BRITISH MAXIMS OP-A MERE MAN w; up every sin but one. 1g l, perfectly euy to moot men to Covers Prince Edward l Island Like the Dew Read by Everybody not One who smvs spiritual seed muv. MAXIMS OYA MERE MAN expect a material harvest. é_ Alornln| Uuardh 1.. Fulwderl I861. v. cbnrlottnonn Guiurllnn Two Cents. Trondhe i:- Boy Scouts Take 0n New War Effort -\. April 28-(CP)—Fill- ii bit-us for war casual- ucxt. Dominion-wide c!‘ the Canadian Boy ration, it was announ- at Dominion headquar- ll contain tOOlh 1711599. tililli). writing paper and = ill’ t-stsilnities in base ‘the Red Cross Associa- . -=hu‘.e the bags to sol- _ .. -_v are brought into nuts from casualty clear- ‘Cross will supply the tctitits ' .u ‘$1 to fill each one. hv Aicnctou. N. B. Scouts ~<~ new will be carried on n1" Canada. Already their first (SHONE ,Good Prospects Seen " For Steel Business 28—(AP)— continuing “Steel” said ~ stistaincrl -r production by had breu enhanced ' llLll‘il\\'.ll of rccent price . on lending grades of strip steel. rch shipments abroad of 457.- ~.~ wins of iron and steel - ureaicsi, since the First ‘They compared with in February and 163.- .. .20. tut; the United Kingdom 1.. forced ahead of Japan s for United States scrap. 6.928 tons, down 31 262-ton March. firmed siiizhtly last owl's“ ccrnpcsite rose .»~.:vn. April 1n business ‘ rlZillfi l-'l.l'iil'l‘ ORGANIZER DIES —(AP)—F'ran- 3H. Czech aviator u) fiiuiit of Czech livin- r plants to_ Poland ' mans were nrcupinp: wzzkia in March, i939. lav after a long illness to Poland. he came to became instructor for attached to the French ng rYSoS .4;- Am.’ i-‘ui .\ *" '_ Loam late for Notices in this column 3 rents per word. "RJlYililflgC 531g _ tonight St. Jun» am 1 o'clock. L-589. uflvi. zuuinge solo, y,M_c_A_ 3M- "*- -\111.\ 4. (i230 p.m. L-590. ff‘_"‘""_1'| Mid dance Fanning Gilt-l; #111001. May 10th. M. L} “' -1»111. Charlottetown, spficial- " -582. Dllfcltfwte to the social evening in Qt v _ Half, Monday evenin , Aiiii Arm, L485 "\\'-\ .1 blonds Y-dunrr People's . Con“; p1,“, Rlver Hm Mai 1856M .. -5 . "Shire the Wealth and Con ert §;:Fim1‘_“}'5Iinll, ontagnue, April ' - lac and 15c. L-571-4-27-2i. >1 z 0 '3 a '< E v .- Houston 27-21. 14-5834- fllld One Act Play, gr- lh, - L-BBO-Q-‘Zll-ll. (lllflti Wednesday. May ..(. , --___ iflruen Bppdm Ind A)l"l|l\>arlo'ips All the newest ii _'_\'(7r\l\<-rv|, "It t‘ no Come n51 ill, Bend for free ‘ ‘r Vcwv. York. IriICZi-Il-il-Mtf "V" hogs at Albany. Fflll May 3R1 at Blllled Q. C. l ~- Ti; ‘ u" tum; {In -- f; "Cell, . ' 1\. - 11 until nobil. Nazis Repalsed On Main‘ Oslo, im Road Flow Of British Forces Con- tinues Despite Strong Enemy Opposition. LONDON, April zs-(cpparhe Wnvr Office reported tonight; that Allied f°1'¢€s had thrown back a 0911mm attack in the vital Gud- bfflndfldfllvu. the main road from Oslo to ‘Trondheim, and had 1mg. ed fresh troops in Norway success- fully 1n spite of all the German arr IONB could do. The British command also dis- closed an extension of "slight, en. @1115! Activity" t0 the snow-cover- vd are!» around Narvik, the ore POYI- above the Arctic circle. Oper- atlons there had been Cllnlpflffltlvg- 1y 0111M. but the new German ac- tion, the communique said. "in no way interfered with Allied oper- muons." _An announcement from the Ad- miralty said mines had been laid in the Broad Vest fjord, between the mainland and the Lofoten Is- lands. and the approaches which command entry 1Q the port, of Nurvik. 1111s is in the vicinity of one of the three original mine fields, the laying of winch was announced April 8, the day before Germany invaded Denmark and Norway. The new fields, however. are much broader, and are situated south- east; and northeast of the Iototen islands, naval authorities said. _, The text of the communique:- “A further enemy attack upon our positions in the Gudbrands- daien (valley) has been repulsed. "Further disembarkation has been successfully carried out, in spite of enemy air action against Andstisues and our lines of com- municntion. "There 11a been slight enemy air activity in tie Narvik area but this | has in no way interfered with Allied l operations. further news from , "'l'hcre is no _ the Namsos area. Count On Planes On the home front, Britons count- ed on their planes to turn the tide of twrcliminniry betbacks in Norway more and more. The watchword of , the weekend, as echoed in the press. was "keep your baiauce—its going ig be touzh." i r The newspapers schooled the nubiu- in the unavoidable pit- falls of the northern calllllflllfl. em hnsizing the Allies‘ early Int-E of organized air bases In Nnru-ay and the difficulties of working through ports that are not equipped to land heavy guns and supplies. Professional strategists were un- mum; .s in recognizing supremacy in t“" " r as the key to the present situation. _ fauna-ring their explanations . were the words of the air secretary, ‘Sir Samuel Hoar::— “Trxiuv our wings are shrcad 0W1’ the Arctic, ‘rodav they are s eathsd In ice, Tomorrow the sun of victory Wliltlflllcll them with its 201G011 t .i|:_h Urged To Keep Balance "We had no reason to hove for spectacular‘ sticccss in this cam- Qicn " said the Sunday Dispfiwh ‘uur task from the bctzlnninit was to recover lost zrotind.‘ The Stmdai" Express. unzip: Bril- tors to "kCPD your balance, said.— “We have become over-elated b! mod news and over-dailies!“ by had news. It is the dutv of all 0i 115 to survey in our minds the whole sweep of the war. rather than to flX (Continued on page}, Col l) Motorless Bays Loom As B. C. Gas llwindles VANCOUVER. April 23 .-(CP) — British Columbia autols today fac- ed the prospect of motor ess days a- ead as gasoline supplies dwindled while the provincial government re- mained firm on its ordcr reducln the brice and oil companies contin- ued thei suspension of deliveries in service s ationa in protest. A "truce" pro el by oil oflmpln- a rejec b the government at Vic ria Satan-filmy night. ‘Ihey c ollne be sold at former reuonagbrzzltlltioh deadlock. r. W. A. Carr-others. ciralnnan 0f the fuel board under which the three-cent-a-gallon wholegalg was ordered. sold the Drawn-ed to mee representatives tomorrow. company J __ __.. ..__ .____.____. t‘ Say Commons Will Request Explanation LONDON A ll 29 _ (or) —The' piiirr Prime Minister c bne "facleclnwith the R B. .u statement" th - wetzlan campaign wig}: h: $35. E26 I-lpilse of Commons Tuesday and at. ill certain circumstances mem- bers of Parliament may demand an immediate secret session" for a 9%!‘ dJIJ-Stllllllslglnif)! the war efforts. e . ' i i . rcspondegt ‘Katee: s d u omatic cor “Rumors retzardinz a reverse suf. fPvcd by a _ comparatively small force of British troops north u; Trondheim last week have had 1-9p- °§§l1$510ns in political circles. 1351's have been numerous con- 511 i Ons among léfldint: politicians dur m: the weekend,» and much will eoend on the Prime Mm star's statement." Missionary On llome Soil After 30 Years , (Monday)- Mall said today l I will amberlain would ‘ necessity of mak- 1 fflARl-OTTETQWN. CANADA. Moubkv, Arm-i. 2b,‘ on FIRST EMPIRE AIR SCHOOL First Iron Lungs . ForHospitalsHere Arrive; More Due ‘ The City Hospital, Charlottetown and the King's County Hospital Montague announce the arrival of an IPOXMILIDK over the weekend. Both Institutions are recipients of the azenerous offer made by the noted Elnglish philanthropist and motor ma ate. 10rd Nuf ield, England. 1e new hospital equipment is a metol container. invaluable for treatment of cases of infantile par- alysis. It takes the place of artificial respiration. Certain types of infan- tie paralysis cause the muscles of the lungs to become weak and con_ sfinucntty some aid to breathing is required. That is where the Iron Luuu.’ comes into use. It works on the principle of a bel- lows compressing and Will 1118 aid of an electrical motor genus rate of l2 to 15 times a. min- The 111m: itself is an iron contain- er about’. 51X feet. long wherein 5, p3- llcut can comfortably relax. Only the head of the person is exposed, 1131f???‘ BRIT! windows in the side 0f , e n . The lune can also be used to good advantage in cases of carbon mon- o-‘flfle uvlsflfllnz and drowning. It is a substitute for artificial resplrattons these cases. It has many Other LORD NUFFIELD WINNIPEG, April 28-(CP)— Veteran of 30 years missionary work in China. Mingh MacKenzie, treasurer for United church mis- sions in Hanan, northern Chinese mvince. is back on Canadian soil oday for the first time in seven years. Mr. MacKeilzic, native of Plais- ter Mines, Cape Breton Island, left Hanan Province with 45 other mis- sionaries when Japanese-inspired anti-British terrorism reached dan- gerous heights. ' ~ - - Forced out of Honan by the campaign of terror, the mission- aries fled to widely-scattered sec- tions of China and were carrying on their work in missions in SzechuenProvince, west China, in the southern Chinese province of Tsinan, in Peking and in Tientsin. "Only one of our men ls left in Honan.” Mr. MacKeuzie said in an interview here. "Evidently he was overlooked when the others lied to escape the terrorism" last October. The missionary who remained in Honan was Rev. Andrew Thom- son, formerly of Toronto, Mr. MacKenzte said the mfisionary d roads—a situation \\'lll(‘.ll ap- parently had enabled him to re- main unharmed. During the terror campaign, bombs were thrown into the mis- sionary compounds and the wooden gates of the compounds were s (m fire. If they rcfttsczi to leave the missionaries were threatened with‘ death. Chinese were forbidden to sell food to the missionaries. They were not allowed to enter the com-l pounds and Chinese servants al- ready inside were forced to leave. Mr. MacKcnzic was reluctant _to disclose the names n; the nus- sionaries ivlio fled Hanan Prvoiuev becgusg "Japanese are very active and lock 1m every bit of infor- mation that comes." He warned] that “somebody who is left be- hind mlght suffer if too much 1n- fgl-maflon 1519i, out“ regarding; Japan's anti-British campaign in‘ chino. Cov’t Members Expected To y Return Shortly OTTAWA. April 28 — (OPP- Post election spring vacations are drawing to n. close for the cabinet 1nd before the end of the present week Prime Minister Mackenzie] Kin? probably will assemble near-Y all: {it}; ministers around the coun- GA E 9. Then will the finishing touches be applied to the government/s program for the Parliamentary session which opem May 16. Leiztslation to be pre- sented will be reviewed an the es- timates will receive their f nal cull- ing for items or expenditure which ma be drop ed during wartime. 1i...- Prime inislcr visited Wash- ington this weekend as his southern vacation drew toward an end and expected back in Ottawa about the middle of the week. ‘Prado minister Eu er who has also been vacationintl is expected back at his deck Tucs- dagizrlculture Minister Gardiner return to Ottawa in a. week or 10 days from Western Canada. War- 25 Years The machine volition but cases are known where patients have remained in the lung USPS. is only a recent in- Driver Exonerated ‘ordered to leave the l UFRLIN, April Gt Clash Between Soldiers, Civilians (SLACE BAY, N. S. April 28- (CP)—P0iiC(3 were ca ed on Sat- urday night m quell a clash be- ,l.\‘.'Ct‘l1 soldiers and civilians that i bro-kc out in a dance hail. After a soldier hud been struck by a civliiiui. a milling crowd was dance hati ‘Fhrcc or four individual flgilts broke out in the street before p0- lice separated the combatants. Shortly after, a group 0f sol- BELATED W A R ECLAEATIN an high command today ad- ltlli tmops yvcre meeting diner in their advance north for a period of two years. After u time i-l e patient 15 able to emerge from the n-on bed for 9, few minutes dmlv and this time ls increased rzradtially until it l3 no longer nggeg. all‘! tofltllgpénd on the artificial aid Th, rr ' r Hosbicgis ‘it. ‘tikféiilifif.’ i§§.‘§i.é°wi.‘.l made b: Lord Nuffield some um d. R0. All hat was required ‘warm the" hospital l0 make application and my the freight charges. The ma- cluncsociome from England, it is un- In Highway Crash 28-—(CP) -The driver of an runn- at. a lévci crossing last hiouziay \\(l. exonerated of blame totiay by :1. g9“? l“?! $41M.’ imtmiknlenhthe cet ; ctims of the accident at 7il‘.'ll’- by Coxheath ivcre Huarh and Cecil Hale, Carpal-iris in deistc . . . T . ' Royal Canadian Air Force, uni a1:- p,.,,{‘c‘§ ggagrdjfyigiggdhmggggfrnltlfg craftsman Thomas hiPL-Pilll. Iii of c1my],-,ggo;nwn_ and t1,‘ wince Ottawa. Harold hiuscrave of NON]! . Sydney, the driver, is in serious condition in hospital. C°1111tv hO-sbitnl in Summersde. are 9-W_l1_l_l~l1’i£f__l_E_hrriVHl_(§_tht:_ chine Ruined p Scene Of Action ; Nams | M.‘ t I t l; small German force in the northern (By The Canadian Press) APRIL 29. iltlfr-Rtissinua mort- ed emu-sacs in uue l_'alli'.'..l.'~ll'=.. ‘hicks refreshing from Kutur mt Azerbaijan, Allied troop: repute-i ed strong German attarx north of Ynez, Belcium . trucks Allied War lTrféhine h. Full Action According T0 EYe-Wit11_€§_s_ Account. (lly l\'(ti)(‘i'[ Ricfici, H.'ivzls 5mm‘ “Iriuwv u. S1131fgsgélgfliléiqtitzyllltotilri’. 4\ ]__ [d 1 [g ]) G 15 N |: R ,\ L t licnl‘ we '.-.L....‘..1~.... =1 _~ -> r ~ __ . '1 . ‘ §l1'1'11‘H0lv_uitl1 the cafm and . ih‘ l Ul~~\l-?(..)L_~\l‘>_l-LI\’5» N 1‘- A R i 0f U18 Wild IIlOUlLliIlAS. i: u ~\r\.\l>t J5, ' .\0r\vay, April 28 1 and ‘1‘-‘S°1‘i5°.[5'.l°“' 1. c‘ I ___u-l. lhvls __V\l_ I l 151 UVO-(lflv trip lll 5. rcuvy, you u: V. . ) . cunt tie .slcuzh from the sire . 1mm“..- m, ruins of .\:uusus the Allied war g1.” 3mm‘ hi“ by m“ Fmlcl‘ “ml: _ _ - . . . ritlsh troops . Inlmlm '5 mm’ l" hi" “"011 91111112 this ion: triul nut in the' motorcycle couriers (lash from’ one ‘iliCh rpig a u . .. tiullnt! iiiutlsautis of Allied troops, 51vf£§11\'n\'11111%v£o11-\' l)('tl(‘(‘illii\'(‘.‘- by pursue to... hi”i3““t.T.?i??-“:.ll.i‘”* t‘. . . tn. anti anti-aircraft guns, arc pour- "wit" cmmlrrv has becouw a vast‘ < ~ - ,, battlefield. lug llliO Norway. (ivruhan airplanes that at first iunniwti anti strnicd Allied » i Siens or w...» ; , 011 U10 \\'av down the lone Natives '3 troops around Namsos are now \'}\11<*.v,\0\vru'vl Ggyns. the first slim, . , - _ i O war was a .5, fnui'-inoto:-t~d for“d m keep f‘ rcslnciful dfs tGcrman airplane which soared overi tnncc by the su-iff pursuit ships l the forest nod drowned n few in- and ‘he amiflnircrafl guns‘ rcndiarv bombs on t3. o railwni‘. nut out little/fox; mh o u z mzs were n . ‘urvv m. slfiéifroflm. “tffémofioillewllfgg “O12; t. a few billfitS nnd It swcden l’, discovered feverish activ- A few nHHHtpFfIRtor n. R m. _ 1 ity in this pftili, north of Trvlldllt-‘lvln- road, 1 at inst smv my first. I-“r nch | Wm” me ‘mefirmed and °“e“¥““i soldier. an Alpine Ghasscur‘ itifllllli; vmfamn Ofmimv blimles- G°"°m_ like a chest in his white, hnodvd‘ Ad‘ 3!‘ 0mm“ d“ Wmn- Cmmmml?‘ cape. With fixed tinyunvt he “us! of British forces in Norway, and his dlrprfing “u. truck. U.“ WM.“ “ht French colleagues are fnst llnin cessanuy ' ' “ “ un the difficiflt war they mus ' likht across roused Norway. German: surrounded At headquarters 1 learned that al- lied troops. including the French Chasseurs Alpiues. the "Blue Devi have cmnplctciv surrounded the Many Duds | When I spoke to il-illl in French 3 he suspiciously d-cmairdcd who i‘ was, but after cxsnninuig my 1m- pers begun to chat. “Tnerels an- other dud," he said, mulling to n nearby hole in the snow. ‘"1310; ‘re bud shots. They've been tijvtilq; to knock out the muons" for o week. but they can't do it. ; “Yesterday they put. 1 bomb‘ right between the rails, but. n | d{dn‘-t. go off. Pretty s/con wove got; to cart it nwn._v~-liave to handle it like it. was a balmy. I "Alt first thing: were pretty imd. , here. They sent over n factory’ mu i iron port of Narvik. Allied pressure on the town is increasing‘, supported by planes and naval uni . Near Namsos allied and German troops are fighting gong u scattered front through the ruined town of Steinkier. Two German destroyers landed reinforcements at the head of Trondheim Flora near Steinkter last- Wedncsday‘ after the Allies withdrew from t e town and con- centrated their face-s to the north and east. General Msrte- Emile Beth- Bo underground like rabbits. Tlvn- planes used to come down to 30o "unfit ,.,,mm,,nd|n‘ hem“ feet to tmeir lmubs and,n rlnvgxcreus adventurer who ilflfitflnlls nlrenrly gained: Norwegians troops on this front. wls optl- M7510 lmtvbmflfi will 11101“? 011 111" i llJYNl a s":1l.=l(‘i‘ purl in DUNN‘- fll- i pushed back nn two southern mlstlc about the mriltnry sltnl- roads. We couldn't get amydhingt us. No ivnest man would trim. 1 m...“ tlon. but malt-ml that there ls done. -, .< word No impartial neutral hard flglltlnl ahead. 8485121311 remix?‘ ngigllinill‘hftll]l‘llitlzf\ ,<-_-.w.l t-vyurviv- Willil he SIZIYF, n ' |' lmqmyy ___ (-,,.,,,,,,,,_. ,.|.,|m "m... A] H r 1 r d_ fA] l ‘ ' ' r i‘ -‘ ‘ I 1i‘ |“"‘;‘~ 1"- "ll! 1W lll- [at r |l|()\\\ ;|l linlw- t nllnllnlls, _t||rl Chngglfirlrs-‘e sg1illoggflwdegglfi|eryalgg better. ‘They seem to b4- Mtlilll nnl ‘ I .| n~ ‘l Ho:- iv lu . y lttnl .rulnlllllll tnlllvlnt,‘ 1,1,5 |;,;|,,- p," mow, forward fuunfln’ the" varmus don't’ come down DGIUW 91100 or w, il;|\'t‘ 1Y4!‘ pvttnl u-zulnsl i|l|\' ,l'ltllllls‘ slnti- nl unr with Mniuv. missions. "Tomm . in trench cnvs £9.91: _______ __ __ "'”‘" "1 ““"“""“ ‘"1" m“ l‘ l . are driviuit lone column. of muddy —“'—“"" -" " I ' ' fi lmall-t - l" suisl. Gllfiilltl‘? (on. loaded with eq pment and (Continued on page V7. col 47y NORTH SYDNEY. N. s., April ~ “l mobile involved in n triple fatality ' Polvcrs i - the l - O3 7,. . ‘caiurd. ' of chef's every day and we turd to .,. northwest from Oslo in Nor- following announcement Sat- )‘ by Adolf Alitier in a pro- . rttion that the Reich is at war with that Scnnriinaviair country. The Rrich at. the same time snug-ill; to llastiiv the invasion by irndticing another series of “docu- merits" vvilich it, Jwas claimed es- tablished the “war Quilt" of the MHCF, (h. Icndon the ctocurnents were if. and ,- l after the Nazis on of Denmark. the alleged (iocumentsi HTly with Nonvay.’ c view of the Nazis, . . (iterman “protcctlonfl still an inciepennlcirt kingdom. 'l‘he high command claimed t0- rlgiv that own Bri ‘sh cruisers were Nari bombers, and hit iii-weight. bombs. It British transport i. set. mire off the 't‘Si puns-r and three other trans- port. wt-re sunk. (ate-mun advices claimed armor- units and warplanes cov- ‘i '1" motorcade were dis- , iizetl and Norwegian . u anions in the valleys and Lfrncc positions were being rn up in the Bergen and stamugei‘ ciistricts on the coast. (h. London, a war office bulle- r L) y. tin m Nortvtqziaii operations said, a German attack lil the 011(1- en hurl been repulsed and | ' air activity had flllllffif i _ ent debarkations of Allie tlmlps in Noryvayl (jtncf among .e alleged (10011- l (Continucdimiyllflbe 7. C111 2) t Sharp Reply To Nazis LONDON. April 2B—fCP)—Sif ‘~"7l'U(‘i flcarr. Air SecrctnrY- 0" night cicnounccd Gd‘- mouvs chnryvrs that. the Allies were planning: to invade Scandi- navia before the German invasion as n “despicable lie" and DIME!“ that, the Nazis‘ “foul and cowardly bio-w" to Norway would be redeem- ed "by hurti fight-till. U)’ ‘HLIQYUW arisen anti by putlffll- 071111111113‘ At tile same tune he reiterated hue Allies‘ IFVltiSxlll and repudia- H011 of enemy td/ries: "We will notimltnte his do tardly conduct. We will not let helpless 560M671 zlronwn. We will not bomb W611 mat l oare Makes b J ‘liter official voice was mi=ed 1'".\lu=t- inhumanity‘ lll warfare n Robert lludsou. Mlulcifl‘ 0i declared at Southamp- Tt- h-zvc not. to show not vu.v the ‘Nazi cane “be 1111c 00F- ruzmv hut. Gcnnnn people thviuseives t-hat war. and part c- n" ' mo viir- wor they are ung- 1119.‘. not. pay." "Ht- Von Rihhentrnp. the Ger- man l"t\"(‘lll'll blunder. has this nl- lt‘l'l‘."0'.l mode a l1lil(".'i-tl(i\‘(‘l'l'l<(‘(l "och to the diplomats in Il'i'l'.ii." Hr F1tlll"4‘l saitl m a broadcast. .'~"p(‘(‘"ll. "We knew tilt; man. ‘He is c '3: (Continued on page ‘l. Col S) _ eleven Air Warriors l For Duty Today. (Hy Frank ‘ _ ‘lahcrrv; (Canadian Press Hlaff Writer) ‘figurine fill‘ v _ I .. e lvo c ling plan m p i 28-—(CP)—The quisition a5 n. "despicable tic" by l a fl muci Hoare, Air Secretary.) lflmn Fl‘ lll- lacrns-s (‘a ' _ the state of Wllflmo m 30ml) nrvit: knew-vii to the Glilnlilllligpfypy. 4,11,; n1,- ._. c in a sweeping proclamation 1m. com however, said nothing about The Dim, H3.- Millfiivity in 1.. Norwegian o; 51mm I the number frmn each Ibo dpschavgcti or illviifillki t0 some, ‘ other duty. . u _ l which will nial 1 ‘rm n nnnme ' ii t. "ca: r '- . . . . rhfifinabétregtgt lgix OTPIAWIK’ AMA J8 flmp’ “T” ’ l)()ii(‘l'lll(ii (iispvrsed the Qroup i “mm” . "H35 m" Z6 O ‘ Wuum“ ugh,“ force Q/ikotlnl l to‘): Bl iC-‘lillliohwdniiiil. lie ‘- ~scort to har f l}. l‘ '"“= . “Y? (1)TI"t)h‘:-‘S0‘1diers_ 0k c “to ° ‘ Filtlii the taunuirq of a 1,990“ >of Bare-clad WLLYTiOZ of the air ‘take rcporn- for duty at the initial l ‘ training hoot opt rated my the l ' vRftv-il ( tn r Force on the -.<1t(- c!“ it I. , Jinn.’ C111). ,Nor'.h lo turn. i‘ Tw- ('i._...-...~ i who enter ‘u tunn-rz'o.\ trill be the i‘... . ‘__/ first to star: traxniti: as pilots. air gunners anti an" o‘ irs the ' t.» Al "i in the nature o.‘ . the traininrz of rinse mm. . up of school irai tors, mcchzrn . .... the varied types of ]7(.‘..0l'i’il0i required, ac- oi eqwtpznvnt including: v of insirtlc ~ aircraft. Start 0f 'l‘raining The opening of the Mlinton Hunt School Ls the start of the training of tihe men who xvi" ‘ "t nver- 59415 H115 ill?!‘ to the Alizorl nations tlfaf. rrrerwli cunt-unruly ill l 1W no (liver-l- fiinyzt Gel‘- many. ‘ Prom that event the British Commonwealth air ttahiinn plan lviii ' huvc fan on ~ 1 i more . ail 70 \ i171 "e cerh year maximum pro- Jan: Number A Secret The number crtlire for {he first.‘ course at the Egliuten initial. training srlinoi is on official sec-t ret but rt r m. the hundreds. Officials m“ lit-fence Lh-part- mcnt, lint‘: alw- for the (ipcn- 1 and tire nunvbcrs ar-coznluorinteci tn in the last. <lc-. int: of all egvch wowed out It'll . ‘Filey have careful estimates of class who the three, and they to qualify will qualify for one 0f classes of flying service number vvho Will tail Tile Fig nton school is the first? d! three initial training schools,’ called for in inc plan. The men, rgporlilp; t <- tnmorrou" wlil~ acquiring discip- spvnd fuuz- vn hue uuti lgiliii _ Xll0ilttll‘_\' things which all an" force‘ men must know. y A; the cud 0i four weeks there‘ will b “ ‘toils and tests. .1 Fl ? un a course‘ tin-m an‘ Hllllllpl? s of recruzts wail l. 1 i-hc an" force v. clement u Fl('(‘» ti» ‘the i ‘~ Egiillttlil, (‘litiuuu 1' _ schools to ncconnnocinte e ntr ob- servers "mt \\‘ii‘(‘.t).\.$ scintiis for 1110 air gunners. _ v H The pziots lvlll Sllflbl will" “abs . ll Tl in pi‘,.,n,.,,1,>,;--; 1 ‘~ training. schools hr-{wrc llltriitty!‘ Jhllh "'1; ; vauccd 113111‘: \1~‘~‘“~ ~ “ ""' (Continued on pace 7. Col 51 International At A Glance i - igreat acclaim in i904 on her i Annual Iinbn-rtptton Delivered [(1.00 U! Hulk-IRAQI. Ikflfh (‘nnndl lnll U-b. ‘fiJltt g OPENS TODA Y iPolioe liuell Egigns Begin Training Vanguard Of line-clad Report _ . »__~_-:i ::_'== Famous Italian Soprano Dies am - MILAN, Italy ‘e lunzan Mme. Lusia mnritilt» who . the world over, (Led fr. hospital to- day after a long illness. For several days Mme. Tetraiaini ,had been unable to take nourish- ‘ment other than occasional s1p= of ‘chalnpavne. Only a nurse Wil. at ‘her bedside when she died a: 3:35 ‘ . 1v l. Mme. Tetrazzini, who firs! eon .255 |North American tour, had iron lhving for some years in compaia- ;tilve retirement 1n her native it- lfi i‘ t She is survived bf.‘ a ‘ ;Signora Elvira Martucci, at u [home the singer was Vlrfiflllllf when she suffered a cerebral hemorrhage last Feb. l3. A niece, Marta Alar- tucci. is a soprando at La 80:112. |Qpera House in Milan Another ‘SISYCT, Eva Terrazzini. from whrm ilrtlia cirtaiucd her earl‘; n m} {education riled about l0 years ftyl i Daylight Saving Time Goes Into Effect i ._ Approximately 2900.000 Canaa- nana lost an hour during the weat- Hid vivlnrh they will not tzet bar-k tintil next fail. Loss of the hour (viii result in a mass theft of d v - ti: l‘. In the dozen-odd municiparties '.\'ill(‘ll turn to daylight saving time for the nunmer months, pum- ill! the timepieces ahead an hour meant that much more daylight each evening. For majority of lac- .» affected the official chm tiour was two A. M. yesterda hilt. the popuiar changing-over" time was at bedtime Saturday. NDTHlNG UKE A SPR\NC~ DAY ‘To MAKE A ct-mw FEEL ‘SPR \ n c.Y ’/ X ‘TORONTO. April 28--(CP)-- Mznimum and mG-Xlmlun tempera- turel: Dawson 29 Vancouver 47 Edmonton 3d Regina 4H Winnipeg 46 Toronto 34 Ottawa 3o hfentreal 41 Quebec 32 So int- John ‘ 7 l-latfax S6 Charlottetown ~- 28 FORECAST Maritime Provinces: hlorlcrale variable winds; fair 5nd mild. ‘Hsynopais: ‘Ilhe weather has bee: fair and mild in Ontario. while showers have occurred m Nfannoba (By The (‘u an Presso .-\'l‘ ALIJIEI) lllli\ll(]l'r\l{'l'l-lllS~ IN NOlHVAT-Aliicll 'l'rn0|1s, pur-l suit planes rcrnll. pourml: into Nor lI-nas corrcspuntlent- ' .- shambles alter German air raids. LONDON - Announce (lerman ntlack in (tutllvraudxlnivn hurled hack and more Allied troops land- rrl lu Norway: navy plants mines In West l-‘jorrl entvauire to Nrrvlk. ad- re- .'~"l‘()(‘Kll0l.\l . - (lei-man vrner nnrthyvurri in Norway ported halted to cmlsolillzilr‘ |m§l~ Italian Army tn be ready. and some sections of Sa kntche- mum. 5 High tide this afternoon at 328 and tomcrlnw morning at 5.21. l Sun sets this eveirngz at 7M flllfl n-ises tomorrow ihoming at 4.51. I April 1 lost quarter ‘3149 am. " Sunuuerside tide l8 minutes lot- tfmn Charlottetown. moon ‘d5’. or Till’. (‘AK Fl-Illlll‘ Kill l\'(;\‘ I 1....- l'§‘/|‘\lt‘ll 94:. A .\1_ lHH 1'11 . leaw, ‘llrrnn-ntun- ii nu A \l out Ti in i‘. M. ' SATURDAY ONLY ' haves Borden 446 P. M. leaves Tormcntine 7.00 P. M.