'- CONDITION aarrsrAc-r a m‘ 4m ndtion of onus Jug!“ as mtialsotgyEtul-le un- . Bummer-side, on :2 I‘! E91 ygmlN BUSY IISTIIDAY ppanenlde firemen were k -N0 TI-AOI OI’ PLAN — from No. l0 Bombing end Gunnery School at Mount Pleas- which gsggsrrrgs E be r . ‘Hie plane was believed to have been flying over this Province or not fer off shore Just beiore it dis- appeared but a search has failed to uneartas a. tarce of its where- bouta. The weather Friday and is“ ii“ ich began bel snow aqua s w ore noon and continued until almost dart held up the search-S. -—DII"I"IOUL'I‘ ‘TASK COM- PLETEIh-Al diflioult task has lust bow the in Wiimot Valley on which the dwell- ing house had been destroyed by e. Mr. Simmons bought the house until recently owned by Mr. W an Clark at Clark's Mills, Wlmnt Valley, and engaged Mr. - Cole to it to the Stevert _ rm. saavroaa ... The m“ Firth Bow- rmliy. rue.- lil God to "Abide Wieh Mo". A mixed tte sang "The Garden of ey- o; n. r." Mrs. Bowness was a woman l» sterling character, a faithful ember of Trinity United Church, ~ member of the Women's on- Y7 Society and e pest president o! e ladies‘ Social Club. She wes devoted wile and mother and eaves to mourn her gassing, her rrovdng husband an daughter sine, her aged mo , Mrs. nlel Miller of Alberton. four ten Bessie, Mrs. lleber llardy he. Mrs. Vernon In‘ l. their: r 35125;? '§§? 2.. 5.13} ti? E51 g "h". ‘Mmfw ‘F563;. sift.‘ ~ rop o a e . . d lllna, Ernest Harris of ersldg] also two brothers mo of ctou, us. and David ' Us , Alta. The beautiful mi were a mute testimony iii in which lo was ‘"- wear-MW" '- n e - Bari Conley. frank Gamble Wm. schurlnan-S § S; i; lie? r t}! §.%§¢§iz ti??? . '9 SEE .15? I gig 2 53;’ . LE5; largest a s :55? i? E 55 r ant, correlating of two acres of ood but yesterday R4‘, 1 m GHARLOTIETOWN cu a... llovl llotlell e l. Qovrel lhlfl ' $1 lloovahaal I llaavy Ivooeve ' Ialovl lien ~ lahn [owls - halves Islam —PLEASE NOTI- Owing to the length of this Feature, no Short Subjects will be slrowil. Shows 7 - 9:25 Matinee Tuesday 3:80 Summersido fl Personals —Pt.e. Gerald Mills has returned to Debert Military Hospital for further treatment after spending a pleasant thirty-day leave with his rents. Mr. and Mrs. William T. 8 . ll. Clermont. Kensington " A and Vicinity Everett Jay has returned to his duties in the RCNVR after spend- lng his furlough here with his wile end smell son, Everett Jr. llrs. James Pende ast return- ed Tuesday evening rom Char- lottetown, where she attended s special meeting of the C.W.L. PO. Vernon Campbell o! the RONVR, is spending his furlough with his sister and brother-in-law Sgt. and Mrs. John McAleer in Bummerside. Billie McLean has acce ted and taken r31 a new Job wit the T. Eaton o. in Moncton. Among the visitors to_ lum- ruereide on Thursday were Mrs. Ken Hale, Mrs. Claude Clow and Mr. and Mrs. K. L, Wai .-V. ‘If-l BATE DICREASHVG HIE. Scotland —t (OP) -- In“? years Pllimmlll‘! il-Wffllliblil be a rare disease Dr. W11‘. Munro forecastsinerevlewolhisxyears work as superintendent of Olen- lomond Benitorluarl here a mm which he recently reitretL. mleoou-(czal-morsmsn MJIILON farbhinge-worth about half a cent each ln Canadian money -have been imued since they were introduced in 10G) but there are very few in circulation now. The Royal mint is puzzled. FUR SALE I offer for eel; at Hunter River I! Business stand. land with a first class dwell- ing. born and henhouse; also blacksmith and wood work. hag shop. The shop is 25 x 40. two story and well equip- ped. Thisie considered one nearest surnnml 2 r.- m i’ $5; m“ at American infantry which c a ‘leaal’ _ é _ E this; i “carom-MM "n: DUVGI III. l. A. Midland and Mr. J. W. 1a., and other matters. EASTERN BIIARBIAII .3103. SAL! 19M Nash Sedan. good condition tires fair. Serial No. 310N164. Below ceiling price. WJ... Weir, Souris. 4-16-11 REICH APMOST North Bea, but the enemy held the British 3nd Anny in check on the approaches to the big German ports of Bremen and Harnburg._ (The Luxembourg radio said entirely without other confirmation that the 2nd Army had bolted northward from the Aller River bridgehead to a point i5 miles south of Hamburg. the Federal Communications Commission re- ported.) The U. B. 1st Army closed up to the Mulde River on both sides of besieged and by-passed Leipzig si- ter gains up to 18 miles. On the south. one of its armored divisions reached the stream on a six-mile front close to the 3rd Army's crossings and possibly- 3b miles west of Dresden. North of Leipzig. an armored division reached the Mulde two. miles southeast of Dresden. 54 miles southwest of Berlin. and was hurrying up tanks and troops on a . ..__ broad front. In the vanishing Ruhr poc- ket, the U-S. 1st Army captured the industrial city of Willi- nertai with a pre-war populat- ion of 398,000, cut the nocket into two segments h.v Joining up with the U.S. 9th Armv. then all but crushed the east- ern segment. and aerial bombardment and its fall seemed near. White flags flew from runy of its buildings. The push toward Berlin opened from the second bridgehead at Bar- by. l5 miles southwest ofMagde- burg. Closest American forces to the Ca-bltal are ilk)": on me . west bank northeast of Magda» burg l-ll1d_45 lniics wcst oi‘ UCLlil. i VOTING DATE (Continued-flair Page ll However. i! he has been leftwith the necessity of carrying on the work of the Government bv Gov- ernor-GeneraPs warrants. because the House had not finished its work before dissolution. Mr. King Tile German high command ap- parently decided to defend Berlin against the US. 9th Army abthe cost ol weakening the Russian front as enemy troops smashed the ori- ginal‘ bridgehead just south of Ma dobunl. - ree divisions had been brought into the battle. one from the Ecst- ggn grolrrt andg least one from i‘ 9' n 3'" "a would have been able to base his b 1171911 135 9’ ‘#2 Elfldgbltlfifllgreatest eppealin an early elec- Gfdfle efldivfiime a”? ckbg it? d f? lion, on the basis that the opposi- "mflil 0R5 T" liifhaa tion was attempting to prevent B the Government from carrying on b0"- its work. A date in early June. roared the broad Elbe by lav; ioasea were inflicted on the Jung 1; m. m, m.“ d“, p”, 9 0m!- , e alter the dissolution. i German tanh charged in against be his best bet. "m! the Americans. who were without When everything went ,well in armored rotection. and the mas- the House of Commons. and‘ its sed anti-aircraft guns ol Berlin's outer ddencea were swung down to ground level and turned on the itself was under as- tremendqg artillery slowed down by the attitude the opposition. Mr. King was faced . by another problem. The thr Mag times aOIflDVCd err-Premier of adult after a Pi ‘turns peace-with Mr. King. and in DOYLE - At the Charlottetown Hospital on April 15. i045. to M . and Mrs. Lawrence Doyle. nee Leonolla Wood. Olty. e daughter. DEATHS Q DAVEY — In this City. april .14 1945. Da-veakago years. The funeral will e lalace from Prank Hermon-eye Funeral Home this afternoon 3 pm. to Mount Stewart where interment will be in Pearle! Ceme . i-lv-it CLAlt Iii-Suddenly at New York ril i4. i945, J. Pope Clarke, In Mémoriam lo Stglwertwirrgoe April 10th, i941. Ever " =5 by l] * m; Family. work was accelerated rather than?‘ —"" 'reach the emnf! 0f Mr!- Wm. . who passed away m‘: a ' , Ieeuwardon, excess of good zeal proceeded to." force a Provincial election ill (ill-l _ Premier Drew's G0\'(‘i'lllll(‘ili| m Toronto was more or less am- azed hy the turn of events, because election in Ontario would be the last thing to benefit the fede- ral Liberal party. If Premier Drew I were returned tario. an t0 POWER to happen. The arrangements for the sol- diers‘ vote in the Ontario election had to be made from scratch, and it W85 doubtful if Mr, Drew could announce his date before illc be- ll he llari . Mr. King would have chosen June l1. and in order to keep the two campaigns from conflicting. Mr. Drew would have had to post-I glnni not ng of this week. pone his When the disadvantage of in ntari his pert with. The answer elections would day June 1i The matter rests there. but it l.- that an attempt will, I. ‘ made to advance the Ontario \.' o: ing date. I.M.I'.Hbu,tedto' ' i"""" £31m... nfimflildlfi. l...‘ ARMORED CARS ll‘! - .._ expected ‘fr. ‘a. l an on infantry. Zwolle, _ the Pm- gresslvo Conservatives would can-y Ontario federally also. and that is just what everyone was expecting Premier Drew chose Jlillr l1 for the Ontario election, he ai-‘ most had Mr. King stumped. Au earlier date was impossible. and a later date would have given him a defeat for o to contend was simple: the be on the same ‘ijom Page iI lantern-pl l0 miles to the southwcstx Ti: Emphasize a Point We at HULMANS have never found it necessary to use fist-amiable tactics in selling. And we are proud of the results we have achieved by letting quality speak for it- self in our merchandise. But “crash" — the ability to hit hard when it is necessary - plays an important part in our operations. That ability is constantly called into play when we go after hard-io-get merchandise, when we insist on quality, when we set the standards for fire goods we sell. But hard hitting is a back-stage act with us-ii. shows "up front" only in "i! wider selection and better quality of the goods you find at HOLMANS. r R. r. HOLMAN LTD. SUMMERSIDE GHARLOTTETOWN .l vg the causewa 'lllC_\' our going to continue to light| in the pocket and the only with- lll“d\ii<'\i 110W being carried out is that under log and mist back to Ill!‘ (llclybie Line 25 miles east ol Amsterdam. I in til:- Arnilem sector. at the eX- il-enle southwestern end of the _ front. Canadian tanks broke loose- ll0l'i|1 of hhe town. capture‘! 895'] icrdny and cleaned ulp today by , the British 49th West Riding of Deelen. together with the lYorkshirel Division alter 40 hours iauiry thrust into Apcidoorn. of fighting The Cana inn tanks illcir attack dn_n_'n_ and advanced iantry, which crossed the River Wednesday, asmuiterl til-liq; and clearing the la-unchedi ition ___break_i lz_ up Formerly of‘ India, General Secretary of the Canadian Baptist Foreign Missionary Board Speaks at 8 O’cl0cl-i A this evening felLw tthe Canadian 3rd Division.‘ to Groeningen. Until the armored ears sported’ i0 miles t Allied formations‘ to‘ -North Sea since Rhine crossing, tile Can-‘ lot there after ‘capturing Lo ,...... can... ‘i? fit“ “m we’: t lft. resaembrsneo en an um. - E ' northeast or lloeuwarden. .¢ "v all Holland east oil the Zuider Zee now is liberated but the Germans clung stubbornly. til: THE BAPTIST CHURCH Dr. McLaurin is one oi Canada's outstanding ol' speakers, pointed, interesting. eloquent, bring- ing always a rich and arresting message, . The lliev. J. B. Mtllilllfllhl]. , live miles along the road to Ap-ei- doom.- 15 miles north oi Arnhem. capturing vital llilll. Canadian ill-l llssc in the Devenicr sector 12st Apeidoorn from the east. crossed the Alteldoorn Canal and lought into tne town lVith capture 0i i-ho hills by T-h! towns of Deeicu, fir» nliles north of Arnhem. and Terlet. 2 1-2 milcs; southwest ill- thQ first major German defensive pos- ln the Holland pocket was rm “e- of the beet stands on the . Iolasrd, and is operated ev- as-y day by the owner who haa too much werlr and no n; help. on 8g of arlottetown. aged 4s years. 0n arrival in Cher ottetown the body will be taken to the Maclbean Funeral Home. Funeral services be from 5t. James Presbyter- ian Church. arrangements to be to the sea. the enemy still had an’ escape saute open across a cause-j MD. m long the north end of the or Zoe and along North Sea! UNDIITAKII A cordial invitation h extended to all, do not ca“ m“ NW they are m o“. fail to hear Dr. McLaurirfs address entirely from land communication.‘ »ir Too Late To Clearly boar .- aarwaau ausfiorsr. and vwlub Saturday night string of ,. der please return For farther particulars apply to- FULTON IOBERTION. Banter River, P.E.l. 7lTlLIiiJi(]EZTlTE5 iV\TlQi1FJ’l7]EH[) Hen turlreya or toms. Any party that. hastoms and are through with Allen: for this waits-so -. "ro-rneonese a ‘ good tract of heavy timber. soft- m More‘; and hardwood. a Anvil. Write Box lo! -‘—'"=.~:=»......- men; 8i‘ It . ' n. Please sohtaot- Robinson.’ d-id-ii‘ WMVTID - XTIIID I00 Grader and Shipper. Must be mvxwm~ ""2! shaiil.’ ' 1137B 0 l lorvloo Niles. Refer-A . Mi. GHT BINDINE season state price. Also] ducks, dralres, and wild= goes; eggs. State price. l".0. B. your station. J. P. TANTON P. O. Box M Bumoloreide. announced later. MaeLAUCIILAN - At P l) hiiadlel- IMIALMEI hla. Penn. on March 28th. i945. Xllolollwllfl IIHIKUI RIII Lauchlan. Wee toll. D.O. ii%%%iiiiiiiiiii=i=i%%EEE%%%%%%%E%%%%%%- AUCTION SALE AT KEISIIGTOII Ievlag aolrl my farm. l will sell by penile auction-en Islander. April ll. beginning at l o'clock P.M...all my farm roaolrllery eled hollo- held effects eonahtlrrrg of one Chalmers tractor with robber tires. one farm wagon tltll.) with robber tires. one tanlear disc barrow with lo dlsee. ma hay rah (ll feet wide). one mouthing barrow till.) In foru- aeetiona. one hay mower. one family sleigh. one set bob alatglu. hrnltore: Oaa Chesterfield selte. one atodlo coach. ole sotieo with fear elsslro. severe _0O6ll0ll| ebalaa. tluao roeblns erselro. one a-pleoo dining-room satte. two hell reeks. several kitchen chairs and roelerl. three Simmons beds with springs and mettremee, folr cheats of draw- em-one radio. one men. one V‘ . two retrlseretors. two sewing machines {linger and New Williams respectively). two kitchen ranges. Terms cash. If day h unfit. sole neat day. - ‘ Mll- OLIVII CAM‘: IUGI MOIIIIOBLAIMIIIOI. No indications were seen that the Germans attempted any last-min-