, ‘ -....-. _.;.. m. .- e UMMND HEWESTERNGU “mm Mn. John Pond. ll Chureh Street-rpm. ‘m suatnnsmu mo rune: coonrr 1111mm Advertising, uni-u iie 1m with m", p,“ grist-n»: - ii-whgéumruiueu u o. following m... u. c , w tor Street. “TmQv. Water Street. , . . Guurdian will he delivered to any hem in '2'“, at 2c w dev- vr 101' r-"er week. PlllIIII'z89 flour-flee Drugute , Mark Gludet, owner-Vital: Summe ’ s; for this service, . d" "u; order to ll" b"! lfliflbhllble for deliveries on your route, “mm, i; reserved for nun ‘ mg interest, but advertising "um-g nature may be inserted . “Hem; a word, strictly payable h glance. '5 DltI-KIL at Taylor wgensingwn. 11-201. ' E up’ . ian crrurtcrr. £3025 it»? sunday. March mus ioiioiis; Bedeuue 1i A. M. rovers; it u: h‘ H“ Hm“ ' ursai-a-i-u. ' HAL BEDEQUE UNITED uiUltcH SI-RVICEE- — " v 1i, Britten will preach on f March 9th in Central @1045 A. M. Lower Freetown ps4, Freetown United Church P M L-42l-3-8-Ii. 11E T0 Bedeque Carnival -, March 11 and meet your d; 11y and pick tho winning “mi” First and second ladies, ", mi »5gc01id gents, first and ‘M, 311-15, first and second boys, 1r and most comical, all r8- pnzes. Skaters in costume Aflmlsslml 20 Cents- “ L-S96-il-tl-4i. ,maararx 1.0.0.3. MEM- ,; _. Mrs. Alex. Horne was m, on Friday afternoon to o! the I.O.D.E. at flier _,- new home on Summer Street g Book Tca, each member M, book, The books are to med to the air port for in the Library- siiiilnaiisrna c._w.r.. MEET- _'f‘lie regular monthly meet- oi the Siimcnerside Division on catholic Women's League held this iveek in the K. 0i.‘ C. ,, grid was presided 0V?!‘ by the Mrs. Joseph tallaghan. . mceillli opened with the Lea- Pi-syer. The minutes oi the us meeting and treasurers were read and approved. . p, r‘. liiarNeill. Red Cross or, gave a very satisfactory ,stating 16 pairs of socks. , pairs oi mittens, also s. num- oi other articles have been ... over to the local Red ,siiowing that the members been quite active during the , Social service work had been undertaken and milk had supplied to needy families» clothing has been provided. -- was a discussion on sending ‘in of food to a needy family [it was agreed that all the .. . would help in this worthy A nominating committee appointed to draw up a slate (filters for presentation at the ii meeting next month. Af- mie discussion on sendil18 i. and magazines to the n. the meeting adjourned-S. Iensimrton And Vicinity George Webster is visiting her husband _ . George "of Lire \‘.A.S,F. in Hail- iitloitn A. Thotnplon was I- vlsitcr to Freetown on h. John Walker‘ has returned from Halifax, N.S. While the was the zuest of her . Jim. liowe and her son Roscoe Walker 0i’ that P. B. Highlanders. hi5- h Rogers was u business to Summer-side Wednesday. tdliie Thompson of the R0. iin Pictou, N.S.. is spending l. ilrued furlough with his par- Mr. liiid Mrs. John A. Thomp- Ellington Karlie Siinms was in Em. on Wednesday on business. Wm. oammii of uie c As r. bv his wife and chil- m Tuesday morning to re- ‘ilfllt in Halifax after a ' ' ‘lfliillkn at his home here. b eron and children ex- remsin in Halifax for , ____ ‘Xeidmstcly two hundred ee- mo The hockey boys to ‘ mpwii Wtdnesday evening .'~ Mine-nod and enjoyed _H I same of the .pley-off ear-T". y i, -. .~, . m" "'"'"e illiinley w are Comedian ' ermr- stem. new: "hill-humus, in Windsor. w» ii revelation of Canada's In strength. A reporter redo In one of the l8 buckln whip- ~hk7°di "fleeting to limp book Inter, figuratively sllcllilli W ' "I" w! elu- eve. unseen he enims III m: twirl"! '1 mint eeot, wiui the feeling i; rein; eusvenflfll innards. The tour-ton. Ilrhtlr 1mm“ m, m“ ml stamina u they shot ueroel rough fields. lull‘ , 0mm ts lnd eluwel u) almost vertical 10-foot banks. Th6 "I out ill meehouleeil unite dell). a. |".;Lnnfl ) i _ ‘h hlne‘! bunch] ' I r0 PM.luoany7P . b —RALPII G. MUTTART. Gene: l rfggflnw Agency. Insurance or :11 s. Rates and particulars without bill! iii . gar-i“; gzilr-z. Hm“ iiibffiiiif —ALBE TON (:0 1.. six case d t ' when pasrtig gerehzhaliiztgiilm v26}: Win18 beer, each were fined $25 and 0°!“- A YOIIHB man charged with uttering a. forged cheque was Elven a sus nded sentence. One man char with consuming was fined 10 ollars and tiff?’ $135.2’? ii2f£§2...°““.'.'“ duinisseir-s. e" ‘"5 MEN'S MEETING-The - ular weekly meeting of the 5%- merslde Y8 M60? Club was held on Thursday evening. Mr. Lorne H_ MacFarlane resided. The guest speaker was Fight Lieiit. Rev. Hir- s , Chaplain at the summerside airport. who gave a. most interesi. L. Wiilett re rted on the war Service Comm ttee that it had now been organized and underway.-—S. — AIRMENS WIVES HOLD WEEKLY CLUB MEETING _ The newly organized club of sir- men's wives met for their weekly "liming on Thursday at the home of Mrs. O. Upman on Chwch Street. The hostesses were Mrs. T. Hall and Mrs. C. Pugh. Re- gret was expressed that Mrs. E. Thompson who had been appointed secretary-treasurer had le-it for Trenton, Ontario, where her hirs- beind is now stationed. Mrs. M. Dewar has been appointed in her place. A very enjoyable after- noon was held and afternoon tea served-s. —!Vlirs. John Macwilliams, Cape Traverse, Mrs. Melville Bell. and charming daughter Diana, DeSable, spent the week end in Albany. guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank MacKsy, Albany. Graded Chick Sales Show Big Increase Last yea: 18,678,000 graded chicks were produced in Canada by Record of Performance breeders and Al)- re aved Hatcheries. This was an in- crease of rnoze than one million chicks over the figme for 1939. Three grades of chicks are pro- duced under the National Poultry Improvement Program which cc- ers, hatcherymen, Dominion and Provincial Departments of Agri- culture and others interested in the Canadian poultry industry. Under the National Plan, poultry raisers can purchase chicks which have been prod/freed under careful go- vernment supervision 0f both breeding flocks and hatcheries. Only Record oi Perfonnancebreed- ers and Approved Patcherzes can produq graded chicks. There are three grades of 411116115 ‘lmider the National Program—R.O. P., R..O.P.-sired, and Approved. All breediing (locks are government in- s""cted, culled and blood-tested for inion or 11:0- icka an oduoed ac- Rieoowi of erformanee mule and female bmeding stock in pens wduclni; 3.02. chicks are of at east two eratiens of 200 egg breeding 01‘ mter. Chicks from these Pens H" purghnpul , breeders W110 want the best inundation stock or cockerals of known breeding. About 50.000 Raoybgliioka were sold in Canada in 1 . RuOJR-sired are the his/iv!!- gommercial gmde. ‘They oome from 110m or approved females mated to R..O.P. sires. In i943 o total of 3.- 00.000 R.O.P.-slred were produc- qs, This year more, haicherics are Slimming to niiien uiis some of ic Arl:und l6 million ch'cks 0i’ "10 Approved gods were sold in 1940 ‘mm chic ere from flocks of av- proved hens. mam! W l Y°V°d melee. In flock lowvvfll "Mimi 1g ma, on the basis of such im- poi-tun, nil as early feathezing, rapid evelopmentegg size, and R.O.P. fitorltndard: Bonn ill l b,.i”°“"°* .'s'i§€f.."°2§i? 3am o; m; typo (or melt product- __________.__.__. When steel fittings on the IW" become brown throuah heat. s res di in vinegar- before cleanitifi in in; trsusi way will M10 "mm"? tho ltains. ing and thoughtful address. Mr. R - N‘ r REPOR (Continued from plge u ‘Maiihmlllhoui W090. eon- "Mrfniuwii want w n» m. desvous and inf w» u... to E's. fifiib“ ‘i 8nd the Y v ' Govemmait "Nell that in President Roosevelt's 0p- inionitwal Limefbputmandw the succeses of the Axis powers :32" l! they were only diplomatic Roosevelt also was said to have made known that the lease. lend bill would certainly be accept. ed- by COHETBSS and U16 American Government then would have the means to curb efforts designed m “it”; 'e'.ti€;.°’§t;i.. ° would then ble able to furnish efficient aid to all European states which nan not steady submitted to this new or- l‘. Sumner Welles is “is n, hlave called the tripartite pant "Vgfy Sig?!" ‘ti?! a‘? B mfltst ‘dEXIBBTOILS “duff” “we” 01‘ Enl- "Before bidding Mr, mum, to have extracted o, promise that Fotltch would immediately transmit, Mr. Roosevelt's message to Ben grade assuring him that tele. Efffilhic rates would be reduced. heron Fieb- 10. that is several days ore this proposition, the Amer; 01m Minister to Belgrade. acting under the urgent orders of My, Rmwvelt. is said to have gone to t m‘! Yugoslav Premier's office to convinced of Britain's ultimate vic- _ lolfy and that he would do every- lhmz to contribute to it. “At the same time American diblomats accredited B 1k mllitals are said to have atgird Wa-‘hillsion that Greek resistance “'35 “Vakelllllil. that war material delivered to G without valuefegoe by England was The Greek Government is said to have informal the United States Minister to Athens of the real siiua. Mo“ “Ereuplm. the American dlfilomat is said to have advised the Greek cabinet to appeal direct. the American people to ob. “i111 shlPments of war materials (‘ornferenccs which were then held in Washintton broke down and ended only in the recognition that the old-fashioned machines dc. liver-ed to the Greeks by Americans are of no value, “in Washington Roosevelt's pro- position was explained by the fact that British diplomacy must use American influence to rebuild the frestiirsle spat-Iv diiiinusneu follow- ng e cosing oi th B it Legation in Bucharest.” e r 15h BERLIN. March ‘L-(AP) — An alleged effort by President noose. Vi?" Y0 1168b Yugoslavia from sp- Drofillhinll the Axis has brought about "a new accent on European- American relationz" the German WmmBHfiB-rv Dienst ans Deutschiand ci%ied tIonlg-ht l e 0n v report n central Euro e of any such alleged effort by the body conformation. The obiWi-ive E'~>"l United States President wassstory tod dapest paper Mag. vardsag. but this story was nicked a m ordinates the work of marry brefd~"io at length by the German radio gided and D.N.R., the German news and propaganda agency. Dlenst aus Deutscliland. said. “dg. sbite the American efforts felt here. with all certainty the conoiidation of the ‘new order‘ will continue in Europe" s directly opposed to the principles The Ease N ti ll Zeit . ed if "Amfitlllflflawglxlid abmaistgkit if Germany sent special envoys all over central America as Rooseve does over Europe. continued attempt on Washington to influence Gennanys neighbors" and concluded: "Europe as a political bloc has much more intelligence than one over in Am- erica, in the well-known American lack of knowledge of non-American affairs. can imagine.’ HANSON ASSAILS (Continued from page 1)_= the o position had been "derelict." "I lieve they have been," Mr. Ilsiey retorted. This attitude-that the Govern- ment should give information only if it was asked fOl'—-WBS a “nega- tion of responsible government." Mr. Hanson said. It was "Fascism in an incipient form." "And l waste of time, too" laid Gordon Gra don (Con. Pee "Sure, it s l. waste said Mr. Hanson. He said the og- nosition would pass the bill wi - uestion if it were necessary but t ere was time to give infor- mation and it shouiiinot have to be ried out of the Government." " ll this language te un- warranted and uie un ustified." said Mr. Ilsley. “ t is l. istrionic displgy which surprises me very muc .' "Well, 1 hope the Minister liked it," Mr. Hanson interjected. "1 certainly did not. experience 6031?: as it proceeded," 1V0‘. Usley " "it; ls nie wnlster n» u crowd beh nd him he ls as brave as a lion." said Mr. Hanson. Mr. Iisiey said that Mr. Hanson was "dealing in old line stuff that doesn't fool s single membernof this committee s. sngIeI minute. "You ought to know. Mr. Han- son retorted. "Between 1930 8nd i935 that is the sort o! thing you fellows were putting over every day." n "Them wasn't a war then. slid these figureril because they might be e or ess. MiI-vtg-srdiner described the work- i of the office of the director 0f pu lic information which was tek- en into his department lest July after being in existence since De- cember. 1939. He accused the T01‘- onto globe and Mall of deliber- otel " rnismpresentiflil "l! 151°" ma; on n; had given l. questioner earlier in the session showimtdbhl! the information bureau cost 2.- 30. i . nie editei-uii hld suflfli“ i-hli . had of e h n-‘itiiiit? ii.“.’.“.'.ff"*£i‘.a "°"°" """ glrlatimsluirnd moving picture releases, performed by the bureau. iscouata) that the bureau had ptrbllghed one oi his speeches ed._ ‘Some iiéiitldiilgs and one British fighter s . retary David Margesson told commons:— " sea and by air and the continuous air bombardment over Th Iinmse 1 "ch .. _ central gioslgfyja” ,,,,,'§,f,,f}§,’§n,m° clifugeié have caused a breakdosvii of many Notwithstandin the Mon oe Doct in 11 _ More“ i“ m’ ° “*5” "5 §€.J.l‘°.ii3i“'li..%i§ife“€i‘i.°‘%?é‘é§i Lin? m keep America “w” “om with great credit." landings by air and sea and one informant said it "probably was more successful Hitler could think up." '11,, npw_mper n“ the” “m,” Some concern was expressed . iili tio. In one lo- mauc traveller‘ m" ‘ mm 0',’ 331i ccgndfiiolifsuof “France and Bel um were almost duplicated. sections and generally razsed havoc with defence plans. The "invaders took advantage of this to put over some im ortant coups. ed "some of the most brilliant Bri- tish staff officers." might have had much to do with the civilian con- fusion it was explained. was declared to have given impor- tant lessons in resisting a. real in- Vader iain from Lari qroats and from west Wales to the Wash. The navy, army. fence guard, air raid precautions organization and other war aux.- illaries collaborated manoeuvres. ofliflmq" umpires showed thgtuail ' "invaders" and was ‘n the evening. ‘firs, meeting opened in the usual way and roll call was answ- about fifty visitors present. any feeling of uneasiness or dis- oprmspondeflcqi was read and‘ re- ports of committees were rcvelvfd- The new school committee is Mrs- Berrigun and Mrs. Bruce MacDon- ald. Lunch committee is Mrs. Bruce MacDonald, Mrs. Younker and Mrs. Easter. Program committee is Mrs. Lane and Mrs Younker. Red CW8! tommittee; gave yarn to the mem- bers and headquarters 1n Charlottetcwn. Mrs. Cecil Campbell invited tho members for next meeting. answered by naming a book which I have read rory." A priogr . 190 000 up to Nov Ln” ‘ . the 1'12 1 m“ ‘mgr-ens re eases issued up to 8382 each, cost of the office. the bureau had eost used upon the total editorial volume m. Gardiner aid the vet-looked the great the wide variety of work Mr. Hanson objected to the bur- eau ubii hi mlméiwra-s llgtspeeches of cabinet Tha was "Government PTOPB-Bfllldfl." he said Jean Francois Pouliot (Lib. Tern. reminded Mr. Hanson “I didn't ask ‘for that," Mr. Han- son replied. Final Conquest __LQ¢M1_HELXXPBI__RHQ g1) Jilin in Northern Ethiopia, another retreat is Lilith _ Juba River valley area of Somali- goodbye ML sunmer wanes is said gflnnilékteoivaud the Southern Ethiopi- DPOCCG din find Fbrrandu. in the Nzorthrgili This was one of the main routes used by Mussoiinifs men in the conquest of Ethiopia in 1936. struck wherethev expect to Ethiopian insurgents wrest the colony from Italy and re- store it to Emperor Halie ° lassle Dursuing British troops have well into Ethiopia proper, be Joined by in a drive :0 British suspicions that Chi imaio and Mogadlscio were used as re- "9111118 stations by German surface announce ma,’ Mr. Rowevem was gilitisders were confirmed. the Admir. case of 200 British and allied sea- men held '1 after" thelrpéiisfpxrselifagear Mogwlsclo been .unk_ The captured Italian ships were named as the Adria, 3,809 tons; 5,1. V0111. 5.490 t0 5-742 ions: Manon, 5.597, tons, and Li-‘Onflrdo do Vinci. 7.515 tons. 11s: Erminia Mazzelia. One of the four scuttled Italian ifllibigzliviisuiggntified as the Marghc- As i0 the Mediterranean tircatre. British aui-horitlcs said that a mu 5 raid bv 100 c1" more German dive- bolnbers. bombers and fighters was carried out against Malta on tiled- ncsdav. Sixteen of the raiders were doivii- damage was (lone to British find Mock invasion Was success Observers Believe it Was Better Than Any by Hitler. ~ LONDON. March 7—(CP)—Bri- tons reckoned today the results of ammoth mock invasion and de- their imitation was better han anything Hitler could offer. summing up the score, war Ste}?- e ‘There were many landings by effect of points “'35 estimated communication. means of this assumption Oil!‘ The sham invasion featured than anything People clogged roads and inter- That t e sham attackers includ- Any material weakness exposed ‘The exercises‘ covered all Bri- d's End to John O‘ civil de- in the vast The final surruni u of the n all the were checked. E..§..§.i.Q.E.H.Qii [Centralized Traffic control MONOTON. NB, March ‘l-A dream of every model railway fan. centralized traffic ccntrol, a syn- tem which permit; of direct oon- glven sectton of track from l. cen- tralized point is about to be in- the Canadian National Ralways be- tween Moncton, Pacific Junction to the west, a. distance of 10.82 miles, and between Moncton and Truro to the east, a. distance of 124.- 72 miles, accoring t) an announce- ment by W. U. Appleton, regional posits direction; also there are classes as between trains under the pi-csent system oi despatching. At each end of passing tracks tracks telephone connection is pro- vidcd to enable the train crew iv communicate with the despatcher if necessary. The Despatcher sits; in front of a Said‘ by Hie discover-V and “'3'- board 011 which 111i sections Oi this LibemB~D_ C‘ Abbcnl Mi nu~cai.~ i track arc indicated. Tire location of trains as well as the pcsiti-cns of passing track switches and indica- tions of sigials are shown by min- ature red, green and yellow lights as a. train moves over the track. By an interlocking system it is im- msible for a dirpatcher to operate a switch or signal incorrectly. The system is a development (f what Iias previously been known as the absolute irernrlssive block sig- nalling on single track and the ad- vantages over" the exist nil Silitem of despalcirfirg by train crdcrs and timetable are that delays of trains ivillCil that svistem entriVs will be zivoicird and traffic capaczty of tile track will be greatly increased with- out sacrifice tf safety of operation. Centralized traffic control has already hen tried cut on some of the Ilnilcd Slate". lines and this is time first. installation cf its kind iri Canada. No Shortage Supply of Oil For Poultry While the name cod livcr oil is commonly employed, actually most of the oils now used to supply vita. mins in poultrv and live stock feeds are derived from the livr: s or bcdies cf other" fish. The lmprrtant con- sideraticn is the vitamin content and not the kind of oil. said WR. White. Plant Products Division, Do- minion Department, of Agriculture, in a recent address on commercial live stock feeds to the Quebec Live Stock Breedets’ A: sciaton in Que- bec City. ‘ At the outbreak of war, United Kingdom, Norwegian, and other sources of oil, upon which Canada depended to a considerable e"‘"‘"' were cut off. Prices nearly doubled and there was serious ccncern o i.‘ supplies. The situalicn was met by an incense in the domestic produc- tion oi cod liver o‘l and the salmon oils fortified by extremely vitamin- rich oils from tuna, shark, and other fish. There is no present con- cern about supplies, and suitable oils can be purchased at from one- quarter to one-third over pie-war prices. h/Fcst of the feeding oil now sold in Panada is vitamin tested and strndafdized, although this is not a legal requirement. Some untested oils offered for sala have been satisfactory while others have been low in vitamin content. Only with a tested and guaranteed oil can the riser be sun. of getting the required viltamins without a wasteful use of oi A labor-atom for fesifing fish oils used for live-stock feeding was re- cently established in Ottawa under thc direction of Science Service. Dominion Department of _Agr.cu1~ ture. Included in New York's Fashion Futures‘ color card are what are designated as "sapphire pastels",- yellow lvfudonna blue, pink and periziu green NORTH WILTSHIRE W. I. The Iliebrttaiw meeting of the I. of North Wiltshire was held a. the home of Mrs. Geo. E. MaicLean form of s. social fifteen members, with an exchange of valenvnes. There wlchr: sent knitted goods to roll call to be from Carnegie Lib- am of contests and M1‘. Ilsle . .. 0min or ieadi w carried out. The meet- jilltyeilsd £$l8lllw‘:l‘€hle;9n)lf. Hzll- ma unsure m.» National w“ fgp]igd_ Anthem. The remainder of the Mr. Ilsley ve a further brenk- ovenuig was spent in dancing and down of est ates but said the a delicious lunch we; served by the Government could not be he'd t0 members. BLANKET! FROM SOCKS Quite warm blankets can be made from men's discarded wcllen socks. Out off the foot lust I50" the heel, cut the leg part up the seam and iay flat. Then over-sew the lock edges until the blanket is the desired siu. Finish the blanket b covering with ut‘lity cloth, b im the edges firmly and oatm- ing t ether hero and there to wcollen lining in place. trol of train movements over l stalled on the Atlantic Regiun of ell that, but the British Imernmerit has ri-und a more useful mull! i of utilising them. Dllllmlnted from s-IIOW DIM". they're ihlly Mo: liersonnel of iiominittee on war Expenditures OTTAWA, March ‘i-(OPL-Steps wwards organization of the War Expenditures Committee, Parlia- ment's new agency for reviewing and checking the vast sums of mon- ey being spent by the defence and other war services are under way. The House of Ccrnmcns after a twp-day debate passed the rcsolu- tion to set up the M-man commit- tee on which. all parties are repre- seated. It was the first time in history liamcnt for the defence servces "pm-ted t" m: "m" ‘serious and for other services directly cun- nected with the war and t0 re- rt, what, if any, economic-s consi- tit with the execution of the policy from infection rif a scalp Fiight-Lirut. Wilson prrciised 1F. rind was a med‘ ul officer effected therein." l h. Members nominated to the com- mittee are: I I St. Antoine-Wcstinount: Peter Ber- covitcir, Moirtrcal-Cartier: J. A. Bradette. Cvchranc: Lionel Chev- rier, Stormount; Hughes Cleaver, _ Halton; A. Fourneir, Hull; R. Glad- stone, Wellington Sutft; Willam Golding, Huron-Perth; R. T. Gra- ham, Swift Current; Ross Gray, Labstone West: C. Macdon- old, Halifax; R. Miiyhciv, Victoria; G. G. McGeer, Vvncouvcr-Burrard; L. P. Picard, Bcilechasse; Vincent Potticr, Shelbirrn-Yarmoulh-Claire; Gofli-n Ross, Moose Jaw; J. H. Sis- sons, Peace Riv-er and J. T. ‘Thor- stm. Selkirk. Consei'vat.ivcs—Peri-y Black, Curn- berlaird; John Dicfenbakcr‘, Lake Centre; Howard Green, Vancouver South; Joseph Harris, Toronto- Dartf‘ vii" 0.0.1". Angus Maolnnis, oouvei" East. pace at which mcdsrn warfare gaidcd as thstinctlv iVii-ilill battle zcne. Herbs Appear Stubborn 'i‘h@ position of Yugoslavia is l’ scum at the moment and have hctii iiidzcaticns from grade the Nazis have nct found 0nd vmh springbnaird for S the Greeks. Yugoslavia is ivere weak and poorly cqihpprd. 1t is not clear" for whether British troops will contended the committee should sit in public as much as posuble they agreed it should sit in camera rather than disclose intimation of value to the cnemv. Mr. Harris h-tperi the Government xvouid give the committee a free hand to dc- cldc whether pubic or private ses- sions siwuld be held. i The Greeks handled by themselves and the iniy airports. Common Policy? l International At A Glance SOFIrL-Germany reported offer- ing Greece and Turkey inducements to cut ties with Britain or suffer Nazi military drive through Bul- garia. toward Aegean Sea. LONDON.—Britnln ships military equipment to Greeks and Turk‘. who mass defensively along Bul- garian frontier opposite more than 150,000 Germans. BELGRADE-Yugoslavia believed troops. Britain has mm in progress since that and, perhaps, forces. . CANADA'S FLOUR MILLS ‘Fheze were 368 Britain seeks to get United States to btfster Y ,, ' against Axis. kiEAIROr-"Briiiszl; oosfliirllrii forcfs or cap ure . a rms n Somnliland campaign and scuttle or’ Canada capture 12 German-Italian shi Mngadiscio and Chisimaio harbors. v01qnny,___500.tm1 NM] gupnly acity Saskatchewan ship sunk by Canadian airman: the, wirhcrlen-ls nor-t of Den Holder is battered; destroyer Dainty lost. of_ the flour number of flour and feed mllfs boo-and Manitoba. _ Provnccs and British than , . - - at first believed; as lic is suffering‘ ‘°“‘“°“‘Ff; re heinz sent to Newfoundland. ___‘_iCoiitii1ued__fifom wpgged ii___ that section cf the Balkans and the fought, Turkey. itself, must be rc- the b. tlicre Bel- c-asy topersuiicie the Serbs to per- mit. thm" ccrintrv tr bectme a sec- operahons the moment assist the Greeks against the Germans. the Italians , flour mills and about to join Axis; Nazi charge that, 925 ‘eed milllfis 1g agar??? 1:94p The flour m a a o a - our ‘""'°"‘“" capacity of oassa barrels. Thirty- Vre of the flour mills, 60 per cent of the feed mills. and 46 per" cent milling capacity in are locat/sd in C-nta" l0. n. m Que-bee ranks second as far as i110 concerned, but in flour milling cap- 15 second t0 Ontario, follnuved by Alter-fa. Que- Thc Maritime Columbia have a small millin"! caparitv. Newsy Notes desert ti of th by Dr? Igguden o MW d,“ merit oi parasites in foxes. '.|. Lionald College, us.» been issued uy W. a’. Swaies ury uurssitoiogy. careful reading ent experimentation has not iui all around viorm remedy. 69D. “Tillnd. in,’ Kitchener before joining the Rig; f decided hi’ "l" Gwmlmml "l" b“ fr", st. Thomas R.C..-\.F. stntin he- jSystem for Moncton MONCTON. N.B._ biarch '7.—(CP Mention and of (ll:>ll'li.)llliilfl uru Control Board, is to be inauguiwic here scoii. i5 will be refill-d by ilic Board New Bvunsivick. iire present syszcnr under which al 1i ivili the Control Boards irzmdle beer in ouairritv for consumption. fem ivili be operated and m lltCii kl-‘i n. (fisiflillllilil: centre. ii i, ARDIAN (Continued frog page é liven hers. we went into the matter more thoroughly because oi our belief that it might bewhet we were looking for in the treat- h! DivLion of Arumai Pathology. Mac- _ has experimented alons the sauiie lines and a brochure 011 the use 0f uhenotninzine in veterin- of it convinces mic writer that tilllilCi- yet been rrratie to cias. it as s success- cel- tarnly iiot tor animals other than The best remedies available for $lpresldent and general Ina“ gillgtiil :1 “gfthflialfiiag glgggsmgvz‘: folxes for round \\0l'nls consist of hagnderigit-Zwelfigf- "l; dislplmilfl‘ governmental expenditures while ‘ ' "‘" ' $iLil)lU‘lllnizeinsiyiiklpi‘iltglllliflitxilzfiftxiuggliltllllin comp COIIOIOGUIIQ-i i _ . f.-.-." movements, tum,“ the svnmhes %wugollff1glgviagdfin which PM“ TREATED BiANTlNG PILOT tfisllgig m). iffillacgiilnfi; and Opera-ii!!! tTB-fi 518111118 by fe- liament checks, up on. government nkhbgdeu; c 5 wqlm Uhenapodium, ‘these g1 course m°i4l “ntml- Mix“ mime“ ‘rams Bkpeflditllrei i5 thrush the Public R3,“.- was [h 586w,- ' “m, u.‘ must be caxeiuliv prepare-ii for‘ 11:0. 0n single ifflvk are B-mmgtd by the Accounts Cnnmittee. but that ccm- 1' ' "fgiewf u diam; |. n u, as titcv are not" ‘illl ‘" "a ' zirrd despatcher witirut having to issue mmee only acts on empEnjiuX-(S niiom , no ‘g , ,§,,'.1,’“ C“ , cannot be u., liiiniu-ti train orders and trains can pass after they have bssn mm.- J ‘gig???’ (fife “rim,” l. '1'," 1.3"," ‘liic use of a owing; iris each other iffefiileclive 01' dirflftlofl The committee's lnstructuins are c ahkfhn 5],.’ }.’,.e,,,.,‘}ck nafimlz‘ iuvrnu of the drug not; sccni to fights. a train in one direction be- “to examine the expenditure dsfray- W3 “M, “golden lnjurm were b6 Imperative to remote the ua ie i118 superior to a train in the op- gd out o; moneys- provided by Pa]; 5 ' ‘ * matter caused by the action of the ) —A new .ystem of st-Liiru beer u. ducts 0f the New Brunsuiok Liquor d Already a \\Cl."Ciii.UL~(‘ is irciirf.’ erected lll Albert Sircct vrliicir and. ‘l understood i at rho ivareiiurise \'\l'i be liic tiistribuiing point tor‘ Eastern and ivzll repnie 1 subtitle. are sliioned from Frederic- i011 _ Aloha with the ivarchoiise will be liiaugtirziicd, it. is understood, new ' lilo iUliplPY stores i-Jlliii A free delivery sys- this in wav the nolicc will he given an ao- Recommend halpI ' Britan gave fhtm was air and sen Mlners t0 be support and a. few troops t-i Sum’ Ineligible MONTREAL, March 7—(OP)-._-. The Quebec Amateur Hockey A4,. sociation tonight decided to recm»; mend to the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association that Glace Bay Miners of the Cape Breton Hcckcy League be declared ineligible for Allan Cup lay giftstild they ivin the OBI-lib. t‘. .10. The QAJ-LA. reached its decision at s. regular meeting after it up- held ihe action of President Nor- man Dawe in voting "no" in l. telegraph vote of thg cAr-LA. imm- bers on the eligibility of Bill Fraser, iii-again, out-again goalie of Min. ers. (Result cif the C.A.H.A. vote was tqdeciare Fraser, who went to Miners from North Sydney Vic- torias. ineligible in inter-provincial Cimf-Yrtltion, but left it to the Mar- itme Amateur Hockey Assfcaffotl tv rule on his right to play in CB. i-LL. finals. The MAHA. decared Fraser lncligblo but allowed Glace Bay's three wins in the best-of- 15 seven fmal series with Sydney Mil- lionaircs to stand.) ‘Transfer of George ‘B211 t; same John Beavers our fcund to be in aPCPT. Bcl! playrd with Verdun Bull-dogs in thc Provincial League last season. If the Greeks, Turks and British have reaxind scme common mil- itrry pslicy—and there have been many indications of that-the ivay is ciear f r British support for the Greeks, not only 1:1 the air but by available in Egypt that could be transported across the Mediterranean without great difficulty. It is significant that cnly fragmentary‘ accounts of the Army of the Nile have been received since the fail -f Berigasi. indicating a general halt has bcen time redistribution of A lovely weddng gciwn shrwn in New Yrk is of white rayon jersey. has long, wide sleeves and a bertha ATHENS-New siritrli in Italian studded with tiny silver discs the shoulder line. The V951 is in F-“Pl """""“"d "IWYW"? GPPPR! un- skirt falling straight frtm shallow Angelica style. also studdcd t/o_“""'"‘¢ ""71"" 15" "I" "flililll ilnnihqefi pleats at the waistline. It match the divas. k-“M "1"" milliTifli i" Al unlu- 4 ' 21v I,“ Fa’ Jr's NEW GUNS FROM QLD-Jllshflcll guns are nice to look at and t shipped to foundries for smelting into new wcaponl. Here's siiew at famous Rotunda Museum at Worlwirh, l-Ziigind, as sever-ll oi’ ihtil‘ number are loaded aboard truck for "last ride". » ' . .. .,_ . .cn to sand liif. cm- vtuute choc‘: 1 Le addresses fl cqlgfgsPein‘c‘a“i J‘ A‘ Malshan’ flirted (‘,Q;1“~_1;\ is-,-@--5u,¢ but ha; \VillI.'i(l_Li_)(‘Fl' i, delivered and iii ‘not ' L -, - _ n t surrendered yer, uuan i res. umi~§§§i1=§s§§§ti‘i5§ gini-QSQITZQ- Nfirthcrn Greece is not an easy in“ 1-5 ‘XPFYM 1° INN i“ gfléi M mi; meg,“ ‘m, chailr- terrain for nreclianized warfare. The PM“ in U"? wlllml 0f l-WOIIERSXHK ma.‘ wmbo ciliogen Sppikmg in me German army has 110i. atpgmptgd Ofoth; Commission products after - - - _ . - - . -- - a re o s. Home vcstsrdav Mir Harris suw- °'l‘°""“?“‘ “P .'““'.‘°‘y in“ i" S n. is illIIIiGCFSIOOd that tire retail 5 ._ _ a mbe ch sen except in Nri bu. tliric the t _n . ifisbtglyglugghowon mlg general popul-rt on did not resist amps, “l lmnmiifllelrdcam 151mm’ ~- '- ' ‘ , ‘,_‘- . . er or sae in m e quaiittas. “though opnosiiign members and the Nurvitgran armed f rice ____i_ t