Jhmnenlgiluriser days. was iii any grass grow under lfegetngQileen Square School vflwm“ leaf“ giagrbiesugglnrgajglalnead . m we ‘pmknrlaveather that was better {flied to football. " lcagllll ll e“ ' me Cit; far more important (than mfg-inning of the games is the upQHGTICC that the you sters- ‘m, majority breaking in the Imp-Will derive from the en- wunters. After all that was the pl! Pl-llilfwbm Fltliixlig etawlyltasatgue ‘ g l 5 C "m" likely that d. to bear fruit. 9K 5K ' Branch Rickey is an amazing man. Here he comes out singing hmgnnas in favor of Happy chandler, the new baseball com- missioner. Now Chandler is every- 1 Rickey is not. They have one thing in common. Neither d thmi drinks. Chandler doesn more. but Rickey can manipulate ‘d!!! "h Churchlllkand as often. gambling and all kinds of bet- flag are anathema to Rickey. chandler likes to bet ‘and Dan Par- ker reveals In his enlfdssing Mir- ror column that he has a few bookmakers as his friends. Chand- ler isn't a heavy bettor, but he is an ostentatious attendant at Ken- mky race_tracks. Rickey we guess ‘jmver toes racin . u Bane writers are beginning to tan some misgivings about this ,I|t¢ll0fl. Thev fear ‘twill be one ‘of those arrv in haste and re- t-at 1eisure" propositions. They m‘ baseball will be circused. that the MacPhall influence will be- rogae too pronouricedak ‘it all remains to be seen ‘game, says Baa O'Mears, how Ohandler will conduct himself. He pay surprise all by changing his port, but aveakdogébt it. Olknbing of! the rubbing table httie dressing room of the Tori- mte Maple Leafs at the Garden recently, Major Conn Bmythe said be was, prepa to fire his last iiockey shots of the 1944-45 N.H,1... season. " H! it! if!‘ "I've been wondering.” he said I ttrdainetrh Archie Campbell com- e ~ he warwound souvenirs, bow much stronger the lciild have been with Apps and ‘hylor working at centre ice in- _ god of KQII*TIGO¥_ aaréd Bodnar.” of l’ e the ‘ ‘just Leafs a _ own conclusion is many the so-callcd esoperts have greatl r-estlmated the teams and th individuals it,» And I've concluded Apps and Taylor couldn't have done any bet- fir, than Kennedy and Bodnar as ‘mire ice mgr, - 3K ‘The game has changed and _I don't think Syl or ‘Billy would have nova any more ninst (lsnsdlens and Red Wings in the playoffs than Ted and Gus." Hay went on to ut that players like Wally Stanowski, Johnny McCreedy and Neil Coi- Yllle.a1l good performers e few ltlrs ago. had difficulty keeping llD with thepresent-day players. this form in DllRd for N.Y hnythe didn't think "Walter (Turk) Brodn could have imurovcd on Frank McCooPs goaltending In "l? sllllllvy Cup playoffs. "Goal- Wllllii." he contended, "has be- ione a much tougher proposition than in the days hen we had lornr Chabot. Geo . I-Iainsworth and Broda around. The new rules ‘lie altered the style oi‘ dBICllSlvc gay, And the game changes have llulllht increased burdens on the “lllls- ilari/icugésrlv the centres. "We've never had a better con.‘ than Kennedy." he added, "and i fllllv 19. He scored 29 goals m us the regular season, seven more in the playoffs. Defensivcly ' llillflll more rugged than either mallghnazllog. a sttrgnf sllrtsiiter e0 pace a ne cr In nor Billy had. W I clearly demon- e playoffs he could under vter and the few games he Ra ers. ‘An firsts: iilimisilmr ‘lllld up _ .. a- hea stronger oppo- .1 d ' ‘It 916 ill. hmgllit know how many oi our g‘ m; Fimv in the services, will . Eh}! come back after the ° or continued. "It's tough road for I'll find Ill’, i ‘will Officer Mathieson, son oi Mathieson Cit . - To in... Dfficc in the league this win- (BY 'l'h C i Baltimore a 02:31:‘: "@5111." m, laume onenlna at Montreal yester- av for 10.000 ,n.s by taking the ball game from the Royals 10-7. Th rds scored all their runs innifles the third and - llmmlns Jacrossmiive . ea Roy, who started for thenltoygdirse, was charged with the loss. Tom Warren, who replaced him. stem- med the tide in the thirdrbut was haefin iglsringva 61$" omffookm, t} Baltimore was chaired from n3: Well-Known British Iiolfcr Dies At 43 IB The Canadian Press) WDL HAMPTON, - England, 8—Dr. Archibald Reid Mac. um. w o played for Great .ain in the Walker Cu olf m . at Chicago in 1 . ied last night. aged s3. He was a native of Edinburgh. . Lucky Number In Bowling Drawing The lucky number in s. swing for a box of chocolates last nigh was _ it was announced. The affair was in aid of a chem lon- shipvbowling team which wii go to oodstock. N.B. for the Mari- time duals. The chocolates are at Jimmy's Shoe Shine Parlor. Dempsey Thrills School In Egypt (By The Associated Pres!) OALRD, Ma 8——Cmdr. Jack Dempee of he Unitod States Coaa guard, former world heavy- weight boxing champion, thrilled two ian grade schools today when e made surprise aDDearan- ccs at their physical education classes and handed out pe l instructions on the art of self de- fence. 0f Doinniissionsr 0f Big League Ball The Associated Pres!) CHI AGO, May 3--'I‘he office of baseball commissioner, located in Chicago’ during the 24-year regime of the late K. M. Landis, will be moved to Cincinnati, commission- Ji-faplll’) Chandler disclosed tod ay. Indicating it may be "longer than‘ expected" before he resigns from the United States Senate, the Kentucky legislator also an- nounced he had framed Leslie M. O'Connor, secretary to Judge Lan- dis, as "special assistant" and aP- pointed Walter W. Mulbry, his senate secretary. as successor to O'Connor. Mulbry will be in charge of the Cincinnati office until Mr. Chand- ler winds up his senate Job. Mr. Chandler said that the state of international affairs might keep him in Washington longer than he e d and ted ut that rem (B a half after his elccflon as com- missioner. He declared he would keep the game “free from race-track gamb- ing or any other kind of gamb- ling." He said he would continue to attend the Kentuc“ Derby. but would not wager. wont . because I have suggested n that players refrain from betting. ____i______i__ ______._._,.i' T115 I key circles a few years back and this writer, a personal friend of the yo pilot officer, hastens to add congratulations to the already lengthy list that he and his bride have received‘. _ Isl nd short followers will be Oflfllzlfl congratulations to Pilot Officer Prank Mathleson on his recent wedding which took in St. Thomas, Ontario, Ill! . Jlld Mrs. Lou ll“.,’.‘,"““‘-‘ll l‘ bill“ player of is; oo- _ln__,lunior ball and Fishing At iiimaiiiiaie an T null"! Pond ll the exc "ulsys of a at Annandale I l" Dublic ia notified that the experimental trout eptlon of Wednesday afternoons and Sat- acii week. By order of TIIElPRINCE EDWARD ISLAND DEPARTMENT Oil‘ AGRICULTURE nisiniiiiln Orijlesv Spoil Onpuening For Royals. By . Jersey City Roebsste IO- 7 Win mound in the-sixth. but John Pod- galny held eff the Eoyals‘ on- slaught for the remainder ‘of the game. At Rochester. the home open was unfortunate down the fore. d, fans. Adrian Zabala, scoring Hie Dlliwncnt; Kemp nicked for nine safeties, the Little Giants sewi a two-run ra y in the fo llo Racing Dn Franco's Most Famed Track OHANQIILY, France, May 3 - (AP) — Racing is on at the tracks in and near Paris-end the betting is heavy — but on France's most famed truck one ponieg nun for es- lcs rec , "life of French ing an hour's ride from Paris, was stri b the Germans. The stn. were torn down for fuel and the ri-mutuel equipment was tom up or scrap metal. " During their occupation of Pram-c, the Germans insisted that racing mntinue to keep the Frenchman's mind off his troubles and also to permit the Germans to get their hands on the seven-per cent wager- inir tax. But now Chantilly harbors hundreds of American soldier; and the famed lint has been turned lyq Dodgers) . BOWLING {fill 3X6 132 - "us _ R. acGuigan . A. Farmer Butler Total-Gm PIN-VBUSTERS: Doucette gm 123 148 148 135 IS’! 3M t‘! P9949?!‘ 1. High single: Pres. Curley, 2S6 Hi h three: ll. Doucette. B30. Po nts: Aces 0. Pin-Busters 5 BOBCATS . McAdam Total-ewe. POLECATS: C. lnclair W. McKenna E. Smith B. McInnls W. Mullins Vuragglllbfit mg single: Bob Bradley! . H h three: Connie LeCIa r. l. Po nts: Bobcats 4%. Pvlmls ‘=- Do-Nuts win from Die Hard: by “willie-so win from H0110"! bl’ dofniilt. Bartolo Favorite For Scrap Tonight gogrori M 3 — (AP) - Hav- ing eompletedaahis first trainlnfl l7 l ht titlilt is 0X- ‘fimrfiirfesl a 2-1 favorite when he attem ts to even his score with Gus (Pe 1) Mell, Montreal glugger, in their return vlo-Tfllllld non-title boxing bout tomorrow night at the Boston Garden. Levoic Wins From IAorin In Fourth MDNGION. N. B». NI! 3 "' (q?) - Itingwise. clever‘ ‘hi! Morin went down before the hard punches of Mom-tows Lennie La- voie here tonight In the fourth round of their scheduled ID-round bout. Lavoie put the Montrealler away for k s after scoring three knockdownsugi the second canto. ' Baseball Results ‘AMERICAN awn NATIONAL asaouss All games postponed. ~ INTERNATIONAL mu sot see sec-re 1s s Mouth-roll‘ O10 N0 Dll— ‘l I4 O Hooks, Podgainy and Devlin: My, Wan-en and Todd. ‘ zsbaiar and McWeeney; Wicker and Martin s a closed area for fishing -__- l; The Canadian Press lven in New York Sunday base- ball was al. Gothamh bail fans st lawful pay-to-get- bali game I night, been . The "18 . Jersey City Wings, ‘I-l, be- his sec- ond victory over Rochester and his fourth straight. yielded" e bt hits. Wic er. was up the verdict with urth ~ "A lot remains to be done but without an shrill-g. glaitgaeigtohaeazi Boston. t1"! Leer. herself a waitress. said young MOmOOI-TII “O COO-Ill» “BIS: Faisal?’ wot‘ licleeseilfllyl Yanks l a. IIADDEIIILLE siiows and rxiiisirioiis g Auslpices Legion and Navy Auxiliaries Red Cros: Corps Wily by New York-Yankees on the eve cf their first long‘ trip of the 1N6‘ lesson. the\ 48-year-old tsdpn .one it in walked his only "l! ’ . aroin .siions 8J1 Kinsmen Club ARMOURY DDII’T niss THE CARNIVAL ' Fliilli gfiiiiiriiii .' By Allan Nielrieeon . Canadian Press Staff Writer ‘IONDON. Avril. 2'1. - (OP)- Tha Kins. Who had-little success - last year. sot away to l“ "I'll flillmllhlls tuia season's aims-fig- rwllfls evened aria tlhe , eve such (plan. ltevgizam‘ Willi: is‘: omen o o t is: i; Eur- one wit-flinch. with?" i TORDNTO, May 2 _ (qp) lllwhhlkers ylasue the bird tour-I ists of Canada is weli u human travellers. “my Onraet. former tra the Great Bear Lake area, sfiflot.‘ a sergeant with tihe. Canadian Army Overseas. tells in hi; rooenmhpuh. fished book “Sixty Below" how a , . hummingbird arrived at the north. Greet cheerful broke out when‘ "fl "W1" 0i the Mackenzie River the Royal oolt,; Rising - l“ ‘w’ ‘wwllls away on a migrating 8-1 shot whose rather is famed 8W“- Tohy shot the goose for air-o rpypaflon; gun,“ home m." food and found that he had also in the 1 1-4 mile Column Stakes killed "he hummingbird Which had w belt the heavy favorite, ford burrowed its ‘way law the feathers e. l", Milford’ a Ho . inguswllw . 1.0M wiwuowfia’ was travellers can fly for- goos These tiny wards. backwards, sideways, or n. They ~'> 55:23“. itéimf". "i. “t. "s. r un re s o rn e5 on ‘thelr lightning rapid wings, but they , rently prefer not to work 11 thAiIispt-amnblfitt “wag within‘: ' You mo ar no (Imflned to hummin lrdys, 5......‘ ever. A pair of roblus built their nest under the air pipes of a can. adian Pacific Railway locomotive at Pcterborough, Ont.. 11st spring. The cnslne was on the move in the freight yards eight hours a day. The birds followed their mobile home about the yards flhlle. the‘ nest was being iirilt and when three eggs were laid In it the loco- motive crew did their switching with Brent oare to avoid breaking them. ‘flhe eggs all hatched safely. The area around Victoria, BC. is the only part of America where the rkylark ls found. The Europe-an sonaater. famous in the ode by Shelley, was introduced there some Rising Light was the King's First runner of the season and provided a contrast _to last year when Bis Majesty's first success came at the last meet in the fail. The colt; enuredi- for we classic 2.000 Guineas, Derby and 5t. lbeger. has Bun Honeiy beaten for pace and stamina rorn the who was unplaced in his only race last season; was a 50-1 shot for Uhe Derby. Capt. Cecil Boyd- Rnchfort. the King's trainer; who saw Rising Light's triumph, said the colt wasa "stayer" and that "it certainly would be wonderful to win the Derby with him this year of all ytars. ‘Henry Cotton, former British Open golf champions a few day With Canada ’s Naturalists . "eve-vow wwea-eoowo-oowwwoore-ooweoowooowooh . much like the horned Canadian! lark, accept mat it lacks the little tufted horns and has a striped breastband. The Russians have provided news for Canadian funnel-s as well as for students of fast-moving cu- rent events. A.1. Olonicilenho, eminent naturalist and horticult- urist, has announced the dflvelgp. merit o! a new species of apple-the Poljarnoe, or Polar apple - which not only has excelex‘ favor and size to its credit, hut can withstand temperatures of 74 below zero. This Phenomenal fruit is also drought- resistant. Canadians in colder par-ca of the Dominion where apples can be grown only with difficulty be- cause of the climate, will be inter- ested in the Russians discovery. A Scottish gardener-scientist in Toronto has kept his taste for sim- pler things ln spite of the fact that he spends his time tending exotic flowers and fruits grown in a big city hothouse. A visitor was amused several months ago when on a tour of the hothouse the old gardener paused in his eulogies of the strange blooms and fr.uits from afar to excl-aim with pleasure at a single dandelion blossom which had pushed its way up through a crack in the fiegstone floor of the building. And do you know that roses and other flowers which close during the night are favorite sleeplnt! ouariere for m-any kinds of ins-eels. The flowers protect them from rain ago played the first if over the Royal Cilnque Ports hampionship Wm!‘ h l y“ ince ue. i a a of dr us’ ‘teeth thro I80 Lbarbxh wire an naine" fieldrtih many ‘explosions 5:11- acr » sea roan n- lierquemareae and the sugegestion was advanced» the‘ ans were Ila stores. The lln are in fair nape al- though bomb. craters, grenade gggggdholéhaxgsnsipuott‘ any tune.“ onl uniforms in evidence at poli- waysjnd greenl_and the Ger tica meetings in the forthcoming mans pmvldedwhne new bunker. Federal and Ontario election cam- wnh Shem 1mm Ion _Nme gun. palgns will he those worn by ser- ‘t C“, on‘ Ne! was" may we” vice candidates or service spectat- cverrirn by the Canadians. ° Cotton said he was looking over the course prior to recon- struction. .He recently went into a golf course ufdhltedtiire busin years ago and apperas to be firrnlv i-hed In appearance it is Army Rules Bar Electionccring OTTAWA, May 3—(CP) — The rs. Under King's regulations no ser-| viceman. other than a candidate. is allowed to address a political; rally. He also may not particlpatc| in an election as an agent or scrutineer for any candidate "or‘ engage in artisan work in co any such election." The regulation also says the servicemun cannot deal any way with party funds. Recently, regulations activities of service candidates were relaxed so that candidates could get leave immediately after dissolution of parliament or legis- lature and at their own discretion, wear uniforms while campaigning. there is noreason ‘why within 1B months the course should not be the best in the world... He said; Eton has its “David and Goliath pair but these twoare friendly. They are Robert Brooks . barely five feet tail, and William Clench, six feet, seven inches, who be partners in the Public Schools rutets chem/trio Brook; iscaptain lawn tennis at Eton second games. captain with Brooks as his second- in-oommand. n- governing of squash and with Clench “Ennis Hearings 0n TaxIngDo-Dperativcs OTTAWA, May 3—Thc Royal Commission on Co-operotives to- day completed hearing of evidence in a four-month investigation of‘ the ositlon of co-o ratlves under present tax legialat on. Proposals for changes in the legislation to more specifically exempt co-operatives from income and excess profits were placed be- fore the Conunisslon at its final hearing by W. C. Good of Brant- ford, Ont, president of the Co- operative Union of Canada. Co-operativcs now are exempt providing not more than 25 per cent of their business is outside their membe ,_. Mr. Good said, able uncertainty about the inter- retation of the law. owever, that there was consider- PO. Bill MCCdAirt of (28 Brrkahfre "Ave.) Toronto vertran of many attacks on Gem-lily l! going back to Can-d" L ailse of e. hockey injury. Tall-gunner of a Halifax squadron helped his team win the distrid‘. ohanrpionsiaip, and was unable to play fllfllll Vancouver Waitress Is Found Murdered (ByoThe Canadian Press) year-old zaetus to tel and v . on (A. rotcction of girls work- ht. shifts. Union offic- ials salrl toda ‘ Mrs. Emily y. ‘ . wt... om . To Rescind Freeze _ girls who come off shifts in early morning hours have ‘Mush off" one man after another on their way home. "We are in favor of a shift that keeps a girl in Jhe cafe in those dangerous hours."- Hawrylulhwas last seen at three ofc i: Wednesday morning shortly er she had let her night - s _lf_f_. Job. Her battered body was found two hours later o1 the beach at English Bay. ._..._____.___ Perfumes have been used ever ainfi? human being! Puiiulated the ea -~. the to OTTAWA, M-lf; 3 - (C?) -'Il1e selective service "freezing" resmo- tion which prevent teachers from leaving their profession except im- der special permit will be rescinded eptembe , Labor Minister Mit- ciiell announced tonight. Mi‘. Mitchell said this was in line with the Federal Government's Policy of discontinuing wartime re- strictions "just as soon as their ' "'“"<i" has disappear“ “ IE 600D T0 YOURSELF and dew rind provide luxurious scented warmth on chilly nights. ‘oifeéi 0n Army Postponemcnts In) Agriculture ' (By The Canadian Tress) OTTAWA. May 3-Labor Minis- ter Mitchell announced tonight that National Selective Service was making a "sample" check a- mong 10 pei" cent of the 160.000 men in agriculture on postpone- ments from military training to work. "It is the intention." said Mr. .Mitchel1. “to see to it that men given postponement of military training for the purnose of "work- ing in agriculture shall work at that industry. While the assist- ance men from the farm have giv- en to other hard-pressed industries during the slack season on the land is much appreciated, it is impossible to let men from the farm leave that industry the year round." Heavy food production i_n Can- ada was even more essential than in the earlier years of the war. The 160.060 voimg farm workers on postponement were a hishly- important section of farm man- power. Dcclarc Kiel Naval Base An Dpcn Dity NEW YOP. . May 3—Tlll‘. German High Command in its daily communique Iirnailcast hours late tonight suiri that the naval base oi‘ Kiel and Flensburg on the Danish hor- dcr had been declared open cities. The communique. reported by the lrderal Communicat- ions commission. virus hrmul- cast over a hook-up oi‘ North German stations still in Ger- man hands. Until today the communique had come from the radio stat- ion of fallen Hamburg. 3 Former Frcncli Premiers Freed PARIS. May 3-—_(AP)-Edouard Herriot, Leon Blum and Paul Rey- naud. all former premiers of France and all just out of Ger- man'intcmment camps, are ex- pected momentarily In France. M. Herriot, expected to arrive first. comes home as a national hero and the welcome his home town of L on is preparing for him may oqua any ovation General Charles de Gauile has received. M. Blum and M. Reynaud return as men who In the past have been blamed in pnrt for France's fall. But they are untainied by any -charges of collaboration and thety o suffered for their oppostlion the Nazis. Their respective partisans arc waiting to greet them warmly and many other Frenchmen may loin in acciaiming them. DUBLIN, May 3 — (CP) -- Sir Valentine Grace. d’! known as the "actor baronet" died in Dublin from compllcat‘ developing from in- uries suffered in a fall from a cycle three weeks ago. He made more than 8120.000 in the stock market before he was 30 and Jben entered the British theatre, play- make sure they were remaining at_ 5 Spe tion Centre. Come and Time-Sill) p.m. V-E DAY- m. Pulls. u. - ______._______ _._. _ canal, and wholly unconfirmed} Stockholm broadcasts recorded by‘ the Federal Communications Com- mission said the Britons had reach- ed Eckenfoerde, on the Kiel Bay i5 miles northwest of the cltyJ Allied commanders wrote off all enemy opposition in the north as the British and the Americans Joined up with the Russians on al solid iii-mile front stretching south-, word from Wismar on the Baltic- - Chaos In Baltic There was chaos in the Baltic as German ships quit Kiel for Oslo and other Norwegian refuges un- der a raking fire from fighter‘ bombers which sank or damaged 64 cargo - sized vessels. Kiel Bay was lighted through the night by burning vessels. and on southeast as far as Luebeck Bri- tish troops with guns ready waited for German troops either swimming or trying to reach shore by boat. A field dispatch said a German Dunkerque was in progress on both the east and wast coasts of Schles- wig-Holstein as the Germans shov- ed off in anything that would float. aipparerrtly heading for a last stand in Norway. The German communique also made an open city of Flensburg at the Danish frontier. indicating that the enemy intended to maae no stand short of the border. Resistance also was breaking up in what is left of the southern re- doubt. with the U. S. 7th Army ham- rtigering 21 miles deep into Austria I IAIDWAY . GAMES of SKILL Gaines of Dhancc BIIISD FIIEE DIIAWIIIDS 15c - ADMISSION — 15c 3 IEIE EIELUETEI cial Bingo SPORTllsl-G CLUB TONIGHT In aid of the Knights of Columbus Recrea- bring a friend- . * , _ Admission doc Do-cnitz Gov’t In Dop-enhagcn? NEW YORK. M1)’ 3 —- (C?) — ‘lhe BBC said tonight that mem- bers of the Doenltz Government were moving to Copenhagen “in- dicating that the Germans intend to set up headquarters there." Quoting its Stockholm reporter, BBC said it had “certain knowledge that Doenltz wag in Copenhagen this afternoon." The broadcast not confirmed elsewhere, was heard by NBC. NEWCASTLE IXB, May 3 — (GP) — A idberal nominating con- vention today chose J.W. Maloney, Newcastle, as candidate for North- umberland in the federal election June l1. Other names placed in nomination were those of John P. Barry. Chalham. and John P. Mor- rlssy. Mr Maloney iv-is on ‘unsuc- slessfiil candidate in the last elec- ton. CEILING ON GRAPES OTTAWA May Zi-(CN-Eflcot- ive May 4. the wholesale ceiling price on imported grapes will be 28 cents a pound plus trans orta- tion costs. the Prces Boar an- nounced tonight. A, A. Shelly, director of retail and wholesale foods for the Board, said in a statement retailers would be limited to their usual mark-ups over this price. within seven miles of the big communications centre of Linz. Only enemy oDlJositfon reported anywhere on the front of the West- ern Allies was deep ln the Alps, vrhere the U. S. 7th Army ran in- to German soldiers defending a pass five miles west of Innsbruck m ‘m 3'95 Sllllpvsedly swept clean of opposition by German uncon. dltionai surrender to Allied armies in Italy Wednesday. noawrrz RUMORED . _.. .-)-_~,-_ (Contlnu d p; ‘Illie ohief eobstaglzsl Stiagrfdilig in D5 W o have be" slfimsthened in recent months bl’ (Hillel delivery of weapons and ES. suppl swckhw“ heard Yleflotiations "i'°..-‘.‘.‘...'Z.'.‘1“‘;.°."...'°..°""* “you without bloodshed. e om” Na?“ Amid the ‘ ' Admiral Doenltz’ ‘Bietitrliltflgg wa 1 ’ believe ihft gggigigarlgenggllilg its: fu a u a Blue»- ier w n g Nuzi ieradgs-gffrliarfilcrgr gloseislsehlgr °°"l"8~ Rlllbevtron. Ley. None of lhem- apparently, was with Doen_ itz in his flight m 3.3mm,“ and Kiel. Britons were intrigued with the possibility of capturing m“; Haw Haw-William Joyce _ [hg renegade Briton. who was broad. casting for the Nazis at Hamburg up to two day; 33m TREME-NDOUS- . ._.g<>aunu<u. 1:_~m.a=a= i» German Fuehrer. doesn't alter his orders to enemy units to keep fighting. the Germans would hold out in the ports. Northwest of Oldenburg, 25 miles south of Wilhelmshaven, the Armored Division Canadian completed the encirclement I I urnn struck northeast from the Lake in an eight-mile advance to cu-t the Oldenburg-Wilhelmshaven railway. In the iznden sector, tho can. adian 3rd Dlvteion w“ meeting stiff resistance in Oldersum, four miles from Ehnden. but this was the only real opposition along the en- tire Canadian Army front t ifcglandlront. there was [Elli FOR AT MORELL CHOICE LOW-S ii ing opposite Lily Lengtry. giilfiltflllfilélléllél .1 E El IE I i- i i LONDON (CP) British scientists have discovred a “sel- ective" weed-killer wh they say, will greatly reduce costs and in- crease yields of food crops It kills weeds while preserving crop; and BDJSS . n o e nu of food for starving Holiandcrs were dumped in no-marfs land near German lines by Canadian and British Army Service Corps units. ‘Food movements were golnIZ ~ smoothly. with no incidents rlpoied ______.__._.._._- s --- s SHOE REPAIR SHOP OPEN F rom t. hl h class work call at oanpllTllniElvsg SHOE nnram SHOP, next to Proud d: llloreslrlei. R. GAUTHIER. Proprietor. I will sell on Wednesday, May 9th at 2 p.m. the pro- perty of A. R- Wise, siiuai~ ed at corner of Elm Ave and Bayfield SI. Store and dwelling combined. J. S. BIGGAR. Auctioneer §§Q§-§§O§§&O-O4§Q 044-00404 O Attention Horsemen Zwischenahner Lake and a calm l Si. Sylvester will stand lfor present season at the farm of Lee Essery & Son, Union Road, Charlottetown- .-aAA§O—OO4~O-O-O-O-§-O EEEEutoEaiIair-JuJioLonrororoE-JraiaimaiEIeiIQ u SALE HOTEL STABLES ET WORK HORSES (Young and Quiet) GORDON WRIGHT car-natal