MAXIMS 017A MERE MAN ii on Ibc pint." ll a good MAXIMS 07A MERE MAN vulva...“ Read by Everlfbod)’ c "i v __ Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew ~=~-~~ Carrion“ - .332. "c-‘M’ w" QWN» CANADA. TUESDAY. APRIL 14. 1942 8 PA0E$ a. $2.111‘. S".'f'25!.‘3'.°.“. .€’.I.'£I';'.2..2?.;“.°... us. a... jrronr nails TURN PRESSURE on vicn Y REGIME Wei-many, Italy And France Are Raided Germ??? Seek MIL Introduce Curfew Law For Ch’town *- Ilotice of_ Motion given l1 meeting Health Commit- ‘t C1116 Named; 131111961 Snecia l Session Later Week. Klnnon gave no- Wlcnfhgllgnnlicriie regular meet- u“ '1, m, guy Council‘ last night. {Igmohe would introduce a. Ivy-law esiabllsliinu the (‘urfew lair ‘l: “ ioitetonn. The by-lavr wll mm m M, a special mcetinz milfclkyuyioliabli" be hold toward ‘hmmvay part of this week. ‘hfchafriiiiars discussed at. a 11,‘. dlfill! ol the Council ln- ‘inld. (i. nnpoililmellb of a ‘Civ- Clliiea-Vh Cflflmilige: the proposfl k. barter street lights in the a111,“; reillflll of the Oil-Y? 1119 "in ofliirrzlnscd salary for the £31,‘ Accountant and the cost-of- m-uir bcnus for civic employees. y“ l2 IIOIIN‘ cf iilotlllll 101" rcrliirlioii of the bv-lliv" to .1) m’! Cciiii. llfarKiiirion said $11811 5 _ ‘:1 murm- which ls not only ..s COIlllt'lI'-w' bn iiiess but also the biis ess of our Wurches. lhe Chil- drrlfs Aid S"i‘lr“i\'. our Community no. pl. 1 when juveniles “rim 11c sCCn oil r l‘ streets 24 hours our of the ilav. He went on lav “I110 plico for these chlldmn after iifno o'clock stc-nlghbls def-' Iiiiteli’ iii the home." Contrary to lhls lhrv are fciiiid any 110111‘ 01 1116 nizli! "ill the (lion doorways or on Ili~ strrci Cfli'1‘I'l‘.‘=." CJllll. IlarKiiiiion said "the re- ilrlr: ii. of liic homo Pave nbsclutc- Ir lallcd flllfl the only home they mm to kllflll‘ i< on the street." Con- 111111111211!‘ (1C(‘11~'ll'f‘d. “For the pro- _ lotion of 111i"? ilivciiilc<, who def- Iniiclv are iioi. itsiioiisible. some pro- azlc whereby the - r0 placed on lhe (Continued 0n page S, Col 0 Islander 11.5 Wireless Air llunners Class MONTFFAL, April lfl-JCPL-Slg Caiiiidliiii pirvlnrcs were repre- "lllffl ii<_ ivrll as Nzuvfrun-‘lnnd, Great Britain and the United , iilmn wings were presented 1 ‘"1’ l" a violin oi air obser- lvlrliirl wircIr-ss air gunners irrad- M11111: frriii f-llc No. 9 Bombing ll (‘rniiiicijv _SI‘llflO' M, Mont Jolt, QIIIPCII “its disclosed hero today. d“ I.‘ Ili-utli of Viiiicorci- loo the llll‘ Il1>‘~l‘l‘\'nl'5 ‘lrhllc Class H‘ W- ‘lllill: Maui-ass rlii- flllllllfifg mmmdlf I; - I Mclnns of 011* . "llillos iiir-Inilo"; lvir-less _ ‘r: Jcs- ' Fin era; Gren- Q . Jolm. -f"lllii: Earle Brynn. Dart- blfllllvii‘ McPhce. Sgdiicy. l'..’i\\'ill‘(1 I5'{|nd; Frank niiicrslde; Lloyd Will‘am5 \'t‘l‘S New Buiinsivick: 11. \.V0ii(lsmck, ' A.E, Taylor, shub. In thln column cr 50rd “Talkies-Monte. --____ sue Saturday. . 4-14-31. hgtmllflrlainment Mt. Stewart fid- dlglllltre Dame Alumnae Rumma ll? "nu __" Bkhows 11g orders all this month for t“ usual". aiarmrnr- . ur e559)’. York. L-12ll-4-7-14-21, __.._ “come w the 11,, Lo‘ Roomflesn Supper in i ~ - . Tu i “'11- Oiilv as cents. ammo-fill“ "Notice taper 1105011193811, 1:211; n1?! m‘ G" c- 5111611. Emerald. L-lfl-I-l-ll. ____ Mlllbd feed: 0f Ill Wheel. oat-s. flour. ln stock all the time. Q. C. Green. Emerald. L-IOB-l-S-Sl. our", and ————-_ puny “an llglllmmelcphtctnl sale - my a ernoon. e‘ "111 Bdmlsslon 25 cenlai-I "Nana _ Ho Kan, Hero x $1,144.‘! Pall)” u Chinese qlllrlermasfer the British ship Empress of Japan, llo Kan has rrcelvcd the Bi-lflgh aboard 5111111112 medal for remaining ‘he W119" 111101181: severe bombing attacks. Gorregidor Fights‘ haclrrrrmr“ WASHINGTON. Aiprfl 13-—(AP1- BEIEQBIIENEI Ccrrcglclor lashed out: today with new blows against. the Invaders of the, Philippines, sink- ing a. medium-sized Japanese drip, raking tank and truck columns tn Bataan with shell fire and smash- ing B, fleet; of small boats. The War Department reported the developments in commurilques vrfiich tcld also of a, raid by Amer- icaii-Filipino patrols more than 600 miles to ilie south on the Island of Mindanao. Eight ware- licuses stored with food were bum- ed However, the Ccrregidor strong- hold and other ports guarding the entrance no Manila Buy were be- in-g pounded by bcmbs and _sliells of sieze Runs. although an-ti-aiiwrafi. fire forced the Iccinbrrs to fly at high altitude, ‘ The ship sunk by Ccrregidorls dials was clf the Bataan coast and a War Department spckcsnian said It was presumed to be inside Manila Bey. Two Canadian Airmen honored LONDON, April ill-ICIP Cable) _.g,3|_ 1.111 Diiguld Mcl..:aii._2l, of Piiiicc Rupert, 8.0., and F11. 581-» Jack smooch Banks, 25, of Tor- brcck MLiics, N.S.. have been a- wardrd Lhc Uisiingu 11.1051 Flyllifl Medal for heroic dcvoaicn to duty on bcm-biiig raids over enemy-oc- cupied country _ and Germany. cbeaii. a pilofywas citw for reliability and persistence. 1101-11 111 attacking and obtaining how- graplis of bamib damage. Bari a was decorated for OUIEiI-Rndlllg work as from. gunner on a low-level bomb- er attack on swig/ital alrdrolne. His citation said 01161111110084! IIOWD in attacks on Berlin, Kiel. Mannheim, Brest, Wllhelmahaven, and other cirong-dedendlrig tar- gets, on one occasion was 011118110 1n a heavy anti-aircraft. barrage over “--‘ He managed to elude the nound flrc alter 20 minutes but promptly returned to take photographs the damage his bombs had done. Banks, an air gunner and veteran 0d 31 corllea against enemy-occu- pied territory, "coolly mob-down" a. Domler 21'! from close range while qppffiflfhlllfl the Nazi alr- drome st Bchlpcl [:1 Holland. The clfnt-fon added that: "during the bcmblng run, hfr aircraft was held In ccarchlighta but. by accurate flre Banks extinguished two lights. AI the some time he warned his 9110f. whlfwaa blinded by the glue. of the danger of colliding with a hangar." War--25 Years Ago Today (l! ‘rho Kai’... Pm!) Glcuoec er Castle. fill-roe offer to Russia. Brlilsh oc- cupied vlllogq northwecl. of Mm. FWar Situation Lasl Night .l (By KIRK! L. SIMPSON, Associated Press War Analyst) Japanese moves in the Philippines and Indian Ocean ‘are chap- lng f0 a definite pattern. They fv-eshadow clearly coming blow: at lndfa. while a Pacific holding front, hinged on island bases from the coast of Japan to that 0f Australia. wards off intervention by the United Slates fleel. Prime Minister Churchill has disclosed that British planes had npoffed three or more Japanese bnflleshlps, flvc plane carriers and many llghf craft In the Bay of Bengal. He gave no indication of Bri- tlsh naval strength there but. loss of two heavy cruisers and a small plane carrier bu already gravely reduced if. - a . o The Japanese force represents virtually half of Japan's known plane carrier fleet and at least a fourth and perhaps even a third of her battleship strength. It. means that Japan's sea-air forces an her Pacific flank, from Japan Itself lo the Solomons off Australia's east coast. have been dangerously scaled down. An rmashing American naval and alr blow at Japanese opportunity for a communication lilies In the China Sea would be clearly indicated but for two circum- stances. - Onc ls the bulwark of Japanese Island bases for airplane; and submarines along the Pacific flank. They cover every approach from f-he Paclflc to the China Sea, including all routes through Interior wafers of the Philippine Archipelago. The other American naval handicap on which Tokyo's warlords "Yllillllblefll? 8TB cflllnllng is the fact that exec-pf. for rfiving task forces, United States seapower In the Pnclflc Is necessarily disposed to safe- guard supply routes to Australia. Even ll Japan's main battle fleet has been reduced to the extent indicated, there seems little prospect that American sea forces can be spared from convoy duty to seek it out. for decisive action. 0 o Japanese concentration of power in the Indian ‘Ocean. however. does strongly Intimate that. any immediate attempt. to. invade Aus- lrulla fa improbable. Gen. MacArthur seems certain to be granted additional time for mobilisation, training and equipment of his Aus- traflumAmerlcan armies for offensive as well as defensive operations. There l: every reason, however, to expect and hoipc for a stepping- up f blows at Japanese island outposts by ‘ ces and an Increase also ln erican naval task 2c:- submarlne raiding In Japanese wafers. Presumably ll. was to guard against Just that that the Japa- Jiqhli-Goh ' 4R? lllwlfdll of arm... peninsula on Luzon was complete. A map of the Philippines wlll reveal at once the high strategic value of the big island 3'15 miles south of Luzon. If dominates both Surlgao and San Bernardfrin Straits, the only two passages from the Pacific Into the China Sea through Philippine inferior waters. India In Deadly Peril From Japs Strong Enemy-I-T-Ieet operating in Bay of Bengal; Churchill fills in details of loss of British‘ Cruisers and Aircraft Carrier. (By Drew Middleton, Assoclaled Press Sh" Wlllel‘) LONDON. April l3—IAP)—At least three Japanese llflltleiihliis. flve aircraft carriers, a number of’ heavy and light cruisers and several flo- llllas of destroyers are in the Bay of Bengal, Prime Minister Churchill fold tho House of Commons today ln a report which made clear the deadly perll of India. London observers predicted that. this fleet. soon would support an invasion, probably by fhc Japanese lroppa now smashing at. the British- Chlncse defences in Burma. Disclosure of the opcratloils of the Japantse naval force off India and Ceylon, in strength far greater than had been Ellfissed. 0111111! 111 tile Prime Minister's discussion 0f the loss last. week of the British cruisers Dorsecshlre and Corn- wall and the aircraft carrier Her- nies—all victims of planes from the Japanese carriers. One of the Japanese battleships is a lfi-lnch-guii vessel 0f the modernized NaBaW c1855. 33.729 tons. Mr. Churchill disclosed. Brlbish planes which sped out. grom ceylon during the Japanese ah‘ raid on Colombo April 5 were unable to find the Japanese fleet because of thunderstorm and bad visibility. he said. When the Japanese four days later struck cl; the Brll-lsh 1181411 base of Trtncomalce, every British (ighser, bomber and torpedo P111119 o! available roared Into battle, but near misses on one Japanese car- rier conatllutcd the only $111315“?! I the nemy ee. 9 1211:; Eng/Rater stifled, and added these bitter facts:- flog" Plano Loner "But whether any damllKt ‘W! done I have" no knowledfe- P114" tlcally all our aircraft taking part tn the attack (on the fleet) were mocked out. or seriously damafled. or became unservlceable." m. Churchill noted that 11w Japanese raider; suffered hesvl! aircraft looser at both 0010111110 and Trfcomalee. but announced that British plane losses. 111011811 less. were serious and that demise also was done to shore 115051711511‘ mcnlo and litpc in harbor. ' "The naval operations were uri- der command of Admlrlil 311 James Bolhervllle. an officer who m, for me pm. iwo will‘: 11111 11"" engaged In the western Media-r- ‘ rancan and has also unrivalled ex- perience cf the conditions of mod- ern naval-war!" gal Mr. 0111151111- (Continued “ea mp I. vol ll Ilepcrt Bomber Is missing MONTREAL. April 13-—(CP) - The Royal Afr Force ferrv com- mand announced today that a “Lockheed Hudson on delivery to the United Kingdom is missing.“ The ferry command announce- ment added that the crew cin- slsta of Richard G. Miller, Mont.- peller, ohio. Captain of the plane- F20. Willlrm Murray, R.A.F. o Edinburgh. Scotland. Navigator; and Nathan Frenkelson of Wuldron Sask, Radio Operator. DIES 0F BURNS FREDERICTON. April 13-(0?) -—lvlrs. Charles Sculllon, an died In hospital today of burns suffered Jan 8 when she rescued her three- nionths-cld baby from nei- burning home at McAdam. The child cs- capod_v_z_lfih__s_llght burns. ‘ flnencflflltfiilwirlooliflllvfi-f Urges “Yes” Vote HON. J. E. MICI-IAUD EDMUNSTON. N. B., A ri __ (CP) —— Fisheries Minislci" lb/liblilgud who arrived home yesterday m uygé a. “yes” vote in his coiismuency of ResLIgouchc-Madawuska on plcbis. d“? day. has seiii a circular lei-fer to voters iii the COHSIILUGIICY. ‘Today danger threatens us from _th.e east and from the west," he said in the letter. “Every Canadian must. now fight; for the defence of Can- ada, and the fate of Canada do. pends on the effort. made by Can- adians and bv Canada's Allies and on nofhlng else." Four Enemy Ahead In Burma. NEW DELHI. April 13-40?) — Four Japanese columns smashed at. the British lines iii Burma coda-Y- struggllng to bleak the Allied Armies and secure the ulcstern Jail- anese flank there Li‘ a 11055111111 descent into the Ganges Basin of India before the Monsoon Season starts in May. A Burma frunls communique said one Japanese column was report- ed advancing up the main road from Slnba-unq-Wc. 70 1111165 110N111 of Prime and 55 miles below the Yenaiigviiuniz oil fields. A small oilfield west of Allanmyo was believed to be Rlfflldv in Jav- aiiese hands, but the British forces remained between the 011116111111 011 fields and the Japanese main body. The British troops were describ- ed as holding one Japanese column which was "pressing hard" at Tuungdiviiirzyi, but theze ivere two cfher enmiy concentrations farth- er west, raising the possibility of another of the familiar enveloping manoeuvres or the invaders. the eastern end cf the line. the Chinese reported they were holding their ground along the Sitlzang River 30 miles north of Touiigoo. despite a Japanese attack sllppTffed by planes and arfil‘cr,v. It was (llscloscd that. C5811. Clllllfliz Kai-Slick had returned to Chung- ktiig after a four-day visit at the Burma Trent, conferring with the British and American commanders, Gen. Sli Harold Alexander and LL-Gcn. James W. Stllwell. Canadian Soldiers Receive Much Mail OTTAWA. April 13 -(CPI— On the average, Canadian soldiers, sall- ors and airmen serving overseas re- ceive somewhere in the neighbor- fiood of l0 letters a month, not to speak of piles of parcels and news- papers from home. figures rel f by the post office department; in- dfcabed today. During March approximately l.- 431550 letters, 1.101.510 pounds of ordinary parcel post, 344.736 pounds of tobacco parcels and 215,000 pounds of printed matter, mostly newspapers vivre dcspatched through the base post office to the forces abroad. The letter mall worked out. at a- bout: 357190 letters a week or 46.568 a day. Assuming there are some- thing over 100,000 men overseas the average letter mall per man each month works out around 10 letters. Quality Guaranteed LAIIA" TEA. Ilir operations Most violent in. Recent months Report Of Damage In. Far-Flung Raids Is Incomplete. LONDON. Apri‘. l3~<CP)— In one of the most prolonged and viol- cm aerial oliensives of recent months, the Royal Afr Fcrce stzuck in uncouiifcd numbers today at Nazi-occupied France iollowmg upon dusk-to-dawn bombing raids ‘from Turin in Italy no the German war plants in the industrial Ruhr. For their part. the Germans slruck back tonight, their planes crossing the eastern and north- eastrn coasts, Nazi bombs were reported dropped in four districts including one in the north Mid- lands. persons were killed and considerable damage resulted from an on one east. coast; town. The English coast. vibrated dur- ing the affencon with the high drumming of fighter Diaries cross- ing the channel tcward France against only weak enemy opposi- tlon, and lncunplete official 1n. formation indicated that a grear pattern of destruction had been spread overnight. The afternoon raiders made a “large-scale sweep" ovcr northern France and shot down one of the few enemy planes encountered. In that period, l0 British bomb. 81s and a British fighter plane were lost thus indicating the scope of operations, but a‘l went: down over Germany. France and the low countries: not; one fell the believed pfOpefl/Y attack LSOO-n-ille round-trip R§I1IIIIZBQBIIIST Italy. y. one oi munitions works was hit. In the Ruhr, the KNIDIJS Muni- tions Works at Essen was a mgjgr target. In a. Wide area 0f German- lield territory _ellemy airdromes, decks mid the like were pounded. Alflllflfifi Germany the primary Oblecllve was again to choke the German military supply 111195 m tlicv Russian fnnt, to destroy the equipment of many divisions before 1t. could be sent frnn the factories. .Tlie Italian liigli command ac- knowledxzed that "several localities m nowlicrn Italy" Iiad been at. tacked. but assened there had been no damage of consequence. The Germans. admitting raid; on west and northwest Germany and over the Norwegian ciasf: as well. as usual minimized their af- fects. 322 Nazi Planes Destroyed by Soviets in week MOSCOW, Aprll13-(AI')— Destruction of’ 322 Gemmn planes In the last week. bring- ing the total since March ll to 1,203, was announced tonight by the Soviet lnfomiafion bur- cau. The midnight communique also reported capture of "a lo- cality cf great importance on the northwestern front" in one nf several continuing Red Army offenslvcs which have regain- ed some popular‘ d places. Lllwflim of the Important 5110f was not disclosed. A spec- ial announcement over the Moscow radio said 9.000 Ger- man soldiers had been killed and 76 tanks destroyed on fhaf front between April I and l0. The s cclal announcement also sat '16 German tanks were destroyed. The regular mldnlghf com- munique said. "during April l3 our troops waged offensive buf- tle on several fronts and occu- pied some populafed places.” If said eight German planes were ahnf down In alr combat Sunday. with three Rusalln planes lost. German transport was sunk In the Barents Sea on Sunday, fl added. 3 Pilots Killed In Plane Crashes RONTO, April l3 - (CP) - Two British and a Royal Canadian Air Force pilot were killed today in three separate plane crashes In On- withheld pending notification of next-of-kln. A Canadian pilot training at No. l6 Service Flying ‘rraining school at l-Iagersvllle died In the cram of his Avro-Anson bombing plane iii a He'd sfx miles south of Slmcoc. The nlanc was about 30 miles from its ‘use. The other pilots killed were a naval airman of the fleet. air arm In trainiri" at. Norman Rogers alr- porl. near Kingston. whose trainer pliimmelkd Into Lake Ontario l4 whoa plane was seen to sbout 20 miles from Midland. To Secu Before re Rear Drive Berne reports travel suspended across line between occupied and unoccupied France. By Thomas F. Iluwkins Associated Press Staff Writer BERNE, Switzerland. April i5 — (AP)—'I'he Germans turned on new pressure tonic-lii iii seeking u- plo- mole greater collaboration beiwcen France and the axis before a threat- ened allied invasion of occupied FllYOp.“ lnalcrizilizcs. Gennaii occupation authorities" were reported to have ordered sus- pension of travel over the rlnniirka- Lion line, separating occupied from unoccupied France, a ninrndxiu-i us- iially i . rvcd for igcriocls of tciise negotiati is. Laval Still Acflve Pivot man on the pro-axis ieaiii was again collaboralfioiiist Pierr: La- val, former vice premier of the Vichy government. who was report- ed to have conferred three llmCS since Saturday with Marshal Petain. German dispatches said Laval was renewing his attempts to gel back into the Vichy cabinet. pos- sibly as foreign minister. after 11-." had encountered stubborn refusal from the need Marshal in his first try earlv this month. The Germans, on the basis of Berlin dispatches, recruited Nazi- iniiided French editors in Paris to promote the campaign for renewed collaboration with Germany. Ger- man ambassador Of-to Abetz was today Would Prefect Rear (Continued on page 3, Col 61 Sgt. K. L. Hardy Killed in action, Sister informed Mrs. Kenneth Cullbecl-r of Sher- brooke received the sad news by cable that her brothel" Sergeant Keith Lockliari Hardy is reported killed. Tile cable read "Deeply regret b0 inform you Lliai your brother Ser- geant. Keith LOCRIIHFL Hardy is re- ported to have lost his life 10.30 p. m. on April 5th al Luqua, Malta. believed in action. 'I\ie diet Coun- cg expresses their profound sympa- t y? The late Sergeant Hardy is a son of the iaie air. and Mrs. Fred Hardy, Keiisiiigton. He was in the employ of Pratt's Siore ai Bloom- field. Prince County before he on- Iisted and was held lii high regard. ‘He went. overseas with lhf‘ R. C. A. F‘. in Julie 19-11 i d transferred to the RAF. as \v"c1c.<.s operator and gunner. Muc sylmpnlhyr is ex- tended in sister and relatives iii their bercn\'enieiil..--S. Hug; gunnery School planned HALIFAX. April l3 —(CPI -—De— fence Minister Rnlstoii announced al; a press conference hero ‘tonight that work on a Iiiige establishment to house a coastal defence and an- ti-aircraft. gunnery school lvullld begin at: once a: iioarhv D_l“llll. ‘.1111 111"’ expressed the hope than n school for advanced biitile ifdllllln.’ of Canadian troop. would soon b.’ operating “somewhere In the we... " The Dartmouth venture. lie said. would be the only one of its uliul In the Dominion and would be large enough w handle more than ‘i000 sludenls at. a timc. There $Cl(1'.‘l'n' would be trained for the lmporranl. task of kecnincr iriiiird along Cm- ada's exposed coast. lines. Drawn from all parispf Canada the men who vn'l1 be trained In inl= new school are already being school- ed here. but. file new bulldinq will both centralize their activities rmc serve as living quarters the mllilsfer tario. Names of the victims were s Referring Io the duties of the coastal defenders. Col. Ralslon sail‘. their work w»; “niagiilflcenffi but lamenlcci the fnri Ihev receiver so little credit for their activities “They are the forgotten men of our war effort," he said. (‘h’Town Woman Attends Meeting TORONTO. April l3 —fCPl~ K- mlles west of Kingslon. and a Brit- M. Walker of Fredericton and Mary Lsh airman from Camp Borden McDonald of Charlottetown aim n- crash mong those who attend-ed a meet- through the ice of Georgian Bay lng here Ilils weekend of thr- Ca- nadian Physiotherapy Association. n International At A Glance ‘INDIA -_Japanesc mass big naval force_in Bay of Bengal in llosition to lIlVflfIc India, 13111U11‘§—Japs progress against “"1151! 118M while Chinese left holds on "Sittang River, PHlLlPPINES-Curregidor hack Japs. communication (ebu remains out. bcaf-l with AUSTRALIA - Renewed aerial assualfs batter Jail-held Rnbaul. BIIITAIN -— If. A. F. smashes 35m" 31 991111119111. Germans raid England. RUSSIA — Soviet warns Japan against breaking nculralily agree- Illfflll; announces new aerial suc- cesses, land victory, Says Il.=A.F. has Nazi Ilir Force said t3 havie hold a long conformer A)“, » 1§§F,T.1..Y_ w . Laval. Parlsanrbon. - - -~ ‘ fififii’,fi.ffgfl,égti~wrs-rcporiekd on a Vliglf in Berlin LONDON, April l3—(CP)- The German air force is on the defence in every theatre of ivur and now has about 4,000 first-line planes, the Dally Ex- press alr reporter", Basil (jar- dew. wrote today. He said his estimate of Gr-rmanys air strength came from a “re- lklblc neutral source." Ilc said the R. A. F, raided the Ruhr, northern l-‘rance and Italy Sunday night, but the Germans "did not send one plane to raid our shores." From Bordeaux t0 northern Norway on the uleslcrn front the Germans have a few more than 1,000 planes, including strong fighter groups In France. Belgium and Holland, the reporter said. llulf of the German air force, lic said, II based on llu~ Russian front. Ill-tween 700 and 800 German planes were said to be In use against Malta and in North Africa. Lined up against the Luft- waffe, the reporter wrote, are Russia's armada, the largest R. A. F. fighter force in his- tory and a huge R. A. 7 bomber fleet. Reports Mussolini In “Prostration” LONDON. 5.517s _ to Pl Special COl'|‘(‘Sl)0ll(l(‘lll of Llic Daily Mail on the Italian frontier cabled today that Mussolini was llllllllfllflt suite of “coiiiplcic “Sll'£lLlOll' when examined by a s]: list. v The dispatch said: "Duiiiiu the iii- iervleul I1 Diicc sobberl liiticrlv, llioii burst into liystcrical laiiuhlei". The specialist said Mussolini had lost .111 control of himself and no 1011201‘ was able Lo manage his affairs as dictator of Italy. which iiow arc re- ported in a chaotic condition.“ (in Man Wllo Snfisrirs HIMSELF SELDQM Safisrizs ofrnzas High tide this m0fnlllg at 10 Ind tonight at. 11,33. sun sets this evening al 6.43 and 1-15."; tomorrow morifiniz at 5.18 New moon April l5, 9.33 am. Bummersido tdo 1B minutes lai- er than Charlottetown. BOBDEN .- CAPE TORMIINTINI SERVICE leave Bordm 9.25 AM. 1.00 PM. Leave Cape Tormenflno 11.00 A.M 3.20 PM