>"%I/ .. The People's Paper Covers Prince Edward island Like the Dew .,.,,._---"‘ That which cannot shared can never be fully possessed. MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN be frat-iv e we Guardian, Two (lento, -fi2mruu. Founded run 7' FAS Anti-aircraft Fire ‘In London Area British cause heavy damage. in raid on Nazi naval base. Beaverbrook llay take Shipping llllsi LONDON. March 12 -— (UP mm - 'i‘lie parliamentary ’ Mby correspondent of tho . y,“ Association, discusln vernment changes “which are . g talked about in the smok- ' rooms of Westminster,” Hid tonight there is a. rumor ' um Lord Beaverbrook may hie over thc shipping rnlnist ,1 ‘In the near future." lie offered "for what It is worth" the report that Lord , Betverlrrookfis successor as min- ister- of aircraft production Jrorild be LL-Col. J. Moore- Bnbuon who would be replac- ' edls lilinlster of Transport by Col. J. J. Llcwellin. parliamen- tuy secretary to the minlst , ‘ol aircraft production. lie added: "Alternately some think Col. Llcwellin might take lull charge of aircraft produc- ‘tlon ii Lord Bcaverhrook left." Rumors of impending changes 1 nose primarily out of reports ‘ tint Ronald Crass. shinning ‘ minister. may be appointed f, high commissioner to Australia, in the same way that his col- league, hfztlcolm MacDonald. former minister of health. has _ been lppointcd high commis- rloner to Canada Heavy B.A.F. llaids on Rhodes OAIRD. Erzrpt. March 12-bit?) 419th’ R n1 Air Force raids on lire Italian-fortified island oi Rhodes iit the entrance to the ‘llftlftn Sea were declared official- iY today to have been carried out Kirghiz! sy and ‘Ihiesday L"! night, it was stated. large llruwere set on the airports at itflritzo mid Cnlato and consider- ‘bii lllllllllsc done to enemy nir- RIB-it on ili ‘birnd. " Alarge quan- iiiloi ilrfllflv bombs" was dropped, ltornmrmique sold. Similar rcsrrli-s were till‘ the Monday night m} . ooivbrrroy SATISFACTORY ifONCTON. N. 8., March l2- iilPl-Tlre condition of AC. L. J “Mil”. Quebec City. who suf- lmd heul injuries when struck . u“ ‘lllltl 0f a plane Saturday, m lrllortttl satisfactory tonight. llaninn for report-ed d. ' provide Eire Post? “granary/r. March l2—(CP>—-'I‘ire w“ Elfllllltz Citizen said today llalllt 0f Hon. Dr. R. J. Mair- w- °rm(‘\‘_COll§Cl'Vflti\'0 leader. is .11 nreritroncd as a possibility m" Appointment of Canadian Oon-rnrlssioner to Eire. Coming Events In "0" , ' for Nollc s In this column 3 cents per word. "fillies-sound Thursday. n-rvv-a-rr-ar. ‘mini?! - Montague Thursday. L-477-8-1l-3l. "(Mr Sale r aid All r r. ‘may afterriloon, Holding}: e y’ L-487-3-l2-4i. , . i ‘Uni ‘nudging vfiliigatnut coal at L-EOX-S-li-Bi. I ogs at Albany every m Mballl‘. G. C. Green, Iihlner- c" of coal now unloadin Get "ill-v. a. c. crieen. 352a. “loner T‘ lump"! llve hogs it Colville up, unfutlr Fraser, Friday. Mai-eh hum l o-m. (Signed) Leslie . “m 1.45s lo the Missi Boot r m. Clark's. wringing? Moreah L-Bll-fi-lii-li. ‘I i? gagrgmiiiirlrrsrlafo'lh‘ilaridh 133i": ' ‘sliver collection. Sale, candy‘. 11-5 ~11. l u wine "lb. ‘Iprncc-tlnrc 'thc House by the middle of LONDON, March l8-—(Th|1|1- 5B!)—(Cl‘r— German bombers, flying so high they could scar- cely be heard. subjected Liver- pool to its longest raid of the W" Overnight and struck eirn- ultaneously at London, the midllllldfl. East Anglia and zlzouthwest and southeast Eng- and. ‘ LONDON. March l2-—(CP)—Tlre thunderous rumbie of an armlery barrage different from anything previously heard in London indi. cated some new development, in anti-aircraft defence tonight as German bombers attacked the cup- ittrl and many widely-separated districts. The midlands. the Merseyslde. East Anglia, and southwest and sguthcnst England also were raid- e Nature of the defensive fire was not disclosed. but its noise re- sembled tliat of heavy artillery rather than the familiar crack of conventional anti-aircraft guns. One raider was shot down on the Suriey-Strssex boundary. On the offensive side, the Air Ministry announced that shipyards and docks at. the German naval base of Kiel and at ncarby Bremcr- havcn were bombed successfully Tuesday night by the Royal Alr Force. The ministry said British pilots saw their bombs star-t zm extensive fire at Kiel and saw other bombs burst on shipbuilding yards and docks. A communique reported also that a lone bomber had dropped ex- plosives on an oil storage plant at Rotterdam and a factory near Utrecht, both in the Netherlands, v " In Tuesday night's raids, six p6!“- SOIlS were killed in one midlands residential district. and in another 150 were driven from their homes by bombs which were believed to have buried others in wreckage. A Heinkel llli bomber was de- stroyed as it. attenuated to attack a. convoy off the cast coast of Scotland, tr l-Icinkcl 59 seaplane was shot down off the Danish coast, and another Nazi plane destroyed at an airport in northern France. Roosevelt in Formal request For 7 billions i‘ (By Richard L. Turner. Associated Press Staff Wrltcr) WASHINGTON. lvfarcli l2-(APi -Conu;ressionnl leaders prepared tonight to speed action on n re- quest from President Roosevelt for $7.000.000.0'J0 with which to "the tools of defence for fighting to pre- nll drmocraclcs irgalnst aggres- serve themselves slon." Acting urrdcr the, lease-lend bill. the Prcsidcirl a-kcti for this sum in a lcitcr" trr Speaker" Sum Ray- burn. Hearlngs are scheduled to begin tomorrow before a House of Representative appropriations com- mittcc. By Monday. or Tiresduy at the latest, Rayburn said, the ap- propriation bill. biggest in the history 0t‘ tire United Slates will he under debate in the House itself. Administration have tire nppr-opriaiio lender's expect t0 n bill through next week. How quickly the bill could be got. flirntrgh the Senate. though, was another question. some (‘W041i it M arouse. if possible, in miniature. renewal of the debate on the bill itself which ended last week in a 60-to-31 V090- British make Rapid advance In Ethiopia d Kennedy , Sh" Wfu" cnmo, March 12 —(AP) — A British column invadirrfl Bil-gift? Ethiopia after the collqlle-‘lt ° 12o alien Somalllond advanced m milcs in the ow We “Y'- w; Mjddlg East command announ today. This force colilllle Dflllll" it?" Ethiopian town some 400 gl 65 north of Mogodtsclo. Ileltell "ma; llilialld capital. Its vosltlllll W“? w“ 81W“ m; 9O miles south 0f J1- jigs with no important Fascia. big; ca; standing’ ill i118 W-“Y up i t. w." Jijigo, the road up which the At British forces are striking “wit; n . to n rar iififirilrwilligrcsqlrrll? lelilllPlifii nmiws m’ tend to push 30 mlles~0n l/Onfilli» Addls Alxrba-Jlbutl rolhwv at ll"- dawn. 8.170 CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA THURBDAYJMARCII 15, 1941 crsr courrrrarr-orrrzusrvr sursrrrn rrv _G_ll_EEll§ hear New - typed‘ Aid Bill new lliagna tlarta Describes Lease-Lend Bill as Monument to Far-seeing States- manshp. IONDON, ltiamh ll —(OP) ._ Prime Minister Churchill today told the United States the British 31d bill constitutes o. "new Magma, car- to. ...,a nrontunc-iil; of getter-op; llllllileftixrl-dseeucilg stiatcsmanship." c. ce . monsz__ l 118 House of Com "The lease and lend bill. .be. came law yesterday“: am m" the House would wish me to ex- press, on their behalf and on berm“ of the nation. our deep and i155- Degtfultlapprcciatlon." ior y ft M_ it was disglosizrd that? $5.311? ‘Ya-ill 11°F Drvpllsanda weapons 11in $330131 axis and Nazi-occupied res to tell the people or the 81d bills passage and “the decisive iilgtrificancc this must have in the a, . "It is the kind of news that "i111 the most Gestapo-ridden ""1"?! cannot keep from p". “Mimi! ""‘°"Eh the mass of “ll flllilfns." the Press Associa- fiign; illbily HIITESIIDIIflBDt said, l6; aswiiilllils tgzttrlizr" mgale is as ' l" "My. the tidlnigls lilrtllflflarllrlfl: a shattering effect." Mfr.‘ Churchill saldz-G " P m?“ Powerful democrac‘ “R5. m effect. declared 1n 50mm}, statute that they Wm devote the“, overwhelming industrial and finan- cial strength to ensuring the defeat of Nazism in order that notions (Continued on page 9, Co] 7) liiaimeliussia To be arsenal For Germany NEW YORK, March 12—(AP)— The Budapest. radio in a Hungar- ian language broadcast heard by the National Broadcasting Corpora- tion claimed tonight Soviet Rus- sia will become the “arsenal for totalitarianism’ and will play the same "arsenal" role for Germany that the United states is playing for Britain. The radio said its information came from “authoritative sources". An agreement between Germany rand Russia. it added, provided for Germany to establish n number of large uurrrltinrr. factories inside Russia where they will be inacces- slbie to British il'lllb€l'S because 0i Russias neutrality. The arriurgcrirurt also will place German factories, technicians and machines near the source o1 Rus- sias l‘ll'.\' irrnzerinls, tire radio claimed. Warns against Over production In tuber crop -produetion Warning against over‘ I of potatoes irext season was sound- ed at the annual meetlntl of the Central Farmers‘ In trtute Yeiyiel" day by Hort. \V. H. Dennis. Minister f A ‘i llit ‘C. o m c m the course of the Bl’- Spemkintl iii terrroon session, Mr. Dennis urged possible. $11811‘ farmers to redirce. if tato acres e this year. “We had g on March 1st. this 30,000 tons of table ‘ml’ dmiwlfaofié seed. There are n arm 8- - tonsascompamed with 123.000 W“! year 880. or 20.000 tons more. “It appears to me that. if our far- mere go on producing potatoes at the rate they are doing. MI- Defl- nls added. "accumulatlrrtl M180 Ill!"- as they have. that. it will leoid w a great. extent to the urination of the Province. Potato growinll in this Province. for the 00st few veers nnywnyklarnsxlbfien a curse rather ne . one thing likely to reduce potato acreage this veer. he said. in the mt that so manv farmer! Monet meet their fertiliser obligations oi lest year and will be unable tobllr- chase this year's requirements. "I felt that this nratter was of e0 mugh importance." said the Minis- ter. “that I took it up with the de- partments in New Brunswick and Nova Sootlo. mm the ‘iileanggrigge- w ether c? WW l1 - m“ h to curtail the acre- certain in the Province your,” he said, stock Dotatocs. to provide a proportion to the num- acree on eoc t Ptheit tf we” could tern 0v noes base izcfgtlsltriltioriztirslong that. line. wewbuld be in a position to curtail thi’; sur- nlu! production and 21W Ollr fill‘- mers something for the work the‘! have to do: But I find that while the other provinces realize the need. and tell me that they know some- thing must be done. thev never- age planted. percentallr! in ber of cultivated farm. I though Churchill calls i’ h a. wide area. Farmers Wartime Italians bomb Hospital ship ATHENS, Greece. March I2.- (APJ-The Ministry of Marine asserted tonight that an Italian bomber had attacked a loaded hospital ship which "already had been announced to the lt- allan government as such. and was bearing the regular Red Cross sign." British aid _,Bill causes Stir in Germany BERLIN. March l2 —(AP) Germany's semi-official reflector of foreign office opinion. the Diplo- mutische Politische Korrespondenz, tonight denounced the new Brit- ish aid law approved by the Unit- ed Statcs Congress as "the most flagrant North American meddling" in an affair which ls none of its business. "The time is past when unau- thorized powers can concern them- selves ln regions foreign to them,” it said. "Attempts in this direction have strengthened fitting counter measures because it la no accident that. the Japanflfi foreign. minister now is coming to Europe to consult with his allies on measures to pro- teci; the interests oi the three porv- ers iir their living spaces." The organ said the contention that the law was defensive was dis- proved by the fact that it contem- plates “sacrificing? United States army supplies. Profound Impression Enactment oi’ the hill is making a profound impression in all strata of German life and continued to be the subject of most serious thought. Available comment, inspired bv the government, takes the line that nnytrrtirg the United States may do to help Britain cannot change the “forward surge" of German political and military forces. The general conclu ion. as 8X- pressed here. is that “it won't change things in the end." (The German radio, recorded _in New York bv National Broadcasting Company, weirt so iar as to say that “the United States will appear to help England all she can, but in reality. she will endeavor to induce Germanv to agree to o negotiated peace.” (“Alter the signing of such a negotiated pence the U._S.A. then hopes to take over the inheritance of mire." tire’ radio added. “However . . . Germany never will acquiesce to any negotiation propo alsf‘) p Germans claimed the signatories of the Bcrllir-Rome-Tokvo pact. are effecting counter-measures. Thus. it was sold, the forthcoming visit to Berlin and Rome of Japanese For- eign Minister Yosuke Matsuoka of "more significance" than enact- ment of the British Aid Bill, ‘Ihe Dleiist aus Dcutschlaudmom- menlarv service. aid “we feel our- selves to be prepared against ell possible developments." " ' ‘ " "It is recalled." Dlenst continued. "that the Fuehrer (on Feb. 24) surcd his hearers that every would be torpedocd which within vision 0f German tubes." A Nazi spokesman made an un- finished comment:— Roosevelt is an unvlledict- able man. Let him send one con- voy and . . " Two killed In air collision C?)- G. rrett. of oronto. m W. L. Bborlw of Belize. British Hondu- rne. were killed instantly today when two Royal Canadian Air Force lanes of No. 4 servlnce f1 int: train- Yng school collided. in d-air over the citiv. Eye-witnesses r0100 of whom miles away. said the machines av- neared to meet head-on. But was not confirmed. were believed to have been VH6“!- tn formation flying, ship come fiAfiAiibON. March l2.—( P. Be T oi Two en es ct from an t e outskirts of the city. ____i.._.____- WARM SOUTH AFRICANS MELBOURNE —(GPl -'f‘ho Ar- gun says that Bouth African troops fighting in North Alrica have created a new record for heel of 135 degrees tn the a1 tireless fenr it will bc carry the matter through. impossible to‘ 1110M WNIYC U1? 0. the remains of the British em-‘ ‘ggm torpedo‘ the accident. heard the crash two The airmen wreckage was scattered over gin fell six occupied dwellina 0n endurance, tigntln l temperatures ' n mo. butL Discuss Problem Annual meeting-Bi Central Farm- ers Institute-Mr. Wylie Gibson re - elected President. The ltnngthening and improve- ment 0i’ farm organizations "so that in agriculture we may play our proper part in this greatest crisis that the world has ever known" was urged by Mr. Wylie Gibson. Merahfleld, President oi the Cen- tral Farmers’ Institute, in his ad- dress at yesterday's annual meeting of the Institute. _ ‘xre was a large attendance at the ittternoon and a rrlrig sessions, which were held ii! "lie old Board oi’ TTade rooms. Market- Building. All officers were re-elected. Mr Wylie Gibson of Marshfleld is President; Mr. Lincoln Dewar of New Perth. vice-president; W. D. Ross. Kinross. secretary; auditor. Mr. R. C. McLeod of Lyndalc. The following compose the board of directors: Prince County: Messrs. Hudson Lowther, Herman Myers, Allison Profitt, Queens 00.: Wylie Gibson. R. C. McLeod. W. D. well, Lincoln Dewar. J. W. McLean. Resolutions The following resolutions passed: RESOLVED that this meeting fe- vor the establishment of a forest tree nursery for P.E.I. (Moved by Mr. R. E. Connolly; seconded by Mr. J. Walter Jones.) ‘Phat the P. E. I. Government be urged to investigate the possibility oi supplying mussel mud to the farmers. Moved by Mr. J. W. Jones: seconded by Mr. J. L. Dewar. That this meeting urge upon the Department of Agriculture the de- sirability of fostering o Mgl-itlmg "Livestock Show in Charlottetown this sunrmcr. (Moved by Alexander Haniiltonpseomded.» by Wylie Gib- sun. That the Department of Agliclil- ture be urged to take steps to cur- tail the acreage of potatoes on PE I. by educational or other means. (Moved by J. L. Dewar; seconded by Alex Hamilton.) That the Government be asked WCTQ (Continued on page 5, col 2) Snow storm 10n Mainland HALIFAX, March l2 —(CP) — Another snow storm. driven by a SS-nrlle-an-hour wind. s\vept over Nova Scotia and Southern New the storm had abated tonight in New Brunswick and most of Nova Scotla. ~ Snow removal squads were busy here as the high wind blew eight inches of powdery snow into rlri is. Saint John had a fnll nf scvcii inches, Liverpool, N. S., four, and Yarmouth. three. Temperatures hovered between i0 and 15 degrees above freezing. Ice from a weekend sleet storrn in 'stlll clung to wires and trccs parts of Prince Edward Island. .1 Election date Set in Manitoba WINNIPEG. March l2 —(CPJ -- Maiiitobals 20th legislature was [dissolved early tonight by Iileuten- ant-Governor R. F‘. Mcwllilama. a few hours after Premier John Bracken announced that a provin- cial election will be held Tuesday. April 22. Mr. Brackenls announcement oi’ a provincial election date followed several weeks of rumor and specula- tion which started when the fifth session of the 20th legtslature was prorogued lust Dec. 17. Nominations close April l2. The election date was fixed at a two-hour cabinet session today. The present 55-member legislat- ure was elected July 27. 1936, There are 21 Liberal-Progressives, l5 Con- servatives, stx Co-opcratlve Com- monwealth Federation, five Social Ciedtters, four Independents and four eeote vacant. Premier Bracken formed a coali- geon government early last Novem- r. Except for three members, the entire legislature supported the coalition. War-ZS Years Ago Today MA t8. MIG-Sty German planes brought down tn Western Front air battles. British gunners successfully bombarded flgrmhn positions nee: Manetz on Lille- Annentieres railway. Moshl, East Africa. occupied by British ilsrocs. Ross; Kings County: J. E. Ding-l Brunswick today. Moving northeast, ' 10 Yugoslavia Agrees to Axrs pact Wants Time t0 Modify Pro-British Senti- ment Before Deal is Complete. (BY “"59" 51- Jllilll. Associated Press Staff Writer) BELGRADE, March i2--(AP)\ Yugoslavia. has agreed "in pfin. Cllllc t0 sign up with the Ger- man - Italian - Japanese alliance, ‘government circles said tonight, but, wants more time before the pen is lput irrevocably to the paper, After hours of conference, Reg- ent Prince Paul and his advisers were understood to have decided i0 K1"? 1Y1. but made these coun- tor-proposals to the German de- mnncisz- 1. That Yugoslavia sign immed- latcly only a declaration of friend. 5111i) with Germany and thus be allowed a transition period, to try tonuotlify pro-British sentiment in this country in an effort i0 avoid possible internal trouble. 2. That the German and Yugo- slav Governments have a further discussion of Nazi demands for the army, for a guarantee that the Yugoslavs will make "no military moves,” and for the right to pass troops tirrough southeastern Yugo- slavia from Bulgaria into Greece. This form of capitulatlon, it was trnderstood, was made upon rep- JCSEIILHUOIIS by military leaders to ‘Prince Paul that military resist- nncc was impossible since the country is all but surrounded by Axis areas. Premier Drngisa Cvetkovic and Foreign Minister Alksander Cin- car-Mnrkovic will go to Berlin demobilization of the Yugoslavlani PAGES 7 B! Halli P Annual Subscription Delivered, 841.00 I. L. 54.00: Cnnudn and U. B. $5.00 i Say Mussolini Sets De adline; Crders Advance Ottawa announces Western wheat Economy plan By Frank FIaher-ty Canadian Press Staff Writer VITA . March 12—(CP)—A double-barreled program to reduce Canada's wheat production was an- nounced by Trade Minister Mao- Kinnon and Agriculture Minister Gardiner in the House of Com- mons tday. On the one hand they served not- ice on farmers that lose wheat could be sold than last year and on the other they offered farmers com- pensation for reducing acreage in a way which will maintain western ermwiny and improve przductvg Camcrty for the future. Salient points in the program: A limit; of 230,000,000 bushels on wheat deliveries in the crop yes: starting Augl next, whether to (Continued 0n page H, col a) (Continued on page I, Col 1) Believe 3 airme OTTAWA, fiiurch 12-401’)- Three men are missing as the result oi‘ the crash oi‘ trvo Roy- al (Ianailiair Air Force train- ing bombers today in Wcst- moreland County. N.B., R.C.A.F. headquarters announced to- night. The missing men were list- d as:-- e, Pilot Officer C. Glllard. of- ficial number Jflltlfi. whose wife Mrs. l’. II. Gillard. lives at (818 (fanrernn Si.) Moncion. LAC. D. C. Code. B62381. whose father, W. II. Code. lives at Bounty, Sash. LAC. It. .. Williams. B54208. whose fntlrcr. If. E. iVilliams, llvcs zit (‘itv View, Ont. Tire fourth crew member of the two aircraft. which appar- ctttly collitlcti during a flight in formation, was LAC. J. Pat- ton of Islington, OnL, who escaped without injury by parachute. MONCTON, N. 8.. March 11 (CF) — Wreckage of wlint. appear- cd to iv: one plane, but which might. be that oi two, was sighted lrcm ill" a. late this afternoon oy alr- lflcrr fvtrlll,’ 1m) rttnr “ \- "all Air Force training bomb winch crushed in \Vcs'.nrorlancl County to- day. Tire wreckage was seen nt an iso- lairrl spot rnltirvar‘ between Pirinscc and Iricadowbronk, stations on the Carratiirrir N-rlltmnl Rnilrvzrvs line cast of i/iorrcton. Pnrnscc is eight milcs from lVloricton and Meadow- brook three miles farther east. One occupant of tire planes, Lac. J. Patton. islingfcn, Ont., was safe. 'I‘lrrce other student airmen were knovrn to have bccn lit the wreck- ed machines. ‘Flicir names were withhold until their condition has been ascertained. In case of cas- ualties the next. of kin will be no- Lified before the names are made public. The planes were from No. 8 Air Training School here. Pnttoir bnzlrd out of one and walked into Shedinc to report tlrc rrrcldrnt. fie was re- portedninlnjtrred. Arr earlier report that another survivor had reached the training school here was later found incor- rcet. Scene of iilc wreckage between Pairisec and Mcadowbrook ls a re- mote area away from roads and other means of ulck oommiurfca- tion. sirow-clogg highways added to the difficulty of NilChiilg the t. No lairdlng by aircraft can be made within a mile and a half of the scene and then only by a ski u: ‘O lane. Details of the accident were un- :Two Training Bombersln Crash ed for in crash near Moncton. n unaccount- Conclusion of Evidence in r Liquor case of Evidence in the case silent! smuggling of liquor on_a ’ from St, Pierre to Mrqrieloir, “as concluded yesterday afternoon he- fore Magistrate George J. Tbrlecdy. K.C.. in the Supreme Court, with three witnesses being heard, Cabllllll Edriiond Loirgentlnc, J. A. Fraser. senior clerk in the Customs dz bx- clsc office. and. Richard Jenkins 0! Powiial. At the conclusion of the evidence and after Georfte Albert Griffin of Sturgeon and Harry R. Walsh. of St. Peter's, the two own charged with the conspiracy. il-ld been dulv warned by Marllstrllifl Tweedy. tire cnsc was adjourned for. judgment lilllll‘ this morning ‘at l0 oiclock in lrfagistrate Tweedy! of-y f cc. , l J. A. Fraser was the first wrtiress heard. Iii rvrilv to turestrou ' St. Clair" Tixrinor. acting for Crown, he strricu that the records did not disclo e any duty or excise, taxes to have been bald during 1040' page B. Ool l) (Continued on Buckingham Palace bombed LONDON. hlnrcil l2. - (C?) — Buckingham Palace has been scar- red again bv bombs. the government disclosed today. ‘Three explosive bonrbs icll on tire palace grounds. one krlliurz n nolrc- nrnn and wrecking n lodge and a wall. while tlircc utlrcrs and ‘trilli- erou. inceiiriiarics fcll nearby. Some palace windows were broken. Baby burned In N. S. fire TRURO. N. S.. March 12-—tCPl- Eric McRac, nlnc-monih-old son 0i Mr. and Mrs. Ernest. Mcllnc. was burned to death in n ilrc which destroyed the McRae home at nearby Nut-by today. The baby r announced early tmrlght. First un- official reports were that the planes hrrri collided. The accident led to a minor high- wnv collision caused by heavy go- ing over n snmvbotmd road. 'I‘wo alr- force imbalances sent from rhforirlmi collrdcrl outside the clly ibut irciilrcr has badly damaged. was alone In the house when the ‘fire broke out, l Mr. lvfcllne was working tn the woods and Mrs. McRae and nn- rvother son Kelsey. two, were doing ‘chores in the barn. Flames pre- n-ented Mrs. McRac frorri t‘l\"‘"‘l\fl flxlre house flil‘.’l' she discovered the . ir-e. large scale . Italian, Dictator visits Albania. to bolster sagging morale of troops. By J. REILLY SULLIVAN Associated Prue Stuff Writer ATHENS, March l2.-(AP;—ltci- Lari counter-attacks stud by l. Greek government spokesman to have been ordered by MUSSOihli himself -~- ihe heaviest of the Albanian war-Arrive been smashed with enormoru Fas- cist losses. Greek informants ro- wed from the front today. ' re Italian; struck at nix poiii along the line, with the groan. forces thrown info sucii an action since the war" iktflilll, and. were everywhere tnrown back, Greer; u, . batches said, adding that the (rib-Qt were in fact. able to seize new nos‘ Lions in the heights northwest Tepeleni, Information that it was the Duce himself who senthisanny forward was attributed bv the Greek spokesman to captured Italian soldiers. They reported, the a kesman added. that Mue- lolin had set next Saturday a; the deadline for his generals to "do something.” Among the prisoners taken y wide)’. this official informant sa" were Blaokshirt officers who sol that Mtrswllnl been in Aibdlilét in the central rector, for five day To Bolstor Marble Hie visit. these officer: were mi ed u oaylnil. was to bolster th, morale of troops. and ho de- clared. to hie military leaders thrr 3.°w"%..i§r°““€£““il°i?’ ‘““‘....‘.?° . a m , before he departs. p s mm m "The Italians." the spokesman lllmmed up. “dlsfliayrrd git-iv. activit- iW ye terclny, having atwu-ked over a. ZO-kilmnetre (about l0 mllesl front, using large forces, “The attack was violent and nu Ported bv every Dosslble means. d" "l" WOODS rebelled sirecessivd n45!" EVE-ORB. inflicting very heavy looses. At auii ct the battle- field was etreym with dead and ed . enemy mo; worm . "At another point the i0 Wlflenk M mom but fnileQ (Continued on page 9, Q01 1) I n‘ fakes faces FIVE. YEARS 1'0 GRow rte-rs - EXCEPT FAt/rmr l r iwd 'I‘()li.ON'I‘O, l\l.' l hirnzrrrurn and irr;r.... " turcs: Dawson l Victoria Ednrcirzozi Brrnll Regina Wrnirrpcg Toronto Otlarva ..r ‘obi; ~u~u:&;m¥» C.vr.t. tittriorvh FORECAST Nlrrritiiui- l.:r~t. i-"w-lr t stilllit!‘ ‘ ' partly i'|(llili_\ urul r..lrl with \t'i\tll‘l't‘tl snt-rtllr ~ l ruin hurl h on and Intuit l- . BOSTON. Synopsis: 'l'lr.» wcrtirr r - r l l in n 1y . u. . ii today m Orr tr Provinces High tide tlri llltifllflf‘, a‘ irllll and e night at l0 ‘>5. Sun sols this (>\\‘ll,l u ..‘ t ‘til wrd irzsts tcnrcrroo nroru 1rd,; .r' (.11. Frill moon, March l3, " " '1 n: Strmniers v, - ‘at. or than (‘ha - ~ CAR FERRY SIULINHQ l.cavr< llrrdcn 945 A r1 ~*r_ l loaves ‘lonncutiire lllrl ‘L la P. M.