MAXI MS OIA MERE MAN l-‘sml k but noise. all learning‘: liui. ll thought. which one cherishes, mother sets at nsulill. ,-—-f_:__ ._.-.- ,',,;,,;,,, Gulrdllll. Founded m1. Read by Everybody Endurance ll quill“! 1""! lmtlenoe all the passion of Kfbat hearts. MAXIMS OIA MERE MAN tho crowning giisrloitetown Guardian. Two Cont. U. S. ACCUSES RUSSIA 0F “WAR 0F Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. MONDAY, MARCl-l "221, 1941 14 PAGES Suggest Russia Seeks Control Of Germany lilies lllvided liver Tvlll 0f iiov't Germany Should llm, B-inch Snowfall in Cape Breton _-_?_- SYDNEY, N. 5.. Mar. 23-111:- _l'illliI‘t‘S brought some -. tutti-starved Cape Bret- ‘ilPIS tonight after o spring gale inches of snow in the districts ivliere a strike Bil i 1'- nilning five weeks ago. ‘Willi: ivsii-rdiiy moniing, a c gnli- piled up snow on ,~. stopping inter-tom's rind causing cancellation SiFVlCPS iintll tonight when rrnm Hniifcix arrived. . bus lines did not start until about noon today Hit‘ storm let up. Louis- 30 miles away, still was cut ,- Mild tonight but plows expected to clear a way to- zorning. i gvciih stretches of uere clear, one or two is between each town solid blockade. ..ll'3(‘l n. Maybe lhis 1...}? Face Was Red? insosf 0.. Mar. as-nz. ilioe coin-puny re-pregg-ng. Mi police tonight that I iiiio Leuscivs iiuto. tinrkcci on ii downtown t-ikiiu: two bags contain- ,:z in sample men's work shoes r.’ ierious sizes, . sch said he would like to - seen the thiefs face, be. ry one ‘V’ was for the left Coming Events II , A ' , i .» lie. airiied Slllplllfini. of seed, Wits and vetohcs. Halifax Seed C0,, Lid. .2 Queen Street, 009001118 "085 at Crapaud for ti in. thii-kcrs l.td., every liiesday llllill ll A. M. R. N. Dawson. "Just arrived. two cat-loads of 0W0‘ work horses. Lewis Mor- in, limiter River. "Jiiot arrived. 50-lb. blocks w" ~t Sllll. licks. also todiaedsalt. P. l-..l. Livestock Feed Agency. "Bazaar Cfzu and Tn. Si. James i i. ‘Thursday. April 10th. h "iiinilifiiili Ilall. Easter Monday, Cutout’ Sally" a three act comedy, giviSoclal and Dance after. Curtain "i-i‘ 01112 Hogs flir Oennde Pack- "l 5'1- P010129 cacti Tuesday until oflln iuiie,_vvhile roads closed to ‘Pitts Blsned David Pratt. "l-‘miills ltoss for Cantu-lo. Pack- iri ii’. Vernon River each Tuesday Ti.’i‘."ll(li')ll. while truck road closed. W. Clarita p"i-°d<i1lltl 1108s for Canada Pack- _.vs n: Ali. Siovart each Tuesday Quit iiyiin time. wihile roads closed o Yltlckfi. signed Earl Jay. ‘h"'\\i.cniley River Players present “N10191:! Concert ln New Gius- iitiw limit, Wednesday. March 26th, M 831i p_ 5L "WW open for business. clean- ciipping grain for the utters and general public. uecDonald. Covohead. ih lrii l) , _ Puftollecitng ilogl for Canada P V-kers Ltd. every Friday. Sourle, p911“ 7711i‘. Fortune Bridge, Bay ROi iuiic. Annandale, Dundee, Dimilflmtn. Strathcona. George uigwell. Cl P ‘M0111! live hogs for Cundo 1mm‘ A‘ Albany. Thursday from u vclock till 3. Emerald Friday AM. rig"! 11 oclock. Truckim service G i" roads DQflniL, Notify A. o. ""- 0? 0. C. Green. ea ,_ - “mt-restock Marketing Board ren- mlrktlill. prom“ ‘m’ m“! n“ an“ he servlce-Ivllllblo to m 1°" everywhere. Unexcelled mi‘? tend um includes every- M"! "ammo our wtelily poi- "ml" Try us and be convinced. _ __. BJlNotloe - I have purchased the M r "ll-tines of the into Clinton 5° "ion Ind intend. ear-nine on in n: W"! Mistrial, Consisting of all B in Belting. Traces. double. mn- Drlvllll Harness. lied hf"- W. 1t. Morrison. Frederic- o r. n, 1. MOSCOW. ltfarch 33—(Al=)-The Qllli" Slates iuseo Saturday lllsiit the formation of a provis- "mal Cwrmon Quw-rnnient at "an will’ date", after Russia proposed the old Welmar republic as a bajls of Germany's future regime. In Heneral. both Britain and Un- ttcd States support the idea of a. federalized Germany, while France is for a loose and decentralized regime. The Russian proposals were subjected to an immediate attack by Britain and France. The long-awaited Soviet pro- posals for ermani‘. made Duhlig for the first time iiy Foreign Miti- lster Molotov, included a two- chambcr parliament. elected by proportional representation through a list voting system. Molotov‘: outline for Germany was the top feature of a day which saw the French stand by their plan for n, loose federation of Ger- man stntes and a British statement on economic principles for Ger- many with ii 10.000,000-ton llllilllill steel level and n, conciliatory gos- ture toward the French (lClllflllil for coal. State Secretary Marshall, in ii paper circulated among the minis- tors. elaborated on the fundamen- tal principles he announced Friday for a federalizcd Germany. in which he urged establishment of a yarovlsional German rcginic "at once." Bid For Support MOSCOW. Mar. ZIl-Lwl-Bri- tish and American sources today view Russia's proposal for n cent- raliud Gcrnxnn government as a bid for German support iind tin attemrpt to create a system. w-hich the Communist Party Will have the best. chance to control. Generally the British delegates appeared more pFFlUlJJCd than the Americans by Fkireigfl M1015" ter Molotov! proposal Saturday. One British source described the entire Soviet approach at. the foreign ministers council ns "sin- ister" in that, in his view. it ap- peared to put tiic wooing of Gui-- nian support nbovc the question of European security. The chief objection from tho west to the Soviet proposals for ii German government similar to the old WOllIlIII‘ republic was that; it provides cosy machinery for s single party to seize con- trol oi’ all Germany. The American, British and French delegates feel that with the main powers resting in the German states it would be diffi- cult for one imrty. 50th 115 the S o vi e t - sponsored. Communist- domlnated Socialist Unity Party in the Russian zone, to take con- trol of Germany. Western powers object. also to the proportional representation list system of voting in which the voters choose one party list or another instead of ballotting for individuals. Allis-Chalmers Strike Ends lifter 320 llays MILWAUKEE. March 23-(AP)— The 328-dsy old Allis-Chalmers strike. which had been marked ‘ov numerous bloody riots in picket line clashes and by charges before a congressional committee that it was Communist-led, ended today when the striking United Auto- mobile Workers 10.1.0) local 3U voted to return to wort without a contract. Robert Busc. Union president, announced the local had voted "threo to one" to eud the strike. Jiuse raid "we will go back with- out a contract before we sign a sweatshop agreement. We will con- tinue our fight." 'l‘hc not" gold tiiediil of tihe Pro- fessional institute of the Civil Scr- vicc of Canada, bearing the In- stitute crest on the obverse side and the Peace Tower. symbolic of "Service of the Stnte", on the re- vcise side. O'i"l'.»\\i\'.»'i. Mflftll 22-(S‘_)cclal)—— For their outstanding con-tribut- iloris to science, pure or applied. and in iiaiicnul niid world well-being in other fields of endeavour, two prominent officials of the Govern- ment Service were today presented with the new gold medal ofthe Pro- fesslonal Institute of the Civil Ser- vice of Canada. at. the luncheon of that organization which is now holding its niinual meeting in the Cliatcnu Lziuricv here. Recipients of the 1947 medal of the Institute are: ' Otto Maass, 0.3.13‘... l\f.Sc.. H111, LL.D., F.RS., F.R.S.C., F.C.I.C.. of Montreal and Ottawa. formerly es- sistunt to the President of the Nat- ionnl tiescarch Council mad at pres- Two ilanadian Airmen Killed hlONTiiEAL, March 23 -tCP)— Two Canadian airmen were killed instantly early today when a. tryin- engined plane they were ferrylng from Gander. Nfld.. to Csiro crash- ed at Santa iitaria iii the Azores, it was announced tonight. Capt. Don utcvicar, president of World Wide Aviation Agencies and Sales, Inc. salt-l that. the plants crashed while attempting to land "in extremely bad weather which was not forecast." The airmen were Capt. Hector Smith, 27, of Mont- real and radio navigator Gerald L. Pollock, 33. of Montreal. Pollock, formerly of Winnipeg, was married and the father of one child. litcvicar said that Smith and Pollock. only two aboard the shiip, were flying the aircraft from l factory i.n Kansas. Smith Joined World Wide Aviation in 1946. Dur- ing the war he made two tours of operation with the R.C.A.!". panh- ftnder squadron. Pollock served with the Transport Command dur- ing the war and later with Air France. British Farmers Lose 48 Millions LONDON. Much 28--(Ai!')-B:;~- tish farmers estimated tonight that. flood damage already had cont them 210000.000 ($48,000,000) in drowned cattle and uheep in the continuing floods, but it will he two weeks before dlmages can he calculated on growing crops. Flood conditions prevailed in parts of England, but rivers sub- sided in places. The Ouso River role l’! feet above normal in York Ind still was rlsinl. threatening the city water works n troops hastily studied llndblgs. Waters wooded in the Thames. Wye and Severn Rivera and re- turned to banks in the Avon. The ‘Rent poured water five feet deep into Gainsborough and hundreds ivcre rescued by boats and army In Floods "ducks". ‘Hoops, prisoners of we! and local laborer: worked to build up dikes to retain the swollen rive: in the fenllnd area. where 12,000 to 15.000 acres of rich farm low- lend: in Osmbridle and Norfolk Counties were under water. A Dutch flood expert who once was reported en route to the area plugged lellts in Holland's dikes northeast of London. Gusts up to 50 miles an bour slirrQd the English Channel and gale warnings were issued for the south of Bigiend. Damaging flood: were reported from Poland and eastern Germany. A sudden thaw gorgad the Vlstull‘ and inundated ao square miles north of Warnw. Polish planed dropped food to msrooned peasants and a heavy loss of life was feared. Awarded Medals At Ottawa OTTO MAASI 9i l i. i . IAMIS- HAMILTON LOWTHER ent director of Chemical Welfare and Smoke, Departmint of Nation- el. Defence. James llzimiltcii Lowihcr. of 0t- tmva, Chief of the Public Finance Statistics of the Dcmi ion Bureau of‘ Statistics. u. s. Army Plane Missing In Nfld. (By The Canadian Press) HALIFAX, Mar. Eff-A United States Army C34 Skymnster with nine persons aboard is missing on a flight from Wcstover Field, Mass, to Stephenviilic. Nfld. R..C. Al“. Eastern Air Command rc- ported tonight. and four planes sent aloft to hunt for it have returned after i.i fruitless search. The aircraft lost reported to the control tower at Harmon Field at Btephenville at 3.30 pm. A531‘. when the pilot gave his position as five miles southwest, of the field. The plane took of! from Westover Field at 11.40 n.m. and was due at the southwestern Newfoundland base at 3.30 p.m., exact reporting time of the plane's pilot. Last. air disaster at Stephen- villo "occurred last fall when a Trans-World Airlines plane with 30 aboard crushed and burned ‘.0 mtiles from the alrdrome. The bodies of the 39 victims svere never recovered and funeral ser- vices were held for them from a pine flying over the scene of the accident, a IOU-foot precipice in impassable forest growth. A storm centred of! the south- west coiist of Newfoundland to- nigiht sent gales reaching more than 40 miles an hour and curry- ing driving snow across Cabot Strait between Newfoundland and Cape Breton Island. The plane veas the second ‘to t 0 go missing in l0 days in tractless coastal areas of the northwest Atlantic. A search by R.O.A.!". planes still Wee being made over the frozen tundra. of central Labrador for three Amer- ican fliers who disappeared a week ego last Thursday on a flight from Owe Harrison to Goose Bey. 100 miles southwest o! the lonely outpost. on the Lah- ratlor coast. ls Optimistic With Regard To Tuber Situation OTTAWA. March Z -iSpeciali ~Belief that nlmost every carload cf the 1946 potato crop of the hiariiimc Provinces will be Sold at a fair price before the season ends was voiced to The Guardian hers this week-end by Senator F. W. Plrie, one of the leading potato- growers and starch-processors of the St. John River Valley. “If more people would take the long view." the Senator said, “and not start prophesying gloom if they can't sell all their potatoes tihe moment they're out of the ground we'd be a lot better off. "Look what's happened to the 5o- callecl ‘surplus’ potato crop by now We're selling three and a half mil- lion bushels to the United Kingdom of the five million bushel over-run and right now \.ve've another order of l1 million bushels to ttlkfi cure of Add that to the fact that starch processing plants are taking lnrgc quantities oi’ potatoes and that we're actually selling potatoes in tthe American market and you see there's not much left. At his own plan-t in (it'll-lid Frills. Senator Pirie is processing 2.5M) barrels of potatoes chilly mid ship- ping out a. carload of starch. Price‘: paid the grower for a field-rim barrel of 165 pounds is $1.50. Senator Pirle told The Guardian ' he felt. it was a good thing that the government. “didirt jump ‘in and offer to pay for or buy up surplus potatoes" as did the Govermmriit of the United States. Above all, he said‘, it‘ W85 fortunate that ‘ the potato-grower W215 iioi. permitted to clump his potatoes as has been (lone in Maine and Itiziho. M: rkets For All "Right now," he said. "W4"- W" find markets for all the potatoes we have tn sfll. I was ziniazetl the oth- er day when a shipment of 85 cav- loads lcft the Saint. John river vai- ley for the United States. Apparent- 1y the growers there were in such n mun-y to diririnptlieip potatoes and get, ilie government subsidy they didn't keep enough for thc coin:- try's own domestic requirements. Rficent. demand for - hliirltime potato-ES from the United Killgtiiigl. i‘ ldurope and other countries. Senator said, "would be n soot! on Page 5 Col. d) Rubber Strike In ll. S. is Averted tBy Tho Associated Prowl CLEVELAND. March 23-well?!’ unionists and company executives of the United States’ "big four" iulziber producers early today a- verted a crippling strike hours “(are mo deadline, tilius setting a wage pattern expected to apply throughout. the industry. After weeks of sessions, and at. least. two breakdowns, the United RllibbBl"\VOl'l{Et‘S tC.I.O.) and bit! four officials cancelled the first major industry threat of 194'] by agreeing on these teims: I l. Hourly increases of ills cents for 110.000 unionists. re- troactive to Feb. 2. i947. tThB average current wage is 8134-) 2. The new wage scale will be gubjgcf, to TC-OPOYilIlK of negoti- ations at the end of 120 days. on ti“ Mare "it; on. rllii Fling (By The Associated Press) OAKLAND. Calif.. March 23— A'n old gray uiarc, Nellie, ran 20 nillcs Saturday in a crazy chase tihirougti Oakland streets and kept l5 radio police cars at her tail. ‘The old nag. destined for a dog meat packing plant. broke from a box car, streaked into downtown Oakland. ignoring traf- fic lights. galloped down to Oak- land Bay, where site mired mo- mentarily in the mud. then took another bridge ramp beck to- ward downtow-n Oakland. These a patrolman roped her after chasing her into a corner. Nellie snorted in defiance, lash- ed out. once with a hind leg-and fell dead. m, HM’ h’! H! i’? lt/llK/Ntf Biisso CANADA FLOUR Expect Rough Time P. E. I. Farm lnoome Totals $9,900,000 0niy ProvlnigSliowing ile- ciiiie From Previous Year. OTTAWA, March 23-—i'CP)—Net income of Canadian farmers from forming operations in i946 totalled $l.267,400,000, the highest figure ever recorded since vnniprlziiiiiii of comparable statistics begun iizxk iii 1038, the Dominion Bureau of Statistics reported Saturday. It Collltlflrod with a iict. income of $1,- 003.700.00tl in 1945 and the previous high or $l,226,900,000 in 1944. Willi ilic exception of Prince Edward Island, all of the 1946 pro. vincial net incomes were tamer than in 1945. Net income from atioiis in 1946 by totals for the lirnckists ivns: farming oper- ]\l'fi‘\'lllt‘CS with pruvciiz-ii; yea‘; in t$10.700.000l; Nbva Scotia $21,400,- 000 l$l4.800.90oli New Brunswick $26,400.000 $23,900,000! ; Quebec $202,200,000 ($l55.900.0()0l; Ontario $332,500,000 $308,000,000): Mant- iobti. $125,900,000 (SSQSOQOOU ‘Z Saskatchewan $29l.700.0D<J ($1117,- 60000071 Alilévlii $307,800,000 ($140- S00.000l‘, British COlilmhia $600,000 '$-i5.500,000l. News Briefs I\lt.).'\"I‘R.l.-.'Ai., .'\l.'.ll'\.‘ll 1.5 —-tCP>- 1711c |\'ii‘._“,',~; licncli Court iiuil licre of Ur Raymond Boyer. hioiiircnl scientist accuafd of hating con- spired to communicate iiifonnaiioii unlawfully to Rusia. ivill enter its third wcsk icnnorww’ with the Crown's evidence still to be coni- plctcd, SHOWDOWN A 'l‘ MOSCOW‘ MOSCOW, .\ltii't'li us: Qicrt-A slioivdomi uii i-he stormy question of participation of the liictniriioiis and other middle and suinll powers in the Geriunii settlement, is likely to come tliLs week in the confer» ence of foreign ministers. PRINCESS NOT ENGAGED DURBAN, South Africa, Iiiarch —(AP)—'I‘.‘.ierc will be no an- iiouncement of Princess Elizabeth's engagement on lior 21st. birthday, a. source close to tii-ic Royal Fain _ said today. "because she is not. e12- gaged." The birthday is April :21. WOULD BOYCOTT BRITISH JERUSALEM. lilaroli 23 ~—(A P) -—'l‘lie Jewish underground orgsiii zatlon Irgun Zvai lieuziit urged to~ day that Jews throughout llic world boycott British goods "as pari of our fight against Imperialism." Former ii. B. Pubiio WorksMiiiisterBurieii tBy 'l\hc Canadian Prcli) OAMIPBELLTON, N. B. Mar. 23 —’I‘lie funeral of D. A. Stewart. was held from Knox Presbyter- ian Church herc Saturday, with many hundreds. rcpvcscniiitg gov- ernment. and llldllfilfl’, joining in tribute to one oi‘ New Brunswicks ablest. nicn. Mr. Stewart served as Nflnlster of Public Works for l0 years and had been a Conser- vative member of the legislature for numerous terms. beginning with his first election ll\ i912. Print-c Eilutirtl Ialilllti, 89.900000 * $49- For “Omnibus” Bill OITAWA. March 3_(w)_1-i.¢ opposition boiling up in the gum- inons to the Government's mam- moth control hill points to the Dos. sihility that the administration may be fort-ed to seek a further exten- sion of tlie control-continuing na- ilLllGl emergency transitional pow- ers act. now scheduled to dic May 15 “The purpose of the SFrCEllGLl omnibus’ bill is to continue for niioilici" year the many war-innu- CCil controls over prices, rentals and other fields which up to pow haie been given temporary ex- istence through the emergency iiowers act. If the bill has not been finally BPlZTCYGKI when that iii- sti-uniciit expires May l5 the 5i i'\lllll'0l measures embodied in it. also tire doomed to automatic ex- tmeiion. 'I‘lie Dl“£‘llllllllBt‘_\"OYGYHIYOS of ric- troi ltlll will have a rough and rocky passage through the Coni- HlOIF which will continue beyond the May l5 deadline. Should that prove true, the Government's only alternative would he to ask the Commons for :i further extension of the ems:- iitgv powers statute. The act or- 0811s‘ was to have expired March extended last week when it became apparent that the control legislation could not be approved by that date. As yet, tho bill is only in the i-csnliition stage but the discussion oven at this point has given a good indication of the trend the main iichatc will take when it develops this ivcek. The Progressive Conscrvaiiire niiil Sol-tail Credit Parties have (Continued on Pagewb ‘céiikffi Ontario Speaker To Explain Position iBy The Carmdiain Prose), TORONTO. Mal‘. ‘Iii-Hon. Wil- .‘ tin-m J. Stewart, who suddenly rc- Isigneii the spezikership of the Ontario Legislature Friday aitcr mi exchange on the floor of the House with Highways Minister IDnut-ett, said today that he has livriitm a letter to the lenders of nil three parties in (‘lie Legislat- ure ivlilcli morroiv. Mr. Stewart did not disclose contents of his letter but said ft would be "highly interesting," in- sofar as it concerns the policy of issuing tickets to the Speaker's gallery and the reasons for his resignation. they will receive to- . l jiintigonish Aeyliim filestroyed By Fire ANTIGONISH. N. 8., liiarch 23- (CPl-—Firc destroyed the Antigon- ish home for poor and mentally ill at nearby West River Saturday night, driving 36 occupants inio the srioiv in their night clothes. No one was hurt in the blaze which ciiuscil loss estimated at $40000. Joseph Dcvisoii. a member of the Glare Bay, N.S., fire ilepziri- ineiii. who ivns spending n iveck- crintendeiit Peter liiacLean. organ- bziic thus far indicate that the coii- ' . aiicial assistants end with his brotlier-iii-laiv Snp- ' Subscrlption Delivered $6.00. Mal-l $5.00. other Provinces 8s U. B. A. 51.00 ERVES” llitherto—Seoret Documents Are Made Public WASwNUTQN. March 23»—( _Unit.ed States documents _-illcft: "secret." label removed toiiigizl under congressional _l)l'(‘$§u[‘[\_-.||(q cuscd Russia of waging a "wdl- u; nerves" against Turkey. told of a "master plan" to bring Greet-a under Communist domination aiiil called Poland frankly’; sot-ice "SEtOllIIE." The documents-laid before tho Home o! Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee for "back. ground" on the administration‘: program to help Greece and Tur- key ward off encroaching Com. llillIllSlll-—l'E|‘»Ol‘lEL'l, too, that Bri- tain hail asked the Uiiitccl Stazeq to take over the "major respon- sibility" for financing military w ivell as civilian needs in the ind southern European countries. One ilocumcnt disclosed llliii tliq United States: 1- HHS advised Greece that "We . . favor g, retention ivitli- out change of 1939 Greek boundaries" in the "inter- ests of over-rill Balkan slab- l-h-Lvp. -. Will support the Greek desire to present its claim against Albania. for ’NOl‘ll‘tBI‘ll Epirus to the Foreign Minis- ters‘ Council. 3. Favors the of a free development zone under Greek sovereignty in the port of Salonika, to provide a coni- mercial outlet to the Aegean for Bulgaria. and Yugoslavia, 4. Favors Britain's ceding to Greece the island of Cyprum whore Britain now holds Jews attempting to enter Palestine. The documents traced the rio- \Ql0]Jll'l€ilt. of the critical Grin- situation through the war an: after liberation up to Feb. 24 when the British Ambassador to Wa=h< iiigton. Baron Iiiverchapcl, handed the United States two notes whicli have not l)(‘t"ll made public in full, "These notes," one document said. "ilflped that in view of tho British inability to continue izn- to tliesc iwq countries. the U. S. would be ivrll- sibiliiy for the military and civil- lan needs ivhirh must be finanted from abroad." All: Ptiizstiuiii is Rum ‘ii-i! out. iiesiis Autonomic insomniac.‘ hliiiiuitizii litlfl ma. mum icmilel" aturc \"’“coiivci' L) 51: Edmon- ton _ ltcgina i. ~ will" nipng .0; TOYillllil ' bee l1. 3B; Saint John i fl ton 22, 44; Halifax '20. 46: unar- Mni-Lcaii of the Aiitigonisli police forco after it was tho-tight all pa- tients liari been removed. Three female patients were tak- en to St. Martha's Hospital wnilc the males were housed in St. Francis Xavier University's gyrii- nssium after being briefly shelter- ed in the barn near the home. Labor Back-Benchers Oppose Conscription LONDON. March 23 v- iAPt- Lahor leader; merelislled their dis- ciplm y forces this week-end to suppress a new rank-snd-ftle par- llunentary "revoli.“. Approximately 70 members among the House of Commons so- ollled "back-benchers" have llIl‘(i up in tight opposition to the Om- ernmenPs bill for peacetime mili- tary conscription which is expected to send more than 1,000,000 young men into uniform during the next five years. Objectors to the entire theory of peacetime conscription have been joined by ii vocal group that insists the prodpectivc recruits are more needed in labor-short, British indusin. The conscription bill. introduced March l2, probalby will be celled for debate before. the two-neck Easter recess begins April 3. The Labor "rebels" seem to have slight chance of defeating the measure. In general the Conserva- tives agree with the immediate need for conscription. Labor leaders have scheduled a party caucus for tomorrow. It wus predicted that the "rebels" would be lectured severely and that, after a prlvatg airing of grlovanv ces, much of the steam would dis- appear. ired n bucket brigade and later helped gut-dc the patients out of the burning two-storey wooden frzime building. Two elderly men were rescued; from the top floor by Cameron lottetoni 24. 33; Svtinfl‘ -~- 3'31. Qfnrmouth 00, 40. HALIFAX. March lit-Weather- _._\'iinr-sii; ziiiti official inland forc- r-nsis issued by the Dominion. Public Weather Ofiicc at Hailliix (ti 11.15 pm. Sunday. Synopsis: The weather ‘was fine over thr- western part. of the Mantis-ties Sunday but over the eastern pari- it W85 overcast with strong winds. The storm causing these stronc: winds is centered near Newfound- land and dlniinisliiiig in intensiti". Warm moist iiir is flowing liitiv lthe west lin‘\ of the district and. ]cloud has formed again in New‘ Brunswick. This cloud will spread eastward accompanied by miidtl‘ went-her. Forecasts valid until Monday in id ii lgh-t: Clear becoming overcast W evening. Little change in temp- erature. Light winds becoming west 20. High Monday at Char- lottetown 38. Itigii tide at noon and tonight n41 12.10. Suii set; this evening at 6.1T Ind rises tomorrow miomning at 5.55. First quarter moon March 29th 11.15 A. M. CAR FERRY ‘TRINCE EDWARD ISLAND" Daily except Sunday. Leave Borden It 9.05 A-M. Leave Tormenttne at 3 PM. lllg‘ to take over the major ]'E3p(\nn' -v<- ., ‘%'_li'li e=\lj:ir 1 ‘i? < x