MAXIMG i OIL MERE MAN _.¢-i-_ w]; to do comes of doing. -. 7 1| || Two Cont!‘ . rial-am nun v Zln at advanced age ‘in LATE nos. J. J. nuoucs island pelts ring good lricas in N. Y. __l'hr second day's sale of sil- "nr fox pelts with an offering tiiicariy illlftlli was held by ‘ r and lluth in , ‘Hilly’. One of ville most noteworthy consign- Iitnis was 80 show units con- lilzned by the (Yanadian Na- tional Fox Breeders Associa- ‘tliifi. Summersitle for the Sil- Itr Fox Breeders rind Exhibi- tiin of Prince Edward Island. ‘Time pelts hail been on dis- l‘l,v and were judged at S||m- _ fiitrside by “r. lllaycrs the lint week of January and were u Dlftfilillllllllg Int. last evening the following lllllllm uiis received from (ism n. (‘afflict-k of Sum- Ifinide who is present at the vie ifflflfillu irltor the inn-rest; ' lithe eonsiwneris. - "New York. 6:28 p.m., March . Hold 1R0 show pelts. average .8028. Full silvers sold nil. Extra light types; were 1m sironn. Price resistance "“"‘“lll""l'l iiv furor-quarter "Iii half sllvcrs. White face h slivers sold we“, Dark" Alas soiil poorly. Pearl silvers y"! well. George A. Call- “\ "lift-The irle uo M" f-illhoi: ‘i. leil qiniietgieiili Split. Tim-.- will be a premium "if" vent, making the “(y- ‘M receiver! prli-p in 9m- m"! "\"‘I'=I".e $71.38. or "T; there Willlld be a duty vmht ‘it'll? irircu they enter- . a} lllLPvl hiatus. It would F“: ner rent on tho valuation ‘mt-fall on the nelts by the _ M States (irstoms authori- iiiiings deposits ii Canada increase Wugnu. ftfarch 5.--(CP) - ba giosiis in Canadian char- lll folnllcd 81.668.130.000 i u. compared _\vil.h 81.041.314.000 “~w“ll<l_$1.io0.488.000 Jan. 31. v i‘: shown today in e s icmeni. of the Finance lnlent.‘ ii c l . o»ii»5i°‘ld§.‘i’illi<l€a‘°l'§§ 33%’- mgnll loans in Canada to- “Hizlgégoo alzainsi, 840,279,000 h clllfldii Eiiiiiaixiidcuwiriltcriooaiililil Coming Events for assoc 555 E N _n-. ollres in this column "n" Per word. , . %__ t mmkksmlll-B Thursdgy. -_ L-a -a-4-ai. i hhm°"M°lll8Rue Baturday t-ass-a-f-at °i coal -—_ k Your gidlewtlsnlnili a U)’. G. ; , melllfl- L-m-a-a-li. ‘Hiltley .1 .%M tooldshfit, New Glu- t, on l Bflme for second 1- ' River vs. North u:- L400. m. Rs at Mun-a Bar lahrichMareh 19311: v ' 13th. . gill for my“ 2 NAZI d Long Career Public Life fpeath yesterday-r- of Hon. Senator J. J. Hughes of 84. An outstanding figure 1n the pub- llc life of the Province passed away at his home. Souris West. yesterday morning. in the person of the Hon. James Joseph Hughe; a, member of the Canadian Senate. He had been seriously ill for about two weeks. taking a turn for the worse last Sunday evenfnft. He was born at St. Mary's Rood on August i5. i856. of Irish-Smttish parents. his father. James Hughes. and his mother. Jane Irving. being both natives of the Old Land. He was first elccicd tothe House of Common: in 1900. and since then was a Liberal candidate for the constituency of Kinizs for every election until he was summoned to the Senate on September 5th. i925. He was educated in the district school of his old home and at St. Dunstams College: he subsequently become a member of the Board of Governors of that institution. His first active employment was as clerk in the service of the late Owen Connolly. of Charlottetown. Later he took a position with Peake Brothers & Company. In 1876 he entered the Merchants‘ Bank of Halifax. since merged with the Royal Bank of Canada. and remained wiith them eight years.be- ing one your in Haufax, one year in Summerside. and the other years in Charlottetown and Souris. From i884 to 1889 he was manager of the Mcrchants’ Bank of Prince Edward Island in Sourfs. ilear Soviets Demand bases From llumania I! Robert Parker Associlted Press Staff Writer BELGRADE. March 6 011115583’) —lAPi — A new Phase of the grim Nazi-Soviet cheat ome with helplen Balk- an na on: as the pawns was in IFOKNII 105B)’. with Russia‘! Stalin apparently moving to counter Hitler's move into Bul- garia. Despite official secrecy and the breakdown of telephone and telegraph services throughout 3e Balkans. these facts emerg- Rumania’; Premier Gen. Ion Antoncscu. after an urgent flight to Vienna to confer with Goering. called an emergency meeting of the Rtlmanlan cab. lnet early today on his return to Bucharest. 2- N911"? 1.900.000 iiumonian army reservists. leaving the fields unfilled. massed in the vicinity of the Prut River fron- tier opposite the Soviet Red army. 3. A Soviet note —lts can- tents unknown — was acknorv. lodged by Rurnanlan govern- ment- fluarters to have been received by 'lt0n$c|| pom"; his flight to Vienna. High diplomatic quarters here heard last night that Russia, had demanded immediate cession by Rumania of Black Sea naval bases- ihat Russia's demands were of u; “ultimative” nature, and hgncg Anicnescu went Sllfltnllllv to w... fer with Rumanlals German “pm- In the lntier year Mr. Hughes. went into business first as a part- ner with George MacFai-lrine then carrytnz on the busines alone. and inter forming the J. J. Hughes 8c Company cornomtion. of which he was president. l He ran his first election in 1900 for the Fvdernl House as Liberal candidate for Kings and defeated the late Hon. A C. MacDonald by about 240 votes. In the generrl election of 1904 he was successful over another strong opponent. ire iiite Hon. John Mac-Lean, whom he defeated bv n maioritv of about 90. At the ixcxi. szenerni election in 1908| he met his first defeat at the hands} of A. L. Fraser. who sub equentlv gasémpointcd Jtldflc of the County Oil . (Continued on page 10. Col 4) Charge German Consul with Aiding espionage {Urges speed in factors." Unloading ships GLASGOW. March 5—(CP Cable) —~Tll6 llllbortancc of speedy un- mmflllii: and titrninir of merchant Ships was screwed by the King w. day. during a tour of the Glosizow and Clyde ide docks. "Arc vou clearing the ships and turnlmz them around quickly," m; asked J. VC. MacLeon. Secretary of the Scottish ‘transport and General Workers Union. MacLean murcd him that all en. crates are bcinit directed toward unloodink shins in the shortest p03. sibf time. l " om Rad to hear that," the Kiniz said. “It's of vital 1111001181166‘ in these days." , Hundreds of dockworkers gathen, ed. around the King and Queen, and‘ cheered a. the Royal couple walked? to the waters edge and lngpegtgd the busy wharves. SAN FRANCISCO, March 5. — (AP) -A complaint tiled in federal court today represented that Fritz Wicdemann. German Consul-gener- al here. hnd received from Ger- many more than $5.000.0i_l0 to be used fu espionage activities in the United States ilflfl other parts of the western hemisphere. The comp amt. a civil action. was filed bv the attorney for Mrs. Alice Crockett of San Francisco, who claimed Wioaieinann sent her to Germany on a confidential missfonu and had refused to pov her. She demanded $8.000. Four children Perish in House firs March 5- (C?)- to have started back he kitchen claimed ‘IOF/O . File believed o! enemy?“ fr; t o“ r it? Mrslutilcfiart Mulieknwifs tame ihi.’ ‘.Y¥i§'§ir'“lllvi>'iimp stood outside helpless across the street to turn alarm. ' The children. lb-nst. raine. three. Doreen 1 1-2. fl . Lor- ve and seoonrf floor of the home. other children.’ aired flim- Plrernen went on the few tered the building but the severe l Jenkins. d: er. Ir-Sfll- 0-41.. heat forced him to leave mum neollt u» crowd British Assault Boulogne By Day Docks squarely-hit and fire started; Believe n_o Nazi bombs “fall ongig ‘during day. children of‘ to old them after running in an Bobbie three months. were ofxrhtrlei: seven were at school when the out. Cause of the fire was unknown. scene two ism-r the alarm was elven minutes but even then the building was an bombud d myomuled “hm inferno. Fireman I'm! 5m"! "l" o“ Norw°|_,.‘“:;nd,d a ‘m’ . before he children. Find cause of Brash unknown ..ARiM\STRONG, 01th.. March 5- (CPJ~—A coronefis Jury tonight re- turned a verd.ci. that the [JJCLS of a Trans-Canada Air Line. plane ‘ which crashed h.re Feb. 6, kill rig 12 persons, met death in aplanc crush, : the cause of which is unknown." IBNDON March b-(CH-In a daylight raid in force across the English Ctiannel British bombers assaulted the Naif-held base Bculrgno this afternoon and harried the coastal areas of northern France. the Afr Ministry annrunccd multim- The Boulogne docks were lqlllffil! hit and a. fire set off in the inner harbor. One German fighter plane was drstroyod, six rendered useIessF-althoflh , _ destruction could not be offcmlly wmmidiiares British fighter min Lzu of was announced. Dofesisfvely, the day Vi! 118M- So far as could be learned not a act-awn bomb fell on all during the day. London had m in- consequential afternoon ale-rm. T)! Admiralty briefly announced that British naval ftfoes had auo- cesamfly raided "German internal: in the lmfoten Islands off Nonvey Tuadoy buf. said details the w- tfon had not been learnt . (The Gennana had said previous- ly that light British naval units number of German and Ncrwelllll . tton to sit up a committee on war Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, ACANAEAJTHUR lllllSlilNS unss on cnizizn rnonrirn l Britain Holds We are never without help. MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN %“*'f¥‘1'l“ ~.- !‘“"<. ~ W. Two Trulap Carcls Naval control of Mediterranean and land-air control in Africa seen of vital i (By J. F. Sanderson. Canadian Press Staff Writer) . While Hitler's grey-clad troops line the Greek-Bulgarian frontier and the Nazis atte-mpt pacificatfon of the Balkans by diplomatic or military action. two important facts should be kept in mind-Bri- tain's naval control of the Medl- terranean. particularly the eastern basin. and Britain's dominant land position in North Africa. from the Suez Canal westward to Bengasl Libya. As long as these factors egrisi. North Africa stands as a spring- board‘ for military action in any direction. including the Axis-don't. lnated continent of Europe. There are military experts who expect this war to be won from Africa using it as a base against Italian and German domination of Europe. Those who support this theory point to the crumbling of Bulgaria by an allied force laun- ched from Salonika in 1918 that led to the German collapse on the western front. They suggest that German domination of the Balk- ans today means relatively litilc as long as North Africa. remains under British control and as long as the British navy commands the Mediterranean to rovfde freedom of action in the M drlic East If Hitler still indulges in the tantrums and tlrades he directed against Kurt Von Schuschnills. the Austrian Chancellor or Dr. Hochu the Czechoslovakia President. be- fore adding their countries to the Reich, he must tempted at times to go to work 0n Marshal Grazisni of Italy. Because it was Grazianf who. for the North African theatre of war to deteriorate from a happ pic- ture for the Axis to n dar and dismal one, necesslatfng changes in strategy. ll 15 Rcnerally admitted now that Egypt lay wide open for Axis con- quest last July. after the fall of France and the immobilization of the French forces in Syria that formed the backbone- of allied re- sistance in the Middle East. But Grazianl didn't strike while Britain ivas strnizizcring from the rfiSillts 0f Dunkerque. He advanced (Continued on page 10, co] s» Ontario member Says Farmers flavc grievance 5-—(CP)— OTTAWA. March Farmers are not getting a fair share of the national income and have a "deep-seated restnimcnt" against the present gyernincnt, Mark S.nn (Con. i-iridrnzindl told tit-s House of Ccmmcns today. - Rismg cn the government's m_tion t. move the House into czmmittee of supply on the estimate; Mr. Smn exercised the time-honored privilege of momlxrs of Plllllflffiéilt to call attention to the grievances of their constituents. He started t: speak Just before adizurnment and did not reach the pont of presenting an ammd- meni. to the motion. but announced his intention of doins so. ‘The a- mendment will have the effect of a m ton cf want of confidence fn the wvcrnment. the House adopted with- cu. niviion the government mo- expcnditures after a numbn- ntcnrbers stressed the importance of the cmmittec proceeding with its work in an impartial manner. Recently large orders for war supplies had been placed by the government and in every case the contracts were based on cost of production plus profit, . Senn said. At the same time labor was assured t! the 1929 wage level with incrmsee as warranted by increases in the cost of iivlfltt- "I am not finding fault with that," he said. "It was the only cliourao for the government to foi- ow." At. the some time the fimners were disappointed that nothing was done t: place them in a po~ition comparable to that of labor and industry, ‘ll-ieir "smouldering dis- content recently broke out into an open flame" then the price of but» fer was fixed. "more is among the formers a very deep-seated resentment against the present administration." he said. War-ZS Years Ago Today (l1 The Canadian Press. MARCH Hill (Verdun) by Germans of Verdun, slight gains in Conn 0, MiG-Attack! on Goose began Forges. leven miles and mode Rus- Colo. mportance. Five boys Drowned in Ottawa rivcr GATLNEAU MILLS. Que. Eviaixli (L-(CP) -—1=‘ive boys between l‘. e aaes of eluht and nine years. \\’t‘i(? drowned today ivst cast of here when they broke through the ice COVEHHR the Cttowa River. 'I“i1e bodies of Ravniond and Robert March. brothers. Kenneth Dickson. and Jack Napier u-erc ic- ccvered. still missina is Gordon Smith. All lived at Gatincziu Fa]: . three miles from Ottmvn. Tile accident was said to have occurred after school lute this afternoon. Residents of the (‘lis- trict said the boys went to ti river each day to pinv on the in". which had been though: to be about 18 inches thick. Drauizinsz (or the Smith boy's body betmn tonixzht. Scarchilzzizts cast long shadows over the iec sur- fwcc as men with ice-saws cut niirze slab" of ice. so ElYREQlIIE! cculri uro- ceed, A stiff current was runnins under and fear was expressed the body tance and might not be found late to save the victims. Greatest need For sea powerin British History LONDON. lfiareh 5—(C1’l—- The greatest need for ships and men iii the proud history of British seapnwer was de- scr bed in the House of Com- mons today by the First Lord oi‘ the Admiralty, A. V. Alex- under. 1t eves an extraordinary plea to Parliament for “many more ships and great numbers of men"...To fight "the attic of the Atlantic" which. beginning now. may mean as much to Bri- tain as did 1r st summer's fate- flll “battle of France." Praising the ‘Empire's contribu- tion in sea warfare, Mr, Alexander said "Canadian dzsttqrcrs have taken no mean share All the vital task cf proiactlng our staborne trade acrcs". ilie Atlantic.“ .. Mr. Alexander remained silent. however. when a member asked as t whether the government had "told America that what we rc- quired even more urgently t‘: ri planes and money is ships and sill] more ships." S. Cunningham-Reid rose to Wfllll the l-louse of a "suicide fleet“ U-lboats, small, fast, by skeleton Nazi to turn loose on British Scalrmcs. expected to return home. Mr. Alexander told the ed last year already have (Continued on page 10. col 3) _ Fascist claims Unconfirmed R0 Gayda. iroovfi had Greek citv of forces in Bulgaria. er at Ottawa nor tmidoni. Gerda. wrftfnil Italic. claimed Britain plans to d Greece from the north the British imperial armies." but 65 miles from Salonfka. Canal mfnatins u it does was rom saionfka the Esperev belnm an offensive fate 1011f, which crushed Bulgaria prisoners and then withdraw.) clans captured Peraianpzggof If miles from Kai-mandala. of Turkey in two). snAY, MARC‘ l the ice when the accident occurred.‘ t. From the back benefits. Capt. A. of stripped of all but essential gcar and manned "v-luntceis of death" which, he said. Hitler piimsi * Anthony Eden leaves Athens after conference; Anglo- Greek agreement. U—boats. he said. are not‘ House the; b0 United States distrcycrs obstin- nc good work in helping to meet the ME. March fn-(APF-Virflillifl Italian conunentalo-i" and Salonikn. now threat- ened by the presence of German (This claim was confirmed neith- fn fl Gfornale d’- f- they continued all efforts with a vert many divisions to the aid of Africa-n war front. l-ie claimed Germany "is bringing a fresh and powerful contribution of forces against the coalition of German forces 1n Bulgaria are men seizure of Salonika would izfve- tho Nazis both tea and air bases for attacks on e Suez and gther British Medfierranein atrong-1 o . (Silonfka is easily defended. do» is d the Balkan vai-' fey a brooches to the Aeigan. 1i t t e Allied‘ armiu under General Fronchet ri'-] leu than one month. and forced ‘Ami "fender H o, 1941 l IKing Carol Slips into Portugal Former King 0f Ru- mania Escapes Vir- tual Imprisonment In Spain. SEVILLE, March 5-—(AP)—Car- cl I1. former king of Rumanai. glfltfgéd on the accelerator of his .1ui aut.m bii: during n "quia: i1 in zhc county" M.'.nd;-.y and. revnlctl tonight, drove Magziii .11 and himself from Spam to 11.. Ligal. Tnus Carol and his constant ccm- Diff n escaped fr:rn the virtual Linznlznincixt Spain has fmpsed u on thin 111cc they fled inst nu’ inn fi m the Iron Guiud ter- '." n iii: licnxclzind. A “fcrc-zin diplomat" W110 $.ip- "cd into Carol's Seville h icl a few . days ago was bellevcd to have pro- lvldtd 111m l the papers neces- Jsary to c1" no frontier, I (in Lisbon. admitted iCllllilGllfiy the cx-scvcreign i» in {Pl bu‘. <1 i t’) disclose his \ nLc It was hinted in .B zl he had been supplied ‘ w Polish passpart.) , ilh a ‘ Carol and his friend apparently ‘had made careful plans for their‘ eicscap" l Thcy left in Spain nothing of| .vaiue but tlicli" fcur (icgJ-twol l Pckincse and mvu F x Terriers-and y . three autoin:bil-_s. including the one tin which thsii‘ escaped. Tlfs was found loicr abandoned in a wood} new tile li‘0iii1£‘l'. 1 ' Cairi find Nlmcl l u- i n Lu ‘u ‘and be ;i in the habit ‘l n: ltng d1". ~ in the c;u'.xiry a l without a chauffeur. On such ixnes might be carried l‘ ‘mmlderable d-lS-i they wcrt- accompanied by a small . met ill: ixolicc patrol Another boy. who saw the tivc break tiarourzh the ice. screamed fer one reason or another‘ permitwd ‘lap. and rescuers raced ta the river. l 0n Monday night 20 miles north Srvillc at LllC Extrinindura crcss- '. “d; Czirci sudd. fly t-urncd frosty uard the frrniii r, B7 miles awn and arclcmtcd the car. The police overe- outdistanccd. Carol abdi "d in favor of his sou. Prince Mi i. S2 .6. H“ firrl to S _ arriving Sept. 13, bu-. was st. prod m going on 1 nnrl prssrlfy the Un- ited Stnics. In cctobcr, he and Mme Lupcscu wrp yfaccri tinder house arrest when tin- govcrnntciit in Bucharest sought Mme. LlHYPSClYS extradition on charges of cmbczzllitg state funds. 18 llollanders Sentenced to die AMSTERDAM. (via Berlin). Mar. 5.~—tAP)—Eigliteei1 l-Iollanders were condemned Lo death yesterday by ‘a cnuuizezl in ncls oi sabomrzc and iter- rcrisni against the German army and the army supply service. and also did cspionaize work. Separate By REILLY USULLIVAN Associated Press Staff Writer ATHENS. March 5.—tAP)-—Gl‘@¢‘\€ rejected mounting German pressure for a separate neat-c with iialv to- night and announcetl he is sland- ina fumly beside Britain. having "agreed on all aspects 0i the siiu-, ation“ in southeast Europe foilow- mg conferences with Foreign Sec-l i-etury Anthony Ede propoilandft, claimed today that M1; Eden 19ft nearly a whole division of Canadian m. [hype days of conferences. reached the ancient said Mr. Eden and Gen. sir John . chief of the British Iinperi General Steffi had with Kinfl Georrze i1 and Premier Aluxandrcs Korizfs "examined verv attentively the situation in the Balkans. where view. to preventing the spread of | The “spread of war" from this viewpoint could have but one mean- ing-n Gerriinn invasion of Greece .roin Bulizaria. The Grcck hiali command declar- ed. earlier. in n communique of its ownz- ' “The nrinv and the Greek people have decided to face events. no mat- ter from what direction. and to fight on with the some undylnu will for iiicir liberty and their father- n . The Royal Afr Force twice bombed linliail warships in ~ ini north. The RAF. said they the shins and dunaaed others. l0 PAGES 7 izaria had ever crmnn court. miiriiai in dramatic save. by we AX“ “$9151 551d mat guionuize and sabotaue tiliui. Ndm “musuhad 43.01"‘? ‘m0 W15‘ ‘lhe court. winch sat for a week. Coumry o“ a‘ Smcmus fixcuse m1‘ sentenced if) others to from 11o to makm“ an “mrlm” m°llve3 Seven vears. mpflsonnient Six '_I‘he Bulgarian Government he “has were Set He‘, said later, had taken “the_ first The defendants were charged fg°p“,;?“§l% lggrllghlfi Blllflllrla 1n- with bcinu leaders of a group whorbloody battlefield Greece Rejects V. -__ n. Athens toniflht Bi- U! llull i l’ Big Balk Seems A H. _ ._ .-.. .#.___~.| Annual Subscription Delivered. [p.00 E. l.. “.00: Canada and U. B. $5.00 an War bout Break I_r_z_ Force Germany continues to - pour soldiers across Bulgaria, Soviets enter picture. 11mm‘ by ‘AAIUAIAS A» . hiAWhlNS Associated Press staff Writer b.9145. 311188113. inure-ii 5.—(AP)-—'l‘u‘clve Nazi divisions-approxi- mately 150,000 men-were reported standing at Bulgaria's frontier uith (freecc tonight, udth more on the way. Wanting only nus the actual |)1i_\>iL';L| entice-ted seemed all but begun. The great Balkan liar so long clash iif men in anus. and even this appeared near. Britain silappcd her thin thread of diplomatic relations with Bul- garia, newest. convert to the Axis. Bulgaria and Runiania — which with Occupied by the Nazis were ilungary formed a highway to the Greek lrontler for Nazi troops. fly report, rloviet Russia was brought into the picture late In lhc (lay in this manner :- Ii ffyhig visit by Piremier lon Antonescu to Vienna to see (ioering vas said by diplomatic sources in naval bases to her at once. Belgrade, Yugoslavia. to have been ’t~onccrncd with a Russian demand that Rumanla cede certain Black Sea These informants said that they gut. their information uircct from Rumania. and that the Sovietfls demand had been of "an ultimntivc 11a.- iure,“ with a short deadline. Bulgaria was occupied by swelling: columns of Nazi troops-and nearly all Bu azirinns of mniuiry age inarcnca oil toward the Turkish frontier. The British Minister. George W. Rciidel. called for the last time upon Bulgarians Premier Bogdan Philoff lfllQ Foreign Minister lvan Popoff. and rend to them one of the most. biint declarations in the history of‘ diplomacy. is‘ matter of indifference to his Malestyjs Government ivhat steps Bulgaria may see fir. to takew protect herself against extcrnali danger. but the pressure and ever- iilCrciisiiliz number O1 German troops cil Bulgnriuil soil and the urcivina suuscrviencc of the Bul- izarian izovernment to German no.1- cv is incompatible with the maln- icnance of diplomatic relations . . ." Thus he read his manifesto, and than added some remarks of hi5 l)?'ll. speaking man-to-man to Phil- 0 . ". . . Absolutely scandalous . . . Bulgaria back on the level of barbaric countries . . , our impression that Bulgaria was a western nation was wrong, at least as far as the police are concerned. I tried for years to deal with Bulgarians as a civil- lwl western oqouie. That now appears impossible." He ridiculed the notion thatBul- been threatened. n territory into a i (Continued on page 9. col t) Peace Balls for More cconomy HALIFAX. March i-iCP» -— A call for more economy in govern- ment and a icsseniii: of Nova ecu- tia taxation so "more dollars can be saved and diverted to the war: effort.” was voiced in the Louisia- ture todov by Blots (Co groltghcsici‘). Opposition ffnanci c. He was openink the debate o the public accounts. tabled (lays aizo. which mowed a 511191113 940. for the last fiscal year. Blots declared the surplus had been mode ‘possible because the gown-m- n}en_t collected from the tatxpaye §9£1gl49 more than they did 1 0 SPELL Wonos IN MORE THAN our. WAY lS NOT‘ A SiGN 0F VERfiAfiLlfY 5-(CP)——- March Minimum and maximum tempera- tures: TORONTO . lndo - Uhina. Thailand peace ‘Still tottcrs i A Greek uovernnient communfquel TOKy-(y March 6___(Thuf$day) .._ iAPl-Donici. Japanese news BR611- ,._-,~_ reported wday the French Indo- lCllilld-Tllhllhlld Deact- Ognieffll" mas become "unpredictable because the French failed io present afinal iculv vestcrelnv despite Japanese ex- pectations of an an wer. An eincrilbncy . u as expected t tires of "coping with the possible situation." it was Bold Only tails remained m be worked out. The ‘Ihailand-lndo-China armis- tice which ended border fighting ll due to expire Friday. but there were last ntizht it was authorita- tfvelv indicated that technical de- vancouver 33 50 Etimcnion 1'.‘ 31 Regina 4B 2g Winnipeg 6B 1 Toronto i2 33 Kingston 2 25 Ottawa. 1 22 Montreal 8 20 QUCDGC 8 23 Saint John 12 32 Halifax l8 34 Charlottetown 10 26 FORECAST hfaritimc East and West: Fresh winds; fair with much the sumo temperature; probably scattered snowflurrfes at night. SYNOPSIS Snovrilurries have OCClITYCKl in some parts of Ontario. though it had been for the most. part fair and .moderatcly cold. The weather has lbeen fair over the prairie ‘provinces. ,cold in Manitoba and Eastem Sas- katchewan, but somewhat milder tn iAibcri-a. cabinet meetinll. odav to discuss mess-g worst" High tide this afternoon at 3.36 ‘ and tomorrow morning at 5. Sun sets this afternoon at 5.54 51:81 rises tomorrow morning at 6. . First quarter mo'n March 6, 3.43 i unconfirmed reports it would beex- "11- tended aaain. Charles Arsene Henry. details of the An bv quarters. but it was lmlieverl out an abrupt break. Frenchi Amba sador to Japan. visited the er Foreign Office durinu the day. anc . Tllesdrliy yvosuundcrstood to have discussed .n‘ ur ier the Adriatic unee off ChfmariLAY-i mace bnnln. a Greek-held D011. fllifl Rlifllffl off Valonri. an Italian D0" will)!“ retarded as likely Silt.‘ ' iuwn nine Italian planes gilardinglnegotiniians would DTODOSQI: I continue with- Summerside tide 10 minutes lat- than Charlottetown. CAR FERRY SAILINGS home-disu- solution was nctl informed "‘ that} Leaves Borden 9.45 A.M. 100 PM. leavm Tormentfne 11.00 AM. 8.169.11- t; try.”-