‘ '12"; 7.: _ —~ MAXIMS OI-‘A MERE MAN Z-i Kelli! i W5“ If we M“; phi arc tense; m5 ‘m! l‘ sicsll! ""7 “mun” ardlon. Fitlmdfilufiwgan”. - -.-:::-.-:...".:.. ir-r-r». fitissn Lists Cars w; can do nothing really true }‘%// The People's Paper Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew ///' cnaacorrarovvist, CANADA, SATURDAY, JANUARY a1, 1a.; Loyalty to the Church. 1L1.- .\t.\ t. and the Family is required lit-cans.- it ls part of God's ordinance. MAXI M6 OFA MERE MAN 12 PAGES Anuull Subscription Delivered, $5.00 By Mull: l‘ E. L. 51.00, (‘umuin untl Ls. $5.00 For Gas Rationing System _ All makes divided into classes according to ]\()1‘_§cp()\\’01'; Oil Controller explains ruling. "I'd hate to bt- the first Jap to (at in front oi‘ his gunsighis." fills spoke his liecwenant as Corp. learn Wcc, 21, first American- Clilucsc to be appointed a flying cadet at March Field Calif" was tnnslerretl to an Army basic fly- lIII school. Two Canadians Killed in wreck GLASGOW. Scotland. Jan. 30- (CP CablcI-Elcvcn persons in- cluding two Canadian soldicrs, were killed tonight; when a pas- senger train collidcd with a light engine in the west of Scotland. The dead Canadians were priv- m Lewis Benjamin Eden and 186k Thomson. Their home ad- dresses were not learned immed- lately. Twenty five other persons were hurt, 14 of them seriously. Coming Events —Q— Ilia for Notices In this column I cents pcr word “Cake sale at KIOIIIIIUYS Satur- llt. January at, zion Ltutid. L-8l5-1-30-2i. "Loading hogs Bradalbane, Fri- gli’ till ll a.m., Iccbruary d. Arthur "llm- L-853. "Wt-l require a qnuntltv oi well- Lllshed bcci cattle. (sworn and miiers; to dress. 600 lbs or ovcr. Ind Cold Storage C0,, Ltd. L-HS-I-ZI-tl. "Reserve Monday. February 9th 0f Charlottetown B. Y. P. U. ‘Flirct: c1l11i1l'-'Mt\l'y‘s Castle In the Air." 1r837-1-31-ll. ha? sccoun; of storm will be m I lwss Hunter River Monday 1'11")’ 2. Batman and Bagnall. 14-853. "mam"! 11038 at Fredericton has "l! until 9 A. M. at Bradal- till a P. M. Knud Jorgensen. L-608-I-17-bi. "511 nrt llv n M» Rsr..°.t'i"..ts2*“ “an "o7 A‘ 09-. Hunter Riirer y. 1 L-Bl-IZ-Ei-Wed-Sat-tf. Willis Dies st Frederic- 1 sllieghlbtgitgg ralsir bfor - . asc u Knud Jorgcnsen. y L-836-l-31-Ii. ciuvcsgggl; Bstlpgiigl Mgieudaqm n I “Marv 3rd nu noon??? A. $3.“ 14-543-1-81-11. ‘O -——-—_. ‘mgllflhs County Lodge meet-s at Fm- Tuesday. February 3rd c m °°10ck. Verncr Moore. Secretaray. L-B25-l-31-2l. --___. "WW0. come to the - Tyrone in ‘trainer's Tuesday. a 4-31-31. Qummck Bhlanlns Association h, mlittglifnlfs st Hunter River. Mon- Jebrsglly 2:15 Tufsgadyt fore- uq ant r . Lem. ormml- Rflllrescntalivc. L-MB-I-Si-Zt. OIICS. OTTAWA, Jan. 80—(CP)—OiI Controller G. R. Oottrollo unplu- sized tonight that every car owner M10 feels he would be almttcd an extra. allowance of gasoline under the forthccmln rationing plan must submit ev don“ of need bc- fore he is placed in a preferred ca» . Mi". Coctrcllck ststuneait wu ll- sued only n. few hours after Mun- 9d itlons Minister I-Iovte warned Can- wdians that. summer holiday auto- mobile travel will not be altogeth- er eliminated by gasoline ration- lng but that it will be "very scr- lously curtailed." Earl r. too. Mr. Oottrellc dis- closed that all passenger cars have been divided into three classes. by horsepower, and that the gasoline ration allot-ted to any vehicle will de nd on its category. otomyclists will be cblc to drive on their gasoline ration just as many miles as the owners of cars driven only for pleasure. Mr. 00t- trcile said. Unless a motorcycle is used for commercial purposes, it will be placed in cattegor “A," class 4, which means on cl owancc for motorcycles of 24 units of gas- oline. At the proposed rate of fivc allons a. unit i-llLs will be enough or about 5.000 miles. Commercial motorcycles will be granted all the gasoline they ziccd to the extent of their proved nor- mal re tiircments, based on the i941 ml ease. Other Details Amipiifying Mr. Howeb slate- ment. Mr. Cottrclle said that under the rationing plan the owner of a smell pleasure car will be allowed 60 units 0t gasoline-MO gallons- c year. 0i this, 33 per cent 0r 95 gallons may be Purchased in July, August and Sep ember. During April, May and June- first three months of o ration of the rationing plan-- he small pleasure car allowance will be 80 gallons. 27 per cent of the year's supply. During the lest three months of the year the quota will bc 75 gallons or 25 per cent. "Next year the motorists of Can- ada will start. lo feel the pinch," Mr Cottrelle said. "In January, February and March of 1943 no more than (l, total of 50 gallons will be permitted for each pleasure car. This rrpresents the remaining 15 per osnt tr-f the year's allowance. Mr. Cc-tt-rclle emphasized that no more than a tnnkfull of gasfiznc would be carried over from one year's quarter to the next. "The regulations provide very heavy jail tenns and heavy fines, or both jail and fine, if anyone is caught in possession of gasoline in an illegal lace," ha said. "It will be lllega for a motorist to store up gasoline in his private garage or in hil cellar, or anywhere else. "So it is easy lo see that if he found himself with scme coupons leftover near the close of the bus- iness day of June 30. or at the end of any other quarter, the most he could buy. would be a tankful." Here are the various models in mach class:- Class 1 (60 units. 300 gallons): Ajax. American Bantam. Austin, Fwontinued on page 8. Col l) P.E.l. will li-g-ltt First Victory Loan Beacon OTTAWA, Jan. 30-(CP)'— Some 2,000 municipalities scroll Canada wlll light beacon llrcl during the second Victory Loan campolg in February, symbol- ising "Dominion-wide hit-h lllll fortitude." the “rcmonials com- mlttcc of the lou csmpallll announced today. Prime Minister Churchill has bccn asked to light a #1115011" beacon ilro In Enllond and ill Canada. beacon fires will b0 lighted, in continuity, across the Dominion from cast to welt. Theme of the Imfilflflllllll will be, “Beacon Fires of Freedom." The first beacon fires will be lighted in Prince Edward Island. on Feb. l0. The sweep will then continue westward according to the following time table: Non sooth, Fob. l7: New Brunswick. Feb. 18: Quebec, Fob. l9; 0n- iarlo, Ibb. 20; Manitoba. Feb. 2i; Saskatchewan, Fob. N; Al- berta, Feb. 24: and British Col- umbia, I-‘cb. £6. FEAST OF MACOABEKS CAPE ‘IOWN-(CPI- The South African, General Staff, the Red cross and other war arganinticou and groups were officially repre- rened gt m impressive military sor in CODZAIIClGtl by chief Rabbi Abrshams at the Great Synagogue hem on the nut oi the Big ca; is Prepared for Long siege Japanese Have Advan- ced To Within 20 Miles Of island. (By C. Yates McDaniel. Associated Press Staff Writer) SINGAPORE. Jan. S0-(AP)- The Japanese invaders had smash- down to within 18 to 20 miles of Singapore on both the British loft and centre tonight and this great base went under military curfew. ' Only on the east Malayan coast. whore fighting was inconclusive along the Sedill river about 40 miles above this island. had the enemy been checked. The afternoon communique oi’ the imperial command thus told a story oi‘ grave reversals:- "Ln the centre there is contact with the enemy about Kulal (l8 miles above the milc-ivide Johore strait separating Singapore island from the mattiland), and heavy fighting took place yesterday in the Sedcnak area (eight miles to the north). "In the western sector of the front some fighting has taken place in the Pontian Besar area (20 miles from Johore strait), “Enemy air activity has been considerable against oitr forward positions and communications.” “The Pontian Besar area. bn the west, is near a junction of roads -one of which leads 17 miles southward to the southern tip of the Malayan peninsula, due west Cl 81088190“; the other eastward to the main road through Johore Bar-u, capital of Johore strait, thence across the-half-mile cause- xtxrlyé which links mainland and is- ~Wldesprecd areas of Singapore Lscif as well as the boss's outlying approaches were feeling the inten- sifted aerial pounding mentioned so tersely in the communique. The one cheering note was the announcement that another 1.000 British Imperial troops previgusly cut off in the Batu Pahat section at gvesitern Malaya. had been able ea back d i British bodies?" rm" the mam llitlcl makes Few promises In speech BERLIN, (From German broad- casts) Jan. 30 -(AP) --Hltler sc- knowledged to his people today that he could not promise an end to the war this year but declared Japan's surprise attack upon the United States ‘on; greatly relieved our situation." Speaking for this first time since his declaration of war upon the United States. Hitler blamed tho weather instead on the Russians for Nazi reverses on the ‘eastern front and promised i942 "will again be a year of gram. virlorios." "Countries which have nothing now m"; united." hc said. "We. shall see who wins this war-those who have nothing to lose and ovci'y11\1l\i: to win or those who have every- thin to lose and nothing to gain. "I do not~ know lf the war will and this year. but one thing I do know: wherever the enemy will come up against us he will be beat- on." Hitler congratulated Japan for tho "way she followed our example and struck first" and added that "now Britain and the Ufllifll States willneed convoys on all oc- ggng and they will see what our U-boats msv actilevc." War:25 Years Ago Today (By The txnsdisn Press) _ 31. IBM-German govern- mgnhuannounccd unrestricted sub- marine warfare to start within certain pacified zones. New Cler- man attacks 0n thc also mwr of cm Eastern Front 10pm!"- rm. 1. ION-German submarin- as sank l0 sh of 10.039 total ton- nage on first 13:)? of 11110081594 fill; '““’“". "Wilt Eiitlti fit“... figs: polgront.‘ Ifitrther British SUCQQQQQ‘ “sported at Kut-el-Aznarl. Mesopotamia. nvmms SECOND v.c. BOMBAY-w?) —- India's sec- ond Victoria Cross during tlic Dres- ent war was awarded D°511111m°“5117 to Subadttr Richllfli Rflm- m‘ m1‘ muons Rifles. for sfllblurr‘ 1" 1°" lion with British forces in Edit MIMI» l- War Situation Last Night (By KIRKE L. SIMPSON, Associated Press Vl/ar Analyst) Among countless birthday greetings showered upon him by men and woman great uml small in the liu Delano Roosevelt could have received none his heart strings as that salute of Gen. Douglas MacArthur, for affairs 0f a war-torn world. Frank- that so clutched at the bravo from fur-off Luzon. himself and his men who have msdc an American-Filipino "trench of bayoncts" there, radioed his commander in chief:- “Smokc-begrimcd mrn. covered with thr- marks of battle, rise from the fox-holes of Batan and the batteries of Corrcgidor to pray rcverently that God may bless immeasurably the United States." President of the whallv" "l" I'll"! "Wm. the men of Baton and of Corregldoi- have kept the faith. That gallant stand in Luzon is an asset Item of still lmponderable strategic meaning in the war lodgers of the United Nations. It ls a still grilling failure for the Japanese sggressors. the effect of which on the whoe course of the war in the Pacific cannot yet be gauged. But it is more than that, It is a symbol of confidence for Ameri- cans In the valor and fightingclsn of their manhood In this genera- tion as wrdun was a heart-stirring nnmg n"- nenchmen h, another‘ as Tohruk and Dunkcrque are for Britons toda for all freedom-loving peoples tomorrow. I O U y. as Singapore may be It is remarkable that MacArthur found both the time and the solemnly gallant words for that birthday greeting amid the din of the endless battle he is fighting against seemingly ‘mpossibio odds That having both the will and tho words, he also had the means 1X com_ mllnlflfllfi it. timed to the minuti- as a message not only to thr- [Ins]- dent but to all Americans, is also a striking fact. Burma Defenders- Sh ift‘ To Attack RANGOON. Jan. 30 _tCP.\ Burma's air dcfcnd-ers shifted today to the attack. strafing a Japanese air case on tlzc Moulmein fighting front in southern Burma while British and Burmese troops on the ground held last to their positions. The American voluntez-n n :4 L: _ El s. 9 o flames n in. willie he was diving low at his tar- er was seen to burst QB Both south and east of Moul- mein. Gulf of Martaban port n- vross from Rangoon, the British forces had the situation wml in hand. "The troops are in 8131i heart,“ the British command nrlrleti Just where the eas'ern itiradinfl column had been enga-tcti was not stated. The last previous NlWYi-‘l had put the Jnoane. ctlthln 30 miles of Monlmcin. whi 1 is across the Gulf of Martaban £10m Ran- goon. As to air operations the regular Britun communique reported twnly that one British plane had been lost in RAF. sortirs cvcr enemy territory. (Tokyo claimed that Javanese were advancing toward lvfotilrncln in three columns: one west from Kcwkaneik. due east of the Gulf of Mcrtaban port. another from Tovoy on the south and the third from a point between those two places.» Are anxious liver Canadian" Farm debts Three-day “Sessions For Canadian Federation Of Agriculture Are Concluded. By James Mcfiooll Canadian Press Staff Wrllfl’ econ» ”“"...“.t*‘.€f.3r‘t.““' lillmfllfift lstctfllltl00.go0,0oo and the release of kev farm workers from compulso military trainiflfl milk‘ ed discuss ons today “1- 01051118 8%- slcns of the three-day Canadian yoga-mm, of Agriculture annual c ting. mvl/m, delegates "P0114118 1'11"")?! thc Fedcml Farmers.‘ Creditors Ar- rangement Act for the adiufligléflf of debts might be lost. the c era tion decided s committee should conifer vrlth Finance Minister Ilsley to stress the importance oi 316M069 being maintained and M1889! ‘l! amendnrentzgfilétr-‘nprove the Farro- era d‘: lglckcrtlcn: Saskatoon. said Canada's farm debt. vtas not ‘£55 than 9020000000 and in Sanka 1- cwan the farmers’ debts were such "we are rapidly becoming l W1‘ ant-farmer province." Mortgage companies. with 0"" claims from fnnners. were OPEN" im three or four forms ss unit-s with motorized equipment and the oaigirfiéil operators were brink m0"- e o . "u you i; other provinces have not got to the same P111" l5 W’ have in respect to debt. I vtarrt v0" to believe me you'll got the-re.’ Mr Bickerwn said. "Co-operatives will not save you.' The federation recommended that pgriculturists be called in an ad- vqn-y" Mm-qlfv M gulp! Wbnarrlq P-(Continued on‘ case 3.1001 l) News Briefs QUITO, Ecuador, Jan. 30- (AIU-Ecuador today formally broke off diplomatic relations with Germany. Italy and Jap- an. BATAVIA, N.E.I., Jan. 30-—(APt -R.elnforcements in both mater- ials (ind mcn already have arrived in the Netherlands East Indies. They provide new hope of aid, a- long with’ tlic Netherlands-Ameri- can victories in the Strait of Ma- cassar. WASHINGTON, Jan. 30 ._ (AID-The United States navy department announced today that the tanker Rochester had been tnrpcdoed by an enemy submarine today in an attack off the Atlantic coast and that the ship had been abandoned. International Ar A Glance | (By The Canadian Press) SINGAPORE —- Curfew declared ls British forces prepare to meet siege. WASHINGTON — lllilf‘.»\l'llllll' ig- nores Jap demand hc anti his Lu- zon army surrcndcr. MOSCOW - Ill-Fusions encircle Germans at numerous points along cntlrc front. CAIRO —— command re- ports two strong enemy columns forced abandonment of " all. R-ANGOON — British say Burma fight "well in hand.“ Arctic storm Causes damage ICELAND 355g; . 16-mo- isyedl-(Aib-An Arctic storm which reached a velocity of 120 miles an hour lashed Iceland yes- terday for 12 hours and did as much damage to property as a squadron of bombers. No live; were lost in the United States garrison but scores of sol- diers were treated for cuts and bruises. Army and marine commanders turned out every man to lash and secure nissen huts and tic down sentry boxes. Brief fierce gust; plucked the roofs off warehouses. capsincd huts occupied by American and British soldiers and blew dovm a good sized church. Several merchant ships were blown on to islands tn the harbor of aeyisdis. NAZIS BAN STOCKHOLM- German bitter- ncss toward neutral Sweden was pronounced when Sweden invoked an export bsn on wool. inventing Germans in Sweden sending woollen clothing to Nul soldiers 0h the Russian front. vs tfirw successes AGAINST cannons Singapore Goes Under Military Curfew Outflanmliéed rind Faith in future In Many Plages- Undauoted By Strict-Soviet offensive continued ‘with Food Rationing; Face Fish Shortage. By Edward Robinson Associated Press Staff ‘Vriier LONDON. Juli. toll lili- t AP t WUn- of donated Brlwlls, in the midst (B Edd G" I A l 1 d their vrozst iisli shortage in 50 y P"; Smrzlyorairiyesirca e years and avtelr1a8ifl8 loneheas g 311911; per person, s wee s cwe . _ -_ faith in the future with their Moscovl‘ Jan‘ 30 (AP) In firm possession oi the railway gate to both the Ukraine granary and the Donors coal basin. the Red 0- . _ army was reported officially to- aggifg; gfflfflf fgggfg°etf,,<siff;e ltlght to have Outflanked. out- thlrd consecutive wcck while the kuued 511d encircled the German income tax—mostlv (‘courted from C1191“? m 5cm" 9! secmrs 0" l wcekly pay e,,v..gcl_ bccstcd the mastcr Stalin plan of throwing Exchcqtiefs fuiiti. mitt Jan. 1 by ‘115 ,G‘31‘m'1n5_ 153m “WW acre 0f nearly £144v(]-[)]_U(),]_ ltusstzm soil ill 194:. Asthe tctal oztnaigv exiwnrli- Huge Gcrtran forxrs ture was 9286.494 221 ' the \\'Qtk-—— £10118?!‘ 0f °111'1'5l3m<=11t steady purchase of domestic issues on the stock market. At the same time government \\'€l'(‘ in u: the of which supply selvicfs took centre. north and south of the KlPIlCIL was only active front. Prong-like Soviet ' ore than £9,~ ' tcs were aimed at many objec- rus neck. s. catching the Nazis between ' for lili‘ inc forks and 1c: them the c- tlms ramc :0 t-hoitn- cf bcnnu tics‘ 13rd. captured ‘ or retreating with such speed that were 81Ifl°$~ they lose much valued equipment. _ v wi 101” days. In tryting to pursue the latter One Lorittcn firm w; - formerly COWS.“ the (“fey-mans met swm sold £8000 wart-h of ibh weekly charges behind their lines bv skill- 13-‘1 WTFK 551d 0111" 5747- ed Siberian ski troops, which in- n‘? C1115“ f"? ~ 11‘ “I6” tcrruptcri the best-hid \'a7i plans 111i‘ 10-1‘ “1 111" N “é 1‘ ““"“’>‘s Tonight's communiqutxsaid num- ‘md 1.1.1“ .‘1“°5"-““1115 m’ “d Nun‘ crous ‘additional populated laces 5°“ 115111115‘: b.9131 d“ i° m“ W3" fell into Russian hands durinp the Milk rationing, which started d“. and a Supblement n ‘H182 50o 1"“ N°v°mber “ml w“ “Xmm Ciermans killed in the libgration of d Ma h. ' - r efrdrelihlcjyduraxtclonndljxggpaifi Sukhinichi, big railway junction in Snghuy chm“, at the beginning the Kirov zone 150 miles south- of the week by Prime Minister “Pf; °l M°$°°“'- Churchill's sombre war picture in ,h "T511" °1' T199198 Temnfllli-S 0f Commons. the stock market later ~ enbeale" E-“emv $116"! (writin- wok on swan, ues, the official announcement Oil shares, generalt regarded as added- t-hc market‘; Dellwct or. imrprovted T119 new Red while scmc dealers indulged in F11’? bRSEd On F. long farm buying of rubbci- shares rnent or surprise aided by deft after Mr. Churchill's indication scouting in moth-like Soviet planes there might be additional bed news which operate in the worst kind of frcm the Fur East. weather. Canada's gift of $1.000.'>00.000 At the front one sees these little worth of \vai' materials to Britain fellows "qlilppefl with 5km The free of charge and repatriation of Russians seem able to land them (t-nrmdian stock worth about 5250- almost anyvrhers" to ilv them in 000.000 were err-pooled to give an nnzznrds and gates Thor- nose out add-ed stimulus to rcinvcsitmcnls in >1“. enemy's “wmkgpots- 10mm, the United Kingdom. break. m, movement. 5nd qmkf Wm iv reporting b ck. Th kl Report Hitler Recalls a e s "m" vl-no then knife into action s... .0 Divisions From France Retail fish shops empty. with mam‘ v1? army offensives considerable ele- {11011119 that the Russians are a-bie .t fling them across whole sectors at the shortest warning. Add 4 weeks to S.F.T.S. courses LOtNTDON. Jan. 30—-(CP) Dciiy Mail reported tonight dis-patch from Madrid. that Hitler had recalled all active divisions from France, Belgium and Holland to build up a reserve army for the Nazi spring cam/paign. Their places in the occupied zones have been taken over by garrison divisions of r--~n over 4-) and boys from l0 to 1T. the newspaper said. Island-horn Doctor honored —'I‘he in a OTTAWA, Jan. Ito-QJPJ-Roysl Canadian Air ‘Force headquarters announced tonight that the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan is "so far ahead of its original sched- ule" that four weeks has been added to the coarse at service flying train- ing schools. This course now will be iii weeks ______s and tiit- additional time students HANULTON‘ N_ y“ Jun m», _ spend thcrc will "still llll‘lll(‘l' im- tAPw-Dr. James D. lrlowlett. who 11m” "51111118 "1 l111°1~*-" H" R- C- quit school at the age of ll years A- F- Sl-“Wmelli Sflid. and did not rerun, ‘mm nine “an "The original schedule provided later—inspired by a borrovrcd Greek that the British Ctmimntntctritli Air arnmmttr—-rmeircd today nn non. Training Plan rhotild com" into fall Ofllly doctor of lvttrrs tivgrce n‘ operation about April. i942." thc Air Colgate University. Force said. "Actually the plan went Refuses request From Montreal Coincident with the award. pre- into full operation wit-ii the opcn- scnted at the opening of Co‘$_.'atc's ing of No. 9 Bombing and Gunnery second term. announcement was school (a: Mom .1011, Que) 99¢, 15, mild‘? Df- HOWIOIt \\'0ll1f1 T8518 H5 exactly two years aiicr thc final ‘limcml 01' "dml-“mllfi 11°"? agreement was reached between tits Angus‘ after l6 vcars During the -- . ' Dbriodh he admitted 4.989 of the gigklgexlggallgllzaCanada’ Ami-u“ university's 8.639 alumni. ‘ Dr. Hewlett. who vras graduated from Colgate iin 1900. was iormgrlr I n pr ncipal of hgh schoos at ty- B t h T mouth. Quincy and Mcdforti. l\l'nss._ s and Bethlehem. Pa, and ll".l\'l~ . master of Hcbron Academy, Hv- w t»... Me. I ftlWli Dr. Hewlett wasbborn ins Fringe- ' Edward Island Fe. 24, I74, c son of George and more Jana How- left. He came in lite Utittei Slates in 1889 aura boyhnfclsh. and wals ____,,___ Zmditntcd rom t 1- .» urn cfass- R0 J‘ aoglkp, The fol gggtttttte of Watervin: bhlnc. m&fl m" 3,1’ the Ems}, force, n 1 ' ______ covering M28851 firs? 1‘°S?€1'_§§R$JX; —_'_"*"—' nl ht to ave en solely from the ares oi that Axis- cccupied port alter; aE-iggrctl‘ 13-1‘:- d .bl ll ll n5 8 ( l 2 - §l\il€lrErt\v‘ln°iTloi1iiigicl's sustained and issdrcrful rotuiwl‘ thrdllsft» 4:10"! '11" ‘cad of his previous c ca . 1 The great majority of the supply dumps established‘ by“ the 3th army p te: t e 0 i‘ ‘WK OTTAWA. Jun. 30 —(CP) -Fi- on Christmas Eve ivere $021K‘??? nancn Mlfllébil‘ Ilsley today told a and such harbor works as a“! tielcgalion of the executive com- 11901116 were ntmln dcstrogdslg 7) mittce of the city of identical tlmt. T119 Brltlsl‘ 11'1" SQ“ as, ‘m1; the Dominion government could miles southeast of f t!!!“ 5mm Rive no flnuriilcxtlal slsslstanclc tors flbbcrtaia tmoaorrlterflagd m a hm, proposed re anc no psn or 0n - " ‘ . ,1 . Montreal. tikirlmlzlrrmt-hrew back enemy. c "Mr. Ilsiey told n5 aha‘ znunlri- l" m - 1m finances were not o. master for T1"! 3°?“ f,“ 7123:0562“ the Dominion government and to 51mm? °“"“‘“ w ‘ iticd in head- give aid to one city would create qvflricrs t mmunique reporting an n precedent that would result requests from Vancouver to Hall- fax." J. 0. Asselln. chairman of the onccutivc committee said. _ . bi attack on enemy 1" $2213?“ iligilspggt and military buildings at Tripoli. in extreme western Ubyl. swift movement taking heavy of re treating Germans. move To simplify Production Plan F e w e r Models, Types To Cut Time, Cost Of Manufactur- ing. O'I“I'.-\\\'i.-\, Jan. 30-~-|CP~--( tiian itiuustrics have BllCaL.‘ some lillportant steps to Lo-(It/JALC with Wartime Prices and ’l‘ratie Board in it; broad program to bring about measures of economy and simplification in production and distribution of constant-r goons. This the board lllti-c known to- night aiter announcing a special di- vision of the board was being set up to work with the board's admin- istrators and advisory committees from industry tn a program dcsigncd to “raiionalizt? production and dis- tributlon. By ratlonallzizig industry the board statement said it meant e1- lmlnating extravagant marketing practices, overlapping sales organ- ization and duplication of services to the end that all possible uni-tithe economies may be affected and still meet necessary civilian dcmanci. Main aim of the program is to obtain a greater total amount of cl- vllian production in relation to hu- man and material resources RTflli- able after the needs of the armed forces and the allies have boon me: The board's administrators now have in hand the formulation o! general rules for the standardiza- tion of production. reduction in the number of varieties, models and styles of goods and oi the sizes and quantities in which goods are nut up for sale. "Frills? must be eliminated, the board said. The board's ndnllnlstralors v r0 (Continued on page ll. (‘fl 5| Rueeaa $<REfc nae Because: \< (Canadian Prrsv 'I‘OR.ON'I‘O. Jam- 30 - and maximum imip m: Dawn-on VlClOHfl ti. \vi:tnipeg 'I‘cronIo Ottawa Aiontrcai Boston liar toils; r1 Provinccs Willi 119?“ W‘ ltohn and SIHKRYPFK“ Ozitario i' ' HOS-royg 1m '51‘. Alamo: Raina will light snow in wrs. P»- mfZIFOYI Saturday. High tidc tn = not. r V139 4rd trniclit at l0 Sm, 5m.- 1lr~,= -_'|ft~'.i‘t\:i'~. :1‘ 595 and rises l(lIll(‘l'l..\\‘ momma at 721 Full moon Feb l 4 l‘! om Srmmcrstrfv» tide iii Illillilif‘? or than Charlottetown. BURDEN - (‘APE TOIUIENTINF‘. SERVICE ,. Leave Borden 0.25 A.i\l 1.00 PM. Leave Cape Tormcntlns 11.00 A.» 3.20 Pl