MAXIMS 07L MERE MAN flllflflfi Int not trllles vex us and destroy phi“; Gandhi, Founded [B81 Charlottetown Glnldhl, ‘lino Canto, iussuufiiclvruh; r51- >,"%//’ The People's Paper 1 cnARw-rro-rowu, cauaoa. WEDNESDAY, JANUARlf 14.1942 Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew ‘Io mists tomorrow. MAX I MS OI" A MERE MAN The rlccds of‘ today nill grccl 1111 Annual sul|u<-r.|.11..n Ili-liu-n-d 21.1110 Dy lhalli l’. B. L. 11.00; (‘uuullu and 1.3 53.0! OcENIEv Suspension 0f Attorney General Still In Effect Refused hearing by Mr. Justice Arsenault, pending explan- ation of past conduct. T] 5u§per1.'~"'0n imposed upon HOIITQTTIBIIE A’: Campbell. Attorney General. during me June term of m; supremo Court was still in ef- fgct when the January assizesop- ened in the Court Hcrlse in Char- lotletown. yesterday. it “'11s WW1 by Mr. Justice A. E. lrrscnauit, 1he residing Judgf- pThe Attorney General had ban barred from appear-mg before A 1‘. Justice Arsenault at the 1ast_ses- sion of the Court. 1mm he ffflffdl“; ed why he had givcn ins 1on0: 1o the Crown Prosecutor, M1. Grit. Clair Trainor. llot to appear u .11 l 5Q¢Ql1d prohibition aplwfll til?‘- against the same 116mm Ytasoclfthq; heard. Later it was undcis o - thc ruling vms intcnllvd f0 “PP-v o11'.\- to uou-crinilnal cares. v.11 until v-cs1c1-dnv dld Almlllfy ("(1X“lra1 cglnplfill again have caszon to cow-H‘ biilme Ml‘ ‘usl . Arsenault. In the c850 0! ‘h? Kn“ vs. Robert Galbraith. the only gllj pcal case on the dockcta n“. Grown Proseculorha ex; W scrcrrli \ tnr-sscs, .110 l\.liilll‘..‘ Gcncral lo c‘. 11112111110 Li} acmsofp “l 0 had t111 n the stand. "I can't hear you. Mr. Attorney General." the Court inteffllllied- when the Attorney General raised h; vlllCC, M1‘, Justice Atronauli rc- pfidml the statement and t‘ ll l)" i-cmindinrz “l? C-"illlllh m... $1111 under suspension in you my court, in r111 except criminal oasis." Th“ Attorney General rfillllffl 1w he “Wasn't. aware of MY ‘Wu-m bgrwoen the Gown ‘fl-id cth:1- case ." He. had unrlersoq H15 ponlchirys rullnt’. "liillififl u? all cases. l-Ie told the Court he [Frail we he ‘r...'.‘:1-..-1;1-.. but had not hear 0 - ~ ' the Court. (Continued on page '7. C01 l) ; Lakes shipping Nien to confer n. l3—(CP)-'S11iP' lrfiyrrgtygifk Jiepresentatives 11nd are?” Lakes and St. Lawrence shlP operators W111 will" l“ fr?“ onto Jan. l0. °" mews offlulllf.) lug the Canadian 1111111111 91‘ ‘__ nmximum efficiency 111 111;.‘ Chi-n flnge o1 essential lllttttldtist 1942, it xvas announced toi11g1 - h 1,_ p, Wilgrcss, chaizman of 9 ghipplng board and deputy Yfm“ ldrr of trad: and commerce, C2215 llrmed that the board imdhinv operators of bulk carrier \L’.s.‘LI5 lop the lakes and river to Iuevt W A A. I... W. MacCalium. duector 05 ghlpplnm The meetingnvvill be a ‘round tabfe confcrence._ The purpose is "to enlist the co- oppl-fltign pf all operators and to obtain their vicws and recommen- dalions." OTTAWA. Jan. 13—(CPl-—Thg Wartime Prices and Trude ‘B0B! announced today that E. J. 0111m- bcrs of vcrnon. B. 0.. hi" bee“ appointed director of fFHlt-‘t “ml vegetables in the board's foocls 11d- ministration. James T. Stow-art of St. Thom-us, Ont, has been appointed dlrectoi bf steel stamping and coated steel. Both men will serve without re- muneration. flaming Events —Q- lafa for Nflllrl-u In thta column 3 can" nor n-urvl ¢-_T:;-. -; . . "Talkies Bouris Thursday. Ir546-1-14-2l. "Talkie: Montague soturdv-v. L-548-l-H-2i. "Wanted to buy Chicken. Fowl Island Cold Storage. 14-219-7-9-14 "Loulln hogs at Coivilla until l P. M. Fgd y. January 16th. D. Ieslio MacDoBweli. L-538-i l4 2i. "Bingo and Dancc. Kinkcro Hall. Thur d . J nuary 15th. Mullitlutfs Misti, a L-526-l-l4-1l. “Cu-d Part Holy Redeemer Hall tonl m, 5,15, f g hments. Tickets as .2... m’ L-527-I-l4-li. the ' Market "Buying pigs on Friday Square, Charlottetown, Knud Jorgenscn. L-5l7-l-lIl-4l. "Bu ng live and dressed poultry fiery‘: esday and [Sjrlday- P- o ,, t - ver. v C0 Hu€'§Il‘I2l‘3'w(d'Sat'It "Loading hogs Thursday. Jan. 15 Summer-side till I p.m.: Ken- Klnaton till 8 p.111. Buman and Basmu North Wllfshlft‘ 11nd Hun- lfl‘ River Friday till noon. Mc- Ewm and Campbell. b547- lihngle Nazi planes Raid English town LONDON, Jun. 11_!—(CP)—-Eiing1e German raiders diving out of the clouds in two daylight attacks kill- ed l0 persons and wrecked sorna business buildings today in a northeastern English coastal town. Those killed were in an ambul- ance post which suffered a direct hit. An East Anglian town also wu the target of a light attack. U. S. creates One-man control 0n prduction WASHINGTON, Jan. l3-<A.P)- President Roosevelt created a one- man control over the vast Unit-rd States war production effort to- night with all power concentrated in Donald M. Nelson, as a sort o1 generalissimo of supply. The sin-prise announcement was given out at the White House ut. two hours before Wendell L, ill- kie. Republican presidential nominee in 1940, 111-as to go on the air with a demand that one-man control be set up to end "debating society" methods. An advance text of the Willkie speech had been distributed in ‘ Washington early in the day. and wiilkie himself had conferred at- the White House this forenoon. I11 actually delivering his speech tonight, Wilikie delcictl the demand for 1i1c one-man set-up in view ct‘ Mr. Roosevelt's action. Under the President's plan, still in1-:1npiclc,:1. new war production bun-d will be established. 11nd Nel- son uncle 11s chairman. Nelson has been sci-ring as executive director of the supply Priorities and Allo- cation Board. Board members, com- prising some of the hghest officials of the government. wt l serve on thr- ncw board~under Ne son. I-Iis only superior officer is Presi- tlcut Roosevelt himself. Washlnglon lmulcdialcly concluded that Nel- son's position here would be rough- lv equivalent to that of Lord Beav- erbrook, the British Minister of Supply. Ban Japs from Fishing in Canadian waters C/ITAWA, Jan. 13—(CP)—Pla.n| for handling British Columbia's 25,- 000 Japanese who today 105i. 0119 of their main sources of llvellhfiw whcn bazrcd frcm fishing in Can- adian waters, now are under con- szdtrution by u. government inter- departmental committee. Further details of the Govern- ment's policy toward the JBPB-MBQ in Canada. were eXDefi-Bd m°m"\' tat-i y in the fozm of a general 11.n- ncuuc-rmcut. Au Order-in-Councll. passed in the interests of "national defence and security", and announced t0- dny deprived Japanese of the i180 or thcir vast fishing fleet on the British Columbia coast. It also removed JopH-HBSG 0n- tircly from Pacific fishiM We?!‘ tions. It was announced by Fisheriu Minister Michaud. one of the gov- crnment ministers who took Pl" 1n o. conference here last wee: when l1igl1 govcmment officials. high officers of the army. n"? and Royal Canadian Mounted Po- iicc and others met the standing committee 0n Orientals in Brltl-lh Columbia. N0 Sign. Of Arson In Shipshaw Fire BIHPBI-IAW, Que" Jan. 13-(0?) --Munlclpal and ‘provincial police officers announce tonight, follow- ing the close of today's lnquirv into a fire in o constriction ca-mp here in which, 15 me were burn- ed to death. that it was unmi- mously agreed thst there wu no question o! arson and that. fire, in n11 probability. had been caused by a careless smoker. The blaze broke out early Bun- day morning at a construction camp, where the Foundation Com- pany is building a $35,000,000 power project for the Beguenzy Power Company a subsidiary Alum- l11um Crmpany of Canada, and destroyed a workers’ but. 94 lost in Torpedoing off Nova Scotla- E n e m y Submarine Creeps To Within 160 Miles Off Main- land. AN EAST COAST CANADIAN PORT, Jan. I! --(CP) __ 11 deqth toll of four white seamen and close to 90 Chinese was chalked up in the past 48 hours by an enemy su which crept closer to North America's east mainland coast than any U-boat had ventur. ed before in this war and sank a large steamship. TI-e sinking occurred 160 miles off Nova. Scotla and more than a0 survivors-the exact number was unknown by ship's officers who were well enough to receive report- ers-were landed heme this morn- ins. some of them in pitiful condi- tion after 20 hours exposr-fc to near-zero weather in open lifeboat-x The captain of the torpbcl-icd vessel. an Englishman. was amult; the rescued but he was suffering so severely from tho-ck that his physician prevented reporters from interviewing him. The doctor said the Captain harl told him ihcre were 181 passengers and scamcn u- board but that he did not know how many were rescued. It was learned from other sour- ces. however, that ‘l2 survivors were being cared for at a navy league hostel. l3 others were brmg treated 111 hospital and at least five more were quartclvwl in i1oirls. It was considered possible but not likely that a few other survivors had found quarters elsewhere. On the basis that there were no other survivors, a loss of 91 lives was in- dicated. The ship which rescued the s11r- vlvors was a small Royal Canadian Navy craft, but navy offclals 1101c declined to say l-ow m-zny survivors (Continued on page 3. Col 4) llope to hasten News from ilong Kong defenders OTTAWA, Jan. 13 —(CP) —De- fence Minister Rolston annoiuiccd tonight the Japanese government has expressed willingness to trans- mit information concerning pris- oners oi war through the interna- tional Red Cross and (‘xprcssld hope this would “lmsten informa- tion to anxious homes in Canada" concerning the fate of the Canad- ian defenders of Hung Kong. The information reached Col. Ralstcn through Hon. Vincent Massey. Canadian high commiss- ioner in Iondon who has been trying to obtain information re- garding Hong Kong casualties, a defence department statement said. While the Japanese government's telegram to the Geneva committee of the International Red Cross mentioned Only willingness to send to Geneva, "information concerning prisoners oi’ war for exchanges with belligerent states under con. ditlons of reciprocity.” Mr. Massey in his me5=ave to the min‘stcr said he assumed the Japanese also would be willing to make available infor- mation regarding casualties. Exiled King Carol discloses Hitler perfidy By John Lloyd Auocla‘ Press Staff Wi-itcr MEXICO CITY. Jan. 13 --(AP)— Eiciled King Carol, who has an- nounced he wants to heart a free Romanian movement agoinst the axlc, today related for the first time in his own words the inside story of his meeting with Hitler be- fore the war and events-that led to his departure from Romania in 1940 in a hail of assassins‘ gunfire. Carol said developments have proved that Hfifer told him elabor- ate lies at Berchtcsgaden in 1938 and charged that the attack on his ‘train when he left Rumaniu was an attempt to kill him and his 11,0019 party. Ho said Hitler told him that. hav- ing been a soldier. in the previous war and knowing the misery W" heaped on humanity. he would not wml to cause ano her; that oer- tainly he would not let Danzig be (Continucd on paw l) THREE YEAR-OLD DKOWNED xrm-rvmim. N. s. 1w- "- fOPl-Three-year-oid Joan Mar- llyn Williams, only chvd of Mr. and Mrs. Starr Williams. was drowned todav in Mill Brook, less mm m0 yards from her home. 11m Qompgny with another little g r. Jo", was playing on the ice who: she lllpp-Eci into the open charm. and was inn-pt. under the ice by the current. drownlni in 3"“ f?" of water. War Situation Last Night i (By KIIIIIE L. SIMPSON, Associated Press Staff Writer) The flaming muzzles of Mat-Arthur's guns, shouting grim defiance still at. Japanese invaders of Luzon, are soundin a message for United States can as thrilling a: the defence of Wake Island In the otherwise sombre war symphony In the Pacific. Three time: within a week those guns have beaten back the foo from Baton peninsula to keep the United States flag still flying above that water-mooted fortress. Lacking any definite ciuc to the nature and timing of concerted American, British, Nctheriand, and Chinese counter measure; against the common enemy on the China to asst-s: the full significance of the ' O I Sea checker hoard. It Is Impossible battle of Baton, It cannot be reiterated too often that time is the vital factor ln- volved. every day or hour that Gr-n. Douglas itlacAr-tliur-‘s guns can delay full Japanese concentration men and southward against Sing- apore or the Netherlands East. Indies II an invaluable asset to the allies and an irreparable loss to the foe. It l; southward, over vital Singapore and in the Dutch IndIel that aliicrl strategy appears to be nese domination of the air effectively. U I A Japanese decision to forego aimed at first challenging Japa- a u frontal assaults In favor of land- air siege operations, virtually fly-passing this tiny Island of American. Fllllilntr resistance to wncemriile Fnalnst Singapore or the Dutch Indies. would be understandable. It would involve loss of face, how- ever. a scrlous consideration in Oriental philosophy. Iiritaln has alrcr-xly demonstrated. it should be added, the pus- siblliii-ss of short line holding positions- that arc protected by wutcr on bnth flanks. Thai may be provcn again 501)“ on 1|,‘- Mztluy pcn- insula as British defenders fall back down the narrowing triangle toward Singapore to repent, on a, hand. blncArthui-Krl stand in Luzon. l. larger scale and with help closer at oz-‘zpzng Business Area U?” Wefiville WICSIWIIJLE, N. S, January l-i-(Wednesciayd-(CP) —Fire wiped out much of this town's business section early today and was still raging at 3 mm. after levelling l six wooden buildings and setting a seventh afiamc. Early estimates had the damage at $75,000 b11t it was still mount- ing and 1t was expected the loss would be much heavier. Firemen from New Glasgow and Steliarton joined Wesiviile firefighters III battling the conflagration-worst ln the town’s history. Biiterly cold weather added to the fir-omens difficulties, freezing water from the many hose-- lines while :1 stiff wind spread flying embers. The buildings destroyed included a drug store, bakery, hardw-arc store, ice cream parlor, meat smith shop. Families lived on all escaped unhurt. market and tin- the upper floors of some but A 111F111! Ilfi-llurlmvnt store across the street from the destroy-ed buildings was set afire and there appeared little hope of saving it. E beaten Back by ll. S. in Philimiisss WASHINGTON, Jan. 13—-(A.P)— Outnumbered and fighting with their backs to the sea. the forces of G011. Douglas blue-Arthur‘ have nev- ertheless administered a jar-ring sci- buck to the Japanese invader o.’ the Philippines. Artillery "definitely su- perior" to that of the Japanese did the Job. _ As reported today by the Umzcd States war (ltjlufblllillli, 24 h. rs 0i coxmnuous 1. A sllutzrrfll and dispcisc. of enemy tanks and 111-111 . It had scattered enemy infantry concentrations and inflicted heavy- losses upon Lhcm. _ It had siicnclrl 11 artillery batter- ies—probably 4U or more guns. Anti it 11nd forced J-.1pi11urse_artiii- Qry units to withdraw u column-robin distance. MacArthur’; losses were described as "relatively slight." Thus the day and night of battle left MacArthur in n somewhat im- prol/Cd position, still patiently the master of Bat-Lin Peninsula, thc rug- god tongue of land between Manila B and the South China Sea. wllflch he chose for a. last stand. PRAISE MALTA DEFENDER! LONDON, Jan. l'.l-~-1CP1 - The British Broadcasting Corporation tonight quoted British troops who have Just arrived in London from Malta, as praising the aircraft de- fences of that Mediterranean stronghold. The men said that to Jan, l0 t fortress had undergone 1.200 air r id alarms and that more than 80 eriem aircraft had been shot down. Is and casuaties were said to be few. Smoot-Sal lrlq ForflllT-yourb WrlLi-eports did not indicate the origin of the blaze. Find True Bill In Murder case SAINT JOHN, N.B-. Jan. l3 -— 1CPl-A grand jury of the New Brunswick Supreme Court circuit 191-1113’ reported a true bill against John A. Oliver, 63, charged with the murder of Sgt. Herbert lnbb, a member of the Royal Canadian Ordnance Corps. _Sclcctio11 of the pctit jury 0mm picd most of the afternoon's pro- ceedings bciure Mr. Ju-zice J, A, H, I... Foil-weather. Ext-imination of witnesses will start tomorrow. G. Earle Logan, a maglstl-nw, a“ copied a. request of the court t0 act as scnzor defence course-i. Asso- czatt-d with him arc Uuries Y Swanton uuzl Dave J. George E. J. llcnncbcri-y is crown prosecutor. Twenty-five witnesses who will be heard include Sgt. James A. Churchman, ballistics expert of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police lwudquartcrs at Ottawa. Lobb was fatally wounded by a revolver billlet at iris home here Dec. 27 after an alleged quarrel with Oliver. a watchman. The grand jury also found a true bill in 1H.- case of Donald Milne, chargtd with danqcrous driving. lie \\'-1s rcicased until Jan. 2O 011 $4,000 bail. - To broadcast OTTAWA, Jan. l3—1CPl—Na- t-lonal Defence Headquarters today made public ti1c names of lneluocxs of Canada's armed forces overseas who will broadcast to Canada tn the "Greetings from the Beaver Club" program. scheduled for Canadian Broadcasting Corpor- ationls national network from 12.30 to i p. m. E. D. T.. next Sunday. The names included:- Prince Edward Island-Pic. A. W. ‘Morrissey. Tignish; Sgt. P. A. Mac- Donald, Montague. .i..> __.._._. ._.. “V0, ltinq When you use, BLEl1§.BM M German desert Army makes Sudden stood Apparent Plans To In- vade Malta Attracts Attention 0f hiiicldlc East Command. By Edward Kennedy Associated Press Staff Writer 0.11120. Jun. 13-l.A.P--~'I"1-e Gtrman doscr‘, 1111113.‘. in ‘.1 lit for 300 miles, made an ull€§if)t’~fi’9fl stand trnlght at the bare cf the Gulf of Slrte 0:1 a line running due south of El Agheiia. Pursuing B1-itisl1 vagiguards lablislu-d contact with t s force cf the enrmy r0111 North Africa, at a p021 hi still is more t-h-m 300 m1lcs shcrf. oi’ Tripoli, the main Axis base,‘ e .a Ill is the key to holdout garrison at fire) Pass v-h ‘h but?!“ if‘: he mo ".113 ,, or 1.; s-scond Dri- tish dc-erl offemive. nut the gm- l-‘.\' 1 aft" ‘the s? erai Middle East situation was more complex. _ Attracting attention at Brztiah general headquqr is were concen- ix1 (I and attempt to int-ad 1 . the attack on Crete. Malta only 60 miles from Sicilian SlJOICS, but the island, armed to the teeth has long been pepared to meet such an onslau-i- and any invad- » _ j parachuttsts, would run 1.1.0 11. rd o o . 917F511. ll. An attempt to invade it would appear to be the enemy's logical first step in any general Mediter- ranean offensive. The lino which Ltd-Gwen. Erwin Rolrmcl llfflflfllTll-il)’ c-tcd for at. least a tcc11;‘c1a.1_v A is stunt-l 1n the Libyan (l. .rt 1s 1- ughly along the road which stretches from Eu Agheilo, on the Gulf oi’ Sirte, some 70 miles south of Marada. a mal- aria-ridden casis. Advanced British elements react-ct! this road vesicr- .0 that. the . d we plans are based on th existence marshy depression west of El Ag- heilo which stretches bland gor some 20 miles. The sctts who took Eulum mp- tured 350 prisoners. cut off mil-Ch of the remaining writer available to the big Axis I-Ieifaya gun-icon, and thus measurably increased the weight of the siege. (Out at sea the Royal Navy mor- ed again. British submarines mnk the Italian minc-vt-eolvr 51111.1 Pa‘- tro. damagcd th- RTE-ton stlpplv 8111p Slrlo and six-Wed an" firccl a. medium-sized supply wssel.) Russo-Jap relations Remain unchanged KULBYSHEV, Jan. l3—(AP)-8. A. Iozovsky, Rush-m spokesman and vice-conunissar of iorclgn affairs, declared todav that sorrel-J 1; relations are lillttllitilflfiifl. sli , baszzi on lhe neutrality pact of 111st April. I-Iis press conference, first since war bloke out in the Pacific, was attended by both Japanese and cor- respondcnis of the iiilivu nations. 211i on inuiltlulln‘ 1.1.11 Japan in response to u Jupm- use rcporltrs qucsticll. He added 1.11111 ulgotillions urt- undci- way ior 1121.011 111 of the For Eastern lishcrhrs "t with J.l,;:1n which expired Dec Newsman sees South Africans Launch attach lIIy Prcston Grover) (Associated Prcss Staff Writer) \Vl‘1‘iI ’l‘l*1i.-I PullTlSli ARMY IN 1m: Wlidlhultm 1>11.s1~t1..1.111. 11» 1139111331 1_.lAl-‘1- »rr1 A - 1111-2110 seat on thc broad c.=1.1.1..11'.*i1t 0111‘- looking Salum 111111 inliiaya 1111-11- lire; Puss 1 watt-lied a South Airi- cun brigade launch 1t 111.111u_ assault today upon the last runaimng Axis nests 0t resistant-c 111 1111s lb-ivlill-"lll- Libyan border area. Bron-uni. Scoismcn from Smith African 'I‘1'a11s\-.1:1i hat-11.: I11!‘ 11.1 11k across the sandy plain upon 5.1111111. whose poi-t loin; lius u. .1 until-r 1111' guns o. British artillery. They attacked 111-st along th" n11- r1111 of Salum irurbor 11nd q ' kly drovc the Axis 111 11. ridge clown to thc s Alter 1112s- co=111;.1r;1t..1 _. ltial success. real troubl; s.a1l1d. The (Iermuus and Italians poured deadly fire into the ftClVBIlCiIifl South African ranks from nmchtnc-gun and sluail cannon hidden in (lorx 11s c cry passageway icn 1 carpmcnt to the scashcr Axis artillery blllcru-s from the southern side of 1h:- harinr barked m" incessantly and they, too, took their i131 (Continued on page 3, Col 2) 1 x (let-pest 1.1-- Ol’ fi~ . I1 1N l i‘ PilII-Afllrflfilll conference. h w; P5553135???‘ . ‘if . “L?” hcwd F Taking U? ifirov Indicates Breath In lit/inter Zines Rod Air Force credit-ell. tviith destroying hundreds of Greer-mun trucks and carts, many 02111111111 and tVJO ‘ammunition CltllilgliS. §=4JHILJAU SIOSCOW’, Jun. suslaincrl (By C. Ya ‘s lAs-suclittcd hes-l “Itlllillllkdb Sun‘! Writer) SlitlilllQiltl-u‘, J30. I;i_<AP)—IX— molitiou sq 1 .. .d 1 g ixieora is of ljtoyui 11;: ‘ ti lructlve 1d and (Ll along a line I50 miles above Singa- po e. r News of the slowed Japanese wo- s Singapore itself shrzr-k 1,1 1. uibs dr 111ml by iiut the iuy-ul Al: with c Jflllilllf FOYCL‘ i1.- upon tlie Jap: cse base a: Singoro, in Southern Thailand, during the night Sinsntporc‘: people. who scarcely had bccn 011111010115 yesterday of l‘;1l(lS in 1111i" J. ucsc pianos were criurtgml by litg-ii 1n the clouds or at some no: from the city, tyere fully anttro this ‘time that attack was on in earnest. Preliminary surveys disclosed that the aerial invader had u-rought little damage. , 4L‘- -.- cis would be 1h» na- val 1131-.- , the soutiu r11 shorc of S d, the putt lC0ntlX1llBd on page I, Col l) Ski-shod hell Troops storm German hoes RcLl troops tollilllt at Urul. 200 11111.1.- suutlnt-cst 0 Moscow’, and \\-t1e_1-el.1orte<i 011 U16 verge of ov-er-i-unning the llzhesi- Bryansk Nazi winter line which a - rcady- has been P-efced- cd ftussian ' i011. :1 _ ed 1111115, were s111-.1 by 11.-yo I L practically t Soy-111 sources to have surrounded Orel, and to have swept on beyond toward Bfyall-ik. 75 mile! away. 1'l'i1o BBC, ‘DIET, _,‘. - 111 ll R1 . able 11111.‘. bVlfiffl were out of yrok-uild reply the)‘ sight." litter-italic. 2i llt f1 Glance .‘.‘.( ITF “l \ i. » art-u uvul (inn iovo ncur .\l .. . .- SlT»f..‘.I’(l" ti ut- Mil-t \\‘.\ ‘" _ res M: Arthur .11 in 21-hour artiltrv 1111"‘. lmltcrics. Oil tons of bilhbs l _ _ “Mwflrf shock troops." The c135 51011111115; llic (niillilil (it-time (.0? Lne b,-OndCast_ . 14_(w9d"e5d1l)’)—(CI’)~—The Hus- es_ S1305 ind-l)’ announced recapture of Kirov in the Smolensk mdn 11111-1011 11nd (lol-(iltlrovo, near llozhuislc. thus iildiculq... ‘he ‘111-uni pcnclrzltinn yet mzulc in the Ifctl ::7n1yl! counter-offensive against ilic Nazi invaders. 1x21 wccn 84am; . 1d its 111mg.“ on ‘ nth rail- . k. .- indicate the (IBULIIQQ 4r Th“ T981011 has been .11: some of the bitterest ftp‘ recent days. - v ct a Nars‘ ‘winter 111v ‘ One Russian unit on the western front was credited bv the com. munlque with kiulm ‘m <'~...,m,,,,, O1!" lzlfllflnt fighting .'or ‘my, (-5.110... V. cfihcr this was K1101. w,“ ..,_i rd. ‘ ‘ 1 e communique also rezoned conzlnueci fig-htinv in the I/“ilv. rm $86101‘. saying one Over-mu} 1 g; o; 200 men utvunotcd 1111 and was rolled back. ica l1» ‘o1 0' it, 111111111111‘ (load or 1.1_~_.-,<,-;pf~1_ m, u.“ :.=»-<1. “ The Soviet Air Part1. fun-gm‘ from north to far so 11 1 6d 85 dfidl-Iflylllg hungrgwdgwg; man tnicka and carts and many cannon and two ammunitkm dumps. O11 the sovuiicrn front, Red boml1ct-s claiinrd 1'1r.<‘.--11c:io11 11' spy... eral lallroiv ‘1-11111 and a station on 111» continuing" Russian drive. A. Loam-sky “.10. oommlssai‘ of \:r1='*n f-Tfifsv,’ 11¢- flared. "we non t“ 7:11» u." our 0p- llmlsm. and cvctfle M ":1" 1:11‘ row (11111 have provn! w» h“; n I“ H to be optimistic." anon-r mean a-rracxs NEW YORK, Jim. 13-—/.AP)_ The BBC zcported tonight um, m. German radio sluoke of “hemi so- ‘ , , viet attacks east of Kursk. Associated Press Stall Writer bflween 0N1 coupon, Jan. 1a -1.~1P1 —51<1- wave after shod dwity by u rlliy recorded and Kharkov wave of Red 1111111111111 Boocuf BY MouEY CAN'T BE HA1) A-t 411a B/lufitun CouNTER 1r, .1 - 11.1.4.1. “fr. .1 11. 1.1.11 I'M Lupe Iun11c11li1u- 11.00 Add “s; .