MAKING OIL MERE HAN e?.'a*'s%rm* kstsflstewu Quark. fwalmhuh \\l. TlielPe GE 0F iloversPrinoelldwsi-didaudlilreihebsw CPIARIJOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY LENINGRADTHA As much as you are incapable of a base action. so much should you be averse to loose language. MAXIMS OIL MERE NAN , JANUARY 19,1943 8th Army's Drive 0n Tri Berlin Battered For Second Night 22 R.A.F. Bombers Fail To Return From Large Number Engaged. Berlin Paper Admits Heavy Bomb Damage "- IIOCKIIO Ian. §AP a-‘lhahlleru ‘:6!!! ac usga w ' night us stating that Berlin ai er two heavy raids by Iri- tlsh bombers resented "the same view" as e heavily-ill‘- tered German cities o! Ultimo. Bremen, liinde Disease or!» llsssii and “ililslmlhlvfll- 1'51!‘ en a smaiier seals." “The Sg-Qglilalllll was agerll S’ e r rs mil notation in a disratogih from tedly h ii?»- 'enly been struck twice after a lt-inontli interval. . now of this," Nachtambe: has damage done Berlin. Maillon Making Maritime Tour IRIIJIRICDON, Jan. it - (C?) - Federal director of civilian @- fenst Col. R..J. Maniou will arrive in Iiredericion from Ottawa. on. Friday to open an inspection tour of the Maritime Provinces. it was ‘ a learned from acting prcvlnciatzéllt. P. director HM. Armstrong 3. During his stay Mr. Armstrong s , Col. Manlcn will confer with New Brunswick officials of inspect the volunteer coi- an wonit of the edericton unit. iio Settlement 0f Steel Strike OITAWA. Jan. ll-(Wl-‘nie full conference of vernuient. union and managemen resent- atives in an effort to set e Can- ada's steel strike will be resumed tomorrow-probably at noon-in- stead of tonight as or nally plan- ned. union members o a steer committee said sfior a meeting c the committee this evening. Indications were that undisclos- ed suggmtions made by the steer- ing committee woud receive cab- conslderation before the general ‘crcnce is resumed. Following a general conference today. at which the smaller com- mittee was appointed. the committee roup held a three-hour session en ing at 9 pm. E.D.'l‘.. followed by a conference oi gov- ernment and company manage- ment representatives. . ll. Millard. national director of the ‘Unltel Bloel Workers of Am- erica. said certain suggestions had been advanced by bo the union and the mane merit delegtes and some of see necessl ted further discussion between the government and managsmeu members of the steering committee. taming Events ‘Wlblklfl-fllllllllilt "rs _ Monday. ‘ ism louris bu‘ O08“ ‘a I lav-trashed?» m"'i'?'td-i'i'. "hrmerswishiugtoshi ensi- Iiihollldviasldoflkllilanhmllm social in "Concert and iii-two?“ "r ‘- ‘his ft. “Crew lacs Graham's load m. musty so, Lass . - i-is-ii ‘ iii-lr-uminerllel: ma. mi- I l- s-si. 4"di..m'iW"ht.""*- em-siueshnsfi iin was bat for aeco siiocsssivs this last isht by a strong it AJ‘. foses whim dropped tons of the biggest bombs tlis world has ever known and set great fires in Hitler's cap- ital with perhaps 100.000 incend- f moo-pound the inissi pared Ylitll onsfi thetonlght ‘before, a envy sy or an m but Britipuiuobsereers said lyt was not prohibitive in view of the large number of aircraft attacking ihs nerve centre of the German war machine. “A great load of bombs was dropped and, by the and of the stuck, large fires were burning." The Air Ministry said. Under a low cloud cover a strong fcros of allied plan roared out over tbs channel ortiv before dusk today in direction of Bouio France for some time afterward by watchers at rhinestone. some bilidiugs there shook. Canadian his Pars lsvsral Canadians too part in ths week-end raids on lin as members of RAJ. crews but there wars no planes from the nswly-orgwdmfiigzhiz.‘ “b05112: er IMIp par c . . E, however, won itself new lory mite-activities curios the 13-32141: ed fllhier sweep over north- western mrope sunday. Squadrons of Canadian fighters under dn ldrl. Bud Melioy 0f Halifax, d Kelly of Beaverton, Ont, and Keith Hodson of London, Ont... blastod lowniotives and en- gaged Nasi fighters with such ef- ectiveness that Air Marshal T.L. Leigh-Mallory, cosnmander-ln-chief of the fighter command, told them Y!- "aonzrstulaticns to wing on suo- cessfui battle. Well dons.” mu Nsei aircraft fell before the Canadians’ biasing cannon and machine-guns. Three it. C. A. l‘. planes are missing. Prepasefsrlnvsusu Borne speculated that the ds- vastative one-twcstab at Berlin m art of a softening process beh he Nari lines for the opening this year of a second front on the m- tinsnt. German night fighters w h had been concentrated the ltuhr to combat w. latent British ut- tscks there apparently were shifted hastily back to Berlin and ao- oounted for the heavier price the RAP. paid on eunday night's visit. while the explosives and firs bombs were chew'ng up the nsleh capital, the Germans flew over London in two comparatively weal: retaliatory raids. It Nazis Destroyed "dome damage was done, but it was nowhere on a large scale and mainly was confined to houses," a communique said. Ten of some so raiders were destroyed. four by one t night fighter squadron which set a rd. m: brief air-raid alert smmded in Iondm early tonight but no bombs were dropped. Mrs. Roosevelt To Visit Montreal Today m; Canadian" ‘fish: mus? on fisecv folds of heavy . to ve Hrs. Tug‘ Winters At Rimouski _Y_i'_liarf 8180MB. fills. as. It - ‘rhs ‘formic-owned "Qumran" h wintsnns mien wharf. s hills lowr- It. wrsncs learned sv. that ills tug l “film: andvsd lure Des. deli-ii. P. Iifififfiilbfi les Ulidin 9W of I big bombers. com- 811 . Heavyeexplosions were head from D0 Allies Hit At Retiring Axis Forces Dy STEPHEN‘ BARBER (Associated Press Staff Writer) CAIM Jan,lB— (AP-The British 8th army. driving Field Marshal Erwin Rommel w ard aion s. ‘ill-hale long front stretch- d from the‘ Libyan Coast, stood tonight less than 100 miles from Tripoli, the greatest colonial port left to Italy in all Africa. but a port now s0 scarred by Alllied bombing that it is no longer con- sidered a major ene base. , Gen. Bir Bernard ontgomery s. renewed oifeusiv which has roiled about 100 miles s co the destruct- ion of Rommers line at Bueral. El Hsun. was going forward along the coast and from the vicinity of Beni Many Airfields Captured sidmne were be moved up ss sir field sf r air field fe and; British aging; n‘; the gill; army's orig mar s Tun and. rendezvous with the Allied forces in North Africa. (Ground action in Tunisia aialri was virtually at a standstill be- cause of rain and sir activity also was light. Allied headquarters an- ced that small bomber forces attacked road and raiiwa trans- rt moving from the ids-held supply poi-ts and re rted the des- truction of three arms-n $181198 and the loss of two Allied or t. New Naval Successes (British light naval forced and submarines scored new success?! aiou the Axis’ sea lanes in the Med terraneen, sinking or mortally forcing aground five merchant shill-s and damaging an escort sh the admiralty announced in 1.011110!!- (In addition one sillbrrlsriniilsheg; Pa a. ear ie 3Hn£~‘ii“ni‘ii%.n£1.n3...inn it 1 . ariglevlrii of the ships were sunk by submarines HEB-kl; Baggage. g6 u - “other. 31a; aaground near G oa. illvvo other ships were sunk sat- urda and Saturday night by lilht riava forces northwest of Tripoli 31.1.1 gdast géegiiinisia, and the escort ~ am . Gin. Montgomery's rapid advance in the last section of Tripolitunia held by the Axis was overrunnini resistance which in some ares-s W65 “my heavy-pockets of artillery batteries, machine-Elm “w! ""1 Study liationai llealth Insurance Q11‘ , Jun. 1B -(CP)- A meetingvgclikw under way iri OtisWH mflgr auspices of the Canadian Medical Aascciatl-n is understood m be studying a national heath insurance bill and it has been 1'3; ported on good authority thattsll r i. bill will be amoilfi We Wig-W?” social reform measures eirilw ii u“ legislative program 0! g parliaments .1 session. A natimal health insuranceng: s; be the subifht of 1%: 7n the 1m year- Srsat liisks For P Aside from the military from the G masses. I I I shift to that target from “ ' ' when things were obviously going llll. O O I Munitions Minister OTTAWA. Jan. l8 — (OP) -—'l‘h.e flow of raw materials to the war factories of North America has al- most reached its peel; and from now on the only means for spur- ring war production will be through improvement in the distribution of critical materials and by curtail- merit of civilian manufacture, Mun- itions Minister Howe said-today. — In his statement the Minister an- nounced a new Modified Controlled. Materials Plan which goes into ef- fect immediately, with a view to c0- ordinating Canada's wartime con- trois and priority procedure with those of the United States. Under this plan,_ manufacturers, basic producers, and public utilities which have purchased from the United States during the last three months of 1942, or intend to ur- chase during the second t ree months of 1943, critical metals or parts containing such metals, worth a total oi $2,500 or more in pur- chase value, must now tile before Feb. i0 a new form, to be known as P.B.-i0i)5. The form is substantially sim- pler than that at present used ndustry under the roductlon re- quirements plan which has re- gulated the flow of mater als for the ast year. It. must. be lied by ail f rnis coming under the new def- lnition of a “class 1 consumer." ansdab war program relies largely on Canadian resources, but there are many materials, particul- arly certaiu metals and metal fab- ricated parts. which are not pro- duced in this coun and must be secured from the nited States," said Mr. Howe. "For this reason it is essential that we co-ordlnste our controls and our priority procedures with those of our neighbor." "The ic feature of the con- trolled materials plan in the United States is that specified quantities of materials are set aside in ad- vance, on the basis of productive capacity. ior each military and civ- ilian requirement," said Mr. Hows. "The quantity of materials to be al- lotted will be determined every three months for the succeeding calender quarter." "Canada has been asked to sib- mi aesoonas possible. an ss- tlmate of this country's total lu- quiremenia of critlosl materials so -War Situation Lust Night ilIKls-ksLliiuosssnAssscbtsilPrsssWas-Anaiyst) ‘fllswulhgahltysllikfilsdlhllifllfltuflswlfiliw- llgAllledairpowethmlsphlflsdhylal-Ifililnwlltlslil. German morale iuusi bs damage dons. severely shocked by tbs complete reversal of the air odds in the renew- ed "battle of the capitals." The attempts of Nari prepsgandists to min- imise the sustained British Mlllltlng attack over Germany and exagger- ate the scope or sporadic retaliatory blows canuet long ebscureistrush O O Q Berlin, like London, h snore sf a psychological target than a strictly military objective. It ll the nervejentre of all Nazidciss. The lt.A.I'.’s " ,, at Nani ' i-: ‘ gm] communications bottle-necks has distinct war-of-nerves values. The deli!!! of bombs and ineeadiariea fell on Berlin at a moment ill for Axis armies in Russia and Africa, Field Marshal Erwin Domino's aruiy h again in [Qffggt “(on tin-surging British troops iu Trlpoliianla. The Axis foothold across the Mediterranean has shrlvelled another 00 miles qr more, Th"; lg u. "Triiilwl"! “Inter that the boasted Africa Corps will be trowed and destroyed before it effects a junction with Axis forces iu northern Tili- As for the situation in Iuada, euoc "m". 6mg‘- iui. The latest is that the lteil Anny fourgshuhsve succeeded i; ‘lift: the slese of ieninsrsd, a aisle established in August m1, Moreover, a Russian forward surge from the relgion of the upper 9°" 3""- hlfl" It "on Hm ambitious imam. ufierislvs objectives "III! ill" Wt been revealed before Leningrad. lostover ltalingrad. Flow Of Raw Materials To War Plants At Peak u "r11 ‘_Modified Controlled §iZ§ri§s§Pi2£n.New Warns Swedes Of Possible Attack ITOOIIOLM, Jan. 18 —-(AP) —Prime Minister Per Albin llansson warned Sweden in s. Slleeoh today of a possible at- “tack against her. lie warned against the possib- ility of false orders being issued and said ll an attack came. everyone would have to help in 11010111"!!! the country. Bracken Confers Witli llanson» OITAWA. Jan. 1s ._ (gp .. John Bracken of Winnipeg, igno- gressive Conservative part, leader, was an Ottawa visitor y and conferred with Conservative House Leader Hanson and other party re- presentaives. lvir. Bracken said he is n taking up residence vrheie he will ulti home Premier held for 20 years. It was understood Mr. Bracken and Mr. Hanson talked about the opposition House [leadership for the session opening on Jan. 2d, but Mr, Bracken said he had no statement of Manitoba. a position he to make on plans immediately. The Muddiest Story 0f Muddy liampaign is ensure oli Remains Unchecked Heavy Attacks 0n Jap Bases —._i_ hn. ll — (A!) —HesV7 attacks on J snese bases in the northwestern Solomon Islands were reported to- day by the United States new which said that one bombing raid. on the Island of Baliais, started fires visible for d0 miles. As both army and navy bombers blasted the Jap positions S00 miles distant, ground troops on Guadal- canal Island mopped up pockets of enemy resistance in newly con- uered areas on the flanks of the erican positions. More llniiorm Selling Prices For Dried Fruit UITAWA, Jan. 18 — m pur- goses of levelling dried fruit pricsa rou ht into Csnad a by arrange- Ccmmodity Prices Stabilisation Oo ration, a War- time Prices and ado Board order wrich became effective January 12 see out brokers’, wholesalers‘ an renailers’ costs and mark-ups. It wil mean more uniform se prices across Canada for dri rszains. dried curl-an prunes, dried apricots and dried peaches. L lins to the wholesaler the brokers‘ price is limited to his gross contract price payable to the C.P. 8.0. plus import duties and truis- portaiou charges, together with s. handling allowance not exceeding live cents per 100 wands. The wholesaler permitted to add to his laid-down cost a mark- up not higher than the one es- tablished by him during the basic gariod, Sept. l5 to Oct. l1, 1941. owever this mark- must not sl- ceed l2 per cent of is lawful sell- ing price of bulk dried fruit, or l0 per cent of the selling price when packaged. His mark-up on cluster raisins is limited to i2 per cent of the selling rice. The retaiers’ mark-up must not exceed that established in his hig - est lawful selling price during he ic riod. It must not be greater than per cent of his lawful sell- ing price for dried fruits in bulk or ill per cent of his selling price when he retails the fruits in the same containers in which he re- ieceives them. The one exception is cluster raisins on which his mark- up must not be more than 30 per cent of his lawful selling price. Air Cadets May Fly In Sliders OTTAWA, Jan. ll - (CD-Can- adlan~air cadets may fly in dsrs fidmmm" t“ °“"'.'.‘. °“‘ at“. a pro now e consideration meemlth official ap- proval, it was learned today. Gliding is considered an excellent means oi sorting out persons who are potential fliers from those who can never be fliers, before they en- ter flying training schools. Grou Capt. D.C.M;. Hume, Nat- ional d tor of the air cadet lea- gue, has been investigating the pol- slbillty oi getting G1 ders for the cadets and has in mind plans for glider work during the coming sum- mer. NATITI RAILWAY IOBKl-II IYCAEI rvgwiv —-(CP) 1301.1. e as been sppoin spee- iai commissioner w investigate the best form of state organization for non-European railway workers to their views on matters af- fecting their well-being are pso- perllg uthoriiies. men with the PAGES yMorit/i through sight miles of solid munique announced tonight. and Leningrad froiiie united Bat- tkh was not aounesd kuporiaut .. ‘XMTFQ lubscriptiou Delivered, “.00 Ifll. “JIM other Provinces and U.I.A. ll.‘ S BEEN LIFT ED Relififter More Than 16' Battle Russians Advance Rapidly On other Fronts; Siege Of Leningrad‘ Cost Germans Heavily. LONDON, Jan. 18—(CP)-—Tlis 17-month-old German siege of Leningrad, Russia's second largest eiiy, was lift- sd today by s. triumphant Red Army that blasted lie wa , Nsai defences, killed l3, Germans sud routed four divisions, s special Soviet oom- Breaking the blockade of Leningrad brings relief to 3,000,000 persons and also released the Nasi grip on ills flow of Soviet armaments and other industrial facilities in the big sity on tlis Gulf of Finland. Observers also fore- saw a new turn iu the satire war because Innings-ad h s springboard for recosiquest of the Baltic States. This great newu, announced h s Moscow broadcast heard here by the Soviet Monitor, was a further damagin blow ts German morale because Lesihgrad had been is powerful Nest vies since Aug. fl, 194i. “After ssvsirdsys’ fighting ti; troops sf the Voikiios on Jan. 18 and so broke the blockade of Lsiiingru " said the communion. whole Russian story. Moscow are. all along the snow-covered front, extending clear into the Caaeseuu. Other Red Armies _' ‘ lri the sdvanoq 0;; Ehankov steel cit/y in the Ukraine, with an van- guards lees Iimi lit miiss from that city. Russian troops also fmwht their way in/io Kamensik, railway point only 8'6 miles north of Rostov, and poured across the Doneis River south of that city on the most feasible mute Rosiov cap- ture or which would bag all the Nari armies in the Caucasus. In the Caucasus they crossed the Mnnych River and se zed Dlvnoyr, rail terminal of a line that winds across the central urea to Krcpot- lrln on the Rostov-Baku railway. Bohluemelhurg, big Nani fortress on the south shore of Lake Ladogs. about I miles east of Leningrad. was among a dozen localities stormed and captured by Russia's winter-hardened "'00P. The lbusaiaru hit t. from three directions. their fighting wad throwh l4 kilometres-M miles- or mine fie .baibed wire, siosi and concrete plllboxes. One Red column fought eastward from Len- tigrad along the west bank of the Neva River, another struck west along lake Ladogs and s third group crossed the Vsllchov River bo strike from itie south. Iciiiuemelburg had been under spdmdlc Rod Army attack slnec the fail of 194i. Bi’ cafiturifl! ll the Riussiims regained a railway running from Leningrad throllsh schliieeseiburg to connect with s line to Moscow and another to Murmansk in the far north. Mur- msnsk is the chief Arctic port for British and American supplies to Russia. Gssuiaee best lssvly hi long unsuccessful effort to teko sningrad the Cer- mans hare lost scores of thousands of men, the Russians said. Hitler ordered the dty taken by storm in August, loll, and the Germans hurled sooooo mo! ainst the it ‘lhe asi waves (Continued on age ‘l. Col s) be siil from the nlte "n" h‘ ‘mm “tili='l§§.'i’-.lt'ln:.?.i§:5-T 5’5'”‘7““"n....”‘?“'“ ' ‘hi’ ma‘: R d t' d .._._ osssary to prepare such an estimate, curls?“ ‘any; e ,, , tithf.“ °°.i’°..'.";.‘.i..°.". Weft! “hi: 9mm .*.'.",,‘,';," *- 1 N - R r “me somingilaior i im- sdlm manuiafitiurers return" ana- instruments to em their oiugaiill n ewsprlnt atlOn8 isillsd the "f: "f; Elllfmwff. “f; The 3.2;‘ in in"up the iiiodirisc m‘ w“ ' ., Controlled ‘ “‘ plan we; b. i Owing‘ "gim- larlfflff“ “m” sued by iorities officer w.s. one. nuw aniuivssraarou orrrawa. no is -<or)- s-ur- newsprint and mu ns plpsl’ were “do y?“ y; gtfllp ell outthe n’ ' 9-"! "amine distributors ----- ihsr reduction ki newsprint rations announced ki ashlngtoa and We l" “m” w w“, gal" sealers. retailers. incurs-iii and oarsmwir- (or) - Col. m, or Canadian and United semi om». u“ w, .. n" m...“ "ggum- m4 and t. chairman of the Nat- momma a u» bs expected with rm United some n: production svsn m “Si m “ma. o’ most“ mo“ “traits. th business Board in the Union possibilit that consumption by Board has warned that publishers ‘at “mm” m mm m‘ do not mmmwmnmg “fimfég Nlmlmflli». has bran iwpoifited ad- the end of e year will he from must expect the Dec. 3i order to be R ll! m’ "bu, minimum.” mug“: ministrator of Bouth- est Africa 25 to 30 per cent less than in i912, followed by a second and periin A edema some. rsletgsd ttlrel‘ need not include purchases of fiidfflii? sicigcsssicnsotliithfigvullfiib ‘“§{’,'L".,°§k,¢'°“'§§‘ "M fit," {h W“ dfiffifmkm. ‘Qjigmlif d y, - - - ne pu- ese re ons m -. o c- mmm‘ Bflhmummfltfimfnmis .9‘ 1 "m1" - was announced ammo by isis hero said. it is certain Canada Dun from chm . . Otts Washington authorit- will follow suit. . a n n. “H an“ Qibgflun its last Dec. 8i. Washington souross Newsprint production curtailment ‘ha’. m‘ a‘ tmww.‘ g. m; estimated a formula requiring that has been imposed to conserve man- “a y“ every newspaper's use of print mwer and electric power resources ________ psperiinlmti be cut "is; the tonriags will‘; sigornlnion, to which the quo “mg vised n would ucecolm-ry- ass oolrs or Sheri-on m.‘ u lj-‘mo wide newsprint consumption by l0 of it; newsprint supply. Timing oi psr cent. further reductions will depend to “my; y"; 1g .-(¢fl -- The actual reduction in Qfl- some extent on the labor nnd “on “on... n“ n m. mflonln‘ sumptionwought in Canada never power situation in Canada. but a plan the most drab in Canada. .hss been announced. but officials war production board spokesman went into elect iodav and officials indicated it was in line with that warned United slates Dllbllfiiltfis‘ lu- n“ m u m‘, o; hugingfl |' A N A i”, of the United states, at or near could "only hone" the l0 per rem accompanies aihooustiesi of the ‘ " *- ' lonisr cent. reduction would last f0i’ the first n“ m“ My "q . I Canadian rationing order quarter of 1m. indicating s furth- umua!“ Qmmm my“ E l canted out oisris__ forecast last e.- reduction might eouie st an of spirits, of wit I " October when the first orders salfldsto. e y. _ u m q ihiting production and dsIvu-y d “ ‘ Afr Raid Alarms Sound In Berna IERNI, Jan. l8—- (A?) Air raid alarms were sounded in the Swiss cities of Berni: and Basel a4 11:05 pma. (6:05 m. E.D.T.—7:05 p.111. AJH‘. night, indicating Drills , bombers were raiding northern Italy. Tornai-lic Winds In Southern States ATLANTA. 0a.. Jan. 1d -- (C10 —Tornadlo winds were reported to» day from widely separated points iii Georgia and Alabama, with the toil of the week-end. storms put at i2 persons lulled and others injured. Hardest hit was Georgia where l ‘ persons died. Four persons rm family were killed when wlinl rlese troyed s. farm home in PLkre rtoilnzv. Five of the dead were Negroes, WILKIlS-BARRE. Pm. Jamlt - (AP) — The unauthorized strike in Pennsylvania's hard coal field which has defied every effort a settlement. was placed in Prmidmb Roosevciljs hands today by tho Way Labor Board. V in previous cases involving lnlvor or management troubles, this sten usually has preceded government selsure of properties involved. A (Liven hm Haves nines fumes l-lc snows HE ChNW Do High tide this morninl ‘l 11-09 and tonight at 10.11. Sun sols tlizs afternoon at M9 and rises tomorrow mormng at 8.32 New moon. Jan. Ii. 6.40 am. Bilmmerside ildn ill minutes iatl‘ than Charlottetown. OAR FERRY SERVLC! DAILY EXCEPT SUNUAY I'm B rd —l.e v 9.05 am“ 11.40 in. §.oo"i'i.ni..“s‘.\ao tun ms "ZS", Cape Torrncntinc - 10.30 a.m. l.l5 pm. 3.05 p.m., 5.45 p.m. 0.15 ii-ns. DAILY AIR SERVICE (EXCEPT SUNDAY) Charlottetown -§llmIltPI1iiilQ' Moncion Isesvs Charlottetown 1.30 Lila 12.80 . ni.. . 0 p. in. rlotteiewn I p. I 43 A ve MlalJMI-l. _......., (- .. 4/4 .