.. . a-sa.\v.dsvna-§qltllirwpt. ' MAXIMG 0|- ; MAXIMS or a MERE MAN -_--' MERE MAN fltayoishseqwhentlieneokls byEverybody \ .:::".r;*1:r.‘" " g Covers Prince Edwartl Island Likctlle Dew +2. """"d a"""" '°""“ u" lubscriptlon Delivered, saoo 12 Iall. “.00: other Provinces and USA. 80.00. EEll-‘TIROOIIS ADVANCE IN LOWER DON OFFENSIVE Protection Of F us . ° . . F Ferry Asalnst ..°I......ZIZZZ Subs Discussed ........_... CABLE) — BrignGcn. John B. Brooks has arrived in Newfoundland to take over command of United CHARLOTTETOWN, cannon, SATURDAY, JANUARY 9, 1943 liow Commander lWas Expressing I Only ll llopo Says President Russians Less Than 60 Miles From R_o_stov War Situation Last Night (By Kirke L. Simpson, Associated Press War Analyst) Even as President Rposevelt told Congress that the great Russian offensives dominate the whole strategic picture of the war. events in the Caucasus and on the Lower Don sharply intensified that. estimate of war relativitles. WASHINGTON. J .8 _ QB.- President Rdusevelt 121d “lnciay m; lite-usage to the United states Coil. gress ivlis intended to convey a lions thpt [he war nliglit end iii ill-id. I O O a l o The third battle of Itostov has begun. Inndon lntiinations that l fifth Russian offensive is impending or in progress in the Black Sea Board of Trade Receives Assurance G. 0 the American States forces, succeeding MaLCien. Grant, Officer Commanding troops here since Oct. sector of the Caucasus in an attempt to seal the Kerch Strait-Crimean lllliilly or escape route behind the invaders are credible if still lacking nut. hc was expressing no more than a hope. he informed a Dixss conference, when he declared yes- Soviets Announce Capture Of More Than 20 Villages — Roll Ahead In Caucasus. confirmation except for Berlin admission o! a retreat in the Caucasus. The Black Sea coast of the Caucasus has ‘ ategie aspect. that ts worth recalling in " with l‘- " l! . It's ‘ ‘ that wherever and however the Allies might strike by land against the foe, relentlessly, day in and day out, they would pound hi; w“ flgfprlgg, utilities and seaports by gtr, O terday that it was "within the realm of Possibility" that “this 78th 4111151055 may, have the historic pri- vilege of helping greatly to save the wcrld from future fear." This was the closest he came to su estlng that the present congress 18, . 4 lpflcialist in the l-ir branch of the army, the 01-year-old General has seen service in the Philippines, where l0 vears ago he was in com- mand of Nichols Field. Later he was From _Col. Ralston Re Safety Measures In The Strait. _ Randolph Field. Texas. and prior to a 0 e e a t have a hand in shaping the ' e-n-I "Wm ‘m’ m" °°“"“"“*°° or m wu tamts u the Alia a. mm the Iloesii oil fields a. 9"“- hlll d command ‘rile question of marina safety (pronoun; mam,“ wfigg m wuhmff Romania are the most viiaL They primarily power the Nari wsr ma- pjggfghygufg égféizvl-fétgz to; measures in Northumberland Strait Ottawa, Nov. T, 1042. um , chine afloat, in the air and on land. They are not much more than 000 and he advised reporters w w,“ 5rd LONDON. Jlll- 9-4331111118!’ )-( cPl-Ruseian troop and protection of the 5B. “Prince Dear Premier Campbell: miles air flight from Russian-held sectors of the Black Sea. coast of the see Whether he would have any smashing along the Lower Don _ _ River and rolling up thy vulnerable Salient deep ll'i the Caucasus captured more than a score of village and railway points Friday, includ- ing Zimovniki, 125 miles southwest of Stalingrad, two Soviet communlques announced early today. A special bulletin broadcast by Moscow and heard by, iocward Island" against submarine attack was taken up last Fall with the Naval authorities and man- agement of the Canadian National Railways and has since received the "active attention of the Joint Service Committee of the Atlantic ccmmand." I have your letters of Oct. N and Nov. 4 with reference to the necessity of taking adequate mea- sures of protection for the Car WTW- had been brought to my attention by Mr. J. LeRoy Human. and I think the b0" POI-fly I can make at the mom-- Caucasus. Six hundred miles to their targets is within range of today's British. llnited States and Russian bombers. It would be easy going from the Laucasus coast, most of it over water and u; [ow [en]; Sooner or later. from one direction or another. an Allied sir blitz against that Romanian oil source is certainly coming. It could achieve decisive results, go farther toward shortening the war than any other soon. But he did say he planned to transmit facts and date to Capitol Hill in the field of social security. “Wishful Thinking" Island Airman Killed Overseas I the Soviet Monitor said Zimovnikki 30 miles b d K m“ b H _ J1“ m], m; y‘ w t 1 1 t" l ___._. p- dictoble funm of Allied attack. . . . _ t _ 9Y9" 0' mm] Mizflg“°;t Y ..°" _. ‘gangs,’ ma“ gfgfmatgthfm “Y ° Y "’|1uo;;g;l-3‘w,;' augogcg: __ m p Tendency scored :8ll‘lIl(0\;SlLlb0ll i}? hSttalingrad-Tikhoretsk railway. fell at. was given in a. letter re a a var g he Ferry I had al- 00-0" y e war, er a I u orn g council meeting of the Oharlotie- ready dismissed this matter at m‘ “'05-?- Wnlim "Writ" i011!‘ Th; regular Fr“; mun] h; i h town Board of Trfldd lost nlsbt. length with the cum of tile Naval m“ “med °" ""1" ""100 m" ' l d id 20 l y g comm“ “u. t at for. The text of col. aaiswlrs let- staff some months ago and his aft-Hg"; félsimafr b°"°‘{,°d WM ".8. Admiral owe s“ “t! “"9"” “ml railway Math"! h“ flu‘ tel. which is addressed to Mr. W. views were at that time that con- m“. mm" ‘rm, (ffféfflf 33d. V on to other Russian troops pushing westward along the lbttelirlgwmaoolusmetlw-rijidihloiliiviti- fitigtxllsiiwrlIi-stl-lnlt Wm “iii “uh toils. 5 P“ ' ' ‘ D0" Rive!‘ Valley. and northward from the Caucasian ° W" ° t = t l’ ""000 0 lv- The latest list of casualties with . ' n10 t i f girl] Ottawa, Nov. 1, ma. Drehcnsion of em er mm m. mo“, number and um b‘ km WASHINGTON Jan. a - tAPl- un a n oo I s. _ z H _ _ r- _ - '_ _ qhenusmm beuodwb °°" M’ “w” . ov m i750 ‘l’? "°."'“° l“ "‘° “m” ‘“°““’*"- ‘l’ 3&3?‘ §i“‘%‘3it§l Si?‘ “mil 1w our i0 moi-hum‘?! mm I have your latte of N . som length with me. Both Previous re rtcd. l“ m" with which you enclose a resolution the Di y-Bt John and the Mul- for ofiic sl m mum“ - no: --—- forces m European waters’ “W m n the moum of m‘ Don m": “w, ' Geomeuk’ E umnN Mm on m. 0f the Board of Trade passed on grave glht Tapper routs; qeud- . 9mm“ “mime this country, today criticized “wish- CB-Pillrlfls Btrukhov and. pushing Buku-Rostcv lino ikolskoye re- 1_ l” d d we" ' m] mmkyngt- “bum an early end w directly westward toward the Nazi presented an lit-mile advance since gctobel-Ifié) with referencemtn Sig?" a "I élllslcdi‘ lstclussl he a7llgzaaf~lutfiigerald rvzederlck. 51%» ds f t b l» the Wm. and churacterimd the em communications hub capture of g Thursday when one Red Arm’! mo so c y measures n e r . vichumussed! o! m: méiang-"Yithfiltaillc (mung-r) Malbeqde. R-IMIWWN San O rOOpS e lfived emy submarine as me No‘ 1 Bu“ which would cut off huge Nazi . column occupied Stcpnoye w the I have also had letters from Prem- . . Sh‘; morning and also with Rear liolmln on the matter. and so Admiral Jones the Vice-Chief of that you may have‘ full and direct the Naval Staff. The former was information regarding developments down in Prince Edward Island the l am glad to enclose a copy of a other day. When he came back he southeast. But the Russians apparently are much nearer than that to Georg- isvsk because the communique as heard here mentioned Novopuv- lovskove as captured. That an- problem. stark is here for conferences. the nature of which he declined to dis- cu r ss. lie said that it had been his op- inioil all along that this war “will forces retreating in the Caucasus aptptrgxlmafely 800 miles to the sou . Ten more populated places fell to the lower Don Valley yesterday. the midnight communique said, and an Drowned in sinking of Transport. Enemy Squeezed iConvoy B E. C. DANIEL Associa Press Staff Writer LONDON, Jan. a --(AP)-D0u8h' iy British destroyers four time! fought off a superior German force. including a pocket bait eship. in the Arctic dark north of Norway and then shenberded their convfly safely and inlfct to North Rusflll alter a stronger squadron 101F190 the defence and routed the Nazi men-d-war, the Admiralty m‘ trounced; today. The IJISO-ion desirOYtir FIOHIII leader Achatcs was lost and the new destroyer Onslow was dam- aired. but the merchant ships load- ed with “important military su plies for our Russian allies" res/ch- ed their destination without loss or damage. the communique said. A German destroyer of the Mm class was sunk. and one of the Coming Events xflua U0 Loading live hogs at Sou-I'll M slid .5 M600!“ iliiimdm“ ‘yli-‘g-S-W-B-bi. "Dance in Millvigrgréh Hall ed- ri sd J uary Mi view Oichzysba. ‘n 1'9‘ 11- "N iltlhiN District WWO lfltete stwBi-ookfleld, Wfllflfid t January 13th at 3.90. i-ll-ll- - ‘garland Dililict L. 0. L.‘ mectl ‘lrscr ships was damazfld- 1i F015’ Reaches Russia Safely Destroyers Fight Off Superior Force Including PocketBattleship. E i . These losses were announced Dec. 31 when the battle was still rosin!- Tlle Admiralty said then that s heavy German cru‘ser was damaged- so. badly it retired. The fact that the announcement ‘today laid "Ont of the larger ships was amused suggested that it might have been the 10,000-ton pocket battleship. The Admiralty Wd -the success- ful convoy passage was mode "l" spite of almost continual darkness extreme cold and navigational has- 3rd; due to m and low vtsibllit anti interference from the enemy.’ It was the first time since August that the Germans had risked their Russians Beside the pocket battleship -- nlobablv either the Luetaow or Ad- miral acheer-‘lhe Gerrrian force included s cruiser and a number .1! destroyers.’ Bollsvo Russian tllaims Exaggerated NDON. Jan. 0 —(01')- T?!) Tr uric, most lsftwlng of Hfitlgll critical weeklaslyangsggiucuisifltgtovl: alert ‘vgro m m current issue today terisl esptur in the last six ii“- "n saws‘ m“ amplifi- nlst rather than sa the lmfted- surface ships to attack the m, pf- "timetable" flow of supplies i0 the c usstanclsimsflim Br was uuasunan (Associated Press Staff Writer) ALLIED J-IEIADQ 11533 NORTH AFRICA. Jan, sufnmpnl Th0 00-10111‘? by a French and Am- "100" 001ml corps of Tanout Mal- ler. a settlement 14 miles from Tlarct in the southern 'l‘u.nisllln desert near the Libyan frontier about 200 miles southwest of 'I‘ri- fill. Was announced today bv s’, 011th Hulitury spokesman as bad weather again limited ground oper- ations in t e northern Tunisian sec- tor. Th d t , 0h stgugl: Oilserlllgorglsflifl miileiiii to litii: ‘1001010 hell/y odds. the spokesman said, but put Tanout Muller's 400 Italian defenders to flight, killing about 250 of them. is now apparent that the Ger- sasus"f...il"lf"=i. a" out.“ a s - British out army in Iillsbya, by tl-l: French in the south, and by the Allied forces in Tunisia — and they now control only a. comparatively narrow strip along the coast from Tripoli south. then lending north- -west towards ‘minis and Bizerte. Attacked lloinmePs Aniny (British headquarters in Cairo announced during the day that A1- Iied pianos attacking Field Marshal win Rommelb Libyan army in its retreat to the west had machine- gunned his transport along a stretch of coastal road only t0 miles short of Tripoli. (This indicated to some British observers that Rommel is preparing to abandon his previous line around Buerat E1 Hslln. well to the east of Tripoli, and is on the march to the west sg . (Cairo headquarters also sn- notmced that R.A.F. planes also attacked Bul hur factories at Licata. on the sou ern coast of Sicily causgig violent explosions. bombed hits were scored on a s a railway de l; and large fires llahtcd. and raid an airfield on the tiny island of pedusa, midway be- tween Malta and Tunisia. (The most significant Allied air action repented. however. was an assault bv Americanheavy bombers Zgilzhhlfbfll‘ gt llialermo. s area . 0W eX- plosign was observed in llelc target. area. d e ugh northeastern Tunis a, at-l quarters announced today The destroyed transport raised to 3 three and the downed Zeros to 38 the price paid by the Japs for the reinforcement effort. The i? convoy first was llklltefl by an led plane Jan, 8 when about 30 miles off New Britain, in whoso harbor of Rahaul the Jails have been known to be concentra- ting considerable shipping. The noon communique of Jl-II. I announced that s l4,000-ton trans- _ s lly I ad d with troops. ho iivsunhoallfng with another I l tra rt and that a third had been" amaged by Allied bombers. l MELBOURNE. Jan. a - (c?) — l A huge force of Allied plume!- f ranging from light fighters to heavy flying boats. Ltberators, was thrown into the battle today against a Japanese convoy which apparently was bent on reinforcing Japanese troops in the Lae area of New Guinea. More than 50 sorties in less than 24 hours already had been made against the IO-shlp enemy naval force which was reported officially to have lost two big transports in the furious combat. A third trans- port was reported hit. Thousands of troops were be- lieved drowned in the sinking of one of the heavily-loaded trans- ports, a 14,000-ton vessel. At laast 18 enemy fighters were shot down in fierce dogfight-s. The Japanese expedition appar- ently was engaged in a. mission sim- ilar to that of Dec. 14 and 15 when Fortresses and be kn folce that got ashore was later re- ported exterminated. Meanwhile, the remnants of the Japanese Papuan army. once num- bering about 15,000 men including some of the elite of Japan's forces. ‘W05 hemmed in at Sanarianda point a 00111010111008 from Allied Head- y“ in e oases the carllmign which drove the Japanese back across he Owen Stanley mountains, have t been announced. Up to Dec. 1. however. Australians had lost 640 killed and 1,550 wound- ed, and three American Brigadier Generals had been wounded. Japanese losses have not been fully counted, and they may never own because of the Japanese method of fighting to the last from treetops and dugouts. The official Allied. count of Japanese dead to- talled 3,B40, but many other hull- dreds of enemy killed, es- tlmated by field commanders in var- ious actions. were not included In this total. The headquarters coni- munique said Japanese losses in this New Guinea war to date include 240 planes shot down and 55 das- iroyed on the ground. Sixteen Al- lied planes have been reported mis- sinighin action. e enemy's naval losses include two cruisers. six estroyers. i0 transports and supply vessels, a gun- boat and large numbers of smaller craft. In add tion scores of ships have been damaged. Aid To scriptions May Fund Started In Generous Style $807.00 Already Received. Local Committees To Whom Sub- Russia Be Paid. and twins "complete destruction," “l The whole problem of the wars conduct now, Stark said. “comes down the shipping and in that re- spect the greatest menace is the submarine." Otlr present shippin losses to un- dersea assault, he sad. are "some ing to be mighty uncomfortable about." and he said he wished “we are knocking the submarines out faster." British and American forces are pulling together, “perfectly splend- idly,“ he said instanclng Admiral Sir Andrew Cunningham of the British Navy taking orders in the North African campaign from Lt.- Gen. Dwight Eisenhower of the Am- ggrican army, although his senior in _ears and experience. v LONDON, Jim, 8 — (C?) -- A miralt surcd. He read the communique iiourlcln troyer ed that there were few cases British work. 15 Flights Made To Islands MONTREAL, can. ii — (CP) -—- Morc than l5 plane flights have been illnclc iroiil Charlottetown t0 the Magdalen Blonds since Dec. l5. an official of the Maritime Central Airways said today. but as yet the company has not been approached to fly food supllcs. (Transport Minister Michaud said in Ottawa last night that an ice- breaker would be used to deliver from 4.000 to 5.000 tons of mer- chmldise to the people of tht Isl- ands as soon as one was available. His statement followed one from l-Iormisdas Langlals. member of the Quebec legislative assembly for the Magdaleris, that. the population faces a new famine. The ‘Transport Minister said "I have not been in- formed that there is any danger of starvation") ‘m, M Falconer. secretary-treasurer 12th axing P ' ' J-ln-O-li realist form 0i wavering iufonri- l. s I A! 111' of the ail- company. said. that two ° _ stion." m“ I Up to ycstcrda afternoon the Mrs. Chas. H. Black. 5-00 tons of mall and express were 005mm“ u“ - 1; guy-pl The Tribune lid the lvsss Canadian Aid w tiasia. Fund in Moors dt McLeod, Ltd. 100.00 awaiting transport at Charlotte- "tlw- <>~~ - ....l..-""- .. .0‘. as: "'01s: El Army, on m...” £an."al"t.r“n."a...ln@ . e".‘.’l"‘.“.°°-.’s""' "it-i §»%2’€‘..".l§’..;'.‘2‘..“‘.€..2§“‘t‘$“'il..°.la w m”: an‘ "0' 1.0-2. tank's la the l arse. I! - cent subscriptions and the Pro- ————— of this week. By. that line. they ._._... non and Kotslnikovski oounter- vlriolsl treasurer. Mr. n. 8. P. 0007.00 would bein postlcn to fly two tons " 01'0"" u “ m‘ °“°“'"°' “d "m m“ m wnnou Jan s - co P) - ‘higigi iuslzill iiiiiliallguhiiltiifiii s0lln1roIiuCtiirarllflEteslillelsiiihipulgfilgg dlllfl m???“ ';'.°.',‘.l.“°‘§;,".°..“d§§d'd... Clyde Rive;- pgmgga’ Ins ltute Ill! are extraordinarily llllh W In! - - I 0 _ 0 P it e 5 e e i? “mum ab”. “Md”. m“ com . has-g: f atlons of high-flying on e as follows. business establishments will be @115, which takes mail throughout u" t i4.“ n" who“ o“; m; g; flgh r meshed across the central Kings Oalry-on- noted with pleasure and the don- the winter, became the sole link ' . wit!» British forces lost 9 I in most continuslliuttls corps, Bfl "mm 0100-00 01'! IN to be thanked Ind wn- wlth the outside world in mid- n3 a my“. W‘ l m ‘m4 y“ m. at on av in Willi- mum Hay Iced . 20.00 rrstulatcd on what they have done December after an inrush of winter ns m‘ n" mW rsy- m’ ' tar-o slum last m: IP uy was a ism-welt dlg- w. ans Mrs. a. 1.. Oct-um. zs-oo lrrestiv encouraging the aniwrs ice into the Gulf forced discon- fm u‘ 1011's,?" l, 3- "o, "w" 00"" mm“ t Q n l tfollow up 0o another nu t mm... c, Stewart .00 of u» campaign r m at is start. tlnuance of ship supplies. With no Hunmngvlgr "w" ._”'_a"_M_uy "II mill." ° f on‘, n“ n" from of Germany Ruhr. I r. Whesr. 2.00 The emal subacr tlons from tn- airport on the 1s ands. landings - _ or datum-Ion 0 ‘an mm of the 001m assaults Iv- Miss Edith Stems, 5.00 dlviduals will be squall apprec- are made on the ice. "w ha"? m, m“. and I001 l0 '1" - some directed st 011W l"! Otto u. Baird. 10.00 imc and it will be e many Every trip since the Bill? with H, m," l" Y {M1, . ‘on the 01 Mm‘ m0 homo. mo. the first cg: Dshlois am. mm hundreds of these that will make su lies m stitch in u... ce and m; tllmiel“ 0'". o; ‘d’, the u: our 100M weather in four dsvs twill" Charlottetown iii-anon u a pm success and ha u. end its voysn st Souris. r. nnwfm" imggid if," rm Panssr st 4-000 the OPQPIMOIII. the Olllldilll legion 100.00 demonstrate fullirlo nce mwua or. has been loaded down ‘with "We "M" ",§_'".u_ mm," the paper . rsf m Air m museum“ the carvell ism, , 50% Islangi’: rocia n of uis valiant masenfers and merchandise m... to tbs ltescow counter-offensive. alum assault on t Ruhr ‘out gnu, pr. may]. p flgphflflgn g, f ,_ usslanluland its srn- e sh p. More than e0 passengers "Buyi m ‘g pnqmcton —'-'-"'—-—"-""-_'(w) w" m. n gargklmral} u" "mm" u“ J. .w n M“. glthyhwithntlaledndferlim dig-flail were flown inintime for Christmas. "a. fl muggy: ... _ - r. an s. . . n . om o e -———————————-— mggy.“ “Li: slql M. “Md “u”, m“ h, 33:“ , hsseanwiiae seven mouflormanwuflllfltlld gym 5210"” , gm. clothing and medic sup- B10 IUPITIm ' - figures an siiou . . - ~ " ——-- iitlfiflkoil’ Si. fiatmmft? Ebb... o. w“ '"" lithtlsdmf. .%-"°‘“"' °" “M” °"""~ ’~°° “" “W ..&....““‘°" "'“""“' " on“. mm’; 4mm“; 14.11. 3.000 before the war. - t h us on also l . > 00.000 miles in tar. _?- 85' m. the successful -Zritlsh des. efcncc of the recent con- voy to North Russia and comment- in Naval history when des- troyers were better led or did finer WASHINGTON, Jan. compulsory loans, or both, was un- der discussion fonight as President Roosevelt prepared to submit Monday his record-shattering United States peeled t0 O-Pllloxlnlte $103,000,000 000. A high government ofiic.al, who cannot be quoted by name. V. Alexanderjirst Lord o‘ the Ad; said Mr. Roosevelt might recom- y, told s. meeting of the Little Ship Club tonight that “we are in the difficult. serious stage of war at sea” and said the U-boat menace ‘ must be beaten before victory is mend that Congress, through leg- islation. take steps to increase treasury receipts to 850.000.000.000. l This might entail, the official said, not only an increase in pre- sent taxes but some form cf com- pulsory loans by individuals. l-Icw- etver, there was no definite word Seize Gas Ration Books NEW YORK, Jan. l-(Aiil-Gas- oline ration books were seized and thousands of licence numbers jetted- clown for possible investigation as the United States Government sought; rigid enforcement today of .ts ball or. pleasure motoring in l7 Atlantic seaboard states. Russell H. Potter. acting O.P.A. district manager, said ration books were seized from:- A man whose car was parked outside a restaurant in which he was dining with two companions. A chauffeur waiting for his woman employer who was attend- lng a concert in Carnegie Hail. A youth who said he was a stud- ent at a military school in Vir- ginia and had stopped to visit friends. A patron of a night club who had left his car parked outside. A man who saln he had stopped in a restaurant to visit his sales manager. A man who said he was enter- taining a member of the armed forces. ~ Meantime. streets were given over largely to iaidcahs, buses delivery lbflllClfl and other commercial veh- ces. State 0f Siege in Bucharest LDNDON, Jan. ti - (C P) -- Reuters news agency reported the Lisbon radio said tonight that a state of seige had been proclaimed in Bucharest. Rumania following an unsuccessful Iron Guard plot against the Antonescu Government. HALIFAX, Jan. 8 —(CP)-\- Mrs. bottle Frame. apartment house owner, was convicted today on five counts of charging rentals in cx- cess of maximums allowed by War- on be planning bud. recommendations, leaving it u re get for the next fiscal year in the Congress to write its own tax ileu- Expenditures in the year are ex- ' qualified approval today time Leasehold regulation. she was fined 0100 and costs. lelfe I have written the Premier took the matter with the a " “' n h" n he equal number of points were taken parentlv is the some as Nove- lcaai; in which r have quoted the lust to make suru: that the iltvilayl ' AIISIIPREAIIJAHI-lel? "i‘-“i§.'i§.s.'§l 331-’. thiltreagllilirnm moral: 112w“ ggtllgfliicgiltti. ifluiitliiiiniink solléded in the Coucosvr- imvlosk- listed on Russian mans as reply forwarded to Mr. 0.1.. Hol- ticn was satisfactory and as a rc-, » - C?) — ' ‘c transport and Rivei- tires nol-tliwest o: denim? The “rm”. ml" °i Unmd 3w“ 5mm“ m” “m” “m” ‘m “m” m "m" wumem °i 0mm‘ mm. lull 0f 8 mssestion mode by Hoar-l s $0 ros have been destroyed in st- that battle, Allied plgngg flmd'150__ naval operations. meeting reporters Nikclskoye, as miles northeast of ievslr. Yours very truly, summit Jones. m one: of Utaff n tlull on u.» Guinea-bound 00o rounds of fim-fnunltion and. l" “l: 11w devmmenr. declares s. i. aaasroiv. . . . . . . weflqrcollro m nme~irosp-:m1-moppce-uwnsn bombs‘ two Wt my Oiherpremiscutu yhlch _ lFnniimind m mm» 11. 11rd 5i have reaclied Lae, Allied ‘Heud- days and cyan we remnant o; “u. to work would be a false one.’ Higher Taxes, Compulsory Loans Talked Of In U.S. i 8—(AP)-— that Mr. Roosevelt The subject of increased taxes or decided to ‘actually had support compulsory loans The President was understood to only general financing et In thL; connection, he gave to a pay- as-ylyil-gtl plan for collecting of taxes from individuals. Mr. Roosevelt told his pres cun- ference everybody is in favor getting 0:1 a pay-as-yoll-go basis, but that there are prolllcnts lit- taciled to the sn-callzd iluml plan which cannot be overlooked. ‘This plan. ndvnilced by Boards- ley Rliml. New York merchant and: banker. would wipe out one year’: tax liability rind credit payments rm the current years income tax. Thus, at the end nf 1943. the in- come taxpayer nwntlri have paititlie same amount as that due on ills i902 income, but at the end of the year he would have settled his 194i tax when some minor adjustments were made That was fine for the lnrilvlrlud, the President. snld. hilt the Treas- ury would be out of pot-kc’. that much. You Do m’ HAVE 1'0 (.0 f0 fur SEASIDE to SEE mince ANYMORE .,_ at n! 01 High tide this afternoon 5nd tomorrow morning at I. - Sun sets tht: afternoon at 5. and rises tomorrow morniriti 3 . 8 First quarter moon Jan. 13. SI .m a . summerslde tide ll! minutes hi»- er than Charlottetown. CAR FERRY SERVICE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY From Borden-Leave 9.05 a- ILIO a.in. 2.00 pan. 4.30 p.m. I. ‘HI-Inc Capo Tormentlne -- 10M a.ui. 1.15 p.111. 3.05 um. IJI pun. 8.15 tun. . DAILY an: SEIWICI ' (EXCEPT SUNDAY) _ Cb-Hottrtown-summersldc- --' Moucton Leave Charlottetown 8.80 s. Q I2.” . I. 4.30 p. Ill. . ve Charlottetown I I. Q 5.0 p. in. 1.05 p. In. a