MAXIMS ._ or“ A , near-z MAN __—-——- 1m! m); bring ‘u flu-ougb 1110- ~ a la ful debs our fiiJslieei-tn wlthwonrselvis 2M’ The People's Paper (lovers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew /I/ '/// In" §>" m-w-ww-fl" ""'-------\\ Read by Everybody Pllll Consistent rerlitulli- is as rare a~ wen ther. MAXI MS OIL MERE MAN sistent temperature in man i;r Founded ll" lure Con“, 4- durum. xmlxptown Guudlll. CHARLOTTETOCWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1942 Manpower Urn-mtg, Jan. 26 —(CP) -Con- H. Jluuse leader Hanson to- l n move aimed at com- W _|,._- government to drop its mp0,... plebiscite proposal and wupled tills with a suggestion that “Md; send e division to lid Aus- u-glfm defence again-st the Jail“- 88!. min-ling off ln the debate on the ‘part1 from tlu- throne 1n the House or commons, Nll‘. Hanson denounc- “1 u “an evasion of NSDQHSWUll-Y" the government's proposal to seek release from anti-conscription miges. He. warned the government it. would have to bear the onus "l! ' , or curries." flgiinrbodyung his criticism on the 715mm proposal an antend- mt to iLe address in reply to the gpeech from the throne, Mrul-lap- |o.'l made a direct. challenge .0 the ‘cmnivht. His amendment a- mounts to a want of confidence mo- ilen upon which the House will be fined to vole nt the end of the throne speech debate which started tori amendment expressed regret use government mid not seen fit ship trust-cad of pro- ,. i regret. the government pd m: proposed measures to Par- liament for complete mobilization vi wraith and mawrlal resources urd man niul woman power on o elective hints so that Canada could we total war "in any theatre of wit." This challenge of the house to e. vote on a DYODO- lo mobilize men for any thcaii of war followed 1ft. Hiuisoirs argument. ln-his 8.- m-vord speech that. the govern- mentshould yet chance its policy md bring u, manpower measure lo j_"_”;' Llimi (Continued on page 7, Col 4) liar-ZS Years Ago Today (By The (Yz-nutllan Press) . 27. Milk-British Admiralty dec‘. .-l enlarged areas the Ncrzii Sm (lungerous to shipping oriaccoiuu of war orperalions. Brit - <1 German trenches at Vermelles and French . in surprhc attack at fuming Events -O_ Ninth-am ll! lllll 8 rent: per word Ill: fur "gum; '=:-_~_~.- "Thlkic-s-Souris Thursday. L-797-1-27-3l. “'.l'llll(l(-5——l\’lOIll.flKll€ Saturday. L-vov-i-in-ai. ufifineciui Dloy'—Mt. Stewart, m- l- . L-7ll7-l-27-Sl. “Wanted to buy Chicken. Fowl. land Cold Storage. L-ZlQ-‘l-ll-tl. "Burlug little pigs every day 2s GAB-Oil oer pun. 2a lbs. $1.00, o. c, - L-548-l-20-Tue-Fri-tf. "Bingo and Dance Fort Augustu Kill. Tuesday night, January 27111.8 14-794-1-27-11. ‘I iii Qmllillg Slim-c Graham's Road fiffrsdlhesduv night. 1r not fine ll. lmnchcs 10 cents. 1,311, "Dance in Graham's Rood Hall Eilsday flight. If not fine Fri- " L-aio. , ___ member the dance and box mlblllit in Stunhope-Covcbead Com- m é Hell. ‘Iliursdnv night. 1f e Monday. L-809-l-27-2i. "Blllillv coca feeder »-,_ . pigs until Ihllgllélelhtéiquy tins week. 50 to 1a w,“ Live"? oicr 75 to 100-11 - s ock Maketingo Board. L- 5-1-27-21. termini‘; sfllllrdliy. February 7th ‘l The Vogumtiiie "Unloading Old Syd-he Ber ed °°ll st Milton. a. c, victim?“ Is-BIO-l-fl-QL ., .__.._ Annual Mcetl on 1mm“, Kl 11g Kingston Fann- y_ Janualf; 3151;??? gall, Butur. Cl ‘m n-lllfiyllfsi ragtlre a ipiaatiiv of well- hellersl to drgéllléog. . re end an“ CW! Storage Co.. Ltd I l Ilionmw 1"55Y-l-15-l8 then t w e u “Qlflrflaturday, ‘ leav-i ‘n-dva-i-zv-ii. lbs or over. n-neli-zi-ti. s‘ Pfla G. “C (Sign. Hanson Is Opposed To Plebiscite Conservative House Leader urges Canada send Division to aid Australians. Prepare strong“. Stand in Burma ANGOON, Burma. Jan. 26 ._ (GP) --Britlsh Imperial forces but- til-Hz the Japanese on the south- ern Burma front were reported to- night to have turned the Sslween iver, Burma's longest and most; turbulent stream, into a stmngw- gurrisoned line along its lower reaches where the Jab-Thai cffen. elvc must be stopped to avoid 1m. Rangoon perllllnim , e was reported establish. ed after s. fortnight of attacks had exposed British outputs along the Tcnnsserlm coast and the defenders had been forced to abandon a, strip of territory in the Burmese pan- handle about 400 miles long and so miles wide at its broadest point, ll - Boat lured Ship to doom NORFOLK, Va., Jan. 23 —(AP) —Musquemding as a llghtship to lure her prev closer for the kill, an enemy submarine shelled end tor- pedoed the American ore carrier Venore off the North arqlina. cutest: e p floating on her side and a: mem- zriersf of her 43 man crew unaccount- Allen Harte, seamen of Balti- more, Md., one of 21 survivors brought ashore at Norfolk by a vessel which picked them up after they had drifted for 38 hours in a lifeboat, told newsmen that "those Boches are certainly smart....they fooled us completely." "I was in the crew's nest on watch when we sighted e. light," Harte said. "The light blinked -in code that the vessel was a lightship. She told us to come over near her. We started tctvnrd her. still thinking she was the lightship vJien a. shell hit us in the bow. It didn't do much damage, but we were called to our ions, “Then the submarine moved a- round to our port- sicle and a tor- pcclo hit us. A general alarm was sounded and darned if that sub, when 1t. circled us that time. didn't signal with her lights as if :l:e were a buoy. She didn't fool us that time and when the second torpedo struck us we were ready for it as much as you can be ready for such a thing." some of the survivors said they saw the sea swamp a lifeboat car- rying l9 men and sow s third life- boat with two men 1n it but report- ed they were unable to go to the aid of the others because their own boat, with 21 aboard, was overload- ed and shipping water. The Venore which was carrying 22,000 tons o ore, was the tanker Charles M. Black prior to her 01m- vcrsion to an ore carrier. Sh: was owned by the ore steamship com- pany of New York. Malayan Retire On Will be larger, Better supplied With Tank llnits Present Arm Overseas Will Be Ma e Into Two- Corps Army This Year. (By Frank Flaherty, Canadian Press Staff Writer) OTTAWA, _Ian_ 26—(CP)— Prime Minister Mackenzie King today announced the Govern- ment’s plans for a larger and more heavily tank-supplied Can- adian army overseas and im- mense financial contributions t0 Great Britain. Discussing the future war program of Canada, he told the House of Commons the present army corps overseas will bc. made into a two-corps army dur- ing r942 by the addition of a second armored division and a second army tank brigade. Three infantry divisions and two army tank brigades will comprise one corps and two armored divisions the other. The 4th division, now training in Canada will be converted into the new armored division. Iegislaflon to provide for the pro- posed plebisclte and for the voting of men on active service will be in- troduoed at. the earliest date. said IVII. King. The question to be submitted will read "are you in favor of mleaslnz the government from any obliga- tion arising out of any past com- mitments restricting the methods of raising men for military ser- s s on; e e lIBBQt-i tht th government proceed to introduce conscription for overseas service without a plebiscite he said, "I do not propose to erect. bad faith and the broken pledge into a principle of action." To proceed that way, he said. would destroy the last vestige of faith the people of Canada have .in free political institutions and in their public men. For the future Mr. King predict- ed an extended application of the principle of national selective ser- vice but declined t0 80 mm d9‘ tails. He said it was proposed to inqreggg the mobility of available manpower and add more women to employment. "I shall confine myself to saying (Continued on page 8, C01 ll) Churchill Suffers From Heavy Cold LONDON. Jan. 26-(CP)-—Prime Minister Churchill is suffering from a heavy cold and has can- celled a broadcast he had planned to make tomorrow riitlhli- A statement from the ministry of information said:- "On tmedlcall Litldvlce. as gents: not ye cornpe ey recovere a. heavy cold, the Prime Minister will not broadcast tomorrow even- l ng. "Mr. Churchill hopes to broad- cast at an early date." Defenders West Loss of Batu Pahat places Japs less than 60 miles from Goldwell urges Conscription of _ Manpower, wealth OVITAWA, Jsn. 26 -(0P) —Ocn- ecripflon of war industries, wealth llid flnmclal, institutions, es well no manpower for dvereeu service, was by 6.0.11’. House hud- cr M. J. Ooldwell, moving an a- mendme t tn the address in reply ne speech in the House 0f Commons tonight. Mr. Ooldwell said the support cf Osnadlans for this progr- should be sought in the forthcom g pleb- ir liq on manpower, "as no total c fort adequate to meet the present needs of the war ls ible without total mobilization o wealth, indus- try and finance as well lo human tesmirces" A Parliamentary committee should examine activities of the munitions m: su ‘ply department, Mr. Cold- Singapore. (By c. Yates M ' ‘. Associated Press Staff Writer) SINGAPORE, Jan. 26—(AP)— The valiant but weary defendem of singmporc dropped buck tonight along the west Malayan coast, sb- andoni the anchor city of Batu Pshatngut on other fronts they utsunehly stood their around u:- einst superior numbers of Japan- cre invaders. The lose of Batu Pabst, placed the Japanese less than 60 miles from the great British naval base. keystone of the defence of the en- tire southwest Pacific. The British command ssid the town W" 1°" after "severe flghtlnm" On.the east coast, the enemy was quiet and the Impflrlll! 11°14 their lines on the south bank M the Merelug River as miles from slngaporc. Perhaps the Jwllle“ were awaltlrll Meinforcemente, be- cause the Rcyfii M! PM“ 97ml“! a convoy of two merchant . escorted by navel forces, off E2108" gnmg no miles farther north- Pill-tolls fighting razed 110;? Kluang of the central front as t e m u; drive farther. :31??? rlorigulthe central Molly!!! W- -- S’ T ' fOontlnued on p889 .7. 3“ 4)- ‘- ___. new P. 1s. SUBMARINE TORPEIJOES JAP Fremier King An_1_1ou F War Situation Last Night I (By KIRKE L. SIMPSON, Associated Pres; War Analyst) Netherlands-American nlr and sen. forces have done more ln Mac- assar Strait than give allied peoples a stimulating taste of victory. They have slowed indefinitely the muln thrust of Japan's rnultl-front conquest campaign-wand time h what counts. It is still a. defensive fight for the United Nations on ell fronti- Thnt ls true in Libya and even In Russia. where Red army operations are primarily of a defensive-offensive nature. The battle of Macassar Strait, like MacArthur-‘s grim stand In Luzon, ls throwing o. jarring monkey wrench Into the Japanese war design. Tokyo's indicated strategy demands full use of that direct Wfll/"WBY from the China Sea to the Java Sea and the heart of the Netherlands Indies. News from Libya and Malaya made the Macassur victories all the more stimulating to allied observers. Even Axis spokesmen were at a loss to explain British back-tracking ln Llbyp. However, lt suggests 7m"! "all!!!" 0f Empire troops, naval unltg and alr- power to other ‘hcfllws. perhaps to the Pnclflc theatre. D There remains the most critical war front of all, the Atlantic. esplte Axis submarine raiding 1n American waters, gfg-[yfll 0| an Am. erlean Expeditionary Force ln North Ireland ls announced. Its size, ' '"‘ lint! are undl O O Presumably, however, it menu American manning of essential ma: "firth Ireland M spring operations In the eastern Atlantic. er t e American forces will rellleve Brltlsh units or merely sup- plement them ls not stated in Washington, ‘reg: lfalzlllltilib: Amvrlcaln troops as well as technicians to North dun o‘ u‘ Al); fl Q7131"? Sgnlflcanee. The best Irish bases for con- = "I e Mlle are In neutral Eire. 1r available to British- Amerlcan anti-submarine forces, these bu” their effectiveness. would virtually double 51MB "l! United States was forced into the war by Japan's attack and the Gennan- Italian war declarations, the possibility of Amgricgn “s” "f has" l" El" has been a question of prime importance That may not be ln the cards yet. If It ever American forces In North Ireland would be avauau, l-dVlml/le 0f that favorable break for the nlllee, comes. however, to take prompt U. S. Expeditionary Force Reaches Ireland Units may be in forefront of American Forces in battle against I-Iiflel; “(in to Ottawa” Farmers’ Slogan REGINA. Jan. 2c -tcP> mo... to-Otlawn." is the slogan of a dele- Eution of some 400 farmers pre- paring for a journey to the Domln. ion capital with a Saskai-hewan wheat pool petition bearing close to 200.000 names and seeking high. '31‘ ilfltvs for farm produce. The delegation, including a num. ber of Saskacthcwan mayors and businessmen, leaves next Friday o.- board two special trains. Delegates will live aboard the trains fluflng their slay in Uttuwa where they will meet Agriculture Minister Gar- diner in a conference Fob. 2. RH. Millikan of Regina, ivheat pool counsel, Will go east in advance of the main party to complete a“- rantlcments. Chief officers of the pool, President J. H. Wesson and Seclelflllv (350112? W. Robertson. are already iii Ottawa to aitcnd the Canadian federation of agri- culture convention opening there oday. Major point in the petition is a demand for an initial ptrvment l nf not less inn $1 a bushel on wheat deli .. :1 to the Canadian wheat board compared with the 7O cents. basis No. 1 northern at the Lnkchead and Vancouver, paid on ilre 1941 crop. ' "nmc-nt to ucce; . ' of ‘parity prices" for all agr‘ ll products. (The petition does not define "parity" but at its last annual meeting the pool defined parity as the average price levels of the years 1926-29 as follows, all prices basis Fort William: No. 1 North- ern wheat $1.41; No. 2 C.W. oats 60 cents: No. 3 C.W. barley '13 cents; £20.72 C.W., rye $1.; No. 1C.W. flax .0 ). No price ceiling on agricultural commodities should be established below nnriiv levels. the petition contends. It also urges “equitable" delivery quotas on wheat. Aid To Australia Under Consideration OIITAWA. Jen. 26—(CP)—'Ihe form of assistance Canada can pro- vide to Australia was e matter for "careful consideration," Prime Min- lat/er Mackenzie King told the House of Commons tonight. Mr. King, before resuming his ad- dress in the speech debate, replied to a suggestion made earlier today by Conservative House lender Han- son who advocated sending a. Cana- dian division to help Australia. Canada, Mr. King said. was as anxious as the United states and all the united nations to Provide all possible aid in Australia. ‘line form such assistance should take could only be determined after careful consideration. he said. WA$H1NGTON, Jim. 26—-(AP)— M “Dfldltlonary force of several thousand United Bt-ates soldiers which landed in Northern Ireland today may form s spearhead of the intimate assault upon the inner stronghold of I-litlerism, it was said here. Only the bore announcement of the safe arrival o! the troops was made by War Secretary Henry Stimson 1n the communique, which named Mat-Gen. Russell P. l-larile -fcrmci'ly commander of an in- fantry division in Louisiana-as the commander, but several consider- ations which may have governed the dispatch of the expedition arose in unofficial speculation Foremost was the fact that these troops now can undergo final train- ing under actual wartime conditions and in close proximity to the the- atre where their services may ulti- mately be required. Thus they doubtless will be in the forefront (f American forces when the time comes for an invasion of Gennan- dominated Europe. Meanwhile, in addition to the lift their presence gives to British mor- ale and to that of the people of the occupied countries, they will be available to garrison Northern Ire- land against a Nazi lnvaslonbnd to guard a vital supply line. A possible subsidiary effect oi this landing was to show the De Valera government. of Eire that concession of naval bases to the al- lies would bring ample strong-h to defend them and Eire itself. On the political side, the people of Eire, traditionally friendly with the United States. could be expect- ed to look on the presence of Amer- ican troops in the four northern countries with more tolerance than they would accord to a stubble British force there. Speculation on the possibility of s German invasion on the British Isles has dealt occasionally with the suggestion that I-litler might strike first through Eire, which has only a small army and lacks quantities mmerenc‘, “Tm “up.” llommefs Army; llontinues drive In Libyan Desert British Forces Pushed Back 150 Miles From Limit Of Western Push. CAIRO, Jan. 2(i—<AP>——Ccunter- drlvinl Axis forces have pushed British units back former, it was announced today, in a drifting battle of tanks which has not yet beecigfoug-ht to a dccriun but is n. STOWHIEI threat to Bengasi. Ltd-Gen. Erwin Rcnitnels armor- ed columns have overrun Zouict Msus, 40 miles northeast of the Agedobla-Ahtelat-Saunnu triangle, scene of heavy tank fighting Over the iveek-Qnd, and rear-lied a point about 70 miles Slllliilidisl of the British-held port of Bengasi. The British forces thus have lost about 150 of the hard-earned desert mil“ between there and El Aghella, the limit of their vveswtigrd push around the Gulf of sirte. _No attempt. was naaiii: here to minimize the gravity of the sud- den £11m. but neither \\“~,l5 there any indication of prmzc. It was accepted that Axis forces recently have been bolstered sub- ltsntfoly by overseas yeiruforu. ments. The British authorities, however said at least n week must pass be ore the first. of new tanks and troops landed at 'I‘ripol1 over the week-end from a battered Axis convoy can reach the front. (The Admiralty announced in Lclndon Monday that British lllb- marince had picked off four more Axis ships in the Mediterranean, sinking TIWO hilly-laden tankers, e medium-sized transport and a lfllvagg vessel.) Cunmuriiquczs from thefam-it were d“??? H“ .....H'”'“i'i2 en a s n east (if Bengasi, seizing roads and airdromes. Rcmmclb pace, however. has glowed clovm since the fiist two days and he is dangling now with the main body, oil typo]? and a e e ing out on the flanks fast as ft is moving backward. British sources declared me battle could not develop much further without a. conclusion, but further indies by the fact that there is no niitabe defence urea until weli cut of Bengusi, where mountains limit the opera- tions area. and make it possible for guns and tank traps to come into may against Rcmmers steel divis- ns. Unidentified Planes Cruise Over California SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 26—(AP\ -Sout.hcrn California radio sta- zioris were silenced for nearly four hours todny while unidentified iilnncs cruised over the area. In announcing the fllaht of the planes. the wrsicrn defence com- mand did not indicate their proba- ble number or direction. No air raid Wnflllllg to ‘.710 public was an- llbllllCCfl. R "PORTS NORWICGIANS EXECUTED OSLO, Nowmy (From Gcmian broadcasts), jun. 26 _IAP'> —Three Norwegians who had attempted to reach iglnud to join the Norweg- ian for s there have been executed by shno..1_r_- afirr . " . ll by a Illllll1ll'_\‘ court 01' "lr- c iniribiii- rd t’) the enemy ca re Republics Atlarltlzic C RIO DE JANFJIRO. Jim 2o- fAPi-Republics of the ivcsterll hrmis-‘phrrc declared the Unitvd slates nnti its American allies non-bclllgcrents tonight. and took as their own peace aims those of the United Slates as expressed in the Atlantic charter. The stand. taken bv till‘ 00113651 committee cf the Pan American i0 state of aircraft and mechanized Equip" that, “special facilities may be con- ment. In the event of such u: attack. cded to those countries that, in 5111s gmergrncy contribute, in the Eire might welcome the assistance Judgment of ouch government, to of an American army stationed inthe defence interests of the heml- Northern Ireland. Question asked In plebiscite OTTAWA, Jen. 3B —(OPl-f~lere ls the question upon which can- arllane will vote when Canada's forthcoming manpower plebiscite L: held:- "Are you in favor 0f releasing the government from n-ny obligation a- rising out of any past. commitments restricting the methods of raising men for military service?" The question was mule public in the House of Commons tonight. by Prim lllnlem- Mmlnenie Klnl s here." pBesirles the United Slates. the NDUbFCs of Central America and the Caribbean are at war with the. Axis. The resolution meant that warship: or these countries could use any ports of ihc western hemi- sppm-p at will, rather than have their stays restricted to 24 hours. Another resolution called for an immediate meeting of the general staffs of American nations to map a unltrd defence of the two con- tinents. _ The Americans took another slap at the AXlg by approving a project recommending the suppres- sion of radio, telephone and tele- graph communications with "ag- gressor" countries and occupied territories. This stand was aimed at eliminating numerous clandes- tine radio stations which have poured out Axis groplliflfldl- W11“ in the face of s wrought by cruisers and destroyers Annunl Suum-npllun flellvererl, l-‘Mm B, Hill: P. K. l., ILOU; Cunurlu nnrl U224. SJDI Ar Toll. UFFnemy Ships Increases In Big jattle Flying F ortresses active in great engagement which began Fri- day against Nipponese Convoy. (By William R. Spear, Associated Press Staff Writer; ‘VASHINGTON, Jan. 28-(A.P)—A United S1119! submarine tor- pedoed and probably sank n Japanese aircraft carrier in the battle of lllaeassar Strait today while surface warships and big Flying Fortress» took heavy toll of an invading enemy convoy, At least l1 ships have been sunk and 23 others damaged by Ameri- can and Netherlands forces slnee the great engagement began last Fri- day between Borneo and Celebes Islands. Northward in the Philippines, I. tiny torpedo boat zipped again into Subic Bay, past net and boom de- fences and heavy shore batteries, and sank another 5,000-ton enemy vessel, duplicitlizig a similar daring attack of last week. So fierce was the action and so great the success of American and Netherlands forces against the Jap- anese invasion convoy in the Mac- essar strait approach to Java that a navy ccmmiiniquc late in the clay said it was "still impossible to estimate total damage inflicted by our combat vessels" but that "the lmown results are substantial.” It also was not ascertained whether the torpedoed aircraft carrier went to the bottom but it was "belieed to have sunk," the communique said. Authorities her-Q credited the Japanese last October with eight aircraft carriers built and two under construction, ung- ing from 1.100 to 26,900 tcvns. The largest ones can carry 50 to 00 plane; but. have a normal comple- ment of 30 aircraft, The sinking of the second 5,?- ton enemy ship in Subie my brought the count of JLpc-nese vee- sels definitely sunk by Arnericm action since the Pearl Harbor et- tack to 51 or 52 if the aircraft carrier be counted. Desultory Axis stabs M: United States shipping paled to nothing the, destruction of Admiral Thomas Hart's Asiatic fleet and by seven Flying Fort- resses of the army on e Japanese (Ovntlnued of...» ‘I. ooi s) Godhout says A King opposed To Conscription MONTREAL, Jan. 26—-(CP)-— Premier Godbou-t told a public meeting tonight; that Pnme Mir.- lsrer Mackenzie King "has always bren against conscription for over- 503: service, and with the example of Australia, who sent most of her troops outside of the country, he will not impose conscription." "I think that conscription for overseas service actuallv would be P. crime," he added. “The example of Austrnlxi proves that now." 'l‘he Qudocc lhcmier spoke be- furc an overflow meeting sponsored by the st. mnis-Dorlcm Liberal Associzviou. About B00 persons crowded into the hall, including about 300 students from University of Aioutreal, while loud speakers currzul the zidlri-ss to :1 crowd outwit: thv school hull where the n: ~tlhg was hold. '_i_:_'iifr.‘iil Approve harter our? llelikie Luki ls threatened LONDON, Jan. 26 -(CP\ -D‘s- patches from Russia indicated 1o- hiuht that the blizzard-braving RF- sauli 0f the Red army norihwcs‘ of bfoscmv ls threatening the Nazi stand at Vclikle Luki. 80 iil~< front the Latvian frontier. and vir- tually has ended the doom of the (‘wrmnns in In llnpfl‘ Vols-n town nf Rrlicv. 131 miles hnrihiv-rst 0f the Soviet Capital. 5 Highly placed Riusians here saki, 11.0 reraplure of Rzhcv ivn= "PX- rrcicd nt any minute" Also rx- iwricd soon was vvntzl of the rr. ll- iure of Orvl, some 200 miles sail "~ vvrw‘. rf Mfl-ffifl‘. and nn.='~'-l‘l\' "5 lklngnrr), 50 tnilcs north‘ oi_K!‘fl__‘ kov mi 11m main rail line in l: ri-Foy _ Th" .'.\Il of Rzliei" would trill ‘l the llirdnii claw upon Vlvy-lllh ~'l ' my; | all’ “my clown the road 0i mm r-tcrut lwtvvccn Ivlozhazsli. re- captured by the Russians. MR1 BlllOl- ensk. . an Bdhflda Goes on Daylight Time Feb. 9 ormwa, Jan. 2i‘r—tCP)_. Daylight ssvln time will he applied throng out Oumdn on Ind after Feb. ll, State Secre- tary McLa-rty nnnounoed today. The ruling ll effective an from 2 run. standard time Feh. 9. The time will be one hour in advance of accepted standard time. The Minister 081d the reason for choosing the hour of I up. In! that transportation com- panies in the United States went on daylight saving time at that hour. "If Canadian transportation companies were to continue to “Write 0n Itandard time ln the various time zones, it would result 1n lcrious rllslom- tion and of interference with essential business associated with the war effort." Mr. .'\le— ‘This-flail! ti. t mcln l Lin. (X-nadlln railways will F008;‘ to adjust |.ll tunomblee £1 day- light saving time." The order was made by (ha Governnr-in-(‘ouncil under the War Measures Act and it ll effective "until otherwise ord. cred." olmvees LEADER. Dian SAN FRANCISCO. Jan. 26 _ (AP)-—'I'he Cliungklng radio 1e. PWYI-‘d today that Dr. Kivang Wing Chung, '19, Chinese Christian leader, had died of head injuries suffered when JIQIIKIIESO soldiers invaded his Hong Kong home on Christmas live. Dr._Chunj.;. member o: titr- pen ' Political council, was prrsirleia: rh- eritus of the famous Ldnrmnn Urn. versity of Canton, “ditch had oeen moved to l-Iong Kong. / A Purify Curt \ (Ari OMEN Artrmcri Moat: Affruflon BY KEEPING, ST! LL 7/ 724-» TORONTO, Jan. and max-smith temlh ‘- '-~"~\l1" -‘I Dawson _7 3 Vlflixjflu. j‘) J1 Edmonion f‘) Regina 37 Wihhupog {ll f8, Toronzo y‘ i‘; Ottriu '1 ~l ; l Mcni. n1 o" Bcsizzn "4 “ S '1 o st! ‘lkxiircraflircs c0lll1ll-l° y} D q \ ihrrugh- lilGCrflbl‘ ab ‘Ye ll<‘!'l""l cm " V Provinces aid llll ' .1: ll(‘.ll.v all sunr- 2'31! w ligl BO5TON. cos‘. for Main?! vvilli lllll‘l'll‘..l out (mg 1 ,.. ...» i"l tuc -ll ~ mm tlvrllilllll :1: 6 i0 Jan Sun svls this a1’ Y1 es irnluiui‘: m. $llllllll€"<' ‘ c; than Cuiivttv: W1‘. MORDEN - ("\l'l-. lullf-IICYIINIC SERVICE lmave Borden 9.25 AM. Lilli I'll. azlacave Cape Tormentlne 11.00 A..\l