=JANUARY 2.494; ROS Y- CHEEKS— l FIRM MUSCLES, BOUNDING HEALTH YES SKATING WILL DO IT SKA TE TODAY es 1- n» e11 1- m- THE FORUM f 1/1 The Health Center Brook] QHEYXYHTTTTER quarters in the Kiev arel. it Wll said. when he heard of the defeat, which ivos regarded by the Ger- IJlilll gcncral std-ff B5 WW “Twill Hitler was pictured as 110111118 that. his personal appelflmfie be‘ fore his troops would stiffen their morale and resistance. His new headquarters were understood to be nun‘: sniolensk, 230 miles from Moscow on the main highway to llie \i"cst_ 11 good 15o miles from the nearest fighting. Sliiritsn, sitting on t-he eteep banks of the Volga, was taken by the in a, strong sweep nouthw iii i-d from Kalinin along o: i ‘\\'lllCl'\\'i\_V. The town nortliivest of Moscow irticly onc.tliird of KEV. U.S.S.R., Jan. 1—(AP|—A1Ivance units of the wctcrious Rod army were he- lici-rzl tonight to h1- nnly a icw miirs from Mozhalsk, key town 1m the AIcscoiv-Smolclisk high- wuy and the next major objec- tivc of the Russians’ great win- ter offensive. Driving hard on the city, ' h iics 57 miles west oi’ the iiii- fitl\‘i‘.l’i(‘(! guard was d to be ivcil within ur- v rzinuc of the town from Gennnns earlier which the , to ilie Latvian border 111.111 lln- vvitiiinl, w‘ g toward Rzliev the _- .~..e approaching a town JODUO or 40.000 population straddles the Volga at a . usher-c it. is 350 feet wide and bio for steamers. It. is a o?" four brunch railway 1d is important iii tele- g.. . . .\'l(l rnilio communication. The ltusslnn advance continued lo be front-ividn, 11nd some of the t important gains appar- hnsiii. In this region .1 (‘no Russians rc- 'ii cripturini: inucli booty, in- - 71 armored vehicles, 4'11 guns dull 4000 trucks. JqiiILL AND ixls, _ M1". Roosevelt had i. . btzv.'ccn ' (i ll iilsli m liiziry, ec- ‘ al experts have s discussions House a ser- ‘llIlCQIlIClKiS bedr- xc frcm govern- Hrnry Stinson dis- ..iii (ii all iiriny re- WU. l lind been auth- lll(‘ll are chiefly form- .- ixalloniil gnzirdsnien .i~<1 (r0111 active dilly they w 1c cvcr 2B Siini- c ' nuni- lmr, l/i‘ sail‘. ilisy ivould be recall- ed i0 iinty ns rapidly as shelter is liable for lliflll, ~ also i1!\!l0lll'i'.‘8<‘l that the . i"e'.<\'.'c1l n privicug de- . and u-otikl ("iifinue to 1 v l1inl< "s other ili:.n relying s.l ly on the draft for men. One purpose. lie indicated. is to get some i8 and i9 year olds. In disregard of the War Depart- meiitfs w“) s, Congress dedined to if l9 subjrct to draft. ' ' seivc“. It fixed In flililiflll, tihzit the War Dcpriment might accept Cliiirlcs A. Lindbergh’! cf- fer of his services. He said no de- cision his been reached but. de- (‘lfliTd (no 1iriidrt-iiiciit is ready to ncccpi» frcm Lindbergh or any one clsi- iiny ndvire vlliCJ might help in the um- efrori. 'I1ic flier and pre- Y Pearl lfarlior critic of the admin- islrotion offcrcd his services this week. Flfifll the Justice Department, "aniline, nun! Cili- iin order for nil lnpw ‘we (‘connn and Italian D u r l n g the Holidays drop in and have f! sundae or a quick lunch at our Soda Fountain. Sundzies, Milk Shakes. Soft D l‘ in k s, Sand- wiches of ~all kinds, Hot Chocolate, Tea and Cof- feel Come in and look around we are always glad to see you. SHOP WHERE IT IS A PLEASURE TO SHOI‘ REDDIN BROS. aliens to cle it any firearms they may have w th their lccal police by 1i p-m. (local time) Monday. The lllluritime Commission club- lished s committee to provide we: risk insurance on American ships. Legislation enacted in i940 but not taken advantage oi heretofore au- thorized use of $40,000,000 for this Dl-IFIWSQ- In the torenoon, Mr. Churmlil and Mr. Roosevelt attended aer- vices at Christ Church (Episcopal) in nearby Alexandria, Va, and motored o Mount. Vernon, home of George Washington. The Prime Minister laid a. wreath of chrysan- themiuns and ills on the tomb oi the first President of the United states. Their return drive took them by the Lincoln 11nd Jefferson memorials. It was a busy day. and each had been up until after midnight to greet the new ear. Mr. Rnosevct, at the White House. gave liis iraditionnl-"To tlhe United siatcsW-as 1942 arrived. Mr. Churchill led a midnight ceremony in the dining e111- of his train which will live in the mem- ories of the 100 oi- so persons pre- sent-his staff, newspapermcn. the train crew. EXPECT DRIVE i0“ tinned from page L‘ Piraeus, six miles frcm Athens, and an airdroime at Candfa. cap- ital of Crete. German planes based at the Candle. field vmuld‘ be almost aslride Britain's vital lane of sea communications and supply frcm Egypt to the Libyan battlefield. Alexandria is little more than 400 miles southeast of Caiidia by air and the hrmp of eastern Libya is less than 50 miles southeast of the airdrome ‘Ihe RAF. operations were in- terpreted in Lcndon rs substanti- ating recent, reports frcm ‘Turkey of new csncentratlom of the Ger- man air force in Greece and on island bases at Myiilcne, Ciiios and Samos. \\'i‘lill'i 15 minutes’ flight from Turkey ard U10 Dzirdnnelles. The communique nus the first official CHSCICGHIC ihrii: the Axis has based sufsmai-iiics in Circek ports within clue striking range of British fleet lanes. Observers sugocsied that the Axis sirntwy calls for an attempt- ed stand in Triipsliionia with such ieipfirccments as have got ihrougli tlic British blockade. Si! ii a stand, 111W said. w:uld be ruled if the Axis could cut Gen. sir Claude Auclilnleolfs lengthened sea lines of supply by air and‘ submarine attacks. Because of the limitations of t-he long land route tlircugh the des- ert. the maintenamc cf sea routes from Alexandria m Bengasi or be- ycnd would be vital to a further British thrust to the west. The increased force of British aiuickg 0n isolated AXis trcops at Birdiii was sseii :15 a Sign that the British command dccs not intend to leave a foothold there where more Axis troops might be land- ed, endangering the British posi- tion frcm the rear, The Germans and Italians. mean- while, have intensified their ef- fOPlS l0 wreck the air bases at Malta. Bflilfll bastion off Sicily, by day and nigh-t bombings. From the fields at repeatedly- rulded Malta British planes have been co-operating with naval un- its in breaking up Axis attempts to shin troops and supplies to North Africa. BRITISH PREMIER (Continued from page i) "Here's to a year of toll_e year of struggle and peril. “And a long step forward to vic- y .. Americans. British. Canadians and Australians roared "a, happy Yggvtyear to you" as they drank the S The Prime Minister then pro- noiuiced in bencdlction-"God bless ou. "May we all come through safe and with honor." The Prime Minister toasted with a. whisky and soda. _Mr. Churchill then joined hands with everyone present in a living 01min. through Air Marshal Sir Charles Portal on one side. and Corporal Wilfred Homer, RAE, the air marshal‘; clerk, on the 0m. er, and led the singing of "Auld Lang Sync." As the Prime Minister turned to leave the crowd sang "He's A Jolly Good Fellow." Mr. Churchill acknowledged the tribute by raising his right hand in the v-for-victnry salute. A hun- dred hands shot up to make e hun- drcd v's to return the siilulc. It was believed to have been the first time in British history that a Prime Minister had spent New Year's Eve on a train travellini through u foreign country thous- ands 0f miles from his homeland. The Prime Minister exchanged good wishes for the new year with Mrs. Churchill in England by tele- phone Just before he left Ottawa. He was met here by Pmsldent Roosevelt's aides and motored to 11:9 White House. Greeted Engineer, Fireman As he strode down the station platform lie slvplwfil T01‘ a mmmm to shake hands with the enzineer and fireman of his train and wish them e. hal-‘IPY MW Y9"- Riding southward t-hrbllflh ‘h’ snow-blanketed Canadian country- side, Mr. Churuzill kept his sfiflf! busily engaged preparing data f0!‘ the supplements economic. fl- nancial, and suppy discussions that continued between American and British officials here during his absence. . Accelerated production of Anion- cnn shiph pianos, arms, lllilllitlfiliS and war supplies or all kinds-and their expedited di ixiulion to (h? Lhcgtfls of war where they are most urgentlv needed-play Vii" roles in the Rooseveli-Cliiirihlll “affecting liie sticcess of lils (ids- ,,. cizsions with Ciiinrlian lenders. _ renewed assurances of Canada‘: wliolehearied SVPW". ""1 We “' BOSTON. 1W1 America“. outplayed bv a wide mflFtlln for 450 minutes, staged e. furicus closing drive only m be "c5911 011i. 5-4, by Bcswn Bruins whiz-ht before B 10:32 holiday crowd at the Boston Garden. ‘Iihe tdllmnn enabled‘ iiie Bruins to “lure” their 811D on the National Hcckev league's mp rung. “The Bruins were cqasting 3pm; mth a. 5-1 lcad when the Aniei-ks Wm“! wvaze suddenly and Whack- ed in three goals in the space of about eight mimres, t Before the visitors launched heir threatening spun. Milt Schmidt and Art Jackson register- ed "Iii-Period tall:es, Herb Cain scored during lhe second frame and lit.le Bobby Bauer end Roy Con- flclier neat goalie Cliarky Raynor at tlhe halfway mark of the finale. The Americans’ first tally, cred- ited to i-he veteran Murray Arm- sirquil. came late in the second period when he f.rcd a 5113i, that iwis deflected info Frankc Brim. “k3 Cage b)’ One of liis own de- fenezinen. Just Mien the Ami-eks appeared hopelessly overvulielmed, Buzz Boll irned- in (he second Brooidyn goal. Almfirmd.’ beat Br nrek ags-in at 14:27 and. with about two mniutes to go, Bill Bensczi li'o‘.:e:i a puck Wings whip Chicago 3-0 QIYIICAGO. _Jan. i—(AP)-Dc- lTOiLS Red Wlllgs cmie out of a slump {might to hand Chicago Blay. Hawks their fifth straight Nat-i01ial_ League hockly defeat, The highlight for 16,96; Stadium spectators, however, was a seccnd_ period fight. between rival de- fenccmen Earl Srilert of the Hawk; and Jinrmy Orlando 91 the Wings. On tlircc sumo-five occas- ions the Livo went at (22th other with i-lieir fists aiicr refeice King Clmc)’ started to penalize them for_a bit of_hish sticking. Then their moles finally held cll to tlicm long enough fcr ill? re-fcree to “and 509ml‘! o major penalty and Qflfllldo a 11111.13!‘ and a match flllSLOlldllCi, pcitnjty [m- inking an official. SUMMARY I First Period .1i!do 2 Allen Cc . e1‘. Wares. Hamill ' ' 0p Second Period F-Detmli. Hfiwe (Lfscoinbe) :i4 Penalties - Gsodrfellcw, Orlando 2 (One mfllcr and one match mis- conduct), Szlbcrt (lllfljorl, Kai- eta. Third Period zmDfiffiil. Kiln-a (Brnneteau. Us- comhe) 13115 3—lgi£‘vll. ‘BYCIWH (Giesebrecht) Penalties-None. Victo rias edge Millionaires 2-1 SYDNEY, Nsjan. 1-:cP>- A blue-line shot fired by defence- man Joe Gollat late in the third Perwd today 88W: North Sydney Victories a 2-1 win over Sydney Millionaires in the league's first afternccn game of the season. The win gave the second-place Vlcg a 4 I-Z-game edrc over [no Up until Gollat-‘s goal, the game had been tight. Sydney tcok a i-0 lead early in the first period when Lude Check poked a goal-mouth pass be-i/ivcen Jimmy F;stcr's lrgs. A Density to Jack Alcliison op- ened the way foi- the eoualizei- in the second session. Bill snelder snapped up Babe Hamulkirs pass from a face-off and scored cleanly. N. n. 1.. sraxinivos Club I‘ W L D F A Pt! Boston 21 i4 4 3 '70 41 31 ‘Ibronito 22 l4 'l 1 66 43 20 New York 3 t4 8 i 8i 6'1 29 Chicago 1 9 9 3 54 58 21 Detroit 23 '7 l1 2 45 50 l6 Brooklyn 21 6 l6 l 58 '78 l3 Montreal 20 5 14 1 4'1 '70 ll. thuslasiiu approval given his ad- dress before Parllanu-nt, the Prime Minister was in high spirits. On his trip Mr. Cliurrchill in- formed correspondenLs ho was sure the co-ordinniion work under way is making surli excellent progress that decisions of far reaching im- rtance would be reached soon ef- er he resumed his talks with the President. At Ottawa he pledged "the total and final extirpation“ of Nazis. Fascists and Jiip jin ists and a world-wide "purge" o axis villarw. The Prime Minister broadly hinted that, in charting the developing ,.‘ . of the war, the major objectives were in- tensified aerial bombardm ‘ of Germany and Italy. blust- lng of Japan from the air. 11ml allied offensive-e in Europe and Asia, and in the Atlantic and the Pacific. "The enemy has asked for total war." iic said. "Let us make cure they get it." ( "Mr. Britain.” u he Wu wru- lerly acclaimed in Canada. 16ft Ol- tawa by spmial train in President Roosevelt's private car at 2:15 n in. Wednesday flilfl’ fl rai-eivvll confer- once with Prime Minister Macken- zie King and the Earl of Athlone, tho Governor General. I _ since the time of Mr. ciiiirchJls departure was kept secret omv n small rrcivd saw hliii Oil ai 1' P} Sin!- tion, and only scntiered '.~.iri_i| yronos oi’ Canadians waved a. l1 ni frcm siiiiv-"cvivz-"l slit-mu l1?"- forms Rlitllg the way as ins (will sped southward _ - Jan. t-(Alfi-Broek- out of u. scrimmage Boston net and ir in front of the ed into its emp- ciiaiznorrigrpwiv __GUARDIA_Z*I_____ NEW YORK, Jon. 1-(CP)—'I‘lie ty corner. ‘Iioronto M11919 Rafi and Ne!" Benson's succzs; resulted in a. York Rangers drew 3-3 1n their greatly stiffened Boston defence, hfllidfly Niailonal Hockey mastic which refused to Bruins played short handed d crack as ing the last 22 seconds. th u}- e game tonight, the first time this season that either team had been involved in a drawn Sime- The decision left the teams tied SKIMMARY for second place. a full game be- hind the lending B:st..n Bruins First- Peflfld ivho defeated Brcoklyn Americans at. Bcsloii. 1—-Boston, schmidt (Dumsrt, B scoring. ilie Rangers ran Bauer) 1:34 theg’ streak of consevutive games m-Bosicn, Jackson (Smith Cain) in which they have not been shut 16-33 out to '16 and treir next scheduled Pemilties—Egan n21. Second Perlol Ii-Bosiori, Cain (Killer) 4:22 e-Brooklyn. Aimstrong 15:06 Penalty-Hollett 5—-Bcst0n, Borer (Schmidt) 1:54 6~B0st.:n, 7—Bi'ockly ' 5 Third Period COllafiihfil‘ Cowley) 9 ' Peniilty-Schniidi. Bill Remember When (By The Canadian Press) (kid) OUT OUR WAY ‘ n OUT“ v DLIIGWI. BRINGING UP FATHER B GQATE THlS MORNING- (Clapper, lL-‘mBDll (Benson, Hill) Armstrong (Larson) S-Igrgéoklyn, Benson (Bell, Hill) Gleesori, big-league baseball stiir of the 80's died in Philadelphia eight years ago today. During his career as ii ball player Gleenscii switched frcm pitcher to second baseman and finally coach. F THE DUGK game, in New York next. Tuesday against Detroit. will g.ve them a chance to equal the'i- own iccord of having sacred in ‘i7 gmies. The 31d strin€7w'i1;a3b1'0k£:i by Detrmi anua . - 10m?’ Carr, Leaf right winger, eras the game's scoring hero, net- ting twice. He tailed in the sec- ond period to i-‘e the count zif_'.ei' Bryan Hexlall. the league's leading marksman, gave Rsneers 1i first- rlcd lead. 'I'hen in the third per- od, while his own tram was short- handod. Can- netted" again on a fast breakaway play fzom his own blue line. Ar. unusual penalty plaijcd part. in costing Toronto a ViCi” They were leading 3-2 half ' through the last period when, \\'li.l Bob Davidson already in the pen- alty box. Pete Langelle joined him tor freezing the puck against his own cage wlthcui an rrppcncnt con- testing the rubber will» him. The rule involved by YQlGIQE Bill Chad- wick was that a playrr when poss- ible must at all times advance the pu . While both men were in the box, AlflPike jabbed in ti~e game's find‘. goa. The attendance \\'_a_s_l_3.l73. R THE BRIGHT LIGHT IN THIS NEW ADDFFON BEEN no THAT 01.1: DUMGEON LONG ENOUGH TO SMELL EACH MACi-HME, BUT MAYBE 1-1126 GOT A’ coco. SHOP HE FELL E2 A 0V MAci-(i NE AN’ ‘I (‘U SHOULD!) Y 4 BE ASHE TIPPIE AND "CAP" STUBBS ‘IE1 Of Season i SUMMARY First Period i-New York, Watson) 10:35 Penalties-None. Hexlall (Patrick. Second Period 2-Toronio. Carr (Taylor) 11:49 Hurling-Pratt, Kcinipniaii, Hex- tall ‘Third Period Ii-Toronto, Drillon (Metz, Daiid- son) :51 4.—i<cw Ycrk. Watson 5:04 Fi-Toronio. Carr 8:07 6—New York, Pike (Smith, Coul- ier) 9:16 Penalties-Churrh. Davidson, Lari- ge. Overtime Scoring-None. Prnaltics—Ncnn. Bearcats cuff Beavers 6-3 SAINT JOHN, 11.15., Jain. l-(CP) —'l"aking advantage of iiw r portents’ penalties, Tz-uro outscored Stunt Jo tonight in an exli. mat/so. The Nova Ssotlans fired five goals past Bill Giggcy while Beav- er players were doing penance in the bZX. Tivo counters come while the young Siint Juhii ll?iftlilltl€l‘ Infill lmly three mates in frcii‘. of THINK A TRANQlT ' BRiNGS 61W i PROBLEM‘; 1'0 LIKE 1o sn‘ _ gE/:TT1'7@gecrrF'w' TO GET yn Rally lfalls fihortlLeafs And Rangers Play l‘ Underdogs Score Upsets In As Boston Bruins Win 5-4 First Tie PAGE SEVEN l New Year's Day Bowl Games i974"- NEW YORK. Jan. i—(AP)-- Gridiron underdog; had t/heir day in the annual New Years Day b0“? games today as Oregcn State, Forcham. G€0fg-B, ualabnma and Tulsa came up with v.‘ctories—- most of vuhfch were suiprkes w tihe followers of football fare. Nearly 250.000 cusbcmeis 1am- ined half-a-dozen anthem 5Lgd- iunis t-o ‘see the post-season classics \\'lllCll, like ilie campaign that pm. (lucid the invited participants, re- alised in an unusual quota of up- _oX'€G‘UIl State, twice-beaten cham- pion of the Pacific Coast handed Duke's all-vic-torixus southern iitle- holders a 20-16 licking in the Rose Bc-wl brittle. plated amid the uii- familiar aroma. cf Tcbzicco at Dur- ham. N. C.. ins-lead of its usual gamer-scented setting at. Pasadena, a . Fcrdl-ianrs firms b'a""kwl Aliss- nuri 2-0 in the New Orleans Sugar " in" i1 1g ii punt in (he Tex, Alabama turn- 1 '85 A. and M., south- ' 111v champion, 29-21, in TH Bmvl as Jimmy Nel- son ran '72 and 2i yards for a pair . h .‘ " \Oll(‘ll£l3‘.\ll'~. zinias sciiiiizcsfieni bor. ciir-"hzti ‘flexes the Miami c 40156 (Jrange Bowl. only one of the hol- iday classics to run true to form. Chris 1.111 TuLsrfls Misscuri Vail-y chomp- ions. rated no better “an an even choice in the Sim Bcivl a1 El Faro. Tex, come through with a 13m- ericd touchdown to shut out exas ‘Tech 6-0. Langston (Okla) University Vulcan Bowl scrap at Binniiiaham, sxtlclpped Morris Brown 13-0 in {lir- n. _ln the llanwY-v" - ‘ ' ‘icicle. moved across the coiliitry .. _ because 0fvvi/l170;_\\;iil'>(l{..!_, . , By. J. R. Wilianis OUR BOARDING HOUSE oun- BELLERNG AT ME LAKE vou WAS THE TOWN c2152! I'LL ear OFF voua CHEESY ens, BUT WHAT (41140 OF A 3121114. TOWN 161T WHERE A BUNNY-HOE oePuTv ‘il-lERiFF CANlT RiDE on i-us BADGE '42-» PUT A UNlFOilM on some MONKEYS AN‘ Ti-(Ev THEY'RE NAPOLEON.’ iii-q ter Duke had ccme from behind twice to tie the score. Don an and Bob Dethmm pwed the Oregon state attack. but it was Gene Gray, a stubstitute back, who snatched frcm Dethman, s.' safely man, and yards 0:1 a 70-yard 5C i1.g play that produced the winning touch- down in the third pericd. Only l4 plays had been reeled off before 73.000 fans in me Sugar B-Wivl when Alex Szintilli, husky Fordham tackle, cradled through and blocked an 3ll‘lli[ll(‘(l end zine punt by Don Cnet-iziiocd of Missouri. Stan Ritiiiski of Fordluun grub- bed the ball Just as it was bound- ing out of the end zone. It was ruled a safely lnstznd of a touch- dcuzi. but the two poiils were all that Fordhem needed to ‘mind Missouri its seccnd bowl defeat in three yearn. All-America Menkze sinkvdch gave aerial-minded Texas Christ- ian a lesson in passing as Georgia made its initial b'"\‘l flpfkkifiljltfe an impressive one. uknxcii yvcd to three touchdc" .. and SCIAV-(l a fourth himself in the Orange Bowl tussle. It was the first bowl (le- feat for TCU, in four New Year's Day contests. ' ‘Alabama fought from behind to 1.6 the score at 7-7 in the second perlcd at Dallas b I re Nelson started the Tzrc on i‘ e rczicl to victory with his tam i1‘ t runs. A touchdown pivs vi only ' n bled minute and a half to play ena 'I‘ul<.a's Hurricane to p11!’ {he uzwl out of the fir. G z: ‘wd to Saxon Ju ' in yard‘ line ("r the ' 1e etid of q 71-yard d va. With Major Hoopla LlGTEN NOUKJE VQQLE: r» cf. our oi= NiNE BLOCKQ‘ FREE RiDE. ALREADY, WHALE-FAcE Luv“: YOU'RE NOT on‘- nus 60$ IN 1o SECONDS ,1'1.1. Pm BACK YOUR BARN~ DOOR EARS WlTl-l ‘rum’ NOVELTY- STORE BADGE OF wouiz-s,’ co By George McManus 17 ' 1 STAR ? 7 WELLJ-IOJ/ couu: wou as. A WELL, e000 NIGHT! w COULD WHY, 50$ MY MOTHER WANTED TO TAKE ME TO HOLLYWOODJJERSELE 1 couu: BE ONE-"DNLY MY FATHER SAID Not --AN' ‘THAT'S ‘i’ VM NOT A STAR ALR52B¥!1%D YOUR MOTHER EVER TAKE TO HOLLYWOOD ?? N ’ ON LY REA§ON ‘:- n; c»?- Ihnhw 115- n-a-d I». Em I a" u r1- € t; — n ‘afLm YOUR MOTHER$ Rl6HT-FlRE "THIS iNHERiTED SERVANT Llllil FIRE-PROOF! "“-““"‘".'XS?E3.E‘.Z.TE$ l VUILLED ME F REDJMSCHAREHB- "1.- R \' “lust 0V8]! BOYS, 1 FIRED THAT SERVANT, so THAT'S THE END OF THAT 1S FiNlSHED! DON ‘vi-us i5 BASCOM, YOUR sew/AMT-