MAXIMG 01A MERE MAN f. eease to become better fi-iiig-‘iyvd- &— n slisll mu cease to be good. Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew MAXIMS OPA MERE MAN Trulhluliicss is ilic first iliilli- ti» be instilled iiitu cliiliircri. W “aria “ma; Guardian, Ioundal Ill‘! tutowii Guardian, ‘Iwa Onto Cl-EIARLUVFETOWN. CANADA. FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 1943 Bulim-rlplloli Delhi-toil, $5.00 llziii, 51.1w» otiie- Priiiliii-i». .\ l ~ \ i? ~ 8 PAGES More 0n Soviet Railways wwnoiv, April 16- (Friday) __ (c1!) ... The Moscow rad’ fllfl todsiy that in usaia a mu m] isciplinea minority is mrgsnlzing the railway mnipoi-t so vital in wartime‘ and that as a result the sup- "m, soviet has ordered all nllwgys m operate under mil- liiiv laW- Tiie broadcast. beard by the [avidl- Monitor. lld that the order mobilizes all railway workers for the duration ol the im- and makes them responsible for "all misdeeds." Delinquent; will be Jud ed by military tribunals, oscow said. lakes liver Lord Bennett’: interest In Eddy Bo. Ltd. UITAWA, April 15 -—(CP)-—Wil- hid Garfield Weston. Canadian- born member of the British House ii Commons and largest manufac- wiei oi food in the British Empire iniiounced today he has taken over Viscount Bennett's controlling in- iiiisi in s. B. may Co. Ltd, of ifiili. llr. Weston has been in Ottawa lot some days. He said that in as- iumliig control of the company it I15 not his intention in any way lochiiige its policies and that CID- iritions would continue under the present officials. Gordon Gale is the company pesidcnt, and W S. Kidd ls gen-V n) manage-r. They will remain b their posts. Mr. Weston did not announce t-he wni cf money involved in transfer of the company's control “inns- uuch as Viscount Bennett was a any to the transaction." lew Canadian losoital Ship leady For Service B)’ srii THOMAS _ (Canadian Press Stall‘ Writer) HALIFAX, April l5 -— (C?) — arkliiig iii hcr new mercy garb ol I ite, grccii mid red and with the Ciiiadiiiii ciisigii proudly flying from trim-shill. the Canadian Nat- iiii steamship Lady Nelson, Can- ilii first hfisilital snip. now is iii- "ilii will)‘ to embark on her new tircer oi ciirryiiig home the sick ind wounded sous cl the Dominion. stripped of liei- luxury accom-z luillliluils of peacetime, the former ioulliciu cruise ship has been fitted . the most modern medical and mfilCfll cquiptnent available, and tirrics i1 sniff oi '70 trained, skilled medical niid nursing personnel from ‘i; Rural Canadian Army Medical P5. Until iiuiv lll the present war. Ciriadiiiii wor/rdcd have been Willi! buck in smrill groups 0H "Wvfihio or on British hos ital m” Dilfilig the First. Great ill‘ miliil-‘liitui ships plied the At- llil br-iw on Britain and this fillillfl‘. but this is the first Can- w" 5111i) to trike up the vital scr- (Tompletely ‘ ilt Rebuilt from stem to stein. the ‘ lltek, 7.97(l<i0ll.llllEl‘ now will ac- tvmmodii o’ te 518 patients. About 200 lhcsc are convalescent or walking sand the remainder bed cases. “The Liidy Nelson called here, at m‘ hm“ Wit. to take on equipment lsillliiln-s after lier outfitting. we was a frequent visitor here in f“ divs as she docked on hei- “If back and forth to the Carib- msn. Allcr war broke out she con- “tli to run the submarine-in- ‘m writers and survived one rit- fll Castries in St. Lucia. B.W.I. ‘j W» deck is taken up with (Continued 1 Trice a. O01 o) L‘ WIIAT _. THIS is LONDON? WNDON -(OP)_ hesumed by ffgslw to be a demolition crew, "4002 of men tunneiled under a met défilcrédatlizin it; Inndofi: s go awa w ‘Hi-M worth of men's siiillnsgs: al- um ‘l Precious as gold these taming Events I “Tame: _ so I‘ d ‘ m‘ “on “ty-‘ii-ai. “Talkie, _ M “my Teillilic inoi-lgt t ‘Rum ulnar"; Mlle. ue Saturday. "ileen. t-lt-Lli. 3:1" ‘Basie’! gt. James e. a ur a ve ng - Fins choice oi sgaeionriible It . illtl ilond ‘list. “m”! Bonn Players present l: “I Comedy Drama Easter 5" CWB-n Bonn Hall. Dance lib Victory Loan National Blood Donor Service Biinic Planned MR. NORMAN KNIGHT Establishment. of a national blood cciior clinic here in the near future is anticipated as a result 0i the visit of Mr. Norman Knight, direc- tor of the National Blood Donor Service, Canadian Red cross Soc- iety, loronto, Mr. Knight yester- day interviewed members of the medical profession and addressed the Charlottetown Detachment of ivity The blood donor service has been organized in all the provlnceg 9x. ccpt Prince Edwardlslarici. he ox- Dlained. It is felt the people of this Province will respond enthus. lastically to this opportunity, as they have done in connection ivith other Red Cross activities. Th? blood donor service is based on one of the great medical m5. coverles of this war, that. of pro- mising whole blood inw dried serum. by a freezing and nmwuicr. inf; process which constants the 51mm P1118115 11110 a powdered serum which can be stored indefinitely in ships. in hflspllals qr m, the Scam. lc°llilaiirgiklldse a. 00101:: llaiifax Faces Loss in Taxes HALIFAX. April l5 —(CP)--'ITtie city of Halifax faces a pOsblble 1055 of $3c0,0o0 in uiicollecteo taxes be- cause of accounting difficulties a- rising from the changeover to the mechanical accounting system g]; City Hall. it was revealed iii the independent audit repurt tabled at a meeting of the finance and exec- utive committee yesterday. The report said it was imposuble to trace old tax accounts dating back several years and many would have to be written off, sinking fund irregularities and use of bond sale proceeds fnr purpose-s for uiilcli they were not lnteiidcd were , also charged. island ilirmanp i Receives Wings BRANTFOhu, uni, April l5 - (CPJ—— Airmen from Canada, Great Britain, Newfoundland and the United States received parade. Gl‘0ilp Capt. H. R Stew- iiri, Director of Intelligence for the RC A F. in Ottawa. officiat- ed. Priimc Edward Island —— A. A Beaten. Flat River. Nova Scotis — D. J. Morrison, Sydney. Quebec - E. H. P Beach, Que- bec City; E Y. O'Neill, Granby. Ontario — J. E. McGlbbon. I-lawkesbury, and three OttBWB men, F. . Darragii. C. DIIOIIdL snd;W .__§i.owart. By FRANK BRUTTO Associated Pres Stall Writer BERNE, April l5 -(AP)- ‘Ilie British Army now is a model for Italian troops who once looked upon German military discipline and ability as unsurpassed. a Rome dispatch to the Tribune De Gen- eve said today. (A Rome broadcast heard in Wednesday night called the British 8th Army “the finest fighting force in the world today‘ and said "it represents the rnost modern and most werlui fight- ln unit to be foixi anywhere. e dispatch. apparently trying to tell more than censors would permit, also reported that author- War Situation Last Night By Glenn Babb, Associated Press Wai- Analyst War secretary Stimson’: assurance that a. constantly increasing flow o! suwliss. olliwlllly planes, will go to Gen. MacArthur should dispel some of the anxiety aroused by the recent new; from the South- Wflt Plitlflv- There ll. however. no reason to believe that his statement discloses any fundamental change In policy, just as there is no reason to interpret the recent Japanese aggressivenesg as denoting any basic change in the always perilous situation in the Australia area. Certainly there la no departure from the United Nations‘ master klan 0f dealln with Hitler first. It la conceivable that Gen. army's perluas veness during his recent mission to Washington had something to do with increasing the flow o! planes to MacArthui-‘s coin- inand but that is a matter of degree. not a shift oi’ emphasis. The series o! lull-plane raids in the New Guinea. and Solomons areas in the last lew days leaves no roam lnr doubt that the enemy has opened a new tactical phase. it is marked by increased aggressiveness and an obvious readiness to expend planes and pilots in relatively large numbers. It ernphaslles the importance nl maintaining or strengthening our present line of air bases above Australia from which the bombers must lly in hold that invisible line beyond which the Japanese can not move major forces except at suicidal cost. Only In that way, in the current phase, can the Allies offset the greatly superior strength ln sea. and land forces the Japanese are concentrating along the area of which Truk, ln the Carolines, is the control point. Allies Take 30,000 Prisoners In Last Month _ 71 Enemv Planes Destroyed In North Africa Fighting Yesterday. ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA. AlJlll 15 --lAP)- the Red Cross Corps, outlining the‘ nature of this important war act-i ‘The wuv in Burma hits returned t0 British am. French troops in hand- w-hand fighting have seized two valuable stretches of high groutid and 600 more prisoners along the Axis Tunisian siege line to boost the allied toll of enemy captives to more than 30,000 in less than four weeks.‘ the High Command sn- uounced today, Allied airmen also punched. rid- clitioiml holes in the enemy's arm- or yesterday, destroying 21 plan/is at a cost of eight allied aircraft. and raining tons of explosives on the still strong Tunisian-Sicilian network of fields. This powerful sky offensive has destroyed 459 planes in ccmbiit since the Mareth offensive March 20. comuarec with 152 allied aircraft missing. Officers also estimate lhiii 150 or riiore Gcmmn and Italian plfill€S have been destroyed ngrouiid during n systematic pounding of Axis air terminals. Sentenced Tc 3 Years in Prison News Briefs QUEBEC, April it’: ~— FVQPIom the floor oi the Legislative As- sembly, Premier Gocibout wuilnt issued an ultimatum t0 Price Brothers and Company Limited to meet the government by tomorrow to reach a settlement of a strike in three ncvsprint mills in the Lake St John area or the govern- iiieut will introduce Legislation to settle the grievances. LONDON, April l5— (CP) Russian troops killed 600 Gor- mans and damaged or burn- cd l3 tanks in a resumilliflll 0|‘ furious fighting in tiie west- ern Caucasus north ol the (ll- emy bridgehead at Novorosslsk, Moscow announced tonight. OTTAWA, April 15—tCP)-Thc Notional War Liihur Board willl open formal hearings May 4 in its investigation into labor relations, the ccst-of-liviiig bonus and allied questions, Mr. Justice C.P. Mc- TiiguP. chairman of the btmrd iui- riouiiced today at. a prcllmiiiiiry HALIFAX. April 15 —(CP)-J0hli hearing. Thomas, 22-_vcur-ol<i negro of near- ARVIDA, Que" April 15- by Bccctivlllc. was givcii thc inzixi- (CPI-Officials oi’ the lnteriiat- muiu sentence of thrcc Years in ionai union of alunflnum work- penitentiary by Judge 1.; w, ers announced early tonight that there will be no work stop- page at the aluminum company plant here, pending negotlatifln! conducted by ltuoui Trenanier. federal counciilstor in the dis- pute. NEW DELHI. Soiigstcr today on a charge of in- flicting grievous bndiiv harm agamst Jenn MucEaclicru Snow of Halifax. who died in Thomas’ home last whiter Cltv medical examiner Dr. F‘ V Woocbuiy said Miss Snow's death had not b:en caused by blows re- ceived from Thomas. but by an in- ternal huemorrhage. and the uri- ginal charge of murder against the iiccuscrl was reduced ic assault. Wlicii imposing sentence, Judge sanizster said Thomas Wits "just a low-itmdc briitzi‘ bully who should have never been born " April l5-—(CP)— the routine of air attack after H brief iliireup of ground flciivitv in which British forces repulsed Jill)- nmgp attempts to filtrate their iicwly~established 905M055 l“ ‘he Gyiéidiiw of the Arakan front in the wes . WASHINGTON. Avril l5 —~ (AP)— A eo-ordinated allied land and nir assault on the Axis Naval Men Lost their’, ivliigs this afternoon at a formal‘ lorcc; in Tunisia to climax the North Alrlcan osmosis" W" forecast "idly bl’ War Secretary Henry Stimson. Stimson warned. however. "H! the enemy probably has 11"" retreating and is P11175795 h" g last-ditch fishi- WASHINGTON. April i5 4A1’) Atlntled‘ States army bombers. ilt Saint John SAINT JOHN, N.B., April l5 __ tCP)-— while naval officials here made no announcement in connec- tion with the irapsizing or n small naval patrol craft at the mouth of k I n hm. the Harbor yesterday with the loss eicmwd m1gere:i““£g;ne; msfmms of six men, it was reported from i‘! 9'1"‘ l‘ other sources today thnt one or two on Kiskn Island Tuesdiw in an unnrecedenwd 0M4” "m, o; m bodies had been recs/med Italians Have Praise For British 8th Army One of the bodies was that of sklpllcr H. R.. Wamback, whose wife and young gon llvo near Lunen- burg. NA‘: Others ln the crew, it was learn- ed unofficially, were Signalman Lawrence Cyril Jasper, 21, formerly of Toronto; AB. Arthur O Elliott, 2i, of Apple River, NS ; AB Joseph Nodwell, l8. Saint John: Petty Officer Thomas James Bourke, Saint John; and 0S. Joseph J. Daley, _hg1n_e town unknown. raids Much ha; been taken away ll%m Italian officers and entrusted to Nazi superiors now has le- turned as part of an effort in re- orgiinlu the flattered Italian iirm "The courage, discipline a.iid s - n. oi sacrifice of the British troops l m Africa arQ above all praise. said i the dispntcli. "Their splendid ‘Phiifi- f icai condition. combative spirit. the R abilitv of their commanders. and the collaboration of the RA F‘ could serve as an example to the _. finest armies in the world." < The dispntcii quoted the Italians \ n; saying that recognition oi the i qualities of the foe Li; necessary . because under-estimation already i h“ proved we costly." Bill? 5.9 I scarcer. Caiindn l r l Smooth Sailinq For Ml yourBuiiinq W h en you use M7 Success Will Mean Much To This Country HAMILTON, April 15- (C P) — Ci. W. Spinney, Chairman of the Nat- ional War Finance Com- mittee, said tonight the success of Canada’s Fourth Victory Loan is ‘of more vital significance =to the war program and the future of Canada than any previous fin- ancial undertaking in the nation’s history. "It would be a fatal mistake if We were to make the easy assump. tion that because the previous loans ivere over-subscribed, this oiic. with a much larger objective to meci, will somehow come out all right-that with about the same a- mount of effort as before and with about the same iiidividualresporise, we will end up with another loan well over-subscribed," Mr. Spinney said in an address prepared for de- livery at a loan rally. "The success ol this loan is oi’ more vital significance to our war program, to tiie fut- ure of our cause and of this country, than any previous fi- nancial undertaking in the na- tion's history." The fourth Victory Loan, open- ing April 26 ivith a nifliimum ob- jective of $l,l00,00'J,000, llflS the double duty of providing funds for war needs and preventing infla- lion, Mr. Spinney said. With spen- ding power high and available civ- ilian goods becoming constantly faced ii "perfect set-up" for inflation unless action was taken in avoid ii. ' "This is wtiv it is so vitally nec- essary that (his loan and subse- quent Iofllls must. to a greater cx- tent thiin fornici-lv, feather up this cxcc=s spending: 170\\'f‘i‘ uutl divert it to the war program," he said. l "Ilizit is whv every clfort is be-j inc made to avoid. as fnr 51$ poss-. iblc, financing tho wnr iiccds through the stile of securities to the banks, for. hcynnd certain lim- its, this is inflationary finance. . . F Dollars On Activi- Service “BY the act of saving. by the “T<?<>F.ii¥iYiF<i' n. "Kirk iifcei 4T’ Funeral 0i ii’Leary Native Held Wednesday BOSTON, April 15 --(CP)-— Fun- eral services for Arthur C. Gay. 43, of Arlington, native of Prince Ed- vt-iird Island and general foreman at a south Boston sugar i-cfiiicrv, who died MOliLflY. were held yesterday n‘ the First Presbyterian Church. "-~' Brv-‘nri. f-liirinl followed in Glenwood Ccmcicry. Evcrcii .‘/.r tn '.':.< hririi iii O'Lcziv_v. Print-o Count. . and came to the United Stairs with hlc lnliicr, "U Fl >-< John J Gay in 1907 The Limilv ' lived in Elrist Boston for scvcrnl‘ yen rs. The sugar refinery worker was s‘ past noble grand of zenith Lodge, I.0.0.F‘., in East Boston and also a member of Brighton Rebekah Image. Aiiston Survivors include his ivlfe, the his father. John a Gay of Hnl- brook and sister_ Mrs. John Pom of Holbrook Axis Fears_ Balkan licute BEIRNE, April l5 -fAP)— T110 seriousness with which the Axis views the possibilities of an Allied invasion through southeastern Eur- ope was indicated today tion that Hitler is stil conferring with his generals at Berchtcsgiid-l on and awaiting a visit from Hun- garian politicsl and military lead-= 5 l 8TB. by rcvcla- ‘ iii? CONVOY BOMBED; 3 SHIPS S 0f Vitallinportgnce Nips Attempt New Plan To Supply Base‘ Six Merchant Ships Under Attack Protected By Three Warships. Bu’ VERA‘ HAUGLAXI) rii- Staff “Tiler . l DQUARTERS 1N AUWPRALIA, April 16 _. (Friday) — (APl—- A €tron| Japanese attempt to supply and man their base at Wewak. on the north coast nl New Guinea. now is under attack by Allied bnmbi-rs. Tniliifs uiinmuiilque (list-ins- eil that an enemy convoy nl sir merchant vessels and iliree ivrirshlpg was sighted ap- proaching Wcirnk and W01‘! lmmcdlaii-lv liorubcii, thrco of llir- merciiiinimcn liclng lilt heavily". Ari RJlMl-tnn ship was nbscr- vvd sinking at the stern, ari- ollicr llstctl rapidly, leaving an oil slick and a 5,000-lnn shin Wits forced hshore and beaclivd. Wcivnk ls some 45ft miles northwest of the Mllcri base nl Port Moresby. lniliciilinns have accumulated recently that liio Japanese alter losing hen- Vlly in attcmnta to supply thclr Iluon Gull‘ bases til Lne and Siilzimziim dIri-cilv hr ship, have turned in Wciviik. iin- liiailin! ilio siiPnlli-s tlit-ri- for vvfiiruvd transportation hr ivziy of lllridzinr. Othcr Allied heavy bombers attacked the nlrilrnme at lla- liniil. New Britain, sumo 50ft silica northeast of Port Moves- v i The Raluiul raid-us i-nuscrl ‘ |'II'L'P "vnliisioiis 11ml lirrs nn > thr- Lnkiinai olrdrome at Ra- haul, ‘Well Known ‘Local Airman is Missing Word \\'Il.~ iccciircd in Charlotte- ‘toivn ycsi/arfiuy- lii[(‘l‘llf;(7ii by Mr. and Mi" I) K Ainchccitl of Fitz- rc_\' Slrcct chili their son. Flt. Sgt. George Muclleod is missing. George is. very popular ill Char- loifcloivu \\I'.i<.‘i‘(‘ he is especially wcll known for his connection with the Junior Royals iiockcv team, which weq iiic- Mnritinic Champ- inivtiip wiiiic he was a member of it. Iii l ii ho captured ilir- Pro- ' He (‘|lIiill])l()liS]’lll). won .. nee as tin nthlcite whilc fliiffilillllf-I Wc~i Kcnt School. He voluiiiccrrd ‘till-h the Royal Canadian Air Force at the out- break of \v;\r bu: was not called up until tho S'Dl‘lll_l2, of 1940. After training lll Crtnntln he went over- seas. in Lin)", 191i. It unis no‘. kiiuuii where he was serving when hc became missing, but ho had SPPII service in Malta, (iiliixiitzir, India, hurl with the Ion patrol off England and Svuiiunrl. Iii. iiiniijc frictifls are sincerely ' flint fiiiiiriiiile word will ouch iii the vcry near fu- Dl-ISERTIYG BALKAN NAZIS Poli=h un- ions havc in- sililr flFhlfiliiilff to deseriers ‘mniivs satellite armies from Helicon countries on the Rus- Hlilll friuii,__ l l l l In Sfmulta Stuttgart. Danzig And Kocnigsberg Arc y Heavily Attacked. B (Canadian Press I» LONDON. April l5 — (C?) — ,Giant bombers oi the Royal Air Force, the Royal Canadian Air ‘Force and the Russian Air I-lorce struck devastating blouus lint night against the Nnzi industrial war miichiiie with almost simultniii-ous raids on the industrial City oi ALLAN NICKLESON sta fl Writer) Stuttgdrt and the Baltic supplysaid that the attack was "vcry CAR gym“. “RH”- lpgvls of Dnuzig and Kocnigsbcrg-‘hcavf and that tho target was |)_.\||(y RXC|T|\'|’ q-vnrr The Britons and Canadians left ' "clearly identificd." it was tiic huge fires blazing in the l first attack on the (‘liy of tinnnu Fpqm nnl’(lr‘ll—l.l‘ili‘l‘ ‘for. n_m. ivrcckiige of Stuttgart’; nlr lniic since the night of Min-ch ll, Rc- 11.40 a.m 2.00 n.m. 1.30 um 4.!“ tank and submarine engine p rmLs, sidciits of coastal England siip- mm _ n‘ ivliile the Russians reported lii a plied an idea oi till‘ size of _ iiic lmivi- (‘rim- ‘l‘lil'ilil‘lilllll‘v—‘ l"--' w. broadcast rm-ordod in London by bombing iorcc \\'li<‘" Yllvl‘ said if .i.m 1.15 um 3.05 iuii. .-i.- um the Soviet Monitor that "pnrtirul- ; look .111 hour mid a imif for the m"- B.l5 u.m. arly flcvcc fir-cs and explosions y maria to ass. i w _ _ broke out in the vfciiiifv" ii , Crews tod of grout explosions and nAiLi Ailh |.\\\|{ E ‘ Dnnzig oil rcscvoir. Rcrl flicrs also i, fires causcd hv two-tori block » t|u\(F.l'1 1i ~ "P “I ‘ saw huge fires iii Koonicsberg in buster bombs and lllFPll(|li"ll'l(‘S. Charlottetown mum r ll‘ ‘ tho vit-iiiitv of the harbor and Coming home the bombers flviw sit-uric" h , freight suk-ds. All tlic Russian so low some of them iuiuuvii i Lcnri- (‘lini-iniicii-iin W" s Y“ i pianos roturiicd i0 their bass‘. grouiitl tin-cots. Oiic Siilllliu shot ; I230 m.. 4.30 n m at The R.A.F. and R C.A F sul- up four supply trains flfill anrvflv!‘ i Arr vi- Chnriullvifiwn 1 ll m ‘h fcrotl the loss of '23 ‘tuificrs. 0d gunned two lriiiiis and a lifliglii B145 D 111-795" m i‘- which l0 wcrc Canadian, during yard. rwvcrs to give ev-i i -—~ QLASS B£f‘i’"ll-V.% , ollipiiufiiis ‘ioxfshlgi SHOULD N1’ i ~' FALL DOWN.‘ l British, Soviet Airmen former Mildred Foster nl nnsionl Big Japaneso F leet Maser: ~ Concentration Is Within Tiixcte Days Sailing Distance Of ."*.’.- .3 Guinea. _ VVASIIINGION, April l5—li\l’i-—l'|uiics i-iioiicii in .I-.i|iiiii‘.~. fili‘[lpl‘ll-l.lp uir zitili-vk iii the Siiutiiuc-i i‘.i furtiii-ciiniiig, War Secretary Henry Stimson /l~\lllit£ ... pi cs5 coiiiorciicc today. The War secretary spoke in direct answer to llii Clil-mor from Australian public officials aiiil others tor lll'|ii m ip to iii-iii oil iiie Japanese attacks i\l'lil retiiiii tiic tiiirii-unii inn ii air initiative in the Auslriilian-snlumniis iiiciitvr. By MURLIN SPENCER (Associated Press Staff Writer) ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, AUSTRALIA, April 15—(AP)--A spokesman for Gen- DOLIQQRiLS MacArthur, issuing the third such wirniiig in “ili\lil" i ..i~;; fleet is massed in the area of Truk, the iliiiiil en- emy naval base outside the Japanese hOlliGliJld, and stands ready “within less than three day's sail- ing distance of New Guinea.” Carrying forward the series of alarms con- cerning Japanese intentions, the spokcsiiiziii zici- ,ded:— ‘i “As regards merchant shipping, a (Jzipnncsc) concentration of approximately 250.000 i-“zilfi tics been maintained in or around Rziiaaul alone for the past several months. “Other ‘Japanese ‘bases on the zirc~~ ‘Manila, Soerabaja~are within easy coiicc i.- range of the 2,500-miie battle line which " are the upper half of Australia. “Constant convoys operating beyond l! Piiiiitl. ..,.:,m i. the range of our air forces are being pushed forward to reinforce the enemy.” The spokcsuiuifs warning follow» ed o, statement by Prime Minister Curtiu that the Allies naval and liincl forces “will be subjcctetl t0 H test beyond their resources“ 1f the air power is not sufficient to main- “iain superiority; ovcr the Japanese. (In Washington Wnr Secretory Henry Stimson told a press copier- crice: "We will keep our American and Australian fliers supplied with sufficient, planes not only to re- place our losses but to build up our aircraft to counter the increasing ‘ ‘ cncmv air strength. . ." —I‘}_m“1"l _ istlmsons remarks followed the Gil-id. 3b i; y lcxprcssioii of privnte opinion by P~3_1~ lwif hi”; other military authorities in Wash- v WurckFuiicial rim 1- ington that the Japanese in the MilllClL Pastor 4.‘. Pacific had passed from the ofien- P01101101 Chiilfllij’ site to a stage 0i "aggressive de- (a tenor-I‘) ‘th In a delayed dispatch from some- 1 whore in New Guinea. Associated many _ press correspondent Tom Yar- and later ciit. hrciioii quoted Lt.—Gen. George C. lbusinm in ‘Kenncy, Machrihurfls nir commnu- roiircd from ll 7Former Rose valley ‘Man Buried in Maiden, lilacs. NIALDFN l l v ‘ dcr. |s saying in his first interview lycnrs _ _ v [since returning from a mission to. Sl!l‘\'i‘.'()l'$ iiuiut <= a. Y‘ f ‘Washington; yPtlfillilif _.\.i i v . i‘ “I'll bc pleased when we have Riiih (iiliis ti.’ .\l.... . . i ithe Jap pianos outnumbered 5 to l. nieces in PIXLH l i w - . . Tlicrc is no indication now oluciiiic Ali's, Jiiiinns (1- ‘ n". f that the Jzip wants to pick up his ‘SlilliCllPi In...“ and go back io Japan. Ir». ~—-~~---»~--~-~-~-- allly combat we a1;- dnléll! prvlili]: . we], but t e Jiip its on m‘. _ _ . airplanes irrmmrl to suit mo." ‘ . we coir-cur l INCAS i\'iiiii2“_.\"iii\7r.it s neous Raids fliiic 400-iuilc trip across hostile territory lo Stuttgart where smoke was lcft billowing 14,000 feet ill inc mr. The R C.A F‘ said tho I‘ili(l was the first in which all squnii- 1 , rons of the Canadian bomber i Hm, “(to m, m. ‘gIOlIp fomied Jnii, 1 participated. lmnighg 7,; i; 4i, , At least three German night l Sm, my; ".1 ‘fighters were shot dovviu two oi ‘\‘ri}|\‘ tflnvyi-fq ‘them by Canadian aircraft. ; p.111 1l‘()(\n I An air Illln1Sli‘_\' communique i A“ A461’: