MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN ‘ii 1em|wl I D0118 avoided than cnnrlostetewn amass. n“... SOVIETS CONVERGE 6N ROSTOVJ T0 TRA Read by Everybody Covers Edward Island Like the Dew eroeity. MAXIMS OPA MERE MAN Justice is incomplete without gen- CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, JANUARY s, 194a Jap Convoy Moves To Land Men 0n New Guinea Two Transports Sunk, I8 Zeros Are Shoi Down Awarded li.F.M. IGT. PILOT H. LEAVITT. DJLM. l Mr. and-Mrs. William Leavltt of illucrton have been informed their son, Sgt. Pilot Herbert Ieavitt (above) has been awarded the Dis- tinguished Flying Medal. He is lelvlrl overseas with the Royal cared an Air Force. set. Lreavitt was educated in Allison University. He left the lat- ter institution to enlist in Feb- ruary. 1941, He received his wings st Moncton in November of the ‘time! year end went oversees short- a fer. lie is 22 years old. Canadian Staff To Soviet Russia OTTAWA, Jan. 7 —(CP)-- L. D. W1 gross, who leaves shortly for hLs post as Canadian Minister to Bali ‘ Rusya, will be accompanied by a staff of five and two of them, l t Mu of B like himself. speak Russian. The staff members will be:- First Secretary, R. M. MacDon- liell, 33, at present second secret- lll" of the Canadian Legation in Waslrngton, Mzlltarv attache, Brig. H. le- irbvre. 54. of Montreal. recently returned from service overseas. Assistant military attache. Maj. 9. J. Okulltch, 34, a native of Riflfla who recently returned from Aclve Service with the Canadian iiilvrs overseas. Tlrrd secretaries. A.0 smith, fiiglmnronto. now on a snoctal mis- ~ l1 i? ‘Pol-onto. recently returned from o. v u. McDaniel “Sh... rim Itoff Writer QAXUAITQI H! AU JI-l. l-(Pridayg; l1 . Whelb planes of the southwest Pacific command of as the ill-ship con- off Lao. Australian and Am. er s.n ground forces completed enveloplnent of tbs Japanese st Sansnsnda. “I of the enemy's alt footmd on Papue. ll} Iflifl Emphasizing confidence in an early windup of the Pspua carn- psfgn. Gen. MacArthur detailed he units which had comprised the iLspanese army end these to medium mer- amsll to medium merchant shi and between 150 and 200 land g bsr s sunk, de- stroyed or seriously emsged. British Loss Captured Ridge b . . chant - ships”! ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, North Africa, Jan. 7—(AP)—— Brit- ish t Arm ti‘. . heavy rains troops to attack Tuesday. The Germans counter- atteoked successfully yesterday they had inin sll the c m? 8 u aommllnes r tion e sdi Zorn-Zens, about 1S0 airline miles out. of Tripoli. Air s m! and waterfront fires st Bousse on the Tunisian esst coast. s Cairo Cairo; and J A McCordick. U Service w'th the Canadian Inte'li- or ltil-"o service overseas. nannalirs Asssssmr BERLIN, (Pl-om German Broad- giii“. Jan. 7—(AP\—Adrvicesfrom lfhv said today the assassin of Acmlral Jean Dorian. (who was SXSPiIiod after the Christmas live "imfilis of the French High Com- "Viiswmer for northwest Africa) “as Bornier De La Ghnpelie, a stu- iitni and the eon of a journalist. Coming Events "West Royalty V. lto els East Royalty Hid-BY night. Bgltofll-alflu. ..'.i"i’il‘i.‘...r..‘?“a.°é. ‘$1229.. it‘! srald, 1.3.11 $or Davis h u... JAM. “tiff?” ‘i233?’ l-l-tl . John .1. Book. yin; dross- ld chick-gigs and fowl daily. 01117- 8 market vslue. Phone or wt in l°i' Dr ces. Island Cold Btora e1 gua- "We bu live and "Next l f n . .u... "CR3 ‘i221. 32.35%. 5M. until 11.80. Signed l-d-li. h "Mouse Bros. Freetown, loading 188R It Bummer-side eve Monda and It 1 y -S p.111 Tb “wins schedule wi be followed mu further notice. Livestock “hung nous. l-s-s-ls-aa-as u names and M!" d i5 the fi ht more then 1.000 from the bases ncsr Leis - several hundred prisoners, i111! I115 other booty were taken in t attack, the flghtlnl "Inch 1990"’ ed.) N. S. Woman Lost at Lisbon , -- >-4\oluo ‘m, :1! ‘land the HERON. laid i051! "W! h hsndbll of an formerly s Con ion. of} ln "the lnouta of heii- iii!" rock crater at Climb Ill i 11°" Lisbon last. slant. and “iii i probably fell accidental!‘ into W sea or was washed sway J I WI - ans was identified tentetivsl! es flsael Helen Mach” 47- 9f native of Novs loo . ‘M7923’. 1y of New York c 6y. m‘ mm‘ tee for the care o! crock o time IIIII IN $10500 a a -brousilt d .55 sent so other! seven workers were through the reivlii’ company late l). fierce on}, i sweat ‘ego of the Hell w" Manlon Seeks A.R.P. Support ___-_ UPPAWA, Jill. 7 —(OP)— Mun icipulities slwilld be . r, aeid in e lagoon prepared for delivery to- ht over the National Network of the Canadian Broadcasting stion. P“ . . II mpsded $0 citillng h oils he cl defence forces of t-luir eollamnnlltiss and warned tifutCssl- clan cities may yet be attacked from the air with bombs or gas. The ,. ive civil defence of their communities offered citizens un- able to serve in the active forces an opportunity to do their duty, lust as soldiers. sailors and airmen did theirs, One Million Gas Masks For flushes MONTREAL Jan. 7—(CP)—To be made available to the general public should war conditions wer- rsnt. 1. .000 a: masks have been forwarded to province of bec Civilian Protection Commi tee for distribution to areas vulnerable to enemy ettackfi was learned of- ficially hero ton N. Soden. puty Provincial 0.9.0. Officer. said that seven car- loads of the masks already have been sent to the Gaspe Peninsula and the north shore coastline of the St. Lawrence River. liig Increase In Collections 0f Income Tax OTTAWA, Jan. 1 —(CP)~ In- come tax collections during the first nine months of the current fiscal year-up to Dec. 31~totall- ed 81.008.101.900. u not increase of $563,015,459 over the some period of 1941-42 when $445,116,444 was collected, Revenue Minister Gibson announced today. It was indicated then that total revenues by the year-end next March 3f would total more than ll,li00,il)0,000. . Driving the nine months ended Doc. 31, all 19 income-tax districts showed increases. Collections from districts, with increase in brackets: Ottawa S54.- 261363 ($24,l95,320); Haifax S28,- 080307 ($12,740,795); Quebec 200.542 ($101585): saint John. N B. $13,817,881 ($7,l7l,tl31>: Char- lottetown slmlxllr ($639,409.) Kinsmen. Hold Annual Meeting $8,364.51 has been sent to Milk for Britain during the past year by the Kinsmen Club of this city, it was reported et the 831111111 meeting of the club held in the Charlottetown l-iotel last nigrlt Professor home C. Callback urns elected President for the coming year at last night's meeting. The (Iherlotteiown Kinsmen Club dur 1m hes had the most suc. csssfu year in its history. Pm rnfisl President B. 5. lord stated in his report which praised the work of the few members remaining 1n the Ho expressed most leellnsi tho lulofheOlubinthedel of its most valued member. the late Jdidi O . . Gordon, One of the most important Item forward was stated to have been lno formation of the xinette Club dul-lns the out year- Thia Item‘ club has had a most successful be- glnntrlg and greet thine! I" 9X- lContiiued on can 070611)‘ Cid Aviation Magazines leaded Jlfi. '1—- is?) —Ol(i $32 laagesi us. lift sarmwsn FOUND GUILT! HALIFAX. Jan. '! — (C?) — In the first Nova Sootis conviction w: Iflflflitlfll. t3! Kirke L. SIIIPWII. Associated Press War Analyst) G If ls monste Japanese amphibious expedition against New Guinea, usda canal or some the: point is ssomblin Assets‘ ll "m... is have ll. it is doing so anon. trying conditions. " u “ m r I I I I I . R-sblILiuNlwllritsimisssldtsbstlserlervseentreoftlleeuemy mobilization, although shipping for the expedition is reported widely dllllerled to avoid sir detection. Within e few hours after publication of the report in Australia, Allied bomber. were on the job over Rsbsul for the sixth time in SC days. They begged an estimated 50.000 tons of Nllrbonose troop sud oergo space and brought to :1 the number of ships sunk or wrecked in the: are; truths ‘heif-‘doseu bomber swoops. I That does not necesnrily forbid s new Japanese effort to retrieve lost ground or strengthen defensive outposts on the Solomons-New Guinea-Timer perimeter. However, it stoutly supports Navy Secretary Knolls tement that Japanese doings in the ltabsul urea. ere being ""3011 Pellllllly by the Americans. A follow-up bombardment of the enemy's Munch, llrflglfl on New Georgia by units of en American surface task force fended to show that American sea as well as sir patrols are widely end ‘Kxfggglvgly on the alert. If a mass Japanese sailing from the Itabaul region is im- g the way. It could bring a sea-air fight, even more Mfdwey battle which changed the fsee of the wer in I I I I I I The l0glc of the situation for the Japanese points primarily toward defensive rather than offensive manoeuvring in the Southwest Pugiflg, The Allied threat against that vulnerable corner of the Nlpponeao con- quest sphers is real and growing, Giraud Very Sure Of Allied Victory Now Fight Will Be Very Hard; Says Nazis Considered Him Enemy No. 1. decisive than the the Pacific. NEW YORK. Jan. ‘f-(AH-Gen. Henri Honors Giraud disclosed to.- clay that the Germans-from wnom he escaped-regarded hisn as "enemy Nu. 1' and had shot one oi nls young relatives in rrance because a uernlan flon-conlnlis- stoned officer had been attacked in a theatre, the lJakar radio said in a broadcast heard here by CBS. The broadcast also reported that the French High Commissioner in North Africa had said he was cer- tain that “Germany is defeated” but tilat the fight "will be hard, very hard." Giraud was quoted as saying he had good reason for being so sure of‘ a Gerfnan defeat. “I was a prisoner in Germany," he said, "a prisoner visited by nigh officers and army generals because I had the honor of being considered by them enemy No. 1. "Throu h these contacts I could observe cosely the decline of Ger- man might, a formidable might at the time when lt defeated us, but which, in 1942. already showed clear signs of exhaustion. I had until than believed in a German victory and now I em sure of the contrary. "Germany today has had 2,500.- 000 of her men killed. ...l-low- ever, I will not lull you into bliss- ful optimi-sm, I am sure of victory but I am also sure that the fight will be hard. ver hard. The Ger- man army today very strong and Germanys internal structure undoubtedly much stronger than in 191B. Let us not fancy that we will march into Paris tomor- row." Giraud also was quoted as say- ing that he knew the fate of pris- oners and of hostages. "One of my young relatives was arrested one day for not having painted his bicycle lamp in blue. A few days later he was shot as a Communist because a German non-com had been attacked in a theatre. I could cite many . It is in order lo put s.n u all of this that we are ng. "I am not a political man. I know only that want one thing, one thing alone. Chase the Ger- t, of France. I want the one program alone ahead f us. Liberate our fatherland and avenge the infamous treatment inflicted lgyoptllee" Germans on the French War—25 Years Ago Today (By The Canadian Press) “m1 Jan. 8. i918 —President Wilson in w! messa e to United States Congresg laid own his l4 ints for world o0. Prime inister W. as, u hes tendered resignation of Aus- trsian cabinet following defeat of conscription proposals. To Send A loo-Breaker To Magdalens --...__ OTTAWA, Jan. 7 — Transport Minister Michaud tonight told The Canadian Press that as soon as an ice- breakcr is available it used to deliver from 4.000 to 5.000 tons of merchandise to the people of the Magdalen "binds Who. because of season- al and‘ wartime conditions, face n shortage of commodities. Commenting upon a statement It Quebec by l-Iormisdus Lang- liili. member of the Quebec Leg- islative Assembly for the Mag- dalen lslands, that the popul- stion feces s near-famine, Mr. Michaud said his department was notified of the situation before Christmas. but unfort- I "M161! had no ice-breaker available to overcome it. “I have received appeals for hel from the Red Cross nurse tiu..fl'°""fi°“f-. ‘it'll. W?“ c an o s n, r. Mlchaud ssid. "With the oo- fliloration of the Maritime Cent. Hi Airways. we took more than 3 people stranded at Char- lottetown to the Islands before Christmas. “Durfn November, the boat serving t a Islands made one trip s week. In December it started from Pictou but was held in the ice and couldn't go further. l have not been in- formed that there is any Ihngtr of starvation. "The Wflllle there must have rum two to three weeks’ gup- Dlles on hand. We will send in nn ice-breaker when one i; available." MINEBS STRIKE wrnxm-nmam, Pa, tAPi-Jfhe number o: striking miners in Pennsylvania’; enun-n. cite fields-sole source of hard 0001 in the United mates-rose to nearly 15.000 lodav in the face of from John L. Lewis, Chief of the United Mine Workers i’ Mimics. Interior Secretary Harold Iokes and other Govern- ment and Union officials that (he or _ A 1C1’) - Jan. 7 men return to w k _____________ WATT JOINS R.C.A.I'. Al». Jan. 1- (or) _ tt ofstblifrontaetial, Qlflébétfl Davis Cop player. ‘ifln sepottrmg; “i-‘iiiiie Men-sins Depot of the n. O.A.I‘. n-qy, w.“ mild i 1-» ope-w -1'E‘iu>u'.‘n.“‘.?. l’(2°"'.l‘.‘. i!" Pelt in tolunsment play. THE All PURPOSE FLOUR lFood Shortage Reported From Magdalen ls. QUEBEC. Jan, 'l—(OP)—\Hormis- dss Lulglsis, member of the l Ls- lative bly for the ag- dalen Is ands, said here today that following a number of storms and wartime conditions that affect maritime shipping, the p0 ulation of those islands in the B. Law- rence ulf faced e near-famine, partic arly e shortage c! butter, sugar and flour. Mr. Langlais said that the corn- any that serves the islands from ~~~~ A . .. .. . _ i Subscription Delivered, $6.00 Illl. $4.00; other Prflrincol end can. “.50, P Rostov; Dozen Vi Yesterday. ictou, N.S., was making one trip weekly instead of the usual four because of the weather conditions and naval needs. He added that there were scale provisions on the wharves of Souris, P.E.I., and Pictou, N.S., but that they could not. be shipped to the Islands because the boat that serves the islands is unable to make its regular trips. Mr, Langlais said that he has government to send an ice-breaker in that region to assure the shipping of the stock on hand, No Sugar Residents of the Magdalen Is- lands, in the Gulf of St. Lawrence more than 100 miles north of this province told Capt. Carl Burke of lvlaritlme Central Airways here there was not a pound of sugar in tne islands. There is still some flour available but not enough lo last until the opening of naviga- tion in the spring. Capt. Burke operates the winter air mall service to the Islands. lie was there last several days ago. It was understood here that 300 bags of sugar formed part of the cargo of supplies the 5.5. Lovat unloaded M. souris when weather conditions closed navigation unex- pectedly in December. Capt. Burke, lccnl manager of Maritime Central Airways said the Gulf was filling rapidly with ice. ills last trip there appeared to be heavy foe one-third of the way out from the north shore of this Province, although the water was still open at the islands. The Airways firm has not been approached to carry food supplies to the ISimitiSfBilt "slliée ‘Ylle-"Wiillfiter lnail service opened several tons 0f mail and 63 passengers have been carried from here. The were stranded at Souris when t e last trip of the steamer was cancelled. Installation Ceremony At K. of P. Lodge Mr, Irving G. MacLaren was i:l- stalled as Chancellor Commander at the semi-annual meeting of the Empire lodge, Knights of Pythias, held last night. Other officers bstsllod last night luded‘ inc . Vice Charlcellor Wm. J. Hillier Prelate Gordon Lord Master of Work H.013. McKee Keeper of Records and Seal B. F. Tlnney I Master of Finance J. H, Wil- s Master of Exchequer H. If. Mc- an Master at Arms J, A. Brady Wm. McEaehern A. R, Gilli! The Installation or Officers was gmldqlcfgd by Deputy Grand Chan- cellor Chas, W. Rowe, assisted l?! Past Chancellor Lloyd Yeo all Grand Prelate and Past Chancel- lor c.w.s. Bentley as Grand Mas- ter at Arms. ced that the Red Army conv Nazis in the Caucasus is les bottleneck point today after villages yesterday, and for gave this picture:- IJ.F.M. Award Announced LONDON. Jan. 7—(CP Cable)- The Air Ministry today announced award of the Distinguished Flying Medal t0 Flt. Sgt. GBOTSE Edwflr Teasdale Nichols of Alberton South. P.E.I., a member of the R.C.A_I". (No trace of e Nichols family could be found last night in the Alberton district and it was con- sidered possible either the name or the address was in error.) Maximum Loading Made Compulsory OTTAWA, Jan. 7 —(CP)-- Maxi- mum loading of freight cars has been made compulsory under an order issued by Transport Controll- er T.C. Lockwood. published today in the Canada Gazette. With a few limited exceptions, no railway will be allowed after Jen. 18 to socept, anywhere in Can- ada except the Yukon Territory. any carload freight unless the car i; loaded to maximum capacity. Capt. Storey Promoted To Rank of Major Word has been received of the promotion overseas of Cars. Frank J. Storey, 3rd Di- vls onel Signals, to the rank of Ms or. afar Storey enlisted for sc- tlve service et the outbreak of wer and went oversees es I Lieutenant. lie was appointed a Captain last November, He is a son of Mr. and Mrl. W. J, Storey, Charlotte- The semi-annual reports sub- (Continued on puke B. C01 5i President Roosevelt WASHINGTON, Jen. 7-(CP)- President Roosevelt told s wildly- cheering Congress today that vic- tory for the United Nations is sure and inevitable and declared that hard blows against the Axis. in Europe and the Pacific, will be struck in i943. Standing on the raised Speak- er's rostrum in the House of Rep- resentatives and addressing the assembled tfineftors land ‘Con; gressmene s orms openn o u» 78th oonsrw. the entitle t redicted victory for the United stions not oni in the war but in the peace to allow. He declared, too. that i943 would see "s very substantial advance along the roads that lead to Berlin and Rome and Tokyo." ament of Germany, Italy and Ja- g". Mr. Roosevelt counselled the ited Nations to remain united so Great Offensives Planned For ’43 Wildly-Cheering Congress. Demanding permanent disarm- . town. Ills wife and family re- alrle at "M Grafton St. Makes Speech To economic ltlblllty that will result in universal freedom from want. In this post-war effort, the Ull- ited states must play s full parl. he said A return o isolatlonism is ' r ‘ble because "we not make America an island in either a military or an economic sense.‘ loelsi Security With vi or, he ‘dissented’ from the view hat wartime is no time for s discussio of domestic re- forms. In very general terms he called for an expansion of the social security s stem end for planning that wll give our fight- ing men permanent employment. when the armed forces of the Un- ited States ere demoblllsed. It was the President's snnual address to Congress on the state of the nation and tonight it led acknowledged formally that their southern withdrawing before the massed might oi‘ Soviet tanks. At least five Red Army columns are sweeping directly, or indirectly toward Rostov, at the mouth of River, while 300 miles south of that Caucasian “hingei the Germans were falling back northward in an apparent effort to escape encirclement. The regular Thursday midnight Soviet communique, as heard by the Soviet Monitor here in a Moscow hronzi- casi, declared 13 populated points and a railway station had fallen to the advancing Russians yesterday on both sides of the lower Don River. The Reuters News Agencyq Monitor, hearing the same communique listed 17 points,- wlth different spelling in some cases. Although confusion thus existed over the details, a study of Russian maps NAZIS Germans Admit Retreat From Forward Areas’ Soviets Are PVithin 75 Miles Of llages Captured LONDON, Jan. 8—(Friflay)—(CP)-—Russia announ- erging on Rosiov to trap the s than 75 miles from that capturing more than a dozen the first time the Germans forces are the Don Lf the Germans cannot hold the Riiiiliill i-‘Oil-lmlls bearing down on ltmtov all their Caucasian 8.l'll'l\*.l will be cut off from retreat except by ship across tile Black Ss-a. And me stussfall naval 101K205 1n that, sea. are still llltacf, s; far a; lg known. ‘flares-hundred miles south of Rostov in the Caucasus the Rau- sfans were ptblllllg llorulwslti along me Baku-iooowv railway, and were 2c miles or more beyond llle rall- road JilllCLlOll of Prulullaflllellskl. Th0 communique as ileum by the Soviet MOIIILOI llsveo mo large pug- ulatled places of Wuiollltllokiflfl, avetaya-radnla, and Sewers-yr ea falling to the Russians m Lfli5 urea. Home of these points vrere iildtll in“, narlu-w-hallll llglltlllg and in too engagements the Germans were said to nave lost 600 men. Altogether ~10 inhabited localities, largo and small, were said to have been oc- cupled. our the first time Berlin an- nounced a Nazi withdrawal m me Caucasus. A Gel-luau rncllu bro-au- cast said:- "German troops in the casttrrs Caucasus completed, according 1o schedule, the shortening of their front line by Wllhtlhlwlilu lroln au- vanced strongholds. il- bcnllno known Ln Berlin ‘Flinn-day lllgllb. "Soviet attacks on Liernlan rear- guerds were frustrated ricsplze lire soviet-s’ massed employment of anks." t For several days British observer-e have expressed beliof lhe Nam (were withdrawing northward toward Res- tov because of the LllTEfilPlllllZ Russian push along the lower Doll. BRITONS CHEER LONDON, Jun. 'l—\CPr—Br:tlsl Government circle; tonight. (twins- ed unofficially that Pro lien! Roosevelt's speech to Consrvfifi i0- day was one of ills boat and Bri- tuna generally rill-cred ‘the address, which was heard clearly through- out Britain on the BBC radio ro- lay. IN (ouRfSiuP A Fellows ARM MAY Q0 1o ‘W/nsf‘ Buf Haven HIS OPPoRfumfnzs High illio '11.» of cznonn a and tonight a‘. l. 5n“ sets this 8l.éi‘ll()0|l at and rises tomorrow morning 8.3 . first, quarter moon Jan. l8, II l-Tfl. can rennv senvlcls DAILY axcam" susoar Prom Borden-Jeeve 9.05 with fuo am. z.oo mm. 4.30 a-m 1- pan. Leave Cape Tormenlins — 10-39 IJII. 1.15 psn. 3.05 H.111» 5.45 lI-ln. 8.15 gun. DAILY Alli. SERVICE (EXCEPT SliNllAYi Charlottetown - Summcrside- Monrton Leave Charlottetown 8.80 s. m. 123m. m. 4.30 p. In. A vo Charlottetown l p. ms 5 35 at as to achieve s degree of world (Continued on page 8, Col. l) b.ldp.m,1.05p.l.