e SUE HE WESTERN GUARDIAN my“; Mn. John lend. ll Church Street-Phebe N0 SUMMEBSIDI and PBINOI COUNT! NW!» subger-lptlum Advertising should be Iefl with lire. ‘Pond. h dill . Guardian may be bolll 18min “$3; wit“ Street. u»: at any of the following etoreeln enid water Street. Gourliea Drlllml". Water Street. Toronto Geudet. 61 Granville street. m Guardian will be delivered teeny home in flummereide by , Boy at 2o per day or 10c per week. Phone 289 for this eervice or ' pm order to the boy responsible for dellverieg on you roulg, rved for new: o! Flmrflf. If? edvertlairu o! I ""3"" m” l" lnleried u! I " lirln-lll curable II -CAPABLE GIRL or woman for general housework. Apply Box 3B. Borden. L-d-Z-f-i-Zi, " ‘m’ 16 x 24 wnrrr: ENAMEL — i ‘* __ -_ now in stock at Bruce's. b s “k? A... mu: as HANDY as your i 2B‘2'4'2" Taylor Drug 00.14"“ -.r. s. TAYLOR, Optometrist, W. Charlottetown, will be at hie Al. T trong black fnsulat- Wm“ 3:11“ m“ atunny’ Feb’ ‘yo? "Blilrkouts.” Sold at “my 7 ‘ __ ___ 1"“- l .5," L-28-2-4-2l. mantras. February 16th. Personals int and Prize Contest. ____ 14-52-2-5-7- —'I‘h0 Misses Clara. and Blanche : ll Sh; Hockey League. o" IFYCCKUWII, Bedeque leion l“ Thursday. Feb. 5. Skate match. FillfllSSlOD 20 cents. 191011 must win this game t0 ,.. ln tile finals L-43-2-4-2i. .[_\‘SUL Bonltirand Wall Board I able at Brace s. L-ZBJJ-zl. m; SWORN IN -— Mayor-El- Wiasloc J. Lidsione and three ii 10Ts (rcre sworn in yester- ll the Sllmiilcrside Town Hall. oath of office was administer- l; shpeilciary Magistrate E. H. ..._ K. C. Mayor Lidstone and ill fiors .l. Lloyd Gorriil, Henry “and T. D. Morrison were el- .. it Yesterday's civic election. personnel oi the council re- . unchanged. Mayor Lldstone gal Rflllkilg Mayor John E. ‘ll, (iefciitrd ht the polls six-S. QUIET wlipuING -- A quiet r took place at the Baptist .naze on Monday. when Rev. lluaaltc illlilcd in marriage. Edna Fmllucs ‘Crossmail, 'ul Mi‘. anti " Jziiucs Z é’ s a r Alexander M1 risen. son of Daniel Morrison oi Un- comer. ‘ihc young couple were (tended, ’l‘licir many friends them iliuch happiness and. remit-S ELEBRATE 50TH ANNIVER- l- Mr. and. Mrs. George A. it! cf Lilikletter Road. celebrat- tleir 50th ivedding ‘innlversary it lit their home on ‘Ifiiesday. niibrr of 'it‘lidS and neighbours ‘ t hour when aitcr- scrvci. Their daugh- _ . atlcrj.‘ having made Illibu. one iur the bride and ther for the groom. especially. llehapm‘ occasion, and Jeffery received I y messag- ltteleunonl: lulu (_- iiph wish- lflElll lilailv uptn turns and lllckiullso some lovely flowers ilfiliillilll tufts, Ml‘. and Mrs. rl‘ have Hmlflfffl at Linkimtcr ltout 41 years and previous to hid lived in the States. The dun lolns their many friends larty congratulations-S ‘ilEilBEli Or’ l‘ lENING AUX- l’ IIUNOURED -- At the -' monthly meeting of the Ev- “ Auxiliary of Trinity United f0 ill. which (vas held at. the home Carl Crockett on. Beavcr hi. Mrs. Fred Watton was hon- Marlin n for." " l address and Ill-alien, The address was read lib. iiaztn Phillips and the Illtatlon inilde by Mrs, Rpach, iWatton. who was secretary of Club replied in fitting terms to "dress and thanked the mem- thoiriovcly gift. Miss Zil- liacQliarrie (vris welcomed back. Sullivan presided over the ' and Mrs. Richard Hinton (me of the program. Several " l were given by some of the A‘ H. Mrs. Walton and Mlae ‘I- rt sang a duet together. Mre. , f reported on the Presby- h-ld in Sllmmcrside recently. Thomas Baker was appointed in place of Mrs. Watton. ‘ EIVES IMPORTANT POST -lohn FZMIICNCUI of Summer- ? received yvord that his a Divir. John F. MncNctll. K.C.. h liarlnicnt of Justice at. 0t- is justhccn appointed to an ‘Qéllmn RS lB/w clerk and ‘w?! n counsel for the Sen- o glCudlllll W. F. O'Connor. K , ~d last summer. ML Mac- W; bnin in Hamplon. N. 8.. Bred for some time with his i - MacNclll and Mrs. Mac- l Sulninci-slde, For a time h; 191i he left Summereide milegtflldia University. 1n ma ‘saga? 0m Summerside and W iic in England joined ,, glare. Aftcr the war he re- am, ‘Lit studios as Acadia 1m He Wl h a B. A. from there , ‘Umvcliteiit from there to D3}. ., n T5 1y to graduate in law. . , l his graduation he went to ‘Jcisl-"vlrcmry to Sir Charlee t. ‘Mwlllo was at that time halo“ M16 Statute Revision ._ 1m - 1'. MacNeill hae held Wmmt pcsis. He was sent ma!“ 8s junior legal re. ' mlry counsel h, to the Sen- ... mining“ of ieglnlo; - v an Will wish him every success. Mlle-Action Way 1° "all Relieve B with the Princess ed NOON-n Spellt the week-end at their home in Albany. —Mr, Daniel Lyle. mail driver at Central Bedeque was remembered on Christmas Eve by his friends on the mail route and in the village. when he was presented with a well filled purse and a_. box of chocolates. a token of their appreciation of his courteous and efficient service. Says more enlisted For overseas than In last war NIAGARA FALLS. Ont, Feb. 4- (CP) - Navy Minister Angu; Mm- dfiflflid said in an address here to- day that "we have enlisted more men for overseas service in this war than in the last war, in spite of the fact. fortunately. that we have no great casualties.” Ml’. Macdonald spoke before an - informal meeting in support oi L3- bor Minister Humphrey Mitchell, Liberal candidate in a Welland by- eleciion Feb, 9. In addition to increased enlist- ment. figures during this war, Mr. Macdnrlald said "we have twice as many men working in factories as there were in the last war." "The Canadian navy has grown in ships more than 20 times and was more than 15 times the num- her of men. Five thousand Canad- ians are waiting t0 join (lie navy now but they cannot be taken in because there is not room for them." The Navy Minister said the Well- and by-election campaign was be- fng watched by all Canadians and said that in supporting Mr. Mitchell the electors would be giving the government a vote of confidence which it deserved. , "I never saw a campaign in which the issue were more distort- ed than this." he said. Ho referred then to the statement made last week by Mr. Mitchell that he would be loyal to his “skipperfl the Prime Minister, and termed attacks on this stand of Mr, Mitchell uncalled r. "Never before has loyalty been considered dastardly. cowardly and infamous," he said. “The new- fangled Liberals. half Liberal and ha‘! Conservative. think it is not rkglxt in be loyal to the chief, but. to sabotage the chief and sabotage Canada. Speeches made in this el- ection attacking Canada's war ef- for are being quoted in enemy newspapers and on radio stations. I have proof of this fact." Believe Canadians In Kowloon OTTAWA, Feb. 4 -(CP) -- Na- tional defence herdquarfera issued a statement tonight saying authori- ties in Iiontlm believe that. Canad- ian troops who took part in the unsuccessful defence of Hang Kong and now are prisoners of war, have been concentrated with the rest. of the British garrison at Kowloon. ' main] and section of the fer east colony. The defence department state- ment said:- It will be recalled that a report was published Feb. 1 to the effect that British troops were in a cou- oentration camp at Kowloon and were being reasonably well treat- Tl-ie information came from the military attache at the British em- bassy at Chungking (China) and had been received from officers who escaped from Hong Kong Jan. 9. Ae it did not state whether Ca- nadian prisoners were in this camp. a further inquiry was sent and a further message received from the high commissioner today states that further details promised by the military attache are not yet a- Q vellable. but that authorities in London interpret the report as meaning that all troops. including Canadians captured at Hang Kong, are concentrated at Kowloon. BUNBHITIS” MCCIICIIS ~ SCIEIESS ' COIGISTICI . . infllibmggdfl .%re]% he dsmle- yeutelnqtltemedlcation straight 9'" a and a mosufrflm and tightneeeand vifii; 1hr: ivrlfi} A: bedtime mbnvgllsvfikubm | ’ Chloe t . Vi! m, m. MW"! a: mm no iii-lug utes. Wl “d. hi‘: fl yywaddedenmfutwhile . AND PRINCE COUNTY F-i-"M lfiiunnntt ALL LINES t RALPH llllTTilRT Summer-side News Briefs QUEBEC. Feb, 4—(CP)_ last night's speakers tourilrxilgsttgé hliStlnl-lb in preparation for the Do- mnion by-ciection in Quebefyfigs; Feb. 9 spoke against conscription. This issue was most prominent among the topics discussed B5 can. h4lll1l~q and supporters addressed el-‘ ectors who are to vote to fill the seat icit vacant by the death oi the late Eijilcst L8DOillLf’, flaring; justice minister. Andre Tasclierean, K. C.. nephew of the former Quebec premier. L. A. Taschereau. said in a radio address that "there are events happening in Australia at present which more than ever would not onlv justify Prime Minister lung's non-eiliorcenlent. of conscrip- tion for overseas service but. which mlilht even oblige him to recall troops now stationed in Itmgland." He was speaking in the interests of Justice Minister St. Laurent seeking election as the official Lib- eral candidate. OTTAWA. Feb. 4—(CP)—Air raid precautions officials. representing all parts of Canada. today passed a res- olution to be presented to Federal authorities asking that essential ser- vices and war industries be exempt- ed from conforming to test blackout regulations, The resolution. passed lust before a two-day conference on A. R. P, work concluded. contained the proviso thatall war industry plants and essential services should be required to demonstrate to pro- vincial authorities within (it) days of any given date their ability to coli- duct a. blackout if IICCCkSRIiQY. The conference resolution also asked that floodllghting and fence lighting be allowed providing it is centrally controlled and attended at all times. QUEBEC. Feb. 4 - (CP) — Paul Bouchard, candidate of the antl- conscriptionist. “Canadian Party” in the Quebec East by-election. said in an address last night that Canada has “done enough" in the present wa-r. and expressed his oiwcitlon to manv contributions already made. Some of his remarks wcrc consid- ered an infringement of the defence of Canada regulations and on that ground the censors advised against publication of them. NEW YORK, Feb. 4-—(CP)-The New York Times said today that private advices received from con- tinental Europe recounted a quip that is going the rounds as a com- mentary on the German withdraw- al in Russia. According to this brag" Goering gave Marshal Petain. French Chief of State, 24 hours to hand over the plans of retreat used bv Napoleon. OTTAWH. Fcb. 4—(CP)~Detaile of a joint war charities drive are likely to be announced within a week. it was learned today. No de- cision has vet been reached on the amount required. the organizations which will participate. or the date of the campaign. a spokesman for the National War Services Depart- ment said today. Canadian Army Casualty list UITAWB. Feb. 4=—(CP)—Death of seven members of the Canadian (active) army was reported today in the army's 85th casualty list of the war. bringing to p61 total army dead and mlSSlllR officially reported since the war began. Two men were reported danger- ously ill and four seriously ill. Iipllowlng is the latest list of cas- ualties with regimental number and next-of-kin: Oversea: Deed: Central Ontario Regiment- Beeton. Edward Thomas. Pte. B66556. Mrs. Cordelia. Beeton (mo- ther) Toronto. Nova scotiu and Prince Edward Island Regiment- Doyle, Lawrence Vincent. Pie" M9610. Mre. Catherine Doyle (mo- flier) 23 Stewart st... Charlottetown. Royal Canadian Army Bvfvlve Corps- Thompson. Jack, Pie. B91108. Mre. Matilda Blaine (mother) Rose- mount, Que. Eden, Lewis Benjamin, $1.. B91087. Mrs. Florence Iibrd on (wife) Montreal. Royal Canadian Army Medical Corp viiiff Armand Euilfllv. rte. Hallow Mre. Anna viau (wife) st. Boniface. M . gavel Canadian Ordnance Cor — Strike. Fern. PW" D96093. I Myrtle Strike (mother) Val-dill. ue. Whalen. Charles. Pie. B94950- Mrs. Hattie Whaicn (wife) TOIOHW- Dangerouelse Q we l t u 0- $4???‘ Joseph Henri. m. pom) yrs. Elqeée Lavoie (mother) Leo St. can. e. nroglgectitrhiétlbgld Prince Edward li-fxtlirahaitlz. Walter Murray. CD1.- F4l573. Mrs. Mary Esther Marshall (wife) Mount Uniacke. N. S. Serloull! lll= Royal Canadian Artillery- Burdon, Jack MALhCW. -— Aalaaa, Mrs. Ethel Burden (mother) h. O t. Ghlaggal Cflrlilllfilflfl Artillery- Allen. Lyle Edward. Grlr. C3597- Mre. Nellie Allen (mother) Ottawa. CRoyai Canadian Army Medic OIDS- Roy, lmopold. P16" E152°3~ M"- Julienne Forest Roy (wife) Morl- "i?" dian Fbrcetrv Corps ana '- Arnold. Ralph Rudolph. Sulta- Leoiei. Mrs. Gladys vion N110 Lwife) Spruce Lake. ILSLEY WARNS ,=(, __ rm l) Ml- Vhl-l “Cree of com uleion may be required in the gionthe "Id year. to come." Mr- Ilsley was critical of sections 01 the ‘press and “certain spite-in- mwd- h5°°'11“l>lred" enemies of Prime Minister Mackenzie King whoee utterances. lie said. had wnfileed the issue. I-Ie made a plea for moderation. reasonableness and restraint and BXDressed the belief that the op- Dosltiion and 8overnment groups should and could work together 111 tummy and understanding. Other speakers at the short Wed- “why sitting were 'r. L. Church (Con. Toroiito-Broadview), Ciar. ence Glills (C, C. F‘. Cape Breton South) and J. A. Marshall (N. D "trust ' . hurrh eaid he o used the plebiscite but the othergpdid not i-itlkle a. Stlllld against it although s rongy cr ticizin-g the oveml 0n several counts. 8 Suggests McNaughton Mr. Marshall suggested that Lt.- Gen. A.G.L. McNaughton, Canadian CWDS commander who now is in Canada, be called before the bar cf the House to give information on Sifeflkth cf Canada's defences and on the need for more manpower. Mr. Ilsley, first cabinet minister to enter the debate since Prime Minister Mackenzie King spoke tile day it opened. was given a long and loud ovation by his fellow Lib- erals and many on the opposition side when he resumed his seat. He said his purposg in speaking was to make it clear to everybody interested "that; my concurrence in the Policy of a plebiscite is based on conviction and is given without any doubts or reservations what- ever." ‘ He said he was surprised by the ‘confusion of thought which exist- ed in the country on the plebiscite and the extent to which thought had been submerged by emotion." “Even after allowance is made for extravagance of language due to by-elections. I can hardly be- lieve that such words as these should be used about a policy which appears to me natural. honorable and dcslrablc—slicl'l words as cow- ardly. dastardly. conieinptiblc. shameful, humiliating and crouTl- in)! lndzgnity." he continued. “Some of the press and certain spite-infused, hate-inspired ene- mies cf the Prime Minister have simply let themselves; go. "They have let themselves go in a way that will make them asham- ed in future months and years." He said that in entering the de- bate Ills main purpose was in make it clear "beyond doubt" to his friends in hi: own province (Nova Swtia). members of business pro- fessions. and "everybody interest- ed" that “my concurrence in the plebiscite policy is based upon my convictions and is given without doubt or reservation whatever." Mr. Ilsley described his Nova Scotia background and said his ireople were of a race whose loyal- ty to the British Empire had iii- ways been taken for granted. "They do not think too much about home defence." he said. “Through centuries their sens have fought in distant parts of the world and they know that defence of the British Isles ls their defence. ‘The distinction between serving ‘n Canada and serving overseas ls 1 distinction which for them has no meaning whatever. “These people believe. and I be- lieve. that this government. with- out too much regard for remotely distant consequences. should take the most effective methods now of carrying on the wan..." Nova Scotia men were being kill- ed in distant battlefronts. but the casualties brought more enlistments. There might be something old- fashioned in the spirit of Nova Scctia, "but can anyone deny the essential inspired soundness and no- bilfty of it? Mr. Ilslev asked. "I believe that the program which EUZAR IAN CHRONICLE DOSE CON$TlP|iTl0|i?{ lll-nlull GETS AT TIIEAIISE m dogged]; mi the colm " ' effort. not the gov- ernment‘: is one of whim every Canadian can be proud." Those members who had taken the stand that there must never be any dispatch of soldiers from Can- ada were mistaken. Mr. Ilsley said. The course of the war had proved that no country W85 saved by re- maining behind its own borders. "They fail to see that Canada's destiny as a free or a slave state may be decided not on her own soil but in far distant parts of the world and that the magnitude of Can- ada's contribution may readily tip the scales." Mr. Iisley said. However, it would not gain any- thing for the war effort. if the feel- ings of those people were “irdden over roughshod" and use made of compulsory povrers in an arbitrary way. “Surely we should not. jeopardize the gains we have made since the last war. sacrifice the substantial measure of national unity which has been achieved in this war. by adopting the arbitrary. he unre- stricted and the provocat ve meth- ods which the l/Cilfiilltllll advocates of conscription would now have us use." he said. ' If the plebiscite were defeated and conscription strongly opposed bv a majority of the people. it would be a less efficient and effective method of providing reinforcements than a continuance of the voluntary meth- But he was convinced that it would not be defeated and he would personally do his utmost to bring a favorable result. "Then what?" interjected Conscr- vative Housc leader Hanson. "We shall be free to act. and we will act iii the best interests 0t the country and of the war eiiort.” lsiey said. "Free to do anything." raid Mr. Hanson. Mr. llsley said there was only one possible danger which need cause fear about the result of the plebis- cite. l-le spoke oi it. "with some tre- ll " a-a we plan should for the immediate D1 m“ future-the coming var _- program which will r11 iln the lili- man and material resources c! this country to (Ire limit. "I have therefore agreed. as Min- ister of Finance, to a war program for the coming year which. in n.y opinion and in the opinion of my advisers. is the extreme limit of what this country can do." The fundamental difference be- tween the government and its "more sincere opponents" seemed to be the question of compulsion or voluntary service. "Neither ee a member of the gov- ernment nor ae a member of the war committee. or otherwise. have I been able to find any evidence whatever that abandonment of the voluntary system and the substitu- tion of the compulsory system in respect in that part of our war ef- fort represented by the oversees army would, at this moment. help our war effort at all." he said. But the government, in view of ‘is commitment-s, would be at fault if it allowed matters to drift and did not seek release from those commitments so it might be free ' to meet. quickly any emergency. For the government to break its pledge on the plea of necessity would bring a situation which he did not like to imagine. He said he wondered if he could believe hie eare when he heard the ‘hysterical ecreame" against the propceed plebiscite emanating from many in Ontario. The course had been described as cowardly. but "surely the coward- ly government or rllament is rather the one whic fear-e to ne- certelu (Ire people's views." Mr, Ilsley read from foreign pa- pers to illustrate his relectlon of charges that the plebiscite course would humiliate Canada abroad. "The greatest source of misund- erstanding in other countries in rc- gand to Canada's war effort arises from the unrestrained criticism in certain quarters cf everything it": fiovemment hae done or is dolns! e eaid. "It is time that we ceased smear- ing Canada. ‘Canada’: we: effort-end it in a . "That danger." he said. "is the a‘ possibility (hat some of the advo- cates of conscription may g0 so far in their use of unrestrained, abu- sive and provocative language, may so let their emotions run away with their intelligence, as to provoke an equally violent emotional resistance on the part. oi those who do not. now believe in or may not vet have made up their minds about. eclect- ive service." As Finance Minister. Mr. Ilslcy said. he could not see that the plebiscite cost would be a waste of public lllOilLY. "We who believe in democracy are willing to pay the price of - mocracy." he eatd. Would Be Sabotage Referring to letters received by himself and published iii newspap- ers. writers of which threatened .0 cancel war savings purchases and to boycott the new 36041000000 Vic Loan to be offered mu month. Mr. ilslev said:- “Lf the individuals concerned will atop to think they will realize that their threatened action means no- thing iess than a strike against the state....A direct sabotaging of the country's war effort. "It Fascism. the attempted use of force to bring about a change in government policy. "No doubt these individuals feel strongly as to the soundness of their own opinions but unless I am great- lv mistaken they would be the first w condemn a labor group which threatened a strike in a vital war industry. “Their own position is even less defensible . . . . “let such individuals express their opinions as strongly as they will. Let them eeek by any democratic means to overthrow the govern- ment lf they disagree with its peli- clcs and decisions. “But no Canadian should strike against the state. No Canadian should boycott a vital part of the war effort." Mr. Ilsley said he had received the wholchcarted support of the general public and the newspapers in his efforts to finance the war and he was convinced that support would continua. Appealing for "moderation, re- straint and reasonableneu" in deal- illl with vital problem: 1k. Dale! said he knew his appeal would. in some cases. "fall on tlvai iars.” This would be true "lirthe case of the Premier oi Ontarlti (Hon. Mitchell Hepburn) who will only laugh at it." Nfltitliléll unity could be maintain- ed but "we would Silillli-l‘ ll in a thousand bits if we followed the course advocated by any SlllfLi‘ fac- tor oi the extremists in the camps --not the camp but the camps-ar- rayed against us." Mr. lslev asked the government's opponents not. to accuse it oi "sor- did motives" or of thinking ol its political future. He had no sons but sons of other ministers were fighting on all fronts. If the government had no ulterior motives and its opponents had noiic. there was no reason why they should not Work together in unity and understanding. 2,800 Germans _>__(§Iontinucd from _ page __1)‘___ Timoslienkifs army was driving on Dl.‘,€p0l'()peli‘0\‘5k, blasting the Nazis out of each village and farm- house. Russian forces acknowledged that everywhere the Germans were throwing all they had into time bztttic and were rushing up rcln- f-rcements both of men and ma- chines. But the Government news- paper Izvestia proclaimed that "our glorious fighters are repulslrig the enemy's counter-attacks, causing heavy losses. and are continuing their offensive." Izvcstia reported heavy fighting Mr. in Smolensk province, where the Nazis were being dislodged from mllage after village and town after town. Detachments of the 208th German infantry division were said to have been smashed by tank-led Soviet counter-attacks. and a dispatch from the front de- clared that the Nazi colunlandcr of vre 216th division, Maj-Gen. V0ll Hlltz, had abandoned his troops and fled by plane when a Russian assaillt caught his men by sur- prise. “When this General was in France," said Izvestia, "he request- ed tile ‘Fuehrer’ three times to send him to the Soviet-German South of the Smolensk front. ilPfll‘ Orel. the hard-pressed Nazi high command rushed in two iliv- isions, including one of thc "SS" or Elite Guard. from FfiiilCQ by plane and eerit them to the front by car. In the Donets basin, the Rus- sians were reported scoring heav- ily with one of their best-proved tactics-small, highly mobile units, including cavalry, which flanker! and then outflanked the German lilies to open holes for heavier blows by the soviet infantry. One cavalry detachment (was credited with overpowering German tank and artillery brigades and wiping out an entire battalion. A dispatch from the front cor- respondent of the Communist party newspaper Pravda reported "bit- ter fighting" in the Doncts basin, where he said the Nazis were put- ting up stubborn resistance after their retreat from Lozovaya. Sixteen miles north of Inzovaya mobile units were said to have swept into Krasnopavlosk. Other Russian units which blasted the Germans out of Petrovskye, 15 miles east cf Kharkov, were rcprri- ed driving the remnants of two Nazi infantry divisions to the southwest. ‘There we; little nerve from the northern sectors of the front. ’I'hcrc was no reports in fighting lll lllc Crimea. iTllf‘ BBC said the Gvrlnllns haul brcn thrown back l8 miles south of Leningrad, Russian sources in London reported that in the Crimea some of the heaviest fighting of tile seven-months war was taking ylace around the Nazi-beleaguered Black sea naval base of Scvastc- pol. (British re rte from Vichy said a i880 mm of the Russian That's I BETTER luv run-f Ceiling Just Temporary Reliefi; Lackoftherlghtkindoffiivulfiqndiedietleeoornmon cause of constipation. If your! ie that type, try correcting it this way: Eat crisp, delicious KELLOGG'S ALL-BRAN regularly. ALL-BRAN euppliee "bulk" . . . helps you ha‘ regular . . . naturally. You'll enjoy ALL-BRAN ae a cereal with auger and cream, or in delicious, bot buttered muflins. Eat it every day and drink plenty of watu‘. Remernbu‘, ALL-BRAN doesn't work like purgativee. It: takee time. Ask your grocer ' for KELLOGCVS ALL-BRAN. It cornea in two convenient l sizes, or you can get it: in individual serving package: at restaurants. Made by Kellogg's in London. Canada. KEEPS YCII RECIILIII liATlIIlilLLY! “Serve by Saving! Buy Wu Sevinje Certificated‘ troops had been withdrawn from T the Kcrch peninsula, the extreme u SCOUCHE CONVENT SCHOOL eastern end of the Crimea, and a new Soviet lino had been based on Uraqe xlrlvmqred Desgochea the Gulf of Arabat in the north Grade X.—i. Teresa Gaudet: 2 and the Gulf of Fcodosiya in the Rita Martin: 3. Ermond MacNeill. south) Eleanor uillis. equal. Grade viii-l. Edith DcsRochcs; Dutch Base 0 2. Edna Martin: 3. Phyllis Pineau (Continued from __ page i), Honor Roll for January. Grade YIL-l. Juliette Poirier: 2. illls: 3. Bernice Desrtcches. Grade VI.—l. Catherine Gallant: gieiplilellie Gaudet: 3. Marjorie Mac- Grade V—l. Dclla DesRochr; and ported a direct hit on a large ship yavgifi? small‘ 2' Tera“ Gaudet: last night at the Japanese-occupied ' é;adéd1§_”j"'.h1.d; 5L.._,.X.‘.. 3 llqrbor of Rmvaul. on New Britain Joan Williams. 3.0l2a_Sl11-'<111. ‘ ' ' Island) _ , Grade IIL-I. Eunice J. Des i A héghhrgnlitgalriygofffnliall fnlelligtega ggfilligxs: 2. Velma Perrier; 3. Cyiil ‘ii sa s . . jungle-hidden air fields on Borneo _Gl"ade II.—l, Estelle Williams; _2. Island-the apparent. baisc for gill? B. Squarcbriggs: 3. Gcra d Jnirnlcsc raid c Scara-ba a, to the P9 @- soutli. He tolfi the Aneta agency 9113119 1- 9.9-1- Jean, J°5- G31‘, that tile Jflilflilqlgsled "haven't, rifle? genst. ilhelglddle Laughlln. 3. H1181) spottl.“ these fe s from w c - _ w» kw» u» i one we» isles. ‘o.‘..°.’.?‘i°éil.‘-i% “aut- warfare which will cost the enemy ' ' ‘ y 3' dear." The fact that fighter aircraft MUSIC fiC2Clll nillcd the bombers caused 591110;; Eleanor 3mm Juuegge svme lief that perhaps I 51W- Poirier. Dorothy Gallant. 9111956 fllrcrfifl Cflifler was o rat- Junior let Div, Aileen C. Pirieeu. me ti the Java sea. but as er as Phyllis Pineau Rita DesRoches. is kncrvri here the main invasion Junior 2nd. Div-Theresa Martin. armada still i5 off Balik Papan, Helen Skerry. Eunice J. DesRoches. custom Borneo. scme 450 miles ncrth 0f Sgerabajtg COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT Rita Doyle. Anaeia O'Brien. Jean I DesRoches. lheral urges TOR . rep. i--(CP)—J. J. ' Gibbons. 62. dean of Canadian ad- ln vertising men and founder and president; of the agency bearing his I I name. died last night at his home here an illness of three e e w months. A native of Boston. Mass" he came to Canada in his childhood —-— l“ .i‘%“ll’.°‘“.“"3°‘i~.*l°§§ “iii ‘r oun e e . l ns .. a - QTTAWA-dwm- 4-‘(CP)—A m" vertising agency 43 years ago and to Prime Minister Mackenzie ing became known as one of me om- to abandon the proposed conscrip- Smndmz advertising men m can- tion plebiscite and introduce I» irda. He is survived bv his widow measure for selective compuleory and two daughge“, M", R, B, p"- service was made by one of his fol- ymsom Toronto. and Mm R n Qruy, lowers. Fred G. I-Ioblitzcll (Lib. To- winnimg_ ronto-Egliillon) in the House of Comnilons ‘Tuesday night be i l “I lnplore iin not to sm rci the honor and dignity of tin." neat. w Y uomlnion." Mr. I-loblitull said. That would be the effect if the government substituted uninformed public opinion for the leadership o and integrity expected of it by the people. he said] 1d A ioiyrr'p%i)iblb\i§liii'e§so iiliztairr gnu t$séz (By The Canadian Press) er criu: ama cur go er, was flf of Mr. Kin ‘s followers to o - I.‘ 5- 1917 — B19451‘ 1°”. m nlebqscfi, and me “W34 gained victory over Senuesi tribes- poae the t f; m q lmmedj- men ln western Egypt. Replying iiteocoacfipagn.“ ma ve t0 President Wilson's note to Dgaklng 1n me debate on the neutrals. Switzerland declined address in reply to the speech from to break off relations with Ger- the throne late this evening, Mr. many. New Turkish cabinet form. Hoblitzell said Canada did not have ed with Talaat Bey as Grand a total war effort, vizier. _ “The only fair. honest and affic- ‘ii. lent way to wage total war la by “Ayn 5mg M155“ the allocation of total resources by ___... irleans of a__nieasure for total seicc- JQHANNESBURG _ (C?) __ A tlve service. he said, ift of another i320 000 ($89.46 0) “I believe the voluntary system o! fr. being sent to M Mtiiskv, Soviet cnllstments has not proven avlsuo- Ambqssml-r 1n Londm. {mm pro. cess. particularly in the army, he “m, 0g Rand and Reef when. a e. He criticized methods of “cocr- ‘ans i" medlcalfaitjsifia-il-Ei-ifi: clon" used by some officers to get Gcgfgg McLean (Lib, 51mm.- East) 1'39"“? army m"! l0 H1115‘ l" ml! said conscription was not an 155i!" overseas forces. in his election in i940 but hledfelt l‘ .' if b b. th p0 I295 om" smug" ilinsc ound v é Mllljllil. conscrliptiiain %en byngflgil: n er Mac enze n! a Earlier in the evening sitting Oppossltion leader in the i940 elect- Gordon Fraser (Con. Petcrborough 3n cnlnnnlgn, West) referred to the proposed re- Rodney Adcnison (Con. York inoval of Japanese from the Pacific West) said he opposed the planned Coast and said they were not want- (‘.'\llS(‘l'llIllOil niebisvlif‘ ""11" "T?" ctl in Ontario because ii they once porter at my command. "f? 881d not there they would want to re- the decision to holcl a plebiscite was main. o case of dodgjr_ig_i;eeponsibiiity_.__ "i" CUUGHS-CULDS forget about the proposed plebiscite B RONCH ITIS to secure rclcasc from its anti-con- sz-r tiun pledges and "art flown to YIELD FASTER T0 luis-iilcss and hold a secret session so that we can all get lvielhfl- Robert Fair (N. D. Battle River) said soldiers and their dependents and school teachers should rccclte (he ccst-of-livinlt bonus. The "W" vuvcial gcvcrnlncnls were having rllllicultv in maintaining their, f5‘ ilcalional systems but the D0111 n 0n should increase grants to the prov- M I X TU D l: inces no that bonus could be W14 T0 NMSINII- ‘- . 5 .