MAXIMS ‘OFL MERE MAN .-__-_- 0d oft interred hog‘: rldes not lie lolll resurrected. no, Founded ll" unrdlan. Two Cents, lion-ior "mm" gmrlorrrtotru (i with one‘: there-it is >‘%I/ ///' The People's Paper CHAR Tricia .1 P aces Ajfaclgfiig ‘Sugar Rationing Goes Were carrying Into Effect In Canada ‘Reiniorcements Thrce-qtiarters of a pound per person per week is “order of wartime Prices and Trade Board. A (By Alan Randal, Canadian Press Stuff Writer) (YTTAWA, Jan. 25-(Ci’)—Without actually knowing it at the time, every Canadian household today wont on a. sugar ration of three- quark-rs of s bound a person per week at the order of the Wartime Prices and Trade Board. run means, the Board said, a. one-third reduction in household mmimptlon for oar-h Canadian, or, in the course of s. year, s saving of rt least 100,000 tons on a tntnl Canadian consumption, including indus- trial usc, oi about 500,000 tons, From this day on Canadians may no; ptlrljrlélSfi more than two treks‘ siriml)’ l?! 5118M‘ It m9 PW" cubed ration ilgirre. Those who . " than that amount on hand m: use their supplies until my or: icss than sufficient under the ration for two weeks before buying more. Canadians who eat in restaur- expcctcd to restrict consumption," the today. “it ‘prudent precaution" to ‘ " pplir-s despite the fact that ~ a‘ stocks now are ru timc, the bourd gave = " r that "rctail prices of ugar lll Canada will not be in- ceased at any time during the l"! AililulllICCd Sunday Donald Gordon, board. chairman. nzuiounrirl the sugar ordcr to IWWSPBDB uicn at a Sunday after- noon press conference at board htildllllflflvrs. A short time later he infor '1 the general public in larcrrdctist over Cana- inn _ oaticzlsllllg Corporation fa. titties. , a _, . (Continued on page 1_ C91 4. l6 men tiled In tcrpedoing "i-w r _. A31 INST COAST CANADIAN PQRT. Jan. 25-40?) -Thirty-six ll-‘ll. 011031 Canadian, died in the i-in v1 inferno of a Norwegian ocd in the western At- , _.\'. Five survivors. all 0i 10hr .0 on the bridge when "if ivrucrlo struck, nfrlrctl hero rih tho story of the sinking. Afrcr 15 hours huddled in an open N}? iii wire picked up by a Br. h chlcr and brought here, lite cor‘. to which lrrv wot-e hg-nri. l“? i0 lozn a convoy when the sub- "Wfuc rfltarkcd. Th" limo Carmdian was Gaston Drcuin t". from somewhere in Quo- lm prmzucc. C illlilg Evcnls Nollvfln In "Ill I cents per wnrtl h“ h" column ‘i’ "W; r. blind ‘t; lcd to buy Chicken. Fowl old Storage. L-219-7-9-ti. 5.19300 lrmdiruz hoes Wlnsloe filldon Tucsdav iorcnoon, Januru" ~1- L-776-l-26-l . ‘filtrate. St. James l-lall, Summer- “- lrlvsdnv. January 27th. Mul- llfl Orchestra. L-774-1-26-1t. "Concert and Pie ial in New liliglrl ‘Iéucsday. anuarylzltltt, ‘ -‘ ‘s.r umoscs. mic following night‘? " no L-65l-l-2U-23-2d. "Come lo Concert and Box Bocial affifklgyi Hall. Monday. January ho"- misslon 25c. Ladies with I free. I1 not fine. followi "l"- L-"r4o-1-24- "wll require a quantity of well- ‘lacrgreacszalétég, “gtecrs and t Ol’ over- "ls-nu Cold Storaso ca. ma. 14-746-1-31-01- ,,,',,'°,§"d°11 reeds A11 the latest 1m (‘St varieties. 50nd for free M, "lllllwlle. Arthur llllesleiy, - - a. Hess for Britain" should or tn. “My” every farmer in this rov- D-a ritaln needs hose and iling Emu-IE“ ‘ Fatryncrdhlgéb ' i a vc rem s. “$99k Marketing Board, 14-776-1-26-11. , __.__. The farmers “1ine" in this orld “wit; is the food lino. zlisha Will trim asked to produce h u 3 <10 it? Sure. they wi . "Stock Marketint! Board. L-77fl-l-2tl-ii. "Th! Annual Meetin ram“, I f the Try YB Institute. will be lied in d i on Wednesday the 29th “at Jfiillliirv at 2.30. If stcrmy the mdfl-yfollwl. ch. 1"“- Wwwrw. o “lavas-tread: i. n Capt OJ. Jones, pilot. Ship sunk off New Jersey Coast WASHINGTON. Jan. 25 ——(APi- The United States navy depart- ment tonight announced the sink- ing of the Norwegian ship Varanger by an ens-my submarine attack off Sea Isle City. N.J.. this morning. Forty survivors have been landed at Townsend's Inlet coast guard station. ‘The sinking was the fifth off the United Stairs Atlantic seaboard since Jan. 14. Summary of New regulations Concerning sugar OTTAWA, Jan25 —-(CP)— Followlng is the offlcisl sum- mary, issued by the wan-time prices and trade board today, on the new sugar rationing regulations:- l. The ration is three-quart- ers of a. pound per person per work, including adults, child- ren and ‘nfants, members of the family, boarders, servants and guests who remain for four days or more. 2. Purchase your sugar in the ordinary way, but not more than two weeks‘ supply at s time. No coupons, stamps or tickets are required. 3. Do not purchase any sugar if you have two weeks‘ supply on hand. 4. Persons in remote areas who are not able to buy every week or two weeks may con- tinue to buy several months‘ supply at a time. but should measure their requirements at the ration rate, namely, thrcc- qunrtcrs of a pound per person pcr week. 5. Lumber camgs and other firms providing meals to their employees must see that con- sumption is restricted to three- quaricrs 0f a pound per week pcr person, effective immediate- ly. 6. Economize on sugar whore- ever you can; some people can gut along on less than the rs- tion. Those dining in restaur- ants are also expected to re- strict their sugar consumption. 7. Additional supplies of S11E31‘ will bc madc available for home preserving and canning. ll. Tho ration affects only re- fitted cane sugar and beet sug- ar. i). Industrial users of sugar, and hospitals and other insti- tutinns, will be advised b! the sugar administrate. (8.8. No- ble) how the sugar restrlotivul will affect them. Two Aussie Towards Libya Fierce Lanrd B a t ti e Still Raging As Rommel Continues On Offensive. (By Edward Kennedy) (Associated Press Staff Writer) Cniiru, jam. 25 - (AP) - Brifislt bombers planes have intercepted the larg- est Axis convoy ever sent into the Central Mediterranean ——- bearing reinforcements for the Gcrrttan-ltalian counter-attack in Libya-and probably destroyed a 20,000-ton liner, set transport aiire and torpedoed a destroyer. A battleship, a cruiser and one other have bccn hit. British Imperial and Axis land forces, meanwhile, were engaged in o. great tank and infantry bat- tle in a vast triangle, extending to a, point 40 miles east oi Agednbia, 511d “P011 W15 battle may hinge island carried out their "scurcitt-zl‘ r-ar the m“? °f Britain's ha"d""°“ ad‘ livcs or liberty to sec that job through. . ‘gals 33,0 “"055 the desert complishrt: uni make a glowing page in the The convoy was oscorled by s. battleship, four cruisers and 15 destroyers. A torpedo attack was launched against the battleship which started on a zlg zng course. and the fliers were unable to fell whether the explosive had formal its mark. But three torpedoes, launched by naval planes, found the flanlka of the great liner, which previously had been set afire b-y bombs. The next day, the convoy was moving at slower speed toward Tripoli, the liner was not seen. and one of the two remaining merchnntmen was set afire. The attack started Friday night and. continued in daylight the fol- (Continued on page 7, Col s) Four Ferry Bomber Pilots are missing MONTREAL. Jan. 25 ~46?) - Four men are liliSsinpz in n Inckhetd Hudson bomber" on a deilvrrv trip to the Ilnltcd Klnadom, it was announced Saturday ‘JV the Royal Air, Force ferry command here. The crew arc: Rolnrt Warren Whltmorc. Miami, Fla. captain; Balm, Eldln Hosny, Hcliopolis, Egypt, first officer; Sqdn. 2/11". Edward Daniel Chanller, Hove. England, navigator, and Horace Gayznl Meyers, Vancouver, radio operator. No other details were given Plan Land S~cheme For Disabled Veterans TORONTO, Jen. 25—iCPl — A bill establishing i1 land schcmc t0 hclp rc-estnlslish dzsithlcrl vclcrflllfi oi the current wnr will be intro- duced shortly in the House of Commons at Ottawa, Hon. Ian MacKcnzie, MinLster of Pensions and National Health said in an in- terview hcrc Saturday. "More than i6 pcr cont of 200.- 000 or so military mcn questioned want to settle on the land after the war," he said. "All sections of canada will be affected" Battalions In Astounding Effort Held up Japanese advance four days; Men still full of fight. wuoon, Jen. as-(cr Cabln- y w, An urmamed youfi Royal Air Force pilot, freshly gr uated from s Commonw 1th Air ‘Iksinlng plan school in Oansde has let s new North Americs-io-Britain flight rec- ord for ferry pilots of eight hours. i0 minutes. The pilot, an Englishman who as farming in Australia. until re- cently, made his flight in a twin- engined Hudson. He took off from "s. North American airport" and seven hours and t0 minutes later crossed the British coast. The former record of eilht hours, as minutes was seltklsst month by airways , (n: New North American, ,$,,*;.t§‘“‘;§,¥{§‘,", sffifilgllii‘ Europe Flight Record m“ ,2}: m“ C. Yates McDaniel L N‘! Bo-(AP) Howytwo FED . —' Australian battalions. r1118!!!» l1!’ -gun nests in the grimly held up an for four day? 8nd ti‘. "'°““;.‘..'°‘ii“ m en - tgnvg. artillglsl’ and d1"- oonioers was told iodsv by Aw!" who cut their “Shift... mess to reach t e r ~ e "There has not been a. more a: founding effort in this war or m- last." declared Australian (liofl- v t. ry Gordon Bennett. himsct a c eran of Gallipo d t two b“ 5 65- on but they were u M! the end as at the a ese Malayan junslee‘. cnemv advance even calm near "“'1 (Continued on Ne! ‘l. col 3? mcrchaiittnart also may‘ Covers Prince Edward mo" &“' fn-nw—\""'"' “""---__..__..._ Island Like the Dew narrows. CANADA, MONDAY, JANUARY 26, B1642 Read by Everybody A F War Situation Last Night J (By Klrke L. Simpson, Associated Press War Analyst) Japan, scvcn weeks after loosing her whirlwind conquest campaign, is mastr-r oi‘ the (‘limit Sea but still accomplice in Russia. as far from her goal as ls her Nazi The goal in both cases h oil, the life blood of modern wru- machines nnd modern industry. The possession or lack of adequate oil resources could prove the ultimate deciding fa nearly all the world in‘ ~ it: ix‘.trr1'y' ' I I Hitler's armies hare itioirrl mut- cior in the conflict that has sucked virrir-x. O O U h 0i tiic continent of Europe with- out striking oil, hls Russian “crusade" started back-peddling while still 1,000 milrs short of the lush wells in the Caucasus that. make the Cas- pian Sch coast a treasure trove. lie has squandered German lives by the hundreds of thousands, vnirnv. i.» nus input-ti Nazi oil rcst-rvcs uith prodigal hand only to be 311d lQTPCdO balkcd far short of his hoped ior Caspian refilling station. ilow decply he has llnuvn upon his all-important reserve is only conjeciuruble; but the ebbing tide in German storage tanks already may spell out for him a grim prediction of ultimate defeat. I I U Japan's China Sea victories hav e been even more swift and stunn- ing in extent than Hitler's march into Russia: and her objective was the sands-cit. The Wvlls of Borneo v..’.. i. iml a prim.‘ rrii lit-Iii thcrc, l'L‘.il.i iur many months, ii ever, for Those liuusurt-ls of feet to oil in the Netherlands Indies are rich the island ui Tarakan. ls in Japan- Fmmhel’ ese hands, but not oil. lt lies thousands oi feet underground, out of the Japanese. pools, over which stand wells de- stroyed by the Netherlanders, are as formidable an obstacle for Hitler's .\r;._.:.rii~:..= tlfxiS mate as arc the th and allied arms and manpower. labor tn b not hope to enjoy free of united na II I i ousand miles and more Hitler still must go to reach Russian or any other oil, miles bristling with Russian It would take months of uninterrupted ore now wells on Tnrakan, months the Japanese invader can- tlon air or even sea h-rassment. U I I ‘that is the judgment of high placed allied officials best informed as to just how effectively the gallant defenders of the Netherlands fully revealed. United Nations tit" task. Must of them lost their The story of how it was sc- hlstory of this war when Air Forces Lash At Japs. A Reported massing for Major land assault at rear of Nipponese lnva B DanicfDe Luce Associa cd Prcss Staff Writer RANGOON, Burma, Jun. 25 (AP)— United Nation forces lashed hard by sir against Japanese posi- tions in southwest Asia. during the week-end and were reported mass- ing for a major land assault at. the rear of Nipponese armies pushing overland toward the allied oustlon of Singapore. A heavy force of RAJ‘. bombers raided Bangkok, capitol of Japan- ese-occupied Thailand, inflicting widespread damage in a strong aer- ial onslaught, while by land Chin- cse troops wcre reported engaged in a. great mass movement in China's southwestern province of Yunnan and along '.I;e Thailand frontier The British command announced a. withdrawal before Japanese push- ing westrvnrd along the Burmese coast on the Gulf of Martaban. but said it was t-aklnc up new positions "scnzcvchere 1n the llloulm-cin scr- tor" 100 miles east of Rangoon. lVlilil-aryr commentators cast. no light on the fate of Motrlmcin lt- self. The Chinese army in Burma was tvrpnrlcrl to h." flPOWlllq into n ma- jm‘ fore» rcclrrcing the numc ml supt-rioriiv f‘lljll_\'(‘d by the Jammi- (‘so in Thailand in the opening of- fonsive. ln addition. unofficial informa- tion was received lPnt the all‘ lure: in Burma is heiuu ronilnuallv rc- inforcorl by lll‘\ ‘r models of fight- crs and bombers. 8,000-vton Italian Ship is captured LONDON. Jan. 25 -iCPl --'I'he British admiralty announced last night that British warshlris. had "intercepted and cnplurczi" lhc 8.- OOO-lon Italian vessel Duchessu 1y- The admiralty communique fol- ws:~~_ “Vvitn reference to their previous statement concerning axis ships rc- porlcd by the Germans to have sailed from Fernando Poo, (Portu- guesc-owncd island off West Cen- tral Africa) the admiralty on- nounces that British warships, dis- patched to make investigations, ave intercepted and captured the MOO-ton Italian ship, Duchessa. D’- Aosta. “The Italian lhlp, Whkli was in difficulty when intercepted, has been taken into s British port." BL 0S OT CANADA ders of Malaya. New Battleship is in Service LONDON, Jan. 25—-(CPl- The 35.000-ion battleship Duke of York, Britain's newest cap- ital rhip. carried Prime Minis- ter Churchill to the United slates and now is in active ser- vice. the Admiralty announced tonight. ‘ Last August Mr. Churchill hmicd the Duke of York was ready for sci-vice when he call- ed the Prince of Wales, later sunk ofi Malaya, “almost the newcst battleship." She was launched in the Clydt- about two years ago by the Queen. It was understood that shipyard mcn worked day and night. shifts to ccmpletc nmilng the bit! battleship. No mention has been made of ithe Jellicoc and Beatty, which wore laid down in i937 for ccm- plctloit in 194i. and it is poss- ible they also arc at sch. Canadian Carrot Supply very short TORONTO, Jan. 25 -_ICP\ -~.Vl. M. Robinson. managing director of I'm: Ontario Fru-ori Dhstribntion Council, sitlzi Saturday the supply of Canadian carrots will be exhaust- ecl within n month. Mr. Robinson said the increasing demands of the army on the pies- cnl. stock together with the rlry growing mason hurl caused the 5110111159. the covcrnmcnt has Deon asked to hilt-r. carrots to be 1m. ported duty irce from the United States, he said. Tea price schedule OTTAWA. Jan. 25—(OP)—A schedule of prices published today in the Canada Gazette showed that maximum retail prices under tea regulations mndc public re- ccntly range from 85 cents to si s and, while maximum prices tfl paid by retailers range from '14 to U cents a pound. $0M FLCIIJR EXBELS IN T u.» .. ,- HE xis Cvgnvoy Gov’t plans Fertilizer ad To Farmers By R. K. Carnegie Canadian Press Staff Vvriier OTTAWA. Jan. 25 -(CPI -‘i‘h" cabinet. it was learned tori-av ha. before it a proponal in ‘. Ca- nadian farmers to nui- I incurred fertillzmrs on t lion that use of fertilzzcrs 0 to some extent, offset labor shortage on the farms. The proposal is llllflCffillhtl ior the goveriitncnt to as‘ nrucli the same‘ lllfllllbi‘? .t: Sisiillg in providing food 1m can as‘ drains for farmers of central and eastern Canada. First intimation that the fertili- zcr proposal was in mirvl cam»? from Acrrictrltur" '\'lin‘.<t.~t~ (‘m about n month .1 .0 w! t meeting of livestock bi possibly more could b» awmnplrsn- ed to increase farm producflon by greater use of iertllimrs than by putting more Pclp on the farms Departmental officials since have made a canvass of the amount of fertilizers available and it is esti- mated that a largo part of eastern and central Canada could be sup~ plied. The proposal is understood to be that the government set s- side $1,000,000 to meet transpo-"a- tion costs or moving the fcrfiliz from the plants to farms. The argument ls tlwt ‘f l0 acre» under plentiful fertilization cou‘d be made to produce what l5 ares previously did, it would require lea". farm help to till the reduced acre- age with equal results. “We are not by arav means sure how long the demand ‘rom Britain for more foodstuffs will keen up," one official told The Canadian Press. “With the Unite-l States headed for a ble wheat surplus and the- South American cntmlrlcs. ready to hell) out the Albcs. the pressure on Canada for food from the Unli- ed Klnnrlcm and other countrk“ may soon ease up, oven before tho war is over. "Accordingly it would not be wise to put too much iabm‘ on the Moms where at some future date they would not b.“ able to earn a lll'll’l,’!, and crcato n labor problem" Evgry error-t. ntould bc made to keep people on the farms. Damm- the use of fertilizers thcre would still be s. shortage of farm heir»; particularly women, this offiwr. said. Yo be ' in News Briefs 25——t.\P)-— Sir Stafford Cripps, returning LONDON, J4m- ffqm 13 months as Britain's ambassador to Moscow, predict- t-d Saturday that war between Russia. and Japan is inevitable and said that thc ltcd arm!’ l!‘ confident of crushing Germany by next fall and winter. wnsrrrucrr6r. arm. 25—-rA-P>-~ rhv Utiitutl Status nu~ tlcparl- mun‘. illlllOllllCCfl torilgl Jlfll- ti"? additional enemy transports and possibly one other hurl brcn allllk in Muscassar Straits, The an- nounccmctit raised to at least . swvcu the number of vcmrlfl Sunk m. Umtrd stairs rlcslrcyers and z-rll-scrs in n suit cng. ' \\‘~'l‘~ tin cncmy WELLINGTON, mm. 25- (CPj-Prlme Minister Peter Fraser said today that 50w Zra- lllllil hurl received n “hrarir-n- in; response“ to pic-as in titt- Llniictl sum-s uml Britain don" nirl in tho Pacific u-itr. 'llns nus the first official disclosure that New Zcaland had _]0lll(‘(l Australia in such appeals. lifter. a is rnuus N azi Winter Weighed in tiic iialanr-c moans tia- guud may uifsct thr: n-vii recorded in the book of judgment. Maxims OFA MERE MAN HIT Fkoltfsrn mun Anuulll hlilllvrlpllilti Délnvn-li, ily lllnii: $5.4m l‘ H. I-. ‘d-DU} Cilllnllls unit l h $5.00 I8 Ship? Sunk Gr Damaged in 48-hour Severest blmgf War Battle t7eztli Nipponese by United States crud Dutch Naval and “For SOU'l'll\\‘bI5'l‘ PACIFIC HEAD- QUAHLL 01-‘ THE UNITED NATIONS ON JAVA, N E. L, Jan. z5-<AP1- Unzted States and Netherlands air and naval forces, strrki u with w-ortlniated fury for H1011’ 1mm 4H horns at u huge Jap- uncsre cxpcduion threading through Nlacassur" Strait, have sunk damaged 10 ships and dealt the severest blows of the war to the invaders. official and authorita- 0 r1 - tivc reports stud today. c those almost continuous hoxvcver, the Japanese ' ‘ ‘ced three new landings in the outer islands protecting Aus- tralia anrl Java, the nerve centre oi the Netherlands East indies, and _t.helr bombers have ranged far and wide in attacks which indicate imminent effort. to penetrate fur- ther the south seas The Netherlands announced the Japanese had put forces ashore at the east coast Borneo port of Balik Papnn, facing Macassnr strait, where they were meeting with strong resistance from a Netherlands force fighting amidst the blackened and tangled ruins of oil refineries and wells which had been ordered destroyed. This invasion, which brought the Japanese within 500 miles o! the main lirdics naval and air base at Soerabiua on Java, was accom- panied by nnot-hcr at Keuclari, on the soilthcuslcrn tip of the Cclebes, more than 400 miles to the east of Balik Papan. Simultanrouslv, an Australian communique announced the Jiip. ancse occupation of Kavieng. in New Irclantl, across the Coral Sea from the Australian sub-confln. ant. Netherlands airmen scored the newest of the blmvs upon the bad- (Continued on page '7, Col 6) Two dead from Poison in (iuebec BICKINGHAM, Quc. Jun. 25 - cr= _ . be - -" . s. a tonight in?’ gdiolllmtlllrcdql p01 Ce Alfie 93ml" . Q (i-anrlt: of .\ . Talbert Bias‘ of‘ églntngilg"‘rqgmsiyll,’l "l and Solomon Buauregartl, 4G. occurred hcre Friday and day. Coroner W. J. Costello said 1i mr-s was "absolutely no doubt" that poison cnuscrl both deaths. and that it was believed to be stryxch- nine. An inqursl. was opened lost. mph: but it was ndjorlrncd before evi- dence was taken to next W-erlncs- day when the results of an autopsy . blt l. perfnrmcrl b_v HT. J M. Ron: l motif." "uul pxpcrt of the Q. - alto gcncralZ-i dcpartmru i1.“ n nimble. Crews Of Th_re—e_ (‘orvettes “Adopted” 'i‘()it()\"i‘(), Jan. ‘l (‘Pl- 'i‘lu- Maritime l'|‘li\'llli'T‘ Assoc- iation ui ‘furuuio has "adopted" tlu- trous- ni tirroc (‘nnatlinn corvette-s, tho liulifrtx, Frederic- ton and iluirlottotntvn. and will supjilv thorn regularly with rvurnt r-litthirlu, (‘l-‘Zilflfllifg and nthcr comforts. Thc hsociation at a mot-ting a. urday said cnrli oi‘ the ships will be supplied with a large box each montl|_ Line Smashed By Reds Weather - lmrdcned R advance further in MOSCOW. Jan. 26~<bimdnyi~ Hltlers winter line has been vir- tually wiped out from end to end and mopping up o rations are progressing rapidly n a vast ri- nnglo sourlttrccst. of Moscow from tho flPCit cf Smolrnsk l0 Kurslr, the Russians reported early today. An early morning communique announced that Soviet forces driv- ing rwstwurd had recaptured Nol- idowv. on the Moscow-Rigs railroad 170 miles northwest of the capital. Weather-hardened Red troops. making the most of the severest winter conditions experienced b- rntinental Euro in many a de- cade, were dcc nred furlhcr interrupted advance. Rrhulan sources operations were in fuli swing the ores. east to have occupied 54 additional pop- ulated centres in their great un- said clean-up In OT I rlllrlflllfi LlflO trssian lh-oops bitter cold. - rurmlir: ll.*.l‘ '.ll(‘ vi.-.t;ri_v or Suici- cruk. heretofore ll lcrs lll u headquarters to Orci and Kt . The ltioscnv magical and sci "rm; .. , - around Till-J, 200 mil-gs tho capital. have horn ircul 11f G'~rmz\u~." "it ~ hula said. Tiny l‘(‘b\~‘{i '- Kaliirm srxgror. SK) tmlr-s north-u ' of Nlosccw, similarly is coins purl;- SWBYlWAfls. of Russian fiflfllSllT‘ alrrirriv have swept far do‘. of firm." pnnzrs and tho (wrtnflllf- ~._.(, sum m be t.il ti‘. run bclnrr’ ~,. [rt-d irrvrs. The Soviet inform- ation bureau said that from Jau- 18-22 a total of cs4 inhabited plows were liberated. ‘The wrrntc cold penetrating all (q-njfl-‘y Etpgyi PXTliCIfl to the Crimea but the pictum thfre W61 obscrue. SIIPIYYIWR can be bzorttlrnist o. for record, . pvccpf in rvticruc ' lion Aloitrinl‘ re 3, m MO81- ittustraiia ilemanris voice in War Councils MELBOURNE. Jan. “iii — iM0flll1ll/l—tCl'; — lmpr-rilicrl Australia delivered a new ric- mand on London today for a direct voice in imperial war councils as the Japanese, up- pnrently in steadily rising strength, expanded footlmlrls on Australian islands against the Commonwealth's outnum- bered defenders. The war cabinet decided on immediate full mobilization of militia and homo defence ior- ces and acceleration of the rilll- up of new prrsnnnt-l, immod- iutc uonsitieratlon oi i'uli ap- plication oi’ air ruiti precau- tiong and a complete coastal blackout and the drafting of concise orders to all military commanders to apply a scarcit- od-carth policy in any area where Australian lorrvs arc withdrawn. The cabinet which had sat through tho week end followed up its second appeal to London and Washington-ior planes and ships to support lis own murshallcri fighting porn-r now that invasion has hit Aus- tralian Sll0fBS-~\l‘llll n frank communication to Primc Min- ister Churchill. The message, reflecting the urgency Australia. repeatedly has stressed in appeals for llillp in her st-li-rloitrncv, con- iarncd two points-first, a. st-rons request for the immed- iate formation oi’ an empire war council in London and, second, a cull for an allied war council to direct basic strategy 1n the Pacific. WANT SPEECHES TTEC-ORDEU hONDONm t Cl’ Edg .r Crim- .‘.i P Shove is {Ha ONLY tunic. THAT Kim's UP AND uevta OMEB 00w» - ,9 it) Qfig; \/® ‘t .16 1 l'l't‘s‘.~ i tCanzuliar\ TOll17-N'FO. and inuximuzrt l‘ alwru ll "m > H m i nut the Prturw Prci-Jl > n OSTON. lax‘. ‘.5 ill“ for oiulrtcr llmllll! mm‘. 5011' lwv l-l "lls ll"rl I. I‘ urirl l1ll= RT- Srm “ urrri rims " T20. m0 l i l’? a n: rmn~r~r< li-Sv 1R nuznf. ~ mt- or than Charlottetown. BURDEN - (‘APE ‘THIUIENTINE SERVICE Leave Bordon 9.25 A M Hi0 PM. LeavIetCape Tormentlne li.00 AM