iT MAXIM] ‘ova near M... rf :1 “aaslgltanzgafisfiwlie IO to CHARLOTTETOWIQ‘ CANADA, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY ZZZ/i’ ThelPeoplesaper "Rfr" w“ r-w-w-m’ ""“---_...___,_ Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Llancl Delegation Has Conference With ‘Prime Minister King OTTAWA. Jan. 0 - (C?) -- Premier J. Walter Jones of Prince Edward Island anda delegation fromhisgovernmentconierred with Prime Minister Mackenzie King and members of the Federal Gov- ernment on their transportation problem today. Premier Jones and nis group, concerned about the ferry serv- ice batween the Island and the mslnland. had a preliminary meet- ing III: s anaport Minister Mlchaud and later visited the Prime Minister's office where they were received by Mr. King, Finance Minhc Ilsley, Mr. Michaud and Justice Minister St. Laurent. Registration For Family Allowances To Begin il-Bnat Warfare Flared Again ' During December LONDON, Jan. 0 -(0Pl — ‘U- boar warifarc "liared into renewed activity" "durins I u. was reported Wnllnt 1n a statement wnion described the increased ac- tivity by uiennar. submarines as "but anothe index that the Eur- opean war 1s far from over." The! said Allied s of mer- chant shipping increased. but das- plte the losses “the United Nations are regularly continuing to sumly their e armies over the world, enabling them tnnaeslst the lQfill \- “i ' e We cona enenw undersea.- t widely- aerparated parts oi the world." the $3131? iolnt statement oi Prime er Churchill and President Roosevelt said. ‘The announcement of the re- cent landing of enemy agents from a. U-iboat on the Maine coast is yet another indication that the menace of Germany's undersea fleet 1g real and continuing." - Increased U-boat activity had been forecast by the President and Prime Minister ir. their jclnt mo... men} on submarines and anti-sub- actions during November. BIIK SALARY INCREASES SAINT JOHN. N.B.. Jan. 0 - (C?) - Hfteen-dollar-a-nionth Increases in wages and salaries oi civic loyees were r uesled by the mpovees in a pettlon read will! at a City Council meeting. ‘Ihe matter was referred to thc committee on bud ets. Members of the Plre and lice Depart- ments —- in a se arate category- "N Mt include in the , ‘ltlon. Coming Events "Notice: -- N near. o_. c, cram, "luring live and creased pour. HY. Pa _ a... o.’.’i’i“s.§‘.’.”..5“fii‘f.' “lfi-i-‘ir. " rains dressed a are... Wallitan d: Boyle. o“ 1-9.; unloading car 1- 10-11. In P. E.I. OTTAWA, Jan. 0 - (OP) Ri-‘Iistration for benefits under the ismlly allowances bill will begin in Prince Edward Island in ad- vanoe oi other provinces. Health Mlhlltcr Claxton said today dur- lng an address to the l‘ “ Club. Mr. Claxton told his audience, which included Prime Minister Mackenzie King and Premier, J. Walter Jones of Prince Edward Island. that Canada's smallest province had been selected for the start of registration t0 provide ex- rience which could be used dur- ng registration in the larger pro- vinces. There was a wide discrepancy in the amounts the provinces contri- buted toward the “ 1 income. but he said that in the case oi Que . taxes collected there "would more than pay the cost" o1, familv allowances in that pro- " 09-. , . .. . ‘Ontario’ and British Columbia would have to contribute to the support oi the scheme in the thin- ly populated Prairie and Maritime Provinces. The Maritirnes contributed 3.0 per cent of the national income and would receive l0 per cent un- der the family allowance bill. The Prairie Provinces contributed 6.13 per cent and would receive i0: British Columbia u ‘ te 7.1 per ceht and would receive six per cent; Ontario contributed 48 per cent and would receive 82 per cent; Quebec contributed 34.5 per cent and would receive 32. TO BEGIN JULY l Payment of the family allow- ances ranging from s5 to $8 for children up to the age of l6 is scheduled to begin July 1. "Pami allowances will be a great step forward." said Mr. Clax- tcn. They would help to bring about the most equitable distri- bution oi the national income. The 30 countries which now were paying family allowances had round that the benefits to the health and welfare of children were "enormous." The additional costs for health would not prove a net burden to the Canadian people. Present cati- inates of time cost, of medical ser- vices paid yearl by the Canadian people was 821000.000. In addi- tion, the number of days through illness amounted to B - 000,000 or a loss of $250,000,000 in productive power. “We aim to reduce the number of days lost through illness. post.- l gone mortality and add to tlhe bro- uizétive power of our people." he madly P yniiiimrgiac: Co“ u --————" . . . o, _ i-s-ai. Actor Acquitted On "Nsaerv m m“ lomwaonwaufio, Manslaughter Charge . ‘IO-ll DOS ANOELEB. Jlh. 9 - (AP) opium“ —" Barry Pitsgerald. M. Irish ‘actor 'sale at Alllgliirsanqicm 7”‘ who pla ed the gart of the el- im, n ' hm‘ dflly p eat in " cinl M Way." __ was acquitted today‘ o man- ‘£10m’ V6123? 8.1L wean.“ zrlauugzrtfwcidhairges ar ing from a . tllry . q; M. - v y. _ Judge William R. MK - '.'“°" °"""“-°‘1'-" ‘°""- m: "‘§...“.‘“"‘.°."".‘ i; o5 o n era or an auigiiiiiniii. linsniéyslimvfii ggamd-kéggn “mighty! office for not _ ' . M "kullln" 1 10m- Mrs. Mary rrar. 87, was struck “flow” n Mum“ m,“ and killed last h l5 while night or Road _ ‘°' 01mg’ start“; sso ...‘l'....“3'sr’l”.lr m"- 1-10-11. “A l time is d t cm with‘? i" c llllblcas ‘w. Ins am. ' ‘ifi-iif "Notice -Ioa h g A]. ma!‘ ‘Phi-trades’. nib. ‘igni- noon until risioig“ PM“ "m" an" . .0. Green and A. C. . 1. Ill-ii. "*7"? "III bl tod and 0min? mimics l" to the new motive crossing Hollywood Boulevard. Develop Gas Turbine For Ship Propulsion WABHINGION, Jan. 9 — (AP) Aygas turbine ia being developed as.a means of ship propulsion, thc United States Mariirne Commls sion disclosed today. It crlbed as "inherently ficisnt." than steam, but experim- ents have not ‘one far enough to determine whet sr a ” _ . power might near IIINIIO. be in prospect in the Mrs. Bing Crosby ~ Ill In Hospital HOLLYWOOD. Jan. 0 -- (AP) — Mrs. Din’ wt: , the former Dix- ‘Strikc Tics lip Transport In 3 B. C. Bities m; isabor Minister Mitchell Coils For Strikers To Return To Work. ' VANCOUVER, Jan. 9 — (GP) — Citizens of three Pacific coast cities - Vancouver. Victoria and New Westrnlnster—used shanks mare, rode bicycles, taxis, hitch- hlked to and from work today ai- ter 2,700 street railwayrnen and bus "drivers went on strike for inweased wages and Improved working conditions. Weather conditions were warm and dry and no tieup of bus- iness and industry was reported. Ninety per cent oi workers in essential ‘ and. services were estimated to be at work in the three centres. The strike followed refusal of the National War Labor Board to grant wage increase of from 12 1-2 to 2B 1-2 cents an hour and a ruling wiping out a 1-2 cents increase granted by the British Columbia War Labor Board members of the Street Railway- men‘s Union (AP L.) In Ottawa Labor Minister Mit- nhell said the strike was "defini- tely illegal", and speculation was current that the Government. as in the Montreal tramways strike. would appoint controllers to take over the transportation system in the coast cities. Extra gasoline rations were granted to essential workers by the Federal Department of Mun- itions and Supply. One shipyard ln Vancouver re- ported that rnore employees arri- ved at work today than on an a- verage Saturday. an absentee day The navy went into the trans- flar. .tlon.\>.t191n¢55. in.) .8 B C. cap tal. Special routes ere map- ped out and reguir truck-passen- ger services operated throughout the city. No indication was given hou long the strike would continue and there was no signs from Ottawa of what immediate action the Federal Government planned. Bracken Impressedl By Arrangements For Oanadians In Paris PARIS, Jan. 9—-(CP Cable)- John Bracken today expraased himself as “greatly impressed’ by arrangements in Paris for the reception and entertainment oi Canadian troops back on leave from the fighting fronts. The former Manitoba Premier who now is National Leader of the Progressive Conservative ‘Party spent the afternoon touring hot- e-ls, rest centres and clubs main- tsined for troops. He spent the evening with Mai-Gen. Georges P. Vanier, Canadian Ambassador. Mr. Bracken, who came Paris today from Brussels, will go back to Britain from here and then proceed to the Mediterranean theatre to see Canadian forces in The P resslve Conservative Leader sai he was interested mainly in seeing how Dominion trcom are faring but secondly he was exploring ways and means of increasing trade and cultural relations with Britain. Belgium. France and other countries on his itinerary. - F. ll. it. Presents New Budget To ll. S. ilongress By C. B. BLACKBURN WASHINGTON. Jan. 0 -— (U?) A budget which contemplates the ncceslty of vsflfll w" 7°‘ n ‘°",‘.“':2,"‘é' .‘.5..'i‘°l'..‘i‘:.“.f;‘ '22 n e on trident Roosevelt who asked fol‘ 010.000.000.000 for war purposes and 813.000.000.000 ior clvil government 'I'hese appropriations are for the flgggl year which ends June so. i040. and are about 011.000.000.000 short of the $100,000,000 estimated needs for the current fiscal year in “time last budset- , a K .. n! Mjgnnistratl u determinat- iiir‘: that ‘the Unmd States shall m“. ‘ my] part in international res nsibllltv for the Pa!“ and we (are of the world in the post- wgcfi-ald lend-lease and relief ex- pgndhuru, which take about one sixth of the war lfPPWTlllhIl. would continue until ail’ the galor- ' Ills! 15 III. pl i! 1A0 f ml, taken to , d terw 1h ‘wit: a without black miii hoapltalo this afterruir luffer- {,',','“,,"}§,“°¢°'.','.|.?“.ns rel-bun..- m‘ "0- , ngJour pigs from a ruplratory infection. "on, » m“ V. “P009 this l1 be fire Crosby. Bug's brothel‘. An indication of practical .. u‘? gnmfllflhmmvéfllll thll ans m hgiiéliémg: sing for international co- t - \'_—.:-—.:=.':_.-.—‘ >. 1 ' -~—— i-lo-I. in an saysm teat. (Continued on pm l. 00L 1i BINDING War.‘ Situationfllfias-lfikigm By KIRKE L. SIMPSON r‘ (Associated Press war Analyst.) Invasion of the big Island of Luzon on the American real back In the Pacific was theinext essential stop In the campaign to carry the fight to the foe relentlessly. Whatever is charted beyond that point, Luann is the key to the whole western Pacific-China Sea strategic picture. Announcement of landings on the capital island of the Philippines is a culminating step In the effort to bridge the Pacific and come (o close grips with Japan. That the campaign to retake Luzon has reached its final pluses many months earlier than was deemed possible in Washington only a year or less ago seems beyond dispute. In the light of the type of Japanese resistance encountered In the advance up from New Guinea. thereon-r be no swift and decisive re- suits even after the landing In force on the big island. The war with Germany is chased as a war of attrition. However bitterly and skillfully German troops fight. drlven to bay they ulti- lllllflly as the ' thus far ‘ w ashore have not. The war in the Pacific has been a war of extermination so far. The tslflulll America estimates on Japanese casualties on Leyte or in the attempts to reinforce It run to the neighborhood of 120,000 as against less than 500 prisoners taken. Nor was it disclosed whether that handful of living enemies taken consisted of wounded or un- wounded. It is futile to attempt to estimate 1n advance how long lt ‘might take to effect the conquest of Luzon. Japanese fugitives still lurk In the wild recesses of Guam, even of Guadalcanal. as well as on some other islands wholly In Allied hands. fly-passed garrisons on enemy- held islands left behind 1n the advance have given no sign of surrender utterly hopeless as is their situation. With American landings on Luzon 1n progress. the grimrnest ea- t” termination fight of the war in the Pacific is beginning only now. f TRUE BILL FOUND IN MURDER CHARGE IN SUPREME COURT International At A. Glance- By The Canadian Press PHILIPPINES U. S. Army forces land on Luzon 1s- Iand In Lirigayen Gulf; R00- sbip convoy escorted by power- ful array of warships. including Australian squadron; landings on l5-ruilc front reported lightly opposed. PACIFIC AERIAL — Japanese lose of 79 planes. two destroyers, midget submarine, other vessels in attack on Luzon convoy; ‘i3 Japanese rlhlps sfllnk or- damaged. 282 planes destroyed or dam- aged during three days of car- rler-bome attacks on Luzon- !‘ “kfnawa area: super forts hit Formosa and Tokyo war industries. BURMA -- Indian troops oc- cupy Shwebo. 45 miles north of Mandalay. WESTERN FRONT-Germans shifting armor in Ardennes sali- ent as Brltish 2nd. U. S. 1st Armies advance on west and north sides; main enemy supply A true bill in the case of Florence Elizabeth McNelll. Charlottetown, charged with the murder oi her titrsband William (i-tyani McNeill, was found by t-hc Grand Jury yes- terday at the opening sitting of the January term oi the Supreme Court. aC-hiei Justice ‘Ilhane A. Oamipibell presided. GR. Holmes Gm rcpresentedthe Attorney-General. -The Grarid Jury brought in a true bill agftirst Josiah Smth on an indictment oi assault occasion- ing actual bodily harm. ‘The Grand Jury also reported on the results of its inspection o1 the Queens County Jail. Provincial Infirmary and Falconwood Hos- pital. Conditions in all three in- stitutions were found w be clean but the jurors recommended that neiw dishes and cocking utensil; be procured immediately ior thc Jail. The staffs oi both IrJir-mary and Halconwood were being overworked» the report stated. and it reoom mended that. a suitable staif house for the nurses and other attend- ant; at Falconwood be ermtcd. ‘line Grand Jurors were: lcvwn, foreman. James E. Harris. Charlottetown. William J. l-Iennessey, Charlotte- town. L/smuel MacKinnon, Hlghfleld. Patrid: McTasue. Charlottetown. route threatened: German at- B n tacks in Alsace dwlndlc. rmw" Howau" Es" “W” y ‘ RUSS“); _ 50,1" “mo,” James Carragher, Charlottetown. Lancli McKinnon, Canoe Cove. Grover C. Gillls. Orwell Cove. Harry Cudmore, Charlottetown. Mamror-d Beer, Hamipton. James Power. Charlottetown. A written judgement was deliv- cred by the Chief Justice in the case of the King. respondent. vs. Norman H. Richards, appellant, an appeal ircm a Judgement by Stip- endlary Magistrate Joseph _W. MacDcnuld at. Smarts on Oct. 1B. The Bipfiflllkflt had been charged with (l) purchasing rationed food without. coupons. 42> selling rationed food without coupons, and (3) sell- ing sugar at a higher price than was reasons-bile or just, nrgd [rad been fined $450. and ordered to pay costs of $3.26 incurred by 0.0 Scott, investigator for the Wartime. Prices and 'I‘rade Board. In lieu of payment the accused vls to serve six months in jail. The Chief Justice fined thc ap- pellant $200. or. thc first charge, or three months in Jail; e50. on lihe second charge or one month in loll; and $50. or one month on the third charge. making a total of $800. or five months 1n Jail. The costs ordered by the magistrate Wore disallowed and the Chief Justice ruled that "the applicant will have acalnst the Prosecutor the cgleneral coats of the afpplioation whi , after allowing or mo“ limes on which the applicant was unwvoeseiul. lfc hereby fixed at £60." GR. Holmcs___and D.O. icifiliainuipigwlii. coil." ' within fan‘: miles of Komarom north of Danube; control morc than half of Ihrdapest as Ger- man relief attempts apparently collapse. ITALIAN — Germans digging in for stand against Canadians south of Reno River near Adriatic. Third Bar To 0.8.0. LONDON. Jan. 9 — (OP-Reu- ters)~—Award of a third bar to the Dlstinguslhod Service Order. for the first time in the R. A. It. to Wins Cmdr. James Brian Tait. leader of three occasions oi at- tacks on tlhe German battleship Tirpltz, was announced ‘ht. This distinction is rare, having occurred only two or three times in the Navy and not at all so far in the Army. Paris 1027.555‘ Suspended For Month PARIS. Jan. 0 - (CF-Reuters) The daily newspaper France Solr. one oi the eldest of the resistance newspapers has been suspended by the Minister of War for a month. because it came out with blank spaces indicating where cuts had been made by the censor. .___.__ Finest Quality 5 c '11s s. COFFEE ,_ ‘Ihotnas B. Rogers, Charlotte- Llondo ry Oanlda with can (on r ,1 10, 1945 6 LAND IN FORCE 0N LUZON IS 800-5 ‘Island Airman Gets ll. F. M. _.___ orrawa, Jan. 9 —(CP) ——Alr Force Headquarters announced to. night the award of six Distinguished Flying Crosses and one Distin- Blli-ihéd Nyind Medal to members of the R. CA F serving overseas, Recipient of the or‘ M. was announced In I-"lt Sgt 31"?! wllllh. Wilmot Valley, Enemy Still Pulling Out 0f Tip 0f Belgium Salient PARIS, Jan. 9 —- (C?) -— Bri- tish 2nd Army forces hammering against the western nose of the German salient driven into Belgium today met weak oppositi for the second straight day, the Germans withdrawing nearly a mile south of the Hotton-Marche sector. British infantry took the village of Checux. five mllts east of Marche. and cleared the entire Nalaumont Forest nearby. Meanwhile United States infan- try and tanks drove through a fierce blizzard to within less than three miles of the Germans’ last. main supply and escape highway in the salient and tonight Field Marshal Von Rundstedt was re- ported hurriedly shuttling armor- er forces from the Bastogne area to meet the threat to the vital road. Should the powerful American thrust from the northern waist oi the bulge sever the Houiiallze- St. Vlth Highway. all German for- ces in the western half of the sal- ient would be placed in a precarious posltion—perhnps faced with a isecond Falalse disaster. A field dispatch from Roger Greene. Associated Press War Correcvxandent. tongll‘: declared that "the next l2 tn 24 hours may provide the tumlng point in the great battle that began Dec. l6 1.61m Von Rundstedt launched his surprise blow.“ The iorc threaten- .43 Butter Stocks In Further Decline OTTAWA, Jan. 0 — (OP) - A decline of nearly 4,000,000 (ands 1n creamery butter producton in December as corn with Nov- ember will not feet the present butter ration oi about six ounces a person weekly, it was learned today. The Prices Board moun- ced a reduction in the ration from seven ounces to about six in Dec- ember “to make consumption meet supplies" during the winter months of low production. P. E. I. Soldiers 0n Hospital Ship HALIFAX. Jan. m-(CIN-Eager for their homecoming after facing the enemy on land. sea and air, about 500 Canadian servicemen dis- embarked today from the British Hospital Silo Llnndovery Castle. and most of them started for home tonight aboard hospital trains. PEJ. soldiers aboard 1n- cludc Pte. L.J. Gallant, Surn- nserslde; PM. OJ Gallant, Urbarwlllo: Gflr. 3.1. Larkin, St Peter's lay, Pie III MacDonald. Coleman: Pte M Rogers. Alma, G G Cur- rle, All: Scores of the lrrvaiided fighters.‘ lintnd the nib d the brighmly-| , cralt roared hellos to Can- adg as firs Handover-y Castle nosedi m: to the pierslde in s drinifng‘ rain. In high spirits deqslte their: wounds-many of them had losti limbs -— they enohanged banter. with crowd; on the quay. i sin-wvors oi the land fighting in; I'll! and on the Western K011i‘ bulked hea/viest in the moivementi In Ill. there were are men. land or lnvaltdad home MI. A Ifllll nrunber d N..C.A F fliorg and Royal Canadian Navy men were in the continsent. crossed m, Aflgntk: on the ve Castle‘: first trlD i0 war casualties Bo- rnaflng this trip, the British Swarm . Jan. 10-(Wednesday)—(AP)._ In Grey North which nltcst. to V501 11nd been encased in evan- of the C. C F. to "atlas oasualtie, from the Medi- Orrunean fronts and from France wecklesa partisan tactics.“ said the lstatement, MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN An lnsag . real, but EJmTIFIs-fiiiiiiasuu very real. I "l". $4.00; other Prnvlncu l: U.S.A. 85.00. sllblflllitlon Delivered. 85.00. PAGss ‘ By JAMES uorcnseiis SOUTHWESI PACIFIC ADVANCE (IOMMANI), l United States 6th Army ‘éoogs ‘fir-om an HOG-ship convoy landed with Gen. Douglas L“; f’ ur Tuesday on Luzon Island, seizing four beach. ea s 4i Llngayen Gulf within 120 miles of Manila. (powered by salvoes of bombarding battleships and ex- llifllllng bombs of carrier and land planes which drove the cnfimysi main forces inland, they got ashore on the south iln _ cast sides of Lingayen at 9:30 a.m. against light op- position. An Australian naval squadron operated with d... [Tuit- ed States iih Fleet in support of the big operation. Within two hours after the first. transports had dlssorsed the s01- dlers to landing boats, following n dawn shelling of the areas, Gen. MacArthur was back on the island where he fought losing battles during the opening phases of the Pacific war. The way for this showdown fight for all thc Philippines alas payed by a multiplicity o; “fly- shlps and aerial attacks. These included the destruction 01' dani- age of 862 enemy planes and the sinking or damaging of '73 ships durin three days o carrier-based assauts on Luzon. Formosa and Okinawa. in the Ryukyu chain. 511611081" Davis. Associated Press war correspondent aboard a flog- ship, said huge stores of equip- ment, guns and armor already have been put ashore for the drive toward Manila down territory suited for mechanized war. Deep penetrations inland by some of the landing forces a1- ready have been made, Davis said. (In a shortrvavc broadcast directl from Luzon. George Thomas Pos-i ter oi NBC said the ‘IO-mlle-longi convoy reached the gulf without] the loss of a single soldier. (He said 50 Der cent more troops went ashore in the first wave man landed at Leyte. The waves of mcn sent in at Leyte were elements of four divisions.) _ Covered by withering warship and aerial attacks. the troops suc- in n5." Rescued In Icy Strait MONCTON. N. 5.. Jan. 9—' ‘CPI —- Eben MzcLecd 0f Char- lottetown. travelling to Halifax on the Northurnberland Strait Carfcrnv, fcll into the icy Strait today bu; was rescued by a Mill's crew 15 minutes later. MacLecd was in a weakened condition when pulled into the rescue boat. l-Ie was revive! aboard the ferry, The Isl ’ was climbing is. ladder to hc able to be one of the first to go ashore when the furry docked. In some way Ire slipped and fell overboard. drop- pins about 20 feet. When -It was discovered he was clinging to a piece lcc. the. ship had proceeded aboui a half‘ mile. Capt. Jay. 1n command 01' the ferry. instantly reversed his engines and backed toward the man. It took 9 minutes for the cessflully opened an operation improvised rescue crew to unhat- whlch todays communique said ten_ their lifeboat and launch it. closed the backdoor to Japan's amid thi- 1'"- fiocs- Once in the water. 11 was u. supplv lines to the East Indies _ short time before the nun wrs and brou~ht the decisive bRUIGII‘. the southwest Pacific close at hauled Ibfllrd- hand. i-"ww The Luzon amphibious move- REGINA. Jan. 0 -—- iCP‘ - Some $100,000 wortlr of furs fro Saskatchewan traplmes and fu ranches were changing hands io- ciay at the first fur sale of tlvr Provincial Fur Marketing Scrvir-a here. Dealers from New York, Clu- cago and Montreal attended. mem; probably was the most aud- acious and risky of the chm-v southwest Pacific campaign. involved the movement of 1R1‘ forces under constant enemy ob- servation and thus open to con- certed air attacks. r 0.. A Lot-ta" London Paper us NEVER (.11 40o i Expects Nazis To i 0...», Just’ Docs - an‘ we snooty v-Blllllil ". s. I B; DMQTED . -- i i Gino or n’ LONDON, Jan. 10 - (Wodnes-i i day) - (C?) -—- The Germans will‘ V-bomb the United States to help hani-iprcssed Japan, the London Daily Express said today- Declarlng that the sea-air war irad gone as badly for Ja-psn as; ~ the land-air war had for Gennany.‘ / the Express pointed out: , “Ja-pan, had done her partner a‘ great service. She has drawn to‘ the Pacific the naval strength of‘ Britain fls well as America. In. Burma and North India alone she‘ _ keeps an Allied Army of 2.0000001 i men engaged. ‘ I "Now Japan looks for German, hci-p. A V-bhot- is thc may it": Germany can offer at this lime. The news-pauper stated that the Germans also want to show off their new terror weapon; and would bcmb the United States "for mal- ice and vanity" as well as to help the Japanese. rmrmoaonoozcsl. sernvrclll. .Q‘w\--l~O_ Jun, 9 -—- (LP: - Mlnimum and maximum tcmfm" cturcs: Vancouver 40. 52; Edmon- mn 1o. 2a; Regina s. 1s: Wlnnlvca .238. zero: Toronto zero 4; Ottawa .13, 13; Montreal i4, 16: Quebec 1i, ‘:3: Saint John 20: Moncton 20. riflllihX 27. 33; Charlottetown _6. .0 LOWER ST. LAWRENCE AND LAKE ST JOHN: Fresh wind! generally fair and decidedly C010- . BAY CHALBUR AND MARITIIME FRDVINCES.‘ Fresh winds partly cloudy nu. colder with snowflurrlcs. _ NORTH SHORE: Fresh to among winds cloudy and colder with oc- casional snow over cast P0791011 iglgzh itigf itlziésoénorninz 950 cng a . . “Sun sets this afternoon Vat 5.21’! rind rises tctnorrorv marnmli at 8.37. _.'a._..-..... Laboritas Against 0. 0. F. Nomination TORONTO. Jan. B ICPJ The national executive committee of the Labor-Progressive Party today issued a statement an- nouncing it had decided to release local party organizations in Fed- cral ridlngs represented by C. C. F‘. members from a farmer decis- ion not. to nominate Labor-Pro- DAILY All! SERVICE Charlottetown — Summer-side — Mont-ton Charlottetown 7 AM lLléyvAefMl 515 PM . .1 . gresslve candidates in those con- Arrives Charlottetown 12 i5 P M stituencles. ~ 5.45 PM. 7.30 PM. "'I‘he decision of the C C. l". SUNDAY SERVICE Leave Charlottetown 11.80 A.M d A P. M. “Arrive Charlottetown 2 P. P and 5.45 P. M. CI-IAIILOTTIITOWN - NE GLASGOW (Daily except Sunday) Lsavo Charlottetown i P. M. Arrive Charlottetown l.” PM. to contest Grey North and thus create the danger that n Tory might defeat the minister in charge of our military effort. Gen. McNaughton. is the latest of a series of statements and actions the determination continue its