MAXIMS 0P L I !R_~ MERE MAN ‘“ w, l; not n cup to be drained but , 'mel to lle filled- . __ ‘ , I‘ OQI lLZi'-"."'3'-"Ju‘$."i»'.1‘§.l.v'°uo "‘ Targets-ore, 0n 400-mile Front, report " Fierce Fighting In Kalinin Area Russians rep01T-1-68 Axis Tanks destroyed and 14,000 German Officers and Men killed in battle. wNDON, lllay 1-ll=‘rlduy)—{CP)-A Russian tank brigade fight- u the Kalinin frollt has destroyed 16B Axis tank: and uulhllated A“ rt t m fl h“ d 2:: tt02ge0£i§silswfl:m“glfll ln fierce fighting, it Ill reported carggd {Oat “Vi? 51%;” °z§giggze ‘If’ l » . ’ _ HWCeDS 0K ay Bil Ulhng VJ i! G ,,',1,"..','.i‘»l'.i'.’l."§§§§l°l1il"§i§‘Zuigffiiiiiiilii’.ii°oil°'l‘illf'l<ifli,d'fiiisiifq giifugflglglzrhvmgegef "belts lowlf 4g;- , _ e or s n - :ldtfl9 Bmlile ‘fink bfwgfmflfgddsgzgmwd 2 planes’ m“ "wk" m‘ mile front from the gBrittanv coast elluedezcllgfédmglflaifs $1000 omcers —' t of France to the Netherlands port men were annihilated in the of flushing" m _ These operations followed two INTERNATIONAL figfian rear and killed ubout German Destroyer ls Damaged By Hurri- cane Bombers. (By WILLIAM ‘srrzwalvrl (Canadian Press Staff Wrlter; LONDON, April 30-40? Cable -- flghiers escorted aircraft of the l...» n.0,, °“‘”°il33l“i,“‘“i? if.‘ "m"? ilzfi‘ - . emy s n o ecoas o n- 1mllfl'1/11¢N1°5c°\‘/ T5151“) 531d 33f tanv during which one dextrose: ylrnly lighting on nu unsv at w h“ as . 1 for of the central from g 3 - n ted b1 B .t “will 1118 14311111“ 3-‘ ~ “m angliérsmszhlcflsicgiiammere docg: our: - s reelllz b‘ to the ,wpriqi-ltiiigny hours of hallld-LO- yggllting. Havre, former home pol-t of the By Th, gumfl“, pa” French line, and Flushing, once the magi glalfhfrlangi POI? hgf train -.- , _ . r . .. Major Victory swlzggngzgr fi;ugi_-ocfl;lxjfjg,'"gujglpg't alum b0amr1JS onig thgsalirlsorta if . ' ' or and reilwa ards at Abbe- Rulslall cllcilu oilzddlledicd “P Pa"! "h?!" will’!!! Vina y y f illilfi (scored: lglf-flozoihlcll? h 31:18}; Alli-i Mlniitrygernewsknservlce g tile "ellml ' ' ‘ _. . sa ur cane om s w ch al- l“ mm, m," v-fllfllPli Rusllhn AIETIIALIA; ‘Australlan-Arneri- tacked mree destroyers escorting meta on tlle central front uue can ll r orces es roy 20 Jail llllllfll merchant vessels along the Flench -' _ 1" 077N151"! lWfl-‘Pi- coast met no enemy fighter oppo- (lispzlicll from Kullmv- _ gitlon, llllcrnllic could]. RUaSlA —-Russian army shoves It added that the crew of the M, Zllkharov 11S enemy back on central front: tal- damaged warship were so surprised l intent Solidi ‘Rl- ln in flay day order of the day de- by the suddenness of the attack l0 l». llnlll front bfllltt" nounces enemy, renounce: terrltor- that some dived overboard as the ‘lumen. lillfil Leningrad lull/Q 5° ial ambitions. Hurricane bombers made their runs. ‘milled lilo Gcrnlans tint they After the bombers had unloaded cvitcll Null P111115 I01 i‘ BURDIA- laps take Lashio, we their explosives the fighters and lire u urlu: olicltnve. Still in Nazi llullds villied S’: ' revealed for the first T - be lhuiunolnls llCfll‘ mnlnllrad 0 9' ltlg an‘ llllugfwgilllitlli brands. _ I lllrs N‘ '.\‘ K‘ 1" u - Prospecting >—* I (Continued on page 7. Col 3) bombers flew back and forth. rak- ing the vessels with machine-gun and cannon fire. As the turned for home, their crews so d, flames were spouting from the damaged destroyer.‘ ' All these operations followed an assault on Paris suburbs last night m which the R. C. A. F. Wellington bomber squadron commanded by Will Cmdr. Douglas Bradshaw of Lon on. 0%., Joined forces" with Burma ~ road to China. , 1 the It. A. . in spreading flaming 110 Cilflllllhigllfi, OTTAWA, April 30—(CP)—In- ruin m the rclmel- swollen rubber collis- and excess profits tax coll- '—*~ -r.—--~::-: " ~<:_ "(Con crssiolls will be provided lll the 1942-43 budget to encourage pros- pecting for important bnse metals rccdcd for the war effort. Fin- ance uflnisicl- Ilslcv announced in n . ‘ 1d a H. "Ride (he House of Commons today. - v _' sun " l _ .3 . _ . olilllirll illry would oifcnlnl f0 mgr,""l,8:01:31",lmfistcgndmszid lfiltfll lilf‘ freighter Fort Douglas dedl‘l',.,flns m mcmm, and excess Illicll Tull aground sl-crn first on ram: "m, on 1942 incomes only rllarbcr protection wall when p H" be rmitwd up m a mull ‘bundled here today before dav- WC“ ‘ De ' h 0 u "v" :t.t.=*-°°2..u..s:; "ti: ‘llle lOoOO-lo l c1 hull nsllv c°r1wr - _ r p,“ y... Human? gyemedesljn. grralzggctthtjiviéls expended for such .15 cauollt by a bllfk cfl- ‘ ~ _ - .- OTTAWA, April 30 — (CP) - A . “i; ..i."";...§.‘;*:l..i:i.i.“r. ui..'::::‘ll f’... 5:53»... *1‘ on swu - - unto the wail. where sh-r WM i1"? bud?“ “Cause prtwpecung iDlVPiQtTliEtl-locuigugr 81111511312115 wit" "“5'111»1l\‘h@l' Dffufll-"P 819410 11 and exmomtlc“ womd be amn- exllenditures committee was s-ug- I1 be necessary to drvdcck the 1H8 EH13’ "Yule Yet"? 385m; wday by w“ services 1h lfor realignment of her pro- Mlnlsge, Trim-sun, m"- hfld an The Minister who s lved us ch .ll'- exgpavgilllllcus nlIui-lneqd k Th man <1 the committee blast velu, . (111 ‘ CC. . e a ' ‘- M D°ug1a3m1"‘1‘et111‘ 115121 5m“ irgiililie Ielxfmgrkmilticnrfllmtowiletlvérkiilt 1lllll¢hed here without the frfldl- body uP agilin to look into wal- elf- meybnlmlzliuorremanv nmmn- Dfinditures and rfilitifglfelgend 005- v A -e c f RXUDBRIW- sible economies. l-le ea e govern- stlfgrwfilrbssgge 3oc;lngcisgxz ment has nothing t; hide lzndxwel- - Nnuongle employee l- “vim” “mfifiiuififvfi. ‘§§“‘§¥u‘l‘.l‘§_u°,;’°i>°i“iiie tonight they would continue the commute, started Wednesday and —n— Nnllv-va In tllle I cnllfn unr lrnrd ‘lhip Danlag-ed Oil/ST CANADIAN 30—-lCPJ-—St\' vnrd House discusses. Inquiry into Munitions Dept. éflgtgunl! campaign ‘hey ‘mned conltlllnuegdthroul l}: the lofterngon I - - itt , - v r cl spllkesme" m’ "he giflcgmfid who genie: you“ the leccfmnlnlxtlfgenlaa: Professional Workers d! BB Con! yen,- gakmg pa“ Committee of the Clgflba" ' Th: opellln cf tconyv. slttiflu gross of 141101" F81“ *1“ ““1‘,°"" found Lluuu- Lacombe (0.011. nlovees ore $W1ll"ll1““'°“"~‘,°1,.w‘§§‘ Laval-Two Mountains) in his S0111. “v ll“;;:.»i-ii3“2ll%lll€t“ “"“‘ “vttsliir u?" it:".l':.:::*r:i:.=l ' at t300ba k moloyrea 5"” ‘m- ' ‘- um 2 P. M Five Houses. Justin ilflehg! sgtlrlklztlilnd ihutnmflalf of the §2§,fi§‘§“i{., 2§2,‘;‘,‘,‘J;f“°“‘ ‘or d“ lllkill-S. L-ills-u-zl- Motsnetirergr bgliaencglgnélf :25‘ bgglei; rig rlnnnce Milnister (lllsluy alinbuncéd ‘Miami Piggy Monday (an C the fiflihflm ng bu Bet wil Qrol e "1' for roluml "Talkies - Sourls Moucluy, Q- "mldlllll l-ltcgs every Tuesday a l at Sourls. George Dlngwcll. employees nre rut and thll $1" 7° prospecting for important base "Concert and Dance in Orwell u; ' i r c ment clerks 51:51, Lghursdng. May 5m. mike §,,t§,i§‘,§,°, m‘! no‘: emu: office ks Orc estra. 4-30-May l. which l, ulnaffectgd_ lllll . I h. week Thursday. Albany. Ls It H, ted qlnployee h “gig. Emerald. A. C. and G. C. geglxfucm‘ ‘fifigcflfi,’ onwwllinh we: . A-IIO-Mny l-e. “Men m mnch “we empmms I i MSQDcal/ed by request, L-IIOI-IZ-Ill-l-Z-Thu-FTl-tf. ch ‘ 1 _-1- Mmtreal bran ea are flu coon n3 gals and strategic minerals, normally. They added that where me ri ish Pa ers . '“—- l; 'A n ad office B t p "llliottlxcles-Reccivlng live holrs as “Taft, Egg 3 ,§,':'§ity'§ imam! you“! of the banqlle Canndienne Nationals e. g0 - , _ are on strike" and Local 5 O. u. u‘... resets‘ kin llifllf“ w. u. o. demands u... wages.’ 311 1'9 5-1-11. "Remember-Girl- G d ' Mn Tea at the homeeufAil/frml; L t b insurers": .l.vr “a s" s‘ ‘l y 5f To . 0 u ___-* , ' '1” “Clock. n» 2a cent? a-l-u. Unloading [oflgy and 5am". :§{_°§'1°£<l bulk feed barley. also m - . Dickleson. New Glas- ' B-l-ll. OTTAWA, April l0—(OP)-Gllb- eldy paid the Lovat Bteamrhtll and Fredericton Co, Ltd. of Halifax for r service 1pm,‘? T119868! 9 am. at Brook- between Pietou, 501ml ml! ‘N’ Quill .11 Charlottetown Market» Magdalen Islands We! 841.509 1B kflfql D.m. Yflrk station: a the fiscal ea: 1:41-42. me a ro- snwf“: 4 Trlwedle: s Mount turn table in the House of Com- vqleyn- '1 Vfllwn River; 8 Cherry mona for J. Baeeeville R0! (TM- u, n, ‘Ysflnesdav. lo am. Hun- Gaepe). llmlcowb 11 New Glasgow; l2 Mr. my asked whether the gov- B Alan Randal Canadialyl Prue Staff Wrlter mmaon. allirllletzslspagcjffggul; groilbgzflngiar heave been tossed into reverse in Britain. Today it 1! M‘ a quation of selling as mum’ V85 515 Q5 possible but Ethel‘ b?!“ ‘ . 311mg only g certain num rda. time of unprecedented deman .3!" ‘rilreountry is news nmgry- nlnce the war started newsp int silh- puu hgyg been aha l_v curtahed ‘n4 as recenlly n; mi -Marm came . {untim- 10 per cent reduction to rave additional shipping space ‘gin the trans-Atlantic leis l" W" - n“ ma“, , consumption o fmllins piss at om. No - dlea a- l newsprint ‘tmklllyu Cross; arthxiilimirei fiiliiimmhifilpfliiiledwliiiiisillo 101' amiss‘)? 510,1 kiav l'l1finsC0gli"l\l‘9d WIT-ll nnerrld. Tlllllsdlll’. 10 am. Ken- services with the M58111"! ll‘ $3000 in every pro-war week. Since inf?" cattle pens: ll Summcr- lands mid-March there have been 1.500.- ’, ‘rile return said the service ll "d" hm", Pm. Clifton Corner. Pay- ll noun 1”" 1"" 1°’ Digs over being continued during the pN- KW Wlll also buy smaller sent season. but the contract hi! "l"! Jorsensen. s-l-tl. not u yet been completed. ooo fewer newspaper COPE“ week. ‘(Continued china-be 9- W1 41 The People's Paper . Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARDOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, MAY 1, 1942 my/ 1/,» Read by Everybody FWar Situation Last Nig (By KIRKE L. SIMPSON, Associated Press War Analyst) A new major disaster for the United Nations is looming in Burma llthough its scope and consequences can not yet be gauged. A Japanese armored spearhead has not only captured lashlo. sev- the main British-Chinese communication line, but possibly hn Party Lines Elallglllfied north of that rail terminal to positions astride the Burma Road Evidence EIGCIOTS AFB e lf that is true a desperate race of British and Chinese troops must on West of the break to escape entrapment and establish a new line to the north for defence of the route to India. That would mean both evacuation of Mandalay and surrender of the last oil fields still with- l.u British lines. . . ‘ ' ‘ o Grave lean are expressed in London and Chun kin about the fate of both the British forces on the Irrawaddy fron an the Chlnere on the Sittan . west of Lashlo. Should General StilwclYs Chinese troop! fall to hold t e eastern Burma flank against a Japanese effort to turn westward down the railroad to Mandalay, the plight of defending for- ces still fur south of Mandalay on both river fronts would be desperate. There is an even graver threat to the Allied right flank. however, _ f llde ndent if lt is true as London intimates that the Japaelgelseoinrspeflzglgalll: afar-girl‘! ha’? ho_dgf of commons today ward from Lashio along the Burma Road inst Concerned With Pro- gress Of War. By Drew Middleton _ Associated Press Stuff Wrlter LONDON. April 30 --(CP) -—V0t- ers in the industrial Midlands 8nd west of England. established party alignments. sent breaking from representatives t0 Mandalay. This would menace the lust communication route between W115i Observers said was a grow- the Irrawaddy front and China. . . ' An off-shoot feeder for the Burma Road runs west from Wanting, ingaevolt against Britain: wartime political truce. Against government candidates 100 miles or so north of Lasbio, to Bllamo in the Irrawaddy valley. It W. J. Brown. secretary of the clvll affords communication between the British and Chinese armies oven service clerical asswlzliion, won a with the lllanditlay-Lashio railroad cut. It also affords. however, a by-electlon at Rugby and W. L. chance for the enemy to stab around the Wanilnz-Bhamo bend far in Reakes. a former mayor. was el- real- of the British troops presumably already falling back northwald ected at Wullusey, ln the Mersey- up the Irrawaddy. The presumable new defence front to hold both the road tn 1' nide district. 'I‘heil~ victories. added m that last month at Grant-ham of and the road to China must include that “nlltl-l-llhalllo connection w_ n Randan Qvey another gov- unless British and Chinese forces are to be completely separated from emmem cflnd1da¢e_ convinced many each other. That gives the London suggestion that the enemy is driving political ogxen-ers that considerable northward from Lasbio especial News Briefs J31“ “"91"” Vital point 0n Burma Road Disaster Strikes British And Chinese Defend- Vers Of Burma- LONDON. Avril 30—(CP)— Admiral Harold It. Stark of the United States navy arrived in London by air tonight to assume his duties as corn- mander in chief of American naval operations in European waters. JHRNBfrAprll . 30—-(AP)--HlLletv Muss0lini and probably the Jap- anese Ambassador to Berlin. Lt.- Gen. Hlroshl Oshima, are expect- cd to meet soon (i! they haven't met already) in an effort to co- By Spencer Monso _ Associated Press Staff Wrlter OHUNGKING. ordinate three-power axis war efforts toward what the Italian . . d PPESS called today “o gigantic, hands mmght- Th” Bumm 10a had been cut at that vllal Junction 5111818 1mm." and the British and Chinese de- IVASIIINGTON, April 30- (AlU-Lcgislatlon to limit war profits, Increase the statutory work week from 40 hours to 48 hours, and freele the status quo of closed and open shops for the duration of the lwar was killed today in the Un- ited States House of Rel!- resentative: naval committee by a vote of l8 to I2. LONDON. ADril 30-(0? Cable) _. Nazi-oppressed French trade unionists today asked the work- ers of Britain, the United States and Russia to "keep your confi- dence in us" in a mcssaBE "- cueged at Free French headquar- when may wok Lam“; that ' YE HTF§T emy forces of strength. given in a. communique of fhl! chlnese command, which disclos- ed that Lashio had fallen to invader on Wednesday. grant end bloody battle alon! ill left. anchor of the allied line. Wt reported, too. that Ch nese tw still fie lflghgxlngh 0X1 n dflfledly the v n t3’ 8 0 Y. Casualties were hlllh 011 5°11‘! sides. New supply Lin" An nmly spokesman said that the VCol‘ Seeks Information Re Dehydration 0f Vegetables QfITQWIAé AYQlTao-(crl-ll. 1-1. iyilatseilucstloelmwhlch appeared m VICllY, April flu-ml’)- The R. A. F. overnight raid on the Cvnomo-Rhone aero works near Paris was said hero today to have been the heaviest yet on Nazi-occupied Franco. A casualty llat issued here con- tained the nanles of 52 66ml and 90 injured. 30——(CP)—Re- OTTAWA, April ports around Parliament Hill to- day were that caucus of Liberal members would be called soon to discuss government action as a result of the affirmative majority obtained in Monday's plebiscite. lie - establish vegetables. He asks speclficallv whether any have been erected in the Drvlflitl‘; raising sections of New Brunswc and Prince Edward Island. Recently it was announced here. that Britain has expressed willing- p ess shipping space than natural product- ovrrawa. April rlo -— 1° P> -~ h H of ' ‘é”o‘h".?.%§..°&’§f;i’l”}..Zuiuuffiéil‘n. Three Airmen Are war expenditures committee on the . h b is last session. raS salLnl-imeasmiirfister Macke ‘ Klusz In C gall! he had been naked bv CJII; servative ganlfiltggt 31%, d- ilpgztligrre€gliigtyiians muffle work of the in the crash of a comm“- ln 5egklng out possible fronl No. l2 BRANDON. Mam- A lnrl near here today- ,“ w“ purwggi air training p . wish give that assurance , _" h d f ur mies northwest of fiphiiilcailiin winsugiilisvfliliilv fir? sszhooi) airdrome. It was budlv Gllfiggmfgguim t” have this com- “Qliillgiiamv of the victims were iiiw all matteis which its member! or o hers may conaider It t able m iuveetigI-le." ordered- Prime deputy. a poor third. 9d 4w?‘ "exwmun- A" mquky h" bee“ evidence 18 Norwegians were shot "minus m"“ sections of the electorate are con- cerned over the progress of the war. Brown said: "My election is a call to the government to settle its nlitical differences with Russia, to arlfeve unity of strategy command to open a second front and will victory this y and H. ear." He defeated Col. sir Claude Hol- brook, the governmemfs candidate. by 6'79 votes. At Wallasey. Reakes efeated John Pennington, the gov- ernment candidate. by more than 6.000 voles, with Maj. L. H. Crlpps. b brother of Sir Stafford Cripps. the Minister's parliamentary Brown polled 9.824 to 9,145 for Col. Holbrook. Reakes got 12.596 vofrs, Pennington 6.584 and Maj. Crlpps 1,597 The Conservative puffy was not the only loser in the two elections. _ Both government candidates April %--(AP)—- backed by trade union leaders, to Flaming Lashio was in JBpaIlE-ie Whom such industrial areas usually listen carefully. The defeat of the candidates is being linked in the fenders of Burma Separated by 6Y1‘ clamor for a second fl-cni. This Ovelwhelmng movement started well to the left WCTG government has since moved to the right but This was the outline of disaster with Lord Beaverbrook and his "8 three newspapers backing the idea. lulu? Florence Mine Still Tied Up HAORENCE. (GP) — Florence l:cal of Mine Workers of loo-man membership is on strike, issued a uting officials of Florence col- llery for their actions in the dispute Ja-lwllese found only an em-mv c"? that has tied up the pit. "'5 The local claimed officials used "poor eight miners and then h kling il~em responsible for the strike The men were suspended April 90 for going home from work an hour quitting time. This brought on a six-dav strike that ended ast Tuesday After one days work the Miners struck again Yesterdav when they ‘earned lllc eight were i0 be suspended for six days from the time they leturned Victoria-Carleton). to the job. d r Na action ktmvagd a trctum to ' House of Commons 01' 9 wor was a en a tonig f"s meet- §)%c]l)a饑,s asks what prosms is bell"! in: of the u. M. w. local. It ad- mode on plans for dehydration 0f joumed until Saturday, indicating . the men would not go buck to work dehydration P1111115 until Monday at the earliest, Sun- day is normally a colllerv ll lidny. 18 N orwegians“ I “use hyflg quantities Of agel- workinz 8111M. :-l l <1 - w c “e” "° purc- n: l t k 0t F01’ Death mkglllllk iltfiCifliS said that only 89 ffifuffife,°fies,gf,‘f,fi‘°w“'gnc,fu’fi;f Sch drated vegetables w cl a e ‘l’ or Nazi Police IDNDON‘, April N. 8.. A ril 30 — e United America. whose statement tonight cen- judgemcnt" in suspending before 30-—-(CPl—The German radio announced that 18 Norwegians were connection with the killing of, two so germanmsecgrity‘ {glide Mlrll 26 "' n on an o e west out o?) - ‘ml-es airmen were killed “gown ° di ted th . WW1" 1171“! ‘mil?’ eailareltsra wgleuulflol-wenigsme u economies in the outlayof money ins school, Bfmsh C°mm°“"°“ '1‘ illegally left Norway shot today ' in Iluvho some time f En l d h th An ofllolfll "W" m“ ‘he 91"“ $21,031:: bygtii: 53th? will C. lfieywmilvurnedl tio Norway sup- . X as fullv as it C!" gabotage weaepolflge {hie rsdio add. ‘ withheld pending notification of ' and other and "on the ground of this l today. “They were arrested while at- tcmlll-l t0 get Away to mgland 1n l f l!!! smack with fire arms Bluiiun ‘f on“ CANADA IHE All PURPOSE FIDIJR and machine guns." Small Nazi Raids 0n Coastal Towns May l -(l"rlday) - LONDON, (C?) - knell-scale air raids on northeast coast to wna caused n few casualties and some damage to property elrly today. In one a man and wife were killed in a shelter, and “ouses and a club were damaged. 10 PAGES rflcians on the government of the Christian faith. MAXI MS 03A MERE MAN 0u.r liberties today are all the fruit loll?" AIM or sovllsls“ls T0 BRVE IIERMANS uu Fighter-Aircraft In Seven Major Sweeps Jvsep/Tp-Stalin h, Midlands Voters Gives I Nada" Break with Annual Subscription llellverut, 85.00 B! lllllt P. Y l. “Mil to other Prorlm-en and U44. $5.1M Report 0n War Declares RUSSTZ-IwhGS no territorial ambitions; Urges army and civilians on to greater efforts; Defeat of enemy in 1942 is object. MQSCO1V~ Mill’ 1—(F!‘1¢1ll.v)——(AP)-Premier Joseph Stalin ln a May Day order of the day pledged that, Russia has no territorial ambitions upon foreign countries and declared that the Soviefs sole aim is l0 liberate its lands from “the German Fascist blackguards." Broadcasting his war report to the nation, the Pre- mier-Defence Commissar praised Great Britain and the United States for the increasing assistance he said they were giving Russia against the Germans. lle declared that Russia must “smash the German Fascist army and wipe out the German invader surrender." to fhe last man if they will not “There is no other alternative way." Stalin said that the only thing now lgpkln; 1| u" .511“, o; m. Red army men to utilize fully the first clan technique which the fatherland la putting at their disposal against the enemy. Then he ordered fighting branch- es of the Red filmy w master thcir weapons to perfection; told army commanders to become masters in leading their armies to make 1942 the year of the final defeat of the German Fascists; and znstructcd men and women guerlllas to wipe out the_ staff and equipment of the enemy in the leer and ‘to spare no ullets against the invaders of our fatherland." Stalin told his people that Brit- ain and the United states are “giv- mg‘ our country more and more mllltarv assistance against the Fas- cist invaders" and that the Red army had forced the Fascists lo "cleur out of a consnerable part of Soviet territory." People: Will Not Broken "Hitlerite imperialism has pied Wide lkffltflflfls in Europe,” Stalin declared, “But it has not broken the will to resistance of European peoples. "The struggle of enslaved peoplel ainst the regime of the German Fascist robbers has begun to take on a general character in all occu- pied countrles....murders of Ger- man soldiers and officers have be- come u, general feature." Alliance Speaking of the winter war. when the Red army struck unceasingly against the (lcrnlans in one of the coldest seasons in decades, Stalin said that the calculation of the in- vader to rest during the winter and strengthen his defense lines “has suffered a fiasco." “In the course of their advance." he said, “the Red army has de- llued on page 9, 4) Reports Pogue Garhuretter is Unsatisfactory 00011- (Contl OTTAWA. April 3l—(CPl-De- fence lvlizlisicr Rrllslon told ‘he House of CfllllllZPS tonight that exhaustive tcsis of the “Pcguo carburettor" tvcrc curricd out by the National Defence Drpurlnleni and l'€SC.’l~l‘(|'l technicians lost fall and liszacioigv. this week tile , claimed by il-s inventor, Nelson C, Pcguc of Win- rllpcg. to be capable. of operating o cslr 200 miles on a allon of gas- oline. has bren mentioned in ills House of Commons. Tonlrzhi C. E. Johnston (ND Bow Rlvorl lucniionrrl l: and 11k!‘ Rev. E. G. Ilanscll (ND, MucLcorll yeslerday’, suggested smile powcr- ul influence was preventing its development Ool. Revision lave the first 0i- ficial information on grvernmenl tests of the invention tonight. H." said that lat fall llle Master General Ordnance had Mr Prague brought to Oilnwa and ken‘. him here for slx weeks on an al- lowance of $10 e dav willie he worked with departmental tech- prov- ing grounds atfrmlpifzlg to make the oontrlvance work "I am sorry to say that the low did not prove a success and Mr. Pogue. I rm sun», would be N101‘ as anyone else lo admit that." The carburettor 20f some in- creased mileage at lilo sacrifice of power and weed. Col. Rolsi-rn said Il. was quite impracflcuble on heavy load carrying vehicles. "Mr. Pogue has never been able m give us rt mrbuetier that works without being constant-ll‘ adjlvicd -and when l su eonsf-llnilv I mean just that." The inventor had bNn told rho Department would be glad to ex- amine any new efforts he produced and the Mintsier sold he beloved Mr. Pogur row WAS ln Oliowl seeking to perfect his inventzon. Solution of Rubber problem 0r just a dull? WASHINGTON. Apr-ll l0 .- lAPh-lvithln a week or two, United States government ex- perts will crowd into a. little glass laboratory not far from Washington and demand a show-down from a man who says he can make rubber from natural gas, grain, and either vvoodpulp or coal. The turn of events in that laboratory may spell the end of the rubber shortage-or epcil ail-I) in large, crestfallen let- AllYWly, it will be a chapter In one of the war‘: llrnngegl stories. For weeks, harried by the critical rubber situation, the ex- perts have been checking inlo the inventor’; claims, testing his product, attempting to ana- lyze it, and losing sleep over its mysteries. Not even today will any of the government men Dflflsofflclsl Judgment. Ills name is not released for publication. Scientifically, the experts say, W! llllwst unbelievable; there- fore, they have their fingers crossed. Thus far, the inventor has refused to disclose vital details of his process or permit government representatives to wltne actual production. But, since there's just a chance the inventor ean do what he 513's he can do-makc rub- hcr that's bettl-r and cheaper than crude, using raw may“. inls with which the United States is amply sup lied - the KUIQIIIIIIBII! isn't mssirlg any e s. ___________ ZO-MINIITE AIR ALARM HONOLULU. April .10 —(AP\ ._ The island of Kauzll in the Haw-ill. lan group hnd n 20-minute .l"' ruid alarm today. clue m llnidgnfjfhd elements m son. tllc United States llfml’ reported Knulli hland is 70 mllop west of (loin. n" -~l~v'~‘l Hnlw, lulu is studio." AN ONION A DAY Clifs You A SEAT IN A SfREEf (M- 1., ;\‘- !i1'..l rg n’. 10.44 end tolng l (ll l4l sun m, mu evening at 7.04 and rises tomorrow mornlnll l‘ 4-59- but quarter moon May ‘l. 7-13 ‘Uglunmcrside tldr- l8 mlnut-rs lat- er than Charlotlefown. - BORDEN - (‘APE TORMENTINI SERVICE Leave Borden 9.25 AM. 1.00 PM- Lenvn (‘ape Tormentlne 11.00 AM. 3.20 RM. WK“ "v- W" 4”“ . ' ‘)5 T gt‘._w'".- ‘c’ :4’- -.' h; ‘~31 3-1-1». :.~1- . 5.1-1.3» ~ . _.:\ ~_>w»<