t \ London Papers Still Sniping‘ At Churchill MAXIMS 07A MERE MAN 1.11- makes the mare. and the “.;‘,‘,°'{f§'¢ mother u well, to go the putt. r‘ I , 4i , Founded Ill? $1331.31“; (llliurdluu, Two 00ml, ‘ti. wf/ ///' / The People's Paper Covers Prince Edward cnamlorrrirbwu, CANADA, A WEDN Island Like the Dew rslbaidlrdsnuoakv 1s, 194; 10 PAGES life. ‘MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN love is the light and sunshine oi _ __ ._.._.4._ _. ":1 Annual Subscription Delivered, 85.00 B! lllulli P. E. I., $1.00; to other Prmlnci-iguml LES. 85.110 of situation resulting PW. l'l-tOP)—-The 011 111 the Atlantic has _ eastd" by the dash .. Citrman fleet units we lJovcr Strait, Winston ‘it Ptirliament and the uiduy 1n the moot re- tmgc of all the recent 1 lwlore the House of hr first. tune since the Prune ea a side to the . he Dover Strait, which rrly the reverse to that d been ivid-ry accepted as for the Royal Nov)‘- wblr to prstpoiic. until the current. “mood of :11 the Hon-c. general r- suivicct of British rc- Qcquence to his or __ the Orient. Although _» _. h 111.3: in the Halve. lp - cit-ac. n,- he, entered and 59 .1_ and he gave up nothzng M ltlcs Vote Confidence in Churchill sians AW.’ the session n croup of in- il .\l;t'1.11t<t .\f.f".'s aha pri- v. adrlvtd a resolution . confidence" 1n the tcr, At the same time. the cfOllp called Mr. is attention to “file grnvc cf unrest and doubt" in the - ant tirgrd chances to ob- ffenfivo co-"rdination of de- ‘L w and rfconstt-tictinn at the to "roman-t. roncehtrated on piicd llv mu- rftort." it". Churrivil disclosed for the pa. time that the principal brrrtrhcrs (if tire Strait-the 2 Ml- ttm Nazi battleships Starr-burst ‘ laws (Continued on 1108c 9. C01 5) LONDON, Feb. l8 -tWcdnesday) -tCP| Imndon nuvspzllf-Eifi um‘ ‘urn to sirpc today at Prime i‘ Chur '1 for his T971501 "re cabinet and shift some c: 11- ra-sponsibility from his b own shoulders. ".\'l'.\11_v '11“.ngs have gone stead- ily wrong h the contiuct of the war." the Daily Herald said. raise till‘ Pxime Minister. oirorbed in 11's tasks as minister of defence, 112»- ‘ct-u too busy to put tiFm 11:111.‘ The Daily Mall warned that Jau- lllkc Cfiliqlitlit cf India would be m“ if Burma fell and the Indians became uutilcky. and demanded that a now secretary of state for Info h.» anpointetl and sent thfirc “with full power to take whatever decisions are necessary on the spot." iii-Foils MAY flew Defence Lin; E51 Elia or Nazi Fleet Units Aid To Allies (Linux-lull paints entirely different picture through Dover Strait. Soviets claim Initiative along Entire front Associated Press Stuff Writer MOSCOW, Feb. l7 —(AP) -—Th0 Russians claimed the initiative a.- long the entire frozen front tonight, and said they were killing Gcrnmns by the thousands in a. dogged md- vance ivhlch iepcated German coun- tcihattacks could not. check. Kharkov. great stccl centre in the Douets Basin. and Novgorod. on the front south of Leningrad, appealed threatened by the troops. A German captive told the Rus- to quit Kharkov 8s the forces c! nfarshal Semeon Timosiienko front. and on both flanks. The Germans hurled tanks desperate left 1.500 frozen dead on the field. Two more villages fell before Timo- shenkrfs men. In the northwest. some 120 miles southeast. of Leningrad. the Soviet-s who took sloboda in the Starorussia district appeared to be endangering the key strong point of Novgorod. Hard fighting Russians killed 2,- 000 more Germans before Ieningmd as they pressed the Nazis‘ rt. In the drive toward Smolensk on the central fronts. even the German radio admitted that the ‘nod stormed ‘through the lines 50 miles southeast of Vvazma but claimed that. the bmach had been mended. The Russian; said nothing offelnlly about. that rector. but We army publication Red Star said both sides are massing 1111p,» forces of re- servis for the attle. British tanks fltrhtr-r». wcre srfld to be taking their i011. Red Star said that the man~ had only a “thin garrison" left in the centre. War-ZS Years British dig In 50 miles From railway By Daniel De Luca _ Associated Press Staff Writer RANGOON. Burma, Feb 1'l- fAPi-British forces burrowed into new and more fonnldable positions today along the Bilin River, some 50 miles from the vital feeder rail line to the Burma. Road, and Em- pire commanders were hopeful the Japanese tide could be stemmed there until a counter-blow could be organized. The British Empire troops were working against time for the Jap- anese were expected to bolster their Burmesg campaign wit-h ground and air forces released from the successful battle for Singapore. (In London t-he Times sn-id that “provisions for defence will have to be raised" to meet o. new attack on Burma and Intila. It added that Allied staffs in London and Wash- ington are “now concentrated" on this problem.) ‘Today's communique said the situation on the new Bllin frcnt was unchanged. but. that British troops had ccme into contact. with a small force of the enemy to tho south. Royal Air Force bombers and fighters attacked Japanese posi- tions, stores and transport tn the Moulmein area. below the m0uth of the Satlween. By withdrawing to the - m; bank of the Billn, the Britih forces apparently had abandoned mm ‘Photon. (amine Mortaban-Rangoon W; railroad lch skirts the Gitlf of Martaban. ‘There were no reports of contact yet with the Japanese along the new defence line. 3 Ottawa Men Are sentenoedt OTTAWA. Feb. l7 -(CP>-'I‘l1ree Ottawa. men. convicted of com- mitting fraud upon the government in connection with war contracts today were sentenced to varymg jail terms and fines by_ Mr. Juszicc C. P Plaxtlll in Ontario Supxvme Court. 'll‘c sentences:- Rudolph E. Brulc. 50, 12 months and $703 or. 1n lieu of the fine, a total of '19 months. Capt. J.A.P. Haydon, 5i. eight months and $700 or. in lieu of the fine n. total of l5 months. Hector K. Carruthers. 61, these months and $203. or in lieu of the ftnc. a total of four months. Posing of the sentence ended a month-long trial session. The tiris- oners tcs‘: announcement. of tPcir tcnns calm y. The c‘: "rs grcw from the ac- cused n". "idly having rcpresrnietl as having influence in .1111‘; of government war from dash By Eddy Gilmore dogged Red that. the Nazis are preparing ap- stcndy pressure from counter attacks. steel further from the‘ great; Baltic Russians impending spring and Hurrfeanc Ger- flic ch‘. contracts. Ago Today ‘By Th‘ C““'“““" Pm“) invsoiv WILL SPEAK ' FEB. 1a, l“l"—I 1 z :1 —~—— f‘ Frrzirh forcrs eifcictcclailtaitictiorinln QTTAWA- F°b~ 17 "(Cpl _ Th’! ‘ i ‘.3 southrrn Albania and cut on House of Commons, tomorrow will -g_ giéccce from (fie Central Powers. resume! ‘fir? ffibnte or} thin ntidrvgs . , rman ,asua ies 111cc tart. of in repy 0 t‘ $006M Wm ‘t 9 h’ m’ ‘\""““’ '" m“ "I'm" war estlnilated by drltlsh smilttary throne with Conservative House J I'm-nil pa: word "l.l‘1li1>;10$—SOlll'lS 'I'hu1‘sday. L-Ll33-2-l7-31. "Iltlkics-Mdnijaghfle, Friday. L-333-2-17-3l. "wllimillttl Y, I’. U. social at Bruce Noyes, licbru-try l9. L-361. “loading hogs at. Murray Harbor “Wiitiy. February 23rd. Murray River l‘11csda_v' 24th. Wood Islands 25.11. at train time. John J. Beck. L-asz-z-ia-ii. __ ‘Gfflliq play “Mary's Custlc in the 23 will be repeated on I-‘cbruary “rd 1n the lower Hall of the Bap- t ChuICh- L-SBZi-Z-IB-ll. ‘vzgitiyllnggve Iliad idliitésscd 00gb, e Y an ‘ o . . . li°li K: 00.. Hunter Rlveiay ls-Zll-IZ-S-Wed-Sat-tl. {Wren u» buy quantity 111111- ml: oats at once, Write or phtne Mvstock Feed Agency. Fitzroy L-362-2-lB-2t. ‘fwe require a uantltv of wcll- 03. lgtccrn oand . or ver limo Cold storm 00.. 1.1a. L-‘lfll-l-M-tf "Winn: live a m: vii t: es usual. A1 any stalled A v A. “it. ‘t‘.‘.fi1“‘f‘f°§t.1§'.‘t?"’§1§'t‘& mim""- M501!!- G. O. Green. b-lifil-l-lb-LB than t w a I "owl! to clrcum w . stances beyond Elliott???" Tuesda Livestock v ‘M; Ssociatlon wll loud hogs m. Y "idly. rub. 2o. 10:10 um. authorities at 4.087.692. zibur Iitalian Warships. Attacked, Set On Fire British Torpedo Planes score success; - Nazi advance units withdraw west of Tobruk. International At LONDON-Churchill “Ill mono Brlflah position cued by with- 'd""l d Nu‘ "mm" mm 3'9"‘ ported by participating pilots after ARUBA-U. s. ulrcnlt may have sunk enemy lube. WASIHNGTUN- Roosevelt nil enemy attack puss New York could be ahellol. Detroit bombed MOSCOW-Russian uluuoe cou- tlnueu. CAIRO-R. A. I‘. torpedoes. flm two Italian cruisers. two Instrum- BID drafting all A terlul bud leader Hanson the first spfiaker. CAIRO, Feb. I'l—-(AP)-Poun- ctng on a strong formation of It- alian ships making one of their rare appearances in the central bludtterroneati. Royal Atr Force planes torpedoed and left. aflame two cruisers and two destroyers, a Middle East communique said t0- A Glance day. The attack was made Sunday night. at the entrance to the Ion- ian Bea between southern Italy and Greece. The full toll was re- ly The Clundlau Pres Oom- an announcmient previously had said that two cruiser; and l de- stroyer were torpedoed and another destroyer was probably hit. m their eyewitness account the pilots sold four vessels definitely were set ufire. - on the Libyan front, British headquarters annou that Ger- mun reconnoltrtng detachmeu have withdrawn from positions In advance of tire main Ania linen neu- n It Goals, but that “considerable enemy farm; are in the urea of n - NIY — 9'7"" nmwm" The latter lies 00 miles almost. due “m” m‘ out of Aln m Gould and about lble on Alaska, a pm H, h mtrullul turn: its... lg m’ market, re- property. for defence. mo mu” ‘u; of 'rohfuk_ ggrattwiv owiile Mhalglfiurly‘ w‘ __“""‘“'"'" n. A. r. "P61101015! m tin a . N - b l O tars-fl. "m- w-m u :::.*...'::::....rs.:: m... " “'““‘ ~,-ll Al , hose comma. er tm.““,f.,'§“‘1"t=wet:su at Oharlotte- SYDNEY, Australia. mi.- u - iiiicii-nucliacicrozr the saharo and "w mesday a <1 d“ shim"! (wbdnfldl!) -tor1 - 2mm llin- walked zoo miles of the way from if‘; want o. ¢a=lsaum1iiy“’n§§.“°§§‘- um John Ourttn wu mam n Alum-la. w loin hi; m1;- mum“ . P ' bclpl to An the: Free e . Ltvrstogzi $.11?‘ i"‘°°- multil- fit"..'“%o"ll'..‘°“ 11¢ bulimia tgntciaike. has beetrgrom . Ch “Moi. not.“ "W" t" m“ " “"“ Bu: cont: to and took off for Java thro ablished ‘st-m l War Situation Last Night 1a] (By KIRKE L. SIMPSON. Associated Press War Analyst) Prime Minister Churchill's dismissal of the Dover Strait episode as an "annoyant-e” which had compensating values for Britain clearly ln- dicates his own conviction that neither that fiasco nor the full of Sing- apore has seriously He conceded nothing to his shaken his war leadership. parliamentary or press critics except the formal inquiry into air force-admiralty llulson failures which may have permitted escape of u. trio o! unsunk. heavy Nazi warcraft, damaged but It was u characteristically bold Churchill approach to his home front problem. There is British mind. His move outflanked no more astute and experienced reader of the his critics. It also tended strongly to reassure all Britain's war associates that. there ls to be no break in the continuity of British leadership. i 1U 4i a O Even as he spoke Royal Air Force bombers were hunting anew ln German harbors for the ships that escaped them in the Strait. additional satisfaction in Prime Minister found some bombs which miss them now will fall on German, The the fact that not French heads. He was satisfied from his own inquiry that all three vessels were fur- ther damaged in their daring race and will not soon be fit for action. The test. of the Churchill theory that removal of those important Nazi naval units from Brest to Heligoland ha; cased rather than in- creased British peril in the Atlantic deprnds on why Ilitler ordered the dash. If Mr. Churchill is right. lf. was because llitlcr find no hope of over using them effectively from Brest under a, continual deluge of British bombs. $ O 1 Four thousand tons of months. Although against small targets is inefficient, that some of those bombs fell true. that the Germans decided to take the their work over and over again. llr-nce lllr. Chuichill argues their escape shows a a ' a bombs were’ rained on lhcm at Brest In l0 that high-altitude bombing the law of averages makes certain German repair crews had to do ships out of. Brest. thus sacrificing their strategic iulvantagcs of an op- Thc presence of the iii crating base on the flank of British convoys in the Atlantic. Ships at Brest had taxed British air and sen power to guard against attacks on those convoys. That strain has been removed by the Nazi flight and the Admiralty now can make some- what better disposition of their naval forces in the Atlantic. as Mr. Churchill drcw the picture for Parliament. l fl II ‘s i! ‘ . Nevertheless the dash from Brest synchronized too closely with the opening spring campaign season ln all Europe and the near and Middle East to escape the conclusion that it plays some part ln flitlefs major strategy. Just what part. it is to he neither London nor Washington can yet know. Mr. Churchill banked heavily. however. on hlg assurances h; Parliament that before the considerable Null naval strength now massed in German harbors can be brought Into action, new British Ind American construction will be available to deal with It. ____.~ __.. ___._i_.__ kart ound P; rts In Northwest Germany it Continue war on Axis shipping with hits scored on at least six ships. LONDON. Feb. l'l-—(CP)—The Royal Air Fcrtvopounded ports in northivcst. Germany last n1ght>— perhaps hitting at the escaped brittlzships Gncisenau and Scharn- horst-and today continued their war on Axis shipping ln xvaters near Britain which during the 111st 24 hours has resulted in hits on at. least six ships. An air mlntstry communique ga-ve no details of the attacks on the Nazi ports, but the Berlin communique admitted that Heli- goland Bight had been attacked. ’l‘hf- Nazis said isolated bombers reached this base where the Gneis- cnnu, Srharnhorst. and Prim. Eugen were reported to have found a berth after their sensa- tional flight through misty Dover Strait. The Air Ministry reported also that a Blenheim fighter of the coastal command downed a Moss- crschmitt 109 during patrol over the west coast. of Tlorway, and the ministry's news service indicated that. the lcxig-rnuge fighter came from the coastal command cano- dinn squadron. The picture of shipping attacks made by the R. A. F’. in communi- qucs of the inst 24 hours: Hurricane bombers of fighter command attack shipping off French coast at dusk Monday. At. least one enemy patrol vessel damaged. ‘ Coastal command aircraft on ._ (Continued on page 7, Col t) Report Japanese Lost 200 Pilots _In Battle BATAVIA. N. E. 1., Fob. I'l- (AW-The Japanese lost at. least 200 pilots in the battle for Bing- apore, according to information given the news agency Anetu by three Airstrallan fliers who escap- ed w Java in the final hours of the aim. ‘Iihc ung pilots said that lust Saturday, with the Japanese al- ready in possession of the Kela-ng alrdrome. they repaired their dam- aged planes in u marby portage, I. hall of enemy machine-gun m. Polish Divisions Near Homeland LONDON, Feb. l8-tWed11cs- utiyi-(CP Goblet-The Daily Her- ald in a. dispatch from Stockholm said today that six Polish divisions fighting in a Soviet. army corps now are only 50 miles from the old Polish border. The Poles, armed with British- zuade rifles, tanks and transport. are driving through White Russia with gathering momentum, the story continued. It said Polish pilots equipped with Russian alr- craft are supporting the land drivu. More Liberal Opposition to Conscription OTTAWA, Feb. lT-(CP) —Hugh MaoKcrzie, (Lib. Lambton-Kcnt) proposed in the House of Commons today that fanners in t-he armed forces be grantsd leave of absence for seeding and harvesting. “One of the greatest dangers to an all-out war effort ls. I believe, shortage of labor on the forms." Mr. MacKouzle said. High salaries in industries had taken many from the farms. If his proposal or something simi- lar were not adoptci. Mr. MacKen- zie said. he feared "our farmers will not be able to supply the food- stuffs acquired for the feeding of Britain and our allies." The armed forces. (the factories and the farms were the hhree big factors in the war effort and they should be placed in n. position of equality of sacrifice. he said. Mackenzie was one of the y (Oontiflt-M on rm o. 001 m Jn ‘the Host of Home Bakers who - LUSSO CANADA M hLBui-ma Partial returns Show , $156,400 Subscribed here Prince Edward Island Gets Away To Good Start ln 2nd Victory Loan Drive. A total of $623750 was subscribed by citizens of Charlottetown and Sumrnerslde yesterday Prince Edward Island's second Victory Loan quota. The loan opened Mon. day and on that dav $931550 was invested by the people of this city and ire Western Capital. No re- turns from Kings County or the rest of Que-en's and Prince hax.‘ been received at Provincial Head- qu rters up until last. night. 1.1a grand total for the two places reported now stlznd5 at 5156.400 with the campaign entering unon its third day. Chnrlnttetotvrfs objective 1n the drive. which continues info March. is $600000 while Summer- side is ask-ed to contribute $265000 King's County's objective is set at $175000; the remainder of Queen's County. outside the city, f5 asked for $260300 and the remainder of Prince County $200000. Wlten word has been received from places outside the city and outside Summerslde. the total for the fir~t two davs will be swelled. No communication has yet been received from King's County. Prince Edward Island's quota of the Dominlorfs ssoooooooo victory Iloan is set at sl.500.000. In the first such campaign to raise money for the war last summer. this pro- vince was the first. to 12o "over the top" Mid before the drive conclud- ed the Island had oversubscrlbed 1L5 share of the Loan. Returns Hold Up Well O'I'I‘AWA. Fieb. 1'l—(CP)--Nat- fonol headquarters of Canada's $600.000,000 second Victory Loan re- ported tonight as the second data o‘: en e the three-week campaign lllml/‘ICYJIHTIS are "holding up very we ' No new cumulative total was in- cluded 1n the evening statement and full returns for Monday and Tues- day will not be available until to- morrotv morning but officials said the returns so far hove been en- couraging WlICII stacked up against the equivalent period in last June's first Victory Loan for the same ob- jcctive. Today loan headquarters announ- ced total subscriptions at the close of business Monday were $51,334,000. This figure compares with a. first- day figure of $58,000,000 last June. “In order to reach the nominal objective of $800,000,000 by the close E 1n contour May Bej-ocated Within Panama Canal Defences Observers believe Base probably as close as Dakar on West African Coast. Will Churchill Reconstruct , ring of defences-was 1'- night I early Monday which cost the ‘Ales Question ls Widely Dis- CUSSBd lfl Britain After lant search for any enemy ln;_=<.s m Prime Minister Re- ports To Critical House. By Harold Fair Canadian Press Staff Writer By Chandler Dichl Associated Press Staff lVritrr BALBOA. C. 2.. Fieb. 11.451»... Tho possibility that German >111» marines may be operating from u. well-concealed base in the Carib. bean Mom-within the canal zone’: d m- ‘ a. by the U-boat raid o. at least. seven tankers sunk. or d9.- maged. United States armed forces long have been exercising a most vigi- the Caribbean and rhw ttr/rl thrust into the West indies it'd t0 Slieculation today wht Jier they hard B. Nfiifillrig station in those wot- era. The opinion was expressed Ln n. my circles that the attacks by two or more U-boals, indicated the G11“- mtms have a. base at least as close as Dakar or some other point. on 110N901‘ 7°11 17 —(CP cab“) the West Africa coast. —Wlll Prime Minister Churchill It was generally believed hem yield to his critics and reconstruct ma; the next few days m“ U...” the government? This question was asked m Vdlm‘ possible additional foravs in a clue. with much dcpenrllng .711 tho cal circles tonight after the Prime Minister ma faced one of the reost Gamma“ m“ critical House of Commons sessions since he took office. I-Ie read his carefully-prepared FIRST BRAZILIAN SHIP WASHINGHUN. Fcb, 17 -_!AP\ statement on the Dover battle w _Th9 United slates ‘gm... dew,“ a, silent House. but failed to alloy .-._. . “nests a m t» ma» 'é‘§.'.‘.‘111“.’.‘.“‘;i?.°§.‘l..i.°.‘"flit-aft? bers over the conduct of’ the war. (h-itics will have a. chance to at- tack the government probably next weiek irhthe btgebatte granted by tlhe yolk V‘ Prme Rois r. ut some crces ' ' wondered‘ whether cabinet changes pulgficokqgilezinformabion w“ ma“ might not be made in the interval A busy clay of conferences and consultations among various groups terminated in speculation as to the hal been torpedoed off the Atlantic coast. rvivoru were brought to Nor- PEOPLE NOT TOLD RIO DE JANTTIRO. Pieb. l’l-~(A- Whether the Prime Mini-it” might P)—The first sinking of n. Brazil- uot take one or stepsz- t _(_Contlnued on page 9, Col 3) Hepburn will Move Adjournment TORONTO, Feb. 1'l—tOPl-1n l "i"! (Continued on page 9, Col 2) ‘llud’ torpedo Proves deadly i-VILLEIMSTAD. Cuarcap. Neth- erlands West Indies. Feb. 1'1- tAPi-A German submarine in- flicted thc first casualties of the war on American s01] today when a supposed “dud" torpedo fired in the attacks yesterday on oil tank- ers and refineries exploded be- latedly on Aruba and killed four Hollandcrs. Ttvo of the dead were officers. the others marines. A marine and two civilian guards were injured slightly when the sharp-nosed, 18-foot. missile flew to pieces as they were taking it Apart. Presumably the torpedo had Jiissed a ship in the attack that spread flames over the Aruba area and resulted in the suspension of oil shipping from the Venezuelan mainland to these Netherlands ls- lfllldg just off the shore. Philippine more of the“ 1M1 ship in this Wfifjflli not movie known publicly tonight. bccausa it is the annual carnival time and of- ficials sought T0 forestall anv riot- lng that might arise among roi. er- tng crowds. in gall-I disguise. against axis nationals and properties. Damaged Destroyer Reaches U. S. Port HONOLULU. Ffb. 1'l——(APl—— officers disclosed today that _ flu d {,1 m lln the destroyer Shaw, which the 5 “love Pig“ ngppqgiflole) Jatpanse claimed they dcstroytd “adm- Geol-ge .A_ Dream premier in the attack on Pearl H Hepburn Ymnounccd today would move adjournment of the Ontario legislature tomorrow. The announcement, mode to re- porters after the after came just before the hurried away to a cabinet. cmin of corporation and income taxe to the Dominion Government for the wars duratttn. It. was the matter of this tax transfer. a-pparentlyt. which pre- cipitated the sudden decision to adjourn just a week after the ses- sion opened. Premier Hepburn, following‘ Col. Drew in the Throne Speec de- bate, admitted he was not. in at pcsitlon to go ahead with his bud- get due to the delay in negotiat- ing the transaction. “We arc cooling with a Government which doesn't know where it. ls going," he said. .____._______ RAJ‘. "NO RIDERS" LONDON—tCP) he last Dec. '1, has arrived sat having difficulties in -'I‘he Al!‘ Illn- lstvy has issued orders which pro- hibits R. A. F. velicles giving lifts to hitch-hikers. Invaders a west wast port under hcr own power. Officials said the Show was in noon Sign“, drydock at the time of the attack Hcemhy.‘ and was _ cll (In? which was to deal wit-h transfer‘ Z0795 _ 5 forward section, and wreckcd the Fotlfs Wt-to DON'T Know wt-tcau '\’l-1E‘f'Rt=_ Qotu‘ Nsvcu sfov AN’ tuqutat: EWHER" / (Canadian PIINS) . g TORONTO. Fcb. lT-- .\lllt.lllll"\ D F d h and maximum it‘flll)t“l".l‘.lll't.<‘ s Dana-am 7 1'5 Victoria. Edmonton i i1 , Regina ‘i913 Substitute bombs for leaflets; Pressure awry-lag?‘ :38 m’ on MacArthufs Troops steadily growing. u ‘Q12 i. 305m“ 33 till WASHINGTON. IPeb. 1'l—(AP)- told a congressional‘ committee _ v Gen. Douglas MacArthur reported that “plent-y" o! bombers would be synopsis; The wciithci‘ fpday that Japanese fliers who sent to aid MacArthur ‘if W mild in Ontario ‘and m1 F5‘ 1.. have been dropping pr agunda could get. them there. He made and cold 1n Mavntobu ‘n11’: “Him leaflets professing great fr encbhip this statement in response w ptchewan _w1tlv\ a t1 tit-t H?‘ it‘ for the Filipinos have now subatl- question; during testimony on WM wards higher (cmPi-itiiihi "- tuted bombs for pamphlets. and appropriations. m o‘ Alberta. ‘flizgachlllldetilz-nuainmdtlilerfiige and: therviietthvétrilcntliyhiadfs tlinagfahc 881d» High tide m!‘ “i"‘“"°““ “i l“ hind the Botm ‘ uln attic "if We could get them more." and tomorrow morning at 1.11», ’ bum Q1 the acfugl fighting, a com- Slllbstus 1111s af.1"..11.on :11 0.31 Meanwhile Jupmcge “gum-g munlqug mid; and rises tomorrow morning at i u 6T7. upon MacArthur; troops was Heavy artillery fire from the 0mm quamr "mo". Nb‘ n‘ lWld-“Y "(Win8- Alr activity wll Cavite shore bombarded our harg ,0 m pm on the increase; artillery fire in greater volume was w. 51cm! the battle line. t all Japanese Damage bor fortifications with lncreasirr intensity during most of the do.‘ to our gum ashore pounded island fortl- casualties were not great. "amt" m Ill-mil 3B7 but dld "Ln Baton, the enemy is bring- m” 11° INlt dlmwfi. in; up artillery reinforcements In developed and there is mcrrnmd artillery Wnmngfon, it that Moi-Gen. B. O. Moore, arrow‘: Muir mm or ma. the fine all along the front. meaty ulr bod activity l; increasing." Summorslde tide eichtcvn ruin- lnstaufluons and utcs later than Cllu1'l()t\0t.0\\‘l1. BOBDEN — CAPE TORMENTINE SERVICE ‘ IAIN Borden 9.25 A.M. 1.00 FM Leno Capo Tormcutlnc IIMI Am l» PM. Nazi 1