r :,GT. BRITAIN . Goering ers Interned MOSCOW. July 14.-The ex- j change Telegraph publishes a strange report saying the Rus- j slan radio quoieo. owcuuu t that Her- sources as saying mann Ooering is In a Nazi con- centration camp following a dispute with Hitler about the prosecution of the war; It says Ooering told Hitler the German Luftwaffe was unfit for further heavy action. 4 Gave Up Luxury To Help Needy 'Angel of Kensington," Emily Thompson Dies At 91 After Life Devoted To Poor WNDON, July 14: (CP)- Emily Caroline Tnompson, who gave up a file o (luxury to, help the poor, Is dead The 91 -year old woman died at Hwe Day Lla. Ken where she nad opened a home for poor moth was the daughter dt Vice-Admiral Thomas Thompson. She left the etately family home In Park Lane 6 years ago to make her home In two loemi 'among the poor of North Kensington, then still a vll-laze of flower-decked collages. In this she followed in the footsteps of her great-grandfather, Robert Jtalkes, the founder of. Sun-day Schools. ' At the Kensal mission she found' couraglng her flock. Women Dig Up Discard Hose Stocking to Mend In London does R Into Big Business Class Halibut Sales AND RUSSIA' Promise That Neither Will Quit Fighting Hitler LONDON, July It It h announced that Great Britain and Soviet Russia have signed a "declaration of mutual policy" amounting almost to a mutual aid pact. It provides for full cooperation and co-assistance in the present war and states that neither party will conclude any peace or armistice with Hitler without the other's consent. A Moscow official says that the pact makes the United States virtually a partner of the Soviet and adds that "Hitler now fat-ex the inescapable difficulties of fighting on two fronts, a position he had hoped to avoid." REMAINING KVICHAK ARRIVES1 tacular Undertaking Successfully culminating a and spectacular salvage under- ed It was not only for the spiritual taking, the Armour Salvage Co. well-being of those tor -whom It outfit arrived In the harbor last became a centre that she catered, evening with the wreck of the Miss Thompson provided also a United States Army transport Kvl-doctor and nurse to give free ad- chak. Tills morning the hulk was vice to women and children assocl- beached at Casey Cove, Digby Isl-ated with the mission. and, so that she may be raised She carried out her work tire- somewhat before being placed on lessly and even when well past 80 the ' pontoons at the dry dock oontlnuued to make her rounds of where it Is hoped to deliver her fnrtinff and en- this afternoon. Tn IVVlCJiaK was vuwcu unuci .... I .water from Sisters Island, Just north of Mllbank Sound where she sank several months ago after stranding, by the tugs Amaralyss, Pachena, Fearless. Capt. W. P. Armour and Bert Frankforth were In charge of the salvage operation. MADE BlfJ DETOUR rrMnoN. Julv 14: (CP) A Free . French volunteer left Paris to come LONDON, July 14: (CPl-Lon- t London He aftCr travel- don's invisible mending stores are miles via Marseilles. doing a thriving business repairing Ca5ablnncai Martinique, Miami, New sun SWCKingS mai women ft'C"- York mA Montreal. glnsr un from trunks and boxes . stored away in attics and cellars for years. Rationing of clothe3 and scarcity of silk stockings brought the demand upon repair departments. New girls are being trained as quickly as possible but there still are many vacancies for "ladder WILL MAKE STATEMENT '..( Kinr tn be Heard From i Regarding Cabinet Changes 1 and Other Matters I nffanra npwsoaoers expect Prem- ier King to make a statement-foon American on possible cabinet changes, a visit Llovd. a2.0OO. Roval. 14c and nnd wavs of obtaining U.6c. 'an expression of public opinion on '-11 . . . I JJ- 1 A I racier, upw, oiorage, ii.ic an ne conscription quesuon. If . . - 12r American 45 000 pounds, 14c' MOTOR-HORN ALERTS and 11.6c to 14.4c and 12c. WESTON-SUPER-MARE, July 14: permission to use FUR FARMS VALUABLE I whistles In an air-raid alert. sub-Fur farms contribute 35 percent'urban fire-watchers now open Canada's raw fur production. age doors and sound motor horns NAZIS AND REDS BOTH OPTIMISTIC Smashing New Offensive Evidently Being Launched By Germans TODAY'S REPORTS LONDON, July 14 Apart from the common admission that there cpntinues to be heavy fighting there is nothing in common between the reports from Moscow and Berlin tonight. Russia claims to have recaptured two towns from the Nails in the cen- i ' tral sector, and to have repulsed two other drives with very severe losses. It admits the losi of 2200 tanks to date. Berlin says the fall ! of both Leningrad and Kiev Is imminent and the Russian army is in a state of complete dlssolu- 1 tion. LONDON, July 14: Oerman and Russian communiques In regard to the progress of the Nazi-Soviet war still conflict widely. The Nazis claim that the Stalin line, as a result of a smashing new offensive, has been broken through at several points, that the Russians I are retreating on all fronts and that the backbone of Russian re- AT MOsPilW to of cunter attack- Nazl jtV I lllvJlJVV TT Jdrlve Is aimed at Leningrad on the north, at Moscow on the centre Reports That Russian Government and at Kiev on the south. Leaving Denied I Russian reports- on the other hand de-alare-thatr the'Nazis havV LONDON and Moscow aeny cm- been successfully repulsed ana inai nViotlnollir a rnnrt. hrniHrast hv nllnrV Viovo lwn mr. Known in hundreds of slum the aerman raaio mat uie uussian .ucularly successful in immoDouz- homes tn Lbndon 'as The Angei govemmeni is preparing vo ievc mg me uerman miuuiry upcia- ol Kensington, Miss lnompsuu musuw. lions, numcruus iuuimwuu, iroop irams wuig ucsnujtru. m Nazis, the Russians claim, I having difficulty In maintaining gas supplies. i . . il 1 .v.. ' i on saiuraay, acwruuis iu uic Russian claims. 102 Oerman planes iwere destroyed, making a total of Successful Culmination Of Spec-1432 In three days. Bulletins VANCOUVER DROWNINGS VANCOUVER Harry Nash, 18, was drowned at Spanish Banks yesterday. Little Belva Eileen Gentry of Mission was drowned while swimming six miles west of Abbotsford. DEAD IN 'FRISCO SAN FRANCISCO William B. Davey, well known San Francisco lawyer died yesterday at the age of fifty-eight: He was the son of a former British Columbia judge and was born in ATTACK IS ' IN A DIRECT HIT i lhe harbor of Tyboron, Denmark, was the locale and a luckless Nazi supply ship was the subject for a spectacularly successful experiment with the new U.S. bomb sight which the R.A.F. Is now using. A bomb from the plane from which this picture' was made, explodes squarely on the stern of the Nazi ship. The bomb was released from 8,000 feet. ARMISTICE IS SIGNED LONDON, July 14. Ankara reports, that representatives of the Allies and the Vichv French arc -have-already signed an agree- ment bringing tne war in Syria ' to an- end. The terms are not niade nubile. SPIRIT TO RISE AGAIN By Prime Minister Churchill LONDON. July 14: (CP) In a letter to General Charles DeGaulle. Prime Minister Winston Churchill said, in a Bastille Day message, that "the spirit of the French , people will rise again, purified and rejuvenated by what it has Trnrnilin ITIV LONDON, July 14: (CP)-News-K M h K I N I , IlK papermen serving ' with British and IVLjIjI IllVJ UI Dominion forces in the United Kingdom still can gather round Royal Air Force Has Another wnere the odor of printer's ink is Busy Day With Good fcirect ln tne alr t0 sh0p. Against Enemy task of brightening the lot, 'of their colleagues ln uniform has LONDON, July 14: (CP) The been shouldered, by the Journalists' i- i nn TTnvrQ COHfPrl hflTTlh llltS n i -im I fntwnftrl Q VPflf rvuytt un iwv,- uuw-v. ot rviuvo uuiuuiitrc 'on two six thousand ton enemy ag0 un(jer the chairmanship of - . .i l J ..... "l avi rt m . . i 1 m ships ana snotuuwu sjcycii jjb, p. is. versione, wue oi a w flghtcrs in two morning raids on mer presldent of the Institute of Nazi-neia jjouo m wmtwuiB journansis. Lellarvc France, today, it was an- Formed to provide hospitality Red War Chief - - War E She Tomorrow's Tides High 5:45 am. 16.8 ft. 18:35 pjn. 18 0 ft. ' Low 11:56 am 6.4 ft. ISiU UliAISUU IIS SITUATION MOSCOW A Soviet communique today taid there had bren no major Nthtlng at the front last night and no significant chanies in the position of troops. Iasl In Bessarabia and the ploestl oil fields in Rumania were again bombed. BREMEN ATTACKED LONDON The Royal Air Force delivered a heavy attaek en Bremen In spite of bad weather, losing two planes. LONDON IS PLEASED LONDON The peace in Syria Is causing much pleature in London. The whole campaign is said to hate been conduct-ti without too much bitterness as between former allies and the British Tictory Is expected to result in Syria and Lebanon forming a bulwark of defence against German advances and to tnhearten the Turks. NAZIS EXPECT INVASION LONDON Extensive defence preparations were observed on the French side of the Straits of Dover yesterday. Apparently the Nails expect a British Invasion. Vol. XXX,. No. 163. NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., MONDAY, JULY 14, 1941. RUSSIAN MARSHAL Semion Timoshenko Brought Success to Red Army in Finland MOSCOW, July 14: (CP) Shrouded Finnish ski troops and the coldest winter in half a century were stalling the gigantic Russia o army 'n its tracks In January, 1910 He sent officers out for more fl"ld 1r ..tnfVA1 wn MIYIOS tV,Ot PTT1 FEW DEAD IN RAIDS C 1 T fl. IT (Killings Killings From From Bombings Bombings in in Jul '5eek 10 UieCr UP Lowest SinceJuly of Last Year i m mrm in 1 1 ' PRICE: FIVE CENTS Churchill Is Threatening Claims Conflict Promises Nazis More And More of Attacks PEASANT Un Military experts were con- months of German bombings, has begun hitting back with Moscow's mill- p,I,i ,;Uf anA ?Q still nnlv at the beffinniilff of her eluding ; that that perhaps perhaps tory might was a fable. Then Marshal Semion Ttmosh enko was called In. Slowly, ponder-( ously the armv pulled itself together. Finally the Mannerhetm Line was smashed., and Timoshenko was a Russian hero. I Stalin named him defence commissar over Kllment Voroshlloff. who became chairman of the Defence Committee, a backseat Job. Immediately Timoshenko started rehashing the politics - infested army. He reduced the political commissars, installed In tne early days when he Soviet wasn't sure of some of Its officers, to the status of assistants. He revived officer's ranks, which had been abolished. in favor of commandershlos of various grades, tightened discipline and created decorations of merit. I Wide neiorms increase d s caie It is Now Time That Germans Should Begin Suffering m Homeland Torments Like Britons and Others Have Been Called Upon to Endure . t rkxmrvxT T..1 1A Hi-oot Rvlfoin iinchnVcn hv t.fn f . - . it t i nVmrnli.il m 1 .111 r:. Win of nn i rrrnivinc mr nnwer. rrirne Minister winsiun uiuiuuh told a thunderously cheering and enthusiastic gathering of civil defence workers today. The Prime Minister de- llyered virtually the same fighting wuiri, owi&cu . the me 'Canadian uanaaian gha sized more .unified qffenyjft; pTr nn?, cv.n ana more iiexioie ueieucco, nua-slan military Journals said Stalin himself had ordered Timoshenko to undertake reforms "based on the experience of recent wars." presumably the Russo-Flnnlsh campaign and the European war. Towering, round - headed Timo-shenko's military career began when, as a peasant youth, he was mobilized into the Czar's army In the First Great War. His cavalry division was one of the first to go Bolshevik. i His most satisfying personal triumph probably came when he led his army Into Bessarabia, ceded to Russia by Rumania last year. Timoshenko was born in Bessarabia 46 years ago and had seen sn his nis home Canadian Women Treating Air Raid Victims ...Canadian Woman Has Her Own Ideas About Precautionary Measures By PAT USSHER Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON, July 14: (CP In her tastefully - furnished Kensington house, Mrs. John Hall, former resi dent of Toron to, described to put into effect her plan for treating a i r raid casualties on the spot. A middle-aged woman quietly dressed in black, she told how she and her moth- PAT USSHER er, Mrs. Jeannie urasMu w iu vji onto, i uw-v donated a u mobile -- first aid unit (hose of last fall and winter would tr, thP horoueh of Kensington- and how she rented and furnished part of a house for bombed-out war workers. She decided It was better to take the first aid post to air raid vic- - -- - nome- ; 4 o hrnaht. tn Bastille u ltspeed In treatment ollen saves - - ii,,e." cho emnnasraea. . . . , . rr,nrn, cinrf. hits, and people won't use them. Was Uie luwcau ui ai.jr - - - - - . . mey nave no ynvm-jr t.o lu. ioin i l JUiy nn,.nlH TOhatever." llc ii-J - IUlCria She tried vainly to persuade CLIf D C A D 17 Kensington authorities to take over UlHl U AJtVli 'one basement in every block and it as a shelter. Finally she CENT mi,Afmi nnWrJ herself rented and furnished a ULll 1 JLU IT ll iground floor and basement in a ! three-storey house. British Submarines and Aircrau It pr0vides sleeping accomooa -- ...... I 111 UUUltlull " . f kj - it n - sacK Nazi davllaht raiders also struck across the Channel and there were light attacks on south and west England. Three soldiers were .they' are stationed. Dispose of Several Italian Vessels . Um LJUI1 1UJ. f0r eight ClgilV people, VV'V, its v- own rein In Mediterranean LONDON DN, Itroycd and another was set afire the weight of falling debris. Walls i yesterday ln a British air raid on a 'are exceptionally uuu u (convoy outside of Tripoli, Libya, a .walls outside provide protcctton wounded when a German piano Zflt: I th- Royal Alr Force Middle East com-. 'from blast. Windows are protected reported ierTEngland. loue aticalr announced today.lby heavy wooden snuuers. message twice, first to six thousand veterans of the defence of Lon don In Hyde Park and later to a luncheon of the capital's organized civilian defenders. I "It Is time the Oermans should be made to suffer in their own I. . 1 . 1 1 1 iU. ana ciues &viue ui mc Inomeiana torments they have twice in our lifetime let loose upon their neigh bors and upon the world, exclaimed Mr. Churchill. He said that Great Britain believed it to be within her power to keep an increased air offensive going, steadily In a rising tide month af ter month, year after year, until the Nazi regime Is either exterpated by us or, better still, torn to pieces by the German people tnemseives. i Mr. Churchill told defence work-'efs that "we are nowTjombing the enemy at a heavier rate than he .has In any monthly period bombed us" and added that "we are only beginning." Mr. Churchill caused laughter ,wheh he said that "that unhappy 'subject of Germany that used to .be called Italy" would have its fair 'share of bombing as well. . The Premier said that the government was proceeding on the as- snmhtion' that air raids such as tun"-"'- . -i la tha TJoTfc Viart hnrlf1 on Britain I sent for his reunion with his family ""- ICJ, OUC r - be renewed and preparations were- being made to meet them. There would be no truce or par ley with Hitler. Rather he would be challenged to do his worst while "we do our best." Durlne the oast three weeks the Royal Air. Force had thrown about half - as many - bombs - on Germany after 20 years, and much was made J?i t Sdurmg Wto . of it in Russian papers. Zenana other The Prime Minister referred to ... , . I I ,v,m i-'the arowlne effectiveness of Brl- able to get hot meals while they.tlsh fighting back against night contended. Too bombing. Germany, he declared are on the Job. she alonglstlll had a large bombing force in often now they have to get '.with a cup of tea ,d. tan. . Mrs. Hall's mobile unit already me nui. "i'5 the recent cessation. Nor a ,v. t-r, rain Tfpn-'had been he belleve lfc because 0ermany ainRto lngt Hesuggested of thanks for Its services during, that the German air force poss.biy f nn.hMwttack. .dldnotliKeinerecepuonimaarc Newsmen in Man -JSS , 1 - , , , 'nounced today that only uva per- x " .", Arrangements Made-So They Maysons . were kUled in alr raids on to build surface shelters, shesaid. . cf in K,nii ink i ..i.!- T. -rhis ficrnrc "Thpv won't stand up to dlrectl celved In Britain. Billions For Defence-Aid WASHINGTON, D.C., July 14. president Franklin D. Roose- velt Is to ask Congress In Washington lor another eight billion dollar appropriation to . step up production of bombers, J. tanlre onH llns fOf flreat Brf- J . forced shelter, kitchen, bathroom, tain under the "lease-lend pro dlnlne dining room, room, 5HMI18 sltUng room and " Dec- - gram, 6i" ugni muion ooiiars wm -r - I July 14: (CPi The Ad-'rooms. The furniture is expensive, also be sought for the United announced tonight thellnciUding easy chairs, a comfort- states army, navy and marl- mlralty nounced authoritatively. and a friendly welcome to news- nt lp,.t three Italian ves-lble settee, deep rugs, luxurious . time commission. Big bombers were escorted ty papermen serving with the forces. ,1(1ine one carrying troops , curtains. Fine paintings hang on fighters as they swept across uie hp mmmlttee placed many press ,,it,rf,n(.9n n. " and SUDPUcS. Ill Hie mvifcv.. wle huiio. . Channel after night attacks on men m touch with ... members , of were credited to submarines ofi The shelter is supported by steel docks at Amsieroam ana w.enu their own profession in va0U6 , Brltaln.s Mediterranean fleet. pillars sunk ln concrete and nas and raias on tymcn vbv.- narts or tne counuy near w ... . chine wpr ries- rnmirrntpd iron ceinng u vbkc LUCKY STONE KALGOORLIE, West Australia, July 14: (CP) A gold reef which Albert Polkingthorne found when picking up a stone to throw at a rabbit already has yielded tz.uuu and Is still showing gold.