hpather Forecast vvcui'"-crt Dlstrlct and Prlr" ' 01 Dpt.. iarlotte ... Islands T.lanrlsLleht Light to to north north winds, winds, cloudy cloudy and and QU!.pte m5??- a (ew showers, becoming yxa iii"" --- m H HI Ktel HH Across 15cm lviaae 1 owaras ft V In" " SAIGON'. French Indo-China, i Imperial Japanese ' ...:t. .iilimiril In French .j.rhin. hezan trand ma- .,.rr n1av as many odsctt- Mpressed belief tnat me .. . -.--a t.n t n m rtnsor but it was disclosed : . . i v. tanks and trucks, involved fere efficient for a full dress dmpaijn. rressure on inai- I is being increased, It Is re- aW Relations IP 1 f nriT s in th, The Vr CENTRE the Importance headed thlnklnc and full ywweratin.. . . ..." uuen a cause was hurt lb .?""consldered statements. fcthr; eLr.cferred Particularly f a nation here. r ti liw.i N1.ckeon felt that th: -"Hi ir i nr l.u ... Oons euer nealtn conal in ph &Vted Rupert had been Be K hoped b? the-.JUnlor Chamber. 'hat the SenW nt, j (1 nm,... carrying in v" UBh wlth thls Civic lentre Is Keported Un; Full Public Support Required fnrth the imnortancc of the nroiect as an ."MM ' U 1 U v- w 'H . L natakMnat II f A T " TM A I Ainl tlfni ur. L.arge announcea mat, as a result of an Interview recently with Premier T. D. Pattullo, the provincial architect had been in the orolect. Dr. Large reported tnat mere was already $13,000 on hand for ho Mvlc pentre and an ouisiac Statin PRINCE RUPERT, B.C. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 4, l'J4l. States Koyal I Occupied upied Country Country mans Come Over Newcastle Hard Hit Dv K "J- J1 ....v, LONDON,, , Oct. 4: CP; The Iloyal :,YmiTTpr auucuicu uib nu 1' uumui-flir r orce aurins me nmm DomD- nmninrce iasi mum to nroseni a renort on ea aocKs at Hotteraam. Antwem u ' V UHll'll. .Clot VV il v.hlii w C4 U.l uuuevo at tvutiuaiu, iuiirnLip 7f:. ,.,v,frrrws orocress that that was was being beintr ma( made e with With a a yiew View to to and ana Dunkerquc uunKerquc in in the me course course oi of IN ORIENT AID WAD n An n ah X A , IjUL UN VV NORWEGIANS AND NAZIS structed to draw up plans and, Armed Clash Keported to Have In that connection, the latter Occurred Near Trondhcim would shortly be visiting the city. There had been an Interview with STOCKHOLM, Oct. 4: An arm-City Commissioner D. J. Matheson cd clash of German soldiers and who had been aulte sympathetic Norwegians ts reported to nave and had undertaken to turn over occurred near Trondhcim. four lots, already partly developed, at the corner of First Avenue and McBride Street as a taxfree site. There would also be free water and telephone and $1000 lllrprilir l llHllutMliwiucn naa ucvu waucu w for. relief purpose jparsag w&uig be r e s"t o r e id." In addition, Mr. Matheson had been sympathetic to the city, making a sub stantial contribution to the cam- naicn fund depending upon the LINES UP RELIGION President Roosevelt Seeking United Front of Churches Against Naziism. WASHINGTON, D.C., Oct. 4: B. r rr- director-general of expre5slon of public approval for Presld(.nt Franklin D. Roosevelt Is n ana suddiv. is Eivine :i will be succeeded moving to secure the unified support of religious groups In all lands against Naziism. to -. I tiiv l.I.V, yv.v.w ' - The I HQ United UilllCU States OtUtUO delegation UtlVfeaviull w 0 r f d Howe, minister -cHmato nt tisnnn had v been made tmrs LiiiidLr ui 0AVivwv iv u kwi i vv il ivi i . r i n wriL j uciiuov announced yester- Ls t0 the balance being required. took un wlth Premier Joseph Sta- r.AI.I H of Industrial workers. Tne civic tne president with the Pope at centre would provide a place where e Vatican. nil elements of the community o.ve Their Support could be kept satisfied and happy, j . fLL.,. ...' .. i""'"1 le "'"'c " . 11 v,i avntl. TV,o Prlncp Rnnprt Junior - i .. . .Mu.tn nmontc mm p. rhimripr nr t .nmmprrp. rl ils iui -v -u...M waiuCi uur nffirprs for -the ensulne years as -....all Ills SUtTCPSS 111 Lilt? I . . ... j .. I Suimmine- Tool I0110WS "unns tne past year ano " " ir. rntt a " measure of success under nr Larue exDressea me view maw ...Miudu, na mveu. me centre ii--.i rP!1crPr n n Ham. c comino voir f M.triu Ua.u.j .lnn tf n-nn ft 1111 SO maiij . . o J.i., i.il. i.iuiin lUMllCU OIUH. v - rvnnnHiro A I. K Sd.in. Li. JV1. lm- mppHs wherebv the swimming pool IC1 rerv I ilil- I II Pflia WllL'lLWJ a - 1 l 1 I A . O XTI .,. flb-nfPAn T ' .v.w w UL tx 4uibf iriu rn i'ni 1 m rn nriA i Th n eiir mm nir tvhii u ta. iw nv - ... m raportant matters but favored as a second unit. The hall ens ana '-ampaigns, particularly president tressed of the Senior Stev- u UL. oiners a3 the chair during the I I, wnicn ne asked sup- whereas swimming -"""'"'early part of the evening, the new . waj, ,ne establishment of a produced deficits. president. Alf Rlvett, taking over Kr Tl n R"pe.rt s for the oromiig .uiii- or Qf. Jwevei a t:ampaign came aiongf clared tnat not only the efforts ncers .-amp tiandrul of men was usu- of the four sponsoring bodies but,- - $1 afldiert ...u v- ...... Jl.. ;tw nranlzatlons civic centre committee of contln- . m more citizens enllst- X ana citizens , gencan, nerallv would be es- ued full support. He acknowledg- . nn nf tho Tn0r a sentlal If It were to prove a progreS5 that had been made ill 1 1 tlV3 i i . v,n ci,KctnnH.ii residue remain bimi wmwmv...- - lng In the coffers oi me juiuu. Chamber of Commerce from a previous Port Day might be turn ed over for the civic cenuc AnsuTPrimr a oucstlon, Dr. Large stated that civic centre plans pro vided for a two-storey Duuums ...Hk' urochrnnms and duu- WlUl OUUWCiO, MIH-- incnone facilities downstairs and auditorium or ha with stage, standard mskmwi. floor as well as smaller service rooms upstairs President Alf Rlvett assured the1 donation w R McAfpp mentioned how the Rotary Club had spent $3000 j Ot SO i. uuyniK a out. in , of this, It could hardly be said I that the city was making a complete gift in providing a site. As a culmination of the civic centre discussion, the Junior Chamber, on motion of A. S. Nlck-prson. seconded bv T. W. E. Henry, passed a resolution endorsing the drive for the raising of tunas ana rrnnpstlnc the fciAC V..VT cltv to W head the Innings Yanks Win. NEW YORK, Oct. 4:0 Southpaw Marius Russo pitched brilliant four-hit ball today to give the New York Yankees a 21 victory over the Brooklyn Dodgers in the third World Series In front in available for a arge aance battle and put them " annua; dinner meeting ol city ?.a,u "nP The civ c cen re P . Liecis UII1Cer5 S" ,6 fanT Rupert Junior Cham- uuupn junior Lnam- :...... i o fans I Wnelrafh41l rVl n TTt 1 1 1 L( Ji 1. The crowd of 33,100 in Ebbets Field was saddened when Fred Fitzsimmons, Brooklyn s starting hurler, was struck on the knee by a line drive and forced out of the game after hurling seven scoreless innings. The Yankees scored all their runs off Hugh Casey who relieved Fitzsimmons at the start of the eighth. With one down, Red Rolfe, Tommy Henrich, Joe DiMaggio and Charlie Keller fell on Casey for successive singles with the first first two two crossing crossing the the plate. plate. In to stem the onslaught The Dodgers, who had been unable to fct a run for the unfortunate Fitz in seven innings he toiled so gloriously, finally counted their one tally off Russo in the eighth when Dixie Walker slammed a double to right centre and scored on a single by Peewee Reese. Salmon Pack Is Six-Year Record Total for Coast This Season Placed at 1,520,000 Cases. ling 1,520,000 cases. VROVINCIAL CO"T o8 31 March 43 4 ment BLDOB. NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER Protests 2 5 Air Force Is Active Over oooatKarJonooooouCHooaooaofHiooomKm3AomDmw00oiKJcmcm Few Ger- AIM ami m TO tmap TRAP riFUMANS GERMANS Jet. OJ infill. 1 " - iKrinbinr iho mottor trv fn.itiv, ra'.ds on oc:uplcd Holland. Bel- ... c-1. Movement oi J ana ntse Forces Indicate tany , Action. the near future. Dr. Large told of Zlum and France, the campaign for funds that was Tne German air force was com-about to be launched for funds Paratively Inactive with only a and declared that, if this was to few Pnes over eastern England be successful, it would be necea- ana ocouana. no casualties were sary to develop complete unanim- "ported. lty of public opinion In support of """ uuiu.caanin f0? wh was heavily hit by the the project. For the welfare, hap- plness and service of the commu- ut"e inurauay. meic werc nlty, the civic centre had never numerous conflagrations with been more greatly needed than mucn aamae an casualties. today and, from the financial standpoint, It appeared that it Wits a taac ui uuw ui iicti. a 1 V 1 I. V4 '1 Ki " LONDON Large-scale Russian counter-attacks on one flank of the German drive against the Crimean Teninsula aimed at turnabout entrapment of Germans and relief of Crimea's defenders was reported today by an authoritative London source. The Biilish Broadcasting Corporation, interpreting the news, said it indicated Marshal Hudenny was "making a determined effort to cut off the Germans now fighting in the narrow Perekop Isthmus. Front-line Russian dispatches said today that the Red Army had recaptuied. a city and railroad junction of B" on the Karelian Isthmus, described as one of the decisive sectors of the Leningrad front. The KussiaiK also reported heavy German material losses on the southwestern front where, vast stakes are involved In frilling lor Odeisa, Crimea and the industiial Donetz basin. IN NORTH AFRICA CAIRO lighting Is being resumed in North Africa. British forces at 'iobiuk, Salum and Marsa Matru have been bombed by the Italians. British land forces out of Tobruk have been active against the enemy.; GERMAN SUPPLY SHIP SUNK LONDON The Admiralty announced today that a German supply ship had been sunk in the Atlantic but gave no other details than that one of Hi's Majesty's ships had been responsible for the sinking. TRISONER EXCHANGE POSTPONED LONDON The scheduled exchange of wounded prisoners across the English Channel has been delayed by a German request for a return of "certain prisoners," an authoritative source said today. The souice declared Ut was "not a question of certain individuals but certain categories of prisoners." MOPPING UP IN JUGO SLAVIA ZAGREB, Cioatia An entire German mechanized division niri)la niinri. Arrorillnr to German rlaims a full-flcdeed Com munist uprising in Montenegio has been crushed after two months by German and Italian occupying forces. Two hundred and sixty-six persons have been executed in Jugo Slavia. BROOKLYN'S BAD LUCK Emphasizing the appropriateness u the question of freedom of ii, .o- offnrt .. .... r, i Fitzsimmons Out of Game by ln oi me projixt tu uk v..-.., worsnin Deing resturea in nuaiu - - - 1 . j the u loot lack nt of . ' . . i , u jury lurv After After Seven Seven Scoreless Scoreless Dr. Large referred to and ls understood to have won the facilities here for the physical de- approVal of the head of the Soviet velopment of the young people. g0vernment. Nor was there any provision for In tne same connection were ithe entertainment and recreation recent conversations on behalf of NAZIS ARE SET BACK Many Casualties Are Inflicted o tne act. Upon Germans Leningrad - Is ih rninmhtn salmon rack for thi3 . ILUUCQtlllK -v w 7" I subscription list with a substantial season ls .a" six-year record, total More Secure. LONDON, Oct. 4: German siege lines around Leningrad have been pushed back one to two miles by Red Army counter-attacks and heaw Russian smashes on that front and In the centre have In-1 llicted more than six thousand WASHINGTON. D.C Oct. 4: 0 President Franklin D. Roose velt told a press conference yes- Uerdav that undoubtedly there would be some effort made to re vise the? neutrality act to facilitate the delivery of aid to the fizhUne democracies. The chief executive Indicated that he fav ored revision rather than repeal Are Coming to Prince Rupert Mrs. J. L. Savage And Miss Mary Frizelle Of 1'. W. C. A. To Visit Here German casuaiues, nuian ic- y w c A Hostess ports asserted Western Canada and to ' fC confer with secretaries of Y. W. end h of thp the lone long Russo Russo - - German German branches In the west, Mrs. front to the other, and reports j ' i'savaee. chairman of the Na- appear favorame w tional Y. w. C. A. War Services Red Army advances POmmlttpe. and Miss Mary Friz- area on the cemra i on nlstratlve war services ported. Anotner cuy n me Toronto are ellan Istnmus wesi ; " ft . tnat win take them has been rccapiurea nm . ... - - Qn Reginai Nazis. A counier-o ve m . Rnskatoon Edmonton. Prince Rup Crimea Is proceeaing vryur.-- Vancouver and Cal Red parachute troops anoguer- e due m Prlnce Uup rlllas are active in me .c- - .av . . t hv tral. gion Civ HCAb -o - . .. . . nnd leave bv boat the next day A German suDmanne is wlll be met In Prince Rupert Tn Tney win oe Larry French had to be rushed ed to have been sunk by Russian . . I .. 1. 4 i 1. I I Vn li i" IT ir l li "J ' warsuipa n. -V- ,i-o. nasnn officer for Brl- A British military auwiui. . mh . wnQ .m return lalthrt tta OMnw- to Victoria. While land in get- ... been unsuccessful by Dr. Jardlne will tln into the Crimean Peninsula and must now attack either by sea or air. . . Berlin claimed that the Soviet armies were being smashed all oWxr hP line. A former Palace of the Czars, 18 miles south of Leningrad, ls said to have been taken. MAURICE DUPRE DIES THREE RIVERS Hon. Maurice Dupre, former Solicitor General for Canada, died yesterday as a result of fractured skull and other Injuries sustained in the derailment of a Montreal-Quebec pool train. He was the third to die as a result of the wreck. Transferring Tomorrow sT ides (Pacific Standard Time) High 1:06 a.m. 205 ft. 13:20 p.m. 21.5 ft. Low .... 7:19 a.m. 4.8 ft. 19:41 p.m. 3.8 ft. In Prince Rupert ad dress an open meeting oi tne Canadian Club In the Legion Hall Ion Thursday evening. PRICE: FIVE CENTS Sinking Torpedoeing of Tanker Another Act of Piracy, Cordell Hull D eclares Four of Crew Are Unaccounted For Vessel Was En-route From United States to Capetown With Fuel Oil. ; -WASHINGTON, D.C., Oct. 4: (CP) Secretary of State Cordell Hull today vigorously denounced action of a submarine in sinking the United States-owned oil tanker I. C. White in the South Atlantic. He said the sinking of the tanker "seems to be another act of lawlessness, piracy and attempted frightfulness in connection with a general movement to urive peupie off the Atlantic Ocean which Is part of the world movement of conquest." Thirty-four of the thirty-eight man crew of the I. C. White have been rescued. The remaining four are unaccounted for. The I. C. White was sunk in that part of the Atlantic described as United States defence zone. The vessel was enroute from the United States to Capetown with a cargo of fuel oil. REVISION moving slowly throiuh Serbia toward BclgradeiU mop' kiui Seib"?. Roosevelt Repeal Speaks FAVORED Not" Likely To Seek Of Neutrality Act1 At Press Conference Bulletins BRUSSELS EXPLOSION BERLIN A bomb explosion on Tuesday in headquarters of the Belgian Rexlst (rightist) move ment in Brussels killed Jean Oedekerke, secretary, in offices of Rexist militarized groups, it was disclosed today. GREEKS ANNIHILATED SOFIA Rebellious Greeks who invaded Bulgarian - occupied Drama district in eastern Mac.-, edonia Sunday night were an-jUbUatfbV aftef 'gkhmbhc3of several hours, it was claimed today. Armed with rifles and machine guns, the Greeks cross ed the line of demarcation and tried to rouse Greek inhabitants of seveial Drama villages and seize public institutions, it was said. FOOTBALL GOES ON LONDON England defeated Scotland two to nothing in an international football game played at Wembley Stadium this afternoon before a wartime record crowd of sixty thousand persons. BUILDING MERCHANT VESSELS MONTREAL II. R. MacMillan, director of shipbuilding, speak ing here last night, said that a six months' program for Canadian shipbuilding included 75; to 80 merchant vessels of 10,-000 ton class with a number of smaller vessels. The chief difficulty in shipbuilding was ob taining steel, he said. Otherwise, the industry was well organized. In 1912, Canada, for the first time in history, will be building more merchant vessels than Great Britain whose yards are concentrating on naval ship building. HOUSEWORK IS STARTED Ci PlMcnnprQ'Pro0611 without interruption ex-Jl 1 IiaUHClJicept p0ssibiy that the road con- t.ondon. Oct. 4: Ships are be ing held in readiness to effect the transfer of wounded prisoners of n.n. Kptnrppn nrp.it Britain ana nai k---" ? Germany, suspension of which was j Lumber Begins to Arrive ana Should Come Along at Regular Intervals. Work has started on the foun dations for the new houses for the dry dock workers along Sixth Av enue. The first lumber to arrive was some heavier timbers, but the other ls to follow at regular In tervals LPrvais and ana the uie work wuik. should auuuiu uun now structlon may take longer than was expected. There Is a steam shovel dieelne out the muskez but it cannot operate effectively on the rock. The land is pretty well all clear- -.,o ..Maniv vpstprdav af-'ed and the home sites pegged out ttlUlVUilWU quumvv w - -- tcr all plans had been maae to. a new wjuuuuiw uaa carry It out. The postponement, It Is explained, was due to word received from Germany. pared for the Storrlg housb so that the building cati.be Iriovea to. Its new location.- u