It. UBftffoy rj... Tomorrow sT ides'" Local TeSS'j (Standard Time) High 6:02 ajn. 175 feet . 17:51 pjn. 185 feet 54 Low 11:51 ajn. 8.9 feet M i vmum 47 Minimum NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER XXXI. No. 239 PiUNCE RUPERT, B.C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1942 PRICE- FIVE CENTS etc ran ussians Are Holding IN TANK WARFARE MEN'S TAXES NOT BRAINWORK IS FACTOR PERMANENT Commander of Canadian Armored Division s,,nn7 "r,"'" "p i war'a Overseas Tells of Progress to Battle-Competence By WILLIAM STEWART ff'!imiili:m Prows Staff Writer) "ML Ml WHERE WHEKri ... IIS IN ENGLAND, kiNUljAiNU, Oct. UCl. 15 lu (CP) 1.1,1) Maj. t i 0 1 1 n. uin In recent week. : dull that will make ;. t do battle. The mediate obJectlTe Is the same battle -com-' .i ved by Canadian :, have beta training .:i-e early In the war. am to draw abreast nnored division which r,i-n E. W. Saosom ud at work overseas un with the other r a pre Juat no damned .! Worthtnalon In 'fart n kmen'i black beret "I shell of a Cana-k largely of hte own he spoke briskly of A tu training first -i .hen in Britain, he u unk towering above i!necrttrmle R wwttd . :md toe performance expected of it Ak-(e had, In Its design. V- v I did have some- !i if (hanje I'rom Infantry k to the subject of Worthington prawd rcompllatunents of division. "Taking aeeoant. Gen. San-, has performed won-(l He told about hU conversion to armor. '.mi make excellent Unk ind. ' he declared. 'The , Millies as a good tank vuiat he has up here. in hit head that 1 .1 touched his grey he end of his black :ti stick. "Our men the energy and . ,usni Tfecvjhowedthat w-r w r u r t m m of of tinlin Canada Ufnjl tfccnlhcy mps tankmen' ' r W vthington moved away .ink as he went on to ' men of his division did 1 .,;nu In shlfU that filled 24 hours to speed up formation to soldiers In V was the only way to b quickly." said Gen. n. "Bveryonc responded, ivrked like trojans. They ' M nsc the need for speed ; ired the 24-hour-a-day There wasn't a. complaint. - a fine lob right through v about that." T ucral moved back to the urculed in tall, green He walked about It poking ' ids with his stick, cxam-1 gunx. peering closely at Its : ; rmor plate. He talked qulct- tall, bronzed officer of his ' :i while a blue ovcrallcd mc-1 lumbered about the deck 1 Ci; iugscrnaut. lank Flre-Powcr T - rnnernl moved away from - and tapping his knee with ick discussed tank flre- - '.he reasons behind tank 1' : t,he tank battles In Libya, - ment of smoke-screens In warfare and methods of out-i an opponent in armor. Tutik. tanks tanks. The ' seemed to bo the general's interest. He wulked to his Battle Of Solomons O struwtle for control of the Solomons was rising in crea- eendo today with newly rein- 4 iorced Japanese troops ap- parehUy determined to cap- lure the prised Guadalcanal air field. The Japanese hare U-BOATS .Merchant Ship Sunk By Torped Attack (Iff Mrtls Beach, hi. Lawtcnre Summer Resort MIHIS BKACII, (uebec. Oct. 15 (CP) A westbound merchant ship was torpeded and sunk last Thursday night off this summer resort on the St. Lawrence River's south shore, farther up the rher than any previous submarine attack. The ship was strurk lust after midnight and twelve of the crew are missing. , by Canadian naval vessels which tried to locale and counter-attack the t'-boal. Disclosure of (he loss of the 1.000-ton ship, one of the vessels In a small convoy, was withheld until (oday for naval security reasons. REICH ARMY GETS PURGE Drastic Shake-up Reported Result of llimmlers Investigation and others reduced in rank. GIVING TO RED CROSS Wartime Service Club Paclllc Paclllc Restaurant Restaurant End Despite Continued Expenditure HAMILTON. Ont.. Oct. 15 0 Q. W. 8plnney, chairman of the National TOuwrMu war war Finance finance Committee, oommiuec, meeting meeting of of Hamilton Hamilton service service clubs clubs he Dominion's Third Victory Loan, for a minimum of $750,000,000. October 19. He reviewed the country's financial requirements and described the coming loan as the WASHINGTON. DC. Oct. 15 reBl teat as to whether we In Can- ada actually are g roving stronger. Emphasizing that he was speak-tng as a layman and not as a member nor an employee of the government, he declared of postwar taxation: 1(Vn. Tl,lnliln mm . . - - f 1 I Ull . II lltnilld fashion. "It's , jueceeded w landing addition- -i think has '." A Wlillfc no ItV one VIH: V4 of us ua any nj u, do Just that." The 4 aj troops on Guadalcanal, the rihtiul basis for believtror or ex- battk-dreas and Nlvy y,. ptm that the high tax sched- T ulcs which have been imposed up 1 hi. business Is tax bill, assuming other costs on a pre-war basis, wtll still be substantially short of let us say half the nresent levy and let us not forget that the money will be owed to our own people and that the .strain In meeting the Interest In 1 peace time need not be anticipated Iwlth anv dearce of concern." The policy of expenditures win Eighteen others were picked up needed to re-establish members a. 1 l. . m . . l4n 1 I 1 1 1 iir llf n on to them at least until the war Is over. iT rtenrrlbed uroductlon, man- ,'nE .working for Industrial development and enlistments and unwillingness on the part of the people to put IS QUIET COFFEE IS done to shore installations. NEW HEAD Edwi IS NAMED nr in. armpn liiictm uiLir v.iii . up money as three possmie doiwc- j necks of the war effort, with the ircc Rupert General Hospital Is mhi) oiilHnrlHA cn it irt nvArrxinir ..auu vsw-ww rnriiir nrriuug miumiun $ 500 irJiilmmnlilthe second. "I i do not SHORTAGE ! OF HELP of the tmrd; nersaia: The help situation at tne t-rince C.N.R.A. Lawn Bowling Club 32.25 bel(evc thcpeoplc of Canada will RUpert General Hospital has. 161 SUCH U uviiu "vwn - i vatiicu u o.nvua wvw mm . believe the Canadian people can possibility of having to close the his office, he pulled his beret irom de thfi money and I am con- institution Is even seen. The most 0 his head, quickly packed his pipe thpy win serious shortage Is of maids and nii1 nnrl lit lit It It t.UiV.AH kitchen Va1 heln nllVrMiirK although even ovAti, some enmn He talked a moment more. "In the trnlnlnir of an armored fornia- ....niic'iv ninroi.ATE of the nurses are leaving to take ' . ,r'xT r.t 15: O) Eiuht more lucrative employment out Upper . . WAR NEWS CANADIANS AT KIEL LONDON-.-Royal Canadian Air Force squadrons took a prominent part In the raid on Kiel Tuesday night. Two-ton bombs, as well ar Incendiaries, were showered on the city's shipbuilding installations and dockyards. A bomber fleet of well over one hundred planes struck with.' the concentrated blast of explosives which lasted over an an hour hour and and war war as as destructive destructive as as anjr anjr 01 of the me seventy seventy which wnicn have nave so mj iwaj.- keen-eyed Of Canada's exd e ef that the far WmadealriM battered U-boat base. Nine British planes WorthillRton, pioneer jar- F . W , I, r v. iMJiuinihv ",, . enforced Wednes- ..J mn.,i ,y nigh-taxation schedule! were losfiThe Royal' Air Force (carried out offensive sweeps 1 hlS OWn armored (llVl- :jv,: rod formations, IS Whipping wlu 1th the OTmlng of day0W.-lieWeeHlaM,,)-nch.eoaita; Railway line, and other land n "'0 shape for campaigns the Coming months may peace despite the probability that target 'were' hit and "at least three enemy vessels off the coast were t ..rn-ovteu from inlantrv to tanKs ov mienpe train- post-war rehabilitation wtu re-C anada, Gun. Worthington'a division has been a governmental policy of I I IUI . Mr. Spinney spoke to a combined demolished." ; i RTSlNS CO1 tnAT1 ir.rnu'L.itrnHrr nf stalinrrad have consolidated leclaimed ... , . , .. . , , ..iii "ll in connection with the opening of "n ,and """'"f declared today . " ,f ,.ii.r, nt:i mirlnn iKiimrH the offensive in savare Iltnt- in' on the western Caucasus front. The Army newspaper Red Star said that Russian troops advanced in two sectors on the steppes north-uvt nf ctalinrrait uhiu In the western Caucasus Russian marines were cited for two actions, one a raid by a landing party against a IN EGYPT DESTROYED- . w ' " - -" ... 'BMt'lTOm friA n m rr tar 31 as ,, .v.i. - - - I coffee i;i 1 1 T exDorts CAUUiH DISCUSSING 2ND FRONT Full Co-ordination of Allies Is Not Yet Reached By WILLIAM H. STO NEMAN LONDON. Oct. 15 The sus picions which have always existed In regard to the ability of the var I Moscow, on the one hand, and London and Washington, on the Lack of Agreement Such a lack of agreement may . colfee states held in 1941 it was erican iorces ana American auy-decided to incinerate 35 per cent plies are going to play In the war. of a figure made up of the estl- impression has been created . - . L mil 40 mr nlll O T n O . nl.l.V. u U J. thnt h9V. tnrla. have been agreed upon by military and civilian authorities, it was announced today. The order has the effect of extending northward regulations recently imposed on the Pacific I Coast nasi ni of the me United uiiniru States ototo which Hand STAND PAT BY WILLKIE Reiterates Statement in Regard To Ripeness of Time for . Second Front WASHINGTON, D.C., Oct. 15: In a statement following his round the world flteht to visit the fiehU jing fronts, Wendell Wlllkle stood lous United Nations to co-ordinate 'Pat on Previous statements re . j s - .... 1 a a j 1 t their ideas and their plans effectively have now, following Soviet Premier Joseph V. Stalin's second- front message, developed Into the Dosltlve conviction that such co ordination has not yet been fully achieved, or anytning like It. There Is certainly a definite misunderstanding between Mos-row and the western United Na- garding a second front, declaring it was "most feasible and possible." "We must stretch our muscles and our mind oelore we can win the war," Wlllkle declared. His own immediate task would be to give an honest report to the people oh the war situation, doing his best to re-educate himself and the people. tlons on the subject of a second front. No amount of sugar coat- QT TPPflP'TCr in? or reslened silence on the Dart illirlll I German-occupied town on the mack sea coasi. uespue me repeaiea 01 aruisn ana American leaaers release of Nail aerial and mechanical might, the Russians both with in and north of Stalingrad continue successful In lepelling the attacks with heavy losses to the enemy. A noon-day communique said the Russians were holding the upper hand. ,can convert siauns message lrnoj I anything but a confession that BY SOVIET the. Af"" Un,,led ste and nrJ other, are not agreed regarding co-ordlnatlon of Allied action with the defensive war now being fought by Russia herself. tish Plan for Punishment of Those Guilty of Atrocities in Occupied Countries MOSCOW, Oct. 15: The Soviet government, in a special an- imsvnlHoVils as It. i fllsnprp-i ... ........ . . . ; inouncement toaav. cave iuii sud- on us as a result of tne wmr are To the Kremlin, quite natur- However. Keen Up Rra.il Hums 33 Percent of Cropiable. t to th lan f Great Britain here to stay . . wnawmn au. the most Important .thing in Ac Knfmy ,n To prrTe suu$tical and tne Unlted states for trlal 10 my aiuiu a m cotnpletelv "'"i"" v..u t.i o.i the the world world Is is to 10 have nave the me Allies Aiues Iter ,.. ,v,- the war nr of Mnnni mnnn. on wrong thinkmg." He pointed out Canada's tax bill now is around I j I I npnn iSr KW!08 if9' , spared . , Vl-l V kJ-J- t . with $500jOOOjOO before the war. --. OAiRfv od. iki-at is stfli crutet I Balance persons reSpon- nlbw into side of Germany, cost t -ski,, aTTwtfioc tn ,viiVi nnni OTTAWA. Oct. 15 0 BrazU's'what It may. In order to relieve 1 Na2l , occupied countries had ar jLaiM;tti t 1011 amminti"d"Dressure-orr tne eastern ironi. iu Kpn snbiertpd. The announcement n I die miBuivutw. til . . 1 m.iawmh.h - ... i . orj.atlori, arc concernea. i0 11052 484 bags, valued at $107.- nuuu aau uic wu aeciarea Aaon niuer ana ius as- and the Interest on the public debt Acrlal actlvUy agalnst the enemy 50000, t s. Glass, Canadian most important thing Is to strike ' relates to be guilty or Inhuman to some l!jn,iJljr ' n the deaert conUnues. : commercial attache In Brazil. In a at Germany when such action can acts. 0 ho lnirASd hv- S25.000.000 be- , . w.j i v .... . w ,inrtart!ikpn nHthniit suicidal loorun rai uwiiutu again j- report to me uominion s iraae anu " terdav bv Allied planes and . two mmcrce department here. This consequences. . -if wenavexoriven.orCrn direct hUj were on a comred with i2,097.584 bags In Even more Important than this M A 1 WU UW ielaht. more Victory Loans before merchant shlp . wen as damage 1B40 , d at $851534)00. basic confhet of Ideas Is the lack 111 Li 1 Ulill U ; awful ....1 ki.vtnsM iar nvar over, m our r . . , l , . .... a In 1941 there were 3,422335 bags of agreement wrucn appears w of colfee incinerated in Brazil, exist between the United States rgnlnst 2516.063 bags In 1940. Mr. and the other United Nations re-Glass said at a convention of the garding the exact part which Am- SENT DOWN Four Enemy Vessels Sunk By Bri tish Naval Action in English Channel male 01 ue isrtt uuin m some oriuaw uuiiu in R..Battley, Appointed Chief amount of the 1940-41 crop which mg gone to war In Its usual whole-1 of ON.K. .Motive Power and remained to be shipped In 1941- nearted fashion, the United States, LONDON. Oct. 15: The Admlr- Car Equipment 42. now envisages the world contuct uuu""u " 1 a. i mm m ion .. . 1 .u . ir, 1 m v sunniv vessel ana tnree enemv T woiiee cxpoi u m isw auu as primarily an American m -- - - - - , attache, were United 1 torpedo craft had been sunk In . v " MONTH EAL, Oct. I5J Edwin Kawm said saia the tne commercial commciciai which which Britain Britain and ana the ww out other uiuu ---r--- ---- - ... . transfer from wartime Hm. to i.o peace ... . . 1 41.- ... . . . i. . j Ithe the PnffiKh English Channel Channel by dv n Brltlsn British jand " superintend- not sufficient to prevent the ac- Natlons wW play the third violin, J lenterprlses but, Mr '.Spinney add- oUvcy I naval acUon One British warship surpluses and uip. cumulaUon of large the bassoon and other non-solo ed, "if we as a nation menti Toronto, has been appointed which, with the carryover of a parts specifically, they are wor- real self-denial and save 1 Ke we motive Dower and car eomln? ctod. might cause "a serl- Hph hv the nossibllitv that goods " ! saved savea before, dcioic. tne " c r.rfln Canadian Mot National lnnal upset ,nc in in the the enrrpnt current statistical statistical j 1 K., the V,o nrcenal arsenal nf of de-' have never esuipment. ous proauCed by transfer will take care 01 ltseii . . headquarters In nosltion.' It was to obviate this 11 be largely retained ik.M.v. r rtomiind for consumer . ., . .. . .t n f . . . . vuiuunii a UV....-..V. Montrea', accoraing to an an- danger mat me conveimuu ui or tne exclusive use 01 tne uner A. iMt the neonle will DC ablC . j . i... u.V . 1V.0 In. iwui f ----- . nouncemeni maae yosiciua u jee spates was caucu auu mv ..- ja forces, . .. ...... fn. trnm thplr MlVlnSS. ... . . t j . i . .. . . -n to jmjr iui N B waiton. vice-presiQeiii. m cineration quota 01 pcitcut oc.. ! Will Dictate a Reversal charge of operation, maintenance , ..t .otutiixH that the verv . . ... vt.i 1 nni ""- - anu consiruiiiou tuc uie nuuuai TNlltn T TT" in inni. Mhieh calls for high taxes In war tms vears will dictate a reversal rp4rt. Tnhn Roberts who. as man- 111"1"VU 1 lU in nost-war years." he declared. . director of National Rall- , Asking for tne leaaersnip 01 ways Munitions limited, Is now As large corporate Investors "to buy deV0Ung his services to the im- EXTENDED : bonds to tne maximum portant worK 01 mat company. which you can manage." he said Mr Battley. In addition to other Drastic New Regulations lor Coast I..., in'vr,Hrn tn moderate ...m , i .hmii of the Prntertion Effective on an- I mere la tiu iun.iiwi4 uull" will w in vii4tgiv the stress we have In the past laid systCm shons In Canada and the couver Island Stockholm Oct. 15:-4teporU upon ready marketability of Do- united States which maintain In ,ofJh hereof a draUc army purge mtalon of Canada bonds" for "it pr0per running order a fleet of, VANCOUVER. Oct. 15 (CP g - ?,rm locomotives, 90.000 freight! Drastic new dim-out regulations in uermany - . ,.,,,. .nM vm dlstrlbu- n nnrf over 10.000 units of Das-! for the southwest portion of- nnrt of an investigation uj imiM- w"""V " - - . i - - ,ii ji port Ol U , ... vf,i .. ,. ,.nn.r no nrk enn nment This : Vnnrniivee Island, including iC- . ... i . j.h at n Lilt: i nn oiiiavi ..v... I " . ' - Secret police Some high ranklixg ne asked purchasers of war sav- requires a working force approxl-Armv offiL-crs have been dismissed lngs certificates and bonds to hold mating 23.000 men. ; Attitude Discussed i Yesterday's London Times dis cussed the American attitude In sympathetic terms and presented the British case which, In Its es-i INCIDENT WAS ODD Crown Witness in Fisheries Case Identified Father Instead of Son in Obstructing Case world. ' Samuel Guno was fined $50 here whole non-Axis this week for obstructing a flshec-Lend-lease i , today o vital vlUl to the the execution of his supreme strategy of the United Nations so long n charged, was acquitted following a ceiveu aa u capable of appearing as a brake on American fighting power n tne war of the United States against the Axis Is considered as. a self-contained enterprise," It said. "The name of warlike enthusiasm 13 fully alight throughout the land, and It comes hard to a brave, proud people to go on sending away weapons from a still limited sup-nlv for the use of their friends 'sHm , .U U.HU - 11'71 , iblc from the sea. ..,. w.. i.r. honrts ICELAND line Daivicimc ujr mnv . i The impulse is entirely generous, yet to yield Is to Jet, the American 'heart prevail over the American nAlilinrn head. The United States is learn-trU i VlKr 1 I wlth honorable reluctance, but LfJLlJ-lS the Rritish Empire has learned v.f... Hot rr nno nf the United UflUlV, Vli ivr w.w erman Plane Dropped Two Mis- MaMnns pan the whole burden siles Harmlessly on Unoccupied jQ mt. and that every gun r,rund or tank, or airplane that comes u. a n-,nn from anv one of their factories has assigned to the nation wh ch rather unique court Incident Adams was tried In absentia and his father. James Adams, appear ed in court In his stead. The unusual Incident was that of a crown witness. Identifying the father as being actually the accused. W. O. Fulton acted as prosecutor In the case with T. W. Brown appearing for the defendants. Twenty-Three More Planes Brought Down CAIRO. Oct. 15: Twenty- three more Oerman and Ital- -lan planes twelve hombers and eleven fighters were. brought down over Malta yes- terdav with the loss of live British Spitfires. Damage to -utomoblle. driver he said, "there arc many side the warplane warplane delivered delivered another anotner attack aitacK to . be j opened tlon," profession. A big hocolate bars, gift from rUly "f, for 'or fuifiii. ulfUl thl the fortress fortress Use Itself was was light. light. and most roor and the general leaped considerations. But If energy ""f of Canada and Lack of accommodation tor the on Iceland yesterday. Two bombs urge njedjK the Op ment of 1U assigned part In tne , its interior. The .automobile enthusiasm were the only require- naV(J bccn dls. domestic heip U not making the were dropped on unoccupied land, : m quickly to his hcadquar-'mcts. our men would be fully- Jn "JJd ftmong needy children. position any easier. doing no damage. , common pian. a few minutes away. There, In trained right now " 1