JANUARY 15, 1943 JNTRY iCHING Pf FnrouracinicUligli r-j of i'fcii tearhins problems were :,t the monthly meeting rince Rupert and District Association which was dnesday evening In Bor-ot Pchool. Nineteen merh-e nre'-ct. Bruce Mlcklo- ias elected president In i i t- T. L. Davics who fh pity. Hill, vice-president, con-Ihr -ut'i" burlness ni'd t rrnts from the British ,i Teachers' Association i trm nrrsnt situation of in the province. Mickleburgh, who was at an executive meeting -deration held in Vancou-rocently. gave a full report irs discussed. 'rnblrm of rural education ,:t pertinent now, Mr. KRh repo ted. The rural must as nearly as possible malW In all subjects and Me of being; guide, phil- and friend to young and jM i b- cxrectedthat men in-n m this calibre would p ot" dl trlrts and endure KUhips ':ir the remuncra-L- reco ved? New Zealand 0 U,t lit I U Ul (Uiai uio- rt paid higher salaries to t' i-hrr.s. tlv :ir there will be !us of oeoDle from the 1 ii tries of Europe to rural areas. inesc 1 th' ir children must be anadian ways of life and (- ot a vnrli citizenship. i i ' rqulre the best ai'hcvs? '!p Mtirn is. urging the io ;iit'- full charge of-and by a uniform mill fltaxation make It possible sphooLs and pay teachers, ei-shcd districts, as well tiers and schools In more Mis cetres. 1' xi meeting will be held 4 School on February 3. Has :s Off V of Illarko-H at Kltkatla 3'fneralnr of "owcr Here lor ITcrairs ij fr ii).. ' rnlnfr .out of n " nnH-o village o' nif-ent wlthou f"r either streets or M lamp has had to "fled to. t n in the eenerator JasepH i I'.ff councillor of Kltkatla iirsterday with his boat W-i No. 14, being accom-'Jpv Frank nvan. Alfred 't.iri wrn.st Bolton, il ' (If rpnlr-! to 'be "en,-l; hehi" carried nut here ilv : - o-siHe ?o that the 1 v h" hT'norl back to h witv. , iew to getting th 1 ai ain with a minimum l p o llehts notwlthstand-Sr' "ninvnble native dance fw 'ne village folk on f. av niPht at the Agnes KHkr,tia Ml)sln wav;b'y Nelson's Orchestra. ' ' alManln Sat Rnam Arrii M ialfl Anion' rWrtras In I.alcii n..,i . i t. linn, in lj, v t ns r"eti wrn Brtain this- week with ' ,)lltln(Tovi. e r it I'Orcemento n i fnald of prince Rupert. CAMPAIGN DEVELOPS Aid to Kussla Effort fietlinc Under Way In Prince Kupert The central committee on the thereto. i . in, nut , U now getting under way and, so far, the public has been glad to give. The objective for Prince Rupert Is $3,500. The publicity committee, through O. A. Hunter, reported on meas ures which were being taken to bring the campaign to the fore and encourace eenernust civlntr campaign i for Canadian Aid to Plans of the src:ai events coffl-Russia which Is now getting under j mlttee,, Charles Viser, chairman, way In Prince Rupert met last are for a couple of dances, one f." . "celved encouraging at the dry dock staff house din- uwmawc rcporw irom all i Ing hall for rirv rineic emnlnvee 1 TIIE DAILY NEWS "PAGE THREE St. Peter s Church. A Sunday eve ning concert In the Capitol Thea Sent Greetings tre is also under consideration. 1 T) TV D Ray Allen, chairman, and other j By 1 lgCOIl 1 OSt eported on the plans for canvass by the special names committee, I JOHANNESBURG, Jan. 15 0) Every canvasser Is to be armed Messages oi congratulations sent ty o! ,tth or-rfpntiaw 1 Peon post Irom Irom the the mayors mayors Salisbury and Bulawayo, Rhodesia, A tag day is planned for Janu- were SUrprise features of the 30, the ladies' committee of entation to Mrs. Smuts, wife of tlv- Speaks On Aid To Russia Fund nended the campaign to the sup port of the club and President George C. Mitchell voiced his con man, being left in charge'of this, xtieatre here, when a special pan-',,0' ?V?eyterlan ,Chu"h' '"e,et has decorated for courage ana .!. '!" outlined the local tot valor - . campaign a large gtoup of writers and Rev. A.,F. . r. MacSween, e local cam committee, chairmen, .The canvass I and another at the Parish Hall of paign -chairman!, presided. Sneaking 'before the Prince Rotary Club at luncheon yes- fidence that members of the. club would be generous in their aid. Fred Szadden was lhe winner nf Kev. Alex F. MacSween Heard at the weeklv rfn fnr the oin L,uncneon or rrince Kupert Fund. Itotary Club Yesterday FOR. HEROES OF STAGE MOSCOW. Jan. 15 (CP) The mlli- whlch Mrs. J. A. Teng is chair- nrlme minister at the EmnlrL terday, Rev. A. F. MacSween, pas-,tary council of the Soviet Baltic wHuuiie was prciueu on me oc- tne Canadian Aid to Russia Fund actors of the Red NaVy Theatre casion of her 72nd birthday. of which he is chairman. He com- with the fleet. CHINA CAN BREATHE AGAIN ! PHIL JORDAN, correspondent lor the London Newi-Chronicle, has seen wore of the war than any other newspaperman in the world. In October, 1939, he went to France, then to the Middle East, returnini to England to cover the Battle ot Britain. Two weeks alter the German army crossed the Russian Irontier, Jordan flew to Moscow. Sent to Burma, he arrived in Rangoon one week ahead ol the Japs, and was then called to India to cover the mission of Sir Stafford Cripps. Mr. Jordan is a contributor to the New York Times, Life, Collier's and author ot a book: "Russia at War". BY PHILIP JORDAN 'London (By cable) In this war I've visited 17 countries and the commodity I found common to them all is the General Motors mechanized transport. I paid my first visit to No-Man's-Land beyond the famous Maginot Line in a Chevrolet. I drove to the Russian Front in one, and watched it taking back the wounded. In another I escaped from Rangoon just one step ahead of the Japs. I was the first war correspondent to set foot in the western desert of Egypt, and again it was a Chevrolet that laughed at the worst roads in the world outside of Russia, where they rely for victory, let me teH you, as much on the factories of their allies as on their own production. They need trucks that will stand up under road conditions you've never imagined. In the mountains of Persia the new Polish legions from Russia use them to make the long trek to the railhead that takes them toward the Middle East. In the great port of Basra, on the Persian Gulf, through which urgently needed Allied supplies flow to Russia, I've seen camouflaged trucks as thick as cornstalks in the fields at harvest time. You see them from one end of the Iraq deser to the other. You find them in the heart of the Belgian Congo. At this moment there is a stream pf them taking supplies along the new road from India to China. More than 100,000 labourers have built that secret road in a few months, so that absolutely vital supplies can be sent to our Chinese allies as regularly as before the Japs cut the Burma Road. v I saw this miracle road being hacked through jungle, and slashed through malarial forests, like a conjuror eating coloured ribbons. Each morning a flock of Chevrolets brought up labour and materials, and later they carried guns, shells, airplane parts, gas, grenades and medical supplies. Because of these trucks China can breathe dgain. And what is saving China will help to save the whole world of decent men. This direct, personal cable from one of the most widely-travelled correspondents covering the many war fronts, pays a great tribute to the workers in Canada who are ' so energetically supporting their fighting brothers over-seas. In General Motors plants the morale of thousands CANADIAN-BUILT GENERAL MOTORS SI fL. . v- - ' 1 TO REPLACE BURMA ROAD I . ' - ' - -f A . -V'-- gj.. N -of workers has been kept at battle-intensity by the knowledge that mechanized equipment not only wins engagements but saves lives. They are as proud as we are when Canadian-made vehicles get mention in dispatches as being an essential of victory. pM-4a WAR PRODUCTS ARE SERVING IN EVERY JHEATRE OF WAR 8