shington Roosevelt and Prime .. rhnrrhill in ses sion Again discu; -loos whlcn Fres-....h anH Prime Min- eolfe rhiirrhlll ad- in Quebec eight days resumed in Wasning- j ... nlcyVlt wl T rl pm- nnarently on greater .i ..Ml H11SS13. UII1- r i;i i --o w lira" hut. thprp was tnati 'jiey uum means of at- : w.lt.h Russia. w a m n w a s YR (i a tiiL. W1. H A inketea nun rirc &uu Heated today t; jt Berlin . by Fir '! and Canadian b::ikfted that Nazi ('re and destruc- ... r -ntratlnn of .:c ever put up 1 HI.. 'II I H1UU1K lUlLt. t A ir.s on Tuesdav .ight the great lie Allies were, appar-J id. Ration 1 1 1 1 I .1 I ft- w and Numbers in m vmrmnrr 14. U1J 111 for l lit vnini intiuw it September: r .. - us i fv r.. t ii; ..... r.; pair, 15. pair, 16. rlinnn. IF . I .0 i.j- -wupuug u H.I1U r lupor. pair, 17. sf f?e- -Coupons 16 -'utjuu; pair, lo. n.. . . "xuuuiis ana ai. p . v-uuuiu uair. in. npi in i . t . i " 111 CiipUJ UUtC t-upons NOS. 24, 25, " 15 and 16 exnlrp ITn n !r- IIJ V 171 NA niwn V fat..... . , ' vv 9 ,f a Anderson Williams UV V llnvi Tele-iraph Staff 28 ana O $7,648.10 10.00 10.00 5.00 5.00 5.00 .00 20.00 30.00 10.00 10.00 in nn "u ana K.err 10.00 w , A Art J.U.UU Ltd. 1 n nn . - - - cessions 10.00 - noDinson 5.00 u"s under $5 10.00 37.00 $7,908.19 I I mi List for Cuts rp Wartime Prv o Bo, ' Short Ribs, braising Halibut Sales 'd by Maximum retail selling prices in Prince Rupert of beef cuts have been authorized toy the Wartime Prices and Trade Board. Plces that are in effect now In Prince Rupert: Shank, hind quarter (boneless) Round Steak or roast Round Steak or Roast (boneless) Minced Round Steak Rump Roast, round or square end Sitloin lip (boneless) Cubed Sirloin Tip (boneless Sirloin Steak or Roast Siiloln Butt (boneless) Flank Steak (boneless) Flank, trimmed Porterhouse Steak or Roast T-Bone Steak or Roast Wing Steak or Roast Strip Loin (boneless) Rib Roast, 7 rib-bones whole Rib Roast, 7 rib-bones boneless and tolled whole) 45 Prime Rib Roast, 5 rib bones 35 Prime Rib Roast 5 rib bones boneless and rolled) Rib Roast, 6th and 7th rib bones Rolled Rib Roast, 6th and 7th rib bones, outside roll (boneless) Rolled Rib Roast, 6th and 7th rib bones, outside roll boneless) Plate Brisket r ,,-Plate'BriskeT (boneless and loUed) Brisket Point Brisket Point (boneless and rolled) Rolled Shoulder (boneless) Round Bone shoulder roast Short or Cross Rib Roast Blade Roast Chuck Roast Chuck Roast (boneless) Neck (boneless) Shank, front quarter Shank, knuckle end Coupons 14 , Shank, centre cut Shank Meat (boneless) Stewing Meat (boneless) Hamburger , Tenderloin 20 31 47 17 25 16 28 31 27 32 30 27 32 24 14 11 21 24 24 23 70 American Sea Bird, 40,000, 17.5 and 16. Royal, Pacific, Booth and Whiz. Superior,. 39,000, 175 and 16, Atlln and Storage. fella 35 47 ' 1 " . Over this table during the past few days tfar leaders of the United Nations have exchanged the Ideas which will contribute to the pattern of tomorrow s victory. Beeinning at the left side of the table, nearest the camera, ',ney are: Lord Loufe Mountbatten, British chief of combined operations; Sir Dudley Pound, B ntish First Sea Lord; Sir Alan Brooke, chief of the Imperial Army General Staff; Sir John Portal. British Chief of Air Staff; Field Marshal Sir John pill, head of the joint staff mission in Washington; Gen. Sir Hastings Lionel Ismay, chief of staff to the British minister of defence; Brigadier H. Redmond, of, the US. chiefs bf staff secretariat; Commander R. D. Coleridge, of th$ Washhogton secretariat, to the British 'jdiieftAUlWBrJseterf. II. II. Arnold, chief of the U.S. Army Air Corps; General G. C. Marshall, chief of Staff U.S. Army; Admiral W. D. Leahy, Chief, of Staff to President Roosevelt; Admiral E. J. King, commander-in-chief, U.S. Fleet; Capt. F. P. Royal, of the secretariat, U.S. joint chiefs of staff. NAPLES IS HIT AGAIN Another Blow Dealt Important Italian Port by British Bombers ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, Sept. 2 CP) Wellington bombers carried another Allied aerial blow to enemy communications in the Naples area last night by scattering two tons of bombs over rail yards at Aversa, north of the Italian port, it was announced today; THE FLYING AMBULANCE Fluid Baggage Brings Big Fine Forty-two bottles of government sealed rye whiskey, brought in as baggage from Vancouver, appeared as evidence against Ernest William Roberts, charged with keeping liqilor for sale, when he appeared in police court earlier in the week. The liquor, which was brought into the city In a large trunk, had been bought at government liquor stores by soldier friends of his In Vancouver whom he Ijad become acquainted with while In the army. Roberts was ordered to pay a fine of $300, or spend three, months in jail, and the, liquor was confiscated. g'ant twln-otored transport planes being used by the R.C.A.F. for Seen c a aKnv( bove 1 is o one oeox 0f the h fltted to accommodate 18 stretcher pases and has all ?aSnmy, SSSfTiS o? tS kind. Recently, a plane of this type was used to transport f RCA?caTaltieS S the hospital ship at an Eastern Canadian port to Rockliffe R.C. A.F. 1 X- taon m wnVal hospital near near Ottawa. ttav-a. The ship. Carries trained medical personnel, usually a doc- mbulance mted for t In e a can normal and when no. tor and a nurse, worK in a vcjjt - , aiilp ready to rush the injured to hospital. tR,C.A.F. Photo) VISIT TO WINNIPEG Governor General and Princess Alice at Manitoba Capital on Way to Prince Rupert WINNIPEG, Sept. 2 During a short visit to Winnipeg yesterday morning his excellency the Governor General and Princess Alice, advantage was taken of the "opportunity for the presentation of a recent award to Lieut. Colonel 'Harold Stuart Hanson, D.S.O., M.C., His Excel lency Invested Col. Hanson with the member' of the most Excellent Order of the British Empire at the Canadian National Station. After Colonel and Mrs, Hanson were presented to the Vice Regal party", the citation was read, recording the outstanding work done toy Colonel Hanson in organizing reserve companies of the Veterans Guard. The ribbon and medal were then pinned on Colonel Hanson's tunic. The ceremony was short, af ter which the visiting dlgnitar ies went for a drive as guests of Hon. R. F. Mc Williams Lieu tenant Governor of Manitoba, Later the Governor General and Princess Alice left in con tinually 1 of their westward trip to Prince Rupert. Carnival Is Reported On Preliminary reports on the big event of last week and suggestions arising out of the experiences therefrom were pre sented at a meeting of the Civic Centre Carnival general com mittee on Tuesday night, T. Norton Youngs, chairman of the Tonight's Dim-out h: (Halt an hour after sunset to half an hour before sunrise). 6:03 pm. to 6:19 a.m. rvi i i k r n m i-f rvi j I CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER mill n" I "ii i ii i 11 VlkXlXUiUl ilili 1. in ... nff PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1943 PRICE FIVE CENTS itler's Nazis Being Routed In Russia : j 3 ; ; - j : j I In RPF VPE U-S- AND BRITISH WAR CHIEFS GET TOGETHER AT QUEBEC 1 1 llnrr In M I Rationing Rationing XhVV Nazis ling I t Jap ,an R9rtr Barges f n rlAL carnival, presided and there was a full attendance of members of the committee. It was decided to send , letters of appreciation to persons who had assisted In connection with the staging of the carnival. Of Sweets Sweetspread Stocks in City Are Below Rationed Requirements Ineiease Expected Soon Rationing of Jams, fellies, and other sweetspreads became effective throughout the coun try this morning and, in Prince Rupert at least, retail stocks of these commodities are admitted ly low. However, with their rationed sale, It Is expected that they will soon be increased to an adequate amount An order, which has been in effect since the rationing an nouncement was first made two weeks ago and which froze; the movements of sweetspreads,. ap plied only from retail outlets to consumers and did not hamper their flow from tne processor through the jobber to the retailer. Part of the purpose of the order was to build up at the ulatlon. Its effects, however, have not been felt here yet. The proprietor of one grocery store, when questioned about his jam stocks this morning, looked rueful. "I have on hand enough jam to supply a ration for 70 peo ple and I have four hundred customers," he said. "And, what is less important, I nave no variety only one kind of jam, and orange marmalade." Other grocery retailers reported a. similar situation. A Lot of Jam With approxlmaely 9,000 ration books Issued to home dwellers In Prince Rupert, the population has a claim on about 6,700 pounds of rationed sweetspreads each month. This does hot include 2,500 ration books Issued to occupants of construction camps near the city, whose food supplies come- directly from wholesalers In other places, ! War's Big Thrill Torped Woman Flying Officer Talks Interesting Meeting of Queen Mary Chapter Last Night The regular monthly meeting of Queen Mary Chapter, Imperial Order, Daughters of the Empire, was held at the home of Mrs. S. D. Macdonald last evening. Mrs. D. C. Stuart presided. Highlight of the meeting was an Informal talk given by Flying Officer Graham of the Women's Division of the Royal Canadian Air Force. Flying Officer Graham outlined the duties of the W. D.'s and also spoke on the co-operation they had received from 1. O.D.E. chapters. The motto of the W. D.'s was: "We serve that men may fly." Section Officer Ralston was also a guest. In the past week the chapter had sponsored the tag day for Chinese Relief which was -convened by Mrs. Brass and Mrs. Stuart. Members had also assisted in the refreshment booth at the Civic Centre Carnival. Mrs. Coates and Mrs. Whiting were appointed to purchase supplies for ditty bags. Next meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. 6. V. Cox. SCHOOL POPULATION GROWS LUSAKA. SeDt. 2 0) The Are Pounded ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN SOUTH PACIFIQ, Sept. 2 Allied planes and tor- pedoes have again battered Japanese barges carrying supplies toward New Guinea where the enemy are still under siege at their most important bases of Sala- maua, Lae and Wewak. Bulletins BERLIN FEARS INVASION BERLIN Vast amphibian armies are being massed by the Allies in the Mediterranean and Great Britain for a two-way invasion of Europe, a German military commentator says. The presence of two British battleships, four aircraft carriers and forty- five merchant vessels at Gib retailers a supply of the rationed J raltar is stressed. r-. . . 1 . i. . V I tloned requirements of the pop- PORTUGUL CAUTIOUS LISBON Special precautions are, being taken by military mobilization in Portugal against foreign aggression and internal disintegration.; JAPS EVACUATE ISLAND ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN SOUTH PACIFIC Another island Santa Isabel in the central Solomons,. has been evacuated by the Japanese. ATTU ISLAND SITUATION ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN ALASKA Had the Japanese fought it out at Kiska with the weapons they abandoned there, many mote of the Allied landing forces would have beenliilled than at Attu which was only a quarter as heavily fortified and which required twenty days of intensive attack to take, an American military observer says. and who, under the ration, can Tonight's train, due from the be expected to use another 1,700 EaSt at 10:45 was reported this pounds, each month. afternoon to be on time. oes on BiglLoss Debacle of Taganrog Worst the L (Third of a series by AP for eign correspondents on their big gest moments in covering the war.) By JOHN A. MOROS03rd WITH THE ATLANTIC FLEET j The admiral radioed us to go and sink some French destroyers coming out of the harbor of Casablanca. We already had fought a fierce battle with them but our skipper, Captain Francis Compton Denebrlnk, was elated. We headed toward the enemy ships, 12 miles away. Suddenly enemy shells began whizzing over our ship. They struck all around and splashed foam 30 feet high. Back at his battle station 1l.1t.ion In eovernment pedoes amidships G. G. Herring, commander and executive officer, noticed that we had been heading on a straight course. As we started turning to port, he spotted the telltale bubble of four or five torpedoes They were headed at us. I looked at the bow of our ship as It swung around. I did not think they could miss. But we did turn and those tin fish passed -by. I watched them as they sped through the water and I thumbed my nose -at them. Seconds later we began exchanging shells with some French cruisers and destroyers. We fought another battle later, but the memory of those tor- racing through the and aided schools in Northern water lingered on as the out-Rhodesia has nearly trebled in standing event of that bloody five vears and in the' senior November 8, when we Invaded classes It has quadrupled. Morocco. German Reverse Since Stalingrad LONDON, Sept. 2 (CP) The Russians, advancing in the Donets Basin, have wiped out the entire German Taganrog Army, killing or capturing more than forty-one thousand enemy troops, Moscow an nounced. Wednesday night. Another six thousand Nazis were killed Wednesday while trying to stem Soviet advances toward Stalino, Poltava Bry ansk and Smolensk. The Taganrog debacle was the greatest single German defeat since Stalingrad. More than thirty-five thousand Germans were killed and five thousand captured in the fi nal liquidation of encircled. troops west of Tagamog on the Sea of Azov. DNB German News Agency had yesterday reported an other German retreat on the eastern front in the Donets- Basin area southwest of Voroshilovgrad. The Berlin dispatch said that "another shortening of the home front involving' the possibility of establishing operative reserves was achieved by planned withdrawal of German lines in the Voroshilovrad area which the Soviets attempted in vain to impede." Russian troops, driving forward on the Voroshilovgrad front, today captured the Jown jtt .Sumy, important Uk-raniah regional centre about one hundred miles northwest of Kharkov, Moscow announced in a special order of the day today. The special order was the fourth Issued by Stalin in four days as the Russians rolled back the German forces along a 600-mile front from the Smolensk-Moscow road to the shores of the Sea of Azov. The capture of Sumy carried the Red Army to within 135 miles of Kiev in a westward drive across the northern Ukraine. oose PRISONERS ROUNDED UP Last Germans Who Escaped From Kingston Camp Now Accounted For CLAYTON, New York, Sept. .2 CD An immigration border patrolman captured three German war prisoners who escaped from Fort Henry at Kingston, On-' tario, last week. Sixteen others of the nineteen who escaped from the prison last Thursday had been appre- headed within two days. Baseball Scores Coast League Sandlego 1, Oakland 3. ' -( Los Angeles 3, Poland 4. Seattle 4, San Franciso 3. American Association Louisville 6, Columbus 4., Indianapolis 7, Toledo 8. St. Paul 5, lianas City 1. Milwaukee 8, Minneapolis 6. Internatioal League Rochester 7, 2, Montreal 1, 7. Baltimore 4, Newark 2. Toronto 4, Buffalo 0. MODERN PROPAGANDA NAIROBI, Sept. 2 W .The Mobile Propaganda Unit of the East African Military Command is practically self-contained and includes cinema,, radio and public address equipment. It has Its own mobile workshop, Its cooks and first-aid section.