wj k at the For-Ju:-. before 11, he nded from his of- Hcuse. i that he has no 1 : ' f his assistants, ft? one for more UU'i 1T 1 til t 1 V Although he set an s'yle five years 1r ar the Foreign Of- - iAivu ilia j rd m the proceedings t ... l'e" on which he serves. be making a speech '"k hp detests most. His A 1 -j viia ii w n m awh tn hn . Wi WWII. irnt . ftvf wno Intrrwl, j - .... vt ywv,u a. IIHJ- lor u ,m ana S r inhn ,0n a fruitless ri i L v. u, u,u;1, o ,,c'y at attention irom " "u c- ulddle of the w. v wen, ,, v.. j . . man - icarnen uom a grammar while neo wS long le I der Way With Syracuse Suf fering Defeat COLUMBUS, Oct. 4 Columbus of the Amsrlcan Association defeated Syracuse of the International League two to nothlns In the first game of the Little World Series yesterday. Salvation Army Fund 3 slender a his fn. Already acknowledged $2,646.65 Ivcry unsneclnrulnr hl Savov Hotel 10.00 ..III m n h . lll . , t-iigagingiy laiKa- ' private - tile (PSUlt ho crof B nnt I - W QVVW " "i" he makes, that Med him to the top In r c -.imat.lon. Churchill . crcat- reliance on him. ft put him forward more er.'ly than any other ; 3r a member of the Pe-ey-maklng war cab- MCn servos lntl.l.u .1 vw iinLiuaiciy in prime minutor n viie nncAii, j i . vjr iiuerwoven t -"wBy and diploma- j houSh a consprva-HVA t-arQed as a nmtrrPci. Sheardowns 10.00 McRac Bros. Ltd. 20.00 H. s. Wallace Co. Ltd. 25.00 relaxed against the back of his chair, yawned. But Eden's policy has gone beyond denouncing Mussolini and yawning at Hit ler. It is based on what the Foreign Office calls "the four cornerstones of freedomn," Bri tain, the United States, Russia and China. Eden's talks with Stalin were, he said, the most exhaustive ever attempted between two nations. Out of them came the British-Soviet 20-year mutual assistance treaty. Still more exhaustive were his later talks with Secretary Hull and President Roosevelt, which were Intended to accompany In diplomacy what Churchill's trips had done In military strategy. This attitude toward Russia, well-formed even before the war, was that ldeaological differences should not be allowed to Interfere with amicable relations between that country and his. With the Unkted States, he proposed to strengthen Britain's traditional bond of friendship on the basis of mutual self-Interest not on the less solid foundation of mutual language, rnitnrp and Inheritance. Vice-President of Railway Retires MONTREAL, Oct. 4 Walter U. Appleton has retired as vice-president, Atlantic region, Canadian National Railways; after a service of i'lfty-three years spent on the Maritime Lines of the National Railways and the predecessor Inter-Colonlal Railway. ;v" " Mr. Appleton will be succeeded by J. F. ' Prlngle, general manager, Atlaatic region, who will act as vice-president and general manager. Mr. Pringic is' a native of Cornwall, Ont., and began his service with the C.N.R. In November, 1919. Sail LONDON HAS AIR RAID ALARM LONDON London had a brief air raid alarm today when a single German bomber attempted to penetrate the defences of the city but was turned back. MUNICH IS ATTACKED AGAIN LONDON The Royal Air Force made a.f'wejl concentrated" bombing raid on Munich Saturday night, it befng the second, . attack on the important German city .within 36 hours,, Other Little World Series is Now Un-j cities in the Ruhr and Rhineland were attacked. From all the raids nine British bombers failed to return. All day today the air attack on the enemy in western Europe including Holland and Northern France continued. RUSSIANS CONTINUE ADVANCE MOSCOW The Russians continue their rapid advances on both ends of the 800-mile front. On the north the Soviet forces have progressed another nine miles toward Gomel in "White Russia, liberating 320 more towns. On the south the Nazis have retieated across Kersch Straits into the Crimea. DRIVE ON DODOCANESE CAIItO The Germans have launched a drive 'to clear the British out of the Dodocanese Islands which they (the British) seized a couple of weeks ago. There have been combined air and sea operations by the enemy, parachutists being used. "Necessary counter measures have been taken," Allied headquarters announced. Dodocanese Islands lie off the southeast coast of Turkey in the Aegean Sea and constitute a threat to the Balkans. FRENCH TAKE BASTIA ' ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN ALGIERS Final collapse of German resistance in Corsica was marked by entry of French forces into Bastia. The Nazis were still scattered on beaches at isolated points north and south of Bastia but these were being pressed by French and American troops.' Baseball Scores SATURDAY National League Boston 2, Chicago 0 New York 3, St. Louis 6 Brooklyn 1, Cincinnati 3 American League Cleveland 86, Philadelphia 3-2 St. Louis l-fi.-New York 5-6 Detroit 12, Washington 5 Chicago at Boston, postponed SUNDAY National League Boston 0-5. Chicago 7 2 Philadelphia 311, Pittsburgh 1-3 New York 4, St. Louis 5 Brooklyn 1, Cincinnati 6 American League Cleveland 8, Philadelphia 4 St. Louis' 2, New York 5 Detroit 4. Washington 1 , Chicago 4-3, Boston 2-1 LITTLE WOULD SERIES local Temperature Tonight's Dim-out 61 (Hall an hour after sunset to Maximum 41 .half an hour before sunrise). Tt.i B.C 7:43 pan. to 7:18 aJn. NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITI NEWSPAPER No. 32 PRINCE RUPERT. B.C.. OCTOBER MONDAY, 4, 1943 PRICE FIVE CENTS A k A U UW m 1 A ft orces Mre Manning Halifax Wharves r f nv m m b a i ikm i k ii iiti r n i ! m k wmr mm mm FALL OF MUSSOLINI rorcrs Who waniea Italy dlnHD Oil iPVfM! Bv E. C DANIEL Sron Wrltr fall was a personal .. (ho tail slender a a shiny blue suit who Great Britalns second i imo Inh. The man. -y Eden, is laminar oui i U I.U tm r4 Inn Vtltt i riiir u. I ill .11 I j Ulltll AIW n a nrlf nin'c for ntir'.cr and leader of the of Commons. The suit he was once supposed to ! man and his lob make ..n.Tlhr mnaf lllrolv -r?-4 Winston Churchill as , Vii! frlftnHe pwflnt 1 V ,;S Ul im( M to make a stand oh a and was vindicated Liared his principle of not :.?. the dictators, and the m ! nle nf his vindica tive him tneir messian. HtjAPS ARl SQUEEZED Australians Tress Ja3. Mountains and Sea Finschafen. From Near ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN SOUTHWEST PACIFIC, Oct. O) The Japanese on New Guinea's Huon Peninsula today were squeezed between the mountains and the sea. after the 'Australians captured Fin schafen; Japanese last Important supply base with more Australians pressing on the enemy's land flank. Australian veterans of Tobruk and El Alemeln Saturday captured Finschafen, major enemy anchorage and air base. t Big Raid On Kassel ii jnr ago this summer, led the forces of democ- , LONDON, Oct. 4 ffi iRoyal their effort at the Canadian Air Force and ir i i u. luiu lvi tin , - iLu t tfia mi a. uii.r i i 1 1 1 l a ar: "Uons on Italy for ; hit Kassel, 91 miles north- ;:n Ethiopia. Public east of Frankfort, Sunday i. i ajalnst the Hoare- night In -a fourth big blow r which -would have : 4 In six months against the B: h and French con- ' manufacturing centre for I1 allan conquest of Nazi fighter planes, loco- Into the Foreign ( ant war machines. The as- c r BL.aln's youngest i sault cost twenty - four 31 Secretary lu 40 .years, i -bombers, four of UiemCan- , it for administering adlan. VJ ; .r Neville Cham- i; pcament policy be- 4' r :? tbvlous, and finally. I r'Si'Jffa, Columbus Wins ' t tne caDinei unm i t i :d oken up arms. Huu?-1 convenes at F'3 usually has done t:- Opener 2 to 0 NAZIS BUILD MORE WALLS AGAINST INVASION fr "qyjj '' As evidence of her fear of a second front, German magazines strive constantly to reassure the German people, with pictures of walls being built in various coastal districts. This wall Is being built hastily on the Mediterranean coast of France by members of the German Labor Corps. WAR NEWS AUSTRALIANS TAKE FINSCHAFEN ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN SOUTH PACIFIC Australian forces the ninth division have captured Finschafen. important Japanese stronghold on New Guinea, the defenders being on flight into the jungles or dead in the field. It is the third stronghold to be taken by the UnitedNations from the Nipponese on New Guinea, the others having been Lae and Salamaua. Capture of Finschalen gives the Allies control of Hun, 70 mjles from New Britain. Since June the Japanese have lost 1,500 planes, 27 warships and 42 transport vessels in the South Pacific. Advance Kept Up British and' Amerltaris' Continue 'ID move rorwarn m Campaign. STILL MOVING ON ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN ALGIERS, Oct. 4 (CP) The British Eighth Army, with the ;( support of Allied naval forces, IChave. recap tureL. position, at Ermoli on the Adriatic coast almost midway between the Italian heel and the mouth of the River Fo in northern Italy, official front line dispatches announced Monday. Simultaneously, the Anglo-American Fiftn Army has surged forward from Beneven-to in j march on Rome from Naples' and have captured an important crossing on the , Calorc River, thereby threatening to turn the flank of ' any water defence line which, the Germans may attempt to hold along the Volturno River. ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, Oct. 4 Driving from Naples toward Rome, the Allied Filth Army took the city of Benevenuto, important highway junction on the bend of the Volturno River, 32 miles from Naples. It is an' Important transportation centre. In the centre of Italy the Americans have captured Seden- to while the British Eighth Army has crossed the Plains of Foggla to reach a point one third up the boot of Italy. On Corsica Nazi forces trying to escape through Bastia. have been ringed by the Allies. Escaped Nazi Is Captured. OTTAWA. Oct. 4 B Eckbert J. Breslg, 23, a Nazi air force private who escaped from an Ontario prisoner of war camp two months ago, was recaptured yesterday In the Ottawa Union Station. 4- Bodies In Mine Shaft j LONDON, Oct. 4 0 Bodies of more than 40,000 Russians killed by Germans have been crammed In the shaft of a mine near Stal- ino. Alexel Tolstoi charged in an article which the Mos- cow radio nroadcast in Eng lish. NEW YEAR OBSERVED Ten Days of Great Religious Meaning to Jews Began Last Thursday Celebration of the Jewish New Year, a period of highly relig ious significance began last Wednesday evening which was Jewish New Year's Eve with a solemn religious ceremony at the American Post Chapel,, under the spiritual leadership of Rabbi, Captain I. B. Rose, Can adian Jewish .chaplain of the Pacific Command. About 150 servicemen and civilians attend cd the servie and services with an equal attendance were held on Thursday and Friday morn ings. The cantor, who sang the rlt uallstic chants, was Private Ad- olph Zucker, of the American Army, and the traditional "Sho for or "Rams Horn, was blown by Lieut. Kenneth J Lewin, American Army. The services were made pos sible through the co-operation of the chaplains of this area, notably Captain Morran of the Canadian Army, and Captains Rowland and Fleming of" the American Army. A special Holy Day feast of Jewish food was provided on Thursday noon In the Empress Hall by William Goldtoloom, under whose direction it was prepared, and to which all service-; men were Invited. Prayer books, the Holy Scroll of the Law and other religious (supplies were obtained through the cp-operatlon of. the Vancouver Jewish community, the Canadian Jewish Congress, and the American Jewish Welfare Board. The present year in the Jew lsh Calendar, whose sequence jnumJbers from the Creation, is 1 5701. The Jewish Calendar is a lunar calendar, that is its I months are determined by the I changes of the moon and are of (slightly different lengths than the Gregorian calendar motlths. The first month of the year is the Gregorian calendar, although It usually occurs In the latter part of September. Part of its great religious sig nificance, or perhaps the reason for it, Is' the fact that- It Is the first of the Ten Days of Peni tence, which come to a close on Ycm Klppur, the day of atonement. This year Yom Kip- pur falls on October 9. It is a day of strict abstinence of food and drink, and a special period of repentance and prayer for members of the Jewish faith, At the end of Yom Klppur. which Is at sundown on Satur day, a dinner for all Jewish servicemen will be held at the Central Hotel. Jewish religious activities in Prince Rupert Include services held In the American Post Chapel every Frday night. Three more false alarms over the week-end two Saturday nlgftt and one Sunday caused the fire department to turn out. Two of the alarms were from the corner of Conrad Street and Hays Cove Avenue ond one from the corner of Fifth Avenue and Green Street. The authori ties are taking a serious view Ceramic Loss t vOIQIciS t Is Announced I'TV CAPETOWN. Oct. 4 05 One of the worst ocean tragedies of the war, the sinking without trace of the 18,700-ton British liner Ceramic ' with more than 500 passengers aboard last ' November, apparently hy into the death of Lee Jack, a Chinaman, who was killed through Injuries sustained in a lumber conveyor at Billmor sawmill. The Jury consists of George Dawes (foreman), Frank J. Keogh, L. F. Brewerton. S. M. Johnson, C. C. Mills and Patrick Mazzei. The Chinaman suffered a broken spine and compound fracture of the right leg on Sep tember 27 and died on September 30 at Port Edward. Incredible Generosity Small credence was given by Magistrate W. D. ' Vance this morning to a story told by Ab- 4raham. a natlvejChargedwlth ceing puoiiciy lnroxica&ea, uia he had been given, free of charge, half a bottle of whiskey by two soldiers on the street aSturday afternoon. "I find It hard to believe that soldiers, or anyone else in these times, would give away whiskey to a stranger," he remonstrated before sentencing Williams to the usual $25 or xven davs. case of James Victor O'Connor of Vancouver, charged tyitl? assault, swinging in and out of police court like a pendulum ipr almost a year. ' ' On November 19, 1942, O'Con nor was alleged to have assault-ed Percy Hughes Halle tt aboard a boat bound from Vancouver to Prince Rupert with such vigor that Hughes-Hallet was taken to hospital in Ocean Fall3 where he remained for many months. On April 8 of this year the case came before the Prince Rupert police court and since then, for one reason and an ether, has piled up a list of ad- i journments which fill two sheets of foolscap paper. The latest adjournment, which was granted by Magistrate W D. Vance this morning at the request of T. W. Brown, counsel for the plaintiff, was for 'five weeks, which will bring the :iWar Is Only Commenced of the current false alarm epi demlc and are taking special case back into court on Novem measures, to apprehend ond pun- ber 8. In the meantime O'Con lsh the perpetrators. nor is expeWng an Army call, COL. FRANK KNOX COMPLETES TOUR OF MEDITERRANEAN SAW NAPLES BOMBARDED. ALGIERS, Oct. 4 Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox of the United States has just com- pleted a tour of the Mediter- Columbus 2. Syracuse 0 first ,'' ranean by plane, cruiser game) I 4- torpedo boat. and Knox witnessed a naval bombardment' of Naples. Speaking of the capture of that city by the Allies, Knox said that It would soon be restored as a shipping port. Knox declared that the present wave of optimism In the United. States was "absolutely unwarranted" at this time. "The European war has only begun," he said. Members of Armed Services Dispatched to Docks After Hand, lers Strike OTTAWA, Oct. 4 (CP) Members of the three armed ser- enemy submarine, in the , vices will be moved immedi Atlantic, was announced yesterday by Ifaval auth- orities. . 4 ' Inquest Into Chinese Death Inquest is proceeding before Coroner M. M. Stephens today ,.; ately to handle important shipments at Halifax docks where some 300 freight handlers are on strike, Department of Labor officials said today. The action was ordered after the men voted at a meeting Monday against returning to work. Members of the forces will be used primarily to move perishable goods and vitally needed war materials from freight cars to wharves whele longshoremen load them into ships. The handlers stopped work Saturday on the basis of reports that the National War Labor Board had granted them an increase of only four cents per hour. SOFTBALL IS EVW i-fco American Station-Complement Wins Over Air Force 4 to 1. Taking advantage of six er rors, American Station Comple ment went to work with a will and took sweet revenge on the Air Force Flyers at Acropolis1 Hill last night by breaking throH?hJk-weaK-"afence"and ' coming out on top of a four to one score to even the Inter- Service Softball Championship finals at one game apiece. The Fly.ers had taken the previous contest nine to three. The Airmen, looking more llko a first class juggling team than a championship ball club, could do nothing right the Americans Yr fall..: on different ibv nf ' Military police, who feared . nothing wrong, that Williams had been injured I There was 1UUC w cnoose D9" after he fell down on the street, jtween Nigro and Crymble. They turned him over to the citv , each allowed seven blngles. the police. SLOW PROCESS Another addition was added today to the long list of ad journments which has kept the former whiffing three, the latter seven. AU hits were well scattered, and no man got more than one, with the exception of Lancaster who got two, both bunts. The total of five runs were all unearned. DONORS TO RELIEF OF CHINA FUND Previously reported C. E. Connell IIM.CS. Chatham Officers Mess HM.CS. Chatham P.O. and Men's Mess Mrs. Moore Mrs. H. F. Pullen Final total $11,09335 5.00 10.23 15.20 2.00 5.00 $11,130.80 LOCAL DRY DOCK SHIP YARD REQUIRES MEN Apply National Selective Service A M 86 41. V- 1