PAI TWO THE DAILY NEV7S -FRIDAY .gg e Daily News Published Every Afternoon Except, .Sunday by Prince Rupert Dally New? Limited. Third Avenue G. A". HUNTER-Managing Editor Archbishop of Canterbury . . . INDUSTRIAL RESOURCES (Continued from page 1) zatlonai meeting this week and other directors are C. H. Elkins, G. C. Mitchell, W. F. Stone ana G. L. Rorle; The Bob Creek property, owned by George Smith and associates, is situated 10 miles by road from Houston station. Eight claims held by right of location comprise the property which lies astride Bob Creek In. semi-mountainous country. The showings are located within an area of strongly oxidized and altered volcanld rock andestic in character, hot all of which has been exposed. PRINCE RUPERT . . . BRITISH COLUMBIA. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By City Carrier, per week .. .15 Per Month, 65 Per Year $7.00 Ey;.Mail, per month 40 Peryear $4.00 DAILY EDITION . . . Friday, October 27, 1944 EDITORIAL With increasing elevation the shearings tend, to tighten up but the residual 'gouge content pan? fine free gold. These 'exposures have been subject to leaching and erosion resulting In decreased values as; pointed out by the fact that almost anywhere along the base of the slopes the talus pans fine free gold. "Development work has not been conclusive either In proving or disproving the presence of commercial quantities if gold ore since no attempt has been made to trace or check by underground work such factors as increased shearing width, continuity of mineralization and the trend of convergence," concludes The property Is eaulDoed with tfae report. ',Thls wfark Is greaUv an amalgamation and concen- 3ustlfied and strongly recom-tratlng mill having a capacltvof i mended. A limited diamond five to 15 tons per day and 13 ready fof operation. In addition drilling progTam should be car- j ried out which If successful could there Is on the property a one- followed by sinking a devel ton mine car, 1000 feet of mineiPment snat with subsequent track In position and three i development mining In ore that frame camp 'buildings In good could recovered and milled In condition. There Is a sufficient conjunction with continued de-flow ot water In Bob Creek for velopment." domestic and mill consumption. I inere.js: on the nearby creek slopes "2ft ample growth of timber suitable for mining and construction purposes. A fair amount of development work has been completed upon the property. This consists of surface stripping, open cuts and 1 the driving of a number of short adits to follower intercept some of the mineralized shearings' which abound within the oxidized area. The engineer's report says that favorable structure Is character- . lzed by the existence of a number I of semi-parallel ahd steeply dip-! ping shearings' which vary ihi width from two to 10 Inches. These shearings tend to occur In groups and there 'are strong Indications that individual shearings tend to- converge at depth and will probibly unit not far below the surface; Disseminated mineralization occurs throughout the country rock but normal occurrences of strongly mineralized vein mattej occurs In the shearings encountered in the adits. This vein matter consisting chiefly of zinc blende rarries' gold values up to one and one-fuarter ounces per ton over narrow widths as evidenced by the" size of the, shearings so far encountered. The adits were driven at creek level which allows the lowest possible elevation for such work. HEYl SARGI WHERE'S YOUR MINAID': SOLDIERS 5 V. J RUB OUT TIRED ACHES The Seal of Quality BRITISH COLUMBIA'S FINEST SALMON WOMAN TELLS OF NIGHTMARISH LIFE IN NAZI PRISON CAMP father who of for alrmen passing Precocity and a was Archbishop William the dead Arch- Canterbury sped Temple, That-S wny there were so bishop of Canterbury from Rugby School to the many women in that prison," Church of England's high councils.There he became 'she says, she was speaking, of flip fp nf trip "ppntvp" nart.v fiohtpr fnv t IP. unf PI'- navensnrucK, in norm uermany - - -v --n -- i dog and' an internationally-noted preacher. The chubby, bespectacled churchman who at the age of 12 sought mental relaxation in the philosophy of Immanuel Kant, was at various times president of the - Oxford, Union, youngest headmaster of a public school. No pussyfooting diplomacy made Dr. Temple Archbishop of York. He was always an outspoken champion of the worker, a vigorous opponent of capi-ital punishment, a proponent of church union and for years an active member of the Labor Party. One of his jobs was editing "The Challenge," a magazine designed to keep clergymen up to date on social problems. It was characteristic of him that he disapproved, the choice Edward VIII, now Duke of Windsor, made between the throne and Mrs. Wallis Warfield Simpson in December, 1936. v "The occasion for choice ought never to have arisen," he wrote in an issue of his diocesan magazine. "It has happened to many a man before now to find himself beginning to fall in love with another man's wife That is the moment, nf rnrir.-il where many thousands qf worn en Poles, Russians, Czechs, French, Belgians, Norwegians and even Germans were imprisoned. At the time she was there, she was the'onry American. Now the wife of a Frenchman, she acquired American' citizenship which she has retained toy her first marriage. Her son by that marriage; last heard of through the International Red Cross, was a lieutenant in the Air Corps. Fate Worse Than Death ment. She was arrested by the I parcels. Gestapo, who told her: "We ' Women usually shoot people like you but we have a fate for you worse than death.' decision, and the right decision is that they should "Atthe; end or h cease to meet before passion is so developed as toi"' Jl were conectea from create an agonizing conflict between-love and duty." Troubled by spelling, Dr. Templevrote on one occasion: "I have arrived at the conclusion that it does not matter twopence how you spell a word provided that everybody knows what it is If-you do not know how tp spell a word the only fatal thing is to think. Your only chance is to rush at it." t . Mrs-. last January, ,200 women all over France, stuffed Into cattle trains so crowded we couldn't stretch His Nomination. Is Disallowed VANCOUVER. Oct. 27 Nomination of H. W. Herrldge, Took Itisks to Aid Allied Fliers; Found Belgian J cald for West Koot-Women Magnificent in the Face of Nazi Iluthlessness enay in the federal election was By RUTH COWAN Associated Press Writer) disallowed bjr the Co-operative PARIS, Oct. 27 (CP) -'Because she hoped that ISL""00 Pr some mother somewhere would help her aviator son, (j '"Hervidse, who is himself a were he ever in need, a French woman of nobilitv;: Member of the"c.c.F. executive, took darings risks to help Allied airmen downed ihjs3ld that party policy aifowed a France. Those risks sent her to a notorious prison Germany for six months. This .woman, who has just iation only under exceptional returned to Paris via an inter- out. We were on the way four, circumstances, naa oomn e-ail- oKrif Yim 1 Auto n- fmt 1nVsf X. nrAfn'! i . VV VHiUJ J frt iAO u W v U V UaJiJ aiiU 1UU illljU co. iiu wakCi deeds casually. But her blus eyes shine as she relates how women In France have dared grave personal risks to feed, clothe, hide and buy railway Food was a loaf of black bread, Madame Chiang ana sausage so decayed It o 1 pi threw mine away. Once we were n special riane served soup by the German Red WINNIPEG, Oct. 27 The Unl-Cross. ted States war department re- "We arrived in darkness at 3 vealed recently that Madame am. We were bundled out by Chiang Kai-Shek was flown SS men, with dogs. It was freez- from Rio de Janeiro to New York Ing cold. We had to walk a half in a new C 54 'Skymaster' Doug-hour. When we reached the las transport plane, outfitted camp the Germans screamed for special missions, In 27 hours commands, and Jammed the elapsed time. According to Cana-women into two small rooms, dlan government policy as an- had to sleep wo.tVjaibed. There? eraUonFrlFmler John. Hart an- "The Belgian women lnthat was no heat . , nounced following recent dls prisoners farmed, and left them there for days, nounced by Hon. C. D. Howe,'R , D k . En,DVUd The women were given prison master" is the type of aircraft dress grey with wide blue which will be used by Trans stripes, and short unllaed Jack- Canada air lines after the war. ets. The clothing was made of i - ; p- wood fiber, and had no warmth. New Dormitories They had no hats, and shoe? p Un;VersitV ror university were heel-less wooden sabots: t . Six hundred women werV VICTORIA, Oct. 27 New housed, Irieach-ibairipks. wHh iirmitqrles for out-qf-towil, stu-cnly nine 'touti$'ifJavatorle. 4nti aT Ih&Untrerslty ot Brit-Beds were: hv' tiers. ifSrid tryilsh Columbia ;are 'ffnder consld- VICTORY LOAN DRY DOCK IS ! GOING STRONG The canvassers In the Prince of the employees are responding enthusiastically In this Seventh Victory Loan. By noon Wednesday the total had risen to $69,500 or 43 per cent of the objective. Many had,' their money ready and were. Just awaiting the canvasser. In one case an employee called with, his money on Monday morning before the starting whistle sounded. prison were magnificent,'' she With a siren call at 3:30' a Jri., cusslons with Dr. Norman Mac- says. "They could have been ' they had to get up and go out kenzie, president of the Unlver- . torn apart, and would have re-: for roll call regardless of trb slty of British Columbia. TheiPrince George Man veaiea notning." This frail weather. The camp was run by university Would operate the woman, whose hair Is tinged armed" German women soldiers .residences which would give stu-with grey, lost nearly a third Food was poor, Insufficient, dents from outside Vancouver a of her weight during imprison- They never received Red Cross chance of reasonable accommo- report that the great majority Not Dead After All FRINCE GEJRQE, Oct. 27 W Karl Anderson of Prince Georet. datlons. eot a shock vesterdav when hp opened his mail and found the cooked, sewed German military camp officer, and having sev-, Prices Board considers him a uniforms, worked in an electri.- eral teeth knocked out because jdead pigeon, The board wrote cal factory. she waved to a Polish friend. (Anderson's family asking that Thls-wcman relatesrthe - During the last; Ql. August, she his ration book.he turned ln fol-stance of a French woman avla- was removed during Allied raids lowing his death. However, the tor standing next to her at roll to an Internment' camp, and was Prince George resident Is very call being struck In the face freed when ' the area was capr much alive and he lost no time by a husky German woman tured. letting the board know about it. - ) Vv' r: " , , V 'i?! our money WimMBSZ JSM J Victory Bonds, 'iWtMm' tiMBi'll interest 'P'e,e$" You You get get dividends dividends in in money, money, at at three three per per cent., cent., and and j Vfr BKyn' Jmlm dividends dividends in in freedom freedom and and in in satisfaction, satisfaction, in in amounts amounts too too Sm where it pays double great to measure. Every bond you buy in this Seventh Victory Loan will help to provide you with security for the future. Your principal and interest are guaranteed by. the Dominion of Canada. And every bond you buy this time will help bring the great, triumphant day of victory and peace a little closer. BONDS Prince Rupert Fishermen's Co-Operative Kaien Consumers' Co-Operative- Stanfields (UAUnAoM. Underwear ABIE ARE YOU REGISTERED? You are eligible to vote in the forthcoming civic election IF you are a license holder; or or or IF you have paid poll tax; IF you are a member of the reserve army TV In t h p riicp nf Viv t--v ,4 , . above you have paid $2.00 as a civic road tax BUT YOU MUST REGISTER This can be done at the City Hall during the dar , I For furtherlnforma(lon telephone 90. Property Owners are automatically registered. Get oii the Voters' List Prince Rupert Non-Partizan Association INVEST In VICTORY, abo fulfill your obligation : a citizen. THE NEED IS GREATER For total victory he fights a total war For nothing less will he lay down his arms. For your sake he's willing to gamble on coming through alive. Whether he does or not is decidedly your affair . . . , ' The imminence of victory has climaxed the responsibilities of the home front Canada's borrowing needs 'today are grat er, not less. To see the uniformed services pet all they need to win with minimum "losses, is still our biggest job. NOW is the hour to buy Victory Bonds-one more than before! w Invest in Victory BUY VICTORY tm. tv - a A M ML I I U u u ' m 1 m m w . w A nice WFAR kiATr cri crTDir I IMITFD Electrical Contractors fOATATRnriAT, TMnTISTRIAL & MARINE ELECTRICIANS Electrical Supplies Home Wiring and Repaid Offices In Vancouver and New Westminster . J2fi 2nd A riiunc macK jtjj OUR Responsibility... w.l A. . . . . 4 V. n 5 of war. xour aoiiars must ouy ue w-. More and more are needed to put an end horror and the bloodshed. Let's not lose s ij in our responsibility to the lads who are 8,v "Ior. much for us. Our dollars will make it easier them to reach the goal our leaders have set- yiciw VICIOUS conditional surrender" or our falI They're hot letting us down! How can them? Let's buy alt the Victory Bonds AND THEN ONE MORE! INVEST IN VICTORY BUY- VICTORY BONDS Ormes lid. PHONES E REXALL STORE Open Daily from 9 a.m till 9 Pm' Sundays and Holidays from 12-2 p.m. PLACE AN AD IN THE DAILY NEWS CIRC .rTVJ 81 an" 8J