PAGE TWO THE. DAILY NEWS TUEm;,ay nn aC. MEN' ON RUrERT John Allan of West Vancouver and the other chap gulped, er" for the gun crew of H.M.CJ3. was trylm- to Local Boy saw all the prisoners at close and then said fn English that Prince Rupert U claimed by bur the' bov. THE DAILY NEWS (Continued from Page 1) range when they were examined he was still quite sure (Jrr-many Leading Steward William Castles. chance, u ,A , Progresses mdically In sick b&y. He said would have-'total victory R.C.Ni. of 2538' Quadra Hvery time y.. ,4 PRINCE RUPERT, BRITISH COLUMBIA beautiful rtng6kle scat. My most of them were "pretty inside two years."" Street. Victoria, formerly of rmt who-,,) i Published Every Afternoon Except Sunday by Prince biggest -kiek' came when our quiet" and only on rwmbfrd Lieut. Guok was-, sports officer Crystal City. Manitoba. Wooa-tuKi;,, Rupert Daily News Limited, Third Avenue Favorably first shell went crashing through t h e movie-type heel-clleking at ILM.OS. Naden and first i During tit aeUon, StewmrU Miti u .,, Q. A. HUNTER. MANAQINQ EDITOR tiie conning, tower." Nasi. lieutenant at KAI.OS.- dlvenchy Castles was hots ting high ex Kunflr. Mr. and Mrs. J. Simundaen, 215 A key rating aboard was a "He was a tig husky fellow in EMiuimalt before, bftiiw ap pkmHre shfllr to one of .lhe Wf Sure, j MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS Ninth Avenue East, have received Victoria man. Acting Chief with Mating eyes anil a bear-trap pointed to the frigate. kuiw and had a clear view of than ph., The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to use for publication Petty Office Robert Cameron, mouth. Another prisoner I Able Seaman deorge Lowe of the whole shew. Who wmiln, word from Ottawa that of all news despatches credited to it or to the Associated Press in this paper and also the local news published therein. their son, Bruce, recently reported the ship's coxswain. HU work nude a few reinaiks in English 'Vancouver was among the j "At Unst two of them wet mii-whi i All rights of republication of special despatches therein are to nave been seriawsly wounded was warmly praised by the officers. Implying pessimism about j depth-charge throwers whose direct hlU ami did most of the In the N.iw also reserved. while on active serrtse In Germany's chances of winning I skill was lauded by officer i damage," ho sold. The lwt ow liv-s In V v. Italy, Is progressing favorably. RXAMINF.D ALL the war. The big fellow j CHEER LEADER ,kn4ekfd the conning tower tojwilliitm I i DAILY EDITION Tuesday, June 13, 1944 Bomb fragments entered his NAZI PRISONERS railed him aside and gave him IH1H1NC. ACTION smithereens. ihiMinna in cheet. Leading Sick' Berth Attendant a furious blast of (ierman, I Title of "official cheer-lead "It looked to me as If one Nfttj1 , more Mia: Should Complete Road ... The Vancouver Province is continuing to write editorials in support of Hie effective completion of the Skeena River Highway to connect Prince Rupert with the provincial highway system. Last Friday the Province wrote as follows: , "An almost complete highway is about to be drop-pfcLinto British Columbia's lap and there ia a little qultoling about adjustment of costs. If there is any misgiving that we shall lose a first-class' artery m.l the north let us compromise and get on with the job. "ToVlay our Cariboo Highway stretches a long arm towards the Coast from Prince George. It lose itself forlornly in the wilderness just short of the Coast Range and has long been symbol of the B.C. tradition to build highways that melt behind the beyond. , "The war did something up north to break this tradition. The Japanese peril showed the necessity, of railway and highway connection with Prince Rupert. United States and Canada went to work, smiting mountains and filling valleys, and now a highway is almost ready to link with the arm from Prince George. It overlooks the splendor of the Skeena gorges. "This is the highway for which Ottawa appropriated the last $3,000,000. It will run from Prince Rupert to Kitwanga, at the end of the Prince George road. Whatever is left from these millions, says Mr. Crerar, will be turned over for rehabilitating the disrepaired end of the Prince George-Kitwamra road, if the province matches Kitwanga costs dollar for dollar. "B.C. members of Parliament want Ottawa to finish the repair job as well. They claim that was the original federal intention. "But now. surelv. the vast armv of enuinmpnt available should not be allowed to be dispersed for iacK oi a compromise arrangement on a repair job. "Prince Rupert, seeking modern highway connections with our road system for a score of years, should at last have her reward." Tip to pipe smokers More men smoke Pcobac than any other pipe tobacco in Canada! 12 A s3 The Pick of Tobacco GROWN IN SUNNY, SOUTHERN ONTARIO ELIO Furniture Store THIRD AVENUE MATTRESS PROTECTORS Sizes 3U"x70". Price .$3.00 Sizes 18"x7G". Price $.'..r0 Sizes G4"x70". Price $3.95 11UY WAR SAVINGS STAMPS WEAR. IT ON YOUR ARM in. 8S8S F Canada and the United Nations had depended upon "Armchair Soldiers" to fight this war; the Nazis and Japs would i have grabbed1 this country long ago. There is no "Royal Road" to licrlin. It's fighting all the way and Canada's Army needs every man it can get. That's why, today, you should volunteer for overseas EMM art, "fa ". Kit M8 wz -2 service. You'll need months of intensive training. to make you fighting.fiu s ,j Don't be a stay-at-homc and let the other -fellow do-it. Get into-a man's uniform, with ' the G.S.. badge of honour- on your . sleeve- If 'Wclrc going to win this- war, L we'll - have -to-do - mora than just, read about it in-the papers. So, come on you fellows, the good old army has got to finish the job. 0 iSf-r'-'