PAGE TWO DAILY EDITION EASY to mix EASY to apply 7fF K07? FAMILY A BETTER START with this BETTER BREAKFAST WHYPAYM0RE? ALABASTINE dries quickly without odour. Wide choice of beautiful tints. Sold at all Hardware and Paint Stores. Tatty Nobiico Shredded Wheat Is a breakfast your f amity witt be atarf fa wotte up to. And, along with that tenipliny flavor, the f ot o better breakfast! Why? Because NabiKO. Shredded Wheat ti mod; from natural 1 00 Canadian whole wfieo t with alt the bran and wheat germ. Ready-cooked, reody to eat. Use tti tested, practical recipes found In every package. THE CANADIAN SHXEDDCD wheat company; no. Niagara fait, Caaada THE DAILY NEWS PRINCE RUPERT, BRITISH COLUMBIA Published Every Afternoon Except Sunday by Prince Rupert Dally News Limited, Third Avenue G. A. HUNTER, MANAGING EDITOR Thursday. April 37, 1944 Plugging the Leaks ... Diplomatic privilege has been too easy a screen for spying. Diplomatic travel and diplomatic pouches, immune from bonier searches, have been for years wiell-worn channels of secret information. The British Government, placing an embargo on travel or uhcensored correspondence from London, is taking only a common-sense step to guard the lives and military plans of Allied forces crouched now on the invasion springboard. : Nothing like this has been done since' the Congress of Vienna set up the convention of diplomatic immunity in 1815. Such action was not attempted- in the last war. This move, denying- traditional privileges to envoys of forty-three Allied and neutral governments only those of Russia, America and the Dominions are exempted will bring protests. Rut now from anyone whose primary concern -is the safety and success of the men now preparing to free the Nazi-enslaved peoples of Europe. This unprecedented effort to black-out spy reports from the great invasion base is not necessarily a: signal for immediate invasion. But it is a measure no government would wish to prolong and is definitely a tension-tightener for friend and foe alike. Against Wildcat Strikes . . . J Hasty headline readers can easily gather a false impression of the new British regulation to curb strikes. It is not a blow at unions, but a measure to help union leaders keep control of recalcitrant members. It carries a five-year jail term for inciting strikes but only if the inciting is done outside regular union meetings. It is designed to stop "unofficial" strikes, such as that which kept 80,000 Yorkshire miners out of the coal pits for weeks and caused Labor Minister Bevin td sav "the situation is worse than if Hitler had bombed Sheffield and cut our communications." This plan recognizes the honest efforts of labor leaders to prevent strikes. Rut one effect, which may not be unintended, will be to make the failure of unions to control members hard to excuse. Paint with UAH over WALLPAPER, WALLB0ARD PLASTER or other SOLID SURFACES Only A 51b. package Wl-44 i It possible for them to be sent us. j cpl. j. McCartney, Can. Army Overseas ! "Please thank the ladles of the Auxiliaries forme for send-,lng the Christmas parcel which T received a couple of flays ago. i It toolc a long time In getting this far but did manage to eventually reach mt. "It Is really swell of everybody concerned to tfranc of ns fellows, THE DAILY" NL"WS f Thanks From Local Boys For Cigarettes Letters Are Sent ! The Women's Auxiliary of the Coast Regiment receives monthly letters of thanks from boys now serving overseas, formerly members of the local regiment, for cigarettes and parcels. It is the endeavor jof the Auxiliary to continue this service with the ! assistance of friends and the general public support ing various activities tor raise 'funds. Below are- a few of tne arettes are surely greatly ap letters received from writers -Tecisted and never a day ge well-known In Prince Rupert, by without mosv or the fellows i which prove how much the gifts asking "Any mall today?" are appreciated: J -t nave changed my address, j "Received cigarettes and though, all the cigarettes you thanks very much. Jem w, I 'Smokes are something we Am now back with my original lare always glad to get and attRpgiment, as you will notice by 'times are Just like gold. the address on the other side Give thanks to all who make nave been with them for about a year but thanks to tne Postal Corps, they never failed me. "Am at present la Italy, have been here quite some time. No need of me giving details. One thing though, this country does not live up to its name of "Sunny Italy during this part of the year. Lots of rain,, men snow, whlct combines v,wltli a sea of mud. I think.' U Heat and- bugs would be moreree come but time will teu, "Have run into a few. of the especially the ones who are in boys who were with me In the the front imes. Parcels and clg- Heavy Battery ! country. Sure was glad xa meet some of the fellows from home and revive old memories; "life in the field with not much space between the Ger-!mans and us Is a lot different from Coast Defence. At this ! moment can hear shells bursting and they are none too far away. "Would- Hke to go on but I am such a poor letter writer and sure don't want to bore you all but. before I close, again I say-thanks a million to each and even-one and hope to be able to ': iiik you oersonallv some day." P. COMADINA, Central Medical Forcej. Dear Ladies: f lank "ln for the fags I sure needed them as'Iiwas erim-pJetely out this time. Not much, news over here but still watting for something to happen. Keep cigarettes romtng If vou can." MARTIN VAN COOTEN, Can. Army Overseas I'm writing uts to thank you and the rest of the W.A. of the Coast Regt. for the cigarettes and parcel which I nave received from you In the last two weeks. This is the first chance I've bad as we have been pretty busy ice the last month. I nave received 900 cigarettes and parcel practically al! together as I have moved around an awful lot since Xraas. I: nope I'm now here for the duration of the war as when you go to hospital It seems yoo never get . yet r madl straJpht. again for the next stx raorrthsv T went nearly two months without a letter or parcel but when they- did eateh up-1 w flooded with them. .They are nearly all caught op now rtnink and. hope. "I met Frank Cotnsdtna a month ago and we spent the evening together and-hacr quite i t'k aboat-the old home town. I don't Imagine that there are many of the old bunch left Were. Harry Atree. Pnvai ana Tummy Flewnr cstree down to Italy on the same boat as I did. Emir Peters- and Wilson and myself were all together in the First .Medical then I met two of ' tvitherst at the Canad- (lan Replacement-cenire and alio some' man from the SeurchUgnts stopped me and asked me If I weren't from the 102nd. Most of the old bunch are here. It is too bad we couldn't have come over as a Battery. "Wen I must close and write a few more letters. Trunks again for the cigarettes, and parcel." BERT CROSS. Central Medical Force BONE ARMLETS Chiefs and other Influential menoa the Patau islands In the .Pacific wear armlets shaped from bones of the manatee or seat cow. Soldiers Fined For Having Arms While Off Duty Charged with carrying fire arms without a license while not on duty, two soldiers appeared before Magistrate- Andrew Thompson In County Court yesterday morning and received fine of $10. or seven days each. The men were Sappers- P. Fob-Idliukl and E Yablonskl of an engineer unit. They appeared as a result of patrol by Provincial Game War den Edward Martin who learned that there' had been carrying' of arms In the woods near Prcit. homme Lake. KNARESWOTtTH. Enr . - , Twenty-two year old Margaret S-ot? rates ' tops" in BrttaJna Women' Land Army In a con -, 't she was adjudged Yt percent n tests on all-round farm worr 1 . in curjivjTi wui kick ncr i l ".gainst any malr farmhand. , jl Men,30, 40,50! Want Normal Pep, Vim; Hff1 BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBbVBBJI " ifi blk-jUBB( .V-lJa,n t7TaBllaBBBBBI)XlHuBmm ." .H 'it Men who think of tomorrow mm buy Victory Bonds today ! IF you could personally accompany one of the dollars that you put into Victory Bonds to see where it goes, see what it does-there would be no need to urge you to invest in Victory Bonds todayl . . . Before your eyes, that dollar would grow into gnns and tanks and planes and ammunition and food. It would grow into ships to deliver these things to our men at the fronts. Your Victory Boiul dollar indeed fights for freedom! ... And A now, let us follow that dollar into the days of peace. It's still jour Victory Bond dollar, remember . . . like cash in the bank. It'syours to keep for your own financial security, yours to invest in education for the children, yours ro enjoy in the form of splen. did new aids to living a new' car, new home, new radio, new household equipment. The man who invests every possible dollar in Victory Bonds today is a man u lx thhtkioj tomorrow! He sustains his country in its fight for freedom so that there will he a tomorrow. Buy Victory Bond as. never before . . . for the) futurt of your country, your family, yourself! The House of Seagram JO, H. I ecoHouv 1 Mover isols BLUl GULEJ1 BLADEl AND one tcid X why Blut 0 IlliJcj ire geou.ae ssmi it uut the? A ll Slrtl bard tnrarll glati which r-;j: ulcan edet ladl '.i cm swell kkntiftcnj Whu's more. jo. j thjt thi exus-km.1 not only Iia:j (if -A o nil nary bhdn, hi ptM you Kf jhli' NEW ROYJ ; HOTEL A Kftir.e A'-. 5 Roor- V W-lff prior.. Vtl P' PACIFIC a Will llewpen Monday, April j' Chop B'irv t w 'j t lIour 6 C3 a I'KINCK IllTLRT ROOFING C( not : tonf rree Estimate Barr & Ander: M.MITI-I . .i.li rfumbinc i,n,, ' Aulml Spr Coal SloWrn nd Corner 2nrt Are- 9 r- Phone Red