SSISTS FFICE Important ork Ifl tar 1 STB TVlc V 1 jr fk i ..... COO wine In a cor .i l 4Via flrct England with Her uuc because Eng . 1 lt clear-skinned, i j - tvn ie rrifiir, her boss knows nrnitown Ollice ago Anthony it. n a nf of women In TP 111 L11C lltKil nnnointment step )n itself, role for women i i r . . 1 1 . 1 01 domestic re rp nartlcularlv people come to I I J...I - phi :i i in iiuviLC. annrnirh tn n nLin np vmu- exlstence hangs trade and the irnnnrinir nip r pps a inr. or china, linens, -which are of men. a -woman service, who J 1 i I .. it i t in ii:i ri.irn rr nir qt Trior general depart- MATIC Pain 1 sort In loints ami UICIWILU ICIIII'UlWiia . . r t,.. . vnnrlnul in T.R-C . cm help you find Hie Get a box today Points net r.4.i , T- 17 Cardena Queen charlotte ten days. rmatlon. Tickets SKINNER - o " Phone 568 STORE, Suggests "Little Brother" Town Britain Should Establish New Towns Throughout Common- ...... 1 4 I. - .. I L . Wild Geese Numbers In Flight "Amazing" KINCOLITH, May 1 Flights of wild geese, numbering thousands have flown over this Naas River village during the past week. Mrs. Margaret Green of Klncolith tells of watching for an hour while a steady flow of the wild fowl flew low over the river mouth, heading north. "I happened to notice them at 8:40 p.m. and they flew over In a steady stream until 9:35. They may have flown over for some time before and after the times mentioned but the number of them that I saw was amazing," MrsGreen said. with passports, travel questions, notarial matters and general inquiries. She was born In the Malay States where her father practised law. and returned with nn t hp nnlnt. nf , . 1 1 .. i tt., l ,4 frr I 4 1 1 u....- ... .... . . - lAjwjumu uujtij. ichoonnir while stm a youngster. At 18 she entered Somervllle Colleee at Oxford and for two years studied modern languages. Thereafter she applied to the Civil Service Commission, rc- rplvintr an aDDointment to foreign service, entered the con- siil.'ir service In London last August and at the first of the year came to America. At the end of a year's foreign service, she will be .entitled to a wartime Oxford degree. Miss Hastings, quiet-manner- prf and self-DOSsessed. will DC 21 In June and In a sense typi fies the English woman about to come of age. What does her generation want to do in the post-war world? "I can't be sure yet," she said gravely. "I don't think they would want less a part of things than thev have now. One thing I feel sure of: they have a feel ing that they have the right to everything going and as far as LUCKY'S Light Delivery and Transfer 24-HOUR SERVICE 1341 Sixth Avenue East Phone Black 371 i ifiitnr'o ' i r t- imro urn ;ivi: n to establish, a recoru iur ability, Accuracy and Fair Deal-in fillinir Physicians' prescriptions. believe that we have deserved the Hlence that has been established thP rWfn. otifl Vila nn ioilts TlllS been broutrht about not in a few i j . - od of twentv vears. v Phones 81 and 82 TERRACE BOY IS HEART VICTIM TERRACE, May 1 0) Last URMSTON, Eng., May 1 " Thursday afternoon Johnny . L. Leemlne. boroueh survevor Christie, five-year-old son of of Urmston in Lancashire has Mr and M"8- w- Christie, suf-this novel suggestion for meeting fered a heart attack and died nost-war resett ement nroblems """"v aiierwaros. f or over a British towns and cities should year ne 113(1 en ill and had build "Little Brother" towns "turned Just recently from through the Empire Instead 0f Hazelton HosPltal where he had more suburbs at home. Mra receiving treatment. Mr. Leemlng estimated there The funeral was held on Sat- wlll be about 5,000,000 persons in urday morning from the Sacred Britain who will be "unsettled" "art Church where Father and ready to colonize various Fabre held a special funeral parts of the Empire after the service. The church had been war. Prefabricated houses, plant decorated for the occasion and and labor, he suggests, should be tne children or the congrega-sent by air to Canada. Australia. tlon the hymns. Each child New Zealand and Africa. present put a bouquet of flowers "The London County Council on the casket and Father Fabre is wealthy," he told a reporter. "It could build a town of 10,000 inhabitants in each of the Dom inions with the same ease as It could build a block of flats." Air travel has brought the Dominions closer to Britain and hundreds of thousands of Bri tons in the services had been impressed toy the possibilities of other parts of the Empire through which they had passed or where they took training. i their own lives are concerned, they want the right to decide." Kitwanga Man Killed In Action KITWANGA, May 1 Mr. and Mrs. Ted Hudkin, of Kitwanga, have received word that their son, Gunner Richard Hudkin, was killed In action in Germany on April 10. Gunner Hud kin went overseas tnree years ago and was married to a Scot tlsh girl, Miss Helen Kilpatrick, of Dumbarton. Scotland. There are two children, a boy and a girl. It Is hoped by friends here that they will be brought to Canada soon. gave a touching and comfortnng address. The sympathies of the townspeople are with Mr and Mrs. Christie In thlr ANCIENT AND MODERN BLEND CANTERBURY, Eng, May 1 (Reuters) The blending of Can terbury's ancient character with modern traffic and shopping re quirements is the aim of a post war plan presented to the city council by Charles Holden, town planning consultant, and city surveyor H. M. Enderby. Provision is made for an inner ring load circling the centre of the town to enable traffic which has no need to pass through the. city to by-pass shopping and business areas generally. Into this circular road will come new roads from London, Whltstable and other towns. The main street through Can terbury will be widened at the blitzed-eastern end and a-new, and parallel street will be con structed between the main street , and ancient Watllng Street, .thus enabling one-way traffic to op erate. Between the two will be four connecting cross-ways. It Is proposed to replace the entire St. George's Street area which has been bombed out, with protection assured for the best views of the famous cathedral which the destruction of build ings opened up. Under the replanning scheme. historic buildings instead of be ing on obscure sites will be brought onto corner sites. The aim is to carry out the required work In the first 10 or 15 years after the war. Buy the 8th Victory Bonds! Prince Rupert, B.C. CELEBRATION SHORT LIVED THE DAILY NEWS Tuesday, May 1, 1945. MONTREAL, May 10) A short-lived oved and rather con fused celebration was staged In Montreal when peace rumors spread through the city. The official denial of the reports from President Truman, how ever, cut the celebrations short. As the rumor of Germany's surrender swept through the city, small stores were deluged with customers seeking glass of any description and design Many streets soon were thronged with flag-waving residents. Night clubs quickly closed their doors PAGE THREE and by the time most of the celebrants could get going the majority of the Montreal night spots were closed and In Little in the way of celebration took place In Toronto as reports of Germany's unconditional sur-render spread. Theatre crowds had not heard the report and most persons who had were skeptical. Royal Canadian Navy service police in the street said they had been warned that a peace might be declared this week-end but city constables had received no special The appearance of gypsies In Europe cannot be traced back further than 1300. YES, she's in there : . . all five fect, five inches of her ... fighting courageously tenaciously -resourcefully! No dispatches come from her battle front. What is it but four walls and a roof -with perhaps a picket fence? Yet it is the fountain of a nation's strength -the sacred cause for which men risk their lives. She has no sympathy for moans about wartime trials and restrictions. She meets them every day and takes them in her stride. She needs no picture stories to tell her the truth about wan With the sure instinct of wife and mother, she knows the agony of waiting arid the bitterness of loss. INVEST IN THE BEST mm 'Millions" and "billions" mean nothing to her. But. ,. shrewdly she senses that one inescapable, price of victory is hard cash in fabulous amounts. And she knows who must supply it. Watch her when the time comes to buy Victory Bonds! Has she savings of her own? She lends them eagerly. The family savings which her work and thrift have made possible? They must buy a full measure of victory to "the last dollar, or she will know the reason why! And alongside her realism for today she builds her, plan for tomorrow. She fully intends that those savings shall make it come true! Bum victory bonds NATIONAL WAR FINANCE COMMITTEE 8.1