r NAMES I E ADDED n nf the Court of Re- J r ni'ii i.i ic l.uuj. i anil . fA he urban ied- trs' Hst. The names those of citizens missea Dy who canvassed the ,rlv this monui. - nrnpri in nv wm. . . hp LiDerai Associa- acims """ hart not nnneared Haw-" . -nminarv lists. Names also presented by J. J. .. fnr ijii- v -1 i aiiu wjr it Individuals who appeared r- u r..rt pynpp.u that there ot ipa-st as many more AAtA fn the citv lists -. ua mint nr itevision ... .1 ...... J MlrrVif T ft rr na . ha i i . h r;i ri.v uiiiui'iii. U . vy-v-r inrr Th n .1 uauivu w Baseball Scores " .National- League New York5, Pittsburgh 11. Brooklyn 3, Chicago 5. Boston 1, Cincinnati 2. Others postponed. American League Chicago 8, Bcstcn 6. Others postponed wet grounds. International League Jersey City 8. Baltimore 5. Buffalo 3, Rochester 10. Others postponed. American Association St. Paul 12, Minneapolis 8. Others postponed. Pacific Coast League No games scheduled Monday. White Persian cats are generally deaf. council chamber at 10 o'clock this morning, and will be open between 10 and 12 o'clock Wednesday morning, and Wednesday evening from 7 to 10, to accomodate those whose names have been missed. mm .Better English By D. C. WILLIAMS 1. What is wrong with this sentence? "I have got to see yon at once." 2. What is the correct pronunciation of "Hoboken?" 3. Which one of these words is misspelled? Animosity, anonymous, aniull, analysis. . wnat does the word "war rantable" mean? 5. What is a word beslnnlrf with ame- that means "answer able; accountable?" Answers 1. Say, "I must see you at once. z. pronounce ozfji os as in no, e unstressed, and ac cent first syllable. 3. AnuL 4. Ju Tillable; defensible. "Falsehood is never warrantable. 5 Amedable. MUSHROOMS MOSTLY WATER Edible mu;h rooms contain some nitrogenous foods and about 90 per cent water. j V f. , DEAF PRISONER AIDED LEEDS, Eng. 01 Sound-trans mission experts installed a mi crophone system and (headset in the prisoner's dock at Leeds Town Hall because the defendant In a murder trial was deaf. SCIENTIFIC APPROACH DOUGLAS, Isle of Man, O) Miss E. A. Chandler, bachelor of science from London ,has Jurt been appointed rat destruction officer here, first woman ever appointed to the post. FOUR YEARS AGO IN THIS WAR By the CanadUn Press May 29. 1941 The British des troyer Ma.shona was sunk by a German bomber northwest of Ireland. A British submarine sank the 18,000-ton Italian liner Conte Rosso with 3,000 troops aboard and a 5.000-tan French tanker bound' for Libya. Loss of the submarine Usk was an nounced. Make Presentation At City Hall Members of the 'City Hall staff presented Miss Hazel Toombs, who is leaving the ac countancy department, with a fine pen and pencil set at a brief presentation ceremony Monday afternoon. Miss Toombs, who has been a city hall em ployee for the last three years, is taking employment on the office sta(f of the Atlln Fisher ies. The presentation was made by City Treasurer H. M. Foote and was accompanied by the good wishes of the City Hall staff. FACTORY IN COAL MINE LONDON, ff) Britain's largest underground factory, built to evade bombing, Is in a disused coal mine and covers an area of 80 acres, F. A. Greene, president of the Institution of Chemical Engineers, stated at the annual meeting. Location of the f actory still Is secret. War c ame. Most civilian goods had to he diverted to war needs. That caused shoriages of civilian goods liat teas the RED LIGHT don't jump . the -i YEILOW Uqht Some restrictions have heen lifted, hut war demands are still grcal. Wc must help our Allies and the liherated countries. Wc can't neglect them. (This is the YELLOW LIGHT ONLY). It does not mean the end of shortages. Gelling hack to peacetime production will he piecemeal and gradual. ' Goodwill, patience and energy now will assure a prosperous Canada tomorrow. net Only after .Victory over Japan can the Qrcen Light he switched on, and the road cleared for enough production to meet all our civilian needs. I I i COURT VIEWS (Continued from Page 1) stable S. A. Hamblin who ac companied him on the night of Ross death identified broken glass 'Which they picked up on the street near 51053 body as coming from a car headlight similar to .that in the truck. Frank Elgner, watchman of a truck park about 100 feet west of the park which Ross 'was guarding, told of seeing Ross fall to -the street and a vehicle speed ing east on Second Ave. The truck, Elgner said, passed him a few seconds before, missing him by Inches. Witnesses Tell of Fatal Crash This morning's session, which convened at 11:30 for an hour, heard testimony by Angus Smith motor pool watchman, who heard a crash about 30 yards from him. A truck passed him al most Immediately, driving in the middle of the street, he said. Leonard Hatha manager of the Beach Place civilian bar. racks, told of seeing a khakl-colored pick-up truck parked in front of hut T-40 at 11 o'clock with someone sitting In the right-hand seat. "I thought it was a woman by the long hair," he said. The truck drove away about five-minutes later in a normal manner, he stated. Pearl Sherman, clerk, said she was standing in iront or ine women's barracks on Sixth Street when Ruth Matzlk drove up In a light truck. "She said something about hitting someone. I thought she said a man, but I didn't pay much attention to it," Miss Sherman said. She stated that Ruth Matzlk had driven up alone, and ap peared "excited." George Nault, guard at the women's barracks, said he saw Ruth drive up between 11:20 and 11:25 in an Alaska department truck alone. She spoke to two men and a girl in lroht of the barracks, then went down a path toward the C.N.R. station. One the men gave him a handbag and kerchief to keep, Nault said Thomas Nusko, U.S. coast- guardsman, who was with Miss Sherman when Ruth Matzlk drove up to the women's bar racks, said that he believed both lights of the truck were burn ing when it drove up. 'Iwould say' that both lights of the truck were on 'when it drove up," he said. THE BULKLEY MARKET Features: CENTRAL INTERIOR Bee : Pork Poultry Products Under Most Sanitary Conditions 311 Third Are. Phone 178 GREEN SPOT TAXI 55 TAXI BARR & ANDERSON LIMITED Plumbing and Heating Automatic Sprinkling and ' Coai Stokers Comer 2nd Ave. and 4th St. Phone Red 389 P.O. Box 1294 Quality Repairs at Economy Prices Prince Rupert, B.C. PRINCE RUPERT SHOE REPAIR 3rd St. (Near the Post Office) THE DAILY NEWS Tuesday, May 29, 1945 PAGE THREB --..?UW7Bimi--..-fa. III. V 3 Things For Voters To Remember change the Government but v change our entire system of Cov-f ernment substituting a for-cign-born scheme of "State Socialism" , for pur democratiq j-jyay of life. 2 You are voting to turn over la the C.C.F. politicians complete control of our. lives. 3 1 Those Canadians who are considering ' voting for a C.C.F. Socialist candidate in the coining election, either as a "protest" or because they are attracted by the pleating promises presented by the. Stat Socialists, should pause and potiSer care fully the consequences of such 3 vote. Here are ffiree poinfs to bear in mind If You Vote C.C.F. You are voting not merely to J tat The C.C.F. program ot "StaUrlr Socialism" can only be ' carried out under an absolute dictator- If that Is what you want then vote for C.C.F. But if you want to retain your individual freedom and right to live your life as you choose, then you simply cannot vote for any C.C.F. candidate, because every such candidate is positively committed to Complete State Socialism, under which the politicians would take over control of the country, lock, stock and barrel! The C.C.F. promises of "full employment", "re-distribution of wealth", and a "minimum standard of living for all" are on condition that we let them tell us what we can or cannot do, make, grow or buy. Under tJelcV'National Plan" everyone the butcher, the farmer, the manufacturer, or; housewife would be compelled to abide by all the regula tions and controls they set up. History proves that any sucli program of State Socialism inevitably leads to an it absolute dictatorship. The C.C.F. appeal is designed primarily to create dissension and to arouse suspicion, jealousy and even hate between one class of Canadian and another. For example, the Socialists would have you believe that the average Canadian standard of living is terrible due to the '.'cruel tyranny of the rich." But what are the facts? What countries have tha radios? The motor cars? The telephones? The bathtubs? The electrical appliances? WE HAVE! The people of, Canada and the United States have more of the good things of life'than the people of Europe ever dreamed of. And how did! we get all this? Did the Government give it to us? NO! We got it through HARD WORK. Under our system of Free Enterprise we.have developed a standard of living that is the envy of the entire world. So, while wejhave had some setbacks and have developed some faults and a few vices that need correcting, anyope who suggests that,.to do this, we should scrap our way of life and substitute the foreign-born program of "State Socialism" is trying to sell Canada down the river. Not one Canadian in a hundred would tolerate any such program as State Socialism once they lived under it. But if we lt the C.C.F. Socialists experiment with their "National Plan?' we may never be able to get rid of it. So don't risk your individual freedom. Vote against the C.CJ?. candidate in your riding. BUT BE SURE-TO VOTE. , PUBLIC INFORMATIONAL ASSOCIATION P.O. BOX 178 B. A. TRESTRAIL TORONTO, ONT. Naffonaf Director FATHER'S DAY CARDS Father's Day - June 17th . HASTI-NOTES now in stock I $1 per box, V Dibb Printing Company Besner Block, 3rd Street Pnone 234