mi i If VrnrCS -hTfl IJW- 4. ..rr lEAGUE , in Hour- -i, 4. San Diego 5- . . m HcUvWOOd 6-0. j 11.5. ocai 1-1 ..t. 2-4. DilU TKAGUE cfnrdaV j Chicago 3. ill - . ( rvtrcil u. -uu ? wasningwuH i. Sunday j .i Chicago 3-6. Detroit 3-1. 5 0-0. :i 0-2, Boston 5-0. -1.1. ?.n wasningion Saturday 5.4, New York 15-0. i Cf IwlH 1. a, lu , Pitisbureh dosi- c.nHav .11 Pitt hurirh 1-5. J.I w - - j.i New York 41. , 7.10. Philadelphia t Ct- Tyilll 6-5. Saturday 1-4, Tcledo 5-5. C'7 7-4, Indianapolis Saturday : i Montreal 8. arc: pK'.poncd. Sunday f Vi'i. UUilAKi 1-4. 1 . r l.t :i at Monday 2 Rc:he-ter 8. ; 5 Montreal 4. ?l,T;ronto 7. 3 iiuuicu in ratr ' Nat :nal Leagues. a.t i.i mi it- i ii.ii 1 1 ijiiai- . . 1. 1 n R Tinunn nil nnsL TIM T 1 s r . 1 1 u Tuesday Ci..,:ago 1 S Louis 7 .ATTfiv AT. T TrAfiTIK : T at Montreal. 2 ir'.pcned, 1-2 Rr-hMtpr n.l t a. miuaio J. 1 IVp-ntn Ofi - ' II. V V. - ASSOCIATION 7 4 ft A 0-14, Louisville COAST T .P. AO-TIP! Sacramento 3, n I Vim T"VI 4 ft JUfl 1 Com o SPORTS - .uui iiucnev Licacue 1 -iea tonight at the 'J 5XJO Suds mpptlni? iu aim it.vjv. win it .uu . - mui n.v;.A. trying in the running for Play-off spot. There uirno .! i . . -v ymjuig aates re-v l;r each team with the wrouie finishing May uiu r nnrp.cs u-orft uwauicd In mppf tn- re game has been bindings; 3 5 4 5 5 Prince Rupert and War P0RHRAN5F0RMED BY EFFECTS OF CONFLICT; NARROW ESCAPE FROM BEING TARGET 0F ATTACK ITSELF Sent Men, Built Ships, Handled Sinews of War, Produced Materials, Bought Bonds Prince Rupert felt the full impact of the war except in the actual physical sense of conflict and, back in 1942 as the Japanese essayed their westward campaign and actually effected their landings on the North American continent, it doubtless had a narrow escape from being the target of attack. 0 6 2 6 2 4 3 4 4 2 leaeup Mm ra w me rrnw . - i-wv.iv 2?ro Blades! iru. J i--- vkur arnv mm ln'Ih0nMlnora-,,',,ha But If Prince Rupert did ac- tually escape the physical aspects of the war, it nonetheless felt its full effects in a degree comparable with that experien ced by any military or industrial centre having to do with the prosecution of the conflict. Prince Rupert, when war broke out in 1939. was a struggling fishing port of a' little more than C0OO. WJar developed It into a bristling fortress of Important naval, military and air force establishments hurriedly organized as only could be done in The case of an emergency. The Battle of the Oceans re sulted in full utilization of the Prince Rupert shipyard and dry dock, increasing its payroll from a retaining skeleton crew of fifty or sixty men to a force of 2000 or more at its peak. The war In the Pacific speeded port development to make Prince Rupert a point of embarkation for huge quantities of men and materials to Alaska and destinations beyond as the United States girded Itself first in the defensive and then in the offensive for the still tin-finished war against Japan. War had its effect also in bringing. into an unprecedented measure of production the flsh- eries and timber resources of the district. At one time war gave Prince Rupert a congested population of 25,000, taxing its every facility of service and living and trying the patience and capacity of all those having to do therewith. In short war transformed JMnce Rupert. Of course, one of the most notable developments of war for Prince Rupert was the construction of the highway alone the Skeena Kiver to connect the city and the coast with the rest of the woild, thereby supplementing the transportation facilities afforded by a hard-taxed railway line. A great industrial achieve ment by Prince Rupert for the war was that of its shipyard which constructed four minesweepers and thirteen freighters of 10,000 tons. The 20,000-ton floating drydock has handled 815 ships and repairs have been ef fected on 2,280 floatjng craft of all sizes. Prince Rupert Made Full Contribution But if Prince Rupert bene fitted materially from war. it CANAD1AN By MARGARET WOODWARD A special dance in the Y last night was an evening of gaiety i to celebrate V-E Day. Music was by Botf Wytorow. I The US.O. program tonight to mark music week will be handled by Bob Morrison of the Y. The program arranged by Bob Fleming is specially chosen as a tribute to the vlctorius Allies. All music lovers are Invited. The Wives Club will hold their regular Thursday afternoon in the ladies' lounge. There will be birigo tonight in the writing room. Beginning this week bingo will be played Wednesday only. Friday games have been discontinued. also made its contribution. Prince Rupert's greatest con tribution was the 641 men and : women it sent to the services 168 to navy, 353 to army and 100 . to air force. The supreme sacri fice was made by sixteen of these. Prince Rupert, while giving of its sons to the actual fight ing and its efforts In the various phases of war effort, did not hesitate to give its financial backing. Five thousand individuals purchased Victory Bonds in excess of $10,000,000. Its people gave generously to all war causes. As "V-E Day" was observed Prince Rupert would look back upon a worthy effort in war thus far and anticipate its competence and capacity to see the rest of the conflict through. Classified Ads In The News get results. FRIENDSHIP GROWS ON FERTILE GROUND friendship between the British The Commonwealth and the United States began generations ago, when courageous pioneers from England first tilled the soil of the New World. This friendship has endured through the years. Today England and America must remain together for the benefit of world security. Bound by close tics to the historic soil of both nations, wc of Canada can help in many ways the growth of thU great partnership. Long the friend of both, weean interpret one to the other. . .foster the mutual understanding that is deep-rooted in the past. Wc as individuals... and as a nation. . .arc proud of our privilege to further the comradeship between John Bull and Uncle Sam. Calvert Dally 300 years ago Calvert said: 7 came to sowe. . . to build" Far back in the 17th Century, Calvert, famous statesman and Secretary of State to King James I, was one of the earliest pioneers to plant a seed of friendship between the Old World and the New. In 1622 Calvert founded a colony in Newfoundland and, a few yegrs later, a colony in Maryland. In letter to his King he wrote, "I came to build, to sett, to sowe . . .".The seeds of friendship between Britain and the United States, sown by Calvert over 300 years agp, have grown and flourished through the ages. This mutual understanding, fostered three centuries ago by Calvert, thrives mightily today in the combined operations of Britain, America and Canada on the war fronts and at home. That great partnership must and shall endure in the peace that lies ahead. One of Youngest "V" Loan Subscribers Marie Mortimer came into the Victory Loan office and bought her own Bond. Marie, being Just 3'2 years old, is one of Prince Rupert's youngest subscribers. Veteran oi Air War Here Is Flight Sergt. Don Nelson, son of. Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Nelson, Waldron Apartments, now home after completing his tour of operations over enemy territory in the European theatre with the Royal Canadian Air Force. He served as an air gunner and spent thirteen months overseas. Not only his parents but his numerous young friends are happytat his - safe return home. He is through, with -the wars.and pects Jo resume studies at the University of British Columbia in the' lalL J BLACKHEADS go quicklr by limple method that di-oWta th-ra. Get two ouncei of peroxln nnvilr frnm vour druirrist. apply with a hot. wt cloth gently over the blckhed nd you will wonaer wuri ucy am mm- Churchill's Frankness Disaster made Winston Churchill prime minister the disaster of the collapse in France and the retreat through Dunkerque and Churchill rode the wave of disaster on a surfboard made of courage, frankness, noble pur pose, shrewd strategy and sue cession of pungent phrases and masterful expositions that kin died the Imaginations of the world's free peoples. "I have nothing to offer but blood and toll, tears and sweat." So said Churchill in the House of Commons the day he became prime minister May 11, 1940. The words swept the world and the world suddenly was aware hat something very Important had happened in London when Chamberlain resigned and Mr. His Honour. W. E. Plher mart on the 3rd day of May, A.D. 1915, I was appointed Administrator of tne rotate of Mlchal Mosek. otherwise known as Mike Mozek or Mosek, deceased, and all parties having claims against the said estate are hereby required to furnish same, properly verified, to me on or before the 8th day of June. A.D. I94S, and all parties Indebted to the said Estate are required to pay the amount of their Indebtedness to me forthwith. DATED at Prince Rupert. B.C.. this tin aaj oi May. nu. iwio. NORMAN A. WATT, Official Administrator, Prince Rupert, B.C. IN THE SUPREME COURT OF BRITISH COLUMBIA IN THE MATTER OP THE "ADMINISTRATION ACT" IN THE MATTER OP THE ESTATE I IK M N N I 1 I'HXIU WW 14 IrVIlPM OTHERWISE KNOWN AS CAESAR Jtt ttilAH VfcKHEXLi.N, DE TAKE NOTICE that. h hrrior nf His Honour Judee Fisher, frcal Judge of the Supreme Court of British Columbia, 1 was on the 25th day of AprU, A D. 1945, appointed Administrator of the Estate of Amand Cesar VeTheyden. otherwise known as Caesar or Cesar Verheyden, who died on the 7th day of September. 1944. All nppfinna InrifVitoH tn said estate are required to pay the auiuuni oi vneir inaeDieaness to me lonnwun and an persons having Clfllma APAlnst th COlH 1Teta,A ... required to file them with me wiujjruj vrriuea on or Deiore the 31st day of May, 1945, falling which distribution will be made having regard only to such claims of which I shall have been notified. uAitu at rrmce Rupert, B.C., this 27th day of April. A D. 1945. JWIIMAK A. WATT. Official Administrator, Prince Rupert, B.C. The Seal of Quality BRITISH COLUMBIA'S AMMIKIMUIO, ONIAtIO FINEST. SALMON Prince Rupert, B.C. THE DAILY NEWS Wednesday, May 9, 1945 Churchill formed a cabinet. But Churchill had more than blood, toll, tears and sweat to of fer. He had a policy, and an aim. "You ask what is our policy? I will say, It is to wage war, by sea, land and air, with all our might and with the strength that God can give us, and to wage war against a monstrous tyranny never surpassed In the dark, lamentable catalogue of human crime. That is our policy. "You ask what is our aim? I can answer in one word. It is victory victory at all cost, vic tory in spite of all terrors, vic tory, however hard and long the road may be, for without vic tory there is no survival let that be realized no survival for the British Empire, no survival for all that the British Empire has stood for, no survival for the urge and" impulse of the ages, that mankind will move forward toward its goal." PAGE THREE FORMER ANYOX MAN PASSES Peter Corak, age 56, passed away on Saturday at the home of R. H. Adcock. 834 Alfred St., where he had been staying. Born in Yugoslavia, deceased came to British Columbia in 1912 and for years was a track repairman at the Anyox mine. He retired 10 years ago. He was unmarried. Funeral was held today. BIRMINGHAM, Eng., ) Very Rev. J. H. Richards, provost of Birmingham Cathedral, wants surface air raid shelters removed from the cathedral churchyard on moral grounds. "They have never been used for the purpose ' for which they were built and create a seclusion that, from a moral point of view, is highly undesirable," he says. , Buy the 8th Victory Bonds! StWW-BY OLD VIRGINIA JVJ You'll Enioy YL hPPy ,ook5n9 v""" empty pipe. But to make It! You can make mm I SfacfowpiafeM with even an yourself happy, you need to fill the bowl with good, mellow, slow-burning Old Virginia, light carefully, pull gently Boy, it tastes grand! OLD VIRGINIA a real pipe smoker's tobacco IN THE SUPREME COURT OP BRITISH COLUMBIA IN PROBATE IN THE MATTER OP TW. -ADMINISTRATION ACT" and IN THE MATTER OP MICHAL MOSEK OTHERWISE KNOWN AS MIKE MOZEK OR MOSEK, DECEASED INTESTATE TAKE NOTICE that by order of INDUSTRIAL & MARINE REPAIR WE REPAIR ANYTHING General Repairs to all Automotive and Marine Equipment Body Work and Painting Agents for Cummins Diesel Engines Forest King Power Saw Willard Batteries Raybestos Products ACETYLENE AND ARC WELDING MACHINING Phone 459 ' 994 First Ave. West Box 1398 Commencing MONDAY, MAY 1 1945 THE ROYAL LUNCH CAFE - - , Will be open for 24-hour service ALL NEWLY DECORATED FULL-COURSE MEALS AND LIGHT LUNCHES r Grade "A" Certificate 1 f-