Find Hitler’: Private Will, Marriage Contract NOLAND NOIGAARD _ . Dec. 80 - (A?) --Ado1f Hitler married his mistress ~ Eva Braun April D as Rugglgn shells rained on their Relchschan. vellerv bunker. and dictated a private will declaring that "myself and my wife choose death to escape the disgrace of being (creed to m. Elan or surrender," United States 3rd Army Headquarters disclosed Saturday night. The original cocpies of the mlb floss contract, the i-ivste will and a ‘political tss ent" de- slznltlltxins a nevfi cabinet to mug! on e war d t d mid-were illsacoverzde inmfnsultl A “m” rmv intelligence case by 3rd gTo thel t u. 1m l . rnent dlsclolred, Hlatlgt? blacxanedtefllii- ternatlonal Jewry” for the wofld conflagration, and lied down upon ‘international Je ry and its assistants the hatred of the Ger- man people for centuries. Tile testament, dated three d s before Russian troops even-en a; Relchschancellery, declared that Hitler himself never wanted war. He claimed he tried to induce Bri- tain to accept a solution to the German-Polish dis ute. which he said was rejected y Britain "pm-g. 15' driven by Pfvllallsnda arranged by international Jewry.” The Private will directed that he and he 35-year-old bride, with whom he said he had "enjoyed mini’ years of true friendship," be cremated together: This docu. Egret gained Lo ielliiergnsteltgoubilts - 6P5 'I'hl1'd Reich. w h ' Simultaneously, British counter- intelligence officers announced the arrest of the man to whom the documents had been entrusted _ Friedeich Wilhelm Paustin iden- tified as adjutant to Hitler'- miss» ins deput , Martin Borinann. Hitler. n what he described as tmY Private will.” vmressed the QUICKIES Sh“ “ ‘ 7» 7 three years ago ‘ 13m eighty!” ‘Therés something wrong with that ear you sold me with a Guardian Want Ad-it ‘plugs’ when M“.r eallllOIIIIIla CLEARING AT- 0195. Going at one low price ......... 'Also Speck! Reductions LADIES’ PHONE i501 desire that he and Iva be cremat- ed "immediately, at the place I have done the greatest part of my works during the 1i years of ser- vice to my people." , He referred, apparently to the Relchschancellely, where he is be- lieved to have spent his last hours The marr‘ _, contract sh wed tho marrla e was formed prll 29. with altar other, Berln city councillor, officiating. Hitler, Propaganda Minister Goebbels and Bormann signed the document. Then Eva, employing her marriage name for the first time, started to scrawi the letter "B" after her first name. She scratched it out and wrote in a bold hand: "Eva Hitler, Geboren (born) Braun." The political testament, to which headquarters said Hitler "scrawled a contracted and feeble signature," named Germans he described as “honorable ‘men as members of a new cabinet to con- tinue the war with all means." To direct the hopelessly lost war Hitler designated Grand Admiral Doenitz as president, and Goebbels as chancellor. Goebbels’ charred body was identified in the ruins by Red Army men a few days later. Third Army intelligence officers also seized a letter of transmittal written by Bormann and intended to accompany the two testaments. It was addressed to Doenitz, now a defendant eti the Nuernberg trials, where Bormann ls being tried in absentla. a This letter, scrawled hastily in ink by Bormann, said: "Since all divisions failed. our situation seems to be beyond ho e. The Fuehrer dictated the atlac ed pol-' itical testament last night. Hell Hitler." All th documents were found in one of austin’s suitcases, hidden in the home of a friend in the vii- laxe of Tergensee near 3rd Army Head uarters. Wit the documents the Ameri- cans found three photographs, two probably of Eva, the third of an unidentified boy of about l2-—an. other mystery child in the Hitler story. Last month discovery of Evas belongings disclosed the existence of a small girl identified Only as "Uschi." DiBQOl/efy of these documents _lends credence to the reports that Hitler and ljva killed themselves even as Rus n guns pounded the By Ken Reynolds ' l rlllzirlllrllliqlzlllzp a HORNE MOTORS ‘ ' PARTS 1100M‘ will l» closed sm- on DRESSES! Special New» ‘Year Clearing Snap up this chance to stock your wardrobe lull ease your budget by selecting two or three smart from this amazing group. Becoming styles, smart trim treatments. Sizes 7.95 ‘° 19.75 llto HALF PRICE lnofler group of Dresses in sises>12 to 18 only. Cone early for belt choice. Regular $4.95 to 2.98 oa all Far Trim Hats / Omaessolloas and a few soiled Skating Jackets. TllE GREENDAI. C0. .... WEAR 99 QUEEN ST. ‘b ohancellery, and that their bodies were saturated with gasoline and burned. Bataan Survivor Fatally Wounded NEW YORK, Dec. 30 — (AP) — Army Capt. Archie B. Miller. 25. of Bellevue, Texas, unshaven and wearing a rumpled blue civilian suit, stood silently in Felony Court today and heard himself arraign- ed on a charge of homicide in the fatal shooting of a man his wife told lice she ho d to marrv af- tero taining a dvorce. Capt. Eugene Dale, 71-year-old Enid. Okla, iarmy flier who had survived the Bataan death march and 2 1-2 years of Japanese im- prisonment, died in hospital Sat- urday, about Si hours after being shot three times in the apartment of Mrs. Fay Hancock Miller, an attractive former model who come from Jonesbo v, N.C. Detective John Kennedy said that before Capt. Dale died he identified Miller as the assailant and that Miller had admitted thc shooting. Magistrate Morris Rothenberg fixed Jan. 14 for a further hearing. Nollie Mofilung Reviews Career- in Latest Book B!’ JEAN THOMPSON u Prels Women with hobblu have righter outlooks than ‘nose with- ni u. toba. Hei- own double hobby o! consuming interest in public life glad writlna is vividly reflected in e Stream H/uns Past. (Thomas Allen). the second volume w! her autobiography. , Picking up the thread of her life where the first volume. Cleorlns the West. left off Mrs. Moqlunq carried her own thrown al most 50 years. from 1896. tmeyear she was married, to 1946 when she wrote the closing chapter of The Stream Runs Fast her present home at Lantern lane. near Vic- toria. B C. she surveys her work as homemaker. crusader for wom- en's rights. Alberta legislator and author of eight books. The book ieflecis the roused life o! the prairie and the women who make homes there. It carries ‘with it the atmosphere of the land's “purple twiiights. her phan- tom breezes. the smell of bvurninil leaves._ the ripe tints c-f autumn. the slanting snow. . a land of sudden chsnzes- of wrsthor and killing frosts.” . ‘There an human and “noel-ten- inv incidents-the reading of Dick- ens‘ Christmas Oaiol in Manitou Orange Hall. a draushtv place heated by one stove i-n the middle of the room. the stirrinlr of Mrs. McOiunfs ambition to be a public speaks mat ddmesa if welcome to a W.C. .11. - ventlon and the peti on to the privy council by five Oah- adian wmnen headed by Judas Ilhnilyl Murphy to have women de- care persons. a No woman who reeds The Etres-m Runs Fast can fail to be stirred lw the aincerltv and enemy with which Nellie McClunR ap- proached every adventure and oo- portunitv which her crowded life the ln-owth of . based upon concern of others and the ideal of a better wol- Most of all. the book iswitiless to the author's conviction that “Oasis 0 °l Industrial World Moves to 51ml! llonsnils, of Pesos B!" All! PBJNGII oaasdiaa Press bluff Writer 1080K“). ' Dec. 30 -(0P - ‘fhjghewjg g ylea: :1 tail-urinal}!!! t danger n WWW!“ 3 ggdden squslls for Canadian business. ' captains . and shifting nervously. Almost overnight the clear sall- lnginaseaofwar orders and evict-plus returns was ended and the fight. for profile in a com- petitive market and fallins nation- al income was on. For about twtr thirds of the year business open- hted under almost full war con- ditions but in the final four months the war at the year end down onlv about 16 per cent frown the figures for the end o! Manufacturing senerallv tlnucd throughout the year p that startled in by a short-lived of 1946. Pl con- the duct! cessation hostilities were snarled bv the strike in the industry that began in September. affecting likewise dozens of plants moducins cessorics Had it not been for this develop- ment, over-all production had a ROOd prospect of cliinblnil out nt’ the year-ions! decline late in 1045 The November drop in the tots! of production was the smallest since the end of the war. labor Problem The total of unemployed in Can- ada is still growing and is likelv to expand further before there is anv contraction. It is estimated that the first two months fo 1948 will see the low and the start of an upturn as the conversion of plants to the Us ’ucti l of civilian needs zcomea an accomplished fact. Year-end reports indicate there were about’ 100.000 more workers than jobs with close to 40.000 ex- servicemen seeking employment The situation was said to be more favorable than had been expected, Since V-J Day 350.000 war work- ers and 250000 discharged service- men have been thrown on the lab~ or market National income has, of course. declined in recent months but the hrsavy distribution of money to dis- chsraed men has helped to maln- tain conslmler oiuchaslng st a high level. Retail trade was ee~ tlmoted to be eiirht per cant Zlgluflil‘ in 1942 tnan in 1944 re- corded minor declines. Pig imn production in the first. 10 months of 1941 totalled 1.108.100 tons com- Damd with 1.868.100 tons in i944. a drop of 3 ‘l per cent and steel production of 2.421.100 tons in the salute period was down 2 3 per con . Shoe manufscturlnfl Plants o- ohlevved production greater by sev- en per cent than in the previous your and the textile mills held at a high rate of production close to flhe peak 1944 fimues. Flam income was off about 10 per cent from the 194-1 total to an estimated $l.300.000.(lO0 despite the higher price lzvel. Nevertheleesthe total was the second best ill Ca/n- sdas history Having izreatlv re. ,duoed their mortgage obligations in the last two veal’. farmers pos- sibly found their not income im- proved 11131041. Cattle marketings ncrealsed Del‘ cent an hog mallletlnizs were down 30 filo 35 Der cent. Mining Awaits Manpower ‘file minins industrvustiii llam- pered bv a shortage of help but the 870M112 Ollfllllls of nmnpowgr should soon riizht that situation. glinerslb production for 1945 was own a out l0 per cent fro t siessooooo total of l9 wfhell: was a smaller production of nlc~ kel- coma zinc and gold. 0- duction of gold showed a drop of 1° W 13 PM‘ cent but the the Year brought w ‘had been reach- ed and that sold production could expected to expend in future, There also were indications in the final weeks of the yea: of m eariv improvement in the demand for copper and nickel for civilian s Lulnberi s is iso tite the help llliortas: althlzusglhc l‘: hi: estimated there are thousands in the bush this winter st. In Ontario and EO- ‘need Newsprint plants continued their high level of production in 194e, til-mini: out 3.260.000 tons. a isain of nearly nine per cent over the 104-4 production. Exports of news- print ‘for 11 months of 1945 total- led 8183510000 a. gain cent over the total for the cor- ieglglllléiiins montehfi of 1044. h! IWOOG ed on a arse scale. Contracts awarded showed a total greater by 30 per cent than in th he ed was up 4d tvroduetim in. sharply oerceotmoiothwatfh ttfilfzn o themcvloils m ‘a t a d s out nin ports for Y!!!’ WM P6!‘ (‘UM from U“. IX- landed "N" r. Oanad ‘s xtarnsl trade shsrnlyiffecteedlzvthe oonolumvirii of hos . total of ° per hour. spring driving. NOW that tire rationing is 're- moved be sure you get the most value for your money. Insist i on having Firestone . . . the tire that is still tops for extra value . . . the only synthetic tire made that has been Speedway proved at 100 miles Right now your nearby Firestone Dealer store can take care of your immediate needs. your present tires may last a little longer you should order new tires now and be sure of having them for Even though PERFORMAflQFKuaIZ ‘has P‘ iwuu" With Iifl-"effi, VALUES ' A ‘and v5 CHARLES RED INDIAN FILLING STATION R. MQIVOR S ' TANTOI BIRDS. she‘ ‘ow n" w . 133i In Mer-ioitiom‘ g V o. r. pavlcsj - McCOLIrFRONTENAC DEALER; STATIC” ‘ WATER ST. EAST .............. . SUMMERSIDE ' CORNER GREAT GEORGE & FITZROY STRE“ t ALLISON sssebnon in. _FIRESTONE' ssimcs wsnanouss a Dliel-ER 1N T ' _ ‘ KENT STREET ggggmngq-OWN FIRESTONE TIRES .. clilinLoTraTowR '.. -.-._.___ .-_- i1 __,_. - w‘ . ‘ i ' “Igylgiogbgl bomblnz t ‘ work of lleiyprzglaillhiiiiililicllliegri’: 3J3‘? Ki“ ‘ahgeneigld lt-liilir.‘ “alga. ‘ w the BOO-year-old mam l never lus conflict between rlghtists and i. ware ill above u» cold m n5“ ohm, w; 1|" ceased during ole . lmlll, I'll it pol ble tha mm and “imam; o. um of warm °°"““ - _ . three moitthl of m im bli lei-lou- troll u mfg t amlsp. Mtndahip. Whefiflfl‘ ° " » . disaster. Bt. c“ I ‘ a‘ ‘albums gqto ~ b75113 llflli, ' 5mm '11; m o- one 01% ‘iillfidilmm-i’ oi m’: