rue i September 16, 1952 Naval Shower by Friends ’ ive M en UV "wrong at H.M.C.S. Chatham, | was,” 4 pi and wilt baa snc i min Good yas { Wa ‘ Moose Women oa Plan Raffle h W Women of the Moose making commitiee held home Cormier to plan a turkey raffle | Eileen| for Thanksgiving Day. Raffle will take nlace Oct. 11 I Winners, of cards were Mrs. O Stogavig, first and Mrs. B. Bacon, econd, Those present included nan,| Mrs, A. Good, Mrs. L. Larson, y, Mrs. P. Norton, Mrs. G. Robin- son, Mrs. N. Muncey all Vegetables For Hot 1; After Summer of Salads eals will be appreciated after months lates. Fall vegetables, like cauli- ed with a creamy cheese sauce, golden plump onions cooked to tender and rosy-red broiled tomatoes, satisfy this e Rupert Daily News ) \..Flect Wren Honored : | lier, Whose marriage takes place! ored: at a miscellaneous shower! their | meeting at the home of Mrs. J, | | ABOUT | ~ TOWN a | } Mr. and Mrs, H. 8. McTier | have returned from. their two- | week trip to San Francisco and — w ee | i | | 4 | Los Angeles and are enthusiasti- | iE ‘ |cally endorsing such a trip to| | i | any one bound for holidays. wr j 1 | | “We had a wonderful time and) 7 4 | | the weather was lovely,” said) 7 i | | Mrs. McTier. The couple, who 4 ‘| ; motored to Vancouver from here, | flew to San Francisco and in Los | Angeles were guests at the Am- iii, We \bassador Hotel and among their ~ Visits ineluded the Coco-Nut LANDON -BOUND == shirley’ | Grove, popular night spot. Douglas, 18, daughter oi Fre- eee mier T. C. Douglas of Saskat- chewan, is London-bound to | study at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts. After an absence of five and a | half years, G. C. Walker of Santa Monica, Calif., arrived in Prince Rupert Monday afternoon. He ,will be here for the next few Award Winner bow Walker, who came here} To Study at EEE TTT x PAROT QUILTED SKIRT makes wear- able dress for school beginner. originally during the pioneer days and was in business for | |Many years on Fourth Street, is) Your daughter will feel at Ro al Ac d renewing numerous old friend-| home with this creation. y a emy ships, He motored from Califor- ee nn REGINA Miss Shirlcy,™@ the trip taking a week |Douglas of Regina, attractive | ro eae : Hol Nam 18-year-old daughter of Saskat- “nn A. ae a Y e ichewan’s premier, left on Mon- | ‘8 Provincial command 0 1S j P| |day to attend the Royal Acad- Canadian Legion Women’s Anx- ociety ans emy of Dramatic Arts in Lon- | ‘ary, arrived in the city last | on night on her tour of B.C. units. | Harvest Ball Miss Douglas, who won the | Sh¢ speaks here tomorrow night, | * ** best actress award in the Sas-|/0llowing which she will take a First meeting of the new sea- |katchewan drama festival last | Plane for Vancouver. Rcteticey mince | spring, met Michael Sai is, t nunciavion School ata commun- re el ar the are Mr. and Mrs. P. H, Linzey re-/|ion breakfast of the Holy Name | The | centres advise should be chosen | from preishrunk, washable fab- | ric, can be quilted with very little | time and effect with the quilter |son was held yesterday in An- | |Saint John, N.B. There she was|*UtD tomorrow on the Prince | Society which made final plans stantial meals, auditioned and accepted into the George following a month's for the Harvest Ball to be held Royal Academy for a two-year holiday in which they visited | Sept. 25 aii ~~ | term, : much of southern B.C., including| phil Lyons is to act as M.C. for Benewy 7 1s @ peach dessert that is). at the early age of three or{? a a Linzey's brother | the dance and committees from i etables,’ a little more unusual, It is\u- « PP A pero eater i 4 jin Chilliwack. | the three parish organizations, ‘called Peach Fritters. To make ious, sie developed ei interest oa oe { the fritters, peel peaches, remove the pits, and cut in half. Sprinkle with a little brown sugar, then , dip into a sweetened regular frit- not ter batter. Fry a few at a time ire| until delicately browned—three ind} to five minutes—in deep hot fac, ilso | 365 degrees F., then remove them ne ca e di and drain on crumpled ungreas- R Green To-| ed paper. Serve hot. ) ‘Wife to Join ‘Husband in African Trip LONDON (Reuters)—The wife of British explorer and adven- rer Johan B.own will leave her typist Job at a London store this moyth to become the first white woman to cross the trackless ‘desert waste of Kalahari and Namib, in southwest Africa Mrs, Dorothy Brown, 30, will accompany her. husband. and another British explorer, Sebas- a , . an Snow, 23, on an expedition nano 4p, LO see if water lies beneath the : : deserts “My wife has never been further from Britain than Sicily,” Brown said today, “but she's quite unruffled at the prospect of five months in tents in the open desert with only a circle of rope soaked in carbolic to keep off snakes.” id Green Casserole [ Last year Brown and Snow discovered the true source of the fed Cucumbers ; Amazon River, Snow has just returned to England after com- | hy pleting the first source to mouth . trip down the Amazon on a raft. The idea for the present expe- dition came from a pamphiet on the agricultural need for water } ' in the deserts published by the we United Nations Educational, imbs | S7entific and Cultural Organi- th - zation soft, b @ spo Cook eu POWERFUL WEAPON { y salt vater Japanese warriors of the 16th wel], Century used bows more than i 1 hot “ight teet long to shoot arrows. A SE ms and y together Ss shells, | g dish | 400 dee intil Tif SLX noers are ed po- D CUCUMBERS | Cucumber items at a COME IN AND F 1a spoon | oe “4” slices Meit Clearing small amounts of many different RUMMAGE SALE eee ed fat Sept. 15th to Sept. 20th eoose:| The Stork Shoppe Phone Blue 810 in drama. Her first appearance | was in a Christmas pageant at | Weyburn, Sask She _ studied under the late Burton James in | the summers of 1950 and 1951 at }the Holy Name, the C.W.L. and Johnny Jack and son Peéter,|C.Y.0, will be the convenors. with companions John Carlick, | and son Herbert, Douglas Reid, | and Dick Campbell have returned the Banff School of Fine Arts. nae home in Telegraph | In 1951, she also joined the Re- : gina Little Theatre ‘ Re ree She won the best actress Men Serve ; award for her part in the thatre’s It was decided to carry cn an aggressive membership drive this month so that general meetings will be better attended. Members |also discussed the possibility of going to Terrace in the near future to help in the formation |of a Holy Name Society there. award for her part in the |Support was again pledged to |theatre’s play, “Tomorrow The R f ly | Martin Saunders and his boxers World,” which was an unsuc- e res ments this year cessful entry in the Dominion | Ladies of the C.WI.. provided Drama Festival at Saint John. At SON Meet | breakfast. Mrs. Mary Ellen Burgess ~ . drama representative of the EARLY PRINTERS Seven tables were in play at | the Sons of Norway whist drive} The first printing presses in with the following winners: Mrs.| France were set up in the Paris Emma Brochu, ladies’ first; Mrs., Sorbonne in 1470. R. Skog, second; Bob Hamer, ren - men’s first, following a tie and 1 With Mrs, Sam Haugan; Mrs. Jutia Slatta, chair -prize, and IODE Chapier | i!dor Anderson, door prize. ‘Adopts Refreshments were in charge 2 of an all-male committee in- ‘Digby School cluding Carl Strand, Gunnar selvig, John Pedersen, Reuben The Digby Island school ha Uhristianson, R. Hundeide, K. | been adopted by the Duchess oj | Dehli and John McNaughton; |Edinburgh Chapter, Imperial Mike Colussi provided music |Order Daughters of the Empire for the dance which followed. |This was decided at the Chap- - jter's first monthly meeting of ; the fall last week | ‘The Chapter also will partici- Saskatchewan Education Depart- ment, recommended Miss Doug- las to Mr. Denis Rob yourRest.. Many people never seem to get a good night's rest. They turn and toss—blame it on ‘nerves’—when it may be their kidneys. Healthy kidneys filter poisons and excess ‘Wcids from the blood. If they fail and impurities stay in the system—disturbed rest often follows. If you don't rest well and use Dodd’s Kidney Pills. Dodd’s the kidneys so that you can rest better—and feel better. 136 Dodds Kidney Pills CRUDE WEAPON The catapult as a;military en- gine for thrdWing stones was | pate in a tag day next month to| USed by the Syrians in 200 B.C. |raise funds for overseas parcels — ener ' and will join other IODE chap- BUILDING SPURT | ters in visiting the museum and SASKATOON © — Saskatoon’s |take out membership first important apartment block | Plans for a fall bazaar were | in the last 24 years now is under discussed and members urged to| construction, The owner of the contribute handiwork. Monthly | $200,900 project plans to build | raffle was won by Mrs. J. Moran, | two similar blocks later. 20 OBJECTIVE $3500.00 GIVE GENEROUSLY Union WA Plans Dance First meeting of the fall sea son by the Women's Auxiliary o the United Fishermen and Allie Workers’ Union discussed plar for a dance to be held early nex month. Reports were heard of summet activities and on progress of the emergency fund. RED SHIELD SERVICES In Prince Rupert, over 12,000 garments were collected and distri- buted to the nee‘, Forty families were riven relief during | the year. — real saving SEPT. 5-26th |} Tom Christie—Campaign Chair | Ed Gladding—Campaign Treas Campaign Headquarters |G. PERCY TINKER & CO., LTD. This aavertisement is not pubdiished jor displayed by the Liquor Contro) BESNER BLOCK ~ PHONE 57 |Board or by the Government of | British Columbia. ; upteme TANQUERAY, GORDON & CO. LTD. .»s the largest gin distillers in the world LOCAL APPEAL | } IND A BARGAIN AUSPICES PRINCE RUPERT SHRINE CLUB Prince Rupert, B.C. in pan. Saute 8 3 mina Starting FRIDAY, SEPT. 19 fat and other C.N.R. DEPOT TRACK “ols | » NEWLANDS WOOL SIX Sery- stTs AFRICA RAILROAD ZOO TRAIN i Which is nearing | DOUBLE KNITTING, 2-02. ball 85e cy Open Continuously 10 A. M. until 10 P.M. et On is peaches, KROY SOCK YARN, 1-oz. ie ar tts whit ‘i rea ARGO, 1-o2. 40c “(s ) ote of th ‘an KROY BABY YARN, 1-oz. 50c ke 4, {Slike a glis- || NYLON CRIMP SET, 1-oz. 52e o appreciated, 1 Cod. |] BEEHIVE BABY WOOL, 1-07. 50e - WALK THROUGH ned biscuit, ake AFRICA RAILROAD ZOO TRAIN * t Peeled peach Air Conditioned by CROSLEY id very little sweet: VU moma aaa ° REPTILES than wang hs EVERYTHING ALIVE 4 little cinna- Whole Cloves into 518 3rd Ave Box Displayed Inside Plate Glass Cages 1118 Quilted Dress Ideal For 6-Year-Old Because a child’s confidence depends on comfort, her dress should be simple and loosely fit- ting. It should not be too un- usual in design or material. A six-year-old is often self-con- scious, She could become embar- rassed if uther children were to notice her clothes too much. A little quilted skirt and woes- kit, like the one pictured hére is a sturdy, hard-wearing outfit material, which sewing machine with a buttonholer, they of a thin-faced child, and don‘ will resist fraying better whenj lengthen the skirt of an overe tugged at. Any torn hem or; chubby child with wide baritis buttonhole worries a child and: . - ; ; : as z aterial. se increases her self-consciousness. ; oF COREE ng mane - Use » soft, round neck for the thit+ Little girls are also just as 7 . ric. * r ster. ‘ t self-conscious about being too | faced yarn fat or too thin as their mothers, | tucks which can be let down for Don’t put a V-neck on the dress! the plump child. mre arabe te gat attachment. Instruction on the use of the quilter is available in sewing centres, too. The machirre re | # rows add reinforcement and pro- long wear. The little blouse can ; TEA BAG S A also be changed often j j | associate their costume with the on dressing six-year-olds. It is herself. Of course, it is easier % ALL COLORS Quilting is something familiar 4 |reassuring atmosphere of home, | a good precaution to sew hems for the child in dressing, when % HIGH AND LOW WEDGES been used to quilted bed cover- | | new school. A Fell owY does not catch her fingers or toes Cia wg to young childrefi. If they have frgest sale l lets or dressing gowns, they will finn cng aie when wearing it in the strange, ‘ mex 2 : Here are a few other pointers ; On the machine so that the child in the stitching when dressing clothes open down the front ; ae . Three-quarter inch buttons have MN § d d | ih ( | been found the easiest size for ew ue e an ed er asia 5 a child to handle. If button- holes are also. done on the readers. @ Women’s Canadian general meeting, Wednesday,/| September 17; at 8 p.m. in Teen! Room of Civic Centre. Film and} refreshments. (1t) | Just slip a feot into one of these wonderfully bueyant shoes . and float off on your round of activities! working, relaxing comfort. Club} For walking, | . nothing equals their good-looking @ Canadian Legion Ladies Aux- | iliary Special Meeting, Sept. 18, cancelled. To be held Wednes-! day, Sept. 17,.8 pm. Legion’ Auditorium. (219) | Fashion Footwear REMEMBER | GEORGE COOK JEWELLERS 3rd ANNIVERSARY SALE ALL THIS WEEK George Cook Jeweller Terrace, B.C. Prince Rupert, B.C. | Nismnber Of. 1HNGS Enclosed Please. Find ........:...0.:. (3c per word per insertion—e.g. Number of words 25; cost, /5c. Six insertions for price of four. Minimum charge, 50c.) Add four words if box number required Name : aeeaeauanein : fs mretnciieeasiay ca