non't be vqgue : : 2 ask for Until Blended, flnd Bofliea in Scotland by HMG&HAIG LIMITED Edinburgh, Scotland tMi idvertisement Is not publlshea wt displayed by the Liquor Control Boara or oy uc uuwmucui ui nuitsn uoiumoia 111 Uama orirl U mm w Leaving City jjttr Years- In Prince Rupert $3.75 J&ifW ell - a NEW STYLES FOR 'MAMMA' It's Give Way To Hit Fancy Of Mature Woman Shipper NEW YORK. Sept. 26: CP) Fashion ad writers always are at a loss In referring to the woman of 45 and over who wears size 16-plus says Amy Porter, an Associated Press writer. 1h- ' rm yl' ''out" is de-f n''''v r. "Otf -T v:in" wont do Eoaeticifa h?'s calVd "h youn In heart." "imrr eslve, dignified." "the woman of affairs" Or perhaps "frankly 40" which means, of course, that she's a good d al mane than 40. Salesgirls probably have th best solution to the problem. They speak of "mamma ttyle." And why not? Many mature women are mammas and proud of it. So let's stop worrying about tact - . . . . and.instsid .consider the older fiatter th wv " v.jf viui uic woman's clothes problem. 'Rnval Royal Ifnfpl Uotel for for eight ofnnt vmve A A . . , WOUNDED H FOLK Tie Red Cross asks your help Canadian Red Cross Society has been storing up For months the SsTall kind in Warehouses ta "aWtam fr tholong heralded German attack op the BnUsh Isles. Red Cross Supplies are in The Battle of Britain is on. Canadian England ready for the emergency. gathered. thousands of sufferers have tff-l One Club has been put out of ohW Srfby a bomb, but the other is still carry.ng on. ISO Red Cro,s ambulance, gww by the people of Canada through the RedCrow, kr now available In England for use in any emergency. The women of Canada have already sent to England, through the Red Crow. 7b6 caiet of tlothing especially needed for civilian relief. They are now working for women and on 500,000 garments children. It is estimated the matenata alona - will cost half a million dollars end the finished garments will be worth three times as much. Within the past week, $37,000 was ap propriated to purchase 50.000 antitetanus treatments; 10,000 pairs of Wellington boots for boys; and $10,000 for boots and shoes for women and children. Food to the value of $49,677.80 has been purchased in Canada and shipped to London which, together with voluntary contributions of fruit, reaches a total These supplies are now of 61S57 cases. available in England. All this is in addition to the comforts and requirements of our own men both in camp and in hospitals. We appeal to the people oftojgf fSl's may S work, tU and money so that XlSS be prepared for euch filled and refilled-ao that we "f i w lhRedCross. arisen, oive emergencies as have now EMERGENCY CALL FOR $5,000,000 PAGE XIY TH DAILY NEWS. 1TC LAGER mature figure. CANADIANRID CROSS Thi 3vtiMmen it not years. M Takes Tlroc problem, are now well taken care I few years ago he bought the Truth is the mature woman eas- of by speclai designers in things home from W. B. Cornish. can ,lnd clothes that suit nr ..becomlng to older women." i if onlv thp-'ll shoo for them. Too . . i. nvi,. . 5 GRANDMOTHER AT 31 .u... Wv MWip hoD- A"e .. C...H.I r,. t . v'"v" " " ' overiooK neea ior a lociu uuuu. ui 1 MeDoutau P""'"! iu.. opk -Per. .tn.rhans a silver fox XXima lr S TnT "araCl0US 1 d9n1t & art or a red puse to match the! l ,fi;!hat'" Mys- ULet my dauBhter red feather in her hat to give-mother. ,u She bore her first child k v, ICU . .. . B . I . . ,. unuBwt. ner (jrama and sparse ana prove A UcDougall of the Royal hea she was 14. . Actu9Uy, a red hat usually is sh... on her a llvely . , .f finirt hi home on ' 'iiatterinp to ih woman wnose ri v i . a 1 . . H.UU JTrVrtnnr Rf .H Kxrh H h no RUnT VK Tf cnt miirh OT O TWin PTTl Tl ftlJArll W 1 tVJJ-tliliy. . .. . . ri..it ir--viM i rTm rmA mma v ihi hA n-Anni ripopc citir Konr r ii hi hiinr mtn wprr Ml Visit lO i-Vel CT-w, w idiiui( r-i: luajrui vi 1.1114 tunii uta iuiu t piuJci jf tut. ui tog v ouw. -"-hv. w. - ish Columbia and will likely named Rochester lor cooperation Fhouklers k that in waui ana uerman aeiayea acuoa oonio ex- jn or around Victoria. in buying; a Hurricane tighter tor hips are mimmizia. mey Know pioaea wnen u.y wre vxcaviiv-McDougall has been 22 the Royal Air Force. how to use folds and drapery to Ing In a field. As a rwill, itVa lialanced COMPLETE Beer fuII.o1ie.l, smoother, more mellow. Gel this extra value at no extra cost. CAP1LAMO BRCWIMO CO LTD . VANCOUVER Pnene 654 for Free Delivery fOOUCT Of MKCU1U 0 CANADA LiMtTCO Canada's War Chiefs COLONEL E. L, M. BURNS Special Assistant to the Chkf of the General Staff By KEN CLARK, Canadian Press Staff Writer Copyrlght, 1940, by The Canadian Press) . ISM BoTrd cTby the Government of British Columbia puUHhed or displayed bv th. Liquor Control . - i gives you an idea of how one staff mind works. ' "War potential is not measured Jn terms of crude manpower. China and India are no great military powers. We may conclude, therefore, on purely unsentimental grounds that, if we want to gain a speedy and lasting victory, we should not direct our efforts merely toward the taking of a number of lives. i " "When the German surrendered tin 1918 we did not insist that vast A man of words and ideas as well as deeds is Col. E.' numbers of his soldiers should L. M. Burns, at 43 special assistant to the chief of the.g general staff of the Canadian army. As to the deeds, at.ahdlng over war materiai...thn the end of the last war he was the youngest staff captain demonstrates clearly where min-in the Canadian expeditionary force, 21. He had a Military power resides ... air forces tarv Cross. After the war he received the Order of thetand mechanized forces are now British Empire for various inven- . , : . . 'decisive; men lacking thes war tlons used in aerial photography his Job. He is a sort of oneW." J Iesht enCmleS ' i t a. tn tho j j i iwno nave xnem. words, they kept coming out in the wnose province Is long-term plan- ( " " Canadian Defence yuaneny ana ning jor the general stalf. T"e ilPY KParh I fUlflS JJllUtIO nlhsr echnlcal and nonular maea- mnHam ormv Ha thpm ntt as ln-lCA UCttdl zlnes in England', Canada and the dustrial organizations. United States. Some of them were colonel's lather was a col- prophetic or, at least, aavanceo. onel th- miiuia but it was. with . In 1924, for example, Col. Bums th- i,,.- oI becoming an engineer wrote that cavalry ought to be lhat the went to Royal Mill- mechanized. He said It was silly larv rniipw The First Great War Canada's Notre Dame College ltn tilk of keenine horses. He was m, x iifoWdr,r fn MONTREAL. Sept. 26: Oa T llilll AO A UvMHWMM I - . Rex severely attacked by the old sabre Royai Canadian Engineers, signal J Beach, noted author, arrived irom and kept men but, when the Brl- officer of the 11th Infantry bri- New York by Canadian Colonial tlsh went to France a few months g-yje, later on the staff of the ' Airways, plane recently and went ago, all their cavalry was light 3rd Canadian division. After the on. to Reglna by Trans-Canada Air tanks. war he studied at the School Lines. He Is going to Wilcox, Sask, In 1932 he wrote that the cur- 0f Military Engineering at : Chat- to write another article on Father rent uniform was ridiculous and ham England, the Staff College Athol Murray's Notre Dame Unlver-poked fun at the scarlet and gold at Quetta, India, and the Imperial sity, the Frontier College that won of some militia beau brummels. Defence College, London. his admiration a few years ago. This produced an extremely un- Annointed G. S. O. "You PePle in Canada don't lartorable reaction. But . . . ex- . . .... . i know as much about Notre Dame as Burns wa s perts consider the battle dress, 'you should. Father Murray Is do- mo 100 percent superior to' the JZ 5TiS to"h? 1n8 B wderIul w0rk out tnere service uniform of the last war. IS.ff st eat Mr" Beach sald' ff.r nr The Colonel's own uniform is 2" In addition to Us high academic neat but not gaudy, except for v V" TlJ:". : standards, the little college was the red tabs and a service dresi mq breeding athletes that were the May hj appbmted talk of the west, he pointed out. WlthSTlet .fl On table I, general staff officer (1st grade) is bemapped. a long are ' 1 1 1 . 4 11 I .t m I J in 11 the 2nd Division of Canadians piuiu m M wiuou ui he was .'delighted to be with the .various branches of the service, ,fc off; He .charts demonstrating which of- to Canada u lal Jlcer ought to do what On the asslstant to aeneral Crerar. Prior desk U not much. A letter that hb nta k fais band .looks personal unopened, a beautl- h comded details1 of ful white new blotter, a memor- Canadian troops at Aldershot Jandum pad, no ash tray. In his quiet office with Fowler's I Col. Burns Is rather short than Modern English Usage . and Roget's I tall. He has aquiline features, Thesaurus, and 6uch' odd fr)eH .green eyes, smoothly brushed hair, for a rn.ousquets.lre bh'?i, H'ti, 'parted. He comes easily out of his col. Bums figures out s!-gnlflcant PHONE 116 Canada At War 25 Years Ago Sept. 26, 1915: Allies began ad- vance pn Yaunde in the German Csmeroons, West Africa. , chair. His gestures and speech. are -thing Uk this;,. , ". r easy, fluid rather than stiff and ne claims no qriginallfjr :for the Ernest Miadaws has fcsen elected precise, well controlled. At first idea but. if you remembejr'ltwas secretsry of the Rillitsus Educa-he appears younger th-ifi his years, written in November.- 1939. and tion Council here. Miss Eileen A In Unique Post think of, all the rWiflcations; 'It Feasby is treasurer. For an Intellectual Col. Burns' i "' joh is about as Interesting as there .'is in the army, varied without limitations. He has no routine duties. He is an analyst and arranger of ideas for his chief, Ma.-Oen. H. D. G. Crerar, and his aides. ( Part of his Job the Colonel explains this way: "General Crerar . has an idea about organization. He sets it down. I make a memorandum. It is discussed and rehashed a dozen or 20 times. That's the! way he likes to work uo his ideas. , Right now I am on the seventh' draft of one memo." But he Is no machine. He Is not j the sort of man to remain lndif-' ferent to the human factor in formulating his theories. For example, take the case of tlx; battle dress. lie thinks a patch of color would "raise the regimental feeling ... improve the morale. LTD. "The patch should not Indicate - the untt or formation. There's no, Everything in Novelties 5 ."' " k 0. - m nh But it might suggest the arm of the service. Its effect would be not unlike improving the design of a motor car or truck by putting a pieoe of piping around it. Of course, the decoration has to fit in with the design," , There are all kinds of angles to j Evas Novelty I SHOP 5j 625 3rd. Ave.- West complete Line of Lumber, Sash and Doors, Cement and Insulating Material ALBERT & McCAFFERY P II ONE 117 MISS OLAFSON A.T.CM. Associate Teacher of Miss Way Also Royal Academy of London Certificate for Harmony PHONE 845 in 7 c )(" ml i