Br.lt. ilia arms wkMiwcm m 3ge . wa ird ldnas for helping uatlaw. War Elfort. lr ' ''roe sunemps nave 3 whrreby wore people nave rJffl 'heir suggestions to r'dj committees. Valuable Ideas bee.i ad;i:ft'd as a result and y essh w.irds mde. ;verai tiandred other factories j?ed war contracts for ths Istrr were aTmroarhed by Suo-Mln. ' H "D;'rt Morrison, who osei that h v should consider ktlnj -.in":: r schemes. . Men n suggested that rdj m: " b' made by nronosala tngtn economy, increased pro-lion, new designs of tools or fune:. improved methods, sav-; 0( material, use of per kuidii of materials and entlon ,;f accidents. exL-' Tt schemes workers sentaf ve a: well as members he s:;a::sr staff of factories on awards committees, by ,h all rf.nr-al are examined. her SOMEWHERE IN SOUTHERN ENGLAND. Aug. 29: CP,-Restless for action again after years of service throughout the world, many hundreds of the French. Foreign Legion, the toughest fighters in Europe, hare taken up quarters here as part of the army of all Free Frenchmen under General ds Gaulle. AS representative of typical French fighting splilt these men were chosen to be the first soldiers of General de Gaulle's army to be rut publicly on parade since Pe-taln capitulated. All the legionnaires who paraded here recently helped in the storming of Narvik and were the first troops t0 enter that port in the Norwegian campaign. Later some of them returned to France and fought in Belgium when Hitler Invaded the Low Countries. When .France collapsed they escaped to Britain to continue the struggle. One tall, wiry legionnaire, speak-in? between mouthfuls of an Eng- Don't be vague... ask for nine uiaest Name in Scotch Haig rum I tr Ml awn 9 A Emm smia,,, aiintio ho somco v HAIG & HAIG VfCIMlV tlltCTtt PKODUCT Or SCOTtANO SUA lOTrUD M tOUO IN Tm UNITED WNGDO" UNDM GOVtRNtKNT SUftHVlSON aig x Haii) i'SKD'.BlENDED AND BOTTLED IN SCOTLAND BY aT" "AIO LIMITED, EDINBURGH, SCOTLAND Cont?nietoSement is ot published or displayed by the Liquor wu' Board or bv tha Government of nrttuh Columoia NION Rteamer r STEAMSHIPS LTD. r MTAU liVFItv Ti,ta. m kj iu- II,... If Con in Mrs, p.m. T.S.S. CAHDENA FHIUAV. 10:30 p.nu Due Vancouver, Monday a.m. lenient, Please Purchase Tickets at Office In'frmatlon Regarding Reservations and Tickets from SKINNEK. Prince Rupert Airent. Third Ave. Phone 5B i Halibut Sales American Electra, 40,000, 10.5c and 8c, Nordby, 36, 000, 10.6c and 8c, Pacific. . Canadian Southend, 16,000, 115c and 8c, The Markets t-srs B.C. Fresh Extras, Grade A Large, cartoned, doz .35 Local, new laid, doz 40 Fruit Honeydew Melons, each .45 Pears, doz. 35c to 45 Grapefruit, California, 5c to 10 Lemons, doz. 40c to , .50 Oranges, doz. 20c to 60c Banans, lb 14 Peaches, doz. 40c to 50 Apricots, 2 lbs, 25 crate $1.50 Canteloupes, 10c to .15 Watermelon, lb .09 Plums, lb 15 Seedless Grapes, lb 15 Italian Prunes, lb 10 App.'es ' Wealthles and Duchess, 4 lbs 25 Gravensteins, doz 20 Itutler i First Grade, lb. 29 Second Grade . .28 I Lard Pure, lb .-. . .13 Vegetables B. C. Potatoes, 8 lbs .23 R C Onions. Ib 05 I Garlic, Imported, per lb .25 Parsley, bunch .07 B. C. Outdoor Tomatoes, lb 10 B. C. Hothouse Tomatoes, lb. .. .15 B. C. Lettuce, head, 7c to 10 New Green Cabbage, Lb 09 Savoy Cabbage, Ib 07 Utah Celery, lb. 10 Cucumbers, 8c, and 10 Onions, 2 bunches 05 Vegetable Marrows, lb .06 Hubbard Squash, lb 08 Danish Squash, lb. .07 Turnips, lb 05 Corn, doz .35 Green Peas, Terrace, 3 lbs .25 Green Beans, lb 10 Feed Hay, Bulkley Valley Timothy 100 lbs r. 1.15 Wheat, $1.80 and U0 Bran 1-65 FOILED CALL-UP BECKENHAM. Eng.. Aug. 29; (CP)- -A button which stuck In her Bullet caused the death of Miss Dorothy Brown, 40, it was stated at her inquest. She had swallowed also two safety pins, a pen-holder and a metal pencil. Miss Brown told the doctor her brother had been called up and she did not want to be called up "as vVW.' " ' THE DAILY WEWB PAGE FIVE lard Ideas French For Legion MaRY astor and husband Unless breakfast makes you think,.: ih Arms Makers Demands Fight L- nf Supply Encourages Hardy Scrappers, Some Of.Many proflucuon Campaigns, In Would Whack Hitler THIS Tjil L.mt A,i2 29: CP) Tl.e England Mary Astor, film player, and her screen writer husband, Manuel Del Campo, pictured together following their arrival at the Toluca Lake, Calif., home of the actress from La Jolla, where they spent the night. Junior League In Basketball Is Being Formed Beanball Often Ratter's Fault "HoitvWves are right, "flavour etptni ay." What rtady-to-at cereal is youc family's favourite?" research workers asked house wives from coast to coast. Five times as many answered Ktlhgg't Corn Flakes as gave any other brand of corn Bakes. And M. Maurice Aquarone, Chef of the Koyal Connaoght Hotel in Hamilton, agrees! After tasting four leading brands of com flakes under strict lest conditions, M. Aquarone came to the same conclusion as so many other flavour experts. "This taste test definitely proved to m that Kellogg's win on flavour 1" Still Play In Britain Gamts Continue Popular But Not Fraser Street has now a fasti As Well Organized As B:fore team for Its coming activities In' War Started basketball. They have' all suits j and uniforms. There Is hope that! In spite of the war in Eur&pe many teams will be in the fleld.i the British people are carrying on McClymont Park which wai de-t their' games. The football season clslvely beaten by Fraser boys will lis ab6ut to open but it will, not be in the game this fall. The Chi-1 be the well organized football that nese Young People's Association Is watched so carefully by many may put In a team and so may (fans on this side of the ocean, the Seal Cove Scouts and there There will still be some profes-are hopes that the Fifth Avenue jslojial games but they will be 11ml-. Prowlers may enter. Bussey will ted -In number .and In scope, be the Fraser Street's coach' thlsj Cricket games have been played, year. The following are Fraser'si even with German planes hovering boys: I overhead, but Usually the players Bussey, all-star player of High retired from the Held for a short SChool, will coach the Fraser time until the danger had passed, team; Alek Bill, assistant, coach, Army, Navy and Air Force also all-star of High School. cricketers sometimes took a day Try team consists of: backs, jo' 'Mr their favorite sports. Arney, one of the best on the! Many golf courses have been team; Alexander, rough but canP'0Wed UP and a11 nave been -made handle the ball very fast; Our- almost untenable by the airplane vlch, who made fame ,ln Seal ad' tank obstructions. Cove. Forwards, Pavlikls, wh0 can Racing, which, was stopped In shoot and Dick up rebounds; June because of the air raids It Is Vuckovlch, who started the; one, said will start again now that" the hand shot with success; Postuk, linger -Is passing. . Fraser Streets' new player; will.be ,'Much ,of the sport .during, the the youngest on the floor; Hlng- swrmier had taken the form of ston, who is a fast forward. bhj?.t . games for the Red Cross It is announced that W.' F. Similar 'organizations. These Stone mav nut un a c.un if enough havf attracted goodly crowds'. teams participate. Fraser . Street ; : ; . ; '. won the Junior Championship, last year and looks for it this -season. Ill JO I A llfl? Other teams are said to have tjlll llAIVJr. similar ambitions. I """"J . n a(V Svaaa I rite M HUNTERS AT JASPER PARK ' i' JASPER PARK LODGE, Aug-. 29. . , - Heading for the big game coun-Old-Timer Says Injuries Usually tty;beyond the boundaries of Jas-Come From "Guessing on .per National Park and as far Curve Ball -norths as Alaska, noted hunters of . 'United States who have been out- PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. 29: (CP) mfclng at jasper today began the -Ernie Johnson, who played 13 )ong trali treks into the terrain years of give-and-take major league where the season opens September baseball and now Is the Boston Red first for grizzlies, Rocky Mountain Sox West Coast scout, believes that sheep and goat, caribou, moose "guessing on curve ball" and not and other game, deliberate beanballs cause most The head of the party Included batting Injuries. Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Mellon of The scappy ex-dlamond star Pittsburgh where Mr. Mellon Is doesn't think much of the sugges- head of the extensive Mellon fln-tlon that batters wear helmets to anclal Interests. With them are protect hem from beanballs, declar- Robert H. Rockwell, of the Am-lng "It's the silliest bunk I ever erlcan Museum of Natural History, heard." Jl. S. Waters, Johnston, Penn., and Johnson added that during his t-. M. Murray of New York. De-playing days he dared pitchers to parting today from Jasper by pack throw at his head and that they outfit of Jack Hargreaves, veteran couldn't hit him if they tried all northern guide, were H. Lloyd Fol-day. som and his son, Henry, of the H. ,nd D-1,0,801,1 Arms Co., New York BASEBALL r 4 SCORES Clty- and Thomas J. Redmond jand J. W. Redmond of Tlvoll, N. National League jY and Harry Webb of Shelbourne, Philadelphia 0-2, Pittsburgh 5-5 Vermont, and Mr. and Mrs. Ster-Boston 8, Chicago 3. Jlingr Adams of Jasper National New York 5, St. Louis 2. .park In order to be In the game American League (country at the opening of the sea- Chicago 3, Boston 2, json. M 9 j Near Victories Elusive Shadow To Miss Jacobs Another Defeat Brings Curtain Lower On Tennis Star Big In Headlines Of A Few Years Ago NEW YORK, Aug. Z9CPJ -Pauline Betz, Los Angeles, defeated HelenJacobs, Los' Angeles, 8-1, 6-4. . " Thus was the curtain dropped a, little farther on one- oL iHe few remaining links with the sports headlines of the tumultuous '20s. The cold, crisp item from Manchester, Mass., forecast the approaching fadeout of a career touched with stark drama' and Infinite pathos; , the career of Helen Jacobs, the 'girl "who walked In a shadow. Helen Jacobs, the stepchild of fortune. Helen Jacobs,; the gamester whose cup; of glory -never was filled quite- to the brim; whose hour of greatest triumph her victory in 1933 over Helen Wills was overcast by drcumstarices beyond hef. control. 4 The rivalry between Helen Jacobs and Helen Wills li - an epic In sports history. An. even dozen times they met over a span of 14 years. Eleven times it was Miss Jacobs who, hiding bitter disap-.polntment behind inscrutable expression, strode' to the net to offer congiatulatlons. In the 12th Miss Wills defaulted. Thropgh jrears 0f playing second fiddle, Miss Jacobs picked up her share of championships In minor tournaments, and wheii her nemesis was not' "entered, lh majoi events. Four times she won the national championship. Once she won at Wimbledon, and five times she was runner-up. But always the victories were tainted by the knowledge that she had not met her rival. When Helen Wills then Mrs. Moody) withdrew from competition after her de-tun tlln 1933 Miss Jacobs had a field day, winning the national I RAILWAY I LIMES Ht ivcMiiri ...you won't get the quick energy yoi nccf That's why more and more wines start their menfolk off with Kellogg's Corn Flakes, the breakfast that does these threejmportant things. First, Kellogg's, proven tops in flavour, tempt your appetite. Second, crammed with energizing "carbohydrates," they start you ouick. Third, steadily releasing energy, they help keep you going through a long morning's work. Think too, of the time and work they save! Ready in 30 seconds, po pots or pans to clean. Get several packages tomorrow or if you eat out, ask for Kellogg's Corn Flakes in the wax-wrapped individual package. Made by Kellogg's in London, Canada. And realty conomtcoff For iust a few pennies you provide the whole family's breskfast or rapper ask your grocer bout delicious Kellogg's Corn flake in the new family-size package. title again In 1934 and 1935. But Mrs. Moody returned to competition In 1935, competing at Wimbledon, and again Miss Jacobs was standing In the shadow:. Foiled Again y . In that 1935 Wimbledon final Miss Jacobs had the long-coveted victory In the palm of her; hand. Leading 5-2 In the final 'set, she caw her advantage fadels if fate were again making her victim of a cruel practical Joke. Mrs.Mpody won the final set 7-5. ' As if mental anguish were, not enough, Miss Jacobs suffered, her share of - physical misfortune through the years. An appendicitis operation," recurring gall bladder attacks, a dislocated thumb, a pulled tendon and a back injury all conspired to add to her woes. Mrs. Moody Is no longer In competition, but her withdrawal has come too late to be of much benefit to Miss Jacobs. A younger crop of stars has come to the front, with Alice Marble, a girl Miss Jacobs used to beat decisively, now queen of all she surveys. BE SURE YOU BUY CARNATION IRRADIATED FOR "SUNSHINE" 'ITAMIND The irradiation of Carnation Milk for extra vitamin D adds not one penny to the price you pay. rt A CANADIAN PRODUCT ! ft CANADIAN PACIFIC Transcontinental Trans-Atlantic Trans-Pacific To Vancouver via Ocean Falls and Way Ports S.S. "Princess Adelaide" every Friday 10 p.m. To Vancouver Direct Princess Charlotte Princess Alice Princess Louise Aug. 3rd, 24th. Sept. 4th Aug. 7th, 17th Aug. 10th, 21st, 31st To Ketchikan, Wrangell, Juneau and Skagway Aug. 2nd, 5th, 12th, 16th, 19th, 26th, 30th Connections at Vancouver with Canadian Pacific Services Tickets and Reservations from W. L. COATES, General Agent Prince Rupert, B.C. cJ. 1 1 7i if