PAOE TWO THE DAILY NEWS MONDAY, DECEMBER , EDITORIAL FROM ADOLF TO BENNY TO R.A.F. IFLY PLANES 'g10 8fc THEY BUILD 8"RI1RRFRC" Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations DAILY EDITION MONDAY. DEC. 1. 1941. 9 Ampnrnn Hoys Trek ek To Canada S To Join Join It It W, C. A. F. J? Native Visiiors The annual convention of the Native Brotherhood of British Columbia to be held here commencing tomorrow is an important event and it is interesting to know that it is the first time the Brotherhood has met in Prince Rupert. We suggest that every possible consideration be give the members of the Brotherhood while in the city so that their visit may be as pleasant as possible and that the work of the convention be facilitated. Collishaw Looks Ahead . . . Nanaimo's own air commodore, Raymond Collishaw. told newspapermen in Winnipeg that "we are on the threshold of the air age an age that will change the whole course of our lives," says the Victoria Colonist. This distinguished Canadian airman, whose experience and direction were important factors in the first Libyan campaign nearly a year ago, sees Canada playing a tremendously important role in the new state he envisions, not only because .the establishment and development of the Empire Air Training Plan has already contributed toward making the whole Dominion air-minded, but also because again it has demonstrated, and will continue to demonstrate,' the aptitude of Canadian youth for a life in the air. As in the first Great War, so in this, the boys from the Land of the Maple Leaf are proving their mettle in the realm of breath-taking aerial adventure. When H. G. Wells wrote "The War in the Air" a short time after the Wright Brothers demonstrated down at Kittyhawk that a heavier-than-air machine could be made to fly, skeptics laughed loudly at the prospect of huge contraptions raining death-dealing missiles from the skies. One of the illustrations in that enthralling book depicted a biplane of weird proportion and design circling Trafalgar Square at a height which seemed only l. 1 VTl -i 1 mi Last Best Hope of Earth . . . A new book recommended by the Book of the Month Club, written by Harry Scherman, is a very interesting essay which summarizes the issues at stake in the present Avar. It points out that the population of the world had increased since the advent of the age of steam from six hundred and sixty millions to slightly over two billions. Most nations export goods that others need and which they do not need in their own country. Most na- tions are dependent, on some other nation or nations for articles of food or some other commodity. The United j States, for instance, has been dependent on imports of rubber from the East Indies and other nations have been dependent on oil from United States. Everywhere the World has become an economic whole. It is to control this economic unit that Germany is fighting. She announced a number of years ago that it was her aim. The idea that Germans are a master race, Scherman says, has amused men and women of other lands. The Nazi blueprint visualizes three great "geo-political empires" as they call them. The first would be their own, covering most of Europe, Asia and Africa. Great Britain, looked, on before the war as a degenerate people w h o would never fight again, was to be a sort of willing aubordtnate partner such as Vichy France at this moment has become. The Italians were to have a sort of sub-empire covering southern Europe and North Africa. Japan is to control Asia and the Americas. This war, then, is best understood as a war to defeat the insane effort of a single people numbering eighty million to be supreme for their special benefit in a unified world numbering over two billions. The writer goes on to argue that the Germans cannot win suci,.g , war. Th basic notion that two billion people could be kept in subjection by force, Roosevelt had something like this in mind, doubtless, when he said: "We will not permit finally, the Ipgic-mad Nazi idea that the technical means exist to achieve a world empire held in subjection by force. It ignores only one things two billion h u m a ii beings." One thing; the writer seems to have forgotten is that only a few years ago the United States by means of mass production and high duties lived in luxury at the expense of neighbors' who needed the goods she produced, a form of oppression that will have to cease, if there is to be anything like harmony after the war. The Italian Insignia was permitted to remain on the Miss Manson Is Big Fish Special Beautiful Bride Dispatched East uaughter VI Judge Central Hgure to In Picturesque Wedding In iwu,-iiire oanoaas 01 i ruwii Vancouver 1 ana 'l"a Ilrea i-rom.iveifiii- j A picturesque wedding took place at West Point Grey Presby terian Church last wee!c when Miss Katherine Marguerite Man- son, daughter of Mr. Justice Man son of the Supreme Court Ing anemone mums and pink roses. i A single attendant, the bride's younger sister, Miss Marion Man- a tuiiipaiameiy lew ieei aoove iNeison S column. 1 nercisoni her preceded up the aisle. Her below the sinister monster were the National Gallery, Ifrock was a bouffant model of Moneys tamous hotel, and horse-buses traversing the stretch from Cockspur Street to the west end of the Strand. Yet early in the First Great War then only a short decade distant the doubting Thomases were given a taste of Zeppelin raids. These recalled another lllus- f l'n f I nn in WTr 1-aV- nl. ...... . . L 1 1 - 1. containing dozens of sausage-shaped monsters bearing the royal insignia of Imperial Germany. Zeppelin, too. was laughed at. So if Air Commodore Collishaw should suggest that Vancouver Island one d a v will be dotted ' starlight blue organza and her bouquet was pale pink and white daisies with pink roses. Peter Crlckmay stood as groom.sman and the ushers were George Parsons, Alex Manson and Lieut. Robert Hodge. The guests were received in the Royal Vancouver Yacht Club. When the briefs and - her groom left she had changed to a dress and coat ensemble in blue-ef-the- with airfields for the accommodation of private planes ihllls ;llared with mlk Her hat probably then as common the ubiquitous who will dare to say now he is talking through his hat? at Patricia Bay. Advocates of the retention of Ripple Rock as the base for a transgulf bridge, incidentally, may yet live to ste lve in salvage the day when Wellsian imagination will again be put in London, Dec. i: Thirty the shade by hard-and-fast realities. "Ve y?un women employees of a large London firm sacrificed their I love letters for the waste Daoer salvage campaign. (7 kan Sent Out Today. Retires CAPTA.V II. E. N EDI) EN Canadian National Steamships Announcin S 90 THE OPENING MONDAY, OF THE ENTERPRISE WINNIPEO, Dec: 1: w The. son of a war buddy of Eddie Rick- r enba.:ker. No. 1 United States fly- Sf ling ace during the First Oreat War. headed a group cf six American youths who Htr.hpd-hlked to I Winnipeg irom wicn.Kt, Kansas, to $a Jjoln the Royal Canadian Air Force. tfa , Bill (Lule) Lucas led the Amerl- Thls Stuka dive bomber bears Insignia of the Italian Air Force cans who hitch-hiked to Winnipeg on4 tVint f r-un(n. r..i a i- rv.... tk .ima i nna in o nKenn aircraft which- f lpw of a squadron given to Italy by Germany. The squadron .an out i!w?re from Wl?hlta to train fliers jM of gas over British-held territory In the Middle East and the planes under the British Commonwealth fell into BriUsh hands. Some of them are now being flown by , Air Training Plan. BUI 5 dad ilewi the K.A.F. wings. with Rickanbacker In the famous Lafavette sauadron in the Firs Great War. "We've seen Mr. Rick-1 enbacker Annilni nfUn " said et Bill T3H1 whenitJf rV an I ft often. Interviewed here at the R.C.AF.'j& recruiting depot. With Bill from Wichita :ame Roy Davis, Marvin Gregory, Rob- ci v laic, jcub iiciiiuuu uuu vuti 22. All were engaged In air craft work or study at Wichita. "We're tired of building 'em we want to fly them," they said. Lucas was an assistant foreman in an aircraft factory, Gregory was A heavy "fish special' consist- taklng an aircraft engineering ing of twenty-three cars-elghte3n course Suhn has 25o flvine hours of frozen and five of mild cured- to hi, credlt Tate and Herndon was dispatched from Prince Ru- a-d worked in a. Bearchcraft aircraft Mrs. Manson, became the bride of P" to tne United State? this fact0ry, and Davis was a navy tor- Godfrey Noel Harrison, son of morning, saving at .iu a.m. ine pedo operator. On the trip to Win-Mrs. Harrison and the late E. R. fisn was brought in from Ketchi- nlDe2 Davis took over the con- Harrison, Rev. James Evans of- Kan yesieraay Dy tne Aiasna trols of the Cessna machine for ficiatlng. Steamsnip Co. liners Nortn Sea part of the way The bride looked very beautiful and Northlarid; both of which Asked why tney wanted to join in classically molded' and shirred were ln ihe R.CJV.F.. Gregory said: "We gown with long train and carry- "- wanted to get the Jump on the kid? ba k at Wichita. There s plenty more coming." EXPANDING a? 1$ Suhn. Their ages rangs from 19 W 9 I 6 1 Si? BIG MILL,! I'aciiic Mills Is Spending Half Million at Ocean Falls. Pacific Mills Ltd. have been au- r thorlzed to spend $585,000 on a new expansion program at their nlaji Ju .Ocean Falls. The. invest,, wjj? ment will enable the' company to.tSjjf Increase production of sulphite ity pulp from 120 to 145 ton3 daily. $i and to boost the output of kraft t'-paper from 140 to 165 tons dallv ' CVTAFIGHTLK RESCUED , LONDON. Dec. 1: KP) The pilot if a ata f I ?hter" .fighter plane catapulted from a merchant ship to tackle raiding German bombers -spent four days In his dinghy in the Atlantic before being rescued by a corvette. DEC. 1 FRUIT AND PRODUCE CO. THIRD AVENUE and FIRST STREET SPECIALIZING in FRUIT and VEGETABLES DELN0R FROSTED FRUIT and VEGETABLES PHONE 343 FREE DELIVERY 0 "PARIS MAID" SLIPPERS Shipment just arrived! Family shoe store lt "The Home of Good Shoes" CHRISTMAS IS ONLY A FEW SHORT WEEKS AWAY SELECT YOUR CHRISTMAS CARDS M)tt ! Hundreds of Ileatitlful Designs to Choose From at Surprisingly Low Prices. BOXED CARDS ... 25c Uox Ten assorted folders, splendid value. 65c I!ox Twenty beautiful Christmas folders. 75c Itox Twelve Canadian artists' scenes, beaut.ifullv colored. 83c Ilox Elite box of twenty-one Christmas folder 1.50 Ilox Twelve Deluxe Christmas folders deplcriir scenes of Canada. INDIVIDUAL CARDS . . . Priced at 2 for 5c, 5c, 2 for I5c, 10c and 15c. Quality! Value! Variety! CIIUIST.MAS SEALS AND TAGS Dibb Printing Co. Besncr Block Third Street 5 if A -v. b FROM LOW RUBBERS TO HIP (JUM BOOTS, we carry a very extensive stock in Gutta Percha and Northern Rubber Co. lines. "BAR FLEX" RUBBER W)RK BOOTS in 6", 10" and 10", cushion insoles . . have the appeal of everyohe,ithat.wear. U1C1I1. 15 ii n GIFTS FOR THE FAMILY FOR MOTHER AND DAD Ileautyrcst Spring-rilled Mattress, Chesterfield Suite Bed' room Suites, Dinette Suites, Occasional Chairs, Axminster Itugs, Enterprise Itangcs. FOR YOUR SISTER OR SWEETHEART Cedar Chests, Twin Sets, Chenille Bedspreads, Bedroom Hugs, FOR YOUR BROTHER Wardrobe Trunks, Gladstone Bags, Fortnight Cases, Letter Cases. FOR THE CHILDREN Wheel Toys, Doll Prams, Wagons, Tricycles. Kiddie Kars Automobiles, Baby Walker, High Chairs, Baby Swings. SAVE MONEY-BUY AT Elio's Furniture Store TIIIUD AVENUE Fresh Local Raw and We Als0 Ca"ym Pasteurized Milk BELMON F CO. n Ladies' and Cents' Suits VALENTIN DAIRY or Topcoats to Measure. M- T' LEK' Ta'IOrorfl PIIONF lllOWE 657 6" 9C0 P.O. Box 975 Phone Or. If you lose anything, advertise for it. p to P h a ft 8 8 ft ft 8 I 8 8 8 8 8 ft 0