Jj)A. FEBRUARY 27. rAR HITS IF fD9, if 1012. " TSTE D3TLY m SAX BASS . n.,tm Hnl aa tfaital l(H .' ." While Other Instrument Wane. I r JAMES MARLOW I - d press stafr Writer YORK Feb, 27: (APi The r hit a few war notes In North America bat it -: the rhythm. , . 'latUd be enough elrU , ' ..." ' h c would-be Benny and Artie Shaw nnrt cr pianos lor candlelight , :r and barroom harmonk- I rj the lad who like to j lif'ordlaiw can Dan on 1 ma: rtul to work with. i: Ume inc sympuuny athlete who roll thun-: ; he big drums will have ' t: ex y to make the drum . b'.-t i i, cutting off Import of ical instruments In the - r ut the aame time J home manufacture. - ;,n .! even helped the goodj in sown Amtnm. , riaiun to Come i a:.ul;i-turem told thiKi iu, ;-.my j ;.; for metal won't . t: h t on piano pro- J v , 135.000 were luttt-United 8Ute test) .c copper wire wtnd-ba- strings become oft iron wire eaa be , I will ruat but It wUI w . - m ue before oop-w re thought of. Ut-:; .'rrittl nrewwary a ..m U used tn piano . - InimnMl Minvu (, n;v Out next suw-'.ire of these lnstiu-:case unleaa Unele '. brass to the mui-rrr. Bras figure - .? making ot accer-to such a great oe- (-." .i for the bettowa Ardboard to leather , I KtnSn and Wood t.csj in finding reed for ' mtRta wag always In ' c that would no, let a , va The rreds rala- j . France were the .fit; the war broke out . 3 more reed from l. 8,h before hoaUUtlet year were ucd In the American manu-O.cn got their reeds from ' A; ,? and began experl-w, plastics. adi.la wood from wftkh urc made used to be a from South Africa. Now Ar.irr ,a supplies IU The :.net ; were made In France. ' be :t arc made here. The c) k..id rannot be had. if c.a . Icrty violins were mde Dc tr.ary and Czecho-SlavakLi pp. - end maple woods by he -ftimen who kept the lii ":rjr family throuehi gr T1LLIE THE TOILER YOUR SHARE AS AN AVERAGE CANADIAN IN THE 1912 VICTORY LOAN YOU MUST SAVE AND LEND MORE BECAUSE Ctntdt WHI Ba Spending in a Yaar About:' Totol Yoor Short- V For or on ot ceitl .. 2,000 mft'orn TooyBflfo'm . 1,000 mffloni fot ceit of 9yfrnnt . 500 miffioni Thlj means you and ivery other mon, woman and child in Canada must buy an average of $153.51 in Victory Bonds and Certificates. This is equivalent to: iponiibittr lo buy Victory Rondl i 9fotr. S I7S.44 87.72 43.(6 Totol J.500 miHIoni 307.02 30 of Conodo't 1941 notionol incem. Avtr. 090 iticomo woi S5I.S pf copito. If you d mort, vouf f- or 134 of the )o' in notionol irtcomo in 1941 ovr 1940. Averog in. tomt wol SIM rugKtr, mgy rii onothtr $70 thii yor. But each dollar you lend has gained in Fighting power: 7...nd CnPyHThi Way: i .. Total 'YourSliofo ' i. .." t ' s Totoflon from all tourcti . l,750miKor)r IS3.SI Borrowlnq from yowr lovingi l,750miBrtni IS3.SI Totol J.500 mlKofli 307.02 or 60. moro thon veu loaned for wor In 1941, including Victory Bondi, War Savingi, (c. In 1 942 you mvit lnd mor tnan tho totol you novo loontd tine war bogan. There Is talk of Prince Rupert STOCKHOLM. Feb. 27: 9 Th IWiery pruduotton worktaK up U. rsstion for adults tn Swwten one uouna torn per aay wnscn would be about half of that of the (Treat DrlUah . lushing port of GrWnaby. The IU-tunwd SoldUm Association, M. a meeting la at night, derided to request the cKteens of Prince Rupert to employ Orittah labor and not employ enemy aliens who have only within the last few l yeans become naturalised. Preakrent E. J. Chamberlain of the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway Co. advises the Prince Rupert Merchants' Association agatmt boycotting the railway company's steamship because of alleged unfair treatment to the city. cratlons. Tint th aame woods are avail OH; DAVE. I'M TERRIBLV SOPOV .'CAN'T ACCEPT VOOO PROPOSAL TO MATOV RIGHT opr I'VE (SOT TO TMlKlK IT OVER 1 OH, BUBBLES DAVE. IS TERRIBL.V JEALOUS OP BASCOM has bn reduced by the Food Ctatmntaaion to a total of grams 'about seven ounces i a day. through the extension of the next bread rationing period to cover 30 instead of 28 days. The previous dally ration had been 232 grams about seven and a half ounce i. Dread coupons are now required to obtain either porridge or gruel in restaurants, but an extra ration- of motesses is granted children to compensate them for having only half the bread ration. REAL HEAVY WEIGHT The weight of the Statue of Liberty on Deldoe's Island In New ;York harbor is 236 tons. FISH KILLS CATTLE The piranha fish of South Am- but tilue;i mav be seut over seas at a'liv TlMf? AUD LEAVING VOU HERE WITH THAT BASCOM FELLOW iSM'T GOING TO HELP THE MQKALb Ur- IHi partofuucle 6AM'6 ACMV WELL.WHV K SHOULPW l Ht BE? VOL) 'RE WITH BASCOM f 11 S LE5VKrDAME,TMAT5 1 1 KklOW. BUT 1VE GOT A PLAN TO PROVE. TO PAVE THAT BASCOM MEANS NOTHING TO ME AVJP VOOVE GOT TO HELPV SI 00 millioni mort tKonl ol of ui now havt on I dtpotit in bont (oyingil accounts: mort than! tight timtt who! 0! of I vi paid loit ytar in tftl inturanc prtmiumt. Bictutt of tht steadily riling tfficiency of Canada's war industrial, coifs art dropping and each dollar! you land will no buy thii much mora equipment than it would a year ago: Universal Carriers Your dollar will buy 54 more, Twenty-Five Years Ago February 27, 1917 Machine Guns Your dollar wiH buy 30 more. Mi Shells Your dollar will buy 33. more. What these facts mean to you as an investor and a citizen: Your dollars will fight for Can. ada harder than they will work for you. Yovf dolor loontd lioi qaintd JO, end mort in ill t.qht.ng potf. Your doHof pt lioi loit tomt of ill bvyira por. For ol of hi thtrt 1 bt fttr oiVifig macKinti, iffgro(cri, rodios ond ettitr hovttHold 9oodi. Moit of ut w'4 bt obit to drfvt only ho'if ai for 01 t did loit ytor. Out daCors 'fj it4 rrt ol otr doly rdi, but tUft ii Itn to chooit from end pricti art gn-troly hgKtr. The dollar you lend protecti the dollar you leep. Th SIS) you mvit Und this ytor, ond tht tquol omount you wil Kot to pay in taits ittp Can-oda's occovnts bolanctd htlp prtvtnt inflation. By lending your doCori you help letp prices down, help preserve the buying powtr of your rcmoining dolors. A price ctXng is holding down tving costs. But your self-dtniol is the rtol support of that ctXng. EXTRACT FROM FINAHCIAl (VST, FEBRUARY 7. 1942. Swedish Adults See Less Bread Seven Ounces Per Day Limit There 000 Cartridge Cases Your dollar will buy 667. more. In the test war, dollars stored I away grew in purchasing! power. While vour dolor has lost some of I its power to work for you, much of I that power may be restored after I the war. Tht tittnsion of produc-l tivt facilities for war may, with peace, bring lower production I costs, cheaper prices to you and other consumers. Those who lent S 1 00 in the last Victory Loan of the firtt Great War got SI3S.8S back in Durchasina rjowtr when! their bonds matured in 1934, plus! mttrtst over 15 years. ! Mother Mourns Airmen Three Is Now ' I Jdy Macltobert of Dounesie, Scot land, Triply Bereaved mother contributed $112,500 for a 217 1 bomber when he was reported missing, now Is presumed to have been killed in action. He was the fourth baronet and the last of three sons of Lady MacRobert of Dounesie. Scotland, who have lost their lives in the air. The Stirling bomber Lady MaeRobert bought was named "MacRobert's Reply" and bears the family crest. SUCCESSFUL BLACKOUTS Peninsula, South Africa, brought all-round co-operation Ih all areas. GRAND EGG-SMASHING TENBERO. Eng., Feb. 27: While half this Worcester town's population looked on 10.000 Cana- able here where the main Job is erica annually kills hundreds or oian eggs wnicn naa gone Daa oe-flndlng skilled fiddle-makers. That cattle by attacking them as they fore they could be distributed were takes time. wade Into streams to drink. destroyed here. 1'ROOF FOR THE WAITING HE. VJILL BE. VAJlTH VOL) COMSTANTLV WHILE I AM AWAV DEFECTIVE PROOF N0 BALLS Gas Ration I- I - HELD NOW) Washington Society Leaders Clamp Down on Parties antf I Divert Effort to- War: j By LUCRECE HUDQINS A?oeUted Press Staff Writer WASHINGTON, Feb. 27c O The jonly big parties In Washlnston these days are the oarties that no I one. has to go. to. If you're Invited you buy a ticket and then stay home. They call them phantom ... , S4l1a Iu.hu. Siaa m ha. I. 1 to 200 and are satisfied if 100 rhew up. LONDON, Feb. 27: 0Pllot Of- . , , .u the of restaurants are taking place fleer Sir Iain W. Maeltobert. whose the huge feasts once held in prl vate banqueting rooms. "Lavlsh-ness" is a word society reporters have forgotten how to spell and small group of Intimate friends' is the phrase most often used to describe guest lists. One newspaper man who has been attending Washington social functions for 15 years said: "The biggest change I notice In wartime narties i that in the old dars ner at the hors d'oeuvre tablet Now when you go anywhere for cocktails you get just that a cocktail and, if you're lucky a couple' of paper thin cheese sandwiches." Representatives ot refugee governments are . persistent yarty-goers. The society pages arre flooded with foreign names; while the club pages carry 'the' Asimes of I'LL PROVE TO V0L JUOW THAT BASCOM MEANS AJ0THIW6 TO ME P l( OKAV 1 I'M GOING TO MKX TURKl BASCOM lit Africa! Four Ifundred Miles Travelling Per Month Is Limit, CAPE TOWN, Feb. 27: V Gas-' oline rationing In South Africa started on the basis of 400 mltrs travelling a month. The amount of the ration In individual cases Is determined bv the weight of the vehicle. MolorlsU who consider that business interests entitle 1 them to a greater mileage may apply for a supplementary ration. The scheme applies for the v-u. v.. lc -,c .IU "-""- present f0 motor cars and trotor-menU no music and no pint. lej on, but tne of nil lHe,rC is. balL ., ' oline for lorries and other vehicles Cockeyed? Not u exactly. The , controlled. j balls are given to collect money, steo Hon. R. stuttarord. for some relief society, if WmlnUter of commerce and mdus-r are no overhead expenses for such trles statd.ln an interview, "has! !i aJa a2.rcfc,a": become necessary in the Interests! lit o? thtil ' P6f of the country as a whole, and has' cent of the ticket to money goes dictat(J by the exceptional . . and unsettled world conditions V 01 DUye." f,C SatU" which recently have become a fled because no one in Wasnlng- atM M a result of tne cntr ton today has time to go to a ball - the f Ja mto war anyway. ( Boiled Shirts Out 1 The phantom ball typifies the wartime mood of the capital's party-goers. Local society. has put' Us formal clothing in moth" balls) Died Last Week for the duration. What enteitaln-J tag Is being done is in business' Funeral of Small Son or Mr. and clothes and Invitations almost al-j Mrs. Edward Ridley Took ways end with tne blessed postscript: "Come as you are- and straight from work." Society matrons who used to meet at large bridge parties now Kitkatla Want f Place on Sunday KITKATLA, Feb. 27: The funeral; of the two-and-a-half months' old infant son of Mr. and come together in small groups to Mrs. Edward Ridley took place on discuss Red Cross and civilian dp-. Sunday with Rev. B. Shearman. fence work over tea cups. One: Anglican missionary, officiating, i hostess recently held such a party The child had died on Friday last j in her garage. A neighbor auto shop worker gave the ladtes a les-f FOR LONDON RAIDS ' son in motor mechanics. 1he official days at home which LONDON, Feb. 27: tf-A Minis-the wives of cabinet member for- tfy of liQm Security order remedy held once a week have oeen'oulr that four gallons of water cancelled entirely. Embassies an a stirrup pump for use dur-which used to give parties for "B air raids be kept in all houses. 1500 guests have slashed their llste ; flat and apartments. IN JAIL 3G3 TIMES BELFAST. Feb. 27: ff A woman ts the best known "boarder" at Armagh Jail. Convicted for the 365th time, she Is serving a month for being drunk and disorderly. Washington cave dwellers who are busy carrying on their work, for defence. Wedding parties have been the hardest hit by the war. A local minister announced that since the start of the war he had officiated when you were invited anvwheieUt 32 small informal weddings for cocktails-you not only -got all; Jere the bride and bridegroom , the drinks you wanted but you ""W sir ciomesi ana oniy The first blackout of the Cape nn. nn plHn vn. din . three formal weddings. "In the i . ki " ' .... old days," he said, the ratio two to one the other way." t - . , . j VOO WAIT WOU'RE GIVING HIMTOME'?' VJELL-L-L- ! OWLV TEMPOCARILV r 1 t 'fa was IMU STOPPED Wn.crMon tM quiet rtWtrom Itrhieff tnmu. tire pi iu. p(ie, kquid U. IL I). Pmmpta. Grtmlni. uiakM. S4h irriutina ami qnk-ir? WW ialcoa UrStinf.SSc trial k.4lUtwnM it. nratw kav-k. ktk ruv aroisial ulr Urn UJJ JJ. I RtMJiiniON i BY WESTQVER 4. I- TAKE t FOR GRANTED iinwo7 I r Tbls advertisement Is not published or dlsplared by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government ot British Columbia. I J. H. BULGER I (OPPOSITE POST OFTICEr DRESSMAKER Mrs. Nakatanl Ladies' and Children's Alterations Phone Oik. 529, 522 Fulton St. Satisfaction Guaranteed Cleanins and Pressinc TWO COTTAGES FOR SALE. Large Public Hall For Rent. CENTRAL HOTEL Trappers: Brine: your furs to me. Prices on all furs have gone up 20. Mink down 10. Those same buyers from Cow Bay will pay 30 more if I am there and you will get a square deal. When shipping furs we wire money on receipt of goods. GOLDBLOOM "The Old Reliable" savoy HOTEL Carl Zarelli, Prop. Phone 37 P.O. Bor 511 FRASER STREET Prince Rupert - in.ci Steamers leave Prince Rupert for Vancouver: Catala every Tuesday 1:30 p.m. Due Vancouver Thursday p.m. Cardena every Friday 10:30 p.m. Due Vancouver Monday ajn. Queen Charlotte Islands Leaving Feb. 10 and 24. Full Information, Tickets and Reservations FRANK J. SKINNER, Prince Rupert Agent Third Ave. - Thone 568 4- "1