V.I 't i PLIO-PEDIC.AND JULIA ARTHHll Hartt Shoes for Men Jack and Jill Shoes for Children Family shoe store ltD. "The Home of Good Shoes" THE DAILY NEWS. PRINCE RUPERT, BRITISH COLUMBIA Published Every Afternoon Except Sunday by Prince Rupert Dally News Limited, Third Avenue. H. F. PULLEN, MANAGING-EDITOR SUBSCRIPTION RATES Subscription Rates In City Per Year, $5.00; Half Year, $2.50; One Month, 50c; One Week, 12c. Out-of-Town Subscribers by Mail, $3.00 a Year. Advertising and Circulation Telephone 98 Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations MFMIU-R OF THE CANADIAN HIESS m. run.iton Pru ia oxrju&tvplv mtUtlad to use for trubllcatlon of all news despatches credlt-ed to It or to the Associated Press In this paper and also the Vocal news puDiisnea uiereiri. All .rights of republication of special despatches therein are also reserved DAILY EDITION Doing Our Share . . . Wanted -Raw Furs TUESDAY, JAN. 27, 1942 Prince Runert is rioine a pretty good share in the war Avork. With the erection of the houses for workers trip nrnrlnrtinn will he sneeded un considerably. As to what Canada is doing generally Prime Minister Winston rhiirehill was well nleased with Canada's output. Ac cording to the man who writes "Back Stage at Ottawa" for Maclean's Magazine: "We have built and launched 140 corvettes and minesweepers. We have built and delivered 175,000 army vehicles; produced 14,000 Bren guns; delivered 9,000,000 heavy shells and 10,000,000 shell cases; produced and delivered 500,000 bombs and 150,000,000 pounds of explosives and chemicals. Canadians are now producing heavy guns, anti-aircraft guns, field guns, naval guns and tank guns; producing (apart from Bren guns) Browning aircraft machine guns, Vickers machine guns, naval machine guns and Lee-Enfield rifles, trench mortars, bomb throwers and smoke projectors. Also, despite much early grief, we are producing tanks. They are not the heaviest tanks, but they are good light and medium tanks, and we are turning them out at the rate of more than five a day, expect to" be turning them out at the rate of ten a day by July. We are producing as well vehicles of all kinds; turning out universal carriers, armored, scout and reconnaissance cars. We produce one army automotive' unit every three minutes through the whole of each twenty-four hours. Not generally known is it that, after Pearl Harbor, Canada came to the rescue of the United States with a great deal of armament; nor generally known either that Canadian armament is today in Singapore and the Philippines and at the Panama Canal just as it is in Russia and China and in England and Libya. Minister of Munitions Howe is probably well entitled to that autographed picture sent him by General Chiang Kai-shek as a token of his gratitude. That still more can be done and will be well done the best members of the government say." How We Would Have Done It . . . There are' many people in Prince Rupert who like to tell how they would fight this war and what they would have left undone. Also we notice the personal prejudices cropping out. For instance these who dislike the English are quick to blame the London authorities for almost everything that happens. Others place the blame for "lack of supplies, for failure to arrive on time and for anything that goes awry on the people with whom they differ politically or the people with whom they may have HIGHEST MARKET PRICES PAID Representing HUDSON'S RAY COMPANY Ship to J, E. ORMIIEIM, Cow Bay, Prince Rupert, B.C. rGIRDLE SHOES tVK WumtN ; CRISIS Thf fliff inillrv With thn avavniro novcnn ic tVint ha J sadly lacking in information. Our opinions are formed on either partial information or false information. So we continue to believe that, if we had been doing the fighting, we would have done it differently. COMING War's Needs and Figures' Demands Strike Home, but There May lie Reserves In the Attic BOSTON. Jan. 27 O- Pul! yourself together, giris, because this will make you shake all over. says an Associated Press writer on war's call to women. There's a crisis coming in your life, -a crisis that will make Valley Forge and the Marne and Shiga. pore look like a Sunday School picnic. You've been talking foi years about doing something foi your figure, remember? Well, now is the time to make jood on that promise because in i ,'ew months you won't be able tc get outside help. There's a short age of rubber, you know, and to icep the army's mechanized units rolling on rubber tires, you'll have to sacrifice the girldles that have been controlling your spare tires etc. Present stocks of girdles and corsets will be exhausted by the end of the year and from then on, you and your figure will be on our own. What to do about it? You can diet and whip yourself into shape that way. You can combine the rationing of automobile tires and the eventual shortage of limousine transportation with walking not only for exercise but to get places and home again. Back In The 20's. Or you can throw caution to the winds and your figure too) and go nonchalantly about your busi ness and social, life. There was a time back in the turbulent 20's when all the girls tried to be flap pers and starved themselves to their respective bones so they could move around uncorseted and unshaken. But their husbands and their physicians didn't like that for different but equally sound rea sons, so that approach to our problem is not recommended. A solution developed In England and harks back and quite successfully too to the binders you probably swathed your newborn babies in. English women are pulling themselves together with musling binders they make themselves. The effect while not as aesthetically or comfortably successful as the storebought rubber girdles, serves to keep their bodies and souls together. And morale of the civilian populace and what is more important to feminine morale than a good foundation garmentIs proving a major element in this war. Dig Up Discards There's no law or priorities regulation to keep you from scouring the attic for the corsets of another year. If not another genera tion. Those girls who squeezed themselves breathless In hour glass corsets, the ones with hooks and eyes and yards and yards of lacing, only a couple of years ago, may.be able to resurrect both the corsets and their shapes with a little modernization You can do what ou like since it's your figure and your audience that will suffer. But it Is surprls- FIVE PINS CRIBBAGE i BOWL PLAYi RESULTS i Sleel Workers and Christian Youth falcons, Eagles, Smiles Cafe ami i I Assoiiatioa Winners Sight. Reddy Kilowatts Lawn Bowlers McMeekln 186 Thompson 226 Paul .., ". 136 Van Berkel 82 Davis 123 Handicap .'. 131 Totals 984 Last Steel Workers defeated Royal Canadian Air Force and Christ'an youth Association won over Rec- ly Kilowatts in the Five Pin Bowl ing League last night. Scores were two games to one in each case. Lawn Bowlers and Armour's roll ed their scores but their opponents failed to show up. Individual scoring was as follows: i Steel Workers 1 -mbal 238 Warner 148 Llnney 218 Greig - 202 Arlington 140 Tarr 121 162 191 227 212 170 156 76 3 187 174 J9'J 220 192 273 Handicap 24 24 24 Totals - 970 917 10G R.C.A.F. Drake 183 181 181 148 White : 85 173 173 15: landley 124 Crapper . 186 Copp 280 Handicap 76 Totals 934 968 1006 Kinslor 250 230 Savllle 210 177 Woodall 215 196 Comadina 197 160 Kellett 185 218 Handicap 19 19 206 154 167 85 192 131 957 HONEY FOR BRITAIN Britain Is the chief market North American honey. 136 BASKETBALL POSTPONED 239 76 227 161 303 137 257 19 Totals 1076 1000 1123 Christian Youth Assn. Harry Lee Jone Lee Kam Lee Frank Fong Bob Lew ..... Handicap 216 150 218 218 234 59 1S5 181 180 189 233 59 213 163 213 133 265 59 Totals 1095 1027 1103 Amour's DeJong : 126 219 249 Alger 183 180 216 Brind 184 141- 1C7 Tubb 158 231 101 Asemissen ... .... 268" 202 227 Handicap f ,. 63 63 C3 Totals 982 1036 103 136 174 175 154 184 131 954 Owing to illness of some of the players, military basketball league play, scheduled for Saturday night, was postponed. ' 1 i '' for lng the large number of women, moved either by the spirit of 1942 or the war, who say they'll gladly do without their girdles for the duration. "If Uncle Sam needs my girdle," they're saying, "he can have What else does he need?" Old Empress Winners. Prince Rupert Cribbage League results last night were as follows: Falcons, 12; Savoy Hotel, 6. Fnirips. 12: Canadian Legion, 6. Operators. 7; Smiles Cafe, 11. Pioneers, 7; Old Empress, U. The league standing to date: G. W. L. Pts. Smiles Cafe 54 33 21 33 Old Empress 54 -30 24 Eagles 54 28 26 Falcons 54 27 27 Operators 54 26 28 Canadian Legion 54 2 23 Pioneers 54 24 30 Savoy Hotel 54 22 32 MRS. M0R1S0N IS PRESIDENT It. The annual meeting of the Wo- 194 I men's Auxiliary of the Prince Ru pert Hospital was held in thn board room of the Hospital last night, business including presentation of annual reports and election of officers. Reports from the President, secretary and treasurer were read and showed that, in spite of so many other interests, the work of the Hospital Auxiliary had been carried on and many necessary comforts provided for the wards. The following were elected to of fice foi the year: Honorary President, Mrs. F. S. Walton. President, Mrs. J. R. Morison. Vice-President, Mrs. F. A. Rogers Secretary, Mrs. J. A. Teng. Treasurer, Mrs. Al Berner. Executive Mrs. W. F. Bussey, Mrs. M. J. Keays, ond F. S.Walton. Mrs. S. A. Klelback again represents the Auxiliary on the Hospital Board. Letter Box AIR RAID PROBLEM Editor, Dally News: Regarding taking the children out of the schools in event of Jir raids and having them stand outside, do you not think it would be, much better to ask residents living close to schools to allow croups of, say six, to go into their base-ments? By so doing they would be in out of the cold (and possibly rain). It would not be very nice to have to think of your children standing outide for any length of time, especially during- a rad. Whereas, If they were In a basement even If It were not veiy warm, I am sure the resident would do everything In their power for the children, such as giving them something warm to wrap themselves In and possibly something to eat if they had to b? there for long. These people. I am sure, would be more than repaid by the parents for their kind ness. This Is Just a suggestion. What is your opinion, parents? A PARENT TUESDAY, JAKUART rJ I CO How limit Control Affects Yon as a landlord as a tenant part of the general plan to halt further incremsi the Cost of Living, the Government on December 1, 1941, extended the policy cf the Price Ceiling to renUlj for all commercial and housing accommodation in Camdi. Generally ipeaUing the new rental lawi provide that: (D lltr: No orl or written lese for any commercial oi ticuu accommodation (urniihed or unfurnished) rru-. legkDj be made after October II. 1941. at a rental higher dm the rentallawfully payable under the leane u eflect oa that date unless an application for increawd rem. I an ln made to and approved by a-Iocal Kenmb f. mi I Ire of the Waiting PrUes and Trade Hoard Swi , an application muat be bated on apcciliedtir. umsunm arising aince Oitolr II, 1941. A'OTK.- tunJ mJ pttmlM uJ tJrly I lain, r.,.r t. (O) A tenant is entitled to renewal of his leaae unless tl landlord recuirea the premise (or cerum rcanoni (3) turned in the Board's Rental Orders and lia eivss lit tenant a written nutice to vacate within the t..!.r in the manner nreaenbed therein. II Ihii n ' j-io vacate is contested by tlie tenant, the Inndlurri ru ccure a Court Older for wieion Copies of all Rental Orders and Regulation of t! Board and application forms for rental vnuaiiom ui available from any of the regional or sub ill .r 0i VV.M.mr 1'iirea anJ Trade Board, and. in ircaf ..hei niTirf.. am not vet esuUinhed, from the 1 lcrk any County or DUtrict Court or l.! Kcnii Committee VIOLATIONS ol theie oiderl are puaiihable by law md ihouldl) rtnorttd In writing to the Price ' and Supply RpmnWii Rtoionsl Office. Wartime Pnctl and Trad Board, st the mms ol any of the fotlowin cities: Vancou.tr, Edmonton, Fcsh Winnipeg, Norih Bay, London,- Toronto, BrocUlU, Mof4 Quebec, Saint John, Malifas or Charloltttown. Cyril DeMara Owen AJmtnttli- ImuJ unJr tLa amhorily l WARTIME 1-KICT.S ASP TKADIi IWAKD o.u. Court Session At Burns Lake , BURNS LAKE, Jan. 27: A court session held at Burns Lake bore many of the aspects of spring assizes. A brilliant sun flooded the courtroom. Judge W. E. Fisher beamed from the bench. P. E. Wilson, K.C. of Prince George, smiled cheerfully even while shaklag a menacing finger at a rattled witness and C. F. MacLean, representing William Benkhe In the perennial case of Behnke vs. Johnson, endeavoured to smooth a brow lur rowed by the Intricacies of his defence. A naturalization case was speed ily disposed of by the Judge, whose Lobl ey Ramblers Win piercing eye rapidly sized up ap- j though the pllcant who was well vouched for. A garnishing order from South-bank was upheld by the court al- Over Piod Ramblers Aoir . va Pi'fl score of 96'0 ' & '') poned Prince Rn:r: Br1 fixture last r.; ' T--' standing, as a rr ;:i is1 The league Cow Boys Orotto P.R. Diary CNJl.A. Dry Dock Ramblers Belmont Hote; Pioneers Pipefitters !S210 777 in :-?483 : 7 ; i o 6130 Inar and loadln; eui UiJ to hie Woodsmi i PRIME .MINISTER CIIURCIIIM, ASSURES CANADIAN HOUSE OP COMMONS OF COMPLETE VICTORY Before a packed House of Commons, Primp Minister Churchill addressed Canada's parliament, (right), ln confide"1? a dramatic rlnclnir imwh in which he the doom of the Axis powers. Mr Churchill Is pictured leaving the parliament buildings, (left), accompanied by Pttoc i 'iSter