i'ii-. i Iff PAGE TWO CLEARANCE Rroken Lines in Spectator Pumps Tan and White, Black rind White, and Blue and White. Elasticized. Regular $5.50. To clear $3.95 Family shoe store ltD. The Home of Good Shoes' EDITORIAL THE DAILY NEWS. PKINCE KUPERT, BRITISH COLUMBIA Published Every Afternoon Except Sunday by Prince Rupert Dally News Limited,. Third Avenue. H. P. PULL EN, PRESIDENT O. A. HUNTER, MANAGING EDITOR ADVERTISING RATES Local Readers, per line, per Insertion Classified Advertisements, per word, per laertlon McNaughtdn Gre at General . . . Staff House Dance Held Opening: Dance of Prince Kupert Dry Dock Employees 1$ Very Successful The first of a series of dances, held under the auspices of the Prince Rupert Dry Dock Employees Association, drew a crowd of between seven and eight hundred persons Saturday night. Filling a much wanted need for proper recreation for the workers, the affair was thoroughly enjoyed by all in attendance. Master of ceremonies and the chairman of the convening commute was Lewis Hllder, with Robert Cameron, Charles Toombs, George, Jlowe, B. Skinner, S. Glllis and D. Monlesano his able assistants. 3 Assisting master of ceremonies and caller for square. dances was Pte. Adams of Mldlani Regiment. The Women's Auxiliary tommlttee consisted of Mrs. 8. V. Cox, Mrs. Robert Cameron, Mrs. C. Toombs and Mrs. Hllder. Also helping out were Harry Bhaw, Jack Davidson and Charles Williams. The Mid- .25 .02 SUBSCRIPTION RATES Subscription Rates In Clty-Per Year, $5.00; Half Year, $2 JO; One Month, 50c; One Week, 12c. Out-of-Town Subscribers by Mall. $3.00 a Year. MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS The Canadian Preaa U exclusively entitled to use lor publication of ill nm de.patcbe. credlW to it or to the Abated Press In th pSer and i lio tU local news published therein. AU rlgM nf rwrwihllrw.ion of myecAil deapatRfaM therrtn are Almy rwvwd DAILY EDITION TUESDAY, AUGUST II, 1942 It is well within the limit of nosfeibilitv that Canada' own Lt.-Gen. Andy McNaughton will be chosen to lead the coming Allied invasion of Continental Europe. In this strange war, international relationships have to be taken into account. It is a fact that it might be easier to achieve complete harmony if the Allied invasion force were led by a Canadian rathfer than by an Englishman or American. But on merit alone, there is no more scientific soldier! in all the world today than our own Andy McNaughton. Unfortunately, the nature of this war to date has been such that few English-speaking generals have got a chance to demonstrate their abilities. General Wavell showed his calibre in the Middle East. It is a foregone conclusion that he will be kept in that arena to deal with the future battle, which also may decide the fate of this generation. But the European theatre calls for a man with scientific imagination. For years past, General McNaughton has given his whole time, and brilliant intellect, to studying ways and means of making and repelling invasions. It is doubtful if there is his equal in the World today in this specialized field, it is certain that he has few, if any, superiors. Canada can watch the decision in -this regard not only with confidence, but pride. Froirt'the Vancouver News-Herald. Mills, provided the music. The floor show included tap-dahclng by Miss Isabel Connery and Miss Elsa Kraupner and vocal solos by Joe Couture, to which the gathering Joined In. Refreshments were served to the entire crowd. This dance is the first of a series of entertainments and recreations planned by the Employees' Association to aid in providing "off-hour facilities" for the men. This excelfent plan Is also coupled with the start of a fund which will be augmented from the proceeds of dances, etc. for emergency cases involving the workers or their families. PLAINER POTTERY STOKE-ON-TRFNT. August 11 O" Two thousand girl pottery artists have been released for war work here. Their original Jobs ended with a government ban on decorated pottery. NOBdbY ALONE IN LONDON LONDON. August 11: 05 More than 170,000 Canadians the population of a good-sized city have th direction of Sergeant-Major made lt their rendezvous. eight cento bonus, that time, Prince Rupert rrmy be known as a City of Faimesa, Instead of "Chlseler's Paradise." Thank you. SHIPYARD WORKER. g PJ5. There is no reason for a g turnover of 200 men per week If o this charging of first class rates g for substandard living is cleaned g up. g , ,o BUDDHISM AND WAR jg COLOMBO. August 11: 9 Bud- g dhlsts ln Ceylon have cancelled o the-; Kandy Perahera, one of the g world's most spectacular religious g festivals so the Island's roads can o be kept open for military trans- g port. I g VIROIN GOATS MILK j LONDON, August 11: A treatment to obtain mtlk from vlr- been accommodated since the Red' gin goats by use of avntheik! sex'g Shield Club opened its doors, and hormones has been discovered at 2 janas nine-piece orchestra, unaer more than 200,000 servicemen have ; the National Institute for Re search at Shinfleld. TUESDAY, AUGUST U, 1 the jdaxlx mm. K.C.A.F. FLIER RESCUED AFTER 14 DAYS ADRIFT After his Hampden bomber crashed In the North Sea after a raid on the Frisian Islands off the coast of Holland, pilot Officer Holbrooke Mann of Dram, Cel., a member of the Royal Canadian Air Force spent 14 days in a tiny rubber dinghy before he wM rescued. Failure of one engine while the aircraft was frying at about 300 feet brought the plane down and it sank almost immediately. Mahn, with one gunner and the navigator managed to eHmb out and their dinghy was released successfully. The emergency rations were oil soaked but two quart containers of water were intact. For the first day or so. confidence that tbey would be rescued buoyed their spirits but by the sixth day the water was gone. Shortly after sundown on the eighth day the navigator who had been delirious died and his two companions slipped the body into the sea. Several times aircraft flew overhead but they did not observe the ttny boat. Then the gunner started to drink seamier snd on the tenth day he died. "I was so weak I had trouble getting his body out of the boat," Mahn said later. On the 13th day. a seagull lit on the edge of the boat. Mahn was able to grab it by the legs and ate it raw. On the 14th day Mahn heard the throb of a ship's motor and managed to hail. Soon he was wrapped in warm blankets and. as pictured above, in the first photo to reach Canada since his rescue, is well on the way toward recovery. Letter Box .1 Editor. Daily News: First. Mr. Black. Secretary of the Carpenters' Union, takes his hair down and drops a tear for a couple of high school kids. He raises his voice in the wilderness twelve years too late. Did not your own press SPORT CHAT ,By ALLAN NICKLESON (Canadian Press Staff Writer Sham Ditching kept a Canadian sauadror' softball team in submission while the bats of a Canadian agrts-flzhter aauadron nine w8 hammered out aa 11-5 victor fat .. inter station chal- missionaries, "could give any of the Services' teasn a hundred start and beat them." The airman said their "bowling and fielding U a revelation'' and that they ptay on camouflaged fields constructed by troops. And speaking of cricket, an Australian expert's forecast that cricketers there soon would br forced to appear in shorts, instead " of the traditional flannels, because carry the news that 2006 of theaeiHM. ffrat of what ta expected to JJZT ddht hnvs uwp tumiM down ax unfit li i , 01 CKnran rtSWKttOnS. brought " - - - M vesica u. the first year of the war? Because ( jenae affairs. for some eight years previous they had no work, no money and no friends untU this war started. I thin reply from Lord's: There could be no nosaible co- Wing Cmdr. Paul Davoud of frction to the appearance of a Kingston. Ont.. heM down second player in shorts, even at Lord's. If base for his winning airmen, while was induced bv covermaent re- My dear Blacand Mr. Whit.th( coramimr. ing do know that taborers you D A R Bmdthllw M and most helpers start in the ship-1 J ,, , A . , I yard at 50 cent per hour, plus the ; umojre S CWU, iv. M,. T Art Ma rui iaic wuniciB. unu. uh. If Your Hair A statement by a distinguished surgeon. Brig. C. M. Page, in the cents less per hour than those high ' 811,111,1 M116! Journal, which said of mmA Rpgina and Set Jim school kids received Also they "kaoe-Jolnt troubles cause a or pafk hurled not get board at $1.20 per day. The masterfuUy and uerc ta,tjod I deal of short and Itong-Urm siaii nouse cnargw i jyr trouble arur their mates collected 7 " J Is Not Becoming V ou Should Be Coming To Us! The very latest In hair styles: Waves . . . Pompadours . . . Bancs . . . Pin-Curl Waves BUDDY KLMP ELSIE KLOIIN and that this "" source m of . wastage "M,C will con- mumn iOT a , "T " a six-run lead in the opening L cents per meal, or eenta per day frame VjlU.neg terted th7flrst-!"n"! ton .troP" I001 1, TrT.H VkT mnta splurge with a homer. While the kids get the same thing for $36 ner month so the shin- ball," brought this reply in a Lon don newspaper's sports column: "Admittedly football is tnsepar- yard lads are out $10J0 per Racehorses, sold by auction atl fr0m knee lnjurlea- but armv month. swcKion. orougnt rwne meat who are to . But on the other hand the most Total price paid for eight tion to know toW the . of us are unable to get into the t!uoughbreds was $46 . Its a big U:n u .biuuiy negligible. Mot.v staff house, so we must take pot for tne lrt f Mnglthey ln jn.ut matches luck, which means that we pay bot .th hom" meat at lt4 present, , actttu, $5 per week straight for a room cntroHed price of from 15 to 'tX TZx In a sub-standard rooming house- vound, the animal. cojuM JJ eteta a2St of dLfa?' (Rent Controller plea note) and ,be proflUbly slaughtered. - le' "Tale at least two $5 meal ticket per. than compensated for by the bene- week: for a -30-day month we pay Perhaps these men of the Oos- fits in health and mental fitness " roughly $22 for a room and $43 pel previously played at, JUmed " ' , for food, a total of $65. $36 from Lord's but, according to an Aus- ! $65 leaves $S9 more than we should trailan airman on leave, New DAILY NEWS WANT ADd BRINt pay. Perhaps someone else is buy- Guinea natives, taught cricket by RESULTS PHONE Oft Ing the War Bonds we would like . to buy but cannot. j So If Mr. Black and Mr. Whiting ooaoooooooooooaoooooooooooecsaoooooooooooooooooooooooo will get together wHh Rent and o Price Controllers and do a little 5 home-town cleaning, perhaps we, the workers, can purchase War S .Bonds ln our own right. Then ln . . . Rolls . . .Pin Cutis, FACIALS For that schoolgirl complexion. MANICURES For the lady that desires lovely hands. SCALP-TREATMENTS To put lustre into hair that is dryed out from the summer sun. PERMANENTS Machine and machlneless. All oil permanents for that soft natural look. Also the short Victory bob. Let one of our three competent operators make you more beautiful KAY SCOTT The Modern Beauty Shoppe Corner 3rd Avenue and Ctli Street o o o o o oaoaooooooooooi0OHioiioooiwooooiooooooaioaoaooooow BLiiiariiBiBiitaiaiBiHiiiiiaiBiitiii'i'icniiiii , R S u NOTICE Conforminj: to war-time regulations and effective at once, home deliveries of Imht will Ik made on orders received up to 2 p.m. dally. Orders, will Ik? taken between the hours of 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. only. THE PACIFIC1 BREWERS AGENCY. Fresh Ixical Raw and Pasteurized MILK VALENTIN DAIRY rnoNi: cs7 J. M. S. Loubser d.c, i.a. CHIROPRACTOR IVallare Hlork Thone CIO OOOOOUOOtHMHIWiO'mHonno' O" o , is O o is NEW ROYAL HOTEL J ZAKEI.LI. PHOr "A Home Away I'rom llome" I tales 75c up 50 Rooms Hot it Cold Water I'rfnfe Itupert, HC. I'hone 281 I'.O. llm lf Ruy from B.C. FURNITURE and SAVE lllth Grade C II L ll K-Hi:i.l)S. Itejular Pilrr Brand New. r4 ,tp now frl45 NEW STOVES, Wood and Cos I. Kejular $IC0. JQg STUDIO lli:i)S. Very Special. IT Xfw- $42,50 Used, 1 only CIILSTLRITn.ll In ood onn shape 0U All kinds of other good "At Very Utw Prices B. C. Furniture Co. PHONE HLACK :J21 Third Avenue FOR QUICK RESULTS TRY A NEWS wantaDLT : Films Developed and Printed 35c, any sire Up to 8 exposures I Rnlartement Coupon w th every roll Reprints 4c each Professional Work, J Fast Servxe Enclose coin with roll ai.d mall to: MEYERS STUDIOS SIS Granville St. Vanroum ' I'MtrWMirMtrHMMWMWWtCNtflOno ANNOUNCEMENT MODERN TAILOR NOW OPEN w a JBtiiftiftiiiftiat (''iBift'ft"'ftftiftfti ft s ft I ft ft s ft 2 k Till advertisement In not published or displayed by tlte LKjuot Control Bomrd or by the Government of British Columbia o inir,K' ami r.r.vrs ki'itk vavai. oifici its- t-vmmuc 2 o ' ' S 2 Tailored to Mraturr P - - V o in (11.111.1.11.1.11 uiu.iAm.f. riling 2 o " sis sin a i ui.irr, iwhind noyai Bank o o g . ... . DlWOOWrum'i .ft - -.. - ,i wiawmHMIOOUOQo OOOO oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooc'ooooooooooooooooooo g For Quick, Safe and Comfortable TAXI SERVICK o 9 PHONE 235 o DAY AM) MOItT o o all i oh a .Morsr OLASOOW. August II T ' fkc seme bed to a stands-busy street and crowds There, between the raiU of a tramrar. was itvr which the tnnUmnan rhi.' ihr tracks befure the reeded APRICOTS Tor Preferring are row . available. Supplies air srrr t limited this year. i 1H-II. Hox, $2.29 No. 1 OKANAGAN VAItlITT J MUSSALLEM'S i Economy Store Where Dollars Have More Cents' .' P.O. 1101 Xl Phonei li lt SERVICES TO Vanrourer, Victoria and Warpaints, Stewart and Norlh. (Jurtn Charlotte Islands. Full Information. TltW and Kmervatltins FRANK J. SKINNMl Prince Itupert Arent Third Ave. I'hone W When Vou Want s Reliable. Comlortsble, Depends bis TAXI HI l-k 11- A ervice zi-llour Service at Regular Rates Ii; you have sornclhinK to pell, a clarified advertisement in this papor will noon let you know If there is ' buyer in tho city.