I' Htt - i "I ra astfTKt rt B-TB-xamj n jf 9 ' cour" 1 hP t The 3 Vr'etJr slore"lt'1 10 hn,,yi ll kP5 lifpsl 2 Variety Store KuS(j M,,rre Jour dlme re little mww mil .... y Ki t, Bonds neip 'SfSSj "b " nnting to. I BOui. I'iraKMjl printers & stationers !BlHIN6 MATTERS nllw BUT ,y j X7 "T 1L a S' VICTORY mmm i mm sai a iinnRY J if nniinc ffSn ' Material and I liAvoy Hotel II I PI IIM mm in III If25 W l" .ardli, lrop. I' ll. Iloi 511 !v! . STUKET TKIM 1; Kl piJtT Ideal Cleaners NEW ROYAL HOTEL J. ZAHELLI, PROP. "A Home Away From Homt" Rates 75c np M) Rooms Hot it Cold Water Prince Itupert, n.C. rine 281 n" 1 Canadian Pacific . Transcontinental Frans-Atlnntic Trans-racinc KECULAIl STEAIWEIl SERVICE To Vancouver via Ocean Falls and Way Torts; also to Ketchikan, Wran-Kcll, Juneau and Shag way jl ConnrcUuiis at Vancouver with Canadian Pacific Service 'onnatlon, Tickets and Reservations from W I t'tiATLS, (ienrral Anent, Prince Rupert, H.U. interesting to know when reading the Daily News 1,1 People of the wholo district are doing the same RAILWAYMEN BUY BONDS Total of Three Million Dollars So Far Subscribed MONTREAL, Oct. 31 Subscrip- 4ons to the Third Victory Loan by mpioyees of the Canadian Na-.lonal Railways system have topped the three million dollar mark, iccordlng to the bocond interim .rogrcss report laaued yesterday y D. C. Grant, vice-president ot mancc for the system. A total of 3,007,250 in Victory Dond has Jeen purchased by 36,438 em Joyces of the railways and its associated companies. National .taiiways Munitions Limited and TransCanada Air Lines. These purchases represent trans actions recorded during a period if nine days, half of the three weeks allotted to the loan cam palgn" by hei'Sllnlster of Finance. Hon. J:L: Ilsley. The "number ol employees subscribing represents an appreciable advance ' over the fotal $1 personal subscription for the similar period of the Second V&tory Loan. ,A J For the nine-day period represented by the report. 35,028 em-oloyee f the Canadian National Railways bought bonds to a total of $2,080,700. Dirrlng Uie sameime 673 employees of National Rail-wsy Munitions limited, the gun manufarturine plant ooe ated. Vs he radwav. bdught bonds vafued at at $80,909 while 735 employee of TransCanAl Air Lines , pur rhasto bonds to' the a,tnount of mJibQ. these three divisions glon, 2.081 employees purchasing f uuiuia vi nil auuuut wi by the employees t.s in S a addition to iip .anauian nauuimit oun.ii-tion of $10)52.750 Including pension and Insurance funds. STOPPING LEAKS LONDON. Oct. 31 Brtlte1 fuel saving campaign has ken the London Metropolitan Watr Board busy reptachr; lraky ta: washers. New washers a ?oint flat the rate of 4.800 weekly, twle-as many as usuaL TOIl CJUICK RESULTS TRY A NEW3 WANT. ADD G 0 L D S E A L THE SEAL OK QUALITY Sorkeyc Salmon Fancy lied IIcrrinR in Tomato Sauce Sandwich Spreads Spiced Salmon Smoked Salmon Bloater THE DAILY NEWS PAG2 TERSE TO SHOW BATTLES Dieppe Operation Renews Interest In Proposals to Put Canadian Actions on Canvas OTTAWA, Oct. 31 0 Since the battle of Dieppe, renewed Interest ias been directed to long-standing proposals that Canadian artists be lut in uniform and sent to war with the troops to record battle scenes with brush and paint. Although Canada pioneered In the field of war art during the First Great War. as yet little has been done about recording Can ada's part In the present conflict through the medium of painting. During the First Great War Lord Deaverbrook, as officer in charge of Canadian War Records, had t Victory Loan n n n a subscriptions Davkl Stewart $ 20t Boilermakers' Union 50t Capt O. J. Decker , -4 . . 100 Pat. J. Mandell r .... 2.000 Thomas Johnn 10f W. O. McKenzlc n si H B B. C. Bridge a. . 10,000 Gordon & Anderson 10,000 I Victory Loan : CHURCH NOTICES nearly 1.000 paintings rriade of 1 Canadians at war. Some artists already serving In the forces have been' given opportunity by the navy, army and air force, to paint war pictures but artM have not yet ben specially assigned to the forces1 to make pictures. "' In the United Kingdom am Ar tists' Advisory Committee is responsible for employment of ar tists to make a pictorial record or j the war. The work of the artists-employed through the committee ' has already been exhibited in can- ada and the United States. j The committee consists of sey- ...AM. A 11 A S tlf 4 eral leading British- -artists- ana representatives of the .war offlce.H admiralty, air ministry, home ol-fice and ministry of information. Canada's example In employing the system employees maktn? a aruw in u.c muic total purchase of $3)750 for the ' followed by both the United States campaign and Great Britain. This time other Th vfpm nrtJvitiP in Cannd i countries are aneaa. have been organized on a regional basis, divided according to the op erating areas of the railways. Thr Atlantic region employees U th-number of 6.484 bought bond.-, valued at $508,'.00. In the centra' region, which Includes Quebec anr1 Ontario. 17,222 employees bought $1,455,900 in bonds The western region, with head-nuarter 3t Winnipeg, had sales o' $815,550 to 9.341 emrlovev J tton was set up for headquarters niil orurl firm thp epntral rp -.- ' - - Is Mounting With a week in the cam palgn still to go, Prince Rn- pert up to last night had reached eighty-nine percent of quota in the Third Victory Loan campaign. Subscriptions up to then stood at $454,450 out of the objective of $530, 000. Yesterday's subscriptions communion Service, 8:35, for the day totalled $35,450, weekly Program: N0Ih'INB MATTERS NOW'ti BUT VICTORY! y? 0VERWA1TEA LTD. . m THRIFT Cash and Carry a iKVM riUMiJUi3aarawauirniriaiJiuiiiiirM NOTHING BUY THE NEW VICTORY BONK- VICTORY! MATTERS NOW BUT f Ifussallem's Economy Store an s i 1 r f imn; rnrrai?i j mmzm cm tuxm m zviwtii 4 1 I : --- BUY BONDS FOR VICTORY kt a:; .:s i 1 kzkzkz unKti wimr cnniiinc imiiii vt u There Is only one issue In this war -Victory, or Defeat. II It Is defeat, you lose all. Speed the Victory by backing our armed might with your dollars. Without civilian aid our troops could I ; not carry on. 1 tin ': viwKlMitlil.llltfl'uS 9.i H B .S S GORDON'S HARDWARE 1.1 w ms xaasis wa mi mi wa m&ui m .1 a.i 1 u bj u mzm cmcm tm eivj as :: l ii : m tm u : :b :i:b ra 1 J a 1 B ks SAVE -LEAD r LJ"'iJ .'11 V 3 I CHRIS MILL BAKERY H M it U ri a ! M n m H nr.iaB-;iiB FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH (5th Avenue and Young Street) Morning Worship, 11:00 ajn. THE GUILTY STAIN." . ' Sunday School, 12:15. Evening Worship, 7:30 pjn- THE ROAD TO CALVARY." "Contie; With the Enemy." 1 The first In a series of addresses on Sunday evenings under the general heading The Road to Calvary." Monday Evening, 7:15 CjOJ.T. Tuesday Evening. 7:00 Boys' Club. Wednesday Evening, 8:00 Prayer Meeting. Friday Evening. 7:45 pm B.YP.U. "Seek truth and pursue It." REV. C. A. WRIGHT Pastor. Hitler and Hirohito have. - , Great Plans for Canada Yes.'aQ Canada's great resources ... her wheat fields, her forests, her factories . . . could be put to wonderful use by trie ruthless .bully-boys from Germany, by the pollts little savages from Japan. And Canada's boundless acres would provide plenty of living room ... for the Germans and the Jans. But what of the Canadians? The answer is simple when you think what happened and is still happening to. the Poles; thf Greeks, the Yugo-Slavs and all the otners ... In terms of slow starvation, slave labor, mass executions. Every time a hard-working Canadian man or woman buys a Victory Bond, the plans of Hitler and Hirohito receive a set-back. The more you save and lend . . . the more certain you help make it that our enemies shall never put their greedy claws on Canada. NOTHING MATteRS NOW 6ut ot aV ut3V ..tt? l" . ite51' .ax c"w- . '-" e" 11 . . ctev a" . ii,ott'- 0- -a . 11UY THE NEW 1 1 V 4- Watts & Nickerson lit mi., V, ''....,VW o A V voty 1 VICTORY BONDS S.E. PARKER LTD. Buy Victory Bonds m 4k 1k, 1 . Mi