Krd 736. run DIVIDENDS paid to the 3,188 shareholders who own the company, remain at the same level as in 1939 $1,485,842. TRAPPERS 1939 DIVIDENDS sll vur FURS to me and get top prices as I have no bwhrad expenses and can pay more than others. Frank Lockvood Ilox 193, Trince Rupert, B.C. 3ls HHI TIIE HAST Wll.t. LEAVE PRINCE. RUPERT: ?0NDAY WEDNESDAY and FRIDAY, 7 pjn., stopping at I an tia .ions. tDNEST ay and FRIDAY, 10:30 ajn., stopping at principal "" LOCAL TRAIN for TERRACE except SiiMflav 4 15 p.m. il I 'f . TMrtivi: it'it t t, i.ivt? itnivrp nfTPrnT- "i " it il l, aniiii ij i 2ES1-'AY FRIDAY AND SUNDAY, 10:30 p.m. Thursday and Saturday, 7- p.m. local train from TERRACE, 11:20 a.m. Dally except Sunday. &IR CONDITIONED SLEEPING AND DINING CARS I ON ALL TRAINS REGULAR STEAMER SAILINGS TO KETCHIKAN. OCEAN FALLS AND VANCOUVER for full Information, etc.. call or write U. S. (iREKi, City Passenger Agent 528 Third Avenue, Pl,iope 260. Prince Rupert, Agents for Trans-Canada Air Lines frv A A tori 1942 IN THE same period our income taxes rose from $244,514 to $8,000,000. The tax load is now 32 times what it was in 1939; 1942 The t :hool board was advised s ivrhi that $10 per month wculd beavallable to the board for incidental expenses such as light- in? in connection with night school classes which are beins held a: ?ooth Memorial School under the nusnlces "of-the War Emergency Training Boara. Extra janitorial 'rvices are being looked after by he classes themselves. CANADA'S NUTRITION PROGRAM -nOO .flOf', 9to Li MUSSALLEM'S . Economy Store "Where Dollars Have More Cents" Phones 18-19 P.O. Box 575 But the reporter who runs the eauntlet of secretaries and man ages to wedge In a word between tel&nhones meets the same friendly soul who shops with a market basket on Saturdays. Bvrne Hope Sanders says the trouble with all this price control business is that It keeps her away from her children. She and her husband have an apartment In Ot tawa but the two Sperry children Doddie, nine, and David, seven live, in the big house In Toronto with their grandparents. Misses Children "It's not so bad during the week," said their mother. "I'm pretty busy. But I just about go crazy for them week-ends. They were here this summer mmmm, we had fun." There in a little leather frame was a picture to prove it. Two healthy joungsters who have their mother's laughing eyes were lugging a basket of moss which the family had gathered together, during one summer picnic adventure. ' Now that they've gone back to Toronto and school, our home is pretty empty," said the mother. "Their father and I go for long walks on Sunday and .we always find ourselves back someplace where we took the children this ummer. And we picture David sitting on a stone fishing in a tream, or Doddie playing on a wing. "But the children don't nind it as much as we do. They t. a lot more kick out of my avelling about the country than : do. Sometimes I think they'd ather have me away doing what they think are exciting things than at home. I always send them pictures of planes or trains I've been in." Mrs. Sperry's parents look after the children and "they think It's their war Job." Everybody came to Ottawa for Christmas. It was a bis lumrj back from that party to women and price control, but Mrs. Sperry doesn t let her mina get far from the war for long. Women's Interests i "Do you know women are more interested in price control than ever," she saw. "Last year wnen we nut the women of Canada watching prices with their little blue books the men laughed a bit. They said the fad would die down. sponsibilities more." Not that Byrne Hope- Sanders has ever been one to shirk responsibility. At 10 she piloted two young brothers and a tiny sister nits her market basket over her from South Africa, where they rrm and goes forth to market to ouy her family's food for the com- ng week. But woe betide the seller of veg-tables, groceries or meat who overcharges Mrs. Frank Sperry. She's one of the major watchdogs it Canada's price celling, as Byrne Hope Sanders, "Mrs. Consumer" of the Wartime Prices and Trade Board. Her list of accomplishments Is enough to scare a reporter. She's the editor-in-absentia of Chate Canadian Prerss Staff Writer laine Magazine, a newspaper women. Dublic speaker; authority on music, fashions and household economics. In short, an Imposing woman executive with a battery of telephones and secretaries were born, to Canada where her English parents were setting up home for their family after dif ficulties following the Boer War For the next seven years she went to Toronto schools but she still took her responsibilities seriously as the family's oldest. So at 17 she went to work, on the Woodstock Sentinel Review where she created that paper's first women's page. While she was still going to school she had taught music to help the family. In 1925 she turned to advertising writing In Toronto and covered Europes fashion shows. Three years later she became editor of "The Business Woman," then In 1929 was one of the first editors of "Chatelaine." NO "SORE-HEADS" NO SORE THROATS Survey Shows Gallant Women of Britain Take Aspirin to Give Quick Relief The thousands o'f British women now working in war plants are determined not to let sore throats, fevers, and colds get them "down. Production must keep up . . . and a recent government survey showed how British women are counting on Aspirin, to help them carry on. Aspirin was named as one of the three leading drug items Brjtish women want for health and morale. And this is easy to understand . . . for generations have proved that Aspirin is one .of the safest, most dependable analgesics known. An Aspirin gargle for sore throat . t1!pvp nnin And rawness almost at once. Aspirin taken with water relieves the headache cricoids. . . , muscular achesand distress. Aspirin costs less than lfl a tablet in the economy bottle . . so always keep it handy for quick relief. Made in Canada, "Aspirin" is the trademark of The Bayer Company, Limited. If you don't see the Bayer cross on each tablet, it isn't Aspirin. The board of school trustees last night decided to advertise for a successor to J. R. Morrison as janitor of King Edward School. Trustee J. T. Laneridee retorted thai he had interviewed 'Mr. Morrison with a view to having him carry on but he was unable to do so as the work was too heavy. RIOTOUS" ROMANCE Co-starring Ray Milland and Ginger Rogers, an hilarious comedy "The M,"! or and the Minor." a picture which local, movie fant have been awaltln? for some time, comes to the Capitol Theatre herfe this Thursday. Friday and Satur day. Rita Johnson, Robert Bench- ley, D!ana Lynn and Lela Rogers are also featured in the cast. The picture is reputed to be a riot of laughs and unusual situa tions all of which stem from oin- . ger's masquerade as a twelve-year -u' i-i r-n eVio on opt from New ... U1U S"l ou oi.x o- wen, n nasn i. women aic '""Yorn, where she had become disu-more and more interested and luslonecii back to her Iowa home working harder. They're reading by j'on half-fare. Milland. a and studying trying to under- major wno teaches at a military stand the economics behind it a11-j academy, becomes embarrassingly Some women, tell me it's the only invoiVed when he helps her elude war Job they can do. Well, It's a SUSpiclous conductors by taking hev j pretty big war job, and It will get nt0 nis own compartment. Roman-; I bigger as shortages increase. tic complications develop when ths "Mrs. Average Housewife Is be- major's flnancee discovers Ginger j ginning to see that the cake she in his berth. The situations wnicn doesn't bake on Saturday has its arise out of this Jam go to make effect on the sugar supply of the up grand and entertaining comedy. TILSlniloSR " By WESTOVEU .. i - . . -t-iiiiii ,c KAVSl I VAJCLU . TELL- ll - tii f r 1 I I fcVjhi,T.':'' )BTi !U Hit I I lit U'V WJUl SLil 1 I I U 11 I 1.711 I I ttwf 1 I . m A I i 5" j'swi m.&r -.1 rss'Ms jAaa- s.:m l: : .ai mush m 'k---zmk " I . rj. JJiS.v.!w... "IfflKf .1 I II y' ft-jaA'fm 1 I - (I III 1111 l HMHi I' -WatSatX lUTS I I ,.. . T rat.Fr . ".,.1 1 -J 1 ' FAQS THRBk. JANUARY 28, 1013 TIIE DAILY NEWS ' 's& .r i . h mir-$ -TO.""'' s)liy,uI . :: FROM 1939 lo 1942, our wage bill Increased from $4,511,433 to $9,379,203, due to additional employment given by the war. But also because the average hourly earnings of plant employees, inclusive of cost-of-living bonuses, are 33.2 per cent higher than in 1939. Women Watching Price 'Sirs. Consume!" of Prices Board whole country. We're all going to Finds Canadians Working Harder to Meet De mands By MARGARET ECKER OTTAWA. Jan. 23 OV-Every Sa urday morning Mrs. f rank Sperry be better wives and mothers when this war's over. Well feel our re By n exclusive brewlnf. process we conserve the vital values In brewer's yetst give you COMPLETE beer the finest beer yo ever lasted. "IN B.C. ITS V.C ORDER THE BEER THAT GIVES YOU MORE Available at Government Liquor Stores and Licensed Premises CAPILANO BREWING CO. LTD., VANCOUVER, B.C. This advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia. SPEED VICTORY - - Do Your Utmost in Giving to the Canadian Aid to Russia Fund SEAL COVE TRUCKING & TRANSPORTATION CO; THREE TWO TAXI John Gurvich CONTRACTOR BUY ... RUPERT BRAND Sole Fillets ... At Your Local Butchers NO WASTE READY TO COOK BUY WAR BONDS OR CERTIFICATES Canadian Fish & Co'd Storage PRINCE RUPERT Co. Ltd. BRITISH COLUMBIA SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT from CHRIS MILL BAKERY EFFECTIVE FEBRUARY 1, 1913, AND FOR TIIE DURATION OF THE PRESENT EMERGENCY we wish to announce to our many friends and valued customers that our Allied Forces will be operating the bakery and the entire output of bakery goods will 'be consumed by the various armed forces. We wish to express pur sincere appreciation of your valued patronage and hope we may serve you again after this emergency. CHRIS MILL BAKERY Mr. and Mrs. H. K. Christensen. t n 3. 8 I. 381 i' t