it? If -A Hi -fc . - PAGE FOUR Expert OPTICAL SERVICE .Fhone 773. L . Chas. Chas. Dodir Dodimcad ftrVtUV I Optometrist in ( r I fr J ' ' Hinil Hand EneraTlnj FnrraTi Charge Jewelry VISIT OUR BASEMENT ORE for Fine China, Dinnerware, Glasses, Baggage and Novelties MAX HEILBRONER Jeweler Diamond Merchant SETTING THE 1943 STYLE PACE Rupert Peoples Store Suits Are In Style All Year Around It's our personal opinion that we secured the smartest women's suits In our history. Give us your opinion. We're sure youll agree. Rupert Peoples Store SHEDS ITS TAIL OSTRICH LIZARD ' The zebra-tailed lizard buries The plated lizard can shed its itself In the sand to sleep. tall while running. A. MacKENZIE FURNITURE LTD. A GOOD PLACE TO BUY Dinette Suites, Bedroom Suites, Floor Coverings, all kinds Bed Springs, Bed Mattresses, all kinds Cedar Hope Chests Store Hours 9:30 a.m. to 12:00; 1:30 p.m. to 6:00 Closed all day Thursday 327 3rd Avenue, rrince Rupert , PRESCRIPTIONS Through the years, the physicians of this community and their patients have come to know that they can depend on us. Ormes ltd. yfus Pioneer Drtuzpfats THE REXALL STORE PHONES 81 and 82 Open Daily from 9 a.m. till 9 p.m. Sundays and Holidays from 12-2 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. BUY... RUPERT BRAND Sole Fillets ... At Your Local Butchers NO WASTE - READY TO COOK Canadian Fish & Cold Storage PRINCE RUPERT Co. Ltd. BRITISH COLUMBIA CFPR (1210 Kilocycles) Schedule FRIDAY rM. ;00 Victor Record Album 30 London Palladium Orch. 00 Tea Dance Time ;30 Badge of Honor : 45 Belle McEwen Sings ;00 CBC News 05 Recorded Interlude 15 Comrades in Arms 00 Aldrich Family 30 Kate Smith . 00 Harry James 15 Front Line Family 30 Personal Album 45 Hymns from Home 00 Maxwell House Show 30 Classics In Cameo 00 CBC News 05 Fish Arrivals 10 Recorded Interlude 15 Great Music 30 Theatre Under the Stars 00 Closing announcement SATURDAY AJVL 7:30 Musical Clock 7:45 CBC News 7:50 Musical Clock 8:30 Morning Devotions 8:45 Old Timers Program 9:00 Lud Glusken and Lee 9:30 CBC News Rebroadcast 9:35 Transcribed Varieties 10:00 Music by Herbert 10:30 Will Carter 10:45 Children's Scrapbook 1 1 :00 Scandinavian Melodies 11:15 Broadcast of Messages 11:30 Petit Concert 12:00 Luncheon Music 12:30 Spotlight Band i 12:45 CBC News 12:50 Recorded Interlude 12:55 Program Resume 1:00 One o'clock Musicale 1:30 Aldrich Family 2:00 Closing announcement All ranks of the Canadian Army, both overseas and in Canada, are being re-examined under the hew Pulhems medical classification system. THE DAILY NEWS The Experts Say SALADS AND FRUITS Raw vegetable salad and fresh fruits' should take a prominent place on Canadian dinner tables this summer. Marion Harlow of the Health Department's nutrition service says those foods provide cne ammunition wnich hems you resist such home-front foes is the common cold, sore throat ind other minor ailments which o toward sabotaging working fflciency. BABY WELFARE The Prices Board has the welfare of Cana-lian babies at heart. Proof of their interest was shown in the recent order restricting the sale of canned fruits and vegetables which specifically exempted the strained foods that go to make up the diet of babies from six to 16 months. THE COFFEE RATION Now that a large percentage of the country's tea drinkers have become coffee consumers, the ehances of increasing Canada's coffee ration are extremely slim. D T MnVi Pr?(oe TlnvrA nH mlnistrator of tea, coffee and spices, says that coffee con sumption has risen more than 15 per cent over the pre-war' normal, while tea consumption" ' has declined almost 50 per cent, j SOUR MILK The Agriculture Department says that Just because milk and cream sour quickly in hot weather is no excuse for waste. Sour milk and cream is grand tor baking and may be substituted in any cake", cookie, biscuit, muffin or griddle cake recipe if you know the rules. And here they are, as given by Laura C. Pepper, chief of the department's consumer section: Use one cup sour milk or cream to replace one cup sweet milk. For each cup of sour milk used, decrease the amount of baking powder called for by two teaspoons and add one-half teaspoon baking soda. The soda must be added to .the dry ingredients, not to the sour milk. If sour cream is being used to replace eweet milk in a recipe, the rules for decreasing the baking powder and adding the ba'klng soda are the same but because cream contains so much more fat than milk, the amount of fat in the recipe can be cut by two to three tablespoons .for each cup of crea used. An additional two tablespoons of liquid (sweet milk or water) will be needed for each cup of sour cream to give the proper PLAYSUITS Do father's red flannels go for dusters and scrub cloths? They needn't, says i the prices board consumer branch, if you follow the suggestion of a prairie mother. She wrote that the union suits took to dye successfully, and when the desired shade wa3 reached could be cut into , small boys' woollen suits, with long-sleeved pullovers and shorts. As for a pattern, an old suit may be used successfully. Reveille at the C.W.A.C. barracks' in Edmonton is sounded with peppy tunes of a popular morning radio program "piped" to loudspeakers in each hut of the camp. I IgPSCARCE WILL BE NEXT WINTER !M Prepare your home now for adequate warmth with smaller fuel consumption 70 SAVE COAL CHECK THESE P01HTS i J HOW TO GET MORE HEAT Pipes and furnaces must be clean, and grates in good order. If one or two rooms are hard to heat, you are wasting fuel. A ' minoradjustment can probably remedy this. Have a competent man check your heating system, and make necessary repairs. Insulate your furnace and pipes where necessary. J HOW TO AVOID HEAT LOSSES Storm windows and doors must fit snugly and be weatherstripped. Lack of storm . windows can cause as much as 20 heit-' loss. Caulking- should be done around windows, doors and in cracks in brick work (some hardware stores have caulking guns for rent). Broken glass should be replaced, and loose panes puttied. Small expenditures . on such work will save much fuel. HOW TO SAVE STILL MORE j V You can save fuel and money by having your home properly insulated. It is a proves fact that in many homes lack of adequate insulation (including storm windows) results in unnecessary consumption of fuel up to as much as 30. Watch for later instructions on how to fire your furnace properly. HAVE YOUR HOME INSPECTED FOR HEATING AND INSULATION DEFECTS Get advice now ! Skilled workmen and supplies are scarce. Ii you delay in getting your home ready for winter you may not be able to get the services you nesdi Sate OHeitcit ut fiite MS19 BEAUTIFUL MARRIAGE Miss Betty Borland Becomes Bride of Robert Benton of Royal Canadian Air Force St. Andrew's Cathedral was the setUng for a beautiful late summer wedding on Thursday at 8 o'clock in the evening when Robert Charles Benton, younger son of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Benton of Innlsfall, Alberta, was united in marriage to Elizabeth (Betty) Jean Borland, elder daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David Q. Borland of Prince Rupert. The ceremony was performed by the Very Rev. Dean J. B. Gibson, assisted by Flight Lieut. O. L. Sprlngborn. Royal Canadian Air Force padre. The altar was beautifully decorated with white gladioli and snapdragons. Baskets tf white Shasta daisies were placed at the steps to the chancel. The bride made a lovely picture as she entered the church on the arm of her father to the I strains of Wedding March from "Lohengrin," played by the or-ganistr, Peter Lien. Her gown of starlit embossed organza over ivory satin was modelled on Princess lines with bouffant skirt and fitted bodice. A full length veil misted softly from a circlet of orange blossoms and she carried a beautiful bouquet of white gladioli, white heather and sweetheart roses. Four charming attendants were in pastel shades. The Maid of Honor, Miss Evelyn Gulliford of Nanaimo, in orchid net, and Mary Queen of Scots headdress to match, carried a bouquet of peach gladioli, snap dragons and baby 'mums. The bridesmaids. Miss Joyce Gillett In peach, and Miss Laur el Mahood, in pale green, wore similarly designed gowns of net with matching hats of the net In poke bonnet style and carried bouquets of peach gladioli mauve asters and cream carna tions. Little Miss Ann Borland, Jun lor bridesmaid, young sister of the bride, was sweet in a long white organdy dress. She wore a poke bonnet of white straw with peach streamers and car ried a colonial bouquet of rose buds and candy tuft in her lace mlttened hands. The groom was attended by Sgt. Gordon Butler, R.OA.F. as groomsman and ushers were Corporal Bert Schroepfer, United States Army and Corporal Fred Armstrong, R.C.A.F. During the signing of the reg ister, Dr. R. G. Large sang "Oh Day of Golden Promise," accompanied by Peter Lien on the organ. Later in the evening a reception was held at the home of the bride's parents on Fourth Avenue East. The guests were received by Mrs. D. G, Borland, mother of the bride, and the groom's mother, Mrs. C. E. Benton. A beautiful three-tiered wed ding cake was cut by the bridp and refreshments were served from a lace covered table, centred with a bowl of pale pin-roses and white tapers. Mrs. J. A. Hihton and Mrs. R. G. Large poured and Mrs. Arnold Flaten and Mrs. C. E. El-klns assisted in the dining ropm. Serviteurs were Mrs. A. St. John, Mrs. J. Westover, MLs3 Helen Brown. and Miss Alma Dybhavn. The toast to the bride was proposed by Dr. R. G. Large and suitably responded to by the groom. Arnold Flaten proposed a toast to the bridesmaids to which Sgt. Gordon Jutler replied. Corporal and Mrs. Benton left for Vancouver and Vancouver Island, the bride travelling In a very smart three piece costume of MacArthur Rose wool, with navy and white accessories and wearing a corsage of gardenias The couple will return to Prince Rupert to reside. One of the latest to enlist in the C.W.A.C., Kathleen Wilson. of Hamilton, has a husband and six brothers in the Army. "Largest Organization of its kind in the World" Mutual Benefit Health and Accident Association' JOHN LLOYD WRIGHT Resident Representative 167 3rd Ave. P.O. Box 953 Prince Itupert, R.C. Phone 711 and I will gladly call Local Tides Saturday, August It High iz:.ju. Low 6:15 18;24 Sunday, August 15 IliKh 0:25 13:16 Low 7:03 19:15 Monday, August 16 High 1:11 13:59 Low 7:48 20:04 Tuesday, August 17 High - 1:58 14:41 Low 8:30 20:48 Wednesday, August 18 Hleh 2:45 22.8 feet 15:23 Low 9:lf 21:34 Thursday, August l!J High 3:3! 16:0t. Low 9:5i 22:20 Fr'-'av, August 20 High 4:20 16:50 Low 10:35 23:10 Saturday, August 21 High 5:1' 17:41, Low 11:19 Sunday, August 22 High fi:20 Low 0:07 12:00 Monday, August 23 19.9 feet 2.0 feet 5.9 feet 22.9 feet 21.0 feet 1.0 feet 4.8 feet 23.2 feet 21.7 feet 02 feet 3.9 feet 23.1 feet 22.0 feet 0.5 feet 3.5 feet 21.9 feet 1.1 feet 3.6 feet 21.5 feet 21.0 feet 2.7 feet 4.1 feet 20.0 feet 20.1 feet 4.1 feet 5.0 feet 18.2 feet 19.1 feet 6.0 feet Jt.8 feet 18.1 feet j.9 feet 7.9 feet High v:3G 13.8 ieei 19:49 17.7 feet Low 1:11 6.7 feet 13:10 9.0 feet raiDAY, APGTJSJmJ TODAY AND SATIrdJ LADIES' ( complete Show; 1:00, 2:45, 4 51, 7'00. 9:1Q. Tyrone Power IN "CRASH DIVE" at 1:00, 3:06. 5:12, jj In Technicolor ADDED Extra Special Cartoon "Red Hot Riding Bur World Nms uc every io oi tris Vii members of the Vbrar r.,,1 of Canada on active senlal me noiaer oi a decorat!;; gallantry, except.onai CiJ or aevouon to duty tweiy memDer of CanH "Army snow" is a fully caJ lira soiuicr Dibb Printing Company OFFICE SUPPLIES PRINTING BOOKBINDING STATIONERY HIRTIIDAY AND WATERMAN'S EVERYD A Y FOUNTAIN CARDSl PEN'S Bcsncr Block, 3rd Street Phone 234 A4jl,J VJIUIIClin LICNN J UH In Brown Suede, Brown Crush Kid, Brown Calf, Black Softie Calf, Black Suede in low, spike and cuban heels. High styled lines to suit any taste and priced to suit any MEN'S "PALMERS" MOOSE HEAD WORKING BOOTS in G" and 8". Just arrived. ramily bhoe More Ltd, "The Home of Good Shoes" NOTIONS FOR EVERYBODY AT THE VARIETY STORE! You haven't the barest notion Just how many notions have herel Dut you can count on this a store for its rnmnlptpnrco uu o.,!-,.iVilnr. tmm mmnlOQ - - . b 1 1 frlbJ blUil AAWii. v- to eomnlptn Koto nr Its convenience right in the business section and l's up to-datc stocks whether sewing thread or hair curlers r! Other till vou've n rro vrrtt nnn i t .11.. ...Vint - 'ja juu lull tUUIlt Ull. JNU mutblT " V notion for, you'll find, it as usual at I THE VARIETY STOR