PAGE FOUR Expert OPTICAL SERVICE Chas. Dodimcad Optometrist In Charge Watch, Clock, Jewelry Repairing, Hand Engraving VISIT OUK BASEMENT STOKE for Fine China, Dinnerware, Glasses, Baggage and Novelties. MAX HEILBRONER Jeweler Diamond Merchant ' SETTING THE 1943 STYLE PACE Rupert Peoples Store In Mannish Tailored Suits we "take the cake" so to speak. Every Suit hand-tailored by one of ada's leading fashion manufacturers. For the well-dressed lady, whose taste calls for the Dressmaker Stjle Suit, we dare you to just look at ours. Your good taste will do the rest. Rupert Peoples Store A. MacKenzie Furniture Ltd, A GOOD TLACE TO BUY BEDROOM SUITES 4 pieces: walnut with round mirrors at all prices. Bedstead, Vanity, Chiffonier, Bench. , ... A. Complete Stock of Furniture on hand 5 . .- 'Phone;?75.;'l . 327 3rd Avenue H 0 I "GALIVANT" SHOES IN BROWN AND BLACK BROGUES, . GILLIES, TIES AND LOAFERETTES. Welted Soles and Genuine Calf Leathers. Perfect Fitting Lasts in Fittings AA to C Width. Priced $5.85 and $5.50 Family shoe store ltD. "The Home of Good Shoes" CARPETS AND CONGOLEUMS IN STOCK Seamless Axmlnster Rugs, "sizes 9x12, 9x10, 6'9x9, 4'6x7'6, 36x63 , 27x54. Congoleum Rugs, 9x15, 9x12, 9x10, 9x9, 7'2x9, 6x9. . ; ; Floor Covering sold by yards. Dominiorif"A"YQuality Brown Battleship Linoleum, 6 feet wide. Dominion Marboleum. Felt Base, 6 feet wide. . Dominion Fcltol, 6 feet wide. Congoleum Gold Seal, 6 feet wide. Baroleum Felt Base, 6 feet wide. Dominion Rexoleum, 6 feet wide. EASY TO CHOOSE A RUG FROM LARGE STOCK Elio Furniture Store Third Avenue, Next the Daily News, Prince Rupert 4 4 4 5 5 6 6 6: 6 7 7 8 8 8 8 9 9: 10: 10: 10: 10: 11: CFPR (1210 Kilocycles) SCHEDULE Tuesday r.M. 00 Afternoon Musicale :30 Hoosler Hot Shots :45 Melodic Moods : 00 The Dansant :30 MacMillan Club Quiz :00 CBC News :05 Musical Interlude 15 Salon Music :30 Music for Moderns : 00 Fibber McOee and Molly 30 .Victor Record Album :00 Fred Waring's Pennsylvan lans 15 Front Line Family 30 Great Misic 45 Song Sheet 00 Bob Hope 30 Words and Music 00 CBC News Rebroadcast 05 Musical Interlude 15 G, I. Jive 30 Rippling Rhythm 00 Silent Wednesday a.m. 7:30 Musical Clock ' 7:45 CBC News 7:50 Musical Clock 8:00 Musical Minutes 8:30 Morning Devotions 8:45 Vernon Geyer, Organist ' 9:00 South of the Border 9:30 CBC News Rebroadcast 9:35 Transcribed Varieties 10:00 A Morning Visit , 10:15 Hoosier Hot Shots 10:30 Wllf Carter 10:45 They Tell Me 11:00 Scandinavian Melodies 11 :i5 Broadcast of Messages 11:30 Petit Corner P.M. 12:00 Luncheon Music 12:30 Western Airs 12:50 CBC News 12:55 Program Resume 1:00 One o'clock Musicale 1:30 B.C. SchooV Broadcast 2:00 Silent Local Tides Wednesday, April 21 High 1:39 22.0 feef 14:11 20.5 feet Low 8:06 2.5 feet 20:15 4.9 feet Thursday, April 22 High 2:11 22.1 feet 14:51 20.0 feet Low 8:45 2.1 feet 20:51 5.1 feet Friday, April 23 High 2:46 22.0 feet 15:35 19.2 feet Low 9:26 2.1 feet 21:31 6.1 feet Saturday, April 24 High 3:26 21.2 feet 16:25 18.3 feet Low 10:11 2.9 feet 22:28 7.1 feet TEE DAILY NEW3 T 'ENEMY' MAY WIN RACES l Boussac Entries to Run Against British Thoroughbreds By ALLAN NICKLESON Canadian Press Staff Writer NEWMARKET, England, April 20 W Race horses owned by a. technical enemy of Britain could well gallop away with, a couple of English race classics this season and the possibility has caused a bit of eye-brow lifting. It's all quite a problem that came out when it revealed that three racers owned by M. M. Doussac, a Frenchman in German-occupied territory, are entered in five classicsThe Derby, Oaks, 2,000 Guineas, 1,000 Guineas and the St. Leger. The three Anubis II, Aetlus and Cynthia II plus a couple of olhers owned by Boussac are under the control of the Custodian pf Enemy Property. They are trained by Steve Donaghue, one of Britain's former jockey greats who Is Bous- sac's agent in this country. "The custodian has power to sell any of the horses and several have been sold," Steve said. "He has control of all moijies received until the end of the war." Steve gets paid by the custodian for keeping and training the horses of Boussac. who in pre-war days raced on a large sjsale in England and France. Boussac won the 2,000 Guineas at Newmarket with DJebel in 1940. All profits from the horses go to the custodian for settlement when the war ends. But no one has answered this question: Will the profits if any) find their way to Boussac after the war? King's Horses There's quite a bit of turf gossip to be picked up around Newmarket these nippy mornings as trainers run hopefuls through gallops. For instance, the King's Tip staff has been running well and the general belief Is that the colt is being groomed especially for the 2,000 Guineas. Best odds for Tipstaff in the Guineas are 10-1, while he is 33-1 for the Derby. Gordon Richards, the King's No. 1 jockey, will be up on Tipstaff in the 24)00 Guineas but probably will ride for the Aga Khan In the Derby. Gordon, Britain's champion jockey, rode Derby favorite Nas-rullah in a mile gallop at three-parts speed, along with Umiddad, and reported himself as "well-pleased' with Nasrullah's perform ance. Both horses are owned byj THE VARIETY STORE PHONE ItED 120 'Where your dimes are llttie dollars" 518 3rd AVE. WEST Sport Chat Barney Ross, holder of the world's lightweight boxing title, abdicated eight years ago yesterday because he could not make the 135-pound weighf limit of the lightweight class. Later the same year he won the welterweight crown and held It for three years until he lost to Henry Armstrong. Twenty-three years ago tonight when a wrestling match was a whole night's work, Champion Joe Stecher and Strangler Lewis, writhed for more than three hours before a New York crowd. Stecher on that occasion retained the title of world champion but in 1928 Lewis took it from him. Nowadays the books don't list professional world's championship wrestlers. Page Joe Louis For Army Date May Meet Billy Conn But Outside Of Ring: CAMP LEE, Va., April 20 CR Oh, Mr. Connt that man may be around to visit you agaln I Captain Jack Springer, Camp Lee athletic officer, is investigating the possibility of having Sergeant Joe Louis the heavyweight champion come to Camp Lee for a personal appearance. If arrangements are made, Louis will meet Corporal Billy Conn here outside the ring. Conn, the No. 1 contender for the Negro bomber's crown, is boxing instructor here. PITCHER G UNXER CLEVELAND, April 20 O) Bob Feller, the Cleveland Indians' erstwhile pitching ace, hasn't lost any of his boom. The Tribe's president Alva Bradley says rapid Robert now heads a gun crew on a battleship. Feller, 24, entered Navy service more than a year ago and started to gunnery school last fall. the Aga Khan, presently residing in Switzerland. His Majesty's racers will show their form when Newmarket opens a two-day meet this month. Knight's Daughter and Point To Point are entered in the Fillies Stakes tor two-year-elds; Crimson Lake in Ahe Caxton Stakes for two-year-olds, and three-year-old Open Warfare m the five-furlong Severals Stakes. The Look Wf lovely J.A4J low Cost Water Paint for Walls and Ceilings! IF YOU'VE A NOTION TO SAVE . . . you can always save on Notions at THE VARIETY STORE! Did you ever figure up how much you spend in. a month on necessities? And how much you could have saved by buying them here? It's something worth thinking about, and worth coming down about. tool Spring needs are here in profusion! savoy HOTEL Carl Zarelli, Prop. Phone 37 P.O. Boi 544 FRASER STREET PRINCE RUPERT i ,TT SERVICES TO Vancouver, Victoria and Way-points, Stewart and North, 0.uecn Chatlotte Islands. Full Information, Tickets and Reservations FRANK J. SKINNER Prince Rupert Agent Third Ave. phone 508 Briefs From Britain A bullock was sold for the equivalent of $50,000 at Stratford-on-Avon to aid the R. A. F.. Fund. Lloyd George, former British premier, has succeeded the Duke of Kent as prior of the St, John of Jerusalem Order's priory for Wales. Ships ranging in size from a destroyer to a motor launch have been "adopted by different offices in the flank ci England. More than 500 Canadian soldiers have paid organized visits to "the shrine of the British Naw." II M. S. Victory, Nelson's flagship, in Portsmouth Dockyard. Three women at Deitoy are doing one of the heaviest wartime jobs performed in' Britain by women. They are making 175-pound concrete sleeper blocks ror railway use During 1942, 939 persons were killed by accidents In mines and jquarries In Great Britain, the Fuej jiuuiay amiuuiicea. in lun me figure was 9D9. Lieut. James Johnson, 55, who won the Victoria Cross a month before the end of the First Great War. while serving with the Northumberland Fusiliers, died jecently in Plymouth Hospital. Investigations conducted by Britain's A. R. P. wardens show that a sudden gas attack on the country would find many people unable to locate their respirators and many others equipped with gas masks in faulty condition because of lack of care. A group of Welsh grocers who conducted an inquiry in the Mer-thyr district have reported that rations supplied miners are not adequate for the heavy work performed. They said the results showed that there were shortages of energy producing food ranging from 25 to 40 percent. Good wine and champagne demand high prices these days in Britain. A London West End wine broker. Jor Instance, paid the equivalent of $150 for four bottles of Cointreau at an auction sale while 30 bottles of Veluve Clln-quot, 1929, fetched nearly $950. Death of William Trevor Watson at Virginia Water. Surrey. rallrf his 11-day speech before the Law Lords in 1938. Altogether Watson, t a specialist In patent cases, spoke lor 13 days in the patent action! which lasted three weeks. He was 56 when he died. i The Avenalls of Brighton, England, are a "family that has gone to war." Charles, the eldest, Is with the National Fire Service In London; Alfred, George and Tom are I A Musical C mote Tomorrow! "IH GREA WALI m.m. I Tl. T , ...I v "iiinonaijij i Strauss and - Luise Rai Melitza Koi Fernand fa M 1;C5.M? d ADDED Pete Smith's TnJ WOULD XFl EVENTS ENDS TOMCr Complete St.. 1il GENE TIERXnl "Thuniei Diros let : U' Comin? Thu, FrJ "Yankee h Dandy" CAW t fAMOUl UtTIIII in the Middle E:' ! with the Horn? F t'l Eileen are a the MUSSALLEM'S ECONOMY ST 317-319 3rd Avenue West Groceries Vegetables Fresh Fruit Tobacco Cooked Meats "Where Dollars Have More Cents" Phones 18-11) r.0. Boi! We Deliver BUY... RUPERT BRANJ Sole Fillets ... j At Your Ij-ocal IJutchers NO WASTE READY TO COOK Canadian Fish & Cold Storag rniNCE RUPEitT Qot Ltd. British