i (VICE WOMEN ARE VALUABLE CIVILIAN JOBS AFTER WAR mobilized War Vets Now Busy at Work, "tjs ocnoois, un rarms ana in uwn Homes By KAY REX Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP) As Canada set her sights for e, the year liMb saw the 24,000 women left m the ied services pack their uniforms in mothballs and . er head into the busy world of civilian industry, ,.,'rek to school or university classes for further thing. Although a number were either married -he enlistment or married j In the services, and chose ' tire to private life, officials ie Department of Veterans rs say the figure is not as as has been generally sup-jay demobilization of Can- 48,000 servicewomen is kcally completed, although nurses have remained in ermanent forces and there " (till a few women dietitians Air Force. D.V.A. officials it that across Canada em-fjrs have recognized the 'van veteran as a valuable to any organization. ie woman veteran is show-he same adaptability, effl-' y and dependability she ,ed in the services," said official. "All this has been raized by the employer who 'ound she pays him a good ..-nrl nn pmnlnvpp " - -' v,... j . . 'i those now in the employ-field the National Employ- Service reports that up Sept. 1 more than 10,000 m c i aerviccwumeii were in employment. It is be-even a larger number J work without the aid of TPS Minw M'oro ra-lnctnlpil former employers. Some 'p businesses of their own 1 as eift shoos, secretarial ana aress snops. uui-hose !ux, specialized branches jrmlng everything from (en raising to frog-farm- J,pf the total number ho en- Vri'V. onnrnv mflfplu R 0(1(1 wprfi lis or physicians, most of m have returned to their in professions. Many wo-' veterans now are holding Jnsihlp nnsit.innc In all nnrt.s ie world, in U.N.R.R.A., in jus government departments jin large business houses. th Transition; Women Workless lemDlovment is "cdnsider J Ipsi nmnnir fnrmpr spr- vicewomen than it is among servicemen, said D.V-A. officials. The women have gone back into the civilian stream more smooth ly than the men. Within the next year D.V.A. officials expect the total number of women formerly in the Armed Services, who avail themselves of the government s provision for training of veterans, may exceed 20 per cent of the women who enlisted. At the present time more than 8,000 are trained, or undergoing train-Ins, for more than 100 different occupations. Approximately 6,000 took vo cational training under the D.VJL plan, and more than 2.000 chose university training or other professional or semi-professional training in various non-university schools or colleges A D.V.A. report reveals that women veterans in universities are studying everything from law, architecture and medicine. to journalism and social work. Many are training as nurses. On the vocational side they're taking such things as hairdressing, stenography, book -binding, linotype operating and photography. Although no exact records are available it is understood that a little more than 30 per cent of the women were married at the time of discharge. However, officials lay to "wishful thinking" the occasional newspaper report that most servicewomen are married and not interested in training or employment. "Many of those who are married must work to supplement their hhsband's earnings," said one official. "Others have abilities and skills which are as urgently needed in peace time as in war." iierally speaking the ratea An advertisement in one Amer can newspaper carting $140 sold $20,000 worth of brfcycles. VOTING IN RUMANIAN ELECTION THAT BRITAIN AND U.S. DID NOT LIKE 5ENORITA5 FIND CANADA IS COLD From Celow Ihe Kio Grande They Came to Winnipeg to Study English WINNIPEG (H Usually at this time of year Canadians take one look at their parkas and heavy boots and start dreaming about the sunny south, but snow drifts and a north wind didn't deter two winsome young senor-itas who arrived here from Mexico recently. They admitted they had been shivering as the train had carried them through "colder arid colder" places and 19-year-old Enriqueba Morales said, "Oh, it's so very cold. I've seen snow before, but oh it's terribly cold." The girls Esther and En-riqueta Morales of Mexicc City were sent here by their father to study English. Last year he sent the sisters to a business college in Quincy, Illinois. They roomjed together arid, did all, their chattirjfc in their native Spanish . . . which didn't help 1 Dr. Petre Groza, Rumanian prime minister, is shown casting his ballot in Bucharest during the recent elections in which the Communists scored an impressive victory. At right Is Gheorghe Tatarescu, vice-premier and minister for exterior affairs, as he waited for his turn at the ballot box. The U.S. and Britain have withheld recognition of the Rumanian government on grounds that the elections were not free. A group of peasants in a village their English a great deal. However, this year things have been arranged differently. The sisters will stay in separate homes so that they may learn to speak the English language more quickly and adapt them selves to the Canadian way of life. Mr. Morales, a manufacturers' agent in Mexico, last year sent his 15-year-old daughter, Carmen, to a convent in Ottawa to learn English. But the cold weather defeated her and she slurried home early. The first thing the sisters did when they arrived here was to buy warm coats. Now they are setting down to routine sightseeing, classes and extra-curricular activities. They have enrolled at the YWCA for swimming and basketball and joined a business sorority. And a year from now, when they return to their native land, it is planned that the girls will be thoroughly conversant In both English grammar and idiomatic Epglish. and also have pleasant memories of their visit "up north." Is paper YOUR business? If it is, the wages of your workers are paid, in pari, by people like ourselves who purchase huge quantities of paper products every year, Even if paper is not your business, the prosperity of paper workers means additional dollars circulating in the Canadian market and thai concerns every one of us. True, this Company is in the business of nuning, refining metals and making chemicals and chemical fertilizers but we use the amazing amount of HVi million paper towels a YEAR in the normal course of our business. Production of these towels means money paid in wages, contributing to the wide variety of jobs needed to maintain the thousands of workers in Canada's many great paper industry. Paper icwels are just one of a myriad supply items needed in this Company's operations, each of which items means wages and Jobs in oiher Canadian industries and in the various services which bring these supplies to our door. ' ME GmSSmilWfJEB Ml Will MffiKl, fflSU&tt, B.C. Local Barrister In New Orleans T. W. Brown, local barrister, Is now in New Orleans after having made a trip through the Panama Can.il from Vancouver by fruit boat. From New Orleans he is returning home by train and boat, according to word received at his local office. Mr. Brown went south a couple of months ago to receive medical treatment AT YOUR DEALER'S JOHN H. BULGER O PTOMETRIST John Bulger Ltd. Third Avenue JAVEX is Ihe speedy, thrifty answer to o hojt of household problem) It cleanses, whitens, disinfects and deodorizes. It banlshei stains from linens and cottons . . . brightens bathtubs and sinks . . . makes toileti white and keeps them fresh. Because it costs so little and goes such a long way, Javex saves money as it saves work. CTh- We Serve You Nothing But the Best . . . SPECIAL UEI) I'.KANI) BEEF CHOICEST VEGETABLES AND FRUITS COMPLETE LINE OF r.UOCEKIES DELICATESSEN 0 Choicest Cooked Meats Roast Chicken .Meat Pies and Salads Daily RUPERT BUTCHERS Phone 21 Third Ave. West 1 south oi Bucharest are shown in photo at right reading a gov eminent poster which says, "Vote for the Sun" as Rumanians recently went to the polls in the parliamentary election. One of them holds a voting card, showing only government candidates, which was picked up in the street of this village where only 30 out of 500 families were said to have received voting cards, none of which listed the opposition. FROM GE.RMAN TO MOSLEM LONDON t Erich Kunza, 30 year old German prisoner-of-war in a suburban London camp, recently became a Modem and has learned to recite from memory the first chapter of the Koran In Arabic. Prince Utipcrt Daily aus Thursday, December it), i94(j KINSMEN HOLD LADIES' NIGHT Kinsmen elub members last night put their gallant feet for-ward, exchanged their regular meeting procedure tor a turkey dinner to which they invited their ladles, then wound up the ev.'nin; by attending the theatre in a group. The dinner was hrld in the Civic Centre cafe- ; teria and was featured by Chri.-tmas fare, after which a turkey was raffled, beins won by Edward Oamcr. Following he dinner, the group, consist- I a1 ut about 15 Kinsmen and hf .: ladies, attended the Canl- ,ol Theatre. Hotel. . . Prince Rupert . J V Yeoman. New Westminster : Jack Smith, city; E. L. Daclan. Claxton; Mr. and Mrs. Baincs. Metlakatla; Albert Fow-He, Sandnplt; Mrs. O. Kello," and son, Usk; John Aitken, Vancouver; Mr. and Mrs. E. Griffin Namu; E. Tugwood, Vancouver; P. L. Northcott. Vancouver; E Linburg, Vancouver; A. Gagnon Vancouver; Frank Johnson, Victoria; C. W. Gordon, Shirley; G W. Fogg, Sandsptt; J. Harkness. Vancouver; R. Rowland, Vancouver; John Troll, Vancouver You saw il in The News! mHB0AJ kll If 11 " T Coupons- A v y The Finest Christmas Gift . . . T w c e by LENTHKKIC Perfume - t,.v .. k: Cologne Dusting Powder Gnu GSlAftl Uiift Pioneer Drmzfffats BEST BARGAIN IN YEARS I am going out of the retail businesi and will handle only raw furs. Everything must be cleared out by New Year's. DONT MISS THE BARGAINS AT- GOLDBLOOM'S Hollywood Cafe PRINCE RUPERT'S NEWEST AND MOST UP-TO-DATE RESTAURANT FULL-COURSE MEALS FROM 11 A.M. TO 6 AJI. ' Special Dinner Every Sunday - 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. CniNESE DISHES A SPECIALTY WE CATER TO PARTIES CHOP SUEY CnOW MEIN FOR OUTSIDF ORDERS TIIONE 13.1 735 THIRD AVENUE WEST as ' dm?--0'' BRITISH COLOMBIA PACKEIS III it Three sailings Per fk for VANCOUVER - VirTOKIA SEATTLE Tuesdays, 1:30 n Coqultlam Fridays, 12:00 Mid:, nt Catala. Saturdays. 9:15 n.n Camosun KETCHIKAN Fridays, 12:00 Mt : STEWART and WAV POINTS Sundays, 12 00 Midi ' QUEEN CHARLOTTE ISLANDS Fortnightly. Further informutmt. tlckcb and Rose i-v.it.:!!: FRANK J. SKINXKIJ Prince Rupert A;x:it Third Ave 568 Steamship Service from PRINCE RUPERT J OCEAN FALLS WESTVIEW (Powell Riven VANCOUVER Thursday at 11: 1! P m TO KETCHIKAN Wednesday Midnight XMASSAILING Dec. 10th, 11:15 p.m. . write call For reservations City or Depot Tteto- "!,,ccs' AV0Y 0TEL Carl Zarelli, Prop. Phone r, P.O. Box 544 ERASER STREET Prince Rupert