I PAGE FOUR M I've Been Shopping at r Annette s SERVICES TO Vancouver, Victoria and Waypoints, Stewart and North Queen Charlotte Islands Full Information, Tickets and Reservations FRANK J. SKINNER Prince Rupert Agent Third Ave. Phone 508 They have the largest assortment of ladies' gifts in town. If it is a gift for Mother, Sister or "Old Aunt Min,' they have it. Drop in and see what they have. You'll be pleased. I was. ANNETTE'S LADIES' WEAR 530 THIRD AVENUE JJ t - tS. TJSj, ' PRINCE RUPERT ROOFING CO. Box 725 Specialists on Bulltup Roofs Repairs, Re-shlngllng Free Estimates The Seal of Quality BRITISH COLUMBIA'S FINEST SALMON THE REX GAFE Now Open for Business CHOP SUEY CHOW MEIN Opening Hours: 3 p.m. to 2 a.m. 2nd Avenue (Across from Prince Rupert Hotel) Phone 173 KWONQ ,SANO HINQ HOP KEE- CHOP SUEY HOUSE 612 7th AVE. WEST (Next to King Tal) BARR & ANDERSON LIMITED 51 ii All your patronage welcome Open 5 p.m. to 12 p.m. Outside Orders from 2 p.m. to 12 pjn. PHONE RED 247 SAVOY HOTEL Carl Zarelli, Prop. Phone 37 P.O. Box 61. FRASER STREET Prince Rupert Plumbing and Heating Automatic Sprinkling and Coal Stokers Corner 2nd Ave, and 4th St. Phone Red 389 P.O. Box 1294 Sk,eena Grocery M ACROSS FROM HOSPITAL We are here to give our customers the best of service Our prices are right 500 5th Ave. East Phone 581 FIVE LISTED AS CASUALTIES Late Canadian Army casualty lists contain the names of four central and northern British Columbia men who have sustained wounds and injuries. Severely Wounded: Rfn. John Pleice, Royal Canadian Ordnance Corps, whose mother, Mrs. Edith Pleice, lives at Dawson Creek. Severely Injured: Rfn. Clalr-mont Rencelaw Strowger, B.C. Regiment, whose wife lives at Ocean Falls. Seriously Wounded: C.Q.MJ3. Arthur Bamford, B.C. Regiment, whose brother, Harry Bamford, lives at Ocean Falls. Slightly Wounded: Pte. Clyde Moraes, B.C. Regiment, whose sister. Miss Pansy Moraes, lives at Port Simpson. FOSSILS FOUND AT GIBRALTAR GLBRALTAR, Nov. 21 O Tunnellers of the Royal Engineers extending; the Rock's famous underground defence system have found fossils of interest to students of natural history 200 feet imJde the eastern face of the cliff. The fossils were several pair of antlers, Jaws, complete sets of teeth, many vertebrae and other bones. The 20-foot wide fissure in. which they were located has been sealed up and will be searched closely for more bones after the war. The coastline of Norway, in eluding the greater islands and Indentations, is about 12,000 miles. L.74M "ZOMBIES STRIKE BACK" (Continued from page 1) ilton, Ontario, acting officer commanding, declined to make any statement for publication following the demonstration. It was evident, however, that army officers were Inclined to the view that there was nothing very wrong or harmful about the incident. After the parade, the men followed their usual Saturday afternoon week-end activities. Some went to the show, some went to the beer parlors. All were back in camp by the usual time and there were no detentions as a result of the parade. Caused Some Alarm at First Unused to such Incidents, the citizens of Terrace' might have seemed somewhat" alarmed at the outset of the parade. One Terrace business man said he was about to be leaving his store to go home for lunch when he heard the noisy procession approaching. He was at first minded to stand by the store but then decided his place was at home with his family. The people of the towri later ac cepted the whole thing as a harmless demonstration. II.D.'s at Terrace, in casual conversation, said they did not wish to have trouble. From Prince George, where Major General H. N. Ganong makes his headquarters, came word of a similar "more or less good natured'' demonstration parade by Home Defence men. Nothing serious happened there ahd like at Tefrrace,corifideri'ce was expressed that everything would be kept within due bounds. THIS AND THAT Mill vfc r I 1 ' I TTi l' l Tin Cit Mml.fw Aii.nn SftHn jfc "I wish you'd be more careful with my husband's envelopes. Every one he' hands me is $10.00 short!" These dimes work their r - heads off THE DAILY NEWS BROTHERS REUNITED Search for Birth Certificate Leads to Meeting at .Midland, Ontario By ADELAIDE M. LEITCII Canadian Press Correspondent MIDLAND, Ont., Nov. 27 CRThe story of Harry and Tom Scott reads like a fairy tale-two brothers separated when children, living separate, yet in many cases parallel lives In opposite corners of the Dominion until, after 53 years, they are brought together by a birth certificate. One of them is Thomas Scott. 59 Quebec St., Midland; the pther Is Harry S:ott, 1650 East Third Ave., Vancouver. Although separated and not even knowing if the other was alive, yet there was Instant recognition when the Vancouver Scotts stepped off the train at Midland station. "There he is!" each brother said to his wife. They would have recognized each other anywhere. It all started when Harry Scott found lie needed his birth certi ficate. Toronto couldn't help him, having no contact with the people who knew him. Remem bering that her husband had a brother who at one time lived In Midland, Mrs. Scott took matters into her own hands and wrote to the chief of police, who for the next day or twtj, .spent considerable itlme ringing doorbells and asking all ,t)ief Scolds In town if they had a Jjrqther Harry. QqebV, .St'.,'.';a!s the last call. From j,h'en , on. it, was simply a matter of exchanging air malls and arranging a visit. Separated In 1891 The last time the brothers saw each other was In 1891 when Tom 11, and Harry 8, took the train north from Toronto to live on Ontario farms. Harry's destination was Clear Lake, Muskoka, and for five Ions years all he can remember is "the lickings I got." At 13 he was working in a jnllliat Wood Lake and after that there folldwe'dVl succession of logging camps uV-til eventually he reached Fal- conburg. He went west in 1903, journeying up the Cariboo as far as Quesnel, working in Kamloops, Revelstoke, and finally ending up at the Vancouver shipyard' where he is at present employed. His wife is an English girl wro came to Vancouver from Cum berland. ,, While this was happening to Harry, Tom stayed on a farm!! near Midland for two years, and then went to work In the bush-Several years of that and then he went west as a harvester. Later he returned to Ontario for mill work. Thirty-five years ago he came to Midland, and 15 years later went to work for trie .mi. HOW! jMClu UfHi '.. Si; X"; ; I, No doubt you've seen dimes worn so thin that you can't see the heads on them. That's what happens when money is really passed around. That's what happens every year to at least two and a half billion dimes that are put into circulation through the life insurance companies. These dimes really go to work. They come in the form of, premium payments from four mill ion policyholders and if you prefer figuring in folding money, they amount to 250 million dollars. t In peacetime these dimes are not idle. They are kept huy through investment in a great variety of local ahd national undertakings. For the past five years they have been busy in a strictly military sense -backing up our fighting men with more than a billion dollars' worth of Victory Bonds. These busy dimes are helping to buy security for you and yours both in the present and in the future both st borne and abroad. It is good citizenship to own LIFE INSURANCE A Message from the Ufe Insurance Companies in Canada P P D D Radio Dial L I I K 1240 Kilocycles (Subject to change) MONDAY PAL 4:00 Words and Music 4:15 G. I. Jive 4-30 California Melodies 5:00 Music from America 5:30 Sports Reviews 5:45 Raymond Scott 6: CO Your Radio Theatre 7:00 CBC News 7:15 Canadian Roundup 7:45 Recital Time 7:45 A Western Voice 8:00 Night Music 8:30 Great GUderslleve 9:00 Bob Hope 9:30 Globe Theatre 10:00 CBC News 10:10 Elmore Philpott 10:15 CBC News Roundup 10:30 Double Feature 11:00 -Silent TUESDAY A.M. 7:30 Musical Clock 8:00 CBC News 8:15 Front Line Family 8:30 Morning Concert 9:00 BBC News 9:15 Morning Devotions 9130 Transcribed Varieties 9:45 March Time 10:00 Salon Muslcale 10:30 Roundup Time 10:45 Morning Visit 11 :C0 Scandinavian Melodies 11:15 Studio Scrapbook 11:33 Message Period 11:35 Weather Forecast 11:30 Recorded 11:45 Personal Album P.M. 12:00 Melody Hour 12:30 CBC News 12:45 Band Wagon 1:00 One Nln'ht Stand 1:30 Junior Music 2:00 Silent BRITAIN PLANS SEAWEED TESTS EDINBURGH. Nqv.'!27 R A 'Scottish Seaweed Research Asso ciation has been founded under joint auspices of the Supply Ministry and the Scottish Council of Industry, to investigate the commercial possibilities of seaweed. On its work depends to a great extent the future of the crofters of the Scottish Highlands. The association will have a biological division; an engineer ing section with a ship equipped to examine deep sea weeds and the best methods of harvcsUng them, and a chemical division to determine how best to extract the chemical constituent Midland Public- Utilities where he has been ever since He. too. married an Old Country plr!. Margaret Stevenson, two years out from Scotland. Many times the brothers' paths almost crossed. Both serv ed overseas at the same time) and fought in the same battles Vlmy, , Passchendale, Arras. Amiens wlth6ut knowing the other was nearby. The only thing that surprised the brothers on meeting was Tom's flvi-foot-five and Harry's flve-foot-nlne were much shorter ,arid much taller than 4 r vM' LEGION W.A. SALE AIDS WAR WORK War work of the Women's Auxiliary to Canadian Legion benefitted as a result of a tea and sale of aprons held by the group in the Legion rooms Sat-' urday afternoon. The affair was well attended and described as ' very successful Dy the ladles. Mrs. A. J. Croxford the president, received the guests. Mrs. G. V. Hanley was conven er and the home cooking booth was In charge of Mrs. F. Elli son and Mrs. F. Barber. Mrs. A. Murray looked after the apron table. Tea tables were In charge of Mrs. C. Michaloff, assisted by three younaj members of the Junior War Workers Club the Misses Betty Wide, Lenore Gardner and Mary Basso who act-pd as serviteurs. Mrs. M. J. Keays was In charge of the raffles. A box of apples, a centrepiece, and a tur-kty were raffled, the winners Apples, Mrs. W- Rothwell, Turkey, Mrs. E. Anderson. Centrepiece. Mrs. E. Anderson. MONDAy NOvJBtfAf. Mr minora SPEE1 Minora 8!ei y ' n orchnary dou bades. It'i th. 1 In the ow prkj QUERIES Zll LONELN, Nw, oers of paur:; getting que . of subject by MaJ servative mexi ton, h'i ., cuniei has sent 10.000 c. tionaire tj Ac men with them in re;.:"1- The World's News Seen Througj THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE M0N An International Daily Ki-u upcr ii Truthful Contirurtiv Unbiatrd Fr from ScJ iim EJitoritlt Arr Timrly nd Initruf live and I( Tralurri, Together ith the Weetly Magaiine Srctiil the Monitor an Ideal Newtpaper for the Home. The Christian Science Publishing Sc ir- Pne, Norway Street, Botton 1), MaHarhytrail Price 1 1 2.00 Yearly, or 11.00 a Mcr.:h 1 Saturday Itsue, including Magazine Se rtian. ; t. ai Introductory Otter, 6 Saturday luuet 1 Lr-Name - - Addrett - - - , SAMPLE COPY ON. 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