DECEMBER 23, 1944 -i n-r iv n Aiiim aiiaiii MlrHI K I N H W mm - mi Staff House Dining Hall Seventh Ave East Tuesday, December 2GUi at 8 p.m. main i:vi:nt 5 hounds .tir.WKO vs. W. WALLAC.R ,1M ' g ( Hi?. Army JU bl l'J-OUHMi WHITS I IB lit I V HZ. LI L TICKETS: idc ?i.tu general Admission M.uu ale at tile Orotto and Green Spot (Sixth St.) AT Y 5 KLfctN KITCHEN oi 1 . ,pr.i for the Christmas Holidays. from 3 p.m. to 3 ajn. Patrons, One and All VIFRHY PHW S MAS Piionc Jilue 882 Electrical Contractors Wc wLsh our many friends and customers A Bright Christmas . . . and . . . A Good New Year POULSKN'S GROCERY . il DIARIES, from $ -" to 82.00 id nr a titcc xirTTti T CCT Kl.00 . . .trv ci v f it n?r n t- a a n m i l i m rj i i mini ijk li: .- . i -U , AbLil U1 I m p ' L tfkfl jE CALENDAR PADS ANU ttiAiNU, cuiiipictc VI1AV PAT TrNTlAH 1AI1H A IN 1 J MAiU. ,.iete ;rom $t.Z to $1.7. v,AtcnuAi; i'vlo - i CALENDAR PADS (JUMBO) ibh Printinq Company .TP m rrtr V la Warn I 1 w a - 'ur stock fresh and complete, prices right Courtesy and Service-Free Delivery Red 41 The World's News Seen Through ur Christian Science Monitor An International Daily News paper TrUIhfCu,i,r.!ve Unbiad Free "'l0"?.'- -rJitorial. Are Timely and Instructive and It l"y "i, Toitflhrr with the Weekly MJRimne Monitor an Ideal Newspaper for the Home. The Christian Science Publishing Society One. Norway Street, Boston 15, MawaduisetM , 41 nn a Month. i lite plA.vu irtiiir, r - . V f ,rt "irday Issue, includinz M.izaeine Section, fZ.tO a Tear. Introductory Offer, 6 Saturday Issues Z5 Unts. SAMPLE COPY ON REQUEST I REX CAFE ' Pen for Business cH0P SUEY cH0V MEIN Owning Hours: 5 P-m, to 2 a.m. ' Avenue (Across from rin( Rupert Hotel) phon'e 173 A A A A A a H A A 4 . 'TCf!fi " m .u.,.i.ui.wiil)ifiiwwitwifiiw(fvwvwiryivu m i n ur u inhim) THIRD AVENUE ! & LUNCH 6th AVE. E., BESIDE P.O. STATION "n". As Good as the Best Better than the Rest SHE PLANS NEW CAREER Verstaile Career Woman Takes' F;;ng r.l Kadio and Then Television NEW YORK, Dec. 23 W A gentleman once said about Olga Samarolf-Stokowskl, "every time Ive seen her for 30 years, I've mougnt sne was Just tnen at ONIONS GO TO WASTE me zenun 01 ner powers." LEICESTER. Eng.. Growers He meant that Madame Stok- i have complained to the British owksl has been going "from Growers Union that ton3 of success to success (and from I onions are rotting In the fields, new career to new career) all Especially in Lincolnshire, bc-her life, and never lets down, cause they have no facilities for She just has begun a sixth ! storage and wholesalers have career, she thinks, and perhaps plenty of onions on hand. this really will be most import ant, KING GEORGE CAFE Special Chinese Dishes Chop Suey Chow Mein Hours 10 a.m. to 1 a.m. 2nd Avenue and 8th Street In September this pianist, !York, January 18, 1005. When a .she first went to Henry Wold- ' sohn, the concert manager, he A A A A A A A A A A A A i told her flatly that he could not ! r-r.11 nniikA1ia ttiUU n V. O IY1 a 1 1 1. fl A A A A A A A A A A A A A A K A A the greatest educational force the world has produced. Her first career, as a pianist, began In Carnegie Hall, New hers. (She had resumed her m alden name Hickenlooper after the Pope annulled her marriage to Boris Loutzky, a Rus sian engineer). There was a Samaroff In the Hickenlooper connection. So the young pianist became, legally as well as for the stage, Olga Samaroff. Under that name, the became the great American woman pianist. She remained that until her marriage with Leopold Stok- owskl, after which she retired j to comparative domesticity until J923, and then came the second career. This began after her parting from Stokowski, when Dr. Eug ene Noble asked her to teach at the newly-formed Jullliard graduate school in New York. She still teaches advanced pupils ; at Juilllard, and there is prob- ably no other teacher in America more successful. William Kapell, Eugene List and Joseph Battista are among her pupils. Her Third Career Madame's third career was as music critic for the New York Evening Post. That came about because she fell over a trunk. The doctor ordered her to keep her arm In a sling over a year Ernest Newman, the great English critic, had just left the Post, and he asked what she would need, for salary and she made a guess. It was $1,000 a year more than Newman got. but the Post paid her. The fourth career was as a lecturer and educator, and her first taste of that came through her former husband. She was playing two Beethoven Sonatas, Opus 10G and 111, and he was scheduled to speak on them. Unfortunately, he was detained, so she did the whole Job. In a way, this led to the layman's music courses, perhaps Madame's greatest contribution to the general public, since these have proved miraculously effective at teaching people to make use or music, as listeners. The fifth career was on the air. It seemed very casual, but II I 1 Kitwanga Soldier Wins Scots Bride i KITWANGA, Dec. 23 Pte. Ray ; Morgan, son of Mr. jind Mrs. W. B. Morgan was married In England on December 9, and Is expected to bring his bride to Canada soon. His bride is the former Miss Lavender Pratt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Pratt, Fife, Scotland. STOWAWAYS FINED GLASGOW, i Five natives of educator, writer and lecturer Wesf Africa who stowed away on made her debut in television on a shlD that thev could come a Schenectady station. This to Britain to help the war effort was no performance as ingenue werfi fmed tne equivalent of $2b In a cute skitMadame long eacn or 14 days imprisonment ago forswore such ambitions. ' when tney appeared in court She sees television as perhaps here. RECORD PARIS FLOOD The greatest Paris flood on re cord occurred In 1010, when the Seine rose 31 feet 4 inches above normal. really came from her long life as musician. Then came the chance to try television. You'd expect a woman like Madame to give out a pungent opinion on these .last two matters, and she does. page nvt THE DAILY NEWS "I think," she says, "that radio, and particularly tele vision, can do for music what nrlntlng did for the written word." 'WOMEN DEMAND BETTER HOMES Speakers at London Women's Pailiament Want Say Jn Peacetime Plans LONDON, Dec. 23 5, Women have been called upon to play a big part In the war and intend to insist on a big part in the coming peace, especially In regard to planning of home., spokesmen for women's organizations indicated at the fifth session of the London Women's Parliament. "The government has called us out at all hours of the day and night to clean railway carriages, to cook grub In the can teens and to work in aircraft factories," said Mrs. E. E. Lang-ford. "And after the war we Intend to have some say in the kind of Britain we want. One thing we want is better nousing. We don't want the kind of homes where, if you open the front door, you get blown out the back door." Mrs. Jean Cannon, mother of two who works in the same air craft factory as her husband, said space should be the first consideration in new homes. The kitchen should be a real "work-place" with at least two drain boards, adequate refrigerator space, and finished with damp-and-heat-reslsting paint. All the women at the conference represented women's associations. AVOID SUNSTROKE A person who has suffered a sunstroke is thereafter always susceptible to heat. - .-f? 4 ITS - OPeace Will Brfurn and like theStar that Shone on 6ethjehem7 bring new hope and spirit to the peoples of the world. Once again we wish our friends at Home, and across the Seas .... A Sln& (ClfrtBtntas i Jeac cf ul Nrm llcar Christmas Eve--We' Greet You- It has been a great pleasure for us to assist you in your preparations for the great day of gifts and goodwill that comes on Monday. Let us assure you that we have clone our best to serve and please you. We appreciate the grand measure of patronage you have bestowed upon us. Now our simple wish Is that Christmas will be replete with many good things for you all and that the fullest measure of happiness will be yours. May another Christmas bring us complete Peace and good will and may the day soon be speeded when the anxieties and griefs of war are assuaged and relieved. ANNETTE'S LADIES' WEAR l! i Since the Three Wise Men followed the Star of Bethlehem to where the infant Jesus was cradled, truth-loving people have travelled far and sought throughout their lives to end the sources of evil In mankind, which brin about such catastrophes as the present war. Let us hope that It Is the last such war and that His spirit will fill all hearts with the light of love and .ence. "VOUIt FRIENDLY GROCER" MUSSALLEM'S ECONOMY STORE TO DEVELOP SEAFRONT WORTHING, Eng., Oi The town council in this Sussex town has decided to obtain financial details for a seafront development scheme to put Worthlngton "in the forefront of all south coast towns." The plan includes construction of a miniature Meet Me at . . . JOHNNY'S JOHNNY'S SNACK BAR (Our Coffee is Tops) BARR & ANDERSON LIMITED Plumbing and Heating Automatic Sprinkling and Coal Stokers EE: i Corner 2nd Ave. and 4th St. Phone Red 389 P.O. Box 1294 PRINCE RUPERT DRY DOCK AND SHIPYARD SHIPBUILDERS AND ENGINEERS Iron and Brass Castings Electric and Acetylene Welding SPECIALISTS ON SAWMILL and MINING MACHINERY All types of Oas Engines Repaired and Overhauled E mmmmmmmmmmmmm WW The Seal of Quality BRITISH COLUMBIA'S FINEST SALMON GEO.JJAWES AUCTIONEEER and VALUATOR sales conducted to suit your .convenience furniture and household effects packed and shipped Estimates Phone for Free Appointment 146 4th Ave. E. Red 127 JIllI Watches Wallets A A K A J a y A 2 5 m A if A A A A . 5 3 A A ft fA A A ' A A A A . A A A A A A A A KAIEN HARDWARE Yfti m Wishes All Customers and Friends a Very I MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A I HAPPY NEW YEAR for HIM Pen and Pencil cases Cigarette cases A gift easy to carry and p.ractical will please him most. WE HAVE Signet and fraternal rings Fine sterling silver Identification, bracelets I JOHN BULGER LIMITED Jewelers Thh-d Avenue Opposite Tost Office 'MID'S CAFE f I CHRISTMAS DINNER "4 I 4 to 8 p.m. p I . I gf Wc extend to all our Friends and Customers Our Best Wishes for A Happy Christinas.