; f rAQE FOUR I: Expert OPTICAL SERVICE CIIAS. DODIMF.AD TinV " I Optometrist la Charge 1 l P. V I Watch, Clock, Jewelry I JJ .,' ' Repairing . Iland Engraving VISIT OUR BASEMENT STORE For Fine China, Dinnerwarc, Glasses, Baggage and Novelties MAX HEILBRONER JEWELER 1 The Peoples Suits- Coats- Dresses SELECT YOUK SPUING OUTFIT NOW! Mail Orders Promptly Filled : Rupert Peoples Store -In the Heart of Prince Rupert" I I THIRD AVE. (Next to Heilbroner's) PHONE BLUE 90? -t CAN'T THINK WHAT TO GIVE FOR EASTER? Come to the Variety Store, and you'll find a store filled with happy suggestions gifts that are certain to please everyone you want to remember on this joyous occasion. Our modest prices enable you to remember all your family and friends, and stay within your budget. THE VARIETY STORE Store Way c NORM AmTITimm , Vil no better way to spruce order a Pair of Hartt's Shoes for Easter. Daily News It Pays Step Into Spring With HARTT HOES We can think of up for Spring than to Handsome New Spring SOLE AGENTS . . . FAMILY SHOE STORE LTD. "THE HOME OF GOOD SHOES" j, EJaco an Ad in The DIAMOND MERCHANT Classified Ads Advertising in this section is payable in advance at the olfice. Please do not ask us to deviate from this rule WANTED WANTED Urgently required by couple, furnished room or flat. Phone Green 626. (84) WANTED TO RENT Four or five room modern house, unfurnished, by reliable local resident. Urgent. Phone Blue 184. (80) WANTED Furnished apartment for couple available May 1 or earlier. Apply Box 726 Dally News. (80) WANTED Room with board, private home preferred, respectable gentleman, non-drinker. Apply Box 730 Dally News. (80) FOR RENT FOR RENT Two small housekeeping rooms also one single room. Call after 8 pjn. 221 5th Ave. East. (81) BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL GEORGE L. RORIE Public Accountant, Auditor, etc. Income Tax Returns Compiled Besner Block Phone 387 PRINCE RUPERT FLORIST Prop.: MRS. A. R. LOCK 300 3rd Ave. Phone 777 Expert PERMANENTS ESTHER STANYER Late of Hudson's Bay, Vancouver Phone Black 934 mornings or call at 1345 Pigott Place Upstairs DANIEL BJARNASON PAINTER AND DECORATOR Quick Service. No Substituting of Material General Delivery IDEAL CLEANERS "House of Better Cleaning" Authorized "FLEX FORM" SERVICE Shapes Dresses Without Guesses Waterproofing a Specialty. PHONE 858 Mall Orders Box 99 MODERN TAILORS We are open again for alter-tions on Ladies' and Men's Suits. Quick and efficient service. Reasonable prices. 318 5th St (Behind Royal Bank) AUCTIONEER J. MAIR Phone Black 984 HIGH CLASS DECORATING AND PAINTINO Call LEO OYER Red 335 867 Borden St. B. LAMB, TAILOR Ladies' and Men's Madc-to-Measure Clothes 302 Third Ave. W. Black 787 HELEN'S BEAUTY SHOP Permanent Waving Beauty Culture In all Its branches 206 4th Street Phone 655 SMITH & ELKINS LTD Plumbing and Heating Engineers Phone 174 P.O. Box 274 INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOLS Canadian Limited B. F. Lovin, Representative Box 526 1315 Piggot Ave. Prince Rupert, B.C. AMERICAN ORIGIN The dahlia was discovered In Mexico by Cervantes In 1781. FOR SALE FOR SALE Studio lounge. 844 Summit Avenue. (84 i FOR SALE. Kitchen cabinet. rnone macs aiu. tan FOR SALE. Complete household furnishings. 613 Sixth Avenue West. 179) FOR SALE. Double bed, spring and mattress, kitchen table, chairs. Kitchen equipment. Practically new. 1357 Overlook Street. (81) FOR SALE. 16 ft. cabin cruiser, 4 hp. Regal. Call Sgt. Pan-nucci, American Signals 478. (79) FOR SALE. Orthophoria Vlc-trola phonograph and records. Console model. Good as new. McBride and Fouth Ave after six o'clock evenings. 79) FOR SALE 2-room cabin; 20 minutes' walk from centre of city. $190 cash. Apply Cabin No. 6. Wantage Road. 179) FOR SALE 6-8 Easthope mar ine engine. Just overhauled. Apply 123 Taxi Stand. (79) FOR SALE Air Force couple being transferred will dispose of three-roomed furnished bungalow for quick cash sale. This house ideal for couple or small family. Apply in person after 5 p.m. to E. D. Collins, 161 Wantage Road. HELP WANTED WANTED Refined family wishes honest responsible woman j to mind two well behaved children 8 ajn. to 2 pjn. Light duties. Wases arranged. Prince Rupert Hotel, Room 41. (80) WANTED Local cafe wants clean respectable woman dishwasher. Hours S pjn. to 1 a.m. Apply Selective Service AF 116. (79) WANTED. Experienced miners for Northern Gold Mine. Apply SelecUve Service A.M. 110. WANTED. Men for underground work at northern gold mine. No experience necessary. Apply Selective Servlcs A.M. 111. (88) WANTED - Janitor and cham- ber maid fo: local hotel. Apply , Selective Service A.M. 115. i LOGGERS Two good sets ofl coast fallers, three men to t tn rw. n Don't apoly - unless ' your pro- 1 ductlon record Is good in coast timber. Camp Is on mainland close to Prince Rupert. Apply National Selective Service office. Pilnce Rupert, and refer, to advertisement number AN116. (IV LOST LOST. Black leather wallet with Nelson, BC. stamped on It, St. Patrick's Day. Contains money, leglstration card and personal papers. Reward. Finder please leave at Daily News. (81) LOST Man's glasses In tan leather case. Please leave at Dally News office, Urgently needed. (84) LOST Wallet, black leather with zipper. Contains identification card, pictures, and $35 cash. Phone Red 953. '80 LOST Black pocketbook.Identi-ficatlon Inside. Please leave at Dally News office. Reward. (81) TIMBER WANTED WANTED Cedar poles, piling, posts, all sizes. Quote prlcf f.o.b. shippinz point, earliest shipment. Niedermcyer-Mar-tln Co., Portland 4, Oregon. (83) PERSONAL FOR THE BEST In Painting and decorating Phone Blue 378. "We Can Satisfy." (89) PHOTOGRAPHERS We will purchase good quality photo - graphic negatives, size 2V4x 2V4 or larger of native1 scenic, game fishing, lumbering, boat ing, or oiner maustnai ac tlvltles in the Prince Rupert and Queen Charlotte Island Areas, black and white or Kodachrome. Please forward negatives to us for Inspection and we will advise you of Immediate acceptance or return same promptly. - Steffens-Colmer Limited, 560 Granville Street, Vancouver. B.C. (113) THE DAILY NEWS MONDAY. SURVIVORS (continued from page 1) from Goose Bay. In the mess that night they were plied with questions. They told how FJ Harland had charted a "spot-on" course for Goose Bay which found them, after the crash, within a quarter mile of his estimated position at the time they were , .. . . . They told how iced aerials and snow static rendered their radio useless; how the pilots had wrestled to keep the plunging, wallowing Liberator on its course when both starboard motors went dead; how they had peered anxiously through the blizzard's white pall for high hills ahead when visibility wenc down to half-a-mlle. S.L. Imrie was faced with the choice of landing on a lake or In the trees. Realizing the treacherous weakness of the thin Ice which tops the spring-fed waters of Labrador lakes. The decided to take his chances of setUng down the 27 tons of flying metal In the trees. F.O. Campbell and S.L. Imrie looked over two possible spots, warned all aboard to take up their crash positions, and SI Imrie headed for the one with the sparsest growth of scrub spruce and balsam. With a crash of splintering wood and rending metal, the giant aircraft struck. Because the two starboard motors were dead, the pilot came in with his right wing low. Striking a tree 18 inches in diameter, the Liberator spun completely around. The tall thudded against another large tree and broke off, hurling out Orlffln and Johns. DIVED INTO DEEP SNOW Unbuckling their safety belts. Imrie and Campbell dived ithrough the holes where their perspex side windows had been. Lunging through snow up to their armpits, they stiu?gted to reach the nre extinguishers carried on the oar is id of the aircraft. It wasn't necessary, however. The snow had put out the engine flames and S.L. Imrie had cut his switch Just before landing. They helped to haul F.L. Harland through a gash In the roof after he had taken off his j Ice -encrusted flying suit. They round P.O. Gllmour traDDcd agalnst hls radlo lnatalaUon by (eventually got off with OUmour ,h ,., .K,.u u-iianH Johnson. ,v " ' J wjy tu 1 Vfc W iliC Jl ildU I (broken loose and struck him a! heavy blow on the shoulder. ot r,"ln Johns, there, no 8l8n- Jt as they start- cd to attack the twisted turret wlth axes- heard a faint . . . a i m 1 tapplng, as of wood against the metal fuselage. Outside, beside the broken tall, they found a pair of fiy - ing boots upside down In the whom nad been wun Admiral snow, feebly pressing a balsam j Byrd at the South Pole. Making branch which, In turn, had'camP ,n mid-afternoon, the rattled on the fuselage. They i party reached Ooose Bay at pulled at the boots, but nothing gave. Dropping to their knees, 'all three burrowed like gophers with their gloved hands to claw '.away the snow. They rescued 'Johnny" Johns. "I couldn't :have lasted another minute," jsald Johnny. Then they returned to free "OH" from the fallen turret. Griffin, however, .wM beyond help. , They prepared to spend the night beside the plane. The temperature was falling to 41 below zero and Al and Doug each gave "Johnny" a flying glove to warm his frost-bitten hands. Johns had taken off his ! mitts tn rhance nvrr fnpl when the crash came and was flung Into the snow In his bare hands. They spread a red-and-whltc parachute beside the wreck to attract search planes, then built a fire. Under an up-tilted wing they tramped out a sleeping place and laid a layer of balsam boughs, a half dozen spare suits of flying clothing, three layers of silk parachutes, and greatcoats. They covered Gllmour and Johns, the two casualties, and huddled about them. Afraid the flames might Ignite the fuel tanks, still laden with 800 gallons of high-octane gasoline, they let the fire go out the first night. The temperature fell to 45 degrees and all were too cold land miserable to sleep They spent the next day Improving their shelter by carpeting it with flight maps and small sheepskin rugs they were bringing as souvenirs from Ice land, F.O. Campbell chopped wood and salvaged necessities from the aircraft. From metal covers of life raft canisters they made cooking tins, to melt snow water and to heat food. From twisted metal bomb doors they made a base for the wood fire, All took turns searching for the "Gibson Olrl" portable radio, which would have enabled them to communicate with Goose Bay or send out a continuous "S.O.S." in Morse but It was never found, though they ( aug in uic snow wun wooa ana bits of metaL They rationed their meagre supplies sparingly for three of the six emergency ration kits had been lost in the wreck. Each man was allotted three-quarters of a tin of corn cd beef, three squares of choco- . , .... i,,,,.. late, and three or four hard tack biscuits dally, this slender ration permitting a piece of meat about the size of a condensed beet cube for each of! two meals. Saturday night the mercury dropped to 55 below and only Johnny" was able to sleep. Watch was kept all night to stoke up the fire and pull covers over anyone who might doze off with an arm or leg outside. Sunday they tried to make snowshoes from the "catwalk" and cartridge belts but failed. "Johnny's" Idea of making them, Indian-fashion, from evergreen boughs and parachute cord, was successful and plans were made to make snowshoes for all later. They saw aircraft directly overhead Sunday, but It was so cold the Very pistol and marine signals failed to go off until the searchers had passed out of sight A brisk wind whisked away smoke signals as soon as they topped the trees. Cold Jammed their machine gun after two shots. On Monday morning they were found by a trapper, Jim Ooudle, who heard them chopping wood while touring his trapllnes. Carrying a letter from Imrie setting forth their position and the state of the crew, he set out on snowshoes for Goose Bay. He arrived there about the same time that an American DC-3 sighted their smoke signals and immense "SOS." on the nearby lake. Soon Oroup Captain Hanchet-Taylor and 81 Ross Robertson, medical officer, landed In a skl-equlpped Norseman with food, sleeping bags, and six thermos Jugs of steaming coffee. The sklls dug Into the treacherous, soggy snow and the rescuers, too. were marooned. But all knew rescue was Just a matter of time A Piper Cub flown by Americans was mired a day later, though it Imr,e Campbell and Harland al strong enough to make the Journey to Ooose Bay on foot and Friday morning the Httle party set off on snow U.S. Air Force dog teams 1 in m charge k mm r of t Captain P nlnln CM Ed, fitful Good-ale, of Ipswich, Mass.. and Mas- iter Sgt. Dick Moulton. of Wonal- 'ancct. New Hampshire, both of; noon Saturday. i ltil Kllocyclei CFPR SCHEDULE MONDAY VM. 4:00 Sound Off 4:15 O. I. Jive 4:30 To be announced 5:00 Peter and the Pygmies 5:15 To be announced 5:30 Personal Album 5:45 Melody Round-up 6:00 CBC News 6:05 Recorded Interlude 6:11 Are You b Genius? 6:30 Serenade In Rhythm 6:45 Ann Watt 7:00-Fred Waring and His Pcnnsylvanlans 7:15 Front Line Family 7:30 Music from the Pacific 8:00 Music from America 8:30 CBR Singers 9:00-Hlt Parade 9:30 Waltz Time 10:00 CBC News 10:05-Recorded Interlude 10:15 Yarns for Yanks 10 30 Great Music 10:45 Band Wagon 11:00 -Closlpg announcement TUESDAY KM. 7:30 Musical Clock 7:45 CBC News 7:50 Musical clock 8.30 Morning Devotions 8:45-singlng Strings 9:00 To be announced 9:15 Nelson Eddy 9:30 CBC News 0:35 Transcribed Varieties 10:00 Melody Time 10:30 Dick Todd 10:45 They Tell Me 11100-Scandlnavlan Melodies 11:15 Broadcast of Messages 11:17 Recorded Interlude ll:45-Dlck Lelbert I'.M 12:00 March Time 12:30 Spotlight Dands 12:45-CBC News 12:50 Recorded 1:00--One Night Stand 1 :30- -School Broadcast 2:00- -Silent TODAY AND TUESDAY Feature at 1:38, 3:40, 5;i NOW THE SCREEN TELLS YOU CRIMF'S uncr -CREGARW! . . . - I I jmm GEORGE 0BER0N- SANDERS (iNiuiT.roii -Hopeful Donkey Dog Sense" "Pitching In the Kitchen ",v"" ' "WHINS STOh IAIRD 1 , J I rrrT7TlTTrTnrr-n 1 SHOP AT THE SEVENTH AVE. MARKET 'The Friendly Store We handle HIGHEST QUALITY MEATS and VAN'S BREAD Also Fresh Fruit and Vegetables Oor Trices Are Right 1 only, EXTENSION TABLE. Keg. $6o.00. To clear 1 only, COFFEE TABLE. Reg. $20.00. To clear 2 TABLE LAMPS. ' Reg. $11.00. To clear 1 Large BOYS' WAGONS. Reg. $13.50. To clear ELI0 Furniture Store Third Avenue MittKi Lojin, Slft' fimtj home etono mut,ho wttVljr.wmime coolinj column; li a tcg-uhr fciturc of thi! pg. JLook. Co thtie tiluiblc hints cith MooJi 1 1 1 n 1 11 J .7 rn n tfMtrthUv Premium Ham! 1 'mTmucrmmr iHr v.an.Bir. If you aro planning to sorvo ham this Easter, be sura it's Swift's Premium Bacon and lum arc still urgently needed overseas, but due to the splendid production efforts of our farmers; there is more available thisscasonforliomeconsumption: Remember; tooj Swift's Premium Ham needs no paiJ boiling. Ic is at its most delicious ' baked in the oven 18 minutes per pound for a whole lum; 22 ' minutes for a halfj Remove the rind after baking, score, stick with cloves and glaze: Brown in hot oven; Sec panel for hints on mak ing die Hastcr decorationsj GARNISH nktttft HA FUK IOUK pm""- . I - iU. : -iinBt 10 mike ins e: I . .. t C It !"- Inches in ilia: : !: .MrMrrmunS IC Ul ft ....". 1,-L. by 'these !!'. NJg centres cut a rcanJih thick .licet hfn'gS attach with tttoilii Tou8chou.creeo.crn Inch high dwt "Jk. stems. Trlrrtho;roJ"gjte, we ucc iu'" carrots. . - - . . Tl SVV ' ( ANA A M 1 11. Ufl- 11 1 n..-n... n- t...... IlrnnknC"' iiKcrs tu 1 1 1:1111 11 in yuaiity iTOUUtisj . 1 Sllvericai