V t k PAOETWO THE DAILY NEWS PRINCE RUPERT. BRITISH COLUMBIA iTIfublbhecl Every Afternoon Except Sunday by Prince Sylv "-f Rupert Dally News Limited, Third Avenue O. A. HUNTER, MANAGING. EDITOR Funerai Flowers. Der Name ;istfle,cl, 2c per word, per insertion, minimum . Transient, per Inch - Contract, per inch Rttters, per line . , BlfcKTace Readers, per line . ; Biiilne&s and Professional Cards inserted daily, per month, per inch sfSTT 8 Columns, 12 ems. 287 Lines to Column. jTWw SUBSCRIPTION RATES $3.75 ide in with Hitler when his tide was mnninp; more trongly and favorably than it is today. Relax for Health j Proper rest helps to keep one on the job. It conserves enercv. It enables one to concentrate on hard work. Edison is supposed to have gone on and on jvui us e.xpei linen is, yet seeping very uiue. cmsun may-never have sle)t very long. He certainly slept J.ri u i i .. i . i.!.. es: a tt IT'S .MUSIC TO OUR BARS . . . To hear people praising the Variety Store. They like our tremendous selection of merchandise and our service. It makes us really proud to know that the people of Prince Rupert can buy "with confidence and satisfaction here. THE VARIETY STORE It Pays to Advertise in The Daily News ACTIVITIES OF Y.M.CA. and Y.W.C.A. (By DOROTHY OARBUTT When the Scottish 'were here about two years ago a couple of the boys redecorated the Pres- MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS i"' "l JSl and ,n " a -Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to u.e for public- itlm' fd?in V credited to the 8reat many mends, bo I Know tloTTafall news despatches It or to Associated Pre&ittrthls paper and also the local news published therein. those who remember Bob Terry. jMlvTjghts of republication of special despatches therein are jone of the helpers, will be Blsns-reserved. pleased to hear that he had a Sri. ADVERTISING RATES : small son born on December 29. Detv Funeral, In Memoriam, Engagement and Wedding Bob is overseas now but I can Notices. Card of Thanks $2.00 imagine that he's a pretty proud BlrJ Notices .50. father. Another new service '"jbaby is a small son born to Mr. 75 ! and Mrs. L. E Koob on Febru-.50 lary 19. Master Koob"s name had .25 'not been selected at the time 50 Mrs. Mitchell left the news with ;me but he weighed eight pounds il3lj ounces when born. His 'father is Corporal Leo Edward iKoob who Is on active service BkXL Carrier, week -" -15 ln Uie Pacific with the Ame,-!-; P3Year - -- - $700 jean Engineers and his mother -Fr?.:- ISlIs from Winnipeg. oy-Riau, per aiuuui JEST.Year rite other day I went acnM EDITION Friday, March 3. 1914 Finland's Unhappy Lot . . . the street to see the new Salvation Army Hostel. They have enlarged their premises to in- i elude a lunch room with ten ; tables, a very modern and well equipped kitchen and writing ! j and sitting rooms for the boys. ; iThev can accommodate about! Finand is on the spot and, no matter what hap- .Ared "d '"ty;IraS .. , , 1 , . . u li i -i In the new quarters and about pens now, it would appear almost inevitable that she thjrtT.e!ght ln the cid an(1 must become another bloody battlefield something many is the week-end they are like Italy has become as a result of having chosen to fined to overflowing with the co-operate with Nazi German)! jit the -time when AX?wS,nenmael t..,1 , - . .. n ies. Adjutant Brunsaen carries Hitler well the to -conquer all appeared on way on as pcrviW)r u1th a sUrf of Europe in quick order. ! twelve workers. Mrs. Edgar, who main difficulty in the way of a peace between Finfefld and Russia, which may yet be negotiated, itne new piace nnd uk deep apjgnrs to be the disposition of some 100,000 Nazi; interest in an its activities, soldiers now in that country. Their delivery to Hus- The lounge rooms are mast at-sia-iTdemanded in the peace terms laid down to i1;? , and settees and homelike with Fonland by 4l the Soviet. 0 It is hardly to be suppoed i pIants are findlng tkeefr-Nazis would be allowed to capitulate Without !that a lot of boys are coming a fifjht. ln from Points down the line! -:Jhe lot of Finland is todav an unhappy one as '01" thfir -eighu. Adjutant . . . . .Hriini1nn nv an tnnn o nil appears to be that of every nation which chose to the blte and pleces of last minute settling down are done they will have a formal open-i inff. But he looked so worried ' that I suggested he dispense with that formality and Just carry on with the very splendid service he is giving. MIDLANDS Flying Officer Douglas Campbell, pieviously reported missing alter air operations overseas winir.iie iiitii it i-ui in iiis unite iui cu nu )i. n has h.. rmv,r, f. itl ,. ,v. wwked, rested, worked. President Roosevelt does j son of Mrs. Maude Campbell, f he same today. So, probably, does anyone who gets ( of cobourg. lot of work without jhrough a fatigue. objective forcobourg and th ' The heart is a good illustration. It works, rests. I Lll& in lhb$ , Red Cross drive which began last i 't. t. il i i i i jvorks, rests. A definite rhythm can be applied to al- week is 510.000. most any kind of job with good results. One can vary! the pace. One can lean back and stretch, get up and stroll-around, pause for a glass of milk or a snack. i And it's the same with exercise. Mild exercise is good for most people. Strenuous exercise is good for foine-but all exercise should be followed by proper j-esf and light nourishment. j Let yourself go relax. You've heard that a million times, but it's an art worth learning, especially us me icjiipo ui wartime living increases. Gunner George Hircock. Spencer Street, had his hand burned while in action In Italy. telaUves in Cobourg learned recently Gunner Hircock enlisted with the 347th Battery. On his way to the Cobourg General Hospital to attend a patient. Dr. Edgar Hayden skidded into the side of a car driven by Roy Cox of Myrtle Station. Both cars were badly damaged and Cox received a fractured leg. Unit in Ordnance Group Falcons had been considered a clneh to cop the title. The engineers won the best-of-three series 2-1 and 5-3 and advanced into the play-downs for the Army crown. The team's newcomers, who had their skates on slmoat as they stepped from the boat, were-Ca.pt. Do: die Pouter of Maple Creek. &sk.. and Ueut. Gordle Bruce of Ottawa. Poirlor playea wtth Msstfrtal CftiMdketM and was a member of Ottawa Com-aacwdo wtien they won the Allan Cup last season. Brnee was with Boston Bruins ln 1941 two assists on two of three goals scored by Lieut. G. N. Hall of Winnipeg. Pte. H. W. Proulx of Edmonton sooreti .wtce Lieut. Lex Chtshotnv of Ofhawa. Ont.. former Toronto Msple Leaf tallied for the star-studded Falcons who didn't lose I ' a game during the regular schedule. Another Oshawa product who played for the EngHsh Olympic team before the wan i Lieut. J. (Chappyt ChappeD Ranged In two. Oiher Falcon players included Pte. Vlnce Oer-Tann of Regina. formerly of i Hershey Bears and New Yoik ' Rovers; Pte. J. B. Brown of Medicine Hat. Alto., once of Ktmberley Dinamiters, and Lieut Oeorge Hood of Oananoqae. lit.. Queen's University and i Kingston Hockey Club. i Ton-notch soccer dabs in ' Canada are represented n Uw ; line-up of an oidnance reinforcement unit team whteh 1 holds the area league lead ln Britain. In. twelve games sine-the season opened last October. ; the team has scored 82 gea's and has been scored upon only six times. Among the football ers are GSM. v. J. Walker of : Montreal, who played with Royal Victoria Hospital ln Montreal , and Dome Miners; GSM. T Tur-; ley of Montreal Carsteels. Royai Victoria Hospital and Macln-tyie Falconbridge Mines; Pte. T. A. Williams. Montreal, Royal Victoria Hospital and Klrkland Lake; L.Corp. Bob Weir. Toronto Scottish and Encalnd United: SQMS. W T. Smith. Toronto Levers; Pte. A. L Bruce of Winnipeg. United Weston and Dome Miners; Cpl. C. R Camp-"-11 Retina Thistles, and Pte. '. J. R. Whent. Vancouver St. Saviours and Boeing. After 83 contestants had played more than 500 games. Bdr. H. J. Ward of Vancouver emerged as winner of a Canadian Army area table tennis championship , His finalist opponent was L. Cjft. M. Chudnofskl of Montreal. ! Tuberculosis mortality is much higher among males than Dibb Printing Company OFFICE SUPPLIES PRINTING BOOKBINDING STATIONERY INK Til I) AY AND EVERYDAY CARDS WATERMAN'S FOUNTAIN PENS Besncr Block, 3rd Street Phone 234 ! Coal Orders We can now deliver your coal orders. Please , give us three days warning before delivery ex- , peeled. 1 ALBERT & McCAFFERY LTD. PHONE 116 and 117 THE DAILY NEWS Alberta Couple y ni c n tuuvu iiw w Aided by a couple of profes- "h ls K,!!c1hlor ""1 ...,?..:. naA, tn llecome, Uride of l.loyrt SllUttlS JUBl Win HOTII a team of engineers upset tall-bird calculations by winning the hockey championship of the Canadian Army Reinforcements Walker, I-ocal Dry ployee. The marriage Britain. The victims evening at the Dock Km- took place last parsonage of Mrat United Church. Rev. Jamea A. Donnell officiating, of Miss Margaret Ellsabetti Klnch. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Kinch of Edmonton, to Lloyd Irwin Walker, son of Mr. and . Mrs. Arthur Walker of Fort Sakjithewan. Alberta. The ceremony took ptef In the presence of a Tew Immediate friends of the contracting couple and the witnesses were Oscar Besalre and Miss Mary Dakus. The couple will reside on Plf-Kott Avenue. The groom Is em ployed at tlie local dry dock. and later Joined the Comman- The bride arrived Just dos. Polrier. de?ite the usual from Edmonton. problem of fitting Immediately Into combination, gained a team trtunrtv n rw recently Philip Oardner of the Royal Tank i Regiment, who was London's first V.C. of the war. has been reported safe in neutral territory He had been a prisoner of the Italians and Oermans since July. 1942. and escaped recently. CFPR 1210 Kilocycles scur.miM: FRIDAY lM. 4:00 Sound off 4:15-0. I. Jive 4:30 Rebroadcast Ding Crosby 5:00- Dinah Shore 5:30 Personal Album 5:46 Melody Round-up 6:00-CBC News 6:04 Recorded Interlude 0:15- Sports Interviews 6:30 Canadian Pattern 8:45- To be announced 7:00- Aldrlch Family 7:30-John Charles Thomas 8:00 Itabelle McBwen Bints 8:15 Front Line Family . 1:30 Information Please D O Morgan and Brtee 9 30 9 30 Nocturne 10.00-CBC News 10:0ft-Recorded Interlude 10:1ft Yarns for Yanks 10:30 Drama From Vancouver 11:00-Silent SATURDAY A.M. 7:30- Musical Clock 7:4ft-CBC News 7:S0Musicai Clock 8:30 Morning Devotions 8:4ft Old Timers 9:00 Musette Tune 9:30-CBC News Rebroadcast 9:35 Transcribed Varieties 10:00 Children's scrapbook 10:30 lUnk Yodellng Cowboy 10.45 - Music by Herbert offerers of Pit INI! ln.t n Ftw Dtopi Rtlitct StafUntu.. Mole Brtath'mg Easier.. Give You CWort It's lirsnd how Vkks Vs-tro-nol dciri cr-ntl v Kcsult arc o pxxl hrcauie Va-tro4K l U mcdicatkm that works right where trov' t ts b. licve painful mnjtion anj make brcathin r- T... 1. .. I . i. ltr' I IV H II Itw UlUlt Ul IUUI IWi tril-foHow directions in folder. VA'TRlV 11:00 Scandinavian Melodies 11:15 Broadcast of Messages U: 17 -Recorded InUrlitde ll;4S Clwirles Magnante VM. ll.OO-Bhep Fields irJO-fipoUlglU Band 12:45CUC News li:0 Resnrded Interlude 11:3ft Program Resume 1:00 One Night Bland 1:30 Hit parade. 8:90 Closing announcement SOLVE .MEAT RATIONING Ytasts of high ifntHU taloe and meat-lilt fiaew have been developed as paaatUt Matan food. .Mill 1' in , miiuiti C.i of W lf.:c miiv C'onsu: lurh for : pri . i 115 liiri-r lsncf . f 8 H A Lift mi difh mailer for from the heart . . . means life to the wounded! Like many another he fought the good fight on the field now he fights for his Jifc in a field hospital. An immediate blood transfusion ofTcrs his only chance. Jhank God for the Red Cross which " puts the vital blood scrum in the army doctors' hands . . . saving countless precious lives. . But from the expanding battle zones comes the urgent call for MORE blood serum. Volunteer Donors stand rcail)'10 donate their blood. But the Red Cros! must have YOUR FINANCIAL AID'0 equip and maintain the necessary Wood Donor Clinics across the Country. Donors must be backed by Money Dono Give generously a gift from the hcrt means life to the wounded. BLOOD DONORS MUST DE BACKED BY MONEY DONORS as GKU