& X m ft at PAGE POUR - INCOME TAX - 1913 Income Returns to be filed on or before APRIL 30, 1941 .FORMS NOW AVAILABLE Prepared by R. E. MORTIMER 32 1 Second Avenue s, Phone 88 Cold Wave Coming Soon! We will be closed for one week while attending the demonstration for the new sensational COLD WAVE, a permanent without heat, pads, or machine. Watch for Itl SUNRISE BEAUTY SALON VIOLET MA 1 1 Cor. Cth Ave. and Fulton St. Fhone Blue 943 r HELP YOURSELF BY HELPING US if CENTS I CANADA I 1939 I Have Your Bus Fare Ready ! I When the driver must wait while you "fish" for a dime, passengers and bus are delayed several seconds. Multiply that few seconds of times that happens in the day and you have one reason why the bus is late. Let's keep it on time! ARROW BUS LINES Open Sewer Is Complained Of G. A. Olay. local superintendent of, the Canadian National Railways, had a request before th city council Monday night that some action toe taken to abate a health nuisance caused by open sewage running from First Avenue into a water course passing the railway shops and round house. The city engineer and health officer had agreed that it constituted a menace to the health of railway employees working nearby. As a means of removing the nuisance it is proposed that th railway company extend a pipe drain in the yards to the street boundaries whence the city could extend a connection. Hospital Made Good Last Year The annual meeting of the Prince Rupert General Hospital which was held last evening re ceive a very satisfactory financial statement for the year 1943, the feature of which was a surplus of revenue over expenditure of $25,140.16. The surplus is held due en tirely to extra revenue resulting from war conditions here. It will be of use In building up a reserve to take care of such exigencies as the purchase of the military hospital after thcwar, the making of necessary improvements. In creased overhead and payment for undelivered equipment. Farm Girl Does Man-Sized Job NEWCASTLE-ON-TYNE, Eng.. Feb. 23 VK 16-jrear old English girl, Dulcie Scott is running ar iO-acre Northumberland farm that has a herd of 19 dairy cat tle, seven calves, two horses, two pigs, and 50 chickens. Her only assistant is a 19-year old Land Army girl, who had lived In the city all her life. Here ts Dulcle's timetable: Up at 4.30 a.m.'. horses fed. birhs leaned, cows fed and milked, milk delivered to crossroads for pickup, calves, pigs and poultry fed before breakfast at 9 a.m. After that .said Dulcie. "The day's work begins." which in- v.- Make Way eaman to-dav gold braid to-morrow . . . that is the story of many a lad in Canada's growing navy. Every fighting officer in the R.C.N, to-day must start on the lower deck. Promotion depends on initiative, resourcefulness, intelligence and hard work. There are no short cuts. If a man "has the stuff", he can go right to the top. The whole fabric of Canadian life has been fashioned on this same principle. Any man is free to rise from the lower deck to leadership whatever his chosen field. How far he will go depends in large measure on the man himself. PRIVATE ENTERPRISE? It is the natural desire to make your own way, as far as your ability will take you; an instinct that has brought to this continent the highest standard of life enjoyed by any people on earth. It is the spirit of democracy on the march. THE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA THE DAILY NCTTS OPKN FOR ItrsiNCSS- -Here Is a VW.CA proleri In full swine While Mrs. Gordon Miller upena-e Larv-p Corporal Pat Fall-well of Lethbrldge. Alta . Canadian Women's Army Corps and Leading Airwoman Ethel Schmaus Edmonton. Women's Division, R.C-A.F.. sign in at the New Blue Triangle Recreation and Leave Centre at Calgary. Alberta. These two attractive young women members of the Canadian Armed Forces are looking forward to their stay, short a- It Is. at this service "hotel." c'udes plowing, cleaning milking machines, taking animals and produce to market and other routine farm chores. reeatin? the mornings schedule at 3 p.m. Edward Innes Of Kitkatla Passes Away Edward Innes. prominent young man of the native village of Kitkatla. passed away there at 8 o'clock Tuesday evening following a brief Illness with Influenza. He was very active jn community life and was secretary of the town council,' commanding officer of the Pacific Coast Rangers and chairman of the Easter Celebration Commlt-tee.Recently he had been employed In Prince Rupert as a carpenter. Deceased was born at Kitkatla 25 years aso. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Innes. HU parents survive as well as his wife and one child and two brothers Lawrence and Rufus Innes and two sisters, Clara and Wllma Innes. The funeral will take place at KltkaUa on Friday. Here and There ! BITER'S FINE RECORD A BRITISH PORT . In ! eight months of Atlantic convoy work not a single merchant ship j under protection of UMS. Biter has been sunk. The Biter one of ( the first "Woolworth" ; escort carriers in action, has steamed i more than 45.000 miles since last April. RECALLS AIR HONKER LONDON O i An Auster airplane used for artillery spotting was presenttd to the R.A.F. by Mrs. Will Oordon In memory of her brother, Capt. Bertram Dick son, pioneer airman of thirty years ago and believed to be the first man to have flown in British army manoeuvres. BIRDS RUN FROM DANGER When threatened with danger, ground nesting birds run rather than fly. SECOND IjARGKST Canada now has the second largest diplomatic corps among British countries. NAVY EXPANDS The Royal Canadian Navy, consisting at the outbreak of war of 11 ships and 1,700 men, now numbers more than 74.OQ0 men and COO ships. Four Years Ago In This War Feb. 23, 1940 V Husslans gained ground In drive on Vll purl. Leslie Hore-Bellsha, for mer British war secretary, urg ed war against Russia, Two U boats reported sunk by R-A-F. Briefs From Britain FLINT. Wales, O -Nearly 500 factory workers of Courtaulds. Ltd.. between 14 and 18 are attending a school here with all expenses and full wage paid by their employers. Subjects tang ; from current a Ha Irs and cittern -ship to metal work.' woodwork and cookery. GLASGOW 9 Sir William Burrell, 82-year-old trustee of the National Oallery of Scotland, jhas offered" his art treasu.es. valued at $4,500,000. as a gift ' to the city of Glasgow. Sir William was for many years a member of a Glasgow shipping firm. LONDON O The famous Crondall "Hoard" of 92 lots of Saxon and Merovingian oottis. from the collection or the late Lord Orantlcy, of Old Windsor, was sold at auction to an unnamed buyer for $8,100. AMERSHAM, England O Fit. Lt. T. R. Bumc. A.F.C.. who kwt a leg in the Far Eastern fighting, is flying again in defence of England. The 23-year-old flier's leg was amputated In 1943 after his aircraft had been bomben by the Japanese at Sumatra. LONDON. O" A charge by Pte. Sheila Bahd of the A.TJ5. that the was slipped In the face led to a court-martial of Staff Sgt. Judith Bridge who was found not guilty of conduct prejudicial to good order and military BRISTOL. England V An R.S.P.C.A. Inspector, a police sergeant and a railway Intpector risked their lives to find a horse which disappeared into a 100-ft. pit caused by. subsidence In a field here. Despite the danger of new falls, they climbed down lashed ladders and found the animal with its neck broken. LONDON O Lord Normandy, taken prisoner in France ami repatriated last November, has been appointed parliamentary private secretary to Viscount Cranborne, the Dominions NOTTINGHAM, England Street transport here was at a standstill for four hours when transport employees stoppd work to attend the funeral of a driver. Harry Hart, who committed suicide after being convicted of dangerous driving and losln? his Job. Tests have shown that fluorine, In the proportion of one part to a million parts of water, builds long-term resistance to decay In the teeth of children. Mark every grave while you have the opportunity. They deserve It. See National iMonuincnts C02 5th East Box 1125 Station It Prince Rupert, B.C, Nurses Offer Miners Help LONDON. Feb. 23 r - British nurses, already burdened with wartime duties have volunteered to do thrlr part to help hard pressed coal miners. The Royal College of Nursing i approached the Minister of Vurl ! and lwer with the offer to e-' tabltah a nursing advisory committee for the coal mines. The nurses volunteered for duty the coal face underground first ud pasts as well as the pit sur-fji'e stations. It would Improve health eon V ions of the miners and protect he i.ew mining recruits by ad- . them on health promotion mr-a-ures such as proper diet " iaid a nurse spokesman. CANADA STANDS FOl'RTII Canada stands fourth amon he United Nations as a produ-pr of wu .supplies, overshadowed inlv bv the United 8tatev Rum'.i ir.d the United Kingdom i:i:n r.ri: oiiioin All official documents form"--ly were bound with red tape, giving rise to the popular x prexxton for tedious official procedure. Aavertue In the Dailr News WOMEN ON TRtm OWN An Ati.st'.allan sheep ranch in r Armldale, New South wales, u i . . ,i.t i. d entirely by women. the better breakfast and he'll do a belter war job ! ft SOU V fWi': ' i i , "V. . i -. I:..j: THE ORDER OF ST. JO Jill? v8w SERVINGUMANIT Since 1099 A.D. The Venerable Order of St. John is the oldest Order of Chivalry in the world. In 1()'J9 A.I), members restored the old hospital of St. John in Jerusalem and provided a body of men, called the Druthers of the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem, to attend the sick. Later, the Order became a fighting Urothcrhood and consisted of Knights to defend the Hospital and the sick, as well as Druthers to nurse them. Always the Order lived up to its muttu "Pro Utilitate llomhium" for the service of mankind. Today the Order of St. John, which controls the St. John Ambujj Association and Brigade, sllli ; humanity. Through the Aj' it teaches the science of Ffst Home Nursing; through the M its members put this instruct i practical use rendering a f'r ' and Nursing Service ihroj Canada and the Dritish EmP Wartime has brought fT wide Per further Informq. Ilwi, gl In touch with your Sf. John Amtwlorx Aitotlo-Hen Branch or Brl-god DWlilonj or writ Ceminandtry HtadquarUu, 321 Otapl St., Ottawa, Ontario. expansion acti ivitics. Hut when r win- comes tins grc-i j go un, as it has for n rlintnatu! vcars.fof"" , ot M. jonn is un serving humanity. glsSsfoctnti'ou nub JJn'pbc m (tIPPnDT TUC orn ronre Mimiinu .... ..... rroVlCE mil nuu nu wmriun in wmurl Wt SHARE UNUtK WAn tn-