aiiuIII CAVF UU I! ill y 11. you buy your clothes from us. nYS' LONG PANTS Cot-J"orited wool., Well .jo Per pair SL50 10 $4.25 nrs. SWEATERS -PuU- ?S mixtures. Big selec- - C r W "W 1 Jin- ...mttEN'S LONG ...... cni in PHRfiK WIND- ,.J ! - rpu I'm 'Jill n t n'TC All lrlnrt r fn 4U C CII -..orrif 1C! TITC Riff StltLHUIi 50c to $i.au . m a p IL.i J iv - JJUUUU' "-t all II MJ A 1 sizes, ran $1.50 to $1.75 MILS' HOUSE SLIPPERS h sizes. New wedge ri. T ,Ji A Third Avenue just West of Sixth Street RED CROSS SHIPMENT Knitting, Hospital Supplies and Sewing Dispatched This Week The following shipment was made this week from the local Red Cross workroom to provincial headquarters In Vancouver: Service Knitting 1 turtle neck sweater, 5 pairs service socks. Civilian Knitting 25 chil dren's sweaters, 37 pairs children's socks, 1 boy's cap, 22 baby vests, 25 baby vests, 25 baby Jackets, 2 baby bonnets, 3 soakers, 2 pairs bootees. Hospital Supplies 75 towels, 30 wash cloths. Civilian Sewing 20 infant's sleeping bags, 2 baby blankets, 1 baby Jacket, 5 children's com- bies, 2 pantie dresses, 2 pairs boy's shorts, 3 women's blouses, 1 pair pajama, 6 women's gowns, 7 crib quilts. 50 baby diapers, 15 pairs girls knickers. Y.W.C.A. Representative Leaves Prince Rupert Mrs.. Helen Ferguson, Y.W.C.A. war services representative In Prince Rupert, left last night for her home in Toronto. Mrs. Ferguson, who has represented the Y.W.C.A. here since May, earned her popularity Justly with her readiness to help and her gracious and friendly personality. Her special duties Included room registry for service personnel, a club for service men's wives and supervision of hostesses for service men's dances. She will be missed by the members of the Y.M.C.A. staff who will now be carrying on her lob and by her many friends both in the services and among the residents of Prince Rupert, " .'A T vniinil Till? ;Iinirm.A 111 l"v "Vi fabric of cimlfeation It is a proud and difficult parf. aladifycanT07intkfTears as you have to cornf sq 3XJY MORE Four Tenders For Peace River Road VICTORIA, Nov. 3 Four tenders for reconstruction of the 26-mile section of the highway to the Peace River Highway between Prince George and Summit Lake have been opened. They vary from $418,085 to $437,047. NEW HAZELTON The Omlneca Herald says that, if the Canadian National Railway is to maintain any passen ger traffic on its northern line to Prince Rupert, it must give definitely better service. "The trains must have at least some cars of comfortable and modern type. The trains must do better than 22 miles pere hour. The trains must leave Prince Rupert at a time to' give travellers the benefit of the scenery along the Skeena and Bulkley rivers. The cost of train travel must be brought In line with car travel." Miss M. E. Campbell R.N., formerly lady superintendent of the Hazelton Hospital, Is now at Patricia Bay with the Royal Canadian Air Force after having spent most of the past summer on the Queen Charlotte Islands. Roger Walsh, son of Thomas Walsh,-'pioneer telegraph opera tor of this district, has Joined the staff of the Wew Hazelton rail way station. EFFICIENCY PLUS DAR-ES -SALAAM tf East Africa Military Records Finger prints Bureau is described as i miracle of simplicity. Giving a press Interview, an officer called a native soldier who happened to be passing in the street. His fingerprints were taken, and within five minutes the soldier was told his name. age. unit home village and other details VICTORY NORWAY DETERMINED (Continued from Page 1) they were with the Norwegian embassy, is still classed as secret, both girls said firmly. Miss Munthe, whose home Is at Tronheiin, -saw tier rather taken as a hostage into Germany, and her home occupied by the Germans. She herself was arrested by the Gestapo and later released. She finally es caped to Sweden last November by a fish boat which travelled down the, Norwegian coast to a Swedish port. "Whenever a German boat came alongside the skipper would be pulling on a net and I would be cleaning fish," she said in recounting her escape. Effective Underground Her, father spent ji year as a hostage in Norway and was later re-arrested and taken to Germany.' So effective was the intelligence of the Norwegian underground that Mr. Munthe knew of his daughter's brief arrest in Tronhelm within a few hours, although he was In Ger many. "Communications were organ ized so that everybody in the underground knew what was going on," she said. Attached to Quisling's Camp On her return to Norway after the German defeat, Miss Munthe was attached to an Oslo prison where Vidkun Quisling, Norway's arch-traitor was Imprisoned. Miss Haraldsen was taken by the Gestapo In 1943" and Im prisoned in Grinl concentration camp for six weeks. In the camp were 150 women and 3,000 men. "I was treated Just like the rest," ,she said. "When they could not get any information from me they let me go." Last December the Gestapo developed an uncomfortable In VJ,AU5CH Bos terest in her again and her compatriots spirited her to Sweden. With-other escapees she rode In a box. car from Oslo to Kon-gsvinger then walked for 27 hours to Charlottensberg In Sweden. In the Orini concentration camp. Miss Haraldsen said, the prisoners had radios, and even a transmitter which could broadcast, to Britain right under tne noses of the German guards. One man, a dental mechanic built a small radio into a set of false teeth. In Sweden, Miss Haraldsen worked In tne otfice. of Col. Bernt Balchen, noted Norwegian military flier, who was engaged in ferrying supplies by air to Norwegian troops fighting in far-florth Finnmark, wnere a brother of Miss Haraldsen was fighting. Both girls left Norway for this continent on the Norwegian ship Stavengerfjord, on October 12, landing in New York. Alter a brief stop In the eastern Metropolis they came directly to Prince Rupert. New York is "too big and too fast for us, but we had a splen-idl time," Miss Haraldsen said. Canada, she added, Is more friendly. Both girls speak clear but halting English, having been taught the language in school They relish Canadian food, par ticularly ice cream. Chewing gum rank3 near the top for them, as it does with almost everyone in Norway, particularly the youngsters. During the occupation, Miss Munthe said, Norwegians grew tobacco in their gardens. Miss Munthe smoked It in a pipe. "There was no other way to smoke it. Cigarette papers could not be had," she declared. Both girls will remain here as guests of Dr. and Mrs. Munthe for the next six months, or possibly longer. W. L. COATES IS NOW ON LEAVE Retiring C.P.R. Agent Has Been in Company's Service Thirty Years Although his retirement does not become effective until December 1. William L. CoatMs, for the past 14 years general, agent for Canadian Pacific B. C. Coast Steamship services in Prince Rupert, Is spending his last month of service with the company on leave. The office which he has managed .iere since 1931 is now In charge of Peter A. Hole, another veteran of the B.C. Coast Steamships purser service, who has been appointed to replace Mr. Coates. After having been identified with the hotel business at Stewart for a time, Mr. Coates Joined the company's purser department in 1915 In Victoria and from that time until 1942 he served on practically every C.P.R. boat on the coast, being particularly well known In Prince Ru- nprt. as mirser on the Alaska i boats. In 1924 he was appointed agent at Juneail, Alaska, where he served until 1931 when he came to Prince Rupert as general agent. The company office at that time was at the corner of Third Ave. and Fourth St. in the building which it occupied from the time the office opened In 1914 until It was transferred into Its present -quarters in the Klllas and Christopher building last year. During his residence here Mr. Coates has been an active mem ber of the Prince Rupert Rotary Club, serving as secretary from 1932 to 1937 and from 1939 to 1942. He was president of the club for the year 1937-38, and at present Is a member of the board of directors. He plans sometime to make his WW fiemm mi prince 'Rupert .ibafig J3ctos Saturday, November 3, 1943 Modern Etiquette By ROBERTA LEE Q. Isn't it all right for a man to offer his hand when being Introduced to a girl? A. Not unless the girl offers her hand first; then he should be quick to respond. Q. When a woman Is dinner- dancing at a hotel, should she check her wrap? A. She may leave it on the back of her chair if she wishes. Q. What gifts are appropriate for the fiftieth wedding anni versary? A. Gold. home at Victoria but his Immediate future, he admits, Is a bit Indefinite. Christmas Cards "If only I could find something really special in Christmas Cards! ..." Is that what you're what you're wishing nf r.mirts Christmas colorful designs to also printed special. m .3 FLAGS FOR CATHEDRAL EDINBURGH 0 A battlc-worn white ensign which flew at the mainmast of H.M.S. War- spite during the Battle of Mata- pan and the red ensign flown by the Queen Elizabeth on her wartime voyages have been presented to St. Giles Cathedral. ASTHMA From all over Canada and the US.A. come glowing reports of quick relief with "Davis' Asthma Remedy No. 7895." Oet It. together with diet sheets, at any Edmonton Drug Store. Three weeks supply (3.0O. ECZEMA For adult or baby, don't miss this 'Davis' Pruritus Cream," grease less, stainless, odorless and Immediately effective. To try it Is to boost it. 60c, 11.00. 1.65. 111!: paying? You'll find just i for in our new selection i Cards. So many clever,! choose from. Open stock i See tnem today ai 9.18