i m f 1" 3 PAGE FOUB 5 i Expert OPTICAL SERVICE Chas. Dodimcad Optometrist in Charge Watch, Clock, Jewelry Repairing, Hand Engraving VISIT OUR BASEMENT LORE for Fine China, Dinnerwarc, Glasses, Baggage and Novelties MAX HEILBRONER Jeweler Diamond Merchant THOSE SHOES YOU WANT I You'll See Them At THE CUT RATE SMART BOUDOIR SLIPPERS Try Our New PERM Because all the latest women's shoes are, always arriving at the CUT RATE, you're bound to see those shoes you want. Stop In any day. Pumps and Ties-Sport and Dress Shoes they're all here. All sizes and widths. . jl The largest selection of Moccasin Slippers In the city, jl Also all the new leather and cloth bedroom slippers. Ij MAIL ORDERS PROJIPTLY FILLED I Cut Rate Shoe Store 506 THIRD AVENUE WEST (Across from Ormc's Drug) VW.V.VAVAVWAV.VW.'rtVAV.V.V.'.V.W FLOOR COVERINGS For your Floor Covering Requirements visit Elio's Furniture Store, next to the Dally News on Third Avenue. Elio's have a tremedously large stock of Seamless Ax-minster Carpets, Congoleum Gold Seal Rugs, Inlaid Marbo-leum, Feltol, Rexoleum, six feet wide. Elio's enormous turnover in Floor Coverings for years gives you better choice at money saving prices. Buy War Savings Stamps at Elio's. Saleslady to servs you. Just say: "My change in War Savings Stamps." ELI0 FURNITURE STORE Third Avenue (Next to Daily News) Prince Rupert A, LADIES' 'Gionella' Dress Shoes In Brown Suede, Brown, Crush Kid, Brown Calf, Black Softie Calf, Black Suede in low, spike and cuban heels. High styled lines to suit any taste and priced to suit any MEN'S "PALMERS" MOOSE HEAD WORKING BOOTS in 6" and 8". Just arrived. Family Shoe Store Ltd. tt The Home of Good Shoes' WAVE for lustrous beauty that can't be beat ANNETTE POWELL BEAUTY SHOPPE Fourth Street across from Post Office Phone Blue 917 for Appointment CFPlR (1210 Kilocycles) Schedule FRIDAY P.M. 4:00 Folk Music 4:15 Henry King's Orchestra 4:30 Novelesque 4:45 Comrades in Arms 5:00 Personal Album 5:30 Classics In Cameo 6:00 CBC News 6:05 Recorded Interlude 6:15 Comrades in Arms 7:00 Aldrich Family 7:30 Kate Smith 8:00 Fred Waring 8:15 Front Line Family 8:30 Sound Off 8:45 Are You a Genius? 9:00 Drama 9:30 Words and Music 10:00 CBC News 10:05 Fish Arrivals 10:10 Recorded Interlude 10:15 G. I. Jive 10:30 Spotlight Bands 10:45 Stirling Young's Orch. 11:00 Silent SATURDAY A.M. 7:30 Musical Clock 7:45 CBC News 7:50 Musical Clock 8:30 Morning Devotions 8:45 Singing Strings 9:00 Operatic Gems 9:30 CBC News Rebxoadcast 9:35 Transcribed Varieties 10:00 Junior Olympic Choir Time 10:30 Wilf Carter 10:45 Music In Three Quarter 1 1 :00 Scandinavian Melodies 11:15 Broadcast of Messages J 1:17 Recorded Interlude 11:30 Petit Concert P.M. 12:00 Luncheon Music 12:30 Rebroadcast of Used Show 12:45 CBC News 12:50 Recorded Interlude 12:55 Program Resume 1:00 One o'clock Musicale 1:30 Rebroadcast of Used Show 2:00 Silent Local Tides Saturday, July 24 High 6:50 19:28 Low - 0:40 12:44 16.9 feet 18.8 feet 6.3 feet 6.6 feet In the Suprrinr Court of ItrltMl Columbia In Probate III the Matter of the "Administration Art" and In tlip Matter or the Kstale of Cora ' Mizabrth Itlack, Dim cased TAKE NOTICE that bv order ol THE DAILY HEWS FRIDAY FRONT LINE GENERALS LIEUT.-GENERAL E. W. SANSOM By DOUG HOW " (Canadian Press Staff Writer) To the "little men" in the field with the Canadian Armored Corps, Lt.-Gen. Ernest William Sansom is a mysterious as any general yet far more human than most. The troop know him as the big rotund man, usually in serge, who inspects them on. ceremonial .occasions with a twinkle in his penetrating eye, a quick smile, a broad knowledge. , They hear he is noted as a tactician. They see him on schemes, smoking endlessly, prying and querying. When he left the headquarters of an armored, division In Britain, a regretful captain on his staff paid his this compliment: "There goes ah enthusiast and the kind of a man who makes everyone under him an enthusiast, too. I don't envy his successor. The boots he has to fill are mighty big." The fighting New Brunswicker left his armored division early in 1943 to command an armored corps. He is the man who, by virtue of his post, is Canada's No. 1 exponent of armored war fare. Under him are two divisions, one he molded himself, the other under Ma .-Gen. F. F. Worthington, like himself esteemed for tank work. Born at Stanley, N.B., Dec. 18, 1890, and educated there and at Frederlcton, he was com missioned in the 71st Militia Regiment at 17 and went over seas as a lieutenant with the 12th Battalion. C.E.F.. in the First Great War. He finished that war as a lieutenant-colonel commanding the 1st Machine Gun Battalion. He had won the D.S.O. and been mentioned In dispatches. Since 1920 fie has been a permanent force officer, doing in peace time a typical round of jobs- of a senior regular officer. When war broke out, he was Director of- Military. Training at Ottawa. He was made Assistant Adjutant and the Quartermas ter-General of the 1st Division and sailed with it to Britain in 1939. Trondheim Plan When Gen. Sansom was just a colonel, in April, 1940, he was His Honor w. e. Fish-, made on ! in the post of leading the Can-the 13Uh day of July, AX. 1943. lLji.n, . aaians in in wnat wnat miaht nugnt have nave nmintnrt Artminiutrw f i Estate of Cora Elizabeth Black, de-1 been their first battle in the ceased, and aU paHUes having Kprnnri Great War. A Canadian claims against the avid estate are,... . .., .(j 1 Slated brigade was heratw required to furnish same. properly vertliod, to me on or about the 15tih day of August A. TJ. 1943, and all parties indebted to the estate are required to pay the amount of their Indebtedness to me forthwith. DATED at Prince Rupert, B.C. iihia 15th day of July AX). 1943. NORMAN A. WATT Official Administrator Prlnc Rupert, B.C. to attack the German-held port of Trond- helm In Norway and the brigadier in command was ill. Gen. Sansom, then a colonel, was picked to take the brigadier's place. At that time the tide was YoU say, Mr. Evans, that you put about $60 a year into life insurance premiums. Perhaps you've wondered sometimes what becomes of your money. There's no secret about it. Here's the story, Mr. Evans. TrlE assets held by life insurance companies in Canada are the common property of yourself and four million other Canadian men and women. These assets certainly get around. Some of them have built docks in the Maritimes. Some of them have built grain elevators on the prairies. nTirftTinr'fiS Some of them have gone into highway building on the Pacific Coast. For three years, now, most of them have gone to war. Norway. The Canadians got only as far as Scotland before the Germans overran Norway. turning against the British in corned. Gen. Sansom left the post of Deputy Adjutant-General at Canadian Military Headquar ters overseas late in 1940 to, return to Canada as major-general in command of an In fantry division then under for matlon. His stay with that di vision was brief and ended with his appointment as officer com manding the first armored di vision Canada had ever sought to form. When Gen. Sansom brought his men overseas In the autumn of 1941, he looked like a happy, confident man. He still does. Not long ago he was asked whether he thought Canadians were the type of soldiers who could lead the big offensive into Enrope. He replied: "I doubt if there Is a similar force anywhere that can beat us." Briefs From Britain Mrs. Gladys DDrlanger, wife of the chief ol the British Air Transport Auxiliary, was fined $9 for misuse of petrol. Among several gifts to Crown Prince Olaf of Norway on his 40th birthday was a goat's milk cheese smuggled out of Norway The, equipment of a British or Canadian division is on display in London, a demonstration of 23,500 military varieties from pigcoas to a Valentine tank. June was a month with one of the lowest crime records in Britain's history, reports Scotland Yard. There was a substantial drop in every type of crime from murder to petty Opening an air training headquarters, h Commodore D. W Morris said that air force crews or training were warmly wel- That $60. of yours, Mr. Evansi certainly gets around Canada at War 25 Years Ago July 23, 1918 British Marfaux and French advanced toward the Avre. German rwdstance in the Marne salient stiffened but French captured Raineval, Sauvillers and Aubvillers. British armed merchant cruiser Marmora sunk. An "honor court" set up at the pit head to try cases of absenteeism among miners held at Askern Colliery recently heard the cases of 34 men. Two were fined and nine others were warned. Britain has completed an ordnance factory program costing millions of pounds. Some centres are so big they have 700 to 800 separate buildings covering two or three square miles. Better Shaves -And More Of Them with a I Lather SHAVIN CREAM 5 ... YoU also have a share in Victory, Mr. Evans. Your insurance companies have put a large percentage of your premium dollars into Victory Bonds for yom ' . '- 1 tt , 1 V f. Jirttt, WW They have just bought 160 million dollars worih of the 4th",Victory Loan . . making a total of 600 million dollars invested in fhese bonds because they know that you and everybody else in Canada believes that Victory is the immediate business of the whole nation. Protection is the people's own business. You, and four million other policyholders are investing in the security that only Victory will bring. We hope you have bought some bonds, too. Worth holding on to, aren't they? IT IS GOOD CITIZENSHIP T0,0WN LIFE INSURANCE This message is tpomored by Life insurance Companies in Canada iff i yvvu m - I 1 iX LA"GE TJ I W SIZE TUBE g 'MA Mi M I: " who who went went to to Canada Canada for for flying flying; WujtmzKmn 19 I l.MW jfjAti SCREEN SENSATION OF SEWc. 7he Tivlh About The f . nam mi A-l l V r-r-- TIM HOLT t BONITA GRANVILLE . KENT I UU . MOT A VBIIrfB .U B AJ a I Added "Donald Duck's Tire Trou "3 Cheers For Tthe Girls (A Hroadway Brevity) World News Complete Shows 1. 3, 5, 7, 9 and few yyi limine In Tnmato tTNaLJr uauce are both on active service but will be back on your grocer's shelf soon at conditions permit. J. M. S. Loubser n.o, B.A. Chiropractor Wallace Block Phone 6t BUY... 136, 3 23 , , , MMMf M GOLD SEAL Fancy Red Sockeye Salmon VICTORY i RENEW 531 RICHARD sJ VANCOUVER, We have v.wti J premise i a1.:! . able to ,ve um-x Hall man vi rx;ip V(). tO US. Pk,, f ,1 home arid: , ,1 to spend c ..v : WE PAY THE lim CHARGES win - in, a Fresh lxcal RaJ Pi Pastcurizwl vl 1 VALENTIN D PHONE R I I 111 r or income hlti rxs sci H. E. MOKTlll Phone 88 CI! RUPERT BRAI Sole Filleh ... At Your Local Butchers NO WASTE READY TO COOK Canadian Fish & Cold Stora PHINCE KUPERT Co. Ltd. BRITISH COW l f bp N ' V 0 i . v V, WOMEN PRAISE OUR EVERY Di LOW PRICES! So many women are tired of the old scheme iej " ui wi uuy uiav mey are unsung t our policy of presenting every item in our store! Prices. .instead of tho nti.m.r fD, "h.iit" crlces sees advertised again and again! In the lone run Vnil vn mnrn at TUP. vaRIETj because you save ai.i. tiie TTMPnnt lust ocw-! Come buy what you need from qur stocks of no1'0 Jng supplies, moth preventatives, closet accessor" many other needfuls, and prove HI THENAR I ETY ST0 If you lose anything, advertise for1'