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Star-Phoenix from Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada • 2

Publication:
Star-Phoenixi
Location:
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE TWO SASKATOON BTAR-FIIOENLY, SVTt'RDAY, APRIL 8, 1943. Would Alter Death Rule In Divorce Find Much Dissatisfaction With Beer Laws Psychology TULSA, April 8. A Tulsa restaurant operator suggested this psychology to alleviate the pang of butler rationing cover a slice of bread with a thin coating of butter, then cat the bread with the buttered aide down. He explained the butter will touch the taste buds of the tongue first and the fluvor will Unger, tlons, compared to a 50-50 split on the farm. A few weeks ago the Gallup Poll reported that anti-prohibition sen tlment, which had, for the past 13 months been on the wane in Canada, took a new leas on life.

The latest poll show that this upwaid trend in the anti-prohlhltion is con-tinulng, a the following table which shows division of opinion on five different occasions, phows: Continuing Eisenhower FROM PAGE ONE October for the 8th Army, every British and American citizen and every British and American soldier had a right to draw pride and inspiration from the record which this united force Is making for itself. "Many of the soldiers of the British 1st Army have been in action almost since the first day of the landing In North Africa, They have gone through the hardship of a winter in the mountains and they have come out of it full of high spirits and determination. REGROUP AMERICANS "In the day of the first drive into Tunisia we threw every American available into the line to help the 1st Army. These American units now have been regrouped and are fighting ae an entity under Gen eral Alexander. The American ao! dier are showing every day that they are capable of fighting with the war machines which our factories are turning out.

"Our AlLed ground, air and naval forces are co-operating to the single end of destroying th hostile force in Tunisia. A special function of the navy under Admiral Cunningham, and of the air forces, directed strategically by Air Chief Marshal Tedder, is to interfere with tha enemys maintenance end supply and to protect our own. In this role they have achieved eome remarkable successes and their work is of an inestimable value to General Alexander and his ground forces as well as to th tactical operations of ths air forces along the battle fronts. The British, American and French lit this theatre, inspired by the common purpose of crushing the enemy, are working in complete harmony and unison not only toward immediate victory on this front but to the eventual complete deteat of all our Eden Disclosed Secret at Ottawa LONDON, April 3, Anthony Eden disclosed to Canadians a secret kept from the British people when he told the joint meeting of the Canadian House of Common and Senate that the British members of Failtament had been meeting In a more august eetting alnce the Commons chamber wa destroyed in the 1941 blit. The more august setting is the House of Lord and on the bast of th foreign secietary'e statement, Biitiih paper are telling for the fit at time how the House of Lords has been converted into th House of Commons.

The Kings robing room with temporary throne and a miniature woolsack serve a the Lord' meeting place, Toe Founder Dies in England Canadian Press HEJFIELD, England, April 8. Rt. RV. Neville Stuart Talbot, vicar of St. Marys Nottingham, and assistant bishop of Southwell, died today.

1 Talbot wa one of the founders of Too an interdenoninatlonal social service organization formed duiing the First Great War In memory of the bishop's brother, Gilbert, who wa killed in action, Mr. Talbot, who served a a chaplain with the army in Franca from 1914 until 1919, later wa bishop of Pretoria for 13 years. Swiss Optimistic About Wars End Canadian Pres LONDON, Apitl 3. In a letter written to his home here from a prison camp, Lieut. S.

Haighton of the Royal Navy told Friday how 20 Frltlsh naval officeis captured at St Nazalre a year ago had been given wrist watches by a Swiss company on their word of honor to pay for them after the war, Tha prisoner wrote the company, saving they needed watches but could only promise post-war payment. Weeks later, watches valued at a total of 5800 arrived. CWADUf IN'THIII UK I'UIIJO OflMUN TORONTO, April 3. In every major area of Canada, except the Prairie and in Quebec more people are today dissatisfied with present regulations controlling the sale of beer in their Province than are satisfied. At the aame time, the upturn In anti-prohibition sentiment which, previous opinion polls showed, started at about the time the new beer restriction were put into effect by various Provinces, appeals to be eontinuing.

These conclusion are apparent from the latest nation-wide Gallup sutvey, in which this question was asked among others: "Aie you satiai'ied or dissatisfied with the present regulations controlling the sale of beer In yout Province?" While regulations vary from Province to Province, the national opinion a shown below Indicates the attitude of the public a a whole: Satisfied, 3 per cent Dissatisfied, 47 per cent. Undecided, 11 per cent Greatest dissatisfaction with the present beer restriction appear to come from Ontario and British Columbia, In both of which places a majority told Gallup reporters that they were dissatisfied with the present restrictions. In Quebec, on the other hand, 49 per cent, oi almost half of the cross section, said they were atlsfied with the present situation. Prairie opinion appear to be divided about 50-80, with a slight edge to tha satisfied group. To the men of Canada, present beer regulations are considerably more unsatisfactory than they are to their womenfolks, Thl is the way national opinion divide on the basis of sex: operation of W.I.B.

New York and Washington offices. If the attitude of some newspaper in the State has become more informed than hltheito; If the negatives are fewer and the positives moie, and so many articles now are being, carried to say that Canada now is showing the that also ba something to do with th groundwork of WIB." It is proper for people to ask for visible and even spectacular result In Information, foi they have been tutored in the notion that Information la a matter on highly-spectacular campaigns and ballyhoo from the top. "They have, unconsciously, often adopted the Nazi conception of Information. They have not considered that the democratic conception my ba utterly different and may proceed the more effectively because it i grounded on friendly contact and a quiet understanding and fulfilment of needs. OTHER ACTIVITIES The board had other activities One wa a report section "which has all the makings of a very valuable research station indeed and which, in my own view, may give a lasting service to Canadian self-understanding and unity." Its aim was to develop an overall contact with the public, without which Ottawa "cannot expect to keep adequately in touch with the people and their activities over 4,000 miles of territory," If I have been recently seeing as many editors and publishers and radio men as my work allows," said Mr, Grierson, It is in fulfilment of a view I hold that Information is not directive, but derivative.

It is derivative of the people wherever they are most intimately represented. Taken on this level, there is no great mystery about what people want, and there is no great mystery about Information, RED BANNER FOR WRITER MOSCOW. "'For outstanding services In literature, the Supreme Soviet haa awarded Alexander Serafimovich, 80, the Order of the Red Banner of Labor, And Its Not Done With Mirrors Canadian Pros OTTAWA, April 3. John Grierson, general manager of the Wartime Information Board, said Friday night that the notice of Canada and its war' effort is more flattering today than it ever was," that the regard for Canada as a nation was never higher." nnd that "it is not done tfith mirrors." SALARIES ADJUSTED Mr, Grierson's statement, covering nine mimeographed foolscap sheets, wa Issued to eliminate certain misunderstanding" about WIB. It 1 a pity that the WZB.

has hitherto kept itself so much In the daik, he said, Unfortunately, it ta only what ie made readily apparent that is taken notice of. WJ B. expense haa recently received public notice. But of 5579,000 spent by th board up to February 13, 5261,000 wa for th National Film Board. There haa been a few out-of-line salary expenditure but these had been adjusted.

In the final account, when W.I.B. figures are compared with those of other nations, or even with those of big businesses operating in the information field, they are in all good sense defensible, said Mr. Grierson. Today all Jobs involving public payment are filled In the normal way through the Civil Service Commission; and evpenditures are accountable within the ordinary hard-boiled terms laid down by treasury. In the laat resort the test of W.I B.

was the work it i doing and how valuable it Is to Canada. Charles VIning, first chaiiman of the board, had taken the view WI.B. best service would be to enable the pres and the film and the radio to get on as smoothly and actively aa possible with their own jobs, "LOOSENING INFORMATION As Mr. Vinlng conceived it, W.I.B,e Job was to loosen up information at the source, rather than itself go Into the business of handouts, Generally speaking, W.I.B. would facilitate the passage of writers and radio men, but not Itself write or radio, "The result of this policy is only now beginning to show, think I see what a great- contribution to Canadian information and morale the W.I.B, can make on these earlier foundations, There had been comment that there were no "publicity men on the Wartime Information Board, which now haa Dr.

Norman Mac-Kenzle, president of the University of New Brunswick, as its chairman, a vice-chairman, and eight senior departmental office! and advisers But under the set-up, the governing board was Interested primal lly in the broad picture of what should be done while the executive branch, headed by Mr Grierson as general manager, handled the carrying out of the projects. "If anyone says that the experts (in the executive branch) are 'bossed' by people who know nothing about information, and that they aie Impotent accordingly, they are short of the reality," said Mr. Grierson. NOT POLITICAL Thera was another "illusion about W.I.B. "that wa cant do anything without asking the Prime Minister, who is also chief of the Liberal Party" but Mr.

Grierson said his experience "justifies the opinion that the Prime Minister allows otganizatlong like mine, founded after public demand, the full freedom of their own natural path." This, however, is only one aspect of the political issue in Information," said Mr. Grierson. "Information will at all times be blamed for divisions of opinion which have deeper bases. Information will be blamed for not solving the division between some people in Quebec and some people elsewhere. It will be blamed, as it already has been blamed, for not marching up to the P.M.

(Prime Minister) and insisting on a political measure. It will be blamed for not bridging divisions which are sometimes geographical, racial and religious, but often political, MOST DANGEROUS JOB "That, of course, is why Information is one of Ottawa's danger oua jobs and, in fact, more dangerous ia Ottawa than in almost any other -capital on earth. It ia in the nature of the country, end part of the privilege of living in Canada and nowhere else. 1 think it is possible, he said, for a public service or Information to pursue Its responsibility to Parliament and the executive of Parliament without necessarily associating itself with the party in power, "W.I.B. does a good deal of work that is not readily apparent to the public, but also some that is," Mr, Grierson continued.

He mentioned special pages of war pictures which appear weekly through the country; W.I.B. airmail newsletters sent to South America; tour of Canadian war plants by South American editors and special correspondents and vlsltois from the United States. "If the Canadian- lineage in American papers ha increased lour times In six months and the Canadian Still photographs carried, well, have multiplied many The question which was the basis for all these surveys was the same: Would you favor or oppose a law to prohibit the eale of all alcoholic beverages (Including wine and beer) in Canada." Today etrongest support for prohibition cornea from the farms of Canada. Tha strength of the antiprohibition forcea appears to ilse with tha population of the area, until in cltlea of over 100,000 population, 77 per cent of those polled said they would oppose such a prohibition law, By DEWITT MACKENZIE Associated Press War Analyst What guarantees are our hardworking statesmen going to be able to devise against the whelping of another war-mnngerlng llillcr when once we have ended the present conflict? Foreign Secretary Anthony Ellen, speaking Sunday before the Canadian Parliament at Ottawa, gave an answer for one angle of thts complicated problem In declaring as regards Germany, Italy and Japan: "Thera is only on security for mankind in respect of all of them; to ensuie that they are totally disarmed and In no position aver to try their atrength again. The United States under-secretary of State, Sumner Welles, discussed the matter In an address the same day in New York City before the Chamber of Commerce, He said: In attempting to put an end to war face a problem that the human race haa never yet been able to solve.

But of on thing I ani perfectly sure: tha greatest obstacle to success is defeatism the assumption that' nations are by nature so antagonistic, that foreign people are so untrustworthy or that the technical problems of con struettve peace machinery are ao great that the task Is a hopeless one," ONLY CONSTRUCTIVE MOVE That seem to invito the further question of whether human nature ran bo changed. History ia likely to record that the only constructive thing Hitler ever did was to show the world that he could change the characteristics of virtually the entire youth of it great nation In less than a decade by Intensive training. Similar methods will have to be employed after the war to make tha aggressor nations peace-minded. Of course that couldn't be achieved thiough propaganda. It would have to ba done through the medium of Axis nationals who are desirous of peace and those people exist, Foicible piopaganda does work wonders at times, and we are in process of administering It In heavy doses to Germany and Italy, with the terrific bombing which is being carried out, especially against the Nazis.

That bombing is likely to prove a boon to humanity in the long run. It will help to knock toleration of Pmsslnn militarism out of German heads. $200,000 Blaze HALIFAX, April today destroyed two warehouses here causing damage estimated at A cracked safe found in the debris by police led them to believe the blazp was set on purpose. No arrests have ae yet been made. Only 3 Weeks to Easter Don't Wait Please Send Cleaning Now! Prompt Service Later Wjll Be Impossible, Admiral Killed LONDON, April 8.

The German radio broadcast a Rom dispatch today that said Vic Admiral Lorenzo Gasparri, commander of an Italian destroyer formation, had been killed in action. TIES 6 for 75c HATS 75c How does opinion in the cities and on the farm compare? Farmer are much less opposed tq, present regulation than are the city folk, a majority of whom say they are not satisfied with the regula- Ferry Plane FliersSafe Canadian Pres MONTREAL. April 3. Tile R.A.F. Ferry Command announced today that all four members of the crew of a transport command plane which crashed Friday near Lisbon, Portugal, were safe, NO DETAILS GIVEN The announcement of the Ferry Command, now a branch Of the Tiansport Command, gave no details of the crash.

Nor were the names of the four crew-members given, and a Ferry Command spokesman explained that crewmens name were not announced unless casualties had been suffered. A dispatch from Lisbon Friday said that "a Canadian transport plane had crashed and that three men landed unhurt with a fourth reported killed. The Lisbon dispatch gave the name of those unhurt as Captain William. Chartrea and Wirelcsaman B. Sliockett.

The Weather Saturday, April 3, IBIS Canadian Press LONDON, April beautiful woman sitting In her London home heard the German radio announce today that she had been sentenced to death in absentia. Tv been expecting it," she said. The woman Is Madame Wlada Ksiastoyanova, daughter of a foimer premier of Bulgaria. Since 1941, when she escaped fiom a German concentration camp, ehe has been in London making anti Axis broadcasts in her native language, beamed to Bulgaria. Her name was used only once In the bioadcast.

But German monitors caught It nnd a German military tiibunal, sitting In Sofia, convicted her on a chaige of high treason. She said she was not worried about the death sentence for hetself. But her mother, bt other and sister ate in Bulgaria. They may suffer," she said, "If so, It will be another account to be settled with the Germans some day. Continuing Russia FROM PAGE ONE to a point 15 mile north of German-occupied Taganrog, wheie it arcs around that city, terminating on the shores of the Sea of Azov.

In the Caucasus, the map shows the lines swinging down from the sea of Azov at a point about 11 mile east of Temryuk on the Taman peninsula to the gates of Novoros-sisk. Temryuc is only a score of miles from the waters of Taman Bay, an Indentation off Kerch Strait which separates the peninsula from the Crimea. This was the picture of tha front as gleaned from latest Moscow dispatches: Smolensk: The Russians were making slow progress from northeast, east and southeast but probably no Red Army column was closer than 50 mllea to Smolensk. Northern Doneta: The Germans have been punished heavily in futile attempt to cross the river from Belgorod, 60 miles northeast of Khaikov, to the Izyum elbow southeast of the city. Donets Basin: The Red Army still holds half of the area against the German counter-offensive and German activity west of Rostov.

Caucasus: The Red Army had columns below Anastasevskaya, 33 miles north of Novorossisk, advancing In an effort to reclaim that Black Sea base. blaraya Itusaai Marshal Semeon Timoshenko's troops still were reported attempting to clinch positions actoss the Follsta, Lovat and Pola rivers, east of the stronghold Leningrad: Attillery duels beyond Kolpino, 18 miles south of the city, recently were reported as the Russians sought to clinch their smash lng of the German blockade. Veilkle Lulil: The Red Army still holds advantageous positions in and about the city and controls the railway line from there through Rzhev to Moscow. Germany suffered 1,193,525 casualties 850,000 dead and 843,525 captured in the great Red Army winter offensive which swept back the Germane to the: west as much as 435 miles and fieed 185,328 square miles of Soviet territory, the Rus-siane had announced earlier today in a special communique. AT STALINGRAD At Stalingrad, on the Volga, where the Russian offensive began last November, the Russians "inflicted on the German Fascist troops the largest defeat In the history of ware, said the bulletin.

In addition to these powerful blows to Hitlers military man power, the Russians announced this total of German equipment In the period between last November 10 and March 81 Captured Destroyed Total 5 090 9,190 20,360 Planes 1490 Tanks ,4,870 Guns 15,880 8600 4 520 4,500 Other booty reported Included 30,705 machine-guns, 9 835 mortars, more than 500000 rifles, 17,000,000 shells, 128 000,000 cartridges, 123,000 trucks, 890 locomotives, 22,000 railway carriages, 1,825 dumps of various kinds of war material, "as well many radio transmitters, motor-cycles, and other military equipment. The special communique, in telling of the German equipment losses, said 8,600 planes, 4 520 tanks and 4,500 guns weie destroyed and the remainder were captured. Vast stores of other Nazi military equipment fell into Russian hands, it added. In some sectots the advance to the west was as far as 873 to 438 miles, the communique said. A total of 185,328 square miles of territory of great economic and military strategic value" has been freed of ths invaders along with thousands of villages and dozen of big cities, the Russians said.

Important waterways and railway lines have again been recap-tuied by th Red armies, it was pointed out. Among these Is the vital Volga artery connecting Southern and Central Russia. Associated Pres BROCKTON, April 3 A cafe here was for observing th law. The bartender had refused to serve a drink to a man who appeared to be under the influence of liquor. The man left, muttering protests.

gome time later the bartender noticed that prospective customer turned away after trying tha front door. He investigated and found the frustrated patron had gone to the nearest hardware store, bought a lock, and had securely fastened the cafe door. Police ha no trouble In finding the culprit. With the key in hie pocket, he wa standing outside the cafe chuckling merrily. Canadian Pres OTTAWA, April 3 Sena tor J.

W. Farris British Columbia) on Friday urged the Senate to pass a bill enabling divorce courts In any Province In which such courts now exist to decree that a person is presumed dead and dissolve his or her marriage by such a decree, ASSUMPTION OF DEATH Under th Criminal Code a man or woman may be charged with bigamy if he or she marries again while a former wife or husband still lives. However, it is a defence against such a charge if the accused can convince the court that or sha had acted in good faith in assuming that the former mate wa dead. If the bill introduced by Senator Farris become law, once the couits decree that the husband is presumed dead and the marriage dissolved, the second marriage would stand even tf the first husband reappeared on the scene. The bill affected two types of situations, tha Senator explained.

One case might be of that of a ship lost at sea, where there seemed no possible doubt that a man had lost his life. His wife, after "some substantial time" might ask a divorce court to decree presumption of death and dissolution of the marriage. At present the courts have no power to issue such a decree. CASE OF DISAPPEARANCE Under another heading was the case of a man who had disappeared. If hie wife had not heard of him for seven years and there was nothing to Indicate he was still alive, a similar decree might be issued.

The proposed law would be limited, the senator said, to those Provinces having divorce tuuit and would not apply to Quebea or Prince Edward Island. The bill has ths support of R. Maitland, attorney general of British Columbia and Premier Conant of Ontario, Continuing Africa FROM PAGE ONE history that an armored division has attacked at night and the daring move was a surprise to the enemy. The armor smashed through toward El Hamma, which la the key to Gabes, but by-passed a concentration of about 50 enemy tanks In the darkness and then had to turn and fight them before getting Ei Hamma. This gave the Germans time to reinforce the El Hamma defences.

So, using El Hamma, aa a pivot, the army swung around like a door, closing on its hinges. Then El Hamma fell this morning and a few hour later British troop began entering Gabes. A general who observed the night tank fighting from the tuiret of a tank described the night tank thrust as a "big risk that had to be taken to break the Meiab Gap defences. "After it wa over." he said, "our tankmen wanted to try it again the next night," GREAT DESTRUCTION It ia doubtful whether the concentrated destruction in the narrow Blelab Gap has been equalled anywhere else during the fighting in Africa. The Germans had no time to save their gun and equipment or even their personal effects.

And this morning British armor rolled through El Hamma while crowds of Arabs stood along the palm-iined streets and gaped through the dust at the procession of steel monsters. Except for rearguard shelling the road to Gabea was open. British Provost Marshal Find Canadian Press LONDON, Apiil 3. Sir Percy Robert Laurie, provost marshal of Great Biltain, was fined 585 today for using a civilian ration book as well as the military ration cards to which he was en titled as a soldier. Sir Percy, a former assistant commissioner of the London Metropolitan Police, allegedly obtained an extra ration book by stating in hie application that he was retired.

Deaths WITHERS THE DEATH OF Robert John Wither of 1312 Avenue north, occurred on April 1, at Lacadena, Sask. Surviving are hi widow, Matilda Withers, two none, R. Withers of Melville, Erwin at home; a daughter, Lorna at Ottawa. One brother and two aisteis In Toronto, one sister in Windsor, Ont, Funeral services will be held on April 5 at 2 from the chapel of Saskatoon Funeral Home with th Rev. A.

B. Moore of Westminster United Church officiating. Interment will be mad in Woodlawn Cemetery, 4-5-c BREVIO THS DEATH OF Peter Brevig, age 69 years, occurred at his home, 826 Avenue north, tin April 2. Surviving are his widow and four daughter, Mrs. Walter Finan, 900 Avenue north, Mr.

J. Peckinpaugh, Kinley, Mr. Roy MacTavisb, Asquith, and Mr. Vernon Long Big Beaver, Sask. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, April 6, ft 2 oclock, from McKagues Funeral Home.

Interment will be made in Woodlawn Cemetery E-i-3-c SUITS TOPCOATS Plain, 1-pc. DRESSES 0E Sanltoned and Pressed I cutf5- OtaPeS 6eJsPteaJ Menslinen Laundry Shirts 4 for 50c Ucss0 Continuing ffl I umsia FROM PAGE ONE the American armor withdrew, Three Axis tanks were destroyed French troop in the Ousseltia valley advanced their outposts four mile east of the town of Ousseltia, but Axis troops still clung to strong hill position dominating the eastern side of the valley. AMBUSH NAZI PATROL On the northern extremity of the Tunisian front, a British patrol ambushed a German patrol of 30 men in the Sedjenane area, killing 26 and taking one prisoner. Although the present phase of the battle of Tunisia found Allied forcea burdened with the slow, costly drudgery of cleaning out entrenched and fortified Axis positions ringing the enemy's coastal corridor. Allied aerial forces repeatedly bombed Rommels troops and transport behind the Wadi Akarit about 20 miles north of Gabes, where the Axis has established temporary coastal defence line.

The B.B.C., reported Austrian mountain troops were beginning to desort Col, -Gen. Jurgen von Arnim in northern Tunisia, bringing to British lines with them safe conduct leaflets dropped by Allied aircraft over the enemy lines. The radio also reported that Gen. Jacques Leelerc, leader of Fighting French forcea from the Chad area, was one of the very first to enter Gabes, as the Allies chased Rommel northward after crushing the Mareth Line, Wilson Dies LACHUTE, April 8. Edwin Howard Wilson, president of the J.

C. Wilson Company, paper manufacturers, died at his borne here Friday after a lengthy illness. He wa 65. The St, John Ambulance Association will conduct examinations in first aid and home nursing in Rooms 3 and 4 at the Technical Collegiate on Tuesday, April. 6 at 7 p.m.

All candidate who are ready for examination from any zone are urged to present themselves at this time. Ail civil defence worker and interested member of th general public are invited to attend a meeting in the Auditorium, Victoria School at 8 30 p.m Wednesday, April 7 to hear an address by Alex Ross, director of civil defence for Saskatchewan. This address will deal with civil defence in Saskatoon. Zone i. Haultain.

Home nursing. Final lecture by Mrs, McKay. Executive meeting, 8 p.m. Zone 3, Victoria. Monday, 8 pm.

Home nurelng lecture by Mis Duff, R.N. Practical bandaging. Tuesday, 8 A full attendance of those taking part in the inspection ia requested so that final instruction mav be given and arm bands issued. Wednesday, 7.45 p.m. Inspection of Zona 8 by Brigadier-Genera! Ross, director of civil defence for Saskatchewan, At 8.30 p.m..

General Ross will address a combined meeting of civil defence worker and S.V.C.S.C. in tbs auditorium at Victoria School. Zone 6, Technical Collegiate. First 'aid, practical review. Zone 6, King Edward, First aid.

Doctor Laudans final lecture Pictures of fractures. Zone 7, Wilson. Home nursing. Zone 8, Sutherland. No meeting Tuesday.

AH members invited to attend General Rose meeting as above at Victoria School, Wednesday, 8 30 p.m. Zone 9, King George, Monday, 8.15 pm. Home musing. Zone 11, Westmount. Monday, 8 IS p.m.

Home nursing. Additional registrations will be accepted Zona 12, Caswell. Monday, 815 p.m. Home nursing. 41 49 7 Kenora Winnipeg Brandon Dauphin Ynrkton Kutevan KRln Moose Jaw Maftkatoon Print Albert North Battleforrt Swift Current Medicine Hat Detbbridga Calgary Fdmontoa J'airvlew Beaverlodga Manitoba; Frkh to atrot and milder today and Sunday SmikRtchPWj and Alberta winds, fair and mild today and Sunday.

Peace ftiver District Generally fair to. diy end Sunday, not muUt change in LISTEN TO TIME OUT. Sunday, 6.45 p.m, -CFQO LIMIT dial 6108 If Rose 4 leaned It Its C-L-h-A-N RSflM AU DE RE RMf.U RRI CLEAN Our Store Will Be 1L CS) ffi) Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday April 5, 6, 7 Fop Alterations OPEN AS USUAL THURSDAY Spring Sake April 5th to April 10th VITA-RAY COSMETICS Buy now dnd SAVE 20 any 1.15 item NOW i 92 fi any 1.75 item NOW I 1.40 a any 2.25 item NOW 1.80 THIS SPECIAL OFFER ENDS APRIL 10th Du to current shortao ef holder and containers. Vita Roy Lipsticb ond Refitlt ort of Included in thit Special Offtft times, tt has a lot to do with the groundwork laid by Mr. Lash (G.

H. Lash, former director of public Information, a branch absorbed into the W.I.B.), and the present RRE.4CR I POTIONS mcbeWn MW A ARfflfAi, ronu 3tes Fdss 52225 Birks Building, 21st Street, Phone 5616. 102 Second Avenue, South (At the Sign of the Overhead Clock).

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