Canada At War The Kelowna Courier A Review of Developments on the Home Front V O L U M E 40 Kelowna, British Columbia, Thursday, March 23rd, 1944 N U M B E R 35 The li.C. Legislature prorogued last week in the third scs ion of the Coalition Govcrimient. The members authorized RATION BOOK GOVERNMENT IX P E N D IT U R E of almost 35 millions for the coming 1944-45 Grower Executives Agree A quatic Shareholders seal year and passed a budget with an estimated S U R P L U S DISTRIBUTION RECEIVES f $100000 Fifty-five bills were also passed during the session ,hich commenced February 1. E C O N O M IC B E N E F IT S to Ottawa Will Do More To NEXT THURSDAY CITY PROTEST Requested A pprove he province which should come out of the construction of a lighway outlet from the Peace River country, by way of Pine Assure Labor This Year Kelowna Residents Have Three City Asked To Suggest Alter ^ass, were noted in the prorogation speech of the Lieutenant- Days In Which To Apply For native Site For Slipway New Book Transfer T o Society *4 mvernor. He also spoke of the $1,500,000 special program for The protest of the City Council Kelowna Board Of Trade Executive Hears Assurances if ,lOAD M A IN T E N A N C E which, added to the regular road I.O.O.F. HALL IS PLACE to the construction of a slipway near From G. A. Barrat And Tom V/ilkinson That As Oie Simpson Mill property for use Irogram, “should assist materially in placing the highway sys- Taking Over Of Assets And Liabilities By Commun sistance W ill Be Forthcoming If Needed— Gov In ferry overhaul was acknowledged cm in an excellent state of repair." The $2,000,000 vote for Most Country Districts Pick by Hon. H. Ahscomb, Minister of ity Association Is Main Business At Annual ernment Pleased W ith Success Of Emergency Saturday For Job — Peach- Public Works, In a letter read at nstitutional buildings was termed “a wise measure." The ses- Meeting On April Sixth In Club Lounge— Old Farm Labor Plan Last Year land Wednesday last Monday night’s meeting of the ion was featured by legislation designed to prepare for PO ST- C ou n cil. Limited Company Is Unsuited To Administration iVAR Co n d i t i o n s , a post-war rehabilitation bureau, un- Next Thursday, K®^owna resi ’The minister alleged that the city Of Community Enterprise Operated By Volun l t h o u g h it is as yet too early to accurately estimate the dents will be able to apply for their had been Informed of the proposed tary Efforts Ck Citizens Icr a cabinet committee, was established. , amount of labor that will be needed in farm and orchard No. 4 ration book when distribution work and had given tentative ap will open at fhe I.O.O.F. Hall un Alabor this year, there are definite indications that additional proval. ’The City Council member der direction of distribution chief took exception to this statement a> a Hon. W . F. A. Turgeon, formerly of Regina, has been ap- outside workers will be available and that the Federal Govern Mrs. T. F. McWllliams- it was pointed out that no applica Shareholders Here Indicate Approval of Change ment will grant extended financial aid this year. Tho large corps 'lof voluntary tion for purchase or rental of the lot iointed first Canadian A M B A S S A D O R to Mexico, Prime Min .workers will start issuing the books had been received from the rovln- This opinion was expressed by G. A. Barrat, and confirmed at 10 a.m., and the centre will be ster Mackenzie King has announced in the Commons. The clal Government. o t i c e s have gone out" to shareholders of the: Kelowna by Tom Wilkinson, at an executive meeting of the Kelowna open until six on Thursday and Fri irst M E X IC A N ambassador to Canada is Dr. Francisco Del y Board of Trade last Tuesday morning, when the current labor day afternoons and until nine o’ Apparently the misunderstanding Aquatic Association Ltd., under the signature of President arose over the fact that the Govern N clock on Saturday night. G. L. Finch that the annual meeting of the company will be ^aneto. It is expected Mr. Turgeon will go to Mexico City picture was under discussion. ment Assistant Engineer In Kelowna Most country districts will com- held at the association premises on Thursday evening, April 6 , The question arose'as a result of pdete their distribution In one day, had spoken to City Engineer Blakc- ilmost immediately. at 8 p.m. a letter received from Grote Stir G ets W in g s with Rutland taking tWo days, Fri borough last fall and no objection ling, M.P., In answer to one written day and Saturday, for the job. had, been registered to the proposed This will be the most importa^it annual meeting held in Labor Minister Mitchell has announced P E R S O N N E L of by the Board secretary seeking In Coxmtry distribution will be on construction. many years, and, if plans of the directors are approved, it will formation In regard to use of ser Saturdays with the exception Of A wire from W. A. C. Bennett, be the last meeting of the historic corporation that was incor :he new Wartime Labor Relations Board, with Mr. Justice G. vice men in the orchards this year. Peachland, where the books will be M.L.A., was also read which indicat handed out on Wednesday, March porated back in 1909 by the progressive citizens of that time. B. O ’Connor, of Edmonton, as chairman, Mr. Justice J. N. Mr. Stirling stated that he had ed that the city would be protected 29. Chief business of the meeting on Interviewed the Federal Labor De In the matter and suggesting that Francoeur, of Quebec City, will be vice-chairman of the 10-man Japanese will get their books at April 6 w ill be to seek itho approval partment and foqnd that there was an . alternative site be recommended. the Kelowna Board of Trade rooms Commissioned lOf shareholders to the transfer of 1 joard. LABOR REPRESENTATIVES are A, R, Mosher, keen satisfaction over the results The Council Instructed the City on Saturday, April 1, and Monday, assets and liabilities of the com achieved by the Dominion-Provin Clerk to write a letter to HOn. H. ::ana(lian Congress of Labor, Ottawa; Fred Molineux, Brother A p r i l 3. pany to a Bociety to be incorpor cial Farm Labor Service last year. Anscomb re-affirming that no offic When consumers are issued with ated under the provincial Societies 4 hood of Painters, Decorators and Paperhangers of America ial notice of the proposed slipway 'The Federal member for Yale con their No. 4 ration books, they will • A ct. had ever been received by the city (A.F.L.), Hamilton; W . L. Best, Brotherhood of Locomotive stituency advised the Board that find that they contain 11 sheets of This change will make the “Aqua and stressing that the matter had fruit representatives had visited Ot coupons as against 12 in the current tic” in law what it has been in fact come to the Council’s attention Firemen and Enginemen (A.F.L.), Ottawa, and R. Harmengies, tawa recently and reviewed the la No. 3 books. ’The new books will for many years—a community en through complaints from residents National Federation of Aluminum Workers (C.C.CX.), St, bor problem with the Government. have one sheet of green tea or cof terprise operated by the citizens at the Government’s move. . Mr. Barrat told the executive that fee coupons, one sheet of red sugar without remuneration and with any Joseph d’Alam, Que. EMPLOYER REPRESENTATIVES: his reaction to that conference was coupons, one sheet of orange pre City Engineer Blakeborough sug futvuc profits accruing to the so H. Taylor, Canadian National Carbon Cb. Ltd., Toronto; W . that Ottawa would go much farther serve coupons, two sheets of pUr- gested that foreshore rights at the ciety for. expansion and develop this year, and this statement was ple butter coupons, four sheets of foot of Gaston Avenue might serve ment of activities. H. Brown, Mpore Corporation Ltd., Toronto; A. Deschamps, confirmed by Mr. Wilkinson, who brown meat coupons, one sheet of the Government’s purpose and this ’The present Kelowna Aquatic contractor, Montreal, and A. J. Hills, Canadian National Rail was also in Ottawa at the time and grey spare “H” coupons, and one will* be taken up with the Govern*- Association Ltd. was foimed. as a took part in the discussions. she^ of blue sirare “K” coupons. ment Engineer. limited liability company and shares ways, Montreal. The board will have charge of the administra It was stressed by both speakers Getting out ration books to the In his letter the minister stressed were sold to the public in order to people of Canada is a tremendous tion of Canada’s N E W L A B O R C O D E which provides com that accommodation was one of the that suitable foreshore conditions raise funds for construction of the S e rg e a n t jo b . main problems. Adequate accom were essential to conduct of the pavilion and later the grandstand. The Wartime Prices and Trade pulsory collective bargaining and arbitration for all war indus modation was lacking on most or- GEORGE WILLIAM RAWLINGS, work on the ferry and that adeqtiate No dividends have ever been Board discloses that preliminary paid to these shareholders and the' tries and occupations which previously came under the Indus of Kel»wna. graduated recenOy as service depended on this work be work on Book 4 commenced last buildings reverted to the City many ^ a pilot Of tha RC.A.F. from No. 3 October. At conferences in that in g done. trial Disputes Enquiry Act. ' Dominipn-Provincial service and the nying rKaiiiing School'at years ago and are not company month, officials went into %he q u e s Selective Service, assets. The annual rentaL is one Calgaiy, Alta. Besides himself tion of paper conservation, the size Government. officials had indicat ^ U a r and an annual .grant is made, there are two other members of the Conscientious objectors stationed in A L T E R N A T IV E and number of the coupons and P.O. JAMES W. LYON, by the City of; Kelowna to the asso; family in the Air Force, a other details. Housewives, grocers CITY COUNCIL sideration would be given to the es „„„ „ J . c-i. 1. 1 „ ciation to assist in the free swim- S E R V IC E work camps of British Columbia will, with a few brother and a sister. and wholesalers were all consulted. 329 Pendozx Street, Kelowna, gradur j^ing lessons and life guard duties tablishment of hostels in the Okan ’The conclusion r^ched was that exceptions, be returned to their home provinces for E M E R agan, and now that the plan had the housewife preferred, the size of OKAYS WAGE R.C.A.F. from No. 2 Obsetyer qTjJe formation of a society, Ke-> worked successfully last year, more G E N C Y farm labor at the end of March. The move, ordered the book as it was, and trades School at Edmonton. Besides him- Aquatic Association, will el- money would be spent and more ALLEGED LAND men prrferred. to keep the estab self in the armed forces are three iiriinate an obsolete corporation by Ottawa to help cope with an increasingly grave farm work done in order to relieve any lished coupon size because . they INCREASES brothers-in-law. Flying Officer W . structure., that was suitable for an l a b o r SH O R TA G E , will affect 450 men in 14ima^n camps labor shortage. had become used to handling them. H. Hamilton, R.C.A.F.j^ Laeut^ P. C; ■ organization - operated for private Mr. Wilkinson told the executive SALES TO JAPS • ’lire supply question also entered All City . Employees Receive Guthrie and Lieut R. H. Goepel, profit but that is entirely unsuited operated under B.C; Forest Service direction since the sunlmer that if was expected that quite a into the picture. The authorities, both in the C.ABJF, overseas, to present day activiti;^ that are number of women from the prairies, More Monty In Lieu Pf of 1942. All camps are on Vancouver Island and the Mainland back in October and November, entirely divorced from private particularly Albazta, would be avail TO BE PROBED were trying to estimate what the Bonus coast. They will B E CLO SED until fire season at least, when, gain and Are operated by th® direc able for work and that many would supply situation” was likely to be tors without remuneration. . ..The, be used at the Coast in the spring BOARD EXECUTIVE if Forest Service plans mature. High Schoool student forest Reports Persist That, Agents as far ahead as July, 1944. A resolution. approving increases directors point out-that the. sole. obr.- and early summer. After the work Finally the book and its sheets guardians may move in. One alternative service camp, oper Bu3nng Land For Japanese in salaries and wages of members'of ject of tee Aquatic' Association ;is there was concluded, these w;orke^ were decided on and bn December the city staffs, including temporary WILL h ear M^B E R to provide a Community service and ated directly by the Federal Government, will R E M A IN O P E N would be released for work in the Here 16 an order was placed with the employees, was passed, by the City ------to stage the International Kelowna Interior if they were needed. King’s Printer, in Ottawa, f6r Council at its meeting last Monday W . A. C. Bennett W ill Address at Radium Hot Springs, a, few miles south of Golden. Closure Mr.______Barrat______advised the members Recent reports from Kamloops twelve and! a half million copies of n ig h t that it Was possible that more Douks that under-cover purchases of land ra tio n h o o k N o . 4. of camps and return of conscientious objectors to their provin The salaries are increased on an Members Next Monday licized Kelowna’s name throughout would be frele to work in the south- for Japanese have been carried out The printing of these books is a v e ra g e o f $5.00 p e r m o n th and —— North America. ; ces will occupy about 30 days. A few of the inmates will prob em part of the valley this year and by whites, acting as agents for the now down to a science. Canada’s hourly wage rates are up five cents W. A. C. Bennett, M.LA., will The shareholders at tee annual that this would ease the picture Nipponese, have already had reper- ration book was done by six address the Executive Council of meeting w U be asked to approve ' ' ably be sent to Radium Hot Springs, and a small number will per hour in most cases. there where they have been largely cussions in Kelowna, printers, the second by' ten, the tee Kelowna Board of Trade at a by resolution tee transfer of all assets be absorbed into W A R IN D U S T R Y , or will remain on the used in past years.The speaker said It is u n d e r^ d that allegations third by five, arid the fourth by It is not possible to estimate the special meeting next Monday ^ m - nnri liabilities of the original Ke- Coast as forestry workers. Majority, however, will GO, B A C K that the Government was dropping have been made that a similar situ- three. Fewer printers and less pa total increase in payroll for the year ing, when general busmesB wiU be lowna Aquatic Association Ltd. to its attempt to make the Doukhobors ation f^stsjm the K elo ^a per has brou^t about a saving of as temporary day labor is used on waived and tee whole meeting re- g society to be known as Kelowna to the Prairie and eastern farmlands, from which they were register and that attempts to make and the Tliree-Man Comimttro $50,000 in p ap e r, p iin tir ig a n d s lu p - special jobs during the year, but the stricted to tee report ^ven by the Aquatic Association. The original them conform with regulations dealing with Japte^ese has met to ping costs, increase covering permanent em member, for South Okanagan in tee limited company will then be allow- transferred after refusing military service. The nuj^al^r includes The first’ ration books left the would be left until ^ter the war. ployees will total approximately Provincial Le^slature. ed to lapse and tee community some Doukhobprs and a H E A V Y P E R C E N T A G E o> Mennon- In answer'to a query in regard to The Committee is seeku^ inform- printog plants on February 5 and $1,500 p e r an n u m . Mr. Bennett has just returned association will carry on in its place, ation in regard to any land pur the^a^ books on March. 3, use of army personnel, it was agreed Certain increases to some staff from the sessions of the House at with each holder of an Aquatic ites. Objectors transferred to industry will work under un chases of this type heire and is ask B b o k s a re sh ip p ed to th e 600 L o by both speakisrs' that iio commit niemberi were awarded last year, Victoria, and he will review tee membership being a member of the ing for proof that such, sales have cal Ration Boards in Canada and to changed regfulations as regards pay. They will draw the pre ments could be expected from Ot but^ the present revision embraces legislation pass^ at tee recent sit- association. . taken ptece. 36 branch offices of the Ration A d tawa until the wsu: had reached a all employees of the city and is tings, with special reference to those The change ■will make the . K e- ..... vailing wage, but W I L L R E T A IN only $25 per month, the Definite proof of such transac ministration. To hand over ■ these more decisive stage and the second awarded in lieu of cost of living matters primarily M eeting the Ok- lowna Aquatic what it really'is—a tions is difficult to obtain, but ru b o o k s th e p u blic; 250,000 v b liu i- balance going to the Canadian Red Grqss. front had been opened. bonus. anagan. non-profit organization—not re- mors that under-cover deals are be t ^ s at 10,000 distribution centres It is expected that tee Sicker or In fact allowed, to pay Labor Director The rates of increase for tee em ing made persist, and the Committee across Caimda dig in to do the job. w ill outline the Government’s teten- dividends. So long, as the activities ployees in each department are set The executive was advised that W . is determined to explore every av- tibns in regard to hydro-electric ow- were carried on by tee original cor- Munitions Minister. Howe has announced that the Govern out in the ' resolution passed last MacGillivray, Dominion-Provincial enue in an effort to either prove or nership and/-will , discuss suchmat- ; shareholders were in a Monday night, and aldermen -were ment, in international conferences, W I L L S U P P O R T propos (Turn to Page 4, Story 4) disprove the reports, it is indicated. MINISTER SAYS ters as land settlement and the air- legal position to demand dividends • warned by Mayor McKay that they port. Board executive members are , if the enterprise showed, a . profit., als for establishing an “international air transport authority would have' to cut teeir estimates VET COULD NOT interested in the demand by mrmici- This has hot been an issue up toi ■! to allow for the additional overhead with effective powers.” He said the Government’s view of the polities and other organizations thait the present arid few, if aiy^, share-. so that the increases would not F U N C T IO N S of such an authority is that it should: 1. Further Kelowna Red Cross Committee DO COW TESTING tee burdfen of school taxation be holders wbuld ever expect dividend..,,^ necessitate an increase in the mill lifted from land, and this will be payments, bty operation under _ tee international co-oiperation and goodwill. 2. Ensure that inter Reports Donations To Date rate. . a matter of keen,-interest and com- old ch art* made this a.'possibility national A IR R O U T E S and services are divided fairly and Plan For Government Em^ ' Finance Chairman O. L. Jbnes ment. ' if larger profits were made. ployee To Carry On Private states that the additional payments ------. During the war all profits of the equitably among all member nations. 3. Meet the needs of the A re Over Twenty-one Thousand Practice Not Possible will not increase the budget appre APPLE SHIPMENTS Regatta have been allocated to war ; peoples of the world for efficient and economical air transport. ciably over that of last year as Shipments by B.C. Tree Fruits purposes and. have been; handed staff reductions have taken place and The. Provincial Government, Ltd. during tee past week'have tot- over to-tee Minister of Finance and 4. Contribute to the establishment and maintenance of a there is less maintenance work un through Hon. K. -C. MacDonald, ailed 50 cars. Total shipments for to the Prisoners of W ar Fund. How- der wartime restrictions. New work P E R M A N E N T SYSTE M of general security. Nine Districts Out Of Twelve Exceed Quotas By Sub Miifister of Agriculture, has turned tee season have reached 6,955 cars, ever, after the w ar these profits w ill is at a minimuin owing to the-war down tee suggestion forwarded by it is reported. ^ T^^ stantial Margins—-City One Thousand Down But and it is not’ anticipated that a tee Kelpwna Creame^ Ltd. and Late Subscriptions Expected To Put Town Over great deal of temporary labor 'will Lieut.-Gen. H. D. G, Crerar, 55, of Hamilton, C O M M A N various'” civic organizations teat a Xop— Pledges Total Eight Hundred Dollars veteririary stirgeon be appointed to be required, b® said. DER of the 1st Canadian Army Corps with the British 8th the Kelowna district who could test Voters Will Be Asked To Approve cows for tee Governm ^t and also Army in Italy, has been appointed commander of the 1st Cana IT H approximately $20,500 in.cash and over eight hundred carry on private practice. NORTH END ROAD Exchatige Bylaw, Thursday, April 6 dian Army, it has been announced by Defence Minister Ralston'. dollars in pledges still to be tabulated, the Kelowna and In his letter. Dr. MacDonald W stated that over 500 cows had been Col. Ralston said Lieut.-Gen. Kenneth Stuart, 52, Kingston, District'Red Cross drive is well over the top and the commun tested in 1942pand over 100 in 1943, IN BAD SHAPE Gnt., chief of the Canadian general staff, H A S R E L IN ity has once again exceeded all expectations in the support ac in the South Okanagan. Friction Passing W ill Assure City Resi corded to the national campaign which closed last wety. developed between the fanners and Low Lying Area Is Problem, dents A Park And Beach In MASS PROTEST Q U IS H E D his appointment as 1st Army commander, a post the Governirient official and he was Kelowna city failed to reach, its quota of $11,250 by about Says W o r k s Chairman- North End he had. held temporarily since; Lieut.-Gen. A. G. L .. McNaugh- removed from ' tee district. $1,000, but pledges and further cash donations are expected to The Minister of A ^culture’s let Water Mains Will Be Re- MEETING CALLED ton, 57, was granted leave of absence. O T H E R make up this defibit arid put the combined total close to the ter, made it quite apparent that a , placed ' The S. M. Simpson Ltd. . ^ ‘change MENTS were: Major-Gen. E. L. M. (Tpifimy) Burns, 46, Government employee coirld not act By-law was given three readings at $22,000 mark. - . ; in a private capacity as a veterin the City Council meeting held last AT KAMLOOPS A letter from Peter Maguire, com-^ 'Westmouht, Que., former divisional commander in Italy, to • Nine of the twelve districts ex-the Vernon army camp. ary simgeon, but Dr. MacDonald Monday night, and voters wiR be plaining of the unsatisfactory road* stated that the Government would asked to approve the proposed acting l i e u t e n a n t -g e n e r a l in command of* a corps-— ceeded their quotas by substantial In the 1942 campaign tee official conditions in tee north end of tee. give every assistance iri procuring a transfer on Thursday, April 6, next. Citizens W ill Discuss Land m argin s, an d it w a s d u e to th e m a g - ,q u o ta o f $10,000 w a s e x ce ed e d b y city adjacent to Coronation Avenue,- presumably the 1st Corps in Italy. Brig. B. M. Hoffmeister, 36, resident vet, and 'would. even con- The proposal covers acquirement ; Purchases By J a p a n e s.e nificent response by country resid- $5,600, and last year, with a quota of was read at the meeting pf ;the ents th at ythe $20,000 quota, w a s e x - $9,000, w e ll o v e r $18,000 w a s s u b - ^der paying a nominal monthly fee of the old Sutherland property and Agents of A'^anepuver; commander 6 f an infantry battalion in Sicily and to assist him in getting established City Council on Monday night. ceeded. Throughout the two weeks scribed. 'This means, that for the ’The writer pointed out teat secr beach frontage on Ellis Street,' north, here. ' ''' ■ ' Italy, to ACTING MAJOR-GENERAL. While the announce campaign it was apparent teat most past three years over-subscriptions, tions of the street were almost im-, of the present millsite. A public meeting has been called In commentiiig upon, the letter at ■ In return for teis desirable park districts would go over the top, and have been approximately 100 per passable and suggested that a gravel in Kamloops for next Sunday to ment did not say so, it seems logical he has been made division tee ’Tuesday meeting of tee Ke and beach the City will hand over efficient orgariiization of canvassers cent. Over-subreription this year fill be put in to remedy tee situa lowna Board of 'Trade executive,' anrundeveloped plot of approximate discuss problems in connection with al commander, perhaps succeeding Gen. Burns. resulted in a ctahplete canvass that w ill exceed 130 per Cent, tion. : Tom; Wilkirison told the members ly the same area Immediately ad aUeged imdler-cover purchases of Complaint was also made in re brought outstanding results. ; “I think that this is a very, fine that m any farmers were convinced gard to leakage from tee water joining the mill on the north. land by Coast Japanese now resid In the city the canvass was not achievement,’’ istated Capt. C. R. ithat cows were listed as TB teat This property is owned by the City mains and lack of sewer connec ent in'the'M ainline district. A Royal Commission, appointed to study provisions made so complete and many organizations Bull, campaign manager, “and as a were not actively inf«:ted, arid that and is reserve^ foi; use as a park, started late and this cut down the sustained effort over a period of cows had been destroyed that show tions. Recent disclosures have 'raised Alderman George Sutherland ag but, as it is crossed by a slough and for the welfare and maintenance of J A P A N E S E in interior time of return calls to homes years is unsurpasre their donatiotis. compared with less fortunate peo- year in conjunction •with tee in Federal Government take immedi J, L. Bowerlng’s application ror playground for hundreds of children Before-4he campaign opened an pie, and so indicates that if dratiny stallation of new pipe in •various ate action to cancel under-covet permission to erect a billboard on an and adults. The foreshore slopes m nf S9000 was suggest- has some dangerous end in view for parts of the city. i , land d e ^ and impose penalties empty lot at Water Street gradually - to deep water and teere teTcSiS^lan Red we will meet whatever may be- The matter of health and sanitary tending to prevent recurrence of . ; Caria'da’s new labor code is in effect, introducing CO M Leon Avenue was approved, by the is no sudden drop-off to trap in tid e w ith City Council on Monday night. conditions in tee area was referred such transactions. V : ^ Aid. Hu^es-Gam es, who was . ab experienced swimmers. ; P U L S O R Y collective bargaining and arbitration for workers ganizatlon set a voluntary quota of front and a cri^^on fOTtltude. ^ The billboard must be built to Alderman George Sutherland has sent from, the meeting, and Aid. City Clerk Gi H. Dunn wiU act $20,000. This course was followed “If, on the pther hand, it shotuq the approval of the City Engineer. been invited to attend'the meeting in all W A R IN D U S T R IE S and in national occupations which Sutherland was instructed to review as Returning Officer at tee poll The lot is not owned'by the City, next Sunday and w ill represent the in Vernon and teat city has also ex- be our fate to continue to enjoy oiu: the ridad situation in an effort, to which will be held in the I.O.O.F. have previously been under the Industrial Disputes Enquiry ceeded its objective by two teofus- incredible good fortune, teen I hope but the. corporation’s approval of City Council. find some solution for improvement. H a ll. Act.-, ' ■ and dollars, including subscriptions Turn to Page 4, Story 3 alli such erections must be secu ^ . fr
P A G E T W O THE KELOWNA COURIER THUitSDAY. MAKCH 23, lUi
In rnu.'it ca.scs, part of their money, went to evitable roll and—perhaps—about three-quarters ot a TRAVELLING IN BRITAIN is m experience. Thjl THE KELOWNA COURIER llel[> their parents and to buy^ school books for teaspoon of immnalade or jam. Tticre was butler—about trains arc just as crowdwl as they are here, Tlicre arjj KiUbU*b<>4 1004 as much as would cover the nail of your little fin ger the new term. Canada’s war effort was not over very few diners and everyone packs their own miv A nffw»ii«p«!r de»»led io IhO' l!iler«*<» #1 tb>e KciowiUi ul ami about as thick. lb« Ok«n«i(aun Valley in tliitinb Culuwbia, pubiribed cvcrjr Tbur_4ay wichea and Ihennos bottle. If you want a drink MKHriiitic hr Tbe Kciuwim Courier lAd. The Keiuwiia Courier ia • looked— tlirouf;li the sununer many bought War r p m wiiU r on the train or a cup of tea at one of the stopi| member ol (be Caiiadiati Weekly Newapapera Aaaocialiun aad of bonds and War Certificates and with some of the the Hritiali Columbia Weekly Nrwapapera \aaocia(>on. THE FOOD SITUATION seemed to boil down to this. you must tiave your own cup. us wo found out to ou| Subacription Kate; $2.5(1 in Canada: $5.00 in other countrieat alngle coplea, fire ccota. money they saved are boosting the school (juota Tljcre was plenty to eat but It was very flat and monot sorrow Uie first day In Britain. Actually china is be MEMBER o r "CLASS A“ WEEKLIES aiuf war effort by buying W ar Savings Stamps at onous. To parapiJirasc Tennyson, “It is a land whereicro all coming a problem. Seldom do you have a meal whe^ W in n e r, 1039, 1040. 1941 school. tliiiigs always taste tiie Kaine." Lack of seasoninglit ando all the pieces of china match. Charlcts Clark Cup On the debit side are vanished vacations and WE FOUND CHEESE EVERYWHERE in Britain. lack of sugar made a tremendous difference. 'ITilngs r p m Eittblematlc of the beat all-round Claea B wacbty ia Canada. that in peacetime are considered delicacies soon became nerve wracking “cram sessions" in school; on the And plenty of it. It was available at almost every meal In holds and some of it was good and some of It was nightmares, 'rake, for iru’tancc, tlie musljrooms. And CIGARETl’ES! IF YOU W ANT to do something fo W in n e r. 1939, 1941 credit side, added experience and a pride in hav your men overseas, send them cigareltos and more cigar] MacBeth Memorial Shield not so good. Personally, I saw more cheese in a week the pheasant, the grouse, the guinea hen. tlie venison, Emblematic of the beat editorial page in ,ta claaa In Canada. ing done something worth while on the home in Britain than I had seen in British Columbia in two wo ate at dinner. No more of those, please, for me for ettes and sUll more cigarettes. Every Canadian in th front. months. As I like cheese, I found it a pleasant substi many months. The sweets were something wonderful Army, Navy or Air Force whom we met said the som' Winner 1938 tute for tlio Innocuous things that were served as to look at, but, like Judy O ’Grady and the Colonel’s lady, thing. Cigarettes in England cost two shillings and four M. A. James Memorial Shield pence for twenty of the poorest brands. Something bette; Emblenutic o( the beat front page in Ite claaa in Canada. "sweets" for desserts. Cheese is rationed in Britain, they were all the same under the skin, than fifty cents. And they are poor things now. A mai| they tell me, but the ration is generously interpreted r p m G. C. Rose, President Have W c School Spirit ? by the grocer, living on anny pay simply cannot afford to buy thoi R. A, Froser, Secretary FRUIT, OF COURSE, was non-existent. I’ho best “But it i.sn’t playing the game!” he said. . r p m and consequently tlie cry is for more and more cigarottci that can bo said of the British food situation is that the sent from home. No man can receive too many, for then R. P, MacLean And he slammed his bopks away, BACON FOR BREAKFAST was a rumor which diet is a liealthy one and the supply is ample. But there are dozens who receive none at all or very few. So Editor and Manager , “The Latin and Greek I've got in my head could bo depended upon to get overyono Out of bed in Is no pleasure eating there— tlie swank hotels. In even In pf his friends are always short. Apparently most of ti & hurryl It was not always good bacon but It was bacon H ie average home has a pretty slim time at mealtime, Th* Kelowna Courier iiai by far the greateat cir.■illation of Will do for a duller dayl” men refuse to sell them to their friends but they \ 1 •iiy iiewipapcr circulating In the Ceatral Okanagan Valley. and a change from the evor-present mushrooms and dried These lines, penned by Robert W . Service in if iny observation and Information are correct. The best loan some until the friend’s parcel arrives. But ti eggs served in our London hotel. But the supply was THURSDAY, MARCH 23rd, 1044 1917, give an insight into the wave of restless meals we had were those in the Army, Navy and Air means that the one chap must take a portion of his nc^ 1 nnoUicr thing. Frequently the fourth person to enter Force messes, where wc found the food generally very arrived and precious stock and repay his debt and b< ness that swept the High Schools of 1914-19, the breakfast room found that the supply of bacon was good Indeed and a wide variety of It. During the trip, ho is short again. This seems to be particularly tr Morale, the essence o,f school spirit, has al already cxhaustcdl I lost ten pounds. I suspect It was not because I did among men who Just go over. Some time elapses bef r School Publications r p m ways been of prime importance to K.H.S., and not have sufficient good food to cat, but because there the first parcel arrives and by that time they ore hoj For the past six years, a school paper, the BREAKFAST W AS REALLY one of the tough meals. despite prevailing war conditions, it has reached was no pastry, little butter and little of those foods lessly in debt to their friends for cigarettes. The s Naitaka, has been published by the students of Porridge was available but there was no sugar and tlio which increase the waist line. Part of the reason, too, a new level based on student co-operation and gestion is that as soon as a man starts for overseas ti milk was about the blueness of on Okanagan sky. There the Kelowna High School. was doubtless because during the period In Brltalm there cigarettes should start to flow after him immcdiati i realization of future responsibilities. Proof that was one lump of sugar for your tea or cofree and, as I This year the Naitaka, with Molly Noonan was little time for relaxation, Any fat one put on was Most of the men I talked to felt that they received 1 school routine has not succumbed to the consc- am not Interested in sugar for my beverage, I found a quickly worked offl as Editor-in-Chief, conies out every Friday after most all the cigarettes sent to them. Some did not agi little relief for my porridge by breaking my lump of (piciiccs of this war is the fact that, with but a r p m it is true, but the majority were quite content that li noon. As well as school and other news of in sugar up into small pieces and scattering it over the few exceptions, school activities are receiving as OVERHEARD IN THE breakfast room of a London smokes came through with consistent regularity. O terest to students, several “columns” run each porridge. But it did not go very farl Then you had great support as during peace time, if not greater. hotel, one waitress addressing another in a loud whisper public relations officer put it this way: “If you can oi ij week. All the work on the paper except final a choice of mushrooms, or an ersatz sausag(j— with no which could be heard in every corner of the room: “If The formation of Red Cross groups and the com persuade the people of Canada to send more and m( meat in It, but something which tasted like sawdust—or checking of copy is done by the students them ho loves me as much as he says he docs, why should I cigarettes over, that alone would make your trip worn mendable efforts of the W ar Savings committees dried eggs scrambled— and that Is really something. I selves. This includes typing stencils, cutting have to share him with somebody else?” Love affairs while. You would have done a real service to the rr i constitute but a part of the program Kelowna did find some people who said that wheVi properly pre apparently meet the saifie snags in wartime Britain as ■ i headlines and illustrations and finally the actual of the Canadian forces here. Urge them to send m< r High has devoted to Canada’s W ar Effort. pared the dried eggs were not too bad, but all Britons in C a n ad a. and to send them regularly. Every man over here v ill printing, which is done on a duplicator. A broad and intelligent conception oh world seemed to be in agreement that they must be prepared r p m thank you.” Well, that is the stqry. You have it a 1 A school paper such as this provides excel in small quantities and in a private home if they are to affairs was recently illustrated for the Rotarians A W ING COMMANDER from Toronto one morning the rest is up to you. If you have any relative or frie cl lent opportunities for practical journalism. Every be eatable. I remember the look on the waiter one noon asked me if I would do him a favor when I returned to overseas in whom you are even casually interested, mai when their guest s^jeakers were three High Journalism student is given a chance to do a f when, after looking over the menu, in a moment of Canada. “Go to Murrays’ and order a double order of arrangements now to do something about augment! » School boys, whose school training and guidance dumbness I ordered an omelet. His look told me I had’ least one write-up each month. griddle cakes and maple syrup and eat them for me.” T u r n to P a g e 3, S to ry 1 disclosed youth well prepared to take their place made a mistake but I thought I would carry on through The Naitaka also serves as a tie to bring the in a restored world. the experience of a dried-egg omelet. Never again. Get different grades in the school closer together. ting back to the breakfast, you finished up with the in- One class is able to find out what another class is doing, school activities are advertised, special and what effect it would have on the supply of The W ily Pheasant accomplishments by any students are played up. birds. A few more birds would probably be shot Som efiiiies Scarce Many odd and interesting facts are brought to A tempest in a teapot seems to have been but it is doubtful if the farmers would kill off •the attention of the rest of the school. By such stirred up over the Provincial Government’s pro many more birds than in previous years, when things as this the Naitaka helps to boost school posal to allow unrestricted shooting of pheasants they had the right on permit which was easily morale. , which are destroying crops. secured. Another project carried on by the school is Game clubs throughout the Province have The unfortunate part of the whole matter is publication of a Year Book. Included in this are protested and it is apparent that the proposed that the Kelowna district may be zoned as an I" a review of the highlights of the school year, amendment to the Game Act will be revised with open district for farmers in contrast to the rest student personals, and candid pictures which in a return to the previous permit system. of the province. If the shooting should be wide Kelowna’s Rod and Gun Club has the doubt open, then farmers at the Coast should be afford future years may recall “the good old school mm days.” This year the Editor of the Year Book is ful glory of being the only organization of its ’ ed the same privilege as those in Kelowna. Pro Lois McKim, who by now has things well organ kind in the province that did not protest against tests of game clubs should not be the deciding ized. From all reports, the 1944 Year Book should unrestricted killing of birds by the. farmers. factor. equal or surpass those of former years. Research has: indicated that pheaisants use Another catch in the matter is that appar -T/i4 The Journalism Class has taken over the weed seeds as their primary diet but at certain ently many members of the local , club, disagree editorial page of this issue of The Courier. This times of the year they do some damage to far strongly with the stand taken by the club’s ex is a stiff task for High School students,^and it mers’ crops, .^t those periods farmers have al ecutive, and this situation not only adversely af serves to show the progress -which has been ways done a certain amount of shooting to scare fects the Rod and Gun Club, but widens the made by these in the field of journalism. the birds away. Apparently the game clubs feel breach between sportsmen and the farmers. It We are still making this that lifting all restrictions would cause the far might be a good idea if the two groups got to luscious bar, bill nafurdlly in lesser mers to go pheasant hunting every day in the gether and arrived at a plan for pheasant control qddh'tities. So6n> wd'hope, war-time Can Education Be Rationed? year. No one knows whether this would happen mutually agreeable to both sides. restrictions will be oVer. One of the major problems confronting Ke B444 lowna High School students today is the making up for lost time while working to help ease the Kelowna In Bygone Days acute labor shortage created by the war. With (From the flies ot The Kelowna Courier) the coming of summer the students leave school
and go to work in the orchard?, canneries, mills, ITORTTYEARS AGO A statement issued by the Associated Growers of stores, and finally into the packing houses, thus T b u r s d a y , M a rc h 19, 1914 B.C. attributed the falling-off in the movement of apples to removal of the dumping duty by the Federal Govern l U M "losing a great deal of school time. But does the An offer by the Okanagan Loan & Investment Co. ment, permitting the importation of cheap American ap value of the time lost from school. overbalance to p u rc h a s e $16,000 w o rt h o f 2 5 -y ear s ix p e r cen t d e b e n ples at low competitive prices. tures, at 97% and accrued interest, was accepted by .the ' * • • • the value of the work accomplished? In some City Council. An interesting dispatch in this issue records the fact cases because of labor needs a student leaves that in the by-election for the Abbey division of West Passenger business on the C.P.R. steamers was very school on the first day of June and does not re- minster, held on March 19th, Winston Churchill, standing active at this time, many of the travellers being Italian as an independent and anti-Socialist candidate, lost out • turn until late in October, so reducing a ten- railway laborers going to other fields of activity in con to Otho Nicholson by the narrow margin of 43 votes: sequence of the practical completion of the Kettle Valley month year to a seven-month year. Just as in This was the third itime within eighteen months that Railway grade in this district. Churchill had run for Parliament, meeting defeat in each any other job, a long Iqy-off means delay in get attem pt. ting back into the stride, a delay which may mean Edwin Weddell was gazetted as Police Magistrate for the City of Kelowna and as a Stipendiary Magistrate TEN YEARS AGO the difference between 'success and failure. for the County of Yale, and to. exercise within the City T h u rs d a y , M a rc h 22, 1934 of Kelowna and within a radius of fifteen miles there Fortunately, most students.of Keloyvna Fligh from the jurisdiction conferred under thp Small Debts The effort at stabilization of fruit marketing receiv have stood the test well, by dint of concentrated C o u rt A c t. ed a fatal blow when the suit of the Okanagan Stabili m * * zation Board against the Crestland Fruit Co., Li;d., for study, but the illusion must be shattered that Statistics quoted in this issue as having been given payment of levies, was dismissed on March 15 by Mr. students can be plucked out of school ranks with ■out by Fruit Inspector R. G. L. Clarke, at Vancouver, Justice Murphy upon the ground that the Board’s agree ment with the Crestland. Fruit Co. was unenforceable out serious effect on their education. placed the estimated apple production of British Colum bia for the year 1913 at 449,310 boxes, or less than one- because it was illegal, being in restraint of trade and free competition. Justice Murphy, in his analysis of the In view of the .situation, students at no time tenth of the average production now. The total amount evidence and his reasons for his decision in favor of marketed by the Okanagan United Growers, first large begrudge their efforts, but due. consideration the defendants,Hfoimd it necessary to ocempy eighty- co-operative sales agency, was 169,508 boxes. must be given by employers to the fact that eight pages, establishing a record for the longest judg On the petition of the O.K. Lum ber Co., Ltd., a credi ment ever rendered in a British Columbia court. While labor’s gain can become the student’s loss. After he expressed sympathy for the predicament of the fruit tor, an order of the Supreme Coiurt was issued declaring growers and admitted that ruin lay ahead of the indus all, education is the main goal of most teen age the British North American Tobacco Co., Ltd., to be in | :B ll try unless some remedy for existing ills could be found solvent, ordering the Company to be wound up under boys and girls. Their future, and perhaps the and applied, he condemned the actions of the Stabiliza the provisions of the Winding-up Act, and appointing W. ■J tion Board as illegal and in contravention of Section 498 future of "Canada, depends upon the worthwhile G. Benson, of Kelowna, as provisional liquidator of its of the Criminal Code. He also stressed that the civil estate and effects. This brought to a close the short things they can learn now. Can a happy medium rights of consumers of apples in Alberta and Saskatche lived history of the largest and most ambitious attempt wan were invaded as a result of the illegal contracts be struck between work and school activities? to establish the growth and manufacture of tobacco on framed by the Board because (from their point of view) a permanent basis in the Kelowna district. Surely this can be accomplished in such a way of improper, inordinate and oppressive restrictions upon Canadians on the home front/ straining every nerve and sinew In this competition. that everyone will benefit. The arrivak is recorded of two phfeasant hens, sent critical year before Victory, are grateful that wherever they ma]f be Following the adverse judgment, the Stabilization . to Kelowna by the Deputy Game Warden at Sardis, B.C., Board dismissed most of their staff and prepared to close' (heir precious cup of Nabob ColFee Is never far away. From Atlantic and handed over to D. W. Crowley for care. The article their office. states: “Mr. Crowley has made many attempts to intro to Pacific, Nabob Coffee in ib protectit’e Pliofilm container comes duce pheasants into the Kelowna district and has been T h e Child Labor Problem A t a meeting of district delegates from Salmon Arm , roaster-fresh and flavorful to bring new vigor to the (ask In hand. fairly successful. The climate is warm, zero weather is Vernon, Oyama, Kelowna, Westbank, Summerland, Kale- exceptional and the snowfall is light, but the ground During the past two years students of Ke den, Keremeos, Oliver and Nelson, held in Kelowna on is covered for a much longer period than on the lower March 19, W. E. Haskins, G. A. Barrat and O. W. Hem- lowna High School have been important factors lands near the Coast. This latter condition is the great bling were elected by ballot as the Board of Directors in relieving the very pressing labor situation est drawback, as natural feed becomes very scarce. Every Tune to Harmony Housed CBC Western Network, to operate 'the Unity Fruit Producers’ Association which winter Mr. Crowley has had to resort to feeding, which it was proposed to set up under the projected marketing Mondays . . . 8.30 pja., Pecllie War Time. which confronts Kelowna during e’ach harvest he is still continuing even at this date, using both the plan for 1934. Their remuneration was fixed at $3,000 per season. When , the appeal for help came the City Park and his garden as the feeding grounds. The annum each, with travelling expenses when away from, first importation was made six years ago and has been the head office on Associatio.n business. students’ response was not only gratifying to • .added to at various peridds since then. The growth of those who made the appeal, but definitely whole the birds has been pretty good, but in numbers they have Following the adverse judgment in the Supreme not multiplied as fast as in more westerly or southerly hearted on the part of the students. places of higher winter temperatures,-or else the birds^ Court of B.C., which ruled the actions of the Okanagan In June those whose progress made it poss have migrated to localities suiting them better Still, Stabilization Board as illegal, it was the general belief in the fruit industry that the proposed marketing plan they have grown in numbers possibly to one or two hun NABOB for 1934 would require the backbone of legislation to ible for them to do • so left school for orchards dred, although this is very hard to determine, as the make it effective, and with this in view a strong depu and fields, tugs and barges, and later for canner birds have scattered considerably, many apparently fly ing south in the winter.” tation of growers and shippers left on March 19 for Vic ies and packing houses. Although a large major toria to “camp on the doorstep” of Premier Pattullo and'^ ity of students were inexperienced, they persever TWENTY TEARS AGO his cabinet until something tangible should be forth coming in the way of legislation that would give the new T h u rsd a y , M a rc h 20, 1924 ed and proved to be an asset in the harvesting plan the legal force it lacked. • The delegation consisted I and packing of Kelowna’s valuable produce. The result of an arbitration held at Vancouver to of W. E. Haskins and G. A. Barrat, of Kelowna,-and S. determine the price to be paid during the 1924 season for W. Birch, of Salmon Arm, representing the growers, and Under these circumstances a student has an canning tomatoes was a marked victory for the growers, E. J. Chambers and J. E. Montague, of . Vernon, R. B. excellent opportunity to supplement his school the arbitrators deciding upon a price of $17 per ton for Staples, O. Jennens and G. S. McKenzie, of Kelowna, . i 'f . graded Earliana and $19 per ton for John Baer or similar representing the shippers. education with experience in practical living; In smooth varieties, being practically the figures asked by a great many cases you will notice the students the growers. Seven arbitrators had been appointed, two _ The Kelowna Intermediate "A ” girls made a gallant ■ by the canners, two by the B.C, Tomato Growers’ ’Asso bid for the provincial championship on Saturday even 'who have worked the. two years’’^ave used their ciation and three independents.' 'After announcement of ing, March 17, when they took on the “Province” girls money more sensibly the second year than they the award, the Dominion Canners staged that they would from Vancouver. They did their bist, but the visitors abide by it but, deeming the prices too high, would cur- ^ were a far superior team and had little troable in win did the first. toil their tomato pack in B.C. ^ ning the title by a score of 27-4. Kn«i4 PAGE THREE THUBSDAY, MARCH 23, HH4 THE KELOWNA COURIEK
2.7 m ills, a n d eciiools 17 J m ilis. INTENANCE Improvements will have to come THEY FIGHT IN ITALY by way of by-laws, tlie Council de :UT AT VERNON cided in setting tJio mill rale. At Y o u r tlie next meeting of the Council, Phone SPRING tlie Hoard of School Trustees is SUNSET 0 KEEP RATE exjHJcrted to request the p la c in g of a by-law before the ratepayers for STORE Tlje Vernon City Council, faced ecliool building. Ixiter In Uie year, other money measures for sewers, VALUES Me & Me (flth additional fixed charges e»- undordruinage and other works may ___ ated to total $f0,000 and wiUi the btirise
SPEND THE DOLLAR— Place Orders NOIV! don’t squeeze it. Keep the — for wheels of industry whirling. 1 D R Y M O PS— Only one of the many handsome Bedroom Suites on the Me & Me P-T-Z Each ...... 4 O L/ 2nd Floor. Priced to suit the most modest pocket book to the richest taste. POWDER WAX- A Hefis and Clark l-lb. tins ...... O’CEDAR OIL (P-j product for worms CKO\ in poultry, hogs and nundajni FURNITURE FEATURES M O PS ...... sheep. Buy the new O’CEDAR Almost legehdary figures of the battlefields are the Gurkhas. Here 0 L in o R u g s T R Y A P A C K A G E I Nayak Okel, who took a machine-gun, nest single-handed, chats with FURNITURE POLISH in Robin Riflemen Bagtabghaclue and Asbahadln. ® Scatter Rugs quart bottles— it’s cheap 1 ...... # C arpets *PAN • o n i a i r Q / k 'S 'S Production Committee Calls For 0 Dinette Suites Coleman Lamp }HERWIN‘W i LLIAMS Time to think about your Accessories 0 Chesterfield Suites P r o d u c t s Mantles, Generators and W e have a good stock of Increase In A ll Vegetables 0 Chenille Bedspreads every part required. jyjARNOT} GARDENING SHERWIN-WILLIAMS e Down Eiderdowns B.C.-Grown Seed Is Plentiful NEEDS I bhowh E n a m e lw a re PAINTS & VARNISHB And Of Good Quality, Sa)fs PEACHLAND’S REMEMBER ! For prompt Me & Me sell White, red trim, ,/ >7f t POTATO POTS, ea. 4 O and would advisd ybli to get your Report CERTIFIED. SEEDS REEVE SPEAKS SAUCEPAN—2 sizes— requirements I Additional requirements in crop s e r v i c e : production are listed in a statement , J andc $1.55, $1.70 GARDEN TOOLS received from the Provincial Agri TO a u x i l i a r y s t r a ig h t I ( THE KELOWNA COURIER TIIURSDAY. MAKCi£ 23. IMI PAGE FOUR VANCOUVER SWIM SHAMROCKS DROP WESTBANK GIRL Moral AI»out WITH THE KELOWNA STARS DEFEAT CLOSE GAME TO MARRIED TO RED CROSS ViaORIA CLUB KAMLOqre FIVE GLENRO^MAN SERVICES Joan Langdon And Shirley W ill Meet Mainliners Here T o Harriet Elizabeth Griffin Unit- (Friends luad relalivea of men w h» From Page 1. 'Column i Muir Prominent In Victories night In Final ~ Juniors ed To Harold Douglas W eb- «.re xervlnz in luiy briuteb of 111* .and pray U»at we may have more Swamp Oliver ' ber Abl)est]r'a Service «re tnvUed tv and more tests to prove our appre- Coast swimmers, who vend in contributivna to The Cour at FUMERTON'S elation of the blessings wo enjoy, have competed at Kelowna Regattas Kelowna basketball teams broke Rev. Mr. Curson, rjtf tlic First Bap- ier for tbia column, cither by mail ,and more and more opportunities to fyj- „ number of years, are again In even in games last Saturday, with tist Church, Kelowrm, officiated at or pbonmf M.) help in the great cause of freedom uje news spotlight after tlie B.C. the Juniors swamping Oliver at tli'e the wedding of Harriet Elizabeth, and uf the future for which we ciiamplonship Swimming Gala held scout Hall 33-1, while the Sham- daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas In a letter received by the Ke tight." in Vancouver on Saturday at the nocks lost a toughle to Kamloops in H. Griffin, to Harold Dougins Web- lowna Courier tills week from Mrs. LOVELY GOATS Following Is a complete record of Crystal Pool. the Mainline city by 32-28. ber, sor» of Mr. and Mrs. J. I. Graham Kincaid, Penticton, the Uic cash donations made in the city iV o Canadian records were •j'jie game In Kamloops was close Webber, of Glenrosa, last Wednes- following news will bo of great f o r E a s t e r und each district up to yesterday, smashed as Vancouver natators a- an the way, wlUi the Interior In- day afternoon, at the home of the Interest to many readers of this paper. It was contained in a letter Tliese totals will bo matcmlly in massed 135 points to take the meet tcrmedlatc finalists showing some bride’s parents in Westbank. III all attractive shades foi; spring. Fitted styles with padded- croused b y o v e r $800.00 In p le d g e * from the former championship’crew good basketball. The second of tlve Becomingly gowned______in______turquoise,^ ______received by M ra Kincaid from Mrs. stitching, tucks and novelty trims. which have not yet been allocated from Victoria, who managed only two-game series will be played hero tlie b r id e chose w in e acccsBorlc^3, Inn M acR ae , a fo rm e r K e lo w n a re s l- to their respective districts and the 85. Olympic and Crescent Clubs tonlglit, with total points to coun/t, whllo her only sister, Miss Mar- dent, ,who lived on Elliott Avenue, Priced, each— city by the secretary, owlnj to the chalked up 7 and 5 .points respect- and the Irish ore confident that they garet Griffin, her soJo attendant. Ion MaolUe, Jr., was reported tremendous rush of work In the Ivoly. will win the round on their home wore a frock of beige wlUi rose ac- missing In Italy lust October, pre- Joan Langdon bettered her own floor, cessorlcs. . sumed jto have been killed In nc- closing hours of the campaign. $14.95 " $25.00 time of 2:02 3-5 by 5 2-5 seconds in The first half of Saturday night’s Am ong out-of-town guests were tlon. Ian Joined the Cadets and later ' A ctu ally the 150 yard individual medley. game found the Shamrocks unused the______bride’s___ great-aunt,______Mrs. _____ Ezra moved______up to the “Buffs," and, when Donated District Quota Bill Turkington, of the Victoria to the larger Kamloops floor and, Johnson, of Kelovraa, the grobin’s the war started he transferred to K e lo w n a ...... $11,250.00 $10,238.10 Y.M.CA., was the other record .^hilc the Irlslimen were warming sister, Mrs, Paul Turney, of Pen- the paratroops. In 1941, when clgh- Tlutland ...... 2,000.00 2,115.72 breaker, clipping 1 3-5 seconejs off up, the Klippers’ star line of Dick tlcton,' and Mr. and Mrs. G. A. teen, ho was picked from his plat- \ ' O k . M issio n .... 1,750.00 1,970.30 tho Canadian murk of 1:55 3-5 for Reid, Jack Rcld and Les Booth Hockley, of Penticton. oon to go to Canterbury Cathedral E a s t e r E ast K c l...... 1,230.00 1,324.00 the senior men’s 150 yard medley chalked up 16 points to 6 for Ko- • • • , to turn the page on the Book of G lc n m o re ..... 900.00 1,255.54 sprint., lowna. During the third quarter the Mrs. Malcolm Morrison and Mrs. Life, a record of the Buffs who lost W ln d e ld ...... 730.000 . 016.63 Shirley Muir came up witli smooth shamrocks started on a scoring Horace Oliver, of Penticton, spent ,thclr lives during the First Great B l o u s e s U c n v o u lin ..... 650.00 \ 902.00 performances In the senior women’s gpree, marking up 13 p^nts. a few days recently with friends’ In War. 'This Is an impressive cere- W e s t b a n k ...... 050.000 I 610.50 events. defeating her Victoria rivals. with three minutes to go, the Westbank. mony and also quite an honor to O k . C en tre .... 350.000 302.00 Alice Thomson and Mncriha Bootfie, Kelowna boys had overcome the ■ * * a soldier who performs it. Ian Soft, lacy, trim sheers, South K e l...... 320.00 378.20 by wide margins. . „ , Kamloops lead and were three “ bulld- 314.00 ’The Vancouver Amateur Swim- points to the good with a score of xviargarei ivmjwurray, or jj^g trying to lob grenades into a tailored crepes, striped E lliso n ...... 250.00 mlng Club made a clean sweep of 28-25, when Frank 'Walden, of the lowna, who have field gospoimwt- Q^rman pillbox that was holding B e a r C re e k .... 75.00 09.60 rayons and tailored- the relay events, anchor man Terry Kamloops team, made two field up their advance. He was In the Joe R ich ...... 45.00 47.00 . j'erseys. Connolly pulling the senior men goals and one free shot, and Dick ^panc.se at toe We^^ Country for quite a number of through to some close wins over the Roid dropped another one through JJ**'*' arranged a social evmlng tor yg^rs with his mother, and his $20,200.00 $20,449.59 Victoria competitors. the hoop, to win the game. ^he young last Thursday father, ------well known by all ---Kelowna------Priced, each— Georgle Athans capped the pro- The j>lny was clean and fast, with evening In the^ s^e^ hall, lacrosse players, at one time owned gram with an exhibition of diving Kamloops checldng hard and u ^ g ^pl. Robin Drought arrived from the “Canteen’’ with Bernard Ray- LOT EXCHANGE that left the crowd gas,ping. He per- their weight to advantage. The Rrandon last week for a short visit mer, —— and------noiw, , lives in Vancouver. , , $2.95 f” $3.95 formed everything from a two and Shamrocks had enough toul shots parents, Mr. and Mrs. Al- The second Item also of interest IS APPROVED a half double somersault to his spec- to win the game but missed most of Drought, of Westbank. He will to readera Is that ponalfl, son laity, a double Jack-knife, ending them. , , return this week with his son, Brian, ®4r. and Mrs. T. MePhee, Vancouyer, with a back one and a half with a Tostenson was the spark plug for . Brandon whence thev will be Is reported mlssjng overseas and Is Uity Secures Lot Near Reser- full twist.' the Shamrocks with a nice eight accompanied by Mrs R ol^ Drought presumed a prisoner of war in . voir For Property On Stock- points to show for his efforts, and . Winnli>eg where Cpd Drought Germany. Mrs. MePhee was well E a s t e r H a t The teacher was giving a lesson ^ s followed closely by Stuart ^ni'^co^S hb teatoS’a?rrSJ known In K e l«^ as I^e W^^^ ‘ well Avenue and Leckie with seven and six th^.’Rf’ A F ruff and came to Kelowna in 1019. ------on the crocodile. . markers respectively. gunn ® i ' , on National Service work for E. L. IS H E R E ! An exchange of property tetween “You must give me all your at- The Reids were the chief scoring Cpl. Theodore Cobum, of Vef- Cross, when he brought a number ithe City and Mrs. K. Wigglesworth tention,” he said. “It is impossible threat for Kamloops and should be non, recently from Kiska, was a of girls up from Vancouver to work Definitely wearable and becoming styles in new spring was approved by the City Council for you to form a true idea of this tn watch here tonleht at last Monday night’s meeting. hldeouls reptile unless you keep the men to watch here tonignt week-end visitor at the home of in the cannery. felts and straws. Something you can rave about. Hats The City wiU get a lot recently your eyes fixed on me.” Teams and Scores Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Hewlett. j ^ Aom„First Great War for every occasion, slicker and neater than ever. See [purchased^______by Mrs. Wigglesworth,__ Kelowna: Tbstenson 8, Stewart 7, Company Sergeant-Major Wally veteran who served with the 43rd these at our new Hat-Bar today. Priced— near toe reservoir, and in payment by Council members without a r^ - Leckie 6, Bogress 3, Macdonald 4, stubbs, of Calgary, spent a. short Battalion, ..Cameron Highlapders of will transfer two lots on Stockwell ment, and satisfaction that the City Hoyle, Harding, Hoy.—Total, 28, recently with his family in Canada, has been promoted to gen- Avenue, owned by toe City. was securing the reservoir lot was Kamloops: Foulger 7, Walden 5, westbank, eral staff officer, first grade, m $1.95, $2.49, $2.95 *"$4.95 Approval of the deal was given expressed by all aldermen present, d . Reid 6, J. Reid 6, Booth 4, Long- • • • . charge of operations, with the rank ■______-J—— ------1------—------— r ------— more 4, Stevens, 'Whyte, Marriott, Last Friday evening, Miss L. Daw- of lieutenant-colopel, it was an- Smith.—Total, 32.; son and Mrs. J. McGregor, of the nounced during the pdst week at EASTER SHOES Winners ^of tonight’s game -will staff of 'Westbank 'School, enter- pacific • Command, headquarters, receive the Kelowna Gyro Trophy tained at the hemp-Pf Mrs. Pat Vancouver. A militia officer of at Fumerton’s and be eligible to meet the Heather Hewlett with an evening of bridge long standing, Lt.-Col. Horn was m - Cubs of Vancouver, for the Inter- and other entertainment, ’The rooms called to active service early .in the For smarter styles, longer vaear and better values!' mediate “B” cham^onship, were gaily decorated with green war, first with the R.M.R. and more F o r S a l e Next Saturday, the Shamrocks wWte novelty recently as G.S.O. 2. for army train- Ties, pumps, oxfords, in all the new numbers for spring. will play Summerland in an exhib- • • • Priced at, pair— \ Sow^rfrls^^a K o “t ^ -f iv ^ ^ during SgL-PUet J. J. Nooi^ R.C A F., Fully Modem, 4-room' Kelowna girls in a preliminary. evening. who is now on leave visiting at his $2.95, $3.49, $3.95 *“ $6.50 Junior Game _____I _ _ ------:------’ home In Kelowna, was notified on n March 17th that he had been com- It is not oiften that an Interior C ft'- STUCCO B U N G A LO W • !%• missioned with the rank of Pilot final is as one-sided as the game Furnace and Breplace... Good location. against Oliver here last Saturday. Members of the Corps will work Officer, to date from March lOto. EASTER FASHIONS FOR GIRLS “Balcony Floor” The southern kids di^layed a com- In Toe H rooms on Friday, Satur- pie. Mary Homsberger, C.WA.C., P R I C E ...... plete lack of hoop knowledge and day and Sunday of this week, -KrZ-^aiT^n th«» week-end at the C O A T S styled for girls— Tweeds, polos and up to the last minute it looked as if The Corps will parade at the NaM parents at Okanagan plain coatings. Sizes 7 to 14. At ...... $ 1 0 .9 5 ‘“$14.95 they would be whitewatoed. How- Armory on Wednesday evening, parents ar uxanagan ever, they managed to sink a free March 29th, at 19.30 hours, and w ill J“^ssion. Sizes l6 to 16 ,...... 2...... 1...... $12.95 to $18.95 FOB FUBIHEB PABTICDLARS SEE shot and the game ended 33-1 for take an examination in Military Pte. H. B. Greir, R.C.O.C., who is SK IR T S—rPleated and flared. Assorted colors. O K TD. Kelowna. ’This , was the first of a Law. stationed at Veriion, spent the Priced from ...... two-game series and the Kelowna week-end visiting in Kelowna at the E.M.CARRUTHERS&S0N,L youngsters are slat^ to travel ad tators Oliver would b6 well advised borne of his uncle and auht, Mr. and G A Y C O T T O N FROCKS in crispy colorful prints, MORTGAGES - BEAL ESTATE - INSURANCE Oliver next Sa:turday. Under ; the to default ^ d 1^ the_ Juniors play j. D. Yoimg,'132 DeHart Ave. bright and pretty for school. Sizes 1-6 and 7-14. 9 8 c ‘“ $ 1 . 9 5 circumstance:^ it teems a waste of the Oliver Intermediates;in an ex time, and for the sake of the spec- hibition tilt, Fit. Sgt. Peter Bath, R.C.A.F.,son ifii Of Mr. and Mrs. A. T; Bath, Man hattan Beach, has received his com n mission as Pilfit Officer in the-R.C. EH. AJ*. overseas. ^Vito him as naviga tor is Sgt. “Bill” Husband, son of Col. and Mrs. G. W . Husband, yer- ‘WHERE CASH BEATS CREDIT’ :non.- '0 0 • ‘ , Sgt. Pilot Bill Rawlings, R.CA.F., who had been spending his furlough at his home in Kelowna, left on Monday for Three Rivers, Quebec, BASKETBALL for further training. M o r e A b o u t H Bdr. Maurice Mbikle,' who has 2nd INTERMEDIATE “B” been spending his furlough at his GROWER hom e in K e lo w n a , le a v e s ,on F rid a y , r fo r h is statio n in. th e east. EXECUTIVES 1 3 . 2 7 Acre Farni | CHAMPIONSHIP Bill Knowles, R CA.F., was a vis itor at his home in Kelowna last From Page 1, Coluirm 3 FOR SALE w eek . • • • Emergency Farm Labor .Director, F.O. James Snowsell, R.CA.F., re- ^e in Kelowna in a few days Tw o acres in full bearing trees, balance hay and vege GAME! cently reported missing, is now a that organization plans would table land. Every bit good and in excellent state of prisoner of war in Germany. He. is discussed for the coming season, fertility. Two modem homes with electricity, bathroom the son of Mr. and Rdv^aM organizations in the city Snawsell. F.O. Snowsell enlisted m i-^jegted in the labor situation will and basements. Barn with steel stanchions for 8 head. DecembCT, 1942 leaving fo^ over- hf the expected meeting Owner leaving district. This is a bona fide good listing. ^as in March j L THURSDAY. MARCH 23. 1944 PAGE 'SIX THE KELOWNA COURIER I HERE IS YOUR .... P n e M e w - 0 ^ ^ a l u & i “ FOOT FASHION STORV” ... for the EASTER PARADE and SPRING W EAR FOR ... presented in four Mor-Eeze fashion-leading groups. Exquisitely styled by master designers. Priced to meet S p r i n g B e a u t y every woman’s budget. u se IN ALL THE NEW SHADES AND STYLES FOR SPRING f V 1^1rr Have a shade for every ensemble. Town brown, black, blue, bottle green, gray, Pink Clover rust, wine and red. Suedes, gabardines and leathers. Loafers and casuals. Elasticized. A? V . ./ Pumps, hi, lo and'raedium heels. Widths from A A A . Sizes to 9. aC i Enchanting fragrance of Whether It Is spring fabric to 4 A " . make your own Easter ensemble, clover fields at dawn captured or drapes and cui^alns to brighten BEAUMONT WitM g HOUR Shoes expertly made by' master your home, Miss Ritchie can show Smart new styles designed for' craftsmen. K A in a refreshing cologne, you many patterns and materials youthful women of every age. An PINK to choose from at lUTCIHE’S DRY Priced a t ...... every day Mor-Eezo (lova in the new 3 o z . siz e . GOODS. value. Pair ...... coLOOnc • 9 • $3.95 UABfllf ..For bread just like mother makes, .try rOODE’S HOME BAKERY MAGIC CARrai BREAD. It’s delicious. Hoorde Bak WILMONT . 0 i *1 .1 0 ery cakes are a real treat. Shoes that are a step, ahead of Clever spring styles featuring fashion. supreme comfort and There’s nothing like a perman Priced nt ...... $4.95 fit. Priced at ...... $5.50 ent to lift morale. You’ll feel gay and look gay ifor the Easter sea Hlijf son with a ROYAL ANNE BEAUTY permanent styled by Miss Bennett. M or-Eeze Shoe Store R. H. BROWN, Phm.B., • • • , “The Modem Apothecary” TOM GRIFFITH, Manager of the BON MARCHE L ’TD., ladies’ ready- Kelowna, Opposite to-wear specialists, has a store full of the newest, gayest and smartest B. C. Post Office BROWN’S PHARMACY LTD. Spring ensembles for the Kelowna *** Phone 180 Prompt Delivery ladies. Suits, dresses, coats, hats, *4 ’*■' IB* j cS> o accessories, etc. Easter SPRING BEAUTY Spring means a EASTER Fresh-As-A-Daisy Look your best in t^ie Easter Fabrics Parade— Don’t be disappointed. Make your appointment n°w fl To top the list, invest in a new SPR IN G COAT. W e have a' grand assortment in all the newest materials, in for a Permanent ! inany styles, and a range of sizes from lly i to 46, at Make your own Easter Wardrobe. Spring and all its glory lower prices. _ >. Gay spring fabrics now on hand. Also bright curtain will have nothing on you arid drape materials to add cheer to your home. with your Choose.your new S PR IN G S U IT from WHAT STYLE OF SHOES 'wiU i EDITH. GRANGEB, proprietress fhis smart selection of tweeds, shet- the well dressed lady be wearing of the, CHARM BEAUTY SALON> lands, homespuns, boucles arid new' RITCHIE’S DRY GOODS this Spring? Let CLAUDE WILL-= will derign a coilfure to suit your tailored worsteds. They are smartly cox, proprietor off the MOR-EEZE individual features. Be gay, be New Spring Permanent Wave SHOE STORE, show jFou the new- bright this Easter with a new styled. Prices range— est, smartest styles ever presented Charm Cold Pack Permanent 'Wave, in Kelowna. Gay pumps, snappy Make your appointments now. Make appointments now for Easter ! For Your ties, cosy casiialsi and loafers. Call . • • • $14.95, $19.95$29.95 at the Mor-Eeze today. For that spring complexion, see * • • lotions and beauty preparations now THE BLUE BIRD STIFLE SHOP on display: in felR.Qi^’S PHARM- AUCE’S BEAUTY SHOP will make- your Spring outfit for ACY LTD. For, spring tonics, con- Dress up for Easter in a N E W P e h m you. ■ Choose the material you like, suit R. H. .Bro\Yn4Phm.B., the Mod- B O N N E T . ‘ W e have them in styles select the style, then bring it to us. em Apothecary, proprietor- T ry our.... This yeM look exceptionally smart • • for missy, miss arid matron. 'in an. ensemble that is made espec- New linoleum means brighter ially for you. _ _ homes. Call in at the O. L. JONE^ • • FURNITURE 8’rOBE today and see TYLON MITCHELL’S MEN’S B LO U SE S galore to go with your: C O L D P A C K and his lad for Spring. This year new suit. Sizes 12 to 40. choose your clothes at Hany M it- oovering needs, “It’s As Cool As A Breeze !” chell’^, then you, too, will agree it is the finest men’s wear store in the Okanagan V ^ e y . Of course you will need a new DRESS for Easter. W e Luxury permanent that-curls your hair closer SCHOOL BUDGET have them in all styles, new colours, printed and plain, to its roots, lasts longer .... yet requires no SPRINGTIME is home improve-IQ one and two piece, a size and price to suit you. • machines, wires, chemicals ! Let one of our ment time. JOS. ROSSI will gladly ^ give you an estimate on Stuccoing ATT skilled operators create a lovely Easter coiffure your home or for any Plastering, i%.K> 4 for you today ! Phone or come in for free con Kalsomining, Brickwork which you , - ; , ^ i may need. SPORTS JACK ETS— A smart range of sports Jackets sultation. Council. Passes Ordinary Esti- in many patterns, all sizes, at popular prices. And a big ALICE’S BEAUTY SHOP is all mRtes £>ut Is Faced With i range of SK IR TS to harmonize with the sports jacket. ready to help the ladies of Kelowna Extraordinary Expenditures look their loveliest in the Easter CHARM BEAUTY SALON Parade. Appointments are now be Operation of the Penticton schools ■fin^ ing taken for Easter Permanent. . . will cost taxpayers at least $52,829.80 In fact we have your complete ensemble for the E D IT H M. G R A N G E R Waves, Miss Anderson, propnetocOT, 1944, according to .the School EASTER PARADE ! is, well•(yell known for her exrellent Board petimate!?estimates anorovedapproved bvby the Brighten up. the rooms by having them Kalsomined or '/woirk. Penticton Municipal Coimcil in a newly Plastered. Have the outside Stuccoed for beauty closed committee session. However, the school bill may not and economy. stop there. Board Chairman H. Bar nard indicated .that extraordinary estimates will be submitted for J O S . R O S S I — PHONE 501 — Council approval. While no com ment has been made by Board mem GENERAL CONTRACTOR bers or mimicipal officials as to the exact purpose" of these expenses, it is understood that they have to do with increasing school accommoda- tipn, which has become taxed al Good ftews! most to the limit during the past few years. ' “Easier Chick Demands Perfect Fit” For the home-lovers seeking the spring cheer of bright rooms ! Ordinarily, extra budget figures would have .to be before the Co.un- cil by February 15 in order to be studied, but the Council has agreed NEW to waive this right. and to take have Y O U R clothes these additional figures under con sideration, if presented in the near m a d e fo r future. ' ■ ■ '.. ' Estimated expenditures for the L i n o l e u m s year are $95,121, an increase off $6,799 over the 1943 budget. How ever, government grants and fees, YOU! AND estimated at $42,291.20, are applied to this total, bringing it down to $52,829.80, which" the taxpayers of Penticton must pay to support their • schools for the ensuing year. Clothes made to your individual G oiigoleiim s Last year’s budget, which receiv ed Council approval, was $50,436.50, measurements give you a distinc and in 1942 it was $48,062. Add new beauty and life to eyery room by having new Linoleum While estimated expenses are tive look and you feel so much $6,799 over last year, the final and Congoleum rugs. W e have the largest stock in the Interior budget figure is not much in excess more comfortable in them. of B.C. from which to choose, of the 1943 total for the reason that the government ^ants and school Choose your favorite patterns and fees totalling $42,291.20 are higher styles. Our expert workmanship P A I I IM TririAV f us give you an estimate on than the $37,985.60 contributed by 111 AVR1L//I i • vonr flnnr covering tiPfids ! fees and by the provincial educa will help you to lead the Easter your tional authorities last year. ; / A large portion of the increased Parade. - expenditures for the year is due to. : For extra energy to do those spring jobs, eat h l^ ef salaries paid to> .the teachers, Poole’s enriched Home Bakery Bread— Ask for school' nurse, steno^aphers and janitors., These increases account it at your grocery store : It’s always fresh 1 0 for $3,418, or over half of the $6,799, . L JONES FURNITURE CO increase in the; estimates. POOLE’S HOME BAKERY P H O N E 435 Our neighbor’s 10-pound baby can i make more noise than its •220-pound mother can suppress." ' n ■rSil i f * MEN'S W EAR SPECIALIST ' * . V i PAGE SEVEN t h e KELOWNA COURIER IlUftSDAY, MAKCH 23. IMi *1. froftn Albert*. British war finance ainra at raising K.H.S. STUDENTS Vemice Carlson; November 29, f-OWIfED LO-rS BENTEO 1926. in a litUe town tailled Boggy ;>ruxixi!»ately IIK) V>t» <^wued by the maximum possible sum by tax CTreek, near Itoblin, Manitoba, siie ation and. after taxation, by war HIGH SCHOOL ACTIVITIES FROM OVERSEAS ity in the north end of Ive- Here is mmie interesting "awujce' was bom. She lived Uiete until riW wiU be rented to F. Dal Col, savings, l^ r e tlran 60 iper cent of was twelve and tliea cajne to Glcn- the 1943-44 expenditure Is being As Reported By “NAITAKA” Staff Writers material: uppUcatU)n W£*s approved at Alex* Vlrr«: In 1942 slie came to nvM-e and Joined our big liappy y'a Council meeting. 'ITie an- met out of taxes, and war savings family. aecourrt for a large part of tlie re Canada frxxrn Hojtolulu because of Elisabeth Folliner: Bom near rental is $50.00. Included in tile wartime dangers there. LINIMENT i>lock ore all road allowances. mainder. STUDENT-TEACHER 'Ilmisoara, Uunuinia. She came to SCHOOL SPORTS Mary Ellen Brown; N ew est arriv- Canada In 1929 (and straigid to Ke tmtmm HIGH CLUB ADDRESSED tlonsr To the wimjers of the first, lowna. at that!). In 1933 slie went WORK-WEARY ARE BOOMING _____ ( Capt. Bull presented tlieatre tickets. back to Rumania tor a visit *‘®nd I KNOW A THING came right back to Kelowna MUSCLES I KNOW A THING . F. T. Marriage Speaks On Ele Teachers of the High School have OR TWO ABOUT Ping-Pong A n d Basketball SPOTS sprung an additional surprise. If again!" (Her own words.) OR TWO ABOUT of Kelowna Senior High mentary School Problems the school reaches its quota by East- ThM Rcndle. Keith and Bobln Create Keen Interest they arc going to see to It that Young: All products orour Motoor GOOD BREAO/ School News er, ,„i.n Country—Englanil Tliey didn’t adian woy- -In a big way I 6 0 0 0 y e a s t / TTie Studerit-lVachor Club had —^"The O leaner." Ping-pong appears to be making as its guest speaker on March 2 trimmings. take long to get used to our Can one of Us greatest come-backs in ’Ihe Senior Matrics struggle out F. T. Marriage, principal of the Kc- ___ __ years with Uio drawing up of a of llie enveloping folds of their lownu Elementary Schools. tournament which promises many homo-work to distinguish tliem- Mr. Marriage, the third visiting torrid battles before a champion selves in basheioan basketball, utoe e senuo.Bchool ^aa addressed the club. Q uality Tobaccos m ak e will be decided. House co»nix.-uweu» owu rvilntodTKdnted out some of the problems In the hoys' doubles, Ma^onald Club. Do their studies Buffer? Per- ^ Elementary Schools, and Weddell have been ^ting a hups! but the fact remains that «Youncer children arc subcon- rr / f merry pace and demonstrating some these people are a largo chunk of , „_iy Interested in educa- of the power which they promise the vertebrae in the extra-curricular tlon," said Mr. Marriage. "This is to show In the tourney. Yamamoto backbone of K.H.S. To clarify this toe main difficulty confronting toe bears watching In toe boys’ singles, situation, an Itemized Kst is now in teacher.” So far the girls have rarely been order. He explained further that, unlike seen In battle, but no doubt Uicy Basketball: Ken Harding. Harold Junior and Senior High Schools, will come up with a surprise. Tlie shugg, Clifton Hoy, Dick Stewart, EXPORT too students of the Elementary U As teachers, too, are In the thick of It House Competitions: Practically all Schools feel that learning is a duty and they swear to give stiff opposl- the boys participate, but none of rather than a benefit for them CIGARETTES lion, come what may. the girl.s, unfortunately. selves. He gave a good example of The tournament Is another de- Radio Club: John West, Dick the experience he ihud with one of The milder better -tasting smok«* monstraiion by old K.H.S. that she Stewart, Ken Harding, Harold the pupils. When asked if he liked Is carrying on In the face of diifl Shugg, Doris Daln, Jeanette Proud. school, the student answered: "Oh, cultics brought on by the war, not Naltaka: Joan Mackenzie, Jean it’s all right, but it takes up an ably a ^ortagp of ping-pong balls. Brydon, Pat Weddell. awful lot of my time.’’ Mod* in No doubt a search of every nooW Individual heroes and heroines? The teacher is the most ImiKjrtanit Conodo and cranny will be carried out to No! Mediocrity may be their mis- ^part___ __ of the__ educational______system, as produce those celluloid pellets to fortune as individuals—but through her ability and personality are what assure too success of the meet. co-ioperative accomplishments their decide whether the students will Basketball names will live. take an Interest in school or not. A challenge basketball game was • • • Mr. Marriage) tons arranged to Press Patter j^ave three girls, Judy Mlddlcmass, Wim played Thursday, March 9, at 4.30, 1 in too gym., between Kelowna and Again the Student Council Is put- Lenore Matheson and Kay Murdoch, Rutland girls' toams. Closely con ting on the kind of a party the take over Miss Kenny’s Grade IV tested from______start__ to____ finish,„ the school game has asked for. ’The lost party class. ’The school principals ore try- H ended In a victory for the Kelowna of this kind proved that the prob- jng to make it possible for all mem- girls by a score of 20-12. lem of a shortage of boys at our bers to teach at least one class. Little Pam Leckio, who seethed to parties could be solved, and from ------be everywhere at once, played an every source we have the same |r I I A V C think how satisfying a cup outstanding game and merits much assurance that K.H.S. did have fun. KJEjgf AV»Al*ky* AyXTAfc# W"‘ credit for Kelowna’s victory. Two Variety and novelty dances, good of Neilson’s rich, nourishing J K l^ . Rutland girls, Pat Pahlman and music and super refreshments are ARE REVIEWED Agnes Hartman, were the bulwark going to be the order of toe day. back to 1929, we fihd l, "S of their team, meeting every one of Prices for e v e ry t^ g are <»,be m ^ Principal A. A.Chap- Chocolate Cocoa would be. Kelowna’s barges with ease and low as possible. The Council irues does •_ David .. „ Garbutt . was----- thenj.,— *i—toe breaking through toe opposing not make money at school parties. team’s defences with equal ease. w e aim te elve every one . *o<»i S 1 lb. 2 9 c j a ib. 19c time at cost price. . , won at the Olympiau at Vancouver. ■ COCOA C44« There are still some who don t gjgg President of the Stud- nillllllh mmrn AIR SQUADRON realize that our jiarties must end Council. Garbutt, along -with at 12 o’clock. Here again is a prob- Guidi, H. Johnson, G. Munro lem K.H.S. students can solve their^ jyij Meikle, represented Kelowna IS INSPECTED selves by turning out at 8.30 and Olympiad. In toe contests, CLIP THIS ANNOUNCEMENT FOR FUTURE REFERENCE getting in 3}4 hours of fun. Its go- carbutt made five points, Guidi Kelowna Cadets Prepare For ing to be the last fling before we Johnson one, making a Annual Irispeotiem In May all settle down to Easter exams, total of ten points for Kelowna. Turn out, K.H.S., as you did before, They had quite a football team in Kelowna Air Gadget Squadron 243 and we’ll really______put it over. those days too, witt^ Herbert Aitken R A T I O N B O O K 4 was visited by F/O G. S. Weeks ai^ _ _ _ Mr*iwT*v«vaT'ivn as its captain. . - Sgt. S. Murphy last Friday. Sgt. | 7 V _ C T IJ IT jR M T C One of the outstanding events of Murphy put the squadron through E iA that year was the “P ^ ’’ pieetii^ ’-W HEN AND WHERE YOU UET IT which took place in toe Junior High. thex?drito then the N.C.O.’s took CCDVE COUNTRY It included a spicy play, “Cecil and over while he gave the boys tips D E iIL V IIi \ * V v l Y l l V A Distributing Centres will not be open on all days of next week. Make si^e that on how to give commands and keep ------Sally in Person,” which was toe Grade XII coiitributiori to the e ^ you know ^aeffy lo g o a body of men under control at all ARTHUR POVAH—with the R.C. what days and hours the Distributing Centre you intend tertainment. Tne inimitable Wilbert to will be open; Help the volunteer workers by following instructions carefully. times. F/O Weeks told the boys a .M.C. Has recently graduated as Burnham: represented Grade XI and that he was confident, if they would a PAGE EIGHT THE KELOWNA COURIEK THimSDAY, MAJRCH 23, W Promoted Guerrillas SALARY INCREASE PROFESSIONAL Flyer Describes Rescue By, AT POITICTON IS and BUSINESS Fighting Greek Patriots FINALLY PASSED Rescued by fiuernl^ ^o lound my co-pllot and the top Reeve’s Veto Arouses Ire Of when ho hud tu bail out of his turret gmunar, who had been Municipal Body And By- bomber over German- wounded. Tlie rest pt our crew hud Law Now Law D i r e c t o r y occui^tMl G r e ^ . JUeut ^ r a ^ D. apparersUy been caplui^. Here wc BuelU, ot U. S. A ^ y Air Corpa, stayed the next night rclatca tiiat Greek patrlota toJd Win Reeve Robert Lyon of Penticton they ...... need little help in manpower. nwmlng w « got word otlxred up a homet’a nest when he "but Bond US ennuvh vuns and am.! Naals had u* located and exercised his power of veto on the AUTOMOBILESPLUMBERS m unlU^rd weTs^ckar^^^^ wero comliyrW b.^ the village^W new salary by-law and the Nazis from Grcecel” Tlie lieu- ground, lli© Greeks said that released this information to the t e n a n t^ ^ o - ^ ^ ^ “ the Germans had burned other vlll- Prta» without first informing all LADD GARAGE LTD. J. G A L B R A I T H -••We had Jiit dropped our bombs solders. I saw them the members of his Council, Ltd. Dealer lor on a field near Athens and started Councillors Cousins, EUb and BTUDEBAKER and AUSTIN PLUMBING and HEATING for homo, when about 33 German to ao but for m Jc^mson were emphatic in their crit- OAltB and TRUCKS Sheet Metal Work llghtcr planes Jumped up. We were ^ leave, for icism of the action of ifiji Worship EsUniatea Gladly Given only a smaU fdrnuition of bomb- ^ *‘'.*^*“ respect at last week’s com Maasey Harris Farm Implomont* PHONE 10» ers, so they had tWngs pretty much mlttce meeting, Lawrence Ave. Pboue 2S2 their own way. Our number one en- CaundUor Kenyon had been told gine w u s ^ t out, with Uie propeU- g i^ iS ^ W UB^uS^were taidnJSs Tuesday of the pre- cr feathered and a string of mach- J®*” jf“ t®®^ were taking us vlous week, but felt that such ac- ine-gun buUet holes in 5 propeUer arrange- should be takenTnlyTn un- BARBERS CONTRACTORS blade. Number two had such a big circumstances. sccrTlo^BSXl W»cn It c^a™, to . vote, th« JOSEPH ROSSI glnc wa, anro‘* , ' ' " w ? d S ' S d ” t tholr vlUago for ua. ; CONTRACTOR was time to ball out . . . I was the . "The guerrillas were fierce look- Councillor Johnw xTw ^^nd Plastei ing and Masonry LT.-COL. J, H. HORN last to leave . . . I landed on a rock *”8 feUows armed mostly with po^ed m i Mlaiy ^ f a w at f f Former Alderman of the City of and was almost knocked out. As rl«cs belonging to numy nations— yi^ua reading voted mi! Expert Work Offlee > - D. Chapman Bam Kelowna, whose promotion from the soon ns I got to my feet two beard- German, Russian. Italian, English veto because he fdt Smt the n «!»o D o you realixo that m ore C a n a R O Y A L A N N E P.O. Box 12 rank of Major has just been an- ed men came running out of the “nd ^ e rlc a n . They had a few should notovirride the nounced. The popular staff officer woods with rifles, shouUng "Ger- niachino guns they had captured the Council H e saJd thnt dians sm oke Keobac than any BABBEB SHOP joined up at the outbreak of the mano. Englezo, Americano?” I an- tjmm the Germans In lightning raids, jng a vote aaalnat the ^tlivn h i! ■ x in iT n A RT/vr* A /’»r*MTnP war and Is.stationed at Pacific Com- swere swered. “American.” Then they They also had some hand 8^^- W o r^ p h i w m n S v S w llT3Ul% rTH Ll!i r V (jb N 1 3 mand headquaj^rs. He served with, ^ came came running, put their arms ades which they gave to us In case incrcasSl ^ m ^ b v -la w bu^ n Jninli other pipe tobacco? the 43rd Battalion, Cameron High- around me,and kissed mo, talking fighting. These guerrillas were the i ^ ^ l ^ of the R ^ i 's CARTAGE landers. In the First Great War. in Greek. They led me down the magnificent fighters. One night {{Jo S Reeves use of S. R. D A V IS ------mountain to a little vlUage, where their advanced scouts reported that wnr«hm * i. there were more men with rifles the Germans were lying In ambush D. CHAPMAN & CO. J. C. K E N N E D Y , C.L.U. GIRLS’ ARMY FOR who hugged and kissed mo, I heard for us with some armored cars be- In releasing the some rifle and machine-gun fire, side a road we had to cross. The ^ h« oontend- . PHONE 298 LTD. Maclaren Blk. - Phone 410 Haulage Contractors. Warehous FORESTRY WORK and after a while a little Greek euerrlUas got ready and went up a means guerrilla, about sixteen years old, to Intercept the Germans. There was *^‘Lt>y-tew ing and Distributing. Local and SUN LIFE OF CANADA' long-distance furniture moving. »me Um>U8h U„.door, pu«l^g » . M oj rm. C; Corps Will ' Be ICnown As German soldier ahead of him. A word came that we could Furniture packing, crating and be construed as any attempt on his shipping. Green Guards — To Train few of the Greeks could talk Eng- move on. The Greeks mopped up llsh and they told me .that the Ger- the Germans In a comparatively part to override the Council. C. M. H O R N E R , C.L.U. Leaders This Year mans had sent 15 soldiers after the short time. However, the councillors were vIn American fliers. The klefts had in- “We were told later by the ^ e r - arguments aeal^t District Representative, Northern *11113 summer a new army will take to the field against forest fires, tercepted them and kUled J4 oif rlUas that they didn’t need any ark^ o? r e ^ ^ f o r DAIRIES Okanagan them. The fifteenth was the man help and that, if the Americans and they voted without^^Jf T h e P i c k o f T o b a c c o that the boy had brought in. The English would send them enough k arm^TThTv.fiinJ MUTUAL LIFE OF CANADA sored liy the Chadian Fores y German through GET TOUR PURE Association and will be known as guns, they would throw the Gw- chail ^ ® the hand and had captured him. mans out of their beloved country GROWN IN SUNNY, SOUTHERN ONTARIC the “Green Guards.” “I slept that (light with the lead ’ilhe by-law, which now finally be- These girls are to be recivited tUgiM. wim me leau- m,in a.a week ween. , . . They xiiey were w ere very nos-hos- nomoc nrknrnfitm v. ' — - ---- MILK AND CREAM *___ TT!..ir __J T..nj.,.. er of these guwillas, and the next pitable and took us into their homes . s ts the Reeves salary at — from — $1,000 a year and .the councillors’ at $500 c^ch. OPTOMETRISTS fdU l2 ^TiiSlaf to they sent word that more and, if th^y had just a litUe food, ------that ^ toe Juniw Forest Wakens ® little village they gave it all to us. If there were TUTT’S DAIRY to do their utafost to rnak^Brit! mountains. They put us only a few blankets around, they iSi ^ o lu i n b i a ^ ^ le s s donkeys and we gave them all to us and slept on the toe gS g S themselves.” have the same objectives as the FREDERICK JOUDBY< Junior Forest Wardens, they will DENTISTS Optometrist be an entirely separate organization SUGGESTIONS FOR Phore 373, Royal Anne Building to the boys, who have done valu PENTICTON TO able work in fire prevention since they were organized in 1931. It is LENTEN DISHES DR. MATHISON planned that tob girls wiU be form CLOSE S CHOOL ed into groups and will study wood Many Delicious Dishes Can Be DENTIST craft, first aid, forestry and signall ing, in addition to gaining a love of LUNCH ROOM Served As Change From outdoors from hikes and other out ' Meat Willits Block Phone 89 door gjorts.. Service , For Students Ends E. C. Wilkinson, manager of toe March 31 Until Fall Term This year housewives are pre Canadian Forestry Association and pared in advance for meatless days founder of toe Junior Forest War of the Lenteii season. Although ra- dens______movement,______which______has____ now The Penticton school lunch room tioning of meat has been susipended ' DE. ‘ . ^[nead to toe ijnlted Stat^ in”an- will cease opteration at the end of temporarily, the lessons learned by J. W N. SHEPHERD noimcing the formation ,of the March, it was decided by the School housevinves in these months, will "Green Guards,” said: “We felt that Board at its regular monthly m e^- not quickly be forgotten. Ingenuity Dental Surgeon the girls should play as big a part tog held last week, after hearing was then .toe by-wflrd in every Shepherd Block - Phone 223 in ■ fire prevraitiah'and forestry con- tors step_^ recommended L. B. home kitchen and “good as they servation a? the boys, since toey Boggs, principal of the Semor High look” meat alternates popped up Pendozi and Lawrence Ave. also share in the forest dollar. In SchooL ^ d D. P. O^ConneU, Ele- aR xjver the country on our tables, addition, today there are a great' toentary School principal. . Diiring the Lenten meatless days many girls that go camping, not The reasons given for closing the these alternatives 'will be welcome to mention toe number of young w m «: on any table, but they are ta^y FUNERAL PARLORS women whoi are smokers, and it is Difficulty in obtaimng supplies ^ d tempting enough for any day felt that if we can educate these the present time. ■ in the week, young women now to be careful 2. Sickness amongst the operating Vegetables, fito, eggs, cheese, I KELOWNA FURNITURE CO.| with fire and to help protect .the ,...... dried peas and beans, rice, macar- ' LTD.' • natural resources, they will be in- "• " s li^ t decline in attendance, oni and spaghetti, served alone or • strumental in instilling this upon resulting in an increase to the unit in combination, are 'winning friends Funeral Directors the minds of the next generation.” cost. and influencing appetites as the I ]Day Phone. 33; Night, 502 & 79| ^ lis year th'e Association plans Tt was felt .that toe co-operation piece de resistance on meatless days, KELOWNA, B.C. to organize these girls only on a commumty groups will have to Cereals, toe ctIeqi ready-to-eat J L U E } small scale and build up leaders, so seemed if supplies are .to be made' varieties, already recognized for that next year 'the project can be for the limch room next toeir aptitude as a recipe ingredi- launched province-wdde, based tip-, y®®^-. A . conummity. garden and ent as well as in the cereal bowl, Ri b b o n I on the experience .that will be gain- cannii^ project was suggested. are doing their share to make ed. Girls' who are interested are Earlier in too meeting, before meatlpss dishes, satisfactory to hun- 'iffiiinullI'll'! asked to write to Mr. Wilkinson, at hearing the school principals, the gry appetites. ' '' * 'Wm ' j. Canadian Forestry Association head- Board had decided todose the To swell your roster of delicious quarters, 509 Biurard Street,■ Van lunch room at the eird of April, meatless dishes, add these menu but when it Was realized that the couver. ideas and recipes to, your handy Fresh fruits are precious these days— fresh vegetables, too. o/woy.s carry Easter holidays would r^ult to its kitchen file: Ra k i n g I being dosed early in ^ April under For busy days, serve fish pie. It There's a shortage of labor in the fields and orchards and any condition, it was decided to can be prepared in the morning, held INDIANS IN stop operations at the end’ of March. in reserve in the refrigerator and there are transpoifation restrictions. ^Then, huge quantities RpWDEB It was felt that during the warm- popped into the oven 30 minutes be & WHOLIesoME er weather the cafeteria is not so fore serving until ingredients are of these vitam in-packed,’health-promoting foods must go CANADA ARE necessary as in the late fall and .piping hot and the topping baked to winter; a golden brown. Fruit salad, with to the armed forces both here and overseas. W hat's left crackers and cheese and a bever INCREASING age, complete this easy-to-prepare for civilian use must be carefully conserved. So when Wm WAGE INCREASES menu. Education And Careful Super- . * _ _ _ ^ Oysters on Toast buying fruits don't pinch and bruise them, don't toss i i vision Bring Results— More ARE APPROVED If your heart warms at the word vegetables around. Handle with care, remembering th£t Indians Are Farming ' £__ oyster, don’t forget how delicious ' these little bivalves taste panned in the ones you don't buy must be used by your neighbors. OTTAWA.—Contrary to popular Penticton School Board Raises a' skiUet with butter and a few well-chosen seasonings. Serve on BLUE RIBBON opinion, Canada’s Indians are not Janitors’ Stipends On Un- toast points. - a v a n ^ n g or degenerating rare. ion’s Application Curried Macaroni and Eggs The Indian population is nearmg the ■■■■ H e r e o r e ^ BAK/NGPOWDER 120,000 mark at the rate of about Sophisticated palates 'will -like D r . C h a se ’s . one per______cent_ ^a _ year_____ and, with the ^ ® P®n.tictoft School Board re- curried macaroni and eggs. EscaU- assistance and'*guidance^of F ^ e r ^ cently met a delegation of the Pen- oped tomates and a gre^i salad R U t E S officials, is improving both physi- ^®ton Municipal Employees’ Union make companionable aefcompani- P a r a d o L cally and economically. It is es- ent^ed into an agreement cov- ments. For Quick Relief of Pain •timated that approximately 60,000 ®^^S to® two school janitors and Quick Breads ------_— — ^------— Indians depend for a livelihood in Light-as-a-feather quick breads, Tor Wartime mfioX ond gardens on reserves. Instructional whole or in part on farming; 50,000 , ^ b o o s ^ reryed hot from the oven, always ten charts, emphasizing the food value are engaged in the time-honored to s ^ a ^ f r ^ $120 to, $125 a month, help to divert interest on. these WILL DEVELOP of vegetables havebeen distributed pursuits of hunting, fishing and days. With a meal-in-one salad,^veg- and seed will be supDlied to aU trapping, and the remainder might instead of $100. "Ihe j^tress, etable platter or fish dishes, serve 0 'sssyr*” INDIAN LANDS Indians who are iinable to make ^ laborers or indust- part-time^ is to receive $40, her golden squares of corn bread, ^ c h purchases. Thirteen thousand rial w o rk ^, I ?e/t-ovefS* ' ^ ------dollars’ worth of garden seeds have welfare of the Canadian In- The unionists on their part waiv I < ed the seniority clause in their Vegetable Production Will Be already been purchased for distri- considered by the Domin- draft agreement. HEYISAR6I Increased Again This Year to British Columbia. Tn addi- wnGwenunent to be and ______WHER^^ gfowaC _____ tion to .the emphasis on subsistence responsibility. Because of _ , chickens 9 sSiusing uprvy^'“ SAVE^ tiwyou _ gardens, Indians in the lake areas u s’ importance, welfare officers. of A Condensed Report YOUB . Hon. X. A. Crerar, Minister of will be encouraged to extend their *^® todian Affairs Branch of the a cub renorter wh^ had bad if MINARD*S Abnre and Resourc^, has announc- -fishing operations. Twenty t S - Bepartment of Mines and Resources Ha H f b * ’®*! ® designed to and d o ll^ ’ worto of^flshing nete are constantly on the alert to im- b S i^ ^ e « i M l o ^ further Incre^e production on Ind- have been purchased for di^ribu- Prove conditions among these native walking with a f r i ^ down Main lan reserves, has b ^ n organized by 4ion to thb In c ^ s of S e m P®ople and to assist them in their thi^ toe Indian Affairs B ra n ^ The ac- Manitoba, Saskatchewan a d d ^ ^ " advance to a position of self-reliance tual reserve acreage under cultiva- berta. , auu and self-dependence. cum saia. i leei .mat X am gomggoing SOLDIERS,____ iUa.riSKi"- to die.’ So he leaned against a tele- RUB OUT TIRH> ACHBS - SERVE ^ tion durtog the last crop year was Officials of the Branch nodnt out Various measures have been taken phone pole and made good.” me ^eatest it has ever been, al- that the Indians of Canada are col- improve their conditions. Prob- I ' ' , ______FIIEE RECIPE BOOK-^end mouto laige n u m b^ of Indians lectively the largest single land- toe most marked progress has your name and address to nave experienced little difficulty'in owners in the Dominion. The total I^®"- made among the Indians who Then .,.1. there , are , those , . for whom securing gainful employment in war area of reseive lands amounts to d®P®nd in varying extent on agri- the alarm clock is something 8.C.Sugar Refining Co. Ltd. industries and in cordwood and 5,423,734 acres. Of this area am- culture for their livelihood. Indian ^ take lying down. Vancouver, B.C., for your pulpwTOd operations.- proximately 2,916,863 acres are welfare officials have found that -----^—r-— ^------copy of new Wartime Book in me c^pm ga of this year, wooded. There are 2159 632 acres todians, under careful supervision, o f Golden Syrup Recipes. ^>eclM emp^sis.will placed up- cleared but not cultivated’ and 210- and have become successful and on me cultivation of subsistence 921 acres actually under cultivation, progressive, agriculturists, and in EXTRA MONEY In Your Spare Time many cases have been known to tc take a great interest' in the care I F YOU.... and utilization 'of their land and Have a-certain amount of spare time, either in themoming. I’ve foimd 1 can give up dosing!” stock. • afternoon Or evening, or-full days, in the summer or winter There is practically no branch of months, r i i *Tve found a Ear better way to correct among people who have tried farming which me Indians have not and ", ' . ' entered. On reserves in me prairie constipation! One t^ t gives me the KELLOGG’S ALL-BRAN frir Constipa Live in the country or in a community under 10,000 population provinces, grain growing and b ^ f . ■ an d " ■ - ■ .' kind of lasting relief I’ve always tion due to lack of "bulk” in the dietl cattle raising have- been mark^ly w wanted, and never got, from harto successful A ll kinds of root and Are interested in turning your spare hours into dollars, we ALL-BRAN cofTMte the cause of such have an opportunity for you. pills and purga other vegetables have been'raised trouble, by supplying "bulk-forming^* with success, and dairying and poul ^ i s Company has an opening for. a capable part-time man in the t i v e I ’v e tried material needed for easy, natural elim- try raising are common to most re Kelowna,territory. Provided you have the aptitude for the posl- eversomany.but mation! If this kind of constipation serves across toe Dominion.' The , tion, assistance in the work and a course of instructions as to it’s KELLOGG’S younger Indians, particularly the how it should be carried out will be given you. haaplaguedyou, tryeatingKELLOGCS graduates of residential schools, As this wrork is on part-time basis, it is not necessary to apply ALL-BRAN regu ALL-BRAN regularly, or several ALL- have shown a particular interest in mrough the National Selective Service Officer. Reply direct to I la rly fo r me BRAN mufiins every day. Drink plenty what might be termed mechanized C-J. KELLER, Branch Manager, Vancouver, B.C., or farming. ’They appear to have re G. E'VEREFr CRAIG, District Manager, Penticton, B.C., from now on.” of water. See if you don't praise cognized the advantages of tractors UP Phone 367-L. Such a happy its welcome reliefl G et ALL-BRAN and other motor-driven farm equip- ' experienceis just ment, and, in recent years,, the de at your grocer’s I 2 oon'vtoient sizes.- mand for such equipment has been North American Life Assurance Company oneof thousands' Made by Kellogg’s in London. f.an- increasing. ^ 35-2C A V A I L A B L E IN 2- LB.« 5 - LB. AND 10- LB^ TIN S THURSDAY. MARCH 23, ISMH THE KELOWNA COURIER PAGE NINE HITHER AND iS A FE W A Y P. B. W illits YON Lmim Sea Feeis C la m s (Cloverleaf) A N D CO.. L T D . Miss II. Larson, Vernon, was a visitor In Kelowna during the past COMPARB Safeway Prices week, a guest of the Royal Anno Whole or Minced. I's, tin 24c YOUR REXALL DRUG STORE Hotel. anS see hew much yea save • • • Compare the prices you pay for food at Safe Chicken Hoddic W ar Savings Raffle Tickets and W ar Savings . Miss Audrey Stephenson leaves this week to spend a holiday at way, and prove to yourself tliat tlic Safeway Lily. 14-oz. t i n ------Stamps always on sale at your 1 t'llUrlE!i Armstrong nnd Vancouver. 33c • • « habit saves you money week in nnd week out! REXALL DRUG STORE Miss Margaret Bennett Is spend Food budgets must be watched in war-time— H e rrin g s I 1 9 Safeway Itclps you control them! ing a holiday in Calgary and Ed Cloverleaf. 10-oz. tin — monton nnd Is expected to return r««4 by Dorwn ElvedsiliL The Imt f M KAR¥ AT iV S' PtMMat Ohm# EAST KELOWNA item on the proigram w &m « piano At**r*tUTWl. * X*I THE OLD HOME TOW N By ST A N LE Y OKAN. VALLEY LEGION HOLDS «oio by WbiDde F«irwe«ther. Barry WP^TMANK OF fKOi lU . MAVB TO «UO &OMBt PurnaiHACouPu: o ®a 6 s ST. PATRICK’S JUNIOR RED il«r»CT)t \ms the «nm>urkcer. r co-«a Oft tou» o'SA»«fWiu.«v® xjig ’Acm TO «fve TKKT svtaantiHN') w»i««T AND ori« , CRO^ PROGRAM sum of $3J3 was realized. After tiie R l u C l l V A lJ u H U30K ANO KkLU VOUW 'THAT BAYW/NDOW Yoova REQUIRE FUNDS RED CROSS TEA / concert, the mothers wer© shown _____ mromm pkuuo» - *ihjpi» oot r AOCUMOLATWr* srtTjM« , ' the work which had been done by . YtyuNs otansKs/ ;«:oo»tD "mir mgg Houaai U Youngstere Produce Variety the Junior lUsd Cross in the ochooL Vital Con^umty Service Ken- Money For Wool I»_ Urgently Women’* Auxiliary Entertains Entertainment At School • • • ^ Branch Needed To Carry On Work Lust Saturday Afternoon ______L jV-W. ,M. V. Snelgiwe. H.CA.F. ------, Tim Kelowna Branch of the Ok* Bowls of shamrocks were tradJ- Th. lunlor R«i C™« held « . a M.n, I. .pendln, “ ■* S? anagan Valley Minesweepers Fund, itional decorations for the St. Pal- UrUInm^t ,jn to *®‘*'^* *‘®‘®*'* appeared ^^ t l y l i U h l ^ p e r , re- who sent another shipment of rick's tea at the Legion Hall last KELOWNA BANOESS SchooL on . to j^rry. _ _ c X i the attenUon it dMcrved? sweater*, stockings, hehnets, socks Saturday afternoon, and these, to- raise funds to buy wool for sotno ' • • • “ j'" ru stical bo- and other wooUm garments to the gether with the flowering plants Orders For Week Cosntnencing isarmento which they are making The young people of the district . - taeneral oubll^s Mission to Seamen, at Swansea, kindly supipfilcd by Mr. Croft, set Taeaday, March XI. ISM f^r a child refugee. Many of l^e sponsored a whbt drive and dance K e l o r such it Is un- Wales, some time ago, have re- a pretty scene for tlio old-worid chlldrcn's mothers attended. The in aid of the Milk for Britain Fund, ceived the following letter in ac- dancers in their gay costumes. Pat- Orderly Sergeants; Sgt Anderson, first Item on the program was a on Friday evening in thp Cotnmunl- knowledgment of the stjlpment; rons were venr well entertained by Mar. 18 to Mar. 24; Sgt. Noonan, piano solo by Eileen Day. foUowed ty HaU. There were nlire tables of "We havetave JustJe received a box of these talentedited young: dancers ‘ from Mar. 25 to Mar. 31. by on Irish jilt performed by June whist and the prize winners were it was a v e ^ IntcresUnv wt- knitted wooUc woollens from the Okana- Miss Pratten’s classes, Maureen Thursday,______Mar.____ 23.—No. 3A _De- Piory. R ud B ^ t . Sylvia Day Mrs. W. Murrell and E. E. Hewlett; “ f^ a i W ^ S f k ^ gan Valley M inesw e^rs Fund Allen, Joyce Harding, Jeanette Oil- tachment, O.C.b kit Insp^oih 2000 atkd Marjorie Perry, Tlrcn came a consolation, Mrs. S. Dyson. Subse- aulle at variance with (Kelowna Branch), addreteod to ridge, Audrey Shelley and Audrey hours, piano aolo by Doreen Elvedahl. quently modern and old-time Ranees f_ea^^2v-hcard exoresaions of the Rev. F. Taylor, who was Chap- McGuire. Norma Crulckshank play- evihc n..iuRuth Borrett danced «h..the •■Kword"Sword were enjoyed. Quite a nice mimSum nt of nxsquenuy-ncara expressions oa at Dance," which was Hollowed by a money was raised for a very wor- dtssauaracuon re g ^ m g mo sot lain at this port but has now jerft cd a pianoforte solo, Dolores Gel- comnanv H O 1 0 3 0 hoi^ for another port of Uio country. One slnlger rerited how Billy made an ‘ „ ’ ' „ hundred and ninety-eight articles Impression on his visiUng; g!rand- Saturday, Mar.. M .-^ o m i^ y ^ p^om icd *by Charlie Rogers, Ger^ J- E. Young has sold his orchard d l ^ ^ The v a ^ of Is a splendid effort on the part of motlicr, and made on agreeable Im- op®” from 1500 hours to 1000 the members of your branch, and presslon of her own. - hours. SiLloy .T L ^ and to Mr Jto. and Mra Young Z C W4?'"^estt FOOnTBACU wo should b© very grateful If you With the proceeds of this tea go- Sunday, Mar. 20.—^No. 4 Dotach- ATTH B LASTM INU TB 00(5 COACH H A D Y O R IN «/N Bobby Rogers^ ^ w S t h '^ n V S ^ rlc rt'L n ^ h “ A COUPLE OW EX pfLAVEies < 1900) TO l«ILL HIS LINO U(> would kindly convey to these ing to the Red Cross, a sizable don- ment to parade at Shale Pit for A«9AINST THB'^SI.AUOH'nSR HOIiouse CtANDiBS* membero our very great apprecla- ation should bo handed over by the Sten gun practice, 030 hours. J fa rollecUon^ letters, supposedly Mr. and ^ Arrance « « * ^ 6 ^ - “ (WTTemwT I written by a soldier to his girl Ing congratulations on the birth ^rt)^ wito 213 m e ^ r a FRo'v’ , awwM^Wa»T>P > *0-90 (tlon for their kind interest in our Legion Women’s Auxiliary, judg- Monday, Mar. 27.—No. I Dctach- and a circulation of 2,276 books for work. The boys wxnild loive to be Ing by tlio largo attendance. To ment at Comptany H. Q. for map friend, which were composed and of a daughter, the year. Of this number, 627 were able to express their gratitude per- odd further to the Red Cross funds, reading practice, 1930 hours, children’s books. sonally, and I am sure you would the Auxiliary earmarked all mon- *rn«»«Hnv ivrnr n Df»tjioh- In speaking of the children, those GREAT SURPLUS OF DR. URQUHART all be pleased if you saw the Joy eys taken during the Saturday oarade at Rutland HalL 2000 of us who have seen the boys and on their faces as they go happily night dance held weeldy for Le- " Huuona Hail, 2 0 0 0 TRUST - MANAGEMENT-CONHDENCE girls swarm into the library after EGGS IN CANADA DESCRIBES LIFE away with their comforts.” lonnalres and members of the armed . .. c ■r, . school, have watched the keenness This letter was vi^ten by Rev, forces. , Establlshment^Llcut. S. R. p ^ l® Above, three important considerations in regard to with which they delve intoi their IN FAR NORTH Thomas N. Bateman, Chaplain. ______P