u prince Utiprrt Daily jScujs Saturday, August 2, 1947 (Authorized as Second Class-Mall. Post Office Department. Ottawa) Published every' afternoon except Sunaay by Prince Rupert Dally News Ltd, 3rd Avenue, Prince Rupert, British Columbia. SUBSCRIPTION' RATES . essei City Carrier, per week.. 15c; Per Month. 65c; Per Tear, S7.00; lffii Bj Mall, Per Month, 40c: Per Tear; 4.00. N3tSftP Ketchikan's Good ISeivs OURSELVES the thrill and satisfaction KNOWING of anticipating major industrial development, Prince Rupert can understanding congratulate Ketchikariwhich, as a result of legislative action at Washington in the making of territorial timber available, seems assured now of a $10,000,000 bleached sulphite pulp plant. ", We are happy for Ketchikan. We can appre-' ciate what it will mean for the "First City" which ;' had been having some reverses this year such as ;'; loss of halibut handling' business due to the Seattle fleet tie-up, the removal of the coastguard and the ;; closing down of the fisheries research bureau and ;; had been feeling in the dumps quite generally. ; From all accounts, Ketchikan, as a community jj "t- had to work hard to gain congressional approval of the resolution which authorized the Department '' of Agriculture to dispose of timber to paper mill '. operators under fifty-year contracts. They had to ! - do a lot of agitating in the right places" to organize the support necessary. But the Americans have the knack of getting things like that done. A big pulp mill project will, of course, set Ketchikan up as a city of no little importance, the principal metropolis of Alaska quite likely, and' that will. mean considerable to Prince Rupert which has some time since come to realize the increasing significance of its position in respect to Southeastern Alaska and Ketchikan in particular. - i H H BOARD OFiTRADE WEEK NEXT WEEK WILL indeed, be "Board of Trade -Week" in Prince Rupert. The big- "B:C. Products" show is coming on Wednesday when important business men members of the Vancouver Board of Trade will be here to show many of the wares that are made in British Columbia. From . all accounts, it will' be an impressive enough display and; during the afternoon and evening of Wednesday, the. citizens will,, no doubt, be out in large numbers td see it. Then on Thursday and Friday- the Associated Boards of Trade of Central British Columbia will be here in annual convention, to discuss problems concerning the welfare and development of the district as a whole and to decide on taking such action an. making representations as are deemed necessary. Prince Rupert will be welcoming men of affairs not only from this district but from Alaska and from the important centres down south. Beneficial mutual understandings and fellowships should as a result, be developed. The Chamber of Commerce or Board of Trade movement will be seen in action here next week. For the Prince Rupert Chamber of Commerce, which has been experiencing;one of the most active and in many respects one of the most' successful years in its history, the events of the ensuing week will be culminating achievements. SOCIALIST V& SOCIALIST INTERESTING labor relation situation has AN arisen in Saskatchewan where the Woodworkers' Association strikers in a government box1 . factory at Prince Albert have fourid themselves 7 locked out after pulling a walk-out. Oddly enough this is the same plant which Premier Douglas' government solicitously took over two years ago to protect the union' after its management refused to sign a collective bargaining agreement. Under the new British Columbia law, which has drawn such mighty protests from organized labor and. ,he C.C.F. in particular, employers can be prosecuted for turning a strike into a lock-out justv-is the union can be prosecuted if it starts a strike before conciliation and arbitration provisions have been exhausted. Who is going to prosecute the' owners at Prince Albert for the "walk-out?" As the Vancouver Snri points out Saskatchewan v is t giving an object lesson on the regimentation as- pects of socialism and1 the union is finding that a socialist government can stamp a lot harder on organized labor than any private employer would dare or desire to do. "Under the planned1 economy so highly extolled by political opponents of free enterprise, a union can have a pretty thin time unless it behaves itself as the government dictates." AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY V-8 POWER . ABUNDANT I I 1 t II Rl. 1 I. DEPENDABLE POWER W 1 I I J SPECIFICATIONS Powered with latest Ford V8 engine, Starter, Generator; Battery, Down Draught Carburator; Heavy riuty Ford-Truck Radiator, specially' designed Power' Take-off, equipped with flexible coupling; and' two ball-bearing pillow blocks, Fuel Tank built In sub-frame. Boh Parker Limited P.O. Box 38 170 East Third Ave. Phone 8) LIFE irr this Prince Rupert by BIDDER JINKS I call her "my little Belgium bride" which doesn't'make sense unless you know that she Is a war bride. She is my near neighbor too, so that on wash days her line squeals protestingly in chorus with mine. Other times we drink tea together or she sits sewing while I Iron. Her married name 1 Mrs. Jack Ewart; but Yvette "Vettle" to her husband suits her dainty self to perfection. So does her speech. In a year's time, she has an amazing -vocabulary, with an accent suggesting the perfection of Parlsion French. The announcement of war on that Sunday In September, 1939, came as a great shook to- the people of Belgium. On the whole, they were unprepared, with no thought cf war. Once started, the ball rolled fast and soon Bel-glum was an occupied country, her people cold and hungry and receiving the "white paper." The "white paper" was a call to duty, Its German inventors would say. It was senl out to all classes and ages, summoning them Into Germany, or some other place, to work in specified Industries. Sometimes, officers followed on the heels at the "slip," breaking families asunder, dragging a frfe people into servitude. Yvette tore her paper into MIERIFf 8AI.B I IN THE COUNTY COURT OP I . PRINCE RUPERT HOLD EN AT PRINCE RUPERT I NOTICE Is hereby given that by authority of a WARRANT OF EXE-J CUTION to me directed, bearing date 1 the 19th day of April, 1947. In the I action of WORKMEN'S COMPENSA-1 Tlow union tiainirr' . MEALON LOOQINQ COMPANY' LIM ( ueienaant, I have seized the lopglng outfit of the defendant, con I fclstlnp nf fitjtam HnnV. r.n 1 1 , 1 CT ... . WUMjl wM(iur 1 Donkey, Camp Scow, Tools; Cables ! and Camp Outfit, the Casboat "Tal-I ana," .and sundry Items too numerous mt-iiLiuu, an inventory 01 Which I may be seen on application to the ; Sheriff, Court House. Prince Rupert; i all of which I shall. offer- for sale at ' the office of the SheriffCourt House, i j-rince Kupert. B. c, on Thursday, Aug 7th. 1947, at 2:00 o'clock in the., afternoon, for cash. The highest or any bid not necessarily accepted. m. m. oi rj-iitriH. tnerni, Dated at Prince' Rupert. B.C . this 21st da" if July. 197, FOR fragments and heard no more about it. She was fortunate for her brother-in-law was forced to flee before his captors and hide out until after the liberation. The liberation is a thing of which we in Canada know next to nothing; When we do hear, we cannot ifully understand what it meant. It was not quite the ending of cold rooms and poor food and little food. Long ago it was written that "man shall not live by bread alone." and therein lay the significance of the liberation. It meant that heavy chains mlgCit fall at last- from the spirit of a country that loved, and had a right to life. It was not done quietly. Listening to Yvette, I caught a little of the joy that transformed her country that day. Yet not "that day" for- it covered a week and more, a period of constant rejoicing at home and in the streets. They sang, they laughed, they danced day and night. "You would think we were crazy," she said with misty eyes, "but we couldn't help It. When we saw a soldier the British liberated us in Brussels we ran up to kiss him!" s Of course it was not the end of all sorrow. Families were yt separated, some to meet no more. The evidence of bombing was all too sad a reminder of what had been, and of the effort needed for rehabilitation. And then there was still the black market, a full, .Haunting demon of robbery. Under its recognized system, you could get nearly anything If you had the money. Its prices tripled so that 1500 franc? ($40.00 in our money) was the INCOME TAX Returns Prepared See R. E. MORTIMER 324 2nd Ave. (Near CFPR) Vou saw it tn 'iuc Newsl SALE Crown -Ovvned Vacant Land at Hays Cove Circle Prince Rupert, B.C. Subject to prior sale or withdrawal, War Assets Corporation t Invites binding offers for the purchase outright of the Crowri's" right, title' and Interest In the property described below: ! liAND Lot'4 and'teti 6 to 22 inclusive,' all In Block 9, In Section 6, as shown' on Mkp 923, In the City of Prince Rupert, , in the Province of! British Columbia. All data contained herein are necessarily abbreviated I andsubject to correction. i Sale of1 this property to any purchaser will be subject I' to the approval 'of the Governor-ln-Councll. ' War Assets Corporation reserves the unqualified right to'reject any-or all offers received for the above property. Offers' to' purchase should reach- the address given ' belowv not' later than-August 22, 1917. (440) IiAtfDS AND BUILDINGS' DEPARTMENT 4095 St. Catherine St. West, Montreal C, Quebee P7O. B6x'6099 Phone BElalr 3771 1. "Therie Is Nothing Finer Than A Stromberg-Carlson" NOW' IN STOCK. STROMBERG-CARLSON MODEL 7G1IL- '6-tube AC-DC mantle model, walnut plastic cabinet. C J A flf, Standard wave. Only j4y J STROMIlERG-CAlttSON MODEL 752II- 7-tiibe performance, AC mantle model, Attractive walnut cabinet. Long and short wave phonograph CQf CA l"Put Ol.jU SEE THEM AT ROPERT RADIO AND ELECTRIC Dependable Radio Servicing Overhauls a Specially. PHONE (111 price of shoes that would ordinarily have cost $12.00, or less. But even In the WUck1 market soap was an almart unknown quantity. When it was alloted, one thin pteee per person, it wa3 priceless despite its strong, green properties that removed the skin from the fane. Once a gift of soap reached Yvette from Canada. There were three perfumed cakes of gentle soap. Even in nosseatioa of such luxuries first thoughts are often of others. One cake went to her aunt who had mothered her .since her own mother's death; one went to her sister for her baby's bath; one she kept for her own personal use. In Canada now herself, it is still her pleasure to remember the needs of her kin-folk. a!l cf whom are In her native land. Out of the abundant of this land, it is possible to alleviate a little the hardships of these brave people whom she letft to come to us. George Mitchell left yesterday to spend t&ie week-end at Lake Kathlyn with Mrs. Mitchell and family who are in residence there for the summer. Prank Dibb has been spending some time at Lakelse Lake lately, aettinis the benefit cf the change from town, as well as improving property he lias there. mm ASTHMA FOR AND HAY FEVER itRK.tTiirasv or cavaha Mil. Vancouver. IIC. PRINCE RUPEST DRY DOCK AND SHIPYARD SHIPBUILDERS AND BNOINXKRS Iron and .Brass Gasungs Electric and Acetvlene Welding SPECIALISTS ON SAWMILL and MININO MACHINERY Outdoor Writers To Pay Ketchikan Visit About 50 members df the Outdoor Writers' Association of America are due in Ketchikan August 20 for a two-day stay. A program of . entertainment in the way of boat and trail trips, as well as flights Is being arranged. The visitors will be from practically al over the continent. Classified Advertising Pays! THEIR ifim M TOMORROW --J v DEPENDS UPON i WIIATYOUDOK TODAY TOM McKEOWN Sun Life ot Canada Itisiilentc: Phone Bine 2lC No. G Smith Block The WmhM m 1 riw 10 '""""'"""""ViVAVAViViViViViliWAVAWiV OPEN AGAIN ., . THE CAFE has the welcome mat out for- its patron-friends Opening Today 4:30' p.m. Our foods are prepared1 by a-new chef who specializes in Canadian Dishes COMPLETE FOUNTAIN SERVIGE SODAS - ICE CREAM - SUNDAES OEO. DYBHAVN Prop. W1; T; COOPER Manager . NOTICE1 MRS. M. DRAKE, nurse admlnhterln w treatment "fiLYOXYLIlil.- f, ?-h will be at; " Sl The Prince George Hotel; prlnce 0 l Aueust 30th. and until Rpntmk. ... 8 ' " I , r-v...Ut ma. ISj. also at: ' m'- The Central Hotel, Prince Rupert. BC September' 16th; 17th, and 18th, 1947 Stops' between Prince Ueorge and Prince i I will h made -k" irquest. For information please write to the Vanco joi-s uuurta uiAJcivt ib WEST IIASnvr VANCOUVER, B.C. THREE From ThU liate WAR ASSETS COAL Will be: LUMP Sacked' Jlt.OO'per ton MINE RUN Loose $11.00 per" ton No rebate for quantity HYDE TRANSFER PHONE 580 1 SISTERS ONCE AGAIN OPEN' FOR 'Hi ",un PAtifc.' acyJ M'cCUTCHEON PHARMACY (E. C. Wallace, Manager) "Your Friendly Drug Store" ! Third' Avenue at1 Sixth' Street Remem&er . . BUSINESS Same Place; Same Jim Mom SERVICE AKOllNI) THE ClOti N'EVl HOll i A Home Awu RaWl 80 Rooms, tint PRINCE RH5 Phone Ml , A. MacKcnzic Furnil LIMITED "A OOOD PLACE TO BUY" FURNITURE OF EVERY DESCRIPTION QUALITY AND TRICES HiailT Phone-775 W For That-Party . . . PARAMOUNT CAF1 at Port Edward, KC CHOP SUBY C,,otf 7:00 ajn. to 11:00 pjn- Maybe this will Surprise you.. in J Railroad watches never' Increased duringt tne- war: AS a' maUer; of fact the price l ,ee since the exchange; has. been taken oil fundi. The Hamlttori Railroad' Watch w and Is now $8250.' The Bali 'watch used to be $5.00 $90.00.. S,S Hie Eltln Railroad' IValch is We have all three of these fine stock at! present and would' be g'ld 10