t Classified Advertising - - . t.t minimum minimum charge. Krc7 50o. KA T1v-K Birth M fc& "'Entailment Announcements: 2. ' Patterson an-j FOR SALE w " The wi'uuM.H . I- . . IK hOctoBcr ,u P . ..MVIF1) l1" ANTED Dispatcher. i241) ijijTuxi Lsames are being re-,gt the Daily News of-lw or girl, desiring ni) r;-routes. iitftW For Rawlelgh V no experience or Sales easy Necessary. L and profit Urge r .--.Priiatelv. Write L Dept VVU-1G0-J-190 4 htween i-Boy h ., j hi . hnnn P publishers contracts. jfrr,. to travel, travel- ipenses Pw APDly in ; only to Prince Rupert Ween 9:w anu iu.uu WAXTtD I to-Studw couch or bed llieltl Iflione Green lM" it irn HKNT Auurt- . IT i fnmtEhfvl nr : nuux. m. Dy cuuc. w if. un-n, uuu. , (238) E7d ROOM lor 2 young feax 1002 Station "B" (238) EZcedar and Fir poles, E cotonwood Logs. Ad-fere t.a.b shlpplnp point. ,h;pmcn' N1EDER- fe MARTIN CO Spald- Purtland 4. Oregon. (239) H0P.K WASTED ki?ta voma.i will look feiic-'.:. cvcu.im. Phone K33 (tf) FOR RENT t) RENT 201 Third list On after 4 :30 p.m. 1 (237 Ti rooms, fur-3 EI- . Av. West. (241) C -? furnished a:. & Cheap win- -A;, Bex 27b Dally (241 Pi-..".rr rooms, part Mb: 615 6th Ave faa Green 698 (239) I- r.; rtable room. EPhjni Blue 967. (237) Pl AND P.OAUI) BOARj. .$40 each I B Slr.Jle Hnma aai? Kite. Tabli meals. Mrs Fiascr Street, (tf ) FTALWOIIK I P with a envpstrniifrv. smoky fur-leaklrm n 884, New Wfiiio- faKactlon guaranteed. p' Memi Ltd. (tf) Installatirme SHEET METAL furnace t mnw l-ouehlnir j jjnwnwu & Sons, 629 J O c a,,a Perman -; w , from drinking, lb l 'tnderpH n.iti i .... 'Men n l. .. . I , c louna free-Xnc-r, 1mm '""tuuver, jWtollyburn, Box ki rpin. tit "uncan, .307; Box an- rdn . renun, Box Rupert, Box 270. apply at the 618 ani Pay for the ad. an 'and i Same b C Paylngf this Dally New5 of- (tf) Cajl at (238) r0lCAL RECORD 'eath- Its .welr silver y brace- W "Lfbols for U111UJJS, Notlcei nrr insertion, Nc gjjjjjJT NOTICE I FPU SALE Winter potatoes, oment oJ i delivery $3.50 per 100 lbs. cash P ' Jeanne Matil-1 with order. D. Tumllson, Ter-Rle David Swltzer. ! race, D.C. (241 j E, Mr ann . FOR SALE "Duo Therm" oil heater, six months old; davenport; both in good condition. Phono Ked 924 or Red 491. (238) FOR SALU-One used,, 1942, yard Koering Shovel, First class shape, $10,000, f.o.b., Vancouver. Other shovels available. Apply Clarence Dixon, Arrow Bus Lines Ltd., Phone 459, Box 1398. (237) FOR SALE W. W. Gieener, 32" barrel 10-gauge shotgun. 474 Taxi Stand, see L. Keller, (tf) F0R SALE General Motors S-6 "Kuaire. rnone mm wb. 4 to 6 p.m. (240) F0R gALE "Babee Tenda" hlghchalr good condition. Phone Red 985 evenings. (240) size, films or plates, and all accessories. Apply Green 106. (24U F0U SALE Flooring, r.clO, dou ble dressed. Phone Green G98 " .V ! . . i fun oAUrj lujo unrysier itoya sedan Jn g0Qd Ehape gnap $900 Also Lasaue sedan! cheap. Can be seen at Dan' ) Service Station. (239 i FOR SALE New and used furniture for household and offices; also hardware; used musical Instruments; 5-pce. kitchen suite $12.50; McClary's electric range $15; slightly used radios, electric, battery and portable, from $20; slightly used men's rain coats, topcoats, etc.; new small size coal and wood ranges $30; new unpalnted furniture, chests, book cases, desks, medicine chests from $2.75; new tumblers 5c. Everything reduced. B.C. Furniture Co., Black 321. FOR SALE Family home, very central, very good garden. Two bedrooms downstairs. Owners leaving town. For good buy call at Collart & McCaffcry Ltd. J237) FOR SALE We have two exceptional businesses for sale. 1. $15,000 and terms will handle well - equipped boatbuilding establishment, ideally located. 2. $1,400 is all that is asked for a complete coffee bar doing a large volume of business. Choice location. See Armstrong Agc-ncles 307 3rd Ave. (238) FOR SALE 32 volt lighting equipment consisting of: 1250 watt Delco plant; 1000 watt Oonan plant; 1 set 19 plate storage batteries; 1 1-6 h.p. motor; 4 h.p. motors; 2 1-3 h.p. motors; 1 Vi h.p. motor. This equipment has been servicing the Telkwa Hotel but now power is furnished by B. C. Power Commission .All equipment in good order. Will sell entire or any part. C. P. Bussinger, Telkwa. (238) FOR SALE Table and four chairs and bed complete. Phone Red 930. (239) FOR, SALE Large supply of dry scrap wood, random lengths, $Q per cord, 3 cord lots $16. Call Blue 810, Bert's Transfer. 303 3rd Ave. (242) FOR SALE 2 Simmons panel cribs. 1 all steel, 1 with wooden sides. As new. Phone Blue 939. (839) FOR SALE Remington typewriter, legal size and one wood heater. Phone Blue 716. (242) SPECIAL BARGAINS IN BLDG. MATERIALS Lumber, 2x12, 3x12, 4x12, 6x6, 8x8, $25 per M. 2x8, 2x10, 2x12, 3x6, 3x10, 3x12, 3x14. All S4S, $45 per M. Shiplap. While it lasts, $35 per M. Flooring, 1x4, $45 and $65 per M. All kinds of finishing lumber Including , doors, windows hardware at half price. Some Gyproc lath left at $30 per M. Also some Loxstave material, trusses, cedar siding, Plywood, Barn Door Track. Electric and Plumbing supplies, especially lead, greatly reduced In price. GROUP 4 AIRPORT SPIES & MECKLING. Phone 866 (242) fCpp Radio Dial V I I l 1240 Kilocycles (Subject to change) THURSDAY -KM, 4:00 Tony tne Troubador 4:15 Stock; and Interlude 4:30 Espetialry For You 4:45-Story Time 5:00 Alan and Me, Tor, 5:30 Hawaiian Melodies 5:45 Platter Parade 6:00 People Ask 6:15 Freddy Martin's Orch. 6:30 Transcribed Varieties 6:45 Recorced Interlude 7:00 CBC News 7:15 CBC News Round-up 7:30 Eventide 8:00Wlnnipeg Concert 8:30 The New Arabian Nights 9:00 Sports Review 9:15 Points of View 9:30 Nocturn 10:00 CBC News 10:10 B.C. News 10:15 Sportsman's Guide 10:30 Music in the Night 10:55 Musical Interlude 11:00 Weather and Sign Off. FRIDAY A.M. 7:30 Musical Cluck 8:00 CBC News 8:15 Morning Song 8:30-Music -for Moderns 8:45 Little Concert 9:00 BBC NEWS 9:15 Morning Devotions 9:30 Morning Concert 10:15 Morning Melodies 10:30 Roundup Time 10:45 Scandinavian Melodies 11:00 Elevenses 1 1 : 15 Reminiscences 11:30 Weather Forecast 11.31 Message Period 11:33 Recorded Interlude 11:45 Ethel and Albert 12:00 Recorded Program P.M. -12:15 CBC News 12:25 Program iResume 12:30 B.C. Farm Broadcast 12:55 Recorded 1:00 The Concert Houi 1:30 Afternoon Recital 1:45 Women's News Commen. 1:48 Needle Pointers 2:00 National School Bdcst. 2:30 Song? to Remember 2:45 Don Messer and Islanders 3 0 Varieties In Music 3 :15 Spotlight Star 3:20 Serenade to America 3:30 Divertimento 3:45-BBC News 400 MEMBERS ALREADY SOLD Civic Centre Campaign Is Sleeting With Good Response More than 400 membership subscriptions In the Civic Centre have been taken out during the last week since the annual campaign got under way, Civic Centre Manager Don Forward said Wednesday afternoon. Objective of the campaign is at least 3,000 memberships. So far, few reports have been turned in by the team captains who are in charge of the drive which is being conducted on a regional basis. The teams, which completed their organizational preliminaries last week, have actually Just begun their canvassing activities. Of the 400 membership which have been taken out, 250 were purchased at the reception desk at the Civic Centre, Mr. Forward said. He looks on this as an indication of the good reception which the canvass will receive. The city-wide canvass is being led by 12 team captains, each of whom is responsible for appointing canvassers for the region assigned to him. There i is an average of 10 canvassers on each of the 12 teams. MACHINES FOR SALE CRAWLER TRACTORS In Our Calgary Yard D-8 Cat with push bell DDPCU r-7 cat with angle dozer i DDPCU Int. TD-18 with doz-. or Int TD-14 With dozer, rt Int. UO. rm TD-40 lu-w An with ttitn Jinele angle - auei dozer . D-4 Cat Wide gauge io D-4 Cat with dozer ams-Chalmers Model M Cat 30 Int. T-20 Cat 22 Cat 20 Erie 1 Yard Steam Shovel-New Hercules 103 H.P. Diesel Power Unit. C. & C. MACHINERY & SUPPLY 767-9 Ave. E. Phone M9269 Calgary TO SAW better lumber more economically, use the modern and up-to-date type National Portable Sawmills, manufactured by National Machinery Company Limited, Vancouver, B.C. Ull Advertise in The Dally Newsl AS ROYAL EXILES LEAVE RIO FOR LISBON Former King Carol of Romania and his wife, the former Madame Lupescu, are shown seated in the lounge of the s.s. Juan de Garay, on which they sailed from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, for Lisbon. They had been in Brazil for three years. The royal exiles were refused permission to enter Argentina. They were married last July while Lupescu was near death from an attack of lukemla, but she subsequently staged an amazing recovery. Their baggage consisted of 65 bags, 35 trunks, 45 huge crates, five dogs and two LABOR LEADER STRICKEN, DIES (leneral Counsel of American Federation Passes Away During San Francisco Convention SAlN FRANCISCO A prominent official of organized labor in the .United States died suddenly "during the natianal .con- vention. of the American Federation of Labor here yester day He was Joseph Padway, aged 56, general counsel of the Federation, who collapsed with a heart attack lust alter mak ing an address of denunciation of the Talt-Hiirtley Bill. He was assisted to his seat by Wil liam Green, president of the Federation, and others but soon succumbed. PRINCESS PATS TO HAVE MUSEUM CALGARY The Princess Pai:Flih Dock- tricla's Canadian Light Infantry announces plans for the organization of a new regimental museum at Calgary. This regi ment already maintains itains a. World War il museum, Intended to create rooms ms of ex- hlblts where records and souvenirs of the regiment's many engagements in two world wars will be kept for posterity. RETURNS FROM OVERSEAS TRIP Leslie Parks, who has been away from the city visiting his former home in England, returned on Tuesday night s train. He visited friends and relatives In London and Birmingham. Mr. Parks landed in England on June 16, remaining there until late In September. He crossed the Atlantic on the Queen Elizabeth. orADV FOR f CCIENCE has proved there are J certain food elements everyone neeus . lor ncauu. , n mcic tvni h o( ( them ..m in a child-s child.s footi food, seriouJ things can happen such as lo of aonetite. stunted itrowth, soft bones, poor teeth, faulty nerves, defective eyesight. Ovaltine supplements the diet with elements frequently deficient in ordinary foods. Three servings of Ovaltine furnish a significant portion of a child's daily requirements of Vitamins A, Bl, C, D, Riboflavin (pi), and Niacin and Minerals Calcium, Phosphorus and Iron. In addition it provides the basic food substances complete proteins to build muscle, nerve and body cells high-energy foods for vitality and endurance. It thus acts as an insurance against food deficiencies that retard normal growth. So if your child eats poorly, is thin, underpar, perhaps nervous, why not try delicious livaltine tor normal growth and better appetite. OVALTINE 41 M ni ' f rilir mil iV!rN rlwr B, m 9 w 9m I llv. r r B" LEAGUE Oct. 10 Mutts vs. Grotto, Army vs. Maple Leafs, Co-op vs. Thorncliffes, Stones vs. Moose. Canf isco vs. Scotians, Fish Dock vs. Thcms. S. M. Oct. 17 Thorncliffes vs. Fiih Deck. Moose vs. Siotlans, Can-fisco vs. Thorns. S. M., Army vs. Co-op, Stones vs. Mutts, Maple Leafs vs. Grotto. Oct. 24 Co-op vs. Scotland, Mutts vs. Canfiaco,, Stones vs. Grotto. ThorncllffpR vs. Thorn. S. M., Maple Leafs vs. Fish Dock, Army vs. Moose. Oct. 31 Stones vs. Fish Dock, Thcrncliffes vs. Moose, Army vs. Mutts, Maple eLafs vs. Canfis:o, Co-op vs. Thorn S. M Grotto vs. Scotians. Nov. 7 Army vs. Canf Isco, Grotto vs. Thorn SM., Co-op vs. Moose, Thorncliffes vs. Scotians, Stents vs. Maple Leafs, -Mutts Nov. 14-Mutts vs. Thorn S.M., Stones vs. Thorncliffes, Maple Leafs vs. Scctians, Army vs. Fish Deck, Grotto ve. Moose, Co-op vs. Canfisco. Nov. 21 Thorncliffes vs. Canfisco, j Arfny vs. Grotto, Stones vs. Thorn S.M., Mutts vs. Scotian.?. Co-op vs. Fish Dock, Maple Leafs vs. Moose. Nov. 28 Fish Dock vs. Sco-tians. Maple Leafs vs. Thorn S. M., Mutts vs. Moose, Co-op vs, Grotto, Army vs. Thorncliffes, Stones vs. Canfisco. NEW dries to a No brush dauber LIQUID ,W.".W. i 4 m a u J3 Full run of flattering colors All sizes Truly treasures for your top drawer! Annette MANSELL STONE BUILDING MARRIED IN OLD COUNTRY Les Parkes, for years identified with the Canadian National Railways station staff here, returned this week from a visit to England where he spent most of the summer. The last time he was there was when he was serving in the First Great War. Ills home city is Birmingham. Of Interest to many friends In Prince Rupert is the news that Mr. Parkes married while in England. He will, for the present, remain in Prince Rupert but later return overseas, Join his wife and settle down in the Old Country to remain there permanently. Mr. Parkes noted many changes that the Second Great War and economic readiust- ments brought about in the Brl - j tish Isles, particularly in Eng land. He was in London and Birmingham during much of his holiday. There could still be seen numerous reminders of the severity and scope of the bombing. There has been, Mr. Parkes says, a5 quite "June a a good sooq crop crop but dui it k wouId have been lareer nad fUp Vippn Iacq Hrwnpcc nrM Vint. weather. More rain was needed to make It suitable growing weather. From the standpoint of general business, trade and indus'- try, Mr. Parkes says It is evident that Great Britain still has it long way to go before resuming the position held in the fin-1 anclal and world-wide affairs held prior to 1939. Today, of necessity, there are many restrictions put into effect which can all be summed up in the expression "austerity" or in other words, a policy that, through hard work, avoidance of waste, thrift and general co-operation, can at least make a start on the way back. The cost of living Is high. There are many who would like to move to' Canada, but it is, not always convenient or possible to do so. Incidentally, he remarked that a packet of cigarettes costs, in the Old Country, about eighty cents. Advertxse a the Daily News CONSTIPATED ? SLUGGISH? A r , n en ha bit-forming lata ti .. Oe.Ltle In action, y.t rcc!i" ciectlve. Get this bandy peckage ct all dru stores. Appty in Seconds lustre; buffs to a polish. required apply with attached to cork. a8Nj SHOE POLISH - BLACK, BROWN - 15c T T j -w . Leg iieauiy at its Best Prices at Their Lowest . . . Full Fashioned Cohweb Sheer And Business Sheer Nylons, Rayon and Pure Silk Hosiery A COMPLETE STOCK "Walk Upstairs and Save" .J VW.W.V1V.V.WAW.W.WV.VVW.W.V Prfnrc Rupert DnHp I3ftas Thursday, October 9, 1947 TEA Modern Etiquette By ROBERTA LEE O. How can a nerson fila tinguish between genuine hos- pitality and that which is affected? A. A person with the least intuition can quickly distinguish this. As Washington Irving said: "There is an emanation from the heart in genuine hospitality which cannot be described, but is immediately felt, and puts the stranger at once at his ease." Q. When should the phrase Terrace FOR PROMPT SERVICE .... See Your GENERAL MOTORS DEALER Chevrolet Buick Chev. Trucks Pontiac Oldsmobile GJI.C. Trucks Machine Work A specialty Terrace Machine Shop & Garage TERRACE B.C. Phil's Cafe Lakelsc Anue BREAKFAST LUNCH DINNER AND BANQUETS Serve: Tasty Food Fine Pastries Proprietor, LITTLE, HAUGLAND & KERR LTD. Lumber Manufacturers Rough and Dressed Lumber TERRACE WOODWORKERS' ART The use of marquetry In cabinet work reached its highest point of development In Hoi- land during the 17th century. Terrace, B.C. Quick and Courteous Service Phil Tetrault m Log v Poles aridjfillng .. sr.'...;:. Ltd. BLUE 610 Agents For International Harvester Co. Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. Philco Radios Willard Batteries GEORGE HILL & SONS LIMITED Complete Stock of Men's Shoes and RuUWs AGENTS FOR SLATER SHOES 624 Third Avenue, Next Commodore Cafe P.O. Box 737 Floor Sanding I have just purchased the latest floor sanding equipment. This machine is the most modern type, and will do any kind of sanding. For the best, consult Phone t "excuse me" be used,?,. ... j A. This phrase is properly used only when asking to be ex-' cused from the room, or, the table or, from giving our attention to a person iQr a mom-ment. '" ' Q. Is one expected' to tip a waitress in a cafeteria who car- ries his tray to the taW? " A. This is optional. Usually, it is not expected. :! KNOX HOTEL A QUIET, PLEASANT PLACE TO LIVE COMPLETELY RENOVATED ROOMS REDECORATED SPRING-FILLED MATTRESSES LICENSED PREMISES UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT Proprietors: TOM PESUT STEVE VRKLAKN 4' ha 1 i: 1 i i i fl V