I f f "4 1 fa 4a 8 II r. Iptlnii Utipctt DnHy Bcto Saturday, August 9, 1947 New Spirit Is Perceived Hon. L. O, Eyres, minister of trade and industry, who has recently completed a 4,200 mile tour of the Yukon, and Northern B.C., declared , the. eyes of the rest of Canada and the world are on the west. There is a definite western trend of business and industry. Inhis. travels nrougnout the northwest he' noticed an awakening of the pioneer spirit among the newcomers, a spirit, fibwever, that is modern in its application. Settlers are seeking newr areas where they can build new homes and have a hand In the development of the north. But these people are not intending to use the same methods of development employed by the'r pjoneer forebears. They look to air travel, hard-surfaced highways and modern machinery as means of opening up the virgin country of the north. y'The day will come, sna In our time," said the minister, "when aircraft will handle everything ejecept heavy freight. Travel and express rates -will eventually be levelled to a point mat will encourage all travel and light freight to be moved :y air." J Mr, Eyres was In rrince Ru-pert"25 years ago this month and he sees a wonderful expansion" since that time. In 1942 and again in 1943 he visited th3 city' .while recruiting for inn IJoyal Canadian Air Force. ! Accompanied Ty Mrs. Eyres and Deputy Minister or Fisheries O. Alexander and Mrs. Alexand et, Mr, Eyres is making a stutfy of industrial establishments and J'oi reservation call or write -City or Depot Ticket Offices. r"PBINOB RUPERT development in connection with his departmental busmess. As he expressed it, all industries are linked together in whatever the future holds for British Columbia. As he sees it we must all strive for greater efficiency in the matter, of production. Only in that way can we maintain our high standard of living and compete in the world markets with industrial countries whose lower standards of living permit them to produce at lower costs. Saturday Mr. Eyres visited the local fishing establishments and was guest of honor at a luncheon arranged by the Prince Rupert Wholesale Fish Dealers' Association. Sunday he "will motor over the hlchway to Por Edward. He and his Darty will return'to Prince Rupert Tuesday and sail for the south the same day. Ladies' Fastball August 12 -Moose vs. Gordon and Anderson. August 14 High School vs. Gordon and Anderson. August 19 Moose vs. Hlgg School. August 21 Port Day, no game. August 26 Gordon and Anc-erson vs. Moose. August 28 Play-offs start. BUG VERSUS BUG Ladybugs are used :n California- citrus groves to destroy mealybugs, one of the fruit crop's deadly enemies. BRITISH BRED Of the 20 breeds of cattle, sheep, pigs and horses or worldwide reputation today, all but three originated in Britain. GROCERY BOAT GOES THROUGH Sca-Going- Store Serves Summer Homes and Isolated Cabins On Burrard Inlet WOODLANDS, B.C. (CP A seagoing grocery man, who serves millionaires, hard-working loggers, hermits, beachcombers, sails the shores of Burrard Inlet, braving its turbulent waters in sunshine ana siorm. He is Durham Garceau who sails a 30-foot launch from his home port of Deep Cove along the shores of the inlet to iso lated dwellers where no land grocer could reach. Usually he is accompanied by his wife. "It is more than a business deal with us," he said in describing his three years of dally trips. "We have taken on an obligation and come hell or high water we cannot fall to get through." He has never failed. He has fought summer storms and winter blizzards, rain and fog. The operator of the floating general store has done every thing from delivering the first white baby actually born on the shores of Burrard Inlet to carrying liniment to ease the aches and pains of a 90-year old hermit. The millionaires have summer homes to supply. The hermit is- Frank Martin, a veteran of the Trail of '98, who lives on an Isolated island.' "I a mabout the only man who ever gets inslae his shack on Twin Islands," said Garceau. VI deliver all his food, but apart from that I feel it is a moral obligation to see how the old boy is getting along." Advertise in the Dally News Here are beautiful NYLONS legs lif A .ermm mm mm. of course they're bu Ilk M, If A E l Tbfy're Unittrd in five proportion to give comfortable uidth and ttrt4ch at ALL poinls ... top, calf. anLlr, auJ inslep ... not juht rnefi alone ! Tbrre'a a eluding in the "Fit-All Family just right for Yuu ... to five you auioolh, feleek comfort. 1m, the patented jiucLer under the foot utretchrg out when the itoclkiog iaon... guaranteed to give a tmvthrr lit over the anVle, under the heel, at the hack . . liclpa hold acani straight. 1. STYLOX DEBS ... for the ahort, amaU woman, slender lega and .thighs. Siaes 8$-9K- 1 " 1 2. S l'YLO.V MIDS ... for average height with average sire legs. Fw short women with larger legs ... for tall women ,with slender legs. 8J-11. I . 3. S 1 1 LO.N LONGS ... for the really tall woman, or average height with sturdy legs. 9)-11. 4. "FlT.ALL.TOr' MIDS ... for the average size woman who wants extra stretch above the Loee. 8j3.ll. 5- "t lT-ALL-TOl-" LONGS . . . take care of the tall woman with large thighs. 9H-H. AND 1 1 1 THIS IS THC FAMOUS KAYta "Flt-AU HttL"l At RUPERT PEOPLES STORE bVbbbbbbsLbT' Steamer Service from PRINCE RUPERT to OCEAN FALLS WESTVIEW (Powell River) VANCOUVER Thursday at 11:15 p.m. To KETCHIKAN Wednesday Midnight (All Times Pacific Standard) For Your Eating Pleasure . . . Broadway Cafe (Formerly Boston Cafe) THE BEST FOOD FINEST COOKING TOP SERVICE BANQUET HALL FOR LUNCHEONS, DINNERS AND AFTERNOON TEAS Chinese Dishes Chow Mein Chop Suey "TAKE-OUT" ORDERS ANY TIME Hours: 7 A.M. to 1:30 AM. PHONE 200 J llO ;. iff NICARAGUA CRATER IN ERUPTION A huge pillar of smoke pours skyward from the fiery crater of the Cerro Negro volcano, near Leon, Nicaragua, after it ruptd recently. Hot stones and ashes have already cestroyea 230'square miles of rich farm land, leaving thousands homeless. Hundreds are reported to be dead and missing in the disaster. . CFPR Radio Dial 1240 Kilocycles (Subject to change) SATURDAY P.M. 4:00 Hawaii Calls 4:30 Songs in Sweet Style 4:45 Swingtlme 5:00 Wayne and Shuster Show 5:30 South American Way 5:45 Sports College 6:00 The Adventures of Bill Lance 6:30 Charlie Spivak's Orch. 6:45 Recorded Int. 6:50 Fish Arrivals and Int. 7:00 CBC News 7:10 Ed McCurdy 7:30 Paul Page's Orch. 8:00 Alberta Ranch House 8:30 Old Time Rhythm 9:00 Piano Pops 9:15 This Week 9:30 Chamber Music Trio 10:00 CBC News 10:10 B.C. News 10:15 Holly House, MBS 10:30 Hollywood Barn Dance, CBS 11:00 Weather Forecast and Sign Off SUNDAK A.M. 8:30 Concert Album 9:00 BBC News and Commentary 9:15 Songs and Singers 9:30 Harmony Harbour, Hart 9:59 Time s.jnal 10:00 B.C. Gardener 10:15 Adventures of David and the Blue Whale 10:30 Pilgrims' Progress, BBC ll:00-CBCNews 11:03 Capitol Reports Ott. 11:30 Religious Period-Tor, p.M. 12:00 CBS Symphony Orch. 1:30 Church of the Air 2:00 CBC News 2:03 "Spice for the Reader," Toronto. 2:15 Week-end Review, Toronto 2:30 Music In Nature" 3:00 Music for Sunday 3:30 CBC News 3:33 Weather Forecast 3:38 Musical Program 3:45 Canadian Short Stories 4:00 Readers Take Over, BBC 4:30 Music of the Footlights 5:00 Recvrd Album 5:30 Ici Lo'n Chante Quebec 6:00 It's a Legend Tor. 6:30 Familiar Music 7:00 CBC News 7:10 The Old Songs, Tor. 7:30 New World Orchestra, Tor. 8:00 Anthology 8:30 Music for Summer Eve 9.00 Summertime 9:30 Vesper i:our 10:00-CBC News 10:10 B.C. News 10:15 Canadian Place Names 10:30 Prelude to faienlght 11:00 Weather and sign off ann. MONDAY A.M. 7:30 Musical Clock 8:00 CBC News 8:15 Morning Concert 8;45tt-MusIc for Moderns 9:00 BBC News 9:15 Morning Devotions 9:30 Little Concert 9:45 Morning Melodies 9:59 Time Sienal 10:00 Music by Goodman 10:15 U.S. Navy Band 10:30 Roundup Time 10:45 Scandinavian Melodies 11:00 Keyboard and Console 11:15 Songs of Today ' 11:30 Weather Forecast lWl-rMessage. Period 11:33--Recorded Interlude "Peanut Whistle" Trains For France l OTTAWA, 0 Canadian fac tories produced 140 locomotives for the French railways between December 1945 and May 1947, it was learned here. Contracts, valued at $18,193,- 000, were placed with the Mont real Locomotive Works, Ltd., and the Canadian Locccnowve Co., Ltd., Kingston, Ont. The engines are the first ever to be built in Canada for France. Apart from a few mechanical details peculiar to Frsncn rail ways, they are similar to "butu Class engines now In service in Canada. Chief differences are in coupling devices and b'umoers. Instead of normal Canadian bells and headlights, they have the French "peanut whistle." Eighty per cent 'of them will burn oil and the remainder coal. 11:45 Easy Listening P.M. 12:00 B.C. Farm Broadcast 12:25 Program Resume 12:30 CBC News 12:40 Recorded Int. 12:45 Ethel and Albert 1:00 The Concert Hour 1:30 Afternoon Recital 1:45 Commentary and Many Happy Returns 2:00 Gold Cup Championship Races at Port Edward Yacht Club 2:15 Family Favorites 2:30 Songs to Re.fiember 2:45 Rural Route No. 9, Hal. 3:00 Cowboy Troubador, Cal. 3:15 Serenade to America, NBC TELLS BANKERS HOW EMPLOYEES CAN ROB THEM Accountant Gives 210 Ways To Steal, Then Lists Ways of Preventing: Cash Thefts By SAM DAWSON NEW YORK (AP) There are 210 ways to steal money from a bank without using either gun or dynamite. , Bank officers and employees get away with $2,000,000 to $6,- CCO.OOO in the United States every year. Fraud occurs most frequently in banks with four to 10 employees. Something ought to be done about it. And bank directors are just' the ones who ought to do it. These are the conclusions of a prominent sleuth of banking frauds, Lester A. Pratt, certified public accountant of Washington, D.C. He lists the 210 ways of de frauding a bank In a book "Bank Frauds" (Ronald Press of New York) and explains in de tail Just how each fraud is work td. In it he emphasizes that al most all are caught 30 per cent within a year, 50 per cent with in two years, 65 per cent within three years, and only "the exceptional'' in more than 10 years. PREVENT BANK FRAUDS Pratt's idea is not to furnish a handbook for anyone coveting some of his bank's cash. On the contrary, his idea Is the detection and prevention of bank frauds. And that's where he ties Into bank directors. Theirs is the responsibility of seeing officers and employee co-operate to deter fraud, says Pratt. They have a moral obligation to protect employees from temptation and a legal liability for negligence. Fratt cites an Instance in which a cashier who 'dominated" a bank and ran it as a one-man affair stole $200,000, or more than COTTAGE CHEESE New Creamed Fresh Made VALENTIN DAIRY Your Dally ALL-WEATHER SERVICE JOHN H. BULGER OPTOMETRIST John Bulger Ltd. Third Avenue R2 Slltl.Ox...iioifer... villi ilipptr comfort and tlioo . etjling . . , deu'gned for llie leisure Iiour, or inform f wear. In rich, toft pliabU full grain leather. Colourt Ihiar Ited and Cliaco Tan. $8.95 and Up SAILS IIATCn COVERS SKATE COVERS EDMONDSON AWNING & SAIL WORKS Phone BLUE 1 20 160 East Third Ave. ($!Xt fa ph'enton') MaMimWnaaMMaaM iwhm t twice Its capital, over eight years. Pratt adds: FRONTIER Him NEW DELHI, in V1 "To the moralist there will be, tier Province i fcume me uuiicuiiy difficulty In in ui'ti-iiiuiuns determining i university university, ni.M.4,. aceardln "i I whether the burden of rests more heavily on the officer fleer or on his careless board of dir ectors." NO COUPON, NO CAKE OXFORD, Eng., 0) Food ministry officials banned a weight-guessing contest for a. cake on grounds that it could not be acquired without bread units. V? - -r I BOAT CONSTRUCTION DESIONINO-JREPAIRS Fine Workmanship Estimates COW BAY BOAT WORKS A. P. Crawley Green 391 PAINTING AND PAPERHANGING Phone Black 823 H. J. LUND SMITH & EL'KINS LTD. Plumbing and Heating Engineers Phone 174 guilt Introduced m the nrJ0i scmbly. U wmc a P.O. Box 274 Train Schedule (Pacific Standard Time) For the East-Monday, Wednesday, Friday 8 p.m. From the East-Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday 10:45 p.m. "new royal HOTEL A Home Away From Home Rates 75c up M Rooms, not and Cold water PRINCZ RUPERT, B.C. Phone 181 p.o. Box IN awar UnlvnrM,. . . . vm ," . "nata,.,! nominations are rJ. I heldlnthespnn.1 "SALVAGE SAUflg. LONDON, a, teers known a5 'SaWl call at each house InHuJ "'""b" uiice a week t ' waste paper. THIS AND THAT .' 1 1 lti Gcorfc Mitihrw AJimi Srnir. !n. "Saves time not having to, walk around the engine to clean a windshield." Business and Professional DR. P. J. CHENEY DENTIST ANNOUNCES THE OPENING OF HIS OFFICE FOR THE PRACTICE OF DENTISTRY IN SUITE 5, SMITH BLOCK. TELEPHONE 765 J. P. MOLLER PHONE BLUE 153 124 4th Ave. East PAPER HANGING AND PAINTING HELEN'S BEAUTY SHOP Permanent Waring. Beauty Culture In all its branches. 209 4th 8treet : Phone HANDYMAN HOME SERVICE GENERAL CONTRACTORS 655 Building and Repairs of all kinds Roofs, Chimneys and Oil Burnera PHONES: Oreen 446 Red 894 PRINCE RUPEE! BOTTLE COLLECT! and MESSENGER PHONE RED to Agent for Pacific BotUtECl GEORGE L R0R1 Public Accountant, Audit: Income Tax Return! Ccl Besner Block - PhouS P. N. Kllborn W.Psd BERT'S TRAM AND MESSES Lumber - Coal - Wood-fcl Freight - Exprta Phone Blue 811 Night Calls-Greta r Prince Rupfrt PRINCE RUPERT FUfJ A. R. LOCK Wprfrtlno' nnnnuels ColS Deslens Potted PM Bulbs Seeds vrnnKTJATE PRICE! Prompt attention to majloj Box 516, Fnone in, JONES NEWS STA1 Eastern and Western W Magazines SUBSCRIPTIONS TA Sixth Street JOHN M0STAD CARPENTER AS-CABINET MAKES PHONE RED 752 If It's Rock Work- CALL BLUE 939 M. SAUNDERS CONCRETE SIDEWALKS - BASEMEj Your house and your" Insured while I do " Servlnj the Fisheries Wi.iu fP.R.). Li Partairi.. LabfUlnf. M w 0 J BLUE 993 MOUKanilfriar MAC SHOE HI WE DOCTOR SHOES-- ih:i:i, them-atteni) their DYEING-SAVE THEIR SOLES " Box 771 Second Avenue I Am