1 our District Vat es Hostess Rushes To Side Bride From Tokyo Flight .citement reigned supreme here Monday night time drew near for beth Carr and Newman Cornish in St. Ay \- jand Mrs. R. R. Strachan, Atlin Avenue. by spending a few days here before going to her home at Hazelton. lral from and the 15 min-| Carr, the} her that | maid, enroute iof, here Dri 1 1 deiayeda Eleanot idvised ordered taxi | | Cove ainport, El- 1 Canadian Pacifie t on the Tokyo a to her honre at 925 riving in time to es and dash to the | the operating staff of C | National Railways here, train last night for a vacation} and prev }in Edmonton. ilmost as excited as he of her ex- the airlift and that told Che CHOsCli &Y oF.) Ua Honolulu - New he returns to ) vel ij } wnen 1 Anyox and rt with her | ceiving her graduated Pauls Hospital in Van 1951 and joined CPA on domestic runs Miss Carr left Vancouver | for Tokyo be at Lupe ‘) Si f She time. Originally she} to Prince Ru- | Vat but her companion had to 1 Oltawa unexpectedly Ww arrive couver if airlift run to! i “it is really commercial ervicemen are with.” ooking the sale ier thar aiong forward ew ! t because. as she fonolulu is really won- ything you read has at ity from her nurs-! clic it Royal Jubilee to spend a parents, M1 Cadets Learn zenship hip training pro- aim of the Air Dennis said here {a Strachan } ictorila th her ( i ivel anada illy to a meet- t men inter- air cadet member of empha citizens Unit ry a, a Committee Cag ug are n both d States were sO) the United their educa { rut are eli given is phy to areon sical train them later in neeced before f roup can be start- e Rupert i i it Ja night's Moore, Jay MacDonald, Ralph k Hicks, Jack Laurie Kirk, Murray Johnson \. Large and Roy Brown Veils ing i hn of 73-year-old Skidegate is one { British Columbia's s Of Argillite carv- se Works are*known in iof summer vacation here with Mrs. Andrew Garten, Avenue West. * Vc sonver Sha will re , a to Vancouver. She will return in | finer points of citizenship She had/lenge to all homemakers, yar YT ee the wedding in| have to provide their families|#!", Guadaloupe and St. Pierre are just as necessary in July as} in January, But in doing so they} don’t want to make themselves | St Laurent who took the salute } into burnt offerings. ing the cook from melting away in the kitchen. The thing to do|®@ two years ago by the na- is to let the refrigerator do most| tional executive of the work for you, of the refrigerator saves money as well as energy. salads | vegetables, serving them in gela- | d Indian Artist Loves Craft of Carving eae | Over Ontario Rifle Range CONNAUGHT RIFLE RANGES, SOUTH MARCH, Ont. (CP)—Some 1200 happy teen-aged Girl Guides from most parts of Can- ada took over this site 15 miles | southwest of Ottawa Monday | ee a | day which normally is used for gee and Garnet Jackson! male rifle competitions. errace are spending their! ‘The girls will spend 12 days | under canvas at this camp, larg- jest ever undervaxen by the Girl |Guides Association | The Guides, ranging in age mber of| from 13 to 16, were hand-picked anadian|by the Girl Guides Association left bY|on the basis of individual merit ious camping experi- jence. Instead of trying to train) the wedding of Margaret ndrew’s She was accompanied Miss Elsie Gildner, who is + * 2 308 Sevenue ~ . Mr. A. F. Williams, me * * the girls in camping and life- Mrs. H. 8. Parker is on a com-| saving techniques, an effort will bined holiday and business trip/pe made to teach them the two weeks , The camp was designed to help | the youngsters to think as Can- af adians, not as the natives of ° ;}any particular province knots See : y | As guests of the Canadians ECIPES Summer menus present a chal- They | for the period from July 14 to |25 will be 26 girls from the! | United States, the Dutch East! | Indies, Jamaica, Bermuda, Brit- with nourishing p | 2nd Miquelon. a | The camp was officially open- ed Tuesday by Prime Minister meals, wihict } ;}during the march past of the There are many ways o1 keep- | Suides by provindas Plans for the camp were start- of the Girl Guides Association. The girls pay their own way and have a staff of some 300 {volunteers to oversee activities. The fee is $60 no matter from what part of the country the Guides come. The Guides, in addition to swimming and sight-seeing tours of Ottawa, will take part in ad- vanced woodcraft techniques group-singing, handicrafts, folk- dancing, simple dramatics and a home-town gossip forum The girls must bring to camp a health certificate and another examination , will be given on arrival, To ensure ade- quate medical treatment, a 20- bed hospital, staffed full-time by two women doctors and registered nurses, has been es- tablished. Using left-overs with the help! Make tasty With yesterday’s cooked tin or with dressing. Save thc} nutritious liquid from canned vegetables for soups, sauces and gravies, and the deicious liquid from canned fruits for gelatin or pudding sauces, A small amount of left-over meat can be extend- ed with rice, spaghetti or nood- les to make a quickly prepared and appetizing main course, Reheating stale bread, cookies or cake restores the flavor. Use the top of the double boiler instead of the oven in summer. As far as possible, do all your cooking on top of the stove, A menu that is just right for summer economy, nourishment and ease of preparation features Spanish Rice as the main disa You might start with chilled fruit juice, serve green beans and gelatin salad, and have floating the Smith-Guyan Nuptials At island for dessert b z Here's the recipe for Spanisn Pres yterian Rice: 8 slices canned or cooked meat A pretty wedding took place in loaf cut about 4" thick the Presbyterian manse on Sat- 1 cup raw rice urday when Shirley Inez Smith, 4 tablespoons Crisco daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George 1 small onion, ehopped Hague, exchanged vows with 1 cup chopped celery Peter Buchan Guyan, son of Mrs 1 teaspoon salt Alex Guyan 1, teaspoon pepper Rey, Dr. E. A. Wright officiated 2'4-3 cups cooked tomatoes at the double ring ceremony i cup soup stock or water The bride, in a floor length Wash rice and drain, . Brow toast lace posed over an under- rice lightly in shortening. Add skirt of heavy slvell pink satin onion and celery and brown afew carried a white prayer book minutes longer. Add tomatoes, mounted with blue carnations liquid and seasonings Cover She wore a_ half-bonnet ol and cook over low heat, stirring) matching fluted lace with small occasipnally, until rice is tender blue flowers uncer the brim ‘about 25 minutes) Mrs. Agnes McLean, who at While rice is cooking, dip meat tended the bride,, wore a floo Slices in lightly beaten egg and crumbs and pan fry in hot short- length powder blue taffeta dress and had small blue flowers in her ening, Serve with the fice on! hair, She carried a corsage of a hot platter Talisman roses 4 si Gioomsman was Mr. John McLean Following the ceremony a re the heme ol Pick, 1532 Mrs, Pick is ception was held at Mr. and Mrs. Victor Biehth Avenue East sister of the groom. The table was covered with a white linen tabiecloth decorated totem poles, symbolizing ical and religious stories. No matter what they carved here was always a “flowingness,” symmetry and simplicity creat- ing distinct beauty, | myth and a white bell hanging ov r head. A two-tier wedding cake tecorated with a bride and groom and horseshoe, was cut by the 10} with pink and while streamers the world’s leading mus-| ‘Phe Haidas used dried skin of | is a Slate found on land, of the Queen roup. When quarried paratively soft, but har- Ick when exposed to take a beauti- 4 1 ly f uface n white men first arrived Pacilic Coast, the Haidas Ar'ving wood, bone and nto almost everything 00 handles to ornate Mal masks, 1G BUSINESS produet he whites were were sold :ead- and soon the reputed to be the | Carvers in North Am- They acquired steel tools rned to carve gold, cop- silver, and later, slate. of the oldest and most pieces were collected be- 0, but the finest carving 1¢ from 1830 to 1890, ' period handsome boxes, / joined by wooden dow- {ish glue, pieces of irri- abalone shell with slate nd small totem poles ned out, FHOWN carvings were the sharks or dogfish, or just the newly-married couple, Pourers were Mrs. Agties Pick | palm of their hands to add pol- | OUTSTANDING ART and Miss Pat Guyan. After a honeymoon trip through the Okanagan, Seattle and Vancouver, the young couple will return to Prince Rupert readers ish to their work, A figurine created in 1833, now in an eastern United States mus- eum, is said to be the finest ex- ample of work by any North Am- erican aboriginal. It is called “bear mother,” based on an Ind- ian Jegend of a princess captured! @ Dry Goods and Noveily Shoj ny bears and forced to marry the! will be closed from July 18 te king of the bears, August 1. (187) She has a child by him and} ‘the figurine depicts with perfect | = os er ee a ae rythm of line and pattern the} SOLER By ees ee we bear mother writhing in agony| BUSINESS IMPORTANT. — (166 while nursing her ferocious off- spring which is half bear and) half boy, | The Helidas’ skill began to wane late in the 1800's and early | 1900's when they sacrificed skill @ Salt Lake Ferry every day, weather Refer to schedule elsewhere this paper. their work. Howevr, old Captain Brown,! at club by July 16. ering fr near-sighted eyes! : Oe ee tine ts arene tool, sail | @® International Brotherhood gives loving care and patience to| Pulp, Sulphite and Paper Mill his craft. Most of his handicraft| Workers regular genera] meet- is sold to tourists from Prince|ing Wednesday, July 16, Metro- Rupert stores, | pole Hall, 7:30 p.m. (166) ruaning| permitting. | in | (1t) | @ Moose members basket excur | and patience for mass prodwe-|sion Terrace, July 20, 8:30 a.m | tion to satisfy the demand for Adults $3.00, children under 14 $1.50. Tickets must be picked up} (166) | OTTAWA.—Life in Europe 1s ijmuch more difficult and uneasy than it was a year ago, says Dr. Lotta Hitschmanova of the Uni- tarian Service Committee of Canada. Prices have risen “out of all proportion to incomes.’ The executive director of this| the Eureka Shop, opened in Ath- relief organization for Europe’s| ens this spring at the suggestion her annual visit|of Mrs. George L. Magann, wife at first hand | of what is being done with Cana-| Greece needy is overseas on to see dian contributions. In a letter to the USC headquarters says: since the end of hostilities. But, on the other hand, the arma- ment race has begun against possible aggression.” In Greece, while the cost of to be better dressed than they were a year ago and there are many more goods in the stores. In certain respects Greece has passed the emergency period and now is anxious to plan a more constructive program, says Dr. Hitschmanova. Welfare officials told her that projects to help raise the standard of living and provide work for the Greeks now have become as necessary as the emergency relief of food and clothing which Canada has been sending since the end of the war However, Dr. Hitschmanova predicts that such projects must walt because another crop fuil- ure has struck the country. The Greek ministry of agriculture told her that Greece would be able to cover only one-third of her grain needs this year where- as in 1951 she supplied half. ‘The tragedy is that the Greek government does not possess Speed Typing Winner Named 5 chase this large quantity of flour and to distribute it people because half of the 1952; Greek budget is devoted to. de- fence,” she | heip, with the exception of one | paid “You witness the tremendous | its first four weeks it showed a effort in each country to rebuild) $5000 profit, all for Greek re- what has not yet been rebuilt Jief. |on the third floor of the Cana- ;dian embassy where garments | donated from many parts of the| | | world are made rez sale. living is high, the people appear | . are mate S008) Ete Goes East To Join TCA | irom Royal Jubilee Hospital, Vic- | Speed typing pendant awarded | annually at St. Joseph’s Academy | merly with CPA, plans to enter | has been won this year by Pat-/| the nursing profession here. Both | ricla Gurvich. The school today released | ja hospital before becoming stew- } names of students who passed) ardesses. Commercial course examinations jin June and will receive diplomas] .i+}, Toa before joining CPA on | Shortly, betical order, are: ; jrace, Yvonne Kildal, M The names arranged in alpha-| but after returning home accept- | | COURSE I—Mavis Cronin, Pat-| \ricia Gurvich, Victoria Hipp, Ter- ae Lind- Say, Masset; Eleanor Meier, | Prince George; Joyce Reynolds, | Hazelton; Joyce Smith; Joyce 1 | Strand; Betty Trueman, Cedar- | | vale; Gertrude Weick. COURSE II Bockkeeping: Beth Paulette Madsen. Christy Terrace; Jeanette Cloutier, Lucy Evans, Anne In the speed typing Patricia Gurvich 68 words per minute. Machura exam SALT LAKE FERRY SCHEDULE Monday Through Saturday Leave Cow Bay Floats 2pm, 8 pm, 5 pm., 6 p.m, and 7 p.m, SUNDAY: Continuous Service Sterting 10:30 a.m. All Schedules Weather Permitting PRONE BLACK 926 accomplished | A Delicious | DOUBLY-DELICIOUS WITH MUSTARD TUNA FISH SALAD 2 cups canned tuna fish - 1 cup diced celery 1 tablespoon minced onion 2 tablespoons vinegar V2 teaspoon salt Ve teaspoon pepper | V2 teaspoon Colman's Mustard | V2 cup selad dressing Break tuna into large pieces, combine with ingredients and toss lightly. Serve in lettuce cups garnished with stuffed olives and lemon wedges. For free recipe booklet, write to Reekitt & Coiman (Canada) | Ltd., Station T, Montreal. gry Lands project needs clothing for adults and ties, handbags—anything that is in good repair and “may appeal to those who need to buy but cannot should not be sent because Can- entirely suitable Acute Need Seen by Woman Doctor ‘Teachers Bow | For Canadian Help in Hun LONDON —You cannot ufficient hard currency to pur-|°L@dy Luck” playing a large in school -xaminations free to its she says. Dr. Hitschmanova described | #°he, an emotional upset or a delayed train, would each tribute to the possiblity of a in examinations. Therefore, to satisfy the Canada’s ambassador to Al goods are donated and all supertor, is voluntary. In! sehool-leaving examination pupils faili aah Sewing and ironing rooms are ‘standards required for ent the examinations. Some of the delegates, Dr. Hitschmanova said the! wertificates and children, costume jewelry, is going’ to produce “gilded document.” But majority of the tea ; Supported a motion its afford the expensive prices in the Athens shops.” However, she said, shoes Maa | girls into adian styles and fittings are not for Greece | show employers. | HEAVY INCREASE . Total value of livestoc Miss Sat er Canadian farms in June, vas $2,010,354,000, triple 1941 total of $615,584,000. Miss Olga Sather, pretty stew- } ardess with Canadian Pacific | Airlines until she resigned re-| cently to rejoin Trans-Canada | Airlines, leaves here tomorrow | night by boat for Vancouver, Miss Sather, who graduated - co es = eee toria, will fly to’ Toronto from |} conta Vancouver, where she will serve | aboard the giant TCA North] Stars. ; | Her sister, also for- } of whole Myrtle, girls graduated from the Victor- ' | Olga, who was a stewardess | its B.C. runs, had planned to quit ed an offer to return to TCA in Toronto. ‘ \ It takes only 15 minutes from the time your fruit is prepared to make a batch of jam or jelly with Certo. It’s the easy way because Certo is a highly concentrated fruit pectin product — the natural jellying sub- stance extracted from fruit. With Certo you use only a ONE- MINUTE tull, rolling boil. You don’t boil down your juice, so you average 50% more jam or jelly. You keep the lovely fresh-fruit taste and color, too. There’s a separate kitchen- tested Certo recipe for each kind of fruit. Follow the simple directions carefully to be sure of sparkling, taste-tempting jams and jellies. Youll be proud to Say ‘| MADE IT To Lady Luck | Miss M. 8S. Smith, a Birming- ham teacher, addressing the an- nual meeting of the Association | of Headminstresses, said a tooth- | scholar failing to make the grade mands of employers for ce cates or diplomas, educational institutes are holding their own hg to pass the nation al school-leaving examinations and others unable to reach the ever, referred to the possiblity of a “chaotic situation” developing from the increase in unofiicial suggeste would be useless to have a na- tional certificate if each school declaring , against a system that would send | world without | some certificate of proficiency to! IDEAL F ing all the bran - Prince Rupert Daily News Wednesday, July 16, 1952 Dentistry By Remote Control ‘ion | ROCHESTER, England, (Reu- part ALBANY, N.Y. (AP)}—-An Al-|ters)—A light plane with its en- bany dentist treated a patient on/| gine stalled swooped down and more than 2,500 mies away, without moving from his efficc.|day. The girls—one “ham’ operator here, Dr. Wes- ley Van Loan told pain-stricken William I. Pogermon, a weather Observer, how to care for his badly abscessed tooth. even run over her back—we con- 9g > et een 4 good plane between two hc was unhurt. > de- 2 Sunday Antics the northern tip of Greenland, | struck two choir girls as they walked home from church Sun- Responding to an SOS sent to a|said she felt the plane’s wheels The pilot managed to glide the and He pancake in an open space. of whom re injured. uses rtifi- 20% Discount ry to how- Wherever you qo, we a. can supply vou with own smart, neat luggage... whether ** be Twin Sets, chers Club Bags or Gladstones & k on| 1951, | the | wheat ! — POU Skt \OW-PRICE CEREAL! Delicious «\ Jams and Jellies RESULTS ARE SURE WITH and Certo Short-Boil Recipes give you 50% MORE from your. fruit \ RECIPE BOOK UNDER LABEL TAKE YOUR PICK LIQUID OR CRYSTALS Certo in either form gives equally good results ] fe followed. They are not i changeable. Vacation Luggage Y! See i qt) LAR 2 2), Medals Prod eR Me ee RECIPE BOOKLET under the label of every bottle and in every package. Each type has special recipes which must be } I | ° nter-