hangman In New Zealand. If she i- i. .1 ...in u n ....... 1 ... .... . liiilU 11, lllclt: Will IIU MUf.1Lli.'U . JIU.UOO Ptl. Prince Rupert Daily News Assessment Cut in Half i.lwitair.ir nHnilt tllf. m;in Hflulnr . ray Victoria Report ..... ...b ; i.'niijeaj. the last word. Tuesday, February 20, 1951 Derision to cut In half assess KETTEIt THAN HKRKINi! lI"W niar.v t a., Lilian not uln-u. about M '. .. 6 Reflects and Reminisces i ""'' . ""'uiil Hull:,,,; ... by J. K. Nesbitt Labor Tells the Government Nursing Service Costs Government House Glitters oriug guoo lutiuiit. n lew jap- f(.el ment of adminiit-ation build-! ingthat to oe turned into am apartment hotel by a local syn-(Urate was handed down last' nivht bv a final silting of the' 'St. aiiese risiiermen were scouting JU1, "w ii'iti, around, off Hokkaido Island, last aie week and not getting anywhere, a ser.-ca ilr., , Finuly they sighted sixteen ' hid.-.x. till dead. The creatures '"' "'- --it-s VICTORIA. The powerful B. C. Federation of, city court of revision. -i Instead of the original assess-' ,.4U.. n..;t t u u j.... .w Independent daily newspaper devoted to the upbuilding of Prince Rupert and Northern and Central British Columbia. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Member of Canadian Press Audit Bureau of Circulations Canadian Daily Newspaper Association t. A. HUNTER, Managing Editor. H. O. PERRY, Managing Director y Carrier, Per Week, 20c; Per Month, 75c; Per Year, f- W.00; By Mail, Per Month, 75c; Per Year, $8.00 "J Published every afternoon except Sunday by Prince Rupert Daily News Ltd., 3rd Avenue, Prince Rupert. THH TIME. Ilti MARKETS I When a Sussex Englishman j-ctuui iuiu uie guvci mucin, uic uuitri nay uiai, di . ment cf $80 00U on Improvement WuH bimined Into Icebergs and r '"''I'-l't A In: t; he building wai re-assessed t went to Collect nut man, ,.... ish Columbia s Labor Act is not a good act and shoui the experience was severe enough V) 'ravel tur-1 ... bill n.... nei,u ;i.. i . . t,u mil i.nriii. mi; u njii i i-.-tr- uui- n IJ't;1 J(j 1 siild i.l til" !:' inrit leuer mm, uir w .kly mea rutV-n for two. But there was im sense In beet in" about it. be repealed and that the operations of the Labor JJ9, p Bia k t)p Relations Board should be fully investigated. ! assessment, role be so aimed. The Federation sent a deleja- a i iur .. ..... i WAS HACK IKKlK l:K.R ! SKI? 1 A Noilii Kay business man, loritf active in Canadian affairs. Report from Parliament r 1 ra I 1 Ages Of Canadians INFORMATION on thn age composition of Can-I ada's population is not only necessary to governments for various purposes but is also useful to private enterprise in many ways. Reflecting the need for such information is the fact that a question of age has been asked in each census of Canada since 'refea tion to see the cabinet and a brief read to tne ministers said this: "It is not so many years ago that British Columbia led the way in improving labor conditions a n d recognizing the rights of organized labor. Unfortunately that is not so today. At the national convention of the Canadian Congress of Labor in Winnipeg, delegates from all sections of Canada heard the B. C. Labor Relations -.. is under arrest for having slain i his wife with ft hammer. He is 6. Two vears ao he retired. 11.' 1 does no deny the crime. They j lived 111 the city's mast exclusive I district. His record was one of , kindness and consideration.! LI Tl ,. ..... .... .... ... inn (wvertnement n not pvoiitnecj or dliulayed toy fSe Llojury SEES IMPOSSIBLE-I have just had a unfov- a-ay u - wj ui uviv tun. m Vf Brium lgati4 Board singled out for condem- pettable exjjerience and I have Seen the impossible home- it s neatness and pcilec-ivation by our national presi-, t ,. , . . , i ,,,,,u... t tion; how she olten made her 1871. It will be asked again in the 1951 census, to he taken in June this year. In contrast with most other attributes of the -hoes, fcefo -P Wonder If 11 dent, A. R. Mo-sher." j .ia-uiiijiiMirn. Ki uup ui ..i.w.o u,. .... hU;5U:ind ivmr.ve hi Th'e labor deleKatiun also all parties WUS taken to Cartierville, 011 the outskirts enteilng the nnu.se necessary to polish was as a nnniilatiriTi ocra ic m mw-chanorinir nhjirnpfpristic. ! caused a stir in legislative cir-1 m. . i , ii en. ,.e f ' , . . 1 ., ' b 6- " " i v.a .a.m.. V . "r , , Icles when it 01 ul ... v w.It e a..l.....,r iLw.y - asked ked the the govern- govern- y-j them'' ment to take' over the a c. ivie- 1 united and to watch a ocmonstration ot the r i The Dean of Canterbury phone Company and operate it MKH S Wf AK WOKK PANTS. Heavy twill. Kff.ulur m. iv, s, a real buy at Itnr.SS PASTS, t'ood dress pants that are we i; ta . nretl. Hef'iilar price $8.25 5 CI.OVI.S, heavy leal h r faced gloves. l)-.uii!iy ftfic Nuw BOYS' HKAH SCHOOL PANTS, Stroiif.ly I allured, till sbn wear in these n,,w VVIMlKKKArtr ItS. Pure Wool Plaids In nil slc5. . give away nri"cs jij, i thought so much of Stalin's re-"liiir.i-fe In la-.!, weeks Inl.TView most diflicult things of all for pl'ine, the cruising .sM-ed .if that he ollei'ed c.ingral illations. He's had considerable practice. as a public utility, lnere nave i"--'. nuns jei, nBnirio. been many requests tliat the The trip was a ranged by Hoi.. government expropriate the Brcoke Claxion, Minister of Na- B. C. Klectric-hut this Is the tional Uelenc" with Hie o-oper- ilrst time in this reviewer's "tion of the HCAF and the of- memory that any influential lR'i;lls of t'aimdair. We left ut- body Ins requested the govern- tawa at 9:30 In tne morning and ment to take the telephone were back in time for the alter- fnmnlrn; This I'pmiMl fif noon .sitting of the Hou-rie. The which is about 4frti arid efficient maximttm about C70. The whoiA demonstraliou Wa a triumph fur Canadian piuduetion-enfiM-eering and for Canadian flying. Gollv, it 1 had one ot itio.v IT f'OMKTII! Less than a iuon,h to the "Seventeenth of Ireland" for in Canada, even allowing for lric.' lure and there, S'. Patrick Day is hailed as the approach of spring. An anniversary parade-in Montreal is remembered as an icy feeling affair, along with course, will be completely i3- plant, said to be the most ellic- I could com home to 1-rin-e Honored by the government. I -'t air plane production plain t l'"t in lime fo,- lea every Satu: -. . j in the woi Id, was an eye-open, r. i day. hop and 'ave at Its size, complexity and jel 1 it-- j HOUSING To gek down from ieticy made a lasting impression 670 inrii to the somewhat slower Lamm w?falNrM on us all but tne spectacular and th'illin; leature particularly to one who i.s not lamiluT plenty of silk hats and the sort of music to he expected. The day si'ped of the House of Commons Gordon Graydon lias ur:;.;l upon the government reconsideration of the changes in the with engiiiceiing and m lan. was the denion.'.tvation by the loan provisions in the National completed f- 86B. It was piloted j Housing Act. Replying, the Broadway G marriage aim put euinouti are assw:iuu-u vt un Britain ages; death is more frequent during the very early and the late years of life; school attendance is confined to the younger ages; employment opportunities are highest for the ages 20 to 45; military .service is generally confined to males from 18 to 4o, with a breakdown within those limits in accordance with the physical demands of the type of service; retirement from the stress and strain of active employment is usual between 65 and 70. At the time of the last census in 1941 the average age of the Canadian population was 30.4 years. This figure compares with 28.6 ten years earlier, 27.4 for 1921, 26.9 for 1911, 27.1 for 1901, 25.8 for 1891, and 24.7 for 1881. Thus, except in 1911, when the census reflected the effect of the heavy immigration in the immediately preceding years, the decennial censuses have recorded an unbroken upward trend in the average age of the population. In the first four decades of this country there was a rise of 3.3 years. The answers to the questions on age in the 1951 census will show whether the trends of the past decades have continued and the extent to which the increased birth rates of recent years have altered the country's age composition. From the resulting figures, all levels of government will be in a better position to determine the requirements for such things as infant .welfare, provision for the aged, and primary and secondary schools. Likewise, manufacturers and others engaged in business will have w.: left Saskatoon (or the coast was another seventeenth ami weather Mr'mgly re.-embcld Jan- j nary. Th" nrairie was while, cold and desolate. But how different a day or so later at North R'imI. Still a longish way to travel before seeing the Pacific yet here by Fit. Lieut. Teddy Evans ol the j prime Minister said that as he HCAF who, I am told, came baik understood the statement of th" oft a furlough in ordsr to do this , Minister of Resources an1 Le-tiemonsL-ation for us. On his vclopment, It was a promL1-'.? t NURSKS' PAY. The Registered Nurses' Association is contemplating raising nurses' wages to $10 for an eight-hour day. At present the rate is $8 a day. At $10 a day today a trained nurse is not being overpaid. On a five-day week she makes only $200 a month which surely is not a great deal for a woman who has given three years of her life to training, who has probably taken a postgraduate course and whose work is so vitally important to humanity. It is not a big salary at all and that is why it is so difficult to persuade m ft n y yotmg women today to enter our training schools. They can last run ne zoomeu over us ai.fceeo the matter ol Iioumiu' con- you sensed spring was on mr way. Every turn of the westward rolling wheels said so. Finest Co; stantly under review, on the basis that, next to etmstrwtio.i required for defence- purposes, housing was to have tlw highest priority. I think Mr. G"nv-don expressed the general fp '1- Continued on page 6i Hours: Tan For take home orders Phone Z. about 300 feet at 670 miles per hour. Have you ever seen anything gj by you at (170 mi!."? an hour? If yon have yoti wlH realize that the only way I can describe it is to say, It's Impossible but I saw it. He then did a series of quick rolls, very quick indeed, and then made a run at the end of which he slid straight up, straight up, 1 said, some it to 12 thousand leo ,. Sure, it's Impossible, I knew it A woman hits made formal ap- ; plication for the post of official Mm r -mtVtr eaerhifi-"'-- r-i r-- j make far more money as sten-, ographeis. j Yes a trained nurse is cer tainly worm iu a nay uui u FISHERMEN . . Glacier Gulch Mining Co. Ltd. you should need a special nurse right round the clock-lhals oiv,ar,. ,. t watched him doing h (MM.) every 24 hours enough to break the average person very rapidly. This reviewer would think the time is surely coming when trained nurses must become government employees to some extent like teachers are. Borne As we were going over tnCar-tlerville from Ottawa we had a;i "escort" of vampire Jet fighters. They .'hot past the Dakota of the Air Transport Command a.s though we w,"re standing still. At Cartierville, thrct of tlve.-,a Vampires flew over us, and alc'i 1 SILVER - LEAD - ZINC - PROPERTY Smithers, B.C. Information and Prospectus Available 2fifi!)-71 Wen Broadway, Vancouver, B.C. a new set of up-to-date facts on the age distribution of the population in all parts of Canada to guide For complete overhaul of Vonr High Speed Gasoline Eiiginon, see Kiipert Motors Ltd. Wc have the trained mechanics and specialized equipment to perform this work for yon . . . efficiently and economically. To avoid delay this spring when the nu ll is on, let us have that jiibliow. system will have to be worked them in shaping business plans and programs for 'tjTS came the F8fiR over thnn, and he passed THEM as thouch the, were standing still. On M) last swing over us, the F86E came which such knowledge is often essential. that desperately sick people will have more personalized nursing Share Offerinq .35 care. Or course, human nature being what it Ls, everybody will over at about 130 miles nn hour. want a trained nurse. Such a That, I relieve, is one of t.ii Rupert Motors Lid system would cause a lot of trouble but that $30 every 24 hours for trained nurses can break a bankroll 1 aster than a dice game. It's a serious matter and something will have to be done about it sooner or later. Freedom In Reverse MIGHT suppose that a treaty which proposed ONE to commit a large number of governments of the world to support of the general principles of freedom of information and freedom of the press would naturally be a desirable convention, comments Christian Science Monitor. But the treaty draft on this subject, which is being distributed to members 'of the United Nations for comment after long sessions by a 15-nation nnmmittPP would have the ironic effect of constrict New Swiss Discovery for Eczemas. Hoils, Psoriasis, Leg Ulcers & JUisc . . BUY BRILLIANT AFFAIR Government House has seldom been NO I so brilliant as it is the day of the opening of the House to-I clay. The State Dinner and State i Ball will be as magnificent as i rnu cnpttil .uit in fltfaui'i tw iv . . ' ,k ' F'W gr GENERAL ELECTRIC WASHERS $Jj With pump ing seriously the very liberties which it was intended j washmgtwin.c. 'fry Y v uvernor and GENERAL ELECTRIC . tyj DELUXE REFRIGERATORS ' Mrs. Clarence Wallace have engaged 49 extra servants for the I evening in addition to the regular household staff of 16 s3 GENERAL ELECTRIC DELUXE RANGES NOW ON DISPLAY AT f ", yfrn- I - people. There will be 4ft guests to dinner and 15 maids waited on them, as well as the butler and assistant butler who serve wines, liquers, col lee and cigars. The guests will sit in high-backed chairs, each with the coat-of-arms of British Columbia worked into the richly colored tapestry. Six massive silver bowls of spring flowers and six heavy candelabra centre the long table in the state dining Northern B.C. Power ? AuthfnHc phofograph of Mr, J. Bitter or) November 1 61th, Authentic photograph of Mr J. filler on February llth. 20 years from Eczema all ovtr tht budy, suFiiifino for Phone 210 The lexeme, wot completely cleared up otter II wceki of Prince Rupert to enlarge and guarantee. 1 ; This comes about through Article 2 of the proposed draft,.. which enumerates various limitations that gover'nmebte would be permitted to place on distribution pf news and comment. Regulation would be allowed, of course, to punish libel or fraud and to protect information affecting national security. ; But there ire further proposals to add bans on "false and distorted reports likely to undermine friendly relations", and statements which would "injure the feelings of nationals of a state." Who is to determine, for example, whether an estimate of the number of prisoners in Soviet slave labor camps is "false and distorted" or whether a description of General Franco's Falange Party is likely to injure Spanish feelings? Such provisions, however well intended, could be used to stifle honest reporting. ; An international treaty in behalf of freedom of information should broaden rather than narrow that freedom. room and the dinner will be served on Crown Derby in red, blue and gold. W ALLACE - The dinner will last from 7:45 to 9:30 p.m. and the State Ball starts at lu p.m. and "Ood Save the King" will be played at 2 a.m. Phar betoro tht f "VV" Treatment. IMMINENT Scientists have discovered that the lack of unsaturated fatty acids in human nutrition is one of the main causes of skin diseases, such as Eczemas, Boils, Leg Ulcers and Psoriasis. The modern diet, in which thtse essential substances are often completely lacking, have brought about a deficiency in a great number of Individuals. i Retnarkalile Swiss Discovery A Swiss chemist. Dr. W. Schmitz, succeeded after 10 years of research work in extracting from pure vegetable oils an unsaturated fatty acid in a concentration of 99 and therefore named F "98". Thanks to this hitherto unattained purity, F'W Is to readily absorbed into the blood stream, that it has a decisive biological activity in the treatment of skin diseases. mi HOURS: r vt irearment. Nalurftl way lo clear up nkin trouhles F "09" is not a synthetic drug but a concentrate of natural nutritive substances. It is so harmless that it may be given even to infHtits without any hesitation. Its remarkable efficiency In the treatment of Eczemas, Uoils, Leg Ulcers nnd Psoriasis has astonished even Skin Specialists of international reputation. As its name suggests, the F "U!" Two-Way Treatment acts internally as well as externally. While "99" Capsules or Liquid give the body the power to suppress the cause and combat successfully skin disease, the F "99" Ointment treats its external, visible symptoms. To many thousands of skin sufferers all over the world, F "99" Two-Way Treatment has already proved its tremendous value and is being used with outstanding results even on cases where all ordinary treatments have failed Two -Way Treatment (or Skin Diseases Now Available At All Drug Stores WEEK DAYS: 9 o.f- P H O N E 7 9 Jcrijjfure paiiaye for JoJaij "Even so hath the Lord ordained that they which preach the gospel should live of the gospel." 1 Cor. 9:14 "Be ye followers of me, ieven as I also am of Christ." I Cor. 11:1. SUNDAYS: 12 Noo"' Atk your Invtstmsflt Dealer or Broker for protpectui. Illustrated ftooklet on F"99M ocmtjlnlnp; til the- lntmt1nK fart oonternlnf thu MmaihsMe new Swlai Discovery wtilrh win brtnt new hearth ant) happiness to Innomerahle akin atifferera. can be obtained tree off charge from any irontl rfrng store or by lending yo name arid addrem to Diva Laboratorlel, Dec, 12S P.O. Box 11B, Victoria, B. C. cars passed through from Windsor factories to Toronto. At times there were as many as 50 new vehicles In a string, with both men and women driving. HEAVY TRAFFIC INGERSOLL, Out. Traffic through this town increased considerably in recent days when hundreds of new motor CALVIN BULLOCK ltd. Tiintn SI XI I'l STIim AND