.THE BIGGEST LIE (Continued from page 1) Prince Rupert Daily News Saturday, September 22, 1951 mwt and M ! preacher who " 11! Drama and Adventure W.A. Endorses Hospital Fund Ufsumes Sessiuns With Busy Season in Sight i "I any hra.i hunter anything about, raising rice. Through an Interpreter I asked him about his farm. "How large was your farm?" "After Communist divide up land we have eight acres." Eight acres! According to Com WATERFRONT WHIFFS breaker. iI ne v. group and the California Jr1 v "Passage West." is Colorful Iirama With Fresh Theme An Imaginative adventure killing pace, At Wallace's of Course Skirts And Blouses FROM "A" TO "Z" when th L, , "o munist propaganda China was a drama with a fresh theme coms cold-tij country of vast landlord estates. )n ,,.hni..r.l,,r tn ip ti ti, ! derer lew ot the According to them breaking up;atre on Mond and Tue.,da u CM hu these estates would the .. ' give peas-.. p .e West sUrrmg John anl ams all an tho me lanri iana rhnv nHiH neeaea. U. - . ..... ... t. . 1 preacher'. CJ( "er Sir girl. , uiey Pavnp, Al elle wivalen and Den- The conflict I asked, "How much rlw did njs o'Kuele. vntt rfliui last voai-O" nri.;iil,i.v li. j The film recounts the terror- me convin Chon said "Last make year gir! c, J r,dden Jour , m,s to , 350 pounds rice. Bad year." h.M Lmiv. vZ . ma. . 7 Materia l.s . . . Styles . . . Colors . . . Prices . . . Wallace's cover them all, FROM "A" to "Z" Gee them today! Sizes from 12 to 44 Chon's family consisted of six P!i(.aD(.d" Z"T" h m" ,w M M " HMCS Chatham Gets Face Lifting A new face has been given administration building of HMCS Chatham and interior decorating is well under way. . . , . , . , the introduction of Great Wars "? b? j"tfor 0n? a naval training station on a Otficer Lt.-Noel men," Staff fe ta tandin a few but newels inat Langham says, mUes mstant Sunny summers in a few months the entire cncourage smiles at Digby, and building will be ship-shape. ! this ould appear natural The seamen s Canteen, for in- , ,v,0 tv,. people. I asked him how they 'ered. -.. j . . lived on 350 pounds of rice KATHRYN GRAYSON - HOWadTT TODAY 7 - 9:00 He said, "Cannot live." It turned out he used to buy a in "SHOW BOAT" WALLACE'S DEPT. Store! few apples or pears from other farmers, walk Into the city and , The first fall meeting of the ! Women's Auxilalry of Prince I Rupert General Hospital organl- zation was held Thursday In the Civic Centre and a busy year was forecast for Its members. The Hospital Fund Kalsing Campaign" was unanimously endorsed by the Auxiliary and, as their contribution to the fund, they will equip a semi-private room in the new wing of the hos- j pital upon its completion. Funds for this project will be raised over a period of three years. The B.C. Hospital Association convention will be held In Vancouver from October 16 to 19 and Mrs. R. O. Moore was chosen to represent the Auxiliary as then-delegate in this connection. A Hallowe'en Tea Is planned for October 31 at the residence of Mrs. W. C. R. Jones. The Library Committee reported that over 50 visits had been made during the year, distributing magazines, books, etc., to the patients. The library Is gradually building up a goodly supply of reading material and now has some 1.000 books on Its Sunday Midnight ond Monday Matinee 4 fr sell them on the streets in ordrr mS stance, has been completely ren- tuHes wnat was originally - I ovated with a new floor job, a known as the 0rder 6 the itwo-tone paint-job and a goodifi(livi Time" wax fnnririert h ih. AlSO ' If yn want to sell it, advertise li. Hews classified. Stpwnrt ic choice of furnishings Hallways , Frencn explorers, and "their in 'SPY HUNT" "FLAME OF YOUTH" I throughout the building except ! the basement floor, have been III C LOflKinn I IV painted and tairs are bemg re J WiXIIiy UK covered with battleship lino- . ... ' . 1 leum. to add to the family Income. That is, until he, as the eldest son, was forced Into the army to fight in Korea. Talking to Ban and other Chinese peasants who had become Communist cannon fodder it became obvious It was a mdn-strous lie that elimination of landlords was China's main problem. Indian hunters. Hence the chase, and feasts of game. To this day, Halifax has an exclusive club whose ancestors can look back to that earliest associ- . ... T- inings are loohing gooa at, Seamen's quarters also STARTS MOnDa' ar.e . ation of Nova Scotia cooks. waiters and trenchermen. suewau, says j. .j. Mclienna. undergoing a change iu soft druggist of the Portland Canal -pa5tel contrasting shades oh, riming town, who is spending a Ule Navy was never like this! China's problem was that there UC'C U1 uaj,s. " "'f "V Complete renovation is plan- There called at Prince Rupert L'UMnras. n levivai ui im.eie.st is nPH also for the basement floor nnt i,,n7 hrnro fh ,.th.au nt ..B w.u ..i '""""is where tne wkun canteen is to i the Second World War, a full shelves. Mr. Simpson of the fin SaBctHna iiumuer oi property aeais isev- De established with added pow- rigged Japanese sailing ship eral of which have already been der room. A Sea Cadet clothing , Kaiwo Maru There was not a j reported in the Daily Newsi. stores will be located across the white face aboard her She was i And a logging operation up the hallway, and adjoining it, the here the better part of a week 1 Bear River is starting, the logs W'KCNs officer's office. j berthing at the CNR general were simply too many people trying to make a Hying as farmers. In America for each square mile of cultivated land there are 53 persons. In China, 1500. Two and one-half persons trying to live off every acre of land! The size of the average Chinese farm is 4 18 acres. In America It's 157 acres. In America 23"4 of the population are farmers. In China, 90. Dividing up the land even further is not China's problem. It Is transf erring millions of people to industrial Jobs, such as build- w ue acm, w me miuinoia iei- , -And a lot more renewing ana dock and drawing to hpr riailv Army Signal Corps gave some 200 books and there were also a number of children's books sent to them from Massett. A committee was formed to Inquire into the apparent shortage of linen In the hospital. The purchasing of games and cards for patients was authorised. The auxiliary Is hoping for more members to assist In carrying on the work of the & J Y A , A KJ i I)n ;xcSi ..I iulbse pulp mill at Watson Is-and. Mr. McIConna arrived in the city by plane Thursday from istf.vart and will be returnine brushing up is in store for this .f interested hundreds. The vessnl ; unit," promises , Lt. Langham, : had already cruised the Pacific, who says he is going to present , being used as a training craft some of his ideas for approval for cadets of which there were at the Ottawa staff officers' ; several score, and smart tars there on the Camosun tomorrow convention which iiiKiu. next week. he attends they were. It was a new experi- ! ence for Prince Rupert to watch 1 the readv handline of heavv ; I ! ing farm machinery which would HMC Tntr Marvsville. station-1 c.nitc r,ir,.Hi HmUin ti.. It is believed that about 2.000 cd at HMCS Chatham as duty! mnvpmpnt nf t.rlm nntfnpmrH ' ! enable much larger farms to be I worked economically. Mrs. J. Ga'ither, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Derry, C. F. Davics, Dr. J. F. L. Hughes. years ago the ancestors of Can-I boat, this week slid back Into figures hard at work among the adas Eskimos lived among the the harbor from the drydock shrouds forests north of Lake Superior. after a bottom-scraping job, and i iir iwiiuiesc isummunisi. iana reform policy is a gigantic He which they themselves will drop as soon as they have control of the country. , On the night of October 26, In renewal of underwater nttings. The tug will be in custody of j The wind-jammer was not Bytown Machine Works for a 'seen in any other British Col- 89.50 tm I f STEAMER few more days, undergoing an umbia port. If there was local : engine refit. interest in what they did, where the Russian Revolution, the j 8econd Congress of Soviets ad- opted their "Decree On Land."i Wlrcn the Coqultlam leaves for the south Sunday, It will be the last trip of the present schedule for the winter as she is to take over the 8tewart run of sister ship amosun. Union's summer cruise ship, Chilcotln, takes over the Coqulllam's run to Queen Charlotte Islands while the Camosun goes into dry dock lor annual overhaul. Prince George , SAILS FOR Vancouver It said the land of Russia was to they went or how it was done, It was true the Japanese studied Prince Rupert and her people. Officers and cadets alike went practically everywhere and seemed to feel it their mission HuMPHiuyBOGART FORMER PRINCE Kl PERT Once upon a time the trim little single stacker "Prince Rupert" ran regular trips to the venerable tourist and fishing village of Digby, across the Bay he "turned over to all the tollers for their free use." This gained the support of the ! in Hie to ask questions. of Fundy from St. John. Digby i One auernoon, the cadets an- ic !nru t H at A n n a nnti o Riiuin ' nniinpPfl tUav urnnlH aiva a Horn- v. 2 v f.t mmmn mnri and Intermediate Ports Each Thursday at 11:15 p.m. For KETCHIKAN and this brings one closer to a I onstration of fencing should long, long story. To fully grasp j there be an audience. It wis anH nnrW'itanrt nnp shrill M there oil rlpht. nunrirprtx rllmlw WEDNESDAY MIDNIGHT have a taste for history, as well ! ing the Acropolis. The blades Luxury at Low Cost as ample leisure. To go back to were not of steel, but they did 1 Full-Size Circulator! Smart new "Imperial" styling, rich brown finish. Exclusive Dual Chamber Burner gives more heat from every drop of oil. Money-saving Waste Stopper, Automatic Draft Mipder. Fully Coordinated Controls. Power-Air Ithwer for forced-circulation optional at extra cost. Complete line of Duo-Therm Oil Heaters fur 1 to 6 rooms. Buy on terms at GORDONS, ANDERSON mU'iEiCOGB AMOUt rUTI.I TMIATHfJ CARTOON . r SHOW not have to be to show how smartly Japanese laddies couid tnrust or parry. They knew tneir stuff. For Reservations Write or Call CITY OR DEPOT OFFICE PRINCE RUPERT, B.C. the beginning means returning i to early in the French regime away back through the centur-jies, and Heaven knows, that's I early enough. I The present however, will suffice. Since the days when the Piince Rupert plowed gusty peasants for the Bolsheviks while they crystallized their control of the Revolution. What has happened to those unfortunate peasants since is common knowledge. They were forcibly, collectivized. When, in the early thirties, they resisted collectivization, they were deliberately starved to death by the millions. The same blood bath lies In store for the unfortunate peasants of China. And the Western world must bear part of the blame for letting them fall Into the hands of the Communists. For thirteen years. Dr. Oerald F. Winfield, an American research biologist, lived in China and studied the country's problems in agriculture, disease, sanitation and politics. His book, "China The Land and The People" makes clear some of the basic problems the countrv faces. Fisheries patrol vessel I.aur-ier, ( apt. Walter Redford. arrived in port yesterday after an extensive patrol of the Queen Charlotte Islands. Capt. Redford reports' that weather on the Islands has been "extremely dry and hot" and that streams are very low, holding back the salmon eager to spawn. This may mean a closure of the Queen Charlotte area, fisheries department circles believe, and the problem was under discussion Sat-day morning by A. J. Whlt-more, chief supervisor of fisheries for B.C., and the loeal fisheries officers. RANDOLPH SCOTT in 'THE CARIBOO TRAIL Today Only November 11, 1918, was a wild sort of day in Prince Rupert. Rain pelted, clouds hung heavy, Fundy, time and enterprise -nave worked changes, these including, gales were powerful. The First a modiiied chateau in which i World War had ended. There is noted the hand of the CPR. was a parade, yet no band. No ' From sultry Boston swarm one kept step or made a partic- j more 'and mere visitors. Since ular effort to smarten up, r - j look colorful. For this parade . jdhn utuN'S AmetM 5$P m fm a T I had nothing to do with streets. Rarely though, had anything j concerning processions looked more profoundly impressive, for i it was ail on storm-lashed salt j water. MONK! Motor vrssw-l Sidney, of Ketchikan, with Capt. John Slvert-sen, arrived in port today with three carloads of fish for transshipment. Cargo was divided Into equal parts of canned salmon, frozen halibut and frozen salmon. J Instead of working on these ; pr 'blems. the Chinese Commun-I ists '.like ths Russian Commun-j Ists before them, are simply i building a police state and gigantic armies to further the ; Communist dream. New Swiss Discovery for Eczemas, Boils, Psoriasis, Leg Ulcers Ships, weather beaten, worn or new, were proud to share in TlESTil vrninfil'' . lillliotl I'litvera Thr-MIIY r a demonstration that had back of it, such traditions, memories and sacrifices. On they came, through gray distance and downpour , government ships, fw mm 5 . F'99" V. .. 4 BOGUMIL SYKORA WORLD-FAMED CELLIST S. J. Gillis D.S.C., R. Cp. ' 4 Chiropodist-Foot Specialist of 1407 West Broadway, Vancouver, B.C., Will Practice ot SAVOY HOTEL Now Till Sept. 26th Only Telephone For Appointment lislnng and fisheries ships, pas- I senger ships, fast and slow ships, each with its drenched flag fo:- i lowing one another and whistling their salutes along the miles : of cheering waterfronts, it ! a dour, chill day. No where was there a suggestion of reviving war's glory. Rather did one sen;.e j a stern solemnity a feeling of I mingled grimness and grief. Whenever the lat,c- Captain j Hoomes K. Freeman, skipper of ) the power boat Narbethong, felt j restless or critical, he would : write a letter to the local press.! And each would end, in quota- i lion as follows: "The best gov- erned country is the least gov- ' erned country." He seemed to find a sour sort of satisfaction in it. Captain Freeman was a kindly soul, witn a first rate opinion of the sail t CIVIC CENTRE TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 25, at 8:30 P.M. ADULT ADMISSION lil M IIHII 5225, H Students 5c UM" General Ailiiii.viion $1.25 ing qualities of his boat. The Narbethong shared in some of the earliest races ever held on CflP Tickets ol ORMES DRUGS and ClVlC IC SHINGOLEEN Shingoleen is a BAPCO product and an ideal finish for Shingles, Fences and all Rough Lumber construction. Supplied in fifteen attractive colors Thompson Hardware Co. Ltd. the harbor of Prince Rupert. The boat was a favorite haunt of newspapermen when the streets became empty and arid, but the captain's resourcefulness was never known to fail. Something about a near collision, or fishing crafts, or stranding, or NEW 10W'C Authentic photogrophf of R. R. Obermeilen M Motch 17, , betor. tteatment with f "99'. EMINENT Scientists have discovered " that the lack of unsaturated fatty acids in human nutrition is one of the main causes of skin diseases, Euch as Eczemas, .. Coils. Leg Ulcers and Psoriasis. The modern diet, in which these essential ' substances arc often completely lacking, have brought about a deficiency in a great number of individuals. Ketnarkiililc Swiss Discovery A Swiss chemist, Dr. W. Sehmitz, succeeded after 1(1 years of research work in extracting from pure vegetable oils an unsaturated fatty acid in a concentration of 99 and therefore named F "99". Thanks to tiiis hitherto unattained purity, F "99" is sn readily absorbed into the blood stream, that it has a decisive biological activity in the treatment of skin diseases. Illustrated !!(. klc l on F "99M cuntatniny all Hie IntetttnR farts rfinrernlng thll tm,-ka-lc new Swlu DlMowry which will bring nrw health am! happiness n Innumerable akin xufftrers. t-an ne obtained free of rharze Irom anv Ruod drua store. Diva Laboratories, Dept. b3. Box 1 16. VlcUtrla. B.C. Authentic photograph of R. R. Obermeilen on Juno 5, otttr 10 weeks treatment with f "99". INalurul way to clear up skin troubles F "99" is not a synthetic drug but a concentrate of natural nutritive substances. It is so harmless that it may be given even to infants without any hesitation. Its remarkable efficiency in the treatment of Eczemas, Boils, Leg Ulcers and Psoriasis has astonished even Skin Specialists of international reputation. As its name suggests, the F "99" Two-Way Treatment acts internally as well as externally. While F "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. In severe cases medical advice should always be taken. Two-Way Treatment (or Skin Diseases a salmon story could always be discovered. He'd think of some- thing, as he mulled over some odd job aboard ship. Invari- ! ably the day was saved. Hoomes nchlvo and w"' Baby Wool Newlands SK v Newlands Argo ' Newlands Do p, 1 2 oz. - i h!' r&B Wool For the MEAL that REFRESHES and the Narbethong linger long in the memory of all old timers. OlIV.IS iJ - JOT Unicm steamer Coqultlam. BEST OF FOOD FINEST OF COOKING and Bnyy"-y Capt. William McCombe,, arriv-ed in port at 4 p.m. yesterday disembarking the following passengers for Prince Rupert: S. O. (Green, Miss N. Tetlock, Jack I'Anson, H. Cutress, Mrs. W. Mc-Kenzle, Miss M. MacKenzle, K. Kearne. R. Garrison, H. Braun, V. B. Walker, Miss M. Kimball, A ipcciol pamphlet hoi been mued dealing with the twe-woy treatment of acne and pimples and II availobla free of chorae from your druggist. FOB TAKE OUT ORDERS PHONE 200 BROADWAY CAFE