10 Prince Rupert Daily News Thursday, November 29, 1951 L "'riSmr h CN3 tVincf Oeorge arrnerl at c 10 a.m. Wednesday from Van- Mi " couver, disembarking among h r .us Travels Far to Post in India 'II H to-, .i ; Ufa i 1 n , and Mrs W. D. Vance. Mrs! j 'I'll. Mr. HUMPHREY BOGAfiT ITT '"I I TODAY 7-9:03 iter"- if WALLACE'S DEPARTMENT STORE Not Just Blankets Ayres Blankets For Sleeping Comfort mi n s - - New Route ! For Canucks Overseas I (By DOUGLAS HOW) i i C'Riiuiluin Press Stall Writer I WITH THE CANADIANS IN GERMANY 9 The Canadians are marking out new military ; : frontiers over here. A tough old scadog named Ginger and two little German girls reminded i them of that on the way in. They met. Ginger off Dover in; ' tlie thick of a November night. , Ginger is a North Sea pilot who ; brought severa. Canadian offi-1 cers out to board the troopship. I He runs a small motorcraft I ?i ... MONTREAL f Joseph Reid j former Canadian Rhodes scholar. I will have put thousands of miles behind him when he takes up Ills new appointment a.i head of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization team advising the National Scientific Documentation Centre In India. He flew from Paris to London, then on to Scotland, Iceland and Montreal. From here he goes by rail across Canada, flies to Yokohama, boards a steamer at Calcutta and finishes the journey to New Delhi by automobile. The young scientist has had extensive training for his job, which will last for one to three years. The assignment Is to advise India on the establishment It pays to buy good blankets. Years of service and sleeping pleasure make a difference. The Place to Ga For The Brands You Know WALLACE'S DEPT. STORE ARRIVING EMPTY last Saturday. MS Kiyokawa Maru, first grain ship to load here in 25 years, left last night with 318.000 bushels of wheat. The 7,000-ton vessel will take on oil at Los Angeles, then head home for Tokyo. Two more Japanese grain ships are expected next month. Aboriginal Fishing On This. and she came out of the wall or j darkness and pins of light that j were Dover at night and bobbed frantically far below the soldiers ; at the rail. A young soldier shouted down, ; 'What place Is this?" j Ginger looked up-, a solid Brit- ! ish face, a solid British accent. ! "Dover,'' he snorted. "Never heard of it." shouted the young, young soldier. i V 1 of r. scientific library. It will have a photographic copying installation to enable copies of sclvntlfie articles to be sent anywhere in India, as well as a translation service and a plan to print scientific journals. Rcld's early education was in m Coast Was Not Unlike Today Primitive fishing methods of the aboriginal Indians of this coast did not differ too greatly in principle from the modern devices of catching fish, Dr. R. G. Large demonstrated to the Prince Rupert Gyro Club at luncheon yesterday in a novel talk. Sydney, N.b. He was wi under-I This Xmas tf GIVE ELECTRICALLY Be wise and lay away your gift now while stocks are complete. VN-- rl . ' II " "You would 'ave." cried Ginger, "if you'd been round in '41." He went about his work, coaching the tossing craft against the lowered ladder, a hard and violent thing to do, and the men got off the launch at last and Ginger bv then an indelible. "came The aborigines, who out of the foam from the north," graduate of the University of Manitoba, and was named a Manitoba Rhodes scholar In 1935. Since his studies at Oxford University ha has been with UNESCO with headquarters In Paris, making his home at Versailles. From Paris he took the long way around to his new assignment In order to visit Canada again and see his father. Rev. Andrew D. Reid, at Victoria. Dual Purpose of Forest Service their tradition confirming the scientific belief that they originally came from Asia by way of Bering Straits, had their counterparts of the modern oive cieancaiiy I cussing character went away ' across the heaving seas and his j farewell words were right out of I the heart and lexicon of Eng- ) land. ! "Cheerio, mites," he bellowed, I "all the best." 1 And it came suddenly to some-j one at the rails that one of the ! strange facts about this move NORTHERN BX. POWER Co.,Ltd. VICTORIA (P British Colum-' long-line halibut fishing method bia Forest Service has come up and the salmon trolling aid with a plan that It is hoped will seining. protect its forest resources and Their first concern, of course, still give the small logging opera- must have been food and what tor a break. 1 a bonanza of animals in the Some time ago the province woods, birds on the beaches and set up the forest management fLsh in the sea they must have Besncr Block I'hone 210 A I'M I ill III So7:9:00 Cortoon . Ne., Fouls Wheel; Boat Returns Stewart, B.C. Prince Rupert, B.C. ment of Canadians into Germany is that for the first time whereby forest interests found! ,h...w. k....i. k. mw. A Ketchlkart-based trawler fouled her propeller on a net a few miles out of Prince Rupert .sterday and limped to port. The Havana, Capt. Ken Hart-wigsen, returned to fishing grounds Wednesday after her "wheel" was cleared by the ' ,ook over laree tracts oI Iorest Dr- Laree, whose knowledge of l land .nrt oi nf Rrit Britain iin nn on the tne wav way. t Thpy Ruaranteetl a sus. tne aborlylnal lore 0n tnis coa.st SAME CI RIOl S CHILDREN ! talned yield from the tracts by has long been admitted, first The little girls were at Ben- j s(.iPntjfic logging. described the primitive methods llieim, first stop inside Germany. The luut,ing interests conduc- of catching salmon then as -I he tram stopped there and the ; lpd selective logging which gave now the choicest of -fishes. The soldiers leaned out the windows ;young trees a criance to grow to stone walls built outside the and watched some Germans load maturity. mouths of streams to trap the Come to the aid of the k4i i mumii machinery on a flatcar. The Small loggers protested the salmon were still to be seen. ty with... y r i ,,, ,6.tu un. o an worked ata nst them. Thev Thp nrimitivp hnnk. nt h-mp par VAST CAVERN Slowly H number of children werp unable lo mwt tne cost of wRh )(,ader mjde from wome.s began to gather They watched . sustained ylrld planning and hair and netUe lwine Une we,.e tne German workmen and tncn,;.aim.ri thpv wpre hpin fro7r Hell's Canyon on the Snake ! River flowing In Idaho and Ore- almost imperceptibly, they 'stray-i out b the big operators. ; Dr. Large also told of the:Ron at one Point Is 7,(MM) feet aeep. mmm1 tote a "larer me uain so uidt, in i The forest sorvce now has a strange rituals attached" to the time, 10 children were leaning , under whi(.h 50 plan only pPm.nt catching of fish which-like the against a rail a few tcet Irom of the province's 10.000.000 acres trees, the animals, the birds and the soldiers. . of forest land will be available even the winds the natives be- Tney were quiet and they or m;1nnt,prnent. lirensps lipvprt ajrrp nnxspsspH nf .snlrit.tt STEAMER dkin't talk to the soldiers nor did ! Prince George The other 50 percent will be Therefore, they were not to be 4,..r4...i ....un ... r. . i. t milfrht. fnr Knnrt hut. f,r upnnlnp they seem to watch them though they were face to face 11 A ,.: , . . ... imoilG i n tha c 1 1 tip r c 1 1 1 i ( , r thai a strange thing. The children; were there because of the sol-j cliers. but they talked among I themselves and acted as though : SAILS FOR Vancouver v- s i. -J l ""1' .' I jji . i, sX ATTENTION Women's Auxiliary United Fishermen's & Allied Workers' Ur DANCE Liiujt-i. ttiia win uc maiiucu oy ..v. ... nt ..b.v.u.. w..v the forest service in the same fi-sh ' might even be one's own way as the forest management dead brother in a reincarnated districts. Jrm- Loggers will bid by open ten-i Til discourse also included der on the timber They must description of the old means of cut at a rate and und.r condi- halibut fishing In a crude motions laid down by the forest tll:,ci r '"f? Unirm at depln service. The cut will be limited Ile als0 told 01 ca' herring and to the capacity of the area to oolachan harvesting. grow a replacement crop. The To conclude his discourse D. area will thus become a sustain- LurBe showed an interesting reel ed yield. of moving pictures depicting oolachan netting at Fishery 4Jay Di.,i i i "J","'"?0 ' ,un,d':r Way," on the , Naas River. the soldiers were not there at all. Thn as the train rolled away, they looked up but only two of the children waved and they were very young. They were so young that they would not even be as old as the new peace. It came to someone then that, though this is i.-ie first time the Canadian army has gone into and Intermediate Ports Each Thursday at 11:15 p.m. For KETCHIKAN WEDNESDAY M1DMOII1 Luxury ' at Low Cost For Reservations Oddfellows' Holl - Fridoy, Novembers i I 10 p.m. -2 a m Refresh' I Germany the easy way the yes- ' -- : - i-eiuay t live on. mainland coast and Vancouver Island. . Write or Call CITY OK DEPOT OFFICE PRINCE RUPERT, PC. President E. D. Forward was in the chair at the luncheon and announced that the date for the installation of officers had been set for January 16 when district officers will be here to Tlii advtitiscrient is not published or displayed by thp Liquor Control Bojcd or bv the Government of British Cokmbia. Mrs. Teng Bereaved Stewart Moose Women Gather seat President-elect Grant Stew- ' mini S3! ' J 4 STEWART The homemaking committee of the Women of tire art and other executives for 1002. Guests at yesterday's luncheon were Alex Wallace and Harry Craig of V'ancouvcr. 0 "M ; A city woman's mother died in i England Tuesday. She was Mrs. C. H. Perkham. mother of Mrs. .Moose held their regular meet-I ine last week at the home nf Mrs. NOV 29 NOV 29 THE ALASKA MUSIC TRAIL , J. A. Tene of Prince Rupert, whOC Williams, Hydcr. Alaska Those i war notified by wire yesterday. prcsPnt were chairman Elsi-e j Mrs. Peekham, 85, had bcenjKuslas and co'-workcrs. Stewart, in failing health for some time, , Williams, Lundstrom. Bnuzek, ! but had been very cheerful and Xeilson and Burnett The busi-! on the road to recovery during . negg 0f the committee was dis-j t io visit of her granddaughter, i cusscd aftl!r which a luncheon ! MisF Ba'bara Teng, lust summer. c"lotni ictt from the bazaar, was Mrs. Pcekham's husband pre-; rafned and won by tiro hostess. ! fleeeased her several years. ( An enjoyable social evening fol- Survivors besides Mrs. Teng j iowed wlth a delicious Thanks-I arc a daughter. Mrs. E. Butter- glvinK luncheon served by the , worth, and a son, T. S. Peekham, hostess, Mrs. C. Williams. both in England; a sister, Miss; p bfffftM OfiH'ft't'f 'JJ??! '1 J'J&l ' (V A ' I Gillette Rocket Razor ltii hard Cumming Planl-st Cesare Cum Tenor Iiiniiko Kaiiazawa Soprano GIFT SET j Jenny Varlcy. also in England. , Funeral will be held Satur day. OPERATIC SELECTIONS IN COSTUME Excerpts from Showboat New Moon Roberta Special Two Concert Tickets Available Plus I'sual 211 Discount (o Mi inlier.i Reservations Taken Now TICKETS ON SALE CIVIC CENTRE Here's a gift set holding a complete shaving kit that every man will appreciate. Contains a Gillette Rocket one-piece razor and 10 Gillette Blue Blades in dispenser, plus Styrene travel case. Also an extra 10-blade dispenser and a tube of Gillette Brushless Shaving Cream packed in attractive Holiday carton. RADIO & APPLIANCE SALES & SERVICE c;as and Ei ixiuic ran;i:s PACIFIC ELECTRIC Phone Klue 2 PIONEER LINE Canada's first electric railway from Windsor to Walkervillc in southwestern Ontario was com pleted in 1886. III Illlilllillfl 5920 "Z2r M ! . tSJ 4 i i J . Layaway Special TWIN SETS 11 you want to solve yrmr tiansportation problem see our used cars . . . these cars arc older models but. they are in good condition . . . and most important of all they arc priced fo that you can afford to buy. 1947 Austin 8 Sedan 1950 Prefect Sedan 1948 International Pickup in very good shape 1939 Plymouth Sedan 1938 Ford Coach For good transportation a 1936 Chrysler Royal 32.50 . i i r ' ... in Si Wi'Jf'Mf A small deposit holds your choice . i .- . OTHfR 0IUITI1 GIFT SETS AT TOUt DUlld'S, "KID flOM SI.57 TO M.M Superior Auto Service Ltd. GEORGE COOK 3tL PRINCE RUPERT and TERRACE This advertisement is not published or U'T. ,; hC NEWS ADS get RESULTS Third Ave. W. Phone Green 217 Control Board or by the Governme."--