bean-shelling partiPs , a lot better time than , now." " l! Prince Rupert Daily News As Ray... Centenarian Monday. January 15, 1951 Says Good Try a Dili New, clit a ! is ana eflet Old Days Best JV "f I i-.. vr, 1 I; fctiTriJuKll Kllllllli l em in licei An independent daily newspaper devoted to the upbuilding of Prince Rupert and Northern and Central British Columbia. Member of Canadian Press Audit Bureau of Circulations Canadian Daily Newspaper Association G. A. HUNTER, Managing Editor. H. G. PERRY, Managing Director SUBSCRIPTION RATES: MODERN, N.S. Nova Scotia's oldest resident, who at 3 Q 106 years of age still enjoys car drives and the movies, think. In tW3 nvmths of a stepped-up rec. lilting campaign, the CMnnc!-ian Active Army has increased tttal net strength by thirteen men. This has been disclosed by OA By Carrier, Per Week, 20c; Per Month, 75c; Per Year, $8 00; By Mail, Per Month, 75c; Per Year, $8 00 the "good old days were the best. Mrs. Eliza Whynott was active j 'National Do twice heudquaiU'i'S. Published every afternoon except Sunday by Prince Rupert Daily News Ltd., 3rd Avenue, Prince Rupvrt. No coniirmation of the fait considered neceua-y. WW Some Ontario lumberjacks are in housework until sue npiamt ill recently. Born In 1844, she married at the w,e of 15 and became the mother of 10 children. She now his 101 descendants, Including ia orinrUhllflrBn 49 oreat- l said to bi- getting from ill t $l There's Suffering By ELMORE PHILPOTT NOT DOOM-BUT DAWN BY THE TIME that my next column gets into print I expect to be winging my way toward India. So this is a sort of goodbye piece to old readers and a "hello folks"' to the new. In one sens it is a warninst: THERE'S suffering in this country!" Sometimes one hear? that statement durintr discussion of a day cn piece wurk. They vorx ,:o hard for two week. that it is necessary for one week to do nothing except rest. A lumber operator comments that Uiy are out for a big cut and a big stake, i And like enough, a big heartache. Fnjoy the xvellttnt lu grand:hiklren and nine great-great-grandchililren. Mrs. Whynott enjoys looking back over her long life. She ad-miU she wore bustles, but she infill, the dtlh-iuuiJ uti the cuiiftruui ictvj El-cause he beat his wife over tv'e hcid with a pork roast, Stephen Bodnar, living in a New PRINCE RUPtR SAILINGS SOITHIMUNU I York state town has been ten- "likes modern-ciny women's clothing." "In those days," she relates, "the ox cart was the chief means of transportation. Ther? was no electricity and no corner store. Everything was made at home, even our clothing. As for entertainment, Mrs. tencea to six monms in juu. minions of ladles love a savory roust of pork but would rather no-have it served that way. Wcdnesdoy, Janji I What you will be readlnj in tins column, or hearing !n the earn -mer.tarie I have been asked tc make over the CBC network, ia the output of a congenital optiin- iBt. I I almost wrote "congenital idiot" for some might say ,hi , anybody that can still be an on- j timiat with the world moving, 1 picture as in must be more than half cracked. ! Maybe. I Whynott says people 50 years "TIIE MAN BEHIND THE MAN BEHIND THE OUN '-By M. R. Tingley in- the London Free Press. (CP PHOTO I ago went to barn dances and ( When Sir George Eulas Fostf was in Prince Rupert long aco !ve told a public meeting thut Prince Rupert was under a curse. Evv I since, when anyone felt like get February? Wednesday, Feb.; For information and resw. contact J. D. Mcintosh, Onprji 3l'il Ave. West QUICK Relief for RHEUMATIC PAIN Lecturer Records ting something off hi chrst, he would remind the community of It i?trr':s remark. Ct a mi'ie t - Funeral Of Jas. Dalziei Anyway I nail my enters ta til' j ' mast as one who believes th.t Why lufftr with rhnimatir, trihritk m nnirilk pain? Temptonn'i T K-C' briiif yu tut camlvrtinti relief Irw nijin pin. Don't turier moll er di. Yoo rin f-l the relief ywi W ( kith T ti '. U nd 51.25. m Madia lutte.- wiio wore whislie'S ana eyeglasses was merely playiv.Bl polities, yet for year and j.-jnrj his words had their effect. mankind is not oni the thresh-hold of doom. But! very close to . , . , . , 1 WINNIPEG W Dr. Spencer m. The funeral of James Dalssiel, TOint, now nmfMlfm- nf RV.tBm. the dawn of a new, better ara Facial, economic and political questions in Canada.' When one is inclined to think of suffering in Canada, it might be well to consider the case of people in really unfortunate lands people in other parts of the world who are suffering from the lack of bare necessities of life. One could think of India and China where millions of people are actually starving. One could think that millions of people in Canada are well fed ?nd enjoy a standard of lving that would be a drerm of paradise to the people of the eastern world including Russia. But it is not nectary to go so far away as that for a comparison. We had been thinking that the people of Britain were having it easier the last year or so, that food, for instance, was more plentiful. Here is an answer that has come to hand for a food parcel that was pent to England for Christmas: "WKat a delightful surprise you have given us. Ve nearly wept ov?v the kind gifts. I just sat down for about half-an-hour in an absolute trance of bewilderment, surprise, pk-asure and almost incredulity at such kindness. . . . Like a lot 'of other people, we have been makinp--do, and going on making-do, thinking that things would get easier all the time, und for a period they lid ; but now it is really worse than it ever was. ..." ! All that rapture and gratitude over a few' cans of meat, tea-bags, sucrar, etc. Then somebody says "There's suffering in this country !" Maybe it would be better if Canadians ?ot down on their knees and thapked God for the- high standard of living they are'enjoying instead of muttering about suffering. ln watehman at Canadian Flshin St. Johrf atic theolog:' at s Angll- than humanity ha known-modern times. oac m'' can College here, recently deliv- As a matter of fact, thoueh, no forty yea-' old town on earth hn ? nf!rv : "a arownea near oiepnens is- er(d tne .oooth of the lectur" kts mirier an evil wis:i. ANYBODY WHO FACES fact ;ana January was neia at man rruire n.ujjt'11. 1 nib bles have alwuwt hen. eiimn '.- know? that the tw mightiexfi ennie t-ojrc cnupri rrrauy. ivfn jn his ilfpUme. blocs of nations which have ever Pallbearer wer- Cit- ""1'"A . to Ca'i- existed are grinding against each Clarence Callow. Pau Taranger, a, tn served as rectnr of Christ ChUr'jil The cold has become and arm Daniel uaniei McLeod. Miieoa. war 000.1 rhrfrpi at vietr.-'in R r. hns "The Sands of Time" and La tively light. This seuport lm never been evrn rorru.telv tnm-h- I d by the ler'or of' armed forees or bombjfi!?. We have bren Tren. , (hroui'h the two r -eatest of nil 1 wars, from invasion r even ft-ar, ! from hunger or destitution. J 'The recorded each of the addresses T mrl To ATn CVionhorvl" mui'd emtJ location and subject in nine . th, w,.vi,e cnnrict,ri hv R,v y volumes. Dr. E. A. W:lght with organ ac-companient by Mrs. J. C. Gilker. He has preached, lectured er war in east Asia war no less real because it has not been fae-maHy "declared" by either side. There is not a single instance in history, so fa" as I can find, where armament races, such as are now on.hav e led to anvthi-m else than war. If the past pat Burial was in the wkiier's ulot Flven addresses at Westminster at Fairview Cemetery. (Abbey, St. Paul's Cathedval, in a Arrangements f::r the fune -il I cave, on board ship and In a were in charge of the United number of countries include; The astuteness of ScoUti-vl Yard is apaln seen, this time the mysterious Stone of Scon? affair, missing from Westminster Abbey. Surgeons and doctors are asked to report any new hr-nla ease. The stone Wion rtut tern of h'story were a safe guiu "I Fishermen's and Allied Worker India, Switzerland, Germany, FOOTHILLS "HARD ALBERTA TELKWA COAL IN ALU SIEH Lump . , , Cobble . . . Egg Nut and Stoker PHONE For Immediate Delivery to the future, then the prese armament race between the U.S union j me wiiifcu m.u . The' deceased is survived by a Born lrr 188H. Dr. Elliott has pub-widow and a 10-year-old dauyh- llNhpt several literary works plus and S.U (Soviet Union 1 blocs would surely lead to all-out, total lps.i than 300 pounds and keepin-j f a number of pamphlets. tei-. war not later than 1952. it hidden coiner involve neay llftine. Hence, pnsslbilitv of mo- f - But I submit that the past pat tures. The touch of originality Quick, Watson! tern of history is NOT an infallible guide. There is not a gov Mrs. McCubbin PHILPOTT, EVITT & family had lived many years at Pacific. Daughters of Mrs. McCubbin, Mrs. Elizabeth Siekawitch of Saskatoon ani Mrs. H. C. Halllday, 132 Fifth Avenue East, attended the services conducted by Rev. n- K A Wriirht. J .T McCubbin ernment on eath tcday which is sure of what its own citizens would do in the event of outright atomic war. Governor Stassen for Instance, BUILDING sirrijcs I.VMI'.I II Is Laid At Rest Tha fur.erai of a long time LIVERISH? "Troubles nevw come singly" they TN 60 take Dr. Cliase' Kiilm-y -Liver PilH and get two treatment in one) Thu proven remedy heli you feet better tauter becatme ft relieves both liver and kidney disorders and the bat-lmche and painful joints which so often result. Lr, is probably right in declaring that resident of the Prince Rupert of victoria, son of the deceased, was unable to be present. Mrs. E. J. Smith was organlft FISHERMEN... ' i co on ay ?er: ( r id Chase a name to depend on. 54 InDTUAce'el for the hymns "O Love That Will Not Let Me Go," and "Abide WiLh Me." Russia oould not launch an aggressive war, without inviting a new revolution within the Soviet itself led by the Red army. We saw the same mighty re-ralnln force wellins p n Britain and all weste n Europe when President Trumnn sucrresT.-er that atomic war might follow district. . Mrs. Elizabeth McCubbin, was held from First Presbyterian Church this afternoon. j J. E. Davev. George Rudder-ham, G. C. Sessions, E. R. Gordon, J. A. Teng and Peter Mark will be pallbearers. The deceased, who died 5n m the Chinese Communist inter- j Saskatoon last week, will be bur-vention In Korea. led tomorrow at Terrace, where The Vote-A Funny Thing J HEREVER one stands on this peculiar globe, Vv a vote is a funny thing. ; Take Canada, for instance. If a man hasn't got a vte, he wants one. If he has got a vote he's very proud of it but a lot of ihe time he keeps it in mothballs. His unused vote is about as valuable as a ticket to lust week's show. ; In some countries, where there is no choice for whrjm one is to vote, the citizens are practically forced to vote. They turn out and vote 99 per cent. In others, where theie Is a choice and with that choice responsibility eligible voters are conspicuous! by their fewness. If there is a 60 per cent vote, it i$ considered wonderful. And because the gift of free speech generally walks hand in hand with the free and secret ballot, the! absentees on vot'nq day are almost always the most articulate about their government or lack of it. " Yes, a vote is a funny thing. For complete overhaul of your High Speed Gasoline Enginrx, see Rupert Motors Ltd. Wc have the trained mechanics and specialized equipment to perform this work for you . . . efficiently and economically. To avoid delay this spring when the ru.sh if on, let us have that job now. r.1. -TrVTkay The real struggle in the world, her husband and mother-in-law Since 1912 the today seems to me between thos! ari interred. An IMPORTANT ADDRESS will be given by 5) Final Rites For Ed. Gustafson who are trying to hold mankind apart and those who are trying to draw mankind together. The facts of science, mechanics, industry and, above ail, transportation and communica-t!on, arc like a. mtehty tide. ''ell!n? toward One Warld. But there are 57 varieties of inter - "1 Rupert Motors Limited Funeral services for Edvva i es's and institutions which arsiErlc Gustafson, 78 year-old p!o- valnly trying to stand in the way neer in we'.t3' n railroading an Knitting Wools! i ( Vi W ti dam back the flood. jcity construction, -was held ht The Iron Curtain is Just t he' St. Paul's Lutheran Chu ;h o- latest of these. I Sunday. Rev. E. Solland ofMei- In the end, with or without j ated. After a brief illness, M?. war, the walls will fall, the cur- Gusitafson died at his home last tains will crack, hands across Thursday. the border will replace guns Peter Gamula, Christopher along the border. lElklns, Stephen Comadina, Ro- oeo bert Walker, A. O. Morse and Pe- NATIONS WILL remain na- ter Wlngham were pallbearer."., tlons, and we may have a lot I Mrs. J. C. Gilker accompanied more small ones and fewer bi? tne hvmn "Lead Kindy Light" NEWLANDS BEE HIVE BOUQUET ENGLISH PATON& BALDWINS See our Selection ones than we now have. h,acti and "What A Friend We Have country will run its local affairi jn jMU3." in its own way, subject only to deceased's son and daug?i-snme basic Charter of Human ter.ln.aWi Mr, and Mrs. c. j. R'Snts- Gustafson, and grandchild Jai- Themain political change will nueline. are the immeliate next About Time announces inclusion of Prince Rupert CTTAWA in the scheme of port defences on a national scale. This city is the western terminus of the Canadian National Railways spreading over all Canada an4 part of the Uniteri States. Prince Rupert ia the nearest point, by far, to Soviet Russia. The harbor ranks among the first few best harbors and has a maie of waterfront facilities including a dry dock and ship repairing and building. Prince Rupert ia a naval and air service haven and is about to see opened a great cellulose industry, whose industry hatij a bearing on certain phases of munitions manufacture. ! It's about time Ottawa included this centre of the northwest in future defence plans. HON. GORDON S. WISMER be that world law will -eplace 0f wrtn other relatives In the power politics (which is just an-1 QeCeased's native Denmark, other name for international , Many flowers were sent by his ffanesterism). Every country will friends to the funeral. Attorney Generol of B.C. CFPR 10:15 p.m. Monday, January 15th. Mr. Gustafson is buried beside his wife, who died here two years ago, at the Fairview Cemetery. be compelled to call Its armies home, and keep them home forever. A wo - id democratic parliament bv an international oo!- W Ice force, will keep International ALLACE if you want to sell It, advertis neace and forbid international it. News classifieds. Pharma aperession. We a;-e woefully far from that Ideal now? Sue. . But If vou look back to 1914 you can see how far we have come. -A Scripture JpaSiacje for Z)oJatj keep left-overs fresh! Pliable, evenly waxed throughout, Milady Wax Paper i tasteless, odorless. Moisture proof, It retains freshness and completely seals-in (and out) all food odors. Economical, 100 foot roll in the handy dispenser pack with a strong, sure cutting edge. Always Available At Your Grocery, Drug or Department Store "Whosoever doeth not righteousness Is not of God, neither Tie that loveth not his brother."! John 3:10. HOURS: WEEK DAYS: 9 a.m. to 9 p. P H O N E 7 9 lar -importance now from the standpoint of international affairs. SEEK SQUIRRELS NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. ffl The To Vancouver (today) E. T Tom Lee Back From Hong Kong Tnm Tfc who for venrs ran a SUNDAYS zoo keeper at Idaho Falls, Idaho, asked the Niagara Parks Com- 7 p.m. to 9 p. Second Avenue mission to capture one or two grocery store on , Applcwhaite, M. Brock, R. E. Dovey, R. L. Johnson, J. A. Lanl-gan, B. Mildred, B. P. Johnson, D. Collins. To Masset (today) N. Nelson, D. S. Love, C. D. Matheson. From Vancouver (Saturday) Mr. Sunston, C. E. Cornell, K. Bosworth, G. Manihorpe. -A i i i WAX WRAP wesi of 7th Street, has returned T8'1 DlacK 5,?r. . from a visit to Hong Kong. Mr. een ,Vctorla i,hi . here. The Commission says this tee, spent considerable time in .,fe,sible and the Chinese city, which is one of ihe m,ght trmiDe w.th the the chief centres and of particu-t customs. SIXTH STREET AND THIRD AVEM'E