I r r"fliiC fupti I UC 1 1 y i ,C V. Tuesday, Septemoer It), i9di Blackwood on Bridt Robert Service Still Around Robert W. Service, hailed club iioni duuiny tc ii,c iiiua trick and finessed her queen. Mr. Champion would have won and Immediately fired a spade. Spades would have been contin-' ued until Dummy's ace was; r ana By Eosley Blackwood by NOW Knocked out. The lone ace of re -"ci-crmurj cnucs as a Canadian Kipling, lor such works As Mr. Dale says, you sometimes get wonderful ciubs m the .south hand would TERMINAL MESSENGER PHONE 40 AM iMiverics fully insured The Shooting of Dan M. result a fwv. tV, nr.; ru..m.nr de- have blocked the suft and the hand vnnlri Viava r. '!," U V Grew" and -The Cr ",c WU,SL owunig. ivir. v,nuiiu LARRY STANWOOD is sun around, vervibCUt,ea miss 15 rash s bidding- on this hand as airo pieces. mm Sam McGee" much alive South dealer. Both sides vulnerable. North I Mr. Dale 5 A 7 1 H 8 D A 7 5 C J 10 7 6 2 (Mr Champion) cMrs Keen) H 8 3 8 K J 10 4 H 7 4 H J 10 D K Q J 6 D 10 U 4 C K 6 C 8 4 1 Print h (Mian Bntsh) 6 8 0 6 H A K 6 S 3 D 8 3 a C A Q The bidding: South West North Bast 1 H Pans 2 C pass 2 H Pam 3 C Paul 3 NT All Puss and continuing uj eious." And yet she scored game and rubber. I a thing would have write verse. . Rupert en lay claim I the iiK 01 a Pre' proceedings and H, court ent of a ut-w democratic Wallace Unburn di. ,.n Admittedly thl, proves nothing 1 "if." .e""Tf ta ' rY- all. And please do not quote w ppTd Tu-st "once". .tid'oS'tSTS rveUd NoT fvir ,ntTMMrTr.i me ding Now MUs Brash, had already .Cubs south of Pmn- h..i. ..uu u " over good. Fine ri,lc lu"ul planned her campaign even oe- out ui course miss tsrasn nan- vreterday, In the supreme tfi!e opening, a Chinese " '., in sit among the and play will win for you most of , to th Jirst died the situation correctly. She d trick. One thing the time. But not all the time. lh the first ' m9."Hnymes of a RoughnecK." was certain, went right up with the ace of to take the clubs on the first lead of the suit. U., !.!. "Hospitality and Good Food" That Is Our First Aim Phone 17 fur Orders T Tak Out Tins b P' """ ... ilast JOHN H. BULGER Cittomelriil John Bulger Ltd. Third Avenue She wasn t going It waa Mr. Champion's opening yea.-, and has another BC """ ""7. volume now reH Head and he chose the kin ..f Club finesse. She knew that she mobab ooao.y vthe .. me " rilm..rf diamonds, wnnlH would make make her contract If tne JW' , f V..... i btrvic- is not a rianaillan which was permitted fcnt in - generally believe but . F.n- opponent who held the king oi clubs had Just one other card in the suit. l Then she led the queen of clubs and Mr. Champion had no choice but to play his king. In this manner the rest of the club suit was set up while there was still an entry to the board. Mr. Champion cashed two to win. The Jack of diamonds came next and MLss Brash won with dummy's ace. She couldn't afford to duck the second dia- Commodore Cafe more diamond tricks but that was all. Miss Brash won five club tricks, two hearts and the aces of diamonds and spades for game. llsllma'1- He s'ted his adull o h ,hwt bject bv by ,Kh a British cam.r as a bank d).rk in Earl Mah Is still looked landi wdting i vew in every snare Notice what would have hvpr as the opponents might pened If Miss Brash had led a Chinese, but, being open- mon,etit. He came to Canada al mond fcalirtl s t"1"" armea arcunj f0 several J assist in the admlnls- years, then became a bank clerk I 1 of jaituv in his land re-, again, first In Victoria, then in I I confirms the even foot-1 White Horse and finally in! 1. shares with the other Dawson. ' N"W 77 years old. Service l...-' it! '1 . i-Ca jir? nrry i 8W poems to his e edit and hopes fir.-t Jimmy Wong while l to complete 1.UU0. Whether he , lancf-ioiporal In the reaches hu goal or not, the an Army overseas. I was i verses lie has written so far have in him because he i made him financially indeperid-( lit Chinese In thel'nt. His first book. "Eongs of an Army at the time and j a Souidjuvh," has sold over .mi . c :rivrnsal ion revealed j 1,5C0,CCD ccpies in English und imiy was working In the American editions. .irutini (Jiiltv of his! His Sam MXiee was a real I name, dredged up from th": ,aw each other several ledgers of the White Horse bank aine f both moved to W Which Service worked. Mr. I why a further l Here's potter of a biUior , dollars 1 is being invested DY olCana . .n w I Aluminum Company ts of Europe and bv "vree. luring a aim view oi 4 ,l par l hud learned the fol- Service s Ci-emation story, wlth- j,,iv from Jimmy. idrew all his money from the " " .bank. Until the day he died, the Itv artcie says, his llf? was made miserable by all and suivdy asking him: "Warm enough for you?" membered best Ills early us a Junior high school i perhaps, he said, be-Ihdt as the tost time of " He lived with his sls-icr anil mother in a nio-iiip on East Pender Street uuver. k' ami his sister Mae .id in their studies, even mon r.ved, or a common danger, everybody Is equal. It doesnt niake,any difference whether I'm yellow, brown, black or white when the air Is full of flying ihvlls we all work for one an- $ ssti-rs Mae, said Jimmy stenogra- othe. " 4 to become u id when the vnd of high I wondered what had happen-ume neat, she applied for cd to hlr, sister, and asked him. A end a commercial train- o"e aian t get a job either. jg..iul. She finally mariied an elderly 4 buy. could she make that Chli.vse gardener. But she could f .ter fly." Jimmy had al-" reallj use.a typewriter." - i:i,ili,-(l. j $ whilu, the son of the ! Sd I believe a Chinese on the had come under grave iur Is much more significant J ration by both his par-: than many of us may realise: i jAHhouRh the first-born It marks the accomplishment of re the age of 14 worked In greater freedom, greuter deinoe- racy and greater understanding .e stores during non-hours to help with the ir.:ome and that money n saved fur him it would of our people. And the more such understanding we can show to our own citizens, the more effective batUi we cun fight against Mr. Stalin and his Ideas. I die a lot more money to "'ish university. (ji:v Wong had put the pro- it . up to his son. For many! h parents had saved as', JamM Forman on of Mr. Bnd MM. dom., P in Br.t.n . a ew " operation I Quebec . . - f0Prward ride. will i jr Canada -s further step op ; a yeflr i..e ii.uiu. jimmy was M M i;.rmun ,,f ,hiq ellv. taking holidays Irom his studio at the University of Washington, is r.ow employed as an electrician ,o.olcfmor..hanhcuan and he had finished high Did he really want to go rfity? If .so. the savings v although he would still work after study hours boaru and clothh.g. Jimmy had made the big iW? at the Alcan power construction work at Kemano Bay. He expects to be there until Christmas. mean nothing to most n.-ia and rv..M. Qf worK u. IN BRITISH COLUMBIA If ymi Want tr ieii it. nivertlse For Action Advertise! Yes, he wanted to go ai ersiiy mure than any-jf'.se in the world. Know- i him was the means of In sehuol, acquiring the Cachings as all the other he would be on an even J IN QUEBEC I CHUTE-DL-DIAB . ' 1 250,000 h.p. installation. Begun 1 qutumn, 1 950. Will b in operation ' I May 1952. ; chuteXlasavanne I ' 250.000 h.D. initollation. Beaun Project os planned calls for expenditure in the first stage of $200 million; Hie final stage when completed Canadians. Righ " k . progress planning f.wo the job. . on too too, names, ... 'j," Were new resources so that now u V , . upply' cataracts ' tmeine two Quebec, Mean provid e hydro- , v River in h them, he felt. Already uUced that on the street nut quite as much recog- I increase this to $550 million. SMine of his "white" f rsity was all that Jimmy .1- ttt. j H, IT '. ;4c ,i:.: V. -f v. r a. . ' T i I ' f ucipated. and more. He I d a strong friendship. . Chuie-au-".-- . w .adition v , I ; v 1 i nri 5. -V A J i A J t iwww- . ,n ,TJJ . power 1 new 1 ' whote : , ' a , .... Vancouver, hiird and worked hard e flew swiftly. Time now ar the end of his law Three other students and derided some months ago uld enter the same legal law students tn hcoin a ml 1 1 i lL,n tlllV 1""" ) fill BITTER FAST! ff First stage to be completed 1 954, I0TIMAT SMELTER Capacity one billion pounds of aluminum a year. lake, above Nechako River Dam, 500 square miles in.area. Kemano powerhouse, to be built V mile inside mountain. Eventual eapocity 2,000,000 Kp. - coast PflHBV . -1 ..t-v .in nntV SUl''"" - ... ...ill Meanwhue v ,anned. wnerc , be bum., here AVcan onprat.on operav.".. will wU1 tAMJll W is .l,lon Will e-rt WlVl flWUVl . ,L... a,uminum neW town mee of Kitimat, a At KemaI1 Kemano, I ISLE MALIGNE ; ' 1 Smelter. Output doubled. I Construction unaWwoy. I '.mi would end in a four- ou tunneV througn huge Bmeiv a ten-nui m construct i 1 BIAUHAKNOIS , I Smltr. R-opnd April, 1951i fu'tnership. Arrangements ' ' Jiade. and the day for ln- f s came. ' of the young men were Jimmy, with the "f graduating marks of "fl: s injected. Why? Be- parents were born in J'i!1'is ' ue frank. He was a 1 there was no room for J the legal profession or, foot drop tx. develop thousand ndg of Canadians. jobs for om Alumrnu num" m coming Tins "Operation of tlus much abroad, for uanau rrtdas oii , . aluminum - 2 i luuuu out in anv Dro- ...itinnal lowest t the country use to tastu , l-ta It means plan and bridges. . , ...t.i-h a tnou"" r- , tn B.r ;,r later, alter finrilno a metai ..x-naUs and wy Curl! heIe and thoro no everytlung from d for tlie free fie laborer, Jimmy finally . . xv.;. for Canaaiatm Announcement Fol' and Winter SCHEDULE Prince Rupert - Terroce BUS SERVICE Effective October 15, 1951, busses will leave Prince Rupert Wednesdays, Fridays and Sundays at 9:30 a.m. local time, to arrive at Terrace at 1:20 p.m. Returning the same days, busses will leave. Terrace at 5:30 p.m., arriving Prince Rupert at 9:15 p.m. The above schedule will be maintained as long as road conditions permit or until further notice. Any objections to this proposal should be filed with the Superintendent of Motor Carriers, Public Utilities Commission, Vancouver, B.C., up to 6th of October, 1951. Subject to consent of Public Utilities Commission. is a ms f Hfence againsi S6'; . 50 YEARS AGO . u Hub ana 14m company' first imelter r -j juin uie Army. But f learned much, he said, f'nied something in the f' sides the pride of fight-f my country," Jimmy told last day I saw him In I "Wnpn there is a com- opened at Shaw mi got Folk, and produced 1 30 tons of aluminum that year. The metal was just starting to make a market for Itself, n I('K0K(iE AUCTIONEER UAWKS ZLli!y" "l ntl Red 127 TODAY 1 1 Alcan f has 4 smelters I J II vida, Isle Maligne. 1 r at ArV HOT. to SEE i s FOR . , Beauharnots and Shawmigan Falls with a capacity of nearly 500,000 tons. And this light, strong, non-rusting metal has found an almost limitless range of useful iobs to do, XT V -Na Pnxkc.n and f rec.iwn of Mummm ft Canadian ImhiOrf and World Marietta HMI1S AT Shawlnigon Palh. Arvldo. Ulo Maligna, SMpihun, Port Alfred, Dcauhamoii, Wakefield, Kingston, Toronto, Etobkoka "ump UOUIC'S. f Vn slzes- Heayy an I Trailer Frames and f - p"wer Take-Offs. ) Certified Operators f hSh pressure and t'nwal welding IPUSTRIAL For arrival and departure times at Intermediate polnta refer to notices posted In the company depots at Prince Rupert, Terruce and IntermeUmtjl points. WATSON ISLAND STAGES LIMITED C. McINTYRE, President and Manager. ELDING CO. bone Green 884 i