Prince Rupert Daily News JOHN H. Friday. October 12, 1951 Civic Center Busy as Another Season Opens I Prince Kupert's Meeting Place Swings Into ray,. Reflects and Reminisces BULGE u Independent dally newspaper devoted to the upbuilding of Prince Rupert and Northern and Central British Columbia. Jenifer of Canadian Press Audit Bureau of Circulations Canadian Daily Newspaper Association U A. HUNTER. Managing Editor. H. U. PERRY, Managing Dlrectoi ; SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ir.t-n ahri winie im-n ai Victuiio. Hi-, stay at Burn? Lakp was ' when he took over the general management of a store for Fred Aslin, a pioneer furtrader of the interior, and where he remained for some years. In Prince Rupert he was long actively identified with Gordon's Hardware and was also associated with the late Pat Phllllpson, another early member of the community. The funeral will take place tomorrow afternoon from the CUenvtile Court Chapel of B.C. Uudetudcpis with Rev. Canon Basil S. Prockter, the rector, oitioiating. Pallbearers will be Earl Gordon, C. H. Insulander, Carl Knutseii, Jack Wrathall, A. E. Wood and Fred Peagam. John Bulge, 3y Carrier, Per Week, 20c; Per Month, 75c- Per Year, $8.00; By Mail. Per Month, 70c; Per Year, $8.00 Action fw Winter Activity plus is the order at the focal point of Prince Rupert Community with the season's opening of the Civic Centre. Heading the staff this year is John Stirn, djrectoa-, who hyik f i'ni Nunaimo and Published every afternoon except Sunday by Prince Rupert Daily News Ltd., 3rd Avenme. Prince Rupert. Hospital patients in England drank far less milk than beer, stout and porter a hundred years ago, says a physician. Perhaps the refreshment was provided in the form of prescription or supplied as a judicious example of standing treat. We always have had a sneaking re- j gard for some customs of the j guod old times including medi-1 cal treatment. A. G. Bar tlelt Passes Away Albert Goodwin Bartlett did at 1:15 yesterday afternoon in the Prince Rupert General Hospital. Due to a heart condition he had been in failing health for about three years. Three days ago he collapsed at home and was taken to hospital. He did not regain consciousness. A resident of Prince Rupert for Z2 years and located in the district during construction of the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway, he was wirely Known and esteemed. His passing takes another link with the early days. Mr. Bartlett was born in Victoria, November 13, 187B, the son of John Bartlett woo, after service in the British Navy, settled in Victoria about a century ago. He moved to northern British Columbia during the building uf the Grand Trunk Pacific, being employed as tinteiniepei at the period wiien all inlund transportation vis mainly by rivor-boat between Prince Rupert and Hauelton. Subsequently he moved to Burns Lake. This was In succeeds Don Forward, i - - well as at the sale in town as Civic Centre. J Most of the other faces on the staff remain the same, with the exception of Mrs. Margaret Blain, who is the new instructress for the women's keep-fit classes. But Mrs. Blain is no ............... ..t "......,. A . . . - DISH! Classt's start on Monday nifeht in the art of Judq. Andy Patterson will be the instructor. Hail-lne from Vancouver, Andy has Chop Suey-ChoH; (JUTE CONTENT A British son', writer calls for all good men to :ora to the aid of the barroom ballad. A Canadian contemporary comments -Sweet Adeline" is still good enough for us. .iiaiipri tile vciimc. iviili - " garet Slinn, she was Rup-Kec .ed , , hls . Bl0n fn,d . lls 'instructing at the B.C. Judo In- instructress there 1947-49 PORTRAITS Films Developed and Printed PROMPT SERVICE tllANULEK'S STIDIO 210 4Ul Struct Box 045 Phone Green 389 Prince Rupxrt Open 6 p.m. . j j, J ' stitute where he was teaching for two years. This class is for men .and is open to Civic Centre members, being held !n the small gym-1 nasium. ! Owing to the junior boys (6 to 8 years of ago having their Mrs. Don Forward is in charge of the tiny-top and toddlers classes with several volunteers expected to come to her aid. Fred Calderoni is back as sports director again and will be in charge of basketball and men's tjvmnastir training Rowland Miles, genial crafts games period on Monday after- noon, the woodwork period has MEN'S AND BOYS' CLOTHING Shoes and Rubberwear for WINTER GOOD VALUES Just Few pf Our Specials: been CHANGED to TUESDAY. Tem-age girls and boys interested in crafts such as leatherwork or braiding and knotting will meet on Monday after school hours, instructor, is on the Job again tilled with enthusiasm for another season's program. In fact, he has furnished a newly deco-tated instruction and workcooni for the craft students, as a result of a brush in hand for several days. In the front office, with her usual generous .smile, is Mcs. Irene Parent who says that season's memberships are being picked up at a good rate. Then there's Jack Mcintosh, caretaker, who does a lot of unsung duties and plays a great part in the smooth running of operations. By the way, "Mac" 1921. It was there he operated 1 a store, continuing there until 1929, when he took up pennan-' ent resilience in fuuee Rupert, j Surviving members oi the : family are his widow, Mrs. A. G. hstehai Bartlett; a sister in ' Vancouver, Mis. Annie Bunks; a brother, Fred Bartlett, in Vancouver, and three sons. Ranald of Vancouver and Bert and Clifford of Prince Rupert. Inure are seven grandchildren. Mr. BarUetls long and eventful life coveted much of the ht-;lury of the Pacuic coast. He could recall more than one memorable event of his ciuldnuwU. As a boy he was a wiuiess it lighting between Indian triBe.- WN'S AIN( (My Nuw THERE AKE OTHERS The following is from the Times-Journal of St. Thomas (Ontario i. dated October 3: "It is extremely appropriate th.it on the eve of the visit of Princess Elizabeth to Canada, the city council of Ottawa should unanimously have elected Miss Charlotte Whitum mayor of the city to fill the unexpired term of the late Mayor Goodwin. Thus, tire woman who is heir to the British throne and who will ato be Queen of Canada will i be welcomed to the capital by the first woman to hold the ol-fi.'e of mayor, not only in Ottawa but in Canada." , Had the Time-Journal been more widely informed, it could not have printed the foregoing.' For it is a fact that Mrs. Nora Arnold served as mayor of Prinze Rupert, a 12.000-popula-tion city of British Columbia, ! from January 1947 to December: 1949. It also seems appropriate at this time to publish it. And a smaller B.C. city had a woman mayor as well as a city in On-tario itself. j OUUl -ii.--, good lit t GviC ENTRE MEN'S M) JO INC W I'NJ'S-timiaieds uf is. pertucl hi. top-notch In the Crafts department, Roly rw:ai $&w u, has a birthday coming up this month October 24 and begins Miles, instructor, announces me to strike off the "borrowed .following new schedule: IVMCN S SEW UKfcSS tSR M r a vis-Ati ua Fi'MKl MJ&4 MEN'S WOKK SMARTS Full .cut. lot oi wear .SU, New International Threat ACTION of the Egyptian government in having the parliament decree that British forces shall be evicted from the Suez Canal and restlessness in Iraq, following on the expulsion of the British oil people, from Iran, presents a new challenge to the United Nations jurisdiction and authority to the basic conceptions of the international system which we . are all endeavoring to build up. Those conceptions are: that armed force shall not be used by individual nations; that there shall be, in the words of the Charter, "respect for the obligations arising from treaties and other sources of international law"; and that all disputes shall be settled either by amicable agreement between the' parties or, if that is not secured, by admission of some form of "third party judgment." Nobody stands more to gain from this new system than the smaller and weaker nations. Under the old order they were, in the event of any dispute or quarrel of any kind with a great power, liable to be coerced by force of arms or by threat of it. But this acceptance of obligation not to use force assumes acceptance on the other side on the part oi smaller powers to accept "rule of law" and due processes of law. And it is this assumption which seems to be challenged by the action of the Persian and Egyptian governments. Tf, while strong powers refrain from "taking the law into their own hands," weaker powers are going to take advantage of them and, feeling themselves safe from coercion, are going to refuse recognition of any international authority, then we are in clanger of sliding into a new form of international anarchy, in which no contracts are worth the paper they are written on, in which no -dispute can be settled in a peaceful and civilized fashion and in' -which normal relations with countries which adopt such an attitude will become ;well-nigh.impo.ssible. That would be dangerous for everybody, but especially dangerous for such small powers themselves. ' For, sooner or later, provocation to some strong power would prove intolerable. Denied by the obduracy of some small power of any chance of obtaining justice by peaceful means, it , would be driven to safeguard its rights by use of its own f orc,es.,And the old' bad'methods of the 19th century would return. iThat is a possibility of which we are all loath to think. But it begins to loom as a possibility. The choice is necessarily between rule of law and some kind of international anarchy. And in any kind of quarrel the strong will use their strength. They may not '.use it either brutally or unjustly. But they will use it. For they will have no alternative, except the grotesuue one of submitting to coercion by powers weaker than themselves. MEN'S UKESS SlUKTS &AU WUKX SUJtti- The average farm wage in i years," as he calls them. He'll push one year ahead of the allotted three score and ten but every one tells him he doesn't look it. "In this place, with all the goings-on, I don't feel it, either." he declares. Organization meetings in one :i tn..e or four looms at the Centie take place practically every night throughout the winter season and add much to the activity. So the 'Centre" now Monday p.m. Teen boys' and girls' crafts. Monday night Adults leath- erwurk. Tuesday p.m. Boys' woodworking. Wednesday p.m. Adults' crafts. Wednesday night Boys' leathtiwork. Thursday p.m. Adults crafts Thursday night Adult If athercraft. Friday p.m. Junior girls' .rafts. PHOTO WRATH ALL'S FINISHING DEVELOPING, PRINTINO ENLARGING EXPOSURE METERS AMATEUR SUPPLIES Phono Greer 136 Sox 478 All suti .. . - S2.15 kii:i i U-:"S SOX B'oi dtebi or work, beat mokes Sic to sii HOIS' COHJD.l'ttOX PAN J'S Sell 8.50 to .Q0. 3,j aoiS' W IN DiJHE AKJ.KS AND JA( KJTS-AU j sliowe: proof. Full Kippers. Less thuo tuclory euft. Pried tiom S2.7ii( BOYS HEAVY Ht UOOL SHOES Strongly built, Canada is $6.30 per day, according to official advice. It does not seem so long ago when the average wage was barely that much a week. has become a byword to meetings. Where is the meeting? At the Civic Centre, of course. Fierce riots have been flaming in the streets of Cairo. Premier Mustapha denounces the British, saying they should be driven out ot the country. Surely he mustapha a silly, idea. Sizei M JIT Biz s 11 to 13 Sizes l' to 5 ... tTi The Women's KeeD Fit classes SHOP SATURDAY AND MONDAY , are now under way every wea-i nesday afternoon and Thursday I evening with Mrs. Margaret Blain instructing. I The regular Friday night National Film Board movies will be shown commencing this even- ; ing at the Civic Centre for mem-hprs Thp hminrs will view the Be Sure You ARE IN Mulntyec Block I SOME OTHER TIME i The person who is hit most by the high cost of living is the roomer who eats out. It is not so many years ago he could find a six or .seven room dwelling for as low as $30 or $35 a month. (Today, a solitary, and usually ; small, room will tost that. And as for the gentle art of dining? i We'd rather not discuss the mat- ! ter. films first and a later showing will be for adult members. The.s-films are of an educational value and will be of Interest to young ana om anne. , The season tickets for the This advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Hoard or by the government of British Culumiiia. Life will now return to Its more ot- less drab flatness for betting on the World Series did provide a tidy little gamble. Any number of folks right here in Prince Rupert have been fever Alaska Trail concerts are now on ishly interested to the exclusion Department of Public Vorks of all else. HE HAS ONE AT LAST Argentina's great paper, La Prensa, seized by Dictator Peron, will come under the personal wing of the latter himself. He for ""3 or for it? was, no doubt, one of the many with anitch to possess a newspaper property. Well, if Peron 1 The- travelling public is berby advised tot HpeeJal and eJauor,diary 30 in.p.h. spjed limit hiip-jijctl on the Northern Trans-provincial highway Iroiu Prince Rupert eit.y limits to Galloway Rapids bridge and on the Port Edward wad J" Galloway Rapids bridge to Port Edward hereby lilted, effective 12 o'clock noon, TlimsdaJ. October 11. was not exactly flush he took a direct and effective way to get what he wanted. But it's not . Perfect tea is so easy to make ivith to te recommended. AM better bu (Signed) L. E. SMITH, .Divisional Engineer. ' Dept. of Public Wo TEA BAGS - SENSATIONAL ! ! 1 1 Come and bnW ""Oil Pre Apple Day $a ""nfg it of Here is another opportunity for you to adopt this tried and tested system of saving money. Canada Savings Bonds never drop in value. If cash is needed you can get back the full face value of your bond, plus accrued interest, anytime at any bank in Canada. Ever tried to move a piano? You know how heavy it is and how it's apt to umrk the floor. Tilings will be different when they nuke pianos of light-weight aluminum. Already one firm has fctai led nuking aluminum O'l key portable, piano. Dm ing Alumis fifty years in Canada, so many new uses have been found lor aluminum that today we operate 12 plants in various parts of the country and the industry provides employment for thousands and that's not counting all the people' who work for more than 10'H) Canadian companies which shape Mum iiluiniuum into al! sorts of forms from fish tags to airpl.ines. Alumi num Company of Canada, Ltd (Alum). 3 for 97c Rupert Radio and Electric You can buy Bonds for cash, of course. Or if Buy your apples from any member of the Gyro Club and they will be delivered before Hallowe'en, All. proceeds for Gyro Playgrounds you prefer, the Royal Bank will arrange for you to huy them by regular monthly instalments out of income. The procedure is simplicity itself. All forms and full information available at every branch. THE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA J ffashionfoot ft