TACIT. TWO opting! LATEST STYLES IN 1 DABLYl EDITION " 1 Julia Arthur Vanity Maid Miss Atlanta and Plio-Pedic JUST ARRIVED Family shoe store . The Home of Good Shoes ltD. THE DAILY NEWS. PIUNCE RUPERT - BRiriSU COLUMBIA Published Every Afternoon, Except Sunday, by Prince Rupert Daily News. Limited, Third Avenue H. F. PULLEN - - - Managing-Editor Paid In advance, ner uppfe Paid in advance.' ner month By mail to all parU of British Columbia, the British Empire 'and Untted States, yearly period, paid in advance ... By mail to all other countries, per year Classified advertising, per word, pi.- insertion .. 1 Local rfeaders, per. line, per Insertion "j j Advertising: and Circulation Telephone .1 198 t Member of Audit Bureau ol Circulations Thursday, March 7. 1940. .1? .50 3 00 y.ou 2t EDITORIALS THE FOURTH CANDIDATE The filing of the nomination papers for Frank Morris of .Terrace makes it a four-cornered fight in Prince Rupert in the genera! election to take place March 27. Of the four candidates we think the constituency and the country would be best served by electing Olof Hanson. Hip previous experience at Ottawa and the fact that he is trusted by the members of the government seems to us a good ason for votin- for him. We realize that Mr. Morris stands for nvicb tbe policy as does'Mr. Hanson. He savs.he has alwavs been a Liberal and was a supporter of Sir Wilfrid Laurier in the old days. He is running as an indenendent and says Canadians never hope to get results from the old line naH-les which he claims are controlled by the few instead of the people geRerally. That is where we think he makes a mistake. No member has ever- done as well for the Skew electoral disti-ct as has Olof Hanron because no memh has ever sewed the nnonle V'e as veil. The flection -stranger who is an independent would be another vo? in Jnnvv? Vr ranJderi1Pss- PoiMy a good voice, but nothing more Miv Hanson is something more than a voice. He is sent inis district, he must be the free choice of the people of the district if he is to be useful. Every candidate has trip snmp nnnni-tnnlfii tf miMMt.. : il.J ... j!'". .iiii,jf ui juuuv;n,y in mis newspaper. We shall report their inblic meetings and. if they want anything more, it must be paid for at regular advertising rates. That puts everyone on the same basis. AUSTRALIA'S GESTURE ; . The most rerrnr rrostuve oi Australia tbH thr European sif-atn is of tremendous imoortance. It means that practically the v hole nation is to "be mobihVd f" war. if. - -- ,v,i in , n,i Vflrv nHarlv a m.Uion ow seas, establish a rowrve of about the same number and establish a home training force of half a million. Th's acMon of Australia indites hnw ppvin.),, fv, look unon .ihrevnt situation. Should Great R-ifm'n ah'l b ranee be hfn 'p the nrwnt wnr thev might' find tbe--selve? immrt hv Janan. That is the chief reason for th home 'Mcrro f orcp JudTino. from the present attitude of the United States little could be expected from them. sititAtion Tt PAT.KQTIMW. Tho&itjjjisp in Palestine is not altogetWunlj'ke tha in India.. In tb latter country there are the Hindu and the Mohammedan rivals. The Mohammedans are a minority and. ? such, seek the nrotection of Great Britain acrains tiip Hind"?; "'ho would have the country independent of Briton In Palestine there are two factions, the Arabs and the Jews. The Jews, "'ho are born financiers hope to use their lents in that direction to'graduallv huv out the A rbs. This is resented and the result is conflict. or the first six months of the war the differences seem to have been sunk in the larger conflict but now they J have flared up again. IION. I)R. K. J. MANION Canadian Pacific Rail Unv. -Their settled otChanlcPii b'ltfled farther westward and .settled nt. Fnrt wn. Ham when an enidemle hmt at.Chapleau. There the future political leader grew un in the rcu?h and ready atmosphere of the head-of-the-lakes, but an early dlsnlav of t.'nlmit in school directed him eastward to university, and a medical' career Queen's Universitv.' Kingston, the bid Trinity medical ffchbol at Toronto and the universities of Edinburgh and Glascow turned the hd from newer Cnad Info a skilful 'iirweon. He collected several gold meoais in the process. Joined French Hospital The outbreak of the First Great War interrupted a successful medical practice a. Fort 'William' nnd led him to turn down a flattering offer to Join a world-famous surfcfcii clinic at Chicago. It also marked tne start of Dr. Manion'4 struggles for M had a fight to" Ret into the army medical service. He Went to France on his own; and .served" in a volunteer hosnltal attached to the French army before he obtained an appointment in the Canadian forces. As a medical offlier In England and with front-line battalion's ' In France, Dr. Manion learned "much : about war and the lot of the soldier. From the Inside he saw the mistakes of sending unfit men ovpr- j seas, and other things. He tells, about them in his books "A Surgeon j in Arms" and "Life is an Adventure." Dr. Manion was Invalided! TIIE DAILY NEWS Thur-:da M., National Conservative Leader ' " ' LEADING FIGURES IN DOMINION ELECTION Hon. ROHERT.J. MANION Leader of the National Party By The Canadian Press Hon. Robert James Manion enters his first general election campaign as leader of the National Conservative party fortified by a rich background of experience in Such varied fields as war, medicine, literature, politics and business. Except for a brief interval he has been actively en-gaged in public affairs since 1917. The First Great War turned h'm tvrm rierllMnn tn tier by way of the army. It remains &nome a"d underwent a serious op to be seen whether in the Second deration in May. 1017. Great War he will reach the'hi?h- - ..... est political office in the gift of the i 1 101. IJI7 Canadian people, that of Prime He entered politics as a Liberal Minister. when he war nominated for Fort . . WHl'am in the "khaki" election of v v. Known throughout Canada and' 1917 but won the seat as a support- S SS Bit trtS " f Sir Robert Borden'., En a flhtln? Bob.' Dr. Manlrn can eovernment. After the war. in 1921 orhT" ,0 UirT,the fU" he entered the cabinet of Rt Hon; weWh weight of hi. ener-y and lnaenuitv Arthur Meighen as Minister of Sold- t l rt0" batt,eWhlChwnl ,e' Civil Re-EstablLshment and . 'm al votlnS on 26. becanJa Mfch immediately power In the In past campaigns he'was always In Conservative party the thick of the fighting for his Thw,u Through .u party the years of Conserva- ' tive opposition from 1921 to 1930. Born in Pembroke. Ont., 58 years Dr Manlon held his seat at Fort atto Dr. Manion Is of the third gen- wl'llani. Those years were hlgh-eratlon In a pioneer Irish-Canad- li8"ted bv a short soell of office In. ian family and had hh share of Artnur Melghen's "shadw cabinet" pioneering himself. When Robert o( 1926 and as candidate for.leader-was still child shIp at the flrt un iniJuPJipp ztnri n nnmnrfn . . , a " l.uiu ih hlx father lamer moved moved 1 i national iianviimi conven- conven- Morris is tnlo, ?X I EVGry Vte filV?n Mr" a,0n? the th" newlv.built line of J1"" of e Conservative oarty at iUUIIk t vn JS a VOie lTKPn trnm all Hone?-, the u r . ... - .. W i mr - - - - w . . . IlUiI, While we think Mr. Hanson is the best man to repre Winnipeg In 1927. The nr len stepped forward a a contender fr the mantle of sir John A. Mac-donald. Regarded as a "dark MM ivi"iir iff ii Our Famous Edson Alberta COAL Bulkley Valley Coal Nanalmo Wellington Coal Bulkley Valley Wheat and Grain PRINCE RUPERT FEED CO. rhonc 58 and 558 horse," he polled an appreciable vote but the choice of the tlon went to R. B. Bennett. Convention rivalries were for-SCtten in the ensuing years and Dr. Manion served under Mr. Bennett's leadership In the 1930 campaign which brought the party into power. He became Minister of Railways and Canals and had the difficult task of guiding the country's two railway systems through a period of depression and declining revenues. The proposal for amalgamating the railways found no favor with him; He fought for the mainten- ""ce, of the two - fcV. systems dJOtCUU and UUU the LI1K and successful attempt to gain the party leadership. . . ;.i . Leader in 19.18 At a convention In Ottawa" in .1038',. 'he won the leadership In new leader. Dr; Manion je-entered the House of Commons when a vacancy occurred at London but had to fight a Co-operative Commonwealth Federation candidate In a lively by-election. The National Conservative leader Is tall and moderately slim. His figure recalls the athletic prowess ii; uispiayea as a youth although nis exercise Is now confined to two-mile walk twice ri.iiiv hpfo his horn and his office in Ottawa LINZEY DAV1ES PHONES 585 58C I-D. Tea Is going ffff-over big. Per lb. OOX, First Graiie Butter Qcn 2 lbs. UOK, Quaker Oats- Large size . Quaker Corn Flakes 3 for Golden Loaf Cheese- 2 lbs L! boys' Kra'utX. 2Vi- Each . Sweet Mixed Piekt 32-oz. Each Woodbury's Soap 4 cakes 18C 25c sl! 5 Sr Wilfrid Laurler was defeated In . integrity of the government-owned 1911- .. .... ,. w I .. I. it.. f,-nrtlsn National. During his re 4 fn t 11 lkA m.nU I . ivuK. ivianion is we iormer x.v- '-nne Desaulnicrs o( Ottawa and " ll1ora rill T Ann OnkAi fV A i.vii hi nic uvuiuiiuce oi wasieiui t"1""" , duplication of lines was worked out iave tnrPe sons and scveral grand and pnssed thro.nh narliament. ,' l1"0' Th 'lection of 1035 brought Dr.' Manion his first personal defeat. Vn D: 1 He lst his seat in the landslide PIPS DYKlVe which swept the Bennett govern-1 i 1 r itr men t from power. For a few years! II H fjnnPP WnQ uuvuiicu uiiu men when Mr. Bennett announced hls,TJQ1,J Qnrrncc retirement came forward for a sec- "UtSl uULCvJoo There were twenty tables at the frrtnhhtly bridge drive and dance of, the Eaele' Lodge last night, the affair being highly enjoyable to all. Prize-winners at cards were: lad- a contest with M. A. MacPherson I le:' first. Mrs. Walter Overend- sec-or Regina, Denton Massey, Joseph, nnd. Mrs. James Hampton; third Harris and Hon. Earl Lawsoh. all. Mrs. II. Smith; men'? first. I c' of Toronto. All four defeated aspl-'Oebls: second. A. Guysm: third G rants pledged their support to thejw. Inch. The door prize was won by John Walker. After serving of delicious refreshments, dancing was enloyed from midnight until n.m. to the strains rf excellent music by Mrs. James Blank's Orchestra. Abiut slxtv couples took the floor for the dance. Z-a'J O SISTERS Q nis. abundant hair is erov inri . sliehtlv rnrlv andl5 NOW OI'ICN FOR Dr. Manion Is. the first Roman !S BUSIMss Catholic to lead the Conservative1; Your Patronage will be hMily " i party since Sir John ThomDSontf ancrerintPrt clled is 1894. Should his party win M ne general ejection he will be th i m to Vlee" "" Molt first nolhAII. -.. .' . "15 Td.nl, ...uw ionium; ur me minisr.op cino i w ..ui.n. j uU 55c I 16 c 30c 26c Golden Shred Marma- Qen lade Per Jar Tomato Juke Orchard City. Per tin 100 Whole Wheat Off Flour Per sack JUST ARRIVED! Fresh Layer CakesThey Arc Delicious AJUL 25c Only Each I -Lb. Fruit 25c illliiiiiiiu C.N.R. TRAINS for' the East-Mondays, Wednesdays and Pri days . 6 P m. "loin the Fast Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays 11 Pm. Andy Ronalds was master of cere moniet for the evening and Prank Ellison and Henry Smith presided at the door. In charge of the kitchen were J. Duff, I. c. Denis, R C Gow. land and Angelo Astori. Dr. R. C. Bamford Successor to Dr. 11. LUNDAHL Will Continue Practice of Hentlstry In Rooms 1, 2. 3 Ilesner Itlock NEW ROYAL HOTEL J. Zarelll Proprietor "A HO.MK AWAY FROM HOME" Rates 75c up it Room hoi & Cold Water Prince Rupert. B.C. monf m r.o. Hot 1M I Coal! Coal! Coal! Winter- T And 'your- needs refilling: Foothills Hulldey Valley Nnnainio- Wellington Wc are equipped to supply any of these coals promptly, carefully screened and graded tn size Phones C51 G58 Philpott Evitt & Co. Ltd. Roys! They're Here New Stock EL AIRPLANES Flying Models 10c 15c 25c 50c SI 1.50 "GONE WITH THE WIND" Special movie editioncomplete illustrated. The most popular book of the OC! year uDs MY RECIPE BOOK Washable cover, size 8JxGJ, 3-ring loose leaf book, complete with recipe index and useful information Otft (Extra leaves 25c per i66)