A ill! PAGE TWO - and TANGO PUMPS New Fall Designs Just Arrived! "GIANELLE" PUMPS IN HIGH HEEL, LATEST CRUSHED KID, SOFT DULL CALF AND SUEDES Family shoe store ltD. 'The Home of Good Shoes EDITORIAL SUBSCRIPTION RATES Subscription Rates in City Per Year, $5.00; Half Year, $2,50; One Month, 50c; One Week, 12c. Out-of-Town Subscribers by Mall. $3.00 a Year. i Advertising and Circulation Telephone 98 Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations lI.MIU:i: OF TJIE CANADIAN CRKSS The Canadian trees' Ib exclusively entitled to use (or publication of all news decpoftahes credited to It or to the Aseacdated Press In this paper and also the denied CO-operatiOn in the war to local news published therein.. All rights ol reipubUoaitiioo of special desjpatbhes therein are also reserved DAILY EDITION TUESDAY, OCT. 21, 1941. This Is Navy Week ... Canada is celebrating "Navy Week." Throughout B. C. COXCIUDES CAMPAIGN (Continued trom Page One) tie between world slavery and world freedom. Mr. McGeer warned against the dangers of inflation. It was easy to criticize governments for what they had not done. He, himself in younger days had had ideas about monetary and financial questions. But experience had taught him it was easier to talk than to accomplish. The "war, however, was showing that things which it had been taught oould not be done were being done, things that gave hope of eventual peace and comfort in a freedom based on goodwill. Barriers were being broken1 down as witnessed by the all-out aid professed by Great Biitaln to Russia when the latter country had ieen Jnvaded by the pggres-; sor. I Hitler would force his 'doctrine 1 of national socialism on all peo-, pies, setting up the master race and the master class. Under his; order power, backed by military force, would remove all freedom and security. If this war was to be won, it was essential that there should be unity among all liberty-loving people of the world. Now was no time for disunity,, discord, disagreement and disparagement. Not that way would come victory. "Surely we are intelligent enough as a people, to unite in one. great force." C.C.F. and Defence In regard to defence and the lateness of the start which had, been made, Mr. McGeer recalled! that C.C.F. members had been the most denunciatory of defence measures. Premier King had committed his government to support of Great Britain when this war began. The C.C.F. would have Great Britain. Premier Pattullo, at the outset. 1 .had pledged British Columbia's support to the Dominion war ef-i fort and that co-operation had been freely and fully given. The ' income tax had been relinquished for the war period but be it to : Mr. Pattullo's credit that he had, the Dominion, from the Pacific to the Atlantic, through insisted that the rieht of the 1. i l i i1-K mausmai centres ana prairie provinces, me inuvv come tax, the province's League of Canada is calling the nation to pay tribute to source of income, should the men of the sea who, in their ships of war, are win nine: the warf -the free peoples- J. H. BULGER Optometrist Opposite Post Office Quality Groceries Phones 18 & 19 P.O. Box 575 Reasonable Trices Prompt Free Delivery Service Throughout the City (Opposite Canadian Legion) MUSSALLEM'S ECONOMY STORE "Where Dollars Have More ' Cents" in-' greatest j lot be permanently given over to the, Dominion. He had also been cour-1 ageous enough to refuse to accept Nowhere .in Canada is there better right to mark 1 the sirois report which would have "Navy Week" than in the loval, Pacific-coast province involved the sacrificing of the of British Columbia particularly Prince-Rupert, an im- p1?"'?, nanclal pow" and portent strategical naval centre From her cities and X.TTmrTA towns, villages and tarms from the sea-coast and from cent than the east, under the con-inland, Canada's men have answered the call to m a n troi of the east. The same sirois ; Canada's fighting ships in their war at sea. They have rePrt provided for the re- answered it so splendidly that today, from a province f c?ns"tutl0Il ,of' , . . , L.1 .Canada, a mighty task requiring with less than ten percent of the Dominion s entire popu- intellect, energy and capacity lation, have come almost one quarter of the officers and which could not well be spared i one-eighth of the seamen serving with the Royal Cana- from the Jb winning the war. j diail Navy 1 McGe also credited Pre-' It was only natural that the Pacific coast Drovince'..La'l.n.!L! Should bear its full sliare in the rapid growth of the system through British Columbia navy, for from the very inception of the Royal Canadian between united states and Aias-Navy, Esquimalt, on Vancouver Island, has been one of ,ka ln whIch Prlnce RuPert would its two main naval bases. From here, at the outbreak p yMpSSertiopie would of war, two destroyers steamed into the Pacific, war- be we'll justified in again express-heads on their torpedoes and live shells in their ready-;ing their preferences for a dis-ammunition racks, on the first leg of a two-ocean cruise itlnguished citizen, one who had which was to.help make history. itaken over the helm of evp- f rom h too a HtUe later in the war, two more,S72 ft USSR'S destroyers, .shrouded in the secrecy which cloaks ship-, period of depression and who was movements in wartime, slipped quietly away from their j base for service in the Atlantic which was to add further! .uction nalk glory to Canada's naval participation in this war. i T',u,M"r " XJ1CT8 The departures of the destroyers were but inter- 'rZ2t 5 ludes i in the west coast's participation in the war. Strange gLST'SnSS: ships steamed into her harbors, to steam out again upon Lanoouv7,7 B- c- Ucenc xxeie, their appointed missions and to return after successes at .ce" sea, gained during long patrols and days and nights of fLJEn& Quem CharlorM ceaseless vigil; of questing into far waters and interc"ep-'rw 3) yaars wU1 flltowe ' tion of enemy ships. j'rovlSne umbie to attend There are tales that can be told of boarding parlies,! SLiTSX WSTi XyCTr armed with modern revolvers where their fore-f atherx I e,uotSon itreatwd as one wd.-had borne cutlasses, swarming into enemy ships. Their StZlfTZ MCiMB way imv ueen inoaernizeq, cut tney boasted .b. cT or buTi 7vm3SZZ: u,t iik; apim as mai ui meir predecessors of yesteryear who had made the fame of British seamen resound through the Seven Seas, German-prisoners were landed, but the silent service said nothmg-uf"how they had been captured and what had become' of their ships. The navy at war was interested only in the job it Jiad to da; to talk about that job was not in its tradition. But, in British Columbia. whiVri h n o itc faring tradition,. the work and worth .of the fightine ships of the' navy was recognized with pride, for in their fulfpart8 f BHtish Columbia Wre Playin& their Even as they had played their, full part in building Sfiin aiX-da 8 naV'T' 10 two years 'of war' f rom les than 2000 officers ami men to 25,000 officers and men-of whom British Columbians formed a quarter of the officers and an ehth of ihe men ! cnM,Wicl,i? one-pf ihe rsons why Navy Week, sponsored by the Navy League of Canada, means much to the Pacific coast province. THE DAILY NEWS TUESDAY OCTOBER J J J', tried and tested to navigate the province through the storms which faced it today. Mr. McGeer warned against carelessly voting without regard ix the dangers hlch might result from division and inexperience. If never before, xr perience and courage were needed today for the safety and se-curity of all. A little good work Ji?re, a little good work there, humble and unimportant as it might seem, would all combine to .defeat Hitlerlsm and bring the world back towards peace and security. Liberal War Effort Pattullo asked the voters at this election to support Wm in co-operating in a program of Liberal ism which was .carrying on a war effort In .Canada wjiich even Prime Minister Winston Churchill himself admitted was essential to a viitory for British arms. Even here in Prince Rupert, with its ship-building, was to be seen one of the phases of that war effort. Mr. McGeer warned agains: Internal disruption and discord such as the Nazis counted upon to soften the resistance of their en-emlef and make them easy victims for conquest when the time came. Indeed, this was no time to breed controversy and dispute. Tc the contrary, all should unite and move together in these dangerous days. "Let us follow the example of unity as exemplified by Winston Churchill who went so far as to pledge Immediate aid to Russia." In this war there were many jobs to be done evert in the capitals of the provinces. People uld not .allow themselves to be diverted at this time by irritating differences. Too much worthwhile had been won to risk it being lost by disputes and experimentation at a crucial time such as this. Mr. McGeer expressed confidence that he would be able to again congratulate Mr. Pattullo on the support accorded by his home riding a support which he believed Prince Rupert people were intelligent enough to give without any persuasion from him. Deserving of Support P. H. Llnzey, speaking briefly, declared that any government which had come through the pe riod of economic depression as the Pattullo government had done deserved whole-hearted support. Supporting Pattullo was supporting a system of evolution and progress. Supporting the C.C.F. was supporting ephemeral dreams based on revolutionary ideas. "Socialists are dreamers,'' remarked Mr. Linzey. "How about the nightmare of the last ten years," inquired a voice in the audience. Geprge B. Casey, who presided, .spoke of Mr. Pattullo's fidelity to Prjnce Rupert over a period of many years. He had beep a leading factor for thirty years and' more In the life and growth of the city. There had pot been a movement or an enterprise Jierel which he had not consistently1 given his support. For Your . . . Hallowe'en Novelties ... go to the VARIETY STOKE 330 3rd Ave. W. Phone Red 120 RONALD IJRIDGETT English Singer and Broadcaster for BBC and CBC Is open to Coach a few pupils in SINGING AND REPIUtTOIUE Phone Red 921 Tied For Lead In Y's Wives Bowls League The team representing the 102nd. Battery defeated the Scottish ln the Y's Wives Bowling League yesterday by a score of two game to one and is now tied yl$h Composite for the lead in the standing. Tfie Composites team also played yesterday but their opponents foiled to thow up. 10nd. K.C.A. 1 Peterson 237 167 230 Norton 134 Ratchford 66 Johnston 43 109 72 45 93 47 86 Webster ..J03 198 128 Handicap 158 158 158 Totals 741 Scottish 1 Carter 132 Park 102 Jones 113 Davis .166 Stewart 120 H9 747 2 3 79 112 45 117 99 64 46 91 191 153 Handicap 174 174 174 Totals 878 Composites 1 Sarginson 100 142 King Ill 134 Cowgill 79 155 James , 140 216 Robinson 97 165 135 Handicap 108 108 108 Totals G35 920 C78 Th league standing to date: W L Pts. 102nd. Battery 4 Composites 4 Searchlights 2 Air Force 1 Scottish 1 G14 701 3 89 67 89 190 NO SLIMMING The hippopotamus the largest equatlc hoofed animal, sometimes reaches a weight of four tons. TOO LATK TO CLASMFI WANTED Housekeeper for small rooming house. Phone 741. MM Ihis adverUsement is not publisned or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia CRIBBAGE BASKETBALL SCHEDULE COMING UP Time Table For First Half Of Aiyansh And Savoys Are To play Season Announced Seiies In City This Week-end Prince Rupert Cribbage League fixtures fox the first hatf of season 1941-1942 are announced as follows: October 27 Savoy Hotel vs. Smiles Cafe. Eagles vs. Operators, pioneers vs. Canadian Legion, Falcons vs. Old Empress. Cwjvember 3 Falcons vs. Smiles Cafe, Pioneers vs. Eagles, Operator vs. Canadian Legion. Old Empress vs. Savoy Hotel. November 10 Old Empress vs. Picneers, ,Smile Cafe vs. Operators, Canadian Legion vs. Eagles, Savoy Hotel vs. Falcons. November 17 Canadian Legion vs. Falcons, Savoy Hotel vs. Ea.gles, Old Empress vs Operators, Smiles Cafe vs. Pioneers. November 24 Falcons vs. Pioneers, Eagles vs. Smiles Cafe, Operators vs. Savoy Hotel, Canadian Legion v4. Old Empress. December l Canadian "Legion vs. Smiles Cafe, Savoy Hotel vs. Pioneer, Old Empress vs Eagles, Operators vs. Falcons. December 8 Falcons vs. Eagles, This week-end will see ne fir:-basketball games of the ."7, Prince Rupert when Aiyan. Ives Invade the ci;y t , u x" , ame series wUh Cl. . c t Savoys. The games wu c uvea tX the Exhibition Hali F 3 Saturday nlgfcte and ,;i preliminary games are c-..r u. rapged. The Savoy this yea; car. . tained .the eervices o) &otc ccw Went pf which mo; w.j t heard later. Bobby Hou.s.or wl bf ln town for the game a; nou b U military dutie make hm ; less an uncertain qu;.:, The Alyerwh team rw a game on Ihe Naas R. c -; for some time. In fa : . , representatives say it t: -,cr bean beaten. The series promises to n .k interesting start for :!- i:imj season. Operators vs. Pioneer- Ciaij Legion vs. Savoy Hu, . E.i; Cafe vs. Old Empress THE ROLL - YOUR - OWNER'S BEST f FINE CUT JVem 1942 Models DODGE and PLYMOUTH Now on display at RUPERT MOTORS Distributors of Chrysler Products PHONE 566 EMERGENCY NIGHT SERVICE CALL COLIN MILLER, HLUE 805