MARINE ENGINES DAILY EDITION PRINCE RUPERT SomeReassnranrp A single gallon of gaiolina will give 8 to 10 hours of continuous operation in the smaller models of engines; larger sites in O proportion. All Lauson 4-cycle engines can be throttled to trolling speed. A$r Starting Esribliilietf SO Ytare Manufacturers and Distributors THE DAILY NEWS. PKINCE KUPEItT, IIKITISM COLUMBIA EDITORIAL VANCOUVER 1,3) Published Every Afternoon Except Sunday by Prince Rupert Dally News Limited. Third Avenue. II. P. PULL EN, PRESIDENT G. A. HUNTER, MANAGING EDITOR FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 1942 s ADVERTISING KATES Local Readers, per line, per insertion .25 Classified Advertisements, per word, per Insertion 02 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. ... MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS flrSSd tT.tJiy617 12JW Plication of til nw, kSnSeS! Shed therein Aseodat Pro , thU pap, and a Ho th. All rlghta of republication of special despatches therein ar also rwnl' " svw s "I The case of jitters in Prince Rupert and elsewhere' along this coast which started with the air raid on Dutch ' Harbor and reached its peak with the "false alarm" imminent danger alert this week most certainly cannot be ascribed to our situation here being any more perilous than it was before these events happened. To the contrary, there is good reason to believe that our position is more secure - a good deal more so - than it was six months ago when. we were all so complacent. Our latest nervousness has been the result of a final awakening to some facts of which a few realistic thinkers had long since been appreciative and a sense of realization of what might quite possibly happen here under the circumstances of war against an unpredictable enemy. It will not m the ong run hurt to waken a lot of us up even if the ring of the alarm clock may have been something ot a shock. b i i While there is no intention on our part to lull anv-body back to sleep again, there is probablv no harm in mentioning amidst all these alarms a few things that mav wel reassure us Midway Island and Dutch Harbor incidents have served to test our defences and, the Japanese nronaeanda miil notwithstanding, there is every evidence that thev have stood firm. When we think about the "imminent danger" alarm IL ' we"lay denve some comfort from the fact that the cause of it was friendly and not enemy planes no aS!8" thatt no doubt fighting O; J PAQB TTTO -THE DAILY NEW3 X Letter Box A VETERAN PROTESTS Editor. Daily News: ' I would like to pass my opinion and that of at least some of the Public at large on the Dresant state of affairs In Prince Rupert and the plight tn which they have i put some of our ood cltteen and pioneer in these trying ttm. Two months ago they put the alien Japs out of here but they found a place for them before they were evacuated. But what about the old ag? pensioners and the useful pioneers who develonrd the (mm. j try and the city of Prince Rupert? They rould find a place for our enemies and pay them 45c an hour but before the war they had our loyal cititens working In caino at 1 20c a day. Now they do not seem I to care whether or not he has a nome out ten mm to get out. I read the local papers and see about the great things the Chamber of Commerce Is doing but I do not see or hear of them doing snvthmg m this ca? of hecesslty. It does not look very good In this rreat democratic country for which I mvself spent two or three years of the best part of my life fight-, ing. 1 What are the workers and younger set doing today? Tellinir i us veterans of the last war to get out of our homes with the shortest notice they can find. I wonder what our comrades of i the last vr -who gave their lives I and everything they held dear) would think if they could see the r?liht tndav of ome of thorn whn home? Thev were good and. raiTimu servant nl served their I counttv well but they ate getting little thanks for it. DUGALD PARKS. A veteran of the last war. SHOULD BE CAREFUL Editor, Daily News: As 9 mfmher nt th. 1 nil , VA . . . . W- . . f MIIU ;a veteran of three campaigns. I would like to ask a few questions ,mui,,L1" ine A"ies heading forward to engage the ttlG Z enemv if thev can find him. M mibSI0Ilary SS Onarv a Amlf;no.?er reassuri thing for us is that the (le. fence fpn authorities at long last are beginning to waken un! A f M D to At MrS' our position out here and are taking glong drld, Bremner S measures The fact that they are being taken is no reason ' whatever that we should become alarmed. The onlv thin rr Affa.',r 0n Wednday Afternoon T ike the mill of the Gods, the defence machinerv of 1716 Women' Missionary society the. democracies grinds exceeding slow but there if in of Fim 'an church held creasing reason to sunnose that it will rrv?n,i .vj,!- i! very enJyabJe tea on wednes- neck nut just-far enough. , fully decorated with beautiful calmlv a,l effectively. - m,.. j. a. tj m.1 ch,t8e , ..v. juoLixiLuuiuii to tninK senouslv ahmit it .u- C. Mitchell. witchen. As far as the Terrace road is concerned, a few months of war is evidently going to accomplish what years of peace could not do. Oddly enough, the men needed thework and could not get it before. Now there may be difficulty in gettintr the men for the work. Mrs. James Clark and Mrs uaiderwobd were at the cooking table and Mrs. D. Hae acted as cashier. SIT.L'I) PRODUCTION Ih 1936-37 tho hntnnf r.t 11. home Mc- In the Delgian Congo was doubled and the maize crop trebled. of whoever Is responsible for the safety of this city. Why are the oil companies allowed to keep their oil storage tanks in the prominent position tn which they are? Why is it. aftr two years or war, these tanks are not at least camouflaged? Why doesn't someone In authority move them out of there nd set them up across the bay. At the present time we are abort of rubber and gas and all possible methods of conservation are recommended and used. Yet any motor vehicle travelling from the C.N.R. depot to the CP.R wharf, a matter of a few hundred feet, must go up town and all around via Cow Hay to reach its destination when a small amount of planking along the railway tracks would cut 90 percent of the trio saving time, gas and rubber. There still seems to be a lot of foolish people here who have the idea "It can't happen here" but anything can happen. What's the matter with the Board of Trade, the Canadian Legion and a few more getting together and telling the government to get those oil tanks out before it Is too late? O. V. HANLEY. Girl Starts Fund; Killed Next Raid ENGLAVD. June 12: V The day after the first air raid on Bitli. Violet Hayden took a shilling (about 23 cents t to a local office and asked to start a fund for bombed-out people. The ;ontrlbu-tlon. a thank offering for their safety from the girl and her 80-year old mother, began a fund which stands now at more than .000 (about $1 1200 1 but the donors did not live to see the fruits of their gift. Both were killed the next night in another raid. uuniti nwuim-- K OFBEERBOmES 25"perdozenw,libepmd FOR ALL EMPTIES RETURNED VANCOUVER BREW MI Alma lira WilMn HrcomM Bride of John llevrtl;k At j Ceremony In Ahm Cottage j A quiet bat very pretty wedding took place last night at Ahm Cottage, Overtook street. Rev. Canon W. t. Rush brook officiating, when Miss Alma Bva Wilson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Allan Wilson of Vancouver, be.ame the bride of John Hewsick. son of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Hewsick of North Porui, Saskatchewan. The bride was charming tn an ensemble of brown gabardine with olive green accessories and corsair of talisman rosea. The matron of honor was Mrs. P. E. PhUllpaon Who wore navy blue with matching accessories and a corsage of pink carnations P. B. Frrillipton was groomsman The young' couple, who havi many friends to with them happiness and prosperity, will spend tin-summer at Squadaree where tin-groom is a ftah buyer for fx-Prince Rupert FUhermr? Cu-'i!)t:i! '.'. fa 'Ji nni i K,u , rw Pushed or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia PERTH'S "Tango Pumps" in crushed gun metal JULIE ARTHUR Hi Styles lines in latest designs PLIO PEDIC Arch Supporting Shoes with Style Plus Family shoe store ltD. "The Home of Good Shoes" ' C10 Th.s advertisement ii not published or cMpf .ycd by the L.quor Control Board ;r I, Government of British Columbia Quietly Wedded Graduates At Here Last Night observed in cu.'.,:, , The toast to the kM , wm proposed by ( if j, DTA mner-IJance rpi b oi,v. ' W. W. C. O'Neill, j,; Another Ktent In Connection With tJ?' T.nT U" Conclusion of l.lCh Sl.o,. J?' J'' ' " ' ... . raw oriiiK u u Orchestra. The annual graduating banquet ' IlM.., and dance of Hooth Memorial Ilkgh ualel .tin , "N"r School was held out night !n The TtS K young people, mostly members of the gratfuaUng class, in attend- w,. aim t . ance. The toast to thf Kln, wai nt'tZ;'t., j dent of the Students Com.,-.:. and0r,lld ,lf . A. 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