8' E e ti 12rtnee Rupert Daily jQcUjs Friday, July 12, 196 "People have more than Ik yy -Ahc My Peoples Store Clothes .Are Jusf Made For Fun . . . OVERALLS BATHING SUITS SWEATERS J! . . SKIRTS SLACK SUITS SLACKS JUMPERS SUN IJONNETS COATS DLOUSES ANKLE SOCKS SUN SUITS RUPERT PEOPLES STORE QUEEN" SUPERMARINE FLYING BOAT PASSENGER, FREIGHT AND AIR EXPRESS SERVICE PRINCE RUPERT TO VANCOUVER via QUEEN CHARLOTTE ISLANDS AND ALL COASTAL POINTS Ml 1 For Information, Reservations, Rates, etc., Phone' or Write - G. II. STANBRIDGE Agent P.O. Box 1249 PHONES: PRINCE RUPERT 521 or RED 878 IIMhCD MCU UAMACUCKIT If UIWLIX MUTT lYinnnVJLIYlUll I Pall Mall Cafe AND CHOP SUEY , y at CENTRAL HOTEL ll HAS REOPENED We specialize in tender, juicy steaks i and Chinese dishes. WE EXTEND A HEARTY INVITATION TO COME AND ENJOY OUR FINE FOOD Motorists Sunday Service Hours: 12 Noon Until 4 p.m. June 16 to September 29, 1946 For Gasoline and Oil Sales, Quick Battery Charge and Tire Repairs Out-of-Town Service Preferred j AT "Frank Morrison s Service Station UM .Rear, of LONG MOTORS, 3rd Ave, Courtesy of ! LONG MOTORS and 7th St., Prince Rupert NATIONAL MOTORS "S. E. PARKER LTD. RUPERT MpTOUS LTD. REX CAFE SECOND AVENUE, OPPOSITE PRINCE RUPERT HOTEL Chop Suey Chow Mein Chinese Dishes our specialty. . Open 6 ajn. to 2 a.m. ' PHONE 173 POSTMENS' HOURS ARGUED IN PRESS Ihitain Puts a Stop to Late Night Collections LONDON 0 How late at night a postman should work Is a question which has found its way out of parliament into the press. Wilfrid A. Burke, assistant postmaster-general, started the discussion when he said that midnight letter collections will not be .resumed in London al though the war Is ended. Mr. Burke said resumption might encourage the public to return to old and later hours of business. The Dally Telegraph commented editorially that "hitherto most of us believed the post office was conducted for the public benefit, and that late hours for a portion of those concerned were considered inevi table, as In some other callings railways, buses, tubes and trams, bakeries and newspapers." Thereupon G. A. Stevens, act ing general secretary of the Union of Post Office Workers, submitted a letter saying that while Mr. Burke had promised the last collection of the day would be at' 9 p.m. instead of midnight, the union considered even 9 p.m. "far too late.' ' Mr. Stevens said the hour was too late "having regard to the unsocial and irksome attend ance the postal staff will have to undertake." Work would not finish at 9 p.m. if there was a collection at that hour, completing and handling of mall would take until 11 p.m. or later. "My members hold that a collection fairly late at night Is In the main a luxury service, and that little, if any, benefit would accrue to the public generally," he said. He added that "reputable business houses" had re-organ ized their posting departments in an effort to clear their cor respondence early in the day, and the inefficient business cle ments who 1 have not improved their organization have no right to expect postal workers' con ditions to be worsened in order to bolster up their lack of en terprise." Postal workers desired to pro vide a satisfactory standard of service but they asked the pub lie not to condemn them to pre war work conditions which be fore 1939 often made "men strangers to their own children except on-Sundays." Mrs. C. A. Nixon of Abbots-ford, the former Margaret Mc-Lcod. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jarvis H. McLeod, passed through the city on the Princess Norah today bound for Juneau, accompanied by her daughter, Lynn. Mrs. Nixon will visit her sister in the Alaska city. . . . the only many-layer insulation is superior in principle. It won't shift, sag or settle. Saves up to 30 on fuel. Install it yourself, (we'll show you how), or let our trained men do it for you. Either way there's no mess. 'Phone today for a free estimate, or stop in and let us show you why kimsul is best foryou-how it pays for itself while giving you real comfort. Act now. Start savins 1 7M;c -sa.Ff. (NOT msiauto) 1KOU , INSLlATtS 100SQ.fi. BUY NOW- Albert & McCaffery KIMStJL DEALERS Phone 116 Prlnco Rupert The .Seal of Quality BRITISH COLUMBIA'S Lota Si TiZl FINEST SALMON CFPR Radio Dial 1240 Kilocycles (Subject to change) FRIDAY P.M. 4:00 CBC Concert Hour 4:30 Rythlc Review, 4:45 On the March 5:00 Johnny Home Show 5:30 Tommy Dorsey's Orch. 5:45 Supper Serenade 6:00 CBC News 6:15 CBC News Roundup 6:30 Listening Post 6:45 Henri Rene's Orchestra 7:00 Art Hallman's Orch. 7:30 Pacific Time 8:00 Soliloquy 8:30 CBR Concert Orch. 9:00 CBC News 9:10 B.C. News 9:15 To be announced 9:30 Casino Garden's Orch. 10:00 Speaking of Records 10:15 Dance Orchestra 10:55 CBC News and Int. 11:00 Weather Forecast and Fishermen's News 11:05 Silent SATURDAY A.M. 7:30 Musical Clock 8:00 BBC News 8:15 Melodies for Juniors 8:30 Morning Devotions 8:45 Medley Time 8:59 Time Signal 9:00 Stories in Music, Tor. 9:30 Musical Program, Toronto 10:00 On the Teen Beat 10:30 Jive Hive, Halifax 11:00 CBC News 11:15 Hit Songs of Yesterday 11:30 Personal Album 11:45 Message Period 11:48 Recorded Interlude P.M.N 12:00 Duke Ellington Entertains 1:00 Saturday Concert 2:00 El Rltmo Tropical 2:15 CBC News 2:30 Serenade. 2:45 BBC News and Commentary 3 :C0 Hawaii Calls 3:30 Flying Down to Rio 3:45 Swing Time OXFORD, Eng. tt) Sir John Shelley-Rolls, great -nephew of the poet Shelley, has presented to the Bodleian collection number of Shelley manuscripts, including many letters and 14 notebooks. LOCAL RED CROSS HEARS POST WAR PLANS OUTLINED The post war program of the Canadian Red Cross was outlined to the executive of the local Red Cross Society by provincial Commissioner Col. C. A. Scott Thursday afternoon. The program Includes emphasis on blood donor clinics throughout Canada, with two mobile clinics in British Columbia, swimming and life saving Instruction, nutrition education, Junior Red Cross activities, outpost hospitals, and disaster relief. Commissioner Scott delivered an outline of the wartime activities of the Dominion Red 'Cross, of which he was over seas commissioner. War work of the Red Cross chapters in North-' em British Columbia was of a greater volume than that of the south, he revealed. 'Hi Present at the-meeting in the Civic Centre were President Arnold Flaten, Mrs. C. H. Elkins, Mrs. E. J. Fitzpatrick, Mrs. C. Smith, Mrs. II. A. Breen .and II. A. Breen. HOW CAN I ? ? : By ANNE ASHLEY Q. How can I prevent j)er- spiriag hands? A. Dissolve a tablespoon or alum in a quart of water. Hold the hands in this colutlon for half an hour before going to bed every night until relieved. Q. How can I unscrew can tops readily, that arc stubborn in yielding? A. Keep a few narrow strips of sandpaper on hand. Press a strip around the side of the screw top and it seldom refuses to yield. Q. How can I take the sore ness from a bruise? ... . A. Butter, when applied as a salve, will take the soreness from most bruises and often prevents discoloration. ESCAPE WAS MIRACULOUS Reporting thjjt his father, Aid, Robert McKay, was making good recovery in the Smlthers Hospital from the effects of shock and a badly stiffened back and that Mrs. McKay was also doing well after having been badly bruised and shocked In an automobile accident last Sunday from which they mlraculausly escaped death or much more serious Iniury. Robert McKay, Jr., Is back from a hurried trip to the Interior town. Aid. McKay is expected to be able to leave hospital by the end of the week nnrt mav be home early next week. It was not certain when Mr. McKay, Jr., left Smlthers as to when Mrs. McKay would be in condition "fit to permit her leaving hospital. The accident occurred near Morlcetowli, about 18V2 miles west of Smlthers, as Mr. ana .Mrs. McKay were returning m a light panel delivery car from a trip to Vancouver. A speedster and "road hog" in a grey sedan, for which the police are searching, came flying along the road and Mr. McKay was forced to draw up sharply to the side of the road which gave way. The local car dropped off the side, turninc over three times and landed upside down among stumps some twenty feet down the sharp embankment. The top was smashed In and fenders and other parts badly broken up. Mr. McKay was able to get out through the window and, dragged his wife out. Then they waited forty-five minutes for assistance, a passing car picking them up and taking them to Smlthers where they were hospitalized. Advertise In the Dally News. mm is a 20 YEARS AGO July 12, 1916 Archdeacon G. A. Rlx delivered a sermon In which he branded "obnoxious" the Idea of separation from Great Britain or annexation of Canada with the Separation wsis a United States. popular subject for discussion at that time. Prince Rupert Liberal Association announced that a convenr Don to name a federal candidate IRAN'S TRICOLOj The Iranian flag c strlDes of nalp , vua,,, (1 Deace. and rrri trifle, COttf on July 24. Fred Stork 1 pectcd to be the only., fnr fho t.lhorol ... ' l"VI was acccmpanii d bs I for Skeena ridlni? would be held family Chief Petty oifi-Dawes arrived In t Winnipeg to beanie n of thp lnral nim - - - 'iai r Ttr s'on. He rpnJn rfflnrfj It trii. ': ffl 12,30 SPECIAL - $3.95 1 Capitol TODAY Elizabeth Arden Treasure Chest CONTAINING ; Ardena Cleansing Cream Velva Cream- Feather-Light Foundation Cream Skin Tori Hand-O-Tonik Poudre D'lllusion -B!. Grass Flower Mist Lip btick. Ormes ltd "Jim Pioneer Druqptets STORE HOURS Week Days 9 a.m. to J H Sundays and Holidays 12 noon till 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. tin )J v Moderation is a Canadian characteristic. It is a heritage of our people. As children, vc learn moderation. ? ; As adults, we practice it. As Canadians, we arc proud of it. In spite of post-war temptations to splurge and spend, we have kept our heads. We've acted moderately . . . wc have not given in to the natural ; desire for immediate enjoyment of everything and anything in sliort supply I. i? and that is why, as individuals and as n nation, we are unhampered by the excesses of inflation. We can point to a fine record. We can point to Canada's future with certainty? But, we can do this only if we continue to live up to our Canadian principles of moderation moderation in all things. 'i 19 HEM "pL THE HOUSE OF SEAGRAM J OCT