11 v 'j3 Itl'llfC UtIUCrt OililU JUCUIS An tart.??fnIent dally newspaper deroffd to the upbuilding of Tuesday, October 22, 1946 northern and centrnl nnlnmhiA. STEWART NEWS Latest from Portland CanalMining Centre - MINING EQUIPMENT IS LANDED; MEREDITH-JONES ARE HONORED STEWART Freighter Chilliwack of the Frank Waterhouse line arrived on Saturday with a 3-ton truck for the Morris Summit, a lVl-ton truck for the Gold Drop Mine, and forty thousand feet of lumber ami ten tons of iron for the Bitter Creek Bridge. Owing to the fact that ore was not available on ac count of the strike she left al-i most immediately after getting the cargo unloaded. Under the auspices of the Stewart Tennis Club a dance was given in the Moose Hall on Saturday, October 19, In honor of Constable and Mrs. J. Meredith-Jones who are leaving shortly for Youbou, Vancouver Island where Constable Jones is being transferred. During the evening John Thompson, on behalf of the Parent-Teachers' Association and the community, presented Mr. and Mrs. Jones with a desk lamp and a pair of plcures and Mrs. Norma Lewis, on behalf of the Stewart Tennis ,Qlub, presented them with a beautiful quilt. In wishing them -..Godspeed the speakers expressed .the appreciation of the commu- - nity for the excellent work accomplished by Constable Jones An his manual training classes J&nd to Mrs. Jones for her work among the girls of the Senior TBehool grades. The music was furnished by Mrs. Jean Stewart rand Mrs. Edith Behnsen at the piano, Mrs. Dot. Thomas, with the accordlan, A. Sweeney, with ' " his violin, and W. S. Orr on the - drums. ..Jhe Corporation of the Vil-'"jage of Stewart has Just pie ted an extensive Job of reno- ,"vating sidewalks and gravelling -.some of the main streets. WOKING, Surrey, Eng., m Surrey probation officers blame the bad weather for an Increase in matrimonial quarrels. INCOME TAX Returns Prepared See R. E. MORTIMER 324 2nd Ave. Phone 88 Railway Must Pay SYDNEY, Australia, The Sydney Morning Herald was awarded $12,000 damages to be paid by the New South Wales state railway commission for failure by the railways two years ago to carry an emergency issue of the Herald during a Sydney newspaper strike. The strike issue of the Herald, incorporated Sydney's three other daily papers. The railway commission's defence was that It was not bound ty contract with the Herald to carry the emergency paper. In. a recent ruling the Federal Communications Commission of the United States said: "Free dom of speech means freedom to express disbelief as well as belief." , FURNITURE 'REPAIRING Upholstering - Slip Covers Drapes , Car and Truck Cushions Repaired and Recovered Out-of-town orders given special care. 10 VIM'S CABINET SHOP Phone Green 974 117 Second Avenue West Opposite Civic Centre RHfUh irltlsl ( Authorized as Second Class Mall, Post Office Dep't Ottawa). .Published every afternoon except Sunday by Prince Rupert Dally News Limited. Third Avenue. Prince Rupert, British Columbia. O. A. HUNTER. Managing Editor. H. O. PERRY, Managing Director. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By City Carrier, per week, J5c; Per Month. 65c: Per Year. $7.00; By Mall, per month, 40c; MEMBER OP CANADIAN PRESS Per Year. $4.00 AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS CANADIAN DAILY NEWSPAPER ASSOCIATION THE BY-ELECTIONS ODDLY ENOUGH, the Liberals may derive more comfort from the result of the Toronto-Parkdale by-election yesterday than from that of Portage la Prairie. In the traditionally Conservative metropolitan seat, the Liberal candidate made a strong run, considerably reducing the majority which Conservative Dr. H. A. Bruce was accorded in the general election of lust year. But in Portage even the fact of a fairly close race can offer but -little compensation for the government party which had fought hard to retain 'the seat which the late Harry Leader, conqueror of Arthur ' Meighen many years ago, had al- ways won with substantial majorities. P.ortage had been accepted by all parties as a testing ground and as a fair signal of how the political wind blows. As a result of the by-elections, . the administration of Mr. Mackenzie King holds a precariously small margin of majority in Parliament. It will have to mend its political fences by more courageous and constructive administration if it is to retain control. As for the Socialist party, its accomplishments in the by-elections indicated that it is not gaining strength. HON. P. J. A. CARDIN QUIET, unobtrusive, rarely speaking, but always working, Hon. Pierre Joseph Arthur Cardin, former federal cabinet minister, who died yesterday, was on of those French-Canadians who, by Drofound devotion to the sterling traditions of Uld Quebec, by the application of industry and by his faithful interpretation of the two great races in Canada the one to the other won for himself a place high in the esteem of the Canadian people. Car-din's voice was rarely heard in the House of Commons, not because he was not an eloquent speaker, but because he -was much more of a worker. It is a tribute to him that, entering the Council House of the nation, with ability to speak only a few words in the English language, and certainly unable to deliver an address in that tongue, he came to express himself fluently and incisively in English. It was not long before he appreciated that in the House of Commons the grace and beauty of French were understood by only a limited few; and that if his influence was to expand he must equip himself with the power to address the majority of the Commons in English. This he did. The task and the success, which he attained illustrate the great characteristics of the Quebecker. There is a well-known jingle of: A wise old owl, that sat on an oak; The more he heard, the less he spoke; The less he spoke, the more he heard; All men should, copy that wise old bird. The moral would appear to be that sagacity and silence are inseparable elements. Assuming that to be the case and there is a great deal to be said for it the value of P. J. A. Cardin had one yardstick only, and that was the yardstick of work. His Departments were always among the most efficient in the government. One might well believe that an individual whose duty was to administer the thousand and onfe things associated with his departments would have little time for vords, that his motto must of necessity be "facta non verba." 'TANKS DESTROY !'"BURIAL SHIP" I SOUTHWOLD, Suffolk, Eng. 9i George Bird, of the British j Ornithologists' Union, told South-jwold Archaeological Society tha'; j American tanks had destroyed I the Sutton Hoo "burial ship,-! I discovered In 1939. i During excavations in 1939 a ; vessgl 82 feet long by 16 feet in ' beam was disclosed. It was j thought to have been the rest-1 ing place of an East Anglican! King or warrior prince who lived about COO A.D. Today, Mr, Bird said, only a hollow In the ground marked the spot where the burial shin was found. The area was. a military training ground during the war. ROTHESAY, Scotland, KfWThe submarines Venturer Votary and Viking, renamed Utsteln, Uthaug and Utvaer, have been handed over to the Royal Norwegian Navy. EISENHOWER IS GODFATHER TO TEDDER'S SON Ge: Eisenhower acted as godrather at a christening of the baby s m oT Lord Tedder, mashat of the R.A.F and Ike's" second-m-command during the Invasion of Europe. The ceremony took place in the ancient, 800-year-old chapel of St. Margaret's, Edinburgh Castle, Scotland. This picture makes photographic history, being the first photo of any ceremony ever taken Inside the tiny chapel. Photo shows, left to right: Gen. Elsenhower, Very Rev. Dr. L. Warr. who officiated at the ceremony; Lord Tedder of the RJV.F., and Lady Tedder holding the baby during the christening ceremony. ooooooo&aaamscHJooocKiiiooa Whifflets From The Waterfront ooaooooDoaoQ-aooooocKKiooo In a recent fall while visiUng his old command, the steamer Prince Rupert at Vancouver, Capt. Neil MacLean, veteran skipper of Canadian National Coast Steamships from which service he retired last year, sustained serious and painful fractures as a result of which lie has been in hospital for the past six weeks. Recovery, although slow. Is steady and it is expected he will be able to leave hospltai for home soon. Capt. MacLean, who could not bear to live a life of Inactivity after so many years at sea, had been skipper of a Vancouver harbor vessel since his retirement from the CNR. NEW LOW PRICES 12 toblcli Uc 24 laW.I. 2?e 100 tabltti 79e Genuine Aspirin is A MARKED THIS WAY MOTT ELECTRIC (Prince Rupert, LIMITED ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS Commercial - Industrial Marine Electricians Home Wiring and Repairs Phone Black (J7 236 Second Avenue West Still Talking Watches... If ever we were able to WATCH you to YOUR satisfaction ... it is now. We won't say anything about the cheaper grades not this time. But starting at $17.50, and up to almost any price within reason this store is certainly in a position to talk watches. THE .WORLD'S STANDARD MAKES ONLY-ONLY MOVEMENTS THAT WE WILL GUARANTEE. Beatuiful styles, accuracy checked by our electronic Svatchmaster'. Briefly that is our watch argument. COME IN AND HAVE A LOOK His numerous . friend here wtl! regret to learn of hia mlsfor-j tunc. j Department of Transport an nounces that a new light has been established on Buliy Island, Ogden Channel. The light la a group flash, white, and is The dally newspaper advertisements of a farmer's market in a western U.S. centre draw over 250 letters every week. if 4s Geo. I J. Dawes The Auctioneer Sales Every Saturday WE SELL EVERYTHING Goods Sold On Commission Household Sales Conducted at Your Convenience FURNITURE AND HOUSEHOLD GOODS WRAPPED, PACKED AND CRATED Estimates Given Free PRINCE RUPERT AUCTION MART (Opposite Civic Centre Bldg.) PHONES: "n Ph'0 t O Res. Rpd Ak for Oeorge LETTERBOX WANTS HOCKEY Editor, Dally News Laat Saturday niTil every hockey fan in Prince Rupart v.aitcd preathlsssly for the open-tiv-; came broadcast from Maple jiff Gardens, Toronto. It never came. At leasts not through Cr ?R. Luckily, CBR Vancouver c:.nie through fairly clearly but H v on't-fc? like that every Sat urday night. j f The following nbi-so-startllirj Information was received from the ruby lips of one of our own announcers' "We don't carry uinierclal programs except by pr 'ia! arrangement." Evidently hese special arrangements were mnaged during the 1945-40 Iwclcey "Reason: What is necessary to bring about a revival of h o s e -special arrangements" ;ow? Will letters to the CBC, To: unto, do any good? A few w;:rds from someone In author-ii y at CFPR would enlighten us no end. Lately we've been hearing a program entitled "Box Seats-ftl.50" vyhlch describes the great treat CBC listeners are getUng . . . fine entertainment for only $2.50 the price of a radio license. Well, I've paid my radio license and I want to hear the Saturday nlfht hockey games. A lot of other people feel the same way. i How about it, CFPR? -HOCKEY FAN." LEEDS. Eng., 0) Work has been resumed after a five-year break on the new $800 000 Central Blnrfe at Leeds University. NEURALQI'A Don't let the pitileas pain of Neuralgia prrvrnt you (rom enjoying lite. Get fa at. afe rtlit f with T-K-l '. niccially made to relieve you quickly .f piercing, tubbing pain and dull, throbbing ache. Cxxti aim for Khum.itic, Arthritic, NVuritic l'ain and Stiff nt. Sciatica, Lumbago. (let a box today 50c, $ t at druggists. T-4 1 New DRESSES and COATS ARRIVING CALL IN A.ND SEE THEM Take your cue from our latest skilful Interpretations of FALL. AMI) WINTER STYLUS IIUY ON BUDGET' PLAN No Carrying Charges No Interest. Terms In accordance with W.P.T.U. Regulation! Steamship Service from PRINCE RUPERT to OCEAN FALLS WESTVIEW (Powell River) VANCOUVER Thursday at 11:15 p.m. to KETCHIKAN Wednesday Midnight FARES and INFORMATION at CITY TICKET OFFICE 528 Third Avenue and DEPOT TICKET OFFICE LINDSAY'S CARTAGE & STORAGE Established 1910 LIMITED FURNITURE AND HOUSEHOLD GOODS PACKED, CRATED, STORED AND SHIPPED TO ALL PARTS OF CANADA AND U.S.A. FOR QUICK, EFFICIENT, CAREFUL AND RELIABLE SERVICE Phone LINDSAY'S 60 or 68 IMIip toffee ' You fnnnT .k with layers of . 1 " COitOn Lin. , i- ""mate the el current-,hat,S,,okeepitotheti only where if It vl-io.i J This is onlv nnp r . .u. ; . iiiousana iaitJ cotton uses Which mn . . n think about. But all these use, J fini-.l to ffmi. . U... : . . . uui - " " 'u' u wona-wide. Tn inlra rt .1. t. .1 ... I ... ... me inn our null, nA I DOMINION TEXTILE COM LIMITED Cum PnJueliM AH Dm,uie .m lU,mi.l: MA60C fASUST FAIIICS . COlOKIil SHmS.fil ADVERTISING IN THE DAILY NEWS BRINGS Wm. F. Fram OPTOMETRIST OF VANCOUVER TO VISIT IMUNCK RUPEB Announcement is made that William optometrist, will visit this city Novembrr l-'l Mr. Francks is president ot the Optical Co., C05 Dunsmuir Street Vi. ri enjoys a wide and successful crz::'.;:t 1 He will brin? with him to I'rinct Kupd Ophthalmic Diagnostic unit and will tuzi prescribe lenses if they are needed. Mr. Francks will be at Hotel ITinte Rupl ments can be made at Hotel. KW.ONO SANG H1NO HOP KEE CHOP SUEY HOUSE 612 7th AVE. WEST (Next to King Tal All your patronage welcome Open S p.m. to 2 ajn. Outside Orders from 2 pjn to 2 a.m PHONE RED 241 CENTRA Weekly and.1! for vour i NEWLY I Transitu! In Cod LICENSED I m.nmm m" chonI V Si'' COASTAL CHARTER SERVICE .in -j n - isn MONDAYS Vancouver to Prince fi, TUESDAYS Prince Rupert to Vancomc lotte Islands. Rupert WEDNESDAYS Vancouver to Prwce Charlotte Islands. ,tewart and THURSDAYS Prince Rupert to Anyox, Alice Arm and Request P mmivs-Prlnre RuDert to Vancouver CHARTERS AIJJGlo SPECIAL W I PASSENGERS ANUFI JEIG 3 Types and Sixes of AIKtiK". ,j From 3 to 18 Passengers, or 480 103. G. II. STANBIunGRjiS. ni n In MTtKJ, liUX