Dally Edition THE DAILY NEWS Prince Rupert Tuesday. March 20, 1945 Published every afternoon except Sun day by Prince Rupert DaUy News Limited, Third Avenue, Prince Rupert. British Columbia Q. A. HUNTER, Managing Editor. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: By City Carrier, per week Per Month Per Tear . ' By Mall. perm6nlh Per Year ' .40 4.00 HYDE TRANSFER Dry Slabwood. per cord .... $10 Dry Poplar, per cord ..$12.50 Sawdust, per sack 15c PHONE 580 Commercial Janitors' Supplies ' t Floor Soaps Wax Sweeping Compound ; Brooms Brushes -.Paper Towels Cups ' Ifbtel and Restaurant Supplies IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ; Prince Rupert Supply House 330 2nd Ave. Phone 032 MEMBER ABC. ion In Early Summer . . . "Shortly after the Parliamentary term expires April 17" which was given as the. time for the general election in the Speech from the Throne, read at the opening of Parliament in Ottawa yesterday, will be taken to mean early summer since the time required between the issuance of the election writ and the actual date of polling will extend the possible date that long. In any case we are assured now that, war or no war, the election is not to le much further delayed. It might have been desiralJe in some ways to have been able to defer the election campaign until at least the end of the European phase of the war, early victory in which seems assured, was over. However, the political situation, mainly due to the activities of the opposition, has become such that it is necessary to clear the atmosphere. The government, therefore, whatever its own prospects for a return to office may be, is amply justified in bringing on the campaign. Hitler's Latest Duty . . . There have been numerous rumors of the activities the past little while of the doomed Adolf Hitler. The latest that he is endeavouring to provide himself with an heir to carry on the battle in the next generation lias as much claim to fact as any of the others, we suppose. It somehow or other may not seem to fit in with what we might have been expecting the great Fuehrer to be doing at this hour of his Reich's mortal crisis. Put any strange thing from Hitler now may not be unexpected. Hernay be able to produce, an heir but some one else will decide whether the heir carries on Hitlerism of the brand we are engaged in UNITY BEGINS WITH "U" We all realize, now, that we must have unity between the United Nations if we are to win this war and prevent another. But do we realize that we cannot have unity between the nations without unity within them? Unity docs not mean that we must all think alike. It ;does mean that we must respect the thoughts and rights of others, and that we must be prepared to stick together. Unity, like charity, begins at home! What you and I sav over the hack fence mii.tlnllpri Outlooli For Post-war . j . Business may look fpryar'd to an era of record peacetime sales, profits and dividends in the post-war, j$ the considered opinion of one of the oldest investment advisory organization. He-conversion problems will be muunicipalities; IJ. Accumulation of "peace inventories" by industrial corporations, and expansion of plant facilities for civilian production; 1. Formation of new enterprises; f). Continued farm prosperity: G. Revival of building activity;' ' 7. Heavy exports. Combined, these factors are esti Meet Me at . . . JOHNNY'S JOHNNY'S SNACK BAR (Our Coffee Is Tops) J. L. CURRY CHIROPRACTOR If pain Chiropractic I If nervex doubly 6ol Smith Block Green 995 1 2Gth day of February. A D. 1945. I was appointed' Administrator of the Kftiaie oi jonn zoeas. deceased, ana all parties having claims against th falii estate are hereby required to furnish same, properly verified. ti . me on or before the 10th day of ' April, A D. 1045, and all parties In dented to the said Estate are re. quired to pay the amount of their inuenu-nnesH 10 me iorinwun. DATED at Prince, Rupert. B.C., this 10th day of March. A D. 1045. NORMAN A. WATT. Official Administrator, Prlnre Rupert, no. KWONG SANO III NO HOP KF.E CHOP SUEY HOUSE 612 7th AVE. WEST (Next to King Tal) All your patronage welcome Open 5 p.m. to 2 a.m. Outside Orders from 2 p.m. to 2 a.m. PHONE RED 247 TERRACE BOARD ik -I A II SCORES NEEDLESS. Ya 1 1 All BAiVhK Y TERRACE, March 20 A pro- : test against the alleged Inability i of G. N. Maclnnes, Terrace baker or.ned his business. The com-ptofVit was lodged by George Me-AdrJis, who urged that the Board Nlake action In behalf of a new touslness that Is experienc ing difficulty in Increasing volumeV of production. its ! POT-WAR AIRCRAFT i inunfJN 0 Second commer mated to go a long way toward taking ;panV( Ltd.. t aeronautical engln- un the s ack created bv t ie nrosnec-leers, described it as a fast tive wide drop in government Courlesy in Business . . . 'The other lump is going to the boys, Sir," is the way a waiter on one train sweetened his explanation of the restriction on sugar. "Don't you know there's a war on?" was what another snapped out when meekly asked if a second pat of butter was available. Of course, the reaction to these replies would be a lasting impression. Even under the pressure of an all-out w'ar effort which has been affecting everyone who waits on the public in f by what all Canadians like us are saying that ts public 'pinion. , Are we personally building or breaking down unity? ;Do we like to pick holes In our fellow citizens who go to liferent churches, belong to different races, believe In dif-rent political creeds? Do we like to repeat funny (but malicious) stories .about the nrltlsh, the Americans, the Russians and our other allies? Ottawa, Washington, London, Moscow cannot make us united unless we trulv w-inr. in ho Mot nne nrn rrrmmc xQr people- you and me multiplied. We are a democracy, i It's up to us. Unity begins with "U." "THE MEN'S STORE" any way, many business people are not! overlooking the importance of con- Uniting to extend courtesy to their cus tomers even when they have been racked to provide them with goods and services. They realize that a wartime policy of courtesy and pleasantry will pay off in post-war dividends just as discourtesy and impatience at this time will mean loss of patronage anil deficits after the war is over and it will be necessary to cultivate a clientele! again. Some business peopleare already oiling then cash registers with FOUR YBARS AfiO IN THIS WAR By the Canadian Prew March 20, 1941 Plymouth subjected to the worst air raid of the war to date. Belgrade re-; ported the British had landed f "great numbers" of troops at Salonika. .Yugoslav Council approved an agreement with the Axis but refused to allow troop passage through the country. TIMBER FOR ARMY . TABORA, Tanganyika f This former German colonny, now a British mandate, has supplied some 40,000 tons of timber mainly railway ties for military use lnce 1041. IN THE SUPREME COURT OF uitnisii (xji.uudia IN WIOHATE IN THE MATTER OP THE "ADMINISTRATION ACT" and IN THE MATTER OP THE ESTATE OF JOHN ZOOA8. DECEASED INTESTATE TAKE NOTICE that by order of Ills Honnr. W R. Plshpr mnrip nn fl.n transAtlantlcplane. Nearly ready for service 1.4 Tudor II, which range df the Tudor I. Advertise In ,thc for Results. Dally New.? i f vl - Sr Important I to get sufficient rationed goods i Mall IS munitions of war. Just i tn nnpratp his hakerv is heine as essential as tanks. Runs and seriOUS, but tne business decline re- lodged with the RAtion Admin- airplanes, Mrs. E. 0. Weeks of Stilting Will not Snowball into a mavior '.strator by the Terrace and Dls- i Ottawa told the local Women's ,ln.,.oe! ..nnivlinn- tn it ,.nii;t?nV trict Board of Trade. Mr. Mac- 'Canadian Club last evening tn ,m' .: v?i: ...:n d ifnnes complained to the Board speaking on the subject of stepped and turned around by a mini-'ber of recovery forces that will bperatt .nifnni.ntiVnllv such as at a recent meeting that he was not allowed sufficient materials particularly sugar, on grounds that the administrator desired 1 1. L,onsiunti Consumer lnivinrr nuyinj, to to fill nil deferred cieiuiui rerrace merchants t0 continue buy,ng takety products from Wants; i Vancouver. Prince George and 2. Purchases 1)V government and (Edmonton, as they did before he overseas. The Fighting Man and His Mall." After describing graphically j what mail meant In keeping up 4 I, .... I -t .. nM, nt IKa ! LI1C aJll.U UUU IIIUIUI Ul bill men who were fighting overseas, Mrs. Weeks exhorted her listeners to keep writing and sending parcels until every Can -1 adian fighting man was back home again. The Importance of I making the mail cheerful and the parcels secure and, above i all, careful direction was em phasized by Mrs. Weeks. She advocated, as sUe has been doing elsewhere, the formation of a local volunteer overseas mall committee to encourage the i rial alniaft to be developed : ending of mall of better quality 8. And the exploitation of new pro-1 from the Lancaster bomber, the ! ana greater quantity to uv ...tn (jncs iTunor 1 win oc intruuucra curing ine'cuiiiiiiB summer, ui- Ificials of A. V. Roe and Com Mrs. Weeks explained Uiat she had been Inspire dto take up the campaign on behalf of the fighting; man and hiv mail by havii g THIS AND THAT "The maestro t?ot tired of the disparaging lemarks t made about piano legal" his mail The Past Office d? partment wa.s doing a magnifi- ! cent Job. knowing what his let- herself observed the deplorably , nt1r, ,rrpU mnnt ... ,h(. great quantity of mail which i .,,. mn ,PPn im. 68 .Is much failed to reach the men to whom carrying passengers avoldab,e deiays and loSfies but nbout ,t,. (,crlam, Mrs. Wccks multiply bv .ii.1 minion You've often watched the teller stamp your cheque. Every day, in ever)' branch of every bank in Canada, cheques arc being scrutinized, stamped and recorded. During the war years, this daily flow of cheques through your bank has swollen to a torrent. Deposit accounts arc more numerous and active than ever before. This increase reflects the tremendous activity of Canadian life and business. Production, purchases and payrolls have all reached record levels. In addition three-quarters .of ? a -million men and women in the armed services must get their pay, and their dependents receive allowances regularly., g The handling of this - wartime-volume of cheques is quite apart from numerous special, services which the banks have undertaken the delivery of millions of Victory Bonds and the sale of countless War Savings Certificates; ration coupon banking; subsidy payments to . producers; foreign exchange operations! Yet all this extra Work has been carried out at a time when new help has had to be trained to take the place of more than 8,500 bank workers now in uniform. Thl"t ' A4 vt r fTi m nl Ii SpontoreJ by your Bank "A vast quantity of mall falls to roar!- ih men for whom it Is Intended owing to misdirection p.nd it le up to the leaders In each community to do something ; larger DUt raa nui mc mag n waa utsum-u wtauac oi wiuiib ., mallln ivihllp Hunlf m .nncu (Vf ii, . r.. ,.u addressing and Improper wrap-! responsible for many delays and Clubs might lake the lead In Mrs. Weeks told of having seen 12,000 parcels nt Christmas mall falling of delivery on account of faulty addressing and other avoidable causes. She spoke of some of the commodities which were sent In the mall such as perishable food commodities, yrups. Jam, fruit, etc. which not only did not travel themselves but damaged other mall as well. "Use your head ai well as your heart when Mending mall overseas." she advised, cmphaslinsr the lmMrtance of careful, solid packing and effective and accurate addressing. The men oversea needed mall from friends as well as faml- Purity, Accuracy, Dependability M' Price jj You are en,oy ta' NAVAL D CanadianRer "M(s a r. and JIUrrhuelon,N Advance ai( Mr t f nlra.:e 0 nru Oii,c(- Men $i h lies. M friends innrt tMtn i-l; ..U ,.i . These nre our watchwords in filling prescriptions!.: And while every piescrlptlon Isn't a mallei of life or death, we fill It a though It were. We use only (Willi "01 mnima DC i'-!i;r:r,KM was a bu.-. a.,, 'w great t)ii( . and often tfn ... j. portuulty h) WH, The imufM'a'.O' i. , a -..u-i.s u., cm, .speaker. T mean horn Rotten. Ti The only link which the n,or '"n? 'W,Ung j The mm movement. clve man had with home was thought and care be avoided. ;, hould be ; undue wor. tne purest and nnest quamy uruF V 'lif t. Gilds' " iii'wll ' '' ; if j -- be i caws kiKji! .m the way t. v, , prM cau mr ij i, i n- lav; timr ltvi the --IK'.iki : .. UiC' ll 'tl ! I, (reatrif oi h.i uli'U'.nit. ,1-1 an 1 1 1 1 1 j i ' ' seventy ft was h'-ld .' ?;! presided i, it Fra.-;er. 4.:c jjri -i ir i' of the nrfMireU Doi.nt I T r.-. i avv.i pt..'iic y sua CIYE! your dollars generously in response to the 1915 Red Cross Appeal. JONES FAMILY MARKET W irccl.slon accuracy. Our reputation years of expert reliable compoundlnT Ormes W 35 Jhonecr DruQff'3" .in n nnl. Open Dally from 0 a.m " ,.jp' . I nM l'J.V II 111 and eomP Hiinoays nna nouoays ir - " TUB! 111,'VAt T BTnK INDUSTRIAL & MARINE WE nEPAIU ANYTIUNO Genenil Itepaii'H to nil Automotive an Equipment Body Work ' Cummins .Diesel nnclnes Agents for KW ,,-est C"- " Fill ul Wlllard Ilatterles lw" Home Oil rmduct-s ACRTYLKNR AND AHC WFXDINO Phone 450 tlox 1390 ...... vrw ft