ar or ml rap X I M V i PAGE SIX THE DAILY NEWS prince Rupert, B.C. Thursday. August 2, 1945 u u n u u u u u You'll be holding the Right Bag... In Terrace . . . THE Skeena Mercantile G. McADAMS, Trop. SELF-SERVE GROCERY DRY GOODS - LADIES' WEAR A Modern Dept.Store . WE WELCOME TOURISTS 1 P y.- BAGS SCARVES ACCESSORIES 5 For - - ! s PEOPLES STORE QlllllllllBBIIIBBIBBIIllllBBIHflllBllll EARLY NEWS IS WELCOME Local news items, to ensure publication, should be in the office by 10 am. Contributors are asked to bear this in mind. Items of social and personal interest are always welcome. TOURISTS "S KEEN A BRIDGE CAMP" One mile East of Terrace Box 13 Terrace, B.C. Vitamin Enriched Bread The Choice of Many, Who Know the Best! TERRACE BAKERY & CONFECTIONERY Home of Quality Products BOX 206 TERRACE, B.C. DISPLAYS HER PIANO SKILL To the delight of members of the Gyro Club and their guests, including the ladies, Mrs. Marie Balagno Lundquist, displayed her interpretative and technical accomplishments as an outstanding pianist at a brief luncheon recital yesterday. Her number? were Villa Lobos "Cardboard Cat" and "Pollchmille," Casella's "Bolero," Poulenc's "Tc-catto" and a Gershwin "Prelude." Appreciation was tangibly expressed with Dr. R. G. Large, on behalf of the club, presenting Mrs. Lundquist with a beautiful bouquet. In addition to the guest of honor and Gyro members, others present included Dr. and Mrs. H. L. Alexander of Vancouver, Mrs. W. J. Scott, Mrs. Annette Woods, Mrs. G. L. Rorie. Mrs. R, G. Large, Mrs. Jens Munthe, Mrs. C. P. Balagno. Mrs G A Hunter, Mrs. James Parker, Andy McNaugh-ton, C. H. Orme, Capt. Robert Orme, Pilot Officer Eric Orme and Glen Harvey of Vancouver. Dr. J. J. Gibson, president of the club, was in the chair. Advertise in The Daily News. TERRACE Transfer&Taxi Storage WE MEET ALL TRAINS SERVICE TO ANY POINT IN THE' DISTRICT (H. SMITH) P.O. Box 167 TERRACE TERRACE MACHINE SHOP AND GARAGE W. C. Osborne V. Imhoff A. M. Williams Expert Repairs on all makes of cars Reconditioning Motors Tractors Road Equipment Machine Work. Diesel Acetylene and Electric Welding BOX 202 TERRACE, B.C. Dibb Printing Company OFFICE SUPPLIES PRINTING BOOKBINDING STATIONERY BIRTHDAY AND EVERYDAY CARDS WATERMAN'S FOUNTAIN PENS. Besner Block, 3rd Street Phone 234 BONDED ROOFERS PRINCE RUPERT ROOFING CO. and Sheetmctal Works Bheetmetal work of all kinds Air Conditioning Tanks Sinks Eavestrough & Furnace Work Prompt attention to outside orders FREE ESTIMATES WORK GUARANTEED Cor. 7th St. & 2nd Ave. W. P.O. Box 725 Phone Blue 964 1 Reconstruction Apices Are Needed Ontario's Re-establishment Institute Trains Servicemen in Numerous Trades with Emphasis On Young; Veterans TORONTO, Aug. 2 Q To former members of tha i armed services to begin life anew with the best possible training, ' the Ontario government, work-j ing in close co-operation wit'. I the Dominion government, ha: j established a huge training ant? I re-establishmcnt institute hers I with the present trickle of gra-, duates soon expected to become I a steady stream. , The institute, which is expected to aqt a$ a mcdel for similar ventures by other provincial governments assisted by federal authorities is operated under the auspices of two departments in the Ontario governmenteducation under Pre mier George Drew and planning and development under Hon. Dana Porter. The Dominion's interest in the scheme has been assigned to the training bcanch of the department of labor. In operation only a few months the institute has been particularly des'sned to aid servicemen who enlisted directly from secondary schools and those who had no steady employment or knowledge of some trade. Veterans may obtain training in vocational, tutorial or commercial classes upon authorization by the Department of Veterans' Affairs. The Institute has capacity for training approximately 2.CC0 persons but at present about 1,000 former servicemen and women have taken advantage of the school's opportunities. Of this group 650 have enrolled in classes to obtain commercial degrees or matriculation standing for entrance to university. Little Interest In Building Trades Institute and government officials are concerned ever the lack of interest shown by discharged servicemen in the building trades. "The courses in these trades are going to be rigidly controlled so that the market won't be flooded with too many men," said Mr. Porter. "One of our greatest needs in the reconstruction period will be for men skilted in the building trades and we are trying to induce men to take training in these courses." The building grades comprise nine designated trades, and by an arrangement with the Ontario Apprenticeship Board, at the end of a three-year apprenticeship, the worker will qualify for a salary amounting to SO to 63 per cent of a journeyman's wages. "Previous experience may enable a man to start as a four-year apprentice enabling him to cam 80 per cent of a journeyman's wages." said a school offi cial. "And the institute's inter-en in the men does not cease when he leaves. Government officials see that they obtain proper treatment where they are employed. They must work un- KWONG SANG HING HOP KEE CHOP SUEY HOUSE 612 7th AVE. WEST (Next to King Tal) All your patronage welcome Open 5 pjn. to 2 sua. Outside Orders from 2 p.m. to 2 a.m. PHONE RED 247 I' t s. HoKA,ocsg 13TH BOOK Hir&a&i if Hachinohc . AlutaS SVorioka 3r riOxLiiU vScndai F H0NSHU .PACIFIC OCEAN I JAPAN I j , O 50 ICO 200 ALLIED TARGETS The map of the central Japanese home island of Honshu shows Tokyo and great Nipponese Industrial cities which have been announced as the targets for Allied aerial and naval strafing. der mechanics and tradesmen after leaving and be taught the advance work of their trade They cannot be made "odd-jobs " men. Tiie nine designated trades are: carpentry, bricklaying, stone masonry, sheet metal, plumbing, painting and decorating, steam fitting, electrical construction and plastering. In addition, courses are also given in motor mechanics, mechanical and architectural drafting, barber-ins, hairdressing, cabfnet making, radio technology and repair, stationary engineering and tool and die making. Officials are attempting to arouse interest among former members of the womens services to take the hairdressing course for which thousands of dollars were spent recently in purchasing ' the latest equipment. In the near ruture the institute expects to open a one-year course in watch repairing as well as classes in air conditioning, graphic arts, embracirv? linotype, handsetting. machine setting and bookbinding: welding and iron work: dress designing: plastics; cooking and baking and handicraft work. In other key centres throughout the province the Ontario government has made arrangements for certain courses to be taught. In Ottawa, classes in hairdressing and machinist work will be given: in Haileybury, mining, and in Hamilton matriculation standing can t3 obtained as well as trades training in the Army Trades School there. Hotel... arrivals Piince Rupert L. Lightstone. Vancouver; Major and Mrs. W. B. Harvey, Van couver; Dr. John Haffle; Mrs. A. Cou'ldwell and daughter. Pa cific; J. D. Livingstone, Wind sor. Ont.: J. A. Sullivan and A. M. Richmond, Vancouver; Miss K. Reynolds, Lethbridge; Mrs. W. Goheen, Smlthers; Miss R. G. Wood and Miss M. A. Hodgios. Winnipeg; L. N. Harvey. Vancouver; R. II. M. Lobb, Victoria. BIRMINGHAM, Ehg Air raids against this city killed 2,241 people and damaged or destroyed 140,336 houses, 2,365 fac tories and workshops and 654 public buildings, it has been re vealed. There were 3,010 per 'sons seriously injured. Briefs From Britain By the Canadian Press FOLKESTONE, Eng., 0 A teaspoon chained to the counter in a. services canteen here is to be presented to the Folkestone museum. During the last four years it was used to stir 2,031,-033 cups of tea. LONDON, a A provincial newspaper received the following letter from a woman subscriber: "Dear Sirs: please send the account for settlement and cancel all further Insertions of 1 a my advertisement for a large unfurnished room wanted. After four weeks their has been only one response; from a luntatlc who offered to let me have his room In an asylum." WORCESTER, Eng., O: A major and a private who each lost his right thumb in the fighting in Germany had the index finger of the same hand transferred to the position of the i missing thumb. The rare and difficult operation, restoring the soldiers' grip, was performed at the Ministry of Pensions hospital at Ronkswood near here. LONDON, P The largest picture belonging to the National Gallery, the 13-foot- square Charles I by Vandyck, is bad: In London from Its hiding place in North Wales. The painting was removed before the war and stored in caves in Wales along with 2,000 other gems from the gallery. CANTERBURY, Eng., 0 Sev-enty-fcur year old Miss Julia SmirtiMjroke her teg while working in the garden and crawled fcr an hour to reach a telephone to summon help. , LONDON, O Lt.-Col. Stewart Inglis Howard-One3, M.C., who was in command of amphibious "Buffaloes" for the Rhine River crossing Marrfh 24, has been awarded the D.S.O. for his "meti culous preparation and brilliant organization" of that assault. None of Col. Howard-Ones' craft were lost in the crossing. IS SUCCESS Elizabeth Goudge, Writer of -Green Dolphin Street," Leads Quirt Lire LONDON, Aug. 2 Q Elizabeth Goudge hardly ever goes to the movies yet she expects to make at least $125,000 frcm a single film based on her best-selling novel, "Green Dolphin Street " The daughter c a canon whose bounty far outran his income she lives quietly, almost shyly, with her mother in Devonshire. She j receives many visitors these days, more than ever before, and among them are numerous ser- ! vlcemen. ! Money that would represent a j fortune to most people Is hers now, but her head is so far frcm being turned that the measure 'of her desires Is to see a little of the world that she knows chiefly through other eyes, and to fit I out a special work-study which "I can have all to myself." I Miss Goudge at 18 wrote her ! first book, a story for children i called "The Fairy's Bab y." "Green Dolphin Street," was her thirteenth book "and to think that I was always superstitious," she says Sitting amid chintz and dres-den, the tallish, spare-of-figure 45-year old Elizabeth de Beau-champ Goudge returned again and again to the theme. "I can't realize yet .that all this is really true! She meant, of course, the way a book guild in the United States acclaimed "Green Dol- i phin Street" as the book of the year In 1944, and her winning of j the Louis B. Meyer prize of some $120,000. She Is Not j A Film Fan "It's odd, though," she said, i "I never thought of writing for the films. I know so little about them, and practically never go j to them. Still, I imagine that I there are many scenes in the j book that will film well." I From her mother, a Channel isianaer, Eiizaoeth Goudge. as child, learned the knack of telling stories, the old fable and folklore of Guernsey. Forty years later she has been able to make gocd use of that skill and of that knowledge. For the story of "Green Dolphin Street" is set first in the Channel Islands in the middle of the last century, shifts to New Zealand, and then is brought back to the islands. "My daughter has been getting a lot of attention lately," the mother said, "and I am. not saying that It isn't deserved. I am delighted that she has been so successful as a writer, but what I'm most proud of is that Elizabeth is a good cook, a really good cook." In April, 1939, Miss Goudge's father died. For 16 years he had been canon of Christ Church in Oxford. Constant generosity had drained the family's resources and mother and daughter could no longer afford to live In Ox ford. Therefore, in September of that year, while the war was starting, these two went to tiny Westerland, where they built a small wooden bungalow and called It Providence Cottage. Four hours a day Miss Goudge works" at a little desk in her bedroom in a rather cramped space for a writer needing plenty of elbow room. She hepes that soon it will be replaced by a study of her own. The final note re-emphas!zed her eagerness to travel. "I should very much like to go j to America," she said. Buy War Savings Stamps ELIO'S FURNITURE STORE PRINCE RUPERT, B.C. The store to buy BABY CARRIAGES BABY CRIBS BABY HIGH CHAIRS COAL and WOOD HYDE TRANSFER PHONE 580 BARR & ANDERSON LIMITED Plumbing and Heating Automatic Sprinkling and Coal Stokers Corner 2nd Ave. and 4th St. Phone Red 389 P.O. Box 1294 TODAY 'til SATURDAY JUDY GARLAND ...more beautiful than. evert Sweet MARGARET O'BRIEN ...more appealing s(f ROMANCE.., . WjN (P COMEDY. SONGS! PlEIT ME I dm GARLAND (Sirfini 'Iht TSOLlEY S0NG"! HmZ O'BRIEN MARY ASTOR LUCILLE BREMER TOM DRAKE t. . MARJORIt MAIN1 Show Times :00 - 2:53 - 4:59 7:05 - 9:11 Jig man ever! AN M.G.M HIT IN il r PAIUM01XI CANADIAN NEWS Enplfiil ANNOUNCING RUPERT RADIO & ELECT! Open for Business August 1 EXPERT RADIO SERVICE BATTERIES SILEX LAMPS - etc. OPEN 9:00 AAI. TO 6:00 PAL 313 THIRD AVE. WEST : PHONE HI Free Delivery Throughout the City MONDAY WEDNESDAY FRIDAY To East Section TUESDAY THURSDAY SATURDAY To West Section FROM 2 TO 5 PJJ. Kindly give us your order before 12 o'clock noon daili your delivery day. We serve Special Red Brand Beef. All choicest , fresh-and cooked meat fresh vegetables and fruits complete line of groceries. TERMS CASH, ALL PRICED FOR ECONOMY ; RUPERT BUTCHERS PHONE 21 THIRD AVE. W. J. L. CURRY CHIROPRACTOR If pain Chiropractic I If nerves doubly sol Smith Block Green 995 Fresh Local Raw! Pasteurized MlUj VALENTIN DAIB.T PHONE 657 RUPERT BRAND : : SMOKED :: BLACK COD : Canadian Fish AND Cold Storage COMPANY LIMITED PRINCE RUPERT, B.C.