Pi. II N a o! N-pi W tl. ill Pi vl m ri tl O) t! n t a B B B B PAGE SIX toe daily NEWS Prince Rupert, B.C. M B m a a B M u a m a a SLAO SUITS FOR YOUR LABOR DAY PLEASURE AT Peoples Store of course WOULD MOVE FROM TEXAS San Antonio Man Looking for Suitable Dairy Location in This District The Pacific -Northwest having. :won the heart of his 22-year old son who Is with th United States Navy. Waid Scott Willis of San Antonio, Texas, writes to ;the Dally News of his intention of moving, now that the war Is .'over, to Central British Columbia to establish a dairy business. His son will come first to check over the district between Prince Rupert and Prince George to decide upon a suitable location. Mr. Willis recently wrote to the Dally News seeking information Which was given and which seems to have further intrigued his interest. He now writes; "We own and run a grade A dairy IGGBBDIIIBIIIBIIIBB' m s mmmn 1 filler Advertise in The Dally News. . It Coaxes The Best Out of Any Pipe Ari'LY WANTED Able-bodied men, willing workers for cold storage and fish floor work. Have steady work for capable men. Can also use some casual labor. Canadian Fish AND Cold Storage COMPANY LIMITED PRINCE RUPERT. B.C. eSissisisr ..Then Instal a new . . . WINSLOW OIL CONDITIONER WINSLOW oil conditioners moisture, acid, carbon and remove grit leaving sludge g JSv varnish V?' ' lubricating qualities of your oil WiMCnwC0TPlelC St.Ck f SLOW filters WINSLOW as well as replacement cartridges to fit other makes ol AS WE ADVISE . B E PENNY WISE -Window Sw'( ,E f ARKER LIMITED Automotive Distributor for Northern DC 170 E. 3rd Ave. Prtnce Rupert. B.C. rhon'e 83 2 M7 g riBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBaBBBBBBBBBBBBBBlBBBBI? farm here (at San Antonio) one of the best farms of its size In the state. We plan to enter thac kind of work there if we can locate suitable land. Our hope is to locate as close to one of the Princes (Rupert - George) as is consistent with reasonably-priced land land suitable from rain and water standpoints for dairying. Terrace seems quite a distance but maybe there will be the opportunity to ship whole milk from that distance. "We are four my wife, my daughter, my son and myself and we are interested 1 munity where the Scotch and English predominate. We are Scotch," writes Mr. Willis who tells of the Interest ne has maintained in keeping up Scottish 1 "aauions, naving been for years , chief of one of t he largest Caledonia clubs in the state of Texas. ews and Views of the District MAIN STREET BUILDINGS AT SMITHERS RISING FROM ASHES SMITHERS, Aug. 29-The sound of saw and hammer resounds on thp mnin srrppi- nf cmni,,. umiiiicis itft i. j. t .11 , V . contractors Bovill and Hann have assembled all the carpenters available tn rush v wun iux lllV various store buildings which . will replace those that were destroyed by fire durincr the nast war. Tfc ieutu store Duncung nas reached an advanced stage of construc tion, while the Heeeie restaur ant building and the Elliott shoe uore building are now getting well along. George Wall has assembled material ready to start at the corner of Main and Broadway Avenue and hopes to get started on the erection of a laree. new and up-to-date garage building ai an eany date. This building will replace the one that was destroyed by fire on the same site. Art Simpson has built himself new private garage on the corner of First Avenue ,ind Queen Street while John Bnvin has also built a large private garage on Frist Avenue. William Bovill is buildine a new house for himself on Al fred Street. . Much of the lumber being used In the construction of these buildings is produced locallv nnri Is being planed by a planer op erating on Main Street close to the buildings using the material. LAST RITES AT TERRACE If. L. Mcintosh Laid to Final Rest Yesterday Afternoon TERRACE. Ausust 29 OhP- quies for the late R. L. Mffintnsh yesterday afternoon were marked by beautiful summer weather The rites took place at the Angli can Church. The service war conducted by the Bishnn of nnie. donia, friend of the deceased tor many years who came here especially for the occasion. The church was well filled. The building Is small but quite beautiful within. Mr. Mcintosh had worked In the church at Terrace in the years gone by. The Bishop spoke at some length of the excellent oualitips and consistent fidelity of the Jue ivxr, MCimosn and feeling reference to the widow and to the empty chair In that house. Rev. Roland Hills, Anglican rector of Terrace, assisted. The casket was conveyed to the beautiful burial ground on the hill near Terrace from which pot may be surveyed much of r.ne locality and especially Mr. Mcintosh's summer home where the deceased spent much time working In his landscape garden. Funeral director wa w a Kirkpatrick. C.N.R. Trains for flip I'tiEf D&llV Mppnt. Qnnrfav Kroni the Last Daily except Monday 8 p.m. 10:4S p.m. "A . .111. Smithers Marks Decoration-Day Parade and Service to Honor Memory of Service Men SMITHERS, August 29 The annual Decoration Day parade of the Bulkley Valley branch, Canadian Legion, was held here on Sunday afternoon when members of the branch, tozethpr with other veterans and ex-service men, gathered at the Legion Hall and proceeded to the Soldier's Cemetery where the gravy of eterans were decorated profusely with the many flowers that naci been provided for the occasion and a service was conducted. A large number of people had gathered for the occasion and Rev. E. V. Bird of Hazelton conducted the service, delivering an excellent address. The parade was marshalled by' L. H. Kenney. president of the local branch, and an impressive parade of the veterans headed by two standard bearers slow-marched around the graves of their comrades. The flag, first at half mast on the large flag pole In the eentrp of the plot, was raised to the mast-head by J. E. Klrby. one of the oldest veterans of 'the district after "Last Post" had been sounded by D. Bodger. The service was one' of the best attended yet held by the branch. EDWARD PONGS PASSES AWAY Well Known .Massett .Man Dies At Hospital Here Edward William Pongs, of Queen Charlotte Islands. passed away at the Prince Ru pert ueneral Hosoital Mnnrinv at made , the age of 39. He is survived by Mrs. Pongs of Massett who is in Prince Rupsrt at present. Born in Germany, theiflatcAlr. Pongs settled at Massett as a ycun? man and was employed by Martin's General' Store for 12 years. For the Dast two-anH.n- half ean he has been bookkeeper with the Co-op store in Massett. DIPLOMAT DIES , CAME.3ID3E, Eng., Pi MaJ. C. B. Wallls who died here at the age of 72, was British minister and consul general to Panama, the Canal ,one and Costa Rica from 1923 to 1931. consul for Liberia in 1906, and former British representative In Monrovia, Da- Kar and New Orleans VANDERHOOF ' The First St. James terinls team recently motored to Van-derlioof to play a return tournament with the local players on Vanderhoof courts. Out of 32 sets played Vanderhoof won the contest by a narrow margin of only four points. Decision to ask the federal member for Cariboo, William Irvine, to use his influence in rer tainlng the two tractors at the airport for land clearing operations in the district now that the Department of Transport has no more use for them, was made at a recent meeting of the Canadian Legion. Alan Stuyvesant has returnpri from business trips to ranches 01 the Frontier Cattle Co.. and Is going back to his home in New York. Mrs. E. A. Ahlm left last on an extended visit with ner sons and daughters In Ed monton and Calgary and plans to maKe a trip to the Okanagan valley before returning home. LADY'S DAY NOTTINGHAM, Eng., P;Mrs. Mary Morrison, a railway horse driver, won first prize at a London, Midland and Scottish Railway horse show here for keeping her horse and harness in the best state of cleanliness during the year. Her competition 100 male colleagues, SUBMARINE BRIDGE There is a bridge in Iraa which is lowered 20 feet under the water so that ships.may sail over the span. VETERAN HOME FROM EUROPE BURNS LAKE, August 29 Veterans of two years service in Italy, Pte. Garner Andernon of Burns Lake is home on 30 days leave, having returned to Canada earlier this month from England on the .troopship New Amsterdam. He volunteered for Pacific duty and doesn't know- if he will be discharged when he returns from his leave or not. "I haven't even made up my mind whether or not I will return to Burns Lake after I get my discharge," he said. Pte. Anderson served with the B. C. Dragoons, an armored regiment which suffered heavy losses in Itally. He says that, as far as he knows, less than 100 of the regiment's "originals" survived the Italian campaign. . "At the Gothic Line in October, 1943, we went in with 65 tanks' and emerged with 18," he recalled. "Jerry's Tiger tanks had seven to 12 inches of armor whiio ours had about wo inches. A Tiger could knock out a Sherman but a Sherman had a real Job to destroy a Tiger." While he received no mator in juries himself, Pte. Anderson said that he had three tanks destroyed under him. He was a tank driver. "It was air superiority that caused us to win," he asserted after telling how on one occasion his own tank" had fired six shots at 75 yard range at a Ger man tank without penetrating us armor. "Rocket flrinz Tv- Timely Topics from Terrace Someone annarentlv rarplpsslv tVivmvinn- ,i lighted match, one of Terrace's sidewalks took fire early Monday morning. W. A. Kirkpatrick noticed an unusual illumination not far from his home and, investigating the cause found the sidewalk on Emer-son Street ablaze. Arousing W. J. Brazier who was SMITHERS A. E. Day has purchased the Diuiaing on Broadwav Ave. for mcrly owned by Geo. A. Heffer-nan and will move it to the cor ner of Main St. and Broadway Ave. where he will re-establish his bakery business which wa carried on by him before losing his former premises. For the past six months there have been times when there has been a shortage of bread available In Smithers, but with the Day Bakery operating again this diffi culty wUl be overcome. Mrs. Arnold Flaten and. family of Pripce Rupert, having spent the summer at Lake Kathlyn, returned home Sunday. Having had the advantage of four weeks of continuous hot sunny weather they have absorbed enough sunshine to last through the winter months until summer comes again. Advertise In The Dally News. ; 1 I I soon Joined by Cecil Lever, the I tVlAA n9 1 . " ui wnii yiucureu a nose and put the fire out. Fire had got down into the tinder -dry turf beneath the woodwork of the sidewalk. About twenty feet of the walk was destroyed and this might have been worse had these citizens not acted so promptly. The Canadian Legion held a picnic at Deep Creek, a beautiful spot In the woods about six miles out of Terrace on the road to Kitsumkalum Lake. The party went out by bus and was favored with fine summer weather. . The recent soell of hot rirv weather brought a maximum temperature of 90 in the shade on one of Its days but each dav people sweltered In temperatures up in the eighties. The mobile tuberculosis clinic came to Terrace on Sundav stayed Monday and Tuesday and on Tuesday afternoon nrn- cceaed to Hazelton. 1 .Jij.::(-fcwij Wnen thp TIP rfo Prnnns nnlrorl of tfollfn.. n . . .1 j. . ., mi ""v v s..aA icueiiuy, u carriea tnousanos 01 uanaaian it j M r Army personnel back home nanin i car led the topmost leader of them all. General H. D. Q. Crerar. First Canadian Army CmMr r'ntfl: victorious campaign in Italy and northwestern Europe. To greet him at the dock-were hta wife, dSite ni Canadian m tary leaders. Above left, he is shown in his cabin with his wife, left, and daughter. Mrs. Z. Palme the riJrft S nvS Wn Vlgn ab0ard the Royal Canadlan Ay Service Corps vessel "General Drury" that was familiar toevervr.nS, dm EthCMap!f Leaf 'UP" Slgnwhlch wl the last the returning vets will see. The stgn brough Seew from trS tl ? and a WaVC frm GCn Crerar h1 on the lie de France's bridge. In the lt hn aeSS drL. for n 'rSt h ime,n Canadian" "soil." Waving goodbye to the troops lining the rails about hjn he RriS is one of l Lh Minui a AaP.lUr0d NaZl "a? ovcr the archwav- Low" rieht. Crerar is seen on the bridge of the vesVl ciSn?ti?h isLf Minister A. G. L. McNaughton and Lieut. -Gen. Chief fS 8 Defe"?e J. C Murchie, urenw( former of General trai staff biair, whn who win shortly assume the post of Chief of Staff overseas. go overseas to (Canadian Army Photos). t phoon fighter planes were the real tank killers." Early this year, Pte. Anderson was transferred from Italy to the western front, where he served in Belgium, Holland and Germany before the surrender. MARCH OF TIME NOVELTY CARTOON - NEWS MARRIAGE RATXtnr DARWIN, Aurtni, where else in a nual mama,. ; at Darwin, with f' IPSWICH. Ener. IP) Dr. JamM c " "lefflni, . 0. 1 orrvipn r . . ' Richard Whitwell, who died at marriaee rZ Trwin.H the age of 81, left his 20,000 "1" ecrd. m l (about $90,000) savings to pa- thp ;"s. "s" "cn anno i . m ..j.. 1 J... ine last 12 mrmth. r"! nt-uis at 01.. nuuu a uuiUlLill l """s.can .. where he was medical superln-1 w Dei".S the most romam tpnrlpnt fnr 57 vpnrs 1 In Ai,.t.ii- aal . v, yv.w. ..wonaiiil. T" r A V 1 TI II Tl-r. i jut i ana lnutu, 1:00 - 2 51 . 6:59 - 9:oj MARIA M0NTJ7; lUKHAN BEY WH HALL f 0 (MM 011 G. R. Mutrie, Optometm OFFICES IN HEILimONER'S JEWELRY STORE Complete qualified optical service. SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT TO ALL RETURNING SERVICEMEN In line with their usual policy of service arc quality "Cambridge" has again come to tin frunf (ifforln.r nil 1 ection of excellent cloth for tnadc-to-measmt clothincr. This selection is reserved entirely for ser v icemen wiin priority suit certificates. WE ASSUKE YOU OF DELIVERY IX TWO TO THREE WEEKS Drop in and look over our samnles IH'X'IHMI rVt.l.TW 1 T r . - liiiinnu urriUAL Ulfcl II A K IM.K.AS uai' the COUPON BELOW AND BRING IT TO US ritE-DEMOBILIZATION PRIORITY SUIT CERTIFICATE . . (1'OK l'CIISOXNKI. iir sruvi, lv nn order? JfflStoJ J?. " advance prlorit, !. in, ofhfl8c.aTac,ShaPrCg,eronnel l P'aCe 0rde" ?or Prlorl" P" CUSTOMEIVS nrmxfFVTA!, REGIMENTAL . SIGNATURE ' DEALER'S NAME M()U(iAXS MKXS HOYS WE IK LTD. ITIihi Iluprrt. II C, Clfln vv Kvw pj r n u iorgans "WHERE Commercial, Industrial and Marine Electricians BLECTRICAL CONTRACTORS Electrical Supplies Home Wiring and Repairs MOTT ELECTRIC LIMITED Offices In Vancouver and New Westminster Phone Black 387326 2nd Ave. J. L. CURRY CHIROPRACTOR If pain Chiropractic I If nerves doubly sol Smith Block Green 993 TERRACE Transfer&Taxi Storage WE MEET ALL TRAINS SERVICE TO ANY POINT IN THE DISTRICT (II. SMITH) P.O. Box 167 TERRACE oys MEN BUY" TOURISTS "SKEENA BRIDGE CiW On. mlln rl nf TtTttH In Terrace THE .NkFkNA WFRfA G. McADAMS, in A M.J n( Khtf WE WELCOME 10W r wm a iffrin TRANSPORT G. L. Brooks, ProprieW wnen in Terrace Motors take care of P transportation. The best In transports'1' r ie - . ... . Ml specializing in servitc else Lake Agents for ca TERRACE MACHINE SHOP AND W. C. Osborno GARAGE V. Imhoff A. M. iwiperi, repairs on an makes of cars Reconam Motors Tractors V - Road Equipment - Work - Diesel - Acetylenrand Electric Wm BOX 202 . tjrE.B