I 1" rv m 41 vis ml- 13rinrc ttupcr. Dnily jDcUhj Saturday, May 3, 1947 Steamship Sailings for VanconTtt. 'Tuesday as Coqultlam, 1:30 p.m. a Thursday ss Prince Rupert 11:15 p.m. j Friday ss Catala, 10 p.m. Saturday s Camosun, 9:15 p.m. From Vancouver Sunday ss Coqulllam, p.m. Monday Princess Adelaide. PJn. J Wednesday ss Prince Rupert, 10:00 a.m., J Monday ss Princess Adelaide 10 pjn. Friday ss Camosun, 3 p.m. - Friday ss Catala, p.m. r For Alaska Friday ss Camosun, midnight Wednesday ss Prince Rupert, midnight. t From Alaska Thursday ss Prince Rupert, 7 m: Saturday ss Camosun. 7 p.m. dl WALLACE'S qxw; A 'A ; S ! tr ..1 ivc'1 .. 5 Rupert but your You brand, ntONLS 11C and 117 don't Courtesy and Service Lady Musicians O.K. But Lack Steam VANCOUVER - Albert Stein- berg Vancouver symphony orch- estra concert master, said in an interview that he considered women musicians just as eood as men, but that "they lack Isteam." "They are co-operative, cood sportsmen and as punctual as men," he said, "Tut because oi their emotional and physical make-up, they lack steam " In the Vancouver symphony 21 of the 80 members are womennine vioiins, five second .violins, four cellists, two viols two viola players and one flau-lst. "If the weman is a better performer than the man then the woman is." he remarked. "But iioo many women might lose tone for the orchestra." Classified Advertising Pays! , il,! Peoples Store Yes, the worst is over it is no time to let coal bin run low get speediest possible delivery of your favorite known of coal from us. ISul leave ordering too long. ALBERT & McCAFFERY LTD. FUEL AND BUILDING MATERIALS j IjKijft fjHr?. Waterfront Whiffs iscvv JJrigjjs Service to Start May 12, Southeastern Leaving 'Frisco This Week-end Halibut Season Opens To inaumirate a mwv j southeastern Alaska . with ...... of Prince Runert and trip l 1 ..w-v..swaa vv VUllliUiUII National Railways, Briggs Steamship Co.'s motor vessel aoumeastern was to leave ban t rancisco this week-end for Prince Rupert and Ketchikan. This an nouncement came today from Stanbridge Agencies Ltd., which is to be Prince RuiA.rt agent for the line. The service is to start frcm Prince Rupert May 12. The Southeastern has been at San Francisco fcr several weeks, being reconverted for the new service and outfitting. Phillip G. Brings, head of the company, who has been in New York, is to make the triD north in his new vessel. T. II. Gustaf-son, manager of the company, is to fly north from San .Francisco to be in Ketchikan and Prince Rupert in advance of the Southeastern's arrival. Cargo will be at Prince Rupert-awaiting the Southeastern's arrival to be loaded for Ketchikan and other southeastern Alaska points. It originates for the most nart in the Minneapolis area to which tht territory is now looking for its source" of supply instead ;f Seattle. j Return cargoes of fish prod ucts are bein? organized in Southeastern Alaskr, for transshipment' east, by rail from Prince Rupert to the United States. Th? Southeastern will oper ate frcm Prince Rupert to such ports in Southeastern Alaska as Ketchikan, Wiangell, Petersburg and Juneru. With a fair-sized list of passengers including a" few who went on to Alaska, Union stea mer Camosun, Ca,pt. Alex McLennan, arrived in Dort at four o'clock yesterday afternoon iron. Vancouver and Ocean Falls, sailing at 1 a wv W V 1 V1I1J morning for Ketchikan whence she will return here this evening southbound. The Camosun had apme 125 tons of freight for Prince RuDert. During a recent two days' session of the annual meeting of the Fisheries Council of Canada at Ottawa, plans were discussed for an educational program to be carried out among fishermen, processors, wholesalers and retailers on the mct advanced scientific methods of fish handling. It was also decided that the council would develop plans for implementation at a later date, of consumer education on the high protein values of fish In daily fare and the proper preparation of fish dishes. The first cf the vessels of the halibut fleet whicn began fish ing in Area Two en Thursday are expected start arriving here with thcii catches within the next few days, possibly Monday or Tuesday, Ihus' turning the spiggot in what some believe will be the biggest-and shortesthalibut ccftsoh in the his tory of the coast. However, while the fish hou- -rc rlatirl rnn r 4 r rryrt m Mi ft first catches of the season, the 1 iishmg companies' camps locat- cd cn islands cjoser to the fishing grounds, already are receiving halibut caught by the onaller boats, mostly trollers making a brie, play for halibut before going after salmon liter this season. Operators ol rra;.y o these mailer boats planner, to deliver daily to fish camps, thereby reviving themselves of the need to pack ice from Prince Rupert and make the return trip loaded. Their dally catches would be packed in ije at the cannery camps and brought in larger quantities to Prince Rupert by Packers. Most of the regular halibut fleet has cleared port by today. and when they start delivering here, the buyers w,U be among the busiest men o:i the vater- front. This ..easnn will ee a re turn of open, competitive selling of fteh such as used' to pre vail before the war on the ex change. First stop for most of the fishermen has been Martin Johnson's herrlns pound at Hunt's Inlet on Porcher Island, where they loaded live herrlnjr i shinninn- sprviVn linl.-inn- the .w British .- Columbia wvsv.fit port V'l V rrnnsrnnrinprirnl C, iait. Johnson Ls said to have captured about 350 tons of herring in his pound this spring, which is selling for $6 a barrel, or $60 a ton. Those who pot out to the grounds in time to begin fishing Thursday get a bit of a setback from the weatherman. Strong winds .churned the waters of Hecate Straits during most cf Thursday, niaking it too rough to handle gear. However, Friday was calm, according to report, and. by the general set or the weather, it looks as if it were calm on the grounds again today. Thursday's blow will set back the first boat arrivals bv 2i hours. The haliout fleet experienced bad weather for a :hort tlmo dnt-InT iIia F.. ,...i ... -uwjr j-iaii, ui the season two year: ago. ,MATTI-:iS OF CONVKNIK.NCK Rumblings of discontent have been heard from the waterfront in regard to a comment D'.ib-lished in this column last wppk which remarked that former Prince Rupert fishermen are moving back here from Vancouver to make their homes be cause mooring facilities here were more "convenient" than at the southern port. Flshprmpn who have struggled for more than a 'quarter of a century to nave the wharfaci fnr thoir boats improved sup.?t thnt this implies that the moorage ncre was termed "better" than at Vancouver. It was not meant to suggest this. By "conveni ent" it was meant that the mooraecs are mnrn mn ly iocatcd to their hemes i-ar. in the south. Specific rem' rk. made by seme of the fishermpn in question were to the offcrrt that, if they were called siidrinn. ly to their boats at night, they could get there within a matter of minutes in Prince Rupert, while in Vancouver they had been forced to live several miles frcm the waterfront, and it took a good deal longer to reach their boats if emcrcencles arose. It is also pleasant to Chink that they are reluming because they consider Prince Runprt. a good town to live m However, there was definitely no intent on the part of thi:; column to slow down the local rrgh.t for better fishing boat moorage. INCOME TAX Returns Prepared" See K. E. 'MO-lTIAII.il 324 2nd Ave. . Phone 88 Steamer Service from PRINCE RUPERT to OCEAN FALLS WESTVIEW (Powell River) VANCOUVER Thurstlr.y at 11:15 p.m. To KETCHIKAN Wednesday Midnight For reservations call or write City or Depot Ticket Offices. PUI'NCE RUPERT BATTERY AAAAfAAArUAAMAAAAAAA! CP D D Itadio Dial I r K 1240 Kilocycles (Subject to change) SATURDAY P.M. 4 00- Hawaii Calls 4 30- Songs in Sweet Style 4 45- -Swingtime 5.00- Ton'ght at Timber Lodge 5 30South American Way 5 45- -Sports College C 00 -CBC News 0:05--Recorded interlude 6:15- -Music a la Carter 6:30 Saturday Night Serenade 7:00 Dancing Party 7:30r-Organ Music 8:00 Red River Barn Dance 8:30 Old Time Rythm 9:00 Juliette 9:15-This Week 9:30 Cello Recital 10:00 CBC News 10:10 B.C. News 10:15-Mid-Winter Golf Tournament Resume 10:30 Hollywood Barn Dance 10:45 Organ Interlude 11 :00 Weather and sign off ann. SUNDAY AJvI. 8:30- Concert Album 9:00 BBC News and Commentary 9:15 Songs and Singers 9:30 The Man of Property 9:59 Time Signal 10:0O-B.C. Gardner 10:15 Just Mary Tor. 10:30-T.B.A. 11:00 CBC News 11:03 -Capitol Reports ll:30-Religious Period Ott. P.M. 12:00 New York Philharmonic Symphony Orch. 1:30 Church of the Air 2:00-CBC News 2:03 John Fisher Reports 2: 15 Weekend Review Mont. 2:30-T.BJV. 3:00 -Music for Sunday 3:30 CBC News 3:33 Weather Forecast 3:38 Musical Program, Toronto 3:45 -Canadian Short Stories 4:00 Music for Romance 4:30 Your Music 5:00 Record Album 5:30 Stage 47 Toronto '-s If It Is understood that Col. Cy Peck, V.C., residing near Victoria, will revisit Prince Rupert next autumn. He is expected In September. He will take opportunity while in the north to meet as many as possible of the local soldiers who were under his command, and who sailed from here on the outbreak of the Firs. Great War in the fall of 1914. 0:30 Familiar Music 7:00 CBC News 7:10 The Old Songs 7:30 Parlow String Quartet 8:0OThe .Headers Take Over 8:30 Sunday Serenade 9:00 Bach Festival 10:00 CBC News 10:10 B.C. News 10:15 Canadian Yarns 10:30 Prelude to Midnight 11:00 Weather and sign off ann, MONDAY A.M. 7:30 Musical Clock 8:00 CBC News 8:15 Morning Song 8:30 Music For Moderns 8:45 Little Concert 9:00 BBC News 9:15 Morning Devotions 0:30 Morning Concert 9:59 Time Signal 10:0O--Mornlng Visit 10:15 Organ Encores 10:30 Roundup Time 10:45 Scandinavian Melodies 11:00 Keyboard and Console 11:15 Songs of Today 11:30 Weather Forecast 11:31 Message Period 11:33 Recorded Interlude 11:45 Ethel and Albert . P.M. 12:00-B.C. Farm Broadcast 12:25 Program Resume 12:30-CBCNews 12:45 Easy Listening 1:00 The Concert Hour 1:30 Afternoon Recital 1:45 Commentary and Novel Chapter 2:00 B.C. School Broadcast 2:30 Songs to Remember 2:45 Mcsser's Islanders 3:00 Cowboy Troubador 3:15 Mirror for Women 3:30 Serenade 3:45 BBC News I ES, the Greeks hare wordi for thtm. So have we, here in British Columbia. Nearly everyone insists on calling all cuphall shingles "Duroid' Shingles. Mind you, the majority of the asphalt shln gles you see actually are Duroid. But ol course, not alL Duroid is an exclusive trade name that appears on shingles made only by Sidney Roofing, find they're made with a base of the best quality felL That's why Duroid Shingles last longer than most That's why they have such an enviable reputation, and that's why the name "Duroid" has become a household word for roofing economy. To be sure you're getting Genuine Duroid Shingles for your home, look for the 5ldney Ceal of Quality on every bundle. SIDNEY ROOFING & PAPER CO. LTD. VICTORIA AND VANCOUVER BU 1 1. TODAY 7:00 9:05 'Willi ilx. 7 " 1 KANC mond SUNDAY MIDNITE and TWO FEATURES An Outstanding Musical Rodeo . KEN CURTIS ANDY CLYDE In "Throw A Saddle On A Star" with noosiEit hot shots MONDAY SHOWS MATINEE 2:30 EVENINO 7.00 - 9:15 i;e. ,,5est the W,,,s,r Serin . "CIUKU 1)1x1 in . "Voice of tli Whisler with Available NoJ r!WiLi! Model 517 $ll r .. ... WE DELIVER ,ui.mic Mrccl rh'ij REX CAFE SECOND AVENUE, OPPOSITE PRINCE RUPERT Hoi Chop Sucy Chow Mcin CHINESE DISHES OUR SPECIAL. Open 6 a.m. to 2 an. PHONE 17JJ Box 1308 rhone 108 ' PRINCE RUPERT PLUMBING & HEATING ESTIMATES OIL BURNER SALES AND SERVICE Cor. 2nd Ave. and 7th St. SAV0 hotei Carl Zarclli, Pi Phone 37 P.O. KKASEK STR. Prince Rupert IT'S SPRING Time to repair anJ recondition your home CALL - i GREER & BRIDDEI HUILDI.KS AND CONTKACTOKS Repairs' Construction AKcratiofl Phone RED 561 f - Bi FOR YOUR , . . . BUILDING REQUIREMENTS GENERAL REPAIRS FOUNDATION WORK CONSULT THE NORTHWEST CONSTRUCTION II Estimates given for any lypc con.lruelion. Phone S(i3 NlRhl-Kfi ELECTRICAL CONTRACTING ' HOUSE WIRING Impairs Installations EXPERT RADIO SERVICE 1 RLE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY Phone CM RUPERT RADIO AND ELECTRIC Hollywood Care ritlNCE KUPEKTS NEWEST AN" MST UP-TO-DATE KESTAUKANT FULL-COURSE MEALb HUM 11 AJVI. TO 6 A M. Special Dinner Every Sunday - 5 p:nUoP- CHINESE DISIIKS A SPECIALTY WE CATER TO PARTIES CHOP SUEY CHOW MKlN rOK OUTS1DF OKDEKS TIIONE 133 7S8 THIRD AVENUB WZST