What is Age?' Prfnre Hupm Oaflp irtos Wednesday, June 8, 1949 one day, and the railroad chief was asked to consider the hotel question, seeing a first rate .site; was waiting to be filled. Sir: Henry spent a short time in' Ray Reflects . . . ka Independent daily newspaper aero tea to at upoalidlng of Prase Hupr Hid all communities comprising northern and central BrltJeh Columbia (autnurued aa Second Clata Mall, Post Office Department. Ottawa) n n1 n'fltn iiiisrpi iPrlnce Rupcrt but lons enoush ill III AIIsUUIIIDIsI'H i to see anything of importance rnoiisnec everr arternonn exrept nunaay o i m i n n..i. v- t . q a DlnM Dnnsrt Rrt1H fVltumhlA. I and size up the general situa- .ir..'s tin .. O. A. HUNTER. Managing Editor. H. Q. FERRT. Managing Director. MXMBES or CANADIAN PRESS AVVrt BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS CANADIAN DAILY NEWSPAPER ASSOCIATION lIon- ' lo d Mle- he of platforms The site selected was on Second , nof' On un scores muica y ! seemed to prefer that part of British Co.umbia from the cor-; throughout Avenue just across the harb()r frQnt just now, speeches are brtns npr of Flfth street and situated and orcuDl,,d bv navaI Mtirm SUBSCRIPTION RATES wT OKI Carrier, Per Week. 20c; Per Month. 75c: Per Tear, 00. SV' By Mall. Per Month, 50c; Per Tear, 5.00 MENS A!.L.W()( JACKETS-... VOOL sf j made and large audiences listen what wM therailwav rM-Jand recently bought by the 'discussed foAfs'all'the'people's.e've and convenient to station ; Canadian Legion. It could not 'business. There are two other j and docks. Excavating com- there was unanimity of ' ' at ' Utte Sp,eia, The Challenge orators, but. strange to say, they menced, a contrcator named ,' . t, turned east there was nothing ! remain snent. Nevenneiexs ; w. T. Muse perrorming each is given the deepest of at- inure uuaiu ui it nutei so lar as , he was concerned. i MEN'S TROtstggJ dines, Ue,,is .....! 1 tention. One is Mr. Cellulose, and the other, Mr. Aluminum. work. Time rolled on, but It brought no hotel. Instead, a fountain appeared on the site. No one quarreled with that but, undoubtedly there was a senae of disappointment. The fountain' played and so did the bowlers on the handsome green -What is age, my dear? did I hear you say It is just a little longer on life's way, A stillness after toil at the close of day, Like the lilt of music floating on the breeze, The softening of the sun as it shines between the leaves, The golden sunset melting into purple shadows Upon the quiet of an evening down among the meadows." A gentle loosening of the roots of life, A little less desire to work and strive, A while to enable us to rest and look Upon the past as if in the reading of a book Whose lines reach into heart and mind And search for the best there is to find Of tolerance that was bought with pain, To wish a chance to live it all again. So that the love you were so loth to show Could be so great, and like a beacon grow-And circle all and make a blessed band Where God is King and all would understand, That life is just a little span To live and grow and mellow if you can. Into a richness of graceful delight Where day is endless and there is no night To fear and dread a curtain of terror- That darkens the sight against life's error. Yes Age my dear is gentle decline. It is universal, not thine-or- mine. Like the waves upon the. rolling sea Where the lighthouse rays fade into eternity. That is age, my dear gently a loosening of the threads we hold A tender reaching out from in the wold Of which we sprang gave live anew in birth To settle back again to rest in Mother Earth. CHINTAI. WANT RATS ALIVE DROXFORD, Hampshire, Eng. 9 The Droxford rodent officer has been asked to catch speciment rats alive if possible. They are wanted to track down aortment, I,,,,, Special MEN'S DRKSS ""Md$ from sir. It's just one thing after another for Mrs. Richard Mor-row-Tait, British housewife, who iiKt Anmist benan a elobal flieht. Part of the winter was uul arrived a virus. th m!t aftpr haviiidiSir Henry inorruin -"-Latest stVM , BOYS' WOOL and , Two Outstanding Broadcasts !ortiiieni. Spei y ij - -been plagued by engine troubles, money shortage, aviation rulings and certificate requirements. The plane Is now in Toronto, Mrs. Morrow-Tait having proceeded to New York by train to raise more funds. She plans on finally making home by way of Greenland and Iceland. The lady deserves to. "'' SCHOOLS TONIGHT . ome ami khaki Special William Hulme Lever died suddenly a few weeks ago while on a world tour of inspection of an industrial empire cover- V? fi t v-;v l-1 : H lage;s and was thanked for his jng forty countries. It all visit by prominent village lead- I started with the making of IS WELCOMED don't need to be sold on the merits CANADIANS of the enterprise system, says a Canadian Chamber of Commerce publication. But their understanding of the way the sytem works is by no means complete. That is the reason why we sometimes see large groups of Canadians supporting measures that would destroy that system. For , ample we find people who believe in freedom of opportunity, yet who give their approval to plans to increase government regulation of business or government limitation of business profits. We find those who, in the same breath, demand lower individual corporate taxes and increased social services from the state. Studies made by an opinion research compora-tion, indicate that there is a very high correlation between economic ignorance and collectivist sentiment. In other words, if a man does not recognize that invested capital helps the worker, that high corporate taxes hurt the worker, that the biggest share of corporate earnings goes to the worker, he is more likely to believe that government control is necessary to keep prices down. He is also more likely to feel that the government should set a top limit on salaries, that government should "put a limit on profits, that higher wages must come out of profits rather than out of increased productivity, etc. Among persons who demonstrate that they are well informed on economic facts, there are practi- - callv none who can be classified as extreme col- - lectivists; but among those who are uninformed, there are a sizeable group of collectivists. A collectivist, we all know7, is not necessarily a person who plumps for a socialistic or communistic form of government, but a person who though he may be ail for "free enterprise" or "the democratic way of life" seeks changes in the rules of action that would inevitably lead to the downfall of the Canadian economic system. AT KITKATLA ers in the persons of Matthew j soap and oils and the treating Hill and Mark Spencer who)0f Labor with eminent fairness, spoke through an interpreter,; xhe vast business was founded Wilfrid Jackson. Incidentally, ! as a rjrivate entemri.se. and still i f f i v'vv; SM,TH&U I. l ! A : " HAVE HAD " I 1 X YEARS OF ; f , r V t V .1 h PLUMBING -iiv PLA' '$10,0 "finee CM HE) ? Ilea net Visiting the village by special i the plane hi which Mr. McRae;s with no fewer than 518 firms. invitation, Jacs McRa&, Coali made the trip was the first that tion candidate ror rrince ku- r,aa ever put down at that vil-; Early in the history of Prince pert in the forthcoming provin- iagP and thatj tn itself, was an Rupert a areat hotel to be built cial election, was given a cordial historic incident. I here was first heard of. The I .A. 1 1 AND i EXPERIENCE I . fcL- 1 LjS-i ; p,,one 174 reception with special welcom- ( Making the trip In the Skeena blue print pictured it chateau ing ceremonies at Kitkatla on Air Transport Sea'oee piloted by style. And that was pretty styl- Monday. Chief Councillor Jos- Pat Carey and accompanied by : ish. This was to be part of the eph Innes presided over a ' Walter Smith, Mr. McRae also Grand Trunk Pacific Railway Hon. E. T. Kenney Nancy Hodges largely attended meeting of vil- visited Klemtu and Butedale. terminus development plans. REAL ESTA INSUPxANC! Minster of Lands and Forests and Coalition Candidate for Skeena He: r ',' ;. ai re ,.TIm .. (li:',' "trlei WH fssued ioult lotlce It tl INCOME TJ RETURNS PREPA Coalition Candidate fur Victoria 6:15 CFPR 8:30 CFPR R. E. M0RTIJ1 324 2nd Ave. (Neal rom ion .1 itflcat JerUt alld vrltln . twn BALAGNO F Phone Urttn "S7 I Advertise in the Dally News T SHERIFF'S SALE THOM SHEET METAL LIMIT r55 wishes to announce that the Latest in Portable Welding Equipml HAS BEEN ADDED TO THEIR ALREADY EXTENSIVELY EQUIPPED SHOP !ubU ncoi Be: Phonf BIj -Prinre Rup'.-rt 33 First Ave. E. "Jaycee" Convention City- HOLLYWOOD cafe MOST UP-TO-DATE CAFE IN TIIM OPEN I'ROM 11:30 A.M. TO 3:30 A.M. We Specialize In Chinese Dishes 6; . i h)r i i Thus, most people are for free enterprise in principle. Some few would nationalize many of the means of production. But many are so uninformed or misinformed on the workings of our economy that they can be led. to favor policies detrimental to it. MONDAY FAVORED DAY WITH THE CHOICE of Monday, June 27, for the Dominion general election, that day now " takes its place with Tuesday as the favorite voting day of the men who call the contest dates. The current choice makes it six apiece for Monday and Tuesday since 1874 the first year in which elections were held on a single day. Five have been called on Thursdays, and two on Wednesdays. : " , No. government has had the hardihood to call "-the voters out on unlucky Friday. Nor has there ever been a one-day election on Saturday or Sun- day. The Monday trend began to develop strongly in 1930. Of the five elections beginning that year and including the present one, four have been on Mondays. The fifth in 1940 was on a Tuesday, day. The first one-day election was on Thursday, January, 22, 1874. Before that, elections took weeks to complete. The first in 1867 stretched from August 7 to September 20. The 1872 contest, held after British Columbia entered Confederation, lasted three months. It took that long for the chief electoral officer to con- im duct the ballotting from coast to coast. CHOP SUEY CHOW MEIN IN THE COUNTY COURT OF 1 CARIBOO, BETWEEN W. M. MOTORS, LIMITED, PLAINTIFF, AND FLOYD GOOD, DEFENDANT. Under and by Virtue of a Warrant of Execution issued from the above Court and to me directed against the goods and chattels of the defendant, Floyd Good, I have seized one Allis-Chalmers Caterpillar Tractor, Model 650, Serial No. 55-266 with 11-foot blade, hydraulic hoist and loader, and on Thursday, June 16th. 1949, at the hour of 2 o'clock in the afternoon, at th? Sheriff s Office, Court House. Prince Rupert, B.C., I shall offer for sale at public auction all the right, title, and interest of the defendant In the above goods and chattels. The tractor may be inspected at the farm of Kenneth Olson, Tchesinkut Lake, about ten miles south of Burns Lake, B.C., and the loader In the C.N. Ry.' yards at Burns Lake, B C. Terms of sale, cash, and this sale Is subject to the Social Security and Municipal Aid Tax. The higest or any bid not necessarily accepted. DaU;d at Prince Rupert, B.C., this 6th day of June, 1949. M. M. STEPHENS, Sheriff, County of Prince Rupert. (136) For Outside Orders PHONE 133 $ mm tmmmm 1 T DON'T MISS THE FUN AT rb i i ( t I LIMBERLO For FISHINTi, HOATINO, HlJNTIN.SjH M DANCING . . . AND MANY OTHhR Fnr, fnr thp Whnlo Familv at LIMBER1 INSULATE NOW. Put a thick blanket of GYPROC WOOL between your rooms and the outside weather. GYPROC WOOL will soon pay for itself, by cutting down your fuel bills, and will continue to lave you money, year after year. In sub-zero weather your rooms can be warm ... in summer heat they can be cool. . . with GYPROC WOOL Furthermore, GYPROC WOOL won't burn. It acts as a barrier to the spread of flames. Give your home this FIRE PROTECTION. Low in cost. Easy to install. Vor mle at Ihiililrrt' Supply, Lumlx-r (t lunulutiiin lmlert ucroti tlaruula. Oypsum. Lint w Aldbtslin. nd, Limited Vncowr Calgary w'ltinlof Trftt S Montreal 2 W-5 49 and be sun ; Make your reservations early 9 C I . ! i i 6 uapny iioiiuay in me ueiniuuao - - nnMTACT U"1 UK t'URTHtK inrUKMAliu" "., cTF.V UNION LODGE LTD. . PIIONfc 5C3-OR Thick Insulation. OFFICES-PHONE 508. EARLY ADVERTISING COPY IS APPRECIATED ' Chandler & Cowgill PORTRAIT STUDIO Film Finishing Eniarting Flash Photos Taken at Home Phone Oreen 389 21 6 4th 8t PRINCE RUPERT, B.C. Gyproc Products For. Sale in Prince Rupert by ALBERT & McCAFFERY LTD DRUG DRUGS Plumbing Troubles? C ; GUESTS ARE USUALLY IN AN EXPANSIVE MOOD AFTER A LUNCHEON OR DINNER DATE at the PRESCRIPTION CHEMISTS . . il TO ' t.cit nYS. 9 AM tjllJltJii iiuur.o - v ceil. - CALL BLUE 846 T0p am.. EBY & SONS Contractors REPAIRS - REMODELLING FOUNDATIONS Let us help you plan that new home under the N.II.A. Phone Green 883 Box 581! NOON SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS-12 7 P.M. TO 8 P-M. BAPCO FLOOR ENAMEL For FLOORS, LINOLEUM and WOODWORK Supplied in nine attractive colors 'IT DRIES IN FOUR HOURS THOMPSON HARDWARE CO. LTD. bicycle df Civic Centre Dining Room For Reservations aUd Chicken In The Rough Phone Red 705 Daily car delivery service tm 7 p m. till from 9 a.m. till 6 p.m. and Suntla SAANICH Plumbing & Heating