6 ' prince Uupctt Dailp 3cto ILto. Friday, AprU 9, 1918 TODAY TO SAT is EVENlNUR7p 2 1 00 00 - :2fl., r r i "i " 'i ,4 ftc. V-1- r. -v" Says Barge TRAINING PLAN FOR INDUSTRY SAID FEASIBLE The proposed plan to relate a high school technical course to the city's main industry fishing need not be unduly complicated nor expensive, but it is one that would bear rich results &uwj ana 5 I- 1 Service To Aid Rupert Prince Rupert will not suffer TO ACT AS DELEGATES V Stuart Furk and Harold Hel-gerson were appointed by the Junior Chamber of Commerce last night to serve as delegates to the annual provincial convention of the Junior Chamber of Commerce of Canada which is to be held at Victoria at the middle of May. REPRESENTATION OF LABOR ON JURIES URGED A demand by the Vancouver Trades and Labor Council for HAZEL BRIKIX! tntf introducing eicitin 1 11 .. Pink Slip Relief Is Being Sought Co-operation of the Prince Rupert Automobile Association and the Government Travel Bureau is being sought by the Prince Rupert Chamber of Commerce with a view to bringing about an amelioration of the "pink slip" regulations on provincial automobile insurance which are said to be having an adverse affect in discouraging automobile tourists from coming to this province for fear of having their cars impounded. Appointment of a local officer with authority to release impounded cars will also be sought. '-si economically as a result of the ! in directing trained young men ! intn t.hp fishing business, the nut nr irnr kill am rnNtin . mrm.. Junior Chamber of Commerce was told last night. Speaking before the monthly meeting of the group, in the ruHuis PLMEIS mum ADDED nis:v CART, NKVVS proposed rail car barge line between this city and southeastern Alaska, according to Van A. Olson, vice-president of Southeastern Alaska Transit Co., which announced last month that the service would soon be starting. Mr. Olson expressed this opinion in a letter to the Daily News with reference to a statement by Alderman Arthur Brooksbank that the barge ser 'civic Centre, Principal Allan M. ! Hurst of Booth Memorial High ' School declared that co-opera tion from the industry is highly essential in order to make the plan feasible from the stand representation of labor organizations on coroners' juries inves TICKETS ON SALE NOW FOR HENRY V'T Classified AcvcruAng Pays! point of the school. MADAME CURIE VISITS EINSTEIN Madame Irene Joliot-Curie, world famous nuclear physicist, visited Professor Albert Einstein in his home in Princeton, N.J. The noted French scientist, who will make a tour of the major cities in the United States for the joint anti-Fascist Refugee committee, hopes to stress the vital need for a greater understanding among the nations of the world, which she said "is the only basis for world peace." Mme. Joliot-Curie also stated that "a further deterioration in international relations can only lead to a third world war, which would mean the destruction of civilization as we know it." Mme. Joliot-Curie was detained overnight at Ellis Island on arrival on this continent, because her entry might be "prejudicial to the best Interests of the U.S.," the justice department announced. I used brush vice would throw men out. of work in Prince Rupert because ana pair. ! , the rail cars would be loaded in Ul y green pigment to the tfrinr r,t , ... It Don't Mean a Thing S If it ain't gol that Swing tigating Industrial accidents received support from the Prince Rupert Trades and Labor Council at its monthly meeting last night in the Carpenters' Hall. The councils are seeking revision to the Coroners' Act whereby labor would have formal recognition in the investi Ketchikan and Juneau, rather JUNIOR CHAMBER PLANS MUSEUM PAINTING "BEE" than in Prince Rupert as in the juu mat was complr day. past. Its results to the industry and to the students would be assessed in the number of trained or partly trained young men who entered it for their livelihood and it would more closely relate the school to the community. "I feel that a course of this kind would give the students a bird's-eye , view of the whole fishing industry and the chance Interest shown in th. uy tourists last sumrni gation of such accidents which Junior rhamhpr nf rnrnmoroo .t , usually affect compensation' whinh iat , nnt0 I U0Ma &k Ti' - ' othe "mu of 7onh- ' e tio 7 '7 A brief was received from Hip -., n.ui.k r.i..w. . f. on the ' emmiscences ujiimi vuiuiuui.1, la cm- inerebv npcpsltiiu Canadian Civil Servants Asso- barkina again on a similar nro-H , ul -UUn(! I A f elation containing statistics on Prt. nniv thi )im itnik.thJ . . u""!ea UP: "It is true that we may divert a portion of the annual halibut landing in Prince Rupert and that a number of that type of labor would be relieved from work," he stated. "However, relieving men from work is our desire, though in some phases it may be necessary in order to make our operation successful." Speed and efficiency of the new service would aid in the development of Alaska and would be a factor in the defence of the whole northwest, he said. ' ... . ... ' - v"v me junior rhmk.. me cost or llvlnc nnrt an mitMni innRin. f .u. . By W.J. - Reflections -----o v.. lne Museum Board, low on dertakine tl - hotmaon Irm lull a I a Jject two tolem poles w,c v,,,u odvauui ns- fUnds but h-n Jn its dcslre tO the soclation and the Dominion gov-expand iU exhibit space, space, has nas 'the me present are lvin ernment. ,.n v, t,.i. n u. irnin j, . . w uie mi The Fisheries Experimental I floated over Alaska and Seward's Station was originally establish- fellow countrymen called it r. ed at Prince'" Hupficfc because woeful waste of good money. ucBtco rcpuncu pro- to decorate the upper floor of gress in organizing workers in the museum building. The young several outside Vlnts. Labor- men's group agreed last night. to select and train for whatever particular branch of it they choose. I believe that, when the course gets started, we will have an enrolment of between 40 and 60," he declared. Co-operation from the industry would mean that skilled men would act as instructors in the practical course and that equipment engines, boats, gear and office practices would be made available right on the ground, he suggested. ''It cannot be done by the school alone, it must be done by the 'industry, except for the USE SPREAD QU Fther as an anaes! uieie waM i w nupa jur u in were u numaniy possible, the management relations within Date or the project is April 18 being used throunhou the city were described I j mis aiso win provide .or u e this northern Nation: With the' last two generations .should offer Prince Rupert area the possi- comlng of the-sec-oild war and apologies. Woeful waste! Alas billty of shipment to Alaska of -and increased aval activity here, alack! such produce as meat, poultry als0 ... ari(1pfl as when a squad of volunteers will ilized world within 4, exchange their Sunday rat- of its demonstration Matters of civic Interest were ment for paint-smeared clothes Boston, discussed and several sugges- and attack with paint brushes, i . and fresh vegetables,' the letter wharf an, skeena,s one stated. "Taking everything into xperlmental statlon was shlft. consideration and the expansion ed south wnere had few Last year, in May, the Jaycees I Classified Advertislr, TOUGH GOING ON ALASKA HIGHWAY uons reierred to the next meeting. J. s. Black, vice-president of the council, was chairman. xvupciw y4" already. 'Will ye no come back? emu fAJi i, wuuiu bina uc a Hin 'Like Heligoland ye will!" scientific courses which can be handled by the regular school staff." Practical instructors would ?ZrZl" cPt undated traffic, is the industry, the students and at a small cost to the school." "One of our problems will be f GOOD CRACIOUSf onewwicoftl I VOU RENOT UP ALREADY ?JV AUNTJEMIM VVU AT HAPPEN ED TO If MOM, AND ( your SPRING jfSZT ( , PRESTC V, T , I' Bivi"g th Royal Canadian be selected by the various flsh- drance to Prince Rupert? "The only thing necessary to complete the operation from Prince Rupert is a slip and terminal to accomodate a barge. This will be built with your labor." to convince the students to en- ,c" a"u ""J.c n.Atc Moilnt,pri pn,if. . ,,lt . DV. ,. -nmnaniPS nr the fishermen J for Fashion-wise 5 Thrify Shoppers ! Hal lace's! (recently married) sent a wire to patrol duties in the Yukon They and the students would learn ter the apprenticeship system. Robert Service asking if there are faed with . . h.mo th. vnriptv of snec.ialized sub- We must sell them the idea that ev :vsr existed two persons called seekers from the United gt t jects ln the plants or canneries they must start at the bottom "Dan McGrew and "The Lady Aiooi, Known As Lou.' The answer was Pnri '.ni,moj I Better English of Course! where they could best be learned. ana wrn up no start at the He proposed that the students toP and work themselves down." spend six months October to j May studying in the school or BIO BUSINESS other instructional sites, and the In the United States, passsen- rest of the year under appren- Pe Pay more than $1,298,900,- 000 yearly to ride in subwavs. ticeship to the fishing industry. A. MacKENZlE FURNITURE Limited ' A GOOD PLACE TO BUY" street cars, trolley coaches and gas buses. By D. C. WILLIAMS ,' 1. What is wrong with this sentence? "I came nearly winning the game." , 2. What is the correct pronunciation of "peculiar"? 3. Which one of these words is misspeleled ? Degredation, delectation, dereliction. ANSWERS 1. Say, "I came near winning the game." 2. Pronounce pe- short and positive. The pair were ports InSpector T. H. Cronkhite purely creatures of his own vivid are to trylng cra!in throu h imaginiation. In some ways there Fairbanks. Trailers, jallopies and will be disappointment. For still trucks are all in the stampede can be found folks, having noth- north. ing better to do, allow idle fancy ..0n'e outfit from Arkansas' I to play around and try to ses met between Fort Nelson and re-enacted the "draw" of Dan- Lower Post in British Columbia,' gerous Dan and listen to the he said "had got off the road tiny toinkle of "that rag time and could not get back on witn. tUne-" out the aid of a truck with a strong towline. Weather was Eighty -five years ago, Seward, coid enough to register 50 below speaking in a small town out and some, including women. Jk I IctnwiT cnmr fcifl tag iikf K This would be done with permission of the Department of Labor and the Department of Education. "However, to get the thing going, it is necessary to get together a committee of educators and representatives of the industry. There will be difficulties to overcome but I feel certain that it can be devoloped Into a project that will be of value to Inlaid Linoleum with Burlap Back and Printed Floor Covering Table Oil Cloth, all colors Carpets Phone 775 327 JrdAve. kul-yer, not pe-kul-l-ar. 3. De- gradation. 4. A route; record j west canea ot. raui arew atien- were bare-legged. The trailer DEVELOPING PRINTING ENLARGING SL'PERPAN PRESS KODACHROME and KODAK FILMS Chandler & Cowgill Fourth St. Box 645 PRINCE RUPERT, B. C. of - a journey. "The itinerary tion to the approach of Russia was warm enough whea the fuel of the lecturer covered fifteen j to the North Pacific. Six years held out but they were without states." I later, the "Stars and Stripes" either fuel or gas, and 100 miles 1 " from nowhere." AND THAT " " -nj WASHING GREENS When washing lettuce, celery 1 or other greens, hold them upside down, spread the leaves Fishermen.. i apart and let the water run Movine, Packing Crating. Shipping and General Cartage and Storage For Complete, Reliable and Efficient Service, call Lindsay's Cartage & Storage Cor. 2nd and Park Avenues Established 1910 Phones 60 and 68 . rf n ' i u through. v iihhIitm K;u I i lake advaiilaKe' in "tir ANCIENT LIFEBELT The early Greeks and Roman' used to make life preservers from cork for armored soldiers Iiopair DepHrtment. 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SKINNER Prince Rupert A.ent Third Ave. Phone 568 YOUR BESl .VVV;':lfflSSr MYSTIC FOAM SOIL-OFF r7 JVS T VVf.'.V'M i II LIQUID VENEER POLISH ' - 0 SCRATCH COVR POLISH j Jf rl GLASS CLEANER WAXES V VlL BRUSHES AND MOPS "Oh, no, Richard is crazy about golf." ! il tlJJUdMto4J2mktil EATING PLA' MM FIIX-COIRSE 11 a.m. to 8 P BANQUET HAIXK LUNCHEONS, AND PART1" liM rl LEV! -11 CHINESE DISH McBridc Street Phone 311 Place your order NOW for the New Electric GLASTEEL Water Heater It's Glass-Lined It's Economical It's Automatic-It's Dependable. Saanich Plumbing and Heating Cor. 4th and McBrlde-Bluc 840 BROADW CAFE ISoiv Available! ... rtioci -nn oJ AvO W. ' butt oi" IM THE SUPREME COURT OP BRITISH COLUMBIA IN PROBATE III the Mutter of the "AtlinhilKtrutliiu ACT" And In the Matter of the Kstute uf Curl (Karl) Mnrrlx Mevirtiin ili-eeuMed TAKE NOTICE that by Order of His Honor Judge W. O. Fulton. Local Judge of the Supreme Court of British Columbia. I was on the (tth day of April, A D. 1948. appointed Administrator of the Estate of Carl (Karl) Morris Sevcrson. late of Queen Charlotte City. British Columbia, who died on or about the 19th day of December. 1947. at Queen Charlotte City. British .Columbia. All persons Indebted to the said estate are required to pay the amount of their indebtedness to me forthwith and all persons having claims against the said estate are required to file them with me properly verified on or before the 15th day of May, 1948. falling which distribution will be made having regard only to such claims of which I shall have been notified. DATED at Prince Rupert. B.C. this 7th day of April. A D. 1948. OORDON FRASER FORBES. Official Administrator. Prince upert, BC. (9j) FOR THE BEST IN AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE See Your R rriucDA! MOTORS DEAU Trod" Che Now Is the lime to get at that shaky step, leaky roof or sagging fence. Repair or construction we have the materials to do the lob. 4 Complete line of Building Material supplies. Mitchell & Currie Limited PHONE 363 v Builders and Contractors Chevrolet Buitk Print Ian Oldsmobile MACHINE WORK A SPECIAL t LOOK FOR THE NEW RED AND WHITE GOLD SEAL LABEL Terrace Machine Shop & TERRACE, 807 V J