1 &xlmt Unpen Oafl? HCms ItD. Wednesday, May 26,2948 HEW SHIP TO BE HONORED weekly m me Cnn,. "Utl iJ POST-WAR PARIS NOT HEAVEN IT WAS IN 1920'S Cone Are the Days When Struggling Artists Could Eat Well for Five Francs in Left-Bank Bohemia Maiden trip arrival at Prim , ,Uirnoon WItT, Driverless Car Rolls Over Bank Dr. C. H. Hanklnson's car wandered off toy Itself Friday night with damaging results. Dr. Han-kinson parked the new vehicle on Eleventh Street while he visited a patient but, apparently, failed to cinch the parking brake tight enough. Anyway, d urine his absence, the ear An Independent dally newspaper devoted to tlx upbuilding of Prince Rupert and all communities comprising northern and central British Columbia. (Authorized as Second Ulass Mall. Post Office Department, Ottawa) Published every afternoon except Sunday by Prince Rupert Dnlly News Ltd.. 3rd Avenue. Pi lnce Rupert. British Columbia, ' Q. A. HUNTER, Managing Editor. H. O. PERRY. Managing' Director. MEMBER OF CANADIAN PRESS AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS CANADIAN DAILY NEWSPAPER ASSOCIATION Rupert, her port of registry, by the new Canadian National Coast Steamships liner, Prince George, now nearing completion at Yarrows In Esquimau, will SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mail, Per Month. 40c; Per Tear, 4.00. be marked by a nultabln welcome By Paul Hrnissart started to move. It went off the for which the Prince Rupert PARIS, (Reuters) Parls'g eage ui w ruuu, ru.ui.B . unamoer of Commerce Is now embankment three times before 'making plans.. An appropriate left - bank Bohemia today reflects the striking changes In u tuntc w mutiJ. i. presentation will be made to son sent me cur souui on rant. E. B fJnlHuBii who has I to. urday for major body repairs. .been appointed skipper of the vessel. The Prince George is due here June 21 on her Initial voyage In the Alaska tourist service but Fl JtdWnj I Messrs j I U- f ;x f, 1 ft a --I,- v i B m , , ',r ; 11I riMi.i 1 ti the French capital's cultural life brought about by the German occupation and the war. On the pavement terraces of the "Cafe des Deux Magots" and the "Cafe de Flure," celebrated mveting pluces of the art and literary world for the lust 60 years, no one talks curiously these days about another "lost generation." To begin with, there Is an aversion to Identify oneself luo closely with any previous experi may be here earlier than that with the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce on a special charter cruise. pleted a cycle which began before the First World War when artists .living there decamped and headed fur Montpurnas.se St. Germain has regained Its former popularity, one observer explained, because It is nearer the Seine -nearer, that is to say, to the river in which desperate artists can commit suicide. Very few, it should be stated, actually reach the point at which this becomes neaessary. Post-war Bouditiuns, .however, Watchfc TESTED Halibut Closure to Effect Employment The number of unemployed MM ence or forms of expression. But more important still, the situation confronting the youilut "uwtiatmot, VQI1 Viri- ' at Prince Rupert Is possibly no who make up the new, autcond Clean-Up Campaign CLEAN-UP CAMPAIGN in Prince Rupert, THE sponsored by the Junior Chamber of Commerce, is in its second and most intensive week and we would heartily commend the matter to the attention of all good citizens. For the majority of people 'who realize that cleanliness and tidiness is one of the prime attributes of good citizzenship, no particular emphasis may be required. It is instinctive and natural for the most of folk to wish and strive to be of best appearance and to be ashamed of carelessness and untidiness in their persons as well as their premises. Not only do we desire to be neat and clean for our own comfort and satisfaction but also that we may have the respect and admiration of our neighbors and friends. ' There is also the important consideration of having a city the appearance of which will win us good name from the many visitors who come among us particularly in the nearing few. months of the tourist and holiday season. Indications are that Prince Rupert will receive a large quota of such visitors this year their numbers being limited only by the capacity of the facilities to handle them. Many of them will be from far afield and it is highly desirable that our community should create in their eyes a good impression for attractiveness and and cleanliness. It is a way for every citizen to help in putting over an effective public relations job for community, district and country. great than usual at this season although the stopping oi ana n telU you , when you lab j , post-war generation of artists is have almost eliminated the by no means identicul with that 1 churm which Paris used to have iof.lOlB. I for struggling artists. A Paris Hum, wunpnufcj nuiiDut nshlng June 1 has caused an impression that work will not be so readily found. There are a good many strangers in town and, of these, a proportion are from the prairie piovinees. It is generally believed that 'where one could eat well for the remarkable renaissance of five francs Uess than 20 oentsi the 1020 s which saw the fulfil- jor eight with wine, and where ment of outstanding American there was no problem about writers abroad such as Ernest finding experimental revues in BULGER'S ENROUTE TO SINGAPORE AFTER OTTAWA VISIT Mrs. Malcolm MacDonald, wife of the governor-general of Malaya, photographed with her two children, Miss Jane Rowley and Master John Rowley, on board a Canadian Pacific liner as she sailed from Montreal to England after visiting Canada. Hemingway, Ezra Pound. Mai- which to publish or studios In I eolm Cowley and Glenway West- which to paint, is gone. cott and brought recognition to Soaring prices, an acute nous- painters like Picasso, Braque ing shortage, government con- and Modilglianl, has only a lim- trols which beset any new prlnt-ited influence on this section of ing venture, a shrunken market Bohemia. Ifor canvasses due to currency Reminiscences By w.j. d Reflections NYLONS! ONE PAIR WITH EVERY Slu OR MOKE PURCHASE MADE AT BOMS' DEPARTMENT STOKE The writers, painters, sculp- exchange difficulties, have all tors, dramatists and intellectual reduced a bygone heyday to a hangers-on and ne'er-do-wells pleasant legend, who inhabit the quarter of St. To live up to minimum Bo-Germain des Pres today are an hemian standards nowuduys re-incogruuus blend of neophyte , quires at least 15,000 francs V V First impressions go a long, thing In the way of newspaper (about $70 a month or about long way. Baggy trousers, over- work. "Well, Mr. King could do due shave, old egg stain on vest, worse than start a "remlniscen- the wage of a middle-bracket greasy hat-band, one-sided heels ces and reflections" column. civil servant in France. and shoes a stranger to polish. Brother, this isn't the pressure Major-General Worthlngton, speaking recently on defence and exlstentialists determine d-ly shedding all vestiges of Anglo - Saxon restraint, and hard-working craftsmen. NEW HUNTING GKOl'NDS Bohemia of 1948 has even moved from its hunting grounds. From the crossroads of the Boulevard de Montparnasse and Boulevard Raspall, which It used of poverty. It's mainly due your own laziness. A city can become Just Arrived... Th- Popular , J that way too. Tourists are always discerning and critical, and the need of highway or railroad to Alaska as close as possible to the Pacific, favored the route originating at Hazelton. So has the Spokane Chamber of Commerce. About as long ago as any- sometimes they feel like giving LE CANT and NATURE'S RIaJ to haunt 20 years ago, it has a loud cry of mingled dismay and disappointment. Don't have them leave, fpeling that way Tidy up ,and do It now! FOUNDATION GARMENTS one ran remember ,the region moved to the pleasant neigh- UlilTED STATES Styled and manufactured by the Parisian Corset Cor These Parisian garments are made Irom thorouj; around the meeting of tlw Skeena and Bulkley Rivers has been regarded as a point possessing certain natural advantagesa junction not to be overlooked or disregarded. tested fabrics properly constructed and deslg: to give the wearer complete satisfaction Available In sizes 34 to 4fi borhood of St. Germain, grouped around one u'f the oldest churches in Paris, dating back to the 10th century. The migratory Instinct of the artistic colony in Paris contrasts with London's Chelsea and New York's Greenwich Village which are relatively stable communities. By moving to St. Germain ,the Bohemians have merely com- Remarked The Empire, published in November, 1923 November went out with a bang. Murray Fuller's car Was turned upside down. The Westholnv1 Theatre's sign was blown down H. O. Crewe's house was tangled up with a telegraph pole. Plate glass in the Knox Hotel was smashed. Cow Bay mariners were up all night. A shingle blew through Frank Dibb's dining room window .striking a cut glass set on the buffet. BLOUSES - BY JORDAN SPORTSWEAR Striped Jerseys In navy and white. Femiiuix Some one in Manitoba won the beautiful automobile raffled in connection with the celebration of Empire Day in Prince Rupert. Oh well, everyone cannot have a car, although sometimes crossing Third Avenue on foot, you mipht think different.' A Manitoban, -2000 miles to the tailored and especiull pretty for spring Sports BUY WITH CONFIDENCE AT ANNETTE" east, captures the glittering Premier King has told friends prize. How much more speedy, in Ottawa that, when he retires smooth and comfortable, than 523 THIRD AVENUE WEST to private life, he may do som.;- the Red River cart!. f xlifing regulation moke it illegal for any Canadian resident to retain in his pcmenion more than $ 1 0 in United States cash. You are required to turn in to your bank, for exchange info Canadian money, any amount you have in excess of $10 in United States funds, without delay. THERE'S A REASON The reason Is that Canada must have the U.S. dollars spent here by tourists, in order to make them available for the payment of imported goods and services needed to keep production and employment at a high level. CATERING TO TOURISTS PROBLEM now is not attracting tourists to THE Prince Rupert. They are coming anyway. The important thing is taking care of them, making things interesting and pleasant for them when they get here. And that is something that is not receiving the attention it should. Are we preparing to make conditions here for the tourfsts such that they will go away pleased, recalling how well they were attended to and served? Are we going to make their visit something memorable to recollect or are they going to remember Prince Rupert as a tiresome and boring place where time hung heavily and from which they were glad to get going? Are they going to go home and tell their relatives and friends that there is nothing to do or see in Prince Rupert? They might easily do that and, if they do, we will have ourselves right here to blame. The purser of a coastal liner which will handle a lot of tourists into Prince Rupert this year inquired anxiously of the editor of the Daily News in the course of conversation Monday what he could tell his passengers when they inquired what they could do and see in Prince Rupert. He was obviously mot concerned that everything possible should be done to show off to the best advantage everything of interest which Prince Rupert had to offer the tourists. The discussion came down to what was being done in the way of local motor transportatiorwor-ganizing tours for the visitors which steamers will bring to Prince Rupert during the summer. In the Alaska towns, which seem to haye a fuller appreciation of the tourist business than we do in Prince Rupert and certainly cater to them more than we do, motor tours are organized and the steamship companies co-operate in the way of selling tickets for such shore tours. ' It is something that could and should be done at Prince Rupert and it is hoped . that the local taxi people will really be able to get down to business this year and 80 something systematic about it. It is an opportunity for the development of already existing local business, possibly on a co-operative basis. If the people who are already here do not do something about it, some-body else may see the opportunity to come in and doit. NEW ROYAL HOTEL A Home Away From Home SO Rooms, Hot and Cold Water PRINCE RUPERT, B.C. Phone ni P.O. Box 184 Kaien Co-c, Modern Etiquette By ROBER1 A LEE EVEN THE WIND AIDS PUBLICIZE PRINCE RUPERT Fix Vp Clean V) Paint Up O. What is the last thing one should do before sealing and mailing a social letter? A. Read it over carefully for errors in spelling and grammar. Slips are often made when the pen moves. writer thinks faster than his Q. If your wife is telling a story to a group of friends and hns nn Imnnrlflnl fnct umnff Margaret McLeod OPTOMETRIST IN NEW OFFICES MARSHALL-WELLS FINE Ql'ALITV PAINTS tttct PTinMir WE DELIVER Even the wind Is helping to publicize Prince Rupert." A gust in the German Rhine-land whirled a page of the Saturday Evening Post into a garden where a German woman Phone P r read the story "Seattle Ponders a is , alI ri ht t0 interrupt and Bad Dream" in halting English. correct her? fOREIGN UtCHAMGE tONTtot lOsRO OTIMIA A. No; let it pass. Q. Is It customary to give a Elsa Wacker, who describes herself as "a Catholic, 35 years and the bookkeeper of a large wedding gifts to a friend who Is 1 'Aa ROOM 10 STONE BUILDING NEW f BONE BLUE 593 firm in Weisbadcn-Biebrich. marrvin!? for the second time. wrote Mayor Arnold that "I have j A. Not unless you are a very seen a picture of you in your close friend, office as town's Mayor and I WRATHALL'S PHOTO FINISHING Developing, Printing fcnhuffinir QUICK SERVICE Amateur and Professional buppliea f ' - V - He wouldn't Board up the Display Window of His Store , . have had the wish to write you." The picture was one published In the February 4 issue of the Post. Miss Wacker's salutation began: "The Town's Mayor, Miss Nora Arnold, Prince Rupper', "HEALING" WATER HARMFUL EAST LONDON, South Africa tP) As natives come to drink the "holy waters" of the "healing" RUPERT MARINE REALTY Alaskan." , Object of her letter was to spring at Transkejan, a new cemetery grows nearby. The 1 j noiy spring is contaminated ! and causes dysentry. Despite its "healing" waters. start correspondence with some' one in Prince Rupert and to receive booklets of this country to study. The Post story about Prince HE KNOWS BETTER I (J. CLAUSEN tc SON) We Take Listings of . . . BOATS FOR SALE OR CHARTER BROKERS JN BOATS, MARINE AND FISHING EQUIPMENT TRY RUPERT MARINE REALTY FOR QUICK SALES OR CHARTERS (Just East of Llpsett's, Waterfront) Box 548 Phone Green 975 Jow Available! Rupert also brought the city to , ,. his advert O Neither would ne tu.i Space III Uic uauj t'r a VICTORIES NEVER FINAL WHAT WE ARE BEING TAUGHT these days is not that struggle for .right is fruitless, that defence, of liberty is vain. What is being taught us is that democracy's victories are never final, that struggle is inherent in existence, that as some one has well put it, there'is no discharge in life's war. The heroes of .history that we revere, the men who gathered to their breasts the spears of tyranny, could not win for succeeding generations immunity from evil Enough that in their time and that through their courage and devotion they kept the lamp of freedom burning. It is our task in our time, with pain and sorrow, to keep it from going out. N. Y. Times. V.-1 ... T ,inioooH the attention of two young men in Holland who would like to settle here. In a letter to Mayor Arnold they describe themselves as young technicians with "experience, knowledge and a zest for work. Both have had training in the pulp and paper Industry. Mayor Arnold has passed the letter along to the Dutch vic Consul at Terrace who is interested In colonization TRY Elen Cafie FOR TASTY MEALS Chop Suey Chow Mein able, charge it is pi every day. ADVERTISE IN THE The Daily News OPEN x LOOK FOR THE NEW RED AND WHITE GOLD SEAL LABEL "ITPAl'S OFF JN SALE 6 AM. TO 2 A.M. CHINESE DISHES OUR SPECIALTY SECOND AVENUE. OPPOSITE EINjPE, ftVJRT HOTEL not luck, nor fatu Advertise more In The NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA S NEWSPAPER Blame abuse . . News.