I it prince Kupctt E?ail? xiJctos tiD. Thursday, March 25, 1948 CFPR ST. PATRICK IS HONORED Radio Dial 1240 Kilocycle Mrs. Karl Erlksou and daughter Catherine were visitors to Smithers over' the week-end. STEWART LEGION W.A. IS FORMED STEWART. The Women's Auxiliary of the Canadian (Subject to change) THURSDAY P.M, 4:00 Tony the Troubadour 4:15 Stock Quotations and Stewart Celebrates Anniversary of Birth of Ireland's Patron Saint . STEWART A fresh fall of Mr. and Mrs. John Keefe left for Vancouver on Saturday morning. Mrs. Keefe expects to be gone about a month. interlude j eighteen inches of snow was no Mr. and Mrs. Sam Shaffer entertained a party for sleighing on Friday night. All had a delightful time. ; Legion was formally launched 1 on Wednesday last, in the Club Rooms of the Stewart Branch, i It was a memorable St. Andrew's Day for the ladies. Officers of I the Stewart branch, headed by I Vice President John Wolsten- holme, formally installed the ladies in office. President Mrs. F. H. Lewis: First Vice President Mrs. J. VTjWT CAN'T j Td!" 7 f STOP EATING SV aWEvW THOSE LIGHT. FLUFFY jk iY, 5A$ PANCAKES Ol lUCKWHtATS ' fT.- - Good for you. os foosf. The roads are still good although the snow is starting to melt off In places. 4:30 Especially For You 4:45 The Adventure of Timothy O'Brien 5:00 The Happy Time 5:30 Hawaiian Echoes ' 5:45 Flatter Parade 6:00 People Ask 6:15 Freddy Martin's Orch. 6:30 Musical Varieties 6:45 Smoke Rings 7:00 CBC News 7:15 CBC News Roundup 7:30 Eventide 8:00 The Nation's Business 8:15 Sports Review 8:30 Winnipeg Concert Orch 9:00 Vancouver Theatre 9:30 Nocturne 10:00 CBC News 10:10 B.C. News '0:30 Music in the Night J 0:55 Recorded Interlude 11:00 Weather and Sign Off. deterrent to the residents of Stewart who turned out on Saturday at the Moose Hall to honor St. Patrick and incidentally John Wolstenholme, whose birthday Is also March 17. J. P. Garllck, ably assisted by a select committee, arranged an excellent program. Good as It was, the program would not have made the hit It did, had it not been for the fine supper put up by the ladies of the Moose under the very able leadership of Mrs. Jack McKay who was convenor of the supper committee. Those taking part in the program were Mr. Jack Bouzek, Mrs. Harry Wilkinson, W. R. Tooth, Sam Kirkpatrick, George Nelson, Miss Dickson, A. Phillips and W. S. Orr. The net proceeds will be turned over to the Parent Teachers Association to go towards the purchase of a projector for visual education at Stewart School. Word has been received that Florence Holtz has been very ill in a hospital in Saskatoon. She has had five operations to remove a brain tumour and has been In the hospital for six months. She has been blind and unable to walk but Is able to see again and will have to learn to walk when she is allowed up again. Bouzek. Second Vice President Mrs. R. Barwise. Chaplain Mrs. C. E. Gibson Standard Bearer Mrs. L. A. Behensen. Secretary Mrs. G. Rothnie. Treasurer Mrs. H. Spomer. Honorary Past President Mrs. J. McLeod. Executive Mrs. J. Thompson, Mrs. S. L. Young and Mrs. John Wolstenholme. Investigating Committee Mrs. H. C. Bennett and Mrs. A. Lawrence. Ways and Means Committee Mrs. S. Kirkpatrick and Mrs. G. Nelson. Social Conveners Mrs. G. Works gang to cut around the wharf to D 1 The Farmers Institute Dance on St. fatrlck's Day was well attended. The evening started off with a picture show, shown by the Burns Lake Welfare When an applicant for a job is sent to you by N.E.S., Mr. Employer, your employment office may have gone through a thousand names in order to find "the" man, or woman, to suit your needs. It may be that there is no one in your locality who can fill the job. By a special clearance system, N.E.S. can find the right man be he in New Glasgow, New Toronto or New Westminster. The "one man in a thousand" may be an executive, a craftsman, or other specialized worker . . . according to your needs. i.a.iiiK me wnarf with 1 FRANCOIS LAKE IS NOW FROZEN The lake has frozen over last and is strong enough allow people to walk across ii moves. FREEZING HARMlI Anderson and Mrs. J. N. N'raan nn J BIG PRODUCER Queensland, Queensland, Australia Australia safety. With these cold nights . 'h. 1 sp,1 .. .. . iods say scientists I tne ice is strengtnening. u nas u may change ;i Denmark Is about 224 miles ( from north to south and , vides about 85 per cent ot miles from east to west. (tralla's beef exports. Deerr necessary ior me ruDiic eiiect wholesomenea. STEWART WOMAN PASSES AWAY FRIDAY A.M. 7:30 Musical Cluck 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 9:30 Morning Concert 9:59 Time Signal 10:00 Morning Visit 10:15 The Sea Is Our Home 10:15 Morning Melodies 10:30 Roundup Time 10:45 Scandinavian Melodies 11:00 Let's Play 11:15 Reminiscences 11:30 Weather Forecast 11.31 Message Period 1 1 : 33 Recorded Interlude 11:45 Ethel and Albert P.M. - Mrs. Grace McMillan of who entered hospital here a Make full use of your local office of month ago, suffering from a fractured leg, died during Tuesday night at the age of 67. She was a widow and was a well- the National Employment Service. known resident of the Stewart fifty years f service district for the last 25 years. At Department of Labour HUMPHREY MITCHELL Minister of Labour A. MacNAMARA. Deputy Minister one time she operated a road house on Bitter Creek, stopping place for miners and prospectors. She married the late 1 James L. McMillan about 15 ITHIN the year which has just dawned, The Vancouver Daily Province W complete fifty years of service to the people of Vancouver and Wll years ago. There are no chil- unconscious for a few minutes. dren- Her husband pre-de- Recovering consciousness he was ceased her about three years able to walk with a little help a&o. Foreman of Tram Has Close Call 12:00 Mid-day Melodies . 12:15 CBC News 12:25 Program Resume 12:30 Salute to Spring 1:00 The Concert Houi 1:30 Afternoon Recital 1:45 Happily Ever After 2:00 Holy Week Meditations 2:15 Family Favourites 2:30 Songs to Remember British Columbia, and enter upon a second half century. ., sitwAKi james Burnett. to the road where a car met him and he was taken to Premier for examination by Dr. Walker, IT STINKS! BRANDON, Man. Brandon Hp suffprprf consumers, complaining about resident physician. 2:45 Don Messer and Islanders the obnoxious odor of gas here, have been told they have to put a fractured rib on the left side and has innumerable bruises. 3:00 Varieties in Music 3:15 Spotlight on a Star up with it. Brandon gas is tram foreman for the Silbak Premier Mine, had a narrow escape during the past week. He was repairing the tram line when the cable slipped and threw him about thirty feet in the air. How he escaped death is a miracle. He apparently landed partly on a bank of snow and partly on the beaten trail, These fifty years have been notable years for any newspaper privileged to live nd serve through them, for they have provided more news and greater news than any like period since 'newspapers began. And the facilities for gathering news, printing it and delivering it to the homes of the people have never been so complete. The Province is proud to be able to say, as it glances back across its half century that it has neglected few of the opportunities presented to it by the times which gave it birth and sustenance. The Province began as a very small daily in a small but dynamic city of not more than 20,000 people. It starts its second half century as one of Canada's greater newspapers, serving a community of half a million. It began with rather sketchy facilities, both in the way of news services and mechanical equipment. It looks toward the years ahead with services already equal to the best in the country and with .equipment unsurpassed. manufactured from coal, and recent coal-mine strikes forced the utilities commission to accept a substitute with high sulphur content. ONE-IN-80 CHANCE Medical records show that twins are born once in every 80 deliveries. 3:20 Sketches In Melody 3:30 Enchanted Pine 3:45 BBC News 3:55 King Gordon 4:00 Ed McCurcty Bfngs 4:15 Stock Quotations These are The Province's outer and more obvious qualities and advantages. The inner arc more important. For every newspaper is more than the paper and Ink that go into its making, more than the machines that turn it out, more than the men and women who write and edit it. A newspaper is not a mere succession of pe$ef, in time it develops a personality. It is more than an aggregation of columns, for the columns are only the clothing of its character. The Province has a personality and a character that have developed with the years and have not happened by mere chance. There has been deliberate and consistent guidance., From the first, the newspaper's ambition has been to be received as a trusted friend in the homes of British Columbia and to that end it has bent its energies. It has aimed to be a good newspaper and a clean one. It has sought news where news was to be found, at home or abroad. It has laid emphasis on accuracy in reporting. It has endeavored to interpret the news in the light of research and experience and with an eye to the best interests of the nation and the community. Its guiding principles throughout have been progress, integrity, character, and faithful attention to those principles have made it a Vancouver and a British Columbia institution. 4:30 Especially For You 4:45 Sleepy Time Story Teller 5:00 String Styllngs 5:30 Music by Sammy Kaye 5:45 Community Calendar 8:00 Beat the Champs 6:30 Three Suns and a Starlet 6:45 Plantation House Partj 7:00 CBC News 7:15 CBC News Roundup 7:30 These English 8:00 One Night Stand 8:30 Boston Pops 9:00 Dream Time 9:30 Prairie Schooner. 10:00 CBC News 10:10 B. C. News 10:15 Critics on the Hearth 10:30 Ial Richards Orch. 11:00 Weather and Sign Off SATURDAY A.M 7:30 Musical ClocR 8:00 CBC News 8:15 Pick of the Hits 8:30 Mornin? Devotions 8:45 Little Concert 9:00 BBC News Commentary 9:15 Records at Random 9:30 Melodies for Juniors 9:59 Time Signal 10:00 Band Stand 10:15 World Cnurch News 10:30 Lord Coresser 10:45 CBC News 1 1 0 : 55 Weather Forecast 11:00 TBA 11:30 Weather Forecast 11:31 Message Period ' 11:33 Recorded f 11:45 Personal Album t'M. - 12 :0Q Mid-day Melodies -12:15 Recorded Interlude 12:25 Program Resume 12:30 TBA 1:00 TBA 1:30 First Piano Quartet 2:00 TBA 3:00 Clearing Up the Weather 3:15--CBC News 3:25 Recorded Interlude 3:30 NBC Symphony Orch. , So relmed, to tilky-tott. Il pom pert your tkinf tel fhij popular-priced luxury tissue is super-tough, tuper-obtorbanl The Province is proud of its record through fifty years. It is proud of having started on its course when British Columbia and Vancouver were young and it is proud to have grown with both. It has been a singular privilege to have shared in their development, to have told their story and to have helped fight some of their battles. . And now, on the verge of its second half century, The Province looks forward to wider opportunities to serve the people who have come to know it and to trust it. It has plans for the future, but the guiding principles will not be different from those that have brought it thus far. It cherishes the confidence and friendship nf its readers as its dearest possession and will work to retain these treasures and consolidate them. It will continue to search the world for news and present the news it gets fairly md objectively. In its comment it will throw on the news what light it can command. And it will always keep its pages clean. 1 TRY Rex Ca4e Moving, Packing Crating, Shipping and General , Curtate and Storage For Complete, Reliable and Efficient Service, call Lindsay's Cartage & Storage Cor. 2nd and Park Avenues Established 1910 - Phones 60 and 68 FOR TASTY MEALS Chop Suey Chow Mein CHINESE D1SIIKS OUR SPECIALTY OPEN t A.M. TO 2 AM. SECOND AVENUE, OPPOSITE PRINCE RUPERT HOTEL Mi .J X t