Prince Rnprxt Daflp r3ctoj Friday, (September 9, 1549. -If YOUR Help Publish! tot ar!rtoon eicept Bxindy by Price Huptrt Dil hews Ltt... 3rd Avenue. Prince Rupert. BflKh ColltxfcS Q A. STOUTER. ManMlnf Editor H. Q. PERRY. Managing Director. Olty Carrier. Per BtrBSCRIFriON Week. 20c: Per Month. RATES 75c: Per Tear, MOO. SZ" ftTD is needed By Mall. Per MontU. &0c: Per Tear, 5 00 . . f ,1V J' i i ' .-" Why No Northern Senator? REID, veteran Member of Parliament for TOM New Westminster, holder of that seat for near- to mend broken lives! YOUR dollars will aid The Salvation Army in restoring to usefulness the victims of self or circumstance. Again it looks confidently to YOU. F - . i- ' t VJ MM". : y thirty years, will be a worthy acquisition to the j ' Respond generously to the Appeal of The Salvation Army 4 It la'! V." J i I jr.' 4 ABEL & ODOWES Men'i Wear -.2 mmm r m f r ( 00 I Classified Ads Avertl:.in a. DOLLAR DELEGATES Their briefcases, bulging with pertinent data, top-ranking members of the government's financial and diplomatic divisions are swn Just before flying from Ottawa to Washington for the Canadian-UK.-U.S. economic discussions. Shown, lelt to rinht, are: Graham Towers, governor of the Bank of Canada; Norman Robertson, clerk of ttie Privy Council: Finance Minister Abbott; M. W. Mackenzie, deputy minister of trade and commerce; External Affairs Minister Pearson; Louis Rasminsky, Bank of Canada; John Deutsch, Finance Department; A. E. Ritchie, Canadian High Commissioner's Office, London; A. F. W. Plumptre, External Affairs. ' ,c- p- Photo) SepW AL.J : the weather God evidently knows his onions. Ray Reflects . . . I Times are usually pretty ac-Itive when sizeable money rob- tiii ii oinij beries are reported. When busl- 'ness is dull and the outlook dis- SA1 STILl Prices :couraging no one can work up A gale, blowing only 140 miles enough enthusiasm to start In 1897, a dollar a day in many . i something. It's been like that parts of Canada was regarded as an jlour pasSed perilously close j fair enough. Today, that much , .u- . ,.!,nce "U,WBJ' iu Diinuiiu, una wn-. ii niigiu i when one morning a Bu-ainci an hour is reckoned by million Buy t of people as not enough, the world wags on! And be suid that down In such a, that had left Vancouver witn semi-tropic zone as Bermuda.' cannery payrolls on board call- , 'ed to say a lot of cash was miss Canadian Senate. There will be disappointment, however, in Northern and Central British Columbia that no heed has been paid to representations which have on several occasions in recent years been made by boards of trades, chambers of commerce and Liberal associations seeking an appointment from this area to the Upper House. As has often been said before, northern and central British Columbia is not without worthy and deserving talent for the venerable chamber-men of attainments, ability, sound judgment who have also served their country and party well over the years. It will not ride very well with the people of this part of the country that their just claims to Senate representation have been again ignored in favor of the south. In this now rapidly developing and increasingly important section of the country, we could well have expected to be accorded favorable consideration and action in this appointment. THIS IS GOOD NEWS IT IS GOOD NEWS, indeed, that reason 'should I have prevailed and that a settlement has been reached between loggers and operators of British Columbia coast whereby the strike, which for a time threatened seriously, has been obviated. Such a strike would have been an economic body blow to British Columbia, through bringing mass . unemployment in the province's major industry and ' stopping production at acrucial time. But the most satisfactory feature of all is the fact that a new spirit of compromise and under-standing appears to be developing between labor and industry. What the loggers and operators have been able to do there is good reason to believe may be achieved should at any future time other dif- ferences arise between labor and management. It is, apparently, agreed that in strike action everybody loses and more particularly the workers and the public as a whole. RICHARD STRAUSS A MUSICAL PRODIGY at the tender, age of four and utorm centre in middle age of critical debate on his impressionistic expression in tone forms, Richard Strauss lived to see many of his innovations become almost commonplace musical devices. Then he became enmeshed in Nazi politics when Hitleriam invaded German art. Born July 11, 1864, the son of Franz Strauss, player of the French horn in the Munich Court Opera, he began strumming the piano almost as soon as he could sit at one and started composing MEN'S ORBS' ll.DO-SOW .... ing. The quarter master, socially inclined, had secreted flstfulls of banknotes all over MEN'S WOK 75c-NOH .MEN'S DRESS the ship. When he sobered up,j "Just for fun I told him I could only give him one hour V SII1UTS-U $: nd thirty-five minutes of my time. he helped the cops and most of the long green was recovered. It might have been worse for I all concerned. Nut MEN'S DRESS 0 DRESS MNTvJ rhoom "TbashefVcwncfiier in rnilk,! MEN'S WORK fi made, (imkI flit I A Department of Fisheries of-i ficer says Canadians are the J lightest consumers of fish In Uie Dominion. Obviously, he never j witnessed a line-up at a Prince Rupert cafe lunch counter with ! halibut steaks, black cod and boiled salmon performing the SO ANNOUNCEMENT THE SERVICES OF A QUALIFIED PUBLIC .-. STENOORAPHER NOW AVAILABLE CATHERINE LAURIE Public Stenographer MEN'S C.ttAHi. mil-wool, rr. K' NOW MEN'S JXtKIT- disappearing act." plaids, lull-Ire; pwkrts. lined-1 Tel. Green C;7 Days. Green 412 Evj;.s. 401 Third Ave. (Prince Rupert Realty Co.) NOW Top U.S. Army officers, en-route to Alaska, paused long enough in Edmonton to refuel (Continued on Page 5) MEN'S JACKET Twict (Mwrishmg, to . . . bowl for bowl, u any other nationally known ready-to-eat rice cereal. AND crisper. AND TAST-IEK! Try KelUKK't Rice Kriapiea and you'll love 'em! wool, full knsth silk lined. bK t- Ree. S13.j Mimeographing Litters Composed Financial Statements Stenography Mailing Lfct' Monthly Statements Reports Bulletins Minute W.ANKETS-F siies. K't Sll- l SI IT CASES. I i Ki lM tinn it rrn KM j BOYS' DK!J i SHIRTS frm. SAVOY H0TI1 W. L. WOODS, Prorx PHONE 37 P.O. BOX 1397 FRASER STREET PRINCE RUPERT Just Arrived HOYS' PANTS I Dross, (ottom i MOTHER KNOWS a BEST! from - BOYS' STIHff pctiun. Fro I llll DIUNS St" AN APPEAL From l II1I.DKEN S SEW LADIES' STOCK SOt KEES tr Brand New Shipment Scandinavian Records Come In and Hear Our Latest Records NO. 6 Jan Johnson's Wedding I,eJ Ho - By Ragnar Hassels-ren NO. 34 Ilalsa dem darlirmnia Barnxdumslieiuniet -By Ragnar Hasseliiren NO. 3 Nil Ska vi dansa By Eric Gylling and Alfred San Francisco Polka Almestad accordion duet NO. 24 Violer till mor By Anna Svenson Nar Ijtisen ska II tandes dar hrmnia NO. 2s Solweits Rant By Carole Larsen Langel NO. 41 Inderilge aftenlufte Jeg er havrtn sung by Aage Emil Jacobseti NO. 30 Sol B h Mimmar Till Dans med Karlstads-fli korna by TaRe Ekvall's Orchestra NO. 38 Trolleo Scholtiw he Ptnnetts bondvals by Tage Ekvall's Orchestra TO MEMBERS AND FRIENDS OF ST. ANDREW'S CATHEDRAL The immediate embarking upon the evangelical enterprise : of building a Rectory waits on two things to be done this month. A. That Volunteer workers turn out Thursday afternoons and Saturdays equipped to clear and excavate the site. B. That our good will and intentions for this project which have not yet resulted in subscribing receive our attention. Almost five sixths of the minimum sum required is in hand. Having this help It will be possible to ask a general meeting to give us the green light. , BASIL S. PROCKTER, Canon and Rector.' Cheques may be made payable to the Cathedral Kwtory Fund at "the Canadian Bank of Commerce (II) STfiAftlSHIP PRINCE RUPERT SAILS FOR VANCOUVER AND INTERMEDIATE PORTS EACH THURSDAY at 11:15 p.m. For KETCHIKAN WEDNESDAY MIDNIGHT For Reservations Write or Call CITY OR DEPOT OFFICE PRINCE RUPERT, B C. Canadian National NMien ne was six. at. iweive nis opus JNO. i, a "Festmarsch" for orchestra, was before the public. He was w:orld famous at the turn of the century for tone poems and crowned his creative genius by jtroducing the impressionistic operas "Salome" ;iiW)4) and "Elekta" (1W7), the works by which he' .was moit widely known in America. "Salome," ."widely censured and censored, the text being after .Oscar Wilde, put Strauss into the headlines. Its 1 treatment of a Biblical subject displeased straight-, ; "laced Kaiser Wilhelm II, but its score brought the 1 composer the crossof the French Legion of Honor. Typical of American reaction was a critic who ' wrote of "the passionate music which grovels in the blood and filth, of the concluding scene." The Strauss genius ran the gamut of musical : expression from simple songs (songs of which were acclaimed as among his most beautiful works) through piano solos, string quartets and symphonic poems to complete symphonies and operas, with ballets and chorals thrown in for good measure. On top of that he was a gifted conductor and was an acknowledged master in drawing colorful effects from huge orchestras. John BclP '' Third Robert A. Werner B.A. Optometrist (Formerly Ulth the Booth Optical Co. Vancouver) 113 Vancouver Block, Vancouver, B. C. S. fix' But when he pins DRUGS HOLLYWOOD cafe it down everything MOST UP-TO-DATE CAFE IN THE CITY DorcroiPTinN Q0$ should be plain sailing if he has n ll W STORE HOURS-WEEK DAY OPEN FROM 11:3 A.M. To 1:33 A.M. We Specialize In Chinese Dlshei NOOS Wishes to announce that he will be ' available for EYE EXAMINATIONS ' at the PRINCE RUPERT HOTEL . . from ' FRIDAY, Sept. 23 to THURSDAY, Sept. 29 (223)" nrl.TT . irn . vi torT m A YS--12 7 P.M. TO 9 DM'"' cnop suEY-cnow mein EmerP1"1 MADE DINNER RESERVATIONS at the Civic Centre Dining Room for Reservation, and Chicken In The Rough Phone Red 705 fro"1 s,rf ! 7 ' P and Dally car delivery service from B a.m. till S pm. For OotsMe Order PHONE 1SI -IMMMI.JJ