imr n rfi' -- y 5 5 i ATHadi, HONEY PRICE IS DROPPING 2 ! CLEAR 0? Prince tlnpcrt Daflp fictos LtD. Wednesday, July 14, 1948 NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA 3 NEWSPAP13 ! Reminiscences By W.J. and Reflections OTTAWA The cost of honey j will take a substantial drop in j the near future. The four main reasons are return of sugar In pre-war quantities, Increase In price of staple goods which low-ers demand for "luxury foods," abundance of low priced corn-J ESQUIMAU j destroyer, fj. can, which h.' tined since het more than tvr0 , alongside the -terday, the Qli been lifted, t seven caw 0l board the Attn,: lng been fatm Well, sometime in the gloam-l From Ottawa comes comfort- ine this evenimr, O my darling, ing news that the price of honey YS wr- as we should have a prettr fair, notion as to what side our bread mercial syrups on me mamex, and imports of low priced honey from South America and Mexico. TRY A CLASSIFIED AD! is buttered on. Ottawa can be stubborn, and also the Unions. is coming down, lpi heralded far and wide that Canada has a thoughtfull and kindly government, so long as a later despatch announcing that the cost of buckwheat is going up, is not received. Ohiook..Cbealaiii A lew years ago. the Skeena Hlehway, the Alaska Road ami The Fraser Valley flood continues to bequeath grief. A farmer, picking his way to a wrecked home steps into deep roadside hole, drowns before wife can save him. Shocked and bereaved, wife is packed off to hospital. Nine children beeome fatherless. Yes there are still victims in need of. assistance. the Hains Cut-off were ua-; known. They did not exUt. Pioneer settlers were hoping ant! ! striving, but their oesi mu. did not go much beyond that. Trwiav the summer motoring Police court fines In Prince j ls .shifting north. There's Rupert for June totalled $2,920, ' a rfason x j economy. U -21 because quite a lew misgmoea folk had been trying to com.- j pete with the government.! That's a nubl fisfull of money. It would have looked large Indeed to Billy Victors back in the old Knoxville days when a few kopecks were gathered in on the charge of liquor selling. The dispenser of refreshments would pay up, with a hurt look, An tndeprndent dully newspiw devoted to the upbuilding of Prince Rupert and all communities comprising northern and central Brltl&h ColumbU (Authorized as Second Cms Mall, Post Office Department, Ottawa) Published everr afternoon except Sunday bv Prince Rupert Daily News Ltd., 3rd Avenue. Prince Rupert, British Columbia. o. A HT'KTEB. Managing Editor. H. O. PERRY. Managing Director. MEM BE.' OF CANADIAN PRESS ATJDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS CANADIAN DAILY NEWSPAPER ASSOCIATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES ilSMfc, City Carrier, per week 15c; Per Month. 65c; Per Year, 7 00; BJ3r :3gt By Mall, Per Month, 4l)c; Per Year. 4 00. Celanese Mill Shares EVERYBODY in Prince Rupert has been admitting gratification for the past year over the wonderful thing it has been for the Celanese Corporation of America to start the big mill at Port Edward. Everybody has been talking about the great benefit it will be to Prince Rupert and, of course, all of us who live and have our stake here. We are all going to be better off some way or another as Prince Rupert, at long last, comes really into her own as an industrial and commercial metropolis with the big primary payroll and all the expansion that will result therefrom. Now the Celanese Corporation is going to give us the chance to back our faith In the new undertaking with our cash. It is offering for public sale serial bonds at as low as $100 each. We are not in the habit of boosting any kind of stock promotion in our news columns, let alone in this editorial section. Rut this is somewhat exceptional so it seems worthwhile at least drawing special attention to. Perhaps the most of us have too long expected someone else to come in, put up the cash and do everything for us without us sinking much of a stake ourselves. Here then is a chance for us' to get in after a great deal has already been done in the way of preliminary organizing and starting the thing really moving. Columbia Cellulose Co. Ltd. serial bonds, being floated to provide part of the funds required to defray the cost of the $25,370,000 plant, would ap- pear to be of most particular interest right here in Prince Rupert. Investing in them will give local people who have a few or a lot of dollars to spare , the opportunity to help along a project which every-Z' one has been agreeing would be of inestimable bene- fit to this city and district. We can be sure that the company will lie watching with interest the- measure of support thev get-here. In fact, we are somewhat "on the spot." "SCHOOL'S OUT" FOR CANADIAN YOUNGSTERS This joyous scene was enacted by hundreds of thousands of school children across Canada, as summer vacation time started. Young Jackie Collum.nin e years old, dashes from an Ontario school with her report card. Entering h!e school building for his report on marks is Thomas Robinson. and once outside say things were coming to a pretty pass when a ""feller couldn't sell a little cider." f Nabisco i Commencing this month, the British government, and not the patients, will do the worrying over, how to play the bills presented by physicians and hospitals. One may not adore Socialism but to the poor man. with an encore family, this is a freedom from care be can hardly resist. ORDERS WERE ALREADY OUT FOR STOPPAGE OF TRAINS BEFORE SETTLEMENT OF STRIKE WAS ANNOUNCED TODAY , OTTAWA (CP) As the f edei al cabinet met again i I Jmi. vou want breakfaat thm' cool, crisp, de today after spending four hours in session yesterday ngotiating committee for the in a last-ditch attempt to resolve the wage dispute unions, said the strike would between the railways and the unions representing not be called off unless the ran- irftwinn;i,t.-nl.n nnmMmori ims mdn Vnr ways obtained an "honorable nturishin)(? llitn you want sunny, go!Jea-f. Sliredded X'hit-wiih fruit! For Nabisco fo is w holesome whole wheat . . . Containinj; fu which help maintain health. Serve tempting N, (W Wheal wiih lustMiu berrks or fresh tr. and salistartory" settlement. and en jo) a turn J. A. Brass, general secretary of the Railway Asso ciation of Canada that Can?.-1 If the strike did get started, U WWAI C(HJ dlan railways will accept 1.0 local time Thursday. Passenger would takf at least two or three freight shipments after midnight I trains would not operate afur days to get trams moving aain N1AGAIA tonight. This action was decided m his evening unless there wi.s I upon by the Railway Association further notification, it was also iou win jievcii Natural! as a result of the Dominion-wide strike then set for 6 a.m. Last night the United Suies' railways declared an embargo on coal shipments to Canada so they would not get their cars tied up In the event of a strike; on Canadian railroads; 1 (OTTAC.KCHKKSF Ne (.rritmrd rrentj Mude VAI.KNTIN 1.MU Your Dallj A IX-WEATHER SERVICE Radio Diai 1240 Kilocycle CFPR 'Subject to change) For Iltaling Satisfaction This Winter Choose a FAWCETT FURNACE stpi"d. The Railway Association also said that seve'nteen hotels op-1 erated by the Canadian National Railways and the Canadian Pacific Railway "may be unable' to provide services to gaests", after .that hour. j The decision of the railways , h ti nTpnt frpit;ht shipments', of any kind followed by thri-e days the embrago on acceptance of livestovk and perishable com-iioctitie.' There was no s'ptement from either Prime Minister Mackenzie King or Minister of Labor Mitchell after yesu-rday's cabinet sessions. Frank Hall, chairman of 'he wksfl . i. isrnl dar; - 2-nun . 3. Is r moi 4. tcni - 5. ' it , 1. dar nou cou ing alit it tial if 'f F . Rl 32 i i Ti Fr SI St u Tt I i , ' r" . .:' ' C. i i 1 I I i 1 1 'I;r .: I- J I " 1 It--?! &n HOLLYWOOD mm You are invited to visit our 6hop and Inspect this assembled heating unit. THOM SHEET METAL LTD. 253 East First Avenue Phone Blatk 884 STRUGGLE FOR PEACE PEACE REMAINS ELUSIVE. To say sincerity is lacking would .be to state an untruth for among the statesmen who labor for an enduring good will are those whose supreme objective is to see that war shall perish from the earth. Such men could be counted in the membership of the League of Nations years ago. Such sit at meetings of the United Nations today. Yet peace seems no nearer. If anything, the drift of the times is in the other direction and this cannot be ignored or under-emphasized. 'I am a broken machine," said Woodrow Wilson, as he lay dying in February, 1924. An idealist, he toiled to a point beyond the limit of his' powers. Grievously disappointed, he possibly had no wish to live. He had witnessed war and studied the consequences. ' "This," he said, touring Europe's battlefields, "must never lie allowed to happen again." But he was new to the ancient continent where hundreds of wars had already been fought and where, verily, they would occur again. He did not reckon with a situation where cynicism and selfish national interests came first and the framing of lasting friendships second. M0 IT-TO-flATf KTIIl OPEN FltOM 3:3(1 P M Tl (167t t 'HINK.SK disiiks a spk iutt For OuUiite Ordrrs I'llONK 133 (HOP SL'EY BUSINESS AND PROFESSiq runLic STENCH IRAPIIEU EKperienced SHORTHAND :: SECRETARIAL For appointments Phone 673 Evenings Red 399 TOR i ROCK AND1 CALL K M. J. ?Al New, Modft All WorliC SIGNIFICANCE SEEN Mr. Merchant... Are you satisfied with th business you are doinff? ... IF YOU ARE Do Not Read Any Further IF YOU ARE NOT SATISFIED We wojulcl ask you to consider if some of your trouble is that you are not Rotting in touch with potential customers. DO THE PEOPLE OF PRINCE RUPERT KNOW YOU AND WHAT YOU HAVE TO OFFER? HE RECENT ELECTION in Saskatchewan T has been analyzed as an exDression of the MAR0ARKT McLKOI) OPTOMETRIST KIANO If Tuning, Vttfi 4:00 Edmund RocKruf 4:1a Stock Quotations Int. 4:30 Music by Goodman 4:45 Wanderaway Shoes 5:00 Music in a Mellow Mood 5:00 Rendez-vous Room 5: 30-Rosa Linda 5:45- Supper Varieties 6:00 Song Festival T.B. A. 6:30 International Brotherhood of Railway Clerks Talk fi:40 Rec. Int. 6:45 Plantation House Party 7:00- CBC News 7:15 Arthur L. Phelps (Kingston i 7:30-Carol Brice (Tor.) 8:00 Geoffrey Waddington Conducts 9:00 Two Weeks at Wit's End 10:00 CBC News 10:15 Scientists Report 10:30 Program of French Music 11:00-Fish Arrivals 11 :05-Weather Forecast and Sign Off THURSDAY-A M 7:30-Muslcal CKm k 8:00 CBC News 8:15 Morning Song 8:38 Music for Moderns 8:45 Little Concert 3 GO BBC News 9:15 Morning Devotic.ru 9:39 Transcribed Melodies 9:45 Modern Musicians 9:59 Time Signal 10:00 Morning Visit' 10:15 Morning Melodie? 1&:30 Roundup Time ".t:45--Scanfltnnv1a ir Mlr1tp 11:00 Bernie Braden Tells a Story 11:15 Songs of Today 11:30 Weather Forecast 11:31 Message Period 11:33 Recorded Interlude ll:45-Let's Waltz P.M. 12:00 Mid-Day Melodies 12:15 CBC News 2:25 Program Resume 2:30 B.C. Farm Broadcast 2:55 Recorded Interlude 1 :00 Symphony Hour 2:00 Sheila Presents 2:30 Commentary and I Learned Late 2:45 Western Five 3:00 Ethel and Albert 3:15 Spotlight on a Star 3:20 Sketches In Melody 3:30 Canadian Amateur Golf ' 3:45 BBC News 3:55 U.N. Report MIKE 0 In New Offices Rf)OM 10 RTONE BUILDINQ phone BU 972 lOir. HELE Npw Phone BLUE m BEAUTY Permanent Beauty Cu. people that the business of government is to govern and stop there. Commercial enterprise is something else again and perhaps by this time it is thoroughly understood by two former members of the Douglas cabinet, 0. W. Valleau and J. L. l'helps. " The former was at the head of a ministry that dealt with insurance in direct competition with private offices. It was an experiment the electors apparently did not feel like endorsing, for Mr. Valleau was defeated at the polls. Mi. Phelps was another minister who launched his department on a program of industrial effort, this embracing a woollen mill and a shoe factory. Here, also, was direct government competition with private enterprise. Mr. Phelps was likewise bealen at the polls, Both were the two cabinet members most directly and intimately identified with a policy that had been preached loud and long and both failed to be returned. Significance is attached to their defeat. all It b 804 41 h Street DR. P. J. CHENEY DENTIST SUITE 5. SMITH BLOCK Phone 7C5 P.o. BoJt 1401 HANDV JOHN F. L. HUGHES Chiropractor 21-22 BESNEB BIXK;K P.O Box 894 Phone Blue. 442 HOMESfl OENCTAL C0f- Building and Hoof. ChlmntJ"1 The people of Prince Rupert turn to the DAILY NEWS for NEWS and ADVERTISING Practically every home in Prince Runert receives the DAILY NEWS. Every person in the home read it over and over. IT'S YOUR BEST ADVERTISING BET! . Are You overlooking rt? or are you quite satisfied? The Daily News Everybody reads it every day . . . YOU do yourself! GEORGE U RORIE j Public Accountant, Auditor, etc. phoks " Oreeu income Tax Returns Compiled. Besner Block Phone 3J7 SLUGO- " SLUGO KILLS SLUGS AND CAN BE USED IN FLOWER AND VEGETABLE GARDENS AS WELL A3 GREEN HOUSES. 4"if for 4-lb. pkg. THOMPSON HARDWARE CO. LTD. For DnlrWJ ! and Wf J MAC SHOE Serrinf the Fisheries Indtmtr- Well. (P.R.) Ltd. Cartage, Labelllnf, Wel;hit BLrE780 BUE988 225 Third Avenue Phone 101 Bo 774