"Il:f.a-.aihfr "P.cp-.rtT'rT 8 Prince Rupert Daily News Thursday. November 16, 1950 p. t ' Vtyon 'hewlT'- n H RADIO .DIAL CP I i K 12411 Kllocyci, (Subject to Change) Vhik.,.,,,,..- "U-1..H. Wartime Measure Recoils Smartly if ' j "don radio s,.J,"ea' A LONDON (! Lord Wool ton, I chairman of the . Conservative ! party aud former food minister, j aeiieyes it is high time the La- Vancouver Pointer Returns to Dublin VANCOUVER 0 Artist Cii" Robinson doesn't mind behvj poor so long as it's in DuWin. So, the 33-year-old artist ie-cently packed up hU easel brushes and 400-odd paintint,-. and headed for his native Ireland. He says poverty goes hand-in-hand with an artist's life. But, "It should be easier to be poor in Dublin." Robinson was employed as a travelling instructor with the extension department of the University of Briti.sh Columbia, """W explained & ''udio av... 1 'jor government scrapped many of the legisiaiiye controls introduced as wartime emergency measures. Discussing the question in the 2:00 R.r.,.i . Sign Off FRIDAY A.M. i:00 Musical Clock 8:00 CBC News 8:10 Here's toil Goou 8:15 Morning Song 8:30 Music for Moderns 8:4J Little Conciit !):00 BBC News and Cotnty. (J : 15 Morning Devotions U:20 Moi nln.i Cone -rt 9:59 -Time Signal 10:10 Morning Visit 10:15 Carson Robi.;on and His Buckaroos 10:30 .4e!(Mlv 'iiinr" 10:45 Musical Kitchen 11:00 Klnderaartfin of the Air 11:15 Roundup T:me 11:30 -Weatlu r R 'port ll:31-MessiiKC Peiiod 11:33 lice. int. 11:45- Scandinavian Melodies FRIiVW r 1. 12:00 -Mid-Day Melodies' 12:15 CUC. N.'s i2:!5 - l'lonram Resume 4:23 I1C. Faun Broadcast 13:55 Rec, Int. i :0'l i : ;)(( f. -fiiin I 3a M'!!"a! Program 1 :45 Needlcpolnters, Comty. House ' of Lords, the erstwhile 3:0U-The Music & THUESDAY P.M. 3:30-Listeners" Choice 4:00 The Sunshine Club 4:15 - Slock Quotations and Im 4:30 My Shipmate Jimmy 1:45 Younx Man with a S-ni.t 4:55 fBC Mews 5:00 Int. Comty. j:10 There's Music In the Air 5 :2'J Musical Program 5:45 "Canada at Work" 0:00--Supper Serenade C:15 -E:;gliih t'avui lliii 0:30 Musical Varieties 7:00 - CBC News 7:15 CBC N'.'ws Roundup 7:30 KveiiUdc- 8:00 Citizen's Forum 8:30 Citizen's Forum News 8:4S-The Metje Reader 9:00 CBC Vancouver Cmecn Oixhestr:i 9:Sn Winnipcs Lhama 0 03 -CBC News 0 ' ' 0 CBC New s 10:15-Talk 10:30 Fairmont Hotel Oroh 10:35 Interlude j minister provoked a roar of j I laughter when he told of having j been tire victim recently of an s M-'r And hJ He quit because the job diem t . I "pay enough to hold a compet-, ent person for any great lcngih ! $750,000 BLAZE A spectacular fire, fanned by a 35-milr -an-hour wind, Oct 9 levelleri eiflu buildings and caused damage estimated at $750,000 in one of the worst fiivs in the history of North Sydney, N. Fifty persons were left without work and 22 others homeless. 4 gara;;e, 22 vehicles, an dndertaking firm, two wholesale firms, a dance hall, a 40-rocni hotel and other buildings were destroyed. This photo shows the fire sweeping through the garage. (CP PHOTO i Skinny men.r of time." He'll be doing much the same in Dublin. But he expects to gain new ideas from "the new Irish renaissance. " gain 5. 10.1 outmoded regulation introduced by himself in 1941. It involved! confiscation by the customs au-i thorities of five pounds of sugar' ;ent by a generous friend from ovi-rstas. j ,ii sugar-rationed Britain thei rstriction had been imposed j during the war because of the' .serious shipping situation at the time. It forbade acceptance of i mnm than fina rwiimris ftf fillV I German Nurses 5o To Africa j physiotherapists, radiographers Mrs. C. Searle, director of the !and occupation therapists, have' TransVaal's nursing services. She , been recruited by the Transvaal said on her return hcre that provincial administration and , , . are a verv ol - will -arrive in Soutn Africa at Get HeiiTeiriii,! Bll up. ,u f tmhha bU, d, lHt,T,' COVENTRY , Engiand 0.- A prize of $6,000 has been offered for the architect submitting the best designs for rebuilding Cov . PRETORIA ? A total of 130 the end of December. The nurses g"'l." and almost add had re-German student nurses, plus 47 were selected in Germany by ceived university education. " r ik.i. "Tr i- , i..,K,.,l...,l Tin. Ui ,.i.n. tW. I , lt,K ,''J PCP. 1B 1H1 .lUlil,. wj" ' Y"u,cw,a'' , " , with food in gift parcels. tury edifice was destroyed many other buildings in the blitz Such regulations, Lord argued, now are unneces- of 1940. Tf! 1 no 1j(0Liu1IIM sary. ' , Wnen a customs official wus .old of the incident he said Lord ' Woolton co'uld have his sugar back, provided he gave satisfactory assurance it was sent to him as an unsolicited gift. j Last summer, after a West Indies firm advertised its product in the British Isles, customs officers launched a drive against shipments of sugar parcels. The authorities claimed the parcels were paid for and as such v. ere not unsolicited gifts. j 11 AD in GREAT POLICEWOMAN Miss Amy Etteridge, 44, is the first woman detective to be promoted a chief inspector at Scotland Yard. 11 nTY7T0n fl mala 4 nil IT n III II E I t. ir mm ,9in urn ( Ft f I z' izfi' it M If 9 I j LES, liili fight, keen Alt ki? Aft's1- f '.'-. i .-vtn M, ill i I from Princeton if available Utt in Vancouver and at II vendor! on the lower Mialnlandl At Invigorating I M'l rlrriing( J'OLD DUBLIN" If more than equal to any imported Ale, For quality . , . body ... and flavor, ask for and ee that you jet "OLD DUBLIN" ALE! .- it f' ' A GENERAL MOTORS VAtUE vy PHOTOGRAPER AND SUBJECT Dick Bird, Regina wild-" life photographer, shown here with a young double crested cormorant at a northern Saskatchewan lake, has been awarded a fellowship in the Photographic Society of A.n erica lie was cited for "out-f tanding ability in the creation of eclor motion pictures of bird life and in the field of photographic education." (CP PHOTO i The high reputation of Chevrolet... its makers... and its dealers ... were three main reasons why get a case today... now! Ihu advertisement not published or displayed by (lie Liauor Control Board oi ty the Government o( British Columbia. Chevrolet led all other makes in popularity according to THE MEDAL SCOTCH OF THE WORLD l recent impartial surveys among automobile owners. . . . and that's the car to buy! Recent notion-wide surveys establis e among automobile owners have beyond question that Chevrolet is the leading ear of t reputation, three ways-he high reputation car itself; the high reputation of its manufaC,0rroeire$'f Chevro e of General Motors; and the high reputation What safer guide can there be than reputation, when it comes to choosing a motor car? For reputation is based on the day by day and year by year experience of Canadian motorists driving their cars in every Canadian season, on every kind of Canadian road. Every car can claim top quality. . But ony one car can be Canada's favorite in popularity, in sales, yf ll : : -x Dealers. What safer gather be? You simply cant the leader wrong when you buy -Chevrolet! in value r-with the highest repu- ' 1 flj ration In all parts of the country VJ I H et23 ' IL Kf M(0)T! & There is a reason for the unrivalled popularity of Dewar's. Corner 7 ill. Si reel uiul 3rd. Avenue It Is the unvarying quality of this famous Scotch. A quality that has been awarded over 50 gold medals, at the great international fairs. Cittilled, blended and batllad In Scotland in 2 6 '6 oz. bottles. BEFORE YOU SAY SCOTCH . . . SAY DEWAR'S This advortisc:'i3.it is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia.