6 l?rintc Uupctt EMilp rJctos LiO. Friday, March 5, 1948 SWIMMING POOL AT HAYS CREEK ru,n w ADULT SOCIALS OPEN TONIGHT First of the organized adult mixed card socials which will I The Daily News Boys MZl From ihe EiSU Tl'nS4ay'11'ui 10 4a ' p m Tables win hi. Ivies' iaun.-r"1', You saw GEORGE GILLIS PRINCE RUPERT-BORN BOY IS DOING WELL IN MUSIC A native son of Prince Rupert is George Gillis who was born here 14 years ago and appears to have thrived in the climate that some southern British Columbia people insist is wet. For over 3V1 years George has been delivering papers for the Daily News in an area that has one be a Friday night feature at the Civic Centre will be held tonight, according to Garnet Hull,' who has undertaken to act as director and master of ceremonies. The socials are open to all, including no-Civic Centre members, he said, and it is not necessary for foursomes to be formed prior to the social. GREKV DOIPHIN fffk -- friumpb STREET LANA TURNER VM MWt WHMf - Hf UH - IUD AB I I NEWS I B Shows TOO -il HE'S A SCHOLAR- 4 J We're Spec TABLE MOIH.L , There isn't a 0, Ril we can't make Kwk k. At LitUe Cifct to ju IW' U ,1 A.' RUPERT RADIO & E,rfT ICE HARVESTING IN ALBERTA Moose Jaw, oask., district farmers have come into town to take off another kind of crop i Box 1 :tC 1 CO-A-L the 1948 ice harvest in which the yield is measured in tons, not bushels. Ice cutting on the Moose Jaw river began just after Christmas and during February will be taking off the second crop in some spots, where water has frozen again to the required depth of about 20 Inches. The health department has tabooed the ice for cooling martinis, and has ordered that it be used for refrigeration and wash purposes only. Iceharvesting here bears a strong resemblance to logging, for men float on the huge chunks of ice until it reaches the cutter, and manipulate the frozen water with long-handled sticks with sharp prongs on the ends. Norman Lowe, who is manipulating the ice-cutting machine in the picture is typical of the ice harvesters. I'ntil the strike In settled in Alberta tlit , COAL that we can deliver Mill bt BULKLEY VALLEY LUMP COAL Place Your Orders Karly ALBERT & McCAFFERYll COMPLETE LINE Of 151 II.KING SI PPLIE5 Even the Winged Birds Are Taking Hand In regard to the winged girls gathering and meeting on the Hays Cove Creek, the eligible! bachelor was not ail that wasi discussed, it appears, as there was one that was tapping the wires and. listening in on the conversation. Among other things discussed and decided was to get the Canadian National Railways to donate the Hays Creek flats to the city for a swimming pool for the young generation. The winged birds felt that they had the pleasure P F D D J$adio Dial L I r l mo Kilocycle (Subject to change) FRlDATf PM. 4:00 Ed McCuray Sfngs 4:15 Stock Quotation.' 4:30 Especially For You 4:45 Sleepy Time Story Teller 5:00 String Stylings 5:30 Music by Sammy Kaye 5:45 Community Calendar 6:00 Beat the Champs 6:30 Three Suns and a Starlet d: 40 According to Record B: 45 Recorded Int. 7:00 CBC News 7:15 CBC News Roundup 7:30 These English 8:00 J C.C. Trators 8:30 Boston Pops 9:00 Dream Time 9:30 Prairie Schooner. 10:00 CBC News 10:10-B. C. News 10:15 Lister Sinclair 10:30 al Richards Orchil :00 Weather and Sign Off SATURDAY AJvL 7:30 Mus'.cal Cloci 8:00 CBC News 8:15 Pick of the Hits 8:30 Morning Devotions 8:45 Little Concert 9:00 Lord Coresser 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 Tunes For Our Times 10:45 CBC News 10:55 Weather Forecast 11:00 Music for Dancing 11:30 Weather Forecast 11:31 Message Period 11:33 Recorded 11 .45 Personal Album r-.M. 12:00 Mid -day Melodies 12:15 Recorded Interlude 12:25 Program Resume 12:30 Polka Time 12:45 Serenade for. Strings 1 : 00 Announcer's Choice 1:30 Hit Songs of Yesterday 2:00 Tea and Crumpets 2:30 Musical Program, Mont. , 3:00 Clearing Up the Weather I 3:15-CBC News 3:25 'Recorded Interlude 3:30 NBC Symphony Orch. Iccntly enough, someone asked "Where is that?" Shades of George Washington. Nevertheless there have been occasions when people found it necessary ' to inquire what part of the I glebe British Columbia wa3 situated in. - - ta. I I I 1 ..,. i Iff J Hi hx&T ProPl Heat! Eat! Enjoy! riiu.-Nfc lie rM Reminiscences By w.j. and Reflections and opportunity for many years to roam over the flats but, by this time, they should give up a little of their pleasure for the young ones thai are walking the streets and have no place to go swimming in the summer. Last year they invited several youngsters in and had two or three small craft sailing and they enjoyed it very much to gether. So, the winged birds, to gether with their elected bachelor, unanimously decided to petition the citizens and city council for Immediate action on behalf of the winged birds and the young generation of Prince Rupert to have Hays Cove Flats put in shape for a first class swimming pool as it was intended for in the first place by nature. You saw It in the Dally News JIM WEST . . . About "Russia's" Europe I've been reading a book by a man named Hal Lchnnann called "Russia's Europe." Lehrmann is a newspaperman who used to write for pjpers like PM, the New Republic, ft""-? the Nation and the New Statesman. These are the journals which some of our pink columnists read to get their inside information on what skunks the people ate who run the Western democracies . a compared with the wcetness-and-light boys from Moscow. Well, Lehrmann, it seems, wen to the Balkans to write a book the leftists would eat up . . . the kind of thing he'd been doir.g in his articles before he went to the Balkans. But what he saw behind the Iron Curtain opened his eyes. He cent stories about it to his "liberal" newspapers and they suppressed them. He lost his backers but he had a shocking story to write and he put it in a book. It isn't a book about how Com-munism or Socialism would work if we only gave it a chance. It's a book about how Russian Communism or Socialism and variations of it have changed the life of the people of countries like Hungary, Jugoslavia, Czechoslovakia, Austria, Poland, etc. Here is no theory but just what happens when the Kremlin boyi and their stooges go to work on the ordinary people of the country. It's a book you ought to read. P.S. An honest, open-minded columnist who was a true liberal nd a humanitarian before anything else could prove his intellectual honesty by reading this book and reviewing it. )im W Saw . . ." li sptmsortd by tlrt Bntuh ColumbM Ftdrraaon 0 Tratlt an ndujtrj. W-tS COTTAGE CnEESE New Creamed Fresh Made! VALENTIN DAIRY Tour Dally ALL-WEATHER SERVICE . ATA DC I Tr 8 A.M. TO 9 P.M. WEEK DAYS 10 A.M. TO 9 PJVI. SUNDAY By Chic Young I Moving, Parkint&J t:l.inni. J r.J Cartage and Sin; For Complete, fox Efficient Sma Lindsay'i Cnf & Storaji Cor. 2nd and Pari i- Establish!!!! Phones U utl JOHN H. BULGER OPTOMETRIST John Bulger Ltd. Third Avenue nr.irrr) mrrh o VaKttK & DKILM BUILDERS AND CONTRACT Newspapebbov he does find time to work on his collection of stamps. Music holds great interest for George and he is a smooth operator when it comes to fingering the keyboard of a piano. As to what the future may hold, by way of an occupation, George isn't making any commitments. He still has several years of high school in which to meditate the problem. HOTEL ARRIVALS Prince Rupert L. George, Stewart; S. Joy, Prince George, James Galland, Queen Charlotte City, R. J. Cook, Edmonton; Mrs. N. Bar- wick, Fort Babine; Mrs. J. Fair- bairn, Fort Babine; Mr. and Mrs. Fletcher and family,, city; Mr. and Mrs. W. Thompson,' Oliver: Miss O. Flanders. Ket-' Chilean; J. McRae, Fort William,' i Miss J. Lofcndo, Terrace! E. Willie, Terrace; A A. C. Lucas, Vancouver; J. O. Peterson, En- ,dak0- I Watch the Classined Ads! o 111 street -which might rightly be renamed Doctor's Row. His route takes in Fourth and Fifth Avenue West between McBride Street and Fulton. George attends the Annunciation School where he is in Grade Nine this year. Basketball is his top sport although he isn't a member of an organized team. Reading and the activities connected with the Civic Centre, of which he is a member, take up most of his spare time but ; m I SUIT-able; For You! i I Our Lay-Away Plan With a Small Deposit WALLACE'S Of Course You piNE P.O. Box 1118 518 Repairs Construction Alterd Not inrrenquently, when a fire partly destroys a building, someone will say "oh well, might have been best had it gone entirely." But how far correct is he? And how easy it is to say. When cash is tight and material scare and costly,, one is liable to count his coppers jand revise the view that it's cheaper to build anew. Of the making of movies there's no end and the work demands new scenes, fresh backgrounds and novel action. The great northwest has not been entirely neglected. Discoveries have disclosed that more than the mounties have been entrusted with duties there. One need go no farther than Old and New Hazelton and find all the answers. What's the matter with screening the race to lay the Atlantic cable dra-, matic expedition to Behrlng Sea and from the shores of the narrow sea, link up with Europe first. But, it failed. The Atlantic won out. And a variety of equipment was abandoned. The vowering crags of the Rocher ds Boule have all the scenic setting needed. Wire, thrown away, helped fashion a bridge made by the Indians across the rush- lng waters of Hagwilget Canyon. The long miles north were packed with adventure. The screen can bring it all back with .Hollywood taking care of glamorous trimmings. There was even more pomp than usual at Victoria last Monday. When Parliament I opens, the glitter and richness 'of pageantry comes as a glad necessity. The legislators have no objection. The lieutenant governor doesn't mind a bit. And as for the general public, they just devour it. As a show, here is something distinctly the highest of high class, and one does not have to pay a penny. Let's go on liking it! Of course! Why not! One can faithfully attend school and yet have a great' deal to learn concerning geography. Many realized this during the war. Thousands discovered how little they actually did know. For example, one aftejrnoon in Prince Rupert, and American Army lieutenant and local folk were chatting about provinces, states, kingdoms, zones and all such subjects. In introducing the young officer, it was stated he came from Virginia. Inno- Floor Sandinjf a Specialty P.0.W1 I Phone RED 561 44 YOUR BEST EATING PLACE FILL-COIRSE MEALS 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. BANQUET HALL FOR LUNCHEONS. DINNERS AND PARTIES CHINESE DISHES BROADWAY CAFE 608 3rd Ave. W. Phone 200 OCEAN ft HOTEL i fnniicrly KsS A Quiet. I'lc place to Lm COM PUT11' I.N0VATH if, ,onis Hi' Snrinc HIM ljt1 Now Manas Proprirl'ir. TOM PESITT PHONE l TO GASOLINE ANNOUNCEMENT! Bert's Transfer & Messenger Service Has been purchased by W. D. Weiss from Paul Kilborn and Warren Peterson. Mr. Weiss will continue the business at 303 Third Avenue, under its present name, but will combine with it his Prince Rupert Bottle Collector and Messenger Service. YOUR PATRONAGE WILL BE APPRECIATED Office Phone: Blue 810 Home Phone: Green 955 AVAILABLE AT IIMhCAV li iLinujni muiuio Liu. Congratulation SERVICE Saanich PlumW Ladies!! LONDIE The Extra Rest is Relaxing! and HEATING 0 on oi'kninc tiikiu sim .km ' ' ' uuildim; and stoke on THE5F. GOES) ' "" 5$S ? Air"'",, 1 fwlw DON'T SOU 6ET UP XtmEN I'D BEK jfJVSJ Must See These TOWELS. FACE CLO'IHS, TEA TOWELS AND CLOTHS, TABLE CLOTHS, RUNNERS, PLASTIC TABLE COVERS, PILLOW SLIPS, APRONS. STREET AT F(HJKTHAU WE WISH THEM tVI HV SK PHILPOTT EVITT & CO. PHONES 651 n'-i i'.k- - Building Third West RED 400