Prince Rupert Daily Mews Wednesday, February 6, 1V'j2 Chamber Bach Mail Delivery Service I I very hard to have him visit ; Britain. I The friendship between the Kins and Queen ZirXl McRae Plan to MONAIU II OF OMMNON MAN iL'diiUiiii'vj rum pane 2) Roosevelt dated back to 1939 i w h e n George and Elizabeth ; made a historic trip to Canada Speed Road Work Offered to Prince W Providing It's Still t Expression Of Kitimat Like all frontiers in the past, Kitimat where the largest aluminum smelter in the world and new city will be carved out of forest land has gien rise also to self-expression. As Rot-e:t. Servlcr told a story of Klondike gold rush days, now appears a tory about the men who "toil and moll" not for gold. with all the armed services. Ho visited Allied troops in North Africa, Italy and Malta. 'Island citadel which with the mother- j land had stoo,d up to years of; furious aerial assault. ' Executive of the Prince Rupert Chamber of Commerce, in sion with the highway committee Delivery of mail by letter carrier ir Rupert is again being considered by the v. brahch of the Post Office Department E ( whaite, MP for Skeena, ha3 been advised' yesterday atlernoon, approved the plan of J. D. McRae MLA to press for early reconstruction and blacktopping of highway 16 eastward from Prince Rupert and westward from Terrace without having such improvements defer, ed pending relocation of the highway for 27 miles in the lower Skeena Valley where it now but to crert a new industrial MacNabb, director of operations in Ottawa His Reluctant Tongue Once Moved Too Fast During his earlier years George had extreme difficulty with his speech because of a stammer. He became accustomed to referring to George V as "His Majesty" or "my father" in order to avoid saying "the K-k-king." This fault of speech, which he subsequently overcame to a large extent, was the background of a classic episode when, a-s the Duke of York, he opened the Wembley Exposition of 1925 In London. As he stood before a microphone TOOK KISKS AS Dl'TY i ' Only a few days after the Allied Invasion of Normandy In . June, 1944, the King visited thef ' littered beachhead, crossing the channel aboard a cruiser and ! landing from an amphibious ! craft. There were many who thought , the King ran too many personal risks, that he should not so ex-, pose himself to a multitude of j hazards, that he taxed the in-1 geiiuity of the security authori-' ties too heavily. j "It is my duty," he replied i '.kirts the railway. " ; ti,c department a year ago Tne Ftory is Cartoonist Allan had deferred such postal service 'iterated itx Beator's "Kitimat 51" a hum- as lrie requirements were not mal deliver. , orous if bazaar portrayal of the mel here. Since then, however, uCsted that ho"1" men at work from the first ar- lne numbr of points of call has jeft availabhi rival to the Christmas "exodus." increa.sed to very close to tlw easiness pcoci. w R. T. "Roily" Goodchild. per- minimum of 2500 required so The Junior rw 1 ffU. Vl.lmnl l r.lllr, f I V, to-vwo i , . 'WOt The department of public works will be advised by letter of the Chamber's stand along ; th s line. j I Mr. McRae will be pressing at the forthcoming session of the Legislature for action as suggested. ' ! DUiiuv: uii-t, yji iiwiitah iiiauH uiMbiun mm llierce IS alSG i beint l v-oa us opinion ot structors wn started the Jod in bciny censmerea June, 1961, with four feet of cue factor exst?. how?vr snow on the ground, writes the which it Is felt might give rise to foreward: 'complain and that is the ar- , Au, ll,b"r leaden I mere was trouble with the i battery of loudspeakers and 1UBLIC ENEMY NO. 1 The RCMP have put Donald (Mickey) McDonald, Toronto gunman, at the head of a crime roll of their 10 "most-wanted" lawbreakers. The 44-year-old former salesman is believed to have fled to the United States after breaking out of Kingston penitentiary In 1947. He tops a list of men wanted for murder, forgery, narcotics charges, bank robbery, swindling and criminal insanity. The list is Canada's first announced roll of public enemies and was prepared by the RCMP at the request of newspaper men. (CP Photo) "The lob is b.g, and lfs tough, rival at 2 o'clock in the after- ' 111 Wilii(tot I his voice carried only a few nd fr"tude that in the j early feet. While workmen strove to days he so successfully masked the anguish he felt when speak correct the difficulty, the Duke turned to a friend to make an aside remark. Just as he did so the current came on and his voice boomed: "The d-d-damned thing d-d-doesn't w-w-work." simply. King George did a great deal to strengthen Anglo-American frientish.p. Wounded soldiers, including many Americans, were entertained at Buckingham Palace. GI's were invited to royal dances and parties. He praised the battle brotherhood of the cousin countries, and behind the scenes the King strove to knit the transatlantic ties evei 'loser. He profoundly admired I resident Franklin D. Roosevelt ind disclosed after the war that he and the government had tried but the men doing this Job are noons of the letter mall by air, conference waiffcii big and tough too. No matter how delivery of which, except possibly Jj'Tf met kie-. much snow or rain falls, how for some of the downtown tousi- """""nately. many feet of mud to wade ness people, could not be carried "There's anotner s through, how cold it gets, Kitl- out until next day. so unfair," rtnia tto mat will be built. I Under the present service "What do you "There's plenty of bad lan-1 these mulls are available to box his companion, guage. and lots of beefs in this, j holders and general delivery "Women doing t, the initial stage, but there's also patrons about two hours after came the reply. lots of laughs and Al Beaton's ; arrival at the Post Office. art represents the marriage be- The Inauguration of mall de-' A doctor uju-ri h tween humor and truth," jjvery would also involve closing tlcnl her age The cartoons have been drawn of Postal Station B, it Is pointed "j never ua , on the site, first as a weekly fix- out. f he answered cot1," ing publicly, ft was only his vigorous sense of public duty which Impelled him to accept speaking engagements at all." "INDUSTRIAL DIKE" In George's reign the monarchy chiefly ceremonial but exercising no small degree of Influence nevertheless became democratic to such an extent that it seemed In no way Incompatible with the Labor-Socialist government that came in the wake of World War II. 2 Not Just Gloves But KAYSER Gloves The Place To Go Fur (he Brands You Know" g 5 WALLACE'S DEPARTMENT STORE Clearing Up Radiophone and the United States. The King's handshake with the President at their cordial meeting in Washington symbolized the growing fellowship between the two English-speaking peoples who had parted politically ture lor the camp newspaper, Executive council of the Prince matter of fact, In . v.aocy ow, wen computa in one Kupert cnamoer ol commerce, twenty-one" Alternate frequency channels volume anu published In Van- at the request of Mr. Appla- "Indeed." said It was meaningful that in the are now available for local radio couver for distribution. whaite, yesterday afternoon re- "what detained yos! midst of Britain's heaving po- phones, the Chamber of Com-Utical experiment often called 'n-rce was advised Monday night a bloodless equivalent of the by Hugo Kraupner who said he French revolution the mon- had been advised while In Van-arrhv trained lifter rather than couver recently that Channel 4 ADMIS' ALL SEATS RESERVED THE INTERNATIONAL CINF.MA GUILD OF CANADA PRE' would now be used here instead of Channel 7. lost It. Labor party adherents were The Chamber had been taking minriful it lha Vltin'o coniiAui: that there was . .v. r...u. i .i up complaints in 1778. EARLY DIFFICULTIES i George VI was born at Yor Cottage, Sandringham, December 14. 1895. His childhood was spent chiefly there or at Marlborough House in London. The difficulties of his own early days, which included frequent illnesses, helped to move ! him into closer sympathy with struggling yor'h and Indeed j with the HUie p.ople generally, i Two serious handicaps plagued i him at the outset. Never rugged i in constitution, he suffered from i boyhood into early manhood from a weakness, which cut I short his naval career in World I War I. After an operation for TOCU 10VI TNISI WONBCimi fil ,T ,M much confusion, particularly Uve presidency in of . the industrial . , Vancouver owing to over- Welfare Society They were channe, , makln mindful also hU visits o many nllig8ible !oca, radlo lephone to factories, mills and mines, of communication aimc,st impossible his talks with workers at their , tlmes benches; of his earnest interest ,.Thls should bri, an ,m in all their problems. BKraupner mpnt said Mr , The King once gave this defl- speaking of the alternative chan-nition of a true leader: nei All that was involved was "The true leader is a man with changing of crystals in radlo-the gift of vision and the desire telephone sets. On the same IS Ad OVER Tom I program v.wcorvER and VICTORIA SUNDAY si. Chilcotin 8 p.m. TUESDAY ss. Cainosun 12 noon ALICE ARM, STEWART AND PORT SIMPSON Sunday. Camosun. 11 p.m. FOR NORTH QIEEN CHARLOTTE loLANDS February 1 ss. Chilcotin midnight i "Eye Wilness" THU V "Switzerland" I '1ftff I a duodenal ulcer, ills general m . .1 654 j health improved. I Much more obstinate was the I stammer. He largely overcame it !bv will power, pcrscverence. the in his soul to leave the world a Meantime, there was a letter little better than he found it. from the minister of transport. Such a leader does not demand Hon. Lionel Chevrier, saying that Immediate results, but is willing the representations of theCham-to strive for what appears to bt iber were being brought to atten-unattainable, leaving i1, to his , tlon of departmental of ficials. FOR SOITH QIEEN CHARLOTTE ISLANDS E 1 services of speech defect special ists and the constant help and encouragement of his wife. succecsois to gather .ht ''rum,! PEKEK FARR : MAKJCRIH fflPSG One Showing only Thundav 8:39 p.m. Doors open at 7:45 ss. Chilcotin January 25 FRANK J. SKINNER Prince Rupeit Agent Third Avenue Phore 568 W TOTEM p FAMUtS PL..IERS THEATRE I I , 1ml ik.m.M.. une wno Knew me King vir- and to be cnent If he caa feel' nil ft 'I that what he did made that ul-j KUuDet'Ollut Am Jqw Control tw4 bv G ..,.. tually all his life asserted: "It is d Mi CoW.. xr. I a tribute alone to his resolution timate harvest possible." , Roads Tested RESERVED SEAT TICKETS MIST BE PICKED I P liEFORE i PM ff That NEW Word in Entertains "Hong Kong HAMH Action ful TORONTO f Canadian motorists some day may drive on rubber roads. , In fact, some are already. Eleven miles north of Montreal near Ste. Rose, a quarter-mile strip of rubberized asphalt paving has been In use since October. 1949. Recently, another test strip was built near Unlonville, 13 miles northeast of Toronto. Tests on some 40 stretches of road In Europe indicate that natural rubber mixed with the asphalt adds years to the life of the road, gives a better braking surface and tends to kcep Ice f;om forming. An action drama laid In the turbulent China of today is set forth 1n "Hong Kong," which opens Friday at the Totem! iiieatrt. Filmed in Technicolor, this production stars Ronald Re- gan and Rhonda Fleming, and introduces Danny Chang, four-year-old Chinese boy. The 3tory aeais with a callous One stretch in the Netherlands drifter trim American miss and a has been in use for 13 years on who are thrown together in a the main highway between Am desperate sprint from the war- sterdam and The Hague. It was Interior to the of ?rn sanctuary used by German military traffic and later by Allied tanks and I Hong Kong. Enroute they act as trucks during the Second World , P"61 pro V tyTB War ncse boy whose father has Just Other roads in the Netherlands becn kll'ed' Whe" Rei!an' a?,e wer torn to thppm pieces hv hpavv b j ..v.w, military traffic but the rubber TOTf TODAY ONLY Evenings 7.9 p.m. kmoi PI AVI! out that the boy Is carrying a valuable jeweled idol, he hatches a scheme to convert the statuette Into personal cash. After the dangerous trip to Hong Kong, he contacts a black marketeer, soon finds himself the target for a band of cutthroats after the million-dollar trinket. After a series of murder attempts, the boy is kidnapped and held hostage for the Idol. This nets some high-voltage episodes asphalt stretch still is In good co:- lition and has needed no maintenance work. The rubber a creamy-colored powder in grains from half an inch In diameter to dus is mixed with asphalt Just before the gravel is added. Scientists sav that the rubber 1 absorbs the lighter hydro carbons in the bitumen but not the as-phaltenes. To the layman. It 10 Points for Effective Advertising Advertise regularly. Every issue of the paper takes your story to its readers. Aiake every ad look like your own. Adopt a distinctive style and stick to it. Use plenty of white space, your ads should never be hard to read. Put a definite proportion of your gross sales into newspoper advertising. It should be 3'- of the previous years gross with more if special conditions justify it. Brighten your ads with frequent illustrations either humorous or practical. When you make claims in your ads back them uo with good reasons. Think advertising all the time. Buy goods that. will advertise well. Get good position in the paper by seeing that copy is in the newspaper office in plenty of time. Advertise nationally advertised goods whenever possible; they sell faster. Plan your window and counter displays to tie in with your newspaper advertising. Your own sales staff will appreciate your advertising if you draw it to their attention and suggest that they read the ads. i. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Todoy's the Doy for Those Happy, Scrappy Who Lead The Way! IN looks as if the rubber swells to 1 and an exciting climactic chase sequence that winds up on a sampan in the harbor. "THE TANKS Al five, or six times its original size. First experiments with the j rubber powder in a paving mlx-i ture took place in Malaya and ; England in the early 1930's. The i strip near Ste. Rose was the first ' laid in Canada, but five now are COMBATS INTOLERANCE WINNIPEG (CP) Fred Tipping, retired city teacher, has been appointed director of the WinninP(T Jnint. TrnHo TTnlnn COMING Starring STEVE COCHRAN PHILIP CAR n upe.auon, iwo in uniario two commlttee for combatting racial in fejueoec and one in St. John s, Intolerance. intolerance. The The trade trades union union Nfld committee which made the ap The first rubber airplane run- pointment was addressed by K. ALSO CARTOON NEWS way was oum in anaaa at tne ; Kaplanskl of Montreal Cana-RCAF station at St. Hubert, Que. dian director of the national Conclusive results from the ' committee. tests now under way may not be ' . available for several years. For best results, advertise! SHOWS 7-9:00 VLLrtJJte 9. 10. I kbtt, : SOROPTIMIST CLUB'S THEATRE NIGH -r- . vi - . 1-.. CohrUO'V DAI LY NOTICE ! We wish to announce that we have open alleys through the week at the following times: Afternoons . Evenings Monday 2:30 - 8:00 9:00 - 11:00 " " Tuesday Wednesday " " 7:00 - 11:00 " " Thursday " ' Friday Saturday " " 7:00 - 11:00 PRINCE RUPERT BOWLING ALLEY NEWS i orem i rtcorre, yveancsaay. "COPACABANA" A MERRY MUSICAL COMEDV Admission tide Adult admission only