Me Te eh es atte we SON NN NR Ry My et we a ae ~—re , \ re 2 2 2 2 2 Se Se ye Se wee AYE NN SHAN OOH Fw eR EHH NN TS e tee ewe rs wh rey K EER ER EERE SE Ow Ee Ee ee DHT AO Ee LED EEN EEE EE OE Her ree eee re HEME Ee ee ER wh ee ee 4 ee tes He tee beep gear ‘ ost 2 Line “Prince Rupert Daily } EWS i)! 7 oe .,, Monday, September 23, lop7. Es ay an independens aaiiy newspaper devoted to the upbiiilding of Pr thea Rupert and Northern and Central British Columbla, ait : ay V ictoria Report. THE "eomer Bf Canadien Press Audie Burenst of Cirewations © |P 8 by J, Ke NESBITT ETTERBOX 7 Pupnisheaiy P. MAGOR, president _ Limited fo Vic’ fOR tA—Now that there’s a new Minister of of The Editor, | Qo ny mill—-Per month $1.00; per yenr 810.00. Agriculture; Mr, Steacy of North Vancouver, and no! The Daily News: — e Autlidrizea an epeontl cian ona by the Pott oi 0 cpartment, Ottawa body has to speculate any more as to who'll get that Iam not a baby sitter butr ff —- - $12,590 a yeurjob: (plus the $5,000 \sessional indem- of the Nalustiees done to thane as I have two in my own home who have “baby sat” two-nmnd - - t three times for the same party a “‘fand as yet have not received any payment for their services. How little some parents value thelr. little children and again the old parent appreciates a good baby sitter and pays proniptly and well, : Sonie tell thelr baby. sitters they will pay then “later”, These laters sometimes turn out to be Laing’ s Uncertain Future | fine everybod y’s busy in this capital—(a great gos- 5 you know--tr ying to. figure: out who the ‘ DEFEAT g gf Liberal leader Arthur: Laing in the re- fae hus ait fi ‘be: My, Speaker. my The: speakershap ofthe. ‘teeis-|* _cent Burnaby byelection has raised speculation Tighire is a pleasant position’ of | speaker, Mr. rane is. Xavier! as to his’ own politic al future and that of the party’s much prestige and authority, not| Richter of Similkameen, a quiet, . oo hard labor, and $3,000 a year,| plodding, pleasant fellow,. who pr ovineial leadership. | . in addition to the regular ses- never makes his presence felt in Sueh speculation takes into. consider ation Mr. sional ce a $8, 000. ter any gathering, doesn’t back- . . . it’s & position worth going after,| stap or loud mouth, though one Laing’s and the Liber ‘al party’s s defeat i in past provin- | not. that goinf-after:it will do you start talking io. inn en | i _ eial general elections. Like Progressive Conserva~ any. bagkbenet MLA “muah | pealize he knows a lot more than ' . gees © pood: 7% , nie} seldom. re-| ne. lets on. bs F“never’, tive leader Deane T"inlayson, he has heen ast cs af \ wards those, ‘ is: bac ckbenchers ; So, ‘there you' ‘Nive its : it’s ods Do any: ‘gther baby sitters: have the lonely political wiltierness, 20) pwho'gd after prints! anybody's guess. In the mean- this trouble? Alex Matthew of -Vaneouver- time the Premier looks. wise, I think they should ret at ‘The other day the forme: MP and MI. A, for the | centre has been deputy speaker | mysterious, says nothing. He least 50 cents per hour wp till ‘ | ; first time sinee'his defeat at the hands of Social |i" recent years, enjoys nese jeuessing gumes, midnight, Thereafter 75 cents oe . But the Prémier ignéred him | especially if he can «promote per hour. cs a Credit and the CCF, disclosed: his per sonal feelings. | wien it eam? to naming a B:.c,| them. Usually, too, he likes to Parents, certainly your -Ntte He will step down he said, as Liberal leader if that | delegate to the Commonwealth |come up with unexpected an- - | : ra eee fe matt Parliamentary Association meet-|Sswers, ones that confound those; gs , . “ : much, is it not?’ LF rales is the wish of the party's followers at the next con- ing in India late this’ fall. The wile think they're experts. Oe THE UNITED es weather bureau forecas’s that temperatures lower than Seasonal. aver- Let us hear from some off6ir: I. ention. and if someone more acceptable to believers Premier chose Mr. Thomas Bate the Speaker, in theory, is; @ges will prevail in Canada from Lake,;Huron west to the western border of Saskatchewan j|baby sitters, Ar ' ~ i‘ vention and if c aecepli of Vancouver-Point Grey as|elected by the Legislature. And! from mid-September to mid-October. This m ip, based on the bureau's 30-day outlook, also fied? Gyn an se children’s safety is worthy.{that : in Liberalism comes to the fore. —— « | B.C.’s delegate. Now, this looks| so he is, In theory, but in Prac” shows that most of Quebec and British Colum'ia can except above-normal temperatures, “Justice's . Yooh ope t tines of it] highly significant. sinee it’s us-| tice it’s Mr. Premier who chooses _ (GP Photo, Map Courtesy 'T. to’ Telegram) | 00 wee _ , Sueh oe tne fortunes of politics, . udily the prerogative of the|Mr. Speaker, and then his choice |f p sy ‘Toronto’ ¢ caram) A NEW CINIDENS = More than likely Mr. Laing ‘will disappear from | Speaker to attend such confer-| i endorsed by the Legislature. 7 — a “an ences. But the grapevine says| The Legislature, of course, could T I M FO ' LONDON @ —- About 4,000 - the scene-—at least his, present “capacity. Mr. Bate doesn't want to be/turn down the Premier's choice, a nM aiush teen one ned . If such is to be the verdict, there are a great Speaker showever, that’s what] but it never does. by STAN ROUGH _ British, cltiz ne n, 195 ‘noe, many citizens including at least some of his political |‘ 21 sy. This is all a bit of the make: og - {mans and 107 Russians, 7 i ; ‘ . . - The latest buzz has as Mr.| believe in which our legislative L kk | H een es on nee csp ernie - foes who will be charitable enough to recognize that life is wrapped about. It's called : : _ Lakelse Hot Springs , feet. It had twenty-one rooms ‘, yaee . o oO . . me ne traditién and courtesy among sy . Pr. - British Columbia has lost a genuinely sincere and All Ak . ar | politigians and: all that ‘Sort’ of Loe: xted one mile south of Lakelse, sixteen miles from Terrace, there are a ining room and lounge room J: _ devoted public ser vant. ra men pane pote of the © nme. Doaité Fildyson, “thie BIC. |number of hot springs. The largest spring-is about 100 feet in diameter and in a two-storey bath house with ao fg * — 4s . FE. , by oung and ireplac re bi 4 feder al and provincial fields id given he oF nis |. By G. FE. MORTIMER leader of the 'Goriservatives, who, | the centre’the temper ature of the water three feet below the surface is 186 de- guests could relax. after their : om a , : BE i . - mp : life, his energy and his capa bilities to the further- | HUCKLEBERRY FINN _|like Mr.Arthur Laing of the Lib-, erees. This spring has a flow of 130,000 gallons per day and is the biggest in|baths. The water was piped ance of political democracy in Canada and the inter- | TAVEING.-.-. erals, can’t get elected to the|y, 7”, ast ° from the main spring 5,000 feet ts of h y ‘Ath, é h, oft In the wreck of the steamboat | <°esatre. 9 frustrating and B.C. The thirteen springs of various sizes are located within a hundred yards @f!away in a 6 inch wire bound - ' ‘ ng position for * 193 “pi ests or the common people. ough, oftena misun- |p aa newspaper with some- party leader to be in, is writical Per race- Kitimat highway and have a total flow of over 300,000 gallons. - {Stove pipe. ptbough the pipe derstood man on the political rostrum or in the halls | thing in it about the way they're lof the Premier for naming Mr.| The existence of the springs vas warm enough Tor the wae At, \ hie at oh ft . taking our book out of the! /Steacy as agriculture minister was known to trappers but it was! 4; Fae hing ik Po: at & ® ’ : , as ‘ , . EMS of parliament, his sincerity of purpose and. deep he schools in New York, because it! t that h has anything against ; Mot until Bruce Johnstone came his hotel a8 ne “hunting, fishing mounted we . 10 merease the WAITING TO BE DEVELOPED lief in the democratic functions of government have | has aris in it laa, e has anything against ito Terrace to manage the fish| 4N¢ health resort in a number of) water pressure the level of the is the son ) 2 é s 2 < Nas some parts in it that’s de-| Mr. Steacy, but because. Mr. « a8 Sh’ American outdoor magazines|spring was raised two-feet by! Lloyd Johnstone is the son of never: been. question by the discerning observer. rog-a-tory to Negroes. Steacy doesn’t come frorh the havchery peates on Lakelke and from May to October every | banking fay against the plank the original owner who died.in lambi h . Tread this to Jim and he look- | country. H rer at aed 1907 M. general-| room «was filled. Apart from! walls. 1953. He was born in Prinee Ru- °~ f British Columbia and Canada owe much to men jed at me kind. of puzzled. Mr. Finlayson thinks a farmer) Known. in 0 r. John-| american and Canadian guests| The Terrace Board of Trade|pert in 1916 and went to live with such as he, of all political faiths, who have devoted. “What does dat mean, Huck—|MLA would make a better agri- ee ad croama the serings and contacted through advertising, | tried to induce the CNR to build |his mother at Lakelse when he dee-rup-a-tory?” culture minister than an MLA: railroaders and ‘halibut fisher-|a hotel! and operate a tourist re- |was two wecks old. He grew up themselves to. their country in public service. Men “It means they don't like the | who lives among crowded. roof- | started’ to clear the land. men visited the hotel to hunt,|sort. Sir Henry Thorton, then|!With the faith at the hot springs and women who | ‘aspire to public life must know, way I wrote down your talk in tops and skyscrapers and super-| HOTEL BUILT , wee and soak ; in the warm president of the CNR visited the could nov ony be a tourist ve . the book, and all that about how | markets oc: |. The Kitimat. and. Omineca| W2ters. Several magazine stor-| springs and advised Terrace; traction Dut heip people regain from thé experience of histor yy that theirs will be a ‘you were a runaway slave.” This doesn’t necessarily, fol-| Railroad boom, with Kitimat its ies and vere of mouth adver is businessmen to build a. hotel ther health. Ne remerabers a “What vo mean. do - lik low, any more than it’s true ao . termin ing: by env VUSlas AC guests 2180; and “we'll send you the overflow | Vividly a number o peopte who hand-and sacrificial life. Yet they: are inspired to aun Wat you mean, doan like low, any more than it's true a western | termir us, was under) neiped in popularizing the re-l from Jasper’. The matter |came terribly crippled and went serve in a most thankless task. dian’ it I was a funaway slave,| tion minister than a lawyer. In-|race to Kitimat passed -close to} 5°'t. , dropped then and there, too) away in peter earth. ape shot . . arn't I 2° "| deed, not so long ago, the. Pre- sprine®s. . 5 - The resort was reached by aimuch money involved. SPrmMgs at Lakesse, Ne leels, have When they go down to defeat-and retire from | warn't I ° eee net ee teacher Mr. Wile the springs. Mr. Johnstone com : ' y aymue ed. tremendous possibilities and Yes, Jim, but all the slaves|™Mler moved a teacher, . Wil-| menced to build a hotel near the! wagon road to Lakelse, then by; SECOND HOTEL BUILT some day they will be developed . the scene, the least we can do is to thank them and | are tree since the Civil War, ana|liston, out of education, into) hot springs in 1910. The hotel| boat down the lake to a walk-| ‘The ‘hotel operated from 1914/to become a health resort and wish them’ well as they pick up the threads of private , they don’t want: children to read lands and forests, and put a layw-| was to, two-storey log building,| way: of cedar shakes 44 mile long! to 1929. In 1929 work was com- anout ’em.?r yer, :-Mr.. Peterson, into,. angen .40 by 60 feet indimension. It| up tothe hotel. “The ‘rates: were! menced on a new. hotel. This tourist attraction. life. - . a . . a “By dey’s all free now, who tion. tor had 14 bedrooms, a.dining room,| $4 per day, European style. building, which opened for bus- - —— goin’ be hurt when you put in| 7° be a good cabinet minister large living room with fireplace, ‘| Over the years the big spring, iness in 1929, was iocated beside |}. ‘LINDSAY’S CO oe « book about de slaves?” a man must be all things to all | bathhouse and four guest cabins.| was being cleared of debris con-! the lake to overcome transporta- i cate! “Phere’s a thing called the! People. He mustn’t permit him-| phe hotel and cabins were! sisting of logs which were sawn|tions problems, and is in re- Cartage & Storage iL Successful. Ambassador National Association for the Ad-, Self to get into a narrow near located 1200 feet from the me in| by Mr. Johnstone and a helper! markably good condition today. Established 1910 Z vancement of Colored People,| He must have opinions. on all! gnring and the water was|with a crosscut saw having aj| It closed down in 1936 due to the “s sned fs = ‘ F' the United States has failed to win friends and in- | ho don’t like to read about all subjects—alter due study, Of prought to the bathhouse in an handle 14 feet long. It was hardj depression and the big - flood HOUSEHOLD GOODS. fluence people in countries to which it has made that.” open V trough. The Johnstones! and slow work and it took a;which closed the railway down: Tluence @) tries to v as mac Mr. Steacy, anyway, has had had a herd of 15 cattle and a; whole day to cut one Jog. In! from May 29 to August 14. The;| MOVING — PACKING recent, formal ambassadorial appointments, at least | shui—are dey slaves dat belong) riculture—the dairy branch. For “Dish-here National Soshia-| experience with one phase of ag- | jarge ‘vegetable parden that pro-! ' 1932 the spring was eribbed intoriginal hotel burnt down in! ATIN __ duced tremendous yields in mal with 2 by 12 inch planks 10-16’! 1936--Little, Haugland Limited | cR G STORAGE United States amateur amhi assadors seem to be do- to dat, Huck?” years he was western Canad1/ area cleared in a meadow ad-'long. In order to drive in these} bought the acreage on which | Lift Van Service , bly well. “No, they're all free men, Jim.”} manager of Borden’s—and that) jacent to the springs. 'planks a raft. was made and a, the hotel is located for the, ; aor ing Mr W “Ik y ? hi he th Van n ven pout, rey ine ° Sao ee now far fim operate Bruce Johnstone advertised! hand — operated pile © driver} timber on it. | Agents; Allied Van Lines Ltd. My | , < eo] thin prate , - hones Whar 4227 Gffice 5016 r, Walter Reuther ears t e the most re- {Chen to read "bout. the slave: " The new hotel was also a two-!] Phones Wharf 432° Cffice 5016 * ; APpe ° Whuffo day make de chillen go| and what they want and what's ns spsteng “ene . storey log building, 80 by 70! cent of Lhese successful unofficial | envoys. ; to school, ef they doan’ want ‘em | good for them, we Dene ee ET 4 4 avn wlvafte | Mea ll give x, month: to The president ofthe American United Automo- |" learn what's in packs , oe ee iia ant ats ame AD, Vapet! : ‘ ‘ aenpaddle t+ 1") “Wel, Jim, Chere’s no time tol] 7: / . -ereen in ¢ hile Workers’ Union and vice-president of the AlT- | youd al the books in the world, se feteen ‘na CEO presented himself to the British Trades Union | because there's too many of 'em-) sport time. So they Just give the childrer Tongress at Blackpool as-a fraternal delegate. His | tne jood howks ne entanen appearance and his talks were a triumph, according |What's wrong ‘bout our bool:, Th Fi fh to the report of one veteran TUC observer. Muek® una Ig: “Tt's the wity you talk In the |’ NOTICE VOTERS LIST Mr. Reuther’s personality, vitality, and record ook, Jim, all the time saying oo , ' i] eave him the stature to Impress right and left oe ais ees i National Awe {L Begun Due to recent changes in the Municipal Act . - Hy ene | ’ . : i rds like that. National As- ‘ . seotclore | Wie - he ash trades cht movement alike. ‘sociation fur the Advancementi}. .. fg, . | ne cies fication of license holders has is words will have a far-reaching influence on | ef Colored People—they think vean discontinued. oo oo . ‘ . ‘ g vence you ought to talk the way ,they In acl: IC , 4 MNOws y 4 a Tey Ne 1 . oF , mf VV wt i” " . ; . Angi Ame) ic in understanding and co-ope) ation, do in college, Jim. VICTORIA.) — The first step sys one competent analyst at the Blackpool sessions, | “Dad-burn it, Huck, where de|/has been taken here In a fight ah r sense in dat? T never been to nol] which West Coast fishermen Mhis is good news, T he United States State De- collene, } talked de same way oll] plan to carry to Ottawa against partment has not been brilliantly suceessful of reeent |my life, You speck me to learn {importation of cheap Japanese ' ' some new way to alk when I'm /eanned tuna. weeks in preserving the close honds of the Anglo- Jan old man, more'n 150 years| vancouver. tma fisherman Individuals, Corporations and companies previously listed as license holders must re-register as Tenant Electors before 5 p.m, September 30th, 1957, American allianee, at least in sentimental terms, If on ol to tot! in nod Monty Carr started selling his rn. W. LONG V Y, I Cl they CG! stre \ 4 ye WA BOM LO be wm ed eateh fresh from the fee in the ‘ ‘ u 1 n Y nethe n the teelingy of hvat her- missed Lhe polit, but J se if hald of his Weat Boy JJ ut the City Clerk-Comptroller Mad between the important labor fractions of hoth |.warn't no use. You can't learn) yonnson Street bridge wharf * Prince Rupert - ag hn lane apallai no Gawute Jim to argue, He's just Ake them | pare countries, he has performed a service beyond the |orrieials in the Natlonal Assoaln- | Mr, Crvr saught 127) tana more or less restricted terms of union duty, Won of Colored People — once | about 60 miles southwest of Cape _ bd aita et [Mt , {they get an idea in thelr heads, | miattery in 4% days — thnt's Nhe Victoria“Times. you eat geb it ont. poor fishing”-—and brought them here to find fish companies of- tree oe op eter tl fering 13 cents a pound, He fly vet oe mo wee UIT ds i ear, ae a ures he needs | 28 cents a pound; NEW RECRUE! -- Three-yeur- “old seonny Kofta, dooked | » Ol 1 ' Pen L a -,* " 5 gn LS CE ef |4o (get by. 2 ‘ot ine ROMP unttorm, slips in betaveen Constable af bir a } ae nn aE ' iy oo | stables 7. P. Brown | ites 33 HIT R YY ; Re ; JM Mr, Curr sold haut ONO |) and a. Bintth as they stood guard -onePirtamendt ME in “quarter of his aateh-tuna wolgh ’ A v i we a ’ ‘it _ EAT ane re a nl en f 4 en : ‘ UPPyiy) | ang 12 to 26 pounds — by carly Obluwa, THe received an honorable discharge from the ROMP aventng and more anc more peo- | Muiks a few minutes later, (CP Photoy ple were camming down to his , mene = boat as the word pot around, 'T have to do thts to keep fram hi ' Koln rote," he ‘ant. " “Ut Borrow W ere money Service thera Is more to dt than that.” Mr, Carr ts vice-president of has improved with age i” AR the Pacific Trollora. Assoclation, |: reprksenting, hundreds of Wort | 2 a Const fahbonts, , "Wo nro golie to flyht these ehanp Japanese Imports this winter, We are galing to appeal to the new faharlos minister J, ‘Angus MaLean for a higher tia When you borrow money, you want aorvier that's backed hy yours af axporfence, hats why most people tirn ta TFG, providing " money service hacked hy 72 years’ aeperiaiet, ACTING, you recalve promptattondon, frlandly but iuainosaiica afleloney, your maney inane diy, and your ehotea of repayment plan ® riff against i. ts Inferior stuff ' Sthamear vialt HEC tadiy, teat _ | fyway.” | of Lun Wh the hiner tariff ja not i ; aed nranted, tian fishermen will / have to “pnek it up"! he and, EHOLE Ch — ‘ Gt TLAMONOUS JAMAICA “ pa Sneed re yt Abney ‘ Te ee ee seereaiedapieneeuseinesenste seine npateatil — neces eeennen srporenon of Cumin VICKETR MAROM In front of the ite-Cavitan - Hotel in Montrenl “following the arrival in TA RE ” C. AW. Agha, M ° oot ‘A BOWEN A. Migham, Manager co ou're saving fore ave 6 et wee at tanner conte emen Tana referred to the long Teg via ar rnin iny- | SISA Third Ave. West at Second S¢., second floor, phone 431) Whatever ‘a Ne a scovl ve at ' caf.warkera a ran ' waodo Murdoehiville, Que, tnd erervled aneh alerans ‘ ' = ne “Baek ta Nurnberg, war ertmingd," ray Phat) Foe anette in Ceylon nnn eeeneneeneeeecensnnen re chatntane ree The BANK of NoVA me ’ onde we ' it ere: . . oY oe eo ha ee te ee oo 6 ed he pebebevenee-s Lee eh Oh Oe ee OF Ooh ns pe 8 hee we fie ae ak a ek ie ee KM oh th Oh