m. Prince Rupert Dailp TUcm LtO. Thursday, August 19, 1948 I Irvt Ekivn-yoar-ohl says Right Word Wins Alaska Cruise SUBSCRIPTION RATES of tlid A " -its? V- v - j N City CarritT. per week, l&c; Per Month. 65c; Per Year, S7.00; By UlaU, Per Month, 40c; Per ear, S4.00. girl with "It's been wonderfu! .i ' th An eleven-year-old a bright smile, an eager voice and rm certainly going to .n- by j. ' u W and a gift fur words visueaijoy seeing AiusKa. t.js is tlie cllv .... i . i, i rviu-H ,.... r . hi- Newfoundland and Defence Dvi,1(.D Rnrvprt wetinesuav u" a , onttesi uuui inu i mxvc ever ri.., V trip to Alaska which site von made." Once, she made a train cha pit wqi.sp sh said the right word : trip to Winnipeg. !,rf, . of 8. THE FORESEEN entry into Confedera fITH -W5 (at the right time. js a Gnuie Sevan sUulent y . . . v tion bf Newfoundland the question arises of ) Hue was Miss I'Uis at ooum r-uim urcy tiuiuur iiiti she won the trip to Alaska for Scn4joi m Vancouver. herself and her mother (!) a i " Advertise ... D The Idcil 11 u'-Kin Tout Hint J 9 voturia com how the broad picture of Canada's national - defence plans will be affected. Certain it is that in --the next annual budget allocations will have to be . ' made to include the setting up of air stations and possibly naval bases in Newfoundland. The question is will this be done at the possible risk of other projects in Canada suffering or will more money befoifnd. As a military power in her own right Newfoundland is negligible. She has few manufacturing concerns that could be converted into riame-guessing contest involving, ;a large part of Vancouver and ! ja mythical horse. Tlie id'9 was! jto name the horse for a Van-j couver automobile agency for! 'advertising purposes. j 1 Lois's idea of a suitable name ".mi i.i, n.i; Ir, A ffi), .,.., U..L I I 9 y-t Kni.illi-r cbssefc nrovidx (miHirr im.f,, i.. cloxt lo studiei. PrepHics you Un entrant J-j, Sciences, Coininerct. Hihiic Eoniioiiiics Also 2 tory to Medicine, Dentistry, Ljw, Tedclim.' Optometry, N-J-si'Hti-jJ J yci preparatory toA- New Moratory and lihury facilitito amcfmr.'i coiuses. Terms: Sept. 2t), 194H, to April yj "The Rejiat." for the horse, whose wise counsel will direct motorists to condition their cars at Colliers Motors was "Trusty" and now, according to the winner, advertising posters have blossomed all over the city informing drivers that "Trusty says to Collierlze." HALIBUT Prince Rupert is British Columbia's principal halibut landing port. Here is a typical picture of fish being unloaded at Prince Rupert. Halibut landings at Prince Rupert this year t6talled about 11.000.000 pounds.. Mt, Cwirl'"')'. Rrqmtrmenti jot J inlim Better English By P- C WILLIAMS 1. What is wrong with this sentence? "He came nearly winning the game." 2. What is the correct pro-liuucittUon of "facade"? 1 3. Which one of these words is misspelled? Anatomy, an-nrhriinism. analize. "It seemed like a nanus that would inspire confid''Uc. so I sent it in," smiled Lois, wla- has a poise that Is unusual in (iii 25 BUSES FOR 4. What does the word "ob-, eleven-year-old Her father, who operates a trude" mean Reminiscences By W.J. and Reflections 5. What is a word beginning ! metal rustproofing business of his own,' brought home the entry with cy that means "disbeliev- - , I T ..I 1 1 I j . J Vw.r . 1 ,t For immediate delivery, inter-city cupacity 24 to 37 passengers. Bun, construction and lute design, g,, regular operation and Inspect m any time. TUKSE HUSKS ARE PRACTICAL Bi lug in tne sincerity ot numan lorms aim j-ui imra nr. motives?" ' I immediately and sent It in to ANSWERS i the competition her.dnuutUTS. 1. Say, "He came near win- Her idea won her two round-ning the game." 2. Pronounco trip tickets to Ketchikan on Unfa-sad, first a as in ask un- j prince Rupert, stressed, second a as in ah, ac- war production and little or no military equipment of her own. Her biggest assets are natural resources, military bases and the well known fighting qualities of her rugged citizens. ; Again the thought arises how when Newfoundland becomes a part of Canada will we cope with the situation of American troops and bases being located on ur territory? It must be remembered that the United States was given a ninety-nine year lease on military and naval bases in the island colony by Great Britain. Will the acceptance of this establish a precedent of American troops training in our country in peacetime? How will this be received by other nations and will Canada's prestige as a free nation suffer accordingly? , Also it is a recognized fact that Canada could only offer token resistance should a strong foreign power attack our shores. Can we, therefore, com- "mit oiu'selve's to the extending of our already limited defence resources? These questions will certainly have to be given serious consideration before final commitments are made with. Newfoundland. More than ever it is brought home to us the neces- . eity of revising our national defence plans and increasing our stature in this vitally important matter. O.K. HE WAS DRUNK ft IT WASN'T HIS FAULT be was drunk." Such I was the line of conversation we heard from a ultZ couple 'of working girls on the street as we came down to the office this morning. And it made WAV FOIi KCHOOL.. TRANSPod More Esthonians, not at all a few years old but how difficult sure that Russia or Russian- today to think of a Prince Ru-dominated territory is desir- pert without a road outlet of able residential region, have j any description! It does streng-arrived in St. John's, New- then the conviction that the foundland with the idea of first settlers here were, after locating in Canada. Jf they all, a stoic and determined lot stay where they are, for a few of people. They had to be. more months, it wont be nec- essary to go any further west Now- that programs of music ALSO FOR SALE 2 White engines. Model 20 A. comj, hauled with U1U. lfi Pair (32 eatal of Tropic Aire r' and 5-pusstnger rear chesterfield mohair covered. WRITE OR PHONE cent second syllable. 3. Analyze. 4. To thrust out; eject. "Those talk the most who observe the least, and obtrude their remarks upon everything, who TIuI'wmjIi' S5. lA Col- to be in Canada. are sanctioned In eastern cock- have seen into nothing tail bars, bring on a similar con- ton. 5. Cynical. GREYHOUND LINES, CaW PRINCE RUPERT cession for western beer par-1 The election harvest report in Alhprfa i thp hpavipst. pvpr of- The ass bands will do. It will take fleer of the Social Security and known in that province. that much to smash the heavy Municipa Aid Tax, was the at be social Credit yield must GREER & BRID gJLMJIIl 11 JWJlilC, ui UAUwti uut o aici iuuu; x, wic icuiui the range and power of sloppy t weekly luncheon of the Princq least 500 bushels to the acre. All in all, the vote crop may be described as a bumper one. Rupert Rotary. He spoke of the ballyhoo in others. GUILDERS AND CONU operation of the new tax and answered questions after his discourse. President D. C. Stevenson was in the chair. Rationing of butter in British Columbia may soon become effective. Not a happy outlook and. if the amount provided Repairs Construction VANCOUVER AND INTERMEDIATE PORTS EACH THURSDAY AT 11:15 P.M. (PST) For KETCHIKAN WEDNESDAY MIDNIGHT (PST) Ft Information call or wrttt City or Depot TVket Offlm PRINC BUPEK'i, B-C. Music will be permitted in Ontario cocktail bars but in a most discreet manner. Where the seating capacity is less than a hundred, the number of instruments must be limited to looks as delicate as what's set MtKCHAMS-fu yuu fcnou , before you in some boarding , 'hat the Daily News is the most effective medium of advertising houses or hotels, it is frail in- H n Prince Rupert? No one deed. ; , 1 one. What's the matter with a smart looking little jewsharp or harmonica? nisses your message If it's ad-ertised in the News. It's the ally efficient way of puttin t over. tt TRY A CLASSIFIED AD! BUSINESS AND PROFESI MARGARET McLEOI) OPTOMETRIST ro?. rock an: V CALL So great appears to be the hunger for even a morsel of praise that nearly anything goes. Quantity or quality It's all the same. Even among the already famous, the craving for more and more, seems unap-peased. Blandishments, adulation that, under other circumstances, would be insults, are accepted with apparent pleasure. Good work is entitled tu reward. That's understood. But there is always a place to stop. In M.U New Offices 10 STONE BUIIX1INO New. U All Wl PIUO I New Phone BLUE 593 FACTS ABOUT SASKATCHEWAN ...and one Important Question I Ttinhv V: MIKH Phone 972 DR. P. J. CHENEY DENTIST SUITE 6, SMITH BLOCK "hone 70S P.O. Box 1401 All sorts and conditions of people will miss Babe Ruth, whose general ability and popularity as a ball layer earned him a salary, sometimes as high as $80,000. A multitude mourn the loss esecially income tax HE BEAd Periinii Btaul! The Skeena Highway is but JOHN F. h. HUGHES Ghiropractor 21-22 UESNEK PIJDCK tl! it 4th 6W CO Box 8IH Phone Blue 442 HAN A. MacKENZIE FURNITURE LTD. A Ooo'd Place to Buy GEORGE L. RORIE , us think just how matter of course it is becoming these days to offer drunkenness as an excuse, just' as though being drunk was something like being sick or in some condition that could not have been-avoided. i How much is being got away with these days in the. way of shirking responsibility by the excuse of ;bt3ng drunk is hard to say. Fortunately, there is at least one law where being drunk is no excuse but is ' an' offence that is the law in regard to motor vehicles, where to be found in charge of .one while ....under the influence of Jiquor is punishable by jail ; ' ' sentence with no option of fine. Immoderate use of liquor and drunkenness are the cause of much grief and trouble these days much too much. Too many offences, we feel, are . condoned because of such drunkenness. Drunkenness is a poor excuse for any crime, we feel, the view taken by the law in some cases notwithstanding. It is about time that something was done about a situation whereby a person can be absolved of any kind of licentiousness or even crime because he has not enough control of himself to know when to stop drinking. When even working girls think that anything should be allowed to go just because a person has imbibed too freely, it is high time to call a halt. It is a poor commentary on the attitude of youth toward the use and effect of alcohol. : JUNIOR AND REALISM THE BATTLE of the Crime Comics goes on. The great majority of alert mothers and qualified ; experts and the alert mother is often the best qualified expert deplore the influence of these crude thrillers. But a few defend them. A recent writer in the magazine Mademoiselle maintains that comics give children a sense of "reality," whereas most modern children's books Z are too full of "sweetness and light." Parents want to wrap their children in cotton wool, she declares, Z and adds: "In August, 1945, one single atomic bomb dropped on -Hiroshima killed something like 80,000 men, women, ... and children in the spdee pf a few seconds, and every child in the United States over four years old knows it. Perhaps our own feeling of security is fed when we over-protect our children." pit may be true that modern parents frequently insulate their children from all sense of sharp responsibility and vigorous challenge in a mistaken desire to "protect" them. But are crime comics, radio thrillers, and gangster films the answer to the child's need for a more realistic approach to the world into which he is growing up? Hardly. They are escapist fantasies which dull the child's sense of reality and responsibility at least as much as any saccharine fable of a world all sunshine and smiles. He may crave adventure stories painted in strong colors, but be will naturally respond to the very real qualities of heroism, honor, loyalty, kindness, and decency, which are part of the human race' greatest adventures but are found so seldom in the tawdry wares of Saskatchewan's Socialist C.C.F. (iovernineut in tlie last legislature bad a working majority of 41 scats. Last month Saskatchewan voters mlm-ed thjs niajoritv to 9 seats. Must -people there voted anti-socialist. The two cabinet ministers chiefly responsible fur introducing socialistic reforms were heavily defeated. In two northern ridings where had weavber delayed the vote and where fi-diermen, trappers and lumber workers had been affected in their daily lives by socialized handling of fih, furs and forest nrodiiets the Socialist 'Mvernment lost both seats. HOME Public Accountant, Auditor, etc. Income Tax Returns Complied. Besner Block Phone S87 oenebal BUlldtnl irf MAPLE, OLD COLONY DINING SUITE, Refractory Extention Table. Atmosphere of distinction to live with. Phone 775 327 Third Ave. Rood. ChW PRINCE RUPERT BOTTLE COLLECTOR PHONE BLUE 810 Black 681 The Government as an employer in Saskatchewan has not readily raised wages. In socialized industries, unions have come to new agreements not through negotiation with the government hut through outside conciliation machinery and threatened strikes.' Herring the Fisheries Industry Wellt (P.R.) Ltd. Cartage, Labelling, Weighing Upholstering AND FUUNITUKK REPAIR BLUE W BLUE MO, speak for themselves -f floV t- rai-ie ques- These fac tion: Ormes socialized industry in workers have been to If the Government, had completely Saskatchewan, how free would the oppose it in any way? DRUGS PRESCRIPTION CHEi AFTER AUGUST 15, 1948 Under the Management of MR. AND MRS. ARVII) MATTSON 'It is no accident that iudii-iiliniJ cutcrjtritie utid freedom for the imliriditul euint tupether." J B1XJRE HOURB--WEEK-BAyS, BUNDAVB ANP HOLJDAYtt- " 7 P.M. TO I" BRITISH COLUMBIA FEDERATION Of TRADE AND INDUSTRY Dally car delivery tartlcs from 8 a.m. till p.m. LOVIN'S (Next to CFPR) PliUNE BLUE 818 PHONE 81 1 1, W W'g