oy 7 3 R. AYRES _ _Baltor’ " per devoted to’ ‘the up uilding’ ee of Prince Rupert and Northern’ and’ Central: British: Columbia. - A member: of The Canadian Press—Audit Bureau of Circulation. Canadian | Daily Newspaper Publishers Association Published by! The Prince: Rupert | Daily News Limited.” Ss JOHN. FB MAGOR Foon! President. « “An tidependent: newspi G. P. WOODSIDE General Manager active oo vould probe sth ee particularly if labor’ : =e ae CCF’s question. of ‘doctrine. .-Since ~the ‘civil + service. commission - recom: 7 mended: the: increases, federal employees may... » justifiably: feel: annoyed: she . the: eovernment ‘portion: ‘of effected economies.’ 2: « Pos “Federal employees should not’: prejudice their y.: unwise ; talk. Of drastic: retaliation, tion, by civil servants. The suggestion that a one-day postal stitike’ be staged during ‘the. Christmas rush ‘season, for instance,’ comes: strangely. from servants of the Crown. What would they hope to gain? The . government would «not. ‘suffer,, but. the lelay. of mail at a crucial. period: of’ the’ year, nis: would be a foolish action that would Although »General of the Army George Cat- lett Marshall was given a. soldier's burial in Arlington National cemetery, it is as a states- man that the world will remember him: If it’ were not for his vision, that’ world would be. a very different place today. In 1947, when President Truman named: him secretary of state, Western Europe was still. - In rubble, economically As well as. physically. . Rebuilding .the industries that war had shat- tered was a task so vast that. it appeared im- possible to exhausted, hungry populations, And. it would’ have been’ impossible in fact, If General Marshall: ‘had not conceived his plan of economic aid, and if he and Mr, Truman had not succeeded im selling it to the American people. ie > tt ay parallels in Canadian » polit. plea history. Success comes to br oad- _ GOP sho id: join, an oe “the: ea og babor Cc ee ess in the formation, of: fa s ontidence . ia the new. ‘party is ‘expressed in’. the mod erm | of - money. to fight elections. This 3 Vrauld. probably. be SO" ‘even: if it meant. agrarian | sup" 1 economic efficiency and preservation. of: ing body. of evidence that. the great — “material: equalizer is not’ government, risis. “hanging ‘over. e “hungry thirties, ia ‘the - . narrlage between prairie oe : . toad ‘ahéad is a hard one for the CCF - and. its idealists: | dian political kaleidoscope it may lead - to. radically ” altered” =~ oblivion. « , Coerdan | is cnotsthe @ answer ‘should, ‘not: ‘bear more. than” ‘their naan ait: ‘cannot grant. pay: increases’ a, further depié: : tion of the funds. it’ needs is not going. to im- “prove: ‘civil servants’ chances ‘of. a’ raise. ‘A just cause does not need methods of coercion. Civil servants have. the » ‘right to- "press their case, with all legitimate influences at their command, and. various avenues are open to them to seek to have the government. wever: No’ government, can ‘tolérate the | “big Stick aimed ‘at its*head, nor are increases: to. -. be obtained by. attempts. ‘to’ coerce: the nation: : Public: sympathy. will soon: run-out. if it is the” public’ which is victimized by, any overt retalia- “general public would; by . ‘the confusion - ‘and. | 2 Goal and j its strength thas waned \, ne paonaly. and: A peeves “ou ly. based - par ties embracing varied S0- . eal and regional interests. “While the - oi . CCF has pricked the conscience ofthe © nation. tobringin many social reforms: | under. the guidance of other. parties, he. tts special- interest overtones nee. been a barrier to the seats of power... * | Now, for the third ‘time in-succes- ; its Socialist parent in Britain has ly two factors have: been most import-. ant. ‘in. this: (1) the. questionable rec ° ord. ‘of the Socialist experiment © Britain after World War IT: as to both : individual freedom; (2) the grow- action but abundance. “Whatever course they: choose, ‘the “And. in * the Cana-- “doctrine or: ‘The Tor onto. Telegram, boomerang against : federal employees. -Similarly the proposal that federal civil « ~ servants | should. refrain: “ftom! ‘buying’ govern- mene savings. bonds will add. nothing” ‘to’ ‘their Help. as gave enki pimgany? ‘ casgpethe “Duy” “thei” as a “good - ‘personal ‘Investment-and”™ | tro “not-as a gesture of altruism. Any. such. hold-": ...back would be akin: to cutting off one’s nose 3 . to-spite one’s face, There is the practical. argi ‘ment ‘also ‘that if the treasury is. SO, shard’ reconsider its decision, Public support will not be forthcoming however if attempts are made to. bring the state to its knées, with conse- ° ‘quences which would react against the public itself. —The Victoria Colonist, The man who saved Europe Without the industrial and economic re- covery the’ Marshall Plan sparked,. Western Europe would’ have lain defenceless, to. be picked off by the Soviet Union at its leisure, ‘as Eastern Europe. was already being. Without the foundation of the Marshall Plan, there could have been no.NATO to hold. the line of freedom across Europe; no Truman . Doctrine to. protect NATO's flanks; no econ- omic or poltical or psychological base for the growth of the European “community” which may well prove, in the end, to have been the most important trend of the 1950’s,. © George Catlett Marshall lived long enough to see the recovery started by his Vision beconie complete reality, He will live on in Western memory as long as there Is a Burope, ~The Vancouver P Provinee.. INTERPR ETING THE NEWS eee. ot Sembee mete 8 rae Ra eR U.K. seeking bridge to close trade bloc. gap ‘ ‘9g DAVE OANCIA Canadian Press Staff Writer BRUSSELS W—Wanted: A bridge, ‘This has become Europe's top objective, The coming: months. are sure to see a detormined drive to close the gap between the two emerg- Ing trading blocs, Tt will rank high In discussions noxt month | during the Paris visit of British Forelg@n Sec- retary Selwyn Lloyd and the London viait of gorman Chancellor Konrad Adenauer, Britain hopes f& way can he found to bridge the gulf betweon the Httle free trade aren, the Outer Seven and the Common Market (the Tonner 81x), Here..in, Brussels, in the new ateel and concrete hoadquartors of the six; officials strogs thos urganey of achieving somo sort of co-: operation, They fear that unless this is done, the Buropean nations will drift farthor apart, weakening: united Wostern offorts to reslat tho Aproad of ' communism, “When tire sevon have signed thoir treaty, we must not lose a single day in establishing - contact with them to see what ean be done," auld Berndt von Staden, diveatdy of the Com- . non Market's’department, dealing « witl reli “tion between tha two groups, | In outlining. the Comman Markt view, von Bladen: emphasized there ‘could .be.no return to: full-scale: negotintions aimilar to: thone baat collapsed a year ago, ~ “Wo, must bargain on current queationn, Yor tha: time being, this ja the only poraible npproach,” f The six now feel that only by whituing away | some of the differences between the two groups will there be a good chance of-developing .n contractual form of western European co- operation, Officints here fee) that the orginal concep’ tion of a brond free trade area proposed ly Britain a yoar ago Is no longer asultable for dealing with present conditions, , When negotiations In this proposal collapsnd M yoor ago, Britiah tempers bolled over, In- ‘dignantly, they blamed the breakdown on the “protectionist attitude” of the French govern. ment, France rotorted that Britain wos primarily Arying to..gain the advantnges resulting from the creation of a customs union without nas- suming any of the rosponalbilities, On January. 1, the Common Market was Inunchod, a atep dorartbed recontly, by Adon. - nuer ag nolitien! and almod at the “nolitien] integration” of Germany, Italy,: Franco and the Benelux countries, | “Only by political Integration. can weatorn Turape ha anfoguarded against pressure fram tha: east,’ the German chancellor snaid,. Within ax montha, Britain apearhended , Aho. drive to group the United Kingdom, Awodgn, Norway, PDonmark, Austrin, Awitvarlnned and Portugal Into the rival Wttle free trade aron, This diffora. from the Common Markot In . that the seven havo no. pinna for a comman oxtornal tariff and do not sonk anything like the economia and political union to which the Common Market ta designed to lend, apes repudiated. at the polls. Probab- ¥ ‘SHOWN | OFF Aithoneh: a “Kitten on. the ‘Keys,’ ". BEE 2 ee ee SE . Soodle owned by. Mrs..'E: Wallace * - Hamilton of West. Vancouve . She taught the dog to “accompany” ~ himself on the piano.wheén: he “sings.” Mozart’s registered name |"... is ‘Sheandoor. Mon. Frere: ‘Yves, which ‘is. enough: to: make any. |. dog | howl. Det es —CP photo. . dignified.” “the first): ‘step: A All Aboard with | G. E. ‘Mortimore : : “Hotelmen say. “the. _ British Columbia. “government should : - force people to orink : Be large, glass of. ‘beer: “because it is. “more: ate They, want ‘the. ‘government to pass. a “law forbidding the use of the small 10-cent. _ glass, which they consider to’ be less decorative . and. less socially: correct ‘than the big. one. This throws a new light on our: publicans. -Previously I had . thought of them as. ‘bluff, Jovial men who’ were interested only, 2 in selling. beer. ; _-Now it: transpires. that ‘they want us to 100k beautiful when we drink. Who would: have. ‘guessed ‘that our hotelmen had the hearts: of artists beating. behind their well-padded wallets?- ’ What. subtle,: sophisticated: taste they have, too. Ihad: never realized. the: beauty. of. the large t beer " glass until ‘the. hotelmen pointed it out. of our. taver nified jumbo glass at” 20. cents. co : ‘ fe . Now, a beer parlor customer enjoys the. right to ask for 2 ‘10-cent glass of beer, and if:he has a thick enough skin to dis- regard the scowls and clenched fists of the barman and the ‘waiter, he can sometimes real brutes of 10-cént glasses, ‘and Bute Tr ‘suppose e making. the first glass" “compulsory” ‘is’ only). | °) campaign | to. “polish: ‘up: the: aesthetic tone te ei will ‘come: to" iforee people: ‘pyiiaw to drink! p= : Wedewood “stein, or. 14th century: ‘Venetian goblets. © peters: " But:the.jumbo-glass will make a good start.-When' the beer- poe drinking public: has ‘been taught to. accept .a certain. amount 1 of beauty and dignity, it will be safe-to begin. ramming culture— and? beer—down their-throats:by the gallon... : ge, artistically | designed,. dig- ntains 12. ounces, + ly get one of those ugly little drink it. ‘If the hotelmen get their way, he will no longer be able to ‘do that. a“ Our beer parlors will no longer be cluttered up with moderate drinkers, who waste waiters’: for the sake of a thimbleful o time and get tables dirty, just f. beer. And the publicans; selling us 20 per cent less beer for the same price, will be able’ to fill their cash registers With extra money; dignified, beautiful : money. One of. the absurd sights in : the home of an acquaintance of . mine who. collects -butterfles, keeps a threo foot alligator in his cellar, owns first editions of all the works of Rudyard Kipling Including : the maga-: zine articles, and has-a' alx--. Toot telescope on.his yoof for looking at the moon and. ofa rg, js his black Lab- —M rador retriever ly. ing down beside ta In the livingg room 1s this big chalr. And a Labek rador’ retriever fg no lap dog. 'Thish ane: Wwelghs ie i fat, plonty of loose tlasuae” about him, He: has a long ively. tas), thick at the base, and tappred, the Ideal “otter tall” ‘of the: breed, He is a sprawly dog, and ., whon he los. down, he docs so” with a thump, Legs, tail, qll of a dump. And ha goes around the back of the rocking chair, gives a deep sigh of cqntonts mont, and flops down right” alongside the right rear rout r, "Look out!" erled' evdryone who sees It, “Don't rock-on the - dog! Tis tall ds lnder, the rocker ,,.1" - He hna roaked on doxens, maybe hundyeda of tinies; Win / wild yowls ns Jeg ‘or: tall: Ix: pinched hy the rocker jaa fae miliary sound In my frlond's home. ~, darn fool would ‘know enough to keep away from the rock- ing chair.”. ‘It isn’t the rocking chair he's fond of,” says my friend, going over and sitting tn the ‘Yoeker, “he just likes to be near the kind of people who Nke to : alt in. rocking chairs.” Don't we all? ear cereemane re enmeriremntieensan 4 8 All qualities . ¥ rom Notre Temps, Montreal The Hon. Paul Sauve has all the: qualities to sueceed and ta make a great premier, His mo- “eee thoda perhaps are different from ,those of Mr, Maurice Duplessis, but we are inelinad + to think that they will be no loss offoctive: Purthermore, ho ‘la-out to make his personnl mark In Quehee -politics, It Is * his right to do.so, Rvery right- “minded person does his work ‘In-his-cown way, Mr, Paul ‘Sauve deserves to Be given our eanfidence and we should ac cord iim also our aincore col- “Inboration, Lighter side “th anawor to a question ns to why the ‘population of Chicago NW HO fnst, One youngstor r0~ piled: “pT Wo popiilation of Chiengo grew haanuse of tho big stork. yards” “You' a think, " y Anid, ithe kate aE aie a EE eee te Be ee Register’ for. os RADIO. CLUB ot the Civic Contre Torre ge Y wy! eee NE OVS Ow ee vv ee SOT SN ee v8" Vee EU eae a te yaa ter ae Wn seeps Peds best friend From The . ‘Christian | ‘Selence ‘Monitor , “A ‘few days ago ‘three er avel me barges broke loose from a tow in a.-violent squall on Long - - Island Sound and’ were cap-~ sized by eight-foot waves. Rese, cue craft took off the men, Ns, _ board in time—all except on He was a veteran salt, Capt Harry* Halverson, .a. bachélor...} - .. He refused to.leave his pet dog, el ge mongrel, he always had with... him, Sg on Woe “Wonder: “why: he did, that? oe “Well, when.a tough:. docker,;. got mad and “cussed out’? the -. captain. menacingly, did the | dog move up close and givecai., “,.. low growl to show. which Side. “ne was on? os : "Sometimes standing’ ‘on the deck. on ‘a-starry. night did, the. , -@aptain’ feel a. doggy- Shoulder. leaning against. his thigh UR ina gathering storm a cold,.. > Wet nose thrust into his hand. assuringly? ; lork “Other times, in’ sunny wea-: ther, asthe captain satin the | 7 ‘shade of his little “house” on “the barge’s after deck, did the . .. dog'settle himself béside him. . . Just_a-hittle’on top of the cap- tain’s foot? If: thes s@ things happened as > Often: “as. we: think: they: must havée—we can understand, reich "be “whistle ‘tunes’: any, -more,’ ie ‘laments: ay nostal- “Maybe it’s pecayge pease eee 2 § iDSAY MOTORS LTD. Corner 2nd -Ave, and 2nd St. Phone 5a 7 Say... ~ this whisky IS really A-1 It sure Is... ‘it’s | Adams Z Al ft? wen ewe eee ee tL Temes ay CANADIAN RYE 1s DION AND Marin vwoen Wit Gurr nyisy mnetian Dit ra AM, ode ws : a Co ¥ : é ete WINISKY TRAN OND. ON OD Tete HOME, \ ' atten, ra ' ( ( ' t \ t ' ' a ' et t ‘ 4 ‘ to ‘oy ” | - a Tr te ne ee ee ee ee ee ee This advortisonont Is not publistiod or displayod by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of Dritish Columbia » ot ' NOR Ra Ur ae ay gy , . : , . wie . ¥ . peut ey ne een POS LTR ERE rg tile THOR ig