_ | ‘Nee the United States’ : rushing paratroopers into Jordan and the. British - French t - hm be eee eh i th. oe A KA HHA OeelhelUchklhllCelUK CK lhl rll ltl hk LaAanunh >». - PRINCE RUPERT DAILY NEWS — 1959 An independent newspaper ‘devoted. to the upbuilding | ms - of Prince Rupert and Northern and Central British Columbia. ‘ A member of The Canadian Press—Audit Bureau of wt 7 bre : Circulation—Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Assoclation . Published by The Prince Rupert Daily News Limited ot oo JOHN F; MAGOR President’: . 4 ah J. R. AYRES: G. P. WOODSIDE ve Editor... . General Manager —— he Authortied af aeebnid, olnes matt” by. ‘the Bost: Oftice. ‘Departinent. Ottawa wT is. always somewhat difficult to Wiite glowingly of a man whose ac- tions,:time and time again, differed : sharply with those held by oneself. Yet in‘looking ‘back over. the half century of. service given the United States by .John Foster Dulles, it must be admit- tel that at all times he acted in what hé thought were the best interests of his country. Throughout his long ten- ure as a senior diplomat he tr iumphed more than he erred and in the long-run jab i is what counts, i ‘The frightening aspeet of Dulles’ re eer as U.S. secretary of state was 7 that: many times, he took the world so closé*to_ the edge: of war in his deter- ‘mination not:to yield to the Russian’ and. Chinese Communists, that many | ‘ineluding us, thought that he wouldn’t | allow us a long run.. ; We could see little difference be- action in i “invasion” of. Egypt to halt Israeli aggression. How- eter, it ‘was over the barren Formosa iglands'that Dulles. nearly led us’ all “world wide conflict by insisting ‘the U.S. support to the hilt the : parasitical .Chaing Kai Shek regime. Brinkmanship was an excellent man- . oeuvre 50 years ago, but with the nhighty nations of the. world now TUESDAY, MAY 26, 1989 “Loss of oneal Dulles big blow to U. S. 4 standing with finger s poised on missile push buttons, it is far too risky. As many of the Allied military command- ers have already stated, it is not a plan- ned war that is to be feared, so much as one that is started accidentally. ‘Once the wrorig button is pressed there is no reeall and civilization stands to be wiped out within a week. However, even Dulles’ most sharp- est eritics conceded that the United ‘States seldom had had a more hard- headed, resourceful representative at the international negotiating table. Possibly no man was more denounced by the Soviet Union than Foster Dul- les. He was a-permanent thorn in ‘Russia’s side, a record which he some- times regarded as a tribute to his suc- cess in frustrating Soviet aims of con- ayes. ’ Sir Winston Churchill, | towering international figure, who erred in his time as well as succeeded, said yesterday that “John Foster Dul- ‘les was a man of principle ‘and int teg- rity whose example should be long re- membered by those who put their trust in freedom and fair dealings.” Little more can be said of a man who served his country, right or wrong, for so long, sincerely believing: that he was right. an other. » INTERPRETING THE NEWS By wars 5 5 Foster Dulles—people wno knew him tended . te—drop—the-“John’’—was a man:of ironclad nforal opinions. In his book—he was a staunch Pyesbyterian, and his book: was: the ‘Bible— byack was black and white was white. ‘ This undoubtedly gave strength to_the con- victions of the former secretary of state who dfed of cancer Sunday at 71. It is for history te say whether, as some of his critics suggest, i? also made him too unhbending and self - righteous to see the other side’s point of view iff international negotiations. “Inflexible” was a word often applied to ao “Dutesr: sometimes in praise and sometimes in blame. Nobody denied he had energy. ‘He. flew the Atlantic and sometimes the Pacific the way most people take a streetcar. He visited 46: countries, travelling about 600,000 miles in the process, during his six years as secretary. He worked incredibly long hours— often in great pain as his fatal illness devel- oped, At his office and at his Washington honie, Dulles was constantly on the job. In his state department role he was the original do-It- yourself man, Administrative details he left to his helpers, big foreign policy” matters he handled himself. We could do this because President Etsen- * hower had utmost confidence in -him. The two were not especinily close soctally--Dulles was not a member of Eisenhower's polf-playing sel but the president leaned on Dulles in mat- Time and Place .. ROUGH TIMES ON On May 9 we stored our gear aboard the 34-foot pilnetter “McGinty,” for a two-day trip down the Douglas Channel, It was -our first trip of the year, and we were out after | halibut, We had a plentiful supply of herring to bait our 1,200 foot, 120 hook skate, several erah nets, trailing equipment for spring salmon, and jluging nes for cod, There was a heavy wind and the sea was rough as we left the dock, but our skipper Cordon Robinson felt that after several post- ponements jt was. safe enough to sail, Two hundred yards from the dock on piece af wood attached to the end of the keel became unbolt- “ed and fouled the propellor, After same man- oouvering we managed to get na ploce of rope wround jit and tle ft back far enough to give the propellor clenrance, and honded for Eagle Tory. The mountains along the channel wore still covered with snow halfway down thelr slopes, wnd it was snowing heavily on the higher penks, and the wind was hitterly cald, Wa reached Eagle Bay, 10 miles from Kjtinat, made wset with our Nne, and drew a blank. We then deaided to repay our bout and ran her up on the beach near a oyriyeron the south alde of the Bay. We cut elght pieces of wood, and na the tide receded we used them to prop the bont up on an even keel. Repalrs ware soon made, and we set about passing the time until Mah tlde would flont ws again, We had a small boat with us and we paddlad out into the Bay and set our crab neta. In hn xhort thine we had 60 erabs, and the frat potful was soon bolied and rendy for cating. Two bald-honded dagles had a neat nenrby, and we watched them through our fleld-ginsses na they flew and glided around the noat aren, AL midninht wae wero again aflont and ran down to the ond of the Bay and anchored off- shore from the wreck of the Widaeon alr. craft that ernashed in 1064, cauaing the denth History will. judge Foster. Dulles’ inflexibility. ED. ‘CREAGH Associated Press Staff Writer ters of state and never failed to declare his faith and affection. Dulles’ personality is hard to describe: He was both ‘blunt and: subtle. He was, in. ‘his public days, a tallish, somewhat stooped man, ruddy of countenance, white-haired and end- lessly active. He was a grandson of Gen. ‘John Watson Foster, a. Civil War soldier who was secretary — of state for president Benjamin Harrison. STARTED YOUNG | He cut his*diplomatic teeth at The Hague convention of 1907, He went there with grand- father Foster and saw international law in the making. At that time Dulles was’a junior at Princeton University. He seldom was away. from foreign affairs for the rest .of' his life. Action was what he loved. He was criticized in many quarters for his incessant travels. Some people thought he should stay in Wash- ington, plan high policy and run the state de- partment instead of gadding off to Paris or Timbuktu, . But Dulles, who could put on old-fashioned carpet slippers and be almost as comfortable in a transatlantic plane as in his own living — room, wanted to be where the action was. And | there he went. - Sometimes he needed time out. He headed then straight for his island retreat in Lake Ontario. He sailed and thought and read and bird-watched, and if a erisis stormed up he figured he could always be back In Washington in time to cope with It, .. by Stan Rough DOUGLAS CHANNEL of the pilot and three passengers, At 5:30 a.m. we raised anchor and headed for Fishtrap Bay, 30 miles down the channel, We arrived at 10:00 am. and just missed low tide to set our ine. There was a strong wind blowing up Varney Pass and Ursula Chan- nel, and a strong sea was running, but as wa came to fish and we were not golng to chicken out In front of two commereial boats from Kitimanat Village, who were fishing in’ the same nrea, off Gribble Island, famous for its white bears. 7 Using our small boat for our flont we payed out 60 fathoms of line to which was attoacherl our anchor and then 1,200 feet of baited line, plus thirty fathoms of rope and the second anchor, We headed far the bay and dropped our erabnets overbonrd, nenr a small stream, Pishtrap Bay js a halfmoon shaped bay, it Js one of the beauty spols on the const, ranking _ With Sulo Pasa, Kildaln Arm, and the Gardnor Canal, The surrounding mountains wero sot off with gouged oyt half elrale in what was, In ancient timos, the ridges In front of tha main mountain, There Is always a lot of bird- fe In this nrea, and we anw heaidas englos, crows, robing, thea following varicties of dueka, binak, harlequin, blue-bill, mallard, sawhil! and foldon ayes, It waa now timo to pull up our ine, and with a high san running we ran into difflaulty, By the time we had one third of aur line aboard, rehaited and colled wo had taken two halibut, four grey cod, ono rock cod, a rateflah and a ‘dog-fMah, Then we yan into real trouble, our ine got fouled on the bottom and In. trying to gat Jt fron we broke JL. We wsod a anftle to try and anag the Wne but without success, We had a faly catoh so wo desided to run for home, Bix hours Inter after no fairly bumpy trip we arrived back at WKithnat and sot n dato for the noxt trip, { ~ . ticularly attracts travellers are TELAPERATURES FR THIS PERIOD VANCOUVER 58 EDMONTON 55 RECINA 56 | WINNIPLG | 87. , TORONTO * 60 MONTREAL 61°. HALIFAX 54 ABOVE NORMAL temperatures ORMAL PRECIPITATION FOR THIS PERIOD VANCOUVER 2.4 EDMONTON 24 REGINA 24 WINNIPEG 23 TORONTO 26 MONTREAL 35 HALIFAX 4.1 ee are in store for Prince Rupert and the rest of-British Columbia in the next 20 days according to the. United States weather bur eaw’s long-range outlook. Below and much below normal temperatures are forecast for Eastern _Canada. The precipitation may, shows that moderate rainfall is predicted up.until June 15 for. Prince Rupert. Most of western Canada will have light precipitation while it is expected to be ‘heavy in Quebec and southern Ontario. omy” . Source of protein food. ‘In so far as food is concern- - . ed the Department of Fisher- jes has a series of test kitch-- —CP newsmap. VOYAGE TO THE ORIENT Kyoto city of intrigue, shrines, palaces with ela borate gardens By ERIC.SANDERSON . Written especially for the Prince Rupert Daily News (Mr. Sanderson, former news editor. of The Prince Rupert Daily News and a well-known Vancouver newsman, is complet- ing a two-month, 12,000-mile voyage to the Orient aboard the © Orient & Pacifie liners Himalaya and Chusan. This series con- cerns some of the ports he has visited). / “Second. of KYOTO—This ancient capita imposing shrines, temples and a series lof Japan is a city of intrigue;’ palaces with elaborately de- signed gardens. i Kyoto is also a city of fes- ) : tivals and colorful fetes. It was. . the. capital of Japan for more & : than 10 centuries; from. 194 to. 1868, swhen. the seat: of: govern- 7 ment “was, shifted’ to" “Tokyo: €« ‘Thousands of Japanese?’ school children make annual ! visits to this old capital which { also is of major interest to; - tourists. In contrast to Tokyo, Bi Kyoto has retained its ancient j color. While many temples and * shrines hold the interest of all, : a memorial in Kyoto erected by ; Japan in memory of all those : from all nations who lost their = lives in the last war on Japan- ese territory, attracts thous- . ands of tourists. One of the things that par- the boulevards around the temples and shrines. It was pointed out by guides that these .were only completed after the war. One guide—al] are especially trained by the Japan Travel Bureau—explained that Kyoto wag one of the few major Jap- anese cities to escape hombing during the war, but as a pre- caution .against attack, the government ordered al] homes surrounding the ancient tem- ples and shrines to he demol- ished and fire lines establish- ed, After the war, the fire lines have become boulevards that today Serve as walks for the thousands of sight-seers. When the Orient and Pacific Lines' SS Himalaya arrived In Japan to inaugurate its new service between North Amer- jen and the Orlent most of the GON passengers took a day off 40 visit Kyoto and Kobe, Ja- pan's largest port for oversens trade, Some took “special tours, oth- ers wont on thelr own, We were fortunate to moet a former British Columbian, John Yoshikuni, with the re- sult, there was no Janguage problem, Yoshikun) was born at Cumberland, BC,, and re- calved his education there and _ in Vancouver, He was intern ed in Canada during the war but at the end of hostilities re- ‘turned to Vancouver, He eame to Japan with his parents ten yont's ngo, An employveo of an American atoamship company, Yashikunt | ‘tg now stationed at Kobe, Ne | drove us over more than 160 miles of rends, most of which ne in, dire neod of roprir, be- tween Koha and Kyoto and showed us neres of vogotahle gardens and farms, Wo arrived at the war ane- ~ morind in a mountalnalde In Kyoto In tine to watch a cara- mony hy three Buddhist monks In a maqnifieent shrine directly In front of the 80-foot high statue, Later we saw the famoua TWaash) Wogenil Temple, a completely wooden atruature built of Keaynakl — timbars. Founded In 1002, it was does- troyed four times by fire and the present “structures were - completed ‘in 1895. ‘After a Japanese style meal, using only chopsticks, we went | .to- the. renowned Gion Kohu | Kaburenjo: -Theatre!: near ‘the’ banks of the Kamogawa river in the heart of the city, to see the Miyako comprised of eight different -scenes, by some of the most beautiful and talented geisha of the Kyoto area. Odori—a dance . Report from a Parliament By FRANK HOWARD M.P. for Skeena Fisheries are a very import-' ant part of the economy of: and in addition to con- — BOC, tributing towards our econ- provide an excellent ens established in Canada. The ' function of these test- kitch- ens is to experiment with the various’: methods of. cooking: fish and with the preparation of recipes. In the préparation of reci-* pes and methods of ' cooking fish a sort of “guinea pig” system is used. The cooks and dieticians prepare various dishes, set them out on a table with no indication as to the ingredients which go into any. particular dish, then ask peo- © ple who had no hand’ in the preparation to taste the dish- es. These testers then indicate their opinions as to flavor, texture and looks of each dish. This way new., recipes and dishes are developed which will be the most palatable. The dieticians also conduct classes in the preparation of fish dishes among hospitals and other smaller institutions. They also provide recipes and general instructions for the general public. All of this is designed to in- crease the consumption of fish by Canadians. In communities like Prince Rupert, for instance, there is a great consciousness. of the value of fish. both as it relates to’ the economy and to the diet. In other parts of the country this consciousness is not so prevalent. Naturally, those of us who ; have ‘3 special interest in the fishing industry of B.C., do all that we can here to laud the , value of B.C. fish. In this way, we to a limited degree, are able to bring the story of fish to MP’s who are not from. parts of Canada where the value of fish is so well known and appreciated. It would appear that not too many ‘people are familiar with this service of the Department . of. Fisheries... However, it is a relatively' simple matter to get: any or allrof the recipes: and other material that the De- partment publishes. All that is _required is to write to the De- partment of Fisheries, Ottawa, Ontario. Naturally, the more that we ' this country is right up there UN EMPLOY MEN T (WITHOUT JOBS AND SEEKING WORK: satel tee DROP IN | JOBLESS Unemployment in Canada dropped off fot the third successive month in April. The number ‘without jobs and seeking work declined to 445,000 at April 18 from 525,000 a month earlier. This graph, based on government . figures released: in Ottawa, traces unemployment figures through — 1958 and to’ date this year. The April figure for this year was” 77,000 below that of April, 1958. The post-war jobless peak was. 597,000 in March, 1958. Unemployment this year hit a winter high of 538,000 in January. : "CP Newsmuap.., ‘Aid From The Kitchener- Waterloo Record + : ‘aa 500 : : % ” 74 * a 4 B 4 o 400 —s|-— nde men ot ~* the mee . ” , e *, e " > : Oe t : “te, Py 300 h- s ®ae4 Waa ° 4 200 Canada ranks among the smaller nations on a popula-- tion basis, but in some ways: Before you buy ° with the big powers. a mutual fund For instance, without any | chest-thumping Canada has set up a fine record in post- war financial assistance to overseas countries. A total of $4,642,000 has been spent or allocated by this country since 1945 in helping other nations, according to a report to the Commons Exter- nal Affairs Committee. The figure incluaes Colombo Plan expenditures,’ grants to international agencies, cost. of military assistance and defense ‘construction under NATO, and | special . disaster or famine re=~ lief. On ge pec a, : Me pe veer record from’ ‘any oe Investment Dealer or Broker, CALVIN BULLOCK Ltd. can develop the desire to eat fish the greater will be the ef- fect upon the economy of B.C. and the better will be. the health of the nation. “ It’s never too early for your children to learn the value of thrift and self-reliance 10 #MTTLION CANADIANS WORKING WITH WOULD BE DELIGHTED WITH ONE OF THESE! v Ask fo see a special With just #1, you can open a savings account for any of | your children... specimon of our - bankbooks ‘Bank. or MonTREAL Canadas Prince Rupert franets I Stewart Trane: Terrnce Branchs CANADIANS, YOUNG AND OLD ALIKE, Firat Bank TOMAS MELVILLE, Manager ATITUR MULE IN, Manager « ERIC MURRAY, Manager SINCE 1817 at peamarheh hb nh inti ni hth ii bin nba bd» DS DD CO Dd ee on 4 i hh nh oh eh dk 4 ad eo hb db bh 4 De fh As 6 & 6S eS 4 MO 44 4 DS SD De oo Dh Ae wots lessns y Yaue / | | : 700 , | | | — ‘ . ‘ . ey wd tt . 690 p= aad enn SORE ‘ Le, APRIL 18 | ’ IN|) [445,000 hep + 7 = . , tate eh: sh MWg of persons _. inquire about pee ‘ fe et dS wana oe a a pt