“1910 coe eed QR AYRES! oo. 5. : Editor, TAREE Autlionizea as second class mall by - PRINCE RUPERT. DAILY NEWS + oe An independent newspaper “devoted. to: the upbuilding ‘of Prince Rupert.and Northern and: Central: ‘British’ Columbia, eA member of The Canadian Press — Audit Bureau of Circulation - Canadian Daily Newspaper. Publishers Association: ‘Published by The Prince Rupert! Dally News Limited, - wa - JOHN F. "MAGOR | Bh ae President” G. P. WOODSIDE. . General Manager if wei the Post Office Department: ‘ottaw TU ESDAY, “MAY | 24, 1960" be , blue sky they. saic «30 to. eekly, newspaper's gs “N: eighborly,, News’ editor, Les Way. | oy fOr ae April 22, our popula cof fifteen ; yeairs the people in our: -do..you: spell. it?” a See -B-X—uh——H-E-X-L—uh, Skip. it. . second - thought, : better. try aspirin.” “But you go to the drug store and-the phar-. On a ‘macist: says, “hexylphlojulep? Sure. It’s $8. an ounce, Do you want the — large one-pound ~“ economy size? A word of warning: This is a: very : ‘powerful medicine. If you get any side effects,” ‘better discontinue it at once.” .. Sor you 0. over “to. the: soda counter, ns “glass ‘of. “water ‘and. take a big gulp: of | ‘the maedicine, The. next thing you hear is. a ‘plain- _. thve- voice: “in” your~ head saying,’ “I am Judge a Where: is everybody?” . Unie ed, ‘you | throw the medicine away. Pe ee, “The. next. ‘day you go to work and. another. friend says, “Your. cold is worse. You- better try. that. new. wonder drug—anticoryzamyza.” " “Doés it have any side effects?” a “Nope. ” . . oo THe, druggist sells you. a dozen capsules for $11 99, You take four, Then next morning your _no.better—but when you comb your comes out by the handful. ‘Copyright: Canada Wide “The worst way to travel is by motor car, Twenty or 30 years ago, when the ratio of motor cars to:area of surfaced road was rea- sonable, motoring was not. too mean aj way of going from plaice to place, though sadly crampéd, | ot, ~ The next ‘worst way to travel ata iB: ‘by -alreraft, It is strictly for Be people in- a hurry, who have other§ things:onthelrmind and don't® yotice mich ‘at; the ‘moment, pe People: with ulcers find nothing ff igvioble about alr travel. ' + The next worst way of travels Is by. railroad, Back in the grea days of railroading, when there “sae Was, 1, tradition to uphold, it wasn't too had {NTERPRETING THE NEWS wa § t hoasds ' “eithe | bipartisan cheers welcoming Prime Minister, Macmillan back to the House of Jommons. on his return from Parls serve as mt reminder that the collapse of the summit thn Was: not an unmitigated disaster for ihe Woate«. ee she, unavailing attempts at mediation “py” demillar and President de Gaulle have en-. Hahedd their prestige at a time when both Premfer Khrushchey and President Blaen- } oWer: have lost, sympathy over thelr handling aretha, U2: ‘eplande, ‘ (Macmillan’s Immediate reward was the n= pUAa Ns Yeaponse of Opposition Leader Galt- ell. and other Lahor and Liberal party lend. anh 40, his minor ghe aummiL proceadi ngs, 1 po tes fe | ino Giniifle ‘could draw solace from a newa- panor article by Plorre Mondes-France, one of | iis most “oloquent erlilcs, calling upon. tho. ritish and Froeneh leaders to work together th conaalidtaing thelr new role as pence nakera, oe ' Wisenhower himself, dospite Nis neknow- ledgod: responalbiiity for the mishandled apy- - rlato.ineident, won a.medsure of public sym-. pathy ‘as a‘reault of the intemperate attacks: unolidd against him in the course of ihrush- ov's preag conferonce (lrada, Throughout the Wostern alliance were pollticdl bénefils, not all of them daserv- nd, ta bo harveated from Rusala's reinvoention of the cold. war, 1 y oe “cBc faux pas “What do you. mean—side effects?” or “one » tles, thera “spuirteny is courtesy. ‘When Les Way was on. the air he did a: lot for CBG.in our’ small towns. . ig ‘ovass roots? through CBC—CBC ~ could have permitted him. tos say, why, che was ‘off the air’. Les Way has.. alway’. been honest, ; “His abrupt dismissal has not. done o «anything: for the: CBC in our opinion. —The Terrace Herald. coe pow “phat: medicine made my hair ‘fall out,” ' you tell-your friend accusingly- at: the office. “That’s funny,” he replies. “It. did the .. game. thing to me.” “YT thought you — said it didn’t have: a side “effect.” . “It doesn’t. That’s - a top effect.” : You throw the anticoryzamyza , -capsuleg ‘ins: s oe , the waste basket. You ‘should have learned. ‘A new . ‘miracle drug. Knocks out a, “cold: your: Jesson by now, but you haven't... ee a Over the next five days you try the follow: ing sure- cure cold remedies. suggested by. office - pals: : , 1. Drinking cold ‘puttermilk while taking: a ‘hot shower.. 2. A jar of pickled herri ing mixed with equal parts of honey and lemon. (Shake well before i chewing). ; ee Bh Three ‘glasses. daily of a “eoneoetion made, o up. of: ‘bourbon, vinegar: and a: tablespoontul of : bicarbonate: of:sod 4-A bedtime slug made of equal’ ‘parts. of ‘vodka, ° -epsom, salts and: maple . syrup... eos 5. A mixture made by stirring afew ‘drops of. pills- from every bottle in your medicine cabinet into: a glass of steaming sauerkraut — juice... an ‘On the eighth day - you collapse at your desk. You wake up to find yourself in hospitai, -and a doctor standing beside you just. putting down ‘a stomach’ pump. “Is my cald. better, Doc?” you ask weakly. “Cold?” he replies, puzzled. . “You don’t have any cold: What you do - ‘have is one of the worst cases of stomach fatigue in. the History of: medicine. What we can’t figure is. which. you swallowed first— the supermarket or the drug store. ” ; The Packsack of Gregory Clark | to go by train. But nobody js in railroading any ‘more, They are all in the haulage business. Therefore, this leaves only the one way to travel that is without fault, and that is on foot. It takes longer, I admit. But It all de- pends on where you are going, yesterday, [ encountered an elderly gentleman whom I assisted across a busy intersection, — “Here I.am,” he said, “darn near 80 years old. I've been chasing money. all over the world, “travelled a million miles. Well, before I left the house an hour ago to walk over here to the drug store for a bottle of milk of magnestla, I phoned my broker to sell, I thought to give him a ring on the pay phone In the drug store, He tells me I have just made $171,000!" We didn't ‘walle fast, But we walked jaunty, Summit meet failure not complete loss to West By ED SIMON — . - : Canndlan-Pres Staff Writer _ Both Macmillan and Gaitskell have heen, in, trouble with thelr own parties over defence “matters salnee Britaln's abandonment of the Blue Streak rocket left hor without a means of delivering a nuclear blow ngainat her enemies. ~ De Gaulle has been criticized for using his augmented constitutional powers to override ‘the functions of France's Chamber of Depu- Chancellor, Adennuer's insistence dh a firm line against the Russians has been con- —stantly deplored by West German Socinl _ Democrats and even by some. ‘members of hia own party. In tho face of Khnrshehov'a new tone of belligerence, such complaints are bound to lose thelr force as Wostern. chiefs of atate “plead for unity against the common danger, ~The sune plea may prove beneficial in tha economic fleld where the rival blocs of tha’ Ruropoan Common Market and free trade area can be oxnected .to ask themselves “whether they can afford the. Juxury of thelr Inter- necino dispute in the present almosphore of world. tenajon, Valuable wait "Horry I couldn't get hore sooner," anid the plumbor who had received a frantic call from n householder, “Wow have you made ont?” ~ “Not so bad," replied the weary "While I was waiting for you tn come and Alon the lenk Jn the basement T taught the ehildren haw to awim," "Patty is policy we understan a, but Oe a. ed ae Firge ale ‘them,”. “without. being opened. ' shame. Wrapped in wax paper. neatly . wrapped: - _ Then. ‘and then ‘again “in .brown: paper. oe ‘Gueested. Cope The: ‘school lunch that a ‘ther packed | for ‘her’ son—did “he. eat: it? Or is it sticking: ‘in a hedge somewhere, thé pack- “age unopened? .. .A lady who lives near’ a cer- = “tain, junior high school (many _..-milesi from here) tells me that ra the ‘pushes. around her: place ATE | “lunches: slipped in there. Py. dotted with.’ “unopened youngsters. “Judging by some of them ; - that I’ve seen, I don’t. blame the boys and girls for leaving , them; ” _ bread, soft an new and soggy: ~ Perhaps abit of ham; all “smeared with salad dressing:. she. said. “White Just flapped. together. Perhaps a bit of. lettuce too. ” “You. mean you ‘open these lunches and . take a look at. them?” I inquired. ~“T know’an: old lady who - opens them and east some of ‘my informant said.” “Some of them: she _ toasts.” And some of them are’ ‘very: good lunches, : thrown - It’s a. just thrown..away. “But the boys going. to school. —I suppose their: nerves. get: upset trom studying,” she added. ° i: “And maybe. ‘they. get ner=’ “vous; looking | at. the girls,” eel: - “Yes. : But ‘there’s. ‘one ® thing: It hasn’t been nearly:as bad. in. the last. six: months. Not. ‘SO many lunches - now.” ‘think). I wouldn't. away. - bade All Aboard with G. E. ‘Mortimore that ‘old . “slim pickings. for lady now?” 0 ove “Not so many lunches.: And T think they’re making ‘them pick us the.papers. they throw around, too.’?’ . The iady’s remarks. remind- ed me that. when. I-was six (I eat omy ‘lunch, most ‘days, : ‘because I was too busy: ‘playing. But I didn’t have the nerve. to throw the lunch away, . or.else I was_ too thrifty, I brought, the full pail home again... “ ‘My mother was" sO “disturbed by .my failure to eat. lunch that she actually. took me out of school and taught me at home, for some. time. Truancy laws weren’t as strict in those days. as they are now. “The lady. who spoke of the discarded lunches had to say: _ “I ‘see them taking those exercises,” she observed; “arid I wonder whether they could not be using that’ energy to help someone, or -¢arn some money. | : “And after. those exercises, the. way they slouch. along, arms hanging. down, shoulders stooped. And. the smoking! Boys.and girls. Some of them) little ones who’ look no more . than 10.”: - “Let's hope they grow up straight anyway,” I said, “and vread: some: of .those -: . about. lung cancer.” And. that was the end of our discussion of the manners of the junior set. “articles: JAM ES. K.ON ESBITT. Out walking . Indy, | -Ex-Canadian sailor takes look at Hong Kong after 19 years HONG KONG—In November . of 4941, as a boy signalman aboard HMCS Prince Robert, Bob Wales of Winnipeg first saw Hong Kong. Prince Robert, in command . of Capt. F. G. Hart, now living in retirement in Victoria, had‘ convoyed across the Pacific, from Vancouver, the troopship Awatea, loaded with Canadian soldiers. Prince Robert sailed away,’ and December 6, 1941, left Pearl Harbor for Esquimalt. A day later the United States was at war with Japan, and so was Canada, Soon Hong’ Kong fell and the Canadian soldiers were ; taken prisoner. In late April this year Boh Wales saw Hong Kong again, from the deck of P&O-Orient Liner Himalaya in- which he had crossed the Pacific from Vancouver, this time with his ‘wife and daughter Cheryl, We was In the Canadian Navy un- ‘tll Inst year, is now with the Canadian Immigration service und will be stationed In Hong Kong for nearly three years. f hb Bailing out of Hong Kong nhoard P&O-Onent Liner Chu- san, Jn which I will sail home aueross the Pacific to. Vancon- ver, Is the Maharani of Kutch, wife of the Indian ambassador ° | ’ of Norway, her daughter, son, and daughter-in-law. They make - a pleturesque party, hound on a sightseoing tour of . Japan, There jg much visiting hack - and forth hetween India and Japan, In another party, from Bombay, aro threa handsome | brothers, Anwar A, Sattar, 20, Rashid Sattar, 19 and Varuk Battar,J6, They are sons of a > wenlthy ‘Indian manufacturer of refind olla, Anwar has tour od Rurope, next year wants to nee Cannda and the United Blalen . » H Slr Roaik Fareed, counrtly, Hentle politician of Ceylon, tx , Aulling In Chugan from Colom. - ha to Japan, Knighted by King George VI, he has been Impor- tant. an Coyloncsa political af- folra for many yenrs, A fow | months ago’ he was dofented, | advised. to hurry home, be- cause there's another election in late May. “We are prosperous in Ceylon thanks to the Colombo Plan, in which Canada helps a great deal, but always we have an unstable government—the gov- ernment of which I was a member was only a caretaker government — Ceylon must have stable, strong gfovern- ment before we can rnake great progress”, . As Sir Razik talked I realized how similar, in so many ways, are the politics and the gov- ernments of the far-flung parts of the British Common- wealth, To hear him, on might think he was talking about the po- litical confusion that extsted In 1052 in British Columbia, when a minority government was elected, With the classics Song on May morning Now the bright morning star, - Dayes harbinger, Comes dancing from the Last, -and leada with her The Piowry May, who from her green Jap throws “The yellow Cowsllp and tha - ‘pale Primrose. Mal hounteous May that doat ‘Inaplre Mirth and youth and warm idealre, Woods and Clrovea are of thy bloasaing, Thus we anlute thre with nur enrly Bone, Ant walcoma thea, and wish hea long, ’ John Milton, 1608-1674 1 peneen etaelaensmenhiuineance speeaienemedtead amimenens , ‘School hours From The Winnipeg Free Press Should. school hours ba lengthened? To be sure, tho extra hour each day could do more harm (han good if It was waated In uninaplhiing: courses, cor if the present curriculum: waa spread out over a longer -porlad, That, however, stroases tha, nood for the officioncy when he' was Mintater of Trade | which should he. expected of and Commerce, §o, having nothing else to do, he dealdad on a holiday in Jopan, A fow daya aut of Wong Kong he war achoo) administrators at all times; It cannot be accapted as An excense for rofualng the AX tra Lime, \ ny an i weed more — ROBIN’S EYE: VIEW | of. :the colorful tulips. at the: Federal ‘Building . gives unique _ slant to display-of flowers. arranged ‘by Prince Rupert Garden Club under.’ direction ‘of president H..S. Harrison, Other ‘efforts _of Garden Club to beautify city are ‘Hanging.. flower ‘ bas- ‘kets which are expected to be hung’ from. ornamental lamp standards Iater this week. (Staff photo by Ken Specht) The lighter side “Holpeiooe” is where, if a guy's. wife looks Hke a new woman, she propenyy is. . -EDITOR’S NOTE — Signed articles, and editorials credit- ed to other newspapers do not necessarily. reflect the views of The ‘Daily News. - 1960 e PONTIAC eo CORVAIR ° OLDSMOBILE 6 VAUXHALL e ) ENVOY The guy was ‘walking down | the street draped only in a barrell when: a ¢op stopped him, “Hey, you. Are you a poker layer?” asked the cop. P “No siree,” the fellow said emphaticaiiy. “But 1 just left a couple of guys who are.’ - bt Two ‘ girls were . walking down the: street ‘when they noticed that‘a lone. sallor had been following them blocks. Finally‘one of the girls ‘turned around angrily: “Now, look here, Sailor. ‘You either quit following us. ‘or get another sailor.’ "he rw +} When nine-year-old. Gerald Thursday, ‘at Lindsay’s Acting pert, B.C, above times and place: ‘offered in, this: auction, ai ‘The Lighter Side for. - AUCTION SALE Wednesday, May: 25, 1960—10 a.m. and 2 p.m, May 26, 1960—10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Cartage & Storage Ltd. Warehouse 150 First Avenue West, Prince Rupert, B.C. (next to New Firehall) upon instructions ‘from Lindsay’s Cartage and . Storage Ltd. and the. Official Administrator, | will offer for sale as is and wheré.is at the Refrigerators, Stoves, Chesterfields, Outboard Motor, Tables and Chairs, Washers, Cartons, and boxes miscel- laneous items, Luggage, Tools, Cameras, Radios, Sleep- ing Bags and other Camping Equipment, Guns, Trunks and Suitcases, Musical Instruments etc. Terms: Cash plus 5%: S.S. Tax, All goods to be cleared at conclusion of sale. Any lot or lots previously adver-’ tised and claimed or arranged for by owners will not be THOMAS M. CHRISTIE AUCTIONEER > answered the phone alt | p.m. a voice said: “We are making a survey of detin. quent youth. If- you have any children do you know wherp they are at this moment,” “Yes,” replied Gerald, “wa have, and I Know, but can you tell me where my parents ares: + + & - Discussing their youngsters, . one mother said to the other: “Is your son hard to get out of bed in the morning?” “No,” replied the other. "y just open his door and throw the caton his bed.” “How does that awaken him?” the other asked. “Te sleeps with the doy,” Prince Rup- ( — CIVIC. ‘CENTRE FRIDAY, MAY 27th 2-10 p.m. @ BUICK | e CHEVROLET adian citizen or British s LIQUOR-CONTROL PLEBISCITES ACT ~ MASSET. POLLING DIVISION. LIQUOR PLEBISCITE PENDING Notice is hereby given that the list of voters for the forthcoming plebiscite in Masset Polling Division of the Prince Rupert Electoral District, will close at 5:00 p.m. on the 27th day of May, 1960, after whicly date no nomes can be added to the list, Persons wishing to register may do so by applying at the Co-op General Store, Masset or Registrar of Voters, Court House, Prince Rupert, B.C. To be eligible to vote you must be registered as a provincial voter in the Masset Polling Division. The following qualifications to register are, briefly: resident of Canada for 12 months; subject, H. W. HARDING, Registrar of Voters Prince Rupert Electoral District Prince Rupert, B.C, resident of British Columbia for 6 months; Can- 19 years of age or over; GET TOP FEATURES — TOP VALUES, . e REFRIGERATORS © REFRIGERATOR: © HOME FREEZERS FREEZERS PRICED FROM $199.95 BUDGDET TERMS AVAILABLE Gankpa _ EATON S.. at be AS te te, a=: ee wr tk tm