viene At : yn % fet ate ett sid ves . : ‘eee tat resi ee ee : “ . . ae ‘ ’ eh He Ap I ae ame ee ey wk mm “yh oe ws “A "sie ateye ; a~<¢ “Rat _Published by The Prince be Ee JOHN F, MAGOR 1910 - _ PRINCE: -RUPERT DAILY NEWS *— fe nea independent newspaper devoted to the upbutlding a - of ¥rince Rupert and Northern and’ Central British Columbia, ember of the Canadian Press — Audit Bureau of Circulation "Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association bt Rupert Dally News Limited J. R. AYRES i aeetareretz veer sats President . Managing Editor - --- ' wae a : ae, : vs ul aN a EO ’Nuthorized as Second Class Mail by the Post Office Department, Ottawa . ai we : wn TUESDAY, JANUARY 9, 1962 bea + Wie — ‘Fulles'picture needed on salmon process | The proposal,aé.ae Norwegian archi- i tect to intragucesfish farms where sahnon will-reproduce year after year under without having to go out to sea to be Caught by fishermen, stuns the imag-. . ihation. The impact of the proposal, ou itlined ‘in’ the January issue of the magazine The Canadian Fisherman by an English free lance writer, John J. Murdoch, is even more e stunning here in Prince Rupert, than in most other places in’ Canada. Last year, the local salmon .catch surpassed the lower mainland eatches and indeed‘ was bet- ter than the halibut catch, in value if not in quantity roe Et “TIthe findings. of Norwegian archi-- tect Kargtein Vik and his brother, ex- plode the myth that salmon spawned in fresh. running water must leave fresh water for the sea to return to breed only once after a long period of time. In Mr. Vik’s system as described by Mr. Murdoch, the eggs are fertil- ized and. hatched in fresh water, the fry are: gradually introduced to salt water subjected to tidal movement and grow up'to 40 to 50 pounds in special pools. Furthermore there is a 75-per- ,. cent survival aspect which is unheard of when salmon are in their natural habitat. What this means then, if all Mr. Murdoch claims about My, Vik’s sys- tem are true, is that the salmon will never reach the open sea but: the: ‘salm- on will be transferred from\ the Hatch- eries to the fish stations ‘and the days of the salmon fishermen, Low id, be num- bered. é ° However, as amazing as all this sounds, only Ireland has been allowed : INTERPRETING THE’ EWS: es Russia, China’ differ on, My artificially - created conditions. . $ + wl . v tq share Mr.. Vik’s confidence. The editor of The Canadian Fisherman, knowing the implication of such proposal to Canadian fisheries, check- ed My. Murdoch’s report that Mr, Vik was planning to inaugur ‘ate Tish farms in Iceland and was also planning to -eonsult with Canadian fisheries au- thorities. Iceland had heard of Mr. Vik but not seen him, Ottawa had not heard of him or of his plan to come to Canada. Be that as it may, Ireland has * opened its arms to the Norwegian? fish station wizard the plan come to pass and Mr. Vik turn his talents to aiding other coun- # tries, then Canada will certainly: be high on his list. The effect of this “automation of | nature” could be to wipe out Canada’s » salmon -fishing fleets, since all the salmon will be grown in pools, owned and operated by the fishing com- panies. Whether it will be a boon to the consumer we cannot tell. yet. But it will surely drive thousands of salm- on fishermen out of their line of work unless a hard core of them intend to compete against the artificially-raised salmon. It may be some years befoye the full impact of Mr. Vik’s fantastic scheme takes effect in Canada, but Fisheries Minister J. Angus MacLean and his department could set salmon fishermen’s minds at yest if a full in- vestigation of Mr. Vik’s scheme was launched immediately. We imagine that both the fishermen and industry would like a fuller, clearer picture of the whole process, as quickly as pos- sible. right to independence By. Ww N. EWER of The United Kingdom Reformation Service: v The attitude of the iwe; great Communist) powers to questions of “cohomichwm” and of "the>: right of THOT Lies Somukeddpondence is, as- ‘it, has always been, contradketary In world politics bot #&p Povict, Union and, Communist China stand) @iittab wll possible occasions, pap SI »otkampions of Ane, rizht of all colonials yeoRrey: pendence and self-detedh ul the principle of ndftifeypi asia, Yet at the same tima® 6adf, equally stren- ously, deny the same rijgiits to nattonalities Which are under thelyowiif rule or* their own. control, ey Ih a New Year interview: published in Izves- tiva, Mr, ichrushche vf MSitea¥Gnice again that: Gane of the most burning’ Tprohlémns of the day is “the eradication fife: colonial system", £911, in the name Mean wimost sb Une. same moment, in Prayda, . . Dyliehev (who®. “Stans, out more and more vn next lo My. Important memberfyar® “ie Party Secretariat! has been firmly denoineing “Hourpeois nation=' é iously and on: complete inde-..’ . quest of Tibet drew world attention to the Im- Kinishthev hifiiself, the MMOS ue number the indigenous population, Ca i of The cconomies of the Asian republics are being geared to the needs of the Soviet state and a single Soviet type culture is being Im- posed, to which local cultures must conform, It is notable that Mr Ilyichev referred specific~ ally to the need for struggle against cultural nationalism. As in the Soviet. Union, so in China, There, too, there is a big-seale colonisation by the Han (the raclally and linguistically Chinese) of territories peopled by non-Han races, The con- perjalist character of the Peking regime, But the Tibetans are not the only sufferers. The in Kansu, in Sinkiang, steadily over-running: the native populations. It is colonialism in the :most literal meaning of the ward, . This double standard — championship of nationalism abroad, repression of nationalism at home -- must have its own embarrassments sdism”. a 4 for the Soviet directors of policy and propa- “Winder present , cond Jons;" he SAN “ther Jkanda, They must be worried by the thought strupgple against athe remy or {he “amc that thelr Internal attitude must arouse deep nutienalism is ole ¢ eit MBORLNGe! suspicions In Asian and African minds of the alism opens the way “Toth yrs _f genuineness and disinterestedness of thelr ex- munist idealogy, “A ® "DOEshy , fid&- ternal attitude: as well as by the impact of he warped against? sey, 1 te their own propaganda on thelr own “colonial whether dd be econ mie! Ze peoples", The embers of nate ate Min Whieh makes it a Jitdle strange that Mr. lally fanned by hee VSt\ Hylehey should choose this moment to draw used far purposes h entlaye attention to the fnet thal the Soviet Govern- Why, in Mr. Ilyie TOs ’ 1 ad ment is eurrently engaged ino a “strug@gle" suredly be that of MPRI f ‘ against nationalism inside its own borders. the “strupele agains siffn \ i 1 Ticulor byportance “i Ye fr ae / ogy, It seems cleat ? ther ferments within thapfis niving concern Lo thi may be da the Te They may be amon; Bovieb Union, Proby is that they existigindy litt tegen ae repressed, mis - It. is, Indeed, likelyse itch, a tise rulers have been, byaghelgny be ht a i Kg? 4 ERI aly AON dso 1 | 20 rie te ders, themselves unt¥itg prineiple of nationality embers of natianal uli A Kazakh or a Sih ig why what is on saered gg Afrenn peoples should happened to becom egy, stead of British, Prege) cM TRY yaw remember that they arg that Russlan colonlalis i" ‘Hquldated", Is belng exte rd. Rugglan and Ukrpah, encouraped to movelndiyd Mhen olng * ” we ae Barol h ¥1 | indy A oo age BT y | f a ; YW 4 Log, Arla landsagin e ate Hh y Irond atte oo to shy a Which makes it One can only conclude that something ts golng on whieh makes {it imperative to enll upon the Communist Party to devote more at- tention and energy to this “struggles and to announce publicly that tt is “of great Impotanece under present conditions’. About Goa Let us be perfectly clear what is ab stake Kah afr Hentlomen, Ti ds ‘the question of the use arn eh force by one state against another gt and aginst ts will, an act clearly forbidden by gin the Charter, We have opposed such action in mo the past by our closest. fends os ‘well as by othors.. We ope@ped it In Koren in) 1060, in Buev and 14 Hungary in 1966, In the Congo Jn 1960, and we do so again in Goo in 3961, — Adlat Stevenson, Chief United Stntes Delegate Pto the United Natjons. fea che yg LOG ght Jnr T have Jived before i‘ in all good ‘ons Kelonce until this day. — Acts Ha. That would, be a glovicus and trhumfiha the close of Wfe, * mewn a y and has made * .. great concessions to him on grounds 2 -” “.of what it will do to its fishery. Should ¢. — oe a * ea ‘ oo ALL ABOARD with G. E. Mortimore Pry + fd . & 0 BBD Tams, * °g - & aye eer Ram tel tany givin mira g AS Pee te me . “oe a MR PRIME MINIS : Spm get ations I will e callisg my wife “Smokey” and , taunting her about the sightly appearance of a cig- garet dangling from the lip in BERD Ges we ‘. we y fer 3 thegkitchen. $I will try to be more toler-” .ant. Even though I am a non- - smoker of five years’ standing, * IF will ‘try to remember that ‘ #smokers are human,. too, ®as¥soon as I can afford it, T will. quit trying to bully my “wife outeof smoking, and coax her with the prospect of a re- *ward# instead, I’ use the car- rot instead of the stick. AS soon as I can afford it (as I said) I shall use the method that my neighbor Bill used for his wife: offer her $100 to quit. It worked. But $100 is ‘an e@x- pensive carrot. I doubt that f will raise that amount in 1962. In 1962 I shall try to shed the habit of reading several books at one time, and spot ting them about the house in strategic places—lying open on the backs of chairs and on tables. Instead I shall try to read one book at a time, and finish it. Y shall also try to get vital tasks finished in plenty of time. I shall try td have in+ come tax forms completed at least five minutes hefore the deadline. In 1962 I mean to stop ani- mals and children, from rul- ing my life. To start with, ab- solutely no more stray cats are to be admitted. This is an in- flexible rule. The house contains four cats now. Only two of them really belong there. The other two were , ,dumped on us by friends ‘and: ‘neighbors. We have not yet been ‘able to steel ourselves - | gene eine eimmeeecten a mae ee ceemmnretiter mee: meee os With: the classics. . Ian, under the pressure of their own Inereas- |, . Ing numbers, are an the move in inner Mongolia, - Hence, : loathed Melancholy, orfcerberus and biackest “Midnight born, In’ Stygian cave forlorn, ‘Monest horrid shapes, and -shricks, and sights unholy! Find out some uncouth cell, Where brooding Darkness apreads his jealous wings, And the night-raven sings; There under ebon shides and Jow-brow'd racks, As ragged as they locks, In dark Cimmerinn desert ever dwell, —John Milton, DOGGONE IT = T DON'T LIKE THE Way THE GOVERNMENT 1S RUNNING THINGS / ow Me. ‘acne 4 CH My, Se uy bee at “ny ' ca \ Au cease, , un= | Good Advice ’ “ Dare tg" ‘eet rid of them—and every ., time’ we try, there are wails ‘from the ,children. Thé cats are to observe fixed hours‘in going out and comin: in.There will be no exceptions - to this order. ‘A 'Way-is to be found to stop the dog from barking. It seems to me ‘that several other dogs "in the’ neighborhood learned their barking from my _ dog, meee, nate TER. IT HAVEA NAME FOR YOUR PUP.. and bark in exactly the same way he does and he gets blam- ed for all of them. But this doesn't matter. I mean to silence somehow—with a muzzle or nel. Iam going to get letters an- swered and papers put in or- der—even if it takes all my wife’s spare time to do it. my dor no - bark a2 sound-proof ken- | Employment questions and answers In this .cotumn we publish ques- tions dbout unemployment insure ance and: employinent, together with answers which may be of tnterest ta you: _ Following are some — questions with answers received from the Un- employment Insurance Commission, If you are uncertein abont any pont do not hesitate to send ous sour question, We will obtain an answer and publish if in this column, Q. I understand that I may be disqualified from receiving _umemployment insurance ben- efit, because I am guilty of making false statements about some earnings I had but did not declare. What is the most I can be disqualified? A. According to the provis.- ions of the Unemployment In- surance Act, a disqualification for each false statement may be imposed against future ben- efit in an amount not ex- ceeding six times your weekly rate of henefit. ™~QIf rt am guilty of making false statements in an attempt to obtain unemployment § in- surance benefit illerally, could a. disqualific ation: awiinst \ ~Y fu- BS. Canada Wide opyright: Any old soldier of the First World War will immediately ' recognize this new dance called the Twist. Maybe the soldiers of the Second World War, in which new delousing chemical powders were liberally used to keep down theparar Ms vermin that had; heen Intimatelye nssoclated wit he soldiering fron most ancien thy times, will no tuke the plensure we old timers de out of watching a bunch of young people. furl. GRIPING WON'T HELP FE YOU! DON'T LIKE tT, STAND UP AND ot hag “<1 a a Vow Sy vy } ede ' ture benefit be imposed, and prosecution proceedings start- ed against me at the same time? - ‘ A. No. If prosecution for an offence against the Unemploy- ment Insurance Act is insti- tuted, then a disqualification against future benefit = shall not be imposed. For such false statement there can anly be one penalty: either disqualifi- cation or prosecution. Q. During the past summer, while on unemployment insur- ance, I went away on a three weeks fishing trip. My wife signed my name to the report forms and mailed them in. Why didn’t I get my insur- ance? A. Each person must sign his own report forms. Your wife, in signing your name, tech- nically committed forgery, which is a serious offence. In addition to this is the facet that normally, while away on holiday, you are not available for work, and therefore not en- titled to unemployment insur- ance benefit. Me Packsack t ously dancing the Twist. All it is, actually, is a good seratch. And memories flood upon the veterans of Ypres, the Somme, Vimy and Pass- chendaele when they witness n whole roomful of happy’ peo- ple going through the very same frantic activities they used to Indulge in themselves the minute they got off duty and could hie themselves down into the dugout and engage in aoreal good Twist, wriggling joyously inside their raspy army underwenr and == war- profiteer khaki tunies and trousers to relieve the from all the Hitle bugs that in- fested the lives of those moat famous men of Flanders and the Pas de Calnis. The Twist is nothing new, It. js ns old as fleas, 0 te tern anette oun i Ft Dept tens ne et HL Fee fn See Re gems of thought Withoul punishment, would multiply, —Mary Baker Wady. +e he The seeds of our meant are sown time wo ai punish- nt the samo commit the aly, —~TTealod, ede wy The certainty of punish ment, even more than ita so- verity, Is the preventive of erimo, —Tryon Wedwarda, +e | He who does not punish evil rammnnds it to ba dona, -~-Leonarda da Vinel. ee Crime and punlahmont grow aut of one stem. Puntshnent iWon fruit that, unsuspected, ripens within the flower of the plensure that concealed 44, --Ralph Waldo Emerson, ~ fitch . SUSSEX DRIVE oTrrTrava ~ Tal SLO CTE AAS pe ene ee eet ate an mee ne LETTERBOX. MOT POTATOES The Editor. The Daily News: I feel that the letter regard - ing potatoes recently published in your paper over the signa- ture of William Dunn should not go unanswercd. I bet Mr. Dunn didn’t weigh the bag of potatoes he pur- chased. Had he done so he - might have found that it con- tained 5 ounces more than the advertized weight. Could it be possible that Mr. Dunn has spent so much time measur- ing “murphies’” with a set of micrometers that he is not aware of the fact that the kind-hearted inspectors of the B.C. Coast Vegetable Market- ing Board make'a practice of adding to each hag of care- fully-selected potatoes a hand- ful or two of equally selected small potatoes, for the child- ren of course. Mr. Dunn, quit’ ‘looking’ ‘atl the price on the crown of that turnip long enough to imag- ine the joy brought to a little child’s heart when . mother hands aver those itsy-hitsy spuds to be cooked in a teeny- weeny kettle. And to hurt the fcelings of the overworked and underpaid inspectors of the B.C. Coast Vegetable Marketing Board by shipping back to them a few spuds 1°, inches to 15, inches in diameter which have been hand-picked to brine joy to the hearts of little children, is not British, it is nol. Canadian, By Gad sir! it is not even So- cial Credit. Mr. Dunn, if you would read Chapter 4 of that masterly treatise “Growing Potatoes for Pleasure and Protit,’” hy Dr. ie eet ee arene eee gree nh etl seen ene cate oe BETTER fe ine othing to wind ov ¢ v 6 J : mee rolled in twe J J wew one. 0 s Sint pit Seat en Green, ' Gandstone. Royale new ry fetiant typing tea Woe at FASTER fee ay else aeons Gely ROVAL bes TWIN-PAK RIBBOW dft out old Twin-Pak, drep wo a ws we ee cyt PRINCE RUPERT DAILY NEWS. Third Avenuo Wost Phone 3203 Scabbeon Sogry, professor of agronomy at the University.of. . Spuzzum, you would learn that: the measure of a potato is not in its diameter but its person ality. AS you've been an engineer for the past 41 years and I've been a bum for the past 40, we've both endured practically the same years of suffering, But I must say the life-saver of all the stump-ranchers I ever knew was not the potato but home-brew. In closing I should say that the one thing wrong with this country is that we have far too. many people knocking such fine democratic as the keting Board, the Vegetable Marketing Board, : the Milk Control Board, the Egg Control Board, The Small Fruit Control Board, the Tree’ Interior’ Fruit Control Board, the Li- . quor Control] Board and the + Board to Contro! Control | Boards. , And I remain, a small but — tasty potato. Cc. N. Taylor, Prince Rupert. The lighter side. A cannibal took his baby to , a witch doctor. “Doc,” he said, “I don’t Know What's the matter with hin. He won't cat anybody.” EDITOR'S NO'tF—Signed ar- ticles and editorials credited to olber newspapers do not nee- essarily reflect .he views of _The Daily News. ya ee ane a emt ed ~ _TYPING: Lay ve Cen ay U easier. Lahtning carria ' comfortable 00" Love, ie vOut Cylindars tO rae oveice TRIAL. Try the " Iiant new Royalin oe own office, Right now, 1 ter institutions | Coast Vegetable Mar- | | Lo ea ie Sel eo ape eae NE AE ee ee