2. Prince Rupert Daly News UNDER . yaper devoted to the upbuilding of ‘Prince “Rupert anc id Central British Columbia Member ‘ai n Press ~ Audit Bureau of Circulations | There is nothing else to 5» habe ane er ame ani., — [do Bo T have heen trying So —_—_—|to puzzle something out. ORE diet ain gp aa mnsvis €2:00: per yous, 020.80 San Why is it when I haven't Sothern’ month, per year, $8.00 TRAN shaved for three days and I'm dirtiest pair of pants and a shirt with no buttons, and my hair hasn't been combed— why is it that this is the mo- ment when people decide to pay a call? i ail By the Posi Office Department, Ottaws, | Wearing m Untried Parties at the Helm \ HATEVER result finally emerges from this Strangest of all B.C. elections our political future will depend largely on the actions of a party hardly Know Whether or not it is asked to form the next hardly ever roOviNneCi: : : Yinind \ : . | John Sturdy ed provincial government, the Social Credit team is || soi in the city Dems mil eet cértain to have a prominent voice in our affairs for | living in the city is almost| . obliged to shave everyday and ie ‘ome | ‘ an ne vd COME, wear half-decent clothes (un- While Liberals and Conservatives go about the | one me is out.of work_or hes a rich wife) but in the country monumental task of reorganizing to put themselves | you wouldnt think it would again in contending position, the main contest ap- matter so much. You’d think a Se i ‘ , ‘i man would be free to give his parently will be played between the CCF and the |tace a rest from the razor and| Social Credit be comfortable in pants with | ¥ ra |holes in the knees and a pair! It is a familiar game to the CCF but in B.C. jof run-down shoes 1 . ‘ : ; fs Pa va ao at. least the Social Credit is admittedly a novice. ne ee mitt. 1. : ‘ : ’ 3 I can get up in the morning [his lack of experience, however, is not necessarily |and shave and put on fresh handicap as publie opinion has already indicated, |‘!thes and comb my hair, and fig ; oe oan nobody ever comes near the If it provides freshness of view it is in fact an | house. But just as soon as I let aane ] : - the old bristles appear ar a ager 2 > 2Vver € 7 10 PI r aroun asset. We hope however, that with two FIGIHE |the chin and allow the waré- parties competing lor supremacy, the next session | robe to slip—then comes the of parliament does not degenerate into a political | evstainte ae ee ae ‘aa farce. | Ranseng and thought we'd drop } in,” "eaay Sec ( - Already searred by in lus trial disputes and har- |" 4. the other uae aia rassed by election uncertainties, the province is in |the minister and his wife came i ; Se Ree : es ec = ‘ a | to call. I was at my typewrite: ne condition for that right now, For the two STOUPS jon the sur porch: phi ns wife with new and more or less equal power it will be a |came running from the living- Rt a room, shouting: “Disappear! Get challenging test, lost! We have visitors! I ran for upstairs and hid in the nearest bedroom, my heart An Alar ming Situation the nearest bedroom, my heart ae «deci ? ia ‘ : the wal! ana wnen I looked at A\ IVIL RIGHTS LEAGUE has been formed in jit 1 understood why ife my wife h ‘ | ; > om : } had sounded so frantic. I looked ee ry age ‘yYape a ~ , 20 the nearby vill ige of Perrace, reportedly Mar suanellige out of “Pobeins protect the rights of individuals from “threats and | Road intimidation ” Downstairs I heard my wife : ; 5 S ‘ ‘ saying: “I’m so sorry my hus- If certain people in that neighborhood are in- | band isn’t here. He'll be dread deed being threatened that if they do not become a 0 A . 1 member's of a certain union their livelihood stands ee : _.... |GETTING THE MAIL in jeopardy, then we have an alarming situation. | “1 suppose he’s in the village, ° ‘oe 2 ail.” 2» iste) It should be brought into the open at once, and the ee Ghee maail,”. the meus air cleared before further damage can be done tO | yummy,’ piped up another our freedom in a democratic country. voice, which I immediately rec- eel igh : . ognized as belonging to our lhe Civil Rights League makes a statement as | small son a body that. “there has occurred to an alarming | “Yes, darling,” said my wife ‘ . ee » |"Go outside and play, like a degree an obvious attempt by representatives Of | poo4 jittle poy.” an organized body to Sad n on the civil rights eee I thought you said : \ ae : 1at Waddy—” of the individual by use of threats and intimidation.” |" “pperes some candy in the If this is true, and the facts can be proven, we | kitchen, dear.” : I heard the patter of little should have the names of these organization repre- | feet going into the kitchen and ° : 1 r stairs atl sentatives so we can see under what color of cloth |! dove for the upstairs bath ; room Quicker than you can they are operating, say ‘click-click, push-pull” I PRE 4 eee sae < ieee a raylzare | Was shaved—and bleeding—and It appears that thou ands of industrial work OU leith enothes eek ade te eee across Canada are from time to time denied the |bedroom 1 was out of my old . . * clothes and_ into yresentable right to work by their own ieaders. ee 7 " The losses in wages are great enough to wreck Then I heard the small voice eae iv » life * thousands o workers, again. “There wasn’t any candy the economic hom life of thousands of wi Phy |i Go Kitchen, pumaings” helpless because the government has certified the dee Scan fave Wal & aio organization led by one of the warring factions. | take. Just run along and play ‘ . . ‘ . “¢ M ymy, why lid you tell The right to work, which is a God-given gift to | jay to eet into? every man and woman, has been denied to those For a moment there was a cals sinen nih lie . ‘ sgani. |horrible silence. Then my wife workers who are compelled to belong to an organi | anid faintly: “Oh; sau wean the zation to which they are opposed, They are foreed other day, darling? That's a ; f “0 . . rerc h aq. |game your Daddy and I play. to accept decisions forced upon employers by lead- | f° Sats lakhs 4 tae an Ge ers who want more to destroy industry and employ- |him. sit DOWN AND BE = ‘ : ee 'QUIET, DEAR,” 7 an . ire + 4 eg A a . e e Ss. ment than to get benefits for their member Fd os te a a Labor unions have achieved great and wonder- | dabbing my razor wounds with > _* . : a handkerchief and resolved ful successes for their membership and while being jnat 1 had better put in an firm in their demand for better living conditions, appearance. I came around to ’ ’ » 8 2 the front door and made a lot have, on the whole, played a fair and square game. |¢¢ noise opening it, and the I But it should still remain the right of an indi- |marched into the living-room vidual to belong or not belong to any organization, vife, “There wasn’t any mail as he sees fit. Today, more than ever, we must guard |And then I pretended to see our ? ‘ ‘guests for the first time, “Why our freedom in one of the few countries of the world | 7 neo: vhere we still have our civil liberties. EVERYTHING FINE BUT— Everybody shook hands and a ‘ we chatted about the weather Re ects and { thought everything was uf | going along fine. Even the small eared save Japsed into} Tourists say they cannot help |it all went unheeded, from her} na sna a cone + kicking at ten cent morning | own land at first until now, after prseg . Ok aad axe: ann papers that very day, from Van- | 4 era of wars, the Republic in T fi . d the eliels had passed couver, In Alaska they will be in- | Wealth and power may well chal- } es ly he began on zig- vited to pay a lot rnore than that, | lenge emulation. And so, every- ‘ee _— ss he : ain to the in- | ®*© The tourists will not complain, | where is concern as | ; : ae as ii All they do is think ternational outlooks, and to what! ! ignored this as long as | i they do is thin | point a changing attitude, and could, but eventually the sound a ; gesture might not bring her of at got on my nerves . San Franciscc wo morning Sie Stop giggling,” I ordered him dailies, the Chronicle and Exam sharply. iner, are costing more. One SOME UNHAPPY! “T can’t, Daddy!” jumps from seven to ten, and/ And when we do it all over’ “Why can’t you?” the weekly from fifteen to twen- | again—stage an election that will Instead of answering he went | ty. In Kalamazoo (Michigan) the | behave and stay put—how’ll it into peals of inane laughter, and | Gazette will be seven instead of | be? The old fashioned way to suddenly he screamed: “Lookee, five, and the weekly has a hoist | vote has always been fair and Inokee! Isn't Daddy funny?” of from thirty-five to forty. The | square, and so is alternative He was pointing at my feet,| latter will not be needed, for it] yer requires about a week, or longer, | today in distracted B.C., it may | ing in my heart, I looked down. | to read j}come down to a gamble. There | So did my wife. So did the min- | ;are thousands who never had |ister and his wife. Ever since Ola Glory was flown | much use for alternative prac- | I had forgotten to put my | over the Philippine Islands in | tice, and have less than ever now|shoes on. ‘98 Washington has listened to |its heen tried out. Besides, sus- | Sometimes I think I just can’t | warnings to shun intrusion. But! pense as a rule is not loved. ‘win : . _‘Canadiattatr Owners Average High |. ________ 9. f_aseese twee SRONTO.—About 54 of « “peewee LO ‘Canadian families own one As I See It hold gets less than $60 a week This new and important side completed fact-finding study of > Canadian people carried out by a leading resear« most scientific Vt ilpotl The Korea THIS IS a good time for This problem} Canadians, privately-owned 000 others which hard-headed commercial firms monsense and The muddle in Korea has come bombing of the Yalu river power caused the most > beset American-British re Truce Talks Now Held In Secret MUNSAN—Allied truce negoti For regardless of who was je may well be on |. a renewal of all! ‘tween the British ®74 Voiced hope Commonwealth could lead to outright disaster in that compaign which one shrewd ; that the Unit THE DECISION cans to bomb the power plant: been a highly de- Coming on the very ANTI-SEMINISM to Korea it comes pretty close to adding insult to injury. > silly explanations this move that have been made, General Mark > British government increase today in many of the 90 countrie communities, , European execut local reactionary mander in Cnief—for he did not > wonder just who is is the reality of world situation out for what is coming Our rule should be quite s to say or do anything which makes things worse already-wobbly Conservative government in Brit- > to fall on this issue began to fight with all it heart and soul Sritish Commonwealt} subject to decision tion and Labor popularity of the Church- ill government has ceclined with ; ; : sible leaders bu Americans would used to compel The threat was that if Brit- | €sso compelled to ‘ that if for any reason the Commonwealth NOW ON EASY TERMS China would SSO FURNACE OIL to occupy Hong 2 in a position ‘ just as well face the} Taft-MacArthur Republican conven “Hello, dear,” I said to my Aamerican-British | WRITE OR PHONE IMPERIAL OLL LIMITED aire ady committed Cernnnanne PO EPL OL OP PPO A PPL Anne tate eae ee eee For Cool “9 iy Cook Electrically SINGLE BURNER HOTPLATES TWO BURNER HOTPLATES TABLE RANGETTE Northern B.C. Power Co. ltd. | Besner“Biock — Phone 210 Prince Rupert, B.C, from the feel of things and slowly, with a sinking feel- | WAAR NI IIE Manet tote te! errr : SY ee es ee ee EE by persons in the $2000-$3000 group; 18 per cent, er 340,000, in the $3000-$4000 group; and 19 per cent in the $4000 and over class A still more surprising fact uncovered by the survey is that nearly half of aH Canadian families whose main breadwin ner earns $2000 a year oy less own at least one car, and 4. per cent own two or more. What is more, two-thirds of the cat owning families in the $2000 o1 less income bracket pai cash for their automobiles hii the highest income group, the num ber paying ash ior whe is only three per cent higher The ratio of passenge ownership is highest in Ontario and on the prairies, and lowes in the Maritimes and in Quebec About 65 in each 100 Ontario} household have one or. more cars; 64 in every 100 on the! prairie Im British Colum Dia {7 in Quebec and 34 in the Maritime The all-Canada average is o4 Proportionately farmers Canada own more car: than their urban eousines. Seventy per cent of farm households have one or more cars, and of these eight in each 100 families have two or more ears The ne highest ratio of ear-ownership is in rural non-farm areas, with 55 per cent, but only 46 in each 100 families in cities of 300,000 or more population are car own ers The survey showed that six out of 10 cars are bought for work or business and that plea: ure driving accounts for only ‘hine per cent of all mileage driven by Canadian motorists in }a@ year. Nearly half of the car lon the roads of Canada, about } 800,000, are 10 years or older Just under haif of all il are bought new. Thirty per cent are financed on time payment pians (41 per cent in the U.S 16 per cent of the purchases in voive trade-ins (50 per cent in the US Ihe four-door sedan I by | Lhe most populs model, If leads with 51 per cent and two-doo edans are nex with 31 per cent Car ownership is more com mon in med ized familie Sixty-one pe cent of famille of four own one or more ¢ai aS against 48 per cent of fam ilies of two; 57 per cent of fam Mies of three 53 per cent families of five 54 per cent families of x or more, About 38 ver cent of the single per ons in Canada are car owners The average number of person in car-Owning families is 3.09, comparing with 2.82 in non car- owning: families APSE Se ee ee Le ae British Columbia Forest Service 1A mains of the ~ HOT WEATHER SUGGESTION }HOT PLATES, FANS. Etc RUPERT RADIO & ELECTRIC SUMMER TOYS Mechanical Fish, Boots, Balls, Trumpets, r novelties that go to make summer: enjoyable ie VARIETY STOR: acre Your Diansa ars kittl: Doll NOTICE The travelling public is hereby advised th effective 7 a.m, June 30 the allowable gross lo. over the COPPER RIVER SUSPENSION BRID approximtely three miles east of Terrace will | TWO TONS. This regulation will be in efted until further notice and for approximately tw (Signed) L. E. SMITH, Divisional Engineer, Dept. of Public Works. MEN AND TREES John Miller at twenty has already been logging for four years. Born in Port Alberni in the centre of the logging industry on the west coast of Vancouver Island, John works as a chaser, unhooking the choker when the turn on the logs reaches the spar tree. John's livelihood depends on a» perpetual supply of trees. In British Columbia everyone is dependent, directly or indirectly, on the forest resource. Protect Your Prosperity Keep British Columbia Green