; 3 . ~ ~~ - 6 = eo @D = = “SS . @ - _o , <= a om = tf» AL i t g of Prince Rupert ti ‘ a Mem B 2u ir { A i oO Publi D News Limited J. PF. MAG F H. ¢ PERRY, Vice-President ri oe : r € ‘ ar. $10.00 en Bk & Office Department, Ottawa RUPERT BREATHES EASIER SP] ; TI Py y rT hal hwvos . . > D, INCI ee I RT pro ably breathed just a little ivier than the rest of B.C. in its sigh of relief in the deadlock between fisher- ind canners, Hither way the dispute turned, it ould have more direct effect here than else- re ‘ Prince Rupert is basically a fishing centre; derives most of its economie stability from this in- iu ¥ Had Lrie & weet i x Le 1 ! hut 1 wh in i i ii Ali ‘ st haw MiULTLEY VV bi aii Lhe lisheries, there is no doubt that the setback in ; city’s economy would have been great and far- I't Ching, Meanwhile, all B.C. eyes and ears are centred on the lumber indu try wondering just which way the 40-day deadlock will turn. A wise man, with of experience behind him in dealing fairly with di all kinds, has made a final attempt in bringing year putes of oodworkers and the operators together to solve the crippling loggers’ strike, Impartial Proposal Phere | at all that Chief Justice Sloan proposal to both groups with all the perience, knowledge of people and world condi- no doubt has backed hi tions at his command, It is a proposal that should be very seriously considered by both union and operators, for if not accepted, it will be much harder to affect a solution in the future. Kach negotiation which is terminated without uccess appears to lead to a more difficult problem. If the present woods strike, now 40 days old, boils down to “waiting it out” by both sides, it will be a long time before either party will regain its footing. Although both parties may find some of Chief recommendations hard to swallow, their own actions Justice Sloan hey are tommitted by to agree unbiased ource, Before inviting the chief justice to mediate, both. had opportunity to judge whether or not he was imparital, and both apparently approved, If either now rejects his opinion, then it is obviously seeking not so much a mediator as a spokesman for lbs cause, that t hat the proposal comes from a fair and If the Sloan Formula is turned down, end of the trike is further out of sight tham ever. There is no government at Victoria which can hasten a settlement, and there are few, if any persons as well qualified as the chief justice to mediate. The dispute is reaching the point where every- body will be the loser, whatever happens, and the bigger the loss will be. kind of } longer it lasts, the Mo erv f ffering from under-work, which ailment that } more peuple than over-work. Plan our days to pack then tight as sardine tins with occupation i body anc 10 interest to go undeveloped, let no latent talent be u Discover new possibilities of adventure 1 every task; discove ew tasks to adventure upon Rua every risk ng from overwork, rather than take € Feabvel } As | yoredom Radar Detects Saucers, US Air Force Investigate sy JACK RUTLEDGI from t WASHINGTON fhe United State Air Force today inve f tj 1 : tively slow speed, as well as later | under some “new broom” leader gated reports that veral “fl disclosing the customary burst | That is doubly true now. Fither ing saucers” had been spotted by that far outspeeds normal planes. | Jimmy Sinclair or Arthur Laing radar virtually in its own back One thing was certain: a thor-| could carry B.C. yard on the outskirt of the | ough investigation is being made | $$ country’s capital by the air technical intelligence | Not only were unidentified) centre, Wright-Patterson Air | ° H | objects seen on radar—indicat-| Force base, Dayton, O., which| Rains e p ing ae —— nce instead of} has been set up to look into | ee mere ligh put ) airline pilots | flying saucer reports Pr and reporte! irie light The flying. saucers over sna ale fitting the general description of | capital were reported late yester- | flying saucers the same night day, about ghee atter the Wheat Crops Officials could not immediat-/ incident actually occurred : ely agree on whethe thi Wa c the first time rad up flying saucer persons was unusual | sources: The objects also were different An operator at National Airport unidentified his radar picked | gether from air force involved, and images on screens Group Plans New Appeal Organization VANCOUVER ()—A plan to in- corporate several British Colum- bia welfare and health organ- izgation’s annual fund appeals| burg, W. Va. He said they chang into a single drive—the United | ed Appeal Organization today moved a step closer to reality Sponsors of the miles midnight. hanging almost motionless. OPP AM Aa Od he average reported saucer din that they travelled at a rela-| that the Liberals could only win reports, This is the story as pieced to- | WINNIPEG | other | perienced light pace, sometimes moving at tremendous speed, at other times | - As I See It by Eknore Philpott Liberals Must Fight THE latest Gallup poll drives home the point j have been trying to make in this column: the Lib- have been losing ground and the Conserva- erals tives have been gaining. If the Social Credit B.C. carry over into the election of 1952 it is gains in federal quite pro able that George Drew will be- come the next Prime Minister of Canada figures do not tell unless they are They show The poll the whole story analyzed 1949 1952 Liberals 50 46° Conservatives 30 34 CCF 13 12 Others 7 8 | For all practical and above all for purposes of the 1953 federal election—you can lump together the Conser- and Social Credit. Thus you get this picture: Only about four per cent now divides the total vote that the Liberals can reasonably expect to get in 1955 purposes— Valives and that which the Conserva- tives and Social Credit may ex- pect to poll * + ¢ FROM the Liberal point of view the situation is much more alarming if you break it down province by province. From On tario east it is a straight fight between the two old parties (with the exception of the sin gle CCF seat in Nova Scotia) Ever since the end of World War One the basis of Liberal power in Canada has been Que bec. On the single occasion when the Conservatives, won R. B Bennett turned the trick by tak- ing 25 seats out of the forme olid 65” held by Quebec Lib- era@is Latterly the Conservatives | have shown a marked comeback in Quebec. I am not referring to Mr. Duplessis’s latest victory in the provincial election, but to the prior wins of Mr. Drew’s candidates in federal tions by-elec- . = IT IS quite true that west of Ontario the Conservatives have little if any ¢hance of win ning extra seats, for their own candidates. The Tories who win in the west mostly do so on their own personalities. Diefenbaker, Nickle, Pearkes, Howard Green, Davie Fulton—all these are Conservatives who poll a_ big vote from people who normally would not vote Tory But for purposes of the next federal election, George Drew can win on the principle that every seat lost by the Liberals is a seat won by Tories i. Go! THE LIBERALS of B.C. have not a moment to lose if they wish} to re-organize in time to pre- vent a Social Credit sweep in the B.C. provincial election which is bound to come in the next year | $uch a sweep, in my opinion, would carry over into the eral election, in B.C,.Hence, un less the Liberals fight in the provincial field their chances of winning out in the federal elec- tion seem pretty slim, to me. Months before the recent elec- tion debacle in B.C. I wrote here to heavy }during the past week, scattered showers one of | light rains in most dstricts, re- | The images|ports the department were going probably 100 to 130 | culture, Canadian National Rail- an hour. That was around | ways age is expected. said here that officers are being | seeing a light following a light | providing warm dry weather. selected from among a citizen’s phases of the community. They | ton. said, however, that the forming | of the organization will some time and It was proceed with its annual appeal, York. this year. folowing it from Herndon, Va.) committee which represents all|/to within four miles of Washing- | Okanagan Saul Pett, an Associated Press take | reporter, said he saw a “flying that they had|saucer” that same night near | ticton asked the Community Chest to| River Edge, N.J., outside of New orange-colored, | next week, | round, moved swiftly and sound- During the past Valley week, some heavy showers, and fed- | Most areas of| trouble early this month while central and northern Alberta ex-|steaming through pack ice off rains | while | forepeak plates was found to, be Washington | Saskatchewan and Manitoba re- |leaking, and she turned back to spotted eight) ceived and | Quebec, of agri- Traces of stem and leaf rust|is umdergoing repairs at Cana-|qation for Infantile Paralysis, | Capt. 8. C. Pierman, piloting a| have been reported in southern | | Capital Airlines plane, soon re-| Manitoba, central Saskatchewan | ported seeing seven objects be-| and at some points northeast of tween Washington and Martins- | Calgary, hut only negligible dam- Practically all early sown grain is fully headed out and in some districts swathing operations will Another airliner also reported| begin in approximately 10 days,| The ©. D. Hows the | Bay Company patro] boat which experienced considerably cooler weather with Apricots |!and in 1947 while on her 34th | have started to move from Fen- it Summerland areas | eT and will reach the peak oath | during the week of August 4, No | Globulin. Peaches will com- mence moving from Penticton | ported. ‘Free Trade Unions Bulwark of Democracy In West Germany, Says Canadian Leader ae OTTAWA (€P) — Unfettered| jn ten can pass a beauty trade unions are one of the) From this comes the belief that greatest bulwarks of democracy | one in eleven can pass a beauty ray Retlects not think tog much to remark that not One woman sions test. The safest wan 4 chip off a fellow’'s = k in post-war West Germany, parlor patting him on the ~ Donald MacDonald, secretary- ve Dppk’ treasurer of the Canadian Con-' The easiest way to lose your a ~~ gress of Labor, said today good name is to sew it-on your _ SO long agg average farm laborer hangs and kept On toi daybreak to maybe af for picayune Mr MacDonald talked to umbrella Sudbury Star newspaper men at a press COn- ference on his return from the Frequent menuon of husing ; : >tiny pay. recent general council meetiny shortages continue to be made.| he say today paid by mut Bin in Berlin of the International) yet in Ottawa we hear so much ; he = ™ Meee «386 Contederation of Free Trade | concerning ceilings and floors é eg Mr. Pearson has been Ottawa he is unable tod any one Wishes ty enter here are other; who more clearly. They oy distinguish bet and maximum Unions, anti-communist world union group. The Sydney, N.S., labor man is on the. executive of the 53,000,000-member ICFTU , He said German labor men had been rebuilding trade unions strongly since the war and the Berlin meeting of the} Perhaps more tha. often, it’s usually When anyone 1s getting along in years, he realizes the necessity of working and saving while young. That is, if he does ween 69-country organization Was 4) tribute to their work NO AVAI The CCL official, Canada’: only representative at the coun cil session, said the ICFTU fighting communism chielly through education and organi zation and by trying to unprove workers’ living standards But unless more is done {fol the people of under-developed countries, he said, communisp) might extend its hold, Bast Asian delegates at the council "A MARINE BAND. BATTERY RADIO Designed especially for the fisherman FIGHT AGABNST MALARIA is carried out in Yhailand with the help of the U.N. World Health Organization (WHO) and the U.N. International Children ney Fund and has largely Emerg : succeeded in eliminating the ‘slow killer” in many part of the |had said something must be e country. Above, a Phai doctor uses a borrowed table los done soon or “anything may happen.” CALL nearby temple to examine a group of chudren : = - — During his trip abroad, Mr BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT | MacDonald said, he had found “= a = la too-prevalent idea that Can-) ‘ada is a Mecca for immigrants | He had sought to dissuade fel-' ‘low delegates from the idea that jall immigrants have to do is | “come to Canada and they are fall set.” . " ; ewaelfe Maritimes Find Advertising Pays in Tourist Dividends. RUPERT RADIO & ELECTR Phone 644 Canadian immigration, he By KINGSLEY BROWN, JR. said, must be regulated so that , Canadian Press Stafl Writer arrivals enter at a rate whereby , ) | . . . . . ‘ sf ‘ . ‘ > Canadis ‘ist bureaux: Javs to} Canada can absorb them an A up for Canadian tourist bureaux: it pays to|,ansee ving and other needs advertise. ‘for them. | . The Maritimes, heading for a record season, are | Mt. MacDonald said LOPTU , ‘ : : 4 . ; delegates were sharply eritical . already reaping fabulous dividends from an intense of race-segregation policies of 4¢ post-war advertising campaign that has turned the me Sra ‘Afsican government. 4 : > ; ‘ 1ey unanimously approved a tourist trade into a top-ranking industry. iresolution attacking this “mon aa) ye Nova Scotia’s $25,000,000 trade -| strous racialism” as being “con 1 RSS oo last year placed the industry in fifth spot agriculture PRICED FROM : apes! Ts 1 trary to the basic principles of and freedom and democracy Breton isiands highlands of Prince Edward Cape above garden and only $7,000,000 behind third- country : — "A beoeegliteste.. place fisheries. Revenues total Provincial governments have é 75 fates —s ip ling $15,000,000 in New Brut poured millicas into tourist pro-| Production es |) ja wick put it in fifth place. Prince | ject ince the war and govern-| e PAN al | Edward Island spent $4,200,000 | ment officials say it has been aw t+ peel on it last year to boost it tO) good inve stment | Costs Bar UP fal Z third position Nova Scotia’s tourist influx : eZ And tourists are rolling into| has increased 27 per cent ovel BC Orders ‘. the Maritimes this season as' last year. New Brunswick has a ¥ never before. They come for at- | seven-per-cent increase. One of , G d & A d ; witueR « aint tractions like New Brunswick’s|the most spectacular gains was . ue ' —e eae or on n ers Fundy National Park and hunt-/| registered by “Quebec tourists ns coer = ed "- — H . Phone 46 ing and fishing haunts, Nova’ who have been entering the ie ee aeaan rae Scotia’s Annapolis Valley and! province at a 56-per-cent in director Of small InGuStFies ¢ a aan euse over last season vision, Department of Defence “Th nmr” ympaign } Production, Ottawa, said here = Che, advertising camps ; Crack Arctic jirected by a relatively small today and efficient group operating on He said the $29,000,000 ship- Su | Shi omparatively low budget building conshaey are = only ‘ mei big arms manufacturing B.C. can rh Pp y ip $360,000 BUDGET expect: / 1] { f he +? Sto iS Patrol 4. mal sats es OF T.| “Higher labor rates more than p |% § Ee Cate ¥ Ova | anything else, he said, “put BC : e otia Bureau of Information on) 4)" q fatal disadvantage with 4 OTTAWA @—Dogged by hard | q $300,000 annual budget The eastern Canadian plants.” luck, the Canadian government | output and results are colossal He said the freight to destina- steamship C. D, Howe likely will| Tourist advertisements appear-| 44, ig the second major factor Gare curtail her annual trip to Can-\ed in 20 newspaper and $28) oie soils ‘ane working against the coast ada’s far northern outpo: magazines in 1950, with a com- B.C oe $60,000,000 out of a | The crack government vessel, | bined circulation of 29,006,000 federal total of $1,351,000,000 de- me \built at Lauzon, Que., and put|More than 11,090 photographs) fence spending in the fiscal year * into service two years ag set | were distributed 1951-52. ’ ’ out from Montreal June 27 with| Bob Tweedie is chief of NeW)” pycept where B.C. can offer a a cargo of mail, government, Brun: wit kK tourist publicity special facilities like shipyards, ~ J officials. and supplies of various and George Fraser heads the there is no expectation that kinds ranging from drugs to oil' Prince Edward Island Depart-| major defence production orders land lumber. Her patro! is the; went of Information will be placed in BC., he said. | y | main link between the eastern In Newfoundland, a reorgan- “Government policy is to give Arctic and civilization ized tourist board has been set every consideration to firms out i But she’s back in Montreal.| 4p with O. L. Vardy as directo. side the “high! industrialized é os The modern, helicopter-equipped Officials report the tourist in- areas souanigdied “thd bidding is | Put Seagram's 83” to Sen patrol boat is a victim of pack| Hux this season 1s exceeding all) competitive and there is a special the water test. Water, gh ice and a labor dispute expectations : facility,” he said. “It is against | plain or sparkling, reveals a -vhisky's Trans NE ent offiele Nova Sc t yw is als sing ‘ j . ae oe ot : aoe rae eae — pore government policy, to encauenar | true, natural flayour and bouquet aon 10W when thre ), Howe | Mt efile , ; me % non-economic production.” will get under way again. Until} (ial for-six or seven films Many P ‘ “ » they do, they aren’t-saying which) eather filha. shave. bee oSB9" | HIGHLAND GATHERING ea rams Of the 26 scheduled sthps Wihtiepanire Aga ye a shat 2°" SAINT JOHN, NB. CP)—What dropped | Velevision, @ a Ace \may be southern New Bruns- EC, . “i: Only the briefest op-overs| The’ International tuna tour-| wick's first highland piping and Canali Whisky had been planned for many of nament at Wedgeport, ,N.B, at- dancing competition will be held s oo the ports of call on the proposed tended annually by some 80 re- ug. 9 1 “Or of ith the| C Ny ‘e %: 12,000-mile route, and th c 'D porters, photographers and filr ous. 7 ot — aii - a c fy ote PAWS on/& Sure } 12, ’ 1 re C. BD, 5, Rothesay Fair, Artists from all producers, gains a windfall of publicity for the province. , Howe already is nearly a month | late | One transport department spokesman said this means “con siderable hardship” for an un- New Treatment parts of the province have been invited. wll Ae 4 Investigated Lay WASHINGTON (AP)A leading Stops Sludge Better! authority says dramatic new | disecoveries indicate that means F preventing o’s crippling | 5 a ee eae ettects ‘may be developed thin |Pressed for time, she steamed ee sien wi ee medical Sludge can lead to coaly engine repair | upstream to Montreal, where Sh€ | girectoy of the National Foun- | bills, higher Maintenance costs... Heavy Duty Marvelube guards against gummy engine sludge ; : . reduces damaging engine heat. « s fights corrosive com. bustion acids « : « provides a tough lubricating film to protect your engine, Marvelube __ This advertisement is not published or displayed b the Lique * Control Board or by the Government of British \ determined number of settle- \ ments. The vessel, which was not For Polio |puilt as an ieebreaker, ran into the Labrador coast. One of her dian Vickers, Ltd. \said there is an outside chance | What will happen to the) yaccine may be developed for | |northerm outposts is still NOt) yoo next year | |certain. They will probably have | i. ; ‘ i | | : eae ave) But, he added in a copyrighted | to get by with fewer supplies, | interview in U.S. News and World and may get these by plane or by| Report, a weekly news maga- cninetl ogo sailing out Of} zine, it is extremely unlikely to | spchstasesa adrian |come in time to halt what he \said may be a record onslaught | \of the disease this year. | He said the incidence of polio lis running was built to replace the Nascopie, Hudson’s went aground off Cape Dorsett pent at the south end of Baffin Is- ss about 50 per lahead of a year ago, Van Riper said much depends ‘on current experiments with a | blood extrame known as Gamma Success in this feld damage from any source is re-| might, he said, lead to a vaccine \for universal use. rip.