2 Prince Rupert Daily News Friday, August 29, 1952 —_— a ab independent daily and Nofthem and Cent Memyber of Cagadian Press Canadian Daily Newspaper A Published by ““he Prince Rupert Da J. F. MAGOR, President H British Columbia, Circulations rai Auuit Bureau of tion News Limited RY, Vice-President Subscription Rates: ier—Per wetk)28¢fper month $1.00 1ail—Per mokithy J5q per year, €8.00 &uthorized —~ aaa A Noise of New Interest CURIOUS fact of the present politieal scene in British Columbia is that, even without a meet- ing of the Legislature, there is an unusual amount of verbiage being tossed about. In a kind of open forum there has been a gen- erous airing of opinions about the new hospital insuranee plan. While words on this subjeet are still flying about, there is a crossfire of conversation in about..the reeount dilemma, Then, as a background chorus which may soon provide the main sound eff@et, there is the chatter created by the ease of ##0 uneleeted cabinet ministers, Hrovress These ave the more audible strains. Rising and falling in volume as the mood demands there is talk about gevernment by order-in-eouncil, government by inexperience and government by a one-seat plurality : At first listening, the general effect sounds something like a Gilbert and Sullivan opera in which yone has missed their cue. It sounds very con- fusing and just as hopeless. But onee the ear be- comes attuned to the noise, this impression changes. Although the rhythm is wild and the notes dis- cordant, there is a theme emerging which promises in time to beeome full-bodied and harmenious. it is the theme of a people becoming interested in what is happening te them. It is the theme of fresh attention and new circumstance. To draw a far bigger and more violent parallel, the British went through the same experience when the true threat of Hitler took shape and, in what eemed a time of complete confusion, they found a nifying vigor. The same basic theme appeared in entirely different circumstances when the Repub- hose Eisenhower their presidential can- © ¥« néeans Cc as lidate. For a considerable time now, British Columbia —and it is probably not alene among the provinees in this—has suffered frem political boredom. This has not been necessarily the fault of the Liberals, Conservatives or anyone else. We did not wish to be disturbed, did not know what was going on and cared less. For one reason or another al] that is changing. We have had an extraordinary, and perhaps alarm- ing, summer which has left us in a degree of shock. It has been rough treatment, and entirely uninvited except by our own indifference, but it seems to be working. This effusion of comment on eur previncial affairs is a healthy sign. In a sense it brings us all into the parliament which previously we were con- tent to oeeupy by proxy—and pretty remote proxy as many defeated MLA’s will testify. that + AL BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT Record Sum Paid by Life Insurance Firms This Year By FORBES RHUDE Canadian Press Business Editor newspaper deveted to the upbuilding of Prince Rupen | per year, @20.Q0 ee Sa as second el@gs mail by the Post Office Department, Ottawa. | ee seemernen ain j ; | } j |chromosome you turn out to € about her impressions of Camada ;,, |THE PROFESSOR reasons that ; agree that it is a wonderful time | i e It by ot. ore / 4, il volt | As I Se Give the Girls Chance HOLLYWOOD, Califor- nia. — The girls have gone bargain hunting and I am writing this out- | doors in a leafy bower which lets through just YUGOSLASIA GETS READY } : ats first center for rehab- . i ilitation ef disabled persohs wi umber about 600000 in that enough sun. oe a Alli 890 oe Eibtind @ucunrtla wei country. Some of these are partisans, injured during the wat it seemed like a goo¢c marmnine § Others are farm hands, some are imdustrial workers. This to eateh mp on my reading. PY = yocational training workshop‘is the first of several and is rane good luek the first thing I , C. aaera Ko sho Tied Wetios 7: es Tae Getes-| Penneda monstration p: aided by the United Ns put my hand on Pec ance Beard. Here two jatients and a director day Review for Mareh 1 which carried a most provocative arti- cle entitled “The Natural Su- ex r proper placin g of machinery periority of Women” by Protes- sor Ashiey Montagu The noted anthropologist of Rutgers University, does mot Wy to answer ali the usual argu- ments, such as that there have been relatively few excellent wemen artists, writers, scien- tists and so forth. He skips all talk of brains, and concentrates) ney, Australia, who is wor ada because she ean’t get enough instead on chromesomes. There are 2¢ of these little bags which , decide what each partiewlar in- pounds to keep me in rags dividual is to be, If you are Because she heard a loi lucky enough to.get am X sex She is writing a series ef stories a female. But if you are one Of for the Sidney Daily Telegraph the lesser half who gets only a and hopes to cover @his coyntiuy Y ehromesome you are doomed jy about a year to be a mere male We called her “undereove: “Well, the sadwfact is that the and that's just what her circum Y chromosome is but am iota, stances are at present. We pro- the merest bit of an X chromo-) mised to hold her secret for the same. It is a crippled X time being so 4S not to jeopa: + * dize her job If they ever found out my real all the humanizing and civil- | purpose in getting the4ob I don't lizuag qualities are in the female. think I'd have it ior long . “Ft is the function of women 10} and, boy teach men how to be human.’ Reason Mis: Far be it fram me to argue was to come the point with Professor Mon- Tabulou do I need it xX toak her X-job Rupe te Prince “a last frontier town tagu I eam ai fer his main about whieh i Have boand 4 jot proposition. With the world lit- of yarns and have been dying erally galloping te hell I sure see for myself Miss X earlier Uhis monih al Vaneouver She is about iahnG@ed for the girls to jump in and take lover before the atem-and-bio- 30, a fast talker, cracks a ket o! logical-war beys wipe owt the more-than-sligntly British jokes whole shebang and talks with a very British I hope the Doc is right, even accent. She is originally from | | i ja razor and.cevldaget me boil- if J de have some secret doubts Britain —remembering those shrill fe- associati at the wrestling has not yel given and. several yeacpa of of Australian her that nasal Jha male voices matches urging on the mere twang t distinguishable dif- male performers to mangle the ferepee between British and enemy Austraian aceent + + oe What i want most to see bere AS FOR the superiority of the in Primee Rupert is a Saturday female over the male, I never might. I hear it is very colori Can you tell me how I might besi a picture of it lor an article had the slightest doubt of it from my earliest yedrs. In our & + * WOMEN could hardly make as bad a mess of running the world as the men have made Maybe they would bring an in- genuity and fresh approach that might unsnarl the jam the world is now in. I’ve seen a cop come up to give my wife a park- img ticket—but end by running a message for her. A man can think of a million reasons why we have to have a) big army, navy or airforce—es- pecially if he is a general or an} admiral, or an airplane manu-| facturer. | Any woman with a son she’ loves, or a husband she wants to keep, can think of the other) side of the picture. | I would like to see the Am-| ericans try out the give-women- a-chance idea by appointing a) new truce team im Korea, head- ed by Eleanor Roosevelt. The | generals have shown that no} matter how good they may be! at waging war, they are darn) poor hands at making peace. | | | VALUABLE EXPORT About 95 per cent of Canada’s | asbestos production is exported, | tion of its blast furnace and‘ Essex County, England. with the biggest amount going | |to the United States. Sludge can lead to costly engine repai bills, higher maleate eet Heavy Duty Marvelube guards against gummy engine sludge ss + reduces damaging engine heat; ss fights cor- Fosive combustion acids : +. provides a tough lubricating film to protect your engine. "Glad | switched Marvelube REFLECTS and REMINISCES | in-!lumbia, when anyone with ex- perience was soundly defeated by anybody, so long as he didn’t know beans concerning public matters, Ray Cheerio! Black-topping creases as jay-walking decreases According to the Christian Seienee Monitor, about half the 2.500,000,000 peopie in the world are on the edge of starvation. Nothing we'd like to do better than @istribyte can-openers, and ber ef homeless young men. paint to nerthen British Co-|@eme less than others, like! lumibia enough. ONE OR OTHER! Skimming through a list of In 1898 Col. Pheedore Reoose- velt reeruYied a thousand aven for service in the Spanish -Ameri- can war. They became Known as the Rough Riders of the West came to this one. Has anybody ever over-estimated the cost of | building a house? Newer heard of /Mt.- Phat is, net yet The first reunion was held in) orioererseomer 1999. The last was this month in| At last a Gkeena trout fisher - Las Vegas (New Mexico) when |man has been discovered who | is suspected of having told the Shaw, aged 78, of Omaha (Ne-| Blain truth. He aaid the fish he Government officials are said | the same g9 19 9 to be concerned over the num- | paid casual queries the other day,. we L diega! because | SUabliny 7 iWork ai \Galmo where Ore thy Carpente, | Strike in Nelson Apes NELSON, BC 94 . felson ANd distrigg went on strike Weis Carpenters on jumibia’s cogs! A strike for the was! of 26 cents an boy. months of r ; Nelsur: contractor ' Contractors ‘reg a OUelld ededings are sin aan enters wooyrad g The strike halled HB. Mig | peters have bem oa braska): “There ain't a thing caught was langer than the one i wreng with me that whisky or that got away Classitied / wemen won't Cure.” a it was an the peninsula of | Gaspe that Jacques Cartier first | set foot on the extreme eastern sheres Of Canada. This was four cemtaries ago. It bas taken that At Your Service... veloping her natural wealth, wauated at Jast, and virtually still a mighty wilderness. Cancerning the future, Cana da’s Minister of Finatce says Canadians have reason for “cautious optimism.” Mr. Avbot, | in some Ways, is a near genius While he never says outright that lower taxes are on the way, he can step so softly he seems to be saying exactly that. Anyway, we want to believe him NO BUSINESS THERE There come occasions when publicity can possibly do more: harm than good, but not often.) For example consider it as a erime deterrent. Commenting on this, the Guelph Mercury says) people have no business to come | - te a newspaper office, or have anyorle else eome on thelr be- half to have their names kept out of the press QUEER, AIN'T IT? | A multitude of Democrats con- | itinue ‘to argue that General | Dwight Eisenhower is a down right greephorn 4: political af- iairs. They could not have heard jmuch @bout the outcome of the ireeem election in British Co- } INDUSTRIAL STEEL CONVEYORS, PRESSURE TANKS, SMOKE-STACKS, Ete. | i Distilled ond bottled ip bond by Corbyvilte, Ontario | WESTERN BRIDGE & STEEL FABRICATORS LTD. i Your opportunity to GEAR-SHIFT At less thau factery cost Very good quality CONTROL * — Siges 87 to 42 POWERFUL NOW 12 H.P. TWIN SELLING Other Models from $166 3rd PWT Ts & ELECTRIC BOYS’ SWEATERS Now BOYS’ PANTS— wear—-From Next to Royal Hotel “er Dave McNab WATCH & JEWELLRY REPA BESNER BLOCK, 3rd Ave. “GUARANTEDD SERVICE BY EXPERT CRAPIg H. CORBY DISTMLERT LTD, . 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