I ii | a } AIRE AEE ARE | 1 ti ai —_« aiiaciniis . i Tito 5 ° il x | Mo t F. Ai a i: . | Canada roa. | : Prince Rupert Daily News | ac See It , vee | Most Families | 2.0. ; 0 busines ia . ay September 27. 1952 j / B C H, 000 business na ~ | Baile ccimamiaeer seemed: gael PS Reflects and n B.C. Have NINES tel sendent daily newspaper devoted to the upbuilding of Prince Rupers [ . ' and Northern and Central British Columbia, : ¥ Te Only ] Child v of adian P Audit Bureau Circulations — Ca ie a Newspaper Association Oh Reminisces j VE RIA : : Published »y "The Prince Rupert Daily News Limited Clmore } 6 itat Sidhe ‘Ru- CTO —One-child fami: 9 ! P. ‘MAGOR dent H. G. PERRT, Vice eee How about tha ' “|ies predominate in British Co- ) a. ; — [ee ) ; }pert mail delivery. It was due lumbia, on en ae i dean ehh [ ilpott to begin in September. Time} — ppe monthly Family Aliow- ie Per week 25¢; pers uth 9) 0; per year, 8 Z / for action, else risk a change in| ayoe report issued today by .w ‘ , inh on sec ; mai! by the Post Office Department, Ottawa. i | fashions. R. Bone, regional director, show. | A Sue ea eo ee ' | - ed that out of '170;208' families in | 1 The ‘Tag ‘Day ‘season ap-|the province who recé@ived | A Sense of Belonging Threat ‘Real proaches 1 has hal good sup [cheques during September "60. || yp (4 ° 1 YKS > as if jport in ‘Prince ‘Rupert ‘from, 789 were paid on ‘behalf 6f one | hat ‘ N :qlmost everyone ‘there ‘is‘an Ynetinct to belonc IT ‘LOOKS to me as : earliest days. (Generally speak- | child; 99,125 -were \paid ‘on ‘be- best ; y ] most everyone ‘there is re ee eee Premier Malan of South ing, thts tsa painless process. | half of two ehildren; 26,523 had | ee f The schoolboy in ang is affected the same way age : ate 5 dee pihthiciiinine | three children. Inve. os aS . a : ” | Africa ‘is conside) ing the USEEUL aaeBONS | Pen families ‘had ‘ten chita- s ) by this as a member of the cabinet. ear a the Us | ren; seven | i Teme th 4 A forcible seizure: of ne Presence of a trainfull of! ren: ‘five Sties ‘ema i112 The trouble is that there is often nothing to British protectorates jungle animals in ‘Prince Rupert | Chitéren; fam’ which to belong, ov at least it may seem»so. Lack of : : - | which lie just north of the money can be one obstacle, lack of the right kind of ges ; : Union of South Africa. interests another, and.a third is often not-knowing | ‘phat is the only possible in-, _ 1 ahiniwt it terprétation of his speech ‘to how wae about ™ his nationalist party supporters On October 2 all those in Prinee Rupert who are in whieh he said that - - : . . . .j|tlence was becoming exhaustec in ‘this dilemma will have the chaneé ‘to dllow ‘the’ | of pitsin’s coch in trans! whole problem to be solved for them. ‘On'the night | ring these areas to South Af- . . rica’s ‘control of that date:someone will call at each home 'to dis- “One of the oldest political euss ‘lm shin i » Civic Centre. and it wil] be [tricks im ‘history ‘is for rulers cuss membership in the Civic Cer tre, and it I] canaries enue abenelits A seen that ‘there are no obstacles after all. overwhelm the opposition at home by plunging their: country into some war or warlike adven- ture abroad As far as money is eoncerned, a whole family can belong for less than four cents a day. As for : ‘ 3 Malan is in deepening, self interests, they run the whole gamut at the'Centre |j,,4¢ aifficuities at home. He : r 2 t ; . \~- ‘y inv re og symphony music. The third |has not only ‘flouted ‘the con- _— tiny ” tt G ” oe y stitution of his country, and item can be settled on the spot with the canvasser. In offering something for everybody, the Civic Centre isa,remarkable institution. .Sinee it was not the highest court in the land by his illegal race persecution laws He has goaded not only the Af- jrieans, Indians and people of ate hilt F tPiay s areyt ac sver bee ) mixed blood to open rebellion established until after the war it has never been are oem eee to the'test, but it is'a fact nevertheless that:a child | violent lines). But he has com- oie . , |}pelled loyalist elements, led by “4 ‘ r yaa Pte aoe s 1 pach |: 7 , J could joinsup at kindergarten age and, through each Se cea tenine . ties tices ake year of a full lifetime, find something to do there of | taik of armed resistance to his . unconstitutional decree. amusement or interest. vege ee ae Although ‘the way to membership is open any |THERE IS no doubt that inclu- ys . . after Oct. 2 will ‘be sion in the South African time, every day of postponement atte ct. c Wi n Union of the ‘British ‘territories 5 r of enjovment lost. in question ‘would ‘be popular} ” day of enjoy |'with the ‘vast majority of ‘the ° . ~ ' ’ 'descendants of the ‘Dutch -set- The Majority Said Yes tlers, and also with many of| | other white South ‘Africans. There is even less doubt that it would be resisted, even ‘to |the death, by many of the na- }tive Afrieans who live in ‘the territories in question. But as Malan and Go. ‘have cpenly defied the entire .UN for everal years in regard to South West Africa—whieh was.a-.Ger- man colony until the first world war—it far from sure that tt not go “whole shog” and try to grab also the British protectorate of Bechuanaland There is, of course, no ‘British armed 'foree, nor for that ‘mat- ter any other kind of outside }armed force capable of stopping such an aggression in the early stages, if Malan tries ‘to carry his implied threat. + + * HAD South “Africa continuea along the earlier lines of iftve- and-let-live, with an increasing measure of mutual respect be- tween the various races»and:na- Uonalities, the peaceful “expan- T midnight tonight Prince Rupert will abandon until next Spring a mode of living it could easily do without on a permanent basis. In this land of the long summer sun, saving daylight is saving something that we already have in plenty. For the most part, it merely serves as a source of confusion when it comes time to:catch a boat or a train. 1s ley will Unfortunately, however, daylight saving is not to be dispensed. by the provincial] government in the same way as liquor. As a majority goes, so go the rest of us and Prince Rupert's negative vote in the recent plebiscite does not register. It :rmust be cut admitted that this is probably the only sensible solution. But if any more commis- sions are appointed to investigate the liquor prob- lem, the city’s affirmative vote on that question will not register either. as in 68, both plan to run again Fisheries Minister Mayhew, 72,)| frequently is mentioned as 2) of hoice to fill British Columbia’s | vacancy in the Senate. However, -|Slon northward would have been fbeen racial or color equality ; ; 4 i ; s | #gainst’ Hindus which now seems yarliament—possibly the last before a general elec White Supremacy While it is alm@st certain that inevitable as desirable. It No Change Expected in Cabinet in most of South Africa. It is “| trivial,-as “compared with Ma- tion—with his cabinet largely unchanged. Bxternal Affairs Minister Pear- segregation and cuffew laws | Colonel. |compliments drip sweet ‘honey 'the “North? (South Africa statted when the}Littte Augie, fanatics re- Populi.” voked the long standing rights | mixed bloods, and passed} the letter, “I'thought that guy FOR HUNDREDS of years malatia and typhus. Not u sent a four-man medical t« DDT an ‘area of 175 til Square organized ‘attempt "ma@de to br The preégram was trebled in During the off-season for m typhus’ problem. ‘Here: a WHO team the people and honres against ty .fghanistan has veen 195) plagued by the World Health Organization 1 to: Kundus in 1951 to spray with miles against malaria wa j control ilts the ring the disease unde! because of favorable rest ia the WHO team in Kabul is shown tackles spraying phus UNDER OUR ROOF By JOHN People don’t »write m STURDY e very dften—except law- yers—but my ‘wife ‘has forwarded me this letter to Edmonton ‘where wwe recently arrived from White- horse in ‘the Yukon Territory; that is, Col. S. Skef- e fington-Smutts ‘(Ret.) and Hamish and Little Augie and myself. It didn’t come registered mail® s0 I knew ‘that it -cowldr’t be from a lawyer, and ‘so ‘I opened it. *Dear Sir,” it began, “I: read your column. .... fe “Lookee” I said, waving ‘the sheet of paper. “A ‘fan ‘fetter.’ “Congratulations,” said th: “Read on, and ‘tt ‘the on your noble brow.” “IT have ‘read vyour ceéhunin,’ said .the letter, “beeause Iam a lighthouse-keper «on a wild stretch of.the British Celumbia coast, and when you have been a lighthouse-keeper for twenty- | pilot. ean't stand the tension,” the Colonel observed. “They crack up early in life. Their nerve go.” “Fhe doctor,, said Hamish, “didn’t say anything about nerves. He says this pilet has a case of the D.T.’s” I'm afraid I must put off this significance business for the moment to explain about our The reason he has the D.T.’s is because he flew uy from Whitehorse to Edmonton and on the way we had to fly so high we were forced to put on asks five years you will read .any- — ° — thing.” Well, before we left White- I looked at the Colonel. -He/Porse we had a lot of time on merely shrugged. jour hands and Little Augie de- “Lately I have been ‘following your account of a trip: into the Yukon,” 1 -continued reading, “and Ihave yet to.read one constructive item or point of interest. How .four full-grown men like ‘you. and ‘your ‘friends could travel that far and «spend so much of your wife’s money without learning anything is beyond my comprehension. Did you tell us anything about the threat of war? No. Did you describe the booming future of No. ‘Did ‘you -warn us of Soviet infiltration into Alaska (What about |‘ that ‘Russ- ian church at Juneau?) ‘No. “Did you make us shudder at the hopelessness of the world? Nota word. Nota shudder. Did you diseuss Adkai Stevenson and General Eisenhower? Do ‘you ; know who they are? And do you mean to say you went to Alaska! and back -without seeing flying saucer? one “I am disgusted with you, ‘sir. | Why don't you raise the level of | your column to one of SIGNIF- ICANCE? Perhaps you “can't Perhaps you're not significant yourself. FWooey on »you, ‘sir. Fooey ‘on Col. °S. ‘Skeffington- Smutts (Ret.) and Hamish and Yours ‘truly, Vox “Hmm!” ‘I said, as I ‘finished Populi was dead.” | cided.to make up a batch of his | Little Augie 100 Per Cent Guar- ranteed Giggle’Juice so he would tbe ready ‘for ‘his customers when we goi vaek Home, and }there wasn’t any place to store \it aboard the plane except in ;the oxygen tank Well, of course the pilot didn't know anything about that, and | when we had to put our oxygei ;masks on the fumes naturally came through instead of oxy gen Weill, Hamish and the Colone] and I have sort of built resistance against Little Augie’s |Giggle-Juice, but it was ‘th ; peor pilot’s first experience with the stuff. I must say that the }really got him. He was in hor- trible shape when we landed at Edmonton, upside down Now to get back to. my type- writer and this matter of sig- | nificance EDMOMTON (CP)--Mrs, . A. Me- }Afee reports that visitors to |her garden this summer depos- jited more than $70 in her Réd |Cross “wishing well.” Monéy jthrown into the well is turnéd jover to the Red Cross ‘hospital |tor etippled children ‘in Calgary | Trem | ple It also widened the ‘know - lilies entered B.C, duting the ledge of mo ‘small “‘Nunber ft | month over ‘those that left. ‘the adults. “Going to sé¢heol is all ' j-while | Iffe up a’ fumes! for a full week owas, certainty | aoe three famities had jonal “point of : view deni doom s satlites ben-|_ Allowances paid duting ‘thre : F }month reached a new high ‘of CRE, URUCMMRTiy ‘AO “Youn |POO* Leaeen Is, ‘Abare ‘thar 800 ‘tenn totals being 6 very well, ‘but anyone, if he so} - = ciao ee een resotves, ean “keep on learning MED] Pn ’ One Ne Life Tregupg fasts. THAT BREWERY Alderman George Casey is When you save jhe urging the establishment of a insurance yoy brewery in Prince Rupert, This, SAVINGS On & yo however, does not come as a basis, You are say idea so far as George is 4 set sum each concerned. It's ‘just repeating YOur insurancegs hat he has been reeommend- Ol BURNERS gud This money ie j ing for many a long year and, , let it be said,.without much real encouragement. However, once has an objective, he finds it impossible to give up YOur-insuranee, skilfully and sels terny profitable family prot he nh meantime) saving Mutual Life of ¢ Fight pictures cévering the inking of the Princess Kath- NOW ON } Camimot be exe een appear in Life. Practically all are large and the seenes are EASY TERMS } vivid. There is a con- ayy trast between this, and the WITH ESSO FURNACE OIL : crimeéss Sophia disaster,"in the « CONTRACT ASSURED | A alae me “neighborhood during late } ae autumn, in 1918 Then illus- trations were not -eneouraged and it would seem certain they | Representatives: were not featured in American , RICHARD SEPHTON publications | Agent, 475 Howedl ——_—— ver, B.C ‘ From the -Uniontown, Pa., i ry Morning ‘Herald, Wanted > hen oa “Cooks -waltresses and _ dish- Co mashers, experienced.” WILL ROBINSON = IMPERIAL Oli. k g 0 OTTAWA (CP) — Indications are ‘that I _—s Africa away’ back’before the first Minister St. Gauvent will face the next session of|war ag ats t -discrimindtion lan’s monstrous actions. Sources closé to the primé® But the deepening crisis minister say that at the mom- ent the possibility of a cabinet shuffle appears remote son will be elected’ president of the United Nations General As- sembly, it will m6t be ‘necessary for ‘him ‘to give up his cabinet A. P. GARDNER & CO. | e wonderfully norm CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS quite as cruel ang more unjust} “It’s ‘a challenge,” said the than anything whieh. eame out/Colomél. “You -will have to ‘be! of Hitler’s earlier years. ;more serious from now on, ‘You + + & jwill ‘have to write words of sig- "AR the opposition within | because Of the unsettled con- dition of politics in British Co- lumbia it is expected Mr. May- hew will. be persuaded to stand | so F Just slip a feot into one of thes . and float off on your round of : nothing equals their activities! Fa working, rélaxing ... ANNOUNCE THEIR ‘ nifieanee. “You will have to¢l| BE Comfort. — for re-election. South Africa has taken non- establish ‘yourself as ‘a pundit.’ The assembly greets in New) The existing 19 vacancies in| violent ilties, because of .the| Well, I supposed he was "right, York next month. Parliament|the Senate constitute a record. strong TERRACE OFFICE is now situated ‘in the McADAMS BLOCK | opens Nov. 20. | Six The sources said Mr. Pearson | will .be able to, divide his time between Ottawa ahd New York. He »will be available by tele- phone on.any.important depart- | mental matters. , Gandhi ‘heritage. On ‘the|I tried ‘to ‘think ‘of sométhing of the vacancies are In| first day of the organized re- | significant right away, ‘so JI Quebec; five in Ontario; four in| sistance by the African Logon erent send it off to the news- New Brunswick and one each} gq] Congress, however, no les¢$!paper, and just: at that moment in British Columbia, Prince Ed-| than 132 persons were arrested |Hamish made ‘his appearance. ward Island, Manitoba and New- | named “Suppression df Com- (We were sitting in the swait- foundland. |munist Act.” Hundreds of: per-|ing+reom-of the airport at Ed- Mr. St. Laurent has given no|sons are now in jail—but-each}menten.) Fashion Foot } rc 7 | Phone 60 TERRACE, B.C. 1 ; iB In ‘the Commons, either De-| indication that he plans to fill) month more and more -people| “They-have taken our pilot -to|]) : BC., Box 220 J . 4 sf fence Minister Claxton or the! the vacancies soon. There now | join the organized resistance. _|.the hospital,” .announeed Hamil: perrace Prince Rupert en : | 7 ; j prime minister will reply to any|are 75 Liberals in the 102-seat| The situation is bound to come | ish. eee Prinee-George —— -Quesnel questions on ‘external affairs | upper chamber and only eight|to a ‘head when the ‘UN ‘As+ which arise during Mr. Pear- | Progressive Conservatives. | sembly meets. For years it ‘has son’s absenee. | There are two vacancies .in}been about the hottest ‘hot’ po- Mr. ‘Pearson will head the| the 262-seat Commons. Both | tato that’ the ‘Assembly “has ‘had Canadian delegation to the UN |.ore in -Quebec-—Outremont-St.|t© handle. ‘In ‘reeent ‘“moriths meeting. If he is elected to the| Jean and .Richelieu-Vercheres. | things have ‘gone’so: muth’ from They will be ‘filled by by-elee-| bad to worse that some kind of presidency, he will be replaced | as head of the ‘delegation bY Htions Oct. 6. | Showdown crisis seems .cloge. at | Qt | hand. another cabinet: minister. Allies Accused The post likely will go to | Of Colonialism Health Minister Martin, who is| | OTTAWA © —Philip ©, Jes- , Sup, United States umbassador- “How is he?” .I vasked. — | “Well,” said Hamish, “he ‘hag turned in his wings.” “Too -bad,” I murmured. “The doctor says he will never ‘fly-again. But in:another week or ‘two ‘they expect 'to jet him out of ‘the strait-jacket.” “Some of ‘those :pilots just NOTICE TO RATEPAYERS A Sale of lots within the ‘City of Prince Rupert on which FOR VERANDAHS, PORCHES | BO} FOR YOUR poor COMPARE THESE FEATURES @® Fibreglass Insulation @ Thermostatic Control @ Glass'‘Lined (fused to metal) @ Oan't Rust or Corrode -Gives. you sparkling, clear, hot water, pure as the “GUASTEEL” | WATER HEATERS to be viee-chairman of the dele- | gation. i There have been rumors that some of the older cabinet minis- a fer the house-0" source itself. ; Be sure you are ready when it starts: i eget ters would like to retire. Indi- delinquent ‘taxes are owing, will ‘be ‘held in ‘the ‘Couneil ‘ postal service vd cations ‘now are there will be/ at-large, said today that Soviet | Chambers, City Hall, Prince Rupert, B.C., at 10 am. “on SURED no retirements until after the | Russia has been steadily absorb- | September *30th 1952. FOR 10 YEARS. next :€iection, expected to come | ing its neighbors while accusing } SEE TP AT in ‘the fall of 1953. )the western powers of “eolon- | ’ Mr. St. Laurent, 70, has said | ialism.” + Property on which 1950 taxes are owing will tbe ‘sold unless that he will-again.Jead the party “No territory which was under paid on or before 9:30°a.m.' September 30th, 1952. Gordon & Andes RUPERT RADIO & ELECTRIC if his health remains good.) Russian domination has been Ba « ; Ph 46 Trade Minister Howe, 66, and) voluntarily released,” said Mr. H.'M. FOOTE, City Collector Phone 644 Box 1279 ‘one agriculture Minister Gardiner, | Jessup.