COPPER SOURCE | Some of the world’s largest copper deposits are in the north- | a ern part of the Northern desia in Africa, BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT Higher Production in Canada Forecast as Bright Future : By The Cana ' aby Canada’s record national production is exceed- —— ing all estimates this year, but trade forecasters pre- dict even bigger and better things next year. i . The 1953 gross national pro- diate future looked generally | |] ASKED my night school cduct—sum (otal of all goods and bright. There mightebe some sag ae os 2 a ervices produced-..is expected to in the ecomemy, but this likely class to “give the ir ont exceed this year’s output, now would be overcome by a general EXCLUSIVE HONOR The British Order of Merit as! The Se distinction for eminent men | tain r and women is limited to number OLDER PEAR 2 Prince Rupert Daily News Thursday, November 13, 1952 kirk an anges west 24 In/are older but nos . i NOt ag tig Rocky Mountain ho _—- eae lt ince Rupert Daily News Limitea H. G. PERRY, Vice-President By carrier—-Per week, 25c; per month $1.00; per year, $10.00 By mail—Per month, 75c per year, $8.00 wea @uthorized as second class mail by the Post Office Department, Ottawa Published by The Pr J. FP. MAGOR, President ¥ it, ’ Cimore | Pt ifpolt | Subscription Rates: an Press Friends on the Stage es heard after the Alaska Music Trail concert last night was that extra enjoyment is GET READY FOR ‘Or ' evita pa sentence explanations of estimated at a peak 760,.- bulge—the same kind of bulge added to a performance when the artists appear to |** ntence ex} ” r sug 000.000. The oclatnal ote. that kept employment at peak or be personal friends of the audience rather than | the overwhelming Eisen- forecast for 1952, made early near peak levels through the i : os hower victory in the U.S.! this year, was $22,500,000.000 twar years, brought national somewhat strange and distant figures on the stage. Laati ‘ : Ln , Capital investment—at a peak | income to the highest level in ; . . . . 21ee ; i é TUNULC | ge of we in a ni history ¢ a t Canadian | Whether by accident or design, it so happens ; elections. a @ $5 200,000,000 ir 4953 “is @Xpect- | histcery and made the Rnaerae | } hi I } people called out these: [ed to go even higher in 1968, dollar the strongest in the te that in each of the concerts this season there 1as . Ts Consumer spending, strong world +e a nol rinitenines , ee : = . It was “time for a change now after sagging in the first been one per former who, assuming the role of | Ike got the womey's vote, people | half of 1952, is likely tomake new : spokesman, has offered the listeners a little talk in |were sick of Korea, too much gains ra kee e.¢ . ° fi ® corruption in government Loo 953 e . t " addition to music. In each ease he has injected it | nigh taxes ahd 20 om «lame “Canales ba With humor and in each e: se the audienee has to But one woman said “too many » expected to be 7 iin numor and i] €acn Case the audience has, i are exp d be buoyant, off t} lloqui ili ; Speeches by President Trumar setting a less reassuring outlook e ects an “Use tne CO Oq < sm, eaten it up. Which lost votes far Stevenson ‘Or sales to other parts of the In a larger city this added fillip probably never would be attempted. It is not that the people there are any less suseeptible to amusement. Collectively, however, they are more formidable. As a general rule there is a faint implication that the artist is there on sufferance and that he is, by advance judg- ment, poor until he proves beyond all doubt that he is good, While this is clearly unreasonable, it is never- theless an attitude that entertainers on a major circuit must accept as an unalterable part of the business It is no wonder, therefore, that musicians of established ability will often put aside a busy sched- ule to join those on the Alaska Musie Trail. In front of northern audiences they can, as they have ad- mitted, relax. They have a weleome up here which no one is in the least ashamed to show, and the re- sult is that without any question they give a better performance. Besides polished professional talent, their concerts have spontaneous warmth, and if there is a more essential ingredient to good musie, it is yet to he found, The reception given last night to Greta. Menzel and her accompanist Thomas Mayer, may be listed as another reason why Prince Rupert will continue to have the best in musical entertainment. PNTA Sets Example LTHOUGH a considerable amount of lip service is paid to the “great northwest,” it is probable that many of those offering their verbal tribute I think there was a good dea) of truth in that one, It always easy to be wise after the event But it does seem to me that Ste is warid Summing it all up, says Dr O. J. Firestone, the trade de- Reminisces DRESSES You'll look lovely in one of our pretty party dresses partment’s economic adviser, “prospects for 1953 are for a continuation of a high levet of economic activity and a gross venson would have had a slightiy better chance had Mr. Truman kept completely out of the pie- ture, and left the spotlight on the two men who were actually run- ational product exceeding ning that of 1952.” * & « Dr. Firestone did some crystal MY OWN explanation is over- | gaging when he spoke before the Simplified, perhaps. It seems Montreal Institute of Invest to me that Ike was personally ment Analysts recentiy, He mix- the most likeable candidate of | ed optimism with caution and, this century. Over half the! with a touch of unpleasant real people Of the U.S. loved Roose- ism—somewhere along the line velt, but another fraction hated him, and hated his whole family Nobody hates Ike, as yet. All the world Knew that the Democrats really had only one thing against on drawing board Ike—that that he Was And some of* those drawing running on the Democratic boards are not so busy ag they et once were New large-scale resources development and industrial pro- jects are not being planned or the same scale that we have be Canadas spectacular postwar-ex- pansion may lose momentum. FIRST SIGN The first sign, he says, wily be contractors is not tick Apart from Eisenhower's im- mense personal popularity it ;now clear that Stevenson was made to carry a load which was is | Just to heavy for any candidate come accustomed tO in recent to bear To understand the! years.” he notes nature of the load you have to True, there are some majo: | 80 Way back to Roosevelt's first | p ts In the offing, such as the | victory Ss awret eaway and the Phat smiling adver turer Was Bersimis River hydro project r, ®astern Quebec announced re net only a political experimente / and a true liberal anything which x he was also a ma willing to try gnt work—but une politician iy “Theny there will be new de- velomen& that we do not know | He took over a coalition of south.| ®bout today. The point I want lern Réactionaries and n wthern t© make is that we cannot bosses. He grafted on to the’ @88ume a continuous expan- jolder Democratic party two new) Som of our economy at -the ;wings. He brought fm organized! "Spid rate of the postwar yeam jlabor, in a ‘way ft’ Kad never! Ss some future date the ee |} been brought in before. But he| P@nsion may slow down. lenlisted a whole army of New An advance indication of this ' Dealers—all sorts and varietic wing Cown—even ahead of ar of what Canadians call prog ‘ apital expenditures | Sives or even lef \ whom which includes large outlays for ' pe e : the Americans call. ‘: ect already under way E : vt b falling off in project have only a vague idea of what they are talking |. You might say that Roosevelt, | »ianning ahc + |who Was a Blant in political feanwhile, the more imme- adout, | stature, hadi feet of elav. Maybe : ; . The reason is that this part of the continent is = was realistic enough to know _— . ° : |; that he had to have feet of clay 5 mly now emerging from an economic wilderness. |to stand at alt inthe actual! f Once a country known to the world mainly for its | World. Anyway his feet of clay| . ; . cr | were the old party machine spectacular gold strikes, it has become in the past | bosses, and the party heels: ie i i a a ‘ : . . | generally. Roosevelt knew human decade a favorite subject of those who try to map habure well enough to ascept the the course of industrial development. jfact that most people are in . ° i politics for what they get out of | Of all those interested in its progress, perhaps Sidhe: get oreien oa no group has been more loyal and enthusiastic than | office But contractors get con 2 se : cen tracts and millions of people get PNA the Pacifie Northwest Trade Association, the for- jobs : mation of which coincided almost exactly with the | Roosevelt turned a blind eye oe . ° . | Geliberately as Nelsom did at the i i region's entry into continental: prominence, |famous navd) battle—to this Pacific Milk is In 1942, John Hart, then B.C. premier, invited | élier side of polities Indeed tn recommended by re 7 . ee | Was not above slick tricks him- doctors for in- i group of Vancouver and Seattle businessmen to | self in politics, for all the gran- eek 4 ' join him on a trip to the northern end of the provin- |%°Ur and nobility of most of his| 4 fants’ formulas. cial highway system. His purpose was to win sup- port for a highway project that would push north- west across the mountains and link up with the Alaska Highway, then under construction. Although the opening of the Alean route to Alaska would answer a need that had been felt for years, there was strong opinion in B.C. and Wash- ington that a shorter route to Alaska was also feasible, Surveys showed that access to the Alcan road via central B.C. would save 570 miles compared with the route through Alberta. Despite the faet that the proposed highway, subsequently named after Mr. Hart and formally dedicated last July, did not materialize at the time, the men from the south were impressed by what they saw and later the same year founded the PNTA, As an international organization which has suc- cessfully matured, the PNTA provides a lesson in the folly of trying to stand alone, At a recent meet- ing one Canadian manufacturer complained it was impossible to sell anything but raw and semi-finish- ed products to the U.S. The outcome was a resolu- tion, backed to the hilt by U.S. members, opposing higher tariffs. At this moment there are problems in sight af- fecting both northern B.C. and southeastern Alaska. Before any hasty decisions are made, it is to be hoped that the example set by the PNTA will be considered. The likelihood is that there are solutions which will henefit both parties 4 great deal, instead of one slightly. | major efforts. Take for instance | his attempt pack” the | preme Court | - + * | TRUMAN was not only half a machine politician, like Roose- jvelt. He was pretty well a 100 per cent machine made and machine minded politician him- | self. I think he will go down in thistory as a brave president, with an amazing courage to make shap decisions which turned out to be right. One was when he | accepted the Communist chal- jlenge in Korea Another was when he fired Macarthur | to Su- |] ARE YOU PREPARED FOR ANY KIND OF WINTER? with Suds Miser and Seven Rinses Have Your Furnace Overhauled NOW Phone Black 884 For Free Estimate Thom Sheet Metal LIMITED Phone 644 CNT ae eRe ‘| AUTOMATIC WASHER : | On Display at { | RUPERT RADIO & ELECTRIC YOUR EXCLUSIVE “INGLIS” DEALER Truman promised Eisenhower he'd do his best to elect him Instead, he did his best not to And the unpleasant part of it is that the outgoing and incoming presidents must meet and shake bands—-heartily and with smiles of course The program director, at the Fourth Estate Frolic in Vancou ver last week, asked the general question: ‘Can We laugh at ourselves? Millions find it impossible But the fellow whe can is singularly fortunate,” CULTURED TASTE We only discovered the other day that mice like to eat flowers, although that cannot be new to the seasoned householder. Loca! folk revel in floral riches both within and without. Blooms are made for beauty, not breakfast An Ontario paper takes a crack at what it calls “the growing tendency to regard pedestrians as trespassers on pavements.” The day is coming when some- one who g0®s on legs Instead of wheels will make a test case With the imereasing rules and regulations, forbidding and per- mitting, allowing and denying, where do the fellows on foot jcome in? Rights? Where are they and What are they? THAT CRAVING Britith grocers clamor for more cheese. Overseas the ration an once @ week. That's no ration And It's barely a temptation! somehow, Britain has ak regard Canada “cheesiest” Ways seemed to as the earth —" | for Bab BUY B.C. PRODUCTS we . 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