. & is fm it a i b it py a" 4 h t aal ‘he vi 2 Prince Rupert Daily News Saturday an Independent daily newspaper dev g of Prince Rupen and Nc Brit « mbia Member of Cz A t B f Circulations Canadian N A n Published by ™h ce F ) Limitea J. FP. MAGOR, Presiden PE Vice-Presicent Spetcaraenoniesiiitinio~aaninieat . inialinnnes Subscription Rate By carrier—-Fer week, 25c; per m & per year, $10.00 Sy mail—Per month, 75c; per r, $8.0 authborizer as “cond 4 r t Post Of x Departmeat, Ottawa Welcome Correspondence LETTER from Fisheries Minister Sinclair ad- early action may be expected on vising tha construction of an airport welcome hit of post-office has handled in a long time, While My of the investigation which is nere 1s the most ; ) . +he } Prinee Rupert tnat the correspondence fo details said to have been made, its point on tne Sinclair did not elaborate on his note was encouraging in reterence to this city as a importance of lanes of the Pacific area. Its possibilities in this connectioi COME readily to the imagination. With Prince Rupert as a stop- aff, the busy air centre of Edmonton comes within immediate scope of the Orient and this, in turn, epens up still further the travel opportunities for central and eastern Canada. For flights running north and south. Prince Rupert is in an equall ad antageous position Being almost mid-wa Vancouver Whitehorse to passengers from Queen Charlotte Islands and the interior, it for pl ating on this route, as well as for those and from Alaska. A third route that traffic is a triangular one het and tt and equally accessible would be a natura] stopping point oper- flying to offers promise of much veen this city, Prince (reorge and Vancouver. At present there is no flight whieh in this way serves central, interior and south- ern British Columbia. In defence, too, an airport here will make air protection possible that could ward off a threat not only to this strategic port and neighboring coastal points but to inland centre facilit ies, S and transportation Those who believe that an airfield at Rupert would be inconvenient Prince for normal traffic since it must be located on an island should: be re- minded that bus- and car-carrying ferries are an established form of*transportation in the southern part of the province; Residents of Ladner commute every day to Vancouver by this For the inhabitants of Salt Spring Island such a ferry pro- vides the only access to Vane means, er, except for air transportation, and the distance involved is much this kind of 1an driving along a greater than it would be here. Indeed, service would be far handier t] crowded airport road. It will be noted that Ted Applewhaite, our federal member, is mentioned as having been most active in drawing attention to the advantages of an airport here. The service he is rendering his con- stitueney and the province in this and Other ways will be widely appreciated and the contemplated airport would be an admirable standing tribute to his work. Those of the city and region who have campaigned so energetically for this valuable pro- ject will receive credit, too, for being alive to the needs of air travel in general and this part of B.C. in particular. The airport is not a firm promise yet and the campaign must continue. But the prospect of its proving a successful one adds an ineentive that should carry us through to the goal we seek, SS riplure Passage for Today ‘Now ye are clean through’ the word.” St. John 15:3 U.S. Election Slowed Work Of UN General Assembly By NORMAN ALTSTEDER Canadian Press Staff Writer UNITED NATIONS, NY. @ A complete re-organization of the United Nations year-round time- table is being considered to speed up lagging work of successive genera) assemblies. Informed sources said the plan’s ‘major aim would be to} avoid the delays caused by Unit- ed States elections every four years, This year the assembly, which is supposed to start its meetings at the end of Septem- | ber, postponed the opening until | Oct. 14. But even that delay failed to|chance now that the work | mulated, would have all assembly sessions start in April of May and last about three months This would entail changing the usual summer sessions of the trusteeship and economic coun- cils which work now towards presenting their reports to a fall assembly, Spring sessions would possibly have the added effect of spurring delegates to complete their work iquickly to summer hect The target date for ending the ect that gave rise to mine, they| familiar ground but prefer to re-! : |; . ena cae ’ . ' E °o |awareness so others gain more escape New York's! current assembly was originally | Diehly obstructed | Dec. 20. But there appears little | Cause they are i ; +} can | Places tat fieh like to lurk in,| with precious few illusions, f | a ( hild % Life of : Jesus “See! “Soon Jesus was tall and strong and began to help Joseph by learning to use the carpenter tools.” A ¢ J agt - t iate -Pulto Ours > I Ciren te ory Ever Tok The Gre Book I \ I presentation of Mr. Oursier br ec La Dy the wel N O'K ry of His Eternal Pathe When He grew up He said, stn do always the things that plea Hin if He had one of Mary swee cakes, and other bo He always broke : gave a piece Even then He knew we should all treat othe ‘ike it there But they t were cheerful f it. Then the to Joseph in ladn’t any His cake DOY id mad 1d made and angel came dream and hin him that Herod, the the way we want others to tre: king, was dead. The li us. When He grew up to be could go home again, t big man, Jesus told grownups t town which wi ‘ ive that way, too. Today we ca! Until now Jesus never the Golden Rule of Jesus seen His real home, the prett; Everybody and everything was house on a green hill; the house joyeg by Jesus: birds and dog that had white walls and land even snakes and ants and round roof. Jesus thought it was fies and the little worms. He all beautiful, especia His treated them all kindly and home. It was poor but swe gently and clean . On holidays, Jesus and Joseph Joseph was a carpente ‘O° and Mary may have gonhe some- his workshop was i ; times on pienics, climbing the f the house 4 Jesus | hij » the very top. We ca: . _ : } ; ™ grew, He loved in His'think of them going on long father’s shop yellow hikes across the green fieic anhavings and , S00n|ymong the wild red and yellow Jesus was tall and stramg and/ ang orange flowers. Near Naga- began to heip Joseph by leart-|reth the wild flowers grow like ; ase the carpenter's tools.!4 rainbow on the ground, even man and the Boy sang t today thelr work while they ‘ ye Once, when Jesus was about and sawed. Some-|, ‘ ined n ti 12 years old, Mary and Joseph . ciel : y t0¢k Him on a long trip. At last sh Cc Ke supper : a ee he | hey came Yo a great city. It was 1¢ DacK of tne . Se ee alled Jerusalem. The }itth ull loved each other : Je ; family went to church in the esu ai heiped . : . H tne is ay 7 Rene egg beautiful Temple of God. It was notner ‘ el a n DO : ae : 7 uli white marble and red cedar olden times no house had sp : : anid a 14 £0 ots or running water, as we do" nf i today. There was onls ew When Mars ind Joseph start in the centre of towr ry home they though that body h to fet was following with some the well to the hy But night around! nnfire Mary jesed he morning, every noont npire “Mary Wussed hey night Jesus went to the well, * mabe where she ang filed His blue jug wit! water J¢ i ae py could not fi Je They left the camp ind carried it home t His : ; ; . : : wa rode back to mother His shoulder i wil Tomorrow: Jesus begins ning « WE i f he His work. r 52, K I I I taken from the A ¢ le Lif [ Je i } ton Ourster Published k Wa i MARTIN REPLIES ‘formed? Certainly there are or, Daily Ne € who wouid Iimd a4 recrea- icongruity of out of the Value in the li Sstickmg up tastes DO differ and we rere arti respect ail tastes tated at K to “Nature never having Carve ut of anything in this way that| ;and unused bu is! | approximate the destruction It remains to be ee! how|caused by the eallousnes: much of Ootsa Lake Francois, and south deadend of water gets| man,” it seems to me that Noah tangled up in a flood and we some of the results. Do we into also to the! got the Buck Flats are Road beyond Noralee; 140 feet of consider ourselves @ retrogres. raise will find its way around!sion since that time? I think certain circumventable” con-)| not tours; obviousiy it would divert About the reference to the} traffic from points west from|/Tennessee Valley Authority why} entering Burns Lake, and that) quote one author when penning | might not be so good! a diatribe against another’ The! Re those articles on this sub-| TVA statement stands; I am on} also state that $25 million are|frain from further remarks | lo be spent for removing timber,} ‘ 1 No gibe was given or intended; | not for clearing and burning.jfor loggers anywhere, again I/ Is not burning highly detri-|must suggest that Mr. Wilds mental to the smaller furredigive more attentive reading to} |Per knows that he gets no fur|as published by the newspaper | | at all, the year of a fire | that Mr. Wilds describes as valu- | Any skilled angler would wel-| able. With my background, the statement that 1 should gibe at ;come the opportunity of casting | | his lures inte stumpy, loggy and | waters, be-|loggers is unworthy of: consider- precisely the|ation. As a keen conservationist get around the necessary hedg-| be cleared up by then. It is stij) | #90 because of the superior art-|insist that we all stand to gain ing in debates caused by the | not US. policy in the period between |ruary, the election of Gen. Dwight D.| untij spring under the new plan Eisenhower and his installation | action. The new plan, still being for- by an election—France’s. clear whether the session|‘8tty with light tackle that js! by possibility of a change in the| will adjourn just before Christ- | 2ecessary to defeat an adversary' have seen before. U.S. government. The haziness of | mas to resume work early in Feb- or leave everything over | ., ness of the Last year the assembly opened|Under discussion comes Jan, 20 is also slowing assembly | Nov. 6 and ended Feb. 5. The|the best late start then also was eaused|to forest cover and timber scal-| this price, this flooding, these things 1 I ask you to We are paying a The statement re the sparse-| low price for the long-awaited |\that strikes from such, shelter,| “wait and see.” tim from| Northern Interior of our prove available authority, as imce. Welcome the chance to pay and be not maudjint ing. Or is Mr. Wilds better in-| ERIC 8. MARTIN ofithey have failed |) 4nimaéls in particular? Any trap-|the articles from which I quoted, | Se HERE _.,and NOW By LARRY STANWOOD also LOTS OF TALK, action, has centred in the last few years on Prince Rupert’s traffic problem and sometimes it appeared as though the problem was one of very recent origin in the world ind applied only to this Locale, a@boul. that Upe heard th, inconver opulous. Any who examines for a quar of an hour the princip nust be st “ke } » whi be avoided by the sim, cKWOrK mechar saced at the principal ere “ausing @ in pi isi every igr ate revolve Minute, th te rea be a signa and pedes Hiue fe vehicles to trians to proceed icl¢ fo proceed and pedes- trians to We t to ow Police Au did the writer know } ng Londoners would have wait for it How nave stop recomyr Little auLomatk or : jong will Prince Rupert to wait? * ¢ + This column conducted a vey recently among acquaint and strangers alike them to the ces state on spur of the mom wnat sound oO smell they associated with being in the country Here are some of their a swers Sights—wild rose red squi rels, gold-finche , coyotes, grouse and her young, yellow ducklings baby rabbits, crocuses, jumping trout Scounds—bark of a fox, cry of an eagie, hoot of an owl, baa of a sheep, moo of a cow, the meadowlark in April, the ery of 1 crow, the notes of a robin Scents—fruit trees in blossom fall of rain on parched earth ‘ smell of pinewood and new mown hay Probing a lit f i A found that neariy every choice i be associated with }; years, the earliest impress! being the most lasting ¢ ¢ + } When people say they ar judges of character, you reasonably assured Lhere I nh ing further from the truth, that they are only indiseri ately suspicious And furthermore, no human being approache: the exper a judge of character Indeed, the more You know the human mind, the less you will trust outward representative of character. It is almost impossible to read in, the face. the.mast os present conduct of any person, and ever more difficult to foretell future conduct, or effect of new situations presented suddenly to him There are sO many rents, unknown as well a know: that most skillful psycholos tatus as appearances as the cross-cur are likely to be deceived There are many people who ge through life hanging their head and bunching their shoulder under a burden of imagined faii- ure mainly because their owr success is so unnoticed that even to recognize it But the success of men and women in al] walks of life is a different from the popular idea | of “success” as a delicate pastel differs from screaming neor lights There ar e those with a knack of making things easier for others; those who do the think- ing and leave it to others to reap the benefit of knowlege; those who fertilize life with their own understanding. h, not in size but in aliveness, is perhaps a major | |suecess worth having. | More Students Take C ourse In Engineering Perrntid ge bargin gh Registra f first ve by the Daily News ti of “ar er during the xt week } gineering sludents at Canadia universities ig 34 percent bigher | By JOHN LEBLANC tn Car WMA [ast oOrding he annual survey just complet Canadian Press Staff Writer ed by the Engineering Institute) oppawa (CP)..Canadian labor f Canada The first year students survey that 2865 registered MwA LesS voleanic in spots but generally engineering courses for 1952-53) marked by unspectacular prog- | as compared to 2105 for 1961-2) pegs /10 gifts th , neanin and 1874 for 1950-1. The oer ec re ee Age , catiiaa ; t ye : y . 4 : Organized lubor took some ob-| Christmas. Tic, ane uge incerase lias’ year was wr * place ie cent so that there are now ap- jeetives, made gains towards folks — shows thg woximately 60 percent mare Others, was stalled elsewhere. By wears fot pa dents taking first year engin and large, it moved ahead Wage Average Advances Under Impetus of Labo, second in @ series * is closing out a year thet wis ; “ To get to sleep ray... Reflects j Remini A national eering than there were two years The national wage aver, e Ob age pushed to omnis aks | sclentt, think of For the firat time in come years month after month, under ia. | Wome! Think it is tng enrolment engineeri ud- bor impetus. Union m ap ents in all years i the swelled to record figures The previous year by reli hase of union organization was! Canedior tn» ahdit al and t total re broadening into new fields 1ers stationed jn Be taat| 8230 The biggest neadiine-snateh- cused of being “hod, hi Nun De nm aualine ing development of 1952 was the beeguse they an takir lasses |s again lower tian @ ¥ payoff in the long-standing | OUt Of Ireland. wey ago and amounts to 1857, whee feud between A. R Mosher, 7)- | W@¥8 be said tha more tian 26 percent less than year-old president of the Cang-|Ue5 are never py ne ber registered in 1961 dian Brotherhood of Railway wakes A ‘ further reduction is fare-| Employees, and James E. Me-' = east for the 1964 «grady u%|Guire, his rival for the tep job SOFT AND KEPRES lass but in 2966 a emai in that largest of Canadian The News-Heraid Ay be expected ranaport unions readers for feeling an; ihe relative proportion of to-/ . oma rene what Mr. Karsh wide) tal registration in different eour manne RESIGNS : photographer had | continues how little) | A long rough fight resulted in Yancouver’s raint hange from previou MeQGiuire being thrown out of should do. comme: the CBRE and this was followed is boast of our ’ *y Mosher’s resignation as boas tell visit : but later he war elected honor- for ra ft THE EXPERTS {it ncustnc”ucle tantra 2 » get elected as president of be Canadian Congress of Labor, Edward H RB ok ay “ee which he founded in 1940 in Ottawa last week ¥ in the year, talk of or- By KAY REX approximately in organized Canadian quintuple: Ny a = , + apes wink ates “abor gained new strength. This is said of Mr By Christmas di different, “@* “Urred by suggestions of an did not think the nev you're seek this aie API 10 amagamation in the ordinary altho Home economists of the| UMied States which would put else did. After ection. Canadian de-| ?™eaeure on their Canadian as- 9 century he must } of agriculture hay — _ Recustomed t a brief dictk Bul there were no active step principe ¥ taste hey ‘OWards Nalson in Canada Roxing i be used " though Mosher 370,000-mem-' doesn't mea Basil-Best for tomato dish er CCL was warm for affilia-| years ago Jackie Bay kk A potent herb whien YOO with the 625,000-member Glasgow was fivw oul t en i ; Trades id Labor Congress.'pion He made ¢ . 4 Dr g the year, the TLC moved it’s ali con: nd . “ " a few degrees farther away from 900 for unpaid Re ar P as confederation : Of GEGOE OFC The stand of smaliet central WHEN. {T PAYs to potat eaulifiower . abor bodies towards amaigama The PS. t} ; ‘ they are cooking tion was not made known woman's jetter Cre H methir ‘ ‘ On wages unions generally print in f ) : nasturtiun AM! managed to move ahead during read it—Wall Str ' sOu] au- the year . RED VOICE FADED The los of : mint —iopd . During the year, the voice of onan’, pi D, COOEES See ommunism faded further in COMM? ' t Horserasiiah —tiped 1 roast unions. The big central bodies — "a ta a beet or W apps sauce io had eared out all but the mi - ed at pors nor fringe of Reds ar é - raw The ¥rench “bouquet. garn! Another move in this tough wed oh | three herbs in one.i fight was a clean-up of the , © feur sprigs of Bae ridden Canadian section ae the same of thyme and one bay/ of the United Textile Workers eaf are put together and t [ America, AFL-TLC. Its top boug tr he thyme Canadian leadership was ex WARNING the outs} tied with thread pelled and supplanted by anti This often & idded to soup. Red officers 1 te i i bouquet” shou Unions made inroads into the Christmas trees not be jeft i moup or slew overnment-employee field dur- long i the year. The TLC signed not be cut on PAR . . ae ip abowt 5.000 workers in the CHRISTMAS GOODIES federal government unemploy- PROPERTY in the Mincemeat Five cups seed-iment insurance commission € aisiy hree cups curra: breaking new ground. It aiso ip chopped ¢ ; issued a charter for a federa- Board . aiecd eel citron; three-quarter tion of around 20,000 municipal! Park Comm" cup almonds blanched, coaz employees across the country So choppe 3\% cups shredded raw tart apple 2% cups finei ehopped suet; 24 cups liehtiy TICE packed brown sugar, 1% tea N spoons satl: 2% teaspoons ground cinnamon; 14% teaspoons grat ' ground one nutmeg: 1%, one teaspoon clove all-spice, one teaspoons ginger for me | sincerely qronne | will do my best to teaspoon eup grape juice. one quarter cup ‘ lemon juice one-quarter cup (Signed) me-quarter eup (Mrs.) » mixing-bow!] rai iy eu peels and citron, slmonds, apple and suet, Com- bine well , brown sugar Sait, i riwimeg, ginger love all-spice. Add to fruit mixture and combine wel] Mix in grape, lemon and or- Com Thank you, ladies ange juices and vinegar | bine thoroughly, then turn ine vour confideace in me which | | sterilized jars and seal. Store in, on jcool place. ‘Yield: aix to eight to do my utmost to justify in this: ples Fred E. Dowdie OPTOMETRIST Room 10, Stone Building Phone Blue 593 “PINTO ON THIS Bensational! ! te ended vinyl ne 7 extra-large sisee the rides of ae iives i | Bronee sagass range! Plastic kick » bounce him, He'll ask for more. He “ almost human! iid on your ou only Be PRINT PO YOUR NAME "BRANDED" CTIBLE NEIGHS AS YOU RIDE! At last you ean have your first name right across his Kids from 6 months t when they ride this You can sit on him , whip bim—bat you neighs” wi 1 ag! seams. Special low ; | rate | priee--only lor twe. timber in the atea| advent of high pr osperity to the} at this amazing low offer. Send one pony. Suppl mes of t pony. One name on guaranteed! CHRISTMAS DELIVERY GUARANTEED: 33 XMAS SPECIAL 2 for $3 Pony inflates to to 10 years get Buy them for Nmited, so order as many as you need Phone 644 POO OOOO NONE SEO CEE DEPT. 13, STRATTON MFG. CO., 96 KING ST. W., TORONTO, ONT. | aoe | inity among all factions Bay Nugget he fi 1,100,000 reporting the To all those who encouraged and ¥ NOTICE Wham (Bill) Msn mner ; mee i ONE EE EN CIEE CMTE Get Your Christmas Tree Lights EARLY !! “NOMA” Christmas Tree Lights AT RUPERT RADIO “YOUR AUTHORIZED + nnmnnineiniee nna D ADHD A READ ing @4 Hews edit Dionne say “Thank You merit your conte KAY SMITH and gentler n,3 intend neenet & FLECTRIC “GE” DEALER Box 14 a