Prince Rupert Daily News As I See It ray To-day's Best Friday, September 7, 1951 ' having w itnessed a dog; tear a I kiiten to pieces. Frightened, and crying, the tots watched from a safe distance. Mothers are not ; entirely without reason for fet'l-; ing a bit apprehensive. A dog Ihas his plare in the gene.al j scheme of things, but "one never can tell." ! oOo Reflects and Reminisces BUY One Only Sparton Wad,, Cimore An Independent aally newspaper t,evo!ed to tne upbuilding of Prince Rupert and Northern ar.d Central British Columbia. Member of Canadian Press Audit Bureau of Circulations Canadian Daily Newspaper Association 0 A. HUNTER, Managing Editor. H. U. PERRY, Managing Director SUBSCRIPTION RATES: iy Carrier, Per Week, 20c; Per Month, 75c- Per Year, $8.00; By Mail, Per Month, 73c; Per Year, $8.00 'v'f" Published every afternoon except Sunday by , Prince Rupert Daily News Ltd., 3rd Avenue, Prince Rupert. EXCESSIVE GOVT SPENDING iConur.ued ucm page 1) ed to be the general fund was a grab barre; with no bottom out of which everyone wanted to get as much as possible. "We find provincial expenditure mounting and mounting." Iter Mr. Baker admitted th-.tt ' there was a government at Victoria with ministers particularly the minister of public works who welcomed advice from such organizations as the Boards of Trade. Here the speaker saw a fruitful field for co-operation and co-ordination to wlikh he exhorted the associated organizations to apply themselves--particularly to the end of combatting the dangerous tendenrv towards too much spending. $149. - ' WI,Y CALIFORNIA? The British aristocracy cannot be as bauiv o.f as it sometimes Prince Rupert enjoyed 407.2 pictured. A baron managed to sunshine hours during June, marry a piuniber's daughter. July and August. Nothing tx-Ex - . ,'J traordinary about that! It's oOo jU(it fifrt class midsurnme.' wea- SO.UETUING ELSE ther. And it s teen felt before. not m quite so gen-tainly perhaps In somewhat distant and cer-'ut quieter times, the late erous fashion. However, it gives Peter Black would gaze l orn the no reason to wear a su -prised look and talk accordingly. oiiice oi the Hotel Central, in the gen?ral di.-ection of a rocky ' British Peace Plan IT IS' STRANGE,' but G.E. Washer With P J $1893 RiA.tLA.M d r n r .1 huiuiliii u.v.. rower Miss E Zettenreen RN., of the nursing staff of the Prince Rupert General Hosnital reft by U-day's plane for Vancouver on a month's vacation trip. lirsnrr Klork Phone 210 ridge on the opposite side of First Avenue. From time to time he'd Inquie what was to prevent Seventh Street from being continued right down to the railway yards, but no one felt disposed to take him up. Mr. Black never thought of a day Prince Rupert, B.C. SttWi irl ' i I ' A i when, instead of the lutel, the; e ; ! . : would be an empty corner an across the stree:, an apartment !TUV- XCW " v house large enouun to hold a tenants. I iVi a c Constructs Company It was the civic luncheon of the Associated Boards at which kr. Baker was speaking. He commended the special iisn fare but observed thai, during a couple of days in Prince Rupert, he had been unable to ih.4 lres i crab or shrimp being served in a local restaurant. President W. J. Scott of the Associated Boards was in the chair and Acting Mayor Harold Whalcn '.vclcomed the visitor, also lauding the work of the Associated Boards and constituent boards which, he felt, had contributed much to bringing the port of Prince Rupert ar.d the contiguous area to the verge oi a large expansion program. Other head table guests at the civic luncheon were C. Gilker, president of the Prince Ruperr Chamber' of Commerce' Miss Elizabeth Winn of Juneau, associate vice-president of the Associated Boards; La.-ry Eck-royd, regional representative of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce; Duncan Kerr, secretary of the Associated Boards, and Geoff Hill, president or tire Junior Chamber of Commerce. pher Pry. Laurence Housman. Roger MacDougall. Compton Mackenzie, Herbert Read, blegiried iiaKaoou. sneila Kaye-Sintth. L. A G. SU-un-'. Frank Swinnerton. LEADING British composers, conductors and executants are oOo ' Russians appeared to be pretty : fair scouts during the second great war. But look at them todayparticularly Andrei Grom-yko at San Francisco, and the Suns of Freedom at Adams Lake in British Columbia. ' oOo SOCIAL NOTE I A local old timer, the othei , day discovered something he had nearly forgotten about. For such incidents will occur. This was the finding of a testimonial '-wrinkled, and time-stained. The date was January 25, 1923. WILL DO YOUR JOB CHEAPEi II Roofing Sidirg Alteration! . . . . . . Estimates Gladly Given true, that at a time when at least 99 44100' , of the people of the world want peace the two great power blocs are driving straight ahead in the greatest rival armament race of all time. i So far as I can find, not a single armament race in all his- j tory ever ended in anything else I ' but war. "Peace'' has become a suspect ' word, for the very obvious rea- son that the noisiest, most phony "peace" campaign the one organized by the Commu-' nists under the name of tne Stoikholni Peace Appeal liaj long since exposed itself as just another instrument for waging j the cold war. 'What the Com-j munists say, in effect, is that : all the rest of the world, except j the Communists, should o'-iitj fighting, and disarm. ' ' Two clever cartoons seem to me to depict the present situa- i tion. One shows a Soviet-made ! tank plunging through the I South Korean lines, with its machine-guns spitting death; and destruction. But its turret ; is open and an invading soldier, is calling out to the cowering survivors hiding in the ditch, ' Would you care to sign the I Stockholm Peace Pledge?'' 1 The other, by the famous I British cartoonist Giles shows I one small boy writing in big chalk letters on the sidewalk "PEECE." His chum is calling ; out at the top of his voice, ' "Mummy, Jimmy wrote a naughty word." . ' BRITISH AUTHORS, musicians and scientists, who are so-1 universally respected -that they j ' cannot successfully be- smeared as Reds or Fellow Traveller.!, have started a Peace Appeal of their own. The idea is to work ' through the vocai.:ona. groups, because within such groups everybody knows who's who. S Here Is the authors' statement which began the movement: j We writers believe tliat our ctv- Blue 182 ADVERTISING IN THE DAILY NF.W3 BHIN08 RESU; That s 28 years ago. It seems there had been a party at the heme of Ed Gibbons and so feli--it.'us was the occasion that the guests signed a document for the hot, to this gene al effect. "It is our unanimous" opinion that should by some unkind chance of fortune, you might be rnmnpllpri tn rhnntrp vmir vocft- t ) For the MEAL that REFRES! Kitimat in 1960 IT HAS often been said that the last half of the I twentieth century belongs to Canada that during the next 50 years the nation is destined to develop and mature to the extent where it will be accepted as a first-class power rather than the secondary role it enjoys today. The industrial growth and economic development of Canada since World War II has been nothing short of tremendous,' and we now have the word of a leading industrialist, H. M. Turner, president of Canadian General Electric Co. Ltd., that, barring war, this growth and development is likely to continue apace during the next decade at least. In an address before the Electrical Day luncheon at the Canadian National Exhibition in Toronto, Mr. Turner took a look at "Canada, 1960," and saw some great achievements. He saw a labor force of 6,500,000, holding a million more jobs than at present ; a gross national product of $26 billions; half again as much available electrical energy ; and ships from all nations docking-at lake ports from Cornwall and Foil William. Kitimat in northern British Columbia, where a half-billion-dollar aluminum project is getting under way, is now. ail Indian village. In Mr. Turner's 1960, it is a large community as important as Arvida, Quebec, is today. Television will be quite' common in Canada by then and, to the delight of housewives, so will new home services like electric dish washers and home freezers for storing perishable foods. One reason for Canada's recent rapid industrial expansion, as the speaker pointed out, is the availability of low-cost power. Her continued development is dependent upon continued availability of this power in increasing quantity. This places a heavy responsibility upon electrical management. Since new power developments require years to plan and build, utility management especially must be able to gauge the nation's economic 'growth, and the consequent need for future additional power, with reasonable accuracy. That the electrical industry will meet the challenge seems fairly certain. This is indicated by the fact that today it is the second largest industrial employer of Canadian labor (60,000 in more than 400 plants), second in salaries and wages paid out and second in net value of production. Only sawmills exceed it in total labor force, and oniy pulp and paper in payrolls and net production value. With this achievement already under its belt, it is not unreasonable to assume that it will plan intelligently for future requirements. Scripture paiiacfe for Joclay We rejoice in the hope of the glory of God. Rom. 5:2 Our iKo!e at the Kingston pl.int enjoyed wiihhing a couple of robin build a nest with slimU of 4d!iiH!immi foil. '1 he roliiim seemed delighted to find their new building material u easy on the wing. o loft, o (oy. Hut ... A wind aro. The nest was so Jijrht that it blew away. 1 he rolmn rebuilt with the same mateiiul; but more lirmly anrhored. While we have no atuhiiion In supply the world' rohim with ni'ktiug material, we ate eager to provide aluminum lor home-huilditig humans and for the thousand other use of til is modern metal. I hrrrlore, our huge expansion pro gramme in Ojirbet am! Kntih Columbia. Aluminum Company oi Canada. Ltd. Vlutn). ! ticn, there awaits you In what 'might be termed a humbler 'sphere, a future and possibilities EEST OF FOOD .almost unlirr.tL'rt. We f'.iank vou." T. D. lattullo, J. Mac Leod Gibbons, G. W. Nickerson. P C0' R. Dav.e, . H. Shrckiey. F. A. "--:r. rt. w FiUV-ir V. S. P. Mc- Mordie, C. G. Grockes, L. S. Bell Jce Scott. sponsoring a similar "Musicians' Organization :or Peace." Its president Is Sir Adrian Boult. Sir Arnold Bax (Master of the King's Musicki, Benjamin Britten, Peter Pears, Professor E. J. Dent are among the vice-presidents. Two hundred British scientists have met in London to take similar action. -Large numbers have signed the peace appeal including Lord Boyd Orr, Professor Waddington, L. P. Richardson, Professor L. Rosenield, FUR TAKE OUT ORDERS PHONE 2M BROADWAY CAFE oOo .nothers are wor-1 Var .louver rled over the fact of children 1 V?fc3tAat iirM "n. nil 'A N. W. Pirie, Charles Singer, T. Goodey, R. L. M. Synge, a. W. Scott Blair, S. A. Beevers, Professor Bernal, J. Needham, p. !m.' Needham, G. M. Vevers, iA Comfort, Professor Gregory, Prp-! lessor Longsdale, Profc-or J. B S. Haldane, Professor Woo, ; Jones. D. M. Crowfoot Hodgkln. J. S. Weiner, Professor Powali, Professor Mackintosh. I i ;AS SOON as I heard of this appeal, from John St. John and Dorothy Livesay MacNair, t sent in my own name to Authors ! World Peace Appeal, 50 Old i Brompton Road, London SW 7. It seems to me on of the most 'effective organized moves for i honest peace so far made. "f V 1 Mantlon Is unlikely to survive another world war. We believe that dillering political and economic systems can exist side by side on the basis of peacefully negotiated settlements.. As writers we waiit peace and through out work mill try to get it; and we pledye ourselves to encouraKe lntertiatiohal settlement through peaceful nKo-tiatlon. We condemn writing liable to sharpen existing dangers and hatred. As signatories we are associated with no political movement, party, or religious belief, but are solely concerned with trying to stop the drift to war. We invite all writers to support this declaration and tell us of their support by Bending their names. Signed 1 A. E. Coppard. Alex Comfort. .Hean O' Casey, Chrtsto- Silver Standard Progress Good Smithers Garage Contract Let JP excitingly me contract for erecting -al Ttie manager af the Silver! Standard mine near Hazelton, H. B. Gilliland. was a recent passenger south on vacation c-'i business. The Silver Standard Is garage building for the public works department at Smithers has been let to the Hastings Construction Co. Ltd., Vancouver. The bid was lowest, $76,137. -'-V. - ,WTt! VTCv-" U1UM11VUIU .. II l-4,'l added to the Big Sunday Sun a base metal procurer and, ac- coraing 10 ac.;. uiuitar.fl, ccn-Unues to prog ess very 1 For Action Advertise! hk '?( I I ,11 I f ' JlZ " ' C' 'I at NO extra cost ! Royal Visit Pictures in Full Color Suitable For Framing 1 1 Iff I (Eften m The Vancouver Sun it first again . . . with a complete rotogravure picture magazine the whole family will cheer! Now, enjoy 48 page of sparkling rotogravure . . . world-wide photo-news coverage . . top-flight feature stories by Canada's most famous writers PLUS page after page of Hie best comics in full color, in the wonderfut new WEEKEND Picture Magaiine of the big Sunday Sun! And remember all this, pluc the scores of fascinating regular features of the Sunday Sun, still costs you Ci 'y 10c! Place your subscription now! TAPPEN GAS RANGES by "INGLIS" Visulite oven Certified performance Automatic burners r1 4& tiCA Victor 1l 3-SPEED RADIO-PHONO V-405 -Wi )i mspirea oy tne aengmiui intn century low- -Ts-'iv bov . KLA Victor desnzners have struck an excit- ing new note in furniture decor. This beautiful model Jtitttaft vmm See rhe best in Electrical Appliances At Rupert Radio and Electric features RCA Victor's Simplified 3-Speed Record Playing S)stcm . . . powerful standard broadcast radio . . . "Golden Throat" tone system. An exceptional value at a surprisingly Only $22950 In walnut fintih (iiightly Wighmr In mahogonv moderate price! ORDER NOW from your loeal VANCOUVER SUN newt dealers: come in for a demonstration JL MARK HILL, Northern Distributors, PHONE 640 AUTHORIZED DEALER NV Daily and Sunday, delivered by carrier $1 .25 per month. m$Mv iWmMk McRAE BROS LTD.