of
youraeif."
Quebeo,
ai'd
all
the
Maritinit-v
Trie
Ai
.;
..line
Hi'-
lniit
v
45
tuimuietl
us
Ul
ti
;,
!
.n?
ago
as
there
t
any
record
of.
p:,;is
Prince
Rupert
Daily
News
Stresses
Demand
For
Male
Nurses
TlWTPFfi
(CP)
The
first
Across.
Calais
there
were
enly
94
male
nurses
who
had
grad-uated"from
qualified
school.
,
The
situation
was
not'
much
different
in
the
United
States.
INTO
TR
ANGLE
You
may
question
It.
but.
there
i-
said
to
be
authority
for
the
statement
that
in
the
past
ten
years
more
newcomers
arrived
n
British
Columbia
than
Califor-
Saturday.
Oc'
ber
20.
ray
Reflects
and
Reminisces
w,i
t..
trai,,
maV
nurses
in
There
were
only
42
male
nurses
to
in
vnc
;.o.
in
ia
dui
ine
nuni-ber
had
grown
to
719
two
years
ia
received
front
beginning
end
of
the
gold
rush.
GENERAL
the
west,
one
cf
three
in
Canada,
will
be
opened
at
Winnipeg
General
Hospital
at
the
start
oi
1952.
Miss
B.
L.
Puilen,
hospital
superintendent
ot
nurses,
is
one
of
the
leading
forces
behind
the
An
Independent
dally
newspaper
trevo-.ed
to
the
unbuilding
of
Pr.net
Rupert
and
Northern
and
"ntra!
British
Columbia.
Jea,Uer
of
Canadian
Pre
Audit
Bmeau
of
Circulations
Canadian
Daily
Newspaper
Association
a
-A.
HUNTER,
Managing
Ear
or.
H.
O.
PERRY,
Managing
Director
SUBSCRIPTION
RATES:
3y
Carrier.
Per
Week,
20c;
Per
Month.
75c-
Per
Year,
JHK8e
$8.00;
By
Mail.
Per
Konth,
73c;
Per
Year.
$8
00
-;"
Published
every
afternoon
except
Sunday
by
Prince
Rupert
Daily
V.trs
Ltd.,
3rd
Avenue.
Prince
Rupert.
ALWAYS
HILLING
Most
consumers
know
at
least
T
cause
the
ruddy
Macintosh
1
about
the
only
apple
you
hear
,n
RMt-h
Columbia,
it
doesn't
Qualifications
for
-
male
students
who
enrol
in
the
Wlnni-
coure
are
tne
same
as
thase
a
little
twin
a
jhoto
iur
jFinaic
uuiea.
i
ney
iu
tui;ow
there
are
no
omei
3.
i
nn
r
,nd
wondprih(!
what
or
w
hw
n
to
Winnipeg
project.
She
says
there
pa).
f0r
their
own
uniforms
and
are
plent),
and
iaan?a
giwu
r.x,
But
if
there
Is
one
Clisn
hf'
But
next
door
in
AJbtr'a
ta
uhlcn
m,,t
of
us
are
ever
aiH
Saskau-h.wan.
the
apple
(ajth)lli
tnr0ugh
life.
be
it
long
has
been
a
p.aje
.'or
male
nurses
books
but
will
be
provided
with
in
Canada
since
before
the
Set-
nu
intermnre.
No
salaries
will
be
paid
but
loans
where
necessary
cn,p
u
rot
expected
to
amount
m
slH).tfrom
hearty
childhood
male
are
nuflf
available
by
the
gov-
ond
World
War.
i
At
that
time
school
for
nurses
w-re
operating
lr
to
much
For
it
s
not
mat
son
ui
t
jnfjrm
age
it's
d-ep
apple
pte
Talking
Of
New
Parties
the
e:
anient.
-
i
country.
with
"your
"
kind
of
cheese
n-
G.
E.
Radios,
Washers
NOW
IN
STOCK
Rupert
Radio
&
Electik
United
States
but
the
field
was,
-
-
-
-
,
the
side.
The
63rd
casualty
list
of
the
PARENTAL
(OINSLL
wnr
in
Korea
recently
released
IDEA
of
George
Murray,
rupreed
Member
of
virtually
uncharted
in
Canada.
THE
Parliament
for
Cariboo
from
the
Peace
Riyer
:
socia'ion
feonductf
conducted
a
a?un-yAon
survey
ou
lieverthe'.
.us,
Canada
as
.
.
.....
J....1
ll
u
.......
in
u.idvu
nuiuut-u
me
name
ui
n
"lr
-
'
,
...
...
.
,
.
,..,,..
,,,
thp
fin.
male
nursing
m
the
Dominion.
Pte.
'Carol
Frankow
of
Prince
to
niAe
his
way
in
the
wond.
his
whole
produce.
t
orchards
on
earth,
taking
in
and
found
on!v
two
provinces
Rupert.
He
was
listed
as
wound-
mtther
tenderly
said:
"Good-bye
Please
try
to
make
an
a
s
th:s
pr-jvtn.ee.
unmno.
mum
ui
had
schools
to
train
Mich
nurses
ed
in
action.
'
Jack
-
-
-
-
country,
to
set
tip
a
new
political
party
in
Bntisn
Columbia
consecrated
to
northern
development,
must
.strike
the
fancy
of
the
people
of
these
parts.
It
illustrate
the
independent
spirit
and
imagination'
of
this
enthusiastic
advocate
of
the
opening
up
and
development
of
the
north
country
including
the-fuller
utilization
of
the
northern
lines
of
the
Canadian
National
Railways
and
the
port
of
Prince
Rupert.
We
may
like
Mr.
Murray's
idea
and
the
motive
of
its
conception
even
though
we
must
realize,
possibly
with
some
rehictance,
that
to
be
successful
k
Mould
have
to
have
some
wider
appeal
than
our
dispatch
discloses.
The
time
is
ripe,
nevertheless,
for
the
develojv
ment
of
some
sort
of
new
non-socialist
party
in
British
Columbia
even
if
it
is
not
entirely
a
northern
'party.
The
trend
is
being
fully
evidenced
by
the
splits
in
both
Liberal
and
Conservative
parties
based
on
the
different
lines
of
thought
of
member?
within
those
parties.
Obviously,
there
is
a
movement
of
progressive
liberalism
under
forward-looking
men
in
the
Conservative
party.
Likewise,
there
are
many
reactionary
tory-minded
men
within
the
Liberal
party.
A
reorientation
of
political
lines
is
due
and
overdue.
Sooner
or
later
a
new
fusion
will
come
into
being
unless
the
progressive,
the
forward-looking,
the
dynamic
people
within
the
ranks
of
the
old
parties
become
so
disgusted
that
they
align
themselves
with
such
as
the
proposed
Bennett
splinter
party,
with
the
Social
Credit
group
or
veer
toward
the
CCF.
The
CCF,
having
committed
itself
so
strongly
to
the
doctrine
of
state
socialism,
has
alienated
itself
from
thousands
of
liberal-minded
thinkers
who
arc
not
socialistic
but
might
he
inclined
to
the
mildsr
or
radical
liberal
views
of
Mr.
Coldwell.
Vith
political
thinking
within
the
old
parties
such
as
it
is
today,
rise
is
given
to
and
sympathetic
consideration
is
commanded
by
such
movements
a
that
which
dispatches
credit
Mr.
Murray
with
suggesting.
And
there
may
be
more
such
ideas
although
without
particular
geographical
implications
such
as
characterize
Mr.
Murray's.
.Scripture
jpaiiage
for
JoJaij
"TetM-.h
me
to
do
the
thing
that
p'.vaseth
thee,
for
thou
ait
my
God."
Ps.
143:10.
As
I
See
It
the
feeling
that
the
polls
were
:
not
at
all
accurate
in
showing
so
wide
a
marein
as
10
or
12
per
cent
between
the
two
ma1or
'
parties.
Now
the
various'
polLs
show
a
gap
of
only
fow
to
five
per
cent.
For
all
that,
I
have
the
feeling
that
the
swing
is
the
other
'
way
at
the
moment.
My
main
1
reason
is
the
tone
of
the
speeches
of
tiie
various
Labor
'
t
candidates.
Tlie.se
are
becoming
;
harvther
and
'harsher.
Thus
one
woman
Labor
MP
is
reported:
;
-tmore
X
Tfl
n.f
it
!'
""
J
I
Election
Too
Long
LONDON.
The
Egyptian
government's
repudiation
of
the
treaty
which
gives
Britain
the
right
to
keep
troops
on
the
Suez
Canal
was
hardly
a
surprise
here.
Mrs.
Braddock
said
the
;
choice
on
October
25
was
to
decide
whether
we
are
having;
a
third
Labor
government
or
a
third
world
war.
...
If
we
get
a
third
world
war,
which
we
are
almost
certain
to
if
a
;
Tory
government
gets
control,1
none
of
the
things
we
are
try-
ing
to
do
will
matter
at
all.
j
Surely
the
Labor
leader
would
;
not
go
to
such
extremes
a-s
this
if
they
did
not
feel
they
were'
1
when
I
was
out
in
business
in
Montreal.
These
came
in
handy
when
I
was
getting
married.
I
believe
it's
i
a
gopd
investment
because
you
don't
dribble
at
it
the
same
as
if
you
have
some
money
in
the
bank.
And
then
the
interest
is
good.
(
Do
you
plan
to
buy
the
New
Canada
Savings
Bonds
?
Yes.
Mr.
Churchill
clearly
fore-
shadowed
it
in
his
speech
to
his
flipping.
If
is.
of
course,
grossly;
own
constituents.
Indeed
some
;
unfair
and
untrue
to
suggest
i
people
are
now
blaming
him
for
'that
if
a
Conservative
govern-
giving
the
Egyptians
the
idfainient
Is
elected
there
will
in-
'
that
they
could
get
away
with
it.
jevilably
be
a
third
world
war.
But
It
does
come
as
another
of
course,
every
Conservative
Mrs.
lillian
Ferguson,
the
former
Lillian
Saunders,
livet
at
155
Shirley
Street,
Halifax,
and
is
one
of
more
than
a
million
Canadians
who
have
invested
regularly
in
Canada
Saving'
Bands.
Her
husband,
Donald
A.
Ferguson,
is
supervisor
of
the
money
order
branch
of
the
Halfax
Pott
Office.
Mrs.
Ferguson
worked
as
a
clerk
in
Montreal
for
eight
yean
prior
fo
her
marriage.
MRS.
FERGUSON...
You
have
tome
Canada
Savings
BonJs,
Mn.
Fergvton
t
A
few.
All
but
one
issue,
I
think.
How
did
you
buy
them
?
Up
to
the
present
we've
paid
cash
for
all
of
them.
My
husband
gave
me
two,
and
1
paid
for
the
otheri
out
of
housekeeping
money.
Why
do
you
pay
cath
for
them
?
We
have
a
plan
that
what
we
can't
pay
for,
we
don't
have.
What
we
have
we
own,
like
our
house
here.
What
is
your
purpose
in
buying
Bonds
?
-
To
know
that
I
have
saved,
and
to
help
when
my
husband
retires.
It's
a
wonderful
thing
to
hae
for
an
emergency.
How
did
you
sforf
buying
Government
Bonds
t
I
bought
a
couple
of
bonds
in
the
First
World
War
speaker
answers
that
charge,
i
directly
or
indirectly.
It
is
thetir
i
weakest
spot,
and
they
know
!l.
I
j
ANEURIN
BEVAN
is
drawing
the
biggest
crowds
of
any
speaker
bombshell
in
the
middle
of
this
strange
election
campaign.
Short
as
it
is,
most
people
think
the
campaign
is
too
long.
Politicians
of
all
parties
yearn
to
"get
It
over
With."
The
main
reason
for
this
feeling
Is
that
there
are
great
national
decisions
to
be
NOW
BETTER
THAN
EVER
.
Canada
Savings
Bonds
6th
Series
mature
in
10
years
and
9
months
from
date
of
issue
ond
bear
fen
3'j
coupons.
The
first
coupon
covers
1
year
and
9
months
and
is
payable
on
August
1st,
1
953;
subsequent
coupons
come
due
August
1st
yearly
thereafter
until
maturity.
If
cashed
before
August
1st,
1953,
simple
interest
is
paid
at
2
per
year,
calculated
monthly.
If
held
to
maturity
the
overall
yield
Is
equivalent
fo
3.21
per
year.
The
limit
for
holdings
in
any
one
name
is
$5,000
in
the
6th
Series.
The
bonds
are
cashable
at
full
faccvalue,
plus
interest
at
any
time
at
any
bank
in
Canada.
They
ore
registered
in
the
owner's
name.
They
are
non-assicjncible
and
non-transferable.
so
far.
His
outdoor
factory
crowd
made
which
cannot
be
made
till
at
Manchester
numbered
15
000.
That
Is
considerably
more
than
heard
Mr.
Churchill
at
Liverpool.
Mr.
Churchill
continues
to
a
solid
government
Is
in
power.
I
HAVE
the
feeling
that
the
"swing"
In
this
direction
right
make
speeches
which
suggest
to
now
Is
toward
the
Tories.
:
me
that
he
would
prefer
another
At
the
beginning,
as
I
travel-
!
coalition
government
to
a
led
around
the
country,
I
had
iContinueti
on
naue
3
AT
WVfSTMWrf
PMIS,
''
AND
JMOUOH
JHf
Mrou
SAVINGS
AN.
ANADA'
SAVINGS
BONDS
on
sob
MOW
m
mm
m
m
r
ijii
a
w
m
.
mm
r
m
l
otw
tlrtW"jj