ut.Crt.tK. MBii. lU"! ine olfltil ' when Il4 1 I l-T I rRROX Pts Present vas Ki ajirt the and Nunley famine Cl UU I I Hww y0ungest was five weeks old annual picnic near hereof .. . Til IT ' ' ' t - a -r- f a. a; l ii w Prince Rupert Daily News As I See It ray Change of Managers Monday, July 23. 1951 ! .Liivt.a .iia.a. " Editor, Daily News: j 1 Thanks tor the Small Ta.K 'picture feature which you have; started in the Dully News. I stop ' with Interest at the strip every: jduy to admire and study the! 'uictures ot the babies and the' Reflects and Reminisces more clever sayings. I think it is th' j best feature you have had for a fcn Independent dally newspaper devoted to the upbuilding of Prince Rupert and Northern and Central British Columbia. Member of Canadian Press Audit Bureau of Circulations Canadian Daily Newspaper Association Q A. HUNTER, Managing Editor. H. O. PERRY, Managing Director SUBSCRIPTION RATES: 3y Carrier. Per Week, 20c; Per Month, 75c Per Year, . . $8.00; By Mail. Per MoKth, 73c; Per Year, $8 00 Prince Rupert Daily News Ltd., 3rd Avenue, Prince Rupert. Published every afternoon except Sunday by Should It be your privilege to exchange a few words with the , : long time. It is fine to cneer us aon i . . . . . .... .... ...... ,v. ... Princess next September, t - - . r ' tat ,. .at, tti'-' gufh. Be yourself. Use just pluln. simple words. But, above all, do not say, "That there guy." up m viieav uu.va ui .i... - phi.sUeutiun, uncertainty and gleom. Thanks again! APPRECIATIVE READER. because of tne Increasing influx of ueoule. who register frank surpri.se when, half a thotisanl NO MOKE SAVING And from now on. every day ; will become a bit shorter al-' though recognition of this oav-hght saving business should make something of a change. British $ Crisis IF YOU wanted to sum up the results of the first year of war in Korea, apart from the close-up battle picture, you eould say: 1. The war saved U.S. business from a major slump. 2. The war cut the very ground from under the feet cf British recovery, so that Britain Japanese Peace Treaty IN THE LIGHT of more immediate and spectacular I incidents which has crossed the news trail, we have possibly not considered an extremely important event which is about to culminate the Japanese peace treaty for the consideration and agreement on which a conference of the nations concerned has V miles north of Vancouver, tney watch smartly uniformed bunds-men stepping out, and listen to music that would do 'credit to any community in Canada. Skcena is growing fast. They should be encouraged and he iecn and heard far more tie- ; qucntly. j Girls born this year can ex-i pect to live beyond 70, fc.iys a ; health expert, even with uuto-j mobiles and all thafc- Stratford Beacon-Herald. A detachment of Mount les will ride in the big parade at Detr.iL this week, the occasion being the celebration of the city's birthday. The home town of the horseless carriage was founded 250 years ago. How It grew, after being given a push by a mnn named Ford! ..4 to. FKNfsr p. tiding now approaches a more serious I dollar crisis than she survived j a few years back. I JUST A LITTLE over a year ago, I when I was down in the U.S.A. : For acceleration I switched to SS0 Gasolines 2LPiece Breakfast $1 Till your tank with "up-to-dare" Esso or Esso fil Sets 32-Pie: Break fa.-:t $ g.95 Sets ..... 21-Piece Bone $- China Tea Set:; (iasolincs. Take your car out on the road. Set j for yoursulf its better all-round performance, f Esso and Esso Extra Gasolines ire Continually J being improved to give the best balanced I, combination ot smooth flowing power, lively jj acceleration and protection against engine ping !! and vapor-lock. Tor more happy motoring, srj to Esso Gasolines and you're always ahead! HIT WILTED j ! Mayor Don MauKay of C.U- j g.iry wanted a ten gallon white' nat" to wear for the Stampede. ; He made the request and a London firm sent him a beauty jy air, a gesture representative cf the British hat trade. Mayor ' MacKay, however, neglected to ligure out how the hat would; look after a week's rain had ; fallen on It. A scientist and an expert who planned to visit Moscow have had their passports cancellej. Incidentally, a couple of oth-r; highbrowed diplomats iBurgrw; and McLean , one ot whom p j.i- j seated slate papers of tirst importance, disappeared la ,t spring and have not yet been heard from. It is evident there Dliiner Sets, from $J t ' ' j Uiam A'WiV.iti.ii inni-: G. Pv. S. BLACKABY 27-95 myself, I reported in this column many signs of an impending slump. The most ominous of these slgrij was unemployment. The official figures show what the war in Korea, with the armament program, has done. Vnemploynient May, 1950 3.057.000 May, 1951 1.609.000 Car Loadings, One Week June, 1950 783.357 June, 1951 821,:15 Cutlun Consumption. Bales May, 1950 718.820 May, 1951 832.612 Steel Production, Tons May. 1950 8,564.207 ! May, 1951 9.094 499 ! BRITAIN WAS in a very differ- 00 pieces at IMPERIAL (Incliulitri beautiful Wed.'i-wood ami t'oul, Ion King's Plate) SPECIAL English Hoiii! China ( TPS AM) SAH I KS at 69c a,, 97c the sign that say, CSSO to stop f Of f DEALER 1 Is .suspicion in London. Tin., coming and going and mysterious visiting by talented servan's of the State appears to be arousing curiosity. It looks like question time. happy nacjejP Imperial fct; ! Mip4. and tar! giurinttctl ire life with the Ijiiujus Atbs ri(. trn Guarantee that's hunotnl by tiver 3h,000 Turning Sr I'l N( HHOWL SETS 7.95 MANSON'S China Shop ilc!c(k ir. CinJa and the U.S. j ent position than the U.S.A. 1 Ernest Paulding, a banker with when the Korean war and the 30 years' experience in British general Western rearmament Columbia, is the newly appoint-prcyram started. She was suf-1 ed manager at thj Bank of Mon-fering from grim scarcities. But treal's Prince Rupeit branch, as there was Virtually no uneni- : announced recently in the Daily ploymcnt. She could not "-shave ; News. He succeeds Gerald R. S. the wealth'' for the Second Blackabj, who will take over th-j i World War had left little wealth bank's Prior and Main streets to share. But she was sharing ; office in Vancouver, following 11 riuccb you anywtierc. ike,' for the asking. been called for early September in San Francisco. As it was the armistice with Japan that finally ended the fighting of World War II, the peace pact with , that nation is of prime importance. ! The proposed draft peace treaty appears under I the joint sponsorship of the United States and Great Britain. It includes generous terms for the defeated enemy and, for that reason, is not being received so j cordially by some of those who will be called upon ! to be signatories. Some Pacific and Asian countries I which have felt the heel or threat of Japanese imperialism can understandably view with alarm the proposed renascence of Japanese power. Australian and New Zealand fears on this score have been partly allayed by a new mutual defence treaty with the United States. The threat of Japanese commercial domination in the East, however, is not so easily disposed of. Hong Kong, already suffering from trade embargoes against Communist China, stands to be badly hit by Japanese capture of Asian markets and it is here that acquiescence in American plans indicates British willingness to sacrifice self-interest in the greater interest of unity. History has shown too often in the past the self-defeating effects of a punitive peace. It has often been said that this was the very factor that eventually brought World War II as the sequel to World War I. , ;As to the success and effectiveness of the peace, much, of course, will depend upon the Japanese themselves. There are some indications that Japan will not continue in the role of a willing satellite. On the other hand, there are some Japanes who themselves fear what rearmament would do to their country and the sprouting roots of democracy there. ! Undoubtedly, the more closely Japanese military power can be integrated with that of other nations having an interest in the Far East, the less danger there will be of the growth in that country of a new, unreliable, opportunistic militarism. With Japan re-emerging into full sovereignty, the emphasis shifts to the United Nations principle of seeking security on a collective basis. AGREEABLY SI KPH1SED , More Indian bands of the north are being discovered. Th"y are known, of course, but that's engine protection with Mirvtluhe the premium motor uil tint of the lemcn" wait yoa i ImjvnaJ b meets ail ctr fur trrt-t( luhn the scarcity that is, everybody ; year5 in cha:ge of the local tutrrs Uriip in attt : any time to have radutur m sure thetked Of for an at z tcfvicrj Titur car ma neti A determent motor oil that not cation. branch. only luhntjtts hat tirjoi! The July ALE was getting a fair share of what was going. j ; The rearmament program was ' tacked by all parties in Britain (except the Communi.stsi. But,' especially within the Labor Party, there was a sharp difference of opinion as to how lar Britain could afford to rearm. ; The Bevan group holds that it is absurd for Britain to rearm to an extent which makes her go bankrupt, and hence unable to keep going many parts of her j economy. I . j FOR THOSE who want statis- tics to understand what's go- ing on in Britain, here are the : key ones: j Last month, the average prices M;. Fau'.ding, a native of Lancashire, England, b?gan his career with the Bank of Mont-! real at Njw Westminster in 1921. After receiving his early training at numerous centres throughout the province, he rereif ed his first ! appointment, as accountant, .at Trail, In 1937. Four years latvr: , he was transferred, in a similar : capacity, to Kelowna, where he I subsequetnly became assistant '. manager in charge of the Peach-' land, Rutland and W.'stbank sub-! agencies of the bank. In 1948. i Mr. Paulding took charge of the iBank of Montreal in Osoyos,' whence he comes to take over I the local office. j Actively interested in com- OF SHOES HANDBAGS LUGGAGE CONTINUES AT (DtSTIHUTION fCTIFIt FUUI PAtlNIEU) , V "V on what Britain had to expo-t l.munity affairs, Mr. Paulding is a were up 18 per cent. But prices j member ot the Osoyoos Kiwanis on imports were up, on the av- j club and president cf the Board erage, by 42 per cent. j 0f Trade. In 1950 he served as j president of the Badminton Club ALL THESE things add up to an ' and treasurer of the Osoyoos early dollar crisis in Britain. ; Unit Canadian Red Cross, and That is the real reason, I be- j wa. on the publicity tommittee, lieve, why there is talk of Mr.1 AssPri Boards of Trade of ashion footveo Unfold Sex Naturally Attlee and Mr. Eden coming to , &oulhern Interior. This year he America. For if my reading of j has bepn one 0 a commiUt, of the world picture is right, Bril- j f() appointed by the associa-ain is going to be forced to make tion to co.ordinate activities ' some new arrangements oeiore , . . ... nkflnnsan and Main HQEX is by no means as fascinating to young O children as parents think," says J. D. Ratcliff in ."The Sex Story for Children" condensed from Today's Health in the August Reader's Digest. "To long. Either she will be forced Line Boards. His recreations In- HAWRIS: Reduced Goioline Coniumption Improved Engine. Performance Easier Starting In Cold Weather . to a.sk for another loan from I the U.S.A. or apply for. a rft- nowrol rt Xar..V,oll AM enmn them, 'Where did I come from?' is of no greater jother form 0j dlrect assistance, ORMES elude golf,, badminton and swimming. Mr. Blackaby, during his stay here, has be com a well known to many local and district residents as a capable banker and public-spirited citizen. Keenly or else she will have to turn elsewhere. FOR YEARS past, I have been urging a completely new deal between Canada and Britain. Under this deal, Canada would USERS REPORT 10 to 30f GASOLINE SAVINGS The revolutionary "Gasmaster" was perfected through government research during World War II (o improve the performance ol military aircraft tnd al manufactured by Votes of England. The "GasmSer'' has now been re-engin. tered by Vokcs for use on automobiles, trucks and motorcycles and has met Vith instant response and success in both Britain and Canada on all makes of cars. moment than 'Why does it ram.'"' Ihe proper answer to the first question, says Mr. Ratcliff, is "You came from inside your mother." T"He will file this away, as he files away other bits of information," the article advises. "The chances are he will ask one question at a time, maybe spaced months apart. And he will undoubtedly want the facts over and over again. Correct interested in lotal affairs, his community activities Include membership in the local Chamber cf Commerce, which he served as president in 1949. Mr. I Blackaby will take over his new HERE'S PROOF I The Pioneer Druggist; say to Britain: "We agree to buy from you as much as you buy from us and we will settle the balances each duties in Vancouver late in August. year without any cash chang H. H. 8rl. sVwf'ft rVrvim Biatifift, Wiuii, write: Ws iiutaliml Voktt "jiinaKlfr" OB our six fiHircry t- ""t only diil tiiry iBiinv tht Irftiraiti of our trukaf but our ftverag miloun iiM bettu inc-rVMed ftiiprotiEBfttrljr tnilut per gallon. (hir irrriM lUtiuti euitonwn hr alao give ui Try good teporti. Cotiiriulti(r;e oB ft prtxiuO which makeft ft tpvminnlno'v is psspntiMl " THIRSTY VENEZUELANS Paul fch Aiiiswurth, ilfciuir4 Maebin Worki, Winnipeg: It wu after eooTlDcing by Oomib nd Hhcpbrook Servict thftt I fawUlM s Yok ,Gsmtr, tuid I rouil admit better mitaif prr gallon ftud improved per-lonn&MM. 1 em firmly reeom-Bwitd tli Vokei "OiiuiMtV to toy frwtviA kihi MncLatcc fen Cliffy, Tort ftrvif Rta-toou, Wmniirtw. wnf4: During tbc punt tt iiiiiirtn we have irutlifi Vikra "( iwirniMtt'rs'' tn ihsmv of uur misuiiitnr' rwa of (irtu'liciifly livery iimke, W a Hr? vry lieHtwi to ml vim- yoil that every inula! Latum dint we lit. vt ituiile bu resulted in ft airttritij ctiMoiitrr. hir uiiMitrtttri rlort heflw p-rtfirtiiii (, iinTM-owJ tniiruga mn -! Htarniig. We nff rwtiiniiwftf) tin- "( iafltiiwter" to hll our riuituiUTi aini Mif(i(li-jiifiit you on m fitte protlucb Venezuela produced more than 8 1 PHONE Mr. Ratcliff warns parents not to laugh at ing hands." For many years to come we could use up any surplus we had, after squaring accounts on actual goods, by buying stocks and bonds now held in Britain or other parts of the sterling twice as much beer in 1950 as in 1945. KUS real lDiproveuMut in perftrtmanre. r For NEW CONSTRUCTION area. I hold that this will prove to be not only true patriotism but also good business, because it TODAY! your favourlt garaga ar and REPAIR WO questions like "Was I born naked?" or "Could I have puppies instead of babies?" Questions grow more complicated as the child grows older. Parents must be prepared with straightforward answers. : Our sexual ethics can be transmitted naturally when it comes time. "It is important that only married people have babies," Mr. Ratcliff suggests saying, "because a baby needs a home and both a father and mother to love and care for it." The child who never asks about sex has prob pays to keep your best customers in a position to buy. scrvka station for your "easmastor". Install In a saw minutas. THE "GASMASTER" IS ENGINEERED FOR ALL CARS, TRUCKS, AND MOTORCYCLES INCLUDING 1951 MODELS SEE GREER & BRIDDEN LTD 7- ceitlT & 1 ' DECCA COLUMBIA CAPITOL 215 1st Avenue West P.O. t l"hiie 909 For the MEAL that REFRESK Latest reloases in Popular, FoIk Songs, Classics. 78 rpm and long play. ALL RECORD ACCESSORIES csi-sta ? f ft ''ftaiwMMN' U giwrwtmi fly yu iftHft. fax Han aujrrili not f burn valvat. ably been told by others that the subject is unmentionable. Parents can break the ice by bringing up the subject of the new baby next door or the new litter of kittens. Scripture paiiage for oday "Blessed are the merciful; for they shall obtain mercy." St. Matt. 5:7 mw it FINE' OF RECORD BRUSHES Keep your records clean for longer wear 98c BEST OF FOOD L m GASM.STi:itS may be obtained from the following dealers: TERRACE MACHINE SHOP & GARAGE BOH PARKER LTD. Terrace, B.C. Prince Rupert, B.C. Rupert Radio and Electric FOR TAKE OUT ORDERS PHONE Z0 LUCRATIVE LEVY The sales tax in the Indian state of Madras is nicknamed SACRED CITY Benares, scene of Buddha's first preaching, is a sacred city to Hindus and the most ancient city in India. BROADWAY CAFE 313 3rd Ave. W. P.O. Box 1279 Phone 644 TRIANGLE SERVICE Hazelton, B.C. LAKELSE MOTORS Terrace, B.C. Klamadhenu the cow that yields everything.