'pensions to all ellMule persons, rial ot tlie iiiicuiauuuai Lubuui icaut Um As I See it Prince Rupert Daily News Thi measure lr.r the wvn-oemi oilice, u heamng a work which to jeme i , " " of our senior citizens is designed &hmM be bpUer known g J ",c" to complete the program of old ' -age countries have been the- It victims has security announced by the be,n a Kuvernment at the session earlier f historical or geographic clr- ! c,,m- back hire" J! in this present year when legLs-: cunustanees. As a consequence 'nwrs and Mi...- Report from Parliament By E. T. APPLEW'HAITE, M P. Mor.day, October 15, 1931 lation was enacted to provide lor ;oi una "'any umer tilings, :'-''"':. irom the ' a federal contribution to assist-! economic development has not Kmn. sei-m. proceeded at an even incp to persons between the ages Pa ' at w com,, imore throughout the world Ov.i- "rni ana 1 th,i. of 65 and 70. ft V I l..r,.. ..-,.., .,..1 . ellt it 0,.,. . t ' Once again, as your representative, I am back m Ottawa and again I shall try to send to your newspaper a little weekly column of items and events iaiKc aicao jjruic alt WlinOUl o left, adequate shelter and clothin beA5ln doe, tm ji Independent dally newspaper devoted to the upbuilding of Princt Rupert and Northern and Central British Columbia. Jemoer of Canadian Press Audit Bureau of Circulations Canadian Daily Newspaper Association J A. HUNTER, Managing Editor. H. O. PERRY, Managing Directoi SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Jy Carrier, Per Week, 20c; Per Month, 75c Per Year. Jfi; $8.00; By Mail, Per Month. 73c; Per Year, $8.00 -i-'-' Published every afternoon except Sunday by ' Prince Rupert Dally News Ltd., 3rd Avenire. Prince Rupert. V Through the courtesy of V. C. Phelan, Director, Canada Rrnrh Tnt nvl t.innul I.flhor V wiieh I hope may be of interest. I have been lie re nimuui, c-uuuKu iijuu ur wunoilt nourishment of the right kind, without sufficient medical care! and without security or hope for the future. Get this book and only a few days as yet but I hope already had some!0fficei 'T nave received a book v a. . j: . k lauct ,f ! entitled: "Lasting Peace the Dav With Chun-hill neanening news oi our uisu ic " , , L O Way .. Th is short book is LONDON I went out to, which is the evident intention - " " Intended to serve as a popular -nmntViincr f Wi-i of the C N R. to proceed as fast. ,.Prtaliilv comprises a lot of j introduction to the International see SOUK tiling Ol -- possible with the sta- the .speech 8J major worii of course, Labor Organization. You can ston Churchill's half-dav tion and yard improvements 'ji commenced bv pointing out ! cet a free copy from the I.L.O., A rvw and exciting MAGNIFICENT m i minis Lane. tnat, as we resume our laooi.v 95 Ruleau Street. Ottawa. Get our country is being honored by ; ne, you will find it worthwhile. There has oeen very little the visit of Their Royal High- David A. Morse, Director -Gen- oarliamentarv activity as vet ne.sses the Prim-ess Elizabeth, ' for we adloumed over the two and the Duke ol Edinburgh. Tie tour of his own constituency Woodford, which lies on the north-eastern suburbs of the great metropolis. It was an English October d.iy at its best warm enough to take tea outdoors, which I did in 2 -"" """"" collection of days of Their Royal Highnesses' primary reason for summoning visit. I know that the dally us lor a second session in the papers and the CBC have given present year Is to give eonsidrr- the Royal Tour a very full ation to the measures to provide coverage, so all I am going to increased security for our older say here is that Her Royal High- citizens through payment or ness, Princess Elizabeth, Is ab- pensions, without a means test Loughton. The. stores were jam Cjciieriil Llccliu Windows !solute!y and entirely charming, and as a matter of nsht, to :U parked with buyers. FOR SALE SAWMILL Ai going concern. Capacity, 15.000 daily Mill., coma tractor, 3-ton truck only five months Id. Timber, $18,000 E. T. KENNEY LTD. Real Estate - Insurance Terrace, B.C. -220 G.E. Radios ore available for every fQste every budget ... every room The Northern B. C. Power INVITES VOl' TO DROP IN AND DISCrss THE PERFECT RADIO FOR YOUR HOME showed evidence of falling prices, especially In some lines of dry-goods. A placard announced that the famous actress Jose Collins, would appear tonight In some local hall. (Yes. the same Jose who used to star in 1915 in "Maid of the Mountains ") A green car with a loudspeaker You will read some rather lui- Canadians witn appropriate res-some-sounding articles about idence qualilicalions who are her but I assure you, they iuv over the age of 70 years, and to no exaggeration. establish a fund made up ot f special contributions levied for In so far as the new session that purpose. Registration of of Parliament Is concerned, all ail persons 70 years of age and we have had at the time ot over has been successfully tin-writing this, is the Speech from ; dertaken, and administrative. the Throne. After hearing the preparations have already been speech read by His Excellency ; well advanced to ensure, once the Governor-General, my im-! the necessary legislation h mediate reaction was: "Gosh, been approved, the pi o:npt pay-weil be here lor two years." It nient from January, 1952. oi NORTHERN B.C. POWER Co. came along roaring tnat tne Communists would hold an outdoor meeting. Then another whizzed by saying the great man, I Prinr Rupert, It C. Churchill himself, was about due. I HIS MOTOR CAVALCADE SWEPT by, Mr. and Mrs. Chm- I chill in an open light blue car.! Nobody cheered las the papers' next day said they did 'every-! where"). But everybody waved! and smiled, and the grand old-man gave them his famous V sign. I Twenty-six Communists fell j In like soldiers behind the mo-1 torcade. None was working , class, all were obviously import- ! ed into the constituency. They j looked self-conscious carrying Labor And Socialism test at the coming election in Britain SOCIALISM'S after six years' control of the government recalls the vastly different career of socialism in the linked States. While labor in Britain adopted socialism and put it into power, American labor unionism generally gave it little support. Much socialistic legislation, either in a welfare or public-ownership sense, has been put on the books and into practice through political action, often with CIO and Al'L support, but the major labor organizations in the United States have resisted urgings to form a Labor Party with socialization as its platform. Socialism was brought over from Europe when the American labor movement was taking shape. Its promoters sought to use organized labor to advance their doctrine. Leaders of trade unionism, notably Samuel Gompers, founder of the American Federation of Labor, insisted that under the free enterprise system of the United States workers could do better for themselves by mobilizing and controling economic power than by centering on legislative power. Get Back-Alive! N BRITISH COLUMBIA during the hunting season people may well ask, "When is a dead deer not a deer?" and get the reply, 'When it's a dead hunter!" Over the last few years many people have died because they were mistaken for deer, moose, or other big game that over-zealous hunters have thought they saw moving in the bushes. Don't shoot until you see what kind of animal you are shooting at. If you really have to, you can always buy your meat at the local butcher shop and let that deer go until next year. A meat charge is always better than a manslaughter charge! Not to mistake the quarry that may possibly be easy. But what about being mistaken for the quarry? Every hunter has certain responsibilities; for instance, when in the woods wear red it may be poor camouflage but it is good conservation. Whenever possible don't place yourself in such a position as to be mistaken for an animal; the other fellow is just as eager as you to get that deer. Don't climb trees unless it is an emergency. You wouldn't be the first to be mistaken for a bear! , With respect to equipment there is a saying about the unloaded gun that Killed, but what about the loaded gun? More than one hunter has been killed or wounded by his own loaded gun. Who would think of carrying a cocked, loaded gun while climbing a tree or log? But it has been done! Carry tho Iheir placards: "Don't tram.- j British lads for Yankee money." I THE FAMOUS MAN SPOKE; IN the High School sharp at seven. The place was packed i out bv 6:30. Many hundreds! i stood outside. Mr. Churchill was more .re- j j laxed than at Liverpool, where j j he read almost every word he j 'said. Htjre in his own riding he ! talked as if to friends.- When ! the old gentleman started I! j wondered whethere! h had had f j"one too many" at the tea in- j terval, for he seemed to have! difficulty articulating. Hut his . words, once said, carried real 'punch. . I His main line was in reply to j Mr. Attlee's challenge to know j ' ! whether he, Churchill, would have gone to war to try to keep our oil men in Persia. He replied that under proper British '. handling of the crisis there would never have been need to go to war. He dealt with the new Labor Party siogan: "Whose linger do you want on the trigger Churchill or A'-tlee's?" He said that we did not want anybody's finder on the trigger but if we had to have one, it had better be one that did not fumble. He declared quite frankly that if World War Three started, it gun so that if you happen to stumble the lead goes i would be by decision of -the , i i ... , , , 'Russians, the Americans, or the UN organization." Britain, he said wistfully, no longer had her old-time power. This hs regretted, above air, be cause if Britain still did have that power it would be used, as it always had been, to keep world peace, not break It. I MR. CHURCHILL TALKED A BIT about the social services, iiilu uit giuuiiu, nui ur yuur partners oouy. A hunting trip is a vacation, so take it easy. For health and hunting judgment it is most unwise to overindulge. Alcohol and gunpowder just don't mix ! 'Instigator or victim, there is no glory in becoming just another statistic on a Game Warden's report. It will do no harm to really think about the National Safety Council reminder that the life you save may be your own. Of course, it is important to htrVe fun, and it is important to get game, but it is much . mOre important to get back alive. dspwik tii JIGIiEl and claimed his wartime government had really initiated those for which the Socialists now took all the credit. His whole set speech took only 20 minutes. Then the chairman threw the meeting open for questions. They came right from the floor. One or two of them Hundreds of everyday use for Niilfl have Iff" developed l.y the Nickel industry through s )l.inned program of research. Today a large share"1 Canada's Nickel production is Wing diverted from jK'acetiine uses into channels for preparedness. So the Nickel mine facilities, greatly expanded over the past decade, are again lciug operated at pr.' capacity. There is actually more Nickel now hang delivered l.y Clanada to the free wmld than any peacetime year. In the drums used in drying phettrulhu Jtlm, vukel nlft is are med h fhf tvn urar and rtsutauit to chemttal cvrrotuttt. were obvious "plants" that is. asked by pre-warned Tory workers to give Mr. Churchill the chance to hit key points. But most of them were free and unstaged. . One asked: what about the coal crisis? Mr. Churchill answered that the first thing his government would do would be to have a good look around. Another asked: would Mr. GENERAL ELECTRIC Churchill favor large grants fof cancer treatment. The answere: j G. E. Radios, Washers lAElADinil DicklJI "The question Is very pertinent, and in the way it is asked, speaks for itself." Try and figure that one. I couldn't. Another asked: Did Mr. Churchill think a Tory victory -would mean a wave of strikes? Mr. NOW IN STOCK In the tanks, trais and umhers used in prttc rising htaik and white or ruler film, iiiikrl alloys ghv hif.fi rrnstattft tf cvtmsion by developing and fixing solutions. Rupert Radio & Electric Churchill answered: No, he ; didn't think for a minute the trade unions would play politics in this way. ONE MAN ASKED: DID MR Churchill favor more Big Three WEST, THE INTERNATIONAL, NICKEL COMPANY OF CANADA. LIMITED, 25 KING STREET meetings with Stalin and the U.S. President? The answer was: Yes. They couldn't do harm, and might do good, and had (Continued on page 4)