torn In New Brandenburg, August 18, 1912. He joined the Ge:- , SFa$ 8ji man army as a private in April,1. Cf lAtl Pfinl!ulrl?ai,y Nem' Victoria Report As I See It lit I has actually picked the Number ! Two prospect BECAUSE of that i fact. THE ELECTION IN LOWER Saxony is just a few days ahead and the main questions are: I Can the new Nazi Party the 1933. His career was unspec-' -ltintrt,li, tacular till ly. However, hs I was promoted slowly but steadily over the vears. in Independent.dauy liewspaper devoted to the upbuilding of Prince! J . . by J. K. Nesbitt Rupert and, Nprthern and Cos. traJ British Columbia. I viptadta TT;t i vtJ t. n VICTORIA United well ! Nations, With Member of Canadian Presi Audit Bar.au of Circulations pretty . Canadian Daily Nepa.vr Association : the pick of the world's best brains, every now anil G a. hunter, Managing Ed.:..rH.o -PERRY. Managing Director then comes to the British Columbia Government for, I He had little actual front line ! ,bl" J-'c "S. v a more n-ummufu on page i) : SRP-Soclalist Relchspartel gt i a real foothold? i Yet you can't go to a meeting , of thi? party in Hanover or any oilier big city. They are having meetings, ail right. But thry Ey Carrier, Per Week, 20c; Per Month. Too- P-.-r Year $8 00; By Mail. Per .Ci:th. 7"o: Per Year. $8.00 an expert to help modernize far-away countries. This is a splendid tribute to the civil service of this prov 3mporlcul yljj,css ince and it should not go unnoticed Latest to be chosen by the UN Fundamentals by United Nations is George P-'about 250,000-about 70 per cent Melrose, the government's dep-iuf the ,.,,, ar(k TROUBLE with the United Nations may be minister of lands. He will about 30 percent are men Nat THE that it wa&raited without sufficient forethought, I sa.'adof tof h"p , T 1 a manw?rW,! B.C. PREMI and it never had the -advantage of normal develop- ;T-f ?' meilt. fieLds; T,hey CMI? ll?e bul-,ln : ! mission mission will will particularly particularly study study El El lur consn uctiun worn. Its founders, in their haste to bring it into being, factor's forestry and agricui- aiuie.s Tn y ' ' tural in resources, an eftort to mix the cement. They v,o didn't take time to consider the essential nature of make the country more seif-0 ,tne .Vds cut wod i.,r 'sustaining -and better able to l", "u , ,1 u' , i ! h play a part in the United Na-ih"fcs 011 th,e" bacrks' ,U tioijs ' 1ulte common to see a family re- I ', . , I turning home with the females, I ,In T ligation and economic , from lltUe girls up cairvlnU ; utilization of land, Mr. Melrose handles n h, s ihK,.i are tin an "invitation Basis, in homes, basements and other out-ol-si:;hL places. But in the country districts H is different. Tim HKP is drawing crowds numbering thousands t it.s meetings. These farm people are PAYING a half a mv.rk apiei-e (12 cents! to hear the neo-Nazi sptakers. Above all. .Uuy want to hear the liiosjiee-tive Hitler Number Two Major-CieiKial Otto Ernst Hemer. : THEY UO NOT GO TO HE AH Henii r be'-ause he has any of Hitler's ability to harangue. Everybody agrees that Hemer is a humdrum, even burin speaker. (Tiiey also suid that abuut Mui:ken. ie King.) Also .Reiner makes substantially the sainu speech tlial lie has ueeu niiikiua ever since AugUNt, JiHS). Ami iln? whole point of this speech ic Miai. he-Keimir -was the man who suppressed tin? revolt uf July. ISrt-t, Vrluu high German jf!i-eers tried to aisu.i.inaU ilitl.?.', und so tjet a t'.uveiniHent atile Id make peace. V OTTO EUNST IU-MEIt WAR HITLER NUMI'KR TWO? j HANOVER, Ormany It seems fantastic to think that, six years after the total over-throw of Hitler's Naziism, people here nre watching and waiting to see whether a Hitler Number Two is already on the make, I shall not clutter up tills report by, trying to give all ditlalh of how the neo-Nazi Party :ame into being here; nor about us lamily (luarrels. 'Ihe uiain points are: 1. The new Nazi Party is a fajt. 2. There are such striking flinllarities between Hitler Number One and the potential Hitler Number Two that my simple Canadian mind tells me that some occult force or secret group the thing they wanted, ur the most suitable material of which to build it. ; They proceeded on the assumption that all nations wanted peace and all believed in the same principles; and the only thing needed to assure world peace was to get them all together under one roof. It never occurred to them that some nations mitrht is one of the experts of Canada. ;and tne menfolk walking along He is the third British' .Col- i with no load at all. No under umbia civil servant to be bor- life is wonderful for a man on rowed by the United Nations in ; Cheju-do. Would any of our gins recent months. like to come to Cheju-do V T.. T71 m T71 I 1 J A There were absolutely no vol have motives of their for joining the o n new organ- of- education, u expected unteers among tne lemale eni- to return in a month from Ran- I ployees of the Department A ization goon where he- went as a mem-1 Health. ber of a three-man commission 1 to plan a modern educational! One of the really excited vis-system for Burma. He brougnt itors in the Legislative Buildings ' As might have been expected from such wishful thinking, what was intended to be an organization !! 1 1 j 1 1 1 A i 1- 1.1. Or ilKe-miniiect nations lias Uirnetl OUl lO De a gainer- along with him B.C.'s curriculum in recent davs wu Allan Be foe Of discordant elements, which clashes every time iand, this Province's plans forjnett of Los Angeles. Nearly 511 HOH. BYRON I. JOHNSON, MI . jluij ttgu iic woo a. fjtic yjyjy in tlieymeet. ; Reginald Bowering, a public the Legislative chain Ue. In raw The same haste was shown in setting the or- e?uhJ;:T teen-aw ae Tent t0 Lu PXyKrTT ta paitment of Health, is now in Angeles and never retumt-H .mtii k i'lW-lii.TIi CFPR ganizatlon to work. While it Was Still in its infancy. Kul'ea and adjacent islands wltn ' a few days ago. He had his wile J.fU.Pw' '1 fltlrl bpfni-P it 1m, 1 ehmrn nnw imliVntir.n nf Ue ihe unitea Nations, planning a with him ana he wasn't off the Dropram stpnmpr nn hnr frnm QJfit,,i - . ..v,,, , t""-- modern public health 10:15 p.m. Monday, May 2 lty tor the work, It W HS made judge among the ln areas devastated by war. , before he had her in the legis- So' as you can 'see' Brilisil ! lative chamber, taliung oi ai.' natinns and oivpn llio vr.oinni1-iilitw mni'nt'ii'nino- ana llie Ot nations, given lespollM maintaining Olllty Columbia well be of may proud days when he was a page, an J World peace. lts cvil service, when the United J James Dunsmulr and E. G. Prior 1 1 Not until it was brought face to face with a dis iiuiauna au Hunsniy eyes a mem-! were tne fremiers. ber of our public servants. It is he ; victoria, admitted, has a tribute to them, personally, changed out of all recognition 1 NOW IS pute among its ovn members, did it realize that they differed on fundamental principles; they did not all aim u, nic wnoie province. since ne wlU away yea,.,j i h i ago. There was no Empress Hotel Or is it .just the butcher, the baker and the candlestick-maker who are better off. Find out how to put your-irlf on your own payroll. Ask fur your copy of 'Personal Planning' at your neighborhood H of M branch. Persouui Plititning u ill ali helfi you sate . . . mid yuu'lt like sainiv at subscribe to the same code of ethics. TIMET! RE-ROC bpeaking of Mr. Bowering and the City was just stainn the Department of Health here ! to build the th-! rtienutoa Disputes Ot nt fKio this ntm.. nature ...,'. i be i i Causeway across Can t settled accord- received a letter from him the smellv mud fi-.it- We will do the Asphalt ot d "All IV BASK". ing to any established moral principles. In the past olner ray and ne told of an M . ,1 . land where the male Is ! iv,.. u i supreme. i m ii they have always been settled by the might of the "o Happy Lsie" sang the males! unusual visitor Stronger, and there is 110 indication thnf tho ni-pnt in tne Department of Public i MONTREAL (CP) A Cinnamon J Shingle: for EsrauTt mMmr ji iwuaiani mi i n m i 1 ' ..I.4'"t,F"i: I -"...' '& IS' rkt I'ho.vk 909 GREER & BRIDDEN LTD. f" Q ,;n u n i i it. Health. I Teal, or red-colored duck, first' One Will be settled by any Other means. Mr. Bowering works on the of its kind to be recorded in. The United Nations can never hone to become Lsland of Cneiu-d. ln the East Quebec, was spotted on Nun's - , China Sea. about 50 miles south Island by Jacques Norma -.i '. w4- 4 4 r an eiiective instrument tor peace Until its members of the Korean mainland. la member of the Quebec society are Agreed on the fundamental principles of right He wrioleI,.tof h,is !.j:mer 01-' for the protection of birds. The , , - -. i, .,-., . , - le8ues in Victoria: "The popu- bird closely resembles the blue-ana Wl'Ong. lation of the Lsland normally is winged teal. I WOBKINO WITH CANADIANS IN fVRV WAU Of lift SINCt 1817 We have the following units In stock for imraeJutf Two Va-Ton Forgo Express Modi (Fluid Drive equipped I One Plymouth Savoy Suburban Thi;: vehicle Is th,- ultimate In smart utility tin In the popular price field. a x ma-"' ' . " ' J ' J l , f . - -'x j , if If. i t I ' Rupert Motors Lid CHRYSLER, PLYMOUTH, FARGO D1STB1BH NOW!! Release Working Wives THE HIGH cost of living' in Canada is sending more' and more -married women into office and factory jobs in an effort to balance their family budgets, Sidney Katz writes in the current issue of Maclean's in an article, "Why Wives Are Going Out to Work." In. the lOSO's, says Katz, only ten per cent of women workers were married ; today the figure has jumped to more than thirty per cent. Of sixty applications, for employment received recently by one Ontario firm, thirty were from married women, several with two or more children. "The vast majority of women are not working to acquire luxury frills," says Katz, "but to pay for necessities medical attention, fuel, housing and clothes. In one Toronto family two pre-school children were forced to stay indoors for seven weeks during the winter because they didn't have proper clothing. They finally got out after their mother went to work and used her salary to buy clothes which her husband couldn't afford." The effects of married women going to work have been harmful in many cases on family life, the . care of children and on the women themselves, says Katz. "The average husband is bitterly opposed to his FRENCH FR .V; 1 I 7 x .If AUTOMATICALLY with o liiauuuuiitUiiyukutidU oa U rjv a rMifcottieeitif tom CENSUS TAKER a $34 95 Mr. R. J. Davy is one of the 18,000 enumerators who will call at the .homes of all Canadianj including yours starting June 1st. His job is to get thp facts which Canadians need for successful management of their private business or public affairs. It is of practical benefit to you and your community. Vour enumerator (man or woman) will carry an identification card. The information you give is kept in strictest confidence, and can be used only for census statistics. It cannot, by law, be revealed to anyone for any purpose, even to other Government Departments. Please be ready with quick and accurate information when your census taker calls. Just one control -to set and your "FRvi"' any food to perfection. NOW ON DISPLAY AT m Northern B.C. Power ( El DOMINION BUREAU OF STATISTICS O DEPARTMENT OF TRADE AND COMMERCE ' " PFf OTTAWA' CANADA p aQa.QDDDo mm jnmmnn nmnmmnuun1 wile working, particularly when there are children in the family, although he usually appreciates the circumstances which require her to work. Many children are neglected when mothers go to work. And there is an emotional burden as well for the working mother, who often has little time or energy for the proper care of her family after a day's work and who feels guilty about her inability to look after the home." Katz .suggests half time shifts with better pay for working women. We have just received a NEW SHIPMEH of steame Scripture Paiiae for DoJaij "He that bejieveth on the Son hath the witness in hirnself.'V-jl gohn 5:10. TRUNK - Makeyour selection i' . ., ....an while ou. - 'arecompW fashion footwe Ibh fccftltnht If not published or displayed by ih Llquof Conktl feerd er to tlx GevormM st BrWh CoIub& ft 9TH DECENNIAL CENSUS JUNE; 1951