RFnrnrNiH'M i Continued from Page 1) Prince Rupert Daily News As I See it Wednesday, November 14, 1951 Whalen, Mike Krueer and Dn; Fitch voted against the moti-jn Aid. Binck did not vote. Aid. Whalen, in talkin., i i fijii -l J I ! the bylaw, supported Aid. Kak 11 rt?a" can mak,.' mak'i't afc that no vote on the issue should nnT ia independent daily newspaper devoted to the upbuilding of Prince Kupert and Northern and Central Briti-h Columbia. Member of Canadian P'e.is Audit Bureau of Circulations l Canadian Dally Newspaper Association. Q. A. HUNTER, Managing Editor; H. G. PERRY, Managing Director SUBSCRIPTION RATES: umo 44r Hu of the recent Puhlir ithiih... Commission hearing here, as n J"1''11' result of the power company's n By carrier, per week, 20c; per month, 75c; per year, request ior a rate hike. AM. Km., ... $8 00; by mail, per month, 75c; per year, $800. -S!.' Published every afternoon except Sunday by ' Prince Rupert Daily News Ltd., 3rd Avenue, Prince Rupert. W don't know what kind of rates we can eet from thn p ... am commission, l hey may be holier h " Tnt than what the nower rnmn.,,, Ve 1 , t,. ' 8 . , . 1 1 ' , . - can give us. I don't think this , ' A referendum bs fair, either to the t n lilf h: public or to the power com- ' "lri!i. pany." P' UAt.CKTT EXPLAINS Ei4:'h m aw. uaBS-.t tola coun.it r::'y.a':a u bvlaw did not ask v.iw. i,. -j.. .n,la "si!. - . u ut 1JK unit: v m. l Ford and Sadie May OAKVILLE, Ontario. The Ford Company has just announced that it will transfer its biggest assembly plant from Windsor to Oakville and I came out to look over the site. Here near farm fields where I played baseball as a boy there will he the bignest single factory building in Canada. It is the m st sinking phase of U.,. ui-gantic change that has taken place hereabouts in the past half century. IT IS always a rrfistuke to return to the scenes of a happy boyhood. For the swift changes of there times of vast iiulustiia'i-zation are killers of romantic memories. Back before the First World War fisheimen used, to put out to "sea" in fleets of smart two-masted smacks. Boats were built GETS HIS JVISH The Duke of Edinburgh had expressed a desire to drive one of the special royal limousine used on the tour of Canada so he drove Piiir-ess Elizabeth to church at Ste. Agathe des Monts during their Laurentian holl.luy. As the photo shows snow was Tallinn. I CP PHOTO i 35th ANNIVERSM SALE day or so atro direct from the land of promise is described us Orient. It's better to receive larter than France, Spam and none at all, than the mouniful Oermany -chtf riy desert, or al-; kind. Why Is it that so many rnost that. Between the Nile Ir-, persons save up all the bad news riuation anJ enoui'h live l.'u.t I Li-t y kr..)vv of, to Ur.jp in the post (-rowers, there mluht he nossi- and Pre - Christmas E HE ray.. Reflects and Reminisces f.'iec? 35 yeors in RuDtrf 10 ycors in present store ; btlitie Ab4jut five thousand dollars ir. cash and Roods di.suppeart.u in Vancuuver during the week-end. light on the spot in Bronte and Cakville. There was the keenost j WiiV THE DLLAY? A ,-nilway lli'e from Terrace to KiUmat is somethiiij? very similar to rail tian-si-'orUUoii be-! I ween Ktimat and Priu-'e liu-! tween K'.timut and Prince Ru- Something else to be rememU i - We Celebrate Our Uk by gtvmq our customers a break ottos' ratder than offer Christmas rivalry to see who could de ign , cheerful letters! That's what ecl Armislice Day in Pmce Hu-; me lastesi ana mosi .-eawuiuiy . canailian troops want nistot all craft. There would be keen races, 1 f,0m home. This is the word especially back into harbor. i ' brought by Archbishop W. F I can still ivmpmber the little Bui foot, who arrived in B.C. a! Canada's chief of staff, Gen- tert. whle observed with seemly! reverence, preserved the heal: hv '. eral Guy Simonds, back from aueen of those inland seas. Her:-' ! hsilnnee ihiii mnm love nf lifi Europe, addressinn n Leelou aud-' REAL BARGAINS name was the Sadie May, and ; whetlu-r a few million others do and iauht,.r one -amiot but len-e in Windsor. Ontario, said her curves were as lovely as either. I he ccuid immediate think that this is what the vet-i see no pros-! those of Betty Grable but even , For we live in the age of mam- erans wno have passed on, would 1 r "t of seitlint? differences with better sUeamlined. Also like moth industrialization. It ts not. sayj cou,i vey .pak Russia. The west, he said, may i Betty Grable, she was painted in the words of the famous . need to sinnd fully armed forty scarlet and white, as was the hymn "change and decay" but It! w th.,, (, .. i, , . or fifty years as an alternative little liglithou.se at the harbor certainly is change and pronrt ss. Prtrwre Kuwrt hiu become ex- ' 10 'ar' Whieh U the hard way? I entrance. She was a Joy to he- Oi-mtfnt lli lAf..l ..f am nl J noia ana a uoume joy io uoe n rM cLAI) for the folks who will bottles should be larger. Even In the 24-year ..-rlod from 1927 ; when the breeze, was really . ' Ret ,he 5,, in the new ; one all the way from New Zea- to 11151 the federal c.overnment sharP- nlant. For evvrv one of them has . land rtrill"rt urium thn Pneitiel naid out t?3S JMM Um In old nve on a moit ony article you need Jtr-t think of something ond it's likeK have it at a special price such 13.8 17 jewel WRIST WATCHtS Regularly $22 to $45 NOW HALF PRICE JEWELLERY Rorjular $1.25 to S3 CO NOW 95c ia problem, every family needs , to be washed up convenient to pensions; durltig 1952 Ottawa wiil I REMEMBER when the gasoline iu,e mon,,y anU 11 8 0lg m01H'y- i ue harbor entrance. mnii came in nnri h,iu! the! But I can t thirjc buck wltnouti for pay t more than half of this 1 amount, $336,000,000, lit universal j pensions at nge 70, exclusive of : inrans-.-ttst pensions payable nt . 1 a-.t- 05. more romantic of the fishermen a pang on that lovel yscene. with ! E.?ypt. with a yearnin Civilian Defence A UNITED STATES Army 'officer, heading north at the first of this week to assume an active part in the organization of civilian defence m, Alaska, said that such defence properly organised can result in the casualties from bomhings tehig cut in half and the resultant disorganization of industry and services greatly reduced. All this can he done if the organization is carried out well in advance and is ready to function. It h.ad been proven in Britain, Col. J. J. Crockett said. Having served w ith the United States Army him-Sfclf during the war and having also seen what bombing war can do in other parts of Europe and how much of the killing, injury, suffering and disorganization can be relieved, he is in a position to know a fact that is recognized by his having been sent to Alaska to help in surveying the situation and organizing the civilian defence machinery 3n the territory. - Col. Crockett, who is of the opinion that war with Red Russia is inevitable, was very earnest in the importance lie attached to civilian defence. Evidently, the United States is taking such (kfence measures very seriously and is really organizing. Now the organization is being extended toAlaska. - Still Canadians go indifferently along, giving little, if any, attention to the matter each authority waiting for the other to take the lead. Such a condition is very evident in Prince Rupert, which could well be a target for attack early in any World War III. The fact that such indifference is general all over Canada is no excuse for any community to Completely lack -organization as everybody knows prince Rupert does. Canada, it is generally admitted, will be on the front line in any future war. Parts of Canada it might be this would be "Belgiums." And there will be no time to get organized after the next war starts. We would be lame pigeons without a crutch and a lot of us would get hurt. " It's about time we thought a little more seriously about this matter of civilian defence and started really doing something about it. Churchill: Peacemaker QRIME MINISTER CHURCHILL says he is ready F to go alone to Moscow to meet Premier Joseph Stalin with a view to reaching better understanding that might lead to world peace and security. That iS a much different attitude than has been adopted by: President Truman of the United States who insists that Stalin must come to him a sort of "I won't play if you don't do what I sav" attitude. Who knows but Churchill, the roaring and merciless fighter of the last war might be the world's peacemaker at this time? .7 Certainly the oJd warrior is losing no time in launching efforts to really reach a world agreement. -- And the world will have more confidence in Churchill when he goes about the business of peacemaking. There will be no Munich if he goes to Moscow for his will be the realistic approach and the insistence on genuine and secure assurances. Nobody fools him. And he will come back and tell us how we stand and what we should do about it. the badie May winning the race 1 bucz. is said to have u uravinu to the lighthouse. : to possess Sudan. The lutur declared that THEY would never stoop to use such contrapUons. Those who had the finest, loveliest little ships, like the Sadie 1:1 j'ili'il'ln"!t',r:!ji May, held out to the very last. But in the end all the little two-masters disappeared and the smelly, ugly gas boats took over. FREE... IS iewel watch with each diamond pure1 Sale Is For' There Could Ee No Bcrter Now when I go back to that same little harbor, I, see one super-craft, something like a torpedo boat destroyer. It dash CHRISTMAS Friday and Saturd: See Tomorrow's Ad For More Porticili .GIFT Than a Subscription to the T 4t A 1 ill I I II es out to sea at express train speed. It does all the work that the whole two-masted fleet of smacks used to do. It races back to harbor with a machine Inside the boat gutting the fish as it tomes. I don't like the new system. For my mind flashes back to the Sadie May and all the joys of boyhood. But the seagulls like the new way better. For noisy with joy they follow thv? incoming craft and feast on the spew-ec'-out fish guts. THE MOVE of the Ford plant to central Ontario is the most spectacular Item in a vast process of concentration. Soon the whole area from Os-hawa to Niagara Kails will be one titanic industrial area, one vast metropolis, one giant city in fact if not in name. I won't like it. For wherever I go I will consciously or unconsciously resent th supplanted fejS6 i ii Tin '" Special Christmas Offer 1 Ends December 31 1 1 Year's Subscription $ g QQ 2 Year's Subscription QQ 3 Year's Subscription 2Q Q0 (New or Renewa In 1 j scenes of a happy boyhood. But I it won't make any difference wnetner I like it or no.t nor tie tyu " r. If you are on a ff likelv hren ai. c 'C 17, - '? i"L It : n lib' '?r A GIFT THAT KEEPS ON GIVING EVERY DAY Take Advontage of This Special Offer mm viicmi.b oie Vira-Weat habit. Make Vita-Weat your daily bread. PEEK FREAN'S r y-o-: 100 COMBINATION RANGE WHOIE WHEAT .j4 r s3r'f .1' "" - . $364-5o " and 6e Swtt J Rupert Radio & Electric Seagrams Crown Royal Sc a gram's V.O. Seagram's "83" Seagrams King's Plate Seagrams Special Old oz. v, PEEK f FREAN'S i 'i hi. .dvertiicment i. not piil.lUhe.i or ''"'''"iJ This advertisement is not published 01 displayed by the Liquor Contiol Board or by the Government ot British Columbia h.V