Prince Rupert Daily News Thursday, June 21, 1951 As I See It Clmore ? ' ' , Fish Strike By July j? hey will goon strike 1 danT0'' 5 '! Executives Labor Need LONDON (CP) Fred Lee, parliamentary secretary to the Ministry of Labor, has called on the British trade union movement to build up Its own reserve of executive talent to meet the demands of nationalized industries. In his challenge, addressed to the General Federation of Trade Unions. Mr. Lee suggested labor .n Independent d4iy r.-ewspapej devoted to the upbuilding of Pnncc . , Rupert and Northern cd Central British Columbia. " ' Ivies-.bcr of Canadian Press Audit Bureau of Circulations Canadian Paiiy Newspaper Association A. HtTNTTR. Managing Editor. H. O. PERRY, Managing Director SUBSCRIPTION RATES: . ay Carrier, Per Week, 20c; Per Month. 75c- Pc-r Year. v $3.00; By Mail. Per XetXh. 'It; Per Year, $8 00 Published every afternoon except 8anday by ' " " Pritice Kuport Daily News Ltd., 3rd Avenu, Prince Rupert. -.1. Peace In Korea? I INLESS Russia provides much more aid, it would appear that the day is fast approaching. The " year oli now and the Chinese Communists are con- ; i?-, no- in fa hqek. Perception Of tne IOllV OI con- tin-.jinf to plav catspaw for the Soviet together with .the accumulated weight of their losses should soon , induce Peiping to make peace. The United Nations is, no doubt, readying for ".that day. What terms will be acceptable? Is any move toward a cease fire going to be greeted with ' cries of "appeasement"? Can the terms be limited to oomm tt.-p or... . "m '"t.eompromi havebTurnZntl un b .. 4 percent vn.., u. Hons arclnuing,h;80 Of 28 prisoners ln th rll, today most of them and wppHer. of liqur " "HI 'I " B.C. MvUi BABIES LOVE PACIFIC Mil liumugenlzed fur easier digt.-always uniformly guw, pul Milk is rrconimrridtd by d. iur iniums- lurmuiai Inm, tiidmin u content makes vital food necessary lor t ir.g strung Iwalthy budid Pacific Milk for your tab? , PACIFIC Vacuum packed and hunw(f leaden and educational author- ities ihould get together without' delay and draw up an ndiuttrlul training scheme, as a starter. Under the plan, workers showing above-average ability aad executive promise at summer schools or other clauses could be selected for more advanced training ln universities aad technical colleges. He contended It was the duty of tho.e entrusted wiiri the appointment of men to positions of responsibility In nationalized industries to create a pool of able, efficient candidates. "At present," he said, "the Trade Union Congress has Iio list of qualified persons they can nominate for such positions. "I believe that until the trade unlun movement remedies this basic defect any conception vl the workers enjoying greater control of Industry will remain a mere dream of the future." He added that the ministries of labor and education stood ready to place their experience and a.sisunce at the disposal of the trade unions In organizing a workable scheme. Richard Hedstrorn was fined $15 and costs of 85.50 In city police court yesterday for speeding In city limits. ..,, ttit .1, KOrea . f llie UiN Omunauy and restore neace "in the firm, realistic guarantees , aggression. . Obviously words will not furnish any real guarantee. Withdrawal of Chinese and UN forces alike - would not be satisfactory. There could be a considerable withdrawal of American forces provided '. the Chinese got'dut of Korea. But the UN will have Zt'O have effective supervision in Korea until the free Z Koreans can ho , developed to take sure charge of T "their country. ,y : - . . ! CWAMWCfl A ROSE AMONG THORNS i- - Preferably the country should be united, but I'1 , , , , , u ttxt i i -the UN IS not .pledged to that course. If a buffer aiWJp their border would relieve Chinese fears, , "There are a lot of things neat Gwina EUch a temporary arrangement could be made, but UN control should extend to the Pyongyang-Won-san line at the "waist." This is militarily, economically and morally sounder that the 38th parallel as i border. Is Comfortable and Economica jcnpture laiSaqe for Joa General Electric Refrigerator Geneial Electric Standard Range $22 "There will I meet with thee, and I will commune with t thee." Ex. 25:22. General Electric DeLuxe Range $5f faff Finding ! I Big Business j By HAL BOYLE I NEW YORK AP Life has become so complicated that an- wrung quMimns can De oig business. Lots of people would rat PaV "me one to find out me iacts man wear inemseivci ----- Out trying to dig UD the infor- tton. may be. This fact led Pierre Marquis to start an organization known M 'acts, inc., which now an- wers 400,000 to 500,000 ques- l)u,ls a ar lur a00""- 3"u.""u & Vear. Who are his customers? Well, people like Gypsy Rose Lee and Faye Emerson and institutions like General Electric and the International Euiinsss M'..:h- ines Company. Marquis, a slender 29-year- old lawyer who was woundfcd during the Second World War.! started hu unique enterprise a CQUDln OI vears ill( Troill ifl'iti'h -about $1500 in scratch. Northern B.C. Power Co. Itrsncr It lock Phone 210 Prince Kuperl, I5.C. St.warl,BQ SK. NATO It ACNES? OTTAWA The urbane old gentlemen in the Senate do not often get hot and bothered about anything. But some of them are mad as hops these days because a r8dio cornmentator "un me- sam mai oniy aoout a dozen of them turned up for an average days work, and that tome of the daiien slept on th? job. Some of the irate Senators wanted Chairman Dunton of the CBC to cancel private stations' licenses for allowing such a "slanderous, libellous attack" to! go out on the air. I , TMI5 SUBJECT O- SENATE reform is a hardy perennial. The parties out of power have been talking about Senate reform ever since the Upper Chamber was set up at the time of Confederal turn. But once the criticising parties came into power they lost all their zeal for reform. They appointed their own par-1 ty stalwarts to vacant seats. Even the master-technician, the late Mackenzie King, was not ; ashamed to be cynical about' dropping the "Senate Reform"; pledge in his pre-election plal-l form. "Providence has reformed the Senate in a remarkable way," ne !used t0 say' ln referring to the rapid replacement of Tories by Grits, or the death of the for- 'ner BUT NOW THE MAJORITY j of the Liberals in the Senate Is' so overwhelming and the num-i ber of king-unfilled vacancies ' so large that there really is talk of Senate reform once again. ,u"n'lJ ,' " 1S e call what Is proposed "Senate nnu,m- rur mea is mat aDDoinTThmrsn thw their own " i,P,, 11, ir ... vacancies. That, of course, was the original idea behind the in "mutton of toe Senate It supposed to be a chamber where trie wisest, sanest most exrier - 1 ienced "elder statesmen" would p r o v i d e for sober "second thoughts" on legislation passed 1 u t . mons. Imagine the public reae- tion even now, if the Constitu- tion of Canada described the Senate as it actually is-about as follows: I "The Senate shall be composed of 93 members, who shall be ap- pointed for life, on the basis of their loyalty to or. hold over) the party in power." AS IT HAPPENS, CANADIANS have a good test of the present government's sincerity in re- rj to the Senate set-up. . r years Past Agnes MacPhail s name has been men- I I ,in v.. ui I for appointment by a govern- meni wuana to make even a House of Commons from 1921 to r40 IZ Tot she o Canada s tirst and foremost most woman woman Mi MP, but actually one of the most useful of all MP's who ever sat in Canada's Parliament. At present, Miss MacPhail represents East York in the Provin cial Legislature of Ontario and incidentally, has more oeoole in made it impossiole for Agnes ta continue on the public stumu 0 oast' MUs Mac" dVT , Q.Ua feS beyond a11 others, Z ceuence.' tl SUteSman par , HERE 13 A LITTLE INSIDE Ottawa story: 1 Away tack before Hitler's war, a famous EuroDean sculntor came to Canada tn rtn . hs. nf -uT-T- Kina ,d his choice. He did one of Agnes MacPhail which he bequeathed to become the property of Canada on the death of Canadas first woman MP. Now let us think a minute what j this means. It means that, after Canada's first woman MP passes along, a bronze likeness of her head will very properly grace our parliamentary Hall ol Fame. out wnai a commentary on the littleness, even meanness, of tne game of nartv Dolitics in Canada that Canada's first woman MP has not long since been maue u senator I ve are a strange people we Canadians. We pay great tribute to our trail blazers and pioneers and our William Lyon Maoken-zies, Papineaus, Woodsworths and Agnes MacPhalLs, but up UU now, only after they are in ttie stone statue stage! Jubilee of Lethbridge IBTHBR1DOE (f This south- 'nv Alberta c"y of 23.000 popn- lation built on coal but burning natural gas now is celebrating ,11a 80th birthday. Ono of Canada's fastest - grow - Ing cities, Lethbriduc's popula - ion only 10 years aeo was 14 612 In the last fuur years it increased 27 per cent, compared with 21 npF r.nt. fM r.il .hru.mir.n ton. Coal, Irrigation, farming ranching and the North West Mounted Police hav" ryn the I-Pthbridee dtorifTaTrtef claims iu lau.o in u,c ou yrars since me city ws Incorpoiated In 1891 " I ',1 ,' T -J V l -,! " . t. T 1.' -. re, p . p., ia , ,- ' ' ;..f 5. , u ' -r 4 'K , V, 0 ' :, ;.Vi i If ' t 1 ' iU - r it. Via t .f ; - i (ft it for ending the war in Korea conflict there is almost a ' j i x. 1 ; I SOUglll iu ll'i unburn ; area. But there must he against resumption of Red ; j ; : i ! ! I ! la i u m ; million-dollar Industries like sugar beet refining and vegetable canning. The Mounties from nvarby Macleod brought stability to the rnvlpac r.trlnn in Ilia f iaiiI iuh days, paving the way first for large-scale ranching and then farming. Much of Alberta's No. 1 hard wheat is produced in the area. Crop failures are few. I 1 Bl" coal 400,000 tons is pro - 1 ' duced annually by Lethbridge mines has been the city's back- bollp lown through the years, Nlck Sheran, American gold J.eekeT. lailllil it In nut rrnnni n ith j along the Bdly River some 80 Vais ago. It was developed with Kngllsh . capital by a company organized by Sir Alexander Gait, one cf the Fathers of Confedera- 'steamers, shipped the coal out to roo .,,,,., i "t of them Nova Bcotla miners. I , . , fNfl c picnic h Planned Th Prinnp Plinprt Rnuinpce j holders were Mrs. Betty Stewart, Unio- u ,., ii,.i,. r i.. tr.-x 'day a picnic would be held at lsafl Lukes we ther Permitting 1 If It rains, hTverf v." memoefs i APSLEY, England fr Bed - ihwll niunufontnroH in 1838 wvre sold at an auction ln this 'Hert J it m Phone 644 people want to know," Marquis 1 said happily. And Individual pay $35 a year and business firms up to $2500 to get his -i answer. I His highest current loh is In find a pretty gal relative of' Bathsheba. the Biblical siren. ' xnu commission came from a film studio which poured out $3,000,000 on a movie called -riuuiH rH..U W11U ii Bathsheba." It is lnnlfinii Inr a ulnmnmiiji femnle descendant of Bathsheba to help publicize its venture. "There are at least severil hundred thousand descendants of Bathsheba alive loduy," Mar- quis said. One query he got was "How many toes does a tiger have?" A prominent museum told him a tiger usually had five toes on each of Its front feet and fo'ir on each of Ju hind feet. DU-satLsfied, he checked further and found the nearest live tl- gers had five toes on each paw. He notified the museum. They rechecked their stuffed tlae's nrt ti d "Snrrv Vnu're r uh- Five Is correct." EXPENSE TOURS II CANADIAN ROCKIES. 2-day, 4-day, 6-day moun- SHINGOLEEN Made in mony attractive colors, Shingoleen beautifies and protects old and new shinglw and fences. ' A HOLIDAY to tit your purse Thompson Hardware Co. Ltd, .rfrt. spieading rd , In Ihe " tSey,au,ar "X beginning of Senate improve-ftium, 1 ley werfr laler rpP'ac-ed brlnr; may more riches mpnt , . . h n IDQ-mtlo fail,,. at, r.r mi-ii. ,J'AT- A " 'g ,"If:J?M rteld foot uuMrwhtohbMm n' rou1 wt- ! As everybody knows, Miss Mac-atPincher Creek, with the great- . Phail sat continuouslv in the Woman is Editor Of Encyclopaedia LONDON (CPX-In the middle Of thp f Ivino-hnmh nttaolro rn London in 1944 a woman began t0 edit a new edition of Cnam. ber's Encyclopaedia Mrs. Margaret Dorothy Law is the first woman to undertake a ,nru .hie b-inri n u .. nw. ik JX MMU UJ OUl.ll A V OO L scale, for sh aill hp rinnrihl for PlUhln, of 14,500.000 words in 15 volumes. Ml's- Law, herself, prepared one Quarter of the enownous Index, although she had a staff of 1Uu 10 helP ner. and 52 ad- VLnrv pHitnrK flh roa ;n nap cent of- tne Pae proofs and there were few days when she did not worlc at her office until late at n'8ht. Tall, well-dressed, handsome, Mrs- Law refused to worry about ner taslc- "You can't fuss over a lUD 1IKe lnal' sn sa'd- Members of her staff said she wuum seiue some mumy poini d-vi a iicmcu uwtuiuiuii mm ne". Peking up ner string baj of groceries, calmly leave to t,T , e X. n r R0Jne ?. ' ? .non- whereJ she llv"s; nuim anu g. own-up children. Not Relaxing Restrictions OTTAWA CP The government is not planning any immediate relaxation in consumer credit restrictions, Minister of Finance Douglas Abbott told the House of Commons Wednesday. Mr. Abbott maue tne statement in reply to questions as to whether action would be taken to speed automobile sales, decline ln which has led to lay-offs in the automobile industry. Skinnymen,women gain 5, 10, 15 lbs. Get New Pep, Vim, Vigor What ft thrill I Bony limbs ftlt out;uly bol-hivin Ml bp) ntL U lntta ilf-Btr ved, tick If "ln-nn-pol" look. Thou uikIb of Kirlt, women . mat. Who U-er HI Id italn tn-fore, tit now proud of ihtuely, hrlihy-Uiokliif Uxlitfi. Ttity tlitrnk Uii rial viitur-tniUdiRg. Aesb- UllUlUtl UlUir. 0irci, lu tonics, ttniilnTs. invliiflrt- I tori. Iron, tttkmln Hi, cil rlum, vmii'b liiood, )tpro j luoi jivei ynu nmt mrflRKtb md hwuiUIiiim-dl; put teuli m u(i bam untw. Gt Lovely CurvM 1h,a t tv&r kpmkis 'Itnj ft. Slop wlifti ion ic Kiiiifd ll S, U. IS or 20 lln. y.,u uwd a Top tioruml wniiltt, Colli Wtl. Nt-w "iiPl ft'-tjiutnfrd" Kite only tut. Trt famons iMrM 'tv.iiip Tnliifl for nf u koi iL btfl iMtintii, tUit ni (Uf. At ftll diuj(Kltl ! JOHN H. BULGER Optometrist ' John Bulger Ltd. Third Avenue -eU. known rmiArvtf'ln rriuila is ? m.H,s we,.ft,l not yet tapped by pipeline. ' Lethbridge's growth from a sirikll mining camp known first as Coal Banks,, is traced in a diamond Jubilee edition of the Uthbrldgf K.rald, published by Henator W. A. Buchanan. Mac Construction Company Irrigation has been a kev:arwi Prnfi.,noi ui,' -n..u factor ln the city's development last night at their regular meet- ner rlding tnat there are ln tne in recent .years. Nearly half of mg, conducted a raffle In which wlole of Prince Edward Island. Alberta's 638.000 Irrigated acres a picnic hamper and a grocery'. D,esP11 two serious heart at-are within the Lethbridge orbit. ! hnmnur wp. u,.,n i..,pW 7 uvJt tacks 'thrombosis) which have WILL DO YOUR JOB CHEAPER This year the $30,000,000 St. Mary darn biBKest earthen ilam Roofing . . . Siding , . Allerolions in Canada-aaid St. Mary-Milk 'and "CB.3 ticket number 354' witn, that zea' and faculty-rivers irrigation development will i It una MeeirtP,. that, n.w t,,: !or-fuh hch made her loved Estimates Gladly Given Black 6G0 S carry water to anothvr 300,000 , rei east and south of Leth - bridge. And a considerable per - Wan nf th siuwiim . V, M tain tourj at low as $41.50, Including sightseeing, room and meals at Banff Springs Hotel and Chateau Lake Louise. See any Canadian Pacific office or your own Travel Agent, i; . now win guests oi Mrs. Nora Ar-Rlver irrigation project, just nold taed. will he In the Lethbridge J trf . ... iniganuil, WJIK'n KOI lis first ::.Z ",,aua "ear m - '''eredlnm,,m - -!LL jPHONQ6ltAPHi Blue If IN EVERY LINE FOB ALL VSfS AND OCCASIONS HANDSOME LASTING LEATHERS SCIENTIFIC FIT AND COMFORT Viewed Shj&s stoics urn de ORMES vmfim Jhe Pioneer Druggists RUPERT RADIO : and ELECTRIC P.O. Box 1279 PHONE 81 fashion foptweai