"well that ..the - Western Allies' dered state of mind. They don't Prince Rupert Daily News As I See It SATURDAY and MONDAY SPECIALS of y Friday, May 25, 2951 end Boys Clothing & Shoes ot Real sQyin9 MEN'S WEAR DRESS SOX A large selection from which n i to . B'rorn ch". SUBSCRIPTION FATES: By Carrier, Pr Week, 20c; Per Month, 'f75c- Per Year, Jt, " $8.00; By Mail, Per Month, 7ic; Per Year, $8.00 fJ ft ' several stories high. They desperately needed the space i accommodate UiJ foreign trade buye.'s comtr.a to the trade fair. Two weeks befo.'e last year's opening they sia teJ to build. Thev were actually doing business two weeks lat.'r on the first two hotel floors. : I AM ASSURED HERE that it is not unusual for a bricklayer to lay 1800 "eighteen hundivd bricks per day which is about double what trade union resun- must nut only keep Western Germany strong and iafe in the Western camp. But they al;o know that the Allies have to keep On coming across with the funds to keep them strong and prosperous here. They are plav-ing a iso fan polite game of mild blackmail. I Later in this series, I shall I discuss the political situation j tiere for we are hre on the very eve cf the Lower Saxony election, which will show whether a Second Nazi rise is or is .lot a possibility. Impress me that way now. Two years agn. women glared t my window - shopuir.a wife. Few tsmile at foreigners r.cw but none glare. I have a hunch that the mi.r politically highly educated Germans are laughing up their sleeves at the predicament of the Western Allies. They ar? letting us stew in our own jui-e. Are the Germans the prisoners of the Allies? Ci are the AlUej the. prisoners of the Germans? The Germanii know perfectly Trade Willi China P si- WORK SOX-A big variety of good quality from HSIItUAIEN'S Pl'LLOVER SW'EATERS Warm w Regular S7.75 . . "'mNavy DRKSS HI1IRTS A'll WPlkUT uiiil,... """"' perfect fit ... S1.9S u, n.ar4 nuui, .-ii 1 1 3 me latest dciuble-breasttd fine wool suits ' TKOl'SKRS Zipper and button fronts. All LAY 1800 A DAY j HANOVER, GEli-;MANY. We were amax-1 ed when we visited Ger-i many two years ago to !find that, even while the k-ities lay in ruins, Ger- sizes li; Nw $10.00 u. sha?is, stripes and checks KAIN'COATS These are a real buy at DKESS SHOES Excellent fit, from j lion w ould permit in nmiy Western countri" i ! tin New York a coupm of y?a -s back, I was investigating this j same matter, and the avera , ! there was around five hund:v:i ; per day.) j I Maybe what. 1s poing up lni" in Germany U what we cail jt n . j built, maybe it is pretty hhudrtv j l.'.tuff. It so, you can t tell i' ; . from looking at it. ! i I THEY TELL ME THAT POV- : erty is still harsh and wide- j i spread here. Unemployment '..tands at about 16 jrercent t i j the tctal working fores i.i SG.25 u WORK SIIOI-:S RnllHlv hullt ,t , , . iSwvj is W 1 1 ' 1 1 Ki in I'll n i vim many was offering for iale manufa:tured goods witn 1 which no other Eu -opean coui- try could beat, or easily equal. : BOYS' WEAR PANTS -For Dress and School. Well tailored for uerl- Pll.tlt V lit UA.ll l r 1 T7r7r ... M I I s-ti ni.MMinr..iii.it.i i-arijo vanity, lull zipper Perfect lit 52.95 1,1 DKESS SIIIUIS Nicely tailored. Sizes Small Mediu I.arte iome cities in the western zones. As it hapepned, we had io , spend three veiy-early-morniu ! .hours in the railroad siulu;:i here, waiting to clear oil' baggage through customs. Tli""'1 were hundreds cf people in t crowded waiting room who had obviously spent most of tlie hihn Uiere. I first thought they were M-cteiers who liked to sit up r.!l night drinking beer. But on A W;.. i , fit RUNNING SHOES P.OVS' AND (WRI.S" RI NMNC SII()S , MM.INti OUT AT Oi l) '!( KS COMFORTERS factors, perhaps Snevitably, seem to EMOTIONAL enter into any discussion of the question of a possibla embargo on trade with China. The ordinary man is apt to fed that the Chinese are "the enemy" and that it is-rong" to trade with the enemy. Then there are others whose judgment is determined by their hope that a peaceful settlement is just around tijtfeonier and can be had if only the United Nations refrain from doing anything that might irritate the Chines. I But emotions are dangerous guides in such matters. This is a complex problem whicli calls for cool thinking and a cool assessment of the advantages and disadvantages of any line of action. And, first of all, it seems necessary to get it clear, what we are thinking about, because words like "embargo" and "blockade" are being loosely and indiscriminately used to describe three quite distinct tilings. These "selective embargo," the are: first, the so-called decision not to export to China any of the goods which are now called "strategic materials)" and used to be called "contraband of war"; secondly, the complete embargo, the cessation of exports to China kind thirdly, the blockade, the of every sort and ; use of naval forces to prevent the sending by sea to China of goods from any source whatever. The selective embargo is the proposal which is now under consideration at Lake Success. The member states of the United Nations are being invited to stop the shipment to China of arms, ammunition, and items useful in implements of war, petroleum the production of weapons of war. The view now" generally being accepted is that both a general embargo and a naval blockade are policies to be avoided, since they would do far more harm than good; but that the policy of the restricted embargo the denial so far as possible to China of all overseas supplies of war materials for her troops in Korea is the one w hich should be adopted. Is Buried at D )iil)!c bed size comforters I talking to tome of tliein. I Nnw lri : hop and X 'ave at There were at t.iat time trade faiii on in Britain and here in Hanover. Our observation was that the German range a. id quality was quite as good as th-i British and the prices were definitely lower. Now the contrasts are even more striking. Today we visited the great continental fair grounds and on the eve of the 1951 exhibition They claim here that this fav has already grown greater than the famed Leipzig affair, whicli, they say here, has gone swiftly downhill since the Russian occupation of Eastern Germany. We have no way of knowine whether such is quite true. But even my layman's eye can, plainly see why the reviving Germany in getting more and mpre. of tiw world's business. . x THEY ARE ON THE job here. They have technical plants as good as any in the world. And they have a very high technical know-how. But also, they know how to buckle lu and work right dowa at the level where it counts. Fram my hotel window I look cut on the main square in this town. A block away is a big luxury hotel, wii.ll a famous larr.e. Just a year ago there was only a heap of rubble where that famed hotel aain stands now .s -.V- t NOW IS TH TIME TO found that some wera rcfugeen from the Russian zones v.:na were travellers who could not ai ford a room or hotel. oOo ONE NOTAELE DIFFERENCE IN Germany between the liKl and 1951, scenes is that f a ' fewr; Allied occupation troop are i i evidence. It is no military secret thut there are more, not fewer, Allied soldiers iie,'e than there were in 1949. Hence I can only conclude that they are on more (" an "alert" footing. That Is, mor-j of them must be out on tha military front lines, for they u: t aren't around the towns in suc numbers. The British Uoops you do see look very young, and a little lonely. oOo TWO YEARS AGO, THE GF.H-nian people M'emed to ue to hell a most confused and bewil IMiluily '.lorl ii,Uin- are llie finrnt umlrr lUr sun. ami in nil tin- rnrliunlinn ruliiri of llie raiiiUiw. ItriliK-ii lip yiiur iiiialn ami parties with I hew rol.irfiil imikiii. 'I lny Hiir mi miirll muhIuiik you'll fiml tlie prii c jii!l pi rfrrt fur any luilu'l. RE-RO0 We will do the job! Asphalt or Cei Shinglcs tit the Rvnt nf Tasle, Aiuay FOR ESTrMATTS phone 909 GREER & BRIDDEN LTD. fo H n Weiiave the following units in stock for immediate 6-1 Two '2-Ton Forgo Express Models t (Kluld Drive equipped) One Plymouth Savoy Suburban i f & - Thl.. vehicle is tlw ultimate in smart utility tramp in the popular price field. Egg Island Lawrence Dupute, 38-year-old lighthouse keeper at Egg Island, who died of self-inflicted shot wounds last week, was buried Monday on the little reef island 240 miles south of Prince Rupert. THe lighthouse tender, COS Alexander McKenzie, Capt. Norman- McKay, made the report to the Department of Transport office here following the tender's return from Egg Island at 2 o'clock Wednesday afternoon. J. Souter, from the Seal Cove stafi, remains ou the island as temporary lightkeeper, pending decision of headquarters at Ottawa whether or not Mrs. Eliza- Rupert Motors' Limitd CHRYSLER, PLYMOUTH. FARGO DISTRIBUTE I become , fc ' .t 3.'. ! " NOW!! Commissioned Officers in the Canadian Army Active Force Armour Artillery Infantry FRENCH FRY , beth Rife will be allowed to become Hijhtkeeper as she requested. Mrs. Rife and her 15-year-old son are also on the island. Dr. and Mrs. G. E. Darby, of Bella Bella, officiated at the burial. They were transported by the Alexander McKenzie. A U T OM ATICALLY with a $34 95 Young men recently graduated from High School with a minimum educational standard of Junior Matriculation, may become officers in the Canadian Army Active Force I IF. hotel arrivals (Prince Rupert Mr. and Mrs. Brice and family and Mr. and Mrs. Huttrick and lamily, Ketchikan; Mr. and Mrs. P. Gaudry, I. Rinehart, R. E. Mawhlnney, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Burgess, Owen Humphreys, R. G. Nyberg, Roy Watson, Ednar Bell, R. Angus, F. J. Hardy, O. Sholten ; r y "FRYRYTE 1 Ju.st one control n set and your any food to perfection. NOW ON DISPLAY AT Northern B.C. Power C If accepted you begin training at Camp Borden as an officer cadet to qualify as a Second Lieutenant in the Active Force. You will receive Second Lieutenant's pay while in training. This training will consist of three courses totalling a period of twenty-eight weeks. When you are granted a commission you will then serve for periods of 3, 4 or 5 years as you choose under the Short Service Commission Plan. At the end of this service you may apply for a permanent commission. 1 his is a chance to serve Canada at a time when defence stands as a most important national concern. The training and experience Prince Itupert, R.C, and P. Veisluce, Vancouver; R. Parson3, W. J. Billmore, Mr. and Mrs. J. Trudgeon, Olof Hanson and Mrs. P. Carey and family, city; W. J. Pitre, Sooke; R. L. O'Brien, Kimberley; Mrs. F. Stafford, Pico, Cal.; Bill Zioklikouits, Prince George; J. McKergow, Vernon; G. A. Beare(P Edmonton; Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Stevens', Skidegate; P. Coffey, Denver, Colorado; H. D. Richardson, Winnipeg; Mr. and Mrs. R. Forrester, Flin Flon, Man.; A. M. Anderson, Calgary. We have just received a NEW SHIPMEN in leadership will be invaluable ajssets to any young man ot 4& "VT throughout his whole life. TO QUALIFY YOU MUST BE: Single Physically Fit Between 18 and 25 "yearVof ag A Junior Matriculation Graduate STEAMS TRUNK Makeyofi A Canadian or ether British Subject lection se stoci while our writ ,olc 1 1 ; -1 are com w a 4h mm mt. '- f - -WW t..,.- i n.nol Depot, 4050 W fourth Ave No. 11 Pertonnel V s. VANCOUVtR, A4IC Jit ' fashion footvec Trained United Strength is needed f? prevent Aggression I CLASSIFIED ADVEHTISINQ IK THE BiBX