Prince Rupert Daily News' Ray . . . Monday January 22, 1951 thur's headquarters in Tokyo, Is not standing for anyone over weight. He has issued an order entitled "obese personnel." He will not permit the command to be a haven for gluttons ami lounge addicts. He refers to individuals of "a flabby, soft, seam-bursting, bulging-at-the-mlddlc st fiei ts anil fem in iicqs As T- -'- 1 1 type who ubvloihl, too much or an, nut !" fflcient exercise." THINKS CONFLICT COMING , , Refugee Believes Russia Wants War-West Will Win TORONTO (CP) A former Hungarian economist says he feels a long and costly war between the western powers and Russia lies ahead. But he is sure the west will win. Ladislas Joseph Ti-nar, 50, former member of the Hungarian Sod:! Democratic party's economic department, said in pn interview on his arrival here: "It will be a long and costly - - - : ! indt pendent daily newspaper d?voted to the upbuilding of Prince Rupert and Northern and Central British Columbia. Member of Canadian Press Audit Bureau of Circulations" Canadian Daily Newspaper Association J. A. HUNTER, Managing Editor. H. G. PERRY, Managing Director SUBSCRIPTION RATES: By Carrier, Per Week. 20c; Per Month, 75c; Per Year, $3.00; Ey Mail, Per Month, 75c; Per Year, $8.00 "JS Published every afternoon except Sunday by Prince Rupert Daily News Ltd., 3rd Avenue, Prince Rupert. SlocL letliiciiuj SALE Fifteen cents seems a lot for a cup of coffee but that's the tariff In Juneau. The old price was ten, then the same as it is in Prince Rupert. There's also a ;- WARM WINTER CLOTHES BOYS' A Mi WOOL PANTS SiOYS' WIXDiSkKAKEIi Heavy weight pure wool pants, rins.-,. Just rlRht , Regular $5.50. weather. Reg. to 55.75. ten percent ho'.st in the coot of bread in the northern city. A sixteen-ounee loaf means 22 oents. Now i J3 $3.l war. It will commence, not not be be- and French books and started MEN'S ALL WOOL HKAVY PANTS. Reg. $9.00. Sale, n ,, ,.,,,h . : , , , . wnen, in ioou, nan, uuyp cause- By ELMORE PHILPOTT GOODBYE CANADA MONTREAL: Our f am-ily arrived' at the Vancouver airport with enough luggage to last me for a lifetime in India. I'm darn sure it was over the weight limit. But stilt the wife insisted that I bring along those two- hams!1 iuio kiu r""" lo smuy economic icseuicn anu . j ! ,.r tho vdnum of the Udmon t hUr.-.,.0 because tho they don rinn't t w-iii. want r ,n u. .,.i, took packed the plant v j - LjAiiiimii; In xii 1942 lie iuuiw yaii .. .. , i ii it, but panning. he part .t. The feeling that the west does ln an anti-Nazi clandestine in- ton Buueun aoouru a piumc PENMAN'S UNION st i rs Men s isi qumny. These it-sell for $3.75. Now per suit. MEN'S ALL WOOL SOX good working sox, from m, schooner and started Dumping , out from Winnipeg, westward ' bound, he never dreamed that seventy years later the paper would fail, because il was "too not want war has made Russia tellectiul movement as an ezo-eager and hungry. The tension nolttic adviser will not relux; it will break." i Germans In 1944 after lhe Budapest-bum Timar and his ovwrara Hungary, my parents wife, a former newspaperwoman. were killed by the Na: is My esaned from Hunuarv in 1!)48 ...u w,.,v, i..k i mo an, r IliQUK' : hop and I teave at . hmL successful." He never reckoned , (, j - wuu Metallic luoy nlr H-mt after the Russians UgnteueU 011 a dLal 11Ke lna- m noC fjBd, her again un.U: She just could not bear the " u" "" -"""" 1945, I HftCf t9 MCIR MK OUriilS " I Me. nf m twrln. Hrmn nv .,r I . .... . . "? .7., ...v...,' waited in. Austria until they got th Budatiesfc siese. I was found.1 An Englishman or title (Kacn- niendb in England with nothing permission to come to Canada. , maaspd eseaue from a Ger- elor by the way has shown Low "Hunearv is a verw sad coun- i.. ,a ,.,,,.11 nmr tn stnn n bahv from crvine. Hold from Canada, but one guy with a hearty appetite. tr today," Timar said. "It ex- . th Russians." I the clll(l upside aown and give So. here I am ln Montreal, all ists on a five-year plan in which After the war, he resumed his a few good, strong jerks. with the Social Democratic Mrig ceases. Just silence. And ....min rtmani an unmarried man lj make a! set to take oft for Ireland and ' I was forced to participate, des-London. Come to think of it, I pile the fact I was opposed to must not omit the touch down it. Actually, it is nothing but a point ln Newfoundland. It will plan of military preparation. I and remained with It until it discovery like that! if VV- JJ X L ended in 1948 with a Communist be oe my my first ur.it visit visn to to what wnat they iney wanted no part of . it iu. ri'pfiti Prim-to that he ha-1 ' Some lime next month JOC used to euU the Old Colony, now He "aid the work of laborers ww...v . .- .w...w U Louis, who latelj suffered de-1 i Vino nlflnL- F H nnrl tliil feat at the nimble fists of Ezzard We May Lose Out PRINCE RUPERT is going to have to come to grips effectively and right soon with the housing crisis or it is going to lose potential population. It. may not be even able to hold what it has. That is just about what the position is today. Big industry, for which we so long hoped, has come here and is about to become established in permanent production. Management says that one of its major troubles in obtaining permanent personnel is that they cannot be assured of housing. Possibly, housing is not the only thing in connection with which Prince Rupert is finding difficulty under the new conditions arising from the advent of big industry. It is iiard for many of us to adjust ourselves to the fact that the old, easy,, small-town days are passing. Prince Rupert is now on the wiry to getting into the bigger town, class and we are having to change our ways of doing things. As for housing, if some ways and means are not soon found of meeting the situation in a substantial and effective way, we are liable to find prospective new residents people who would stay here if they could find homes going elsewhere. Take Port Edward, where Columbia- Cellulose and Nelson Bros. Fisheries are located and where there is a new townsite available. People are liable to start establishing themselves right on the ground out there if they cannot find suitable accommodation in Prince Rupert. There is no point,- of course, in suggesting that this person or that person, this concern o that should- do something about it. A serious housing lack situation has developed and, if there is nothing that can be done about it here, we need not be surprised if potential population and potential business goes elsewhere, .This is a problem which requires all our resourcefulness to solve. Charles and then went out and. toyed with Freddie Beshoi-e. vill have another fight. Louis U 36, but he's still- trailing the championship. He can't escape the noi-tion that he's better thun Charles. Well, we ll see. Decome me rvew rrovince. u"11""1 a"u u,,,.lrta,v ,.. pa,. mi, and Hunr a state coal nunt ana nnn hours are long, rounded out with 000 prcducUon had been almo.st lectures on Communism. ONCE ON THE PLANE I wasted "The Russians have good trebied-no time getting to sleep. I guess weapons. But the people in Hun- "When the Communists trans-the strenuous job. of getting gary have no boots or clothing, formed the coal mine from my ready for the big trip had worn Hungary is a rich country that business model into a Soviet me down. Anyway,; I fell into a now is turning to ruin. People model, I resigned." deep sleep," and never even are not getting proper food. It Then came his flight to free-bothered to get off the plans for is all being sent to Russia." j dom. the usual leg stretching at Cal-1 PROFITS TO RUSSIA gary. - ; 1 The Communists have nation-1 I allzed everything in Hungary but Celanese Veep But lust about the time when FOOTHILLS "HARD ALBERTA TELKWA COAL ALL SIZES Lump . . . Cobble . . . Egg Nut and Stoker PHONE G51 For Immediate Delivery It took Jim Corbett three years to feel convinced he would never regain the title. He was gemic-maniv and stubborn but he never got it back. Jim Jeffries saw to that. He also accommodated FitzAmmons. Jeffries, when the I ' "le factories once owned by th Du(J This Week . we were due to get to Winnipeg we made an unscheduled land- aer Russian ownership now and Georga Schneider. vice-pi-e;ii-their profits are sent to Russia, dent of the Celanese Corporation ing at Rivers,- Manitoba. It stvms that Winnipeg was either fogged PHILP0TT, EVITT & ( time came for him to ivtire, un- Timar said je had undergone of America, is due in the city by iin or iced in; we never did find the nardsnips of two ODcupa- tomorrow's plane from New York defeated, thought he would stay BlILMNG St'PI'I.reS UUl WHICH. I U,,n,rr,.. fivot K.. 1 h n U f o Kit, r-.u.-t- I.l'MBirt that way. However, he wasn't through. Why couldn't he trim Jack Johnson just for old times sake. " Johnson put him away permanently in fifteen rounds. I Anyway, uuwn we ceme at what! Germans and thea by the R js- odical visits of inspection to Co-used to be the air navigation sians. " lumbia Cellulose Co. mill eon-training base in World War II. t After the German "break- struction at Watson Islcnd whi.-h It Is now the centre for all air- through in France in 1940 out js now nearing completion, borne training, armv. navv and off business links between his, . PRINTING jrx us Mllburn, MacAr- General General Brigadier csmmandin; sr force, we were told. However, homeland and the west, Timar If there are any navy chaps there became a translator of English C.se- Classifieds, for Result.. Hiqhcst .Vi- ALL I Expert: Vcrsolii now they must have slept in. We I saw plenty of army types and a Quolity 9? 09 few air force fellows but not a single navy blue uniform. 0O0 . THEY SERVED US a hearty O n O I army officers' style breakfast at Rivers: Ham and eggs and really Dibb Printing Co and how one great business helps provide them for Canadians Newspaper Publishing wonderful coffee. 1 The mess hall Is typical Cana- PHONE 2J; BESNER Bl-OCK v V A1TIEI) anff complicated are the problems of i forWbie furniture. The place is MStf f sxb e .1 f V U3-NOW is the II to get your SLEIGH! clean. The prairie girls who run the kitchen and wait on table are lean, efficient. . The officers you see around the place- (as distinguished from the students! are the cheery look-, ing, typical army type. I noticed that most of the young officers in training wore service ribbons. That is they were veterans of the jcond World War, preparing for a third. 1 Some looked to m? like the kind who. say "okay if I have to go again I'll make darn good andi sure-that this time I'll be ln the i ,1 mTi mat 1. Security far Wives and Children. To a good father, the most important kind of security is that which provides enough income for his family in case he dies prematurely. That is why today most Canadian fathers have life insurance. It offers the sasiest, surest way to protect dependents. A total of $83 million was paid our in death benefits fast year by the fife insurance companies in Canada. For many widows and children this money brought desperately needed security. job I want to be in, not the one i somebody else puts me ln." One youns; RCAF chap, with ribbonless chest, looked lonely to 2. Security for Later Years. Every worker must retire from hit job tome day. And, for most people, Hie insurance has proved the easiest way of providing income for that day of need. Life insurance is flexible, too. It meets the needs of millions, of people whose financial problems and living standards vary greatly. fn 1950, a total of $145 million was paid fo living policyholders! This money helped thousands of people fo retire com-fortably, travel, end make many of her dream come truel l-Mssw.sssss i . i..,.,-iil.sseiis"''1' V newspaper publishing' co-ordinating the various factors concerned with the business. The case of the Edmonton Bulletin, suddenly suspending ptibl'ication, is an illustration. Usually when a business" suspends it is because of a falling off in trade 01;. straight losing of money on business done the overhead simply being more than the ""' revenue. But these are not the factors in the case of the Edmonton Bulletin. V s business has been increasing and, apparently, it has been profitable. It has simply run into an impasse where a million dollars is required to provide plant to keep up with the volume of business and, further, it is finding it difficult to obtain newsprint the principal material that a newspaper uses. In short, the Edmonton Bulletin has been too successful, as Publisher Hal Straight says, Somehow, it is difficult to believe that the historic Bulletin, which has come through many vicissitudes and has had its ups and downs in a checkered career, is really through. 1 The Bulletin may not have been Edmonton's largest and most flourishing newspaper but,, somehow or other, Edmonton will not seem Edmonton without it, any more than Vancouver would be Vancouver without the Province, Winnipeg without the Free Press Toronto without its Telegram and Montreal without its Star. They have come to be institutions which have withstood the test of times good and had. FISHERMEN . . . me. He sat alone. oOo MY SEAT MATE told me that I snored all the way from Rivers to Toronto. However, he assured me it was not too bad. It was a lucky break for me that we were late. Instead of going right through to Montreal it gave me the chance to lay over For complete overhaul of your High Speed Oasoline Engines, see Rupert Motors Ltd. 0 We have the trained and specialized equipment to perform this work for you efficiently and economically r Tno"tn for "-or s'v tr-nrS-and visit my mother and father, bctli stil.' going- st ons at age 85. oOo AFTER- A GOOD night's sleep In Montreal I had to visit the ultra modern Aviation Building. There I found the TCA boys chuckling with glee because their plane had beaten the RCAF to the rescue of Prime Minister St. Laurent, stranded in Iceland due To avoid delay this spring whf n the rush is on, let us have that Job now. Rupert Motors Limitei to failure of the RCAF engine. 3 Security of a Job. To earn the money which provides all other kinds of security, a man must have a job. Life insurance htslpu create jobs - by investing policyholders money in securities which finance the building of new schools, highways, power plants and other public works and vital industries. Life insurance companies invested more then $200 million in ways which brought progress and the security of obs fo Canadians from coast ro coast during 1950 1 There is a long standing war on between the RCAF and TCA 4. Security of a Home. Most Canadians own their own homes. In this way they enjoy the double security of an investment and freedom from house-hunting problems. Many of these homes have been built with, money invested on behalf- of) policyholders ty life insurance companies. last year, many millions of dollars were invested in mortgages on homes ey the life insurance companies in Canada. These investments made it possible for thousands of ramifies to enoy added security. over whether the American' made Pratt and Whitney or the w ALLACE British-built Rolls Royce engine Is the better for their particular jobs. George Drew (ultra Imperialist) is a Pratt and Whitney (American) booster. C. D. Howe (formerly a U.S. citizen) is as British as John Bull when It comes to. airplane en- Pharma e In these four important ways. Life Insurance helps Canadians in every walk of life to. face the future with greates confidence. It ie the nations greatest single source of personal financial security for today and tomorrow! Each year this giwae business has grown with people's needs. And today, the more than fifty life insurance companies in Canada look for w aid So serving aft evea greater number of policyholders in 19S1 1 Soviet and India news is that Prime Minister Nehru may LATEST visit Moscow and Poiping to discuss a new peace plan with Stalin and Mao Tse-tung. Joseph Stalin will, doubtless,, be happy to receive Mr. Nehru, and he may take the opportunity to express his sympathy with India over the results of British "misrule" about which Soviet trouble-making emissaries in India have been talking. He may even offer to. send Mr. Vishinsky to settle the dispute over Kashmir. If this offer were accepted, and Mr Vishinsky should fail to settle the dispute, Stalin would send . gines Hence the TCA chuckles at the discomfiture of the RCAF when HOURS: WEEK DAYS: TCA brought home the bacon, your Ambassador of Security. Thanks to the helpful services of the trained life underwriter, almost 300,000 new policyholders in 1950 have the security which can be provided, only by life insurance. Today nearly 5 million policyholders own Hie insurance totalling !5Yi billion dollars t pardon me, I mean the prime minister. 9 a.m. to 9 P p H O N E 7 9 SUNDAYS: Daily Health Hint A report from 12 Noon to2p" 7 p.m. to 9 P " in Russian garrisons to preserve order. Mr. Nehru, however, is not likely to fait for such a ruse to gain a foothold in India ; but a little first-hand experience of Soviet diplomacy might remind him of the value of British rule and the benefits of remaining in the Commonwealth. The LIFE INSURANCE COMPANIES in Canada and their Reprtwanlattvvs WORKING FOR NATIONAL PROGRESS . . . BUILDING PERSONAL SECURITY i-'SM For mild exercise there Is nothing to beat walking. Walking moderate distances between home and work, or school or between any two points for that matter is most stimulating. i9 ' j I' SIX! It STKF.ET AND THIRD AVKMIE