2 y HOTEL ARRIVALS T' f Prince Rupert Daily News port will become, permanently, one of Canada's chief strong- holds. Jewish DP'g Find Haven in Israel DRESS IIP Friday. May 26, 1950 Ray Reflects and Reminisces ; v a it 1-' iftr "fff 1 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier, Per Week, roc; Per Month, 73c; rer Teai. $3 00; By Mall. Per Month 50c; Per Year $5.00. igg?r5grv Canadians are being urged to use not flat but globe shaped maps because the latter show the shortest air routes around the earth are found in Canada, mure Matthew Halton, who went from Alberta to become a noted I Prince Rupert W. R. May, George Tough, J. ' B. Wright, J. L. Simpson, Van- , couver; S. Sondineck, M. Breino, : New Westminster; Mrs. O. J. Bindpage, Ketchikan; W. G. Turner, Victoria; Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Evans, Edmonton; A. Harmen, Mrs. J. McLaren, Terrace; Mr. and Mrs. H. Taylor, Cassiar; W. Hel&el, Juneau; Mr. and Mrs, Feeney, Cedarvale; Mr. and Mrs. T. Loop, Parkside, Sask,, R. J, 3 . 1 1 n V. ... n .-...-V. Frank Dibl cui i tuyjouueiit. overseas, is it' uer- man aujvmcic cise. miyune y- ) many this week to take a look at frig from New York or London to cities like Tokvo. Berlin Rnmo ! Moscow, will discover extraord- ' inary advantages. German youths .ho. he says, he's afraid will be worth looking at. It's like Uijs. According to Hal-ton, Russia is bent on creating a large army in Eastern Germany composed, mainly of ex-Nazis, who will be controlled and directed by Russia. Included will For hmk HERE ARE JUST xt OF THE GOOD YM Men's Pure Wool A Reg.$ 30.00. d I Now Men's Gabardine si H t styles and color, tit. Special J? Young Men's c PANTS-perIect fl Frum l Men's Union Stixsll " needle. RPg. $3 oo Now Only ' Men's HWDRKUrnia4 soft U'xture. " R. g. 25c Now ' I By' wivniiiiEAKii showerproof, all $4 00. Now. -Sf-Boys' PANTS for dr,?, school wr-ar, g00d J strung. rrom. A in town, for dri. . ,. 1 Someone speaking over the air, says he has been asked to define a totem. He cannot accept the suggestion that it could be described as a god or an idol, feeling that such would be distinctly misleading. His own guess makes the totem pele a family crest, a family guardian, or in other words it represents kinship. That's nearer the mark. 1 sMt & i IK ii : Iri'ie&i '!fTrrt'" ,f r'Jw,.in'n,MMa- mill t 'be hundreds of thousands of I boys, from fourteen to eighteen, jto be trained as young Germans jwere prior to 1939. It will be the Hitler build-up all over again. .Halton Is not without misgivings. Holmes, Vancouver; D. Matheson Watson Island; G. A. Cowafl, Los Angeles, Calif.; Mr. and Mrs. J i MacKay, Caspaco; F. E. Curtig, F. Threfal, Victoria; Ltd. Cdr. G. : Manson, West Vancouver; J. ! Gilen, T. Mobraaten, G. B. Simp- ! son, W. A. Matheson, P. L. Chaq-uette, G. B. Andrews, G. C. Mac-Donald, J. Clark, Vancouver; John Call, Ocean Falls; pr. Douglas Leechman, Ottawa; J. W. Pettigrew, Winnipeg; Mr. and Mrs. Ted Sheppard, Sandspit; J. W. Wiley, Port Simpson; P. Simpson, Montreal. RUPERT has lost another citizen of PRINCE sterling: worth with the passing of Frank Dibb. To his ho?t of friends the news of his death yesterday came with a deep sense of shock. He had passed one critical illness and was, apparently, making tuich good recovery that it had been thought he might have had many more good years. Resident of Prince Rupert for some thirty year?. Mr. Dibb had made a valuable contribution' to this community. First of all, he was a skilled artizan in his trade and his typographical handiwork was reflected in the product of his own business establishment, the excellence of which was widely recognized and greatly demanded. . Possibly Mr. Dibbs greatest accomplishment as far as public service was concerned was the personal direction of the planning and construction of Prince I Gay with flags the steamer ' Prince Rupert steamed toward (the dock at noon hour on Wednesday, May 24. Flags were num By agreement between Israel and the International Refugee Organization (IRO) of the United Nations, some 3000 displaced persons (ItiOO institutional cases plus 1400 dependents) will now find new homes in Israel. Here a Jewish refugee of German origin, suffering irom heart disease, is escorted up the gangplank of an Israeli ship docked at Naples by a Palestinian nurse and sailor. IRO will pay 2,5u(,000 to Israel lo help finance five institutions for aged refugees. Migration Of Asiatics erous, mats more man tan said for the city. rum 'Oc 0 1 Dominion Archaelogist Here to Trace Movement How strange would It seem, could one's hands feel the touch : I ,1 1950 MAY 1950 I JfJ " "' '' M' I 'ir " I jt, jtft Rupert's new general hospital built just before the 'of reins instead of a wheel! How Tracirig tne migration of Asia war, Chairman of the building committee he worked !many-living tociay in Prince. Ru" tics m North America is the fas assiduously on that project which might well be 12 3 4 3 6 UyP J32. 14 15 lySTiV 1 20 sjy cinating task allotted to Dr. Douglas Leechman, who will spend the next three weeks along the Cariboo trail. Dr. Leechman, archaelogist Jtvith the National Museum, Ot ! horse? Perhaps it might take a day to go thirty miles. But, why ; the rush? The road? Bumpy and narrow .like enough! And of j course, In time you paused in the j rippling stream instead of cross- i Inir Avpr thp lit tip hHrtp-A Fnr t.hp considered a monument to his memory. Mr. Dibb had also served on the aldermanic board in useful and conscientious manner. . Serious and hard-working, any job he undertook was always well done. Such was his nature. He was also generous and ever willing with his assistance. The Daily News joins with the rest of the community in extending to the widow, son and other bereaved deep condolences. tawa, arrived in the city aboard the Prince Ceirye Wednesday and is spending a tew days with SHINGOlcl Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Ellis who are here for the summer rearranging the museum. . Chief objects Dr. Leechman expects to find are implements, The ideal finis! sky had a robin's egg blue, the sun shone a friendly warmth, and jogging hoofs will kick up the dust. The horse had a thirst and how he did drink. Hardly a sound anywhere save the murmur of trees and distant warbling of birds. No where on earth a contraption that at first would be called the horseless carriage. Shingles, Fences arrows, Knives, sum scrapers, ! etc. Skin scrapers were used to rough lumber. MqJ ! il-SJ i -7 l! take fat and tissue off skins be a variety of ottrq colors. fore tanning. The distribution of i implements, he said, helps trace J Thompson Hordwi When the House of Commons the of migration the people who Co. Md. GOOD NEIGHBOR who are so anxious to cut all ties with THOSE Britain have today something more to think about. In a land long denied its own full needs was heard an announcement from far across the seas that dire distress had been caused in flood and fire stricken communities in one of its sister coun- went on record recently to take action aimed at reforming the Senate, that august body remained calm. There was not the slightest hint of dismay. Days passed and finally a resolution made them. There is an overwhelming amount of evidence of an Asiatic migration to America, Dr. Leechman said, although several other plausbile theories have been investigated. ! YSSSs is BAD for Cars Moving, Paiking, ( rijT Shippinj and .inir' Cdrtue ind Storaci was passed to the general effect Certain materials were found ! In AUTOMOTIVE tries 1 in the great "British" Commonwealth Of jthat reformation be applied to recently in the south Yukon Complete Reliable and I ' I I SERVICE as in any the Commons. And there, the situation stands. iciii oervics, also aiei. Canadian Liquid Air Co Mmnar io some lound 5u years I ago near Kamloops. Similar I samples have been found near thing else, you get exactly what you pay for Sleek and powerful, the gun Vanderhoof. Dr. Leechman hopes " ... ntiit.li-in.tl T 5 . . That s the reason to link them together and show for Oxygen. Acetylene sttd yeldl.-!? suppUfs. Lindsay's Cartas Storage Limited a why you're wise to bring the distribution continuous-elang the Cariboo trail. B.f. HflSHTAL.'Sfe.l.Si;R.lfE SERV1C E NOTE RETURN BILLING CERTIFICATE WITH YOUR PAYMENT your Ch.rysler built car to a man who knows it Another objective durintr hi I I Cor. 2nd and Park Av -i featuring the Reserve Army's j float in Empire Day parade sent .'one's memory flying back to the stern days o fthe early forties, when parades (and there were j many) revealed Prince Rupert as I both forbidding and formidable. The day may yet come when this best . . . Our trained mechanics have the Nations. Long before the government of that country had "fact-f inded" the needs of those communities a stratocruiser left Britain's shores bearing eight tons of scarce bedding and other materials for immediate alleviation of suffering. That is in addition to what individual Britons might have done. Total allotment from the government is nearly half a million dollars. It seems strange that a country "so removed from our way of thinking" should be so prompt in coming to our succor in times of distress. Perhaps it might be a wise move for us to bend our thinking so that it more closely resembles that of our good neighbor. Est. 1910 Phones 60 a r stay on the west coast is to determine the point where coast culture stops and the interior culture begins. 'Know How" to make CLASSIFIED ArWTPrtTlSTVri iw Ttitr nmw vrc.ro r, . -,,r I 1 hniniMillfflm!'fli!!ll!'!''-!mi!-'im-mirv''! I j . , . . . ij yiAi fAlOl I PtWM"'"1 1 li """-" I I1 I II II III Tf J. . II iiiiii iii.i iiiii.iiii.n.n njin. .m in mi i j , T.S.S. STEAMER repairs quickly saving vou time and money. Thev use onlv factorv enqineered and insDct-H narts nnd special for-rorv nporoved enuin- PRINCE RUPEI SAILS FOR PnnprtMnfnrcll'l I Vancoiw a.Tl InU'rrnt'iliatf Thursdoy at 11:15 p m. FOR KETCHIK GETTING GOOD REPORTS common occurrence in the newspaper business A is friction between the businessman and the reporter. Many of the former blame the latter for bad press. But who, cry the unbiased, is right? Writing in the May edition of the Harvard Business Review American, William M. Pinkerton, an ex-newsman (Omaha World Record, Kansas City Star, lVIDMCSDAY MIINf Fur Rcserv Write or ( f CITV OH W oifin: PRINCE HI I B.C. V iy ' ,Jt f 566 Service Dept. s M t XA' &J ; ' - ''MC.:; if 866-Parts Dept. f r 'tf be there! aHic the gray magic etc.) and now director of the Harvard News Office, argued that, contrary to the rantings of some people, reporters can be trusted to get things right . . . as long as businessmen tell them the facts. Incidentally his arguments were listed in the last issue of Time. Newsman Pinkerton compiled a few rules for businessmen to keep under the glass tops of their desks to help them get better relations with the press. Some of the most important are: 1. Put an officer in charge of press relations and give him authority to speak for the company. 2. As an outsider, the reporter "knows nothing ... he cannot be a specialist in your problems.'' But unless "you make him understand the special circumstances, the technical reasons ... he will fail to make his readers understand too." 3. Be helpful to reporters even though the news may seem bad for the company. Bad news (for example, a scandal or an accident) will be printed anyway and the story may be worse if the reporter becomes irritated by the lack of co-operation. (This is very important). 4. Don't mislead reporters: ''If you feel the temptation to lie, say 'No comment' until you get your imagination in check." 5. Stay "on the record ;" don't put a remark "off the record'' after it has been spoken. Pinkerton says; ' Properly used, 'off the record' means 'hear this and forget you ever heard it generally, a ridiculous remark to make to a news reporter.'' The Commerce will The united trading nations of the world will be there to buy and sell in one of the earth's great free markets. All the people of the world can not attend in person, but the work of their hands and minds will be there ... to speak for them in the common language of trade and commerce. VANCOIVER-MCTOK renins! mJVMJ ROYAL PORTABLE OetitonEASymMSi 'VvS omr R0YAl GIYES Yy 't&Li riHCEB FLOW KEYS (SPEED SPACER Al STREAMLINED BEAUTY "MAGIC" MARGI ( I 4 fsLT9 I 1 Reisiered Trade mark wrT"sJ j Only $00.00 cash ond $0.00 a yteM The Canadian Bank of Commerce will be there . . . Our branch on the Tradt Fair grounds is ready to supply accurate, detailed information about Canadian markets and opportunities . . . information from nearly 600 branches across Canada to help you do business. . Sunday, 9 p.m., Tuesday, 1:30 p.m. Coqu' ALICE ARM. STEWABI uniiT miviPSON ! H P Sunday, Coquitlam, 1ft 1 I "r.7oitEsi CHARLOTTE ISI AI ss. camosuu. rnirrll Ol tt' THE CANADIAN BAiTIK OFXOMMERCE CHAREOTTEISII 10 p.m. I BROS. LTD. N.rly 600 branch.. r, C.nda nd In i lcn,n' J E"- N, Yori'' f "U.., l Ana.l, $ttl., Pw4aiJ n.. I .... H FRANK i. SKINN'J Prince Rupert AjJ , m. prnKn w.n ndi Corr.tpond.nH throuhut lh World Our Trade Fair Branch is in The Administration Building X liilM