Prince Rupert Daily Mews roia Vancouver i Saturday) ---a. Davis, Dougim ecuiv. i ZumuwmiviHi w. a. Ameil of AIR PASSENGERS ."--, . uu"v. . . at! io ojna;spji toaiurciay Arc ine .Department gi Indian Ai- CREDIT IS'XIatcT- Mer.cus , Ocu-ber 10. 1950 ix. y, T. M. Christie, Mrs. Lang. Pierson. Mrs. F. Williams, Kiss f&U-s left my the noon rUnr for Guard it as a matter HED T It. L. Hanson, J. W. MPcrl, J. B. Morse, T. Paliant, Mrs. D. Pal- Vatu juvtr afif qwnd.ufi mIv cf Ptf An dependent daily newspaper devoted to the upbuilding of Prince Pihua To Vancouver and infant, (today) Mrs. Mrs. J. Ed- M. Bjornerud, Mow Chang. Mr. Tur-1 lant. Miss S. Pallant. we in the Jlf rict in .(-.ct hK uy me jjrn of the ' ' ' Rupert and northern and central British Columbia . 'uu, ner. iiuiifi Hong Viici: Cheng, Si F. . UJUUttl Cobbart. I. . i T . d date . - month and " com,,,.. waras, w. s. Arneu P. Chapman, r 1"HM" Indian v v"8f!e iiui a7la Mnj VW- nv !,-.. ) ;e . Member of Canadian Pi ess Audit Bureau of From Sandspit (Saturday) Circulations wr'dl'm' Laivrent'e pratt- Mr. and Mrs. Davies and two i Weut- Cdr. J, M. Oolby, staff in the opening of three new i CREDIT BUREAIJ Canadian Da41y Newspaper Association C. ph H. Walker. 0F Dm... ! 8chooIs- . G. A. children. C. Giddings. officer at H.M.C.S. Chatham, riuurt HUNTER, Managing Editor. H. G. PERRY, Managing Director I To Bandsplt (today) D. Shep- To Vancouver (Saturday) J. leaves Saturday for Ottawa on, "e ' SUBSCRIPTION RATES I herd, W. J. Findley. G. Steele, C. G. Owen, H. Wilson, official busings. j ciassiilea By Carrier, Per Week. 20c; Per Month, 75c; Per Year Ads Brlnp Result., $8.00; By Mail, Per Month, 50c; Per Year, $5.00. ANY worthy organizations conduct annual i anpeals for financial sunoort in Prinno T?n. w. 1r ..... . ;V:; ' :' pert. Another has been added. It is the Canadian National Institute for the Blind which is now having its first campaign here. It is to be commended f othe generous support of Prince Rupert and it is the generous support of Prince Rupert and it U accomplished. There will be no canvass but the ap-; peal will be conducted by means of letters inviting ; subscriptions, general advertising, a tag day, Sun-. lay evening concert and other efforts. The Institute for-the Blind, of whose good works we have heard considerable during recent-days, aims, in general, "to ameliorate the conditions " Wot the blind and to prevent blindness." Its services have become available to the local community , , through the recently established local branch which - is sponsoring and directing the campaign. .... PIME SOFT DRINK THE MINISTER of Finance called it a buderet (small size) to help prevent prices from going higher. One feature was an increase in taxes on - --corporations. Since corporations produce most " ' goods, and since taxes are a cost of doing business, all who produce goods must try" to raise pricesto recover their higher cost. Another feature was to add a cent to soft drinks and candy. Many soft drinks traditionally have been sold at five cents. The bottlers already . .We in a squeeze, since the 1950 nickel is a . "shtrunken and miserable caricature of the nickel of Mr. Abbott's school days. If the tax of one cent --StS SdeS (&S il likely will) the 1088 of volume to bottlers will reduce the margin so much that the price is likely everywhere to go to seven or eight cents. Mr. Abbott is bringing nearer the happy day of. the dime soft drink. - A third feature of the budget is the measure to fix minimum terms for,sas'pn the instalment and other credit plans.. This is n o-nnrJ thi n - a 1.".. J M ff i?" -r -'- ! i'v- ls--'-s 'lAiN X' ' r 4 i ;t " ' ,v '"'if ' V ' s- S ' , . . " - i- - ' '. 4 ':. ....... 5 7 "A ;i'ii;-',V! , 1 , ,, - " ,,' . ; : -Happy. sAhtm ft.. s ( Hill . ' , around. It is good that-dealers -and finance com-, paofes will not lend too heavily and it is even bet. , . Jer that buyers don't buy a new washing machine ...4Hea?t ""til they get the stove paid for. The catch is, however, that many a good lawyer believes the law is an encroachment on provincial rights. So nraybe Mr. Duplessis, who. is watchful in such matters, will bring about a contest to decide whether or not Ottawa can do it when there is no national "emergency." Mr. Abbott says that the government itself will reduce its spending on things not related to rearmament. Good intentions are duly noted. Mr. Taxpayer, however, has long been married to a wildly extravagant wife the government and he'll be worried into his grave before jshe -reforms ito the extent .of firinV One' Wirdresserjir one photographer in the film board. ' I. . JARGON LANGUAGE of specialists in any subject, from 'sport to religion, tends to grow away from common speech, Sometimes this is necessary, The ; physicist and the theologian, dealing with matters and processes not directly present to the senses, - are almost lorced to develop a language of their own to avoid the confusion that would ensue if thev used everyday words to express something out of the ordinary. , In other professions or trades, mystifying language, it is suspected, is used principally to impress the layman. The theory is that the layman will more cheerfully pay for services that he.be- lieves to be immensely complicated than for some- thing so simple that he can clearly understand it. That explanation may account for the writing of Isome academic economists. There are honorable exceptions, but the erudite economist who condescends to explain to the layman that two and two make four is likely to say something like this; "Under certain favorable conditions and when similar objects are in question, if two such objects are added to two other such objects, the total may ah most invariably be equated with four." Printed Word. SCRIFTVBE PASSAGE FOR TODAY ...... "Prove me, if I will not open the windows of Heaven . and pour you out a blessing, that there shall not be room :;Ct0 receive it." MalachJ 3:10. '