Prince Rupert Daily News Monday, November 6, 1950 ReJ'lects tween Calgary and 'Edmonton. But he made no fortune. In 1000 he was in Boston, driving a street-car. He began learning some labor lessons there, watching relations between the teininisce FIND LIMESTONE . NEW DELHI P Large limestone deposits, estimated to contain 10.000.000 tons, have been car men and the company. - Gun) Shaw wanted F" ... ho m eht ZZ--tmFm " ' mm -srr WwV TTTt 1 ITjr; pVJTTt- ten or wry ""Jury received j ne seemea to do all right He drove cars by day, studied law by night, got a law degree from Northeastern University, wa3 made an assistant to the president of the company in charge Giant Canuck j To Guide U.S. Wage Controls By JAMES MARLOW WASHINGTON (AP) Can-adlan-born Cyrus S. Chlng Is one of the biggest men in the United States government. Sucking on a pipe, his lron-jrrey hair mussed, he's 71, weighs 230 pounds, stands six feet, seven inches. President Truman recently appointed him chairman .of the new wage stabilization board, a This resuut-u - posits are believed to be big enough to provide a cement factory producing 500 tons a day for 40 years. t ninety-'""'. ,yng is he survived ',nd lived as long as Nexs Classifieds i.iaKe Sales. Fire Bug Given Four to 40 Years CIRCLEVILLE, O. A 21-year-old circus roustabout, who admits burning to death or killing 172 persons during the last 12 years, was sentenced Saturday to four to 40 years in prison. Robert Dale Segree, a husky youth who says he set the 1944 Ringling Brothers circus fire in LlarU'crd. Conn., stood quietly as sentence was passed. He pleaded guilty to setting two minor Circlevilie fires. A flaming Red Indian, Segree said, tortured him into setting the fires. ui personnel prooiems. ile became a U.S. citizen in 1909, but he loves Canada's maritime provinces. Every summer he spend3 some time with fellow Americans nn the Tobiaun River around the .( anIll ?n White House the other jlr. Truman was hav- .V'V SIMPLE 7f I I1KWAI Salmon CHub In northern New Brunswick and viits boyhood nap Guards were on .,al The day misht ht a bit tedious . 4 Apply warm oil il frealy frmly . l : in vrli, II A mie ! f I At Kt drug- drug- 4 jl shots were cutting massaging to men wun ieveu k INSIST and glands. IV OH h aists' for 8J yxirt.rr.1 l (or tne nouse tu- spot not likely to be very amusing for a man whose huge face always wears an amused and happy look. Although he has plenty of savvy In labor relations, he'll prob r'ttin ai.-wnfrl ii Vv. tl - -j -, - 1 mi i nlr ,. rnl tjmenot a seconos 1 uncertain, amazed fj! Draw and shoot! ; who had that lazy tady. Blood was al- cron es at a ?dg? founded many vsa's ajo on the Murray River In Prlncs Edward Island. In 1919 he went, to work for the U.S. Rubber Company. Did pretty well there,- too. Started in on labor relations, in time became director of labor and public relations; and kept the Job till 1947. GOVERNMENT JOBS Meantime he filled a lot of jobs for me government. While in one of these povern- ably need all of it If the povern-rruent starts slapping control on FOUNTAINS FOR CANADA These two founta'- is in London's Trafalgar Square, replaced two years ago in the reconstruction of the world-famous landmark, have been given to Canada. The National Gallery has custody, but so far no one knows what to do with them. It is. expected they will go into storage in Ottawa In hopes they may fit Into the National Capital plan. (CP PHOTO) COMBINATION RADIOS 'some ardent Labor- ho would union-There are a few wages. Before it went home this year, Congress set up an economic program to combat inflation. This calls for an economic stabilization administration and u wage stabilization board. (If price 'controls are imposed U.N. feeling toward him, so it's said. ! From 1925 to 1931, and since ! 1910, he has been a member of ' curity Council faiis to handle the aggression immediately. The action was hailed as the most important ever taken by rtime miRni oe w- i strike complicate ment jobs as a member of a special board investigating the r ) th There could even the UN Assembly. tet al'Ti? witnour the advisory council on industrial relations of the National Industrial Conference Board. ' In the 1933 depression year he of all this salutlr.5. described as a waste was a business member of the- by the government., wage controls have to be applied at the same time. Ching will be key man In wage controls.) Ching was born at Red-Point, P.E.I., but didn't like digging potatoes on his father's farm. To Use Armed Force NEW YORK' ft The United Nations General Assembly Saturday approved by 52 to five a Western-backed proposal for a veto-free system of collective security, giving the UN the power to meet aggression with armed force on a few hours' notice. lean troopship that ,'s first ground party coal dispute in 1948 Ching received special attention from that well known acid-penman, John L. Lewis. ' Said Lewis of Chins: "In attendance is Ching, a truly re- ) markable man, who sees through the eyes of 'United States Rubber." i This seems not to have wiped j the grin off Ching's face. Not all ! labor leaders have the same acid i bom s;i r , Pacific aboard, r- "SIMPLE" LANGUAGE AUCKLAND, N.2. P A loc'il official reported: "It is obvious from the difference In elevation with relation to the short depth cf the property that the contoar is such as to preclude anv tl i-sonable development potent!, for active recreation." He meant the land ls too steep for sports. kohama last week ,to National Regional Labor Board of the National Recovery Administration. President Roosevelt 'in 1941 appointed him a member of the National Defence Mediation Board. uu tlrr would be At 19 he headed west to make his fortune as a buyer for a fel-ow IsUndcr handling farm pro-farm productions. Hi duties carried him back and forth be All hands were V For the first time in UN his omntly to Korea. tory, the assembly was empowered to ask for troops if the Se rcent of the Canucks trans. And it's Just U bcins descd'ofl Canada's wlndic;t have given the di:'.- Victoria but let inv iay, a town where ir Your choice of two Df tne f insst names in ry to fit, the hat or. worrv over keeping radio . . . of dust Ls deservin? It's one reproach be directed at Prln,? S-yiiiB Tho 0NLY combination with ) B ...I. J, o motm.i hanA "' " vW1:ti ri-"rr h1" F T A UiriAr. For 3 . Generations the t ehanre. 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