Prince Ruperi Daily News ! LETTERBOX mpnt and 1:, Tuesday, November 14, 1950 Ray Reflects and Reminisces died to Ontario. And the H of it is the stuff is scid. It is said to consist of water, monumental nerve, pine tar sugar and a faint maple flavoring. If anything intended for consumption should be absolutely as represented. It's maple syrup .maple candy, or maple sugar. It's the Canadian Adviser On River Project VANCOUVER -A Canadian will help to rf decide tho on the ... distribution .. lnnineer lt' Th. . TV As Mi i,e TRIBUTE TO BAND Editor, Daily News: - In this letter I wish to pay advise nn .... ",mt t e'opment An Independent daily newspaper devoted to the upbuilding of Prince Rupert and northern and central British Columbia Member of Canadian Press Audit Bureau of Circulations Canadian Daily Newspaper Association O. A. HUNTER, Managing Editor. H. G. PERRY, Managing Director SUBSCRIPTION RATES Although men -with loaded re- heartfelt tribute and "to extend very essence of Canada in her sincere thanks to a noble group j volver. were . racing toward his happlpst mood AnytWng Uelmand River between Iran or uanamans, tne Greenville ; , feels like a personal insult native band under the leadership I his underwear, was enjoying Sj quiet after-lunch nap, just up By Carrier, Per Week, 20c; Per Month, 75c; Pr-r Year, w $8.00; By Mail, Per Month, 50c; Per Year, $5.00. '"'lrSI By ELMORE PHILPOTT and Afghanistan. Christopher E. Webb, British , Columbia authority on water re sources, now is In the east as a member of the neutral Helman River commission, organized Tens of thousands of Europeans are said to be ready ',o stairs. The homey, the domestic touch! ! .Joying income tu of a flue musician, Fred McKay. This band, along with our own Prince Rupert Shrine Club band, made this Armistice Day parade such an Inspiring one that it will live long in the memories of all . leave for Canada, becaifse they en . BARE BABIES BAWL IF YOU WERE within earshot of a single baby's "This will be a hard, a long : feel 11 ,s better 10 be tllere. than and a bitter winter in the ru?- remain where they are. Wonder ged hills of Korea," said Bill J how miiny are approaching 40? Preventive War k IIIIMMHOaMMM who participated or watched. I wish tn cnnffrati.iof., ton.' Herbert of the CBC from Japan l f T "lYf.l ma vnn w.. ; those who planned the parade ! Sunday- 8111 knows he Is guess-1 so far this hunting season, - j f ma-ilia, iua-lll, you would do something and service in such a um no t, "'s "'b may iuu uusmci laianues nave oeen lew include for the first time this back and conclude he didn't lor-, if any. Years ago, it 'was not it get much. all uncommon for someone to about it. Today, right now, hundreds, ys thousands of babies be shot in mistake for Kama HEAVY PLAID A.L WOOL CITING SH,rTs All sizes. Usually to $9 00 BOYS' JACKETS. aU wool p.aids : wilh I BOVS- HO.MHFIt JACKETS -Warm and a OVS' TROl'SKUS- For schoo, and ,m,drrs T ' good strong materials. Nw at real barPaill excellent band and thereby adding so much to the day's ceremonies. Never before have I, fur Prince George is about to sub- Sueb- tragedies have happened mit to dollar haircuts and ac- near the city but it is well to; one, heard "O Canada" and "God are crying "ma ma" in war torn Save the King" played wKh'sufh ! cording to late word, barbers are remember that in the early days! depth and vibrant meaning as!toclay working aU day and half wr" veteran hunters lived here GEN. DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER the other day paid his respects to the theory of a "preventive war." with the fervor of a soldier. His words were: Possibly my hatred of war blinds me so that I cannot comprehend the arguments they (its advocates) adduce. But. in my opinion, there is no such thing as a preventive war. Although this suggestion is repeatedly made, none has vet explained how war prevents war. Nor has anyone been able to explain away the fact that war begets conditions that beget further war. Which raises the interesting and provocative question of what constitutes aggression and what may be defined as preventive action, particularly in take care of the there were also scores who had night they were played before the! Cenotaph on Armistice mornin crowd of ?5-cent customers. It's verT liule experience. The tend- bv the combined Greenvill. n.l , """ more man a lew " mu.a..j. Shrine Club bands. I am sure it s months ago since Prince Rupert who'waved farewell to six-bits all stirred the hearts of heard, as it did mine. managed to survive But when the parade was on its way back U th Canadian The armory building, where i the Legion lunched Saturday. Legion headquarters to enjoy an hour of warmth and fellowship. hlstory "at goes toj I know a lnmp erept into many Jrtmme,emfntf of Prince a throat when that inspiring TrfL, g ,y' m" native band turned down IcJJlI! Greece. Their families are lucky if they have one blanket per six persons. Most of th.e babies are wrapped in rags, and go bare-bottomed. They lack even elementary baby necessities like plain old-fashioned napkins. oOo WHEN I MET DR. LOTTA Hitschmana again the other day, after several years, I asked her: "What do you need mast?" "Nankins." she answered. "Just plain, ordinary, everyday old fashioned babies' diapers. We want the one yard square kind rnd figured material, made out r'f old curtains or such like, is best. There is a terrible shortage of soap in Greece, so we prefer napkins that are not white. But we want every napkin we oas get." oOo JUST BEFORE I MET the dyn-smic little Czech 'whom I myself named "the one woman army" her title which has since become international) I told the family that we would have to lay off anv Avenue alone, while the rest of v,7-7 VT r , " vuMiw. j was nie uiuy amusement centre of the kind In the the parade continued on to the Legion. Perhaps we all wondered WJ j dKUADWai CI north and, while Luke did not tlLi ,'aW hlch skate toward a fortune, he help forbade such fine of ; a group men ed a ,n provkUng entertai; CttUnit in the new city. Eventual T " ly. "re all but wiped out th . .v u ... I premises and construction of the i uuu me ureenvuie I arrrK)ry followed IM1 (QV CT,e4, 1L A mixture called maple syrup, costing 10 cents a gallon to make ami selling at $3 50, is being ped- SsJW j,J Hours: 7 a.m. n I ' For take home orders Phone 200 I more charitable contributions for uaiiu, niufr xur giving Prince Rupert the privilege or enjoying their grand music. May this be only one of many occasions when they will be with us. Thanks, too, to the Shrine Club band. They did the home town proud. HELEN M. DENNING. Member Canadian Legion Women's Auxiliary. Housing Man Due Friday awhile. The little blazing-blue eyed lady didn't ask us for any money But when we heard her eyewitness stories about Greece i:v vife and I changed our minds and handed her over $10. It made me so damn mad to think of the governments poi'r-, ing out billions to get ready for onother war while babies are literally bare-bottomed in Gr-cce Extra coirfort and less worl? SSLSd'flIwert-frult ITS CCflBeJlWltfl nUll ;H?-.;:UH: ! f' U i rauun. together with Kelh.g - . llf p 01611130 Ull 116316 iifunrTRop'Sraln tJiIHlP 0M fZWlfi. ) ;jp ! Low j C0$ - Efficient i nouruihment. It Kellogg r Word was received by the city' delicious! Double nutritioim! fjferfp p 111 I I that I figured we just had ro dx; . , I n-AKEa todayt You'U be gLl j -JrjH .. j I I AvOiloOle HOW Ot council at their regular meeting !a-t night that Mr. Brown, the housing commissioner, would be in Prince Rupert November 17 "nd 18. our little bit. For what good would it do tho.e bawling bare -bottom rd babies, or the families huddling together p.even to one blanket, If I merelv asked what those crook It. was suggested by Ald T. R R'ark that the commissioner fS fflfj Suit I M.rr Phone 3n f- f.k iwrw i m.if. iTfTITTj .'lit i f f meet with tne mayor and city council Friday. Aid. Georse fasey said he felt the people who had applied for housing should ed grafting politicians had don with UNRRA or Marshall Aid and all that sort of thing? oOo THE UNITARIAN- SERVICE Committee which Dr.- IiOU" Kitchmanova heads. Is not lik some others which I could mention, but won't, by name. It do"' not spend vast sums on new-paper ads and other public-it' (which in the case of one mam a""e a chance to meet th effi-J cials when they were here. I It was decided to have the mayor and city clerk contact Mr. . w ALLACE PHARMA Brown by telephone Tuesday morning to see what kind of arrangements he wanted to make so the council would have time to plan and advertise a public meeting If that was what wa3 wanted. USE YOUR CREDIT - DON'T ABUSE IT If you pay your bills promptly, any merchant or professional nan, anywhere, will cheerfully say "O.K." when you say 'charge it " CREDIT BUREAU OF PRINCE RUPERT moth help for Britain campaiff1" ate ud almost all the money contributed. What you give to Dr Lotta goes right where it i the present situation regarding Soviet Russia and the UnUed Nations. A large part of the world may be convinced that Russia is behind the nominal aggressor, North Korea, which has been held by the United Nations to be guilty of aggression. That aggression is now being dealt with although the participation of Communist China may complicate the situation. No international court, however, is in a position to render a formal judgment convicting Russia of aggression or on overt act to attack her neighbors. As for preventive war, the Christian Science Monitor comments that it is particularly unlikely, "even unthinkable, that any international tribunal would authorize the United States to unleash the atom bomb against a presumptive opponent that had not struck first and in great force. Yet the atom bomb is the principal weapon in the arsenal of the "preventive warriors." The possession of an international police force by the UN is an end greatly to be wished. But there exists only the merest embryo, a possible informal nucleus, of such an instrument in the international forces which have gathered in Korea. Behind any effective police arm it is necessary that a responsible legislative authority be organized. There is great promise of this in the recent vote of power to the UN General Assembly. Essentially the arguments for a "preventive war" fall back not upon any analogy to orderly government but upon an assumption that it is necessary to the survival of free Christian nations This assumes further that time is on the side of the Communists, that they are growing stronger while democracy is growing weaker. The Monitor does not believe that premise any more than it believes that the strength of Christianity depends on the adoption of unchristian means. With the devotion of a suitable portion of its production to defense, the United States and the non-Communist world can far outstrip the threat of Soviet Russian imperialism. THE BABY SITTER . ALTHOUGH "minding the kids" U an age-old practice, it is only within the past ten years that this activity has come to be professionalized as "baby sitting," says a government health bulletin. From an informal gesture on the part of some friend or relative, it is developed into a regular part-time occupation for adolescents of high school age. Baby sitting is found primarily in urban and suburb?.?, areas where the small family unit prevails. Here there are rarely grandparents or relatives to care for the children, as is the case in rural regions where the larger family unit still tends to exist. Young couples can no longer afford or are unable to obtain the permanent hired help that also served for sittmg. Thus, this source along with the source of relatives has been removed from the picture. As a result, the use of high school children as sitters has been rather widely received and accepted by those whotwant to get out for an evening once in a while but who have not been able to "because of the kid." This acceptance is not without reservation, however, since many of the parents are somewhat hesitant about leaving their children in the care of some high school student, often a strange one in the "friend of a friend" category. They realize that baby sitting is not merely sitting but involves the same activities that the mother would perform were she herself there. It involves responsibility, understanding, and knowledge in caring for small children. In other words, the baby sitter must assume the role of the mother for a few hours during the evening. HOURS: WEEK DAYS: 9 o.m. to 9 f t P H O N E 7 9 SUNDAYS: 12 Noon to2p. 7 p.m. to 9 p needed with less overhead cos' i than any other welfare aeenev I know of with the exception of the Quakers or Friends. 1 oOo APART FROM THEIR NEW ob- i Jective of covering the bare- : bottomed babies of Greece, Dr. ' Lctta's outfit, still runs war or- 1 phans' homes in France and Switzerland. It does" big-little things, which do not look so great on paper, but mean so mur-h to, child victims of the wars: ' For instance, there wer" many European children wh" , rseded such things as glass eye? . or artificial legs. But the Unltar- lans steeped into the breach In many cases and got to mutilated 1 ones to the places where such , ' aids w.ere provided under existing welfare agencies nOo I ALL YOU NEED to do to help j Dr. Lotta cover the bare-bet- ; SIXTH STREET AMI THIHD AVENl'E tomed babies of Greece is to ml' one or more napkins to the Unitarian Service Committee of 43 Sparks St. Ottawa. If you can snare a dollar or more send it along too. It will helD buy the soap to do the rest of the job. O'd nankins W1U do last, washed clean. Te Doc savs "t-V the women they don't even need tn the edg.?s just pink NOTICE Waison Island Stages Limited Announce Winter Schedules EFFECTIVE DECEMBER 16)h, 1950 - Time Schedule No. 3 Cancelling Passenger Time Schedule No. 2 For Passenger ani Express Service Between PRINCE RUPERT, B.C TERRACE, B.C. ROUTE TRANS-PROVINCIAL HIGHWAY VIA GALLOWAY RAPIDS HKIIX.K Reo Down Read Up Trip 1 Trip 3 . Trip 4 Trip 2 , T.-Thurs. Mon.-Wed. MI1ES Wa.-Wed. fue.-Thurs. Sat. Fri. Kri. Sat. Lv 9:30a.m. Lv 6:15p.m. 0 Prince Rupert Arll:20a.m. Ar9:15p.m. 10:00 a.m. " 6:45 p.m. 13 Prudhomme L Lv 10:55 a.m. Ar 8:50 p.m. 10:10a.m. " 6:55p.m. 16 Rainbow Lake "10:45a.m. "8:40p.m. "10:40 a.m. " 7:25 p.m. 31 Tyee "10:15 a m "8:05 p.m. ' 10:55a.m. " 7:40p.m. 37. Skeena " 10:00 a.m. " 7:50 p.m. "11:13a.m. " 3:10p.m. 45 Telegraph Pt " 9:45a.m. "7:35p.m. 51 Kwlnitsa " 9:35am. "7:25p.m. It 11.25 a.m. Ar 8.20 p.m. 58 East Kwinltsa Lv 9:25 a.m. Lv 7:15 p.m. 11:40a.m. Lv 8:25p.m. 56 East Kwlnitsa Ar 9:20a.m. Lv7:10p.m. 11:55a.m. " 8:40p.m. 63 Salvus Lv 9:00a.m. Lv6:55p.m. "12:20p.m. " :05p.m. 75 Exstew "8:35 a.m. "6:30 p.m. "12:30 p.m. " 9:15p.m. 80 Griffith's Mill 8:25 a.m. "6:20p;m. '5:35 p.m. " 9:20p.m. 82 Shames "8:20a.m. "8:15 p.m. "13:59 p.m..." 9:40p.m. 90 Amsbury "8:05a.m. "5:55p.m. " 1:05a.m. " 9:50p.m. 93 , Remo "7:59a.m. "5:45p.m. Ar 1:20p.m. Arl0:05p.m. 100 Terrace Lv7:45a.m. Lv5:30p.m. Abbreviations and Symbols: AR Arrrive Lv Leave Depots: Prince Rupert, 3rd Ave. at 7rti St. Terrace, Silver Tip Cafe (Service Cabs, Phone 555) ' Head Office: Prince Rupert, 14 Smith Block - Phone Black 907 Issued Nowmber 9, 1950 . Effective Date Dnrpmbr 16. 1950 tssued by C. Mclntyre, Gen. Mgr., 14 Smith B'k., Prince Rupert. Issued pursuant to the provisions of the. "Motor Carrier Act" and Regulations thereunder. Ar.y objection to this new time Schedule may be filed with the Superintendent of Motor ' Carriers. . Public Utilities Commission, Vancoi ver, B.C., up to November 30th, 1950 SERVING THE B.C. COAST QUEEN CHARLOTTE ISLANDS FROM PRINCE RlTI KT TO: M ASSET PORT CLEMENTS JUSKATLA CITK y QUEFN CHARLOTTE AIX1FOBDBAT CUMSHEWA 900 . LAVE: PRINCE RUPERT Except Thursday and Sunday FROM TRINCE Rl PERT TO: ALICE ARM them." Church Seeks Work on Drive j The beard of works reported I to the city council last night ' they had received a communlca- j tion from the First Presbyterian Church regarding surfacing their i STEWART LEAVE: PRINCE RUPERT THURSDAYS ... ' .. 9 9.00 anveway. xne church trustees had been advised their annllpa- tion would receive serious con LEAVE: STEWART FRIDAYS For orsiRVATIONS REM' TICKETS - INFORMATION - PHONE 476 . QUEEN CHARLOTTE AIRLINS I sideration when permanent Improvements are effected on Fourth Avenue east. After consideration of the proposed sale or lease of property adjacent to the fir hail, the board recommended against Christopher Bid nine K all Fl-9" Air Freight en SCRIPTVRE PASSAGE FOR TODAY "Thou hast known the Scriptures, which are able to make thee wise unto salvation through faith which Is in Christ Jesus." 2 Timothy 3:15. mi FINE FLOWER A chrysanthemum ' with 120 blooms has been developed at Beer, Devonshire, England