2 '"TZEf, Prince Rupert Daily News 1959 Sees Canada Important Facfor In United Nations Body Friday. December 22, 1950 iProlesting at Freight Boost OTTAWA There was a wave of r'otest from the Drovinc By NORMAN A? TSTEDTTR CainCiiii Ptj-m Staff Wr.ti-r n In'iep'TKifr.t dal?y newspaper --Tsted to the upbu idLng of Prince Rupert and northern a.-.d central British Columbia Metnber cf Canadian Pr-ss Audit Bureau of Circulation Canadian Daily Newspaper Association KCNTER, Ifar.artr.e E.'.cr. H. G. FEF.EY. irar.arir.g Director ECBSCP.IPTION RATES mi t Ps See 'yesterday at the announcement ' The impact of cf lte ra:!2y that !h,' were LAKE SUCCESS, N.Y. (CP) -. . un ;;ve percent ln- Canada j g role , on world rf fairs a expressed throuch , create m fnieht rates fotiowr- i.amer, per wel 20c; Per Mvr.th, T5c; Per Year, Ey Mail. Per Month. 5ft- Per vsr Mfrt ' iLT By ELMORE PHILPOTT HOSPITALS NOW the United Nations continued to grow in strennh lhe erantin of wage increases , . . , , by the federal a bit -awr dunng ,,,A lvM. As the yea- drew to a close, L. B. Pear- prem-er s.-r.aiiwood of nv. son, Canada's external affairs minister, was ap. ! fndiani premier t. c DouR.j Big Four Conference Jll Virt, na JUSt tunfv-nian l, commuiee, set up lu Feet of Alberta were among those imme hnm aftpr nn r.r.i. nsediatian of the Korean war. "THE REPLY of the three Western Powers to the wno prv.nx.ea. H n. H -v Bastnan. Ttiiiilst'.- J bOViet note Ijr01O,sir.r a rrx-t-t i r rr f fV.iirn-.n r,' Satifin in iha hnm'tal of agriculture for British Colombia, said a further incr in rates mould a t as n embargo on exports f om h's p'O.'- New Power For Prince George Foreign Ministers has opened the door wide to very I She was one of the lucky sweeping- possibilities. : ones'. And a meeting of th? Council of Foreign Mink- I She got in, after only a ter would seem tn ms. t ,. , .. ..l .: I couple of weeks of waiting, and nice. limpctant committee indi?atJ the staiure He and Canada have attained among the leaders of the CO r, .tit ns nhkh make up the world organization. Canada took another leading rtie in the Korean problem besetting up a special force for service with the United Katfrr in Kcrea or els- here. In this move. Canada led the way in ORMES DRUGS f'raser Pr Sue fussibilily Aired only two last-minute postpone j Dr. H. M. Daggett arrived in the citv on Wednesday's plane from Vancouver to soend the pro- r-,r. ... v. I v uv.l Ui Viittli" J nel for peace at the moment. But it remains, of ' course, to be Keen whether the Soviet government The BC. Government's ments cue to "lack of beds When she did get in, she got fine j j treatment the bet ever, the says. develotiment for 1' I'.C v,t ..I '"J power this area, ortelnally planned for .'"7. " uu. plans for formation cf an inter- Que.sn'-l, may be elu.'tr to Prinee Until I had a chance to hear national army to fight aggres- Christmas a--u e ''' iij nai K-Jes sion wne-ever it may occur in a big Vancouver hospital Ij The start of 1950 saw Gen.j George on the Fra.-er River east of here. This vta the ,sta'l cplr.Ir. here U;U wtik cf a j usually well informed observsr. Um required on long power MtBridt, Burrs Lake, Endako". Que.r.e' and others could easi.y be suppl.ed with power in addition to Prirce George. Many of these stUemenU already are wni accept the idea of a meeting "to seek" a peaceful solution of existing issues." The Soviet note, to which the three powers are now replying, proposed "the convening of the Council of Foreign Ministers of the U.S.A., U.S.S.R., Britain and France to examine the fulfilment of the PotwJam Agreement on the demilitarization of Germany." That was at once regarded very naturally in London, Washington and Paris as too restricted a He believes that a wall of secrecy imposed over plans fo-an interior power project have , u.u&ui vatuay umi u news-, a. o. L. McNauenton. who head- paper complaints aixut licit of ed the Dominion's U-N. deie-j otcU were probably exaggerated, gatxm curing its two vears on Brother, did I get an eye- the U N. Security Council, retu.ri i opener! Far from being exagge-, to duties in Canada. The e.H ted, the Vancouver scarcity of of Canada's .security coun -I jbeis is ,sj acute that it is a dls-jterm al-a marked the beginning ; grace ri'ht now. of another term lr Canada as In the event of war Cod help a member of the Economic an 1 us. No one else will be abie to Social Council. been brought about pendir.ij the in Comfort! Give HIM a Gift He will Appreciate O PIPES cigars TOBACCO naetions of the International re.-eiving power irom ine Salmon Com m ik.n ax- ' uw"r -omtnj -Mott s Ule-1 t units It is beheved that there are.; An ar.nouncyment ronr-rnin several suitable power-di m sites not even with a bed. R. a. Cer.-yj RiddeU. 42, for scope jor suci-i a conierence in nresent uor ( r-on- ooo merly Pear r.'s special assist- zxezjfu srs sir-" i mere mentiun of such fflans to ; "' t ! SUPPOSE A MOSCOW oitxtr ant. arrived at LaJce Succe&i in : wanted to prat a blast at the August to Uke over as Chi- f CH0C0LATIS O RONSON AND OTHW UGHTK iT2F$ tfVT'WI cum the Power CommUs on would bring theit full wrath to bear. Particular significance was decadent aemocracie. Suppose of Canada's permanent delegi-it took a simple thing like hos- tion. John Holmes of the Exter-piUl beds in the rich, progrea- nal Affairs Department, had I ft 5) nii fciXftii)iii.)ii.).i.k.kmx..vkiLk jjuve city of Vancouver, British , worked as acting head of Cue (Columbia. It wouid not need to delegation until that time, hire any giib liars or truth i ON V.S. SKt'RETARIAT twisters. All it wouid need to do During the .year ta Canadi- wouid be to report the grim ans were appfjinted to important ! facts. pasts on the V.ti. Secretariat. Dr. "So Btoutiful. ondw.lh27M placed by the originator of th s theory here upon water-level research being done at Sheliey. 12 miles from here on the Frer River. Tliis researc h is osI"tiirj!y b-ing done to determine fiood water conditions but it is possible, he po.nted out. that the water flow reading? art a .'so beir.g used to Compute the year-round powvr potential of a dam placed in a canyon Just east of Shelley. With p. power development closer to Prince George, power transmission lines to other In Feclufft" Th Nw . . . McCLARY V Here are some t iHugh L. Keenleyside. formerly D.-Jctors in Vancouver get up 'Canada's Deputy Minister of Heat the crack of dawn but not , sources, and Maj. Gen. How a I what you might expect, to start ..Kennedy, former Qua termaster visiting their patients. " -General in the Canadian Army, No. no. j became top - ranking lnterna- They get up to hustle dowu tlonal Civil Servants, to the hospital to Queue ub for Kenleyside. 51. was appointed j o , UiUUIJS. "Demilitarization" is only one facet of the Ger-Im&n problem; the German problem Is only one facet of a world problem. To discuss the "demilitarization : of Germany" in isolation, out of its world context, ,"ould seem somewhat unreal; nor would it seem likely to lead to any result. It seems indeed that the Soviet proposal was not ' intended very seriously, that it was made on the assumption and in the expectation that it would he 5 rejected. , The Russian proposal as it Stands has been declined. But at the same time it did seem to afford just a chance, if a slender one, of a wider and possibly more fruitful consultation. Moscow seemed at any rate willing to talk. No portunity, even though slight, of which British Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin has called "a sincere attempt to achieve, through negotiation, the removal of the undtrlyirg causes of world tension," could be neglected. A decision was quicklv taken Woshing 3 MxW i fw i at I fit It, and I i 1 their chance to beg to get oneihead of the U N 's Technical At- r. m b "II I tlx i tVilVTUIVC terior localities would be lets "' " , ....i y t and would cut VJSFZTlFJ? tSZnSX nn the number of booster sta- ritih crtumw or more patients into hospiuL fiance a minisirafion a Some of the most skilled doctors brand new post. The T A A. wv in the country spend hours oit "P as an outgrowth of Pre si -end doing nothing but sitting in dtnt Truman's point four" proline waiting their turn to ask uirram of aid under-develop'' get a pauent into hospital countries. In its i nal form, the Of course, everybidy in B.C. T A A- is to np!P two-thirds of U SUPPOSED to have the right th wor1'1 Jifl fr," bck- to haspital treatment-paid lor wr d methods of industry, agri-by the compulsory haspital in-, culture arid health, among oth ;r isuranee scheme Hut the fart. i. sioects of life.-For a beginning. t VffBririe S'rt hs- that many sick people who re- ion are re- that the reply should not be a blank negative hut juire hospital attent alf prnafiv ,.,t .i. . , j fused such because tl msh9 You there simply w are not enough beds to fill ths ALLACE u n. members pleaded WiA).0')d tT the prtjject. . Kennetiy, a 57-year-old forestry specialist", a; rived In th5 M-l-Fait last April as director of a $53,000,000 U.S. relief and o'ks n-,';:ram for Arab refu-"es of the Arab-Israeli war. need. oOo , Pharma? MOREOVER, although the; public oavs the hot fr.r th hiis- IV. K ,v 1Vjii juue opportunity ior really, valuable results. To quote Bevin again, the three powers "an? ready to take part in ar.y properly prepared four-nower meeting which offers the genuine prospect of putting an end to the existing state of tension, and of bringing about lasting friendship between the free world and the U.S.S.R." That is the essence of the three-power replies. We have now to see what response the Soviet government will make to such an offer. pitai upkeep, the hospital au- '"S co-c- dinatlng the direct thorities themselves retain the nli 1 works urograms to right to pick and choose amon b,n th" rfuees. Kennedy had the doctors. Ihose on the hos- 'P!rnatl-: ta.k of ctmferrfrv pital staff list get their patients 'i',n governments on the pro- in. Thce not on the staff list J , .,. ., Wih the of do not. opening the U N HOURS: WEEK DAYS: Here i nnw th !w ar.itu l"'n" 11 Aemiiy cession arrz 19, a lare Canad'an delcsjatio" 9o.m. to9p works: A patient may be perfectly satisfied with the profes- tifmai ahitltw nf his rr ha. i hop-ie Dv Pearson, arrived lr New York. For the first time 'e- p H O N E 7 9 SUNDAYS: tor. But the patient needs to ell"e c" Sr,T P" ln Canadas into hospiUl. That family doc-;!; a'" tor is not on the "laside track" 'T""' ZZu T with the huspiui-whfch Is prl-il,1!?0?-,... 12 Noon to2p 7 p.m. ro 9 p k"..i. TV ,. .1 V V -the se.sslon opening, Pearr i.jnjjii.ai Ait ah ujc patient .i culled fur a "two-vear mriral- compelled to switch to some :rinm Kiiin. ii. I other doctor who has the pre-; sprecheg at tne UnllPd Natlon. SIXTH STREET AND THIRD AVESCI Menu " Into rrr the , Institution . .? P7 in and n to-ear effective attempt to about question. f peace "' TK.s,M.o0;jI , j But by Dec 15 when the as PROMINENT Vancouver dtl- jembly officially ended, the out-lens, whose names are known hook for x-ace was dim with from coast to coast, have re- Kussia faiiinB to accent the U N jcently been compelled to go to, majoity j initial efforU to medl-j other cities to have major oper- at, the Korean war. auons because their own doc- Lingering hopes were held that tors in their own city were un-! Pearson, along with India's Si -able to arrange hospital accom- Beneal Rai and Iran's Nasrol-modatlon. And on top of thls'lah Entera-r. could find a wa-conies the plain warning fro.n, to avert a inaior conflict he-Major General Worthington that twen C.:.imunist China ai 1 Vancouver needs three times the the United Mat'ons. We BROADWAY CAFE present nuniDer or beds as a precaution for another war. oOo GRANTED thai iv !lo In Expects Russia Best Food crazy times. But was anything j TA ClrSlA Caaii more in.;arie than for Ottawa to! IU i I5IW JUvll appoint General Worthington Finest Cooking EASY WITH CONTROLS IN ITS APPROACH toward mobilization of our industrial resources, Ottawa is reported as still favoring moderation and caution in rushing into drastic regimentation and government control. Sober-minded citizens with memories of the last war still fresh will approve this realistic attitude. They will realize, of come, that Canadians are not altogether their own masters in this matter. To put it bluntly, we are too small and too close to the United States to le able to set our own gait, even if we wanted to. Broadfy speaking, whatever Uncla Sam decides to do in channeling production into defence, we have little choice but to follow. We can only hope, therefore, thut sober counsel prevails a; Washington as well as at Ottawa. Putting our whole economy into a strait jacket, "'ith manpower, supplier, prices and wages, and almost everything else rigidly controlled, is not a move to be undertaken lightly. As we discovered 10 years ago, it means, a revolutionary upset for the nation, socially and industrially, and it only worked reasonably satisfactorily because the people were aroused by and actually engaged in a full-scale war. And, as we discovered f 've years later, once fastened on, it takes a long time to get rid of the shackles of state control. Moreover, as we also discovered after the war, control so far as prices are concerned does not prevent increases it merely postpones them. The difficulties of n period such as this of twilight mobilization are truly immense. But until it's decision of total effort for a total war, let's go easy. To move too fast in this grim business can be just, as grave as too late. Financial Post. SCRIPTURE PASSAGE FOIt TOilAf "Let every man b swift to hear, slow to speak, slow to wrath for the wrath of man workcth not the righteousness of aod.' James 1 119-20. WASHINGTON D. C.Forme" Secretarv fen War Robert Pa;-tron nredlcted last nWht truit Soviet Russia would strike directly aslrt the weste-n nations with all the strength at r-or rornr"n hv next vesr. Honrs: 7 a.m. to 1 a m For take home orders Phone 200 Hore SHOP EARLJ I FOR W 1 1 just just the the type type v7 head of the Canadian Civil Defence program but with no real power to act? The question of who Is to pay for the tripling of the haspital accommodation has not even been faced by the Bt. Laurent government much less decided. Meanwhile the responsibility for getting enough beds to Ko after the peacetime needs of the people of B.C. rests with the government of B.C. Compared with this aggregation of sound-sleepers Rip Van Winkle was a chronic As of Table GIFTS I ,deal9 j t. j-.a i MM that would moke gnu jiunuuiu ..!' for Christmas this year.. Visit Our Furniture Depcrtmenl . ..i mrnil1"1 m Von will find a wide range of House Third Cease Fire Message -1, h 8 it wf ! 1 coff" CHAIRS CEDAR CHESTS NEW YORK A third was sent by the United Nation cease-fire committee to ths Chinese Communist aoverninent GORDON and AWEBWi A STANDARD OF D. C. PRODUCT M yesterday ai, Peiping, seeking an jend of the war in Korea. The two previous notes went unanswered! 3rd Ave. W. Federal Block