REFLECTS . -- tffy, ....-Win Prince Rupert Daily News i ,n : .. As I bee it u&O v and REMINiSCtt Friday, February 6, 1953 ' JfAtV',' ' i I " Most parents look forward to1 the tindeicy. i. ,! ...,,., ' ..- . O H f J" . f V. " - 1 "Jr1 thf day when their tecnuite but toward thU 5 ' " i 1 TV f 4 , ? -jrv . 1 I . -i daughter will marry and have . nhle humility.-eh,.,,,,';'' r-.1 v h it- t rvr i t f-A rt hpr own- - " CX - "J W A " VV-''J J C,lnore Ju.t ,, f; , . " VV I! 71 M'i',ViA,t' ? ,V V 'VI Good judgment come from ex- MupieOmrpe thl. ," ti in it-Mni1Mit dully newspaprr anmm to the upbuilding of Prlnai Kupert nd Northi rn and Central British Columbia. Ifpmber of Canadian Pri-sa Audit Bureau of Circulation ' Cunadlnn Dully Newspaper Association. Z- " Published by he Prince Rupert Dally Newa Llmlteo i. P. MAOOFt. President H. Q. PERKY. Vlce-Preitdent Bubucrtptlon Rat1: By cairlm f-T e-, 2;: per month ! per year. 10.00 By mall Pi t month, lie. per V?nr. 18 00. i' ' V-C- X ; fcg- r ; 1 1 c V i ' CtlaV-J I toNdUMNOtmuouT jlucal pum,ri X. fV'jlr''l . 4 V rV 'eV V 7 ' -" . f 1 r'ullino- " ll ma Cards :' Hum U . comfortable i. IU city nrrvlr. r.-t-im,,! ,7 ! I r vj -lfV 'OSM'V ll r V !- "I lurmturt.. .y n interior d.-co-. home ovr l2 t, V,ii tA'l V- - ,VtA . ' 1 rill ,alor A h,uto"nrt h.mid bu hu : U-wn. In. the ,,h , ,; h urtrent hvpf HhUh 13 an n lirgtni CAn 1. . storms. ta., , , . .V jflA ffV wfe a cnn,,orlable rlulr for him of cJuf;., , I . , -'V V r'T-? K " . A' ' . for used Christma8.to.it n? io.s. but aS ,i d, j ' 1 ' H AMI', . : t . m . -i" : cam, pivvui c Vuiwouver does not m-aimto , story books, magazines, to admit that on 21 day out 01 J, , . , 25. the weather was wet But puzzle and games, paint- tn,. Wfl aI now mat in what- nrvv iihai,,, FERNJE, BC. ic?i A , whom he hat iw! ..... yea vUltetl M ... , K ... . William W.-;t k , J. had nut sei-n h.s (elt Ireland at if,, uthor'.w) aa r.d clew rcall fy Ui Port Offloe Department. Ottawa. The Link is Missing JUST 23 years ago today the now deceased Tm-phe News put out a special edition carrying eulogies of the north and Prince Rupert's part in it. V. A. Mackenzie, then provincial minister of mines, wrote the leading article in which he saw the imminent development of mineral resources in areas contiguous to the northwest coast. The still active H. H. Stevens, at that time a member of parliament, wrote a beguiling piece bn the lustrous outlook of the Peace River country with Prince Rupert as an outlet to the sea. Another writer commented on the city's advantageous' relation to the Orient. ever that city turns its hand to. she simply mu;t excel. A M'MItER OF STI IKEI) FROGS, mounted In different positions. carrymK musical Instruments of ths natural-history collection owned by Dr. O. E. and arranged as an orchestra, is a feature Morehouse of Fredericton, N.B. The frog orch?stra took two years to complete. It is part of a large collection made by Dr. Morehouse's father. " , ' TO BE F.Nt Ol RAfiEU ing sets, crayons. Patient ut the TB hospitals it Nanaimo and Sardia. B.C.are native Indians, mostly children .,i young atlutts Tr ere thankful for the. bvoks. eUr . hieb reakra of thw column "Cod said. Ini-reiujs and mul- ,.entuj-y. a clerwal confrere told land B.nthr r ri.-l..i .'htt Ih a mem. OTTAWA DIARY !H"Ki!ls Just how did the nation, in -was as menacing as it was crlti-those critical hours of last cal. u nt a couple of year, ago-oui of lhf, (arull ((f N((l,e lmmB they n.-ed more-much more- Ul)lV)TWty . ., wllltl p,.,, lhut ""w . 'in seajm and out of season." The Indian yoimsstcrs have a U(jr ..i,, h9 adnr(1, urT nol ..l of fun re-making those o4 U(.iil( of u maUl Christmas cari into wmelbing b , hjvp ,.,, new and b.-auUful The doctors dV that this, kind of enjoyment ' is half the buttle InJ beatins the iracher. ehrrkinu Moose by using Knife and Fork It was all very convincing, all very heartening, ;and apparently inevitable disas- sentatives, for their part, could MfcVS SM f: AT HWMU ..,.) .,11 ;,l,mHf..,l tn what u p aw still savitlfr today. I". ' u.a . .. hardly repress a thrill of hope FREDERICTON (CP) This rirariiii.llv th full t iirv nf lh . i. . v. n., ., , . . , n, . . .. j , m 111 . 1 L i . c uvm a .1, 1 lain,, j . moose that w hohirxi th i-IimI n-i u .,. .u. .....i,. . Hit aioiy 01 4 With linlfC Slid fol k. H,.r. Hr. t hn ., .!..!... .1 U.J-shOt i nce-dread killer, J. announced that U, birthdays, Simply mail them to either , J illy ' b,twn Jlm Following is a passage from one article in that 'happening edition speculating on (instruction 'of a railway into .jM - - n ti J.ii i Liv 'i I uiiuii yn t nau froR orchestra and other strange hoMillal. or rare The mdlan Thursday hours is being relied was close at hand. An ev nt.H in the life of the late Dr. pieced together. Government, arbitrary settlement would the Peace River country which would serve Prince O. E. Morehou"-' labor, and railway management saddle the government with re- ' Times, Post Of fire Box 241. Van- couvcr. IT OFTEN amuses me to hear North Americans damn the South African government up sources are variously supplying sponslbility for both the terms I "s son. Dr. O. t. Morehouse, the information oieces. imposed and for the additional , has an extensive array of nat-What stands revealed is the finances required to meet any in-! ra history exhibits collected by drama of one of U:e greatest creased operating costs. Com-1 bis father. gambles undertaken by a gov-, pensating increases in freight! Few specimen:- of Canadian Grey aiul Vi :u'.-Very Sl c io! 11 vii:n's sfoitr mhs u Very Scca! $1?; MtN S WIMiliHl iKi;;. Kuitable for y,.,; ;. . dre.i.s 8hnrr. ....,; i Vi ) Now $3.93 vtr VH MuitK Minsrs Gixal quality h I " f-4uw $1.95 VtlN'S WIKK AMI HKISS MM KS Big variety. From 45c hill and down dale for Its race and DrceniiMT re dull mentally. A student, to d t'-rmine the ae-curacy of UiK discovered that Churchill. St.iiin. Elsenhower, Men and Truman were all bom In Aue.ust. There runs a str.ince law through the bneth of human history -that nu n are continually tendlnst to undervalue their environment, to undervalue their happmest, and '. undervalue t heiiiieives. The grent am of mankind, tlie ln typified by the fU of Adam, is ernment of party leader in Can-' and passenger rates would have 1 wild life fall to find a place segregation policies. I know how immoral and Impractical thev are When the white South Af-nrans put signs on benches adian political history the to be granted. In brief, ail that! among the stuffed and mounted gamble, namely, that Prime Min- the management representatives items In the Morehouse coiie--ister Louis St. Laurent took had to do was to sit tight tuition. Onlv" thev when he summoned to Ottawa their intransigence and, thei One of the prize trophies is a "For Kurojeans 1 . . t . mounted caribou the railway and labor heads so cost of meeting and uurea.,011- Rupert: t "This is the short route. Here is a great harbor where ice is unknown. Here is a modern grain elevator, wharves, shipping- facilities, shipyards, drydock, nearness to the open sea, and beyond the expanding markets of the Orient, which Prince Rupert is closer to by more than 500 miles than any other railway terminus in America. "No one can tell how soon it w ill be decided to proceed with the Peace River railway construction. But phenomenal development in the rich wheal growing and mixed farming areas of the Peace makes it self evident that a decision cannot be long delayed." he ad, one of signed their own political Oram before that warrant. the last killed solidly deadlocked that a strike ableness in the labor demands would be unloaded upon the species of wild life vanished from New Brunswick seemed Inevitable. As events proved, it was a gamble that paid off. ' DAXGEROIS MOOD public purse. Obviously the atmosphere Into which the Prime Minister's call Another set of moostf antlers carries the tale of the knife- V-neck puilovfrs ii . Regular $5 00 Now $3.85 The inevitable reaction to that cry was what is now coming up over all Africa, that U Africa for tlie Africans"-Europeans for Europe. But w.iat we forget over here is that white North Americans to Ottawa arrived wasn't one to and-fork shooting Dr More The summons to Ottawa didn't tuns1 hnt.Aitns house and several friends, so th , ... . .., ., . breed any disposition to compro- unpruvr ur criucai w-mpcr o. . K..a h..,!.,- ' 'torv Does, had a rfuntini! eamn the Montreal talks, so far as the those criUcal Thursday hours to ot far from the home of a are the beneficiaries of the most labor representatives were concerned. Almost from the start of purge the air of the almost shrewd hunter who happened to ; M,PrMsfu metal agression ever How IS it we are able to Cling tO a Vision Which inegouuUons they had sensed yalled wm be toid (n tomorrow., With shotgun and bird-shot am- r(.nt lssuP f "The Native Voice" that management representaUves munition " : npwou fillins writes: "Durtnu column. others seem to regard with such indifference? At He spotted a moose, which Harrison's administration flf-. didn't spot him, giving time to , treaties had reduced the were relying on government in-, tervention along the lines of the legislation used in 1950 Only" this time the legislation would be used before the atrike enmmenc- Pullovi r-s. mie ;'.. N;,95c B4IYS' PAVK f'or st-luHtl. h.ir .'. s . SpCCiO S2.7S IIOVS' Mini s For v !m: ii ,.f Very Si?oi'.:S3? ROW i.M)i't(t Wit Huitable l,ir m-., i M'lXHil Special, ft am $! BF SIM Wit Kit I UK KlOllf fi MILESTONES Frnm IIM rilM il 1h Pally Ni-m plan his course of action First ; i,)cnanii- hunting grounds by 33 he emptied the small shot from ; n,ijiion acres, leaviw? about one-the shell,' broke otf the blade ! ,lth tlM.lr original area " of his jack-knife and rammed j Treaty after treaty was made, it Into the casing. j and broken. He fired from 20 yards and FOR BETTER BUYS IN . USED CARS See Superior Auto .SERVICE LIMITED ed. instead of after it. j This prospect made labor lead- i 40 Years Ago Today ers feel that their strike threat: was largely empty, so far as Mayor Pattullo explained to-3 railway niatiugeineiK was con- uuy mc tn. wiun unu liiian cerned. and that the cards were cial position because the formerl stacked against them. Word ; city council left such a large reached. thm that the Prime deficit. Minister had sounded out the i ' the moose frit, wounded but jtil! ; the controversy over full of ftfrht. This t - the, tmn!LtU,nsy of the hunter used a piece of iron fork has tn ourstion ThSt Sh0t forward JT,Tn Uh world moed mo,-did the tricky , h d many Another of Dr Mn rehouse s ,he m,menU hnl whl,h ta top attraction, is his eollecHon . trartsllUon of how Uie or irogs . 'children ' of Israel captured the Also extensive is the weapon . . ',, , ,r,rh CCF group in Pi. -.-liament to learn : F. Landes was elected presl- their attitud;in the event of the i oent of the new Indoor Baseball this moment the-Chamber of Commerce here is rjiaking its third or fourth attempt togain support for the railway proposal at Ottawa and Victoria, The Terrace Board of Trade, fully aware of the scheme's history of shattered illusions, is backing" it to the limit. , Individuals-like Walter Wilson at Burns Lake and' Page Rideout at Nelson have continued through the long years to give their encouragement. ' The answer lies in a human reluctance to be Sold down the river in this ase, the Fraser. If the Peace River block is entered by an extension of the Pacific Great Eastern from Prince George, that is where the birthright of people in the north will go. The vast and wonderful north country which receives so much glib, treatment in public places will become the turnip field of Vancouver, many hundred of miles removed. ; Teace River and Prince Rupert belong together, but the link is missing. It is the' third P.R. the Practical Railway. government acting by order-in-; League with W. D. Vance, secre council a speedier method than j tary, and H. J. Brooks, 'treas legislation through Parliament i urer. collection, including various. I Sfftf' i Jack O'Brien asks me to Uke types of old pistols and muskets ; Jrd Ave. W. Phune Ciretn Z17 but considerably more arbitrary. a look at Joshua verse 21 which siys: Next to Rupert E While the CCF reply had been utterly destroyed "Ai.4 thr and more modern weapmw. In- j eluded is a pair of lon',-bnrrel- ! led muskets used by Morehouse j ancestors during the American j Revolution. ' firmly opposed, the labor negotiators felt that the situation in the city, both ' all that was 30 Years Ago Today Alderman McKenzie a resolution at council meet mn and woman, young and old. and ox. and shep. and ass. with Ing for a thorough investigation into present telephone and the edge of the sword. t.,.ir u- "i aorvMl three ter- a view to! Diiiuiii r a u t :. ,k: ,oi.iiii i water charges with ! Britain Planting I Canadian Trees i making reductions. U.H, Security Council Me! 42 Times in '52 i rioie miiiit-i! "v tre nch warfare . . . We went i after the men In mortal eom-! hat. but if the ladies got hurt It. TAG DAY TOMORROW EMERGENCY EUROPEAN FLOOD Rt'-lF TAG DAY SPONSORED BY THE 1.0 .01 20 Ytfors Ago Today I VANCOUVER (CP) P,ritaln is wasn't our doing How Joshua Numerous aircraft Hew In and I build in? up a sound reserve of figured that the Lord told him UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. ! out of Prince Rupert today 1 standing timber from seeds Im- to conduct a war of that kind The 11 members of the United : carrying men to reinforce the ported from the Pacific coast, its a little hard Xo believe." Nations Security Council met 42 , police force at Anyox owing tow Dr. John Walton of OUtsgO'Ar times during 1952, the seventh the strike in progress there. One j ,ulw British forestry com -' now RIGHT you are. Jack! The year of the body's life. , i of the . planes . the ., "Pruicni mlsiti 'it is building up a reserve , wny reMj the Bible Is this. Number of meetings last year, i George'' was reported missing ! by planting the seed of doupliis ' Better than any other book or It left here but fecords show, was five more than shortly alter Inclusion of Check-off System In Labor Laws Now Being Studied OTTAWA Q, The Commons Mr. Gregg said members should has adopted a suggestion by not take hasty acUon on a pro-Labor Minister Gregg that a pogai by Stanley Knowles CCF- fir, sitka spruce and lodcepole books ever written, it shows the pine. First seeds were planted in enlarging consciousness of man in 1051, when the Council set a low record for the number of sessions. Fourteen meetings, the largest 1022. ' j about God's will, in tne eariy The doctor, who Is regiiw pro-j books of the Bible they commit lessor of botany at the Univer- all sorts of bloody crimes all slty of Glasgow, Is one of Brit- in tin; name of God's orders, ain's nine forestry commission-i But step by step man learns number on any one question. Have uou tried was found later by the Salvage j Princess. 10 Years Ago Today Mrs. D. C. Stuart was again elected regent at the annual meeting of the Queen Mary Chapter IODE with Mrs. J A. Teng appointed honorary re lruiyq b.e! Winnipeg North Centre, that the, ere devoted toe Adnion of 0 " THI.mixlnl DolaHnn n4 nanmluiFn Tn-n mast inn ndell ers. eheck-iff into labor legislation. 'u' ,,1,tmun;.uU..mu..p.c. c ! routes Act be amended to Include i held on the subject of Kashmir. Abraham makes a revoiuuonnry change he refuses to murder his son. in the name of religion, fio on all down the line, nut. Jack, are we really any Captain Honjan r c I the voluntary revocable check-1 Seven considered a request for of j j investigation of alleged bacter- r 4 . i. ,. , .,j i,. .jiioiogicai wariare six were neiu gent. U.K. Trade Envoy Returns To Britain t , h-' Va on an appeal to countries toi compulsory for employees to Since the radio inspector from Vancouver started his collection bdter than the slaughterers at Jericho? It took the Ocrmnns six years of bombing to kill 60.-UW) British civilians, men, women and children. It took the R. Keith Jopson, senior British of local radio licences here, 1,500 agree to the Geneva Protocol of 1925, prohibiting germ warfare; three on the Tunisian question; and two on the Council's report to the UN General Assembly. deduct union dues from an employee's pay at the request of the employee. Mr. Gregg said it Is open to question whether unions should ' trade commissioner In Canada il have paid and prosecutions and economic adviser to the U K British six hdurs of coneentrat for failure to pay are pending High Commissioner, ha3 com- i d bombing to do that in Ham derive stability from government- pleted his tour of duty and is 'burg. It took the Americans six Dam Construction Awaits Report enroute home. imposed measures rather than agreements freely entered into ! It'j richer, mouse, full-bodied . Mr. Jopson was Trade Commis. sioner in Montreal from 1045-48. He succeeded the late A. M. seconds to burn to death 60,000 civilians at Hiroshima. i Harvesting machinery sold In ' Canada In 1951 reached a total I of $:)8.641.000. On Canadian-American Relations between employers and employees. Officials of his department now were studying the act. Changes blended to satisfy the taste of British Columbians. Try it Wiseman . as .Senior Trade Corn- servoir reaching 42 miles Into; British Columbia. in.ui.c. ... SEATTLE (AP) Further planning for constructicli of the proposed $284,336,000 Libby dam "Benefits to t;anaaa,- une statement said, "will be the al In Montana awaits a "favorable should be brought in as a group of amendments, not one by one. Angus Maclnnis (CCF-Vancou-ver East) said that until a few years ago employers used all the weapons in their power against You'll like Captain Morgan Bl.uk Label Rum. Mfy Ag4 In Smail Oat Carfl Canadian-American ,' most entire elimination of flood report on damages in the upper Kootenay relations," the Seattle army engineers office said. It was the first official statement from the office since last November. At that time, Robert CaptainMorgan establishment of a trade union. It was understandable that employers would oppose the checkoff. The act already compelled lake area and a potential increase of 172,000 kilowatts In power output along the lower Kootenay." The dam Is expectod tA pro-i duce power valued at $23.5004)00 1 ;A TORONTO COUPLE has Sommers, British Columbia lands been charged with the torture employers to bargain collectively f Jg minister, indicated there would be opposition from the new Brit Jiiurder of a 2'2-year-old boy, RUM with legally-constituted unions. To go one step further to the Paul Davia beoianc, wno med SEE IMG LIS SEE AUTOMATIC WASHERS And DRYERS INGLIS AUTOMATIC WASHER ... ... $459-00 (With Sudsmiser) INGLIS AUTOMATIC DRYER $319-50 ASK ABOUT EASY PAYMENT PI.AN AT RUPERT RADIO AND ELECTRIC Phone 644 Box 1279 In the United States and also aw In reducing the flood menace. The $285,000 allocated last year ish Columbia government unless Pacifie Northwest gas distrib Illcniltil lo Peritenon from Carefully Selciicd check-off should not be rejected. C. S. Johnston (SC-Bow River) said he hopes the committee will for planning and preliminary Hare Ukl Kuiim studies has been exhausted, the recommend that the check-off utors agree to take Canadian natural gas. The statement from the office of Col. N. A. Matthias, Seattle be Included In the labor legisla tion and. that the government ' of a fractured skull and a brain ', hemorrhage. Charged with murder are the child's mother, I Edna Leblanc, 21. and Aiex- ander Sielinski, 37. Police said tlie itunun ii Sicllnski's com-. moa-law wife. Investigators J say they have evidence the boy was lashed with a dog leash, his hands were burned on a J stove snd that red pepper Juice was forced into his mouth. district engineer, said the project would benefit British Columbia as well as the Pacific engineers' statement said. Further preliminary work requires an additional $305,000 allocation which must await a "favorable report on Canadian-American relations from the U.S. section of the International Joint Commis. slon," the engineers said. will accept that recommendation. Many provinces had legislation providing for it and Individual agreements between companies and unions included the checkoff In labor contracts. Northwest states. The proposed THIS ADVtHTtSEMrNT IS NOT PUBIISHF; D 0 DISPIAYFD BT BOAHO O iY TH GOVWNMfNT Of MHISH -ul. dam on Kootenay River, north of Libby, Mont., would form a