1 I wa deserves the gratitude of air lor everybody by using public Canada for its clear call to Stop.Unoney to put everybody on the Look and Listen about this public payroll who could not find whole business. a job in private enterprise. There Prince Rupert Daily News As I See It Report From iui cover Monday, March 10, 1952 Parliament But nulte frankly. I am not u UI exact . y a ... v, " nofulThat -heir call will have , things need,.,,; to be d.e. . wars, .fe much immediate effect. Nor am ! . armament raw ? . even sure that w shall escape DONT SAY the world has learn-' public anc! . ;; that third world vi.r. ! ed nothing from the two world a common.',! The purpose of this piece is to . wars. an from the present ar-, private h'lvuJ: By Edword T. Applewhaite, M P., Skeena Vn Indejiendent dally newspaper devoted to the upbuilding of Prince Rupert and Northern and Central British Columbia. Member of Canadian ress Audit Bureau of Circulations Canadian Dally Newspaper Association. E. A. HUNTER, Managing Editor; H. G. PERRY. Managing Director SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ' f- r, nnok OS,- cr mnnlh tl Oft- nPT I I Chnore A Pli'J'notl show that the very technique mamem, lace. ine common j iat it ean and ' and magnitude of the armament PPle of all the world know the Publk scrviwt "! race will itself lead to the great- utter hypocrisy ol Uw 1930 cry ; have room for,-.J '"' est social change in history. The "where is the money going to 'n-the-munwr " R t industrial machine must r""11 t mm?" it. Illustration Station South of Hums Lake-Favors Double Holiday and Union Check-off Once again your member is back in Ottawa nn ; this time it looks to me as though we may be hen $10: by mail, per month. 75c; per year, $8.00. Published every afternoon except Sunday by r! O,.no-t rei!., Mau-e t t (4 9rH AVPIIIW PHnOP RlinPrt. When Peace Breaks Out have an outlet war or peace.1 No, the Canadian people never , HAT ls the silVtt ;t The Haw will come, and not far again need to fear a great de- clarlt eloudi Entered as second class mail by Post Office Department, Ottawa.; until well Oil into July. I shall try to keep you in- : ; formed, once a week, on matters which may be of IF YOU ARE by nature hence, when the long suffering pretsion like tliat of the thirties. K'jvern!'fm Mlllj , i . nennle of all the world will as Tlw city folks can have jobs andimonll that m arkets.Pt0Ple to uit a ucuiuii .w.w w..- )h r hie outs it. compel tnetr the iurmers can nave m : interest and which perhaps do not make daily pre Meat Fron? Peace River give every man and i UJ,,K 't the thirti., J the dark Side Of things govcrnments-to beat their swords We can who wants and needs ; ul:lt is unriecut, 1IUO U1UWM1UI e.", llirii auniij iiii-u wv;tnaii, , nrunintr hooks. We might call one, a job at fair pay. We can j do that by building homes, where j Classified -dTI we now build planes, by employ-; the News pavV'T j you can find plenty of excuse for gloom these days. The world is engaged in the greatest armament race of all tinv, and no previous such race has ever ended in anything but war. In this armament race the it, in 1952 terms, changing their tanks into tractors, their trenches into irrigation ditches. TAKE OUR own situation right 1 here in Canada. Can we ever forget those appalling years, those terrible thirties, when a million Canadians were on tlw Tina I ninci in DrmiiUD.J but in fairness I must say this charge could not be levelled at the Social Credit group. v The first issue of all our documents, Hansards, Votes and Proceedings, and such, were ail heavily black-boarded in memory of His late Majesty. In fact, the whole proceedings connected I headlines or radio news. ; It Is the intention of the government to establish an Illustration Station under the Depart - ment of Agriculture in the area south of Burns Lake. I am hopeful we can get this under wa'y this year. It is an acknowledg- j ment, I think, of two facts: the ! productive possibility of that district, and the rapidly increasing ! market in Central British Col- ! umbia. i It is always a pleasure to me to come back to the opening of ' a new session and meet all one's I IIV, bUStfJh III I UfJUIQI tVy nations are spending suun vast that the human mind can; dole in a land with "too much ot sums with the opening of the new hardly comprehend them We everything.' I -an we loreet me session were rather sombre; a are told that the NATO allies will i scores of thousand., of h iinele-s. roamed the genuine feeling of sorrow was spend over $100 billions a y.;ar I Jobless boys who fur the next three years. Can we country? Can we forget how evident everywhere. The Session was opened as usual by the friends (of all political parties) ealize what that means? We get a better idea when we leain that seven countries, i U.S.A., Britain, Canada. France, again. I get a kick out of the j reacting 01 ine &peecn irom ine tnn whirh wimp m e m h p r t Throne by His Excellency the ALL TIME HITS ALBUMS and LP.'s at Rupert Radio im-oudlv disDlav. after a holiday Governor-General but many hi & ffefc In the South. Again this year I i things were different from last Belguim, Luxembourg and Neth they ' rode tne rods, how they wvre chased from pilluv to post, hounded from town to town? We had our first cnunce in Canada to show the whole world how "depressions" could be fought and beaten. All we needed to do trn was what we did the minute Hitler shot us into war. All we needed to do then was what we are doing now think Rt. Hon. C. D. Howe should ! year. We had, of course, a new erlandst are spending on arms. CLOUD has a silver lining. It's an ill wind EVERY that blows no one good. These. and other time-worji sayings come to mind as the city papers exaggerate and twist the facts so as to fan the foot-and-moijth story into a national calamity. 'After all, there were on March 1 exactly 24 heuJ of cattle known to Have the dread disease. Wh(n we consider that the Cariboo ships as much as ;i0,0D0 head in one season, this is a small number. ;Be that as it may, the country has already- suf-ferejl great losses and cattle owners have been hard hit! in all parts of Canada. ;The silver lining to us in Central British Col-umljia and the Peace River Block is simply this: with ledicod prices, it is now possible for small operators to pet a start in the cattle business. J There are tons of succulent feed in the Peace River Block which will be wasted in the next few months if not fed to animals some place on the map. Some millions of bushels of grain are still in the fields west of the B.C. border. In all northern B.C. iindj Alberta there are vast quantities of feed, and theje are few places on the C.N.R. between the moJntains and the sea where there are not surpluses of liay at this moment. ; There are not enough beef cattle being fed in Ceiftral B.C. Beef or dairy cattle are a natural part Governor-General, a Canadian, etc.. over FIVE TIMES AS MUCH have taken a prize. "C. D ap- peared In the Chamber a rich Rt- Hon- Vincent Massey; every- AS THE ENTIRE WORLD SPENT thing was done in the name of IN 1938, THE LAST YEAR BE- the Queen; and due to official FORE THE HITLER WAR. mourning there were no receo- i mahogany. ! j The Department of Fisheries has given the details of an event which I think should be of in- j terest to many in Skeena. A 3.200-mile fish haul by truck, be tions or entertainments. SURELY the CCF party at Otta- that is, create full employment " H J . 1 lieved to have established a long- distance record, was made re- i cently from Hay River, Northr i ! west Territories, to New York , City. The trip, made by re-; i frigerator truck, was carried out I ' on an experimental basis by the ; Trans-Canada, Auto Transport I Company, The shipment left Hay River in the late evening of Jan-S uary 3 and arrived in New York ; in the evening of January 8, and was unloaded and sold by eight ' a uf Jmy farm program in the fertile valleys of the : o'clock the next morning. Fnfcer, Nechako and Bulkley Rivers. TZeTZ SSl J No one wishes to make a profit out of another's , members bins. The first of these . . . . was Jack MacDougall's bill to v n i i. i i .i i i miJnrtnnp Rnt Vipvp natnvp has nvnvirlpn that, p-ond a ii - " ........ . . - -, .- ... , (J. w - - " auictiu uiic juuiiniuu uny ttiiu can! be brought out of evil, profit out of disaster. 1 v'ctor't Day Acts- t0 Provlde ... , tnat tnese days be celebrated The foot-and-mouth sensation will die away in i by statutory holidays on a Mon- .!... ,i ;.,u : .....fvv, ;u , dav in each case. I intend to mitttuuiM' ctuu igiu.uii.uie m cmu v.tuuiua win supix)rt this measure but I am' go iilong its accustomed way. Of course, some spec- : not going to speak on it. My ex- ' , 1 .,, , . . ,u , perience is that the best way to will make millions out of the have they majors panic heip a meaSure of this kind is caused bv overstating the facts from Saskatchewan. t0 keeP quiet and hope it comes ' ' , . , . , to a vote. It is my opinion that if J In the country of which Prince George is the ; this bin comes to a vote it win centre the time is ripe to take the pressure off some j be carried- of Ihe older livestock communities and place the FUORS check-off , , . , , , , Another bill I shall vote for is cattle the land feed. With much natural on near so Stanley Knowies c.c.fj mn to fodfler in this country, a sane profitable economy I provide for the voluntary revoc- , .,, , , T . , , , . i able check-off of union dues; al- wopld be beei-milk-lumber. It is not too much to say though i am afraid that the thai local business men, bankers and others should assist in a campaign to get breeding stock into the lusji grazing grounds of Central B.C. While the bonanza market for beef has been brken, beef will always be in demand. In British Colombia we produce little more than 10 per cent of Jthe meat we consume. Prince George imports abdut 95 per cent of its meat supplies from Edmon- House will defeat it, as it has done on several previous occa-' slons. Hon. J. G. Gardiner, Minister of Agriculture, did a fine job when he piloted through the House the bill for control and ex- ' tirpation o f FootJand-Mouth Disease. He answered many ques- ; tions during the two-and-a-half days the bill took to get through. ; I was of the opinion that the i Opposition made great efforts to make political capital out of the Foot-and-Mouth disaster tor i Sane development of the northland will change ; l sort y ,v ?, tr ztr.ir'J - . -t , ' ' !Uf'l' I ' , , 'l ' ' ' " " ' J: t ;; ?, V H, M - (( , i h fy , Wy!k "We "We must must get get a a lot lot of of money money for for the the nickel nickel ,' ray Reflects and Reminisces W. A. C. Bennett tells the Lib- 1 erals and Progressive Conservatives they will be licked in next summer's election and won't be back for fifty years. By that time, each will be around a cen- tury old. It will be just as well j to take good care of that forty : ' a month by the time they make j seventy. all this. Opening of the Hart Highway this summer i and the construction of a rail line into the Peace River will give us a farming area where we can produce 100 per cent of the meats we consume and the bulk of our other food supplies, and then we have a surplus to ship to our less fortunate neighbors in the Pacific countries where food is scarce. We could not strike a better blow for our future security, economically and militarily, than to make B.C. self-supporting in farm products as soon as it can possibly be clone. The barrier placed against Alberta beef over the foot-and-mouth panic should be lifted at once, otherwise the profiteers will move in and price meat off the tables of all but the opulent. There are already quantities of beef ready for the market north of Prince George. If the ban is not lifted, then the Peace River Block beef should be hustled into Prince George over the Pine Pass at once. Bulldozers could be placed on the Hart Highway tomorrow and there would be little trouble getting cattle of the Parsnip River. Trucks could haul Peace River beef and cattle to this market and at once relieve some of the pressure and certainly help to keep meat prices in check. Prince George Citizen. NOT EVEN JARRED The cost of living index this month declined seven-tenths of : a point, according to the Bureau of Statistics. We had to be told to know there was any differ- '. encc. A bowl of mush, this morn- I ing, cost exactly what It did a j week ago. , 1 urmZTA T dFJLr ' V we export?" "Yes, son. In recent years the Nickel Company's exports to the United Slates have had a value of 1(10 million dollars. All these U.S. dollars coming in help to keep Canada prosperous." , ' A contractor sailed a few j weeks ago for the Island of St. ! Helena, to repair and brighten ' up the building in which Napol-! eon died 131 years ago Wonder I how Bonaparte would have handled the overtime question?' "Well, son, there are lots of markets for nickel these days. So many uses have liecn developed for it ly Inco that they are producing over 250 million pounds a year. ''More than 90 per cent of it is sold to the United States and other countries. Rij;lit now a lot of it is going into equipment lor our defense." Scripture faiiage jor ?DoJau Increase Canadian highways by spending Canadian cash, in- ; stead of using millions to help ; Europe become more than ever an armed camp which lt' always ' "Jesus went about doing good.' -Acts 10:38. 'At riV,!SdlTjiSeandiLeo Nlmsick, member for Cran-i black. The - mAU other one disappear brook. Well, there has never ! been a time when B.C. couldn't i do with a few more roads. a mm Woman Trapper Bags Big Wolf TERRACE Miss Dorothy Egan, while working her trap line at ej. She used a XI calibre gun. Miss Egan, In Terrace, collected a $25 bounty. She Is niece, of Matt Al'ard the well known hunter and trapper. Try Doily News Wont Ads FROM ON HIGH! j Second Avenue has a tourist i attraction but no one suspects j (Continued on pane 3 ' ' l u 25 King Street West, the International Nickel Company ol Canada, Limited Kalum Lake, sighted a couplf of