Prince Rupert Daily News ray '- ' !-,' -V : , U.S, Doesn't Want to Embarrass Allied Countries, Says Dulles WASH 1 N( ;T( )N (API State S,,r,t;,t I'oster Dulles has assured Allied countH,.. . Monday", February 23, 1953 Reflects and As I See It -V j rt Reminisces a Hi te.tiMul cully newspaper devoted to the upunlldtug ot mnm Kupwl jid Nurmrm and Oulral BrlllBli ColumLla Member of Canadian Hr Auuil Bureau ul Circulation Caiutdlan Dflliv N-papr Aaso latlon Publish.! b; "Tie Prince Kuperl Unlly Npi Umlte i. r. MAOOH. Prwiuent H. U. PFRRY. Vh-rTeaXlelit United States is seeking to avoid "(,iitj(.aj H, -M rassments and troubles" with them in eW,; in- . , . ' lb:;' ;s- 42 f ft , aagW n i Thiusdi Wesion Coyney ml Subscription Hates: t.j earner weeK. 85c; per month 1 u-; per Tear. 110 00 at mall Pej jioiiUj. lie. per mi ten". . not have been first in runmn; .,.,; t,l i'in.t 'i the coal welKh eale t Prince "f ! if author!!! u cor:d dsns n-.all fv rV OBe Department, Ottawa. The Water Won't Wait ! IN. at- -Cx- i f i ' Rupert he mm handy t' it. One of several a. tiuna ni'rf-r: m rt.,,, 1 1 And when he did flnnlly make cmhUleiUoi,. lii!e tol.l it ; 'In ahum.-, , t the Kiadc. It was to rt nittin n pte conl. i.u. e 1 est.ii.li. Ii- "'K- Pievioiiwy i, ment of a naval b'.ortude i (he "'"' "'" on i. I 'the job for many a pioneer M ;.. 'J Jiar China toa si Another t n'rlcter ; lU !,i.n - .) i-Vw indeed of the minur Un al nlir-emelt" of t n.utl j " Tl.u tt J4 estubluhinenU have been loimr tlon reconiim uitatiuiu asa list " P"bH ;, critir , h aV. -1 W k. .'. How To Hold B.C. Jobs 'lN THK British House of i Commons on February j 1 1 the Rt. Hon. HaroM I Wilson said: I S 1 1 in the siime m lishborhood Coy- trade Willi China, lie nut. imriu run t, i , X r!a" V came dowu. not ao km The whole ranije of "measuiea nwuwr pieW1,al , incorporation, from tlie of vatv'ei kind wfiirh rouUt be," Ml uxr.ei,.h ' V n,T fler Kli dike J kh. white Hiii and elumor uf the Klon- uilopred.'' UulU said, U uii.eri'" bumjIh at V, tt He wore a trimly cut intensive iiuiy in the hit of ,dam ttiey hail the parliarnentiiry session at Victoria ALTHOUGH is still at an early sta.ee. it is disturbing nevertheless to note there has been no reference yet to timber clearance of the Tweedsmuir Park area which will be affected by flooding being carried out by the Aluminum Pompany of Panada. Last fall Lands and Forests Minister Summers Avas sufficiently interested in the threatened disfigurement of this beautiful property to come up beard, itylish elolhin: three r ul. all I - "l nrir : eU ml li..r iit.i iu 1, ' L and affected eertaln gaiety ol !rrfsibili'y. their miblarv ctt-jre" tn the t.u IU . n.uiir.tr. Life la tawcn iM.,.cri a:;.S the ('ejr l H- Kar.i rteen to hi llkinR-but only un- iUcJti einbjrr.im. itH ut "'-' HIAMK Klsslt til the vote of the Orand Trunk hl... ..... mt,l be caused w.thl '.. THIS AKTIST'S SKETCH shows a patient beuiK tieated in the newest mode! of the Cobalt -60 beam therapy unit produced by the commercial produc ts division of Atomic Energy of Canada, Ltd.. at Chalk River. Out. First unit of thU model will be shipped to the Francis Deiaficld hospital. New York, next month. our Alhea however, IKiliM .. mteationeil hh.ut uui lt, te- racific Hallway noumhtt acru.s Canada and t. roinin-Uirig charm of the Yukon faded. Weston had spent much of . ' flue W ioim i. tu aceoinpiu.h bv i 'he uiuiemiaiuUfm his Intereatin llle in ncwapuprr whi n' "aeerel uiuierstan.luil'ii , dlatlon, Inert office. He had had wide ex- penult eiislavemn.t of lore.-.n would be b aim d an iui ,. ,.. . k... .... u ih rience on the stalf of the New lM-,...rl, a cam u ior y rnv j atjomt anj n it Private TV Stations to Compete With Government in Australia ident l-Lsenhoaer I "We cannot hope to earn i Canadian dollars by our direct ; trade, and in the first nine ! months of last year we were i still paying U,v less than 40 per Jrent of our imports from Can I ada by uur exports i3 there nut now a case for entering into ne- gotiatiortj with Ottawa to se-j whether that trade could not be at least part! o-ii on a different basis?" "There is widespread intercut in Canada in the suggestion that some of our Canadian purchases should be paid for in sterling and any surplus whii 'i miirht develop should be he'd in the form of sterling balances on Canadian account in London. "That sueestion has been put forward by many Canadians, and while I was there I reil a very constructive and realistic article by Mr. Elmore Phil-pott, a noted Canadian columnist, in which he worked this York Herald. He dabbled off and on tn the office of the Ik.il Newi and Evening Empire and ; that the uiidew.unj, i UK iii'lve bad in lis lii''e- Heiw tiie aoa.aii.i:.!,. tu r RPtN Tftc prntiMed action, when television is intro- "oining nunea mm urwr own i ... .... ,,,,1.. n,,. i.. ih : to recall incident ol hi nro- said, would ei ve two udn:i n " l l"'ii U ( l!y LOUS I.. I.H K CflHUfiian Pre CVrrespimd.-nl ,,,,. h.taon v.rimx f fe.nuunal adventure Inrufent- 1 puruuae: ,u ru u mv.taii,,. SYDNEY. Australia ( Aus- e roups for and against television " ner w.re attentive lUten- j fine U to rrister dramaSw-, Dulli aiu a tralia is not likely to have remi- the government quickly decided t'r.1 ally what we belie- to be l iejpurpiwe m the I. U lar television profrrams until that a royal eutnmindon wa the . The weitsh arales. when Coy- i many breaches by the Sva-Mend lihtir.t In Is ; 1955. if then. The federal gov- best procedure. ney was there, occupied mor ' Union of the wartime uinl r- j Korea on aerepuo - ernment feels a full royal com- The report of such a conimis- f"ee and was in a different standings; and. w condiy. to t"-ione way to to ws mission inquiry should be made Siun may be ready in 1954. but position. One had a (rood i-d wter equally dramatically the replace We.si. rn lor -. t before it establishes a policy 1954 is a federal election year, office with desk, table, stove u-4iie and hope ot the Amerk r n ive. tr.xtps su Bn,4 The Mentlrs government -in- A victory for the Labor party, and two window, as well as a ; people that the captive pcuplf ,.'irixer have the troduced legislation February 18 l0w In opposition, mie.hl ehne small bed. He had not t!i hai be liberated -tyinf up We -tern to permit private television ,v.p whole Dicture Many Labor slightest objection to slippm "TJite dueumeiit or prono-iir e- bat allh Suvie; w .. out in stime detail." Mr. Eden, top Conservative. ; stations to compete with nation or government-owned, sta- said of his Labour colleague ai "The Rt. Hon. Gentleman who j leaders claim private television Mnriea to mi mends 01 ne ; nl4.nl ls nt intended to 0 a This pi.iey r.f . is a cheap form of exploitation dailies. reiuuininK active and , donie.t.io ii!ti-al iirmunirn e- -' and more on r.at.vr ! of the people. Hut others In the capable. There was always a ; mr it j, intended l be ' apply to consider .!,,.! s Labor party, such a the (roups mutual willingness to call. , pronouncement In relation tod aid to Indo-Ciut parliamentary leader. Dr. Her- Another old gentleman wh'i ; foreln policy, which I hope Mil; bert V Evatt. believe a govern- served the welnh scales and who receive and I think s-hou'.d te-l The m.t anrieiit ; : ment television monopoly would could also look b.ick and Kllrnpse ' ceive a milislantiaily unaniitnaisj lions on earth hive t b held unconstitutional, as was history was A. 8. Carter, who j backing in the co:nre.:s ..." mated as pou.t.y :. MILESTONES I r.il.l I lie lilex ill I lie O.lllr NrH 40 Years Ago Today Labor previous attempt at a could remember Calgary when , Hi comment appeared tu te-i years old. The newly- organized Hoy Rovernmcnt airline monopoly. has just spoken did, on the whole make the most construe-! tive .speech of the whole debate." I HAVE don my bit to promote this plan to by-pass Britain'.! : scarcity of dollars not so much to help Rritnin as to help Canada. In fact, it is primarily for the sake of B C. Already I see sipns of a coming slump, quite as plain as those that vere there for a Crowfoot and rather Laromb? were largely Instrumental in nrnttpiittntr I h T '..-If f , Wit Omd. III tl. RADIO SYSTEM Scouts were addressed by Alder- 1 man Bullock-Webster and J W Chappelle at their first meeting The national radio latlon are san(ts frf)m utUlM,,,f lUr, A!. ; t un by the Auatrallan Broadcast- ... ow , ,hf of es Ms .revenue from a larRe share of Later he made hi home as a : rancher ronvenlenl to where highly valuable nil itrtke.s, Jut! Rev. F. W Kerr In his . ''rrvn on the" destiny of China predicted the future world Readers will come from China. the licence fee of 2 on receiving1 Mis. The commercial stations . and see for himself what it was all about. Later it I , was understood government engineers had surveyed the site and were preparing a report. Then Alcan ! i itself joined the discussion by offering to finance j clearance of all the marketable timber concerned. ; Since that time silence. Although the Speech from the Throne referred to committees that will study the questions of Buttle Lake power and development of the Columbia River basin, the urgent problem of Tweedsmuir Park went lamentably unnoticed. In a brief to "Forest and Outdoors" magazine, which has shown an interest in the matter, the Burns Lake and District Board of Trade looks at the situation in this way:. "Tweedsmuir Park was set aside as a park because of the unsurpassed beauty of its many lakes, great and small, which are now directly involved. If nothing is done to level a fringe of standing trees 200 yards to two miles in depth in the area that will le inundated, and disuse of the debris, access to the waters and terrain leyond will be blocked for a century, for trees underwater do not rot. "The aftermath will be a 143-mile-long, ghastly, gigantic graveyard of dead trees and snags protruding from the waters, and tangled masses of wind-driven debris along the outer edges. Tweedsmuir Park should and could be a continuing asset." The main riddle involved is how can clearance of roughly 150,000 acres be done cheaply and effectively? Suggested solutions range from burning to pulling the shoreline trees down by lug atter the Hooding has been completed. On this score, perhaps similar work now being carried out at Prince George offers a practical answer. There two bulldozers, dragging a caterpillar track between them, are levelling timber on potential agricultural land for as little as $4.00 an acre. Not all the Tweedsmuir Park land in question could lie so treated, but experts maintain there are thousands of acres where the method would be feasible. Whatever the answer may be, it is certainly not inaction. Although it was not obliged to get mixed up in this, Alcan has made its offer and the next step is up to the government. If it intends to respecMts mandate ;o promote tjie 'welfare, of this province", it muft act quickly. The water will "riot wait for elections. south of Edmonton, have been numberii 103 compaid to mah. Ctlrler 6ui not whole year before the stock market crash of 1929. The tiin to avert it is now. B.C. has the most vulnerable """llm7"" i,ve la surviye til tlu f'rirm niiH 30 Years Ago Today ft-f.m ttm nrnaram Col 3 H MrMuilin. present to AtlvwtweimJ Thty each -puy . Mr McDonald, who r.-lKned j economy in an canaaa .in in? . government acent at Prince Ru ,t25 to the Roverument for their "'"' i"-1 "r ",r I last few weeks many base metal j uorr na. been aonointed su- n.. ,..hu nt welsh scales some year aieo. la i mines have closed down. perintendent of the provinei;.! ; one .:r t.n. i tj iM-evl.iu.'i '" ln lh fltT and " We have tost a, pood slice of p(,,K.p a, of M lrch 3j i year otofU ' . i ' lu white - tw prewmt ' ' the British lumber market. Y!- . . .. ' . . 'occupant. .Mr. Sutherland, will 4 have a hu'?e surplus of unsold: u ... , .....,,.. " "'-".ba rememoerad by many of the is- ' ' - 1 iiiiii.-. iru;- 11. .1- in in. i.ceu .salmon, much of which used to jdlstui and munjrSiMlpid ujj j the Rotary Crib, iwcd th- V"- lation when necessary may be tio to Eritain. We ild no apples 1 rr. by the pi.tma.ster T r of tin., ntv to hust'e for pe for'h . . v.t r .1 t-i t 1 1 to Britain this year. The federal , , , . , . . . . business for the usi lvi s Inslend , v. ,j u- .t.. 1 .(.-, ' government still holds a hi1? , , , , ,. .,. -, ' of look v.: to others to do i' fur , - ... u ... " , sum us of butter, boii"lit to .. ,Thesy.,t LV," tern here thus I', some- . HI-irAi . them what different to that In Can--1 JUjUl lUI 11011 4-la. where the CHC not only: n . f- j "J operate- IU own stations but has j ..L. . J., I Alllftr 20 Years Ago Today maintain prices. Yet Britain is still desperately short of many of the very things in which we have a surplus. A larfte number of lot a I un regulatory powers over private broadcast in?. The duel system e employed met the fiS Prince They have plenty of money but Rllp0rJ hut were disappoln'ed . gives lisl.ier In all the cities I VICIX.HUA. CPi-The hovital and many of the towns a wide lnwrar.ee scheme will nee-.; a when told miners bound for A n vriv harl nlrr.:rlv liecn i-ii'i'it off by the Oranby Company ; j('hoi('e- NEXT MONTH Mr. Eden and Mr. Butler will visit Ottawa, on their way home from Wash- tu" boat. Probe smaller provincal subsidy in '.he next fiscal year than for the current year. Finance Minister Elnar Oui-Ideuon said the subsidy paid to j the scheme In 1352-53 t orn consolidated revenue was $4 .CSV I 900. The subsidy In the next. Iu- c Ciirrie t f v Jtv t t ineton. Mr. and Mrs. John McRae at" I think our Prune Minister - f),r discon-inuance of could make history (and help ; h , Third Avenue us hold our jobs) f on that visit oI m nPalth. Cost $54,000 lie inaue me visiliiik Err.iin tal year will be v.53.5C2 less, or 1 0 Years Aao Today OTTAWA CP-The Currie in t V Kill.o r-. tu.un rir... , ,.. , l.i. I . . . . I - . . M- - $4033 .428. busl to the To. U8 nermisxlnn hv the citv Cf.nncii tK .e, .,!.. -.rl,-.- et I Contributing Ijl lots to erect an apartment buildinr statesmen exactly the same: proposition that Mackenzie Kim? made to Franklin Roosevelt. That became known as the Hyde 1 Park agreement. All four parties would back him on this. Under the' Hyde Park agreement U.S. , promised to buy as i4.M7. ' approximately 45.OO0 i" n' h! ! ' ':! ' ,.,r. than the government sU.jh'd hTT . on Third Avenue across Irotn moi tne post ottice. i mated was lost as a frAiil' lilt -V',--:M mnw i m ."n f 6,'and Uimitjv4jBUilA!MitO'l I ; IthefU from the army camp m wun uie oijf'inns ; t i ne r-(jri ; p... r-.n. much from Canada as Canada j roa(j Prince Ruocrt 'a i . ' . . I The Arab Leaxue formed ai bought from U.S.A. Under that l " Ule iuuy was '. :Calro in 1B45 -,L,u of Eeypi, "Industrial annex" is now linked up with this city. tamed in a reply tabled in the,, Jordan. Saudi-Arabia. n- . . - ... . . B.r.j.a Scripture irmiure f-aiiuge i" assune tor t, 1 a 1 couimoiui 101 reny v iigui. ; r. ihannn and Yemen. or Jotlay Joaa-j a simple sounding, but vastly portant bargain, the two neighbor countries averted what ' would otherwise have become a critical situation. Incidentally, "Thou hast the words of eternal life." St. John 6:63. Soviet Shipping In Dire Straits it enabled Canada to pay her LIONEL iCLt -Mciiorn. ; j i George S. Curric, former dep-j1 i uty minister of national defence i and head of a firm of charUicrl accountants, was appointed last' ! April to conduct the inquiry. HU ! controversial report was tablet' ! In Parliament In December. t way In the war without taking a single cent of lease lend or U.S. handouts. Letterbox Reports Indicate Here's a man who doe a great deal to Mlow-citij-ehs and his community. Vet for he' l-en "hiding his light under a bushel". Anyone looking up Main Street, for ir.!.n-' never guess that he hod a hand in establish" ;' its fine new stores, hotels, office or apartment I-But he ha. Nor would many people realize that they him to thank in part for their homes. Or fort ' water that flows from the faucets. Or the elert" serves them so many ways at the flick of ''' Every week worker take home pay f"1"1 ,n'!'' thnt this man helped to develop. But they're u.u-Ins connection with their jobs. ! He even ha an influence on his fcllow-fitii and the length of their lives! Who is he? He's r i typical life inwrnnct policyhoM" - who might be any one of million of c"nH','"ntlK; t ia through investments of his premium money create public works, home and industries m ' ' i CANADA WOULD say, we will have! accept sterling for all prod-fi -ht. i ucts you buy ' rom us- ln anv PICKETING IS WROXO conditions, they would Editor, Tne Dally News: , , been granted without a Unions have filled a ncces- AND THERE WOULD sary function, but all good BEEN NO INFLATION. year in which we earn a surplus The defence department said bills submitted by Mr. Currie up to last Nov. 30 Included $17 S'J8 for fees; $0,353 for travelling expenses: $428 for telephones and telegraphs; $2 for postage and $255 for stationery. HAVE on trading account we will invest that surplus in property, ' By THOMAS HARRIS STOCKHOLM ( Reuters i - . Russia's shipping industry, plagued by delayed launching, poor maintenance, time-consuming repairs and poor tur narounds, Is ln the midst or a slump and orders have gone out things when carried too far, be- But the workers demanded j r" u bonds or mortgages come bad things, and Unions everything at Big j once, so much so, , the sterling area. No are fat becoming a bigger pen- that many small outfits have ' wil, chan ange hands bptween TRAIN ACCESSORIES Now In Stock! Oil Can Trains Crossover! Automatic Gates Bridges been forced out of business. rtnvfrnmpnl Thu I rt iuiHim 1 ace than Big Business. We cannot ban strikes even If we wanted to, because that would be Every raise in wages widens the sellers will get paymerit In their gulf between agriculture and own money. ot nying a person the ngnt to manuiaciuring Dusinejaes snd By this simple, but far reach- worn or noi as he pieasea. mases n impussiDie lor farmers I ing process, Canadian wheat to shipping organization ti ' "liquidate shortcomings." This is the concensus of re-! ports reaching hire in Russian technical publications. TVy point out that la.st year's ship-i building quotas were not Jul-! un tne other hand, pickets i to compete with other indusnies ( growers, lumbermen, fishermen also rum"- munities. Life insurance money is fruit growers, and metal miners would be able to hold their markets and keep their Jobs. are doing ju.st that. Denying a ! f or help. (Incidentally when person the right to make a choice farmers take a rare holiday, without coercion. They have to j they do not demand that other go along with the rest whether j people pay for it.) And outside medical research projects seeking to they want to or not. There is no of our own country, it makes diseases. So, if you own life insurance, get out from un '' bushel and take a bow ! filled while the 1951 quotas were exceeded by two per cent. At the end of the second quar- j ter of last year, launchlngs were ; six-percent below planned ton-! nage, Complaints by ship op-1 erators against poor mairil.cn- j It. would require, each year lor some time, the purchase by the Bank of Canada of a considerable amount of British held stocks and bonds. These could be resold In Canada or held bs more difficult our trade with other countries because of the difference in cost of production. So the whole tiling boom Good Used Cars 11 T Studebaker Champion 4-door sedan 1 1948 Dodge 4-door sedan 11951 Studebaker Z-door sedan 11M9 Austin Panel 11949 t'lylni Standard Coach THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL 1937 Chevrolet Coach Good transportation at $100.00 Superior Auto SERVICE LIMITED sucrj thing as peaceful picketing. A hidden threat is not peaceful. Even if a person crossing the Jine did not get a punch in the nose then and there, he would know be was taking a chance of having his house burned down Sorry no "027" track available. ance and slow snoduy repair at vniiD (.reiJCE erangs on us time and time again. the Bank of Canada preferred. Compensated Prisoner a ..i-.J IK. .utarwriter - ..il I firmly believe, when we have work in the yards appear regularly in the Soviet shipping press. .f Ih. m. Iho- SO ui'" or hts family molested etc. Free suffered enough from natjen VICTORIA The British enterprise mean mat it one is wide strikes without finding a solution to Inflation (because not satisfied with his job, he has Columbia cabinet approved pay United Stout n mV", " ,lan w Canada - will fll"'V M family'. .ecufllV and yow " yean. ly him I you cannot have high costs And liment of $256 compensation to a ma low prices without hurting some Rupert Radio & Electric Phone 644 Box 1279 Tiir nrt uiciiDAurc tt MPANIES IN In the first quarter of lu.st year, 58 per cent of all breakdowns occurred in ships' engine rooms. Shipyard managers blame engineers for maltreating the engines of their vessels. Engine room crews are often rhanuel before they have become fully-acquulnted with the engines, the managers say. the ripht to change it for one that is satisfactory. I believe at the end of the war, business was more ready to work along with employees than any other time. If they had a-;ked for shorter hours (which would have been as good as a raise) and better and safer working Vancouver man ImprLsonrd in the Oakalla jail who lost a firmer in an accident ln the prison's sheet metal shop. Prisoners are riot covered by the Workman's Compensation Act and the compensation was awarded by lilt Lirt nuimMiui. wi" " I"'"""" "ft it Good Cifienhi fo own group) the Supreme Court v ill reverse Its decision and ban pickets. In a democratic country, pickets are wrong and cannot legally be made legal. MRS. C. G. HARVEY, Smithers, B.C. Srd Ave. VY. I'hene Green 21T