tsew Chamber for V.S. Security Council ray... Welcome Fish Pact j . I VANCOUVER VANCOUVER CP-United Unitert Pi.v, , ' V Prince Rupert Daily News As I See It Fish- Friday. March 14, 1952 H i prr-np j - Reflects and Reminisces i ermen's and Allied Workers' sltion of or , Union Thursday welcomed a ' a"d shore ,. S , statement from Minister cf Fish- in vain - j cries R. W Mayhew that Canada Horn i c-, would not press for early ratlfi- TTr evt"' caUon of the fisheries treaty wilh u$K ...... at. ntt, s""t (,., iOl. :f..lt Rev. David B. Matthews pre Rupert and Northern and Cental British Columbia. , Member of Canadian Dress Audit Bureau of Circulations Canadian Dally Newspaper Association. . A. HUNTER. Managing Editor; H. G. PERRY, Managing Director ' SUBSCRIPTION RATES: cnrrler, per week, 25c; per month, $1.00; per year, ?Sj. . . $10; by mail, per month, 75c; per year, $8.00. vfnM Published every afternoon except Sunday by Prince Rupert Daily New Ltd., 3rd Avenut, Prince Rupert: Authorized as secrxnl class mail by Post Office Department, Ottawa, j mis indicate, that the oppo-! 'mU m.m " w':i and h,V, sided, and opened ana opened and opened and opened the meeting with prayer. Patriot Ledger of Quincy, Mass. ; Cote de Neiges is a stylish part' cf Montreal and the gunmen who Jap Fish Treaty For Your SPRING ClOlft iTHE Moderator of the I - .v. . u I at CUT-PRICES BOYS' CLOTHES BOYS' PANTS-School wear and 4V dress wear. A very large selec- W IV. wer fighting it out with detec-I tives selected it as a nlao of I nervous, if temporary, residence. I They managed U mobilize three sub-machine guns, four 45- calibre pisWls, a thousand rounds i 'of ammunition and three heavy: ' revolvers. As a rule detectives do i not have artillery practice unless ! in the armed forces. United Church has just returned to Canada from the Far East and warned ! that the same old reae-j tionary elements are in ! power in Japan; He fears that the militarists may; stage a comeback. Down in Australia Dr. Herbert Evatt has been strongly warning j of this same danger. He and the : whole Labor party there also strongly deplore the lack of a .Vanishing Glimmer FOII a little while there seemed to be a glimmer of hqe for tho.e who had been feeling that, with taxes so oppressive and government surpluses so huge, some adjustment was inevitable. They were supported in their view by the belief that many taxes, however good their intention, had results that were adverse to the interests of the people and the finance of government. They recognized that a law of diminishing returns could and did operate in taxation as well as elsewhere. Corpor- This is a general -viw of the new Security C ouncil chamber at Vnited Nations Headquarters. Measuring: 13? by "2 feel willi 24-foot ceiling, the chamber Is completely equipped with facilities for technical services, including simultaneous interpretation, press, radio and television booths. The Security Council chamber was designed by Arnstein Arneberg of Norway, whose government contributed some $15,000 for its decoration. Seating arrangements in the Security Council, as well a in the Trusteeship and the. Economic and Social Council, will accommodate around 529 persons. tion Sperial, pair SJ.75 to $5.:5 BOYS' PI U.OYFR SWKATIRS All wool, light wright. short sleeves Special Price 9ric BOYS' VVINDBUEAKERS Suitable for sprint; and summer wear. Attractive tailoring, full zippers. Special Price S2.43 to $3.25 B'G SAVINGS ON MFN S CLOTHES MEN'S WORK SOX Good quality makes Per pair 45c to $1.25 MEN'S AND YOl'NG MEN'S p ii y sin M ! COMING THIS WAY j Willi Bruntjen, the young Or- ; man farm hand, had nothing to do with foot and mouth diseae. Ottawa says so officially. From being an alien suspect, with RCMP escort, he now returns to i Vancouver, with $50 in his jeans, a good job in- sight, and later on a bride from thae fa'.hcrland. ! Verily, fou and mouth disease has not done this Immigrant nny ' harm! clear-cut fisheries treaty which ation income taxes had been extended beyond what ; would have kept Japanese fish- LETTERBOX u t : f:.:.,...v..i : tra nOTtn 01 me equator. Rhine Canal Speeds Ships. DRESS PANTS Latest styles, good fit KM IXHIlTFl'L Editor, The News. Please allow me to say a few words in answer to a recent let- Special value MEN'S DKESS SOCKS YOlNfi MEN'S PINE SPRING JACKETS THE HAGUE, The Netherlands tReutersi The Rhine, age-old Vnmnekn watprwnv will enter A ter in the Daily News from Mv.jn.w nh,,. ,n ... hi;,orv Mav 21 ' when the new 45-mile-long Am- Latest styles, lroavy satin. Real Bargain .. MEN'S T-SHIRTS White and colore. Regular 1 85 Special MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS Plain shades. sanforW Special . But the plain fact, there as ! here. Is that local Canadian and Australian Interests were sacri -! flced to over-riding considera-I tions of U.S. power politics. ' SOME remarkable statements have been made in Canada to justify the strange fishing treaty, we are told that the Japanese are barred from fishing for halibut, salmon and herring. We are also told that, because the above are the best paying categories of fish, the Japanese ' won't want to cross the ocean for other kinds they art free to catch. SPOKTS OF ALL SORTS Everyone enjoys sport, In great or lesser degree. No one will deliberately discourage its full and free promotion. Grand indeed Is the winning of something that has tens of thousands interested. It would be a sorry world should baseball, football, boxing, curling, hockey, basketball and scores of other lines decline and fade away. But it never will. There is something in this glad rivalry, the zestfol playing of game that keeps us on our tors. Reeves. To illustrate the point I shall : make, let me tell a little story which Mr. Aberhart tbld us one time about a colt his father raised on his farm in Ontario. This colt was born on the old homestead and grew big and fat .in the pasture around the barn, , drinking out of the wooden ! trough all summer. Next spring the old gentleman took the colt sterdam-Rhine canal is opened to traffic. Built at a cost of $23,800,000, the canal will give the Rhine a fresh outlet at Amsterdam, enabling the heavy river traffic of inland Europe to link up with the North Sea and the oceans of the world more speedily than ever before. The work now nearing com- BE SURE YOU ARE IN Next To Royal Hotel level. The net earnings- of business had shown resulting declines, and unemployment was growing. Kxcessive taxation in such commodities as tobacco hud resulted in wide-spread smuggling, which was costly to industry, eostly in law enforcement, costly to the morale of a people, and costly in the declining revenue? received from these sources of taxation. This seemed to indicate that second and wiser fKought might suggest possible modifications. But recently Mr. Abbott in his public utterances has indicated that no such relief is likely to be forth-, coming. Necessary expenditures, he has pointed out, have made quite a dint in the $732 million surplus at the Mid of the year, and prospective increases in defence spending might account for the balance. But the disappointed taxpayer is not likely to ' more than partially satisfied with such explanations. He knows that he himself is sharply restricted in his spending. He knows that many businesses are finding it difficult to maintain a healthy position when caught between the needs for expansion and .1 .... .1 ,i ;t: i i and other horses across the rivr pletion includes what Is claimed to another pasture. The colt was: to be the world's largest inland Instead of an airplane, the steamer Net haeo will carry passengers to and from Kitlmat. If not as fast, the change ts safer. A boat may hit a reef but It never hits the id of a mountain fire thousand feet up. TRAVELS IS OUR BUSINESS lock, at Tiel, where the canal joins the upper Rhine. The lock it 1.170 feet long with spacious entrances and tne 190-ton vertical lock-gate can be raised in i. few minutes, giving unusually-iiipic! clearance for vessels. By eliminating, the present Quite contented until he got' thirsty and wanted a drink. He' walked up and down the river! bank and sniffed at the water but didn't like it. So he made up his mind to swim the river and drink out of the old trough on the other side. Of course, the moral is we are swimming CNR SEE YOUR TICKET AGK There are plenty of strangers in the city who would enjoy Inspecting the museum, yet remain unaware if the place is open or closed. Until Wednesday what tiresoiiw journey through smaller canals, shipping time between through rivers of wealth in or der to get at a financial trough. Amsterdam and the Rhine proper If you're going places wht-ilitr for buiinf or pleasure io any destination near or far, keep us ever in mind. For Trarrl According to the Social Credit- will be reduced by half to about amounted to an obstruction prac Vessels of up to 4.000 Ucally barred tne entrance near ers' ideas all you have to do is,0 hours, take a bucket alonir and ' heln tons will be able to pass and the street. No signs that tell you anything. One Is left ttf make a personal Investigation. M-MriineiH ami ine cnppiing uuruen oi taxation. In-his new sense of disappointment in the disappearing hope of relief, the average taxpayer is lilu'fy to become increasingly sensitive to any form of government spending that does not honestly overtake each other without risk. The canal will make the Rhine navigable for large vessels up to Basic, Switzerland. 500 miles from Amsterdam. It will give Austria, Switzerland, Germany, yourself whenever you need any liquid finance. That all sounds very good but in my humble opinion, they forget that eighty-five per cent of the wealth of Canada is in the hands of t wo is our bushms travel mHju htrt m Can a ti"fl njttd Stales, I mnpelc! VCe'lf be-glad o help you with your plans, anil will do our best to make your trip t pleasant one. per cent of the. people.! 4!s .vsecnoMovuKta. r ram-e., e.8umi, r.,. r,t i. ,.,,; DZu Luxembourg arid Hungary 'a shorter and more direct water Menial Health The most over-enthusiastie of ! I all promises Is this: That In case t the Japs do come over here anJ : fish for other specie than halibut, salmon and herring we can tend them home by adopting single-handed conservat ion ' measures. '.IF ALL this is so, why did the j Japs cling so stubbornly- to : their "right" to crops Into our waters at all? I What are they coming over for merely to admire the beautiful scenery? The plain truth is that the ! treaty itself is vague, ambigu-' ous, and open to double interpretation and long argument. In Article IV the signatories "agree ; to abstain from their right undor International law to take part in fishing for a specific stock of 'fish' under certain" conditions. ! Those conditions are set forth hi trrree separate clauses, all of , which are most complicated and I hard to understand. Moreover, they are qualffied by the following-strange appendix: "Provided, however, that no : recommendation shall be made fOT abstention by a contracting party concerned with regard to ; (If any stock of fisti which ai, any time during the twenty-five ; years next preceding the entry i into force of this Convention i has been under substantial ex-i ploitation by that Party . . ." i THE ONLY real Justification for j the acceptance of this treaty ; by Canadians was that they either had to take this or noth-' ing. It is ridiculous to pretend that ' tha Is what Canadian fishermen hoped to get a clear division of the Pacific into two halves. control this wealth, surely th?y STEEL ;ENTAL health is still a M' major problem in two bright recent Canada but there are route to the ocean. j The present link between Am-! sterdam and the sea is tha 15-mile North Sea canal, finished in i 1876. and ending at Ijmuiden In the world's largest sea-locks. Thai canal now is being widened to meet the expected increase of traffic created by the new Rhine link. I are clever enough to make htwi to protect it and not let us drink out of their fountains without paying for the drink. If you start printing .counter-; leit money or issuing boat checks, you are asking for trouble and a visit to the jail house. I agree with Mr. Reeves thit counterfeit money Is as good as Of all Kinds, from Design to Erection. WESTERN BRIDGE STEEL FABRICATORS LTD. VANCOUVER, B.C. Wm. Cruickshort G.A.P.D..CM During 1951, about 100.000 ln- any other kind as long as the; land ships of a total tonnage of 528 -3'd AveW(? people of Canada have confi- j 23,000,000 passed through the old "Xi!';U.Vl ' Phone 260 canal near Amsterdam. When ' the new caisal is in operation, ii i - in this Is expected to Increase' to more than 50.0O0.000 tons. I dence in it. But the trouble is I to build up that confidence and Ihold it. I It doesn't matter to me what ! kind of money I have as long las I can take it to the butcher -and bring hpme my pork chops? If this brain wave is as in-! pie as they say it is, why don't they practise it in Alberta? I Mr. Reeves said that, if. w"' 1 had a Social Credit government in British Columbia, we could build roads with bogus checks. He must think the people of j At best, we have a treaty which , J gives the Japs the right to come j back into our coastal waters, to n,h tor Hrtoin f fiv, wt oniKin toiumoia a re more mno- developments, says the monthly letter of the Royal Bank of Canada. The Canadian people have almost ceased to look upon mental disease as something to be ashamed of and to cover up, and the Canadian governments are expanding provision for treating mental diseases adequately. There is no stigma attached to mental ill-health. Patients are sick people. The idea that they are weak characters who could get over their disability if they would only pull themselves together is on its way out. Mental illness is more disgraceful to the sufferer or his family than a broken leg. It is no wonder that there should W disease of the mind as well as of the body. The human brain is the most complicated structural apparatus known to science. A great neurologist says; "If all the equipment of the telegraph, telephone and radio of the North American continent could be squeezed into a ' ha.lf-gallon cup, it would be less intricate than the three pints of brains that fills your skull and mine."' What are the signs of mental health? Not merely the absence of disease, but deeply-felt happiness. Mental health is the adjustment of human beings to the world and to one another with a maximum of effectiveness. It means having the ability to maintain an even temper, an alert intelligence, an acceptable social behaviour and a happy disposition. The mentally healthy person knows himself, accepts himself and is himself. A leaflet on the subject says people who are mentally healthy feel comfortable about themselves, feel right about other people, and are able to meet the demands of life. eent than tnose of Alberta, not for other kinds. i j Can- anybody, familiar with ! Mr- RcV theory sounds good j th Japanese trad practices of feul il cmls to me ne is bai-glns (earlier years, imagine that it U!lnto the racket of the financial I going to be an easy Job for our ! wizards and they may put up a ! fisheries patrol vessels to com- I liMle resistance. But, as Mr. gjam loves clothes gr;? pel the Japs to catch only one Reeves says, everything phys- ically possible can be made fin 1 kind of fish and not another? ancially possible-but I add it's; WHAT the Japanese have won V. . w V M r ' hardly probable. ' Go ahead and try It, Mr. Reeves, and good luck to you. H. D. SMITH. Nithi River. dent nationals and vessels from carrying on fishing operations in presently conserved fisheries in all waters ... In which fisheries Japanese nationals or vessels were not in the year 1940 conducting operations." l the physical right to come back into waters where their statesmen can argue till Kingdom-come about the letter of their status. The Japanese Premier's preliminary letter of February 7, 1951, speaks volumes when it says: "The Japanese government will, as a voluntary act, implying no wairer of their international rights, prohbit their resi- Joan loves fnmi YOU prohihly have some special interest, too- you'd tove to have or do "some day". R.it ntr :,H Imnro i hmfnrt wilt Onlv stretch SO f.'r' 7 more than ever, the secret is to plan ahead, savf 'I11' Here are two practical suggestions: fay Scripture faiiage or ... , . . I . miii-h it Will and preaching "Jesus went about . . . teaching healing." St. Matt. 7:29. I irst, occRie what you want mow, Royal g,nk i and open a special savings account at The Canada for that one particular purpose. Then sa ; RfcOND, use the Royl Bank Budget Bxk to kp J" Last February the army tried pylon vests that contained protective inserts of lightweight metal. The Latest in Popular Records ALL TIME HITS ' pfg ALBUMS and LP.'s L'W" at Rupert Radio & Electric THE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA J. E. TAYLOR, Manager Prince Rupert Branch The latest vest is designed to protect against mortar, grenade and shell fragments. Ths nor on your course, and to avoid careless spcnilniS-hook spenJ y,,r . V does not suRRcst how you should It does provide you with a simple pattern to hf P PLAN YOUR BUDGET TO SUIT YOURSELF-You Ask for one. cm get a copy at any hr.mch. Armored Vest 0( Ail-Nylon SEOUL. Korea tAPi United States infantry in Korea are testing a lightweight armored vest that Is all nylon. It weighs only seven or eight pounds about half the weight of metal alloy vests, the army said today. mally account for 60 to 80 per cent of combat wound. Tlw nywn vest wtu sometimes stop a .5-catibre alug but wUl not protect agairut high-velocity rifle or marchine-gun fire.