Prince Rupert Daily News As I See It All Aboard Saturday, May 16, 1953 NT' t by By G. E. MORTIMORE j Uijependent aallT newspaper devoted to the upbuilding of Prince Hupen and Northern and Central British Columbia. Member of Canadian Prern Auult Bureau of Circulation ' Canadian Dally Newspaper Association. Published by 'he Prluce Rupert Dally Newt LlmltM i. F. MA OOR, President H. O. PERRY, Vice-President Subscrlntlun Rales: nqmtt 1j carrier Pr wee. 25c; per month 1.0'j; per year, $10.00 ik' ly mall Pe month, 16c, per year, 18.00, Sa&saS jthorltBrt aa cond class mall b the' Port OfBee Department, Ottawa, l more I t . . .. av a ev Churchill's Last Wish IN THE British election i. Sii I made up my follow Mr. wherever he of m mind to Churchill wont. v ( i iiii il.; r IS V for two rcasons a hunch that he first. I hud THE SWEDISH-AMERICAN LINE'S M.S. Kungsholm, now near-inR completion in Holland and due to arrive in New York at the end ol thiy year, has been scheduled for a 55-day cruise around South America, leaving New York next February 6. The new 000-foot 22,000-ton luxury liner is Scandinavia's largest. She will carry fiOO passengers in trans-Atlantic service, 390 on cruises. would win oroverbial the election by the whisker second, I felt that in the very nature of things this would be the old warrior's last appearance In an election campaign. Scottish friends argued wilh me about this -and said I-was wrong. They said the British never voted for .sentimental rea OTTAWA DIARY fSi'Trrv. By Norman M. MucLeoo sons. For I felt then, and I feel 1 Tl'I-ir TIME finds three-year-old Brenda Roe of Ottawa ti mood foi the capital's tulip festival. She admires some ! first tulips to bloom In Ottawa. The city will mark annual Canadian tulip festival May 10-24 when its will be at their best. Doctors used to be a light-hearted crew. Equipped with a box of pills, a nest of leeches and a happy grin, they set out to cure everything from ingrown eyebrows to death. Now they are the saddest assortment of Gloomy Dans outside an undertakers' convention. Despite a wajon load 'of new tools and more wonder druirs than you could shake a scapel at, they refuse to admit that they can cure anything. And the more lives they save, the gloomier- they get. No doctor worth his penicillin spealts ' the word "cure"' above a whisper, for fear of being drummed out of Hie profession. The modesty of physicians and surgeons has Increased in direct proportion to the braven confidence of the popular science writers. For .some .time the Reader's Digest was the poor man's guide to medicine. You can depend on it for a fine selection of new cliseases-at least one every month. Any intelligent husband could pass a shaking hand over his brow, point out in the pages of the Digest .some symptoms which he had just found in himself, and work breakfast in bed on Sunday morning. But along with this pleasant list of new ailments, the Digest began presenting stories of new medicines which would cure them, and cure the good old reliable ailments as well. The Digest became so good at curing diseases on paper that doctors snatched it from the waiting-room as soon as It arrived, leaving patients with nothing to read but copies of the 6nail-Watcheiv' Gazette and the Illustrated London News for November, 1912. Then it transpired that some of the wonder drugs weren't so wonderful after all. Some of them cured you, but killed you immediately afterwards. Others removed athlete's foot, but gave you warts on the ears instead. Yet other wonder drue;.s did all they were supposed to do, Dtit by that time doctors had turned sour on the printed and spoken word. Sooner than arouse false hopes, they scared people to death by declining to offer them any hope at all. Nowadays every story of a new miracle medicine, no matter how spectacular Its results, carries a statement by some doctor that the stuff Is not in any sense a cure. The announcements grow more and more apologetic. The next new fixlt- lotion will probably be heralded In these terms: "Dr. Wilbur Bone announced today that he has developed a new antibiotic, boneomyecin, which will not cure anythingat all. It was at first hoped that boneomyecin would be effective against pimples and dandruff, but tests have established that the new drug not only Is quite useless, but in nine cases out of ten results ln harmful side-effects." 1 now, .that Mr. Churchill won Tne latest favorite anecdote province but that they would that election only because it was travelling Parliament Hill relates lull short of overturning the his last appearance. That gave i tc w break in the hitherto solid government of Angus L. Mac-him what tilted the scales his : Political front of a Liberal Cab- dunald. A reduction In Macdon-way. , inet Minister's family which PC aid's majority in the last legis- The people felt in their bones j lendel' George Drew has effected. I. dure, and a strengthened Con-that he was on the last trip ! Tne cabinet minister's son servative opposition are being around, so to speak. That gaveines Il8ed 12 was confiding in forecast. The CCF Is not expect - him a special tribute over and nis mother the plans that he was lift to be a major factor. above their normal reaction 1 maturing in his mind for his. In M . iitobu the return of the because they too sensed that it j future. He told hei that he de-! i j: eral government of Premier was his last such performance, i cMed to follow the same line of Campbell is being taken for It was like the extra tribute occupation as his lather. - .granted in both old-Una party the extra applause you would j His mome.- was pleased and 'circles here. The only sceptical give to a great actor on his last j applauded him for the decision, i note is being contributed by the appearance. i He then told her that he had Social Credit group. They are i decided also to enter politics. icommiltinK themselves to no i SHALL never forget the scene Again his mother was pleased, i forecasts. But they say that So- m the vast hall in Glasgow She indicated her encourage- ;cial Credit may contribute a sub-r i d Bntleman "ad ment. istantial measure of surprise to finished u u his - final campaign ! At, that point he told her that i the result. "Vended to ent" PO-"U"S 3SI ln British Columbia the Libre no come Back Again and 'eraic a Progressive Conservative. another here are curiouslv vet even more sentimental , His mother Immediately was . ,n u i Tn l y ooUm tc The ' nd She dP" "oiej toresTon tll ha dWa dry MnT a .ntaSTLM, fhTd"" had 'old ,bT:,',,pThe cT'ictlon to Social Credit Premier Bennett ed plainly on the old manV L cheeks He knew what they were 1 "We'''. mothtr'" th,e , , has been an inept political lead- thinkinc n.inister-s young hopeful replied, 'ev alul has sUrred wiUe antagon- ' . ,, t , "it's like this: George Drew needs iSm- i2i tlie hitter warf ire thai You can tell a loT by the look help so badly." . i , 0"w' ,u sSa x the of a man's face at moments of i in their final clean eiean-up nr. hour, nours , Credit 1 r?.J" .! and the CCF, factor a emotion Churchill a! hurt Z v""v core of hTs heart in P thf,.Commons' thc MP's were which is expected to influence hat 1951 Sect ion when getting considerable personal tll, seoond choices of the voters found .St fif'SS n'oer1 nd 'Zto.W favor; ,31 Saturday Sermon Protect Our Forests Y1TH the observance of Forest Conservation W Week throughout Canada, starting tomorrow, Mention is rlirecterl to the rich natural property of .vhich every Canadian is part owner. To put it in figures, every Canadian at birth becomes inheritor of 15 acres of his country's forest. Although the property is called "crown forests," the crown is on every individual's head as a shareholder of the publicly-owned timberlands which, all told, measure a million square miles. Out of this tree-growing inheritance comes a stream of wealth amounting to more than two billion dollars a year. Whether in a logging camp or An industrial town, the forest dollar lodges into every Canadian's pocketbook and energizes every branch of trade and commerce. In Canada's early history, the forest supply far exceeded the immediate needs of limited population. Today the situation has changed sharply. World demands for forest products have expanded the yood-using industry to a point where' accessible "jmherlands no longer contain a surplus and in some :ases are insufficient to feed dependent factories. -Urging that everyone be made aware that the forest dollar is born in the forest and that its life expectancy is due directly to perpetual production of wood material, Jl. J. Killam,' president of the B.C. branch of the Canadian Forestry Association, said recently: - "The biggest factor that defeats good forest management and threatens the nation's income from forest resources is the annual plague of forest fires. These are 80 per cent the work of human recklessness and by a modicum of personal care could be banished. "While most Canadians, in recreational journeys to the forest, take effective precautions against forest fire damage, 4,000 others manage to set the country blazing and year by year desecrate another two million acres. In this process, they incinerate 3oO million young trees that Mother Nature herself hud planted as a future endowment for the children of -Canada." : Although the federal and. provincial forest services and the many well-organized private fire-fighting agencies maintained by logging operators are steadily intensifying measures for protection and suppression, their efforts will not be enough so long as human carelessness continues unchecked. ; The answer rests-with the individual who carries the instruments of destruction in his pocket. If he exercised complete care with these, nine out of ten forest fires would be prevented. The slogan is "Keep B.C. Forests Green." It is worth remembering worth millions of dollars and th6usands of jobs. By BASIL S. rttOCKTMl Rector SI. Andrew's Cathedral The Christian Faith Is entirely opposed to individuate egotism and yet It regards the Individual soul or personality only true reality. 1 - At the beginning of the Bible Uine aw,., not spell the f the testimony regarding the! nmi i n aLivjn ui ivmn la in terms ui , a1' to l,m,li ' ' an Individual and not of a group or race. Holy Baptism, the cen-.not 83 SAmA rlht trnl nnH euenfinl rito nf Initio.! 'acred duty . . . a tllity 01 lion Into a true relationship with L,inS freecl"1 lo " n,.,i nr,i k f,i ice towards ftxi and ir, all believe him when he talked 1 V- - i- .v- . me conipeience oi recentiy-se- world ' ac" ' talked;t.on.s in Nova Scotia. Manitoba Wted Provincial Leader Arthur bor. . ; individuals. These These three three f-ictor factors, the l-l-d I . , 'and British Columbia. The feel-hninp He told them he wanted only ing was general that the result Ottawa Uterab i one .more term in office "to wobfd SCrVdlt c o carry Important 1mpllca-tove?tu the make the supreme effort of his ' tions for the later federal con-1 S"tin life. He wanted to try to bridge test. ad- I) I II E'JTO'RV ZLZL ZL i.The.t " opinion' ........... , vni.. Ui, from Nnua Cnf -i no c- Un r.., u rv t.- tlKtl .till Farmers Solve blocs. ! prises were to be expected in that In other words the man whose twvlrr In all itillh-H 11 l: ami 7::ll) p.m. Mi:t'l fch-I : I S e-i'it ) li mil, 4th Ait. W . at Dutntn it Holy Communkm tf ft Siintay Srtir.l !' t" CtHill BilMl S ITwHi-r. I Bi-cliir HUM' ini'iM Sth Ave. K. nl Ychim ?-Mlnl.Hcr: Hrt. Frt lOrwr fame had been built on war wanted to end his career as a There is a hymn which prays, "Baptise the nations," but you can't baptist- nations but only persons. The command of Christ t3 preach the Gospel to every creature recognizes the sanctity of the unit, not of the collective. So therefore there Is an essential unreality about all group concepts, be it the state, society, the church, the party, the union or whatever. All these things exist for the proper and voluntary function of the person towards all other persons and towards the Person of the Godhead, soldier of peace. BUT to Mr. Churchill's open chagrin' and inner grief, he people did not all believe him. Nobody openly called Church (lltsT I'lll 'i-ltVTI HI W ill a warmonger, as manv on both .sides of the ocean had done 4th Avrmif Bisl Kc. E A. WrlgW. " Gr.r rFIIIST 1ITH DIG flth Ave 't Rrr. L. O SffW a lew years earlier. But it was clear from one end of the isle I 4 iljwr fi.tl.VITIllV All"' PrusiT Slrn-t C O. Sr. Cpt Owrrr Or Riinilsv Kchiiftl 2 P to the other that a great many people felt that danger of world peace would be greater if Mr. Churchill again became Prime Minister. I asked a group of workmen in tho-bi? new steel plant at Mnrgam, Wales,, what a Tory victory would mean to them. One put it: . . "He'll have us back in khaki." lie will." By '"he" the man meant Labor Problem CAVAN. Ont. (CP)- Five farmers in this district 10 miles southwest of Peterborough have Droved there Is one good way to solve the farm labor shortage. The five Mervm and Charle-, Smith, Louis Pudsey. Bob Ross 9 net Gordon Staples exchange labor through a co-operative scheme. Most such schemes collapse because one or another member feels he is giving more work than he Is g'tting In return. To avoid this handicap the Cavan farmers decide at the start of each season on the rates of hire . for men, horses, tractors and implements. The rates are fixed on BBjJiottitjfjJjfls;. When one man brings his "ouipment to work on ihe arm of another member, he is credited with his hours of work at the agreed rate. At the end of I he season all the credits are balanced, and those who have a surplus are paid in cash. Bob Ross, who has 97 acres, "aid the farm he took over ln 1947 now Is about two years more advanced than it. would have been had he worked it by himself. . (Blari ST.'MII'ri.lTlllKl Bth Avn. at M.-llrl'l; - tmmm They do not exLst to push persons around and to use them for means to some great and non personal end. They properly exist to foster personality as the sacred reality In a self-governing relationship of love and sacrifice tcwards persons. We live In an age when this thought must be cherished and steadfastly held. It is not only ittiAiia vwhi:h;-,p(iv-jiiie xmurtd for mill-personal molives. The . disea.se ts connected with our' collective" organization In Industry and business and with the modern state whether com-munLst or capitalist. It tends to be a crime almost everywhere In the modern world to be an Individual soul. But perhaps It UflQ nlll'llrC I'd frtf thu Qnn nf 'Attend . r.r. n n il s an'.'"1 kirchill; and nnbortV' evn Runrtnv Si-liiml " ' . Pravrr 1.' P Coronation in Westminster .. Abbey ' IjONnnM tv, Mo-.o. I - ' iBIi"' o.. Hrluml II '1" " .TH manning- inem to attend the BOYD NKrX, one of Britain's leading conductors and musicians, has been appointed dean of the Royal Conservatory of Music of Toronto. He succeeds Sir Ernest MacMillan who retired in 1952. Mr. Neel, who assumes his ' duties Sept. 1, conducted the Sadlers Wells Opera Company in 1946 and 1947 and the D'Oyly Carte Company ln 1949. He was marie .a commander of the British Empire in the Queen's New Year's honors list. MnrttlllK Wnl-slllp Srrv , lum,niWuirs nave coronation In Westminster wtsumnstei Ah At) received their invitations "com-1 bey June 2. ri'J ttn Ae- , lirnH pt.-r- -v t. ceded to ask the name. THE BIBLE tells us that King David was not allowed by the Almighty to build the temple, because there was too much blood on his hands. Churchill, like David, might be completely sure that he had never shed the blood of his own countrymen, or their enemies, except in a righteous cause but now. near the end of his journey See Ihe new... God was crucified. The world! first Presbyterian O The Invitation consists of a large gilt-edged card bearing the Royal coat of arms. Along with it, the press received special instruc : lions frnm LETTERBOX A BIG MOMENT Editor, The Dally News: 01 111s clay coum not Dear mat anyone should be completely f himself. u .. We must have a care that our freedom to organize and com-' V , j Scotland Yard and six pages of bi trrTheTwi; lli?K"cUoM d -gulauorl - tf . ..... v ; i nRsc conclude with a terse on this earth, many of his wn ' countrymen did not believe, in I their hearts, that ' Churchill j wanted to leave them in a world ! K M4l M4"1lStt 'AiiHiwr' CHAM Scripture Passage "They went forth and preached everywhere." St. Mark 16:20. note, saying highland- pistols and powder horn may be worn. Correspondents are told they may wear any of the forms of court dress specified in the lord chamberlain's regulation for dress at court, evening dress with knee breeches or trousers, morning dress or dark lounge suits. The earl marshal's office which issued the invitations, said It Is expected 349 men and women will represent Dress and FOR YOUR at real peace. That cut him to the heart. . As I watched the grand old warrior's face nobody needed to tell me whether he was sincere. I knew then that he was talking the simplest truth when he said that peace between Russia and the West was the supreme aim of his remaining life. I hope and pray he gets that chance to make real peace not iust for our sakes, but for his. too. For, as I see it, in that finest hour when' Britain stood IIM1 IHCTtlC RANCI radio in the Abbey. The total We extend a onffl31'"!, to visitors lo worship A'.. EA 231 Fourlh Minister: HovWJ; SUNDAY, MAY 17,1- Morning Worsn r J ' Sunday School I--1'- wnrshil) 'iM- ST. PAUL'S LUTHERAN CHURCH Sth Ave. nl IWrltrldc St. REV. II. O. OLSON, Pastor ' The Just Shall Live By Faith" COME AND WORSHIP SCNDAY FKKVKI-S MAY 17. 1053 Morning Service 11:00 a.m. Sermon: "The Holy Spirit and His Work." Junior Choir .Anthem. Evening- Service 7:30 p.m. May 17th program. Sunday School 12:15. attendance on Coronation Day including peers and memhera r,f Northwest Pacific Conference is to be held in Vancouver from July 1 to 5. All members are welcome. July 5 will be Women's Day for all women members; The local group has new quartern. All meetings will be held tit 317 West Third Avenue. The club will be open from 7 to 12 pir). Anyone interested may eome, but come sober. May I quote from an item on "failure" in our leaflet, "The Lifeline": "The 12 steps that elevate men and women to the new vistas of a way of life have no( failed or cannot ' fail for th reason that God never fails. But some alcoholics have failed to , give these principles first plaee in theii lives. For this failure (not of any failure of these principles or of that Greater Power), there is as a result little if any change found in their usual alcoholic existence. ''May we, then, always turn to that Power who has guided so many thousands of us this far and may every alcoholic who tur,ns to AA fur their answer believe, observe and live the principles which constitute our way of life." ' CARL W. BERG. aione there was no noint in theoya. Family will be abul unls ZXZ ' jjirace, wiin ireeaom. Minister at botbjl Telephone Directory MUST BE IN tY MAY 31st Please submit your rhanges IN WRITING o the Teh-phone Department, City of Prince Rupert. ACT MOW GREER & BRIDDEN LTD. Remember tn , to keep It ';y , AUTOMATIC OVEN TIMER PUSH-BUTTON CONTROLS SPACIOUS MASTER OVEN STREAMLINER DESIftN $359.00 On Display Now RUPERT RADIO AND ELECTRIC iu urnre EVANGELICAL FREE CHURCH Statioi: E BuildiilR Pastor: W- 11:1)0 a.m. Sunday School ami Bin" rISS Classes for all ages. 7:30 p.m. Evangelistic Service. ' A warm welcome awaits you at the en"11 See us to discuss that new construct ion Telephone 644 "Across the Bridge.