Trince Rupert Daily News Thursday, May 13, 1954 A . ft r Medals Still Being He'd Nine Years After End of For Veterans! Second War Lt.-Col. H. M. Jackson, director of the department's war service records division, stys the majority of Second Wot Id War TRAVEL TOPICS SEEING IS ENJOYING While East This Summer CRUISE The Beautiful iaguenoy and Sr. Lawrence 5 to 8 days. CONSULT YOUR LOCAL TRAVEL AGENT Crawford Moore Travel Agencies 215 Second St. Phone 620 .Try Daily -News Classified ties. There are still 4 631 bars to be issue'! and the department carries on a ceaseless hunt fur the next-of-kin. It could find only six last year. Long before the rued . Is now in the -a.ilts are el'-ane-d out Hi-i records division will kf ri uir--the United Nations Sew-? M al and ths Korea f.!e-:r,i to s-;;:: 28,000 servieerner. tri p.-t:ti-i pa ted in the Korean War. I ON THAT ' S-A i iii TASK. tM 1 JOB CALL ON DIBB PRINTING COMPANY Upper right r Cnrqf Pr!s Distribution Warelou Center: Final Aliembly Plant Formground : Body Aiiflmbly Plant g'tiil n hi 4 ( it! s aie under roof at the site of the largest BanuU'turimj centre in Canada, General Motors' ;v pi;:ts in south Ohawa. The factories (shown oe olfi" i!ly oi.-t'iied this fall, will produce all GM nr.i built in Canada. In all-out production the will raise GM capacity by more than 25 per cent to 1350 vehicles a day. Insert at upper left shows infra-red paint drying oven, a new Installation that bakes paint from inside out to produce tough high-gloss finish. The Oshawa development is one unit of a General Motors expansion program that has seen $100,000,000 invested across Canada over the past four years. . which cover 43 "2 acres of the 50, y i- veterans who have not written in for their medals are those j entitled to only one or two. i There are also seme Who just don't care about medals, even if they are entitled to seven or ; eight. 1 The medals, packed in tar-tons, are stored in specialty-constructed vaults in the division s Slater street building here. SIGNATURES NLCLSSAfiY A veteran has to wrho in for his medals so that tha o.vu.on lll has a signature which tail. with one on ii.s records. But, c Jackson says casts of per applying for medals to v.nien they are not entitled are v;e. Medals' could not be issued to veterans because in many eases they moved after the war and the division has no auUrossus lor them. First World War .oterans u.: o had to write in for their'mt'datj. 1 htse medals were m.nied in Britain and were engraved wilh 'I I he veterans name and rcgi mental number, tecond Won War medals, made in Canac.a', were not engiaved. For tins' rpninn t he ve : i-r ;t lis iitfmr; ne- f partment has issued o!,t!u engraved memorial oars s.nce laol to next-oi-kin oi iaial cas ties. There are stai 4,fcoi oa..-, tc be issued and the cit-partm .n.. carries on a ceaseless hunt for lite nexi-ol-kin oi Popular Steamer Prince Rupert SAILS FOR VANCOUVER and Intermediate Forts Each Thursday ut 11:15 p.m. For KETCHIKAN U'UVFtlllV MMniol.l I Comfort and Service By have Mcintosh Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP) Nine years ar-ter victory in Europe, the veter-ons aflairs department is holding 1284,615 campaign stars and medals still not applied for by second world war veterans. And it still has between 20,000 and 30,000 medals for First World War veterans. Incidentally, the official title of the First World War is "The Oreat War of 1914-19 " Chinese Bride Meets Husband For First Time VANCOUVER (Pi Shine Lee 31, has arrived back in the land of her birth and has been united with her husband she had never seen. I Her arrival marked the last lap of 1 Journey which oegan in the western shadow of the I Rocky Mountains, wound through the Orient and the courts of two countries and which will end at Port Alice, B.C., pulp town on the northern end; of Vancouver Island. Miss Lee was born in Cran- ! ' brook, B.C., and taken to China by her parents when only a few months old. i After 30 years in the Orient, her marriage to Woo Kee, 53, Port Alice widower, was arrang- ed by Mr. Woo s mother and her parents in Hong Kong. They were married by proxy under Chinese law 12 years ago. Five years ago Mr. Woo sent for her, but the Canadian Immi gration in Hong Kong contended she was not the Shing Lee who was born in Cranbrook. After years of wrangling, Canadian attorneys drew a writ against the attorney-general of Canada for declaration tha'i she was a Canadian citizen. The slim bride, looking younger than her 31 years, made the trip here via Formosa, Tokyo, Anchorage and Seattle. She will be married to Mr. Woo under Canadian law. "My, this Is a beautiful country," she said through an interpreter. 11 am going to be happy here. and Promotions on Merit Conditions on Taking Job Tender ( Politics Chief Iv ve.u s U H. Ai-i Fi.',ke k-ii;urc;l oil '", ; ia- -. . . i . nil til I):: r ')! the Federal inn 'toe 0$' Tasty..' ) L 'mtm ' 'VVi f V j r-fc i l r or economy I jf jgj choose sizes I . . 4 or 5. ) Mfa ' ( wer niii .iuss.an J0 or r.-servntiotis wnut m h IS a B K .-a S3 Fl tl M j hVTTWn I CABHED fOODS J sliip that has endured thromih ''"1 i''o tli- iidniiiiistrations of five presidents and 11 attorneys-general. 'I lie greying FBI chief looked back over those 30 years the oUi: r ii.v mid recalled the l.Ui Stone interview. "I 1 old liim I would take the ! job only on two conditions. i "1 .-aid Hip bureau hail to be divorced from politics, wilh ap-!"ii.tme:ts n.'ide "o'elyo:i niei-l. i Scond, protnotioiis would be '''' proved ubil'ty, the FBI would not be a catch-all for pol-i i ii:.il hiicks. and would be re- ; , Mecessary I ! I ram Inps j i i men by Ii." !'-(' is il y i .lllt U cat , ill m e t t.ike joi.r !) rel-'.i!!.! ' lor up or in.' it iiiiri i r '. 'hv purler to mak; u s.oniv. ii'lit-i. Mo. t ti .r.'e!li'rs bring ha!peis loud. The woman porter in e.ic.'i I 'l l.u Hilfj Ireiiueri'iy 'r i,el' p.l i.-i V, 'el'S. l!;e conductor alio was a woman iio sriin:iT The c'laclit s have hoarse loiri-.'Itt akei.i tun- u n) ItiHtm Moscow day and night. 'lne holov-Moscow train is in n'.crii, 'Aitn caipeted lloors and cuod furiii.u'e, but thtre nu- no c.iutht r.t(.r:s and the on';.' thin.; to do U sleep fuilv cloth'; 1. P.ar.e truvei clm-sn't oiler quile' 'he s pi' of trains lor inceii.. luii.,sian.s. foreigners usually ,t,e jiiil. abo.iKl first, and in .'liii'.le .-.iMt.-. 1 hey are taken to; a sp;t'ul v.ai.ing room at cac.r an p irt. The plant s are all two- . in;med liyushins, Soviet vernio'i i ot the American IU-3. except I tin y have a tiicycle landinr;-i .Car. Westerners are dlscuu-' ceried by the absence of seat ; belUs. in flit-1 1 1 -nacks are paid fj,' ex t pt on the l.t-nirgi ad-Hei-mi.Ki l un where they are fiee. Uinning Judge tor Hobby Show U. C. Binning, West Vancouver, one of Canada's leading arti.stswill lie judKC of a new featnfsSr'W the Pacilic National sponsible only to the atlorney- general." NO GESTAPO In the course of the talk, I .pu to Hoover a question that has cropped up intermittently. "Is there a danger oi the FEI becoming a gestapo? What is to prevent the i-UI tiom using pol- . ice-state methods?" Hoover's reply: "K , not if wo; have men of ch 'lart. .' in ilie 'r - puiti'r.ation and an alert public! (.piniun." i I asked about reports and In-' sinuations that FBI lilts' ate open to AOine congressional in-1 .t .ugators- and that tlie Ft.1; "tips oil" iiu.itibr rs oi Co.'.tn- . to subversive cast's where its own agents can't gel evidence for wo.ui ca.-.e. - ! Hoover snapped: "I .can say C;;(iua..uedly uutl L, an alMolu-e-lie. i in pn liy sensitivt io I'.ic mailer oi our fncs. i ve consistently resisted every attempt tJ make the raw Iile avail. i1::.-. Data from FBI Illes have leake t out through other agencies. People like Ut tiuow liicUainc .Of the I BI around." TESTIMONY tTCEATEO STIIt On the political sirle. Hoover created a Hurry when he appeared as a witness last November to testify in the case of the late Harry Dexler White after Attorney General Herbert Brow-hell charged former ytre meet Harrv Truman promoted Whit-? despi'e FBI reports of cpioiia?,e . activities. Why did Hoover testily in tl'io White case? "Alter the at'orney-r.cnerai made his speech on ilie Wiii.e Vi: e, .stories and rumois were widely circulated that 1 had bet-i a par! y to an agreement to pro- mute Wlnte and retain him in government. "That .story was absolutely un- true. The Jcnr.er cmnnittee 'he Hi na'o l!it?rnal ie;:tirity .s;i')-I comniitlce headed by Senator Jenner of Indiana called me I l '.vice and asked me to' testify on J the While case and twice I it -i fused. j "1 agreed to testify on the j Miinl iccpiest. rather than l'a".- a subpoena. I agreed because I wished to, avoid a subpoena a-i d ; ' because the story which was going around reflected on me and on the FBI." Thin Hoover added: "DurlrJ - i " - -- i Set Imltidci fifty- cent siia Gillette en blades ' stores used blades I Republican administrations Ii have been accused of beim; H Democrat and during Demo- ! cratic administrations I've been accused of being a Republican. As a matter of fact, I've never oted and 1 iiavc no politics. I Before Hoover took over, tne I FBI was an inept, politics-ridden agency tainted by past government I scandals. There was no requirement a.s there is today 1 1 thai FBI agents must be lawyers or accountants with a back-e round ot good' mural character. They got their jobs bv political pull.- There was no fingerprint li'e, r.o crime defection laboratory, no training program and no prestige. Hoover tossed out me political haners-im, the incompetents, and .some with criminal backgrounds. Hoover and his FBI zoomed to prominence in tin: gun-blazing lighter era "of the early 30'.;, (and with the solution of the j Lindbergh kidnap case. He made the FBI a centre for scientif'c crime investigation and brought a prestige to law enforcement? never before attained in the United States. Queer Finds j GLASGOW, Scotland Among items handled in the police lost property department last , year: A bridal outfit, a glass eye, : a suitcase containing six live mice and three coins dated 286 ' AD. ., . ' i OPTOMETRIST Fred K. Dowdie 3t Third Ave. VV. Pi,.:ne Green 960 Broadway Cafe 9 GFST OF FOOD FINEST OF COOKING 1 (Ml TAKE 01T ORDI IIS Phone 200 V 1 EASY 1 1 i ; i xt r VW Gillette ONE-PIECE RAZOR Here's the modern razor that takes all the fuss out of shaving! You get clean, good- ICKtKIIlg 5i IrtVl S lliat ITlilKC yOU y feel refrcslied. This one-piece Gillette Korkot Razor changes bladts instantly, cleans in-st ttntly. Get real shaving comfort with a Gillette Rocket. Gold-Plat d Gillvrt Dttlux Rockl On-Pic Razor, 10-B'ada Ditptnsw And Handy lrav4 Ca- Nickal-pluttd tiiltt ftoi.kW Razor, 8iod Oi pntM Handy &tytn And fiawl Cai-$1.3 onq t ; of . upper-develop i! iiineone the Ci'!'- III ( HTIVK .!u e 'o en- S!!jt With -it tlie pla- i;i that y,M tnu"!it n v. : i- .'t;w nl th.e ti.S. ' .. . -et V a Inim one motiiri', ;e'iet (tltlMl 1 i:.p-;in t ' hi n trth i. 11 ii ,'iv ll IV" i.niwiiy and ulequate. nl ' i r wnr!:- en re i o' :. l five d.iv i I. 'Ul'ie t'lf !!iele to your live Hints a slow. Even 'ban 20 h II Urn km.,. IIS "S'lft. ' aimolstered. 'i - v r t tie win-,:e 1 -".r tne win- -f t hiimi'ti lamp. ' ' h i:d clas,;- :"i..'r to the first ! 'r;r berths are i '" ;- ' u: led mat- ' t r Canudian I ' " "-h farnl.,hc:l i 1 1; ki, l wo and ; :,: v iiii us angles " ! stn.-p so as '!(' than Ml ' r bas. bun- of each irh coaches. , is a buffet I Ail tlie seats aid r'"t.4V ... Exhili to be held in conjunction wilh the International Hobby Show this year. - lie will judge the first Annual j Color Slide exhibition with Per- : cy Bentley and George E. Jarvis, j both of Vancouver. Accepted j olor slides will be shown regu- l larly at the Hobby Show from I August 25 to September 6. ! Judges for the Pictorial photo- graph section, marking lis 15th j year of operation are John i Helders and Hugh W. Frith, both ! of Vancouver and Que Chin, well known Seattle photographer. j Entry forms for the Color Slide S vV m Jll as It f 1 'should lit I m It'. Ill Vi -v M " . , v . w - - , f 1 i-1 ' LKJ LnJ '-- fsC Hn. quality, choic." flavor, full hX;? HJf- 1 ... ,t " BatUfyinq strength Nabob '&3f h'HM1' 'vvrfi f lift, your spirits and satisfies KV l'iTt- lK as only a good tea can. Why vVl,lf n Xs itif-- -.-nA ' not treat yourself to "tea as it s '- s. should be?" N" exhibition and the salon of pic toilal photography can be ob-:;"-t ! tiiined by writing to the salon i secretary, Pacific National Ex-'' ! hibition. Exhibition park, Van- couver 6. B.C. l , " T tC n A ? " v. X sh 7fi i "ten! is not otihltlior or disoluved by the lotilinl (j, it'W r,t by jiw G,,wlnMtCM) 6f Biilish Cobimbio