Prince r-v S Rupert Daily News As I See It if Saturday, May 23, 1953 An Independent daily newspaper devoted to the upbuilding of Prince Rupert and Northern and Central British Columbia. Member of Canadian Press Audit Bureau of Circulations Canadian Daily Newspaper Association. Published !jy The Prince Hupert Dally News Limited. J. P. MAUOK. President H. Q. PERRY. Vice-President Subscription Rates: By carrier Per week. 25c; per month, tl 00: per year. 10 00. f&ittt 3y mall Per month. 75c: per year. 8.uo. bS- Authorised as second class mall by the Post Office Department. Ottawa OTTAWA DIARY By Norman M. MacLeod Parliament Hill political circles now know that the die Is irrevocably cast for the appointment of J. H. Ptekersglll to the cabinet as Newfoundland Minister upon thi? Prime Minister's return from the Coronation. The decision Is taken despite the unfavorable reaction to the "kite" which sources close to the Prime Minister Hew a little better thart a week ago when they released the story as a rumor. Liberal M.P.'s didn't trouble to disguise the resentment which Ihey felt towards such preferment being shown to an outsider. Maritime Liberals re-ln- Saturday Sermon Rv Ul'V II t rw c , Restoring Force "Verily, Verily, ', say ui0 yXClT the works that I do shall h. ! . .' A Great and LC0H0L u addiction ALCOHOL dozen of 01 our public workr than these shall he ,, hlca' Use I What a magnificent promise those who are willing to believe and an, at r,(1 Christ as Saviour and Lord; for those in Jesus Christ as the way, the truth ,. , f. . .... ..--s .;.V ! 2 loicea the general view by add ing that the Atlantic Coast prov ne inr,;niy worn that Is as- " auungiy opposed io,w"":u " v,nrisnun is to; (an Ministerial imporU and that the carry the. Gaspt-1 of Jesus Christ i W, ., . S 1111,3 move conceivably might cost the lnto all the ends of the earth T 'uh w" government the loss of an esti-, lnU Va, Wll, L Prfttriltli''-mated e t work 10 seats in that area. ! oi Jciu8 and be transformed TnH st' tr So strongly did the rank-and- become new creatures in Christ i " co,1tinuaiiy u, file Liberals in the House fecli Pentecost was the most (Xipu-j knowlfdi-e of lu i Ution the m sit tor I hut. thou n..-').,.. i i f i it ..... !.., "r w r. i'"' "- xi.-wi.iii year uuu me wi.se with th whole city was then thronged only in.sutut 1 n, with pilgrims from all parts of ; strut-linn 1,: V ' ' jsuaded Rt. Hon. C. D. Howe, the recognized "strong man" in the government, to cdhvey their views to the Prime Minister. The usually influential "CD." had his interview with Mr. St, Laur - ent Just before the P.M. left lor the occasion. The report in Lib the then known world. The Spii it filter death b,u, " , was to work with a new instru- Cod gave to the! u ment, namely, the truth concern- prophet evanueh u', ln a crucified, risen, ascended ; teacher -for thp t j divine Saviour. Of Pentecost we Hie saints untothf." read that the believers were ',"f rlnp. untn the t. IN THE EJECTION SEA I he was testing when he was shot from a Meteor jet aircraft at 29.000 feet (about 5'-2 miles) up over Oxfordshire, England, is, Parachutist Bernard Lynch. The new seat ol the British Martin-Baker Aircraft Co. automatically allows the pilot to escape from high-speed aircraft at high or very low altitudes. An earlier Martin-Baker seat, standard fitting of Britain's Royal Air Force, has been adopted by the U.S. Government. jgg All Aboard (J.nu -...v., .a iivi wmy uiti iiut-u ttmi uu? uuiy rjpirii. 1 ne me oooy or Christ (the Howe magic fail completely, gift of tongues was exactly the be no loiiRcr chiliir' but that it aLso met a reception' preparation needed by the dis- and fro and cairini V which was definitely rough. Mr.jciples for the task of witnessing every wind of dwtr the common cold as a cause of absenteeism in commerce and industry. Nevertheless Canada is just beginning to emerge from the dark ages of its attitude toward alcoholism. It is still widely .regarded as a wilful sin and the victim usually can expect little but silly advice, scorn, ridicule and even jail. Misery, disgrace and failure are still considered the natural penalties of reckless overindulgence. Medical science recognizes that the alcoholic drinks compulsively as the result of some personality defect; some mental or physical maladjustment. But beyond establishing that the alcoholic is one who can never learn "control" one who must stop drinking completely or succumb to the disease-doctors have been unable to do little about it. There has grown, however, an amazing organization that has been able to do something about it. Alcoholics Anonymous haven't discovered a "cure." But they have devised a program a sort of "way of life" that helps a great many alcoholics to stop drinking. On a recent Sunday afternoon about 1,800 men and women crowded into the banquet hall of a Toronto hotel for luncheon. At least 60 per cent of them were ex-drunks the rest were the wives, husbands or friends of the ex-drunks. The meeting was the climax of the regional conference of Alcoholics Anonymous. The crowd included some of the wildest carousers, the biggest boozers Canada has ever known. But that Sunday crowd was one of the most happily sober crowds ever gathered in that city. There were some men there fresh from skid 10 me inrongs who had gathered i si-iglit of men. in . ,ot. uuiriii, ls saia 10 nave let ins ionowers Know in no unt-er- 'tain term.? thn, hA Adnv rlnpe j to observe the feast, for they ufter the wiles of i IL'OrA Hum it t T.........I , bi., . u . . .. .. 1. "vn. wnv.it, iS nt USitirin ' '-itaiui(4 tilt' initR Cabinet appointments his clear Jews, devout men, from every . B"w up in all tliinp -I prerogative, which ho has no in-i nation. This gift at Pentecost ! who i. the head, nf tention of sharing. made It possible for the Oosnel ! from whom all y Story to be given on a single day framed and knit! The controversy is unique in!10 hearers from many different ! through that whi-fe f the fact that neither Pickersglll s! nations. I supplicth." abilities nor suitability for Cab-j The dominance of the Spirit is j Clearly this means inet rank are at issue. There is not to be tested by the presence Christian people su pretty general recognition that; of any special gilt. One who Is what the church to the individual who has served ! obedient to Jesus ls granted the the Bible that they r Liberal Prime Ministers In varl- ability to do the will of the sure convictions to ous capacities for almost 15 years! Master, not necessarily in spec- false religions and bt inow is a thoroughly brilliant j tacular service but surely in holy ; resist the influence u person, with the added likable living for the v fruit of the Spirit ot this present evil qualities which are especially ; Is love, joy, peate, long-suffer-' The purpose of ma:, valuable when found In a Cab- ,irK. kindness, faithfulness, meek- Is to glorify did hen lnet Minister . ness and self-control. and fully enjoy Him The Snlrit Is clveii ti everv Heaven. The Bible believer. Therefore, Christians oiirpo.se of the Chr. "re oualified and commissioned : That ye may show k ky the Spirit to declare the Gos- cellencies of Him The trouble i. timf. tho ranlr.. and-file Liberals are becoming definitely worried over the Con - i servative slogan that "it's time for a change." And they feel that me rickerselll anrxi nt ment. re- by l more U.S.-UX Showdown WHEN the U.S. generals in Korea laid down truce terms which were fantastically out of line with the UN's previous instructions, the old British lion roared with the voice of long grievance. Indeed, the- team-work Dro- tf.sts by' Churchill and Attlee V'ere driven home bv the entire Commonwealth. The most devastating attack on the nsum- tion of UN power by the U.S.A. tame from India. But our own Lester Pearson got there first Willi tne neatest question. Canada simply asked why the U.S. truce team, supposedly speaking for the whole UN, had so grossly departed from the truce terms laid down in great detail last autumn after months of discussion In the General Assembly. FAINT HEARTS fear that the American-British alliance is such a sickly growth that It might die because of too much Plain speech. The exact opposite i;: true. On both sides there havp hivn growing grievances which need led to be aired. The United States people have been carry-I ing 95 per cent of the load of the Korean war. They have a right to be sore at that. But more and more people In the entire British Commonwealth have come to believe that Mac-Arthur-minded mismanagement was responsible, by the tie-up with Chiang; Kai-shek, first for masing a little war into a big one, and second, for dragging out that war by being unneces sarily sticky" on peace terms. Some even suspect, as Attlee iaid, that some Americans don't really want peace in Korea. - THE ALLIES of the U.S.A. were -ooTin at The & Urtant. perhaps. pt u an example of international bad "rio LT Tn time the U.S. generals, enjoying a monopoly voice "for the UN" inside those truce tents, arinnterl attitudes woefully out of line with the wishes of the UN m expressed in clear detail by the Assembly. The U.S. general's fumhllnc reluctance to accept Asians among, the custodian nations was one example. But the last straw came when the U.S. gen erals arbitrarily differentiated between North Korean and Chi nese prisoners-of-war. The Americans should have known that the Communists vould anprily reject this non-UN plan. But they also should have known thatjf negotiations oiokc uown as a result, it would be Impossible td keep the willing support of a united Canada or a united Britain or a united UN for further -war In Kntti We now know this nnilrinn-'wlii be-fevlsorl. ' CANADIANS did not struggle against Britain for over n hundred years progressively to win equal status as a Tree sovereign nation only to knuckle under in new-type colonial subordination to U.S.A. The whole Commonwealth feels the samp way. The British learned long ago that the surest way to get an angry look or even a punch in the nose from a Canadian, an Australian, a New Zealander was to refer to "you colonials." Now, as most of us see it, the U.S.A. is treating the entire Commonwealth and the whole UN as a glorified colony of U.S.A. We don't like It. WE In the British Common wealth have only ourselves to blame for failing to set our own nouse in order and to. stand on our own feet. So long as even lre hard-pressed Motherland .,?"L bam. e Commonwealth oraers irom " &am- wn.a Huld help twain escape from that neces pel of Jesus Christ to all men. out of darkness ir.to H liveryone is needed n the blessed 's "Kni.. n wui road. Rut this was no crowd of reclaimed human gardless of its intrinsic merlLsJofk of being co-laborers to-, "fe a glory to did? would have a sulficientlv high- cethef with Christ. It is diffl-1 rates among; the top half health problems. It equals i cent were those generally J worxers ranging from skilled industrial work- executives. Studies have male alcoholics aw man M'' it Johnson Landing on the east side of Kootenay Lake, the premier said. ' f me Social b0Clal Oerilr Credit imii..n govern- jments highway building program aw"'"lB l n'Bn gear, and it VtQo has nil all Kn been . - I J paid for out of cur rent revenue. There has heen no borrowing," said the premier. Coronation Clemency For Prisoners VICTORIA (HiThB of Queen Elizabeth June 2 will readily mean something to prisoners. Th nrni,ioi v. . J handed appearance about it to 'cult for only a few men to be an lend additional force to the Con- nrmy of God. servatlve cry. Veteran Parlia-ir; T : r ; mentarians cannot remember, f,ri Presbyterian Church derelicts. More than 90 per a, wine collar salesmen, bookkeepers and ers to top corporation shown-that seven of ten ,1 ? '4 4 'I I , j Several members of the train j crew knew the orders. Three pedestrians, all keen-witted, I ! may cross the road together 1 and fail to warn one another. I Sometimes, reerettablv. thev j are deep in conversation, or , ' , .I Tl... I .1- drunk. But perhaps there is more to it than that. Is it possible 1 j that for these men, time is suspended in some eerie way wnne tne physical world rushes on? Ask Buck Rogers. P THE g- ETTERBOX J HORSES AND HOUSES' NIX KS The Editor, : i.The Daily News: i It is with considerable Interest i that I await the disclosure of the organization or lndi-IvMuiil responsible for the unsigned political advertisement appearing on pase two of your edition of May 22. One can. of course, be quite sure it is not the Liberal party, but it might , be a good move for other parties not connected with this moronic I nppenl to publie.lv disclaim any association with it. And whoever the advertiser may be, should this piece of obvious political propaganda have ever been presented to the public through the medium of i your newspaper without a signature attached? For anything appearing to tho contrary, It I could possibly be taken as an indication of the paper's own political opinion. Our Coronation festivities will indeed come to a sorry pass If this so-far-unriiSclosed advertiser is permitted to pervert the parade into a political rally. Or perhaps they just don't give n- damn what the Coronation (signifies, so long as they can get in their cheap bid for attention. i Surely those in charge of the parade are not going to sanction anything of this sort? Anyway, If the advertiser intended to identify the organization responsible with some part of the anatomy of the animal used as an illustration, he hns rucceecled most admirably. On 'he other hand, a picture of an ass may have been even more Appropriate. WM. H. PRIEST. WOKKEKS SCARCE REGINA (CP) A scarcity of agricultural workers, but not a serious shortage, is predicted for Saskatchewan this year by J. W. Temple, Prairie regional superintendent of tho unemployment Insurance commission. First United Church Sixth Ave. W. and Musgrave 11 a.m. Morning Worship Sermon: "A Vital Religion" Children's Story: "See How Big I am!" Anthem: "Above the Clear Blue Sky." 7:30 p.m. Evening Worship Sermon: "On the Day of Pentecost." Anthem: "A New Commandment." COME AND WORSHIP SUNDAY SCHOOLS at First United Beginners and Prim- ary at 11 a.m.; Older pupils at 12.15; at Conrad United Hall, " all at 11 a.m. YOUNG ADULT CLUB meets aftnp the evening service at 145 Seventh Ave. E. who hold or have held jobs involving skill and responsibilities. That Sunday meeting was heart-warming evidence that AA has been a great force in restoring happiness to twisted lives and broken homes. It was a demonstration, as well, that AA is a great force in restoring to full usefulness in the community men and women of considerable abilities. AA has proven its right to a place alongside other established organizations that fight diseases such as cancer and tuberculosis. AA has earned entitlement to public sympathy and public support. - The Toronto Telegram when last any province was re quired to accept a Minister from elsewhere as Its sole voice In the Cabinet. Cases such as the time when a seat was found for then Finance Minister Charles Dunning in Prince Edward Lsland .aren't regarded as parallels. In the first place, Pickersgill Isn't a Dunning, with a national reputation and wanted for his pror ven qualifications in a top Cabinet Job. And In the secondplace, Prince Edward Lsland, which doesn't always have a Cabinet Minister anyway, isn't New-! foundland. Practical Liberals don't like anything about the situation except what they know of Pieker.sijill'i talents. LONDON (CP)-Replying to a questioner in Parliament, under-' secretary of state J. O. Foster said no-arrangements are being madisjr ..ftni. sejriiv- rec-Ord oi- Cdmmdnwealtli Bitish troops partkipating in the Cor- onation procession June 2. 1 We extend a cordial Invitation to visitors to worship with us. 231 Fourth Avti. East Minister: Rev. F. A. Wright. D.D. Organists: Mn E. J. Smith and John Currie. SUNDAY, MAY 24, 1953 iVIornlng Worship II o'clock. Sunday School 12:15. Cvrning Worship 7:30. Minister at Jinth services "t "Remember the Sabbath Day! to keep it Holy." Habits that take half a lifetime to form can .sometimes be broken in one blank, tragic second. Consider ithe veteran nilnt with thousands of hours in his logbook. Ever since he learned ti' to 1.. . V. n I - B J ! . fly, the lesson of doing cer tain things In a certain, methodical order has been hammered into 'his skull. He does his cockpit check; at other times he changes over fuel tanks; lowers his, undercarriage. These actions seem completely automatic. Ho does them without thinking ... or so he believes. But some day, quite unexpectedly, his mental machinery misses a beat. He fails to do the routine thing. The amphibian pilot lands on water with hi wheels down, or on land without them. Why? If the pilot survives, he can't tell you. The navigator, for no fH-cemlble reason, gives the pilot the air speed to steer instead of the course. Absent - m 1 nded professors, according to legend, sometimes put out the clock and wind the cat. But the people who suffer the lapses I have mentioned perhaps only once in a lifetimeare not absent-minded professors. They are careful men, used to quick thinking. A pedestrian in the prime of Hie, sane, equipped with sound eyesight, crosses a busy highway 10,000 times, looking .to right and left each time he strides out. On the 10,001st time, he forgets this precaution and Is bowled over by ' a garbage wagon and knocked flatter than a banana skin. Perhaps a sudden attack of minor epilepsy, never diagnosed by doctors, blacks out the alert mind for Just a few seconds. But there are also lapses of longer duration. A newspaperman who has made accuracy almost a religion, checks every fact in every story with utmost care. But one day, when he isn't even pressed for time, he fails to carry out this ritual. Consider tha railway dispatcher who for 40 years has routed trains on separate traekB and kept them apart In the approved way. One evening he forgets all he ever learned and pulls the wrong lever, ramming tho- Prairie Limited head-on into the slow local from Gopher Junction. Or the locomotive engineer suddenly forgets orders and runs clear through a danger signal Into the nextworld. , I was discussing this question recently with someone who brought up an Interesting point. How is it that when the responsibility is shared by several people, all of them apparently suffer one of these lapses at he same time? When the pilot forgets to lower the undercarriage, he has the co-pilot to remind him. B.C. Ioad PaMConlrack Announced by Premier Bennett I) IK EC 1,0 tmii-M tn ill fftinnn ii ftlitl 7:30 p.m. f:l'"r -J:I.1 piTil a nil lilt AS(, l( r(t.i th Avi. W ., it Dost Holy Communion Sim'lav SrlOTil 2 Cantm Basil s Prwlt'fT l lllvT IHPTM 5th Ave. E it e Mlnlitor: Bc. Prnl ' I hist wtrsitvTit He E A. Win HHST I SITU1 KM ih kit e. l a s Sl VATIIIN" ' Krnsrr Strut CO. Rr. rnpt. Buntl.iy Scliiwl t ST. PUT'S I.I TIN 6lh Ave. t M,-l 'KiiTOluT Si-ht"! II Kw-nlnir Pray" " ,;,;! I til Bir"- Riimluy S"l"li'J:. Mnrnlni! Worship , M.'D Sill Ave. S- . i 5i. rAut-'i ! LUTHERAN CHL i ... .... l Mi'llll'1 i HID nvr. . REV. a. O. OLSON- ' "The Just Shall L i-' ( OMK AM H 1 Sl'NUAY SI"' MAY 24, l! Mnrniug Srrvire-J'- Sermon: "Thel"; His Work." junior Cliolr An Evening Service-';" ' SlnginK W m.xrd Air. ARE INvIT'- Sunday Scho''!-1'"1 MISSION SATl'K"'1 EVANGELICAL FREE 11:00 A.M. Sunday School ami Adult Bible Class A child won is a life saved. 7:30 P.M. Evangelistic Service An Invitation Is extended to all to'itttentl this service. Station "It" Building Sixth Avenue East NORTH AMERICAN BAPTIST MISSION Oddfellows Hall, 4 111 Ave. East Rev John V. Schweitzer All services in the German language 10:00 a.m. Sunday School and Classes. ll;00 a.m. Worship Service and Choir. "Pentecost and the Christian Church" 7:30 p.m. Evening Service and Songsiiralitin. Installation of officers. 9 p.m. Social Hour and Refreshments. "JEDERMANN HERZLICH WILLKOMMEN" VICTORIA Premier Bennett today announced the awarding of road paving contracts costing $1,008,000 and covering '173 2 miles of highway through- ' ! out British Columbia. siting or a $948,478 contract ' . . for If iiftiuli.nfii' r construction of a new boys industrial school at Brannan Lake, near Nanaimo, and another for erection of a 230-bed $1,523,400 tuberculosis hospital at Essondale, also were announced. Robinson Construction Co. of Nanaimo was given the industrial school contract and Ken-nett Construction Co. Ltd of Vancouver, the Essondale job. Paving contracts awarded wer: 39 miles on the southern provincial highway in the Nelson, Creston and Fernie districts; 31 miles in the Kamloops, Yale and Slmilkameen districts; 42 miles In North Okanagan; 47 miles in Lillooet and South Cariboo; 14.2 miles of trans-Canada highway in Kamloops and Lillooet district; an eight-mile section of Yictoria-Patricia Bay highway. New construction contracts announced by the premier included 6.5 miles of trans-Canada highway between Spence's Bridge and Martel at a cost of $786,101 "General Construction Co.); 4.9 miles trans-Canada between Salmon Arm and Tappen, $484,-271 (Jamleson Construction Co.) The government will soon call tenders for construction of a "tote" road from Argenta to S SZ1!!?.. tak "andouta from The REGULAR BAPTIST CHURCH announces a 10-DAY PREACHING UnWHLlADYCI?z proving a "Coronation vekr clemency" for inmates of iti serving sentences nnrler cial laws it amounts to one-third off the prison term of each prisoner serving more than 30 days, effec uve May zv. The attornev-creneral'.q rlonort. ment explained, however, the; order will affect. prisoners. Most prisoners are serving time under federal laws. Tha federal government already has passed a clemency order allowing one month off a prisoner's term for every year of sentence. "(joch Jn5we Do Our QvcaleA will be considered nightly, 8;C0 p.m., (Sunday 7:30 p.m.) b" REV. DON HILLS of VANCOUVER The annual meeting of.rlje Prince Rupert Ladies' Curling Club will beheld in the Civic Centre, Monday, May 25, 8 at p.m. sharp - ? Your attendance is urgently requested. SUNDAY SERVICES 12:15 Morning Service: "Dcruuntls of Love' 7:30 Evening Service: "The Preaching That Saves." Phone Blue 323 Weather permitting. "rvlce t Bali r. the Port Edward 629 Sixth