MOOSE j,eu4 Prince Rupert Daily News As I See It Letterbox peacocks obtained T' f ,or animal Dark Tuesday, May 19, 1953 I s far ax t.h. A "iH i ..... . v-ani ere It was fn,, THE DOGS SPEAK I The Editor, 'The Daily News: GOOD CITIZENSHIP The Editor, The Daily News; not accompanied b V,.!' "rtnicut So ,u V'1' -hipped bacfto1; "tea. allowing "we time to impr u. sock pen. t tun I'n itiiir - Oh! Give us love and liberty; Or else a painless death; The horror of captivity, Must never be our fate. Peace River is a country, Six hundred miles from here: High mountains bar the entry, Of Rabies, Do Not Fear. .Please do not break our spirit, A tn jepcMMnt dully newspaper devoted to the upbuilding of Print Hupn and Northern and Central Br It lab Columbia, atamoer of Canadian Press A unit Bureau of Circulation Canadian Dally Neve paper Association. Published by 'rhe Prince Rupert Dally News Limited J. T. UAOOR, President H. Q. PERRY, Vice-President Subscription Rates: Mwwi iy carrier Pr wwie, 26c; per month 1.00; per year. 10-00 jjtasT&Ifnj y mall Pe month, 16(. per year, (8.00, 'xT-- jtnorlsed as Mcond class mall bf the Poet OfOoe Department, Ottawa. ilect a Liberal Government "ROM whore we sit it looks as if Art Lain? is the man. ... i A years ago the Liberal party appeared to have j suffered a disaster so terrible that it could well be j final. Lven its most loyal members muttered rue- j IATEST REPORT "utMtijr" Canada is a nation fine and . free, On every inch of soil a citizen you must be. On the train or on the bus, Do your duty without fuss. Citizenship begins at home If you stay or if you roam. When you land in some new town Go to work for its renown. Don't you wait for time to pass You're liable to find you're out of gas. Immigrant or cllium, born x Sri V 7 ! V,'.: With cruel chains or lash; ; Our Friendship does not merit, A treatment so harsh. Occasionally we catch a rat, And scare a burglar too, Ju:Tt stop a wlitle, nnd fjier Speak ripht up don't be i ' :' vie .14 'r- forlorn. . Ideas you have fine and noble Don't be a Hitler or a Goebbel Bring them out Into public view Let the people on them chew This Is a freedom, founded democracy God has granted us liberty Freedom of speech of thought and voice So for this let us rejoice. EDWARD W. GREEN that, How much it means to you. Wc love your darling daughter, And like your little boy; To guard them is a matter, Of duty and of joy. Should you not heed our woeful lay, And us no mercy show: . Then must we too our maker cry, I.Ike little Raven and Crow. ANDREW WASEND Britons AH One Team YOU SEE the British at their best in times of crisis. They were at their best when they stood alone in Europe against the whole concentrated evil power of Hitler. Bui you .see them at their best again, rit'lit now. For once again the great Churchill is at the head of an absolutely united nation, determined to "make a try" for world peace. The great .strength of the British is that by instinct they play the game as a team. Thus, once again this past week, we saw party divisions in Britain forgotten. We saw the greatest of all British warrior prime ministers make his supreme bid for peace talks. We saw Mr. Attlee neatly drive home the Churchil-lian points. CHURCHILL was the great policy maker of this century, for all western nations. He made some great, most grave mistakes but who that is human did not? But he made several masterstrokes which have moved the world greatly forward, toward the supreme goal of one free vorld, based on justice under law. It was cVurchill who teamed up with the equally great, but different, Roosevelt to get the Al'RKI.IO HERNANDEZ, 43, has brought his ancient craft with him tc Canada from his native Spain. For 25 years he has made by hand gold and silver chalices and other delicate pieces of art. In his Quebec city studio he puts the finishing touches to a gold chalice he will sell for $250. He is training his elder son, Henri. IV in the craft which Aurello learned from his father. CALVIN BULLOCK in. 'iCOOKIK mm OTTAWA DIARY By Norman M. MacLeoo Politics and cynicism being at Drew, leaders of the npxsilion Keith -H. Tucker Optometrist succeeding Sydney Gonick Optometrist See ffse new., fully about needing four or five years at least to put the party back into a contending position. Rut how the picture has changed! Far from bringing up the rear, the Grits at this point actually seen) to be putting on the strongest race of all. Admittedly a certain amount of luck has played into' their hands. One instance of this was the resignation of Harold Winch as leader of the CCF forces. However worthy Arnold Webster may be as replacement, be is not in the same class with the fiery and eloquent Mr. Winch as a provincial figure. ..Moreover, the CCF cause was not helped by reports, whether true or not, that Mr. Winch disagreed with his colleagues on the fundamental question of whether complete socialism could be effectively applied in B.C. Although Mr. Winch has not forsaken the party, he has moved just far enough to create an impression that all is not harmonious in the ranks. ,; The Liberals' prospects are also improved, by the fact that the Social Creditors must go again to the voters asking for .a "fair chance." Such a request is not the most effective kind of election appeal as it carries with it the implication that the record so far has not been particularly successful. In addition, not many elections have been won by a sudden mood of generosity on the part of the electorate. But more than anything the resurgence of the Literals is due to their own determination to stay in the fight and to the personal vigor of Mr. Laing. The party's new chief has, in our opinion, the essen- tial quality of a Premier to a greater extent than least inseparable if not qulto identical, Parliament Hill circles haven't been too surprised to hear some MPs attributing the Privy Coupcillorship bestowed on PC leader George Drew to motives other than the Prime Minister's generosity. The most common suggestion 527 Third Ave. W. Phone 212 advanced by these hard-to-cont- vinpp MPs is tmit the Primp all had been lormer prime nun- ; ' isters Meighen, King and Ben- nett. Since ex-prime ministers ! stand high in the precedence table, there was no need to give j them status In any lesser cap- aeity. What the Prime Minister real- ; iy has done for George Drew, therefore, is to give him defi- I ' nite status for the purpose of official occasions. That's something that the late Mackenzie King never did for John Bracken. Aetuully, neither Bracken nor Drew were entitled to the prefix "Honorable" which the press used to accord them by courtesy. Under the strict letter of the law, a provincial premier or cabinet minister is only entitled British world kingdom and the j Minister acted from twinges of U.O.n. Illixeu UP lOgeiner lOrnnl. ilommlni. Irnm th the common good fcUJ.I RM46 shabby treatment which the opposition leader has suffered on several official occasions. Notably there was the time when, at the state dinner held in honor of British Prime Min INIItt men "Like the mighty Mississippi, let i' roll on," he proclaimed of this mixing up process. But about ten years later the same great architect of freedom and union could privately say of CAHGE ister Winston Churchill, M.i the British-American alliance ! tw, ,.... ti, AUTOMATIC OVEN M Yours Now . . . and For Keeps $M0 fine new home at last . . . Today It's yours, but whose would It be if anything should happen to you? You can make sure NOW that your family will always have this comlortable home secure. A Great-West Life Mortgage Repayment Policy will promptly pay off the full mortgage debt upon your death . . . and the cost of this important protection is surprisingly little. . , JAMES S. M'KNS 734 Alfred SlH Prince Rupert, H.C. something like this: I head table. He was accommo- I "We don't mind being junior , datpd simply witn a cnair at an partner tout not too damned ordinary table one which would j junior." j be classed in precedence terms ! as pretty far "below the salt." to use the term while in office. A Privy Councillor, however, carries the prefix for life. Hon. Mr. Drew, therefore, is qualified tQ use it from here out. NEVER in all history did Rritons I Mr. Churchill himself annear. work more neatlv as a team ted to be conscious of the silent l f any of h'S competitors. One can imagine the hustle' than Churchill and Attlee did -oivl inflicted on the opposition freedom of Press In Danger' way a. i ne frime Minister naa ieuurr. ni leasi, inav was made his call for an early peace j interpretation generally placed 1 meeting with Russia, suggesting! upon the fact that, in the speech- I PUSH-BUTTON CONTSC . SPACIOUS WASTER OV STREAMLINER Df5IM $359.00 On Display Now RUPERT RAD1 AND ELECi Phone Green 505 that something very good and 1 wnicn ne gave, nc went out or his way to refer to Mr. Drew in big really may be happening in PFNTICTON 'P Liberal Lead- highly flattering terms of good- Russia and we should make the i er Arthur Laing said Thursday humored familiarity. Churchill most of it E - 'I 1MB! ' . It r . f .-: But it feU to the Opposition J Drew had 1 met '"timately J- leader to put in plain words w nat ! . . .... . . rt fhp AfPiimfp Mpu7 nnrt Tn. TODAY" "VOI R ITTl'RE IS Ol R Bl'SINESS n is aamiuca on an sides in ' " ' " ' parliamentary circles that the .formation Act in Alberta in 1937 opposition leader's latest honor ln M"nt of Premier Bennett's re- Telephone 644 Advertising in the Daily News Brings Results recompenses him handsomely rk- nhour press ln n: for all past slights of this na- Salmon Arm speech. ture. And by far the majority Hf 'aR relernng to a reported I opinion credits the recognition statement of the premier's that ; to the Prime Minister's innate newsnapers covering the Social i m.'llions of people feel throughout the entire Commonwealth: That powerful elements in the U S A. do not seem to want peace: "These elements want an all-out war with China and against communism generally . . . One often wonders who is the more powerful, President Eisenhower or Senator Joseph McCarthy." and drive and direct action that would infuse the government under his direction. The gamble he took in relinquishing his federal seat to enter this election speaks for itself as an example of his desire to do everything possible for B.C. It also reveals the vital quality of courage. - From the local point of view, there is' one other feature about him which should impress this district favorably. He considers us important enough to come here to speak to us. This is the sort of attention that the north has been too often denied. In this action we also see a high regard by Mr. Laing for the qualifications of the local candidate, Bruce Brown. Should the Liberals form the next government and Mr. Brown become a member, such esteem for his services is certain to te of advantage to this constituency. To Start CNR Museum Train on Way sentiments of generosity and credit campaign were biased chivalry. j against his party. The fact is that the official! "Where is such attack to Lead?" Table of Precedence takes no !Mr. Laing asked. "I sense in it a account whatever of the posi-1 prelude to attack such as the tion of leader of the opposition. Alberta government made in The reason for this oversight is : 1937. Fortunately, that act was the fact that, prior first to John disallowed by the Supreme Bracken and then ' to George Court." By I THERE WAS an even neater I touch when Mr. Attlee suggested that China's seat at the UN should be given to the real government of China and not held by Chiang Kai-shek now on Formosa. ( i ' Not while actual fighting .In j Korea is going on," interjected ehrtfemn.' : - I "No, soon after the armistice." I Thus an absolutely united 44 fdWT 'l British nation, by clever team i Continued on page 7i of engine 674, built in 1899 and 1 oldest active CNR locomotive. t V Special tn Tlif Dally News AURORA, Ont.-With Premier Leslie Frost at the throttle, a bright yellow museum train pulled slowly Into the CNR station here Saturday to touch off T. two-day centennial celebration commemorating the 100th anniversary of the first steam railway run in Ontario. One hundred years ago to the day, a resolute old-timer, belching smoke and sparks, chugged to a stojj here to open the first 30-mlle line of the Ontario, Simcoe and Huron Railway. Dubbed from the start "Oats, Straw and Hay," the portage line was built to "avoid the circuitous and dangerous route" for water-borne traffic on Lakes Huron and Erie. Stepping down from the cab tn tM, IH. New Welmller locrMW ti-ll lk 'm"" Solmonb.lliM" k.coie IK. tint Mm to win th ConaJ'o" LocrotM Ctramptonhip. Mr. Frost was greeted by Dr. I Crawford Rose, mayor of Aurora, and Mrs. Rose, both attired ln costumes of a century ago. Hundreds of citizens Jammed the station area to witness the brief bit of pageantry. Following a luncheon given by the town council and the Board of Trade, attended by provincial, municipal and civic officials, railway officers and historians, a centennial parade was held while the CNR's museum train was opened for inspection. Speaking to the crowd from the station platform, Premier Frost said his grandparents rode in a passenger train over the same line the day the Dominion was born July 1, 1867. Government Pays Bonus k Your Social Credit gov-ernment pays the premiums and the dol-lar-o-day charges for oil receiving social allowances, mothers' allowances, old-age assistance besides providing free medico!, optical, drug and partial dental care. 0WANSWER In 1904, William Rraid founded B.C.'s first distillery, and established the standard of quality that distinguishes B.C. Double Distilled Rye Discover for yourself why B.C. Double Distilled is preferred by British Columbians for its superb flavour . . . its light body and mellow smoniliness. THE BRITISH COLUMBIA DISTILLERY CO. LTD. CANADIAN WHISKY any way you add it Any way you look at it, saving tnean personal independence, OPEN A i SAVINGS ACCOUNT AT NEW WESTMINSTER, C. Xiour government gives a bonus of $1 0 to old-age pensioners, persons receiving old age security from federal sources, and those who get old-age assist-once. Don't be misled .... Mark your ballot first choice. tM(,li.li.,Bilfc,t Don't Miss : THIS IMPORTANT BROADCAST John Dief enbaker, M.P. TONIGHT 8:00 p.m. CFPR "Tht Notion's Business" Published by The Progressive Conservative Party M.I The DlsfwguiKhed Products of British Columbia's First Dishlkry SOCIAL CREDIT I dry cm EUTidferii I C. STERLING LONDON I C DOUILI DISTILLED SC. EXPORT SC. RESERVE SC. SHCIAL Control Board 1 5?(SanfiiT3 Thie Huprtipmpnt ic mrf rMiKlickciH tr Hicnlaprl ht the LiQUOr Thin advertisement Is iasurd by the British Columbia Social Credit Cam- pntpn Committee. or bv thp finvernment of British Columb i