1 s Legion Head Prince Rupert Daily News i vwt are NOW i.rM-,iu111K , a, i great diplomatic defeats PaL a. h . The classic example concerns vMJj Mjiii j Poland. The "hate FDR" brigade ' As I See It UNDER . . . OUR ROOF Tuesday, May 27, 1952 ?! Pavs PU i m-jus up uie revision ot ihe oouiiuunes oi Poland as one All Independent daily newspaper devoted to the upbuilding of Prince Rupert vTf T''d Sl'n"0UtS t0 Sta11"-: VELAND i Yet hi his u own book Chun-hm last. ti. . 'APt t and Northprn and Central British Columbia, Member of Canadian Press Audit Dureau of Circulations Canadian Daily Newspaper Association. Published bv The Prince Rupert Daily News Limited " ' " J. P. MAOOR, President H. O. PERRY. Vice-President I1 -ry-'h By JOHN STURDY My wife and' i have been living in tne shed slnde our guests took over the house. i tells in some detail how with have Utn , 11 Cb' three mutches he Illustrated his Bether-rx,?'?" & rhurchill'si plan to shift the '"mmy aii whole Polish nation west at ' "or.tribm J ' h ft .Germany's expense. : kitty. Tori 1 lretaryj , J ; AM AMt'Bir-iH r... . inotineed tk... ..t , ft Subscription Rates: By carrier Per week, 25c; per month ll 00; per year. 110 00 Ey mail Per niunth. 75c; per year. $8 00. Authorized as second class mall by the Post Office Department, C1 iZSi I -AM v The War on FDK I lislu'r recently roared in an'Zw1' r' .iingiy voice at a Canadian vUi-;.? 16 i,nKtL rip I -i THF.Y have ; : avin- in I L!1,?,. ; '"""" Lii uri'nr xuttr. '"-i artir,w parts Of the U.-S.A., th;iL: tira( President of the USA: the South is still flnSTL, itpers Trolley knt. . . In hell mi-... .i.. i. ! ' veil uu toey naw nun so? : issi-at Etlmnn When I was a boy at school .Saskatoon and Hw?, t ,ifctaV-' ft.! I must say that we fougnt against the eviction. I'll never forget the day when these characters from Back East arrived on our Island Hamish, the assistant janitor of my old apari-ment-house, and Little Augie, the blind-pig king, and Col. S. Sketfington-Smutts tRet.i and his bride, Anastasla. ,' My family and I took up a defensive position in the living-room, resolved to hold our home against the attackers. It was a losing battle from the start, or perhaps I Just didn't have the heart to turn them out into the night, because the first thing we knew the guests had the house and we were in the shed. I remember my wife saying, '-Well, they'll only stay for a couple of days." Poor, deluded woman! She CANADIAN l.KOlON at its national convention in Montreal elected clergymen to its two top jobs for the first time in Legion history. Vs. C. B. Lumsc.'n 1 left , 57-year-old professor of Bibls studies at A"ata University, Wo!fvi!!c. US., suctti'&s Group Capt. Alfred Watts of Vancouver as president. The new first vice-president is Dean J. O. Anderson ( right of Winnipeg. "the war." j ' By ' the war" they do not mean anything so trivial as the; two world wars of this century, i but the American family strife- if fl eentnrv ncn I i There ls another weird war-that goes on, wifh increaslni; j bitterness, in our own tlme.j That is the amazing war that' U.S. newspapers, politicians, ancl the whole "upper class" wages ', "PROTECTION obw, lptim( li i. u w3 n ivrn prencn by readme, a witty play, "Le Voya.;n .le Monsieur Perrichon." It wax n'joir. a pappa with a beautiful cLiol.Lii v.lio hud two suitors. On;.---foolish fellow saved pap-pa's life, when pappa fell In a mountain crevasse. Pappa nevr forgav liim. The other, wise ;uy, ku'. the girl by lt ttins; pappa :ave liim! Victoria Report ... by J. K. Nesbitt That. I think, is the real rea- against the late and nreatost: son why the hate of FDR ! President of them nil FDR -the frii-ri'l VICTORIA. -There's a ereat argument. 0-oinL'''nihii , r xj.-.eveit, made that optimistic statement on September 13, 1951. We are ! still in the shed. mareh"s on. They Just can't revive FDR for saving them -isijeeially as the New Deal, rope he threw them ls still there. of the common man everywhere. nil IIS td IVrinm flfcf rrnvn ii'ivim tM JM T w. "iiviu All O U CflVC UlllITIl LliC VULP III l)A.- L k. raft CAlVllEOUOa "Main Item: Free Enterprise IN THE eurr'ent election campaign we believe that I several highly publicized but basically minor issues have been allowed to obscure the real decision that voters must make on June 12. In spite of all the red herrings, flying bricks and sound effects, the decision to be made is simply whether we want government or private control of our industrial Mfe. " 6c?ide this big single question, every other subject of debate is comparatively unimportant. On the type of control finally chosen -depends the prosperity of the whole province and, in turn, that of almost every individual in it. We believe that B.C. is too young and too naturally powerful to surrender its manhood to the ministrations of the government. State control may have its place in a country's old age or in adolescent distress, such as Saskatchewan's droughts, where , spine artificial stimulus of the economic organs is . needed. But this condition applies probably less to B.C. than tb any other piece of country in the world. Social Credit, with its mbnetary reforms which it has not the authority to apply and its limited ttyjerience, does not appeal to us as the solution. The choice, as we see it, lies between the Liberals and Conservatives. Both are pledged to free enterprise and both are in a position to sustain the boom now resounding in B.C. The question, then, is which to choose. We suggest this as an answer: Forget the minor differences in their platforms and give your first choice to the man of either party who, by his brains and character, is best qualified to do the job. lricwyandagam,l1uS Liberals or Conservatives. Each side is taking the' a witty writer said the other day that the greatest mistakr dishes. She very seldom gets credit, in an effort to win votes June 12 near the stove to took anythingj The reeord h this thit oh account of Anastasla is nsuallv , . Canada's 3'.! refineries and 14 blending plants produced $511,-'' lui'i wyrth of petroleum piodii' U in l'JSO. 1 he had made in his life was not - ; to h ive joined the Communist tor, preparing curry and riciXTTin MV1' of VotinS ls n y" lh-,TI " h" her Cdlonel. I 10 te could m i have turned on for. husband, the 1 particularly popular. x limner passed the act Bivlnewomen rhe ' vou'P!ff d.h.e aJlZln.s. lhei,wb comrades, whole host of1 (Thev first met in India. women. n ,,. as a " i viii.f I mm hi- niiuiuor ninn r unim tA Kit. lib liiuiiv ui-uuit- Hi ft ..u i .j. .1 . i ....v., i vi . k - - r uniers iiuve uone, null ueeri know), but I suppose I've been come into force until March of.eoing to plump. Liberals and fabulously paid for It. i 1917, by which time the Liberals Conservatives may trade choices! Well, if you probe this 'fun-! were In power. ( ,, ,,.. .. k-wtie rnectarle bit finil ' for f th the sake CIlk ,l of call a vou carrying too much weight, anyway. Now and again I personally venture Into the abode that we used to Call home, and usually wjiat they ' ; free enterprise, but "u" I Lu" can't 1 "rl see that it has an inner circle oi This reviewer rnrmt l.f I corf The writlnir uhir-h h-iv t.ho PUBLIC MEETING (LlLF the guests site very polite to me hope that the liquor plebiscite, m?ny CCFiers or Social Credlters highest maiket value In the passes. It's not' that he wants1 tln,gn,l.cn?ices-4 whv should u.s.A. today is that particular cocktail lounges, but a "yes"j'rev They re determined to getpart 0f uu. Ked-huntln'? which! vole would wake up the gov-!"'1' p.artUs Pl(ctf'J- With them j tend,, l0 smPnr or dhrredit th-: there' " s n.a matter of enolee - It's ernment to the fact that great Rcosevelt. i is something drastically wrong!3 p-tuir of "'"g election! Latterly smart Britisher.-; as with the present liquor law, and !JlumplnB always has lentWell as Americans are cut tint; which encourages furtive drink -j PmPni!,ls t0 a vote. thenjselves i;r.at .vlabs of the, ing in alleyways, in the back' It's apparent now that even well-paying American pi', lie-1 seats of cars, in hotel bedrooms, Liberals and Conservatives arejbecca West .syndicated a .series' and causes people to park bot-1 Browing fearful plumping may of newspaper art ides, .-.uiim.':- I ties under tables at cabarets,!1 tP popular. Mr. Wisnier says'edly on the life of Stalin, which! and sneak drinks, usually far.Blv No. 1 vote to the Liberals I arrived at this a-stonUiinn; ,i.n ; and murmur, "G6t)d morning" fl siippose my face is. Vaguely familiar to them) and this particular morning I happened to run into Hamish. He was Carrying several large wrenches and a Variety of Other tools, and with a Curt nod tn my direction he disappeared into the utility room. Ndw I haVe known namish for a rang time, ever since the little man was assistant janitor In my 61d apartment house Back East, and I knew the terrible things he could do with a monkey wench. CIVIC CENM TONIGHT At 8:00 O HEAR too many of them. ana no. -l to tne Conservatives; ! elusion: That Roosevelt had Conservative Alan MeDonell i piven away'' Kurope to Ktulin.l says give No. 1 vote to the Con-j while Churchill had "looked on": servatlves and No. 2 to the Lib-' in consterniftion. Besides, what is wrong with cocktail lounges? I have seen many in Washington State and t . . , nan i ! when I heard a thunderous cripiure faunae tor joaaii I is a v "A certain priest when he saw him, passed by." St. Luke 10:31 California and I can find little : rrals- j Stunewhat the same theme Is: wrong with them. They're small ! This has cau.sf d CCF chieftain ; developed at length in the war, and clean, generally attractive; j Harold Winch to observe that history by the Australian, Clies-j one doesn't see nearly the Liberals and Conservatives have j ter Willniot 1 drunks one sees In B.C. 4eer I formed a coalition in advance 1 f : clanging and banging from the i utility room, I must have turned ; pale. j I collated Hamish on the way lout. "What are you doing to-my house, Hamish?" I demanded. He regarded me blandly. "Fixing a few things," he said. "What things?" "Well, the hot water system," iarold Winch TIIK JOKE of all this is 1 hit parlors. It seems to me that ifiof the election Report From . I had a teen-age daughter I'd' One, Indeed, wonders how ai wnie the Kreat FDR is dead.,; rather she take her first drink, j person can vote choices If he j Winston Chun-hill Is very muc h in public, in a cocktail lounge, j has studied the political sitita- J a!lve n' is not onlv '""' ,,r th''! than take a nip from the open tion. Take the matter of hos- i greatest statesmen of modern hiifl.le In frm hcwlr nt t.t a:,-,it..i i. r,n.... tl, r . t Inn; hut t.wv nf ttif mint nr- ' Parliament Hill By Edward T. Applewhaite, M P., Skeena And GEORGE HILLS Your CCF Candidate ' said Hamish. "It's utterly Inacfe .,.! L. L.. ..L ' " " IJILHI I1I.1UI aill.L-. Ilif L-UliMS Vll" I --. ' " ' MMMMWtHWlW1MlW'( wnHauNu quBl.r. luuk jt "ie mitr lcar as niy generation was fore- fives say they'll open it to com- Mie wrl,'"i's of our times. -In hH. B0utrdWoes se le it!-noe That's 1 t0 ,Parn to ' ' P-titionf which coulS wc-U je- volumes he is taking the credit 1 bShsneIoS. ' ' ' rZM '. ." f11"--' HW-:''" to supply both the kitchen sink) Back from a tour of thcith- v11 maintain it as now. If a The Department of Transport is the department responsible for the Dominion Government Telegraph and Telephone Service. 'When introducing his estimates a few days ago, speaking on the tele-communications division, Hon. Lionel Chevrier, Minister of Transport, had this to say: "While r am on that, I think II " should communicate to the house National Railway (Terrace to that the expansion in the inter- jKitimati Bill, and the New West-!or. part of British Columbia has minster Harbor Commissioner's and the upstairs bathtub Well, 'southern interior, I can't figure "- in-i I have solved the problem. I have out who's going to win the elec- f Pulsory insuranee how can he fewUion. com prom ise? Wouldn t he have; merely changed around a pipes so now, in the upstairs I don't think there's going to'to voU' Lmeral. on. I Libi ral only, bath, the hot water comes out of be a good deal of clarification ' ln order give ( -uplnsis to Ins, the cold tap and the cold water! from so confused a political pic- vote- comes out of the hot tap." 'ture; in other words, I don't) If he wants a reduction -n I was staring at him in con- see how one party can get auto licence fees, wouldn't he 1 fusion. "So What?" enough seats to form a good, have to vote Conservative, and Hamish sighed. "How can you safe government. It depends on Conservative only, for the Con- Lose Something; 0 Mister be so dull?" he asked. "Isn't it the new voting system, however; servatives are the only one;; who. reached such a stage that the Bill. They have had several bills obvious that when a person wants ' If it works out as the govern- have said they'll do this. government ls bf the opinion. this year respecting insurance that a commercial company companies new incorporations should now provide telephone 'and amendments to charters. a bath he naturally tuns on the ment hopes it will, the final; That is about the only defi- hot water tap. So what happens? count may turn up a govern- nite opinion I returned from He gets cold water instead. The ment with majority support ln the interior with that people taD says "hot." so he comes to the Lecislature. aren't eolnn td vote choices to and telegraph facilities in that Senator Gershaw bf Alberta sponsored a measure to amend, the conclusion that there is no; However, I do not believe the any great extent. me industrial Development uann hot water ln the house. The re- - area. We do not feel the federal government should be the agency to iv?rve the public in well developed a:id Industrial areas. "Arrangements will be made to Act. This ls an act which was ; suit ls that vour wife eets Dlentv passed in the yeiar 1944 for the oi it for the dishes." j a n J j K ti v jK.Hi.i.m-y.n.VhunJrrA.rf-' from home and W W . (lis.-overeHl.atvourn.nHey, It happens t.K, fl-li' never happen to you! lfainBt Wofr-J"1- A Special! Lamp Shades "Hamish," I said, "your concern for my wife is positively touching." It was Just (hen that we heard the screams. They came from upstairs and they were absolutely terrifying. We ran for the second floor, while these terrible shrieks echoed through the house, and ln pmpose of encouraging inchrs-trial development. It is proposed in this amending bill that a person who is engaged ln an industrial enterprise "or commercial air service" may apply for a loan and receive consideration. At present, the Act does not cover air services. Hon. "Mike" Pearson introduc dispose of our facilities in British Columbia to any commercial company which may be interested ln continuing the operation as it presently exists, and at a standard of service no lower than is provided at the present time." In my opinion the telegraph service will be taken over by the Canadian National Telegraphs. FISH EXPORT i ' -raJim'4 travelling. Unveri r- what usea to be my bedroom we discovered the portly figure of ed the bill to provide for carry- H New Shipment Just Arrived. Ai' hew designs all new sizes. TRI-MTES, BRIIHiK LAMPS, TABLE AND BOCIMMIt SHADES AT SPECIAI. PRICES ing into effect the treaty of Col. S. Skeffington-Smuts (Ret.) peaC3 between Canada and Ja He was dripping wet from head earthen,. They are us-fuL To some of my readers, at least, the matter of Canadian fish exports is one of Interest and im to toe and his flesh was the color of bbUCd lobster. "Do something, you gaping! idiots!" he shouted at us. "Can't an hleutinVatioii. portance. The figures for the first two' months of 1952 compared with the same in 1951 do lint naint too hnnnv n nirt.urp 4 J pan, with a short but impressive statement. He dealt, very briefly, with one or two of the points that have been raised by the opposition. Stanley Knowies had mentioned the question of penalties which might be imposed under the bill. Such penalties might attach to acts of Canadians who did not respect, for you' see I'm being scalded to death?" Rupert Radio & Electric f f 1 'V ' f J I ' I Well, I got some anti-burn Ointment from the bathroom The export of all fish products fell from $21,100,000 to $19,310,-000; our exports of fish products to the U.S.A. dropped from $14,- example, diplomatic property. A 210,000 to $14,140,000 while that SOmewhat similar situation might in nll-io, nniintrioc full fi"iim ..... fcL fl ' "" arise n, after an lnter-eovern- $G,890,()00 to $5,170 000; our ex- melxUl SietUemi'nt of war claims irfil wnere i noticed the tub was filled with water and Hamish and I gently apl!ed the stuff to the ColoneVs livid body, r don't dare repeat ;any of his language. '...' Later, when I was again alone with Hamish, the little man saMd thoughtfully: "You know, that's a funny thing. I forgot that the COlonel never takes anything but a cold water bath. He must have ii M vnlir H" tni. can :,u ' ; ...... mii some Canadian sued in a Canadian court to recover a war claim. ,.r Th Bank oi III jjuii. oi iresn anu uozeri iisn is down from $8,300,000 to $7,980,-' 000. "Fresh and frozen'' show a varied pattern. There was a drop of $410,000 in whole or dressed fi$h but an increase of $90,000 in ii,ri(unUn m,t,ni rid. fish. Teller. CH" J, A i v It U I 7b- At long last, Hon. Rdbert ti. Winters has been able to an THE ENCHANTED ISLES WAIKIKI BEACH BAHO turned oh the, cold tap, and nounce the signing of an agree 10 DAYS thejexports of filletted U 11.111. Can- VUil- no in"' .- Kotrt.io- 41, A lL i,.V. vrrtL. ,oro fm ""-" ulibchi u15 LJUllllHluu anu lime. uiir " th'3 Prov!nce of Nova for ii Scotia, $42. fim million llion to to $1.67 67 million million, oi of constfuctlot, uncler t f wh-h salmon accounts for a 1V, ra. ,.0rf , :'" . m m wen, u s too bad, but I guess your wife will hare to Wait until the tank Mats up again before ehe can do the dishes." Sometimes I think l's really safer living in the shed. . . .... - - .-r-' .'0?Thle of 'the rouoTthT tranclda Tours few-cheerful . spots, exports highway through Nova Scotia. That now leaves Quebec the only province not yet in the ITbiMKEfll m Mm I: FROM $33110 From Vancouver) includes Hotel, Air Transportation and Island Tour's) , For Reservations and Information Crawford Moore Travel Agencies Phone Black 637 No. 1 Wallace Block, Prince Rupert B.C. shellfish (other than lobster) Were up $10,000 and exports of fish meal rose from $1.15 million to $1.96 million. ABOUT TIIE SENATE I tion't often mention the Senate in these letters. The Senate -does a lot more work, you know, than just passing divorce bills. --Th?- Senate recently has been disftissing bills of interest to Btiiish Columbia, the Canadian Your HNS Manager is a f-iioil man to know. In 'f ei nice he is R. ('.. Snndnver-SIy. Roads Better at Francois Lake FRANCOIS LAKE -Roads between here and Burns Lake have been gravelled and culverts are being Installed along the route Travellers report roads In better condition for travel than at any other time. EXTEND SERVICE REGINA (CP) The Saskatchewan government has undertaken a program to extend electric service to 1,000 new customers in towns and on farms. The electrification expansion ls estimated to cost $8,000,000.