- ' ' - 1 Jj mm mm mmm - tAMUP New OH Prince Rupert Daily News As I See It Exhortation For Eternity way k Tuesday, February 19, 1952 At St. Paul's Lutheran Church. VIfTr.n,. Pastor S. R. Johnson brought an-: number o i n Independent daily newsppper devoted to the upbuilding of Prince Rupert and Northern and Central British Columbia. Member of Canadian Dress Audit Bureau of Circulations Canadian Dally Newspaper Association. 3. A. HUNTER, Managing Editor; H. O. PERRY, Managing Director SUBSCRIPTION RATES: other stirring evangelical mes- !U Pension 'j.' sage last night when he spoke on yja" ancl e mat not ui; the heavenly banquet, emphaslz- wi!1 ' ' lug that every time the Word is lately preached the invitation Is sent time, ah out to prepare for eternity. i Paid t I There wiii be a great gathering , 11 "o o;ii ;on that "last day." he declared. ! ?.np tas b?fI; . 3y carrier, per week. 25e; per month. $1.00; per year, $10; by mail, per month, 75c; per year, $8.00. King Survived Cancer Published every afternoon except Sunday by Prince Rupert Daily News Ltd., 3rd Avenue, Prince Rupert. Entered as second cla-s mail by Post Office Department, Ottawa. i "And they shall come from the THE LATE KING did not east and west, and rrom thej i"uarj north and south, and shall siti Ku; down in tne Kingdom oi uod. i "jk'ji 11. Nfm ,, cl-iu ... However, the pastor made It very I i die of the cancer of the ! lung which made neces-jsary his operation of last i autumn. i The British Medical Journal .states conclusively that his p.iin- I less and peaceful death was clue to a blood clot, caused by a ; disea.se of the circulation system. i Tne King hull bi Hi treated for "wotfd 0W1 i this clogging condition ever sino j 1 1948. The lulls operation w.i'l cU-ar thul only those who have 1 "washed their robes In the bloud of the Lamb" will be there. Jeim said: "I am Uie way. and U.e truth and the life. No man com -eth untu Uie Father but by Me." There are people who want to be 4ved in their sins, but refuse U; he savel from their aim. The pastor exhorted that tne people should eorae as they are. "He that cometh unto me I wili In no wise cast out." "O last, and see that the Lord is good " One's own worts cannot merit 'salvaUon. Every aoul must oc i dressed in the righteousness of I Jesus Christ in order to enter j into heaven. i The challenge was "Are yo-ir names written in the Lamb' i Book of Life? Do yon anow Jcstis a your personal f5aviocu-? ! completely successful, and there j was no evidence to show that any f.irly recurrence of the cane; was expected. THE CONQUEST o. cancer seem m . if j. c L3 Spotlight on Schools WKF.K will lie observed in each of EDUCATION Canada's -ten provinces from March 2 to March K The theme this year is the same as in- other years: Kducation is Everybody's Business. Certainly, everyone subscribes to this slogan, but how many individuals dig in as wholeheartedly as they might in making the occasion something more than just another of the calendar's endless "special" weeks? If Education Week is to be given real meaning, its success must depend on something more than lip service and a few dollars' contribution; it requires interest, ideas and active participation. The home, the church, the school, the farm, industry and commerce, management and labor, all have an interest and a responsibility in the continuing process of improving Canadian education. - Why Education Week? The purpose of this week set aside each year in March is to encourage Canadians to examine their educational system, discuss it and help in its development. Criticism, provided it is sincere, informed and constructive, can make a valuable contribution to our schools, our methods of. teaching, and the effectiveness of education in a rapidly changing world. It is easy to fall into the dangerous habit of taking education for granted. Education Week is an opportunity for all of us to clarify our thinking on the real purposes of our schools. GENERAL ELEt' William GET A FIVE-DAY WEEK!"-By I to me the supreme medical goal : 1 of these times, for it is at thc ; very core and centre of the , j greatest mystery of life. j i Take the greatest love story, j I A single cell, we boy, males j ' with another cell, girl. j I Out of this wedding, which takes place between two cells i too tiny even to be seen oy ; the human eye, there grows even I the most highly developed living jcieatures. If you or I could look at the tiny newly wedded cell,' ! we could not tell the difference between the tiny speck whicn: ! would g'ow into a whale, a I rattlesnake, an eagle or u j human being. But God knows. I And the laws of Nature, which iare the agencies of God, cause' each one of these specks to cle-) velop according to wonderful ; patterns. I Each tiny invisible wedding1 j speck, grows over the years 10 I what God's laws say it should bo-; icome maybe a superb beast liko a lion, maybe some -cheeky and: i chirpy creature like a city spar-: i row, maybe a king, maybe you or i me. j In simpler, more primitive ; creatures there are but a few j 'GEE, TRIGG EH. WHO EVI R THOUGHT WE'D Butterfield in the Vancouver Daily Province. AC-DC Battery Portables 5 Wi : nJ ii J Hi"" ' the part . i? Hoa' Arbitration for Civil Servants i VICTORIA it Arbitration proceedings will be open to British Columbia's 10.000 civil servants, if the government acts on the K'commriKlalion of special legis- May Bring Down 1952-53 Budget Early in. April Considerable Tax Reductions May Come in View of Surplus . By D'ARCY O DONNELL C'ttnadian 1'rrss Stuff Writer Rupert Radio & fej I YOUR iE DK.LER lait of Feminine Appeal OTTAWA (CP): A record peacetime budget, latwe committee which inquired i creesX n tne containing tax reductions and announcing a surplus 'm" the industrial and concilia Hon Arbitration Act It was learned Saturday this Is one of the committee's important leeommendutions In its report to ! billions of tiny ceils, all doing 0f possibly $500,000,000 for 1951-52, will be presentee' the job they are supposed to do , . . . . . .. .. to fulfill their pre-planned pUr-, to .the forthcoming session of Parliament. 1 pose. But no matter how many The session opens Thursday. - b( tabled In the House this wivk. MANKIND, meaning in this case the male of the species, usually discovers sooner or later the wisdom of that familiar injunction: Never underestimate the power of a woman. Advertising men have long observed this principle by directing their appeal as often as possible to the purchasing agent of the family. Husbands, of or few, all the celts must them- Feb. 28 and finance Minister an end Figures for the first nine UnOtr .,.r the ,1,, nrPWnt system sysiLin. em rni selves nhev the inflexible law of AhhotL m hrinir down the 19S2- . .w,. .i.,i .i....w presini months of the fiscal year showed .i,- v. rnont-.i. God: , '53 budget Tuesday. April 8. a that tne suipius had reached a ,u ' n r oovernmcnt Emolovees' ! They must come-Into being oy shon time b.'fore the Commons t0t3, of $72l,ooo,000. It wa. ea- Aiuiim tit diref ly with the splitting of some existing adjourns for the Easter recess. petted the surplus would be slim- .?,?; XThia the fina i cell. They must live their indi- The 1951-52 budget was pre- down in the final months of '.' ..J , y vidual lives, is law-abiding units sented April 10 last. lne year, but there were some - -. course, do have more spending money of their own, i ' ''b- "s"""'" ine contents oi tne ouagei guesses inai ii wouja total at i . ., . ci..,i . . but more often than not they are strongly influenced. they are parts. wl!. remain a SPcr?t untn reai Past $5oc,oooooo. tn" , amount . had grown , , to $nt i.- THEN THEY MUST-Ult. i In th -,.,mc. Zon Jl J, si I lie uumiran ui nir in the way they spend it by women's ideas, prefer V5N m Parliament voted $1,700,1)00,000 fPCond world war In 1939 expen-lor defence expenditure in 1951- d tures were $553.0S3 0!17. They 52 and tutor it was estimated that sky-rocketed to a peak of $5,332.-not mire than $1,400,000,000 253 50f in 1944 iney must give oaca to uou dr0pp.d by Mr. Abbott in the the invisible Life Force. They last few months have launched must give back to earth, to the a ,lo0f, of spf,cuiation. matfrial world, the material. o,, rliUcnl observers have tapered off from 1944 ' f ' B 1 ' '- JlV ! vMble elements which they have "L ta Induction n amount- wou,d be pP,U bef0re the end ot They auctions amouiu .v..: Dr preaictea tax ,h tht year. Th The amount ommmt nnt not wn spent n , i. linti thP wiir hroke out in Korea held in their own body pattern ing to be tween $100.000 000 and i was reflected in the surplus. I ln one ftnn rlamiu fArnnclB Since then they swung upward. CANCER is a condition of law- tnat' repor ppatime defence DEFENDS FOLIC Y lessncss, a rebellion by the in- vnpn.iitnrpo nf 9 9nfi nnn rinn are s, n.w.o u., fmmicniiu ri dividual cells, for some reason planned for 1952-53. f Jnded his polt cy of high taxa- f J . I t i IX I JL- 7 L uf prosperity. He 'J X 1 J 1 I .-'' k I l Mr. Abbott has said that in. Hon in periods which man has so far been unable to discover.' carry on deficit 1 11 I KSr-ffW preparing the budget ne and his has said that to The individual cells refuse t: such as these , fy It- 111 I I I '"'--rvi lr$t, ficials will look closely at the financing in times ?le- at lnelr aPPomiea time iney blamed for "fraud j avy cigarette taxes, would be a on the public ' f f J I ! A I ' I I ' 1 ' : kctp on sinitung aim .spiutiii. inri,(..srni, smueGlinp of Ameri-. The Kurnlna Is neH li retlnre the r r V IT i-. W 1 - I I?--1-- ences or expectations-. It has been proven, too, that women influence men in many other ways in their attitudes toward their jobs, for example. In this connection, a survey of industrial workers' wives in Cleveland last year produced some interesting findings. The investigators found, among other things, that a wife looks upon her husband's' job mainly as a source of family income. As long as spendable income is steady, she isn't too concerned about such things as job prestige or working conditions. If young, the wife encourages her husband to work overtime for more money. If older, she is more inclined to oppose overtime. The wife of a habitual absentee may have considerable influence in correcting the situation if the facts are brought to her attention. There is nothing very startling about these findings; they merely help to confirm what many people have assumed for a long time that employees' wives are an important factor in industrial relations. ;into more and more living cells. can ciEarPltes illl0 Canada, a j country's debt. I They grow out of order in all dr in consum,)Uon 0f Canadian : surplus wi), nis slxlh ,n Th ine surplus win oc ms sxm hi directions in the end iter- they .,..,.. ., In mtmi,vmni " Unce tho end of the second S Si a row ally kill the creature of whicn Cjn,adl'1" thfco factories. ,rld war. He nad surpluses of thev ordained i were as comnoneni w rlnntl ThC MeraLl U n0W amoul1 ts ' $373,648,901 in 1947; $'176,1 19,6! " ' " ' - - - - IJl llllO, .JW,JW, ITl 1 IxIJ, cigarettes retaUing for .42 cents $13) 524.953 in 1950 and $203.45(1 -in Ottawa. There has been spec- i qqq in 1951 xhe ,947 srplus iilatinn in unnfficial eirele that!, u. -: r m I CANADA like all the rest of the I civilized world has men and women vear in venr nut. untkin-r - .V." . " " - . " .... u a.iuK ' uunsn unvc .... ... ,., . Ann(, n,. cm. tup lax ov deficits compiled during the years of the depression and of ; from two-to-five cents a pack in laboratories to unravel the mystery I have touched on above age. th jxveond world war. vanaua ui.u leuas me wnoie . ,. v,..u rHi,.n., re Canada's net debt, amounting to a mere $268,480,004 at the turn of the century, climbed to $335.- , '99C850 by 1914-the year of the world in the transformation 01 ductlons , ,he 15 per cent excise recent atomic discoveries into tax electric stows washing ager.c es for combatting cancel ma(.nlnes anc, refriR(.ratorSi Saskatchewan s "Cobalt Bomo M AbboU has u he , to marks the greatest anti-cancer ,ncorporate inl0 thc rPBular tax 'Z' l f . CI "( " 'i I . He's He's got got a a lot lot behind behind him him... . r;V outbreak of the first world war. Bv 1918, the debt had reached W i : , .1 ll. 1 n'-fv lcal , Ktrtir'tnrA the 90 npr renr. rie- ; $1,191,884,063. But everywhere one third of ail still ahead, now he become man fence surcharge placed on per- ! In 1939 the first year of the! iviiu w.c VII Wiwxr UUU1U , Bnn.i in.,,. ovc nnl nnmitro. second world war the debt to- I be saved if only they would take: Uon prorits-in lhe last budgPt. Scriptttre passage for Jodaif the available treatment in time, : tailed $3.152,559J14. It climbed; In dol that hf. may ef fect somc I as King George did rwliipflnn In (he m.nnrgl lav On tO a DCak OI l ,4US,44 in "God 0 loved the world that He gave His . . . Son." St. John 3:16. jcoiporations and personal in- i The surpluses in the last) ' comes ; live years have reduced it to ' Trans-ocean mation, yet it must be admitted j the Alcan enterprise ranks i Two per cent of the yield from , ii.mi,iw, uuo. i thc personal income taxes, from j The trend of the debt reflected i corporation taxes and from the ; thc movement of federal govern-10 per rent sales tax will be ear- j ment expenditures. In 1901 ex- $1,000,000 BABY RACKET Dr. Leon Azoulay, 54, shown at right, gives himsulf up to an Mnidenlified Montreal detective on a warrant charging him with abduction and conspiracy. Police allege he is the kingpin In a racket selling babies for $3,000 to $4,000 to couples in the United States and Canada. Two others. Herman Buller. a lawyer formerly from North Dakota and Bill Dutka, construction foreman, were' arraigned on similar charges. (CP Photo) nis nrst nrancn. i Years of work and study and g": tay! responsibility have prepared him.ribc a lot of Canada as he moved to ICI. branches. He got to know thepeof farming, suburban and industrial t:v communities, and how they use jorc Now he takes over from the man'",., moves up . . . and the road to ray . . . Reflects and among the greatest in Canada's industrial history. It seems Vancouver pilots are reported to have heard that In 1952 no fewer than 56 vessels from alien ports will have business at Kitimat. ma! ked to nay the cost, of $40 a Ipenditures totalled $46,866,368 month pensions to all 70 and j an amount that now barely cov-cvei, regardless of means. j'jrs the expenditures of one de- Tht healthy surplus compiled j payment of government, during the current year gives Mr. j By 1914, the government was Abbott a fair amount of leeway spending $127,384,473 and by 1918 Video Seen VANCOUVER The man who helped make possible the first trans-Atlantic radio broadcast 45 years ago predicted recently that a form of trans-ocean television may not be far off. This was Dr. E. W. Alexanderson of Rei jminisces Anyway, why shouldn't it be a lor making: tax adjustments. He 1 i fact? MIST BE POSITIVE also has forecasts from experts One, way to find out where the Vincent Massey had not been that the outlook for 1952 is good. open ior DOin 01 tneni. shoe pinches is to foot the bills, long in Canada Sunday, when a j Vancouver, for fifty years with j Thc value of Canada.s i's gross na 16.., the Oeneral Electric Co. -Wall Street Journal, reporter inquired if people were !f You Do Not Pay Your News Subscription, the Boy Loses A 1 Call upon ihe manager of your Oi bank. You will find him expene"1 townsite took place and just in time to level his camera at it. The site was on a hillside opposite where the railway station now stands. understanding, eager to serve yo"' tional production in 1952 is expected to be. $22.500 000.000, an inciease of $1,300,000,000 over 1951. last spring, Mr. Abbott estimated his revenues for 1951-52 would amount to $3,730,000,000 and expenditures to $3,700,000,-00C, leaving a surplus of $30,000,-00C. Last fall, he revised his estimates and indicated he expected to end the fiscal year March 31 with a surplus of be I expected to address him as Your A clothiers' convention, held Excellency, recently in Montreal, submitted "Heavens, No,'1 said His Ex. a list of what they regarded as ' At last we have a pretty fair Canada's ten best dressed men. line on future conduct. Three are engaged in the news- I paper business. It will now be Rupert E. Benson, pioneer advisable nay, necessary to Prince Rupert photographer, who always remember one's poise. I moved to Vancouver years ago jwith a view to retirement, gives You can fool some of the people to others the benefits of a pro-all of the time and if you are fessional experience and know- 1 i Subfcrlbers of the Daily News who receive their papers bj Lorrier boys are reminded that these boys our little merchants are charged for every paper they take out. If yon are receiving the paper and arc delinquent, the boy has to finance you. This Is a reminder to people who may be in arrears, whether it is their custom to pay the boy or pay at the office. It is not the office that loses if you fall to pay. It Is the boy. We hope this reminder will expedite the payment by .hose 'who may have fallen behind. Prompt payment of your newspaper subscriptldn Is a legitimate obligation. The fact that your creditor is one of our boys or girls should make the respecting of the obligation the more desirable. . ' One oTa series by your bank DIDN'T FALL OCT! That Roumanian radio repairer and Grade Fields, noted come-diene, have wedded after all. Announcement it had been called ol f evidently meant little. He will be reasonably sure of entertainment, if the same cannot be said for. her. ilfi not careful one of them will be ledge. Benny knows his stuff. you. Kingston Whig-Standard. tween $2O0.0d0,(Mj and $300,000,-000. His second estimate appeared conservative as the year neared Incldentally, he arrived here the very day one of the mast enormous blasts ever fired oh thc Tills may be subject to conflr-