Prince Rupert Daily News ray As I See it dador to Cwnada presented to die . k,,),!;, J () regiment a gold medal of honor1 War' Th 'V,'w- on behalf of the municipality of ' Sussex -m.uT1 tarm 4 Eelde, in Holland. The Hussars seen a cerem M had been kmci to the people of 'eighty venr-T "ke'this ' ' ' ' " U ------ tutu: Saturday. June 7, 1952 tween other leaders of South e.nd North Korea. 3. When, in la47, it looked as if an agreed government for the whole country could be set up, fthec's henchmen killed the man wlum everybody regarded us the one likeliest to achieve this purpose. Reflects and Reminisces 'j An Independent dally newspaper devoted to the upbuilding of Prince Rupert and Northern nd Central British Columbia. Member erf Canadian Press Audit Bureau of Circulation Canadian Daily Newspaper Association. Published by The Prince Kupert Daily News Limited i J. P. MAGOR, President H. a. PERRY. Vice-President I I more J Subscription Rates: By carrier Per week. 25c; per month (I 00; per year. $10 00 By mail Per month. 75c; per year. $8 00 PI,:L,II C. GREGORY LEBLANC D.S.C. 'Doctor of Surgical Chiropody, FOOT SPECIALIST Ste. 3 Metlical-Dental Bid.. West V..., Ingrid Bergman Awaits Twins ROME i Reuters) -Inerld Bergman was in a closely guarded Rome clinic today awaiting the birth of twins. A burly gatekeeper refused to let anyone eater except doctors and other employees. Nuns watched from windows to seo that eager photographers camped outside did not try to clamt'jr over the high wall. The twins are expected wilh il the next few days, according to friends of Miss Bergmun and iur husband, film director Ki.berto Rosxelini. ' The Rossellnis huva one child, a boy, born in February, 1951), shortly before they were inarrit t. Some folks are commencing to Inquire if the Canadian BUI of Rights is to include that of people on foot, at street crossings. But others prefer a studied uncertainty. Authorised as second class mail by the Post Office Department. Ottawa. PHOF2SSOR MeCune does not say in his book rwhat one top j U.S. news magazine said) that Rhee himself was the direct in- i stigator of that political mur-, tier. Thus, on page 87: "Terrorist bahds of the right,; Rhee Cooks Own (loose ', I 1 f C' Wishes to announce that he will be I'facticing Chiropody at General Eisenhower's welcome to his home town in Kansas included a torrential rainfall. Ha already had, of course, heard remarks concerning river floods, and noted a few high water marks. PRINCE RUPERT HOTEL June 23rd - 24th - 25th - 26th rrup I HL governments mvPrnmPflt 01 of II U.S., S lne witn Korean tne aPP8"'"1 immediately collusion of Britain and Australia bean ttn anti-communist cam-, puign. Lyuh Woonhyung, form- have administered a sharp er head of the People Republic, . was the first victim of the reign rebuke to that ancient of torrur. He wa aasaiwlnated 0U July 19 ,m7' on a 8eoul Qvmrrrvin Rhee tvr-mt nnee. tyiant byngman ;gtm,t ln ljroad d9yHght and Jn The boss of South Korea had sight or a police box. He had already been repudiated by his been mentioned tt a possible own rigged National Assembly, "compromise candidate to head Rhee had commenced his lat- the provisional Korean govem-tst campaign for re-election by nunt." the simple expedient of rieclarj Again on page HI); Advance appointments will i)r at kn.mf,l SHI. A British cruiser, havl it; discovered at Tobermory, the ancient treasure ship sunk In 1S!)0 will now try to tee if thei.1 is anything of value. HullywHid might be consulted. Even ullowing for ctunpuigu ieivur, there will doubtless come a day when once agai.i British Columbia will be Ii.ltlsh Colum t. ' i V ,-1 -yv:; Officials Mark French Invasion CAEN, France tJ. -Top Alll- d military officials today marked the eighth anniversary of the Allied invasion of France with visits near to this Normandy city whose capture cast many British and Canadiun lives. VOTE AS YOU LIKE bia, and Alberta (iiscover Itself to be Alberta. Of lat.. it's not Field Marshal Viscount Mont "On December 2, 1S47, Chang Duksco, leader of the cooperation faction In the Korean Democratic Party, Vas assassinated by a rightist police officer under circumstances which Involved the Kim Koo-Syngman Hliee opposition." OUT IN India last year I had several talks with Mr. Anup Singh who was India's representative on the UN border- Guard Your Franchise A STRANGE notion is held by some opponents of alternative voting that the way to beat the system is to "plump." This means that a voter ignores all but his first choice and selects one candidate only. The misleading argument behind "plumping" is that a voter's alternative selections may help to elect a man he does not primarily favor. While that is correct as far as it goes, it is so incomplete as to be just as bad as a falsehood. What is not' said is that blank spaces on a voter's ballot can destroy his wishes even more drastically. In computing results of alternative voting, a ballot is discarded as soon as those candidates marked on it are out of the running. This a ballot showing preference for no more than one candidate has just a one-shot chance of staying in the heap. If that chance fails to materialize, the voter loses all further voice in the outcome of the election without having accomplished anything more for his candidate than he would have done by filling out the entire list. At the same time", he has left the field wide open to those he was hoping to defeat. The moral is to insure yourself against a completely lost cause by giving some help to what you consider the lesser of the other evils. This can be done on a descending scale of merit until all spaces are marked. You have then made full use of your franchise without the slightest injury to your favorite. : gomery, deputy Allied supreme commander of Europe, attended m vo i HE the ceremonies at Runville, first French village liberated by units of the British 6th Airborne been ;o easy to determine who was who, which was what, nr plain ;-why the ????. As elec-j l'ii." go, io..'t say this one will j n il be memorable. j One never knows. It must be all of 7f years since a regiment to be known as the Princess Louise Hussars was formed at the village of Sussex, 'way down in New Brunswick. The Princess was the wife of the then Governor-General of Canada. Last I week, the Netherlands's Ambus- watch commission when the-) Commission and after good food ing martial law, jailing editors and beginning to arrest all the M P.'.s likely to vote against him. YOU COULD write the whole recent tragic history of Korea around the life, of this .senile scoundrel. In fact it has already been written in what is by far the most authoritative book on Korea. It is KOREA TODAY, by the late George M. McCune, of the U.S. State Department. Professor McCune died before completing his book also before the tragedy oi war in Korea. But in his book he painstakingly documents the descent into the abyss in Korea. You could sum it up thus; The Reds plus Rhee added up to catastrophee. There are sixteen different references to Rhee in this 372 page book. They clearly establish these facts: J. Rhee arrived back ln Korea from the U.S.A. an found absolutely no popular support for himself. He was established as the top maq-only upon the forcible Insistence . of the U.S. military machine. nd drink, suggested that they hold elections only in the north leaving "his good friend Syngman Rhee' as top man. That "friend" is a .millstone around UN's neck. Rupert Radio & Electa Korean war started In June 1850. I quizzed him closely about the Communist-line yarns to the effect that the South and not the North, had started the war. This man, who was actualy on the spot, said there was absolutely no truth to this story The Northerns attacked, and for weeks sustained their attack, In a way which testified to many months of preparations. But he did tell me one revealing thing about later developments: After MacArthur's brilliant counter attack from the sea, and the drive north across the 38th parallel the UN Com mission was instructed bv UN Try daily New Wont Ads 2. Rhee blocked all attempts ' to prepare for general elections towards the unification of the for the whole-to-be-united coun-country, either under the UN, j Uy. But MaeAnhur staged an or by direct negotiations be-1 elaborate dinner for the UN Classified Ads Pay fto maciir!!i vouir CaeuDQott ucacOer Amber Author No Writer WASHINGTON lAPi The United Btates Court of Claims Raid yesterday Kathleen Winsor is not a writer. On that basis, the court awarded her a $28,358.72 refund on M no MBBiiDf1i7a taxes paid on the sale of motion picture rights tc her best gelling 'novel "Forever Amber." a. g. Wffnf Judge Evan How-')l, who wrote Alhi-nulive Voting will he lined in the mining l'rovimiul Klerlioii. the unanimous decision, held that Miss Winsor wrote primarily for her own amusement. Although she has 'written since childhood, he noted she has ' published o lly two books. , The court agreed with Mis Winsor's lawyers that the $lo5,-000 n,?t proceeds from the sa'e of picture rights should have been taxed at a lower rate as capita! gains rather than as ordinary income. Uh,W Jack McRae WITH TODAY'S Says . . . e That for the oast three LIQ.UOR. LAWS vears the Hon. E. T. Kenr.jy, Liberal Minister and himself have stressed for a good high way between lyre and Terra :e. When he says it was difficult you will appreciate it wh'jn you recall Mr. Carson, a Conservative Minister, announced only last fall that NO MONEY ft "WLs VO ISllH . . i B WOULD BE SPENT ON OUR HIGHWAY during 1952 except a 27-mile survey. Your Liberal Association. along with Mr. McRae, took mmediate action and pro tested such a decision. Bottles under the table . . . .. A furtive, sneaking custom that rnakrs law-liri-akrr nf our rili.pim rrralrs ( disrespeol for all laws, just lirraiine one law thr liquor Im. i wrong. Moderation? No! As long as we must rontinue to buy a 26-oni''e bottle to have only a 2-ounrc drink, we will never ai hieve real moderation in the use of liquor. Bootleggers thrive ... By unworkable restrictions on the sale of liquor, we have ereated a fine market for Oie bootleggers and bootlegging is the father of all other rackets. VOTE "YES" IS JO ASSURE A CHANGE The only certain way to change our liquor laws is to vole "V KS" in the June 12 liquor plebiscite, "YES" for liquor by the glass instead of only by the quart. After the voters have approved, the government has staled it will set up a committee a cross section of the community lo consult with the legislature, and design the best posnihle jvsiprn. A change came in January of this yar and well it did. During that short time the Hon. E. T. Kenney (Liberal Minister) has had the 27-mile survey completed, crushed gravel spread on at least 30 miles between hen and Terrace by mid-summer the whole road from Terrace to Tyee will have a good crushed gravel surface and certain sections by contract are Ljing widened and straightened. This improvement has bee:i only possible under a Liberal Minister and Liberal Administration. Mr. Anscomb and Mr. Car-3on, Conservative Ministers. Explaining Alternative Voting briefly, it may be eaitl that the voter lias no longer to eon ten I himself with marking an X for just one ea'iulidute. He marks a first choice fur his candidate, and then proceeds to make a second, third and possibly further choices for as many candidates as have been nominated. On counting the ballots, if the highest candidate has an absolute majority over and above the total votes cast for all the other candidates, he! is declared elected. If however, no candidate obtains an absolute majority on the first count,' a second, count is required. Itefore doing this, the lowest candidate is excluded and the eecond choices on that candidate's ballot are transferred to the other candidates as indicated on his ballot. If the second count elects no one on an absolute majority, the next lowest candidate is eliminated making a third count necessary. This continued until come candidate obtains an absolute majority. while in charge of Public Works, consistently bucked highway development in Nor thern British Columbia as also evidenced by Mr. Carson's statement in Prince Rupert only last fall. NOW, for political purp CITIZENS' COKKilTTEE FOR A COMMOU SENSE LIQUOR LAW Georg A. ('.ran, Chairman Rm. 812-207 W. Hastings, Vancouver PA 8.VIH wife " oses, these gentlemen have the audacity to say they ai interested in our highway-past experience hasn't shown it. Answer that, Mr. Anscomb Dr. Hn A. F. Kdr IT S Msnartl TeniTOtt d Wolf COT OUT THIS MESSAGE FOR REFERENCE AND DISCUSSION: A brochure containing detailed information is being mailed to all Ilritinh Columbia householders. Vote for your LIBERAL Candidate on June 12th whom Gordon ShslM Cm. E. BiMromb. E. UBoultU. Cliff Wijhtn..,, Mrs. K. E. Prortor . Het. Lumb Mr. 4 Mr. A. D.Uudw VI. C. Dllmsr.. Jr. Mr. Mrs. B. R. Tuppw Clsrke Simpking Cspt. J A. I.srvn Frfd Bogdn Winriifrod kenworth chsrlra M. Dtfieul Rets W. Myfra Orvsl ('. Cook Mr. a Mm. Don King Aid Arrtii Proctor Z. K. Kstsy fol E. J Rv.n uorwin Hlrtf h. C. ('rM-ry Buds Brown E. Doug, fltons Dr. Mrs. Hugh Roi you know has pressed for au.I Fred J. Jut4 Mrt. G. Wsinborn Art l.nrutophcr better highways and whom ycu know will continue to And rntny othen omitted through lack ot ipse. press for a better highway deal. fc.syavs-.r.ft.wftr-.aatw