Prince Rupert Daily News As I See It i REMINISCE Thursday, June 11, 1953 That was a keen-minded worn- 1 r - r; i , by The Aioti,. v, . 4 - k m L an who won a trip to Bermuda I miles inn"i.". 8hwT 24 $ - the best answer, in AI.ni nly2, for sending In An '.ndepe ndent dally newspaper devoted to the upbuilding of Prince Rupert and Northern and Central British Columbia. Member of Canadian Press Audit Bureau of Circulations .- Canadian Dally Newspaper Association. j Published by The Prince Rupert Dally News Limited. J. P MAOOH. President H. O. PERRY, Vice-President to the question: "Why is a news- n 0fi 01 or Semti. oeattle. n, o..l . u" paper like a woman?" What she ( m ore wrote was: "Because every man I they wish t0? Rnhscrimkin Rhtm' flu mrplor Vcr uwlt 'Jf nur mnnth 11 Oft! TWf 1PRT. 110 00. snuuiu Rev unc ui ma uwn, ana Jj 1 : not look at his neighbors. &. , X" j". W"l - --, By mall Per month. 75c; per year, 00. Authorized as second class mall by the Post Ofllce Department. Ottawa 1 WITHOUT RIVAL RT.rtiB ttm UrAm resnnnrtmit Month of or Deci uecisions "!l5 w mh trash w"UlecostSomu,h,H "f cour.se, to the andslijl W nCv in It will" not be the fault of the government of those grass plots in front of the post office do not become exclusive, although there I Just as.much playground room as ever for dogs and that goes from noodle to mastiff. There is also seating space for leisurely citizens. bad Ofirtrnlti ... .i.. - num w adorn tvfrr. "en a half sililllng jumps io u-n shilling,. LFCAIXY CORRECT While we never felt Certaln.lt now appears well established that ANN Schedule Chonge, Roller M . I. - , , 1111 a dog has legal rights. It appears ! that In Mlddlesborcugh (Eng.),! a bow-worf was lying on the doorstep of his home enjoying the supreme doggy delight of gnawing a bone. A neighborhood girl tried to take away the bone. He growled and bit her. The charge read that he had been a dangerous animal at large. The magistrate held that the dog was not a large but on his own 1 ground and it was the natural thing for a dog to derend his I .'(iperty. Case dismissed. Congratulations, Rover. Olve us your paw. TIUItSDAY Adult Skjlr FRIDAY Tern Kkatr SATl'RDAY Monlirht Skjlt That Salmon Plan THE PEOPLE of Han-1 e y, Stoke - on - Trent, England, are having a lively argument about B.C. salmon. It all started when Mrs. R. Mayer, 2202 Upland Drive, Vancouver, cut out one of my columns and sent it to her sister, Mrs. Percy Sylvester. Mrs. Sylvester in turn sent U to the Evening Sentinel, and then the fun began. For the Evening Sentlm-l posed the question which I had asked here: Should B.C. salmon packers be permitted to stockpile B.C. :almon at warehouses in London? And should Canadians who wish to send gifts of salmon to friends in Britain be permitted to pay for these in Canada thus by-passing the heavy parcel postage charges and delay in delivery? THIS ISSUE has split the readers of the paper in Britain. It reports: "A lively controversy has arisen from the rejection by the British government of a plan Ly which Canadians could send to their friends in Britain gift parcels of tinned salmon at the lowest possible cost. "On one side are ranged in this country those people who would not benefit from the scheme and traders who regard it with some misgivings. Both support the government's attitude. On the other side are the salmon packers, Canadians who wish to send the parcels and p.m. U l!Mi may well mark Juno, lfKtt, as the HISTORY month of great joy, celebration and decision. It is the month m which a new Queen was crowned, the beginning of the new Elizabethan era, and the time in which world statesmen will make decisions that will have a deep impact on the reign of the young Queen and the economic life of the free world. Seen through Canadian eyes, 'the two major world events that likely will follow the Coronation, are the conference of the Big Three powers in Bermuda and decisions of the United States the world's major economic force on future trade policy. The Rig Three conference Rritain, the U.S. and France has been reported as a possible prelude to a bigptr conference, a meeting of the Western powers with Russia in pursuit of that evasive shadow peace. A long-term peace pact with Russia if such a thing is possible would; of course, leave Canada and other countries free to reehannel their industrial efforts, produce more for world trade., and thus enhance the possibility of an enriched cultural life under the. new Queen. Rut to sell more goods abroad will require a deepening and widening of the channels of free trade. Canada and the other countries of the free world have emphasized they rely on the U.S. to provide economic leadership in this field. A test of what course the U.S. will follow will take place within a few weeks. A committee of the U.S. Congress now is drawing up its report on the so-called Simpson bill which would ring the U.S. Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act with new import restrictions. The act itself must be renewed this Certainly the government is glad to announce statistics on increasing longevity. We can pay taxes longer. Ex. CIVIC CEN QI F.EN ELIZABETH presents a Coronation medal to Cmdr. Robert Welland of Victoria, B.C., leader of the Canadian navy Coronation contingent. The presentation was made during the ceremony of awards by the Queen to representatives of the various contingents from Uie Commonwealth in London for the Coronation. VICTORIA REPORT S- -J- nj-. VICTORIA There's talk in the This quite priceless parchment i one of those white benches on Legislative Buildings of haneinu 1 document will be placed in the i the terrace, visit the archives LINDSAY'S CARTAGE AND STORAGE LTD. Established lftlt MOVING . . . PACKING . . . CRATING SIIII'FINO . . . I OKWAKDINft . . . STORAGE Experienced handling Local, Nation-wide and World-wide Shipments. 'MOVE WITH EASE . . . SHIP VIA LINDSAY'S" Agents Allied Van Lines Ltd. Fhoiie KO or 8 Cur. 2nd and rark h Provincial Archives in the Build- and have a look at this link with oil portraits of the Queen and in the ing so after, you've rested on I our romantic past. the Duke of Edinburgh legislative chamber. For years portraits of King George V and Queen Mary hunp; in the law-makers' chamber, a colorful splash in that ornate, sombre place. But, before any Military Alliance with Britain Urged in Statement by Sen. Tail iiii.amiMMrt M "in v I WASHINGTON (AP Senator one could be around to hanging those in Britain whose Sunday tea-time desires are being frus A. n.. Taft lull Rep iv O ) has Prtii...ri r.nui'H the portrait of 1 r'j)!iri fur fl fnMllnrv nllinnrp tions so far as the Korean war ir concerned" If efforts to obtain an armistice fail. Elsenhower said the U.S. would have to 'go It alone" .very where If It operated slni'.ie- Vlil, I1C 1WU1 UWIH ilW-U. lliJI Ul UJ.. Britain in the- Pacific to paR'ii VI and Queen Elizabeth. The one trated. Mr. Allan Taylor, president of the North Staffordshire Grocery Association, objects that the scheme would mean a stock for "a favored few in salmon-starved Britain" and that "such bypass the United Nations veto in that critical world area. The Senate Republican leader issued a statement clarifying the vlwu-tf hii pvnrosyfrf in a Plnrin- handedly !n Asia. In nn Interview before he is . iii n I n III id the Queen wasn't so good, and ! so something in authority ordered both down. A new picture of the Queen was to be ordered. UKU sued the formal statement. Taft made It clear that any early That was about 193H. It was the end of the matter. It was one of i.atl speech May 26 which caused President Eisenhower to say 1 "no," that he couldn't agree with Taft that the U.S. "miRht I as well forget the United Na- WITH ALL THE FEATURES supplies as we can afford should be bought by them (British private traders i and distributed by them on as fair a basis as possible." The secretary "of the associa- those mysteries of government; month or it will expire. President Eisenhower. has asked Congress for a one-year renewal. Rhee Intends io Fight on Alone -After Armistice He Tells Star nobody knew anything, and the whole thing was forgotten. Since then the spaces for the portraits YOU WANT MOST of royalty, on either side of the clock, have been blank. Northwest Rated "Without unification, neither interior, or irom up-isiana points , lions adds: "This seems like an j attempt by the salmon packers I to use the sympathy of Cana-I cilans to overcome the currency j problem. J would definitely irown on such a scheme." The newspaper itself sums up the controversy with this comment: "Many people see good Top Defence Area come to your capital city, you t South nor North Korea can any longer survive this war of attrition. The Communists are mav find a few sotinre inches truce in Korea would likely put him back, in the same foreign pulley boat with Eisenhower In j the Far East. I The Ohio senator said he Is ' resinned to United Nations ur- ticlpation in the peace decisions j which would follow a Korean j cease-fire, a course Eisenhower I apparently Intends to pursue, j But If armistice negotiations 1 fail. Tnft indicated In the stnte-; ment that he has not changed I his view that the U.S. "might as well forget" the UN in deal-j ing with the Korean situation, j He denied he ever advocated ; ' go it alone" policies and did I not mention any differences of ' opinion with Eisenhower. ! Taft said the United Nation;; ! had proved itself unable to hall ! aggression. trying to wear us out. It is prov ing successful even with Ameri where you can sit down in Par-1 SEATTLE (AP) The North-llament Square. For years, each ' '" iK one of the most important summer, two white benches have defence areas In the nation, been placed on the terrace of the Charles S. Thomas, underseere-Legislative Buildings. Always : tary of the navy, said here to-thev were crowded, and visitors day- e tod the Seattle cham-had to sit on the stone curbir.es ' ber of commerce, at a luncheon points in notn lines or argument." HERE again are the main Tacts. Many people in Canada regu TORONTO (CP) President Svngman Rhee of the Republic of Korea has told the Toronto Star in a cable from Pusan that his country "intends to fight on .alone after an armistice." The Star, which carried excerpts from Rhee's 600-word cable In a front-page story, said (he cable was in reply to questions submitted to him by the newspaper. The cable said: "If the armistice is signed against our plea, we are ready to fight It out ourselves so that, - win or lose, Korea will be unified one way or the other." cans and the United Nations fighting In Korea. '. . . This Is the way the Communists took China. We cannot wait if we want to survive. We must settle our own fate." The story also says that Rhee wants to lncrea.se trade with Canada. Rhee said In the cable: "We recently sent a consul- larly send gift parcels to friends and relatives in Britain. These are paid for by Canadians, in k- a n a a i a n dollars nence no question arises as to whether or aboard the aircraft carrier York-town that the navy has spent almost $250 000.010 in the Seattle area since July 1. Special Session To Be Called . not individual Britons can af peneral to Australia to open ! ford to buy our salmon -""""rr- f-1 2" " ffPf :1 MmM SDMI SH 4 - colored inliTKiri-; commercial relations there. If 1 But the postal rates on these Th cable, received by the newspaper Sunday niuht in that the md the lawns. No one could understand why more benches were not put on the terrace. It was another of those strange, annovlng, petty mysteries of government. This year, however, the government has found two more white benches; that makes foilr. If you're lucky you might find a seat. One would think a terrace as long as that one would have 10 or 12 benches, so that visitors could rest their weary bones and aching feet. The outlook from this terrace Is splendid, Indeed sweeping Canada should desire, we will b j parrels are so high Canadian donors of the gifts ii-ply to fjiie siioris sent by ywlkti to'jsend -Sou a p-presenta- uivUi fulfil H . ijl.ar Friday, !iddH OTTAWA DIARY .XXSSSS?. If Truce Signed OTTAWA CP) The United I Nations General Assembly will I putomatically be called Into session by External Affairs Minls-: ter- Pearson should the truce i talks at Panmunjom result In I I n armistice, S. F. Rae, secre feel they are getting only about hull the rer'"Vft4tterrrirreTr money. Under the ship-from-the-stockpile plan the senders of parcels would save very substantial sums of money. For whole shiploads of B.C. salmon would go forward to Britain and the transportation cost per tin of gift salmon would be reduced to a tiny fraction of the present postal rates. BRITISH grocers seem to fear his homework. Albert tries also to get Artie the waiter to keep abreast of current affairs. But Artie isn't When the MP's are away from the Capital, Albert's friendly oasir-. i. a subtly different place. The furnishings are unaltered. The beverages are the same. the philosopher that Albert Is MtTtM ISPIAY MOKUT green lawns, the Inner Harbor, with its ships, and crowds on the docks, distant Little Saanich Mountain, Its observatory gleaming in the sunshine, the green cooper roof of the Cathedral Church of Christ, a glimpse of the turrets and towers of Craig-' darroch Castle, the Ivy-covered Empress Hotel, with its lawns and flowers and Ihe heavy traffic, constantly swirling about Artie the much-abused waiter ( Hence his reactions aren't alls his same half-downtrodden, i ways too co-operative or satls-halt-fainillar self. factory. CAT, LOO that if this plan were permit Yet with all these familiar For example, Albert recently rtATXmtrt dsns tary to Mr. Pearson, said today. . "The position is that under a resolution of the assembly passed at the conclusion of this part of the seventh (last) session, if there Is an armistice In Korea, the president is requested to recall the assembly," he said. Mr. Pearson, president of the UN General Assembly, would thus automatically recall the deliberative body. ted, families in Britain would work out private bai ter arrangements with friends and relatives in Canada. They claim this Is has been sympathetic to the drive of the Council of the French Way of Life to have family allowance and all other Federal government cheques issued bi-llngually. He explained to Artie: . "Cheques are Just another form already going on In food par features, the atmosphere of the place is curiously changed. It is no longer friendly. Instead, it Is impersonal almost to the point of being coldly formal. The reason is that Albert likes to think of his establishment as a sort of Parliamentary institution. And during - - - r-i the - recess when cels from Ireland. The long-term solution, of course, is a new trade deal with WHERE CRAFTSMANSHIP COUNTS . . COUNT ON US! Dibb Printing Co. COMPANY J ...Til. wmrr nine cm 1"""" of If talks v money. vrt,j money imjiji.j vaiaa, War Memorial corner, colorful and bustling, but far enough away so that the noise Isn't heard. So, next time you're In Victor-la, and visit the Legislative Buildings, try and get a space on one of those four benches, and sit there for half an hour. You'll get a view of Victoria Impossible from anywhere else, and one Fully automulic aim mm '-'7 - .. i Mli there are no MP's to give his cheques should talk also. And clientele it distinctive parlia- I it's only right that they should .....I ... rallies foil"""-.- ... Britain whereby Canada would accept sterling for all food purchases permitting Canadian salmon and oilier foods now In The Montreal Gazette has Just observed Its 175th anniversary. In other words, more than half mentary flavoring, his interest In talk In both the official languag- the operation very noticeably es. Then Albert ouoted from the the history of Canada can be found In Its pages. Willi economy of operation and I" ' , For complete satishu tion now ''' ...tea 1 , J is mo.lcl come-Ly McClary. TI.e .(Ins of a wi.le variety of Mc( Jury electric, heavy surplus here to move without any government Im brief addressed by the French Way of Life Council to the Cab that will quite fascinate you. posed restriction to the British wood and combination ranges. inet: "National unity, which is market. narrows. It centres simply upon the cash register. The patrons who come through the door are of interest only to the extent to which they serve to maintain the steady rhythm of its low hum. That's not like Albert. Ordin synonymous with an enriching duality of culture, can only be wrought slowly, through a sue Lleut.-goverjior and Mrs. Clarence Wallace are expected back from the Coronation by the end of June. They've been having a wonderful time In the Britijih capital. They were among more cession of deeds and aceompish-ments. And the higher the level Cattle Men Seek Highway Patrols army arily, when the MP's have to be at which the example is set, the sooner and better win national looked atler either Before or . after their day's legislative la- unity, of which we hear so much than 300 guests at a state dinner Ihe Queen gave in Buckingham Palace. be brought about.' WARE$i!fi JUST ARRIVED... ROGERS MAJESTIC Marine Battery Radios fa Three bands: Broadcast, Marine, Shortwave. Tr Low battery drain. it Designed for Marine use. " if Highly sensitive receiver. Only 59.9S Other Marine Models from 42.!i5 up . RUPERT RADIO and ELECTRIC VERNON (CP In an effort to halt the widespread theft of cat That's a good argument, His Honor will carry back to PRODUCTS OF GENERAL STEEL Artie," Albert concluded. But for once Artie was indif 1 1 umif fi.i.'ii,wiJ,TTlJi -' ijtiiinTi1" Victoria with him the commission signed by Queen Victoria' in 1858 appointing James Douglas . bors, he's as oblivious of the cash register as he is to the electric Jight meter in the basement. It's something that he knows Is there ,and takes for granted. During these periods of hiatus ,.in his establishment's parliamentary operations Albert is an tle during the hunting season, the B.C. Beef Cattle Growers' Association has proposed that tfovcrnor or the Crown Colony ol ferent to his patron's logic. ' Boas," he said flatly, "I think It's all nonsense. If money or cheques l don't care which It is Just to long as the cheques aren't the bouncing kind will Just talk to mt In one language, that will inveterate reader of newspapers. Through their columns he tries patrols be set up on all highways with power to establish road blocks and to Inspect all traffic. The association will ask the Department of Agriculture to hire deputy brand Inspectors. British Columbia. This was the commission which historians had been searching for over . the years, and had Just' about given up hope of ever finding It. Last month It turned up In a long-locked vault in London, t- ! to keep himself posted on public be plenty for me. I won't ask for questions against the time of the Phont Box 1279 Prince Hupert 1 yf MtBriiie St, MP's return. It's his Way of doing anything more.