Prince Rupert Daily News TRACTORS FfSTslTr As I See It Iff 1 In BUH'k In Mnmrtal 2 new TD Monday, February 25, 1952 u.miu iruciors. K, v and reljullt T rV . 'U Tn available lor Immediate .hlpm.t. '? .," " ii. vt. nipitui. un. u, ,tr, -IT! SI. ( ll,erl, si ;',""v IW h Q ' J C i more in Independent daily newspaper devoted to the upbuilding of Prince Rupert and Northern and Central British Columbia Member of Canadian Dcess Audit Bureau of Circulations Canadian Dally Newspaper Association F aThuNTER, Managing Editor; II. G. PERRY, Managing Director I SUBSCRIPTION RATES: " ; carrier, per week, 25c; per month, $1.00; per year, ' $10; by mail, per month, ?5c; per year, $8.00. 155;gto Published. every afternoon excent finnriav !!ilMu!IS! ,!!!!iI!,,fi!TMlP'Hf)M;r;tf'K:;'M!Jn1f'lI!l'!pttr;tu-:..rr Prince Rupert Dallv News I.I rl f hini A .wt Fntfred as second class mail by Past Office Department Ottawa ' , THE CP,C asked me to be Dn.-.L H-w chairman of a recent , Citizens Forum broadcast, i on the subject "What Should Our Policy Be To P ANCAKE DAY, which falls tomorrow on Shrove Tuesday, is a centuries old traditional holirhiv. ward China?" I I half liked and half hated th ! job. It is nice lor a change to be ' a moderator irs'ead of a debater. ' But it is tough for a person like me to have to stay out of the argument. HERE ARE some reasons why I think the new government of China should be recognized in L.n as representatives of China, as soon as there is real cease-fire in Korea: 1 1. Because it is in fact the ' EOV-rnment To use the ancient: REFUGEES SUFFER The Korean winter is cold but thousands upon thousands of war refugees must l.ve in tvnts in huge barren camps. The United Nations Civilian Assistance Command has helped make sure everyone has a roof of sonu kind. But food Is barely above the starva- noii urn aou ctuimng ana fuel are scarce. Kvwj older than Pancake Day, however, are the paiicakes for which it is famous and the Lenten reason which it immediately precedes. Pancake Day is always the Tuesday before Ash Wednesday, the stall of Lent. ! Although they did not realize what they were doing, men and. women in the Neolithic Age (the Stoiie Age) created a food which was destined to be theTiiain dish for this world-wide celebration. They made, on their crude hot stoves, the world's first pancakes, from ground grain. ! The pancake was actually the first known form of cooked bread. Naturally, in this interglacial peinod, nothing was known of leavening agents. Th cave men discovered that moistened ground jrifin baked on stones made a very good pastry. This, of course, was the pancake which still delights the hearts of millions every day. I Pancake Day, as we know it today,-originated in the year 1000 A.D. At this time an English clergy-map, Abbot Aelfric, set forth the proclamation that ; t "in; the week immediately before Lent everyone ' shall go to his confessor and confess hi rWrk anH phiasc. "its writ runs" from one 1 'OR w,t" FA. JUKVCT ?IIRVY end nf the vast lnnrl tn thn r.thor Dr. McKechnie, Vancouver, Dies ( VANCOUVER D.'. W. C. Mc- Kechnie, well known as a pioneer : iamily dx tor and heart, speclal-; 1st. divd at the end of the week. The funeral took place today. V.. McKechnie wai a brother ! ol the late Dr. R E. McKechnie, ! Chancellor cf the University ol i British Columbia. He was 78 vean- of age. U.N. Relief Agency Aids Stricken People To Survive Winter Editor's Note: Bill Boss. Canadian Press staff writer in Korea, has completed a two-week survey of conditions among lit is in laeral fact the most effective government that there has been in China probably for a century, certainly since the revolution of 1911. 2. Because the new government of China is recognized as the lawful government, not omy by its own 475 million people. : but by all its free neighbors in ' Asia, including India. Indonesia, Ceylon, Burma and Pakistan. 3. Because the actual govern-; ment of China is also recognized by the most sincere peace-loving nations in the west including : Britain, Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Sw&sserland. ! 4. Because the Charter of the UN plainly states that "China" is to have one of the permanent scats on the Security Council, and it is a plain hvpocrisy to pret.-nd that Chiang-Kai-Shek s little group of leiugees, hiding behind the U.S. fleet in the island of Formosa, is "China." 5. Because the question of recognition of China in UN is bound up with the larger one of u.n.uii ijujuiuhuii uuruig ine n.orean winter, j nts article is the first of a series based on interviews witli United Nations. Korean Republic and civilian sources ! By BILL BOm Canadian Press SlnfT WrlU-r SEOUL, Korea (CP) Winter has not been ss hard on Korean civilians as was feared. The mild weather and an energetic relief program are almost sure to keep Koreans most of them alive until spring. But the margin is narrow. Food is at a bare subsistence - - -- - level, though enough to prevent rice. Nor wiU the government . If you have misled you, paper, please phone y0Uf newsboy. If you do not know your newsboy's name, call the office before 5 p.m. ROl'TE 1 Jimmy Davidson WulLs and Nlcker.soirs lo rrlwelf, . Mr in,-' . 0th Ave. West CW anil Z '" ROl'TE 2 Ralph Ulsen. Kitir 7;;8 Herman Street; HBO ;th East to Sc:i ROl'TK 3 Victor Maskulak. 1st Ave. West 248-1077; 2nd Ave. West S41 ... in-,' tith Street; 3rd Ave. Friz,-11 ' ', " West. w"j ROl'TK 4 Alvin Nyste.lt, ISlue r,3g 7th Ave. West 704-1427: 9ih Ave West ten-Fultoi) Street 700 Block; Tallow' fitrm M Ave. " J ItOI'TC 5 Jimmy Mi I ran, Jte kJ2 4th Ave. West 100-445; Sib Ave V.ejt lo'.tii West J08-S30; Uunsimnr Street H-tt i 51&; Enu'i-son Place. A-new Place. " ' " ROl'TE Kdward Kkalapsky 8th Ave West 105-537; Bth Ave E;u " now Bireet 113-708.- ' KOl'TE 7 r. ler Brown, lllue 971 . All of Sectwil 2 ROl'TE 8 Jimmy JoliKMin, ;reen till VVaU-rfront and P.icilic J'lace; iCNPF FloaUs). UOITE 9 Mrlvin Itjornson, (Irern 113 8th Ave. East. McBrlde to Hays Cove Ci.-a ROl'TE 10 Richard MarDonald. Klui J3J lh Ave. East 237-736; Slh Ave. East 3Gi Tli Street 5J1-518; OlPJn Street 411-41; EbcrtS:- ROt TE II Leslie Murdoch, Mack 285 Pli'sott Ave.; 1st and 2nd Overlook; H'tv Pin;;ott Place. ROl'TK 12 Jimmy Mminlii ail, Red 335 llth Ave. East 333-13oj, Frederick St.; SxV ROl'TE H Konny i hy, ,ree t5 1st East 225-247; 2nd Ave. West 137-341: , 131-225; Markftt Place; 3rd Ave. Dally : Motors. ROl'TE 13 Robert Jensen. Rlack 9.V1 5th Ave. West r,3l-lZi, 741-715; Borden Sfcf Street Bisgar Place. ROl'TE 1G frank Kilborn, (ireen 71 4th Ave. E-i.it 124-234 ; 5!n Ave E.i.t 101-244 , East ;o-li;)8; Uow.'er Street. ROl'TE 17 Charlie Mndstrom. Crcen rA 6th Ave West 210-530; 7th Ave West Uii-iT ' West 221-528: totblnlere St 721-728; Ma 704; Tatlow St. 025-733. ROl'TE IX fcady Careless 6th Ave. East Block 800; Slh Ave. Fi-: East l(H0-1144: 10th East SO0-M38; .!-Bacoil btrect, Donald Strctt. ROl'TE 1!) Jinrmy Johnson. Cireca til fith Ave. EsjU 870-1140; Ambroic Ave ROl'TE 20 Jack Ituiiolpli. Creen 721 8th Ave. East 1030-1944. ROl'TE 21 Ronnie Iveson, Blue 713 2nd Ave, We.st 11-1314: Park Ave. MS-r Street; Water Street; Beach Place. ROl'TE 23 Larry Parent, Green 4H 8th West 615-735; Summit Ave.; Taylor S:n ROl'T'J 21 Hriao Roberts, Itlark 40 ind Ave. West 71fi-3ifl Ave. and G'h Slf":. : Wet I.iily News-Watts and Nirkir.am'; ROl'TE 25 Gary Parkin, Green Cth Ave. East 1141-1478. ROl'TE 20 Frankle Slewart. Blue 7K! 7th Ave. Ea.st 981-1080; 1103 Ridley H"me; c-Ave. K28-1154. ROl'TE 27 t hristoplier Haryey, Green ?14 Cth East, McBrlde-Hays Cove Circle. THESE ARE THE DAILY Nf LITTLE MERCHANTS THEIR SUCCESS DEPENDS ON YC. war and peace in all Asia m""1""; tvi ryone is unnn accent resnonMbiUtv for the car-? China is not recognized, and giv- S0 klnd. 01 ,roo- Many ot lhp of refugee and evacuees. en her allotted seat in UN, the "iate h homes" the' rest In A" rcllef suPP'ipd war In Korea .s inevitably just mP'1Vmy CAC and must be imported, the fore-runner of another one " Lt ert CAC buys n0 Korean ce lest cre ' m,eh .hln, on a vastly greater scale. : ul not,.no"eh c.,othin- inflation 1 auu" be " stimulated sl"nuiaiea. In such a- mir n.v although supplies have tmprov-. would fall in , ,S B ed- in 1( reluge must stsy The result is that in Korea, o. wf.ks wnat happend to hQ hoi . , , ... countrv. the Korean rrain i. the confessor shall so shrive him as he may then hear by his deeds what he is to do." This proclamation by the abbot resulted fn wide observance of ."Srjrove Tuesday" which soon became, in addition to $ period of confessing, a day of merrymaking in mahy p;:rts of the world. Shrove Tuesday, of course, soon became popularly known as Pancake Day. In old England it was quite an event when housewives flocked to churches on Pancake Day to be f'shriven" or absolved of their sins. At the tolling, of the bell in the morning, it was customary for the; housewife to drop whatever 'she was doing and hurry to the confession. Since this was also the day for. feasting and eating pancakes in small towns, the; holiday cakes soon became known as "shriving cakes" because they were made on the day the women were "shriven" of their sins. Those early pancakes were made of four symbolic ingredients: eggs for Lenten sacredness; flour for the staff of life; salt for wholesomeness; and milk for innocence. The housewives all made their pancakes according to this precise formula. It also gave them an opportunity of using up their supplies of surplus fats before entering the Lenten season. I Scripture Passage far Oodaij ; ' Go ye . . and teach ell nation." St. Matt. 28:19 ZTJl be warnini? !lL'n .H0"f nil iUness or deafh f.om exposure ' P'-tiful in the open market but ihould a tn nf Lone-nealected oeat hnes am does not figure in the ration. helping to overcome a shortage K(""ean refugees are fed United , ,,4 If, . 4- i, s ! It would be as insane as immorai ;a bargain for British Common -i wealth countries to "go along" with Senator Taft. General Man. of fuel. The record of the United Na States beans and Canadian bar-lev Rpftlfpes Rrp tnn nrvir Kn.y Artnur. and aeree tn . tions 0 Civilian Vviiia,il . . Assistance rtSMSLUIlCe Com- Willi ""J mase mand workjng through govern- in tne f market, and even Formosa a spring board for a earn prm-mli ti ment acencies of the Hennhii.. workers -do not o Korea, is such that I found imure uniang Kai-Shek attack on the Chinese mainland no refugee who did not feel buy enough for their needs. One in three Koreans is a refugee. For the rest, enough rice costs three times what a man earns in a month. Everyone is short of food. But almost all are getting enough ;o keep them alive. Do You Need A New Furnace? WINTER 1$ NEARLY OVER BUT.... If you are planning to instal a new furnace for next winter . . we would strongly advise ordering now for future delery. Ordeis placed now have th following advantages: I. u save a 10 t 15 increase expected in Iht very near future. Z. You are nut required to make the normal one-third down payment. A small monthly payment is all that is required. 3. Your furnace will be almost paid fcr when you are ready for installation Thorn Sheet Metal Ltd. Phone Black IKt ; i.tiniuig jyuooiuif 1,, uein NEHRU IS convinced that early dune to help him. , recognition of the actual gov- The relief program has worked eminent of China is the vital largely because the ground war-key to long range peace in Asia. lare has been static. Major op- ! He told me in New Delhi, just erations would have sparked new a year ago, that the CQmmtn- refugee movements and dislo- : wealth Prime Ministers had ' C!-ted the distribution of stip-made a tragic mistake by failing P'ies. io suana up ior the conclusion BIfi ivPRnvmcxTs Quick Canadian Quiz border the boundary that f-'hould have been, In fairness and ' n justice. they had jointly reached in the ray The United Nations still ha January 1951 meeting In London. after more than 18 months of 1 What Ls the distance from , x llicL tUUL-lUSiOn WaS A two-storey frame building that tne new government of fl&rrri Second Btvu, . Cnina Cn'na shnilM should hD be nr... , Winnipeg to Calgary? war experience. 11s policy is to use an emergency as a means 2. What great, salt water body i Reflects and Reminisces. i on Street, tenanted orig. accepted as a i inally as a residence and under- ! act' at the earliest practicabic I taking premises, but unoccupied nl0men':. of educating Korean admlnist.ra ailed Canada's Inland sea lors in problems 01 civil govern lur a considerable time, has by this time, had most of Its win-! th t,,r 1However' vast Improve- dows smashed. Minister of India ments have been'ef l'ected since " '""?"c"- There l'K" was as no no hm did not discn. last. khZ I, nownere m Canada should the ,, ,u. mmr , 4 recent death of Sir Allan Ayls- Xs whk-rcoTu of North Suih wrth, at 92, awaken livelier in- : Just another illustration of the n nlcl Chiang Kai- Koreans were evacuted to rear . leiest and conjecture than in ' yearning to destroy 1 hiding out. But I learned areas which were not prepared 9 How many foreign automobiles entered Canada duriifr 1351? In 1939 Canadians earned $4,289 million. How much in 1951? In 1939 average employee in Canadian manuiacturtng worked 47.2 hours a week to.-$20.14.- What did he work and earn In 1951? ANSWERS PAGE FOUR. ' iin "H mini1 wwiii iiiiiraiii'ffliiTO'Hii'iinwi iiiiiimiiiiiiiiwiii it ii"!iimi'"i niiimii'ii'ii o 1 1 1 I i i ii ii I i ii ii ii h hiii in ii iii i inn nun i hi i ii i Scottish Ship Builder Dies d has not entirely subsided yet. "'a "y ' ?h' Ha'ldst " China" policy-to do a job in the field and a e so Aylsworths real feelings were Macfean's AnTai '' " letting the. Chinese much happier now that F Hump Hume, R B A., A rvmi we are Communists outraged but for diplomatic, and p Fed ks- ; take over Formosa. ' able to co sonilthm "in . construe construe-other reasons, he could not ex- Moreover, I don't think any live " press them, as he would have c "Is the modern school turning realistic person can blame them n. ,K -. ... . But the- HI..I..J ! nut tnMn. r,f t.i. fn, ih. i Korean impmm.ni wioiieu. -u v. wmpfliauic u - i ."il, ou lung as We dO nOt hQc in- j tainments in knowledge or be- ! know whether or not we are "in rnobyzed its total re-; LANGBANK. Scotland (CP) The Alaska Panhandle rirhtiv nav,or- " "s a shocking fact that 'r world war three. But any t" . , manPower lor ' Sir James Lithgow, 69. Scottish canadf h,7i Bnf,yy fiV, lne h Wcal scrool gradute to-!sane !ane "cold "cold storae" storage" M BB J,lvulvlng te own lppin, magnate,' telones to to Canada u w typi,fa'scHh00' g,radute policy Policy for , . no"0 nnf fow died Satur-Jut harK "b"if. ' 1 m! dav day snplls spells haHlv badly, ie is !qco-0i largely i 1 Fnrmnsa Formosa n.iU would 4L ... 1 I 1Iie- We' There mere i, ls is no no control co"tl nf of es- oc. h.. , . . . . in- involve the e- . . w" way. nc waa euiur pi- nr xhi:i bout orw-half of her front door" . .g " 6d Eng- ; moval of Chiang Kai-Shek and 5 l are "ot f" ratloncd-not "J building during the second world 'h sentence- his on the Pacific Between lrd Ignorant of the troops-who by the way are even war. Alverstonp m t! oh ' sim facts about his country , detested by the overwhelmine " ' ' ' - " - Whaf ' Pickup ( 7r TTT - f threats in Washington rZn, 3 and ls c)rnPletely muddled about , majority of the natives ; ' and her" ZSe thE ?8t 0t the WOlld'"' L.?'w a. f t quite GENERAL ELECTRIC powerless. Later in life Avles-i ... . yuuauie. mat, tnese native For. worth acknowldeged the 'blunder ml? t fl ,the modern ! mosans would vote for indepen- was. He should, he declared. ' t" ""J' p- "l"""""s. Esso and Esso Extra are continually being improved to give the best balanced combination of instant starting, smooth (lowing power, lively acceleration and protection against engine ping. Switch to Esso gasolines and you're always ahead! "ccuuiii m) expresss I -- 1- T!erf such ii-i-. o a have boldy challenged judicial decision. yours-ilf" philosophy, its lack of newspap?r reported the results of a general information test intellectual discipline, Its ..improperly bahmreil enrri.nlm We have mentioned ? vln. 10 Prospective students of AC-DC Botrery Porrables Prine Prince Tt, its mechanical "T rotarv ".:"'"v:u"'' systems' MODELS 5,6 end 7 n4 Rupert. Suppose. or generation land ao s "nf' n0t this northern port had had an! typical American aim Teduca! ! Prime thp MiniC' Can&ti uninterrupted coast line all along , lion. Surery, . , Can'San ,v-..u leaders &iT. ,nWUI)b mett British Columbia's Pacific front. niexunner me Clover- are aware that our American nor-General, others Premier Du-Er tryine deDeraerv L"Sf in IT!. rirf "SHW thm -v. f 9 andSothDers Glad I switched. . . serves of these false Ideals." There might have been a different site for the terminus although a better harbor would have been hard to discover. Yet, .think of how Prince Rupert would have been the gainer! Ponder the meaning of the missing to tSsso; ca , w Rupert Radio & Electric wiuutjm Mackenzie King was still alive and in office. There were quite a few unable to name the date of Confederation. And these were all graduates of secondary schools. "All students, Mr. Hume continued, do not know the meaning of an adjective. Not long ago a YOUR GE DEALER