GREER & BRIDDEN LTD. St. Laurent Urges Americans To Take 'Rnld Lead' for Freer Foreian Trade State Power Authority is anxious to proceed with the American share of the undertaking as soon as it can gel a licence from the Federal Power mission." Earlier he had said Canada ; was not bluffing about going ahead alone With the seaway I part of the development if the j U.S. still does not act to par- ticlpate. WASHINGTON CP Prime Minister St. Laurent urged Ununited Slates to take a "bo'd lead" for freer foreign trade. Canada, ne said, greatly hopes the U.S. will pursue such a course In its tariff and related policies without any "backward steps." "We cannot nibble at this corner here and knock out tlv.it leader said. The Prime Minister said it was no secret that he and President Eisenhower have been talk-im; about the St. Lawrence seaway and power project. He said Canadians are 'most anxious to pet on with the Job." asking only co-operation in developing the hydro-electric potential of Hie waterway, adding: -in the US. the New York See us to discuss that new construction piece there to protect some spe- ' ! - V ,4 3 . Canadian Missionaries Have No Trouble in India ( r, eial interest without weakening the entire fabric," the Prime Minister said. j Mr. St. Laurent stressed his ! : country's concern over, a pos- j j aihle shift' in United Stales trade ; : policy. He prefaced his plea for free-i i iiig tiade bonds Willi the ret , minder that the U.S. and Canada hive ' built up the hiehe.st 1 level of trade he) ween two conn - -I tries that the World lias ever seen" and said tliat this was ' a 1 thliu; of utmost value" to both TOHONTO (P The Canadian Council of Churclies said today . 8 its missionaries are Slaving no Prince Rupert Daly News Tuesday, May 12, 1953 tJ f 't 6 ..'..,.''...; (,.;-, t ,;;jv5 -w.' ; . . . 1 I rill I "It underlies the welfare of Al homo or away the call is for our peoples and it Is essential ' to the strength and prosperity (if tills continent the bastion of I the free world," the Canadian General Motors of Cuim.la will have tlie largest passenger car assembly plant in Ciuuuhi when the giant project seen in the upper phntnapiph v rr.inpletui lute in 1jvJ. Buirk, OUlsrnolnle and Pontine cars will he assembled there by the end of this year. '50 Monarch ( onver tilde, ItlHO I T iiwAilMIMfrm I completely automatic with every possible extra. I i A Must See BUCHANAN'S 'BIACLUWHITF SCOTCH WHISKY with Chevrole t to be added to the output of the new plant twelve months later. The bottom picture shows the humble factory where the first Oshawa-built vehicles were produced in 1876 by. the McLaughlin Carriage Company the forerunner of General Motors of Canada Limited. trouble in India despite a recent iovernment threat to bur for-i.m.ii missionaries unless they slop evangelical teachings. It. A. Hennett, president of the council's deiarlinmit of overseas iMlviioiis. said no Canadian nils-' sioiiaries have been refused ad-' iniltaiice to India anil that "no trouble is anticipated." He was eouinieiiuiig on a recent statement by Dr. K. N. Kaiju, India's home minister, ' i bo warned foielgn ministers to i iid their evangelical work hi the icoiiiit.iy and to confine their ue-tivllies to social uplifting. Mr. Hennett said: i "The churclies in India have made strong appeals for help and !co-oper.itlou from Canadian 'churches. Keeently, the Protes-it.uit Church Council of India passed a resolution urging foreign churches to continue sending young people lo help them ; in their wink." Sixty-five Roman Catholic and 50 Protestant missionary socle-;ues are represented in India. Jack Kramer Not Quitting After Series SALT I.AKK CITY API Jack 51 I'onliar Sedan, only !4,(KM) miles, healer $I1S - A '50 l ord Sedan New 2-tone Kxlra good looking $1050 Otc Ste nt is in tu dlauh Last of the Square Riggers Kramei, tennis player-promoter. THICKS '51 Kuril Pick-up Excep Monal condition $132! li Appolntmn( '5:2 Chevrolet I'lck-up. Like V end Whut,, DiuiHtn iumi luihanan 4 C Iti Campaign Starts to Save Cutty Sark -i i Distilled, Blended and Bottled in Scotland I Mild today any reports that he will ipiit playing at Hie end of his current professional series with Australia's Frank Seilgmaii are wrong. The 31 -year-old former world amateur champion defeated Sedgnian here Wednesday night O A. 6-4, to run his lead over the Australian to 11 matches, 45-34 new. Heater equipped.... $17!: Bob Parker Ltd. 'The Home nf Friendly Service" CONTENTS 264 OUNCES This advertisement i.s nut published or displayed hy thf u ( onlnil linard or by the (.nvrrnmrnl of British tuluiid r , would serve as a permanent memorial to the Hritlsh mercantile marine. In the evolution of sailing vessels, the clipper was the finest, and almost the last development. Ships of this type were developed first in North America. They h id yacht-like lines, low freedboard and were snuare-iTyyed on each of their raking masts. In the middle of the last cen I -j. I ' I P DAWllNs;. I'M 1-Cj' J.i C OH' fc--l l-L HAVE THf ) ' , , COlNG SHOPPING- tAJ'if MOUte ALL TO MYSELF I ' MAY WE have J iu BK GONE Ns--riJ rn.-.ty. Her masts and .standing . 'ilKKinK-- Ihat once towered to cathedral heip.lit show signs of; irol. The r.Tittv Rark is a sad sil'.ht lor old .shellbacks who look at her with an almost rev- ! erent. uleani in their eyes. j The Cutty Hark Preservation Sorii tv. under the patronage nf the Duke of Kdinburgh, lias ap-ptaled for rvfjuoiio to save the! .ship. About 46,0110 already have; been subscribed or. promised. . i The plan is to recondition and re-rip; the old windjammer and place her in u permanent, dry berth near the Royal Naval College at Greenwich. There she lONr.ON i AP A e:imp:iH;n h:f. sl:.t-l to thf Cutty Kark, l.i-.t oT tin' tin!' I'lippi'i-s, from the hiT':iki tf.- yui'il';. It coiik-s .hi t. in time. The old :;iiiiii' rii-.e.er. 0C3 ti.-n.'i iinil biMiililiil evi n at. lier ndvaiirt'd u"!' of ill. .swing.-) at JTi r moiiiiiii: in the '1 luninvi mar (iirrtiliitlir1. Near her rhiis the run-.o tnimp.:, till'..' and lii'hler.'i I ha I. How can y the riiiMneree of the I'm I iif London. The Cutty fial'k's paitll i.S cracked and blisliTt-d. Her st-.'el rabies r.nd ailrlior chain arc tal y American Nippers weiv queens of the seas. The Cutty Sark was one of the few British sl ips that could compete with I he Yankee clippers. She always held her own. The Cutty Sark was used In the China Sea and Australian wool trade during her nrealest e.irs. In 1885 she made a pas- i sage from London to Sydney n i 67 days. Clippers favored by Xhc wind otten could make faster I passages than the steamships of ! that period. 1 Now the Cutty Sark is all that France Opposed To Bringing Laos Invasion Before United Nations PARIS (', .-France has Informed the United States that she firmly oppo.-ed to brinirmg the Communist-led Vietminh iiiVa.-.ioii ot 1 aos. lmlo-Chin.'i. beiore the. United Nations. .Slate .Secretary John Foster Dulles of the United States told Conre.-i a cmimiiltee is exchanging views on possible UN airing of the Ignis invasion with the governments of France, Laos, Viet Nam and Thailand. He had already been advised of French views. is left or the old breed. Tlw othersthe FlyinR Cloud, the Ann McKim, . the Nightingale and the Witch of the Waves long ago have foundered or been broken up. Two men who served aboard the Cutty Sark are monocled Capt. C. E. Irving, 81, who now operates pleasure launches on the Thames, and Capt. Richard Wood.;et, 75, whose father was a famous skipper of the Nipper. Lumber Exports from B.C. Show 60 Per Cent Increase ments totalled 335,904.000 board ( AH -PEACE AMD OUIET-THF.CES ). 1 U ! - HOS 'V NOTV.iMf; ?0 GCDDFOI?THE J . K! '1V A . K -E THE DOOR BUUK ? 7 ) . - ' NEPVESASTO LIE IN A TUB t (op steaming wai ep and soak: J ys-Ai ' t't" XS " """ uTV- Cits mr DtTHfPS, tJACwono-J I i n. l i J (Z- in- ' IM ( f I HAVE TO TALK TO WO J b"f:i U " "'' i (. ABOUT THBSf PLUtPBlNTS J I VvFlL SEND THAT -L AhATS THE WAv) I I pr-( &-"l-? W'-'VT' Wyif--'' W- V ' rov canning JflL? FvvP I UUU I WANT MY J . I'LL DEtlVER THEM ) I ( HE'S UPSTAIRS IrA II . .AHwnituI HUSBAND TO ) ULS PEBSONALIV MPS. THE BATHTUB--- J ) WUVTj t' . ( SEE THEM r . . cs 8UMSTEAD ( FIPST DOOR TO IT ' r.i i ,1 f - 1 fe: ! - I-' v 1 u ,:: v .- "I -1 . . "I. ft ! r ff . . .9 ' .v. V 4 A GOOD PLACE TO STOP... Mountain View Resort VANCOUVER fCP) Lumber i-xports from British Columbia Acre 60 r cent greater in the first three months of this year than in the same period in 1952. Orders shipped to the United States by Water reached more than 4(1.000,000 board feet a mouth in the first quarter. pUU:, .shipment ; to the United Kingdom, the principal market ia.H year, dropped to half the volume shinm-d in the fir tjiiarter of 1052. First, quarter waterborne ship feet compared to only 274,816,000 ! ' last year. Shipments to the U.K. by water total 196,657,000 board feet, compared with 269,816,000 i at the same time last year. Other water shipments, mostly ' to the Eastern seaboard, were 1139.246910 in the first quarter, ' 139,246,901 in the first quarter, March 31 last year. The totals were supplied by the Pacific Lumber Inspection Bureau. Good Clean Cabins Lunches Gas Store BOYS GIVEN RIDE NOT SAME AS TRIO REPORTED MISSING c E D A R V A L E OTTAWA (CP) -Police said to-! vanished a week ago while cay there is no connection be their way to buy candy. 53 Miles East of TKKKACE, B.C. Coronation $10,000 of Holiday Fun! tween. the three brothers missing in Toronto and those picked up Thursday hy a motorist near Mannlick. Out. An intensive search for the Toronto ynttngslcis Henry Qmglcv. 10, Howard. 7. and Paul. 5 was touched off when Allan Burton of Manotick told police he gave three boys n ride in his car last, Monday. The three Toronto brothers 9 A WH FOR THAT ' o9! Medallions Being Struck OTTAWA (CP) Coronation commemorative medallions to be issued to school children are ready for distribution, Finance Visitor Breaks Law, Demands Police Action Minister Abbott has nnnounced i today. . About 3,000.000 are being slrurk at the mint here and sent to each provincial government to be distributed to chil - 1X. a ft K', i-V II u J I 1 i X J v. II V m. .s,UaC v x y . f aT 1 ENTER BLUE BONNET'S HAPPY HOLIDAY CONTEST Win big cash prizeH or valuable nierrlianilisn in time to make us dren. They are of bronze the same metal as one-cent plee.es and slightly smaller than Canada's dollar coins. The front of the medallion bears a shoulder-length portrait of Queen Elizabeth, crowned and robed. She is wearing the I r(m " -) A I'M NOT GOING I I I ) I If f I UAV '''ST' 'k WHEPE DO VOU k C TO CLEAN IT UP j fc P VOXSW ; ( KEEP VOUR BPOOM?J I'M GOING TO GET SA SEE ZZncT GJmILE t ( AJ-r I'LL HELP VOU PPESSED AND GO J 4VAl?OUNP fZj ' T CLEAN IT UP ) V-rp THE MOVIES T e TTx .3y toiZS M PORTLAND (API C. M. Oraham, 77, visiting Portland 1 rum D a 1 1 a s, Ore.,' drove through a red light here Friday, lie looked around. Not a policeman in sight. So he drove to. the police station ,and confessed what he had done. Then he insisted that the sergeant band him a citation, which he said would be the first in his lifetime. In 'the end he went free, although the sergeant had to take Oraham before a forgiving judge before Graham would leftve. Yenr 8 viti-atKHi one to rememlK-r! ui't, fur nine weeks, the makers cif blue Bonnet Margarine are awarding a I'iOO cash tirat irie . . . $'-'011 in additional rash prizes . . . plus 1(1 pieieH of MeKrine's u-h tIi new "Comet" Aeropii k bag-(iae . . . plus 5 wonderful Northern blntrii- "r'p'irt'iiuin" orlal)le radios! 23 big prizes every week! 207 prizes, worth over f 10,000., in all! I'inul week's contest ends midnight Julv 11th. Simple rules at your (iror'fr's and in package of Blue tiuuuet Margarine. - Tudor crown, first authorized by King Edward VII in 1901 for use on medals and medallions. The reverse shows Her Majesty's royal cypher "FUR," ton-ped by the St. Edward's crown and with "Canada" below. Surrounding this is the Latin inscription "Elizabeth II Reglna Corona ta MCMLIII" (Elizabeth II crowned Queen 1953).