Prince Rupert Daily News l"S Agency to Aid 'WhiU'-Coltar' Worhera Quick 1 Canadian Cm Friday, January 11, 1952 ray.. Reflects $nd Reminisces As I See It fbtf PUr.n In independent daily newspaper devoted to the upbuilding of Prince Rupert and Northern and Central Brithh Columbia Member of Canadian "res.s Audit Bureau of Circulations Canadian Dally Newspaper Association. 3. A. HUNTER, Managing Editor; H. G. PERRY, Managing Directoi 1 1 1. Alberta and SaskaUhewar. : in B.C.? i i became Provinces In what year? i 4. When wv j 2. Pensions paid to all at ujit tax first eolle'tiT 'SW'-1 j 70 will cost taxpaye.'S how ninth! 5. How often m ' t ,next year? ' 'elections be held' 1 f I 3,What ls the leading industiy! (ANSWERS ' r j l ' ' ' "" " P;' l fa v ' v - l; iv A-1 J ouoi,KiriiU KATES : That's a good description of By carrier, per week, 20c; per month, 75c; per year. veniint distance or Alaska, Is ed In Hansard off V $800; by mail, per month. 75c: Der vear SRfin - - 1 "i me sessifii . ada. The most southerly is j Members of p,h, W, ,,!. .i,r rk.lrnlt li.rf 1 ..III.... .. 'J,ajif Published every afternoon except Sunday by Prince Rupert Daily News- Ltd., 3rd Avenw, Prince Rupert. : - use me remove ... suaiise thnuwh it may appear, , ion" and do t.i i. ! Vancouver in a recent issue of Saturday Evening Post. The , evergreen city does itself proud The picture on the cover, show- j liik u man Haling pensively a' J tailing snowllakes, is also a work ! of art. 1 Captain Carlsen knows the 1 moods of the ocean. Practically ! all of his bold life he has goni; so. It to. thev cla!m; ; NOT FIT TO VOTE I HAVE lived and worked l'icht across Cnnfl:i Windsor generally speakiiiK colder than Prince Rupert. umi nas rU-ht fullv kr f J i , J ,.r, I ,.. I'liK-M-S,; 1 jvii-iiliuii ui tar wuiu ijuiiiiu- since confederatii n ! Ion" recently banned from the wonder what th i! ., I from Montreal west; have I " '-i Elections Act, ls frequently not- I directory u doin. i :ime in B.C. made mv hor since l!i::7; and paid taxes t?At)ialBSra, L down to the sea in .ships und there is little he can be told about the mutations and hazards ol what blue water, a.s a career, imans. It can he cruel as well Non-manual workers now account for over 30 percent of the lirmnl-itinti In ;.!.. r.4:..i: .1 1 1 ... on our home in Vancouver ince 1.-M2. m urn m a.s kind. It can distinguish, n-i But I Ret. no vote in For our house is in mv f , ... .....Ma, ,u,icu vuuiiiiKS tmpiujru nafc'Criiris. The International Labor Organization has prepared a full description of the main problems affecting "white collar" workers which will be discussed hy II.O's Advisory Committee on Salaried Kni-ployees and Professional Workers due to meet next February. Here, Max Kaiilmann, Chairman of the Committee, takes up the problem with II.O's Director-General David A. Morse (center) and Assistant Director-General I.uis Alvarado, at riglit wife's name, ju.st as it was in the other provinces where we lived- and where I voted But : mmm well as humble. The .story of the r'lymi? (mi tin pi i.- rellic'-s for example, how remorseless it can be The skipper - and th-world thouiiht he -had won ar epic battle. Instead, he was vanquished, thou:!h h a v 1 n clHcrluliy niven hardship and almo'-t his life. Because he wa.s horn with brine in his veins he loves shii.s and voyae.s. He ha.i MFN'S AND BOYS' WEAR Old Schools Are Tragedy A Banker Speaks THE position that James Muir occupies as presi-I (k-nt of the Royal Bank of Canada lends weight to his discussion of national financial and economic matters, part of which was contained yesterday in the Daily News in a report of the annual general meeting of the hank where he made his customary statement. Mr. Muir reiterates a feeling of unhappincss that has been expressed in many quarters over the huge budgetary surplus that has been built up through taxation by the federal minister of finance land which has made for political criticism. Mr. Muir j used a rather striking expression when he suggested ;that, unless wisely used by the government, this I budgetary surplus could prove an inflationary "time J bomb." J There is something new in Mr. Muir's declaration that industrial development and free trade can ! be achieved together and his suggestion that closer j relationships still between this country and the United States could well be developed, j Mr. Muir's views, being from the straight busi- , ,'ness and not political angle, are worthy of respect- : ' ; Iful consideration. j Leadership Begins at Home HOVS Itt'ltlSMt BOOTS, laced, almost What Pulp Mill Means I here in B.C. I pet no vote in civic jalTuirs because 13. C. is still awuv ! back in the dark ayes in municipal government. SOME PEOPE east uf the Rock- ies have the false idea that B. c. is the most "progressive" part of Canada. That is downright nonsense. We in B.C. only talk progressive. We don't aoci even liberal. Back in Ontario, under the I Tories, thev Put throuuh sreat hair price per pr. .o VJ ' Al l. WOOL WIMII'.ltK AKI Its, zippi'i's, all si,es ... :l.in to .7. I'.OVS' Al l, WOOL IIKAVV PANTS, Ms CALGARY (CP) One nf h OVA(.l.(i AKOIMI Most of the Royal Family wih be on, or pretty handy to the Ketchikan Paper Figures I'.t-nefils and Points to I'rince Rupert traKedies of this continent is' that the older schools were built "too well," in the opinion of W. ! A. Branton. comoletins? hi. ami. "I wear :t..-,o to 1.75 racnic early this summer. Vi: HOYS' SWKATKIt PI I.I.O I KS. , ...... ...i,v. llrtio I he Ketchikan Chronicle has . ; never . went much further away1 It: I Chunks Of socialism in Iho rlv''6-11" " c-i v.aiLai v .M'liuri nnurii al! sinvs. Now II", architect and buildin insn.tn,- : been 'Wur'n8 out the big things than Germanv. Well, plenty years of the centurv. Thev wrati- thev mi.ss. "The older schools have h.' l P"lp mlli : npwr k )'' MI- N'S WORK SOX. lots of wear ped it up in the Uunon Jack, and I Pair had it march in'j hphind come , , . . . "" lnc ttLLfiiuaiu ingoing in- ; stone "oiStio'th, construction will !LmnJl in l A,ing younn peop.e wiUt.ar,, Adam Beck who liuikcrl umwipi-M their 4.V ,-(' MI N".S IlKAt'lr I'OIK K !U ( ;S munity and, doing so, cites U:h to write and rooms pjpen. ""r. c'"lls Ui uoiuiii- : with rejection slips are advi ed : bla Cellulose on Prince Rupert Ml N'S IIMV V i ! ANNKI, SlflKTS M1V S IIK tV V Wllll't Oitll r.tXTS for woik to get in touch with an exclusive, yet talented Russian novelist, J. Stafin. Whatever it Ls hi stand indefinitely," he said. "The modern schools we're building now are practical plants i to work in, not to be admired 1 from the outside. "The one-storey schools we're building can be changed to meet lul in silk plug hat and white dress shirt. But they never, never called it socialism. They called it public ownership. They wanted results npt words. Smart Tories! DURING THE HITLER . war MEN'S SI:MI-)lti;sS PANTS oil s!i. li ... . The Chronicle savs: "Prince Rupert .shows a population increase of about 2000 from the pulp mill alone. But luesiii" lor its nun is not done writes about, must have tre mendous popular appeal. Cir MK.N'S BKOHN TOI'CO VI S now culation to date, totals 5,1 Ki 301. changing needs in education near to Rupert. It centres around Wnv. VOU ran tPnr Hnuin q ) Tori-im on ti, many British boys were sta MI-..VS SI-.MI-DHf'SS H t'lS. showerproof iIKN S UANy !R.'HS AM) Ki:.VI-)KKS.S SlllltTS 01 I l it. HI T Tit I K " ' " ".ui: .v. , j ii.;: jiuauu, una and SWlth thinos All ormmrf in Tin r,,.(t'c i ' u.... tioned down at the RAF train i'rince Kuput, within con- mis oi wear r-,- wuutiu iui - v. . . m v a f,uni in j;u J Ultl i 1 a summer vacation if you need been about 1800 in the past tw.j ing base at Boundary Bay. For MEN'S HEAVYWEIGHT C OMKINATIONS Penmanji ttie best finality, all sizes. Suit Competition In Celanese I AM Y SATIN K.AKY ( Kilt l Ills Now something to do they began to to. years. The logging interests have study the set up of municipal i The older schools, however, ocj-un to build a very good ac-covernment in British Colum-' w fixed and ' unchangeable. : cess road overland toward Hy-At first they simply could not They had to stay whatever way der, Aiaska, that one day may" believe the facts they found. I they were built and when they ixk-mi to Portland Canal, de-don't blame them. , became obsolete nothing could velopmg a great untapped em- The laws of municipal govern-' b? done t0 chan5 them. Scrap-. pire. Rupert stores stayed open ment in this "most progressive" ping them cost considerable 'ric.ay -evenings U summer lon-j part of Canada were about fifty sumJ- to handle the extra business of DE SURE tUKONTO -The market ac SB tion of Canadian Celanese l.t.d YOU ARE IN lyK-TALK mueh about international leadership ! .V which appears to be passing from the eastern, j to the western side of the Atlantic Ocean, j Important problems involved in world leader-.ship include control of international gangsters .abroad who plot inhuman crimes. It also means keeping ourselves on this side vital and clean within against domestic criminals and gangsters. . Leadership implies setting the example for ; others. It involves national, . community and per-; sonal responsibility. j We have made great headway toward world . security and peace by the United Nations the At- lantic Tact, and NATO. The W m.t;. or rix'.v vears behind thnsp in common stock has been receiving a good deal of attention from Next To Itoval Hotel ; investors recently, it sold as "" mi. Eiaiuun came to nis puip uuu employees fmcTr dUtlC? h';re in 1911 "Large scale logging always from Spalding, Lincoln county, develops a country; by building England, there were about 12 roads, docks, sehoolhouses ana schools m the city. Now there transportation facilities Mam-are about 6a. Each addition is t.,.nn,.u , .., , . high as $.',8 in February 1951., Britain which many ignorant Canadians cail"slo w old Britain." N IN THE RECENT Vancouver election the-voters Hhat is, the property owners i voted to' extend the .civic franchise to all adults. That has long since been done Mr. Branton's work. is a good si.ed job. ci'.v wnrthv nf Reds Fight For Malaya i iV II the western ' ; united and agreed on practical plans against aggres- liheTmeTa in every other i tt'!.Phat m bT law r mutMl inter- na B.C.) ! Good Host is a Mind Reader Conservative cab- "Economists figure that for i each man employed in a primary production job. one olhar full-time job is created, and trr.iL the two men thus employed In turn wnl support live other persons. So one primary job in log-girig'or the puip mill- will mean wo.k lor another man, and the two will support in their families and with their spending, a total of seven persons. Thus h tne m;ll and camps employ 1U0O persons in this vicinity, :t i 'ale to assume that existing , ...v,,lu j,, uux-uon can ne strengthened. net minister in the moribund' coalition government, of B. C. i suggests that this should not be 1 done. The time might come, he says, when people who are not property owners would elect the dry drinks, .v.ir..r 5nme like Sctpurc Passage for Dola,j 'If ye love ir.j, keep my commandments." St. John 14:15 loninct Mepped Ip Since Slaying of Commissioner KUALA LUMPUR, Malaya, Communism's fight for Malaya has been stepped up since the ambush killing of high commis out .;:u:e niid-Septemcer dr.-,p-' Pd from $S2 a share to a low of $4a a share in nuvember. ' down 27',i. Currently it 1s trad-: . Injt around S47-$J8 a share. j i Although tae lower quotations j reflect generally lower .security pr.ces in virUiahy all industries,' plus the drop in demand for textiles in the last half of l'jil, they are also due in part, investment men say, to the prospects of greater competition in the syntonics field in future. Canadian Celanese is ut present Canada's sole producer of acetate rayon yarn and staple fibre and the biggest manufacturer of synthetic textile in the country. Courtauid.s iCanadai, sole. Canadian producer of viscose rayon, plans to boost its annual . tire yirn capacity to 22 million lb. mow lu million i and its staple libre capacity to 24 million lb. a year Uio 12 million). Canadian Chemical Co., subskl-! iary of Celanese Corp. of America, ' says its $54 millions chem- ical plant, at Edmonton will make j not only cellulose acetate but j also "s acetate acciaie yarn yarn una und .stup .stunle I others the opposite, sweet dnnks' u..,.. Unrnett's IS an LX1KA wniy u-v- ., , n: t-Mn vcu aoa and new retail and service estab- sioner Sir Henry Gurney 50 miles Iknmcnt heic will add over 500 mctt and norm oi nere uct. 6. ucrsonx m thr.ir ,v,iiu Tw Germany Backs Schuman Plan leave out the sweetness Mascot Had i Close Call or individual preference. every mayor 01 Vancouver, Well, so what? Are the citizens of Vancouver less responsible than those of Edmonton, Winnipeg, Turontj, London, Edinburgh, Glasgow, New York, Chicago or Seattle? IHiS controversy amuses me because it renews my boyhood. t.hpsn !imn"a,,, i nnwH yti! th. . i,.. i it took a dangerous turn when o'her 500 jobs created by the Ccmmunists terrorized 8.000 primary employment will be on workers into staying away from the farms in the states, on the 10 big rubber plantations in the shiplines seiving Alaska, t Instate of Negri Sembiian. ' ainuies, etc. But men who have been fight-1 "Tllpi'e need be little worrv ing the red terror in Malavn for about supporting -schools and J (CP)-The d0? known the West German Parliament i a PO. Wren Alice" th m.i i ,rsitifiwi tH ch . BURNETTS I canine mas;ot aboard the Cana- By a i , . , """, v"c vt&i i j -j vote, uic, West went uci Germany i any agreed aiireed I T ui heard i rr all ,ii 1 1 was was a a boy boy ' in in mree three' years years say say things things look look a a ' i-ubil iacmUes. "'n. ihe iui: prc.-.ent io a julf Korea, h'iH had a i ii.r. close hr brush -it'oooi Heel ,,t V -.1 ' u mfiir- wnen I European F,,r" output w,th , . five other ...... Hamilton, ..a,!,,,,, u.ilui Ontario-before io Dtiore they mey J Utile worse -vi-i.se nw now than inuii iney they rea really ly ' ; seW' , , vjlu-lllon " of. tne cnun npc RUrt'PM im-l-jrinn c.hi ,!Ll,. l.wl.. wilh death nn. .i . , . . ,.i Naval headquarters . .. told V'OU , put uuougn me reiorms which are. : " " auuui the WiL away many ancient barriers. progressive" B c. t titin. r ,, i.. .. ,'.M,IIO0.0OO but it will run up lu KT.fiPtr nf Vif.iiT A .1 . habit of himnin-r fmm ...i, . 'ub(,ut fwty years later ,", aooul' -.uuu,uuo in three or M'i li vi KV n nrrnrii h "tWhentXdTvimoifr the Red themselves divide lhe :?5 l L O N ip to the tanker durin- re-Uhinc' Ue AIlce between, Later 1 read actly those i i-i, &a.i wa, luuueco tax ana 11 aiupje iiore DON GIN u Vrf fZPHBUln nV The were slackened and books, y we used by S " T 'f , . taxes these people will well. ThiS would make it com- "Vl, i tf I a ' ear-off spars were put into more reacttonary awloisU h !T1,C . BURrnl!a t.rfare, : pay will be two or three time Petitive with both the aoove loun" herS f ln T" ,,,ay b''tWf,e lhe destroyer and the government of S n eT'f.o f "'"B "P of ""b-,' what tne city now produces. Tlw companies. iCelanese Corp. strip of ' wTter between UUe" , lhC he tne tanker- Able Seaman Nor- in the controversy wit' th" Z f , n ' of the X't ' 1 pulp mill will pay all taxes in President Harold Biancke 8ald vessels. tA?;man Nplso" of Vancouver then American colonists who askeu naUon ancl lu"; Property tax for reacntly that "just a .mall part' Leading Rcam, ,.. . "own a rope and rescued for "no .taxation without , government. . l"-year period. - of the cellulose asetate produced i uatr " ittiutfl n. .n:n ."a,.,,. , . 'r i in; war si. is in nn nrci ' "it r,,,ut j .1.... ,1 i.. ..1.. j... lyer of Vancouver, who had .... pi-i. : itsemanon. At that time only -e , " T .""u",-' " . "'"u" ""u auu ' : lJIMIUU people had the ritlu i L i. , .. , ! ,u the pulp indu.stry may pave the staple fibrei. been caring for Alice for months, 1 leared she would be squeezed FIRST RAILROAD between the two .ships and called , lor a gun to shoot the dog. j ine worlcl s first steam rail-The destroyer captain, Com-! road. using Geirge Stephenson's to vole in an an Britain B.1UI11, M . . ! 'or omer small lnau.stnes. blueprint. It's the same one the such a.s plywood, and that its rvuf . , , . .J ,, (-'h,r-sc Communists used. But saw lugs will be cut by existing Cw.Vifc to .u. think of it, 1 thw would there are differences here which mills, which 'will increase then-Dean excellent issue to dis- may make the blueprint harder payroll. Also that a new barc cuss in the coming Liberal party to follow. j and lorry scrv.ee may come out convention in B. C ann i.r t - . .. 1 . .u- .... y . . . . 'decide in i,D no , lnv ulKest anierence is the " "e iJUP pium, ana mai n i elect ' m'ovmtwl lack of any nationalism ln this could un a rich new llleline i I lit !lfeS.-1.k- i c on t Know yet how 111 write, the Communist mh m mob. tourist centre nerhans even spcax, or vote in thai, eiectinn i, . .. rt .i t " ... .. ' , tl" '""K as mougn tne nationalis-, iB ccuure, n ier-bui hut l I think i, think q a lot of other folks llc and patriotic people are on lninal ''right rates were ob-S ,ic ' "keh I tio abi"- this: Ihr .side. Even though Malaya tamable here, democracy begins at home. If still .is a colonial country where "Ihe Industrial accident in-' ff " ln civlc aN:llc white man still rules the for logging camps hits lairs you v haven t got it. Period, local populace are aeainst th a Pretty figure. An average log- Reds, ger may spend $150 a year just At least 90 per cent of the Chi- lor nis boots, and in some west nese are as much against this coast lumbering towns it keeps rebellion as Britain because law- a nalf a dozen to a dozen men abiding Chinese are the main busy bout shops Just making j violime Kd - lOKKer hOOt.S thn AluulfQ likftnlno ' A NFW WASHER . . . For the New Yeor Till: IMil.lS MOI.II. ".-,(" Check these Icaturet Automatic jump 0 Porcclnln enamel tub 0 Lifetime lubrication Quiet as a whisper Lovell safety wriiiBOr Year guarantee only $159.00 At RUPERT RADIO & ELECTRIC r.in'.'-'TV fftfrh t-km : rv .. i . : S ft fc t : ; 1 ' ' m ' 0 f ,:::-::' -' Though thev ln'cir ntr,i mP . Pator figures that it ' base, the Red terrorists are tied i 0VCr J10'000 a to ;tOBeher.AnucleuofSorne3Too "eCP a ",'an mttoyed in a 5 men nr. ,.. ! u"6.-'?. camP. a"d most of that $10,000 lj 'Malayan Races Tib eratVon '"an ,nluUiP'y " "sure ir tn-3 otner races - . 4U4 equipment, supplies and in the farty members u are estimator! uou nf ih ,mio 'rt..i i SfU V ! at 4,000 or so, which probably in- tail trade here ln 1048 Is shown ! eludes most of the army. All told, by the U.S. census at about WlITrM - iff Bill i m - v' . , r" rSE QNexl time f$i i", : iIH) a buy :3ffpfo """ 1 '' mi i i n; in i L'.VDER NEW MANAGEMENT activists guerrillas, work- $7,000,000." ing politicos, soldiers and all i , runs upward of 6,000. HOVH., Sussex, England Against this slippery enemy Rupert Hall, retired schoolmaster, the British and federation forces has been collecting barrel organs' have fought for more than thie for more than 30 years. One of years, at nresent with .,,. icn i riu nri . SAVOY HOTEL Prince Rupert's only modern rooms with bath " Fraser Street Phone 37 I m i Thin (TVfri.i ...... , n,..i, This advrrli.mAnl err- or displayed by th Liquer Control th Liquor Control Boord or by the Government of British G, i 000 men of all services. I trian instrument 80 years old. oimiti ur Dy tne uovernmrnt or British Coluinbtm. " 'Di