All Aboard V- '" on t hi on Prince Rupert Daily News Saturday, October 10, 1953 The idea of keeping tin' kids out of school for an extra three weeks will be about as popular with grown-ups as a proposal to extend the mos An, Independent dally newspaper devoted to the upbuilding of Prince Rupert and Northern and Central British Columbia. Member of Canadian Prens Audit Bureau of Circulations Canadian Dally Newspaper Association. Published by The Prince Rupert Daily News Limited. J. P. MAOOR. President H. Q. PERRY, Vice-President As I See It t by PlJroll CI in ore ! -lint--"1 s." rFV'it., Subscription Rates: Hv. carrier Per week, 25c; per month, tl 00: per year. $10 00. fn mall Per month. 75c: per year. 8 00. As if we didn't have enough tu.uo:s already, someone is tiying to extend the summer holidays for school children by three weeks.-. Certain rash members of the Canadian Tourist Association urged at their annual meeting that Labor Day should be pushed back to the third Monday in September. Tliry !:iy a longer season is the only way to enliven the tourist business, which is slow in spring and winter. According to another body ol oi nuun, it might be better to let the tourist industry Aunirlped as second class mall by the Post Office Department. Ottawa. Saturday Sermon THE THREEFOLD CORD Hy CANON BASIL S. PROCKTKK St. Andrew's Cathedral "A threefold cord is not quickly broken."-Ecelasiash The Hebrews, the People of God. were required limes to appear before God for worship and thanksgivi, times ln the year. That is, the men were. Men are mon. . To Head Off Slump MY TELEPHONE rings and a gruff, friendly voice says: "They laid off 13 per cent of the men In our plywood plant today, and they say more may be I THE than women. The trouble today is that so many of them i . laid off before the end of the i trsched into Ww ritual where they can clnsp (jc; their women and the children will not see them and ETTERBOX wrung piucea. i iiv i men urc eu -conscious. Ei have more feeling lor tn supernatural and that old the male person being the primary-created being is not i ne tnree occasions were iiw noi pauperise nis sons, n feasts of Passover, Tabernacle j the Heavenly Father p. Thanks For Everything NEXT Monday is a .special day during which we are asked to pause awhile and consider the things which make this life a good one. It is a day o Hopes and memories, of prayer and festiveness. -hut these are generalities which by themselves do. little to describe Thanksgiving. All through the yesu' we have our own individual times for reflection Mid gratitude. Why make a public occasion of it? Perhaps the reason can be understood by calling tf mind the emotions of those pilgrims who survived a perilous existence after venturing west to .Alnerica more than 300 years ago. They had faced rstiiictiuii on sea and on land, and now at last life hn.ked a little better. The soil was generous, they had learned how to protect themselves against the dangers and sometimes bitter climate of their strange country and, above all, they had found the freedom of thought and worship which had driven f ijt-in to endure these ordeals. A day of thanksgiving ti God was proclaimed, and together they fell to 1hir knees and prayed. , " ' ' The point of remembering this bit of history THIS IS THE NEW BADGE FOK THE KCMP. The badge, ironing out some heraldic problems, is six inches high and four inches wide .on a blue background, with a Bison's head facing front. A gold-edged blue scroll carries the legend, "Royal Canadian Mounted Police" and above is St. Edward's crown. A blue band with a gold border is inscribed with the RCMP motto "Maintiens Le Droit," Uphold the Right, . and Pentecost. They were all us. Man tn his true die:, j thanksgiving. The Fan-aver was giver as well as a recti ' their Thanksgiving for FREE- j the ordinance of Thai., j DOM. By the direct intervention ; recognizes this, of God they were lifted from i . ! month." i The voice is that of a wood-i worker, longtime friend, j Not long after a knock comes at the door and a sawmill operator hands me an admirably writ-: ten brief on ways and means of 1 getting back our export markets. , He remarks "something has to be done soon or smaller mills will have to close." In the mail for that day comes a request from the Saskatchewan j Farmers Union to stop off on 1 my way to Ottawa to help them line up solid farmer support for i a stronger overseas effort to sell I their accumulated wheat, i One would have to be blind and ' deaf not to see and hear signs 'that we are rapidly approaching another marketing crisis like that j which attended the big stock market crash of 1929. I But Canada has a greater j stake in preventing another quito season. i farcins need a rest be- ' tween holidays, just as boxers need a rest between j-uiinds. ixies a boxer tell the timekeeper to hurry up and ring the gong so that he can get started again? Does a urcr petition the game authorities to let the hunting season continue just a little while longer? The members of the Tourist Association should watch their step. They may find themselves on a tour of their own. aboard u rail, with u posse of enraged parents and neighbors swinging rawhide whips behind them. The school term is too short already, i am amazed how much the term has shrunk since I was a boy. When I was at school, the distance between one holiday and another seemed tj be roughly 2'2 years. Now that another generation is ut school, the term seems to last seven days or less. Suppose we let ;he tourist ocople shove back Labor Day to the third Monday in Septemberwhat will be their next demand. They will want to push it buck to the fourth Fiklay in November, and then the first Saturday In March. And while the Tourist As-'soclation is pushing Labor Day back, the merchant:! are pushing Christmas forward, until the year is twisted Into a pretzel. Alter the calendar ranks have finished playing Cnine.se checkers with our feast days, we won't be able to tell Hogmanay from National Cheese Week. Even a cynic's heart will be touched by the siht of kiddles running to find their Christmas presents only to be cuffed and sent bark to bed because it isn't Christmas after all it's HIGHWAY VITAL ,ne r.oitor, !'hc Dmly News An editorial appeared in last Friday's Omineca Herald iTer-larc weekly) re the Terrace-utimat highway. It M'eius very strange that Prince Rupert has not chu-lenperi the provincial govern-men's side-stepping and indif-lcri nt iittitude toward this import :'iit. subject. Not only is central B.C.'s future dependent on it. but it is vital from the standpoint of hydro- electric power for Prince Rupert. It hi understood that the transmis 'slavery into freedom. And their . greatest sense of freedom was In their worship of God the Saviour I First Presbyterian C THANKSGIVING Sl Special ThanksgivinE at each service MORNING SL'BJE' TV Rationing For U.K. Young Advocated ! and In the obey:.ig oi His Law. j The Tabernacies was Thanks- j giving for HOMES. They had! ' I been wandering nomads at the beginning but now they hud I homes and a homeland. So they I worshipped and gave thanks, j i dwelling In rough shelters and j : getting out from under their j 1 present roof trees. . ' The Pentecost, was Thanksgiv- I "Gratitude or Ingram EVENING SUBJEl "Our Duty of Prai- We extend a cordial li major, slump than almost any LONDON i Reuters I The fathers and mothers of Britain have i to observe that the pilgrims were offering thanks .other,. country. m the world. For . . i , ft. 11 ! the . amazing expansion of our ; to visitors to worship ing for WELL BEING. They I brought the first fruits of their sion lines will be located along . the highway as it is building. j Vol"- editorial of Sept. 29, on I ? North Pacific roud, was ex-! ce'l'-nt and someday will be a ! lealitv. BUT is not a highway j v.-hieh will affect all of us right ! now worth fighting for with vrvvthiir; we have RIGHT now? ; GERRY DUFFUS. ! Terrace. trade in the past 15 years has made us much more vulnerable ! flocks and herds and fields as i 231 Fourth Ave. r offerings to the Sovereign Giver . Minister: Rev. E. A. Wn Organists: Mrs. E. J and John Currlt MorninK Worship II u been advised to ration their children to one hour a day of : television. More than an hour a day will "do too much damage," said Freda Lingstrom, who directs i l the country's TV-for-chlldren programs. , She said she was "shocked" at reports that American parents let their offspring sit in front ol the video screens four hours i day and six hours on Sunday. If she has her way, she said, ; the BBC will put on no more Sunday School 1115. j to ups and downs than are more self-centred countries. There are three or four simple. big moves which Canada could make to break the threat of ac-. cumulating surpluses, which I otherwise will bring a slump. ill Tell Britain and the whole British Commonwealth that we j will accept their money, pounds ! sterling for everything they buy i from us. Use up our year-to- Evening Worship 7:3 of All. They were not to appear j with nothing, because worship of j j God, rightly done is not to think j of oneself solely as the receiver : and God as giver. No, the thing for which we should bless the i ' Lord most is thai we are expected to be in partnership with Him j j . . . adding our meed of labour i ! and skill to His bountifuiness. j i And this Is expressed through the j Thanksgiving Offering. Some- j . thing of us in response to all joi uio.se oeiieiacuons nicii we now tare iui ran ted. We expect to eat well. We expect to walk in safety and to have warmth in our homes. We know we can think and worship as we wish. In that lies the present significance of Thanks-pi ving Day. It is a particular occasion to be grateful for what today is so normal that it hardly bears a 1))ought. When the life of one close to us is saved or when material fortune comes our way or when our love for someone is returned, perhaps then we give' thanks in our own "personal way. Rut Thanksgiving Day encompasses all that and the not so special, too. . ' It is a time when we say "Thank you, God, for everything." Minister at bolli sf; "Remember the ftibb. to keep It llul.v j year profit on such trade with than seven hours a week of children's programs. At present ; .Britain, etc., by redeeming Can- adian securities held in Britain that is given. A good father does it telecasts about 45 minutes a i First United CI j or by buying British securities or day or chiklren. DIRECTORY PETWORTH, England (CP) . John Smith wa.s fined 1 for not having propi-r control ot his motorcycle in this Sii'jex municipality. Police said he had a pet do: riding on the tank, and his wife seated behind him was carrying a second dog. Sixlh Ave. W. and Mir TIIANKSdIVIM nil rliorrhi"! at It a.i Aumluv HrllMJ wt mill "i Mi p.i l'J:."5 fvrept properties, mea-iiwiine uuy umci ' InKa ta k to roup of ... film ; I British ouods in every field. i (2) Where the Canadian gov- t chs, here, Mlss Lingstrom. alFC she wants to see child- , ernment itself buys surpluses to support home prices to farm- ren sheltered from seeing actors, from TV by being , lers. distribute those surpluses rf -'red scripts i such as butter, dried milk, cheese, Jrowlpd, handed or lynched , she want kids to 01 get meat, etc., bv some such method i ?oes, las issuing food bonus coupons . 'vicariously involved in grown- j 11:60 a.m. Morniii! Ki'il I Editor's Note: The Terrace (''lori.il iiieiitions a !i100,0tl0 el'Vr by Alran towards const ruction til the road, but the sil nation is nut clear. We ou'it" quesliuns in (lie leRis-I: lure l.y Frank IIdhjiU, Ml. for Skecna, and answers bv Public Works Minister P. A. OaKlanii: Mr. Howard 1. "Has the rnrtment of Public Works been approached by the Aluminum Company of Canada relative to the building of a roail from Kitimat to HiKhway 16?" 2. "If so, did the Aluminum company of Canada make an offer to cini-I'ilule Inward the cost of bulliiin; said road?" , Mr. Gaglardi 1. "Yes; May 13. 1053." 2. "No definite offer, but manager of Aluminum Company of Canada said he was prepared to recommend to his company that it contribute toward tiie cost an amount equivalent to the value of the read to the company v The Daily News Intends lo Ail.lf't rATHMIRtl. 4th Av W nt Dummmr St. Hnly Conimiltiloii S :0 ft.ui. REFLECTS and REMINISCES Kay Sermon: "Who Owiis ' Earth?"' Children's Btory: "f Do You Give Tluni Anthem," "Jesus Shall J HuiHlay Hrn'iol u oo p.m. f Canon llasii S Prucktrr. B.A.. BD r I- 'if. if j ; " 0 VI- iKv , V'w ' ..... ::,'", .71- f. ..!' 'W , ,' ' V- 4 iff l?. .; , ... ,' y. t '. 1 . w ? ... 1 - . ,.; f' v iii ' ''V' f v "W-itf ' 'K.t,'-i .. ' v-'. - . ..;4,:ti.-. -,' .- -.- 1" 4. -V . f -J -n if with unemployed 1 n s u r a n c e ! UJ J?""" ' " . 0 which a child could . cheques, old age pensions and so , JgWing Hi-ctor (Blue 700 Some folks are still lament gets caught. Having been dis-lon 1:30 p.m. Hvruing W'uri I IHST I14HTIST 5tli Aviv K. nt Young St. Mlnlsler: Ilcv i-'n-ii Antrobufl Sernion: Thank.igivi Dig the lack of originality in covered in Hi1 naming of new newspapers, fined $25. that shape he was '3) Go full speed ahead with; '" ungsuiiiii u ai.su agum-a : Could have been j a housing plan, based on thi : Phosts. But she is very pro-witch easier mortgage plan the KOv- w-dragon. as loiig as some- Anthem: "Send Out li ICirci-u (.14) mm ernment has already announced. ' "'ie nulls their teeth before tlry nv ivav nvr Dust off that famous "shelf of , go in front of the camera. They are weary of Times and Heralds and Records. But now runes a bright boy who suggests the Kitimat Meow. Now lUU'isnew. . Liulit " COME. WOItSIIIP GIVE THANKS SUNDAY SCHOOLS - , . . .1 thP nnhiic works" hist in case. I "They simply must have no I IKST PIllSllVTIJtlAM 4th Avenue !Ca.;t Riv. K. A. WrlKllt. UD. (OrfPll 9S2) I lll-T ( MHO television is also being felt in I . ':A'nA h V-fv- United, Beginners ai.-i London. The famous old music i"er w,,cal" ' ' x"" th. rirnVon .ni hn or anything else we now. The dragons and haps can hiu fiffhtinir inainr hnt rZ'&T-S .ire n have in surplus, Canada must! have ugly faces, belch dreadful ury at U a.m.: 12:15; at Conrad Ul" all at 11 a.m. sell at a price the buyers can and fames and howl like werewolves j campaign for speediest this pos sible construction of road. Select and Mail Your Overseas Christmas Cards EARLY! Dibb Printing Co. are willing to pay ! uuc Put a tootn in one or tnem HAVE PATIENCE fn future the Edinburgh Scotsman, the Edinburgh Eve-nirtg Dispatch and the Weekly Scotsman will print news on the tiJiit page instead of inside. 'Die new owner is Toronto-born Roy Thomson. We'll wager he's beijn offering a few suggestions. 8.1(1 01 11 v if West I llev. L. U Hlihcr I lUrern 6131 u.wnn aiimv Kiawr street Br Cnpt ami Mrs C. Fmync" Sunday school a.tlO p.m. (Blurk Soft NT. I'M l.'H I I Till. KAN 6th Avpiuip ut Mi Brlile Btrwt Pastor : Rev. II. O. Olsn The decline, once slow, is yearly becoming faster. Showbills feature "nudes," bring out a certain type of men, but the women and youngsters remain home. The days of the sellers' market j and the BBC switchboard is Jam-are over. ' mprt witn calls from complaining If Russian salmon sells for less parents. than B.C. salmon, our former ! : customers are going to eat Rus- j . INFORMAL DRESS so essential to the whole district. Hut, to avoid starting on false premises or supporting a poor deal, we are endeavor-ins to get all the facts before taking a stand. CliintSf 3- sian saimon. oo wiin oweui.ni OWEN SOUND, Ont. (CP) Wit CHOP SUEY... CM0WM (lllark flIO) lumber, Danish butter. "' puss.oimy or reacn- It was only logical to expeot it? the scurehead stage, given L due, ln tnls late day would nesses who appeared in Supreme And If our overseas wheat cus Court sessions wearing open-! w nirt & n m. 3:30, be foiiEht bv Frenchmen. It took UT. I't.'II.K'H AMII.K'AN S4-ai Ctivi tomers can geu wi.eaW iu. necked shirt? were rapped by Mr t r . I 4, ' i Hilllduy Mimuuy KnbJii.il Ktijjjioi J jj 1 :00 ih) a'n. . ji ' EvonliiK I'ltuycr 7U p ro. H ltl;(il l.K BAPTIST ' I ' '" ' ' ' ' ,t ii , . t. it , , . . place iajvlocucco. Eich, Ja ltis r lie Atlanta llneV Qu.hMiM"cai. staVdsJ ?head-ili'!cPiiln. s&it'd from Halifax for England BoMv .automobiles were, wrecked, 1 iwrsday, having been diverted i nofone. jwas. injureq, and ,hpnor from her last voyage by the was satisfied. ii 9 - i (baity except . Tin-' , Hollywood t uwws ".""I ' I v : Wice P. E. F. Smiiy. "I think not gbihg- to" move our wheat,. that ,e Jhould realizft that , much of the 'en-; uporpvi-hlen'so comin t3 court is a fif,l iou3 mat. t tire Canadian economy depends. , ter ., he ,said ..and they shoul(1 be on their besU behavior so far F-Qr action try Classifieds , as their dress is concerned." 1 I Smuliiy HcliiHjl 11:00 a in. Muinlni 'W.iiBUIH -Srrvlee :! New York York strike. Statements j CM Bill' Awe. K. bint- M:t ( ' i , . . ....., I'li.J gx Oriic" 5 rnu lev lw.mi a Thorp I or Oulsiue J are heard that with the excep Politics is the art of getting money from the rich and votes from the poor under the pretext of protecting both from each other. tion or ine latter city, no where is there any place ln North America with more water at all timus than in a port 'way up tbout mid-way in British ST. ANDREW'S CATHEDRAL CHURCH. value -: j- Quality, style and all the other tiling ' " A, , y " f ; More Canadians have been l- feeing Canada during the sum I IHNKSf.IVING Sl'NDAV, OCT. H Festal Services at 8:30, 11:00 ond 7:00 Special Preacher at 11 o'clock, the RT. H';V- H ' " 11.11., I .lt.fi.S.. Bishop of Caledonia li'se wluch represent value are maint in stetson "the world's mosl famous hat". nicy ainer. even in death! ! lner sny those who have had up- Jiminy Campbell, described xs uortunitv to look around. It will STETSON "a. penniless,, tragic figure," is oe an advantaRe to hear their' dead in Chertsey, England. A ! remarkj. There will be so much song writer, he scored many a . to observe, to study and to re-hit, including "Show Me ths I member Way To Go Home" and "Let Me i Call You Sweetheart," although SOMETHING TO CUT . tlMMe were those who could not i Then there was the woman agree with the latter claim. iwho wrote the National Defence e fi Stetson Hals are priced from $8.95 to $.50. STCTSON CKX1TRY CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETV 'll"o- llllf K"l Mi'i-mid tvi'MiM Heodquarters at Ottawa saying in Bi'" .she v.as interested In swords. Ottawa has been asked if a flenping man can create a dis .vi. llKl SIMIIV KII'IC: "HKi: MN. lllu! NI Cavalry or infantry"? came the ,1 Oi'l. 1 si'ii ni. hut i t: ni te K-,a y""t"J Mll.Jn-C TIUMMtiichliU turbance. The answer is "yes" i inquiry. "It really does not mat-if:. he picks the wrong apart-Iter," she replied. "It's for cut-nienl hallway for slumber; nesting my daughter's wedding lakes off everything and if he ! cake." Birvkies every duuulj - M Siuulny School every sunduy nt ',,. i n WitlnesclHy KvrulUK MUnd utt Sdcuml 4 I'M niontu " r "nil W1- 2 KuHtllnB Itoom l)i"ii WliiMluy it FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH mMJ 60c SALE 60c on RECORDS CITY OF PRINCE RUPERT NOTICE RE VOTERS' LIST Registration of Householders and Licenseliolders for the Municipal Voters' List closes at 5 T.M. OCTOBER 3It, 1953. Householders are entitled to be registered on payment of $2.00 on or before October 31st, 1953. Licenseholders who have previously registered and who have paid a trades license fee for the current year do not need to re-register. New licenseholders should register at the City Hall between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Mondays through Fridays. All registrants must be British Subjects of the full age of 21 years, and in the case of householders must have resided in Prince Rupert continuously since January 1st, 1953. Property owners with titles registered in the Land Registry Office by October 31st, 1953, are automatically on the list. For the added convenience of new Registrants, the office of the City Clerk will be kept open all day Saturday, October 31st, from 9 a.m. to S p.m. R. W. LONG, City C lerk. REVIVAL SER W m I .,i. 111" Mill - iv'" I October 78 RPM 78 RPM DR. JUDS0N BURRED , 1 CtarV Evangelist - Columbus. j:00 a."1" Sundays 16:00 ' Mrs. Mary Hewitt, 1356 1st Overlook, a waitress "in the Broadway Cafe, is an enthusiastic supporter of B.C. Hospital Insurance. Mrs. Hewitt has been hospitalized once this year, and her daughter Dorothy three times. "It gives me and my family a real sense of security," says Mrs. Hewitt, "to know thnt when we do go to hospital, the bill will be paid." Mrs. Hewitt is one of a million satisfied people who ln five years have had accounts totalling eighty million dollars paid for them by B.C.H.I.S. Play it safe be protected. Your local B.C.H.I.S. representative, Mi. R. A. Knight, is located ln the Government Agent's Office, Prince Rupert. POPULAR STOCK LARGE SELECTION RUPERT RADIO AND ELECTRIC 313 3rd Ave., Prince Rupert Phone 644 Eveiyone Welcome! w" ntwl is the power of Ood unto sa to everyone who wit""