11 South Africans to Decide Future At Country-Wide Election in April A. I.M1 I : oil -a t- X" t . ASTLtV r. WI.I.YS CAPETOWN Iyttti South Afrrans are preparing for one of the bigge-st decisions in the history of th;:r country when -chippie cngiy more than 1.500.000 voters go to time prune minister Field Marine polls April 15 to decide the shal Jan Smuts, luiuie way of life for the coun- This will be more than an try and its 12.000.000 people. ordinary general election and The voters must choose be- more than a routine choice between continuation of the pre- tween two rival parties. Consti-dominantly A f r 1 k a n-speaking tutior.ai an ' --scial issues lnvolv-Nationalist government of the ed have seriousiy divided the 73-year-old prime minister, Dan- country. iel F. Malan. or the mainly ; Maian Nationalists nurse Ideas English-speaking Lulled Parly ;ot turning south Africa Into a opposition J-a by 52-year-old J. rt0Ublic inside or outside the PLUS GEORGE MONTGCi, The Fabric Tcl!s The ui-ay and Sat,,, CARTOON - NEWS "PEST.M.VN WIN'S" ''HI, u CAPIT( Today 7 - 9:00 oi.ct:e of war- .o. N. Sir-1. British Commonwealth if they r i( 1 1. ,v.;. Soturdoy Shows 2-4.20 6:50-, P'ince Rupert Daily News Friday, March 13. 1953 are returned to power for an- other five years. And many of their critics feel that their "tough" policy towards South Africa's more than 8.0OO.000 natives can u'Mmately lead only to a racial stcim. NuliuiialU. meetly Eoer stock It's the Newest Mill f II' MM ..Jt whose families pioneered much of the country and fought the j English for control of It, look to i a republic as a natural and de- j Arable slate of independence ! ouite "free" from Britain. ; They have none of tjie sentimental or emotional ties with Today and Saturday Evenings 1: : p m - wviua I fOTEll! DEALER'S NAME PKIXCE rillLIP renounced all his titles when became a British subjett. Here he attend the 1S52 Edinburgh horse show with the Earl of Dalkeith 'righti and the earl wife. Jane McNeill. Philip Takes High Responsibilities In Stride as Husband of Elizabeth V i ' m ?.... - r-'-tr".T Britain which are still a tradition among families of British origin. They are convinced of the ; need for outright control over j he teeming native population of DANCE ELKS HALL j? the country u the white man is to survive in the land. And they -1 J r Tlirrr a trliU'n ttml m-n of Ihr MounltMUrn fnoiliy con-cl &rwun purprme imclfr rrMly grin Thr Duke of Etlln-burh u no excrption. He takes In sirlri hw high rfrpun4ibllitt4 ms husband of ih Un Thw nlory. one of a series. UN of hi family backKT'jvnd. education and naval career see no need to "consult" African j representatives in e course of I dykf McMillan at the piano their administration as advocated by the United Party following a "softer" approach to biuphs family tree He tracer his descent from t hrLstian the Warlike 12th century founder of the Dani.--h-Ctt'rman house .of Oldriiburg. and can boast royal inceilors of Greek, Danish and German blood. POVVIR I.N DKNVIAKK On his lather's side, undei-!he name of Schleswig-Holstein-Piiderburg-Gl ucksberg. the family has ruled in Denmark vinre the 15th century. At birth. Philip was sixth In sucres-slon to the throne of Greece He has unce renounced all titles to be- iorurday Night $1.00 per Csf ntcred the Rnyul Nav.il Clli'H- j t Dartmouth as a rudt t. : Through his scliunl life he wa.i ' treated as an ordinary boy. ll'.i i ' clii.vnial s at Cheam, once re- rovend from aurpriw at seemit i Philip minus rtironet and ro'x- as their childish fancy had an- j ticlpated, regarded him as oif of themselves. At OorduruUiuu i he mingled fieely wl'h vins of ! lUihermcn and farmers. His last . school report said h" had the "strongest sense of service" in ! the whuol He was placed 18th of J4 entrants to Dartmoulli end won the King's Dirk as Ix-.t cadet of his term ; By ALAN HArtVE Canadian Irra K1R writer 'Wrong Call' f- 'S f i RCA Vular V.507 299.50 iBrmSs Arrest LONDON tCP The Mounlbat-!cns, they say. arc playboys wUh a purpose. The Duke of Edinburgh flu the pattern. A Mountnattrn on his mo- BERLIN iAPi The West Ber-! lin newspaper Tclegraf reports a British subjfi t. that 16 proofreaders of the Soviet ther's side. Philip has the family ,ome M otr sector Tribune were arrested for trademarks love of the sea and j sabotage after it was discovered 8 of mission under a gay Bv a fiincldi'iire. th Duke and Queen Elizabeth are distant 3 ' A " that their paper had praised exterior. j cousins. Their r r r. - g r e at Joseph Stalin as a fighter for- Rerkle.is and light-hearted In ' randparents ur Veen Vic "war" Instead of peace. hU dashing naval days, he now loria and Prince Albert. Piny AN 3 SPEEDS ecu Left With new RCA Victo 3 ipeJ chonovr ! When war broke out. Phlliii 'as rommlsiiloiit d an officer in the Navy and was rxntcd as a midshipman to the bittlcshlp Ramlllies He later served with the cruisers - Kent and Shropshire and with the battleship . Valiant. gives strict attention to his state Call 112 That's the Cab hi Philip was botn June 10. 1921. it Mr.n Repos. his father's house ,n the Isle of Corfu off Oreece. His father was Prtnce Andrew, fourth son of Oeorge I of Oreece. His mother. Princess Alice, now lives as a nun on another Greek The Spnr lOOr' fabric.'i of our new g coats are lovely to at . . . d;h'.'.hlful to PORT ELIZABETH. Soulh Af- duties as first gentiem;n of th-rica (CPi Officials of the elc- iealm ohant park hpre think they have Similat... Admiral Earl Mount ' finally devised a fence to keep batten "Uncle Dickie'' to Philip : the elephants from raiding neai- as a young man drove a mon-ibv farms. They are building a ogrammed limousine and gave i 12-mile fence of heavy steel lavish penthouse parties They ' -able? linked to street-car rails fald he ius playboy. I I tMOlT HATTll: In March, 1941. he w searchlight contro' officer on p tfcat flivi qwo'ly twpfb i-woy pr- m fcKmo-K o '"45", "33'V w "78" records. finmtt 3-sprf cKongtf ntwri Sfanard ml SKhwov 7iub rod " "OoMn Throat" tens tyttem Suprb cobit ttyfinf and craft tmonUiip island. .Tinos. Philip, ion, had four sisters, an only the Vallart at the battle of but one Cape Matapan. fou.lit in dark upris'ht in the eround. the touch . . . an'.! .sumptuous to wear. A wide, varied choice of styles and prices, too. WALLACES DEPT. STORE MODERN AND OLD TIME DANCE TONIGHT LEGION AUDITORIUM Music By lKTK IIFGGR and HIS WKSTI RN tlKI.S Price SI. 00 Dancing from It When war came, he proved himself . The Mountbattcn naval tradition was started by Philip's grandfather, a German princeling named Prince Louis of Bat-tenberg. He entered the Royal navy In 1888, and rose to be First Sea Lord. Come in for o demonstration i McRae Bros. "The Store Thai Service Built" OPTOMETRIST Fred E. Dowdie Room 10, Stone Building Phone Blue 593 v.is killed in an air crash From the first, his life was eventful. When he v.'as still an Infant revolution threatened Corfu, and the late King George V sent a Royal Navy detachment. Philip was removed to St. Cloud, a suburb of Parts, where he attended an American school called The Elms. At nine he went to Cheam In Surrey, one of Britain's oldest preparatory ich'xjls. iAVi HITI.I.R MENACE ness. "It was." he said laUr. "ns near murdirr as anything could be In wartime ." The Prince was mentioned In dispatches and hi captain. Admiral Sir Charles Morgan, commented: "Thanks to his alertness and appreciation of the situation, we wr-e able to sink In five minute. to eight-Inch Italian crulvrv" In 1912 he transferred to the flotilla-leader H.MS Wallace, be- The next stop was an unortho "MUSKETEER" her first lieutenant COm ing uhnnl In n-rvr,v tn,, r.H,.,l i i-. In loon 1920 k bv .Li,.. ... 'Jimmy the One" in naval par Prince Maxmihan ol I By an Ironic twist, the feeling f against things German that ac-1 rompanied the Tirst World War it extended even to sausages : nd dachsttund itmoveJ Prince Louis from command i The man who helped make the navy the strongest In the world 1 had to watch the war from the sidelines 1 Renouncing his German titles j he chose his mother's name. ! Mountbatten, a compliment to jthe Island fortress tn Plymouth , Sound called Mount Batten. ! Apart from the Mountbatten I influence, there are many not-j able strains In the Duke of Edln- SAVBM0HI lance, men ne was posted to a new destroyer. Whelp, with her joined the Parlflc fleet, and was Baden The school was run bv Dr. Kurt Hahn. an antl-Na.l. enrt tho Mltlcr mnaA r' ,,. at the Japanese sur cd Philip and Dr. Hahn both pT!fnt by left Germany. The teacher established a new school at Oor-donstoun. on Moray Firth In Scotland, which Philip soon Joined. He staved in Gordons toun until March. 1939. when he render in Tokyo Bay His first navy Job In peacetime was an instructor In one of the Royal Navy's stlffest training courses. Later he obtained his first command, as captain of the frigate Magpie in the Mediterranean Qo Discount cjCetjmiciti Ex-King Farouk Verifies Rumors About Separation t From his record, there Is no doubt that Philip was an ex- eeptlonal sailor That ability, plus his underlying seriousness, qualifies him as a member of a family which. In the words of the weekly newspaper The Observer, "has been the talk of three EuroK-an generations, jng hpgdaches to statesmen from ON ALL CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING PAID IN ADVANCE ROME Ex-klng Fafriuk of Farouk's abdication last Ktrypt Is having mother-in-law 'mer An exceptional suit value faultlessly custom tailored at trouble. Farouk did not go to the air- In a bitterly-worded statement port to ee Princess Narrlman the days of Blsmark to those of Roosevelt, alternately charming, annoying and splendidly serving their contemporaries." Thursday the portly playboy i off. 2-Picce $75 P1 Tn Mi. H.sure or Ready-for-Wear virtually admitted that he is separating from his 19-year-old wife, Narrlman. and 'that his mother-in-law Is to blame. Narrlman left Farouk In Rome to fly to Switzerland with her mother. Farouk's statement said bit- ENJOY MILD" It's true now you can get a Lei.shman suit with Lci.snman quality through and through, Ui. hiiian styling and Lci.shnian craftsmanship at a very much lower price. with V-- t 'mr-' i terly that her decision to leave I was "ably abetted by her mother, I who was obviously In touch with j Egyptian political elements." i It's the first word from Far- ouk about rumors that something the RflHdesf. Besf--Isfinj was amiss with his marriage. Rumors gained ground with the arrival of Narrlman's mother. Some said she went to Rome to persuade Narrlman to return to Mu.-.k':Ucr" suits are created of rich-looking, imported worsteds, English tweeds of proud origin, fine cheviots and other fabrics in exclusive patterns and new colours very much for Spring 1953. From the first day of wear to the la,st, you'll enjoy wearing a "Musketeer," Just as you'll be pleased with Its outstanding value. CIGARETTE ! Esypt with her baby son who Is 1 heir to the Egyptian throne since AT L0fti:sr w 1 Caiuulai lljo.il b'tAlimtuislii( Available at For the Finest in Office Supplies mm I IP D AILOilS SEE DIBB PRINTING 206 Fourth Street P. CRAVETTO Phone Blue 418 L..--... -'- . mm mm m, . . . COMPANY