p4 Tt.-uotr f j UN Agency Prince Rupert Daily News A JDHANNKSBURO f moi sain nn ive i., .. .in Saturday, June 21 1952 ' "any t'eitirtl r i serve tOiemselves with tea fr,,r, t i, .. H To Restore Education As I See It t) .-w"fK' r?e J more the world's largest teapot in the U J tompoui(i or a Rand told mine u"w" M- preai ' a.n independent daily newpiper aevoted to the upbuilding of Prince Rupert and Nuruu-ju and Central Briusn Columbia, Member of Canadian Pies Audit Bureau of Circulation Canacmn Daily Newspaper Association. Published by Tlie Prince Rupert Daily News Limited J. r. MMMJH, President H. Q. PERRY, Vice-President The "iM.V coi.sl.sts of six units or n, j Subscription Rotes: Bv carrier Per weer., 25e, per month tl 00: per year, tlu 00 V .jf , I I ! am each having a 70 Kull.m steuni-l ""'""8 "w,-,, heated water Uu..ci .suoiilvi r- - 7" two 55-Kall.n Insulate,) tea brew -: , .....'"N (,,.., era which pi oval.- tlie cliUa. ' , ....;, A "iu'-m!, , ien,t of V.UW.IJ..H) cupi a y.-ar, : J !",t'."'a. Hi; f' AMMM . -- . i- - - - ' By mail Per month, "be; per year. $S Oo far'' ' ' 'X . Vuinorlzed as second class mall by the Post Office Department, Ottawa I ........... rfTfVWVVl UNITED NATI0N3, N Y. More than 1.500 tons of paper, enough to provide 7,500,000 textbooks for Korean school children, afe being tipped from Canada, Japan and th Untied Stages by th UN. iCorta:! He-construction A,t'iu.-, U was SuO-iiouiiA-'ed btre by i l)JUW iCujgaUry, LMtRA Ageut UjtWfiaJ The r.eslora,tiwa ut' Uie coitn-try's eJuca.ti.oiuJ sy.-itmi. hAx. KUfcs.'y iyoiiJi.fU out, is lundu.-WtuLai to wiy long-rajige pwu to recoii.-tU uct and rehaniixtaU' A Monster Out of Control "THE full stark tragedy of an illegal strike is be- ! Gromyko jFiig THE APPOINTMENT of j Gromyko as the Soviet j ambassador to Britain j may he a good or had; 3 " T t' For Cool Cooking Use Eloclricol Appliance omen time will tell. Rut; it is certainly a big omen. : ! Contrary to the oil-repeated egenii, Russia'- inov.es ui the! nternational field are mysteri rSYftlTkS TACLCKANOfrm G E. KETTLES r v H i I ; I coming more and more obvious as the lumber ' industry ends its first week of inactivity with a ; settlement apparently more remote than ever. Since preliminaries to the work stoppage did not meet with the provisions of the Industrial Con-t ciliation Act, the strike has a blemished birthright. ! We do not fix the blame on anyone and it is not in , our power to do so, but this is a fact which must be faced. Being illegal, the strike is beyond established .methods of handling as laid down by the Act. To find another approach or to correct the fault by holding a legal and supervised strike vote will t V .-V 11 Korea. lie aOed thai sch.J-book were nut produced in K,Jt flviu 1V1.U Ui Lui-e Ui.e Janajuse, wiio govyrukd Uj? toiniUy (Awtig UhaA tii, Uijd not peruui. thtt puhUi'a.Lloii of hooks in Uie Koiwaji ianKUage. Huwe 1'j40 and Urn oaUireaJi of present hosiUUJes In mid MiiU. uiot ol tJm books uroduLvd hi tjje eomtlry ha.v been destroyed. 'I'lw paner, eUIwtr eiuoute or auing sjji4;ineia, is valued tf.t a quaiter uf a iiililion Coitus aiui will be tiousd ov.'r to iIim Korean Ministry of Education for production of books for million? of students in primary giammar and secondary schoo's TOA$TEks :- 0.95 32 EGG COOKERS - f liAlllfiMi I.f.1S Slu.iiiiu J Jhbiii itre ,eujt to Koiea by piaiic ar. the i'ir.-y Uep in C:,s loi-range rthaljiUUtiJii of that cOiUiUy i loc d resouicec by ilie United Nations Recon;itruction Agency and the HeU'r Project aa hiteiUeiiojiiUiUtioiial voluntary iocicl;, . Abuve, riuhaii f .'reif htoii, a hatching expert with the U.N ('Ail A.ssiitance Coiiiuijn.1 i.i Korea, shows a farmer how to handle babv chicks. I Northern B.C. Power Co.ll Mesner ItliK-k Phone Jp J Prince Uupert, lie. UNDER OUR ROOF By John Sturdy In the last few months, after having lived on The Island for two years, I considered I had scored something of a victory. I had learned to answer th; take tune. Meanwhile, a solution becomes increasingly difficult as-workers drift from their camps to other parts of the country and possibly to other jobs. Also, the cost to all sides is more than one million dollars daily. The right to strike is an instrument of protest which no country calling itself democratic should attempt to remove from the hands of workers. It is a fair and essential weapon. It is also such a potent weapon that it should b used only under official supervision and never at a time when anger more than, determination is a motive. Unless these conditions are met there is a danger that the weapon will become a monster belonging to no one, and controlled by no one. ous only to those who will not study the record. One of the facts is that whenever some big switch is coming m the Moscow Une Uwre are big switches in the top level men who are to apply the changed policies. For instance, when I.tfyinoff vent out and Molotoff came in 3 ftussian Foreign Minister In lay 1939, the Soviet uhan-oned the pro-western line and witciied to negotiations for the .eal with Hitler which wis aade the following August. LOOKING BACK at my own syndicated column in Cana-liau newspapers on May 11, 1939, I see X wrote thus: I regard the release of Maxim Litvinoff as one of the most crucial events of this critical decade ... Anyone who took the trouble to get a complete copy of the speech made by Dictator Stalin to the General Party Congress of the Russian Communist party on March 10 of the present year could hardly be astonished that a tug of war developed between the Litvinoff policy and that enunciated hvv Stalin. For the lartter made it crystal clear that he did not regard war between Russia and Germany as inevitable. On the other hand he made it plain he might outplay the democracies at their own game. At Munich they virtually gave Hitler the go-ahead signal on his long advertised march to the east. Stalin meanwhile made it plain to telephone. ;J,or, and I bet you thought this type of instrument went out with your grandfather's handle - Big City people, coiUUed with luxuries and conveniences, can liaj-iily aiipreciate wht't a fe.ti Where S!i tY, 1 v, r --4 llus . ttt Alter N alt i in tbf iifv city Zmme shows you how wrong you can f 1 ' ! be. . Going On Vacation? BUY A USED CAR AT LOW COST U U is is , , just hist a a matter of the 1 hen there are the rings. Everybody has a different ring. teleplitme ring- ing and you!n oul' ''ne, for Instance, there k " rr picking up tne ' are lt'n suosenrjers ana each receive r. Gne nas an individual call sig-Child's play ! na'. anywhere from one lon, s. w lpniJv Rut in i ring to four lout's and a short. A j the country' Tlle result Is that the telephone SL fcntiii this business'' '"ost constantly ringijig. l- Thil fiim ftvouiitt, 4 paik!ing extra diy l;tii terved wii!i pleMuic ll yea round. Here in Eiitish Columbii the puie toil water The managing editor of a metropolitan daily is credited with clipping a particularly good piece of writing from another paper and fastening it to his bulletin-hoard with the comment: "Read this, and wish you had wrote it." vf answering tw telephoue is a!tnouKn tlie chances are nine much more difficult operation. one that il won't be for you. Our telephone is a box affair. WKONG RIG attached Fr almost two years I an-.ittle to the wall, with a I crank at the side You swert'd tne wrong rings, because turn the 1 never could r"' wheth- crank to get the oper-1 ler our signal was one long and .m... . , . itwo shorts or one short and f end gentle climte corrbine with the ikill end peliepce ol the brewers to liinj you Lucky E L3r, ihoougMy utiJyinj beverajt. c" 1 L 1 w Sl 1 t this ellect: V, itwo l0"i5S- The neighbors didn't uke u cne mU(; m r ' 2 1950 Austins 1 1949 Chevrolet Sedan 11946 Dodge 2-loo truck 1 1948 Thames Van 1 1949 Flying Stondcrd ? 1941 Interna tional 3A' ton panel 1 1949 Austin 11949 Morris 11951 Austin ton truck 1- 1941 Chevrolet Coupe c win pun every KUSSiau soldier out of eastern Gcfmany nrovided only that you do the rest of the job by 'persuading' But in the last couple ol months I got pretty proficient nd I was aole to recognize our call almo.it without being told. And then just last week people stopped pinning us. I couldn't understand this, iijul neither could mv ife t- .11: western occupying fores to get out too." Now a.-ik yourself- if yju were a German, and r;ot u Canadian A ti KM American or Uriton how would i ter all, someboily is usually call-such an offer appeal to you? j ing us, even if it's only about I think we- re-arm Geiuianv.1 lui overdue bill. Vnr an entiie at our own grave peril. , ; (Cicitimitu on paKe 5i ui 1 1 Fjrr Trade aHorse for a Car? BECAUSE.f the provincial election muddle much unwarranted abuse has been heaped on the alternative votrfng system. Some are declaring this experience proves we should at once go back to the old single' vote method. Such reasoning has all the good common sense of trading your car for a horse if the engine" seems too complicated. The election machinery was to blame for the confusion of June 12, not the principle on which it operated. Polling facilities and training were simply inadequate for the mechanics of the job. Those who are demanding that alternative voting be thrown out should be reminded that only first choices were being counted when the mess developed. This suggests the situation would have been no better even under the old form of voting. The alternative vote is our best defence against election by minorities. To abandon it particularly after we have now acquired a working acquaintance with it would be a distinguished contribution to the forces of timidity, ignorance and myopia. PIANNING A Hitler that if Germany were to go on the rampage anywhere it had better be at! someone else's expense and j not Russia's ... . .., ON THAT DAY, as on many days since, I wrote to show j that in a tug of war for th? j favor of Germany Russia would always be in the position to! outpull the west. The color ol the government was not so im-j portant. The long range fact U that economically Germany and j Russia are naturally comple-1 mentary to one another Ger-1 many and the rest of western Europe are natural Industrie competitors. Above all, Germany and Britain are competitors. I recall my repeated warning of the Stalin-Hitler deal, which staggered the world a few montlis after the above was written because it seems to .no that history Is likely to repeat itself. Right now the western allies are struggling with Russia to see who can take over a re-armed,, re-united Germany. 1 think we' are on the wrong track. It wouid be better to keep her disarmed, neutralized. I think that Uncle Joe holds all the aces, most of the trumps, and a couple of jokers tin his sleeve. P HOLIDAY? Superior Auto Service LIMITED Third Ave. West Phone Green 217 Mi mliir .Inp in cidrs many advantages Low st and bi-lyj'u.' M-rvw-e iii( iiid;ni( i wiig charrs, etc. See F. H. LINZEY i'hoiit for I ml hi r details Eepreeiitatives ' Offir.es over for Prince Rupert Broadway Cafe mm Bellapy fiftlLucky . m a f THIS IS IS WEEK Inm ray Reflects Winner 1&50 . ti I BruHelS Award Ji 'l'-i ,, h ; '. ' J i h si' Alii RUSSIA can deliver to the Germans a united Germany and she do this WITHOUT war. All she needs to do is to make another horse-trade with whomever Is the dominant German Cheerful Thoughts Dept.: Only a few hours now and the Uays will start becoming shorter aid shorter, but we hasten to add the process will be very gradual. bt. This has, for example, been true of major events such as the stampede. But It won't be this way any longer. Today, It's more cash and less hospitality where a few motels are concerned. Here the figure will be $20 a night. But the great majority, to their credit, still stick to the old $5 and $7. That's more like Cal &f""'t&4ltI : f! I j. i , - . It's suggested that slogans, such as "Evergreen Playground" QUALITY INGLIS APPLIANCES if AUTOMATIC WASHERS WRINGER WASHERS GLASTEEL HOT WATER TANKS ana .Sportsmen's Paradise" be gary. '4 '"TZr til A dancing instructor says many dancers are heavy on their feet And not only theirs. Ex. placed on automobile licence plates, and in this way, give a further boost to British Columbia as a tourist larui. Old stuff! We'll wager It was first thought up when Tom Shaughnessy was purchasing agent for the CPR. i j j I llU' 111 ! i 1 I mm tmm. The marriage of a dentist and ss w OIL fill BURNERS A(k . ' tA d 1 1 1 1 0 Drew Pear. ion, Washington columnist has been hit in the face by a senator, who declared he did not Uke what he had been reading about turaself. Plertty of senators could say the same. tl v - ft 'I i A Bruce Brown left here by manicurist In Ontario was announced some months ago. Since then, It's reported they have started, fighting tooth and nail. Canada's veterans don't want to see General Kurt Meyer out of priecn. Their memories aren't as short as those of some other peopk. iHfcUJjridfee Herald. air this afternoon for Vancouver to attend a meeting of returning officers who handled the June 12 election in the various coastal ridings. imT NOW ON m 1ASY TERMS Short stories In little books Thousands of them! Paper covers! Stories concerning crime, unhapplness, suspicion, frustration, sex, anxiety, mischief, injustice, love, deceit yet all interesting. It seems to be tlie drift in today's alleged 7:-'-Jf:'W'y -1 "'LjSr ELECTRIC RANGES O GAS RANGES AH Available At Rupert Radio V . Free Home Delivery ., Phone: ' If . WITH ESSO FURNACE OIL H i CONTRACT ASSURED WRITE OR PHONE IMPERIAL OIL LIMITED Re-I'oholster Your Chesterfield NOW You Phone We Call Samples brought to your home at no obligation. Phone Blue 818 PRINCE RUPERT UPHOLSTERS 330 W. 2nd CO. LT LUCKY LAGER BREWING & Electric Calgarians have been noted for thslr freedom from trying i o exploit visitors in the way o' overcharging for service no matter what the occasion may New Wetmlnster, B- ALSO BREWERS O F JlJO N J.Y P . - Thliedveriiiement ii not published or 'J'utthU the Government ol Britun Board or by