Prince Rupert Daily News Kay As I See It RtlFLiCTS and REMIN1SCI Friday, June 19, 1953 Alberta Man Finds Water With Branch Vancouver is having a eood the body 0f a due had been ii covered ,i.', , An independent dally newspaper devoted to the upbuilding of Prince Rupert and Northern and Central British Columbia. . Member of Canadian Press Audit Bureau of Circulations Canadian Dally Newspaper Association. Published by The Prince Rupert Dally News Limited. J. P. Vaoor, President H. O. PERRY. Vlce-Prer.tdent I 1 old fashioned wet June, and that's that. No one is hurt or catches grievous disease. There are brides and rosy cheeks, beautiful complexions and fresh, pure aid. Ootl bless June, wet or dry. was also another ;. cats had been i, ' minor Rla t. ; Kh to arouse lion. more Subscription Rates: tly carrier Per week. 25c: per month. 11.00; per year, 10 00. By mall Per month. 75c; per year. 18.00. COWLEY. Alta. (CP) An 81-ycar-old suth Alberta man is one of the few persons wtio cling to the ancient practice of "water witching." Authorized as second class mall by the Post Office Department, Ottawa. II ALTON'S DISI'I.KASI KF. Matthew Halton, Londgn correspondent who hails originally O'l'-'s real lit,, l5 life that one. !;,'; Oscar Wilde -,n Irnm a lift ? rnuoi i ar,iiKn is' Freed The Sausage Sea Hird. 34 .Win, 17, n Ernest Cooknell of Cowley Alberta-Pincli. r Creek-made a says he can locate an under-1 ftw r(.mttI.ks lo Sovj(.t Klm, ground water supply by walking yesterday He Wttfin.t thtnkln of 41V ITH the international scene burstinp; into wild 17.3, 14, Atlin. W diplomatic language when he mil perhaps momentous tumult, it is comfort branch of a willow tree. called Moscow "helpless and half When the wand Is over a hearted." A good line and mavbe water source it waves violently, handy tc the' truth. I ' - V'-v' -1 ' f 1 ''' o f t'' ? t he says, and sometimes the bark is torn away. Only a green willow U u.si d. The wand, a three -foot slice of a younR willow tree cut in the shape of a protiK, sometimes will bend upwards und sometimes down. But whenever it "wlRgles," there Is water underneath. ' Pearson's Sharp Line I THE SPEECH made by Lester Pearson at Harvard University on June ill was one of the most ; important ever made by a i Canadian statesman. j Prarson spoke not only as Camilla's Minister of External j Affairs, but as the authentic, i world voire of democratic prin-jeiple. He was candid in his de- seription of the "world Communist conspiracy." But he stood ; foursquare on British tradition i 1 when he warned that "some of those who have gone about to I eliminate the real menace of the Communist conspiracy have I done so by methods which I weaken our democratic concept of law and justice, which have threatened to destroy that feel A diplomat Is a chap who, whi'li Unkud wluit hia favoiiU-color is. replies "Plaid." At least part of the post office lobby Is offering more space as the process of change-making continues. Undoubtedly, the business is going to take time. Men. for example, are different. There are those who, having lived in Prince Kup-.-rt have al-wuy: enjoyed a mail box service. And the last thing they desire is a chance. TWO MEMBERS of the technical stores of 11 Echelon, 3rd battalion of the Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry, examine a. Fatchett 9mm machine carbine now on trial by the Canadian arrxay inKorea. At left Is Pte. Edward Earles of St. John's, Nfld., witlni L.Cpl. Donald Wylie, Toronto. fHE NAME ro Wm fOK GftAT ABVANC: IN tffUGfMriOll KNGUSIl ANCr.STKY Mr. Cooknell discovered his "witching" talen in his boyhood days in Oxfordshire, England, after watching some water searchers from London. While Haired South Korean President Sp endsMany Hours in Spreading Garden 111 When Gen. Mark Clark flew He says four of his family! could make the .wands wiggle j Near Hollywood, some time over water, but four others could g-. dogs living in large airy not. He doesn't know how or: kennels with thv?!r own beds were ' why he possesses the talent. He discovered, Their owners, being says it may have something to lout of town, they were being do with the individual's body j boarded. Incidentally 1 the dogsi chemistry, and possibly is in-' have a swimming pool. Board in-, herited. j eludes cottage chvese, eggs, Mr. Cooknell claims he has meats and whatever vitamins are 1 found water at depths ranging needed. j as much as 230 feet. i j He has never taken money for In Vancouver Jast week, some-a job, believing the charm might ; thinr; else was found. This was World attention Is forusvd on str-cing-wlllpcl 78-ypar-old President 8yii(jmftn Rhee of South Korea bpcnuw of tils ariamant st a rid alfalnst a imce tht would leave hts war-wraoked country divided. Whut sort of. a mun'ls he and what Is his background? Hr-e are wme of the answers. Bet i tor. ing of community on which free society must be based." That was a polite warning; to the U.S.A. that Senator McCarthy's witch-hunts are doinj to Seoul recently for an urgent conference over Rhee's bitter opposition to a truce with the Reds, they held their meeting in the "garden office." While talking with important guests, Rhee is apt to stop his conversation momentarily while walking over to pull up a weed. He prunes his own trees and hedges and attends to his flowers and shrubs daily. After a 6 a m arising a'nd a light breakfast, Rhee reads the harm to western unity. SEOUL lAP) Allied troops re-o-ccupled Seoul in September, HERE, is the nub of what Mr. be broken if used urofessionally. 19;0. after landing at Inchon Pearson said about interven tion in Asia: and routing' the North Korean Reds. A throng of Koreans gath-erpcl in the buttered capital citv New forces have swept across ing to note this contrasting English newspaper headline: "The Sausage To Re Given Independence." It may be news to most Canadians that the humble sausage bad entered into politics and acquired the dignity of government recognition. This distinction was bestowed upon it by the Ministry of Food in the early days of the war when it was put "under - strict control. According to ministerial decree, the beef sausage had to contain HO per cent of meat (beef, mutton, lamb, pork.'vea, or edible offals) and be sold at not more than one shilling and ten-pence half-penny per pound. Pork sausage had to contain 65 per cent of meat, of which not less than four-fifths had to be pork, and be sold at not more than two shillings and five-pence per pound. "" Now all these restrictions have been swept away , and the trade will be able to make the sort of sausages to suit local tastes. This development lias moved Toronto commen-1 lator Lewis Milligan to review the history of the saiisage. ; . ''One of the earliest was made from shrimps, crabs, oysters, prawns and lobsters," he observes. "The black pudding, according to one authority, is an ancient dish in England and Scotland, and is made of oatmeal, suet and hog's blood, variously seasoned with caraway, thyme, mint, garlic or onion, ! salt and pepper. The Scottish haggis, which was described by Burns as 'Great chieftain o' the pud- din' race,' is composed of the meat and brains of the "beep's head, combined with oatmeal, etc., in that I ".animal's stomach. Haggis may be a good meal for I Ta plowman who can work it off, or as a small side ; ;tish at Burns' dinners, but even with the latter the ."loyal Scot needs to take it with an anaesthetic in : the form of Scotch whisky." ; :.. Presumably the haggis maintained its inde-; .-pendente throughout the war, for it did not get into : .-politics. Any attempt by the Ministry of Food to ontro the chieftain or prescribe its ingredients -might have intensified the demand for Home Rule 1 for Scotland. The proletarian sausage submitted ; without a murmur to dictatorship. the Far East since World War for your money II. Some of these reflect the (mlsations of the International newsoajHTs for an hour, then sketches Chinese characters on to tiear an address by their white-haired president, Synn-man Rhee. communist conspiracy. Others are primarily related to the It. was a momentous occasion feu- the little man who had en That makes its Obi dured prison torture and 33 Independenl MP John L. Gibson, Quitting Politics OTTAWA John I.. iJacki Gibson, 47, Independent member of the Commons since 1945 for the British Columbia riding of Comox-Albernl. said he will not contest the August 10 general oaper with a brush dipped in heavy black ink. His characters spell out such mottoes as "Respect Heaven and love humans." At 8:30 a.m. he goes to a largo ooml and feds bread and rico to more than 100 goldfish. Then he walks to his office mrt receives reports on the war. He consults with his ministers. ice cubes without tii and puts then in a basket... c! a awakening urge of millions of Asians for national freedom and a better life. If we of the west ore not able to agree on the distinction between these two forces which require a different approach and understanding by us, our co-operation in this part of the world may disappear . . . "There are some who believe that Asian Communist is an years of exile in his loni? fight aga.in.st monarch i.-sts, Japanese militarists and now the Communists. Many present expected a dramatic, spine-tlnglinu spoch from the leathery-ski;i-ned graduate of Harvard and Princeton universities, Fthee said: "We have rotunvd to our beloved citv. Now let's gi-t the- stink out of the streets and By 9:30 a.m. he is bark in th aml election. harden receiving visitors m implacable foe, bound hand and foot to. Moscow, nnd that to negotiate with it in any cirnim- T.ving instructions to his secre-; oibson, wno generally voica Utries. wltht the Liberals in Commons Just before noon, he sits down bu' oftcn fltlzed the govern-to his typewriter to bung out, ni'nt's Policy on specific points, nersonal letters or-statements.' .told reporters he is leaving poll-Often they are appeals to hls'tlcs on his doctor's advice, people to plant trees, use coal A wealthy British Columbia instead of wood fur cooking and lumber executive, he bought a heating. home here and moved his family Rhee deplores the barren hills to Ottawa a fiwv years ago. He see it in operation stunees is futile and perilous, Therefore, they argue, we must do everything we can short of ell-out war but even at some risk of war to prevent the an-pearance of Asian Communist governments; and to weaken and destroy them if they man-ape to obtain power . . . "There are others who will DfMIMIU ' said they will move back to the west coast, but he was not sure where they would live possibly somewhere on Vancouver Island. RUPERT m AND ElEClii get some trees 011 those mountains."! ; .-. The incident Illustrated Severn. points in tlo character of th 78-year-old president.' He is a simple, direct man 'With no epioarent affections, but stubborn in persistans: for what he be I ieves is, best for Korea. , Me is a passionate lover of trees and flowering things. He has a mania for sanitation. Today, In Ihe midst of the armistice crisis, lie still is exhorting 8coul residents at least once each week to clean up and plant. His love Is for a country in wriich he was born under a monarchy Marcli 26. 1875; which tr rew him In prison when, as a I'rinrr I have none of this policy. They f&el that Communism in Asia . . is a social, economic and political development, growine1 r.o n: TY.lx advert twnr. ni, not published j r tliplayiHl by the liquor Control -'Vmrd or by the Oovrrnmrnt ol of Korea. He flies often to thel hattlefront in light army plane.-., scanning the terrtain closely. "On several occasions, Presl dent, Rhee has discovered tree or brush fires during his trips." said his secrteary, Chang Ki Bong. 'On each occasion the mesident made note of the exact location nnd sent out fire fighters immediately." At 12:30 pm. dailv. Rhee lunches with his Austrian-born Jaoan's deeply-indented coastline has been measured at more than 17.000 miles. rtr,tiih Columbln ioilt of special Asian conditions ,pnd one primarily for Asians to ! deal with." j j PEARSON'S proposition comes down to these hard-boiled policies: 1. Canada will stand by the U S A. to renel clear-cut military wife. Francesca, 20 years his OTTAWA DIARY By Norman M. MacLeoa YOUR HOSPITAL JVltnodist mission convert, he Humor, whom he wed in 1934 tried to stir pp the spirit of He eats what, he likes, Including democracy; and from which he chicken, fish, beef and pork. He fas exiled, fleeing for his life j prefers western food but occa-soon after the .Japanese took 1 sionall v eats rice and some Ko-contiol In 1910. , rean dishes. He returned to Korea in 1945 After receiving visitors from 2 I INSURANCE PREMIUM .The most striking feature a'tively early stage Leader Drew' agressions, such as occurred in J.tound Progressive Conservative; will have the open assistance of ; Korea. Canada would probably national headquarters these Ontario Premier Leslie Frost, enter a Pacific Pact to make 'days Is the complete absence ol With Ontario recognized as! such a policy effective, liie over-confidence that existed likely to be the kev nrovince 1n! 2. But Canndn uHll not snn. to 4 p.m. and a 7 p.m. dinner IS DUE V in 1949 arter Japan's defeat only to be caught up shortly in a war w Jiich kept him moving in and ' the final result, Frost's partlci Leader , George pation in the campaign is looked noil, reactionary, social counterrevolutionary forces, such ns that of Chiang Kai-shek; nor Togi me which . see) tfrvtwast -: he listens to the radio. Before retiring, Rhee opens his Christian Bible und reads passages aloud to himself arid his wifti It i.sn't that Drew atKl his oxj,t, ill 8,iiiul 4s its fortunes f"' High Command Pn a? ,a factpr of-major im-1 in in morale. morale. Thev- They lr!tanc;' 1"lre Ontario? Premier'; me at all iowr "tiren't. But the 1949 camoaiiin'ls rated as a person of powerful tjrwfiyed. . , Rhee lives in-a fino concrete-a rid -tile mansion on a Seoul rillside. He spends many wak- One of tiie world's great ship canals, the ld-mile canal from 111 uate imperialism, in disguise. Our policy must be, as he pu's it: "Defeat Communism by doing more fyr the welfare of the underprivileged and undernourished millions of the East than Communism can ever hnpc to do." ir-g hours in its t?autlful gardens. spreadine;, ! the North Sea to Amsterdam, ,was opened in 1876. gave them a lesson in political! influence with the province's tealism from which they profited ; voters. ttwpite its pain. They're notj Less certain to the amount of lorgetting it. assistance in the national cam- The simple fact was that back! paign which Drew will receive in 1949 Leader Drew relied forjfrom his chief Parliamentary his information on the cam-1 aide, J. G. Diefenbaker, Q.C. The nnnrw DUULI jvJLs paigns progress nation-wide word Is that Diefenbaker is in- THE PRACTICAL world peace volved in a nip-and-tuck battle mainly on PC party workers. Not too unnaturally, the party faith- making or Lesr.er Pearson over support of the overwhelming home riding of Prince Albert, to which he has transferred from 1111 cucin 1 emphasize in. their reports anything that they thought their Leader mightn't enjoy hearing. The result was that Drew passed the entire campaign in an atmosnhere of comnlpip his old riding .of Lake Centre after the latter was merged with Moose Jaw in the last redistribu PHASE RETURN YMR MUM NOTICE WITH YOUR PREMIUM PAYMENT OREC0 TH majority of Canadians. His sharp new line on Asia merits and should receive the continued support of the same majorityfor any attempt to swing Canada behind the MacArthur-McCarthy "war for Chiang" line would split Canada from end to end politically. tion. If his home battle prevents Diefenbaker from going on the road for a national tour, the loss to the Drew cause will be definite. political unreality. The results on voting night constituted a .shock, awakening for which he was wholly unprepared. This time the PC Chieftain is being careful to stay as, close and a-s accurately to actual public opinion as is humanly B.C. HOSPITAL INSURANCE SERVICE SPECIALS foR FATHER'S DAY Dress Shirts, Sporfr Shirts, T-Shirrs, Ties, Socks, Jackets, oil of good ouolify and reasonably priced. IHIKSS SHIItTS While and Colored. f J - Regular to $4.45. NOW t" T-SlllltTS Itegular$1.95. S-f Cff Now Z MUN'SANI YOUNG, MKN'S S( A "" A lo S-f f-A SLACKS Good tailoring. Now MKN'S DRKSS OXFORDS Well-built, good fit, lots of $ f? 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In a field as thoroughly confused by Social Credit and CCF pre-emption of the political domain West of the Great Lakes, he believes that he stands an excellent chance of MAKE SURE YOU If Opportunity Knocks Don't Let A Lack of Ready Cash Hold You Back A Low-Cost B of M Loan Con , Sove the Day for You ' Opportunity is said to knock but once, so you don't want to risk missing it. It may require ready cash that you do not have, . but even that need not stop you. If you have a regular income and are in a position to repay,- you can obtain funds for any useful purpose at the Bank of Montreal. A B of M Personal Loan is inexpensive and convenient, The interest rate Is only six per cent, and the loan is repayable in easy instalments. And you pay interest only on what you still owe. Jf you borrow $100 and repay in monthly instalments over a year, it will cost you just 27 cents a month a total cost of only $3.24. You can borrow more or less, for shorter or longer periods, at proportionately the same cost. So next time you need money, don't hesitate to drop in and talk over your problem with Ernest Paulding, manager of the Prince Eupert B of M. You'll find him an Interested listener and ready to help whenever possible. (vt ) II & tit' -fr": if QUALIFY FOR matching the government's strength and crippling its power in Eastern Canada. But he knows HEW INSURED BENEFITS he has a fight on his hands. He isn't making the mistake again of under-estimating Liberal cam paigning strength. LOOK FOR THE NAME tmPsT COST riKnim rROTF.crios acamt UXjLdUU tniPPtla HOSPITAL PIUS I It is stated definitely by PC , sources that before the campaign '' is ended and probably at a rel- BETWEEN RIXMONT ANI KOYAL HOTF.I.S