Prince Rupert Daily News Thursday, April 3, 1952 ,ince Rupert Daily News As I See It ly newspaper devoted to the upbuilding of Clnl broken up for this is a day whrn steel Is needed. It was in 1914, when Wilhelm Hohenzollcrn J " . .. M.-rthorn anrl Ofltral British Columhia . ....w.!-r ti 11 i"" IN VANCOUVER use an. AUSTIN U DRIVE won't happen again. We now' know what's what. i ! i ANYONE who has studied our, political backgrounds over a period of years must know that , the Liberals and CCF are far ; ' closer together on their foreign ; I outlook than either one' of them , j Is to the Conservative party or ' to Social Credit. i The Pearson-CCF spat was probably more painful to all concerned because It was a falling out between good friends G) F Canadian Dally Newspaper Association. 1 p 'M.,;tRi(iK EdlK)r; H. O. PERRY, Managing Director ray . . . Reflects and Reminisces 61 (more spilled the international beans, that this 21.833-ten luxury craft was captured and renamed to become a celebrated round-the-world liner and trooper. She made six cruises of 30,000 miles. Ironically enough, the Empress of Australia called at all world ports with the exception of those of Australia. PU,,oU npr k. 25c; pt month, $1.00; por year .-Tt ,s second flahS mall by Post Office Department, Ottawa. Keremeos clergyman declined i who, in this field of foreign af- CCF-Lib Spat Cools fairs, think more and more alike. wed a man who described r i gree With Stalin, But- Special Low Rates for day, week or month For reservations contact: BROADWAY U 0H117E LTD. BAywicw 1616 3roadway at Oak VANCOUVER 9, B.C. Mv Kuess is it will Drove a mmseii as a Darienaer. naa ine THE sham, short emit he- mere soat and not a long term gmslinger said he was a wine CAME LEISURELY ttw ' , ,.m,.nilpe; intiplLS that tnai i Premier 1 emier .ToKPnh JOSeptl Stalin ftUlin , . nf n ' l feud For with some Conserva- clerk there might possibly have j Discrimination a g a 1 n s t 31 the pi tween Mr Pearson and e'r the riBht wing, been a ceremony. port port of of Prince Prince Rupert Rupert under under load i ...ni.it'-'s in reirard to international affairs the rrv ti-0 lust tow makim? nmses which sound like line regulations has been re- v ui WAV. .w v. .. - " - - lit""-- . . . . Tot- m r.,.t n,.,.,o l,f I 1 ll1 .1.1 V. r if u ; ; ... . t.hp nrp minarifs let aavocauns .imj nuv i iuuvc-u. ncitumc news, uiuiuusu artllV coiuui. ii uc isBinvcic auuuL it, unu weeks has been a gOOUi a tle.u witn Chiang Kai-shek. It's a fact shiploads of immi- why it took 40 years is hardly' U , nh the (lancer of a third world War IS M-,inrr fr.v tV,a WnTo .mm. and Franco, Liberals and grants continue to pass through ; understandable. ico, 'the 'the f'c ' fe " ; CCF might see the point In call- Halifax. Hcwiy out from au-ope remote. ind the L'nited Kingdciii, tiiey Prince Rupert school bord de- try. lng "quits." will sprpad all over Canada unci pior modem noshuns in educa- It has cleared the air on what ttjit Mmbicr hai tnM n that means as far west as Yu- tion. tven High school DUDills ' I eting of the heads of great powers would, I as he suggests, be useful. In fact, if all got was really done at Lisbon. It: kon. ctttl hnrlv sinpll with pffixhpnrv , lnhnr . (li'lppation ... nnt . to . worrv i .?t r? rio.if.n-ilrin( .,n,l ...Ifti has Shown, beyond all Shadow ; shnl,t ,,n(.mrlnvmnt Hi. nnillls NEV.' WASHER . . . THE INGLIS Model 159' Check these features -t 0 Automatic pump' 0 Lifetime lubrication . a Quiet as a whispwr v of rinnht that what th CC.V.nn-'-tn wh.t him.ni in iow whpn i ivivs iiivmrtp - General Elsenhower, on the i-M..., nit inTDrnutinnM touru u-nnw it , . 1 a f,.r,,vi ah ...in , i- ,.ui. - ........i. first ntinivprsarv .nf his sprvipps : ? i llOnai COUTIPll OpiJOPa WHS unl uiicnipiuiiiciiL uctuucu iivi. in wili liui. UJ UJlt: I.U LV be dialled and We could go ahead .000 in April to 147 000 in No- Flish, and thn chance ore it lU u 1 & vember to suggest the present will be the same a year from 10P6. submitted an 11.000-word the the program program actually actually accepted accepted . , fu . at al Lisbon, "soon, v. but Dut the tne i "phantom pnantom u : ic.,.. hi'tter world. 4f)n n,.n immn1n,,.H ,11 ilkPWis nn, if it i ihD itiinti,m tn rp. report. But if he becomes a pres- ; S -y.HMWiftHI;--- -A, " i !h -. . - 1 ! ,,, tnfuA K.,t it ,..S11 f l army" goal of fifty divisions. ; fade away. That ignores the fact main in Canada", inability to idential candidate that won't be r.any vumu ut u.,.wU uuk .v ; This ..pnantorn ailliy.. of fjfty that the Korean war broke out talk the language of the coun- anytning. 0 Lovetl safety wrinef Bm 0 Year guarantee Z," 1 bniy $159,6p j llv unified if It IS to be Under the dictation divisions by the end of 1952 'n J"ne 1950 ana- as manV busl try s something to be deplored ' , , , , 1 .vk'tH ii,,. nes papers have pointed out, and certainly to the disadvan- Mrs. R. H. Ball and family!;. nni in m listed In the minds the only . west. That Can only be settled by o bothVn Prince ea,t Of ors averted a slump. tage o Canadian and sailed last night on the "high gear American publicity ; former alien. Rupert for Vancouver vni'ie they will take up future rcsi-' UOriS WHICH JJuiiil hupsici iuiss nui. cl inui- f: GOOD KoiiniG ! men who issued the misleading statement from Lisbon which willingness to concede. Farewell to a once famous dence, Dr. Ball having transfer Cobequid Bay, a oranch of the; RUPERT RADIO & ELECTRIC ee ,iin -.v co-eitence CO-exiSlcnce 0I nf canitalim and ana caused all the trouble. I Bay of Fundy on the north shora snip; Bunt originally ior tne rea ms uud., J Va7 ;ta!in capuaiism , Columbia Cel- Ms, of Nova Scotia, is noted for 1 Kaiser and named the Tirpitz, manager of the : - Ikiti is (lUite WOSsible. In fact. Capitalism and MR. PEARSON showed oulte shad fishing. i. the Empress of Australia will be lulose from here to Vancouver, i A ' T " iism must co-exist. Non-interference with clearly that the program tt'hlrh Canada nnrpnt.prf nt. I.is- iir? of other states is, of course, the nub of ' ! bon was a decrease and not 1' i an INCREASE as compared wit)j IcXlHt'llC'C. ; the goals accepted a year earlier. Rn5i:i's :ift ions anrl rleaiincrs wore rtm. i What NATO aims at Is twenty- ?' ' .. . , . . . 1 five divisions actually mobilized vith Malm S WOrtIS, we WOUld SOOn be SUC- i in western Europe by the end surmounting the hurdles which now lie in f V.!ls U'.r.1,1!?. twentv- OOD FOREST MANAGEMENT HELPS ALL OFUS UI world peace. ' might be described as "quick ...u .v,,. n un tVi., T,,t,..; : call" reserves. i .CUiiy M-ems HuM.a ca.u.ut ui These ftre reason.tbl(! goals iccept our own good faith and certainly we j and certainly worthy of the , . i suppuri oi every uuuuuiun wno it to accept ner. ; SUDDOrts tne baslc idra of nato ' .. ! for defence onlv. or Mister THE Minister of External Af Sera fairs, in his various speeches ,D Cell. Dwight D. Eisenhower be nomi- 1 In Parliament, has clearly shown , . , ,, i one of the causes of misunder- 1 for President, the range of topics he could ; standing. The goals accepted by n campaign speeches COUld be governed bv ; Canada a year ago were secret, . . L . .. , , . , and hence Parliament was not he retires from active duty or resigns his ; then told exactly how many cu- ...il Iitlps nearby coniinunilies: (;m1 forest inauaeiiHMit does aay Milh llie obi "1koiii and lnist' cyrle. 1t-'uus il means mi I inning yield, prosperity eonies to slay. With increased population and full time employment, towns in the neighborhood ean, undertake long term improvement projects, merchant ean expand their business. The entire community enjoys a higher living standard ... a fuller life. ... il helps U.C's logging intluslry: (mhmI forest management assumes responsibility for lire and blight prevention over large areas. It provides a convenient ami steady market for the :on. e of the things he could talk about as "Mr. ver' would be different from matters he - : " . i k privileged to discuss as a retired officer of j visions NATO expected to have ' this ycar, and two years hence. , On March 13 he said: I wish I could give the House exact figures of the military I pluns of a year ago In terms i of divisions and aircraft but I have made Inquiry to see ' whether that t possible and I find that those figures still i cannot be disclosed at this ' time without the -consent of the governments concerned. ! Here surely is one root cause of misunderstanding. In 1951 I States Army. liiuLw'ni liv iwleiM'iitlent oncratnrs in ncarbv districts. Hccatise it employ retired officer continues subject to army I'tis. An officer who resigns ceases to be to army regulations. He .also forfeits re- : benefits. It i f e possible issues in a campaign include ; our Parliament voted for w hat I , . , , . ' .,. . 15 , , .amounted to a "pig In a poke.", f Which bear security classifications. Should r. Pearson knew what the I'ver, as a retired general or officer in in- jlt ftatUS, discuss subjects SO classified he WOUld (was not told. That surely was. f y of violation of army regulations. ; XTyar STan been ft as a civilian he would be committing no told. And because of the sharp . . , i both sides of the sini , TT , , i i controversy on 'Hofai my regulations. He would be guided ; AUantic about the ambiguous f propriety and his own determination of way m wn we were told, it large scale conversion facilities, it can utilize all grade of limber with minimum waste ami with resulting economic benefit to supplier. t . . . il helps our government : Good forest management contributes large sums annually to government ivvenue while actually improving the areas entrusted to its care. I'Wcslry olliciaU are relieved of costly patrol ami maintenance expenses yet retain full ami effective supervisory control of all such areas a I all limes. t . . . il helps yon: As a citicn of ltrilish Columbia you have a personal concern in good forest management. Direc tly or indirectly, forests arc responsible for more than of your annual income. Hut these forests will disappear within a few generations unless they are intelligently eared for like any other valuable crop. I'nder good forest management, a healthy young tree lakes the place of every mature tree cut. ""Sr. , t ft.. , 4 , .4 H,,,., , f should not disclose. a decade of holding some of the most respon-iiitary assignments in United States history, !'er has been privy to international and li decisions of transcendent importance. much should he tell of the communications Your Easter Parade J3ecjuiA foments he saw nf thr nnfpipnfes hp at- Iher "Mr." Eisenhower or "General" Eisen- kui n low; 7 lvill have to decide should he become the "'an nominee. ii!j,l,u.(, fitxutqe for DoJati I'ushult worship the Lord thy Ood." St. Matt. 4:10. CE RUPERT (DISTRICT) ' PROGRESSIVE CONSERVATIVE Coliinihhi Crllulosr i.oiii;iiy I tho first inn' of a ri'fv 'exmmling CuiKulian in, luminal on-tmisMlioti. II iiiii n fnr moiillis. this organization trill be combining timber front ISrilixh Columbia trillt natural jia.s tlcrital it es front Ubvrta to produce u trule range of fibre and oilier acetate i Will i for Comnlianx from cottxt to otaxl. (tar orogrum of coiilintiousfore.il yield ensures lasting fitll-limc employment for tlionsantl.t of Cumnliuit workers. ASSOCIATION MEETING CVIC CENTRE LOUNGE APRIL 17-8:30 P.M. o COMPANY I.IMITKD'- IMIINCi; Rl'l'EKT, H. C. Mil SMART FOOTWEAR Fashioned to enhance your costume. We've a complete selection of new designs in colors leathers and heel heights you prefer. " W-dths AA-C , i FASHION FOOTWEAR ro9ressive-Conservatives in Prince j Upert Sectoral District are requested to Uend 0 Meeting of the District Associa- t"0n fnr tu I The purpose of nominating a CLIP AND MAIL TODAY :oi.i mhi Ki.i l i.usk t o f tor the forthcominq Provincial IE; cction. Slainlaril lnilliii!, ntirumrr 2, II. l. I'lru.sp cn hip. tu'liiMif rlmrtr, thr attrartive 20-pntr illimtratefl htmUvt "The Slary of Farming." m il!rfi.! C ;iV l'roine W. D. LAMBIE, President. f , J I .