y.- ' ' , - I Prince Rupert Daily Mews Pictorial Says Princess Margaret Shuns Old Haunts by Going to As I See It (5 Thursday, May 28, 1953 tr vr ' A.j I'ii n! i LONDON (API The Sunday BY .in independent daily newspaper devoted to the upbuilding ot Prince Rupert mid Northern and Central British Columbia. Member of Canadian Presa Audit Bureau ot Circulations Canadian Daily Newspaper Association. Published by The Prince Rupert Daily News Limited. " J. P. MAOOR. President H. O. PERRY, Vice-President Pictorial has come up with an plains m al! 11 Dart explanation why Princess Mar- Margaret Is J hy p garet Is shunning her old gay in the DlesL.u haunts; She's going to church which vkit. r"eht 1 1 6ave instead. ; mre n o fnioiv pltifjwll concern." been Last week iv,. Subscription Rates: B carrier Per week, Vac; per month. 11.00; per year, 10flfl w mull Per month. 75c: per year. t8.00. "While the Queen Queen has has i preparing herself for her Coron- f I r - ed a eh.n Vsihortwd as second class mall by the Post Office Department Ktlon, her 22-year-old ulster had States croons p , "" dedicated herself to the rellirtmi. th.e ..... .r"aiePi - t .... ,2.,Z: Mr Salmon Arm Shadow SALMON ARM: Here in one of the loveliest beauty spots in all the world, a .vague shadow seems to hang in the air. ' Mr B(.nneU,s aUack on J'he people of Salmon Ann are : t, plvss f,,r printing the re-acutely ware that their lovely 1 ports of Mr. Reid's sex and so WRJ U 44.., LIU" IIICl.-MI I 4I1.UIUUOII tabloid said in a front-page 1 cialism charges some local wisp- OPTOMETRY Fred E. ki , a fc .! nit PREMIER AXfiUS L. M AC-im.NAI.I) of Nova Scotia has ! attain li'tl t'ip Literal party to victory in a provincial election. He first became premier in 133. little city has become the storm centre of the entire B.C. election. They never Nought fame, much less notoriety least of all (Md they want to have the name of this city draped nt Into the limeltfiht as It was. If I am any Judge; of character, the people around Salmon feature. i i "It Is no doubt as a result of i the Princess' new and fuller religious life that the rumor has spread that she plans to enter a lellglous order after the Cor-OiiHtion," it added. Officials several weeks ago denied the rumor that the Princess plans to enter a religious order shortly after the Coronation. The Pictorial said the Princess lately has been a regular church goer and a frequent visitor to the l.oerion home of the Archbishop of Canterbury. '"m I'J.RtoncB 1'lioae Blue sjj ALVAREZ Cl'V, a Montreal fish-ralslng specialist, holds a Canadian Bowfln, one of four to be displayed at the Ixmdon zoo as a special Coronation year attraction. The fish were shipped from Montreal to Britain. Bowflns are living fossils, survivors of an otherwise extinct family. crac ker came up with this win-' dow card slogan : J Don't believe everything you ! Keld." j Hut the deeper reaction was one of burning lndignaUoii liieainst Mr. Ueiiuilt. Frank 1 Marshall is an easy going und I unassuming editor of the Sal-iiiioi) Arm Observer. He Is usually a moderate Conservative but has been fair to all parties, ! including Social Credit. But when Mr. Bennett attacked the press for doing Its duty, Mar-Uhall really got mad. Ann are just waiting for Jim'1 9 to set the chance to dissociate the name of thi.s city and this district from the charges made by their former MI.A that the schools of B.C. by "sex and socialism" courses were "producing thieves, robbers, dope ad-I'icts and prostitutes aged 13, 14 jnd 15." Moreover, so far as I can finJ i 1 .. A . Quxok Enercfy DUTTERSCOTCII nous the people are not so particular which party does the job of Ret j Hi' wrote a sizzling editorial iol which the following Is Just i one paragraph: -Mr. Bennett implied that the I press, and he went to particular j palir to include both the large . and the small papers, was dishonest in that it slanted the news and distorted the facts. No ffl V 7 LU ting rid of the MLA who brought ihem into this valley of humiliation. Like a person with an aching tooth, they want it out, fast. MR. BENNETT had a big meeting here a short while ao. But like all other big Socred meetings it was a carefully stage managed affair with carloads in Outboard Mot- implication could be further from the truth." The outraged editor went on at length to show to what expense and pains newspapers go to get accurate news reports. It was their duty and right to comment he said "the slightest deviation from It is a step towards a dictatorship." for vievdm coick rO".f; l lfftflc pcrlormontl, Hf, lur.i ond loa mi m t, j ,t &por' iHrlliootil mow Nm; low trolkflf, DoflMtg L tlg( 15 Ella Igr km gl TIIE LEACOCK MEDAL for humor for 1952 has been awarded to Lawrence Earl of London, former Canadian newspaper man. The award was for his book, "The Battle of Baltinghfts." He is married to Jane Armstrong, also a feature writer. An Expensive Venture IN RETTING his sights on the Aluminum Company I of Canada as a venture the B.C. government would take over if the CCF is elected to power, parks expert Arnold Webster betrays an ambition that has grown out of all reasonable proportions since lie assumed party leadership. Vi: We allow ourselves the hope, however, that Mr. Webster would not attempt to install members of trie cabinet as executive officers of the company. Without passing judgment on the current CCF Candidate?! in their own lines of business, we doubt that any of them are oualified to operate a multimillion-dollar organization which incorporates some of the most advanced scientific ideas known in modern industry. Presumably, therefore, he would be prepared to hire a staff of experienced executives whose salaries should make an interesting item in the provincial budget. It is possible, of course, that the venture could be put on a sufficiently profitable basis to cover its payroll and other enormous expenses and still leave something over for the province which, to make he whole thing worthwhile, would have to be more than it would pay in taxes in private hands. Market conditions and costs being what they are, however, Jhere could be no assurance of this and the B.C. public might find itself on the losing side of a gigantic gamble. Expropriation of Alcan is a king-size example Of what the CCF would like to do all over the province and the risk that the people would be required to take. Regardless of the faith one has in the industrial future of B.C., it is a tall order which grows still taller when account is taken of the fact that there would be no expansion if investors knew their projects became the government's once they were in successful operation. Since the government would be boss, the plight of labor would be as precarious as that of management because every demand for improved working' conditions would be, in effect, a political issue. Experience has proved that the public, which pays all the bills under doctrinaire socialism, is a sterner taskmaster than private enterprise. Conversely, it is less efficient, probably because there are too many people with conflicting ideas. " On the whole, it would seem that the duties of government are already onerous enough without any party looking for more. brim tinu, , cmp t&H.HKS' tlHUH.S SYKt P; f Ullrtyoom t4d uiUr- of. party workers brought hun- j dreds of miles. I But the answers which Mr Bennett gave to the indignant ; rnd naturally insulted school' teachers certainly did not help j the Socred cause. For here is i exactly what the Socred leader Cireie 12 niediuin sixd muiirt tint. U ! buttrr, ufar and rup, j I INCIDENTALLY, this is the only place in all Canada where in recent years I have seen a rash of electioneering poetry. Several people have given me election poems. Of Urn, more later. 225 RUPERT RA idid: in each muttin tin, Arranjzr ;( of 4 nut r.ra'r. on lop of sjrt.p. Prepare r!l iitii at insiruiitj nn parLj t:vJ ro'l to rM'irtitv'f 9 s 12 inches, lirunh livhiK tih iik-IiiU Tanwr ami s; r-;;l -th remaining nyriip. .A douli up lrnrtliwifccf hkt jl!" SUcr into i'J i -in h piece . I'laie uliu-, cut dtn( in inuLiu (tin. hke at iur 1- I". rnii.uKs, t'ttt Iter Htfif Knot, ft'rilr The B.C. Sutter Kefimnv I .J., I,). lt 'Mi', Vanrnuv. V, C. . i AND ElECl P.ox I'M Tr'mt u 1. Completely repudiated the Reid charges. 2. Nevertheless asked the people of Salmon Arm to reelect the man who got tht-m where they are today. 3. Completely side- stepped the claim madjf by Mr. Reid the offending ex-MLA that in caucus Mr. Bennett had "backed him up 100 per cent." This claim by Reid was verified by Mr. Shantz, another Socred MLA. - THE INDEPENDENT FOOD STORES AD On Page 10 Specifies "MIRACLE WHIP" und "BEST FOODS" MAYONNAISE At 59c. This should be "BEST FOODS" ONLY "'Vi..:. $ .&:. .; r'A tr i f f fort gairy coffee RED LABEL r n r - ,r li. DOUGLAS STUART, 66, treasurer of the Republican national committee, has been .appointed United States am- ; bassador to Canada by President Eisenhower. Mr. Stuart, vice-chairman of the Quaker Oats Company, lives at Lake Forest, 111. Clerical Milestone . SUMMERSIDE, P.E.I. (Pi A former teacher of philosophy at St. Dunstan's College In Char-lottetown, Rt. Rev. G. J. MacLel-lan, observed the 50th anniversary 01 his ordination to the priesthood. He is a rector of St. Paul's Roman Catholic Church here. . FORT V FINEST IR AND OF COFFEE YOU CAN BUY CARRY Athabaskan Silences Red Forces While ROK Troops Make Withdrawal :.rv..ofy;teaaB t 010 tBf t h,,:;..,:,w.i iei , 1 got as far as a small Island con .lLi. li.. n ijiumwf nmrjgf. -f --m J r 1 - ,. ON BOARD IIMCS ATHABASKAN (Delayed! While .Korean truce talk ;were under rway at1 Panmunjon tliis Canadian iies-stroyer was called upon to play more deadly tune with her four-liKh guns in the Chado (Gn""Dyr nee ted .to the mainland by a sand -spit ,but.,lihey reqiured:belp to Ivacuite safely. I . y ' ' IIMCS Athabaskan had been standing off Chodo when the call for help came and she responded immediately. The navigator, ll zTsmzra J.-land area. '-' It turned out to be one of the liveliest clashes with Communist tnainland forces which the Ath-'asbaskan, commanded by Captain J. C. Reed, DSC, of Toronto and Victoria, has experienced in htrr current tour of Korean Lieut. James Clapton of Victoria, piloted the ship by radar through treacherous rocks and shoals off shore. As the beach came in ' range, the Athabaskan's main armament opened fire to suppress enemy mortars and troops and to provide a- curtain of fire on the landward end of the sand-spit, to prevent the raiding party Irom being harassed during the final stages of its withdrawal. - After 40 rounds of four-inch shells the Communists withdrew to what seemed to be a secure position behind a hill, out of sight of the Athabaskan. The ship then shifted her fire to two "The action began in broad day-"fight alter friendly South Korean troops called for support during a withdrawal from the fcucmy-held mainland. The previous evening the South Koreans .had raided the mainland near Chodo Island to gather Information. They had captured a North Korean army major and sergeant and the enemy was hot ul1 T-iiipiacniiriiLs, burn The MINING INDUSTRY in B.C. is like a CAMEL! (Although it can't go too far without water) It supports many people. It covers a lot of ground. It sticks its neck out to make progress. It moves with great strides. It carries heavy burdens. BUT . . . the LAST STRAW can break this CAMEL'S BACK. HIGHER TAXES COULD BE "THE LAST STRAW!" 'In five years, 1948-1952, the mining industry in B.C. pid $114,270,000 in direct Taxes, (and many millions indirectly). HIGH TAXES DON'T CREATE PAYROLLS ... MINES DO THE MINING ASSOCIATION I OF BRITISH COLUMBIA Oh Maty o tSVeUt THutc i Zxitid m their withdrawal trail. They cing them with ten rounds each. i ,, , ?. .-, .-" -V. i; lu DDDoaD!B...i.noo....r. and you get so much more EAST-EMDERS HEAR CAPTAIN D. J. PROUDFOOT Former Liberal MLA for Victoria FRIDAY, MAY 29th at . ST. PETER'S CHURCH HALL VOTE LIBERAL JUNE 9th Room to move around, stretch your legs - Wonderful meals, graciously served and visit with friends. aboard train. Wide choice of air-conditioned accom- - Large, picture windows comfortable modation for day or night trips. reclining seats. Dependable, safe travel In all kinds of Free baggage checking to your destina- wouuitw. fion Inn in 1 lha l. WUa 7m tartl, go br train jrou SAVE oa low-CMf round frlp farf CANADIAN NATIONAL-- CANADIAN PACIFIC