Prince Rupert Daily News All Aboard 4 j VU mi Saturday, September 5, 1953 'o.w.-3-'U m independent daily newspaper deroted to the upbuilding of Prince Rupert and Northern and Central British Columbia. Member of Canadian Press Audit Bureau of circulation Canadian DRlly Newspaper Association. Published by The Prince Rupert Dally News Limited. J. P. MAUOR. President H. O. PERRY. Vice-President 'fctibpcrlptlcu Rates: " mv rerrlpr .r v.vk rjer in.mt!i. il.OO: Der Year. tlO 00. Saturday Sermon "A SIMPLE PRESCRIPTION" uy mall Per month, 76c: per year, tfOO. utnorlzed as aeoond class mall by tl?e F: Offi;e Department, Ottawa By SENIOR CAPTAIN CYRIL FRAYN of The "Come unto Me, all ye that labour and and m k ... InHan onH I oilll nl,,. luU.. . . I t n . ill; i s ?! to r ' ; l i xjr v. - ' 1 4 : r h i r ( i A - i " "I - li V , , i X j LiaijiJ A a ,V. hju. B.,c..T.u rest, i ake mv upon you and learn c(Jie; for I ara m(iw lowly In heartr and ye jmall find rest uno, souls."-Matthew lli lte, 29. " It Is true today that many are trying to find m yount people, the middle-aged folk and the !M L are seeking. Some are satisfied and we ask i A polirtman "who leans 'against the "Wall for a 'nap may awakento find a tobac-ronist has 'painted him to resemble a wooden Indian. That Senate boat was found by L C. Meyer, clerk of the Senate, in a cobwebby corridor outside the Senate divorce- chambers. Before photographers could get pictures of the boat, it was removed In n hastily-summoned truck. The boat was being built for Assistant 8enate Clerk Rudolph Larose by carpenter Bill West. Mr. Meyer said he presumed the work was done in the carpenter's time with materials supplied by Mr. Larose. However, there Is going to be an invenliKalion. The results of the, Investigation may rock the country. It may be discovered that the parliamentary library has been " converted Into a playroom for senators' greatgrandchildren. Detectives will catch the little fiends In the act of cutting priceless lnw books Into paper dolls. The Petawawa horses, smuggled into hiding while the election campaign was on, will be found stabled in a forgotten basement room, happily grazing on back numbers of Han-surd. Somewhere in the attic the investigators will come across a 88-year-old Senator who was misplaced in 1951. Two coses of playing fast and loose with public property 'weie reported recently. In Winnipeg, a woman painted a fire hydrant brown with a bright "green trim to match the color of her house. In Ottawa, a Senate carpenter was found building a boat for a Senate official in a little-used corridor uf the Senate. The paint Job on the fire hydrnnt didn't last Jong. A stubborn workman appeared with a ran of red paint and spoiled it. 1 Officials of the fire department told the lady that she could paint the fire hydrant any color she liked, as long as it was red. Even this concession was a fairly generous one. The Winnipeg lady and other free- lunce hydrant-painters will have at. their command hues ranging from McCarthy pink to Moscow scarlet. If none of the shades of red matches the house, there is one more wy out: paint the house to match the hydrant. Give the amateur painters an inch, and they are likely to liike a mile. Next thing we know, mail slots may be painted to resemble sharks' mouths. A garbage collector who lingers too long flirting wan the widow Riley may find his wagon decorated with candy stripes to match the awning of the house next door. the question, Why? and the I ' PIhllk. . v answer comes to us, "They have cleansed made a eomplete surrender of remedy, a doctor themselves to Ood." Sorry to say stand but Chrisr, p! there-are many who are dissatisfied and the reaspn no doubt It that they have -made ho surrender. The Prescription: "Come. Take My Yoke. Learn of Me." m so aimpie I child stand. Come-Tab. Our scripture tj me. Does it not n, are too far away (rot haps the lawful oc 4 life, it's duties and How simple, mid yet how many miss the way because they feel the Oospel Is too simple. No doubt you know' the Bible THE OLD INDIAN ART of moccasin making Is still one of the leading crafts in New England. The soft, handmade footgear is tqps in comfort and utility. Here, Robert While of Old Stur-bridge Village, Mass., sews a moccasin with cowhide thread. tolls and toys hn y engrossing. To ten renouncing of all it, be brought Into Ha complete surrender j. AP Vrifer Tells Inside Siory Of June Revolt in Russian Zone story of Naamaji, the King of Syria. He was a great man but! he was a leper. In his house-1 hold there was a little maid and she was Instrumental In getting her master to go to the place of Ellsha. The message that Ellsha gave him was, "Oo wash In Jordan -seven times, and thou shalt be clean." .Naaman was very angry and he turned and went away. His servants suid, "If the this peace that o : seeking. "Take rcf i you." So often the t of our lives must t The Saviour's Will tr self-will, Hii purpoet come the passion of a. the wooden yukt r Romanian Stores Have More Food ugly. "To the prison," came the cry from the angered crowd. It surged into Beethovenstras.-.e and clamored at the closed iron j unites the atresig Ji I prophet had asked you to do I some great thing, thou woulds't Keep The News Alive LEAST twice a week if not of tenor well-meaning AT citizens stop members of this newspaper and inquire with a hurt look on their faces, why a certain news item wasn't in the paper. The question invariably is long after the paper has gone to press or several days after the incident they are referring to has happened. The pained expression is thereby transferred to the newspaper man's face because nothing cuts him more to the quick than having deprived the public of some worthy item while it was still news. But what really hurts is that the well-meaning citizen was in all probability at the meeting in question, or saw the incident, or was a member of an organization that did. something of interest to. the public and didn't mention it to the newspaper either before it happened in the case of meetings or when it happened in the case of an incident. A phone call, a word in advance and arrangements could have been made to get theletails and thereby please the group concerned and enlighten the public as to its good works. We are not making excuses. With a small staff we endeavor to get as much local news in the paper as possible. Major meetings are covered but with the fall coming up and organizations and associations starting their winter season it is impossible to be present at all meetings. That is why we ask the citizens to help make The Daily News a bigger and better paper of interest to the people in this city and district. In it, throughout the years you should see a record of your life. From the time you make your appearance in public life in the birth notices, through the first race you win at school, your graduation, engagement, marriage, your promotions and successes, your trips away from town, your return, the birth of your children, their successes and eventually your obituary, you should leave your mark in the only record of this city, our daily newspaper. With news items, so the. history of this city is written, forever in printers ink for the generations to come to see. Therefore, we ask that if you know something of public interest that is going to happen, is happening or has just happened, let us know. Help us get the news while it's new, and you'll be helping yourselves and your city. But Prices Too High For Workers a common task so I grill of the entrance. Red poii' e have done It but because it is so ; Christ means or. Bv RICHARD O'RFGAN other than the bare rations ap- easy you do not -want to cto it. strength with His. I Prom numerous closed-door interviews In Leipzig, behind the Iron Curtain. AP writer George ' Boultwood has been able to get perhaps the most authoritative stcry yet obtained on the revolt last June In "that Russian zone city. Boullwood was among a lew Western correspondents able to get a visa to Ro Irom Berlin ' to LelT)lg In connection with the annual Leipzig Trade Pair. The tdltor.) By uEORGE BO'.'LTVVOOD LEIPZIG (API A new Communist propaganda office stands in the market place of poked macnine pistols through the grill. A dozen brawny workmen lifted the iron barrier from its hinges and smashed It. Th- Our verse again, -k BUCHAREST AP Red Ro- : neured In tne markets. ri ne words came to mm us a mania now appears to have fol-1 Recently there has been white I lowed Moscow's lead and initlat- bread, more meat, sugar and f J f MVJAM ! If we place our-: crowd rescued the three arrested ed a new economic policy to vegetaoies, ana many, out not mi im iij tllll UUII men. hands and take Hit us we cannot iai! t Him. I pa lavo inn muiiuB ipiih iiii in Nil. Liir iiiiin .ui i ui . n,,, - i Then German police began , ,8 m 000 pe0pie kept in near- j disappeared. Shops have more firing lrtto the crowd. A young skivery and hunger for six years .clothes, shoes and consumer I girl screamed, clutched ilvr As i the Snvtet Union. Stalin's Items. I Discusses B.C. Rail Problems I) I RECTO Sm'lree In ll rlflrrtr ml ! w p m. huM I'M MifWl we VICTORIA t Railway prob siomacn ana leu oieeamg wine the t)aln seems to have brought ground. Three men dropped. j rf,aUzation that it Is impossible The crowd, angrier than :ever, ! to continue hardships and ruth-set fire to the Red "National I ieS;; economic pressures without Front Pavilion." It -ransacked I running the risk of a Berlin-like the Communist Free German I explosion. Youth offices showering files i Diplomats here say the Ro- Lepzig today. A small metal plate by the entrance says, the building replaces one "destroyed by Fascist provocateurs on June 17, 133. That is the memorial to more than a dozen persons who los: their lives battling Communist I,I IMV till Jt isn't a situation, however, where the average Romanian worker can buy much more food or clothes. They are priced way over his head. He spent all his savings in a currency reform scare, apparently Inspired by the government, a few weeks before the poods appeared. 4lh Ave W ti tt.'J Holy Communior. 1 lems In British Columbia were discussed at a meeting between government officials and Donald Gordon, chairman and president of the Canadian Natlorial Railways. Mr. Gordon said at a Joint press Sundar Srlwol ' Canon B.U1I 8 fttcra and papers out the windows.. A j inanian people were desperately Communist youth's blue shirt i hunerv ud to a few weeks ago.. Btflot was publicly burned They were sullen, despairing and even a little unruly. Consumer ponce ana Russian tanks or before Red firing squads in the mass uprising here last June. Today the city is crowded hkt mm Sth Aw 1 M ! At the shrine commemirating the defeat of Napoleon in 1813 , goods were few and high priced. Mlnlnwr: Rn tut speakers harangued the crowd. The Communist-s ponsored Up came the mighty roar of "Fourth World Festival of Youth" "we want freedom!" The crowd this month saw the beginning of took up the refrain of "Deutn apparent change. The. Red conference with Premier W. A C. Bennett following the hour-i long meeting that It was thei "joint hooe" of the CNR and the j provincial government to find a ( means of providing rail service to B.C.' Peace River area. Both j had a "common Interest" In the j 4th Ann Rev. t A T with visitors to the annual trade fair. Dating back 700 years, this ancient European ! lair . goes on, though regimes come and go and wars sweep over Central Europe. Portly Communist Mayor Schiand Cber Alles," the old na- government dipped Into Its re server in the apparent hope of a tional anthem. ood 1953 harvest and some food (tlS Otb Aw district. Mr.lj Neither Mr. Bennett nor Mr. Gordon made specific mention Hans Ulrich is a busy greeter. Hiy looks more dignified today than he did June 17. Then a crowd of strikers dragged him the province-owned Pacific Great Depicts History TRURO, N S. P One display at the Central Nova Scotia Exhibition is a "walmural," a large weaving a homespun wool de Fnart SW Hr Cunt nd n out of the city hall and made Bundny Schom l Cheered by thousands, the marchers headed for mid-town, overturning police cars and routing the occupants on the way. But by now the Russians had moved in. Nine truckloads of Soviet infantry cruised about the crowd, soldiers firing In the air. Tanks, their ugly guns revolving, lumbered forward. Several persons who would not give Eastern Railway, which Premier j I Bennett has been trying to turn I over to the CNR and the Cana- dian Pacific. However. It was believed much 1 5 him march at their head.'Round his neck was hung a notice say picting the history of sheep in ing: IKh Avcrnw IrlP Pastor: R. " , We demand free elections. of the discussion hinged on the Down with the government." Nova Scotia. It was designed by Mrs. Douglas Murray of Jolll-more and executed under her direction at the handcraft centre. J ate- in Outboard Motors That was one of the incidents Sftl l REFLECTS and REMINISCES told to this reporter by w:t-1 nes.ses, who for their own safety C3ay way were crushed to death. Emboldened by the Soviet Bundny Srhooi Evrntiif rr?" cannot be identified. future of the 422-mlle- railway that stretches from Squamish to Prince George. Thepremier said recently that the province would consider allowing United States Interest to take over the line if Canadian investors continued to show a lack of interest In the POE. more glaring ,ii,rla Scliool l Daylight saving for 1953, end- They only seem iiig at midnight September 26 is than our own. Mi.rnlnK Worstip ( rtoo nth Are troops, German police attacked.' They fired not in the air, but into the crowd. For the Leip-zigers, that was the bitterest j thing of all. , i The arrests began that nigh'- ' Possibly 250 Leipzlgers ,wer put behind bars. Reports "received in the west said at least thne ! for tti provdvit catch yew can mokm . . . gat tarrife performance, aU nthiag faa-turet and law coet In tha 5 h.p. ttto Sportltar outboard motor. Neutral Clutch, (low IroHina,. flaihing ipead in a dektxo, aconontkal motor. See It NOW. Own dek 194 Elto far at -A POSTtftft not needed in Dawson, Prince Rupert or anywhere else in the north, but as far south as Puget This is their story of the day: Western radio reports from Berlin of the strike by bulldin;? workers in East Berlin's Stalin Allee June 16 was the spark that set off the explosion here. Next morning, no street cars were running, shopkeepers were b90!"djng'uP their windows and SOMETHING TO HEED One of the major jobs crying tc be done by the newly-returned Sound its adoption is reasonable Faithful Churchgoers' WADENA, fiask. . Wadena Finr Pre$bytefi OMUCT. CMUOM Under the changed circumstan- government at Ottawa is a com- aftle)aa....s...uli WJ -.-vljlois fair to become kiwwri as the fwiMtur Leipzig men 'fell fatyrthefwfca ' firing squads. i ! ces, a solLd hour of more or less pletc overhaul of the Senate, clear daytighfc can be mufte us tobservesthe- Fifianclaf P'ost. For of. half a century there has been endless talk but not a single ZJ.uuu woisers lrum uuuyu;g factories were on the march. Ten abreast, arms linked, three columns of men and wo "town of churMes." wun a popu latlon of less than 1 .300 the town now hat- eight churches representing various Chrlstfan denominations. " ; j i j RUPERT RADIO AND ELECTRIC No one knows where the fie3 definite step has been taken, go in the winter time, but it does i There is plenty of real work for seem a great pity they do not go ; an upper house. Given a chance Now it seems calm, but the arrests are still going on, arid beneath the festive air of the trade fair, the city seethes with resentment. Despite the presence of foreign visitors. East German army squads openly display machiae pistols, and police patrol only in pairs. The Soviet troops are the Senate could be very there in the summer, as well. Jenny Ltnd gave her first concert in New York in 1850 at the age of 29. WHERE CRAFTSMANSHIP COUNT3 . . . COUNT ON US! Dibb Printing Co. COMPANY men, clad in working clothes, converged on the railway station. At first there was a festive air about it. The massive procession wound through town, ripping down photographs of German Corn- 313 Third Ave. W. Phone 644 A Liberal still calls a Conservative a reactionary. A Conservative, of course, insists on ca!l- IN ABLE TO SEE! Punch and Judy shows in Brit 1 ing a Liberal a Communist. And : air may be boycotted, because i munist bosses. They ignored the not much in evidence, but Leip- First United Church Sixth Ave. W. and Musjrave if you must say something or what is known as the Humane I statue of Stalin in the market zigers say several battalions are liihfi in Jmim other to a fellow, right to his : Society feel such shows will have place. in the area, ready to move aguln this generation grow up believ Then things began to get if necessary. We extend a to visitors to or -.i. In face without him feeling seriously offended, Just say he's an ing it's OK to beat up the wife tttt kAiiriu i and become little brutes. We may HOME TO ster: Bf- Mini Mrs Organists: EUROPE FOR CHRISTMAS! ...j tnhni-' well despair if, in the future, Punch and Judy fails to arouse screams of children's laughter and deep chuckles of adults. There Is such a thing as Innocent Cemetery sign in South Bethlehem, Pa.: "Persons are Prohibited from Picking Flowers from Any but Their Own Graves." Plan To Spend LABOUR DAY WEEKEND 11:00 a.m. Mornlnj Worship. Sermon: What's Your Racket? 7: SO p.m. Evening Worship. Sermon: The Joy ol Achievement. COME AND WORSHIP SUNDAY SCHOOLS At First United, Beginners end Primary at U a.m.; older " pupils at 12:15. At Conrad United Hall, all at 11 a.m. SUNDAY, SET' Mornlni W""1"' Sunday WJT. u.nister at fun, thank God. But it is never 2nd Annual Chrtstmo ; sailing iMAASDAMn... is seen by underwitted soreheads. direct from HALIFAX When the Second World War struck the Pacific, it overwhelmed the Philippine Islands. It was then, and there the seeds of T vrf .v, :: T.J" V LESS AND LONGER A recent check-up shows the average dally wage paid male help on Canadian farms is $5.00 IN vltp board. Without board it is death were spread for General Jonathan Walnwrlght at Coriga-doi and recognized as a hero. He was the first. Others wefe to follow. Unconscious for days, he died this week. FIRST BAPTIST CWH $5.23. Chances are, years ago, the bold ranchers slumbered shorter and worked longer. GCETCHIKAN The faults of others are like headlights on an automobile. (From New York Nov 7i) to Southampton, te Havre, and Rotterdam for oM efepe. PerionoHy eonducled'by BART MENAGE Manager of Holland America's Winnipeg office, ond your genial host for the voyage. He wit I takedreof oil travel arrangement on the Cominem-ond wilt see thot everybody enjoyi o hoppy prelode to Christ, mos in the homeland f -Other personally conducted Christmas tailing from New York , RYNDAM o.. u to Ireland, fcngfond, France, Holtond. For-action try Classifieds twttv "sr$m i - ".Hit" FOR COMPLETE RESERVATIONS CONTACT JOIN family and friends in the homeland for this joyous, festive holiday mason! Sail on ships designed for comfortable and economical Tourist travel famous for good food, good service and immaculate cleanliness. Here you have virtual run-of-the-ship privileges at low thrift season Tourist rat of $160 up. First class (39 passengers) from (225. OI K KG11MR SF.KVlr- SUNDAYS ?prt0 10:00 a.m. Intermediate, Senior, and yoU"i(fii partments of Sunday School meet. years of age and upwards. 11:00 a.m. Morning SerVlcs. npeinnf5 12:15 n.m-Sunday School, for Nursery, t .. and Junior Departments; children age. 7:30 im. Evening Service. MONDAYS -or 6:45 p.m-Chlldrcn' Church; chlldie" 8:00 p.m. Young People's Society. . TUESDAYS 7:30 p.m. Bible and Prayer Hour. - CITY TRANSFER LOCAL AND LONG DISTANCE FURNITURE MOVING Phone 950 CRATING PACKING STORAGE First Avenue and McBrlde Street Book EARLY with your Travel Agent. ELLIS AIR LINES ...,- TPhone266 Office Opp. Post Office IT'S GOOD TO WUN I KfcAL TOKUNIU WINMIftV, VANCOUVER weium ship". 591 Burrard Street, Vancouver 1, B.C. PA 6431