- THE LETTER ill :i Prime Rupert Daily News As i See It How to UNQUESTIONED (... . The rhe Erillur Editor, (jjXjRlNS VACATION MPN7HS MOST MOTORISTS MEET MOUNTAINS. MANY Mix MANEUVERTHE hAIRPWTURNS - ANO STECP. PREClPtCE-RANKEO Friday, July 17, 1953 NEED PROOF The Editor, The Daily News: A MOCK SI N' The Editor, The Daily News: The Dally News: OSRTHEBRSTTIwe. NOTEC I i our eiuiurial Julv J a d?- Mayor j' Harold .......... Whalen On J the lic evening evening ui of July 9, f, i a TRAVH- EXPERT CAROL LANfc OFFERS inmiHifl a, t 1 shinv nhiect Blintincr in the sun- mands an apology now that he ""iaiea 1 are niakm. , An Independent daily newspaper devoted to the upbuilding of Prince Rupert ttud'orthrn and Central British Columbia. Member lt Canadian Pres Audit Bureau ol circulation Cauadlan Daily Newspaper Association. Published by The Prince Rupert Dally Nws Limited. J. F. UAOQR, President t H. O. PERRY, Vice-President TIPS RPR TPURINO THE PEAKS W I light and floating heavenwards 1 has escaped being deposed from snowwig . . . nothing ven J OWTORTANOSAFFn:, m ore in the IMC northern IIUI Wivi 11 unj sky Vinvv office with the bungied'up v. . . I- mess i ...1 1 1 ..... , . . somen I WU.1 BCCII thnt.shlnlne obiect. the eves of he got himself into. I think he " l"mc ""'J'S . . . h i manv Prince Kunert residents, would be well-advised to leave n out Subscription Rates: By carrier Per w.-ek, 25c; per month. 1 00; per year, 110 00. by mall Per month. 75c; per year, as 00. women. According to reports In The sleeping dogs lie. This reminus me . I Daily News several suggestions Howt.v,,r, f the mayor can , i. .... : f 0N APPROACH, CHECK HI6HWAY rWHOL OR SERVICE CTATKJN FOR. as to its identity Have been ad-4how me wlwe the nt I OUain.Z, . r 1 k i vanced but Uut general .c.oiiyii made to the Minister of Munl-are jowarus," To a . 4rfTVVT CHANGeDRflftD - o-n cipuJitk'S were untounueu ana ih. ..... , -,rn CONDITIONS., i " " JI1IV Ii , ' sus seems , to point thul the . object was a rasUug builoun, from a weather slilp. ihut hi was within ll'tf'li i i.. .... . . . " 1 IltlL III TH. 11 i.t .i rilil in ffii:inrlnir Lhn trin of I ' iie,'f! Ulttt I IJ'ARK IN TURN-OUTS. DONT every man that vuluj ft Kashmir Peace Near OUT on the frontier of India and Pakistan something is happening which may mean far more for human welfare tIAW VK 1 If ri, VlfcW Aid. Darrow Gomez to Windsor, Ontario, without authority loreign mission or i WHILE IN A TRAFFIC LANE, Sim of the city council I will have r.o hesitation )n apologizing. r- mUsion work yuu will j! least U-n of the weaker J. unteer. However II tft " whether political or re , & not too onerous ami tZ paid the lades of iiecrS1' take a bai:k seat; Ui.'t a Job fui the ttciti t-tlien. With all their peculiar , F ! A pilot who saw the tiling es-jtiinated U to be about 4U.O00 j to 50.OU0 eeX high, as it- Wii ! above the. cirrus clouds, formation, liut, a ioKKUuXiiig imllooii. II imagine would have eiciJixi ;ti lone; before it reavtuul. sucji, i heights. j The. object, ob&cxyfcU by. the ! residents of Uiis C4ty .was a mock, 'sun, and no balluon oi' maiir ImadB o.bjex'4. If-tbc reldejits, ! had kiiywn, wbwt was to take The worst feature I see in the r.raccwell report is where h;? compliments the clerk (city clerk R. W. Long) In the en-Kufciuiu nt of Mr. Thomas, ihr consulting engineer. Mr. Brace-well does not realivse the phoney feutures of that transaction. A GRADE, AlWWS BtfiCK WHf EfS WITH A HOCK Oi U56. ( IF CHANGING TIRES, BLOCK rVHE&S OPPOSITE. ONE say thunk God for & f moXioii was passed to contact m id their Uii(U?.stiiiu( Jf Die Profcs-sional r.nginter s As-1 EbWAHD w. Qt k place in sjja,qe witjuii if nuiws from the Htm the .object appwir-pd, ttiey ..would most Jikeiy bve surmised thut wliat tliey were looking, at was ileaUd by the Moon, jockeying liuo position for aw bpe. when its body would be between tbe. sun and the earth, exactly 24 )iours later. HEAVY - TUArHl ' OTTAWA ,(CP) - A building was moved it lerlai was available and tne iw.i. When council convened at Mie following meeting the engineer was Already In town and engaged at that meeting. Although I for one alderman have never seen' the gentleman ho pieces 15 miles tlnwli streets recently. I.aivtf sections measured 28 li) j front for Aldermen me uujwi uiui tuuiu acru , Kulipiy acted as a in the northern sky was a niock,Mayor whalen, and sun, caused by the suns raysiMcL..an and Krueuer. He did than would even ceasefire in Korea. One of the best results of the recent Commonwealth conference was that the Prime Ministers of India sat -down together to try for real peace between their two countries. Kashmir is the main bone of contention between them. Now it looks as if Nehru and Mohammed Aii are reaching accord. THE DISPUTED area is officially called J arum u and Kaslunir. It straddles the foot of the Himalayas. Tha fabulous "Vale of Kashmir" is horth of one range but Janimu lies south. In fact there are four distinct divisions to the disputed territory, both by religion and geography. Azad Kashmir, now occupied by the Pakistan army, and which everyone agrees would join Pakistan in any really free vote, lies in the northwest. Ladakh, a vast sparsely settled mountain area to the east of the Vale of Kashmir. This is Buddhist in religion In fact owes spiritual allegiance to the Dalai Lama of Tibet. I met no one out in that part oi the world who believed that the people of Ladakh would vote to join Pakistan in preference to India though I did meet some who felt refraction , as the rays rushed ; thvir talking while they did the close to the body of the moon at ; ycheming. au act well perform- $FCRB6eniNGUfTO MOUNTAINS, v- CH0CK KAPIATOK, Tinas, FAN0LT, , TOOLS AHDJfiCK! (F, SHElT f COfVMrttoSi, Ml Cft ; tnat moment, ana uue to ine,PC. it paid off and the North atmosphere In the northern sky jern rj.c. Power Co. won. Tin close to this city. Of course this : c)ty council was out-generuled strange pnenomeiion inusi nave ,lltt rH rna,irri,na ihm reflects ;: and REMINISCES been caused by a freak refrac- ' lwt The pUlllc have lion due to the coming eclipse of lhp iln)ri.s,i(in that j am op. the moon. posed to improving the grounds. Refraction of the rays of the Nothing could be further from sun Is due to the change from ajtho truth. I simply oppose the straight line which a ray of light ,lse 0f money raised by special or heat . assumes when passing jevy for ordinary maintenance through a smooth surface Into a I WOrk until such time as a corn-medium of greater density. That I niete drainage system Is com- , v. . $ M - ' Asked how he achieved such - enhower. But he never beheld Authorized aa second class ntall by the Post Office Department, Ottawa Move May Be Wise One that the parks board finds itself DISCLOSURE unable to perform its function must be disturbing news for every family in town. It raises the alarming possibility that this is to become a city devoid of pleasant outdoor recreational facilities and thus limited still further in the variety of its attractions. Even a most cursory glance at the condition of our parks reveals that they are in need of not merely attention but a vigorous program of improvement. If the parks board action is taken because there is indifference to this situation, then we have indeed reached a state in our thinking which is as dangerous as it is sad. Perhaps, however, it is not the attitude that is wrong but the system. As it is now, the parks board is a more or less detached body of community-minded citizens who, within the limits of their budget, must contrive more, by persuasion than authority to do what they can for the betterment of our public grounds. They have given their time generously and diligently and one may be sure that, in proposing to relinquish their task, they are convinced they can do nothing else. Since this impasse has been reached, two choices remain. Either the board be freed from the position where it must beg and borrow to accomplish its purpose or the city take over its duties, implementing the work through the engineering department, as its members now suggest. Under the circumstances the latter course might be the wiser, provided the board be retained in an advisory capacity. Without some group to keep a conscientious eye on park requirements, there is a danger they would disappear completely from administrative plans. As the engineering department is a big factor in the operations, however, it appears that needed action will be obtained only if the city is giving directions. While it is true this will add one more problem to the many now on the council's, agenda, it is one that cannot continue to be handled in its present indefinite manner. To take a single example of the need for action, there is a Little League being formed among young baseball players here which promises to blossom into an activity' of major importance. Already special bleachers are being, planned for the games at Algoma Park, and formation of a Pony League for older boys is being discussed. Other games besides baseball may be eventually included. Prince Rupert cannot afford to fail these youngsters nor the hundreds of others who look to the parks as their favorite playgrounds. If we are content to let them make out as best they can in whatever muck they find, then the whole thing can be forgotten. But we have a hunch no one is going to let this hannen. natural, delicate flesh tints on Bonaparte without a frown or Ik. without a smile. Is what happened when this strange phenomenon took place In the northern sky on July 8. The eclipse of the moon took his nudes, the famous painter, ! Renoir, is said to have replied: I "I just keep painting and paint- I 1., ..!! T f.w.l lil.i ...inking pleted. Instead of hiring a couple of gardeners I would like to see a crew of good husky ditchers employed und retained until the drainage system has that if the people of Ladakh were: "s .r, 5 1 k"w lts r'Eht- entirely free to decide their own1then- . Tea drinking in Canada is almost four million pounds more annually compared with years ago. And perhaps that much extra sugar, counting the cups. place on the evening of July It I at 9:3o p.m. and was visible at (the North Pole, Oreenland, Alas-,ka. the Yukon and northern destiny they might choose to join Tibet. But that was before the Com IkfM to iMrln vp tptt . ....... u lLlk ImHtfin tea FIVE TO SPARE Some people," says the Weath-ervane editor, "will drive five been completed. The road should also be extended; the pathway's contrucled: some shrubbery planted and other all round Improvements made. But drainage must come first. GEORGE B. CASEY . Most of us have diverting rillf "' Unfortunately 1 e ' w "PUVy VPr thiS memories emories of the Coronation i munist, occupation of Tibet, city to notice It. h. (1m Spdit ovtboo.a m i btr ftoHK . . . to.""! rvm OtfihH, ioort oH.n 1 twin opca'wi. Aw.al.ntfiT lwi tlte for ai lint a. r miles and five bucks to have pay which has had the effect of tell them what making the people of Ladakh Phrenologist overwhelmingly determined ttf "if m" f f !,1T would refuse a free ntelli-protective remain a part of India, and thrfolks Commonwealth. S gence test their ow" homJ' Ladakh, by the way, is the ' , . , . .. . f ti .v,o.i,rt It Is estimated that Canada summer overseas. Possibly It's true of Sergeant Grosse of the Perth Regiment in Ontario. But it wasn't this way on the journey home . With other Canucks he was packed aboard a Greek Line ship manned by Oreek officers, Italian crew and German stewards. It was one of the wast sea $331.1 PIERRE I "CLAIRE. 1433 Eighth East. Several Cases Still Before says Jesur chi'lsrvisited in his ! ? t tha twenty nine million quarts of strawber- boyhood years, as student, maybe, of the Wise Men of the East, i rles this summer. We'll leave you ; in ficiirp nut. nil the shnrtrnlcp faring Junkheaps he'd ever been Who knows? casualties. The total must have :on. There wwre 186 Canadians, ! h.n ctir.fHnfF . 'a a Viniip horde nf or hiimlurnnk immigrants, rotten rotten V.,, .... UNDER THE settlement now RUPERT Wt AND ElECli 313 Third Ae.K Phone 644 proposed, Ladakh anl Jammu would become integral parts of Then there was the retired I major who named his summer India. home the Nut Shell. He had Azad Kashmlt would become meals and scanty facilities for a nihe-day crossing. For four days the vessel was buffeted by an PiO niile gale. "But it was a great exjier-ience," remarked the sergeant. He mljht have said more but didn't. an integral part of Pakistan. The',1 Privy Council LONDON Canada's connection with the judicial committee of Britain's Privy Council is In the same situation a the song which had ended but whose iiic ody lingered on. Camulu cut olf civil Judicial appeals to the Privy Council In 1949. establishing thut the Su- hopes the people would start calling him the Colonel. Vale of Kashmir, loveliest spot 1 on earth, would become an in-.' dependent state, with its status! The Daily Sketch of Iindon jointly guaranteed by India and Pakistan. says Napoleon, with his look of power, resembles President Eis- NORTHWARD HO! The Toronto Star prints a page Should this happy and states elorlfylng Vancouver without j prenie Court of Canada hence- saying anything particularly forth would serve as the final manlike solution be brought to pass, Kashmir would thus become a link of friendship between the two great twin nations of the Commonwealth in Asia. Busses Sought For Pioneers npleal. The Privy Council however, still hears about eight or more Canadian appeals a year, under WRIGHT TONIGHT CFPR -10:15 FuW.lkX kv CO Ml4al OKI. OMrt new, unless it is Kitnnat. But of course, there had to be some reference to the northern development now going on and "the misty ports such as Prince Rupert " Shucks! Misty Vancouver Is what is meant, only It ought to ha fog. ' ''.,; the decision that cases In pro cess prior to January, 1949, could AFTER VISITING Kashmir myself and seeing Abdullah's good Kashmiri government In action, I wrote in this space on April 6, 1951: The licencing committee of Prince Rupert City Council will try to make arrangements with T.M.C. Trans)H)rtatlon system to see if two, 'or three trips a week' be tnken to the Privy Council for appeal purpose, if .Decenary.' No oue knows oc will estimate All sorts .nf "cruisers and crtiis- , "If Kashmir and Jammu ever eirtliehtadeiopassBieFloi coast . . "... ' -J .. 4'!tj 11,1 ,K,1 Mil im. do get a UN vote on the Question' of accession either to India or SPECIALS For Saturday and Monday ? OTTAWA DIARY By Norman M. MacLeoo the number of CaiwdltrliiCiies M.IU to be heard. Official!) of the administrative part of the council court know officially how many probably will be heard this year . They can only guess how iii:u.y are to come. So far this year, the privy council has disposed of five cases. Pakistan I think it would be a sad mistake to have it on an All-or-Nothing basis, but that the four natural divisions Jammu, Ladakh, Kashmir Valley and 'Azad Kashmir' should vote as home co-'tnat-- prince -Kuperrs I '"v"" v . ... ,,, ' . u . i mand, the more colorful should senior citizens will not.be entirely yQ experiences. Just.-now cut of f 1 ' somewhere between Puget Bound The action followed a letter and Alaska there's the luxury from the bus company advising yacht Danglnn. The skipper is the council that bus servlca on capt., Fritz Stelnkraus, a former Routes 2 and 4, Eleventh Avenue captain of a German submarine, and Section 2 would be.dlscon- He's good natured and bull-tinued due to the shortage of j necked. Incidentally, supplies In i found themselves involved In fully-fledged political insurrec r sections." 75 granted leave to appeal In one case and Is scheduled to try to i competent Class A drivers. - , elude 2.000 bottles of whisky and fit two or three more appeals In MEN'S UNDERWEAR Blmi ts and tops. Now, only MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS Good quality. Give-away price Privately at that time I wrote to the key personages in Canada and India who had facilitated my trip to Kashmir, urging much I if possible. a:o. oeorge casey torn council 1 800 bottles of uerman Deer. the senior citizens would be left, t . - Among Prime Minister St. Jjiurent's most fervent wishes ts he tours the nation in search 'of votes undoubtedly is the hope that he will be more successful nationally in controlling the political situation than he is in his home bailiwick. For down in the Quebec city and lower St. Lawrence area, where the prime minister hangs his political hat when he's home, things are far from tranquil. It's putting it mildly to tions. Veteran Jean Francois P6uliot is reported to have smoothed over the situation in his riding of Temlscouata, but Ottawa Intervention is said to have been necessary In order to oil the troubled waters. The situation is described as still uncertain and the same solution that now seems stranded. He suggested that an i m I to be coming to pass. agreement be reached with the !)' bus iirm to make two or three .'trips a week to the 'home. ' MEN'S WORSTED PANTS Wool. All sizes. Real Value Try Daily News Want Ads MEN'S SEMI-DRESS AND WORK PANTS threatening in Charles Parent's seat of Quebec West and Rugust MIEILCnflrEIES 3.9S All sizes. Real values. From ... . Mailtais' riding of Charlevoix. But, Phlleas Cote In Matapedia- Matane and venerable Joseph i MEN'S GABARDINE COATS Single and double-brfa. Good weight, good fit, water-resistant. 59flJ Real value A" Rousseau of Rimouskl definitely j have been side-tracked in favor of new blood. Both have indi say that nowhere else in th! Liberal party does greater turmoil exist. The ridings mainly involved are Matapedia-Matane, Kam-ouraska, Rimouskl, Charlevoix, Quebec West, and Temlscouata. The individuals involved include such celebrities as the veteran Jean Francois Poullot, the colorful Phlleas Cote who once served on the French-speaking , secretarial staff of the late W. cated their intention of run FISHERMEN'S PANTS All wool, Perfpct tailoring. All sizes .... ning as Independent Liberals. m, b. V . M ml! MA ! All MEN'S SHOES mZ - - r Arittocrat Anniversary Viscount Melchort Special Retrv . $ yor$ old . 5 ytart old 4 yoart old 3 ytar old ; For (hess. Good fits. Lots of wear. Black and brown. From if One of the factors In the lower Quebec unrest Is said to be dissatisfaction over the pension which the MP.'s voted to themselves. Habitant voters are reported tq resent the disparity between the $40 per month which the . ordinary individual receives and the $3,000 per year BOYS' PANTS Khnkl rnlnr flnnd fnr evervda'V p 4 St GIN ' ' " " ja T-mm. m k gmi , L. M. King, and Joseph Herve Rousseau, who at the age of 75 was one of the authentic "characters" amongst the Quebec . summer wear. Reg. $3.50. Now, piflr I ROVS' PIII.I.OVI'B SlVRTi. BviAU Wnnl ft 95 5 II London Club London Dry (nw'.t on melchers members in the last Parliament. Short sleeves. Half price provided ( for Parliamentarians BOYS' SHOES J For dress and every day, good fits, $Q t to T The trouble common to all the unruly ridings has been a strongly held desire to change horses in mid-stream in other words, to nominate different candidates from the individuals who qualify. In the over-all political picture the lower Quebec situation I.n't . too , important, since the PC candidates aren't regarded as serious contenders in the ridings involved. The battle is between the' official and the. independent Liberal nominees. CABIN CRUISER FOR SALE "ELIZABETH M" Length 35 feet O.A. Beam 9"g feet. Registered tonnage )3 tons. Powered by 78 h.p. Grey Marine Lugger . . '. . Good appearance and condition. Bleeps 4 with galley, cooking faculties and water closet, Price $3600 Cosh Boat may be seen at Yacht Club. To inspect, contact Capt. R. Wilson. To purchase, contact Mr. C. S. Foreman, Columbia Cellulose Company Limited. who represented them in the t iii';M?M' j last House. The last nerwinn LOOK FOR THE NAME hom they took into their con-iridencp in respect to their new pi wis were the late MPs who bad ceased to please them. As a result, when these worthies arrived , from. Ottawa, they SCRIPTURE PASSAGE , "We live, if y stand fast in the Lord." 1 Thess.. 3:8. BETWEEN T"E ROYAL; AND BELMONT IIO'3 TW advortiMinant It not publlthed or displayed by lh Liquor Control laud er by fho Govornmont of tritith Columbia. n