walta.it.uMtiiiitMMmiiiiH Prince Rupert Daily News Army Officer Finds Answer To Heat Problem In Trenches OTTAWA DIARY Frr.jry J, 195J ::.y. As i See It v ;, I CIntore By Mormon M. MacLeod j No; Just fiurativvSy but very Ulenuly, Ht. Hon. -Jimmie" Oar- : Ht BILL IUISS Cnfl n ITnaSuil! Writer A 1 Canadian v v colonel says nance oflurr. But the Mjlrli.., a in. percent eai.r r.-'W"r onow to ib cpouuUE4 a ma KufMn and Sie-.rwn ad Ontrl Bmtta Ctuaiti. BM erf Ci.iC.i. Pr- A-juit BurB rf 3rralOca PubtuhM ii l-xs P.iin rxsy N Umraa J F. MAGOR. Fr.MJr.t H O. PEEAT. Vfc-Freldg i,rr ha, tven. worth many limes .... . . - hu wfieht m sold to the Prauie e jjjinks he's found the' hunw-made cwitn""1,1, Urmers he h -(?e- . . eleuu says t,.,.', ''1' y c:n-r---r -c. ir- fr roon pr yrr. now nn,ke. gfu t.,o h.,i Of V. uiinou 3: M.-K-e 1933 . - few- eiuiiment lacks an The podtrt-siw but formidable 1 . muumot of Ancuuurc. ho h' t iru'XjH'nsive, safe bunker piion hazard been crucf-us on bhll or u- fll ti, .l.ticr man Iuke Otto Off Beam A Continuing Challenge T h L f ttf 1- Western wiit grow on timuil ning the front-line posi a ur-a-d-y Jtfuft ewr unce ARCHDUKE OTTO still ; he arnel ui U tiiu. tions. 0 MATTER how great our economic re-f-ourc-fs, if we are sjiiritiUilly hankrujrt, the "N 1:'" f lr? ir T- "T":;r the caii 81 pprumiily Ui With uid t MMueUiiiJ! k'UT 14 -Col Jjcwk TruuVau. offirer roniB-.andnsg llc ll BiitUIion. Lt.-Col. feter H,ngi: fleer rommanUir.jt tin- ' Ullon. Kujal (.!.,(-,' Rient. says. -From any f.jniard h sition you see a low hZ of sooty smoke, iite efc aijake oailituty, United Nations jxj, ,a' Trudeau says a f,4 , stove mu.it kivi- no mine fire hjard. u,. f eotitrol. be e.-u.-u irif si k da -e and to .:.,! t.:, puvable, rve (,t!.r .' HOy Ski K (jimnl. want Bt- than 1S3 n iHJiwf , tiwt wuid give him a ruM vaiue cf ctoe to im Ui invite Canadian Indus hoes to get back the throne of Austria-Hungary, which his family lost as a result of the First World War which their government did even more than the Kai- tJC out) try Ui produie it lr tne army Bas in the years h hat brn ' A lan at trie frtint. Trudt au in lit Capital lf Hon "Jim- j own. like all the uthers here, lr.- s" c-in vaUe U Wntirn umi tru m !vcs nowaday by aercu!iure tuu boen wll tai e- staves of Uwir own mar.ufac- ture hTOVLS IIOMi Mlt ) DR. KIM KVO IIOl'X. SO-year-oid graduate in veterinary icienre from Seoal National L'n.eersity u the nuciorr our bub .k para.-itjk' at the liih Can out n Pu-id OreuiK SiaUun In Korea. The Station formerly operated or.ly as a sick bay ai)d trars-t station bat i:ife September has furtetkMied as a tit-id liO(pilal. The re.ui. has been a lhje-fifth redu".iu in the med:cal tails of the Commonwealth Division. Chief of the Divisions medical ervees la Col Morgan Smith of Toronto The arm)' rt Hum uih atti-l ammunition boxes or shell raiiijt. k nj'ttus of rubbrr and euppvr tuimr and arrew-taps. ind IrUa Um-ih Ui niake their iu. There are a varii-ty of de- et of a run -ciiinai ouuar. - ; nr wiil be bv tlte ume lljt &mJi Saskalliean River JrrisaiKm prtisret is built And Uiw evi ry uuiicatKin at the nuwn( tliat it s K'Ut K lo tx built. Bark i-i the 1S35 ei.-rtcm then Conservative prime Minwer R B Bennett nuide a heavy bid lor up-a-t froai the Prairi-s He off .-red tlie ura of tlimsm ptr year f"r a period of five y ar U be pnt upon a survey hu h would biue-priiit a plan of besldi-s ln.atlng ?l V lh pnn v stove met-Is thai uui a The Valor is a k. tvC made of thin Unit re-a rtihles a thieknh i set on end. with fi,ur i. a grille top Th baow no ! fj .4; LalUin lie says lli-. a. at least 400 Th'. Brithh Army s., 6t $b ea--h A Jujuri-n..) Ution wlls !ur y n -says they coiiid ! if., duied in Canada lot a.. Vuu out blme the n.jn fur that, een :J ine rrumoes veein iii.-n A m maiu-r of tact. Otto u not ud crup pemtriiiy. as tome of us found out when he wi Uiunr these pans around the time of the start erf Hitler war But Gtu ho bt-en mttking a speet-h in Toronto which taJcts the e4e fur dingf-rou silliness A-orti;ng to the Giofce and Mail lor January 14. Otto made two ci points in a lecture to 1JO0 M-Htir.gariani : 1. "Irifi-a will soon be con- Letterbox SUHM- aullwui'xt-d. otlwrs run All Bive Uat. with more or k'M fctth ty . Tiie Jjth Canadian flrl-J ori ufitif aliUluti rfi iiva an av-enm' of mw than ne w-vere (.a- ut burn injuries daily ' Other U-s-M-r cases are treated at , veiiauntal jiMI nou and at the; S7th Canadian field ambulance, j THE OTHER SIDE ( drwifht eoiitr..! and eiitjiimem.i: .rlts wtu h tlie Western pruv-iiirei then could carry out In ihae da.i $5ix0o0 waj stiU a large sum of money Tlr at wbout SI M Editor, U-oiied by a Cjmmuiust regiir.e ; fhe Dailv News . Prairie furnier w"re tmprevpi It !ed tlifuch th'V nitRht ; . , , , as In the early llKJOs a few pioneer men and women flM. tne B(.riI1(.tt orr-r ligaou bth-f and ) JruuV.iu .aya he thinas a lluiati-Ufciie Uiv" U Canadians UM-d in Italy during the winters of l!44 and 1S45 Is the uiuvrei. A few are available KIDtlEYMi: RobycurRc;! I we must co-orcuhate our; with courage and vision came trudrrimr over the B it that wm before Oartiner.; ; . tint tri-v'.ivr rii K:i. fl Om Hazeiton and ISclla Coola 011 irtitchewan. took to the hurflrea the Soviet' uiiinuii irau. rope so to throw on He Hid idem to elert the Liberals and trie Federal Govern i the detune " This is the pack horses same ase p. pUn which President Tru-p , . future is indeed r-ieakV These were the significant word.; of warning: -j,i-:cn last ni;hi by a newcomer to us who is U.-ttnd to have a viud part in helping many to ensure that r.u sjch bankruptcy occurs. He is the PJ'rht Reverend Horace Godfrey Watts, new Anglican Jiinbop of ti e IK'ce of Caledonia. . So matter w hat one' g nomination or faith, the arrival of a man of ISibhop Watts eminence and jurjHie is an irr.poil.iht occasion. He is htm to take his jJace amon others who are dedicated t a cause which reaches intimately into the thoughts of ail of us. Without these ministers of God to quicken our awareness of spiritual values, the danger of which the Ilishop s!ke would I. far closer to us. ; ' For those of the Church of England in this part (, the province, the arrival of Bishop Watts cannot -. tilled ,inr.ply important. Its implication embrace a far deejx-r meaning. His influence will touch iKrwtlytn their very existence and, in this broad t'til remote area where the church is to such a pronounced decree the heart of a community, his jidance is certain to have a tangible effect on litany lives. ! It is a responsibility for which Bishop Watts i.i particularly well equipped. Besides long experience' in missionary service which has accustomed hrn to widely scattered congregations, he has a persuasive and forthright gift of speech, as those wr.o attended his enthronement will testify. - He is a man of definite and unpretentious character who will assuredly allow him.-ielf no realms as he surveys the 350,000 square miles of i -Jigged countryside that comprise his territory. In his sermon last night, the Bishop listed three challenges w hich the Diocese , of ' Caledonia has already presented to him. The first came seven yar? apo when he was first offered the bishopric vr.ieh, in the interests of his missionary work, he ffit obliged to decline. The second came when he vis offered it apain last October, and the third came in the form of his consecration last week. - The third challenge is a continuing one. We are confident, however, it is not so big as the man. Their purpose was U build for :y woiLd bring on end of the story, but it still goe on. There are still a few families h-ft a very few. They were j man sid r.a ' world war. ment would do more than per lor the engineering survey; it j Uiemaetoe and their famibe a -awn mmn IB'Wh, ttnMfcf 4m4b( Mm ttmm m In lM ttM kUrt4. 11 tvt i aawilM Mir t-4 Fur lent and messes behind t Ua actual froiii Uie rtr.y pro-i vides United BUtes-made o- i hne stoves pot-bellied after the) oid 4uebee hter-lype wood; stove I future in the Ootsa Lake valley ! These r.ea and women, with promised by the Alum repre- would construct the nwviary erjuneerin work M well It was a X'id uppir.g of .he INDIA may or may not go Corr.- ! HnM A weal many people j l,M "ireuth Ami another f 8 -made kro-; Bermett bid TVie ConservaUves serrtatives at one of the many meetings that they would be settled with fairly, when the people who were actually to be flfKXied had txen taken care of think she will. Out In India ar.d wm m raasrr. ti 'nearbv. I found many foreign- :1 UemnU Oovm Lukt. SutMm ui convinced ers who were ene stove is bring exper'.menUrd i with hy C.pt iHan Can-ipbell of! iainduu. Out.. Uie brade ord- rharftd that unrtertaklrtf! a as kiiitihcere and ade simply for )-fi'fin n;iriMi Tliev warned Dodds KidnctP : India was. as they put it. "the THRM: CNILtmrN LI FT ! the voters that If they tru4d H These people have had to sit Ihey would hear nothing more back and watch with achtn about it after the polls had clos-hearts. the.r friends and rela-jed Uves move away, and their : But the voters reacted th- These aelliemeDU ke akMi the north shore of Ooua Lake, a iont lertiie valley fcin south. Life for the early settlers was next Ch.na " I found also within India a great many disillusioned tr.d cynical Indian Intellectuals who mere also sure that India would soon go Com- see INGLIS SEE! rr.uiiait community broken ud There C')hi?rvtive tw-nnru ourr arid one of hardships and heart These were the people who j aches, but they knew the court- are not enough people left to bought the giant-size Gardiner had been brought up to believe try was good and that their ef that everything that was wrtmt, forts would some day be worth m India was due to British im-i while. pentlism. When the British rai j As the population grew, roads ! came to an end. and India stlil were made, stores and post of- AUTOMATIC WASHERS And DRYtF. INGtIS AUTOMATIC WASHER $J33 iHHh Huitoinmrr) keep any sort of social acUvities deal iney nave siner m. ur alive. There are thre children reason to be dissatisfied with thv? left of schX)l aee. The few at- paekag" tempu that have been made to Here's what It has riven them kwp some semblance of sorla! Prairie Farm Assistance, life going, since those who sold $140 000 000, Prairie Farm Re-have gone, have been futile, habthtatton Wrks. WOOW.OOO; What have thee people lelt i eompensutlon lor wartime Brit-look forward to In the future sh wheat agreement. K55 00OOPO. and what have the parents to That ail adds tip to $2S5,C00.(XU offer their young children' But ii addition, the great St r.ad ail her oia trouoies. plus a f;Ces were built. A government telephone line was put through and schools were built. A community hall was erected at Wis-i tana in the 1920s, around whirM the life of the four setUemenU ' was centred. ! INGLIS AUTOMATIC DRYER . ; SJl. A'-K AKfH T tSV PATMINT PI.4V AT- .Marv mver aam ami They are left In a country as River trrtKatmn protects already CO.VTT.NTFD AND HIPPY : ircmiier as it was in latw oui '" ' ' ' " .' . with no future. There the Farmers' Institute ( These want,A!can to people mffi,n .re hirf Pem.i. met RUPERT RADIO AND ELECm Pknn. ft&A Cot U great many that the intellectuals did not even know existed, ! they became like ships without j an anchor, j j BUT SURELY Otto's statement I that India lacks "positive re-, Jigious belief" is so off the beam 1 as to be ludicrous There Is not j a single country in all the world i which Ls so saturated with re-j ligion as India. j But in fairness to Otto I think J he has groped toward and then i mis-stated a point I have tried j to make myself, j A general characteristic of are started, and the South Saskatchewan River project Is Imminent Those three projects will fewMt the tiiu.l safely over the thre fr.r BJme hHmlr.l,.,, ; buy XtVm out ran move othersi "cw " r .. v.., $,50000.000 nsture in the evenings with b ruiurp lor ineir ia:miiea. inrjj i want some compensation for what has been done to them singing around the piano. There the community dances were held and also moving pictures These few families left are ' FIRST, FASTEST IN CANADA Sandspit-Vancouver were shown, nce a week. Every REFLECTS and REMINISCES Roy year the school had iu Christ- truly the ones to be sacrificed j ma amoert there with a tree on tne alUr progress What Indian life is passivity. When stroruz wUled futures hke Gan-ltor aal the children. There was!01- ho Is going to save them' Must they be left' to spend thei dhi, Nehru or the Communist j a players' club and many a good l."'jw that the Empress of CJrr.ada has tamed and other Dieting is the art ef letting j r.c.rtv came alone they do wield play was acted for the enter- rest of their times In a ' graveyard of what has been"' MRS MOLLY M SPICER Wistaria. B.C. CONVA1R tauunent cf those attending. A ball field was made on the hail property and a good baseball and softball team was farmed among the young men from the settlements along the lake. The people were contended and happy. They raised good liaers scorched, aerophane car- I the hips fall where they may. I jar greater influence than they j r.rs are beins; Investigated.) R is tne triumph of mind oveTjwoui,i ,n other countries, pre-j '.'.J y not go a shade further ' platter. i cisely because they have the htta lcjok over our flying sauc- i push, the dynamism so different HERE THEY ARE! lrom the general characteritic ; Be rt known there ar three', r think India wiil make her TTarry Truman, returning to' Fridays the tfprteentri in 1453 J democracy live and thrive be-his home in .tiuc-uri, was given, February. March and Mov amber. '; cause the dynamic democrats, wnat't called an emotional This is merely jnentioned not; typified by Nehru, know what M'PrGRT THIl Mt'SFl'M Editor. The Oaily News: May I take a litle of your valuable space to ak tout the people cattle and went in for mixed ( PRESSURIZED 300 MILES PER HOUR O RECLINING CHAIRS Enjoy foster, smoother flight . . . Hreetvng Aoout ten tnouaana because w Ualute anyone in India wants and needs better ; farming. There -was some tog- j f Prince Rupert support the' rir naa t.antim All In T 1 of hfea; good 'ti the "L,iy. J952" on March 1 at 9 p m at the valleTf, were present oners 01 wgn- - particular, but with tne idea that , than the Communists do. paying jobs have commenced to one might be a bit superstitious : pour in. Frequentiy he weeps, arK n)oy worrying. NO. I DO NOT think that India privately. Emotional is right. . 1 wui go Communist. But that ; We were praying it would not j will partly depend on how much r:n TiTi'Tr haoDen. vet tt Is a Wea fact 1 understanding and help India n. .h. 101 tK. ..! Capital Theatre, the prcxreeds to foom soft reclining choirs . f,- j.f F" ',! W - sVv.a. ftnjjjj t-VVX eegkm was weU populated where ' ' . Tlie Credit Women's Breakfast people lived in oontentment and Club Is sponsorlni this show. of B'1 the ponorowo When every bone in your body . ' "3r k,.' ,. that .her, 1 '."L ,7TJ tv.";.- -,: . VL Z ! i which U being produced and dl- a.'. vs. "ju can k tne Lord - 'V l-r", r;j;; .w. Il I";;...- .directed by Mel Thompson and Pat Columbio'l A vtu mricoH, nave dicer. lia "u i utujujc liiF.- H"v " ji.t hi kmssu. m, vr . , . . who wanted, and more folks do not! toying with the Idea of backing i whole world! ; Bolton, who have become well t-! thi.se particularly in tfe! Chiang Kai.hek in a wild, uicie WORD rXZZ faTa! ot re not a herrinir (iptariiit is the riian in ve all he reads in UiV Mi. ; nr.rtn : eamDie to rttcotiuuer iiu. jm . - scenery This is only the beginning of ' teur snows i ' itheup umf nennle are not on'vt -I i 3 lnainereni to blind but quite MILESTONES t rom Uw l-Hen at IW svatly Wewi I Curiosity sometiir.es asks the tneaning of the Fourth tlstate. H is said to have originated in the fact that if India goes Communist the whole balance of world power will swing that the story. That year along came I I am sure that everyone who representatives of the Aluml- j attends will have a pleasant num Company of Canada, tell-1 tvenlng. ticket are on sal in ing the people, at a mass meet-i many ! our local stores,, and I ing at the Community Hall, that am abto sure that the cltlwnis a wonderful thing watt goinf to ! of Prtnoe Rupert would whole happen. They were going to heartedly wish to support our build a dam In the Nechako ' Museum, in fact we rtiouid petl-valley below the watershed ofltion to have a real Miurum In 1797. when Edmund Burke, a British memocr of parliament, j so described the newspaper pro-j fession. The three estates of the way 40 Yeori Ago Todoy 1 The Arab, African and G. Dawson was elected newlesian areas would swiftly fall t,. ...... nrlrl.nt of th. owt f Trade t 11 inaiaii ueuiocri.y uuuapocv realm . naiu ojii r.r. die vv- wuiut1'-" - , in Hungary Fully PKI HSt KI7I I) fur ynur added mfwi with rbeerfully 4eerated liiteriam , , . pleat y f roam What happened would be peanuts. Ootsa Lake. This dam would! our city, a place that will attract spiritual, the Lords Temporal, (succeeding Frank H. Mobley. und the Commons. Fourth comes j the press, because of its im- Mr. P. Margetts, new manager raise tne waver leva or Ootsa I tourwU, he of interest to us lo- Lake nearly 150 feet. The water of the Bank f British North portanee to the state. cally and also an educational centre for our children. We should have a Museum we ed his company will take over the local Burns and Company All this ... and Canadian Pacific's familiar, court service, while you fly A80VE the weather. would then run back through a tunnel to Kitimat where It would I America has arrived ht the city First Avenue in the general , lrom Winnipeg. He succeeds F. 8. lor s large I ran boast about, as Prince Ru- generate power neightborhood of Second Street , Long who has been transferred aluminum plant. A wonderful j pert has many treasures which audit n PHCiftf ' your travel Canadian to Calgary. could- do with study sidewalks. Consult friendly thing for British Columbia, as are now practically forgotten and meat market. ! 1 0 Years Ago Today Dr. ft. J. MacOonald has been named coroner to succeed Government Agent Norman A, Watt who has resigned. well as Canada. 1 before they become a thing of 30 Years Ago Today Progress! A magic word. Butjfhe past, they should be on du- play and kept for all time. Tlie staff el the city hall made a farewell presentation to W. D. Vance and Ernest A. Woods on the occasion of their retirement. We il wager the Canadian Legion, a hotel, good sized warehouses, people on foot, cars all day and half the night, mothers and babies in carriage and splashes on skirts have a few notion on the subject. there was a catch in It as far as the people of the Ootsa Lake valley were concerned. They1 were to give up their homes and A Vancouver power boat Let' all get behind this effort and see what we can do, nothing is Impassible when we make up our minds, we want something. AN INTERESTED CITIZEN. eaught fire at the Yacht Club with the loss of one lite and several men badly bumed. The sum of $2,400 was set aside by the School Board to set tip a free dental clinic In the public A BAKE CHANCE 'o r-i frtiwinr horl OS, nuit HnVC In I land. Tes, for a price, of course.1 Some of these people had lived on their land lor nearly lifty years. Could any price make up to them what they were losing? Some were newer settlers, but all were here by choice, not by in January. Prince Eupert hadjschcf' 20 Years Ago Today also quite a few. But had there been an error, such as 24 instead Ten special cans table arrived Healthy Oldster LITTLE POND, P.E.I. CF) Jam ( s Mills celebrated his 100th birthday with the remark that he had never had the doctor -in on the boat today bound for of 25, we doubt if the Vancou ver press would hove made the Anyox where a strike is ki prog-corrcction. ' t th Cranby Conanlidated Special Treat WE8TBOURNE, Man. CP) Freckles, a female deer, ls a breakfast guest every morning at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Barney Johnson. Given as a pet to their daughter, the deer gets one slice of buttered bread and two lumps of sugar. Your Locol Travel Agent ... CRAWFORD MOORE TRAVEL AGENCI Mining and Smelting plant Uhere. circumstance. They were finally paid eft by Alcan and mewed away none satisfied. They all felt more or less that they had been sacrificed for progress. This you may think to toe the his life. A non-smoker and teetotaller, he believes in the old adage of early to bed and early to rise. Phon ' Blake M. Wilson, manager of A pesKimist is a man who always notifies the local undertaker of a change of address. 1 Wallace Building Bterline Meat Market announc