l" office- .m .. all a tri. ..""Uf, Prince Rupert Daily News Letterbox tortly of the w1 th h'P-A two twr1. Tuepdav, June 17. 1952 fto ttidepeudent .lailv newspaper devoted to the upbuilding of Prince Rupert LET'S 1IK.UI A PARABLE nction strike Sti equi: Procedure 1 beu.!0", ar g hered to. Mucn kas !. , 0 and Northern and Central British Columbia, Member ol Canadian Press Audit Bureau of Circulation Canadian Daily Newspaper Association Published bv The Prince Rupert Dailv News Limited J. P. MACOR. President H O. PERRY, Vice-President BOTH SIDES Editor, The Daily News, In the Thursday edition of th: Daily New an article appeared under the heading "Union Re-Iects Offer of riimnotilsi with 1951 park, Editor, The Daily New, We all realize the task of running a newspuper In a community and pletmliiK everyone is no child's play, for it just can't b done. We realize the complex responsibility involved with crossroads in every direction. And at times, how hard It niu.st be for 'hey caifnedVerCr I" r- . , 1 1 w 1 1 - ..!.!.,. Kit. x. . . ... ----- lnan . ? W v t - W - 'Vi'-M &l vf- f? 'fan which ... " uui, ....miik r isiiermen s views. The story went on to point out the union negotiating commit f income record statem, price. Tt,e e m I tee had rejected a company offer without a vote of the niem- an editor to smile when election machinery all goes haywire und Uerslup concerned. Since th Papers lu H P-mafterJ Now thev ... . 1's the horse we bet our money op ; "iiniicauoii of tin, siorv tru fulls to come in on time. fishing companies have seen fit Tommy Douglas is still sitting vo publish a special bulletin for street distribution contalnlng mi Profits by taking' 'la' cuts In their urt Sl.i the s;nie charges. pi'leia, i latest offer win Prior to publishing this story, f . I -.i rail a in the driver's seat in Saskutch ewan and all tlie green lights are shining ahead, Just after tough luck In the eastern federal by-elections. Now B.C. has gone crazy uLso. No wonder some no contact was made with th-lMon over lust year ,.t . I union of rice tj obtain our side ! r Vml on coho two i of the story. Our membership I poutld 'or pinks' and 1 f-.i feel vru very strongly vti-,,nuiu .,... .1,1 ' and oniv in ,. .. u !f editors go on sitdown" .strikes over this one cuse ol eve hn.e u...,. . and cut down the news spa-e sided report, coining as it does ' niT-r M-.u.l 1 last year's nrU ""'i and flashing headlines to liol-ut a critical period In our ne-snevik victories. . I (foliation., lor the 1952 price Now, the national unlhein has agreements. At a meeting held been injected into politics. M:iy I Halurduy in the Canadian Le-I explain? Our society is found-! Auditorium, a motion wus ed on a two-class foundation i uiuinimously adopted- censuring that economically has ferment- i Dally News lor their action. dent this oner will -not ,1 a solution to u curr. f nit and unless the 1 take a much mor wi(? proach to the p,'uieinUJ certainly be a lle J will view with r.grt,t, 1 UNHcij ll!iiF;fiMki PROlI AS PEACOCK With brilliant plumage set full sail, kils peacock at tr.j Moose Jaw, Sa-.k., wild a.umaJ park struts ptoudly hi all hir glory. One of nature's most colorful haiuii-workj, the stately bird's feathers with their dozens of brightly -colored eyes a thrilling night. t( P PHOTO i i ed a class struggle lor the own-) Peaders will appreciate the lership of the means or life, the , problem in this industry of af- By farrier Per week, 25c. per month $1 00; per yar, 10-Gtt By mall Per montii. Ibc. per year. StJOu, fcuthorieed as second class mail by tiae Post Office Department. Ottawa Flying Over Prince, Rupert WE HEARD the buzzing- of planes overhead yesterday much more than is usual for this city, but most of the buzzing was made by just one aircraft, a small, two-seater Taylorcraft. It was the aircraft of Prince Rupert Aero Club, which with 35 other flying clubs from Victoria, B.C., to St. John's, Newfoundland, are observing the sixth annual National Flying Club Week. The local club joins the other Canadian clubs in holding "open house" this week, from July 15-21, and their objective is to interest more and more young Canadians in aviation training. Prince Rupert's club has even gone further in its public relations move it is offering anyone over the age of 18 a free trip over the city by plane ! The open house program also provides an opportunity of familiarizing the public with the club's instructional program and training facilities and equipment. All flying clubs in Canada are-non-profit organizations sponsored and directed without remu neration by leading citizens of their communities. They give freely of their time and talent out of patriotic motivation and a sincere interest in youth training and in the advancement of aviation. Many a well-known flier has had his start in one of these small flying clubs throughout the country. For more than 20 years with a proud record of accomplishment these clubs have provided the leadership and facilities for bringing aviation education to our youth. In Prince Rupert no less than 10 persons have learned to fly since the postwar operation of the Aero Club. lording a vote to every fisher . ALLIKO WOHKfcHti UNION. Per T. PAKKIN. ray Reflects As I See It Northern RepreWl tools of wealth pioduc.ion and distribution. We who control the means by which we live control our lives. The workers at long la.t have become class conscious and find that class solidarity pays off better than singing the national anthem with no disrespect to Her Majesty, our Queen. OKORUE CASEY. 'j tATfST RFfOhT In Ottawa, the other day, the passenger elevator in Parliament's Peace Tower became stuck between floors. There was a delay of more than an hour. That's not at all unusual. Often wheia anything involving peace is concerned, government machinery becomes clogged. fm Wkmimm Ht J Thursday, the third of July Is of intense intei?st to everybody in British Columbia, and you'd better believe it. 'Friday, the lourth of July, is jus a lother holiday which Canada has nothing In particular to do with. Vet there come times when July, midsummer month, can make quite a stirring start. iiiun on ti:e coast, scattered as they are in tne many inlets and villuges from Alaska to the U.S. border. To facilitate a democratic expression of the membership our union maintains 3a locals in the brotherhood and many branches who meet at tile cull of the negotiating committee., to vote on offers. At the time we were being criticized ty Hie companies, special meetings were being held all over the coast to vote on a recommendation from the committee in Vancouver and every local and I more of the Trade Agreements Act of 1951. CANADA can only regain our former British markets in IWA and Churchill branch hud at Imntt a full report of tlie latest offer of thi . . . ., . lumber, flsli, fruit and so forth ,..T, Wh ALL T know the Story ;jy making an entirely new deal From Scotland com.s the f ug-gestlon that Queen EllbPth II approve the appointment of u Court Jestei. Elizabeth I found an applicant to be quite acceptable. Her reign was one of glory and renown. Perhaps a good Uv. Jester Is what O B needs these austerity stricken, anxlou s, sombre times. , 1, I... ; with Britain alone the. linn, . I "." o a meeung Oi tut- uuy Nv.iu -...V' We ran U,u"m ..y,mr! Saturday Jn the cried wolf, wolf so often ;,noney is good with u-'iiM irlLrB,,J"1A11,,l"ortl?m: The, r-s,,i- ,)a""t an" lhoSP of J olnp'' .1 i i .f i cent We want vou to huv -ir"' that When the wolf really ; J. L..,. ,V.J ....... f..", 1 and branches will be tab- CALVIN BULLOCK Oflr award of rthe most-mentally-jumbled - copy - writer-of-the-year goes to the creator of this Philadelphia department store copy: "f or you alone! The brlda' bed set . . ." i FALL SCITS An English manufacturer is reported to have left a fortune ta a group of tailors, but only on condition that eacn will reman strictly sober. The story, presumably, Is believed made out of whole cloth. Groucho Marx, the entertainer, asked recently is he had anything to say on the subject, remarked that? it was his belief that one of the best hearing aids a man can have is aa attentive wife. . imiiiu. int., jinn jfn naut at going wrld price.. We will did come nobody would i ulatet drriile. and the majority ili Under our constitution AS I'SHAI.! rally round to save the i80'1 ster,,n r"r u,w- Divorce lists, as usual, appear Our producers would get their in the Vancouver press. As a sheep. i money in Canadian dollars Irom I am afraid that I am half, Bnn.ent-but our gov-way ' " " to where that fool boy fl- L T , 'T n ' Wh8' nlly landed. The difference te. ? f U,' .... .. . hi. i ,, Mness would he to square the rule there Is just the announcement. That's all. But sometimes there's a wee detail, such as a v.ife declining to cook anything but eggs. Some one in the neifh-Dorhood must be hard-boiled. UNDER OUR ROOF By JOHN STURDY I have been truthfully howling total balances year by year. What we could not offset by buying extra British goods or away hi this et'U'.'nn and over the radio in Canada, "Look out. ! ri'f. um ii,ntH nu tut l.t. . Appliance Repairs & RADIOS refrigerators electric irons . 6 toasters etc: FoV oil your Appliance Repairs see . look out, B.C. we are losing our . r.L,,.. .. ' ... ,,.,. A health expert says two apples a day keep a fellow better than just one a day. Perhaps . . l.. .1.. i I'"' iiwr-a on hitt nil. i,.M Tuesday, the first of July, is of British markets." But nobody stock and bond market. To be- Hamish said he would like to go into town to see the tourinq English football team, and then added: "You know,- I was once substitute for the Glasgow Gondoliers." deep and abiding concern to the I this will also keep the deripst whole of Canada, as it should be gin with, we could pay off British-held mortgage., on Canadian propel ties, such us in.r CPR. seemed to pay any attention Now, when w have a disastrous work stoppage in the woodworking industry of B.C., I !eel like putting a megaphone right into the ear of every bla .uid little employer in B.C. and of every man-jack in the mills and woods. I feel like shouting in Paul Kunyan roars: "Have you read Mr. Churchill's speech about Britain goine; broke?" Rupert Radio & Elecm Report From ... Parliament Hill By Edwurd T. Applewhcite, M P., Skeena BIG SUHGE The Irish potato famine of 1845 was. a factor in the lar?;e emigration or Irishmen to North America in following years "That's nothing," said Little Augi.;-, "I used tt play regular for the Piy uic! .Vliistle pig-mis." "What kind of a football team was that?" I Inquired. "It wasn't," said Little Augle. "It was a hockey team. It was composed of waiters and bartenders from the Pig and Whistle, one of the better bhtros Back East, and wi used to play teams from other places of the same ilk. The league gania'i were played at four o'clock in 'he. morning in the northend arena." "I suppose you were water bo," I said, with a sneering sometimes he wfuld get one shot away before he was hit over the heac. After that, no one paid much Litt'.-ntion to the puck." "What did you use Instead?" I enquired. "Bodie," said Little Augie. "Of course!" I apologized. "How stupid of me!" Quite a Strain "You can appreciate," said Little Augie, "that our games did not run the full regulation length. The. -a weren't enough Pigmies and Galloping Ghosts to go around. At the end of the first period there were only two . m A M i Wm a& Mar nntlP The question of adequate policing for the whole Babine Lake area has been one of correspondence, representation and lack of success with me ever since the summer of 1950. This has a Dominion angle due to the large responsibilities of the Indian Affairs Branch. I am glad to note tnat at last i 11 completed at this session, (and I think I may take .some Stanley Knowles, speaking to.' Unless you have read that1 speech you ignore something In- j finitely more Important tlian any wage dispute. THK BOTTOM has dr.ipped out of our British Empire lumber markets. We h tve lost Uve British market, for apples and salmon. These three items were like the three legs if a stool on ' ' . A v - credit for this) serious thoun. lne also lavureu postpoo- is bein civen to hfttr nnl!-m ''B " ana 1 am cciUlUenl we people left oa th" Ice me and the other goal-keeper. We were both tired. It is finite a strain uying to kctp flying bodies out ol the net." "Of course,'' ..e added sadly, "the league brol:.- up eventually. inflection on the word "water." "I was the goal-keeper," taid Little Augie. "Vvhe.Y I was with the Glasgow Gondoliers '" began Hamish. "Who Is telling Uob story''' demanded Little Augie. "Well, I was til i one who in that area. IhLs, in my opinion is essential, in the interests o! J : , ..., -... '.,V.ii-','",'' " Indians , and white Canadian., which B.C. prosperity sat ovei a long perioo 01 years. Bo far we have not fully felt the injurious effects of these lost rrrai km.-Fur- DCfS. Tf CONDITIONS CREATED BY THF. ARMS PROGRAM we have a TEMPORARY boom market in U.S.A. for .some of the tilings we won't get to it this time. With respect to the "Canadian Citizenship, Act, the P. . M. said that the present 1 time 4t i- nut -ontemplated that it will be dealt with at this session. Hon. Walter Harris, the young Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, made a good hnpres- ' ' ' ' alike. Apparently some United Stat.s newspapers nave recently attrib The management ol the Pig and Whistle protested against their waiters net appearing for work until two or three days after a earne." He paused, thoughtfully. "I hat was long before the 40-hour week." started" "I can't remember all the names of the Pigmies," said Little Augie, "but I do remember Joe Clancy. He played centre because he had a pair of skates." Col. S. Skeffington-Smutts used to sell to Britain. But one of these days the Am uted this country's fortunate financial position and the hign value of the currency on the New York market to ultra-conservative government policies; the are not. too weil informed. Canada's federal, provincial and .Little Aiigiv rose and stretched himself. "Well," he said, "If you wlh pardon me, I'll go and water the nasturtiums." When he had left the room municipal taxes take 33 percen. sion (as he always does) when moving second reading of the new Immigration Act. Anions other provisions it .deals with, those who are -not entiled as oi right to enter Canada but are in what Is known as prohibited classes, there is a modification of the rules now having to do with persons who have committed a crime involving moral turpitude. ThP government's sug Hamish started talking about ericans are again going to slam .hut their gates. If Taft wins the election indeed if any Republican wins the same old cry is going to go up again. -Any B.C. woodworker who takes the trouble to read the reports in the local U.S. papers of what is said at meetings of IWA locals lit Washington and Oregon must know that there Is a growing oi me national income, against 32 percent in the United States; and social welfare takes 25 per tne Glasgow Gondoliers. But the (Ret.) who was sitting across the room, sharpening his sabre, suddenly said: "My word, what did the rest of them wear?" Didn't Weor Skofes "Overshoes," said Little Augie. "Galoshes. In the beginning w.? tried playing in stocking feet, but the ice was too cold. Our greatest rivals were the Galloping Ghosts from Goose Village." "Did they wear skates," I en colonel and I heard almost nothing that he said. Somehow cent of our budget. These same newspapers would disapprove of -he Canadian National Hallways, Hamish's experiences on .the football field seemed pale and uninteresting at this point, and after a while the Colonel and I d. c. rower commission. Man. toba Telephone system, the Pol uemuiiu u irtj mil vauiM j ymer Corporation's synthetic got up and strolled out of the quired. rubber plant, Trans-Canada Air "No," said Little Augie. "but house, leaving him sitting there lores, prouue... ir.n-rp. newsprint). . THE LONQ-RANGE truth is lines and the Canadian Broad casting Corporation. If the edi gestion is that we might admit a person who has had a clear record for five years If the conviction occurs after 21, or two years if before 21, if he has rehabilitated himself. Bob McCubbin, parliamentary a-islsitant to the minister of agriculture, handled the re.sclutlofi to amend the Cold Storage Act. The idea behind the amendment tors visited Canada they'd be surprised at what they would find. once they rang in a toboggan on We stood on the steps and us. They used it as a sort of watched Little Augie applying a five-man buck, and I must say watering can to his bed of nas-it was very effective, until we -rt'ums. brought along a can of gasoline "You know, old boy," said the one night, poured It over the c"!onei. "don't you think there toboggan and burned it." are tlr0s when Little Augle may "In Glasgow" Hamish began, exaggerate just a tiny bit?" "Just out of curiosity," I in- ; - ,J 1 A day or two ago John Diefen-'oaker asked the Prime Minister to the Act Is this: Instead of Dav whether we would consider th Sng a subsidy of 30 percent as that Britain needs our lumber, .'rru'it and fish and U.S.A. does not. But Britain cannot buy from Canada what she' used to buy because no matter how eloquently Mr. Churchill phrases 't she is going broke. They call the: trouble "the dollar gap." That is Just another way of saying they are not selling to U.S.A. and Canada as much as they have been buying from . ENGINEERING . MANAGEMEHT . FORESTRY German Police revision of the Criminal Code at has been done formerly, in five this Session. Mr. St. Laurent Payments, one ol 15 percent, one said that there has never been f 1 percent, one of 4 percent and any Intention to rush It through two of 2 percent each, will now the house. It is not something . be Paid, after the completion of which has to be passed at thLsje project, a fubsidy of 3314 session. Mr. Drew also pointed j percent In one lump sum after out that there may be several, the project has been parsed by considerations to be borne In t,,e officials. Stem Revolt BONN, German'y K Five thousand German Communist police appeared yesterday to "U.S.A. and Canada. So they mind before finally concluding terrupted. "Were there any Gal-loping Ghosts aboard the toboggan when you burnt it?" j "Only a couple of substitutes," , said Little Augie, "and they! didn't matter too much." ' "Still," I suggested, "the team's manager must have been slightly annoyed." "He was on Uie toboggan," aid Little Augie. Hamish tried to put In a word again, but I got there first. "In this early morning version of Canada's national sport," I asked, "did you by any chance use a puck?" "Well, in a way we did," said Little Augle. "You see, Jim Clancy who had the skates must sell more or buy less. But why Is Britain not selling more? On April 9 the British Embassy in Washington officially protested to the U.S.A. They cited chapter and verse to prove that when British manu the new code and asked for a full consideration of all angles. The Prime Minister said he knew of no reason other than the time re In Friendly Hands OSLO Kb Officers of the Norwegian National Guard recently completed a training course at quired to give the matter careful coastal batteries in the Oslof jord have stamped out a wildfire revolt in more than a dozen Soviet zone villages where East Germans protested their eviction from the Communist frontier security belt. Fights between police and villagersat times reaching proportions of pitched battles-have been going on for five days. Scores have been arrested. More LIMITED . i A study In the house, that would .TlSerm teft ato.t " facturers recently lioan to cut heavily into the U.S. market the U.S. manufacturers successfully FORESTERS ENGINEERS iU put pressure on the American 811 WestUaslinqs. Vawfiouver 1 ,BC. government to EXCLUDE the British goods tinder the emerg would face-off at centre Ice, and than 30 casualties are reported. ency powers given in Section 7