: mt a a we t a i it yd iy ate ye byl 4 Ve ies they is of i! ag . a ah Ba ae TIA 5 a —- ee a 2 eS we meet epee ee eantee er eke neree, - 5 ee 7 ie eee a — ne =a ies iis ee See = Lar Mand Dis ent Th ME 7 mmeen Pring peice Wate Ned Saturday, April 16, 1955. . - { An Independent daily newspaper devoted ta the upbuillding of Prince Rupert | > and Novthern and Central Aridsh Coiumbta, : Momber af Canadian Press -- Audit: Bureau of Clreniallons Canadian Dally Newspaper Assoctation. Published by ‘The Prince Rupert Dally Nows Tdmited J. F. MAGOR, President, * Bubseription Rates! ” . Hy carrier--Per week, Aer per month, $1.00; por year, 110.00 : By mall--Per month, Te: per year, $8.00, Post Office Depatimoent, Ottawa 20 OR remem eee et en ' ’ md gas i CuHON i van dae Authorlved as seeand class mail by the — - ee ee Aen tet eerie e Important Meeting | PRINCE Rupert will have a special interest in the — Canada to be held next week at Winnipeg, Not only will matters of significance to B.C, fishing he discus: | sed there but it wil be the first such meeting since the Council was joined hy it most recent member, the Prince Rupert Iishermen's Co-operative Associa- Lion, Although the Council is celebrating its 10th hirthday, it has a distinguished history that actually extends hack 40 years, Its parent hody was’ the Canadian Fisheries Association which was establish- | ed in WB ata time when no national commercial | fisheries or fish trade body existed in Canada, Even | then Prince Rupert had an interest in the organiza. Lion, for one of the first directors was H. 5. Clem. | ents, M.P., of this city, Tater Col, J. W. Nichols, | formerly of Prince Rupert, served as president. Those who supported the original organization — were leading figures in the fish industry at that time, Some of the firms which they headed have vone from the roster, others have been absorbed, while a few huxe expanded tremendously in the course of the years. Though lacking resources for more extensive work, the Canadian [Fisheries As- sociation fad a record of impressive accomplish- ments in promoting the progress and welfare of the industry throughout its 30 years of activity—not the - a Ministry of Fisheries and a complete reorganiza- tion of the Department of Iisheries, lor its coming meeting at Winnipeg the Coun- cil has a program of wide importance, Among the ° speakers will be Fisheries Minister James Sinclair and H. §. Gutteridge, poultry division chief of the exxperimental farms service at Ottawa. Mr. Gut- ter'idge will speak on “The Use of [Fisheries By- Products in the Poultry and Animal Industry.” An- other subject will be a report on thé Council’s three- month test public relations program. “It is a meeting which will be watched with close attention by all those interested in Canada’s fishing industry. {tls not neceasary to be driv-' ing fust to have an naecident— but It certalniy helps. REFLECTS and REMINISCES An Ohlo {father of twins has declared his right to feel proud: ls well founded. ‘heirs, so to speak. However fast the world pop- ulation grows, there are ‘Still, veeant seats in) Churches — Brandon Bun, Hoping that farmers and con- sumers will agree about a farn is about as unrealistic un ap- proach ak expecting av small boy, und his parents to tyke the same view of what's a proper diet. Provinclal secretary Hon. W. M. Nievle of Ottawa says that from his experlence as a trial lawyer, he would rather have a jury of slx people--all awake -- than a jury of 32 with two or three asleep. And whe pul them lo sleep? A village in northeastern In- daa reports an annual rainfall of 60.654 inches. That's almost: six feet of water, All we can: ‘think to say about this ts, think: -of the shovelling ifso much mol. sture had fallen in the form of snow, ee ee You can mail letters on a. street car in Amsterdam, Hol- te travel all the way to Amster- dem to mall a letter? According to most physielans, a fat person who won't det is also fut-headed.- Wand Pieked, IHS NERVE EXMAUSTED Every so often, somebody asks or Can Tread Vt ‘Men, you can lve ne Jong. f the’, qditay, beylgerently, “Why. | women... SHYS inated AR VIVA Mr all the mows sts . i! ithero's nothing we'd ike to da’ “ -more but frankly we haven't got ‘iy Informed of all selentifie the nerve. We simply are not| fitines which show that women cations enough to tell where: live longer, take more exerelse, foMe minrried men are when we wotry less, ent less... and ol] see thelr cars parked at an ocld | Uhacrest of ft. So men... the spot at an unusual hour, or: pith (oa longer Ife Is open to Where some sweet young thing , yall fe whén her mother thinks she's, " rat the rink or a social hop, or What cprominent citizen gol “drunk .and mada a nulsanee af ‘himself at the dance, or what! i mother alts in the beverage room ; renkons thit forty + two biltlon | While’ her children run they hegy cans have heen produced tn jHreots at all hours, tho. last 20 year, And a roadside | — | survey tndietes that of thi) A man should never let hs MimMber, 297 have heen plnced I wit catel: him flirting, She ree trash barvela.--Blrattord Beneons/ members she enught hin that Vopald. OWN og | sermeen -eieet Examiner, We have, over the yeuls falthfully kept our read- Will Sir Anthony find his new jolt wu Garden of Ren, ‘ te ee trod fn American trade publiention _—a : Maternity Event Apel 17th to 23rd We have many maternity garmonta to clear at loss thon Mh prier, Including gab. Jnckets, dentin skirta, amocks und EF iproaaen, ~ 4 " _ MONDAY SPECIALS Maternity SUPS cise ossecneee connie 98 4 ; Flannelette Diapers sess 9.49 for the union. to purge Communists or @ in Canada. , we woot Co. ae my f oe a a . ye . \ soy ta Unien Blunder TRADE unions are playing right into. the “hanils of! their own powerful enemies when they dq’ ‘such! 10th annual meeting of the Misheries Council of ‘foolish things as those which followed the suspension: eq about a pleture of a girls of George Gee, business agent of local 213, Interna-! legs. tional Brotherhood of Electrical Workers.’ | George Gee was accused by the oe ‘international heads of his wnlon 'iy9 final total form of ¢dinplete of carrying out pro-Communist unionizatton. It means that no detivities. Following the proce-. man can hold a job In that: par- dure laid down in the union con- ticular industry unless he .can "stitution, Mr. Gee was expelled net AND HOLD a union card. from his post as business agent, ¢ union heads deprive union He reported for work as a regular lineman for the B.C. Electric but after a few hours was laid off by the com-- pany, because of protests fron the union heads that Mr. Gee. wis no longer a union member tn vood standing. + + Ry lit 1S small wonder that the ‘orien handled such cdses lin B.C. rank-and-file members of the (and the way they have beenmls- union concerned went ona brief pendled in the Electrical Broth- “unauthorized” a this gross exhibition af injustice: ‘phe B.C, section of the. IWA Unions of course have a right won an historle fight -abiinst ei their former Communtst leaders. . mere pro-Communists from of- They threw out the Whole gains, lure, ‘fees In their organization if iIniwith a shattering bang?“ -” m logs :the opinion of the entire union But the new Jeaders of the -membership it Is not in the best ‘IWA did not attempt to do, any- interests of the unions to allow , : . han. Communists to keep these jobs. ‘thing so unjust and indéed out ' ; . . But no union has the subse- least of which was its lengthy campaign to establish quent right to further persecute or penalize the ousted official, to the exteng of forbidding him : to earn his living and the living |: of his children. ‘ Any such procedure wou a gross abuse of the principle of ., , the closed shop. wright of any union to say that persisted, it would surely lead to: . ence atan the agitation for passage of fed- iP? (lepries of his regular, job, cral and provinelal guarding every Canadian indl- ‘vidual against any such gross. persecution. walkout Indeed, laws sa t & + THE principle involved In t rast . George Gee case Js of extreme , ‘importance In Canada right now. news Within a few months there will |drowned, one was missing’ and: Pe .probably be a merger of the two "pictures of any animals! What ‘creat trade unlon organizations All down over the years, unions have fought, first ‘for the right of collective bar- ‘vaining, and later’ for the union shop principle. “me I FACHERS REJECT P LAN o ° se in report wha append." FOR JOINT WAGE GROUP. : VANCOUVER (@. — B. turned down a proposal for a joint wage negotiating comm Th2 proposal for a joint committee of BCTF a vchen Trustees association; sent In by West Kootenay Councl), | rejected In favor of adhering to the old plan’ of, lenehets “7 dealing directly with trustees in thelr districts, |. a , Gordon McLean of New Denver called for a "th defeat” for (he proposal, which ft got. Sloe : Ind, we are told, But who wants” Go As tf See ey Elmore P, hifrodl . after torhood. as. v Id be, if | fe- Quaitty, Beauty, Economy, Protectle one product, All are present in Turnall be palnted for protective purposes, Surf Sh deep cypress wood grain—wavy or siral remodelling projects, See your Building. nearest Atlas Branch’ for descriptive maltel.,cnd ’ ATLAS ASBESTOS Comp MONTREAL = TORONTO MINNIE ‘ "y nd aN fi =. enh. oo” 1, All -nowspapers (et com- Rieter fala tT venembe ‘ Maints, I remember a week ova Western paper when there was a run of complaints about {he pictures, One reader did- n't Ike a pleture pf a man in’ 4) bathing suit.” The reader "thought the man had too . many muscles, and made the paper look like the -Pollce Gnezette, ° , } Another subscriber complain- 1 ‘There was a girl at- tached to them,) Someone else j weakens = obfected to n pleture of some | The so-called “closed shop” is dogs In the paper, “Dogs tear my prize plants + to confettl, and use my yard as a cemetery for bones,” the man sald. “And you have the | “nerve to run pletures of dogs. The next time you publish a | members of thelr right to hold: plelure of - those dissusting | cards in closed shop industrigs beasts, TN quit the paper. they are, in effect, sentencing Newspapermay are a senste | those men to perpetual unem- lve buneh, and they try to: ployment, keap the readers happy. But | do they: try hard enough? Here ts an Imaginary editorial con- ference, when the boss decides ‘that he will avold giving of ‘fence to anyone .... ‘Managing Editor: “See here, nan, we've been gelting too wk many? complaints lately. The publisher fs worrled. | too : THERE is an Illuminating con- trast between the way the In- ternational Woodworkers, of Am- yMoy bad temper about a dog ple- c, He hates dogs. I hate myself. we'had a picture of a dog?” City Editar; “Sure, Yester- day we had a plebure of a dog that rescued two children from drowning, brought them to life with artificial respiration, then ran and fetched the pol- i... dee, pausing en route to turn in It is well within .the right of. fire alarm. I though it any and every won 6. say’ that would be all right fo run a pie- a ONC. ture of the dog receiving a of fis offleers, But It Is-ndt the eee eso M.E, “I don't care what the mutt did. No more dog plc-: , thres in this newspaper, under- . sland? [also have angry let- rs +: ters about pleture of a cat, an JAPS BESET BY FLOONS wpe a a horned glaflooza- ce am. wocky.” NAGASAKI, Japan th —" A cg “what's a horned glaf- he heavy ‘Yailnstorm flooded much | jwozawocky?” ‘ ‘of western Japan today. Kyodo. M.E. “How should 1 know? agency sald. 10 ‘persons: This handwriting is hard to ‘ read, But fropy now on, no “rageous as to deprive, those’ ous- ‘ted officlal of their right: to carn .their own livings, at thelr reg- ‘lar trades, 8 ct ‘such a man must therefore dlso; family starve,” -, remend 15 were Injured. it reported 6,000 9 vou think this Ist 240?" chomes washed away or flooded, ¢.£, “No, boss.” 9,000 persons in’ Sage. province. M.E, “This morning I got a isolated, 15 bridges washed. out, call from a man who Is golng and thousands of, acres of farm-! 10 quit the paper if we run any ‘ Jand flooded re ' more hockey news. He says - ‘gur hockey storles are too 4 bloodthirsty.” Soy “All wee did ot Is complaining about. I’ve had a lot of beefs about sports , ‘eipchay | Stores; Some people don't like C. Teachers Federation Thurgoy. ' bowing. Others have no us aS ct tor. basebull, cricket, tossing ‘| the.caber and water polo, ‘To wet site . ve + GRORUE DAWES unyplngss AUCTIONEER 2 1 Phone G02 and 2952 yas ' cae ye AR a fo Mt FOR TOWN. AND COUNTRY o | Sie toot Wa SHELL-WHITE: SEA GULL GRAY H| SUN GLOAUFF- FATHOM GREEN SWAY «=: CORAL SAND AWA sureroly'ly'bo:-much combined In fing th les, which need never aut for town and country t bullssefor naw homes and ya or write to your la. ey ; Company Limited A Member of the Turndr'é Noval! Qrganizallon fO., VANCOUVER 4, A Me beg fh My 4 Plastic BIDS 2 FOF vscisiescinagnapanenininns JYQ + THE STORK. SHOPPE Phone 3627 Phone 3621 Philpott, Evitt &C 900 2nd Ave. W, . ren ‘ , re. All Aboard & GE. Matin ' particular sports?” ! ne, thanks, L'm abolishing the “sre you going to pay the sal- | tures, City:editor, you can go fiat - heard from aman who is ina, ' of newspaper are you golng to. ' produce?” Is it true thal : ' sheet of paper fo each subseri- MB. “That's what the man; ooo } oa : The Letterb day a man erme In and yel- EXPRESS APPRECIATION led aL me beeause we ran some |The Editor, news of a chess. tournament. |The Dally News, What do you think we should | We wish to take this opportun. do?” ity to express our respect and SE “Quit mentioning those ME "No half-mensures for | sports department altogether, There has been sone oppa \- ton to, eomles, Pm euttthg « them out, Some readers