he ih : Ati Gripen nest ation ote et ayes stes cee age Roc oete - - Wednestay. Aunet 24, 18y, momen mi mane ee me tee oan - An Lidependent daily newspaper devoted te Une upbuilding of Prinee Rupert and Northern and Central British Columbn, Member of Canndtan Press —- Audit: Bureau of Ctreulationas Canadian Dally Newspaper Assochition Published hy ‘The Prince Rupert Dally News Limited yy dR MAGOK. President) Nl Sp. uo! Subscription Rutes: ica > BY carpler- woes lB nh e rmonth Tae, ber year, #00 fetes we +t ener te Arne etait Hn = ~ vatente een oe ~ i! Authonzed ns second class inall by the Post Offlee Departinent. Ottawa | Ambassador's Strange Remarks | SPECULATING on possible reasons hehind the change in Soviet Russia's change in attitude to- wards the West, the Western Producer recalls an ine cident that happened in Saskatoon which indieates that the cold war has not been called off entirely, “When the Soviet ambassador to Canada, Di- mitri S. Chuvahin, came to address the Saskatehe- wan Council of Public Affairs in Saskatoon, his | speech was awaited with interested anticipation,” the paper remarks, “There was an off chance that he might throw some light on the new look.’ “Hedidn't. Indeed the tenor of his remarks was Such as to indicate that he hadn't heard about it. Trug he gave his enthusiastic support to ‘peaceful co- existence’ but his concept of the meaning of that term would not racer with much favor in the West. He did make sume quotations frum recent utterances of Khrushchev and Zhukov but they did not affect his position which in brief was that Hussia, her allies and satellites, are and have been invariably right and | their opponents consistently wrong, “All the peace lovers were Communists and the Democrats—he didn’t call them that—mostly war Mongers, One could not escape the conclusion that in Mr, Chuhavin's view peaceftl co-existence was an excellent thing so long as it rigidly adhered to the Communist interpretation, “The Russian ambassador's speech was of the kind that could have appropriately been made during the Stalin regime; it echoed all the familiar cliches justas if the back-slapping convivial parties and protestations of friendliness and-goodwill had never occurred, One felt that either it had been prepared wt long time in advance and not been revised or that the ambassador's mail from Moscow had been held wp and had not reached him in time,” 5 > The paper offers the sound thought that in view Uf such occurrences, the best advice would be found un a variation of Cromwell's exhortation to his troops xibout to cross a river: “Put your trust in Ged but wind to keep your powder dry.” The West should scncourage, Welcome and meet half way every friend- ZV gesture from the other side of the Iron Curtain but fat the same time should remain alert, vigilant and yrepared for all eventualities, & OTTAWA DIARY & Nonvan | The life of a federal gevern-+ The chief point made fs that wvent Trade Commissioner as-! some 100 of these trade scouts, '-!gned to promote the sales of! stationed in virtually all regions Cunadian goods in some foreign: of the globe, are working round ‘narkets, Is certain to be one of | the clock to search out oppor: Narlety and very likely tu be tunities tor Canadiag trade, They wtrenuous, In addition. it may Sin retum in’ fastest ume a Wave Its really adventurous mo- comprehensive report on the pos- A eLiLs, eibiides for sale in thelr areas ke ine eee or the Trade: @f any Canadian product sub- iCunnissioner in Lonion, Eng: @Utled to them, They can set up Nand, to whom a British impor- CMtacts between Canadian ex- ‘er of canned sahnon compkaine, Perbers and tae importers in red That the Canadair product Hele area, And they can arrange which he had fust received Apron tnets and iUnerarles fol Wun toup to standard. The la individuals enterprising enough ‘porter sugested that an almost 28 ake, personal sales trips. rmpercepuble discoloration on a, Altagether, the service which pmnute area of the top layer ar ley offer 1s valuable to the Ne salmon Was the sure tip-off; Polat Of belng almost Indis- rthat the can harbored the pac. | ensible to the exporter who Heri of plomaine poicon He Woes i The Trade and Com- Myanted to refise delivery of the Werce Department belleves that pentire shipmen, far wider wee could be made of By NORMAN 1 Phe rude Con atissioner Jagle he service If its existence was, Fed dublewsly at the salmon end More generally realized, That's sdecided to tate a chance Whike The Wn pose ot Ue Porelgn Trade Hhe dimporter was lookin on dy aruiecle. Lone terror, he aalnly proseeded | OOO E CONT TIAI AGES Mo eat the entireddguters tpn Ube! Citi de ib ean, Then just as ealy he are, | , THE rdered a osecond ean opened and! Tronsumed iis content ans well ETTERBOX yAfter Une he told the miperter: MH Pim alive Gnd well Lan Wrow sesesseeervoesecsvevecsavoersere ymorning, you Know the amon ome kaltor, pis all right.” The Dally News: : In some trepldivon the Brle’ on benult of Prince Rupert sh dmporter called the next pigs Lodge $42 and Local 108 of Morning, OW receiving the Trade the Interiational Bratherhood Gonmssioner’s assurance thatsof Pulp, sulphite and Paper Mill the hi slept wer and never felt | Workers please aceept the Uanks yPetter, he deeded at once lO Gt the joint committess for the Becept the salgion while he had) gi) Kenny show fora real com. ivestioned, Ppetent coverage, ' LTP this show paves the way to 1 The Trade and Commerce De+ guture citertalminent of Unde jpartinent (urn the cpatiieht an | eullbre for Prince Hupertites you the work of the uatlon’s trade} will have played womajor part in teouintestoners dn the current] Delnging Unik wnout, phen OF }ts publle tion “Korean The commitives would alse Pirades” A leading article deals: pike to extend thanks to the stall "hn considerable detail with the; of radio statlon CEPR for thelr AWOrk of the commissioners and] oxcaliont eu-apermlion whieh With the finetlons whleh they! contributed grently to the sue- yur prepared ta earey aut an} cess of the show, Pehle at fro and Individis! Thants agen, Fanstows fo sell Canadian poody LUCATL, T08 aud the tn export markets, | ALKA LODGE, | | | ENJOY LIFE... ! EAT OUT MORE OFTEN Boe week, 2he, per month, $600; per year, 636.00 | he cos 4 | i Ely 1 LON DON— Some of the both sides of the Iron conference to discuss the atomic bomb. ; The {invitations for the con- | serence were. issued last winter by ja small but infvential group of British MPs who are the real ‘core of an international body known as the Parliamentary As- sociation for. World Government. Russian acceptance came only few days before the conference imet in early August. The ac- ‘ceptance was all the more sur- -prising because. up til then the ‘worldwide Communist party has been the most vitriolic and con- {sistent opponent of the idea of ‘world government. on principles ‘acceptable to the democratic West, ; The conference was held in the London County Hall dust across the river frum the Houses of Parliament. , It quickly resolved ftself Into ithree working commissions, one concerned with the moral res- ponsibllity of the selentist for his work, another with establish. “ng the actual facts as to dang- ers and damages resulting from nuclear warfare, or excessive itests of nuclear explosives in jtime of peace. The third com- mission was coneerned with the Possible techniques of control of ruclear weapons In the event of an International armament Pereement. + + THE MPs were not asked to sit in on the actual work of the ‘commissions, so we only heard #bout them in the final reports 'to the plenary session. I found most fascinating the argument about the moral res- ponsibility af the scientist for the work. Some scientists took the position that the sefentist had No responsibility and Indeed nu is ae i BETTER SIGNS { The announcement that the! city plans toinstall 587 new metal: ‘street numbering sigus will be| ‘received with pleasure by motor- | ‘ists and pedestrians alike. Ed: dieonton's. poorly. wwarked streets ‘have long Been a source of’ cam- | {plaint. In many parts of the. lelty, not only In the outlying: ‘districts but on the main thar- ‘oughfares, slgns are either atb- Sent, poorly placed or hard to ‘read so that it ls a matter of: considerable difficulty for the iwayfarer to find out where he ‘Is. The new signs, whieh have ‘Jarge black letters on a whine background, should be of areat! ‘nasistance. | However, 587 signs will not go’ :f00 far, and will probably be! ' streets, The greater part of the: jelty will still have to depend on: ‘the traditional signs painted on itelephone poles. Most of he complaints centre around these. In many places, the letters and numbers have faded and become: nearly Wegible. Even where the! ‘palnt is fresh, the markings are jReNerally too small and poorly located, so that they are dif-: Seapets ne ed at any tina, | ‘One suggestion which has been! ‘made and deserves exploration | jis the use of Muorescent paint, which shines brightly when ilu. minated by headlights or street tampa and would Jargely scive ithe preblem of visibility at night: Af thtg ts not practleable, the! numbers could at least be made mutch Jarger, Pending the time when it tsi possible to place proper markera, vt all Inverreetions, more thought ‘and effort needs ta be given to! Improving the existing siggns. | Kdmonton has an excelent: street numbering system, well i desiqned to stnplify movement abaut the elty and the finding! of uddressos: bul much of its: | BACK at ea 3 heiahe GIRLS HANDLES, OXFORDS, KUNNEN, OVEN SITE PATENT STRAPS, As ! See it @ Scientists Mect io world’s top scientists from neem ke Ny ee eee BY 10re Pp hilull Curtain have met in joint problems’ created by the tteht to declde on the ages to Which his discoveries were to be pul, ” They argued that a sofentist would be a traitor to his profes- ston Tf he did not endlessly en- large the field of human knowl- edge to the utmost of hits ability Just because some of the dis- covertes might be hnrnesged by evil men for the harmful ends. But others strongly stressed tiat the mere faet that a man Was a sclentist did not make him thy less a responsible eltizen or be gg hens mente ntterremerreamaney meters epyen ah Be ee lt w oe Lote od ‘ aN ASG GM En FH AR OOR 8 OLE Le contgrEene 6. Y Ny & | ALL OF EASTERN CANADA will have temperatures above human belng. One sclentist—I think he was! un Ttallan--suggested -that ev. ; GY young sclentist should be: asked to swear a solemn pledge, : wong the nes of the famuus Hrppoeratic oath that doctors have taken for thousands of yeats past, never to use thelr skill except to save Ife, not des- - troy it--always to help and heal und never to harm or injure. eof ob THE commission which was set up to study the possible harm- | ‘ud effects of nuclear explosions, | in war and peace, was necessarily ; a’ mere organizing body, It took steps to do its job over the next year by compiling all th available information, The British government pave - i great impetus to this work by cffering to make available to {t. wl the reports of the official: British medical committee which tt has had working on this very siblect. “the Russians, not to be out: dane by thelr British hosts, pre- _sented to the conferenee 20 com- plete bound sets of the findings of one of thelr sclentifie bodies on similar matters. OTHER PAPERS SAY... value is lost without satisfactory: street sipns. ~Edmonton Journal’ GOOD READING Public funds must be spent, and public Nbrary. {reilities ex- panded, to make good -books as readily. accessible as possible to’ children, Parents and . teachers: need to cxert continuous, patient, effort. io divert children from! cone books to something nore! worth while. Yet in the end, the! effort would be well spent, for! eter. sald he, “We'll all it represents ‘the only positive | way of dealing with harmful: literature, - — Ottawa Citlzen, ing " chave with Oltawa In his tdea “district, but deducting $15,000 a “waged over the staying power of Chicago'y civil defence COTS ye >mic bomb drops -- if it ever daes | West Const ds expected to be helow normal. Th: Maritime Provinces much above normal. Map was supplied courtes/ of the Toronto Star. VICTORIA REPORT JX Mtn tr VICTORIA-—One wonders what Quesnel-Prince George extension success Premier Bennett — will a few years ago. Just now, no one knows how all this dickering will end: cer- tainly, at this point Ottawa has no intentlon of giving Mr. Ben- nett $20,000,000 for the PGE. Why should the {dberals help Mr. Bennett win an election for Soctal Credit? ‘That's the way the Ottawa government figures Mt. However, a few months before the next Federal election, tn 10957, the $25.000-a-mile-for-50- miles might be raised, AS the election nears, the Ot- tawa Liberals will be In need of many good friends, and voters, in this province, which is now mostly Soclal Credit and CCP, a harsh politieal fact which the Ulberals don't admit exisis, but which they'd do well to swallow. Soon now the provinse's big- gest political guns will be sound. Ing In mighty fury for the Sept. 12 Lillooet by-eleetion, It will be a whirlwind cam- paign, which ts the way Premier Bennett wants it. Most of the specch-making will be confined to the one week leading up to voting day. Befure Labor Day no one will feel much like attending | that the Federal government Should cough up about $20,000,- 000 for the Pacific Great Kast- ern Railway, Ottawa has offered B.C. $25,- 000 a mile on Che first 50 miles of new construction north into the Peace River country from Prince George, Mr. Bennett, be- Ing a fast man on a_ political gamble, hasn't turned that down but he thinks the sum not near- ly enough. Our Premier suggests that Ot- tawa pay $25,000 0 mile for the entire length of the rallway from Vancouver to the Peace River mile for the 80-mile section from Cuesnel to Prince George, That's the amount Ottawa eave to the Johnson government for the FRAGILE UNDER STRESS A high-level brawl js being glass apartment houses uncer ftomie attack. An atom selen-| political meetings. tist'says they'll splinter and can} ‘The Premier Js sure Social Cre- normal In the next 30 days accord. ing to thls map prepared on the basis of the United States Weather Bureau's long-range fore- casi, Most of Saskatchewan and Eastern Alberta will ‘have near-normal temperatures white the be highly dangerous, And ian alt will win. At least that’s the architect of such buildings re-' way he talks out ioud, knowing. forts that ordinary window such loud talk often brings dlvi- | glasa Js as mueh a hazard. ‘dends in votes. By such talk the ! In such exchanges it's easy to Premler—belng a good polltician | ; im i hopes to pet a Socunl Credit} understand the — vexation Of bandwagon rolling, onto which | hopes a majority of Lillooet's | ve voters will climb as It nears the: nulty by the time the first ato- polls ; | ad HSC can’t win, Mr. Bennett | if these profe:sors keep talk. (hopes the CCP does, though he if these | ° doesn't say that out Joud. The one Mr. Bennett doesn't want to tused up In marking the main. . 70 SCHOOL MEMO ' The pubtle retains a great: a | nonchalance through all thus, , j) however. Perhaps the defence | chiel’s inoditiention, “if it ever: does,” Is the explanation, But: whatever the cause, the people | generally are proving hard to! SCH. | As only a few modern cliff. | civellers have elasy brick homes, ! they are nota major threat. But’ the "Iittle people’ muy stroll. j [away from this controversy with a onewly-fixed idea to duck quickly gut, of range af any win- dow If” quer ‘Une, rald : sirens ‘ should ringst vee ak o~Windsor Btar, | win js Libera! Mr. Gibson, whose resignation from the House over forestry miatllers caused (he by- election. The Liberals. of course, in this test oof public optnion they browght on themselves, have far more to lose than any other party. Tt Mr. Gibson should be de- fernted, It would be a terrifie slap-In-the-faee for B.C, Liberal forces, one which would cause them to pollieally wobble and tre], oo Mr Bonnett election, atid’ not lose polltiedtl face, for hla party--bey pardon, ' i oe 7 , er f 7 Hi if iu iL ee ‘ te UNIVERSITY APPOINTMENT ~eMo, Trenee Lasser has heen appointed rector of Une Iversity of Montreal, He gues ceeds Magr. Olivier Mtaurault Who held the post 21 years, The appolntment was an hauneed by the Most Rey. Clo yun Pontes, apostolic delo. hate to Canada, (CP Phoata) ‘ EAEAWHELMO NN Nidesseteea ase AAT AVON RL DAs rf for more comfort with beauty .LEW@i-9 R BOYS HEATHEN HOOTH, UREA, OXFORDS, HOX, OVER STIORS, RUNNERS, SCAMMERS gaa oe MEDALLION and server conn OPiRAL stwetnue 1 OY) LQUALIEER TANOEL a Natlonally advertised, Un- paralleled quality, Beauty with privacy, alelight cantrel and fade protection, Revalutlonary cleaning ease with LEVOLOR'S smoother, tougher, catalytic plasticvcest aluminum qs, Enclosed head, self-adjutt: Ing liter, Yepes dlappear Intd battam bar, Plastic: ond cape plotrct sills, In Linon Fresh: brand or wold celers, Parlect (it and Indtallation, Velue-nacked pices, Como tn er call new for free estimates, . Identified by the LEVOLOR ves { oo Cmuld Jose the bys . will have temperatures | Mr. Premler, the word should | be movement, you say? — has never held Lillooet anyway. The same applies to the CCF, 1f, on the other hand Mr. Ben- | nett should win, what a tre- mendous ylctory it would be for him, even more of a victory for BC. than for CCF, for the CCF was on top of the first-count ballots In 1953, and SC as third ‘Town the lst, | 1 te Ane ae at me td eaten sep ee me FAVORITE AREA Sir Waller Scott was buried jn the ruins of Dryburgh Abbey In the Scottlsh borderlands. 0M wn ek tae He ee Re be cee ee Chinese Dishes CHOP SUEY... .. 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