' f t } an me : ( ta anata 2 PN AEGON OL TNS TEE ESRC KT SES Ty BOT a2 HV he BIS ee ag she > nae ae ony 2. Baa SREC IE SE RPL SE PERS B35 1s SXSVTRCERSE IS =e Y > pre saw he @i w. ahi art gti’ RES a oe at "sy wy ekg a F art * ee - we om SOR 2 SE TE PE t. ‘= 7 : sank a! ‘ ay ket « Tombstone censorship Is not, that I have, returned I Intend to} 5063dW, " Plittee Rupert Duity wews Thursday, February 24, 1055, ° 1 - smemmrenme ae . cca mR NR Rpg Re cenmneet namie Bete IR ce eae y ; ne An Indapendent dally newspaper, devoted to the Npbullding of Prince Rupert ” and Northern, dad Central Briiish Colurhoia, | le Momber of Canadian Préss — Aulit Bureau of Circulations ; Catindlan Dafly Newspaper Association. Published by Tne Prince Rupert Dally News Limited J. P. MAGOR, President Subscription Rates: . By carrler—-Per week, 250; per menth, 6100; per sear, $10.00 Ky mall--Per inonth, 75e; per year, $8.00. ' suthorlye) as second class mall by the Post Office Department, Ottawa : Red Line ALTHOUGH the effect is unintentional; Commun- ist pronaganda is being helyed by some mem- pers of parliament who in an effort to make politi- j cal capital out of the unemployment situation are deserihing it in overly lnrid terms. In the House of Commons recently, Wilfrid Dufresne (PC, Quebec West) suid: “Some of the peaple in my region are in dire need, At this very moment many families can- not obtain unemployment insurance benefits, and’ have to beg from their neighbors to feed their wives and children.” In another speech, C. I. Johnston (SC, Bow River, Alberta) announced: “We have millions of people going hungry in this country.” He went on to say: “We have more registered unemployment in this country now than we had during the hungry thirties.” All of these statements are outlandish exagger- veiltions, as (he speakers must Know. It would be dif- ‘ficult, of course, to contradict Mr. Dufresne’s ac- count of his constituents being forced to beg without making a personal investigation, but in view of the . Many public and private welfare agencies operating today, the story does not stand up. While admittedly -ywe hear from time to time of terrible cases of ne- ‘“@lect and poverty, particularly in large cities, these almost invariably can be traced to failure in notify- -eing responsible authorities. If a family is reduced to begging, official help is certain to come as soon as its plight is known, Mr. Dufresne’s misleading -Jmplication is that such help simply is not there. Superficially My, Johnston may be on firmer ground in comparing present unemployment with evthat of the hungry thirties, but what he fails to add .?fs that since then Canada’s population has increased __ hy several millions, [f his line of reasoning is fol- towed, the unemployment situation in the U.S. is ten times as desperate as Canada’s, To criticize the government over the increasing were number of jobless is fair game. The problem is : serious and an alert opposition is needed if it is to be gquarely met, But the line should be drawn at fur- nishing fodder for the Communists. To depict Ca- nada as a lend of unemployment and starvation not only whose dearest wish is to make the situation so bad s.that a dictatorship can move in, “REFLECTS and REMINISCES citogether unknown in Great: meet him. He wrote me and Britain. Sometimes {t's found! sald: Iam writing to you because : the only thing that ever gets:! also had meningitis. My mo-: peopie near a change. Once, Rev..ther and father prayed for me! FE. Rochdale witnessed the most, and I know what prayer means,’ unusual he'd ever witnessed! “He and J just want you to know.” fought the good {ight and lost.”: ‘LASTING QUALITIES G, C. Walker expects to return Prince Rupert Js an expansive ta his California home alter a.zort of town. It can be a soft few more months in the north- slue as well as a wet one lasting lund where he pioneered it years for weeks and weeks, ago. George still kes to play: ————— around down below 49 but for; The lowest priced new home pwibit matter is far from distiking being built today in Edmonton British Columbia, Callfornia'sells for about $10,090, with the ‘“4ray be allright but what dy'e majority going for a few thous- know about rattlers, Not one {o.nnd higher range. Majorlty of _te seen of heard of. ‘the huys are made by familles we halling from Jower and lower It will need a heavy snow esting homes, .4grm to prove that the age of! —_ minvetry ts not dead.» «11, |ROON.TO VOYAGE a i oS Princesh Margaret, it is declar- Perhaps more than one former ied, patient can appreciate the feel- saliing for home, epee cnty eee ee es ‘recovered from meningitts. been found In Jamaica-—also -eclved was from a boy of 1! probably goes for the Princess’ whein [have never met but now jeelings too. Hem Ne cep tee aes ate al THE SHOE WITH THE BEAUTIFUL Fit ‘| choose the softest shoes that ever walked It's: no. surprise that experienced nurses profer Naturalizer, The flexible comfort of, these shoes, their soft soles, thelr smart’ but easy styling make fem the perfect rens- 06 eg NOVEM, edy for hard hospital n$11.95 : "floors, In easily clean As IIlustrated ed white alk. 4 VOGUE. SHOES LIMITED 2 AER ane din i is inaccurate but invites agitation by those | rt mr ta As | See It 0 ‘ I Ebnove tae Pm Phifpoll IAlherta Wild Rose NO TRUE life story i which I have heard for a long time has given -me such a nice warm feeling ‘around the heart as that -of Marie Jackober, of ‘Fairview, Alberta. Marle is 13 years old, and lives ,90 far from a regular school that ‘she has to take her Grade 7 les- ‘sons by correspondence, But, “all arcund Marie is the greatest ‘of all teachers—Mother Nature ‘herself. And this young girl has ithe kind of eyes that really see that beauty. She has also the ‘gift of expression—the ability to ‘put into words some of the | beauty which she feels, + + + AWAY out on the far side of the world, In New Delhi, India, Is a publication called “Shankar's Weekly" which decided to run & contest to see which school ‘children could write the best ‘poems. No less than 24,000 entries were submitted~and the one which won first prize was by this young ‘Alberta wild rose girl from what most people would ca!! the wil- derness of Canada. ° t+ + + (ON THE dark night before -he| won the battle of the Platns of ‘Abraham, young General Wolfe is sald to have recited Gray’s “Elegy Written in a Country “Churchyard” and remarked, as the legend says, “I would rather have written that poem than take Quebec.” But whether he sata those words or not, Wolfe was a great ‘admirer of that poem which In- ‘cludes the lines Full many a gem of purest ray serene, the dark unfathomed caves of ocean bear Full many a rose ts born to,we go “hack to the Bible” ws blush unseen, and waste [ts sweetness on the desert air. q 1 w . Although on the surface the CCF group in Parlinmént-'§ ear- rying on as usual these days, 1 definite lessening of its effertiv- ceness Is becoming clearly appar- ent to close observers, The. chainge 1s becoming in- creasingly noticeable as the wark of the session enters the stage where the standing “cénimittces lof the House ate. commeéheing \their meetings. In past years jthe committees have been accus- tomed to afford the Sociniist, MPs their chief sounding board lon Parllament Hil, With no Il- imitation on elther the length or the number of speeches pro- Iyvided by committee rules, the lcOFers would hold the floor and dominate discussions regardless iof thelr minority strength, Old- ‘Hine party MPs didn't exactly like ithe tactics, But they tolerated them. This session the Liberals and PCs show evidence of a different imood, Their patience with ths Socialists obviously is on. the wane. There ts less willingness ‘to allow them to dominate dis- leussion: a) —e the CCP spilt over the ré-armd- ment of Western Germany was too deep a wound for any. super- ficial gesture of unity to heal. ‘It Is true that when Leader Cold- iwell found himself In a minority ‘of four in his parllamentary group on the [ssue, he places himself and his leadership tn the hands of his party caucus, The result was an unanimous vote of confidence which regularized his ¢ g ~ THE MANNNING ELECTED APOSTLE The Editor, The Dally News: ‘The situation seems to-be that; 1% ETTERBOX continuance In office, But the endorsation didn’t repair the ra- vages ofthe cleavage over an ‘issue regarded ag*not orily fun- damental but algo as certain: to ‘recur In subsequent poiltical campaigning, Rank . and - fite CCFers feel that the confidence they voted tn Mr, Coldwell fixed things up for the present, but ‘they are realists enough to know that Jt didn't represent any per- manent solution. Parliament HIN circles recog~ nize another factor in the cur- rent spectacle of CCF waning strength, Even before the Ger- ‘man re-armament issue blew up, _the Socialists were worried over ‘the decline in their yote on the “national political front,; While they succeeded tn fhercasing their Parliamentary strength In eet nieee see eerste ines cam ett ebeetne | rtnaaetnte, French Cabinet. Faces Problem OF Catching Up PARIS w—Faced with a mass of accumulated big problems, ministers in Premier Edgar ‘ Faure’s pew government plunged today into the task of learning their jobs quickly In advance ol urgent decisions. The National Assembly ended | the 1953 general clection, their) ANCHORAGE, Algaka ut A successes were confined to West.isix-man team, balked by bad: thay or eo eta vagivse B | Alaska T of Me’ Probes Crash By Norman M, ern Canada. Thelr national vote weather for nearly four days, | recorded 9 substantial slump.’ headed by helleopter Wednesday | East of Winnipeg the party re-‘for nearby Mount Susitna and! turned only one.” MP—veteran ‘the scene of a U.S. Navy bomber Clarence Gillls of Cape Breton jcrash which Killed 11 men Feb. ; South. 17, —_ |S The party will Investigate the . For a party that aspired to be crash and decide whether. It ts the politica) votce-of industrial feasible to remove the bodies of this was a serious set the victims, all navy officers and labor, “De. enlisted men, back, And the Parllamentary, rye twin - engined Neptune group hadn't known what to do patrol bombir crashed fast about it when the German re- rhorsday night: Skeena Bill says ther source of weakness, CCF @ For Entertainment, See mene mrtg mane morale is trying gamely to stand | up to this latest blow of fate, but the difficulty of the effort it Is making !s appafent. And the: future is, at the:most optimistic estimate, uncertain, ‘SPECIAL Per nce) 9 19-day governmental crisis “Wednesday night by approving $09 to 210, Faure’s bid to head. France's 21st post-liberation gov- | ‘ernment. ? But only four of the 20 minls-{ “ters-picked by. Faure for his Con. EEK oe } “ FoR TAS - “THE CURIOUS SAVAGE" ens” . Wolk Shirts . HELD OVER:FOR ONE MORE sanehrige. SHOWING THURSDAY Pond Rey 2330 2.50 | ; | | 4 ; Now oy Fe q ib Boys’ © For Top Quality Food = Gabardine At Budget Prices Coats . Shop.At , Fully Imed Hol- lywood Style. Reg. $10.95. 10. | “* -"NOW TO CLEAR sexvatiye-Loned cabinet served Hn the previous government of ‘Plerre Mendes-France. And two _ While most of the ministers | chave had previous cabinet ex- | “perience, they must catch up on the details of their new posts be. of the four have different jobs. |, Here in this beautiful poem, ,cught to think.” “We put bits in 1, fore venturing far in the realm | . , We note in Edmonton Journa of policy decisions. of January 28, a report from 2: certain church meeting at which - Premier Manning was chalrman ‘and at which he was elected apostle.” Mr. Manning seems ‘o have boundless self-esteem and ‘Hmitless personal ambition. If. Brizklaying Plastering General Repairs ‘Tead—"Let po man think of ae R, (Dick) Bolcrin himself ‘more highly than h? “written by this youngster in Al-jthe horses mouths.” “My breth-. herta, we see once again the ren be not many masters seeing = Phone 4526 “proof of what the poet Gray wrote, _ Consider these‘ beaufiful linet In Marle Jacober’s poem “The itunity to rave against t Filry Queen:" Each twilit eve she made her Holy Scripture, which translation : way And oe'r the moonlit hill Aft the quiet close of day When all the world was still. Along the dewy path she strode Into the silver night. . The flowers slept beside the road The moon was golden bright + b& & WHAT thrills me about Marie's'Manning may well take his firs poem, 1s not just that it has won its well dé that the government of Alberta has also, so $1.000, Here 's a girl who lives In a! served prize; nor here is a man bravely entrenchec commendably, bridled tongue declaring all hu awarded her a scholarship ofjman endeavor under the powe’ jwe shall receive the greatet con- , ‘demnation.’ * ac “Mt Manting uses every dnpor- | Re- | ‘vised Standard Version of our: has been gladly accepted and ‘honored by the Christian Church; , throughout the whole Engiigh: ‘speaking world, and against tH: | the will strive in valn for truth; must pervall, iff | The Christian character’ of ‘these revisors ia beyond reproaet: ! ‘and thelr scholarship universal: | ‘ly recognized, at whose feet Mr jlesson in Christian ethics, Ye° ‘behind a microphone, with un- Yo; / h / of the antl-Christ, CYhe Ye Mr. Manning's theology or lack beautiful but lonely place, She ‘of theology, leads directly to con- is within about a week of ' Ancient, a3 *4ngs of George Drew MP, recently well a3 modernized jeeps have ecuntiess hands to shake and _ "Pb think that one of the most wheezy bands to hearken to. It's Upeply moving letter that I re- becoming tiresome and that’ writes a poem, because she feels the beauty in her own heart. By o chain of clrcumstances {it hee comes world famous—and the young girl gets the chance to do (hings in life’ which, Low,wogks ator, og nayeaciod de Impossible, But the real noint {s that all over the world there are leglons of unknown people with similar lfts, Almighty God—or Mother Na- ture, for those who prefer that term—has Iherally scattered the “sparks of genius among all races ind in all places, even though many of the human helngs who tre so blessed never get the chonee to be recognized by thelr fellow humans. The blessing js In The Divine gift, and not in the human ree- centtion, No wild Alberta rose ta ever really wasted, __ PEAS AND Dial 2512 fused thinking and moral chaos You can't take our. blessed Lord’ Sermon on the Mount and cnst Hit Into some Sufure Millendta’ Age. to bolster up some wishfu cape’ the, jit sud@munty/ot Sad: ‘mighty God, “Be not decctyed [God 4s not mocked," Not evary jone that holdeth up His hanc and. saith, “Lord, Lord, shat! en- He that acattercth twill and falleth in the spirit of Christian brotherhood {s not In-the way.o! Eternal Life, Recently we heard a minister pray--"Lord bless ‘all those who labor to heal the broken unity of Thy oly Church." We never hear a prayot ike that from tho “Bock to the Bible" hour, Intelligent Bible Ltudy on the adult level is not ts he expected from that source, REV. H. G, SMITH, —. 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