i Broadcasting Commission ‘Hearing Set OTTAWA—The Royal Commis- sion on Broadcasting, appointed last month by the Federal Gov- ernment, announces that it will begin its public hearings in Ot- tawa on April 30. The- chairman of the commis- sion is R.. M. Fowler, president : Association. The other members 'areiEdmond Turcotte, formerly Canadian ambassador to Colum- bia, and James Stewart, presi- dent of the Canadian Bank. of ‘Commerce, All persons. and organizations desirous of making a submission to the Royal Commission have been invited to forward their briefs to the:commission secre- : ‘tary, Paul Pelletier, not later . than April 15. In addition, the of the Canadian Pulp and Paper’ 2 6 Prince Rupert Daily News Tuesday, January al 1956. Unnatural Club Play Indie: signals, Mr. Champion was enough to realize the play of the clubs could not possibly be feated the contract. singleton trey of clubs and Mrs. ° Keen won with dummy's queen. On this trick, Mr. Masters drop- ped the jack, which was never going to be any good anyway. ;BLACKWOOD ont BRIDGE By EASLEY BLACKWOOD The opening lead was the: ates Preference There are many variations of the suit prefer ened My, Masters made such a signal in today’ s deal by playing his clubs in an unnatur al manner. smart | sull mean? Mr. Masters doesn't! ‘make a play like this without a. intended as any other kind of atreason. . : Signal than a suit preference, | Obviously, he didn’t want clubs He played accordingly—and de-! egntinued. What else could It be bul an atlempt to indicate a preference for a lead in one of the other two plain suits? Since ‘he had played his highest clulj ifirst, apparently) he wanted a ‘lead in the highest suit, spades, secretary ‘should be informed as oa Therefore, after whining with soo as possible, and in any event DANGER ithe king of hearts, Mr, Cham not later than March 1, as to the \ De — Sensing dinger, Mrs. Keen dis- -Plon didn’t have to guess as bey briefs to be submitted to the) CUSTOMS UNCHANGED — The quaint religious and social system which governs the Hutterlics’ jdained the trump finesse and |tween spades and diamonds, He Commission In order that aj Way of living is practically the same as it wag 400 years ago in the Swiss Alps in the 1th contay Heda heart to her a ace. She con- ‘promptly led a spade, Mr. Mas Oe et 33 schedule of public hearings can| Three of the younger girls at the Wilson Siding Alta colony said they feared punishment at haying. t—-—---~---- ~ == +tters gol two spade tricks, then sa be prepared and announced. The this photo taken but then asked the photographer to send prints to them. They attend school jled a club which Was ruffed for HIPMAN, 33-year-old - Montreal milkman and father | commission plans to hold public} at Wilson Siding, 20 miles south of Lethbridge, (CP Photo) North deater. Both sides vule LHe setting trick. : ren, receives .the George Medal for heroism: from | hearings at various points in Ca-| . : ° i ° nerable. Fe ‘Massey: ‘during a ceremony at Ottawa. Chip- | mada. NORTH ’ eo rescue three Indian children from.a burn- | Under an Order-in-Council of St, it e, SO a Oni ISM Ui e 4 K § Genuine he C igh nawage Indian reservation near Mont= |pecember 2, 1953, the commis- : ; Do ’ Ket Wo . . - » , “ 1 YY ° ° s ACP From National Film Board) sion has been directed to ex- Fo AK QUIT BR | Office Wives ' amine and make recommenda- or rowin utterite ‘om: THLITITIeS te Champion) eM asters) | ; tions upon such matters as the ji A io8$76 A A Qadr | Back On Job 1 policies: to be followed by the}. By DAVID OANCIA Through the years we have al- “9 case the hostile situation] ¥ Aa ys | a a ; : ( ’ Canadian Broadcasting Corpora-; Canadian Press Staff Writer | ways extended a helping hand; and to meet the pressing de- : Pode ‘ ‘ is sat MONT REAL @--Women who mr mat sin up his tion in ile television broadcasting] WILSON SIDING, Alta, @ — ‘to non-Hutterites in need. But;mands fer legislation, the Al-| oem exchanged typewriters for kil “Too darn me Holse. activities and the relation of|]The impact of modern civiliza- | We don't want to do anything) berta government in 1944 pass- | ad) chen utensils When they gol he. statement in an interview during his first such policies to the finances ofj tion is*changing the Hutterites'/that is forbidden by God.”" ted tite Land Sates Prohibition | vv od i997 6 3: married now are ling the de- south..t o attend a trappers’ convention here. He: said he the Corporation; the Canadian} way of earning a living. But! WANDERING GROUP Act, which forbade the Hutter . eA mand for part-time office work- s-sent- here by the people’ in his area of the North to act 1 wat yalioiaue and soi oo " lites from adding to their ex 4 4 ers here, content of television programs} the quaint religious and social| . wg? % ; ; s representative tothe convention. broadcast by both the CBC and stem hich 7 ens the col- The Hutterites’ way ~ of life: ‘isting holds of land by pure! The biedine: Bmplovient. agencies report i born in-northern Saskatchewan 33 years ago private: operators; the financing sys mM ‘ul cn gover lie lly th has kept them at odds with} i chase. lease or rental. { North fast South West hundreds of former secretaries been “outside” before. He has-been a trapper ti wt onies still: is practically itheir neighbors since the 16th! : SL ‘ass 1 Pass ‘and stenographers ere putting ! l d d _-/0f public television and sound! same as it was 400 years ago. ee : foawet 6After the war this legislation | Pass 4 AN Pass cthois nroemarriage ie pepere was his father before him, * broadeasting; and the licens- : 2 veentury, Through the = years; fified. but Hutterites | 1 ode iss vy ass ithel pre-marriage alflee expel a ; The sect now is enjoyIN8itney moved from country taj VaS MONE, Duy Nullers: ‘ence to good use, boosting thelr — [greater prosperity than at any try scekine a} here | ‘ineuine and rclieving the rous sion and sound roadeastin country secxing a haven where: : : b csee cece sete wuwetw evemes stun tu ¢ a | Pe Daily News Classifieds vaion d b 8 time since it was founded in the they could live the life. wey ‘ocated at least 40 miles von Coes mee Ue of homeemaking. ; Swiss Alps in the 16th century. thought was right. ‘he pearest Hubterite- owne tinued with Lhe queen of hearts! Most agencies say business ig The Hutterites have advanced Rough!ty 75 years ago the, “and, Before the purchase can and Mr. Champion was in with golng up. Most strive to place Ibe completed, the lknd must be ‘offered for puwolic sale for at ‘east 90 days, Legislation also’, rapidly from the primitive me- thods of farming they used a few yeats ago and now have reached'a stage where their col- onies are among the best-! equipped, large-scale farming operations on the. continent, Christ and the Bible are the: Hutterites’ guzie. Theirs is 4 life well-insulated from the their registered part-timers ino the same area where they live. . More than 80 per cent are mar ried. Those with children usu- ally are confined to one day ib week, or evening work, Some ppenings are oul of the the king, Here Mr. Masters had to make (a discard. He was practically ‘certain his partner had slaricd: with a lone club, Tf he could get a spade lead from Mr. Cham- pion at this point. he probably could cash the queen and ace of ordinary, Che reavest asked for i that suity then lead a club for his @ wirl at least five feet eight i partner to ruff, inches tall, presumably because As you see, the largest spade of the height of office files. ¢ he could spare was the trey and And another asked for a good: that wouldn’s Jook much like a Jookine girh with class,” no pre- Vials experience world’s 400 Hutterites left Rus- sla to settle in the Dakotas of the United States. Since then! mits colonies to 6400 acres their, number has inereased | | Wis € es ous roughly 25 times. : This restrictive legis! allon The members of the sect were | oreed the crowded colonics to described by the U.S. populatior | find new areas and many over- reference bureau as being | flowed int ro Mcntana and Sus- among the most prolific people j Kate hewan where ho such laws ¢ het on earth, If the present birth | 2xist. sweam of community IH€/ rate continues the Huiterite: Mr, Wurg views the around them, They ee LCi yopu'ation will double every 1f-law as discriminaticn. {vote in elections or take part! years, Coat stilt feel that oe auacenieeaa fallace’s: Dept. 5 Store N Alberta a Christians _pugesuunane medieval painters and he'six in Saskatchewan, Others dresses simply in the standard-are in the United States, Para- “COLOR. _fegasese eet som o ‘ + Vas The smades is : 1 2CRSSALY, | Fin conimunity activities andi” if was the Hutterites’ refusal! would never have passed such come-on, The smailest diamond viens exp cesar ot ly within the last 20 years: 4 45 veh ER he could play was the seven spot There’s an execubive vice- | only W in the y to | during the at ay . . 10 bear arms during the First. law. The men who form our ana Glan} i ay : be. ‘have they bowed to the law! ; : “and this might look like an en- president coming Into town, , Yave Uney orld War that brought resent-' 3overnment —prefess to — be o he \ hild to at- : mtawtagt noe prOTE SS * couraving eard tu Mr. Champion. explained the appiicant. “L want i AY which compels children to at-|inent in. the U.S. and started! Ghristians an ‘ery at 4 ona hool 8. anc Starvea’ Christians and I dery any of and result in a diamond shift. to dress up the offlee a bit." ai tend school. ‘the movement of colenies into: hem to show me where Christ This was the last. thine Mr So oy | PATRIARCTIAL HEAD ; Manitoba and Alberta in 1918. ‘nas ever forpidden- any uv! his Masters Wanted aid in view of Ph » “We would rather be burned.. The federal government Wel- people to buy land.” these considerations he discard- CRAFT3 ag jat the stake than go oul andicomed them and gave them a ye is peyildered by the oft ed the deuce of clubs. 5 jive the kindof Ife now being guarantee, withdrawn a year: eepeated sagyenion Unit Hut- HIS REASONING - FOR mn itived in the world,” said Rev. ¥. Tate ', of exemption from mili-; fortes leave the province andy vee _ ALL AGES | BS John Wurz, 1. -year-old head of | ‘tary ‘service, There was no open: he vountry oS ous Now follow Mr. Champion's * 9 ‘the Wilson Siding colony, 20! hostility to their coming in”. Nera m an, hedsontng. What did his part- Civic Centre | Ws ‘miles south of Lethbridge, He isletther Albeyin or Manitoba, Where ean owe poe What ners unusual play ia tie cub tL _ __ : | NYLONS tt le 8 Bl: Ithe recognized had of the|They settled on generally poor: country Es prepared ty give Us peer < i na 2 M Ao whe world’s 10,000 Hutterites, half land, and as a result of thelr the -religlous freedum and the Today To Wednesday — 7 - 9:05 | Bal Better WEAR. of whem live in Alberta. ‘industriousness, frugality andjright to live as our fore- Tue i ) i , Mr. Wura speaks and under- }simple | life, this land was rapid-‘tathers taught ust" | MGM's Lo years in filming! fortis te produce! Cast of thousands! art stands a German dialect better: oy develuped inte splendid Or : ; j : than he does English. He bears farms, Zz SY Mee ght a striking resemblance to the’ Now there are 42 colenies tn odi at a | i ancient prophets as depleted by: Atberta, 22 In Manitoba and ~ *% CONG | black garb of his people, He has guay and Englund, Wills SELALSINIG HOUND! ‘ an untrimmed grey beard and tntterites regard their most Herre ys Hong, white air which hangs eeenomienl unit as a. colony Tana Edmund CARS OF TOMORROW—Artists’ conceptions of two experimental i straight over b's cars and collar, ine 9 " 4 model cars to be exhibited to visitors at the annual General having 900 “souls” but through He makes an urgent plea for the years the number Gf resi- TURNER: PURDOM a Motors automobile show In key ellies around the nation sturl+ [ipeedam for the Hutterites lodents on a colony las risen Louis CALHERN ing this week are shown above, At the top is the Centurion, 1 pructise thelr religion and way, steadily and some have as 1 Famous Mhayers dueatre two-door, four-pastenger coupe made by Bilek, "The aeredys for life withoub outside Interfer- many as 200 “souls,” Normally sso at se emeg emma namleally designed auto is of fbre- “glass constructin with the a a fi a q } | | mice, when a colony reaches this size wi. upper body painted red and a brushed mevallic finish on the vlony reaches this sla, a a n a Mt oh “We are the only true Com- jf sswarms" and a “daughter imunists In the world,” he said,’ colony” fs formed, "We have the spiritual idea dn Karty fin the Serend World ‘our organization, ‘The Bolsheviks: War troubles again beset the hare tyrants whe do not believe: pruttertties, : t i WO We ih almighly God and who want REFUSED ‘FO PSGHT " oe “the whole world for then. 1 BOY KILLED BY SHOCK | cotyos," © Fe Public indignation against Ue Hutlerites faereased as other MINNEAPOLIS Uh. A fours. tne pasts of the Hubterite phil, yeareald boy was eleetranuted: usophy af life as a verse. fran, residents of Alberta Joined: the by a short elreult in a television’ (he book of Acts! “And all that armed forees and farmers were sel Sunday, The vietim, Gal, peeved were together and had lett to earry on thelr operations Pubnum, was viewhng a programy) ay things in common, And sold Withowl Phebe sous, Phe Hutter. with his mother, Mrs. AMOI jade possessions and goods and, Hes flatly refused, beeuse of Putnam, “One minute he war} opted them to all men, ns every hele religions beliefs, to serve sitting there and when 1 lnaked nan had need." cn the armed forees or to work 1 wine again he was lying on hes traci RENTIUCTIONS in any Joh which was connected HIV JOHN WR, ore re ye meiner a tn Munitutns sane “groups of with the war effort, oe Hutterd eo natrhiredy rd, We ib . Ie touched She neh ne he wy lan PTL Lat Deg ISTUL ON M0 ANG NPP PGS Nah tag Or Migr eshrlet expaiston of Thalteriie @ beleyistun se aurbys 'S alton Hon seb und in neurhy'+ vololies, They desepibe the sect, Sasa “body af strleh quraetishis PB Perr gr COWES onder a strongly Corman zed, s@mbealien. selfsxeek- pie and aperesstye (ominunist | ‘system! Mh Alberta a hiw restrlets land! purelases by the sect, The min eetielsm seems ta! shave develaped: from the rapid Linarenst I reed vers dn Tut. terlte dane hulddngs and. the sects deleminndion to renal uot from commialey (tie Tfe, PO "They donk ao inyonte lower portion, separated by a chrome sweepspear, The bottom | shows Oldsmobile’s 1956 experimental car, (he Golden Roeket, | With a gold-cclored MMbre-glass body and acrodynamle stylings, this two-door spurls coupe has a speelnl look. of graces and swiftness, » Monday : to Wednesday ' Shows 7 - 8:25 pn, ! WI MW ‘TA a Two Foutures Man ead 7 (hd 3 Sn arnt. at ; . SUNK ‘We fi i: y bt ; ee sot EHO NSIRE AL HES ANI Rae SS Sa A CAN Arete hoe ea vals by milo the horror grows, as cach town wails in foot for the BOMB TRAINI | xia Ha! AIG i) Be Att «JEWELLERY ~ HEADQUARTERS FOR 1956! February : LEAP YEAR SPECIAL any. hare,” said one Atbertun, “They: FOREVER mind: thelr own business inna PER : pay Wiely tases and bills! i a | promplly without legal, Lt! on the other hand whi pond: da they da?” | “Wee do everything the people: andl Che government ual af as": suid Mr Ware, "We pry our taxes dnd wre al. ACs GEST BADRARA HN BRIT KEITH CARSEN THOMAS COME = ' me ge SQUARE OC *VaRD : @ : The Largest Stock In Town RUPERT RADIO Wuyi ny Wn me abhers, Alchasl ten AND ELECTRIC nmeniadit ¥ah'Kanas of GORDON & ANDERSON hve Phone again | he Philippine republle teh Phave an aren of more than 1000: AED ANTETS Dehua Ma urd AVE, Dial 3014 ' PARR RP iro lls, BBP PP PRP RPP A | , (TN | ttt tt ie te z ‘ t { ei tg tt hh hahah mii bn hh amibhah na abna rh dit fin ip hp bh tnt bi bm bh nb bk ob i kn. gk a ek me Bin be he hn te in he hn bie th th ath het all ody site ct oth ith ate ttt bie ha a ee ee OO eek ek eg kk et ew hm mh hm