+1 seat ware Tar r : ee ~ - - s oe oy 1495, Pee y . tae Wedne dev, ayo 17, fn dadependent dally newspaper deveted boo nbuddbur of Prince Rupert and Northerts and Central Drtttsh Colin. bk Menaber af Canadian Press Audit Bureaus of Clreblations hadi Date Nensoaper As coetoth tt Published by The Prince Hoot Daly News Limited JO MAGOR President ‘ tps St caption! Raite s ier BY aug BY carrier -Per week 250 par coenth ¢)00 por year, $16.00 23a" Byorath Per anbrth Soe mer year Ee be Aublurteed as second class nial by die Post Otter Department. Ottawa Fishing Across Border THIS newspaper was a bit surprises} at the ‘ather harsh treatment accorded the crew of a Canadian Mehloat apprehended recently in American waters, The esay members were iver siz able fines plug a Hel aetion dvainst the baat facets its owners Post bond to obtain tte vGenec, / Phe truth ds thera det of Arceriean fishing ves sels not only fisttin bathe cies vetige in Canadian Watery neay (ae Queen Chigdatte tslinds, Heeate strsdt dietaiet, ) dts fron th’s fisitne diaieh that most of the dolio sahnon How coming ta Kotehikan are heing taken The Amorvean deat eembers 69 or 70 larger oats, sume locally ov red oud some, like that of Cas- per Tverson, Seattle owned but lecelavartered here partod each year, . The law of compenstion seems to be at work in Hecate strait, for only the larger boats can fish there in the kind of weather we've been having during the current coho rin. Being able to take rougher weather than the 32-footers, these craft also vet the cream of the coho crop. And they are the only ones that don't have to run for shelter—in Canadian ports ~— When a suff blew cones we, They report, however. thet Canadian officials have arrested one or more of their fishing crews and have chased several hoais out of chely harhors, per- stat ree hgps*hecause of the rough treitment accorded Cane udians caught in U.S. waters. When you recall that vessels of both nations fish for halibut in Alaskan waters and international waters, and sell their vatches and make their purchases in both American and Canadian ports, vou see why the treatment of trollers sounds unusual and tough, The truth is that the new north Pacific salmon: treaty Internationalizes the north Pacific salmon fishery, and may tend to ease this present friction, Tait a lot of U.S, boats actually are taking their eoho catches on the Canadian side af the international boundary, though they are outside the Canadian three-mile limit. It might he hard for the Canadians to prosecute them successfully, but they also might Le taunted into trying, by the way we treat Canad- ins in our waters, —-Ketchikan Alaska Chronicle. s. JUDGE SNAPS LOSING STREAK FOR ERSTWHILE CLERK BETTOR 4 LONDON '® — One vecent morning John Ammon, 28-year- Fold clerg, assed his boss for a day off. He suid his wife was afl, Permission was granted, ' Ht Was a nice day and along aout soon the hoss himself gdlecided ta quit work and have a MHng at the Epsom races ‘ You puessed it. Bul you haven't heard {t all. - The bess spied Ammoa betting heavily at the race track. The next day he erdercd an audit of Ammon's beoks y In court Tuesday Amman admitted he was £442, four shil- “hngs and one penny sber. in his accounts, He said it all went fon a lone losine streak, © ° The judge broke the stregk. He sentenced Ammon to a ‘year dn pefsan, Sam's ge Gi Y PNR Gs ‘ . z wee ae Mid, AVE FER ATO bap CUT I he's mastered the pieis eamera aad just for adjustinents before mking a Me UUDY, he's he eurtane. and having a good (ine at the Beaue han home dn Clurcmont, NE Heven-year-old Cary Beaunyan hai become attached to the tre squirrel and feedy ie milk Irony aepiriy bottle widy a Dipple on it, Gary's mother found the Uitte animal sprawled cn the Ndewalk and took it home heen wee “W Jeoked an helpless," tebe A ba ID reeoe Chipper looks as needs another Kecand formal portrait of some friends, to: As | See le i ' t Elin ore MY, ifpoll | ‘ t yt 2 Vie | ‘Far-Flung Camp | ‘SOEST, GERMANY —: | The army has treated: its’ visiting MPs exactly! as it treats the infantry. men—it hus kept ‘us on the hustle for some days, We bive seen this far-fling camp, this Nttle bit of Canuda : deep instde Germany; and We | have sech it in ail its aspects, : We have seen the infantry In: tralning, and very rugged train- ine at that. We have seen them shuoting and practising all the’ hew techniques of battle. But we have also seen them In ful} kit running at and ellmbing over very farmidable log wails, craw). ‘ing on thelr bellies on a single ‘rope from one pole to another, ; ‘hud edging across double rope | :tdders. We have also seen them practising amphiblan warfare fanious Luke Movhn, which Is the scene of the famous dam busting episode of the Hit- Jer war. nr + on une + Fb (IT WAS-A remarkable scene at that rebuilt dam when Brig- ‘adler Anderson gave our party an on-the-spot briefing about the busting, Readers will remember tho ev- ent which was recently immort- caced ina fine movie: How im- ‘portant that water storage dam was to the economy of Germany and espectally to {its industrial heart the Ruhr valley. For months the tup brains In the alr force figured on ways and means o destroying the dam, and fine lilly the men of the air force did just that in one of the most ‘herote and ingenious attacks f_ {the whole history of war. But ‘here was the brigadier telling us about the destructlon of the dam ‘ P and here on the very outskirts ‘of our MP's party were perhaps '30 or 40 curlous German tourists ‘Hstening in. The destruction meant that a great wall of water swept down ithe valley, taking the lives of some 60,000 German civilians So far as I could see no German _{n the crowd seemed to have any’ ‘memory of that fact, or {f he ur ‘she did they showed no resent- ment because of it. Perhaps al- | ter all they agreed it WAS Hit- ‘ler's war. & + & 1 THE MPS HAVE been called up- ! , On not only to visit all ranks of: the brigade, but also ‘to make: short speeches to the men and | their families, | | T was one of two speakers as- sieved to speak to about 600 or | 700 peuple, mostly drawn from | the Second Bittallon of the Vani Dons—that is the famous Royal Twenty-Second Regiment. I rot off to a good start by telling them. that I was with, ar rather beldnd, the famous original Twenty-Second Battalion on Sept, 15, 1916, the duy they touk ,Courcellette on the Somme. 1 fiso told them that we visiting MPs were all sufferdng from an Ceeupnitional disease something like “housemald's knee’ except ctiat our partleular complaint: Might be described as‘ diplo- niat'y elbow" after all the parties that the French gave us in Paris. TORING ABIDE vohinded them that the thing which had made Conada really great among the Inatlons of the world wos that tn jour country the descendants of jthe bitterest enemies in history, the French and English, had leurned to live and work taget- her {nh reasonable and Inereas- Jug harmony. - went on from there and trled to show them that every Canadian soldier in Germany ane every wile or ehild of a Canadian soldier Wad the hance to carry on that partlent- w work whith has mads Canada Brent, Hut 1 stressed that now on went Joh iy really to make friends with the Germans andl help to heal the terrible wounds left by the wars of this century. OPERATES IONOSPHERE RECORDER — Dr, John H. Chap- ‘Say... DECLENES ‘TO PERIURE Joe McCarthy hasn't any-| thing to lose any more, He ts trying to wid up an “I-tolde, you-so” position aginst Admins | istration Far Bastern negotla-! thuns fi case anything — goes: wrong. | Jn the course of an attack on Tke’g Far Eastern pulley on the floof last week he complimentec feleran glalesman Walter George OD, Ga as “an excel- lent senator.” The answer wis typleal “1 vish J could - redprucate the compliment,” buomed — George, ‘but £ shall not perjare mysell toy uny-such statement as that.’ McCarthy {s deflated-—yeats mist pasa to undo nis work avery litle while now sume cautrt throws out one oof bis manifestations -the Pelers ant Luttimore cases und now the Cortlss Lamont case. Federa. judge Wemfeld has just rited McCarthy hos no right to In- lerrogale Lamont on his per- -ONal bellefs, But that doesn't end Ite : Other Papers | “] econcmists who keep clase Waleh In the eyes of:;, government over the state of the natton’s ouslness, the present sunimier has been marked by one out! standingly satisfactory fentiire, It has not brought the tra.) lidional mi. {-season slump to} the economy on anything tike! its usual scale. That's regarded a8 9 worth. while and slynificant feature of) the boom whieh gathered its! kreatest momentum in the} »pring ncnths of the year, The! dip from which autumn business ; will make its climb ‘Hl not bo! nearly so great ag In other years, ' Admittedly durlng the WECKS : ince mid-July business hos been : tapering c/s in alnvost all fields | But it has been tanaring . ger fromt he records to whieh it allinbed In: the spring months. As compared vith a year 1g0, Iti is holding at g substantially | higher level In virtually all Ma | Jor Clelds—retalling, the tuto- | motive Industry, busie steel, | heavy durable gouds, mining engineering, constri. : ton and the manufacture ol. In addilius, in the retailing - Aull, some of the CAA ans rth tron a ch RY ty echsi ue Ml “Culer clothe; 4 eeesscrles.yenen Competition the Telalling t ws coul ie thay VUlr Shelveg patie on SEruNG te barytt Ai. While the constmer 7" Dear at first pl te! benetitted tron ‘hic UC Irayes DUSIieLy 1 MUTE seer d pant “RE Quin ind weal f Dit ' f The broad gemin cei ually hteh Hi genera) ronan Sven maintal i mer is that emiient il HAN econ: misty ate pa rceurd autumn ppd'sed The fact t fy slump of recent guys oY a shadow of} 5 leztrced a7 aed built-in sem Dushveas bog ao Bet ‘Lae esonemfsre fee] ti mentum Ly suite gf