mtg 3 ‘ ! t ‘ j 1 eS ut - e ~~, at" o=.-* TE- Oe me Gk ah D wa _ a 2°, Prince Rupert Daily News ee me Monday, September 16, 1957, . an 7 tata @ehy hewspaper devoted to tue uppuding of Prince Ruper code and Northern and Central British Columbia, | Member of Catidiin Pregs--Audit, Bureau of Circulation . Canadian .Datly Newspaper Assoctation Publignhéd by. ihe Pringé Ripert Daily News Limited . J. F. MAGOR, President S.bscription Rates: a TI AGED By mail—Per month $1.00; per year 610.00. ae By Garriér—per month, 81. 25: per year, $12.00 suéforsen as weond dass mull By the Pust Office |#partment, Ottawa eee ons ers t Funds Raised Tonight Well Spent T NIGHT i is the night so far as the Salvation Army tis concerned. Fora week and x half true stories have been’ published in The Daily News, depicting the unceasing work of The Salvation Army, whether it be looking ‘after lost waifs, helping, unmarried mothers, caring for the down and out, the drunkard orthe criminal. It doesn’t. matter what lost soul nebels lielp, The Salvation Army stands ready to give its assistance, whether it be materially or spiritually. However, it takes money to do some of these things. The willing workers of the “Army”, its local corps of Christian solttiers can only do so much anid then they need money torcarry out the .rest of its wark. a . _ » Tonight in a one-night-drive, the local cor DS hopes to raise $5,000 to continue another year of good . deeds. .As most people in Prince Rupert fully appreciate, The Salvation Army is par ticularly tffec- tive here. There is a need for its type of work here anid it is answered willingly. But despite many dona- tidns of*tlothes, magazines and other excess goods, thbre. are times when money and only money is need- edi. .. money to pay for groceries for needy families, mé ney to pay bills fox persons in trouble and money to provide necessities for the derelict. |. Fhe Salvation Army’s Red Shield drive for fuhds is one campaign where administration or op- erating costs are cut to the bone. Practically all the meney raised goes right to work in this community. Itiis not only money well spent but the donors are assur ed that it. awill be used to help i improve not only the lot of someone in the city but inthe long run will assist in improving the entire community. Give gen- erpusly when the canvasser calls, tonight. ‘ ed te wa ote | South ‘Will Lose in Power Fight Bi is obvious that in any conflict of authority involv- ting, the Arkansas national. guard, the federal gov- ernment is ina position to make the final and de- cigive moves. « Gov. Orval Faubus may bluff and bluster but he - cannot sever the strong cords which bind his state’ militia to the central government at Washington, ‘—The national guard is not only a state organiza- tion. It is also a military reserve component of the federal government. When guardsmen are ordered into active duty by the president he becomes, under the Constitution, their commander-in-chief. > The guard is tied to the defence department and receives money, uniforms and equipment from _ it. The Arkansas national guard, for example, was given federal assistance amounting to more than $5,- 00,000 during the last fiscal year.. _> It would be possible, therefore, for President 0} tsenhower to call Arkansas’ ouardsmen into federal seyvice if the governor did not retreat from his posi- lion. Or the defence department might exert strong piessur es on the guard, withdrawing federal recog- niLion, recalling uniforms and equipment, and other- wise driving’ home , the: rae of ultimate feder al” wuthority, oy Whether stich ‘steps ar e being considered is not clear, But Mr, Eisenhower has warned Gov. Faubus that “the federal Constitution will be upheld by ever y pi ictical means at my command” and the Arkansas guard has been standing squarely in the path of a foderal court order based on a mandate of the Unit- oq States supreme court, ' The president, beyond any douht, holds the win- ning hand if he is ever forced to play it, The hap- piest solution would involve an iminediate reversal of Ghv, aubus’ present position, . ' In any stubborn deadlock of authority, however, Mir, Itisenhower and the federal government would have the last word, Itis right, just as it is inevitable, that this should he so, —Minnenpoiis Morning vy ihune, ‘Borrow where money service has iihproved with age diy, and yout choird of repayment plens s Phono or v Malt H¥C today. GpHOUsEHOLD FINANCE When you-horrow money, you want service that’s bieked by yours of experience. That's why most people tum te HEC, providing @ money service backed by 79 genre’ edpertencse, AL ITEC, you receive promptattantion, friendly but burdnantlitce omalanay, your monsy Ie one ’ 4 mw ae mw eee ert Free a as C6 Bigham, ow " BA Vhird Ave, Woot at Secdnd S1., secend Hoor, phone 6611 PRINCE BUPERY, B.C, ( tree oe ' ‘ tote hw te ee oe oor see 1 i ee tb bw oe Do A oe BD Dh ee 4 fe Des. eo, A AA 4 BD. by As ! ‘See’ lt ‘Eb nove PI ; frott . © Keep Booze Off Planes: MY sympathies are solidly on the ‘side of the.men and "women who fly the passenger planes across Canada and who are trying:to head ic :bever ages ser ved on airer aft. I say down with the drunks, and more power to the elbows of those: who guide the planes across the dangerous skyways oF this vast country. Let the thirsty drink . all alcohol that they want and ‘the luw allows, but let them dg SO on terra firma, Having flown | clean — right around this globe, and Having criss-crossed a good many coun. ; tries on three continents by air, | iam well aware that’ some good airlines do serve alcoholic bever- ages and also. maintain. high safety records. But on some of the lines in Europe I have asked myself, what is this anyway? ‘Is it a legitimate airline, or is it'a fly- ing barrooin? The bottles of booze literally sell Uke ‘hot- cakes, evén on short runs, for once the aircraft are in the skies the tax does not apply. But regardless of what they do in Europes I think we shoul@ Keep the booze off the planes in Canada. Our hops are longer, and even with the regulations as they have been in the past, we. have had too many flying acci- dents in Canada. | The men and women who daily take their own lives in their hands, and’ -who have in their keeping-the lives of all the rest of us who must travel by air on business say they do not want any more problems with alcohol-: ics than they have already. I think they are 100 per cent right. I CONFESS that my feeling on this matter are more velement than they might have been hbe- cause I was unlucky enough last winter to get a drunk for a séat- mate. _ He got on at Winnipeg and promptly proceeded to make himself .obnoxious. He rudely}. and loudly blamed the TCA stewardess for the fact that the flight was late. Finally a man off a move to have aleohol- sa gust, Hterally as meck as, Moses —finally blew my top. I really burned ‘his eats bY __‘ telling hint to. shut -tp,. that we; the had twoof the finest airlines in! the whole world In Canada, and that as one passenger the TCA lecould mever make me mad ‘by: take irying LO! being late rather than chances with my life, meet a timetable. “a pe. SPE TIN TYME TE aah 18 ym, y. ' Sat : . . prvenreyeptgre ra empemere ere TIE WUNNER —BYA NOSE — A natrow esca.te is recorded by. the camera ‘as this lucky . mouse pets. his nose. out of the way of the _tra > justin time, The photo, made in Indianapolis, Ind, was made, with Strobe leht wired to the snriny of the bap. (Note wire ht ‘right! VICTORIA REPORT 4 2X Webi VICTORIA Your Socia) tives as the official Opposition, cabinet ministers to travel, Credit Government — as Prem-,— he much prefers the CCF, Hej; they'll get to know the people, lier Bennett delights to call it __'doesn't politically fear CCF"ers NOW suppose that the move is sitting pretty once again after nearly as much as Liberals and succeeded to sell alcohol on: ‘retaining Delta and Cariboo | Conservatives. airlines in Canada. Instead of: seats in the recent by-elections,; In due course, Mr. having had just an obnoxious: Mr. Bennett, of course, béing grounch with a half hangover to- deal with the stewardess would ‘have had a man demanding ful- filment of his legal right to buy’ more firewater. He was the type ; who busts things up. True, not all drunks do what one did recently in the States-—/ that is take out a pistol in: the washroom and shoot’ a hole in; the side of the plane, thus creat-,: ing an acute threat of a.crash. But. the indisputable fact is’ that flying is already a hazard- | ous enough adventure, both for: crew and passengers alike, . The sale of booze on planes: , would do nobody any good, and might: do many people harm. So my voice and vote in on, the side of the men and women in aircrew uniform. erals, a politician, which he has to be if he’s to be Premier, would: have been happier had he taken Burnaby seat away from ‘the :CCCF, but he really didn't ex- pect to do this ,and so he's not too: disappointed. : He's" quite happy with the , preserved status quo in the Le- gislature a strong Social | Credit side, supporting the pov- ‘ernment, and the CCF, with not too many members, as the af- ‘ficial Opposition, and the Lib- just a rump group, a nuisance value, the Premier thinks, way down at the botton of the House, of no importance whatsoever, What Mr. Bennett want are Liberals or doesn't Conserva- Salvation Army. ‘Always Set When Cry of “Fire” Goes Up This. is the Jast in a series of stories and articles outlin- " work of the dedicated offic: bilitate men, women and child vaticn in needed funds. across the aisle reached the boil- ‘ing point and asked the booze- wa ‘everybody hound how he thought the plane could have been on time with blinding blizzards raging in Montreal and Ottawa. But the boor found fault with one thing after anodther. He -crabbed at the.food though it was first class by any standard. He madé him- Self such a pain in the neck to that “even I—who have the patience of Job and as a traveller am, to my’ wifes dis- ., Bach tram the Files of She Dally News SEPTEMBER 14 10 Years Ago Retiring. after nearly 25 years of service as managing secretary of the Prince Rupert General Hospital, H. W. Birch was honor- ed Thursday afternoon by mem- hers of the board of directors, the medical profession and hos- pital’ stalf ata joint: surprise gathering in the Nurses’Home, '30 Years Ago The completion of the acrial reconnoissance of the route for the Skeena River highway he- tween Terrace and Galloway Rapids is planned for today, Ma- jor D. R, MeLaren, DSO, made several short flights over town and harbor yesterday tnle- Ine pietures, he i '« eter , 40 Tears Ago Mayor MeCaflery left for a short visii to Qeean Falla yes- lorday, He ls expected to he back augiuan Lomorrow,. th LA SON Pa RR ie ear et NS SNR ‘Useful Profits LEEDS, England --A rec ord profit of £708 wag ratsed at the Press Bal) here, The money ows’ and orphans’ fund of the National Union of Journalists, and the Newspaper Press Fund, ne HR mate me ep pm ga nm vows Vw Ae the Tne To Check Your PRINTING NEEDS DIBB Printing Company oboakig : the. will be divided betweeh the wid-. In Oregon PORTLAND Two ex- ‘perienced.. mountain’ climbers . fell to their death Sunday trying to scale hazardous, i foot St. Peter’s Dome in the’ Co- lumbia River gorge 30 miles east of here. The two killed were Don Mc- Kay, Portland, and Joe Quigley, of nearby. Vancouver, Wash. First word the men had been tt tious face of the rocky crag was received at about 11 a.m., but it was several hours later be- fore would-be rescuers found they had been killed. Sheriff’s. deputies radioe d, Quigley fell seme 1,100 to 1,200 feet down the sheer side of the dome, Only a few climbers have heen able to ascend the rugged peak in the past, = - — Tanat April he plinted a rank fe CHmbs wp the side of his tae commercially tom helt of B00. heard, many had to dash out: seen to plunge from the precipi- - from the scene that McKay and | MORT WOPPY FELLOW .. M. Alox Toylor, 1 BP brewing producta suppiioy, shows “what's hrewint "4. ing work of the Salvation Army in this district. They show the ers and how they strive to reha- ren who have Icst all hope and | in many, cases do not know w here to turn for help. The Sal- Army will stage its one- night drive tonight for $5000 ‘. It 3 is. not hard for most. folks in Prince Rupert to remember (y the. big fire of the past year. Chi . bers Die | Surely the half-burned build- ling -on. .Third. Avenue speaks, | eloguentiy. of the terrors of that! inight, For housed in that build- | jing, which was made up of one- ;room apartments, lived about 30 people. When the cry of “Fire” was ‘in their night clothes to avoid ‘being burned to death. But the Salvation Army was on the job, and these folks were all take to the Citadel across the lot. Here they were provided “with clothing from the second- hand supplies which are always kept there. The usual cup of coffee seemed unusual that night, to these unhappy .peo- ple, as well as to the fire-fight- ers who were still fighting the blaze! After a night of terror, peace once again reigned, and at 5 am, the Salvation Army had found places for the destitute to stay, and .all wended their tired _way homeward. nn eee a enema tema memmennt nt WO, of n Crechaslovakion Brady Hoy vine In his garden, Now he fa the proved awnor af a plant that matory house ond stretches out far 40 foot. Tere, he afapinya a clipping af the vine. Note havea and ving in piekavatnd Narmally thon vines prow } foot, side; ever and ever. He'll be able to; CCF, ‘as long as it remains the sure as sure, become the govern. ment. Oppositions always become | the government. Mr. Bennett: of political life. British Columbia, if we are to judge by the. results of the “little election” shows no sign of putting Liberals and Conser- ture. and Burnaby proved once more that this province is most de- finitely an Sc ince. the two-party system back but the two parties are SC and! And we most definitely have : ‘hopes to win every Liberal and{bind desks’ in Victoria. Conservative voter to the sc ithe Premier’s explanation when then he'll have the whole | People complain free enterprise vote, and will be | fully hard to get an appoint- able jhe hopes, to keep the CCF: ment with a cabinet - minister at a safe distance, forever and in Victoria. ! ! do no such thing, of course; the: official! Opposition, will one day, | wort face that cold, hard’ fact felectric supply on Allumette Is-' iknow what they want. A pren | nrovince i Premier, Bennett | by cabinet ministers sitting be- like B.C., says tine can't be administered That’s that it’s .aw- Squirrel Hazard PEMBROKE, Ont. @—Flying wd squirrels are a headache for the ‘Pembroke Electric Light Com- pany. They have disrupted the ‘land several Limes by flying into = 1 ‘transformers on high tension : wires. vatives back into the | Legisla- | The voters of Delta, Cariboo | CCF prov-: CCF, not Liberal and Conser- : ivative. | i That’s something Liberals and | Conservatives just will not, or cannot seem to understand. j the two party system now. It; HAS returned. Just look at the line-up in the Legislature and you'll rea- jlize that fact: Social Credit, 39; CGF, 10; Liberal, 2; and Mr. Uphill of Fernie. With the by-elections over and no Autumn session of the | | Legislature, things will along‘in this capital for a few months until the cabinet starts a great rush, about mid-Novem- ber, on plans for the 1958 ses- sion, likely to open in= mid- January. Attorney-general Bonner, in his role as Minister of Indus- ;trial Development is going junketing to Europe. The Premier is toying with ‘the idea of accepting the Federal government's invitation to alt- in Ottawa by the Queen in mid- October, , Cabinet ministers wil be run- ning about, all over the prav- ince, The Premicr Se IVT EET They still talk about the neces-: Sity for the return of the two-: | party system to B.C. We HAVE | tend the opening of Parliament i | | coast | a-} Thank goodness ave’ re preparing fort ASIAN FLU - | SO Ray EHC pe Mea ages Megha Spee eeet Ms [1s MORN anapenteyrten | ¥ / vey a we 4 be ed “oy . yon ve . pros bey ee : a Lo Lot Serreseonesrereacreererrorenorre Other Papers Say . nevertesabscecscorcenssensveesiis OPPORTUNIEY LOST In the pocket of an old sult, the man at the next desk found a dollar bill. Instead of being nieased, he’s disgusted at himself for not having spent. it, iwhen it was ‘worth that muchidii oo Stratford “Bedtcoh: ‘Hora. ; ve SHARK ON THE Ling. People in West Looe, Cornw.ul, | were unable to use the local out- door telephone booth on ‘Tues- day. Some absent-minded tele- -phoner had left a flve-foot shark. jin the booth. This will come as a comfort to people who leave jumbreihas, gloves, coats, hats and ‘packages’ in various publie’ i places. , ~-Montreal Gazette. COMPLIMENT . Jay Waldo Monteith, MP for Perth, who has been appointed Minister of National Health and Wellare, is a chartered -account- fant, a useful background I! the Conservatives decide “to, follow. the Libcral lead vind saddle the country with the astronomical most of national hospital insur-- ane. ~-Winnipepn Tribune , SCIENTIFIC IRONY What a supreme irony that all the nations of the world, on both sides of the curtain, can co-op- erate for 18 month on the Inter- nation] Geophysical Year, in a joint effort to examine the uni= verse we live in--while at the -same time we cannot co-operate to prevent us from blowing” our- sélves into the next galaxy. 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