i i B ae oe : ! : . fe ' tome me . i aS ey a iy ve ‘ 2 Prince Rupert Daily News ~ mo ' Saturday, October 5, 1957 ah independent dally newspaper devoted to the uphuilding of Prince Rupert and Northern and Central British Colunibla, Member of Canadian Press—Audit Bureau of Cireulations Cnoadian Dally Newspaper Association Pullished hy ‘The Prince Rupert Daily News Limited , os J, MAGOR, President. 1 ate , a A Subseription Rates: Cin erage By mail-—-Per month $1.00; per year $10.00. . . BY currier---per month, $1.25; per yeur, $12.00 @htharized as second class mail by the Post Office Department, Ottawa ° nr pee ; About Being ateader sis FHT need for leadership in~ all--walks of life’ is “ greater today thah ever before. Tvery aspect of living demands guiding hands: government, business, the professions, the fine arts and the mechanic arts. Leadership does not mean domination. The World is always well supplied with people who want to he dictutors. The leader is of a different sort. He seeks effective activity witha beneficient: purpose. A elance through history shows that the story of nations and of in dustries is told in terms of the ex- Wloints of individuals. In every significant eyent there has been a hold leader, an object or purpose, and an adversary. Durant makes one of his chatac- ters say in The Mansions of Philosophy: “The masses do not accomplish much ... they follow the lead of exceptional men” 7 1: A healthy society is gne mn. which opportunities ° are given for leaders to emerge fyom all ranks in the yfopulation. ‘The mechanic who has a helper assigned tb him is a leader. The office worker with a secretary isa leader. Within their spheres these leaders have the same responsibilities, the same opportunities for showing ability, and the same potential satisfactions as has the leader of a government. ' Inacountry like Canada the genius of leadership seems as likely to sprout in some humble home as in e¢ mansion of the wealthy. To be educated in a coun- try school, or in a city public school where little lux- oF gah -ury is enjoyed, is not a handicap to the attainment of leadership. What marks the leader is individual craftsmanship; sensibility and insight; initiative and energy, : So sluggard need aspire to leadershix. There are passive persons who are content to go through life getting lifts from people; who wait until action is forced upon them. They are not of leadership material, | How do men get out in front and stay there? They raise the standards by which they judge them- selves—and by which they are willing to be judged. They raise their aim, both for themselves and for the gToup they lead. They develop with energy ‘their own knowledge and skill-so as to reach the'standards they have set. Co —Royal Bank of Canada Letter. ! . uo iy , ’ e Touch of Immortality 4#.'T the moment British conductor Sir Malcolm Sar- © gent raised his baton to conduct Sibelius’ Fifth Symphony in Helsinki's Concert Hall last week, Jean Sibelius died at his Finnish home. ' The incident seems symbolic. Finland’s great ¢omposer is dead, but his musi¢ lives on, The man who possesscd unusual vigér up to his 91st year had dchieved' a measure of immortality through — his works when he was half that age. He had lived a full fife devoted to the compelling urge to compose. He had found recognition, and high recognition, among his own people and among music lovers throughout the world, : The world of men records the passing of another @reat figure, THs influence remains, vibrant and in- Spiring as long as men find emotional satisfaction And enjoyment from the preat contributions he made fo music, —Victoria Times. Svs €BZPi ses eBSr eA FSG aecvwe Bae rsstvagwtFews- er Ae* ~ 1936. "The CEC is out of its depth,” -\Mr. Bowman said in an inter- er #. by OTTAWA—AII the world i have a hunch that the name Little Rock will also become famous in future history. For it was the strange mixture ol events at Little Rock, Arkansas, which drew the eyes of all the world to one of the great and | good advances of these mixed-up times. It was at Little Rock that a tired old man, reluctant to fight, won a preat patile. For Little Rock may well prove to be great republic. THE people of the United Statcs over the issue of slavery. They -!fought the bloodiest and costhiest war that there had been in mod- ern times, until our own beastly | +century twice plunged mankind Jinto true world war. . The war between the States settled the issue of slavery—and incidentally settled for 1 time the question whether any group of states had the right to secede. The verdict was, no slavery and Radio Pioneer Charges CBC With Wast> VICTORIA ‘M—One the establishment of the CBC said Thursday the ently operated is a waste of money. ‘ He is Charles A. Bowman, 74, sole surviving member of the ihree-man Aird Commission, sct up in 1922 to study broadcasting :in Canada. ' Asa result of the commission's j recommendations to Premier R. | Bennett the CBC was founded in \ . we cay 2 ranean ‘ ° ‘ i . . . oe See It >: . d q 4 ve bnore | Philpott ® Little Rock Victory. and Goliath, and how one small stone in the hand: of 2 brave young man won a little war, the stone which slew the oligth dence, that all men, including of outworn face attitudes an Lhe |Negrocs were “created free and went to war with each other | of | the | three men whose findings led tO pYEN in the war against Hitler, | ing of them and digging into! lions of tons of ore. - ‘ knows the story of Davic Ino recession, But the Civil War, did not anc could not settle the deeper ques tigns of race relations, By and large, all the southen States still. draw the caler line Not one state, in the south, ha: ever yet in fact admitted either by law or custom that Negroc. are included in the great word: gi the Declaration of Indepen- equal.” BUT notwithstanding the fact | that the South has never yet ‘admitted that the Negro is an equa) human being, the South has done its best to face up to the new world facts of life. — Hitler. and Stalin, between them, literally compelled our free western civilization to. look lat our own race attitudes, as an honest man looks in the mirror, | and sees his blemishes. ~~ Hitler carried race hate and race persecution to dark depths ‘to which it had never been car- ried before, in the whole history of the human race. Stalin put “abolition of racial exclusive- ness” as his number one war aim, and the fact that World. Commu- the 38th International Frankfurt Auto Show. Built. by the Georg furt, the three-wheel one-seater has a 48 ce, motor, which can be days. LESTER B. PEARSON COLUMN By LESTER B. PEARSON nism. does in fact apply equality | of rights and opportunities be-| tween the races-is a mightier: weapon in its cold war. arsenal, than any H-bomb or intercon-; tinental missile. national. the American nation still seg-! them to find that new, and per- | . nal regated the Negroes from other’ haps greatest source of energy, . ; broadcasting network, as pres-| Americans, in most armed ser-| Uranium. Svy}ample of co-operation between ‘vice units. . TO jarmy leaders like Eisenhower ‘saw this must:come to an end. It lhas been done.. The new way ! works. ‘ The time also came when the ‘Supreme Court made its .great {and historic decision which de- ‘clared unlawful the segregation . }of school pupils on a basis of race color. | view -here, explaining views. he ON May 17, 1954, when the Su- {expressed in a recent letter to; 1 ' the Ottawa Citizen, of which he 'was ecitar until his retirement | ie the coast in 1946. | He said that continuing op- | eration of the CBC on the pres- of segregation, there were 17 . But the time came when wise | preme Court ordered the end) A CYCLIST WONDERS just how low a motorist can get while passing to examine the new Ger- man cabin-scooter, the Mopetta., The new low in road midgets was exhibited for the first time at won Opel Company of Frank- seen at right. Top speed of the Mopetta is about 25 m.p.h., just enough for short trips. A plastic hood goes over the seat for rainy . (Copyright 1957. All right reserved.) ‘There are few places in the world more beautiful than Algoma in_ the Canadian autum, when the trees are red, brown and gold; the waters of a thou- sand little lakes glisten and the rocky hills are massive and magnificent. | These rocks have now come to life and there is much prospect-| alone there are hundreds of mil-' This development is a fine ex-; ‘ 'private and public enterprise. The search has been SuCcCess- | Uranium is not a produce whose | ful and the resulting activity is | sale can be left to private pro-; converting an area which hadj ducers. Its use for atomic wea-! been the reserve of the hunter | pons necessitates, therefore, that: and fisherman into a furiously; the Canadian government should! growing industrial complex cen- | exercise control of its marketing; tred in a thriving, well planned!and sale to other governments. : | community, Elliot Lake, which,/ At the present time, in fact, the. a couple of years 2g0, was real- | government has underwritten ly-—and exclusively—a lake. This; sales arrangements for this pur- iis pioneering—modern style. The| pose covering the period up to’ | trail of ’93 is made by the trail-; 1963 to the amount of more than lers of °57. Where the mala-! one billion six hundred million. {mute saloon might have stood, is! dollars. That is really big bus-' ‘an up-to-the-minute school with | iness. period, all we could produce and American . have, been carried out without this ar-_ at a profitable price. defence plans could not rangement. In the future, a world market | will be required to keep the mines at full pro@uction. This, I am certain, can be found, he- cause there wh] be an increas- ing demand for our uranium for peaceful purposes: especially for powet. This can be met by agreements made between Can- ada and receiving governments. Here again international consid- erations are important because these. agreements will have to be in accordance with the provis- ‘ions of the United Nations Con- vention of the Peaceful.Uses of 1200 youngsters working in two} shifts. | An old Indian of the region is reported to have sighed, when this mining activity was states. where it was applied—as well as the District of Columbia. There were'a total of 3,000 school districts in this whole area. Just over 700 have already | @!l Practically all of this Uranium | © Ete meee . has been going to the US.A..! Atomic Energy, to which Cana- though the broadening of ony: 4a. along with many other states, outlets—under appropriate po-! has subscribed. litical safeguards through gov-! In short. the national devel- Other Papers’ Say... 20. 1 | { | t | KEEPS YOU MOVING | The shortest span of time | “ mam de the thine hes _tween. the moment the traffic to fee seen ER CU pyets. ot i ud the manent the fellow be- “hind you starts blowin his-horm. | «Phe Sherbrooke Daily Record sh beeen ret we Touchy Brith Columbia is a thorn in the side of the: GBC. h'The nationsl radio cid a ‘TV j show on down-and-out alcoholics , dozing In Vancouver, waterfront’ i doorways and referred ta them (us residents of “skidrow.” ‘tne Vancouver Sun furiously, retoris that there’s no “Skidrow' aud. /anyone but a non-British’ Column - ‘dian dolt would know it ia prap- iperly “Skidroud.” ‘ ' --VThe Ottawn Joanna SKIDROW RESPECTABELERY - ‘ IGNORANCE A DEFENSE? | In Toronto Maristrate rect “Thompson has refused to pacd aaa “!impaired driver because hoe was ‘not satisfied that the man uh- ‘derstood he contd be sent vo prison an a second cangiction. The musvistrate says the defend- -ant was intoxicated when wain- ed the first time atid didirt us- derstand the warning. Sa what's rippened to that old axion about ignorance of the law be- Algoma Uranium Finds Turn Tourist |": i:sc0re. Paradise Into Mecca For Engineers MONSTER BATS The “flying fox’ of tropieal As.2 is actually g species af bad, with a wineepread of fiye feet. Attains C.L.U. Designation ~ eT ne Burns _J.S. Buriss, representing the Great-West Life Assurance Company in Prince Rupert. has been awarded the CLU. sine aw ent basis is “a waste of money-— 4A huge and unnecessary demand jon the public treasury.” oo, Mr. Bowman added: “The broadcasting situation in this ‘second half of the 20th century is profoundly different than -¢ ‘was when the CBC was estab- | ished.” sO He retommended that CBC etations be given to the universi- i fies of Canada; that more pri- l vate TV stations be allowed; and now asks for new more drastic that national TV broadcasting laws prohibiting publication of with Canadian talent be limited] any advocacy of interracial mar- ‘ta three hours dally, as Canada! riage, and five year prison terms ‘could not supply talent for morg.| for printing anything which stirs | up “friction” on race questions. Lookin gq been successfully desegregated. I doubt that any great nation ever mace so swift progress in so complex a problem. If we want to ,see a horrible example of a backward country on the question of race and color, we will find it in our own sister member of the British Common - wealth—the bigotted land’ of South Africa. There a National Commission An editor convicted on such a istic employment for life. charge is banned from. journal-| brought to his attention, 1nd to ernmental agreements—is under! mutter, “when the white man way: notably, and desirably— | came here first, he killed our, with Great Britain. animals and sold the furs. Then. co oe . . he cut down our trees and sent’, Uranium is an important) them off as lumber. And now— factor. not only in our trade, bui:; never satistield—he is taking. Th oul international arya away our rocks.” ere are fur more than domes- He is certainly doing his best ‘tic considerations involved. Onur, s certainly doing his best, mines could not have been do-: because these Algoma rocks next; yeloned in the way that they’ year will be producing 14,000 hove, for instance, had it not’ tons of Uranium oxide annul- peen for financial assistance! ly; as much as the whole of the trom abroad, largely from the! of 34,300 tons of ore a day,—a lot of the Indian’s rock! Next: year nearly 400 millicn dollars jot npread to . . aerrog worth of Uranium wil] be pro- ,t greed | take, for an agreed duced in Canada. It will be our: metal of greatest gross valuc.! And in these Algoma. mines! Aes : fs I a IREIIIIIXIIII ITI yoo. ,Pack ao ° ‘Crom the Pies of She Datly News October 5 4 | 10 Years Ago A Kttle later than Jt ts often making Its first appearance of the year, snow came to the tip af.Mount Morse and other of the higher mountains surround neg the elity during the night Jand Prince Rupert people, on- serving, §{ Chis morning, had to ndmit that winter is definitely most In the of Mine, nae e advanced Gerry Woodside, wha Js a petty © * officer in the Chatham Nuval) @ t [ 209 0-00.00008 SOO 65SSSSOOSCOOES Research @ivision, left by alr bo- day for Vancouver, en route to Esquimalt where he will take n twoeweek training: coyrse, 20 Years Ago The Pranee Rupert Chamber of Commeree, at sts monthly Ginner inceding dn the Canim d+ dore Cafe last evensng, instruct ed President J. 0. Little to cam: mindcate with & J. Hungerford, president of the Canadian Nee ona) Rullways, with a view lo having bee company conaldeys ’ the possiblity of constructing Piogls” Tobviotor. With this new n branch ne vonnoeting ibe feature secretaries can tabylate Pence River country wilh Ly with finger er polm without main Ene of the CNR Inty Prince moving thelr hands from the. arpert. a, qyulde-hey positions, . a We 's ' ” + Bain v "VINANCE MENISTER Fleming ” aan ref Croadic signs the pratocol Vo new Canin United Stntes Via aipreement desiwned ta on y COUT te (L868. corporutions to gndpit Cunudians toa prenter * share ownership in thelr Gana- . Ccllan subsidiaries, Atate Beere- y tary John Dudien Ceeutrey, who Valnned for the WS, and Cann wn onibassador Narnia Robe mertogu louk au dné thts photo ! tikeen Sept, 26 ut the Waah- Jupton ceremony. COP Photo) Chartered A LB - nneenan Corrlage Control, Allows the see” rotary te sult the carriage ten: olon lo hor needs. Just u flip of who bnele does it! Ne need te call # repely mani 0000000800000 9 Arvcountant ' e 6 325 Fourth Avenue East . y H F p 4 _ Prince Rupert, B.C. LE Foy tho Groat Now RO P.O, Drawer 128 Telephone 3975 || e ‘ POPOV KO VETO REVERE XM OWATING WEW WaCiC TARULATOR X SENSATIONAL NEW CARRIAGE CONTROL XK EXTRG “PERSONALIZED” KEY X PLUS 17 TIME SAVING FEATURES @ @ ® PRINCH ROPEUE AND TEEHACH : Bulow my Kervien ° i ee: e e 0 Smithers Jowollers or The Daily News e Saves up to 50% in SSECOHSCCHCECOCEORSEETSCERSO Exive "Personalized" Mey. At no oxtres cost—-A 43rd, key in any of these combinatlone(i)( (4) . Other combinations at a slight additional charge. Plus Improved “Magle” Margle, “Vouch Contral”, Vime-SaverVepe’ nd a host of other up-to-the. minute features that help make typing @ breeze. LY NEWS VV PHONE 3124 Al. PORTABLE Contact 000077900000 09.08. U.S.A. This requires the ralming usa. and the U.K. Their pro- | duct would have been of Hitle | value if the U.S. government head! : az) a Newel worcal Nibed o costly pipes or register Look at these exclusive SIEGLER features e Two-in-One Heatmaler e Sleglermatic Draft onds soot and smoke e Silent-Floating super quiet motor mount e Lifetime porcelain enamel finish ° 6-way directional Tropical Floor Heat © Cast iron construction o Kleen-Fire burner, cleans as It heats e Summer cooling at the turn of a switch ri VUIMATIG baa HEATERS, P phi. } m EATON’ OF CANADA | IN PRINCE RUPERT opment of Uranium in Canada is very much an international mat- ter. The most important interna- , tional aspect however. arises from the fact that now practi- cally all of our Uranium, whith ‘poes to the United States, is be- ing used for the manufacture of atomic weapons. have reason to think—that this suituation willy not persist in- definitely, but it exists now. When I was both member of See — ALGOMA (Continned on page 6) OTT NI Pe PO ee ike tke doe RLU oo ook Rea ee 2a Ee fuel A hs " MONEY BACK GUARANTEE | We hope—and ! designation unen succersful campletion of final examina- cions im the three-year Char- tered Life Underwriter course, Abtainment of requires study of Life Underwriting, Insurance and Taxation Taw, Estate Planning and Bueiness JTn- surance, and is) the highest educational qualification a life underwriter can achieve. the C LU . advaneed Mr. Burns bas represented ‘Great-Weet Life in Prince Rupert for the past ¢ four years, Foe SO ERC RrR ERE OI Y mn: ter mee ine ee A eee Seen ek ae ante ee, OE Eee. at ea lp ne ee ee ee =, « . y ad yHdipou nde PRORMIM, «i ve Ne. . 0 ‘ ‘ ’ S if ua. PHONE 3144 U