-nually for the mighty Yankees. 1910 - PRINCE RUPERT DAILY NEWS — 1958 An independent newspaper devoted to the upbuilding of Prince Rupert and Northern and Central British Columbls, ° A member of The Canadian Press—Audit Bureau of ~ Circulation—-Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association - Published by The Prince Rupert Daily News Limited JOHN F, MAGOR J. R. AYRES Editor President G. P. WOODSIDE General Manager Authorized as second class maltil by the Post Office Department; Ottavr — — THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1958 NCE again, as it does every year at: this time, the city is divided into three camps. World Seriesitis, that peciliar disease ‘which ‘affects’ even the unitiated, (persons who do not know a pinch-hitter from a. pinch bottle) has a large segment of the town’s citizenry in its grip. There are on one hand those die-hard fans who love a perennial winner and root an- On the other hand there are members of a group growing larger by the year, call- '. ed “Hate-the-Yankees” club. This col- lection of rabid baseball fans is made up of Milwaukee- Braves supporters and ‘others. who cannot see the New Yorkers even with the aid of a micro- scope. “ ‘Then there is another breed of baseball fan, who actually only comes into being at this time ‘of‘year. ‘They don’t car e who winsso long as the total number of runs coincides with his or . her baseball “pool” ticket. = It is this group that sheds an en- tirely different light on the stature of | the baseball giants whose activities in ROSPECTIVE settlement of the waterfront -strike which has tied tip the major shipment of British Co- lumbia exports since May 21 was re- ported yesterday, after leaders of both parties. to: the.dispute endorsed a com- promise worked out before the federal mediator. If the unions concerned ratify this action loading can en Series time full of excitement, unexpected County Stadium or Yankee Stadium.. during the next week occupy so much of the country’s interest. Mickey ’ ‘Mantle or Hank Bauer or similarly Joe Adcock or Wes Covington are undis- puted heroes to New York or Milwau- kee fans respectively. However, to a man who has been holding a 8-2 ticket “for two innings with the game nearly at an end, anyone of the aforemention- ed quartet can become clods within seconds by hitting a bases-loaded home run. This is particularly true if there is $25 or $50 riding on the outcome of the game. Whoever wins, someone will be a hero for years to come and someone will be the goat. Long after this series is over men will talk of the deeds of a ‘man who leaped high to pick a sure three-base hit off the wall or some un- known pinch-hitter will climb to fame with one swing of his bat and perhaps never reach that peak again. All of which makes it a wonderful time of the year. Providing some lout in Mil- waukee doesn’t ruin our 6-4 Yankees ticket on the office pool, that is, : Freeing B.C. exports believed in prospect provide for retro- shoremen on a timed basis. standpoint of the public, it will be the . prospect of agreement and resump- tion of sailings even this late in the year which will be important. Regard-~* = less of its cause, the dispute developed — as another unfortunate economic blow ~ for British Columbia, in a year which hence. at the five Pacific ort have heen cohwebbed during ‘ne period. The benefit may come too late to save much of the western movement in the grain trade which had opened the year so promisingly. It should be an ‘immediate relief to the lumber and pulp: ‘industries; which together con- stitute a large section of the province's primary production. It would also re- store the normal routine’ of offshore ships through B.C. ports, where their honse flags have been missing for the Hist four months. The reported terms of the settle- ment upon which coneurrence is now already has seen several. With major interruptions in Brit- ish Columbia’s trading opportunities drawing to a close a substantial im- provement may follow in the employ- ment rosters. A good many secondary industries depend on forest products for their operation, particularly con- struction. More housing starts, with a resumption of work on public pro- jects, quickly could make a difference. If British Columbia experiences the Indian Summer which normally it ex- peets a substantial pickup would fol- low. — The Victoria Colonist. -@ banquet in the Hotel Astor .on Times Square. (een ee ee ee ee 7 INTERPRETING THE | NEWS No winner in Little Rock free-for-all By JOSEPIT MacSwWtin Canadian Press Staff Writer The strugele over integration In) Arkansas has aspects of a free-for-all wrestling match in which several bouts are waged at once and nobody ever seems to win. The new statement by the United States Supreme Court may at Jast brush away some ‘of the degal canfusion over the essentially simple but) bitterly-foneht issue of whether bincek and white ehildren should sit) together $n osoythern sehools. Sbuplieity ends as soon as the prinelple of the problem is stated, Only roeently, for fnstanee, has President Tisenhower felt free fo speak out on the question, Ino these words: “Most of us beleve that all men re equal fn the slpht of dad. wk we Probably few Amerleans would oraue with that statement not out Jond at least—-bot Hts preetien) application is another matter. Tt hos been the erux of legal warfare alnee the Supreme Court in 1054 ordered Integration Jn southern sehools “with all deliberate speed." Court netlona at varions Jevels now are comb toon elimnax, resultings fram earttary court nedions. She malo antapontata ara Are kangns Gavernor Orval Faubua, the Nationa) Aaxogintion for the Advancement of Colarad “Poole and the federal “‘hovernment. , Hore ian A-TeE af recent hapnanings! Tait dune aubus won a aim) vietory whan in fadloral datrlet Inde med that Little Roel me snapend dategration for 2¥y yonra to saved new tarmoih and ehaoes tn the alty whore federal troops forced titerration in WO. my vy we We thin voli waa upset by the olahth UL. elreutt court, and the Suprema Court then affinnad the elret court's da. chien in oan appeal dept. Wa. In other words, On Arse the high tribunal ordered Faubus to reopen the schools on an integrated basis. Instead, Faubus invoked a now state law enabling him to close high schools altogether, Then he moved to put the schools undar private Jease--nt $1 oo year—and reopen them on a sepregated basis, It was to this manocuvre that the Supreme Court referred Monday when ft sald that neither direct opposition nor “evasive sehomes" would be tolerated, . kk ot At tho same thne still another aourt was having: Its say, In Omaha, two federal clreust duddres ordered thea Little Rock board of ed- uention to retain control of the city high schools and to maintain thelr integrated status, This emnoe m the form of a restraining order, on the appleation of the NAACP, It re- mating in force until Oct. 6, when a three- Judge elreult court of appenls hears the enso for a temporary Injunction, The unhappy edueation board had tried carilor-—without success—-to avald all this by valing a judge whethor ita contemplated course of netion was legal, Phe judge repiied that he had no Jognal authority to alive advice—-“that ils aoMothing for which you will have ta dopend on your connunl. " 20th Hat eT IRENE AR eREETEE® SEE flntS PRN He dnht Mixed metaphor Vrom The Wamilton po! ‘The viff-rafe has been on our bnelkas long enough, We Intend combing them out of our ludy," antal Montreal poliaa dlroator Albovt Linglola, folowing a yald on night apota, And while thoy are about it, couldn't they eam out that motaphor tan? NOROTHY MOREAU of Montreal, who was “Miss Canada of 1956, looks at; the ‘dominion and. ‘provincial coat of arms at the entrance of: Canada’ House in’ ‘New York, Miss Moreau, now a professional : singer, will: sing” “at the Sept. 30 banquet in cele- bration of the ‘opening. of: the 26-storey building on Fifth Avenue. The building. houses the Canadian consulate-general, the Canada Travel Bureau and the New York offices of Canada’s National Film Board, —CP Photo. Heart of Canada i in Manhattan By LLOYD McDONALD Canadian Press Staff Writer New York City hung out an official welcomeing flag yes- terday. to-mark.the formal opening of ‘Canada -House, a Fifth Avenue structure dedi- cated to Canadian | enterprise, in this metropolis. : Mayor Robert Waener,. who along with External Affairs oo : . Pee -. Minister Smith and Hon. Ray active and future increases to long-. From the. . : project, took part in a. flag- Lawson, former consul-gen- eral here and father of the raising ceremony, proclaimed “Canada Welcome Day” in New York to mark the oc- _ casion. -21/On the eve of: the. dedica?¥ go 2°: tion old scores were: ‘forgotten? -as their friends gathered’ for. NEAR RADIO CITY Canada House is a 26-storey granite-and--limestone build- ing on 54th street in the Radio City area. To the now-retired Canadian consul-general “it is an enduring symbol of Can- ada in the United States.” He told the diners: “It is more than just a busi- ness centre—it is, as It were, the heart of Canada in the centre of Manhattan.” More than 500 guests at the banquet, many here from Can- ada for the occasion, applaud- ed the speech by Lawson and that of William Zeckendort — the New York realty magnate whose financial help was needed to bring Canada House , from the Idea stage to a strue- 5]. tural reality. GOVERNMENTS RELUCTANT This: financial. intervention threatened for a time to ne- pate the purpose of, Canadian project, since the j Diefenbaker government was ‘|’ reluctant to take offfce space because of the large American financial Interest. Zeckendorty however, in a personal visit to Ottawa carly this year assured the govern- ment he would turn aver to Canada his equity In the building as soon as he had been. compensated for his In- vestiment., Cannda House was halled In Civic questions ..eand answers Thts tn one of a Kerlon of Ne he tHlons on elty affatra, protlams find | prajecth to whieh Mayar Pods Date ter haw affered: to provide ations Questions shontd he went to eeivie Quertions and Abawvers, Clty Malle Trine Tupert, Cagether WIth nome HE ellen, The werk do tat Hecemurtly ferteet the apliton af the whole or Tv bind members wm oelty counell, Q. Why don't wo hive Oity Police Instoad of ROMP? ; A. (1) The ROMP 4a t City Pollea would he, (2) The ROMP are, In most casos, hotter trained, ~ GQ The cost of tha RCMP: force Ja much eas than that of the Clty Poallea, The differ- One® NRMounts, Abt the lenst, to $60,000 por yen, Tha only danger of — the ROMP system for small alttes jx that in some communities they appear to take thaly ad. , yoction to a great oxtont from | thelr own henadquartera rather: than from the Clty with whom an alle :}- lous |, Mable to Civile corruption than" vo ry t they heave n contract, e an editorial in yesterday’s New York Herald-Tribune as “a daily reminder to New . Yorkers of the size, wealth and importance of the: northern neighbor we take. so much for granted that. we. sometimes ‘overlook its trie importance to us.’ ” og The Old Sweat The records don’t show it, the high brass won't admit it, but there was near mutiny in the Canadian Army last war. This is not mere bunkhouse f scuttlebutt; I know because I at the was with the group time. ao Around the end of May, 1944, the Canadian Army was on the move. We had been on similay moves many times be- fore on exercise Sparton, Tiger and Harlequin, but this’ one was Exercise Overlord, and only one-way tickets were is- sued. The roads to Portsmouth lined with vehicles, tanks, and gun carriers of all descrip- tions were crowded ‘to the verges. Our home away frota home was a barbed wire en- circlement, part of a huge wooded estate. There, cut off from all con- tact with the outside world, trained to a hair spring, nerves taut and tension high, ‘the men chafed at the bit. Like a boxer ready to enter the ring, they were primed and ready for the kill. And then came the stalemate. The situation. could not con- Escapism in spacism From The Kitchener-Waferico Record: Sir Robert Watson-Watt, fa- mous British scientist who pioneered radar, thinks “spac- ism” is merely a_ slightly scrambled version of escapism. Sir Robert may have somec- thing there. if men were mice From The St. Catharines Standard Three medicos, after experi- menting with mice, declare that a fellow’s less apt to fall victim to a virus if he keeps calm. Let’s hope this news doesn't give fussbudgets something new, to fuss about. tinue. indefinitely, Insubordin- ation became. common. The . Brass met in worried sessions. “Stronger and sterner discip- line,” barked one brigadier, "Give them plenty of hard work,” snorted a major gen- eral. It remained for a lowly col- , onel of First World War vint- age to solve the problem.. “Gentlemen, he said, “I will give you a changed. camp within 48. hours.’ Then he outlined his plan. Some 48 hours later, the gates opened: wide to admit a whole convoy of 60-hundred- weight trucks bearing a pre- COED Roan Ta ome “hegre ete oy ji ' a Pech ody et ae . ‘ che Te, a es {rt 1 te sa Rett oy eho eal ame cious cargo. | yD Was it - gold? Cigaretteg?* Parcels from home? No siree, it was 1000 ATS girls ‘all post- ed for temporary duty . sy clerks, drivers cooks, etc., etc In no. time ‘at all a mam’ moth ‘dance. was _ organized: Soldiers furtively brought ont pocket comhs, buttoned their tunics, and the.girls took over" : the » morale problem” : Of. “the® camp. RS From. that | moment > soni” there wasn't.a speck of: trou-7 ble. Say what you lke fellas; * man can live without cake, | -but without women? ... well, I.ask you? ot just — enjoyment # natu rally tor FREE delivery phone 4032 SICKS' CAPILANO . BREWERY LIMITED 38-48 » . =a* . SY cos . ok S a . . were ewe Re EE ee he ua aman CUURIDIOLIONTEETRGETUSNCE RUG sll - This advertisement is not published or displ: iyed by Che Liquor sme . Control Board. ser by, the Government: of Colorful, taste-tempting, and $0 GOOD for all the family =. here's a salad they'll not only eat, but enjoy/ C Asalad bullt around juicy, crisp -B.C, McIntosh Red apples, Try featuring B.C. "Macs" in your salads, and Just watch that appetite appeal. and zesty flavor arouse new Interest _In salads around your house, Asa start be sure to try the new salad recipe given below, ; ae ee ee ee For now, FREE Apple Recipe Booklet, write chon ed wolnuta, Sat anide, allen dacoratian, Pool 4 romalning apples and chop conrsoly; uit In bowl and sprintle with ramalning lomon julce, Adc salt ohoppod walnuts and mayonnalse, Toss Halntty. reons in aalad howl, Docoralo: wit v4 criap salad a generously, rolls and walnut halves, Sarvos B.C, McIntosh are particularly economical right now,\.__ . so keep them handy for snacks... serve them often In salads and desserts... and put one In every lunch box, . For greatest savings, buy your B.C, "Macs" gigs | | in the economical, easy-to-carry } tak oa? went gare th ting Waldorf Salad a. o Centennial Nae of salt Y, (tm. sugar . " tup chopped calery @& lorge walnut healves lettuce, elicary or é large OC. Meier r 3 the, lemon fuleo Y bunana, peated and oticed % cup mayonnetse, 10 large grapes, + halved and seoded ‘British Columbia’ _ Mae pak other greens Dip banana rounds In lemon julce, cont with mayonnaise: and rall In ash apples, quarter and ramave cargs: wo apples in eights (skin on) and dlp In Jamon julce, Save for finn Pe sugir, col lay Krapos, rotrnealiltng fH) Apple mixttira on pple wedges, banane LUNCH BOXES Dept. N., B.C. Trae Frulte Ltd, Kelowna, B.C, Lt : « . Ath on BEE of a * * . i i ‘ an i Qo pon f “By Doug Smith. f scenes ERE ARE Cece et Sr qe ge EN,