ah 4 BE dep ltge ae ts _ tract, new business to this immediate area. that, secretary of the Chamber of Commerce, Sheet ny id a tem, o so Sp ." 2 Prince Rupert Daily News Thurs sday, July “4, 1957 An idependent datly newspaper davoted to the upbuilding of Prince Rupert and Northern and Central British Columblia, . Member of Canadian Press—Audit Burenu of Cireulations - Canadlan Daily Newspaper Association Published by The Prince Rupert Daily News Limited Wd. ‘F. MAGOR, President Subscription Rates: eT ‘By mati-Per month $1.00; per year 810.00. ‘ By carrier—per month, $1.25; per year, $12.00 Authorizea a8 second class mall by the Post: Office Department, Ottawe a. Magistrate’ s Multi ple Role ITH Walter D. Vance’s P enation from the posts of police magistrate and judge of the juv- enile court, Prinee Rupert loses from public office a distinguished, kindly figure who has performed a service for the community which cannot be measured in terms of his written duties alone. A magistrate and juvenile court judge is more than an arbiter of misdeeds. Although his position may cloak the fact, he is also a consultant, adviser, teacher and fr equently a sort of foster parent. His value to society, including those who appear before - him, depends not only on his decisions. In his human understanding of a case, and in the severity or sym- pathy that he gives to it, lies a great part of the bene- fit that his verdict will achieve. Many an offender will draw @ lasting lesson not merely from his pun- ishment but from the manner in which it was delivered. . In his position on the bench, Mr, Vance obvious- ly had a deep awareness of this and executed it with skill and insight. He judged his cases with care and frequently there must have been occasions when, in his desire to find a fair answer, they weighed heavily on his mind. The leisure he can now look forward to has been conscientiously earned over many years of tnvaluable service to this electoral district. «. His suecessor, KE. T. Applewhaite, is particularly well qualified to assume this important responsibil- ity. His early legal training and his experience in the speaker's chair of parliament when he was called upon to pass judgements that were both fair and ef- feetive will stand: ‘him, and this community, to a good advantage in his. new, position. Mr. “Appléwhaite’ s other new position, that of special assistant.to the city clerk-comptroller, also ‘holds out promise of making use of his specia! quali- fications to the benefit of Prince Rupert. While the exact nature of: ‘his duties in this post is still an bee- ified, itis probable: that for some of the time at leas Mr. Applewhaite will be working in the capacity of an industrial de velopment agent endeavoring to at- It was the pressing need for action along that line which led initially to consideration of the business tax, As former member of parliament and, before Mr. Applewhaite is singularly well equipped to under- take such work. He knows the district, he knows the approach and' he has formed many useful connec- tions. There is encouraging reason to believe from all this that he will prove a valuable addition to the increasingly ij impor rtant office of clerk-comptroller R. W. Long. — GEMS OF THOUGHT — Citizens of the world, accept the “glorious liberty of the children of God,” and be free! This is your divine right.--Mary Baker Eddy, . She Was Only Sgt’s Daughter But She Was Sure Good on Draw POWELL RIVER, B.C, (CP)—RCMP presented a search warrant and selzed a barrel of tickets Monday night after Bob Coe, of Powell River, won a 195%-model car raffled by the Lions Club. ‘ The person who drew the winning tieket was heauty parade winner Barbiura Tawsthorn, daughter of Spt, Riauws- thorn, ofticer commanding the RCMP detachment, Potter” wre * considering laying charges: against the club. “When | grow up I'm going to wear an ARROW ARDENT” no untidy "gathering"; cord-edge stitching on collar and cuffs; walst tapered to prevent blousing; no bidding under the arms) buttons anchorestliched on=—~can't come off. Sanforized-labelled, of GOUTEO 4+ RS.00 ooe And I'm going to buy it at ~ Watts & Nickerson ' MEN'S SHOP oye CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE ARDEN because | tke the neat, thprter point fused collar with Its “Host right” spread. Arrow shirts have all the Arrow Trim Look features, too: soamless French front (Mom Iikas thet It's easior to Iron}; new tapered sleeves— 1Or help control Kno owledge By ALTON L, rocket to be set off in Can What it learns could hetp‘- travel. Or tap a new source. of chemical energy high in.the air. weather - and disastrous storms. , This skyrocket is not the kind usually set off to awe and please kids on the July 4 U.S. Inde- pendence Day. . ahi sobing 2. Back From the Files of ‘The Dally News 10 Years Ago JULY 4 SEATTLE « — The present ni: ghway to Alaska: is, in the opinion of Brigadier -General James G. Steese, a former pres- ident of the Alaska ‘Road Com- mission, ‘‘no-damned good.” The retired General said it was plain nonsense not to have a coastal highway into Seattle. ~ Building permits issued at the City Engineer’s office in June reached the highest peak since July 1946 buoyed by a wave of construction - that included two major industrial projects and several homes. Total for the! month was $55, 510 as compared j with $9,325 in May. 20 Years Ago After making a visit to Nord Cape, Norway, in order to see [old home town of’ Trondhjeim .near Osdo, the midnight sun, visiting his meeting his old friends and. telatives and -hav- ing a wonderful time, Ole Skoz, skipper of the seiner, Fred- ella, returned to Prince Rupert Saturday night, hale and hearty and ready to tackel the serious problems of life once more, 30 Years Ago A congregation numbering some two or three hundred as- sembled. Sunday afternoon at; une corner of Second Avenue and Sixth Street for the prayer ond thanksgiving service in con-: nection with the Diamond Jub- jlee of Confederation celebra- tion in this city. The service was conducted from the flag-draped | ticles: balcony of the Prince Rupert! ‘Fach rocket. is geared for see: Hote] by Protestant ministers of cific duties. The Churchill the city with Archdeacon G. A./ Rix presiding. THE CRADLE— Born to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas McMeekin, 731 Fifth Avenue West, a daughter, this morning. Born to Mr. and Mrs, R. S. Wright, Fifth Avenue and Cot- ton Street, at the Prince Rupert General Hospital on July 3, a son. NOT FOR CELEBRATION July 4 Rocket Widens NEW YORK (AP)--A huge Fourth of July sky- doms and powers for mankind. bring the new freedom of space] ruled ;energy if it can be understood affects our weather too. , tions co- -operating in the IGY. tudes of the earth—-from_ fixed ground stations and from -ships rat. sea between the Arctic and Antarctic. 125 rockets; about 200;. two dozen or so mare apiece by each of: the other. tgur nations. Navy-~sponsored shot with Cayi- ada_ co-operating the site, will roar up to 200 mites Others, including the first IG@Y rocket fired Monday from San miles. see what happens when the sun and radiation -and at “omic par, - rocket will measure. the electric charge density of the high iono- ——— sphere. Others will sample air ~ ‘pressures, temperatures and 40 Years Ago. winds at different altitudes, or measure cosmic rays, magnetic of Hea vENS | BLAKE ESLEE ° ada today seeks 1 new free- It’s. a 24 foot- long monster, an Aerobee H1, powered to rise 100 to 200 miles and radio back knowledge of the skies, - Sched- for launching ‘at. -Fort Churchill, Man., it will be..the first of the biggest “shGots’™ in rocketry during the Internation- al Geophysical Year. : AIR) MYSTERIES Altogether IGY will see some 400 rockets big and little woosh- ed up by the United States, Rus- sia, Britain, Japan, France and Australia to check on the earth's air and its remaining mysteries. Air is a vital domain, especial- ly the first six or seven feet in which we breathe. hundreds of miles, with 99. per cent of it compressed within, the first 20 miles. The one per cent nove. ‘that is ad fantastically complex chem- ical _ and - electrical cauldron created mainly by. the sun’ Ss en- ergy, explains Dr. Peter H. Wy- ckofr of’ the U.S. Air "Force (Cambridge “Research — Centre, ‘Boston. This high thin air is the home of the ionosphere, the electrified air that makes radio broadcasts possible; the home of the. daz- zling northern lights; and a storage battery of vast chemical and put to use. AFFECTS WEATHER What happens up there vitally Balloons can rise about 30 miles, and tell much. Rockets supply probing fingers to learn a lot more. All knowledge will be shared among all 61 na- Rockets’ will rise from all lati- Russia is firing up tthe United States Some, such as -today’s US: in supplying Nicolas Island, Calif., reach 75 . That shot ‘was timed to flares out with explosions of gas fields, or the aurora. Some will be launched. from balloons at heights of 15 miles. Some will explode prenades at intervals as they soar up, with the sound waves telling about high winds. air temperatures and Yor REN DUITVERY, sic’ CAPILANO PREW Control Board or by the Gove PHONE 4009 This advertiaement in not published ov dis Our air rises|- Record Number of Scouters | At Outdoor Camps in -B.C. Special to The Dally News VANCOUVER Boy Scout Leaders in record numbers wil be attending outdoor training courses across B.C, this summer. Nearly 120 have already reg- istered for Wood Badge courses for Cub, Scout and Rover lcad- ers in four sessions at provincial points. The Wood Badge course pra- vides ‘advanced training in Scouting principles and’ particu- larly in the outdoor aspects of the Movement. Trainees, under snecially qualified instructors, live under canvas in Camp as the boys would. : The largest. Rover Leader course in Canada the first in B.C. is now underway at Camp Byng near Roberls Creek. Twenty-four trainees will take instruction from; a team under John Wencher of Hamilton, On- tario, assistant provincial Rover commissioner for Ontario. Completed June 23 at Camp Barnard near Sooke, Vancouver Scouts Passport: Denial Ordered Reconsidered WASHINGTON w—The Uni- ted States Court of Appeals told the stafe department yesterday it must reconsider its denial 2 a passport to. Donald Ogden Stewart. author and playwright. The writer denied he had had any Communist connections in the last 15 years but his pass- pert application - was” turned down because he refused to say whether he shad ¢ ever been a Communist, Five of the court’s nine judges voted to affirm an order by U‘S. District Judge Henry A. Sehwein- haut sending the case back ta the state department for recon- sideration. Chief Judge Henry W. Edger- ton took the. position that the regulations for denial of pass- ports to Communists. and sup- porters of Red causes are invalid, and that the department. should be directed to issue a passpors LUN | retnwenreone ' province, Island, was a Cub Leaders Course for 34 leaders, It was under the cirection. of Ernest Oakley, Met- ropohtan Vancouver District Cuhmaster. On Jwy 6 at Cultus Lake, 36 Scout leaders start their train- ing under Earl Briba, Metropol- itan Vancouver District Scout- miaster. _ . A second Cub Leaders Course will be held’ in August at Camp Sorrento on Shuswap Lake un- der Frank J. Bower, District Commissioner for North Surrey- Delta. Twenty-six are already registered for this camp with: further applications expected, cs at eevee bee a tnt sree erent dine Trade Prospects|] With Japan Said Bright “VICTORIA —Prospects for two-way: trade between British Columbia and Japan were never brighter, Muneo Tanabe, newly- appointed Japdnese consul mi Vancouver, said ‘Tuesctay, Mr. Tanabe’ said Japan needs Miore B.C, timber and iron ore: and would like to export’ more finished’ stee! products to this “We already have quite a omar ket here for Japanese toys,” said Mr. Tanabe, “but there are many heavier goods we would jike to export. more.” The new consul was accom- panied on a short visit here by Kayuaki Arichi, vice-consywl in, Vancouver for the past three ; ears. ' i . Mr, Tanabe, formerly first sec- | retary at the Japanese embassy ' in Ceylon, was appointed Jdépan- ese Consul in Vancouver at his uwn request. “T wanted to come to British | Columbia because of its import- | ant historical and geographical | relations with Japan.” ” he said. ae ee GEORGE DAWES Phone 6032 and 2952 to Stewart without further ada. eet ee ee ee a cae ee ee - RRV LIMITRD 04-100 them around at TV Tima for everyone to enjoy luscious, B.C. Cherries—and who can resist tham? For refreshing summer eating, keep a bowl of sweet, red-ripe B.C, Cherrias handy where kiddies ahd grown-ups alike can “dig In" = pass lime, and whon friends drop tn. And let tasty B.C, Cherrias add new Interest to your summer meals... fresh, “stems on” for broakfast... cherry tarts or othar favorite cherry desserts for lunch... rich julcy cherry pic for dinner. WASHER YOU PAY $209.50 Less your trade-in cin G50. 0.00 $45 9.50 As: low as {iS per month McRAE BROS. 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