hohe. mom, : ‘ re ™ . % . vot s “An independent newspaper ‘devoted to the upbuilding @ of Prince Rupert and Northern and Central British Columbia. . A member of The Canadian ‘Press — Audit Bureau of Circulation — Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association cores Published by The Prince Rupert Daily News Limited JOHN F. MAGOR President G. P. WOODSIDE General Manager -J. R. AYRES Editor re Authorized as sccond class mail by the Post Office Department; Ottawa WEDNESDAY, JULY 23, 1958 i ‘ACCIDENT to the city v ’* on Sixth Avenue last Monday points up the vulnerability of Prince Ruper t’s water system, That the break Ww hich left householders without water in a very short space of time, was re- ‘ — paired so quickly, is due entirely to the efficiency and hard work of the city. . publie works crews. Had the water been off another 24 hours it would have meant real hardship to many families in the city, especially those with tiny children. ’ While the mishap was caused through a large boulder and through any defect in the Ime, it shotild give water consumers. a fais idea of what a break in the water sup- ply system can do and how speedily the city’s available water can be ex- hausted. In many areas of the city pnd between Prince Rupert and the vater source at Woodworth Lake, the various pipelines ale in such poor shape that a break can be expected at any time. ‘ In aveport to City Council June 18, the. city’s consultants Associated Itn- gineering Services Ltd., stated: - . “The City of Prince Rupert faces a JELURNING to the subject of juv- énile hooliganism, bottle smashing and svandalism generally at beaches and parks after dark, and the diffi- culties of police in controlling same, it might be useful to point out that there Gi not the authorities in this region would be game to try it is another mat- _____ter. The suggestion—not original—is to but a curfew on minors using cars. Nearly all the nocturnal: trouble is caused by youths and girls who con- eregate at these places in automobiles. * The State of New York recently put siich a restraint into force, with what: ‘success we have not yet heard. A fe We days ago a juvenile court judge in {he State of Maryland added his opin- ion that a ‘boy or girl in the late teens is'“too young to be turned loose with wear at night, » ‘The judge spoke from personal experience, having tried rater main: not. is:a possible: vemedy—though whether _— more than 20,000 cases involving juv- Accident stresses weak water systems major task in rebuilding and expand- ing the most essential of its public services. “The city’s water supply and ‘dis- tributiqn system has reached a Critical position, both in terms ‘of its physical condition and in its capacity to meet the growing: demands of ‘domestic ‘and industrial consumers.’ The report specifies that “all the works which run fiom the water source to the site of the ‘present booster pumps ‘are ‘the water supply system’ and all the works be- tween the pumps and the consumer are ‘the distiibution system.” This should be plain enough lan- euage for any to understand. In other words the water supply and distribu- tion systems are in danger and there- fore so is the consumer. Much soul- searching and a sensible resultant ac- tion should be undertaken by the prop- erty owners of this city when a $761,- 000 waterworks bylaw for improve- ment of Prince Rupert’s water sys- tems is presented for approval at the December elections. Otherwise Prince Rupert residents are going to be up a ' dry creek with only a paddle. Curfew on teen-age drivers enile waywardness. Under the New “York laws minors must restrict their driving to the hours of daylight, and a juvenile may operate a car at night. only in accompanied by an adult.. It is not an unreasonable law when. all factors are examined,.though perhaps - “it could be modified “to ‘allow night driving under parental permission, to accommodate juveniles having occa- sion to drive for legitimate purposes. In the late teens a high proportion of delinquency problems'can be traced to the use of cars. Under a curfew law there need be no hardship of embar-, rassment to decently behaved young- . sters using cars for the purpose of transport.. formers, the authority of the police to chase them home or if necessary make arrests would be reinforced if a cur- few was there to fall back on in the ab- sence of a more specific charge, Jt is worth considering, —The Victori ia Colonist, a : ‘ ' OSOYOOS LAKE, B.C. looking west from Anar chist. “Mountain, United States border. just north of the Canada-' _'—Photo courtesy, of B.C. _Government Travel Bureau ~ ~ Victoria Report - by J. NESBITT - With respect to bad per-“~ INTERPRETING THE NEWS US strong contrasts underlie the basic U.S, palic ies Involved in Lhe American troop landing in Lebanon in the current Middle East crisis aiid In the U.S. military Intervention In em- battled South Korea elg@ht years ago. “Phe landings mark the only two Instances where U.S. troops have gone ashore on forelan RO}L since the end of the Second World War, But the parallel ends there, rar In moving into Lebanon last week, the U.S, aid so outside of the United Nations. It; neted \ijder the so-called Eisenhower doctrine, by which the U.S. offers to help ayy Middle Bast Ni{tion requesting military ald ag nst armed Communist aggression, _ Thus, the U.8. In Lebanon acted first rnd Bought UN sanction afterwards, In 1950, when North Korean armies stormed aver the SRN parallel on a quiet Sunday after- on, the United States summoned the Security founcil, at that time being boycotted Dy Boviet*Russta, The council ordered a cease-fhre ne naked UN mombers to see to tt that the HEN SO -ffre was carried out, x Only then did President Truman act, ‘ordor« 1))ft U,B. alr and sea forces into Bouth Koren. | i made {t clear his military intervention was ased | on the prior UN action, c'Two other significant contrasts exist, The orenn tntorvention came as a reault of direct t " HWinry aggression, with tens of thousands of rib Korean troops action In Lebanon, Tho ryt , Move there, though in "Prost fo nn npponl for help from Lebanese Prosident Chae Mdun,war dictated by a fear of aggression, “ Alin Korea, the U8. had «mom, ff not legal, ‘, commitinont going badk 'to 1943 when ‘the oh Yiited ‘Statin, Britain and China, mooting at Oalrd, promtacd Korea, long a vasa ut Japan, ae Indepondence “in due course,” Yussia and the U.S. occupled the Karean pontnaula at the end of the Second World War, \ ap aepieanveapmbae ca eiig ca acy Cah t asi ata aster ad tl gt a utah intervention policies differ ‘By GEORGE KITCTIEN Canadian Press Staff Writer cach governing roughly one-half of the territ- ory. The division was formalized in 1048 with the estublishment of two regimes, the Republic of Korea in the southern zone, with its capital nt Seoul, and the Communist People’ s Republic In the north, with {ts capital at Pyongyang. U.8. and Sovict troops were withdrawn by mld-1940 and an unensy peace existed ttl) the North Korean attack a year ago. South Koren today exists under an unset- tled, unhappy truce, Her e —by Mar Eastern Standarda—but shoe still ds on'n semi-war footing, with 7000,000 men under arms and ‘on ; guard leat the North Korean - ‘ntymies move southward, The UN Jand ‘forees, which totalled ‘800,000 whon the fighting ended in 1953, naw ‘number hot 60,000, made up largely of two U.S, In- fantry divisions. Turkey ‘and Thailand both have token ‘foreos'’ ‘along the demilitarized yona botween North and ‘South but the other UN Allies, Including Canndn, long since have pulled thelr forces out. Tho UN truce commission meota period. Jeally, Moatly, 14 honys 8 charges nnd countor charges of ‘troop ‘bull tips on both aidon of ‘the lines in violation of the ‘truce ‘Lovins, And the UN periodically calla on the Soviet Union ‘aid the North Korenns to. pormit free eloutidns, ‘the erat atop ‘Ih the gon) of a unified Koren, but medts only Commut fat tdbutte, sramom vocmmennsrs: Ushl Thought Dov Dada Thore shall no ‘evil ‘ingpon ‘tn ‘the Alito Proverhy Vat, ‘Soarntes snld the 'snmb thing, ‘you he wna polaonod by the atnte, Joaus dled ‘on ‘tho croan, ‘But the oross of Joan and the homlovk of Bocrates we seo now wore not evil in what they accomplished, economy is booming | Sona, publle—through VICTORIA— Now: that ‘the Princess has gone and the pol- iticians have ‘fléd ‘this capital, ‘one turns back, -with relief, ‘to. poking through -old news- paper and -diaries, old . files and officiaa correspondence, | to learn a Httle ‘more of. what went on in British Columbia in - the years. gone: by, events © which were of. mighty Import | ancé.to us here today, even though often we don’t realize. that: fact. a ‘One finds a. speech by A. “Rocks Robertson, made in the! : late: 1860’s when Victoria and ¢ New Westminster were. battl--|' ing for. the capital; when everyone was arguing . this }: great question: would the }: Crown Colony remain a crown -colony, would “it become an- nexed.to-the-United States or would it join Canada. © _Mr: Robertson said this: “I believe that so long as the people manifest their deep concern about public matters, . so long will -there be a sub-. stantial and efficient guaran- tee against an excessive abuse |. of power and- position by th? : rovernment.” Wisely said, that, and it holds as true today, perhaps ;}. more so, than it.did when spoken nearly 80 years ago by one. of B.C.’s outstanding pub- lic men, Who ‘had been Mayor of Victoria, Secretary-after the Crown Coi- ony of Brithh Columbia be- came part of Canada, a Sup- -| reme Court justice—and died |. at 40. The Dunsmutrs built homes 4 ' fit for Princesses, and so now jt is turning: out, The Vaneouver residence of the Licut.-governor and Mrs, Frank Mackenzie Ross . was built by the Jate Col, and Mrs, Reginald Chapin, she boeing Mand, the youngest of the eight daughters of Robert Dunsmulr, Vancouver Island conl tycoon, builder of the Island's: Esquimalt and Nanal- - mo Railway, and of Cralgdar- ’ roch Castle, though he lived notto see his dream complot- : ed, In the ecnstle Hved his wl- dow for 18 years, and she ded there In 31908 when her son Jnumos who had been Premier, was the Lioul.governdr, liv- Ing a stone's throw away in Government House. . While in Victorian the Prin- coss dined In the wardroom nt the Canndlan Jolnt College, once Watloy Park, fhe princely residence of James | Dunamuly, who, ie hia father, had olght daughtors and two Tho whrdroom fs the arig- Inn} ‘Drawing Room, and the : ploaming ‘glittering © crystal | nt eno four at thom, are still ‘there, ruse 'b a Ma uintttaly for uv, this won- ov'ftil ‘ninco. {x owt by this Kho. Padort! guirdons ara ‘Govorniniont; ttr milntainod, thd ‘the public in porinitted to vidit them,» though tho Ohdtle 'Wtnolt {H not © open, Tt Ja curfons, and a alan of the thnos, that the twa moat magnificent private residences in Victoria‘s history are now owned by the public. Craigdar- roch | (named for the birth- be turned into a museum, and . “plice in Scotland of Annie | furnished exdctly as it was in Laurie) is headquarters of Greater Victoria School Board. Someday, everyone in -Vic- toria hopes, Craigdarroch will first Provincial. | i Barvicas the 1890's. . i } | | . Gere ren tn teme cmtarven eremnene Tae etre Rng tn en TRY. THE ~ Grana : Cafe For the ‘Best Selection. of Chinese Foods . OUR SPECIALTY - TAKE OUT ORDERS | DIAL Buy your show tickets here 321 5 ¥ Fresh: bread - daily ‘Open 6 o.m. to 1 a.m. 635 2nd AVENUE WEST. PUBLIC DINNER To Meet The British Columbia Cabinet | ‘Guest Speaker: HON. W.A.C. BENNETT Premier of B.C. Civic Centre Auditorium | TUESDAY, JULY 29, 7:00 p.m. Tickets on Sale at ie ad La Gondola Decth’s Pharmacy.’ Canadian . Legion: Civic Centre ‘Ornbes Drugs Kaien Hardware ; Grotto. Tobacco £o. '$3.00 per plate, ‘Admission will be by ticket only and Ino view af the limited seating accomodation, the public is urged to purchase Aekets as early as possible, | ate pete sime men Rn we Sk ot thw » f - Pricing ourselves out. . Pram: The Chictgo Dally News A ‘reel of barbed wire, made in Germany ‘arid shipped from Dusseldorf. to New York, frel@hted. by, rail to Cleveland, hauled from the freight yards to the warchouse by truck, still costs the jobber ‘40 n ton less than an identical reel of wire sola by U.S. Steel in | Cleve- land)... The -big question ist Can we continue. to jack up wages and ‘ “prices: every year and still be’ |: able. to) compete © successfully = boy's LE for from $3. 95 pre EIN? S SPORTS SHIRTS <. Bin Selection, All Sizes, ‘Goad: Appearance, Lots of! Wear," . Real Value. - SPECIAL. ATHER SHOES | DRESS ‘ t. - with foreign pracditcers? . Why should a European buy American products, “can purchase the same items = for-less at home? 'The answer cand {t's costing American jobs. eee re nemecettinns, semQneeR mE Cotaeteee Ha NRO eS nee fen $3. 25 when he 717 - 3d Ave... Wes ye te cart Are a bee tesa 2 ‘seems obvious, | > B. C. clatter Ltd > Ft i ae Wee an fou emma "Daily: ‘News Classified ‘Ad’. fe THE BEST COSTS LESS ff anenetweie neue anes “witH: en, ea Only a Northern B. C. Power Co, Ltd. Besner Block, Prince Rupert - Phone 4210 | ome 10. 5 cu. ‘ft. oe Refrigerator: seh . no ety oth y 319 95. ota ‘ ‘ats no Terms ~ Attanged ‘Stewart Ss , bah teay hes tr. th tan , rer “sv Mts ney Shae 60 East 7 / Take the Family, SA V E with the-™ Dad: Round Trip Fare For the Head” of the te Parity. Mother: oo One-Way adult Fare’ For the round trip, Be Tt Seis Sis: bne:Way adult Fare For the round trip. 12:and under 22 years of age. Junior: V2 One-Way Fare oo , For the round trip for children of 5 and under 12 years old. Under 5 free. TaN se te aye weed t OF, I EN Fe ER me cprateneratae Sr AS i e Between Eastern Canada (Sudbury, Capreol, Cochrane, 2 "Windsor, Sarnia and East) and Western Canada (Winnipeg if and West). Batween Canada and Midwestern and Western United ‘States. Between Western Canada and Eastern United States. ‘ eTeTCrTtn YN ITAL: Y! KIDS CELEBRATE B.C. CENTENNIAL YEAR Here's your chance to get iin August Ist and win yourself a prize or ribbon. REMEMBER if you have a pet, bicycle, tricycle, centennial costume, doll, wagon or almost ‘any ‘toy—you can get in the parade—Entrits. ‘should ‘bo decorated, @ Leaving Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays @ Stop-over privileges Ad @ Generous Return Lint e 300 Ibs. Baggage Allowance : MATTE EN ee Seemann Sennen STramsoste “Completo information from any C.P. or C.N. Tickol Agant.— a! - ‘ (4 to 14 years) the Fun on Friday, ovmamarvestell - + recente aes OER Tn vets AMS MU meee hao Sina ererriri NATIONAL SCHEDULE Assemble. far paracle at the Civic ; Centre, Co a 9:30 . 10:00 — Parade lagins. | | 4 1:00 — Judging of paracle entries at Algeria | - | Park, | . 12:00 — FREE—Hotdogs and Cokes, | 1:00 — Track meet, ae | 2:15 — Swim meet, AGE . YOUTH DAY ENTRY FORM | will onter in the following events — Please check (V), PARADE ~~ (... ‘costume ( TRACIK MEET (oe ) pet ( ) »), | SWIM MEET (.. we), bieyela ( ) ) misc. ( revved This form to ba furnac in at the Gyro swimming pool ‘or Civile Centre ° No later than July 26th, tah pte gy ae eg td LOO @ Ate EE: 1h 06 Be Ny Mo ete ree de hs bod BE fis te | : | | | |