a, ra ' { oe fy» . ma a Re + _ teal re at oe i; POSES PSPPPRHTESORREASETEREKE TER REBEBRESREREEERR wt e+ Eas te 4 a ow oe QR OE OBE Me | meee ¢ \ ui (uthurmea us second elas mall by ‘ ee oS ee THEN igri! oe tv ee eran nearer ecormereennnmatnenen snes nan cere ant .- Ab tudepundent dally newspaper devoted to tise uppul j ee elt ah Ghote he eG hs yg gay a Be : Oh Ss Prince Rupert Daily News — Saturday, September 7, 1957 ee ee ee eee aan. ernmanaenal Iding of Prince Rupert and Northern and Central British Columbia, tf Canadian Preas-—Audit Bureau of Cireulations 5 + Member o er i By Canuudian Dally Newspaper Association J F. MACIOR, President Subscription Rates: V3 By mall--Per month $1,0U; per year 610.00. Oe a p $12.00 grriure-per month, $1.26; per year, ‘ Pupished by ‘rhe Prince Rupert Dally News Limited the Post Office Tepartment, Ottawa by As I See It 4 ag NT ar en : whee f Money Donated Not Wasted touches everyone tively few citizens tuke the trouble to go matter of public income days. welfare FHE inevitability of tax ation has been the theme of - writers, financial experts and cynics from time ‘immemorial. It has rarely evoked. praise, but often nhuch invective has been coupled with the subject. It There are more head Know that the work goes even willing to contribute to the required funds, but seldom wishes to take the money is being we ¢ and outgo. of us—in the pocket, yet compara- into. the aches than enough in these It is the same with the monies contributed to and other societies. The public is content to: on from day to day, and: is trouble to find out if their ll expended, or wasted. ' There is an organization that is well known — that is to say, its works are—to the public, and whose. jedicated task it is to make worth out of waste, es- pecially where human lives are concerned. , This is The placed at the disposal of those in unfortunate circumstances Sulvation Army whosé services are all citizens, particularly and those who ave a liability to the community. It stands to reason that when such a person is restored to good citizen- ship, thé red item in the ledger is transferred to the dther and better side. In other words, a double sav- those who are interested. , ~ 442 ing is made. '” The “Army” does a lot of this kind of work. It is doubtful if there is in existence today a more econ- cmical or more efficient welfare group than The. Salvation Avmy. It is sometimes asked if the “Army” publishes an annual balance sheet. Of course it does, dnd ‘this is made available and should be studied by 4 * 48 ‘ However, the story of service is not to be found entirely in figures. It is to be found in the daily ac- tions of the uniformed men and women who are not ‘ashamed of the source of their power and who believe in practical Christianity. The “Army” places its accent on action—action motified by the love of God and love to man. This Teac here and there. - .treason was the same then, as it} Later Hiram Maxim thought I rushea .them into the [38 .70W- Ancient. Israel, like the:that his machine gun was so | wrong clothes. John wore reborn Israel, was at the very Testament? route of the preaching and now international boundaries of! teaching missions of the Prince hostile nations which. are now in : - te state of armed and: trigger- oo"? ‘All Aboard PODPPS OL OPSOOL PC ODO DO OVODPEOLDLOOS® lawn or made mud-pies in the kitchen. of the rowboat is bright red. were soon red too. sunny afternoon, and as the garment after another until they wore nothing but a coat of paint. were annointing with finishing touches of scar- let in places where a little skin showed through, I remembered that it was nearly time to meet the boys’ absent mothcr at the airport. , of boys, aged four and two, is much like trying to tattoo an eel. . fraction of the color. A quick hot bath thinned the pigment Michael’s vest, which him so tightly that he bulged. at both wore John’s sweater, one with holes. It hung on the Elmore P hilpott oy | | , ' _@ Holy ;CAN.any reader help me with this? Has anybody) > ever made a map of the travels of Our Lord, Jesus Christ,'as told in the first four books ‘of the - New Land Query = of Peace, to see how many times During the summer months, ] : . they zigzagged across what are was trying to trace the actual ‘happy tvuece. Aceording to: my rough sketch, most of. those travels took place beyond the borders of the present state of israel, Of course we all know. the, Biblical record of the birth in Bethlehem, and the boyhood in Nazareth. But a good many of the places mentioned’ are in what we now call Lebanon, Syria ’ Ry G. BE. MORTEMER The two little boys helped me~ paint the inside of the row- boat. I didn’t want them to TIME. ROTER of a helicopter, hovering over the burning wreckage of two aircraft, to blow smoke and flames away so firefighters can approach at Shearwater, N.S., naval air _ base. A United States exchange pilot and a © inadian reserve pilot were killed when: a Ban- _shee jet fighter, its radio out of commission, | iunded at the base and plowed into a propeller- we GEORGE DAWES. AUCTIONEER | ‘Phone 603% and 2952 _ SWEEP HER OFF | is used (CP from National Defence) trigued to note that it is the! Arab-held old city: of Jerusalem, whieh contains . Chnistianity's most hallowéd places. °---- But they helped anyway. The normal colors of the jittle boys (when they can be perceived through the dirt) are. pink, Y OWN gui ys white and brown. The inside M WN guide on my travels in Israel was-a nice young Jew- ish boy, from Glasgow. He had a genuine Scottish burrrr that made you feel like donning a kilt and singing Scots Wha Hae The .boys, needless to say, It was @ boys worked they shed one ~ WORLD Ii By HON. LESTER. B. PEARSON (Copyright 1957. All rights reserved.) help. I would have been more or Jordan. —s. driven Avenger, beginning its take-off. at ease if they had dug up the |, OP ™my own visit to. Israel ai}: _ | | few years ago I. was rather in-i} . ° ARMS and POLICY . etc. He had served with the RAF before deciding to stay in Israel. He. showed me around the plains of Megiddo which accord- ing to legend or, prophecy are supposed. to be the: site of the last climactic Battle of Arma- geddon. It was easy to see why so many big battle of .the old days took place on that plain, for it was the natural deploying space for; armies disputing that vital cross- roads..of the empires. Just as. Palestine, or Israel, is now in-the hottest of all world|to use them. So it was said | hot spots, so it was, time and) when eunpowder was first used time again, in the old days. The! to slay nights in shining armor. globe. As man comes closer to—if he has not already Just ‘as John and Michael themselves der what can be done to rid him- produced. | There are those who gain) comfort from the view that the]. killing efficiency of new arms]! Cleaning ‘paint off a coupic Turpentine removed a ti centre of the. competing power politics, -battles bloodier. The Egyptians, the Babylon-} It may be that a ballistic mis- ians, the Persians, the Greek,/sile that can slaughter millions! the: Romans,.anda few more,| within a few minutes of its dis-| bound ends of it. Michael an old is such that no one would dare, sub-committee now meeting in London - have insisted, on relat- ‘ing these two questions—secur-| iciple’they are absolutely rignt.: ‘In practice, of course,. the wis-! deadly that it would ‘make war! dom. of their ‘course depends 0n; ament of Vancouver arrived yes- | ‘impossible. All it did was make: the securitY conditions they lay) terday on the ; down as essential before an arms: “reduction agreement can be 8C-| nominational church gatherings | cepted... i during a five-day stay The fear that now makes such; 2 a standard of discipline © schools—and it is pointless to deny the case—has moved a Quebec jurist to some sensible: observations. — | | _ Judge Aimee Chasse, acquitting a teacher of a charge of unjustifiable corporal punishment of a pu- pil, said that moderate and seasonable steps to pre- serve discipline are within the teacher’s authority. ay. will be something to remember when the Prince Ru- pert Salvation Army Corps stages its one-night.drive |: for $5,000, on. September 16... : yo hers Must Be Backed" . : HE declining in - Canadian that such is’ + "stares. Why shoujd-these peo- . ple be mad at me, I wondered, The accused teacher, according to evidence, had érasped a boy by the hair'and forced him to his knees, The judge upheld this as a “moderate and iieason able step” and remarked that because of a gen- éral lack of discipline among children today it was * oh ° + ° improper to undermine the teacher's’ authority. The authority. teachers once héld should he re- stored, if necessary by legislative action, When the dccasion demands, teachers must be in a position to inflict humiliation on brazen troublesmakers, who seck to enhance their own reputation among their we fellows at the expense of order and discipline. — Tf a good hiding is the best way to do it, the teacher must he free to administer it, Jf the best method is through the performance of menial tasks nbout the school, then the teacher must be able to érder it done, Authority is indispensable to. good cdueation at ‘y ee “s PR OOF AGAINST CORRUPTION VANCOUVER @ — The 1.0, delegation to the forthcoming “International Woodwarkers of Amert mene snes memanenien veshnin semnmeena —The Calgary Herald. a seve te cor pein te NEON TEO IOI TT Cn ~ a. convention: Jn Port- “anid will propose mensures to make the union proof against o corruption = a a i Seeretary-Trensurer George M nd there Is no sugmestion of racketeering at prereant and the distriet is seeking safeguards againat any future He said the union must *keep prea with modern and demands,” ; The dintriet delegates wil) seek reorganization of the International on dadustrial union prineiples, three-monthiy audits of local funds and proportional repre- sentation of distriets on the international executive board, Mr. Mitehell said the B.C, disteiet ta organived along in- Austrind union Hines and tts locus already are required to have Jan offielal suid Friday, itchell of LWA District 1 malpractice, smethods provision for boy Like a tent. Also, John in- sisted -on wearing -bathing: trunks:: No .time*.to .-change. | clothes now. The boys scampered among the people:in the, airport. wait-._ -ing.room.. There? were hostile, just because the boys had into the paint oe But then I realized that the people had no“méans of, know- ing what had happened.-.All they saw was a scruffy-look- . ing individual in: - holiday clothes, attended by two hill- “got ‘including the Turks, all swarm- billy urchins covered with red. blotches. I could have climbed‘on a chair and shouted that there was no.cause for alarm. How- ever, I did not feel equal to it. Some of'tne people in. the waiting-room must have gone, away with the idea that in our community, children with ugly contagious diseases were ullawed to run loose in public. As for the boys’ mother, when: she arrived she attempted to: conceal herself behind another ‘traveller and slide pastas if ‘he -didn't know-us, But the boys flung themselves at her and administered painty hugs and kisses, She looked down at her scarlet sons and flashed me a glanee of tired reproach. She may not be so quick to leave those boys in my keeping, next time. eter: eee nna et cm gm St NNR AT e e Liberal Action e ‘ ege Said Justified VANCOUVER @ Liberal Lender Arthur Laing sald Thurs- day “it appears that Liberal crl- tieism of the Bennett Govern- ment's forest policy has been justified’ by the Sloan Royal Comintssion on Forestry, In an interview, he sald: “Appointment of tha Royal Commission was secured by the Libemus with co-operation of the press after such a.commis- slon was entegorically refused hy Mr. Sommers, then Minister ed over it, at one time or an- other. oo “The main. difference is that'in and emyper and ‘other modern ‘ refinetnents. of the agencies. of destruction, .. DON’T. ask me to explain how At, _-is that the Bible prophecies, written thousands of years ago, have time and again been Jiter- ally fulfilled in our own twen- tieth century. ..But it is true be- yond all reasonable doubt. Take this cartoonists picture of the present day big world powers, as ‘given in Chapter Seven of the book of Daniel. — “And four beasts came up from the sea, diverse from one another. The first was Ike a lion and had eagles wings. I be- held till the wings thereof were plucked, and it was lifted, up from -the' earth and made to stand on its feet like a man, and a man’s heart was given uhta it. “And behold another beast, a second, like. bear, and it. ralsed up itself oronesider-“And It had three ribs in the mouth of it, between the teeth of it... a No newspaper cartoonist ‘would even hestitate to make the first description fit the British Com- monwealth and. the united States of today. Neither would many newspaper renders be in any doubt as to what great pow- er was meant by the bear with three ribs in Its teeth. Yet those descriptions were charge 10,000 miles away will, by! its very destructive power, pre-j vent the’kind of war in which it) will ever be used. “But ‘even if 1957 B.C. the war-making kings that did happen, peace would ors, were using char-| only be precariously balanced on iots, horses and elepphants. .“In terror, © 0. = tH ae 1957 A.D. the ‘great powers arej ~The using chariots’ of:.the air, tanks,i ments is part of the search for i published thousands of years ABO. \ “VANCOUVER (—Pre-trin} ex- amination of Robert I. Bom- mers, former Minister of Lands and Forests, In his slander sult ngainsl Vancouver lawyer Duvid A. Sturdy has heen set for Bept. 23, Mr. Sturdy states that be will apply for a trial date ts ourly ag possible after completion of his’ examination of Mr. Soni mers. spree ema Ge ere se agg memes set of Forests, n NEW FREIGHT art yah nt aH | Try Daily News Classified t effort-to reduce a better peace than ‘this. however,“:are not Arms, [- into action. one factor in causing war, they are-more often an effect | gaining Nations arm for, pressed than a cause. conditions .»necessary removed or at least reduced by| by th the solution of some of the M4-; of the Mission t i jor'p ' the : strengt i “natural- arma: , reduction. would follow natural sO great a; any syste threat.to. peace as the policy of} trol governments that brings them | be reasonable, fool-proof and ef-; C * ‘Weapéns may fet fective:” { . ‘ference charged with the inter- ‘reached--- esting, if. the “ultimate weapon” it is nat-) dividing certain armaments into ural for him toa worry more and offensive and defensive categor- more about its use and to.won- ies. ‘sion, some of us self of these engines of total, Minds sharpened by a good din- destruction which his own scien-| ner, tific and engineering genius has| defénsiveness of a weapon de- . | pended on whether you ‘were in front of or behind it. - The four Western members— | possible, task of decided, that the offensiveness or ncluding Canada—of the UN ty and disarmament. In prin- After days of futile discus-! Sur | If all the speeches, articles and resolutions on disarmament made since: the Second World War .were laid end to end they would probably cirele the! seen i missile, was now going to take a! tougher line at disarmament) talks with the U.S.A., the UW. and France. . What is behind all what should we do? t a} \ t this and I shall try} week. Quotation strictly forbidden Star News Service. Leper Mission Workers Here , could: be! two owrlds. This wouid Yeon vs The USSR has. never accepted at the F m of international con-! Tuesday nig ‘of honor at and inspection which would \ but! played with the idea for bar-| but when'Use have never given more, -- purposes; defence or to secure certain po-; than qualified approval. litical objectives. All through; gone together. We could des- | troy every modern weapon and | man could still fight-—-with | sticks and stones. Behind all the talk about arm- | aments, lies fear and insecurity.; No nation, however pacific its: own policy may be, is willing to| discard or reduce its weapons if it feels that this would deepen! that fear and Increase that in-| security. “Disarmament discus- sions therefore thave toa often concentrated on ‘plans that would leave each nations rela- tively as strong as before and, on convincing world opinion that, If a conference fails, It’s the other fellow’s fault. Hence, the genuine search for agreement has at times depen- erated intd.debating manoevres In order to push ‘an adversary into a false position, and Keep a strang one for yourself, I remember the tortuous snd prolonged deliberations of a sub- committee of the League Con- ’ GENERALQD ELECTRIC t This is the weakest point in! history arms and policy have: the Soviet case and we should ; never allow their propaganda to | obscure it. We have every rea- | son to suspect their motives gen- | erally when they keep pressing. | for instance, for the abolition of; the atom bomb by a mere reso-' lution without any means to en-: sure its observance, If the state of the world ‘vere . such that nations had so much 4, trust in each others good inten- tions that they were willing to: destroy"hlomle weapons on the strength of a mere paper decla-; ration, we would have reached | the milennium, ‘here wouldn't: be any atom bombs to destroy. How far.we are from this happy condition was shown in! the violent tirade against the, Western powers launched August 28 Jast by the Sovict dele- | gnte to the London sub-commit- ; tee. | Mr, Zorin’s statement was also | f. warning that Moscow, having | announced Its stiecessful testirey of an Inter-continental ballistic Ball Tout ore et a i” i Cal rt 4 “dine! vy Ft caseaebelidi Or aaah “A i rt dl peo named wil CMe CEE i as : y Ae i ° the three-emonthly mudi, TRY THE DIAL ; 3215. Grand Cafe For tho Bost Sclection of Chinese Fonds OUR SPECIALTY — TAKE OUT ORDERS poe ceng ae neet pus c peewee america stece-pmveearementnias mente se er@eg BS Open 6 om. to 3 6m Usn—angd Ave, Weet a FORWARDING SERVICE Coast Forwarding announces a new portal to portal freight service between Prince Rupert, Kitimat and Vancouver, Freight and handling charges will be assessed ona weight basis only. For rates and other information phone 3475 or write to Coast Forwarding Ltd., 749 West ard Avenue, Prince Rupert. | | a qari ! anaes e naar | | i Mi ‘mil : @ Two Rack Noor @ Mugnotic Door Cate, ‘GORDON & DIAL tetas an ‘\ fn | more WA , MODEL CLD 10, A ih ay : Hf ae MAT : ht i | NF | ‘ aa | Mig ft H m e : H | a et i en an Wi : | in, i amir i i Pings ee. H | ce @ Vull Widlty Froaevor @ Vegelubia Wydrator ANDERSON 3014 ! i “ | hy A deputation worker ‘of the Mission to Lepers, Miss . North" to preside at city. to deal with these questions next ; hy G. L.! in the. | “Queen of thei} inter-de- | HER FEET! | How about a Dryer for Mom? Y‘know with our. wet season 4 coming on, it’s | GOING TO BE ° TOUGH on HER . MAJESTY to dry your clothes, but “if you drop in at. the “RUPERT RADIO & | ELECTRIC now | and see all! the SPECIALS on DRYERS before they’re all snapped up, you Soviet ‘delegates. have! St. Paul’ Miss Ament olitical: problems that givide|.py. president Mrs.. W:-H, Hicks, “| , Last night Miss Ament spoke hen international corfi- to a meeting of the Evangelical) |. - .bdence, lower: tensions, and arms. Free Ch ciation. ‘preside at a) ‘ irst ’s visit is sponsored ‘| e Prince Rupert auxiliary} urch Young Peoples asso- | ' Monday night she will} joint-church service! Baptist church and} ht shé, will be guest! the regula meeting: of the auxiliary to be held in the s Lutheran.church halk. , o Lepers, headed | |- eae cene eens yl hme creme Classifieds-They ‘Pay: HOLLYWOOD CAFE OPEN From 5:30 p.m. to 3:30 a.m. FOR THE BES? 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