it Py ia be Rupert Daily News 1057 , Ai Sndepeudgne,. antly Hewspaner devoted ta the upbuliding of Pritica Rupert and No rehern and Central British Columbia, Mémber’ 6f- Canadian Press—Audit Bureau of Cirreulations . variadian Dally Newspaper Assoclation Publishett by The Prince Rupert Dally News Limited ies J. 'F. MAGOR, President ; Subscription Ratea: i ‘Ti, ya b By matl~-Per month $1.00; per year 610,00. By carrfer-—per month, 81 25; per year, $12.00 \Wuthorized as Recond class mail by the Post. Office Department, Ottawa Increased Paving Plan Needed is to be hoped that Highways Minister Gaglardi Was not talking just for the sake of keeping Prince Geor ge residénts off his neck when he. stated that the Northern Trans-provincial highway between Prince George and Prince Rupert will be completely paved by 1960. The time for mere worlls and prom- isé has long since passed. With car travel along Highway 16 and south inereasing vnanthly concerted action is necessary with a progressive plan of paving to be carried out as soon as possible. Car owners are: becoming increasingly incensed at the govern- ment’s apparent “you want a car, you'll drive on the roads there are” attitude. Cars are a vital necessity in ‘this isolated part of the world and the time has gone when owners of vehicles in north and central British Columbia should have to take it for granted that a good-sized repair bill is to be expected after every car trip. “Whether the Highways department plans to put doxin its stretches of pulvamix and leave it until subh a time as the paving program gets under way, wé cannot guess. But in this climate some repair of the weather and. travel-worn cold-mix sections should also: take place, before the knife-edged pot halés do more damage to district cars than the form- er ‘dusty gravel road did, > There is no disputing that this year’s weather hag done nothing to help the highway construction craws but if Mr. Gaglardi and his tooth-paste smile hogs Premier Bennett wish to retain the ridings they Ww on so easily it would seem logical to add to. the number of paved sections as quickly as they can. To keap his promise,on the ‘Rupert-Terrace stretch algne Myr. Gaglardi must instantly launch a prégram whereby 20 miles are paved this year and slightly more than 32 miles are done the following twe years. What he plans to do with the stretches areund Cedarvale and. between Telkwa and Topley, is not known but a sound engineering project of last- ing dimensions is called for. ¥, At is. high time that the government stopped pen- alizing: the car owner of the north for | owning his ony method of individual transportation. 2 Soe 7 “ah md AD: “ ““Euesaray, July 16, Royal Precedent : historic precedent will be set next Oct. 14 when : the Queen of Canada opens the Canadian Par- liament. For the first time since Confederation the cefemony will be carried out in person instead of thyough a royal representative—a fact of particular significance now that Canada has achieved complete autonomy. Both at home and abroad, Her Majesty’s partici- pation will demonstrate that Commonwealth inde- pendence has not been won at the expense of loyalty toxthe Crown, and that the ties of history, blood and ty adition are still strong, + It will be unnecessary to note in Canada, but p@rhaps a source of misunder ‘standing abroad, that itawill be Canada’s queen, not Britain’s who per- fot ms the ceremony, That both entities reside in the one person in no way diminishes their separate- Ness constitutionally and practically. This may take some explaining to neighbors even as close as those of our southern border, who may be expected to refise questions of colonial status, But the fact of stich duality is clearly appreciated: in this country. Itai is but one of the many intangible paradoxes which cnr ich and strengthen the Commonwealth family of nati lOns, ' It goes without saying that Canadians from t eqast Lo coast will welcome the Queen’s visit and t ee = GEMS OF THOUGHT — & Freedom ds not. the power to do what we ike, but to be wha we ought to he--Core, a myrk the date as an honored one in’ our country’s history, ' —Victoria Times, helleve they are free,—Coethe, True politeness is perfect ense and freecom, It simply con- shake In treating others just as you love to be tranted yourselt, eo] ;, rae —Chestertsald, 1 here are two kinds of politeness; one says, “See how polit iT would mitike you hoppy." Tomlinson, beaa tan ] the other, og ame Ch op THE MELROSE © @ FINE, FANTOUR CHINESE mann oy SERVED TO PERFECTION phone . 3329 For Orders to Toke Our Le Oee es anne cone 2 — , None are more hopelessly enslaved than those who falsely er wos . ae 8p Pye oe . MP MMe By JOHN BUSIE i ALGIERS (Reuters) —Citizens? of Algiers Hive in a perpetual state of tension, wondering all! the time what will happen next. The main preoccupation in this North African city of 192,000 Europeans and 162,000 Moslems ; is when and where the next ter- rorist bomb will go off, and what kind of trouble will follow In its wake. On June it, at the funerals of] some of the 10 people kiNted by a bomb explosion on a eilftop dance-hah two days earlier, angry Buropeans stormed through the streets of Algiers, beating at least five Moslems to death and wrecking hundreds of Moslem-owned stores. The terrorism is the work of insurgents, fighting a Moslem nationalist uprising against French rule fn Algeria that be- gan 2% years avo. OPEN EYE Europeans here do “not seem to be afraid. But they are tense and watchful. They say that you cannot be afraid all the time. One gets used to the uneertainty. and carries on normally. The streets of Algiers, with its big, modern buildings dotting the Mediterranean hillside, look like those of any other busy tity, except for the presence every- where ‘of armed men in various uniforms. . Moslem and European women jostle one another in the mar- kets under the eyes of police carrying submachineguns. Troops and police are on patrol or on guard everywhere. On buses, uniformed | LETTE The Editor. The Daily News: I was very glad to hear the} museum bylaw was defeated in the recent civic elections, Net that it wouldn’t be nice to have a new museum, but there are home ‘ .. Back From the Fites of The Dany July 16 10 Years Ago . A pretty summer wedding was) 2 solemnized on Monday at 8 p.m. News \ piace of her home, when Betty | Lynn, eldest daughter of Mr and Mrs. Thos. J. Gowan, be- came the bride of Robert Wil- liam Leslie Currie. 20 Years Ago versity of British Columbia and his bride, the former Mrs. Olive Dawson, arrived in the city on last night’s train from Vander- hoof, “Prince Rupert” evening on the for Vancouver. 30 Years Ago The halibut boat ‘Atlantic’ which drifted aground in Metla- katla Passage yesterday morning came off on this morning’s high tide and marketed her catch at the Fish Exchange today. no damage. ™ She suffered , wina IMDM, R. FP, Grous, 46, of Toronto has been appoint- ed RCAF alr attache to Tur- key, He will be promoted to L veting group captain on taking over his new cuties Inter in July, [Terrorism Rocks Algiers Citizens Ponder Future {bombs An armed guard is aboard ALWAYS VIGILANT cident, apart from troops cor- cilrer needed in the city first. I think it’s a shameful disgrace to ex- nect our civic employees to have to work in that horrid gloomy old building Hall. Just about the worst atmospher: ’ of anyone in the city, and then; of small means: can feel like a SL vrohin we complain about the work they! millionaire, until the first in- ~ . GF do. stallment on his yacht or sports inice new sunny building. \ nerhaps they Prof. G. G. Moe of the Uni- i che most part they are ridiculed, They will be sailing tomorrow | eee ee TS BG es guardsmen search parcels and women’s handbags for ‘concealed buses’ travelling out of Lown, Men sit on stools at ‘the ‘en- trance to hotels, bars and Stétes, examining parcels, briefcases and bags, and sometitnes Search. ing customers for arms.. A car backfiring in Algiers is Hable to make people scatter for cover, At any moment, Jeep loads. of troops are liable to . Spéed through the streets on their way to the scene of an incident, to carry out a search fohdowi inter 4 planted or to comb a district for suspects. An ineldental result of. this has been a step towards sélving the city’s traffic problem. Mili- tary authorities banned parking on both sides-ef the streets, TO CUT ESCAPES “ All but a few of. the ‘alleys leading into the hillside Casbah the old Arab quarter of Algiers have been Sealed off with barb- ed wire entanglements to pre- vent terrorists from escaping into the crowd after throwing 2 bomb or shooting down: A European, The barbed wire ring around the Casbah also helped to pro- DROPPING. ALI INE_si tting door in the shack’s floor and ju is a 32- nound conger ce all day long in his iHttte, fishing tackle -shack on Brighton's Palace Pier, tending the needs of other fishermen, doesn’t prevent John Bromley from doing a. ttle fishing himseff. He lifts at sea below. Bigeest eaten, to come up through the fleor so far in Sussex, England, a trap drops a line through to the ‘Scientists Make Element 102, Product of Atomic A CHICAGO (h) — Discovery of; element 102—the 10th and new- est synthetic clement of the at-| finding element 102 would result omle age--was announced by ai from bombarding vhe heaviest Joint international rese are hiavailable clement with the light- team from the United States,!est particle tu supply the needed Sritain and Sweden, imunber of protons and electrons. The new element was the pro-|| When John Milsted posed name of nobelium, after{tain’s Harwell — establishment ‘the Nobel Institute for Physics | worked ot Argonne. last summer in: Stockholm, It was made by under the U.S.-British exchange coNeagues theorized ago that the best twa years bombarding curiam, synthetic Program, Flotie and Friedman jelement 96, with positively | cesctssed the experiment with charged carbon Jons accelerated {hem, in the Nobel Instltiute's cyolotron, | Milstecd) had been promised The discovery resulted from] "free time” to experiment with the jotnt efforts of scientists} the Nobel cyclotron and decided from the Argonne national lab- {to join the project,.Others join- oratory near Chicago, the atom- ing were the Nobel team of Hugo. de energy research establishment /AtterUng, Bjorn Astrom, Wilhelm ab Harwell, England, nyd the ‘Porsling and Lennart Lolm. Nobel Institute. : - All were present when the ac- I marked the first tinve any eelerntor bombardments were Gf the artificially created ele- | started in Macch, The researeh- ments, al} heavier than uranium, ers obtained chemileal proof in has been discovered by an int !June that the clement had been ternational research team. Ur- | created. anium Is elernent 92. _— Spokesme'n at Argonne, a U.S. ogee Atomile Energy Commission lab. | Use Classifieds--They Pay oratory, gave this version of the | occ “ discovery. PROVED THEORY Pail R. Fields, group leader in Artonne’s chemistry division, Arnold M, Pri iedman and other | tect Moslems inside from Eur- opean rioters who considered storming the place on &me 1}. A sure sign of a terrorist in- All Aboa rd i, CE Mortimer Rich people are always recom- mending poverty, for others. They argue that poverty is more uplifting than wealth, and also more fun. They seldom go-so far. as to try it themselves. As some peo- ple say of churchgoing, co!d : : ‘morning showers, or the drinking ‘of ill-tasting medicines, rich people often plead that they had enough poverty in. their youth to ldst them the remain- der of their lives. .Their argument in favor of poverty has some merit to it, even if they don’t practice what they preach. In these days ol! ample consumer credit, a man doning off the scene, is the dis- appearance of Moslems from the streets. They know ‘that they are likely to be beaten up by indignant Europeans. more important things we call our City They have to work under It’s high time we gave them a; car comes due. Then But there are still some people could approach; who can't rarse the down-pay- their duties with a great deal | ment, or who are burdened with nore cheerfulness. Just consider! an old- fashioned, néurotic com- now, is there any one of us that | pulsion to pay for _things as they poor man will transaction longer. tu be to When a man has been shuffl- remember the We's bound remember it, because he will} wearing the suit until it falls pieces. | Huge Hydro | “| Development At Lachine MONTREAL (CP) —A ing about clad in a thing that: looks like a potato sack with but- tons, his appearance in a new. are conducting an opera- suit always stirs comment umong j friends and co-workers. man who has a suit for But 9, every day of the year misses this kind of attention, I believe He doesn't hear people saying. “Well, C.B., I sce you’re weraing the blue pin- Stripe today.” The; best he can expect by way ofr! personal small-talk is a compli-! ment on the handsome design of : a new hotel he has just a Down in my income however, conversation piece. I bought a | St. Louls to Heron Island. new suit recently, and my ears|rapids are still ringing from the com-'sounding methods, ments it inspired. The usual pat- | too risky. bracket, ) a new suit is still a: | would volunteer to spend month | get them. People im:this group | *¢"" of talk was this: after month in that without complaining very bit-'° One of the advantages of be- | ness to give us nice working] taste of small experiences. quarters and good wages, and being public servants * entitles i them to no less than we’d expect for ourselves. — Consider the matter of buying , clothes, for instance. One mam: 12S he buys a package ‘cnly have to work there, but for|old garment beyond help, and: with the rent money. man is going to feel strongly about the new suit? The wealthy man may better taste, and he may have and treated with contempt in a great many cases. No matter | what they do, it’s not right. They | don’t even get enough pay. It’s ‘up to us, as citizens of this city, new City Hall. I’m sure if our mayor ‘and his -helpers asked for or expected one, they'd he criticized fram all sides and accused of selfishness gy Some such silly thing. Let’s show our appreciation of the hard and unrewarding labor they do on behalf of our city by spending some of our money on a beautiful City Hall. LNot .fov.the reason. Ive. heasd mentioned of, having something nice to show the tourists. Thac’s al) very well, but I think we owe our first thoughtfulness to our own people. So came on, everyone, can't we do something about this situation ? (Mrs.) VIOLET C. HILL. STILL WANTS PROBE The Editor The Dally News: Now that the swimming pool is okayed, all the taxpayers will be expected to put In some vol- unteer Jaber, That jis okay by me, but, if we are foing to save the city same manéey by working free of charge, how about city counell savings some money for the taxpayer? Why Js it that counet) refuses fo Investivate and bare the facts of the Algomn Park landfill pro- Juet M.F, GREGOR, _Prince Rupert, wha's became a tbe pigeons, but. hunin diy, und Thane ar SISA Vhird Ave, West at Secon . . 8 bee eee tee ane Me Borrow where money service has improved with age When you borrow money, you want service that's bneled hy youra of exporlence, That's why mort poople money service backed hy 78 yours ALVIN, you reculve prompt attention, friendly OUSEHOLD FINANGE C. @, Aigham, Monager PRINCE RUPERY, B.C. turn ta JIC, Pomene 8 orpertenee, esallie oftichmey, your money tn ong your cholee of repayment plang vintt ITC toduy, WEAVE VP, Rupert #40 aim, “Terria 045 wm, LEAVE Veiner Rupert 4100 pn d Sty, second Hue, phowe 4914 mevenen R00 pam, building | can enjoy the benefits of poverty.. to put up a strong clamor for a j his suit made to measure, but the : “New ‘suit, eh? Pretty sharp. ” “Wife bullied me into buying | before the flower-banked fire- iterly? We expect private busi-| ing poor is that you get the full. it. Twelve dollars; bargain day; off the rack. An hour in the rain, ‘and it should fit my little boy’ | eS bottom it registers on a guage (The rules bi can order a suit as nonchalantly , Should’ of gum. , about a new suit by drawing ate | It certainly is a double shame‘ Another man has to wait until: tention to its cheapness, poor fit! are linked by radiophone. ‘for our police officers. They not! time and moths have eroded the ,and unfortunate color) jal, NEAL EVANS TRANSPORTATION CO. LTD. : Phone 2085 DAILY BUS SERVICE Connecting with C.P, Airlines (a Vancouver The tlmen of depurtnre ond arrivals ore as fallnwa ten WAILV SUINDAY ONLY demand that a. man! answer complimenis Everyone I met rsponded in, then he has to buy another one! exactly the same way, except my idepth at thet point. Which | friend Jim, more: ot sleeve ‘forefinger, and observed: have. who took a handful becween thumb = and! “Himmim, Pretty good wee ee DINNER GUEST —1. osing the food right out of his mouth to nt hungry pigeon is a pleasure to 75-year-old George Poulos, San Franelsco man of Union Square.” Born In Greeee, the bauehelor visits the square four times a day, raln or shina, to feed the birds, continuing v routine he bean elght years azo when his fall Ing ¢¥eslght foreed him to stop working, Wis attention to the flock attrnets almost as many sightsecrs ag Unlon Square or “Institution” as the “niygeon CNR to Kitimat ANHIVE Terrnee Wed am, Ve Mart 834 po ATUNVE Terrace TIO pan Vrinen Uenngnered. TVS poten, aquired. mater: You ought to have a suit Sarazin, made from it.” ‘helicopter. and four Que-} i bee hydro ground crews! tion at nearby Lachine 'Rapids which is expected jto result in a $200,000,000 hydro-electric power de- velopment with a poten-' ! ‘tial of more than 860,000, -: 000 horsepower. : The helicopter has been, plumbing the rapids part of the: ,St. Lawrence River from Lake | The j normal depth- from boats,: make | Hovering at 1,000 feet the air-: craft drops a weighted wire into ithe water. A red marker is at- | tached 150 feet above the | weight. When the weight touch- i aboard the aircraft which then: reports the finding. : The plane and ground stations - Four! i stations take transit readings marker and caleulate the ion the m Model WSC57 Only 18 Down—Pay “Holding that whirlybird ‘Steady over one spot for three ‘hours is worse than making a 1S-hour trip," says pilot) Ivan Onty QR per month McRAE BROS. LTD. The Store That Service Bubt 2325 Phone 2326 The huge project was announ- ced several years ago by Quebec: hydro, but it is not Known when construction will start. Me tee Gift ’ Cigarettes for CANADA'S MIDDLE-EAST MILITARY PERSONNEL. °. % fayer4 AND OTHER IMPERIAL TOBACCO BRANDS CAN BE SENT TO CANADA'S UNITED NATIONS EMERGENCY FORCE $1.60 sends 400 Players Sweet Caporal, Matinée, Viceroy or Winchester, Velee Includes postage, Mail order and remittance for IMPERIAL TOBACCO CO, P.O, Box 6500, Montreal = chance off of Bri- | OUR BIG “HONEST TO GOODNESS” SA LE IS STILL ON HURRY DOWN TOMORROW FOR SOME REAL BUYS! %& BABY BUGGIES ELECTRIC FRY PANS %& ELECTRIC FOOD MIXERS ye WALL PAPER we STAINLESS STEEL and ALUMINUM WEAR wk DECK CHAIRS All Groatly Reduced at GORDON & ANDERSON Dial 3014