A RNS ‘ 2: “Prince Rupert Daily News Duass “Friday, September 27, 1957 - i eee T t ‘ . vow, ‘ . an independent daily newspaper devoted to the upbullding of Prince Rupert | fot and Northern and Central British Columbin. — Member of. Canadian Press—Audit Bureau, of Clrenlations “ ’ Ganedian Dally Newspaper Association ‘> Published by Te Prince Rupert Daily News Linited : (ins J. F. MAGOR, President ° ‘ j Subscription Rates: — EE e By mail——Per month. $1.00; per year $10.00, “By camier—-per mofth,.€1.25, per year, $14.00 Authorized ‘as ‘second class mail by the Post Office Wepartment, Otfwwa er erences © ence hapa erent SE . e sow . 4 Film Has Up-To-Date Message EVERY dedatle the motion picture makers of the world give the public a production which not only entertains and instructs, but leaves the threatre- goer enriched mentally and spiritually. If ollywood did it with “Gone With the Wind,” Britain aeccom- plished it with “Idamlet” and now Hollywood again, through the genius of Cecil B. DeMille, has. given the world atheply moving experience wilh hig “The Yen Gommandments.” This film now. showing in Prince Rupert, is more than a “spectacle” Lo awe the public, with its gigantic sets, its brilliant film wizard- ry and vast throngs that portray the despondent Hebrews under the eruel yoke of iieypl. It gives every man, woman and child, who has any knowledge of the Holy Seriptures a keen insight into man’s struggle for freedom from bondage, dis fight against tyranny and the realization of the need for a strong, unfaltering faith in God. "The message that shines through the $18,500,000 epic is the same today as it was 3,000 years ago. Where in the days of Moses the Hebrew tribes sought to escape the slavery into which they had been born, so at this Veiry hour hundreds of thousands today cry out for release from the bonds of totalitarianism. As My. DeMille himself says, in presenting the work he had planned for 30 years, “friendship and freedom hold the key to the future of world affairs but they just don’t happen. — . “We all have to work at them.” ‘ . Pharaoh Rameses II, as brilliantly performed by Yul Brynner could just as easily been Mussolini, Hitler or Stalin. His arrogance, utter disregard for human life, burning ambition to see his will done at any cost and against the advice of his counsellors, made him the personification, of all dicattors. At the same time, the dedicated: Moses, presented in an inspired manner by Charlton Heston, in the face of tribulation and the doubting outbursts of his own people, represents every prophet up to the time of Christ who has contended that.men are to be ruled by law and not by the whims of individuals. Men are free souls under God, Moses told the Hebrews, not the property of the state. © a And yet how far have we progressed in the past Paar a oe 2-000-years:—Who of'us today would turn from our materialistic lives to follow one of God’s phophets? - Who would believe today, this week, if a ‘man ap- peared among us, telling us, He was the Son of God. What impact would such a being have on the money- grabbing, too-busy, pleasure-loving world of today? '’he answer shames us, as it shamed Moses, The Ten Commandments helps ‘us rencw our faith, It isa picture all should see with an open mind, - forgetting the fact that it is a film preduced py the movie capital which has often propogated worthless trash. Cecil B. DeMille, fulfilled a dream in pro- dueing this motion picture, he realized a coal which he hopes will help the world keep “The ‘Pen Com- miandments” and thus bring a measure of peace and security to mankind, It has heen arranged that, My. DeMille’s share of all the profits of the picture will wo into a special trust fund for religious, charitable snd cdnentional purposes, and on his own insistence, he will have no voice in the money's disbursment, Vor sheer beauty, painstaking authenticity, {ihm genius and spiritual uplift, the film has seldom heen equalled, It is a worthwhile experience that no one should deny themselves, , . Ls Be age HE ee ee ee rp TES RPE MIRE Ce A ORE Te My tee har tarts Me Ee Meee tee tg ge eg te .ON soos Now Ow yO TR HR ‘ . . mM * eee ay “oN ORME ATES ALAS Sigg TERE EAD ee temas VE Semel t by ® Notes on one mystery. Do you want to know how come the Yull Breynner hair eut? Elementary my dear Wat- son, ‘Phe price of mens’ nair+ euts in dearge, North Dakota is new $150. Tenee the growing popularity of «lhe do-it-yourself home clip. —, First grhde butler was selling for 57 eents a poand ino super- miuarkels just easl of Sp&kane as we enme through. But prices of goad meals in restaurants are just about the same on both sides of the border. This ig still the land of con- tracdietions. A Sioux Indian rroze to death the other night in the bilter snowstorm. With his nephew the unemployed man twas ridite a freight train to try? | to get to a job as a potato digger. Yet a few hours later, I also spe by a western U.S, newspaper that an 86-year old Pennsyl- vania landlord has just sold sev- eral good two stoyey brick houses for $10 apiece. “The old gentle- man explained to the astonished ex-tenants and new owners that the steady rents they had paid Gin, Scotch | VvVvyuvs As El nore P, hilpott a J AMESTOW N, North Dakota—This eastbound trip across the western states has enabled me to unravel -|we got into. conversation with ~ noe : ee ns . Fee wey te . wegaebe bad etic tt ty ry tg ca eet te EE aa eetay tte a SS elgg ip hae we! " , . ’ eae we veces eee . + . + wy mye IS eal w ie wes 2 OD eat, a. ee ' ~y! Cae - _ P - ’ a w { q I See It i , t i ‘ . & OM ye . \ : , . . $ NELSON @ -— Deleg t wopld have made the Great U.S.A. the brocedure to be him all the years had actually already well paid for the homes. costs of scheols for reta litles convention have rejected a move pulding code to the status of the Nat The UBCM tured down a Nanaimo ‘resolution whieh uniform building code of the Pacifle Coast Building Officials Conference equally authoritative., Resolutions carried by. the convention included: . . From Prince George, asking the government to’ churify, oo taken In respect of arbitration of school | estimates, if demanded by one party UBCM DELEGATES REJECT MOVE |. FOR NATIONAL BUILDING CODE’, nates to the but not by the, ot From Prince Rupert, asking Uhe government to jnelude in - the public school system the financing and administration + wy ’ rded children, - y Union of B.C, Munieipa- to raise a replonal lonal Building Code, peo ery oy te IN CASE you haven’t heard The; Governor af North Dakota has appointed the week of ‘October 6 to' 12 as International. Letter! Writing Week. | The Govemor’s name is @on-! orable John E. Davis, and ‘the: slate capital is Bismark, : It-would be a nice nreighborly thing if some Canadian readers | dropped a line to Governor Davis | to wish him well. ‘It would ‘be | even a better idea if we all wrote | letters to long neglected ‘friends | in foreign countries. — - : What a fine thing it would be! \ i President Ike wrote a. nice’ &* 2 little Sriend’y ore eh ‘Ais old war) «1 SLEPT LIKE A LOG” — A log boom-man enjoys his cigar ’ ‘! while demonstrating the new safety suit designed for the * i \ and better still, what a ‘fine! ne - : thing for the whole ‘world it. loggers who work on log ponds, eat-footing from log to log would-be if Marshall Zhukov with their pike poles. The specially designed rain jackets and pants, with removable individual air- tubes held in by zippers, are being used by boom and boat men of the. Weyerhaeuser Timber Company of Everett, Wash. If they should slip from the log ,they stay afloat, thanks to’ the safety suit. The rubber pants have two king-size air tubes that keep the legs on the surface, By the way, this fellow’s cigar remained lighted throughout the damp demonstration. were to write back in the war- time vein-—free- from the ac-' cents of rattlesnake — venom } which have characterized © the: years of cold war. ue a “mid-morn drink at a wayside coffee stand ‘STOPPING for IMPROVEMENTS BEING STUDIED, two middle aged women who ran the wee place. Prices To Drop By 10 Cents brand tach of imported gin and and prices of Canadian and . imported wines will increase on a new B.C, }:quor bourd list effective Oct. 1. Wine -increases ‘range from five to 90 cents a bottle. Two ltypes of imported English ales and stouts will go up 2 cents a | dozen bottles. , | Price rises are due to “ine ;ereased costs the board,” | aid ‘board chairman Donald MeGugan. The Scotch and gin reductions are due to absorb- tion of a portion of freight costs py the distilleries. Unsigned Letters Not Published _¥f the person writing to Let- ter Box who | signed selves “Ex-Broadqway Gang City Resident” will write to the editer identifying the contents’ ef his or her letter and sign- tng their proper name and address, their letter will ‘be published, ‘The Daily News does net print letters which do net inelude bona fide sig- nature and address, aithough nonem de plume may be used i€ the writer desires. Letters over sigmiutures are given pret- erenee, POOF HTS SEE AAHORGLALALODOPOUDITES: RESTRICT PEDDLING GARMIA, Ont, Gi -- Council of (he Sarnia Tidian Reserve has started enforcing a mMiing that »peddur's ‘trying to. sell goods on the reserve must have written pemmission from officials before stating — house-lozhoause.” ends, Offenders may be fined $10 or lhe piven a seven-day jal) sen- Fionee = ar both, COSTLY SPICE of modern food spices, about $58 ha pout, wholesale, F y A See eed UCL Om Tht. ONLY Cte thIpO B.VEFAR OLD CANADIAN WHISKY Olen olan PU nine eat ele ogee ot p e vis advertisoment isn oraeen Control Board ar by the Governmont of Brith Columbia, ublished or displayed by the Weuor Sch a7 mM F.C. KY a) ' 4 “HOD eunne cate weet Macagqill LOGOS AL PREELTS wt Pgs EVE ETT oP CO NDER OMEN Moy OCU aa TE CABIN LEM ' Me Alt Met ep an tonto ute wt CTE Captian heaven “stor Pchentey “ONLY ow conete | trom the Canadian border, and | spoke hopefully and wistfully | about getting there sometime for a look-see at our country. } : | Yes, siree, this great and rich; r : a $ Oo o Wwe VICTORIA @—Prices of one! scotch will drop 10 cents a bottie : 26 varieties of) them- *- Saffron is Uae most expensive | They were just about 100 miles t 1 1 ‘ i tq ! | t t Black Opposes Transfer $. 5 fy .00 TRADE-IN | ALLOWANCE: ON A - NEW G-E WASHER ? | land is the home of titanic con- tradictions. , There is in fact more liberty of economic action than there is on any other similar expanse of this whole earth. But what have the Americans done with all that liberty? 7 They have standardized them- selves as no other people have ever Gone anywhere on earth. For instance, you can go into al- most any town in the whole good old U.S.A. You can walk into Wesley Black told the Union of B.C. Municipalities he! opposes the view that more and more municipal ; charges should be transferred to the province. | | NELSON (CP)—Municipal Affairs Minister’ | “Provincial revenues eenal very large are still not beyond] reetions and changes will. be;\- j our requirements, he said. tmade as experience shows they: Mr. Black said the government ; are needed. is not. prepared to assume the; But there is not much in the ! charges paid by ‘ municipalities | act’s content about which there toward the operation of hospi-jis any serious difference of op- any coffee shop and 99 times| tals. .} inion. i out of 100 it will be identical; Education costs are being) Municipal aid: the sovern- | with every other coffee shop youi studied to see whether the pras- iment is prepared to support at will find anywhere in the vast’ ent plan, implemented in 1955'the forthcoming. federal-pro-' country. — ; | can be improved. he said. ivincial conference the UBCM. They will be seyving exactly! The convention -is expected .to | contention that the Federal-' _ the same foods, on counters that have identical equipment. The same juke box will be play- ing the same songs. debate a resolution criticizing | Municipal Improvement Assis- . the education aid formula as;tance Act should be reactivated. | outmoded and one which places: This would revive the fund from a heavier burden annually on;which municipalities could bor- With Pump TT - _| taxpayers. ‘row at low interest. LESS TRADE-IN I HAVE my own private and pet) «764 us not forget that it is the Proposals to set up a water, theory about one of the basic} iaynayers who ultimately pay | commission: the suggestion has causes of the unresolved race war that still goes on in this great republic. In the former slave-owning states the colored Americans considerably outnum- ber the so-called whites. The jatter know very well, down in; their heart of hearts, that they are fighting a losing battle against schoo) integration today, the price, whether the tax is lev- | Merit, but, as the water situation ied by the municipality or the| is not critical, the matter should provincial government,” the! be studied further. minister said. | Welfare costs: “I am in favor “While it is not the govern-,of equalizing costs of welfare: ment’s intention that any taxi services on a per capita basis, should We raised to unreasonable Similar to the system used in’ levels,*the municipalities should health services, in which the not try to shirk their res ponsi- : Municipalities and the province and complete assimilation to- bilities in this joint effort.” i share the casts.” oo | NORTHERN morrow. On other subjects, Mr. Black; Mr. Black said ib is hoped) N \ But complete assimilation con- said: jmunicipulities will soon he able \ flicts head-on with what we} ‘Phe new Municipal Act: might call the great American | Se oe dream. For the secret ideal of the American majority is not a! _ - 8 29,000 land of, mized Drood” mont GAA Employees tion was summed up in the od: Laid Off phrase “free. white and twenty. | ; DETROIT we General . Mo- one”, ; The-one tenth of the American tors’ list of employees laid off people’ Whose “nneestors | /eume | because of strikes grew today Lo from Aften are the proatest ob-i#bont 24,000, A GM spokesman, stuele to) that standardization said the latest layoffs were more® which seems to he the midn, if than 9,000 at Pint, Mich. - 6,100 unconscious, Boal of this mighty )at a Buick plant and 3,000 ut a | republic, — tbody plant { yo es cor- ;, to pul all their bylaws on micro- _.-}film for easy reference. | , He suid the government will provide the service Hf cities and. distriets want it. Dial 4210 een ‘ ' GREAT NAMES IN OCEAN TRAVEL! ve a ee 1 & 8 S iH These Tour 2 Table, Floor, Pull Down etc. All Fram: The Famous Singer ILne Ait at wt tom Wa ‘ iN pt Gabi ANALY LY, CUNARD’S " SYLVANIA + CARINTHIA + IVERNIA » SAXONIA KOO Woerrad St, Vanover, WC, SPECIAL MODEL MM-41A This top-value model has many of the famous G-E * ' "ye . . . * quality features, including the fast-emptying auto: ” , matic, pump and G-E ‘‘one-control’” Wringer. Farn- ous Perma-drive mechanism on all G-E Washers - is sealed in a bath of oil for trouble - free service. 269.00 50.60 you pay omy |59.0o AT B.C. POWER CO. LID. Stewart, B.C. Besner Block, Prince Rupert N r 3 0no ton luxury Hinerk were anecially Anadian service. They are part af (he largest Neet of passenger ships on the Athintie whieh neta a standard of ocean travel that ts sucond to none, Enjoy the ease and luxury of these great trinseatlontic atibilizers for smooth sailing. And there's ‘roundethe-clock’ fun for you... movidny pee Plus Canord’s superb culsine ane service, A perfect way (a travel—artive at your deatination Remember... When You Go Cunard... Getting Agent--No One Can Serve You Belter bo i oO EEIGNE day \ designed for the C | ie Hy FOR EVERY ROOM IN THE HOUSE ci react Bul! om Idea — 28. Ident aa ot, Yoo HO liners, off equipped with , is Gere . 1 TON thineing, sports Come and See Fall | ati relied and refreshed, Shipment of Lamps ) «ofa, 29 Thore Is Hall The Fount | 1WIA fee Your Local PRICES FOR ALL BUDGETS erie . t fre ' aw Ve OHTen GOCunard Phone © TAMaWwedd te: ¢ Tate aa@ouw feet f eee t @ . vores ‘ 0 i ’ 4 A. MacKENZIE FURNITURE LTD. "A Cood Mace to Buy Mor Over a Quarter Century 308 3rd Avenue West Phone 4146 | HILIP M. RAY INSURANCE AND TRAVEL AGENCY CSuecesser to Dybhave & Wanken El . Os Third Ave, Ww, Dial 2215 met ’ ‘ e RAO em Tet