Daily News ), 1952 | Prince Rupert > independent dail WSpaj am! Norther. ami Member of Comadiar Prer ane Dal) Publisiied P. MAGOR Bubscripr ¥ carrier—-Per vee! « » >? mail—Per ment? "Se per uthorived as secc ma ~ted to the upbuilding of Prince Rupert enttal British Columbia, A: it Bureau of Circulations New per Association Rw Daily News Limited 3}. PERRY, Vice-President ~~ 4 os th $1.00; per year, $10.00 URN’ x ©, 68.60 eae ; a clas by the Post Office Department, Ottewa WAYS OF EATING N EXPER? o» what is and what is not “done” A in the best cireles has denounced the Ameri- ‘an way of ea!ing meat-and-vegetable dishes and 1as emphatically approved the Canadian way. Emily Post was written to by a lady who lays lown her knife after cutting her next fragment, ransfers her work to her right hand, lifts the fragment to the appropriate place, absorbs it, ransfers the fork to the left hand again, picks up the knife, cuts another fragment and repeats the process until her needs are satisfied or the viands give out. This we have generally. regarded, and have been taught by our American friends to regard, as ' ei the American way of eating. The lady’s husband, however, keeps his knife in his right hand and lifts his fragments with his fork, held continuously in his left, which we have regarded as the Canadian technique. The lady wrote to inquire which of them was rjght, and to our unspeakable astonishment Emily Post replied “your Husband,” and went on to Jescribe the “Americar\” technique as the “zigzag” nethod of eating, suitable only for persons with nadequate control of the left-hand muscles. Canadians therefore need no longer feel vulgar ili ter Sus -* Me t v As | See It o/s ca more Philpott id Beware Those Polls THE professional polls now show that Ejisen- hower has pulled ahead of Stevenson. But remember the same polls incorrectly ‘indieated Truman’s de- ‘feat by Dewey in 1948. The polls were also away off the mark in Britain last year, for none I saw indicated the true result, namely that the total i}Labor vote would top the Con | Servative In the recent B.C. election ; neither the published polls, nor 3 the confidential ones gave anj 0 Ou : ae preview of what hap-) )reRPRISING BLIND busin The safest attitude to take| 350 stands and cafeterias und: | toward any election outcome Was National Institute for the Blin« summed up by the most astute| supervision on the job are a | politician Canada ever produced,| rehabilitation of blind business ithe redoubtable Sir John A . Macdonald. He said “you mever can tell how a horse race or election will turn out.” e © ¢@ |9F COURSE shrewd gamblers who spend most of their time swudying form charts and other factors can often keep a jump (or two ahead of the horse race }game. But no ome has yet de- rvised a sure-fire system “beat” the races, Nor has any-| ,one devised a foolproof way to) OTTAWA (CP)—The old Brig. Alan B, Con schedule. The only reason statement by defence he: to Army Silent About R Of Far East Military Head | forecast election results in U.S.A. | } . 4 a 3 4 men are operating more than the auspices of The Canadian Pre-manageria] training, and i of C.N.1.B,’s service veople in the part etirement. » army is retiring 44-year- nelly 11 years ahead of given in a 34-word official ,dquarters was that there ‘ . |Mrs. Arthur Chilton. Another, but much smaller | EDMONTON €P)—A 25-year-| strike has been reported 4 old English girl thinks too few|Oakalla prison. It seems that | Canadians have a “real sincere | 50Me Of the kitchen workers are a a s guilty of having unclean finger | sense of values” and some take) >. \). Anser continues well con- | their material gains pretty well) toned for granted . Miss Aimee Chilton, an econ-| It won't be long now before) omist and lecturer at Birming- |°@nges will be recommended in | provinela) liquor laws. But for ham, made the statement while/1). present, when entering a here with her parents, Mr. and! beer parlor it will be necessary to lheed the invitation “please be| She sald it is the dream of | ated.’ hundreds of girls of her own) 1, young Dhike of est elees| age to come to Canada but the ' ihis birthday anniversary near dollar situation makes travel) qi o0 } bread prohibitive Singapore. At the banquet, eggs | “ee & , a thousand yearg Old were used, | “We have all been very im- in the making of certain dishes! pressed with your great coun- This meant the treat would be! try, with the vast distances, the greatiy improved, Barly in life industries and most particularly | Royalty learns how to be all! with the food,” she said in giv- things to all men—As important) ing impressions of her tour as what you stand for as what} TIGHTEN BELTS you fall for ; “Tt is true that British people , ie ‘i | have been forced to curb their NO SPARE SPACES appetites considerably during the years of rationing but our health has not been affected. “Therefore one of our first impressions of Canadian peo- SPECI, FISHERM PANT! Pure wool, Hamohy mt window smash al Thuisd | and Fulton Wednesday i ant reminds one of something sim- liar years ago. A shot was fired/ ‘from the hill side near city hall! A boulder the size of a chair ple is that they eat too much.” | nn eastward, alighting inj While in New York, Miss Chil-| front of where the CR, office ton said, vast amounts of meat) yo. then. The rock struck less were piled on the plates, ofteD) than a foot distant from a baby more than she had been used 00) 64 rio oe , seeing in an entire week, Also a) lot of food had been ieft and would be thrown away For people whe have been taught to conserve every bit of | food, she added, this seemed al- most unthinkable. In England every restaurant saves all scraps and they are purified and used for livestock feed, Miss Chilton said DRESS CONTRASTS One of the other aspects of All size These pants are ext arily well tale with a dozing baby It's true enough that now and | then Prince Rupert has sleek! looking plate glass shattered. | Remember how that barber shop front near Fulton Street looked | some years back? The car made a beautiful sweep, and next sec- ond was in among the combs, brushes and shampoo specialties’ | Reg, Price $12.50 | now’ 9-00 BE SUR YOU ARE Next To Royaj { THEY ALL EXPECT IT A Vancouver dally not jong ago | declared it would not print any 1 indelicate when using their two-manual method n American dining-rooms, Whether Canadian residential schools which have American pupils vill feel able to abandon the practice of having two tables, one at which food is eaten in the “Ameri- can” manner andéone at which both hands are kept contin roe iloyed, is another question. We fatnS' “FRY spite of Emily Post, a good many Americans will keep zigzagging and a good many Canadians will follow the same pattern. S&S * BUSIN ss ar07 LIGHT New Salt Find in Newfoundland May Bloom into New Industry By The Canadian Press ripture Passage for Today Ned you, but ye answered not.”—Jer. 7 Newfoundland geologists underground “Dead Sea” which may blossom into another valuable industry for Premier Joseph Smaill- wood’s economic development program. While. government THE | that some quarters regard it as ET TERBOX jone of the most important min- jeral discoveries in the province isince the lead and zine deposits at Buchang a few decades ago. ’ The lake of cHemi¢al brine was Editor, discovered while geologists wer Daily News: | drilling for salt on the rocky It would appear from Alder-| west coast. Its size is unknown man Casey's letter of Oct. 9th, | put it contains salts four or five that tt 4 ouncil is a law)... co ie Cy co | times more briny than the sea. It unto themselves, , : Referring to the telephone | # whispered that the salt is not commonly-known sodium petition, he states: “I see little | the hope of it getting by city council | chloride but possibly potassium even though 5,000 signatures] chjoride, of greater commercial may be attached.” value. Now this is an example of the | ame bull-headed attitude which | has affected many of city coun- cil decisions in the past few | years, Furthermore it is a situ- ation which cannot be tolerated in any government. When things get to the point where a few can ignore the wishes of the| ims depths until their bits people who elected them it is| broke through into the pool. ime for a change. | It is believed the brine would, It seems that one or two mem- | if in adequate quantities provide vers of the city council) are |the raw materials for an im- secoming a little over-confident | portant chemical industry. officials ~£OUNCIL N ALL POWER The discovery came after a drilling crew’s persistence in following up a “hunch.” When they failed to find salt in the upper layers of strata, they drilled deeper, boring down through the normal salt-bear- }or other countries In the old days in Ontario when I wrote editorials for the “Scotsmans’ bible,’ The Toronto Globe, and ran a couple of times | myself aS a Liberal, the party jused to retain a confidential forecaster. His regular business jenabled him to travel from place to place. Before elections he | knew just the right spots in each is no job for him, Brig. Connelly, a Calgary en gineer who became a brigadier at 35, returned last month from the Far East after nine months as head of the Canadian mili- tary mission in Tokyo Headquarters declined com- ment on a report, published in the Chicago Tribune, that h was “fired” because he was lat Canadian and American life for such retirements except that) that impressed Miss Chilton ts senior offigers are returned clothing. when there is no further suit- Once again rationing has able employment for them in taught British women a sense of the service.” ° value and style in purchasing Defence Minister Claxton re- that is lacking here,” she went fused to add anything to the on statement. Officials said «che maximum retirement age for a brigadier is British Women have learned te get the most for their more pictures Of wedding couples. | Bul you examine other papers in| vain to note the following of, such an example. No doubt about! tt. Newly-weds want their amiles as part of the story Try Daily News Wont Ads @unemcen eee |town to find out What was cook- jing. He never talked polities, but listened or maybe dropped innocent question now and again. His technique Was more accurate than any of the later mass-production polls for he was an expert in interpreting the various factors ¢ + ¢ in tipping Ottawa last spring when a company of Canadian soldiers in Korea was sent & help guard rioting Communist prisoners on Koje Island The Cafadian government al | States that the soldiers were sent to Koje without prior consultation with Canadian au- protested in May to the United) 55 and that they seldom retire at 44. Brig. Connelly will draw a life pension of about $4,000 a year for his 21 years’ service since he entered the army at 23 after graduating from Royal Military College In Kingston Brig. Connelly became a ma- jor at the outbreak of the Seo- jond World War. He became chief EISENHOW s gettin igger fengineer for two divisions as crowds ce ine Sheers tan | thorities jwell as the First Army Corps | Stevenson. But-as-Laurier -usea). Brig. Connelly—now ..on Begin Italy, and in 1943 was pro- |to remark in Tordnto, “you cheer|“7ement leave—acted~as’ Haso@) moted to brigadier to command for me, but do not vote for me.” Officer with United Nationm®/al) the engineers in Italy. In Big cheers are not big votes. | headquarters in Japan and 45/1944 he took command of a | Some of our most successful | SUch would be expected to acti reinforcement group in England politicians have not even held! ®* Canada's spokesman an@/for two years. Returning to public meetings, much less de- | keeP Canada informed of de& lpended on the cheers. Gordon | Vélopments at the headquarters. |Graydon was elected as a Con-| He was also senior military |servative in the year of over- adviser to the Canadian dipico- have discovered aN} whelming landslide against his|™atic mission in Japan. He did) party. He knocked on the door | not have charge of any troops of every home in Peel County |!® Japan outside his immedi- hat he had time to reach. ate staff Of course the leaders of the! He was posted home in Au- parties must depend on speeches, | 8USt, nine months after going jradio talks, or press st&tements,|to Tokyo. The normal army Pave been reticent to disclose de-| Otherwise they would not doj Posting is two years, but in the) tails of the find, it is understood | What the public insists they must} two years the Tokyo post has) , it i prs o—debate the .main issues.;been open it has beep filled |Each country has its own meth-| by four brigadiers |ods for doing this. The Ganadian| he first report Brig. Con- |custom, like the American, is for! nelly was being retired Came jthe leaders to wear themselves| jin the Chicago Tribune, which to a frazzle and literally talk | ‘ . \ [themselves hoatge. We expect— |pQpsed, 2 Jletqnce. spokesman it ag ay q . oR “or of | ‘tawa know soon enough that Speeches trom our party spokes-| Canadian troops were !o be }men a to But Mr. Churchill won the} Rae British election iast year by} Defence headquarters yester~ making just seven big speeches|Gay gave enquiring reporters of which I heard all but the | this statement last one where he spoke for his| “Brig. Connelly is on retire- own son. jment leave. The department Britain, literally being “the | does not normally give reasons tight little isle’ makes this sort | of campaigning possible where BROTHER FROM AFRICA STAVANGER, Norway (CP)-— ‘it would not be practical here, | with our immense distances. In| Rey, Andreas Magubane, a na- | Britain every nook and corner | tive of Zululand, brought greet- of the country is affected by one |ings from the Zulu church to |really big speech within 48/the 110th anniversary: of the hours You just can’t get that | Norwegian Mission Society here, jsame blanket effect here—|phe Norwegian chairman re- |though TV might soon change | called that the first Norwegian | that. |missionary reached South Af- rica in 1844, QUEBEC EXPLORERS Prisoner Dies : An Experiment issssignt'sze'beierea to nave been Father Marquette and Loui. | ‘TACOMA, Wash. (AP) — The Joliet from Quebec. |second of 200 volunteer “human : guinea pigs” has died at McNeil Island Federal Prison, a victim of army experiments seeking a cure for a liver disease prevalent The death Sunday night of Walter Harvey Wood, 39, was reported by Warden Fred Wilkin- | Son, who said that of the 200 convicts inoculated with hepa- TOASTERS The men offered to help the Wood, sentenced for interstate n their ability to run the affairs| Potassium chloride was the af of the city and I for one am glad|backbone of the once-great 5 O see some new and younger|German chemical industry, } nlood in the city hall. j However, I wonder how much eo ere ¥ longer the younger men with| The find marked the second younger ideas will continue to| “iscovery of salt deposits in the | butt their heads against a stone | Atlantic provinces within a year. | wall? Earlier, in Nova Scotia, 4 de-jin Korea. : To Alderman McLean ana|POsit was found near a bed of vw: | those members of the city| high-quality limestone adjacent counel] who apposed the original |t© Antigonish Harbor. | bylaw, congratulations, and| Industry minister W. T. Dau- carry on the good work, phinee said the deposits raised J. 8, BURNS. “strong possibilities” that the | titis, a form of yellow jaundice, province would shortly become | only 15 per cent had come down . 1) MORE CANDIES? pad ae _ _— of basic with the disease. Ay Y . . ustr emicals, ee a LONDON (P)—The Ministry) The size of the deposit has not |\army find a method of combat- a of Food is checking stocks of|been determined. But govern-| ting the sometimes fatal ailment. w ) | Candies throughout, Britain to| ment officials claim that millions | which struck many servicemen in eit find whether they are largejof tons of salt are there, aad|the Second World War and also %y enough to permit ending thejat least 2,000,000 tons of lime-|in Korea. ~~ ie i oe cneee, Sit how-|stone almost on top of it. , i ever, ve it” no pos-| The salt was found at 779 feet | transportation of for - if ¥ P sible to take sweets. off the ra~jand exploration is continuing in| ties, would have hana allaieis tae e tion before Christmas. the area, parole next April. % er ; by Phone 644 }Canada, he became commander of the Alaska Highway and later ihead of the army's Saskatche- wan area He went on leave for at least two months on his return from Tokyo. He has been in Calgary and Ottawa since his return,) but army official said they’ ,;don't know his whereabouts at | present PREPAREDNESS PLANS STOCKHOLM (CP) Evacua- ition plans for about 3,000,000 persons in more than 100 cities iand towns have been worked | out in Sweden. Under these civil idefence blue-prints, priority. is given to children, old’ people, invalids and their nurses ‘ Youcantgo £- MLL OUT © ) IF you Feel SCN , worry-—any of these may affect normal kidney action. When kidneys get out of order, excess acids and wastes Dodd's Kidney Pills. Dodd’ kidneys to normal sain, you feel better — better — work . Ask for Dodd's Rider Pills. at AUTOMATIC TOASTMASTER’ THE ARISTOCRAT OF THE AUTOMATICS ONLY $32.95 =, RUPERT RADIO & ELECTRIC ~ Br Box 1279 meney and buy clothing of lasting. quality and smart style, Miss Chilton said. Miss Chilton felt British wom- en are more wisely dressed but! do not have the variety of cloth- ing that Canadian and Ameri- can women enjoy. Her father, director of a Brit- ish manufacturing firm, came to Canada to survey industrial possibilities ~ ELECTRICAL SUGGESTION General Electric Kettle $i General Electric Steam tron $2 Hanscraft Eaq Cookers $4 Waffle Irons $} Toasters from § | “Toastmaster” Toaster—Automotic 83 Northern B.C. Power (o.| Hesner Block — Phone 210 Prince Rupert, B.C. Th. ed vertnement i set pubbshed or dipleyed by the Uiquer Control Boord o by the Geveremen of Betinh Colvmdo Stew = ’ 4 oe ag Here is another opportunity for you to adopt this tried and tested system of saving money. ‘Canada Savings Bonds never drop in value. If cash is needed you can get back the full face value of your bond, plus accrued interest, any- time—at any bank in Canada. You can buy Bonds for cash, of course. Or if you prefer, the Royal Bank will arrange for you '° aa regular monthly instalments out of income. The proce * city itself, All forms and full information available at ev° THE ROYAL BANK OF CANAD ° er Prince Rupert Branch ap oy TAYLOR, Manag Branches also in Terrace and Smithers .