Fisheries department out to “beat oysters By BEN WARD OTTAWA (CP)—The federal fisheries depart- ment is out to beat the oyster at its own game—repro- at Prince Rupert Daily Mews Lt. ~— 4 Monday, July 9, 1962 , Vital mine discoveries being made in B.C. VANCOUVER (CP)—The most active prospect- ane ne no oe sters. | fisheries headquarters here, says ing and exploration year in the history of Canada’s tee it succeeds, a whole new | the hatchery experiment “shows Pucifi thw is 1 swing’ an ‘elimi Pr era will be opened for the At- real potential,” although it may Pacilie North est now is 1) full SW 5 “ d p elimin- lantic pete industry, now|be another two years before the ary reports indicate important discoveries are being —— lag b iser © «| ¢ . soar a es ft _ Bubse vaparies. y disease ane enews full results are known. made, the B.C. and Yukon Chamber of Mines reported ny as well for oyster-lovers across SLOW RECOVERY ; Friday. ~ oo i the land. __ Meanwhile, Une. oyster industty The chamber estimated that ogists now are probing for min- By Work is being started this|*5 slowly recovering from a dis- . ve eenlorati eleral deposits in many outlyin 1 ' r some 60 exploration companies ying summer on an experimental oys- astrous outbreak of diseases that teyether with more than 59) | parts of B.C. the Yukon and ter hatchery at the fisheries re- practically wiped out the rich rospectors, engineers and geol- the Northwest Territories. cass search station on Prince Edward | New Brunswick and Nova Sco- ana sincets | Activity in the north was re- Island’s famed Malpeque Bay,| Ha stocs’. nn aan te. ported at a record level with : now the heart of the Canadian | Oysters rom Prince ward Is- H d 55 exploration compa ries Ke oyster industry. | ane Poe been transpla nied ve U son angry ee in the Yukon ruone. work an ' - "dhe hatchery will test on a e sticken areas to save we o,° . ; aw nveas ree ; ‘ taitly large scale a relatively re-| beds Irom extinction. at critics ene ee ade the Merrit “on cent conviction that oysters can| The hatchery idea is the re- - Asheroft-Kamloops copper elt, be persuaded to spawn effici- | Sult of an investigation into oys- f Asner a north of on Tet " | eny ently and well under controlled | ters which became intense about Oo stars oa vbd on i in the eve thers dew artificial conditions, that tne seven years ago when the mys- By WAL BOYLE 00. and Wemithers nei. en larvae can be fed and that an | eB disease struck along tne NEW YORK (--‘I’m incens- | silver at Alice Arm; copper at ber adult oyster can be obtained. New Brunswick and Nova Scotia yr raven . con cle ; COpper Al tie * Fisheries scientists hold high | Shore. red! exclaimed Rock Hudson. Buttle Lake and near Tofino on se _ nari S| Atlantic oysters shun cold wa- | Rock, one of the world’s film | Vancouver Island; iron ore alone the hopes for the experiment, which | y 5 box office favorites was angry | the coast and islands; nickel sede may free the industry from the | ter and the Canadian stocks fre al recent critics_-most of them | southeast of Atlin; gold in the an present uncertainties of oyster mainly located in the warmer hon shouts Seti oe gestnen- - Sabine iver any Bo Shoe x nt regeneration. | southern sector of the Gulf of who have, uineted Lhe Wolly~ copper. on the Stikine River, " - pr. A. L. Pritchard, director of | St. Lawrence. Prior to 1950 New wood star aystem is through Mr pane RE | | conservation and development at | Brunswit suppiled im per er Their rensons: Tt is too oye HIGH GRADE ORE / :O e Canadian output, Fe. pensive, places. too much power The chamber said it had re- | (32 per cent and Nova Scotia the : : : na , id high-grade gold ore sam- N h ° emaining 11 per cent : 3 in the hands of capricious ac~ ceived high-grade gol’ ore sam ort American, ‘ = p - ees REE SEES lors. and actresses. ples from a discovery 1 the . But by 1960 the oyster disease e ° TROPICAL RA HT — Harold Hennebery of Sambro, near | Hudson, one of the first stars vicinity of Yellowknife, N.W.T. European girls had just about eliminated the Halifax, caught this 400-pound tropical manta Ray while fishing |i fight Kack publicly, spoke his iit had reports of extensive claim ae ° mainland stocks and PEL was ussian re a Jons George's banks about 250 miles south of Halifax. The manta Ray mind. ad lib al a recent lunch- (staking on a hematite iron ore U.K. shoplifters producing gd per cent of Cana- owe | is not commonly found in the waiers around the Maritimes. This leon at Sardi’s: theatrical haunt. | discovery between. the — head- _ J dian output. In that decade the; ¢ e | one is likely to go into deep freeze and may be shown at a fish- here He expressed particular | Waters of the Snake River in LONDON Girls from North total take fell from about 7,500,- ag | cries exhibition later in the summer. _ CP Photo tanno ance ‘at criticism blamine the Yukon and the Northwest . America and Europe do nearly | 000 pounds to about 3,500,000 im ro ve as la ve easier ——— anne oC ee ay e “ts *\rerritories border. ..aeone-third of Britain’s shoplift- pounds. | ! ° pstars for runnin’ up costs ON | eg chamber added that min- ing, a report “published here It was the second Canadian ae tan . ; j two of history s most expensive yn See i aaa shows. | appearance of the disease which WASHINGTON (7) — Elimina- | reciprocal Russian step to con-| ruc ers S$ ri e en S movies---Mutiny on the Bounty eral production this year is ¢x- t “The three-year study of 1,500 aoe has plagued oyster beds off tion of travel restrictions on So- tribute to “better mutual under- Y | and Cleopatra. pected to reach a record level My . TMs ’ . “so ‘ . ” , j {sj F F ite + ) y woe 3 . “ ’ ‘ ‘ ‘ “ou “ory ") ry"? * — cases.. shows foreign students or|the United States Atlantic shore. ee visitors 1 0 we oat standing ang broadens | “It's nothing put sensational- | “ol upwards | orn SOO OO ae single girls doing domestic work | Between 1915 and 1918 the PEI. ates could /€a oa iw her |of co-operation between the peu- lism--the way Marlon Brando, mainly because he Japanese " me ; . eo, improvement in U.S.-Russian re- | ples of the two countries.” land Elizabeth Taylor have peen | market continues to stimulate | in return for accommodation peds were all but exterminated : arr ‘ . ! : | steal. because “it’s easy” and |by it lations, officials said today. Should Soviet Premier Kbri- " ‘abused as_ persons.” he fumed.| exploration and development ac- 4 everybody does it y ‘ The U.S, action was announced | shchev react by cutting restric- TORONTO (CP) — Eastern Canada’s violence-! “The salary of a star isn’t | tivity. Japan imported = some wo. girls described a Paris CARRY DISEASE by the state department Friday. / tions on the travel of more than : ’ . _ an ~~ the prohibitive factor. It's studio $20,000,000 of B.C. mineral pro- employment agency where the | Some of the PEI. oysters, how- Beginning immediately, the ap- | 11,000 Americans who now visit marked truck driver's strike has ended. Trucks which ‘errors that usually run Up the {ducts in 1961 and is expected lo Cen thingy 4 oe i -<_|proximately 2,000 Russians who the Soviet Union each year the : : ; i bills. Tt S S wants to put | double that amount in 1962. @ase of shoplifting in various |ever, were resistant to the dis-|Pre . year, ‘ sts : a0 - aa rppks avea i bills. Then someone wants to pu {" London sores ving the favorite | C4S¢ and from this small per- visit the United States each |way probably would be opened have been standing idle as long as 12 w eeks because | the blame on the star. a i topic of conversation. centage the Malpeaue Bay stocks year wn pe as ree to travel as ifor other measures On improving rate strikes in Ontario and Quebec are expect-! “In any case, it, is the public kill d } In one store, 30 of 37 irls| were built to normal size over a) any OVE oreign tourists. relations. - aut eaiiing during - 4p Awe ce that makes the system. The peo- bones ne wtealing in one year Birls | oo-year period. y oaomote handed by George| One possibility could be re- ed to start rolling during the weekend, following set- jie pick their own favorites” Two kille | " ~ Soreign-born The resistant oysters remained | Ball, undersecretary of state to|newal of active consideration of tlement of both walkouts. (774 4 | eerieuneereereneeernlar ntl | With that blast out of his| gs lane explodes The report authors, Dr. T. C carriers of the disease — which | Soviet Ambassador Antoly F./an agreement for direct air ser-| Both disputes involved mem- ae pat od eight cents Seb-" system, the bie. good-natured P ‘ e My . . “4 . * i 5 ir va ry * eV , . . ; a P i 7’ f 4 N. Gibbens, senior lecturer in has no effect whatsoever on hu-|Dobrynin, the state department |vice between Moscow and New| pers of the International Broth. |“ st also calls for increased con- ex-postman from Winnetka, Ill..| ST. ¥ RANCIS, Kan. (i — An forensic psychiatry at London : : " University, and Mrs. Joyce! thousht that an illegal trans : : plant of seed oysters from P.E.I. Prince, es eoeethe sistant at the] to the mainland beds caused the : “i new outbreak. oest tment of Dears. Sho Federal scientists have since were not. made to feel at home transplanted 10,000 barrels of in Britain steal for “revenge.” P.EI. oysters to the diseased Most girls caught were mid- areas ane thes are produce at . new breed of disease - resis an CoE a ee dS eee ee : - . ° ric eds. Thefts ranged from small) It will be another five or six quantities of food to items as|years before the industry gets large as an eight-yard roll of back to normal. In the mean- carpet. time, oysters prices which shot The report shows women out- | to $40 a barrel from $10 during steal men six to one. Most men steal books. tions. West. will remain high. among cow-hands. CALGARY @ — Citizens of this foothills city today braced themselves for a week-long seige of Calagary Stampede celebra- the United States w in 1955 in retaliation f ltravel restrictions on fore tors | which dated back to 1941, Restraints on travel by Soviet; | diplomats, officials and corres- $12,000,000. travagant outdoor show in the pondents in the U.S. are being | continued. But the United States - Police cancelled all holiday ‘invited Russia to undertake dis-. ileaves and extra patrols were cussions “at an early date” for; the decade of disease probably announced in case of trouble removal or reduction of all such limitations. Hotels and motels were set to leave their “no vacancy” signs up for at least a week as Visi flooded into town for what has become known as the most ex- mans who eat the oysters. It is| informed the Soviet government | York. The text of such an agree- of its action and asked for a ment was negotiated and ini- tiie last year. But arrangements were broken prior off in mid-August in lof the crisis over the Berlin wall. Restrictions on Soviet travel in| real came early Fri ere imposed | few h ers (¢ind.) uebec drivers, than a month erhood of Teamst strike by 1,400 @ i which began more : to the Ontario w the midst) was the first to. be tributions by the firms to health and welfare proved mileage way drivers. The union h benefits and im-) rates for high- ad demanded 30 cents an hour while the compan- ies offered 24 cents. The agree- } run until September d in Mont- day night, a. ours after some 600 he terms almuast nding an 83-day tract signe 1 ment wil or Sovietlers approved t igners; ynanimously, € Wages of the waikout that cost an est imated|ranged from a Settlement as announce .Dougall, preside) Local 955, Tie sa voted 1,999 to 1,6 ‘ending their six-week W settiement / relaxed and pitched into his steak tartare. . Rock, who now lets other mailmen deliver his money to the bank, reminisced about some of the other jobs he had parachute drifted across the Ne- held before ne soared to success braska border about eight miles (as a movie actor. He was a short | from the crash scene. He was order cook, soda jerk, piano picked up and taken to hospital i mover, railway expressman, but-lat Benkelman, Neb., for treat air force B-47 jet bomber ¢x- ploded high over this northwest Kansas area Friday night, killing two of its three crew members. The co-pilot bailed out and his Quebec strikers | er : _ (cher and grocer clerk. s. pasic $1.55 an) é g y ment of injuries nour Q average STs as . . . ” Ontario vent i an Avera ere 500 4!q short order cook,” he said. d in London - ’ by Kenneth Mec- | at of Teamster id the strikers 34 in favor of “]T think I had most fun being) The plane, from Schilling Ait ‘ : : . ; Force Base, Salinn, Kan., rH , 7 still enjoy cooking at home| qioed the base than an engine '_ewhen I can snow off.” ‘ t ‘ ; had caught fire at 32,000 feet Rock, who recently completed | and the co-pilot was palling out. e | Tour Is ts GQ ack utah stonney- doctor Y ays — ~~ — his: goal is “never to stop en~ BOMBAY ‘) -~- Police in sev- e Dawson Cit joying life.” aral Indian states have been y | “T like to get interested in new warned to wateh for confidence projects, exhaust them, then go; men who masquerade as holy on to new projects. T’ve_ tried;men and ehent religious-minded sailing, skin-diving, water ski- | Indians out of money and jew: inp and golf. elry. wage inereasc of 28.5 cents an hour, Jess {han the 30 cents de- manded by the union but two for old rush cents more Phan wars recommend - g ed by a conciliation board re-| py prerER WORTHINGTON port, . 4 4 s 4 ROGERS PASS AREA By KEN LIDDELL steal a heading from an editorial ram News Service in The Revelstoke Review, “open / thie windows eastward”, REVELSTOKE, B.C, —- CoM-| The Rogers Pass route will pletion of the Ropers Pass seC-|qnen Canada's second oldest na- tion in B.C. of the Trans-Canada Lfdenal park, Glacier, which was heyhwary means motorists ¢cQn| established in 1886 but which ow drive 4,875 miles from New- |hag never known the auto and foundiand Lo Vancouver Island. few people even know exists. To tell people in this city of | Also, and at long last, It will shiny aluminam roofs that you've | focus attention on another na- driven in over Rogers Pass is to| tional park, beautiful Mount Re- be treated like a Very Important | velstoke, 0 spectacular setting on Person top of a mountain, You nre Jooked upon as one Opening of Rogers Pass will who has came ino from a land|also mean the Trans-Canada hiled with mysterious mountains | Highway hag at last been finish- That wall soon see the nutomobile | ed after 12 years of Inbor, Fin- aod the trash barrels for the ished, that is, except for the por- fist time. tion where Quebec is drageing its This 92 - mile - long cornidor | feet, thorouph the silent Selkirk moun-| ‘The Rogers Pass route will be tuns connects Golden with Re-|open the year nround, tm the velstoke doa more-or-less direat | past the Biz, Bend Wiphway, a Hoe, entiing 100 miles fron the | great 800-mile loop northward old ronte and thus singiag i res plong the Columbian River from qruean for the bumpy lurhit- | Golden to Revelstoke, Was open shaped Bip, Bend Viphwiry. only in summer and even then Opening Of Rogers Pass, July jlargely ignored in favor of a 30. will bring the old cowtlown, southern route, Culpary, within aw T4-hour drive | Already there is talk of 500 of the old mitltown, Vancouver, trucks a day moving between Olffedal ceremony will be held | Vaneouver and Calgary over the early da September, Trans-Canada, For Revelstoke aren it will, to! Rogers Pass was located in Toronto Teleg the trains. ings, scenery. tion? The peography erentes feet, os ete ¢ ALBERTA *%. Les. emg | BANFF ~~ NATIONAL PARK “RIG BEND” HIGHWAY (OLD ROUTE) REVELSTOKE rs VANCOUVER NATIONAL PARK “" BRITISH COLUMBIA pened avian aeemenmenaed R ose Pome or vanevomasnnats! ee neweenrer 26 erate gran al ah ee Canada closes last highway link 1881 by Major A. B. Rogers, a! will make happy will be Stephen New Englander. Tis discovery | Petriuk, of Moberly, B.C. provided the CPR with a route | through the mighty Selkirks and seide store between Golden and until now the beautiful country) Revelstoke. Tt is about the size of has heard only the whistles of}a granary and Mr. Petriuk de- sertbes if as “temporary quare ters’, Tl has been “tomporary” since 1945 when he heard the hichwayv was to go through Mo- berly. Wis cabins are lighted by lamps. The highway, which is abso- lutely first-class, traverses coun try that knows up to 50 feet of snow in winter, a snowfall that aecounts for the aluminum siide- Hke roofs on Revelstoke’s build- way patrons from 1886 to the carly 1920s when the CPR hotel known as Glacier Touse was de- molished and the park settled Some 5,000 feet of concrete spowsheds and strange dentures known as “dragons’ teeth” - - wil} protect the route in winter, But jn summer the road best deseribed as “spectacular” solely from point of view of the As 3. R, (Bud) Styles, supe tendent of Clacter - Revelstoke National Parks, sald, “perhips too mueh emphasis has heen plneed on the winter aspect and avalanehe protection and detec- sides. ‘The highway ts il. average af 4,000 feet but peaks are from 9,000 to 17,0000 at the rate of 8 feel woyear, One man whom the new rond park is Mr. Petriuk has the only road- GLACIER PARK served rall- Inte oblivion, The park covers 421 square miles and has 10 square miles of glnecier, Tt provides i preal variety of shilny conditions of #lpine and professional calibre, neliding downhill runs of four miles, The outstanding attractions are tnexplored caves and the Lieelewnet Glacier, whieh falls more than 8,600 feet from the wy PEVe, The placer has been recedhys By contrast, Mount Revelstoke unique in’ the entire ehnin of Canada's national parks, ‘There, one can drive right inte the heart of a aith-Alpine Van, he Wemile long highway foes wp from 1,400) feet. at Revelstoke, or exnetdy aomile, On the summit af Mount Re- velatoke are three dakes with food fishtag, a ehatet, camp wna plentie ground, The lakes are of Lrnpslieent emerald and tn sen- con the visitor ean be knee-deep in Violets, datgies, nvarigolds, l- ping and even red heather. The park was first Rested nn W010 after three Revelstoke mon alimbed over the shoulder of Mount Revelstoke and spent ne week exploring: the plateau, From the various loakouts on the done winding ellmb, ane Icoks down on the Wleciewnet nnd Columbia Rivers, with Re - velstoke nestled between them, : Three NOUNE anges ci be neen frome the sume, Telegram News Service DAWSON CITY-—-There 5 ale ehnes in the there was i GO BACK SUNDAY A spokesman fo bureau said compani called their emyployers for regi | ae ng ae lar Sunday night shifts. | Klondike Loday as The spokesnian decline how much the compantles and Wusiness Lhe rail-' - vale - \mueh-bally-hooed but. said trucking Gold Rush Festival but the festival isn't ready for them, r the transport es have re- eg | DS. 1to SY) pourists have arrived: is hoped in money ready for Lhe ways Look over, firms’ may have ¢ getting it all bae four-year Ontario agree- ment, which i rough time” tuckered-oul. tourists and theres . not spare is retronctive to as 1961, vnd rans until 1965. The initial six cents. October 1, September 30, Increase Wil] be about Top wane for aw city trucke been $1.78 an hour, The Quebec contre inereases totalling, with nine cents retro- 1, another nine August 1, 1063, One visilor is re tried to bunk the night in Roab- rvice's cabin, which is naw an offtictal hHistorle site on fringe of town. TENDERPERT 1 calls for need the same repped spirib as conts starting ALGIBRS (i -- A vindent gun heart of Oran's ean seetion ody shatter- celebration pendence holl- 100 dend and garded as cheeehakos cbonder> sourdouphs. eames la Paw- first offielal inde day. More wounded were first hour of th swept the for Buropean Becre sufort will In the able and which peet bir-elty probably be courfort- content, Bub EE you @° Dt .occc cee ee eee cere rete conventences nad This application will be kept an file and referred to a8 red enrpet ablention, Atay enal vacanelos occur. young man, stay erst. e yahting, stronghold of tL Army terrorists. | HEREWITH APPLY For a Daily News Paper Route ce ceeecenn uececnerenenamene corte ste eee 0252222225 SASS Dawson Cly NAME AGE teeming with oc neeeateeteeseeae nme . ec wenn eeeaee or tent to ADDRESS PHONE ported to have PARENT'S AP PROVAL He | approve of my son (daughter) assuming the re- sponsibility of delivering the Prince Rupert Daily News. } understand the "Little Merchant Plan’ which places the carrier in a responsible position and teaches him the trail of "M1 rinciples of Free Enterprise. In approving this applica- Howe who blazed Lie beall at ‘8. tion, | undertake fo ensure than my san (daughter) will Though my wife und Pare re- discharge all abligations involved, featy we feel more ike lishint Signed wee ee nn Atriean Relationship ..---..6 cecwecenees 7 aS yoda ud vis CN rN orem Bae cer ae fs f q # bo nee gn earned