LE a TC »MORROW'S _TIDES— 9, 1952 rime 17.5 feet 15.6 feet 7A feet 10.0 fewt torm rikes e Lose Lives N. California | ios rain and northern he week- lives and anding er trains! vers | highway cations it ang vice over ows in mtains op i border ugh ad motor deep en were hugh oak gh winds of of Ukiah orst Fog History London great g ne and first IaVA ike the ackgout rit ler ever portation . paralyzed, A were killed idents and r Hleashed a behind the at a my and 1 to £0 1 WOrK rwooc and apy yhound ’ Crash lures 2 A Grey $ pa ty road Rossland its side plunging ikment injured of Winni Young, Trail condition in on bus acci-| Columbia's n less than Greyhound ilo Kootenay 's, Gossip And Too Much Talking |} Smith ; vniensoniinedbamanacinariee te Che ’ PROVINCIAL 6 NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBL4’S NEWSPAPER Published at Canada’s Most Strategic Pacific Port—‘’P tince Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest” VOL. XLI, No. 287 i emai. serene mee PRINCE RUPERT, B.C, MONDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1952 i A “flying” discovery of gold in the hills near | Kemano Suy. may touch off another industry—or . ;, even a gold rush—at the Aluminum Company of “sa ee as “+" (Canada’s huge power site.? Pats Honor Comrades Canadian Press dispatch iy said an airborne surveyor | MEMBERS of the First Battalion of the Pring Patricia's Canadian infants wh reported to have found gold; ; arrived home last week after 13 months’ fighting in Korea i: d leas steel miles from the Alcan pee services In the rain at the United Nations’ cemetery near Pusan. In backgroun: a ; ces ject. He is George J. Smith of} wary ie usan n ‘ ground are rOSses + t+ Yane 16 ; Marking the graves of some of their fallen comrades "eeuiin cea spotted min om Se oe Ue = ; eral veins from ‘the air while | ° . fooking out of the window of ree 0 | t ee in his plane, then later flew in by rmanic helicopter and staked 15 claims. Seats Born And Raised in Three of the eight candidate seeking election to four vacant aldermanic pests next Thursday were and raised in th city. which is the greatest num- of running for of- here time include Mrs. W. D housewife; Ald Gomez maintenance BC Packers Ltd Bremner, hardware ager Mrs born iOCRI fice for some They Kay Darrow man at and Bill store man Smith was born here pioneer parents, Mr. and Mrs. J Jock) Watson, who have re- ided here since 1911 of Lifebelt May be Clue “To QCA Pilot VANCOUVER ® A lifebeit which Was washed up at a light ho 35 mile orthwest of here is being investigated as a possible clue to a Queen Charlotte Air- lines plane missing since Friday The belt was turned over to RCMP Sunday by the keeper at Merry Island Lighthouse as eight plane wmtinued to search from the air in strong wind and cloud The pilot, Capt. Bruce Wi t of Vancouver, Was the only per on aboard the missing wi engined Anson. It vanished on a 90-mile flight from Vancouve Comox Five Airmen Lose Lives in Fire RAPID CITY. &.D. CP)-Piv« U.S. Air Force officers died Sun day when fire swept through ithe two-storey barracks at the | Stevedo Rapid City air base. Six others were treated in hospital The is the major base instal bombers The first woman candida since Mayor Nora Arnold's term ended in 1948, and the fourth m the city’s history, Mrs. Smith is secretary of the Canadian Club and the ladies’ ,curling club; a member of the Order of the Eastern Star a Sunda) Schoo! teacher at the First Bap tist and an organist there ARMY VETERAN Aid. Gomez, 37, who i re-election after a term as alderman, al here. He took an sports and is @ Canadian Army Church secking two-year Oo was born active part in veteran of the overseas, win Freighter Speeds to Orient After Loading Barley Here rhe Japanese Prince over Une faste wt modern freighter to Rupert weekend with 8 enter harbor depart 63 Dom ec ton of barley loaded at th Grain Elevator ishin Maru of the nion ‘ NYK peeding to the Orient via t Circle Route at > Knol { better The E Line, is he Grea than 17 maid to be an exceptiona perd ior uceal freighters Making het this Seattle, the Eishin Maru is pow nele-screw . turbine a displacement of 7,000 I 493 lee She has passenger tion and carrie port Via ered by¥ a tons in length ommoda has and measutt ae ix of them dn Another here Dee. 12, said agen G. W. Nickerson and gral hip is expected to diox but mo ied by rail no hold-up, C Railway officials shipping the major activity waGiAl said from Prince source says Don manager of Pacifi Co. His company les lining of such ship. is necessary, however, lining was done in Grain Rupert waterfront Ritchie 1s also har where thi most grain lives andilation for B36 inter-continental | Vancouver, he sald, because lum- i ber is cheaper there . emo on How to Handle Business Women Y Apes \IDE KERR Memo to nage women that is \ te with notes ‘bout gossip, from the Re- ' America, The vate research analyzes and pments affect- ih ® membership l executives and women mem- vorked on the nen after con- yehiatrists and} of it @ with a flood, of tears, give the girl an oppor- tunity to recover her self-con- trol. The tears are generally due to a combination of on-the-job and personal problems. Let the girl know you are available to discuss anything she wants to bring up, but don’t pry. Above all, don’t dismiss a tearful girl with an off-hand “Go wash your face; you'll feel better.” Finally, keep in mind that some women use tears as & deliberate weapon. Don’t yield. Whatever happens, you have to maintain your standards When criticizing a womans work, remember that women take things personally. Ask @ man: “Where get this did you steak?” He will answer: “At Green's. meat market.” Ask his wife the same question and she'll answer with some emotion: “Why? it?” In the business world such reactions are due party to the fact that women are on the defensive; not only because they feel as a group that they have to prove themselves, but also because a woman tends to see almest everything in terms of herself. In dealing with women, critic- ism should always be linked closely with encouragement and appreciation, Never take a wom- an for granted. Your failure to comment favorably is likely to What's wrong with of} Smith and his partner, Fred Nash, plan to go back in again in spring to continue their in- vestigation. The mountain is so steep, Smith plans to take in Rupert ning the stinguished Conduct | §00-foot ropes to lower a man Medal. He is married and hasi down to take samples. | two children In Prince Rupert mining cir- Bill Bremner, 38, has spent! cles, the report is not regarded all his life in the city with ex-| 2s “anything sensational.” eption of the World War If One authority said the area years when he served with the bas been surveyed and pres- pected as early as 1928. In some places beth gold and copper has been found while other areas have been bare. Another said that while little mineral of any kind had been Royal Canadian Navy, mostly on/ Atlantic convoys He Rupe nercee of Prince t Junior Chamber of Com-/ and the Kinsmen Club SEEK RE-ELECTION Ald. Ray McLean a past member Ald. J. PRICE FIVE CENTS “2 Mineral Veins Seen | In Flight Over Area HELD FOR MURDER—Twen- ty-one-year-old Gale Knott of Curve Lake Indian reserve, has been charged with the murder near Peterborough, of Wesley Taylor, 26. Knott is accused of stabbing Taylor to death after what police des- eribed as an evening of heavy drinking on the reserve. ane |located in the coast range to W. Prusky are two others who! the north and south of Kemano, re secking re-election, Ald. Mc-| favorable showings had been} Lean after a few months Of | giscovered to the west in a type} service following his victory! of rock similar to that in which oyer Ray Gardiner Sept Premier gold mine is operated. by-elections |@ Other reports of gold discoy- Ald” McLean, 29-year-old ac-fery in the Kemano area have countant, came to Prince Ku-| been received here. One tells of pert in 1944 and in 1948 entered/ tunnel workers, drilling through partnership with Bob Rudder- | the mountain to make the 2600-/| ham as public accountants. He | foot penstock from the Tweeds- | is married and has three chil-; muir Park watershed to the) dren. Ald. Prusky is a machin-| proposed power house found | ist at the drydock rold while drilling i Hugo Kraupner, operator of j Americans Remember Pearl Harbor | NEW YORK 0-—“Remember Pearl Harbor.” : So went the Americt.: battle ery of the Second World War. Sunday, 11 years after the sur- prise Japanese attack, Ameri- cans are still remembering. In a statement on the lith i ir ( aning plant and lat ry ; ary or I a = wimcoagees : | anniversary, President Truman came Se ing tT Pere sate ris mas ree | Temembered—and warned that and during Wey Wine Has ja surprise attack” can happen hard working member of the . * | again.” suites " , ‘ome ‘ bee . Junior Ciamoes of Come? Cutting Begins Sess o im mene for 10 ye aap a. ol Seni destructive power of the . or tt the la evel ee i » intai ‘ ham i. pe Matiy city motorists took ad-| atomic bomb we must maintain vantage of a slightly nippy but} otherwise clear day yesterday to| drive out along the highway to} 42 wa CAME HERE IN tay Gardiner born in tathis city in 1942 working at unt for, chop down, and bring| +} ~ydoek until the war's end| oe" Christmas trees | i oo sy ae in alae i in Some chose pine, others spruce, | te cehane exert . & ae according to individual tastes | m of the Untted Fishermen | “"¢ also, likely, availability ca a me, Meanwhile, Pat Forman, chair- | bn