~ 1 Prince Rup ert Daily News Fy 12 eptember 12, 1952 Pipeline Rushed to Coast, Half Completed by Fall VANCOUVER strike their tents 360 of tl couver. They week and another pipe f that mil of pipe are arriving (CP)—When the “big-inchers this fall, they will have completed | iF 1 & ” ie 715 miles between Edmonton and Van-| Mountain 000 id jj Gaily. Ten cars of enamel haye/| pipe liz coast l of fibre-class mat- 1953, that hree month l tractors, a wheel- of the orici: hedul dit even backhoes and The 3 : : +} tmree clamshell diggers. k t ‘apread” ax time, oil cém- week that ' A vill \ the ame busy expand- begin layii 12-mils mete MOP Art stretch n in their refineries in anticipa- Hope it ‘ yt | tion t pipe line’s arrival Sept. 1 next ye About $50,000,000 will The « ve ty pent on expansion and new other lad time I ‘ id th Cy ee othe: SWEDISH PLANNERS em Bvacuation divide ut 3,000,000 persons Abou 100 cities and been een completed b teel Civil Defence Asso- operat evacuation section sanization now totals rained men and women Mate UBIQUITOUS “E” re be the letters of the alpha- wack; 6 t of bet, the letter “E” is used most Twenty-o1 eel pipe! freat ICKHOLM (CP) come l€ which fected by the! 115.000 t trike yuent ERR Re ESE SSS ERGOT WALLACE’S OF COURSE SHREM SPARE RRR ER RR ERR RRR prea aaa AMaT Aaah aaTaMAtaN Sioa eMaMaMaM PEMA PREPS! Water in Three Minutes? YES, with an LECTRIC KETTLE only $9.95 Northern B.C. Power Co. Ltd. Phone 210 Boiling % é 5 5 . ' a MaMa ee teeta eee Sate eat ata nae Hesner Block Stewart, B.C ea ote ane eee ante MeM heh This advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board, or by the Government of British. Columbia re aS well as a num- | MENNONITE NOMADS—A Mennonite family of ine, Ontario in an old jalopy, was unable to find anyone who could understand Spanish or the Germa1 to work in tobaceo fields row (left to right) they are: Abraham Loewen, his wife Elizabeth row, Helen, 3, John, 5, Abraham, 14 family originally from Mexice Elizabeth, 16, Anna, 14; front Prince Rupert Drydock Classiod! as Repair = Depot Only; No Shipbuilding Contracts Prince Rupert drydock, which has been classified as a ship re- pair yard, “is being maintained in case of an emergency,” An- gus McGugan, commissioner of the Canadian Maritime Com- mission, said here Thursday Mr. McGugan, who has been visiting west coast shipyards, also attended a Royal Canadian Navy committee meeting on corrosion and fouling at Vic- toria Director. of production with the shipbuilding branch in the ministry of supply during the last war. Mr. McGugan said he knew of no Shipbuilding con- tracts for Prince Rupert and after inspecting the drydock said it would not be “economic- ally sound to begin active ship- building unless there is some Head of CNR Legal Staff enroute f forced to spend the night near K ), expects assurance of continued busi- ness The drydock, which was aGg- lively engaged in shipbuilding here during the war, has done only repair of hostilities Applewhaite Skeena, urged the House be utilized althougsh. E. T. Liberal MP for several times in of Commons that it Contracts for been let to various other ship- yards in Canada with major repair work being done at Hali- fax ONLY REPAIRS At a special committee hea: ing on defence expenditure last April at Ottawa, Mr. McGugan in answer to questions by Mr Applewhaite Said the Prince Makes First Trip to City The man who directs one of the largest groups of lawyers in Canada, Norman J. MacMillan, ‘came to Prince upert to see the about fer several years, ¢ The 43-year-old. vice-presi dent and general .counsel fo: Canadian National Railways, his wife, and one wf his top legal men from Montreal, Hugh O’Donnell. and Mrs.” O’Doninell arrivel aboard the Prince George and after a day-long sight-see- ing tour left by train for the east Mr. MacMillan is enroute to Jasper where, he said, he wil meet CNR president Donald Gordon on Friday and inspect re-construction work at Fark Lodge, which was by fire last July Mr, MacMillan and.Mr. O’Do! nel] attended the anhhal mee! +i) of the Canadian Bar Asso- ciation in Vancouver where Mrs O’Donnell’s father—-Printe' Minis ter Louis St. Laurent-—received an honorary degree of do laws at opening of the new jaw building at UBC Jaspei destroyed tor of The trip here was t the group Asked if he knew when the $10,000,000 raif link frem Ter- race to Kitimat would bein For sturdy Oxfords and I of expert attention FOOTWEAR CORRECTLY eihiin and all other types of shoes suit- able fer school, you can be sure at FASHION We Fit Your Chiidren’s Shoes things he has been reading . ‘ : “he said he ‘believed tenders closed today and the contract would be let shortly. He would not venture the time needed to build the line, saying only that it would be completed as quickly as possible Route of the line i through some of central B.C.’s most rug iged country Mr. MacMillan said recalled that the route i: urveyors similar to the survey made by c ympany engineers 40 years ago when they were mapping this part of the country for the terminus of the line, Les Charle mal ho completed the survey for the line we are build, used those maps as a guide.’ s Of Winnipeg, the Lolieg to 40-year-old lt. seen Odd that now afte t years we are putting a li into a part of the country wher dollars are being nd we might, have done it year igO Instead of coming to Rupert. The CNR came hers becalse there were better port facilit, MacMillan will spend hort tm? in Edmonton aft his Jaspcr visit and then to Montreal? mulions ot spent, a tinnt 4 na time etur: alers, Footwear work since the end} naval ships have} SCREEN «x * FLASHES By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (AP)—Perhaps you think of John Payne as the bare-chested gent who slices up pirates while grasping the hero- ine with a protective arm. Well, the same guy is perhaps Holly- wood's most accomplished sales- man. He spent three months on the road last year, visiting 62 differ- | ent cities. In three years he has touched 225 United States cities, selling films such as ‘“Carib- bean” all the while. | He performs these chores as | principal star of William Pine | and William Thomas the ‘Dollar Bills,” producers who are both | former press agents. They and their stars hit the’ hinterlands with hoopla to hoist the profits of their epics PAYING APPRENTICESHIP “It has been great experience *|for me,” Payne admitted. “I've : | learned how a picture is exploit- : |; ed, and im going to make it pay i@:m | it. {m making two pictures as partner With Edward Small, I'll roe out here on the road selling | em, believe me “I’ve learned that two-thirds | of this business is not in Holly- } wood Hollywood has neglect- | ed the selling end too long.’ | MUST BE GOOD | Aside for a distaste for down- | | beat stories, the public has no |particular concern about cycles | Payne said | “I read that musicals are on | ; the way out right now,” he ob- | | served, “That's nonsense, A good:| musical will always sell tickets, | |and So will a good western or a Rupert drydock was classified as| good adventure. But they have a hip repair drydock only”’|to be good. That's the differ- | by the maritime commission. | ence between the business done He said it was decided not to! by a five-day western and some- | get the Prince Rupert drydock:| thing like ‘Stagecoach’ or ‘High | into the shipbuilding field “be-| Noon.” | cause the technical personnel | -_— has dwindled’ until there is} Every once in a while Holly- practically no one there able to| wood produces a gem of a movie undertake a job of a naval pro-| which can be enjoyed by every- | gram type and moreovet it; One. Such a picture is currently was decided that if at all poss-| Showing at the TOTEM theatre ible we should keep the naval| a story whch relives a character vessels as close to Esquimalt/0f far-flung fame whose life rom Manitoba to southwestern itchener, Ont., in the car when dialect they spoke. The Tillsonburg, Ont. Back daughter Margaret, 2; i Jacob, 9 (CP PHOTO) ee“ aRNER Bros. ef és Pappily Peter HE. Ar x ROGERS x Techmicolo, 2% 08 Mire my, All his great joy and gol-darned g Evening Shows — 7 - 9:05 p.m MATINEE SATURDAY — 2 p.m. OTE Famous Players Th TODAY and SATURDAY T A “Portraits Of The West” “First Robin” TODAY and SATun News EVENINGS 7 - 9:03 CAP/ 70 SATURDAY MATINEES 2 - 4:25 DANCE Tonight Legion Auditorium 10-2 Everybody Welcome ADMISSION $1.00 Modern and Old Time Dancing drydock as possible due to the|ended suddenly near Point Bar- electronic row, Alaska in 1935 “The Life of Will Rogers brings to the screen the second- generation Will, the late philos- opher’s son who by appearance, voice and appeal is a personifi-! cation gf his father Mrs. Rogers is played by June Wyman, and Wylie Post, the pilot and Rogers’ friend with whom he met his death, is acted by Noah Berry, jr. equipment and guns.” Mr. McGugan said “the only consideration given to Prince Rupert drydock was its value: its strategic location and’ asset in time of war.” Mr. McGugan left by train for Edmonton after a trip from Vancouver aboard the Coquit- lam. He will fly from Edmonton to, Ottawa Huge Meteorite Discovered in Oklahoma Park ARDMORE, Okla. (AP) For | At the CAPITOL Theatre, “Lydia Bailey” unfolds the un- |forgettable story of a swash- | buckling American sent by his |} government to the West Indies }to search for the Lady of the | title. Dale Robertson is the leading man while Anne Francis is co- years 7-year-old Bob Dodson, an! marred as the lady The story | Oklahoma park service employee | takes place .in the primitive ployee, | jungle of-19th century Haiti had begged scientists to investi- | . Late ¢ ard, ack ot ct stic y) ik ae ‘eli a 3 ,, . wr of sid ae is ee MODERN HAZARD ae eens ; me ~) GRAYS, England (CP)—Arthur ray State Park . ooh Jackson was electrocuted while Nobody paid any attention |fixing a television aerial in this Today, guards maintain a 24- | Rasex town. The coroner said Unfortunately this sort of hour vigil while scientists probe |: Cagaemsees, | thing hapepns to a lot of ama- of | teur electricians.” TOPS ) for New Mexico scientist, said it was/- a nickel-iron meteorite, prob-| ably the largest recovered in the United States “I cannot tell exactly when it fell,” La Paz said, “but I can say | without fear of contradiction | that when it screamed to earth it | frightened the prehistoric inhab- | itants out of years of growth | La Paz estimated later it wa probably about 20,000 years old He said his trip to the site of the meteorite yesterday wa MUSIC BY THE WeSTERNAIRES 1936 CHRYSLER SEDAN 1939 PLYMOUTH In very good condition 1936 CHEVROLET Excellent Shape 1949 STUDEBAKER SEDAN New paint, air conditioned, good rubber Do You Need A Good All-Purpose Truck? 1945—1500cwt. 4-wheel drive, $575 Licensed, good condition Superior Auto Servi 3rd Avenue W. ~— LIMITED Phone Green 21 ADVERTISING IN THE DAILY NEWS BRINGS RESUME comfort, eemony)) ee j Srey \ prompted by a call from A Ullen Gragham, director of the Tucker Tower Museum Tenacious Engine Holds _ Onto Finger BELLINGHAM, Wash., (AP) — Pea EEN SAMY TBD al DO AOE LODE. “FY ROT IL TINIE OO I An automobile grabbed the end | of» Duane Partlow’s finger yes- | terday. It took firemen, me- hanics and doctors three hours to free it. The 17-year-old amateur me- chanic was setting the engine | valves when the valve lifter | slipped. The valve slammed |down on the finger.. | | Firemen and professional me- | | chanics were stumped. A doctor was called to admin- ister sedatives. Then, with the | youth sitting on the frame, the | automobile was towed to a/| downtown repair shop. The motor’s cam shaft was broken and Partlow withdrew his finger. He may lose the end of it. SPECIAL JOB | GADDESDEN, England —W. H. | Siddons, native of Dundee, has | started teaching a parrot to talk with a Scot’s accent. Mak- | erg of a mineral water that goes | with Scotch whisky want a bird | with a “Scottish burr” for a tour of shops é: Fra tmanes “RIP VAN WINKLE long recognized 4% ble of the most comforts long lived mattresses i money available—the . Winkle is made to the ‘ exacting standards of slu comfort as all the other Restmore mattresses- A. Mackenzie Furniture! iarter nee “A Good Place to Buy—For Over a @t 327 Third Avenue