Prince Rupert Dai Monday, October 6 ly News 195 independent daily newspaper devoted and Northern and Centra Member of Canadian Press — Aud B of Circulations Canadian Daily Newspaper A lation Published by The Prince Rupert Daily News Limited MAGOR, President H PERRY, Vice-Presideiit Subscription Rates carrier—-Per week, 26c; per month $1.00 Per mouth, 75c; per year, $6.00 thorized as second class mai! by the Post Office A Stormy Winter Comath UCH valuable time is being wested in import- to the upbuilding of Prince Rupern British Columbia ireau ¥ G J OR aS ae LABED raat Department, Ottawa $10.00 per year ¥ mall ant places with continued debate about | chase of the old liquor store as headquarters for uh the new telephone system. Mayor V subject with vould | ialen having already handled the and there no cali to elaborate if it was now restins i quarters eonsideration fairness, in peace. There are signs, however, that is not h 1 and zeaior S 1 I ) heard im some | <4.8 ‘ L ni > ; about takin; ition aimed at condemning ’ the whole thing | | } lhe 1 i ancrly approaeh would be to allow t ilize into action, if any, ing comment, vut t e 1] alikk t to mate before mak | would be subscribing to the waste of time which records have been mislaid, there- fore, it is pertinent to point out that the question vas decided affirmatively a little while a has already gone far enough. In ease the PO plebiscite. Barring an act of God or some extra- man-made development (war an example, but « petition definitely is old liquor store’s fate as part of the system is sealed. DY ordinary might be not), the telephone ‘ < If something important to talk about is needed, there is a large ripe topic in housing. In a few weeks somebody still unidentified will be confronted with the problem of allocating fifty new houses among what easily may be more than a hundred families. No matter how courageously or how fairly this imposing feat is aecomplished, it is almost certain to anger just as many as it pleases. While this is the case with almost every public undertaking, it ig unwise to assume, an attitude of resignation for that reason. Hell hath no fury like a thwarted home-seeker’s wrath, and it may there- fore be forecast that Prinee Rupert is in for stormy weather which will make a normal winter look like spring in comparisop. | To moderate the blast, a move could be made now at least to take the matter of more new homes under eonsideration, There is a thin chance that no more are needed, but it is not likely to attraet any betting money. t A reasonable preliminary would be to find ut what the present demand is. If it accomplishes nothing else, it will serve as torm to come, a warning of the SUSINESS SPOTLIGHT Alberta Oil May Go to California Via Pipeline Crude oil frem Alberta wells may be finding its «: way to United States markets as far south as Cali- fornia next’ year, Officials’ of the’ Trans-Mountain Oil Pipe Line Co., here said they are convinced there , will be for Canadian oil in the Northwest at@ California when the 711-mile line from Edmonton to the west coast is completed next The opinion based on a® - survey of refine market and) for the trans-mountain line b supply conditions the U.S.} i955. This is just 2,000 barrels northwest region. One official) shert of the daily capacity of said California is expericncing) the jine an increasing shortage oil | Already refinery capacity total} oO . = or _" ve AV t| h ay oe Cree "| ncien ris He said Alberta crude moving Relics Dug Up through the pipeline to Van- couver and trans-shipped to the U.S. would help fli the gap) DUBLIN © Relics of pre- —— — ys — |Christian. Ireland, believed , to report issued by the pipe-| ¥ line company showed the 1949 date back some 2,600 years, have consumption of refined products | been unearthed at Lough Dar- in the Vancouver, Seattle, Port-| agh, sear Boyle in Roseommon land and Spokane area was | County. 243,742 barrels a day. | Six months ago remnants of By 1986 this will have in-|2 primitive ween canoe were creased to 209,773 barrels daily| {und in the area and brought and by 1960 the requirements ta the National Museum in Dub- will be 338,423 daily. lin.. When the level of the lake was subsequently lowered during The trans-mountain pipeline,|g reclamation project, several with an ultimate capacity of|small man-made islands were 200,000 barrels daily, will go a| discovered. Further investiga- long way toward meeting ejaes brought to light three more demands of west coast consum-~| canoes, a sword, a bronze chisel, | ers on both sides of the border, several bronze rings and a pol- | pipeline officials stated. ished stone axe. | A new trade regulation re-| Convinced more important dis- | cently passed im the U.S. has|Coveries remain to be uncovered, | knocked down the import duty museum authorities plan further | on Canadian erude oil from 21|¢*¢@vations next summer after | cents a barrel to 10% cents a the lake bed has been completely | barrel, Under the new duty, it| ‘ined is heid likely that Alberta ail can compete directly with Cali- fornia and other crudes in the! The sport of curling was! Pacifte northwest markets. known in Scotland as far back) It is estimated that 198,000'as 1697, but is believed to have | barrels dally will be available; been played earlier in Holland. | a mari Wh y in yne ot HISTORIC GAME | Americans, a MECCA Pacific Canada's Booming Tourist Industry Has Biggest Year $y Pris I vear with tl Wiig previr beaches a north of Fl rhe 4A riieat TWO WAY ENCREASE t yea Ame i O0U .U00 ida be frem fiv Re +pprexuin and tien Ontari ered clo ountry s nue 3,500,000 TOV" Queder Mon eai ‘ ge and a $10 average » Ontarlo x stays an spends of SI $10 a day Gays and United States tourists enter- ing British Columbia this year numbered 683,878, an increase of seven per cent over last year. Alberta's National Parks were the main attraction for $65,065 tourists compared with 735,787 in 1951 Visiters to Saskatchewan to- allied 170,000 ineluding 76,000 over-all inerease f 30 per cent pent ar mpare A stimated 1- $4,000,000 in $6,000,000 1951 FOR STORTSMEN Ha I Manit nan-e r imliux wo UNE lgger- north the fall the have a od new rw 710,000 ovince last I in the hough fig- ivailable for New- Prince Edwa sland forecasts t per of visitors basing its of Unit- he pro- cent in- id Lhe numbpet cars entering 1 10 per Scotia resort operators of the best entered with feason “one 67,000 car comy ed a) 5 B | might MESSENGER HERO — Jimmie Edison of Montreal celebrated his 35th anniversary as a bank messenger by single-handedly capturing a long-wanted bank robber. When Edison shoved a gun in the robber’s back the man surrendered without a struggle. Bank personnel and police said the captured robber is the man who held up the same bank—the Victoria Square branch of the Imperial Bank of Canada, Montreal, three weeks ago, (CP Photo) ower last year. They Fright Can Cause Death w WATURAL RESOURCES . af c ? ete ore Pr. ibpoll Kerea Peace Closer I 2 DON’T knew if many U.S. generals in Korea) vead this eelumn. Here's! hoping. But | am glad to! note that they have made a proposition te the Cam- munists based on the plan proposed by a noted law- yer, and publicized weeks ago in this space: All prisoners of war om oth sides would be taken to some demilitavized spet between the battle lines. They would be al ONCE UPON A TIME CANADA By Merie Tingley in London | « British Atomic Explosion =: ™ Culmination of Research LUNDON (AP)—hk: sian, successfully detonate: of Australia, was the eculn trail-blazing in nuclear r¢ Britain at the beginning of the fir One st men to begine active h in this field w John Dalton, the ff modern chemistry tigated famed expanded the of physics Cockcroft went on 1932 It was Cockcroft whe toid Britain in 1940 that the ato bomb was pessible. But Britain then was virvaaily in. the war against Nazi Germany and could not spare the men and resources needed project After the United tered the war in 1941, Britah proposed a joint Anglo-Ameéri can, project which resulted in the ‘building of the first atdn bomb. by mid-1945 resear British fathe who ik atom theorie Ernest Rutherford wo! the fie And two of his met and E. S. T. Walter to split the atom in ve Das) rhe aione money the for States en But the passage of the Me Mahon Act of 1946 te guard the 0.8. atemie program end- ed the British-Ameriean part- nership. This brought com- plaints fron Frime Minister Churchill, then Conservative opposition leader im the House of Commons, that Brit- aim had not built up ber own researeh fast enough and had been left out im the cold in am age of atomic diplomary The expanding program soon afterward received at least moral blow, with the conviction of scientists—German-born Klaus Fuchs and British physicist Alan Nunn May—on charges of hand- ing over atomic secrets to Rus- sia. Another Italian-born Prof. Bruno Ponte- corvo, disappeared two years ago and is generaily believed to have gone behind the tron tain. Britain pushed ever, and today’s it ahead, hew- explosion was major result j Doctors Say — | CHICAGO (AP)-—Two physi- cians expressed belief today that some persons might be literally frightened to death ; They also explained how the ame stresses of fear or terror bring about the slower| |so-called “voodoo” or “hex” | deaths among some superstitious |natives. | Writing In the journal of the American Medical Assoclation, | Drs. W. Proetor Harvey of Wash- | ington and Samuel A. Levine -of) Boston told how sudden emo-| tienal upseb started a series of} abnormal heart. beats. in a heal-| thy woman patient undergoing an electrocardiograph test These abnormal heart were not the ordinary heart | “skipping” or palpitation that sometimes occur in normal hearts but @ prolonged and highly-ir- regular pattern that the doctors said could lead to ventricular! | fibrillation and death In ventricular fibrillation groups of heart muscle beat in- dependently and without rhythm and the heart cannot pump blood, beats | two top British-employed | - scientist working tion. of og British research projects, | ne sti tree ized } Air Travel ‘lowed freely to choose whether | te go home or t stay om their aptors’ side of the line. No un due pressure would be peasibie The Communists have not yet epted this sane plan, But the British generai assels has more behind his hunch of a fairly early peace than appears om the surface Por while there are great dif ficulties in plan which tain’s first atomic explo- not total exchange ‘of all prisoners the Russians, of Il people in the world, should last to raise obstacies eo. = 2 THE SOVIET was the first gov- in the modern world precedent of war taying in the cap The overwhelming Stalingrad was won bravery ty and the herok the people, but clever political was J od mm COUSIN” UST & ‘POE ess ‘cP PHOTO: any is based on &@ t coast of m | TF tne 1 OLL Git nortnwes ol whic i ination a history be the h started searen { the eentury. ernment Must Learn tor. country Non- Violence the Russian an ‘Or We Perish’ Heaws (CP)Nik Cave Hitler had ordered the Ger- ‘ ‘ nan armies to stand and fight ' i he death. Por any German weneral wilfully to disobey that tirect order was to lay hinwell heer ol OTTAWA MASA JULION Mahatma ft pen Wo irn to Ge in many. The Rus and emphaticaily Field Marshall Von that any who did sur would be allowed lay in Russia if they so chose. They ifically promised that NOT treated prisoners or be sent many if they did not “no pubiiciy promised Paulus render to were per hey would be 4 rainary mck la Ge Moreover, the Soviet kept the wot treat Von Paulus immediate followers this form of condi ender. Many became of the so-ealied Free irmy Officers had freedom in Russia, with privileges and such like the Russians were this for their own pur Bult they and their allies now turn around and ay thal there is ne precedent, legal or moral basis for aliew ing prisoners to stay in the eap- country \f they choose + + ¢ THE British Quakers have released a peace plan of their na- own, publicized over the BBC ype and Asia, who They let both sides in Korea and therefore ea simply cease fire om the Hine still choose, and to build this already held and on the-potnts citadel of freedom so meg tha ready agreed upon. They say totalitarian: ca imply postpone the prisoner break it dow juestion——that is let both sides If we can eontinue te hold all its prisen tent ary ers until agreement on their re hope for the day when the,{rec jease cam be reached later world can have influence wit ay * But they and this is vit the peoples of totalitarian coun new auy ey tries; and, thus, a world of non Let the violence which Gandhi visual might become possible.” the Chinese prisoners they hoid and who do not choose to go The Quakers submit that if these captives are not to be treated as ordinary war prison ers there is no justification in holding them at all. They sug- gest releases should all be sent some island, or some other spot where neither side could; be afraid they might later again! be used to fight against their Britain's own home armies | resolved, * ¢ + ‘ reports British Overseas Airways I THINK the Quakers have got Corporation something. For the life of me Months of I cannot see the sense of con- ing are necessary to fit girls for tinuing the shooting behind the the work of air hostesses. They/enemy lines if our main UN| often leave to marry within a) opjective is as stated—te keep year’s service, said an official. | the Communists from again But now the call of the alr) crossing the - mark already is luring some of these women) aoreed on ag the proper border back, B.OvA.C. and B.B.A. have for a ceasefire so many on their staffs they are | That |: tte £28 inate t at present cutting training facil-| |, ee vial ‘cok Pan e arin ities by nearly half, lm ae War e ; ane “aid timer,” serving on|#l8o meant in his west coast BOAC. after a three-year Speech break, is attractive Mrs. T. Pons-! ford, who left to marry one of| the Corporation’s senior officials. USEFUL FROSH “Tt may sound silly and senti- ene eae (cP) “Hazing mental, but I ant I really malt Cobhes poten of tor ns Gite . here,” aald, |~© : ob, : od a Te — ” leurned to good use, Freshmen ) are scheduled to wirid paint aN |brushes, brooms and mons in The Canadian raven, — clean-up operations at mtny wel found mostly in northern areas,| fare centsdsoperated by the same is the same species as the raven) fare centres anerated by various of northern Europe. Red Peather Agencies. ledge to ith Gandhi tiga Gu Loe core iserman imited theatre lo “ Of course ience mMandni . ing ai augnt I We all word WwW more dé : pose anotne! ‘ i cunnot ar iM De More erribie VaslLaun LG u every Way more Wat yet Known areadiui Anh tor aAeCy keep just iG 0 the Eur ay poasibly eX- ean ne€Ccess say UN release NOW all back Lures Former Hostesses LONDON (CP)-One of gest staff problems airlines may soon be to th bie he dig- ot expensive train- NORTHERN BIRD bh) wood'’s cowboy court martial on feature dur Amateur Movie Producer; Sound For Next Main P;, STELLARTON, NS three years of ®—After satirizing Holly- movies. and de eclive films, a group of young people here are preparing produce their first movie sound Like the others, it will be a satire, although perhaps a little more subtle The Pictcu County Cine-Arts Club, comprising home movie producers &nd “Little Theatre” enthusiasts, has turned out two short films in three years of valuable experience TRIAL AND ERROR The two produced so far by trial and ervor were only the raw beginnings. For their first sound film they are using company directors, script writers, lighting and property men, set designers and well-rehearsed actors Dave Nickolson, Stellarton lo in a ‘photographer who became inter- ested in attending making movies while nearby New Glasgow high school, organized the group The first shert on bar room brawys and wild west anties sparked keen interest in the area and soon the club began the more technical aspects such as dellying, wide angle lens, fades and dissolves. More mechanically -minded members worked on methods of producing counterparts of ex- pensive equipment used by pro fessic The first prob- a huge crane- Hoiding nai stadios was the dolly device lem like cameraman and camera moves from long to short and from aerial positions without tinuity of the film INGENIOUS “DOLLY’ They first cniid’s Cart director which range to ground ievel breaking con rived @ Uipod on | Was impossibie te change height and angle of he camera. And the cart jiggled An engineering stu lent finally designed a device re erablying saw-horse support ed by four bicycle wheeis, With a beam of wood attached which acts like @ see-saw The “horse chub a but he camera a was ysed when the “Killer successful : scenes in ew Glasgow and the proved invaluable ne interlor work lown U filming and jeveloping plant produced They were street pt apth cut ¢ me wasted be sending filme they built i believe to be thre only ampiete procetsing plant east of Montreal, Now they are work- img on @& contaet printer They plan te make a tape cording with thelr filmy transpose it to @ master tape which wouki be synehronived with the projector at the time of showing Shifting Population WINNTPRG CP) The City o Winnipeg than 500 civic voters within a year, accor- Assessment Depart- ment’s preliminary count for the October Civie election. So far th: lst has 162819 namea, wh they re- and : lost more ding to ¢t voting eampared with 163.335 a year Upper and lower Canada in 1451 each had five mills manu facturing paper ’ COMPARE THESE FEATURES @ Fibreglass Insulation @ Thermostatic Control @ Glass Lined (fused to metal) @ Can't Kust or Corrode Gives you sparkling, clear, het water, pure as the source itself. GUARANTEED FOR 0 YEARS. SEE IT AT ; Hothing new ee ray... Reflects Reminig Speaking of eon havudla fhougr lumbia’s wild hor ‘ the Peace Rj, Because i find Canadia: good going engage wr Policemen the new {fj au w th M this F ple, thousands of Emerald Ise ton And then, § many a nT from Irela Sergeant | whiskers form. He which t i himself And how other rinne not at hi see the point A pessimi he MEET THE WEEKLips British Columbt: hewspapets wi this mor Or day th in ine while ¢ lems, are 1 But it w shop and off Someh ideas are over SECOND Ct yestercay those who morning countless IGG! ment Cement wh nipeg Thre PAR PROM Ih TORONTO. 7 If you employ 16 or more) Ht you gross $400,000 WE WILL ANALYZE BUSINESS FOR ON Write .+« Georce $. Mx 5 Buin Wasters Div M1 Geary Street, See Eeteblinbed 17 Inglis “GLASTE WATER HEAT RUPERT RADIO & ELECI Phone 644 G.F. Push Button Range ... With Pressure Cooker G.E. Standard Range ....- G.E. Apartment Range... Northern B.C Power (0 Resner Block — Phone a6 Prince Rupert, B.C.