i 4 re, tan o ce Ninf woe ed a . 5 te, ce * » ANTELOP? rovernor-General Vincent ceremon the peace pipe and joined in Massey is initiated eceracy by Chief John Cotton at Fort Mac ¥Y. Following his crowning wit) Che Published at Canada’s Most Strategic Pacific Port— VOL. XLI, No. 244 into the Blood Indian | Casualties Northern Sector | PROVINCIAL Ba NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA's NEWSPAPER PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1952 Communist Hit Record SEOUL © Communist dead jlittered the frost-whitened | battlefields of Korea today as |Red casualtes mounted to a |record in 1952 totals | In a bloody week ended Tues Sale of Bee In Grocery Stores Urged “Prince Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest” PRICE FIVE CENTS r an | day, the US. Eighth Army esti- | ;mated Communists lost 10,186) | soldters, including 5,866 killed. | The Ninth division reported jt) i 11,652 casuallies on Communists in nine days of| fighting for White Horse Moun- | tain which ended: Wednesday sab adc Ler Today, nearry 1,000 Chinese : troops assaulted Sniper Ridge on story has led to the location of a the central front, but South Red Cross Bociety Koreans held control of the Dimitrios Samoladas, hand-to-hand fighting Salmon Fishing Closed Down in patrol boat Arrow Post, had today from Bella Bella Daily News Story Locates Person Sought by Red Cross Yor the second time in Jess than a month a Daily News an engineer aboard the fisheries Salonica, Greece and asked the Red Cross for help. A story Seeking him was carried last Friday. . Known as “Jimmy, The Fish,” because he is an ardent fisherman when not on duty, he is expected here some time Samoladas served with the Greek army in Crete during the last great war before joinihg the Royal Navy. He worked for the CPR here in 1951 and then joined the Fisheries Depart- ? person sought by the Canadian Beer and wine should and no restrictions should been sought by his sister in the Prince Rupert Junior Cham- ber of Commerce for a new B.C. loquor policy, contained in a brief which will be presented to George Hillis, CCF MLA for Prince Rupert. The Jaycee brief, approved by the entire membership, also calls for liquor by the glass to be sold leod, Alta. A crowd of All commercial saimon fish-' ment oldu ab ale ing, except trolling, north of| —* head-dress of eagle t Cape Cauti as a a tribal dance to the beat of - aon has been. caeed O PLEAD GUILTY ‘CP PHOTO) 9 Girl Fler, Formerly Here, Instructs Yes inything that will ever change mined says the young miss Osoyoos, B.C, who now is instructor with Calgary Fiying Chub fter f from ar the Charges Russia With nton Attack on Plane CP)—The United States to- Moscow that Russian planes injustifiable attack” on an missing out of Japan since ; F Soldiers Killed in Explosion OTTAWA €P).A training ax lent in Japan killed two men i wounded one officer and 21 en yesterday Army head today were advised in from Kure accident described a apiosion of an unidenti { Hiect in the midst o p doing mail arms tr ccurred at the divisional hool at Hara Mara ‘ f the dead nd ed are withheld pendin ation of next-of-kin . Juveniles On Suspended Sentences Four boys appeared in juve ‘ irt here and were giver ended sentences after hearing Parents of the evidence against them boys apres to make restitution for goods taken the ol city firms between March 1 and ee mid-September ed 109; BY boys from a number Except on spect ne; boys must be in their homes by 8 o'clock each evening oceasions, the for the balance of 1952 Federal Department of Fish- erles officials said the closure made as a conservation meas- and also due to the fact) is nO salmon in commer- olice Nab ir¢ Livere }at cocktail bars, night clubs, | hotels and private clubs. | Another brief has been made |public by the Conrad Street Robbers In | Parent-Teacher Association | which urges that food and en- jtertainment be provided at d Wines Two City Groups Presents Briefs on Liquor Policy of liquor licences to be issued in any one centre. This is the recommendation of¢ ‘BUY Gyro ‘Apples Support the Children’s Playground be sold-in grocery stores be placed on the number cocktail bars, night clubs, ho- tels and private clubs. 3. Private clubs should be allowed to set their own time of following hours: 8 a.m. to 1 or 2 a.m. on week days; 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. on Saturdays, and re- main closed all day Sundays. ern region have been kept open | | between $150 and $175 taken . . ial quantities left in the re- | char pte aeeeeme eee? SMAM ae ac cue gion Other points broug orwar f 7 arie areer Cape Caution is the northern | by the P-TA recommend: = oint of entrance to the Queen Tw 2. lead iltv in poli -, 1. No bars or places of liyuor| 9 restrictions on number of Dawn's first airplane ride| Brrr, of Sutrane pen | wo men pleaded guilty in police court here this’ gisripution be opened: in rebl< be imposed in order came when she was in Salmon trolling in the region| Morning to charges of breaking and entering Dan’s “a aaa 5 Sebnied for cote ane causlgenee. aie nine She managed to vneinen a , 2 . s “ ° i premises lice coiees eee ne — ee Monday Service Station last Wednesday and were remanded ;,. sale of liquor be strictly; at Oe eee time, nage ing those barnstorming planes With the exception of troliers, Oc supervised and that no liquor be| 3”¥ of No other members of Dawn’s/“!!, fishermen have been on} to October 25 for sentence, sold to intoxicated persons with coming political plums.” family know how to fiy strike throughout British Co-| The men were: Victor Laro- ; amil “no 1 o fly, but : stiff fines for violations. It that , aa ac ora te venr.|iumbla since Sept. 6 over a} OVER NORT LE chelle of Masset, and Clark ; i urges grocery stores eee Ste Laid tee hee evar) dispute and , | N H PO |Ernest Saunders. fixed ad-| 3. The public be better edu-| be permitted to sell wine and old brother, Lawrence. He's al _ — an only yester- | ee me » ho cated in all phases of the liquor | peer on their muniel- . ready flown with his sister on ak ae ieomar al Quick work by the city de-| question. (Pal licences and Bie i cloris e tts e | if : She started taking flying (fishermen to resume operations | Navy Sends | tachment RCMP solved the case HOURS OF CLOSING that private clubs be permitted lessons in September, 1950, on Monday | within six hours after the ser- ies © have a club with no P j i | The Junior Chamber brief after graduating from school. Fishing grounds in the north- | Vice station was broken into and recommends ‘further: restrictions on hours of closing, She received her commercial a oons flying licence the following longer than usual in the hope | ; | from the cash register. 2 on pee, of three years with a club May after rompleting the re- | that the strike, which has seri- | | The accused were nociced| © 4 y glass steward. : } ;meet government requirements quired 200 flying hours, $0 (ously hit native seine fishermen| ve Wor around the service station during | gor licences, these requirements Mr. Hills, MLA, has advised more than the presemt require- (in the Quéen Charlotte area,{* Fa 2 , : ~ “ithe afterncsn of the Nis be determined by the Légis-1 all , that he ment would be settled, WASHINGTON ©The United | 4nd after owner D. J. Lippett dis-| 1117. pred which 7H In 1950 Dawn went to Prince - merece | States Navy announced last night /Covered the robbery he gave/"> “Tot peer and wines be ward t0 the liquor a waak Rupert Aero Club as an instruc D d k iit has launched re te descriptions of the SUS- | Gispensed in restaurants with now making its saiiry Tonow tor. After five months of flying ry }giant balloons, high ve the) : |the service of meals only; in = float aircraft oe to oc |north geomagnetic pole, and| ENTER BY WINDOW | y pa Be Fg ae ox te which Associated Airways at Vancou sent them to altitudes of about) Mr. Lippett said everything | in das in B.C by rock by ea : "" Sh td |40 miles—literally above the top| mas in order when the station | me ys pl e Ghe retained with that firm | u own | of the world | closed at 6 o’clock but when he} Dou $ F ee A three-man board headed by unti] June, 1951, then moving on The instrument-laden _ bal-/ returned half an hour later the| H.-H. Stevens will in turn make to Chilliwack she SAYS Dut That was fur a lot of work. I Postponed loons, tall as 10-storey buildings,| money was missing. ‘ were released from the Coast| Thieves had enjered the gar- in| age through a rear window. In Fear of hand the flying job and also Guard icebreaker Eastwind i the cooking for the wang VANCOUVER ©—Shutdown of/ Baffin Bay, west of morthern Afte ik 1 refresher cou two major,steel shipyards has | Greenland. j ut Lethb 1 imed the Deen “postponed” pending fur-| The soaring rockets radioed) Calgary F Club as an in- | ‘her talks between management | back cosmetic radiation measure- | tr te and unions 4 in Family Knocked Out By Gas Fumes RO) ~ ve woman, were found tt h or rhu f on | Att i Mott i they all ' houte } : on Waist ver the epi he ’ t. Mr ¢ L.. Sy Wh iv i M per fount Mrs Dolyna W i Gerard 18 and grand ther M Penelope McDonald, 80 unconscions in downst rooms. Sharon hold- ing rrandmother’s hand, ymnily partly conscious Police and fire wardens be lieve fumes may have been ac- cidentally home by piped into the Walsh s*fuel truck nm With Sweat and Blood Korean Hills Get Their Names tain and Triangle Hiil Where do they names? Some, like Fool's Mountain and White Horse, are translations of Korean Others are pretty obvious Triangle, Lone Pine, Old Baldy, {Pork Chop and T-Bone all look that way from the ground or on & map. Bunker Hill is full of bunkers Keily Hill honors an unknown hero, Capitol Hill belongs to the : South Korean Capitol division WN RANDOLPH get thelr The naming is done some- limes bw the troops that take the heights with sweat and blood, sometimes by. staff offi- cers back at division headquar- ters, and some by War corres- pondents. The mostly man responsible |for the colorful string of names is Gen, James A. Van Fleet, the Eighth Army commander, Every hill in Korea more than 100 feet high has its own private number—its height in metres on the old Japanese military maps of Korea. Until July, 1951, exceptions, soldiers and war cor- 1] weed the num wath Wa bil respondents was | bers |is practically all straight up and | will be more and newer names. a few | everyone is waiting for—the last a company spokes- aid Thursday night ments at one point on thre globe where the earth’s magnetic field} man Earlier, the companies had| has least influence on incoming | announced that the shipyards, cosmic ray particles me of them working on three — aa SPCrE destroyer-escort ships, would be closed at the énd of the} shift Friday hundred workers in the of Burrard and Pacific Drydock Companies were given Thursday of a shutdown end of Friday afternoon Indonesians Riot Against Parliament JAKARTA, Indonesia (CP) — wage demahds. No date! Thousands of Indonesians riot- fixed for the walkout ed in Indonesia's capital today! With this strike threat hang-| i" the wake of a parliamentary over us we are unable to get | Vote censuring defence * minis- orders for the yards.” a ter Hamengku Buwono IX, pop-| ompany spokesman said ular Sulton Jogjakarta Burrard is working on the| Order was restored after | hush-hush naval vessels. Pacific | President Soekarno assured the/ Drydock afternoor Six yards notice at. the hift The mions workers, members of seven had voted to strike for higher ing new has been engaged inj Tioters the demands for Parlia- | construction of commercial | ment’s dissolution would be con-| ships | sidered. But the capital remained! | GREEN THUMB MEADOW LAKE, Sask. (CP) Mrs. M. L. Dull, who won first Drive in a garden competition here, is 71 years old, She planted and cared for 16 varieties of| vegetables ernment might fall. | mobbed the residerice of the Netherlands High Commission- er, tore down the Dutch flag flying and ripped it to shreds. Some banners rioters carried indicated Communists had part in the disturbance. The rioting involved no bloodshed. Coal Miners Protest Delay In Payments WASHINGTON (P)—A protest strike of 150,000 miners crept through U.S. coal fields today. The strike, unauthorized. by John L, Lewis, head of the min- ers’ union, is in protest to the delay in paying the recent $1.90- a-day wage boost to the men. Payment cannot be made un- til the increase is approved by} the Wage Stabilization Board,| scheduled to meet today. But U.N. troops and the Communists both use the same old Japanese army maps. So when you said something about Hill 1451 the Communists knew exactly what you meant, So last year Van Fleet issued an order—no more hill numbers in news stories. Probably few other wars have generated sO many hill names. The main reason is that Korea down, As the war goes on there But there is one name that hill | the Canadian National Railways, | Kootenays, it was reported here contacted their office at Terrace | today. | ing. tense as rucnors spread the gov-| | Several thousand persons! — Police moved intp action quick- | wee ly and investigation proved the| suspects had boarded the a Vigilantes here for Smithers. | Although the telegraph and} VANCOUVER @ — Fear of telephone lines were out of order,' hooded night raiders has swept police, with the co-operation of|the Doukhobor districts in the and when the train arrived there} More Doukhobors are re- about midnight,the RCMP took | ported to have fled their homes Saunders and Larochelle into | in Grand Forks in the interior custody. More than half of the|to sanctuary at the Hilliers col- missing money was recovered. |ony on Vancouver Island. The accused were returned to} A spokesman for the men, Prince Rupert yesterday morn-|women and children who fled to Hilliers reported that the men- inpatraeencenictihiiinati | ace of night raiders and vigilante GOES IN STORAGE jaction had brought fear to the TABER, Alta. €P)—Equipment/tiny settlement of Gilpin, six for a children’s playground at| miles from Grand Forks. the provincial park here finally} There was no immediate com- arrived. It was too late for use} ment from government or police ~WEATHER— Synopsis Light rain has been falling along the north coast during the night and cloud has spread in- land to the Prince George region this morning. Skies remain clear ‘ over southern sections of the pro- Ja vince with early morning fog in ' coaStal areas. Light frosts have occurred in some interior val- leys. Forecast Mostly cloudy but with sunny periods in the southern section both afternoons. . Intermittent light rain northern section to- day. Not much change in tem- perature. Light winds. Low to-~ night and high tomorrow at Port Hardy, 42 and 54; Sandspit and this year. authorities. International Plowing Matches at Carp, Ont., before the Toronto's Allan A. Lamport. Front row, left: to right, are: D. Simpson, Stratford; Sid Emery, start Beaverton. AT PLOWING MATCH—Nine Ontario mayors and reeves posed for cheering crowds at the Mayors A. S. Kimmerly, Napanee; A. Parkhill; Mrs. Bernadette Smith, Woodstock. Back row, left to right, are: T. J. Moran, Renfrew; Charlotte Whitton, Ottawa} and Reeve Helen McKenzie, Prince Rupert, 48 and 55. of the mayors’ match won by (CP PHOTO)