’ Te PROVINCIA ; : . . ee ' ’ PROVINCIAL LIBRARY, NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA’g NEWSPAPER VOL XLI, No. 249 | t Bgpog z | tg } “ ite to Hon. R. W. Mayhew (centre) Who Is si 1OWN receiving a gift avec with the figure of a leaping salmon Presentation was On 4 Wholesale Fish Dealers Association, the Fisheric Association of Fish Dealers As ioclation and other member associations of the Presentation took place just prior to Mr. Mayhew’'s departure omtment from Minister of Fisheries to Canada’s ambassador to Gordon O'Brien, right manager of the Fisheries Council who wart Bates, deputy minister of fisheries ernor-General Touched’ — Civic Presentations by ERIC SANDERSON iti¢ ON HOSPITAL NEEDS ee Martin Seeks Grass Roots’ Information me a superb present for eful. It will be one of my most . this northern country in agri- ; VICTORIA ®~ Health Minis culture, in fishing, in mining ter Eric Martin plans a fact and in the tourist trade, finding tour of central and Prince Rupert may well be- come one of the world’s great- est year-round ports. Canadians in all parts of the insurance wants . will watch your prog: It was jearnéd Wednesday that ress with the keenest interest igovernment plans to bring de- rhe Governor-General’s ad linquents to the scheme through imaxed a busy day dur- suspension of arrears has not which he addressed more | ¢, date had a desired effect and ‘han 800 school children, visited | tne minister will go among tive Miller Bay Hospital and made people to get reasons first hand tour of the Columbia Cellu- . we plant on Watson Island VISITS ‘CENTRE’ The Alter the public reception .in the drill hail, where hundreds A hall, of children and their parents WEATHERM N said went to see His Excellency, the pe been vice-regal party paid an unof- Says: , ‘ticent ficial visit to the Civic Centre ° * of the ‘where Mr. Massey inspected the ! ry art exhibit and was aaa on a- : Synopas ‘ , ; of the building Nearly me half inc h of rain The Governor-Genera!’s main/ fell on the north coast last night uddress followed a short speech|®S another Pacific storm mores © chiefs and chief counsellors through that area. On the south epresenting the entire Skeena/C0®St many places rig ose ¢ Agency in which he thanked the traces * precipita ion _ a — | native for gifts which they had; “?zle fell from. the “ cloud presented. _ ; which covered the entire re- . . , rion F ' d ‘aa eee 0 g The idtution Gf Sih shovine so oh eh ee ar remained clear through the troduced the signators of the | Might eee ee Rain from the disturbance re will spread to the northern in- , : of CHEEF PRESENTED terior this afternoon and to the of Chief Wallace Morgan of the/ south coast tonight, There will K people presented Mr.| be showers in the southern in Massey with a valuable oll terior tomorrow ans Meet painting by his daughter, Jud A second storm which will 6 tI f the Wolf Cret—Lahkibu| move into the Gulf of Alaska ection ind with it the rank of Chief tomorrow will bring more rain HK-de ish ind strong winds to the north Chief A. E. Nelson of Kincol-| coast on Friday on behalf of the Nishga Forecast people, presented him with a Cloudy with showers today carved cedar box, and the chief Cloudy Friday with rain begin- B./ Of the Port Simpson people gave ning about noon, Not much in} him a large carved wooden change in temperature. Winds 244. Spoon that he said had been in| westerly 20 this afternoon, light tion| his family ior more than 100; tonight and southeast 25 tomor iter | years row. Low tonight and high to- I want to thank you dearly;morrow at Port Hardy and Sandspit, 46 and 56; Prince Ru- j pert, 48 and 56 i d/ for all these presents,” said the (‘Continued on page 3) 200 MILLION CATS DON'T MIND northern BC. in early November { in an ¢ffort to obtain wrass-rhots! information of people's hospital | ; Were “involved In a tight aboard | sears, based on 1935-39 prices Published at Canada’s Most Strategic Pacific Port—Prince PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., THURSDAY OCTOBER 23, 1952 UN Worker Fired. For Not Talking UNITED NATIONS, N.Y, €P)— UN Secretary-General Trygve Lie yesterday fired one Ameri- can UN employee who refused t answer questions of the United States Senate Commit- teé, suspended another and put 10 on special leave pending fur- thur investigation Lie annopnced he fired Stan- ley Graze of the technical as sistance administration for re- fusing to tell the committee at recent hearing whether ne personally engaged in espionage activity in the United States Committal ° Ordered on Murder Count James Dudoward, 25-year-old Port Simpson native, left here today under escort for Oakalla jail to await trial on a charge of murdering Wilfred White here last Sept. 5 Dudoward was committed for tial by Magistrate W. D. Vance. bringing to conclusion a lengthy preliminary hearing at thousands of words of evidence were taken Defence counse] Doug Hogarth operation today climbed one-tenth of a 16.0, the Bureau Di sschissmiostniiecieensnsiinsceicechi in 4n eloquent address requested the magistrate reduce the charge from murder to man- slaughter but his plea was re- jected Dudoward was or dered to stand trial in a higher court, presumably the next as- Sizes to and pei General Hospital a few hours after he was found with gashed face and neck aboard the fishboat Laura Louise on the afternoon of Sept. 5 Thomas W. Brown, Qc, peared for the crown Evidence disclosed the two men a badiy ap- the boat during a drinking party. Red Chinese Make Gain on Korean Hill WEST SECTOR, Korea (CP) Chinese Communist infantry at- ‘tacking under heavy artillery cover nipped off the forward Section of Little Gibraltar, a massive Korean hill position Bill Boss, Canadian Press staff) Church of England in Canada, | writer, reported there was a luil| died Wednesday in hospital. She/ US. at dusk, but then Chinese Reds | launched a heavy assault under cover of more artillery (Censorship prohibited giving exact position of Little Gibral- tar. It has been identified how- ever for many months with an area defended by the Ist Com- munist Division of which the 25th Canadian Brigade is a part.) First reports from the battle ground said a wave of Chinese overran one United Nations platoon position * Typhoon Hits * . 7 Philippines .- MANILLA (CP) — The Philip- pine Red Cross said tonight 370 persons are dead and 200 are missing in the wake of a ty- phoon yesterday The Red Cross said several hundred were injured. PIONEER CHURCH St. Paul’s Church at Halifax, the oldest Anglican church in Canada, was erected in 1750 which’ Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest’’ haa oe Peace River Gas Supply Ample to Last 50 Yea Russian Censor Regards Bible Undemocratic’ Church Workers Say VIENNA (Reuters) — The Russian censor in the Vienna radi station regards the Bible as “undemocratic,” ehurch workers complained today They said the matiuseript brating the 20th year bishop was originally with “democratic” ideas But ehunks morality of man after the fall for a special broadcast cele- of Cardinal Theodor Innitzer as 4 forbididen because it was not in keeping the censor compromised, they said, by cutting out from the script, including a quotation from Genesis apout the flight from the Garden of Eden, from the Book of Job and some some yuotations general references to the Living Costs Up But Old Index Shows 1.1 Decline OTTAWA (CP) — Canada’s new cost of living yardstick the consumer price index which went into August to 116.1 from 1 reported today. This created a paradox in measuring living costs through Price changes, for the old cost of living index, which the new @ 1.1 decline during August to 186.5 from 187.6 The new index is the result of. two years of study and re- Vigion in ling 100. The old index was operation for. more.than..124 chored vessel to deteriaine what equalling 100 Herbert Marshall, statistician, told a press confer- ence that indices will be pub- lished Simultaneously for next six months in order that industry and labor may make! adjustments in labor contracts carrying elevator clauses Wife of Primate Dies Suddenly EDMONTON (P)—Mrs. Lorena Barfoot, wife of Archbishop Walter Barfoot, primate of the suffered heart attack. measuring price|ter Churchill cRanges based on 1949 prices | Britain's atomic weapon tested off northern Australia early this Dominion | point during of Statistics Churchill - ° White, 49, died in Prince Ru-| indéx replaces, actually reported | Discloses Test Result ; . inist-| tion going to the border at/ | ta Cee erune _Minist | Huntington, the other to New| |Plym, 1,450. ton navy | Which was anchored in the la- |goon. The ship blew up in a | million degree cloudy vapor and | fragments, $ | Churchill, in hig first official | Statement to the House of Com- ; mons on the atomic test, report- | ed the ship disintegrated, tons of | rock and water huried into the ; air and a high tidal wave fol-| | lowed. | Churchill made it clear that | Britain intends go on making | atomic weapons, and indicated a hope the test may result in the resuming an exchange of atomic information with Britain, Celgar Gets Green Light. For Arrow Lakes Project VICTORIA (CP) — Proposed establishment of the $65,000,000 integrated forest industry in the Ar- row Lakes region by Celgar Development Co. Ltd. Wednesday was given the ° government, Premier W. A. C. Bennett and Forest Minister Robert E. Som- mers in a jgint statement said|don Hammond, 11, and Richard | Shas the appeal against granting the | Sims, 10, captured & five-legged | here 960,000-acre forest management) frog in the pond at the golf| licence had been disallowed. green light by the B.C. FIND FREAK FROG | WOODSTOCK, Cnt. @©—Gor- course here. Just. what value the today disclosed rs Further Drilling to Make Five Trillion Feet Reserve VANCOUVER (CP)—Gas reserves in the Peace awn River area now are ineed of the Pacific | president of Pacific | day in an address here. | He spoke at a joint luncheon of the B.C. Board of Trade and | the B.C. section of the Canadian | Institute of Mining and Metal- | lurgy. | Mr. McMahon said: | “The Peace River reserve may be doubled in the near future |to five trillion feet by further great drilling. This would assure al-| |most 50 years’ suppiy.” | Naturane from Peace River to | the coast can be built by Christ- |mas, 1953, if final approval is |obtained from the United States. He said application of ap- | proval now is before the Fed- |eral power commission in Wash- | ington. | Al BC. is looking forward to ;construction of the gas line | which would bring cheaper fuel |to most interior points in the | province as well as to the lower | Mainland and the West coast. | The proposed pipe would pass | through Prince George, through | the Cariboo country and through |the Fraser Valley, branching off |near Chilliwack with one sec- | Westminster and Vancouver. meeting with the Seattle coun- |cil early -next week to urge | that Washington city to press | for approval. The pipeline ter- ; minus is temporarily planned in | that state city. | ‘Girl Claims Drug Pushers | Canvass School |; VANCOUVER (CP)—A 16-year- old girl was quoted Thursday by the News-Herald as saying in an intervicw that a gang of young pushers loitered near a city high school to lure stu- jdents into the drug habit. | In,a front page story she |was quoted as telling reporter |Harry Le Long that she, a | student at the school, became | addicted to drugs after stories | told by these youths aroused her | curiosity. | This young girl, whose name withheld because- of her testified Wednesday at a arising from disclosures a& mumber of teen-agers had been taking drugs. The case was not connected | with this statement of pushers | was age. | trial The government decision| freak would have remained a| loitering near the school she at- gives Celgar company the go-7 question. ihead signal, to start work on its development which is de- signed to produce lumber, sul- phite pulp, newsprint and dis- olving pulp used in the manu- facture of textiles, plastics and explosives. nl -at Lovers Ruffled Over Two Cat Weeks bear for California; but with lifted tail and unfathomable eyes, The Cat remains as the | true symbol of human civiliza- tion.” weeks. In the interest of har- | e. Mony, for the sake of 200,000,000 bring | C@ts we're both trying to help, ~ we ought to get together on one | week. Having two only confuses | the public.” | Cat enthusiasts the world over, From the other side of the! xendell said, have a warm spot fence, came this statement from | fo. Governor Adlai Stevenson. | national president Guy Bogart: | |. 1949 in a message vetoing an | “Personally, I wish both groups |Iinois bird lovers’ bill to pro- | God speed . . . Anyone who will] ii: cats trom running wild, help inform the American pub- | the governor said: lic on the value and lovable} : qualities of all cats belongs to| NATURAL TO ROAM our fellowship.’ It is in the hature of cats; Then Bogart added: to do a — amount of un- the | escorted roaming. ae as tee in, os | Kendell wrote the Democratic for the United States and the | presidential nominee, expressing lant } ( of : orig Nov Rn Feline a equally i. il Cat olive an- tobert . suit f the Oups to VO cat and extending to him “our very | best wishes for success in Novem- ber.” | “This, however, is not neces- sarily a political endorcement,” Kendell later explained to a/ reporter, Kendell has had difficulty with | the Truman branch of the Demo- | cratic Party, He wrote the presi- | j the Feline Society’s gratitude; fact is similar requests for special proclamations are so numerous as to preclude issu- ing any except those occasioned by a national emergency or when Specifically authorized by Congress . . .” Kendell didn’t take this lying down. He wrote another letter to Stevenson asking for a cat week dent asking for a proclamation | statement and asking him to use of National Cat. Week. Joseph Short, late press secre- tary to the president, answered: | “,.. Tam sorry to have to tell you that it would not be possible for the president to comply with your request. The his influence with Truman for a presidential proclamation. . Stevenson hasn't answered the letter yet, “I think they’re just kicking the whole think around in Wash- ington,” Kendell said. | & . IN GERMANY—Tanks, guns and infantrym drawn up on Waterlooplatz in Canada has one infantry briga | tended. The Vancouver city council is ly in excess of the 20-year northwest, George L. McMahon, Petroleums Ltd., said Wednes- * Toronto | Newspaper To be Sold | | TORONTO (€P) -- The Tele- |gram, Toronto evening news- | paper is for sale in an advertise- | ment published in ioday’s Globe jand Mail, All shares of | Telegram Publishing Co. are be- jing offered by executors of the |late publisher George MeCul- |logh who died Aug. 5. | Mr. McCullogh also published | the Mail | capital stock of the company | which publishes the Telegram ; and will be received up to Nov. |18 at offices of the Chartered | Trust Co. acting for the owners |of the shares. Bevan Gets ; Meanwhile, opposition to, : granting approval by the oe) matum for the pipe toeross. the border} " "775" SERRE Pa et its effect would be on a harbor.|!8 waged by the “oil states” of | The bomb was placed in the| © frigate «€P)—Labor members of parliament today approved an ultimatum from party mem- bers order Aneurin Beyan and his left wing rebel group to dis- band or get out of the party The ultimatum was put to a private meeting of the 296- member parliamentary Labor Party. It was in the form of a motion, calling for immediate disbandonment of all. organiza- tions in the party other than those officially recognized. The motion was earried by 188 votes to 51, according to sources present. at the meeting. New Liberty Publisher Branches Out TORONTO (CP) — Jack Kent Cooke, 40-year-old millionaire- publisher and radio executive, Wednesday purchased Consoli- dated Press Ltd. and indftated that development of a national weekly news magazine is the prime objective behind the pur- chase. Consolidated Press is publish- er of Toronto Weekly, Saturday Night and a number of national Erom Labo magazines with a combined cir- culation of more than 1,000,000. Mr. Cooke already owns New Liberty Magazine with a circu- ‘lation of more. than 1,200,000. ehof the 27th Canadian Infantry Brigade are. Hannover, Germany, to honor the ; de in Germany and one in Korea. (CP from National Defence) een on her birthday. . the Toronto a