ORROW'S TIDES— rimey 1952 t { S 10th ire P Probe ton Find oF a0 a red i THERMAN Says t ex will rks ith vy Linne OW ibn t igi to to at ines a A Pr Canadians Have Fought For a Year A Ty 14 feet 10.3 feet » feet » feet - a Je . Sategs tile ~ i ed Hakan Hunley ‘extreme Jeft) and Ir Miada anadan Army uarter der hares It) oil ood aN cb m right under » are the first Turkish the NATO training Staff college early they are briefed on by Capt. H. Evans and awards section ‘second from left) Turkish (CP from National Defence) Otlawa oration of honors IANS TOTAL $210,000 IN SWEEP sd eee, cher, 3-Year-Old Colt ins English Stak e Race 100-to-6 choice at Post Cashed under the wire in nine-furlong event two engths ahead of the pack for the lakes Win and a 4.105 sterling about $11,500) prize Four Canadians won a total of $210,000 with the Irish Hospital Sweepstakes tickets on today’s running The list of ticket holders an- nounced at Montreal jast Friday ndicated there were no Cana- diaz Uickets on Richer Three Canadians held $60,000 “ekets on the 66-to-1 second- paced horse, Sunny Brae, and he held a $30,000-ticket on 50- to~l Garrison Hack, which placed Lbird Price Cut Threatens B.C. Herring VANCOUVER (CP).The erles Association of B.C. said Tuesday there will be no her- ring fishing this winter unless United Fishermen and . Allied Workers’ Union agrees to a re- duction in earnings OU and meal are the chief products the $8,000,000 her- The* Association industry that because of increased a time live heid Fish- of said production by other countries ang @ surplus of oll stock, the world price for oil is half of what it was last year A year ago, the price of fish was 12 cents a pound,” Rich- ard Nelson, president of Nelson Brothers Fisheries, said. “To- day, you can’t it for more than 5% six cents.” The herring season opens late and riins to early in sell or in fall March BIG ENGINE OSLO, Norway ®—The largest marine diese] engine ever built in Scandinavia was put through trial runs here, Designed to pro- duce 10,500 horsepower, it will be used in a new cargo liner | -\terday aft : Che Daily News NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBLA's NEWSPAPER ost Strategic Pacific Port—’P since PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., Published at Canada’s M VOL. XLI, No, 254 $50 on Beer Sale Count Beer parlor | Warned against selling cases of ; beer after their establishments | close for the hight at 11 i One downtown hote] was fined $ Operators are owner tf @ Warning from | Magistrate w Ep Vance that he | could lose his licence if he per- | initted his employees to sell beer | after hours | “You have something of value | the magis- | |'n @ liquor licence.” trate told the hotelman. “If you lose it you will also lose the | Sreater part of your revenue.” | The owner was summonsed | alter RCMP noticed severaj per-! ;80ns leaving the notel after | (11245 p.m | Both det |Offence for the hotelman but pointed out that police have a duty to perform and take a very ibTave view of law breakers The police realize the diffi- culty in getting patrons to leave the premises at closing time,” said defence counsel, “but when they are stilj departing with cases of beer up to 11:45 p.m. the offi- cers are forced to investigate.” It was pointed out that the owner had no intent to break the law and believed that the beer beirig taken away when RCMP investigated this case was sold prior to closing time Liquor Inquiry Commission Here Monday The British Columbia Liquor inquiry Commission will sit in the Court House here Monday to. receive briefs from ciy organi- ‘gations and individuals. Some briefs already have been given to George Hills, CCF-MLA for Prince Rupert, who was re- quested to obtain views from groups here regarding method of sale and distribution of liquor in the province It has been stressed that the commission is not inter- ested in any group's views on whether they want liquor to be sold by the glass since that question was overwhelmingly endorsed at the last provincial election on June 12. Mr. Hills said that while some organizations have submitted only one copy of their brief. the Commission has stated that six copies of each brief must be submitted in typewritten form Among briefs prepared for presentation to the Commission are those from City Council and Conrad Street School Parent- Teachers Association. Some groups have submitted com- plaints against sale and distri- bution while others have also recommended changes which, they state, would be beneficial Hon. H. H. Stevens, president of the Vancouver Board of Trade and former minister of Trade and Commerce, is chairman of the Commission. Other members are the Very Reverend Cecil Swanson, dean of Christ Church Cathedral, Vancouver, and George Home, secretary of the B.C. Federation of Labor 30 p.m. | 50 in police court yes-| | ' ence and Crown coun-/ | Sel stressed that it was a first | soaieheeeeneeatemeenmeee ee if } ] i | SEA LORD—Admira! Sir Rhod- | erick MeGrigor, 58, Britain's First Sea Lord, conferred with Canadian chiefs of staff and naval officials during a one- day visit to Ottawa. He was to address the National Defence College at Kingston, Ont., on British defence policy before leaving Montreal] by alr for the | United Kingdom (CP from Nationa] Defence) Oriental Rendezvous Sailor Vows Hell Marry Her This Time VICTORIA ® ~ Able Seaman John Kobayashi of Fort William, Ont., left Tuesday on a ship of War with high hopes of keeping a romantic rendezvous in the Orient The 23-year-old sailor, twice thwarted in attempts to marry his Hiroshima sweetheart, is a crew member of the Canadian destroyer Athabaska which nosed out of Esquimalt harbor shortly after 10 a.m. PST for her third tour of operations in’ Korean waters ed ‘This will be the third time, and this time nothing is going to prevent my Marriage to my giri.” The girl is Miss Kazuko Eshe- mura, whose parents died in the Hiroshima A-bomb explosion, and Kobayashi first met her during his first tour of duty with the United Nations. He was serving at that time on the des- troyer Cayuga. Firm Members Charged With Act Breaches VANCOUVER ©--Nine mem bers of Vancouver company have pleaded guilty to breaches of the Companies and Securities Acts President John Louis Backie of United Sterl-A-Fone Corpora- tion and eight individuals were remanded until Nov, 3 for tence Pleas of guilty were entered on one charge under the Companies Act and nine under the Securi ties Act Under terms of the company's charter, the number of share holders was limited to 50. The crown claims Backle sold stock throughout British Columbia One charge involved trading in securities while not registered as a broker ee ——_ ‘ a sen- i ttle Gibraltar’ Identified as Unknown Hill a ned from IANS IN Com- ' espect dom- United Korea, vnere the a Regi- e days ‘ast No-~ troops eight Lormed were seven N ut When the Royal 22nd action occurred I could name the hill only by its height in metres as shown on army maps—Hill 355 The Ist Commonwealth Di- Vision and Little Gibraltar have been linked in news reports since the division was formed. Until their recent action the Chinese played a wily game— as did the Ist Battalion, Royal Canadian Kegiment which then held the hill. “Our fighting patrols went out in all directions but did not find them,” said Lt.-Col. Peter Bing- ham, R.C. 4 Commander. To capture a prisoner last Sept. 24—the first taken by the Canadians since they returned to the line in mid-August from Summer reserve—the R.C.R. had to send out two patrols, One “laid wp” in enemy territory for 48 hours to learn the Reds habits, the other effected the capture. Lieut. Russ Gardiner of Carleton Place, Ont., led both Through the autumn, the R.C.R. fought a cautious war. Action usually was at night. Daylight activity was confined to artillery exchanges and a keen look-out from observation posts. Bingham forbade his men to fire rifles or machine-guns at night unless they had a man clearly in their sights. Onee the Communists raided and almost surrounded an out- post commanded by Cpl. Gordon A. Auger of St. Catharines, Ont. That time the R.C.R. had to re- ply. Auger fought it out without casualties. Units on R.C.R, used flares freely, R.C.R, enforced a blackout, “There We were, a great, mysterious, black mass between the lights, and I think it im- either side of the The pressed the enemy. They kept | away generally, The only time we used a flare was when a company commander person- | ally assured me that the Com- munists were on his wire.” Until the men learned to keep ;Out of sight by day and avoid grouping, casualties were high At their peak they showed 14 titled in one day, | Hill 355, with its |like crest, attracted the Chinese fancy as a conspicuous target The area consequently got a daily autumn raking-over. | “It's just solid rock up there,” | Says Col. Bingham. “Units had |to accept the defensive lay-out }of the first people there. Each |successive unit just chipped a | little more away inside.” | No daylight traffic was allow- }ed. Bingham visited his com~- panies at 5:30 a.m. He allowed Gibraltar- | each to receive one Jeep at day-| | break, Most supplying was done } at night, One R.C.R. outpost. ona spur |of Little Gibraltar is just 300 | yards from the Chinese, It occa- | Sionally gets the full treatment. Able Seaman Kobayashi vow- To Se ON MUNICIPAL Response name oh Fritiay. Civic elections will be As an added clerk's office will be kept open and Thursday on the Municipal vote persons on the voters’ list Four aldermen will be elec | | FRIDAY DEADLINE iclals today urged all those not registered to convenience to new registrants, the city mayor has another year to serve. Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest” WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 29, 1952 Skeen PRICE FIVE CENTS VO rs’ list has been slow and city do so by 5 p.m, held Dec. 11. between 7 and 9 o’clock tonight At the last municipal elections there were just over 2,900 ted at this year’s election. The ‘ Labor Delegation Opposes Voluntary Hospital Plan By The Canadian Press VICTORIA ~— British Columbia councils of Tra#les and Labor Congress of Canada, representing 90,000 workers, Tuesday told the Provincial cabinet the be théir membership was unalterably opposed to vol-. /untary hospital insurance, A strong delegation conferred ) With the cabinet ror more than an hour and left no doubt about Labor's opposition to the gov- ernment’s plan to institute a ivoluntary hospital insurance plan. Ry K. Gervin, provincial chair- man, urged the government to implement recommendations in the report of the Hospital In- | surance Inquiry Board “and to 'take any other «te Strengthen present plan.” Gervin said his organiza- tion believes premiums should be lowered “in reeognition of the fact that a sound plan cannot be adequately admin- istered without support from general tax revenue.” Abolition of co-insurance was also urged, LABOR REPORT Definite action at the next Session on the Labor Inquiry committee's report and Chief Justice Gordon Sloan's report on the Workmen's Compensa- tion Act was called for in the brief ‘It is our opinion that definite action on these reports is nec- essary if industrial harmonious relations between employee and employer are to be maintained,” Gervin said. HOCKEY SCORES. Western Hockey League New Westminster 5, Saska- toon 1 Victoria 3, Vancouver 5 Okanagan Senior League Penticton 1, Kamloops 7 Kelowna 4, Vernon 7 Canucks Suffer 66 Casualties In Battle for ‘Little Gibraltar’ By The Canadian Press OTTAWA — The Royal Canadian Regiment’s steps necessary | n And -trpprove:the Girt, peace and | ' 10 Hostages Held Captive By Prisoners CHESTER, Ill (Pp) Unruly convicts and taut-nerved offi- )clals pressed their endurance into bao oar day today 10 hostages de- | pending upon the outcome. | The second uprising in two days broke out yesterday after- noon in the Menard State Pri- son’s psychiatric division. Most of the 300 psychiatric division inmates who stormed the kit- chen-dining room were herded back to cells, but 38 armed with | kitchen cutlery seized three un- | armed guards and _ barricaded themselves ‘in the mess hall. { Seven other guards were host- | ages of 332 east cell house in-| mates who rebelled Monday. : 1 Nominee Only For Labor Board VICTORIA €P)—Labor Minis- | ter Lyle Wicks said Tuesday he | has received only one official | nomination to fill the Labor Re- | lations Board vacancy caused | by resignation of George Wil- | kinson, American Federation of | Labor appointee. | Official nomination is Roy K. | Wootten, business representa- j tive, Vancouver Island civic ;council. Mr. Wicks did not | know when the new appoint- {ment would be made. stalwart defence of Little Gibraltar Hill last week has! | resulted.in the army’s heaviest 4 Korean war. The army yesterday announc- ed 68 casualties, including 14 dead and 13 missing. | In a dispatch delayed by cen- sor, Bill Boss, Canadian Press correspondent in Korea, iden- tified the R.C.R.’s 1st Battalion as the Canadian unit helping to defend the massive crest on the west sector of the front in action of Oct. 23. A Reuters dispatch said all but a handful of one company was -hit when Chinese Com- munists overran their post. | Meanwhile, the 3rd Battalion of Princess Patricia’s Canadian | Light Infantry arrived at Pusan, | Korea, today. to . the blaring a and an official greeting rom South Korean President Synghman Rhee at the dockside. casualty list of the >—-- WITH COMMONWEALTH DI- VISION IN KOREA (—A hand- ful of men, the only fit survivors of a Canadian company which refused to bow to overwhelming odds, today drew new weapons, eager to get back at Chinese Communists, The company held position on Little Gibraltar Hill, on the western front, against 1,000 hinese The Canadians were swamped but held on until a’ counter- attack restored the Allied posi- to censorship, but Chinese Com- ‘lawyer, Tuesday was Stop. Work... Against 1,000 Storming Chinese Canadian Company Holds ‘Little Gibraltar *PROVINCIAL LIBRAR ils VICTORIA, B. c, ORMES R > @:; DAILY DELIVERY Phone 81 a Highway Projec e Completion Soo TO REGISTER Halt Work Order Reverted: TERS’ LIST More Funds Made Available of householders and licence-holders to get their Funds for the completion of work on the mile- | long stretch of highway east of Galloway Rapids | Bridge have been made available and the project will be completed before winter sets in. Ottawa Man Named Head Of Liberals OTTAWA (€P) — Duncan K. MacTavish, 53-year-old Ottawa elected president of the National Lib- eral Federation at the annual meeting of its advisory council. He succeeds Senator J. Gor- don Fogo who died last July. Mr. MacTavish, regarded as hind-the-scenes man in Liberal affairs for many years, will hold office for a year, His current public ofice is that of chairman of the Federal District Commission, the body that administers the Federal Government’s plans for Ottawa aS a national capital. Ship Liners Threaten. to | The chief engineer of the Provincial Public Works De- partment, Neil M. McCallum, advised his office here that an additional $50,000 has been made available to complete the original contract. The engineer here, W. W. Meighen, was notified _three weeks ago that work on the last quarter of the Project was to be halted because of lack of money. Original contract for the job, which involved elimination of more than half a dozen ous curves on Highway 16, am- ounted to approximately $200,- 000. Stan McClay, head of Wood & McClay, contractors! when ad- vised of the move said he was “very happy to hear that news.” “It means we will be able to complete the job and take a lot of grief off our hands.” nico the major work on the Way has been completed, there remains only one cute through in the last portion. Heavy machinery has been in VANCOUVER ©—Workers lin- ing grain ships in the port of Vancouver were scheduled to hold a “stop work meeting today unless & wage contract was signed before then. This action was threatened Monday by executives of the In- ternational Longshoremen’s and Warehousemen’s Union, local 507, after a “flat rejection” of union demands by three steve- doring firms. The union is asking a 20-cent hourly raise, plus pension plan and welfare contributions for 300 grain lining. division workers. Their basic rate is now $1.89 an hour. Woodworkers Plan Strike VANCOUVER (CP) — Interior woodworkers have voted in favor of strike action to back their demands for wage increase, Stewart Alsbury, president of the International Woodworkers of America announced. The union’s policy committee met here to plan its next move following workers’ acceptance and operators’ rejection of set- tlement terms suggested by the conciliation board. The move may be a request for govern- ment-supervised strike vote. The majority report of the board called for an increase of 344 cents an hour. The current basic rate for 5,000 interior lumberworkers is $1.30, MacDougal Cited for Leadership VICTORIA €P)— A. R. Mac- Dougall, Member of the Legis- lature for Vancouver - Point Grey, is expected to be named House leader of the three-man Progressive-Conservative bloc in the Legislature to succeed Ernest Carson who died last week. It was learned here that a meeting of the three Progressive-Conservative MLA’s will probably be held at Van- couver shortly. Pulp Output Comes Down MONTREAL © — Canadian pulp production in September totalled 683,037 tons, compared with 720,285 tons in September, 1951, the Canadian Pulp and Paper Association reported to- night. Total output for the first nine months of 1952 was 6,582,836 tons, compared with 6,807,908 tons in the corresponding period last year, defenders as Baker Company of} the Ist Royal Canadian Regi- | ment. Lieut. John Clark, of Beebe, Que, one of the plateon com- manders, sald the Chinese opened assault with a As the barrage lifted, Chinese infantry came in yelling munist radio first named the Reds adian positions, biding their time. Some of the Baker men fought their way back to friendly positions. Others had to stick it Sgt. D. Rennie of Halifax hid in a shellhole. He saw the Chin- tried to stick that flag in and we got them, too.”