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1S Som NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBL4’s NEWSPAPER DAILY DELIVERY

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8.0 feet Published at Canada’s Most Strategic Pacific Pott—"F tince Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest” Phone 81
———————— VOL. XLI, No, 275 PRINCE RUPERT, B.C

: MONDAY, NOVEMBER, 24, 1952 PRICE FIVE CENTS

 

Voters
Decide
red Fate

»to Polls

$3200, Safe Taken In Robbery

Yeggs Break in City

 

  

 

 

business this morning, pending |
} investigation by police

coc Store Over Week- End
Voter
n two
oii Week-end yexrgs, gal ning entry by chiselling
is to through a rear door, madé off with a 350-pound
eat a 42 , +4
strongbox from Simpson’s mail order store here and
ting ;more than $3,200, cheques and valuable papers.
a ae RCMP are investigating the
aod C robbery whieh confounded store
ae | p t clerks and manager this morn-
: aad y ar en ers ing as they walked into the
- U.S. HONORS « eh ; Third Avenue premises to find
os on . ROCKY Brig. J. M. Rockingham. director. rotest the safe gone
_— a ary traiming for Canada investec i the Police believe the robbery was
pple, Bro teak i with the 0 belie robbery was
ab- os is ic { Degree of Officer, by Stanley committed Saturday night. A
ot. i Wy Ut Nia , a
2 ' amb ( Cana The remony was held F d | A t janitor told them he saw the
m aa at the US. I Canada. Brig. Rockingham former aa e etd C ee eens ee meee eee
ane f e 2 Car 1 : r Nn jwhen he cleaned up Sunda
peated ad Gio Brigade in Korea, | VANCOUVER P) — British| morning But he ie’ ak ad
e it ve pert . Pi sg ™ . on orious conduct in ae — ning pian to turbed for he thought the store
Kenyor ices in Kore rot a federal bill which they) pmpjoyees had moved it
Inde CP fron sththosies Defence claim will permit courts to levy) Entry was gained through two
Both Lib sentences of 10 years for strik- | doors in the rear The outer
erva oo 2 government projects and/| dor may have been forced, said |
t the five years for picketing | police \
in igna n y ue At the annual convention! “phe second door had a two-|
Ger here, 10 delegates, representing /inch hole chiselled in it to al-|
gains about 7000 carpenters, termed low removal of a bolt which|
Geor O ISSIN Troo the propos ed legistation. most! barred it | OIL PIPELINE—A pipeline is being laid from Edmonton to Vancouver, 731 miles, to find new
ane hos a re bs the building| Besides containing more than| markets for western oil. This picture shows a crossing of the upper Fraser river in the Rocky
COF leader, 7 ae a ce ed $3,200 in cash, the heavy safe| Mountains. It is ome of 60 river crossings along the line, owned by the Tfans-Mountain Oil Pipe
rally Sat- was aiso announce 4\\ also contained cheques and ine C y
wound up Believed Down Over am demands for next year oa naan . - ctl i
sien, thet will be set by a special provin- : i |
: a R ore The store did not open for!
beth annie ugged Alaskan Coast cial council scheduled to meet)

Funeral Service
Held in Stewart |

signation in January

it govern

Worst Fog in History Cripples

  

 

   

 

€ Pr ae peng - } All persons having tran-
a ANCHORA( ‘E. far’ faint radio signal was the Former Miner facies ketines« n. Pee | | Shipping; Air Travel Halted
kameen weeny clue today to the fate of 52 men aboard a giant Of 5 (Nov. 22) are asked to con- For Mrs. Bouzek | .
{ er (1124 ae ra which vanis hed Saturday night tewart ig office as soon as pos- | STEWART — Funeral aarvinde | One of thé worst fogs in the history of Prince
an ; . . : . . .
ver the Gulf af . . . were held Sunday for Mrs. John} ay" ; 5 ie
, _| over the Gulf of Alask Dies in East The raid was made all the|Bonuen vite atthe Dubner | Rupert lifted this morning allowing the first air
Camne Twenty-four plane Th ST ae easier, said one policeman, due|here, who died suddenly at her| plane to leave this city since last Saturday.
xception ee search, but the ree €a $ | Word has been received here!to the heavy fog which cloaked! home a week ago. Other action, halted by the
© cam- | OUDlOOk was poor if the in Toronto of Rocco! the city Saturday night and all Born in Bohemia 57 years ag0,| dense fo a
aoa ; 3 g, followed. ‘The 495
for The Weak radio signal i 61-yeat i veteran of Sumday Mrs. Bouzek appeared in 00d } foot, 10,000-ton freighter Taigen ~~ ——
mousn i cauitintia satiod aes Ee ne y assing, gold miner at Premier, Stewart The safe could not be seen by health the day before her death!iqgaru which anchored in the! ;
Social | equipment carried by the Glo be- nd Anyox customers entering the store. It and helped her husband prepare | harbor Saturday night-with 92,- Twenty-four-thousand boxes
cip from | master, was picked up Sunday a i" Born in Italy, Mr. Santurbane’ Wasin @ rear apartment, hidden. outgoing ,mail, - She . collapsed oon ‘noxes of Japanese oranges | of Japanese oranges will be
rta Yakataga on the Alaska coast ane urne I to Canada 40 years ago from the public, said store em- later and died the ‘following for discharge here, was eased unloaded for distribution in
mpaigr tine. It Was so dim no’ bearing at a worked in the north country ployees morning. irito the dock just befbre noon Prinee Rupert territory. Three
he Bocia) | could be taken VANCOUVER 0 Two little | UNtil two years ago when he wa a An energetic member of the Gangs of stevedores waited oa! carloads will go to other B.C.
ts short The huge four-engine plane, ... . fr t . taken ill ° community's so¢ial life, Mrs the wharf ready to board the centres and 19 cars will be
en route from McChord Air ®S 'eturning from the movies} 4 yrother, Dominic Santur- Bouzek was president of the vessel *) sent to prairie points as far
xpectec Force Base wear Tacoma found their mother asphyxiated | pane left here by plane to bring ana ans | women’s auxiliary of the Stew- One veteran shipping man | as Winnipeg.
hr Wash... to Anchorage. was the of three deaths-by-gas|the body back Prit Rupert } art General Hospital, a member here ‘eaid. the <iimae which A special CNR train pulled
third big troop-earrying plane | per, the week-e1 |F ineral arramzements will b Ha rd Hit p Beg Oe ee o fell over the harbor shortly be- alongside the ship to load the
to vanish in Alaska in the last 7 ve ol lige | announced later jlary, an e women 0 ne ‘ : i "
16 days, There were 91 persons Bo ed o fourth life.) 4 a ~ cae Ne | Moose }fore noon Saturday ‘was the / oranges.

 

worst he had ever seey. It crip-} The weather also turned cold
pled all air travel os ind from | | with the fog and a thin sheet
the city - ‘of ice made driving hazardous

. aboard three planes Abram Ken $5 and During the last war she lived
od R The US. milita : unsport bedrid vith a broken leg for a time in Prince Rupert,
y id ervice plane w la sorted , e flames which con where she has many friends

Besides her husband she leaves |

Connecticu

 

t Bridgeport

‘Qn War Front
Martial Law.

The captain “ab Taigen |

 

 

 

 

 

85 suriay oft M Athet. tale ee en eee weet _— ynor: sore, © "Be sons, John F. Bouzek, cus-[Maru decided to drop anchor in the city and.along the high-
enya % a oY ns Pantie wenktiod gee Found dead by her _ Canadian battalion, newly- | toms officer at Silver Heights;| {ter arriving here ffom Shi-| way to Port Edward. No serious
farm filand 188 enti eae Mrs. Myra Jackson . cua .. - ded oat ak et | Joseph, radio expert here, and|™izu, Japan, about 7 o'clock | accidents were reported up to
Sd ee oe ee Follows Riots and “into action last Tuesday | Victor, decorated RCAF veteran | Saturday night with the Oranges | press time.
odiest The Globemaster, carrying US. Marcia, 6, made the di night. eS ee ala oe cargo for , es Two coastal vessels, the Prin-
( Air Fores i a t k hey eturned from a yo tis BAGDAL,s (P)—Tye tough new! The 3rd Battalion of Princess | Rey. Father O deKeyser in o The Ocean Venus, which com- a yg re a
i - lef Me abs a I NM -ja i locks ad the door of their military-headed government to-| Patricia’s Canadian Light Infan-} lWelix Roman. Catholic . Church. pleted loading more than 400,- la an jee ere unday on
nand ae 1,400-mile |! ute, The gas jets were on. day dissolved all Iraq political try, which arrived in Pusan only | 000 bushels of barley last Satur- | me e-fog was at its
di wi aki A gastiif took the lives|nerties, closed 12° newapanets | Cet, 98. waa thtewn ines ccer-| ae ee . ste 7 oer in port. by| Nort. but shipping officials ex-
wrio? ; we ak , , wee > ay, was also he
ae : { Harri Wright, 85, and her and prohibited demonstrations | ter-attack against Chinese Com- | | cemetery or fi ¥| plained they were able to pull
Mau podliggee tie nepher 4-year old iy * ane in the wake of week-end rioting! munists pushing hard at’ the| i the wharves because they
. Pa Murphy. n e woman wa found in which at least 11 persons are | Highlanders’ famed Black Wate h.| i U. S., Bri ti h D adl k d jare not as large as the freighter
ed : ‘ the kitchen floor and Murphy believed killed and 58 wounded. | Casualties were heavy rl iS e oc e jand both are radar-equipped.
killing | pe el, w \retl athroort — sald ee Frenzied mobs looted and set) Company B of the PPCLI soo | lion Ghana also left on time
ee eve waver sovec over 306 \ fire to the office of United/over from one Highland unit | di Pp Pp | Es
or a eu hed oe" pane at the States Information Service Sun- | under Capt. Leslie Bashin of Cal- ver n la eace roposa lesan Frank tear ae vessel,
NCOUVER BANDIT TAKES , " day, stoned the British embassy|gary. Company C, under Maj te penne y= Gt ae . na.
and attacked two police sta-| Ed, McPhail of Regina later took UNITED NATIONS (CP)—Most serious diplo-| viea to ate Ge afternoon for
tions over from another hard-pressed |
WANTA GE OF HEA VY FOG ~WEATHER— army sreegn: sled iis alte a eee matic rift between Britain and the United States in| Vancouver.
Forecast capital to restore a semblance) Company C bore most casu- | years continued unabated today despite effor ts by|
Cloudy southern section todayjof order Sunday night alties infliced on the Canadians

  

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M8 0,
le 9},
hain ¢
Nst sory

 

Fog cloake operation

iter Vancouver

fa-souper

Pp into his

iped from

$2,300

i
erie
the re
Columbia
f Prince
the Alaska
this week
ug peed per-
r Mr
by river
Editor.)

'. MURRAY

River last
anadian in-
on, multi
flour mills,
factories
wholesale
vas accom-
Q. Albins, of

was said to
ne country to

e In which he |
00 some years |

Si, no duobt,

hand knowledge

id timber em-
intouched in

imade by

Daniel Grisenthwaite, f nuive
ca when two gunmen robt
a suburban We Vancouv

Mr. Weston aLopp d overnig
with ©. R. Skogland and A
Blair, trappers and then wen
to Finlay Forks He expres
great, interest in the country and

following his visit, mew value ¥
attached to reports of a pulp
and paper industry being estad

i lished at Prince George
At Finlay Forks Mr. Weston
bought several pairs of ladies

MacDougall |
his teen-age
sandals are
Indian women under
Marge’s direction, Birch wood
moose hide and beads are used
in making the Finlay Fork's san-
dal, The wood is for the sole
No smarter sandals are turned
out anywhere. It is unfortunate

sandals from Marge
at $20 a pair, for
daughters, These

that the industry, launched by
Mrs. MacDougall, to provide
pocket money for the indian

women, could not be expanded
It was at the cabin of Skog-
lund and Blair that a trapper

Harvey Scott, some years ag

i Tuesday. Sunny northern}
ection today but cloudy Tues-|
day. Little change in tempera-|

Light winds. Low tonight}
and high tomorrow at Port
Hardy 35 and 40; Sandspit 38)

and 45; Prince Rupert 30 and 36

a leg. The acci
December. Scott
was alone and the nearest doctor
hundreds of miles away

He set his leg, wrapped it in
splints, struggled against sub-
zero weather and a depleted
wood supply, but came through
the wiater, and was able to
walk without crutches in the
spring. He did mot see a
human being since the last
river boat out the previous
fall.

Art Blair, by the way, is a
prother of Dr. Harvey Blair, M.P.,
Lanark. Art has made prospect-
ing and trapping his business
since coming into the country
following World War One

In the neighborhood of Hud-|
son's Hope two Germans had|
disappeared. Police were noti-|
fied and a se arch for the missing |
men began. The police employed |
Bill Innis, a trapper and neigh-|
por of the two missing men to}

proke

ji Was in

| Slain man Was duly buried

Armed cars and machine-gun
carriers patrolled Bagdad streets
today

Gen. Nur Aldin Mahmoud took

| posts of prime minister and de-

fence, and immediately declared
nartial law.

far afield but finally to the body
of one, With seventeen bullet}
holes in it

Bill said it Was obviously mur
der and that the other German
had committed the crime.
The

| police departed and Hudson's
| Hope was left with its unsolved
j}erime, Apparently the crime had

| been committed in cold weather.

When the summer sun came and

ithe days got hot, trappers pass-}

ing the cabin where the crime
had been committed were aware

This led to the discovery of the
remains of the second, German,

hidden in the cellar under the}

cabin, beneath a trap door.

Years after at a remote
cabin on the Finlay River, Bill
Innis, haunted by memories of
the crime for which he was
responsible, ended his life by
gunshot.

| have a sense of humor in view)

The |

in their first action. One was
Lieut. Don Marvin of Montreal, |
wounded four times while on
patrol

Canadians were under
stant Chinese shelling
the the following « day

Day long harmony
were expected, but
held little hope for them.
con-
through

 

iyged Country of Northern B.C. Provides Rugged People

, the hope that the God to Whom

night that troubled spirits were
he prayed for forgiveness should

about

Since Innis died,
with a trapline passed into the
ownership of Hamburger Joe, a
famous Finlay river man, who
later sold it to the Indian Affairs
Branch. His real name, Joe
Burgenheimer, is a natural for

of the manner in which the
police had employed a murderer}
tq aid them to a solution of the
crime which the murderer him- |
self had committed

Innis is said to have killed the

men in order to gain a rich creation of the nickname by
bounty in furs stored in the| Which he ls better Known than
cabin. by his real moniker. Some say he

On our journey up the Finlay
River, we camped at the cabin |

of Bill Innis. I was impressed | Him 5 when he went into* |

\of a strange and persistent odor.) by the sturdy construction of the

cabin. It was beautifully eer
of logs, was spacious and well
proportioned, Large windows
|looked out upon the river, proved that it was possible to
It was raining that night but; @™mputate your own toes.
the experienced rivermen in|; Some winters gone by Joe was
charge of our outfit refused to| caught in sub-zero weather on
bed down within the cabin. We his trapline and from his feet
slept on the green grass in front} He managed to get back to his |
of the cabin, I didn’t learn/cabin to thaw them out and

It was here that Hamburger |
Joe made his great contribu-
tion to medical science. He

He is said to have left a con-| about the murder and the sui- | circulation Was re-established in

» aid in the search, Bill led them! fession in whieh he expressed|cide until after, But I felt all

(Continued on Page Five)

' India and other countries to close the breach.
RR ie reer ies

Giplomats| we yuld not accept the British-
j backed Indian compromise plan |

The two allies split far apart! for ending the Korean prisoner- |
when the US. notified Foreign | of-war deadlock.

| Secretary Anthony Eden that it |

|

the cabin Mistice.

got the nickname because he al- |
ways carried a hamburger with |

oeners who say they are afraid

Loss Lower
‘Than Believed

VANCOUVER © — The RCAF
here said eight vehicles and a
garage were destroyed Saturday
| b% fire at the Tofino station on

Both British and American
| coast
| spokesmen made it clear met} ee of Vanogiyet
they are not divided on their! First estimates of damage

basic refusal to send back pris-| -aneed as high as $100,000, but

an Air Force spokesman said the
‘oss is expected to be much lower
than that figure.

The base is not active but is
being kept in shape by a work-*
jing party from Calgary.

DAILY NEWS CONTEST OPEN
TO NEWSBOYS, CARRIERS

WIN A GRAND PRIZE!

This Contest is Open to Carriers and Newsboys

Starting today, the Daily News is putting on a competition
for subscriptions. The boy who. gets the most new subscribers
between now and Christmas will receive a grand prize. It will
be a beauty. We will tell you more about it when those new
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Each boy who gets five or more new subscriptions will also
get a prize.

To win the GRAND PRIZE you must get MORE tha five

subscriptions.
NOW GET GOING
A record will be posted next week with your names showing
the results you get.

to return to the Reds.

They differ over what ap-
proach is most likely to solve
the problem and bring an ar-|

 

«|

 

ore