a pT, »MORROW'S -TIDES— 3, 1962 ifthe 19.6 feet 22.0 feet ) 85 feet 25 feet lal K by th Fulton Oursler books based on the Bibk uch as “The id” and Greatest Book Ever, iin The Daily News in chapter form f Je and heine nracentan ws featu tory be Der j e last nas Eve ‘ iI of Jesus by Fulton Oursler trated for new paper publication by > Keette WriLer VOL ene tn » Mla No. 282 PUBLISH at “ ity to Seek Power & Inswer in elegation to Query intent of Commission Ke Hill ouncil li ‘use this cit Victoria s and Mike Krueger were ist night to go to Victoria Ly’s power situa- Ng vic NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA’s NEWSPAPER Published at Canada’s Most Strategic Pacific Port—"P rince Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest” PRINCE RUPERT, BL., os, samara _ DECEMBER 2, 1952 dag PRICE FIVE CENTS r | } Cant Operate on Same . Costs as 1952 Level Rupert Hospital Bewildered: 1953 Costs Soar by $40,000 “We just couldn’t begin to do it.” That was the reaction today of D. C. Stevenson, | administrator of Prince Rupert General Hospital, Ww nen faced with the statement made yesterday by) | Hea opera Minister Eric Martin that hospitals must on the same daily rate next year as they did re a 9 Mr. Stevenson said that costs had risen “at least over those of iast year, mainly |due to increases in wages and | Salaries. | “If we have to trim our costs | elsewhere, we have to reduce our service—or operate at a serious | loss. “And I don't see how we can cut down on service,” said Mr. Stevenson. ; th ate Big Majority Approves India Proposal. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. & ~~. Fifty-three western and neutral ae riteommiceninntal $40,000 | od Ret erent PROVINCIAL LIBRARY, 118 TORIA, B. C. } | | | MURDEK SUS PEUT — Mrs. | June Armstrong, 24, of Holland | Marsh, Ont., has her three- week-old baby with her in Toronto’s Don Jail where she | is held on a charge of murder. Believed the first time a mother and infant have been kept in the jail, Mrs. is charged with stabbing to death Walter Coleman, 38, at Holland Marsh, 40 miles north of Toronto, Sept. 21. She gave birth to her baby in hospital after being transferred from | jail, She will be tried in: Jan- | wary. Mrs, Armstrong, mother of two other children, refuses to part with her baby, police officials say. (CP Photo) Socreds Not Disgusised Conservatives | OTTAWA @—The man who | directed the Social Credit elec- | tion victory in British Columbia says his party wants no truck or |trade with the Progressive Con- servative Party. | Rev. E. G. Hansell (SC-Mae- under way at present for new ieee es eae Com- jare not Conservatives in }and that they have no intention ‘of linking with the Progresstve | Conservative Party. ‘ | There was no truth in suggest- }ions that Social Crediters are | simply Conservatives under an- | other ee a | Pearkas Charges Army Wrecked Brilliant Career OTTAWA @—The opposition’s military spokesman accuses the government of wrecking a “brilliant” career of an army brigadier to cover up its own embarrassment. Maj.-Gen. G. R. Pearkes, B.C., (PC-Nanaimo) charged Monday that Brig. Alan B, Connelly was made the “whipping boy” in a controversial issue that arose after the dispatch of Canadian troops to guard Communist pris- oners on riotous Koje Island last May. Retirement of Brig. Connelly. 44, of Calgary, was announced by the army two months ago on the grounds that there was no fur- ther employment for him. His last job in 21-year army career was as Canada’s chief liaison officer at United Nations head- quarters in Tokyo. City Soldier Returning From Korea A Prince Rupert soldier is among 550 Canadians returning from Korea on rotation who will arrive in Seattle Thursday aboard the United States Navy troopship General H. B, Freeman. He is Lance-Corporal W. O. Holt, of this city. DAILY DELIVERY Phone 81 ‘ r ‘tos must be BIGGEST ROCKFILL IN THE WORLD | redh Crew, lasted through 274 i the ee S one of the headings for Alcan’s cep, mainven- ° power development, an average ng else, and of Third of Alcan Project Completed of 45.7 feet a day. t, we have = ° : ~ “wat by 16 feet the former ow soe d W. t R, t B D, Wo: . record they established woe ct As Flood Waters Rise at Big Vam won record they t notion Ald ‘ ’ layor Whalen as NECHAKO.—One-third of the| years be fore the reservoir is NOT ONE CENT —DISTILLERY HEAD Worship ask-| triple-play Aluminum Company | filled . because of ore aahdn project in west cen-| The other two parts of the : here at this/tral British Columbia has been | $550,000,000 project have still to bs completed ibe completed—the 10-mile tun- the talk be- clerk and Mr nh abeyance to consider the hich was again} Ald. Ray Said council has the * in coneurring hares "™Pany’s proposal to 's diesel unit but Udermen argfed against jand the Coast Range. Water has nel through the Coast Range with thé powerhouse at its base and the aluminum smelter at Kitimat, 50 miles from the power site Seventy men will remain here this winter to overhaul machin- ery and clear away the con- struction town which grew already. climbed 120 feet up the | beside, t the dam 1 god re face of the 317-foot-high brrrdh mip o 1040 men worked 0 but it will take another 4\the dam. Mannix Construction Com- pany won its race with the win- ter freeze-up in the Nechako canyon to complete the Kenney dam, third biggest rock-fill structure in the world The dam will create a mile-long reservoir between 150- it up, Milliken, Grande Prairie, BACK FROM GERMANY—A contingent of Canada’s 27th Infantry Brigade arrives in Quebec City after a year’s service in Germany. Left to right are Sgt. M. I. Gustafson, Edmonton, Cin. L. R. Alta., Edmonton, They were part of the 686 officers and other ranks— all married men—returned under the army’s rotation plan. VANCOUVER (—The Cana- dian brewing industry does not pay “protection money,” Albert J. McLellan, prominent British Columbia distiller, told the liquor inquiry commission here. “Not one cent is paid out by the Canadian and Western Brew- ers’ Associatidn for and Cfn. E. J. Chouinard, (CP PHOTO) for any one.” political campaign funds or for gratuities During the examination of Mr. McLellan the word “protection” was mentioned by chairman H. H. Stevens. “You used the word pro- tection,” said Mr. McLellan. “1 remember what it used to | Mean in days gone by, and I don’t like it.” the United Distillers of No Protection Money’ Paid by Brewers Ltd., which owns and operates the Princeton Brewery. He told the commission it is impossible to draft a law which would effectively bléck distillers and brewers from controlling the retail outlets of liquor. : He said that wherever a law has been written to control the Mr, McLellan is president of oo tgs haa it has been