eee 1(MORROW'S -TIDES— rime 1952 18.4 fret 17.5 feet 10.0 feet 6.5 feet ) Motorists, Wintry Blast iti SMeWAlK ists alike t rious al Monda; been appointed general man- (4nd quietly as he came. He ar-| | tris owned the Detroit Red| “ger Of the Canadian Export- ‘rived Tuesday and left today. If} p t F Wings of ths itional Hockey! ¢rs’ Association. He has been jhe found a way to stop the | e urn rom } League nd ha interests in| the associatior Montreal (slaughter, he did not say so | j merous sports arenas. He also| manager for the la year ink ihc tance’ tihaded tek Korean. Dut : was director of numerous busi-| He served overseas with the the solution does not lie in , ; : , tenneren Canadian Intelligence Corp spreading wer “by stacking sus¥eewk ibis we Cc VISITS FRONT LINES—One of the few Canadian women fo visit A native of Montreal and a/| “during the Second World War Red Chins. . aa pi ee na Suuschea | the front lines in Korea, Mrs. Marjorie Heath of Donalda, Alta., graduate of McGill Universit; CP Photo) ' TOOn chats with Lt.-Col. E. M. D, McNaughton. ndin; ee ae ae ca ™ e e|from more than a year on Kor-| © a eee , commanding officer of vere, Norris nels Canis in getting ge ow ged i ean battlefronts J | the Royal Canadian Horse Artillery. She is on duty with the ay por arena corpors ons ‘ & at \ ‘. . ; ‘ . > Chicago Stadium dace Madi- C C out a plan that would bring al Most of them were members of} United Nations’ Korea Reconstruction Agency. She is the widow : : : ‘ Square Garden Corp. 8t ounty ourt positive and definite victory] the Ist Battalion, Princess Pat-| of Capt John Heath of Toronto, killed in Korea while serving 1 elaborate emoni he will | Louis Arena Corp., Indianapolis | without possibly running a/ficia’s Canadian Light Infantry,! with the RCHA. (CP from National Defence) reignty CP PHOTO) | ©ONseum Corp., and the Olympia Awards 75-25 grave risk of enlarging. the| first regular Canadian group to) ——-—--— ee x sues Genwane Geukne race a . oe | cheered their American counter- Min‘< ; Streets Treacherous cum ezihh In Damage Suit reine ross savaterasteer|Forest Minister Studies for $1,000 in damages. — Korea, Britain, Canada, France, WEA THERMAN i ; smui d Mel Porbe araetets ae Ft St John lam Poole, defence lawyer Mgusteaiia, Mew Sealand. Thai} jin Tweedsmuir Park to be flooded by . the..Alean tow. B Line Aa ‘y » i entered a coufiter claim of $383 $ ’ ~ seroma a PROVINCIAL LIBRARY, 113 i yee : IG VICTORIA, B. Cc. NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBL4’8 NEWSPAPER Cibliked de Galen: Most Strategic Pacific Port—"F rince Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest” VOL, No., XLI 264 .. DAILY DELIVERY PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1952 PRICE FIVE CENTS ‘Ike’ Leaves Korea After 3 No Answer Yet To Peace Problem | Talks to Many Troops on _ | Secrecy-Clad Tour of War Front ‘Business Magnate Dies at 73 ; CHICAGO © ames Norris, 73 Pre we Ss : By The Canadian Press portsman with a wide range of interests, died Thursday SEOUL.—President-elect Eisenhower left Korea! i }by plane at 8:01 p.m. today (Korean time) after his hysic } eath was r* fo a caused by’ a heat ss j|historic visit to the war front. Only eight days ago he attend- "He is enroute home after? ———— iretenennentnentinaneninmmiat § f Chi Stadium boxing three action packed days of} } " . card and had been at his office| EXPORT EXECUTIVE z.¢ eking a way to peace Canadians at the Norris Grain Company MecDerby, 42, of Montreal, haw Eisenhower left as secretly tadium Corp. of Detroit war!” he told a press confer-| 8° to Korea. ve Red-berreted troops out- ) Wa a dire Pacific Railroad Co. the West| A 75-2 rt f blamey There are many limitations in| Freeman whem she docked. Indies Sugar Corp, Upper Lakes |i cnvietiens : n War of this kind but this much | British Coimpia troops cheer- | . ; and St. Lawrence Transit Co.| last Aug. 28 between ; was certain | ed loudest because they had only 0s 0 €ar im e estrians Lite i Toronto Elevators Ltd sas “die Se ‘Much can be done in myja four-houP bus ride before a #6 ON Shames River bridge opinion to improve our position en was 6 treien Of th Ati tie | reaching Vancouver. aiuiual Ts eo C — has beer awarde here by and much will be done.” Eastern troops boarded special | To Retain ‘Aesthetic’ Benefit Hits City Connie J wine WO: Saba First U.S, president-elect to | ins that. will take them to} » | : Greater biame was attached! (wend a smoking battlefield, |'eir homes from Alberta to] Of Tweedsmuir Park Area Ga Str k to the driver of the bus, oper-|, Eisenhower talked with gen- | Nova Geowe, fee to four anye 3 thi morn Torced $ | e ated by Watson Pa | away | Isiamd Stages erals and soldiers bunkered blame on the! against sleet, smew and wind } a ’ ‘ in Math- im razor edged mountains. The mv ' VICTORIA. — Government engineers are com- He talked with troops of US., puting the cost of clearing all timber from the area By The Canadian Press LO move With caution . : t : : : ; driver of the car cident reported up Reported in ews after the bu 5 of ete eee eens ivered r and the Philippines ‘development, Forests Minister Robert E. Sommers he wo =: Stes gn Biv " a os : EDMONTON (P).—Pacific Pet cs Se eile ag ci Canadian troops waited for Says | said yesterday. bs ae ne ee Aas os a ' v= =| roleums Limited and associates ; ‘aay he — a The storm track which has| Engineers are in the area, he Th f | Vi 2 ah ' Fr aa th, | day reported a big natural gas Rise alenaiees plagued the southern coast the | explained, and they have been / ictim vn h Ave=| Sohn No. 12 well in the 0 h 8] Yi Old “He hinted that one of the first last few days has shifted farther | instructed to submit their find- Che John N 2 well in the south-| * €al- Pansat ail nai Sa i south to give gales over the) ings by Feb. 20 “soa report can Of Bus Cr A Bast. ses east sector of the Fort St. John : Sao se Ganth Boreane ta take | Western states along with 2 24-|be made to the lesiilature.” as. iy j ! 1 ding | gos. Sh / training South Koreans to take | nour rainfall of over 214 inches m . 4 ‘f , afte ttine stu ; nae vininath a »e : 2. 3 “I want to get the complete walk | Off , The flow was rated in ex owgir over most of the combat burden|i,, some northern California e 8 P Dies Thursda der f B Memorial! _ { 6,000,000 cubic feet daily] @,° now falling on the Americans. | points. : facts,” said Mr. Sommers. : y walk High Sehool aligt n testing the formation be-| Still Laughs SECRET TRAVEL | Milder temperatures have re-| The minister's remarks came] yetson, BC) (CP) — Walter : : tween the 6.316 and 6.338-foot! Eisenhower left New York se-|Sulted in the valleys of the }soon after Alcan vice-president Payne of Wynnde! B.C., died in onni tia . . 1 tet PASADENA, Calif AP cretly under cover of darkness! Southern interior which is still) McNeely Du Bose announced his hospital yesterday. third victim ty tolened , : as Fourt! The well previously flowed gas Trixie Friganza is 81, and she’s before dawn last Saturday close enough to the disturbance company will finance the re-j os the Greyhound bus evash on oat — ace oP FN} at the approximate rate of 3 pretty excited” about it. Th The security blackout on news| *0 show intermittent rain until) moval of all “accessible, mer- the. shore of Kootenay Lake i tin ic pos ~~ | 000,000 cubic feet daily from the ojd-timer of musical comedy and|of his journey was not lifted|e@tly evening. chantable” timber from the Tuesday. the Minees het upper triassic. Coring now is be K : en receiving! until his plane was one hour in| ; Forecast area. Mrs. F. A. Whitfieldwef Nelson of Second | RAEN FREEZES low 6,046 t birthday ca two weeks flight on the way home and well} Gale warning continued. Mr. Sommers said this is a }and Mrs. Sadie Lindsay - were - Avenue The . : n failed gene Now bedrid 1 arthritis, beyond danger of attack | Rain tonight and Saturday) «minor step to the solution,” |killed when the bus plunged’ ate i in mel ' ¢ on side i tired from the —_ morning, otherwise cloudy with | but added it wouldn't go very |from the snow-sheathed high- se : ; until after noon an Navy to Train 0 yea < Prete os aaaeue far towards doing anything | way into the lake. Eight others “ s i mat Firm | : \ ; we —- Churchill Winds light, increasing to aimathe for the ene: value. ee reported in good a ; ‘ Underwater nici: weiie ° | easterly 35 to 40 in exposed areas| All timber, not just merehant- os | MI a . Aatitinva: Wire ; Cabinet Probes after midnight, and decreasing able timber, must Re removed ~ e. es °,° ® . at : : to 15 Saturday forenoon. if the aesthetic value is to be cu le Demolitionists ion ace ee : > | Low tonight and high tomor-/retained—the main issue with Mrs Ro ston 7 on Char es “sone eee : hem laughing Allied Policies lrow at Port Hardy, 36 and 42: /northern residents who have ° . | ; g TT t ie 49” VICTORIA (CP).The navy at | Sandspit and Prince Rupert, 36| been demanding complete tim- EM ' vaane ed today it will soon start LONDON (P)—Prime Minister! and 40. ber clearing. W S hool matt weat t| trails nderwater demolition Reuther Voted Churchill’; cabinet and eigtit of 00 arns C S nied rt w tonight of 36/ experts or “frogmen,” at HMCS the British Commonwealth's top! ° h \ * 1 nt base here statesmen today examined west- | October Costs Rise One- Tent. About Frills he Kiti Lt.-Cmdr. George D,. Cook of To Hea C| ern Allied policies in Korea, de Tor ») said the RCN hope tigate Liv : : Mluminum! vieroria BC a Director oe . - Naval Ord-| gent meee : From Churchill, on the pnt : | from 116.0, the Bureau of Statis- that there will be no over-all meltet hap bd ot tind ti bs inance at ttawe Balloting was announced aS/ress of Atlantic alliances, mi oe i tics reported today. increase.” ; | g Pevenom er et monke The men will receive intensive | 3 979,181 votes for Reuther and tary preparedness effort in Eur-} ain eats This is a reversal of the Sep- Mrs. Rel he ti on he union} pees of its cage and attack- ; *Taining in small groups. 2,613,103 for Allan Haywood, 64- | ope, and the size of Britain's new} , ltember trend, when the new in- _ ‘S- ston has sent instruc- aueeneae “ “ i ' Members of the re serve will year-old CIO executive vice-| defence program with its accent | dex based on 1949 prices equalling tions to all school board chair- heard.”| te daughter of | ceive training as well as active) president on new weapons. 0 ontest | 100 dropped by the same amount, men. ‘ . put in! yp. Arthur Harrison, | Petsonne? ase Reuther was chosen to suc-| From Foreign Secretary An-| | Cost of living, based on 1935- The miinister stressed ‘that ade one oa nay parateae the face n r school will be set up ceed Philip Murray, the organi- thony Eden on his recent New| Commissioners in two north-| 39 prices equalling 100 continued school construction will not be they catia wine ty her crit m the east coast, Lt.-Cmdr. gation’s chief for a Goma years York talks with US: President-| central B.C. towns were elected | its four-month downward trend, co that “frills must aheas oe ee ae se destroys Cook said ‘until his death last month. elect Eisenhower. lhy acclamation Thotete as | declining one-fifth of a point ut out, rhe monk , ———| ee Ee eee iis cc ne _|during October to 1848 from: She reiterated that she is | _— | nominations for municipal elec- | “M4 ; i tions closed throughout the | 185.0. jaiming at a 10 per cent redue- . 1 J / E : | province . : | Higher food prices provided for tion in her bydget, but increased ; : i | al SCapees Hore ate, beeulte: ms en in new prices yer | ares in schools will be } SLICK, ' . ; ke eigns | STEWART (one to be elected) | 8° ‘ ecapture ~—-William Tooth, acclamation. iN Among I Miners Another year eS nited StaLes assured, but Truman had top defence | nd grant .coal | ‘ wage boost, day approved | wage increase | 357,000 soft | he said, he! esident-elect | 4 coal strike | nds when he | p wepre-| Baby Dies After 'ss'ssvecis’c' ‘ it have i , p ’ . di D3 c iy mime’ ides and | Monkey's Attack Lt-cin. Cooke explosives dis ae Middle East and the east-west P | Bas ni N COL / nf | VICTORIA (CP) + Educati 7 ATLANTIC CITY, NJ. (P cold war. oint ed on New naex bu ae PMinister Tilly Rolston Wednes- The CIO elected _Walter Reu The extraordinary cabinet iene =% OTTAWA @-—Living cost +43 ‘ - f oie S as truc oe ther, 45-year-old head of the session at 10 Downing St. also | e day ins ted British Colum {reflected by the new consumer},... “ ‘ United Auto Workers Union, as'was to get two first-hand re-j ' did t | price ‘iter diihiwen one-tenth of bia’s school boards to “prepate the labor organization's presi-} ports ( an 1 a es ja point during October to 116.1 @Stimates with great care “so by early summer ; | 1 | og MITHERS ovo to ve sleet} FT VYING SAUCER’ SIGHTED In Stolen Truck st * | BY 20 STEWART LOGGERS | men: who broke out of the pro-| €lected)—John Brown, Richard |vineial jail here ‘by sawing| Robinson, Len Proppe, Joseph Special to The Daily News ' | through bars of a window were | Slessinger. STEWART—Twenty loggers reported here they saw a |recaptured early today near| TELKWA (five to be @lected)} 4.4 ht object which they said was a “flying saucer” streaking | High Prairie, Alberta. —A. E Bates, R. Bowldy, C. P. . , y RCMP said the men were cap-|Bussinger, Art Dockerill, J. D. over Bear River Valley at 8:15 a.m. Tuesday. eect Shieh tad see : a The “saucer,” the report said, came “swooping low down eta Tour Gale caeanad eek Widen Paulsen, E-l* the valley aind just as tt appeated to be about to erash into | day are Lorne MeQuarrie, Doug-| TERRACE (four to be elected} @ mountain, zoomed up and over the Bear River Ridge. jlas Johnson, Terrence Talbot,}—— Commissioners Emil Haugh- ‘The witnesses insisted it was a flying saucer and not their }and Conley Hall. McQuarrie was|land, Samuel N. G. Kirkaldy,| ‘imagination, _ Penner ne sat hoaded with wooden traps. sets out trom. ;semtenced. Wednesday to One| Geoffrey Lambly, Harty. Philip, (An unidentified object, described. by--nine- witnesses in. WINTER FISHING-~A lobster fisherman, his boat eo : : : ST eesie “a ti Storms | Y¢at and five strokes of the pad-| and Hans A. K. Koch. Prince Rupert, streaked across the harbor the same morning,» ar Queensland, N.S., with the first of some 900 traps he will set &t sea during Season, Storms | dle was for armed robbery. | VANDERHOOF (one to be!| but most reports said the “phenomenon” occurred at 8 a.hn., eg i , any traps are dest royed, pounded against rocks and ledges in shallow | They are being held at Peace | elected)—-C..Prout, K. M. Silver, 15 minutes earlier than it was reported hted