1 nf Lgg 1 PROVJNCIAWI PROVINCIAL 113.1, 113 ORMES 'VICTORIA, "B. C.-t KA DRUGS DAILY DELIVERY NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER Published at Canada's Most Strategic Pacific Port "Prince Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest" Phone 81 VOL- XL. No. 215 PRINCE RUPERT. B.C., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1951 ' PRICE FIVE CENTS (Q F PRINCE' M VP T73 4 r t! 5 . bther Hells Gate May Lose Supremacy Over Hart Highway n in Skeena System Is Drowned in I Skeena River i I Body of Robert Kale, Native ! Fisherman, Is Recovered ! Body of Robert Kale, 31-year-old Hazelton native, drowned (Tuesday evening in. the Skeena I Kivei from his fishing boat, was recovered Wednesday afternoon. j Kale went Into the water near Aberdeen and the body was picked up by police near Tyee CALLS FOR HELP Hospital Drive For $164,000 Starts EDMONTON (CP) The Edmonton Chamber of Commerce is afraid that the new Hart Highway will- endanger Edmonton's position as chief trade centre for the north country. Jiimn living Blocked by Habine Slide but Department Taking Action tit may h'come annljier "Hell's Gate" is the ,.f several thousand tons of rock leaving the side of the Babine River and holding back half a million sockeye salmon trying to enter t rj' The chamber's shippers' committee said that peculiarity of Giants Still j railway freight rates makes it 1 cheaper to ship from Eastern ! Canada to Vancouver than to I Edmonton. It foresees the pos- . 1 ' 1 .. ; sibility of goods being shipped i Have Chance hmm t S to Vancouver, then to Prince ' ding to Rupert by boat, and from there Babine Lake to spawn. The Babine Lake run take 0 per cent of all sockeye going up the Skeena River. Superintendent of Fisheries G. 6. Reade said today that the counting fence near the lake head showed only 127.000 sockeye of the average 5UO,000-run had escaped Into the lake. a few miles downstream. Ka.j's wife, also fell into the i water at the same time but she ; was picked up by another native : fisherman, Kelly Morgan. I Kale was fishing out of North j Pacific cannery. The body has been brought to i Prince Rupert. J The fatality occurred when Kale leaned over from the side j of his boat in the attempt to ', :avc his net against which a I floating log was drifting. His : wife fed in when she attempted (via Prince George) over the; ' ,,, Hart Highway to Dawson Creek. ! NEW YORK (CP)-New York's . From Dawson Creek rail ship- alnt Pennant hopes took on new ment could be made to Grim- S ?Park Wednesday night - when Cincinati Reds the shaw, connecting with the Mac-!the whipped wni. Hirh.i mri thpn,.. tn i Brooklyn Dodgers 6 to 3 to cut Hotel Sugar Ray Is Winner Hospital Launches Campaign for Funds At Iast $102,000 Must Be Raised If Institution Is To Run At All League to 5 V4 such points as Yellowknife. j tn Dodgers' National These northern points now do'lead over the Giants About 40 miles downstream, ! the waters of Babine River have been narrowed to a white-water milling gorge of 240 yards by a huge rock slide. their trading with Edmonton s". The Giants were rained out in 26 riKitn with bath K to be made to the .fl. Proprietor W. L. nmrnvs today. I'lHicrwoud, Vancou- in lha fltr offices of manufacturing and other firms. , NEW YORK ff Sugar Ray tc reach him and pull him out. Four men of Prince Rup rti flrtin.in. rli.pL.I -'" j Robinson, suddenly turned killer ; Prince Rupert General Hospital needs $164,000 y id streaming from ,hi left . . ....,. ......j immi'ticc preparation i returned with their report and Alaska Squadron is Grounded nra rnf-ir tnn wrtr n mui- pictures of conditions. Mr. Reade , to operate efficiently, and it needs $102,000 if We're ; dleweieht title from Britain's to turn is expected rn.in2eTh.ve tS to be sure it will continue to operate at all," Randy Turpin Wednesday night i nn a technical knockout with a ! their games at St. Louis and will meet the St. Louis Cardinals today instead. Originally the Giants were tq have had an off-day today. ' In othr National League games, Pittsburgh defeated the Philadelphia Phillies 8 to 6 and Boston trounced Chicago 7 to 3. AMERICAN LEAGl E In the American League, the Boston Red Sox moved to within games of the idle league- ne first of the year. addition will be two'are and are making their re- j E. T. Applewhaite, Skeena MP and hospital fund j violent attack that forced Ref FLASHES " "J " DWl W Ullw. I r,n i campaign cnairman, t,oia a group 01 ou communuy TAKING ACTION Action will have to be taken I jii leaders at & dinner j last night. size as a unit wnicn :wntly added, i. way lor it, a taxi I tailor shop will be Navy Planes Held in Interests of Morale Pending Probe WASHINGTON, D. C. (CP) A naval air squadron in Alaska has been grounded by the Navy for "morale reasons" after a eree Ruby Goldstein to stop the ; fight at 2 minutes and 52 seconds of the tenth round. j Unleashing the full fury of his bombs after the sturdy Briton j had opened a gash in his left ; ye, the sleek Sugar Ray from Harlem shot the works in one j leading Cleveland Indians, nip- i A district-wide campaign for $75,000 was officially touched off by the closing words of Hon. A. D. Turnbull, guest speaker of the dinner meeting: to 1 ping the Detroit Tigers 2 immediately, he believed, If the 1 ' remaining sockeye of the huge run now milling in pools below the blockade are to be saved. This could be done by twoj methods: ! 1. By use of a sky-line and Visitor Shows Rotary Films i Woods' vntlrc prop-i by 100 feet will have AIRI.INKR CRASHES SAN FRANCISC O A mammoth, double-decker airliner, on a test and training flight, crashed on its back in shallow water in San Francisco Bay today., killing three fliers aboard. Ii carried no passengers. United Air Lines said the Strato-m;i!-r was being flown by two in 10 innings. Chicago shut out Washington 3 to 0 in the only other Ameri "Hospitals are co-operative furious burst that yanked to Its ; feet, a sell-out crowd of overj 1 000 persons at the " Polo i Grounds. j . On thimd'prnilR richt to the ' . Kotanans today were treated enterprises. They cannot operate to a showing of scenic and travel without the wholehearted sup- can League game. i buckets to transport the fish series of recent air across the block. 3rd' Teng i mntinn ntrt.urp hv flenrfru Wiek- nnrt nt th rmmtmit " crashes there. Francis Whitehalr, under-1 2. By stripping the salmon of lham Rolarlan and city councll; '' the roe and transporting the ! 'K. f m.H,i VLnwrn. 1 Mr. Mr. Turnbull, Turnbull, in in addressing addressing ! hart rnmiru, out of a flurrv of i 'kg Home secretary of the navy, says that .V1' !?,"!. ... i Mr. and Mrs. wickham. in senior captains, veterans in the service. SCHOONER SINKS - HALIFAX The Newfoundland tismng schooner, jean National Cincinnati 6, Brooklyn 3. Pittsburgh 8, Philadelphia 6. Boston 7, Chicago 3. American Boston 2, Detroit 1. ". Chicago 3, Washington 0. Pacific Coast " Xos Angeles 5, Seattle 2. (Best of three semi-final; tied one a special board of Inquiry is to Investigate the accidents. Crashes of three naval aircraft have claimed a total" of 45 lives. The planes were patrolling the area between Alaska and Siberia. the lead.ng men and women in ', tjiws caved In Turpin 's tricky the community, business and in-1 d(fence Down went the 23-year-1 dustry. said it "could never be j s1 Negro 0n his back. Taking' practical" for the provincial j advantage of the count, he j government to build or recon-l rftped hlaisM oSi the deck at ; ' ' ' Timer-hospitals. the count of nine. " i "For if the government builds But Robinson, who had lost his j the hospitals, then it would have 160-pound crown In a tremen-; to operate them too, and the dous upset in London July 10,' X3UV IV Will UriHIIltlV bttlkV tt ( i4l . , D u A Ten, left at the major engineering Job to create iK7n hrHr2.r"i;; ,e weeK tor Jasprr to a permanent runway in the lu- LFn7Rh v" auuhie. , Miss Barbara ture. It could be a Job something Thi5 - Mlh "Whiray. Thy is h-meward bound like Hell's Oai." declared Mr. fhe . t Briiain with the Reade, and added that it would i on southbound ir ol Vancouver. Last have to be done soon "If we j . e i :B J . K. .., and Mna, sank in the Grand Bunks off Newfoundland "yesterday several hours after being gutted to the waterline by fire. Marine radio here said all crew members numbering about 20 were picked up by (he schooner L. A. Dutton. choir gave a concert want to save future runs of our Fr.cidy night they will sockeye in the Skeena." nloeps and on Satur- But there Is a bright spot in the Civil Service Commission at Glcndale. There have aiio been ix j game each. other aircraft crashes of recent Portland 4, Hollywood 7. weeks, taking nearly 100 lives I Holly wood, wins best of three in all. (semi-final two games to one.i (Continued on page 8) was not to be denied. Finning t Turpin against the ropes with jthv: fury of his drive, he rained, ! blow after blow at the reeling : MARYLEBONE IS WINNER MONTREAL The tourinr ! cnampion. All Randy could do was twist j British Marylebone Cricket ial farewell concert of the picture, said the fisheries ill lake place In Van- supervisor. If the lake can han-I in Sunday the choir die 500,000 salmon, then the last over the CBC. 100,000 or more already there and Barbara are ex- would have a better chance to ' rrtuin home next survive their spawn and not as ; much damage will have been ; done (nari Would at first appear, j Club yesterday w ound up its his head. He could not even raise his hands to ward off the stun-,ning blows. Curling Rink Before Winter is In Prospect Keen Members of Club Will Decide on Seal Cove Project This Week Wage Agreement Reached in Pulp Paper Industry tour in Canada with All-Montreal West Indians. The score was MCC 254 for seven wickets declared, West Indians S5. Last year's run, counted by the pn Wins fisheries department, totalled 543,658. Just when Randy appeared, j ready to pitch forward on his j i lace, the referee stopped it. I At the end Turpin reeled for- ward wildly and almost sank to , Battery 0. C. Football i nis Knees. Establishment of a curling rink in Prince Rupert Reds Seeking UN Admission :i Lesion defeated' to 3 in Malison Cup -t evening. As a result, ENGLISH 1.EAGTE Division I j VANCOUVER (CP) A conciliation board i recommendation of $1.40 an hour basic pay has been J by the coming winter is again a live possibility. A Charlton Athletic 2, Manchi'S are now one up In ! William Chorney, 29-year-old Prince Rupert man, for information as to whose whereabouts meeting of the executive of the Prince Rupert Cur! B with another game let United 2 tie . i accepted by 4000 paper mill workers and mill oper- ing Club is called for this Friday to "decide one way radio appeals were made last TOKYO Peiping radio tr.r ; pr:t;qi, rnlnnihia at0rS ln rltlsn OMmDia. threw out a hint tonight that : or the other," says Neely Moore, enthusiastic presi- rartce' and is home again. TIDES - - H. L. Haksen, international representative of the International Pulp, Sulphite and Paper Mill Workers, said Wednesday that the agreement means 16 V2- the price for resuming Korean truce talks would be the admission of the Allies that all Red truce violation charges are true. The United Nations command I Fulham 5, Stoke City 0. f score last night was Liverpool 0, Arsenal 0 (tie). Legion. , Division II j w: , Barnsley 2, Notts County 1. j Ralph Smith 2. Dave' Birmingham City 0, Sheffield, Len Matthews 1. j Wednesday 0 (tie . ' -Gerry Ford 1, Herb Leeds United 2, Cardiff City 1. Dick Cameron 1. ; Notts Forest 2, Everton 0. lie -and Pat Forman Southampton 2, Doncaslcr Ro-"teemg duty. vers 0. Vote is Over December Friday, September 14. 1951 (Pacific Standard Timel dent of the club. If the executive considers the plan feasible, a general meeting of the cldb will be held to "go from there" which means financing and construction arrangements. On terms so reasonable as to be "out of this world," Doug Frlziell has offered to make One Hundred and Seventy Ballots at By-election 21 3 feet per-cent wage increase wun a 209 feet minimum boost of 22 cents an 24 feet hour- 4 1 feet ' It Is the first industry-wide has so far rejected all of the Red High 0:01 charges but one. It admitted the 12:44 accidental strafing of Kaeson Low 6:26 neutral zone. i 18:44 Leather I p to 11 a.m.. Onlv 10 per cent of the 2862 i Svnonsis i eligible voters this year had -a-.: ..,;v.. ,, i visited the polls in the Civic available the old RCAF mess hill; i ' Vr J I Ol at Seal Cove, now being used for j tinue over the southern half of C" pTTj!SLrL ( imrtesj g. y. jnluistnn Co. Md.) contract In the pulp and paper industry here. The agreement also provides a 40-hour week and a cost-of-living clause of one cent for every 1.3 point rise in the government index. Companies signing are Alaska Pine and Cellulase; Bloedel, Stewart & Welch: Powell Rivr Co.: Howe Sound Pulp, and Columbia Cellulose. storage of cars, to the club. Ex- a, , provii:. e for at least the c " , ' ' "tvr"' ' "th : tended by 14 feet, this would next two days. Bright sunshine! make room for three standard wiii lalse afternoon temperatures l"m' " ePf "el. P hp circles that voting will be Ugnt. ;hn,iin bowllng 1,-p ice shPPu sheets. u lh .fhm interior tmnr- VA.('(U-VER N Standard . J , ' George Dawes was this year .v. u.i i in row to the mid eighties and he the f(r & baot but TORONTO Athona . 09 Aumaque 24 Brattie 43 Brvcourt 6 Buffalo Canadian 25 i,ne riimc vj.-uigu ui iu uir high seventies. did not precede by much several of the five candidates sur- J Quartz U.s-ot I The "T" portion of the build-i Ing could be used for a clubhouse. j The whole structure measures ; 40 by 136 feet as it now stands j and the "T" portion is 35 by 00 ! feet. j Required ice surface would be 140 by 145 feet whlch'would be Mines . 'K'lllC It I; l.ne In the Prince Rupert veying the electors and estimal-arca today but a flow of warm ing their chances. Of course, moist air on shore is expected j tney voted. t3 develop tomorrow and posslb- j Similarity in the past years ly bring lain. ' 0f the polling pace could indi- "orrcast cate that the same people vote North Coast Region Variable ; at the same time each year, cloudiness today. Cloudy tomor- j By 11 a.m. today, 170 voters row with occasional light rain i had visited the polls. Last year, t Border . large enough for use as a skating venue for children, at least, when H is not being employed tt'Uonaid for curling. An arrangement would 'P'reek . !l'remier 'A-l be or drizzle In the northern part, i at the annual election, 130 bal-r, Wind light, increasing in the ! lots had been cast by the same Living Controls Labor Demands HALIFAX ! The Trades and Labor Congress Wednesday revived Its demands for national I. :alth insurance and direct government measures to hold dow n living casts. To combat inflation, Congress at its annual convention proposed a 100-per-cent tax to be tmpos"d on excess profits and made with the nearby B.C. .. .1 ni.,Ul trt n.aU ! it . .1 1 ,Tn V.n4 5 rh-t ley inclarri .22 600 .03 Vj 1.40 .08 1 13 25', 10.75. 2.4S .37 .12', 5.20 .03 Vi 1.75 .53 .15 .22 . 2.63 5.50 .67 7.25 . .50 . 2.95 . 1.50 16.50 . 2.20 17.00 11 'i . 2.80 . 9.40 1.40 lHi . 19.00 Uranium Babine 'iriaclian C M & S 17.87 Coliwest 3,80 Donalda 46 Eldona 23 East Sullivan 9.00 " Giant Yellowknife 1100 God's Lake -38 Hardrock 1 Harricana 09 Heva 14 Jackkhlfe 07 Vj Joliet Quebec 52 Madsen Red Lake 2.26 McKenzie Red Lake 49 McLeod Cockshutt 3.10 Moneta 30 Negus 95 Noranda 76.00 Louvlcourt . 26 Pickle Crow 173 San Antonio 2.65 Senator Rouyn 22 Sherritt Gordon 3.80 Steep Rock 7.45 Silver Miller 1.63 Upper Canada 1.85 Golden Manitou : 6.85 " "'""'S'""" 'E. " year piev.uua, Packers cold storage plant for m les r ! voted and three it was the ice making. Second hand ca,st twenty, Pf ?0r' years ago Lows tonM and highs to- the last 160. nloin" it is believed could be same as year htn inert at least the noss.bll- morrow At Port Hardy, 50 and! In charge of the election, Re-itv is "beint explored 83: Sandspi 55 and 65; Prince! turning Officer R. W. Long ex- The project might be carried RuP-rt 55 and 60- ! Pec,s votes wl11 be counted an out for $10,000-but $15,000 is . , hour after poUs close at 8 p.m. ; felt to be a safer figure. ' Miss Audrey Wrathall Is deputy The fact that the keen Curl- Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Dennison, 1 returning of fleer. , ing Club members have indicat- who have been holidaying for P clerks are George Royals, , ed they are ready to do a lot of the past three months in Seattle Mrs- Andrew Thompson, Mrs. ! work themselves will, it is ex- and Portland, arrived in the j William Bond and Mrs. Louise, pected, cut the cash outlay cou- city yesterday on the Prince , Cromp. slderably. .George. Mr. Dennison continued j on to Whitehoi se while Mrs. Mrs. Eric Trumbell and daugh-; AUSSIE TREES Dennison .is staying over here j ter, Eleanor, return home on the ! Most Australian trees are of for a visit with her brother and , Prince Georgfe yesterday after a the Eucalyptus type, numbering sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. John holiday visit to Vancouver and more than 2C0 species. Gurvich, 736 Fifth Avenue West. ; Seattle. I 'A i i i mi SLeduc M .... proceeds be used to subsidize tood arid other necessities to reduce tlyir cost to the con- sumer. It added: 'We deplore the lack of any provision for re-institu-' tlon of price controls and weak and Ineffective steps taken against Inflation which serve only to further reduce the pur- STORY-BOOK ENDING Hilda Alev, 2-year-old displaced person who came to Canada as a domestic, Is happily married to Miles Keenleyside, also 23, son of Dr. H. L. Keenleyside, former deputy minister of immigration and now with the United Nations. The bride was employed In the Keenleyside home for a year before she took up employment with the International Reitigee Organization. (CP PHOTO) -madia.,, ! chasing power of the workers i already at a low level."