LA PKOVJ-!'- 1U it? 1 Jit IT 1 i ib J j yN' n Doily N )TAR V CABS NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA 3 NEWSPAPER Delivery DISPATCHED Published ot Canada's Most Strategic Pacific Port "Prince Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest" RADIO VOL. XL. No. 12 PRINCE-RUPERT, B.C., MONDAY, JANUARY 15, 1951 PRICE FIVE CENT8 Phone fciw Id Must llmm Smallpox In Britain 0 LONDON P British healfn authorities, wrestling with one of the worst flu epidemics on record, took urgent steps today a- ited Nations ikes Out; Canadians To Tighten Belts Developing Of Alaska . 1 - ! gainst tin even more dreaded j menace smallpox. I Twenty-eight cases are now j reported in South England and i tne deaui -toil fiuin ,anihiiiuX owns Taken Ease Up RCAF Requirements OTTAWA n The Royal Canadian Aid Force announced today that entrance requirements for men enlisting as ground-crew "have been altered considerably" in an effort to solve one of the worst shortages facing tne .4 OTTAWA CP) Government ec- WASHINGTON, D.C. ffi TrcS- &d4 iSm -m tm iv yvi r ti tvfl ICT A1ipfronornists Predict belt-tightening iS. IV (l ) . "'cuior for Canada Canada this this vear year thouizh though th th: ident Truman said today that mounted to eight on Saturday, the 12 months beginning July 1; a grocery clerk in Brighton s struck out today in country is expected to produce will see continued emphasis on cauKnt tne disease. The Health a record $20,000,000,000 In goods development of natural re and services. sources In Alaska. Ministry ordered the shop closel with orders that foodstuffs which had been exposed to anv den offensive on the rn front. Tank-in-v teams, by nightfall, Rapid expansion of production Major items for Alaska include $21,000,000 for roads, $20,000.000 1 risk be destroyed. Ration books armed forces. The new standards a -e vi tual- for Alaska railroad, $10,000,000 linked with the shop were also Advanced 12 miles and lor 31 puoiic works projects ana i destroyed. would normally lead to an increase In the standard of living. However, with Russian-backed Communist aggression, prospect of increased standards Is dim, economists say. $&,76i,40U lor tne isKiuina reclamation project. ptured three towns Osan, mgjang and Chon. ittack bv the army, which Expenditures for military, (en In retreat since late public works, communication system and Indian service in kber, came oniy ly those which would apply in wartime. The educational requirement is now fixed at Grade Eight for all ground crew recruits. Their age limits are being raised fro:n 30 to 40 and aptitude and classification tests are being eased. Shortage of groundcrew is possibly the most serious manpower abstacle confronting the Royal Canadian Air Force plan to triple its operational and training Alaska were not Itemized in the ifter Gen. j. iawion wild American forces "will budget. Jily stay and fight" In Ko- "Red Witch" Given Life Freight' Rales Still Await God's Message KEREMEOS f Determined remnants of "Children of Light" kept up their marathon vigU last night. Thirteen members, who went into self-confinement nearly three weeks ago, are still awaiting an end of the world "message from God," They continue prayer and hymn-singing and s m.ide his fighting nt after a visit to Korea Sizing morning sirine Qy; Case Deferred '.activities this year. AUGSBURG, Oermany 1 Iise OTTAWA (CP) The Board of th Air Force wun us i paved the way for the Collins, United States Vi-.A "t .. ff .M.iMBMtMl Transport Commissioners today chief of staff, said troop deferred until March 5 its general freight rate inquiry after eight provinces had objected to hnents win Degm vo now ! give no Indication of quitting. NAVY READIES BIG O Now completing refit at the Esquimau naval base, the cruiser Ontario will sail Feb. 19 for the AnUpodes on a 15-week training cruise with units of the Australian Navy. The 9.000-ton ship is expected to call at Pearl Harbor enroute to Australia and may also visit New Zealand. It will be the first time a Canadian warship has visited Australia. She has a complement of 700 men under the command of Commodore H. F. Pullen. (CP PHOTO) goin gahead with public heaings now. Postponement was ordered after the eight provinces all except Ontario and Quebec had Two unidentifiable persons came from the six-room cottage Saturday night. Only Mrs. Agnes Carlson. 50-year-old leader, and eleven others are left. The meeting started December 26 with a group of 35 including men, women and children. Plane Crash Kills Seven' 0 PHILADELPHIA iff) Seven persons died yesterday in the flaming wreckage of a National Air Lines plane which crashed into the snow-swept International airport runway. Eighteen persons were rescued from a fiery death, ten by an heroic stewardess who perished herself after making several trips into the burning pane to rescue passengers. The DC-4 skidded on the ics- After Huge Take, Kitkatla Koch was today sentenced to life imprisonment for causing murder of Buchenwald concentration camp prisoners. The "Red Witch of Buchenwald" 44 years old was convicted of crimes against Austrian and German prisoners of the Nazis. The red-haired widow of the camp's wartime Nazi commander was not in court to hear the verdict. Manager of B.C. Pulp and Paper TORONTO P Leslie Clemln- Jtorea in two or three He added at a press ! fiice during his fourth i the Korean theatre that: regular army division will Einized. nal Guard units will be into service. ' replacements for Amer-oops are already going to nt. i warplanes lashed at Su-day with blazing one-two B-26 bombers roared asked that the hearings be delayed until the report of the Royal Commission on transporta tion has been received by the government. Inlet Is Still Full of Fish Logs By Rail To Pulp Mil! TERRACE Since January 5 local trucks have been hauling logs from John Hagen's camp at Remo to the old army spur at Terrace. From there, the logs Chief aim of the Board's in quiry Is to devise a plan of equal izing freight rates as between Thomas Johnson, Fisherman, Dies The funeral of a Prince Ru , Fifty thousand tt.ns of herring taken from the same half-mile-square hole at Kitkatla Inlet have made no noticeable difference in the number of fish different regions of Canada, km the airport city 20 The Canadian Pacific Railway sheathed runway and smashed uth of Seoul, bombing fating enemy troops and had prepared suggestions for through a picket fence. will be shipped by rail to the cellulose plant at Watson Island. equalization to be presented, to there, according to reports from the fisheries office fcs. Then fighter-bombers Gasoine sprayed over the 200- son was today appointed general low, rocketing and ma- day but they were withdrawn when the Board decided to delay , here. inning the fleeing Reds. hearings. manager of the British Columbia Pulp b Paper Co., with headquarters in Vancouver. columns took part in Echo sounder pictures taken of the area after trie 20,000 ton nice and got as close as to Seoul. The appointment was an- extension tof" the 30,000 ton quota had been caught showed $103,000 Fire Alberta Mine yard area. Quiet Week-end For City Police The week-end was a quiet one for the police. One man was arrested Saturday. He was charged with drunkness. Otherwise no arrests were made, it" was reported by police 'tills morning. Streets were extremely slippe'y hut nn mnirvr nccirientji in traffic fish from the surface to the bot nonced today by D. W. Ambrldge, president of the Abltlbi Pulp & Paper Co., who is also president of B.C. Pulp & Paper. First Cargo of Sulphur Is - Delivered AV Watson Island The 4.375-ton Panamanian freighter Santa Ana,-. Capt. Iasson Nicolakis, first of the boats to bring sulphur to the new Columbia Cellulose mill at Wation Island, arrived in port yesterday afternoon from Los Angeles. She will be docked there for the best part of this week. The Santa Ana Is the first of six such ships to come to Watson Island within the next month. WEATHER torn for a stretch of over half mile. pert fisherman, Thomas Johnson, 73, will be held to morrow at Grenville Court. Officiating at the service will be Rev. E. Soiland. " Mr. Johnson, who until entering hospital lived at 142 Third Ave. East, died last Thursday after a prolonged Illness. Besides working In city hotels, Mr. Johnson was a seaman on both the Atlantic and Pacific co3.sts Before living here for 38 year, he came to Canada from his nat tive Denmark in 1892. He fished out of Halifax prior to moving to the west coast. There are no next-of-kin in the city. " . CARDIFF, Alberta ffl The Clemlnson started in the pulp J. A. Lanigan, Dominion J Synopsis ft than a foot of snow fell and paper business In 1925 as a $100,000 tipple was destroyed by fire Saturday night at the Sun Government biologist, who has dance coal mine at Cardiff, 18 research chemist with the Sault St. Marie, Ontario, mill of the spent the past week on the jtlr (IK I 9; east coast of Vancouver miles northwest of Edmonton. grounds, says he doubts if l Uuring the night as a re ' were reportd. . Spanish River Paper Co. The fifty men employed at the an intense depression mine are temporarily out of work there were ever so many fish taken from any small area of noved i-sto the southern Columbia coastal areas. The owners plan to move to an old tipple so that production any ocean in one day. still snowing at.Comox can be resumtd. Truman Presents Largest Budget Yet rning. Snow Is also re- Capt.C. W. Earnshaw of t he fisheries patrol vessel Howay ver most or the southern tral Interior. Wet snow backs up Mr. Lanlgan's stats '(i rain and snow touched ment. They were referring t 11 Vancouver Island dur- 6.500 tons taken from Gasboa: Great War night but turned to rain Water Evaporates And Fire Starts Passage last Monday. In add! NEW SCHOOL BURKS FALLS, Ont. 0) On-trio Education Minister Dana aybreak. Byron Nelson Has Comeback INTERIOR TOWN ENTHUSIASTIC Z Terrace Progress Reviewed At Trade Bd. Annual Meet Home For Aged ond Experimental Station 1950 Accomplishments Applewhaite Speaks utatlon will become tion, an estimated 1,500 tons were taken from Barkley Sound in the t along the southern coast Porter said the object of Ontario's central suD-mvision tne same Water evaporates. Such w?s the discovery of Acme Importers when a pall of towels left on the bIavb Wtlnrl s4w Qnnlau mnnu the day but little change Chest-$471 Per Person WASHINGTON, D.C. day. t 'led in the conditions "A phenomenal week of fish PEBBLE BEACH, CAL. '(P A Texas rancher, Byron Nelson, Interior until well Into , lng , , ing was the way the Howay new education curriculum Is to "keep the hurdles high." He was opening this village's new $185,-000 high school. "We have the finest teachers to carry out the system," he added. "uim. me suirm centre i -- .. j . h-j once "Mr. Big" of golf, thrilled first officer. Jack McEvoy, des the coast will move In cribed it. He said he had spent many years on local waters with- fed weaken but still anoth- (CP) President Truman today laid down a $71,- f bance Is moving into the , out seeing anything like it. Wiv- out at 9:50 a.m. yesterday to the company office in the Exchange Block at the corner of Third Avenue ond Sixth Street by the tenant upstairs. Smoke was reported coming up through the floor. I nasKa and can be ex- wa3 594,000,000 spending bud-1 'esst "Perator Joe Fenton ' " 1 " Kent bnsv rece vintr rpnnrt.'; 1 3! 0 bring mixed rain and of War Danger TERRACE. Problems, affecting the Terrace district and community and progress that had been made in their solving were reviewed and reports indicating the advancement ' that community and district had made in 1950 from the standpoint of industrial development, all leading up to an exceed III ! ed and no one around to open it. They had to force entrance. Inside the office they found the towels smoking in a pail which had boiled dry. Seiners were queued up watt the northern coast to-morning and to the coast by tomorrow When firemen arrived on the more than 15,000 fans yesterday by winning the $10,000 Bing Crosby gold tournament with a 54-hole score of 209. He put together rounds of 71-67-71 to top a powerful field. The victory meant $2000 to Nelson but the money was only incidental to the par-cracking ace who once spread-eagled the golfing world. He 'was the boss man once more if only for this tournament. ' Stan Leonard of Vancouver scene, they found the door lock- get for the United States government and declared that sound policy requires taxes be increased $16,456,000,000 to balance It. "This is a budget for our national security in. a period of grave danger." Truman told th? ing for their turn to go in for a set. There was room for about three boats in the passage at one time. Seventy packers, many of them towing scows, were lined up waiting to take the huge catch away. Sets averaged from 300 to 400 tons each.' TODAY'S STOCKS Forecast m coast region Clear lie northern mainland 'dy with snow over the solution in Korea with the sta ingly cheerful outlook for thei future, were highlights of aj typically enthusiastic annual meeting of the Terrace and District Board of Trade which was (Courtesy f. I. J0I1 ristoii Co. I.til.)" P'-'r of the area during the new Congress which will have Widely scattered snow over northern Vancou- full say on the new taxes ana Capt. Earnshaw and Mr. Lanigan were sent out with full authority to close down fishing at any moment if they saw stocks pnd this afternoon. In- was well down on the list wlt.'i a total of 223 on rounds 76-70 and 77. In the pro-amateur best-ball division, Leonard and Bill Maw- Is expected to give at least some of the President's plans a rough ride. Bevcourt 50 Bobjo 13 Vi Buffalo Canadian 26 ConsoU Smelters .130.00 Con west 2.05 , TVinnlHa . Sfi I cloudiness over the en- a tonight with Inter The huge expenditure which hinney of Vancouver scored 71- mixed rain and snow Eldona ...ZZZIZ.'..".".".. ' .24:416-71 for 208, also well behind 8 in the earlv mornine held last Friday night at the new motel at the east end of the town. C. J. Norrington, who was an active president of the board during the past year, was in the chair, turnirg over before the close to Alex Gillanders, who was elected to the presidency during the meeting. Speaker of the evening was E. T. Applewhaite, MP. for Skeena, emor, lit 'lie icouc'j. P wet snow, not ouite so were becoming unduly depleted. Thev did not once have to invoke their authority. Fishing in the school at Gasboat Passage has been declared finished for the year. "It's better to call off fishing while there are still lots of herring," Capt. Earnshaw said, "than to take a chance on not Truman proposes for the fiscal year starting July 1 more than half of which would go to the military figures out to about $471 for every one of some 152.-000,000 men, women and chil ICSdaV. WlnrlaNnrfh. 1 1 in the exposed areas of "'n Charlottes and licht dren In the United States. If Truman has his way just, having enough left for seeding.' who chose to deal with ine ln- about that same amount will be bilization of a firm line there. With the Chinese Communists willing to risk a major war as the United Nations endeavored to seek a reconciliation, the world appeared to be on the edge of a volcano. There must be no giving away to despair, however. There was no good reason why United Nations efforts to localize the present conflict to Korea should not succeed. Yet, if such was not to be the case, the responsibility most assuredly must be fixed with Peiping anjl Moscow. With the Soviet Union preponderant in land forces and building up sea power, but weak In the air and atomic weapons evidently willing to wage world war along aggressive lines, it became essential for the western world to build up armaments and defence. While this was being done, the danger of world war might be even more increased within the next few months. While preserving economic and social strength and the democratic way of life, Mr. Apple- " rest of the area, be-southeast (25) tonight, '"'flit and highs Tuesday 1 1 Hardy and Sandspit, 30 Prince Rupert, 30 and servaUonist but, in spite of the '"national situation with brief collected from the average citi extraordinary quantities of fish zen although some of it will, of local matters on which he re- course be in the form of hidden taken from the school at Kit- Iterated assurance of his full kPtla. neither he nor Mr. Lani VANCOUVER American Stancara .28 Bralorne '. B R X 4 Cariboo Quartz 1-25 Hedley Mascot 51 Pacific Eastern 05 Pend OrelUe 9.00 Pioneer 2 5 Premier Border 8V2 Privateer 6V2 Reeves McDonald 4-90 Sheep Creek 137 Silbak Premier -31 Taku River 06 Vananda H Salmon Gold 03 Spud Valley 04 Silver Standard 2.86 Western Uranium 1.53 Oils-Anglo Canadian 5.55 A P Con 37 Atlantic 2.50 C & E 6-90 Central Leduc 2.20 Home Oil 15.25 Mercury 14Vi Okalta 2.20 Pacific Pete 8.35 Princess 1.70 Royal Canadian 10 TORONTO Athona 09 Aumaque . .32 Jot Crashes, f fe Killed 10011 UIUIKWI v.vu Giant Yellowknlfe 7.50 God's Lake 42 Hardrock 32 Harricana .13'2 Heva 8Vj , Hosco 7a Jacknife 5'2 Joliet Quebec 87 Lake Rowan 08 Lapaska 5 'a Lynx 17 Madsen Red Lake 2.72 McKenzie Red Lake . .53 McLeod Cockshutt 2.70 Moneta 39 Negus 135 Noranda - 76.25 Louvicourt 21 Pickle Crow 1.90 .Regcourt 5V4 San Antonio 3.15 Senator Rouyn ... .26 Sherrit Gordon 3.40 Steep Rock 8.15 Sturgeon River 15 Silver Miller 1.00 AGO -0) A FUSS cunor- taxes. The budget proposes a $7,461,-000,000 outlay for military and economic aid to friendly foreign countries, compared with $4,726,-000,000 this year, and $1,277,-000,000 .. to enlarge output of "atomic materials and weapons" which would soon be on mass production scale In this HOCKEY SCORES SATURDAY National Detroit 4, New York 2 Chicago 3, Toronto 3 Montreal 4, Boston 0 Pacific Coast New Westminster 8, Vancouver 3 Tacoma 4, Seattle 2 Okanagan-Mainline Nanaimo 2, Kelowna 0 Kamloops 6, Vernon 4 Western International Trail 7, Kimberley 3 Nelson 5, Spokane 2 SUNDAY National Montreal 2. Detroit 3 Toronto 1, New York 2 Chicago 1, Boston 5 Pacific Coast Victoria 5, Portland 2 New Westminster 4, Seattle 1 Western International Nelson 2, Spokane 4 ""ber crashed nnrt.hupit. gan saw any need for closing down fishing. However, neither thinks there should be any more taken from that school. Neither ccmnanies nor union have applied for an additional extension of the quota at Gas-boat Passage, but it is quite lik'j-ly that, if herring are found in quantity anywhere else In the Interest and attention. Other guests were W. J. Scott, president of the Associated Boards of Trade of Central British Columbia, who spoke appropriately, and G. A. Hunter, who brought the greetings of the Prince Rupert Chamber of Commence. E. T. APPLEWHAITE, M.P. "The vital question of today," said Mr. Applewhaite. "was how great was the risk of a major fso today, killing five cf TdES northern sub-district, there will i be applications made. If they war." The situation was "fright.. whin re stressed the importance BATH, Somerset, England i are made, fisheries department r'ay, January 16, 1951 Col enly dangerous." Maybe open of the western world adopting war with Communist China policies that would appeal to the 7:57 18.1 feet 21:04 14.7 feet might be the result, this leading Police here were puzzled by j officials said today, they will housebreakers who entered two "receive consideration." But there homes, flung jewels of consider-! is no guarantees the extension able value on the floor and left j will be allowed. To date, no ap-wlthout taking anything. ' plication has been made. 1:18 9.8 feet to war with Soviet Russia. It people of Asia and thus combat the lure of the Communist na-(Coutmued on page 5) 14:56 7.9 feet was still necessary to find a 2.29 Upper Canada "T"