PHOVirUlAL LIBRARY L..A 1 OIL I iifl m i V CABS NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER An i nlSPATi HEP j Published of Canada's Most Strategic Pacific Port : "Prince Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest" Phone 81 VOL. XL, No. 116 PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., THURSDAY, MAY 17, 1951 ' PRICE FIVE CENTS Clean-Up ITBareiio&iCii IF, Hir iiiies inira vlF Approved Board of Health Pursue ' l ity Proposal Sewers, ' en Johnston, Korean f United Nations Hold I v, 2 ' , a Back Mass Assaults Casualty is back f, ar TOKYQ (CP) Waves of attacking Chinese ty Kxpectcd in City Soon Not Happy Reds failed today to break through the main United Nations defence line. The Chinese smashed a hole in II Over Reception in Vancouver ,a lUij'trt Korean war-casualty is expect-thc near future but he was not very happy South Korean ranks and streamed through but Allied troops rushed up and plugged the gap by nightfall. - ' ' Waves of Chinese stormed ' Mil 0 11 Oilier 1 J invito i aiutia ouiuici s were Vancouver by plane last I- nday night. United States positions but every time the Americans weie t son rih Johnston. pushed off the hill they counter y.s S U. Johnston, hiuh i i attacked to recapture 'A r pert, lelcpnonea "" ground. Halibut Landings arrival in vun- ,.r II. ! mine ui vt.. Trailers, Incinerator, Etc. Gratification at the interest the city council is showing in the desirability of a real cleanup in Prince Rupert was exprcs-o.-d yesterday at the quarterly meeting of the Prince Rupert and District Union Board of Health which pursued the matter further by asking the city to definitely set the earliest possible w- .fit as "Ckan-io Week." ..' The Board of Health is asklug the city to include its own property in the clcan-up andj to arrange for special disposal Berry-ices cn a designated day towards the end of the week so waste material may be removed after assembly. Meantime the city will be asked to adequately advertise the event. Satisfaction was expressed by the interest which had been already aroused by newspaper publicity. Clean-up and sanitation conditions occupied a good deal of the time and discussion at yesterday's session. " : In order to permit of cleaner week-ends in the city, the hoard decided to press further upon the city for the institution of a downtown garbage pickup . on Saturday instead of Thursday. Docs and children, it was . arrived from Korea mnry. iney um . In gn nvr was lurre up (or them on tn.-ir AMERICAN j Leading Lady, 60,000, Storage,! 17c, 15c and 13.5c. I McKlnley. 75,000, Storage. 17c,' 15 135c. I r , ... ll.os in '.u. lion with iite. Cpl. Johnston J jltier they had suu- Actions were along the east-central front, the hottest sector of the 75-mile wide battleground. Field dispatches said that 96,-000 Chinese were attacking in 25-mile 'length in the opening stages of an all-out Communist offensive. Another 25,000 Reds are reported gathering strength on the Pukhan Valley Invasion route west of the central sector. Far to the west erupting attacks and mounting pressure indicated a major advance toward Seoul might be tried later. All along the line Red reserves were packed deep behind the bugle-blowing assault units. Tightening Up Term Buying OTTAWA (CP) Tile federal ?overnmcnt moved Wednesday to plug loopholes In restrictions on instalment buying. James Sinclair, Parliamentary assistant to Finance Minister Abbott, piloted through the House of Commons a bill aimed at preventing consumers from circumventing consumer-credit regulations. The regulations were imposed last November and were tightened in March. Sinclair said that some consumers were , using charge accounts at department stores to evade regulations. There also were cases where a plumbing firm, for instance, would instal an electric water heater and give the purchaser unlimited time to pay. takeii from a Japan- jnd had emplaned aver. cpk. jonnsiun injury as a result of explosion, and his NIGHT WORK Work continues under f loodligh t: cn the Kemano Road in Gardner Canal, first step in development of a section of northern British Columbia for an aluminum plant, first phase of which will cost $160,000,000. The U-mC road heads through practically-unknown mountain country. . (CP PHOTO) i It appears the in ker? his son irom City of Seattle, 87.000, Storage, 17c, 15c, 13.5c. Jeanette F., 58,000, Atlln, 17.1c, 15c, 13.5c. Regina, 80,000, Storage, 17c, 15c, 135c. Republic, 50,000, Atlln, 17c, 15c. 13.5c. J.B., 30.500, Co-op. CANADIAN Nafeo, 48.000, Storage, 17c. 15 5c, 14c. White Hop, 28,000, Atlin, 17.6c, 161c, 14c. Four-Forty, 20,000, Co-op. up. service. iston was one of the ist in the rc-formed au briparie for ser- FISH WORKERS Voting on tm and went over Canada Must be Saved i From Small Men, Bruce all. il in Vancouver there Home Run Mark Tied Hutchison Tells UBC That, said Sinclair, would be unfair to persons who purchased such equipment through regu- wiling, he said, nor ive any Instructions j They had no docu-illd tliey have any epl Korean notes, i-in Western civiliza- ie men had homes m, f.ir tuhi.h tViriJ VAWmuvt'D rr a i -.... Mar cnanneis. Silence ,nln'v'u 1 LU pieuive wii- Under new regulations these NEW YORK . Big Gus Zcr- New Offer Final result of wage negotiations for fish workers of United Fishermen and Allied Workers Union will be announced this week-end. Voting on the latest offer 'of the operators Is concluding in some ten locals along -th We-t OftiiKt of BfcC. i - nial of the Philadelphia Athlct- ada irem ravenous nrodmalitv and niHaee "was made purchases must comply with said, caused considerable unsightly scattering of garbage, particularly around the restaurants, during the week-end. Aldermen members of the . board referred to the difficulty of getting garbage collectors to work on Saturday. Nevertheless, the possibility of setting up the Saturday collection will be further explored. " Ultimate garbage disposal was under discussion when Dr. Duncan Black, medical health officer, proposed that - the Incinerator at the city limits be put back into operation instead of the open dumping as at present. When aldermen recalled that the operation of the incinerator truh.v, hv U.-nr.,, Htl,u,,n Kt,,. r V, Vfvlo I credit restrictions applying to I les hit two homers Wednesday night to tie the Major League ... .v. ......... ... J Mediately. Most of record of six in three consecutive l-iW, were strangers. iuuiiciu Daily Times. The newspaperman delivered It. J.I ' i games but the lowly St, Louis A Johnston has no! Browns won a siugging contest la hi, son.. Uc-i. B:& Must Import Labor j uitj fMii-'l'i.aiiHJil a-uurvs ut tlir: in arrive in Prince i Latest offer by operators Is as University of British Columbia1 in as he Is released WASHINGTON. DC. ff The Inquiry into General Douglas follows: lu to tf. . Chicago White Sox. talk of the American League, kept pace with the leading Yankees by punch ollicers, alter receiving an honorary doctor of laws degree. ing out a 9 to 5 victory over Bos- Mai-Arthur's ouster exploded into a bitter wrangle today among senators over their power to force General Omar N. Bradley, chief of Joint staff, to tell what was said at a meeting with President Truman on April 6. wn neu ou. vie nastju piuwu nad betn ruled out soma years the Yankees to an 11 to 3 tri-lago owing to the cost (S20.000 a Crash- 1. For female general fish-workers, starting at. $1 an hour, advancing to $1.27. 2. Male general fishworkers, starting at $124 an hour, increasing to $151 and $1.61 for skilled graders and cullers. 3 Cold storage workers, start umph over the Cleveland Indians. year) and that the Incinerator The results left the amazing had since deteriorated, the Idea VANCOUVER (CP) Officials of the Unemployment Insurance Commission today urged British Columbia employers to import workers from Europe to meet a "critical shortage of labor" in the province. "Within coming months, labor demands will increase far beyond our capacity to supply for already shortages are apparent," said William McKinstry, superintendent for the Pacific Inen Die Chisox two and a half games was put forward that waste oil Athabaskan At Esquimalt AB Kay Dean Doing "Marvellously" II MI'S Athabaskan, which Finally, the vole was 8 to 5 behind the world champions. " from local oil plants and service VER r-Two British ff killed early today against forcing Bradley to tell, i The White House talk was about the firing of the Far East stations might be hauled to the dump for firing purposes. Tills possibility will be further explored with the city council sanitation committee. . I; A total of 1,359 graduates are receiving degrees In the two-day convocation which began today. An honorary doctor of laws' degree was also conferred today on Dr. Isabel S. Maclnrcs, retired professor of languages at Uni- j verslty of British Columbia. j Hutchison said that Canada must be preserved from "small and trembling men who dare not be Canadians, who forever lean on some other nation, who once leaned on Britain and now lean on the United States and must always lefn on something." ing at 1 36 an hour, Increasing to $156. '. The new offer represents an Increase from 20 to 28 cents' an hour. Offer also Includes that working conttillons remain the Weather j region of Unemployment Insur commander. The dispute meantime shoved aside Bradley's testimony on thv Korean war. . mvauiime, me rai situation m Synopsis s by an automobile '"'i are Alexander i , and Joseph Cof- "f South Shields, "if members of th 10.000-Um freighter Ypst-rriav'. Hii..pha,o mnu. tt.e city was trmeti a continuing same for a two-year period but has a re-opener clause after one year. If accepted, provides for a It brought angry talk that the White House may be "pulling an ed eastward into Alberta dur-1 "c"sRrace" which was encouraged ance Commission. In the commission's montliiy bulletin, McKinstry said: "Satisfactory arrangements can be made for a suitable supply of labor to be selected irom other countries. The time ts now." inn the nieht. Some cloudiness DV tne "-eaing p.ace ror roaems at the dump. and scattered shower , activity monthly increase to net workers, reduction plant and cannery persists In the Interior regions of British Columbia but these At the same time, officials of Iron curtain" down on the testimony and counter charges that Republicans may be "trying to sabotage' 'the Asia policy inquiry because they do not like the way the teslmony is going. Bradley refused to tell what was said at the meeting on the Gets Its the National Employment Serv SEWER CONNECTIONS Sanitarian Armlne Boas reported to the board that there were 36 houses in the city flanked by sewers but as yet not Connected up with same. This matter was referred by the board to the civic board of works ftnd are expected to decrease appreciably in the next 24 hours. Cloudy skies and occasional showers are occurring along the r-- ix- workers of $10 to $50. : Thomas Parkin, scrn-tary of. Prince Rupert local UFAWU said; today that final results of the; voting should be available "in a ; day or so." j Negotiations with operators nre miis ice said . that larger snortages were becoming evident in mining, logging, shipbuilding, truck made an emergency call here Tuesday night to hospitalize Able Seaman Raymond Dean of Toronto, lost no time in it-aching base at Esquimau.- Leaving here at 9 o'clock yesterday morning, she was at K.squimalt at 10:3(1 this morning. She had steamed south via the outside passage. The call at Prince Rupert had entailed n.) delay in the originally set arrival time at Esquimalt. "Doing marvellously," was the report (he Prince Rupert General Hospital gave IIMCS Chatham this afternoon on the condition of Dean who underwent an emergency appendix operation. He is expected to be up and h-nbhling around very soon. ' rt Back ing, construction and agricul ground that such testimony would destroy him in the role of Race Horses northern coast. Sunny skies will be general over Vancouver Island and the lower mainland. Forecast were stance! in reuruary mm I superintendent of works who will ! investigate the practibltity of i hookiiiff un. If connection 1.i REH - Leonard J. no has served as 10 Hie royal commis-""isporuuon during Vars. has returned North Coast Region Cloudy i practicable, the owners of the confidential adviser to the President. Today President Truman upheld Bradley In his refusal, saying, through an aide, that Bradley should not answer. with sunny periods today and ture. NES asid that shortages are for both skilled and unskilled labor. At Victoria Premier Byron Johnson said the idea of an immigration plan similar to Ontario's had not yet reached the stage of serious consideration. ailian Nntlnnal -Toll first offer, voted on in March. MONTREAL (CP)-Firteen race was turned down by a 95 percent' norsPS perished last night when majority. Subsequent negotia-, fire gutted a stable at Blue Bon-tions resul ted in a dead lock,, af tercets race track. Damage is es-which a conciliation tioard wasj tiniated at more than $50,000. ' sought. W. K. Smith of Boston, one Before the board sat, however, of the owners, and a Japanes?-negotiations were resumed at Canadian Jockey, Hiromi Ukey-rcquest of the operators, which ama, 19, of Vancouver, suffered resulted in the final offer. i minor burns. ;j P special duties as Friday, a few showers along the western slopes of the Queen Charlottes and along the mainland today. Little change In temperature. Winds northwest l"e president. Mrs. S. D. Johnston left for ROAD REPORT Skeena River Highway (20 miles per hour) In the exposed areas near the Queen Charlottes, decreasing to light tonight. Light winds elsewhere. Lows tonight and highs Friday At Port Hardy, 42 and 56; Sandspit, 40 and 56; Prince Ru- , n authority on '"'to matters, M". 'relght traffic man-lleystem in May 1949 ' ces WPre loaned . ;s"'ffi In important fwc the board or mmlssioners in Can- Interstate commerce " 'h the llniio oi.i Vancouver by plane today to see her son, Cpl. Kenneth Johnston, recently returned from Korea. Armand Boas, local sanitarian, leaves tonight on the Prince Rupert for a similar appointment in Nelson. TODAY'S STOCKS property will be summarily ordered to so connect. Menace of the possible developing of the practice of trailer parking on city property was referred to by the board, one Instance in particular being mentioned. The need of a trailer camp in Prince Rupert was described as "most urgent" and that will be one of the matters the city will be asked to investigate when dealing with the trailer problem. Hugh Hart, sanitarian from Terrace, who was present at the meeting, told a trailier camp having been established there. It had been equipped with running water but it had been lm-practicable as yet to eliminate the use of "privies." Demoted but Skipper Wins (I'nilrteny 8. I. Julllistoll "o- litil-J" Ipert, 40 and 58. General The Bulkley River is at present at or near flood stage and travellers should check on condition before undertaking any trips past Terrace and Smlthers. Prince Rupert to Terrace Fair to good. Terrace to Smlthers Fair to good with local rough spots. VZI at nclal rail: ; ore the Senate. Z .'?mons and the Ji of Canada. Do you wish space IN THE VANCOUVER (CP) Capt. Sig Trelvik ' demoted himself to deckhand and made it pay off Wednesday. A herring fisherman for years, Capt. Trelvik knew nothing about halibut but he learned ; the hard way, working on deck with numb fingers at the bait tanks. Trelvik arrived back in port j on his 62-foot diesel seiner Western Monarch with a catch of 80.000 pounds of halibut, biggest catch ever taken off the British Columbia coast by a single boat. An-old friend, Capt. Ostein Hansen, was at the helm of the seiner Western Monarch during YCf ft'Ql Edition of Daily News? Ct Rupert hiiMinaec f twiner rnnrpKRnted W Industrial supplement which is about to be Train Crash-Two Killed : WINNIPEG (CP) Two members of the crew are believed killed and another injured in a head-on collision early today be ROTARY CLUB f-reScnh VARIETY CONCERT SUNDAY, MAY 27th, 9 p.m. CAPITOL THEATRE ROTARY MIXED CHORUS and ASSISTING ARTISTS Proceeds to be used for Conimunity Projects TORONTO Athona .7 Aumaque ' -25 Beattle 49 Bevcourt 41 Buffalo Canadian , .20 Consol. Smelters 1.3950 Con west 3 00 Donalda 53 Eldona 20 East Sullivan 7.75 Giant. Yellowknife 625 God's Lake 33 Hardrock 14 HarVlcana 8Vj Hcva 10 Jacknife 09 . Joliet Quebec 55 Little Long Lac 62 Lynx 13 JkUdsen Red Lake 2.15 McKenzie Red Lake 44 McLeod Cockshutt 2.54 Moneta 32 Negus .77 Noranda 71.60 Pickle Crow 1 59 San Antonio '.. 2.40 Senator Rouyn 17 Sherrit Gordon 3 25 Sleep Rock 7.75 . . VANCOUVER. American Standard .... -22 Rralornc 5.60 Cariboo Quartz -2" Congress 07 Hedley Mascot 47 Indian Mines -25 . Pend Oieille 7.05 . Fioneer l-'S Premier Border 33 Privateer 1" ' Sheep Creek 1 52 Sllbak Premier 43,2 Taku River 05 Vananda .16 Salmon Gold ,' -3'i - Spud Valley W Sliver Standard 2.35 Western Uranium .. 175 Oils A P Con - Atlantic 3.00 Calmont :. 105 C & E 12.00 , , Central Leduc . 2.10 Home Oil 13-75 Mercury 15 Okalta 2.53 . Princess Royal Canadian 11 Vi Royalite '3-25 n cl)mection with the opening of the Columbia 1(e . i,,'11 are urged to have their copy in our hands ; ""'her delay. iZCial SRCtlhs are now being closed and space ;"s should be made-at once. M J Cltv V1 contaln new pictures and articles featuring foe 11-uay fishing trip. Capt. Hansen is a veteran halibut skipper. ji.i . ... . . .... tv,o ""u uisirici, Wlin special reieieute w - Cplli.i. tween two Canadian National Railway trains at Postans, Ontario, 80 miles west of Port. Arthur. Buried in the wreck are Fireman George Miller, aged 35, and Brakeman John Chockla, . 25, both of Fort William. Engineer Charles Seal. 55, Port Arthur, received a scalded kg THE TIDES -Var'rf speclal nation-wide circulation. Dally News or Phone 748 for appointment Friday. Kiay 18, 1951 1 18.0 feet High 11:19 23:20 Obtainable fr'im Members Tickets 60c 20.9 feet; 4.7 feet 6.3 feet Low 5:10 17:13 Ji but his condition is not serious.