PROVINCIAL 5 - f i r A r ' I 113 ORMES ' DRUGS DAILY DELIVERY NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER jtR ,110 V ,srr( CABS HKi Published at Canada's Most Strategic Pocific Port "Prince Rupert,, the Key to the Great Northwest" Phone 81 I VOL. XL, No. 276 PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., MONDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1951 PRICE FWli CENTS r V v V ; , , : , " ! 1 iC Allies And Winter Hits Alcan Work fenhower Demands Id of Haggling and Communists Exact Location Young Germans Head North To Join International Crew Of Silbak-Preniier Miners , Ten tall, fair and eleamcut young men straight from West Germany, some in their teens but the most Agree on Itling to Defence Snow and High Water Stops Transmission Line Kemano And Kitimat To Curtail Advent of snow and heavy )MK (CP) General Dwight D. Eisenhower Of Korean Cease-Fire Line rains m the rugged mountain warned Atlantic Pact countries todav to ston count above Kiidaia Arm h. in their twenties, passed through the city on the nnmmonJ iinn.infm brought an end for the time ! Cu m nan n lust- pvpninrr Vinnnrl for Prmioi- fn inin trip! S ,m' l'l'V"'""t, lUlget, 1IIUI- beta. tri work n :.h. tr.nm. " """"" " " T ; national glory and "attempts at the impossible" s'on line which win carry power i crew of the Silbak-Premier mine where they will ! learn to become nararock miners. from the big Kemano River powerhouse to the great alumi- Second Armistice Item Successfully Negotiated jlimr their sovereignty. US Willing To Meet Reds To fill up gaps in the ranks jul tiie mining crew at Premier, -otiViower declared that unles Flirnne'q rrr-'num Ut smelter which Aluminum ?. . -u . 7 ".Ui;Lb , ; Co. of Canada te to build at I v f ne is built strongly east of the Rhine, there Kitimat. crews are now being i ill he' Deace without fear. This WMsintPrnvproH moved out, some men having s I hppn Jlnum tnf.n t.hp pHv hv Tpr- MUNSAN (CP) Allied and Communist staff officers tonight agreed on the exact location of the 145-mile line across Korea where shooting will stop Inite reference to inclusion of German forces race at the week-end, leaving today for Vancouver. Some Atlantic Pact army. if an armistice is signed within 30 days. of the Only the signatures Red Satellites In Korea Fight TOKYO (f There is growing belief on the western Ko:ean front that Russian satellite officers have taken command of Red Chinese artillery. Since November 1 Red artillery has shown an amazing increase in speed and fire accuracy, staff officers reported today, and at least one Allied radio man has heard "pure Russian" artillery orders. they join what Ls assuming the complexion of in international crew consisting of other Immigrant workers who have been arriving there during recent months from Italy, Poland, Scandinavia and even as far as .vlaita. "And they are all doing very well," said O, L. Pitt, managing director of Siloak-Premier, who was in the city last night aboard the same steamer on which the Gtrman boys were going north. 'iney are keen lor learning how to be expert miners, Mr. fill reported. Ihey are learning truce negotiators are needed ta zzell May Run Again On Disarmament As Proposed By Asian-Arab Nations FARIS r The United States agreed today to gat together with Russia for private disarmament talks as suggested by a group of Asian-Arab states but expressed doubt as to the usefulness of the move. Iraq, Pakistan and Syria submitted a resolution to the 60-member United Nations political committee asking the Big Four phases of the work are already behind schedule owing to weather- and other conditions so an early start will be made as soon as possible in the spring and the job speeded up on an Intensive scale. . , S,x Inches of snow fell in the Kildala Arm area last Friday. Prior to that a couple of camps UN Troops Win Fight Would Be Candidate For Mayoralty If Given Supporting Slate complete settlement of the second item of the armistice agenda, fixing the cease-fire line. I A sub-committee will meet tomorrow to approve the proposal. Several other points must be ; agreed upon before a full ar- mlstice can be signed. ( I There is still a possioility of 1 Theatre we Passes Another candidate in the had been isolated by flood water mayoralty race next month here conditions after heavy rains, may be ex-alderman and city, wne, i-nmn will to speak English quickly with Russia, United States, Great Bri- Chinese Communist Woman Commander Slain in Battle businessman, Douglas Frizzell, also be piirtailmsnt m wnrv at. tne school teacher at Premier ; tain and France to try to jo-operating oy holding night i oncile western and Russian clisses for their benefit. ! armament plans. ftrad Expires at Capitol MUNSAN 0i United Nations ire Sunday INigni who indicated this morning he Kemano and Kitimat but this would run, "if there is a support- too will be pursued on an even ing slate of aldermanic candi- more intensive scale next year, dates." employing thousands of men. Mr. Frzel. told The Daily Digging of the huge water tun- Heavy Snow In Montreal 'iypicai of the party of Ger-; Ambassador Philip C. Jessup; troops won a savage 41 -hour jman boys heading for Premier ; later told the committee that the fjgt, to restore their western llast night was tall, blond 21-junit3d States was ready to do m'tle Gibraltar positions same an armistice In Korea y New Year but no one in an official position at the I'nited Nations camp would risk prediction that the truce can be negotiated by then. However, as soon as the ceasefire line is definitely settled, it is expected the fighting would virtually end on an Informal Fred Read died in the The itrc late Sunday He liad been unwell :rnmg Irom a visit over-rs4 weeks ago and was ar-oia uernara scnuncuer tnis n tne committee voted it. 1 35 miles north of Seoul but the m.j uc .vun ii urai nei oeiween ianusa lane ana 'nam Frankfurt Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei communists launched a new Vishinsky told reporters he saU!t today. had not yet decided on an answer I it, fighting is, . apparently (i npilal for a short time. (,iui..u i, iu.. iUl muc.u.cu v B.emano site win powernouse montpai "MONTREAL (CP) (fPiPiht Eight inches inchPiTVpirn T PlCAL the Dectmber 13 civic elections: continue during UU""B the " winter. ' , T . . of new snow blankeU Montreal Vuerhard was a typewriter me-Earl rn nnrrirm . ;inrt F i , Gordon orme rm Stuart, F.i A week or so before Christ- chanic before his home- K, Anfield. William Vance, Gun- mas, according to word reach- today after a IaI1 whlch started started i leaving to the Asian-Arab move aimed at dose co-ordinated with the cease me tncatie ne maae casing east-west tension. out, against the uncertainty and nar Anderson and George Mit- lng here, Canadian Pacific Rail- early -this morning and kept -hell. ! way's British Columbia. Coast coming down at the rate of two and death came near ight hour. collapse was noted, lm-alternpts to revive him austerity of his own land, hej There will be four aldermanic bieamsnip service win run one ncnes per 0ut. Some transpor fire talks at Panmunjon where basts, staff officers held a four-hour sharp bargaining, accompan-session Sunday. jed by fierce fighting, had During the week-end the brought the Allied and Commu-Chine?e Communist woman com- nist truce negotiators to agree-mander, clad in a black suit and ment on all but 10 positions on known as "Black Rose," was kil- the snow-swept Korean battle-iJd by machine gun fire of the front Sunday. lie but all that could be ijaw new opportunity and freedom in Canada so he resolved to come to tru..'.: country. He was married only four seats vacant, possibly more, if or its largest coastal liners Into som aldermen resign to get into Kemano and Kitimat on special Ihr- mavoraltv race. ' voyages to take workers to Van- tation services were tied up. Toronto and Ottawa also had Violent Storm On Lower Coast 1 in vain. Meanwhile, it 1. cxpecier'. an!couver for the holiday season. ;! heavy falls of new snow today. Waegcr and Jack! the amhulance were! r.fre. and an inhalatori announcement will come at the United Nations as she led a Differences then remained m I council meeting tonight from ! Aid. H. M. Daggett whether or not t ha will run fnr maunr AM ttar- ?f. but deceased failed cuiiiclousness. VANCOUVER A brief but charge. Communist artillery fire the centre and the west domi-shaip thunderstorm abut 6 prevented her body being reach- nating some 30 to 35 miles of o'clock last evening brought in- ed the 145-mile front line. This, evi- months ago and a principal .oncern now is how soon he will oe able to bring his young bride to join him lor he wisned to make the setting complete in becoming a permanent citizen of Canada. Being able to speak English before the attack Ihe j 0d whalen said Saturday he still Kurt Meyer, Romping at Home, Through With Nationalism teriuption to power and trans dently, was ironed out today. in tended to run. Council seats to had been speaking with uk. theatre manager. iim of Mr. Read re Harvey, Prince ! portation services in the city and through the lower mainland. The electric storm was accom br; filled are those now held by Mayor H. F. Glassey. Aid. George fairly well although he left OFFLEGEN, Germany (CP) -Kurt Meyer, Gei pioneer who came to Casev. T. B. Black. Mike Krueger sOjouI at the. age of 18, Gerhard! panied by gale wind up to 50 m'les' an hour, sweeping uvtrf Rupert. Veep of Inriian I IrP New DC Chamber iprr m 1910; four ywaW ihd Don' Fitch.' - corporation. With the j - - ' ul severul extended so- 1 jman major-general who was sentenced to life im-iprisonment for war crimes, said today, as he enjoyed told a Daily News reporter of his early life in Berlin where the family home was destroyed .VANCOUVER Dr. C. H. At Premier from Vancouver Island. Power line trouble was widespread. A Japanese fisherman is missing near Steveston after a 60- his first freedom in seven vears. that he went to during the days of intensive Al Wright of Trail was Saturday , .. , , 1 , , ! lied bombing during the war. His Canada as a "fanatical German" and came back tO:fatner fell smto Russian hands elected president of the newly. :i England he had not; '.Uiere. since leaving his England, Through his and unbroken residence became exceptionally n and the local public. Many Die in Train Wrecks and eight months ago was sen mile gale in the morning which organized British Columbia ' Ore shipments from Indian preceded the electric storm. , Chamber, of Commerce. ' mine to the Premier mill over Germany "convinced that all nationalism is dead. The Imprisoned former SS At Victoria a large window ; J. T. Harvey was elected second the newly built tramline snouia leader came to his mothers was broken in the new library. vice-president. Today's Stocks (('fitirtl'KV K. II. drill ustltll (to. I. tel.) I .rly theatre goers, will I , familiar figure and f persniiallly. f direcuy identified with Series of Railway Mishaps In linited States at Week-end home in this coal mining .village only two days ago under a system whleh he savs allows war NEW YORK W Three train prj30ners to go home alone on I v holme and Capitol tenced to 20 years' imprisonment In the Russian zone for having been a Jehovah's Witness. "Since then we have not heard from him," Gerhard said. His mother and a seven-year-old brother are still in West Berlin. His young wife is In Frankfurt. Schlindler travelled across the Atlantic from Bremen on a Swedish vessel, landing three weeks ago at Halifax. He Is not wrecks in the United States dur leave from time to time. Twenty-Thousand Fags In Week -end Robbery ing the week-end caused at least I here, f uily al Ul "I in t. his life he was commence by the end of this week, it Is announced by Dale L. Pitt, managing director of Silbak-Premler Mines Ltd., who was in the city on the Camosurt yesterday bound for the mine after a trip to Vancouver. The two-mile tramline from. Indian to Premier- is now entirely completed and running regularly, Mr. Pitt said. Underground installations at the Indian mine have been completed A reporter went to Offieben to he stage and its seventeen deaths, scores Injured mtervlew Meyers wife and was! h said once that he was ana unesumauta aamage amazed to step into a room f illy bom in the theatre" To passenger train streamlln where Meyer himself was romp Rumors of a "big deal" in sale of cigarettes led ;cl He was well inform- ers crashed head-on Sunday at w with three of his live chil- unfamiliar with mining for he RCMP to the discovery Of 20,000 fagS Over the Week-worked a year in the French coal en(j before they were missed by the owners, Kelly, and breaking out of ore has """CO. , . , , . , , , 1 1 I Another of the party of young1 UOUglas & VjO. L,X1. Arresiea ana cnargea Wim re-, commenced. VANCOUVER American Standard N 30 Bralorne 5.75 B R X 03 Cariboo Quartz 1.16 Congress 08 Cronin Babine 49 Giant Mascot 90 Indian Mines 24 Pend Oreille 9.25 Pioneer : 1.90 P vmler Border -33 Privateer 08 Reno 03 Sheep Creek 1.60 P'lbak Premier 56 Vananda ll'i Salmon Gold 02 V2 Fmid Valley 20 Silver Standard 2.50 Western Uranium 3.80 4 (hrri occasion requested Woodstock, Alabama, 29 miles dren. I ite from Gilbert & Sul- southwest of Birmingham, killing I Neighbors kept casual watch i 'helled. at least ten persons and injuring ! in nearby homes in ease Com- "ci was single, and aged about forty or more. . ; muntsts tried to take Meyer be-t A surviving member of At Orchard. Idaho, a westbound j hind the Iron Curtain, only 300 : is a sister, whose home Union Pacific freight train ram- yards away. t Mhorpo. near Grimsby, med head-on Sunday into a I The man, who ls serving a life Ke had made at least waiting eastbound freight, killing j sentence because he was found f -its to the Old Country five crew members. : responsible for shooting 18 Can- Germans here last night -was t cfA, nmnot.tv ,-c Frprl Fs.rrirKrf.nn 28. nf .r"n lne commg in 01 inouin, w'aa, v.. j - --o- y j - iuu luiis 01 ore uuny win nc 18-year-old Alfred Diebisch from I Ocean View Hotel. 1 added to the 250 tons already Gelsenkirchen. He was learning; the watchmaking trade before adian prisoners of war In Nor Police said today they had De'nS nanaiea irom wie reheard alld Premier Border worrt-large of "a deal" in which a'mier quantity of cigarettes were . f ,. . , The wroll at SUbak-Premier to be sold. Police were on hand , i, wi .o Koi .'ls now 250 men. 'f i4 nis experience on one be saillna for Canada j leaving his homeland and had j ! also worked in mines. He did not peak English as well as Schlind- i ler but was equ""..f bright and! PGE Must Be Extended mandy in 1944, said he will re-i turn Saturday to Werl military ; l;id War II broke out. On Saturday a locomotive and eight cars of an Illinois Central passenger train jumped the tracks near Fort Knox, Kentucky, killing an engineer and fireman. WIICU tile ucai w ao 11.11113 t... summated. They traced the cig- A unique feature of the new Indian tram installation was keen. I ti prison where he was transterrea recently from Canada. Ironically, Werl Is only a few miles from Soest where Canada's EATHER Found " it virtually hauled itself in. their tekg the "act lA temPorary cable and towcr .xact number numDer. . I wflg installed at the upper en(( Mrs. H. S. Parxer reported her ,.ri ovp thig ,a. taken 0,!r?co -45 iBank Manager Province Cannot Afford To Delay, Premier Asserts 27th Brigade is going to be post-1 From Terrace Mossadegh Gets Confidence Vote VANCOUVER. Premier Byron ; store on Third Avenue West was Q the upper structure materials Johnson told the British Co- j entered over the week-end. Po- and equipment. , lumbia Chamber of Commerce lice said entry was gained The upper terminal buildinj 1 Synopsis "s of Paeinc storms has T'i a path across British through a rear window out measures 30 feet in height by To Smithers H. M. Wightman, formerly ac notning seemea to nave oeen ,5R anri , It in(,hlripS th. here that British Columbia cannot afford to delay the construction of the extension of the It ste8SUwea"! ' TEHRAN Vole of confidence neTsist Premicr Mossadegh was re-' be expected to ! rti.,ll5 corded 90 to 0 bV I.ranfcP!trUa" 0, 'the .province af,er the hd an" v ;ment Pre,m and tomorrow Witim . Z Ziu v 'nounced his plan for an imme- Pacific Great Eastern Railway taken. There was $5 in the cash bins and the heavy timbers, register and a flashlight nearby. compressors and machines for Police are investigating. j underground work were all countant here and for the past ed in 1952. To a question whether he would become a soldier again if given his freedom, Meyer replied: "I would become a soldier again only as a member of a European army, not as a member of a , German army alone. What would be the use of a German army alone? We must train the youth not to think of Germany or France or Belgium-alone but of Europe as an entity." , Mever, slim, dark-haired, blue- Calmont , 1 40 r-ntral T educ 2 45 Home Oil 15 75 Okalta 2.80 Royal Canadian 16 TORONTO thonn 08 "s Aumnnue 21 Reattle 17 Bevcourt - .51 Buffa'o Canadian 09 rtnnsol. Smelters 161.00 Con west 3.40 rvmalda 35 Eldona 17 Fast SnUivan 8.90 't'her mild Tm o, diate general election 'P coast will range fronv Tlle. Prfml,ir told Parliament "t A Terrace ' normwaru uum nmu: vui. jyear manager of the I branch of the Royal Bank of j The premier did not know I Canada, is being transferred to where the money was coming Smithers to assume charge of from but the project would have ! sub-branches operated f r o-m to be financed somehow. I there including Hazelton, Telk- Connecting of the lower end j wa and Houston. He will assume of the railway from Squamish 1 his new duties at Smithers De- to Vancouver was also essential 1 forties in m Her r, that there would be no compro taken in over the tram. The lower terminal building is of similar size and half way be-! tween the terminals along the j tram line is an anchor struc.-! ture measuring 50 by 14 feet I with 30 feet height. FINANCING Newfoundland Voting Today i thirties at night while is wilh reat Britain on the mtcrior the ranno will beioll issue and said that he ex- ' ihirties in t.hp riovMme peebfu iu get uiuni.j' United States to help the country through its economic crisis. cember 10 and Mrs. Wightman as the barge system Deing usea and family will Join him there at present was not adequate. later. i ' . Mr. Wightman 's successor at' . , , Terrace will be J. T. H. McCon-, flnnfte Rrinfl neU, from Roblin, Manitoba, who ' 'UwUil UIIIIKf I'venlies at night. J Forecast I Mast region Cloudy J-wors today and tomor-? change In tempera-r'lul south (201 today, , i Indian had to September 30 ST. JOHN'S, Newfoundland pl.0Vi(Sed $,50o toward the cost Newfoundland is voting today in of the tram lme and other nec. another general provincial elec- essary installations. The estl-t'on. mate is that Indian's total con- Premier Joseph Smallwood tribution to capital cost will oe and his Liberal followers seek irom $125,000 to $150,000. Sil-re-election. The main opposi- bak-Premier has furnished all eyed and 41 years old, disclosed ; that the Royal Canadian Air j Force plane which flew himi home from Canada plowed into a farm field' in landing outside the airport near Hanover where! the 27th Brigade is now concen- j trating. He said the tires were I knocked off but there were no ; serious injuries. i Giant, Yellowknife God's Lake Hardrock Harrlcana Heva .Tarknlfe .Tn'ipf, Quebec Tittle Long Lac I.vnx .10 .35 .13 .07-'';, .1034 .06 "4 .40 .7614 .11 win be arriving at Terrace at the no lonmlit.- u.-p.ct. i95i Disease Threat first of next week Lows 1 ujuigni ana . , . ! tion come from Progressive the tram line equipment and is Disrupted i,CIulH.. Hti at,nn mf Charles Akenhead, branch manager at Smithers, remains there. ROVIGO, Italy Inquest After Woman's Death A coroner's inquest and autopsy -will be held this afternoon on a 28-year-old housewife lound dead at her home Thursday afternoon. She Is Mrs. Connie Ward, 618 Eighth Avenue East. Police discovered her in sewage systems, weakened build- As all ballot boxes have to be proceeds will be divided 75 per mgs ana iacx oi onniuiiB ' tnered at " a central n"a '' point '" ' be- De cent to Indian and 25 per cent fjosed new threats Monday in the ?.atneretl "Jf t suhik-Prpminr mmrow-Port Hardy, 38 I' Sandspit and Prince f and 45. rthquakes 1 Formosa flooded Po Valley. 1 ' lt,OTM "8 c"' ""' wl L" "u - TIDES'- Health and police officials w ""' hnvp intensified n ramnaiun to. Tuesday, November 27t 1951 99 2 fppt. mvp t.hninianris from SDreadme in one s:eai L,acraaor tne Rest Ordered For Princess High 11:39 feet disease and building collapses. , voting is deferred until spring. answer to a call. She had seemed in good health 10 p.m. the previous dav. Miarlsrn Red Lake 2.00 McKenzie Red Lake 46 McLeod Cockshutt 2.70 Moneta 2914 Negus 65 Noranda 76 00 T.onvlcourt 33 Ptckl Crow 1.61 San Antonio 2.50 Senator Rouyn 15 Shcrrlt Gordon 3.55 Steep Rock 6.60 Silver Miller 1.36 Upper Canada 150 Golden Manitou 6.60 7.4 feet I Typhoid fever has broken out. Premier Smallwood and his-, Low Former Voncouver City Sergeant-at-Arms Succumbs VANCOUVER Alexander McKay, who was sergeant-at-arms at City Hall here for 15 years, died yesterday. He was 73 years of age. For many years with the Investigation department of Canadian Pacifio Railway, he was a regimental sergeant-m a J or with Canadian Railway Corps overseas hi World War 1. 5:32 18:21 fi'.H (CP) . trn u knihmH was at Smithers 2.8 feet More than 16,000 persons have . Liberal party have four acclama-1 LONDON The Sunday Ex- D 1,11(1 uciivra nci imuw..v. - - urn'0-a for thp Kwnnri durina the time of her death -y loaav At. past, is She was lvine aione au wie Were killpri onrl "Vinro hnnsp. said DOllce. been made homeless by floods Itions with candidates in 23 seats. ; press said yesterday that doctors which started seventeen days ago, Progressive Conservatives have , had advised Princess Elizabeth and the unofficial death toll has j 22 candidates,. j to take a three weeks' rest to climbed past the 150 mark. j Returning officers reported a recover from the strain of her Damage is counted in hunri- brisk turn-out of votes as the tour of Canada and the United reds of millions of dollars. polls opened. (States. , COAST DISASTER The 1906 San Francisco earthquake cost 1,500 lives and caused an estimated $500,000,000 property damage. f .JU Injured by shocks I Mrs. Ward was born at Hazel- arred the eastern and ton and had resided here five f-rciri coasts yesterday, j years. J