I PHOV nC'IAL PROVISO I AL LIBRAS. 168 1 4 118 50RMES DRUGS DAILY DELIVERY NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER I CABS I Published at Canada's Most Strategic Pacific Port "Prince Rupert, the Key lo the Great Northwest" Phone 31 VOL. XL, No. 262 PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1951 PRICE fWs CENT8 9 Fuin rn nil Greets mm Columbia Cellulose ay Sea Yields Two Bodies )l Couple nter Into Mew Fields West Powers Prefer To Disarm But Ready To Battle For Peace WASHINGTON, D.C. (CP) President Truman last night challenged Russia to accept the "foolproof disarmament plan under which United Nations inspectors would police each country's forces and. weapons including atom bombs. r. ll.tlitux Harm Ri-crplinn BiriHK Knd i : Princess Elizabeth fiikr of Edinburgh ex-;i varit-ty of weather ::iinc Provinces Tues- ;ii,-.wi(-k. the (lav win Harold IMantke Forecasts Expansion in Speech at, Toronto TORONTO (CP) Expansion of the Canadian activities of both Columbia Cellulose Co. Ltd. at Prince Rupert and Canadian Chemical Co. Ltd. at Edmonton was indicated today by Harold Blancke, president of the Celanese Corporation of America, - '- , y' 1 f4 V, A ft s 7 . At, hilt I Mil IdO Colli. 'iiDin'.li Nova Scotia ,l:iv was like Indian , Halifax, they were cvi'ic gale sweeping sea and furious rain- Two badly decomposed bodies, discovered a day apart In different localities, are awaiting identification, polite said today. Yesterday, crew members of Princess Louise discovered a body floating face down near the prow of the ship at dock. Decomposed -jyond recognition, police say, i-wevcr, that parts of clothing l-c identifiable. One shoe appears to be an oxford-type saddle v..li buckle top. Blue or black inim pants and blue cardigan sweater were worn. The second body was found Tuesday. Port , Edward police were notified by a native who .covered It on the Skeena River shoreline between Sunny-,;ide and Cassiar. Coroner's inquest will be held this afternoon at B C. Undertakers. i i s s? 1 Today at the united nations General Assembly in Paris An is J I parent company of the two Canadian subsidiaries. drei Vishinsky of Russia denounced the western disarmament plan as "ludicrous" and offered another plan of Russia's Addressing the Empire Club R E T I F I N G Vice-Admiial Harold T. W. Grant, CBE, DSO of Ottawa, chief of Naval Staff since September, 1947, is to retire December -, Department of National Defence announces. (CP from National Defence) iss clutched her hat hands. The Stet-,il Canadian Mounted here, Blancke said existence of own which would call for an immediate five-power confer blown away. ii it was , f MH-Ct! ence and an armistice In Korea. ators went in- MONDA Y TO BE HOLIDAY Next Monday, November 12, as so strong till' wind W! ii'.A not be 1 heard. Thunder Clap Stops Power A heavy local lightning strike hear Tyee on the main Falls River transmission line kicked out the switches In all Prince "'"vsrt nower stations today Falls River, Shawatlans and u iv. dock anu city power was off for twenty minutes. Tne Interference came at 1:56 p.m. The lineman in the Tyee area leportvd to N.B.C. head office in the city, that it was one of the loudest and most sudden peals of thunder he had ever heard, plastic-topped iim- V Columbia Cellulose makes it possible for the organization to enter fields of other cellulose and wood products by means of full and economic use of forest reserves in licensed areas. ''It may well prove desirable , to erect facilities to produce pulp products such as kraft and ; newsprint In addition to high i alpha and rayon grade pulp. It I would seem logical to produce sawn-lumber Droducts as well as Princess and Duke waved continually to ANNOUNCES EXPANSION Haroid Blancke says Columbia Ccllu'ose to branch out. Ship Fire Kills Five Better Deal For Vets "-q i , . 1 i I , reviewed a guard place of the Princess. Parliament Buildings, Imjus Macdonald Welti- royal couple. The (Gil ion of Halifax was Vishinsky said the western plan was so ludicrous that he had been hardly able to sleep last night for laughing. President Truman, in his speech, said the free world would prefer to take the path of disarmament toward real peace and security but he added: "We will do It the hard way if we must by going forward as we are doing now to make the free world so strong that no would-be aggressor would dare to break the peace." Truman's bid for the Kremlin to join in "this great enterprise for peace" was nade in a radio address to the nation. It was a follow-up and ex-hlanation of a DrODOsal which ! plywood and shingles." SEATTLE (CP) Rescuers had DluckeH 31 survivors off the Sixial Credit Takes TJp Cudgels Want of Confidence Motion Rejected will be generally observed as Remembrance Day In Prince Rupert although Sunday is the actual anniversary of the World War I armistice. The Canadian Legion's cenotaph service will be held on Sunday morning but the annual Armistice Day banquet will be Monday evening. Local stores, in line with the rest of the province, will be closed "on Monday and practically all offices are expected to follow suit. The Daily News will not be published on Monday, nor will any other newspapers in British Columbia. Mr. Blancke dia not indicate where future expansions would take pl-ace. Columbia's plant at Prince j Riinprt. has Eilrp:iHv incrpflspri Its' ' OTTAWA (CP) The federal overnment was urged Wednes- V : : jjrnmant theme, the stricken freighter George Wal-i. iitioned the fact that ton from mountainous North ,-. it ui-hter of a sailor Pacific seas today but five other I her husband was a members of the rew arc dead i- m'-ntloned that be- 0r missing, iluyal Canadian Navy, Explosion and flames doomed i established Canada the Walton 390 miles off the production, Mr. Blancke said. i clay to act at this session to i increase war veterans' allow- Mainguy New Naval Chief iv I ii i ances. Victor Quelch (Social Credit, Aradia, Alberta) and Percy Wright (CCF, Melfort), both vet- Toughening Up Missionaries OTTAWA 'ffi - - - Vice-Admira Vice-Admiral , tne urined States. Great Brit live admirals to the Washington coast late Tuesday y as she headed westward with hi Halifax continues 10.000 tons of wheat for India, departure will be made She was abandoned, I' i charlnttetown. Survivors were rescued by the inlay. Sydney, Nova Japanese vessel Kenkon Maru eAiis. made the request during Harold T. 8. Grant, 52-year-old ain and France had jointly made ' the throne speech debate In the 51 SALMON ARM. B.C. (CP) A i Mean Cuts House of Commons. Both supported a Canadion Legion re-! nnwl tlit lha hocln mnnlhltf ! "boot camp" for toughening' missionaries for work in the a few hours earlier for submission to the United Nations General Assembly in Paris. The first step in the plan would be a great inventory or census of hief of naval staff, who began ii-- career as a boy sailor of fifteen, will retire December 1. He ' las been in the Royal Canadian Navy thirty-seven years. Admiral Grant is succeeded by : be visited. and the Greek freighter Kather- w ill be spent at St. lne and are now headed for Van-ituumlland, and the couver. , . , VJ uuu utiav Kilt. UCUIVj UIVIIUHJ , NHW CHIEF Rear-Admiral E. Rol'.o Mainguy. OBE of Che-mainus. Atlantic Coast, has been appointed chief, of Naval Staff to succeed Vice-Admiral Grant. Rear-Admiral Main-guy, at present Flag Officer Atlantic .Coast, is well known in Prince Rupert. He' will be promoted to vice-admiral. (CP from National Defence) -juiigies n. in up nt.c uy uiiowanCe be increased to $50 the New Tribes Mission. ! I from 40 or sinEle eterans and Power Cost ,'ie will embark for Revised figures confirmed a each nation's military strength. Thlrtv-two members of the Midday from Bay of total of 31 survivors and five I Rear-Admiral E. Rollo Mainguy This would- be followed by cuU t$100 from $70 tor married. tjuelch moved a motion of who will be promoted to vice- in armaments and ultimately by admiral on taking over as chief. mission 24 Canadians -and eight Americans are preparing for work in Thailand jungles. Under Camp Councillor Roy Larsen they are learning every non-confidence in the government. It will likely be voted on next week. The waters of seven lakes and rivers will begin to back up next spring, when the main dam in connection with the Nechako River work In central B.C. ls fin-Lshed. It will be four years, ac- -fu )ums;.,ml, aboard the of the 3'-nvaii crew dead or , in Canada. missing. v; Edmonton Chemical thing from carpentry to cook-Jct'F MOTION BEATEN Inn Thp 11 tunmpn in t.hft nflrt.v' McanHmo ll-io Cftinmiiill vntjtri cording to an estimate, by the are learnlng t0 saw plants and iCo to 19 against a CCF motion time the dammed waters reach pound a nail. 1 'calling for use of price controls their maximum. By the new , The group, non-denomlna- and subsidies to reduce living nt is Taking Shape i f -. yea!, wo sa u u j tional and r e p r es e n t i n g 15 costs and to "equalize sacrifices Harry Mot Backing Ike WASHINGTON, D.C. W President Truman said today that there Is not a word of truth to a New York Times story that he had offered to support General Dwight D. Eisenhower as presi ,nn i churches, takes its religious which people are asked to make i training from "Rlist.v" Walters, at thie timo 11 IOXTON (CP) A hiitfe new chemical in- By the time Alcan is produc 1 jfV7. 1 1 I," . PZ "j ' T X ' - ;K the outlawing of atomic weapons. The President laid his main emphasis on a call for an "honest continuing inventory of all armed forces and armaments including atomic weapons." "No country can afford to reduce Its defences unless It is sure .the other fellow is reducing his at the same time," Truman said. After Vishinsky had ridiculed the disarmament plan, L. B. Pearson, Canada's minister of external affairs, said the speech, of the Russian envoy was the "same old record as before buf was somewhat more scratchy this . time." . . Russia's Vishinsky angrily assailed the western disarmament plan in Paris today, charging that the United States was lead takimr shane in Ltlmonton as an otlshool ta's wealth of oil and natural gas. Important ing power, it will cost approximately a cent In power to produce a pound of aluminum at Kltimat, as compared with seven cents at Bonneville in the United States. ex-furniture factory worker The motion was technically from. Los Angeles. one of non-confidence in the The camp Is on 117 acres of government. It was supported heavily forested land. i only by the CCF and some Social Founded by Paul Fleming, for- credit and independent mem-mer missionary in Malaya, head- bers including J. L. Gibson of quarters of the mission are in Comox-Alberni. Chico, Calif. Mrs. Fleming and! dential candidate in 1952. i The Times article, by Arthur - nut at present produced in Canada will be itured out of by-products from the nearby f 'Ties. Wood pulp from British Columbia will i-ssi'd into yarn and staple fibre. , Krock, Washington correspon 23 members of the mission were killed In an airplane accident last year. dent, said Eisenhower did not ! accept the offer nor did he spe- I piflpollw rlt H 4 the field in Canadian Syria s Premier Quits in Crisis fc ,,, j -y UKilLM Haines Road Now Closed TIDES - - products now imported such as pentaerythrltol, used In military explosives and In resins employed in manufacturing pras- Crash at NEW POST Commodore Roger S. Bidwell. CBE, of Halifax is appointed Flag Officer Atlantic Coast, succeeding Rear-Admiral E. R. Mainguy. He will be promoted to rear-admiral. (CP from National Defence) I CAIRO f Syria's pro-western ; Friday, November 9, 1951 ; premier. Hassan Bey El Hakeem, High 10:15 19.9 feet was reported today to have re- j 22:40 1 8.6 feet E'.gned in the cabinet crisis over! Low 3:51 6.2 feet western defence proposals for, 16:34 6.0 feet the Middle East. ' Co, Ltd., an affiliate flic Corporation. It Ls i '4,(i(ii),oi)0 on 300 acres -s on what a few feo was a wheat field. 'i plant, to cost more 'iOCiiiim.ouo, may be built ""rtsan Industries Ltd. 4'xecutives of the firm t) in Edmonton confer-4 Mayor Sidney Parsons - lor the protect. CHEMICAL ii Chemicals plant, ' tlie North Sask-J River six miles east v. will be reariv ea'rlv JUNEAU W The Haines cut-olf road, which joins the town of Haines to the Alaska Highway, ls now closed to traffic, It was announced today. Tiic Canadian government has put a gate across the entrance to the Cunadian section. The territory will keep the road open to Mile 32, however, to facilitate an earlier opening of the whole road In the spring. ing the world to economic destruction by a mad armaments race. Vishinsky reiterated before the United Nations General Assembly that the United States not the Communists had started the Korean war. The arms-count plan was presented to the United Nations today but Vishinsky quickly dismissed it, calling for a world ' conference by next June 1 to consider the whole diarmament question. Earlier United States State Secretary Acheson challenged Russia to end the Korean war. and work sincerely for peace. tics and paints; methanol, used in anti-freeze and as an auxiliary fuel In piston-type and jet aircraft engines, and N-propvl alcohol, the largcst-volunie alcohol used in the United States as a brake fluid and at present not available in Canada. Others are propylene glycol, used as a cooling agent in liquid-cooled aircraft engines, and di- Anchorage Three of Five Members Of C47 Crew Killed ANCHORAGE Q A United States Air Force C-47 crashed In landing at Elmendorf air base last night, killing thre'e of five occupants. Two others were critically injured. ' propylene glycol, used in print Leather ' work force of 500 men construction under 'tt-r conditions. Two be on the Job next will have two main technically called fmcal and cellulose Mort Ferguson ing inks, textile processing ana in specialty oils and greases. Fuel for heating and generating power for the huge plant will come from Alberta's natural gas well. No details of the CIL project have been announced. The company has taken a five-month option on a 300-acre site one mile east of the city. Dr. J. H. Shipley, development manager, " Synopsis Another in the series of storms from the Pacific swept over the north coast of B.C. during the early morning hours. Southerly winds reached gale force In ad New Models Of Cars Out WASHINGTON. D.C. ff United States government today imposed a virtual "freeze," effective February 1 on introduction of new models by thj automobile industry and manufactures of other major consumer durable Exhibition Head G. Mort Ferguson, former Prince Rupert canneryman, has been re-elected to the presidency of the Pacific National Exhibition for his second one-year term. The annual election was held by the elected directors last week. 4 . vance of the aisturDance, men S6 and Dr. H. G. Littler, chemical ' h department manager, both of tne cxposc(J areas of the Queen Montreal, declined to comment Charlottes when the storm mov-on the company's plans when in ed iniunc( Those winds are ex-' iw:aer will use propone i e gases, available at 'i('.s only a few miles '.aiiulacture chemicals, ' i"ch now must be im-m the United States, cfliiiluse acetate division out the yarn and the ''''. as well as large "f the raw materials textiles which will be 1 fur final processing I the city last week. pected to decrease gradually In -rtfES Including washing much- rve-pr7sWent ed as Honored pods ines and other articles. .the next six to 12 hours, ciouai- n I.. Av,Ann!ar! I r nnl-kl. In " V1UI -U.&na with the other vice-presidency was John S. C. Moffitt. Honor ary treasurer for the year will The action came in the form of orders reserving machine tools almost completely for military and defence-supporting Audition For Elgar Choir almost all regions of the province with considerable shower activity especially along the coast. Another disturbance now developing In the Pacific will ; be T. R. Fyfe. Cs -tw, .a-V 4i , singing reach the coast about midday Anvone interested In tomorrow. In o nhnlc QTlH fulfill? H tl'iO New Mayor for Edmonton City EDMONTON Edmonton has a new mayor. Aid. William Hawre- I BtonriTiON material is cellulose About 25,000,000 'ear of the stuff will I outi5,ooo,000 pounds '"" at the Edmon- and the remaining Pounds to be exported. -ds of Edmonton's 15,-""d quota will go into and the remainder ,'r ' J:ilP for the acetate "come from an affiliat- Prince Rupert. J to be made from H and butane - inelude through Great Britain next summer will have a chance for an audition Friday afternoon with C. E. Flndlater, conductor of the Elgar Choir. Miss Barbara Teng, Prince Rupert member of the choir Sinatra and Gardner Wed PHILADELPHIA (CP) Frank Sinatra and Ava Gardner were married last night in a double-ring ceremony at which Judge Joseph Slaone of the court ol common pleas officiated. GALE WARNING North Coast Region Gale warning issued. Cloudy with showers today and Friday. Little change in temperature. Wind westerly (35) in exposed areas and 15 elsewhere," decreasing to light tonight. Southern winds (25) Friday. Lows tonight and highs Friday At Port Hardy, 37 and 50; Sandspit, 40 and 0; .Prince Rupert, 36 and 50. lak, aged 37, was elected by a landslide margin. He received which toured the British Isles LAURENTIAN HIDEAWAY Saran Chai, which means Serene Happiness is the Norwegian-type home of J. W. McConnell, Montreal newspaper publisher, where Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh spent the week-end following their return from Washington, D.C. Located in the heart of the Laurentlahs, near Val Davd, Que., it is 60 miles north of Montreal. , tcp from National Film Board) this summer, received Information todav of Mr. Flndlater's ar over 25,000 votes. Mayor Sidney Parsons, seeking re-election, received 7,300 votes and George Gleeve, 4,400. rival here tomorrow. Audition is to be held at the Civic Centre.