LIS' or!Mes DRUGS a, S IS DAILY DELIVERY NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER TAR Y CABS I, nil) IllSPATCHKD Published at Canada's Most Strategic Pacific Port "Prince Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest" Phone 81 J " VOL. XL, NO. 282 PRINCE RUPERT, B.C.. MONDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1951 PRICE FiViS CENTS ! imam uv v , . m y .OKCfe mi esitemice Oil sion s Agree to Behind Lines Inspection After Truce But Big Question Still Remains: Who Will Do Policing? 1IT:4M tCP Primmnnist tnirp npirotia- Rupert Escapes Storm Damage Canada Vins Many Awards TWo Imprisoned For 5 Years for "Murder" Of Babies in Canton t. siurm-'ashed B.C. coast got ' 7 . . .. . . , the worst of gale winds last night tors today proposed a behind-the-lines inspection by as gusU up to 115 miles an hour j l.,,.,. j nm,Uta f nf h-tmvi were recoided at Sandspit, Queen CHICAGO Canada captured . 47 championships and first prizes; at the International Hay and ; Wheat Show here. Ontario goti nine firsts and 25 second prizes; -A berta two championships and four first prizes; Saskatchewan one championship and four first, przes, and British Columbia, two Charlotte Islands. Steady winds of 85 mp.h. blew for more than two hours. Little damage, however, was imported in the northern region. In Prince RuDert. where Busts Apparently Were Given No Semblance of Defence In Unruly Communist Court HONG KONG (CP) A Communist court on Joe Scott First To Enter Field AKO DIVERSION Here la shown the cofferdam which was ri.uncclion with the diversion of the waters of the Nechako dir in ttie Interior south of Vanderhoof, into the western ;o r-arry additional water for the huge Alcan power house inn Hiver which will supply the Kltimat aluminum smelter. END REVIEW and arms in Korea. The move possibly paves the way for agreement on another step towards an armistice. It appeared to be a 'major concession on the part of the Reds. In the past they have refused to allow observers behind their, lines. ' Now the big question Is: what neutral countries do the Com-, championships For the first Sunday sentenced two Canadian nuns to terms of of more than eo mp.h. shook lim Canada fnitpH " many Duiinines t'J ineir luunna- wheat championship but won the -v five ,,. years in . prison . and , ordered . i . three , others , expel i St tions, no serious damage was re- oats and coarse grains cham-!e(J from China. The sentences came during a dib- ported. Small boats tied along- , n l. siue CAUuaeu wuaives auncicu nada Opposes Russian forderiv trial in Lanton. ," ,hhin'H,n,,.. 4c , 4. e, At Sandspit, Queen Charlotte munists have in mind to police l Some of the 6000 noUv SDecta- sa,a 've wcic. oilier o u u c r i u r iiluiiiclit; tnrs leaned tn thp iudee's nlat Airlines reports several private the truce.' , form and hurled denunciations Courvette, 38, superintendent o nace With Men, Guns Bookie dwelling chimneys knocked out by higli winds and communlca- at the defendants. A milling orpnanage. crowd loudly protested that the Swter Germaine Gravel, 43. sentences were "too lenient." i 1 S:-,ters Imelda Lapierre. Jer-An unusual broadcast of the Dlaine Tanguay and Elizabeth trial tt-as hpnrrt hprp hu t.h As- Lrire. V, Assauu viaim ITAWA. (CP) In 1)51 Canada moved into dangerous and highly costly phase of the cold VANCOUVER (P Massie White. and Gravel ' sociated Shouts the tions were disrupted when poles were flattened. No damage to Canadian Pacific Air Lines property there was leported, said company officials. j Meanwhile, the tail of the storm is lashing the coast near Masset, according to weather reports. Press. of t was called twilight mobilization. Precedents f.0' rjy-f?ur.P fs-icrwuidi heard ea-iw were each sentenced to live jears impiisonment. 'V'wSiMr.' ; above the voice of the prosecu ' hearintf, and his wife. Jean, were Sisters Lapierre, Tanguay and d up all over the place it anything approach-' lor as he cironed a long list, of 1 gun-whipped Saturday night ine, n of ..murder,. of i'omeieM Lemlre were all ordered expelled I'mit- n im hu turn mdn from Communist China: duration of war, Can- rauinment thev rnnlH make for r" ' lr lwu waifs who had heen given shel , i soldiers fighting in months ahead. j White has not yet taken the ter at the Sacred Heart Orphan- It wasn't all-out mobilization t,a"d n 'P'jJ'.T'.'l."! ''!"! e- J' All sisters were from Quebec. Four years they operated a receiving station to which were Would Free Kurt Meyer Chief Prosecutor Would Let i Him Go if He Fights With Western Europe Army WINDSOR. Ont. (CPI Bruce J. ' S. Macdonald, Canada's chief ; prosecutor at the war crimes trial of Kurt Meyer, thinks that. Meyer should be freed from prison If the Canadian government is 'satisfied he would fight In the western European army. Macdonald said he has no doubt that Meyer was legally convicted in the killing of 13 Canadians within 100 metres of Meyer's command' past in Normandy but he feels "the matter ui uiw u.ai6 -mi iuniu.i.6 j ne rjroadcast mentioned no Canadians For Europe aul .soldiers and airmen to Europe. She announc-Fi'brtiary a three-year . pinnr.im that would least $5.1)00,000.000 and lyihinc! the country had ,r!nrr in peacetime. to keep horse-betting houses. (semblance of a defence for the brought thousands of abandoned i Nothing was stolen from the nuns. They were Identified only children, many of them dying I house and White said there was by their Chinese names but Ro-'on arrival. Some had been picked-no attempt at robbery. man Catholic sources in Hong up off the streets when only a ; --vdayold. f. p n I, Uie government i The nuns were arrested nine months ago and held lncommu-i nicado in a Canton jail. Moscow Clears Mystery into being a Depart-if liclrnce Production wrii netting the arms iimi nt needed by Can-i, to some extent, her by any means. War would make even this look small and 1952 Is expected to be a considerably more important ye.tr as far as results were concerned. For in 1952 the program will start moving into full stride.with aircraft, warships and other arms and the men to fight them pourin; out of the plants and training schools. But 1351. as a year of achievement and preparation for greater achievements, went beyond anything peacUTRi--Canada couid recall. The drive launched in February went well beyond anything envisaged In the fall of 1950. The reason behind it all was Russia, The more immediate QUEBEC f' Seven hundred Canadian troops, most of them m.'mbers of the First Canadian Highland Battalion and containing drafts from the Seaforth Highlanders of Vancouver and the Canadian Scottish of Victoria, sailed trom here for Hanover in Germany to Join the canardlan 27ft) Brigade tor service in Europe. The Canadians set out aboard JOE SCOTT . . . seeking re-election U school board I First to file nomination papers for the December 13 civic elec- ' tionr is W. J. Scott, candidate for school board. Mr. Scott's term ! expires this year. He was pro- po ed by Orme Stuart, seconded 1 by W. G. Murray. 4-- . Awthei'. school, board . trustc I whose term ends this year Is A. ' J. Dcminato. He has not signified I y?t whether or not he will run 1 again, I Meanwhile, a Port Edward . j trustee will have to be appointed Korean Front Quiet Today Ship Arrested For Smuggling LONDON (CP) Moscow radio said Monday that Soviet fighter planes had forced an American military transport plane to land at x-Hffnuarran"a1rrreW--seTreral days ago." The report that that the plane had "violated the Romanian state frontier in the vicinity of tariff on the three-year . .;!) tUjubleei-'iihe an. iiitary bud-jet that had Mi.irfd notitbl late In ii flic was spending an l $150,000,000 a month .should be dealt with realistically:" ' -'"'-" Meyer, aged 42. now serving a life sentence, was recently transferred from penitentiary tn Dorchester, New Brunswick, to a British military prison in Ger VANCOUVER The American freighter Jack Lukenbach was srlwd here today after three members of the crew were alleg- Mesita and then, after flying e(J SEOUL, Korea (P Calm along; the 13.500-ton liner Canberra, the Korean ground front re-j making her second trip from mained unbroken today. i Quebec to Rotterdam with men There were a few light con-! of the force Canada has placed tacts on the central and eastern at disposal of the North Atlan-front. No significant action was, tic Treaty Organization defence to have smuggled ashore in' Inst time In peace- many over nomanian lermuiy, iiau violated Hungarian territory in 2C000 American cigarettes. The ship is held until the excise and Compassionate liberty which he ; N aUencied a meeting Ml- ...aiiraH last lo-t liroolr week In to VISIT visit hl his .... o bi ;.in to enrol women provocations were i-iuna s enuj Iihtcs: raised a brigade in the Korean war and the the area of the town of Gyula received forces. HU..-U , however, reported cigarettes are said to have been T In ' K,,,, battle seeming willingness of interna- .jnd tried to fly over Hungarian i . . . an air Just south of i This will be the last contingvnt nuuai ;uhuiiuiii.ui 1 territory. family brought his case into the limelight again. He Is now back in prison. taken from ship's bonded stores led there to appoint a candidate to replace H. F. Robins, whose term expires, said Mrs. M. M. Roper, school secretary. Last board meeting before tat election is Tuesday night. the Manchurlan border yester-: to leave 'Quebec as the St. Law-day five Chinese Communist jets rence River is now closing to were shot down with no loss of navigation. Next embarkations United Nations aircraft. 1 will be from Halifax. eral war. A united Canada backed the government in the unparalleled program of reaumament and overseas action and aid which, unfolded. In October, parlia "It was forced down by Soviet air force fighters stationed in Hungary on the strength of Article 22 of the IHungariani peace treaty," the broadcast said. Today's Stocks (CiHirtrty s. II. Jiilmhtun i'o. I.tri.) Walk-out in V and sent it there: wry man who applied 'i wuirt pass the serves; itraduated European nci-.i and prepared to ' 3liufl air crew a year; fijitir .squadron to Eu-r'Jipped with Canadian's; fit delivery of the iiiadniii-designed, Cana-t tighter, the CF100 loii'irtl aircraft factor-l anl.-, asirt other plants h is tor all the arms and ment gave a unanimous vote of ! A United States Air Force CM7 Bomber Crash in Denver p0rd Plant four men November approval to continuation of el- cargo plane with forts to riam the tide of com- a board disappeared Smashes Into Residential Ship Loadsj Bridge Here Writer Found Dead in Hotel Area of City DENVER -CP) A B29 bomber, trying to reach Lory Air Force Base with one motor not working-, crashed into a row of swajik residential houses shortly before noon today, apparently killing eight airmen. I WINDSOR, Ont. Ford Motor I Co. workers walked off the Job , today ln protest against the dis- charge of 26 men following a j work stoppage. Ten thousarfd ! workers may be Involved, i United Automobile Workers of America denied an official strike. The workers, after news of the discharge spread, Just dropped their tools and walked off. eather Yukon Princess Takes On Unusual Lift at Ocean Dock Today 19 on a flight from Munich to Belgrade. Air and ground parties fea.ched for it in vain over a wide area of Yugoslavia and Italy. It was described officially as carrying diplomatic cargo to the American embassy in Belgrade, i l.S. TAKING ACTION At Washington. D.C.. the Department of State said today that the United States will take "immediate action" to free the munkm in Korea and Europe. Four months earlier, parliament voted nearly $1 900.000.0UO to cover this fiscal year's bill for it all. The three-year program calls for an air force of 40 squadrons, 3000 planes, 45.000 men with 11 of the jet squadrons in Europe and a radar network as the frontline wall In Canada; a navy of 100 warships; an army ready to fight at home or abroad More than 115.000 men would be VANCOUVER. Harold Ding- man, well known newspaper and magazine writer, was found dead At least one civilian and five Synopsis "rt storm of the year airmen were injured. Five homes ln a hotel room here today. Nearby was a bottle of white four of ttrem VANCOUVER American Standard ... .28 Bralorne 6.00 B R X 03 ' Cariboo Quartz 1.10 Cronin Babine 49 Giant Mascot .9f Indian Mines 25 Pioneer 2.00 Premier Border 36 Privateer 08 Reeves McDonald 6.30 Reno , 04 Sl.epCeek. 1.60 Silbak Premier 58 Vananda 14'j Salmon Oold 02 Spud Valley 20 Silver Standard 2 58 Western Uranium 4 40 Oils-Anglo Canadian 8.05 A P Con 58 Calmont 1.62 Central Leduc 2 50 Home Oil 16.15 Okalta. 3.75 Royal Canadian 15 TORONTO J"ii hurricane force at the I ( iuilotte Islands last were damaged, demolished. TIDES - - Coast freighter Yukon Princew, Capt. A. F. Campbell, is taking on an unusual cargo lift at Princt Rupert this afternoon. . It illustrates the Importance of Prince. Rupert as the nearest Pacific Coast port to the, great Alcan development in the Kiti-mat area.. The value of the ocean dock loading facilities is also demonstrated. The lift is a 150-ton prefabri- tablets. . , Thirty-six years of age, Ding-, man received considerable pub-i licity a couple of years ago for ; an article in Liberty magazine I entitled "Babies for Sale." Later I a libel suit was brought against in uniform by 1954. In January, 1 four-man crew and the Amcri-151 there were 62.000. At the : can Army plane which is re-1 end of the year, the total was ! ported to have been forced down ' nearing 90,000 j in Communist Hungary. Charges arose in parliament i The department, at the same Jji n''!icnt gusts of over 100 !! hour were reported f i!siit on the ca.st coast Island. tiitio of the storm Is now M' northern Queen Char- Tuesday, December 4, 1951 High Whalen For Mayoralty and in the Dress as the year ; time, rejecien a moscuw cnaisc ; him. Miss Charlotte Whitton, i 5:36 17:21 11:26 23:59 18.9 feet , 19.0 feet j 9 0 feet , 50 feet , '?''"d is weakening. Strong i now mayor of Ottawa, and the Low magazine. that the plane was carrying equipment to help antl-Commu-nist "spies and saboteurs" be- V!ih fT wU'T.tl1U,i! behind schedule, that the planes V !fh Of tnp nu.t. hill, rip- ... . i , - -.. .uu.,v uuv th ne ami oim we Til l ur Blankcts. Inn, nrnr nipd on schedule. TO:nina me nun luiwiii " '""lug the clay. (;"T.um'es will remain a '"vo normal in southern that Production Minister Howe j parachutes, maps and a port-replaced that there were gaps I able radio on the plane were in some lines but that generally described as standard emergency (Continued on page 5) equipment. ;(! somewhat below nor- : rated steel bridge which will be i installed on a roid in the K'liiano power house area. The material was brought here j by rail from Walkerville, Ontario, j and occupied tour flat cars. ! The ens weie run alongside ! the ship on the railway spur i which was built there during the Chinese Communists Take Island off Yalu-Athabaskan in Fight nc north. f Hie far ! GAI.K WA ARNING Coast Region Gale cwtinued. Cloudy with :;t lowers todav and Athona 08 Amaque 22 Beattle .20 Bevcourt 58 Buffalo Canadian 18 Consol. Smelters .-.,.174.00 Conwest 3.60 Donalda 38 Eldona 17 East Sullivan 9.15 Giant Yellowknife .0.75 ! Nomination papers of Harold S. Whalen for the mayoralty were filed this afternoon at the i office of the city clerk. f Giving the occupation of an I agent, Mr. Whalen is proposed ' by C. G. Ham and seconded by i E. D. Forward. He is the first mayoralty can- 1 ! riidate in the field. j j Mayor H. F. Glassey has an- i 1 nounced he will seek re-election j and H. M. Daggett has resigned ; as alderman to be a candidate for the chief magistracy. j j Last " week Douglas Frlzzell Intimated he might also be in ; i the field. ! WASHINGTON, D.C. (CP)-A Chinese am-j war. .... , , ' The Yukon Princess will mil out- -ii j.. phibious force drove South Korean guerrillas off an thls evening tor Kemano after island near the mouth of the Yalu River Friday in 'completing the lift. - , .. , , . Southbound the vessel will call I lomorrow. Little change .fWalure. Wind South-1'. decreasing to 25 by - Low tonight and high "JW -At Port W., C.,ri Pigs and Hens May Have Helped to Reduce Living OTTAWA (CP) Pigs and hens are helping to apply the brakes to the record climb in living costs. With pork and eggs now reaching peak production. tace ot opposition 01 iour united rsauons warsnipsUt Butedaie to load iso tons of , v. u untiu 'IU Prince Rupert, 30 including; the Canadian destroyer Athabaskan. fish meal for Vancouver and at rV.an Bq!U tn taW-a nn 90A Inni Athabaskan, along with the.,,,' for Powell River. British cruiser Ceylon and the ( - destroyer Cockade, threw gun- j ...... .35 .14 07ij 10 06 45 11 God's Lake Hardrock Harricana Heva Jacknife Joliet Quebec Lynx Land Home prices of the two items have eased. Lower pork and egg prices are I fire at the Reds and evacuated between 300 and 400 South ' Koreans. helping to take most of the steam lout of September's cost of living 1 index rise. I How successful the hens and I ' Wy Turkeys ''Mt-VAUT are pleased to """ie the winners of three J lurkeyg at the store Saturday, ' 'uiky numbers are 1132. J ;I"1 6536. lu,t holders of these num-? Wesent themselves at the ; anil answer a simple they wni have the V rr Christmas. crus!omMs ere"uj From Korea (jdin lYldintdined Seattle Tneum ted : States transport, Gen. Simon B. Customs and excise collections Buckner, carrying 116 Canadian at the port of Prince Rupert for i soldiers home from the Korean the month of November this ! wal. , docked here Saturday, year totalled $51,98.13 compared Most nf tne soldiers, home on Madsen Red Lake 2.00 McKenzie Red Lake 46 McLeod Cockshutt 2.68 Moneta 29''4 Negus 65 Nnranda 77.50 Louvlcourt 41 Fickle Crow 1.65 San Antonio 2 55 Enemy artillery on nearby islands countered the Allied naval fire. One man aboard the Cockade ' was killed by a Red shell. There were no reports of other casualties aboard the warships. The North Korean radio Parked Car Hit, . Badly Damaged RCMP' here are investigating a collision Saturday night In which a parked car was "badly damaged. Owners of either vehicle have not yet been Identic ,. fipJ The damaged vehicle was parked cn Second Aenue Wft. between Seventh and Eighth Street, when apparently a passing vehicle sldeswiped It, ripping off a fender and part of the liooii. pigs were in October will be' disclosed tomorrow when the Bureau of Statistics issues its latest survey of prices barometer. During September the index made the smallest climb in five months six-tenths of a point, to a peak of 190.4. This compared with a record monthly climb nf Golden Gate Span Closed by Storm SAN FRANCISCO Gale of 100 miles pvr hour which pounded the San Francisco Bay area during the week-end caused the Golden Gate bridge to sway and jump. The bridge swung as much as twelve feet and, while engineers decided that, It had not been damaged, it, was ordered closed for a time. , I with $47,671 J8 In the samo ' rnl.itiiin leave, are members of claimed tiwiav that. th rmnmu. I '7 from Fr Friday has not Senator Rouyn 15 Shenit, Gordon 3 90 Ste p Rock fis Silver Miller 1.3S Upper Canada 1 .58 Golden Manitou 6.75 r "n j month last year. ! the Princess Patricia's CnmU!Uin . nists had recaptured Taehva I The. revenue for 1 031 In dale ' LIkIi' Infiintl-y. I l.slmd. 70 miles northwest ol aggregates $022,898.72, a sub-: the C n a d.l a n were kept. Fyangyang, and killed an entire tantial increase over $5'.8.68452 aboard until their eastbtmnd garrison of 500 American anri I in the first 11 months of 1950. j train was ready lo leave Sunday. South Korean troops. failed for. Please j 4 5 points in February. The Index is based on 1935-39 ' p: ices equalling 100. uur niiniliers. I