Prince Ruoert Dailv News Thursday. December 6. 1951 MineMachinervSvatIon ArY From Gt. Britain Christmas Sale Gyros Hear Dam Account N'erhako Diversion Phase Of Alcan Project Described Prince Rupert Gyro Club heard Divisional Home League secretary, Mrs. Major Poulton opened the tea and sale which was held in the Salvation Army Citadel Wednesday afternoon. In spite of the wintry weather YEAR IN REVIEW . : Canucks in Korea Add New Chapter To Canada's Honor OTTAWA (CP) Canadian troops went into battle in l)t.'l for the first since the Second World War, in defence of the principles on which the United Na Basis will be 6.000 tons per year of Group 3 fibio, officials ivpoit. There will be a small production :if hand-cobbed crude and an additional production of Group 4 fibres. Further lest work is required to estimate the .quantity of the latter. Preliminary milling and spinning tests haw1 been completed on tiie fibre from the smface value and indicate an 8'; recovery of spinning prrades low in magnetic content 1 1.0-1.5''! . there was a good turnout of ; patrons to enjoy the tea and to :4a. Select Christmas gilts from the -array of work offered. In the cosy hall which wast Bulkley Valley Collieries are awaiting the arrival of new ftiin-ing machinery and equipment from Britain for Installation at the mine on Goat Creek near Telkwa which Is being expanded to meet the demands of the Columbia Cellulose Co. pulp mill here for fuel. A new pit, which will VKxIuce 130 tons of coal dally for Columbia Cellulose, s being de- I veloped. f Bulkley Valley Collieries are also continuing operations in a 50-ton domestic pit from which truckers haul fuel as far west . as Hazeiton arul a far east as Burns Lake. ' ..... graced by colorful enrysanthe-' mums the guests were received by Mrs. Senior Captain O Oys-tryk. I Cashier wan Mrs. C. Smith. ! Servlteurs for the tea we-e i B.C. Asbestos By Next Year Announcement is made by (.'it In r Asbestos Corp, thut production plans are being drawn arid mining and milling eqiup-n.cnt ordered with the objective of placing the company's Mc-Dumi' asbestos properly in pro-dcrtii.n ' by Dec. 1, lto2. Layaway DISCOUh ON ALL an Interesting first hand account ai luncheon yesterday of the irreat, Alcan water diversion and! dam project southwest of Van-crhcof which will be the key toj the whole new aluminum smelt- j iiiR industry at Kitimat, eighty j m'les youth of Prince Rupert. ! It all hinges on the Nechakoj ! water project, said William : Ciuickshank general agent, pas-.vei.ger. department, Canadian i National Railways, Prince Ru- j ' pert. who recently visited the A.iil. there would be no great new ; lake to ;)rovi(.,' the water, no power and no aluminum plant. I I "J here are irw (138 employees! I 'ill ih' lnm site. Mr C'ruiek.shank i revealed. They are aeeommo- I j juaieii in an ULi'a-modei n ramp j with all the amenit.. s. He told i I ol Ihe millions of dollars worth j ii.f equipmeni, which are stoied; wre ioi'Mulinty ihe tfrtat heated Prince Rupert Rotary Club was! ami Mrs. Rudolph in business session at today's! iM home rooking table a luncheon. President Fred Scad- presided over by Mrs. M Wakj-di n was in the chair over a r.ood i (Uile and Mrs. j. l.lnney. New Zealand and Indian troops actually materialised. Thr Patricias, since they were the first Canadians into Korea, wire picked as the fit st unit to leave there under a rotation plan announced in August on the basis that no soldier should serve in that tli.'atre more than one year u" possible and. above all, no more than one winter. As hundreds of the 2nd Battalion Patricias started moving homeward late in the year, men of the' 1st Battalion leached Koieu fiom Canada to take their plaf.-s. Decision to use paratroopers of the 23rd Aairborne Hrluadc in Canada to replace the men in Korea was announced a'oiiK with tiie rotation plan. The only battalion affected fjy the rotation plan this winter however is the 1'alrlcias. Tin' Kuclid trucks which shuttled i .lack and forth ulong a network' .1 nads at various levels, carry- iufc rock, gravel, earth and sand. a gr- at fleai of which was ob- lained ii'ully as the work pro-It reeded anil which was stored in This Week Only GEORGE COOK U PRINCE RlPERT and TERRACE tions is lounnwl. The first Canadians to die in action while their country re-i mained technically at peace died in Korea late last winter. Ollr -rs died under the U.N. banner through the spring, in the savaee Chinese offensive of lute April, and through the Jong, dull summer and fall while the armistice talkers wrangled and an uneasy mixture of lethargy and violence held sway in the hills. As the year drew to a close, the number killed oxeetded 100. By world war .standards, the rust was not great numerically, but it.': toll ul feels home in cities, towns and hamlets across the ccmitry. The dead and wounded came irom the 2ft h Brigade, the special force formation raisvd in mid-1950 for U.N. service and united, for battle in Korea HlSt Mav after one butlalion the 2nd Battalion of the Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infancy- had fought alone for several months. The Navy's destroyer flotilla served off the Korea coasts through the year without battle casualties, its three warships alternately escort ing aircraft carrier? and ranging the shores for bombardments of enemy troops and installations. It took five deustroyors to keep three serving off Korea. The five, relieving one another on a fairly regular schedule, were Cayuga, Athabaskan, Sioux, Nootka and Huron. The Air Force's 428 Transport Squadron mnvd its base from McChord Field, Wash., back to! Montreal's Dorval ai'port in June I but kept flying the trans-Pacific I airlift as if has since July, 1950,1 without a major accident or loss 1 life despite thousands of has- ' attendiinci; of memlrcis. 'uV' f V Mrs. W. llinms, Mrs. A. Thonin- j SOii and Mrs. B. Eri-lison. Pre- paring the refreshment were I Mr J. Wlikie. Mrs. R. Srherk In cliarge of the needlework .11 out 7" Matured (ind Bottled in Eiudaiid Jl . NAVY 'i,T i vul, la Will niiii i t immiK ii'iine m tllc spring - from the 2nd Battal ion oi tne Koyai Canadian neni-ment and the 2nd Battalion of the famed Van Ijoos, the K-iyal 23nd Regiment which in Novcm-bci lor five days bore the brunt of Chinese Communist assaults on a vital ridKetop posit iun 40 miles north of Seoul. The Canadian brigade In Korea added new honors to Canada's great battle records, and from all indications more than lived up tc Canada's proud military tradi-t'ons. In the v.oids of MaJ.-Gen. A. J. h. Cassvls, O.C. of the 1st Ccmmonwealih Division, the Canadians have been ' tnaitnifi-cent.'' New Volumes For Library D.snr-y "Straw Man." Ilobart - "Sri pent-Wreathed Staft." Lawrcnt "The Picture Wln- dow." Mr n'.artftt -"The Cruel Sea " Stiferl- The D;ctor of Mercy" Fhcpard 'Jenkins' Ear." Slaughter "Road to Bith-ynia " Smith "O' the Brave Music' Stevenson - "W inter aild R'-ugh Weather." Van Every "Captive Witch." Wallari "The Wai.dt-rer." Westrotl -"Captain Barney." Yenni "Spellbound Village." I c. t at--. her, , --"'iun """". hert. r. r,n si'. lur 11, - " '"''"l n BELSAu I II HEAPS WATERi7J : jj Give I! Electrical '5 ; G. E. i v I G E. Iron, . Jg ! and i i S : y G.F. HeoHnq Pods j G.I. Toasters jj I1 11.95 Ml fi.F. Wosher with Doily Difjper Jgj! ; Sondwich i Toosterj JJ' '5 Bobv Bottle : Warmers ' J : Hciiron Beech il rWxce 28. i ' Homilron Beeelt ; Mixer ' i Sunbcom Mixer H; Northern II Power Co. C Phone 2U !''' S Prince Rupert. U Slrwart. BC. is.Miix: .J.l.Jil, . . Fill Ihr ) nmutrs comfy styles they'll .f. i:.t ardous flying hours. Recently added books to the There were at various times Public Library heu include the during the war indications that following: U.N. countries might be asked Alln Tne Doctor in foi greater contributions but skin" Canada's share appeared to have Ames ' Forever Tomorrow." levelled off with this three-edged A.srh "Moses." commitment, involving possibly Barnes -"With All My Heart." 8,500 men in the theatre of oper- I De I.a Roche "R e n n y's r.Hnrie nl..o tttmic-.mrl,. F .I l.cl-c O , . 1 , t r. i IP ? (Dick, " KNITWEAR I pieat stockpiles. Vast engineering feats, involving comp.ex organization, were the damming the canyon and the hills above which w.ue being Fheered of all i'jose muterials for the ;oliil lou.tJatioyj, against rock walls. The deadline for the dam project, Mr. Crtickshank said, was to be November of next year. Then it would takj three years to fill the great basin of water tc be created by the diversion of the Nechako River across the divide leading to the Kemano power house. Mr. Cruirkshank illustrated his address with a number of graphic 1 on-the-spot recently-taken ihotographs. President E. D. Forward was in the chair and guests were Jack btanstield and Ted uuthbertson. In view of the forthcoming departure frum th3 city of President-elect Grant Stewart, the ci club decided to elevate Vice-1 resident-elect Marc uormely to the post. Election of a nvw vice-president will take place at next week's luncheon. CNR Building Ice I House At Pacific PACIFIC Tenders are being called for construction of a 200-ton ice house here for the Canadian National Railways. j LAND ACT j NOTICE OF INTENTION TO I APPLY TO LEASE IAND .In ...... . i.co.wtii4 lAirict Punc1 tuert miH situute at Mission Point. Venn Passage, adjoining Take' nonce that I. Frederick Nnsh, I of Twnice, B.C.. occupation B.C. Land , Surveyor, acting as agent for the Indian Affiurs branch of the Depart-; ment of Citizenship and Immigration. ol Ottawa, occupation Administrators, intend to apply for a lease of the following described lands. Beln loreshor'j; Commencing at a post planted at the MetlakaUa Wharf approach. 400 lect Soulhcrly from the MW corner ol Lot 12. KafiKe 5. Coast District: thence 3 1 u41' E. 350 feet mors or less; thvnce 6 BS-lll' W. 120 ;eet; thence N. r-44' W. 4U0 feet more or hiss tu the high wuter murk of Venn p...-,j.f.- nienee Soiuherly and Easterly 150 fee-t more or les U) the iMiini oi commencement and containing one acre, more or less, lor the purpose ol a wharfsite. INDIAN AFFAIRS BRANCH of the DEPARTMENT OP CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION. p.T KKKI1EKICK NA.SH ! , TIilI.ciI Novi-mher 7 liliit ' ' 1 1.13 2o.27j i Come to the aid oi the party with . . . OK) imi Specia 'i i rV.Sic,---"? J 4 ! IT ' I CHINA 1! JJ 1 ;J I I 4 i i II . s. - J. 1 lis JiV.f , lift I "Barbara" By saving get this HALF 1 v.ir 1 1 1 1 1 MICE PER ITEM 3 Aylmer Soup labels and 25c 3 Aylmer Soup labels and 35c 3 Aylmer Soup labels and 35c 3 Aylmer Soup labels and 6kJ il Aylmer Soup labels and 35a 3 Aylmer Soup labels and 360 clearly) ROYAL $are on. DEMERARA RUM This advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia at home preparing to relieve those already there. j The big news of the year centered around the 25th Brigaoe. The big news in the brigade was made by the Princess Patricias, CITATION FOR P ATRICIAS When the Chinese launched their April offensive, the Patri-ofcias "stood like rocks" and won an American Presidential citation, a coveted unit award, for being one of the units WhosJ courage turned potential defeat ' victory They had bv then been in the line two months as part' of a Commonwealth brigade. They had been in Koica since December, 1950. Two days after they went into acti in, on Fi b. 19, it was announced in Ottawa that the remainder of the brigade would leave its training base at Fort Lewis, Wash., to join them. Brig. John Rockingham's 25t.h can..: together in Korea and went into action as a lormation in late May. In May, too It was announced that the brigade would become part of the 1st Commonwealth Division, but it was i.veral months before this union of British, Canadian, Ai'slrallan, v " ' JJ? yf i r- - with AYLMER SOUP labels Plata SUvorware in the lovely pattern, exclusive to AYLMER. Aylmer Soup, labels you can guaranteed silverware at nearly PRICE. Write for Free Illustrated pam phlet. Or 9end your order now. Canadian Cannvrt Ltd., Premium Dept. s Hamilton, Canada. Please send postpaid the following piece? of Tudor Plate .Silverware ' Barbara" pattern. I enclose Aylmer Soup labeU and in cash or money order. Here"! th happiest woy of oil to check off your gj" thi Christmas. Surprise the family with slipp"- 0' novel'y slippers for the younyer$ . . . relaxing ' for dad and a truly glamorous pair for mom. Her t extra large selection . . . priced comfortably low- Fashion Footwear OUANTITY ITEM Teaspoons Soup spoons Tablespoons Luncheon knives , , Luncheon forks Butter Spreaders I Namn . . . i (Print name ! Address. For dad . . . i the comfortable SJ,J slippers he appreciates it This advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Hojrd or by the Govcrrirncnt ol British Cokmbi. 1: ; i