Customs Work I Derelict Ship Prince Rupert Daily News! Newsprint Price Undisturbed Wednesday, July 4. 1951 Is Increased j Being Scrappe! The Customs House staff at Wreck of the old Amcri. .. WASHINGTON, DC. W Price Stabilizer Michael Van Disalle said that the Canadian government authorities hud again refused to withhold the $l0-a-ton Prince Rupert find their duties Uner North Sea, which opera,! Y51 , 1UI j,ra OI1 lne Aasl. Feouence of the work entailed In rn untn 1047 i, . ' increase In newsprint prices due the developments going on by orl an ln the vlcit" "i to take effect July 1. ; reason of the aluminum and Milbunk Bound where she V Disalle told reporters that he cellulose activities, as well as the since bven a marine landmark - .- J had talked by long distance general business ana transporta-, now beinu cut ud for wrm y. telephone with R. M. Fowler, tion routine Montreal, president of the Pulp Vancouver wrecking concern s; will be cut down to the water u for the steel the derelict imiis. uie mutji-iiu 10 De movJ Rogina Depicted In Terazzo Floor and Paper Division of the Cana-diun E'-fence Production Board. Disalle miot'-d "bowler a de-dlning a request by American Ificla's to h'i!d up the scheduled Inert as.o, announced by Cuna- io Vancouver Dy scow. The 0 maud lor steel for defence 1 dustric; actuated the essaylii;.' the sHlvaga job on the North's, vvh:.-l' is in a difficult no-m. WPOINA iWtlf.n .liiu Run dian newsprint mills,, pending rif,,,n rMi(,Pr,t. of th Ri,.h further talks. He uaid hj had nrri!nr, RHlilt dlBlH,.t for such o. rations liiilf a down men are enw J RBKHU rowtet 11 it was nou pos- 0lm re,.elved letlers i wnlf.n S'-ble to suspend $5 of the 111- .,,, ,,f th. ,, -,, ,i,.ni,.trt In the wo.'K and George Kn came north from Vancouver by clever drawings crease until talks are held with American puljlkht.'r.-i and I r,t' ' 0 wt jtt ni ; architecture of the University of i.,mtiOn with the job. u A 1,. ...... In , a Ikensed architect after com Last week the. North Sea caut; fii- bv accident from an m lene torch and made quite i.-pectaiular blaw for a time. ATLANTIC BATTLE pleting further examinations. Working for a Reglna firm, her drawings and ideas have paid off. The proprietor of a marble, tile and terazzo company asked for a flrwtr r'iliin uhtrh umnlrl hp m- Reaches Canada After 34 Years INDIAN HEAD, Sask, Journey's end has at last been achieved by Mrs. Katie Helpler, who took 34 years to make the loiai nunioer 01 AlHea m outney from Russia through blematlc of his trade. The job chanl MVS lost bv enin'y acti. was assigned to Joy. j the Atlantic iu the 8ew Wo,ld War 574. The work called f'or a suitable was design for the floor of the front office which would include 70 lot the tile-laying trade, a lilt kinds of terazzos, or marble nian with a trowel on a Oermany to the Dominion. Mrs. H-'lpler with her husband and five children, fled Russia in 1917 during the revolution. They Intended then to make their way to Canada, but got only as far n.. Hamhnrer ' chips. completed floor. There j a. Miss Sundeen chose the. map other Utile man enjoying imai of Regina for the design. Various from a lunch box. An indepenaent daily rwspaper Cevoted to the upbuilding of Prince Rupert and Northern and Central British Columbia, ulesaber of Canadian Press Audit Bureau of Circulations 1 Canadian Daily Newspaper Association O A. HUNTER, Managing Editor. H. CJ. PERKY, Managing Director SUBSCRIPTION RATES: 3y Ca'rief. Per Week, 20c; Per Month, 75c- Per Year. e?a. 8.00; By Mall, Per Month, 75c; Per Year, $8.00 ij$ Published every afternoon except Sunday by Frince Rupert Daily News Ltd., 3rd Avenue,. Prince Rupert. Profound And Dramatic IN THE second section of today's issue, we report ; I for laymen on "current developments in Canada's ; far-flung chemical industry. One can pull out all the big and splendid adjectives about the size and signif icance of this program and What it means for our industrial maturity and for the betterment of all Canadians. Yet words alone will fail to brinp; into the mind the full scope and meaning of what is now going on. Take -just one example, the new Columbia Cellulose plant near Prince Rupert, last week visited by a Financial Post representative. Here . . . has just opened a $27 million plant for high alpha pulp production. Here was a major feat of imagination and engineering, and despite our familiarity with big figures the fact remains that $27 millions is still a lot of money for one plant. And almostefore this want was in production, plans were finalised for increasing its output, much of which gin be achieved by installing additional machinery within the present" walls. And the same week another associate of the same company was starting work on what will be at least a $52 million project near Edmonton. There, in a chemical partnership with the oil refinery industry, cellulose will be carried a further stage toward its final usefulness to the consumers of textiles and plastics. Back again to the north Pacific coast, to Kiti-, mat, about 400 miles north of Vancouver. Now it is a fishing village, 47 small buildings visible from the sea. A very fewr years hence, Kitimat will be a major community of British Columbia. There work has been begun for a 100,000-ton aluminum plant scheduled for completion by 1954. From there productive capacity is to be advanced to a fabulous 550,000 tons. By harnessing a series of mountain lakes and drilling ten mile tunnels through the mountains,- Alcan will get a water-power head seven times Grand Coulee's, giving it power costs of one cent a pound compared with l34 to 3V4 flbr new power capacity on the U.S. Gulf Coast. . The cost of all this: The first phase, $160 millions; the whole job $550 millions. The effect of such giant projects on the development of British Columbia, on the populating "of interior areas, on the development of ancillary 'industries and services, for the improvement of the lives of people, will be profound. In Germany life was unkind owns are sei out ui ine vanea to Mrs. Helpler. Her husband i terazzos. including a few bulld-dled th. re and her children arei'". Ul railway with a mlnia-.itlll there. With th Germans, I t"r trai" complete with smoke, she suffered all the havoc of thetlw aii'PW't. Wascana Luke and Second World War. From 1943!!rof,k bMi' ttnd a touch of DO WE HEAR A DEEP RUMBLE? By Charlie Knight in the Windsor (Ont.) Star. (CP PHOTO) on she lived with about 1,000 numor In one section is the emblem EDMONTON BOOM (Continued from page 1) THE EXPERTS Saij . . ray.. Reflects and WOMEN'S SHOES other homeless families ln a 1 hufe-j air-raid shelter. 1 That shelter, a six-storey steel and concrete structure, had no windows. Its inhabitants were without natural light or fresh air. Food was also a terrific problem in Hamburg ln those days. People lived on a near-starvation diet. Mrs. Helpler dropped R emin sees Edmonton finally disposed of the debentures on the United Stntes open marketbut only $10,408,000 worth at an interest rate jacked up to 4.04 per cent from 2.7. When 1947 dawned Edmonton was just another Canadian city, essentially a commercial and distributing centre for a vast agricultural area and extensive mining development ln the north. Then, in February 1947, oil was discovered at Leduc, 21 By KAY REX Canadian Press Stall Writer FISH EATING ECONOMICAL NEW SHIPMENT OF PENNY A Virginia man of 98 never had a doctor. He's the kind of Fish paters are happier than , from 200 pounds to her present a gentleman who could cause an apple shortage Great Falls most o.h.-rs t.iese days. Their weight of 126. ' javoriie fctd often is as much as Now she is living here with 25 cents a pound cheaper than her sister, whom she had not beef, and there's also plenty of .green for 35 years until her re-It. cent arrival. The fisheries department re- r- -- ' ports good catches of most kinds ( l0,;d budget. Home economists .ol fish so far this year. 'claim a savings of about 50 p:.t LOAFERS British Columbia beckons to California's vacationists and miles south. Overnight a whole new era opened up for Alberta and its capital city. This discovery after Imptr- they are coining by every means of transportations axcept one And it's easier for Canadians ..jnt when lt la taken into ac- White, Grey, Wine, Black CASUALS IN ALL PRICKS AND COLORS and that's the bicycle, says the travel editor, of the Ban Fran now tQ buy goud nsn 110 mawer of thm tannnnnnn in a 20-vear count that a one-pound can dnlUnf program in what area they Uve' FiBhorie" to powdered milk makes the equlva- only come Pm howled io Minister Mayhew recently told fent p with dry of t our quarts of fresh Uquld ""House of Commons that more I skim milk. hundreds of others. Edmonton cisco Examiner, Harry Jorgenson. LAST YEAR'S PRICES Let 'em all come. Quite a few should be here today. There are reasons for this summer's now is practically encircled by nsn siuixo iXLK ujtiiiii5 ou'i to mix: rut tne required Canada. There w.as no reason ' arn0unt of lukewarm water into mnuoi-non nnrth 41 onri -! Off IieiQS. SOUle WlUlin 3'2 HllieS nr its limits iwny taiuuiuii! CVCI w"c,c a deen vesse : surinkje mlik pow- lulose are a couple. Fashion Footwear alue of building permits sky-'could not buy fish cf good der on top and then stir briskly! rocketed from $13,183,000 in Quality. with spoon, fork or egg-bcuter 1947 to $40,030,000 in 1949 and i Of course wherever a housewife , unti, thoroughly blended. $46,579,000 in 1950, both years goes snoppmg mew uays it nuns the second highest in Canada' the pocketbook. But she finds So far this vear they are $3,000,-1 fresh fish selling cheaper than Why is it that, although as far back as anybody can remember farmers have always been losing money, yet it is rare that a farmer is seen in a bankruptcy court or in the almshouse? 000 ahead of 1950's record pace. I meat. Bank clearings, a good bar- j STEAMED SALMON ometer of business value, soared ; Boiled or steamed salmon from $099,453,000 in 1947 to $1,-! makes an excellent main course. 205.326.000 in 1950. Thev were uo To bcil. tie the salmon piece ln A Canadian flier, seeking treatment for what he considered a back injury caused when he $16,000,000 in the first five1 parchment pap?r or cheese cloth months of 1951. and boil until the meat falls away from the bone. alighted in Sweden, was told that he was suffering from imagination. For eight years he endur Steam by placing fish in kettle over boiling water and leave there until done. Allow one- ed pain, struggling, as well, to exist and keep a family. He is CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS Total capital invested in manufacturing plants last year was $112,000,000. Major projects under construction or planned for this year are expected to mean a similar outlay. Under construction are a lfi- third to one-half pound of sal Cooking costs GOING mon for each person. now to have an operation, an X-ray having proved the necessity. Eight years is a long time to depend on imagination. French dresFing is just the thing to serve with the salmon j I which by now has been chilled, And those are only three of the more dramatic ' examples, all from the far west, of what is taking place today. Financial Post. What Is A Customer? CUSTOMER is the most important person ever A in this of fice ... in person or by mail. A Customer is not dependent on us . . . we are dependent on him. A Customer is not an interruption in our work , , , he is the purpose of it. storey, $5,000,000 extension to the CNR'g Macdonald Hotel.' to be Edmonton's highest building; two oil refineries at a cost of Canada's Federal Minister of Immigration and Citizenship says immigrants should be en DOWN! When you buy an ! i placed on individual plates and surrounded by lettuce leaves. For the dressing: Place one egg yolk (very dry! in bowl and add dash of salt and pepper; whip with egg-beater while continuing to add salad oil and small amount of vinegar. Watch that vinegar! Too much or it will prevent mixture from whipping into the required fluffy dressing. Scalloped potatoes and tomatoes go well with salmon. couraged to go west, instead of j more than $20,000,000 for Bnt-stttling in Ontario and Quebec, j ish-American Oil Co. Ltd. and It is most important that they j McColl-Frontenac Oil Co. Ltd.; locate in British Columbia and ; a $5,000,000 modernization of in the valleys facing the Pacific j the Imperial Oil Ltd. refinery, and up north. A good idea. Im-1 Planned are a $50,000,000 migration from overseas has been ! chemical plant by the Celanese helping settle Ontario and Que- j Corporation of America and a bee for the past three penturies. $750,000 factory by Great West Garment Co. Edmonton is a Vanmuvpr's first. Hav nf hnrui. I POSSible Site for a $14,000,000 We are not doing him a favor by serving him he i3 doing us the favor by giving us the op ELECTRIC RANGE And for dessert strawberries meat sales disposed of between 1 PulP and PaPer miU proposed by and ice cream are just the thing four four and and five five thousand thousand pounds Bounds, i Montreal financiers and a $17,-;a thls time of the year. 522,000 nickel refinery wnicn j io cL'T COSTS Prices ranged between 24 and Powdered skim milk for cook 48 cents a pound. A thousand customers were taken care of. ing will help cut down on the portunity to do so. A Customer is not an outsider to our business . . . he is part of it. A Customer is not a cold statistic ... he is a flesh and blood human being with feelings and emotions like our own, and with biases and prejudices. A Customer is not someone to argue or match wits with. Nobody ever won an argument with a Customer. A Customer is a person who brings us his wants. It is our job to handle them profitably to him and to ourselves. Another carload is due today. Meat has sometimes been called tougher than harness. But it need not follow that this is. You'll be surprised to find how little it costs to cook electrically. One reason is that all the heat Sherritt-Uordon Mines Ltd. has announced it will build in Alberta. An average of 3500 to 4000 housing units are being built annually, but all are priva'e projects because the city has admitted it hasn't enough money to go into housing. Edmonton has never seen anything like It since 1795 when the original Fort Edmonton was 'established in the lusty fur- College Memorial Honors Classmate trading days. But the city, now goes into the food none into heating the kitchen , . . and what a blessing that is these hot summer days! Besides, you turn it Son when you want to cook, and turn it off again the minute no more heat is required. Not a wasted watt! And it makes food go further because it keeps nutriment in LONDON, Ont. (CP) Jack covering 41.73 square miles, js Spalding, 22, was to have grad- accustomed to the limelight. The North Saskatchewan Riv uated from the University of Scripture faS3age for JoJaij "Her conversation hath no bitterness." Wisdom 8:16. Western Ontario this month.; But Jack, in third year of a general arts course, died after a short illness last February. Professors said he was one cf the mast popular boys in the university, whose death "ended what would have been a bril er made Fort Edmonton one of the top trading posts on the continent when it was the main transportation artery in the northwest before the railways came; thousands of gold-seekers outfitted here during the Klondike gold rush of 1897; buah pilots made Edmonton their base while helping to open up the north; and the Becond does not dry out the valuable juices. t)rop in and look over the latest models. There's a range to suit the size of your family . all kinds of modern conveniences. or liant career.' Now a group of Jack's student Ladies and Gentlemen friends have placed 50 modern Qualified Steam Boiler, Refrigeration and Pipe Welders , All Certified Operators We build Stacks, Fire Escapes and Tanks all sizes INDUSTRIAL WELDING CO. 225 1st E. Phone Green 184 French books in the university World War brought the "Amer-llbrary to perpetuate his mem- lean invasion," when Edmonton ory. Sparked by Gordon C. Hey- was a key point in construction LING the tailor mans, the students contributed ; of the Alaska Highway and the Canol pipeline. the money to purchase the works. In the front of each volume will be placed a picture of Oil has brought all the present turmoil, but it still is second to meat packing as the city's most important single industry. Phone 649 220 Sixth St.