Prince Rupert Daily News Monday, October 29, 1951 Rod Cameron m " w ! r-i Have UiHu, 3 . 'rugged outdoor p"'-I on as a rough bu T Clt itronble-shttV lt- Film of Old New Orleans Adventure In Color New Highway To Far North EDMONTON (CP) The Mackenzie Highway, a vital link with annual catch. The fur Industry has also been affected bv the highway. Pells are shipped in large trucks to Grimshaw. Trapper., and tradet s have been brought closer to Peace River towns and are within easy reach of hospital and medical services. Tourists seeking new hon.'.on.s RUPERT MEN'S 2 AND BOYS' STORE : A Complete Kay Bur Filmed in the picturesque ut-mosohere of the older New Orleans, "My Forbidden Past," showing lrom today to Wednesday at the Capilol Theatre, is a vivid drama of tempvstuous love and intrigue. va Garner, as the heioine, rt..ai..n a raminiiun for ro travelled the highway last summer, stopping to view two ol the north's sce;iic spots the Louise and Alexandra falls. Both arc located on the Hay River, within the Northwest Terntoi- ' eompelem as (, t on In her mur L?.' lob as sthKecoah frontier post ""' ' Sally Eilers.who h wen on the m-JV ' time, tathe wufcL Companion v,-lQr o Tuc80n--on a M lively comedy "He',,rr Wond-.r" with wiV Terry Mure JAK Adventure roars in technicolor in "Stage U Tucson" which yhuws a' the Totem Theatre here tli-,' irst half of this week. It tells the thrilling story of two men and a woman who risked their lives to blast the mystery of disappearing vehicles on the dangerous haul between St. Louis and California's gold In the period immediately preceding the Civil war. Canada's northland, reaches farther into the Northwest Ter-! ritories than any ether highway In Canada. i Only the Alaska Highway ex-tends farther north, but It en-, ters the Yukon without touch-! lng the Northwest Territories1 and doe.sn't link with Important ' industries of the area. j The all-weather Mackenzie Highway stretches across mii.s-1 keg, forests and farmlands for j 384 miles from Grimshaw near ' mance with a bequest fiom a shady female character, Itt iert b:'ing to i.-gain the heart of I a former admirer, played by 1 Lea8 ; J 4 I . i -V. . , Construction of the sta.-tfd in October of 1910 i ...I,.tri in 19-18. Prellml- marest. Robert Mitchum. Enlisted in the uary surveys had begun in 1938 and" v.ere carried oa during th-' : Man's Outfit j I $29.95 j j $39.95 Either price includes: m 1. Choice from a 50 Suits Z m 2. Any Adam $7 Hot 3. Any Tookc " $5 Shirt 5 4. Any Curric m I $i.5o Tic ; Size" Horn 33 to 44 campaign is nei uunuui'u'u"a cousin, played by Melvyn Doug-las. in a plot to eslrange Janis Carter who is Mitchum's bride. winters of 1938-79-40 m in ei-fort to find a winter roaJ lor U jelor-trains. The winter road was used djr-lng the winter months until the all-weather highway was built. Parties set out in 1945 to survey tiie terrain for the Macken Peace River In Alberta to Hay Kiver on Great Slave Lake In i the Northwest Terrltorfes. It is a vital supply route for 1 northern industry, carrying mining machinery, provisions and irfim iirrini.rfHii j', i ,.1, nin rT TfmtV nnrl Tl 1 SI)V Al i Another factor is Kuci'.j Wat-ison in her role as a decaying ! southern aristocrat. The bride's i death at the hands of Douglas '.becomes mistakenly charged to Mitchum. Miss Gardner ri.es to Ithe occasion by clearing Mil-i chum and, at the same time, she ! .sacrifices herself by revealing zie Highway. They lollowea me imp ui n;al route of the win supplies to the North and ship- i ments of fish, grain, fur and lumber to the rail port of Grimshaw. It is also an important outlet for gold frou. Yellowknife j ter rout, detouring around mus-Kc and swamp areas. Construction ol the $4,300,000 highway was a Joint effort of tlve federal and Alberta govern her own unsavoiy ancestry, all of v-hieh retains hT 'he 1ve of Mitchum. M M and uranuiw from J'nn Kaaio on Great Bear Lake. j l.arpp trucks now deliver sud- '. h ments. The 303 miles in Alberta HURRY ! MimRY! HIGH-PRICED HOG -. plies to the doorsteps of traders ', who once waited weeks for them - to be freighted along the Peace ; 1 River or carried by winter trac-: Starts Today to Wednesday BRANDON, Man 0 Malcolm McGregor of Brandon paid $395 for a purebred boar here, record pi-Ice in the sale of purebred swine sponsored by the Manitoba Winter Fair. The board won the reserve championship at the an- were paid for jointly while the 81 miles in the Northwest Territories was a Dominion government project. Maintenance graders and trucks keep the road In condition during summer months and two snow plows keep It open during the winter. j tor-train. The truck cargoes are ; j moved on to Yellowknife and I points on the Mackenzie River j mm wh9 fctcsnt lit ft I i ! mial exhibition. MICKEY TERRY ArA i R00NEY MOORE OfC RUPERT MEM'S : & BOYS' STORE j iiiiiaiiiiiiii by boat lrom Hay Kiver. Homesteaders In Alberta's far j north use the highway to carry CITY HALL MEMORIAL. A new $750,000 city hall opened here iri'iav bv Mayor G. R Chamberlain of Peterborough, England. The hah will be a memorial to the late George W. Morrow, one-L.ni mavoi . financier and prominent citizen who left the residue of the city hall. ol his -.stale some $500.000 toward building fi numbe- of foimer Peterborough citizens, now prominent in othti centre:- were among those expected. iCP from Peterborough Examiner, r m --r- jh j ft (harvests to elevators. Areas ! around Manning, Keg River and ltFort Vermilion have become ln-! creasingly Important as agricultural centres and last xear alone marketed more than H00,-000 bushels of wheat and 200,000 bushels of coarse grain. Great Slave Lake Is Canadat'3 orpaiest snnnlier of fresh-water Central Interior f RAVELS TOTE, SHOW STARTS 7 pm Last complete show at8:20 pm. u'dne 'i a i ll fish. Last year about 8.000,000 pounds of whitefish and lake iirnnt valued at $612,000. were i A FAMOIS PLAYERS THi f I I f - i J- - ' -p v ml . f i- . If I "' ' l 11 j. , . , ! hauled from Hay River down Heard g-ecse gathciing on Lake. Mr. Goodlad is well known j thp Matkenzle Highway while Burns Lake at night and next m Prince Rupert fishing circles, i oJ. about j eoOiO0O pounds were day winged wav south, in perfect where, he has been engaged in cared by ' tne water route, formation, talking with extreme hul.ibut. fishing for some time. j u intfk -j.sn:ess-a sound thrilling lo Born in the Shvtland Isles. Mr. : I!H ' nf llm ited s of Formerly upp Gcodlad s-,ght greener pastures 1 Jiej ' f, t-kr Some residents, however, are in 1910. ad came into these parts "fh th lake and willing to stay. Heard expressed when the lailway was eommg m .mer the irom the cast, and the west. He . "t" today: "I came here thirty-five K ve and Athabaska rivers nverto to years" ago. and it sort of tie., you." lanched in tlr, -imn p :hir,ie,." Athabaska and. "l-came up hvre for three when Ushn:S n now ac. w,.k:. ho.iday. and I m still ert again. ! counts for almost half the total he.c. and nvjst of my family too. , when I asked him how he had : . . -Don't expect news until it's enjoyed his short s'ry in hos- j --g J VANC'Ol VK.It VICTORIA Sunday, 3 p.m., Chilcotin Tuesday, 12 Noon Camosun AMCC ARM, STEWART AND rOKT SIMPSON Sunday, Coquitlam, 11 p.m. FOR NORTH Ql'KF.N CIIAKI-OTTE ISI.ANHS Nov. 9 and 23 ss. CluU'Otiii i cu soith (rt:i:N UA!tl.OTlE ISLANDS f3. Chilcotin, Nov. 2, 16 and 30 9 p.m. I FRANK J. SKINNER rnni'i. Kupert Agent I'hird A t- . if Plione 568 bit tdwrlMMnl It not publltUci or dlip'rywf by tit Uw I . " ' ' . '. ' 'i'v ' Ships ond Woterfront hapm ni d" warned the unseen pital he answered, it s just I'.Ke ( pprake.. Had called at office just Lemg at home. Thvre's an ex-, a-it was g; Uing dark, and found oellcnt. cix. said that goes a' (.".runar.t'iuvt sitting. Jo electric long way with a man " "What I' ht to .shatter the peace, and are you going to do after our. . ;:i',.-)w caili to the oilier. 'What 'iw! s.ay wi'l your daughter?" i !t,r.- vo;i do..:3'.' ' I a fcc-d 1 a.k .t. ana li e reply came un- CNR steamer Princess Norah nrriued at 10:30 this morning. disembarking the following passengers: Ml. and Mrs. Mat Bevis, VSaitinir ior jou. I r.u'i ' a:;d l.i' i'act y: ' I ."i gou'i" to do preceded to ciucidat? first ncthin all winter." Mi.-. Carroll. C. J O Keefe, A. L. a nr.'- , j ,hnsnn Mrs. Sinclair. Allan statement. "V.nen I was a kid. I i asked him if he had or cruica-jy m in nospnai. n rage lor prince Rupert. ituperi. "Say oay Trvtne Irvlne and amj W. w. E. E. Drew. Drew. At At tn the reported asked the doctor: llows he'lo to the boys on the water- Alcan sites, 100 men disembark ill.,1 ! A (wiiin-T fin''' anr! the f,.ni for f,,- me," mD " and .iH n when han T I ukrl asked . . n in 10 f. front P(i al Kemano Bay and for Ladies nr-d Gentlemen doctor replied. "Just a matter of him how he ii'i"."" enjoyed the "- paper, Kitimat. Klimiat-. Ship's OIlipS officers Ullicris report jrjjuij hmi! -' nrl T Uil. rilllv rf-nol'ted v. riin '-Nnthirm purynes me .. .nnrliiinna at dead fiom pavumuma, but lor- ue n-jj.i-, iiiiin. rotiJ. o pxtremeiy niuuuy uumniiuua I am very interested in politics. . Ritimat and floods during the you know , and I w ish some of the Week--end caused damage and in- TOTEM FOR ROYALTY Gift of a miniature Indian totem pole from Beverly Jack, a North Vancouver Indian , student, brought a delighted smile from Princess Elizabeth during her visit to Vancouver during the week-end. She received the gift at Stanley Park where the royal couple pent 20 minutes with North Vancouver school children. Mayor Fred Hume Is beside them. 1 CP from Vancouver Province 1 LING ihe tailor tunatcly the r.nrse thought fther.vise and here I am." Met atU active Miss Durban, w.-'.r kk snappy t'rtan tiotr ers ycungvi- people were jusi as in-, convenience. j icrcstt-d. ' , j. Atcr having been out of .v?r-1 h , mon(.n under-1 i -U!,.i. T oln,irnd ''I'm (rlarl 220 Sixth St ::omeone approves." sh-e said, and Kincolith Girl Dies in South going annual overhaul. Union I steamer Camosun will return; here next Sunday on her regular Vancouver-Prince Rupert-Alice Aim-tlewart route. The steamer Cotjuitlam, which has been re when.suEuesied she had figure to wear them. "Only from the iront. I think," was reply. A nlace for evervthing. and l.i., i., U.. nliD " T if in T5,-i.Tfii,,ir nnrlh Ihn hllltv flf lieving llCVillft on Oil the 111C run, iuii, win De wnn- t. i v 1 1 1 ii 1 ill iv. . ... Lt: ii in" t, ..-j.... ... , - ine .i. ii.tin.-i su vr.i uiit.aLioii ui iiumc iiira .Yumi uaiiki' nrawn r iii-r uyciiioiu. for man or small family moving , Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Stewart j Coquitlam, with Capt. John Bo - j on jobs and so thinks Jack lrrarik. of Kincolith arrived in the city drn jn command. arrived in port whe has made one. home, lor en the Coquitlam yesterday at-i 3 30 yesterday afternoon from MONAMEL High Gloss Paint Best for ALL vear. "Ten dora- 1 etnee a yi ar. ! trnom fiom the soutn. me Vancouver and sailed at 11 p m tor Alice Arm and Stewart warm in winter, ar.rl cool in rhi'd died a few days ago in funeral will jiiMuc- ii ; the coming thing for I Vancouver. The up !. jre, and my guests here : take place here. 1 whence she will return here to- morrow morning to sail south at iv on. The Chilcotin, Capt. James IhunV-i. arrived at 6 o'clock last i evening from Masset Inlet points I and sailed at 8 p.m. for Vancou-1 vp- Passengers landing here agrrc. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Earl are p.oin1; to buy one for themselves soon. These .cupboa'tls open and mak? a bedroom, and Haines Cut-off to Close This Week i from the Coquitlam from Van ve c:u!d sleep four. "You should cut off the bottom of yotrr co;t f;r up here," said I to traveller from Vancouver caught in w:intrv weather, who h mm 1 JUNEAU The Haines Cutoff couver and waypoints were Dr. R. h. Ball. Miss Flora Ball, Miss is scheduled to be closed Nov 1. according to information receiv- YourWccdwork' MONAMEL solves your painting problem where you require a smooth, beautiful., durable finish. had succeeded In niopping up ed by the Alaska Road Corn- iViOllyo Fitch, Mr. and Mrs. Reid, O. Lien, Mr. and Mrs. J. Stewart and Miss P. Stewart, Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Gould, H. Parker, B Poffenrcth, Li Brice, Mr. and ittumuuui ilnurilm? Always Leading With the Best in Watches most of melfd snow in cafe. - mission fiom Brigadier H. W. Love, commandant of the Northwest Highway division, Whit-e- Mrs. A. Anderson. Mrs. C. Cut horfc, Y.T. n,I ..,..,1 1- i, ,..,., nr,nh ...intor hill R Wehbpr. Mr and Mrs. M. when' snow causes difficulty in Beaton, George Alexander and maintenance. i S Morrison. Never can understand why all -Towtilen" don't ''iscard city r'icl:er apparel when up here. Some make most ef visit s, equipped fully lor "Huntin'. shool'ii', and fichin', of such ilk is Roy Milliner, insurance man. When asked how business was. he replied: "Men come into this town with v.arls of notes to choke a mule, and spend a lot. You can HallowcYii is loads more fun 1"'n-'(. have lots of juiry, MOiMlrrful-i'l Apples all ready for the eerie them' out to llie M.lelirs ami P"' . tilt'"1 1 haunting al your door i ..'' ime . fuii-prookinfi IlalloHrVn f1"", MONAMEL is highly USE HALLOWE'EN persuade anyone to spend money j in ui ii'ii m i 1 ---- , 1 . into all kinds of inti them to save, it's a different wiitnimmmimit-irirrimM 1 apple "tats" for in" matter. . Periing into face of Eskimo- LIGHTS like ligure. recognized Vancou- younjislers, and lor your WTfr -1950 Vauxhall Sedan u-rite D ck" McKr nzie, up hire!. resistant to acids, ' alkalis, alcohols, grease stains and scratches. Easy to keep clean . . . it's scrubbable. MONAMEL is your most economical finish for all interior woodwork. MONAMEL 52.65 per quart for first winter. Had goire into own llallowcen parly. VV on the Christmas lighting string ' Beck's store to buy spoon, em-rreinir with comulete new rin .Von t run ihorl bmi$ devvn to sneepskin gloves. Asked what he would do when winter came, as he unzippcred boots t 1 1950 Austin Panel 11947 Monarch Sedan 11950 Prefect Sedan show lining. "I suppose I shall be transferred south now get plenty of H 3.G AW No Hallowe'en party is complete without "Noma" plastic pumpkin snap-ons as an effective lighting decoration. SEE THEM TODAY AT NORTHERN B.C. POWER Co.,Ltd Besner Block Phone 210 Washed few "smalls" in hotel j laundry. Wonderful set-up, complete with three Bendix mach- ines, drying machine, and drying ' room. When I visited W. T. Goodlad in Burns Lake Hospital, he had I ; just eaten his last meal there, ', 1 before leaving for the home of I his eld-est daughter and son-in- ; law, Mr. and Mrs. Gilgan of Burns 1 1 1947 Crosley Coach Superior Auto Service Ltd. Third Aye. W. Phone Green 217 Gordon & Anderson for Hallowe'en i Phone 46 Prince Rupert, B.C. Sti wart. BC 1 A.