Prince Rupert Daily New-Thursday, 3 October 1, m r Completely Liquor Act Revamped Introduced iv Have you tried H ..,.! (J,-. I!7 STEPHEN Canadian Press Martin Praises Drug Serum For Polio j TORONTO (P Health Minister Martin today said gumma globu-j lln. a serum used In the polio-: nivelitis epidemic this year, "is Canada'r health story of the I year." I He said preliminary figures, of 214 deaths and 5.748 cases "would Iseem to indicate that this year's VICTOPJA. British Columbia may soon have cocktail lounge? in its better hotels, but they won't : be the dark, dimly lighted "exotic" bars found in: ' some parts. ( r, .! s u U u ... L, v 1 ' ' 5 - V t , with bran to help keep you regular) pp. SsStai. 't?,,-fc- .tvti .! M1 mum tmt A' -, V (loasted in Kellogg' s radiant ovons' A m 1 rm Mi KEEPING CONSTANT WATCH over ground th t tor more than iv.o years was the ' No Man's Land" of the Korean campaign is the new Job of Canada's 25th Infantry brigade. Dotted along "the Canadian section of the demilitarized zon? these observation points report in detail all . movement seen. Left' to right: Pte. Roy Fletch si , Salmon Arm, B.C.; Pte. Gordon Elson, Clandeboye, Ont., and Cph Arthur Stinson, MIU -own, N.B. exclusive flavouring developed by W. K. KeWcg) Ex-Premier 1 rC? Vtszz 15 - BRAN FLAKES SCOTT Stall Writer j A completely revamped Liquor Act embodying these and other ; provisions was introduced bv : the Social Credit government in j the legislature Wednesday. It will give the province drinkui!? privileges the lifce of which it i hasn't seen since 1917. ! i, Designed to increase outlets I but at the same time reduce ! Consumption and backed by I strict enforcement regulations.! j the new act divides licences and i i liquor outlets, into four cate- i j dories. ' I The act specifies that all out- i lets niu.it be well lighted and , i horoughly respectable. THE FOl'R CATEGORIES j I Cocktail lounge licence:; liquor, beer 'and wines in clubs, . hotels, resorts, steamships, rail- I ways and military messes. j Diningroom licences: beers and wines with meals in restaurants, hotels, railway cars,, tenmships, clubs and resorts. ! Dining-lounge licences: liquor, u..-ers ana wines with meals in night clubs, cabarets and certain restaurants. Public house licence: tjeer and other malt beverages only. Bars, as such, would not be permitted in any of the four i classifications. j Except for clubs, liquor by the ! bss was last served in B.C. be-j force prohibition in 1917. Since 1 1921, whsn prohibition was re-j pealed, tha province has only , bern able to buy liquor by the ! glass in private clubs, beer by i the glass in hotel beer parlors, ' and bottled spirits in govern- The "pubs" would replace the ' beer parlors. No longer will it i be necessary for them to have j rooms attached for guests. Government liquor stores wnl , continue with their operation somewhat speeded by removal : of the necessity of signing a i receipt for a purchase. j BASED ON REPORT i j The new act is based on the report of the. Stevens commit- tee which held public meetings I throughout the province last I year after the people voted 2 to 1 for the? sale of liquor by the glass in a plebiscite held in the June, 1952, provincial election: Only four of the 48 electoral districts voted against it. All present licences would be cancelled under .the act at the rnd of the year, but the Liquor j Control Board may renew themj until December, 1954. , The new act must go through ! two more readings in the legislature and then be approved by : the lieutenant-governor at the ; last day of the session before it i 'ecomes law. ; A local option clause would j siVe the electors final say on 1 whether there will, be any new ; outlets in their areas. The bill carefully outlines that lat a a club club must must be be non-profit non-profit jnd devoted, to purposes benefiting the membership. - v Very Temporary , YORKTON, Sask. (CP) Farm- lers on No. 9 Highway were i pleased to see about a mile of , new gravel on the road. They were more surprised a couple of days later when workmen re- moved it. They had merely been drying the gravel before using it for a different road. ! sor G. A. Woonton of Montreal's j t' s. 4 A THK YOl'THU L DI KE OF KENT tries on his beret shortly after arriving at Sandhurst Royal Military Academy for his flrst day in the Army. The Duke will be 18 years old in October. 1 f - I ...-.IMH r' Jp ill H, .. MIRZA OSM.VN AM BAIG, former secretary of the Pakistan foreign ministry, has been named Pakistan's Hiih Commissioner to Canada. He succeeds Mohammed Ikramullah, who has been appointed ambassador to France. Date of his arrival in Ottawa has not been announced. HMl i FDMl'NO HILLARY of AucKiancl, N.Z., who climbed Mt. Everest, will make a North American lecture tour to tell i about his exploit. Sir Edmund F.n apiarist, was knighted by' the Oucen for his conquest of Everest. V'- 4Vo ; sf J ;v' - , T" Wfr&i staffs go into the other outfits that are not trying to work. , HlBo11 ,tn,s ,tUst"lft and at Lhf...ftMke?w"nd IW-,C , p p e r ' - " Carpeviters are --puUing in wooden floors and sidings in tents. Stoves are intalled. The union's commissary department patrols the lines with fuel and ilooct. Mountain passes between India a"u ranau iroin 14,1)1)0 to 18.000 feet altitude. Sentenced ; To Death i CURO (API A special revo- liitlnnmy court today sentenced foimcr premier Hjiahim Abdel Hai!l io death for "hie,h troiisort" and con;;pirary with a forelfijn povcr to undermine state security. In hi.i trial, which ended Wednesday, key testimony concerning the alleged plot involving tli'.' foreign power was heard only in secret. The power, never oific:?Ilv identified in public, was accused of attempting to piomnte a counter-revolution tc rr?tor cx-king Farouk. to the thimi". vi 1 Hadi. 57-year-oUI Suadist pprtv premier during the 1!)4 Palestine war, was the first of i el least 24 persons ordered ar-r-t ! cn trea'cr. chargp two P'-o 'eutor Lt.-Col. Mohnmed T. h'i harged that Hadi, Farouk, and the late premier Mahmoud Fnhmv Nokrashv were responsible for senuinf; the Egyptian Army unprepared into the Palestine war, , ' President Mohammed Naguib. who led the army revolt that o'i strd Farouk 14 months ago, v;ns wounded during that war. Ship's Captain j Falls Overboard MANILA (APi The RCA mar- ine ccattal station here reported j tarlv to'lsv that it had received; a message from the .ship Admiral i Hardy saying her master had i ' fallen overboard in the East i China Sea. -The vessel, of uni- ; rirn,lflf!d remtry. reported it was about 150 mils southeast of Shanghai. SPECIAL ON Steel Oil Tanks? 110 rial. Tank $ 55.00 275 Oal. Tank $ ISM 375 Gal. Tank S 90.00 550 GaK Tank SUO.Oil x 3' Prov. Tnx Extra All tanks made of l:J-g.nifie steel Industrial Welding Green 8Xt 225 l irst Avenue 3- VS., ., " .c. M i " if 1- ' i' -; -a jr. . ,..:- 4 t-jr ; - -1 v-.n;' 'If - B '- t-r i"1 ""V ' , .t.: !! 1..,.;- "'j iff H,. ;T"vl V'"' Nm rr GLEN McLARTY, 21, of Toronto Is awarded the Webster Memorial Trophy after day-long tests at Ancienne Lorette airport, near Quebec City. He received the trophy given to the top amatur pilot in Canada, from Air Vice-Marshal J. L. E. A. de .Viverville, associate director of air services for the department of transport. j outbreak of polio particularly j j In Manitoba and the earlier epl- j ,demle in -he Yukon may prove j : to be one of the mast serious on i j retord." ' I i In an address prepared for the 41st annual meeting of the Can- : adian Public ilealth Association.1 Mr Martin said produttlnn and 'distribution of gamma globulin during the epidemic is an out- . itanciing illustration of effective co-operation and a tribute to the nation's public health workers." j "To meet an emergency situ- i atlon the federal government ! granted more than $15lJ 0(iu to i assist In the production or gam- l ma globulin. Detailed plans have i I also been worked out to ensure i considerably increased pioduc- j tlon in 1954." , j j Mr. Martin warned against I -undue optimism" over reports ! of the serum's value In modify- ' lng the paralysis which may follow an attack of po'io It is the only known preventative agent. Mrs. John Drainie j Puts on Blue Bonnet ; Finds it Best! 'i'akv your hip from Mrs, John Drnniiii "Cl.tir Murray" of radio fnnt, and wife nf the wiHl-knotvn a't(ir. 4nitarH )r i.t xk Hi.i k 1n.nkt MurnHtitui with atnj pn til at any prirtv I.ik ttu i Ipruting CanadiHii 1ml v, you'll Ural IH.i.i:xr. Hi.i'K lioNNfct'H fronh, nwpft tiavor tiwftVB mli top hilling You'll love it vPHr-rounil nutritmiihl vnltm And you'll lov iIh pninmnv. Ii'h ho IiaikIv Ut uw, too. I jich unhicn-Vf How qunrUr pouiul is indi niunllv wtHpix-d in pure nluminurn fod with an inner parchment lining keens U delicious flavor in and ie-lMtt tMlnrK fmt I llu' DKi t'XK Ili tK liovr.t and Kvjot all three I lavor, Nutrition, lunnoim I BT-173 r Mew Instant Coffee Sparks Revolution in Breakfast Habits Changeover Comet Fast at Women Abandon Coffee Pols and Metsy Grounds for Matchless Speed and Satisfaction of Chase & Sanborn's New "Instant" You just can't deny it! When the -H' pot dituipiH-Hrii from innumerable brenkfiiKt tabliw ncroxs the land, some ort of revolution hi hit the Canadian breakfaat we no. And it'a happening! In n faat-growiiiK numlxT of homes in every community th breukfiial eotTie ian't brewed, perked, alniined or driped any inore Coffee'f mmlp- glorious, fragrant and zeatful the moment hot water hita a 8KKnliil of wonderful new Instant Chase & Sanlorn Coffee! Any woman would be jrlaH to gyy farewell to atainerl coffee piita and loppy grocimia. Hut it, m to ! an "inatant" of exceptional merit to change her HlleKiunce. l'or hreakfniit coffee, parliculnrly. New Process Perfected If anybody could produce aui h nn "iiwtant", it would be Cliaae & Siinlxrn, with ils unrivalled background of nearly 100 yearn a the nation's lending eofl'ee hffli' Not until t:iiHse & San-fcjftfft scientists had deviaed a Revolutionary new process was it possible to perfect this delicious new form of breakfast eofl'ee. Thin marvellous process extracts the flavor, color, aroma, and all the deepdown goodness of the finest selected coffee lienns. There you have your morning coffee in rich, coffee-colored granules 100 real coffee! Nothing whatever to do but add hot water and enjoy its flavor and its heart-stirring lift. Big Savings, Too And with new Instant Chase & Snnhom you not only economize on time and work. You save money up to 4t)( a pound on your coffee bills. No wonder it's being served in more and mora bornea every day. Pickets Quietly Patrol Gates Leading to Timmins Mines TMMINS, Ont. V Strike Strike Reef Reef pronertv. property, and and office office si P'cItets tlie Vnitd Steelwork- m Amerita quietly patrol here and across the Quebec bor- der at Noranda. Only one of tl.e' companies -to'""' 0 T A :m. p t.Kt'ls "J? ,,ei.-,.h-. i-ni f,.m slakg down for' the cold r mt . "If . 0? Yes, this instant coffee t j2t . BBHI mm Mc Gill Fence Fulfills Mission To Develop Early-Warning System NEW YORK CP The radar de- ' Gill fence were not disclosed fences. of North America which but the uroiect director vrnta.' 1,1 J"'VC,!")'. "imcaiea an- ;io Keep the smallish Broulan ! nouncement of the project could 'Reef mine in operation - be made because "the Russians! Broulan Reef fouirht through have as good a fundamental Kw to stay in urtton p ana now QU. Ion: I knowledge in thu' w . . will give Canada and the United h bomber attack h T r from .u the Arctic . I- came into new prominence to - d.yr with a series of announce- ments after a long period of At Montreal, . , . it was announced that, h .project known as the McGill fence has fulfilled its Professor Woonton, at a Mont- real press conference Wednes - ri unimjpeded by the- pickets. V 'Earlier, Wiere were gunfire and 1 dyriamituig, kidnapping charges, mugglngr, and allegations of in- timidation' i., ihis Porcupine gold camp. . , . - ' : MANY CHARGES LAID Since the snowballing strikes started' neai- here Julv 11. two union men nave been charged i with attempted murder; 17 have j oen , janea ior Rssauu. ana a halt-ctozep charged with Intimidation. ' ' . Virtually all the tounh action in the spreading walkouts came as members of the big CIO-CCL union battled company attempts fourth its 240-man working force I ' 'oh the Job daily. Other and big- I Rer Idle mines in Ontario and I Street and 3rd Aven ue mission to develop an early-, tests of the McGill fence have ploys more than -5 000 have warning system. And in New ! been turned over to Canada's shut down for the strike dura-Yoik, The Times says today in (defence research hnnrrl for tr. Hon Thpir ,oii,,.(o ..,.. is a far cry from I lie weak, disappointing coffee substitutes. It's potent, full-flavored, 100 real coffee 1 But there' only one vvny to uiei ueveiopment ana "large-1 erauy peaceful, scale trials." pickets are still posted at the Piofessor Woonton said the entrances to all the strikebound plan Is not In competition with mines In the district, scattered the Lincoln plan, a huge general over about 35 miles. But producer defence plan for the U.S. tion - workers move freely into which also Involves radar.. the woods-encircled Broulan prove it. Got a jar of New ft doesn't pay to take chances with growing feet: That's Why we invite you to bring your youngsters in for a size check-up at any time. There's no charge. No obligation. When new shoes are needed, we have a complete stock, of . SAVAGE shoes for all ages. Illustrated is a SAVAGE, Two-Strap Black Patent Slipper which we liavc in all sizes and widths. Instnnt Chase & Sanborn. Taste that freshly ground coffee flavor so good you'll make it your regular coffee! a Washington dispatch that the U S. defence department has the Canadian proposal "under active consideration." The Western Electric Company reported at the same time that Its first experimental units of a new type of radar system designed to give at least six hours' varnlng of aircraft approaching over the North Pole are near-ing completion in the polar region. ;; Operational details of th" Me- OPTOMETRIST , Fred E. Dowdie Room 10, Stone Building Phone Blue 593 NIGHT and DAY SERVICE Call a STAR Phone 112 CAB iLY SHOE STORE LIMITED 62! Third Avenue Phone 357 STAND Corner 5th MwMA. ill