s rr It SCREEN FLASHES Clue to Whereabouts of Missing Couple From Kamloops Proves False BinR Cnxsby. Bob llo and Dorothy Lamour hit a nranu 1 v L new noaa in r;i n Prince Rupert Daily News Wednesday. February 25, 1953 i;venini V LC' 'mohIc'c V VOxtM TAT 0 EM Sot.. 2 p.m.. Hauu. NJ late.st Technicolor lauKh ro Road to Bali," opening tonight at the Totem Theatre The sixth in Hie fabulously funny "Road" 'INDIAN UPRISING" TODAY 7:30 series takes the three globe trotting troubadours to tlw colorful and mysterious land of Ball " In this hilarious highway plo-i riously p.ived with music, mirth J FATHER IS A BACHELOR" NORTH VANCOUVER (CP) RCMP said today they had tracked down what turned out to be a false clue in the search for Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Labrie, missing since November 17 from an auto court at Kamloops, B.C. A North Vancouver youth said he saw the missing woman two days ago on Marine Drive, In North Vancouver. He said the woman, whom he identified from a newspaper picture, work- V:. Stf 1 trji? . J'LD ...to revolt-riddled Gkkb i. i :.:t and merriment. Blng, Hod ana Dotty top aii of their previou? fun-fesLs Their riotous ride U Bali is sprinkled with a sparkling array of song hits; lavish production numbers highlighted by the gorgeous hues nf the Technicolor .camera, and of i it 1 1 I ii fit r " DftGUl iccra mm Li 5 ' f I course the zany and wacky an-! tics of Bing and Boo as ol as the delectable sarong-clad I beauty of Dotty Lamour. I - Road to Ball" Is an eliter- talnmeiit-Dacked film designed THREE Ol THE I'Ol'K CANADIAN army officers who will form par oi the sovereign escort for the Coronation nupti t one of the $1,400 uniforms they will wear. Lieut. H. McLeilan, "second from right i is r earing the dress uniform. Others, left to risht. are: Lieul. H. E. Pepler; Lt.-Col. E. O Brooke, who will head the party; Lt. McLellan and Lieui. D R. Foster, who will act as standb. Fourth member of the escort party U Maj. J. S. CrVon. ! ed in a North-Shore coffee shop, i However, police said they i showed the youth an actual i photograph of the missing woman, and that he was sure she was not the woman he had i seen. Y CORJKR i to 'lrkl the funny-bone. oll,ht Mr. and Mrs. Labrie were last the ear and bewitch the eve; It solv.- no problems, pleads no cause, states no etsc mid offers no solution to the Ills of the world. seen at an auto court near Kara- 1 arm 4 'f Ioods and police feared for time that thev had met w was Ensr: i foul play. 15 - lvtf n vm..m CHARLES V:I3 SrtlHUHQ-&l'.-', III. 1 ! W. STARTS TOMORROW Henry Seguin. now serving a term, in B.C. Penitentiary for shooting and wounding a bank manager during a robbery at-temDt at Williams Lake, was m ;1 MAVOK A. V. SHACKLKKOKU of Letlibridge, Alta.. got a severe shock and narrowly e.-caped severe injury when electric current Plus Cortoon - News Shows 7 - 9:03 CAPIT0 from two microphones passed through his body as he was questioned by police in connec-announcing winners of a teen-agers queen contest. The mayor tion with the Labrlcs" disap-was Irozei: to the mikes until they were disconnected. The pearance. He was found to have AM( 'A motion picture which combines throbbing, excitement -filled drama and an unusualiy impressive tasl H Paramount'.-: Thunder in the East." oiH inng tomorrow at the Capitol Theatre Set in the mystical Indian province of Ghandahar. "Thunder In the East" stars Alan Ladd. in another two-fisted .vl-Kerr and Connne Calvet This top-notch starring quartette plays its assorted role against an atmosphere thick with lntrlaue find violence Al:m in s PtAn;s TmvnJ r 1 isold a light truck and furniture ! beloneine to the missing couple, accident was caused by the difference in the grounding system in the public address microphone and the one used by the radio ' wlth whom he had lived at Kam-i Lethbridge raoio station. Trying to free the mayor are announcer Joe McCalium left i and alderman Cliff Black, YMCA counsellor. loops. Seguln, also wanted on a mur-1 der charge in connection with VAjhi ...I';';.' the slaying of a taxi driver in; I H Ontario, said Labrie was going TTAiro V CE ABC Victor Moore, Beloved Star On Broadway, 76 Years Old i to another town to seek employ- ment when he left Kamloops in j November. ; A salesman told the RCMB last week that he picked up a 1 couple resembling the missing A DITCH RIDING MASTER, Frank Dopheide left , U supervising training of four members of the Royal Canadian Horse Artillery chosen to ride in the Coronation procession. He explains the four-rein military bridle to Lieut H. E. E. Pepler. Call 112 That's the Cab loth "I don't think 76 years U so Labrles outside Kamloops in old." he said. "I used to play the mid-November and drove them Idd. In another two-flster sol-1 dler of fortune role, arrives in the tiny Indian province with; an airplane load of munitions ; He tries to sell the shipment of death-dealing contraband to , Ohandahar's Maharajah. ! Charles Boyer. in a powerful j portrayal as the Maharajah's j secretary, turns Ladd's offer' down on the ground that the only means to quell unrest Is by non-violence This decision leads the rebellious forces to unleash their blood-lth attack on the Maharwh"ii forces and their English friends. Included In the English colony Is Deborah Kerr, a lovelv blind girl wno has lived in Ohund.i-har ail of her life Love hits horse s and I ve aged more uiian to Cache creek, thit in one race when my bank-, By MAKK IJAItON NEW YORK i APi A bciov-d comedian now winning garlands f'.T his triumphant ptrforniunc? in a serious mle on Broad'Aay was 70 years old Tae5ay. Victor M-K.-re, staV' of the hit revival of Paul O:'o-:rn's play "On Borrowed Ti.nt.' f.iys he hasn't the .ilisht'.s intention of ELLOS ro!l was growing thin and the horses were going slower. "I really don't have to work. I Railway Posts Reclassified PHONE la e At. r - . make a lew bucks about $2.s00' a week p'.aying on Broad ay i VICTORIA CP) A rcclaa.ili-an;l in the movies. I also own i cation of positions in the pro- retiring just because he Ls hv-.hi(, hrin. mp in aht 7S ,,1 ,,H ,v,e Mit !uLal veari lug ano'heT brithdy? a year. But I wouldn't thini o! ; starting April 1. ' fx This vear is also hi;. BO'.h retiring because I am having th; , ye posts of deputy minister, happicrt time of my life playin?.he)d by p c Richards, and as-in "On Borrowed Time." If I quit, ,,.. deoutv minister, now oc- mm A nivcrsary in show bu ;:ie.-.s. Moore scemtl incii-'uant ihat anyone should cvlu tl.iuk h? w is ' going to retire. fa Prince Rupert to. 4 wjiki.T.- I w-ju.l on.y go to the cupiei bv j. b. Broadtrent. wUl race track and pretty soo.i I be at0jjstecl . woul'l have to go back to work jtead. a new position of "cx-a"al:'-" 'ecutive assistant- to railways M-icrc had no early ambition minister Ralph Chclivynd will for the theatre, he said, until he be set up and occupied by JJr. started reading advertisements Broadbcnt. bloomed between Miss K'-rr and Ladd but when she becomes pware of Ladd's mercenary attitude toward the predicament they are in she rebukes hlrn Romantic interest is further enhanced by the presence of Co-rlnne vCadvet, who as a sultry French adventuress stranded In the isolated land beguiles Ladd In order to get transportation out of the besieged city. i KETCHIKAN; ; with connection! m WHITEHORSE SEATTLE ANCHORAj. SPEED r-COMFORT - SAFETY M.E VOI K I.IK. A L TIIAM L AGI ST 1 . ln the newspapers. lU- I lrHi tit Mr.cii!a "T ex- an nHvertLsement in a elections1 000 valid . iiiiisRiiiRiiiabai) n LIEl'T. H. McLELLAN U shown riding under the watchful eye of Dopheide, who came to Canada 16 months ago from Holland. newspaper asking for tall men to! ; Wn' India v sen" play "uoers- in a production of 1952 a total 105.000, Babes in the Wood.' I was far votes were polled. from being tall, but I climbed on i a stone .so I would be as hnh as the other fellows, and the sU?e manager didn't notice the stone in the dark stage alleyway. USELESS T.Mdf cm To Bo An Aristocrat You've Got'ta Be A BLUE BLOOD! Exclusion Brings Protest m v Scm'ii vearH w'tt a nrot inciul ommiNion ui H.(' fore Is for lumber ilcnlial. In urra vnl of tlir ('arcade mountains llicy found vuht lra I of ov r-nialur- prurr uml u Wallace's m ThuL's tin; n ; y Drpartment so B urc lire i " very, very particular about licniliM k llie poorot rommcrciul for'!t yr'iiH in tin- roin-. ' I'M'IfKM fr liimlx r, Ilu-M- lri-M taking up valisahlr pa-c on lii h hcallliy txrw roMlli mi-ilil ! .tartrl. K Hrtinu on llicni I In- omiuission slald that than H)?n of tliro In B 11 io inf::i lia:K!i.sc Ihcy .s'jll. Wallace's have a reputation m for over forty years of licllini; quality merchandise J at reasonable prices. VICTORIA (CP) Federal civil servants in Victoria plan immediate protests aRainst announcement from Ottawa lh.t this city will not be included in the five-day week authorized for 21 cities in Ontario, British Columbia and Quebr.c. Only B.C. cities included in the civil service commisoion rulmu are Vancouver and Nc-.v Westminster. "It is totally unfair to cx-clu'le Victoria from the live-day week." Gerald K. Samnion. district councillor of the B.C. branch of the Federal Ci.il Servants Association, said today. "Just because we live on the Island, why should we be left oul?" . For Quality Merchandise a a 1 1 a rr'c VVMLLALC J s Dept. Store : rouhl h: on rl l into mhii lumhi'r . . . ry e ffort hhoulil ! made to ri ournc rarly removal .... 'v'ii if the govcruiiicnt tliil not ni full royaltiH for the limlx-r. That wan the pi lure in 191.1. Today, some of these low prude foresls are leased to Culumliiu Cellulose. 'J lie onee useless, mcr-nialiirc limlx r now furnislieM li i r 1 alpha wood pulp which we refine into pure white eellulose . . . hasic produel f the preat eheinieul (ihre industry. And, as the dying forests are cleared, healthy young trees will start growing in their place. COMPANY LIMITED PRINCE RUPERT, B.C. .1 Suhxidiitry tij Canadian UipiiiwuI & Cellulime i ummity, Lid. . t lilllllEiailllSIlK A OF HANDBAGS -r NKW TIi;i;S FOR OLD! Ihir rtniKf nation program keritn R.C. forml grvvn . . . pruteett D.C.'$ greatest asset . . . enitures the iirosnerily of future Reiteration. aJaj A ( '' 7 j- u tit Lovely Selection in oil Colors n.95 WOMEN'S SLIPPERS olso n.95 Fashion Footwear