~ , mULaTT Wainy i ‘ (bee ve''/3 Awd 4 is {Wings Crush Rangers First Big League Hockey VAI ‘ NTR picked P) — The grind started again last night and National Hockey up right where they ended ° ' efending ns ana ast four J k Rangets 1 Worsley * Detroit ne, Chi- ed an up- Canad- Wings . but |John Wiloon tallied in the ypade it rough for Worsley, who was making his big-league ae- for injured Chack Rayner The. Red Wings moved into a 3-0 firat-period lead on goals by /Ted Lindsay, Alex Delvecchio and Gordie Howe, league-lead- ing Seorer last year Wings toyed around in stages Dut Marty Pavelich later and final period to keep a safe margin madic Life Limits Eskimo ng Standards, in North { better lard of living has improved ny Win le at | Bazaar . the night won by FPorty- tiek- hostess « Rupert Grim i prize, Mike 2480 heels wh Port 1498 by with ny icket { w of winners raf- aium- Brodie; hamrock Fry Stra hand- by Jim m by won ok ert r Bay ushior prize ilten by nl bowl annister efectric choec- aida Let i letow eau oak rae JON Al rmed offi- office se- are lun ting lewitt In the 18 : diplomats, top io disappeared | ferry P)—A Freneh priest says ‘them Likely in Missing Diplomats ne light 0D) Burgess at who van~| disappearance, has possibly be-| joeated. friend of! fice colleague| by the authorities, Europe last/ established that the name ts of t seen to-|q senior foreign cffice official to} | vealed, Can- ever little off than they have through the years, This is the report of a slight bespectacled missionary who lived in Canada 10 years before saw Canadian civilization Rev. Jean Philippe, OMI, 43, was in Winnipeg recently while on a trip to his home in Paris He says the Eskimo has jost many superstitions and taboos, gained much from schools and sympathetic teachers and has he been helped through rough times! by government aid But the Eskimo’s standard of living still is pitifully low be- Cause he ls a nomad 1% is very difficult to help in thin respect,” says Father Philippe. ‘““They want to remain nomads so it is difficult to find jovs for them, So few live in such a vast territory.one Eskimo per 100 square miles 1) YEARS IN ARCTIC Father Philippe went to the Canadian Arctic in 1935, travel- ling from the Atlantic into the north by way of Charchill, Man., 600 miies north of Winnipeg. He saw Winnipeg--his first dan city-—for the 1945 For the last has worked at Churchill proper We cali Churchill the banana Cana- first time in seven years he the mission in belt,” he Says. “It's the south ernmost point in our diocese.@ Million square amiles with 12 missions and 26 priests Father Philippe’s first years in the Aretic were far from 1 easy He had come aimost straight from Paris And they don’t teach in thi seminary how to handle a dog team or how to shoot a seal,” he recalls. “I learned fast His hobby is photography With camera he Mas recorded the life of the Arctic on film from the magnetic pole to the treeline, from Hucison Bay to the Mackenzie country He develops and prints in a amali darkroom at the Churchill mission, Some of his photo- graphs have appeared in Cana- dian magazines and newspapers NATURE'S TRAP The chameleon a type of lir- ard, catches insects for food with i tong ue The search for Hewit began a few days ago in Bristol, the | sources said. So far the former actor, who shared a London apartment with the time of his not been Burgess left a letter for Hewit, but a name in the letter had been carefully erased. Since the letter was first seen i has been a well-placed informant re- BUY A BOX OF Jaf ton ORT THE CHILDREN’S PLAYGROUND | APPLES FROM THE GYRO CLUB Footwear - HYDROGRAPHER -¥.C.@a Smith, 61, who charted the Hudson Bay navigation route, is the hew Dominion Hydro- grapher. He succeeds R. J. Fraser as head of the Cana- Gian Hydrographic Service which charts Canada’s navi- gable waters. A native of Montreal, he surveyed mine- fields and did charting jobs for the British admiralty dur- img tne Second World War. He spent six years since the war charting Hudson Bay and Strait and prepared the first official volume of sailing direc- 110ns8 for the route. (CP Phote) Spring Salmon Biggest Fish In Weighs 23 Ibs. Biggest salmon in the Prince Rupert Red & Gun Club fish derby yet entered was weighed in by Dick Gilker yesterday. The 2344, pound spring was Caught near the BC. Packers plant, along with three others of iems weight which were not weighed in, sald Jim Bacon, of- ficial weighing-in judge today Mr, Bacon said “everything in- | dicates that springs are starting thelr fishing over ing the three run now” and predicts good the week-end, dur- ~day Grand Derby Everything counts, too, in the week-end lnanksfving Day derby, which. opens officially at 7 adm, Saturday and closes at 9 pm, Monday Prizes for which angiers arc eligible are displayed im the Northern B. C. Power Company window and range from table lamps to fishing rods, reels, jao- kets and a gladstone bag There is no entry fee ahree-day derby, All are welcome to enter types of fish caught during’ the 72-hour period will be eligibie Prizes* wii] be awarded for the heaviest fish of each apecics Official weighing-in station 1s ai Bacon Fisheries, Hunts Fioat, Cow Bay Fishing Area includes the Prince Rupert harbor, outside the harbor ‘no limit) and as far in- jand as Telegraph Point on the Skeena River Prizes will be presented at a game dinner, to be held by the Rod & Gun Club at the Broadway Cafe, at 7 p.m, next Thursday Meanwhile the last weekly derby ends tonight at 9 pm Prizes for winning fish in the general and weekly derbies will also be presented at the dinner. They will be in cash—realized from the sale of derby tickets for th angiers and ail s . A cr “The Transvaal Museum will alter the labels on three exhibits to make clear they Ulustrate a seientific theory of the evolu- tion of man, not the actual facts. Religious groups had ob- jected to the inclusion of re- ligious theories of the origin of man SIGNIFICANT DATE Alexander Graham Bell took out his first telephone patents on March 7, 1876 better : 1: and with For yowr Fall Changeover, avoic repair bill risk with Heavy Duty High- Detergency Marvelube that stops sludge Specialized Lubrication (every point serviced by chart to manufacturers’ re- quirements). Now's the time to make a date for this “Care Saves Wear” service, | ‘Glad 1 switched By JACK SULLIVAN Canadian Press Staff Writer TORONTO CP)..The 70-game National Hockey League schedule ‘opened on two fronts last night but the usual pre-season tub '| thumping has been drowned out hi by World Series and Canadian’ ‘| football hysteria. At this early jdate the ice. fellows | forgotten men of sport he are They've been going about their '|own business the last month or 80 pruning here and there in ef- forts to mould big-league clubs and generally behaving like orderly big business corporations Somehow or other, the wild pre- | dictions and dire threats of “we'll ibe right up there this year” are | massing | The usually - voluble cluo |eoaches and Managers have re- | fused to go out on a limb. Only ‘Sid Abel, newly - appointed coach of Chicago Black Hawks, ‘has been willing to do some pub- \lic star-gazing. “All I can say is we'll be trying to get out of the cellar and into the playoffs,” said the former , centre of the Staniey Cup cham- pion Detroit Red Wings. The Hawks have had nowhere to zo but up in the six-team circuit tne | last few years ane @ capable Sid, Last Rites Held For Fisherman Punerail was held here yester- | day for an old-time resident and | fisherman who first. began fish- ing on this coast in 1909. He was Leonhard (Leo) Bredal Mikelsen | Sandvar, 65, who died in St. Paul's Hospital, Vancouver, last Saturday Born in Berg, Helgeland, Nor- | way, Mr. Sandvar came to Seattle | in 1909, went to Alaska sub- sequently and arrived in Prince Rupert in 1912, employed in the | fishing industry He went to Norway in 1926 where he married, then returned to Prince Rupert where he since lived. Besides his wife, surviving him are one son, Melvin of this city, and four brothers and five sisters in Norway Services were conducted from Grenville Chapel by the Rev. H. 'O. Olsen, Lutheran Church min- ister Mrs. G. C. Gilker was organist and Mrs. F. BE Anfield sang a solo, “Take My Hand, Precious Lord Hymns played were “Nearer 'My God to Thee” and “Safe in the Arms of Jesus.” There was a] large congregation and many) beautiful floral tributes. Burial took place at Fairview cemetery under arrangements of B.C Unde rtakers, ere [enema et Make Your | Printing Matter | Part of =|, Your Business | ¢ Did tt ever oecur to you that you need distinctive printed iter fot your “partioular dues? SPSS» 2: Cea e } Type faces give you this]) outstanding distinctiveness— ]) and these can be supplied by] our modefn printing depart- |) ment. Dibb Printing Co. | Imperial Esso | he fifth Hawk coach in seven years May provide the spark to boost them in the fina! standings The veteran of more than 10 years in the big | aes will be the only playing-coach in the big time He viens 1 go in “wher ever and whenever I think can help the club.” The closest to any outright prediction has tome from Art Ross of Boston Siders the Bruins as Bruins. He con- 1952-53 edition of the the strongest since the mauling, red-hot club of 1940-41. That year Boston won the Stan- ley Cup The Bruins haven’t made great changes trom that club that lost out t© Montrea] Canadiens in the Stanley Cup playoffs last Spring and at this date there’s no particular reason to believe that they'll topple the ranking Red igs Coach Dick Irvin o: Canad- jens is banking on practically the same 1951-52 chab to carry Canadien cetors this season and predicts only that Maurice (the Rocket) Richard will break the league scoring record of 50 goals he set in 1944-45 “if he plays the full 70 - game schedule.” One thing is certain. The Roc- ket will eclipse the 324-goal life- lime record of Nels (Old Poison) Stewart this season. The dark- haired Richard has 319 so far and should add another chaptcr w the record books before the season is very old, Toronto Maple Leafs who bewed out ignominiously in four straight to Detroit in the Stanley Cup semi-finals last year, have made the biggest changes of any club in the circuit, They have only eight members of the 1951-52 squad Few Forecasts Heard on NHL Tear While World Sports Overshadowed and the experts aren't too en- | thusiastic of their chances. The Leafs figured in the big- THE | STETSON STRATOLIWER Are you on the go? Then can't bear the Sretson Stratoliner. It’s neat, vee as streamlined and stylish as a This soft, light- weight fur felt hat is a won- you jet plane. § derful traveling companion, j .2@ matter where you're going. Come it and see it soon, uae a ¥ La wt 1 ‘ Shipment Just Arrived Watts & Nickerson MEN’S CLOTHING een Merits . Start gest pre-seasor hen they disposed of goaixeeper Al Rollins defenceman G A entr Cal Gardner and winger Ray Hannigan from thei Pittsburgn farm club, for Ch goai- keeper Harry Lumiey. Other reg- ulars 1missing J Klukay sold to Bost man ! Juzda and k R gren New York Rang« who missed a play-off berth jast av lost centre Do B 9 leigh out with @ badiy broken wrist in an exhibition gam 4 raded centre Reg Sinciai; ne Wings for defenceman L: bé Manager Fr B her isn't predicting . b or his blueshirts. He f at a time We have built a reputation for tair dealing om CERTIFIED test dri: fol} eens A-1 satisfy the 1 t ing buyer 1951 FORD FORDOR— two- tone tu 63 WU miles $2100 19 FORD FORDOR— A well kep $1800 1947 youe FORDOR— Ve $1200 SPECIAL OFFER One only 19 MONARCH CONVERTIBLE - pos- sible ext: I m car ng ced right ‘2550 Phone 93 educ canal for Natai, ents here to stress courtesy and | good behaviour in their chil-| dren. 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