valvcsets went out to Ikoo oft a refu-,nrtM i: have been the PaieUinc coasi Tel Aviv MINISTER it ,riTY Kinnrv minister a arc and mcm- ,e Uzi lature for nay a Visit to crt in ab'f three it u expected. A .k ik. Pfinv Rnnprt 1 if C'Ttncrcc will I i. A Mr Ifpn aiJalii5-W Hnar"mpnt. It is m tind much to 5p VUi vuiawui ' e:iai)l.:n iu ceiancse i i STRIKE FADING A " In -i.atioral 1 Amer. a. Local vrtrd to halt deliv-' bcr to the f.rike-bcr 0 and Two Huvx I'd, until iir - -v- ntaln-rd Sir I.i Vaiv wf f".rtvt aitrori, If m ' IliirraM Tlrw. 1 :i iUt"irt cl the Yar rs, ci L union, which tuning ngnis wnm , ic agreement having j ci en Saturday by Pearcon minister of that the phoney" of the C.C.L. would ; ttary of '.he Victoria T .v..,- r i i i icadcrshlp for the Wal'.acc head of the nr' iny, na he ex- re h t-ivi ' tt) the lobs. Stfe t ol the Boiler- L. un in ncrslstwl rv. nut, 110 BREAK h'C ocrnnn "'KTiSrmiynrlp r Yrk India Well on J & (he attempt 'nc roundthc-woi1d urn r n vi ai nours, 14 ( ijoo oy ilow- Milton Rcvnoldis, manufacturer, ar-' :a!1 nhht from Cairo. k from L-. flf'd Sa-uri.av nmi . :"Kirr. New-ln '-.rer hours rini !8 Cairo ,n 20 hnurc mm.. ano from Cairo wo tiMirs. 38 min er Wl.. -v iiuncy .1 ' 1I lP tl it... nd ftn. "ururu to lc armv i First Certificate Of Citizenship Is Issued Here First certificate , of Canadian citizenship to be Issued In Prince' Rupert since the new citfzenship laws were put Into effect on January 1 was granted this morning by Judge W. E. Fisher to John Christen, former dry dock and construction worker. Mr. Christen received the document along with the congratulations of Judge Fisher during a brief session of Coun uasc ty Court this morning. Although he actually Is not the first to be formally granted citizenship here, Mr. Christen ls the first to receive the certificate. Mr. Christen told a reporter that his certificate ls of the $5 variety, applied for before the price was reduced to $f. It bears the signatures of Secretary of State Colin Gibson, and Judge Fisher. Vancouver Bralomc ' 11,25 n n r.nn. M B. R. X. - Cariboo Gold .a.'. Dcntdnla Gmll Wlhksnc Ilrdlcy Mascot Mlnto Pchd Oreille T'innrrr . Foothills Heme Athona . Aumaquc Bssittln Toronto (ask) .12 2.70 .25 .03 V: 1.11 2.90 3.80 Premier Bfjrdcr -01 Premier Gold ... .. - 72 Privateer Reeves McDonald r- i-5 Reno .. ,.v.... -1' Ralanon Ooid -'s Sheep Creek Taylor Bridge ' fask) ."0 Whitewater MVz Vananda 3j. Congress -05 Tnrt'irlc"Rnti1-ll (aS'k) .CO v'IIcdley Amalgamated vfipucl '.Valfcy Crntral Zeballos Oifs " I A. P. Con..,,. ....,.-; uaimoni , - C. & E. .......iu .03-.10 .02 .12 .28 2.00 2.70 3.10 .20 .40 .85 Be'vcourt i I-00 Bnhtn Buffalo Canadian Cons. Smelters onwest Donalda Eldona .24 84.00 1.06 1.03 .50 FIND FATHER MURDERED SON A coroner's Jury which Saturday concluded an Inquest at Bella Bella Into the death of Infant Rcdnall Paul Brown, who was killed at Bella Bella on April ll, returned a verdict that the child had met his death by "murder at the hands of Wil liam Jafferscn Brown," his father. The Inquest Into the death of the father, whp killed himself with a gunshot after murdering his ron s.rd attempting to murder his wife, ls continuing. The Inquests were conducted ty Coroner W. H. Hill of Ocean Falls. Local Tides Tuesday, April 15, 1047 Uigh, ........ 9:01 16.1 feet 22:30 16.4 feet Low 3:13 10.9 feet 15:50 WIN 'BEAVERS" AWARQ FOR CANADIAN RADIO East meets west as two of the winners of "Beaver" awards for service to Canadian radio during 1948 congratulate each other during presentation of the awards at a Toronto gathering. At left is Dick Dlespecker, program director of station CJOR,.Vancouver, and at right William C. Borrett. managing director of station CHNS, Halifax. Smilingly Introducing the two winners ls R. G. Lewis bf Toronto, editor of the broadcasting publication which maks the annual award selections. Winners from all parts of Canada were brought to Toronto and introduced to the Canadian public in the nationally broadcast program "Canadian Cavalcade." ooooooooiao)DOoooooKiijoooaoocKi5uooieio.aooociOAo :.- WD A Y'S STOCKS :: Curtesy. S. D. Johnston Co. Ltd. ,ir,.. Elder - -07 Giant Ycllowknlfc 6.05 God's Lake 1-32 Hardrock Ilarricana - -12 Hcva Gold 00 Hosco ,49 Jackknifc 03 Jollct Quebec 56 Lake Rowan -21 Lapaska. 32 " Little Long Lac 1-85 Lynx r 21 Madsen fled Lake 3.30 McKcnzlc Itcd Ltike .... -55 MacLeod Cockslnitt 1-85 Mancla 55 Ncgiw 2-05 Noranda 16.00 Osisko Lake i-28 Pickle Crow 2.81 Rcgcourt 53 San Antonio 110 Senator Rouyn .10 APARTMENTS IN EAST END Carl Poulscn announces plans r..r Hie buildlnc of a second storey to his business property, on Sixth Avenue East immediately beyond Hays Creek Bridge. The second storey will be above the present store, warehouse, restaurant and cold storage' and not the Post Office section. There will be three four-room apartments and one three-room apartment. Construction, wilt commence as soon as materials, which are now being sought, become available NORTHERN AND CENTRAIij BiUTlSHj COL4&lBi&'S;NEW8PAPER TAXI PTAXI TAXI3 .y in i ll 537 SERVICE ANDNI0HT DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE sind: .....Hotel, in" '-4 T cial"' M ('anada's Mosl Strategic Pacific Port "Prince Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest" lliiilillAiiili.lAiliil Bill and Ken Nesbitt "OVERNAIEr- PRINCE RUPERT, B.C.. MONDAY, APRIL 14, 1847 PRICE FIVE CENTS Provincial Ll ESTINE lOLENLt ,:,,man Shut In i C.C.F. 299 Leader jun j Savs Party L s while var-' ;ve quid Dbscrv.":es were :rtDce na broKen Pak-stoe A British in Jerusa- Queen Elizabeth Stands In Mud SOUTHAMPTON The world's greatest liner, QUeen Elizabeth,-Ls aground on a mudibank off the entrance to Southampton and five tugs are endeavoring to pull her off. The vesselwas irlfcound frcm New York. She Is resting upright and Is said to, be In no danger. Second Smallpox Death, New York w thin Jhc last few days of ,.t$ He 'claimed that Opposition mahdy. a 26-year-old .wpmafi Leader Harold Winch in the succumbed to sinltpqaghhere yesterday. A general campaign for vaccination has bcj5tnstl-lutcd in the city. Ifgf FIFTH LARGEST Bolivia Js the fifth largest . Include 7.0 feet 1 country cf South America. Accuses His Country Of War Making Policy LONDON (OT) Henry A. Wallace on Sunday accused his United States Senate critics of hysteria and told a British Broadcasting Corporation audience of millions of Britons that there will be no peace until iU ...V,, .In xr,iM rntu ";i npur lll'nl" (til tllC RlJOSCVelt tiiv; niiwii. "" h-"" " r ... model. He said that "the immense power aim wuu ... . - f.Ati;.iWiare. being used for rr i cm f I strategic and military purposed United otatCS . rali1T ti,au to raise the stand- Oneri to Attack I ard of living in countries which WASIIINGTON -An unoffloal cAmprl(.an CXM .. survey Indicates that the United States, with hex wartime air craft detection-network all but dismantled, .Ja, virtually wide open for surprise attack from the air. Army and navy manpower dOTcbllizatlbn ls also re ferred to. WASHOUTS QN RAILWAY LINE Warmer weather in the Bulk-ley Valley has been causing washouts on the Canadian National Rallwavs line but there was no serious delay to traffic up to today. The lastcst washout has been at Morlcctown where a pile driver and men arc at work today. It Is not anVlc.iT patcd there will be any delay, to the train leaving tonight for the East. There was another washout in Bulklcy Canyon yesterday but it was soon oleared. LEAVES SHANGHAI SHANGHAI Millen Reynolds, Toi'.nlain ivcn maufac-)urcr, liad used up iZ hours ivid il Imlnutesiof his GO-hour olijrcilVc iror a round-the-world flisht wifen ,!ic took Viff from Sha'nghai tiday for Tokyo Ifvn lh (next hop. He and his two (companions had safely 'crossed "the Hump." Iktwct1!! heie tind SNew York Hrjnolds pliiis two stops Tokyo iid Anc horasrc. ' CANADIANS WIN SCHOLARSHIPS NEW YORK M - Five Canadians are among 122 winners of Guggenheim scholarships announced Sunday night by the 1 foundation here. Winners in cluded John S. Stevenson of Vancouver, an engineer of the B.C. Department of Mines. MOTOR VEHICLE CENSUS CANBERRA lOWVustralla will take a census cf Us 1,000,000 motor Vehicles to calculate annual expenditures on motoriivg. Income derived frcm motor Industries, Influence of taxation, and importance cf motoring In transport. TWINKLIER, TOO Wcmens eyes usually are! slightly darker than men's; in Washington Wallaces statcmcuts are meeting with a storm of criticism, one suggestion being that action should be taken by the government against Wallace under the Logan Act for his utterances. Wallace said yesterday that United States was now virtually at war with Russia and there was an anti-Russian disease which still had some time t'J run. COMMITTED AT TOPLEY Rablftcjlkidlan to. face , Trial rti Attempted Killing Charge : Preliminary trial of Michel Williams at Topley Thursday htixt of Indians from the far Batolnc, Middle River and Tacla lakc. The accused was charged with shooting with Intent to kill Lawrence Kylllns, a He hacker at Topley. Williams was commlt-t"etli Tor trial at the next Assizes in Prince Rupert. Magistrate Harvey Davlcs 01 Smlthers presided, stne dfience bcinj represented by Indian Agent Boys cf Hazellon. The prosecution was handled by Sergeant J. Henry of fcmithers. Constable R. W. Strops of Burns Lake, who had handled the Investigation, gave evidence which I placed the accused near the scene of the alleged crime anoui the time it was committed. THE WEATHER Synopsis , Clear skies were general over Uie province this morning. High nrrwsurps and div northerly winds .across British Columbia will rcsuit in fair weather until tomorrow night at least. Forecast Prince Rupert; Queen Char lottes and North Coast Clear. today and Tuesday. Light north erly winds. Little change In temperature. Mihimums- tonight -ort HJrdy, 37; Massett, 32; Prince Rupert, 34; Maximum Tuesdays-Port Hardy, 55; Mas sett," '52; Prince Rupert, 52. Cameron Says Winch to Overly Cautious Is Failing to Achieve Revolutionary Purposes of Socialist Movement : VANCOUVER (CP) Colin Cameron of Comox,' .fit i t 'n i i T- i 1 1 1 1 re-elected provincial president 01 tne uritisn Loium-bia'-Yukon section of the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation by acclamation at the party's fouH-eenth annual convention here Sunday, told delegates that the C.C.F. is losing the support of young people In British ColumDia dc- cause the party Is "too cautious." Britlih Columbia Legislature was "too 'cautious in facing current risks He faces-a greater risk In failing to achieve the revolutionary 'purposes of the Socialist movement." Members of the new exccuUve George. C. Thomas .of Prince Henry Wallace Causing Sensation i- t BULLETINS AT YAK HOW YARDS VICTORIA Three hundred membeis of the American Federation of Labor went through C.C.L. picket lines to report for work today. Provincial and Esquimau city police fiustled pickeiers back when they attempted to interfere with the entry of the opposing union stair and have agreed to by Great Britain and France. CANADA INVITED WASHINGTON Senator Arthur Vandenburg today called upon Canada to join the Pan-American Union "filling the twenty-second chair of international brotherhood." In 1944 Prime Minister King of Canada said that Canada would not be ready until after the war to join the Union. KING, O.UEEN ILL COPENHAGEN Queen Alexandria, exhausted by constant attendance at the bedside of King Christian, who is growing weaker with heart trouble, fell ill herself today with influenza. DOGS RUNNING WILD VANCOUVER Two Alsatian wild dogs "were Alarming "JiesU dents in the vicinity, of the technical reboot. A family reports having been trailed and Hie canines were also reported hovering around a duck farm. NEW FLIGHT RECORD LONDON A 'British Oon- stcllaticn .'plnlnc 1ms larrived here latter getting up V )'ew record foriapMwntr'eal-to-Loii-dfln commercial flight. The timewas'lO Jioilrs a'nd 41 minutes. fThe Ilight 'was pidn-slop at 299 miles iper hour. BURNLEY IS IN ENGLISH FINAL IDNDON Burnley of the Sec ond Division defeated Liverpool of 'the .First Division by ascore cf one to nil Saturday in tne semi-final cf the English Foot ball Cup. Burnley will now meet Charlton Athletic al wemoiey Stadium in the final. Charlton had defeated Newcastle- a week ago. APPOINTED TO "ROCK" 1 LIVERPOOL 0 Captain F. S Bell, commander of MAS. Exeter wben that cruiser engaged the German battleship Graf Spee in the Battle of River Plate In 1S39, loft here to take up his appointment as chief cf.staff to tho flag officer at Gibraltar. FOX OF MANY COLORS The red fox is also colored silver, black and yellow. U.N. GREEK BORDER COMMISSION ON WAY A member of the VS. army, one of the members of the United Nations Greek border commission, is shown travelling, by pack mule with the of ' aia 01 a woman gume. ne ana uie ouier commisiiunera weie ui workers All departments lr way to Kastanofitenk, a Partisan-held viUage on the working today, the yard were .. !, Greek border. There the commission made Its first contact Illiniums ui. .v - r, ... .v,,.u which was closed Saturday, but work has been slowed down, Clarence Wallace said. Twenty Amalgamated Union members have transferred affiliation from C.C.U to A.F. of L. TKKATY Otf GERMANY MOSCOW Soviet Russia was I said today ilo have "agreed hi Willi llic .Jill bioaua, wiuuxi iiiuiuucu many wltuicii ouiuicia. These Partisans are Communist-Inspired, according to a speech by President Truman recently, ln which he asked UJS, aid to the Greek government. Removal of Kwinitsa Snowslide bv 9 May 24 will Open Skeena Highway C.T I Zr: AnUcyiated. o)f w date of the Skeena River . . t - "' i Jr 14 1 it lilt. j r iu clill Mur v J . jpniivrlinrr tii ihctvirr. Hilhllf Kwinitsa; slide region makes on present r 'i 1 11 1 . - - . snow. HiocKaae mere dangerous: "It isn't safe to work oh 'the slide now," Mr. Brady said. "If should e free of anything except the snow on the mountalutop unusuaijy large slides, and then came down today, . we could . only the extreme JJp will touch 4 Tr tt I Mem iuiiioiiuw. iwwciu, ii 10 road. 100 aangerous 10 pui jnuu wuin. ing there now. Besides, even if we did manage to get the slide cleared, the hanging snow might ccme down and: bury some pas senger UKiig tne Highway. Road crews working on the western end of the highway have cleared the road as far as Skeena station. 13 miles west of the slide, Mr. Brady said From that point eastward to the slide there is very little snow, much of the road being clear. Until it is safe to begin work- in e on the siice. Mr. Brady said, this road crew will . be put to work improving the road from Prince Rupert to Port Edward and to Prudhomme Lake where surfacing and drainage ls re auired. Terrace snow removal crews. worklne west out of that town have cleared the road as far as Extew. where the snow lies be ¬ tween five and six feet deep on the highway bordering the rail way. Where the road is not ad jacent to the railway, the snow Is four feet deep. From Extcw westward to the slide Is a distance or 22 miles, which the Terrace road men will continue to clear until they reach the major snow barrier. Mr. Brady said hat he could see no reason for keeping the men ou the Prince Rupert side of the slide working on snow removal now, when the weather in the. next few weeks will remove the snow, probably be,fore the -slide ls ready to be cleared. The $25,000 causeway to clear the slide wiiicu Uie pulic works department authorized for construction al the last session of the legislature, will be completed this year, Mr. Brady raid. The causeway which will have a road surface widlii of 18 feet, will skirt the slide zone 200 feet from the base of the mountain and will be far enough out in the river to be clear of practically all snow-slides. "The slides that have come down since the highway has been built have never spread out more than 50 feet from the base of the mountain," he said. "With the causeway, 200 feet away, it Plans for the 1.000 loot long rock fill have been completed. and although Mr. Brady gave no date as to when construc tion work would start, he as serted that it would be com pleted this year. Mr. Brady nlans to leav the city Thursday night for Vancouver where he will attend a conference of departmental en gineers. The engineers will ex change information and ideas on their summer work projects. COMMODORE CAFE SOLD George Dybhavn Becomes New Proprietor or vVett Known Restaurant The well known 'Commodore Cafe here has, been sold by James Killas )a George Dybhavn. William Cooper has arrived from Vancouver and taken over the management on behalf of Mr. Dyhavn. Mr. Killas, who is a pioneer business man of Prince Rupert, having been here since 1910 when he first opened up in the confectionery business, 1 ate r turning to restauranting, plans to make a motor trip, to Vancouver next month with, Mrs. Killas and later may move his family south. INDIAN TAKES DEATH PLUNGE Uaped .From Third Storey Of ast End Rooming House in iVancouver , VANCOUVER Willie Major, young native, died in hospital liere after plunging from the third floor of an East End rooming house. Three companions said they had three times restrained hurl from opening the window and then went out. When they returned he had disappeared from the room and he was found in the alley below bleeding profusely. ml irom inakinr war., ioc itiius .t. fc,u,,tv - 'i u,vb v" "' -.SM .. . . . ;.. .j (T..:i.i r.i : . t f t i u.s it.:.. .Er by oeucrai MarhaD.of,Uuitctt.-rtjiaj; WlllV snUwTant:lllglllillneWountan, ' 1 V . . .... ""V .yu........ above v. , ihe . ira already ready been T.'...f..ii i work the t- iKZt