"New Operations May Exceed Huge Kirkland Centre "' Red Lake, Ont., Nov. 11 -- (CP) -- Red Lake mining camp in North-western Ontario near the Manitoba border, is preparing to celebrate its 25th anniversary. Some mining men say the 1926 Red Lake gold rush was the biggest since the . Red Lake Held Biggest Gold Field Canada Yet Has Seen: Kloridike in 1898. .-. At that tine, Jack Hammell of Howey Red Lake Mine said: "Red Lake is going to be the biggest gold camp Canada has ever seen." His words were echoed recently by Horace C. Young of the McKenzie: Red Lake Gold Mines and director of several others. . Mr. Young says he that the Patricia area, which in- cludes Red Lake, the new develop- ments at Sioux Lookout and Pickle Lake, will in five years produce ore gold 'than Kirkland Lake, on tario's best gold-producing centre. Mr. Young estimates that by the end of the current year dividends 1 Red Lake mining enter- pald 'by @5. will total $10,000,000, ® British Troops Use U.S. Armor He sald production by the end of ' 1050 wil total $72,000,000 and this 'year's production will be around $10,000,000. _ Most hopeful sign here is the steady improvement in grade of ore. In 1944 the average grade for the camp was $9 a ton. This year it will be about $11 and Mr. Young js it may soon go as high as $15. Growing Population Red Lake nas a population of 1,500 and another 4,000 mine em- ployees and their families live in communities that haye sprung up around the mines, There are five public schools in the area with an enrolment of 500 and a thigh .school in Red Lake where children are attending. Each mine employee is assessed $1 # month for the. schools. During the war "years, Red Lake Just about held its own. In 1044 came the biggest of all its booms pnd with it greatly increased fin- ancial support, Now there are seven prosperous ines' with ore that persists to depth: 'There are also eight other outstanding prospects: with more or less proven 'ore bodies. 'A great many. others have good surface ghow and are in the early stages of : dévelopment. ; The only worry of the mining industry in the area seems to be a shortage 'of labor and: the pros- péct of "an insufficient power supply to look after 'tHe seven or THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Combining The Oshawa Times and Whithy Gusette and Chronicle © WHITBY is convinced ®- eight mines in late stages of de velopment. ' Labor Shortage } The only worry of .the: mining industry in the area seems to be a shortage of labor and the pros- pect of an insufficient power sup- ply to look after the seven or eight mines in late stages of de- velopment which are expected to be producing soon. With regard to power, D. L. Natress, regional manager of the Ontario Hydro-Electrical Power Commission, says that actually there is little to worry about. While thére is not a surplus of power in the Patricia system, which 'serves the mines of Red Lake and Pickle Lake areas, there is ample in the Thunder Bay system and the two now are being linked. Mr, Natress says it is expected the linking job will' be completed VOL. 9--No, 264 OSHAWA-WHITBY, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1950 PAGE THIRTEEN Suit in Newsprint Anti-Trust Business déd agein only if another war Where 22 Died In Airplane Crash Circle outlines the wreckage of the burned airliner in which 22 persons crashed to their death in a blizzard recently.: Ground parties reached the Northwest Airlines plane yesterday and reported all 18 passengers and four crew members were killed. Plane crashed into mountainside six miles from the Butte airfield. --Canada Wide Picture. by May, 1951, permitting transfer of from 5,000 to 10,000 horse-power to the Red Lake area. JUNIOR FARMERS Toronto -- (CP) -- More than 100 members of the Canadian Coun- cil on boys' and girls' clubs are arriving in Toronto Nov. 12 for the 20th annual national club week. The meeting coincides with the Royal Agricultural Winter Fair. QUICK SERVICE Boreham Wood, Hertfordshire, England--(CP) -- Mrs, A. Axtel, a food committee official, asked col- leagues to remove a waste bin from outside: food stores near her home. She 'later told the committee: "Somebody moved it all right. They put 'it outside my front door." Of Canada's labor force of five million people, slightly more than a million are members of trades unions.--Quick Canadian Facts, British Korea. General Dwight , Eisenhower Amherst Holds Maritimes' Winter Fair Stopping in front of an apple display at the Maritime Winter Fair in Amherst, N.S., are, left to right: F. George MacLeod, president of the Maritime Stock Breeders' Association; Premier Smallwood of Newfound- land, who officially opened the fair; Premier Jones of Prince Edward Island, and F. W. Walsh, deputy minister of agriculture for Nova Scotia. --Central Press Canadian. NO ARMY YET, SAYS 'IKE' Oklahoma. City, Nov. A sal e come to feel at home on U.S. tanks in the fighting in North "group of Tommies has U.S. armor protection as they man- ecuvre on the north bank of the Chongchong River, where they have yesterday there is "no Atlantic Pact army at present to-lead" and add- ed this is no time to speculate whe- ther he will command such a Wes- tern European force if it is organ- ized. The Colunibia 'University pre- sident and 'war-time European Al- lied commander-in-chief said there was a niisunderstanding about re- marks. attributed to him last week in Texas. He. was quoted then as saying he soon will have a military assignment in Europe. He declined further 'comment... 3 --Central Press Canadian. been held to a standstill by newly arrived Chinese troops from Manchuria. Princess Pats, the first Canadian regiment scheduled to join the U.N. fighting forces in Korea is now en route across Canada to embark for Japen. This group is shown in Toronto's Union .St matlers and wives from many Ontario towns made it appear a wartime | pcene as they bade good-bye to the troops. ion where «Central Press Canadian. A traffic' lakes arid Montreal. The aerial photo above shows part of some 40 vessels held up with their Montreal bound cargos. Repairs were rushed on the 'damaged lock which caused the 2-day delay of inland shipping. ' A " : ~GCanada Wide Picture. ANNIVERSARY. FLIGHT TO POLE Fairbanks, Alaska, Nov. 13--(CP) --THhe United States Air Force cars ried"'the Navy to the roof of the world yesterday. The occasion was the 375th anniversary flight to the North Pole by the 375th Weather Reconnaissance squadron, station- ed at Eielson Air Force Base 27 miles southeast of Fairbanks. Abroad the specially modified B-29 superfortress, "Lonesome Polecat," when it took off was Rear Admiral Clifton Sprague, commander of the Alaskan sea frontier and deputy commander-in-chief of the Alaskan unified command. HELD IN STRIKE VIOLENCE Windsor, Ont., Nov. 13--(CP)-- Three men were held by police fol- lowing an outbreak of picket-line violence Saturday at the Windsor Packers, Ltd. in suburban Sand- wich: West township. The violence Land Unit Disbanding Harvest Thanksgiving in St. Paul's Cathedral, London, is one of the most splendid and inspiring eccasions can meet with in the capital, says a British writer. If one goes in late, as I confess I did the other Saturday afternoon, the mingled tones of choir and organ are already eddying down the nave, echoing around the: lobyrinth of columns and echoing yet again from the dim vastness of the dome. 4nd far away, under the dome it- self, and beneath the clustered lights, one can glimpse the golden mace and the black robes of the Lord Mayor of Lon- don, his sheriffs and entourage, al- ready grouped there at the chan- ce] rails before the harvest offering of crops and fruit and the receding ranks of white-gowned choristers. Wistful Note So far all was joy and thankful- ness. In the nave, however, between this belated spectator and the light ed sanctuary, was a huge congrega- tion which included 500 girls in a uniform we may not see again. Thus a wistful note was struck in an otherwise happy ceremony. In corduroy breeches, green sweaters beige shirts and green berets, these girls were members of the Women's Land Army, which is be- ing disbanded on November 30. They represented 17,500 - colleagues all over England, Scotland and Wales, the last "division" of an, army which has shone in two wars. That morning, before. the festival service, they had marched to Buck- ingham Palace for a farewell in- spection by the Queen.' Only after the service did I dis- cover that prospects are not so dis- ma] as they seemed. Talking with the girls and their se¢tion leaders I learned that nearly all are deter- mined to stay on the farms. "What; give up farming now?" said a red- haired lass from Leicestershire. and scarlet | § "Only if I get married, and perhaps | not then!" The army has, in fact, came, Formed In 1917 | The first Women's Land Army was formed in 1917, and before it disbanded two years later, had re- cruited. about 23,000 members. The second army, a much bigger affair, actually anticipated World War II by. three months. . By the time war broke out, 1,000 land girls were already far enough advanced in their training to go straight to the farms, and at the peak of wartime expansion, in June, 1943, there were 83000 WL.A. members among the 223,000 women working full-time on the land. - The girls have worked in any part of the country to which they were sent, and practically mo kind of farm work has been outside their scope. Some are milkmaids and dairymaids, others look after livestock, drive tractors and thresh- ing machines, destroy pests, culti- vate fruit and vegetables. Some, even do forestry, mostly as labor- prs. or nurserywomen;. a few have read for forestry degrees and di- plomas, Gallery Abolished Women have certainly come into their own in the United Kingdom, even if it has taken two world wars to bring it about! In my view, one of the most gracious and: timely tributes from mankind to woman- kind is the abolition of the ladies' gallery in the House of Commons: The fine new chamber, opened at Westminster on October 26 with royal ceremony and in the presence of the Speakers from many Com- monwealth and other overseas leg- islatures, recognizes that "ladies" are no longer to be segregated in a separate cage, like the more deli- cate creatures in the zoo, but are quite capable of fending .for them- selves in 'the strangers' gallery, which now seats 326 instead of 239. Their ability to do this can hard- ' ly be disputed, considering that 21 | women members of Parliament are | actually on, the floor of the House, | holding their own in the arena of | debate, : Flin Flon, Man. -- (CP) -- Road-| building is tough in" the muskeg | country. Forty feet of road disap-| peared into the muskeg south of here, sinking six feet. Big trees were | felled -and put in the whole and finally there was enough to make another platform of sand and clay. | J Setanta done its job. It has trained more | At. present only one-fifth of Can- than 100,000 young women to do ada's - water power resources are farm work and, what is more, to | like it. Now the "W.L.A." would be | harnessed : to manufacture: elec- tricity. --Quick Canadian Facts. Washington, Nov. 13--(AP)--Re- presentative Emanuel Celler (Dem. N.Y.) called on the United States Justice Department yesterday to start an anti-trust suit "to restors competition in the newsprint in- dustry." Celler, chairman of the House of Representatives Judiciary commit tee, recently conducted' an investi gation of the American and Cana- dian newsprint industry as part of a broad committee study of econe omic power in American industry. Writing Attorney-General J. Howard McGrath, Celler said a score or more of newsprint mills-- makers of the paper on which news» papers are printed--have adopfed uniform price increases since Oc- tober, Sees Law Violation "I believe that here is clear evid- ence of violation of the anti-trust laws of this country," he told Mc- Grath. On Oct. 12, Celler wrote, the Powe ell River Company of Powell River Company River, B.C, increased newsprint $10 a ton, a price follows ed'by a number of other companies. On Oct. 26, he said, International Paper Sales Company, selling agent of the largest Canadian producer-- Canadian International Paper Come pany,--~and wholly-owned subsidie ary of International Paper Come pany, an American corporation, an- nounced it was raising prices $6 a ton. "Soon thereafter, Abitibi Power and Paper Company Limited, and Consolidated Paper Corporation, Limited, which had both previously announced - $10 increases, reduced their price rise to $6 per ton," he told McGrath, adding that others then adhered to the $8 increase. Sees Income Doubled Celler quoted figures indicatiyg the net income of the major new. print producers had doubled and in some cases more ghan doubled iy the 1944-40 period. He gave little weight to the ye- valuation of the Canadian dollar £s an 'excuse for price hikes. Asserting that the newsprint ip- dustry is exercising economic cone trol by raising prices instead of ex« panding facilities, Celler said: "I am not the only one. to ex« press alarm over the situation ine dicating monopoly power in the newsprint ind y. My senti are voiced by the National Retail Goods Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Ase sociation." MOSTLY ASIATIC Turkey's - territory. in Europe is only 9.257 square miles compared to 285,236 in Asia. | occurred when picketers attempted | {to stop truck and company cars | from entering the plant, which has | been operating since a strike began | Oct. 24. The Crown Attorney's of- | | fice will decide tomorrow whether | | charges will be laid against the | men, MAN SLAIN, FRIEND HELD Windsor, Nov. 13--(CP)--Andrew Woloch, 45, was held by .police to- day on a manslaughter charge fol- lowing the death of a. 45-year-old friend during a fight at a wedding reception. Michael Shinkowsky, 48, died of injuries when he was knocked to the floor. = Witnesses told police the man was hit- once by Woloch and fell, striking. his head. Traffic Congestion In The Lachine Canal ¥ gestion' kdown in the Lachine Canal held d by a br up all shipping between the great and end of it was a huge pot ringing." And the sound Mr. Peabody awoke read his newspaper. In it o You could have knocked Mr. Peabody For there, right through the window of his own room, came a rainbow. And at the As he approached it to-see if it was real, he heard the sound of bells. "The whole town has heard of this!" thought Mr. Peabody. "That's why the bells are louder... louder...LOUDER.,.. alarm clock beside his bed was ringing ... ringing . . . RINGING. Shutting it off, he sighed sadly, got up and dressed. At the breakfast table Mr. Peabody ported to have said that old-age benefits M r body ; e end of the rainbow should: provide everybody with enough to retire on. himself. "More of gold! income I want, of the bells grew : Arniving at with a start. The a speaker wasre- softly. The LIFE INSURANCE COMPANIES in Canada -and their. Represeniatives WORKING FOR NATIONAL PROGRESS... BUILDING PERSONAL SECURITY "Hmmph!" snorted Mr. Peabody to of additional help for older: people. But to. build the kind of comfortable old-age my life insurance -- and maybe more. It gives my family protection now. And it covers my own special needs in a way no mass programme could possibly do." like millions of other Canadians, began another day of earning and saving for his future security with life insurance. "Even without pots of gold, it's a pretty good world," he said to himself. And as he worked, he began to whistle rainbows! I like the idea I fully expect to need all the office, Mr. Peabody, ~L-750b