INSIDE EDITORIAL ........................ Pago 2 SPORTS .............................. Page 4 CLASSIFIED ........................ page 6 COMICS.............................. Poge 7 WOMEN'S SOCIAL .......... Page fi WEATHER Cloudy with scattered showers. No* much change in temperature. Low tonight and high Tuesday 35 and 65. Dedicated to the Progress of the North Phone LO 4-2441 Vol. 3; No. 99 PRINCE GEORGE, BRITISH COLUMBIA, MONDAY, MAY 25, 1959 BY OABWSB S5o PER WEB>C Aurora Candidates Prince George beauty lovers will get a final chance to officially view the candidates in the Aurora, Queen of the Evergreens contest at a Tea in the Civic Centre Wednesday. The six contestants for the title will be introduced by reigning Queen Aurora, Lynn Alexander. The Tea is sponsored by the Rotary-Annes and will be held from 3:00 to 5:00 p.m. Mrs. John Mellish is the convener. The public is cordially invited to attend. Murder Trial Opened Today In Assizes Hearing of a murder charge against Isaac Augustus opened in the Spring Assizes here this morning. Augustus is charged in the killing of Fraser Joseph Augesta at the Stellaquo Indian Reserve-near Vanderhoof last December 17th. Most of the morning was taken up with selection of the jury, before Mr. Justice Brown. * Jurors who will consider the charge are foreman, IS. T. Braalon, W. W. Bogh, J. M. Cq/ldcn, J. W. Braay, J. It. Daniels, J. H. Boland, II. R. Handlen, E. A. Herbert, II. P. Encmark, A. II. Babcock, Howard Barton and John Banzer. Prosecutor for the assizes is Hubert B. King. Defending Augustus is T. G. Bow en - Colthur.st of Kamloops. FOUND GUILTY In assizes last week before Mr. Justice Lord, Walter Kindrachuck was judged guilty of criminal negligence and sentenced to one month in prison and a fine of $250. Kindrachuk was charged following the death of Mrs. Lydia Ccowscr of injuries received in an automobile accident in the spring of 1958. He had been fined $100 for driving without due care and attention in June of 1!)5K, but when Mrs. Crowser died a few days later he was charged with criminal negligence. Defence council T. Raymond Cullinane had asked that the charge be thrown out of court, claiming that his client was...bging charged twice with the same offence. tils" request was de'hied. NOT GUILTY Emil Holzsworth was found not guilty of a criminal negligence charge is assizes last week before Mr. Justice Lord, His car was involved in an accident near Red Rock and his passenger, Edward Stevenson, was killed. The car hit a truck and caromed The assizes arc expected to continue for another two week. off the road and into a ditch INSPECTION of Royal Canadian Sea Cadet Corps "Grizzly" Friday evening in the Prince George Armouries was conducted by Lt./Cdr. D. H. Tye, CD., RCN and Captain C. V. Laws, CD., RCN. Standing from left, are Major David Skene, O.C. "A" Company, RMR, Lt./Cdr. Tye and Captain Laws; Lieut. Harry Lomax, O/C Grizzly; and F/Lt. Harvey Clarke, O/C of the local RCAF cadets. The visiting brass highly commended the local Corps in all phases of the inspection. �Vandervoort. A practical jbk'e involving a dead bear has provided the Prince George Junior Chamber of Commerce with another pelt-in its drive to put new busbies on the heads of Buckingham Pal- Tlie butt of the joke was Marc Miller of 2020 Pine Street. Early Saturday morning he arose to find refuse from his overturned garbage can had been strewn belter - John Kisel was ordered to pay ;i $10(1 fine or serve l"> 'lays in j;iil when he pleaded guilty Friday in City Police Couri In bclnpi an inmate in a common bawdy house. llo was charged following an RCMI' mid May (i ai G90 Third Avenue. Similar sentences were meted out 111 court earlier to two female inmates. Loiiella Saunders, charged with keeping a bawdy house and (1 legal sale of liquor, failed lo appear in court Friday and her bail of $300 was estreated by the court. Hemorrhage Victim In Improved Condition 'PIi o Prince George woman flown to Vancouver last week for tj'calmcnt of a severe brain hemorrhage is reported in "improved"' condition today. Mrs. Phyllis Clement, :(.">. under the care of a neurosurgeon In Vancouver General Hospital, was described as "dangerously ill" when an RCAF mercy aircraft touched down here last Wednesday to transport her to to Vancouver. Prior to the report of her "improved" condition the woman was described as "fair." NEW SWEETHEART of the Prince George Teen Town is Jennifer Tidy. The vivacious teenager was chosen Teen Town Queen by a panel of judges at the Teen Town Dance Saturday night in the Elks' Hall. She succeeds Lana Holley and will represent the local group at the Provincial Convention next Easter. New Teen Town Sweetheart Jennifer Tidy Chosen Satur Saturday night was a big night for 115-year-old Jennifer Tidy. She was chosen Prince George's Teen Town Sweetheart at a dance at the Elks' hall. The pretty and popular teenager began work at The Citizen as a reporter today. Jenny was chosen over nine other candidates to succeed Lana Holley. Anne Perry and Rolande Lafleur were chosen as princesses. The Teen Town Queen is chosen on the basis of beauty, charm, ability to speak, intelligence and poise. A tea was held for all nine candidates at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Sid Perry. Here they were judged for poise and ability to meet and converse with people. All the contestants were quizzed on their knowledge of Teen Town and their answers counted in the final selection of Queen. This was the last test the girls had to face, and at the dance Saturday night the judge's decision was announced. It proved to be a popular one with the teenagers pres- ent and Queen Jenny was presented with the Winged Victory Trophy by Mr. D. Fawcett. She was then crowned by past Queen Lana Holley. Jenny will reign over the Prince George Teen Town-ers for one year and will represent them at the 1900 B.C. Teen Town convention I in Kelowna. skelter around the back yard. Thinking the mess was probably the w o r k of hungry dogs, Mr. Miller strolled back into the house in disgust. Upon, peering out his front window, Marc changed his mind about the dogs when he spied a huge bear, either s 1 e e p i n g or dead, sprawled on the sidewalk across the street. Not wishing to play the part of Davy Crockett, who is said to "have killed him i b'ar when he was only three," Miller did not vent-ire out the door but promptly phoned local predatory animal hunter, Milt Warren. After Mr. Warren arrived with his trusty gun and informed Miller that the bear was quite dead, he then ventured out-of-doors. The Jaycees, who have-collected 13 bear skins so far for the busbies of the Royal Guards, claim no part of the practical joke, except the bear's skin. Miller says he doesn't know who planted the dead hear, and it had apparently been dead some time. The Gateway S u p p e r Club, north of here on the Hart Highway; has been sold for $50,000. Carl Auer, who opened the night club two years ago, has sold the entertainment centre to Jim and Don McKay, contractors from Vancouver. Mr. Auer says the McKay brothel's plan a renovation program, to cost between fifteen and twenty thousand dollars. The night spot operated under its original owner for the last time Saturday. The new owners will be closing the Gateway in about a week when the renovation program, expected to take about a month, gets underway. The Jaycees don't know either, and- they don't care. The part of the joke that interests them is the fact that they now have one more bear skin for their shipment to the War Office in London. Morrison Gets Around "Travsllingest" travelling salesman for Prince George this past couple of weeks has been Board of Trade President John Morrison. His efforts in publicizing Prince George have taken him from Seattle to Dawson Creek, and way points. Two weeks ago he was in Bellingham to attend a Rotary conference and took time off to speak at the Pacific Northwest Trade Association conference in Seattle and tell of the northern proposals of Peace River Hydro. . Pie returned just in time to help welcome the Legion convention to Prince George and then take part in the three-day veterans' sessions as a delegate from the Squa-mish Branch of which he is a charter member; Last week he was in Ques-ncl in company with Harold Nloffat, Chuck Ewart and Alex MacGregor, to talk about the effect of Peace River development on this part of the country and then' headed north to spend the week-end in Dawson Creek. Official Service By JOE F. KANE WASHINGTON CAP) - - Western diplomats who worked with John Foster Dulles in his unrelenting efforts in the crisis-packed years of the cold war will fly here to pay final tribute to the former secretary of state. Dulles, 71, President Eisenhower's foreign policy pilot for six years, died of cancer Sunday at 7:4!) a.m. Most of his family was at his bedside. President. Eisenhower deeply mourned his passing, and the free world mourned with him. Flags on U.S. government buildings throughout the world were ordered flown at, half staff for the next three days, and Eisenhower' cancelled his formal schedule during that period. An official funeral will be held Wednesday at 2 p.m. in the Washington National Episcopal Cathedral. A guard of honor will keep a vigil beside the body during the 2-1 hours before the funeral. MILITARY HONORS Full military honors accorded heroes and distinguished leaders will he given Dulles When he is buried in Arlington National Cemetery across the 1'tomac River from Washington. The Hig Four foreign ministers' con fere nee in Geneva will recess Wednesday and Thursday as State Secretary Christian A. Herter flics homo for the funeral. With him will be tho British and French foreign ministers, Srhvyn Lloyd and Mauriee Couve de Mur-vllle. There was a possibility Soviet Foreign 'Minister Andrei A. GPo-rhykp might also attend. He expressed "deep condolences" to Herter when told of Dulles' death. "West German officials said Chancellor Kqnrad Adenauer also may attend. DIES IN SUONI' Death came to .Dulles in his sleep at Walter Kccd Army. Hospital; Mrs. Dulles hurried buck to tho hospital at 5:30 a.m. only a few hours a Her she had left when one of the doctors called her with Kin- word that her husband was sinking rapidly. Her son, John, an engineer from Mexico City, and another son, Avery, a Jesuit priest studying hero, reached Wie "Hospital shortly' before she arrived, Dulles' younger brother, Allen, director or thL> Central Intelligence Agency, ami his sV^/r, Eleanor, a state department official; arrived a short time later. They watched as null'-: heavy breathing became more strained. It stopped <�nce, then resumed, before the end came. one of tho family asked "Is it. ail over?" and one of the doctors nodded. I,KIT ALON'J.] No one said a word as Mrs. Dulles walked to the head of t.he lied and gazed at her husband's face. Then the rest, left ihe' room, leaving Mrs. Dulles nlone at. the bedside. She left the hospital about 40 minutes later with her two sons. Heavy (loses of pain-killing drugs tufd kept Dulles sleeping most of the tiiii<" during his final days. At times lie could not recognize members of his family, but on the day before his death he recognized his wife and managed to speak a few words to her. Eisenhower was at his Gettysburg, Pa'., farm when his physician, Maj.-Gen. Howard M. Sny- der, phoned, to tell him Dulles was dead. Eisenhower cancelled plans to go to church. Instead, lie/went to the sun porch and pe/icilled a tribute to Dulles. "John Foster Dulles," he wrote on a yellow pad, "was pne of the truly great men of our time . � . a champion of freedom and foe only 'to tyranny . . . ihis countrymen and all who believe in justice and the rule of law grieve at the passing from the earthly scene of one of the truly great men of our time." TRIBUTES FLOW IX The tribute soon was followed by others from high officials hero and abroad. I'rime Minister Oiefenhakrr said I lie death removed from the1 councils of the world one whose influence for peace was worldwide. I' r i in e Minister Macmlllun praised Dulles as an American patriot "in whom t.he 'highest ideal.-; were supported by a signal force of character." Sir Winston Churchill, who visited Dulles at. the hospital earlier this month, said Dulles was "a man of principle and Integrity whose example should long bo remembered ... a great American has passed." President Charles de Gaulle messaged Ki.senhower "1 deeply feel the great loss which tin: death of John Foster Dulles constitutes for yourself, for your, country and all men attached to freedom." Chancellor Konrad Adenauer said West Germany had lost, "an understanding friend who made the cause of the German people his own." FIGHT AGAINST CANCKK When doctors operated on Dulles last Feb. 13, lor a hernia, lihey found a recurrence of cancer. (Surgeons had removed a cancerous portion of his large intestine on Nov. 1, l!)."ii;, and said they found no evidence the cancer had spread elsewhere. Dulles returned to direction of the state department about a month after the 1956 operation. Dulles had spent most of his time in hospital since the latest operation about 15 weeks ago. Your Citizen Carrier m The 28 customers on Vanderhoof Highway Route One are served by 11-year-old Floyd Quinnell.'a grade six pupil at Peclen Hill School. in spite of his busy paper route Floyd finds time to play Church League baseball and enjoy outdoor sports, such as swimming, fishing and hunting! Besides his other activities Floyd is the proud owner of a large rock collection, which he supplements occasionally with rock hunting expeditions. At school the youngster's favorite subject is Social Studies. Money from his route has helped Floyd buy his Boy Scout uniform and he has saved an additional $10 as well.