ete ee Business, Classified Prince Kuper — SOE heb Baa hehe Ba trp Se ELL UPT GR i OME gh PR ee a Hy SOT My ee ee ge Rag Age . ‘ PI hag Ma Eta PEED UG ME yO ARIES, ie 1 tg Sa Be gt ov Te Oe ge eee yee ree ee ele Published at Canada’s Most Strategic P 3203. Advertising 3201 ev eee bh ohm we ee eH inuclear blasts. =, The 755-pound camera-toting “spacecraft, launched Wednesday rom Cape Canaveral, Fia., ran ut of electrical power cight hours and 44 minutes later. Scientists said this meant it would be unable to correct its ‘‘course and would miss the moon by 300 miles. It also meant Ranger V would - not be able to operate its tele- “~ vision camera nor to land a “ quake-measuring device on the i 4 * moon's surface. “Pasadena’s jet propulsion lab- oratory, which built Ranger V and is tracking it through space afd the spacccraft apparently falled to draw clectrical power ‘from its wing-like solar panels to operate its instruments, BATTERY DIES Its only source of power then wi a small reserve battery with a-dife of eight to nine hours, That battery went dead just as scientists were trying to com- mand the spacecraft to fire a small rocket that would re-alm it at the moon, Cause of the failure of the so- Jar power system was not an- nounced, but there was unoffi- clal speculation by some space experts that the craft's delicate solar cells could have been dam- aged by radiation from recent Debate continues OTTAWA @.— Another round of debate on proposed legisla- tion to boost the lending capa- eity of the Farm Credit, Cor- poration, now doing rhoul.$75,- 000,000 worth of business a yonr, highHahted ‘Comomns — discus- gions Thuradny, 7 Agriculture, Minister, Hamll- ton suid tha Farm Crodit, Cor- poration secks to ostablish ec- ononienlly, = sound farm units through tts lending activity ra- ther than merely maintaining non-economic farm operations, Rexall One- Cent Sale Starts Monday Oct, 22nd ORMES ' U.S. moonshot bi » PASADENA, Calif. (AP) —The United States’ ‘third straight attempt to scout the moon by television has failed—possibly because of damage to the Ranger V lunar rocket by radiation from recent high altitude! high altitude nuclear blasts over the Pacific. This was. the third straight failure in the hard-luck Ranger program to scout the moon elec- A RIOTER IS CLUBBED as he demonstration by Flemish-speaking Belgians in Brussels. Police se 4 is CO me re acific NTRS Fete jon Vas a i ay morning who was nervous, '-Tsmelled of alcohol and wore a | shirt spotted with blood. | cal) Killed Tuesday night by shots - from a .22-calibre weapon near _-lthis Vancouver Island city were | Diane Phipps and Leslie Dixon. “| Dixon’s body was found four | stuffed 1 ¢hiatrist said the killer’s actions |-Phipps was not criminally as- ve Pr wie ew Suspect + os iat. 7 fatally shot two 19-year-old sweethearts through | the head has moved to the British Columbia mainland. “- Three crew members of the Vancouver-bound. ferry Tsaw- fwassen told police Thursday they saw a young man Wednes- miles north of here at Piper's Lagoon—a local lover’s lane. That of Miss Phipps was under a wrecked car south of Nanaimo. She had been shot through the head, and beaten. “COULD KILL AGAIN” Meanwhile, a Vancouver psy- were those of a sexual psycho- spath, although police said Miss oe re ee ree we re ee saulted. Dr. James $. Tyhurst said that if frustrated the man kill again. US. vessel led away by police during a arrested 50 people ‘but later released 45 of them. Thousands of ‘Flemish’ marchers poured into the city and clashed with French- “speaking Walloons whom they accused of “subjugating” them. The Fiemings felt: they had enough of, the rooster’s crowing .. .. “the rooster being’ the. Walloons’ symbol. The race and culture rivalry. goes back 132 years to peatedly.has threatened the country’s unity. Although the Flemings now have a majority in Parliament, they: claim dis- crimination continues, especially in Brussels. strations by the Walloons continued far into Sunday night. Twenty persons were injured. “New wave. exists — tronically for upcoming manned moonships. Ranger IV crash-landed on the back side of the moon last April, but failure of a timing in Catholic Church VATICAN CITY (CP)—Is there a “new wave” in the Roman Catholic Church? The question is too, device prevented it from send- ing back television pictures. ZOOMS PAST MOON Ranger III gathered too much speed at launching last January and missed the moon by 22,000 miles. Rangers 1 and II were test vehicles not aimed at the moon, Four previous moon shots, in the Pioneer and Able programs, failed in their missions to rocket m paylond to or around the moon, With each Ranger launch run- ning about $16,000,000, total cost. of the nine failures was estima- ted to exceed $150,000,000. Thursday's failure deft the United States well behind Rus- sin in moon shots, The Soviets’ Lunik ILI took television pie- tures of the far side of the moon in October, 1959, just a month after thelr Luntk II plowed into the moon's face, Lunik Lo milss- j ed the moon by 4,700 miles in, January, 1059. Belgian independence and ‘re- Counter demon-— -—- TNS Photo : seeking |. shrimp grounds Commercial Fisheries vessel the John: N. Cobb is now carrying out exploratory shrimp fishing off the west coast of Vancouver Island. The primary purpose of the cruise will be to locate poten- tial commercial shrimp grounds, the Daily News learned today. The ship left Seattle October 15 and is expected to return November 16. “Records will be maintained of the general topography of the ocean bottom and oceanogra- complex for an easy affirmative, but new ripples of thought—if not a new wave—are creating a heady sense of expectancy at the Among some Canadian confer- ence representatives, there is a fecling that the assembly is posed ready to make a big ad- yunee, despite the fundamental conservatism of influential sec- tions of the church, During the last 20 years, a number of changes have been made in the sacred liturgy, or public worship, of the Roman church. There is optimism that these reforms will be carried an- other step forward during coun~ cil discussions = starting next weok, Enecuragement ts drawn from Pope John's opening speech to the council October 11, Partici- pants sald a key point is that Pope John, in effect, instructect the council that what is to be stressed is not the precise sub- News: Briefs KARLSRUHE i —- The West German Supreme Court sentenced confessed Sovict spy and political assassin Bogdan: N, Stashinsky today to eight yenrs In prison. The high court found the 30-year-old formor Soviet agent guilty of esplonage and of being ‘an accomplice In tha poison pistol killings tn. Munieh of Ukrainian national and Stefan Bandera in 180, . } fe Ist. lenders Lev Robot In 1057 ofe fe . AACHEN, West Gormany (Rentors) The ndvent of the Common Marketp — ushering tn an epoch that would change history of Europe and the world —~ has added a new dimension to Buroponn nows, Walton A, Cole, general manager of Reutors Nowe agency, sald hore today, ye ” ; BRTUHLDHUM, Pa im — Karel Zlaka, the Czoch diplomat who' murdered his wife and Inter shot himself after a 110- Milo-anshour car chase by police who thought ho was a tratile Violator, dlad today, rn + + a BERLIN (Routors) — Threo Bast Germans between 18 and 23 oseaped Into Wost Berlin without trouble Thursday night, but East Gorman police apparently captured another person trying to rench the British sector, + ¥ 4 + DAMASCUS, ASyrin (4) — Yomont royalist reported fresh fighting Thursday, Thoy claimed their tribal warriors killed 92, wounded throe and captured 20 soldiors of Promior Abdul- aw lah Sallal’s republican forces, } second Vatican council. stance of doctrine but its pre- sentation in a way that meets the pastoral needs of the day. MAJOR VICTORY The fact that discussions on liturgy have ben placed first on the council agenda is a sign that the papal directives have been een seriously, these sources said, Convicted assaulter fined $10 A man with three pervious convictions of assault and who is presently on recognizance to keap tho peace appeared before Magistrate B. T, Applewhaite in police court this morning and was fined $10 and costs on an- other charge of assault. Noughas. Everson Scott of 320. Sixth Avenue East pleaded guilty fo a charge of assautting his brother-in-law Wilfred Johnson Brown of 708B RBighth Avenue West on September 27, Bcolb wont into Brown's bed- room and slapped hiny across tho face, Brown told police thatl. ns a result he lost his Nearing for a day, Scott's only defenco was that Brown was feeding Hquor to his wife and he wanted to get even with hin, Prince Rupert has now gone 224 days without a fatal traffic accident and 644. days without a fire fatality. ADS RVR SRSA SDR E ERA ES ED DEES ENTE EY END TAI eh WAAR Bh Balad enema aie NT NEA Em a aaa thyme OP AlN phic and meteorlogical condi- tions. The size and sex composl- 4 ; oe 8 Fe OF ay et 7 7 t Daily Net Port — And Key to the Great Northwest PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1962 News Desk 3206, Sports 3204, Social 3205 spotted Tsawwassen ferry 1%. NANAIMO (CP)—The hunt for the man who was robbed. Sixty dollars re- mained intact in Dixon’s wallet. Police said they have hcen un- able to locate Miss Phipp's shoes, a fact Dr. Tyhurst said was significant in figuring the killer a sexual psycopath. Three women in the lower B.C. mainland have been at- tacked in the last three months, but. only for their shoes. The latest incident was Wednesday. “This is a form of fetishism, and the compulsion becomes: more and more overwhelming,” the psychiatist said. NOTICES BLOOD In the case of the Nanaimo killings, he said “the man could, have accosted both of them and We : AERIAL REPAIR JOB — A helicopter hooks on to a battered been repulsed. His excitement increases become orgiastic Eddy Dolby, a waiter on the ferry, said he saw a man ina could i washroom and noticed his blood- | stained shirt. Neither Dixon nor Miss Phipps “He kept his face turned from me, but I could tell the blood on his shirt was not from shav- ing,’ Dolby said. Stewardess «Mrs. Anna Mac- kinnon-said a man in his~mid in! quality, and he is fully capable |. of murder.” i toe PROV lu TAL LISRARY ViCieRia, EC 45 31/62 Teo PRICE TEN CENTS television booster antenna to pull it upright as repairmen re- store service in North and West repairmen across B.C.’s. Lower Vancouver. It’s one of the tricks Mainland are using to clean up damage from the weekend's hurricane-force winds. — CP Photo | | | . -e The annual ccnventi _ Bretherhood to hold convention at Terrace on of the Native Brother . 20s stopped by her newsstand for! hood of British Columbia which was scheduled to be about an hour during the cross- ; ;ing and appeared nervous. Twice | 30, said a man, apparently the; same person, left the vessel ina maroon car which he had trou- ble starting. Ship sails The Norwegian ship, Sun Ka- ren sailed for the United King- dom last night from Watson Island after loading 14,000 tons of pulp at the Prince Rupert pulp division of Columbia Cel- lulose Company, Limited. The 10-000-ton vessel was an old liberty ship that had been tion of the shrimp populations V. Whiting of the local halibut ‘commission said. , The method of operation will linvolve making transects and using sonic equipment to deter- mine general bottom character- istics and suitability of the in- vestigated area for trawling. In those areas where a trawlable tows with a Gulf of Mexico shrimp trawl will be made to assess the distribution and ab- undance of shrimps, extended. Skippered by Capt. will be determined, together with Trygve Wallman, the boat ar- other pertinent information,” E.! rived here Tuesday. ee Ten die in crash persons died in a multiple car crash on the fog-shrouded Glou- cester - Bristol trunk highway Thursday night, The vehicles involved were a bottom Is indicated, a series of bus, a minibus, an auto and a truck, Six of the dead were men and four were women, Seven others were seriously injured. ie ho KIWANTS KAPER rohan ranis are authentic: show slntod for the Olvic Contre noxt Thursday, Friday and Saturday may bo a success, Pictured gbove, Jock Ewurt is seen Rotting a ple in his face during one of the acts, i ee Wy amaane . in order that tho ' Uae 6 “ehh pha Me Api he ele tt ane, Logan Lat tat warine pe tae GB tig aE Ne Bev onthe Bt Bh RE Ao? aM nt wt Bd, Bae Nishga Tribal Council. Mr. Calder learned Vancouver. Mr. rangements with Centre officials. The convention was originally of the change of location yesterday in a phone call from Guy Williams president of the Brotherhood in Williams asked Mr. Calder to finish making ar- Terrace Civic held in Prince Rupert November 27 to 30 will now be — 2 . __|he. dropped the magazine he was! held in. Terrace 1 ead itowwras ¢ rac Assy A United States Wureau Of|reading, j-held-in. Terrace’ instead, itwas. announced today. by... ... Oa the car deck John Slack,| Frank Calder, MLA for Atlin and president of the | arrangements was very dissat~ isfied with this arrangement, and: did not think that three »|hours was long enough for the banquet and speeches, as there would be at least 200 Indian of- ficials and many guests at the occasion. “Mr, Williams had made it quite clear when he phoned last going to be held here, with meet- ings in the Royal Canadian Le- gion, and two banquets in the Civic Centre. with the Greenville Concert band and Aiyansh Phil- harmonic band in attendance at week to arrange here, that the convention locale could be changed to Terrace or Kitimat, difficulties,” the meetings if we met with any Mr. Calder said. BRISTOL, England (fh --- Ten. oe ever, Jacob Vandenbrink, MANn-'oq tHe said that the officials ag . . + iwice a . i . awer of the Civic Centre, would | called iu meeting promptly and the banquets. ‘only hall which had large enough to the bands, Mr. Calder said, How- The Civie Centre was chosen for the banquets, as it was the a stage accommodate ‘We regret having to reach the decision to move, but we had no other. recourse.” Accordingly, Mr. Calder con- tacted the Civic Centre in Ter- race and was amazed by the co- toperation and interest he receiv- ;apparently only alow the time ‘turned over the hall to the Bro- ‘from 5 pam. until 8 pm. for the ‘banquet and speeches. He said ‘that floor hockey was scheduled therhood completely, so it could be used for meetings and ban- quets as they wished, ‘for both those nights and he Mr. Calder also said that ewould mot cancel it, Mr, Cal-| at Gey. George’ Pearkes, VC, der sald, would be definitely coming | Mr. Galder sald that the Com) tram Vietoria to officially Imittee ino charge of convention 'Glassey services J i to be held ‘tomorrow Funeral services for city pio- heer H, FP, Glassey will be held ‘at the Chureh of the Annunel- ition at 10 am, Saturday, Requiem mass will be sald by Rev. James Tracey. Mr, Glassey died In the Prinee Rupert Gen- eral Hospital Wednesday at the age of 80. He had lived in this city for 44 yours, and took an netive part in civie and political affairs, flowers be sent to tha funeral, etre iene treed Driver fined $50 The family requests thal no Wilfred Deny Stewart of Cas- open the convention, “T have been asking for the Brotherhood to meet here for 4 long time,” Mr, Calder said, “as it isa big thing and would have brought a lot of people — to town. [tf would have also been nv great honor for the people in the surrounding villages, as they could have come into town to take part in some of the dis- cussions, We are very sorry to have to change the plans,” Officials of all levels of gov- ernment, labor, industry, chureh and local business and civic hodl- ies would be invited, to attend the convention, Mr. Calder said. Topies to be discussed will be organization and expansion, In- dustriniization, a vocational school in the north and the B.C, land question, be ome men EATHER Gloudy with occasional rain ee te RENE oe perneete ame wre mene iwhen the aceldent occurred, slay was fined $50 and costs and has his Heenee suspended when he plonded guilty in police court to a charge of driving without due care and attention, Stewart: was charged after a ear he was driving collided with the rear of a vehicle driven by Vernon Rydde of 808 Fitth Ave- nue Wost whieh dn turn came into collision with the rear of another vehicle driven by Sonia Berg of 3388 Fitth Avenue East. Miss Berg was said ta havo stopped at a crosa-walk at Sec- ond Avenuo West and Fifth Street to let a pedestrian go by PL A Oe tonight and Saturday. Little chunge in temperature. Winds southerly 15 ocens- lonally 26 in open waters overnight and Saturday, Low tonight and high Saturday 4h and fe. Dally News Readings: Temperature ab noon... 50 Harometer, falling ..... 20,06 TIDES Saturday, October 20, 1962 (Pacific Standard Time) High oo... 07:06 «16.8 foot 18:53 17.5 feat Low ... we «00881 5.8 foot 19:66 10,1 foat A ye UR a Ra pe er RM a AB noes AEE ee Pe snap aie