TAR CABS RADIO piIsPATCHED — ielicopter Flies Mut Injured Man “Nursing Sister Parachutes To sid Surveyor with Broken Back By The Canadian Press (OUVER.—A tiny nurse, a human packet of (| stamina, Sunday aided in the dramatic 1» reseue by helicopter of a 20-year-old o had lain helpless on an ice-clad ledge Wood- persons 1000 feet onto the wild Pitt y 45 miles north- er Grace three iught in a tree uspended 100 feet for three hours natched injured safety late officials said fractured back y good eondition.” Joe Chamberlain, Christie were int Coquitlam Columbia geo- Friday when ight in a snow 600 feet down landing on a to Johnson May Resign ‘As Leader Election Still | At Stalemate | VANCOUVER | Vancouver Daily (CP)— Prov- 'ince said Saturday Pre-, i 'mier Byron Johnson will ‘resign from leadership of VOL. XLI, No. 158 DELEGATE “HATTED”- cipalities at Calgary. Dr. E. G The invitation to “Go Western” met with warm approval from this Montreal delegate to the annual convention of the Canadian Federation of Mayors and Muni- LIBRARY Vi FORA. B.S. a 6 . on NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER Published at Canada’s Most Strategic Pacific Povt—"Prince Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest” PRINCE RUPERT,“B.C., MONDAY, JULY 7, 1952 D. Murray of the Montreal city council and professor of bacteriology at McGill University accepts the Miss United States Record Crossing - Of Atlantic at Speed of 41 mph ABOARD SS UNITED STATES AT SEA—The sleek new United StateNs completed her today in a record of three days, 10 hours and 40 the trans-Atlantic speed for the first time in 83 years first run was 10 hours two minutes faster than the uper liner crossing minutes US copping Her record traditional white hat of welcome from a pretty Calgary (CP PHOTO) dals have caused damage glass, Pat Forman, chairman of the) Parks Board, and Gus Soder-| |Jund, park superintendent, told) ‘RCMP this morning that beer) |bottles were smashed in the! | pool sometime Sunday and mat- ting around the edges was lit- j tered with glass, i Soderlund drained the pool at! 11 p.m. last night and workmen) this morning began sweeping! jthe pool and walks. maiden Atlantic ribbon for the | Mew Break Glass in Pool; Drive Tractor on Lawn Lumber Taken From Acropolis Hill For the second time in less than two weeks van- time littering the main swimming pool with broken ute % yiciv bates PRICE FIVE CENTS DAILY DELIVERY Phone 81 Vandals Take Over Cit Parks During Week-En American Slang Corrupts Boys Regard Good English as Sissy’ WARRINGTON, England—(Reuters)—-Teacher R. B. Mad- dock said today American “slang” had so corrupted his boys good English on the radio. Guelph Prison Riot Quelled Resident Dies In Kamloops In 12 Hours Funeral services were held in|1,000 surly, cursing prisoners) Kamloops today for Mrs. F. M. | rioted at the Guelph reformatory Davis, former well-known resi-| Saturday night and took com- at McClymont Park, this Former City that they now regard correct English as “sissy stuff.” Maddock said he had taken steps to counteract the in- fluence of American comic books and the conversation of U.5. airmen at a base two miles from his school. He said tHe had arranged for the boys to hear famous sportsmen—men they could regard as being “sissy’—speaking ‘tb 14 years agq by the British Cunard liner Queen Mary )3,000-ton vessel averaged 35.59 knots about 41 land hour on 2,938 mile crossing | dent of Prince Rupert, who died | mand of the gray stone institu- Mayor Harold Whalen, when | Friday after an extended illness. | tion within half an hour. | informed of the damage, said, | Her husband was formerly Wielding knives, wrenches and | “4t's a disgrace and it proves | chief clerk to the Superintendent | meat cleavers, the prisoners sur my contention that police |Of Railways here and holds the | ged through dormitories and cell ' The t mile an ie ak eel the Liberal party. 800 foot level of | A dispatch from Victoria said | the defeated Liberal leader is jnot making any announcement} FOR RESCUE and Christie Northcote through At dawn Chamber- valk out while ned with North- } iberlain waiked from 4 itil 1 pum. when he ched civilization and noti- RCAF. The Air Force nediately dispatehed a It picked up Chamber- ind he flew over the pinpointing the spot ere Northeote lay... On. his..Led himmediately, but those closest to him say it is a certainty as soon as the party can call a conven | tion a new leader will be nam- ed. It adds this within a few months could be VANCOUVER (€P) i Columbia's marathon |}count pushed ahead slowly dut ing the week-end with CCF and Social Credit still battling obtain the largest group in the 48-member legislature Three more seats were British election to decid Saturday night: bringing the BULLETIN Simmons, Raschi to Pitch PHILADELPHIA. — Curt Simmons for Na- tional League and Vic Raschi for American League will be opposing pitchers in the 19th an- nual All Star baseball game at Shibe Park tomor- row, * * * should patrol the park.” same position in Kamloops. He Mr Whalen said damage to| ¥% transferred séven years ago. playground equipment is just} Mrs. Davis was an active part of the reason for police | United Church werker and was patrélling. He said motorists are|Prominent in tennis and lawn forever speeding past the park | bowling circles, through the 15-miles-an-hour| Besides her husband, she zone and my requests for an|leayes two daughters, Mrs. Elsie officer to be on duty in the| Murray of Vancouver, and Mrs. area; especially on Sundays,| Thelma Johnson of Seattle, and have been cast aside. one son, Jack, in Kamloops. CARS SPEEDING Last. time Mrs. Davis was in “T personally saw more than 50 going at an excessive Speed past the park on Sunday, yet there was no police officer cars Rogers, 667 Fourth Avenue East. | blocks in a lightning outbreak. | At least four guards were hurt, ; none seriously, by thrown chunks | of bathroom tile and plaster. Ap- | parently no prisoner was injured. | Twelve hours later the uprising ‘was over, but cells and dormi- tories were a mess of broken glass |and furniture. Damage is estim- ‘ated at $200,000 or more. Guards, reinforced by Ontario provincial police used big tear- | gas bombs as well as riot guns) | | | Prince Rupert was three years | that fire tear ; i iY shat » tear-gas projectiles to | ago when they visited at the) quel the outbreak. Fire hoses | Nome of Mr. and Mrs. George| were brought into play in the| SPEEDY SWIMMER Namee of Vancouver, who rep- resented Canada, in the 1948 Olympics, is one of four wo- men chosen for the 1952 team in the Helsinki competitions. Miss McNamee _made two . Kay Mc- t exct ‘ epee 2 urt Napsed from ex- |toval to 38. All t to tl . — Be ae. wre No, explanation waagiven ter | trogen rome "Her beokae a. mr Ae we Ai WORS SO See A child is going to be killed ' iviais at Toronto. Her brother, istion |beaten Liberal party. This was Denmark Rejects US Protest hives sidan i poy thoss speeding R bli the en Gerry, smashed three records RAGEOUS WOMAN | standing until counting resumed COPENHAGEN. — D k tod: jected | isn’t curbed,” said the mayor. epu icans e | in the trials, and also goes to Grace Woor- {| Monday winch: ont deslnincanns enmar ay rejecte a mon rice the Olympics. Miss McNamee ane % sf alata es o< + ooaine : : « Sederlund also reported to B t | Oo competed in the 100, 200, and Al, 100 pounds, ELECTED American protest against proposed delivery of a pia as ee a t e ver nt ct wae vith Sqdn Lar -_ hae Danish built tanker to the Soviet Union. Move driven a small caterpillar p t R | R d d tions. (CP Photo) I loctor, @ é . ‘ ‘. — . ete - a . veteran of res- CCF—14 risked cessation of all U.S. economic and military | ‘tet over the playground ar y ures e uce to | Lib—6 ‘ area near the children’s swim- s PC—2 aid to Denmark. ming pool at the park during CHICAGO (CP)—Amid a battle | Second Riot oe. 2 Lab—i —— ———__—__—_———__—— | the night. over rules of the 1952 national ove urp us +t nded 100 feet LE \DING . . i intel Kinet ouiek aii ole convention of the Republican ge yu JK NG Ch R d B t B k All puerto party for selection of presiden- ANCOUVER (@—British Coi- ! M h g : oe ‘OFr__6 inese e 5 @a ac a5 |the lawn from the lugs on the/ ti.) candidate opened here to-| VANCOUVER ¢ i n IC ! aii orked frantically to CCF —6 | tractor although he believed the Pe Mentholehs “focnea suite umbia packers in a move to clear a } 1c | 7 4 7. herself, After hanging for os SE@UL (AP) Large allied trenched in log pillboxes two|damage could be repaired. - Vetere oak i political last year's grt owe pack ao State Prison hours, she made a rope Bt ae raiding party supported by tanks | miles east of Panmunjom, truce} The tractor,.which has been| ing. put nothing ines then @ warehouses oo ve re ere 4 - hrouds of her chute : Total—48 anc flame throwers were beaten | talks site. jused in the area for the past sensational wing of pledwes [tors pak gon : . os $5.80 a JACKSON, Michigan (AP) — leg bs iad van cad sees phere ser ‘tag! back early today by Chingse en-| allied raidérs were pinned | Week, was left in the park over) trom delégates could make A per meg oe a One convict was shot last night eter tat ie au ied ae teen ————| down by Communist mortar | the week-end Dwight D. Eisenhower the Re-| “we've got a bulging ware-|#S 140 odd wild and rioting pris- r of the US. Coast|riberal ticket in Victoria. Edu | Shells and grenades. At first, out-| puMBER STOLEN publican choice for its candi-| house and we've priced ourselves/Oners grabbed two guards as d half a mile from pire sabes er ota a M * or ers | post rockets failed fo dislodge; 1, another camplaint to po- date. ‘out of a market,” said one com- hostages, threatening them with t took four hours for | returned in Victoria, Straith | Se FOGR. lice this morning, Soderlund re-| Senator Robert Taft, cool and|pany official. “Price of other death, and wrecked a cell block Jamieson to CAfry| wa, th® second cabinet minis Burned By i Seer \ported theft of some lumber|confident, claimed he had the;food products has come down at the southern Michigan prison. na stretcher to the] tor in the re-election. Other was |from Roosevelt Park. necessary pledges of delegates|and we have met competition.”| It is the same prison — the | Forests Minister E. T. Kenney) ' me $600 000 For | The lumber had been torn|to win 604 and some to spare. | New price will range from $35 | world’s larges® — in which a einai in Skeena as an ire i di away from the flagpole at the] 4 seating of 50 vital delegates|2 Case of 96 halfs for ae ee ee ee riot April gaged Pair ei isla. tabiaiae tel ‘Dredging Here |park last week in preparation|was to stake in the rules of|Salmon, top grade, to $14 for|brought dea one convict e in Crash ; UVER @-—Mrs, Claire and Earl Edgerton, { to be married next killed Sunday plunged off the a ditch of nearby were Cir Car j + vostock became a widow vhen her husband was 1 Vancouver traffic ac- even other persons were ‘identally in B.C, dur- veek-end oli Ai ice, Al e that. three men were on Pitt Island, about 40 uth of Prince Rupert, 3 SOnsiderable excitement ; en when police were ®a to assist in a search. * Men—Dr, W. (Bill) Pat- ‘nd Hugh Douglas, geolo- ind E. E. (Ted) Mason, a engineer—-had no know- at they had been report- ‘sing until they reached nartered boat to bring vack to Prince Rupert. Mason said this morning “pper of the fish-packer id hired to take them to ind became over-anxious ‘wo of the party failed to by darkness Saturday le ised Ly rN Patmore returned from a ut We Weren't Even Lost’ rline Search For Geologists \ aii Byron Johnson, had been defeated, and Attorney-General !Gordon Wismer is trailing in Vancouver Centre Aycan ee Ninth Oil Well ‘Blows in BC FORT ST. JOHN @ successful oil or gas north eastern B.C. district blew in with a 50-foot high spray of light greenish oil Friday night | Pacific Petroleums No. 9 well | became the areas fourth success ful oil well The ninth well in this from Where the packer tied up, but we found we couldn't make it before ‘dark so lit a fire and stayed put. “when ‘daylight came about 4 }a.m, Sunday, Bill (Dr Patmore) packed some food and set out to meet us. While he was away the skipper notified his employer | who in turn told the RCMP.” | Police here immediately char- tered a Queen Charlotte Air-| lines plane and headed for the | area, Pilot Roy Barryman said | lhe flew down Grenville Channet | and after spotting the packer | dropped down to talk with the skipper. He returned to Prince Rupert shortly after 2 p.m. | Meantime the police boat, PML | 15, was ordered to the scene and | VANCOUVER @ everely burned when a can of gasoline exploded, were ‘flown to Vancouver from Kemano Satur- day for hospital treatment. In fair condition in Vancouver Gen- Hospital are Nisto Raffin of Mitchell, B.C., and Patrick Kelly, both 22 Employed as drillers with Mor- rison-Knudsen Company of Can- Ltd., they were drying their the eral ade, clothes over a campfire at jconstruction camp near Kem- Five gas wells also| have been completed in the area. | tire and exploded, ano when @ can of gas caught reconnaissance about six miles| plans were being made to organ- | they then returned totheir rooms | area and to the northern inter- ize @ ground search party if the men had not been located by |}sundown on Sunday “We had no idea the skipper got panicky and after Dr. Pat- more reached us we were pre- paring to head back to the boat ‘when We saw a QCA plane cir- cling overhead. We waved to it and shortly after trekked back to the boaf. “When we got there, the skipper was talking on his ra- dio to the police boat. After he told us what had happened, we notified the police that we were alright and hadn’t even been lost.” The packer brought the men back to Port Edward, arriving shortly before midnight, and Two youths, | Special to The Daily News lror the building of a new plat- ' ° form OTTAWA—More than $600,000; “This is another eee of worth of dredging for Skeena /ack of police patrol in our city, | district has been approved in the said the mayor as he settled |down to his day’s work. |supplimentery estimates of the Surely there must be a po- | House of Commons /liceman available to make peri- | Number one is Delkatla Slough | odic trips around the city.” at Masset, where $208,000 will be| Water is expected to be pump- a t i th : ane ed into the swimming pool again | spent to clear the way f0r @/ this afternoon, after workmen | fishing vessel anchorage isweep up all the glass. , | In the Skeena River, $400,000 Last’ week, Mr. Forman re- | will be spent to clear the bottom ported vandals had torn shin- , of Inverness Passage. Both these cles off the roof of the newly- | projects have been requested for painted rest rooms and that |some years by‘ north Pacific holes were bored through the | Coast fishermen, walls of one side. _ —WEATHER— Synopsis | A flow of moist air across the ‘north eoast is bringing cloudi- imess and a few showers to that } 4 in the Prince Rupert Hotel. \ior. However, a ridge of high Mr. Mason’ said the skipper) pressure is well established for should not have become over-| those regions for the next two anxious “because you don’t get| days. lost until you've been in that! Temperatures will slowly climb kind of country a couple of days|under. the clear skies in the at least.” |southern districts but little “There’s a terrific growth on| change is anticipated elsewhere. the island and nobody would ever | Forecast attempt to break trail after it | Southern section sunny this gets dark.” : |morning clouding over this ‘af- The three men, who arrived|ternoon, Cloudy Tuesday. Re- here from Vancouver last Fri- | mainder region cloudy with scat- day, left Port Edward about 2|tered rainshowers today and a.m. Saturday. Originally they | Tuesday. Little change in tem- had planned on being away only | perature. Winds southerly 15 in the one day. exposed areas, otherwise light. Pitt Island is located between | Low tonight and high tomorrow Banks Island and the mainland. | at Port Hardy 46 and 65; Sands- It is 57 miles long and from}pit 50 and 60; Prince Rupert 50 the fight and no compromise | !OW-stade chums. appeared possible. of last year’s pack and the new Senator Bricker of Ohio, Taft) supporter, moved that the 1948) “Shing season now under way * is expected to produce 1,400,000 rules be adopted but this) ....5 brought an immediate counter | plan from Eisenhower forces} F seeking vote as each state until) vane i the contest is settled individ-| aay Ores ~ ually. | sharp earthquake jolted Hualien on Formosa’s east coast early to- day, but there were no reports of —-TIDES— Tuesday, July 8, 1952 Warehouses hold 98,000 cases casualties or damage. The weath- [3 bureau rated the quake as grade four on a scale of six. High «...... 1:22 22.5 feet | Hualien, a city of 45,000 about 75 14:28 19.6 feet| miles south of Taipeh, suffered ta 8:04 0.2 feet| extensive damage in a series of 20:69 6.0 feet! quakes last October. wounded eight others and did close to $1,000,000 worth of dam- age. me Leaders of the néw outbreak are among those being disciplin- ed by solitary confinement for their participation in the April rioting. Now, as then, rioters com- plained and again prison author- ities agreed to. these demands. Both hostage guards were freed unharmed, but only after State police troopers had been withdrawn from the cell block. Rioters shouted they would throw guards off the fifth storey cell block balcony to the concrete floor below if they weren't. While a Soap Box Derby was Other not organized for Prince Rupert entries this year so that a local winner could take part in the B.C. races at Mission City July 1, local racing enthusiasts will have an early start for next year. Prince Rupert Trades and La- bor Council plans to hold an annual September 1 (Labor Day) Soap Box Derby, run according to the rules and regulations of the international event. sponsors Frizzell Motor and The Daily the derby are Products Ltd. News. The TLC will be the main sponsor of the fall event; Friz- zell Motor Products, in conjune- tion with General Motors Ltd. and the Daily News, the spring derby. Reason for the double derby is to give contestants two chances a year to test out their cars in competition, then This year’s entries for the te perfect them for the real fali derby will then have the| race that counts at Mission, opportunity of perfecting their, B.C. cars throughout the winter for| The call now is for sponsors the annual spring event which|of individual entries, which is is to be held next year on May/open to all city organizations or six to 13 miles wide. and 60, , be 24. businesses. Those sponsoring @ Soap Box Racers To Get Two Chances Annually; Labor Day Becomes Derby Day aiding the derby entry are responsible for Trades and Labor Council with|the purchase of wheels and axies for the racer’s car. These cost $18. At Labor Day's race, several prizes will be given for first, second and third winners—also a consolation prize. Donation of prizes will be accepted by Gran- by Watmough, who is ih charge of the derby committee. Names of sponsors can be submitted to the office of The Daily News. Rules and reguiations of the derby will be published in The News, as well as other, iiforma- tion from time to tirae. Number of entries in the race will @e- pend on the number of firms or organizations sponsoring the boys, x Na cect Ns