Nie AR CABS ADIO DISPATCHED omber Crashes n Plane Search Seven Saved By Para-Rescue Unit; Suffer Burns By The Canadian Pres: if 1) MONTON.—A United States Air Force B-17| crashed Friday in a remote area near the| Yukon-Alaska border. |, the scene of the wreck including | three injured with second and | third-degree burns Tt was not: oken Leg 't St esn op immediately known whether this was all of the plane’s crew. ti eo Fan A token of three helicopters started evacuating the survivors VOL, XLI, No. 163 Seven survivors were found at| Wy NO 2 ROT T WwW ae PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., SATURDAY, JULY 12, 1952 18-Year Record Smashed By Current Hot Weather Mercury Zooms to 90-Mark WHOLE CONTINENT SEPARATES FAMILY OF CENTRAL B.C. PUPS ; PROVINCIAL LIBRARY, . 118 er g VICTORIA, 8. c. RTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER Published at Canada’s Most Strategic Pacific Port—‘’Prince Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest” _ NOTICE Poder of Commerce DINNER to be held Sunday for Hon. R. H. Winters at the BROADWAY CAFE (not in the Legion) TEN CENTS (including comic section) In Downtown Prince Rupert An 18-year-old record was smashed here Friday | ‘when a heat wave struck Prince Rupert and pushed | FRANCOIS LAKE here are travelling far and wide. tia Bay, Newfoundland to their Puppies from the Minsmere Kennels Two cocker spaniels are enroute by train today to Placen- new home and two other puppies from the same litter were shipped recently to Prince The Newfoundland-bound puppies should reach their new Social Credit Nears. B.C. Election Victory Winning Seat Leads By 7000 VANCOUVER.—The Social Credit party is only hours away from final victory in British Columbia’s Compoand yon im Pride 19, 16, 20, 19, Superforts Bomb Korean City "ers: ting? stay In Biggest Air Blow of War SEOUL (€P).—B-29 Superfort- esses took over at dusk Friday | o make an around-the-clock »ombing of Communist instal- ations in the North Korean ‘capital the greatest Allied air slow of the war im De 5S ( wheal saiate Drug Count Sixty-five Superforts followed | wn as Area 2B |waves of fast United Nations open until VANCOUVER ©-—A pretty 18- fighter-bombers which left Py-| \year-old girl Friday was sen- | ONByang, the capital, and its) » sales .om the jtenced to prison for 18 months, environs in flames during the; | the first person to be tried in day-long raids More than 1400 tons of bombs were loosed on the rubbled area in a record of 1254 individual flights Eight Killed in A Pal | Public Weather Office. Socreds and CCF each jnor company negotiators had | jany report of progress as they), yacc] ba cai i | ‘Clymont Park’s swimming j ended two days of secret con-} s couv |feren +s veuuuanis | pools yesterday and a parade,of Raids were part of the new| The six-weeks-long strike has|45, the park again early this| get-tough” policy. which began | made idle close to 1,200,000 work-| morning. g parly ' i with annihilation of key North|ers. In addition to 600,000 ideal) One citizen made a special| * * Korean power installations last| Steelworkers nearly 600,00 em-| trip to visit Mayor Harold Wha-| Public Dinner had taken 18 seats and Hundreds of citizens flocked|Mrs, Tillie Rolston, Social Credit candidate in Van- er-Point Grey’s third seat, appeared a shoo-in |youngsters and mothers headed foy her party’s vital 19th seat. When counting of alternative choices, started July 3, ended last night, this was standing: Elected—SC 18, CCF 18, Lib. month. | ployees of allied industries have) ien to ask him .what he was| ° 6, PC 4, Lab. 1 | be aid off. pane a : * > ms The Usiied Shite Ak Peel |going to do about the dust. be- Site Moved to Leading—SC 1 called the Pecmieanir sikh tne) The auto industry has been | jing raised as a result of no rain. Total 48 : a yongyang Ne | hit hardest. By Monday nearly; “Best answer to that was:| vs . Broadway Cafe “largest 24-hour eftort of the| Korean conflict by Far East air| forces on one target area.” 300,000 auto workers will be idle.|‘pray for rain,’” said His Wor-| Ford Motor Co. alone has laid|ship as he made preparations | off nearly 72,000 workers. ‘fora day in the sunshine. The ,FIRE HAZARDS | dinner for. ..Hon. . Herbert... H. | The heat wave, however, is not| Winters, federal Minister of |confined solely to.Prince Rupert| Resources and Development, has Chamber of Commerce One outstanding sea, in which Mrs. Rolston now leads her clos- est opponent by more than 7000 votes, is expected to be finally Gecided today to wind up the marathon race. Three-way Crash | YAKIMA ()—Two automobiles and a gasoline truck rammed to- gether in a ball of fire and tan- | gled wreckage yesterday, killing eight persons, six of them of one family Five of the victims are children of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Johnson, of nearby Selah. Mrs. Johnson, 38, the truck driver, and the second automobile driver were other vic- tims. Johnson and another of his children are in critical condition from burns and tajuries | dow ntown rooming house. Fed }eral prosecutors will handle pros- Co-op: Parma, 54,000.\ecutions in the other 15 cases ULLETINS Survivors Rescued DE JANEIRO (CP)—A minesweeper to ed up 20 survivors of a Brazilian DC-3 rashed into the sea last night. Five persons ind three missing. Plane carried 26 pas tk Vampire Jets Collide ONDON (CP) Two Vampire jet fighters ided in mid-air over RAF station East England and crashed in flames. Both pilots were * * * 2,000 Dead in Raid Volcano in Aleutians Glows Red KODIAK, Alaska © Shishaldin on Unimak Island ihas been glowing red for the | past week, coast guard reported | Friday Northwest Airlines pilot, Fred Zimmerly, reperted smoke pour- ing out of the Shishaldin crater Moun Dramatic Rescue Bid at Sea Ends in Death of Stricken Man SAN FRANCISCO ()-—-A dramatic sea and air race to save the life of a seaman stricken with polio on a Coast Guard cutter ended in death today The Coast Guard reported Frank A. Ashenden, 22, of Van Nuys, California died two hours after a plane from San Francisco raced 1,400 miles and successfully dropped an iron lung to the cutter Finch ne youth was stricken early yesterday Ashenden was kept alive by the crew, which worked in shifts pumping exygen into the rigid body. Speedy Conciliation Forecast In Rail Union Wage Dispute that labor groups would press for a prompt clean-up of the issue. The last dispute dragged out for about 1% years before ending in the 1950 general rail strike and subsequent compul- sory arbitration New Drought Threat From Heat Wave VANCOUVER OTTAWA (—Federal concilia ‘tion machinery will swing into {action with record speed in the huge rail-wage dispute The Labor Department con- | ciliator probably willbe appoint jed Saturday, informants said \shortly after railroads and un- ‘ions announced they could not jagree on new contract terms land asked the department fo | help. | The request for conciliation came a week after railways re- ceived wage demands of an esti- |mated $150,000,000 a year for |more than 125,000 non-operat ing employees, and only four land forestry department offi- jcials have warned tourists and ‘campers to take precautions with matches and ‘cigarettes while passing through forest areas. The nearest rain clouds, says the weatherman, are hundreds of miles away and so B.C. gen- |been changed from the Cana- idian Legion to the Broadway Cafe. This was announced at noon today by Norton Youngs, presi- dent of the Chamber. E. T. Applewhaite, Liberal MP for Skeena, has gone to Terrace () — Shrivelling | spectre of drought hovers in the to meet the minister. They will motor to this city tonight. The dinner is scheduled for 7 p.m. erally is in line for some real summer weather. There are always plenty of tips for keeping cool in a heat wave and Dr. Morris Fishbein of Chicago probably has the best solution. He says tnat if you can con- Canada to e vince the boss, an aft A d C | siesta is aeteenai wed Al ey on Other tips for keepi 1 FE h are: go tropical; don’t cereus is eries don’t overplay and don’t over- jeat. Avoid an excess of alco-| COLOMBO, Ceylon ()—Canada | holic drinks, don’t worry and) will provide $1,000,000 to help don’t let people get your goat.| ¢, Y Daink shenty Gf Gael wabee put | oem develop her fisheries un take ice drinks in moderation. |2¢" 2” agreement signed here | The learned nhysician and au-| yesterday under the Colombo lthor ‘has no tips for citizens|Plan for development of south- when it rains, except to try to| east Asia. keep dry : | The agreement provides also | Police have warned citizens to| that Canada assist Ceylon in de- watch their speed past play-| velopment of villages for settl- ground areas. |ing thousands of families and cert | for providing electricity to the | ORANGEMEN'S DAY | Today is Orangemen’s Day— |the 262nd anniversary of the| purpose dam. | Battle of the Boyne. It is the| Where goods supplied by Can- Galoya Valley in East Ceylon, where United States engineers are now completing a huge multi- Five seats were settled Friday. In Vancouver Centre, Mrs. Laura Jamieson; of the CCF, cle- feated Attorney General Gordon Wismer with a majority of 1396 votes, Mrs, Jamieson was tie second woman elected out of 3 who en- tered the race. Other is Mrs. Nancy Hodges, speaker in the last Legislature, and the third will in all likelihood be Mrs, Rolston. Social Credit snatched both Vancouver-Burrard seats from the CCF after Socialists had led on the first count, CCF will ask for recount in the second seat, where Social Credit won by 246 votes. The alternative voting system upset the final result in seven seats from what they would have been under the previous “X” system. Of these seven, Social Credit won five, taking both Bur- rard seats and Similkameen from the CCF and Yale and Fort George from the Liberals. CCF took Premier Byron John- son’s New Westminster seat on a further count and Progressive Conservative upset CCF in Na- naimo. If the “X” system had been used, CCF would have form- ed the next government with 21 seats with Social Credit the offi- cial opposition with 14, —-TIDES— Sunday, July 13, 1952 (Pacific Standard Time) 'OKYO.—-Communist Pyongyang radio said the UN record air strike against the North ean capital Friday left in its wake 2000 dead, PO injured-and 250 missing. ish Cheer Republican Choice }and flames licking 200 to 300 \feet in the air. Unimak is the first island of the Aleutian jchain, just west of Alaska pen- insula’s tip days after negotiations opened day on which Orangemen in) ada under the agreement are | heat haze over British Cqlumbia | The move into conciliation | tsday—the 13th consecutive day | from straight company-union | without rain, but still a long way | negotiations underlined previous- | from fhe rainless stretch of 98) ly-expressed union declarations | days last summer — —| The drought last year cost B.C about $50,000,000 in lost wages) and woods production. | The dry spell threatened the} | water supply of Duncan, a com- | munity_of 3,000 on Vancouver Is- | many centres throughout the|sold by Ceylon to the public,|High -.............. 5:37 18.0 feet world celebrate the battle that} Ceylon promises to set up coun- 18:13 19.5 feet made William, Prince of Orange, terpart funds equivalent to Cana- | Low .........-.....- 11:44 5.0 feet William III of England. | dian expenditure on items sold. — -—— feet July 21 Deadline For Entries in senhower Seeks Wholehearted Support | land. Bans went into effect in| for nomination, r arranged a post- on meeting today with | lable Republican mem- t Congress General won the Republican nomina- tion. Communists, as usual dis- sented. sented today as determined to insist on fighting a campaign on an all-out “fair deal” plat- form as the best hope of a democratic victory over Gener- al Eisenhower in November. The government and diplo- | matie offices, however, there was | went hefore the can crusade aimed at| United States domestic affairs. out an “administration! A British foreign office spokes- has fastened on every one|man limited his remarks to the | wastefulness, arrogance |statement: “Eisenhower is very | the White House. é . PAGO General Eisen-| and corruption in high places.” | much admired and respected ‘ged toa fighting cam- After five days of feuding, over here.” ‘inst the Truman ad-| among themselves, the delegates; Most newspapers happily as- tion, today sought to| gave Eisenhower a roaring wel-}sumed that the Republicans ‘he wholehearted Repub- | come jchoice meant that regardless of Support of the party's 1962 | . adon comes the re- ithe outcome of the November ential nominee ee oe of west Euro- | presidential election, Europe ‘o wipe out the bitter- codes newspapers heaved sighs | would be assured against Com- h split the party in his | Se a a : ;munism ‘ of relief that Eisenhower—the ; | battle against Senator iioe Ra aaa ie | Meanwhile, in Washington tb A. Taft 3 President Truman was repre- ing-down” of foreign and do- |mestic proposals for which he has campaigned since he entered Truman hag said he will not | Vaneouver on | be a candidate. jand burning of rubbish. . ; | areas : : Eisenhower's areas of Vancouver Island for young, running |... 2 mate says that the fight against ests were closed to travel las Communism will be a “great is- sue” of the presidential paign. Senator Richard M, Nixon of | Califormia said: ;contined near the 100 mark fo “Tt’s an issue the Democrats| the seventh day in a row. are stuck with.” | a rete toed vice widen, candidate for ‘Baseball Game, tion, tol »{ foe nat might the the aa-| 90ftball Sunday vice-president, still tingling over ; ministration has. failed to halt} eam | £0° 70 days. ‘ | The weatherman could prom sion of the convention | discreet, tactful silence, Officials Y ; ind formally accepted | declined to comment for fear of; A long-time associate said | Communist aggression, | Anderson will meet Commercial | omination. He called for a|being accused of meddling in | Truman Will oppose any “water-| “We have to get a more effec- | Hotel in a regular scheduled tive program,” he said, “to save ourselves from being destroyed from abroad and within our country. In the evening, softball wi {Gyro Park, lawn sprinkling | Two | | year. Ali B.C. forests were closed ise no relief as the temperature | at Lytton in the Fraser Canyon | Sunday afternoon Gordon & game of the City Baseball League. featuré CCC 300 vs. Firemen at ‘| The racing car and driver for derby committee, has set July || the annual Labor Day Soap Box | 21 as the deadline for entries. Derby here must not exceed 250) | pounds and all cars must be jequipped with 19-inch wheels. These are two of the rules) T|jaid down by the International) ‘tical Workers, Soap Box Derby Association ana| the Engineers International Un ion apply to all boys entering the | |race being sponsored here bY | to ithe Trades and Labor Council | Frizzell Motor Products, repre-| 9 }sentative of General Motors, and | TLC's annual sports day. iThe Daily News. | TLC. They are from the Inter national Brotherhood of Elec | Ten sets of regulation wheels jat the Civic Centre. 1! | here shortly. (Red): | Meanwhile Granby | Two entries have been receiv- ed so far from locals in the local 344, and At least 10 boys are expected be sponsored in the event, *}held in conjunction with the | ‘The race will be held on See- ond Avenue, starting at North jhave been ordered and will be | Star Bottling Works and ending . Six cars were entered in the Watmough, caairman of the (derby here last year and boys labor Day Soap Box Derby Event wanting to enter should speak up fast so they can get instruc- tions on building their cars. Northwest Construction Com- .|pany has donated some material land an instructor from Frizzell Motors will advise any of the .| boys who need assistance. Boys taking part in this derby will be able to perfect any faults during the winter in preparation for the B.C. Soap Box Derby, held annually at Mission, B.C. It doesn’t cost very much to sponsor a boy, so let’s get en- tries in quickly so officials can plan the big race. Remember—July 21 is the deadline. ee