Old ;:K: nap jjc? a she wan- Field oercrf bedinave-' an hat ' ne fair." i: Swcaen t:a Cai:K a Til; :tiild : thr ::::. nad r:.:" '"ure B; (tit creat ON I I I M I I U 11 II a ft. 1 1 ii rr i i lo.npmns ai of Liquor Law -x owner. :p::on of In c Magls- bee from a sum and It will pay for many '3 Taxt Murray , man hours of work. All of Brit- K " . 1-1- V-1 1 1 I . f .... If n r.;it: i.mi i .mum ilia u.111 iiiuiiL iiuui it. ' wav ui-fii ipi tin.- urnv ikiiiiiit.i vr - - - ..situ ilivi iaiua&..i National Railways form an lm- ia rrrtant nart. or nnr rounirv s - 1 ti i. . men DroDeriv .. t r 1 - " CUUllUIllJf , tUIItlilUGU 111 . 1 nun say that -..- lucKei sys- -a. uasea on "ne:sc: i0 con- ' Of their nrnnof bo!e3 ot rum and niskey that had raid These COnflscatprt t-v. . v. ... - w end of tho in. M) .Mu"ay denied lt and rwi,, laxl business w U -l--wV44ili II. the doUcp . . tvnpn K , "ic saie rampant" in acted Set t . uunse f.,1 A. N. Pot- ine Crown .ML' I'llriv, "iiirn nuK . vuu n rr " w TO CVttU- cope and nan unitAj ... l! " 2f,0 -uonstrated at the here Vanahan "Thpu arp sn larpp. 30 'rLS,m,e 01 the widespread and so dlverslve that invert toi Mur- ,t , t ro P,n,Hiom land all parts of Canada benefit uun 01 it .. - . 1 vcu are rcsnon ' ,rom lnem 1,1 Janaaa al0Ile Wilon ot vourlthls year We ShaU Spend ClSC state van. .ijlto $100,000,000 for materials and M . II..' ..J ll -l UI. i:.ir- 'My advice' muncjr : j nave properly "KWowoHKHowaosHKHHja ft Gg&inists New Ship Launching Pledge ofC.NR.Policy Railway Expenditures Important Part of National Economy, Declares Vaughan V I C T 0 R I A Mayor Percy E. George and the city council of Victoria entertained at a civic luncheon here today Hon. Lionel Chevrier, K.C., minister of transport; R. C. Vaughan, chairman and president, Canadian National Railways and Steamships; N. B. Walton, executive vice-president, and other officers of railway. Mr. Vaughan said that thi new Canadian National steamship the "Prince George," to be launched at Yarrows Limited, Esquimau, following the luncheon, is to be "bigger, faster land more modern" than any j passenger-carrying vessel sailing : today in the northern coastal service of British Columbia. "But it is not on this account alone that we are proud of this I new steamship," said the rall- Iway executive. "Our greatest l nHHo nno fr irVl1h T am Burn .! , every Canadian j, snares, stems from the fact that she is Cana- dian-deslgned and Canadian- i built. "We could have placed the ordtr for this vessel elsewhere ! than in Canada. We had that i choice. But the record of Cana; i dian shipyards in the late war (convinced us that just as good ships san be built in Canada as anywhere in the world. This new steamship is proof of our con- uviciloa. -It is an attestation of our faith in the quality of Canadian materials and In the skill or Canadian dockyard - t- r last ","om a ers, It Is evidence of 7 Avenue alterable principle to spend with ' Soptem- Canadian industry and with Canadian labor as much as we ;;r.; the can of tne money we earn sp - :irjiely largely from Canadian Industry rort) the and frdm the fruits of Canadian labor. ( ) p--m1a, rnM Tha nrrionl nrlla tnr thin c. . i.i vnipn ino vpkcpi was x.f uhm mm. r.vrn 111 :: TODAY'S STOCKS :: Courtesy S. D. Johnr.ton Co. Ltd. , Vancouver Bralorne 11.05 B R. Con .05 Vt B. R.X 10 Cariboo Qoartz 2.25 Dentonla 18 Hedley Mascot 1.08 Minto 02'i Pioneer 3.75 Premier Border 04 Privateer .36 Reno , .12 Salmon Gold .25 Vz Sheep Creek 1.00 Taylor Bridge 52 Taku River .72 Vananda .25 Congress .04 Pacific Eastern 08 Hedley Amalgamated .. .03 Spud Valley 10 Central Zeballos OlVi Sllbak Premier 67 Oils A.P. Con 11 Calmont 34 C. & E 2.45 Foothills - 2.40 Home 3.85 Toronto Athona 13 Aumaque 31 Beattie 82 Beveourt .59 will be shared by firms and individuals distinct from, and in no way part of, our company. "This huge sum would be even larger If materials and labor were available. For example, we have already placed orders in Canada this year for roling stock that is, locomotives, freight and passenger car equip ment amounting to $40,000,000. But tills Is not sufficient for our requirements and we have been trying for many months to In- crease our orders for passenger- , , , , , . cars- e mater,al fa" anJ abr uch shortasje ha? ,been that car equipment firms have been unable even to quote on our requirements. "In the face of these difficulties we have been endeavoring to improve the situation with an extensive program of rehabilitation and remodeling of locomotives and car equipment in our own shops across Canada.-On this program we shall spend an estimated $24,000,000 this yean When you add this sum to what we are spending for equipment built outside of our own shops, you reach the large total of $64,000,000 for rolling jtock alone. As I have said, we would do more If we could but we must grapple with the same problems with which all other Industrialists in Canada must struggle. "Let us alays remember that It was upon the bed-rock of the railway Industry that the pro gress of Canada was laid, pro- 1 ...Ll.k i 1 nAMriAnAnl. nrpss ill u.iiu-11 Liic iuuilujucu making up the Canadian Na tional system played a vital part. It Is upon the bed-rock of the railway industry that the future of Canada must be laid. In that future the Conadian National Railways will have an Important role to play. As to how they will pay It, the launching of this fine, modern steamship here today is an omen and a nlortno" Bobjo .16 Buffalo Canadian 18'2 Consol. Smelters 86.50 Con west 85 Donalda I-05 Eldona ' 108 Elder 80 Oiant Yellowknlfe 6.15 Ood's Lake I-06 Hardrock 37 Harrlcana 10 Heva 38 Hosco 30 vi Jacknlfe 07 'i Joliet Quebec 46 Lake Rowan .15 Lapaska 24 Little Long Lac 1.71 Lynx lO'b Madsen Red Lake ... 3.50 McKenzle Red Lake .60 McLeod Cockshutt 1.76 Moneta 43 2.12 Negus Noranda 43' Louvlcourt 169 2 50 Pickle Crow Kegcourt San Antonio 4-00 .59 Vi Senator Rouyn Sherrit Gordon 2-99 Steep Rock 245 Sturgeon River -23 NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'8 NEWBPAPER till of Europe BULLETINS KILLED ON MALAI1AT VICTORIA Three persons were killed on the Malahat Highway, 11 miles from here, Saturday when a truck overturned, crashed into a bank and burned. Two of the three, one a woman, were killed Instantly. The dead are Mrs. Mary Lentz of Prince Albert, Saskatchewan, William Allan Stuart of Vancouver and Charles A. Knight of Victoria. SAVE MEAT, HELP EUROPE WASHINGTON, D.C President Truman Sunday night asked all Americans to pledge themselves not to eat meat Tuesdays and to abstain from , poultry or eggs on Thursdays g&s sacrifices to buttress his Aid for Europe campaign. The president asked every family to "save a slice of bread every day" and asked public eating places to serve bread only on request. IMPERSONATOR JAILED TORONTO Sanford Ross of Eden, Ontario, who once lived as a woman, "married" another man and organized a ladies' auxiliary, was sentenced today to two years and seven months imprisonment. Known as "Mrs. Jean Priscilla Cran-dall," Ross told police that he once headed a women's group in Prince George and later served three months in a Brit ish Columbia women's prison. J "7 N eworK SJ LABORITES FLYING EAST C.C.L. Delegates Take Off From Vancouver For Toronto VANCOUVER British Colum bia delegates to the Canadian Congress of Labor convention, being held next week In Tor onto, took to the air from here today. Forty-two representalves of B.C. labor left Vancouver In two specially chartered Trans-Canada Air Lines' 21 -passenger planes In the largest and longest flight of Its kind ever handled in Canada by T.CJV. It was also the first double charter flight for the company. In the party are spokesmen for the shipyard workers woodworkers steelworkers and miners, and the first plane left at 2:30 p.m. Pacific Time, followed by the second thirty minutes later. They will reach Toronto Sunday morning. Preceding the delegation, Harold Prltchett, I.W.A. district president; Pen (Correct) Bas-kln, international representa-of the steelporkers and Harold Murphy, regional director, mir.e -workers, left here Friday on a regular T.C.A, flight to attend the National Council meeting In Toronto today. WAR VESSELS ON CRUISES .H.M.C.S. Ontario and H.M.C.S Crescent Active on Coast For the next few weeks H.M C.S. Ontario and H.M.C.S. Cres cent will be engaged In training cruises off the coast of British Columbia, according to an an nouncement from Ottawa. The Ontario, having been carrying out gun trials not far from Esquimau, will now until U.S. COUNTERS SOVIET RUSSIA And This Is Salutary Thing, Declare Charles DeGaulle PARIS 10' Gen. Charles De TSLt:ZL weight to world ambitions of the ! soviet union. "There is not a' iree man in me wona wno aoes not consider this salutary," De Gaulle said. CUTTING OFF MEAT SUPPLY I All Sources to Be Picketed 1 In British Columbia By Packing House Workers' Union VANCOUVER 0 British Columbians face the possibility of an acute meat shortage today arising out of the threat of province 2 wide picket action against all meat sources as th; Dominion-wide strike in the packing house industry moved Into its fourth week. William Symington, international representative of the United Packing House Workers of America (CIO), said In Vancouver that every source of fresh meat would be cut off by a picket plan scheduled to go into effect Wednesday. Packing plants, railroads, highways and Borr. butcher shops will ba picketed. I rank ooMni irTn hit "V BY RAIL ENGINE Douglas Fisher, a Canadian National Railways conductor received severe facial Injuries at 11:15 Saturday night when he was struck by an engine in the railway .yards as he crossed a track near the depot. He was taken to hospital in the city ambulance. The accident occurred shortly after the passenger train for the east arrived in the city. Aquitted of. Parent Murder SANTA ANA, Calif. Heiress Louise Overell, aged 18, and her 21-year-old lover, George (Bud) Gollum were freed last night on charges of murdering the former's wealthy parents, Financier and Mrs. Walter E. Overell, ending the longest criminal trial in the history of United States courts. The Jury's verdict of acquit tal following two days of de liberation and nineteen hectic weeks of trial which turned this sleepy city Into a carnival town, was greeted with an .immense cheer from a spectator -Jammed courtroom. However, the buxom Louise, sole heiress to her parents' $550, 000 estate, Immeaiately told reporters that she was not going to marry Gollum to whom she Is engaged, CHIEF JUSTICE NOT IN RUNNING Has No Intention of Seeking Liberal Leadership in British Columbia VANCOUVER Chief Justice Gordon Sloan denies that he October 15 be occupied in train- has any aspirations to become Jng exercises in the Gulf of leader of the Liberal party in Georgia and later that month British Columbia. He has no in-perform gunnery, torpedo and tention of allowing his name to anti-submarine Cuues. go before the convention in De- The destroyer Crescent, new- cember when a successor to ly refitted, will cruise around Premier John Hart will be se-Vancouver Island and engaged lected. The name of the chief In working up exercises along justice had been prominently with anti-submarine work. t mentioned. TAXI 1235 Phone , Hotel. TDira Published at Canada's Most Strategic Pacific Port "Prince Itupert, the Key to the Great Northwest." VOL. XXXVI, No. 234. PRINCE RUPERT, B.C.,) MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1947 PRICE FIVE CENTS Are V Cabs SaaaaaaaV.aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa New International' Body! Is Spo MOSCOW (CP) A new Communist international organization was announced Sunday to fight the Marshall Plan mid - ka.le.? o nine countries for'm the or- gamzation. It is the first such grouping to which the Russians have lent support since they declared tiie Comintern dead in 1943. It Is aimed at uniting the chief Communist strength In Europe. Pravda,t official Communist newspaper here, said the Communist leaders from the nine countries met "somewhere In Poland" last month and ap- praised the world as split into Russian and American orbits, i grade, Yugoslavia, is to be head-They ordered an "information quarters of the organization. WINNIPEGWOMAN STABBING VICTIM Believed to Have Been "Afraid of Something or Somebody" WINNIPEG 0 A worried and frightened look worn last week ny Elsie Frances Tasker, beautiful hazel-haired divorcee, who was found stabbed to death In her downtown home, was believed today by the police to hold the clue to her murder. A relative said she appeared worried and "afraid of something or somebody." The body of the 42-year-old woman, who looked ten years younger, was found in the hall a ees rvaam necuc wona oenes tnas 5 to 2 Score - Joe Page Is Big Hero Brooklyn 02000000 02 7 0 New York 01020110 x 5 7 0 Batteries: Brooklyn Gregg, Behrman (fourth), Hatten (sixth), Barney (sixth), Casey (seventh) and Edwards. New York Shea, Bevens (second), Page (fifth), and A. Robinson. YANKEE YANKEE STADIUM, STADIUM, New iNew York York New New York lorK Yankees won their eleventh World Series in fifteen starts by downing the Brooklyn Dodgers today be- fore a crowd of 71,548 fans yielded a gate of $319,778.09, the richest of all the forty-four classics to datef Coming from behind after Starter Frank Shea had been shelled from the hill, the Yanks knocked out Hal Gregg and continued to attack his successors to nail down tne American League's twenty -seventh Series victory. A game-ending double play precipitated a wild scene near the Yankee mound as New York players swarmed around Fireman Joe Page who had pitched near perfect ball after swinging into action at the start of the fifth .He allowed only one hit, a single by Eddie Mlksls In the ninth, as he returned the first thirteen men he faced. With about $70,000, the difference between the money going to the winning and losing sides, hanging in every pitch, the left-handed Page, who received credit for the victory over Hal Gregg, was magnificent. The Dodger3 swarmed over, Shea in the second inning as the young right-handed rookie, coming back with only the day's rest, faltered under pressure. BROOKLYN Stanky, 2b; Reese, ss; Robinson, lb; Walker, rf; Hermanskl, If; Edwards, c; Furlllo, cf; Jorgensen, 3b; Gregg, p. NEW YORK Stlrnwelss, 2b; Henrlch, If; Berra, rf; DIMagglo cf; McQuinn, lb; Johnson, 3b; Robinson, c; Rizzuto, ss; Shea, p Umpires Rommel AL O rgamzing nsored By Russia bureau" set up to co-ordinats activities. The nine countries whose Communists foregathered were Russia, France, Italy, Czechoslovakia, Romania, Bulgaria, Yugoslavia and Hungary. Bel- way of her home late Saturday by a niece. Fully dressed and sprawled face down on the floor, she had eight savage knife wounds in her body, one of which penetrated her heart. She is believed to have been killed late Friday. Local Tides Tuesday, October 7, 1947 High 6:49 .153 feet 18:31 18.1 feet Low 0:20 5.6 feet 12:19 10.4 feet Wof td ! 6 7 8 9 K II E . in the seventh game which plate; Goetz (NL), lb; McGowan (AL), 2b; Plnelll (NL), 3b; Boy er (AL), rf; Magerkurth (NL) If. First Inning No runs, one hit, no errors none left. Second Inning Three runs, five hits, no errors, four left. Dodgers went out in front 2 to 1. Hermanskl made third on long line drive, coming In on Edwards' single. Shea replaced by Bevans. Jorgensen scored Edwards on ground rule double when ball bounced into stands, A Yankee run came when Ru2 zlto's single scored McQuinn who had walked. Third Inning No runs, no hits, no errors, two left. Fourth Inning Two runs, four hits, no errors, four left, Dodgers scoreless. Johnson scored tlelng run on double by Bobby Brown. Right hander Hank Behrman replaced Gregg. Henrlch singled with bases full to score Rizzuto; Score 3-2 for Yanks. Fifth Inning No runs, no hits, no errors, one left. Sixth Inning One run, two hits, no errors, two left. Yanks held Dodgers scoreless. Pinch hitter Al Clark account- ed for the single run when his MORE DEATHS FROM CHOLERA Vaccine Being Flown From . United States to Egypt-Cairo Sprayed with DDT CAIRO O) Five additional deaths today brought official total fatalities resulting from Egypt's two-weeks-old cholera epidemic to 344. A United States Air Force plane arrived today with 1,600,-000 units of antl-cholera vaccine and simultaneously an Egyptian plane began spraylne the northern half of Cairo with ' ' DDT. SHIP JEWS TO CYPRUS Thousands More Refugees Being Removed There After Reaching Palestine JERUSALEM 0) The British transport Empire Rest sailed from Haifa for Cyprus today, carrying 400 more of an estimated 4000 Illegal Jewish Immi grants who reached Palestine last week. They followed 1600 Jews who disembarked at Cy prus from three British ships yesterday and 800 others who were shipped earlier. LITERATE NATION By the fourth century A.D., Romeliad 28 libraries. Gkamps blow to short centre scored Rlz- zulo. Score 4-2 for Yanks. Seventh Inning One run, one hit, no errors, none left. Johnson scored after the catch for the Yanks on A. Robinson's fly to left. Score 5-2 for Yanks. Eighth Inning No runs, no hits, no errors, none left. Ninth Inning No runs, one hit, nt errors, none left. Yanks win game 5-2, win series 4-3. j -j aa r r fUUU D,r J rr AHMITTCf u WINNIPEG 0) Reconstruction Minister C. D. Howe told interviewers today that Canada has "arranged for 17,000 displaced persons to date" to settle in Canada. More will be brought in according to demand, said Mr. Howe, "but all will be brought In on a selective basis." THE WEATHER Synopsis With clear skies and light winds overnight, temperatures over the interior fell to the low, twenties early this morning. Similar weather along the coast resulted in temperatures as low as 35 with ground Jrost in the very low regions. A developing storm now 300 miles off the Queen Charlottes will bring Increasing cloud with rain to the northern coast during the day and to the remainder of the coastal area overnight. Forecast Prince Rupert, Queen Charlottes and North Coast Clear, becoming cloudy by noon and overcast with widely scattered showers by evening. Overcast with showers overnight becoming cloudy by mid-morning on Tuesday and clear by evening. Winds southeast (20 m.p.h.) exposed areas, shifting to northwest (20 m.p.h.) Tuesday. Elsewhere light. Little change , In temperature. Low tonight ana high Tuesday At Port Hardy, 46 and 55; Massett, 45 and 55; Prince. Rupert, 43 and 58. r -4.