Ber-Atomic Plant Project ' Hy Thick and Fast 1 Jl-vieo CASES 5ER 707 t.f abfiu -: con-: c lc mesa k ' - as fan. copy- ! ": Diaver P05U - Krr.-.y build" :. j r.lc war Kl dward Island Is Only life Ircc of Dread Ttir c v staaids at w i P- mo Edward he of v cmvince free i J-r Brlt sh Colum- Ifo tfar t ... year while m w ..artlr t hit with In Van: uvcr. opening m ri;:: oi'Pti dpfprrpH Inr iPenitentiarv lers Arc Out Twn nffirprs nf Iti Penitentiary have been F nendm- outcome of i;au: ;, nto the escape p ion- term prisoners . Major -General R. B, Rtommi: aimer of nenlten- Isaid v -terday. ' KA SHIPS IG RADAR ll'an Coastal Vessels 1 Vp-to-Dale 'vigation rLE Radar today Is ito thr ttuldinir of Aln.ji c)vulan passenger ships .oanaerous coastal shoals tost time in hbtory. The N Trant:portaUon Co. f'aska, which sailed from ' Tunday. is on her first fun equipped with war-N aid to navigation facl-ffenmcians went along to lle Caulnmpnt nartr,r,m FPany has scheduled the P n of radar for three W lt.J nnccAM -i 1 as available. r has been in use on Brl- r-'umraa coastal vessels Jar or mm.,, j I, h ic aim JJluCU- f ( ' 3 equippco ANNIVERSARY OF RAILWAY Special Ceremonies to Takei I'lacc on Montreal Island MONTREAL The 100th anni versary of the first railway on tW IsTan'd of MotreaUrthe Mont- real and Lachine Railroad will be the occasion of special cere monies hero and at Lachine on Thursday. September 18. His Excellency, Viscount Alex- ander, Governor General oi Canada, has accepted an invitation to be present extended to him by R. C. Vaughan, umu, rhalrman and president of the Canadian National Railways of which this original railway forms a part. Others who will take part In the celebrations include Hon. Lionel Chevrier. Minister of Trasport; Mayor Camlllien Houde; Mayor Anatole Carignan, nf Ijichine. and John Loye, president of the Canadian Rail-man Historical Association. nnn. M.iurlct Duulessis, Prime Minister of Quebec, has been Invited to unveil a calm at Lachine. Viscount Alexander will arrive at the Central Station from Ottawa at 10 &m. and will be u-Pirnmed bv Mr. Vaughan, My- or Houde, Mayor Carignan and other railway offlctrs. Pollowine a review of tne o.xn. R. pipe band and members of the Vlmy Patrol of the Canadian Legion Legion at at the the cast cast end ena Bonaventure Station. Mr. Loye will Ivito the Governor General to unveil a bronze plaque there. Mniipm railway passenger eaulnment will be Introduced and Transport Minister Chevrier will invite Mayor Houde and Mayor Carignan to officiate at the naming of the two new buf fet parlor cars, one of whlcn will be christened "Montreal" and the other "Lachine." His Worship Mayor Houde will preside at a civic luncheon in the Windsor Hotel at whtcn tne Goveror General will speak, and Mr: Vauchan will present to the city a large oil painting by Adam Sheriff Scott, R.C.A., depicting the opening of the Montreal and Lachine Railroad 100 years ago by Lord Elgin, Governor General of Canada at that time. Following the lucheon a special train will carry the guests from Bonaventure Station to Lachine. There, a commemoratlye calm will be unveiled on the site of the original station at St. Joseph and 21st Streets. His Worship, Mayor Carignan will hp the official host at a THE WEATHER Forecast Tuesday overcast. Remainder of region Intermittent rain or drizzle today and Tuesday. Little change in temperature Lows tonight and highs tomor rowAt Port Hardy-52 and 92 Massett 52 and 60. Prince Ru- pcrt"50 and 60. AGED TRAVELER ON AIR LINES Mrs. Clara Eddlcstone Makes Trip From Chicago to Montreal MONTREAL Trans-Canada Air Lines oldest passenger, 101-vear-old Mrs. Clara Eddlestone of Chlcaeo. reaffirmed her pref erence for air travel when she arrived unescorted at Montreal airport aboard a TCA plane. Polish-born, Mrs. Eddlestone, thouch now living in Chicago, was for several years a resident f Mnntrpni she returned to snpnd a month with her grand rhlldren and five great grand children In Montreal. Altogether she has 12 grandchildren and 22 ereat erandchlldren, most oi them living In the United States. Yesterday's flight from Chic ago was not the first for the aged traveller. Her introduction to air travel came last year in March ioiwVtn she. for the first (imp In 100 years, . u"' olane. As in the case yesteraay, oi w .. . . by Trans. North Plaza, His Excellency ana Canada Air Lines and nd t the official party will proceed to real. She enjoys flying, too. the best way to travel," NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLtfMBLVq NBWHPAPER. boaraea BRITISH FOOD FURTHER CUT "It's she claims. Last vear she was. accompanied daughter, but she by a grand made yesterday's flight all alone though TCA stewardess Roberta Bell was on hand every moment and paid special attention to ner nWpriv nasseneer. "She was wonderful," stewardess Bell said after landing at Montreal. A special surprise was on hand tnr v,pr when she landed. Mrs. Eddlestone was Interviewed in a recorded broadcast over a local radio station. She attributed her long life not to what she d"d and didn't drink, but to "the years God gave me." . garden party given by the city of Lachine at tne urove. m niv. of uhlr.h Mr. Vaugnan present to Lacine for its histor- leal museum a iuu j.-.iv, t.hP locomotive Dor thP first locomotive in ti ICO LCI, v.. model of a small Canada, and a modem Canadian Nauona. ,-... LONDON O The Britlfh cabinet met In emergency ses sion todav to consider a fur-. .ther cut In the food rations. It Is reported that food ex ports from the United states may be slashed 50 to o per- .cent. Miners are being asked to work an extra half . an hour dally. Luck Strikes Them Double Mr. and Mrs. Alex McRae Clean Up at ,Civic Centre Carnival Grand I'riic Drawing rwvri Good fortune fortune struck sirucn in i nival Saturday night for Mr. and Aiov Mr Rap of the Leeds 1 iVtliJ. - " Prince Ruricrt. Queen Char-I Ariartments. In the drawing for lottes and north coast North-1 tne carnival grand awards on east coast Vancouver Island admission tickets Mr. McRae was Overcast this morning, clearing the winner of the first prize, a in the afternoon and becoming overcast again during the nignt. $285 electric refrigerator, whlle luck scored a few minutes later for Mrs. McRae who won the third prize, a $135 radio-iphono- graph automatic player. The list of prtze-winner3 was as follows 1, Electric refrigerator, value $285, Alex McRae, No. 12171 2. Al expense air holiday to Vacouver,. value $$200, Mrs. J palllster, No. 4263. 3. Radio-phonograph, automatic player, $135, Mrs. Alex McRae, No. 2985. 4. Handl-chef, $35, G. Har grove, Vancouver. No. 7368. 5. Automatic electric toaster, $25, J. E. Parker, No. 2359. 6. Fluorescent desk lamp, $15, Birtch, No. 3182. 7. Floor Lamp, George Viereck, No. 14524. 8. Floor lamp, Charles Wilson, Hazelton. No. 7285. a nlnMp tnhlp lamo. B. De- (7, & " J . . Fehr. No. 3481. 10. Electric iron, E. Thomas, No. 4249. 11. Pressure cooker, R. k .TnnPS. No. 8684. 12. Stainless steeel saucepans, DaliD Singh. No. 5986 ia. Electric kettle, Larry Dennv. No. 13294. 14. Stainless steel cutlery, Mrs. C. M. LeClare, No. 2745. 14. Smoking stand and slgar- ette box, F. F. Brown, Victoria. Making of the drawings was tinor feature at a dance which brought to conclusion one of the most successful Civic Centre carnivals on to Mont- record. With W. F. Stone, car- nival chairman.' and Aid. T N Youngs, chairman of the Civic Centre Association, directing the proceedings before a large crowa, he luckv tickets were drawn one by one from a barrel by Queen Barbara Wilson ad her attend ants. Four Charges of Selling Liquor Raymond De Valera, a recent, arrival Ifromi iVancouver, appeared before Magistrate WD. Vance In police court vnis morning on four charges ot selling liquor to Indians. He pleaded not guilty to all four charges. The case was adjourn-'ed until this afternoon. Calgary Policeman Succumbs to Polio I iRusso-Amcrican Dif ferences and Greece land Indonesia Baffling LAKE SUCCESS, (CP) -United Nations plans for global arms reduction, thw:trtcdbv Russ-Amen- can differences and over- shriflmvfirl bv Greek tur tea stales prc&Miig. - iui u..n,v-Nation suDcrvlsion of the vp!ik fire" order In the Indies. .; - . ii'rhprvprs look to Russia to re- pleasant "aoume at we cuiub - v-' or,, that general the argument of iv,- the annual nvip Civic centre Centre Car- i,ar new divorced atiiio . v - - from the, atom bomb. LAND O'COTTON Egypt is the world's fifth larg est cotton producer. Calgary 0) Staff-Sergeant William Cameron Jennings, aged 36. first and, only polio victim In this area, died in an iron lung here Saturday Home 4.00 Local Tides Tuesday, August 26, 1947 High 10:40 15.2 feet 22:00 17.2 feet Low 4:05 6.7 feet 16:00 10.5 feet SLAVS SET ION PRIESTS moil and the veto, comes up forffllcted grave injuries yesterday last ditch debate today before One Killed and Another Seriously Injured in Trieste Region ROME An Italian news agency dispatch from Trieste says that a mott theHYugo- Slav zone of Vcnezfca-Gullia in- on a Vatican prelate sent to .. confirm children in the area and .. ynt , tv.f the fall meeting f Mty-fl if ivc memrs of the General Assem-, Umping to dcfend him. bly. . The security council nas ac-, Msgr. Glacomo Ukmar was ta- """i" compllshed nothing -- u. during - the! ken to - Flume Hospital - suffer- Armed Services to Learn Industries OTTAWA Ji Members of Canada's armed services may be temporarily vj.. detached from mlll- Toronto Aumaque 25 Beattle ? Bevcourt 70 Bobjo "3' Buffalo Can. 20 Con Smelters 86 03 Comwest 85- - - D:nalda - l "1 Eldona - 88 Elder - 75 Giant VKnlfe 6.10 God's Lake ...... I-18 Hardrock ... 40 Harricana 07 1: ( Heva -- 33?'' Hosco 30 Jacknife 11 Joliet Quebec 49 Lake Rowan . -16V: Lapaska --- -29 Little Long Lac L60 Madsen Red Lake 3.13 MacKenzle Red Lake .... 3.56 MacLeod CocKshutt ...... 1.65 Moneta .- 45 Negus 2-lu Noranda' 44-50 Louvicourt I-50 Pickle Crow 2.60 Regcourt 25 San Antonio 4-05 Senator Rouyn 48 Steep Rock I-97 Sturgeon River 18 Sherrltt Gordon 3.40 iMiiimii in i i 1 ',,,H''',,HHBBBH. W ' ' AFTER ANTI-JEWISH RIOT IN ENGLAND- This smashed and I . . - . . .... i 4U iUa anH...Tpulsh rint that looted store is part oi tne auermaui ui "- " result of the hanging of two British flared in Liverpool, Eng., as a sergeants in Palestine. Twelve persons were held In ball In connection with the demonstration, during which many shop windows were broken. Similar riots were reported from other parts of England. ROUND WORLD AIR FLIGHT gTTTf f f T'TTTTTTT? Miff f j A-Blue i- 1 IPX STAR TAXI 5 TUff ft 11! 1 Stana: . a Published at Canada's Most Strategic Pacific Port "Prince Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest." VOL. XXXVI, NO. 199. PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., MONDAY, AUGUST 25, 1947 PRICS FIVE CENTS L .v nn Canadian soil. British lmml- 1 SJ M W V - ice cream cones which proved a luxury HciT R Wallls, Doris Holloway and J. Drtly alter they landed from a plane at Ont United Natio Last Ditch D BANK SNATCH IN ONTARIO Bandits Take 61000 From Lonp Branch Commerce Branch LONO BRANCH, Ont. fc Three armed bandits escapfd with $4,000 In a Canadian Bank I of Commerce rclttbery here. Two bandits entered the banK thortly after the opening while a third covered thein from a get awav car. The manager fired a futile shot a't the fleeing robbers. Toronto police received a tip that escaoed convicts from Kingston Donald McDonald Ulysses Lauzon and Nick Mlnllle had been spotted In the area McDonald and Lauzon are def ilnltely hooked up with a $40,000 Windsor bank hold-up last week Assembly Confectionery Man Booked By TransCanada Airlines MONTREAL The first round Having tarting Today the-world "all the way by air" ticket to be Issued by Trans- Canada Air Lines wa3 recently delivered into the hands of Eric ShoreV, well known Ottawa and Montreal business man. With his unique ticket tucked safely in his pocket, Mr. Shorey said farewell to Ills wife and son Roger, at Montreal airport as he boarded a North Star Trans Canada isauaua ah atrcaf t ofT.CA. for the .... year. It rontlnudiscusstons! tag from skull fracture ana Kia- ( Qf R commerciai ody i . . . w ..... ti1 , nev xnne wouncs ana urv. muiv i ... . . on Indonesia tqaay wim u um- - . . ., . . lnrinn,v whlch will take him into 29 countries, cover stme 40,000 miles and will return him to Canada within six months. Although such travel arrangements had never been made by TransCanada Air Lines, the achievement of such a compli cated with 30 other CaltU tie-in UC-iil w ivit some owmt tary duty to gain experience em- . ,. s marks another ployment In larger industrial . progresslve step by this corn-firms, the Department of Na- and indlcates the scope of Hnnni rvrf ono nnnniinrps. I ... nuiia cprv pp it nrenarea 10 uiiet : ; TODAYS STOCKS . . n f T 1.4 t;ourcesy a. u. jmv.wjii w. jjw". ooc Vancouver i 1-25 - Brarotnfr"M.' j..--- v.t, B. R. Con 5' B.R.X -10 Cariboo Quartz 231 Dentonia 19 Grull Wihksne -OS17? Hedley Mascot L10 Minto -03 Pend 9reille 2.20 Pioneer 3.99 Premier Border -05i Privateer -35 ' Reno .: 10 Salmon Gold 17 Sheep Creek 15 Tayjpr Bridge - -55 Taku River 7 Vananda , -25 ' Congress -04V4 Pacific Eastern 10 Hedley Amalg 04 Central Zballos 02 Silbak Premier 67 Oils A. P. Con 15 Calmont -36 C & E 2.43 FootlVlls 2.60 the travelling Canadian public. Mr. Shorey, who Is export sales manager of a Montreal con- to the products of his company at a great saving of time. -'Overseas during the war I was impressed by the favorable nosition attained by Canada'3 goods and I feel Canadian business men should lose no time In maintaining and developing this new position," said Mr. Shorey. "I hope to re-establish the contacts we enjoyed before the war." Mr. Shorey ticked off from memory the cities he would be visiting starting with Montreal. His first landing will be at Prest-wick, Scotland. From there he wll go to London, then Belfast, Glasgow, across the North Sea to Amsterdam, then Brussels, Paris and Marseilles. From the latter city he will fly to Rome, followed by a side trip to Malta, then on to Tunis, Algeria, Casa blanca, in North Africa. From there a commercial air liner will carry him over French west and equatorial Africa to Leo- poldvllle in the Belgium Congo, then on to Johannesburg, Cape Town. Port 'Elizabeth and Dur ham, South Africa. He will touch at Lourenco Marques, capital of Mozembique, thence to Bulawa-yo, Nairobi, Alexandria and Cairo. Leaving the African continent, Mr, Shorey will fly to Beirut, Syria, then on to Bagdad. From there he will fly to India, touching at Karaichi, Delhi, Bombay and Madras, theh to Colombo, ' Ceylon. Back to Madras his air-I plane will take him to Calcutta, I then to Rangoon. Bangkok, Sln-i gapore, Hong Kong, Canton, I Shanghai and across the water to Tokyo. On the return leg of his flight Mr Shorey will visit Anchorage, Alaska, Edmonton, Chicago and i finally Montreal. Associated with the candy company for the past 16 years Mr. Shorey served with the Canadian Army for six years. During the last war he enlisted as a cunner in the Royal Canadian Artillery No. 8 Field Regiment of Montreal and saw action at Caen, Falaise and Carniauet. He was returned to Canada to sit as in structor at Petawawa Camp and a month later was appointed to 1 Underground Jews Would Hit Britain JERUSALEM, Irgun Zval Leumi, militant Jewish under ground group, today exhorted Jews throughout the woria to "hit Britain economically wltrr- out mercy" in protest at the shipment of 4400 Hebrews 10 Germany. the cruel British machine for- Irgun declared: "You can stop orders, laws. Boycott. Boycott. ever. Don't pay taxes, uoi uue Boycott until the end. The world of. Jews can bring great harm to the enemy. Britain is In economic trouble. Hit them economic ally without mercy." Urging Jews to ignore nunger strike, Irgun says: "'It is nO time for fasting. It Is time to go to war." . - Lively, and 20. Roy and 19. National Defence Headquarters 1 In Ottawa as staff captain. He j is a son of Albert Shorey and of the late Mis. Shorey of Mon treal. Fish Sales American fpf tinnprv firm, is usine air a i i 19. 15,000, Pacific, Canadian Roberts. 25,000, 22.4 Royal travel ercluslvely to enable hlml sea Ranger, 80,000, Atlln23.6 to conduct a world-wide market and economic survey in relation Mississippi Pays Respects to Bilbo POPLARVILLE, Miss. 05 Mls- sisslnnians. who never deserted Theodore O. Bilbo when under fire of outside criticism for nis racial beliefs, planned their final rpsnects today for the state's most spectacular political figure. Arrangements would have been tn thp liklne of the 69-year-oia senator-elect who died of heart failure at New Orleans Friday after a long illness. AIR PASSENGERS To Sandspit-Mrs. F. Williams, Miss E. Williams, J. Williams, Miss V. Young. To Vancouver Misa Betty Piu- len, W. B. Webster, II. Linaer, Miss Nancye Dawes, Mrs. E. Don-nally, ' Mr. Jabour,, From Vancouver (Saturday) E. V. Dumas, Miss Nan Bave-steV, P. M. Christie, Mrs. C, Stev enson. From SandspiUO. Trenhard, B. MfcEwan, C. Eden, B. Brldger, Carl Berg, O. Bridget. EXPLOSION IN RAILWAY CAR WOODSTOCK, Ont. KB Explosion in a railway car. on a Cana dian Pacific. Railway siding here shattered windows and snooit neghboring houses shortly after 10 o'clock on Saturday. M-wo trainmen were Injured. Th'e explosion occurred when a tank on a passenger-baggage coach was being filled with gas to be used for lighting purposes. Baseball Stores American Philadelphia 7, St. Louis 0 .New York 13, Cleveland 6 Washington 5, Detroit 3 Boston-Chicago (rained out) National Cincinnati 5, Brooklyn 8 St Louis 5, Philadelphia 3 Pittsburg 11-4, New York 10-3 Chicago 4, Boston 10 NATIONAL Pittsburgh 1," Brooklyn 3 St. Louis 9, Boston 5 Chicago 0-8, New York 4-3 Cincinnati 12-6, Philadelph ia 3-8 AMERICAN Washington 1-7, St. Louis 7-4 Boston 11-1, Cleveland 2-2 Philadelphia 2-4, Detroit 6-5 New York 2-16. Chicago 3-6 ' 1 u