PROVINCIAL ' ‘| pieRARY ; ICTORIA. B- c. PROVINCIAL LIBRARY, — — 118 . C. { | ( ‘AR CABS 10 | pis P PATE HED NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA’S NEWSPAPER Published at Canada’s Most Strategic Pacific Port—"Prince Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest” 178 VOL. XLI, No. PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., WEDNESDAY, JULY 30, 1952 ds Jam pets to Eva ncks Bring dwiches PRICE FIVE CENTS Loggers Heading ORMES DRUGS DAILY DELIVERY Phone 81 Back | To BC Forests, Sawmills op (Cot mere IWA, Operators _ ) { : 1} irom au ser point crowded] Sign Agreement body to- . r re + oxidant VANCOUVER (CP) —The tramp of loggers’ aid’ bee eee 3 eg | boots today began driving the ghosts of costly silence continue| SEVEN ISLANDS, Quebec, at the mouth of the wide St, Lawrence River, is lee ten | from the forests and sawmills of coastal British : — quiet fishing village to the capital of the huge iron-ore project in Labrador-Ungava. It is | Columbia. : the jump-off point into the Ungava wilderness where the-ore is found and will be the railway Summer fire hazard and © and docks terminal where the ore is transferred to ships for Canadian and United States | *ramsportation kinks were the i erd ements} mill (CP PHOTO) {only remaining obstacles as the urging cacaia ieinkeuciulat ee |giant timber industry began to e Prigeo Sepecie to lite after 45 days of ins eat undreds Jam Cathedral to Pay..." appeals Settlement e the $1,000,000- to stay a-day strike of 32,000 workers n urrar Tuesday ast es ects to Bisho Gibson was announced last night by no ”? * been ordered in the area of Prince Edward Island | !#°% Asnsiie salmon fishermen. | not yet reported acceptance. 13:96 95 feet! vency. hwe t f | Chairman J. B Gillingham an- Spokesman for FIR said they sto following outbreak of an unidentified livestock | nounced today believed less than 200 workers | T | B ° disease. Two horses and a cow have died so far. | He said the action clears the}are employed in these opera- 0 ing Ir e $ ourt qd ine | way for most new contract pro-|tions and that in several of * | visions of 1952 season, including|them workers have applied for boosts of about f r|decertification f the IWA e 0 0 rien ru $ general e ; . |wage boosts of about four per|decertification from the A. y g BC. is Steel Prices Rise in US ee for most workers. : CHURCHILL. Winnie Admits Britain | Trouble Canada May ‘Beam News. To Troops CANBERRA (Reuters)-- Can- adian troops in Korea and Japan will get news from home beamed to them via Radio Australia if tests now being conducted aro Successful, ~ Prime Minister Robert Men- zies said basis of the scheme was worked out during his recent visit to Canada. Details are being worked out by the CBC and the Australian network. Radio conditions in the Pac- ific are such that direct trans- mission from Canada to the Far East is poor but Radio Australia’s service to Korea is well-reecived. i VANCOUVER () — A slender | quency. At Ottawa, defence officials ee eee Wena rent see —— _— 4 bee Forty-two Polio 16-year-old girl told in police A send charge against Heron | Said that, if the experiment. is ' Service ment today issued a special order permitting steel court Tuesday how she sold her- | of living off the avails of prosti- pcgewet 2 ‘s ot ag = i i ili i i self to Chi > men to get money | tution was withdrawn. e Far ditions ex.| Mills to put higher ceiling prices in effect on all Cases Reported for hee Sow frien es ann rd gag girl's mother was barred |Same daily newscast that now is break in) steel delivered on or after July 26. VICTORIA (CP) — Forty-two supplied with narcotics. from the courtroom as she re-| beamed to Canada’s 27th Brigade : more caution cases of polio have been report- The blonde girl friend of the|lated in a whisper how, spon-|in Germany. ( * * * ed throughout British Columbia heroin addict broke into violent | sored by Heron, she met as many] This is a 10-minute broadcast ithwest_ of . . . up to Tuesday night, Dr. G. F. sobs at the conclusion of her|as “four or five Chinese men” at|made up of domestic news and Prince Ru- 18 Missing in Alps Amyot, the provincial medical testimony which resulted in 18-|night in a skidroad hotel room| major sport scores. It is pre- raging out . _ health officer, ‘said. months’ hard labor sentence for|and made as much as $25. “I|pared by the OBC and sent over ME die CHAMONIX, France—Search parties left here “Polio, is not developing in Everett «Jock) Heron, 21, for|gave the money to Jock to buy'the CBC's short-wave transmit- mrving today to hunt for 18 mountain climbers reported | any alarming way,” he said. contributing to juvenile delin-| drugs with,” she said. ter at Sackville, NB. may have The number of cases at this tning “9, MARSHALL sip missing in Alps since Monday ‘eport Proves Com munist Teaching WASHINGTON (AP) Federal Bureau of Investigation says Premier Stalin has decided the Communists can climb to power in the United States only by “forcible destruction” of the government, never by peaceful means. e*' ¢ ¢ The report was released Tuesday by the Senate Inter, A. Security sub-committee headed by Senator McCarran, in a prepared statement, said he sought + + In its operfing sentence, the FBI report says: “The purpose of this brief paper is to set forth documentary proof that the Communist party, U.S.A., teaches and advocates the overthrow and destruction of thé US. government, by force and violence A long-secret report by the | same period in 1947, '48 and ’9 —all normal years—was consid- erably higher. At this time in 1947, there were 83 cases.” — WEATHER — Synopsis The high pressure ridge that has protected B.C. from Pacific storms for the past several days shows no signs of weakening and there should be no marked change in the weather for the lated afternoon thunderstorms in the interior. early morning, Not much change in temperature, Winds north- west 20 exposed areas, other- wise light. Lows tonight and highs tomorrow at Estevan Point 48 and 58, Port Handy 50 and 62, Sandspit and Prince Rupert 52 and 65 SECRETARY-GENERAL — Count Bonabes de Rouge of Geneva is secretary-general of the League of Red Cross So- cieties. He is attending the International Red Cross con- vention at Toronto. (CP Photo) Go on Trial WITH CANADIAN BRIGADE, Charged with murder are Pte. Clarence Leo Mowers, Sillery, Que., and Pte. Kenneth Carle- ton, Saint John, N.B., both mem- bers of the First Battalion of the Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry. The maximum sentence is death Everything Under Control By DON DOANE HELSINKI (AP)—These Finns are fabulous. The way they stage and handle these mam- moth Olympic Games is as spec- peting in more than 100 events before more than 100,000 specta- tors in a dozen scattered places— big scoreboard, Loudspeakers blare announceemnts. It’s harder to follow than a three ring circus but the Finns have everything under control. Finland is far from rich and people have to work hard for a living, But Finns love sports and. are & SUCCESS, ; half are working without ; Pat McCarran (Dem, Nev.) "\ Soe wilt peated or ae coats Tw ° Sol di ers tacular as the games themselves. Hundreds of others have laid Ss st i ? o- 4 @ districts and there will be iso- Nearly 6,000 athletes are com-|aside better-paying jobs to help out at low salaries. icC preps ae : serve aS messengers, permission to publish it because “there have been Forecast KOREA (P)—Two Canadian sol-|and it all moves like a dozen} In every contest, there's at some persons who tried to tell us the Communists} North Coast Region —Cloudy|diers accused of shooting a Ko-|synchronized clocks. least one official to watch every were not dangerous; that they had no plans for anjexcept sunny both afternoons.) rean woman to death went on; Whistles blow, starters’ guns|contestant. “They know all the armed revolution in this country.” Extensive. fog banks along the/trial today before a five-man|crack. Names and records flash| rules, too,” says the United States coast during the night and!court martial. in bright electric signs on the) track coach, Brutush Hamilton. line. of finish, march out again. every Finn takes @ personal in- terest in seeing that the Games Of the 8,000 Finns working on the Olympic Games, more than Three thousand school children Before every race, 12 to 20 men march single file to the finish They mount stepladders, half on each side of the truck. In sprints, there are two to watch each runner and pick the order After the race, they Hundreds Lay Aside Low-Salaried Jobs To Help Make Olympic Games Success Workmen constantly repair the running track, and reset the Stage for the next event. When an event is completed, the results are shown on a huge electric scoreboard which cost $100,000, 4 In bright Mghts, it shows the name of the event in three lang- uages, the names, nationalities and records of the first seven placers. At the rowing races, mimeo~ graphed results are produced in jess than a minute after the rankings are posted. Even gyra- tions of gymnasts are reduced rapidly to ts On paper, Eero ejaeniemi, Olympia press chief Jargely responsible for information efficiency, credits the handling of the Games to “a lot of hard work and advance plannng by_a lot of people.” 4