Problem Upsets Sinatra | jage—But it Isn rfsscpng problem has upset the Prank serious, the crooner A it isnt ‘ aid. ‘But I think I'm going to see my wife in Sinatra mak t, adding wants. I movie in Africa ever interfere with rents bul nothing in Tere Headway in Secret $ On Fish Prices of top-secret negotia- break the deadlock between an d cannery operators, = fre the United } and Allied Workers and the B.C. Fish- lation met behind} with Labor Minis-| ficks to try to work for acceptable and opera it? wleration om City on (TL) ont | sin East uM y mula ishermen for both sides said nake no statment on ys. They sald they sworn to secrecy Wicks alse iment to of ter said make on talks. He that he was bout the the OWeVer hopeful ave Deen on strike ecause of chum a dis- al saimon Kathleen's Captain Suspended ANCOUVER © ptai un ©. Hughes aan First er Charles W. Savage of the ited Princess Kathleen have ber ispendéed pending toome of a public inquiry hit sinking rhe mpensions by British umbia Const Steamships were ade attomatically The inquiry will open at Van < iver court house Oct. 22. Mr j ice Sydney Smith will pre ©. He will be assisted on the} h by Capt. Bernard L. John-| i Capt. James F. Patrick. | This same trio conducted the | ibe into a collision between Kathiven and the Prince Rupert in October, 1051 nor- or-General Taken Ill vernor-General Vincent ill He yesterday and was forced to, day visit to Calgary \ ern Canadion t ur, was regal train in Calgary — an POW's to Get $1 a Day iInadians who were impris by certain German organiza 1 World War will be given of $1 a day for each day of Minister St. Laurent ughly 1,600 veterans of the expedition 194] be ome edi who were in prison ghly $1,400. Payments will than Oct. 15. KD TOO STUNNED TO CR rime of will mY GREGORY tt) was how oddly quiet it was. There was a hiss of escaping steam and low moans from _ people trapped in the cars, But there were no outecries. Soon the only sound you were aware of was the screech of ambulances arriving in relays to take away the injured and the policemen The rrible to 50 tell the iremen hopping of fir and railworkers working quickly to free people trapped in the cars The injured were of up € rsons } tely all ages " IL LLETINS. NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA’s NEWSPAPER aL No. 239 PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., WINSTON CHURCHILL, Prime a speech Saturday, It will end th conference, the first since the genera) election @ year ago Mary ‘tized by Delo On ‘Mucky’ Road Stretch Several Prince Rupert Here ; { { j Minister of England, will make e four-day Conservative annual party regained power in the he is shown with his daughter won't citizens were delayed more than three hours last night in getting home lat the new road construction site near Prudhomme Lake 77 i Jay Burt ; cer told | Protests of the watchman, com ‘ . é _. mandeered an idle bul Idozer and the Da News today ‘hat: two finally moved the truck,’ Burns VCRs we tuck on the high-' related today way a v with several other Somethine ha to be done cara W eturning from Rain-/| about that piece of road. Its a bow Lak sbout & pom disgrace and is going to cause The fir ruck they met ap-| 4 lot of trouble.” pear block the way. but a Burn uid about mile of ketehy mute around the truck| the road was in “terrible shape’ was found. Then, the cars were) with huge boulders and muck faced with the second block proving a hazard to any kite YT? truck was down so far ef driving it couldn't move, nor could we Among those who wete de get around it aid Burns ayed by the road block were The place was opposite the Art Ogilvie, T. W. Boulter and timekeeper’s office at the high m Boulter Jr.. A. J. Dominato. way ictton project of a Terrace taxi, and Bill Harper Wood & McClay Lid. recently —_—_----—— cealied off by a Victoria order ruck driver John Jolsetb t Fi d aa eine ee ee| a Hospital to telephone to the city for some one to move the truck Bound Dead But we couldn't wait that , long. Some of the fellows got NEW YORK (CP)—A “television out of their cars and despite: pit actor and scenery artist was found early today bludgeoned MOOSE CONVENTION to death and bound under a SAINT JOHN, N.B. (CP)—Three burning studio couch in his fire- _| damaged apartment, bull moose on the road, neat The victim was identified as here stopped long enough for sanford Tillis, about 35, who Mrs Annie Greer and her, had been employed by the Na- daughter, driving along the/ tional Broadcasting Company , — t of the car Police described the case of “ar- highway, t get Oud son and murder.” and approach within’ 50° feet.) “police said robbery apparent-| Then the moose went on their)jy was not the notive in ‘the ' slaying way iwhen their way was cut off by a truck mired down ¢ Y OUT They were brought out to the station platform, and finally a jumble of baggage was lined up there too Thete Was no panic of any; kind. Those who escaped injury did what they could for those who were hurt, Reseue workers offered one erect, elderly lady a eupn of tea as She climbed out of a Car “Pm all right, thank you,” she | said. “There are many others in greater need of that than T am. ” vewitness Tells Story of Train Wreck There was a great confusion of wreckage, The engine of onc train seemed to have jumped the platform and landed on a nearby line used by electric trains, It had disintegrated into just a shell, Ihave a particularly vivid memory of the body of one woman, covered with a sheet and jplaced apart from the others. The rescuers were busy working | Ito save the injured. The dead | ‘woman seemed so alone there Hill Rages In Korea Reds Storm Up | Slopes Screaming Le ommunists -| their way to the top of While ‘last night and massed 16,-' 000 fresh troops within ‘easy striking distance of the blocd-soaked hill. Communists could commit i fresh divisions time the curses and pushed the valiant South Korean defenders off the ridgeline fought it out rifle butts and bayonets | we | Yonchon SEOUL (CP) —Chinese| battered Horse Mountain Tftelligence officers said the two to battle any Frantic slopes stormed screams Chinese with up and Reds South Koreans with grenades, and Tt was the seventh time — savage close-in fighting wept across the rubdbled oats of vital peak Action on White Horse far ovetshadowed the fighting else- where. Sharp but minor fights Wi reported along the far rn front, northwest of and in the east The Eighth Army reported Red casualties for first week of October were 4,786 killed, 2,692 wounded and 50 prisoners—total of 7,528, heaviest since last No- vember. The figure does not include havoc spread by allied planes and artillery nor did it include heavy Red casualties of the last three days Socreds to Set ‘Policy By Nov. 30 VERNON © Credit. government 's Social a set. its) financial policy before Nov, 30 Municipal Affairs Minister W. | D. Black told the Union of B.C Municipalities convention Thurs- day departmental estimates) must be in by Nov. 15 and leg- lation for next session by Nov. | Policy must be established fore the latter date Whether the government would accept the municipai pro- posal for an 80-20 split on edu- ‘ation costs similar to social vervice Was not known So far, the cabinet has not heard fram a special committee of deputy ministers of finance, ducation, municipal affairs and agriculture set. up by the John- government to study the Hobbs report and other school financing proposals Nor has it heard from farm- ers, though their brief is gn hand, It has the Hobbs report presenting the municipal view- point and the municipal 80-20 proposal. Mr. Black promised early action “about the abominable | situmeion we are in now.” Gash Expert To View Wreck OTTAWA (CP)—Air Force head- quarters said Thursday it is sending an accident investiga- tion officer to look at the wreck- age of an RCAF Mitchell bomber missing since 1947 with 30 son j i i j | i ish Columbia interior. nine} | aboard and located in the Brit- Published at Canada’s Most Strategic Pacific Port—"Pyince Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest’ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 10. 1952 PRICE FIVE CENTS ; NEW CHIEF JUTICE—John W. | Pickup, 60, prominent Toronto | workmen blocked off the 25-foot lawyer, is the new chief justice | of Ontario. A partner since | 1923 in the law firm of Fasken, Robertson, Aitchison, Pickup and Calvin, he has been a | bencher of the Law Society of | Upper Canada since 1946. He Was created a King’s Counsel in 1933. He Was crown prose- cutor recently when both ser- vice personnel and civilians were convicted of large-scale thefts from the army camp at Petawawa, Ont (CP Photo) Death Toll - Now 105. in Train Wreck LONDON «CP)— The recorded | ¢ death toll from the Wednesday | sea of water will be drawn oft} tripie train crash at Harrow | station rose~to 205 todny-- Digging in the debris went on) slowly. Railway officials said they feared more bodies are still buried in the wreckage. night 94 injured were still in) hospitals. Another 63 had been | RIVER DIVERTED ; released after treatment. ~—WEATHER— Synopsis Cloud that has persisted over the southern B.C. coast in the wake of a weak disturbance that moved over the area yesterday, | will clear during the day A second disturbance accom- panied by rain will move over the far northern part of the province today. The central and’ southern in- terior will continue to enjoy) warm sunny weather. Forecast } Southern section, variable} cloudiness, Not much change in temperature. Light winds. Low) tonight- and high tomorrow at} | Port Hardy 45 and 58. Northern section, cloudy with) intermittent rain. Nof much! change in temperature light, becoming southeast 20 in exposed areas by evening. Low tonight and high tomorrow at Sandspit and Prince Rupert, 46 and 55 ATLANTIC COLONY Trinidad in the British West Indies has been a British Crown Colony since 1797 | num | sealed off the 1,500-foot diver- | sion tunnel at the Kenney Dam | here churning Nechako. | smaill pools of water remained | directly below the dam in the | death in the shallows. | wilderness pleateu, has travelled | 184. miles northeast to keep its | is being backed up to create | area, Last | 'completed and opened just a Winds | Nechako River Halted As G Battle For ‘Alcan Seals Off Taine! To Choke Water Course Complies From cP and Special Dispatches NECHAKO CAMP.—The Nechako River, which | for centuries has been fed from the myriad of lakes |and streams in Tweedsmuir Park area, has been |erased from the landscape of northern B.C. Builders of the giant alumi- industry on Wednesday to choke to death the Within a short time after the wide tunnel cut through. solid reck of a canyon wall, only river's main channel where thousands of trout wait for For hundreds of years, the Nechako, feeding off the chain of lakes which sprawl over this rendezvous with the Fraser River at Prince George. But no longer will it flow. The giant Kenney Dam, dedi- cated last May 10, diverts the watershed flow from east to west. Trapped, the water now | a reservoir 350 square miles in When the 10-mile tunnel now) being constructed eastward from! Kemano is vast | to feed the powerhouse being there by the Aloe num Company of Canada. ‘ The Kemano development will | supply the power for Alcan’s | $550,000,000 project now under construction at Kitimat. The diversion tunnel which was blocked off Wednesday was year ago. It moved the Nechako out of its ancient bed allowing |construction men to proceed with the job of “waterproofing” the bed and erecting the Ken- ney Dam. The dam wik cause the water Footman Shoots Up Earls’ Home LIVERPOOL, England €P)—A | gunman last night attacked the Earl of Derby’s country home and killed two man servants, slightly wounded Lady Derby and injured a valet who tried to disarm him. : After a two-hour search po- lice announced the arrest in ; Liverpool of 19-year-old Harold | Winstanley, a footman employ- ed at the Derby home, Knows- ley Hall, near here. Lord Derby was attending a cGinner at nearby Southport at the time of the shovting. Police said they could suggest level on the west side to rise about 170 feet f a lake. Eventually it wili have its out- ger | cubli ° Vote Strike VANCOUVER (Members of seven unions voted Thursday in favor of strike action to bagk up wage demands put beforé two Vancouver steel shipyards. Union hourly boost in pay. Meanwhile operators of two Vancouver shipyards by-passed the unions and sent a new wage offer through the mails to the homes of 700 workers. Tt brought an immediate pro- test from labor ledders, and an pap wage from a spokesman for the companies. “We sent it through the mail just. to make sure the men got it,” said the spokesman, “We sent the offer to the unions, too, but through some fluke in the post office some workers got the offer at home first.” The companies—the Burrard Drydock Co, Ltd. and the Pacific Drydock Co. Ltd—offered the workers, represented by 10 unions, a three-cent pay boost and increased holiday and medi- no motive for the shooting. Special to The Daily News ters of the action last week on the east coast of Korea in which HMCS Iroquois was hit by an enemy shell and suffered three fatal casualties. Killed were Lieut.-Gdr. John L, Quinn, and Halifax, and Able Seaman naval Yokohama, Japan. Wing Cmdr. W. 0. Reeves will ve * Away o quarters, Edmonton, sho ficial inquiry later, or, Ont he f 410 j escort) were bombarding a por OTTAWA — Details were re-| leased today by Naval headquar- | of Moose Jaw, Sask., Elburne A. Baikie, Hamilton, Ont., and Wallis M. Burden, Sault Ste. Marie, Ont. They were buried October 8 with full honors in the British Commonwealth cemetery at The Iroquois was part of a task element which included U.S. Navy destroyers and des- troyer escorts and smaller craft leave Tactical Air Group head-|of the Republic of Korea Navy. fourth day of a schetuled the scene. of the crash near) three-week patrol, the Iroquois Rossland, There will be an of-/and the USS Marsh (destroyer , tion of a North Korean railway skirting the shoreline. This sec- tion of the railway had been a previous target for U.N. warships and the Communists were try- ing to put it back in service. The Iroquois and the Marsh blasted the target for about an hour, Working parties were ‘dis- persed and the rail line was observed to be well saturated by sheilfire, As the two ships broke off the bombardment and turned to seaward, shore batteries opened fire on the Lroquois and almost immediately a full salvo bracketed the ship. ship's sick bay. Although taking evasive action and making smoke, the ship was subsequently hit by one shell. Lieut.-Cdr. Quinn and AB Baikie were killed instantly. AB Bur- den was critically wounded and died a few hours later in the cal services benefits. HMCS Iroquois Not Damaged in. Shell-Fire Three other men were wound- ed by shrapnel and shell frag- ments and seven received minor euts. As the two ships withdrew, the Iroquois’ main armament poured a steady fire at the shore battery and silenced it. The Iroquois received only slight damage and her fighting impair- { hospital "at Sasebo, Japan, are Able Seaman Edwin M. Jodoin, of Toronto, and Joseph A. Gau- det of Tignish, PE. The for- mer has a broken leg and shrap- nel wounds The latter wounds in his right leg. AB Waldo Berggren, of New~ ;pert, NS., ie ln Se sips sek bay but was to be re+ leased for regular duty today.