ORROW'S TIDES os 6, 1952 Time) 16.7 feet 179 feet 9 feet 10.2 feet VOL. XLI, No. 251 PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., SATURDAY, Ike Claims | —, 4 He'll End Kore | | an r | } Le | eA ; WASHINGTON @ Governor |} | Adlai E. Stevenson stumped the i | Vote-rich east today in an ap- a parent determination to punc- { ture the prestige of Gen. Dwight ' D. Eisenhower who has pledged if elected t visili Korea in a personai effo to end the war Ei Ciamivwe hiiatwt n Al pi int announcens ia night in re Detre rT Republican presi- . dential nomi: CHAMBER PRESIDENT.-Lew- ee castigated Presi- ig Wesley Simms of Saint John NB., has been elected presi- dent of the Canadian Cham- ber of Commerce at the annual fent Ty : gent ari s administration as into the Kor repeated warn- having t Fre Ev like a een Ww i heavily-moustached inhabitant rec ins of Ottawa, looking ar Gf ite ings by military an 2 blicz r the new RCAF European bast lena ' o papecenn meeting in Toronto Mr Sines France. Fit.-LA. Evans, a pilot with Then he said he would head) ** President and general man- ose WhO compieted the largest the administration resolved “to wine * ‘ Pine and Com CAF history when 60 Sabres flew the forego ; of politics and ec aetareen ee . : Lo conece on ¢ o 21 Asay | USN DUSLIECSS | C (CP from National Defence) ine the il ie ited . sae by his father in 1872. He is a ob is honorably done.” That job| 10FMer president of the Cana- required nere trin ta a@n Manufacturers’ Associa- r age be | thor (CP Photo) eson a $ on mores, | ud I shall make : _ cus that trip ‘ Stevens Wednesday state- é M 7? ment—that of Eisenhower con- lm ressive : axe Peace Decision 2": 2 4% is expected to % the I theme in his speech- ing barrage today Last Rites Near Three-Hour Speech Condemns Russian Tactics an fF War Criminal Released Today HEIDELBERG ().-US orice -—~ State Secretary VICTORIA (CP) und heartfelt An impressive tribute was paid) auth crim- A TIONS Dean ed States said F riday the United today released war . nal Herman Giesler, 53, from) here Friday to the late Ernest de whether the Communists want) prisor continuation of thele : | “gs ar een Carson cowboy-to-cabinet ea and act on the decision. se eae saan iy the set minister and native British Co-| na was sent to prison in delegate political presented ; committee a y More esl grants principle (anada turn of fumbian, as more than 1,000 per- | sons crowded Christ Church ior participating in wartime atrocities at Muehidorft concen- i lon co-sponsored by 20 | tratior camp during which six Cathedral for the funeral ser-| ntries including Britain, (Canadians were executed on vices : | France and Canada, seeking As- | pitler’s direct orders : Former Public Works Minister and approval particularly: of of forcing the prisoners of Progressive Conservative member for Lillooet for 16 years re re the 6-9 Month war miy issue impeding cease-fire in died suddeniy Tuesday at his Korea Oak Bay home vald m The : ion would also Premier W. A. C. Bennett, who 2 Asser President L. B en ences tealled Carson’s death a “great ay Aasem resiae ‘ : : «Cited } loss to the Legislature and to Pea ahada’s foreign min the public of BoC,” was among ; } ter, call on Chinese Commu or e t |} honorary pallbearers, as were ni and North Koreans to former B.C premiers Byron agree to a truce on the basis of Two young men who pleaded | Johnson and John Hart the latest UN proposals » jeullty to theft of between $150 The longest funeral procession ne steentnts maakt of te ae Dan's Service| in recent times in Victoria, ex- . : station here on ——, - °- | tending more than five blocks, . ) t t nama + were sentenead ta tall tar 42 minut the longest in day wer entenced to jail terms followed the route from the “ public career, was greeted| in Oakalla ae , | Cathedral to the cemetery : , ee from western dek Clark Saunders no fixed ad- ee ARIES I ‘ dress, was sentenced to nine gale who i it @ mag- i ‘ ‘ 1 of the K mont und Victor Larochelle of Ni I h wa * vs ne ur ‘ erve? : moni peg Mase! was given ain montis Mew Typhoon Both admitted previou records Z One Asian delegate said For before sentence Was passed by N M I. ‘ : cs : 7s + ” MISSA , Minister Andrei Vishinsky Magistrate W. D. Vane ears aniia of Russia, expected to speak The two men were arrested six wher the political committee’ po t service ‘ ' pon hours after the service station As I li M t rd Labor eets again Monday, will have was entered They were taken Oo oun 5 to “put his best foot forward”! off the train at Terrace and re ve train 3 rre and } A osiie Saiiamiat ' to meet the logic of Acheson’s| turned here by RCMP MANILA (CP)—A new typhoon tion of Russian of evident disclosed that « ti : : : vec arian Hiaclosed that abou today even before officials had f North Korean ag- $87 of the stolen money was re } obstruction of truce | covered years The count from the typhoon} trix which hit southern Luzon lisland Tuesday and Wednesday reached 444 dead, 460 missing} and 27 injured | Soldiers Russia Declines Armistice ‘Bait’ Shipyard = 7 Workers Get ::. | D NATIONS lisclosed today that U.S alked with Russian | A Phingpines aes Cre a s here during the last spokesman said the death toll ; ioht, months on chances of an might climb to 600 or more as ! ay ncreases armi tice in Korea late reports trickled in from : a Nothing came of it, they said isolated areas in the VANCOUVER Closure of Russians were given a full op-| The new typhoon is moving) botth Vancouver's two major shipyards portunity to say if they wanted |in at a faster clip than the ty-| in the Was averted Friday when 600) an armistice, but they never took | phoon trix and along the same workers, members of 10 unions, the bait i path were granted a pay increase of Jobson cer cet SESE SSNS Swome 8 POLICE ARREST 36 MAU MAU: athe The companies—-Burrard Dry 22, dock and Pacific Drydock agreed to pay half of the medica} services cost for workers. The unions, three Canadian Congress Bryans id Joseph }, of Mont ' NAIROBI ©—Thirty-six suspected Mau Mau terrorists nonth hard were arrested @t an oath-taking ceremony in Nyeria area in “ of Labor and seven American enya Friday but police reported that unrest and tension is 20, Of Pederation of Labor, had voted srowtng Was se€N- to strike. The shipyards have ui oe nt ‘itish and African troops kept a close guard on tribal hs deten-| been working on naval and com- British anc i pt ¢ = mercial contracts reserves and planes are patrolling the native districts. . . : — _ ee — _ | PROVINCIAL For Carson | ming out.” | REPORT TENSION GROWING | NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITI#&H COLUMBLA’s NEWSPAPER Published at Conada’s Most Strategic Pacific Port—‘Pince Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest” OCTOBER 25, 1952 Il Dead, In Week By The Can TEN CENTS (including comic section) Canadian Ar 51 Hurt s Battle adian Press ; OTTAWA—The army Friday issued its 147th | éasualty list of the Korean killed in action and eight wounded, one for the second | Q ~* * npn ad ; time. The army has been issuing casualty lists almost daily in the last week, reflecting the heavy fighting Canadian troops are believed to be facing because of sharp Communist attacks. , Since Oct. 16, the army has is-} sled six lists, reporting 11 dead,! fl wounded and six missing. i In an interview, Brig. John M. Rockingham, who trained and commanded Canada’s original 25th Brigade in Korea, said he interprets the new | Communist thrusts as drives | of roughly 1,000 men--design- hd to “keep us on our toes... make sure we aren't thin- | ; He did not believe Red thrusts) indicated the start of a full-; scale offensive The Canadian 25th Brigade is) part of the ist Commonwealth} Division which yesterday exper-| ienced its biggest battle of the) year in retaking Little Gib-) raiter Hill from Chinese Com- |munist forces. % Mild Weather Builds up B.C. Coal Stocks VANCOUVER ©—AMild October | weather has resulted in a large surplus of coal on {sland The Vancouver office of Cana- dian Collieries Ltd., the largest producers of domestic coal in Vancouver | B.C., says it has,a 25,000-ton Stockpile at Union Bay and Nanaimo. “We always have a stockpile} is the biggest one yet,” said E. | mendous stockpile.” ' He said the firm’s 600 miners | are working a three-day week. | They work a three-day week} during the summer, but normally | lby September they return to a] five-day week. September domestic purchases | ef coal were good but many bins} now are full and mild weather is | | continuing. . | | Kin Peanut Day | “Peanut Day” got away to a good start this morning as Boy Scouts and members of the Kinsmen Club took their posi- tions at downtown street corn- ers. Proceeds from the sale go to- | ward the many projects under- | taken by Kinsmen to help child- ren. e Will Kill... Lik titer Gets Death N e You Are Murdering Us’ a \TCHELOR cular miliated and arrested rule of gun, will not stop us ct Reuters)—-| Headed “Africa Speaks,” the; “Creating the emergency you) from our goal. . ny mail ih-| letter was posied in Nairobi yes- have brutally treated us and| “you cannot end our political | will be killed terday. It goes now you cannpt claim democ-/| wish by arresting our leaders. Sie the British! “You must feel very happy at| "cy and freedom. “We have now more men with M the anti-| the outward success of your) “Fascism has come to Kenya. brains and will continue to fight ie orist organ-| cruel operation ‘Jack Ascot’ (a DESTROYED PRESS you and achieve our freedom. reference to the anti-terrorist} “We have been robbed of all This is the voice of new Af- et ed in a plain) campaign known as operation! freedom, you have destroyed our | rica. the |, W@8 addressed| Jock Scott Pickup) press by arresting our editors} “We have been forced to go yyy dering ~= whites," “You arrested our leader, Jo-| and suppressing our newspaper. underground. If we are known 1m apparentiv) mo Kenyatta, and a lot of other; But you cannot suppress the! you will murder us. We are not esident nders. Other| people, Thousands of Africans) voice of the people. afraid. “nts of this British | leading a normal life have been) “The brutality and suppres-| “We ask how many of us you “a the same cir-| stopped, searched, beaten, hu sion, the show of force and the|will imprison, how many of us otice From Anti-White Society you will kill. “We are 6,000,000 and power is in our numbers. We shall retaliate in the method you have employed. We shall not forget the bad treatment we are suffering. “When our time comes we shall not show mercy because | you don’t know what mercy is. | “We will kill like you are | murdering us today. | “This is no threat. It is how | we are feeling today. | “Africans, Unite.” | castle United 0; Aston Villa 0, | Early Start For — *Bromwich Albion 0 (tie); Chelsea war, reporting three men} : Police Head Retires After Short Term Corporal W. W. McLeod, head} of the city detachment RCMP | for the past six weeks and mem-| ber of the force for 21 years, to-) day turned over his reins of office | to Sergeant Ross Clayton. ; Cpl. McLeod. is retiring on. pension and leaves by air Mon-| _ day to rejoin his wife in Van- couver. ; | Sgt. Clayton, patrol sergeant at divisional headquarters here, will assume command of the city force until a permanent appoint- ment is made. He came to the city only a few weeks ago from ranbrook, where he was in charge of the RCMP for several) petch years. Cpi. | was transferred to Kelowna. The retiring police officer said Whe ddes fot ‘tnew- wirat~ne ts | going to do, but his first though} is to take a (JOINED IN ‘31 Cpl. McLeod joined the RCMP | |in Winnipeg in 1931 and after a) few weeks in Regina was trans- | ferred to Vancouver working out | of there and Victoria until 1934) when he was transferred to) Cranbrook, He went back to Regina in 1939 and in 1942 was sent to) Lethbridge. He worked in var-| ious parts of southern Alberta, | including three years at Water-| ton Lakes, until his transfer to} this city as head of the city| detachment. ' Cpl. McLeod was married at| bore down on the Philippines | at this time of the year but this| Cranbrook in 1939. | He turned over the detachment : finished counting the toll from|O. T. Simpson, general manager.| to Sgt. Clayton at a brief cere-| peta the worst tropical storm in 50|“If our miners were working full) mony this afternoon. Earlier in| | time now we would have a tre-| the day he and his: force were | reviewed by Inspector W. M.. Taylor. | FOOTBALL LONDON @-—Soccer results: English League Division 1-—— Arsenal 3, New- Manchester City 0 (tie); Black- pool 0, Sheffield Wednesday 1; Bolton Wanderers 2, Stoke City 1; Chariton Athletic 0, West 2, Tottenham Hotspurs 1; Derby County 1, Cardiff City 1 (tie); Manchester United 1, Burnley 3; Portsmouth 2, Preston North} - End 5; Sunderland 3, Liverpool 1; Wolverhampton Wanderers 3, | Middlebrough 3 (tie). | Division I[—Barnsley 2, Luton .Town 3; Blackburn Rovers 0, | Rotherham United 1; Brentford 4, Leicester City 2; Everton 2, Westham United 0; Huddersfield Town 2, Bury 0; Hull City 0, Ply- mouth Argyle 1; Lincoln City 1, Leeds United 1 (tie); Notting- ham Forest 0, Fulham 2; Shef- field United 2, Birmingham City 2 (tie); Swansea Town 1, South- ampton 2. : Scottish League Cup Final Dundee 2, Kilmarnock 0. Scottish League Division A—Aberdeen 6, East Fife 3; Clyde 2, Hibernian 3; Fal- kirk 1, St. Mirren 2; Hearts 1, Celtic 0; Motherwell 1, Partick Re a et PROVINCIAL LIBRARY, 11s VICTORIA, B. C. BUY Gyro Apples Support the Children’s Playground Suffers Heavier Losses FIRST SNOWFALL—Trees and roads in rural districts near Quebec City were covered by the season’s first snowfall when winter’s first blasts hit much of eastern Canada. (CP PHOTO) Seven Canucks Cruise Globe With 72-Foot Sailing Ketch — The 72-foot|intee face-lifting and a lot of “Memory” is carsying| hard work by the men, Memory seven young Canadians and an|was ready for a trial sail. They OTTAWA: ® McLeod arrived here on|Englishman on a dream adven-|took her out into the Solent |Sept. 8 from Lethbridge to re-|ture—a two-year cruise around | under auxillary power then hoist- place Corporal Ed Anderson, who} the world. sail. They found .the ship England | sien ond ans Sateen aire ; ere the | 0.19 Fosaaias oh Ro The stout sailing craft, pu’- | cuaued specially in Atlantic from Ha "on the vi |south coast of Bngland, last{ Mirby wrote of the saf e~ at ey eee the coats abe ee hl Ae trip, # c of rran~ f ’ ean via Portugal. ae and other gear that In her lockers were provisions | might save lives in case of enrer- for 30 days. And aboard were : Cameron Rougvie and Bill Dew- an and their brides; Eddie Hughes and Bruce Kirby, all of Ottawa; Kelly Brownson of El- dorado, Ont., and Ralph Menhin- ick of Hamble. Menhinick, a sailor with deep- sea experience, joined the Can- adians in England and was elected skipper of the ship. DESCRIBES PREPARATIONS Kirby, a reporter on leave from the Ottawa Journal, has written a series of articles, describing Memory and the work that went) into outfitting her. He told of the first trial cruise, an overnight jaunt to the coast of France, of the special gear and sails which were fitted and of the wed- gency. One of the last tasks before leaving England was the pro- visioning. This was planned by Cam Rougvie, who is also the ship’s navigator. The provisions included 112 pounds of sea bis- cuits, 36 pounds of butter, 100 pounds of salted fresh meat, 50 pounds of coffee, 100 pounds of toes, 112 pounds of flour, dried fruit, milk powder, canned vegetables and meat and many other items. It would be enough to last 30 days though the cruise to. Portugal was expected to take only eight to 12 days. The Memory put out to gea Sept. 11, and after clearing the Scilly Isles, the crew fitted a pair of specially-designed spin- nakers specially purchased to take advantage of the trade winds which blow steadily from east to west across the Atlantic and Pacifit in southern latitudes. | Mike Giraud, special corres- | pondent for Vancouver radio sta- | tion CKWX aboard’ the Ontario, }eabled Friday the cruiser was |in collision with the Chilean freighter Arauco Thursday night. | No one was hurt, but both ships | suffered slight damage. Thistle 2; Queen of the South 1, Airdrieonians 2; Raith Rovers 3, Third Lanark 1; Athletic 2, Bre- chin City 3. HOCKEY SCORES LONDON Wales today de- feated France’ 22-16 in an Inter- national Rugby League game dings of Rougvie and Dewan. The weddings took place the, day after the girls, Claire Parent | and Marienne Wilson, arrived | Lae as from Canada. After honeymoon- | ‘ ing trips to Paris they returned) RC N G : to Hamble where Memory was) rulser being outfitted. From then on,' * 2 wrote Kirby, there was a definite | In Collision, feminine touch about the boat. . “A new curtain appeared in Damage Sii At the shower; wash basins turned | ig. from black to white. Clean tow- . els made an appearance and| VANCOUVER (CP) — Canadian bars of soap cropped up. When’ °ruiser Ontario, now on a cruise we sat down to a meal we were, 4round the South American con- confronted by knives and forks.” | tinent, suffered slight damage in Within two weeks of this fem- | 4 en in harbor at Buenos eviniesmvnginaeen | Aires. The Says Synopsis | A strong ridge of high pressure | . remains nearly stationary over Ezzy Outpoints B.C. and has brought P= akies | , . to interior sections 0! e pro- | vince, Patches of cloud and fog rgentinian in coastal areas will clear during} NEW YORK @—Swinging the day. Light frost was report- | viciously from the opening bell, ed during the night from many | etimly~ determined Ezzard interior points. Charles hammer?d out a one- Skies will be clear again to-|sided 10-round decision over morrow with patches of morning | game, strong Cesar Brion of Ar- fog in coastal areas and in some | gentina last night at Madison interior valleys. Square Garden. Forecast Brion, a 5-to-1 underdog, out- Cloudy this morning, clearing | weighed the former heavyweight by noon. Sunny tomorrow. | King, 196% to 186%. Patches of fog after midnight, clearing by noon. Not much change in temperature. Light winds. Low tonight and high to- morrow at Port Hardy 42 and 56; Sandspit 40 and 58; Prince Ru-| pert 44 and 57. WHL Edmonton 2, Victoria 1. Seattle 3, Vancouver 3. OSHL L Kelowna 2, Penticton 8. me