'S ORROW TIDES— 6, 1952 rime) 18.3 feet 19.7 feet 95 feet 4.9 feet ock Mar Saved From indy Channel erican Boat Owners Lose ket Z he ecity| CCF member of the Provincial position Oct. | Legislature for Prince Rupert -| married in 1930 to Mrs. Chiarles Published at Canada’s M VOL, XLI, No. 260 Ottawa Expects Relations With US. Remain Friendly OTTAWA a continuation Official cirel i | president in the United States “There's not the slightest friendly practical co-operation | especially one like Kisenhower— | | West Coast: By The Can VANCOUVER—Briti Former City Engineer, Pioneer Dies W. V. Tattersall, ploneer eab- inet maker and city engineer in the early days of Prince Rupert died suddenly his home here early this morning. He was 80 years old Mr. Tattersall came to this city from his hometown of Birk- enhead, England, in 1912 and was one of the original members | of the carpenters’ union here He was city engineer for only ia short time before he went to work at the drydock, where he i | remained for 20 years, then open- (ed a cabinet-making | Seventh Avenue East He operated his own business ; until the outbreak of the Second | World War when he again went {to work at the drydock, remain - shop on jing on the job until 1946 when he | retired | MASON He was a member of Kaien |Chapter of the Masonic Lodge, | having joined the society on his | arrival here 40 years ago i Mr. Tattersall’s first wife, who ;came here with him from Eng- | land, died in 1918 and he was re- | Hills, mother of George Hills, Besides his widow, he leaves | H., V. Tattersall and) Leslie, both of this city, and three stepdaughters, Mrs. F. W. (Lena) | Grimble, Mrs. Sam Haugan and Mrs Kasyer Funeral A tWo sons, John (Amy) ervices will be con- | iueted in St. Andrew's Cathedral | t 2:30 p.m, Saturday, Rev. Canon Basil S. Prockter officiat- ine Boilermakers Accept Offer VANCOUVER Marine Workers (-~Members of | and Boilermak- ‘rs Union Monday night voted to accept a 7¥g-cent Wage in- crease offered by Vancouver shipyards : The union is the largest of 10 llas Vessel Burns at Sea were saved from the chilly winds} el yesterday by the timely arrival! boat enrouté to Prince Rupert. We ; , , f Ming up from the engine room wee Both men lost all their posses -~ sKILT | signe ihey left here by air thi: i it' afternoon for their home in| Ketchikan i ard rhe boat is partly insured. It| yard penueved to be tal loss It is on the beach about a mile | bove Camp Point Light, 80 miles | fe South of Prince Rupert, in Gren- i jially | Vile Channel ( i iew with before | . he other ne 1 Hennes | i b | wa : ‘Bl We n th ee JAMES J. BEHAN new appointee 7 N . * : New District « CNR Manager *. * ° Visits Cit Ay y Jame ! Beha newly -ap I rage Mw the Canad National Railways’ B.C. dist i arrived Prince Rupert ta hy { { visit to AQUI ius VTHING l . ; Mr Bei “ lu OL Way knew | SCE Wn oe wa . rs u a , first Creore for 4i i Nie Rall si + ’ eas, he re lands _ | iaaners aii at aevett ter 9 wh » was transferred to : region as CNR sup landing aaagirs far ial Wi " a te a ant general super . endent portation and has 1949 becarne neral superin 4 ansportation Kemano ' ' region with he * ever é al Winnipeg, where he ed to/ remained unti) his new appoin perators| He eds Bernard Allen AF were} who retired this fall earch Mi ecelved |couver by steamship night - cI Rhea i — * e - eae dark cloud arises from Britain's first ", held off the coast of Australia at ‘3. Immense clouds of smoke, steam and alr ss ‘me “3 Osi iprush of water Behan will leave for Van- tomorrow ‘ ; rh, aad after the initial orange flash had been | ' unions that negotiated with Burrard and Pacific Drydock Companies. Six hundred men are affected | LATER STAGE—A later stage of Britain’s atomic weapon explo- sion in Australian coastal waters shows the cloud surging into the sky, Southerly winds, varying in speeds at different heights, already are beginning to take effect on the smoke cloud a few minutes after the blast, OOmS a of friendly co-operation under the Republican said one highly-placed minister Giant Tidal Wave Misses | meet a tidal wave last nigh Wms ‘ PROVINCIAL YT ei 7 * NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBLa’s NEWSPAPER ost Strategic Pacific Port—"Prince Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest” PRINCE RUPERT, B.C.. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1952 PRICE FIVE CENTS s Ike Storms White Pulp Mill Seeks Proxy On Schools But Election To Board Necessary The board of school trustees i would welcome a representative i from Columbia Cellulose Com- | pany on Watson Island on the! | board but suggest that he, or'| }ehe, gain the position in the} | Same manner.as other trustees. | | At the regular meeting last night, a-letter was read from the department of education ad- €s in Ottawa today looked for New York doubt we will have the same under a Republican president that we have thad in the past,” Onl adian Press Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower’s landslide victory ripped open the |once-solidly Democratic south iand shattered the 20-year Dem- y Ripple sh Columbia prepared to EISENHOWER .»» landslide vigtory ; , , vising trustees that a request * acsamanear pon ng 0 t but distance whittled the | from the company for a repre- 4-Day Pr : : : . semitive oh the Board. was ison | known, Wall Street zoomed into monster to a ripple. ‘Wkdonahie” ail ceed farther . activity at such a pace that the ; ‘ epee eo R End: high speed ticker tape fell as Wave were launched by an/o from trustees lot Ss much us two minutes behind i earthquake near the southern The company suggested in a reporting seetted ieee taars jtip of Kamchatka Peninsula, in| letter some time ago that be- In Surrender : from the trading floor. ET EE It is understood that three or iSiberia, some 4,000 miles from caUse it pays the major portion | here of4school taxes in its district : COLUMBUS @— -da | Huge waves struck Hawaii and|*)@t the company be given the “ eee tte 2 _ ? “* ithe Aleutians but weather sta-| Privilege of appointing a repre- jtions up-coast in British Col- | 5@@tative to the board. uprising of Ohio penitentiary in- mates, a period filled with fire, rioting and death for one con- four major U.S. industries plan- jning development in Alaska |have been holding off in the (Gertrude) | 3 umbia reported only “moderate Trustees endorsed a motion swells,” and for B.C., Washing- by Bruce Brown which said the ;ton Oregon and California any board is “quite in favor of Co- } danger there was has passed lumbiea Cellulose having a mem- The tidal wave was due here ber,on the board but they should at 3:30 p.m, PST” a weather of- 89 about it vict, appeared at an end Tuesday hope that a Republican admin- | night. | istration would take over control The unruly convicts in four|at Washington. The election re- cellblocks out of control since | sults are now expected to bring rioting started Friday night, quick action in the advancement in the normal way.” gave into a surrender ultimatum | of their plans. IL ifice spokesman in Vancouver se base seconded by trustee A.| delivered by Warden Ralph Ee |said. “It would take delicate in- | Déminato Alvis. i js struments which we haven't got During discussion of the re-j Early gains ranged between $4 ‘and $5 at the outside in leading _ issues. AVALANCHE | In the election, there was Winnie's Tories Win By-Elections se mi ics Oo LONDON ®—Winston Church- | U.S.—Eisenhower. ill’s Conservatives retained two| The avalanche of votes—close seats in by-elections yesterday. | to 6,000,000 more than gained by At High Wycombe, John Hall! Democratic presidential candi- polled almost 2,000 more votes|date Adiai E. Stevenson—gave | to record whether it had arrived quest, Dr. R. G. Large, chair-| or not.” man, pointed out that members Oe a of the school board are elected: EVACUATE COAST representatives of the people // | Frightened by radio reports and he suggested large corpor- that a huge tidal wave was ap-! ations, regardless of the amount proaching, between 1,500 and of taxes they pay, should have 2,000 peopie on Long Beach their representative elected in Peninsula in Washington evac-' the same manner uated their communities briefly All trustees admitted that Co- No panic was reported in B.C.| jumbia Cellulose pays a large ‘ORMES ifs ties DRUGS DAILY DELIVERY Phone 81 House Buying Orders Flood Exchange Landslide Victory Gives General Near-Record Vote By The Canadien Press NEW YORK—Buying orders flooded the floor | of the New York stock exchange early today in the ' | aftermath of Eisenhower’s election yesterday as first | Republican president in 28 years. j STEVENSON . . + loses in own state when he appeared in a New York hotel ballroom, matched his opponent's unity plea, said it Was a “day of dedication rather than triumph,” and that he never will give “short weight” to his hu ,than his Labor opponent, and atthe 62-year-old General a tre-}; ee Woe }~ International ~ affporc “Here } pdr tion~ of. school: taxes: in the | Belfast, Iretand, Sir'David-Camp- | mendous mandate, but-fell-shart4" ee ie tie warned all aircraft operators a) Port Edward area. _ bell, Ulster Unionist( Conserva- of guaranteening him a Republi-{.. The General already had tidal wave might strike, and all| Trustee Joe Scott said he diditive) won over Labor with a ecan-controlled Congress. the record popular vote seaplanes were removed from! not see “any harm” in the ap-| majority of 15,412. Noon returns from 121,250 of a Repu — the water or double-moored pointment, but other trustees 146,361 voting units showed the{ Folled up by Wendell L. Wilkie “just in case.” | pointed out that it would be set- Th )} popular vote as follows: Eisen-} in 1940—and 27,751,597 amassed nonpeacresnaitresprsinenenst ;, | ting a precedent if the request | é hower 29,124,001; Stevenson 23,-{ by Roosevelt in 1936. : | were granted ‘| 470,798. SS 6) WEATHERMAN is: eae en ito politics after a 40-year imilitary career, Eisenhower | buried Governor Stevenson, his ‘Democratic opponent, under a coast to coast swell of votes matching in volume that given Herbert Hoover, his last Repub- jlican predecessor in 1928, and rivalling some of those for Frank- lin D. Roosevelt. Health Minister | Postpones Tour | i jing. Increasing cloudiness is ex- | VICTORIA (Health Minister | pected in most northern regions | Erie Martin Tuesday announced | tonight and Thursday as the dis- jhe has postponed his tour | turbance moves southward. through central and northern | Forecasts , British Columbia for a survey of| A few clouds today, becoming | CONGRESS = liked Ike in | the government's hospital insur-/ overcast in the northern part| But while voters like | ance services. | this afternoon and in the south- | ©™phatic terms, they a a Mr. Martin, denying that he | ern part late this evening. Show- | What less certain that it was had changed his plans because|ers tonight and Thursday. A time for a change” in Congress of criticism by political oppon- | little milder. Winds light, in-| Which the Democrats have do- FY | ents, explained he was delaying | creasing to southeast 20 by late | inated for the last four rar ‘ | his tour because he plans to take | evening. Low tonight and high — ¥ “~~=“ | part in the by-election campaign | tomorrow at Port ardy, Sandspit| Representatives apparently HEADS LIBERAL WOMEN — | in Similkameen and Prince Rupert, 42 and 48. | Hinged on the outcome of a Mrs. C. J. Embree of Halifax |, half-dozen or more districts has been elected president of with only a vote or two likely the National Federation of Dirty Wash Saves B y's Life to separate the two parties in LIMA, 0, (AP)—-Mrs. Don Marshall was busy at her chores yesterday when she heard her three-year-old son Harry yell Liberal Women at their bien the 435-seat house. nial meeting in Ottawa. She The senate contest was just as from the basement, “Mamma, Stevie's in the basement.” Knowing her year-old son, Stevie, could not walk down Says | A Pacific disturbance is ap- | proaching the north this morn- However, Ike getting about 57 per cent of the popular vote, it is expected to be far in excess of 49,829,312 record cast in 1940; WINS STATES In his sweep, Eisenhower car- ried two states the Republicans haven't been able to capture Since 1924, Massachusetts and Rhode Island. He won or was out in front in 14 states where Republicans haven't had a pre- — fb — 1928—Ari- zona, ornia, Florida, Idaho, Illinois, Minnesota, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia and Washington. His landslide wasn’t quite as wicespread as that registered by Hoover over Al Smith, since Eis- enhower couldn’t break into West Virginia, Kentucky and North Carolina as the former president did in 1928. In some respects, Eisenhower's Was more of a personal than a party victory. Although he help- ed elect Republican administra- succeeds Mrs. W. T. O'Regan tight. One-third of the 96 Sie the basement stairs, she hurried down and found the little lad of Ottawa. Mrs. Embree ate seats were up for re-election. mother of three grown child On the basis of mid-morning lying in a basket of soiled clothes. A disconnected joint in a furnace pipe showed how he got there. ren, has been active in politica! returns, Republicans had ‘won of circles for many years were ahead in enough states to Questioning her older son, Mrs. Marshall learned that Harry hati dropped his belt in a register. When he pulled up the grid (CP Photo) seat 48. This would leave Sena- — tor Wayne Morse of Oregon, Re- to get it out, down Stevie tumbled—head first. He escaped with minor bruises. SIEN® 'publican until he switched to! ANCIENT TOWER pavenaoh and became Indepen- Oldest building in the Tower donk. 40 pans the dealin See of London, the White Tower was He refused to indicate ine he constructed between 1078 and will #0. soi STEVENSON OUT ‘| Stevenson was able to hold to- gether only remnants of the once-solid south, plus possibly Kentucky and Missouri in the border states. His running mate, Senator John Sparkman, helped salvage his home state of Ala- bama, but not much else. The Democratic campaign of “talking sense to the American people” -had fizzled. The Ilinois governor, who reluctantly accepted the Demo- cratic nomination, lost even in his own state. With all the big states — New York, Michigan, California, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas and New Jersey—safely in the Republican column, Eisenhower had whop- ping total of the electoral vote. He needed only 266 to win but was heading for possible total of 442. Stevenson had only 89. In Springfield, 01, Stevenson philosophically conceded the victory to Eisenhower, called on Americans to “close the ranks” and pledged his support to the winner, IKE CHEERED = ARAL STAGE—A cloud formation 50 miles long arises from Britain's first atomic weapon explosion, held of fthe coast of Australia, This picture was taken 30 minutes after the morning tions in many states, there was tough sledding for Republicans in the Senate and house battles and races for governors. New Terrace Bank Branch Opens Nov. 10 Special to The Daily News TERRACE An important. event for business here is schea= uled to take place Nov. 10 when the Bank of Nova Scotia opens its large new office on Lakels€ Ave. sie Bright, modern and spacious, the new office replaces the small temporary building on Lakelse Ave, which has carried on the businéss of the bank since Aug! 1, 1951, when in a surprise move a branch was opened here. . Construction of the new head- quarters was necessitated by the tapid growth of the branch's business, it is explained. The branch will continue un- der the management of R. C; Sandover-Sly who opened the temporary office, and will oper- ate with a cansiderably increas- blast. (CP from U.K. Information) Eisenhower, wildly cheered ed staff,