HORROW'S -TIDES— rime) 1952 174 feet 6.0 feet #0 feet 8.2 feel / | } * ‘ . ; an ,peers doWn from near the Lop of it Kind tn ms Canada, now for the city’s incinerator and will 00 large bricks in its construction 18 feet, 10 } tow » nehes at the bottom CP Photo ) Head Dies Suddenly tm of Heart Attack ISCO (CP)—Philip Murray, presi- ) and the United Steelworkers of . of a heart attack, He was 6. @ His death removed one of the | Dig. Dareeol. United States Ja | bor Others are John L. Lewis. president of United Mine Work- jers, and William Green, presi- dent of the AFL Murray retired at Mark Hop- trate ws Mental ination Kin Hote] “ about midnigat shortly after addressing the western regional conference of steelworkers. His wife arose. at “6:45 am. and found him col- 'a-) lapsed on the floor beside his A bed A doctor pronounced him dead 20 minutes later Ms ester Immediate speculation as to oo ne Murray's successor as CIO leader » entres around Alien 8. Hay ie) wood, CIO executive vice-presi- dent, and Waiter Reuther, pres- ident of United Auto Workers INDIAN WEIGHT Candy weight in India being equivalent measure of a madras candy to 500 pounds Secretary is a ms From t Today blans The D ily * etus ‘ NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMB1A’s NEWSPAPER Published at Canada’s Most Strategic Pacific Port—"P ince Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest” VOL. XLI No. 264 PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., MONDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1952 PRICE FIVE CENTS q . ° meets a¥s Sfat £4 / Police Start Traffic Clamp- TRUCE | ‘Soviets Cite — ‘Countries on | Commission | UNITED NATIONS @—Soviet | Foreign Minister Andrei Vishin- | sky today called for the creation | of a UN commission on which Russia, the United States and Communist China would be in-! FOR KOREAN | cluded to settle the Korean war. | Other countries, Vishinsky sug- gested to the commission, would be Britain, France, India, Burma, | Switzerland, Czech osovakia } North Korea and South Korea. | In @ speech to the UN 60-/ member political committee, Vi- | shinsky turned down all com- promise proposals for settling the prisoner-of-war deadlock at! , Panmunjom He warned that adoption. of the American resolution backing | up UN negotiations would wreck | the talks and lead to the pro-} traction of war i Fascists, | Nazis Score | Election Gains | Six-day battle to reach civili-| Madison, Wis., had been sought / hilltop. His plane was damaged. In Flanders Fields LIEUT.-COL. JOHN McRAE Died in France, January 28, 1918. In Flanders fields, the poppies grow Between the crosses, row on row That mark our place: and in the sky The larks, still bravely singing, fly Scarce heard amid the guns below. We are the dead: short days ago We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow, Loved and were loved, and.now we lie In Flanders Fields. Take up our quarrel with the foe! To you, from failing hands, we throw The torch: be yours to hold it high! lf ye break faith with us who die We shall not sleep, though poppies grow In Flanders Fields. FAIRBANKS, Alaska (AP)—A bush pilot walked out of the Alaska wilderness last week and told a harrowing study of a Bush Pilot Tells Harrowing Escape Story _ takeoff from a strip he hacked|sandbar when he lost his way out with a hatchet, only to run|in snow flurries a week ago. out of gas in flight. The Alaskan flier, formerly of FRANKFURT ©—Rightist and | zation after his plane was fore- | since he vanished Oct. 30 Fascist forces scored sharp gains and Chancellor Konrad Aden- ed down in a snowstorm i Joseph Cook's story was one! joined in the search for him in/ foot strip through brush. Then As many as 20 planes had auer’s middle-of-the-road Chris-|0f desperation and frustration| hazardous weather. | (ian Democrat Party lost ground | yesterday in local elections in three west German states In Lower Saxony, the British- zone birthplace of the outlawed | Nazi-like Socialist Reich party two former Nazi officials were named to prblic office Adenauer’s chief opposition , ne Socialisi‘ ‘Social £ rets) heid their own and gained slight- | ly in some areas HOCKEY SCORES WHI. Vancouver 1, Victoria 1; Sas- katoon 4, New Westminster 3; | Tacoma 4, Seattic 1; Calgary 3,| Edmonton 1 OSHL Penticton 5, Kamloops 2; Vert) non 4, Kelowna 3. ‘overtime | WIL Nelson 5, Kimberley 3; Trail 5, Spokane 7 NHL Detrolt 3, Toronto 3 (tie); ts cago 4, Montreal 6 SUNDAY NHL | Chicago 1, Boston 4; New York! 1, Detroit 3 WHL New Westminster 5, Seattle 0./ WIL | Trail 4, Spokane 6 Boxing Day Declared Holiday For Most British Columbi , VICTORIA ®--Boxing Day, Dec. 26, has been declared : a holiday under the Shops Regulation Act and the Factories nis Act. the provincial secretary's office announced today wer This will mean a holiday for virtually ail British Colum- OHNSON SPEAKS AT CONVENTION - | offices of how he made a last ditch} Cook said he landed on @/Kach time the plane skidded New Building For Forestry Department Likely in 53 A special building to..house the staff and alll piane ran ont of gas. equipment for the provincial forestry' of Prince Rupert district may be con-| gine, the damaged plane drop- offices and department structed here next year. At the present time the 40- odd employees are scattered | around offices in the Court! House and the Besner Block on Third Avenue Lands and forests minister Robert E. Sommers said during his visit here last week some action must be taken to allevi- ate crowded conditions in the Court House and he would con- sider the feasibility of con- structing a new place for the forest service : It was learned that estimates for construction of separate of- fices for the department were drawn up for the previous gov- ernment and property is avail- able on the provincial govern- ment grounds NEAR COURT HOUSE The structure could be located to the rear of the court house allowing ample room for park- ing and concentration of all for- estry service and forestry de- partment employees While steady there are some 40 workers in the various in buildings here, field workers come and go during the jyear and under the present set- up, crowded conditions do not Forest Laws Praised by City Woods Man systems under which his com hs ie pany was granted the first forest Rue Lt management licence in B.C lumbla He said the forest manage- ment licence is one of severad possible methods of co-ordin- ating private enterprise and government ownership in the forest industry and was devel- oped to fit conditions in B.C, “Forest ownership in B.C almost wholly in the govern ment Watson t leg imbla Achnin Lo ership IS¢ said Ual se@8- is Various forms of lease or ing Con- » new usly to lals for well business r many of ‘ees and 1 now are t the indus- ia representa- adiar company outlined «Can Soy cutting rights have been estab- lished, in addition to the direct transfer of timber in Crown grants, railway grants, Indian reserves, etc.” He said the B.C. Forest Service and the Government “through appropriate legislation are still adapting their cutting regula- tions and permits with the dual purposes of meeting the present needs of market and ndustry, and providing incentives and means for developing the second crop of timber for future needs Forest Management licences, he continuer, account for less than two per cent of the protec- tive forest land in the province “Intent of the policy for Forest Management Licences Was to provide a means for the forest industry to operate On a Sus- tained yield program by setting aside, for those who could com- ply with the rigid regulations, a limited reserve of timbtr land to be managed by the licensee as a tree farm... “That these policies do pro- vide an incentive is shown in the fact 13 ilcences had been granted by August 1, 1952 with scores of other applications re- ceived and under discussion or negotiations.” Stating that the principal product at Columbia Cellulose plant at Port Edwari is refined sulphite pulp for chemical dis- solving, Mr. Johnson said the type of product manufactured may affect the calculations of cutting cycles or other condi- tions. pan After describing the area in which his company obtains its logs, he said failure to live up to the provisions laid down un- der the forest management li- cence could lead to cartcéllation | of the licence to cut timber i “The forest laws of the west- ern states and British Colum- bia have been created to con- form with practices which the most forwar dlooking members of this industry had previously adopted as necessary for the preservation of the industry and all that it supports. “Such practices as are proved | to be good business .. , inevitably | will be included as forest legis- lation. Bad practices in the past have resulted in restrictive leg- islation .. . “This industry, by continuing to take the initiative in develop- ing and promoting good prac- tices, can .ensure that present and future legislation will con- i | | | allow space for them while they are in Prince Rupert. The B.C. forest service radio network is headquartered in the court house at the present time) in a small office with only! enough room for a couple of operators. Since forestry si one of the busiest departments of the gov- ernment, Mr. Sommers said he feels the workers should have adequate and properly-organiz- ed offices Concentration of all branches of the department in one build- ing, he said, would automatical- | ly improve the co-ordination necessary No decision on construction can be made until his recom- mendations are acted upon by the new Legislature, which does) not concene until February, but the minister indicated there is good chance that it will be) = built in 1953. City Building Marks Sharp 10-Month Rise Building permits totalling $39,- 900 were taken out by city resi- dents’ here during October to bring to $426,527 the total value | of permits issued in Prince Ru-/| pert for the first 10 months of; the year. i Of the October total, seven) permits were to build homes and | the remainder were for altera-| tions and repairs to present) dwellings. ; Building permits in September | totalled $36,445 and value of per- mits issued in October, 1951, was only $9,450. The 10-month total is more shades by better than $75,000 the value of permit taken out during 1950. Great Zionist Statesman Dies, REHOVOT, Israel @ —' Dr. of Israel and a renowned chem- ist, died of heart attack Sunday. 7t-year-old father of tinue to be beneficial.” into deepest mourning. | Chaim Weizmann, first president | after. a prolonged illness plunged this newly-born desert nation He got into the air again, but snow forced him down on a Four four days he worked with at hatchet to clear a 1500- he made three takeoff attempts. into brush and suffered more damage. Although the fabric of the plane was badly ripped, he in the revised rules was started here today by DAILY DELIVERY Phone 81 Campaign Against Parking, Speeding 1-Hour Limits, 20 mph To Be Strictly Enforced Strict enforcement of the traffic bylaw with regard to parking and other regulations laid down RCMP. The informal approach by motorists to parking and driv- ing regulations is going to be remedied, officers said, and drivers who fail to abide by the regulations can expect to be fined. Mayor Harold Whalen said the enforcement follows com- plaints from the Automotive Transport Association regarding fines levied against truck driv- ers for double parking on down- town streets while loading and unloading goods for stores. “It’s not fair to truckers to be penalized for delivering materials necessary for our consumption,” said one police officer, adding that trucks lately have been unable te back into curbs because of the large number of motorists who park their cars on down- “town streets all day. The traffic bylaw, which went into effect last Aug. 28, allows one-hour parking only on Third Avenue between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. While a number of motorists received parking tickets last managed to get into the air on the fourth attempt. Cook said he was in sight of the Yukon River when the “lL thought TP eeuld glide to the river but, without the en- ped like a streamlined rock,” he said. He crashed and was thrown clear. Although exhausted and vi bruised, he walked two days and two nights. After reaching the Yukon River bank across from the vil- lage of Tanana, he lay on his back and fired a pistol. A villager heard the shots, flew over and picked Cook up. His condition was reported as good. Pi a LIBERAL PRESIDENT — Dun- can K. MacTavish, 53-year-old week, police indicated today that even greater numbers will be issued from now on for in- fractions of the bylaw. Another regulation which has been ignored_is. parking, the bylaw an autoist is permit- ted to park 18 inches from the curb, “but still many are as mueh as two feet out,” said an RCMP constable as he moved along the street looking for olators. In an effort to enforce the law, police will patrol the streets hourly as well as con- tinue to keep a constant check on speeders. Under the bylaw, the speed limit in downtown Prince Ru- pert is 20 miles an hour and 25 miles an hour elsewhere. The law also gives pedestrians the right-of-way while crossing in crosswalks but, police said, “that doesn’t mean you can stroll across the street at your leisure.” ‘ “The laws are made to be en- forced and motorists and pedes- trians alike must abide by them.” henarial Army Veterans Draw Higher Pension NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. (CP) —Imperial war veterans in Can- Kinsmen Head Visits City For Ceremony Norman Martin, district gov- ernor of Kinsmen in B.C. arrived here by plane today from Van- couver to officiate at installa- tion ceremonies of the president and officers of the Prince Rupert Club. Harry Sheardown will be in- stalled as president, succeeding Stan Saville. Mr. Martin, a clothier in Dun- can, goes from here to Terrace, Burns Lake and Prince George before returning. His visit follows by a day that of Trevor Thompson from Burns Lake, one of the founders of Kinsmen in Hamilton, Ontario, in 1920. He accompanied J (Babe) Rougeau, president of the Burns Lake club and two other members, on a goodwill visit. Before leaving they left a gavel, whieh the Prince Rupert club now takes to Terrace. a: Damages For Furniture Loss Awarded Damages totalling $3,000 have been awarded Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Bennett for loss of their furni- ture and clothing in a truck fire last February. Mr. Justice Norman W. Whit- taker handed down the decision in the case, heard here at the Fall Assizes last September and advised the court registrar of the result. Mr. Bennett, former resident mining engineer here for the Provincial Government, thad sought damages from Fraser Valley Builders Limited, oper- ators of the truck, which caught fire at Rainbow Lake, while the driver was in a cafe. Mr. Bennett had employed the eompany to move his belongings to the Red Rose Mine near Skeena Crossing. He contended, through his counsel, Thomas W. Brown, QC, that the fire was caused by an overheated exhaust pipe which had been carried through the van of the truck to keep perish- ables warm in the temperatures ada have been granted a higher pension rate. Ottawa lawyer, has been elect- ed president of the National Liberal Federation at the annual meeting of its advisory council in Ottawa. Mr, Mac- Tavish, who took over the chairmanship of the Federal District Commission more than a year ago, sueceeds Senator J. Gordon Fogo who died last | July NO NEWSPAPER TUESDAY Tuesday, Nov. 11, being Re- membrance Day, The Daily News will not publish. Next edition is Wednesday. (CP Photo) — | Percy J. Curle of New West- iminster, secretary of the Im- perial Veterans Corps of British | Columbia, says he has been ad- |vised*of the increase by the |British. ministry .of pensions. |The increase was sought to off-| and {set the drop in exchange ‘the increased cost of living. Under the new rates a pen- |sioner, if married or with one |dependent, will receive £26 a year or 10 shillings on a weekly basis. For other imperial vet- erans the rate will be £20 a ‘year or seven shillings, eight- ‘pence a week. of Skeena Crossing area. Fraser Valley Builders, repre- , sented by D. §. Collins and R. G. | Vosburgh of Terrace, claimed the | fire was caused by matches pack- led in clothing or furniture own- ed by the Bennett's. In a lengthy judgment, Mr. i Justice Whittaker held that the company, aS a carrier for re- ward, had not discharged the onus of proving that it was not responsible for the distruction of goods entrusted to it. A counterclaim for $419.97 for damage to the truck was dis- missed. Mr. and Mrs. Bennett are now living at New Denver, near Nel- son. | than $100,000 above last year and! 23 Die in Riot-Torn South Africa DURBAN, South Africa (P)—| A new clash here between Ne-| groes and police and a one-day strike threatened more violence today in race-divided South Africa, where 23 persons died in week-end riots.in two major. cities. | A strong police force of ar-. Announcement of the death of mored cars and trucks patrol- Israet: ied in Johannesburg as a gen-) eral one-day walkout called oy! buildings were burned. Fire from police rifles and started in the eastern Cape automatic weapons on Saturday the African National Congress province. Two white persons, one a Roman Catholic nun, and at least eight Negroes were kill- yesterday and last night skirm- Durban. Six..government. and. mission killed 14 Negroes and wounded 39 in the diaraond mining cen- tre of Kimberley. Police opened fire again here this morning as démonstrators attempted to fire another build- ing and stoned a fire brigade that had rushed to the scene ‘}under police protection. The outbreak here, like the one in Kimberley, started when tried to break up @ Se seme South Africa’s strict seg- regation laws. @ Rips CS Ae sips