MORROW'S -TIDES— ver 29, 1952 Time 5 22.1 feet feet 76 feet 4 25 feet contest the office 1¢ death in 6 Killed in flames still tragedy deen sald 36 : i rvicemen Bodies of mg those ene of wilnesses to sid the plane it “sheeshed™ ba iree-llanked. field | tis destina- rd air force seattered mm the wreck- ile from ere rted the was circling field when 18 mill Villans and the scene the heart by in the They were ng about it Reductions ve Elections PC Critic uring the Hs Next Com- ext spring's tain tax re- there will 1954 ould come t when the made them taxpayers ig a wordy campaign rash Near Airfield our Babies Among Victims Tacoma-Bound Craft Burns The Canadians \ four-engined military plane from Inight and 86 of the screen last night ,add $52,754,000 a year Che PROVINCIAL | LIBRARY vict Qe D NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBLA’s NEWSPAPER Published at Canada’s Most Strategic Pacific Port—’P tince Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest” VOL XL, No. 279 City | t cere PUBLICITY STUNT | ‘Vulgar Hoax’ Reports Birth Of Septuplets | | ,SANTIAGO, Chile @~Fe deral | | Police today announced the re-| ported birth of septuplets to al Chilian woman was a “vulgar hoax.” A report of tie births last night | } i | | | | } ants in Ottawa's Dee. i civic It is the first time Mayor Whitton was nominated August, 1991, of Mayor Grenville conned great excitement in the| (CP PHOTO) Chilean capital. All but one | newspaper brought out banner | headline 5 in extra editions to tell | heir readers the story j High government officials hur- ried to the clinic where the | mother and her babies supposed. | j ly had been taken, Police said authors of the hoax | had sought to gain publicity for a spring festival j The WEATHERMAN Says | “ ' This is the frosty Friday on) the southern mainland of srit-/} ish Columbia Last night the mercury fell twenty degrees at Vancouver, the | coldest night since last January | in Plane Pree in a field south of here 39 aboard were Trunk Murderess 3rd but still well above the | Escapes Again record of ten degrees est ablished | in 1911 PHOENIX. Ariz. @—The out- again, in-again trunk murderess, Winnie Ruth Judd, led searchers a baffling chase today after her sixth escape from the state hos- pital for the insane Red-haired Winnle squirmed out through a sawed window Fog is confined to a few thiek | patches in low lying areas but/| this ig expected to dissipate rapidiy during the morning. It} will not return tonight. | A moderately active disturb- | ance is developing off the west} Tt was her second escape this/ this year from the hospital where she had been confined since 1933. In 1931 she killed two girl friends evening. The cloud will | prevent the formation of fog and produce somewhat higher over- night temperatures. Cloudiness is and shipped their dismembered | general over much of the in- bodies to Los Angeles as bag- | terior wnee Forecast Cloudy today and Saturday Intermittent rain today. Little; change in temperature. Winds Freight Rate southeast 25 in the exposed areas today, lighter elsewhere. Light winds Saturday ncrease to Low tonight and high Satur day at Port Hardy, 36 and 42;) 7 Sandspit, 40 and 45: Prince Ru- set ages pert, 37 and 40 MONTREAL © Pacific Canadian Natic Railways Canadial ' and nal “Meat Embargo To be Lifted In Early Spring Logay the fede annauncea «at ceptance of al concilia tion board report recommend an average Wage increase of 16 cettts an hour for non-operating WASHINGTON, US. agri allway workers culture department announced ot thov fijeq | Gay the ban on import of Can- At the same time, they fled) cdian cattle and livestock pro- application with the board of | ducts will be lifted next March transport commissioners for a/] I nine per cent boost in freight It was imposed last February rates to cover that portion of the: phecause of the outbreak of foot cost of the wage increase that) ang mouth disease in Saskatche- | would go to freight and passen-| yoy ger employees | In a joint statement, the rail- | roads estimated that their ac- : DENSE FOREST — } ceptance of ‘the conciliation) French Equatorial Africa In }board's majority report would|the heart of the continent has) to their | 300,000 square miles of rich ot wage costs ic ot vcs | investigate i Business and jan interview today he had been dented RUPERT, B.C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER a, 1962 PRICE FIVE CENTS ° $400,000 FIRE—Flames leaped 150 feet into the air and a pali of the $400,000 fire at the T. H. Hancock Company's box-manufactu Leaside electric wiring in the plant. smoke a mile high spread fron: ring plant in Toronto's suburban The two-storey factory was destroyed. The fire was believed started from defective (CP PHOTO) Mayor Urges Citizens to Support Group ‘In Combatting Juvenile Delinquency Here A city organization's move to; “This I do with pleasure,” what action can bei the mayor. taken to prevent juvenile de-) “and 1 believe something jlinqueney in Prince Rupert to- siaould be done in this direc-/ said cgast and cloud cover is expected | |day was heartily endorsed DY. thn.” ‘to spread to the wer mainiand | Mayor Harold Whalen The mayor, however, said hé > The Prince thought a probation officer Rupert branch of Professional Wo- men's Club has set up an in- vestigation committee to find out whether or not a probation officer, or other form of coun- selling for juveniles is the an- swer to the prebiem Mayor Harold Whalen said in to a delinquency problem “I think the problem be attacked before it comes to a climax and juveniles land in court for misdemeanors. ficer takes over. We need some approached by St. John Madeley, Organization, or an- individual director of the Social Welfare who will take over before it Department here, to give his, comes to this point.” support Mayor Whalen poinied out would not provide the answer! should! That is| the time when a probation of-) that several antaahtel had come to his attention where in a family either parent— mother, or father—was not in ! the home ne the burden of caring for children fel on} | one alone. “In such cases very often the (children are left alone too much. Too little parental in- terest cin be taken in them and they are left to shift for themselves. That’s how they | get into trouble.” “If some individual could step in to take an interest in them, invite them to the Civic Centre, for instance, where they .could mix with other children in recreation or handicraft classes, I'm sure it would be a big help.” In his letter to Mayor Whalen, Mr. Madeley encouraged the work 6f the women’s club. “It is heartening to note this development and I am sure you will concur in the thought that it is a healthy and hopeful sign when any community organiza- tion express an active concern for .. the causative and pre- ventive factors at work in what is essentially a community prob- lem affecting children,” wrote Mr. Madeley. ORPHANS—Four shy young puppies huddle together, newtidered and lost in the North Waterloo Humane Society kennels at Kitchener, Ont. Found in an abandoned groundhog hole, their mother ran off into the bush at the approach of the dog-catcher. AF ee) “Concern for children and the conditions under which they live and grow up is a positive factor in community me 6a Mayor Whalen suggested that the Social Welfare Department would be the first to find prob- tem cases, but could not spend enough time with them to take individual al interest in. children. ngs ARE the Way They Used to be—With Freak Accidents, Anyway My Pav JONES Information Council upset by a} aren't what! he National | ‘Hts Peassur- iceidents are | i ial ' | is able to! , ad aceidents not} to happen, | pening In ~ tho, CUNdup of yn hat in 1962 ani- ! shooting people | UC Crashes .. .] falling fantastic | Windows and/| ; walking away ai and safety ll getting hurt y tell other people eXample: shen |, “8S. AWakened | a ' Baltimore, Md., i oye. tS Tight hand. a chair, and escaped from the stockyards badly. i from two cowboys, But the champion distance | tas ifaller in 1952 was 10-year-old | battered car, ind the victims were Rudolph, Kosic, his wife and his mother. | Kosic did what came naturally! when the bee flew in. He swung at the intruder, forgot to steer, and the car turned over three times LIFE SAVED But while rabbits and pigs and bees were causing accidents, a |dog saved a child from serious injuries in a five-storey fall. Six- year-old Louis De Sosa slipped |while playing in a hallway of lhis family apartment in New York City and fell down a stair- | well, Five floors below he land- ed on the back of a German |Shepherd dog named Prince. | Neither dog nor boy was hurt i there was his pet rabbit moodil) staring down the sights of a 22 | calibre. rifle. Monroe charitably | figures the rabbit hit the trigger accidentally But a pig in Lueneburg, Ger- many, had a clear motive of self defence for shooting a butcher who was trying to kill it. As the | butcher knelt beside the pig to) | finish loading his gun, the pig} sprang up and struck the trigger | with a hind leg. The butcher was) shot through the knee, You can imagine the surprise) lof Mr. and Mrs. Milo R. Ewing of Denver when a 1300-pound cow} landed kerplunk on the roof of) their ear as they drove along. The bovine bombshell had leaped off an overpass onto the Ewing car. Casualties: one dead cow, two frightened and banged-up people, and a badly | Kenneth Wright, Jr., of Comp- | ton, Calif. Kenny was playing on top of a 1,500-foot cliff near | Lake Arrowhead when he oe ebee cracks | He fell 200 feet virtually straig wae a So oes it,| down, landed on a nearly vertical but by buzzing the driver This | rockslide, then — enewer arte year it happened in Elko, Nev.,|/drop and roll before reaching the foot of the cliff. He didn't|car to a garage, where a mechan- | break a bone. A real hardy kid. ic estimated it would cost $300 Here's a tip for aggressive to fix up the bashed-in radiator. automobiles: when you hit Joe Strauss’ car, duck! For it hits right back. The Strauss car was struck as it made a left turn in Indianapolis. It rolled with the punch into the path of another car. The second impact sent the Strauss car around in a ful! eirele, and it crashed resound- ingly into the rear of the auto! which had struck it in the first - desperately to pull the place. | Fipeoard of his parachute, the A cheering note in the general-| Plane hit an air pocket, dipped ly grim traffic situation is a| Sharply downward and scoop- noticeable trend toward hardier) ¢4 the plunging airman neatly pedestrians. In Portland, Ore, a| D®¢k aboard through the same sturdy jaywalker dashed through door he had used as an exit. oo septs “grr en Also surprised and grateful | ght, smacked into a ca ver by Kenneth EB. Phillips, demol-| was Flier Joe Wardle of Salt Lake | ishing the radio antenna, and| City, Utah, at the way his forced | kept right on going—a hit-skip landing turned out, Heading for pedestrian! an open highway and an emer-} And in Atlantic City, 240-pound Dominick Ianscoli merely laugh- ed when an auto struck him, shook hands cordially with the driver and helped him push the! Things looked a little rugged for Air Force Capt. Fred C. Seals of Dallas, Tex., when he fell out of the wide-open door of a mile-high C-46 cargo plane as the plane lurched violently in bad weather o dropping supplies to G.1.’s Korea. But just as he ee: ngine died, Wardle pulled up the’ | nose of his smal! plane prepara- tory to touching ground. He felt the wheels hit and sat there gency ianding when his single | waiting for the plane to stop rolling. Instead it continued briskly down the road. Perplex- ed, he peeked out ang was under- | standingly astonished to discover ‘the plane had landed astride a moving auto. .The driver of the car was surprised too. Nobody | was hurt, little damage done, Trolley Motorman Albert J. | Cooney of Philadelphia can’t be /blamed too much if he looks the | other way the next time he has ‘a chance to play good Samaritan. ‘ Cooney saw flames shooting out 'of a house, stopped his trolley |car and turned in a box alarm. | He continued his run and three | minutes later met the fire truck ;as it raced to the fire he had /reported—met it head-on. Five |firemen and three trolley pas- sengers Were Injured. Mrs, Irene Collins, of Johnson | City, N-Y., was in a hurry to get home. So when a standing freight train blocked her way, she started to crawl under one | of the cars, The train started up. | (Continued on page 8) ~ ” « PROVINCIAL Lise VICTORIA, 8. . “ ORMES- DRUGS Woman To Contest Coundl $ The first woman to step lemmas and into this today told the Daily News Pioneer City Carpenter Dies at 85 A pioneer carpenter of Prince Rupert who moved to Terrace in 1920 to farm died there last night. He Was William A. King, 85, who came to this city in 1910 after having arrived in Rossland, BC. in 1906. He had been hos- Pitalized for a year. Mr. and Mrs. King celebrated | their 60th wedding anniversary | last Wednesday. Mr. King had a hand in the construction of many of Prince Rupert’s first buildings, and also the city hall. He moved to Terrace to take up farming where he developed an orchard. The Kings sold their farm after | World War II. Besides his wife Alice, he is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Lilian Redditt of Vancouver; a son, Victor King, engineer at B.C.| Packers in Prince Rupert; a! grandchild, Jean Redditt. Mrs. Redditt was formerly a school teacher here. Burial will take place in Ter- race; funeral arrangements will be announced, $10. Increase. In Newsprint Announced TORONTO (CP)—Abitibi Power and Paper Co. Ltd. is advising its Canadian customers that price of their newsprint will be increased $10 ton, effective Jan. 1, Increase is the same as that put into effect. for United States customers last June '15,- which did not apply in Canada. Some other Canadian news- print producers are also under- stood to have advised their cus- tomers of increase. Under the $10 increase the Canadian base-area price will be $122 ton. Canadian publish- ers also pay a federal 10 per cent sales tax on all but the trans- portation part of price, The uniform penny postage rate began in England in 1840, year’s civic election race is Mrs. W. D, Smith who she will run for alderman. Mrs. Smith will be:the fourth woman tg enter civic politics in this ity; and should she be elected, Will be the third to hold eivic office. Mrs. Smith, a member of sev- eral women’s organizations in i the city including the Canadian Club, took out nomination papers this morning at city hall. “I am a little afraid of two years of service,” she said, “but I’m going to try it anyway.” While no one has so far filed nomination papers, the follow- ing are known to plan contest- ing the four aldermanic = which become vacant this - end. * Aldermen Ray MeLean, Gomez and J. W. Prusky, terms expire; Ray Ga the United Fishermen and Workers’ Union; Hugo f ner, dry cleaning and la operator; Ald. George Hills, also MLA, whose seat expires, stated he will not run. ¥ Among previous women’ | eivie office ere, Mrs. Arnold saw the greatest suct She successfully contested | first election following sioner W. J. Alder’s regime 1 in 1942 and continued to sérve until 1948 as alderman. Them she was elected mayor, which post she held for two years. FIRST WOMAN First woman alderman in the elty was Mrs. E. C. ‘Kirkpatrick, now living in Victoria. She 2 served foe, ‘wo. years oom - at ws ia Mrs, J. 1946 and 1948, defeated both times. 2. Only one other person has taken out papers for civic office in the Dec. i1 election. He is Dr. R. G. Large, term on the school board e Other trustees retiring are | E. W. Becker and A. B. who haven't indicated whether or not they will run again. x Two vacancies will exist on the board of park commissioners. Two-year terms of ae Pat Forman and Co: 0 Art Murray expire. They Have not indicated whether or ‘not they will contest their seats: Other items to come before the voters are a $42,500 school bylaw and a referendum asking pegple to authorize an order that-sall milk to be distributed in theygity must be pasteurized. a ila at The Mormon Church was (or- ganized by Joseph CSmith. in and first American stamps were sold in 1047. Queen Mother, modern home. Early in the new year they will leave old-fashioned, grey- stoned Buckingham'Palace. Their new home will be nearby Clar- ence House, a 127-year-old man- sion now furnished with the last word in domestic luxury. Cosy Clarence House was the residence of Princess Elizabeth before she came to the throne. This winter the Queen, the Duke of Edinburgh and their family will have to endure the discom- fort of the palace. The official royal residence, with its dozens of long, windy hallways and high-ceilinged | tne rooms, is impossible to keep | “Re warm—especially since most of the huge building ts not cen- trally. heated. Clarence House, big, three- storey mansion just off the stately Mall, has not always been a homemaker’s dream. It was) p built in 1825 for the Duke of Clargnee, who became King Wii- liam IV. TRANSFORMED Seneca County, New York state, in 1830. i: Princess teaws Buckingham For Modern Home By KEN BOTWRIGHT LONDON (Reuters)—Queen Mother, Elizabeth and Princess Margaret this winter will give up the “coldest house in Europe”. to live in Britain’s most of Kent. Last royal occupant’ be- fore Elizabeth and her husband moved in almost four years ago was the Duke Connaught who died in 1942. It was Elizabeth who t formed it into a modern ht with laber-saving kitchen up an | sy and up-to-date, a ee new fabrics: oan what furniture to Later it was occupied by Queen Victoria’s mother, the Duchess ingham i The floor, ‘the nursery s1 is being for Princess garet. c