lid , vicroai.i, b. c. 152 KAY 2 151 ORMES DRUGS DAILY DELIVERY V A m. NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER in.n DISPATCHED Published ot Canada's Most Strategic Pacific Port "Prince Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest" Phoi ne 01 VOL. XL, No. 144 PRINCE RUPERT, F.C., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 20, 19S1 PRICE FIVE CENTS I !,, j .:: ' w mm ilk j 1 i '; ; i f , ': . -:- -,.- t, jr.. Crisis Over Iranian Oil- Mossadegh Takes Control I Communists Cleaning Up Counter-Revolutionaries HONG KONG (CP) Evidence from official and semi-official sources now indicates that a great Communist purge in China has taken at least one million lives and doomed other millions to mines and labor camps. j j What Will British Do Now Is Big Question j TEHRAN (CP) Premier Mohammed Mossadegh ordered his government today to take full , authority over Anglo-Iranian oil operations and j Britain called home its peace mission. Mossadegh promised to keep oil flowing from nationalized installations of the company in which the British govern.v.ent holds a controlling interest. Dictator Mao-Tze-Tung has started it because of the Korean war which, it is reported, has developed many counter-revolutionaries and because Communist land reform is opposed in every province. ANDIDATE J- Angus n. farmer, has been Progressive Conserva-jidirtale in the June 25 al by-election In the Edward Island constitu-! Queens. The riding was vacant by the death of i J L. Douglas. (CP PHOTO I Mac Arthur Is Not Testifying WASHINGTON, D C. General Douglas MacArthur today turned down an invitation to testily for a second time at the Senate inquiry Into his ouster by President Truman. He said: "I do not believe It Is in the public Interest for me to do so." ! Foreign Secretary Herbert Boston Braves Pilot Resigns pops Ruckus 4 m win m ninpiiniTrrn if-irir t i fr- iwmrrnv tmri r l-irf- 1 House Beats Tory Motion Over Ships OTTAWA 05 Progressive-Con servative Opposition tried un Expulsion Is Ruled Valid Morrison conferred with military leaders and said that Britain will protect Its nationals in Iran If the government in Tehran falls to do so. The British mission, ordered home, consists of both Anglo- national URGES DEFENCE SETUP Maj. F. F. Worthington Wainwright director of civilian defence, urged plans for wartime protection of civilian population be pressed to the limit at the 14th Loca oirls l BOSTON O) Billy southworth, lone of the National League's ; most successful managers, has ; resigned from the Boston Braves. jHis request that he be relieved ! from a five-year contract that SWRIGHT, Alberta Ch Iranian and government repre- Teach Now y police and Royal Cana- ntatltfe, ers LONDON (CP) Judicial committee of the Privy Council to iliunuu ronce oatuea runs through 1951 was granted by President Lou Perini. successfully on Tuesday to force withdrawal of Canadian registry from seven China Sea ships which they suggested might be carrying war goods to Red China from Wainwright military day allowed the appeal or a Mlss Deshka Pcnoff and Miss ?f."??la"i.a VSi0"..!?; Renee Nicholson, Prince Rupert Monday night before the Perinl named Tommy Holmes, itht Town Hall. Wln- one of the most popular players wre broken and vehicles in recent Boston history, to take over as manager for the remainder of this season and all of next. Negotiatlons with the Iranians broke down last night. Iran ordered that all Instructions from directors and board of the Anglo-Iranian Oil Co. shall be considered Invalid and unenforceable as from today. PARATROOPERS NEAR Meantime at Nicosia on the Island of Cyprus British parachute troops were carry on normal daily training routine. They convention of the Canadian Federation of Mayors and Municipalities in London, Ont. Discussing defence plans, left to right, are: Gen. Worthington; Mayor P. Horace Bovin of Granby, Que., president of the federation, and Alderman Roy Campbell of Westinount, Que., chairman of the conference session on civilian defence. (CP PHOTO) New Cannery on Local Waterfront is Running First Fish Goes Through Canfisco Plant 250 Employed " With the first sockeye to come from gillnetters union to expel one of its mem- Uir's. have been successful in bers. their studies at the Provincial The Judgment quashed a ma- Normal School at Vancouver and jorlty ruling of the British Co-1 naVe been awarded their teach-lumbia Appeal Court which had j err certificates, confirmed an award to Myron j Mlss penoff and Miss Barbara Kuzyoh of Vancouver of $5000 Reketov, the latter a graduate for alleged wrongful expulsion nf vietnria Nnrmal School, have Now 58 years of age, South- worth, who suffered a near ner Opposition leader George Drew, reviving Parliamentary battle over Chinese-manned vessels, introduced a motion which would strip them of protection of the Canadian flag but saw the Liberal government's majority defeat the motion by a vote of 116 to 36. The Conservatives won support from the CCF and Social Credit groups. Mr. Drew suggested that Canadian registry be withdrawn from the ships even if there was vous breakdown in the mid-season of 1949. informed Perinl and General Manager John Qulnn Sunday that he felt "some one else could do a better job." irom tne union. j been Bpponted to the teaching could leave quickly for Iran K I The union involved was Local staffs of Prince Rupert schools. i authorities said the involved were members fciyiil 22nd Regiment who rived Saturday from Val-Camp in Quebec, oliii-er saia that some of 'b;.makers were Iri the at previously and had trouble at Valcartier. t Ju.ne.'i Robinson said 'iteen 10 Oand ISO soldiers fcjut 100 panes of glass aw. 'A information here was iiaras was touched off rts that a member of the &id Regiment had been No. 1 of the Boilermakers and Miss Penoff is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S. Penoff of this: in the Skeena River area, the new cannery of Cana city. t called. . No transport planes for the troops are at Cyprus yet but it Is understood they are available at other Middle East bases within three hows flying time of Nicosia. Miss Nicholson is a sister of l at Ocean Dock went into dian Fishing Co. Ltd. only a "possibility" that they Iron Shipbuilders' Union. The law lords ruled that Ku-zych must bear the cost of the appeal to the judicial committee and of the appeal in British Columbia. The Judgment came as a cli Mrs. W. G. Sheardown. were carrying contraband to Red Sox Show Yanks How China In their trading runs between Hong Kong, the Portu operation yesterday. Manager John Fraser said that, although "there were some bugs to be-straightened out," the plant was working "much bet-. The airport at Nicosia Is not guese port of Macao and the Red max to a seven-year legal fight large enough to hold the 100 j arrested by military transports required to carry 4000 In which Kuzych sought restor- ! ter than we thought It would troops to danger spots. ation ot union rights, camp commandment said . 'BaaMaaBBBaa SECOND VOTE ' Nw YORK (f The battling Mr. Drew forced another , vote I Cnlca8 White Sox yesterday on the Chinese ship controversy showed the Big Town why they incinerator Burned Down Relic of War U Destroyed An uncontrolled fire yesterday afternoon burned to the ground the "incinerator building," four miles from Prince Rupert on the Port Edward highway. The building, which had since; the end of World War II been -r nut certain that any ar- after Prime Minister St. Laurent are leaning me American league ad been made. BULLETINS declined to make public a cabinet directive freeing their owners from the obligation to use for the first' day." Some 250 men and women are employed at the new plant which can run four lines at full capacity and in eight hours process more than 6000 pounds of fresh fish. Salmon pacKers Rivers Inlet, Capt. Harris Trimm, and the Asahi-H, Capt. Peter Buchan, wo Drop British officers. The Prime Minister was upheld In the vote 143 to 30. when they came surging back to defeat the New York Yankees 5 to 4 in the second game of a vital double-header. The Bombers had mauled the White Sox il to 9 in the opener. Pinch Hitter Bob Dilltnger drove across the deciding run in tha ninth inning of the tense second game with a double after the veteran Ed Stewart had kept the Sox in the struggle with a three-run homer of Vic Raschi Halibut Landings The Progressive-Conservative idle, was used as a storage depot by Wood, Parr and McClay Ltd.,1 highway construction firm at j work on the Port Edward road.' om Race were the first to unload at the j new cannery. The silver, gleaming sockeye are taken from the hold of the packer by a diesel leader charged that the list of skippers of seven ships included a man named T. Hamisch whose name looked to be more Russian than Chine.se. American 18,000, Pacific, 23.5c Tatoosh, crane and dumped on a plat-I form, where two men channel 24.6c, the fish into water -sprayed 17c, 15c. Canadian Kodiak, 43,000, Atlin, 17c, 15c. in the previous Inning. t reports Indicate two - ol the four competing In tornatiiinal predicted log -opped out yesterday and tier u0 will dock at the Rupert Rowing and Yacht ne time this afternoon. reported the yachts ran avy weather on Queen 'He Sound. It was nearby the open dump now used by the city in garbage disposal. City fire department answered the call but there was no water supply in the neighborhood. Firemen used water stored in the truck to spray other nearby buildings. They report several oil drums were stored near and in the building, but damae Air Pilots chutes and up an elevator into the processing room. The cannery, housed in a for San Juan II, 40,000, Storage 24.6c, 17c, 15c. Bruce I, 21,000, Royal, 24.6c 17c, 15c. Island Queen, 25.000, Co-op. REDS LOSE PLANES TOKYO Ten Communist planes were shot down or damaged today in the Korean war's first double-deck dog fight. On the ground North Koreans suddenly abandoned Punch Bowl Valley which they had fought for so viciously. VANCOUVER ISLAND SUFFERS DROUGHT VICTORIA Drought the worst in years, threatens heavy cross losses on southern Vancouver Island which has had only light showers in the last three months. Loganberry, blackberry and raspberry crops already show lack of moisture and farmers fear losses of more than $100,000. INTERIOR BOY MISSING PRINCE GEORGE About 30 persons from Prince George and Vanderhoof are scouring forest country, 50 miles west of here, for 13-year-old Lome Bishop who disappeared on a fishinp trip Sunday. was not estimated. , Reports indicated that considerable rubbish and slash had been burning near the building, formerly used ,by incinerator ore Metals On Strike CHICAGO ffl Nine hundred pilots of United Air Lines went on strike Tuesday and later a national mediation board directed the Air Lines Pilots' Association to end the Walk-out. The strike halted all the company's commercial non-military flights In the United States. A mediation board in Washing mer U.S. Army warehouse on the Ocean Dock, covers several thousand square feet and is so designed that it can be enlarged. It operates two fast lines and two standard lines, and Is capable of producing packs in quarter, half and full-size tins. Meanwhile, operators of all canneries In the area view this year's sockeye season with optimism. Averages began higher this year than they were all e Rationed crews of both American and Baseball Scores (American) Chicago 5-9, New York 4-11 Cleveland 2, Boston 9 St. Louis 4, Washington 1 Detroit 5, Philadelphia 9 National Boston 0, Chicago 3 Philadelphia 9, Pittsburgh 6 New York 2, St. Louis 1 Brooklyn 5, Cincinnati 4 Pacific Coast Los Angeles 3, Sacramento 5 . Oakland 2, San Diego 0 Portland 3, Hollwood 4 (16 innings) Seattle at San Francisco, postponed, Airline strike. Reds Are Indicted Canadian armies. The Idea of the incinerator being used by the city had been ! canvassed at various times since the war. ton termed the strike Illegal but a Union spokesman said the AWA (P - Four more metal Jls- primary lead, refined iar' lead, slab zinc and n-win be placed under '"? July 1, Production Min-c. D. Howe announced to- through 1950 season. And on the waters approaching the Skeena WASHINGTON (CP) Twenty- Walk-out was "comptetely legal.' and Naas rivers, fishermen are The pilots are demanding a limit on hours of work and mileage. "Hoppy"-Kids' Hero not losing time by sleeping, according to. Capt. Buchan of the packer Asahl-H. "There are a lot of new boats out there, and everyone's working night and day. The sockeye don't wait for anyone." Leather foon Girl Mining Group is TODAY'S STOCKS one members of the Communist party's secondary command were IntJlcted today on charges of plotting violent overthrow of the government of the United States. Seventeen of those indicted by federal grand Jury in New York were seized in an early morning round-up toy Federal Bureau of Investigation agents. Four others were being sought. Sixteen of the arrests were made in New York and the one other In Pittsburgh. fught by Vancouver Concern (Courtesy 8. D. Johnston Co. Ltd.i Synopsis The central interior was quite cold this morning and light frost Hundreds of girls and boys and grown-ups too lined the MP. was reported in tne x-ruiuc adiengeri andCNR wharf as early as noon to George area. Klmberley see wic ccicui acu wcorem "tu,c Long admitted to hold strong promise of being developed into a profitable producer of base lls, the well-known Gibson Girl group of claims ;ihsm Island, at the north end of Grenville !1"tl, has been sold by M. M. Stephens of Prince star, William Boyd, or better known as Hopalong Cassldy, step ashore from the Union steamship Chllcottn. The summer 1 Quesnel both reported a low of 34 degrees. A strong high pressure area remains stationary off the coast and a weak disturbance Is moving southeastward through the Alaskan panhandle. This will brine a few showers to north Each of those seized yesterday was described as a "prominent, active functionary of the Communist party, United States of America." cruise ship will dock Just after press time. i The Chllcotln Is scheduled to leave northward at 2 p.m. pt and the Gibson Girl Mines Ltd. has been Mfalfd to acquire and de- w original erouD of eleht rn of mnada. Ltd. Development From Vancouver (Tuesday) K. McKelvie, B. Smith, A. Chapman, H. McCaffery, Mrs. Walker, F. Greening, G. Morrison, G. Abbott, J. Smith, R. Smith, C. Smith, S. Squire, R. Brodie, J. Williams, H. Good, J. Pluta, S. O'Neal. D. Clark, C. Hulette, W.' Simpson, J. Liebsen, K. Jefferles, 4. Frizzell, J. Proctor, H. McFad-den. From Sandsplt (Tuesday) Mi. Poffenoff. To Vancouver ( today I Miss D. Hallt, W. H. Baker, E. W. Mc-Leod, J. C. Elsey, J. 8. Sledding, H. Hansen, J. P. Digman, R.. Banfield, G. Bulger, O. Abbott, F. Lester, O. Longva, G. Kostelac. Jfanted claims as well as consists of surface stripping and aims and fractions which ' trenching, three diamond-drill dlso been staked. j holes, one 50-foot shaft, one "ctors or tv,o iuf. oMit nnH'i small amount TORONTO Athona - 08 Aumaque .20 Beattle 48 Bevcourt 38 Buffalo Canadian 18 C M & S 142.00 Conwest 2.75 bonalda 50Vj Eldona :. .18' East Sullivan 7.15 Giant Yellowknife 7.00 God's Lake .34 Hardrock 17 Harricana 10 Jacknile 093i Joliet Quebec .45 Little Long Lac 58 Lynx , 12 Madsen Red Lake 2.09 MeKenzie Red Lake 44 McLeod Cockshutt ...... 2.56 Moneta 30 Negus .75 Noranda 72.50 Louvicourt 18 Pickle Crow 1.60 San Antonio 2.30 Seualor Rouyn .13 Sherritt Gordon 2.75 Steep Rock 7.30 Silver Miller 1.45 VANCOUVER American Standard 20 Bralorne 5.80 B R X 02 Cariboo Quarts . 1.10 . Congress .07 Hedley Mascot 53 Indian Mines 22 fend Orielle 7.50 Pioneer 2.00 Premier Border 31 Vi Privateer 10 Reeves McDonald 4.50 Sheep Creek 1.55 Silbak Premier 40 Taku River 07 Vananda 16 Salmon Gold 03 Spud Valley .10 Silver Standard 2.38 Western Uranium 2.10 Oils A P Con 36 Atlantic 2.60 Calmont 1.03 C & E 15.00 Home Oil 14.70 Mercury .12 Okaita - 2.30 Princess 1.30 Royal Canadian 12 Royalite 14.00 . - vile new i;uuiiJaiijr auut v - rdrl J. Snrinior ,-,-iot- I rt .nB.nf.Mnir from the bottom ern British Columbia today and increasing cloudiness to southern parts tomorrow. Southeastern sections are cohered by moist unstable air and shower activity will continue In this area especially in the afternoon. Forecast North Coast Region Clear today, clouding over in the northern nart this afternoon. Variable R Wood. W n' Mlln.r H ' nf the shftft. Plley and Miss Evelvn e!I An extensive diamond-drilling Caterpillars Hold Up Prince Rupert Train Near Red Pass Caterpillars are causing trainmen trouble on the line of the Canadian National Railways from Jasper to Prince Rupert. Thousands of them swarmed over the tracks Monday and stalled a freight train for two-and-a-half hours before workmen could clear the rails. The track, were covered for a distance of a mile near r J- U. Munroe is secre-1 program is now In progress on "asurer. a three-shift basis under the Gibson rjivi I xiofinn nf Pptpv L. Clark, for- fu Ihrnn.rv. merly manager oi mimum-Bell Ltd. The camp is equipped with radiotelephone. Two distinct ore zones have been indicated with outlying parallel veins. According to the uKU many nanus " was first recognized as '1 deposit of merit. Con-'D'e Work has been done bv. "Pcrators first by a group by Sir Donald Mann, cloudiness tomorrow. A few I showers in the northern partj tonight. Little change in tem-j perature. Wind northwest, 20: TIDES - - Thursday, June 21. 1951 (Pacific Standard Time) High 2:05 22.9 feet 15:16 19.9 feet Low 8:50 0.2 feet 20:57 6.6 feet miles per hour, ixiws tumgm Swift-water, aHmit sixteen miles west of Red Pass Junction. It was so slippery that the engine could not get through with the whole train of 31 cars but took four cars of frozen refrigerated fish from Prince Rupert and returned from Rfd Pass for the balance later. , 'lne Granby Consolldat ZZ oTthe s;r-mg;r,highs.tomorrow-At Port Hardy. .""!!. SHIP tlmr r Pn.i.or interests, dated May 10. 1951. the and fnP. fi""u "' ' j (Continued on Page 2 Rupert, 45 and 60. . . , !d' and finally by the '"fated Mining & Smelting