NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER TAXI . S f niitz m. m m ww CDM.K. n McINTYRE waste 537 O; j. nnnrri -r iou.. ... " DAY and NIGHT SERVICE meross from urme; AND H""" " Published at Canada's Most Strategic Pacific Port "Prince Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest" Bill and Ken Nesbitt VOL. XXXV, No. 178. PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., WEDNESDAY, JULY 31, 1946 PRICE FIVE CENTS 'inn itted Against IXU. in Dispute . ,, y. Tntrnntirn T1UIB' w" P UCBW1" i ' n-n.finA as n result - . TiiUlre A. M, f I u i the injunction case.i -j.j h ininnctlon eem ago the rlent ,i m.r nasian to urge I nr nfhprs not in the lo- ..j IlitntitP." rv hearing of 12 of with recent picketing -J (tactftrrln v nnrl m ritv nollre IlIlLvU ' " they would see inai iUl' three other men will Iate: derrson of Mr. yt' Lt-iv w- . . a iVili mnrn. . r n in run l. - DESTROY 1 1 1 Foreign Minister Ru:.la in a speech 4 vr&ic 1.U111C1 ctiLc the Franco regime MiMn ealrt "It It to safeguard the . i l visaunt Addl- Jill n? fnn a n n i ui nppininii nn'j migrat to the the four ftlw wrniM ' v "Vil , n the ...Aiiii.o ht. might wlih to minent residence in lf I" A T1 inn r. I HH K Synopsis . ! lr... m " air is wercasi conditions Ure -"-oastal area and '-w? -"Odltlons the interior of Brit- Rain thmt'Ara ri- t rain were reported im.. morning and JBn tne northern ln-Sreatest amount of fa'len on the west 'couver i3iand where 1 'he past 24 hours sincn. Little eathei is n) 24 hours but movement Is fore- ant, noon ana forecast upert Queen char-"orth Coast-Over-"8 locally, . cloudy by fin T-i ' "urBaay inter-n today, becomlnt? '. boning. widPlv J,n showers Thurs- t - i. . winas, 15 m.p.h. g hi temperatures. TP I'ort Hardy ...nee nupert u Thursday, Port Massett 02, Prince ca Tidcs A"RUit 1, 194Q J 20.4 font ' 19.9 feet 2.9 feet i2 2. 33 0.2 feet PEACE TREATIES ARE PUBLISHED STRONG WARNING AGAINST PLANNED Mir av, hatred "CarS. 'A Mnorltles, too, who co3 lous peoj eat to Indi vidual fre. 3 was done In Oeimafo. i 930's. We must contlnj! against suspicion anJjk - under new guises 1; fought It during the f commented Rev. Basil 8. Procter, rector of St. Andrew's Cathedral, following a preview this morning of the short subject motion picture "Don't Be a Sucker" in the Capitol Theatre. As quests of theatre manager J. Harry Black were more than two scored rlvic, church, service club leaders and educators who expressed themselves as equally impressed with the powerful picture wnicn ww De snown here at the Capitol on Friday and Saturday. "It exposes a real danger that the objects of the war can eas ily be lost after the war itself has been won," said another. Scoring hate-mongers who strive to gain leadership by appealing to group and racial hatreds among the population, the picture carries a young ex-serviceman, who has Just been listening to a rabble-rousing street address, back through a similar street corner In Berlin where a Nazi storm trooper advocated similar principles of hatred more than a decade ago. Showing the similarity of the beginnings of planned intolerance, the picture moves on to-waroVthe Inevitable result," depleting what happens when a few gamble with other peoples' freedom. "Don't Be a Sucker" was originally made by the U.S. Army Signal Corps for showing to the armed forces' and is distributed without profit by Paramount Pictures as a public service. Bulletins PALESTINE PLAN LONDON Rt. Hon. Herbert Motison presented to Parliament today the plan for the creation of two states Jewish and Arab In Palestlre. SAVED FROM SHIP FIRE RIO DE JANEIRO Rescue has been effected of 1,000 passengers from a Brazilian transport which caujlii fire off the roast. CAPTIVES' STORY BERLIN Two 'American officers, who weie released by the Russians recently, told of their experiences while in Russian prison camp at Potsdam. They were captured July 4 when found in Russian occupation zone. They were well treated but kept incommunicado. MINISTER WEDS REC.INA Federal Agriculture Minister J. O. Gardiner and Maude Isobel Christie, widow of Dr. H. II. Christie, were married here n Monday. The bride was attended by her daughter and llie groom by his son. DRINNAN RETIRES VANCOUVER Walter Drln-nan, for years chief pensions advocate for nritlsh Columbia, is retiring. NEW COMMISSIONER OTTAWA Appointment of Mr. Justice S. F.. Richards as commissioner in the dispute between the I.T.U. and the Southam newspapers is announced. TO TAX CO-OPERATIVES OTTAWA A COT. proposal that the proposal to tax cooperatives be held over was rejected 70 to 5G In the taxation committee of Parliament. Acting Finance Minister Douglas Abbott said it was the intention to go ahead with the taxation of co-operatives. ALL MODERN "Hot Jive with name bands! Cooler lnalde. miking in the lounges.'' could be the billed attraction at this Canadian Arctic Igloo. Tho esklnmo called Pork, his wife Hattle and grand-soi Ikkat, shown In a' scene from the National Film Board's production, "White Safari," a Canada Carries On release following Operatl in Musk Ox almost to: the North Pole and back, are not the uncivilized folk a lot of people think E.;klmos are. They use modern gasoline stoves and lanterns, alarm clocks, phonographs. Exiectlng him to be amazed by the snowmobile, Musk Ox men were surprised when Pork asked, "How much gas does it use?" The expedition came across this Eskimo family at Baker Lake, a tiny settlement on f hesterfleld Inlet, Hudson Bay, just before the Safari of the Snows reach d the Arctic Circle, in this shot from the NFB film, Pork is working on a new snow knife, 11 lttle is making caribou moccasins and Ikkat Is kibitzing on the conversation. TODAY'? STQCKS Courtesy S. D, Johnston Co. Ltd Vancouver Bralorne .. 11.65 B. R. Con .13 Vz B. R. X .11 Cariboo Gold 3.10 Dentonla .43 Orull Wlhksne .13 Hedley Mascot ...... 1.45 Mlnto .05 Pend Oreille 2.70 Pioneer 4.25 Premier Border .0734 Premier Gold 1.58 Privateer .56 Reeves McDonald (ask) 1.35 Reno .12', Salmon Oold .mi Sheep Creek 1.25 Taylor Bridge .... .68 Whitewater .03 Vananda .38 Congress 11V. Pacific Eastern .10 Hedley Amalgamated ... .11 Spud Valley (ask) .23 Oils Calmont .24 C. & E 1.85 A. P. Con. .13 Foothills 1.50 Home 2.83 Toronto Aumaque .61 Beattle : ' .62 Bob Jo .16 Buffalo Can. .21 Don. Smelters 94.00 Eldona .45 Elder .41 Olant Yellowknife 6.20 Hardrock .70 Jacknlfe .16 Jollet Quebec .60 Little Long Lac 2.00 Madsen Red Lake" 3.15 MacLeod 'Cockshutt .... 1.80 Moneta ,55 Omega .19 Pickle Crow 3.05 San Antonio 4.45 Senator Rouyn .63 Sherrltt Gordon 2.25 Steep Rock , 2.75 Bturgeon River .25 Lynx Xo Lapaska .31 God's Lake .05 Negus ' 2.16 NION HIKING PACT VANCOUVER A unlon-nianagcnient acrreinent for the hiring of It. C. occan-coinir seamen through union halls was signed yesterday and the new system will become effective on Thursday. The Canadian Seamen's Union will provide seamen to man Vancouver's 4fi 10,000-ton freighters. CONVENIENCES, IGLOO STYLE FINE RECORD MADE BY LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL IN MATRICULATION EXAMS An analysis of the official departmental mark sheet for the University Entrance examinations reveals highly creditable work of Booth Memorial High School students here. Of the 23 Grade 12 students writing for complete university entrance standing 14 passed In all subjects and received complete standing one student Dorothy Ker.gln gaining an pveraee of. over 83 per cent In the required subjects. In addition two other Grade 12 students wrote partial exam-natlons and passed In all subjects which they wrote. ' Of the nine students not granted complete standing, eight BYRNES STATES U.S. POSITION Smaller Nations To Be Considered No "Peace Vengeance" PARIS, Secretary of State James Byrnes yesterday pledged United States support for any changes In the Big Four treaty drafts, sought by a two-thirds vote of all 20 nations at the conference. His declaration, plainly stating American position against arbitrary rejection of nmaller nations' recommendations for final treaty drafts, came after the rules committee had approved the principle of complete publicity for all confer ence deliberations. Mr. Byrnes also stated that United States would never again return to poll-cal Isolation and said: "We do not want peace vengeance" that would plant "seeds of future wars." passed In all subjects but one and the other student passed In all subjects but two. These students may complete their standing by writing supplemental exams In August. Fourteen of the above students wrote in addition Senior Matrciulation Science (Chemistry or Physics) and 10 passed, this making one subject less for them to complete next year In Senior Matriculation. These Grade 12 students wrote a total of 110 University Entrance papers and passed in 100 of them which Is 91 per cent of the test papers written. House. Approves Co-op Taxation OTTAWA 05 A budget resolution dealing with the taxation of co-operatives was adopted by Commons in a standing vote of 70 to 56 after the C.C.F. called a halt to Its members' attempts to have the legislation withdrawn or amended. Also adopted was a resolution giving new cooperatives a three-)year tax exemption. Fish Sales American Northern 55,000, Cold Storage, Canadian Kenn Falls, 29,000, Co-op. FAT EXPORT BANNED WASHINGTON The United States is stopping exports of all fats and oils owing to a "critical shoitage" in the United States. GEORGE DAWES GUEST IN FIRE-SWEPT HOTEL; LOST EVERYTHING George J, Dawes, well known Prince Rupert business man, was among the guests In the Hold Herbert at San Francisco which was swept by fire yesterday with the loss of lives of four firemen and the Injury of several others. Edward Dawes received a telegram from his father stating he was safe and well but had lost all his effects. There were no other particulars. All guests had been safely evacuated from, the hotel, the dc-ttnirti&n of which marked the worst fire San Francisco has had in eight years. Mr. Dawes plans on visiting Eos Angeles before returning home. 'Axis Satellites to Be Thoroughly Stripped of Any Power to Make War MINIMUM OF ONE BILLION DOLLARS IN REPARATIONS SET, MOST OF WHICH WILL GO TO RUSSIA PARIS (AP) A Master Plan to strip Italy and other Axis satellites of their military might, bill them for $1,000,000,000 in reparations, practically all of which goes to Russia, re-shuffle their frontiers and require them to guarantee "fundamental freedoms", was dfsclosed today with publication of pro posed peace treaties drafted by the Four-Power foreign ministers. The treaties, prepared by Britain, the United States, Russia and France, will be considered at the 21-power peace conference now In session In Paris. Final decisions will be made by the four major powers after the peace conrerence .has considered the drafts In an advisory capacity. The treaty drafts covered only i phases on which the foreign ministers' council, at Its recent Paris meeting, had reached an agreement. Matters on which no agreement was reached such as the United States' demand for free trade on the Danube were omitted. Treaties with Germany and I Japan, will not .be considered until the Allies"" deemT those countries ready for full self government. Military restrictions placed on the Axis satellites relegate the armed forces of those countries to the minor role of local defence. Hie following limitations are imposed: Details of Demands Made On Italy Italy 185,000 troops and 65,-0C0 carabiniere (military police), compared with a 1939 army cf 2,240,000 men and 5,175,000 trained reservists; navy devoid of submarines and composed of 67,000 tons and two old battleships, compared with a pre-war fleet of 717,420 tons Including 130 submarines; air force cut to 200 fighter and reconnaissance planes and 150 transport and training craft. Romania Army of 120,000, compared with a pre-war force of 1,800,000; air rorce of 150 danes and 8,000 men, compared with estimated 1939 personnel of 15,000; navy of 13,000 tons and 5,000 men; anti-aircraft artillery of 25,000 men. Finland 34,400 troops, com-, pared with a pre-war force of from ! all a" occupied Ka wum, countries "u" un- 301,300; navy of 10,000 tons and ," ' ' . air'der consideration, except Hun- .enn. personnel strength of 4.500; air,' .., force of OO.planes and 3,000 men. Bulgaria Land army of 55,009, compared with peak war-time force of 670,000. Anti-aircraft artillery cf 1,800 men; navy of 7,250 tons manned by 3,500; air force of 90 combat type planes with personnel of 5,200. Hungary Army Including frontier droops, anti-aircraft and river flotilla of 65,000 men, compared with 700,000 during .war; air force of 90 planes manned by 5,000. Billion Dollars ' Is Minimum The reparations figure of $1,000,000,009 is a minimum and may be increased. The total amount Italy must pay, In addition to $100,000,000 to Russia, has not ye: been determined. Likewise, the amount which Bulgaria must pay has not been decided. Hungary, Finland and Romania each has been nssrtsed $300,000,000. The United Statin reserved the right, however, to oppose the assessment in th case of Inflation-ridden Hungary. Ilcslniffling of the map of Eurcpe was. one of the major undertakings outlined, but proposed territorial changes do not approach In scope the 0 land transfers involved in the peace treaties or the First Great War. Tileste Most Controversial Thl most controversial territorial change before the present peace conference would establish Trieste as a free territory and give Yugoslavia "all the terri tory east of the line known as the French line" In Italy, and a group of Islands In Jhe Adriatic. Greece was given the Dodec anese Islands and France was awarded five thin slices of ter ritory on the present Italian-French border. A 1910 Axis edict awarding half of Romanian Transylvania to Hungary was nullified, and the 12,000-square-mlle territory restored to Romania. A 1940 -So-. vlel-RomTnlarf-Igreeineni" Ti'y which Bessarabia and northern Bukovina were ceded to Russia wa3 confirmed. The question of the Greek-Bulgarian border was left unde-cided. The proposed Finnish treaty awarded Russia the province of Petsamo, on the Arctic Ocean, with Its Ice-free port of Petsamo. Each treaty contained a clause requiring respect for the individual liberties of citizens. The clause for Hungary, for example, read: "Hungary shall take all measures necessary to secure to all persons under Hungarian Jurisdiction without distinction of race, sex, language or religion, enjoyment of human rights and of fundamental freedom of expression, of press and, publication, of religious worsn'ipf political opinion and of. public meeting." Another clause ordered defeated powers to "undertake not to permit In the future existence and activities" of fascist organizations. The Allies agreed to withdraw Russia permission to maintain occupation troops to protect her communication lines to the Russian occupation zone of Austria. On the subject of demilitarization, the treaties declared that the former enemy powers "shall not possess, construct or experiment with any self-pro pelled or guided missiles or j apparatus connected with their discharge, sea mines of J non-contact type actuated by influence mechanisms, torpedoes capable of being manned, submarines or other submersible or specialized types of assault craft," The proposed treaties also required co-operation "with the United TCatlons In order to ensure that Germany may not be able to take any action outside German territory In the direction of rearmament." The drafts abo lcoked toward the admission of the former enemies into the United Nations. If the treaties are concluded', the preambles said, Allied ower3 will be able to "support" applications for United Nations M0L0T0V FOR v TWO THIRDS Russia Fears Bloc at Peace Conference if Simple Majority Adopted PARIS 0 Foreign Minister V. M. 13010107 of Russia fought today to eStabllsh a two-thirds majority voting rule for the Paris peace conference of 21 countries because, "Jf all decisions were by simple majority," the Union of Socialist Soviet Republics would be sure to find 1U self always In the minority." Molotov told the rules committee that a simple majority "would place the Anglo-Saxons at an advantage because It to 13 votes." He feared the adoption of a simple majority rule would play the west against- eastern Europe.f Holland and Greece hae supported Austialia against ths two-thirds vote; ar Crash In Interior Telkwa Business Man and Police in Collision Mrs. Bussinger Injured SMITHERS (Special to Dally News) C. P. Bus3inger of Telkwa, accompanied by his wife, had a head-on collision near Houston with a Mounted Pollcs car yesterday morning. Bussln-ger's car was badly damaged ftnd Mrs. Bu3slnger suffered a severe cut on the head. There were no other parties Injured. Mr. and Mrs. Bussinger- had left Telkwa for a sfjprt holiday trip to Vancouver but, owing to the damage to the car, were unable to proceed. The accident occurred near the bridge crossing the Bulkley River at Houston. The police ca'r was coming up the hill around the curve when the.ac-cldent occurred. Owing to the heavy growth of bush and the position of cars drivers were unable to see one another until approximately eighty feet apart. By the time they had applied their brakes they had met. The bumper of the police car rode over the top of Busslnger's bumper causing severe damage to Busslnger's car. Mrs. Bussinger Is out of hospital and quite comfortable - The Bussinger car was covered by Insurance. Driver of the police car was Constable J. Ward. DIPHTHERIA ON TRANSPORT C'EW YORK A United States coastguard plane has flown antitoxin to the United States transport Kobe Victory, carrying replacement troops to Britain, among whom diphtheria broke out. It must be a serious epi demlc considering the large quantity of serum ordered. One man Is known dead. OUTLAW ATOMIC WEAPONS NEW YORK Delegates to the United Nations atomic energy commission were called info session today lo re-open ilhcussion of Russia's proposal to outlaw the production and use of atomic weapons 1 Hi V r r