IlNOTON (AP) - A pfo,Vto " terod to carill in um lunyu iuiukv gaiUv.. ended the war. s Koiclii Kido, lord keeper of the privy Seal ir w Kmperor Hirohito, told the story to a tiv of the United States Army's 'psycho- ire urancii at Saz-jlvi- awaiting trial Ditlil' :atw and other ac-iat went on behind 111- a) the last days in- ontalned In a lubiimed report on gira warfare cam-t ,iapao disi'iosea also that rco Kamikaze pilots gs iincide attack on p MLoun In Tokyo t omvidrntial ty-j August 1945, prob-ed an at'.ack on the Stale- uooprs to land as related Dy istorv r ier.: morning ol Aug. w American bjmb- lyo Down came a rectangular 5 ray bore a copy of the Iteration and the Japan':; first offer t .submitted three Kldo carried one to i prcar alarm ana mmedlate .audience x. he said, might break by the 2,000.-p the heme Islands, pt know that the sued for peace. let even been told indicate ) lost hi army extremists nt give them an Ic seize the govcrn- r. moment the sur- tiayed was danger- inc-J ilIt::;hlto thoroush- isituallon and eager Responsibility. He meeting of the Ei lie supreme council lion of war and the suorcme fc?reri before t)ie perp there but the Amaml. who had m ;uiclde Hie mill- agree to no sur- Emperor's powers Kany way abridged, no longer listened I pldert by the imper-i" a: Kldo expressed in would accept the pr and Kldo workrd pt al) day. Hlrohito fding of 11. ar)l It it the next momlug A surrender dispatched, mean. he Allied covern- , ... . ir uiiijjeror nau P" council and dl-Bake steps lmmcdl-oaeh Russia on the ranging peace. Not auer Hlrohito had command many council make plans pUsary to Moscow. militarists' onlv that by diplomatic Ihev might nossiblv Army out of the he Potsdam declar- P'lsned In Japanese pnligtjtencd Japan-Id H an acceptable fnder Tjut the army ft could defeat tho Japancse beaches, '""ct such heavy i avorable peace fctiated. P5 the Bleat rnnn I " ...v.. "rreci repeatedly "Uier otllc a s nn saving the followed cala- oombs desolapH Nagasaki. rus. lar- ilto, court larti0 H him aav u,it.i. If "VI Hamilton Showdown Provincial and Mounted Police Reinforcements Arrive Union rickets to Resist? HAMILTON (ft Forces for a showdown t niggle in the six-weeks-old steel strike began to arrive today when a force of some fifteen to twenty Ontario provincial police entered the city, A detachment of some ninety Royal Canadian Mounted Police was expected to arrive in Hamilton later today. Striking members of the CIO United Steel Workers or America prepared to resist expected attempts by provincial constables and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police to open picket lines at Hie Steel Company of Canada plant. CARNIVAL MAY YIELD $10,1 Prince Rupert's 1948 Civic that the, civic Centre Carnival came to a conclusion Saturday night after a week of celebration and on fltfit to the Caielv which. Civic Ccntrajinth rfi;in?byh(ranictS;itiCs estimate, may net as high as $10,000 for the- community project. Orpss receipts for the week were .In the neighborhood of $20,000. Final feature of the carnival Saturday night was the drawing for 50 War Savings certificates of $25 denomination, which took place from the stage of the auditorium. Winners arc announced elsewhere in the Dally News today. The lucky tickets were drawn by Carnival Queen Marjorie Wilson before a crowd which filled the auditorl- urn. PREMIER KING SAILS TUESDAY LONDON Prime Minister King prepared today td return to Canada aboard the Queen Mary after arriving here front the Paris peace conference whero he headed the Canadian delegation. The prime minister will sail for Canada from Southampton on Tuesday. Today he had lunch with Prime Minister At-tlee and Viscount Addison, Dominion Affairs secretary. CHANNEL SWIM ATTEMPT FAILS DOVER Jorge Berroeta of Chile Sunday abandoned his at-. Umpl to swim the English Chan nel from France to England a half-mile short of Dovcr'3 Shakespeare Beach after having been In the water 15 hours and 40 minutes. A strong flood tide forced him U give up. HOGAN WINS , GOLF TITLE t PORTLAND Kh Ben. Hog'an captured the National Professional Oolfcrs' Association championship Sunday with a 6-andl win over Ed Oliver, Wilmington, Delaware, in the 36-hole final. .great emotion, "I am going to stop this war, and I don't care what happens to me personally." On the morning of Aug. 9 tha Emperor commanded the council to surrender. The militarists agreed, but they laid down certain conditions: No occupation of Japan by Allied troops; free withdrawal of Japanese troops from foreign soil; trial of war criminals by the Japanese gov- Contlnued on Page 2) Generalissimo Francisco Franco, left makes the main address at the opening of the Siguenza cathedra) The cathedral had been destroyed during the civil war In Spain and was only TODAY'S STOCKS Courtesy S. D. Johnston Co. Ltd Vancouver 7"riT&fom :S 12.1b -- B.R. Con - j13 B.R.X .10 ti Cariboo Gold 3.15 Dentonia - 134 Hcdley Mascot 1.55 Minto MY Pend Oreille 2.85 Pioneer 4-3 Premier Border .08 Premier 1-00 Privateer . 55, Reeves McDonald 1.30 Reno 13 Salmon V'z Sheep Creek 1.10 Taylor Bridge .70 Whitewater 03 Vi Vananda -36 Congress H'z Pacific Eastern 10 Hedley Amalgamated.. . MVs Spud Valley 20 Central Zeballos H Oils . A.P. Con -11 Calmont - C. and E - 1-85 Foothills 1-70 Home Oil v 2.95 Toronto Aumaqse .. 83 Beattie -75 Bobjo 18 Buffalo Canadian 22 Cons. Smelters - 91.00 Eldona 52 Elder 4 41 Giant Yellowknife 7.30 Hanlrock 74 Jacknlfc 17 Joliet-Quebcc 74 Little Long Lac 2.01 Madsen Red Lake 3.20 McLeod Cockshutt 2.00. Moneta - 5 Omega ,-2' Pickle Crow 3.10 S;in Antonio 4.35 Senator Rnuyn 71 Gherritt Oordon .' 2.81 Steep Rock 2.55 Sturgeon River 20 Lynx : 30 Lapaska 4. M God's Lake , 70 Neeus 2.45 Aubellc 51 Heva Cadillac 2Wt Harrlcana 22 McKenzle Red Lake 90 QUESTION OF MORALE LLANNON, Wales Plans to establish a cemetery next the Llannon Isolation Hospital were protested on the grounds "It would have an untoward psy-choloslcal effect on patients." Smithers Is Winner Pelage ritrlies Errorless Ball to Lead Interior Town 5 to 1 Victory Special to the Dally News SMITHERS Smithers defeated Prince Rupert 5 to 1 here yester day to redeem themselves for the 9 to 1 defeat they suffered at the hands of the coastal nine on Saturday. It was a seven-inning match. Delage pitched hltless ball and was master of the situation at all times, striking out eight Prince Rupeit batters. Bell pltch-slx-hlt ball for Prince Rupert but his teammates errored four times to allow the rive runs. Rupert's sole tally came when Davis walked, stole second, went to third on a wild pitch and came home on a passed ball: An outstanding Infield play was Vuckovich's catch of Leach'.i line drive over third. LBh ry -i A DC northern and c; ENrrjAYKPfiba'c COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER I) i Ur Phone TAXI TAXI 349 ,0. mi PER - c.mcintyre 537 I KDpert Tobacco bio DAY and NIGHT SERVICE Published at Canada's Most Strategic Pacific Port "Prince Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest" Bill and Ken Nesbitt VOL. XXXV, No.,200. riUNCE RUPERT. B.C. MONDAY, AUGUST 26, 1946 PRICE FIVE CENTS RING PAPER MAY H AVE-r-D JAPAN OUT WAR t r of Privy Seal Sai outSf T Drdcr After Reading f mb arrassing (Account of the first game at Smithers on Saturday appears on the sport page). . . . Vancouver Getting British "Hollywood" LONDON The Sunday Dispatch said yesterday that a "British Hollywood" was to be established on Sea Island at Vancouver. Th former site ot the Boeing airplane plant Is be- In.s taken over for use as a film production centre. THE WEATHER Synopsis Heavy clouds and rain witn jqattered thunderstorms cross ing tho Rocky Mountains from Alberta last night and deposited an inch of rain at Cranbrook in the Kooenay region, TIip storm is expected to be restrict cd to the southeast tip of 'th" province. Coastal areas over Van couver Island and the Lower Mainland are experiencing ex: tenslvn fog and low cloudiness this morning but skies, will clear by early afternoon. The remainder of the province Is clear and warm with no change In sight for tomorrow. Forecast ' Prince Jtupert, Queen char ' lottes and' North Coast Cle?r today and Tuesday, northerly winds ten miles per hour, little change In temperature. Mini-, mums expected lonlght Port Hardy 51, Prince Rupert 4o. Maximums Tuesday Port Hardy C3, Massett 04, Prince Rupert 70. A FRANCO AT DEDICATION OF RERUIIr CATHEDRAL THOUSANDS TONS ! OF FOOD WASTING VANCOUVER -Members of the cre oLthe steamerOcean Angel, wine JTnas arrived ncrc from Jjia Orient, declare that thousands of tons of food are held up at, Shanghai, and some of it Is retting, while black market operations continue rife in China. BRITISH BASE 4,IN TURKEY" Ankara Is Satisfied With British aud American Support Against Russia MOSCOW 0 It is reported here that Britain has "set up a supply base in the Dandanelles" and that command of a Turkish airdrome near Istanbul has been "subordinated to the British." An Ankara report that Turkey, rejecting the Soviet proposal for Joint Russian-Turktsh defence of the Dardanelles, told Its powerful neighbor that the United States will be a suffici ent guarantee for the security of the strategic straits. mendment P recently reconstructed. At the right are some of the town-f6lk who gathered in the square and surrounding balconies to cheer the generalissimo. Fish Sales American Northern, 57,000, 28 and 21.30, Booth. Canadian ... Kodiak 70.000, Atlin. Takla, 65,000. Co-op. Parma, 32,000, Co-op. Ispaco, 32,000, Edmunds & Walker. Neptune TT, 10,000, black cod. Cold Storage.. f$T 4 Bulletins JILTED, SHOOT'S 'VATfc0UVEB bllveNcsticti, 23, is in a critical condition in hospital, and an American siidier. Marvin Lester Mack, 25, is held by police on a charge of attempted murder following a shooting here Saturday nijlit. The shooting followed a quarrel during which the eirl broke lier engagement with the soldier. WEEK-END FATALITIES TORONTO Sixteen persons lost their lives in accidents and one slaying in Eastern Canada during the week-end, a Canadian Press survey showed today. Twelve were the result of car accidents and three were drowned. MONTI'S MOTHER ILL BELFAST Lady Montgomery, 81, mother of Field Marshal Viscount Montgomery, was reported today to be in wcrsc condition following a stroke on Saturday. Members of her family were notified that her condition was grave. Lord Montgomery is at present in Canada on an official tour.. NO PARKING SYDNEY, Australia W Among bylaws posted at the entrance to the Sydney Domain Is one telling that it is an offence to land aeppelln in the public park. ASKS RUSSIAN JUSTIFICATION Australian Delegate to Peace Conference Not Satisfied With $900,000,000 Demand PARES 0) The Australian delegate to the peace conference proposed today that Russia ba :alled upon' to "Justify her rep- araMon demands" and asked! that a special "on the spot" in-1 vcstigatlon be made of the ability of the former European enemy countries to pay Russia's $900,000,000 demands. E R. Walker made the proposal to the economic commission for the Balkans after the Italian commission had approved two more paragraphs to the preamble to the Italian treaty draft. Foreign Minister Molotov, replying to Walker, sa:a "Australia has not had her fields, cities and Industries devastated." GOOD RELATIONS OF RUSSIA WITH WEST ESSENTIAL PARIS In keeping of the peace of the world, maintenance of good relations between the Western powers and Russia wa3 more important than peace treaties, declared Hon. Brook Claxton, head of -the Canadian c"elegatlon to the peace confer ence, today following the depart ure of Prime Minister W. L. Mac kenzie King on his way back to Canada. The peace: conference today entered the fifth week of lis deliberations. Mitchell Answers I.T.U. Criticism OTTAWA Hon. Humphrey Mitchell, minister of labor, has answered" criticism which fvas made of him at the International Typographical Union in Miami asse St. one." d Opposition At Ottawa Would Bring Emergency Powers to Conclusion OTTAWA (CP) The House of Commons today adopted a Progressive-Conservative amendment that vould make the Emergency Transitional Powers Act 1945 expire automatically March 31, 1947, whether Parliament acts before that time or not. The amend- ' ment is described by Acting Prime Minister Louis Laurent as a "dangerous The amendment was moved by Progresslve-Conservauve leader John Bracken to a bill that would extend the provisions of the emergency; acl icf sixty, days after the start of the next As originally .drafted, the Act. which gives .tlm government power to keep wartime price. wage, marketing and other con trols in operation, would, have expired within fiiteen days . after the start of'the" next session. GOVERNOR TO PAINT Golf Second to Art During Alexander's Match at Jasper JASPER PARK Golf was seconded to art during an 18-hole match on the Jasper' Park Lodge golf course.yesterday. The outcome of It was the governor-general, Viscount Alexander, at present visiting Jasper, pofh plans tdr"dd an oil ' painting of Pyramid Mountain which Is viewed from the course high in the Rockies. During a foursome match between the sovernor-general, Viscountess Alexander, and the American ambassador to Ottawa, Hon. Ray A'therton; and Mrs. Atherton, art was th.e jmaln topic of conversation. Discussion of golf shots was at a minimum as. they moved around the course. However; coloration, contours and brush technique, necessary to handle the various hues of colors orj the governor-general's favorite mountain 'were under discussion constantly. Atherton, who has completed three paintings of Jasperhlm-self, shared the enthusiasm of His Excellency who Is a competent artist too. One drive -was transfer of the view from the tee to a sheet of canvas. As they passed down the fairway they selected viewpoints for possible locations to work at later. for releasing of the Card report because me group had t to Edmonton Sunday, His hx7 which blamed the president of the Union for failure to settle cellency requested photographs anadlan National the Winnipeg strike dispute. Mr. he Mtlchell, who had been accused Railways. These are to work he "turns hme to from whi of anti-labor leaders In. causing th .Wrt tn h mnrfo nnhiic ensure than contour and gen- 0f eral outline is correct. He. turned points out that publication J color the report had been concurred in by Harry Finch, Canadian executive of the I.T.U. BOY KING GUEST OF HONOR AT GARDEN PARTY King Feisal of Iraq, II, Is shown with Princess Katherlne of Greece at the garden party given In the boy king's honor at Hurllng-ham. King Feisal succeeded to the throne wlrm his father, King Ghazl, was killed in an automobile accident in 1939. His uncle, Emir Abdul Ilah, is serving as regent until the king be comes of age. down an offer for photos, saying he preferred to remember the vivid colorings of the mountain and produce the work from memory. While in the area Their Ex cellencies and the party, .visited many of the favorite tour :spots of vacationists including Mount Edith Cavell, Athabasca 'Falls, Mlette Hop Springs and .Ma- Ugne Canyon. His children-Shane, Brian and Rose with their governess stayed at Jasper Park Lodge during their stop-over and enjoyed the recreational facilities. The governor-general,, the Viscountess Alexander and the party remained in their prlva'ta railway car In Jasper towiuThe party moved on to Edmonton Sunday. Included in their tour on the return trip are visits to Edmonton, Saskatoon, Winnipeg and Fort William. Local Tides Tuesday, August 27, 1948 High 1:25 22.1 feet 14:03 21.1 feet LoW 7:48 .U-feet 30:00 4-5 feet v