E v- ,, , Morning ... n a vu J ike, apparently ,'nfc.ands was rc-' by Georgetown ji.t.ii-hfinrc be ne U-"1" . (pacific Stand- .. ,t 3-58 a m It MVe centred r-s nortliwest oi lici f i lised Thf whclc aie ccll- arkey has been ln-rcrpunJ on auth-ie wartime Prices y.i. i. fiinio 1 'it itrd Nations ; v -fats o) a mll-.::r, ci war In r r.": ue lancn U.'Jd Nations LI.. ..nl(lAn ;tcre:led because rcn countries -u .. . i j W1 10 CU1S-.IUCIUUIC fOR in i AID o - f mains day by fierce .2 ola lifeboat. yif'ivnr ui hiiHv . r;!!r -i ... ..w... ii niiiail LVJil B fin tit- Slf I .1 ! nerce storm ln- nujiiiv iiui- Xlrnnmi, CM.... -I. win oiuutu una r uii a iuth ua it :m ' tit. endeavour- Ihn a. 1 . j vo Ktiore 'LIVn l.-ntH ,i :t thi wH.it UWIl uvea, ---- "itiwi-uiion; 1 toil J beiiv rnn. "J me r.ftl.U 13 -sun wis morn ry water:, where 1 shaken bv .he rx- PCndini 12 Iioiifk (n f Mini.. "Rasboat and finally "Wially swept ashore concition, is still le search 1.. -iij AT u.. lit U1U rtt additional men !n out to Uijist In ."""Cn includes drnir. vitg, ;ciyot early Thursday CHMacc J Mlitt.. ... c' "isorder , ln svice i "I Urch.of a 7 "irrupted iblon,1511 which U, rin,atl0nal Unln 5 in K "KFUa- r,!,members shouted Premier ... Privateer 58 Reeves McDonald I-20 12 Reno - Salmon Gold -20 Sheep Creek I-20 Taylor Bridge (ask) Whitewater - 017' Vananda 21 11 Congress Pacific Eastern 48 MortW Amale. .1JV2 Spud Valley (ask I Central Zeballos (ask) .15 Oils A. P. Con. 10 Calmont -20 n x, v. 1-60 :if Toronto. Ual- Foothills I-81 Om (l small linn .! Tt .... 2.45 XltAIIC She oooaooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo :: TODAY'S STOCKS :: Courtesy S. D. Johnston Co. Ltd. Vancouvrr Bralorne 1165 B. R. Con 11 B. R. X - 13 Cariboo 2M Dentonla - 33'' , OruU Wihksnc ... -10 Hedley Mascot i-39 Mlnto m Pend Orlellc 2.90 Pioneer - 3-''0. Toronto Aumaque ''8 Bcattlc l-15 Bobjo 15 Buffalo Cdn. -19 Cons. Smelters 80.00 Eldona 54 Elffcr - 115 Giant Yellow-knife 6.00 Hardrock r T..l.lf .12 jui.iwiti.c ....... . r-..--r 1 wmcj which JollctlQuetuicf 'tyMfodY Little LongLa? - nc4di ncsdav. Madscn Red Lake .. MacLeod Cocksliull- MO Moncta Omega - r Pickle Crow 2 95 San Antonio 3.80 Senator Rouyn;.... 46 Sherrltt Gordon 2 05 Steep Rock 2-40 Sturgeon River .. -21 0 Lynx -" Lapaska - Gods Lake co 2- Negus - Aubellc 40 llcva Gold 54 Harrlcana 27 McKenzle Red Lake -83 Halloween Backfires I our Youths Suffer injuries As Result "f Bn,b Implosion i" Victoria VICTORIA "ff l our youngsters arc In hospital today as a' result of two explosions or home-made bombs during the Hallowe'en celebrations here. One bomb bui'sl mar a cot-fee shop on Gorge Uad, injuring Ronald McLaren, aged 15; Richard Coles, 15,a"d Gerald Roberts, 1G. A fourth joulh, Bryan Rcid. may lose one or two fingers from a second explosion. Hospital reports the condition of the four as "good. ' PEACEMAKERS RETURN FROM PARIS Secretary of State Arthur Vandcnbcrg j of Michigan James F Byrnes and Senator aSoLTthey arrived at the 2gSrtg Truman's plane, ' The Sacred Cow. from Paris aboard President JSydeclared that ne was "most mttollm- Is at right. NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER HTTnT' I P.., . June ii KflRiiKi INDIAN LEADERS "GET TOGETHER IN SIT DOWN CONFIDENCE This picture was iaken nsMahatma Oandhl, the Indian leader whose Hi.- ha- .-.:x 'Pent fi:;hUn8 er a free India, getf together with Pandit Nehru, leader of the h.m !;:,vornment and Saroar Patcl. whJs in charge of Indian home affairs, to discuss an Important point n the AH-lndla Congress rnmmtttpc session at Delhi. Left to right are, Pandit Jawaharial Nehru, interim government lr ManatmT oandhl and Sardar Vuabhubhai Patcl. in charge of home affairs, photographed at the "get-together" conference. BIG GALE BLOWS OUT SliippinR Around Vancouver Emerges From Shelter Norah and San Jose Safe VANCOUVER O'-Small craft emeTged from shelter along the British Columbia coast today as a westerly gale blew ltselt out. Two fishinc boats were wreck ed and a bi packer was badly wrecked buf is safe In port. The fish Dacker San. Jose, struck a rI,ofI the south I reached Victoria dry dock with the aid of two salvage tucs. She is badly holed as a re suit of being pounded by heavy seas The steamer Princess Norah, which had been ashore on Co mox Bar, reached Vancouver last n!.sht. She is not believed to be seriously damaged. FOREST SCALE FOR OCTOBER Rawloz scale for the Trince Rupert forestry district -totalled 25259,261 board feet, bringing the year's log production to date to 135,479,689 board feet, according to the monthly production bulletin issued by District For ester J. E. Matheson. Pole and piling production last month was 342.575 lineal feet. making the 10-month production for 1946 3.98G.005 lineal feet. Comparison with 1945 shows that ln October last year saw log production was 45.060.939 board feet, and the year's total to that date 192.694.909 board feet. Pole and piling scale for October, 1945, was 830,917 lineal foot, and the total to the end nf October was 2.423.044 lineal feet. j Railroad tic production last month was 12.308 units, while nnrriwnod nroductlon was 132 cords. The sawlog scale by varieties: Fir 1,172,585 Cedar 3.841,838 Spruce 11.G94.144 Hemlock G.341,244 Balsam 1.308.375 Jackplne 505,763 October Customs Receipts $29,000 Customs receipts at the port of Prince Rupert during October totalled $29,730.73, according to the figure released this I afternoon by the Customs office. Total receipts so far tnis ycai arc $243,179.41, with $383,088.79 period in 1915. as for compared the same I Alberta Is Short By 2000 Teachers EDMONTON Tnere Is a shortage of 2000 teachersJn Alberta, the provincial School Teachers' Association says, and the shortage will become even greater. TAXI TAXI 00 537 ' ..CO 10.V t-v ' 16.4 feet , DAT 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. 25G. PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1946 PRICE FIVE CENTS 0,000 COMMUNISTS PINCHED OFF . M II 11 Duke of Windsor Cannot Get Job NO WORD ON PULP MILL D. G. Stenstrom Tarries Daily News Questions I LONDON 0; The Duke of Windsor paid a visit to Prime Minister Clement Attlee today and Whitehall sources suggested the "Interview concerned the Duke'i future but he did not get a job as authoritative sources said there was not suitable appointment. It is understood the Duka. and Duchess will sail tor New York November 6. JEWS RESIST DEPORTATIOH Haifa is Still Scene of Protestations and Disorttcrs Refugees Diverted to Cyprus HAIFA, in spite of defiant screams and Intermittent viol ence, izuo Jewisn reiugees were transferred today from the al most foundering Immigrant ship San Dimltrlos to twtf British vessels for deportation to Cyprus, The transfer followed a gen eral strike and mass meeting at which deportation of refugees ! was protested bv Haifa's Jews. 1 Two thousand Jews marched on ! British street barricades but were dispersed wlthoui, violence. A mysterious explosion occur red In Haifa Bay during the night but no major damage was repprtcd. A .general strike of Palestine Jews is proclaimed for Sunday in protest at the deportation 01 the 1,200 illegal immigrants from Haifa. Jewish shops, factories and offices will be closed -while mass meetings and demonstra- Uoni.'are .held In Jewish settle- " v kftivernslafa-Wden -- No pomment was received from D. G. Stenstrom, former Ocean Falls pulp mill manager Thurs day afternoon when questioned bv the Daily Ntws on the pros pects of the group of business men, which he headed during a visit here, establishing a pulp mill ln the area. "We have nothing to say on the matter. We have been look ing the area over, that's all," he j parried. With Mr. Stenstrom are H. a. Blancke, F. C. Underhlll, A. L. Richards, G. S. Schnieder ami R. T. Bowman, who have been ln the city since Monday. Some of the party are from uie unueo. States, while others are from Vancouver. i HEAVY HALLOWE'EN DAMAGE; POLICE CHIEFSAYS WORST YEI Many windows were smashed in the city and there were other pranks of more or less major char- nuiet Hallowe'en. Such was also the general report from police staffs across the Dominion. Street lights were smashed in Winni- broken in Tor- Bulletins CANADA SAVINGS LOAN Prince Rupert's total of Canada Savings Loan subsqrip-(ions to date is $191,850. British Columbia is maintaining its dsily average cf almost $2,500,000 with sales to date of $34,G50,500. WINS NOBEL PRIZE STOCKHOLM Prof. Herman J. Jlullcr, world-famed geneticist of Indiana University, was last night named winner of the 191G Nobel prize for medicine and physiology. The 55-year-old scholar, author and lecturer was awarded the prize for his work in discovering that mutations, or biological changes in a species, may be produced by X-rays. This year's prize amounts to 130,000 Swedish krona ($36,-205). OLD MAN FATHER WINNIPEG Noah Brunette has become a father at the age of 73. The new arrival is his eleventh, ten by a former mar riage. Mrs. Brunette is 46. N. B. AGREEMENT ' FRED'ERIc'tON Full agreement has been reached for new financial arrangements between New Brunswick and the Dominion government under which the province and its municipalities will vacate the income and corporation tax field for a further period of fiv'e years, Premier McNair announced today. Abandonment of the collection of succession duties by the provincial government is an additional feature of the WASHINGTON HEAT WAVE WASHINGTON Sfc The United States capital's famed cherry trees popped forth with surprising blossoms and roses bloomed along the Potomac River today after a record two-day 'heat wave which saw the mercury rise to 84 degrees. . r Hi EHrS 1 W' "WOMAN I LOVE" TOUCHES ENGLAND'S SOIL The Duke and Duchess of Windsor are seen as they walk put of their temporary home in Sunnlngdale. Eng.. on their first morning in England. It's the first visit of the Duchess to England after their marriage 10 years ago. They are staying at Ednam lodge, Sunnlngdale, lent to them by their friend, the Earl of Dudley, for their two-months stay in the country. Vlllwu Vl f vv-v wt - nronertv were overturned No large scale disturbances are reriorted from any part of the Dominion and few casualties directly attributed to the annual celebration. Most tmroarious celebrations appeared to have taken place In Vancouver where one nunarea street lights were smashed Prince RuDert oropcrty holders this morning ruefully surveyed their homes, business places and public buildings and added up a toll of broken windows, smasn-ed street llehts and other juven ile damage which, according to the police, marked last night as one of the most destructive although not the most spectacular Hallowe'en nights In the city's recent history. Reports from all parts of the city which poured mto city po lice headquarters during we early hours of the night Indl-rated that vandalism was being practiced with Impartiality In every district of the city. "I zambled that the conduct nf the luvenlle element would hp hitter tUs vear than It was I last year. I lost," Sgt. O. L. Hall, ihead of the city police detach ment, said in a statement last night. Backing his statement was arnrps nf com- plalhts .of wilful property dam: nffn teleDhoned to police head quarters. Other destructive acts, not reported to the police last night, were revealed this morning. Although extra policemen were on duty to guard against such mob outbreaks as blackened the 1945 Hallowe'en record, tney found It difficult to cope with this year's type of juvenile tac- tacular concentration 01 ae- tlcs which lacked any such spec- structlve youthful force lied up from hundreds of Indi vidual groups scattered tnrougn-out the city. ; "Just when we thought we had got a line on one gang; of win dow breakers in a certain pari nf the citv. the activity there would stop. Then complaints would pour in from another district," a policeman said this morning. , Schools Sutlercd Broken Windows I The city's schools! of course, cifforpri hpaw window damage. At Annunciation Catholic School, -n window Danes were oroKen shortly before 10 q'clock. Booth Memorial High School sunerea heavily, as did King Edward and Borden Street. Probably the crudest act of window breaking occurred in a residence on Piggot Avenue where a vandal used a 20-foot length of two-inch steel pipe to break four panes of glass and smash a window frame. (Continued on Page 5) POLICY ON EMPLOYMENT International Plan Is Being Proposed By Great Britain LONDON Oi Great Britain nroDOsed today an international convention on employment policy and co-operation of different International agencies "so that action be taken to avoid economic depressions." The proposal was made in a memorandum by the United Kingdom delegation to a pre paratory committee now in session here. It put additional weight behind the British contention that full employment is essential to elimination of international trade barriers. TRAPPED BY GOV'T FORCES IN SEAPORT Nationalist Forces Spreading Into Manchuria PEIPING (CP) An es timated 100,000 crack Chinese Communist trppps were reported cut off by government encirclement in the north China port , of Chef 00 where a violent battle raged ln the streets. Commu nists massed thousands or troops in five Shantung Peninsula ports east and west of Chefoo, presumably trying to break through ths garrison. While the government strove to pinch off this springboard to Manchuria, its armies were spreading swiftly 'across Liaot-ung PenlwulaSabove Ruuflan- occupled Manchuria ltseu. iney seized at least two' strategic points along 100 miles of Korea Bay. PRIORITIES ARE LIFTED Tailors of Canada Am Now . Permitted to SU Without Ex-Service Reservation" OTTAWA 0. Tailors of Canada today removed the priority siens from suits and prepared tiqiEeUtpuieedjijvUlana. .Prices Boara ornciais saia wiey believe the lifting oi the priority for service men and women now may allow civilians 10 cup into 35 per cent of merchants' stocks formerly set asid for cer- tlflcate holders. THE WEATHER Synopsis The province now lies in a strong northwesterly How of pacific air following the disturb ance that passed, through yes- t ref ntoVifs HsmsM was tal-1 tprH n v. Northwest gale lorce winds continued over the ex posed coastal waters this morn ing but will decrease rapidly. Another intense disturbance, now 900 miles to the west,;iis moving rapidly east-northeast ward and will be over me yueen Charlotte north coast region to night and into Alberta by evening Saturday. Gale force winds with rain will accompany me passing of the system over the coastal region with inixea.ram and snow over the Interior oi the province. Forecast Prince nunert. Queen Char lottes and North Coast Cloudy generally overcast by noon. Overcast Saturday morning, be coming cloudy by noon, inter mittent rain in afternoon be coming continuous by evening today. Showers Saturday morning with widely scattered show ers after noon. Northwesterly winds (20 m.pJi.), decreasing to light by mld-mornlng. Southerly winds (15) mid-afternoon, increasing to southeasterly (40) by evening today, except sou.th-n.f im pvtrpm southern" nor- vasu . Uon. Wind becoming southerly (35) early Saturday and northwesterly (35) after noon. Warmer tonight. Little change In tem perature Saturday. Minimum tonight-Port Hardy, 40; Massett. 39; Prince Rupert, 39. Maximum Saturday Port Hardy, 44; Mas-sett, 44; Prince Rupert, 44. BREAKING WITH FRANCO SPAIN NEW YORK Kf ports. In United Nations assembly circles today were that demands will be made, probably from a Soviet source, for mmtdlaW breaking off of relations with Franco Spain, the objective which Russia sought in vain In council