AKMY SHAKE . .. a 1. 1. .... I., i(h Command of Hie II 111 III J Marshal Zhukov, hero recent war anil com- r of all. Russian ground has been deprived ol obscure provincial post mandant of Odessa inlll-llstrict. He was once to .'Marslial Stalin as . i.. i ()K. i lie inimmun. or woikcrs in the uhole- ElaUF ini-iiu v" .30 per week July 1, lias further increased to $17, .. Klfiriltiir Z III JlUfcUJH utes are $11 and $15. the rate is 45c per hour 110 1CSS man vii n wwi j ay. (I'AIU, KIXUllIJt.ll I0IUA The selsmo- n i r ii....,.,. S licic aim vfiiii., ngton, recorded cartli- sliwks at 11:11 and last nlRht, probably d under the ocean miles lie California toasi or . . 1 1 ...... 1 . 41.. I 1)11 IIIC IIUHII IMF l t.l I HiPnM ...It,. I Dldliu. wi mni. inui- nrom 7.J5 mis illuming, Hicgo had an earthquake of "No. 2 Intensity." ICLKS' CLL'H CLOSLS ...... . . . t - a a I in operation for over years, the Allied Officers' has been closed final . .-. ..i UI11CS IdKlllK inaii; STK1KE IS 01 T NCOUVKK Strike .In n .VUnsttiT htro rratrf accepted a 15c per hour increase with 40-hour and maintenance of membership. 50 MEN I.AII) OIT Vf'f lltVt'l lt..ii.A nf laid off from the West. ; ANOTI1CK STItlKi: IV I Ml All Vvl IF JIM., i sir kc. nivo viiip nuu men. tM aw initio iia-iiioariiirr Mars IWI1 V jassy Men Are I W K in Kussia iflWA 0 Prime MlnUter ' King ,ald Wednesday ininun tHat 11 mil nl IT .1. ' m ti a m k v ptlitilnvfinjs j - c j I 'i ,r 111. flnnl rnnnrl rf i commLilon on espl-"ad returned to Russia c 'ic recori wa:-; made dud- IV Munday The re.it will be $1,000 Mislaid at Cold Storage Disappears -- Thief is Sought City police today are seeking a person responsible .for the disappearence of a bag containing $1,000 mislaid at the plant of the Canadian Fish and Cold Storage Co. by an employee of B.C. Packers, Port Edward, during a business visit to the cold storage plant at Seal Cove Wednesday afternoon. I The money money, contained contained In In CHINESE ARMIES HEARING CLASH MANKING iti Rival Chinese government find Communlsr armies were on the march today along the Yangtze River and a claih north of this vital artery of China posed a threat of full-scale civil war. Information Minister Hsueh- Pel said that the Communists were marching from the north I upon the Yangtze, along whose banks He Nanking and the great port, of Shanghai. "If we permit ihrm to advance unopposed, wt had beUer consider moving the capital back to Chungking," he said. pelago. Canada nas also de- tllnnil JlncdjtQ,glve tn Diva the United States Uon because of the sovereignty rights involved. The United States took the view that the station would help In plans to develop the continent's Arctic defences. EXPORT LUMBER PRICE BOOSTED NEW YORK 0) Canadian manufacturers shortly will Impose a 10 per cent price Increase on htmlber products sold to the Un ted States, a spokesman for the lumter industry said today. The Increase would compensate for the price differentials caused by the revaluation of the Canadian dollar to parity with the United 'states dollar. SIDE VISION The eyes of a whale are set far back and look in opposite directions. They cannot be moved to look straight ahead or P OITATION (IF PORT FISHING TRACTS VISITORS TO ALASKA -ocal Party Impressed liy What Is Iking Jni1l Alimir Tine I inn Armitir UMC HUntl liorc Markings, Floats, Trails, Cabins, Boats low fi'oliiiifT cfvnnfnc nil nrnlind Kptfllikan district " ubi tuitnui i . j w v -w - made accessible to visting sportsmen who come Ul bO Ul W1L- VullltV.T i'""! "- J viw tuvti itiuvii ii ' yj i' 1 i. r . t i tJ r C HlvnI l n i -tlccrl II It l-r r H Willi I - I'VlllllllWV I II I 11 vkJCVVI - - MM TA thn mt-r n - rt iU'T rT I VVf'MK lllllll ,l w j vi iv . i lib Aixtjw " arouna uevuia ui-, I; and on whlrh Ketchikan j U ril The trln was made bv iia u- i i t i i .. iiu uu jmu as jus cueits Mill. Tnm.. Tl -I. t T -;.-. uruce miiis ana uick '"1' are clearlv mnrlfprl for 'filing boats which find ' at' which to moor and wcll- ' ur foot trails over which tnto the lakes or trout Morr than that there are 1 : nlly located cabins in i ' btaln shelter. If neces- d 'he lakes are equipped b if It is all the result of wnmnntal policy which re cater In at least some measure to It. "It seems a pity." reflected Dr. Iar.sc, "that here around Prince Rimer t where wc nave as good sport fishing lakes and streams as arc to be found anywhere in the world wc should mot be tak-iiv- .steps to similarly exploit them." The party completely circumvented Rcvllla Oigrdo Island, traversing the scenic Ilchm OiXnslt Leisurely fishing atclvity lnr eluded the taking of six spring and coho salmon, two of tthem the first morning out by young Bruce Mills at Goose Bay and the" fbur others by Jim Parker. u '-he Importance of the j Dctp fishing for red snapper hic and endr-avours to ; cod was also induisoa m. a bank currency bag, disappeared after It had been laid down on a fish box at the Cold Storage plant by the employee during a visit to the Cold Storage plant yosterday shortly before. 3 o'clock. The money was being taken from a local bank to Port Edward when the official stopped In at the Cold Storage Co. on business. He laid the bag aside while he stopped and talked to a workman on the fish floor of the plant. He failed to pick It up when he contlned on his way to Port Edward and had driven as far as the incinerator at the city limits when he discovered that he had forgotten the money. He speeded back to the Cold Storage Co. but found that the money had disappeared. The city police were called and . 1 1 1 t ill til Ul IIIC llUfeVJ lUilllUfe meteorological company premises was begun. A Project Refused number of workmen were "archea as tney te t ine piani OTTAWA I - The Canadian at lhe end of the sh-lft at ?:3: government has rejected as too A few ot the workmen were about expensive a request by the United Stales government that Canada :and man,y, ofu them had passed beside the bag dose canvas establish sta- a metcorologlcal i Hon on Melville Island on the i Bot,tle1polcen and T officials declined to discuss nVrhl-.age uo.t.Pm nf the Arctia - the case morning. for publication this TODAY'S STOCKS Courtesy S. D. Johnston Co. Ltd Vancouver Bralorne - 12.00 B. R. Con .12 B. R. X 10 Carboo Quartz 2.90 Dentonla 42 Grull Wihksne 11 Hedley Mascot 1-38 Minto : 05i Pend Oreille 2.95 Pioneer 435 Premier Border 074 Premier Oold 1-50 Privateer. .55 Reeves McDonald 1-25 . Reno Wz Salmon Gold 17 Sh?ep Creek 1.15 Taylor Bridge 58 Whitewater 03 Vananda 38'.'2 Congress - 10li Pacific Eastern 10 . Hedley Amalgamated.. .10 Spud Valley 23 Centra-1 Zeballos .......... .10 Oils A. P. Con .11 Calmont 30 c & r. 1.90 Foothills 1-60 Home 2.95 Toronto Aumaque 60 Seattle 05 Bobjo . -IG'i Buffalo Canadian 20 Cons. Smelters 93-5 Eldona 43 Elder 54 Giant Yellowknlfe 5.50 Hardrock 70 Jackknlfe 16 Joliet Quebec ..: 55 Little Long Lac 2.00 Madsen Red Lake 2.9'J Macleod Cockshutt 1.78 Moncta -60 Omega : 20 Pickle Crow 3.15 Can Antonio 4.30 Senator Rouyii 60 Shcrritt Gordon 2.35 Steep Itock 2.95 Sturgeon River Lynx '- ' La'paska dod's Iikc Negus High Low Local Tides Friday, July 19, 1948 4:14 17:07. 10:40 23:09 .22 .23 .30 .f.7 3.21 19.3 feet 18.7 feet pr ovr AX. LldhAriY NORTHERN AND dEjNJCRAV BRITISH UOlJUMBLVe NEWSPAPER red top cabs TAXI TAXI Phono QAQ Phone .OTU- 537 KASPER C. MdNTYRE Stand: Rupert todscco more DAY and NIGHT SERVICE I )AV (across AND NIOHT from urmesi SERVICE Published at La.T 0SVee ff .ratcgic Pacific I'orWTrince Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest" Bill and Ken Nesbitt " VOL. XXXV, No. 167. PRINCE RUPERT, B.C. THURSDAY, JULY 18, 1946 PRICE FIVE CENTS plletins UP pr j nce Rupc New Ship Job MUSHROOM CLOUD OF SMOKE- Atpmlc cloud billows skyward after the fourth atomic bomb dropper over the "gulnea-plg fleet" mcored in Bikini lagoon. This Is the first photo of the awe-nsplring sight which greeted eyes of observers watching "Operation Crotsroads" some 5,000 nllds west of California. Uneconomical to Maintain Dry Dock Here on Wartime Footing STEREOTYPERS STAYING OUT "Hegrctfully" Decide They Cannot Return to Work At Vancouver Province V COUVER The Stercotyp-er Unlrn unanimously dcld?d r'-M not to go back to v !i:k a- the Vancouver Province on as there wsre members of the typographical staff there who were not menvcers of the j I rnatinnal Typographic Un- m ine wiereotypers union aa- ; fd thp rrovince "with rerpf i i . decision, making it clear bat there was no grievance ;i:':un-it the Province Itself and i!mt some of the workers involved had been there for 40 vtar- IMekrt lines of the A. P. of L. and C C. L. were again around Mr: Province today but press-nipn who had decided not to p'iiiiii:iip the strike, Tere back in the plant. Trieste Compromise Endangers Republic '"ME (V Premier De Oas-jarri said today that he feared that !b? new Italian republic would fall if Trieste were Inter nationalized as recommended bj: the fsur-ipower foreign mlnlsi JUVENILE DEUNQUEHCYIS GREATESTJiiMi; 7T rT "rT "a 7T i which satisfied neither Italy nor nnnniru iiifT nr rfTiniinuiAMr and that itaiy is rKUDLLri; mU3l KC-E3IADLI3n nUPIE Public morale is as great a problem today as the affairs which face the United Nations and the unbridled delinquency of the "bobby-soxers" and "teenagers," for which a growing disregard of home and parental responsibilities is the primary cause, presents a "frightfully serious" picture for the future of the nation, declared F. Earlj Anfield, Indian Agent, in a chal- j actlvitv enouSn- taf?ted the lenglng 6 address before the Prince , Preven 1 nquency. . "Tremendous emphasis" must be Rupert Gyro duo at luncneon ' morale la,d on the teaching or yesterday on the subject of "Un- must tQ the chlldren. 0nCe again acciarca war-oiaengms on ju- ; the real the ents become con. vnnlto Tlotlnnnnnpv ' .. .... wii'iv a-v, uviivj Declaring youth to be the real asset and wealth of the day, Mr. Anfield appealed for preservation of mortality an dehtical values on the home front, failure of which would mean that the sacrifices of millions of men In war would have been to no avail. All too ready was the In-' cllnatlon to pass over lightly a s'c'uatlon where thousands .of returned men had come back to find their homes wrecked, the bonds of marriage broken and the chlldren fallen victim; to the evils of the world. Delinquency Not Kesult of War But, asserted the speaker, Juvenile delinquency was not the direct result of war. War had only finalized conditions which had been gradually developing over a quarter of a century whereby there had been a loosening of the responsibility of the home and parenthood. It was an extremely serious situation when in one year (1944) there had been a 32 percent increass girls. Unrefutcd figures showing 40 percent of marriages in Eng land to be cf pregnant un children. .Mr. Anfield called for more attention being paid by- local, provincial and national governments on the nurturing and development of youth and proposed a "Department of Welfare of Youth" in government. "God help the future if the problem is not tackled," concluded the speaker in suggesting that, even here in Prince Rupert, there might be a co-ordinated undenominational community movement of youth coun sel springing from the Civic Centre. President W. D. Lambie was in the chair and in thanking Mr. Anfield, acknowledged the character of his address. Guests included Kenneth Malthouse of Vancouver and Magistrate W. D. Vance. STORM SWEEPS CHINESE COAST HON Q KONG F Wind reachlne a maximum of 10: boys and 54 percent among .miles an hour struck today as pinning its hopes on the forthcoming Paris peace conference to veto the internationalization proposal. WOULD TALK TO VAUGHAN Railway President Being Asked to Confer with Local Bodies and Attend Dinner R. C. Vaughan, president and chairman of the board of direc- fidantes and counsellors to their tors of the Canadian National Railways, coming to Prince Rupert for a brief visit next Thursday afternoon in the course of a tour of inspection of western lines with party officials, has been invited to attend a conference with representatives of the Prince Rupert Chamber of Commerce and Prince Rupert Industrial Development Committee to be followed by a dinner with the railway chief as the guest. Mr. Vaughan and his party will be arriving here by rail at approximately 3 o'clock Thursday afternoon and will sail the ;ame nlgnt on me steamer Prince Rupert for Vancouver. In the course of his' visit, various deed . I parted for the open sea before down tne work of collecting Too much had youth been allowed to go their own way. Pool-roomit beer parlors, dance halls, movies, purveyors of entertainment designed for adults and not for Juveniles, were subject to regulations but the real control must come from the horat! and was the responsibility or the parents who. too often, were In clined to relegate thMr duty to 4.1 feet, lice. 7.2 feet' Nor the storm hit. The 2,143 ton aerman wartime industrial British steamship Taiposhan, eqUpment as reparations to the which ran aground near Swatow victors. Of C0Q to 800 plants in was reported being battered to tne wcstern zones, which prob- pieces. EXAM RESULTS ON SATURDAY VICTORIA W Junior senior .matriculation em :ind na- the church, the .-:ehool. social tion results will probably bo tp sprvirfl hndle.i and ftven the no- leased Saturday mornm?,. tr Bald Statement In Regard to Local Shipyard. Made By Minister of Transport In House of Commons OTTAWA (CP) Transport Minister Chevrier said Wednesday in Commons that Canadian National Railways has called for tenders from all shipyards in Canada for construction of a new vessel for passenger and freight service to be operated by Canadian National Steamships on the Pacific Coast. HIGHWAY IN GOOD SHAPE Fresh Grading Reported by Auto Association Eleventh Avenue Dad The Prince Rupert Highway from end Ho end between Terrace and Prince Rupert has been freshly tegraded, it was stated j 1 this morning by J. Harry Black, piesident, oi the Prince Rupert Automobile Association, and Is now In good shape for driving. A power grader from trie Terrace end came through to Kwln-ILsa yesterday while the grader from this end reached Skeena. Repairing of a bridge approach between Telegraph Point and Skeena which had been In bad shape has been nearly completed. A bad spot on the road in lhe Bulkley Valley east of Telk wa hav toeSn restoiedl4otgodd shape. i and another blew two tires. FISH WORKER LOSES FINGERS Tom Mulhern, an employee of Booth Fisheries waterfront THE WEATHER Forecast Prince Rupert, Quesn Char lottes and North Coast Overcast in northern portion, cloudy in southern portion today and Friday. Widely scattered rain-showers In northern portion throughout and over southern portion Friday afternoon. South- ..! ...InAa 1ft Tnflpa npr hnnrV ered rain showers persist over the Queen Charlottes and North Coast region. Improvement has resulted over the northern interior with near clear weather elsewhere over the province. A low pressure centre In the Gulf of Alas'ka continues to give an onshore flow of moist air over the north coast which will produce little change th the weather of that; area. A high centre developing over interior British Columbia will give clear weather over the remainder cf the province. The temperature dropped to 38 degrees at Cranibrook dur ably will be earmarked by the lng Ule nlght thowh ?rc sea- Allierl control council m utr-lln. as suitable for reparations, only 14 plants have been dealt with by the inter-Allied reparations agency hpro. The control couikII recently assigned more than 50 other plants to the ag- mcy to allocate to its 18 mem ! Education Department announ- bers, but tne wnoie program. ! was a mere divisional ccd today. far is behind schedule. sonal temperatures prevailed. Warmer weather is expected for th interior with little change over coastal rcglona. HANDY GADGET A combine has been developed which digs, Sacks and toads Replying to H. a. Archibald (q. C. F. - Skeena) who asked whether the vessel will be built at the Canadian National dockyard at Prince Rupert, Mr. ' Chevrier said that it would not be built at Prince Rupert because the staff of technicians and workmen at the plant had been reduced to a peacetime basis and it would be uneconomical to maintain the plant at Us wartime footing. BRITAIN TO ASSERT BREAD RATIONING LONDON The government tcday was. repented to have decided to follow through -with Its plans to ration bread derplte a thieatened revolt of the natlon'3 bakers. This Master Bakers' As- Ecclatfon said lit would refuse to Reference was made Jr, Mr, I collect bread. tickets in theri holes of the city street ori Elev- effective Sunday, enth Avenue between McBride After a cabinet session, Food and Conrad Streets. One tourist Minister Strachey conferred car broke a spring on this street Wnh the takers. The bakers' pJant, suffered the loss of two support the government's decl-fingers and part of a third In'sion to Impose bread rationing an accident on the company fish Sunday. floor Wednesday afternoon. He was taken to Prince Rupert General Hospital where he is being treated by Dr. W. S. Kergin. Mulhern was reportedly working with a circular saw when the accident occurred. He lost the fifth, fourth and half the third fingers of his left hand. spokesman emerged from the meeting tight-lipped. ' London streets and billboards were plastered with placards promising to publish the name3 of "public enemies and dictators" who vote in parliament to Newspapers which have been extremely critical ot the government plan to ration bread turned critical eyes on the bakers' threatened revolt. TUNA FISH AGREEMENT Terms Arrived at Between Boat Owners and Fishermen excert lleht variable southern of 20 per cent take f or the ves- railway .properties at the port peratures. Minlmums tonight: will be inspected. j Port .Hardy. 50; Massett, 54; The Chamber of Commerce ! Prince Rupert, 53. Maximums on and the Industrial Committee J Friday: Port Hardy, 64; Massett. are desirous of discussing with j 61; Prince Rupert, 63. Mr. Vaughan matters concern- Synopsis in" the development oi tne port iuuuy onaca wiw and railway line and Canadian National policy in respect to this area. REPARATIONS WORK SLOW a typhoon swept the China coast BRUSSELS W A breakdown endangering shipping and dam- ... the p0tS(iam nact in respect aging communications. British to rurUilne Germany as an eco- and American naval vessels de- .nn.i. ,hnip h.is p.itlv slowed portlon. Little change In tern Agreement has been reached between the owners of Prince Rupert vessels which engage in. tuna fishing and the fishermen members of the Deep , Sea Fishermen's Union on fishing terms. Settlement Is on the basi3 sel on -gross stock after which the expenses are paid and the balance equally divided between the members of the crew. This is the same arrangement as exists in halibut fishing. Up to now the boat's share In tuna fishing had ranged anywhere from 20 to. 42 per cent, their toeing no uni formity in the matter. The Vancouver fishing terms for. tuna have not yet been finally settled although there has been agreement that, meantime. 27 per cent ol gross stock shall be taken, 20 per cent to go to the boat while the remaining seven per cent goes in a trust fund pending arbitration of its final disposition. The Vancouver tuna boat operators have been asMn? for a 27 per cent boat's j share whereas the fishermen de sire it fixed at 20 per cent. PREMIER KING OFF TO PARIS OTTAWA W Prime Minister Mackenzie King left today for the Paris nsace conference, accompanied by Norman Robertson, undersecretary for external affairs. Mr. King win sail on the Gcorglc tomorrow.