I Yf 1 H " MM r. M M w ENCE fstandinc Irilain, I -is, dim) (1,1 I 1 ry Ernest Be- r,ico of rom- tat he is not lhat the major iTrs three bombings in the Stuttgart be the fault of .overnmcnt if " 1 Mr, Eevin de a two-day (ins ; British foreign . Secretary said In eager to con- i peace with Jap- ainst any future Islon and he de- I? suggestion that So exploit and Ijplesof the East-Ixan is 'sheer Id that Great Brt- i c::ar that, if I4i for bases in- Is are granted, it unwarranted ln-i I tne sovereignty Ncnce is highest and those f 1 "e of little work- l"am c Miii I 'hc newEquln- r on established (! iry.EdaUonal 7 u"u gl I'M. ; ,5annas asked VJ K lei A -Text area staged Saturday by anti 1SWJ' .. extremists for whom the United States troop3 oiiH r.ornun nollce searched in ui'u i - j, four armed swoops during the night, making a house to house search. Several score suspects have been detained for question lmr and 58 arrests made. of Tur- 4b, ; uta the l e water- f the "niion. The rales, iaslii-g through the nleht. in at least one case were Mirwiorted bv American tanks and hundreds of heavily armed soldiers. STRIKE RIOT ENDS IN JAIL vANCtJUVER W Three men, convicted of unlawful assembly in connection with a disturbance In front of the Dally Province building last July 23, were sen- Led that outside tenced to, J all terms on Monday. I:th Greece must William B. Fricscn, 38, was sen- . trwpj from Rockandel, 21. six months, and lj possibly. Robert Daniels, 31, four monms. ti J frish an- ' -" Ublems facing MINERS WOULD litoig peace was Dn-ciTlll7 UHRkT fcdaredMr Bevln, " i new solution STEWAKT The members or tssive basis if a Local No. 694, United Mine, I t u to be avert- Mill and Smelter Workers, held std that World a meeting on Thursday to'dis- iave been pre-' cuss the acceptance or rcjec- the entire world 1 lion of the arbiter's figure re- I etive and deter- ported as eight cents per hour .".eliminatlne con-1 increase. Unofficially, it Is re in the past had led ! ported that the majority of the lit upon the future las the 'tough one" t between the ma- f t as completely with the Dollcv of rate James Byrnes 1 Mi .Germany p'i had no monc- V Interest In Trl- weijn secretary Nwasthatof in- dc, ? would be willi- Dutch East member 30. Mr )ISEASF. fS VETS wians arc about I h solve the mv. lus disease" whirh v" , lwcij workers for Is- Wch appeared Kt alter thn e..n. members are in favor of acceptance and the resumption of work. The ultimate decision will have to come from provincial headquarters of Uic union. Will Move Grain Here Next Month Shipmenls of Allieria wheat fotherrinre Rupert terminal elevator for export to tlic world market are expected to begin about November 1 when the Rolden flood will pour Into the elevator at the rate of 20 carloads a day, the Daily News learned today. Information on the movement of ships which will carry the grain to food-hungry countries was not available here although, in the lifiht of statements made by the Board of Grain commissioners, it ' likely that the grain may be shipped this winter. It Is expected that the elevator, empty since last fall, will be filled before the process of loading the grain into ships is begun. Capacity of the elevator is 1,250,000 bushels. U was emptied hv three ships, one Brit ish and two Russian, last Oc tober and November. iGIVING TILL IT HURTS SALT LAKE CITY, P)-When Mrs fnrv nrewerton decided to give a friend $5 for her birthday, her idea went beyond ortnoaox currency or gift certificates. She changed a $5 bill into coins ranging from pennies to quarters 350 ot them altogether then u connrnielV 111 lilLll l,um inmcu tissue paper and gave them to fhi. the friend frton in in n a fetchlngly- fetchlngly- berlbboned box. ' CANADA LOAN IS MOUNTING Provincial Total for B.C. is Now Over Twelvc'Jlillign Dollars VANCOUVER-Tlic provincial total for the Canada baviHgs I,oan up to last night had reach ed a, total of $12,015,050 for r. dally average of $2,400,000. Payroll subscriptions are aver aging $150,000 daily with a total of $720,000. Powell River employees sub scribed $25,500 the first day and. arc now over $82,000. Powell River general canvass is $25,600. Armed forces are averaging over $20,000 with a total of $143. nnn ThPrp are many cash appll cations and pay assignments are Moll Tiiwni-cifv students are over $50,000 with commission to the University of Brillsn uoiumou gymnasium fund. First returns irom uawa in the Yukon showed seven applications for a total of $3,300. A Victoria woman, who recently received a legacy of $30,000, wanted to invest it all. When told that was impossible, she bought the limit ior herself and one for her chile;, CEiTtRTTWSOLlBIA'S NORTHERN AND NEWSPAPER 1 t rst. TAXI TAXI t; : : Octo-er 23, 1940 537 ar . . M.2 feet Si -4,eel DAT and NIGHT SERVICE 4.1 5.0 feet feet Published at Canada's Most Strategic Pacific Port "Prince Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest" Bill and Ken Nesbitt ,8 44 VOL. XXXV, No. 247. PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1946 PRICE FIVE CENT8 F0REPWP0LICY PROGR&BE- IS B. C, Andrus (second from left), WAR CRIMES--Colonel mt.DTTP MA7TC! apquitTED FROM S2S leS blen Nuebw O man snoruy r and Hlalmar Schacht right. Nuernberg .prison. Xeln 21 dffendS5.uBd gnco'nf Settlement of Marine Strike Marine Knlner Camingt& ' - 1" !T i..,. Terms on East ami n'i West Coast Still Tied Up tj YORK. WC.I.O. marine engineers and cast and sulf coast ship operators today signcu i contract to settle the 22-day old maritime walk-out but suiKins deck officers and licensed ship personnel continued to bottle up virtually all unuea ouues TlPfore the snipping ue-uy ui the cast and gulf coasts comes to an end, however, the paci must u onn.H hv both tne union UC iuvv j , . membership and 44 shlppin other unions invoivea in ..ivoAmorirnn Federation oi Labor mates and pilots-must to terms. The masters seek a 30 per cent increase and a closed shop. Thu would cave tne west puasu -ni driirrhnund. The unions are OVUl oi" , , to negotiate with the west coaw shipping lVcr Ms auer conc.uu- ing talks wltn cast aim coast operators. NUERNBERG Result ot the 1 1 OTTAWA The castor Eric i, hnirH into the I Georre Adams, charted with 1 1 1 U 1 1 J MJ h - ' suicide of Hermann Goering will net be made known until Thursday. Pictures of the bodies of the executed Nazi leaders will be released tomorrow but there will be ,no pictures or the .ictual hangings. FIGHT RENT CONTROL SEATTLE Two ;arge apartment house associations here have decided not to re-rent apartments when they become vacant until rent controls have been cased. They do not seek excessive rents, they say, but merely adjustments. Veterans' organizations arc vigorously protestini; what they declare is a "most unfair" stand. CREDIT rOLlCY WASHINGTON United Stales credit policy towards other nations depends on two factors the meed of the coun tries concerned and the attitude of the applicants towards the United Stales, sal.l Secre. (ary of Stale James Byrnes today. He was answering criticism of tlm withdrawal of credit to Yugoslavia. CHINA STILL FIGHTING NANKING There is no let up in the serious civil war in China, either side seeking to gain advantage pending a pos-. siblc truce. The latest peace conference is still only in a preliminary stage, it is pointed out. RESIST MEAT PRICES NEW YORK Resistance to high meat prices is having results. In New York the price of porterhouse slcak is down from SI. 25 to 05c a pound and in St. Ifluls from $1.10 to 98c. . GULF IS STORMY VANCOUVER At least half a dozen vessels are in trouble as a result of a storm in the Gulf of Georgia last night. The tug G. H. French is ashore near Squirrel Cove on Ccrtez Island and her crew have left her. The fish packers "Daisy B. (Victoria) and New Eraser arc aground in the Frascr River. The small Seattle freighter Pasco is also In difficulties. LIFTING CONTROLS WASHINGTON Price controls on flour, bread and bakery products are expected to be lilted by the end of the week. conspiracy' to convey secret information to Russia, went to the jury today after a three-hour charge by the presiding judge. ON LONG FLIGHT SAN FRANCISCO The Pan American clipper plane Westward Ho is winging her way toward Honolulu on the first leg of a survey flight of 21,000 miles which will take her to Guam, Tokyo, Rangoon, Ba-tavia and Tilanlla. SAFE ALTER SHIP CRASH Another American Vessel is Sunk in Grenville Channel T It MrLcnrl. collector of CUS toms. who receiveci word yester day morning of the sinking of the American cannery tender America In Grenville Channel, about six miles north of Klev Nugget, had satisfied himself last nicht that all on board the vessel had been rescued by an other tender, Helen S., and were on their way to Seattle. Tlie sinklns of the America, a dlescl vessel of 60 feet length, followed collision with the big halibut," vessel Dorothy. The Am erica was heading south follow ing the ending of the salmon season in Alaska waters. The Dorothy was bound north and, sustainlmr httln damaee. was able ti proceed. The United States coastguard vessel MacLean was dispatched from Ketchikan to give any necessary assistance but was recalled after It became apparent that her services were not required. NO CONTROL OF BULGAR VOTING WASHINGTON CP The State Department has disclosed that Russia turned thumbs down on an American request for Allied Intervention to ensure free elections In Bulgaria. Russia said that intervention would be "rude interference in the Internal affairs of Bulgaria." ' BATH, Eng. CP) Ninety-one-ycar-old II. Love is successfully recovering from an appendicitis operation. SET FORTH BY ERNEST BEVIN CONSERVATIVES WINNERS OF TWO RIDINGS IN MONDAY'S BY-ELECTIONS SEARCH FOR SABOTEURS . Work Stoppage in Stuttgart Against Bombings STUTTGART CP) Nearly German workers staged a 15- wi-J minute work stoppage today In ShhdeVprotel against a series of raids affirmed his de v aUthorillcs IoUowing DREW PUTS IT UP TO MACKING Ontario Premier Says it is Prime Minister's Duty to Call Conference TORONTO, Premier George Drew, in a letter Monday, told Prime Minister Mackenzie King that it was his (Mr. King's) duty to act on a.request of the major ity, of the provincial premiers that the Dominion-provincial conference be reconvened to dis cuss temporary tax arrange ments to replace wartime agree ments which terminate at the end of the present fiscal year. "CROOKEDNESS" IS CHARGED MOSCOW. Oh "Extraordinar liv crooked secret talks" are the words used by Soviet newspaper Pravda in accusing United States and Turkish diplomats of participating in surreptitious dealings on the future of the Dardanelles. The article says that the Big Three decided at Potsdam that ench should hold direct talks with Turkey on revision of the Montreauv convention governing the Dardanelles but that, so far, these talks had not taken place. Then the article commented the table" conversations Deiween Turkish and American diplo mats. Ready Forj U. N. Meet Tlain Talking on International Differences Expected to Mark Meeting Opening Tomorrow NEW YORK iff) Plain talking on differences which have marked postwar international relations was forecast today as diplomats.from all over the world called their staffs and advisors into last-minute con ferences vo sharpen policies thev will present at meetings of the general assembly of the United Nations which opens tomorrow. President Truman will fly from Washington to deliver the main address and is expected to emphasize "unfounded fear of war" is throttling progress of inter national co-operation Vancouver Bralorne H-60 BJI. Con it B.R.X - -13 Cariboo Quartz 2.95 Dentonla ... 33 Grull Wihksne , .H'i Hedley Mascot 1.44 Minto 05A Premier Border 07 Pend OTeille 2.90 Premier Gold 1.35 Privateer 59 Reno 13 Salmon Gold 21 Sheep Creek 1.20 Taylor Bridge 80 Whitewater 01T3 Vananda 31 Congress v lUi Pacific Eastern 51 Hedley Amalgamated .. .15 Spud Valley : 18 Central Zeballos . 10 Oils A.P. Con. , 11 Calmont 22 C. & E. ........ , 1.62 Foothills - 1.70 Home 2.50 Mackenzie King Government Is Left WW) Slim House Majority Results In Both Parkdale and Portage . Were Close Two More Lawyers In OTTAWA (r.P Prnrressive-Conservative vic tories as a result of yesterday's by-elections in Tor- onto-Parkdale and mortage la rraine umj uuiwi government holding the slimmest overall majority any federal government has held in the House of Commons since tne snort ran .."m JOHN BRACKEN HAILS VICTORY Sees Results of By-Elections as "Censure of Government" OTTAWA, (CP) Progressive-Conservative Leader John Bracken today hailed his party's victories in the federal by-election as "censure of the government for failure to achieve industrial peace and meet housing: problems. "The voters have spoken in the language of democracy," he said. INDIA IS TDOIIRIFn 1.1 IVw U Lr bLI IJttl Ilooe of Early 'irtctrf Restoration of Peace Between Hindus and Moslems new DELHI. O Troops were strengthened in East Bengal today as bloody Hindu-Moslem warfare threatened a crisis for India's voune interim govern-1 - - 7 ment. There seems uuie nope oi i early peace. The government said that ifinn men two battalions ana brigade headquarters would join 2500 soldiers and 450 armed noliee in troubled Noakhall ana Tippera districts east of Cal cutta. Refugees from the troubled ... . . .... , ii zone told oi Kiumg,- lumuis, burning, forcible conversion and abduction of women for forcible marriage. Refugees number 40,000 In Tip-nera alone. Moslems outnumber Hindus five to one In East Bengal and both Moslems and Hindus agree that the Moslems started the dis turbances. LONDON, tf) The Central Electricity Board has approved to provide 1.029,000 extra kilowatts at a cost approximating $160,000,000. : : TODAYS STOCKS : : ' Toronto Aumaque .60 Beattie 1-20 Bobjo 15 Buffalo Canadian ' .20 Con. Smelters 81.00 Eldona 44 Elder - 1-03 Giant Yellowknife 5.90 Hardrock 55 Jacknife - 12 Little Long Lac 1-65 Joliet Quebec 61 Madsen R. Lake 2.90 MacLeod Cockshutt .... 1.55 Moneta 60 Pickle Crow 2.77 Omega . 17 San Antonio 3.80 Senator Rouyn 45 Sherrlt Gordon 1-93 Steep Rock 2.40 Sturgeon River 20 Lapaska 39 & God's Lake 62 Negus - I-91 Heva Gold 54 Aubelle 39 Harricana , -20V2 Mackenzie R. Lake .85. lawyer, alderman and veteran of the First Great War, won the traditionally Conservative Tor onto seat over Lt.-coi. Jonn W. G. Hunter, Liberal, his closest rival. ; cal' Miller, another lawyer, took the former Liberal seat' In Portaee la Prairie over Jaffray Wood, Liberal, and Sidney Coul- thard, C.C.F. Seyenty-seven of 78 polls gave Coulthard 2809. Miller 4590 and Wood, 4036. In Parkdale the complete 168 polls- gave Ford Brand, C.C.F., R547: Hunter. 7.643: Mrs. Eliza beth Morton, Labor-Progressive, 969; Len Palmer, Social Labor, 96; and Timmins, 8,193. Loss of the Manitoba seat by the Liberal government followed by a month the loss of the tra ditionally Liberal Pontlac seal In Quebec to a Social Crediter. -' te government now has 125 ; J.finrthcHouse:Ot;CoHinions-; Skiing -with Progressive-Conservatives, 67; C.CJ, 28; Social Credit, 13; Union Natlonale (Quebec), l; Labor-Progressive, 1. One seat Is vacant. PAYMASTER IS UNDER ARREST LONDON. CP) Major William Olmstead Smith of Reglna, paymaster of the Royal Canadian Army Pay Corps, Is under arrest pending the promulgation oi findings of a court martial wmcn tried him on charges connected with the use of Army tunas. Smith pleaded guilty to fraudulently misapplying to his own use $34,400. THE WEATHER Synopsis A deep low pressure area is now moving northeastward over northern Vancouver Island. The disturbance which moved Into southern British Columbia dur ing the night will continue. Its motion northeastward over the interior today and Into Alberta tonight. A ridge of high pressures appears to be building to tne west of the northern coast ana will bring about an Improvement from the west tomorrow. Forecast , Queen Charlottes and North Coast Cloudy with rain showers, becoming widely scattered this afternoon and clear ing tonight. Clear on Wednesday with increasing cloudiness becoming overcast by evening. Northwesterly winds, 25 m.p.h, over the Queen Charlottes ana northerly, 20 miles p.h. along the northern mainland becoming northwesterly 15 m.P.h. by afternoon. Southwesterly winds on Wednesday. Cooler. Ground frost tonight. Mlnlmums: Fort Hardy 33, Massett 32, Prince Rupert 34. Maximums on Wednes day: Port Hardy 48, Masseti . Prince Rupert 47. Lord Halifax to Live In $ table DONOASTER. CP) Lord Hall-fax announced todajr that he has sold HIckleton Hall, his big Yorkshire home, and plans to move into his stables. The size of he establishment and staff difficulties are glvenas reasons for the mdv'eV''1"'