Dispatched PROVINCIAL LI3?.A?.Y, 1 1 a JIigES DRUGS yiJVICTO.lI.'., 3. C. Daily Delivery ... NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'8 NEWSPAPER CABS vntUbv Cano,a' Most Strategic Pacific Port 'Trinca Rupert, the Key to tho Great Northwest" Phone 81- v VUL. XXXIX, NO. 202 rT7l Wr'ir dttttcti t n n mit?oniv - -1 Mil WS L3 . i ? BASEBALL SCORES Terms to be Made Known Council Defers I '' mum paign For Housing 'aiincil Feels Situation Eased In Any To House this Evening 0AVA, (CP) The Speech from the Throne, at the opening of the special session of Parliament this afternoon, announced that a bill would be introduced which would put railway workers in Canada back on their jobs immediately. Details were deferred until the House meets again at 7:15 this evening, in Le Allotment for Year Uwd Up , sine committee of the city council re- night's meeting that they had met with ton local representative of the National Adminisratirn, and had come to the agree- ni&ht session: now was not the proper time to press for Reason expressed for coming to that conclusion were that, with completion of Columbia Cellulose's plant at Watson Island, reduction In the number TODAY American Boston 15, Chicago 6 New York 6, Cleveland 5 MONDAY National Philadelphia S-9, Chicago 7-5 American Detroit 3, Philadelphia 4 Chicago 6, New York 4 Cleveland 14, Boston 15 6t. Louis 3, Washington 9 Western International Victoria 3, Vancouver 6 North Koreans Are Driven Out TOKYO North Korean force penetrated Into Pohane. tmnort- ant coastal port today, but were ariven out and fighting continued a mile and a half west of the city. . British ground forces I no regiments landed yesterday In Korea and are now In action. United States artillery and tanks were attacking road block? west of Pohang. s American bombers struck heavy blows at objective In North Korea Including a steel plant. Army Takes i, Over In ll.S, j ', !wouId probably be much greater ithan most pcoP,c azed and that the need for hnimln-T JkJL -MOUNTAIN RESCUE An R.C.A.F. helicopter hovers over Orouse Mountain 5,000 feet above ' th ground during a demonstration of mount ain rescue operations near Vancouver. Two unidentified climbers, in foreground, are waiting to be picked up. In the distance are the Olympic Mountains In Washington State. t (CP Photo) ! housing. xa at !iAntlM"t iPnilUII fVIHIVII ind Jtinrau Kepre- Ur Service, Highway Susie V.'lr.n ki represented at the dated Boards of t with members of .kar and' Junmu I Commerce In ai- iThe Ketchikan dele- led by Robert Ellis, e Ellis Airlines, Wll- , an attorney, and of Pan American hie First City group an amphibian air- and piloted by Mr. ii was represented at by Miss Elizabeth ho was re-elected us ice-president from n requested that a regularly would probably fall off, that a great number of present employees were transient and renters and It would therefore, the committee felt, be better to wait for a while before pressing the matter. In addition, Aid. T. B. Black .said Mr. Johnston had reported the national housing allotment for the year had been used up and the ten applicants had bten advised to put their applications In order to get in on next year's allotment. Many of the applications Mr. Johnston- had re celved, Aid. Black continued, were not even able to put up the small amount of capital required under the plan. Council accepted the report. FRUIT ROTTING TORONTO The Canadian Federation of Agriculture says that cantrloupes and pears are beginning to rot on the ground Okanagan and Niagara i canneries may have to close on account of the railway tr'ke. I The Prime Minis ter asked the Houre to waive ordinary procedure In ordur ,to permit the House to sit at night on the opening day. . - Prime M'nistcr St. Ladieut told the House that leave,;' was sought to introduce a bill which would permit of resumption of railway operations at the earliest possible moment. '".'Ti; The contents of the bill, the Prime Minister stated, were being revealed to Opposition leaders but not to the House or pre3 before tonight. v. t Yesterday, Frank HaU," chairman of the unions, said that the men would go back to work If me government ordered them to do so. " " C.C.F. FILIBUSTER If they consider the terms, of the bill unfavorable to the workers, they will take measures'to delay its passage, it was Indicated by party spokesmen. Steamships To Be Still Tied ; VANCOUVER Railway strike pending will not bring resumption of steamship service on ths i BriUsh Columbia coast. Seamen Ijof theCanadian National and Canadian Pacific have voted Sir ceui, m iavor or striking a;; , did seamen of Union Steamshins Ltd. Jast week. Tins means that steamship service on the British Columbia coast will be paralyzed even if the rail strike ends. , , Persisfent Car Taker Is Fined William Robert Stone Wilsher was today sentenced in city police court to six months' Imprisonment on a charge of taking i an automobile without permission of the owner. The charge ' arose from an escapade last week when Wilsher took an automobile from In front of the King George Hotel and smashed it up at Port Edward. It was his third con- viction on a similar charge: Also convicted was John Loean, a passenger In the car. HflTvas sentenced to ten days. : : ' Truman States Policy of U.S. WASHINGTON The White House said yesterday President Truman personally ordered Oen-eral ttouglas MacArthur to withdraw his statement on the delicate Formosa issue because it confused the United States position. In it MacArthur said Formosa Is vital to United States Far East defences and must remain in non-Communist hands. - To set the record straight, the President outlined the official American policy: "The U.S. has no designs on Formosa. The U.S. Is guarding it to keep war from spreading and the Island's future as a former Japanese terri tory is a subject for international settlement." arm L filiifj AIRLIFT SPECIAL Crews of., the 426 Thunderbird Squadron have to eat wehther at their home base at Dorval, Que., or-pver the Pacific. This RCAF Photo taken somewhere over the Pacific shows LAC. J. A. St. Laurent of .Levis, Que., dishing out coffee. (CP Photo) British Troops Land In Korea U.S. EIGHTH ARMY HEAD QUARTERS IN KOREA Two crack battalions of British troops arrived In Korea today from a British carrier. The carrier ST Wednesday, August 30, 1950 High 2:40 20.5 feet 15:08 20.6 feet Low 8:57 3.5 feet 21:19 4.2 feet brought from Hong Kong the WASHINOTON Railroads 'n, Fjrst Battalions of Argyle and the United States today main-; Sutherland Highlanders and the tained on-time operations under Middlesex RcgimenU. The wav-the army's direction but the )ng and shouting U.N. reinforee-labor dispute that threatened to rnnnts were greeted by an equally stop the trains Is st ill unsettled, enthusiastic crowd of Americans The army took over operation of and mmtary officials., the trains at 8 p m. E D.T.I Sun- i-1 Princess Is Named LONDON r- The daughter of Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip was registered to day by Prince Philip with the names Anne Elizabeth Alice Louise. She was born August 15 and Is the third In line to the BriUsh Tlme and place of chrlstening are not yet an nounce(j QC A Plane Kepi Busy These are busy'days for Queen charlotte Air Lines with Its loc- ally based Norseman seaplane piloted by Capt. N. Jermyn. . Today the plane is covering a wide area In all directions irom Prince Rupert. This morning at set with passengers and freight. Returning here. It set out early this a f ternonn nr a eharter flieht ito the Skeena-Naas forest sur Ivev and was to Dut down at Aiv- ansh. Lava Lake and Kalum Lake jwith men and supplies. Returning from that operation, It leaves late this afternoon for Ocean Falls to bring to the city a party of six persons headed by H. Bish- j op. Yesterday three flights were jmade to Masset Inlet with fif-j teen passengers and about 1000 tons of freight. -route be inaiiRUr-i In the k Ketchikan and , fruit i BIG NEW INDUSTRY Canadian Fishing Co. To Sullethu Littitiiiiiiittiiititiiiiti4i4iiiiitH KW'JllMtt Iff M THE WtATHER North Const Cloudy with a few . scattered showers; little change In temperature,; wind, westerly, 15 miles per hour. Would Remove Donald Gordon ' VANCOUVER -Eight hundred railway union men, meeting here last night, demanded the re- mbval of Donald Gordon, presi-; deit of Canadian National Rail- i . ..... ways, whom they desmoid as cliTcf stumbling block In rrpgotja tlons prior to' the railway strike. ' Six hundred railway union menj at Calgary passed an Identical j resolution. , A meeting at Toronto asked for Mr... Gordon's withdrawal from further negotiations. i 4- PRINCE GEORGE Clear weather hai brought cooler nights to the Interior. Thirty-five above s recorded here ! during the night. ' WASHINGTON President GETTING IT STRAIGHT Truman today sent General ' MacArthur in Tokyo a statement on United States policy In Formosa. Announcement to this effect was made at the White House. FLOODS IN CUBA HAVANA More than $2,000,-000 damage has been done and twenty persons were drowned in floods in western Korea. 30 CASES OF POLIO VANCOUVER Number of cases of polio in British Columbia reached thirty yesterday. Latest patient is a 10-monlh old Vancouver boy. There have been twelve cases so far In the city with others on Vancouver Island and in the Fraser Valley. OREGON MILLS CLOSE PORTLAND Many Oregon sawmills are on the verge of shutdown owing to the worst car shortage in years. Some mills are operating only three or four days a week. RUSSIANS LOOKING AROUND LONDON The Daily Herald says that Russian submarine officers are travelling in Russian freighters in all parts of the world to familiarize themselves with waters and ship recogni tion. PEI SESSION CALLED CHARLOTTETOWN Special session o the Prince Edward Island Legislature has been called to consider the situation brought about by the railway strike. Vital car ferries between Prince Edward Island and the mainland are Establish Cannery Here District Processing Operations to be Moved From Carlisle to Local Ocean Dock A new industrial enterprise in Prince Rupert was given the green light last night when the city council gave permission to grant a licence to Atlin Fisheries Ltd. to establish a fish processing plant on the Canadian National Railways ocean dock. The application said work would start as soon as permission was granted. Speaking to the application. tne Unlted States Army during Harold H. Thorn said it had been tne war . the Intention of the company The premises are ideal for a for a year now to get a cannery tlon witn operating In the city. It wouin u0. be one of the principal canner- very commodious warehouse and direct access to tail les in the district and would, space .mr.im, ,, t fn rm at. the ' and water. Carlisle Cannery ioay. inis wqi on orders or President Truman, who last Jfrl- day ordered the railways to be seized by the government to avert a natlon-wldc strike. will be used for winter storage of boats, equipment and ac comodation for seasonal fisher i'men and will be In a similar JfUMMUIl OS IfllTTU UlfUCl OIaifiUUO at Oceanic, Porcher Island and Wales Island. "Office administration will be maintained at the office of At- i tin Fisheries Limited which Is the Prince Rupert headquarters for the Canadian Fishing Co. Ltd. Plans are under way for extending the Atlln Fisheries Limited office to take care of the additional personnel necessary to handle the canning operation. "Negotiations for this move have been going on for some time and it was originally planned to be In operation this year, however, unavoidable delays prevented this being done. "A seasonal payroll of about 140 employees will be required to operate the cannery and it Is the Intention to use all local help. It Is expected that certain key men will move here and become permanent residents. "Havlns their cannery In town will round out The Canadian Fishing Company's operation as the Atlln plant carries on a large fresh and frozen fish business Including the now very popular machine wrapped one-pound packages of fresh fillets of halibut, salmon and sole. 1 us submitted by f delegation. The "tich was approved guested that Ellis o at present run i between lh" two n consisderatlon as carrier. CONSTRICTION Chamber and the Board of Trade sub- solution requesting ay be built connect ed the Taku River 8 properties to Atlln Highway. ? Company, are at. d Mining and SmeR- 1 and the Polarls-8 Company are at Nlng In the Taku we present time, are stoeknllort h,year and brnnoht rl. which is open station onlv fiv he 3ar. Officials nf Nanies have slated ce le development. ,c until the lnade- nsportatlon is re- hiRhwav 'Wah to Bwcie roiiU "St secl.lnn nf n, Possible to dock Mi. I noaa rrcni,,ti.. ?0 Unanlm.,,-1.. 1 we Domini,,,, and ",nua Eovrmmnni. '""ti Slnvi.u I,' "Win River to m a rnnri h .cioroint,;; 'lie r-souitinn re- ' t1)? UnitnH E.... fnt ,he Canadian "'U.S.tevrl. . ' """lal boi.nrio,.. . " mile tr. o,f..j- '"her ren,,.: ... Rial ' ,ru l"ai continue the Swe1e Point to TOFF ved Bi n .. honr;nz,",:r Slau. " mat tor Hio port t , '-""occis th In 01 of Z' "e ftmeri-L. "e road thisse'Z rCitr,lthouat 01 the fear m $14,O0.OA DAMAGES SAN FRANCISCO The t'nitrd States yesterday filed a maritime libel action vskinj SH.OOO.000 damages from the Luckenbach Line as a result of the sinking of the hospital ship Benevolome Friday night when at least 18 died. The action charged negligence on the part of officers of the freighter Mary Luckenbach. PLANE PASSENGERS SAFE EDMONTON A Hrht plane, missing In Northern B.C. r.ince Sunday, was foivvl yesterday near Findlay Forks, B.C., and its three occupants, one a two-year-old child, are safe, the R.C.A.F. reported. 18 DIE IN HURRICANE HAVANA, Cuba At "east 18 persons were reported to hnve been drowned In the hurricane that lashed Western Cuba. Property damage 's estimated at more than $2,000,000. Reports said that fruit crops, especially b"iMas, were ruined In the west. Considerable loss of cattle was also reported, CHURCHILL UPHELD STRASBOURG, France The The European Consultative Assembly last night endorsed the eventual European defence authority and a unified army as proposed by W.-nton Churchill. Europe's unofficial Parliament took the decision in the face of British Labor's objections h ya vote of 69 to 19 with two abstentions. CANUCKS IN FIGHT TOKTC The Canadian de-stoyer Athabaskan and Sioux have been In action again bom-harriing North Korean shore installations and railways. "SO EARLY END TOKYO The commander of the United States Fleet In the Far East sees no reason to expect that the Korean war may be over by Christmas. - ;! y A r' v 1 1 - -v f w v v v. f jt V . - . hciuht of the season. Chief need was water supply as they had nlrcMlri,, hnnn fit .'Of) nf Gllf firirnt rionfrioif" tjc for wanting the plant In the city was to be at rail head. Carlisle ennnery, which would be closed, as not. Engineers would be In the city at once, he said. Council was unanimous In backing the application. OFFICIAL STATEMENT , The following official announcement was made today: ' The Canadian - Fishing Co. Ltd., packers of the well known "SEAL" brands of salmon, are moving their Carlisle Cannery machinery and equipment lntoj n nice nupert ana win De in operation in this city at the start of the 1951 salmon season. "NcBotiations have been com pleted with Canadian National Railways or a long lease on a larae portion of the western end of the Ocean Dock and a start will be made to move In and set up the necessary machinery and equipment at the close of the present canning season. The lease includes the cold storage warehouse on the Ocean Dock which Is already equipped with Refrigerating machinery and this will be used in connection with the canning operation. The lease also includes the large machine shop Just west of the Ocean Dock which was used by LOOK, NO BARS It took a shaking Winnip eg newspaper photographer a lot of patience and work to get this photo. His editor order ?d him to get a shot of Louie the Lion in Assinl-bolne Park, but not to clutter it up with a lot of steel bars. Playful Louie first refused to come out to pose, then when the keeper did coax him out, he lashed the photographer across the face with a soggy tail. After six attempts, the photographer got his camera between the bars and took this close-up. cp Photo)