provincial i A m - ALVATION ARMY Borrows 9l Ah'JW-:. ' : a RED SHIELD . V , ' Y1S 4-14 I tides tironu, c. c. KAY 31 1 (OL APPEAL - J it " L. September 27, 1953 mc Standard Timet Quota $3500 I 4:03 - 193 feet t 15:58 21 2 feet NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER TO DATE: "i : r 22:41 9:49 3.7 8.7 feet feet Published or Canada's Most Strategic Pacific Port "Prince Rupeit, the Key to the Great Northwest' $2,300 i - ' VOL. XLII, No. 225 PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1953 PRICE FIVE CENTS it - f - t -,-f Mw; c: ru i. ,!) i , t erts ,-".. ' h i ice taken ? ' 5 " i, 1 1 ; - " ) w ft? : ,? i ' i i k K 1 mm mm mm mm. 1 - "V U five persons cliiugeu m U rakflHD a member of an unlaw- outside Hie mi ice Jnbly itv hull. August 2, told At Least 200,000 115 Killed, I, fUll'IU in WMt,w tcrday afternoon that l0rely watched the pro-ami when he saw they inn out of hand he had A started home. Left Without Homes Oraham McKcnzie, zu, By The Associated Press SAIGON, Indo-China. Nearly 1,000 persons are reed with rour omers mb had gathered outside hall, early August 2. re- 20 home at tnc request ,r Harold Whalen and I o 1 known to have been killed by a typhoon which struck the coast of central Indo-China, pham Van Ciao,. governor of central Viet Nam, announced today. I 1 nlly been dispersed by It was feared that the death p with tear gas. On trial KPiizle are Earl Batt. Flrwin. Clayton Jarvls i.ld Mcrvln Jnnasen. ul. which has been con- toll may reach 2,000. The ty 259 Injured i, In Storm j By The Auoc-lat Prrrw ! TOKYO. A roaring ty-i phoon swept over Japan's; main island Friday night j and e ai 1 y ' today,'1 wide-, j swiped the Uemin Tokyo t arey and left in its wak" J millions of dollars- in ,'J property damage and at j phoon Friday pushed flood waters over the whole region around Hue. The governor's an- j jjor three day, adjourned aouncement was only a prelimi nary report on the casualties. iv afternoon ml "- i-the defence until Mon- frnoon. At least 200,000 were left homeless after the winds and floods swept away their straw fczie told oeience counsel iarll) that RCMP Const. j , . ' i h ' L ' i,. y 4 : , t t-j I 4 , i f I I I r . i jl... ' 1 .' i " .-,,-.. ,. ! j i , v.-,...,,. lJl-iaiii.j.ii'a.3.-i-iLju.i-iiiii-iiiiii iiiminiimim inir i -' --a.. huts. The typhoon destroyed food supplies and rice in the fields, Thirty Miners Reach Safety After Blast TIMMINS. Out. t- Thirty gold miners, trapped from half a mile to a mile underground by a surface explosion, climbed to safety early Joday. - The men were trapped when two large compressed air tanks, used to operate hoist machinery of the Coniaurum mine neai here, exploded with terrific force Friday night. The explosion will shut down Coniaurum six other mines in the area are closed by strikes jf .iwttw .. . .. m ' . 6 was mistaken when ne It he saw him i McKcnzie i I on a truck at Frizzell's earlier in the evening 1 1 1 waving his arms and t Let's go get them." J.! that he followed the to the corner of Third ?i and Fulton Street with jF Graham and another ii d then went up Fulton forking his way through itd until he reached the at the i ear of Ornies and famine was feared as a result in Annam, central Viet Nam state. Medical authorities also warned of the danger of a iyphoid epidemic. Relief .operations were hampered by floods and continued rains. French warships and coastal vessels, assisted by helicopters, were taking medicine and other supplies to the strick least 115 dead. Skies cleared today as the storm swirled Into the North Pacific where It began lreftk ing up. Japanese national police said the bin storm, with 90-mile-an-hour winds nt Its centre, alM left 288 missing and 259 injured. Hundreds of thousands of Japanese were left homeless. U.S. bases In Japan suffered. DamaRP at Camp Otsu near Tokyo will run to $1,900,000. A landslide damaged the heating plant and an ammunition depot at Camp Mi.suru. Fivp warehouses collapsed ut the Kobe quartermaster depot. Communications between Japan and Korea were disrupted by the storm. One army type line was temporarily re- re. CAPTAIN BODEN . . . retiring Veteran Skipper John Boden Completes 48 Years Service By i:KI SANDERSON ! to V a n c o u v e r, inanoeuvering A sea captain who starU-d his j along Granville Street when It career as a deckhand aboard j was a plank road, sternwheelers on the Fraser river j He Joined the Union Steam-will Dilot his ship into Prince i ships in 1905 and after seven en area, a 90-mile coastal stretch between. Tourane and people started to throw ilie said. "I thought the for an indefinite period until the hoist can be repaired and compressed air pumped underground. Acting mine manager W. O. r ....... n Rnt u i . .j t... the village of Quang Trl. Aerial reconnaissance disclosed that typhoon floods also Ii mieht get out of hand las time for me to leave." It, he admitted feeling tien as he said "Cori-(.;ier pulled me out of a CLOTHED IN STERILE UNIFORM, a technician in the Zemun plant near Belgrade sifts penicillin powder. The plant produces over 200 billion units of the drug per year, and machinery for the penicillin production has been contributed by the United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund. UNICEF has given over $15,000,000 to enable the Yugoslav government to carry out Its long-range plans toward betterment of child health in the " country. , caused serious damage in nones r.vT "c , w "'uw held by the Communist-led Vietminh. The pilots said Red-1 l a ra- w"5- wun noisr. 'on Third Avenuei and Rupert harbor for the last time held areas north of Doug Hoi. """""J wouia mst mem years on boats plying lower coastal waters, became a captain. Among ships which he guided It one of them and . tomorrow afternoon. violent shove along! He is veteran skipper John through B.C. rugged waters were, enue." The six-foot 2"2- j Boden who came to Prince Hu- 82 miles north of Hue, were w urmw mkjcku uu vi covered by water and that Vlnh. operation, he last of the men, Vietminh administrative capt- reached ground level following a .hading, hard climb up part of the tal and a. .military base, ? n SlJfV ' - been heavily damaged. - 4 ' 1 .. .... .- . A ' k 1 r- L il il ' I : ' 'ft:.' - V. t A ! V 1 ' . . ' I it I , , ' .'si ' . - " c . - ' ( ' . ; . 31. 1 " u ' '.V 1 iKpiiz.e hi id that he did pert before Ihe city was started I the old Coquitliim. the Cassia, paired this afternoon, but It broke down flKain iiy way resist or obstruct ana laier wrornea aooaro irrinut- nnuic bum mc vo.u. , .. ers bringing supplies and food to I In 1906, he racalled In an In- surveyors. j terview today, he took supplies Movie-Goers Miss Gunfight In Lobby as Suspect Killed BALTIMORE (AP) A west ; wounded in the battle on the it was nearly six nours arter , the blast at 8:15 p.m. that the I last of the miners reached W Kllimai ior worners du ,u- Captain of the Union Steam- ' ... I (., the h Hranrl Grand Triinlf Trunk PftClflP Pacific Some news copy reached I Tokyo from Korea via a British j commercial telegraph firm j which routed messages through ( Hong Kong. - The Japanese coast guard said . iihins' SR raniosun. ne is reunne - " ) safety. They were caught ground on various levels below k'able. iile's evidence was sup-iarlier by testimony Riven fiam who described the 11 the evening of August i he, MoKenzie and two Rhad spent the evening driving around. drlnkinR i'" - , Railway mow CNR. The sup after 48 years aboard ships ply Time Change Tonight Means Extra Sleep, coast desperado was killed andjinezanine of the Town Theatre. ing the B.C. coast. a Federal Bureau or investiga Shot to death in a phone I One of the best-liked and most ' ul .kimuiFi In pnuEla (ipr. 8,000 feet all the waydown to the 5,250-foot level. No injuries were reported and the men, although haggard and tired, were in good spirits. They booth as he tried to place a call in f nc Atiffolaa mac .inhn C.lcHn kmg and down Third up e the 71.year.0d captain was 1 be t w e e n Sixth and ; hfrn nt Kilmarnock. Scotland, in to small ships or boats were uink, but only two seamen were mown dead. The 10,000-ton tanker Chigusa Muru. which called for help during the height of the storm Fri-1ay nitiht, radioed today that British Columbians can have tion agent fatally wounded Fri-lay nieht in a blazing gun battle at a downtown movie house. Most of the movie audience, absorbed with the crime picture on the screen, didn't realize a squad of FBI men was shooting f Streets. . n,. .tiitK Kin naml.tji were reluctant, however, to talk of their experience. plies were transported overland to the work parties. "I've seen every place built along the coast," said the Jovial captain as he recalled how he used to plod up from the waterfront here to Orme's Drug Store, which first opened In a tent overlooking the harbor. In 1929, he was appointed cap-lain on the Cardena which used to transport supplies from Van ITi'llsed to d the rmirt that : . ...v she had repaired a disabled en- line and was heading for po: t it out with the trapped gunman. under her own power. I Another agent was seriously art; extra, tyMfef, sleep tonight when clocks go back' to standard time. Daylight Saving Time ends officially at 2 a.m. tomorrow. It started last April 26. In Prince Rupert, train arrivals and departures will change as follows: The eastbound train will leave at 8 p.m. standard time but the arrival time of the westbound will change to 9:39 p.m. standard time (formerly Johnson, 34-year-oid f o r m e r bank robber wanted for parole violation and as' a murder suspect. Agent J. Brady Murphy, 38, of the local FBI office, was shot in the lower abdomen and died today at hospital. Agent Ray Fox, 3P was shot in the hip. They were leading a squad of FBI men up ,the steps when Johnson being stalled by a Los Angeles operator on his call until officers could get there suddenly turned and opened fire through the glass door of the Workers' Body Found in Canal The body of a bridge worker, who apparently slipped off a i : ! to uiengarry, viiuuiu, n . Y was arrested severa ,d r It was on a warrant I ' j!ord Malume. He said i DROVE STAGES fr to his arrest he hnd 1 Senior captain now for the r.ird the name and de- i USS, skipper Bodcn received his "8 Constables Miller and : education in Glengarry and Ste. fit his name was Ma- i Anne de Bellcvue, Quebec, and S.Roth McKenzie and i n 1900 headed west. He started who was with the ac- i working on little boats out of i"ti accosted by the two steveston and at one time drove in later on August 2, said ; stage conches from Stevenstnn couver to tne many nigging camps and towns which were springing up along the coast. For 1 yeHrs. he piloted his ship through the treacherous coastal waters and made regular trins un the Skcena to Port Es- floating dock and drowned, was found in the waters of Gardener Canal at Kemano yesterday. 9:50 standard, 10:50 daylight). He was Jack Warkenpln, 34- Bus schedules have been on daylight time and now will year-old man employed on con 'asnt asked his name, fnve his correct address. i"iied by Mr. Hogarth, f sald'that he had lived " Rupert 20 years and OLD COl NTKY FOOTBALL slngton where four - canneries were in operation there. The ship usvl to call at all the canneries with supplies and went as far switch with the clocks to stand THREE SETS OF TWINS BORN HERE DURING MONTH Prince Rupert's third set. of twills In less than a month were horn yesterday at the General hospital. They are twin boys, born to Mr. and Mrs. Ralph T. Salonen, 309 Second Avenue West. One weighed seven pounds, 12 ounces, the other nine pounds. . Sent home from hospital today were the second set of twins, silso boys, born September 18 to Mr. and Mrs. Werner Eckert, 155 Ninth Avenue East. ' The first set were premature girls, born to Dr. and Mrs. .Donald Oakley, 127 Hays Cove Circle, September 8. One baby, Donna, died yesterday at Vancouver. The babies were flown in ' an incubator to St. Paul's hospital In Vancouver, a few days after birth. struction of a floating dock at Kemano beach camp, who disappeared from the Job Thursday afternoon. His body was found 'In about 15 feet of water about north as Stewart. At one time, said the captain booth. Murphy sagged to the floor. Fox fell backward towards the stairs. Other agents' moved up, emptying their pistols into the booth. The phone booth was riddled with bullet holes, the telephone book was punctured, and shat ard, so that there is no change so' far as the public Is concerned. Planes and steamships will continue on the same schedule, one hour earlier than the daylight times. LONDON (CP) Soccer results today in the United Kingdom: ENGLISH I.EAOI K it took two weeks to make tne f f had any trouble with ft- He admitted that In ! rot an examination for i to the RCMP but that! round trlii between Vancouver and Anyox. Division I ...o.u oi me resuns ........ win, i ct,.,rn.,iri imilrd 3 10 a.m. Friday morning, after a lengthy search by fellow workers. Mr. Wadkenpin was last seen at 4 p.m. Thursday. About 15 minutes later, other workers noticed his absence, and when WEATHER North coast region Cloudy tered glass lay around the floor. Johnson was dead when he Captain Boden brought the Camnsun Into the harbor here this morning and after discharging p.areo left for Stewart, Alice inSfeW C Pi !B'' ' Newcastle UniU-U 2. h .ld fZu ' Cardiff City 0. Arsenal 3. il irprio,rtler Umtl Charlton Athl. tlc 8, Uvrrp.l 0. I with showers today and Sunday, arrived at hospital. h failed to return, a search was continuing cool. Winds south Huddersficld Town 2, Middles erly 25 along the mainland and started. "or T. W. Brown, C is cross-examination bv westerly 25 In the western area,, An Inquest Is being conducted brough 1. Manchester Arm and Port Simpson: He is due back tomorrow afternoon and hopes to spend a couple of hours In port greeting friends before he sails at 8 p.m. for the City 2. Forts. :,S that MrKenvIo novnr subsiding to southwest 15- to. by Coroner W. C. Proby at Kemano. Warkenpln is survived by his wife; at Kemano. night. Low tonight and high Sunday at Port Hardy, 8andspit mouth 1. Preston North End 3, Bolton Wanderers 1. south. vJ!- . .1- " and Prince Rupert, 45 and 55. On his retirement, he's going to spend the winter visiting old Program to Assist Indians 't the rcmp exam re-ause he had failed. The ' said that he had no no believe that he had P 'he questions on the J re not very hard. !" by the prosecutor ' seven beers apiece the ' nd Oraham said they Fm a period of three f Benzie repeated that l1"11 be 21 until Doepm. friends and relatives. He s going first to Bella Coola and then will head for Lacombe, Alberta, to spend some time with his two Sheffield Wednesday 2, West Bromwich 3. Sunderland 3, Blackpool 2. Tottenham 1, Manchester United 1. Wolverhampton 8, Chelsea 1. Division II Bury 2, Doncastcr Rovers 1. Everton 3, Derby County 2. Fulham 3, Nottingham Forest 1. Called For by Skeena MLA ing recommendations to the Special to The Dally News VICTORIA A move aimed at (: '' i i'r . P year. He'd been going advancement of native Indians Saying that the committee brothers, David ana Kooeri, anu his sister, Mrs. W. (Jessie) Parker. Captain Boden lives with his daughter and son-tn-law, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Franklin, In South Burnaby. His son, Jack, formerly a skipper on the Teco, a B.C. Packers boat, is now a pilot in Vancouver. . .,2 years, t said, and had never "HoneH ok,.... is contained In a resolution moved in the Legislature by Frank could be of unlimited value to the Indian people of British Co ) fir , y "M : i I l . It - - ' ' i .' , " . " "t . . s ". r j , ""'ul nis age. ""Miberatelv hmhi tho Howard, CCF MLA for Skeena. Hull City 2, Brentford 0. Leicester City 4, Plymouth Ar-gyle 2. Lincoln City 2, U'ods United 0. Notts County 1, Bristol Rovers 5. Oldham Athletic 1, Blackburn Rovers 0. In his resolution, Mr. Howard Wposed lumbia, Mr. Howard notes that to date, no recommendation?, have been made to the legislature by the committee. asks that the provincial advisory Denn tvin n committee on Indian affairs, ap pointed by the lieutenant-gover Rothciham United 2, Swansea hn thought that the On r nor in council in December, 1950, be asked to conduct "appropriate investigations into Indian affairs, aiming for the advancement of native Indians." wic ptrson gome W Parlors," McKenzii n operator cannot & Person's age cor- Mrs. C. Laurie Renamed to Post A Prince Rupert woman hai been re-elected to the board oi directors of the Associated Credit Town 1. Stoke City 1. Luton Town 1. West Ham United 1, Birmingham 2. SCOTTISH LEAGUE Division A Alrdrieonians 2, Hearts 1. Celtic 3, Aberdeen 0. E'h w6 tpreutor that fr Llh eds they did He also asks that the govern, ment be requested to file wltb the legislature any recommenda Commins Rites Set for Monday Susan Margaret Commins, eight-weeks-old daughter 6f Mr. and Mrs. Harold D. Commins, 309 Second Avenue West, died at home early this morning. Born August 1, she is survived by her parents and one brother. Funeral services will be held Monday afternoon from Gren-ville Court chapel with Rev. L. G. Sieber officiating. B.C. Under feht : th Police tions that the Indian advisory : me crowd was uunaee i, uiyac u. maA i . Bureaus of British Columbia. She is Mrs. Catherine Laurie secretary-treasurer of the Princt Rupert Credit Bureau, who received word today of her reelection at a recent convention of the B C. association in committee may have made. He notes in the resolution that the committee was set-up for the purpose of inquiring into questions relating to the civil rights of Indians and other matters afiectintf Indiana, mid of mak ""a Rav Z Te counsel I saw . J.' McKenle said iaown bvfrusert Arnold he wabsyeRyal Hotel East Fife 4, Falkirk 1. Hibernian 4, Hamilton Academ- Partick Thistle 1, Queen of South 2. St. Mirren 3, Raith Rovers 0. Stirling 2, Rangers 0. THE DIMINUTIVE Shetland pony social register In Omaha, Ncbr., raised its collective eyebrows in shock recently, when Trlxle announced that she had given birth to a youngster with long ears. Reason for all the astonishment was the knowledge that the little colt s daddy was a mule. Shown at his mommy's side, the long legged, long-eared newcomer is still plenty cute. takers are in charge of arrange -ttentm, : nothing to ments. "4 : 1