PROVINCIAL p?.:vi::::.".l ii2?.-.r, DMORROW'S 1 SALVATION ARMY TIDt &rfA. 2. C. J1S4 RED SH1ZLD ,aay. w h - f acific Standard Time) APPEAL S.it it.o icet 19:57 17.3 feet Quota $3500 1:50 7.1 feet NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER 13:43 10.9 feet Published or Canada'. Mosr Srrotegic Pacific Port "Prince Rupe.t, the Key to the Great Northwest" TO DATE: VOL. XUI No. 216 , PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1953 PRICE FIVE CFNTH $900.00 ff ' 111,11 T -:v " ' eamen m JL r - Wraebge ff Inlsi fmm !ned 17 ,. .. . ,. . . r .1 'i I - r .7 r " .i M M a b m mbi m m m m . nr a .1 I 1 ! Vi Vi U UUi7AiVijUUUU10juij ant waunman j in Hospital - i ?f ) British seamen fined $100 each in court here on a SETTING OFF FIRE ALARM BRINGS BOY SURPRISES - WEBSTER, Mass. AP)A seven-year-old Webster boy eot two surprises last night. He became curious about a fire alarm box and pulled the handle. The town fire whistle began to blow and the firemen found him still staring at the box when they arrived. Surprise No. 2 came along In the person of his dad, a fireman, who quickly got to the seat of the problem of criminal neg- i i i i Nothing Discovered Of Five Occupants By The Associated Press KETCHIKAN. Wreckage of a plane in which wealthy New Mexico oil man Ellis Hall and four pas-sengers disappeared a month ago was found yesterday at Boca de Quadra, a timbered ridge 35 miles ke loiiowine: me .Jin ing of the nightman of the Prince it grain elevator. -eririg in Prince Rupert ! Hospital Is Gus Mag-65, who yesterday had a bullet removed from his : . ! east oi nere. ine snattered plane was sighted about mid-day by a Ketchikan flier and well-known plane he flew back here and notified C. M. Ashby. an qil company representative who has been financing the continued search for the missing plane. 'wo sailors. Walter Geof- athlete. Herman Ludwiesetv nnrt Ltcr and Sulwyn John Wife of U.K. Diplomat Disappears From Home Bv The Associated Press GENEVA. Police said today the wife and three children of miin,r n,-;r,.u THIS CRIPPLE IS ONE OF THE MANY THOUSANDS seXr who are flocking into the western find nf it I" P,arCe'S f frCe f00d- After Plckin "P the" Pls, Ea t German" oft. to necessary elude Communist police who try to confiscate the ht-artek,, borne try to mail their food parcels from West B3din, but Communist police w re reported opening parcels posted from the west, confiscating those containing Cricln food positively identified by ground of the Merchant Prince laon. England, here for a i If rain, were told by Mag- parties wnicn beat their way through heavy brush to the scene. (Ludwigsen is well known in Prince Rupert. He was the kir w. D. Vance the Incident be a lesson to them, were charged under Sec- All Aboard Convair centre of Ketchikan All-Stars basketball team and last year Extra Artery Making New Men, Women Out of Persons With Heart Attacks fci of the Criminal code won the most valuable nlavpr diplomat Donald MacLean have disappeared. They have not been seen since Friday. carries a maximum pen- it two years in prison with In sentencing the Dair oinuiu nas cauea officially By ALTON I,. BLAKKSI.FP knee said he would deal award in the annual international series here. He is a brother of Harry Ludwigsen, the veteran Ketchikan basebaU player, who also nlavs aeainst. ba,:,ltJa,M f"""time work as ""-Tause of blockage of one or NEW YORK (AP) Rir-w i,. Killed well drillers, machinists, railroad both of the coronarv mtoiina il.fm under Section 1035 permitted a fine. man hearts are bclnc made uoii Sinking Ship Prince Rupert teams.) and strong again by giving them tne an extra artery, a Canadian sur knee disclosed that workers and physicians. Dr. Arthur M. Vlneberg of Montreal told an International College of Surgeons meeting. fefl come ashore and Dur Starts Race By The Canadian Press ALBANY, N.Y.-An tate of the five persons aboard the plane is not known. geon has announced. Men crippled - by - heart attack, a .22 rifle, taken It back hip and engaged In tar- The third whim OlbCIJF artery Ul brings II life oearcners reported rinding no American Airlines Con i IHC- scarcely able to work, now are saving blood to hearts starving trace oi tnem near parts of the widely-scattered wreckage, but i-iice. If they were shootine at tit, , iji a. r,urope-wiae search for the family of the man who is believed to have skipped behind the Iron Curtain and two British security officers have been sent to Switzerland to aid in the search. The British Foreign Office indicated it may make a statement on their disappearance later today. In London, William Didsdale, Foreign Office press officer, said It was a "matter of speculation is to whether Mrs. MacLean had left to join her husband, who vanished In May, 1952." vair plane crashed and For Safety ST. JOHN'S. Nfld o, I and pieces of wood In a VS. Coast Guard boat planned to go to the scene today to burned near here today Itxir they heard .someone scour me area. sinking Spanish freighter, the and were told that the and all 25 passengers and which normally feed the heart. Heart attacks come because the coronary arteries harden and narrow, or are blocked by clots. The dramatic operation takes an artery running through the chest and thrusts one end Into' a tunnel opened Inside the heart muscles. The fresh supply of blood brings a new lease on life. The third artery has been given successfully to eight out of nine men subjects in the last three years, he said. It can be done safely for any heart victim "who can walk lob feet or more." he added. Forthe spare artery, Vineberg uses the Internal mammary artery which nourishes tissues in TU- - . "Marte", today beean a frantic watchman had been led. Batev and Crnwlrv CLUB DOORMAN REWARDED WITH HOLIDAY IN US LONDON O Alfred Gibbs, retiring after 34 years' service as doorman at the American Club in Piccadilly, has been rewarded, by a, month's holiday in the United State . .me leiuiituiu were irom aUv . green de Havtland. Hall, -of Al- lne cleW 01 three were buquerque, N.M., was flying a I killed. race to port ... a race against time and the rising water in her arry the elderly man tn nn n lin elevator foreman- of- iwin-enginea ae Havuand of The 3.744-ton erain-iripn htJ that color when he vanished LThe ?lan.e. was om . . """ with his wife, two daughter, 1 slon 10 Chicago. Mrs. MacLean, 37, a native gave up attempts to patch the and iiu a a juuug young ii-year-oia 17-year-old friend iriena Tne crash u;u occurred in ui a a hp rested until taken itat. ,m . .v. tt'rf told Mr. Vance that he er had a rifle In his fMore and he realized the on a flight from Ketchikan lastf111 .wooded area .near. Uw August 17 to Bellinn-ham. .la Albany-Schenectady hlthvav. gaping hole In her tarboard side and headed for St. John's. oi Chicago, and the three Mac-. Lean children two boys, nine and seven, and a two-year-old Smithers. '.bout 10 miles west nf Alhsni some 560 miles to the northwest daughter had been livinir hor f es of the offence. Schools Loaded to Capacity As Attendance up by 154 of her position on the Atlantic, j Members of the ground crews I Ca!l'!t TaS not determined lm-The "Ported after "!.. tCT Marte annealed for hin darkness and i nie cnesi. une ena or tnis artery j is permanently closed off. with her mother. Mrs. Melinda Dunbar, for some months. Ridsdale told a crowded London press conference that two security men were rushpri tn The free end is placed inside Tuesday when " the "lc crew aDDear- ralny weatner forced them to Mwa, Bergeron, operator of -rew appear- ; . . iMVA ,h. ,ml t.t o easol ne statinn - .u. a nhing Areas W For Year tunnel created by separating ' " ea to oe loslncr their rinprgin suikusi; " .ci hi- .-..VI 7 Aus"'8 lne,r. oesperate lrBrrif,ri ,. . scene, said he rnnnkri n kii. An I.. f ..I CI . I - , ', . ... ... ...... u ..u... iiav uccii , - "..v.. Iniin TV. . , 8tnWn flpfkr thn h.i.nl battle at the pumps,, in a game attempt to keep her afloat. Trie mi uiiicaac vi auuui, iji pu-i TOinparpa io o in j une. Tne nean muscle tissue. Tne muscles f J ,cu VJ3" pils has been tabulated in the j Port Edward enrollment was! are not cut. They close back neva tne moment WhltehaU got School District 51 population j heavier due to the fact the 1 holding the spare artery In place! word Monday that: the woman .uu.iu. 41ICIC ,WU 1JO Sign Oil T .J4I5 HICtE. nthur nnnnl k.l 1 He no Saw saw more ttlflto btrtriiaa oodles inside, Inci. i accordinir to ficures relensed tn British Columbia' muin- Search for the plane," unnea states Coast- Ouar4 cutT ter Yakutat left he'r North Atlantic weatner Station, to snwri The plane struck the-central tower of , radio station WPTR. The plane was scheduled ducted by .American. RCAP anrl "wi north of thP nn . arade 4 pupils expected to at- Other blood vessels in thelTw .TT ' vanisnea tend city schools had to be , chest take over the job of serving ! wT a turned back to Port Edward duel the tissue formcrlv si.nnlicri hv ! M.acLean..and Guy BurgesSj I'M, which Includes the to the aid of the stricken Spanish ship. Prince Rupert Aero Club planes, was spurred by the offer of a $30,000 reward made by Condor Petroleum Comnanv nf Ahilonn to the large enrollment in city I the mammary artery. This artery " vl , S'1- crosf r schools. iUannarenHvsinciiiHrivfrp-fmm from England to France m 'leena, Greenvllle-Prin- W Butcdaie land at Albany Airport, about six miles from the accident A work Dartv from the cutter i '...u laai, ostensibly on a holidav. scene.- Other school DoDulatlon fig po all salmon net flshinc HplnpH lha Vfaxfao ... I .. AH ana vanished. vanisnea. Texas, in which Mr. Hall was i ...v. ...mio uich m an has been widely assumed I ""P a patching the hole ..in ii , i , .. with rempnt. tnrf nlnnlrc It -ciiu ior me rest of " the chief supervisor of they either slinnprt hphlnrl t.h hardening such as affects the coronary and other arteries. Dr. Vineberg said the oil driller now can hike 10 miles through brush country carrying a full pack. A machinist, unable to Vancouver announc- To Map Out a principal owner. Free gasoline was provided all planes taking part in the search by the Standard Oil Company, a subsidiary of Condor Petroleum. ever, today the Yakutat radioed the U.S. Coast Guard station at Argentia. Nfld.. that the Hatch r it had been rennrtori Iron Curtain or were kidnapped by Communist agents and taken there. No word has been heart of them since. h fishlnr hn iuh 1954 Season ures with June students in parentheses are: Borden Street 2'j'i i291; Digby Island 15 (13); Port Esslngton 33 (32); Inverness 14 (15); Sunnyside 34 (24). Worker Injured In Bridge Fall SpoHal to The DKilv News ing attempt had failed because i work 2,i years ago, now can put '"8 the Week In 1V, r. It is understood that r.nriwiir. of the awkward location of the A review of the Dast inurm' sen is In line for a major share of the $30,000 reward. leak, and the Marte began her race for land. in a ib-nour day when he wishes. A physician, victim of two heart attacks a year apart, now is back at his practice. 0 South Queen Charlotte "as Catches from Tu havc not yet been activities and plans for the 1954 will be the main Doints on th day from the school board office. While district schools are crowded to capacity there is no danger of children going onto a shift system. Biggest boost In school registration this month was at Conrad Street School where up until today 345 pupils are being taught as compared to 307 when the school closed in June. About eight of the Conrad School students are additions from the Port Edward School. Thirty Port Edward School pupils, are being taken care of at King Edward elementary school where the school population is presently 417. There were 385 pupils there at. June. When the new Port Edward school is completed the pressure on city schools will be relieved. Booth Memorial High School present school roles list about 583 students with another 35 additional ones exoected bv the The search Dartv said thn agenda of a meeting of the The operation io .t;.-o being TERRACE. In hospital here nsed now at other hospitals, Dr. undeiEoine treatment for back Vinnhnm coin Prince Rupert Little League Baseball Association called for next Tuesday, September 22, at the Civic Centre, President Art st Fixes -WEATHER- Synopsis A disturbance In the Gulf of Alaska will bring more clouds to the north coast Thursday but elsewhere sunshine is expected to predominate. Forecast North Coast Region: Sunny with cloudy periods today. Cloudy in the northern part and sunny in the southern part Thursday. RCMP Inspector injuries is Bin ineienoerg, injured In a fall frpm Star Creek Bridge yesterday. Employed by Columbia Cellulose on a bridge construction Jm Prices Williamson said this morning. The meeting to which parents of Little Leaguers and prospec R Daniels Dies in Europe Word has been received here of the death in Europe of P. J. Daniels, retired manager of the Bank or Montreal in Victoria and father of Gordon Daniels, 345 Fifth Avenue East. Prince On Plane Trip tive piayers between the ages of 8 and 12 years are invited is to jod. he was using a daw-bar to RCMP Inspector Taylor, head draw a SDike on the bririen ' ..- . . .'. New Rul ing wreckage was scattered over a half-mile of brushy, timbered land about 100 yards from the shoreline of Boca de Quadra, an arm of Revillagigedo Channel. , They said the aircraft apparently had been circling around. They said the right wing of the plane apparently clipped a mountain, sending the craft crashing to the ground. The party said the plane looked as. though It had exploded. Part of the cabin was located half a mile from the wing. The wreckage was at an elevation of 1,200 feet. The plane was reported seen in the same general area after taking off from Annette Island Aug. 17. After Ludwigsen spotted the j ------ ui me rriuce Kuperi suo-aivision when u ,u the k bar slipped and he was schertuled to leave this fell 15 fee to a rocky ledge, morninR by plane or whtte. narrowly missing a 60 foot drop horsei Yukon from wnk.n int to the creek bed. he wiU beKin a rouUne ,npec. He is being treated for a tion triD. He will rail nt. Arlin i Rupert. end of September as students rtwn tT pnee ms-S " 22 Series Little change in temperature. Wind westerly 15 today and southerly 15 tomorrow. Low tonight and high Thursday at Port Hardy, Sandspit and Prince Rupert 45 and 62. quit summer Jobs and return has ''as r0 Mermen's ended with rini. twisted back at Terrace Gen- Smithers and Burns Lake before oe neld in the Club lounge. Also besides the executive the association would like to see any senior baseball players who can offer constructive criticism before the official league is formed next year. The association hopes to lay groundwork for winter program for the Little League, which will include blackboard practices and active pitching and catching iiuiu uuu oi town, ims anuci-pated figure of 818 this term eral Hospital 1 returning. r7 y Judge Joseph Eigty years of age, Mr. Daniels had been holidaying in England and on the Continent. Other survivors include two daughters, Mrs. Q. Paulin. Victoria, and Mrs. R. Tillyer, Seattle, and three grandchildren, Terry, Ronnie and Elaine Daniels of Prince Rupert. lu has m.u.i uoinpares wun 0(8 students registered at the end of June. At Port Edward Elementary School there are 91 students as n.i tnai lair Fm 11 um "stone wne r7,. per pound StraU f and Fra-and' SSi? .P-nd for St. John Ambulance Launches Drive Reuther Urges War on Poverty MONTREAL (Pi CIO president Walter Reuther has Dronosed kreaa. 0 at)ove Es- St. John Ambulance Associa-1 tion, which has branches in 68 : Campaign chairman for the drive, which starts September P,es offered to lash k H it?1 that Canada and the United States wage International war Police officers, firemen, playground supervisors, forest rangers, school children, Boy Scouts. Guides and others also receive this training. The association also operate) 15 highway first aid posts whosi services have been praised b; Assistant Commissioner C. E Rivett-Carnac of the RCMP lr fme th.Mnt,5 per Pund! fnu flne uni(n demand-t kind. wn and 8 cents teuinCreased th" hair" Ve Clearlhue . B.C. against poverty to break tne back of aggressive Communism. He suggested last night that the two countries ship part of their combined 2,729,000,00-bushel wheat surplus to impoverished countries, either as a gift or through long-term credit, as one weapon in the fight. Borrie Elected To Head Chamber EDMONTON Of W. J. Borrie Of Vancouver tnrinv was elected h 1 h ?en "-ejected B.C. centres, is appealing . for $100,000 this month to maintain its first aid training program and services. The association, organized nearly 900 years ago by knights in the Crusades to free the Holy Land from Moslem domination, has been active in B.C. for 46 years. In that time, said Mr. Justice J. V. Clyne of the B.C. Supreme Court, who is president of the St. John Council of B.C., "ths organization has aided thousands of sick and Injured citizens." "The work of St. John is purely voluntary, and we hope that citizens will itspoiid generously to our apptal." 14, Is Fred B. Brown, president of Vanwest Logging Co. Ltd. and Deeks-McBride Ltd. J. Foley, vice-president of the Powell River Co., is vice-chairman. Prominent representatives of every major industry and business in B.C. have volunteered to aid in the drive. Money raised will be used for additional training facilities and to replenish and maintain supplies of first aid equipment in the 68 centres operated by the association. The association's big Job Is training men and women for first aid positions In B.C.'s rapidly-expanding industry and for posts in the West Coast civil defence program. ""' action. e - w,.. wt' !5. Its members serve in ail large public gatherings, in Red Crosi clinics, as nurses aides and 1c rehabilitation programs for th aged. "Their work takes them lntc the factory and the home and their voluntary first aid teams are always on hand to give help to the sick or injured wher. needed," said William Manson. B.C. vice-president, Canadian Pacific Hallway. I "" Hull. . r Mer" rjanJalel this nft.,. THE BRITISH TELEGRAPH SHIP MONARCH lies off Middle Cove, about six miles east of St. John's, Nfld., completing the western end of a new cable connecting Newfoundland with Via TTnltpH WlncyHfim Tim nahlo uroa flriotarl ij ... n j ... . . K'ng347- president of the Canadian Cham , eat frofn - - o - - - laiiu uii KmyK.y uu arums. Alter completing the cable to a point 250 miles off Newfoundland, where tt will be splined to a line from Cornwall, England, the ship will complete the network r.y connecting Middle fve with Halifax ber of Commerce succeeding L. W. Simms of Saint John, N B.