i ppw '"".:' -Li-Hump imm p i miiwi null "" ' i Roving Gangs Causing Havoc in Polish Cities Planes Circle X-Y- 3 beat up their teachers. It adds: the spoiling of park benches, at-"The range of hooliganism tacks and fights which often consists of public rows, foul end with bodily injuries and language, window breaking, des- even death of the person attrition of public property, like tacked." TODAY and WEDNESDAY Evenings 7 By KltlnIiU OREGAN ViliNiii i . Hundreds of "teen-agers have been arrested 1 in Poland in recent weens in a drive to put down acts of hooliganism by roving gangs of young rowdies. i Police newspapers reaching here report lrequent raids by police in cities like Warsaw, Krakow and Lublin and in smaller towns. The young rowdies are rounded up and sent to labor camps. i Western diplomats in Vienna see the rowdyism as an expression of restlessness of Polish ...UK emn,lin!cl rvt)-tr JF n ""-iih" fiflpffintfT' :-:bij i sviuurr Over Grounded RCAF Crew WINNIPEG CP) A It- "- Dakota aircraft circled Monday nlht over three RCA' personnel, strande J In helr Nor;emar on an unknown lake In the sub-Arctic since Saturday. The Dakota was tp, circle, until a rescue pane arrived to ensure the prsii ;tm of t'if grounde. craft would not be lost. Th ? ')uii(led airmen were spotted by an Edmonton crew about 10:4) p.m. Monday when flares were feen. Aftsr that the Norseman crw of pilot FO. O J Fisher of Duparquet, Que., LAC. G. M. Dawe of Vernon, B. C, and LAC. J. W. Bradley of Stureeon Falls, Ont., - turned en their ill REV. GEORGE BEAI.TREGARI i TOTEM Extra "HOMEWORK" "GRIDiRON GOLIATHS' JUUUI Willi VUlll.iiuiitov lions, and only Indirectly as a CARTOON TIIE FIUT FOI R CARLOADS of a 750-ton ship nent of pressed barley for the hungry children j' of Korea is loaded at Saskatoon, Sask. The shipment resulted from a financial appeal launched ; by the Unitarian Service Committee for $100,000, enough to provide daily feedings of barley gruel for 125,000 Korean children for three months. A Canadian dollar provides a month's supply for ' five children. A second shipment will be sent fr m Peterborough, Ont. , J .JtTmii flickering land lights and then made radio contact. The rescuers then told the base at Churchill and they were relieved by another Dakota which patrolled the area all night. All the Dakotas In the search were equipped with additional gasoline tanks to fly 11 'a non-stop hours. form of anti-communism. j The newspapers say Commu- ! nlst youth organizations have been infected by rowdyism. On a '. recent excursion "the first cul- tural and educational demanr,' of the Communist youth leaders was an energetic demand for vodka," one newspaper commented. The Juver.ile gangs appear similar to those warring with authorities in some United States cities. NEWSPAPER COMPLAINTS Newspapers make these complaints: Gangs of young thugs attack "respectable people" on the t i streets of Warsaw and other ! cities in broad daylight. They I enter state-run stores and beat C3 On The Same Program The missing craft had been j At Least Half of U.S. Medium Bomber Fleet Composed of Jets 4 WASHINGTON UP The U.S. i And by the end of this year! These 'developments appar-Xlr Force, racing against the I the last of the Second World ently figured iii the recent de-irrowth ' of the Russian airpower, War design conventional engined , cislon to rely less on manpower Last Show 8:30 "AIR CADET" REV. ARMAN J PROl'LX WITH B-29 and B-50 bombers mav be and more on airpower to main STEPHEN McNALLY GAIL RUSSELL located sunaay ana men lost, due to the difficulty of fixing the location of the flares. The lost trio reported no frostbite, despite constant temperatures of close to 50 below, and all were In good spirits with no Injury. Fit. Lt. C. W, Bounce Weir of Dauphin, Man., will leave Churchill at 9 a.m. today in a ski-equipped Otter With fuel and additional heaters for the airmen. Heaters will be required to warm gone from the medium wings, ; tain the U. S. military position replaced by the atom bomb tot- j in the Far East now has at least half its fleet of strategic medium bombers composed of swift, high altitude jet craft. CAPITOL I ing Boeing B-47 jets. TODAY to WEDNESDAY ! In 1053 deliveries of all types of military planes from the air If I-anions Plajei's Thettrr. up the managers and assistants, apparently just for the fun of it. They assault poiice, turn Communist-organized . dances Into brawls and have such defiance of the Red regime that they break up Communist meetings. The hooliganism, says the Warsaw newspaper Zycle Wars-zawy, has even reached the point that high school students craft industry totalled about 12,000. Accelerated deliveries coupled with crew training during recent months, it was learned today, have enabled the strategic up the Norseman's engines before takeoff. Whether they will I continue on to their previous ctocCoMFORTABU air command to raise to be-1 destination has not been decld r1 - CPA BREAKS RECORD ' , : ON HONOLULU FLIGHT ; I v f. VANCOUVER (CP) A Canadian Pacific Airlines plane ' , carrying 37 passengers and a crew of five, Monday shaved 34 minutes off the record time for the Honolulu-to-Vancouver 1 flight when it landed at Vancouver's International airport in ' a rainstorm. The big DC6-B airliner completed the 2,800-mile flight in ' seven hours and 54 minutes. The CPA held the former record of eight hours and 28 minutes, set Dec. 17. tween eight and 10 the number ed U.S. Prisoner " k The missing plane was cn of medium bomber wings equipped with B-47s. A wing of that type normally contains 45 pVftn 6.F Goodrich Escapes Camp SEOUL A lanky Texan j returned over the holiday to the . arms of his Japanese bride after j 400-mile mercy mission irom Churchill, Man., to pick " up a sick Eskimo at Baker Lake. N.W. T. The men's stubby, ski-eauip-ped Norseman wa3 forced down 1 31 months as a prisoner of the Communists the last three in Saturday, In the snowy wilderness about 1.000 miles north of Winnipeg. ' FOOTWEAR planes. RAPID RED INCREASE The rapid increase in the Soviet Union's operating air fleet of jet and rocket-powered interceptors has made more urgent the conversion of U. S. strategic fleet from the slow (400 miles an houn piston-cngined bombers to the high speed (over 600 miles a houn jet piunes. For long raiige heavy bombardment the air force at present art Island in St. Lawrence Finally Gets Electricity Teachers ; a pro-Red Camp he said Is cowed by dagger-aimed leaders. Cpl. Claude J. Batchelor, 22, of permit, Tex., slipped out of the , camp near Panrnunjom In the darkness of the first hour of the new year and said he would have come back a month sooner had he not feared harm. He thought "quite possible" others of the 21 Americans there would follow him. j Await Word ing Madelinots is traditionally a time of courting, visiting and general merrymaking. Fishing REV. FERNAXI) FAl'CIILR HELD BY REDS Three Quebec missionaries are reported among several known to be under arrest in Communist China. Rev. George Beauregard, a Jesuit of Marieville, Que., and Rev. Armand Proulx of Ste. Agathe de Lothinlere, Que., are two of five missionaries named in a list of those held by the Reds, reported by the British Foreign Office. Rev. Fernand Faucher of Montreal was not included in the list but is known to be under house arrest in Shanghai. GRINDSTONE, Magdalen Islands, Que. (CP) Electricity has tome to these windswept islands that stretch 60. miles in the Culf of St. Lawrence. KEEP YOUR FEET WARM IN '54 WITH ri.KKf E-I.INED OVt.RBOOTS Zippered or Laced Men's Rubber or Leather Tops . Ladies' Fur-Trimmed Children's, Ladies' or Men's Pullover 1'leece-I.incU Boots . . . Very Dressy FASHION FOOTWEAR From Board for lobster, cod, mackerel and haddock has always been the has about four wings (30 planes eachi or Convair B-35 bombers. Thep Vinoc nlanes enn enrrv 40 Previously, the only electricity , main activity, and there is some Inn. r.1 h" ml f an,, Iflnri In- I JASPER PLACE. Alta. (CP) was at the hospital and a few off-season farming, but not fish Dlants that hid their own ! enouch to supply local needs. plndinir hvdmaen weanons. at I The next development In the.i in this 1 mrrln-ate niives anri ooerate strike OI H teacners suburb of Edmonton is expected generators. Now the rlcctriritv 1 Winter's ice still stops the co-operative's generating plant ! steamers to Charlottetown, Pic- HISTORIC ( Ill'RCH : The ancient Cathedral of St. I Mark at Venice, Italy, Is distinguished by its five domes. tou and Montreal, but now thcr ; over a radim of more than 5 000 i miles with lesser loads. Their I 'peed has been stepped up to nb'ivc 43.i miles by adding four ' jet engines to the "ix piston is regular air service all year to New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island. There is long nt Grindstone supplies most of the 9,200 .inhabitants. Diesel engines using oil were needed for the Rcneralors bi cause there is ' no waterpowcr on the low, tree By CHIC YOUNG The Voice With The Smile Wins BLONDIE distance telephone service, and to come from tonights school board meeting. , The teachers at six schools In Jasper Place Alberto fifth-largest community, did not return to classrooms Monday morning after ie,";Clfrlstmas vacation.5 WH They were unable, to agree with the i schooK board on the , -, l-, , -T'LffiWiH r '".; . t if : n ! DclWorv of Hie f 1-st prcduction I a Department oi Transport less isles Av Took out- x I urot rr. t c I. fiiN,3 r,SN Y V , ' .. "S - s. - V LCn . Electrification cost an esti- wireless station. j items of Hie FociiT B-52 h-avv, muted iii00,000. The Quebec gov- With a new highway built ; all jet bomber Is expected to eminent ' pays 75 per cent of since the war, the islanders i start next fa'!. Thit plane, whlb tlic cost; the islanders the bal-1 have several hundred automo- larking ih -o of 'he n'on- I 1-, v. w" KAU LULU I Ell J v VI Jk J t 'mm' 1 L dale a government aruiuauun than ance. biles and a bus service IinKxi3 1 enninccl B-36, flies faster Winter for the. French-speak- most of the islands. th medium B-47. To compen-sa'e for Hie hi(;h fuel consump tion of the jet engines, "the" B-521 The Prince Rupert Daily Ncv.s-' Tuesday, January 5, 1954 is b-'ng enuiped for mid-air refuelling from tanker planes. 1 It,,- tci ft. 1. '10 . e4 -i tv T-f" "'' " "A MX. X -r-y-r- -V. T s. -,1.7 L i,m ijti it. i 1 I t. L rttl 1. u I tSA.i S.N u.: s-i mt, w ITA wzm- board award should go into el-fect. . . Tine arbitration board recommended" rasCNoVetilDet ChatT'lhe minimum annual salary should be . Increased to $2,000 from $1,800 and be retroactive to Sept. I last. The teachers accepted the nward but. the board, after first rejecting 11, agreed to the salary boost but approved lt coming into effect Jan. 1. In Alberta, the findings of an arbitration board are not ' binding. Dr. W. H. Swift, deputy education minister, said k. 2 Pipe Ordered ; For Extension : To U. S. City y Yum By ZANE GREY KING OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED From ALL OF US XI LL PICK A FiLD HAK TUB HOSPITAL .' S , VANCOUVER CP Pipe to extend Trans Mmntain Oil pipe ' MY HuCH'A4 Xl&tlT.' 7MisS fkl I eoOM .' CCODIHC TO K CAVT,Ht ' 0T 'j doni foeser hi wink yvuHLLOfrrnAT t CUFF, tO MIL tpO AHMAD MTU HI PI At line f'em here U: Ferndalc. Wa.h., has already been crdered, 1- there "isn't any statute under which the teachers can be required to return to work." Some 2,300 students In the six schools were without teachers. ALL OF YOU E pipeline president J. Grant Spratt said Monday night. Mr. Spratt arrived here Monday to take over as head of Trans Mountain Oil Pipe Line Co. Ltd. - ci- eAjHeee, aovwe--ySs foBBHGivu ha ye wlXf ljy i THBAIUPOGTIVTH If fTNf,"! & l f Only four turned up for classes He said all riht-of-way has Monday morning. Unaffected ; i: , u ' p ? been obtained for extension of were two classrooms of grade the line to the General Petrol- one for Roman Catholic pupils, urn Corp. refine-y n3w under, Roman Catholics In higher WALLACE'S DEPT. STORE construction in Ferndale. grades attend public schools. The strike Is the first strike ' aiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii The pipeline runs to the coast from Edmonton, Alia., and went 'on stream" late last year, de By AL CAPP of Alberta teachers In 13 yearj. The teachers rejected an Invitation from officials of Jasper Place, mainly a residential district, t" nttend special nret- III ABNER livering 28,000 barrels of oil daily to Vancouver Refineries. Gen eral Petroleum will take an ad WELL, ALLWE. KNOVS AOUT HON CASE WE LL SCRAPE UP Th' J AM AH V I I BUT, MEANWHILE I IO,CXJO SOMEHOW V AVES IO II WHUT MAPPEMS WE GOT OUR LIFE- A CEMTS A WEEK. L I I TO PAPPV ? SAVIN'S O ft-4-.oo-l WE'LLWORK A I aV- ditional 35,000 barrels when the Ing of the school board Monday PRINCE RUPERT TO K GQTT4 i J &T TWET A Sfaooo,M IN THEM DAVS.THEV CALLED 'EM 'rAUNS '.f THEV CKASE& GAL, DANCED ALL NIGHT. IS WHAT WE REAP IU GREEK refinery is finished next year, night. The meeting was nut Mr. Spratt said. I n-.u. Dl PN T WORK, ATE C QUICK. AN'AH SAVES A I IT OUT, AW RIGHT- J TrgfL-K MVTHOLOGV. MVTHOLOQV. TT"! PENKN A WEEK. I Vl , 'T' f-""S I W, J AN' CHASED GALS. T li.ij r??7 j Milk is 'Bottled Sunshine' KETCHIKAN $15.oo if: For Growing Children V.RANGIXL $27-oo By STAN DRAKE THE HEART OF JULIET JONES JkW I LI rUDUl IV V IP I CON'T BUEA ton 7n OUT OP THIS SLACK ' TW'., I HOLE PRETTV QUICK' Milk, rich in Vitamin D, is essential for children who are unable to get enough sunlight. Your children will love the farm-fresh flavor of our wholesome milk. Phone 18 WHEN YOU rJXMkW.-T XX S HELP ME, ILL JLNEAD Kl V $41 40 ; jh I J ; TH4TS TVPICALOP THIS GHOST rT't'' I WAMT TO.' THE X T14 2- H. I ' V TOWN,'" ONE LOUSY TRAIN A DAY. I I R.-OA ! . QOICS 1 SHAKE THIS "Z . - 'fiT HOW MUCH L0N6E? i MISERABLE PLACE, THE " I S-V-i 1 j' xXJp-m-mlJ (35 : WAPPIER I'LL &E. x ISm ill jT7 1 coupla minutes. X OyT7rpT " ' V s ,l I (VHITEIIURSE For Home Delivery I LI HI 6 I C AIR $5600 I LLLi J LINES Northland Dairy Limited NORTHERN PRODUCE FOR NORTHERN CONSUMERS SEATTLE $6500 3rd Ave. THE Ask about our GROUP Fares Phone 266 Office opposite Post Office) 11 i ii U'