ARROW'S TIDES PROVINCIAL LI! Syro apples October 22, 1953 will be i Stard'ird Time) 1) 4;") 21.3 IC'l't delivered Sunday. 12;4S 23.6 feet NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER 19:' 6 41 18 0.8 4.4 feet feet Published at Canada's Most Strategic Pacific Port -"Prince Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest" ORDERS PLACE YOUR NOW 1 v r VOL. XLII, No. 245 PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1953 PRICE FIVE CENTS -. i .,. ' ' . i r-J. n 5 I .... .4l j. U U nnnonn n nn n n f sm wmm m - i m ill i mm a mm i r .m. m 3 y: judirg to ill ynicMiJgp , hmmm t -7TS3 ,tilt Asks Repatriation Without Coaxing By The Associated Press PANMUNJOM. A smiling United States soldier quit the Communists today and said it is "more than likely" that some of the other 22 Americans who cast their lot with the Pweds will change their Iff!--. L-' i . .--VV-" J7.'"r.'; ;.VV Tension Increases In Trieste By The Canadian Priess TRIESTE. An -uneasy quiet lay over this disputed free territory today in the wake oi ivjw threats by Yugoslavia's r z ' 1 r" 7i tJ ''fr ' VV The Friendly Type hllRA ENTHUSIAST (left) was delight-d to have Mr. Black BcarDose for a movie the Gieut Smoky Mountains, N.C., but didn't bargain for his hammy nature. When tame anim:il climbed near the car window, the lady Inside held her distance (rlnht). President Tito and demonstrations by student? in Italy. Three Italian divisions face (nber Seeks Further Clarificatidn Surcharge on Cargo From Orient minds. Apparently in good health, Cpl. Edward S. Dickenson of Big Stone Gap, Va., was turned over to the United Nations command today. He was the first of 359 unrepatriated Allied PoWs to return to the Allies. "It sure feels great to be back in the hands of the Americans," Dickenson grinned to reporters at the short transfer ceremony. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Van Buren Dickenson, who live in a remote cabin In the southern mountains, were joyous. BIG WELCOME "If you can," his mother told a reporter, "I wish you would get a word to him tell him nobody hereabouts thinks hard of him for what he done, and we 'will all give him a big welcome Crews Safe As Ships Collide QUEBEC. A small Italian freighter collided early today with a big Montreal-bound Norwegian freighter in the St. St. Lawrence River 31 miles west of here. Department of Transport Signals said no one was injured. Reports reaching here said Yugoslav forces along the 90-mlle-long frontier, mnnouevring on the heels of Tito's warning their letter said. "May we sug- handicap to discourage consid-Rcst that the port of Prince eration of further shipments." ire RuiJi'rt Chaiiibcr ( if will write ag.iin to jAmbassadur to Japan hew a.skuiB further that his government would regard the handing over of any part of the free territory to Italy as "aggression" whether The Importers also main Rupert will never be treated as a Pacific coast terminal port until traffic is developed and in our opinion it will never be developed with surcharges In Italy sent troops to the area le sitULiUon whKn Rupert denied clas-: or not. .- a Pacific coast ter- 1 tained that the prices of oranges In Japan and the threatened outside competition had no bearing on the situation. They declared the surcharge was operative In 1952 when neither of these reasons applied. Because of this there I operation. Yugoslavia and Italy have long been vying for the territory, and the dispute entered a "The $4.50 per ton would most assuredly constitute sufficient surcharge on trans-ments to Rupert. I views between Mr. home." Dickenson was one of 23 Americans, one Briton and 335 South Koreans the Reds said new and crucial phase nearly two weeks ago when Britain and the United States decided to move out and hand over Zone A of the territory to Italy. Zone the ships collided in dense fog fill Vancouver import BOTTLES CONTAINING specimens of the half-million fish in the collection of Stanford University's Natural History Museum form a sea of glass on a museum staircase. The bottles and certain preserved items had to be removed while shelving space was remodeled. Student Jay M. Savage (foreground) holds a stuffed sturgeon. 's surcharges were dis- near i'ortneur, Que., 130 nuies fast of Montreal. The Italian WATER TRUCK'S SCHEDULE MARRED BY HEAVY RAIN le mummy meeuta iber. A has been under Anglo-Amer refused repatriation to remain under Communist rule. Dickenson changed his mind with no coaxing. The UN com snip was laeniinea as me l.iau-. , ton Carla Maria G and the Norwegian ship as the 1,258-ton Irr ;o correspondence ihamDer asking that Stugard. mand has not started efforts I I to persuade former Allied sol ican administration since the end of the Second World War. In Rome, students broke out of their classrooms for the second straight day to tangle traf-lice in demonstrations for Trt- made to remove tile, Memory of Life in Canada "Unpleasant' to de Marigny ALBUQUERQUE (AP) A city water truck crew stuck to Its schedule and drove out Tuesday to sprinkle dirt streets in northwest Albuquerque. But it didn't get the job done. The truck got stuck ia mud from the heaviest. rain the city has had. . - - 1n six months. , i diers to return. After the 10-mlnute transfer Vente.-. About 1,000 high school process, Dickenson was whisked The Maria was outbound lrom Montreal and was believed to be carrying tgrain. The Stug&rd was' bound for Montreal from Halifax. The Maria was run aground after the collision to avoid sinking. The Stugard stood by until and university students, carrying Italian and Trieste flags and shouting "Down with Tito," n Mandarin oRtive tWs icii', Mr. May- lue . lux jvu iu-if.e I'ntice Rupert JJ il hy the i'run.i-Uiit Colilerence out Pacini; tuu;,t tt r- there would be no ihis until ihe Con The colonial government ordered him out, and with his by helicopter to the evacuation hospital In Seoul for a medical checkup and processing. APPROACHED GUARD wife, Nancy Oakes de Marigny, she saw that the Italian ship he sailed in a tiny bout over Section 2 May Get School For Primary Grades in 1954 marched through downtown Rome as police watched but did nut Interfere. Youths of the neo-Fascist Dickenson made up his mind was in no danger, then proceed come back some time before ed to Montreal. Italian Social Movement scat siders the amount ol tered leaflets calling on Italy cargo to Prince Ra- stormy seas to Cuba. .. Nancy later, had her marriage annulled. Freddie wandered to the Dominican Republic, to Canada, - and finally to .New York. He is married now to Mrs. Mary Taylor de Marigny, a niece bulldint? to house primary (trades in Ropfinn Turn until a tlPW hllllri- 10 o'clock; Tuesday ; night.. The soldier , approached an Indian guard, complaining of, being ill nd asked' to be taken to the medical station outside the Later the Maria freed herself and turned toward Quebec. ,The 'collision ,'ocdUrred at a point where the St. Lawrence is less than two miles wide. i to stand firm against "Yugo- s the classification. j slavia, the ally of Russia.1 uig could be erected to replace ALLS MIAMI, Fla. (AP) Alfred de Marigny. whose name was em-brazoned in headlines 10 years ago, is leading the simple life of a salesman here, happy that he is about to. become a United States cltiion. "It is wonderful- to live and work in peace In a decent,, respectable" country," said de Marigny. "I am proud that this country may grant me citizenship." Ten years ago de Marigny was acquitted of a charge of murdering his Canadian father-in-law, Sir Harry Oakes, in Nas-seau. But the jury which freed him of the charge recommended .hat he be deported. Police, backed by a few troop.';, Borden school stockade. ;owncrs' policy is to of Byron C. Taylor, former number ol ports oi ir scheduled routes,' continued to stand guard at the British, U.S. and Russian embassies and the Yugoslav legation. TROOPS MOVE IN -me time ago Prince Tentative plans to open a temporary school for grade I and grade II students in Section Two next ycr.r were outlined by Dr. R. O. Large, school board chairman, at a meeting of the Borden Street School Parent-Teacher Association last night. He also said the board might Require a site above Biggar Place fir the proposed new building to replace Borden Street school. Dr. Large said the school board hoped to acquire a war assets Dutch Claim Reds Holding Canadian PoW considered as a ter-bui tins was turncu recommtiHlatlon of W -, i' i s, i- r I 1 ' t i'Y , 7 ;i7 ! i 1. j ' : ; t 4 ' ' , ..I., r , 4 1 f -' 4 t 4 ' 1" c . f a, r ' A ' t ' E r s - - ' I i . . i .f .. , 1 . Once there, Dlckensen asked for an officer, and an Indian non-commissioned officer asked the American prisoner: "What Is wrong with you?" Dickenson replied: "Nothing's wrong with me. I want to be repatriated." Dickenson then was segregat United States envoy to the Vatican. They are living In a rented house here but plan to build their own home. "Everything about my five years in the United States has been good. It is fair, and it is democratic. I work, I live a simple, normal life at my job and The Italian defence ministry announced Tuesday night that fi coimiuta,ce ol 8an I wo more divisions, armed with Amerlfcin-made tanks, have He said board members felt the site above Biggar Plaee would be suitable as a central location for the new Borden school, construction of which might start In 1955. Dr. Large told the group of the -!ilf lenities of providing accommodation for the rapidly increasing school population here and outlined school construction financing. The Parent-Teacher group also discussed lunch room facilities at the school, which were termed Inadequate, and planned to study means of Improving the school joined an iniantry divisions al it is iiuc wicie is a ' gram iuuving "ie Kuijert out inj Uigcty tiaiiua-J 0 ties ou r wilicil Hi.- tias riu ujikiui. ' ed from the other non-repatri ready dug in along the Trieste frontier I in my home. My wife is a grad-i uate nurse. She is from a fine family and gives her services to j the poor -in the clinic. I have CAMP FRIEDLAND, Germany ((f) Dutch former prisoners-of-war returning after almost 10 years in Russian prison camps said today that a Canadian is among prisoners still held by the Russians. The repatriates said a Canadian "air force colonel" is being ated prisoners. Wednesday morning, one of the other American prisoners reported . that Dickenson wls nxissing, a. reliable source said. " W UUuCCl L.I ,c f n , Bodies Removed From Plane VANCOUVER ! The bodies of five plane crash victims were flown here early today: The tra- Students Sought When Overdue PETERSBURG. Alaska (AP) widespread search is under wav for three 17-year-old high Italian sources claimed the Yugoslavas have distributed steel helmets and automatic weapons to all able-bodied civilian men on the Yugoslav side of the frontier. naa many irouoies ana sne is very understanding. "The memory of my stay In s uf ' '"ii;;! s aie t. : hi-le i ims ye.u a aiU'iiipuns u. ''She i' pi icfs as a He said the PoW. showing no let us say, unpleas- reaction, immediately went back neld at Russia's Cherbakov camp, Canada Is- lunch set-up. ant. They have a rule, article into the compound and told the bu' they were unable to give his ,J0U.ll luUlT freight I school seniors who left Saturday ,c sequel to a pilots desperate j28 which forbids British sub- other Americans that Dickenson name. They described him as MNiiwei v "'l1 "" -" . j gamDie 10 Dnng a uuui injurcu . ,., ., Kir, ri !,j i having a slightly dislocated lower , miner to hospital through stormy .1Uzeng unJess they were born SKies. . i in th RHtiKh Tslps T hurl m "ie uihiertmce "as encd , a ouioiae ' ur these seasons !' 'ate ui S'l.ua j--i wiaun oranges n.i;. iished. ! should our im;x)it-0 'cute tnetr snir- The plane, a single-engined de ! feeling that I was under a Ges-Havilland Beaver owned by Pa- j tapo amj had no rights. It was cific Western Airlines, crashed a tle Gestapo, not vicious, but Monday in the mountainous n was there. jaw. The RCAF has no rank of colonel. A Montreal couple, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Fischer, said last week that they had heard their son, who was conscripted into the German army during the Second World War, may still be a New Prison Set For Province In a small boat on a deer hunting trip. Ihry were Aiden Hall, Leslie Reid and Sam Kito. Their boat was last seen at Five Mile Point and a storm swept the area later on. Fishing boats, Coast Guard and chartered planes are taking part In the search. -WEAiHER- Garibaldi Park area 55 miles "Here one is given a public hearing, with a fair chance of TTrTM-iT it ytk i it i. -:; tr'"iSes thiouah your Menage woulu lioi be I'ng lucior,' he con- defending one's self." north of here on a mercy flight from Bridge River, B.C. All five persons aboard were killed. They were: Bob Drink-water, 33, of New Westminster, vrs i;ooKi:i .iwUIvin v, ivmuatBi prlsorler of the Russians. They P. A. Gaglardl said Tuesday night said their son was In Yugoslavia the government will announce when the war started and was plans for a new British Columbia drafted by the Germans. , The Dutch repatriates return-prison ,ui,i ., j -i,. within the next 10 days. . , ,. ... . .. 'ng today were captured j w,, by So- e The minister, addressing the viet forces durinR the Second filer Young Girl Shot to Death Cummimfin,, ti B.C., the pilot; Lucille Worden, 21, of Langley Prairie, B.C., a Forecast North coast region Cloudy nurse; Joseph Neymayer, of Pion fiMMem-e. Uaviu Mc-rUa-- Vancouver im-f;1 Mt,,r5, remarked f iur iniics Kunert A 17-year-old girl, Catherine Victoria Industrial Exchange, did World War after they had been today and Thursday. Showers on eer Mines, B.C., the injured man; Thursday. Little change in tern and Lawrence Hamilton of Pion Aslln has been found shot to not ampliy his statement except conscripted into German units, death at Fort Babine RCMP re- They said at least two Americans to ,t would be a Uon 0, the ported today. No further details ,-,,, ,,i,j1 .K and 120 Europeans from seven tl" be booked US, lltlliJ i nerature. Winds light in me eer Mines and Ernest Maple of r a sucturne go aijulied applied southern section. Goldbridge, B.C., passengers as to whether her death was w"''sj countries still are being held ! Winds In the northern section Their bodies were recovered by tn tile r,.nf ' IE InpaDGlnff tn 30 accidental, murder or self-inllct- which the government will ini- aiong with the unidentified Caned were available at press time, tiate within the next few days. adian. a ground party which reached the wreckage late Tuesday after "a last ynar tor rates this evening and shifting to Rupert equivalent to ' westerly 25 Thursday afternoon It had been spotted from the air. h,,'" 10 Vancouver,; Low tonlcht and high Thurs- jt,c Tf $ .cre charged day at Port Hardy. Sandspit and The wreckage was spread over a wide area and was burned. One wing was apparently sheared off by a tree and the fuselage was 5u Per ton," Prince Rupert, 45 and 55. Waite . Amulet Miners Strike As Parley on Checkoff Fails I found several hundred feet away h Critical of Designers Russ Baker, general manager of Pacific Western Airlines, who sootted the wreckage from the air, said the flight never would offered to discuss anything except a wage increase and that only if the check-off were drop y rwm K4 , ( - ... Wring Car Comforts have been made in such poor NORANDA, Que. (CP) The last copper and gold mine operating in this northwestern Quebec area was closed down early today when some 400 workers of the Walte Amulet mine went on strike. The workers struck at midnight after last-minute nego weather on a scheduled trip. "Bob would never have at men on strike in this area. The i other mines shut down are Nor- j anda, which employs 1,600 miners, Quemont and Normetal. T. E. Little, Waite Amulet mine manager, said the company was prepared to discuss all points, including higher wages, if the union withdrew Its check-off demand. However, Pat Burke, area supervisor for the United Steel- Opened the Brit-tuday and said that designers tempted to fly in weather like that If he didn't feel that injured man's life depended on ped. The union has Insisted on the report of its nominee on an arbitration board as the basis of negotiation. The report favored a 22-cents-an-hour wage Increase, a 41-hour week, sir. statutory holidays, shift premiums, a pension and welfare tiations on the issue of union getting through," he said. Of ni aunpiu h i , 0tunst comfort. one should take the precaution of checking that one Is the same shape and size as the man who tested the car, but that may not always be possible. "And surely a little research in a wind tunnel will do away .with the piercing draught from a quarter of an Inch of open window" dues .checkoff broke down. In a Drinkwater, an experienced strike vote last week, 88 per cent bush pilot, flew to Bridge River of the men favored a walkout. Monday afternoon to bring Neu BESPECTACLED Nancy Ann Miller could compete with any 20-20-vlsioned beauty. The 21-year-old blonde from Mt. Prospect, 111., named "Miss Specs Appeal of 1953." shows that glasses don't detract bit from a gal's natural charms , plau and union security invoiv workers of America (CIO-CCL), mayer, suffering head injuries, The work stoppage raised to more than S onrt the nnmhr of .said thht the company has nothing the checkoff. to hospital t Vancouver