PROVINCIAL PEOVISCIAL tIBRART, LIBRARY VICTORIA, B. C. 113 5 fALVAfrbN ARMY ORROWS T S. 1 TIDES RED SHIELD mm APPEAL , ( tober 3, 1953 r BtHrrturd iy::.;t Timet 17 7 feet Quota $3500 1 T 0 feet NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER - 4:27 0 3 feet TO PATE: 10:05 8.3 feet Published af Canada'i Most Strategic Pacific Port "Pfince Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest" $3,200.00 VOL. XLII, No. 230 PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., FRIDAY. OCTOBER 2, 1903 PRICE FIVE CENTS , ji JV h Km fin r? uujiaViyuiua u J-" x " '! V- -.. - . 1 , ... " ii. ?ia, '.. J nn m mi i m,. - i ii niiiil . No Additional Funds Available For Aid f. . By The Oao41a Pres VICTORIA. The BrMsh Columbia government has no more money for hospitals and cannot meet increased hospital operational costs. Health and Welfare Minister Parkin Denounces New Union The northern representative of the United Fishermen and Allied Workers Union today denounced the effort of a group, ol "renegade fishermen and 4 high-pressure union men' to break up the UFAWU as "misrepresentation, deceit, and a pack of lies." Thomas K Parkin admitted that several top leaders of his union were openly Communists but denkd that the UKAWU wua a "tool of communism or a medium for Infiltration" for the Iteds. vt j I - vi - t at, . v " - - vy v v vA " if Mil t. -vJi ;KS ok S(MK OK TIIK MUST JET air trait from Great. Britain : will Hold conferences, h and Toronto October 0-20. Members of the .design 'council of the British HawkVr. Terrace Man Gets Tvo Years For Robbery .William George Dilworth. 30. of -Terrace, yesterday waa sentenced to two terms of two years In B.C: Penitentiary by County Court Judge W. O. Fulton after he pleaded guilty to a charge of theft of $105 in cash and a cheque for $179.28 and a second charge of frogery. Sentences are to run concurrently. Defence counsel Mrs. Wllla Ray said Dilworth got drunk on September 9 and picked up an envelope containing the cash and Eric Martin made thla clear Thursday when speaking in the throne speech debate in the legislature. Hospital budgets were frozen to the 1952 level last fall and Mr. ' Martin's remarks were taken to mean they would stay frozen. "There must be no misunderstanding," he said. "This government does not possess any additional funds with which increased hospital costs could be met." Increased costs could only mean Increased B.C. hospital Insurance premiums or increased government subsidies, he said. The government wanted no part of either. However, he said the cost of living had levelled Off In recent months and he would not be surprised to see a comparable levelling off of hospital administration costs. roup they include in their productions the frve planes shown here. Top left the ' Wlutworth NF-11, twin-Jet night fighter: top fight-single Jet Hawker Hunter ntly set a re old for level flight of 727 8 miles an hour; ' bottom left-Glostrr Javelin, vish all weather, twin-jet Interceptor; bottom right the revolutionary Avro Vulcan icoHa-Mim bomber. Centre Iff tltr CF-100 all -weather fighter, designed by A. V. Roe Limited, Malum, Out. . . . VipaneSIa, Erskine Heroes A newly-organized union for liiiheniien the Pacific Fisher men and Allied Trades Unlon- the cheque which belonged to minounced here yesterday that Erik Baksten. a Campbell-Ben Dodgers Edge Champs 3-2 , N ( ..-liny ,'iiiii)iin- a reei ii d total of 14 slrlkeoulsj the third game of the world nett Ltd., worker at Terrace. He had forged the cheque, cashed. It j organizers have launched a drive to "rout out the Communist-led UKAWU" and would establish a local in Prince I pikIiIIi limit, g home ; today as Brooklyn Dodgers whip-I scries .Yankees lead the series 2-1. il fcr.skiiie ehiilked up j ped New York Yankees 3-2 in it but had only spent $8 of the. money. ... Mrs. Ray asked leniency for Dilworth. saying that he had a The greatest increase In hospital costs was wages which had Increased 100 per cent to $20,-000,000 a year in the last five yea rs. Mr. Martin said, the govern Ersklne's 14 strikeouts wiped out (lie world series record of FOI'R GlkfiKFES ambie out ror a sxroii in their pen in the London Zoo, but they look a bit indecisive. And well they might, for from here it's hard to tell whose head Is attached to whose chassis. . Karlson, Aussie Hypnotist Arrives For Benefit Show! 15 LOSE TOUGH GAME ' wife and three children all under tour year of age and that It h 13 set. by Howard Krmke of Phlla-urlplUn Athlctlrs against Chicago ' ultii In the first game of the 1!2!) series. LUCKY N.Y. YANKEES, ment saw the day when 300,000 persons would be paying hospital Insurance premiums through payroll deduoMorn. . 1 was sent to prison they would be ! entirely without, funds. j- Prosecutor Tv W." Brown. QCi Ttie Brook ryr " ftivher. " whw i'KLYN "1 lie Brooklyn Untile, an evening newspaiier In the last month 24.000 ac- eaid that while accused had ex The new union Is supported by the Bfafarers' International Union (AFL-TLCl. , Parkin said today that all this talk about, ryrnrmmlsm Is ;,tlt frOn5ToT-TOTOe-'Wn,u" breakers." ynestioned whether he was a Communist., Parkin said: "My political beliefs are my own business, as Uiey are of any person in Canada. The northern representative ond paid organizer in Prince j Karlson, Australian master in j Mossfield, baritone of "From j perlenced. no trouble with the I counts had been added to the j the art of hypnotism arrived In j Leicester Square to Old Broad- ' j police since he was released trom j payroll division. Some of these fi'-y h n"lnut u-tlly biased in connection with the world i mil tins burner headline after Thursday's second "Kl'.;er loss; ,' ";$. - -? $ Prince Rupert ttiis afternoon on j way" CBC program and Basil penitentiary in 1948. he had had switched from direct pay lasted only one inning of the first game of the series on Wednesday, fanned Joe C-ollllis and Mickey Mantle four lhurs each and set a new mark Bt the expense of plnch-hltter Johnny Mle in the ninth Inning. CamtMinclla .olaylng with a his first trip into Central British John. i)0ng record of similar offenoe ments , and in another month 240.000 would be on payroll Columbia, ready to stage tnei Kanson ( mat is tne oiuy name fIPm 1942 until 1946. He said the first of two shows for the Prince j he uses professionally! has been crjme was made worse in that It Rupert Lodge No. 342. BPOE. j practicing hypnotism for seven ! took place In a frontier town and pert Firm to Buil I iialnfully Injured finger, smashed j Rupert for the UFAWU for pev- Accompanying-mm were larry oi ins mi years, ne nas Deeu uu thHt the, money constituted the tour mow; ior two. years since ne t the game-wltmlng homer lntojP,14j years angrily attacked , the entire pay of a working man. Guards Kill left Australia and recently came MM left unci stanos won one out , tactics or Hie riftiu in noiu- Wehouse at Kitimat lng meetings, to gain supporters More for their drive. ln the eighth liming Jutt after j the Yanks had lldd' tif! score at 2-2. I A crowd of 35,270. largest ever IikI. iimi r of the I located near the lallway station. 'I Kitimal' Hiiilde Mr ItiiwiiiiI who will man Mrs. Lippett Wins VIP Contest Again PANMUNJOM ( AP) Indian Judge Fulton told the 'accused ttiat while he. had gone straight, dtlhk feeemeef'to be his downfall and "society must be protected against those who prey on it.' He said he could give Dilworth 14 years on each count, but would be lenient. He told the accused to make good use of his tlm while he was "down south." "Illegal Meetings" "They misrepresent facts, hold illegal meeting" and dismissed retmrts of success of ure operations' In Klllmat and ! to see a series khiiip at Fbbets eventually take up residence . Field, watched the two feat. nilec, leaves tnnlKht P to arrange for a ii'triiel.ion of a large tlieie, owii'-d and operated Hie House ' New York... 000 010 0102 0 SU).h mrPtlngs as "only a fig- Pi luce Rupert Supply i'"r Hie firm at the 011 Olx -3 9 0 imrii r... .i .oUr wiiinir Brooklyn 000 meiit of their imagination." He. from England. Interviewed - after , he : arrived, by CPA this afternoon, karlson said hypnotism or the science of power of the mind, is a combination of a natural gift and training He received his most recent training under Professor Van Lowe in Brisbane. Karlson. who is reputed to have performed the Indian rope trick, will appear at the Civic Centre tonight at 8 o'clock and Sunday night at 9 at thejCapltol Theatre. , .S t y He will go to Terrace with Mr. Mossfield tomorrow to .stage "a performance at the Terrace Civic E out recently to Sid Hunter. Raschi and Berra; Erskine and guards armed with guns and clubs today killed two Chinese prisoners and - wounded five others in the second mas break-out attempt In two -days of restive anti-Communist wat prisoners! ' The Indians Thursday quelled with guns a riot of North Ko :Its t n n it I ri... S I ' ' J mm, ntly Mere by a eroun Head office of the new firm is ji-ampaiieiia, at 900 Second Avenue West. "pert, businessmen, luietioii to start Referring to the meeting in yuathiaskl two weeks ago at which John Jackson and Chuck Chapman, former union officers, said the membership voted to disaffiliate from the UFAWU, Parkin said: Newspaper Strike Settled Mrs. D. J. Lippett of 935 Sixth Avenue East, became a two-time winner this week when her entry to the Dally News VIP contest was picked at random from the first 10 entiles and was found to have the correct answer. Mrs. Lip-pett's answer, Solon Earl Low, MP for Peace River and leader of the National Social Credit BULLETIN The builders supply firm an-! tlcipates a busy ilrst year" "In I Kitiiuat wliere the ' Aluminum i t'omptiiiy of Canada -lias Just, approved a starU on private f"r Hie Job has been ' SEATTLE (AP) A spokesman rean non-returnees, killing one ""Invest Construc for the CIO American Newspaper and wounding five. ts ami George Mar- Guild announced that an agre-1 An Indian spokesman said or-ment has been reached with th dsr had been restored at the N, will Jlccomn:i nv Centre, sponsored by the Cana- Party, identified the very im- ! wan Legion to Klllmat to for the building, t llKOl'TIMl. Que. (CP) Seven persons missing on a Norseman plane since Aug. 25 were reported late today to have been found alive and safe near an unidentified lake in northeastern Quelle. "Our Vancouver headquarters report that In the first place it was a sneak meeting. Jackson, who chaired the meeting, called ' it by word of mouth only. "The meeting wasn't advertised. The executive wasn't even notified and only 20 of a total porta nt person correctly and j home-building in the townsne. Subject to certain conditions laid clown' by the company, private homes will be limited in a lil.iimed area bordering a park. Ct iiti'al Mortgage and Hous Two Men Die In Car Crash Ofo7 Seattle Times in the 78-day-old compounds five miles southwest strike by the Guild. i of Panmunjom In the demllitar- Don Brazier, a membtr of th teed zone. The outbreak lasted Guild negotiating committer, only a few minutes. said the committee will recom-l The spokesman said today' mend acceptance of the Times' riot was touched off when five offer in voting by the union PoWs in the camp hospital de-members within the next 48 manded that another prisoner, hours. . taken to the hospital after; at- He would not disclose terms of . tempting suicide, be returned tc Judge membership of 128 turned out. "The UFAWU headquarters reports that statements by the HIV that the Quathiaskl local had swung over to them Is completely false. . , COURTENAY. B.C. Two Vancouver business men were killed Wednesday night when their car plunged from the island highway, 16 miles north of here. won her $13.65 for the second time since the VIP contest started June 29. Mrs. Llppett's entry, enclosed on a sales slip from Midway Grocery, won her the entire Jackpot In the last competition of the contest which ends today. She also won the second competition on July 10, gaining the same amount of $13.65. The contest was sponsored by Dally News advertisers on a page of advertising every Monday for the past three months. is or Terrace was nf s:i nun h t, ,.i.. the offer. The guild has been the compound. F" 111 County in rl The Indians refused. P'"r be had pleaded V a charge of robber v Dead are Arthur Ro t b we 1 1 asking a 7.85 per cent wag In-Brown, 53, and Walter'E. Haley, crease which would bring cur-Mr. Brown was president of rent top mlnlmums to approxl-Brown-Fraser Company Ltd. matejy $110 a week for six-year Mr. Haley was sales manager editorial staff membera. They for the company. now get a $102 top. ing corporation lias announced .lie extent of loans available for Kitiiuat housing, and Alcan Is open lor triplications for lots. No definite price has been announced but an unofficial figure of $750 u lot has been mooted. Alcuu is asking prospective- lot purchiiKcrs to submit house plans, stipulating that ' homes must be erected within one yeur of purchase of lots. As yet. no water, road or sewer facilities have been Installed, but Alcan reports these services will be rushed as soon as warranted. J. S. Shakespeare, Alcan's su The Indians said two of the five injured men were hurt by sticks wielded by the Indians, and the other three were gunshot wounds. Fisherman Found Dead Aboard Boat Cliff Chris topherson well-known fisherman in this district for over 30 years was found dead yesterday aboard his small boat at Inverness Cannery. A coroner's Inquiry conducted by Coroner Don Forward Bald cause of death was coronary thrombosis. F rw aficr pir Terrace had been "Since then the local has had a proper meeting under the UFAWU at which 100 members were present The meeting voted unanimously by secret ballot Iff stand by the UFAWU. New officers were elected and charges laid under the UFAWU constitution against the previous officers (Jackson and Chapman i for irregular conduct." I1; and rubbed of ap- " " nuguxt 20. He is ' Vancouver in Court Accepts Apologies for Publishing Letter wi'Utor T. W R,.,., Judge W. O. Fulton In County ! journ the case rather than close t letter, while the case was still Known as "Happy Chris' Hie Court yesterday accepted apolo- i it as he "believed that the letter pending I" ' S3.000, stressing r of the charge nnd P muniment until n f U, since the main Fss was still in hue. Asked for an explanation, Mr. before it appeared in the paper and that she did not know of apy law against its publication, it was there so long, she said, that she was amazed when it was published. Jackson was the former president of the Quathlaskl local; Chapman was the secretary. Answers Joyce Referring to a statement made here yesterday by David Magor said he was absent from perintendent of properties, said the company is "keen to see private homes built as soon as possible." ctderly fisherman about 60 years of age had been fishing for B.C. Packers since 1922 and for other canneries prior to that Ume. He town when the letter was pub gles from Mrs. Ann Minard, LPP constituted an attack on the candidate In the June 9 provin- dignity of the court." clal elections and from John Before the Monday afternoon ' Magor, publisher and editor of sitting of the trial Doug Ho-The Prince Rupert Dally News, j garth, defence counsel for one of lished. The letter was referred to the newsroom, he said, where worked out of Sunnyside I thought It was all right to Joyce, SIU representative, that Jdina in I nil CkA Off express anyone s opinion, she the men. Joined Mr. Brown In protesting the letter and pointed the seamen s union wanted to help west coast fishermen with their problems. , Parkin Said: "Why has the SIU not organized the Atlantic coast fishermen who are helpless and at room Flees Out Window C. Webb, manager at Inverness, found the body. Mr. Chrls-topherson's boat had been tied up on the Skeena river since last Friday and when no sign was seen of him for several days, Mr. Webb went to Investigate. B.C. Undertakers are in charge of funeral arrangements which will be announced later. Va. (API Th.. it did not receive the full attention It should. When he is present, Mr. Magor told Judge Fulton, he checks the proofs as a sort of double insurance against mistakes and since he was not there the Import of the offending letter was not realized. He said that he regretted that such a mistake had occurred and that it had never been the intent of The Dally News to show disrespect for the court. "Our past record will show," he said, "that the News has al "ie wedding in ' county jail Sun-P anvh.H.. t out that both defence counsel and all accused had nothing to do with the letter. Yesterday the Crown prosecutor again read the paragraph of the letter under discussion and told Judge Fulton that it offended the right of all to a fa'r trial. He cited the law on contempt of court which in brief stated that any speech or writing which would tend to prejudice, the public, a judge, jury or witnesses of a trial in process were considered in contempt of court. ror what he considered a very serious contempt of court." The apologies arose from a letter published in the September 18 issue of the Dally News concerning the case of five men charged with being members of an unlawful assembly on August 2 while the case was still In progress before Judge Fulton. The last, paragraph of the letter signed by . Mrs. Minard said "if the court Insists that the people now on trial are guilty, it would In our opinion be a terrible miscarriage of justice." When the sentences had been handed down Monday afternoon Crown Prosecutor T. W. Brown, QC, asken Judge Fulton to ao- Mnke ud ' Hor said, "but t see where those opinions should be within the law." Judge Fulton said "there was great contempt of court and such a thing should never happen." "If the court is held in con- tempt by the public," he said, "then it results in anarchy. The court must be respected." He told the editor and publisher tliat precautious should be taken to prevent such a thing happening again, and should doubt arise then the staff should seek legal advice. He told Mrs. Minard that she had committed a "grievous breach of the law." The court accepted apologies from both. Slide there went out the win- -fight loss in their unorganized state, instead of trying to raid the west coast where an established union of fishermen already exists? -"The general attitude of our membership (UFAWU) is that if there is anything wrong in our union we have the machinery to change it. If the membership is dissatisfied with the Trial Date Set clambered through a second-storey window while the bride-to-be, 17-year-old Lottie Lillian Kinley, looked on, and the bridesmaid tried vainly to foil the escape. Seven hours after the nuptial rites were to have been performed, Deagle returned meekly to the Jail, thoroughly drenched from a steady rain, and surrendered. Too late, though. The rest of the wedding party had gone home. 8 r . o o m - elect, TORONTO Ot Chief Justice J. C. McRuer has set Nov. 16 as the date for the trial of seven rub I r.. i -igie. serving ways been on the side of law and order." ber companies and the Rubber r'Wftbbery, fled I W1w another nH Association of Canada on charg Mrs. Minard told Judge Fulton that she hud taken the letter officers they can oust them by Judge Fulton said that he had es of ooeratimr a combine to fix r,,mrinv -rv... beeu very aman to mtd thtlinto the Daily wews ten days prions of rubber Urea and tubes. legal ballots ' J,ir iwo