PROVINCIAL IALVATION ARMY MORROW'S A Bui A a. I 11 KM 4 yl Bk II II PROVINCIAL L!E,.:iT, TIDES i,yi ScplCI"ljCr 28- 1953 'JjJHlICICP.IA, E. C. KAY J 54 APPEAL (1C' swrrtfil Time) 3:15 20.7 feet Quota $3500 15:15 22.4 feet NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITI8H COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER TO DATE: 21:43 9 07 2.2 5 0 feet feet Published at Canada's Most Strategic Pacific Port "Prince Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest" $1,900.00 VOL. PRINCE FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER XLII, No. 224 RUPERT, B.C., 25. 1953 PRICE FIVE CENTS n I . ;' ' ' ,. ' , -""-I " ' ' ' ,' 4 i . r. ft .. I I i . ' ' ' - I J i x .v i . . ... ' ' : t Vi. r wm. i Li I 0 n ri r"N Aft I P01tiOSTOilDliD ruuuuu xuSluU ... h . Didn't Agree With Actions of Crowd : . 'is A. f ins.-, l" Jll ' l::v' . fflfr if ,i Testimony that lie didn't agree with the crowd's actions during the August I and 2 demonstrations but that he thought it was ls duty to find out what was going on, was given i j County Court before Judge W 0. Fulton this mofning by one of the five men charged with unlawful .assembly. Under cross examination by, ' - erown prosecutor T. W. Brown, ,ftrr hp hl4fI hv x ' il - '1 1 'T V S ' V RMP Constable Hill and taken htHMIK 01 r THE SHORE of North Korea .sharp-shooters from the Canadian destroyer into the police office he said he told the constable that "this if very silly.. What are yoit going, to charge me with?" Con stable Hill thought awhile, Jar- ,low up an enemy mine at clo.se range. C macllan warships exploded many such mines their throe years patrolling with Unite! Nations warships.' . ' ' QC, 23-year-old Clayton Jarvis said he was curious as to what was going on and that he felt it was his duty to break through a crowd of people and inform a police constable that 'T don't know what's wrong with you guys, you're bringing this on yourselves." J.irvis along with Earl Batt, George Flcwin, John McKenzic and Arnold Jonasen face the charge as a result of the demonstration early August 2, when a crowd on Fulton Street was dispersed iby tear gas after the patriation Commission Postpones rt of Interviews With Prisoners vi , said, and replied, "You're not a bad guy, I'll see what I can do." . Another constable came in, sw Jarvis and said "Ha! you're tie guy that was doing all the hollering and swearing down it Frizzcll's. I was in the police car and saw you. You're going to get 14 years for inciting a riot." the witness quoted the constable as saying. Jarvis said he wore a navy blue crew nock sweater and not FOR THE FIRST TIME IN FOUR YEARS official observers from the Soviet embassy at Ottawa attend air force day at the RCAF station at Roikclif fe, Ont., near Ottawa. Crossing the airfield on arrival are, left to right: Mr3. Vedeenev wife of Col. Nlcolai .Vedeenev, military attache for air, (second from left); Leonid F. Teplov, charge d'affaires; Vassilt Chitarey, first secretary; Mrs. Kolossov and her husband, Major Anatole Kolosiov, assistant military attache. iKKKT II. T( ( K.MAN j Led and Red efforts to coax which an Allied spokesman call- ilNJOM AP) The Ko- , home prisoners refusing repat cd "the psychological battle of fpatriation commission, i riation. fe y wranK'inK over rules. No .specific new date was set fVlponcd until as late as for the start of prisoner lnter- irsday tne siari 01 ai- i views, a pnase 01 me truce city hall liad been stoned. Jarvis, j In direct questioning by defence counsel Mrs. WUla Ray, said that after leaving a cafe and talking to two native girls, he had come around the corner of Third Avenue and Fulton Street by Ormes drug store and merely watched what was going on at the city hall. After tear gas had been show Several Hundred Believed Dead, Thousands Homeless in Storms SAIGON, Indo-China 'AP) . persed the dense shroud, but icapital before the winter months. Several hundred Indo-Chinese i weather experts warned: "It will The fog blanketed most of W YORK BOARD FINDS cur time. The UN command ugrced to poktpone the start of interviews, scheduled to begin today or Saturday. . It was hot clear whether the neutral commission agreed to hn Allied demand that the delay be deducted from the 90-day Interview period, which the UN command said must be counted from the time all un-repatriat-ed prisoners are in neutral a blue doublebreasted blazer as Sgt. Stewart had testified. Under cross examination by Mr. Brown, he. admitted that it was curiosity that had taken him up to the Fulton Street area alter he heard someone say "they're tearing down the were believed dead and several , be back either tonight or tomor- Britain, bringing transport to a hundred thousand homeless in row." . I standstill. It persisted In many citv hall." He had been "stun ered on the crowd he went round the comer of Third Avenue and there was approached by RCMP Const. Crouch. When OMMIE PARTY "GUILTY" J.BANY, N Y. i API The New York state board of regents iared the Communist party subversive. It Is believed to i first time that any government agency had put the A'inUt part y on trial for subversion, heard the defence j'ind It truiliy. Communists have in-en tried before s ft oak. The decision 't;yi aiembei,t, the Cummunkt lrora holding public school jobs. '. - . " a typhoon today which struck a j City folk were alarmed, for I Industrial areas, cutting visibility 90-mile stretch of the central 1 bad fogs seldom descend on the l to a few yards. x Indo-China coast. I . , i . ned" he said, by Const. Miller referring to him as "Buster." But a commission sportsman's "When Constable Miller satd told to move on her asked "if ri statement that "it is under-1 martil law had been declar-'bet out of my way. Buster,' did SCANDINAVIANS "ARDENT The destruction was centered on the ancient Annamite capital of Hue. 328 miles north of Saig stood" the 90 days will begin rd?" and later told the con- 7 that colYTtrnr yonr suspicion or on the actual starting date of stable "if you want to arrest me police brutality?" Mr. Brown on. The American economic you can." ; asked Jarvis- mission estimated that 90 per Ration , Includes Move nrion mahave riurini7 fh OO.Hiiv. interview cent of the population ol .Hue, a Admitted He Was "Butting In SAYS PRETTY AUSTRIAN VIENNA (Reuters)Elfrlede Stelner, 21, a pretty Austrian student, says that dudng an 8,150-mile bicyling tour In northern Europe she received 50 proposals of marriage.- Scandinavians were the. most. ardent,' she 'a)d. ' , k .. .;. town of 25.000, and the surround 1 rjr' ing area were homeless. The typhoon reportedly hit an period, 22.600 former prisoners (of the UN and 359 prisoners of i the Reds are to be questioned nuuc Jdic ui uuui lqiiu The witness said it didn't. He said , that he knew that the police wouldn't like ', what He said and admitted that he was area off the , South China sea CRIA re ti.i. HHt.wfi fufiilties for the-mentally 11 hi hv their oriRinal aide. , , SoverniiiBiit inu-oduced the next few years. '. ine ve-nauon neuuai cum- "."7'" Tri coast between the big French sXt and naval base ofTourane and the villagn iof Quang Tri on the north. French and American officials rushed aid to the major legislation of the ; Two German; Waf Prisoners -Allowed to Remain in Canada Mr. Howard saia tne govern-: mission, coniposeu ui iu,mu iuwus , ment "threw out the window" an ! Sweden, Switzerland, Czechoslo- j that he wasn't up Fulton Street offer from the Aluminum Com- j vakla and Poland, said the delay j where he had been placed in pany of Canada to provide $600.-1 was necessary because "ar- ! evidence by Sgt. Stewart and ii the legislature Thurs- stricken section. vsa i - ; v,; i S 4 :'?: ft. ('. t . , ' t m i " ' , . 'Hi, , , '. 1 ' s. 1 i 1 9 ? i ' if . w . i -. V t ": ". t'Jt M "S i. i ft ,' , . i ' . A - ' ; t I - t f : . ? , if. .v. .IT T ' ' ' ' ' T I It 1 1 V' . vvJ'S',. 'l ly because everyone was running and I didn't want to get trariipled." --t ; ,;.: j; Under 1 crossexaminatldn by Mr. Brown, he said, he's heard that Hie two- girls had; pleaded guilty to "being members of an unlawful assembly." He said that he had burned his hand with the smoking gas grenade and admitted that he'd heard evidence he'd thrown the grenade toward the city hall. He insisted he didn't see where it went. In answer to Judge Fulton he admitted that he had seen pictures of people throwing back A typhoon in the same area (I'd Driukhobors, school 000 toward construction of a rangements and facilities' lor C onst. Kiaaeu. ne was nm in the interviews had not been OTTAWA (CP) Two Second representations on his behalf. P natural resources tax-'. Kitimat-to-T errace highway last year caused 5.000 deaths and left 500.000 persons homeless. he was granted a year's proba the forefront of the crowd, he said, had not seen stones thrown and suffered no lasting effects from the tear gas. v of the legislation was ! The offer had been made in l some' of it was what March but withdrawn later. Reports from Tokyo said the tion and later was given official status as an immigrant. season's 13th typhoon skirted the coast of southern Japan today, completed. '"! The commission is reported to have been trying to reconcile widely different recommendations submitted by the Allies and Reds on rules to govern the frnnient fulled to pass i Mr. Bate asked for a faculty of p defeat last March. dentistry of the University of In May, 1950. Hans Otto Al- Arnold Mervin Jonasen, 18, told court that when seen flooding farmland and causing brecht surrendered voluntarily peakcrs. Provincial Sec- British Columbia. 'SleV Black CnmU Hnm.' at least one death. Winds of 57 shouting down on Third Ave miles an hour whipped the Itami fK-Skeeimi and Tlionias 1 - to police, in Calgary. He also was given immigration status after a year's probation. World War prisoners who escaped while being held in Canada have been granted permission to remain "provided they meet health requirements," the' Immigration .department announced today. Both former members of the German merchant navy, they are Franz Jenlsch, arrested in Hamilton about six weeks ago, and Heinz Fromme, who surrendered to RCMP here mors nue he hud been kidding a friend whose truck had broken grenades. He told Mrs. Ray, dur-1 area by noon and were expected Vaiicuuver-Poiiit rsi-eui . HCnOrmnn ing re-examination that lie naa to hit Tokyo during the night. I Hie tliione speech tie- , operation. j The Communists insist on interviews with Individual prisoners; the ' Allies demand groups I of 25. not seen Jarvis near the alley The U.S. Air Force weather station said the centre. of the typhoon will skip Japan. Kyodo news service said more ; Feared Orowned the Duukhobor legisla- I oni-nmn commission i VICTORIA (CP) A 28-year-old auimiiitrd in iiiufwti. ' Victoria snort fisherman. Walter 30 Doukhobors Sent to Jail question of resale of Richard Drown, is missing and IJoukhobors. feared drowned In Saanich In- recently In order that ills status could be cleared. Fromme Is living in Marathon, Ont. way by the police barracks. DENIED STATEMENT Yesterday afternoon Constable Hill, last of the Crown witnesses, said that he saw George Flewin standing alongside Ormes drug store. He said that he arrested Jarvis because he had had him pointed out to him earlier. He denied that he said he would try to release Jarvis after his down. When the crowd moved up to the city hall he went out of curiosity nml stood with a 'teenage girl by the alley at the rear of Ormes Drugs on Fulton Street. There he was joined by another 'teennge girl and they watched the proceedings. He imw "Grace Green milking a spectacle of herself" he said and a young native acting "as if he were beserk." Questioned as to waving his arms, he said he combed Ills verntneiii. took over ap- let waters, RCMP reported on "ly 19.000 acres of land I Thursday. than 1.930 houses and 2.850 acres of farmland had been inundated in southern Japan by mid-day. A hurricane also lashed through the Gulf of Mexico early today about 430 miles 'south of Pensocola, Fla. The storm was moving in a northwesterly direction with winds estimated at 90 miles an The UN command wants the prisoner to havo the right to iefu.se to listen to the explanations; the Communists demand that all prisoners listen. The Allies obiect to individual Interviews on the belief that a prisoner appearing before Red explainers might be intimlated by threat of reprisal and other means. The Communists also demand that the explainers be allowed to talk to the prisoners i'' Christian Community i Colwood detachment of the vc'sal BrolherlVMMl, HCMP are conducting a search A department spokesman said j the health provision was a "routine process." It will mean a check by the health department similar to that given all immigrants, who may be ruled out because of tuberculosis, mental illness or serious physical de VANCOUVER 9 Thirty Dotikhobor members of the radical 8ons of Freedom were given sentences today ranging from one to three years on charges of nudism. Twenty-seven, all men. were given maximum sentence of three years by magistrate Graham Ladner in the makeshift Bur-naby Hall courtroom. One man uoukhubors who came j of the area south from Bamber-'ut 1910. after the com- ton down Finlayson Arm. wut bankrupt In 1!)37. 1 Mr. Brown's boat, hired from '-liobors were allowed to "'' lit wood, was found by two 11 the land. fishermen who had seen it Earl Batt told court that he hour near Its centre, and was expected to continue along this general course with a slow turn Ji KillMi i ! earlier, occupied by a lona fish. was by the Capital theatre on night of August 1, and went with the crowd up to the city hall. &,,,: , . cnmin. to the north. fect. Once cleared "by the health department, Fromme and Jen-iech will be given landing cer He saw Sgt. Stewart and said he Ships in the path of the storm asked him what the disturbance -the least controversial "wiimeul's overall for-luiaiice schiKil roiits "'ured alimi. ,iH, were advised to exercise caution and small craft from the upper hair once and while he and the girls were laughing he pointed out various Incidents to them. When the tear gas was thrown, he said, he and the girls were moving down Fulton Street. "I saw this object.." he Said, "it was smoking and I picked it up. When I found it was hot I flicked it away, to get rid of It" He said he didn't know why Drowned Steelworker's Body Washed Ashore Near Kitimat Texas coast through the Florida was all about but couldn't remember any of the conversation with the sergeant or Inspector Taylor, head of the Prince Ru ' U M. v.. i , keys were urged to remain in i, ' ononis i:ou- ' t Mitch was one of port. was sentenced to two years In the penitentiary and two women received one-year at Oakalla Prison Farm. Twenty others were remanded a week for a probationary report. In starting to sentence 119 Doukhobors convicted of appearing nude in public. Magistrate Ladner told some of them: "It Is unfortunate that I am only able to sentence you to three years." I ""IS In London, England, millions Passed at, tl1P last tificates officially granting their entry Into Canada. They may then become Canadian citizen in five years. Two other German merchant seamen previously were granted permission to stay. In March, 1949, Willy Gottschalk was discovered working in a Montreal chemical plant. After various pert sub-division.. He admitted that he'd had "quite a bit" to drink. of Londoners groped their way were the 10 per George Flewin told court that to work today through a chill, gray fog, which turned fall into winter. KITJMAT. The body of Law-1 Evans, a strong swimmer, at-lence Mc.Dougall, steel erector tempted to save him but was who was drowned In a canoe unable to find hiin in the dark, accident at Minette Bay on La- Evans and Mclsaac were res-bor Dny, has been recovered, cued after their cries for help The body washed ashore on the were heard In Kitimat camp after he had attended the late show he had gone into Macey's f,n the profits of milllng f "S companies over $25 -Per cent tax on the of Umber held for By -noon warm sunshine dis- he didn't drop It immediately and that he didn't know where he had thrown it. Jonasen said that he had no ill-feeling towards the police. "After that," he said. "I was pushed or shoved and fell down. I got up quick- beach at Kitimat on Tuesday. ! and two boats sped to the res- for a milkshake and later down to the Hollywood cafe. The crowd was Just starting up to the city hall when he turned into Fulton Mr. McDougall. employed by cue. MiG Pilot To Meet Mother . Soon; Both Fled North Korea Street, he said. There he bumped into Constable Miller. He was the Morrison-Knudsen Company at Minette Bay, was the victim of the first drowning accident here in two years, an accident in which two other men -WEATHER- Forecast . arrested later by Constable Hill, Dick Long of Macey's testified North Coast Region: Gale that Flewin was in the cafe at The two survivors suffered from shock and exposure. At an Inquest immediately following discovery of the body, a verdict of "death by drowning" was returned. Liz Taylor Taken 111 warning Issued. the time he said he was. " ""tier licences and JJI Construction Act rn" boards to issue gov-Huaranteed bonds for Mtan. The school , a the government each Per nt of the interest UmI ?mendment the i constrion current , u"i assume all eharew afe WOUld S ' i-ueuon150? 's to hldn, nW fW ?",started ii cu until until Art Murray, witness for the defence, said that he and his wife Sunny with cloudy intervals today, becoming overcast this evening. Rain tonight. Variable cloudiness Saturday with rain sat in their car in the alley be nearly lost their lives. The tragedy occurred In the early hours of Labor Day, when McDougall and two friends, Don EVans and John Mclsaac, were returning to the Minette Bay M-K camp from Kitimat, a distance of about two miles. Their small dugout canoe capsized in hind Wallace's Department store The mother fled from Norte Korea late in 1950 with retreat ing Allied forces. She carried with her a childhood picture of her only son. -She asked today to see her son, whose whereabouts has been a closely-guarded secret since he made his only public appearance at a press conference in Seoul Tuesday. RoK army authorities contacted American military offi The pilot, a senior lieutenant In the North Korean air force, flew his MIG-15 to Kimpo airfield near Seoul Monday to win freedom and claim a $100,001 reward offered by Gen. Marl Clark. UN commander-in-chief Thta mother said her sot wanted to flee to South Kore. many times before the war,' bu. she stopped him because tht Communists were spreading tht word that anyone who went tc and watched the whole proceed. on the northern mainland. Little change in temperature SEOUL (AP) The mother of a North Korean pilot who fled communist in a Russian-built MiQ jet last Monday will be united with her son in a few days. The mother, a 43-year-old woman who was born in North Korea, made a surprise appearance at South Koreau army headquarters in Taegu. The defence ministry identified t.ei as Chung Wol, mother of the $!U0,00O-prizu winner, It. Noh Kdudi Suk, ings. Under questioning he said that he thought the crowd was disrespectful but at no time was the choppy waters of the bay and the three men clung to tne he alarmed by the actions of the crowd nor did he fear anyone COPF.NHAOEN (API Movie actress Elizabeth Taylor, who arrived here Thursday with her husband Michael Wilding, was taken seriously ill Thursday night, an agent of Metro-Oold-wyn-Maver. her studio, said today. - , . Winds southeast 15, increasing to 40 near midnight and shifting to westerly 25 tomorrow morning. Low tonight and high Saturday at Port Hardy, Sandspit and Prince Rupert, 4b and 95. the bond Issues. I! Jclt said side of the canoe for over an hour when McDougall, weak t.ho South Korea ould be prose.- cials and uiraugeiiieiitsi were would be injured or property damaged by the crowd. The ca.se is continuing. hZmm "dually from exposure, lo4. his grip and made lor a reunion in a few days, cuted. pf'Bi-Miii torlsaiik.