LI3RARY t (morrows PR0Vl::CIAL LI22A2T, . rrm i i i 113 TIDES vicx:r.iA, a. c. ; jay, January 16, 1954 ific StandaM Time! .. 11:06 21.1 feet feet 5:00 9.5 feet 18:00 3.1 feet l !'.'' 1 '. '.V t' , ' r . .. 1 1 , H " ' -' iy e. ... . : . 1 '. Jan. 20 -8:30 p.m. FRANCES MAONES, Violinist Tickets on sale at Ormes Drugs 10:30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m. Saturday NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER Published at Canada's Most Strategic Pacific Port "Princ Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest" VOL. XLIII, No. 12 PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., FRIDAY, JANUARY 15, 1954 PRICE FIVE CENT8 , . A7 d Ik cy V UifilW EM II Iru r Temperature Dips To 12 Above Here ! I This city's major industry slowed to a halt today I V4 1 . f v 1 f A." r ' i ill, d.l as rising winds and falling mercury combined to force herring fishermen ashore," leaving packing 1 Deadlock On Talks Continues By The Ansuciauwi Press PANMUNJOM. Efforts to revive the stalled preliminaiy Korean peace talks remained at dead centre today, and both the Allies and Communists I. i V.' vJMmI l ' B, i plants with nothing to do. The temperature dropped to' 12 ahove zero in the early hours . of the day, and the weather-' Tank Facing Tough Tests 5 - . v f-vV, U :J '. " ' ' 1 - - f ' ' - ' ' ' - 450 Arrested As Egypt Hits Brotherhood CAIRO Arrests mounted to 450 tdoay tn the Egyptian gov- U DETAILS of this new British heavy tank, the Caernarvon, are scarce, but Britain's War : Antony Head has claimed It probably the most powerful in the world. More powerful ivirr armored tTian the British Centurion which won American praise in Korea the man could offer no relief from the cold snap which is grippins Ihe entire province. Forecast is for continuing cold with a low tonight and hich tomorrow of 10 and 29. Br noon today, the mercury liiiioii to Alliel strength is undergoing severe tests with the British Armw at hnm. ,.,i Britain, too, recently opened a 100-acre tank factory, the largest In Europe. insisted they would never modify conditions for returning- to the conference 1 ernment crack-down on the out Blowout 'Caused! Fatal Accident, had crept up to about 20 ahove and the wind had subsided. Most local fishermen quit yesterday when below freezing veathpr sent fish scurrying to the depths and froze up nets. The remainder gave up the attempt today. lawed Moslem Brotherhood. A communique from President Mohammed Naguib's Revolutionary council accused the fanatical political-religious organization of conspiring with Britain and aiding the communists in s Witness at Manslaughter Trial table. 1 Liaison secretaries adjourned' for the week-end after a session j described by Edwin Martin,! United States state department China specialist, as "3'4 hours of each side advocatinj its po- sition." i Martin Insisted (hat certain! Communist remarks be stricken to -me Bully News pnl witness in the trial of George plotting a c o u n t e r-revolution In most cases, fishermen . aeainst Nairni!!. rpuimo tire blowout Robertson, J-E-A fatal Labor Day acct- Jackson said that Robertson. All took the life of Glenn who faces a charge of man- v.ouldn t risk handling the froz- The communique said the en nets for fear of tearing them, j Brotherhood, which claimed a. pose able to use nets found , of membership 2,000.000 at the fbh had deserted near surface hlpnt. ot itg ; p,, ln E t waters, seeking warmth beyond -n-miron ,ith .v.. n ; carrying the two Jackson s, Mrs. j William Jackson and three! children, struck the guard rail of the bridge near Shames on j Highway 16. , ON l RITt HES i William Jackson, who appeor-i ed in police court here with' i crutches, said that when the it Terrace, in the opln- slaughter in connection with Mam L. Jackson, bro- Jackson's death, was the driver from the record before the pre- deceased and princl- when the panel delivery truck llmniary talks resume. The Communists restored that they ! reach of the nets. 1 1 fmpnt rii.rrf., i v,i A WORKMAN brushes earth from atop a 3 800-year-old wooden coffin discovered during excavations at slW'ara, 20 miles south of Cairo. Dr. Zakaria Ghoneim, Egyptian cheologist who discovered a new pyramid at the site, watches. The pyramid, buried under a hill of rubble and sand, is believed to be about 6,000 years old. Rough water whipped by high teplc Midme ast country 8n,df hC Balu- f The government dropped the r tic air" wa've keep 6X6 0n the Brotherhood yester- day' orderin 14 dissolved and men ashore Nelson Brothers Fisheries ex- rs 'iSt!d' ' tne 45 i,prt.rt tn v,ait h. tn- arrested, only 20 have been set would discuss only a date for reopening negotiations broken off Dec. 12. They also rejected again Martin's request that the secretaries confer in secret. Arthur Dean, special U.S. envoy, walked out of the conference hut last month. He flew back to Washington, saying he m JOHNNY KAY CRIES J WIFE GRANTED DIVORCE !EZ. Mexico Crying Johnny Ray wept Thursday as Marilyn Morrison Ray was granted t divorce, f sinner broke into tears as Miss Morrison filed her hgtiiHf iiwoiupa,tahillty..The divorce was granted in truck was being filled with gas at. a garage on the outskirts of Terrace, he remarked on the softness of the right rear tire. He described activities of the group while in Prince Rupert on Labor Day and said that on the return trip he drove the truck , z ''""""; free, how many might face trial before m,v,. iw a Revolutionary Court niwn ui:ii omn.n ui tinti 11.1110 was not disclosed. out. B.C. Packers, Prince Ru- would not return until the Com- i Hockey Players Invited To Join Game Sunday J. ist federal court by Judge Perando Romero Figuroa. ' pert Fishermen's Co-op, and 1 other. plants, were In the'sairgi Cawh C-t,.J predicament. . jCdfidf 3VCU 'n't think any man likes to see a marriage go on the play said. "I hope some day to marry again and have From Harbor and kids." A Co-op spokesman said the tie-up in operations, which Wii) continue until a break in t!e weather sends the fishermen hock to work. Is a little latei than usual this year. The tie- until they .were, pr he Terrace side of Tyee. There, Jackson said, Robertson, whom he considered a capable driver, asked permission to drive. Mrs. Jackson there sat In the middle of the front seat with himself on the outside. HEARD 'BOOM' While he was' rolling a cigarette, Jackson said he heard a "boom." the panel truck swerved. A Vancouver seaman narrowly escaped death in Prince Rupert harbor early today when he slipped from a ladder and plunU' on Spawning on Babine up might last for days or weeks. I munLsts retracted their charge! lot International treachery . The Communist delegates." ac I cording to Red correspondent., j j told Martin today: ) "Our side considers that the) i dispute between the two sidPS! j In the past meetings should not! ! be an impediment to resuinp-j j tion of discussions." j I Martin replied: "Let us be i jiealistic. How can we expect aj i respectable, constructive atmos-; phere in resumed talks if the1 talks start where they left off; j v. hen completely extraneous, ir- j ; lelevant and unacceptable mat-I i ter was suddenly Introduced by j I your side into the. record . . . .! "We can get to the political j j talks only if we succeed in elim- j es Phenomenal Recovery' The cold weather and the advent of Ice has brought forth scores of hockey players and within two hours today a hockey match between the Prince Rupert and the RCMP was lined up to take place at Lake Oliver at 2:45 Sunday afternoon. The continued low tempera -tures has guaranteed good ice by Sunday afternoon and th" city parks board are ready to erect the boards for the rink. There will be no skating nt the Rotary tennis courts this year as the city engineer has advised against flooding of the courts which would dam-ase the asphalt. Bill Stone has been named coach of the Prince Rupert pucksters and any hockey players who wish to play for the city squad are ' asked to contact him. Garnet Hull will roach the Mounties. Any former hockey referees and timekeepers are asked to phone Art Murray. The Port Edward bus which passes Lake Oliver leaves the depot at 2:30 p.m. and extra buses will be put on Sunday to take care of the overflow should It be necessary. But the fishermen r.ren't the , 19 he icy waters. , sole victms of the weather I Frank Burns, 48, crewman off Canadian Pacific and Qucn j a large Vancouver tug, is re-Charlotte Airlines suffered. Both 1 ported in good condition in the cancelled flights yesterday af- j Prince Rupert General Hosptta; ternoon when wind-whlppec j recovering from his nightmare waves prevented take-offs at! swim at 2:30 a.m. near the I11:- he saw some object in frort and 'A (CP) , Spawning of: 1.300,000.000 eggs, six times as filmon on the Bablneimany as in 1951, were luid last :rc" ,,lurrru ,nol",nK mo uml a "phenomenal" re. i year. Z p ? . wnerai 1953 after sharp cutsj Also looked looKLo for ior are are dciki better -nays days i H??taLnexLTrn,n. hta tne accident oplnon ne was imrioirfo in ion - J.rJ.i!?i;.!f?r B.C-s. salmon birthrate. ; cllsed by a Wowout Seal Cove. i perial Oil dock. - . , ilan,j lo a new sciciunu; gau- Iteye, 200.000 more gf,,, '-landslide years, Dr.) The fisheries department re- (illTl tOr Of the Pacific i rx.i lnrt (hat a cruo-lul ".nownlnu mating oDstrucuve matters . . . , i Cross-examined by Mrs. Willa Kay, Robertson's counsel, Jackson denied having more than two hot rums at a club in Prince Rupert. He. said he had three glosses of beer in Prince Rupert ' ' 1 -J i if A 1 i J ' -' f 4 "ii: 1 , ..'ij .T1.( ' ' hi ',. 1 ft . i 5' : 1 f , ; V'; r- Ration, Nanaimo. B.C., ; bed sampler" has been developed The CPA plane prepared for i Fellow crewmen are credited take-off yesterday," cruising ou' I with saving his life. Burns is be-Into the harbor, but returned I Heved to have slipped and fallen its 18 passengers, ashore. j as he was climbing down a lad- The CPA flight went out etjder from the dock to the ship. 1 p.m. today but QCA remained 1 He was pulled from the water grounded. QCA also blamed the j by shipmates who applied arti-weather for setting a float ficial respiration until the Prince adrift. Ropes froze solid and j Rupert fire department's ambu-snapped, releasing the float. I lance and resuscitator crew ar- Householc'ers suffered, too, as rived. jiLsncncs research an-,wnich shows what parts of a I,, ' , , , :salmon rlvrr re .best sul,ed Jor. ! and one bottle of beer.while on Barbara Ann Displays New Personality As Ice Show Captivates New Yorkers g.,," . " ,' ' I natcning eggs, us a question o: tne rogd to Terr8ce f 'Diiic canyon in i9at i tt-,m f omii h rinn nt wtftor .. . , ... well-stoked furnaces failed to Firemen John Dohl and Jacii Pearson reported they and crew At lne ume 01 lne ne ' ! "Z acc,aenI'. efforts to heln sl II Iw ltt f .7 l8nd0XysP"' !ald- youngest child was ut tn Tin nnn h tl Ilrsl V "Scientists now know enough ; asleep 'across the knees of him- in about the requirements of salmon self and his wife. ) 377 000 i tow .''":,' i' 'eggs to decide whether any sec-1 An adjournment was requested !i.,, i. 'ion of stream bed is good or bad bv Prosecutor Gordon Vosburg nawuon, SDOUt 1 :0 1 ,,. ; . ., . . Bv BILL HARCOIRT. NEW YORK (CP) Don't tell dark-haired, she brought a Gallic touch to the Garden in her two featured numbers. But Barbara Ann's the star. There's no doubt about it. Back stage after the show, wearing a red polka-dot dressing gown and cuddling a tiny white men worked on Burns for half an hour before taking him to hospital. The tug, S. D. Brooks, owned bv the Kinecome Navigation Co. of Vancouver, left this morniny, without Burns. fr. RlV?rt t0 ment statement said. present. ;il equipment to Ba il. The operation was la.st spring, touching 'v5' run this year. on skates this other dimension of a hitherto demure personality? "I love it, really. It's such fun. It's so new for me, so different." "But I suppose I'll always be Goldilocks," she sighed. The show has other skating champions including Peter First-brook of Toronto, three-time Canadian singles champion and Olympic contender. Another champion starred in the show was Jacqueline Du Bief who holds most of the skating titles in France. Svelte and estimated that keep Jack Frost out of homes, and more frc-zen water pipes were reported. City works superintendent Ci. IC. Beaton reported the city reservoir was dangerously low and urged residents not to leave taps . running unless there water pipes were actually exposed. He emphasised that, in most eases, where water lines had been correctly installed, there was no danger of froien lines. He also warned against use of blow torches on frozen plpis. due to the fire hazard, advising residents to call for private thawing service. the Olympic committee, but Bar-j bara Ann Scott has "gone i savage." I That's the surprise the Holly-jwood Ice Revue and Its petite ! Canadian star sprang last night 1 as the show opened its 17th season in Madison Square Gar-iden. I Mark Barron, Associated Press I theatre reviewer, said the show ! follows the general line of previous ones but Miss Scott "is j ' lovely and a melody in rhythm as she performs as a top baller- lna on ice." The revue generally iwss an "exciting show." I The first-night crowd seemed I poddle in her arms, she looked like Goldilocks again. She said (she was eagerly anticipating j later in the season when the : show plays Toronto and Mont-: real. j "It's like going home," she j said. destroys we Shop Waves Batter Log Booms VANCOUVER 'CP) Huge waves kicked up by a 55-mile-an-honr gale Thursday night tore loose 300 sections of logs valued at klmost Sl.000.000 from their moorings in Howe Sound. Ten tugs are attempting t round up the logs and other boats left here at daylight foi the scene. fan mBdse I A CWA tractor mu- at the Rovul Cuna- f'x new Rocky Point Polio Victim Has Boby VICTORIA (CP) A young Victoria mother, Mrs. J. E. Munro. Latest reports indicate the stricken with polio, is reported; tugs arc having oifficulty in re- 0 a delighted with the new and exciting phase of Miss Scott's personality. Once, skating the part of Goldilocks in a fairy-tale pageant, the former Olympic and world champion figure skater exhibited the classically perfect style which won her the amateur crowns. But when she swivelled her hips In a flashing rhumba, and cringed excitingly before a whip as a slant-eyed, exotic captive princess, the little girl from Ottawa left no doubt that she's a hig girl too. How does she like displaying is destroyed by fire checked the blaze "Ultl spread to othcr 't the S5.000.000 ar-r construction near some 15 miles ''. There was no am-"'iir the pluae. tlmHlc of damage "inedhlely avulltibl.', 1 -111x11 for Ihe tlen-1 net inn Co.. rnntrnc-arxeni'l, Hlrl u truck tractor valued at ,f' destroverl t.ni'nlhi.r "1 ' tT aoing weu auer giving Dirui in , trieving the logs, an Iron lung to a healthy, six- The logs were moored at Lar.s pound boy. Bay. A tug boat official here sak She has been confined to the the mishap was the worst of U; lung since Nov. 27. ! kind in the sound. Plans For Quiet Rites Fail As DiMaggio, Marilyn Wed. ?,l l,'iily of tools and llllllerv 1 Hie flic was not downs the second to I"'," naHonal defence .fudge know their plans unti: Thursday afternoon. They wanted a quiet wedding with no fanfare. Yet by the time they wck married the crowd was so thick DiMaggio, his best man, res-taraunt manager Reno Barso-cchini, and Lefty O'Doui had to elbow a puthway for Marilyn to the elevator. Joe and Marilyn left on a brief honeymoon for an unannounced destination. "Just driving," Joe said. SAN FRANCISCO ( Marilyn, Monroe and Joe DiMaggio ' were married Thursday In what was supposed to have been a quiet ceremony, but wasn't. Municipal Judge Charles S. Peery read the civil ceremony in his chambers while au estimated crowd of 500 jammed the corridors of city hall. The curvaceous actress and the former Yankee baseball slugger didn't even let the Youth Acauifted VANCOUVER (CP) An assize court Jury took only 10 minutes Thursday to acquit 21 -year-old Ralph Harris on a charge of manslauKhteh arising out of the traffic death of John Storogoff Nov. 28. Testimony disclosed that Harris drove off without stopping after his car had struck Storo-eoff. He was apprehended two blocks away from the scene. "us area within 4tt nlu'lit an, eslimultd K!00.000 damuue w is MAJOR CHARLES E. YKAGI R, USAF pilot, who established a new world speed record of more than 1,600 miles an hour ln the Bell X-1A, Is congratulated by Lawrence D.'Bell, president of Bell Aircraft Corp., which designed and built the airplane, after completing one of the preliminary flights at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. This is the second time ln six years that Yeager has become the world's fastest human. First time was in October, 1947, when he flew the Bell X-l faster than sound. a fire which broke SURROUNDED BY A GROUP OF YOUNG SICILIAN ORPHANS, Mrs. Clare Boothe Luce, U.S. Ambassador to Italy, speaks with the tiny Sicilians during a visit to the Franklin D. Roosevelt Hospital ln Palermo, Italy. Mrs. Luce came to the hospital to open a new wing of the establishment, which was built with the aid of the United States. two of the Victoria Depot here. A quan-