PROVINCIAL LIBHARI, 113 VICTORIA, B. C. 13 AT 3154 DRROW'S IDES- August 7, 1903 Slardard Time) feet 17.6 feet 3.5 feet 8.2 feet 12:33 6:10 18:11 ' NORTHERN AND CKNTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER Published at Canada's Most Strategic Pacific Port "Prince Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest" VOL. XLII, No. 182 PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1953 PRICE FIVE CENTS VDeliYtry Phon 81 X, & I M mm, 15 ITtt J n UJS Li 0 Native Counsellors To Attend Meet An important meeting wil be held here Saturday morning between 12 counsellors and headmen of native bands in this area and RCMP Inspector Taylor and Indian Superintendent Anfield. Purpose of the meeting is to, , I'?; 'if -;' X ; f PROCLAMATION TO ALL PEOPLE IN THE CITY OF PRINCE RUPERT: The disgraceful scenes of last weekend must no! be repealed. Lei those who attach themselves to a disorderly mob out o! curiosity or a desire for excitement reflect that by joining it they themselves become lawbreakers and subject to serious penalties. We have the Police for the protection of every one of us. It is their duty to keep order and to make this a safe and decent place in which lo live. It is cur duty to co-operate with them. M! persons arc notified that the law will be enforced in this City. 'in-.! discuss ways and means of pre-vf-nting a recurrence of demonstrations on Saturday nights on the city's downtown streets. - Meanwhile city council today issued a proclamation advising the public thdt persons who at Dulles, Rhee Map Plans For Korea V i 4 -if : J By ROBERT B. Tl'CKMAN tach themselves to a disorderly mob. become lawbreakers themselves and therefore are subject to prosecution. The proclamation urged the people of Prince Rupert to do their duty as citizens and cooperate with the police in order to make the city a decent place in which to live. SPEAKS ON RADIO Mayor Harold Whalcn, who MHhed the proclamation with SEOUL (AP) United I W'-r '4 !! ' -I . States State Secretary Dulles and President til Syngman Rhee, apparent ly in accord on a U.S.Korean mutual security pact, today mapped plans the authority of the city coun-! cil. will speak over CFPR at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow. He will appeal In an Informal "fireside chat" for the public s help to prevent such "disgraceful scenes" such as have occurred on the last two Saturday nights and culminated in the arrest of more I than 80 persons on a variety of BY AUTHORITY OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF PRINCE RUPERT H. S. WHALEN, Mayor August 6, 1953. v jit for the reconstruction of war-torn South Korea. Dulles anO top aides met for almost two hours with the ' -ii. . LATViST BABY FASHION design takes a Up Tiom xne American Indian and the Korean and lets junior ride in tandem with ma. Created by designer Lois Lignell, this Wear-Baby Is made of stout denim banded with a contrasting color. Mother's hands are left free while baby sits comfortably behind, acting as a slight reducing agent in the bargain. South Korean president .while subordinate officers worked on urned U.SPrisoners Relate j final details of a mutual de-j fence pact, .Authu-ltj.tiye.ource.' smd the ' treaty subject to ratification j by the U.S. Senate could be !ioaWv ff-tr IniHallncr hfnr0 nullps ' ' ' ' J t v Communist BWdide:'i On Rail Travel Cracks ' J charges. ' RCMP assistant-commissioner C..E. Rivett-Carnac, who was in Kince Rupqrt yesterday investigating the disturbances, left last night without making any statement. ' The attorney-general's department in Victoria announced lust Monday .that future action will depend on what he learned esome Stories of Brutality ; leaves Saturday for Washlng- ton. ' j Dulles told reporters after to-j day's session the talks were go HKKItT HNSON arrived on crutches with one leg Lt.-Gcn. William K. Harrison, j senior Allied truce negotiator. I VILLAGE I API Thursday's accounts, If not so nearly 160,000 parcels had been distributed, despite bad weather nd South Koreans Communists today By RICHARD KASISCHKE BERLIN (AP) The Communist blockade on rail travel to West Berlin's free food .stations was cracking today under the ing 'fine. Later in the day, . Dulles and sweepingly lurid as ordeals described by sick and wounded nigs, burnings, death and the travel restrictions, to lift the 10-day total to 1,600,000. here. ' - It has been pointed out by officials that last Sunday's crowd of between 300 and 4H0 . which assembled in front of . lid starvation at the missing. He said the Communists had starved him seven days, then repeatedly smothered him with a wet towel and revived him with Jabs from a lighted cigaret In a fruitless attempt ' to pet military information. Harrison, from Clovis, New Mexico, -is the second .cousin of '-,i..,?'i- the 78-ear-dld . Rhee toured Seoul -alone; for.' a look at the city and what the U.S. diplomat called an irtfoi'ttipL chat.' ' ''. 'their Red captors 51 DESERTERS T pressure ; of East Germany's hungry .millions. h they said killed low prisoners. As further evidence that Com The giveaway' centres report the city hall was ' composed mainly of whites. During the fishing season each Shomas D. Harrison v " i I SECOND MEETING ,' " i Dulles said today's meeting, the second since he arrived on munist police control was break. ing down, a record number of 51 fnen deserted from the east PoWs freed last April In Operation Little Switch, were all the more Intense and personal. A new army censorship rule allows a liberated prisoner to tell only of atrocities he saw. HROKEN MEN The accounts were grimly accented by the sight of pitiful, broken men who made up part of today's 392 returnees. Some ed thousands of Soviet-zoners were Joining the throngs of East Berliners lining up today. year the Indian population totals ern people s police" army and Tuesday, was devoted largely to es Take Off in Dismal more than 6.000 in this area Many of the new arrivals re gendarmeno Wednesday and Wednesday night. largest congregation of natives in Canada and each week-end ported they had been able to buy railroad tickets to Berlin Perhaps due to this police ther to Seek 16 Airmen for the first, time since Satur sabotage, east zone reports said ALICE KfXLEY'S dimpled which was expected to could hardly walk. Others were terribly emaciated. One, a South confiscation of "food gifts ap beauty. -PV. 1 day, when the east government clamped on Its travel ban. NO TICKETS . UN STEINKOPF big expanse of ocean 300 to 500 peared to be easing. But the i APi United States mllcs west of Scotland. Visibility Communists pressed their ter .mes roared off Brit- there was reported less than a dismal weather to- mile and the sea still heaved with plans for spending $200,000,000 already voted by the U.S. Congress to start the rehabilitation of South Korea. Dulles said the potentially explosive question of . Korean unification had not yet been discussed, but probably would come up at Friday's session. He said he may see Rhee ugain Saturday before leaving for Tokyo. Lower level U.S. and South Korean' officials, meeting for the second straight day, were reported to be ironing out the ror into the factories to keep restive workers in line and prevent a feared second revolt like they and many white fishermen come to this city by hundreds. City council at a special meeting last Tuesday night endorsed a motion requesting police to use more courtesy with people with whom they come in contact following complaints by aldermen that in some cases officers acted too abruptly without giving reasons for their actions. MORE ARRESTS bring fame and fortune to the youiif? actress, will soon fade forever from the silver screen. The 21-year-old starlet announced that she will give up her film career when she becomes the bride of Kenneth Norris of Sim Marino, Calif. mie the search for 16 waves eight to 15 feet high.. Korean, was delivered dead. Another South Korean died of tuberculosis aboard a southbound helicopter from Panmunjom. In contrast were cheerful British and Commonwealth prisoners. Some of the returning Americans were in excellent condition. that of June 17. V , y V ... The East German government made no announcement it was lifting its ban, and in many places tickets still were not on sale. Relief officials, however, reported that people were showing up from farther reaches, of the Soviet zone. They said railway employees had sold them tickets at various stations. Cracks in the blockade became apparent Wednesday night after railroad workers In Bran iii men still missing in ! Tnc 7,636-ton British merchant .llantic. ship Manchester Shipper radioed fhips were enroute to tnls morning it had one survivor Is with four survivors -nd two bodies aboard. I'idies, the rest of the " Another British ship, the prd the giant RB-36 1,605-ton Manchester Pioneer, lin e bomber when it reported It had three survivors ilefore dawn Wedncs- aboard. The French trawler ill' But In general, they were worse than the British, though not in Meanwhile the number of differences between the U.S. md South Korean drafts of the defence pact. They reported 'considerable progress." Work to Start On Causeway In Fev Days Naas Gillnet Area Closed Portion of the Naas River area which is reserved strictly for salmon gillnet fishing from 10-Mile Point up is closed to sockeye nets effective at 6 p.m. tonight until further notice. pi Iceland with five of Maselalena picked up one body. persons arrested on charges of taking part in an unlawful assembly rose to 10 this morning with the apprehension of two ablaze. i The radio messages received 1 ' vors and the bodies here were sketchy and often denburg province, which rings Berlin, slipped through 40,000 of 1 UD frnm lifphnnla as desperate shape as the South Koreans. SPECIAL TARGETS U.S. and other airmen appeared to be special targets of Red brutality probably a reprisal for deadly Allied bombings and strafings, Allied officers said. A Negro B-29 co-pilot, Lt. garbled, but they indicated two survivors had been nicked up m dinghies after WEATHER- Synopsis their hungry countrymen CAME ON FOOT ted the ships to the from a lifeboat droped by an air ' ' ' . v Temperatures will remain 'h aircraft faced a force rescue plane Wednesday while the others had been taken off one-man dinghies. 'teen aged girls who came here less than three weeks ago from Nanaimo. The pair, Nancy Conrod and Diane Miller, both 18 years old, appeared before Magistrate W. D. Vance In police court this morning and were granted bail of $250 each. Prosecutor T. W. Brown, QC, as they criss-crossed a NEW WESTMINSTER, B. C. Work on the causeway linking l ulu Island witn Annacis Island, site of a proposed multi-million dollar British industrial development, wifl start within a week to 10 days, K. K. Retd, chairman of New Westminster Harbor Board, Samuel E. Masslnberg of Detroit, said he got four days of continuous torture and, starvation from the North Koreans, followed by a warm except for cooling expected in northern B.C. on Friday. Forecast North Coast Region: Cloudy today. Sunny periods this afternoon. Cloudy Friday with light rain in the northern Dart. Foe special effort to woo him to Others got around the travel ban by bicycling, hitch-hiking, or coming by bus to stations near Berlin and then on foot into the city. Railroad men also smuggled many food parcels for their families and friends. The new influx from East Germany reinforced another big flood of reliefers from Soviet East Berlin, sending the food stations off with a rush into Principe Channel closes to all salmon fishing at 6 p.m. tomorrow Until further notice. Rivers Inlet and Smith Inlet areas will re-open to seiners and ' gillnetters at. 6 p.m. Sunday. , '! Catches on the Skeena have dropped somewhat, sockeye average for yesterday being 65. Halibut landings yesterday saw 13.000 pounds from the Kaien traded on the exchange communism "because of my asked the lower bail due to the fact th? two girls are just over jsaid today. Mr. Rcid said beginning of the ! 1,300-fnot causeway will start as 'socn ns the level of the Fraser i river drops within five feet of He explained , banks over the water both days. the juvenile age. race." "I understand communism better now. I hate it more," he s. to the pair what their legal Little change in temperature. Winds light today, southeast 15 said. rights were, and advised them to seek a. lawyer. normal. At present it is seven to on Friday. 1 their 11th day of distribution r Low tonight and high Friday At Port Hardy and Sandspit, 54 and 64; Prince Rupert, 53 and 62. and heading for the 2,000.000,- at 19, 18 and 13 to Royal.. On parcel mark. At the close of Tuesday 68.000 pounds were distribution Wednesday night sold to the Co-op. The returning' prisoners presented grim evidence that some of the thousands of missing Americans never will return. BEAT TO DEATH Shung Keum Shoon, a 25-year-old emaciated South Korean i i . a - - 'J 'I eight feet above normal. The causeway is to be constructed of river bottom silt and the cost lias been estimated at $105,001). Annacis Island and the site of the causeway were visited last week by Sir Harold Boulton, representing the estate of the Duke of Westminster. The girls told court they had been in Prince Rupert two and half weeks. The prosecutor told them their case had been remanded until 2:30 p.m. August 11, along with eight others, and that a preliminary hearing was scheduled at that time and not a trial, that the case would take considerable time. If bail was not raised for them, he said, they would spend the time In custody. Also facing the unlawful as Beanr of Outfitters Produces 50 Horned Steers For Picture . .. - i i A told of seeing North Korean Reds beat seven Americans so severely with rifle butts that five died within a few hours. Cpl. Russel P. James from Auburn, Wash., told of grisly burial details in the bitter winter of 1950-51 in the notorious min v'-v t Special to The Dally News JASPER Major Fred Brewster Dean" of outfitters In Canada's starring Jimmy Stewart, the veteran outfitter was "stumped," but not for long. Brewster had no difficulty in sembly charge which was re Fisherman Dies in Boat STEVESTON. B.C. (CP) An reH in miirt this mnrninir are ' Rocky Mountain region Is a man . . ! ,v.n otD s i- rro rlnna In a niirrv tan tsau. oracc ureen, uforg-; . ..... -"" ' ,,, rdinarw KtMti,& kuL Flewin, Clayton Jarvis, James and the unobtainable, enroute to Jasper and next week they will be taken to the Columbia icefields, largest ice de- ' posit south of the Arctic Circle. There cen& will be shot lor the film depicting' a cattle drive across the ice and snow of the Yukon in the gold rush days of, '98. Other scenes in the picture "The Far Country," will be shot at the base of Mount Edith Cavell. . w Duncan Ryan, Simon Morrison, explosion' aboard a gillnetter moored at this Fraser River port Tuesday night took the life ing camp that prisoners called "death valley." "We burled 25 to 30 men practically every day. We had no medical treatment at all and all we got to eat then was a little bit of millet every day." Other prisoners repeated the stories of death marches north during the first winter and how many never inhrte it. '- , . i rr i I ' C K. . ( . -r ! ... ' 50 steers with horns was another matter. After burning up the telephone and telegraph wires, the Major found 20 horned critters on one Paddle River district farm, 15 on another and 15 on a third farm. Tomorrow the steers will be However when the Major received a telephone call from Universal Studios In Hollywood last night to produce 50 homed steers to be used in a motion picture to be lilnied near cele-urnt,i ,lnpei Park Lodge, and John Alexander McKcnzie, Arnold Mervln Jonasen. Meanwhile, Inspector Taylor has appealed to all who have complaints against the police to take their grievances personally to him. . ' ' G JRoiw HIS RECENT ILLNESS, Sir Winston Churchill PPlly as he leaves his home in Chartwell, taking his pr company, to continue his 'convalescence at Chequers, of the fishing vessel's owner, flames forcing other fishermen to stand by helplessly while the vessel burned. The fisherman Hinn-y residence of the Prime Minister. was Idei, titled as Isaac Geoig J