t LIBRARY I PROVINCIAL LIBRARY, SORROW'S it. VICTC2IA, 2. C. 113 KAY TIDES October HI. WM 11C Surrt.itd TiM.n HI 4 feel 20 8 feet l 8 feel. 3 8 feel 14. Hi PIT) 20.41) VDeliytry Phone 81 NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER Published of Canada's Mot Strategic Pacific Port "Prince Rupeit, the Key to VOL. XL1I, No. 236 PRINCE RUPERT, B.C.., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1953 the Great Northwest" , PRICE FIVE CENTS . n Mat (Mill I (Snnnsnn:i;a .-WW U Britain Suspends Present Constitution By I be Onadivt Press (jKOKCKTOWN, r.riUsft Guiana. Governor Sir Alfred Savap ioday announce! that thi3 colony's six-mont h-oM conslitution will lc suspended from today and proclaimed a state" of emergency. 7 he rwt nor. liis fiithoi i1vf r l ; . . KH-HVK HOT IU.H1.IM rmiUMTyclp pol .i.cmpn form a duman pyramid atop four niotor-n.tiile tr.iinii u f..r a puilce .show. All teem nonchalant. But somewhere in the pile thrte ,v(rj wril be urn' wlm wmhrs for tioar life th vt he was an ordinary patrolman. o p, ot Freedom problem: Mr. Harding said federal Jus - tice Minister Stuart Garson was ice Doubt Story of Third Kansas City Kmnap-Murder Mystery jtff &i f- - t v;- -- v S CITY 'AP' --'J lie I-ni man wiio may hold the key to tliheld a rom.try-widn certain unanswered questions In i mwiruiis -n,nvii -t the Bobby Oreenlease kidnap- toh P"li' " lioin :i:..it killing. won tlie 'lin.kniit fur a Tho fedcrul agrncy said It had Party Sought Irlayed any country-wide starch for Marsh pending clarification of Inconsistencies In statements made by the pair now held in the kidnapping. Under arrest in St. Louis are Carl Austin Hall, described as the leader In the plot, and Mrs. Bonnie Brown Heady, 41, the i divorcee who aided him.' I Hall admitted kidnapping the ' six-year-old boy, son of multi-I millionaire Robert O. Green- lease, 71, burying the child's I body after finding him dead and ' collecting the $600,000 ransom. ! But he dented killing Bobby. He told officers he turned the boy MRT MAN BELIEVED THE EXPRESSION, "packed like sardines," may lose its meaning altogether if the present scarcity of the tiny fish continues. At Eastport, Maine, thousands of small fish go to waste on dry land after being chased ashore in droves b; rampaging whales. The Maine sardine industry could have made good use of this batch which covers many acres, as the season's pack to date li one of the smallest in history. . WillED AT NAUAIMO ' iSli.MO. b C. '? A 20-vear-old fUhcrman from Prince Bonner Defends Government SWicvrd to hive d.owned In Commercial Inlet hre st:r'i'd driics'ii.s (ipcratioris after he was reported from th iuhir.g hunt Inverkare. His name waa Policy Towards Doukhobors lover to Marsh .on the day of theftuUifr up the Demerxra River ; kidnapping and later found him?diiy t guard the Canadlan- p layoffs Seen Locally eto Grain Market Lack b.trkH liy M) ftriiten troop.; A lio niv il 1 if 'J'hursftay. de-livrrecl a 1i:iH Inttln" rartio f.itf 1 1 1' -1 1 1 in wdi-li In; v;usd sivt i rllii'Hit. Ic:id)-r:i of CfHiiiini- n.t 8flili:iimnx. They are b' irrR removfd from i poila winch tlipy ttmk over wlien'. t,hp I'l-opii-.s Progressive, party swept to a i;inu.ihde victory "m elrctl"n,s la.st April. Savage declared attempts h.ivn been made to undprniiiie loyalty t Britain by intimidation and other methods. He announced that as a precaution ary measure, meetings hav I been banned and checks on road traffic instituted. . However, the goverfior said, "the intercolonial cricket match with Trinidad will begin this morning and will continue tomorrow, provided crowds disperse quickly to their homes alter the match." PATROL STREETS As he spoKc, jiritisli troops patrolled the wide tree-lined streets of Georgetown, alert for ! tny disturbances, One detaeh-will ! nirnt or troops proceed owned bauxite mine at Mac- Kciuic, 60 miles from here, supply .source lor the Aluminum Company of Canada. Savage said iit his address that he hopes "there will be as little Interruption as possible In the normal life of the colony1.": ', "Over Teeent months there Ins been a planned and continuous program of Ktiengt.heit-itip links with Communist rxnin-trics, with a view to making British Guiana a servile state where the people are compelled, under Intimidations,, to give uj i hose freedoms we all cherish," lie said. TllltLATENII) APPEAL The six ousted ministers headed by Prime Minister Cheddi Jngan, had thre-iienei l.o appeal to London. Washington and the United NRtiwis. . A Colonial Office announcement in London today said the envernor had been niven pmere- enry powers. The aU'craft Car- ner Implacable sails tomoirow force. He said he would go abroad for support of his party's demand for self-rule. v no lack of grain handled expected due to the Jack of world markets for Canadian wheat. ' Grain handlers down south SOCREDS INTRODUCE NEW B.C. VOTING LEGISLA TI0N . .'- - ; VICTORIA (f British Columbia's Social Credit government Thursday introduced legislation reducing the minimum age for voters from 21, years to 19 years. ; -, , , ... 'The hew Elections "Ac presented . to the legislature ..felso would throw" out the alternative voting syste'rmj this week expres.scd "alarm" over the wheat situation and a shot to death In the basement of the Heady home In St. Joseph, Mo. He claims he hasn't seen Marsh since. Some authorities have expressed doubt that Hall and Mrs: Heady had an accomplice: . There has been some speculation that Marsh may be dead. FILED WARRANT ' j' ' The FBI has ' fired a ' ftigit iVe warrant ifor the arrest, of Marsh on a charge of murder. The capture of Marsh could answer these questions: Who actually killed Bobhy Oreenlease? Why was he killed, even before ransom negotiations were well underway? What happened to $300,000 ransom money still missing? Approximately $202,000 was recovered from a room In St. Louis. Hall has said he may have lost another bag of money while drunk. Further doubt was cast on Mrs. Heady's story that she didn't realize she was participating 1" Weatherman Pours Out More Rain, Less Sun in September AllieslQffer NowIRIan Tlre-AiiNorlHted Preys I'ANMUNJOM. The Allies today offered a compromise plan that could get explanations to reluctant prisoners-of-war started sooner. 7he United Nations command said it is willing to work around the clock to cut the time of building temporary explanation centres for the Communists from seven to five days. The Reds will use the centres to interview 22,600 Chinese and Koreans who have refused to return to communism. The neutral nations repatria tion commission, in a letter Thursday, Indirectly accused J, trni Allies of trying to stall the i start of Red persuasion attempts in an effort to cut down the explanation period, which nds Christinas Eve. ; ; ' Both sides built .' explanation facilities before the scheduled Sept, 28 starting "jdte.j but- each rejected .the;,, other's . construction. . !i y. ' t,l l 1 : ; . ' The;, Reds'; Uaid the UN-built centre-was located so that t'oi-nmilst representatives . Would Jiavc to travel too close to itoekades holding violently anri- Ked PoWs. The commission liked the UN to build a new one, ' After hearing UN estimates of he time It would take one eek for the temporary facilities and four weeks for the permanent areas the commission ked the Allies to finish It in four days or let the Reds do it. Police Probe Disappearance Of Lytton Nurse LYTTON. B.C. Investiga tion into the mysterious disappearance of Miss Susan Kelsey, middle-aged matron of St. Bar- thlemews hospital here, is being continued, RCMP said Thursday. A search of the hilly terrain near this Fraser Canyon town has failed to turn up any trace of the woman, who vanished Sept. 15. Police now are attempting to contact relatives in Montreal and California in their efforts to lo cate her. The 27-bed hospital closed down temporarily at the end of September because of a shortage of nurses. Father to Hang For Son's'Murder PORT ARTHUR, Ont. (CP) Eric Kaipialnen, a 31-year-old Finnish immigrant, Thursday night was convicted of the mur der of his young son Sehpi last Nov. 28. He was sentenced to be hanged at the district jail Dec. 8. Kaipialnen was smiling slightly when the verdict was announced by the Supreme Court jury which deliberated for 35 minutes. The youth's body was found In a steam bath building here with bullet wounds In the head and chest. Kaipialnen lay near his child with a wound between the eyes A 22 calibre rifle was nearhv. VICTORA-a-TUe thronje speech debate in the B.C. legisla ture wound up Thursday night with a verbal clash letween Attorney-General Roblrt Bonner and a CC'F Kootenfcy member over the governmelils Doukho-bor policy. ' ; I ; , ' Mr. Bonner fiifislad the debate at the rjight session with a spirited defence' of " his policy towards the' radical' Soils of Freedorrl sect : after Randolph Ilarfling' ctlCF'- KalsVsj oc a n) just as spiritedly raked it over the coals. Mr. Harding spokeUhrough a continuous volley of heckling from government benches while Mr. Bonner was received for the most part with stoney silence. The CCFer painted a picture of fear of the actions of the Sons of Freedom in the Slocan Valley in his riding and attacked the government for lack of action In J its Doukhobor policy. ! Mr. Bonner replied that the I protection aiioraea lire ana pro perty in the Kootenays by the government was "unprecedented" In the history, of the pro vince.. Mr. Harding said the "key'"-to tHe whole Doukhobor problem was for the government to ac ' cept the Doukhobor problem as a provincial responsibility. -He said the Doukhobor situa-! tion was getting worse and worse. ' Mr. Bonner admitted the situ - 1 ation "may not be getting any better" but added that the statement that It was getting worse was "debatable. Mr. Bonner said he wanted to make it clear that there was no over-all" solution to the Sons sixik'-iurn for the Vancouver md New Westminster local o' the International Union of ui'".ert Brewery. Flour, Cereal. Coftdtink and Distillery Work ers of America iCIO-CCLt said that '.til per cent of the local's urain winkers have been laid olf. The spokesman said that the re due to lack of world for Canadian wheat that was causing grain to pile up in Vancouver and New Westminster elevators. Other workers such as longshoremen and trainmen arc allectcd by falling wheat shipirrents, Canadian wheat board officials in Vancouver declined to comment on the union statement. Here in Prince Rupert the Nor- wcrjian freighter Itiseanger was scheduled to arrive today from a kidnapping when she lured ; ""in urnam. wnu men 01 Bobby from his school on the ; the famed Argyll and Suther-pretext that she was his aunt land Highlanders, battle-tested and his mother had been taken I veterans Ot Hit Korea fighting, HI ; Jagan had denounced the The FBI said her fingerprints i troop arrivals as a "show of i Vancouver to take on a cargo of had been found on the ransom i notes used during the kidnapping; negotiations. ' 1 .waltlpg for a written report, of the governments oJioy on the Sons of Freedom policy. -, n total of 104 2 hours in August-Figures for September of 1952 showed more of everything more ratn, more sunshine ant! higher temperatures. In September last year there were 13 38 inches of rain, 70 8 hours of sunshine, and a high tem perature of 72.7 degrees, reached September 21. -WEATHER- Forecast North coast region: Gale warning in effect. Northern part, rain this morning, cloudy with scattered showers thereafter. Little change in temperature. Wind southeast 4T. shifting to southwest 35 about noon, decreasing to 25 this even ing. Low tonight and high Saturday at Sandsnlt and Prince . Rupert, 47 and 55. potted him. West of High River, about 25 miles south of Calgary, another horse trade was pulled on the Ca'rtwrleht ranch. This time n 22 calibre rifle disappeared ilong with the horse. As he travelled, Hie youth apparently lived off the land, well-populated with game, and slept under the stars at night. . A hunter's shack or an empty line, cabin on the far reaches of a ranch may have offered him shelter occasionally. And thus for a month he ghoateH his wny through the foothills, hunted and apparently alone, except for the horse that carried him. But the Mounties doggedly on his trail finally brought an end to his lonesome adventure. Details ot his capture were cot available here. Il no cau-c for rilar: kwjlln ot r;-.!in ii ,r ployed at th. r. II :e -'fin ili v.itor was 'oday s M.:..- ,;, ,!l' "I UK1 I( liciM V' ni-ili 'tnr. said (i r hilts of ju, ri i'i;i.:y Ml tli.it wh f'.ii ui " in Hire slu is Jj kit y Found ' -'I Vi i ! ('.;;, y tli- " - lmi;. I.), i.s II, ll. mvS' l i del. Ill miles Masstrl. HCM1 hrtc today ' "PPare utly UH.s from P(WIT ;'H'it swept i,,,,.s " Uuriticv U-UI W;1S liiuncl m April .!(!. v,iti, )!lf, "C W Rik 3. an Uiiiy, rshid I,, 1P a"' '".'...ificd as - way. well -known 'Urea js Running ,urs Late 81 G n,... " I w,-n auinnin. tight to ni "which it. i.'l the! line !n m v, cit - J an Council Tib, . ft . .. . 'Mm nnyoody P 1L aUtocl; ave is? ,!?no. ht(,niS,ei,h"r and bo W5. In 'It tL -fe'lt larger "III the 'til one th... , they "-j nan f f 2.700 long tons of wheat and the 'Pa ranger, also from Bergen, Nor way i.s o pecled here on October ;?0 to load 7,000 long tons of wheal Mr. Mills said that the elevator began the month almost empty and that, shipments of grain will he arranged to take care of any ..hips coming In during the month. The elevator will In all probability be full by the end of the month, he said. Canada obliged the United Kingdom with large shipments of wheat at a lower price during and after the war In the hope that such a move would bring a better price when Brit- The weatherman wasn't vsry kind to Prince Rupert last mnnll, Via lT3Vll fVlic etfw InWAI temperature s, ie5s sunshine and more rain on more days than in Aneiit. During the month of September there were 8.87 Inches of rain registered here, spread ovr 23 days of the month. In August there were only 3 85 inches of ratn on 16 days of the month. Mean temperature last month was 53.3 degrees, with a high ior uie monin oi oi.o aegrees, registered September 3, and a low of 41 dgrees. September 29 and 30 High point in August was 73.7 degrees, reacnea August 14. Sunshine was meagre too last month In Prince Rupert. Old Sol : ble?sed the city with only 63.3 j hours of sunshine during the entire 30 days, compared to a vie ted of horse theft. ! When he escaped, police said, he took another horse and rode off into the hills. His lonely figure was spotted many times in the days that followed, but he made himself mighty scarce, drifting always westward and south. He easily could have covered 200 miles between Bowden and the ranch where he was captured last night. The first sign of him after his escape turned up on a ranch south of Cochrane, a foothills town about 40 miles northwest of Calgary. One of its horses mysteriously disappeared one midnight and a stranger was In its place the next morning. The strange horse was plenty weary. The youthful outlaw drifted south unuiu, disapptamig into the hills whenever someone Western Saga Ends in Alberta Foothills As Fugitive Cowboy Captured by bounties i snow(ltl s'Kns or recovery, However, Britain has turned to ! Russia and other European coun-tist, yes-1 tries where she can buy wheat at j a considerably lower cost. Autoclave? Doesn't Know CALGARY (CP) James Roselte 1 came to the end of the owlhoot trail Thursday night. " The 17-year-old fugitive from a horse-theft sentence was captured by waiting Mounties as1 he rode stealthily up to the Dick Gardner ranch west of Nanton. some 70 miles south of here, under cover of darkness. Police said, he intended to "trade" his weary mount for a fresh one and then slip 1 back into the safety of the hills. In custody instead, he Was to be brought to Calgary during the night. The foothills of western Al berta have given him protection for the last month, since he escaped from tue Bowden In stitute, about 10 miles north ot here. He was sentenced to term in the correctional Institu tion for youths after being on lfc $ V ' 'A I V ' r ; : , - . ... 'Jim' --V- ..-. : 'a larger autoclave be author : .tMS. i.- -'.Wi .ftil ized purchased for the sum of approximately $275.' The. committee resolution passed without a word. Queried Jater, each alderman admitted he didn't know what It was and that maybe one of the others did. Oh, yes- an autoclave ts a type of sterilizer WHISPERING A GLEEFUL J A RE WELL into the ear of her father's prize-winning Brahma bull, little Kathy Partin wishes her ranch friend Godspeed on his trip to Cuba Raised at the Heart Bar Ranch at Kisslmee, Flu, the animal looks rattier glum at the prospect of travelling to another country to rais a 'family e l!,nL health Me a'"d that.