, PROVINCIAL! ,, , , i L1BRARV MORROW'S TIDES i u frciay, November 7, 1953 IClflC ic siar.aaiu iiinei 1:38 19.2 feet 13:17 21.3 feet 7:18 7.8 feet HERN AN CENTRAL BRITISH Doily Nf COLUMBIA'S 19:57 3.3 feet Publish,! o r kA NEWSPAPER vol XL: ' Nr25C9n0da S M0 StrpRtC9ie . K.y to the Great Northwest" - PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, ,953 ' 1-1 V-ijlf i o onegl X 1 no a. L "X on Uod '4 v. l" 4 1 ' ' if A mm UU VJCfe' fiA fafim. tkv u n mm t r Pi - i f 41 10,000 Parade ' - I I ' . . S V a In Guy Fawkes St ys -fV?- .41 A , 3 I Celebrations Italians Blame British Soldiers By webb Mckinley TRIESTE (AP) -Bloody violence broke out anew in this disputed Adriatic port city today as clashes between rioters and police took a two-day toll of possibly nine killed. United Stn By HAL COOPER LONDON (AP) Thou 7 - j 5 - ' sands of -celebratine- stn- ? i .A ,4 w. . o it. Vvf lr dents battled police for more than seven hours moved in. fast in full field gear with bayonets fixed Presidential Aim to iry 10 quell tfte disturbance. Thursday nijjht in one of unomciai reports said six pro- the most riotous fiuv Italian demonstrators were killed If E i I in noting today as the eltv wa fawkes niirhts London gripped by a eeneral strikp a The shooting was done by Trieste's territorial riot police cor -sisting of Italians and Slavs. British and American occupation It f hand grenade tossed from the has seen in many years. More than 120 persons face police charees of the wild outburst, climaxed nillirng thousands exploded In the midst of a squad of police, wounding two of them gravely. Reports said one of these may also have died. Two persons were killed in rioting Thursday and 18 were injured. It was the first ti mp AmnHfan troops am not move against tlv rioters. , Premier Giuseppa Pella called for a cabinet session today, and urged Italians to remain calm. Rome's school children the firSt tO hit th slriul. 11.1. jmayya Threatens To Halt PoW tariiourr I !tilj-i D.J. C j I ii jy h marcn 01 10.000 university students and others on the Houses of Parliament. In Piccadilly Circus, 65 bobbies stood shoulder to shoulder against assaults on th dmnn. morning chanted: "British soldiers killed them. RHtish Mi Statue Of V.rns n rOO Lr ernA n( JOHN RANDOLPH troops had been called in to help aueH the bitter demonstrations. British and American forces, which occupy this citv hnrf k. 7 . BUU vi IX'NJOM iAP)The In- dlers killed them." This was not true, but it was an index of the hiah fo,iir,. , ,v, n(jce0 up meir Ih raavva pHm d. ih. ni "1U,'B ova which wmcn dominates aominates the the traf- traf- Red;wintOIVfws with anuJpeared'ready to caU toe whole ! ,flc C'rCle' Climbin fhu S ru 1 may have to program q quits to a favorite stunt of celebrat- throw up my hands." I , . : ing Britons. viously been posted merely as ief of the Korean commission lndlrertly tPdly-warned the Com- that have built nn inw ti euarua arouna rjuiicllngs where British-American announcement The warning by y Lt -Gen uen. K K.s.,use S indicated he may - indian trQopg tQ conduc mcir personnel were working. Police first i-ire interviews if the Dresent pSATILE MAYOR WHALEN ifter they were outnumbered in a clash near the waterfront and were forced to give ground. tottering procedure breaks down. Earlier Thimayya had visited the camp holding the 22 Americans and one Briton who have refused renntHntinn i Tt.. T th tWO South Knrpann Koreans charged h with the betrayal of Maj. Gen. William F Dean wear concealing straw hoods as they are brought to trial. xS csrsea' President s Rhee to The annual celebration in honor of the 17th-century plotter who tried to blow up the Houses of Parliament started off calmly with millions of Britons dancing around bonfires, burning effigies of "the Guy" and drinking ale. The rioting erupted, spokesmen claimed, after police had refused them a nermit frr mnu-ur mUNt SYSTEM October Rain Here Totals 20.66 Inches ronce iired on the demonstrators. One demonstrator ' slumped to the ground next to this corresnnnripnt oti,. - i w UIC ujiil- ed Nation side, and he reported a. Mayw Harold Whalen to the rescu'q at noon today the city s telephone Ky.stem blew a main fu.se and put all m Prince Ruuert out nt onmmi.i o naa neid the Indian commission for more than, four Pulp Union Deleaates ppared to hae been hit. Riotinir here fnllnmpri tv,., big procession through London XJlise Wcw M. 12 D5. Djn. torlav and u.) iuiu vu near comii i ni against the VN rnmm.M streets and a bonfire. A rjolice Mde for wlrelthlff Doua Huiruc it .u. . the Indian custodial force.'' jSpokesBn den'i such permls-! Tolleet in Vancou ver day's bloody events in which the If all theain that has fallen British-trained territorial police t on Prince Rupert since Jan- 1 fired- on demonstrators-killing j this yeaf" was still .here the two and wounding another 18. citv would be awash with six pepped out of the city hall. An RCMP dragnet was put ''fine mis.sing wire boss anri at. that tlm uru-i sioii naa ocen Wltnhela. an. I The Allied PoW hnnrioH Tm said the only restriction was an Three pvpnnti'vo ff f of the trouble. ayya a long, typewritten protest denouncing delivery of moil oia one lormaaine DrorpM nni ..icom, wcre jonowea " water una last month s ')V similar niithreaim in rainfall nf 9n inho. .. P to the tclonhone room ho strode .......iiu . newspapers and magazines from or meetings within mile ""u rJT V T P WOrKers a o union union at at Cn Columbia Cellulose , V Parliament while the House is plant on Watson Island In in session session. left lasr nio-ht - ,.uuun,,j lilClilJUIUIlK -D years auo he had wnrlcprf fnr ih. rv,r.,it -i T - - -- wwici - " " J lllttjr WC-U Italian cities notably industrial j pusn tne yearly total to a new the United States which the j Milan and Rome. pone and Telegraph system. After locating the trouble PoWs considered counter-propa- record high. Already 73.27 inches nave fallen in 10 months. Last month rain u nn In the Italian ranita? Ih ...fe,.v iUJ .aiiiuuvci to anena a meeting of union representatives from nine B.C. pulp and paper ganaa 10 intimidate cinnrw The mob surged out of Pic cadilly Circus with the cry: "On to Parliament." The stn. 'ttinds of demonstratinir iiiHr,fo "Pieted the circuit with a pair of insulated pliers and nem in position fnr in minniu .i... coerce and bribe" them to come rlnnn . 1. ntji . ... record desoite its irrp.f ot oincu nic ornisn consulate in lillliO. n normal. Mr. Haeue then inrH -....j .v.. aowntown Rome. scheme is acceptable, ; tt 'is far dents fought their way through a mile of streets to the locked The trio Pat O'Neal, presl- as in October, 1949. more than 21 inches drenched the city However, it bests Pennanently. Itn lian newsoanersi h I V t i aeni oi Local 708 of thp Tntor. national Brotherhood of Pulp, fall of 13.29.lrich.es and is more . irom. adequate". The statement continued : "We do receive a travel allowance of 40 cents a day but this can be eliminatpd at. snv ti blamed British Gen. Sir John Winterton for the order to fire which turned the flag-waving and later stone-hurlinn- ripmnn- gates of Parliament Yard. Some marchers detoured en route into Downing Street and tossed firecrackers aeainst the home. . The protests were signed by an American who appeared to ihave written his name Richard j Cordon ; the British prisoner, An-drew M. Condron, and a South .Korean. The main demand, Thimayya said, was that the neutral nations h Remanded For Sentence Sulphite and Paper Mill Workers (AFL-TLC): Peter IKtpr corresponding secrets rv and stration in Trieste into a national Angus Macphee, financial' secre crisis. Cheque Forgery Count by five cents per day over an eight-month period. Thus a five-cent Increase can be lost in a short time. taryare travelling aboard the Prince George. man twice as much as fell during October last year. Twelve month rainfall totl in 1952-was 79.38, in 1951 it w-; 69.71 and in 1950, 83.87 inches of rain fell. With two more months to go Prince Rupert has a good chance of beating the 1950 high. Statistics from th nik i, windows of No. 10, Prime Minister Churchill's official residence. Unable to penerate the police cordon at the Parliament Buildings, -the crowd then tried to march to Bucklneham Pa I oca iwiawun luiuuiisniuu -censor Neil Ph They Will meet in Vnnrnnvn Gouzenko Sues Paper For Libel Sunday with deleeates frnm "Management will give no guarantee that this nrmiin nt "" ii-uiano-, naa been remanded fuf sentence "UKU nlBU 10 Illter out all ma-t'ter hp hH day after-n charges of theft and uttering j terial urging them to return, by M-u.ut . n ',uuncI i a ,orKPd rnpQ"e and the latter, "I asked them what we Should other unions. will last even for the contract Two members of the Interna But mounted policemen gradually restored order even hours alter the outburst began. year. 11 rctainin.r ci i i . Hifttui.-u nut! uw 111 ui n letter xrom a tional from Tacnma Woh land weather station show that Nlorar rv guilty io the forgery and re-1 man's wife who writes 'O, darl- NOT ONLY WAGES mere were onlv four riavs njith. John Sherman, vice-president ot Throughout B.C.. mnrp than me puip workers' union, and out rain during October this year. During the month tho Supplying Charge A- E Brown. vIce-Dresidpnt of 4,200 workers at nine mills cast cZn t I" V court' Plostcution evidence showed, Bnd tney seemed a little unclear travail , tnoftof!that during a party the two i on that point," said Thimayya. Uniiinn 1ti1 loft onrJ.,. r"V. I iij TORONTO Oi Th law firm of Robinson and Haines said Thursday it has been retained by Igor Gouzenko, the Russian embassy clerk who exposed his country's wartime espionage in Canada, in a libel action against the Toronto Star and one of its reporters, Gwyn Thomas. The action will alioas that mv shone for a total of 34 8 hours- the paper makers, also will attend. ; Sfdori to whkh two in hi. v,m ori in. r""""."T' "ign temperature for last . month was 65 degrees on Oct. 4. and the mprnnrv riinnn . MAY SET DATE fna Steele and Adella had i)i.arinri ..;i... terviews that the Reds handle The delegates are exDer.ted tn . u J .JK" I.U .i lOW Of 35 On Oct 29 Mpon t - " week- Tile fnrmn perature for Oetnhpr Danots- rulp workers at one mill voted against strike action and papermakers at Powell River also .voted against a work stoppage-Mills Involved, besides Columbia Cellulose, ares Alaska Pine and Cellulose at Port Alice and at Woodfibre; Ellf Falls Company, Duncan; Howe Sound PulD ComDanv. Port.' Mpllnn- set a strike date and draw up policy to be followed at each Gouzenko was libelled in a Star $100 cheques and two $50 ones with them when they left. After one cheque had been ruined and torn up the pair enlisted the aid of Chan, who with a transparent box containing a Hunt cooled Sedorp's signature Brings $50 Fine Murray Thomas Vague was fined $50, costs or in default one month In jail, when he pleaded guilty before Magistrate W. D. Vanes in police court this morning, to a charge of supplying an Indian, Katherine White, with liquor. WEATHER Forecast North Coast Reeinn: MnstW much lower than last October's average of 50.9 degrees. story Oct. 30. plant in the event of a work a compound of 500 prisoners a day beginning Monday or agree to forget those who don't meet the Red explainers. Meanwhile, Allied and Com munlst diplomats today handed a team of staff advisers the ft Escape stoppage. The two women then engaged P Pa folia The unions voted 72 per cent in favor of strike action in a government-supervised strike vote throughout the industry last week-end. The vote followed their rejection in a referendum fa770175 Santa Claus Critic, Dr. Brock Chrishom Retires a taxi to drive them to Ter-1 tough job of Ironing out disputes race and paid the driver with which have tallpri pffnrts tn MacMlllan & Bloedel at Na-naimo and Alberni; Ocean Fulls WVER (P -Prison farm ; ! a:;e lokiiig or a $50 cheque. All the cheques arrange a Korean peace confer- clear today and Saturday. Not ana Powell River. Since results of the strike vote well ici;uvcieu CACeUt tne . CIll'c mucn cnanee in tpirtnorntiiro destroyed one. were announced, no move ha U.S. envoy Arthur Dean and Lrd " , w"o maae it H.W and n ii, i TORONTO Dr n nmi. Winds lieht. . been made by either the com Chisholm, in the past an out Low tonight and high at Port Hardv 40 nnri m- MuRistrnte Vance remanded the case for eight days or less pending the arrival of a report from Ottawa. panies or ine union to discuss the 'situation, but W c r top Red negotiators have recessed indefinitely while their aides try Informally and probably in secret to break the deadlock. mistake. 3 VZ : CCllce' murmured spoken critic of morals, laws and Santa Claus! Dlans to rptirp tn Sandspit and Prince Rupert, 32 Jones, mill manager at Colum ana io. small house on Vancouver Island director-general of the United Nations World Health Organization said he doesn't like what has been happening to himself. Dr. Chisholm, 47, whose views over the years have raised storms of protest, also doesn't like Hollywood's gangster movies, the press that plays up international dis the ,JZ "? BlePPed to ' sort out his thinking." The eminent Canadian bia Cellulose, has announced that the management "is always open for discussion." 7 HSDrvlnR atrist who recently resigned as of a five-cents-an-hour across-ihe-board increase offered by the companies. Basic rate at the present time is $1.50 an hour. In the vote at the Columbia Cellulose plant, 286 workers favored strike action and 99 were against. '. The executive of Local 708, in a statement today, said they considered the strike Vote majority at the plant "as a con-scientous expression of the need for a more liberal settlement of their requests." (the union demanded a 10- Cents-an-hour Inrreo Jrism officlal td -W! T1 ' i ! t l!reTlT,hursday and that r " n ZZlimici frm hl Wh0 mad " ". 20.;, t,are Edward h van h "netn HuPe, Urn Uom a work "i-storm Friday. tkt northern differential. A conciliation board recommended a four-cent increase, which the union turned downj and the firms followed with in nffpr nf ntr t . b . If' five cents an hour.) AWARE Of ACTION cerns ana "sacred cows." The dissatisfaction with him-relf, he explained in an interV viw Thursday, arises from the fact that he has "become a compromiser." He said he is seeking "a- sort of reorientation" by taking to the woods and physical activity. Dr. Chisholm said the United States' gangster movies are doing the West a great deal of harm. "It's simply impossible to explain they don't represent West- ' em democracy," he said. People in Eastern Europe could not ac- cept that such things would b( allowed out of the country i they were not authentic an government-approved. It was his remarks in 1945 oi Sar.ta Claus that drew crltlp fire from all sides. Then Canada's deputy minister of health he said children should be toll the literal truth about everything and should be taught Santa Claus Is not ffeaL "The men are awarp of the S action tney have taken," the statement said, adding that "the pulp and paper manufacturers fy to fiu. uurt here on " o.u. nave refused to acknowledge the Wiriplv-Oortpri filCt. Ptokirt:: years 'or con 'ap a woman, 1' ten A 1 that this is a high-cost area . . "It is only in wages that standardization is in effect to Mm irvnunvn nrTTV'c i I ' 4 T iL'ir,Tni't' t . . i. ) i .i. ... . . "'anao a miHrii- - - MODERN SCHOOL at Bella Coola in Its picturesque setting is shown just before official opening when department of education officials handed over school to District 49, Ocean Falls board of school trustees. Three-room school with teacherage! built at cost of $85,000, serves both native and white children and removes necessity for two school systems In Bella Coola Valley. any extent ... We have nn npnclnn nlnn fifi .-.w mivttniix 1 & d ifvniiii'iviiiiviio, uMiu tu ottjr wnetner sue deserves such bad publicity. Nevertheless, she's the object of these pavement printers' scorn, and, Incidentally, they seem to consider "Sibbie a nice boy." The street-writers' campaign took place In the Bay ' Ridge section of Brodklyn, N.Y. Wft0 livpa ""u"-'lKea '""H him o ri ,across tne A- against, her will. they have in other mills nd, while the