k MORROW'S PROVINCIAL LIB1A3Y,. TIDES Mv Lay, November 8, 1953 IN .1:4, ... IrlfiC Staraaru 2.13 J- eet 13:49 21.4 feet 7:51 8.1 feet 20:32 3.3 feet Do ., Phone 81 NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER Published at Canada's Most Strategic Pacific Port "Prince Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest" VOL. XUI, No. 260 PRINCE RUPERT. B.C.. SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 7 10S ppiru ptvc r-vr t 4 i. n. y mi . r...-1 . . ru n n n ha n mi i i n fin ink Returns To Clear Son's and Own Name FAIRBANKS, Alaska '(AP) Blonde Diane Wells denied Friday any part in the murder of her wealthy husband or that she was overly friendly with a Negro drummer who is accused with her. , V" V 1 ;". !.' ) .... 1 : . , , , , - -V - y x 4 s , , .-".' ' :. j ' i In a signed statement through Girl Located iSTED on the side of the French In their fl jht against the Reds, here Is one of the Sikorsky wpters recently sent from the United Stat :s for use over the rugged teraln of Indo-Chlna. wig like a giant mechanical bug, It Is bet .ig serviced by French Air Force mechanics at an ild lomewhere In Indo-China. Red Rites Honor Workers MOSCOW (Reuters Prime Minister Malenkov today took moKt of the military flavor out of Russia's annual Red Square parade and transformed it into a workers' festival with the spotlight on civilian achievements. Marching army columns, guns and troop carriers passed through the square adjoining the Kremlin while squadrons of jet fighters and bombers roared overhead. But the soldiers had gone after 20 minutes. Their place was taken by an estimated 2,000,000 Moscow workers, who walked at snail's rpre for hours across the capital to salute the-1 36th anniversary of the Bolshevik revolution. However, Marshal Nikolai Bul-ganin, Soviet defence minister, in the key speech of the day said Russia "cannot but take measures to strengthen her armed forces." He reported that Soviet forces had proved their military ) Movies Planned Here Safe on Beach After Sinking KETCHIKAN (AP) A mother's ordeal In wandering naked along cold and rocky beaches in fruitless search for her drowned husband and child was described here Friday. David Tate, 21, Metlakatla fisherman, was lost with his seven-month-old son, David Jr., when they were swept from Her Bay Patients Scream and Dodge Three-Dimensional Film Shown' her attorney, her first comment since a grand jury indicted her Tuesday, the 31-year-d widow said she flew back from Seattle Friday to "clear my name and my son's name." Mrs. Wells, arrested Tuesday-as she stepped from an airliner -in Seattle, and Johnny Wjr" 33. a former Fairbanks drummer -who is under arrest in Oakland. Calif., are charged with in-.', murder of Cecil Wells In his bed before down Oct'. 17. Mrs. Wells is at liberty on $5,000 bond. Warren faces a preliminary hearing before the U.S. commissioner in Oakland next Tuesday Wells, 51, was a Fairbanks automobile dealer and preside.ii, of the Alaska Chamber of Commerce- He was shot thrpugh the head. Mrs- Wells made her first comment on a statement by Warren to Oakland police thut he had met her at the Fairbanks Country Club and laic) had meetings with her at another musician's apartment. "I do not have any comment to make at this time relative LARRV STANWOOI) tion to 3-D. Specifically. th it's like. And the Dicture Is a fc'jellng, sometimes scream- three-dimension movie portrays good on," he said last night. p paruy siuunea auaience a natural depth of field which Is r Bay Hospital patients Impossible to attain in the ord- their 16-foot boat on a hunting,! LOOKING like a well-regimented chorus line, these three beauties relax in the sun at Daytona Beach. The gentle sea breeze rustles the frfciges on their wide sun hats. A spoksman from the Prince Rupert Chamber of Commerce denied today that these girls are refugees from the city's record rainfall. "It's probably raining at Daytona right now," he said. r,M law the first modern1 lnisry two - dimensional flat dimension motion picture; movie. Thrce-D creates the Im- F l oression that one is actually tak- Mearwhile, the Capitol Theatre in Prince Rupert is being prepared to present here soon an even newer form of projection Cinemascope which creates the impression of three-dimension but eliminates the use of glasses by spectators. wo-hour full feature saw! ing part In the action on tne trip Tuesday. The father's body was recovered Thursday at the entrance to Seal Cove, west of Ketchikan. SWAM ASHORE A Coast Guard plane found 18-year-old Mrs; Tate waving a iience duck and scramble iut of the way of tumbling rs, crashing cars, stabbing screen. Goilnowsky will put on shows at Port Simpson, Columbia Camp. preparedness during fall manoeuvres. . But most of his speech was devoted to the increase of food and consumer goods In Russia, Pulp Workers in Ontario Reach Agreement on Contract A huge screen 21 by 15 feet cr crackling flames, all: Alice Arm. Kincolith and Stew-h appeared to leap out at ! art when he leaves here on a will be Installed together with om the scrcn. piece of canvas on the beach of Gravlna Island. She had swum ashore from the foundering boat, after removing her cloth new projection equipment to I and efforts on the home front. show was presented by chartered boat today. He presents the film only where regular theatre companies aer net estab- provide the top In picture enter- Rulganin opened today's par Goilnowsky of Penlicton. tainment for local movie-goers. I Bri- TORONTO B A strike in j cent wage Increase with a mini-Ontario's pulp and paper In- mum Increase of five rents n ing on her husband's advice. as reviewing general. He b past few months he hasiilshed. He expects to make sev- Famous Players recently launch j drove in an open blue coupe n tour with the 3-D film eral appearance in small Alaska ed cinemascope in Vancouver! a. to Johnny Warren's statement," she said, "since I do not kno his reasons for them. Certainly any implications are unfound She- was suffering from exposure and was taken to a Metlakatla ellnic. own the long line of soldiers. dustry was averted last night I hour. when nine unions representing j The increases are retroactive to 15,000 workers and 11 firms i last May 1. and aereement run b the Cariboo ,and Central J coast towns as well. with the western premiere of i his hand at t.h saint rtm ncre, mt. uounowsKy "Three-D probably won t last the extravaganza. "The Bobe." 4 Returning the - salute. -Han She wandered on the beaches ed." Wechel agreement, on a new for two-vear term enrtinu tnrii l:Jt the northern B. C. coast forever. This Is one way people It is understood The Robe wiU Lenin's tomb In Red Square were fo two days with, no protection' ' .. n.," contract , , 130, 1955. rutheastern Alaska. In remote areas get to see what; also be presented here. . Malenkov himself. President Agreement was reached after!; It was hailed by both union Mrs. wells s ' statement of canvas she found in an oid Voroshllov. Foreign Minister Mol "a three-day session and covered handed to reporters by her at and management representatives as "a great stabilizing In the shack while .the tempera a wage increase and fringe benefits. It provides for a three per fluence In the pulp and paper otov, Deputy Premier Kagano-vlch and four other figures representing the government and Communist party hierarchy. tures dropped ', to . around the i.. " , . - .... i - (' 'f". ' t i! fr.' IT . 11 i.j . , ii i ft ! t, , i f f m 1 ft.,. - S ' 'IS 4 ' j' I ' . V I rtl . r-i . 1 . f I in- :'.. -'1 t'- j - ! -. ' . ft - ' , j -.! j I movie was a science-fiction : In which a 'Space-ship 'I Martians, lands In the U desert by mistake. picture Itself Is well cal-lor suspense. Titled "It From Otuer Space," it Is kersal production. In this Air Strip at Prince George Sinks Under Big U.S. Bomber ; ; vr-- Jaycee Chief industry. . ' 1 J Agreement was i also .reached on fringe Items dealing with sick leave-; payi : overtime J or , shift To foreign guests watching the t nnrarip It spnmed that the flneent. i this- year had ' been; purposely 1. Unmn Xiihawaii workers and Vacation pay. ' ,1 f was on IS mm. film. Two Settlerrierit. was announced by J. Arthur Daoust, chairman of freezing mark. , Her feet were cut on the rocks and she was hobbling on improvised crutches. A group Of 75 searchers from MefiakaUa found. Tate's body.' ' ' f' i I. i-ii' Partners Find Body of Miner Special to The Dally News ori in synchronization special screen were used. '"Hence wore tinted glasses. 100-member union negotiating committee and Canadian director of International Brotherhood PRINCE . GEORGS CP)- An overloaded runway- gave, way here Friday under the weight of a giant U.S Air Force B2'J Superfortress . which blocked traffic on the strip after completing an emergency landing. On a flight from San Francisco to Alaska, the bomber made the landing with one en- pnowsky, who has shown of Paper Makers (AFL-TLC). Theuiiian&.arigjnally aked for , The president of the British Columbia region, Junior Chamber of Commerce will arrive in Prince Rupert tomorrow on the first lap ofJiJi.bt-naiajljojiiiraof the province. - - Dennis O'Sullivan is scheduled to arrive here by boat tomorrow morning and will speak at the Jaycee monthly meeting Monday night. Harold Hampton, vice-presi a ble . to take off Btlong : the rer paired runway if It keeps mov-. ing. . When the distress call was first received, control tower men asked for the plane's weight by radio, then suggested that a shorter runway was the strongest on the airfield. But pilot Lieut. Aubrey M. Brim decided to risk sinking rather than use the shorter strip- f Meanwhile, other traffic at the airport is using the shorter runway- Another Is out of action through a construction project. 1 In out-of-way places tout B.C. for the past few y he really gets "a big ran the way 3-D hits specie first time they see it." stance during a scene focused on civilians! The army's 20-mtnute contribution compared with three-quarters , of an hour last year. There were no tanks, and the overhead air squadrons quickly disappeared. WEATHER North Const Region Gale warning extended- Rain in morning, otherwise cloudy with showers Sunday- Winds southeast 35 Sunday morning. Low tonight and high Sunday at Port Hardy, 45 and 45; Sandspit and Prince Rupert, 42 and 48. torney, Walter Sczulo, who said she had returned from Seattle "fighting mad" over the charges. ; The statement said she Jit'W to Seattle Tuesday at the suggestion of her attorney because he thought she needed. rest after utie lurore of investigations and controversy in, the two weeks after the slaying. She said she made no effort to keep the trip wUh her four-year-oid son, Marquam, secret. The secret indictment against Mrs. Wells and Warren was returned after her departure. During the investigation here Mrs. Wells told police and a coroner's jury that her husoand was killed by one of two intruders who entered their swank eighth-floor apartment. She said one "made lor" her husband in beat while a seconl seized her and beat her unconscious as she fled to the living -room. She said later that her . husband had kept $1,000 in a secret drawer in the living room' and the money was missing when she returned from hospital- a wage increase of five per cent and backed It up with overwhelming strike vote by employees in the Ontario mills. 1 ; gine out, another about to go, lonri ismnko nnurlnff from the W when huiie The agreement Is expected to boulders c abin .nm,a t o ctnn mi Waller rocks came crashing craninK mil in a slide, one truest ...... n .i n.ih unn tn set a pattern for settlement in pulp and paper mill disputes in Quebec and Western Canada. dent for Northern B.C., will head the committee welcoming Mr. O'Sullivan. A tour of the city. DORREEN Body of Anton Iverson, 60-year - old Dorreen prospector, was found Friday one and a half miles from the placer mine site wtiere a rock slide crashed down a mountain side October 27. ' The body was found by his two partners, John Secora and Oscar Nelson and will be taken to Terrace for burial. A brother, Sigurd Iverson of Vancouver, arrived today. cried out and sprang ; goon the airfield's longest run-He explained with a grin: wayi Ule piane slowly settled Mieniy I Saw that rock j through the runway surface. Mignt at me Thcn some HeHVy timbers and hydraulic me. For a moment Hurts were usecTto halt the slnk-f. 1 was 8 Roner." i ig plane. " all a joke, of course. ottictals said a brisk cross-had Quletlv flinnrd 1 o.inH onrt tht. irilp pni-;iie caused the Columbia Cellulose plant and the cold storage is planned for tomorrow, and Mr. O'Sullivan will be guest of honor at an executive dinner meeting at noon Sunday. He will leave here Tuesday night for Terrace, Smithers and Prince George. Italy Seething With Riots Against U.K. Policy on Trieste Depression Predicted By Candidate VICTORIA (CP) Canada is P ball at the guest during the crippled plane to swerve a r," wii 2ht i.f u i, . i or thp commotion. n "id the rest, 'wral, the entire audience, lnB men, women and chll-"Mted similarly. The film wnlle Drohahlv q llit! t,. snort aisinnce aiicr it muuim down, blowing the two tires. New tires are being airlifted from the U.S. When they arrive and engine repairs are completed, the plane will be moved from the runway to a concrete apron. Officials say the giant plane, weighing 101,000 pounas, will be ROME (Reuters i Italy seethed with rocks, clubs and tear gas today against British policy in the troubled free city of Trieste, where police have killed six Italians with gunfire during the last three days. Students and school children UIS Speeding Strike Claims poured Into the central streets of Rome today, for the second day, their passions aroused by angry newspaper editorials demanding the dismissal of Gen. Sir John Wlnterton, British commander in Trkste. They quickly shattered win lid, Is a dramatic intmiiii. OLD COUNTRY PRINCE GEORGE (CP) An official of the Unemployment dows of the British council a nritioh ifrmQir.n i Insurance Commission here says 0OTBALL building, centre, and the Rome office of,hls off1, ls d,ling asquickl:i: POSSlble With flOOd Of n-llieh tTnrKoor. ilr,aa MnS B claims from lumber workers who injuries were reported. Policell Rw (CP)Rcsull8 of 80C. C "Played in the United slipping back to the "hungry 30s" because it will not get out from behind the United States "dollar dictated trade barriers," a Labor-Progressive candidate in the Nov- 24 by-election said here last night-Mrs. Doris Blakey said there were markets for Canadian goods in the Commonwealth and Asia "especially China" but Canada would not accept the sterling pound. She said the LPP would fight for a new Isolation hospital in Victoria where polio patients could get "proper treatment." The largest payroll in Victoria was that of civil servants and it was high time that civil servants were given full political rights, even the right to strike, she said. ftft&SS "It Is high time we elected someone to bring up these problems and to raise these questions," Mrs. Blakey said. have been put out of work as the result of the Interior lumber workers' strike. The workers are not directly involved in the walkout by the International Woodworkers of America, but were laid off be "IXlo i vv,,,i,Tr p01.l8niulh , Shemrlcl Uliltrcl 1. "uueuc a, HuUdorsfleld cause mills employing them i'cttA. . """""mu-r c ty 2. , : ' v w V;' X.- s ' V X ' .v " ' . - ' ' - f V ,v ! "ji ' , "?"'-"- i Yo . ' ft - - I were forced to close. Most of the mills produce rough lumber. The planer mills they supply have been closed by strike action. Striking workers are not eligible for unemployment Insurance payments. Norn I Hnm 0- i 3- At, villa 1. 'c" -. a-aimeriHim 0. rushed to the trouble spots, drlv-nt back the students with batons. bnut ?0 demonstrators were detained trying to break through to the British embassy. The crowd outside the police cordon oulckly swelled to several thousand. Police held it under control by laying down a screen of tear gas. Similar demonstrations were reported from Milan, Turin, Genoa, Venice and other provincial cities. In Palermo, Sicily, police .beat back repeated attempts by crowds of students to storm the British consulate. Pillsbury Point Fog Horn Out The Department of Transport IUn,,U m.m Athlollc I. , nuvfrs t. Hull City a "'Wll I ,.Ky,e J- BrlKtol Rover, a. ' NHtu County ! h..u,'J,,: Lincoln Citu 2 " " U 11 rfirl K " 5, Bury 0. bm" I EAGlE LONDON ART SUFFERS BLOW FROM POOR HEATING UNIT LONDON (Reuters) Three artists were among the tenants of an apartment block in arty Chelsea who petitioned recently for better central heating. They couldn't get nude models to pose in their chilly studios. ; , "Our nudes were getting goose pimples," said one. "After a while they refused to pose." The heating svstem has been overhwultd, the temperatures raised to 75 degrees and tbe painters have their nudes back. ' '"on a, this morning- advised mariners that the mechanical fog bell at Pillsbury Point, Prince Rupert harbor, has been removed tem Queea o( " 1, ClVH. MORTAR COMPETITIONS among the three Infantry battalions of the 27th Canadian Brigade in Germany brought the troops to a pitch of efficiency termed by military observers as "impressive " This mortar team comprises, left to right: Rfm. U. R. Woiiocock, Toronto, Rfm. O. C. Bruttoco, Hamilton, LCpl. W. A. Mover, Toronto. porarily. It is expected to be out THIS IS NOT A DUET. Despite the protessionai delivery oi me lullaby by opera and television star Miml BenzeU to son Jonathan Willis Gould, the baby seems bent on crying energetically. The singer Is the wife of Walter Gould. ... . of operation until December at. the eailiest. ;i 1?.- S . u