LIERAFY Borrows ORABC. P20VI5CIAL tlSSr.SI, 113 ORMES TIDES VICTORIA, B. C. ,ilajf. January 20, 1953 ,Jt.itlc sianriard Time DAILY DELIVERY 4 47 213 feet NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER 17:00 18 2 feet ,11:00 S feet Published or Canada's Moit Srroregic Pacific Port "Prince Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest" Phone 01 ft ' - 23:08 51 feet i 4 in' VOL. XLII, No. 15 PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., MONDAY, JANUARY 19, 1953 PRICE FIVE CENTS nd Road n o n : iLocatoini ill Alaska tvvl to- Iaeliiirs ought ' e- Economic Status jrimission May select Route I. I Jr.-- 4 . , . , , .. r 7 hsHINGTON (CP) f 1 Must be Increased r ! Prince Rupert's location is a drawback to attracting teachers and teachers here have not received ! the same standard of living gain "such as has been ; A. istruction of a new ay tn Alaska, west e Ilotky Mountains, ui-i'd Sunday by or Warren Magnu-1 Km.-Wash.). hxJW jf : enjoyed by other groups in society. And the economic status of S40 0O0 a year for the 63 teach t. teachers must be raised to com- ers of the district. Members of the arbitration board are Lyle Munn, Vancouver t barrister, chairman; V. L. Dryer, i-te wltlr other professions In icidr to remrdy "an already ) alarming and growing teacher .';'iortagc In B.C." J Tliis, tiR(.ther with reams of also a Vancouver lawyer, named r - -.i by the teachers, and T. W. Brown, QC, of Prince Rupert, named by 'vid'-uce supporting his claim Nature's Sculpture irriiistilitlz-d the nncninff ha rraire the school board. ; K rOUt. COUpled wl'h rKtf or cutoff to south-a . 1.2 pii: l. would serve Hi nun for a permanent ; tit industry and benefit i' . .-t-d territorial alumt-i.dui uon plant, lie laid. y nali r said 111 a sUlr-tlmt he U preparing urn to create an Ala.ska nioiml ruil and highway vW.n lo wlwt the mot a.sd (icnomlcul route for ,i and railway or either ;'hi mornlnir of Allan SnraBEe. Wilson, Chllliwaek bar TP ifx-cutive assistant to the B.C. r's'r' na been named to present ! Tea hers' Federation. Dresentine i the school board brief CKSTI'KIKS OF WAILINU w inds and wsuidfrinf river bave combined to 'carve weird figures on the prairies near Drumheller in east-centnil Alberta. The clay and sandstone pillars are in an area called the "Badlands" or "Dinosaur VaJ'ey" which covers about 250 square miles. J the Prince Rupert teachers brief Assisting Mr. Spragge ta pre-i to the first sluing of the salary anting the teachers' brief are w i ,H R Davidson. vice-Drlnclral of i NunvtTou finds of dinosaur and hrr prehistoric animal relics have been lound in the ! district The Alberta government Is said to be considering turning the area Into a province. ! park. - ti uiu a . in uiu. i Booth Memorial , . High school . and . id Hie commls- Arbitration by agreement j R G Moore, principal of King was proposed by the board of Edward Elementary school. school trustees of district 52 , Mrl m. M. Roper, school board i i Prince Rupert) and the Prince secretary, also attends the hear- - rut i i."-u-d the piesent. Truck Loggers Renew Demand nupen leacnem Assocuiuun , ing H;:lvay route alio rrc-i'lcd a route wlilch would I with existing roHdx at G'orac snd Haw-lton. in noithwmt lo AUln to jhPn the board refused to grant ' Apiary increases but countered iwith the 1952 agreement. Mr. Spragge said K was his opinion that "this province is not getting enough teachers in For Probe of Forest Policy SStfte, If granted, the requested ln- quantity or in quality to satisfy it. W Y T U.. . . - ,ne V" . wm wul 0",r" uw , rr' ,k.b ' "ease would have amounted to our needs. Getting Some Fine Teachers iium ijuKnri wutuiuun iius present goveriMjierii n is quite wu- "i"8 uu. Klir vw-i.'iemi.'ir rn.ite. similar; renewed It demand for a royal -BWnl , tl.t th. ! lor ho cannot afford to take v drnt l,8",u'e nmiu-m : rrcummendrd by an en-! eommta.lon tnu, the province s ,r0l.n Pnlml0n huge tracu of wtiodlaW s ruilnmd survey, would jorel policy. pJllcy U rui;iras to govenimenu.i Mr Batkie Uie object of at Prim e George but ' j w. Balkie of Campbell River nd If we titn do sometWng j forest management policy sus-tun abiMit 100 miles east aid m his pitnidentlal address: ' about It, the 'hoie damn bunch Uincd yield was a "vpry worthy ' o'.hir route, through "Th f,..t mmiiirmni nn!lm ,t or. onina tr h. rinriiM " lone snd one with which W'e all 'I'm not saying that the new teachers are all stumblebums. We are getting some very fine teachers, but not enough of constructive steps such as raising the general level of teachers' salaries designed to make the profession more at FmkN hikI norrhm-pt In n,.rtiu .ft.w.KtKi. f,r Tk. u i .A,. fU,trA.,nn ttxv aorp nut. it wax fhp mtliod t ONE OF THE VICTIMS of the floods ill the Calgary district, little Tommy Wodman7, was rescued by deputy fire chief Barney Lemieux. Tommy was forced to spend several liours sitting on trunks on his bed in 16-below zero weather -when the ice-choked. Bow river flooded. Later, Lemieux rescued the boy's parents, Mr. and Mrs. O. Worman, and their dog front their flooded home in Lowcry Gardens In west Calgaxy. tractive must be taken if our Pest, m ar the B C -Yukon i ririat nf th lut iMimmKni '.nn iimhr tntuinn r.:iinrii' nf arrivlne at the obiertivw which ' em. we are also getting here It would connect ; and a continuation of that policy that the forest management was "so dUaisreeable to us schools are ' to attract and retain well qualified 1 If , taiH irnvprnmnt nnllrv hart t v i -, i -'f i ( ' V. .- V he present highway. some who are definitely not fit : to be in the teaching profes- : sion." ! Mr. Spragge asked the arbitra- ! led to applications "by the hundreds, duplicating, Interlocking uu ' ii t bill would set up 1-man commission and. the fitate Depart -1 to i! up meetings with ' mil uftlcmls ! No Easy Way to Get Liquor Licences in B.C.' - Bennett and overlapping ail the imoort I ? boara to con-siaer tnree pro- : ant area In cttiU 'B.C." Tliere podtlotwr' " . had been proteu to these appli-j "Thai the existing (salary) : 'Bailed Out' Actors Play to Full House "That within the past fivei years in Prince . Rupe,rt the 1 tendency has been to adjust , teachers' salaries with the : main intent of maintaining j dollar values in the face of i cost-of-living increases and ; . cations and appeals to the cab scale does not properly recog-! nize the nature and Importance of the teacher's work, i VANCOUVER Balled -out t Everyman Repertory Company i inet and promises from the forest . j VICTORIA tr.P-Premier Ben-' He said he has heard reports Dranch that the dlssatlsfed I : nett Buturday siild hlk govern- j .lrrady that individuals are out parties would be taken care of jinenl will not tolerate pressure claiming to represent the kov- by nubile working circles, lonfr- e in the process the necessity for 1 giving to teachers a standard actors continued their smash run Saturday obtained a Supreme WHEMAN t rumen, and preM-nting them- ' trm timber sales and farm wood Salaries should compare more ; favorably with those of other; occupations. "That the very real and; threatening teacher shortage j in'this province requires that' of living- gain such as has of "Tobacco Koaa- at me Avon toun injunction o i been enjoyed by other groups i Theatre here Saturday night with j ther police raid until charfces In society has been over- i police powerless to step the per- laid Friday have been disposed officers of. selves as go-betweens in the ; jots. Seven morality squad formance. looked." Mot & lino was cut from the matter of obtaining liquor li-1 -p blamc UiT thls ronfu.sed cences and Importation of for- i and cnafrtic condition can be laid .-Iftn liquor products. squarely On the shoulders of our The premier continued: "No-'last gowrnmerit. and particu-: ivtv h a soeciul ear of this!larly on their minister of lands; Not The Only Croup Neglected fJ&& groups tiylntt to get liquor licences under the new drlnks-by-the-glaji system recom-mendi d for Britii-h Columbia in the btevens report. Egypt Begins Rounding Up Red Plotters teacher. Mr. Spraggt sUted. ""5 " government. There will be no i and forests. E. T. Kenney, i Mr. Spragge said that while easy way to get liquor licences" ; "Tlie legislation was purely a teachers "do not claim they are forester's theory that was rushed 'he. only group in society whose m Meanwhile, nhii th the va.r Vancouver - . . . ,-,, r. ' salaries have been neglected. Says M nnpsiA ' ' continue to swim p the oi can. extending the j t sp- U uf mild rainy I r alon? the BC. coast.' Pui ilic air is also Blving utile cloud over tlie In- of the province Is keeping the tempera-in the twenties or low ; which is about five de-! above nnrmul for mid-' U.S. Officers Kill Canada's toria that the Stevens report were even less than that of a civil service clerk. He said that the "purpose of teachers Is more than teaching reading, writing and arithmetic" and outlined 18 other duties of a good teacher "and there are many others which develop Into many long hours." ellect on moiviauaia. it was M. ,.nri,.r thp irukp nf a ana-! Mr. Spragge presented several may lead to suspension of the Liquor Control Board six-man lained-vicM rilan and very few ', documents to the board giving last Friday took two actresses off to jail on charges of participating in an indecent show. They were released IVi hours later on $100 ball each and finished their performance. Everyman Repertory Company last Thursday received a warning from police to "clean up" its production of "Tobacco Road" or close its doors. Tlie company Is one of two-year-round professional theatre groups in Vancouver. A detective and policewoman described the play as "lewd and filthy" in a report to city prosecutor Gordon Scott. The company recently took over old State Theatre, a ' burlesque house, and renamed it The Avon. The old State was often closed from time to time for "lewd and filthy" shows. inspection staff. - l,!- i th nrnvinee realized comparisons of teacher salaries No. Bad Mail The teachers' representative ; CAIRO CP Egyptian authorities during the week-end launched a roundup of Com-munl.U. officially accused of The commission report chars-' tne implications of the scheme."' to incomes of other professions, ed gross Incompetence on the Mr jMe was supported by Some examples given, were, an-purt of unnamed officials in the Howard Green. Progressive Con-, nually: enforcement of the Liquor Act. scrvative member of Parliament t Lawyers. $8,680; dentists $5,425; ' for Vancouver-Quadra. He called engineers $9,900; all professions ij mild, unsettled wealh- , continue over the south-i gave some statistics about i ' TORONTO O Canada's met teacher shortages in B.C. and wanted criminal has been killed rt central portions of the plotting with powerful Wafdists in Canada as he presented a by police gunfire in the United statement showing that In the states. for a government review of the o no. B C. forest industry. ! comparison, teaclicrs In past six years only six Prince! He is Hugh Kennedy. 35, of e lor Hie next couple ofilo overthrow Premier Nagulbs ) rcfoim government. Forecast I w,ln 25 Brmy olflccis and 15 h ('oast Region: Cloudy) high civilians under arrest, a "atlered showers Unlfty ! government spokesman an- i He told he convention: "Tlie B.C. got the following earnings: Rupert students had become ; Winnipeg and Toronto, wno neia Convicts Riot In Pittsburgh Penitentiary sooner a review is made the lor the same period ushs. soonrrttwillpivevouconflder.ee! Secondary $3,129: elementary in placing the forests on a per-1 $2,324; all teachers $2,648. I net ual harvest basis." Earnings of an elementary uesday. Little chunge In :'ture. Wind light. Low t and high Tuesday nt 'irdy 38 and 44; Sandspit d 38: Prince Rupert 30 nounred every known active Communist W'Ul be Jailed In a sweep against Red cells and organizations. He said six Communist newspapers have been closed. Announcement of the crack teachers. the top spot in the RCMP list of Due to Increase In pupil pop- Canada's hoodlums, published In ulation, B.C. would need 1,160 the Daily News last Saturday, new teachers next year, he said.) Kennedy was shot Jan. 8 white "Today there are 700 enrolled accompanying officers to the at the three educational schools Salt Lake City police station for in B.C." i questioning in a morals case, and He said Prince Rupert "in ; died two days later, particular" was at a dlsadvan-j Kennedy, who took over top tage In attracting teachers be- J place as Canada's No. 1 bad man cause of its isolated location. . from Donald tMickey) McDon-Besides the six teachers of local aid, now believed dead, has been origin, this city depended on the ; wanted, by police since his es-balance of 57 from outside. icape Nov. 27. 1948. while on the The hearing continued this; way to Kingston penitentiary to afternoon in the court house; serve eight years for forgery. PITTSBURGH One thousand rioting convicts, who set fire to Pennsylvania's sprawling West-tern State penitentiary and seized five guards as hostages lo Korea Bound Ships Due Tomorrow - - i i f V , V.' j- I " 4 V V, i 1 1, J : iv i.r M . .1 V ' - '0 b ' "'Ar ' 4 down came after the premier Cto Broadcast decreed dissolution of all politl Jenhower Talk actuality broadcast of the Two grain ships are scheduled to arrive In Prince Rupert harbor Tuesday afternoon to load barley at Dominion government and a third session is to be held cal parties and confiscation otay defied hundreds of police them Into their to force assets on the ground they en-.UywK dangered national unity. ; cells. . ! Cursing convicts, shouting for r J- Pan-. prison reforms, started several Coupon in roper ,n U() ccl, bloclts and Nomination coupons for the ' prison work-shops Sunday, night. Alex Hunter Good Citizenship! No prisoner escaped and no award are on Page 2 of today s shot was fired, edition. Ballottlng continues all Warden John W. Claudy estl-week. mated damage at $50,000. xP if tonight, when, it is expected the 'H's in which Dwlght U. '"wer will take the oath of and make his inaugural as 34th President of the I States of America will 'i d tomorrow on the CBC t'jnada Network from " 10 n.m. hearing will ena. Decision of the board will not likely be announced for some time. Rupert Rinks Advance in Smithers Spiel The Late Minnewanka will be I the second sliip to load grain for I Korea while the Eirho Maru will itake her load to Japan. I Parker Mills, elevator superin-itendent. said today the elevator pessor Plans Trip rink'as "nearly full and another SMITH ERS. The O'Neil minion ousneis nave oeen or- rj-iritirti.oH linhnt.fn with TilflP victories in the 27th annual de.rd- U,tl. -.! 1 . . n Former Defence Minister Dies In Kelowna bonsplel here which carried on e '"f ."7 Z " ,.. w isoic Finals wilii loading at least four ships a a over the week-end. avflltlv. Jill VCy IM CwUwU wiviiy "LOUVER Ahn . v.-m Nmwvtiiriiietlr. tit to build. Copper, bronze and Ibe played tonight. maun neie as long as me gi&ut keeps coming," said Mr. Mills. va ' - r t -i A third ship Is expected later " square mile, nf n Pa. I "M u.if. win h im heean.se soeclal non-magnetic stainless! Prince Rupert rinks are good progress. The Dominate and Webster i . n n.,-a v VtA this month and three more are to come in February, Mr. Mills 'ntllan and Atlantic oceans 'she's a good sailor," he said. "And steel will replace magnetic metals 1 ;aly In nved of a magnetic i I don't antlcliate any shortage; for rivets, chains, anchors and snys a Unlvprliu rf nrit1n wii,ntr. uhsn thi time metal suouorts. has been noaiied Imperial Oil event; Webster 'Illlllbla Professor tnm. I n ,.,ll. ..rmrum .illi - v - t r i ill iiwuuiiKa ivp,., t m . . hn'. I...,...,. uuutung a non-mag- -fOOt Vacht unJ ..in ct He explains his projected trip for three years In the Pacific, this way: "We can measure the studying 15.000.000 square miles; JWs summer to do the job KELOWNA -V Hon. Grote Stirling, 77, minister of national defence in 1934 In the Bennett Conservative government, died In hospital here Sunday. Born at Tunbridge Wells, England, he came to Canada in 1911. He was first elected to the House of Commons in 1924 as-member for Yale. He became defence minister Nov. 17, 1934. Mr. Stirling again was re-elected to the Commons In 1940. Uc retired in 194S. earth's magnetism but we nave:two years in the Indian Ocean, no idea of how It began or why g ooo.000; and two years In the THE "Ql'IFT MAN" BEGAN circulating through stores and along the downtown Streets here shortly after 3 o'clock this afternoon. Tire person who asks him the direct question: "Are you the Quiet Man?" while carrying a copy of today's edition of The Daily News will receive some valuable prizes. If the Quiet Man Is caught on the street, Capitol Theatre manager Harry Black will give the person $5 cash. The prize Is increased $5 each day until Friday If the Quiet Man is still not identified between 3 and S p.m. each afternoon- The film, "The Quiet Man." opens a week's run at the Totem Theatre tonight. . . in the fours of the Kenney event. . Winner of the Neely Moore-Jim Stewart match meets Al Manson's rink in the final of the Bulkley Valley Collieries event. Moore lost in the fours of Wall Electric event and Roy Col-linson lost in the lours of the Heggle event ... , ' M 14 Lose Lives STEFHENVILLE. Nfld. CP A United States military .transport plane rammed into a snow-covered hillside and exploded In a ball of flame near here Friday, killing aU 14 American, strvfivmen aboard. Atlantic, 3.000.000 It exists. To investigate it. one must be as far as possible from the ground, as 11 is a weak force. Bifidon Medusa Owllong, "Ue professor of physlca at estimates it will take him years. Son of a Polish judge, Prof. Owllong was educated in Poland subject to disturbance. The ocean I and lied to Britain with the la the best place." !' tlle -year-old physicist o a crew of four on the Tlie yacht will cost about $3,000 1 Polish air force In 1039. iv