i Sonic Dae ee eee Pag see Par ee en AT EN a SOREL DS Rises, coer ra err SeS RSE eRe Seen ee tended by the greatest concen- ye tration of Investment men and e bankers ever gathered in West- * ern Canada. . ‘ ~ Buyers of the f#as are Inland PS for communities in the B.C. in- i terior; fs pany, for the lower mainland; be ang | CoPporation, vo the plane, owned hy the Acro ( the Hotel Vancouver, sent Peace EY British Columbin. ! ed nearly 29 years of planning mR struction work fH ‘Transmission Company Limited’s ay $200,.000,000 pipeline project. 2 HU ' "Ini its initial operating phase, ! W mr | the 650-mile Westcoast line will | R d Mi At 18 000 h ; deliver 400,000,000 cubic feet of | e oon fi Mp ' pas a day. When additional com- , ‘ pressor stations are added, its ; capacity will be raised to 660.- ' 000,000 cubic feet a day. WEATHER . Gloudy in the southern part toinotrow. Little change in tem- perature. Winds casterly 15 in f Wednesday, Ontges & fib . : the southern part tomorrow. Low (Pacific Standara Tt dO" tonight and high Wednesday at Figh wees 1:24 19.9 feet Port Hardy 32 and 53, Sandspit : , 13:26 20.9 feet: 42 and 53, Prince Rupert 35 and . . / wee ‘ . LOW lia cessccesseae 7:25 5.6 feet: 56.“ ; _ Published at Canada’s Most Strategic Pacific Port — And Key to the Great Northwest 19:50 3.7 feet PR VIcTorra OVINeTAL LIBRARY. . ? 1 B.C, TIDES CER x Od First Gas Pipeline — Opened Move Climaxes.. 2 Years of Plans “ VANCOUVER (CP) — The first major natural gias pipeline to be built in Canada opened officially today, | Premier Bennett, by turning a Valve installed in a ballroom of River natural gas fldwing into distribution lines throughout ’ The turn-on ceremony cliimax-~ and two years of actual con- on Westcoast FOUR-YEAR-OLD Victoria Johnson of Newark, N.Y., points to her doll with a bandage on the chest on’the same spot on her body which is bandaged after surgery. Victoria is rccover- ing from a heart operation at Northside Hospital in Rochester, - N.Y., which doctors expect to add a number of normal years ~ to her life. Born a “blue baby”, Victoria had to have an artery »which fed blood to the lungs repaired by delicate surgery before she could have something to smile that way about. an “The opening ceremony was at- Natural Gas Company Limited, the B.C. Electric Com- Pacific Northwest Pipeline for United States Pacific coast states. E VOLUME Gravity Counterbalancing NEW YORK ut — What keeps a baby moon up in the sky? Why did the Russians choose the height they did: And how did they get it up there? The answers are not mystcrious at all. Doing it is tricky. To get a moon up you lift it high into the air with a powerful multi-stage rocket. The rocket turns so that finally it is flying parallel to the earth’s surface. Then the final stage of the rocket fires off, kicking the moon away at tremendous speed. If the moon travels at, say, only 12,000 miles an hour, the earth’s gravity quickly pulls it down to death. KEPT iN LINE pee oo _ ., .But if the speed. is 18,000 miles an hour, the ¢arth’s gravity . “-eéunterbalances the moon's speed, pulling on it as-the moon tries to flvyoff in a straight direction. Result is the moon flies in a circular or elliptical orbit around the earth, If you could suddenly turn off gravity, the moon would take off into space. - Fx-Minister | | There’s so little air in space that the moon is not slowed down much by friction. But there~is enough air so that . ° ultimately the moon begins to lose’ speed, and gravity says Not Appearing Lo _® To Press Suit to it in effect, now come home and back to earth. If the moon got going 25,000 miles an hour, it could thumb ‘its nose at carth’s. gravity, and escape into space, never coming VANCOUVER. () -— The Prov- ince says in a dispatch from Victoria that former forests min- back. Ister. Robert Sommers will nov FLY ANY HETGI'T ‘ Moons can fly at almost any altitude. The Russians ap- appear Oct, 21 to press his slan- der sult, against Vancouver law- parently chose an altitude where the air is so thin the moon would keep going for a few’weeks, may be longer. yer David Sturdy. * The newspaper says Mr. Som- A construction force which reached a summertime peak of 2,200 during each of the two building years completed the job about two months ahead of schedule. They moved 7,000,000 tons of earth and used 230,426 tons of 30-inch steel pipe to get the job donc. The pipenune undoubtedly be- vins a new. drafor thePeacé River country of northern B.C. and Alberta. eter ease The higher the altitude of the orbit, the longer the moon flics, ' The altitude and orbit are determined by the final speed given to the rocket, and the direction or angie at which it’s set free. That angle determines how near and far it comes to the mers will be represented by vay : a counsel, who will ask for an ad- earth in’ its orbit. journment. HIGHWAY 16 COMPLAINT _ James Proudfoot, counsel for Mr. Sommers, had no comment on hts client's failure to appear at the B.C. Supreme Court for n. pre-trial examination Monday. Nor would he reveal what his course will be when the case fs eniled Oct, 21. However, says the Province dispateh, it was learned that formal papers will be fled later this week asking for an adjourn- ment, The former Social] Credit cabl- net niinister started sult against | Mr. Sturdy 21 month ago, He charged he had been slandered by Mr, Sturdy In a statement made before the Sloan Royal Commission on forestry. Mondny was the second thine Mr, Sommers did not appear. Word on Completion Of QCI Road Sought The British Columbia high- ways department bore the brunt} rail and road routes from British op othe majority of ertleism, Golumb.a to Alaska, handed out at last night's meet} Referred to the executive for Ing of the Prince Rupert Chane | sudy was a communication from vor tp 90 ber of Commerce, William Board, secretary-manag- Apart from a protest lodged) oy of the Ketchikan Chamber of against the Inactivity on We commerce notifying the local proposed cannery rond glong te | ehamber that a meeting of the Bkeona River slough, the Cham: | qrska Wehway Service come her also wanted to know when Tl nission was to be held In Ketcht- could expect completion of thei pan shortly. Massot-Port Clements rond. The Prince Rupert chamber A. Bruco Brown sild Utl) was invited to send n delegate promises had been made regards fig the commission‘ moeting In Ing the completion of the ret view of the proposed ferry link and yet today the rond was Only petween Prinee Rupert and 10 miles out of Masset and Just Iiines, Alaska. over a mnfle out of Port Clements! yy) Morne president of the MWe moved that the chamber) opamber, warned members that writo Highways Minister P. Awl jy March, 1058 the agreement Gaglardt asking when completlon] pegween the Canndlan Puelfle uf the rond could be expected, Railways and the Canadhin Na- to do the job and now tt had) jaint sleamehip service, comes been moved out, Mr, Brown sda yy for renews To suggested Another member reported (hit! tat the chamber should express here was only a tworman crew) ny Opinion as to whethor the loft an the job, rauforlty of Ita members favored C,G, Ham's complaint that ping joint aperntion or operation there was 25 miles of KEOVEL por tnelividual xcrvices by the two roud on hlylway 16 between Shamron and Prince Mapert tliat hada't been serviced for three months wa refered to the chambers blahway committee, The chamber was also urged lo appoint a apectal conmittec to co-operate with the Alnaka Tntomnationnal Rall and Whah- wiys conmmlasion in sealing what would be done to survey possible tn oe eR emene come ‘Pr. George Man Dies in Crash | BOUNDARY BAY, BC, (Pi ee Ross Rutledge of Prince George, was burned to death Monday a t- ternoan whens the Hght plane jyo was flying erashed Into on Held here and burst inta flames, Club of TLC. was on a: training Myht over this regan, nv resort men soul of Vilneouvar, 8 mee serecenen) aammnniaeeeant aremmamtes ome ORMES | Baily Delivery | ® | DIAL 215] DRUGS ferred to the transportation committer for study and report ta the next meoting, The port and marine committee will ask the CNR what plans tt has for inerenstng the wwotulness of the Qcean dock, Continued on Tage §) Seo (gCT ond ‘ ee te ~ moa an Pe a aos ma dae ‘isilent transmission can be de- ‘ttected by-a special instrument. | | compiinies, The mattor was ree | ea eee OV Eph lak fy cee We de here reed gts PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1957 ’ x Silent Satellite Tracked Science Needs More Money By The Canadian Press ‘ The Russian earth satel- lite has fallen silent. Canadian defence scien- ceased but that they be- lieve the man-made is still working. One scientist at Ottawa ex- plained that it is like an ordin- ary broadcasting station where ino one is speaking into the ; microphone although the sta-. ition remains on the air. The Thus the Defence Research Board’s telecommunications es- tablishment at. Ottawa has. been | able to use a meter to detect the | | "silent" transmission from thei 1 ‘satellite on its regular wave- ‘over Canada on schedule. | Meanwhile, astronomers in : Quebec City began to plan for organized dawn and dusk’ watch- and possibly photograph the sa- tellite. og In Montreal, Primé Minister Diefenbaker said the satellite’s tions must make larger finan- ! cial resources available to their scientists. And in States satellite engincer said: the rocket flight that launched ' the object indicates Russia is ahead of the West in develop- ment of rocket fuel. Mr, Diefenbaker, in.an address Monday at Montreal's McGill University, predicted space trav- e] within the present generation. "TY should not be surprised if one of you penctrates the outer 'spaces,” he told graduates at a, ‘convocation, The non-realities | iof space fiction had become a: reallty with the Russian man- moon, . + “The free nations -—- and par- ‘ticularly those in NATO — must co-operate in making larger fi- | nancial resources available to | selentists,” Thus scientists would : not be “f{ettered by improvident considerations of false cconomy when welghed on the scales of survival,” Today in Washington the U.S, Navy credited Russia today with another first-possession of oper- ational Intermediate range bal- istic missiles capable of plac- ing nuclenr warheads on virtu- ally every fixed allied base in western Europe. Capt. HW. L, Miller, of the of- fice of the chief of naval opera- tlons, sald Ina briefing prepared for the National Sceurity Indus- trial Association that “the known Soviet possession of tha IRBM at present seriously prejudices our tenure of any base within 1,600 miles of Soviet launching sites." ne ee NEED HTT Here LORE ERIE Rea Two Airmen Killed in Crash WINNIPEG (h -- Two airmen wore killed Monday when their T.33 Silver Starjet trainer crash- od at RCAF Station Mnaedonald, 66 miles west of here, An RCAF spokesman sald that the viellms were mm ROA In- atructoy and a NATO student ‘plot. Names were nat relensec, Tho RCAY js (Investigating tho cuuse of the crash, TOKYO, (y — Tho UAL Aly Force tonight located Typhoon Heater §6 miles onst of Iwo Jinn on a course that ahould miss Japan, The storm, with 145-mile an how centre winds, was move ing north-northeast at 25 mah. 1 ‘ 4 | * : 1 . tists said today the steady|’~ § “beep-beep” signal has}. ~ moon’s radio transmitter |. | length as it continues to whiz | .€s begining October 20 ‘to ‘see To Cannert launching means the free na-! . @ Gi ‘ os I at ‘ el os In Penitentiar ’ SS THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS — That “mirror” is just a mirage, as Charlotte Strah of Manhattan, Kansas, faces not her. reflection, but her twin sister, Charlene. Both beauties haye been chosen from among 42 sets of twins in the Rocky Mountain area to reign as “Twin Queens” at the Rocky Moun- tain Oil Show at Casper, Wyoming. ! \ \ i PROJECT SAID “FRAUD” ctivity on Road * Pacific and Cassiar, is to be sent to Premier W. A. C. Bennett and Highways Minister P. A. Gaglardi. The Prince Rupert Chamber of Commerce urged that the, questing his co-operation in the highways department which: has remained in a half-cleared condition for more than nine months. ; The protest will also point out to Mr. Gaglardi that continua- tion of the road project would help create winter employment for Prince Rupert jobless. A. P. Crawley, In asking that the sug- gestion ‘be incorporated In the jletter to the premier and the highways minister, said: “With the unemployment situ- ‘ation as It is now and likely to grow worse, use of men on the cannery rood project would be a great help.” A. Bruce Brown labelled (he ‘annery road “a frand from beginning to end.” Mr. Brown said that it was a year since the rond was sup- posed to have been started and yet. so far it was only half eleured, SCHOOL SITUATION He suid that District 68 school bourd had belleved that the road was to be eampleted and as a result had built an addition on the Port Bdward school to take cnre af the ehildren from the cannery comunities. “The children were to be brought in to srve the school board the cost of bullding one- roony sehools along tha Skeena River,” he said. Mr, Brown said there was only six miles to bulla to the point where Mr, Gaglardt sald the yond would be completed this year and yot nothing had been dona . ' "The contract was let on a noe tencor bast, the same as the fiasco ft the north on the Stownrt-Onsslar road,” he sald, “Wo should Indicate to the minister and the promier Just Jyow serlously we need this road, nnd condemn the Inactivity of the government, "Tt was started a year age and hus pono exactly nowhere." Tt wan also moved that a copy of the lettor to bo sent Mr, Ben- nott and Mr, Gnalardl, bo sont Willan WH. Murray, MLA ree 6 immedi- | matter. ately start work on the road: L. M. Felsenthal told chamber members that because of the road ‘we have been made the laughing stock of the province. We ¢an't afford to be polite any more.” -J. S. Auld.said that previous information that the contract had not been let to Raymond Skogland of Terrace, might be incorrect. He said that another contractor had shown interest in the road contract but had been old that Mr. Skogland had been utvert the job as announeed by Mr, Gaplardi when he was here to meet: the governor of Alaska. DIFFERENT STORIES T. Norlon Youngs, just back from attending the Canadian Chamber of Commerce conven- tion In Victorla, sald that while on the trip he had spoken to both Mr. Skogland and the high- ways minister, On the one hand Mr, Skogland sald he jad ore dered equipment for the job and ou the other Mr. Gaglardi said he was going to pub government equipment on the project. Mr. Huin's motion was referyed to executive so that the protest could be drafted, Mr, Brown's asslstanee dn drawing it up wis requested, ane secon, <0 ebetaaas = nein Mr 42-8 eRe: GnemTeT mem Salmon Strike To Continue VANCOUVER (hh —& A vole by constal union fishormen on fall chum salmon pttces shawed that 76 per cont of the 2,000 affected have rejected a company offor, {. union spokesman sald Nlon- clay. Speaking for the United Pish- ermon and Aled Workers’ Union (ind) tnd tho Native Brotherhood of .0,, UPFAWU seoretary Homor Stevens sald a strike whieh started Snrturday will continue, Tho union ta willing to nego- thnte further on chim prices, he ucded, \ t / 1 4 1 . ea HE DG EST Re in Vb gue : ‘ ete ; . . «ph .|taking into consideration the ' A strong protest against the inactivity on the | | proposed road from Port Edward to link the can- Calgary, a United;nery communities of Inverness, Sunnyside, North PRICE FIVE CENTS ny "ae . ' at § th / y tae ; . . st / . . 7 « Three Yea rs , Paddle Sentence For Rape - Convieted slayer Werner Hensel was sentenced: “wy? a to eight year’s imprisonment in B.C. Pentitentiary by. Mr, Justice J. V. Clyne in this morning. ‘A Fall Assizé jury September 30 fourtd Hensel, 36-year-old Kitimat worker, not guilty of a murder charge and found him guilty of “manslaughter in the May 25 shooting of Franz Lech- ner at Kitimat. The jury attach- ed to the verdict a strong re- commendation for mercy. Also sentenced this morning were Arthur Tom of Quick, B.C., to three years in jail and 10 strokes with the paddle. on a rape convictiédn, and Benjamin Roy Hallett, who received a six- month term for breaking and entering with intent.” The fourth criminal case on the Fall Assize schedule ended with an acquittal yesterday when Ronald Partington of Kiti- mat was found not guilty of breaking and entering the Ed- monton Dormitory in Kitimat, August 3 this year, A. A. W. Mc- Donell conducted the defence for Partington. N. Poole was Crown prosecutor. | In passing sentence on Hensel, Mr. Justice Clyne said he was B.C. Supreme Court here Shop stewards and.-the execu- tive board of Local.,708 of ‘the. International Brotherhood: of Pulp, Sulphite, and” Paper: Mill Workers have decided. to’ ask Labor Minister Labor ‘Lyle- Wick, not to appoint J. F.. Lynn, con-, ciliation board chairman,.to any future boards: dealing. with dis~ putes in the pulp and paper in- dustry, a union spokesman ‘said. today. . ar _ Mr, Lynn is currently heading a conciliation board hearing the’ wage dispute between the union and the pulp mill operators... . “REPEATED DELAYS” | “‘This action was taken as a provocation under which the shooting was committed, the jury’s recommendation for mercy, and various points men- tioned by defence. counsel A. ASKED FOR LENIONCY _ Mr" Browii- had asked ' leniency on the grounds that here would be deported back to his home in Germany where he would be handicapped by his record. ‘ “Hensel has no previous rec- ord, otherwise he wouldn’t be here,” Mr. Brown added. On this point, the judge told Hensel: an _ “You came to this country to abide by its law, and you have broken it.” ‘ Before imposing sentence on Arthur Tom, 25-year-old Quick man convicted of raping -his eight-year old stepdaughter, April 9 this year, the judge said he would have “unhesitantly imposed a 10-year term on a white man.” Mr, Justice Clyne said he was not drawing any distinction be- tween races, but he was con- sidering that Tom had, very Httle education and lved in an isolated village. 4 , “TIowever," he added, “it was a cruel and beastly thing to do and when you come out of jail you will remember that you will be punished severely if ever agin you do anything wrong.” ‘Benjamin Roy Hallett, who conducted his own defence and made his own final plea before being sentenced, asked for a sus~ pended sentence to “get a chance and start a new Hfe." He claimed that he wast too drunk to remember anything about breaking into McRae Mo- tors' garage April 10 this year. ‘I've got the Jiquor out of my system now, and a susponded sontenee would help me on my way,” he sald, The judge agreed with Hal- lett In saying he had the poten- ial for making a good eltizen, but sald he did not belleve Hul- Ielt was ontirly unconscious when he committed the offence, "Thoe” slxemonth term will carry you over the winter,” he sulel, ‘After that, I suggest you got In touch with the John How. urd Soclety who can help you considerably.” beon experience on dally and w and woastern provinces and is Vritlah Columbia, Bruce Brown in his final.plea. for Hensel after serving his sentence , union measure against what. it terms “repeated delays before - handing down an award on the — part of Mr. Lynn, refusal to make decisions in several: important items and on matters of, proce- | dure -before ‘the board". 9°% “It was also decided to recom- mend at the Local’s general day and Thursday rejection. of poth the majority and minority reports by the board. This backs ficers in Vancouver last. week. A similar: position was taken by representatives of the United Paper Makers and Paper Work- ers, the spokesman said.. ~~" Dawson, Wad Gets Contract On Celgar Site .Celgar Limited today an- nounced the award of the con- tract for site preparation at {ts pulp mill plant site-near Castle- gar to Dawson, Wade & Com- pany Limited, engineers and contractors of Vancouver. « This phase of the work will include excavating, grading, til und rip rapping. The carth-may- ing involved ts approximately 650,000 tuble yards with ‘some 31,000 cubic yards of rip rap. Work will be started {mediately to take advantage of the low wator period, and it is expected that this phase should be com- pleted before spring. Tt will Ine volve the grading for the reloca- tlon of approximately 1% miles of the CPR's Kettlo Valley Linc. TENDERS LATER my Tenders for the sheet piling work and the construction of the first building of the proposed. pulp mill, the pulp warehouse, will be called by H, A, Simons Limited, consulting engineors, who are acting for the company. the nrea newspapors for these tenders in order that. local con- tractors in the vielnity may have an opportunity to bid on thls work, HOWARD PHILLIPS APPOINTED. TO EDITORIAL STAFF OF NEWS Appolntnvent of Howard PhuUNps av a senior reporter and deskman ab the editorint staff of Thea Dally Nowa nounced today by editor J, R. Ayres, Mr, Phillips, 30, formerly of began hls newspaper carcer 13 years ago on tho statt of the Winnipeg Tribune in Manitoba. A Canadian by birth, he hag - was ane” Vancouver and Victoria, ookly newspapers In thd contral’ Ww professional photographor In° ' Wey the bap he al Pulp Union | To Chairman matters and acquiescence to all company submissions of non-cost: Advertisoments will be placed tn - a Nah oh beh bol aecatas we , membership meetings ,Wednes- | . no ee ow oat Faye ree te Oe ee ad re Ct Oa ae eee Ee ye Oe 5 Nea Mh Vin pe Heat "wae" “ , wh sori este eRe ete Rf ote Elen . mee ae Oar: AT a up the position taken by WEE delegates and International .Of- “poe mY ee eS rae he