WEATHER / Variable toudiness Saturday. Not much change tn tempera-, ture. Winds casterly,]5, Low to- | night and high Saturday. at Port Mardy 55 and 60, Sandspit and Prince Rupert 55 and 62. Prince Rupe ree a eR Ee rot ae oot LS EN tty! ° oe ae A et BA horde Led bees oe Om tw Published at Canada’s Most Strategic Pacific Port —- And Key to the Great Northwest - Pe Be ue Fo RW Oe de BEE PE WS en at TT OT ota aoe ROVENCIAL High caceccae 419 B-feeb... 16:17: 20-1 feet. LOW ceessegeeeetees . 10:13. 6.7 feet. , 23:00: 4.3 fect in, rT EE MEME AP arte UL EE RE OOONS eg Bie bn bw Foe ~. Boe ow LIBRARY t Saturday, September 28, 1957" (Pacific StaRGarsh Fie) eo VOL. XLVI, No, 227 “£OOK OF WONDERMENT is on face of Moses’ faithful wife Sephora as she gazes at ‘her hus- be a. sband’s face on his return from meeting God on Mount Sinal, in Cecil B: DeMille’s film “Zhe _ Ten Conmmandment”. Sephora, “portrayed ‘by’ Charlton Heston, -lead the Hebrews out of Egypt. week, inte ate em HOURS PILING UP Use of Big Crane Adds Impetus to Pool Project | By GLADYS Use of a Pand H crane has given the work on the Civic Centre Swimming pool added impetus this week. In 20 hours, the erane mov- etl fill that would have taken 50 men appreximately two weeks to move. Added to this, 60 men pot in 963 hours pouring cement, pre- paring reinforcing steed and in- stalling drain ties. . Mrs. W. Jt Gordon, in eharge of linson end (ime sheets, says it ts beginning boo work out so hat workinen tur same proups of out on the sae teht each week, Fisheries Minister Visits City tanada's hew mninister of} finheries, Hd. Angus McLean, Lo- day was sthediled to meet with rapresentatives ot the city's gishbrye talustry, ’ Mr. Meleun, Who arrived from Tergace oon an dvformal visit lash mipht, wilh meet with offl- clals of the Prince Rupart Ca- Onerutive nssoeiutton, dhe fish. Hig plants in the ity, vessel owners wind Hshevimen's wWiilon, vesterday the tahortes niiuis- Ley visited federal fixheries catablishinents at leans Creek and oat bakelse, THe Is weceme panied hy his depuby jpalndater Georne Glare and A, de White nore, chiar faherlas supervisors Say British Columblia, Mr, Mebenn ts aeheduled to leave the city by plane tomor- raw. . ORMES"—— Baily Dolivery | e . | DIAL 2157) ----- DRUGS echpineers are layed by Vancouver's Yvonne De Carlo realized that.Moses, . had come’ face to face with God’ and Icarned that he ‘must’ +- -Film-is being shown at in, Prince Rupert until.the end ‘of néxt ” Bennett Not Going . To Interfere VICTORIA @-—Premicr Ben- BALDWIN netL said Thursday he will not decision of the B.C. motor ve- she added. “Of course, if they can make it two nights in the week, all the better.” Expected in Pringe Rupert during the week, is (he architect for the pool, Seva Koynnder, Vr. Koyvander will consult with en- Bincers din connection with the Next steps in the erection of the pool building. Over and above the labor done should be suspended. “Everybody should. be treated the same,” said the premier, commenting at his press con- ference on the minister's speed- ing fine In Kandoops. Mr. Gag- lardi was fined $10 for speeding on the new Kamldops-Savonna road, ROMP afficers said*the minis- ter was travelling 85 to 100 miles an hour. In Mureh this year he at the pool, Columbia Cellulose | Was Mined $25 In Vancouver ona spending several) Speeding charge, nights a week making detriled In Kamloops, Magistrate drawhigs for the project, Charles Anderson said in an in- One group oof workers has | terview he was not aware that it left Prince Rupert, They were pwas the minister's second jan students whe put in 85 hours offence, when bh imposed the turing their holidays and bave | fine. : how relurned to Cheir studies. The Vaneouver ight men have racked Up] Mapistrate Anderson as saying ore than 85 hours each to thar} he would have fined Mr. Cage credit on the thne sheet. Three lard) more df he had known the af these, C, Dearaway, Ti. W.yelreumstanees of the case, Sorge, Jd, Prockter are past the eee uti ni . half way mark dn thelr tine pledges. Pyst the 50 hours mark Is Donald Galtens has $34, hours to dis eredtt. There ts na ogreat need at tie moment for women helpers to xorve coffee ducing rest perlods, Say quotes’ e CCC Lists Men \‘@. we For “Start-Up The Colmmbin Callulose Come pany bd, Watson Ishind fliniish- iy room personnel wil not be required to start ils regular wehedule wat dopa. tomorrow, W, E. Walllwell, oparating sapere Intendent, sald todiy. Vindshing roo) personnel wha re to observe the start-up are third lands, fourth hands, fifth hands, reall and ale handlers nnd scalomoen, Mr. Halliwoll sald, POLICE WARN OF PROSECUTION FOR DRIVING OVER FIRE HOSES Ag an attermath of the $%000 tire at Rupert Motors Ltd. Wodnesday night, the police warned today tint persons drly- A/Sut, J, W. Todd, NCO In charge of the City ROMP dlo- bo prosocutod, np motors velileles aver fire hoses Tala to Mehta fire, would tachmiont, snid today, that severnt persona had driven aver lid hoses Wednosday nant. . “Th tk prohibited In Aeetlon 12 of the Motor Vehicle Act,” 8/7But. Todd sud.” and dn future anyone who driver aver nt. Hose dnoug ato fire wil) be subjoet to prosseution, sem nchenmiren ates tea cmmnm tee: tom To Qppose Boost VANCOUVER ( ~~ C1, W. Wile) son oof Tradl, director of Medical Serviees Association, a health Inauranee plan, said Thursday he will appase neeeplanee by MSA of the newlyupproved 1- per-eent foo dnerense of TC, doctors, ' eaeiente atam seen eerie & !since it opened for the fall term i i i | Airborne Division escorted nine ‘Negro students into the building t ‘to disperse segregationist dem- t i dinterfere in any way with the |sion lessened Thursday. ‘hicles branch on whether High- | students attended classes with- ways Minister Gaglardi’s licence | out incident F land Thursday. The Negroes said: ~ | I ' PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1957 7 Faubus told Arkansas night they have,no choice]. ‘concerning integration. in “| the face of what he called | : ‘Ginsheathed bayonets’): ‘and ‘police state methods” ‘VW the Little Rock racial |. ° He urged them | « struggle. to be calm. -But immediatcly after the talk, a former Arkansas govern- ~ or, Sid McMath, and.an NAACP | -: Clarence A.|-. words | in- | field sccretary. Laws, declared Faubus’. were not conciliatory,- but flammatory. In the sometimes bitter speech, Faubus attacked use of federal force to integrate Central High School, then advised his listen- ers: “Let us go about our normal pursuits in a friendly, peaceful manner, obeying all laws and orders, including those of Gen. Walker and his troops.” This referred to Maj.-Gen. _ , . nots ol ‘Faubus Talk| | \'Described | As Raw. LITTLE ROCK, Ark.) 9 (AP) — Governor Orval} * SHOW STARTING THIRD YEAR — “The Threepenny Opera”, longest running off-Broadway show in New York, is beginning its third year and doesn’t even now seek a spot under Broad- aa : way’s bright lights. Preferring the intimate environs of a small Greenwich Village theater, “Threepenny Opera”, adapted from the 18th Century English classic. “The Beggar's Opera” by John Gay, is nearing its 1,000 performance. Featured players -ghown above are Pat Ripley, Scott Merrill, Bea Barrett and Judith Paige. ° .| to shoot him.” “I Had To Constable Told PRICE FIVE CENTS ~ wee, Do it” An RCMP constable testified today that Kitimat worker, accused of murdering Franz Lechner May 25,. told‘him less than half an h our after the shooting: * . . “T caught him, (Lechner), in bed with her, (his wife). I had This statement by 34-year-old Werner Hensel was admitted as evidence by Mr. Justice J. C. Clyne against objection by de- fence counsel A. Bruce’ Brown who contended -that constable Edwin Langner, the witness, had not. given Hensel a cautionary warning that his: words could be used against..hifh as. evidence. Constable. Langner told the assize court jury that he was called to the scene of the killing, 71 Finch Street in Kitimat, in the early “morning of May 25 and arrived there at 12:45 a.m. Opening the door, he saw Hensel on a chesterfield in the living room, smoking a cigarette, the constable said. ' * Hensel called him in with the words: “Ja (yes), in here, I killed him,’ the constable told the court. , He said when he noticed a body in the doorway of the ad- joining bedroom he asked Hen- sel how he had done it and was told “With a.rifle.” oo “T asked him what happened,” said the constable, “and he said he had caught his wife in bed with Lechner, He had to shoot Edwin A. Walker, placed in com- mand of paratroop units flown! to.Little Rock Tuesday to enforce federal court integration orders at the 2,000-studént school. _: TROUBLE SPOT. Intermittent racial violence has occurred at the high school Sept. 2. The army integrated it Wed- nesday when units of the 101st and used the threat of bayonets onstrators, . The scene was quict and, ten- Inside the school, the Negro NOT ONLY KITIMAT ALCAN Has ~ er : fhié bedroom when he VANCOUVER () — An official wr ON rent vestigated tine house. Canada said Thursday it has more to do W money than spend it only in Kitimat. John Kendrick, Alcan project manager, told a _ conciliation board here the company had not only to build an alumina plant in Jamaica to process bauxite but also to buy the ships to transport it to Kitimat, both Wednesday! most white students appeared : friendly, aitd sat at the same: tables with them in the school cafeteria, ‘ Faubus in his televised and: broadcast speech declared: “Wo are now an occupied ter-' ritory, Bvidence of the naked, force of the federal government is here apparent in these un- sheathed bayonets in the back of| sehool girls... in the bloody, face of this railroad worker who was bayonetted and then felled by the butt of a rifle.” MIXED UP The governor apparently had Incorrect formation oniWdus ac - tion, oceurrings Wednesday, One man was knocked down by a, rifle butt when he sought to take | the weapon fronia paratrooper, | wand another was cub with a bay- oneb when he failed to leave the school area, “In the name of God, whom we al revere, in ‘the name of Jiherty we hold so dear, in the name of defeney, whith we all cherish, what is happening in Americon?” Fauwhus asthed. ' "Ts avery right reserved to the states by the constitubion now, lost? "Must the will of the majority now yield, under Coderal force, ta the will of the minority rogard- less of the consequences "- SPEECH DENOUNCED ix-governor MeBath called Frubus’ speech “iightly tiflama- tory.” We sald Faubus proceeded his plea for calmnoss with re- marks which wore “caleulated to arouse the emotions of the poo- ple to an even higher piteh," A spokesman for the National Assoclation for the Advancement of Colored Poople saw nothing coneliintory tn Matbns' speech. Claronce A, Laws, NAACP fleld socrotury, sald: “We has praotl- eally invited mualeontonts to dee flanee and violence. The govern- ora apooch was one of raw, tine ing calumity, covered with on thin, transparent cont of calm. "It ta hoped that responsible aiidvons trom overy walk of lite will sponk out at onea to ex- Lineilah ty finme of hate Mr. Wabus may have lgnited.” 1 He said the company has other Dr. Kit Show To Aid Children Tonight's “Dr. Kit" show he- ing sponsered here by the Prince Rupert Shrine club, is in ata of the Shriner's crip- pled children fund, “The well- known hypnotist arrived in Prinee Rupert today for his ene-night show at the Civic Centre, . “hast night,” Dr. Kit said, “T bad the honor to draw the biggest crowd ever -recorded in Kelehikan, Alaska.” He said the 1,200 seat high school gymnasium owas packed to overflowing. Curtain time donight is 820%. eed ene stern seems sete ” OTTAWA @ .-. Donald Gordon has been reappointed president of the Canadian National Ratl- ways for a threesyear term, investments all over the world. He said Alcan had to borrow $350,000,000 to cover its total in- vestment program, which in new plant and increased working capital totalled more than $800,- 000,000. He was answering criticism of the company’s reinvestment program made Wednesday by a representative’ of the United Steelworkers. About housing, he said the company's proposals are accept- ed purchase of a new house is within the grasp of 83 per cent of the employees. Answering Union board mem- ber E. P, O’Neal of Prince Ru- pert, Mr. Kendrick said that of 1,122 employees who own their homes, about 700 are hourly paid. Company statistician Stephen Barnwell produced figures which he said proved Alcan wages are comparable with other — trade rates. The union had contended that they were lower. The union jis claiming a 30- cent-an-hour raise and other benefits for 2,900 workers at Kitimat and Kemano, The com- pany has offered 45 cents over three years. ner Places him, he said.” After that the constable ques- | tioned, the’ accused until other ROMP-officers -arrived;--he - said. * Cohhfronted with several ex- hibits presented by crown counsel W. N. Poole, Constable Langer identified them as the blood-stained quilt, sheet and pillow he had seen on the bed in- The constable also identfied a pair of blood-covered bathing trunks as those in which Lecn- ner’s body was clad when he saw it. He identified a yellow blouse, as the clothes he saw Mrs. Hensel wearing that morning. , Defence’ counsel A. Bruce Brown asked the constable if he had seen a pair of women’s shoes: at the end of the bed when he searched the bedroom. The constable said he had, but under further questioning he said he did not know why he had not impounded them as evidence together with other clothing, Earlier in ‘the trial, Siegfried Hackel, upstalrs terant In the. Hensel home, testified as a Crown witness that Mrs, Hensel had worn a yellow blouse and peddle pushers but no shoes, when she ran screaming up to his apartment after the shot was heard early In the morning of May 25. Yesterday Hackel told the jury that he had taken Hensel up- stairs to enim him. He said that he had removed the rifle from HWensel's hand and was holding him by the jacket, “Then he must have silpped away,” the witness said, “Sud- denly I was holding the empty UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. @ — The = first Chinese-Canadian member of Parlinment took on aw diplomatic tisk today with the urbanity of a veteran for- yn service officer, Douglas Jung, who Ja a3 and looks younger, joined the Cana- dian dolegntion to the United Nations after a surprise invita} Han by Prime Mintstor Diofen- vaker and begins service on the log ecominlttes, UN observers folt that the wp- polntment of Jung, a handsone Inwyer oof = pollshed manners, mons that he is being groomed AS AN oxport on Mar Kost affairs, Ho 18 Canada's fivst elected of- Helat who could spoak in Ching, nw country of 600,000,000, In the nitive tongue. He fa planning an official trip, to that country and others in Southonst Asli ’ Vancouver's Chinese MP May Become Canadian Expert on Far East Affairs Jung's vietory over former de- feonee minister Ralph Campney in Vaneouver Centre, was one of the more spectacular sur- prises of Canada's general elec- tlon Inst June, Jung, was sented In the UN dologatos lounge, discuasect with Hm, 1. Rogors, Canadian ambas- sndoy to Peru, and Charios BE. Ren, Progressive Conservativo member of Parlhunent for To- ronto Spadina, bis hopes and plang ns, tho first person of Chinese extraction to enter the Canadian Commons, BIG HOOST “My constituents gave a great gift to my people when they olectod me,” Jung sald, “And of course by No mens Are my cone stituents all —- ar even mostly — Chinese, Nevor again with any Cunndian-born, Chinoie need to “ye ye veg beat fecl that he cannot aspire to high office, Yam Uving proot that we are accepted, “T would Hke to make It cloar tht 1 consider myself Cann- dian (rst — I don't Wke too mech stress on racial things.” “Tho Chinese nro great people for celebrations — births, wed- dings, anything. Bub my oloc- ton was tho flrat chance that Canadian Chinose ever had to eclebrate such a thing, Old pao- ple came to mo in boars ef pride nnd joy, But T bellove thoy wore thinking mostly of what. this enn mean to the young of our race," Jung's UN assignment follow. ed Prime Minister Diefonbakor's visit to the UN and Jung had and a pair of “peddle pushers” | jacket,” Hensel was: downstairs.‘ again “standing over.-the body, beating away at it with the rifle a butt.” a ea Smelter Firm | - Says Union VANCOUVER ()—A. represen-. tative of the United Steel Work- ers of America charged Wed-— nesday that Aluminum --Co. ‘of. Canada paid low wages and ‘ex- ploited its advantages “as one.of the few major. world producers” to pay for expansion of its Kiti- ° mat plant. - : Appearing before a concilia- ‘tion board here, Harry Waisglass said Alcan’s workers are paid.less-- than those with other.” major producers. : Oe The union is..claiming a .36-: cent hourly increase for 2,900 cents over three years. He. said that 1951-56, $353,313,574 was .made available for reinvestment, : out the $400,000,000 quoted. by the company..as,. the total “amount spent on reinvestment in that period. nee “So the consumer is paying for most of the expansion and. the shareholders, over 70 per cent: of whom are in ti" Wa pared with 16.3 cents spent on reinvestments.” , He denied a company conten- tion, that there are competitive conditions in the industry. — curity had labor-men when the company would not even con- sider a guaranteed annual wage,” he said. Mr. Waisglass gaid there is no better way to assist the economy of B.C. and Canada—as the com- pany said it wished to do—than with those paid by the three ma- jor producers In the U.S, ‘ He said 41 per cent of the wor- kers at Kithmat are unable, be- cause of low wages, to buy their homes, even though there was some pressure by the company to “invest in a home in the community.” Mr. Waisglass sald “as far as the aluminum Industry ts con- cerned Canada is as much a part of the U.S, as Texas.” He said Alean wages are far below the average In comparable industries In the province. ae Minesweeper Here For Visit The “HMCS Fortune’, one of the vessels -of the Second Can« adian Minesweeplng Squadron docked at the Canndlan Nation- al Railways wharf at noon to- day on hor three-day’ officlal visit in Prince Rupert. Under command of L/Cdr, S. D. Moore, CD, RCN, with a complement of six officers and 46 men, the Fortune will carry out minosweoping exercises and. providg sea trnuining erulsos for RON Reserve personnel of HM C8 Chatham, Sunday betweon 1:30 and & pm, | A rogular visitor to tho