PROVINCIAL rOMORROW'S ORMES- TIDES vicror.iA, n. c; ipi-lf k Standard Time) Ttwr.'idsiy, July 1, MiUi Daily Delivery Phone 81 . 60 Ifff't F i a 'i a in i i ... i u i ri net i u O.W.I IJ.U irri, NORTHERN AND C'ENTKAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER Published of Conoda'i Most Strotcgic Pacific Port "Prince Rupert, the Key to the Greet Northwest" VOL. XLII1, No. IM PRINCE RUPERT. B.C.. WEDNESDAY. JUNE 30. 1954 PRICE TEN f'F.NTS ZO:oy 6.4 fort DRUGS CI f? si(dr f 1 OP . A Uw mm EDITORIAL - - Governing Junta Believed Probable GUATEMALA CITY (Reuters) Guatemala's Spy Ring Operated In Embassy I new head of state, Col. Alfredo Monzon, meets rebel leader Col. Castillo Armas in neighboring El Salvador, probably today, to negotiate a truce in the 12-day fighting. Diplomats here In the Guate- P PnrtlAknr nialan capital believed the two, J V I UlllUllj enu-Gommunists both, would io n in still another new govern- i Rebelling I RUSTY FORD ' FREDDY t'HRISTENSF.N DON SCIIERK m i iwJlni . I i, ing junta. The general feeling , wis that Castillo Annas could! dictate his own terms. Anainst Drew The rebel's rear headquarters Jviid l Uc Tuesday Castillo Armas I whs ready to discuss truce terms VICTORIA fl Deane Finlay- hut insisted en assurance liiat'son. British Columbia Promc- I the anti-Cummunist drive would sive Conservative leader, said in MFf .BOURNE (Reuters) - Former Russian secret police agent Vli'dimlr Petrov today told how n Bu.-i.ilan spy e.enlrc covering (lie United States, Britain. Can-ad. New Zealand and South Afrtrn w.is run from the Russian emb-'sy In London. - Petrov, head of the Russian spy system in Australia until he decided to neck political asylum raid tlic London centre was headed by a Soviet diplomat named Kukln who doubled as RusRian secret police .. head in Britain. Another . department of the Russian espionage system headed by a man named Raina, he said, was charged with spying on atomic weapons and guided missiles. Both Raina and Kukin hive been removed from their posts, he added. Raina was ousted from his Job during the puree which followed the execution of former Russian interior minister I continue. a statement Tuesday night thai sections of the provincial party j The Vatican's nuncio to Gua- temala, M.sgr. Oennaro Verolino, ' DENNIS REED CLIFF D MIL JERRY BLITCII In s agreed to be the third party at the armistice conference. The truce call came after a quxk series of political changes which shoved Col. Carlos Enrique Diaz out of power less than 48 hours after he had ousted ex- Look To The North AI'TEIt weeks of preparation, The Daily News today is proud to offer perhaps the most complete, and certainly the most up-to-date, story of our northland ever published. This is the story that all too few know about.' In the great metropolitan centres of Canada one finds. a profound ignorance of the opportunities that exist ujr here. It sometimes seems that other countries have more interest in this part of Canada than do Canadians themselves, as witness the comparatively large number of new citizens who are making their home in the north. The publication of our Northland Empire special edition is an attempt to throw a little light on the subject. With compliments of The Daily News, the paper is being distributed to hundreds of selected organizations and individuals from Victoria, B.C., to St. John's, Newfoundland. We are sufficiently sold on the story to believe it rates nothing less than a nation-wide readership. In addition, the supplement is being given thorough distribution in this area by weeklies which have assisted in its publication. It may help to quicken our own awareness of the bounty that is ours. So we take this occasion formally to introduce The Northland Empire. We hope you will find it of interest. Daily News Supplement Lists Northern Progress 'Readers of The Daily News more -than 100.001k.. Ri addition I are rebelling against the national leadership of Oeorge Drew. In another statement to the Victoria Colonist, Maj.-Gen. O. R. Pearkes. PC member of Parliament for Esquimalt-Saanich, said reports of a forthcoming alliance between the Progressive Conservative and Social Credit parties were "nonsense." Both men admitted there was a rift In the party in B.C. They pin-pointed the trouble as disagreement over party 'eather Wrecks Opener; l president Jacob Arbenz. Monzon imes Possible July 1 was internal affairs chief under Diaz and minister without portfolio under Arbenz. Diaz, first reported arrested, laler gained political asylum. Arbenz, who -yielded power to l' Rupert Base bill! Ussocl-officials, pluvris plus Hill nt first, Miiiidlc on second, j Giordano, Bill SundberR at third uiuz Moncay, now is m tne Mexi- j DiSAGKt E WITH DREW can emoassy wiin a large number of other refugees. and secret police head Lavrenll P. Dcria. Appearing before an Australian commission Investigating Soviet espionage In Australia, Petrov outlined for the first time in public the life history of an agent In Russia's dread MVD secret police. s of buxcbull fans were at the weatherman touay Vonllmicd rain caused can-jhon of the fust came be- and Ijn Srherk behind the relate. The outfield Is unchanged. For pitchers Ford has Freddy Cbristensen, Dennis Reed, Jerry dutch, Jackie Sharpe, Bill Don- r? ("iiLrf Ketchikan All-Stars and Rupert All -Star. -.v. ialdson. Oordie Cameron and i Larry Mathews from which to ftuioter Art Murray,, who Australian security men kepi a careful watch as Petrov, grey d tlic drive for a :bitiecr Kinross Rites Set for Friday Funeral services for James Stirling Kinross, who died in Prince Rupert General Hospital Monday night, will be held at 2:30 p.m. Friday at Grenville , choose. Also on tap will be Bill Gunn, Jack Lindsay, Bru Kim-j uiulsim. Matltly S"ilcwlck, Cliff Oen. Pearkes said some party members felt that "all matters connected with the federal and provincial organization In B.C. should be vested in the provincial leader.," , Mr. Finlayson said "there is a group' of responsible people in the Victoria area which disagrees with the national leader's views on party organization. "I might say that the disagreement is more widely expressed than in Victoria alone." The provincial leader said the issue will be thrashed out at the 1277 iictter" Dominion Day Jn-Uoilal Baseball mm ics, said l oie press time tliat the ikan team, due to fly in i tkrnoon, were told not to If from the Alaskan centre j . there was little chance On: Hi Court Chapel. GORDON Ml'NDLE Canon Basil S. Prockter will officiate. i heired and bespectacled, looking more like a banker than a t.py, gave evidence. Speaking in English he said four of his senior officers were executed or fired in various purges. The last of his superiors to die, he said, was a depuly foreign minister. Dekonsov, executed about the time Beria fell from power. Petrov said, that as a secret agent In the Russian embassy in Canberra his reports were not seen by the ambassador. Interment will be in the Masonic plot at Falrview ceme- , provincial executive meeting at levy. ,: ; :;i ' ' f . - ; " '; Vernon July 17. get a bonus in today's edition of to ,th'n 14,000 conies beimr riu- tiD .11, , ,' In Ihn tnv. . t .. 111. New Union To Use Love In Bargaining Cloudy weather clearing for to-uM Illtlg game, weather forecast for to-i is not Jnucli belter with and .showers predicted. Mball offiiials hope that 'iither will clear In time urn-row's two games, set for iid 6:30 p.m. iiny event, roach of the Rupert All-Stars. Rusty has alternative line-ups lor the opening name of Prospect faces 1 the northwest, 2,000 area, are Entitled "The BC . Yukon M,th J L.. -! , ! being circulated in Kitlmat by Canadians For Holiday Dahl and P. Paulsen of Terrace. Coaches and piayers' woiKed late last night on completing the new fence at Roosevelt Park and it will be all erected, if not completely painted, by game time. Also set up arc the two foul -line poles at the end of each baseline A concession stand has also been built.' Baseball Commissioner Stan Moran Is scheduled to get the scries officially under way al 1:30 tomorrow afternoon. Aid. Phil Lyons will pinch-hlt, for Mayor Oeorge Hills, and extend a Welcome from the city to the Ketchikan team and any visiting dignitaries. Umpires for the series are listed as Johnny C'omadina.' Andrew IiCtourneau. Dido Gti'vlch and Steve Mintenko. Should there be a game tomorrow arternoon It will be broadcast by the CBC's C'FPR, with sportscaster Mel Thompson giving a play-by-play description of the game and Dick Ayres adding a commentary. Game times have been set, for fl:30 tonight, 1:30 tomorrow afternoon and 6:30 tomorrow evening. with the progress of the north country and the centres lying north of the 53rd parallel it also Includes many articles describing the growth of the areas around Prince Ruperl. Prince George, Kitlmat and Terrace. "The Northland Empire" edition was published by the Prince By The Canadian Press Canadians will head I and safety officials have urged f o r the public to take it easy. scries. Assisting him as beaches, summer cottages, ball special arrangement. The remainder is going to Dally News readers and to selected address-ess in Canada, the U.S.A. and overseas. INCREASE IN PRICE Because of the special supplement, today's Daily News will be sold on the streets at 10 cents a copy. There will, of course, be no extra charge to subscribers. Additional copies of The Northland Empire may be obtained from The Daily News office at 25 cents a copy. As the supply is extremely limited, however, those wishing to place an order are advised to do so early. 's. Ford will have Benny I' and Miner Slnlundson. Hie iirst team Ford will Nick Pavlikis in right field. ' Emidge in centre and Petrow in left. Oordie c will be on third base, rdano at short. Dave Hill '"iid and Syd Srherk at Ion Seherk will be eateh-' rl no starting pitcher has parks and race tracks Thursday for the Dominion Day holiday. In many parts of Canada they face the prospect of cool and cloudy weather. IU will be largely a day for family celebrations and local sports events with few large-scale celebrations planned. Highway traffic Is expected to reach a mid-summer peak and police Rupert Daily News in co-operation with the Prince George Citizen, Terrace Omineca Herald, Smlthcrx Interior News. Nechako Chronicle, Cariboo Observer, Dawson Creek Star, Peace River Block News and Whltehorse 6tar. Larry Stanwood, well-known Prince Rupert newspaperman, was the editor, and was responsible for nearly all of the writing, page layout and make-up. Circulation of "The Northland Empire" is 25,000 copies, which means a readership of probably ' -lined fH- eitiier team. ho second string ore Dave jmmcrs Says Oil Discovery Tokyo To Mark Dominion Day TOKYO The Canadian Hag will fly at American and UN command headquarters here on, Thursday in honor of Dominion Day. The Far Ea-st command has adopted the custom of flying the flags of each member nation, and of Japan, on the country's national days. Judge Penalized MORA, Minn, What did municipal Judge W. W. Tenney sny to municipal judge E. A. Thompson? "Five dollars and costs." ' -Judge Thompson got a tag for going through a ston sign and appeared before Judge Tenney. Judge Thompson said he was thinking of his real estate business. He hit a truck in the process and did $400 damie to his car. WEATHER Forecast North Coast Region: Cloudy today and Thursday with scattered showers mostly along the mainland coast. Not much change In temperature. Winds light. Low tonight and high Thursday at Port Hardy and Prince Rupert 50 and 60, Sand-spit 50 and 55. st Northern News in Years i'it!lA (CP-l.nndK Minls-K. Rummers hvs followed i Bennett'x announce- "f a commercial oil clis-in the Peace River clis- VANCOUVER i A new type of lalxir organization which approaches negotiations on the basis that workers and management should "love each other" has been certified as bargaining agent for employees of two Vancouver firms. A B.C. labor department report showed Tuesday that the Vancouver Christian Workers' Union has been granted bargaining right for employees of Stock Fixture Limited and Velden Construction Company, both in Vancouver. The first certification covers shopmen and the second Is for carpenters and laborers. The VCWU Is part or the Christian Labor Association nf Canada which has about 1,600 members across Canada. CLA president Frank Fuvk-schott of Hamilton, Out., said his association "believes that love and co-operation are the powerful forces around the bargaining table." He nridrd. "We won't threaten. We will explain what oilY workers want and we believe we can get those things more easily with mutual love and understanding." The CLA originated in Europe 100 years ago but did not spread to Canada until 1951. This is the first time the association has appeared on the West Coast. Denies Damage From Smoke Hugo Kranpner. proprietor of Ideal Cleaners, said .today that no damage from smoke occurred in the cleaning plant Monday as first, reported. The smoke, caused, fireman say .by a flashback from the furnace, occurred in the boiler room. Nab Killer' Gang SINGAPORE ( Singapore police report they errestd 16 Chinese youths believed to be members of a Communist "killer squad" operating u trie colony. '111 nn enthusiastic slate- (ft Fifteen persons died violently during last year's one-day holiday, most of them victims of traffic accidents and drownings. In British Columbia, all forms of transportation to the United States border and interior resort centres are heavily booked. Main attractions are the Canadian cycle championships at the British Empire Games oval In Vancouver and a cherry festival at Chllliwack. Alberta, like B.C., probably will have cloudy weather with risk of showers. The Highland Games Association annual track meet Is scheduled for Edmonton along with a Western International Leagii'? baseball game, and Calgary will hold Its annual motorcycle hill climb on the Banff highway. Many children and military cadets will leave Saskatoon for summer camps'. WATCH FLOOD WATERS Manitoba also was fatality-free last Dominion Day but Brandon area residents will have their eve on another danger rising flood crests on the As-slnlboine river. In Toronto and Montreal, where cloudy weather and possible showers are forecast. International League baseball games will be the feature. A Dominion Day Invitation tournament, has been scheduled at Hamilton's Chedoke Golf and Country Club. Quebec province traffic officials fear a high accident toll on the highways with thousands of Montrealers flocking to the country and the mountains. TROOP THE COLOR In Ottawa, the governor-general's foot guards will troop the color on Parliament Hill and there will be a iimrclipast of the Cameron Highlanders, but civic ceremonies will be cpnfined to a tlreworks display at Lansdowne Jfcuk in tHe evening. No Paper Tomorrow The Prime Rupert Dally News will not publish tomorrow, Dominion Day. Publication will be resumed Friday. Banks, stores, business houses and government offices will be closed for the July 1 statutory holiday, and there will be no local mail deliveries. However, wickets at the post office will be open from 8 to 10 a.m. and the lobby will be open from ft aim. to 6 p.m. A'likh calls It a "find of "'litest liiiMi'tnnre." I,s Is the best news to cmiie ,r northern B.C. in many lie said. "It holds treinen- fet' 3 iihi. oiny nir a 8'''. lll'na Kill f(tl Ihn nnnn.nl i"' of everyone In B.C." Simiiiiers snld: "Unnues- f'lV rtl-lllinir 1 l-irninrliMiit. flip trans)ittlon fiicilltles, and gratifying economic growth both within and without the settlement centres of Fort, St. John and Dawson Creek." Meanwhile, the Pacific-West Bulck Creek No. 3 light gravity crude, oil discovery may well Indicate British Columbia's first major oil field. L. M, Clark, vice-president, exploration for Pacific Petroleums Ltd., reported at the company's 15th annual meeting in Calgary. . The discovery well gave up a large recovery of high gravity crude oil. rated at around 3b degrees API, and Indicated approximately 28 feet of oil zone in the nikanassln formation, from 3.8fl4 to 3.912 feel. The discovery caught, the government with Its regulations down, Drawn up some weeks ago with Hip proclamation of the new Petroleum and Natural Gas Act, the regulations were still In the hands of the Queen's printer Tuesday. The Act and regulations provide for strict government con- will be intensified end the of operators will be. v Increased. ' wulespiend and sli'iiped-ivity will l),. reflected in "T iHklltloiuil eniploynieni,. """nt of truffle and Honor Discoverer Hk.N -HrH,alii Tuesdav RCMP TO USE GHOST CARS TO CUT HIGHWAY MISHAPS VICTORIA ih RCMP "Ghost Cars," manned by plainclothes constables, will start patrolling British Columbia highways on the Dominion Day holiday. Announcement of the move, first of Its kind by RCMP in the province, was made here by assistant-commissioner C. E. Rlvett-Carnac. The measure is "an attempt to curtail accidents and deaths," he said. The "ghost cars" will be In radio communication with a uniformed constable in a marked police car who w)ll arrest offenders. 'l Sir Alexander Fleming, iiikfeJi t of !iilclllln, at. a cere-"iiirklnn the 25th anni- Of tile wntirlor rtritir Tli. "f iidinburgh presented Sir jl'Cler, who now Is emeritus SLEEPING BEAUTY What could be more pleasing thnn thf sight of this pretty miss napping in the sun on a rock high above Devil's Lake, near Wisconsin Dells, Wis. The sleeping beauty looked so peaceful the photographer didn't wake her to find out her namt. ur of bacteriology at Lon-1 nlverslty, with a pair of I 'Mi'ge III tureens I trol of drilling and production, j They are similar to those In Al-i ' b?rta I