Today's Weather Rupert--Overeast, prince light — Che Daily News Tomorrow’s Tides Sunday, September 11 ,1932 SUMED) desscphiiteersesc 11:25 am. 18.0 ft. nogthwegt wind; barometer,) 29.96: 23:11 pm. 19-4 ft. temperature, 55; sea: smooth. | Rae 5:00 am. 46 . “ ; « : “Wil 17:16 p.m. 8.2 ft. ‘ 2 eee ar ae XS od "NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWEPAFER vol vol, AxaTL No, 2’1. “Ss ee yee meintatoneh Kalk eau See ae + ae ne —— ” ue —— Lee New Motor Run On 529 Mile Route Approved | Following Long Fight Alex*Johnson, Operator of Vancouver ; Utilities, Given Permission to Inaugurate New’ Transportation ‘ System After Conference With Public ‘ Works Minister VICTORIA, Sept. 10:—One of the biggest recent devel- opments in British Columbia transportation will be the first regular stage service between Vancouver and Prince George, a distance of 529 miles. After a four-year fight for a franchise, Alex Johnson, operator of the Vancouver Utilities, announced yesterday that he had been success- ful Yollowing a conference with KIDD REPT | Hon. R. W. Bruhn, minister of pub- lic works. The Vancouver Utilities will con- F. W. Hart Gratified to See Tenden- cies Towards Economy | tinue as a jitney service for a month jand will then commence the new bow service on a month to month | franchise, | af necessary in winter planes will be used over impassable portions of ithe road. General principles of govern- nental economy as proposed in a report of the Kidd committee meet | with favor in the eyes of F. W. Hart | this city. However, some of the} PACIFIC): details are not so acceptable and | | probably prevent adoption of) Hazelton to ~y ‘Included in Pro- the report as a Whole, Mr. Hart be- | jected Goodwill Flight From eves Tokyo to San Francisco Mr. Hart t the federal government seems to be is gratified to observe This Month falling in line with gen- | A communication has been re- tral principles of economy. State|.oiveq by Mayor Cyril H. Orme tate, city after city and COM-| from the Hochi Shimbun newspa pany after company in the United | per of Tokyo, Japan, announcing States are showing similar tenden-| th» third attempt to be made thi Mr. Hart declares year under the auspices of tha’ Only by policies of most drastic/ newspaper to stage a goodwill economy will the world be able tO} fisrt across the Pacific Ocean extricate itself from the present) trom Tokyo to San Francisco with chaotic condition, Mr. Hart believes. a Junkers long distance land plane. The flight is to be attemp- ted about the middie of Septem Lik S uk. ber with scheduled stops at Sab I es pirit 0 : ishiro, Japan; Nome and Fair- banks, Alaska; White Horse, Y.T Prince Rupert in Hazelton, B. C., and Seattle. The ° plane will be manned by Kiyoshi Regard Bad Times| Honma, navigator; Eiichiro’ Baba pilot, and Tomoyoshi Ishita, radio operator ne thing I like about Prince) phe first attempt made under t is that nobody seems to be}. auspices of the Yoshi Shimbun x about bad times like they, Vancouver,” said L. F. Cham- field secretary of the B. C.| to span the Pacific this year from San Francisco tu Tokyo ended in failure in May when an amphibian icts Bureau of the V: incouver | \plane which was to have been Board of Trade, before leaving fr! flown by Seiji Yoshihara crashed Vancouver last night on the Car-| during a test flight at Oakland .. “You in Prince Rupert must} the aviator being badly hurt been hard hit by the depres but you seem to keep it to your- lves. I have heard very little The second flight, intended to b a non-stop attempt from Seattle to Tokyo, failed when the Bellanca imbling and hard time talk since }jong distance plane, whic h was to I have been in the city,” he said Ihave been used by the late Cap it is the right spirit. There’s|tain Yoshinori Nagoya and Kane hing to be gained by telling} kichi Asai crashed during a everyone our troubles. The turn has|flight at Floyd Bennett Field, New ome and this is the time to be | ¥ wk, Capt. Nagoya being killed ( rful,” Perr coke ee | Five Probationers Take Up Training ' ‘ Lest o * ITALY THREATENS lurkey and other nations, will withdraw from membership in The new probationers ¢ ire Miss Jane Potts of Alert Bay and Misses Ruth Nora Rudderham, Win- ie League of Nations. Charlotte Edwards, Wilkinson nifred Eby all of this city ° TO LEAVE LEAGUE ’ —_——- One Girl From “Alert Bay and Four + LONDON, Sept. 10:-A Rome From City Start Studies at * dispatch to the Morning Post General Hospital * yesterday stated that, unless er * France decides to recognize the A new class of five student nur- * ses has just been admitted to the * in land armaments, Italy, #}/nurses’ training — — a aor i" sether with Germany, Japan, #|Prince Rupert Genera Spivat. + + > * ?| +) + + + + + + emand of Germany for equal- # + + + + + + and ° Stee ee eoeeee ee PRINCE RUPERT, B, BO, : IS ai Impressive Rites For Screen Execu- tive—Searching For Body of First Wife in River HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 10:—Im- pressive simplicity marked the fu- neral rites yesterday afternoon for Paul Bern, moving picture executive and husband of Jean Harlow, soreen star, who committed suicide last Sunday. Miss Harlow remained dry-eyed throughout the service which. was conducted by Rabbi Edgar Manuel Conrad Nagel read a quiet eulogy on behalf of the screen colony by whose members Bern was held in; such high regard. Henry Bern, brother of deceased, who had arrived from New York following the tragedy, was so shoc- ked by developments following the} suicide that he was unable to at- tend the service. He revealed details of his brother's first romance which culminated in his marriage twenty years ago to Dorothy Millett, | who is believed to have herself com-| mitted suicide by jumping from al boat on the Sacramento River be- tween San Francisco and Sacra- mento on Monday night or Tues- day morning, apparently after learning of her husband's death Henry declared that, while Paul had held no love for his first wife for many years, he had maintained her out of sympathy and had made no secret of his first marriage. He revealed that Miss Millett had been confined some years ago to an in- sane asylum but had since been re- leased from the institution. The waters of the Sacramento River are being searched for trace of the body of the first Mrs. Bern Meantime, Judge Ben Lindsay revealed yesterday that Bern had conducted what amounted to veritable matrimonial bureau for | the Hollywood movie colony and | had been responsible for the mak- ing of many of screendom’s most colorful matches. While servants in the Bern house- hold stoutly continued to deny that there had been a quarrel between Bern and Miss Harlow immediately vrior to hig suicide, the rumor per- sisted that Bern had threatened to shoot his young bride of two months just before wae his own life INCREASE IN YIELD Wheat Crop For Canada This Year Is Estimated at 465,000,000— Much More Than 1931 | | OTTAWA, Sept. 10:—The wheat| ‘rop for all Canada is estimated at | 165,000,000 bushels by the eed ion Bureau of Statistics. This is an increase of 160,000,000 bushels over} last year The prairie wheat yield is esti- mated at 446,000,000. bushels as} compared with 284,000,000 bushels last yar Grain Ship Not Expected Before End of September Elevator offices do not now look | for any ship to come here to load, wheat before the latter part of the} month, It had been originally ex-: pected that a ship would be here by, tomorrow, } SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER R10, 3 1982 one —— Senorita G1 shebang on its 15lst No wonder whole holds 1 pure bred Arabian steed inniversary. Monterey, Mexico, orita other times. eta Rubio loves a parade——she leads the when Los Angeles will get the sen- t PATTULLO IS_CRITICAL_OF “UNION EXONERATE HOLD-UP IN POLICEMAN VANCOUVER Jury Finds That Special Constable Priestly Was Justified in Killing | Burglar at Bowen Island Cashier of Specialty on Burrard Street VANCOUVER, Sept. VANCOUVER ing a verdict of “justifiabl cide in self-defence cution of 4 corqner’s jury yesterday exonerated Ernest Priest- ly, special provincial constable, in connection with the death of a heavily armed unidentified burglar | who was shot to death by the offi- } cer early Thursday morning wh ren | VANCOUVER, Sept. 10 he failed to halt when ordered to do| was quoted at 51% ¢c. | Exchange today. Sept. 10 Return- homi- ; minion Specialty Co, and in the exe- Street this morning with $400. They automobile awaited them at the curb. Gus; drove VANCOU v ER WHEAT Pattullo Finds No Sentiment Of Substance Favoring Union; General Tone Is Much Better MERRITT, Sept. 10:—T. D. Pattullo, provincial Liberal leader, completed a tour of the interior and returned from here to Victoria last night, During an address here just before leaving, Mr. Pattullo de- clared that he had this year found a very much more settled and healthier opinion as to general economic conditions than seemed evident the previous year. Beyond all doubt, he said, conditions were improving and, in this connection, public temperament‘ was a vital factor. He stated hat he had found no senti- ment of any substance in the whole area of sixteen constituencies which he had visited favoring a co- alition government. Company is Relieved of $400 in Daylight 10:—Two men held up the cashier of the Do- on Burrard and escaped! off in an} in which a third man} Wheat on the local PRICE: FIVE CENTS “Cértain Methods” Used. To Gain Support From Some Liberals Tis Said Grit Chief For Province Reiterates That He Was Not Consulted—Government With Such Majority Should Have Been Able to Carry on MERRITT, Sept. 10:—While he will await a further statement from Premier Tolmie in respect to the latter’s here containing 25,000,000 feet. | | | | lafter the age of 14 years were adop- ited, more than fifty percent of the | boys | would be thrown on What would the committee do with announcement favoring a union government before mak- Liberal leader, said in an address here last night that it would not appear conducive to success of the course with that, not only had no representa- tions been made to him (Mr. Pat- to any exigent conditions which a IN LUMBER igovernment having a three to one majority could not meet, but it could hardly make for unanimity Loss of $300,000 Involved in Fire guited, but that certain methods This Morning in Crane Yards =‘ had been used to secure the support ing a full reply to same, T. D. Pattullo, British Columbia % vhich the Premier had been faced BIG BLAZE tullo) as leader of the opposition as that, not only had he not been con- at Thesselon, Ont. of some Liberals. THESSALON, Ont., Sept. .10:— More than nine million feet of lum- ber, valued at $300,000, was de- stroyed today by fire which swept the yards of the Crane Lumber Co, Native Couple From Kitkatla Wedded Friday Miss Agnes Lewis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Lewis of Kit- katla, and James Shaw, son of Mr. ind Mrs. Jacob Shaw, were united #) marriage by Very Rev. James B. Gibson, the dean, at 3 o’clock yes- terday afternoon in St. Andrew's Anglican Cathedral, the ceremony being witnessed by a large crowd of friends of the couple from the na- tive village. The attendants were Harry Brown and Mrs. Betsy Brown. Following a noisy procession in cars through the city streets, the FRANCE TO PAY DEBT Annuities to United States Wiil Be Met in Full This Year, It Is Announced PARIS, September 10—It was announced yesterday that the French government had decided to meet war debt annuities due to the United States on December 15 this year and will also liqui- occasion was celebrated with a date some overdue payments at | wedding supper in the Dominion the same time. The decision was | Cafe. reached = in with Great Britain. Hope of being able to success- fully complete a new commercial treaty between United States and France, which is now being nego- tiated, is believed to have actua- ted France in the decision to pay the annuities. —- Relap se Into Darian By Kidd Report If the recommendation that free education for children be abolished conjunction Mr. and Mrs. Shaw will take up residence at Kitkatla where they are a well known young souple, CANDIDATE IS INJURED Anthony J. Dimond, Democratic Congress Aspirant in Alaska, Hurt By Airplane FAIRBANKS, Alaska, Sept. 10:— Anthony Dimond, Democratic can- didate for delegate to Congress, was seriously injured by the whirling propeller of an airplane in which he was campaigning at Iditarod. Dimond was slashed on the shoulder, cutting the flesh to the bone in three places, knocked un- conscious and hurled into the river. and girls in our high schools the streets them? Would it have us relapse into barbarism by a_ reversion to the ,child-labor system which in most respectable countries has been made Thirty-Eight junlawful? Surely not.—Victoria . eat Dead in Blast Walibut| Landings Seventy Persons in Hospital Follow- ing Explosion on Ferry Steamer Yesterday Summary American—35,000 pounds, 4c and} NEW YORK, Sept. 10:—The 2c. 'death list as a result of the explo- Canadian—None. sion in the East River yesterday of American the ferry steamer “Observation” Clipper, 30,000, Booth, 4c and 2c. Fairway, 5,000, Cold Storage, 4c and 2c, was placed last night at 38 with 70 persons in hospital suffering from injuries, ~