, - Today's Weather | ° Tomorrow’s Tides Prince Rupert—Overcast, wester- E Tuesday, Sept-mber 20, 1932 ly wind, 8 miles er hour; baro- BS up e 4:10 am. 17.0 ft. meter, 29.82; te 2 ure, 52; sea ’ 16:00 p.m. 18.9 ft. smooth, ¢ OQ» iM a ? Te el Gee 10:00 a.m. 83 ft. “en, % ; 22:55 pm. 61 ft. % fy %, NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER a Vol. XXITII., No. 218. ‘ PREMIER DEFERS HIS UNION PLANS ae BRITISH MOTORSHIP IS DUE TOMORROW TO LOAD WHEAT Tolmie Announces He Will Carry On With Present Cabinet Until After House Session in January PROMINENT JUDGE DIES Hon. Frank Egerton Hodgins of To- ronto Had Distinguished Legal Career NEXT YEAR, TORONTO, Sept. 19:—Hon. Frank Egerton Hodgins, judge of the On- tario Supreme Court, member of the First Appellate Court and judge of the Admiralty Court, died here yes- terday in his seventy-ninth year. Before his appointment to the bench Mr. Justice Hodgins was one of the most successful of Toronto barristers. As head of the firm of Hodgins, Heighington and Bastedo he enjoyed a large practice and his opinion was sought in many im- portant cases He was born in Toronto in 1854, a on of the late J. G. Hodgins, LL.D., and a nephew of the late Mr. Jus- tice Hodgins, Master-in-Ordinary at Osgoode Hall. Upper Canada Col- lege and Trinity University contri- buted to his education. He was gi- ven the honorary degree of Bach- elor of Civil Law by the latter insti- tution in 1904. In 1879 he was cal- election. WILL PRESENT COALITION PLANS TO LEGIS- LATURE AFTER WHICH MINISTERS WILL BE ASKED TO RESIGN PRIOR TO ELECTION EARLY VICTORIA, Sept. 19:—Premier S. F. Tolmie issued a statement Saturday evening in which he declared his purpose of carrying on with his present cabinet to clean up pending matters. Owing to the delay which would be caused to public business if he were to reorganize his cabinet now and call for an election, Premier Tolmie ex- plained that he had decided not to proceed with his union government plans for the time being. However, at a ses- sion of the Legislature early in January, the proposed reforms would be presented and, following the session, all cabinet ministers would be asked for their resigna- tions and a new government would be formed of the pro- posed union nature following which there would be an After the election, the Premier said that he would be prepared to agree to the leadership being determined by the newly elected members’ should the: proposed union government be successful at the polls. The Premier advocated a reduction in the size of the cabinet from eleven to eight members and a reduction in the membership of the Legislature compatible with pro- per representation of the whole people. led to the bar and in 1902 was made King’s Counsel From 1890 to 1896 he legal agent for the Dominion Gov ernment in Toronto. As counsel for the Ontario government. he took part in the licence investigation | held in 1907. At one time he was | solicitor for the Toronto Board of | Education. The esteem in which he} was held by his fellow lawyers is shown by the fact that he was el- | GERMAN IN AIR AGAIN Yon Gronau and Companions Flying Home After Two Weeks’ Stay at Tokyo acted a TOKYO, Japan, Sept. 19:—Capt. ected, first as a Bencher of the Law | Wolfgang von Gronau, German Society and later as President of the; round the world flyer, made a Ontario Bar Association forced landing with his three companions in bad weather in the sea off Hiratsuka, twenty-five miles south of Yokohama, Satur- Active Anglican An Anglican in religious conem j nation, his activity in church af- 4 ed * * NEW ALTITUDE + i* RECORD MADE | le Snetartiti | I. LONDON, Sept. 19:—Reach- # # ing a height of 45,000 feet, # + Capt. George Unwins beat the # |# previous altitude record by 1500 # # feet. He achieved the new high # # altitude mark near here on # (+ Saturday. + * * |\#@¢oeeee0 eeee808 DROWNED AT ENGLISH BAY | day. After less than two hours, fairs was almost as prominent as he was able to resume the flight | his professional career. He was at] 44 Nagoya where he landed at | one time chairman of the Anglican 3:35 p.m. Committee of the Laymen’'s MIs-| yon Gronau had taken off from ionary Movement. In 1906 he was | chairman of the executive commit- | tee for a revised hymnal for Bs, the airport near here Saturday morning for Nagoya after a visit of nearly two weeks in this city, Anglican Church He married Miss Anna Mackle m | in 1880. She died 16 years later and } Kootenay Farmer in 1899 he married Miss Blanche} Lockart. He had four daughters Killed By Bull George Cartwright, Aged 75, Prom- inent Rancher of Erickson, Attacked By Animal His favorite recreation was Cross- ing the Atlantic and he visited the Old Country nearly every year. He | belonged to the Toronto, the To- } ronto Golf and the Ontario Jockey Clubs. deneens ea NELSON, Sept. 19:—-Attacked by | i b t Landin ‘ a bull which he was leading from a l u g lits stall, George Cartwright, aged /75, prominent rancher of Erickson, | was instantly killed. He had resided pounds, 5.2¢ | in the district for thirty years. hesamary American—134,000 and 2c to 5.5¢ and 2c. Canadian—22,500 pounds, 4c 3c and 4,le and 3c. \* *# GERMANY TO VOTE ON NOVEMBER 6 # 4 19:—The gov- * and 0 000ee en ebeeers - American le Wizard, 42,000, Atlin, a and 2c ie Rainier, $1,000, Booth, 5.5¢ and 2¢.|, peRLIN, Sept Nordby, 45,000, Cold aoe 5.3c # ernment has ordered the new # and 2c, # Reichstag election for Novem- # Onah, 10,000, and Viola, 6,000, # ber 6, Setting of the election + Cold Storage, 5.5¢ and 2c. # date follows the recent accep- President Paul von of Chancellor von * tance by \# Hindenburg Canadian Teeny Milly, 6,000, Atlin, 4.1c and 30. | Papen’s dissolution decree, e Edward Lipsett, 8,000, and Morris | * H,, 8,500, Cold Storage, 4c and 3c, | | Gertrude | Miss Gertrude Helen Radcliff, Well Known at Vancouver as Artist, Loses Her Life VANCOUVER, Helen Radcliff, Pee? ee0e00000 Sept 19: Miss | aged 50,] | well known locally as an artist, was] | drowned in recovered, Wife of Senator Borah is Better Has Been Seriously Ill Since Last Week With Influenza at Boise, Idaho BOISE, turn here iogceces cee tT Idaho, condition of Mrs. Mary Borah, of Senator William E. Borah, reported Saturday #'slightly improved. Mrs. Borah was stricken last week with influensa/ and has since been gravely ill. English With a good-sized list of passen- gers, Union steamer Catala, Capt, A. B.* Dickson, arrived in port atl» #/8:15 last evening from the south |, #* and sailed a couple of hours later! #)| for Anyox Stewart and other nor-|* witnessing #j\thern points whence she will re- tomorrow The body was Sept. night Bay Sunday} morning when she slipped from a rock into deep water. 19:—The | wife was be to afternoon | Not a beauty contest—-but stern business. They're members and p-vospective of the members Artists and Models Union, Local No. 18210 at Chicago, busy getting organized. GRAIN SHIP IS COMING Motorship Danwood Due Tomor row to Loard Cargo of Wheat For Orient The British motorship Danwood is due in port tomorrow morning and will load a full cargo of grain from the Alberta Wheat Pool’s lo- cal elevator for the Orient. She will be the first ship to load wheat | from here for the Orient in some | years. it was not known definitely whether or not the Danwood would be lined on arrival here but it was rather expected that she would be and would, therefore, be able to go on berth and start loading at the elevator almost immediately. The Canadian Trading Co. of Vancouver is agent for the Dan- wood, the company already hav- ing a representative here in con- nection with the loading. The Dutch steamer Flensburg is due here next week, her date of arrival being tentatively set for next Monday, and the Maasburg, another Dutch ship, is expected early next month. Both these vessels will load full for United Kingdom or Continent. VANCOUVER WHEAT VANCOUVER, Sept. [9 was quoted on the today at 47%4c Tare 9° oe eee * | police today following . + * BLACK BEAR ° CAUSES TWO : FATALITIES * EMERS(‘ IN, M an., * Sept. 19: :-—Two persons * are dead here as a result * of a farmyard * with a huge black bear * The bear killed Geor ge \* Kawrilia, mer, and Mrs. Kawrilia Wheat | local exchange | *! »enknife before he could be sub- @ | Donug: all and Martha Lewis, were # | taken to hospital with knife wounds battle * *#\ George Ward, # cuts on hands and arms. > 2 aged 65, far “a PULP MILL ASSURED Great Britain Takes Stand Like France on German 1 Arms Equality Problem Must Be Solved by Negotiation, Foreign Office Declares—“Unfortunate” to Quit Disarmament Conference at Time Like This LONDON, Sept. 19:—The government of Great Britain \today took a position very near that of France in opposi- tion to Germany’s method of demanding equality in arma- ‘ments. In a memorandum issued from the Foreign Office yesterday, the government insisted that the German prob- lem must be solved by negotiations and declared eo to quit the disarmanent conference w= was “unfortunate at a time when | CHINESE attention and energy should be di- | rected to the economic rehabilita- | Japan's Campaign of Aggression in Manchuria Resented—Inter- tion of the world.” Germany Takes Issue vention Asked BERLIN, Sept. 19:—A government WASHINGTON, D.C., spokesman today took issue with |“the unfriendly form” of yesterday's |British note opposing Germany's jprocedure in demanding arms | equality. —An appeal was made to the United States Department of State on Saturday by the Chinese legation to halt the Japanese campaign of aggression in Man- BY DRINK -— churia in connection with the re- cognition of the new state of Runs Amok and Manchuchuo. Four Persons Similar appeals are stated to have been made to nine other powers. It was intimated that the Uni- ted States would not consider “taking action until after the re- port of the commission investi- | gating Manchurian affairs had been Sreapre Sept. 19: Indian Stabs | Vernon | VERNON, Sept. 19:—Louis Victor, \é in Indian, said to have been crazed jwith drink, is in the hands of the an affray Sa- \turday night in which he ran amok ond stabbed four persons with a # | dued Two Indian women, Octave Me- | Garner’ s Mother Is Near Death CHICAGO, Sept. 19:—Cancelling all election campaign engagements, Speaker John Nance Garner, Demo- cratic candidate for vice-president, ‘but were able to leave soon after- | wi ards. Two men, Evan Crozier and) suffered eee ——-——— * died from the shock of 9) According to some local paiile He arrived here yesterday to be at the her hus- * band’s death. + , teners, ?| ;couver an item read over a news an- | bedside of his 81-year old mother, |* broadcast Saturday | Mrs. Sarah Jane Garner, who is ser- + * @ night declared that the local pulp | iously ill and believed by her phy-|# *pee reer ve eee ees jmill was assured. ‘ sicians to be near death. TO DEPORT — COMMUNISTS Reds, Now Serving Terms in Quebec ' Jail, to Be Banished From Canada QUEBEC, Sept. 19:—Fourteen al- leged Communists, convicted and sentenced for participation in May Day riots in the mining districts of forthern Quebec, are to be depor- ‘ed during the first week in October when the sentences they are at pre- sent serving in Quebec jail expire, NAMED TO | EXECUTIVE Ald. 8. D. Macdonald Again Member HAMILTON, Sept. of B. C. Branch of Trades ~ and Labor Congress , 19:—In the lection of provincial executives at he Trades and Labor Congress of Canada convention here Saturday, the following were elected for Bri- tish Columbia: Colin McDonald, Vancouver, ehairman. Ald. 8S. D. Macdonald, Prince Ru- pert. + a + + e + b + + a + + + + > + James Wilson, Victoria. William Watt, Vancouver. ete? e0002004670¢6684 a INTERNATIONAL PROBE > ARMAMENTS IS ASKED # counaibialiba e PARIS, Sept. 19:—It was an- # nounced by Premier Eduoard # Herriot Saturday night that + France would move towards - having an international inves- 9, tigation: made of German ar- # maments. It was suggested that +. alleged clandestine armaments oe were suspected in Germany. + * eeeeeereeeeeee Rotarians Make Ketchikan Trip Local Members of Service Club to Pay Fraternal Visit to Group in Alaskan City With a party of local Rotarians roing north to pay a fraternal visit to the club at Ketchikan, the Paci- fic Salvage Co.'s service boat Sal- vage Princess, Capt. Frank Tyler, left at noon yesterday for the Alas- kan port and is due back early to- morrow morning. The party making the trip includes G. A. Woodland, president of the local club, Capt. W. P. Dybhavn, G. A. Bryant, Col. G. BE. Gulick, Johrt J. W. Armour, Nicholls and G. H. Munro. OFFS teerveteretree e+e 227040446404 € t JAPANESE PLANE TO + MAKE NOME FLIGHT # + SAMUSHIRO, Japan, Sept. # 9:—The Japanese goodwill # airplane, which flew here from # Tokyo last week in preparation # for a trans-Pacific flight to # San Francisco via the Kurile # and Aleutian Islands and Al- # aska and Northern British Co- # lumbia, will take off for Nome, # Alaska, at daybreak tomorrow. # From Nome it is planned to fly * to Hazelton. + 2 **+* 470000064787 = i Pi saqe i A ae AGERE AE A OO <= = ST ae Lee ee. Le pated <2 sine ed Fag et sey til mae - Wei ae: a