z irrly crule at Alaskan ' north aa SUka. Or. J. T. i 'iit Seattle and Spokane, i Mrs WUaon and family. ;rt yesteriay aternoon ' f-irty-loot gasoline cruiser J u late in June that - 'ti here on it way north ' intervening, has been re- .ny dellghte, fine weather 1 "ii the larger portion of Tin Wllsonia will leave iMir.-iuiK. oontlnulng lte . ' to Seattle. CALGARY nFIFCATF MAKES HIS REPORT Nlltf hoin of firand Tounrll .Mrrllng of 1 niKht s meeting of Prince ;t A. - inbly, Native Son of Canada. " ) r presented an IntereaUng 'h reiem grand oounoll oon- !1 migsry at whleb be was i'".'ntative of tn local body .--res' :r,n feature of the report nmoc tion with the great ' "io orKsniEstion Is experlen- Of .. an, f the grand council were ' rc;rM iit nvist of the pro. y i 'lie Dominion. - i ruauomnw'. praaldrnt, was In ' -c H. A, Dreen acted as occ- ae aUhenee of II. M. Daggett TITLED BROTHER OF B.C. MEMBER OF THE LEGISLATURE DIES ' Au Vtecount Deerhurat aKnd 6J. He was a well-known B:sley. VCOl VTR, Aug. O.-Vtacount Dcer- ' ' died yesterday was a brother ' u. Coventry, member of the -1 a'' lor Snanlch and well known ffiiui. A' Confederation Canada produced ' "" bushels of wheat In re had reached four hun ' , uii.Miiiini. rRrs CIINTKU. ISTrilHIK The central Interior hay crop all atong the line this year la a wonder and fives promise of exceeding reeorda of past years, stated Jack McNeil of THkwa. who was a visitor In the city yesterday. Oeneral crop conditions are of the beat and there should also be a bumper harvest of grain and field crops. A little moisture la the worst need at this time. BABY BORN ON TRAIN ON WAY TO WINNIPEG WINJilfBO. Aug 9 A daughter was horn on the tram coining ncic eai.t to Mr and Mrs. Jim Taaamanuk late of Poland but now looking lor a . ir. Pan&dn. There was no igcpiiuu doctor near but a Polish miawne loosed after the mother und child and both arc now In the nonpnai v o.. CHINESE KILLED IN SHANGHAI ACCIDENT trvennv. Auk. 9. - Thirty -three Chine were killed and 150 were Injured in the collar of the ncavy v. shelter at Shanghai aays a of an open Reuters despatch. KAIMVAY MEKTINfl of the 9-Dlrectors VANCOUVER. Aug. Railway met yesterday Pacific Oreat Extern Hon. W. H. Sutherland said thlt only routine business was trans- n-tl ssssssssssK fel" ' jEtBL SSBISBD aBBsS SSSSSSSSSSSSSSsV BBSSSQ JAMK3 DOYLE Hon&Iu. J MlUton-aire wn offers a S33.000 pfize for a 8.1 n Francolsco-Honolulu flight under contcsi conditions TRIP ON PRINCE CHARLES POPULAR Three Itar Cruise to Mrviart. Anjox and IJiirrn f'lurlolle Maud Draws IxM-al People The three-day trip frsm Prtnee Rupert aboard the steamer Prince Oiisrtea to Biewan. Asm and thet Queen Ohar- iKe hUnds is saining m popularity assd eaeh week sees many city people taking It. Those leaving yesterday afternoon for the eruate which will end here on Thursday Included Mike Hu- dema, Mr. and Mrs. A. Thompson and child. M. M. McLashlan. Mlaa Joan West. MIm Audrey Buahby. Mlu Dunbar. Miss Olive Munro. Mr. and Mrs. O. H. Arnott. Mr. and Mrs. Bam Mawey. R. A. Creech. BUILDING MATERIAL AND COAL ARRIVING FOR LOCAL COMPANY Tus Cape Scott arrived In port today with two scows of lumber for Albert si MeOaffery. one of which la to be used on the rebuilding of part of the government dock, the work being done by The Rupert-Vancouver Stevedoring and Contracting Company. Tug Lome it expected to arrive tomor row with two siows of coal for the same firm. OLD TIMERS' SOCCER TEAM TO BE CHOSEN AT MEETING TONIGHT Owing to a misunderstanding among the members as to the time, ihe meet ing to have been held laat night of the committee to select teams for the forthcoming Old Tuners' football game waa not held. It will take place Instead tonight after the league football game The Old Timers' game la scheduled for August 18 and the proceeds will be applied to the fund for the improvement of Acropoili Hill grounds. The committee delegated to select the players con. BIG LEAGUOASEBALL AMiuir.w u;iic 1 Iroit 1. IVton $. rirvrUnrt fl WeaJatci t n 1. All othen rani. Il.t0l tTMIMl Vstlmint W I, TV- Chirago 63 S7 .813 I fVt .hurg 5 9 688 St IUU 00 4.. ; Nw York 50 48 M rtjinnati 49 M 471 Brooklyn 40 M 1 Ptl Hdilpr.lt 34 S3 JBJ Bito:i . 37 OS 381 New York 70 91 71' Wa-hlngtnn "3 4J .60 Del ml! 55 43 S3' ' i'l..!:.(.rlphii .56 6 521 i Ch.-ago M SO 4fli i Cleveland 4 12 4'i St I ils 41 03 391 j Boston 35 7 33.1 TAXI Boston Grill 25 Ambulance mid Large Upstair Dining Hall, Service) with newly laid dancing Anrhrrr l Anytime floor. fr hire. Exchange Ilulldlnc NEW SODA FOUNTAIN. Stand ' PRINCE RUPERT The latest and best for the .MATT VIDECK. Prop. least Phone 457. Northern and Central British Columbia' Newspaper PRINCE KUI'ERT. B.C . TH.sUAY. AUG I' ST 9. 1927 Pri.-e Five Onts V' , TIT1 11 T nPJFF"1 1 nHFTi Ti nns wn rfrannmnsN ti t FTMiTHT7 m tt rrkrtn nrt ha ait Jhree Dead as Result of Chinese Shooting in Vancouver News Office htARKFJ.S HETWEEN COMMUNISTS AND MODERATES NATIONALIST PAKTY HAVE FATAL RESULTS ItKI FUND STIMULATES TK0UI1LE C HIGHWAY MAY BE BUILT IN 'rVKU. August 9. A shooting affray at the offices Morning News, a Chinese daily, claimed thren live t-tii. The dead are Louis Manllar, editor, a s.ia) -m he Vancouver branch of the Chinese Nationalist B Park, a typesetter; Wong 8uy Sang, of Kamloop. I'lc tragedy is believed to be the outcome of the recent Nationalist party, th Communist section gaining con- 'trol of Um News. iiiii mioiii: u VANOOCVKR. Aug. . (Later) - -Dissension In the ranks of th Kong Mori Jane. Chines Nationalist patty culminated In the shooting at the news-paper oaUce on louder street Baat Uat ! night st Survey to I Made Subject I Wo" 7 nttT- i and asked to see Umit Vba liar and titpnfirmation From Ottawa jm directed to um balcony wnr the Matter was busy, a loud arcuBMnt was " lUm beard and on or two sun mote . 'r of public work, jojiq, cr,u th.t . tentative WM( pk. , pur and write been rwerhed between tth Wss a MSWUr. Ma Jan Snee, a ,.na uwiinion Ttn,r , 1 r i a Joint tedml and -jtasmnt: tmm the curtains tMt y ! mm pepoxed hth-1- a-ioon,. TKrv fled but ft'vrlnioke aixl Oolden whs ri ..i in l (lurins : t)r KUk u Victoria ' tu confVmut im at Ot- 'in 0r this road would ii highway from Van- TO ALASKA WATERS s MiiMin sjnu taniiij iirrr .ikviii a (:z:t immu llrr lUtrndrU Voyage North WOT4I Park waa atroek. The pallor wart catM and they found Wont Park dying on Uw first floor. Louie Man Iter waa dying 1 Uw batoony with two bullate In him and Wont Suay Hang dead with two bullate In hla body. The police fx lev It man ahot Louie Han liar and then ahot himself The wounded men were dad before they reached the hoapltel. ki:i rrti)i".tiAM ta months ago there -wm a apllt In the society, thoae s-jeportlng the Hankow Ocmmunlet party setting control of the paper. The supporters of the Nanking moderatea failed In their legal efforts to wreat the control. The reported presence In Canada of an agent of Jhe Soviet Council of Bua-ala with a large propaganda fund added fuel to the feud. It was stated by Investigators that the fund waa to be used to stir up cusxenalon between the Chlneax and whites. Blfte of J. 8. Irvine. E. Dickens and S. D. Macdonald. YANDERHOOF The new eight mile cut-off on the Prince Ocorge highway, which eliminates eleven miles of very dangerous road In the vicinity of Mud River, will be ready for travel this work announces Arthur Dixon, district engineer for the provincial department of public works. The Vanderhoof Conservation Asoocla tkm, at Its annual meeting last week elected officers as follows: hon. president. Hon. Hugh Outhrle; hon. vice-president, Dr. Simon Fraser Tolmle: president, Robert Reld; vice-president, Samuel W. Cocker; sec.-treas. J. M. Johnston. Executive committee: David W. Donald. F. Bowman, Ernest Smed-ley. John H. MacMllian; E. A. Mitchell, J. 11. Ellis, and T. P. Calhoun. pkintk iki:i:tki. KENORA. Aug. 9. The Prince of Wales and Premier Baldwin were greeted here today at the teflon pln'fomv Ill 1. 1 Til -MtS IUKS. nm,UTH, AK. 9. W a. Cuthbert. years f age. eamptf oiler of the Btoel Con.pany of Canada, died aboard the steawrcr Hefcert Ifofesen on lake Ontario yesterday. Bid. Asked BO. Silver 1.70 1.00 Coast Copper 1300 Cork Province .... ,i .07 Dunwell 'AjM J Olacier ; .08 Gladstone 12 Independence i -0? JMH Indian , .07 .09 L. & L. .09 Lucky Jim 18 .19 Premier 226 2.27 Porter Idaho 19 51 SUvercrest .06 Surf Inlet 01 V4 Sunloch JBO Advertise In The Dully News WINS rMVERSmr MEDAL Seventeen - year old Joan MacDonald. daughter of Ramsay MacDonald. Vanzetti and Sacco Denied Further Stays; Execution Thousand out on Strike a Protest and Police Take all Possible Precautions to Prevent Riots NKW YORK, Augut 9. Sacco and Vanzetti were denied pleas of xtay of execution today in the superior court at Den-ham, Mass. Today in New York it is claimed that 115,000 workers arc out on a sympathy strike. Thousands of policemen are posted in Union Square and smaller details throughout the city to preserve order. Four thousand clothing workers arc out in Rochester, New York. At Roston a riot squad raided the cap makers' headquarters on the eve of a strike. It is understood the police plan to place machine guns along the Charleston prison walls where the execution Is set for Thursday. Many arrests have taken place throughout the country in connection with disturbances and bombings. In F'rance the crowd broke the police lines before the United Stales consulate at Cherbourg singing "The Internationale." Demonstrations continue in Paris. In Sweden 15,000 participated in a parade. Demonstrations in F'rench Morocco and South America are reported. New South Wales "Unknowns" affixed a paper to the American wreath on the cenotaph reading: "To a nation that would murder an innocent man." SHARP BREAK IN DUNWELLS Shares Dropped Yesterday From $1.22 to 85 cents Following Victoria Lead VA.NTOrVKK. Aug. . Following a kharp break on the Yirtorlu Stock f:rhiinge Saturday and Monday, IMinMrll shares took a sudden drop jrstrrday afternoon on the Vancouver exchange In I lie morning, quotations declining on Kales or 1.700 hare from S1.22 to S1.17. In the afternoon the Mock fold at $1.10 at first offer anil the price declining to KS cents with 15.36J (.lures chugging hands. VANCOUVER EXCHANGE HALIBUT SALE SMALL AT EXCHANGE TODAY There were only four boats In today with halibut with 78.000 pounds, three of which were American. The sales were: American Atlas. 30,000 pounds, to Cold Storage at 11c and 6c. Yukon. 30,000 pounds, to Booth Fish eries at 11.50c and 6c. Eastern Point. 5.000 pounds, to Booth Fisheries at 12c and 6c Canadian Dolphin, 13.000 pounds, to Atlln Fish eries at 11c and 6c. ncr.Kii colors Mrs. Martin was very pleased with herself. Her cook had left In the morn lng. and she had found a new one before dinner. The new1 cook come from WaJcu. Now. Molly," said Mrs. Martin, "here Is a lobster. Be sure you don't cook It too long or the color wUl be spoilt' When the new cook produced the freMy booked lobster It was Jet black. "Oood tieavensl" cried her mistress, "You haven't cooked .It as you were told" "Oh. yea. I have I" protested the girl. "But It turned red and I was afraid I'd cooked It too long, so I blackleaded it." Rev 8. B. Warren of Stewart Is a passenger on the Catala today bound for Vancouver. It Is estimated that there are 76,000 per?o"; unpaged tn teaching In Canada New Theatre Announced to be Erected Here on Site Opposite P.R. Hotel il'ItlNCE KUPEirr amusement company has secured I PItOPEKT.' ON WHICH TO BUI I.I) AND PLANS AKE I COMPLETE FOR IlUILDINd Indicative of a loial concern's enterprise aad faith in the future of the city was the announcement made last night by Col. S. P. McMordie, manager of the Prince Rupert Amusement Company, that his concern is about to embark upon the construction in Prince Rupert of a new $75,000 theatre building, which will have no peer in r.ritish Columbia'outside of the metropolitan centres of the south. Plans are now being prepared for the commodious and elaborately '. appointed structure whk-h will be erected at the corner of Second Avenue and Sixth Street across from the Prince Rupert Hotel on i lota which the company h-. purchased from the gwerament Within a mim HIP Tniinc mr It is expected to have the building ompleted and in operation. 1 he building will be of reinforced -encrete construction with a frontage if 60 feet on Second Avenue and dep& of 140 feet. It wul be two storeys In height with provision for two stores on the ground floor and space abovt r COMING THIS WEEK (iroup Organized by Northwnttrrn Kall-way and Another by Raymond Whllromb law. phyileian's and dentist's off loei. I Th" northwestern Alaska tour No. A2 The front of the butMtng wUl be stflt- wte rr,T tn Vancouver from the ably decorated aad the entrance to the ; United States Sundav win be In Prince w n i m i m mm i auditorium si me itm, arug cwu Jo ,pf fnr TlllirtnnV NpYT Uommod.Uon tor 1.000 persons. wUl RP ne' wlU ,,UU lO aJCl I Ul I I ill I O Lilly it CA L L. , c , srmnaaati. Alaska, returning by Jasper. Winnipeg. in Vancouver, will be elaborately decor- jmona wniwomo una cruie of the No, 7 will arrive tn Prince Rupert Trtday ated and the appointments srue- ture WUl include handsome dressing " ind P" b Can-and tM"i N,tion1 "P Stewart. smoking rooms- i sfterwards going by Kltwanga and Ha- The structure will be repreeentatlve of the most up-to-date, elaborate and "'' " " uthr Ind:n to 'Per comforuble In modern theatre building P nd Mount Bobson and thence to New be decided and the undertaking wUl a , acquisition to the architecture of the We-talnster. There arc 55 In ths cltv. While primarily designed ai a moving picture auditorium, It will be of such a nature as to be able to take care of any theatrical needs of the city. One Of Its features, also In line with modern theatre building, will be a large pipe organ. Construction will be carried out by the Prince Rupert Amusement Co. It self. Erection of the new building will necessitate the removal of the present pedestrian approach to the CiUt. wharves which the railway company Is aTangtag to follow Sixth Street and d wn First Avenue. five Tiimswn acres or rLorr.K M'MAS LAKE AREA VICTORIA. Aug. 9. Five thousand acres of clover, the largest single crop ever harvested In Canada Is being gathered on Provincial Oovemment owned lands In the Sumas reclamation area. FIRE YESTERDAY ATCOWICHAN LAKE VANCOUVER. Aug. 9. Fire yesterday swept 150 acres at Oowlchan Lake on logging operations of Murphy tc Me IVmald damaging four million feet of felled and bucked timber. It is re ported under control. ST1UTK IIY. TRAIN. LONDON, Aug. 9. Sir Oeorge Lewis. eminent London barrister, was killed when he was struck by a train In Switz erland, where he had been holidaying. It was learned today , .Terrace. Clear, calm, temp. 66. Rosswood. Clear, calm. temp. 65. Alyansh. Clear, or tin, temp 62. Alice Arm. Part cloudy, calm, temp 63. Anyox. Cloudy, calm, temp. 63. , 8 tenia rt.' Part cloudy, temp. 90 Hazelton Clear, calm. temp. 66. Smlthers. Clear, calm. temp. 79. Bums Lake Clear, calm. temp. 60, Telegraph Creek. Clear, calm, temp. 68. Whltehorse. Clear, south wind. temp. GIRLS' DRILL TEAM TO GIVE EXHIBITION Will be Added Attraction at Wextholme Theatre Friday and Saturday Evenings The Prince Rupert Otrls Drill team will appear In exhibition pyramid building, team drill and tableaux as an added attraction at the Westholme Theatre Friday and Saturday evenings. The team, which Is preparing lor Labor Day celebration participation, consists of Misses Evelyn Dalby. Dorothy Edgsr, Edna TJnger. Chrlssie McLeod. May 4. 1 Thrmpson. Ada Mensgohr. Irene Mor- rlton. Julia Walters and Cathie Irvine. Coaches for the girls are Douglas Frizzell and Alex. Mitchell. MOYIE SKIPPER IS HERE LOOKING UP SOME OLD FRIENDS Captain E. Karl sen of the yacht Mabel DU1 owned by John Otlbert. ths movie actor, ia In the city looking up old friends. He came particularly to meet Captain H. Wahl who is out on tus beat Just now. Captain Karfeen has been taking part tn movie scenes since 1918 at San Pedro. He was here ten or twelve years ago with the Moose and la trying to locate several men he met at that time. He Is staying at the Knox Hotel. YACHT EXPLODED ON THE GREAT LAKES TORONTO. Aug. 9. Walter Banks of Toronto. Mrs. Helen Johnson, and the Japanene steward were drowned fifteen miles north of Sturgeon Bay. Wisconsin, when tht( gasoline yacht exploded. BRITISH WARSHIPS VISITING SEATTLE SEATTLE, Aug. 9. HM.CS. Patrician and the British West. Indies cruiser Colombo Joined the United States Pacific navy here yesterday for "Fleet Week." In 1844 the value of fUh caught in Canadian water was only 1125,000 to day the fig t re 160 POO 000.