0 p 1 .. n L 25 TAXI and Ambulance Serwic Anywhere at Anytime Stand Exchange Building MATT VI DECK. Prop. x. N 107. 'ACCO flrea fnrcMtcr say their uccea t '" the fire destruction no lurgeiy to the eperalpn iiirj tn wardens and the) '" mid the field stsif of mcni in putting out tlrca dl- -tun. 'her to own very hot and iiuinuee. nnd Mr. Allen laeuea llt' duneer la not over -ie ut moat vigilance should be BOMB EXPLODED CANTONBANK ..vu nil IJlMllg run " Hostile Demonstration -TON Auk 23 Several persona a have been killed despite 'Premier iu.u or casualties when a Pi' aw yeaterday m -the offices "-. -ci luncnt (bank here, lm-"f;c: number of Indlvld- ir.'Hted for taking part In a 'i:'iiiHirHt,on in front of that Rumor" of the failure of am ' depository previously re-ne Withdrawal of a large ioicr.ii niiMtiiKN TO ASSK.MIH.K I KrlDl.MIC Porter Idaho Itlehmond Sllvercreat Silversmith Sunloch Tortc Mines KAK l hOlTII 4- HOBSLAND. Aug. 23. The city council, faced with two ceaee of infantile paralysis has forbidden the awemblage of children under 16 years of age following action at Trail to the aame effect where thirteen caaes of Infantile paralysis have been reported, two of whkh have ended fatally. There have also been three drnths at Trail from typhoid, which la epidemic among the children. " VANCOUVER EXCHANGE B.C. Silver Coast Did 1.35 11-10 Oopier Cork Province Dunwell Glacier ..J." Indepcodenee. Indian L. and L Lcadamlth -Lucky JUn . .0314 .7614 .07 .08 .19 2:25 M .04' 2 ' .23 4.80 More than forty-five million have been speni " Asked 1.50 12.00 .06 Vk .77 K 0014 " .07 .08 .00 054 20 .21 H J2 .0514 .26 .80 S.10 dollars in the PItlVF. tri-KHT. III'.. Tl K-1'AY. AlCt'ST 2:i. 1927 PRINCE RUPERT Northern and Central British Columbia's Newspaper W . . . , ' . j M SSv- . S , -'X Is. ' '" u 1. " ih1.. ' c . '.' THE HRITiSII "TANKET" : Latest development of the British Tank Corps being in-sected by Sir Laming Worthington Evans, secretary of state for war, during his review of the "Merchandized Force'" Westminster Political Campaign Beginning to Warm Up Following Nomination Candidates Yesterday NEW WESTMINSTER, August 2:1. The provincial by-election was inaugurated in earnest last night with a number of meetings in the interest of the two candidates who were nominated yesterday, Mayor A. Wells Gray, Lilieral, and Charles A. Welsh, Conservative. Tremicr MacLean, Hon. W. It. Sutherland, and Hon. T. D. I'at-tullo spoke on behalf of the Liberal candidate and for the Conservative Hon. S. F. Tolmie was the chief orator. At the Liberal meetings local issues predominated. The Ladner bridge was discussed by all the speakers, the Premier stating that - bills paawed by the Legislature Incorpof; PENNANT RACE GETS CLOSER CRUSHED BETWEEN CARS AT GRANBY MINE LADYSMITH. Aug. 23. II. C. MoRey-nolds died ln the hospital as a result of Injuries received when he was atlng the bridge companies had not been sponsored by the government but recommended by Liberals. Ocuwrv&Uvss and Independent. At the Conservative meetings Dr. Tolmie declared that there existed s : general feeling throughout the province , of the instability of the present govcrn- lioston .Beat Chicago Third Time mcnt and he believed the sooner a 111 tJUVVVillMI I! IIIIV IMIIilO and Piratet Idle RUTH LEADS IN HOMERS NEW YOHK, Aug. 28 The pennant rare In the National League la getting tighter every dy. The Boston Braves yesterday drubbed the Chicago Cub for the third time In succession, while ltie Giants and the Pirates were idle, the Cardinals pulling up within one game of second plaee. The Cubs had a lead of only two and a tuilf games today and very few more reverse would throw the first division situation Into a Jumble that might hot.be straightened out until the very last games of the season. SAWMILL TO BE REOPENED Los Angeles Lunilier Products Co. Expects to Resume Operations Next Year at Buckley Bay The big sawmill of the Masaett Timber Co. at Buckley Bay may be re-r-rtencd next year stated E. lleapby. genera manager of the Los Angeles Lumber Products Oo controlling the Cleveland made three straight from , Plant, who was a passenger on the the Yankees. nuKa hit his fortieth , Prince Charlca yesterday bound for the homer of the year and thus became one , Island on a visit of inspection to the up on Gehrig who went hi Mess. It j company operations. Certain renova-was the first time this year that any j tlon work to the plant Is about to be team made a clean awLvn series aaainst i Instituted. the Yankees. NATIONAL uLuirK Ohlcage; 3,.BoVon .( , St. LbtnaJj PhtktdeljphiS 0. AMERICAN UAUI C New York 4, Cleveland B. Washington 2-3, Detroit 4-7. Philadelphia 3, Chicago 6. The Los Angeles Lumber Products Co. , ..... .. .. . sixty men empwym to :ivcuiwy oi Buckley Bay in logging, .operations, the loss produced toeing sold... .. DUTCH AIR LINER CRASHED IN ENGLAND KILLING ONE PERSON SEVEN OAKS. Kent, Eng.. Aug. 23. A mechanic was killed and- seven out of eleven passengers were slightly injured near here yesterday when a crushed between two cars at the Dutch air liner bound Irom Croydon C-.' m:t' where ' w:i cmpl".vvd. I' m --rr'. :v. -or. the flcM. SUDDEN DEATH JOHN 0. TENG Body Found in Woods Where he Had Been Sawing Logs for Firewood Death came suddenly to the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Teng yesterday when their father, who was apparently in good health, died suddenly in the woods nearby. He had been helping them with the wood cutting and had gone out during She day and had cut through about half a log when ft seemed as U he had sat down to rest and had fallen over backward and died '.here as a result of heart failure. About six o'clock J. Campbell and Harry Wllwin, who were going to cut wood, found the body and hurriedly reported it. He had probably been dead several hour when found. John O. Teng, who came here from Abbotaford about a month ago to live with Mr. and- Mrs. J. A. Teng at their home 1188 Second Second Ave. was 69 yean of age. He was born in Strom. Sweden, but had been living at Abbots-ford since 1914. In addition to J. O. Teng of this city, there Is a ran Eric O. Teng of Orand TaTttdK. Michigan. At an inquest held this morning before Deputy Coroner James It. Tannock. a verdict of death through natural causes was returned by a Jury consist ing of O. H. Munro. foreman. Steve King. George D. Ttte, J. Lome McLaren. Frank DMb and Thomas Mc-Meekm. Witnesses were J. A. Teng, J. M. CampbeU and Harry Wilson who found the body of deceased last evening by the sawhorsc where he had been en gaged ln sawing wood. The funeral takes place tomorrow afternoon from the chapel of the B.C. Undertakers. Rev. J. R. Frlzctl CHINAMAN SUCCUMBS AFTER JLONG ILLNESS Mil Vim. Aged About Thirty, Hied Laxt Night In Prince Kupert (ieneral llwpltal The deatli occurred last night In the Prince Rupert General Hospital of Lin Yun, Chinese, aged about 30 years. De ceased, who lived In a shack on Third Avenue and had been ln the city for seven or eight years, had been 111 for some two year. Funeral arrangements are in the hands u t to Japs where it was eaiwiea. 1 lir te cannsrlss at Ust ale packing W0, COO caacn of reds In half pound flat. HtOtT LAST NK1IIT IN MANUOHA KIT 1 CHOP NOT lAMA(it:i WINNIPtO. Aug. 23. Light frosts centering around Winnipeg and Ms suburb were reported test night from a n umber of point ln Manitoba but the drop la tetapecature it la believed was not (ufflcleat to eaue damage to the crop. summs shown by Boston Grill Large Upstair Dining Hall, with new laid dancing floor, for hire. NEW SODA FOUNTAIN. The latest and best for the leant Phone 457. P'-ire Five Cents VANZETTI ARE EXECUTED OLITICAL CAMPAIGN IN NEW WESTMINSTER WARMING UP lacco and Vanzetti Die for Murder in Electric Chair Boston Midnight KOTE Ts AGAINST EXECUTION UNAVAILING ONE OF MEN PROTESTS HIS INNOCENCE TO THE LAST !N. August W. Nicola Sacco atMl Bartolomo Veascttl mruU'd this morning for niurdr. Catestino Madainw 'I'-ni in the tt ic chair by a few adnulee. ); j!i xnah w;t rarricd out n few minutes after mld- -I. and outride tin' high prison wall stood two small armed .mo mid Vnnzrtti made brief Speeches in the death : i"i-v they took their Heata in th rinnth lu.tr Vsnuttl innocence to the last. 0 TABULATE RESOURCES OF THE EMPIRE "3 t'ongri'HH Taken Artion at I Owning Session in Montreal Aug ' aSr-AstloB . sesnion of Um take . and metallurgical eon-a revlw of the i- and lltdtinirlc of the - in .n effort to achieve tubuiattoii l the Kni-(iiid industrial resource nir forrmi..tioi) of thr ii'ilittet of the emplr? i "mi in each dominion cuhmles . committee i all be appointed who '! mui Mm duty ut re- h unit concerned lt iuki -melting oapafcll-formation of an mo TRES ARE NOW WELL IN HAND The fight to aave thr men coattauesl up to the but minute and covmet fa them, afier visit to Governor Finer l II -SO. declared "It It all over." BAN MiANCHWO. Aug 3S.-Ofte hundred end twentjr-fivs Men partis-patlng in a Sacco-Vaniwttl protest parade eie arrested la front of the Hatt f Justice QIJiKVA. Aug. 2.coo and Vaa aettl manlfeatent dsuvaUshed the window of the great hall of the library of the League of Nattona Palace test night The rioting followed a nrjtest meeting argaatoea' hf SoetaUata. .The mc4 first mawh id the AnmlBaaaon-. ulate but the polloe beat them off. A hat tired by an unknown penna killed a bystander. MANY lli.MdNHTKVIIONS NBW YOHK. Aug .- -Demonstration un behalf of Sacco and Vansettl were staged both before and after the tion in many European and South American cities A aoon a ttte newa of the electrocution wei announced, the mob in front of the newspaper office at Duenaa Alraa began atoning the United , Btatea commercial bouse. The demonstration waa quelled only with the aid of police relnforewnenta. Hinging and snouting, a preoaeaion marched Into the Mall in London early I thli morning and waa acattered aa It neared Buckingham Palace by mounted j pulloe who arrested aeveral of the par- A steady rain kept the aeveral demoa-Urstlotte In Parte within bound Pol lee at Oothcnburg, Sweden, oharged ; the crowd to prevent It reaching the Nr Two Earning in Interior and Arrrtoan oonsuute A IkoIh n anila iliey arc Under Control Says Hi. I' i. .u.iMon in the interior ii ii.inrt but the hasard la vt weather stui continues, R E. Allan, district forea-nnied irom Bie .Interior ! he haa been Inveailgat- N'- there are two i'rr-MMH. One la la the Da-' uiktc about 400 aorea haa '' mid the other between in Eu'lyn where l.fiOO aorea iiiiriKu Both theae flrea are ' ! a uja- f nt ltU-w4 hlf B i demonatrsUon before the MR. Consulate 1 Laborers stopped work at Montevideo. Uruguay and Aaunsa)R, Paraguay. Huge Run of Salmon in Siberia This Season ONE TKAP TAKES 75.000 1CEDS A DAY AND CANNERY PUTS UP 200,000 CASES OF HALF POUND FLATS SEATTLE. August 28 Siberia is experiencing the greatest run of salmon in history, according to officers of the ateamer Santa Ana which arrived here today from northern waters with a cargo of mild cured salmon valued at approximated $300,000. I Officers of the vexse! said the Kamchatka Hiver was filled with fish. One trap at Ust yielded an average of 75,000 red salmon a day. Salmon taken on the Siberian coast are of fine quality as well ah being plentiful. Russian fishing interests this year shipped a ..ullii. . sceksys in refrigeration Irom. STEWART MUCH IN PUBLIC EYE South More Interested in Portland Canal District Than Prince Rupert Says Visitor SEES NO ELECTION Kenneth Drury. Journalist attached to the staa of the Victoria Times, passed throuob. veaterdav wtlh s nartv Witinrf that Stewart te vsry much in the public eye ln the south, much more than it seems to be here. The advent ... .1.. r ....,-... i i .. a UllLlllhO Uf til I ComPaJ' " district ts looked upon 'as a great move. Not only have they During the month of July, the mu- taken n!e group but it Is stated In the south that have definitely they nldpal electric light system .howed a fcecured the B Missouri. net surplus of tl.4S1.84. while telephone department revenu exceeded expendl- " P ture by $1568.49 according to report "Pla uevelopnl ovnm ne con-submitted l6eTt I1M1 difficult, at the Dun-the to the council last night by weU wa du m01' to laek Informa- suoerlntendent of utilities. Fliure tton on tne of Part PuWlc- on the month operations for the two impresaton a. to the condition of the departmente were as foUows: noMr- ntct th atatrlct P Estimated Revenue S9.121.53 that (TAt ths Wicvrv lt tan Ha tn Inluva " " "' " Sxpendlture 7.669.69 Surplus Telephone estimated Revenue 3.78S6 uk; uiauw.is ucw lui.iiw. So far as 41 431 81 tbe blg companies are concerned they are am aaecio uy iu. Mr. Drury said he did not anticipate an ekct,on no and ,elt P""' Bxpendtture 2.422 j07 B Ul V VVIi UUKU b VnilUiUO krC "VU1U r.,i. aiR.r4fliwln at New Westminster. In the event w.aw ' rvf Malts rtfd lwi4vifv ths,. ths wwvtltlnal rlMi AKKIVALS Halibut arrivals sold at the Fish Exchange this morning were aa follow: American Republic. 21,009 pounds. Booth Fish eries, 10.6c and Sc. Canadian Ternen. 0,500 pounds. Canadian Fish & Cold Storage Co.. 11.4c and 6c. Mulrneag. 10.000 pound. Atlln Fish eries. 11.4c and 6c. Caygeon. 6,000 pounds. Canadian Flah & Cold Storage Co.. 11.5c and 6c. The American schooner Paragon, with 60.000 pounds, not satisfied with price oflermg heie. proceeded to Seattle. PASSENGERS ARRIVE IN VANCOUVER FROM DISABLED P. RUPERT VANCOUVER. Aug 23. Passengers taken from the steamer Prince Rupert, which lost her rudder yesterday, arrived safely on she Cardeua and Princess! Beatrice last night. The disabled vessel! with the tug Dauntless acting aa rudder, is expected to arrive this afternoon.' LONG IW SPELL i CAUSES SHORTAGE WATER IN CITY On motion of Aid. Perry, seconded by Aid. W. J. Greer, the city council last night decided to request that water fr garden sprinkling be used sparingly during the remainder of the present extra long dry spell. Warning along this line will be published la the press. Aid. Perry informed Uie eounnl that water in Wood worth Lake had receded to a point 6' 6" below the top of the dam. Ths D:i IM WSHjVI J kuv 1 v , JJWtStlSWa4 IDUUnblUil tlllii. UC UlAllsfTU VUUICWllHt.. PRINCES CLOSE WESTERN VISIT Are Now on Way East by Kettle Valley Line After State Dinner Last Night VICTORIA, Aug. 23. The Prince of Wales and Prince George with a state dinner last night at Government Howe concluded their holiday week end on Vancouver Island and left this morning for Vancouver en route east. The princes attended the provincial exhibition here and snowed keen interest ln the various exhibit. The Prince of Wales paid a surprise visit to the bedridden returned mea ln the returned men's hospital, chatting with each of the patient ln turn. VANCOUVER. Aug. 23. The Princes arrived on a special boat from Victoria this morning and left for the east by the Kettle Valley line early this morn lng. LIQUOR PROFIT CHECKS SENT Prince Rupert Gets $3-987.74 as Her Share in Distribution VICTORIA. Aug. 23 The finance department today distributed $534,506 to the municipalities aa their share of the liquor port Its for the six months ending March 31. Prince Rupert gets 5,-987.74. Prince George S2.641.2I. The total liquor profit for the nine months ending March 31 amounted to