ui-.Miv nui. wily luuiiuiiuii uui ituutnuw. xiiau id may tuu desire of the Britishgovrjunt W$ we desire that limitation and reduction do applied to-allclassos of vensols." Two Patrol Boats WRrtimttlJ.Ss Trollers Encroaching , on . Wfiters Using Harbors of West Coast COLLISION IN HOOVERSEES AIR IS FATAL CRIME DANGER Six Killed When Army Plane Col tides With Passenger Carrier KAN DIKGO, April persons were killed w scngor carrying plane 'ect. All tho occunants of the Planes were killed. Those killed were Lieut. Geln Kccfer of the army plane, Horace Murphy and L. I). Pratt, pilots, and three passengers, A. I). Dun, J.trdo Amelia and Miss Kelly. , HAZELTON FIRE DESTRUCTIVE HIS COUNTRY NKW YOUK, April 22: Pres ident Hoover addressing the an- ifii.-i population are lawlessly Miieu in the United States as in Great Britain." he said. "In many of our cities murder can apparently be committed with Impunityy .Tha president wild hevdond fronted with a national necessity of first degree and that wo are not suffering from an ephemeral crime wave but from subsidence of our foundations. Flit I- SASKATCHEWAN HAZELTON. April 22.-A fire BLAINE LAKE, Sask., April which broke out nt 9:30 Sunday 22: A block of business Dull burning destroyed three small dln at Blaine Lake was ue-tlw,llings, a blacksmith shop andjtroyed by fire early this mor-AC'hinMeinundryhere. Inlng with loss of ?100,ooo. Trade, which had already taken similar action In a long statement on the sub-; CLASSIFIED W' I Boston Grill frerron rM lb ClMalfleo . k '?. LARGE CABAUET If you low, dTrtliM tor tt. ?.. rQ 4 .'l8peoll Dinner Thursdays and If jou find. tockU the owner. Saturdays tr Dancing emy Saturday nlflit Whatever you tad. sdvertlM tor It from 9 to 12. PRINCE at Dane Hall for Hire RUPERT (1ET THE CLASSIFIED HABIT. Accommodation) for Print Partus Northern and Central British Columbia's Newspaper l'jone 437 Vol, XX., No. 02. PRINCE RUPERT, 15. C, MONDAY, APRIL 22, 1929 PRICE FIVE CENTS U.S. ITAIN NOW AGR On Saturday aftf moorhthe plane accomplished the flight from Prince imately three .hours. rs. mediate Action djLJeor to Hazelton. '.'iff i OTTAWA, April 22. To insure a thoroughly effective PEACE RIVER enforcement of the regulations governing salmon troll-. . ing in B. C. waters, particularly the northern mamland (III Mmt 1 1 H ,m AS nirrir. (Ml PHot-lntt Tslnnrls nrpn. two natrol boats! VU luLil jiullUxs ject the Peace Kiver board states jjUrne(j 22 Six nual luncheon of the Associated an suggests that It should pro-hen - pas-1 Press today declared that life ceed by way of Peace Pass. Fin- m was Ttruck 1 property In the United States ay Forks und Hazelton to Prince 1 n mid air by an army pursuit Plane which wn flvlnir overhead was relatively more unsaie um uupen, wnicn is specuicauy In any other civilised country injgpoken of as "our northern port." TVi!th wivrld. "Twenty times crash came at an elevation of 2000 many people in proportion to the iiazelton in approx? perfect landing was made at The flyers intend (6 return to Hazelton in the sum mer. They are surveying a proposed aerial route from United States to Alaska. VIOLENTDEATH RECORD HIGH are being assigned by the fisheries branch to this duty. ! The announcement Was made by the deputy minister of Local Hoard of Trade Passes Worst Week-End In History of To- f...1 - ttr A r...l T1, nntinn tunc thn null t nt n iicsuiuhuh iiKiuns i vi , lumuwusi lawtu 11M1CT1US, . t rUUIIll. XIIC v.nun hub ".w . complaint in 1928 that United States salmon trollers, particularly those operating in the Hecate Straits and more northern waters of British Columbia, frequently fished within three miles from the shore and also used Canadian ports for purposes uncovered in the treaty. At the special meeting of the1 TOKONTO. April 22. iiix per-Priiwe Rupert Board of ,Trde are dead, 10 Injured, one called for Saturday afternoon. , a missinjr and three under arrest, In resolution was passed asking fthe the worst: week-end history of senate of Canada not io.anc;(on vidlenco In the city. The dead the transfer of the Alberta lines e: to the C.P.U. and C.N. It. UDllj William Mclnnes, aj?ed 74, who provision was made for a western, was struck by an auto. j outlet. This was done on the re-1 G. C. Hell, found dead in a quest of the Peace Iltver Hoard of , hotel. I Mm. Ueolet Anderson, aged 35, found dead in at gas-filled room. Fred Hillman, aged 50, fatally mat a racmc ouuei is noi oniy ue- , . J-, H. Trudgcon, aged 50, sue-to on1 sirable. but necessary. It goes ,n motor crash wilh cumb1ed a a deal with various movements .which have been made to secure it street car Miss Jean Toucliffc, aged 22, is missing. She was last seen on riday. The 10 injuries were due to mo tor cars. Huskie Dog and Cargo of Finrs Carried South on Airplane from Juneau to Seattle Yesterday SEATTLE, April 22. Bettering its northern flying time the Alaska-Washington Airways plane Juneau, which made its first flight to Alaska last week, landed here last night from Juneau. Stops were made at Ketchikan and Port Ludlow. The plane carried two passengers and a cargo of freight, including a shipment of furs valued at $40,000. Five hundred letters and a husky dog which was presented to the flyers in Juneau. A return flight is planned during the week. NANOOSE BAY HINDU FIGHT Murder Case May Arise Out of Incident at Vancouver Island Mill NANAIMO, April 22. Behan Singh, Hindu, aged 45, died In the' local hospital on Sunday from a fractured skull sustained in a general row at the Hindu enmp of the Struita Lumber Co. at Na-noose Bay Saturday night Dalip Singh and Lakha Singh are being held by the police as material witnesses. Dalip Informed the police that he heard groans in tie corridor adjoining his sleeping quarters early Sunday and, finding Behan Singh unconscious, placed him in his own bed. 1)1 K I) IN VICTOHIA VICTORIA, April 22: Marshal Pollock Gordon, well known resident of Victoria, died today aged f7 after two years of illness. PLANE OF KEITH ANDERSON LOCATED TODAY Britain an United States Join Hands Today before Agree On Hold Policy of Naval Armament Reduction at Geneva Conference Arranging For Recommendation to Assembly GENEVA, April 22. Britain and the United States joined hands before the League of Nations preparatory commission on disarmament today in a stand not only for limitations but for reduction of naval armaments. "Let us take a hold," urged Hugh S. Gibson, United States delegate, in submitting the nev United States pro-j posals, '"and begin by scrapping the term limitation in j order to concentrate on a general reduction of arma-' ments." "I am in the fullest agreement with Mr. Gibson," Lord: Cushendun said, "when he says tnat in naval matters we rreparm Commission of League r mi of im ory B mens Exploratory Flight of Plane Yesterday from Hazelton Farther North Following the Yukon telegraph trail, as did the United States New York-to-Nome flyers in 1922, the big Cessana monoplane from Wichita, Kansas, piloted by Parker Cramer and W. G. Gamble on an exploratory flight to Alaska, left Hazelton at 12:15 noon yesterday and, after a brief stop at Atlin for fuel, landed last evening at 6:55 at Whitehorse. The distance between Hazelton and Whitehorse is 675 fnjles, so the pl9.n.eraade excellent time on tho hop, Ajtti3:07 p.m. the plarfe passed oVer Telegraph' Creek -arid at 4:15 inane uie siop ai num. Rebels Blow Up Bridge in Attempt to Stop Mexican Troops PRINCEIS INVITED BE SOCIALIST IIKADFOHD, Ens, April 22: The Prince of Wales has been invited to join the Socialist party, A. J. Cook, radical leader and secretary of the miners confederation, said in a speech here last nlsht. Cook was referring to an incident at Mansion House when he publicly than ked the Prince for his work on behalf of the distressed miners. The Prince of Wales has t-hown himself to be a great man and a daring man and I have already asked him to join the Socialist party," Cook said. When the rebeU dynamited this iron bridge to stop, the advance of Mexican federals on Torreon the government forces built a temporao track below and the trains forged Ahead. Lost Airplane Seen in Australian Wilds and 6 Others to Rescue Body of 3Ian Seen Beneath Wing of Wrecked Machine, But He Did .Not Move When Water Dropped For Him by Searcher SYDNEY, April 22. Six airplanes were headed today toward the Tanimi desert, in the northern territory, where the plane Kookaburra of Lieut. Keith Anderson was seen ! yesterday with a body beneath one of its wings, j Lieutenant Anderson and Robert Hitchcock disappeared 13 days ago while hunting for the Southern Cross. J A flyer named Brain in searching for the plane yesterday j sighted tho Kookaburra and swooping low thought he I could make out Anderson. He dropped a parfichute containing water, but when the figure did not move ho con cluded he was dead. He saw nothing of the second man.. VIOLENT STORMS IN JAPAN CAUSED DEATHS TOKIO. April 22. Violent windstorms on Sunday caused at least a score of deaths and destroyed hundreds of houses. The coastal steamers from Niigata with 150 passengers aboard are missing. Many fishing boats are unheard of and it is certain that a number are lost. WEATHER DID MUCH DAMAGE Thirty-two Lives Lost In Central States Over Week-Knd NEW YORK, April 22. Flood., tornadoes, wind, hail and rainstorms took 32 lives In the midwest, southwest and south over the week-end, Injuring two score persons and doing hundreds of thousands of dollars of damage. FLOAT SURVEYS ARE COMPLETED Site Just East of Dry Dock Said to be Favored by Engineers of Public Works Department W. A. Gourlay and R. F. Davy, engineers for the federal department of public works, after spending an even week here surveying sites for the proposed fishermen's floats at this port, left at the end of the week on their re- iturn to Victoria. Mr. Gourlay went south last night on the ; Prino Kupert,rMj,Dayy, having leu baiuruay nigm on me i rince Charles. The engineers will make their report to public works headquarters whence an announcement as to the site selected will be made. The site just east of the dry dock is understood to be still favored. Construction of the floate is to be carried out this summer.