LOST HIS LIFE INTHESKEENA Morning at l'ort Edward DR. DAFOE IS NEW PASTOR AcceptH ('nil to Hnptlut Church In rrincc uuperi, itcginning September KF.GINA, Aug. 5. Major 1. Linilanv. Hiitiorintondpnt l r southern Saskatchewan of the Ko.val Canadian Mounted Police, died suddenly yesterday, aged 49. killhTwolW saw others I'Ocal Party Who Went to Prud-nomme Lake Returned With Hide of Animal, i ic,f"urn,nP ,nst evening from n holiday jaunt which took Ihcm mru going from Thursday, xi"mT,miJ? from tlnyllght to dark, J Dougherty and Theo. Fortune and Kussoll Shcrk brought W' n them a big dark grey wolf, jvrwrh Mr. Dougherty la showing lotiay as evidence of I heir prowess. I iicv left by way of Clyah Itlvcr t Lakc through to Prudhomme J.nkc ami then followed the creek ,h;?l,Kh half way to Wark Canal, niri?' "puffherty says there arc th ,V V W0,Ves nU bear in ln-'' Part of the country. out of the declaration of equal status of the dominion at the last Imperial Conference In 192C. i lie stated the first duty had to jdo with the fostering of a close Charles C. Leonard Slipped Into Japan. That, was the political Water Very Early Friday relationship and had to do with treaties, alliances and other matters of a purely political charac- fharleaC. Leonard losl hlslifel1"- ne oilier work was to fos- earlv Friday morning when he'lcr c,08r trade relationships so pi pped off the float In tho dark at that markets might be provided For4 Kdward cannery and his, for Canadian goods and such body was not recovered. Some articles as Canada needed might people nearby heard him fall and be purchased, dived to try to effect a rescue, but The ajm of the minister would ii'rrc nnAliln In rin n. Ho nn It . ... L c' her at Hamilton Street. Van.'.06. l,r" lhe. advancement of he rouvcr. a sister in Winnipeg and j 'ntl f Canada, preserving j-arcuTs in ocouanu. and Increasing the solidarity of the emnlrt ad to preserve the Wt possible feeling with for eign nations. Introduced by President i Mr. ilnrUr-W-4ntraml -by President Milton Gonsales f the Board of Trade, who mentioned that the minister was eoinir to irepreHnjt the greatest little 1,. McNaughton. presi- Dr D.ifoe of the Chj:iwacV,0,ent"bV tM Women's Canadian Tapt .st f hurch has accepted a cairciub.ri xtttlled a welcome on r1nnhMnUi,t Church t' .b-half of the organisation she Lupcrt and Is expected to take , f , cr his new duties on the second . "presented Funday in September. j Mr- rer, in opening men- I)r Dafoe is n married man,t,onl that Prince Rupert was w Oi a familv. He has been at the nearest point to his new f b ll'wack seven years. He was hrrn for n rntinin nf u-oal In thfl Fi r ng when he preached In the I ra! rhurch. NUMBER DROWNED AT OSTEND YESTERDAY Ol-TFND. Aug. 5. Twenty's; rc. ru-rson are believed to have been drowned here yesterday v hrti iwo excursion bonta collided a the harbor entrance, one of ihj-m winking almost at once. ! tghf bodies hnvc been recovered. OSTKNI), Aug. 5: The latest casualty reports of the excursion boat disaster, show 11 dead, 28 njurcd, and five missing. POLICE SUPERINTENDENT DIED REGINA SUNDAY (Continued On Page 2), AT NEW YORK Iands at I-akehurst Sunday Night nnd Leaves Wednesday for Hound World Jaunt LAKKHURST. N. J.. Aug. 5. The Graf Zeppelin arrived here Sunday night, landing here at 8:62. The trip was uneventful. It occupied 95 hou-s 19 minutes. It is expected the big airship will take off Wednesday on bis return to Friedriehshafen on the first leg of n four-leg trip around the world. SIR HENRY THORNTON HOLIDAYS AT JASPER JASPER. Aug. 5. Sir Henry Thornton is holidaying here and is enjoying golf and other recreations. It is not often gets a holiday, but he will spend nnother week or so he"c before proceeding on his annual trin of inspection, taking in Prince Rupert. BODY OF FISHERMAN FOUND SATURDAY AND WILL BE BURIED HERE The body was found Saturday morning of Frnnk Rockman. fisherman, who lost his life in the Skcenn River on July 10. It was taken to Port F.swinglon and Cor-oner Monroe and the police went there and held an inquiry. The body was then brought to j 'H 11 '. (V - I Rockman has been in the habit of fishing in this neighborhood in : the summer and working in logging camps in the winter. So far as known, he has no relatives 'here. mii i irriiT runrrrrrT I lUMUKKUVYb Boston Grill Tuesday, August 5 . Jl :51 ' LARGE CAHARET High a.m. 23.1 i 8pcUl Dlnnen Thursdays and BaturcUjJ 13:41 p.m. 21.1 ft. 'i Duncliif Every Saturday Night, 9 to It I,ow a.m. 0.0 ft. i Dance Hall or Hire 20:43 p.m. 4.0 ft. Accommodation fur Private Fartlea NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISII COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER PHONE 457 Vol XX., No.180. PRINCE RUPERT,, DC.. MOttDAYUGUST 5, 1929 Purpose of Legation to Japan is Outlined by Minister at Luncheon The twofold aspect of the duties of the minister to Japan were emphasized by Hon. Herbert Marler, envoy plenipotentiary to Tokibt in an address to the Board of Trade and Women's Canadian Club at their luncheon Saturday afternoon in the Commodore Cafe, President Gonzales of the Board of Trade presiding, supported by Mrs. McNaujrhton, president of the Women's Canadian Club, and by Col. S. P. McMordie, D.S.O., of the city, and T. H Johnson, president of the Canadian Fisheries Associa tion. Mr. Marler outlined the steps that led up to the ap- pointment of a minister to Japan, jBhowing that it grew naturally THANKS EXTENDED TO PRINCE RUPERT PEOPLE FOR MOST ENJOYABLE AND SUCCESSFUL TIME AT RECENT FISHERIES ASSN. CONVENTION The following wireless message was received last night: Harry Pullen, Daily News: " ; On behalf of the visiting delegates and members of the Canadian Fisheries Association, we wish through ypu to publicly extend their heartiest thanks to the Prince Rupert branch of the association, as well as to the. members of the Board of Trade and the mayor and citizens, for a most enjoyable and successful convention. The latch string is always out if you Rupert folks ever give us the opportunity. J. T. O'CONNOR, Past President. , . in South Hard Hit but Demand for Coast Spruce is on Increase and P.R. not AffecUd That while the fir lumber market is badly hit by the Mr. McAfee says there is a growing scarcity of spruce EGYPT GETS PROPOSALS CAIRO, Egypt, Aug. 5. Premier llahmound In a message Sunday to the people of Egypt declared he had received proposals for a settlement of relations with Great Britain that go far leyond anything preceding and ex-prettied the belief that a trenty emlwdying the proposals would consolidate friendship and enable the two countries to co-opernle in preserving the peace of the world . 'and the demand Is steadily in. I creasing. This moans "that the local mill is likely to operate steadily. . "" Saturday Mr. McAfee's partner,; II. R. leMillan STtheWU. .R.f" McMillan Export Co. went south after spending a couple of days here on his way home from Ot- r tawa, accompanied by Mrs. Mc- Millan. He was highly pleased at being able to put through the deal by which the Dominion Government giants a subsidy to his company to operate a line of freighters to Australia carrying lumber. This, it is thought, will beneficially affect the whole of British Columbia. SASKATOON PILOT KILLED IN CRASH SASKATOON. Aug. 5. 1. Smith Marriott, instructor pilot of Saskatoon Aero Club, la dead a Norwegian trapper from Rein deer Lake, was killed outright when (he plane crashed Saturday on a sand bar in the Saskatchewan River. Scout Organization is Strong Factor for World Peace Declares the Archbishop of Canterbury ARROW PARK, Aug. 5. The boy scouts of all nations commenced their second week of the- international jamboree yesterday in a solemn war memorial service . German, Knglish, French and Belgian scouts stood rank to rank with some forty other national troops in this great thanksgiving at which 50,000 attended. They heard the Archbishop of Canterbury allude to the day as the fifteenth anniversary of Engand's entry into the conflict. Beside the archbishop stood Sir Robert Hadcri-Powcll, who dream- npAaTl lir 1 nn 1 rn ed of the universal brotherhood I I !L W A K h A K h of boys twenty-one years ago, and IvfllU 1 1 111 11 illlJu said he saw his dream fulfilled with : Ihe gathering yesterday, j "Today this dreamer comethjandi he cometh not alone, but with him, ) tho comradeship of nearly ! AT CHICAGO . 2,000,p00 boys belonging to 41 ! CHICAGO, Aug.' 5. China-icountries. His dream has become town's, guns, blazed yesterday in a the world s reality," said Ihe arch-Clksh of tongs. The , Chinese bisliop, who alluded to the scout quarters all over the United States (movement as a strong force to- were natrnlled hv strontr nnllee (wards peace In the future. details anticinating the trouble "Pleading. There were Iwo slioot-CAHI) rim ni, tiuvu-q Or THANKS injr8 here and ono n Ncw yorkt Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Fritz and b.uf no cause for th.e strifn waa fnmllv rlnsirn tn rnnvpv thplr nln. ,RHcn, 1 cere thanks to their many friends , for the kind expressions of sympa- Thomas Woodhouse was this Jtliy and floral tributes received In morning fined ?50 or 30 days for jlheir bereavement. having liquor In a restaurant. Bremen Whicli Broke Trans-Atlantic I'ime Record The S.S. Bremen, above, ne German liner, as she arrived at New York from Cherbourg, France, after completing the tran -oceanic passage in four days id 17 hours. This beats the Mauretunia's time by nine noun. At the left is shown the Hein el mail plane, which took off falling off of the demand on the prairie market and the from the afterdeck of the liner at Fire Island, and failure of the producers of British Columbia, Washington 'ng the vessel, manned by Baro nJ. Von studnitz, left, LOCAL PEOPLE ARE OFFICIALLY THANKED t The members of the Can- adian Fisheries Association thank the people of Prince Rupert and all those who assisted so generously in the entertainment of the dele- gates to the recent assocla- in convention. T. II. JOHNSON, President Canadian Fish prioft Association luiLLiiiLii i riYTLrjii 'z:-Cux;xi urccn Aounnr DIED IN ENGLAND lthe0,pit?1' a"d Alfred . VLddLL HOllUiiL LONDON. Aug. 5. Dame Mil-lieent Faweelt, leader in the suffragist movement, died today. r MAINE COAST lar landed at N w York jo minutes after lcav- and Karl Korchoff, right. and Oregon to get together and reduce the output which j j is at present greater than the demand, the Big Ray lumber . - TIT' 71 mill at Prince Rupert does not expect to be affected to any 0, hit v re A -n- nviiti I mn AtSI great extent, was stated by George McAfee, the manager, U,(linuUT IUicT iLilli JLlflC: 11 III LIllS IllUlJllUg. Pat Whole OrganizationBehind ijte Pxojzct of Building Airships LAKEIIUKST, New York, Aug. 5. Dr. Leister Kiep, manager of the Hamburg-American line and a passenger aboard the Graf Zeppelin, said this morning his company has decided to put the whole organization behind the proj'cct of building airships. The performance of the Graf proved to him, he said, that a ship with stronger engines could make the transatlantic crossings with regularity and speed. i KILLED WHEN ! PLANE STRUCK TRAIN STRUCK1 BY LIGHTNING CALGARY, Aug. 5. Three eotile. John Ference, aged 59; Pauline Ference, aged 59: Mary iuiii u.'i w kj ....... i HirucK uy ine i . t it. nam u -lncre is a uismasiea scnooner a' ounu on l'eiit aianan isiano, on ; Virgil Cline Killed When Trying Out Specially Constructed Craft Ference, a daughter-in-law, aged , 19. were killed north of Red Deer , SAN BERNARDINO, Cal., I yesieraay morning wnc.i w.c i A 5. Piloting 8 Specially ,,,, vt e a.. k !,n w,ich they were riding was con,tructed cruft ,ntendd for a mc coasi oi .iiiuiiB, wmtn in uo- ay. zy, anu anu sam oam rereuce. reieuce, ageu ancu intrnek ......i, v. n,ni .,i a,. lieved to be the Valdare of Bear River. N.S.. and there is no sign of life aboard. The coastguard crew failed to reach the ship on sccount of heavy seas, but a second coastguard boat is proceeding from Cranberry Island, Maine, to investigate. It Is presumed that Ihe vessel went ashore during the night. ' WHEAT MARKET CLOSED j VANCOUVER, Aug. 5: A' usual in the summer, for a brief time the wheat market is closed until the new crop .begins to arrive. I GOOD START IN CRICKET MATCH; REGINA. Aug. 5. British Columbia , cricket eleven had J9 runs for three wickets when the match with the Alberta team stopped at lunch time today. The Saskatchewan and Manitoba game is also in progress. terday. RETURNING HOME Among the passengers on board the Prince Rupert this morning from Skagway was Miss Madge Holes of London, Eng., who is now returning to her home by way of the Panama Canal. She says she enjoyed her visit to the northwest Immensely and thinks this is a wonderful ountry. Scottish Humor imp"-'' illrert Aberdeen Joke frnm be Factory NOTHING DOING t.nr rliilnnHA the Edmonton-Calgary line. Two-; . . , . t- . i nounccu, POET DROWNED flight at yet an- rii. ..... virnu vmie, unui, "iu we injumi, ''" '".ti ed when his machine was molighed. When nearby workers in the isolated Fremont Peak country of fh Afnfnvp rlene-t ran to ihe snot WEST YARMOUTH. Aug. 5: where Cline had fallen and William Sloane Kennedy, 79, in- they reached liis mangled body ternationally known poet and pieces of the imathcd machine biographer, was drowned" while were still falling, .tnktnir hl .ltlv awim here ves- " i presumed that lightning struck the gasoline tank. PRAYING FOR SETTLEMENT WAGE DISPUTE MANCHESTER, Aug. 5. The Lancashire textile stoppage entered its second week today, no rearer a solution than it was last Monday, when 500,000 workers first walked out in, protest at the enforced reduction! of 12 1-2 per cent in wages. ' The strikers have lost during this week of idleness $5,000,000 in wages, but apparently they are not worrying. The Manchester E. Davis, general manager of An advertising expert was ad- restaurants, movies ana amuse-the Toronto General Trust, ar- vert.sed to deliver a lecture ltS?Srtfi rived in the city from the south i Aberdeen on "How to treat your carefree and Tiappy. Prayers, this morning on the Prince ! customers." Only two men atten- however, are being offered in Charles to spend a few days vis-i ded the chairman and the lec- Lancashire t-riuthes for the early iting here. i turer. settlement of the dispute.