AD BLOW CAUSE OF BABY'S DEATH Tragedy Follows Their Fame iiuu Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh wij...,- attuu buoy has been found near Hopewell PREMIER LANG OF NEW SOUTH WALES DISMISSED FROM HIS OFFICE BY GOVERNOR GAME B.S.I1. Stevens, Head of United Australian Party, Called On to Form Government Executive Order Was Disregarded U1.0P )EY. New South Wales, May 13: Having used hu o authority to dismiss Premier J. T. Lang from Sir Philip Game, Governor of New South Wales, to-pd B. S. B. Stevens, head of the United Australian in the statq, to form a new government wh.ch invi- tIr. Stevens accepted. The action or the Governor, PREMIER STYLISH fcnnclt Live in Fifteen-lloom Hotel Suite Which Cost No Less Than $110,000 to Prepare Rent Is High fiime Minister is on Stand Before Committee of House '.W-A May IS: Bxpendl- ii t'ct in alterations to the ntc now occupied by the Mi: .istcr at the Chateau n amounted to MlO.Ttt nul paid by Mr. Bennett r month. i ts emerged from the 'mmons committee on i iici shipping today at ion the Premier was pre- mier said that, when he hud cabled from London I - that the work be not pro-vnh The work had. how- 1 'I proceeded with. He did "i until a long time after-ii.it the coat had run to ' I'MI Tl.t nttii A n 1 hiinKes had coat to much. 1WWTAIN TO MEET DEBTS JNDON, May 13: Tw British cabinot wns ported last night to Javo decided to pay in full war debts due Uni ted States on December ! irrespective of whether nr not Germany defaults on her payments t() Great Britain. Payout of the debts is expected to lijivn the wav for a currency confor- "ncp between Great Bri- torn and United Status. Kioming oniy a snon ume oeiore a i state general election, grew out of the refusal by the Premier to obey (an executive order demanding the I real! of circular letters which urged heads of government departments in the state to withhold from federal officials funds due the Commonwealth under terms of the financial agreement enforcement act. CUBS LOSE TO BRAVES ISoston Renews Challenge For National League Leadership-Cards in Fifth Place CHICAOO, May 13: Opening a York Qlante by scoring an easy vie tory over the Phillies Brooklyn Dodgers hud no difficulty taking the Cincinnati Reds. In the only American League game of the day. Cleveland Indians scored a close victory over the lowly Boston Red Sox. the winning run coming In the ninth Inning. Rain and cold on the eastern sector caused postponement of all other American League games. Yesterday's Big League scores: National League Boston 8. Chicago 3. Brooklyn 8. Cincinnati 2. Philadelphia 2. St. Louis 8. American League Cleveland 5. Boston 4. (Continued on Pago Four) TO HELP DISTRESS OTTAWA. May 13: Wide and elastic power to combat unemployment and distress was conferred uion the government yesterday In a bill numbered 72 which passed the House of Commons and now goes w th Senate for ratification. Vol. XXIII., No. 113. was composed of representatives of the British Columbia agricultural department, the natural resources and colonization departments of the railroads and the Soldiers'. Settlement Board. A tentative scheme will be formulated and forwarded to Ottawa with a view to receiving approval from the Dominion government Migration to the land will be entirely voluntary and selections will be care- XuHy .mad. The seheme will simply be the moving of willing families from the cities to the country and continuing relief for them there In the hope that they may become at least partly self-supporting. REVOLT IS DESCRIBED Lleut.-Commander Hart Addresses Ilotary Club on Interesting Naval Event in South 6,000 WERE EXECUTED .Moral Effect of the Vessels Being In Port Ended Trouble in San Salvador Recently diving some interesting details of the San Salvador revolt which was crucial series with the Chicago Cubs nipped in the bud by the opportune an Wrlgley Field, the htmt grounds . arrival of the two destroyers of the of the Hornsby men, Boston Braves Canadian navy, the Skeena and the renewed their bid for National Vaneouver. Lieutenant-Commander League supremacy yesterday by Hart of H. M. C. 8. Vancouver spoke scoring an easy victory over the! mast Interestingly to the Rotary Cubs. Stellar hurling by Ed. Brandt ub at its luncheon yesterday, was largely responsible for the Bos-; Hie two Canadian boats were on tnn victory. He allowed the Cubs, their way to take part In the ma- nnlv five hits The lead of Chicago hioeuvre at Bermuda with the Bri- was cut to one and a half games, dah fleet when they received orders The world champion 8t. Louis j to go instead to San Salvador where narriinnls assumed fifth place In , a revolt was said to be taking place. th. .tanriinn ahead of the Idle New The ships entered the port In 'think- Ham onri whn the toa lifted. the Inhabitants were very surprised. In see the two little warships anchored In the harbor. Their presence practically ended the revolt. The moral effect was sufficient without any other action. A landing party went ashore but the revolt was over. The trouble had arisen among the fewer caste natives and mixed I breeds employed by coffee planters who cared little for their comfort and who wete using the natives to enable themselves to get rich and dear out of the country. Those people were the chief objects. of attack. The better class of planters, who used their men well were not molested. These paid their mem atrtut-a dollar a day and housed and ted them well. The revolt undoubtedly had communist backing and papers found tin some rebels gave a New York address as the headquarters of the activities. Attack By Communists The speaker told of the attack (Continued on page four.) Destitute Families To Be Given Farms Under Plan Being Arranged Endorsation of British Columbia Proposal to Be Sought i rom uttawa Migration Out of Cities Would Be of Entirely Voluntary Nature VANCOUVER, May 13 : Groundwork of a scheme to enable destitute families to go on land which has reverted for taxes to the Dominion, provincial and municipal governments was laid yesterday when members of a special advisory committee met Hon. Nelson S. Lougheed, minister of lands, and Hon. William Atkinson, minister of agri culture, ine acmsoty committee ARE SENT to Prison Seventy-Seven .Men Get Three Years at Nelson Naked Pilgrimage Stopped at Grand Forks NELSON. May 13 v Seventy-seven malt" DouMborsywho participated in a node parade at Thrums on Sunday last, were sentenced to three years'. imprisonment by Magistrate Cartmcl here yesterday. GUANO FORKS, .May 13: One .hutidretf and thirty-one Doiik-hobors men, women and children who set out in the nude to march to Nelson, late yesterday afternoon were arrested and brought here. They are now being held under guard. Were Wedded In Cathedral Miss Ida Tolmie and Peter Collinson of Kitkatla Arc Married The wedding was solemnized quietly at 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon In St. Andrew's Anglican Cathedral. Very Rev. James B. Gibson, the dean, officiating, of Miss Ida Tolmie, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Oswald Tolmie of Kitkatla, and Peter Collinson. son of Mr. and Mrs. Amos Collinson, also of Kitkatla. Witnesses of the ceremony were Miss Ethel Mason and John Nelson. Following the ceremony, the nuptials were celebrated In a suitable & ! mannr Mr and Mrs Rnlllncnn will reside at Kitkatla. VANCOUVER WHEAT VANCOUVER. May 13: Wheat was quoted at 60fec on the local exchange today. t AMERICAN HOPS OFF ON ATLANTIC FLIGHT HARBOR GRACE, May 13: Reckless of the fact that It was Friday the Thirteenth. Lou Relchcrs. American flyer, hop- ped off for Dublin. Ireland, at 8:30 this morning after a delay of two hours In .repairing a sta bilizer which had broken when he landed here from Newark, NJ after u flight of six hours and twenty-two minutes. He plans to refuel at Dublin and proceed to Paris, hoping to halve the tlmo of Col. Charles A. Lindbergh foi the distance. NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., KRIDAY, MAY 13, 1932 HOPEWELL, N.J., May 13: Medical examiners yesterday expressed the belief that Charles Augustus Lind bergh jr., nineteen-month old son 01 uoi. and jurs. cnaries A. Lindbergh, who was kidnapped from his parents' home here on the evening of March 1 and whose little body was found by neighbors on Wednesday, had been dead for at least two months. An examination" In which the lnveatlga- of the body, now little more than a directions skeleton, led to the belief that death was probably caused by a blow on the head, ihere uelng Indications of this. On the right side feet from the road. The discovery of them was made by "William Al len, colored truck driver for neighbors, who had stopped at this point In the road to chat with a passing friend and later had occasion to push his way through the thick brush off the roadside. The point was not five miles from the Lindbergh estate In the Sourlandt. The discovery was actually made on Wednesday afternoon but announcement was withheld from the public pending definite tdentlftca- tlon. Mrs. Dwlght Morrow, grand tlon might follow. The belief was, however, generally expressed that the baby had been murdered the same night that It was kidnapped. Owing to the con- of the skull Is a hole about the slac ,urvetnance around the Llnd-of a 25c. piece -over the ear. Thel home slnce that night, It terrific blow caused a compound fracture of the skull. The body was positively Identified by Col. and Mrs. Lindbergh as being that of their son. , The remains had been thrown would have been Impossible to bring the body back later. It is believed. It is thought that the murdering abductors may have been fright ened off while In the act of bury Into a shallow grave only a fewing the child, thus accounting for the crude and hastily dug grave. Developments In Case Following were some of the principal developments following the disappearance of the child: March 1 At 10 pjn. the disappearance of the child, who had been placed in his crib for the night earlier In the evening, was discovered by his nursemaid, Miss Betty Oow Outside the open window of the second storey room had been placed a three-section ladder. The child Is believed to have been removed down this. Ransom note for $60,000 found mother of the child, was Ute first pinned to window sill. to be notified of the discovery, one March 2 A widespread search advised the authorities and later was instituted. Mrs. Lindbergh re-broke the news to Col. and Mrs. vealed baby had cold and broad-Lindbergh. The latter Identified the cast diet to be followed in Its feed-night clothes on the skeleton as be- ng. lng those the baby was wearing the March 3iiUndreds of persons night of his disappearance and by questioried by the authorities, in-other means establtohed Identity, dueling members of the Lindbergh Col. and Mrs. Lindbergh bore up household, particularly the nurse-bravely under the terrible shock.; maid. Both, up to the very last, had been hoping against hope that the child March 4 Col. and Mrs. Lindbergh publicly offered to treat conflden- mlght yet be alive and well. Mrs. , tially with kidnappers. Lindbergh has been remaining in March 6 Police expressed belief close seclusion Jpr some time and Is i that child would goon be returned. being attended by doctors. She lsj March 6 Col. Lindbergh opened expecting to become the mother of negotiations with underworld char-anothcr child this month. acters with view to obtaining their With eminent criminologists and. services as Intermediaries. Investigators taking up the slender clues now afforded more than two months after the ghastly kidnapping, and murder, state police de clared that ll was too early to ex pect an arrest or even to disclose March 7 Col. Lindbergh two more notes demanding ransom. March 8 Police reported progress being made in Investigation. April 10 Col. Lindbergh paid Tomorrow's Tides ""Saturday, May 14, 1932 High 7:56 ajn. 16:7 ft. 20:55 p.m. 17:8 it. Low 1:40 a.m. 9:0 ft. 14:10 p.m. 5:9 ft. Pictures of Dead Lindbergh Baby PRICE: FIVE CENTS BACK TO THE LAND MOVEMENT SCHEME K &ns .tgggggtH Sdr sMAt', JM Charles Augustus Lindbergh, jr.. kidnapped March l. whose body has been found near parents' home. Charles Augustus Lindbergh, Jr. Murdered Over Two Months Ago In Oninion of Medical Experts Indications of Wound on Skull Found Famous '-Pos1iivcIxJ'(lcntifics Body asThat of His Nfnciccn-Month Old Son Flyer it- over $50,000 through Intermediary to supposed kidnappers. Money received In graveyard but child not 'returned - - Challenge ef Gangland NEW YORK, May 13: In some quarters In the east, which like the rest of the country stands aghast and Indignant at brutality of the kidnapping and murder of Charles Augustus Lindbergh Jr., "America's most famous baby," the belief Is held that the act comes as a challenge and warning from gangland of the United States a challenge by gangland's power against law i enforcement of the country and a I warning that the people of the Uni ted States, even the most prominent, must submit to gangland's demands and pay Its prices. On the other hand, however, of-i Continued on Page 5) RELIEF IS DISCUSSED Prince Rupert Trades and Labor Council Holds Regular Monthly Meeting Last Night The Prince Rupert Trades & Labor Council, at its regular monthly meeting last night, engaged in a discussion of some length on unemployment relief matters and It was decided to ma Ice representations to the authorities that some steps be taken to provide single relief workers with clothes as well as board and shelter. T. J. Shenton. who has announced himself as a Labor candidate for Atlin in he forthcoming provincial election, was present and addressed the meeting briefly. Business at the meeting was otherwise largely of a rouUne nature. Vice-president J. J. Olllis was In the chair and there was a good attendance of delegates. Halibut Landings American Akutan, 30.000, 3.5c and 2c, Royal. Sentinel, 23,000, 3.5c and 2c, Tatoosh, 16,000, 3.5c and 2c, Canadian Droit, 5.000. 3.5c and 2c, Storage. Toodle, 8.000. 3.5c and 2c, Atlln. Oony. 5.000, 3.5c and 2c, Storage. Capella I, 0,000, 3.5c and 2c. Stor- age. 1 4 4ti 1 5 5