Tomorrow Y'Hrles It J. flmnphw. newly sppoisr-J ifMrtl maosxer Eatrn Lines. Caasdlaa Paclno Railway, with htsdeusrtert la Montreal. ise-ceerflM J. J. Smrlr. wb reHo-qntsbed kit port on aecmat of hi health after y years service. Wr Heaparey was fsrnerly asatatant to Ur. Grant Hall. Vte President. Today's Stocks Supplied by 8. D. Johnston Co. Ud Toronto Int. Nickel. 17.11. Noranda, SMS. Bherrltt Oordon. L44). Vancouver Big Missouri, M. Bluebird. M. Bridge Hlver Cons, JL Cork Prortnc. Mk-Oeonjta Hlver, Orandvtew. M. Cariboo Oold Quarts, UM. Lucky Jim. .06. National SUm, 97. Noble Flvs. .tOVfc. Native Son, Jl. Tend Orellie. 1.4S. Premier, 04. Meridian, .14. v Reeves MeDooaW. Ji, Ruth Hope, M. 8llvtr OMat. .Off. WayskH. .49. - Whltrwsler, .10. .; k. Reno, U0. 1 t) . Reward. .17, " ' oils A l Con.. .30, cnimont, .08. C. Ac B. Corp.. .78. Freehold, .07. Sterling Pacific, IS. Mercury. .18. United, .09. Resignation is WON qUAUTKIt MILLION j Acknowledged! rrcrnler Tolmle ll No Comment to Make on Withdrawal of Mr. McKcnxle VICTORIA. June : (Oanadlan PMaat Premier 8 T Tolmle had no comment to make on Saturday when he acknowledged receipt ol the real nation from his cabinet 01 Hon W A McKeniie. minister 01 Minos. He xtatrri that he would re commend acceptance by the Lieutenant Oovernor of the resigna tion. No Immediatr move has been made to choose a successor. CONTINUING OF RELIEF C.overnmcnt at Ottawa lo Continue With One-Third Contribution to Municipalities ft (Canadian fJ A vr w ... - IV Preesi The federal government 1 1- .uuiIm iii nne.thlrd sliare IB vwiwii of direct relief within the cities of Victoria ana Vancouver unu o-ntch municipality. Hon R. W. . . ill. Hruhn, miniattr 01 puoiw im. announeai following receipt of information from Hon. W. A. Gordon, minister of labor at Ottawa, Other districts will be given con- aWetitnon mn wvn wn" atatomeflU are rewuro hv ui tawa. rrNDON. June S: tcnadl.i -W. N. Ssnte-Crlmp of Lon don. holder of Hyperton, winner of the Derby. In the Calcutta sweep- .stakc. won W50.000. When r. m-... .;nn tt. i . - at- ftu'.fi POWER FOR PRESIDENT Unllcd SUIes Chief t'kreutive Can Tut Trade Treaties Into" Operation WASHINGTON DC. June S Ca Roosevelt power to negotiate ana put In operation, without first re ceiving Senate approval, recipro fc.. ; Mr rudlan Pres Speaker Ralnoyj told newspapermen late last week! Mcantj.u 0:1 tuun.e tfcat the proposed tariff bill, as, Ust drafted, would give Prealdent British tin a '.tv Niw ttvy :ivuiu READY TO TAKE AIR Capt. and Mrs. Mollivon Prepared To Take Off Today if Weather Wat Suitable Long Flight Hying Pair Essaying Trip Which lias Never Before Keen Attempted cal trade treaties witn canaaa ana t LONDON, June 5 (Oanadlan other nations. Pres Everything was In readi- I nMI for the trans-AUantlc flight of I IP Ml j himself and Mrs. Molllson to New LOCal jaWmill IS York, sakt James A. MolUson. Bri Being Closed; Machinery From Seal Coft Plant i Going to Gcorgetoun With the announcement last week that the Dig Day Lumber Co. was permanently closing down ita sawmill at Seal Cove snd that W. R. McAfee and S. E. Sunbury would establish a box factory at Georgetown, dismantling oi the local plant Is expected to be soon under way. Much of the machinery Is to be moved from here to Georgetown. Lumber in the mill yards lvere Is also being cleaned out. much of It being cut Into box lumber. Pioneer Realty Operator Passes John lllnns Johnson Dies In Vancouver at Age of 70 Years VANCOUVER, June 5: (Cansdlnn Press) John Blnns Johnson, aged 70. pioneer real estate operator, died here on Saturday. tish flying ace. today but he fear ed that weather would be unsuit able for a start ud that he would have to postpone the take-off from today. "Our chances of making the flight are ten to seven," Molllson said. "If we get through it will be' our last distance flight. We cant continue to gamble with oar luckj Indefinitely." Hie Molllsons are to attempt a flight which has never previously been essayed, namely from Croy don to New York, when they plan to rest one full day. then hopping off back across the Atlantic Ocean to Bagdad and back to Croydon, twelve thou&ard miles in all. Their original plan was to hop oft at noon today It Is planned to make the flight In the two-engined plane "Sea farer" which the flying couple tested during I last Wednesday in a flight which they circled south eastern England. ASTORIA MILL OPERATING ASTORIA. Oregon. June The THIS WEEK THE Pontiac Straight 8 High 12:04 ai 0 ft. 33:53 pi It. Is on Display at Low 5:60 ajn. XL X Kalen Motors Show Room 17:45 pm All Cordially Inrltcd Phone 52 A-1 NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER Vol XXIV.. No 130 PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., MONDAY, JUNE 5, 1933 PRICE: FIVE CENTS JIMMY MA TTERN MAKING GOOD TIME DEFINITE TREND TOWARD IMPROVEMENT, SAYS STEVENS Globe Flyer Succeeds In Crossing Atlantic and Lands At Moscow Arrives nl Capital of Soviet Republic Three Hours Ahead ' of Post and (ialty 1 early rorced iiown in ucean j and Made Stops in Norway j MOSCOW, June 5: (Canadian Proas) Three hours1 ahead of the Pot-Gntty time for the distance so far, James J. Mattern, young Texan, who is making a solo at- t. mpt to break the flight record around the globe, arrived h. re at 7:50 thin morning, fifty-one hours and thirty-seven minute out of New York and with probably the most haz-1 General Manager jS5Lf geK iiu jggfgfgfgHrgV gggpgggggav. gti ga, lgsgsgsgsgsgVgsggs. w 1 m ruuua JVri Ul III IIIJJ vmmh hwi ( Following hU Kurrrvilul c rusting of the Atlantic Ocean Matwm was first sighted over IreUnri 8unday morning The name morning he landed at 4:15 on JenfruUnd an Island off the aouth coav. of Norway, taking off eleven hours later following a much-needed ret. lor Oslo. Nor-wjv which point he left lor Moscow a few hour later He planned rn.ike a stay of onlv two hour iere and U n pr 'eed via Vladivos-tk Nome ik1 F iitb.mk in con-:nuaton f thr flmhi -.o New York MaU-m rriMTted on arrival here h t! on Sat'iii.i mi:!n he ran Into n h avy storm on the Atlantic Ocean ' ;i, i result "f inrh u r was formed; ii tlie wtii' of plane. fofrliiR : m nearlv to sea level and driving in off Ins course which caused ,m to make the landings in Norway which he had not contempla- i-ii Mountain Sheep Are Quite Tame ..:i.e U'-s. war- SAWMILLS ARE BUSY In Prince George District Reported Considerable resumption of activity In the sawmllllng Industry in the Prince George district is reported by Harold McJCwen, C. N. R, dis trict freight and passenger agent, who recently paid a visit there. Mr. McEwen reports that saw-milling opensUona have been resumed at the plant of the Eagle Lake Sawmills Ltd. which has been closed down for three years. The nlanlng mill had been run spasmod-cally In the meantime. Gale & Trick have resumed cutting st Hansard In a smaller mill replacing one which was destroyed by fire some time ago. The Praser Lake sawmill at Fra- I ser Lake is also cutting again after a suspension of several years. CREATION 0FPEERS King's Birthday l.lst Includes Honors For Many of Ills Subjects LONDON, June Press Four new Astoria Box Co., which provides! Canadian this city s largest individual payroll, Is resuming operations at once, it ; is announced. 5: (Canadian Minister of Trade and Commerce Says General Conditions Are Better Arrives in Vancouver to Welcome Delegates to Pacific Science Congress Will Meet Executive of British Columbia Conservative Association f j VANCOUVER, June 5: (Canadian Press) There is a definite trend toward an improvement in general conditions, Hon. H. H. Stevens, minister of trade and commerce, stated this morning on his arrival from Ottawa to welcome the Pacific Science Congress, which is now in session here, on behalf of the federal government. "Too much at- - i Mention is being paid to the New SCIENTISTS I IN SESSION I Representatives From All raits ot - World, in Attendance at (iatu ering In Vancouver Many Speakers Wide Variety of Subjects Victorla- Nanaimo-Vancouver Cruise VICTORIA. June 5 (Canadian Press With two hundred delegates present representing all parts of the world, the fifth Pa dflc Science Cong real Is now in session here and will continue to. ten days. Having been otfteiallr (opened by Hon. J. W. Fordham- Gratifying Resumption ot Activity Jotnson. Lieutenant Oovrmor of British Columbia, at Victoria, last Thursday, the convention trans ferred Its sessions to Vancouver I today. The delegates' travelled from Victoria to Vancouver yesterday I an a special voyage of the steamer Princess Louise via Nanalrmjj where a visit was paid to the Bi ological Station. Dr. II. M. Tory, president of the Research Council ot Canada. Is presiding over the convention and wss the principal speaker at Use opening session. Principal Speakers Principal speakers at the Vic toria sessions of the Congress were' of Wisconsin. Madison. Wis. Forestry research In Canada has bren drifting without a dearly j discerned goal, without organisa-i Uon a-d without a unified driving I force. Dr. Howe charged. It waa.i he said, far behind other research; efforts In Canada and "unless the situation Is Improved soon, we thai) be hopelessly In the rear." Chemical science Is on the verge of Important discoveries In the flftkl ot wooo utilisation as cheml peerages, onelta) raw material and an almost privy counciUorahlp. two baronet cles and more than forty knighthoods appeared In the list ot King's sixty-elehth birthday honors this unlimited field awaits It. Dr. Sher-rard declared. Progress within the next few years, he said, would be :PW. I year. The honors covered a wldel In Vancouver field ot public services, literature,, Dr. II. L. Shaplre of the Amert-sclence and drama. No Canadians nan Museum ot Natural History, were included among the honored. f,'ew York City, tokl the Congre The new peers are Major-General at the session here today thai J h. Seeley, who commanded the North American Indians and the Cavalry Brigade in Eskimo have a common origin France during the Great War. Rt.'Many hundreds of years ago Ber- Hon. Qeorge Lane-Fox, Sir Edward Ing Sea was crossed by adventu-Iltffe and Sir Samuel Balmer. I (Continued on page three) York stock market In judging the state of business," declared the mtn- ister. -The thing to guage this by Is commodity prices and, in Uk connection, thing look promising." Mr. Stevens wUl speed the next few days on the coast and on Saturday wUl meet the exeeuUfe of trie BrftWi Columbia Conservative As- MANY DIE IN WRECK fourteen Persons Killed and Injured in French Train Derailment 116 NANTES. France June 5: (Canadian Press) Fourteen persons were kitted and US injured, many grave ly, early Sunday In a derailment of . the Parts-Nantes Express train la-; den with three hundred excursion- tsts enroute to Brittany. ; The engineer was arrested. It ts reported that he failed to observe i signals. 4c. Halibut Arrivals : Summary, Canadian 70,000 pounds, 5.4c and 3c and 5.6c and 3c. American 80,800 pounds, 7c anjl (c to 7.7c and 4c. Canadian Cape Beale, 48jD0, Cold Storage, 5.4c and 9c. : Joe Baker. 11,000, Cold Storage, Dr C. W. Howe, dean of the fae- 5.6 and 3c. ulty of forestry of the University White Hope, Ujm, Atlin. 5.4c tr Toronto, and Dr. R 0. Sher- and 9c. rard. principal chemist of the Unl- American ted States Department of Agrlcul-i Venus, 1&0OO, Royal, 7c and 4c. -lure laboratory st the University Augusta. 17,060, Booth, 7.3c and Bravo. 13.500. Booth. 7.1e and 4c. T1088. 2.300. Royal. 7 lc and 4c. Zarembo. 15.000 AMin 7 lc and 4c. Emma. 15,000, Pacific. 7.7c and 4c. LAKELSE HOT Springs Lodge An Ideal Place to Holiday Finest of fly fUtiing. hunting, bathing and boating. Arrange for transportation with W. II. Burnett. Terrace, B.C. Rates from Terrace to the Lodge including boat service: One adult, $3.00; each additional adult, $1.50. Write or Wire W. II. HURNETT We Look After Your Wants