Tomorrow's Tides THIS WEEK The New Chevrolet 9:28 ajn. 17.8 ft. 22:24 pjn. 18.4 It. Is on DUplay at WO ajn. 9.0 ft. i ,w 15:52 pjn. 5.0 ft. Kaien Motors Show Room NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER All Cordially Invited Phone 53 IV No 00. PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1933 PRICE: FIVE CENTS POUNbTERLING JUMPS UP IN PRICE INTERESTING PREDICTION REGARDING HALIBUT SHIPPING Currency Inflation in States Is Promised by Speaker Rainey Today Form of Bill Not Yet Decided on British Currency Rises Result of Talk and Canadian, Dollar Stiffens ASHINGTON, April 18: The passage of a currency : ... j .ii Mil at this session was predicted today by Speaker i: i . ;, at the Press Conference. "We are going to have kind of inflation," the Illinois Democratic leader i The White House is studying it What form it will ., I not know." Sentences imI Thrre Year and Kspul bv Ibtmtan Ovrt on llritKli SaWolMire VOW. April 18: - Fwikmlag ) were pronoun -ed tonight MboU cases: Tlitrntcs. three years "i- MrOqe aki. two years NcmlWH'l. Allan Mimk- : 't'i Cu -hny. rxpulMou : .v ac-qultUd ! Heads National Committee Life Insurance Week BaK lVliiiiBW'MHk bbbbbbbi! ILBl i9n! evsbbbI c. n, iii vu.N 1.1 National i(4nilit "ii Imam il InilriwnikinT 1 ii tiiMirmr" and Chairman 1 ulivr ( InlrfMUonal) Com-' iKr A.mmUHoo ot U(e Asemy Mr Devlta a Wo Gearnl '' "tmi of Agencies of Uw Cos-'1 I. ile ,MHUlioa. ADMIRAL HONORED MoSMt ami MrConl Are laid At Krl in Arlington National Cemetery HINOTON. D.C.. April It 1 ""'ml of Admiral wUtkftm i inn of 'the United states Hureau of Aeronautics, WW 1 Arlington National Oeme- Uic and ot the weak with 1 honors. Admtml Molfett vu tin, of the dirttiole Ak-iMor two wealcs ago, hU 1 ' hk recovered from the At-'Jii'ttii early lust week. ' ' 1 nt Commander F. C. Mc-mimander of the Akron. " ' ' burled In Arlington Na-"' Cemetery. NEW YORK. April 18 Talk of ! currency Inflation tor the United States hoisted British currenelea to hluher pricea today. At noon the pound sterling reached gHB' In United 8 tales funds. 3 V, cenU higher than the previous close. The Canadian dollar gained three-six tecnlha at 83 l-16c. ALASKA IMI'OSIK TAX ON THAI" UUH1IIT I Itill - -iar 1 Mi 9 ' JUNKAU Alaska. Awll II: 4 CP- The Noam of the Trrrl- Urtal Itlalature yetrrday passed a Mil ImnoMiiK a madu- a ted tax on salmon taken In trapa. 4 444444444 Traffic is Being Restored Today on C. N. Railway Line 'A .' ,'i.t men n the Job. cf-p. n bring beni this morning ;) Canadian National Une .i between Kwlnltaa and i , i it) station-, v. nere there . :. i blorkudr since a week : i t Saturday afternoon when a ii k shed r ivrd In under ii iit u( snow anil u-c so that to-,i Mi s nuular (rum from the east in : lit be uble to pas over and i. mi tluough. This train, regularly tin at 10.15, was reported tht mm man to be running an hour and .i half late. It i. expected thai business. In chid Ins the movement of halibut eastward In carload lots, will be resumed tomorrow. Work n! rlearlna the lire wa reaUy facilitated by the use ol a dragline and clamshell outfit which arrived from Vancouver 8undy afternoon and Immediately went to work ii the obstruction WELCOME TO TROY Krlrhikaii is first Municipality in Territory to Greet New Governor KETCHIKAN. April H: (CP I To this city went the honor yesterday of being the first municipality In Alaska to greet John W. Troy as the new Governor of Alaska when the steamer Yukon stopped here wi route to Juneau, the territorial I capitnl. with the new governor on 'board Mr Troy to the publlaher of the Juneau Alaska Dally Empire newspaper at Juneau. COPPER IS PILING UP Granby Co. Now lias 25,000,000 founds Lylnc on Dock at Anyox ANYOX, April 18: The Granby Company now has here 23,000,000 pounds of copper valued at about $1450,000 piled in a heap near the dock ready for shipment as soon as the price reaches a point where it can be shipped without causing the company loss. The difficulty is that the interest on the money is eating up prospective profits. Company officials say they have between fifty and sixty million pounds stored in the east. Atkcd as to the progress being made, officials of the company stated that they had now practically all the men they wanted but so far the efficiency is only about eighty percent. However, the new men are gradually improving and every day sees the production increased. PASSES IN WINNIPEG fir Daniel McMillan, Former Lieu tctanl of Manitoba is Dead W1NNIPBO. April It Sir Daniel McMillan. KCJ-tO, LLD dts- Unguiahed political military, bust as and social leader In Winnipeg tor almost slaty years and lieu tarant-Oovemor of Manitoba from Itee to Mil. passed away here a' 'be weak-end at the age of eighty - an years He was one of the most noteworthy of those pioneer figures which the RM Rebellion gave to the prairies and the Cana dian west has produced few who could be regarded as his equal I versatility and leadership Born In Whitby. Ont. January 14. Ittt. Sir IHniel was impressed wtth the possibilities of the great prairie country after the Reil Re-benior and he decided to re main Wln-ipeg had about two hunored inhabitants when he first became one of Its cltiasns. Daniel McMillan eataMkbed the fintt art mill In Winnipeg. For virtually the remainder of his life he continued to be associated in some way with the grain bustneca. He was gradually drawn Into pol itics, and in Ittt was elected foi Certr Winnipeg and continued to represent that constituency untH I WO. Hen. T. Ocpenway. the Lib eral leader, took him Into Ms cab-net as provincial treasurer In May. M. a post which he held until the Oreenway Government resigned In I960. Knighted In 1901 On the occasion of the Prince of Wales' accession to the throne as King Edward VII. In 1901. Daniel McMillan was created a knight commander of the Order of St. Michael and St. George. He was the first president of the Royal Crown Rank and held that office almost up mull the time it was absorbed by the Royal Hank of Canada. In March, 1867. he married Mary, the daughter of James Lindsay, of CoUlngwood. Out. Lady McMillan djrd Feb. 1. 19S3. Ttelr daughter EHeAnor Isabel, married Leigh N. McCarthy, of Winnipeg. Sir Daniel was a Mason and a member of Knox Chureh. which he attended for more Un fifty year. Hie equality of man can onlvbe accomplished by the sovereignity of Qod. Lord Deaconsfleld. Japanese Planes Overcome Difficulties The Jjaa uj,- it pp-.x- t i Kuppiy ihi n .iiuij uui'. - wiUi f i& snown divpinnq b.is of pr.vi where rummunwaUuii by road L AIR MAIL TO ORIENT Jack Mrl'orri, Well Known Aviation i;nlhuuvt. Predicts New Service Si:TTl i; April 18: A fat air mail route Iretween Seattle and the Orient via Alaska and the Aleutians will be in operation within two years, it is predicted by Jack MrCord, prominent Western Alaska cattle man and trader, who Ls a visitor in Seattle, accompanied by liH pretty auburn-haired wife. Cutting ten days off the fastest prestnt steamship time, planes will be adle to make the trip from here to the Orient In two days on rontliiuoas fliihl and in four days by stopping at nljhU, MrConl declares. Jark MrCord is a well known aviation enthusiast. Several years ago he mad' an ovemitbt stop here with his wife while on a flicht to Alaska In a plane piloted bv the late Capt. P. J. A. (Paddy) Burke, who larr lot hln Hf in the Allln district by starving to death following a crash. REMOVAL OF LONG Petition for Urscfltlng of Senator Is Presented to Speaker John N. (lamer WASHINGTON. DC. AprU IS-A delegation of retUafteutaUve Louisiana State citteem appeared at the end of the week before Speaker John N. Garner and presented a petition to the speaker demanding she removal of Senator nuey Long wr.om they declared was "personally dishonest, oornrpt and Immoral and repulsive to the dllxens of Louisiana. Tl petition was referred by the Speaker to a Senate committee. jam V ! m i.-Oinn,!?r"iiJ" aeriptanps to j i . lid bitiikit.N in Ji!,o). A pla:) sjr , v.r n rairliateers, Jehol, iin possible. FLIGHTS HELD UP .Miss Jear Batten Makes Forced Landing Near Karachi Italian lawyer Sale at Calcutta KARACHI. Irdla, April 18 Mist Jean Batter.. .O-year old New Zealand irl. was forced down near here la the course of a projected solo flight from Bnglana to Australia, breaking the propeller of her biplane, rode on a camel for twenty -eeven miles before being picked up by an automobile which j brought her irto Karachi at the week-end. Arrangements are being made to make repairs to the plane which was once owned by the Prince of Wales. CALCUTTA. April 17-L. Robi-ano. Italian barrister and aviator, arrived here safely yesterday after having been missing on a prelected record-breaking flight from England to Australia. James Dunlop of Victoria Passes formerly Ooll Commissioner at j Ullooet and Lived SO Years in British Columbia VICTORIA. April 18: (CP James Dunlop. aged 78. naUve of, Scotland and a resident of British' Columbia for the last fifty years, ls , dead here. Hr was formerly gold commissioner at Lillooet. NEW GERMAN AMBASSADOR IN NEW YORK NEW YORK. April 18 Dr. Hans Lurhcr, former president of the Relschbank. arrived here at the week-end from Germany to assume his new duties as ambassador to the United States from Germany. V uiieifLtdt iuiedeed uuy When All Fish Will be Sent in Frozen State ! i . I). H. Finn Forecasts That Eventually No Fresh Halibut , Will be cpnsifjned From Here to Eastern iMarkets Tells of Experimental Work in Refrigeration j "I think the day is coming when no fresh halibut will be shipped to the eastern markets from Prince Rupert I j think it will all be frozen by improved methods and shipped in a less costly way than is at present done to the eastern markets where it will arrive in a better condition than supposedly fresh halibut has ever arrived. I am not alone In possessing these thoughts. SomeH 1 . . ; or the most thoughtful men In Can-1 ada are inclined to agree with me' rtliTTTnTTPTi Kk I I I H V W and. though this accomplishment i 1 lUliLllV win oring wwi h many vexint; problems. I am sure that they are Such was an Interesting prediction which was made at today's luncheon of the Prince Rupert Oyro Club by D. B. Finn, director of the Prince Rupert Fisheries Expe rimen- Lui Station, In an address on the subject of "Refrigeration In the course of when he described Inter-eating experiments in this field of the fishing industry whleh are be-tag carried on at the local station i "The one cry ot nearly every great industrialist that I have ever heard of is "Look to the Future.' The Henry Fords, the Monds. the Carnegles and the Rockefellers have all been men who. while they took advantage of present conditions, at the same time so handled their businesses! that they could take advantage of what they felt must happen In the, future. Prince Rupert must do this! also if H Is to become an Important ; and thriving place. I "In the proper development and I Improvement of fish freezing, fishj storage and fish transportation, lies the future of Prince Rupert's fish-1 cries, since this has been my con-! vicUon. Mie organisation which 1 represent has been quietly but steadily working towards the anlu-' ton of nme of the problems which must be solver! before the improvements can be put into effect. Matter of Transportation "Let us consider for a moment the matter of transportation. You are all familiar with the methods. I take It that you have all seen these large, heavy refrigerator cars being loaded with fresh or froaen fish Continued on Page X Tk . vp OTTIf HTTr VjUiJjl 1 1 Macdonald Admits Liplonage and Sabotage at Moscow Others Declare Their Innocence MOSCOW, April 18: Just before the court retired today to consider the verdict In the Metro-politan-Viekers sabotage case, William L. Macdonald reiterated his guilt but all the other British prisoners stouUy affirmed their innocence and all the Russian defendants abjectly threw themselves on the merey of the court. The Russians admitted all the charges against them. Yesterday the attorney for Macdonald admitted that his client had been guilty of espionage and sabotage. Premier Teacher Pneumonia Victim J. l. Bass of Victoria Passes Away In Hospital at Mining Camp The death occurred at Premier last Wednesday night of J. M. Bass, aged thirty-one, teacher at the school at that place. He died In the hospital as the result of a severe attack of pneumonia and pleurisy. His home was In Victoria. He formerly taught at Anyox The body is here today aboard fie steamer Cauls being taken home to Victoria for burial The B. C. Undertakers of this city have charge. ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING and CONVENTION The Annual Meeting of the Prince Rupert Liberal Association will be held in tho Metropole Hall, Wednesday, April 19 at 7:30 p.m. ItUSlNKSS: KM'XTION OP OFFICERS Immediately following thin meeting ft nominating convention will bo hold-to select n candidate to contest Prince Ilupurt riding at tho forthcoming election T. I). PATTUMX) WILL ADDRESS THE CONVENTION