Tomorrow's Tides In' In Trouble o! Florida wa upwrecit vloUm In m- xi. hurricane, than iiargas of sraussU- ' He's gatllin over i.irncane Ant. Vancouver Stocks Vsneouver "fille. l.U. ' Fivi .11, 'ii.-: i jo ' '"nil Kiiver. Jt ' ": Idaho, M. H'wr Cog, m. "Wa River. Alia.' Os.) ""Vm .jo ""ewster. .07. no.. vuarti. 4M. M'.'nliaii 48. fil' Muw.piiri, .11. ! " kv Jim. .04. vr fregt, m y verly 04 4?f 11 X .474. "ivr Bon .1014. '"blrd. Oiu r"'l(. .01. M'Ttiing 8Ur, A K Toronto "ami, "'"HI 1.3S i ' Ml'Wilters. 7S Sl"" 149 ".iji, ,i Uk, fjeaj, Alll"nio. ljf Si P r .JH. ,'"V..n. ,00 ''"'I m Sixty Thousand She Vancouver Id. Rancher I REAR-END e., hl p.., I COLLISION rr t ouyo lie i ui ,vutzung Back on Crofton Well police Investigation Assisted by Evidence Given nt Inquest lt't....t. If na lliutn A ft inn ranl TTviIll 1 1n 4 1 t .1,, tB.fil II lilt II HUB nwii jiiiji'ui niu uiun i atuuiuivm Testimony Can be Prepared ' I A, Sept 0: (CIM Charlt Eccteston, sheep w h discovered the body of Maude Lilley in an iin'i well nettr Crofton lust week, cleared up the inn phase of the investigation for the police at into the woman's death at Duncan last night -tified that he hod found the planks over the 1 U out of place and had pot Item back He had not remembered this before he Uled In view oi the well having been j covered over with the planking It was at first bettered by the police that thaw might have been foal play. TM to the worn! wrist 'was her avMeate The body was at 1 tint believed la have been that mt Miss R TUawa of bull IPl Vermont became the twtnw- jwas attar gr that of Ma ode Lilley The inquest has been adjourned 'until September It when pathological evidence will be submitted. 8BATTLS. atpt. a result of a private airtopay ordered ny Major John F Dare, it was an-nouneed yeaterday that Bdward L. Mann, local clothes presser win wa IoutJ dead ta the city jail laat week, died of strangulaUon as 1 result of hanginc. Italy to Honor Famous Airman Premier Muwsllni Orders That National Honors he Aeeorded )c Plneilo MTW YORK. Sept ;-A cable- received here at the end of lienors be accorded Oenaral Pran-Maaa de Ptnedo. famous Italian avi ator, who was burned to death here on Saturday when his plane over turned at Floyd Bennett new as be was attempting Ui take off on a trans-AtlaniH fllnht to Bagdad. School Children In Seattle City BRATTLE Sept 6 Between 5V tjoo awl 0.H cn"?TO'.."'":: e atudles In u i vrtMl school re-openeo Ht swnmcr vacation Pound Sterling and Canadian Dollar on INew "u,"","v Fourteen Persons Were Killed in Craih Near Blnghampton, N. W Yesterday ni NO II AM PTON, N.Y Sept : (CP) Fourteen penons were killed and more than a score in Jured when a milk train crashed into the rear end of a fast Erie passenger train which was standing- at a siding near here last night. The passenger train was bound from Chicago to New York. The engine of the milk train telescoped the two rear coaches of the passenger. VERMONT GOES WET Twenty-Fifth Stale ol Union to Reject Prohibition Arizona Convention MONTPILIER, Venwmt, Sept. 6 to vote in favor 0 repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment, early re- terns lfldirattng a popular vote of more than two to one again the national prohibition law. Last narht's tabulation showed a vote approximating 58.660 for repeal and 15.060 against. Aritona Convention PHOENIX. Arte.. Sept. 6 Ari-tona became the twenty-first state at the Union to oHleJstty reject the 8iheenth Amendment yesterday when delegates in convention here east a unanimous vote in favor of repeal. TORIES ARE 'NON-PARTY' Courlenay Conservatives Ssy They Do Not Want Continuation of Present Plan OOURTENAY. Sept : A meet ing of former Conservatives here yeaterday voted unanimously against continuation of party politics In Ilrttish Columbia and urged that a non-party plan be sought. Khe wee from Premter Blto Mus- ManV gf Wnrlr Qn aUnl ordered that Italian nauonai . or j Nickel Mines in Province of B. C. VANCOUVER. Sept. 6: There are two hundred men at work on nickel development work in the province of Dritlsh Columbia, It Is stated In mining circles here. Halibut Arrivals Amcrican--138.500 pounds, :5c and 4c to 7c and Ac. Canadian None. American AUas, 30.000. Royal. 6.8c and 4c. Rainier, 37,000, and Prosperity, 31.000. Cold Storage. 6.5c and 4c. Uhona. 14.000, and Oceanic. 1S,-000. Pacific. 7c and 4c. Federal. 16.000, and Gloria, 8,500, Ilooth, 6.6c and 4c. 5: The I3ri- msiw Nmv VORK w Sept ' . i i .t Malls Dr. and Today's Weather 2:38 a.m. 20.4 , 15:10 p.m- 2', v, ' Prince Rupert Clear, light northerly Low . :o6 a.m. . i , wind; barometer, 30X6; temperature, 21:38 p.m. 3 '., 64; sea smooth. NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER 'f i.. v& - - - - V 206 PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1933 PRICE: FIVE CENTS DY MYSTERY BEING CLEARED UP HIS POLITICAL FUTURE MATTER FOR ELECTORS TOLMIE Fight Sleeping Sickness Spurred into action by deaths ol 75 persons, physicians of St. Leufe and variety banded together for a determined fight against the mrjarl Of ;a. eceaeaUc of steeptag sickness, which had strts- shnws one of the victims. L. Hagan. beJ-g attended by Half phystciaM at a St. Louis hospital. They are Dr W O. Patton. Dr 8 1 HUler. Dr B F Higgins. and Dr. T R Usher More Deaths From i Great Industrial Sleeping Sickness Ipidemic I Continuing to Spread in St. Loui 300 Cases Under Treatment Now BT. LOUfB. September S Jt was tt totally annou eed Monday nigh hat there had been tea more loathes during the preceding thtr-ty-etx hours as a result of the ep 1emtc of sleeptng sickness which 1 -ontl utng to spread In this ctty and dfcrtrtct So tar there have been seventy-five deaths and a total of more than 500 cases. Then- are still two hundred cases under treatment. Federal govemnent experts have reached the city to amduct Investigations into the ma- 'ady which It Is believed by some local doctors may be spread by Veteran Employee Of Telegraphs is Victim of Attack VANCOUVER, Sept. 6: CP W. A. Jamleson. aged 61, assistant chief operator and veteran Canadian Pacific Railway Telegraphs employee, died of heart failure here yeaterday. TRAIN LATF. LAST NKillT Delayed by traffic along the line, last evening's mixed train was one hours and thirty minutes late. coming in at 11:30 pan. FEWER UNEMPLOYED IN GREAT P.UITAIN , Great California LONDON, Sent. 6: -The number of unemployed in Great Britain decreased by 31.038 in the tnenth between July 31 and August 31, It was officially announced yesterday. The total number of unem- Uh iwund swung i been cnnvplnsi ployed in the jaunlry Dn Aug. S'rilma. dotaTcleid (or the put mont at Utke Ka1l U tist 21 was 2.4U.000. uu.. tirrtwr. The Cananian ...i hnm. from Uie In- a Expansion Likely Canada's Duty to See That Equipment Keeps Tace With Development MONTREAL. Sept. 6: -Lard McMillan stated here yesterday that1 'It will be Canada's part to see that equipment keeps pace with devel opment I expect a great Industrial expansion soon MANY DIE INST0RM Results of Hurricane In Texas at Week-End More Serious Than Anticipated EDLMtUKG. Texas, Sept. 6: (CI') At least 3t persons per-ihrd in the lower Texas Rio Grande valley, some 1500 were injured and some million dollars of damage was done to property as a result of the tropical hurricane, it was indicated last night as interrupted telegraphic and telephonic communications were resumed following the disastrous storm which swept hi from the West Indies and the Gulf of Mexico on Monday and Tuesday. Tlieer was also extensive damage and considerable loss of life across the international line in Mexico. BIRTHDAY OF LOS ANGELES City Celebrates lStnd. Anniversary of Its Founding Premier Denies He is Planning to Take Job Islands. in uttawa uepartment People of British Columbia and Not Press Will Decide His Retirement as Head of Provincial Government, Questioning Scribes Are Told ' VICTORIA, Sept. 6: (CP) "My retirement from the tiremiership is a question for the electors and not for the ires," declared Premier S. F. Tolmie yesterday when mestioncd regarding current reports of his political intentions. "The report that I am about to accept a post in the federal department of agriculture is just another one of those falsehoods that I have been compelled to deny recently," Dr. Tolmie added. i LINDBERGHS LEADER IS IN SWEDEN! B.C. NEED ""i" TT - Tzf-m t iTJ -"!Z T- Z ... vl. j. . m " . . . ... , . aiuviu niii.l avast tsst assatss aWWIMW mre mmi inm imm ni'inr-vumr mn jruvi ""'"-P" PnrvtaeewTevesawisavs In . Hanged Himself 1 In Seattle Jail Private Autnrtf Condueted lot Mayor Dorr in Case of Edwsrd Mann STOCKHOLM. 8weden. Sept Butler Hotel in Seattle Closes Long Popular Hostelry in Lower Part of Puget Sound City Is Through 8BATTLE. Sept. 6 The Butler Hotel at Second Avenue and James Street, for half a ceTntury one oi this city's leading hoatelries. dosed rts doors yesterday Quests vacated but week and aU Is quiet now with the sole occupant one watchman The management announced that t Famous American Airman and Wife ' Second .Roosevelt Required in This Copenharen Vsneouver VANCOUVER, Sept. 6:-J. O. Tur ' cot, and Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh aeon, one of the Liberal candidates j landed here Monday from Copen- j for Vancouver in the provincial el-hagen. Denmark, where they have ection. stated yeaterday that Bri-been spending a few days following ttsb Columbia needed a leader such a trans-Atlantic flight. It is under-1 as the United States had in P rest-stood that the famous American j dent Roosevelt who was not afraid airman and his wife wtll fly on ; to risk to gamble the national wel-thelr return across the Atlantic fare against the capitalistic system Ocean via Spain and the Azores one who was not afraid of nartv and who was or Canada first. Wive of Famous Movie Director Severely Burned HOLLYWOOD. Sept. 6: It Is announced by physicians that Mrs. Valerie von Strohelm, wife of Brie von Strohelm. famous German motion picture director and former actor, will probably recover from severe burns which she sustained when a machine wtth which she was being given a dry shampoo it could no longer operate suceees-l caught free In a teeal hair dressing rutlv in that nart of the city. establishment. Viscount brey Philharmonic Choir Sinking Fast, Resumes Practices Elder British Statesman Unconscious Now With Condition Reported Very Critical First Presentation of Coming Season Will be Operetta "A Tale Of Old Japan" LONDON. Sept. 6 Tlie cradttlon pxtnc Rupert Philharmonic RUodn who u STiL? Society held Its first practice of the vW?t7?,,!!I' season last night In the BUes Home. i?ouy yf!?..'!"' &tre being a good turn-out of ae- "v " T "TZ rLSZl tlve members It has bees decided is now hew ont for a turn in the condition of the great elder lirittsr. staseman. s OTTAWA. Sept. 6: CP W. : LOS ANOBLBS. Sent. 6. Thsl O. McOuarrle. former M.P. for ! slty of Los Angeles on Monday ob- New Westminster, has bean served Uie Ifttnd. anulvemry of its I appointed to the British Oo- that the first presentation of the esailng winter season will be the Oolerklge-Taylor operetta "A Tale ol OW Japan" which wffl be put on daring the first week In December. 'Only private concerts for associate s new JUDGES FOR Tins members will be held this winter. PROVINCE AKE NAMED Engagement Mr. and Mrs. ft. O. Johnston, In- founding. On September 4, 1781, lumbia Court of Appeal and H. isbsss Caunety. announce the eleven families arrived to settle B. Robertswi K.C. of Vaneou- tnganverrt aI Mietr elder daughter, liere. forming the nucleus of what.-f ver has beo appointed to the Rsta Beatrtea, to Mr. John Durran is toriiiy the greatest city on the Supreme Court. of Pftoos Rupert. Uie mr rrlage to Pacific Coast of America with a a place on October 18 at SU population of 1.381,000 persons. IS Andrews Cathedral. ft.-' " s. atialg