BODY FOUND AT LINDUP lptr Portion of Man Had IUp peartd llrrn Lspovd For Year "vmruU por report th. j f the lower portion of mi . tn ine duii near uiwup . t believed to have been ') the elemenU for a year i r portion was mUdrvg but. .:iher search In the nelah-the skull was found. ? amall amount of money pockets of the clothe. f prrjon ha been reported m. r : n. that neighborhood. 'i 'lie thigh bones, pelvic and I t" w and skull now recovered. are endeavoring to recon ' u' ' the body with a view to e wt .. fang identity If possible. T .c remains had cvldenUy been r by animal. What appears ' " ' vc been a note was found In a hi a has been almost Impos-1'Ie f deolhlier It. A k tfc had scratched on It the IT'. ., C rl t .i 'x.-y. Artie.' ,. cr.:- M P " or "W D." ng consisted of thercmatiw ' overalls, blue sox and grey r nlso found nearby was label- phersldc," a strychnine pols- HahbutArnvals Summary Anerlran- 107,500 pounds, ar 4c to 8.5c and 5c. Canadian -8.000 pounds, 5c 0c American 0"n 37.000. 6c and 4c. G" Illrd. 28,000. Cold Storage, 6c nl 4, ''v. lOAOO. Pacific. 7Jc nnd 5c. yltor. 6.000. Royal, 8.2c and 5c. Italnicr. 9.000. Pacific, 7.0c and 5c. . Onah, 17,000. Atlln. 85c and 5c. Canadian 1 H 8.000, Cold Storage, 5c. CANAhlAV rim it iinrt ..... m,mw m V 1 MEMBER BACK 4 AGREEMENT PACT RE CHICAOO, July 11: CP-The heat market skyrocketed here to day. prtrwttdYaocins the- five-cent limit allowed for a single day. Rig Vancouver Advance VANCOUVER, July 11: CP (-The price of wheat advanced six and a half cenU here today to 8Ie per bu thel from 74f yesterday On Monday the price had been 74c. down one-eighth rent from Saturday. FROM OTTAWA Olof lUnwn M.P. Arrive at Sml-then From Capital and Is Hue Here Soon Olof Hanson. M. P. for Skeena. arrived In Smithcrs yesterday after attending the recent session of th: House of Commons tn Ottawa and is expected In the city within the course of the next few days. Mrs. Hanson and daughter. Llnnea. ar-1 rlvrd at Smithers a couple of weeks ago from the east and have taken up reswence ior mc "v" summer home at Lake Kathlyn. Olof Hanson Jr. has been working at Terrace for the past six weeks. IIAK SILVLR ucii' vnnif Julv It: CP Sll- 11 4," tu cabinet of Al ... FRANCE AND ;i ENGLAND LNGLANH IN IN French forcWIi miiHiwr MONTRRAt. it. r.m ti, 4- Rir John Simon. British l adlan gold price was stend 1 clgn secretary. - hi per ounce, I cu'Ppt- one cent to $34.43 today. 1X)ND0N, July U: CP- 1 X Informed quarters mun... - that reinforcement bf the Lo- canto Pact by Friday was uic t understanding agreed upon . . nrlljiln and succeeded by J. J. MacLellan. lion, i Oeorge Hoadley Is minister of j health and telephones and Hon. J. F. Lymburn, attorney general. j jr if ! SSstlMartinKraljls Killed at Anyox Miner Loes llls'Llfe In Accident at Smelter Town, Police Advised District headquarters of the pro- W V"1"' Al...".-! ....I... I,.r. .r. ndvlsed of nn France as a rcsuu oi ' i"""'w r . K V. "7 ... inm. Kniiipeii Lou s nartnou. -r accident in me - and for- which resulted lu the death oi Martin KralJ. a forelun miner. No details of the tragedy have yet been received. An Inquest Is bclnif held. Today's Weather Tomorrow's Tides lrat6 High 1:17 ajn. 20.4 ft. r. ; RupertRaining, light 14:15 pjn 18.6 ft. r t wind; barometer. 30.08; Low 3:03 ajn. 2.4 ft. j ,"-;p.'.Vurr. 53; sea smooth. 20:05 pjn. 7.6 ft. NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER V.i XXIV No 160. PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., WEDNESDAY, JULY 11, 1934 PRICE: FIVE CENT3 MORtWOWER TAKEN ON BY DOLFUSS WHEAT GOES SKYROCKETING AS SMALL CROP FORECAST Canadian Crops Are Damaged by Electrical Storm On Tuesday UNITED STATES AGRICULTURAL REPORT PRE-PKTS LOWEST YIELD IN THIRTY-FIVE YEARS; QUOTATIONS IN WINNIPEG, VANCOUVER AND CHICAGO BOUND UP. EDMONTON, July 11: (CP) Whipped by cyclonic winds, electrical storms .showered hail and heavy rain in Hide sections of Alberta and Saskatchewan last night, rauinfr severe damage to crop and property. W. I). Spccthlcy, aged 27, of Lymburn, Alta., was killed by lightning on an Edmonton street and a companion, David Hcpncr, was injured. WINNIPEG. Julv 11: (CP)-A United States crop re- r- :-i.iuintr the smallest nroiective yield in thirty-five . writ wheat futures up GJc to G&c today with -the j a 'he top prices. Volume whs the largest in weeks . If th veiled across the pit, executing fistfulls of pur- - 2 orders, Chicago Prices llich Winnipeg Scout Earns Thrilling Trip Through Arctic Cockburn of Winnipeg. Kings S out. i the choice trm year lo talc the thrilling trip to the Arctic on the Hudson's Bay Co. supply ship Nascopie This .-turdy vessel eizh year makes a survey offCan-ada's roost northern parts, carrying supplies and j -.stir? In the person of the R.C.M-P Young McCal-lum, 1 17 years old and six feet. 3 34 Inches', was chosen from 50.000 scouts tn Canada for the trip. The choice last year fell to Eric Udell of Vancouver. The voyage Ml) take him along the rome established In 1668 by the ketch Nonsuch up into the northern hinterlands and down tnroujni Hudson Bay. Also making the trip is P. Ashley Cooper. governor of the Hudson's Bay Co. who will be the first governor to take the trip In. the history of the famous org uuzatkm. Chancellor of Austria Initiates Great Drive Against Nazis' Threat Accomplishes Cabinet Shake-up Which (lives Him Control Of Practically All Important Departments Of Nation ver aroppeo . , - " nation of Premier J. E. Brown local meiai mm" - 4Wc on Monday on Conner pound for several aays. loaay ver price was 46MrC VIENNA, July 11: (CP) Chancellor Englebert Dol-fuss announced a huge drive against the Nazis today after he had concentrated in his own hands all the military and police power of the nation. He accomplished a cabinet shake-up by means of which he will be chancellor, foreign minister, minister of defence, public security and ALBERTA TRIO DEAD CABINET AT OTTAWA rremler It. O. Held and New Minis- Man, Wife and Another Young try Sworn In Last Night EDMONTON. July 11 cr-Hon. Woman Drowned When Auto Plunges Into Itlver OTTAWA, July 11: Farm Point. l CP! Thrre O. Reld and the reconsirucw-a Der&ons Mr. and Mrs Charles War- . .ii....Ihi Inn ' Alberta iohuk w. ui,.ker arid Helen White, aeed 21. of Ottawa, were drowned In the Oa- MINISTRY IS NAMED Hepburn Sworn in as Premier of Ontario and Announces Cabinet TORONTO, July 11: (CP) .Mitchell V. Hepburn was sworn in as Premier of Ontario last night along with his cabinet following the resignation of Premier G. S. Henry and his ministry. The.cab- inet b as follow: Premier and Provincial Treas urer, .Mr. nepDurn. Provincial Secretary and Regis trar and Minister of Game and Fisheries, Harry C. Nixon. Attorney General and MlnUter of Labor, Arthur Roebuck. Minister of Agriculture, Dun can Marshall. Minister of Education. Dr. L. J. Simpvon. Minister of .Mines, Paul Ledue. Minister of Municipal Affairs and Public Welfare. David A. Croll. Minister of Highways and Pub lie Works, T. B. McQueston. Minister of Lands and Forests and Northern Development. Hon Peter Heenan. Minister of Health, J. A. Faulk tier. Miss Ruth ailliss, who has been ! Oeorge this morning. Many Are Taking SPECIAL SUBSCRIPTION OFFER Many present subscribers are taking advantage of the Special Dargain Offer of $1.50 to End of Year Also n numb''' of tien- subscribers are being added in the city of those who arc attracted by the low rate Pay $1.50 now and get the paper until December 31 delivered to your home. Canada Due For Great Period "Of Prosperity in Near Future, Col. Nicholls Tells Gyro Club After describing how England, despite the handicap! of having no natural resources except that of coal which was of doubtful value, the necessity of importing three- quarters of the commodities which her people require to exist and huge national debt and large per capita taxation, was now seething with activity and enjoying an era of qq- rlous prosperity which was showing itself in large building programs TT,n i XI in throughout the country, increasing ' 1 1 ( H A I I I 1 of manufacturing plants, etc.. Col. j v v J. W. Nicholls, comptroller of thel Canadian Fish & Cold Storage Co.. I in addressing the Prince Rupert; Gyro Club at luncheon yesterday, declared that It appeared to be a certainty that Canada too was about to enter upon the greatest period of prosperity It had ever known. In spite of the extravagance in public affairs of the past few years and the foolish legislation that even yet was being written- on the statute books by federal as well is provincial governments. It was oerfectly logical that this era of prosperity was about to dawn for Canada and that It would probably come e,ven. sopnfr.tharj, manyjKople might expect. Canadas great natural resources and her numerous products for export must prevail and It was inevitable that the rest if the world must pay. tribute to her. Now. if ever, was the time to nvest in Canada, to start new busi nesses here and to Increase existing rading facilities. Col. Nicholls. who returned to the ;ity recently from a three and a half months' trip abroad in the course of which he travelled 23.000 jilles and visited eight different countries, described some interest ing incidents and Impressions of his Journey. Two months had been spent in England, one In London. -he other In the south of England. He told his listeners of some of the points of Interest he had visited tn- ludlng Westminster Abbey, Houses of Parliament and Lords. Runnymede Island where King; John had signed the Magna Charta , and an International football final i at Wembley Stadium as well as a j cricket game at Devon in wh'ch the; touring Australians had played. I and Lc Havre. The French, hej thought, were unjustly accused of i I exploiting the American tourists by French money had remained what I it was four or five years ago whu American money had depreclatea. Col. Niaholls also told of Visiting - - Irttn nr Tirf Ill-Si. I11VUL . . . . . : . . .. . . the same price : r wa sul" "w " i uneau Kiver. aDoui sixteen miies on a va?auon mp 10 vanwuvcr Amsterdam, ine cuy 01 canais, hen the car in which and elsewhere in tne soutn, re- mentioning a' visit to the Art Oal- drlvinR crashed through turned to the city on the Prince I icry there with its treasured Rem- brandt and Van Dyk paintings of Continued on Pane ' Interest Keen In Tokyo Over Things Politic TOKYO. July 11: CP Interest 'continues keen In the Japanese , political situation following the re-icent cabinet reslenation and the mfjlntment of Admiral Kelsude Okxdi as the new premier. The former cabinet resigned because It MEATLESS Butcher Shops in Alaska Capital Closed Pending Arrival of Supplies Ketchikan Affair Police Prevent Picketing Attempt-National Guardsmen Shoot In San Francisco JUNEAU. July U: CP With all meat supplies exhausted, every meat market, here Is closed awalt-tng the antral of shlps'-fronTTa coma, breaking the longshoremen-'; strike embargo. The Northland Transportation Co.'s motorship liner Northland arrived at Ketchikan yesterday enroute here. Brush at Ketchikan KETCHIKAN. July 11: PoMce officers had a brush here with men from a coastwise vessel who approached an ofl tanker with a view, it was stated, to picketing. The police officers prevented the men, from the freighter from going too close, the tanker moving out into the stream until the other vested: got away. There was no untoward ; Incident. . Shooting' at 'Frisco SAN FRANCESCO, July 11: Na- tlonal guardsmen shot over thel ' heads of pickets on the local watcr- the front but there were no casualties. AGREEMENT IS REACHED On the Continent ! Provincial Government and Munl He also told of visiting Boulogne . cipalities Reach Understanding - On Relief VICTORIA. July 11: CP) DJ overcharging them. It possibly was g Columbla Munlcipalittes not remembered that the value of nd the provincial executive over 'he new relief policy to be effective next month was ironed out yester day after a conference between Hon. Oeorge S. Pearson, minister of tabor, and representatives of the union. Mr. Pearson explained his plas to segregate under re-reglstration starting August 1 all those who are Inter-provlnclal transient. These are defined as persons who entered the province since October 1930. Dr. W. T. Neely, prominent physician and surgeon of Roswell, New Mexico, and Mrs. Neely were amon passengers aboard the ss. Prlnc" Oeorge today going north to maka the round trip to Skagwayr Card of Thanks Mr and Mrs. F. N. uooa wish to return sincere thanks to alt "Ir friends for kindness, sym- htld itself resoonslble tor laxity of pathy and beautiful floral tribute official discipline In connection during their sad bereavement in with the "share deal scandal." ,the lost of a son and brother. i l