Today's Weather mous Australian Ace V - . . . . . m . . . a - - Water and Apparently Having bngme Trouble rrs Kintrsiora-ornim ana companion, lorn retnv- . . 1 1 i. a a - i ? i i mi l ...twilinn. lrt nOM loff A llo rin hfirl lrocfoi-floif orl II Nll.ll II11ILI1I .vw . ww . 4 . . w & U L . . a. . U 1 iM nhnilt O 1 1 V 1 , "V IY1 n .. ...nr. 1 lllill VW III IN I IS : J. n Trade Pact With Italy! fM0 DE JANEIRO, fov X: Following the vine: of notification iv the Brazilian gov-rnmenl to the League f Nations yesterday lat it would not co operate with other na- iuuiviku ii iz. & a i w avwLa w in thp It'iln-H.thinnian h,.. 1 - I . Mirvhl tMAnti. I. ... I - rwv man n.in ULLii iivku 'A m niiMrficii .1. i -J j OFFICIAL 1 - jf wwiuaj "J w flF Min 0A A AAA U - -z Panter, 2611. HALIBUT ARRIVALS Canadian - u, io,wu, 7.0c una TRii.. . .... K RESUMED ALONG LINE ON SATURDAY "dins are cxnprtprf in hp J" vw lllnt-t-A... . . "U ft . 6c, IJin ii U4 name uvcf et , to leave for the east at vlUCK ( nm nfvni.. . i jaaii weeks a . with ,,,uuuw morning r frel following a tin -Tay omthCe10CkiAth train nlRM e ea,st 18 due tomorrow stored to normal on Mon- exhaust MRS. KUBLEY OF Fate in Bay of Bengal , n . tm; t.i n ah i i kprduc at ainKapuri: on rngni rrom Aiianaoau An- tort fiver V-'ilituiv-a nuuub u i7.ui. iiic iasi. iciiuii wcia from C. J. Melrose, Australian pilot, who passed Kingsford-Smith about 150 miles out In the Bay of Bengal. , I Melrose, who arrived at Singapore pearly today, reported that flames appeared to be shooting from the of Klngsford - Smith's i monoplane flying at an altitude of 'two hundred feet. Melrose reported niicclnir thp mlccfntr plane about twelve hours before he landed at Singapore. Royal Air Force machines and all ships in the Bay of Bengal have been ordered to conduct a search. Was Trailing Scott ALLAHABAD, India, Nov. 8: CP Sir Charles Klngsford-SmtUi, Australian long distance filer, on his arrival here at 5:30 last night after haying covered the distance of" 5500 miles from England In 29 hours and 28 minutes, was about three hours behind the record time Jot C. W. A. Scott. After refuelling 1 i . 1 n ii u 1- 4 it, 'iiere, niuKMUiu-oiiiiui ivuk me air again for Singapore in continuation of his attempt to set a 1 new record for the England to Aus tralia flight. Nearly Eighteen Million Feet Of Timber is Taken During the month of October 1 sawtog production in Prince Rupert ; forestry district totalled 17,878,496 . .. . I I L n ...U UU EOn J71 Wn vri I llintnn lairi Al lXXZ llVrTIUUillU 1CCL Ul WIllUll iWU.llil hUCWU Election lip miiMii .mm frt- cironnn rin - m uve federal election was feet was fir, 1,858,389 board feet, cedar, 7,595,475 board feet spruce, 5,237,804 board feet hemlock, 1,- 673,004 board feet balsam and 933,351 board feet jackpine. Pole and piling production in the interior totalled 55,043 lineal feet of which 50,932 lineal feet was cedar and 4,111 lineal feet hemlock, Cordwood totalled 143 cords of which 90 was cedar while the tie count was 67,694 pieces of which 63,865 was Jackpine and the bal ance hemlock. KETCHIKAN DIES Clarence Payne Is due from Se attle on the Princess Adelaide this afternoon and will proce.cd from here by gasboat to Ketchikan where he has been called on ac count of the death of his sister, Mrs. Lawrence' H. Kubley. Mrs. Kubley Is the wife of a well known merchant and sportsman of Ketchikan and, ilke her husband, is well known in Prince Rupert through having made frequent visits here. Card of Thanks w n Moxlev. Eleanor, Bob and Mrs. Raabe wish to thank the many kind friends for the beautiful finrnl tributes and the sym- -n... Hnriness shown them during their recent bereavement. BAD LUCK OFJINERS Operators Of Betty Mine Lose Result Of Season's Work In Flood Much Damage Viison, niythman and Robinson To Carry On Nevertheless SMITH ERS, Nov. 8: Of all those along the Skeena and Bulk-ley RJvers who suffered lo3s and Inconvenince during the recen and unprecedented floods caused by the heavy rains and chlnook wind which melted the new snows in the mountains at the headwaters of the many creeks and rivers of the district, probab'v none of them were harder hit than the partners who have taken Tver the development of the Betty Coal Mine on the Telkwa River about seven miles up the river from Telkwa. These partners, J. Wilson, T. Blythman and A. Robinson, had worked hard all summer building roads and putting a large bridge across . the Telkwa River at their .nine. Their camp Is on the south side of the river Tind the coal mine is on the north side so it necessitated t bridge at that point over which lo transport their coal to get to he main road up the Telkwa River. These men set to work and built a bridge of two spans, each span being 60 feet In length. They hewed all the heavy timbers out if trees along the river banks nd constructed the bridge largely it their own expense. Just about the time the river started to rise they started over the road to Telkwa to get some supplies for their camp but had only gone a short distance when! they came to Goat Creek and IS found their way cut off as this Annual Affair of First Presbyterian creek was In flood and the bridge ; Ladies Most Successful in Years, was gone. $350 Being Taken In Bad Luck Continues They returned to their camp1 uHfh thp tnWlnn of crossing The annual bazaar of the La- Continued on Page 2 In charge of the various booths were the following ladles: Tomorrow's Tides prince Rupert Clear, calm; arometer 3U.; temperature, ; High 11:54 a.m. 23.2 ft. smooth. Low .. 5:45 a.m. 6.2 ft. 18:34 p.m. 1.7 ft. NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER ... ACQ J. PRINCE RUPERT, B.C.j FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1935 PRICE: 5 CENTS SMITH NOW LADY SCOTT AND SISTER TRAVEL BY PLANE Contrary to early reports, there .were uniforms and color at the wedding of Lady Alice Scott and Prince Henry, Duke of Gloucester, who were- married in Buckingham Palace chapel Wednesday, Here is shown Lady Alice (left) and her sister, Lady Margaret Hawkins, arriving In London by aeroplane from Bowhill, Selkirk, estate of the late Duke of Buccleuch. BIG CROWD AT BAZAAR FOUGHT RUM AND DEVIL How Billy Sunday Made Thousands Hit "Sawdust Trail" CHICAGO, Nov. 8: (API It was not that Billy Sunday presented anything new to his audiences,' but on their own bridge and working dies' Aid oi nrst rresDyienan n was me manner m wmcn xic uc-down the north side of the river Church yesterday afternoon, fol-1 livered his sermons that made to Telkwa but when they reached lowed by a carnival last evening of them reach their mark, cause, the their camp the water was coming which the men were in charge, was sinners to repent and then impel over the banks of the Telkwa so one of the most successful held in thousands of them to "hit the tv.v rura nhiitrprt in rpsciip t.hplr vears. a total of about $350 being sawdust trail," a feature Of his powder from Its location near the taken as a result of the whole un-! campaigns. The two principal ob river and carry it to highs. dertaklng. The bazaar was partlcu-i jects of his attack were the devil ground. 1 larly well patronized and, despite and rum. He began his sermons in Wdlsnn and Robinson then cros- weather which was none too favor- the ordinary religious manner of sed the bridge to go to town, leav- able, there were large crowds of la- any preacher, but when he warmed lug Blythrtan behind at the camp, dies, representative of all denoml- up to his subject the entire aspect They had only been across a few t nations, in constant attendance, of the meeting and preacher were minutes when, looking up the ; The hall 'had been attractively changed. He worked hard with his river, they saw the bridge, which decorated for the occasion with. voice and his body, so hard that had been several miles farther up vari0US motifs arranged by those lni on many occasions it was necessary the river at the crossing of the ( charge of the individual stalls. for him to remove his coat ' and main road, come floating down 1 The bazaar was opened by the vest to enable him to proce?d with and setting straight up as It had past0r, Rev. W. D. Grant Hplling-been when In place. This bridgjiwortn and Mrs, c Q Hanii presi. hit the pier of their own bridge, i dent of the Ladles' Aid, and Mrs. D, In the middle of the river, turned iM L d receiTCd the guests. up on its siae ana iormea ua.u. i Tne tea room was ln charge of The heavy floods of the Telkwa Mrs j G sten and Mrs slm0n-illed it and the log up against MfS D McD Hunter Mrs w, iam. which had apparently been ; Vanc6i Mrs L w Kergln and held up the river by the derelict jMrs T H Johnson poure(J bridge, following close behind "1 re Mrg Nen MacDonald G. in its course down the river, and w Abbott Mrs j . r, Morrlson Mrs. more than any man made bridge Mfg j A could stand and It went dowql under the terrific pressure and, ..... u . cue. they watcnea me result ui men. summer's work go drifting down considerable' Fancy Work-Mrs W L. Sandi-loss Th ; also suffered selected son and Mrs. James L. Lee. in a Quantity of LiuJ1 J?, ,i,,h t.hev had1 Baby wear-Mrs. Samuel Massey mined and , stored . i near thP the -bridge bridge and Mrs. B. R. Rice h h fniinwinc day tney rc- f.v. any degree of comfort. At times he went further and took off his collar and necktie. In his sermons he discarded to a large extent Biblical and religious language and resorted to the vernacular, especially when he desired to place emphasis on his point. He was ably assisted In his (Continued on Page Fouri Engagement Mr. and Mrs. James Brown an nounce the engagement of their only daughter, Agnes Darling (Nes sie) to William Frederick Stone, only son of Mrs: Annette Woods and Alfred Max Stone (Chicago, MISSING MUSSOLINI' Si FORCES MAKING HEADWAY UNEMPLOYMENT MAKALE IS IS DISCUSSER N0W TAKEN Kev. C. D. Clarke Gives Views To Kotarians at Luncheon And Makes Plea For Study Members of the Rotary Club were interested and stirred by an address given at their luncheon yesterday in which Rev. C. D. Clarke pastor of First United Church, depicted the lot of the unemployed and strongly urged study of possible means of removing this menace to society. It was a problem that had to be tackled by someone. Leadership was what was required. Mr. Clarke took for his subject "Vacant Lots," presumably because a preacher always requires a text, and he compared the unemployed ta the vacant lot ln the city with Its weeds and its menace. It was the vacant lot of humanity. The unemployed were the under-privi leged, the dispossessed, a burden to the city and society generally and! bcomlng steadily larger. They were the product of the machine which produced ever more and more. They were used by some to get cheap work done and sometimes .were used to win elections. The Only cure to the problem that was offered was Section 98 Just as the cure to the-vacant- lot problem was to. cut the heads off the weeds. The speaker told of the condi tions of life of some of the people he had met and how they were kept veil supplied with literature which was not of a capitalistic kind. He suggested that the only cure for 'he problem was to cut the Tiours )( labor, ln two. He asked what -vould happen to members of the :lub to whom he was speaking if; fhey were compelled to be Idle. Men who were trained to live active Uves could not live without work. One of the problems facing oeople today, Mr. Clarke said, was joing to be not the finding of work. but providing for the leisure time which all would have. He made a olea for the study of such subjects is socialism. He drew attention to the fact that Jesus was one of the 'eaders of men, yet he could get only twelve people to follow him. lesus might have preached the duty of men to God for a thousand vears and ho objection would have been taken to his teaching. It was only when he taught the duty of man to his neighbor that they cru-cified him. Noted Actress Is Believed Married Katharine Hepburn and Leyland Hayward on Flight to New York Following Reported Wedding ST. LOUIS, Nov. 8:-Hepburn, noted screen her manager, Leland Vanguard of Italian Army Entered City Last Night Renewed ' Activities in South Gorrahei Falls nvaders Are Now Approaching Lake Tana In Which Britain Is Interested ROME, Nov. 8: It was seml-ifflcially reported last night that he Italian forces had entered Ma-cale without resistance from the Ethiopians and that the main jody of the invading army would narch in today. Later it was announced that the Italian army had intered Makale today from three sides. It was still evident hat the Ethiopians were planning to put up their active resistance against the Italian advance at a point some forty miles south of Makale where troops have been concentrating for some time. Meanwhile, the Italians were I pnntlnnlncr nrtAraflnns wlt.Vi tanlrs and other heavy equipment with a view to cutting off the railway from the Red Sea to Addis Ababa , ivec .whteh K the.- Ethiopians have been taking in 'large quantities of var equipment. The capture of Gorrahei In Ogaden Province was ilso reported today after days of air bombing. From Asmara Is was announced that the extreme right wing of the Italian army had penetrated deep :nto the regions leading to Lake Tana, headwaters of the Nile, in which Great Britain is interested greatly. From Addis Ababa came reports that Emperor Haile Selassie was planning to fly to the Harar region on the southern front with a view to inspiring his forces there. REACHES SACRAMENTO SACRAMENTO, CaU Nov. 8: miles south of here on the Katharine Yukon River. It was impossible star, and for the search plane to make Hayward a Ending but it returned here were on their way by airplane last night from here to New York following their reported marriage. No direct admission of their marriage could be obtained from either Miss Hepburn or Hayward but the latter, becoming annoyed at the persistence of reporters, made a break: "I am not a celebrity but only her husband." AGED MAN DYING QUEEN CHARLOTTE CITY, Nov. William B. Shearer, former cashier-in the state treasurer's depart ment, arrested a few days ago at Fort Worth, Texas, on charges of embezzling $24,000 of state funds, was returned here yesterday to face trial. LOST PLANE IN YUKON IS SIGHTED ON ISLAND IN RIVER NEAR DAWSON DAWSON, Nov. 8: The ' plane of Pilot Jack Herman. missing with five passengers on board since last Saturday noon when it took off from : here for Fairbanks, was found yesterday by one of the search ! planes on an Island thirty-five immediately and dog teams were at once dispatched with blankets, food and other ar- tides of relief for the stranded party. Several machines will fly over the grounded airplane today and, If necessary, drop food. It Is likely that Herman and his passengers, all of whom are safe at Cassiar Roadhouse, will be brought here by dog team if conditions are such that planes cannot eration ln the local hosDital for in eood health D. . McLeod. Mrs. ill!), f.hp mnrriaep- ti take nlnpft.ln st.rnncmlatprl homla u c r.r.t on-. (Continued on page three) January. 8: William Duncan, 92, is in a land, Meagre reports say the sinking condition following an op- members of the party are all jpected to recover.