PROVINCIAL I LIBRARY it VICTOR!' i Today's Weather Tomorrow's Tides mailt) (8 A.M.) High 6:16 ajn. 155 ft. Prince Rupert Clear, light easterly 18:59 p.m. 17.5 ft. wind; barometer, 30.00; temperature, Low . 0il8 ajn. 8.0 ft. 64; sea smooth. 12:16 p.m. 7.0 ft.. w NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER Vol. XXV., No. 149. PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., THURSDAY, JUNE 25, 1936 PRICE: 5 CENTh CHARGE OF ESPIONAGE Japanese Naval Officer and Former U. S. Petty Officer Indicted In Los Angeles LOS ANGELES, June 25: (CP) A man Identified as Toshio Miyasakl, a lieutenant commander in the Japanese Navy, and a former noncommissioned officer in the United States Navy, were indicted by a federal grand Jury on Wednesday on charges of conspiracy to violate the Espionage Act. The United States officer indicted was Petty Officer Harry Thompson who allegedly received money for revealing naval secrets. ON FLIGHT TO MOSCOW Clyde Pangborn, Noted Long Distance Aviator, Planning Daring Trip to Europe DALLAS, Texas, June 25: Clyde Pangborn, noted long distance flier, Is here on his way from California to New York with his "Flying Wing" plane, embodylnt; many new and radical features in aircraft construction and equipment, in which he will attempt t3 fly via New York and Paris to Moscow. His Intention is to fly through the stratosphere at an altiude of 20,000 feet, taking special oxygen equipment for George Munro Leaving Disposes of His Residence on Fifth Avenue IJast to Capt. Sam Hougan Announcement Is made of h! sale of the residential property of O. H, Munro on Fifth Avenue East to Sam Hougan, well known local halibut boat operator. Mr. Munro, a prominent pioneer citizen, is planning to leave with his family In about a month's time for Van couver to reside. Their departute will be regretted by numerous friends. Tells of Trip To Southern Towns XV. M. Watts Heard at Gyro Club Autobiographical Talks Also Prove Interesting W. M. Watts, at yesterday's reg ular weekly luncheon of the Prince Rupert Gyro Club, told briefly of a recent trip he made to Vancou ver Island and the Okanagan. He described more particularly the Oyro contacts of the trip at such points as Nanalmo, Kelowna and Penticton. Interesting autobiographical talks were given by H. N. Brock-lesby and W. H. Tobey. Dr. R. O. Large, president, was in the chair and there were re ports on playground and Boys' Band campaign activities on Wednesdav there will he Gyro Club luncheon next week, market today. no Halibut Arrivals Summary Canadian 28,500 pounds, 6.3c and 5.4c to 6.4c and 5.5c. American None. Canadian Clipper. 9,000, 6.4c and 5.5c, Cold Rlnrnap. AlkPn. 12000. 6.3c and 5.4c, Booth. Bay view,' 7,500, 6.4c and 5.4c, Coldj Storage. IIAR SILVER . . ob. rm n.ir 4 A ONLY ADEQL 4"'T1SI1 FORCES WILL V, SAYS SIR SAV Prisoners Of a. VJICE OARE Little Long Lac, 6.50. McKenzle Red Lake, 1.87. Perron, 1.32. Pickle Crow, 6.10. Red Lake Oold Shore, 1.60. San Antonio, 2.45. Sherrltt Gordon, 1.08. Siscoe, 3.60. Smelter Gold, .08V2. . Sturgeon River, .48. Ventures, 1.95. MacLeod Cockshutt, 3.60. Itardrock, 2.43. Oklend, .40. U Mosher, .49. 1 Bousquet, .13. , Bidgood Klrkland, 2.00. Gllbec, .06Vi. Jowsey, .26. Lake Rose, .46. Madsen Red Lake, .55. May-Spiers, .40. k Wlnoga Patricia, .33. Aldermac, .23. LONDON, June 25: Sir Sa- muel Haare, Secretary of State for the Colonies, declar- ed that, if the British navy and air force could be brought up to strength in time, there would be no war in Europe. Meantime, however, the atmo- sphere was such that any spark might kindle war. TODAY'S STOCKS Courtesy S. D. Johnston Co.) Vancouver B. C. Nickel, .37. Big Missouri, .56. Bralorne, 7.75. B. R. Cons., .062. B. R. X., .14. '' Cariboo Quartz, 1.60. Dentonia, ,18y2. Dunwell, .03 Vi. Golconda, .10. Minto, .66. Meridian, .07Vi. Morning 8tar, .02Vi. National Silver, .02. Noble Five, .0234. Pend Oreille, .75. Porter Idaho, .04. Premier, 2.45. Reno, 1.25. Relief Arlington, .34. Salmon Gold, .0914. Taylor Bridge, .10. Wayside, .10. Oils A. P. Consolidated, .16. Calmont, .13. Vulcan Oil. .50. Toronto Seattle, 1.40. Central Patrlclar3J7, Chibougamau, 1.67. Ood's Lake, 1.11. Inter. Nickel, 51.25. Lee Oold. .04 War Released Over Three Hundred Ethiopians Turned Loose by Italians At Addis Ababa ADDIS ABABA, June 25: . ,(W Ethl- ...Ua.UIa0 tractiirrlav KlftV flf DIAGNOSIS OF CANCER Chances of Recovery Described At Convention in South VICTORIA, June 25: (CP) Early diagnosis of cancer was pos sible only through competent x- ray and only through surgical removal of the gastric lesion might the patient be afforded a prospect of cure, Dr. Verne C. Hunt of Los Angeles said In an address to the Canadian Medical Association at its annual convention In Victoria today. Approxmately twenty percent of patients with cancer of the stomach may be cured by operative means, Dr. Hunt said. President Installed Dr. H. M. Robertson of Victoria was last night Installed as president of the Canadian Medical Association. The ceremonial was patterned after the colorful procedure of the British Medical Association. Bank of France Cuts Interest Rate on Loans is Reduced From Five to Four Percent, According to Announcement Today PARIS, June 25: (CP) The Bank of France today reduced it' interest rate from five to fou percent. Canadian Will - Adjudicate At Welsh Eisteddfod Sir Ernest MacMlUan. who was in Prince Rupert some years ago as an examiner for the Toronto to the birth of Christ. Geological Survey Party to Terrace E. D. Kindle and Companions Leave For Up-River in Flat- Bottomed Boat or .m til be lolnln the,durlnK the coming summer i mw wm-w t - In view of Dominion uay iauing Uallan Army at their own request while the most of the others ara taking Jobs with the Italian for publication this week-end. John D. Frascr of Kalen is pay- YUKtt, Junt- ;J . -V -( a br(er ylslt to town haylng , ouVnce on ihe New York metal rived In the city on last evening's 1 train. Today's Weather Dead Tree Point Clear, calm; barometer. 30 10: temDerature. 54: School Holidays sea smooth. Start Tomorrowj Triple Island Clear, light north- ' west wind; barometer, 29.88; sea Public schools here, as elsewhere 'smooth. In the province, will close for the Langara Island Clear, light long summer vacation tomorrow. ' northwest wind; light swell. This year schools will re-open onj Monday, September 1, as Labor; ..... ra falls on Monday. September 7. Kain III Interior, Promotion lists of the various city i No Forest Firc. schools are expected to be available It has been raining in the recently and there are at pre sent no forest fires in this district, according to advices received' at Forest Branch headquarters In the v' ' city. BIG FIGURE IN MARKET Trading' Success of Arthur W. Cut- ten Made Him lim Rys Mystery Oracle CHICAGO, June 25: (AP) Arthur W. Cutten who died yesterday In Chicago, balanced the world's need forjbreadstuf f s against the worldi precious supply of them, calculated the result, added the wiles ofan expert market trader, arid converted the mixture into a tremendous bank account. He did it so unerringly and sc often that he made himself legend. To the urilnltlate in the nation's market places he was the personification of astuteness a figure cloaked in mystery, an oracle who spoke seldom bu weightily He had a small office acros: LaSalle Street from the Chlcag Board of Trade. Ills' name was no' lettered on the door. There wai nothing to lndicatejthat behind 11 were issued orders that profoundly affected the prices W commodities and of stocks and, Indirectly, many lives. V Cutten's first job in Chicago paid him $7 a week, That was on his arrival as a youth of 20, from Guelph, Ont., Canada, where he was born In 1870. In 1890 he wai a highly ambitious youth, freshly graduated from Guelph Collegiate Institute. Thirty-five years later he owned more wheat than any individual had ever possessed. A few years more, at the time of the "boom" stock market, estimates on his fortune varied from' $50,000,000 tc $100,000,000, and some figures even were higher. yt -Hls -first, job. at7a week -was merely a stop gap. Soon he occupied a bookkeeper's stool In a broker's office. By 1896 he had acquired a working knowledge ol grain trading and at least $600 for he then paid that amount toward a seat on the Board oi Trade. In 1906, he married Maude Conservatory of Music and who at i Boomer of Chicago, and began that time met a great many.lociil I trading "on his own" with a stake people at ar reception given In! of $3,000. Yet for 15 years he was his honor by Mrs. G. A. Rlx, has a comparatively obscure figure in been appointed adjudicator at the ( the maelstrom of the grain pits Royal National Eisteddfod to be ; He was prosperous, but not noted, held at Machynlleth, Wales, in His spectacular coups began In August of next year. .the years immediately following This festival is the oldest In tlw j.tne worm war. one oi nis most world, its origin dating back over , famous was in July corn In 1924. two thousand years. It Is said w!Hls profits were estimated at $1,-have existed when the Celts were 500,000 to $2,000,000. Shortly after cohauered bv the Romans nrloi ! wards he made a greater clean-up In wheat. On "Ground Floor" He transferred .his attention to the stock market, getting In "on LAST BIG PARTY OF INDIANS DUE HERE TOMORROW ! VANCOUVER, June 25: (CP) One hundred and eighty Indians from Hazelton left here aboard the steamer . Flag Day Comes To Close With Wannamaker was chairman in charge of the dance and Jack Cobb presided at the door. Elderly Chief Justice Quits the ground floor" before the peak! Sir William Mulock Announces of hysteria in 1928 and 1929. Hej Resignation as Head of Ontario headed a trading group known as I Court of Appeal the "Big Ten," which, with an- other syndicate, frequently was credited with buying and selling on the New York Stock Exchange of the davs when trad the on some Dr. E. D. Kindle, Ottawa, of TORONTO, June 25: (CP) Sir William Mulock, 92-year old chief jhalf of all Ihe stocks turned over f 0ntarlo justlce the Court f A peal, today announced his reslg nation. anrt mg volume n recora peaiw. federal Geological Survey , nm-tv rnn.istincr of .1 w Hnadlev 1 Single deals earned Cutten as 4 of Kamlpops and J. H. Radcllffc nlSh as $10,000,00. It was said, manipulator of market prices. He !and A. F. Klllln of Vancouver L,llte au uie Breai' aiK.et piuugcn,; lermea nimseii a -casn Drain after havlnir been In the citv for wnse success aepenas upon , merchant and dirt farmer" and In the past week, are leaving today secrecy, Cutten said nothing. ithe western suburban district of . : : i i iln a Ilat-bottomed boat, wnlcn "v .V --,vh.8 fu uiWw uu opian prisoners oi war u"fthev have obtalned for Terrace in concerning his philanthropies, said 800-acre place which, he insisted 322 were reieasea uy me nana. . . by his intimates to have been con- i was not an "estate." but a farm siuerauie, luuay uiwtcus ui uueiyn j tnat paid lis own way. play golf on a municipal course j in the markets, he said, he wai donated , by Cutten In the year 'an Investor, trading on the basis when a million was a bagatelle, j 0f statistical Information and he He retained Charles ("Chick") 'prided himself on being an hao-Evans to .lay it out, 'ltual "bull," meaning that he was The congregation of the Angll-fa buyer, rather than a seller, of can Church which Cutten attended i stocks and grains, as a boy are called to worship byl Yet in February, 1935, the fed- a carillon, he Imported from Eur- eral eraln futures administration ope at a cost of more than $30,000. disbarred him from trading In The Cuttens were childless andany market In the United States Mrs. Cutten, eschewing society as 0n the eround that he had manlo- such, devoted much of her time ulated wheat prices downward, to Infant welfare projects. Shelcutten obtained court orders stlf-gave generously to orphanages, ; nng the decree, day nurseries and similar lnstltu- Several years before he had an-tions. Their city home on Chi- nounced his intention of trans- cago's "gold coast," the Lake,, erring his market operations to Shore Drive, was used only oc- caslonally for entertaining. Habitual "Bull" Cutten abhorcd the popular be the Winnipeg exchange. He said then that "over regulation" had effectually ended the Chicago Board of Trade as a "free and lief that he was a speculator or J open market." SALVAGE DELAYED Prince George last night for Capt. W. P. Armour returned to Prince Rupert on the last lap port' this morning from Boxer of a 1500-mile Journey from their homes to the Skeena Impossible to Release Vancouver Tug From Boxer Reef Until Higher Tides Reef near Butedale with the sal vage boat Algle, reporting failure River fishing grounds where so far to ;take the Vancouver tug they will be employed for the D.B.M, off the rocks where she summer. They are the last of piled up at a high tfde this week four parties totalling 700 who while engaged in towing Queen have been brought around via Charlotte Island logs to Ocean Jasper Park and Vancouver Falls. Higher tides on July 3 or 4 owing to the railway tie-up are being awaited before another out of Prince Rupert. Picture Party Cancels Trip attempt is made to free the D.B. M, The vessel is leaking slightly but Is believed to be in no immediate danger. The smaller salvage tug Daly, which was also called to assist in the salvage of the D.B.M., h?s proceeded to Ivory Island to pick up and return to port with a scow which was used recently in takln? building material for the new Illness of Carole Lombard Prevents lighthouse to be built at Ivory Isl- Trip to Ketchikan On Location HOLLYWOOD, June 25: Plans ;o. take the cast of the picture -Spawn of the North" to Ketchikan, Alaska, on location were abandoned yesterday on account of the jlness of Carole Lombard, one ol the heads of the cast, who Is suffering from anaemia. and by Mitchell & Currie. IS COMING TO ISLANDS "Beagle," Explored the Patagonlan Archipelagoes, passed and repassed Cape Horn and visited the home of the Yachan Indians, most primitive of the earth's peoples. National Railways and Steamships, an old acquaintance, Mr. Burg re ceived a variety of Information on his forthcoming trip and visited with Captain D, McKlnnon, ss. Prince Charles, which makes the scenic Queen Charlotte Islands run lor tne uanaaian Nauonai Steamships. Marseilles Ship Strike is Ended Sailors Win Complete Victory Tie-up is Brought to Close On Wednesday MARSEILLES. France, June 25; The seamen's strike, which has tied up shipping of this port this week, came to an end yesterday. REPUBLICAN CHIEF SURE National Chairman Declares Election is "In the Bag" For Republicans This Year WASHINGTON D.C., June 25: Arriving here yesterday, John Hamilton, chairman of the Republican national committee,' predicted that the presidential election was "in the bag" for the Republicans The Grand Old Party, he declared, would carry all but six or seven states. The entry of a third party, he felt,, would be all for the benefit of the Republicans. Hamilton stated that Republican headquarters would be moved next week to Chicago. ROBINSON CHAIRMAN Veteran Senator and Staunch New Dealer to Guide Philadelphia Convention PHILADELPHIA, June 25: The veteran Senator Joseph T. Robinson of Arkansas was yesterday elec- ted permanent chairman of the Democratic national convention Noled Explorer and Writer Nov f here. 0ne of the chlef champions In Vancouver On Way North of President Franklin D. Roosevelt ' I and the New Deal, Senator Robin- VANCOUVER, June 25:-An in- son made ,, fltthtlnB SDeech jtcfesting visitor at the Canadian jafter beln cho,en to tha i I 1 r V.I V. n a I lycrterday was Amos Burg, famed i National Geographic Magazine I writer, explorer and lecturer whose hair-raising adventures in the E;aU1a nwA'sutn seas have been witnessed by lull IVY aiICJWaiH.vnhTn1 Smdrof travel motion picture enthusiasts. This summer he will make motion picture stories m The Elks' Flag Day celebration Aiaska and British Columbia's on Tuesday came to a close With a QUeen Charlotte Islands for re-very enjoyable dance in the Moose i iease through one of the large Hall, about eighty couples being in ( Hollywood organizations. He also auenaance. music was Dy unarne . pians 0n writing a number ol Balagno's Orchestra. Walter 8mlth travel articles In which the waters was master of ceremonies and'of British Columbia will danclne was in full swing from lolnrnmlnpnce. manshlp. He declared that, notwithstanding all charges to the contrary, "President "Roosevelt had adhered f aithfully to the Democratic platform as laid down at the nntlnnnl Annn.nttni. I, f Vlnnrm In 193Z. He raked the Republican 1936 platform and Its interpretation by Oovernor Alfred' M. Landon, presidential candidate, from' top to bottom. One of the features of yesterday's session of the convention was the demand by Senator Lewis receive B" Schwellenbach of Washington oi inclusion oi a pianic along tne ! p.m. until 2:30 a.m. At midnight de- Mr. Burg is sailing north In hlsjlines of the Townsend old age pen- llclous refreshments were served sprit-rigged surf boat "Dorjun." aiu" " lkuukmk i-with the Junior Elks in charge of In this small craft he has retraced I form- Tne Washington delegation this lmnortant feature. Harrv nhnrlps Darwin's vovaees in thcalso advocated Inclusion of a plank for production for use as proposed by Upton Sinclair of California. It is unlikely that such planks will be included. President Roosevelt Is due to ar- Through G. A. McNicholl, gen-1 rive here late Saturday to make eral passenger agent, Canadian formal acceptance of renomlnatlon at a great rally In Franklin Field. Donations And Loans Made To Rupert Museum Loans and donations to the Museum for the month of June received by the custodian were: R. G, Cunningham, collection of carved black slate totems (loaned), I Port Esslngton; caribou horns, na ted by T. W. Collart; two Haldah black slate guest dishes, Haldah hat, Indian sopolite spoon, Indian coffin and skull of adopted dog, two spider crabs, two Indian carvings, loaned by Canon W. F. Rush-brook; Indian mark and stone Implements, donated by Dr. R. G. The men won a complete victory; Large; Indian skull and stone im in their demands. Red flags were , plements, donated by H. Ponder, hauled down from the masts of a Dlgby Island; Indian pestle, do- number of ships following the jading of the strike. Fred Perry Wins In Third Round Defeated John Van Ryn of Phlla delphla in Straight Sets At Wimbledon Today nated by Mrs. W. E. Fisher; Indian I fish club, Indian bone club, Indian trade hatchet from Maine, donated by C, Sllker; piece of carved slate found at Dodge Cove, Dlgby Island, In clam shell bed! earlv Prince Rupert five cent trade to-,ken, donated by W. O. Vigar; whale harpoon, old rifle, donated by Rev. Canon W F. Rushbrook; i whale harpoon (gun harpoon), do-. nated by A. J. Prudhomme. WIMBLEDON, Eng., June 25! -d Perry, defending his Vancouver Wheat all-England tennis singles tltl, de- VANCOUVER, June 25: (CP) feated John Van Ryn of Phlla- Wheat' was quoted at 81 4c on the iielphla In the third round today Vancouver Exchange yesterday and 6-3, 6-2, 6-0. was unchanged today. 9) . 4 51 t H' 31