PROVINCIAL LIBRARY CTOi ' A, B.C. Today's Weather Tomorrow's Tides (8 A.M.) mm ;"High ... 3:40 ; -.upert v art cloudy, light a.m. 19.0 ft. SOL . L vlnd; barometer. 3004- 16:34 pjn. 19.0 ft. tern 63; sea smooth. Low . .10:14 am. 2.9 ft. 22:35 pan. 7.1 ft. NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER Vol. XXV., J. 5 "A, PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., MONDAY, JUNE 22, 1936 PRICE: 5 CENTS WARNING THROWN OUT FOR SENATE BOMBS AND FIRE Twelve Thousand Dollar Damage Done as Result Of Series of Incidents Three Schools, a Sawmill and Community Hall Victims Of Outrages on Saturday Night in Villages West of Nelson NELSON, June 22: (CP) Three schools, a sawmill and a community hall were victims of bombs and fire Saturday night in Doukhobor communities west of here. The school at Glade was bombed, Appledale and Blueberry schools were partially destroyed, the sawmill of Max Buskin at Terry's was destroyed and the community hall at Glade was partially destroyed. The total damage is estimated at about $12,000. No arrests have yet been made. PUT ASIDE ROOSEVELT Al Smith Said to be Identified With Insurgent Move At Convention NEW YORK, June 22: Five prominent Democrats headed by Alfred ' E. Smith Sunday suggested the putting aside of President Franklin D. Roosevelt and the substitution of some "genuine" Democrat in a statement addressed to delegates to the National Democratic Convention opening at Cleveland tomorrow. ' MEETING IS I i CALLED OFF I De Valera Frowns So Army Demonstration in Free State Cancelled DUBLIN, June 22: In view of the stern government attitude the Irish Republican Army Sunday called off Its scheduled demonstration at Bodenstown. A concentration of troops, the largest ever staged in the Free State, encircled Bodenstown like an Iron ring- with tanks, sandbags and ambulances ready for action. The Republican army, a political organization, had planned to meet despite a government ban against any such activity. TEA PREFERRED LONDON, Junue 22: (CP)-Oor-lllas at the Zoo are fastidious Each morning and night they drink tea. They won't take anything else. 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 RAILWAY HEADS TO VISIT FLOOD AREA 4. 4 A, E. Warren, vice-president In charge of western lines, Canadian National Railways, with headquarters at Winni-, peg; II. A. Dixon, chief en- glneer, Winnipeg, and B. T. Chappell, general superlnten- dent, Vancouver, will arrive at Kltwanga by motor car on the railway line Wednesday In the course of a tour of Inspection to the flood-damaged section 4 rf 4Vi foil it Is not ex- A kill. A Utl V tJ v pectcd they will endeavor to come through to Prince Ru- pert. NEW MILL GOING IN Martin Miller Establishing Plant Near Galloway Rapids Bridge Martin Miller, formerly mill wright for the Big Bay Lumber Co. when it operated its big sawmill in Prince Kupert and more recently identified with the Bill-mor Spruce Mills Limited is establishing a small sawmill in a bay on Kaien Island just to the north of Galloway Rapids Bridge. Construction of the plant is now well under way. It will be connec-I ted by road with the Kaien Island Highway. Lumber will be cut for the local market and shingle making is also to be engaged in. Halibut Arrivals Summary American 36,000 pounds, 7.5c and 6c and 7.93 and 6c Canadian 49,000 pounds, 6.4c and 5.2c to 6.6c and 5.5c. American Friendlv. 15.000. 7.5c and 6: Cold Storage. ProsDerlty. 21.000. 7.9c and 6:. Royal. Canadian Margaret, I, 15,000, 6.5c and 5.5c, Cold Storage. Cape Spear, 10,500, 6 5c and 5.5c. Cold Storage. Pair of Jacks, 11,000, 6.5c anfl 5.5c. Cold Storage. Manralice. 6.000. 6.4c and 5.ZC. Atlin. Mother II, 11,500 pounds, 6.6c and 5.5c. ARMY IN CONTROL riot is Reported Uncovered In Bolivia BUENOS AIRES, June 22: The army assumed complete control of the Bolivian government Saturday afternoon as a plot was discovered, said advices Sunday from La Paz. The subversive movement presumably was headed by the former President Boutlsta Saavedra. An army manifesto said It would govern the country with the collaboration of Chaco war veterans, organized workers and the ablest men in the country morally and intellectually. IN D0UKH0B0R COMMUNITIES ROOSEVELT LIFTS BAN 4 J Embargo on Export of War Ma terials From United States To 4 Italy-Ethiopia Raised 4 Not Recognized 4 4 4 So Says Eden Regarding Annexa 4 tionWhat is Canada Going to Do? 4 4 WASHINGTON, D.O, June 22: 4 President Franklin D. Roosevelt on Saturday revoked the embargo on 4 export from the United States of 4 war supplies to Italy and Ethiopia 4 as being belligerents in the Halo-Ethiopian 4 conflict. The ban on Americans travelling on vessels of 4 either of the belligerent nations was also lifted. The Italo-Ethioplan war has "ceased to exist" declared the Pre sident In lifting the embargoes and restrictions clamped on the two nations as a means of guarding American neutrality. Canada's Action OTTAWA, June 22: (CP) Premier King told the House of Commons that he would launch an Investigation Into preliminary forecasts by Rome that Canada would drop economic and financial sanctions against Italy. Annexation Not Recognized LONDON, June 22:' (CP) For-iign Secretary Anthony Eden told hp Wmisp nf nnmtrmnc tnHov that 1 .he British government does not recognize Italy's annexation of Ethiopia. Act of Heroism I At Grassy Bay l i Johnny Sunberg Saved Life of Tommy Ormiston From Drowning Sunday i Johnnv Sunbere has been re- celvlng plaudits for an act of hero- ism at the Women's Labor League picnic at Grassy Bay yesterday. It appears that young Tommy Or-mlson was out in a skiff which up- set, throwing him into the water. wim f inH ,,., ,, berg saw his plight and unhesl- tatlngly, leaped into the water and after some difficulty, rescued the other lad who had been down twice and Is said by spectators to have had a very close call from drowning, Congress Session Comes to Close House and Senate Rose Saturday Night at Washington """"" , ' J, ;7. The seventy-fourth Congress of the United States came to a close early Sunday morning. A filibuster on the Duffy coal measure died In h. Senate. uiv uu vviittv; aiuuoc uvw- steps was a bundle of bills that In- j eluded the new revenue and relief measures. The session had lasted six months. The House idled through a few final bills then somberly finished Its business. The long embattled tax bill estimated by its friends to be potential of $800,000,000 revenue cleared the last barrier. Senate gave approval of a conference report Saturday. , 4 HALIBUT MARKETING BOARD CARRIES ON; 4 UNDER B. C. PLAN . 4 A halibut marketing scheme for r this coast sWiar to the one that is at (present being 4 operated under? the federal 4 Natural Products Marketing 4 Act was recentlj submitted to 4 the provincial authorities and 4 accepted for inclusion under 4 provincial marketing leglsla- 4 4 tion. This makers Prince Ru- 4 pert directly Interested in the 4 recent finding of the Natural 4 Products Marketing Act un- 4 4 constitutional by the Supreme 4 Court of Canadaj as well as the 4 proclamation of jthe provincial 4 marketing legislation this 4 week. The local halibut mar- 4 ketlng board continues to op- 4 erate without interruption un der federal authority. 4444444444 STARTLING Tr CTlTA f"vT7 I Tii! IlVllllll vri j Brings Blonde Into 16-Year Am-. brose Small Mystery Case Action Over Estate Disappearance of Theatre Man Subject of Much Speculation TORONTO, June 22: (CP) It took a little more-. than sixteen butL a mysterious blonde has finally been Injected into the Ambrose Small case Since the astonishing disappearance of the slight millionaire theatre-owner one December eve- nlng in 1919, just about every other possible angle to the bizarre mur-; der-without-a-corpse has been lugged In and now trie blonde. Patrick J. Sullivan; former pol-, iceman and one-time editor of a 'weekly sheet in Toronto, is the sponsor of the mystery lady whom j it tt i t ii ne aeswes as gooa-ioosing, i about 40 ld- about flve f1 '1V incu" " eHfc; BBHUU, ouna ana iair compiexiun. It was she, says the man who has taken an aggressive Interest in M'B.'"4 T! Tt Tu f, !.' wh0 delivered to him the alleged "" vf,,,;; nf h r husband. The so-called confession, two type-written pages, was signed "T. Small." The document was produced and read In court in the latest of legal proceedings revolving about the will of Theresa Small. She Inherited her husband's estate when long ago he was declared legally dead, but, reputedly through Sullivan's efforts, Small's sisters, Florence and Gertrude, obtained rr income from his estate. Mrs. Small died in October, 1925. Florence Small seeks to set aside estate is placed " at about $2,000.- V,tr ,H,,1 (Continued on D Page Two) f 4 C niXl ft i"T iPASSINfi OF VON BUEL0W German Foreign Secretary Dies Of Lung Trouble at Age of 51 BERLIN, June 22: Bernard W. Von Buelow, German Secretary of State for foreign affairs, died Sun day of complications from a lung Inflammation. He was fifty-one years old. STUDENTS PROMOTED List 0f successful Students at King J Edward FrA High irh erhnn, School Are A Announced King Edward High School promotions are announced as follows: Promoted to Grade VII Honors Joe Landrey, Maxlne s!fvTrsfde;TarJarRyMtad,Hn0ra tJi-jmn. p a,,, tw. '.Amey, Maisie Cameron, Vheima Davis, victor Dell. Hugh Forrest, Roland Fredriksen, Noreen Gibson, Mary Ellen Moore, Kay Muway. Adele Mussallem, John O'Neill, Lydia Pettlnuzzo, Hlro Yamanaka. Conditional pass Maurice Da- jvey, Robert Elkins, Kathleen For-tune, Florence Parker, Betty Wood. Promoted to Grade XI Honors Alma Dybhavn, Bertie O'Neill, Clara Ketchum, Ethel Cousins. Helen Valentine, Robert Manson, Sumacho Kanimochi, Alan Kergln, Helen Lakie, Harold Ponder, Peter Allen, Oeraldine !Cade' Maret Smith. promoted Fred Barber, Howard Beale, George Brown, Kitty Cam- eron, Winnie Cameron, Violet Cavenalte, Mary. Davey, ..Ljfoda Field, Robert Gibson. John Grim-son, William Hadden, Phyllis Ham-blln, Noriko Hayakawa, Hazel Hill, Harold Ivarson, Laura Jonasson, Nick Killas, Winnlfred King, Ru-lolph Lovstad, Ted Mills, Robert rforlson, Mary Orme, Charles Per-Uns. Lloyd Rice, Jim Schubert, ''dith Smith, Victoria Stamford, Hlromi Tanaka, Hlsao Tsumura, lean Watt. Philip Williamson, Dick Vinslow. i Promoted to Grade X Honors Hlrojl Yamanaka, Emily Christopher, Phyllis Hill-Tout, Mfred Wikdal, Annie Peterson, Kiyo Suehlro, Marie Sorenson, Malcolm Wilding, Mlmmy Johnson, Bertha Vuckovlch, Hazel Mastln, Hazel Lear, Norma Smith, Alex Ballle. Teni Tsumura. Hazen Han klnson, Robert Davie. Percy Knut- jon, Frances Daglish, Helen Green, Donald Fitch. Promoted Margaret Armstrong, Katherlne Baker, Eric Berner, Ethel Beynon, Peggy Blackhall, Emlle Blain, Edward Bolton, Billy Brown, Jean Cameron, Margaret Christensen, Angelo Christian, Ro Cromp, Sylvia Croxford, Tom Dal-zell, Dorothy Davies. Nancy Dawes, Violet Dell, Mlkl Dol, Muriel Eby, Terry Fortune, Josephine Gay, Joy Green, Shlzu Hamazaki, June Han-klnson, Norman Hebb, Nona Hodgson, Haruye Klhara, Maureen Klrk- patrick, Louis Knutson, Evan Love, Ralph Morin, Dorcas Maclnnes, Sada Nakamoto, Donald Norton, Bob Parsons, Robert Rudderham, Marie Schaeffer, Mary Sievert, As- laug Skaland, Hjordls Skaland, Jorun Skog, Ralph Smith, Gordon Stamford, Dorothy Stewart, Jean Storrle. Jennie Strand, Joan Watt, Dorothy Wllkle. Passed Grade X Commercial Honors Emllle SkatteboL Elsie Davis, Lois Ponder. Passed Lillian Croxford, Jessie Glllls, Cathie McMeekin, Michael Montesano. Promoted to Grade X Commercial ' Honors Eileen Yates, Mayko Izuml, Vivian Wrathall, Antoinette Blain, Cathie Eastman, Nora Posttolu, Olga Zellsko, Dorothy Blake, Mollie Ellison, Amaranth Bury, Alice Hanson, Peggy Steen. Promoted Jack Campbell, Terry Orimble. Frank Montesano. Emma jwhlffen, Sabra Woodhouse. Suggests Upper Chamber Go Easy In Killing Legislation T C Wnnrkwnrth ;Ooasworth, f t. f U F . T Leader, onrlni Says C,vc r,nmi Government will Will Have Support of People Power of OTTAWA, June 22: (CP) kenzie King told the Senate the next month or two on its legislation, of an important nature originating in the House of Commons. J. S. Woodsworth, leader of the Co- operative Commonwealth Federation, advised the govern- ment tnat the people would any steps to curb the power elected chamber. PLANE HITS GREAT SHIP .British Royal Air Force Machine Strikes Normandie's Mast Stay No One Hurt GOSPORT, Eng., June 22: (CP) A Royal Air Force bombing plane struck the stay of a mast and crashed on the deck of the great. French liner Normandie while flying across the bows of the vessel today. No one was hurt. The Normandie was in Cowes Roads disembarking passengers. DROWNED IN J0UTH Three Fatalities in Water on Lower Mainland Over Week-End VANCOUVER, June 22; (CP) rhree were drowned on the lower mainland over the week-end. Police today recovered the body jf thirteen year old Tommy Can-ham of North Vancouver from the water of Ambleside Beach, West Vancouver. He had been missing since he went swimming yesterday. Lawrence Toulet was drowned in Englyish Bay Sunday. Francis Fors, logger, was drowned at Stave Lake on SHnday when he fell into the water from a boom of logs. Hundred Nazis Sent to Prison Stiff Sentences Imposed For Trea sonable Plot KATOWICE, Poland, June 22: A Polish court dealt out sentences of from eight months to ten years Saturday to nearly one hundred Nazis accused of parti cipating in a treasonable plot lo' re-unite upper Silesia with Ger many. ' GETS ( THREE MONTHS J John James Duffy, alias James Golden, was sentenced to three months' Imprisonment by Magis trate McClymont Saturday afternoon for vagrancy by begging and was given an additional fourteen days for assault. BIRTH NOTICE At Fort Erie, Ont., June 20, to Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Mcllralth (nee oeorgina iris Hunter R. N.) a daughter, Patricia Jean. in Any Move to Curb Senior Body Premier William Lyon Mac-, today it had better reflect for refusal tn nass onvprnmpnt. support the government in of the Senate to thwart the HONOR TO WAR DEAD Decoration Day Observed With Ceremonies at Cenotaph And At Fairview Cemetery Decoration Day was observed here yesterday under the auspices of Queen Mary Chapter, Imperial Order, Daughters of the Empire, with about seventy-five persons present at the ceremonies in honor of the memory of the Glorious Dead of the Great War. Ex-service men, members of the Women's Auxiliary of the Canadian Legion and of the Daughters of the Empire were prominent among those in attendance. After placing a wreath at the cenotaph, the gathering proceeded to Fairview Cemetery in donated cars. There was a brief but impressive service during which the soldiers' graves were decorated with flags and flowers. Mrs. J. E. Boddle, regent of Municipal Chapter, was in charge of this service and J. S. Wilson gave an impressive 'address. Bugler William Ranee played "The Last Post" and "Reveille." George Brown accompanied the hymns with cornet music. FIRED ON JAP SHIP Atmosphere in Orient is Stiil Tense; More Troops in Peiping PEIPING, June 22: Foreign residents of Peiping were startled when 3,000 Japanese troops with full war equipment suddenly entered the city to reinforce the garrison here. The appearance of the Japaness troops who paraded through the legation quarter caused ' many fears that the Japanese were tak ing over Peiping. Not since the Boxer Rebellion In 1900 have' so many foreign soldiers entered the ancient Capital of China. LONDON, June 22: (CP) Registered medical practitioners in the United Kingdom in 1935 were " . . e A.4 nem 1 I n n oo.ooj, or ooi more man in iyj. 4 4 4 COMMERCIAL PACT 4 BETWEEN GERMANY AND ITALY MADE 4-4 4 ROME. June 22: A commer- clal agreement between Ger- many and Italv was formed 4 4 yesterday, further cementing 4 f r!nrUtr roll tlnn KaI uroon Iia A two countries. w 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4