Noted British Aviator Is Over Atlantic Ocean Making New York to London Hop illX - ''Of- CAPTAIN JAMES M0LL1S0N ada to Fall into new Hands At End of Week the hands of the new Car.' ion ai mianignt ounaay. ine inftA .(11 1- - 1 11 I ILL a- 4 iiui vi i v ijx V- lj.wv. liCW PUiiViva Will IV Is the nr.nv chairman of th; M T. J . n t i . fhlch Will flinr.tlnn In an nrtvlsnr"' rge of radio broadcastinc '1 be Major W. E. Gladstone llltrv WAathpr ! way brought from England to the post of general Is Continuing Of Rockies tel!:l ir the ocnirtesy of r . ftinroroirwirai niimiii hi H La r ivuirrt. inia iotv" " s urn ,, ending s p.m. tomorrow). The pressure Is hlnh on rr,ru. alls fin tk. . i"c - "ic west coast. Moderate l)rlheast t.n ,! . x oudy "u'"'wii winas, pari Prince pr, . -"HVii, una aisirici mo- OSt -- ' -lunreusk' wuius, v imr and ml ANCIIOKAGE RAINFALL SIX AND HALF INCHES IN TWENTY- FOl'R HOURS I SEWARD, Oct. 28: On ac- Can- j f count of washouts due to two days of torrential rains, the Seward electric light and power plant will be out of j commission for several days. i Anchorage reports a record of l six and a half Inches of rain for a twenty-four hour period ending yesterda. 4 4 HERE ON PULP MILL PROJECT F. L. Buckley Arrives Today Ac companied by Construction 3Ien and Engineers Here In connection with the local pulp mill development, F. L. Buckley arrived on the Prince Rupert this morning from Vancouver following a trip to New York. He Is accompanied by J. P Walsh of the Walsh Construction Co., Vancouver; G. W. Boyd of the Northern Construction Co., Vancouver; W. J. Clarke of Quebec and L. A. DeGuere of Wlscon-Rfinlrtc WITnsin Mr. Clarkd " . m.., ... i ro in Montana Snow nfi Mp npGuere are enelneers. HELENA, Montana. On.t. 28 fit Zero Weathor U nrpvalllne Montana a1 t.ho flrnf stmn we season r- ui Ule Rocky Mountai-.s " there are blizzards In Do i- the later having been here befoiu. They will be spending the few days in town. Vol. XXV., No. 253. ;mg the isntish Isles and Northern Europe mounted ('to thirty-six today. Four-keen were renorted to have NEW YORK, Oct. 28: (CP) Attired in a dinner iac- perished when the Latvian "J 14tllii bl'UU y - ti ill r-.TLii 1 1 iiiL'iiL li f i ji ii ii ii ii i vi ii n :i l-rifi i rv t irt nri ri iirH i h i mi i ii i iii w f") V AAV. KJI L VJJ aLC. 11 1 111.. niiii: lu e&iuijii&ii a mailt in st vpnrppn nrm a halt hmivo iuuh nil me ul-sl VjUhsl ui it t i-it T-k . . . nil i mi mi i i . - Hf nllinn'u m it 1 1 1 "V i S U n limn tlVtAM unit;, iuuiu&uu is ubinir a new monomane wnicn ne nnr- BJIf lucinwiiv ; aa iqw- 1 XT T 1. T i. 11 l , . n .. . - . 4- t.n..n n n ? ,wl nn,1 . marine traffic has been paralyzed by the storm with shipping in the North Atlantic and Irish and North Seas at a virtual standstill. Coastguards are endeavoring to inswer numerous nleas for assistance. In the-clty tf 01a"i'gTw yest"erdSy two persons Were killed' as a result of the storm and forty were injured. A school boy lost his life when struck by slate flying from a roof. A man was electrocuted by a flying wire, PURSE SEINERS QUIT FISHING Belllngham and Anacortes Operators Find Present Prices Give Them no Profit BELLINGHAM. Wash.. Oct. 28: Declaring that they cannot operate profitably at present prices for salmon, purse seiners of Anacortes and Belllngham have decided to quit fishing operations. Paid Fraternal Visit Some fifteen members of the Terrace Oddfellows' Lodge arrived on last night's train from the interior and paid a fraternal visit to the local 'lodge. The principal feature was a banquet at which speakers were Noble Grand' J. Cre-tlen and T. E. Brooks of Terrace and Noble Grand Charles Harra-dlne and R. J. Keron and J. L. Mcintosh of Prince Rupert. Most of the v sltors will return home on this evening's remng's train II. F. MacLeod, who has been visiting with a brother near Leth- ncxt: bridge, Alberta, returned to U'C city on last night's train. Japanese Wholesale Fishing In International Waters Is Menace, U. S. Official Finds SEATTLE, Oct. 28: (CP) Frank T. Bell, United States Commissioner of Fisheries, upon his return from Alaska yesterday, forecast international com-nlications if Japanese fishermen continue taking Son outside the three-mile limit in Bristol Bay. Mr Bell said that six huge floating canneries', 15,000-tonner carrying a crew of six hundred, one a ffchPfl international waters this season and, if such unregulated, unrestricted operations continued, Alaska salmon would become extinct. T 1 At. 1 -J? 1 i ii .... nnnlr Incjf AlrvVit tnlsinrrl; PHMniNTrW Tint i ... . "... . ' i J a ,.c :ct. iTor or the thp. seconri second time tims witr c wnt-uii HiuiMouii ittcivcu a uauierain irom Amy, ' . . . , . t . m.. . J v ' I Air Air Qnn and r lint iiv.kijic diiuho me naiia-ziLJiuun; niur poinimg f Ms nrnnnsprl rnnfp nn n man i? Anin direction; 1 ALBERTA DEFAULT Pra'rie Province Appeals to Bank Of Canada for Money Needed By November 1 (CPi - within a year It appears certain tlhat Alberta wi1 default on maturity1 of bonded indebtedness; On November ,1 $1,-. 250,000 becomes due, and there V only $336,000 available to meet if Prsm'.er Aberhart sought to borh.y. the difference fronts the Domlnlox government ban' Han. C. A Duni !ngr finance, ministers, turned hln i down with ifii expTanatTofi 'th Ottawa could loan to provinca only for relief purposes, author" for other purposes having explrrd Premier Aberhart Is now maklnr an appeal to the Bank of Canada In the spring Alberta defaulted on a $3,300,000 maturity wnen n was refused a loan by Ottawa because It would not subscribe t 'he federal loan council tdsa by which Ottawa would have had -5 measure of supervision over It finances. SURPLUS Oil CASH Relief and Part of Sinking Fund, However, Not Taken Into Account Record VICTORIA, Oct. 28: (CP) In the fiscal year ending March 31 last, British Columbia had a cash surplus of $2,619,175 on operating account, Hon. John Hart, minister of finance, revealed when he tabled public accounts in the Legislature today soon after the opening of the special fall session. The surplus Aor not consider relief costs nor does it provide for all sinking funds. Revenue during the year reached a new record figure of $25,862,077 while expenditure was $23,242,901. U. S. Steel Has I Best Earnings In Many Years NEW YORK, Oct. 28' (CP) United States Steel yesterday reported the best earnings In six years. For the first time the full dividend on preferred stock lias been declared. Card of Thanks George Dungate and family wish to convey sincere thanks and appreciation to all friends for their many kindnesses to, the late Mrs. Dungate' and' cars donated and expressions of sympathy shown durlne their recent bereavement and "especially!' thehtfrslng- stall of the Prince Rupert Hospital. NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER PRINCE 'RUPERT, B.C., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1936 GERMANY'S ENVOY ' . LONDON. Oct. 28: Joachim von RibbentroD. German am- bassador to London, speaking ejL c r 17 here, made a stinging attack "Unly Une French upon Soviet Russia. The only Plane on Oriental real danger to peace in Eur- Trip Left in Air opc, declared von Rlbbcntrop, , ' twaj Communism. Late Telegraphs Sir Ed;ar Britten Dies SOUTHAMPTON, EnR, Commodore Sir Ed?ar Britten, com-mahder of the great British iner Queen Mary, died today. Sir Edgar, who .was sixty-two years of age, suffered a stroke just before the Queen Mary was due to sail for New. York. Dan Bulger Wins NEWMARKET, En Sir Abe Bailey's Dan Bulger, the, established favorite, today won the Cambridgeshire Stakes. Daytona was second and Laureat third. New Members Heard VICTORIA The Liberal government's successful candidates t In last summer's by-electlon LE BOURGET, France, Oct. 28: ---niy one of three planes which left here at the. first of the week oil a long distance flight to Saigon, prench Indo-Chlna, is still in the air. Ons crashed and one having encountered mechanical trouble, returned to Le BoUrget. The other js still making good progress on the ; 13.V.00 mile Journey. DISPUTE IS ; UNSETTLED i looks Like Walk-Out of Pacific j Coast Waterfront Employees r Truce Expires Tonight Mark Afc Connelly of 'Omlrieca- i:eie 'suddenly ' I Mi and Howard Forester of Van-couver-Burrard today moved and seconded respectively the address in reply to the Speech from the Throne. DICTATOR STALIN IS GRAVELY ILL; AN FRANCISCO, Oct. 28: ' rnferenoes being held by Rea Admiral Harry Hamlett of the federal Maritime Commission wlh a view to reaching a settlement of differences between shipowner and nnlon waterfront workers, 'which threatens to precipitate a general tie-up at the expiry of th extended truce period tonlnht tension of the truce aajournea yester !day until Thursday. Meantime, Ed jward S. McGready, assistant sec cretary of labor, was continuing 'eleventh hour efforts to preven the tie-Up either through a settle' Jment of the differences or an ex- Tninety-five percent in favor of a (.Walk-out on or after tonight un- less their demands are met by the HEART TROUBLE shipowners. The big Pacific sh'p operators including, the Matso-i ? PARIS, Oct. 2; (CPJ The and Dollar Lines have refused to newspaper Le Matin said to- t .meet the edmands but are wlll- day that Dictator Joseph Sta- ; lng to renew the present con-J" lin of Russia was gravely . ill tracts. Some twenty-seven ship with heart trouble and that .companies, either foreign or At-; reorganization of the Moscow , Ian tic Coast concerns, at the end regime was already planned, 'of the week capitulated to the ThP stntpment of Le Matin is demands. in line with strange state- ments that Stalin is reported to have made Jo newspaper correspondents In Moscow, b one being to the effect that gard him as "officially dead." . NEW YORK STOCK PRICES RECOVER Firming up Yesterday Following Weakness Due to Pre-Eleclion Activity NEW YORK Oct. 28: (P) New. York stock prices firmed up again' yesterday after several days of weakness attributed to pre-election LANDON IN PITTSBURG PITTSBURG, Oct. 28: Governor Alfred M. Landon, Republican candidate for President, of the United the world miaht as well re- States, addressed an enthusiastic audience ,of 50.000 people here last night. He continued his attack on the Roosevelt administration for 'alleged violation of the constltu- activity. There was recovery after . Tomorrow's Tides High 0:07 ajn. 20.6 ft. 12:12 p.m. 23.1 ft. Low 6:05 ain. 5.4 ft. 18:46 p.m. 1.5 ft. rRlCEi 5 CENTS MADRID IN DEPLORABLE CONDITION DEATH TOLL IN GREAT STORM IN OLD COUNTRY MOUNTS TO THIRTY-SIX Fourteen Lose Lives When 'Two Dozen Women Steamer Founders Off In Field; Few Are West Coast of Scotland Conceded Chance Fifteen Perish When Lightship Capsizes. LONDON, Oct. 28 WASHINGTON. 'D.C.. Oct. 28: Theie are twentyVthree women In . he field for Congressional honors (CP) -at the national; elections next The death toll as a result Tuesday. Six are Republicans arid 01 the storm which is lash-,our Democrats. Only four or five of these women at the outside are given a chance' of $elng elected. K Ld l o : Civil Population, in Rags And DANGER DANGER TO TO PEACE. PEACE, SAYS SAYS ' 7 Starving, Awaiting City's Fall . r 4: Emergency Rationing Of Food is Instituted Fascists Are Making Plans For Triumphal Entry Of Capital. MADRID, Oct. 28 i (CP) t Besieged and swarming with ragged, starving and hopeless refugees, Madrid today began vigorous rationing of food to its million and a half people as an emergency provisioning committee under Civil Governor Carlos Rubiera worked day and night. At Navalcarnero the" insurgent command has drawn up plans for a triumphal drive into Madrid as forces are being consoli- . dated ten miles from the city. Today's Weather (Government Telegraph ) Prince Rupert Part cloudy, Jght fog; northerly vind; barometer, 30.30; tempjprature, 42; sea smooth.' ' ' , - v ; Langara Island Partly cloudy,-light southwest wind; barometer, 30.14; temperature, 49; light, swell. Triple Island Cloudy,, light southeast wind, sea smooth. Dead Tree Point Clear, calm; barometer, 30.28; temperature, 35; s-ea smooth. Prince George Clear, southwest wind, six miles per hour; baro meter, 30.22. Victoria Cloudy, north wind, four miles per hour; barometer, 30.23. Vancouver Cloudy, calm; barometer, 30.28. Estevan Cloudy, easterly wind, four miles per hour Terrace Cloudy, calm, 42. Alice Arm Cloudy, calm, 38. Stewart Cloudy, calm, 42. Hazelton Foggy, 30. Smlthers-Foggy, calm, cpld. Burns Lake Foggy, calm, 23. KII.LED IN AUTO CRASH SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 28: Mrs. Eva Sweet, formerly of Missoula, Mon., was killed in an automobile tion and extravagance and playing crash, Her husband, a well known of politics. football star, was badly Injured. u :r;..-;,rrT Wails of Scheme Are Annbunccd-Provincial Govern- U1C aVClrtSC ...... down 1.28 and utilities, .80. - Halibut Arrival , American Summary -11,000 pounds, and 7c. Canadian 29,000 pounds, 10.7c and 6c to 9.7c and 6c. American Augusta, 11.000, 10.7c and 7c, At Un. Canadian Capella, 11,000, 9.7c and 6c At Un. Southend, 16,000. .9.3c Cold Storage., .; FARM EMPLOYMENT PLAN IS RATIFIED AND WILL BE OPERATED IN PROVINCE ment Does Not Like it But Will Give it a Trial VICTORIA, Oct. 28: (CP) The farm improvement and employment plan sponsored by the federal and provincial governments to enable unemployed men to go on ..iarms ior me winter nas Deen rauiieu oy ootn ments and will go into operation i,n British Columbia, Hon. George S. Pearson, minister of labor, announced todav. M . : : Youths over sixteen years of age, "unemployed and without means of support," will be eligible. They wllf be placed on farms and paid an averaee of $7.50 ner month. Thev and 6c, will be furnished with transporta-- ( , tlon to the farms and given $3 to- Bum, 2,000, 8.9c and. 6c, Cold .wards the cost of winter working Storage. . ' ' : . "-j-dothes. The farmer who 'accepts the labor will be given $5 per month as a payment toward board. Dominion and provincial governments wll ldivide the costs equally, The provincial government had previously made It clear that-it does not consider the plansatls-factory but is willing to, co-operate In trying It-out, '" ..yrf'.fti