Porcupine Advance, 22 Oct 1936, 2, p. 1

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Mr. Mrs. Klimkowich are Committed for Trial Mrs. . 815.97 ~ her ho ning of ing to ger po against lice cof faced : gession goneral‘s offic prosecution. C Hitch, Consta ronto, and I the Hollinger excluded at t mon "in fairn Had to Both court trial heard single mon. excluded at the suggeston of Mr. Comâ€"| mon "in fairness to the accused." Had to Break Down Door Telling the story of the raid on the house at the rear of 157 Eim street north, Chief Hitch said: "Constables Peters, Hayes and myself went to the; door at the end of the house, on lane. The blind on the door was down.‘ We knockz=d. Klimkowich lifted the blind to one side and at that time Petâ€" ers and Hayes shouted ‘Open the door ; wWe‘re the police,, and they showe? | their badges . . . Klimkowitch dropp® \l the blind and walked away. At thri time I thought they might make an: effort to dispose of whatever was in the house so I left the back and went to ‘the bedroom window at the . I saw Mrs. Klimkowich come to the window carrying a rag bundle which she set down on something near the window. Then she flipped up the winâ€" dow, grabbed the rag bundle and went to throw it out. I trisd to grab her wrists ‘3ut missed and grabbed the bunâ€", dle instead. As soon as she felt the weight of the pull she heaved it out and the gold buttons fell all over." Six Quart Basket of Gold The Hollinger officer produced a sixâ€" quart basket full of white bags, These he deposited with resounding thuds on the magistrate‘s table. _ _ l Continuing with the story of the arâ€" rests, Chief Hitch said that Constable Johnston, another one of the provincial men who had ibeen sent up here from Toronto with a search warrant for Klimkowich‘s house, arrived at his side and helped pick up the gold. The other officers had gained enâ€" trance to the back of the house by smashing the door down, and the two officers who had the gold went in the front door. Inside they saw Mr. and Mrs. Klimkowich, two other women and a child. Chisf Hitch asked Mrs. Klimâ€" kowich: "What are you doing here?" "I‘m the lady of plied. "Why did you throw that stuff the wndow? I nearly caught your a "No person touched my arm." replied. No Doubt of Identity Mr. Common interrupted Chief Hitch‘s story here to ask: "Is there any doubt in your mind at all that this is the woman who threw the stuff out the window?" "Absolutely no doubt at all," the chief replied. Constable Hayes had found one small gold "button" in the bedroom and Constable Peters had found a small package of native gold in a drawer in the kitchen. The officers also found what appeared to ke a set of kitchen scalesâ€"but they found them on a shelf in a clothes closet. an and Wife Given Preliminary Hearing on Charge of IHiegal Possession of Gold. Quantity of Gold, Said to be Worth $15,815.97, Produced in Court. W. B. Common, K.C., of Attorneyâ€"General‘s Dept., Conducts Prosecution Kerr The two women found in of Saturday to Chief C. F police force nst her and ‘s, Mich 7 worth home a of Sati ecution. Chief h, Constawble o, and 1. °L Hollinger imir ast netr court by Magistra the evidence preliminary i solicitor 0 days, are safe in Winnipeg and both appear to be onditien. For three weeks after they were lost, ations and then for another week their entire c quirrels which they had snared, and a few wizened ike squirrels?" Flight Lieut. Coleman was askeC aid: "in fact they tasted pretty good to us." of goldâ€""higt asked trial | hrough their . and ‘5oth we y Magistrate he evidence a LOST FLIERS TAKE UP DUTIES AGAIN 6 on â€" charge h of abou the i and Airc ake, N.W .T citor from the att ‘. Toronto, conduct aief witnesses were ble Alvin Peters, c Lainsbury, assay mine. All witnesse: Tue \W O rre KlimkOo gold ou f ha high Octobe Hitch who â€" inquir * from the house before couns ock wich t the _ commit Atkinson inst bot LA P hJ C 4 4A NiA when of g ille; ading on 3rd, ~the assa y e hrew $15,â€" window of i the eveâ€" d, accordâ€" he Hollinâ€" _ evidence id in poâ€" i the two legal posâ€" n 1€ of she reâ€" high harl edad f Chief [ Toâ€" aPM. om for who seph FPortey, R.CA.F s north of Edmonton and both appear to be Out at he leg thrown from the the Provincial p sealed and placed day morning it v linger where the thne mat ther in | the Un Kerr, getti: there tion. n before entry Could iDe gained TO ThE house. While standing at the window the chief had seen the younger of the two other women in the bedroom anc on entering the place he had "tolc them to sit down and shut up." One of the women was between 30 and 35 the chief judged, and the other wa. about 60. I. Lainsbury had spent 20 years al the assay office of the Hollinger, he I. Lainsbury had spent 20 years at the assay office of the Hollinger, he told Mr. Common when he took the ytand. Previous to that time he had custom assaying and smelter and yine work. Great Heavy Chunks of Gold He opened the bags one at a time kefore the court and drew out great heavy chunks of gold about the sizo ind shape of muffins. Some were largâ€" er, some small ahd flat. All looked more like poorlyâ€"moulded hrass than the gold they were proven to be. Bag No. ° contained $9,140.90 worth of the preâ€" cious stuff, 85 per cent. goldâ€"$29 an ounce. Bag No. 1 had one piece of gold larger than any of the others, and a few small pieces. Its contents were worth $6,075.07. These two groups o metal were the ons alleged by the crown to have been thrown from the window by Mrs. Klimkowich. No. 4 bag cortained a small brown parcel, inside of which was a second parcel which, when opened, revealed partlyâ€"treated ore. It had been hamâ€" mered flat and there were generous quantitis of laceâ€"like gold in the quartz. No. 2 bag contained a button said to have been found in the bedroom" of the Klimkowich place, valued at $530.80. Witness was confused someâ€" what by Mr. Common‘s inquiry as to whether the metal was worth more than 25¢ a pound. This question was asked because the information had alâ€" leged that ore of more than that valâ€" ue had been found. Samples had been taken from the buttons with a file, and from the packâ€" age of native gold by choosing what appeared to e an average piece, Mr. Lainsbury said. Handed Search Warrant in Toronto Constable Alvin Peters said he had been handed a search warrant in Toâ€" ronto to search the premises of Michael Klimkowich in Timmins at 157 Elm street north. He, three other provincial officers who had accompanied him from Toronto, and Chief Hitch had arrived about 100 yards from the Klimkowich place at about 745 that Saturday evening. They kept observaâ€" tion on the place for about an hour and had seen several people come and go. His evidence from then on followed much the same line as Chief Hitch‘s. He was asked by Mr. Commons to idenâ€" tify Klimkowich from the psople in the courtroom. After looking everyone over rather â€"carefully, Constable Peteérs (Continueg on Page Two) . go. His evidence from much the same line He was asked by Mr. tifv Klimkowich from ith Sria. i ba he the bu! The fore The JQorcupine Nopantre Â¥al “hie aid Klimkowict , the man a ocal police ged aul in \ Published at Timmines, Ont., Cansadea, Every MONDAY and THURSDA*Y W atrk | witne door h: entry C C t at whic 18 from the JSS sealed,. signed a at the mine, a aich it was wrap the window of t "Getting Dark‘ ssâ€"examination Hitch said tha " Mr. Bateman tness in reply t r had had to the [ness In 1 ‘ had hac y could hb standing seen the wiches were in and wife w lice station n there. The > window was police office, i1 in was who were found at after being lost for in excellent physica] riey existed on short 2t consisted of two berties. "How do you OK.,." He seals the f ches e four hed a the tak d and signed reply to a quesâ€" id to be smashed be gained to the z at the window, e younger of the the bedroom and ce he had "told d shut up." One office, > safe. ken to were and sampled, ned and placed ne, along with wrapped when v of the house. Dark" ition _ by Myr. E. that ‘It "was e allowed to > were taken a when the ‘he material vas taken to c2, packed, fe. On Monâ€" to the Holâ€" e broken in officers, the be wWas not Canadian and American fishermen, and thsir governments, have wrangled | over the respective rights in the North Pacific fishing area for years. There are, at the present time, two very effecâ€" tive treaties, the Halibut Treaty and lthe Ssockeye Treaty, under which both countries operate. In the formation of lthese treaties, however, they sesm to l have forgotten altogether about that other North Pacific powerâ€"Japan. What are her rights? is a question now causing widespread anxiety. Japanese Start Operations "She has none!" declares one Canâ€" adian fishery official. ‘"The fish belong to Canada and the United States since they have always caught them excluâ€" sively. As to salmon, they are hatched in Canadian and American rivers so there is no dxbpute or should be no disâ€" pute, as to whom they belong." The British Columbia‘s Salmon Industry Is Reported Threatened by the Japanese By JOHN B. TOMPKINS Central Press Canadian Correspondent Vancouver, B.C., Oct. 22nd.â€"As the greatest British Columbia salmon fishâ€" ing season in years draws to a close and the 1,500 fishermen of the FPraser River arca alone, count wages in excess of $1,000,000, fears are being felt here that Japan may put a stop to annual salmon runs from the ccean to the upper river spawning grounds. Rumours that the .fapanese plan to inâ€" vade the rich British Columbia and Alaska fishing areas with great floatâ€" ing canneries anchored ten to forty miles offâ€"shore in international waters are current along this coast from the state of Washington to Alaska. share of the great s Seiji Kondo, prof@esso Fisheries School at F declared before the L Relations Congress as mit?, Cal., that the velecped an internati0o scientific research on eries of the North Pa Japan,â€" though, seems determined to have what. it is felt, is her unrightful share of the great sea harvest. Dt. Seiji Kondo, professor of the Imperial Fisheries School at Hakodata, recently declared before the Institute of Pacific Relations Congress assembled in Yoseâ€" mits, Cal.. that there should be deâ€" veleoped an international programme of scientific research on the salmon fishâ€" mentâ€"weI extensive . the offâ€"sh momen ships 0 n maxkng Sumnels Survyeys,. i5 an excellent example of the modetrn Japanese floating cann‘try. An oilâ€" powered allâ€"steel vessel carrying a crew of 70, it has a capacity of 150 fuill cases of halves, or 14,.400 tins a day. It is equipped with machinery capable of packing salmon, tuna or any other fish. There is a reduction plant with a capaâ€" city of five tons per day besides a small freezer, cold storage plant and salmon salting faciliti‘s. nNnag The shir ‘Trouble is foreseen in Pacific coast waters as Japan m akes a vigorous invasion of salmon waters now Cconâ€" trolled by Cangda and the United States. Floating Ca nneries in international waters menace $50,000,000 in â€" dustry. The ABOVE layout shows B.C, salmon fileets, a~ day‘s catch, a rare picture of a salmon snapped as 1 leaped out of the water and UPPER RIGHT, a Japan ese fisherman‘s wife happily> displaying two pink salmon. Much antagonism is reported between B.C. J apanese and white fishermen. Floating Canneries Mothering Fishing Fleets in International Waters mne ~Pac:ilit J Seattle, Wash B ) Haku Seq TIMMINS, ONTARIO. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22ND, 1936 illy makit exp me oOf umme M a 2 } ifi ccording 10 Th erman," publish ... At the ing this view ng Instituteâ€" heir own ments in Flattery equlip Made Hugh Catch She a nunmrjer of small boats mothered by two 32â€"foot, 45â€"horseâ€" power launches manned by eight men each and carrying radio directionâ€"findâ€" ing equipment. Off the coast of Alasâ€" ka, the Hakuyo Maru released its hord£es of small boats and had not the slightest difficulty in catching, with nets, suffiâ€" cient sockeye salmon to pack 57,600 halfâ€"pound tins. There is, of course, nothing to preâ€" vent Japan from operating her floating canneries in the unrestricted internaâ€" tional waters. Such an event, however, will prove drastic to the British Columâ€" bia, Alaska and state of Washington fishsries. The International Fisheries Commission, which administers the halibut resources of the North Pacific for Canada and the United States, has issued warnings that it will spell doom to the present gigantic halibut conserâ€" vation scheme, the result of five years of the commission‘s surveys. Fraser River Depleted Twentyâ€"three years ago a disastrous rockslide into the Fraser river during the construction of the Canadian Norâ€" thern Railway, blocked the salmon from ascending the river to their spawning grounds. Thousands upon thousands were deprived of the right of returning to ther birthplaceâ€"which is the only place a salmon will spawn. Since then, what was once the world‘s greatest salmon river has been depleted. Beâ€" cause for years no restriction was 'xqade on the amount of fish that could be taken from the Fraser, the river has never yet attained its formr place. After a salmon hatches, it descends the river to the ocean, where it reâ€" mains for four vears. At the end of pass from the Strait arates Van land of the body of v American alon: ever reach their spawning ground erIt Now there is much cause for ailarm on both sides. Both Canadian and American fishermen are forgetting their petty quarrels and uniting against a common enemy, a foe who plans to rob them of th:tir living. When the Japanese establish their floating canâ€" neries. the salmon will not even be given a chane A m Undersel] 11 In nee to leave the ocgan, le% lot m otr Canad‘an Product O This narrC anadian‘ Ontario and Quebec _ to Work for North to hatch. They will instead be scooped from the high seas by hordes of Nipâ€" ponese fishermen operating beyond the threeâ€"mile limit. The floating cannsries will harvest the homing British Columbia salmon as they proceed from area to area inâ€" dicated by the scientific information. The fish will be processed and then reâ€" leased to the world marketâ€"lowâ€"priced first quality British Colum‘sia salmon competing with our own salmon of the same quality but higher price. Unless Ottawa, Washington and Toâ€" kio reach an agreement, it is felt here, 30,000 people connected with the $50,â€" 000,000 fishing industries of the North Pacific coast may find their livelihood In June, 1934, sixty trolling boats manned by white fishermen bore down on a group of seven Japanese fishing boats and one fish buyer as they lay at anchor in a small cove on the British Columbia coast. With the great force the white fishermen pushed the Japaâ€" nese boats from the cove, anchors and all, to the high seas, with warning "not to show vour faces round here again!" departmnts of the two provintes, was forecast on Monday at Toronto followâ€" ing the Montreal conference between Premier Hepburn and Premier Duâ€" plessis. Timber and pulpwood formed the chief topic of the discussion in Monâ€" treal Saturday and mining problems of the two provinces will be discussed at another meeting within the next few weeks, Premier Hepburn said here last night on his return. Devartmental experits will join in the Premiers Agree on Coâ€"Operâ€" ation and Support on Muâ€" tual Policies to be Agreed. 2 DC ores Published at Timmins, Ont., Canada, Krery MONDAY and THURSDAY Regional Conference of Public Health Nurses was he October Parry sou With the â€" doing publ served by present, ri Nurses, Bo services an cluded grg health nut University rersity of phical Nipissin "Place of Beds Health Nuring 1 McKsnzie on Health Nursing new conference tC blems of detail in ments. Unifermity in Wages Greater uniformity concerning wages and labour conditions in the timber inâ€" dustry of the two provinces will be sought with the two governments proâ€" posing greater coâ€"ordination regarding cutting operations and forestry conâ€" s°rvation, the Premier said. "Both governments are going to make every effort to administer our natural resources in a way that will se of most benefit both from the point of view of employment and revenue, for the treasury." he said. by Ki school served tinusd United E. Smi by Rit "As soon as the special session Oof the Quebec legislature is concluded, we propose to meet again. At that mseetâ€" ing there will be all the officers of the various departments of both governâ€" ments to discuss our mutual problems. "We are going to coâ€"ordinate the enâ€" tire administration of our lands and forests departments and there will be uniformity in regard to policies and adâ€" ministration. We have also agreed to extend the share of our in "These people contract a year or LWO in advance and ars now fearful of what may happen and as a result they are coming to Canada."he stated. extend the share Of our regard to our natural resourcé U. 8. Markets North Bay commending eral Council Canada has North Bay Nugget:â€"Instead of reâ€" commending "birth control" the Genâ€" eral Council of the United Church of Canada has changed the name to "voluntary parenthood." The terminâ€" ology may be different but the idea is the same. The firs : health stered N ractically All Public Health Nurses of District in Attenâ€" dance at Event at Kirkland Lake Last Week. Many Inâ€" teresting and Helpful Papers on Work of Health Nurses. ‘onferen Distric AMBERS AND McLARNIN GO INTO HUDDLE public * ng, M Sound, dist1 Hy in the Church h. pres represent Board of : and Red C craduates _ in 1"tY . preside Brooks 8111 of: nurse TSe@s . lene Bed 1 € he Kirk] anitou Musk ention be ional al on th Oof A toulin Aad >( nd O1 in He 1M of sOCl and Care in a Public zramme"; Katherine Generalized _ Puslic Mrs. Nora Pox, asâ€" . District ociation iid in solving pro he proposed agree Alg 10 TIC with r HC ‘Inf inCc On Viet )€ pa ma Te M ike Sc Thi 1Al riour C chairm 11 C ario ril w nce No . and Dock All ol itr: L nive Sudbury skaming 11 nurses ind Ont roup 1y of mntario urday Roard | up inâ€" public ersity, Ord Reag) pub he the On TC | _ Noranda Mines Limited will spend $5,000,000 on development of its own power with erection of a new power lplam at 30,000 horsepower capacity in A Northern Quebec. | _ President James Y. Murdoch anâ€" nounced at Toronto the new project would be undertaken ‘"in the very near future," ard added that ‘"only a few details remain to ‘be anproved by the Quebec government before tenders are granted." sistant superinte ship Children‘s the work of the health nurses c Edna Moore, Ch of Provincial D broug sion. the n prepa She 1 Health Nur from centre nounced tha mission â€"hac nurse in took up her Miss E. M of Kirkland tertained th Those at North, Coch Richer, F. F Schumacher pine; H. Atkinson,..R. Roy, E. Lynton, M. Kidd, S. Bat°ersby, of Kirkland LIke; E. Smith, New Liskeard; C. Keith, Haileybury; K. McKenzie, M. A. Clouâ€" tier, F. Docker, North Bay; F. Sparlâ€" ing, Callander. He forecast a saving in power costs to Noranda and a boon for Northern Quebec, as well as Canadian construcâ€" tion companies. Surveys were reéported made last month of the proposed plant site where water flowing out of Grand Lake Vicâ€" toria into the Ottawa River provides a natural situation for such a developâ€" ment. The proposed site is 75 miles from Noranda Mines. Tenders have been asked for reâ€" garding freight charges from Rouyn and Amos, Que., into the power site. Effort is being made to obtain definite particulars regarding construction costs, it was learned. Noranda Mines Will Develop Own Power President Murdock Says it Will Mean a Sd\m;, in Costs. Operating facilities of Noranda Mines have been steadily increased since inâ€" ception of operations in 1928. Today Noranda is the second largest producet of copper and third largest producer of gold in Canada. In gold production it is exceeded by Lake Shore and Hollinger and in copâ€" per production by The International Nickel Company. Option For Two Years The company still has two years to exercise its right to the power site, Mr. Murdoch said, and tenders will not be let until all governm@ental details have been settled. ‘Trv The Advance Want Advertisements In 1935 production included 74,500,â€" 000 pounds of copper and 268,000 ounces of gold. athe nurses for ared pape mentioned erings in In Nurs ntre: tha had Feellin closin for a pape! n ‘sing â€" ir ‘s of °t t the C 1 place raserdal :s can coâ€"Oopera Chief Public He l Department â€" tings and lead | sing Miss Smit r attending and ners for tha p dutie acEa Fane A PT, s for the the importa developmen ; in distric f teaching. 1e Ontario ] ndent Aid Societ an CC of Timmins Fowler, ale this t of Socie SS8¢ Miss week Sup: ciety, de and how operate. ) Hy publ Ssouth pSrinte Hospit: pro Te of â€"M 1 Bro Brooks, J L. Wing th Porcuâ€" . Lynton and LIke: C.â€" Kaith She droâ€" Townâ€" scribed ‘ public Miss a nurse Health, discusâ€" hanked an~â€" ) Comâ€" health Wilson endeé al,. € e who amme. f such Public moved lent en â€" se en o c t o0 m 0. c w0 z0s on in in in m an n Mpuance |== ceb i i in im im im an m im m ie m n ie in in m in i io in en n im in am m an m s uin c m i 9 tm im m s J T YÂ¥ T ) Published at Timmins, Ont., Cansada, Yol. XXI. > :No. S1 Every MONDAY and THURSDAY . ONTARIO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22ND, 1936 MORNDAY and THURSDAT PRICE THREE CENTS s w_â€" Mr. Mrs. Klimkowich |(The British Columbia‘s Salmon Industry Regional Conference of are Committed for Trial§ Is Reported Threatened by the Japanese _ Public Health Nurses Floating Canneries Mothering Fishing Fleets in International Waters | Practically All Public Health Nurses of District in Attenâ€" \â€" dance at Event at Kirkland Lake Last Week. Many Inâ€" teresting and Helpful Papers on Work of Health Nurses. Man and Wife Given Preliminary Hearing on Charge of Iliegal Possession of Gold. Quantity of Gold, Said to be Worth $15,815.97, Produced in Court. W. B. Common, K.C., of Attorneyâ€"General‘s Dept., Conducts Prosecution > of pubâ€"| sistant superintendent of Teck Town 9, Reâ€"|ship Children‘s Aid work of the | The first regional lic health nurses ty, described A Mrs. Michael Klimkowich threw $15,â€" | with the Klimkowiches were allowed to | 815.97 worth of gold out the window of | leave but the man and wife were taken her home about 9 o‘clock on the eveâ€" | to the local police station when the ning of Saturday, October 3rd, accordaâ€" | van arrived from there. The material gistered Nurses Association of Ontario was held in Kirkland Lake, Saturday | October 17th Edna Moore, Chie{ Public Heal ith nurses can coâ€"operaté District No. 9 covers th reograâ€" | Of Provincial Department of ing to Chief C. F. Hitch of the Hollinâ€" | thrown from the window was taken to istric C Ta y P I + ) ; Kis y mAÂ¥ l ught ereeting ind lead th ger police fore who gave evidence| the Provincial police office, packed, | phical districts of Algoma, Sudbury rought greetings and lead th | ) , ; l | , n a ina Ts against her and her husband in poâ€" | sealed and placed in the safe. On Monâ€" | Nipissing Manitoulin Temiskaming, | Sl0n. In closing Miss Smi the nurses for attending and those who prepared papers for the programme She mentioned the importance of such lice court on Tuesday when the two| day morning it was taken to the Holâ€" faced a charge of having illegal posâ€" isre the seals were broken in j session of goldâ€""high grading." the presence of the four officers, the Both asked trial before a higher| material was weighed and sampled With the exc doing public | served by er wh gatherings in development of Public court through their counsel, Charl then bagged, seal signed and placed present, representing Victorian Ord@r| Health Nursing in districts removed H. Kerr. and both were committed for| in the vault at the mine, along with | Nurses. Board of Health, School Reard | from centres of téaching She anâ€" services and Red Cross This group in.| hounced that the Ontario Hydro C« trial by Magistrate Atkinson. who| the rags in whi was wrapped when | heard the evidence against both in a | thrown from the window of the house. single preliminary inquiry. W. B. Comâ€" Was "Getting Dark" mon, K.C., solicitor from the attorneyâ€" Under crossâ€"examination by Mr gâ€"neral‘s office, Toronto, conducted the | Kerr, Chief Hitch said that it "was thief witnesses were Chief | getting dark." Mr. Bateman was not | e Alvin Peters, of Toâ€"| there, said witness in reply to a quesâ€" cluded graduates of courses in public] Mission had placed a public health health nursing from McGill University,| BUSe in Fraserdale. Miss H. Wilson { h University of Western Ontario and Uniâ€"| £00k up her duties this week Toronto Miss E. MacEachren, f Kirkland Lake District Hospit tertained the group to tea served at the Windsor Hotel and conâ€" Those attending were Mrs m versity of Conference began with a luncheon prosecution. C Hitch, Const: ronto, and I Lainsbury, assayer at !tion. The door had had to be smashed the Hollinger mine. All witnesses were, in before entry could be gained to the | tinued in the ladi( parlour of the| North, Cochrane; Misses R. Brooks, J excluded at the suggeston of Mr. Comâ€"| house. While standing at the *.\111(1()\\'.! United Church. District chairman, H.] Richer, F. Farr, of Timmins; L. Win | E. Smith, presided, papers were given| Schumacher; G. Fowle South Porcu mon "in fairness to the accused." the chief had seen the younger of the Had to Break Down Door two other women in the bedroom and Telling the story of the raid on the| on entering the piace he had "ml(i[ house at the rear of 157 El eet| them to sit down and shut up." One north, Chief Hitch said Constables| of the women was between 30 and 35, Peters, Hayes and myself went to the | p by Rita Brooks on "Infant and Preâ€"| pine; H. Atkinson. R. Roy. E. Lynton school Hygient s Docker on | M. Kidd,. S. Batersby, of Kirkland LIke; [ "Place of Bed Care in a Public} E. Smith, New Liskeard; C. Keith, Health Nuring Programm Kat Haileybury; K. McKenzie, M. A. Clouâ€" | McKenzie on Generalized tier, F. Docker, North Bay; F. Sparlâ€" chief judged, and the other was door at the end of the house, on the|; about 60 | Health Nursing M1 Nora Fox, asâ€"| ing, lane. The blind on the door was down I. Lainsbury had spent 20 years at | ' en uen . on c c c : s We knocked. Klimkowich lifted the) the assay fice of the Hollinger, he | new conference to aid in solving proâ€" | \‘ y d' 1\/1' S 14 blind to one side and at that time P tâ€"| told Mr. Common when he took the blems of detail in the proposed agreeâ€" | 3 ()l dll dl lnt‘b \‘ lll ers and Haves shouted ‘Open the door ; rtand. Previous to that time he had | | ments. | l) 1t > P} y We‘re the polic« and they showe:| Â¥fone custom assaying and smelter and | | Unifermity in Wages (‘el()p ()“ ll l ““ el' their badges Klimkowich droppe\| fine wor | Greater uniformity concerning wages | the blind and walked away At thei| Great Heavy Chunks of Gold and labour conditions in th« iber inâ€"| President Murdock Says it time I thought they might make an cpened the bags one at a time / i(IU,\'\I',\ of the two provinces will be | \\” \[ $ 4 is ; effort to dispose of whatever wa in | 4 the court and drew out great sought with the two governments proâ€" | 1 Mean a say ng In the house so I left the back and '.\".'Ilf, ' of gold about the >1th posing greater coâ€"ordination regarding (‘U.\‘IS, M | | cutting operations and forestry conâ€" | â€"â€"â€"â€" servation. the Premier said Noranda Mines Limited will spend "Both government: going to make | $5,000,000 on development of its own every effort to administer our natural| power with erection of a new powel! ‘ } ind shape of muffins. Some were largâ€" to ‘the bedroom window at the fron. ' er, some small and flat. All looked more| . I saw Mrs. Klimkowich come to the window carrying a rag bundle which she set down on something near the poorlyâ€"moulded hrass than the | they were proven to be. Bag No.| window. Then she flipped up the winâ€"|" contained $9,140.90 worth of the preâ€" dow, grabbed the rag bundle and went l cious stuff, 85 per cent. goldâ€"$29 an resources in a way that will be of most j Plant at 30,000 horsepower capacity in of view of j Northern Quebec or the| President James Y. Murdoch anâ€" | benefit both from tl employmen treasury," he said ;nvwmw(! at Toronto the new project session of | would be undertaken ‘"in the very near | future," anrd added that "only a few details remain to ‘be anproved by the Quebec government before tenders are granted." to throw it out. I trisd to grab her |ounce. Bag No. 1 had one piece of gold wrists ut missed and grabbed the bunâ€" l dle instead. As on as she felt the t ian any of the others, and a| few small pieces. Its contents were worth $6.075.07. These two groups Of larger t | "As soon a 1 | the Quebec legislature is | propose to meet a | weight of the pull she heaved it out metal were the ones alleged by the crown to have been thrown from the window by Mrs. Klimkowich. and the gold buttons fell all over. Six Quart Basket of Gold The Hollinger officer produced a sixâ€" quart basket full of white bags. These No. 4 bag cortained a small brown | he deposited with resounding thuds on | parcel, inside of which was a second ; the magistrate‘s table parcel which, when opened, revealed Trouble is foreseen in Paciftic coast waters as Japan m akes a vigorous invasion of salmon waters now conâ€" tire administration of our lands and Continuing with the story of the arâ€" | partlyâ€"treated ore. It had been hamâ€"| trolled by Cangda and the United States. Floating ca nneries in international waters menace $50,000,000 inâ€" | forests departments and there will be rests, Chief Hitch said that Constable| mered flat and there were gens rous | dustry. The ABOVE layout shows B.C. salmon fleets, a day‘s catch, a rare picture of a salmon snapped as 1 uniformity in regard to policies and adâ€" Johnston, another one of the provincial | quantitis of laceâ€"like gold in the | leaped out of the water and UPPER RIGHT. a Japan ese fisherman‘s wife displaying two pink ministration. We have also agreed to | salmon. Much antagonism is reported between B.C. J apanese and white fishermen. | ing there will be all the officers of the various departments of both governâ€" j | | | | I | ments to discuss our mutual problems I He forecast a saving in power costs "We are going to coâ€"ordinate the enâ€"| to Noranda and a boon for Northetrn Quebec, as well as Canadian construcâ€" tion companies Surveys were reported made last month of the proposed plant site where water flowing out of Grand Lake Vicâ€" | extend the share of our opsrations in | regard to our natural resources.‘ | toria into the Ottawa River provides a men who had ibeen sent up here from | quartz, No. 2 bag contained a button Toronto with a search warrant for | said to have been found in the bedroom ; By JOHN B. TOMPKINS Made Hugh Catch to hatch They will instead be scooped Klimkowich‘s house, arrived at his side|of the Klimkowich place, valu@d @t} goentral Press Canadian (‘orrvspondcntf She carries a number of smail boats| from the high seas by hordes of Nipâ€" U. S. Markets |natural situation for such a developâ€" and helped pick up the gold 1$530.80. Witness was confused someâ€"| vancouver, B.C.. Oct. 22nd.â€"As the| mothered two 32â€"foot, 45â€"horseâ€" | ponese fishermen operating beyond the The premier said United States newsâ€" | ment. The proposed site is 75 mile The other officers had gained enâ€"| what by Mr. Common‘s inquiry @S U0| preatest British Columbia salmon 11<h»il"4““1' launches manned by eight men | threeâ€"mile limit print importers and paper mills were | from Noranda Mines trance to the back of the house by | whether the metal was worth mor€e! ns season in years draws to A (.1(.503(‘:1('31 and carrying radio directionâ€"findâ€" The floating canncries will harvest| curtailing thsir imports from Scanâ€"| Tenders have been asked for reâ€" smashing the door down, and the two| than 25e a pound. This question WAS| ang ihe 1,500 ;'1_\11‘.:3“(\“ of the Praser| ing equipment. Off the coast of Alasâ€" | the homing British Columbia ~ukmoni<1mu\'nm countries dus to the disturbed | Sarding freight charges from Rouyn officers who had the gold went in the | asked because the information had “1â€"‘Ri\‘m' area alone. count wages in excess | ka, the Hakuyo Maru released its hordes| as they proceed from area to area inâ€" 'l state of Europe and were turning to ' and Amos, Que.. into the power site t | Effort is being made to obtain definit ply | particulars regarding construction costs C h t ie e esc domeh and | leged ore (Mhan hk Y4l of $1,000,000, fears are being felt here | Of small boats and had not the slightest | dicated by the scientific information. | Canada to assure themselves of a supâ€" Mrs. Klimkowich, two other women and | ue had been found difficulty in catching, with nets, suffiâ€" | The fish will be processed and then reâ€" a child. Chisf Hitch asked Mrs. Klimâ€" Samples had been taken from the salmon to pack 57,600 | leased to the world marketâ€"lowâ€"priced that Japan may put a stop to annual salmon runs from the ocean to | Clent sockeye "These people contract a year or two it was learned. p \ Tha t re voOU lni > ere?" | button with lo ) p the ackâ€" 1 1 4 . i¢ Wi+ ) 1 ; ) ¢ hn . kowich What are you doing here buttons with a file, and from the pack the upper river spawning grounds. halfâ€"pound tins. first quality British Columbsia salmon | in advance and are now fearful O | Option For Two Years "I‘m the lady of the house," she reâ€"| age of native gold by choosing W“i*tmRan“,-h that the Japanese plan to inâ€" There is. of course, nothing to preâ€" | Competing with our own salmon of the | what may happen and as a result they The company still has two years to same quality but higher price are coming to Canada."he stated exercise its right to the power site, Mr plied appeared to ‘be an average piece, | vade the rich British Columbia and | vent Japan from operating her floating "Why did you throw that stuff out ) Lainebury said Alaska fishing areas with great floatâ€" | canneries in the unrestricted internaâ€" Unless Ottawa, Washington and Toâ€" Hon. Peter Heenan, Ontario minister | Murdoch said, and tenders will not be the wndow? I nearly caught your .az‘::} Handed Search Warrant in 'l‘urnnl({} ing canneries anchored ten to forty | tional waters. Such an event, however, | kio reach an agreement, it is felt lwnn:ol lands and forests, and Hon. Oscar |let until all governm@ental details have person. (oughed NY : 61M .. SA9 §‘ Cf “'\:”!)‘fi“ Alvin Pelers said fic h"““xnxhn\ offâ€"shore in international \\;lL«‘I":~v will prove drastic to the British Columâ€" 30,000 people connected with the $50,â€", Drouin, Quebec minister of lands and | been settled replied s peeni c 0 fnrlln es on are T(): are current along this coast from the | bia, Alaska and state of Washington | 000,000 fishing industries of the North‘ forests, attended Saturday‘s conferencs. | Operating facilities of Noranda Mines No Doubt of Identity ronto to search the premises of Micha€1| grare of washington to Alaska fishsries. The International Fisheries | Pacific coast may find their livelihood ; Premier Hepburn said it was also deâ€" | have been steadily increased since inâ€" r ‘ interrupted hief | Klimkowich in Tir ins at 157 Elm s ; 4 ¢ > ide luring } talk witl cemier M 2 Lk ME pAuprewich }1 s “m“‘\l o o || _ Canadian and American fishermen Commission, which administers the | gonk | cided during his talk with Premier i ception of operations in 1928. Today y stor here sk "Ts there| street north e. three other prov ‘la smcs 24e S 5k § rrang i the Inited € y ananese lessis the tw nrovince antinue y ®, Hitch‘s story here to ask I € et no Ie, other provincl halibut resources of the North Pacific| In ths United Kingdom Japanese| Duplessis the two provinces continue | Noranda is the second largest producer and thsir governments, have wrangled } 1s oo , R PR W the North ! for Canada and the United States, has pink" salmon sells for less than it | their agre¢ment whereby municipanlUes | of copper and third largest producer of ish Columbia to can it, deâ€" , are prohibited to bid competitively for 1 gold in Canada. fact that Canadian products | industries by offering tax exemptions In gold production it is exceeded by any doubt in your mind at all that|officers who had accompanied him ; I I Cz ll.ukv Shore and Hollinger and in copâ€" over the respective rights in ned war oe that + d 11 d . Pacific fishing area for years. here | issued warnings that it will spell doom out the window? arrived about 100 yards from the cific fishing area for y€ Th 4 this is the woman who threw the stuff| from Toronto and Chief Hitch had| ' +ur P t} nracsont ip ali + . S j p ie atht the| w i cmlah . t 745 that| Aare. at the present time, two very effec. | to the present gigantic halibut conser "Absolutely no doubt at all he| Klimkowich place at about 745 that| e vation scheme, the result of five years | avre given preference chlaf yanifad | Saturday evening. They kept observa.| UVée Ureabies, the Halibut Treaty and | Y440n S C1 pH itE Fear Ssen eniel repieo i s priy °C‘ "..|the Sockeye Treaty, under which both | 0f the commission‘s surveys eb Â¥rouble | tart] f per production by The International Constable Hayes had found one small| tion on the place for about an hour | / / 7 . t n an the.foumal | ‘raser River Depleted In the event that thé Canadian,|â€" North Bay Nuggel:â€"iInsfead 0f TC~ . Nmickel Company A 4 had seen several people come and j countries operate. In the formation of Fraser River Depletec e y PX mnaime cont? trRe: een: $ j gold "button in the bedroom and and had seen severai peop C o f | j o es 4 s t ; | American and Japanese governments do | commending )irth controi n 161 I In 1935 j)l'u(iuclmn included. 74.500.â€" ht F q 1| go vidence fr the followed | these treaties, however, they seem tO | [wentyâ€"three years ago a disastrous | i manh s + ; 5 barat Comnmeil af the United Churel ( ' Constable Peters had found a small | 80 His evidence from then on followed | : | + Inot reach an agreement and the Nipâ€" j eral Council of the United Churtch 01 goy nounds of copper and 268,000 ‘e istabl eters had. [ the same line as OChicf Hitch‘s | have forgotten altogether about that | rockslide into the Fraser river during | Aarermenr "istior the" i1 i'v : Cansda‘ ‘has ‘chaneca name to I nds of pper and 268, unces package of native gold in a drawer in | * y on m t + Nee h4 > nawar_â€"â€"Tanan | x . _\ _ pon‘se fishermen ignore (he / sSHAID | DCV 0C onl s es of gold the kitchen. The officers also found | was asked by Mr. Commons to idenâ€"| other North Pacific powerâ€"Japan.| the construction of the Canadian NOTâ€"~â€" | warnines of Canadian fishsrmen, seriâ€" | "voluntary parenthood." The terminâ€" what appeared to e a set of kitchen | tif} Klimkowich from the people in the| what are her hts? is a questi0n | thern Railway, blocked the salimon from | ous racial riots may result ! ology may be different but the idea is scalesâ€"but they found them on a shelf | © urtroom. After looking everyone over | now causinms l"\“ nding the river to their SDpaWNINS _ mwentyâ€"five years ago there was not l the same ITry The Advance Want Advertisements in a cloth« -'(Q t rather _ carefully Constable â€" Pet rs | Japanese Start Operations 1:1‘()111}(5. Thousands upon thousands i Japanese in the fishing industry m' 1 a clothes closet £AL 4 f ut $ a Japalcs 1 1 143 LUSUIY | in tha "Raiita anHinrin s on Tu "aj h none!" declares one Canâ€" | Were deprived of the right of returning | pritish Columbif Of a sudden. t} 27 7 n The two women found in the house (Continueg on Page Two) She has none! leclare:s C . 4 . : Columbia f a sudden, thousâ€" | / 1 1 \J F3 rp y 1 : adian fishery official ‘"The fish belong | to ther birthplaceâ€"which is the OMIY | angs of them "invaded" the Fraser rive * \“;hl{b M\ l) ‘\](L\l{hll\ ('() IN l () Hl l)l)l‘l“ 3 4 fishery officié he 1ist l 24 im‘ se 2 se uo. |ands of th inva ts as 1j : 3 t ts stt e o on m n on e o ~ o+ Inited Stat inpa | place [ spawn.. Since then, | ) F7 k ) A o on T to Canada and the United States since | Place a saimon wil SpawHh salmon fishing industry, which, unt ; 4 en mm 5 4 7 7 t orn a TD 10 1 y ie A a o + A0! Â¥A4 ) 1UL} f f * Page T FLIERS UI DUTIES AGAIN they have always caught them excluâ€" | what was once the worlds grealest | inen had largely besn in the hands of * Nee m us â€". . | sively. As to salmon, they are hatched salmon river has been depleted. B Indians and Caucasians $ y h 4 lLeause for vear 4 striction was m !.,‘ n K in Canadian and American rivers so | Cause for years no restriction was MaCC) â€" In june, 1934 | there is no dispute. or should be no disâ€"| 0n the amount of fish that could be sixty trolling boats manned by white fishermen bore down | ‘ : n itaken fror the y the 1 T 1asS on f j pute, as to whom they belong | taken from the Fraser, the river ha@S| on a group of seven Japanese fishing never vet ttained its for r nlace ; A * ; t never yet attained its formr piaC boats and one fish buyer as they lay Japan,â€"though, seems determined to | : ‘ 1 After a salmon hatches, it descends | at anchor in a small cove on the British | have what. it is felt, is her unrightful share of the great sea harvest pr | the river to the ocean, where it reâ€" | Columbia coast. With the great force in pof +5 y t the id of | t white fishermean 1 venf in | Seiji Kondo,. professor of the Imperial mains for four yeal At the end Oof | the white fishermen pushed the Japaâ€" Fisheries School at Hakodata, recently ! that psriod, its cycle of life completed, | nese boats from the cove, anchors and declared before the Institute of Pacific he salmon starts its mysterious homeâ€" , all, to the high seas, with warning "not Relations in Yoseâ€" | * ard trek to its birthplace. In the case | to show ur faces round here again ress assembled in se â€" mits, Cal.. that there s uld be d id D€ CE s of the Fraser river, the fish ysualiy on w Ontario and Quebec to Work for North veloped an international programme of cientific reseat eries of the North Pac moment ho ne| Premiers Agree on Coâ€"Operâ€"| n. In Canada, nets are used. I: ation and Support on Muâ€"| o e e melaa tual Policies to be Agreed. D n ( e natural ré ircé have long argue not g1VvC of Ontario and Qubf through coâ€" nericans more Al I nat oT ordinat: 1 U 1@ l and forests A \\ nnecessarik e 1 R : J t n A ‘ . . 1 4 * | f the No pI inces, was Sm ie ce ie en en mm o o oo BBA eS n en h insl , i Slemay . _ | the spawning ground _ C an Axtra it sHELDON wW. COLEMAN JOSEPH FORTEY in . mMAMING. tHLS . SUMLELIA : CS o6 49 4 ‘an t f rsfâ€"on Monday al 1OTORIO LOHOW â€" A diet of s rels would scarcely meet th istronomic demands of an an excellent example of the modern Underselt Canad‘:an Product ing the Montreal conference between epic ) two )A t it‘s Japanese floating innet An oilâ€" Now tl s much cause for alarm | Premier Hepburn an Premier Duâ€" pré stufl, ¢ NOC M powered allâ€" vessel carrying a crew n both sides Both Canadian and | plessis | Ost 17 t y W $ m j ’ ¢ 1R I m i/ i ye » y 1 t ( 1 t € l dest yV of 70, it has a capaci M 150 full cases| American fishermen al ulpwood formed th o I All t f U C - 1 1A I + | 4 . bha> 5 rrol 1 4 i and Air of halves, or 14.40 ns a day. It is | their petty quarrels and he discussion in Monâ€"| lost for Paint Lake, N.W.T equipped with mal capable of a common enemy, a i0¢ ing problems of 0 aays, are safe 11 physica} hacking mm tin f1 iran them af | it uh fFau sr 4 , nditien. For thrs m short I .LL."..XA;_. sa Hnon in (). er 11SD l.n) Oi ‘;‘..‘.. VA | 10 Will O .‘.m,‘l:.\(.‘(l AT rev Ross? Both Lew Ambers (LEFT») and Jim tions and then for of two There is a reduct )lant with a 1.1;';(1-5:.]@\;:.«.\‘,- establish their floating canâ€" | ig wit the next few kave had recent victories over the great little squirrels which x do you city of five tons per day besides a| neries, the salmon will not even be ‘ weeks, Premier Hepburn said here last ri. which makes them possible future OppO! ke squirrels? Thev‘re OK ~He small freezer, cold storage piant and | given a chance to leave the ocean, les! night on his return | erweight champion. Apparently t re going J m the almon salting facilitiss ‘alons ever reach their spa w is | l)._).\.il;;'...'..n‘ experis wili JOHl in LiE f into a nuddi ver Lae meLidaus 10 cop ith the elusive R se en o c t o0 m 0. c w0 z0s on in in in m an n Mpuance |== ceb i i in im im im an m im m ie m n ie in in m in i io in en n im in am m an m s uin c m i 9 tm im m s J T YÂ¥ T ) Published at Timmins, Ont., Cansada, Yol. XXI. > :No. S1 Every MONDAY and THURSDAY . ONTARIO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22ND, 1936 MORNDAY and THURSDAT PRICE THREE CENTS s w_â€" Mr. Mrs. Klimkowich |(The British Columbia‘s Salmon Industry Regional Conference of are Committed for Trial§ Is Reported Threatened by the Japanese _ Public Health Nurses Floating Canneries Mothering Fishing Fleets in International Waters | Practically All Public Health Nurses of District in Attenâ€" \â€" dance at Event at Kirkland Lake Last Week. Many Inâ€" teresting and Helpful Papers on Work of Health Nurses. Man and Wife Given Preliminary Hearing on Charge of Iliegal Possession of Gold. Quantity of Gold, Said to be Worth $15,815.97, Produced in Court. W. B. Common, K.C., of Attorneyâ€"General‘s Dept., Conducts Prosecution > of pubâ€"| sistant superintendent of Teck Town 9, Reâ€"|ship Children‘s Aid work of the | The first regional lic health nurses ty, described A Mrs. Michael Klimkowich threw $15,â€" | with the Klimkowiches were allowed to | 815.97 worth of gold out the window of | leave but the man and wife were taken her home about 9 o‘clock on the eveâ€" | to the local police station when the ning of Saturday, October 3rd, accordaâ€" | van arrived from there. The material gistered Nurses Association of Ontario was held in Kirkland Lake, Saturday | October 17th Edna Moore, Chie{ Public Heal ith nurses can coâ€"operaté District No. 9 covers th reograâ€" | Of Provincial Department of ing to Chief C. F. Hitch of the Hollinâ€" | thrown from the window was taken to istric C Ta y P I + ) ; Kis y mAÂ¥ l ught ereeting ind lead th ger police fore who gave evidence| the Provincial police office, packed, | phical districts of Algoma, Sudbury rought greetings and lead th | ) , ; l | , n a ina Ts against her and her husband in poâ€" | sealed and placed in the safe. On Monâ€" | Nipissing Manitoulin Temiskaming, | Sl0n. In closing Miss Smi the nurses for attending and those who prepared papers for the programme She mentioned the importance of such lice court on Tuesday when the two| day morning it was taken to the Holâ€" faced a charge of having illegal posâ€" isre the seals were broken in j session of goldâ€""high grading." the presence of the four officers, the Both asked trial before a higher| material was weighed and sampled With the exc doing public | served by er wh gatherings in development of Public court through their counsel, Charl then bagged, seal signed and placed present, representing Victorian Ord@r| Health Nursing in districts removed H. Kerr. and both were committed for| in the vault at the mine, along with | Nurses. Board of Health, School Reard | from centres of téaching She anâ€" services and Red Cross This group in.| hounced that the Ontario Hydro C« trial by Magistrate Atkinson. who| the rags in whi was wrapped when | heard the evidence against both in a | thrown from the window of the house. single preliminary inquiry. W. B. Comâ€" Was "Getting Dark" mon, K.C., solicitor from the attorneyâ€" Under crossâ€"examination by Mr gâ€"neral‘s office, Toronto, conducted the | Kerr, Chief Hitch said that it "was thief witnesses were Chief | getting dark." Mr. Bateman was not | e Alvin Peters, of Toâ€"| there, said witness in reply to a quesâ€" cluded graduates of courses in public] Mission had placed a public health health nursing from McGill University,| BUSe in Fraserdale. Miss H. Wilson { h University of Western Ontario and Uniâ€"| £00k up her duties this week Toronto Miss E. MacEachren, f Kirkland Lake District Hospit tertained the group to tea served at the Windsor Hotel and conâ€" Those attending were Mrs m versity of Conference began with a luncheon prosecution. C Hitch, Const: ronto, and I Lainsbury, assayer at !tion. The door had had to be smashed the Hollinger mine. All witnesses were, in before entry could be gained to the | tinued in the ladi( parlour of the| North, Cochrane; Misses R. Brooks, J excluded at the suggeston of Mr. Comâ€"| house. While standing at the *.\111(1()\\'.! United Church. District chairman, H.] Richer, F. Farr, of Timmins; L. Win | E. Smith, presided, papers were given| Schumacher; G. Fowle South Porcu mon "in fairness to the accused." the chief had seen the younger of the Had to Break Down Door two other women in the bedroom and Telling the story of the raid on the| on entering the piace he had "ml(i[ house at the rear of 157 El eet| them to sit down and shut up." One north, Chief Hitch said Constables| of the women was between 30 and 35, Peters, Hayes and myself went to the | p by Rita Brooks on "Infant and Preâ€"| pine; H. Atkinson. R. Roy. E. Lynton school Hygient s Docker on | M. Kidd,. S. Batersby, of Kirkland LIke; [ "Place of Bed Care in a Public} E. Smith, New Liskeard; C. Keith, Health Nuring Programm Kat Haileybury; K. McKenzie, M. A. Clouâ€" | McKenzie on Generalized tier, F. Docker, North Bay; F. Sparlâ€" chief judged, and the other was door at the end of the house, on the|; about 60 | Health Nursing M1 Nora Fox, asâ€"| ing, lane. The blind on the door was down I. Lainsbury had spent 20 years at | ' en uen . on c c c : s We knocked. Klimkowich lifted the) the assay fice of the Hollinger, he | new conference to aid in solving proâ€" | \‘ y d' 1\/1' S 14 blind to one side and at that time P tâ€"| told Mr. Common when he took the blems of detail in the proposed agreeâ€" | 3 ()l dll dl lnt‘b \‘ lll ers and Haves shouted ‘Open the door ; rtand. Previous to that time he had | | ments. | l) 1t > P} y We‘re the polic« and they showe:| Â¥fone custom assaying and smelter and | | Unifermity in Wages (‘el()p ()“ ll l ““ el' their badges Klimkowich droppe\| fine wor | Greater uniformity concerning wages | the blind and walked away At thei| Great Heavy Chunks of Gold and labour conditions in th« iber inâ€"| President Murdock Says it time I thought they might make an cpened the bags one at a time / i(IU,\'\I',\ of the two provinces will be | \\” \[ $ 4 is ; effort to dispose of whatever wa in | 4 the court and drew out great sought with the two governments proâ€" | 1 Mean a say ng In the house so I left the back and '.\".'Ilf, ' of gold about the >1th posing greater coâ€"ordination regarding (‘U.\‘IS, M | | cutting operations and forestry conâ€" | â€"â€"â€"â€" servation. the Premier said Noranda Mines Limited will spend "Both government: going to make | $5,000,000 on development of its own every effort to administer our natural| power with erection of a new powel! ‘ } ind shape of muffins. Some were largâ€" to ‘the bedroom window at the fron. ' er, some small and flat. All looked more| . I saw Mrs. Klimkowich come to the window carrying a rag bundle which she set down on something near the poorlyâ€"moulded hrass than the | they were proven to be. Bag No.| window. Then she flipped up the winâ€"|" contained $9,140.90 worth of the preâ€" dow, grabbed the rag bundle and went l cious stuff, 85 per cent. goldâ€"$29 an resources in a way that will be of most j Plant at 30,000 horsepower capacity in of view of j Northern Quebec or the| President James Y. Murdoch anâ€" | benefit both from tl employmen treasury," he said ;nvwmw(! at Toronto the new project session of | would be undertaken ‘"in the very near | future," anrd added that "only a few details remain to ‘be anproved by the Quebec government before tenders are granted." to throw it out. I trisd to grab her |ounce. Bag No. 1 had one piece of gold wrists ut missed and grabbed the bunâ€" l dle instead. As on as she felt the t ian any of the others, and a| few small pieces. Its contents were worth $6.075.07. These two groups Of larger t | "As soon a 1 | the Quebec legislature is | propose to meet a | weight of the pull she heaved it out metal were the ones alleged by the crown to have been thrown from the window by Mrs. Klimkowich. and the gold buttons fell all over. Six Quart Basket of Gold The Hollinger officer produced a sixâ€" quart basket full of white bags. These No. 4 bag cortained a small brown | he deposited with resounding thuds on | parcel, inside of which was a second ; the magistrate‘s table parcel which, when opened, revealed Trouble is foreseen in Paciftic coast waters as Japan m akes a vigorous invasion of salmon waters now conâ€" tire administration of our lands and Continuing with the story of the arâ€" | partlyâ€"treated ore. It had been hamâ€"| trolled by Cangda and the United States. Floating ca nneries in international waters menace $50,000,000 inâ€" | forests departments and there will be rests, Chief Hitch said that Constable| mered flat and there were gens rous | dustry. The ABOVE layout shows B.C. salmon fleets, a day‘s catch, a rare picture of a salmon snapped as 1 uniformity in regard to policies and adâ€" Johnston, another one of the provincial | quantitis of laceâ€"like gold in the | leaped out of the water and UPPER RIGHT. a Japan ese fisherman‘s wife displaying two pink ministration. We have also agreed to | salmon. Much antagonism is reported between B.C. J apanese and white fishermen. | ing there will be all the officers of the various departments of both governâ€" j | | | | I | ments to discuss our mutual problems I He forecast a saving in power costs "We are going to coâ€"ordinate the enâ€"| to Noranda and a boon for Northetrn Quebec, as well as Canadian construcâ€" tion companies Surveys were reported made last month of the proposed plant site where water flowing out of Grand Lake Vicâ€" | extend the share of our opsrations in | regard to our natural resources.‘ | toria into the Ottawa River provides a men who had ibeen sent up here from | quartz, No. 2 bag contained a button Toronto with a search warrant for | said to have been found in the bedroom ; By JOHN B. TOMPKINS Made Hugh Catch to hatch They will instead be scooped Klimkowich‘s house, arrived at his side|of the Klimkowich place, valu@d @t} goentral Press Canadian (‘orrvspondcntf She carries a number of smail boats| from the high seas by hordes of Nipâ€" U. S. Markets |natural situation for such a developâ€" and helped pick up the gold 1$530.80. Witness was confused someâ€"| vancouver, B.C.. Oct. 22nd.â€"As the| mothered two 32â€"foot, 45â€"horseâ€" | ponese fishermen operating beyond the The premier said United States newsâ€" | ment. The proposed site is 75 mile The other officers had gained enâ€"| what by Mr. Common‘s inquiry @S U0| preatest British Columbia salmon 11<h»il"4““1' launches manned by eight men | threeâ€"mile limit print importers and paper mills were | from Noranda Mines trance to the back of the house by | whether the metal was worth mor€e! ns season in years draws to A (.1(.503(‘:1('31 and carrying radio directionâ€"findâ€" The floating canncries will harvest| curtailing thsir imports from Scanâ€"| Tenders have been asked for reâ€" smashing the door down, and the two| than 25e a pound. This question WAS| ang ihe 1,500 ;'1_\11‘.:3“(\“ of the Praser| ing equipment. Off the coast of Alasâ€" | the homing British Columbia ~ukmoni<1mu\'nm countries dus to the disturbed | Sarding freight charges from Rouyn officers who had the gold went in the | asked because the information had “1â€"‘Ri\‘m' area alone. count wages in excess | ka, the Hakuyo Maru released its hordes| as they proceed from area to area inâ€" 'l state of Europe and were turning to ' and Amos, Que.. into the power site t | Effort is being made to obtain definit ply | particulars regarding construction costs C h t ie e esc domeh and | leged ore (Mhan hk Y4l of $1,000,000, fears are being felt here | Of small boats and had not the slightest | dicated by the scientific information. | Canada to assure themselves of a supâ€" Mrs. Klimkowich, two other women and | ue had been found difficulty in catching, with nets, suffiâ€" | The fish will be processed and then reâ€" a child. Chisf Hitch asked Mrs. Klimâ€" Samples had been taken from the salmon to pack 57,600 | leased to the world marketâ€"lowâ€"priced that Japan may put a stop to annual salmon runs from the ocean to | Clent sockeye "These people contract a year or two it was learned. p \ Tha t re voOU lni > ere?" | button with lo ) p the ackâ€" 1 1 4 . i¢ Wi+ ) 1 ; ) ¢ hn . kowich What are you doing here buttons with a file, and from the pack the upper river spawning grounds. halfâ€"pound tins. first quality British Columbsia salmon | in advance and are now fearful O | Option For Two Years "I‘m the lady of the house," she reâ€"| age of native gold by choosing W“i*tmRan“,-h that the Japanese plan to inâ€" There is. of course, nothing to preâ€" | Competing with our own salmon of the | what may happen and as a result they The company still has two years to same quality but higher price are coming to Canada."he stated exercise its right to the power site, Mr plied appeared to ‘be an average piece, | vade the rich British Columbia and | vent Japan from operating her floating "Why did you throw that stuff out ) Lainebury said Alaska fishing areas with great floatâ€" | canneries in the unrestricted internaâ€" Unless Ottawa, Washington and Toâ€" Hon. Peter Heenan, Ontario minister | Murdoch said, and tenders will not be the wndow? I nearly caught your .az‘::} Handed Search Warrant in 'l‘urnnl({} ing canneries anchored ten to forty | tional waters. Such an event, however, | kio reach an agreement, it is felt lwnn:ol lands and forests, and Hon. Oscar |let until all governm@ental details have person. (oughed NY : 61M .. SA9 §‘ Cf “'\:”!)‘fi“ Alvin Pelers said fic h"““xnxhn\ offâ€"shore in international \\;lL«‘I":~v will prove drastic to the British Columâ€" 30,000 people connected with the $50,â€", Drouin, Quebec minister of lands and | been settled replied s peeni c 0 fnrlln es on are T(): are current along this coast from the | bia, Alaska and state of Washington | 000,000 fishing industries of the North‘ forests, attended Saturday‘s conferencs. | Operating facilities of Noranda Mines No Doubt of Identity ronto to search the premises of Micha€1| grare of washington to Alaska fishsries. The International Fisheries | Pacific coast may find their livelihood ; Premier Hepburn said it was also deâ€" | have been steadily increased since inâ€" r ‘ interrupted hief | Klimkowich in Tir ins at 157 Elm s ; 4 ¢ > ide luring } talk witl cemier M 2 Lk ME pAuprewich }1 s “m“‘\l o o || _ Canadian and American fishermen Commission, which administers the | gonk | cided during his talk with Premier i ception of operations in 1928. Today y stor here sk "Ts there| street north e. three other prov ‘la smcs 24e S 5k § rrang i the Inited € y ananese lessis the tw nrovince antinue y ®, Hitch‘s story here to ask I € et no Ie, other provincl halibut resources of the North Pacific| In ths United Kingdom Japanese| Duplessis the two provinces continue | Noranda is the second largest producer and thsir governments, have wrangled } 1s oo , R PR W the North ! for Canada and the United States, has pink" salmon sells for less than it | their agre¢ment whereby municipanlUes | of copper and third largest producer of ish Columbia to can it, deâ€" , are prohibited to bid competitively for 1 gold in Canada. fact that Canadian products | industries by offering tax exemptions In gold production it is exceeded by any doubt in your mind at all that|officers who had accompanied him ; I I Cz ll.ukv Shore and Hollinger and in copâ€" over the respective rights in ned war oe that + d 11 d . Pacific fishing area for years. here | issued warnings that it will spell doom out the window? arrived about 100 yards from the cific fishing area for y€ Th 4 this is the woman who threw the stuff| from Toronto and Chief Hitch had| ' +ur P t} nracsont ip ali + . S j p ie atht the| w i cmlah . t 745 that| Aare. at the present time, two very effec. | to the present gigantic halibut conser "Absolutely no doubt at all he| Klimkowich place at about 745 that| e vation scheme, the result of five years | avre given preference chlaf yanifad | Saturday evening. They kept observa.| UVée Ureabies, the Halibut Treaty and | Y440n S C1 pH itE Fear Ssen eniel repieo i s priy °C‘ "..|the Sockeye Treaty, under which both | 0f the commission‘s surveys eb Â¥rouble | tart] f per production by The International Constable Hayes had found one small| tion on the place for about an hour | / / 7 . t n an the.foumal | ‘raser River Depleted In the event that thé Canadian,|â€" North Bay Nuggel:â€"iInsfead 0f TC~ . Nmickel Company A 4 had seen several people come and j countries operate. In the formation of Fraser River Depletec e y PX mnaime cont? trRe: een: $ j gold "button in the bedroom and and had seen severai peop C o f | j o es 4 s t ; | American and Japanese governments do | commending )irth controi n 161 I In 1935 j)l'u(iuclmn included. 74.500.â€" ht F q 1| go vidence fr the followed | these treaties, however, they seem tO | [wentyâ€"three years ago a disastrous | i manh s + ; 5 barat Comnmeil af the United Churel ( ' Constable Peters had found a small | 80 His evidence from then on followed | : | + Inot reach an agreement and the Nipâ€" j eral Council of the United Churtch 01 goy nounds of copper and 268,000 ‘e istabl eters had. [ the same line as OChicf Hitch‘s | have forgotten altogether about that | rockslide into the Fraser river during | Aarermenr "istior the" i1 i'v : Cansda‘ ‘has ‘chaneca name to I nds of pper and 268, unces package of native gold in a drawer in | * y on m t + Nee h4 > nawar_â€"â€"Tanan | x . _\ _ pon‘se fishermen ignore (he / sSHAID | DCV 0C onl s es of gold the kitchen. The officers also found | was asked by Mr. Commons to idenâ€"| other North Pacific powerâ€"Japan.| the construction of the Canadian NOTâ€"~â€" | warnines of Canadian fishsrmen, seriâ€" | "voluntary parenthood." The terminâ€" what appeared to e a set of kitchen | tif} Klimkowich from the people in the| what are her hts? is a questi0n | thern Railway, blocked the salimon from | ous racial riots may result ! ology may be different but the idea is scalesâ€"but they found them on a shelf | © urtroom. After looking everyone over | now causinms l"\“ nding the river to their SDpaWNINS _ mwentyâ€"five years ago there was not l the same ITry The Advance Want Advertisements in a cloth« -'(Q t rather _ carefully Constable â€" Pet rs | Japanese Start Operations 1:1‘()111}(5. Thousands upon thousands i Japanese in the fishing industry m' 1 a clothes closet £AL 4 f ut $ a Japalcs 1 1 143 LUSUIY | in tha "Raiita anHinrin s on Tu "aj h none!" declares one Canâ€" | Were deprived of the right of returning | pritish Columbif Of a sudden. t} 27 7 n The two women found in the house (Continueg on Page Two) She has none! leclare:s C . 4 . : Columbia f a sudden, thousâ€" | / 1 1 \J F3 rp y 1 : adian fishery official ‘"The fish belong | to ther birthplaceâ€"which is the OMIY | angs of them "invaded" the Fraser rive * \“;hl{b M\ l) ‘\](L\l{hll\ ('() IN l () Hl l)l)l‘l“ 3 4 fishery officié he 1ist l 24 im‘ se 2 se uo. |ands of th inva ts as 1j : 3 t ts stt e o on m n on e o ~ o+ Inited Stat inpa | place [ spawn.. Since then, | ) F7 k ) A o on T to Canada and the United States since | Place a saimon wil SpawHh salmon fishing industry, which, unt ; 4 en mm 5 4 7 7 t orn a TD 10 1 y ie A a o + A0! Â¥A4 ) 1UL} f f * Page T FLIERS UI DUTIES AGAIN they have always caught them excluâ€" | what was once the worlds grealest | inen had largely besn in the hands of * Nee m us â€". . | sively. As to salmon, they are hatched salmon river has been depleted. B Indians and Caucasians $ y h 4 lLeause for vear 4 striction was m !.,‘ n K in Canadian and American rivers so | Cause for years no restriction was MaCC) â€" In june, 1934 | there is no dispute. or should be no disâ€"| 0n the amount of fish that could be sixty trolling boats manned by white fishermen bore down | ‘ : n itaken fror the y the 1 T 1asS on f j pute, as to whom they belong | taken from the Fraser, the river ha@S| on a group of seven Japanese fishing never vet ttained its for r nlace ; A * ; t never yet attained its formr piaC boats and one fish buyer as they lay Japan,â€"though, seems determined to | : ‘ 1 After a salmon hatches, it descends | at anchor in a small cove on the British | have what. it is felt, is her unrightful share of the great sea harvest pr | the river to the ocean, where it reâ€" | Columbia coast. With the great force in pof +5 y t the id of | t white fishermean 1 venf in | Seiji Kondo,. professor of the Imperial mains for four yeal At the end Oof | the white fishermen pushed the Japaâ€" Fisheries School at Hakodata, recently ! that psriod, its cycle of life completed, | nese boats from the cove, anchors and declared before the Institute of Pacific he salmon starts its mysterious homeâ€" , all, to the high seas, with warning "not Relations in Yoseâ€" | * ard trek to its birthplace. In the case | to show ur faces round here again ress assembled in se â€" mits, Cal.. that there s uld be d id D€ CE s of the Fraser river, the fish ysualiy on w Ontario and Quebec to Work for North veloped an international programme of cientific reseat eries of the North Pac moment ho ne| Premiers Agree on Coâ€"Operâ€"| n. In Canada, nets are used. I: ation and Support on Muâ€"| o e e melaa tual Policies to be Agreed. D n ( e natural ré ircé have long argue not g1VvC of Ontario and Qubf through coâ€" nericans more Al I nat oT ordinat: 1 U 1@ l and forests A \\ nnecessarik e 1 R : J t n A ‘ . . 1 4 * | f the No pI inces, was Sm ie ce ie en en mm o o oo BBA eS n en h insl , i Slemay . _ | the spawning ground _ C an Axtra it sHELDON wW. COLEMAN JOSEPH FORTEY in . mMAMING. tHLS . SUMLELIA : CS o6 49 4 ‘an t f rsfâ€"on Monday al 1OTORIO LOHOW â€" A diet of s rels would scarcely meet th istronomic demands of an an excellent example of the modern Underselt Canad‘:an Product ing the Montreal conference between epic ) two )A t it‘s Japanese floating innet An oilâ€" Now tl s much cause for alarm | Premier Hepburn an Premier Duâ€" pré stufl, ¢ NOC M powered allâ€" vessel carrying a crew n both sides Both Canadian and | plessis | Ost 17 t y W $ m j ’ ¢ 1R I m i/ i ye » y 1 t ( 1 t € l dest yV of 70, it has a capaci M 150 full cases| American fishermen al ulpwood formed th o I All t f U C - 1 1A I + | 4 . bha> 5 rrol 1 4 i and Air of halves, or 14.40 ns a day. It is | their petty quarrels and he discussion in Monâ€"| lost for Paint Lake, N.W.T equipped with mal capable of a common enemy, a i0¢ ing problems of 0 aays, are safe 11 physica} hacking mm tin f1 iran them af | it uh fFau sr 4 , nditien. For thrs m short I .LL."..XA;_. sa Hnon in (). er 11SD l.n) Oi ‘;‘..‘.. VA | 10 Will O .‘.m,‘l:.\(.‘(l AT rev Ross? Both Lew Ambers (LEFT») and Jim tions and then for of two There is a reduct )lant with a 1.1;';(1-5:.]@\;:.«.\‘,- establish their floating canâ€" | ig wit the next few kave had recent victories over the great little squirrels which x do you city of five tons per day besides a| neries, the salmon will not even be ‘ weeks, Premier Hepburn said here last ri. which makes them possible future OppO! ke squirrels? Thev‘re OK ~He small freezer, cold storage piant and | given a chance to leave the ocean, les! night on his return | erweight champion. Apparently t re going J m the almon salting facilitiss ‘alons ever reach their spa w is | l)._).\.il;;'...'..n‘ experis wili JOHl in LiE f into a nuddi ver Lae meLidaus 10 cop ith the elusive R se en o c t o0 m 0. c w0 z0s on in in in m an n Mpuance |== ceb i i in im im im an m im m ie m n ie in in m in i io in en n im in am m an m s uin c m i 9 tm im m s J T YÂ¥ T ) Published at Timmins, Ont., Cansada, Yol. XXI. > :No. S1 Every MONDAY and THURSDAY . ONTARIO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22ND, 1936 MORNDAY and THURSDAT PRICE THREE CENTS s w_â€" Mr. Mrs. Klimkowich |(The British Columbia‘s Salmon Industry Regional Conference of are Committed for Trial§ Is Reported Threatened by the Japanese _ Public Health Nurses Floating Canneries Mothering Fishing Fleets in International Waters | Practically All Public Health Nurses of District in Attenâ€" \â€" dance at Event at Kirkland Lake Last Week. Many Inâ€" teresting and Helpful Papers on Work of Health Nurses. Man and Wife Given Preliminary Hearing on Charge of Iliegal Possession of Gold. Quantity of Gold, Said to be Worth $15,815.97, Produced in Court. W. B. Common, K.C., of Attorneyâ€"General‘s Dept., Conducts Prosecution > of pubâ€"| sistant superintendent of Teck Town 9, Reâ€"|ship Children‘s Aid work of the | The first regional lic health nurses ty, described A Mrs. Michael Klimkowich threw $15,â€" | with the Klimkowiches were allowed to | 815.97 worth of gold out the window of | leave but the man and wife were taken her home about 9 o‘clock on the eveâ€" | to the local police station when the ning of Saturday, October 3rd, accordaâ€" | van arrived from there. The material gistered Nurses Association of Ontario was held in Kirkland Lake, Saturday | October 17th Edna Moore, Chie{ Public Heal ith nurses can coâ€"operaté District No. 9 covers th reograâ€" | Of Provincial Department of ing to Chief C. F. Hitch of the Hollinâ€" | thrown from the window was taken to istric C Ta y P I + ) ; Kis y mAÂ¥ l ught ereeting ind lead th ger police fore who gave evidence| the Provincial police office, packed, | phical districts of Algoma, Sudbury rought greetings and lead th | ) , ; l | , n a ina Ts against her and her husband in poâ€" | sealed and placed in the safe. On Monâ€" | Nipissing Manitoulin Temiskaming, | Sl0n. In closing Miss Smi the nurses for attending and those who prepared papers for the programme She mentioned the importance of such lice court on Tuesday when the two| day morning it was taken to the Holâ€" faced a charge of having illegal posâ€" isre the seals were broken in j session of goldâ€""high grading." the presence of the four officers, the Both asked trial before a higher| material was weighed and sampled With the exc doing public | served by er wh gatherings in development of Public court through their counsel, Charl then bagged, seal signed and placed present, representing Victorian Ord@r| Health Nursing in districts removed H. Kerr. and both were committed for| in the vault at the mine, along with | Nurses. Board of Health, School Reard | from centres of téaching She anâ€" services and Red Cross This group in.| hounced that the Ontario Hydro C« trial by Magistrate Atkinson. who| the rags in whi was wrapped when | heard the evidence against both in a | thrown from the window of the house. single preliminary inquiry. W. B. Comâ€" Was "Getting Dark" mon, K.C., solicitor from the attorneyâ€" Under crossâ€"examination by Mr gâ€"neral‘s office, Toronto, conducted the | Kerr, Chief Hitch said that it "was thief witnesses were Chief | getting dark." Mr. Bateman was not | e Alvin Peters, of Toâ€"| there, said witness in reply to a quesâ€" cluded graduates of courses in public] Mission had placed a public health health nursing from McGill University,| BUSe in Fraserdale. Miss H. Wilson { h University of Western Ontario and Uniâ€"| £00k up her duties this week Toronto Miss E. MacEachren, f Kirkland Lake District Hospit tertained the group to tea served at the Windsor Hotel and conâ€" Those attending were Mrs m versity of Conference began with a luncheon prosecution. C Hitch, Const: ronto, and I Lainsbury, assayer at !tion. The door had had to be smashed the Hollinger mine. All witnesses were, in before entry could be gained to the | tinued in the ladi( parlour of the| North, Cochrane; Misses R. Brooks, J excluded at the suggeston of Mr. Comâ€"| house. While standing at the *.\111(1()\\'.! United Church. District chairman, H.] Richer, F. Farr, of Timmins; L. Win | E. Smith, presided, papers were given| Schumacher; G. Fowle South Porcu mon "in fairness to the accused." the chief had seen the younger of the Had to Break Down Door two other women in the bedroom and Telling the story of the raid on the| on entering the piace he had "ml(i[ house at the rear of 157 El eet| them to sit down and shut up." One north, Chief Hitch said Constables| of the women was between 30 and 35, Peters, Hayes and myself went to the | p by Rita Brooks on "Infant and Preâ€"| pine; H. Atkinson. R. Roy. E. Lynton school Hygient s Docker on | M. Kidd,. S. Batersby, of Kirkland LIke; [ "Place of Bed Care in a Public} E. Smith, New Liskeard; C. Keith, Health Nuring Programm Kat Haileybury; K. McKenzie, M. A. Clouâ€" | McKenzie on Generalized tier, F. Docker, North Bay; F. Sparlâ€" chief judged, and the other was door at the end of the house, on the|; about 60 | Health Nursing M1 Nora Fox, asâ€"| ing, lane. The blind on the door was down I. Lainsbury had spent 20 years at | ' en uen . on c c c : s We knocked. Klimkowich lifted the) the assay fice of the Hollinger, he | new conference to aid in solving proâ€" | \‘ y d' 1\/1' S 14 blind to one side and at that time P tâ€"| told Mr. Common when he took the blems of detail in the proposed agreeâ€" | 3 ()l dll dl lnt‘b \‘ lll ers and Haves shouted ‘Open the door ; rtand. Previous to that time he had | | ments. | l) 1t > P} y We‘re the polic« and they showe:| Â¥fone custom assaying and smelter and | | Unifermity in Wages (‘el()p ()“ ll l ““ el' their badges Klimkowich droppe\| fine wor | Greater uniformity concerning wages | the blind and walked away At thei| Great Heavy Chunks of Gold and labour conditions in th« iber inâ€"| President Murdock Says it time I thought they might make an cpened the bags one at a time / i(IU,\'\I',\ of the two provinces will be | \\” \[ $ 4 is ; effort to dispose of whatever wa in | 4 the court and drew out great sought with the two governments proâ€" | 1 Mean a say ng In the house so I left the back and '.\".'Ilf, ' of gold about the >1th posing greater coâ€"ordination regarding (‘U.\‘IS, M | | cutting operations and forestry conâ€" | â€"â€"â€"â€" servation. the Premier said Noranda Mines Limited will spend "Both government: going to make | $5,000,000 on development of its own every effort to administer our natural| power with erection of a new powel! ‘ } ind shape of muffins. Some were largâ€" to ‘the bedroom window at the fron. ' er, some small and flat. All looked more| . I saw Mrs. Klimkowich come to the window carrying a rag bundle which she set down on something near the poorlyâ€"moulded hrass than the | they were proven to be. Bag No.| window. Then she flipped up the winâ€"|" contained $9,140.90 worth of the preâ€" dow, grabbed the rag bundle and went l cious stuff, 85 per cent. goldâ€"$29 an resources in a way that will be of most j Plant at 30,000 horsepower capacity in of view of j Northern Quebec or the| President James Y. Murdoch anâ€" | benefit both from tl employmen treasury," he said ;nvwmw(! at Toronto the new project session of | would be undertaken ‘"in the very near | future," anrd added that "only a few details remain to ‘be anproved by the Quebec government before tenders are granted." to throw it out. I trisd to grab her |ounce. Bag No. 1 had one piece of gold wrists ut missed and grabbed the bunâ€" l dle instead. As on as she felt the t ian any of the others, and a| few small pieces. Its contents were worth $6.075.07. These two groups Of larger t | "As soon a 1 | the Quebec legislature is | propose to meet a | weight of the pull she heaved it out metal were the ones alleged by the crown to have been thrown from the window by Mrs. Klimkowich. and the gold buttons fell all over. Six Quart Basket of Gold The Hollinger officer produced a sixâ€" quart basket full of white bags. These No. 4 bag cortained a small brown | he deposited with resounding thuds on | parcel, inside of which was a second ; the magistrate‘s table parcel which, when opened, revealed Trouble is foreseen in Paciftic coast waters as Japan m akes a vigorous invasion of salmon waters now conâ€" tire administration of our lands and Continuing with the story of the arâ€" | partlyâ€"treated ore. It had been hamâ€"| trolled by Cangda and the United States. Floating ca nneries in international waters menace $50,000,000 inâ€" | forests departments and there will be rests, Chief Hitch said that Constable| mered flat and there were gens rous | dustry. The ABOVE layout shows B.C. salmon fleets, a day‘s catch, a rare picture of a salmon snapped as 1 uniformity in regard to policies and adâ€" Johnston, another one of the provincial | quantitis of laceâ€"like gold in the | leaped out of the water and UPPER RIGHT. a Japan ese fisherman‘s wife displaying two pink ministration. We have also agreed to | salmon. Much antagonism is reported between B.C. J apanese and white fishermen. | ing there will be all the officers of the various departments of both governâ€" j | | | | I | ments to discuss our mutual problems I He forecast a saving in power costs "We are going to coâ€"ordinate the enâ€"| to Noranda and a boon for Northetrn Quebec, as well as Canadian construcâ€" tion companies Surveys were reported made last month of the proposed plant site where water flowing out of Grand Lake Vicâ€" | extend the share of our opsrations in | regard to our natural resources.‘ | toria into the Ottawa River provides a men who had ibeen sent up here from | quartz, No. 2 bag contained a button Toronto with a search warrant for | said to have been found in the bedroom ; By JOHN B. TOMPKINS Made Hugh Catch to hatch They will instead be scooped Klimkowich‘s house, arrived at his side|of the Klimkowich place, valu@d @t} goentral Press Canadian (‘orrvspondcntf She carries a number of smail boats| from the high seas by hordes of Nipâ€" U. S. Markets |natural situation for such a developâ€" and helped pick up the gold 1$530.80. Witness was confused someâ€"| vancouver, B.C.. Oct. 22nd.â€"As the| mothered two 32â€"foot, 45â€"horseâ€" | ponese fishermen operating beyond the The premier said United States newsâ€" | ment. The proposed site is 75 mile The other officers had gained enâ€"| what by Mr. Common‘s inquiry @S U0| preatest British Columbia salmon 11<h»il"4““1' launches manned by eight men | threeâ€"mile limit print importers and paper mills were | from Noranda Mines trance to the back of the house by | whether the metal was worth mor€e! ns season in years draws to A (.1(.503(‘:1('31 and carrying radio directionâ€"findâ€" The floating canncries will harvest| curtailing thsir imports from Scanâ€"| Tenders have been asked for reâ€" smashing the door down, and the two| than 25e a pound. This question WAS| ang ihe 1,500 ;'1_\11‘.:3“(\“ of the Praser| ing equipment. Off the coast of Alasâ€" | the homing British Columbia ~ukmoni<1mu\'nm countries dus to the disturbed | Sarding freight charges from Rouyn officers who had the gold went in the | asked because the information had “1â€"‘Ri\‘m' area alone. count wages in excess | ka, the Hakuyo Maru released its hordes| as they proceed from area to area inâ€" 'l state of Europe and were turning to ' and Amos, Que.. into the power site t | Effort is being made to obtain definit ply | particulars regarding construction costs C h t ie e esc domeh and | leged ore (Mhan hk Y4l of $1,000,000, fears are being felt here | Of small boats and had not the slightest | dicated by the scientific information. | Canada to assure themselves of a supâ€" Mrs. Klimkowich, two other women and | ue had been found difficulty in catching, with nets, suffiâ€" | The fish will be processed and then reâ€" a child. Chisf Hitch asked Mrs. Klimâ€" Samples had been taken from the salmon to pack 57,600 | leased to the world marketâ€"lowâ€"priced that Japan may put a stop to annual salmon runs from the ocean to | Clent sockeye "These people contract a year or two it was learned. p \ Tha t re voOU lni > ere?" | button with lo ) p the ackâ€" 1 1 4 . i¢ Wi+ ) 1 ; ) ¢ hn . kowich What are you doing here buttons with a file, and from the pack the upper river spawning grounds. halfâ€"pound tins. first quality British Columbsia salmon | in advance and are now fearful O | Option For Two Years "I‘m the lady of the house," she reâ€"| age of native gold by choosing W“i*tmRan“,-h that the Japanese plan to inâ€" There is. of course, nothing to preâ€" | Competing with our own salmon of the | what may happen and as a result they The company still has two years to same quality but higher price are coming to Canada."he stated exercise its right to the power site, Mr plied appeared to ‘be an average piece, | vade the rich British Columbia and | vent Japan from operating her floating "Why did you throw that stuff out ) Lainebury said Alaska fishing areas with great floatâ€" | canneries in the unrestricted internaâ€" Unless Ottawa, Washington and Toâ€" Hon. Peter Heenan, Ontario minister | Murdoch said, and tenders will not be the wndow? I nearly caught your .az‘::} Handed Search Warrant in 'l‘urnnl({} ing canneries anchored ten to forty | tional waters. Such an event, however, | kio reach an agreement, it is felt lwnn:ol lands and forests, and Hon. Oscar |let until all governm@ental details have person. (oughed NY : 61M .. SA9 §‘ Cf “'\:”!)‘fi“ Alvin Pelers said fic h"““xnxhn\ offâ€"shore in international \\;lL«‘I":~v will prove drastic to the British Columâ€" 30,000 people connected with the $50,â€", Drouin, Quebec minister of lands and | been settled replied s peeni c 0 fnrlln es on are T(): are current along this coast from the | bia, Alaska and state of Washington | 000,000 fishing industries of the North‘ forests, attended Saturday‘s conferencs. | Operating facilities of Noranda Mines No Doubt of Identity ronto to search the premises of Micha€1| grare of washington to Alaska fishsries. The International Fisheries | Pacific coast may find their livelihood ; Premier Hepburn said it was also deâ€" | have been steadily increased since inâ€" r ‘ interrupted hief | Klimkowich in Tir ins at 157 Elm s ; 4 ¢ > ide luring } talk witl cemier M 2 Lk ME pAuprewich }1 s “m“‘\l o o || _ Canadian and American fishermen Commission, which administers the | gonk | cided during his talk with Premier i ception of operations in 1928. Today y stor here sk "Ts there| street north e. three other prov ‘la smcs 24e S 5k § rrang i the Inited € y ananese lessis the tw nrovince antinue y ®, Hitch‘s story here to ask I € et no Ie, other provincl halibut resources of the North Pacific| In ths United Kingdom Japanese| Duplessis the two provinces continue | Noranda is the second largest producer and thsir governments, have wrangled } 1s oo , R PR W the North ! for Canada and the United States, has pink" salmon sells for less than it | their agre¢ment whereby municipanlUes | of copper and third largest producer of ish Columbia to can it, deâ€" , are prohibited to bid competitively for 1 gold in Canada. fact that Canadian products | industries by offering tax exemptions In gold production it is exceeded by any doubt in your mind at all that|officers who had accompanied him ; I I Cz ll.ukv Shore and Hollinger and in copâ€" over the respective rights in ned war oe that + d 11 d . Pacific fishing area for years. here | issued warnings that it will spell doom out the window? arrived about 100 yards from the cific fishing area for y€ Th 4 this is the woman who threw the stuff| from Toronto and Chief Hitch had| ' +ur P t} nracsont ip ali + . S j p ie atht the| w i cmlah . t 745 that| Aare. at the present time, two very effec. | to the present gigantic halibut conser "Absolutely no doubt at all he| Klimkowich place at about 745 that| e vation scheme, the result of five years | avre given preference chlaf yanifad | Saturday evening. They kept observa.| UVée Ureabies, the Halibut Treaty and | Y440n S C1 pH itE Fear Ssen eniel repieo i s priy °C‘ "..|the Sockeye Treaty, under which both | 0f the commission‘s surveys eb Â¥rouble | tart] f per production by The International Constable Hayes had found one small| tion on the place for about an hour | / / 7 . t n an the.foumal | ‘raser River Depleted In the event that thé Canadian,|â€" North Bay Nuggel:â€"iInsfead 0f TC~ . Nmickel Company A 4 had seen several people come and j countries operate. In the formation of Fraser River Depletec e y PX mnaime cont? trRe: een: $ j gold "button in the bedroom and and had seen severai peop C o f | j o es 4 s t ; | American and Japanese governments do | commending )irth controi n 161 I In 1935 j)l'u(iuclmn included. 74.500.â€" ht F q 1| go vidence fr the followed | these treaties, however, they seem tO | [wentyâ€"three years ago a disastrous | i manh s + ; 5 barat Comnmeil af the United Churel ( ' Constable Peters had found a small | 80 His evidence from then on followed | : | + Inot reach an agreement and the Nipâ€" j eral Council of the United Churtch 01 goy nounds of copper and 268,000 ‘e istabl eters had. [ the same line as OChicf Hitch‘s | have forgotten altogether about that | rockslide into the Fraser river during | Aarermenr "istior the" i1 i'v : Cansda‘ ‘has ‘chaneca name to I nds of pper and 268, unces package of native gold in a drawer in | * y on m t + Nee h4 > nawar_â€"â€"Tanan | x . _\ _ pon‘se fishermen ignore (he / sSHAID | DCV 0C onl s es of gold the kitchen. The officers also found | was asked by Mr. Commons to idenâ€"| other North Pacific powerâ€"Japan.| the construction of the Canadian NOTâ€"~â€" | warnines of Canadian fishsrmen, seriâ€" | "voluntary parenthood." The terminâ€" what appeared to e a set of kitchen | tif} Klimkowich from the people in the| what are her hts? is a questi0n | thern Railway, blocked the salimon from | ous racial riots may result ! ology may be different but the idea is scalesâ€"but they found them on a shelf | © urtroom. After looking everyone over | now causinms l"\“ nding the river to their SDpaWNINS _ mwentyâ€"five years ago there was not l the same ITry The Advance Want Advertisements in a cloth« -'(Q t rather _ carefully Constable â€" Pet rs | Japanese Start Operations 1:1‘()111}(5. Thousands upon thousands i Japanese in the fishing industry m' 1 a clothes closet £AL 4 f ut $ a Japalcs 1 1 143 LUSUIY | in tha "Raiita anHinrin s on Tu "aj h none!" declares one Canâ€" | Were deprived of the right of returning | pritish Columbif Of a sudden. t} 27 7 n The two women found in the house (Continueg on Page Two) She has none! leclare:s C . 4 . : Columbia f a sudden, thousâ€" | / 1 1 \J F3 rp y 1 : adian fishery official ‘"The fish belong | to ther birthplaceâ€"which is the OMIY | angs of them "invaded" the Fraser rive * \“;hl{b M\ l) ‘\](L\l{hll\ ('() IN l () Hl l)l)l‘l“ 3 4 fishery officié he 1ist l 24 im‘ se 2 se uo. |ands of th inva ts as 1j : 3 t ts stt e o on m n on e o ~ o+ Inited Stat inpa | place [ spawn.. Since then, | ) F7 k ) A o on T to Canada and the United States since | Place a saimon wil SpawHh salmon fishing industry, which, unt ; 4 en mm 5 4 7 7 t orn a TD 10 1 y ie A a o + A0! Â¥A4 ) 1UL} f f * Page T FLIERS UI DUTIES AGAIN they have always caught them excluâ€" | what was once the worlds grealest | inen had largely besn in the hands of * Nee m us â€". . | sively. As to salmon, they are hatched salmon river has been depleted. B Indians and Caucasians $ y h 4 lLeause for vear 4 striction was m !.,‘ n K in Canadian and American rivers so | Cause for years no restriction was MaCC) â€" In june, 1934 | there is no dispute. or should be no disâ€"| 0n the amount of fish that could be sixty trolling boats manned by white fishermen bore down | ‘ : n itaken fror the y the 1 T 1asS on f j pute, as to whom they belong | taken from the Fraser, the river ha@S| on a group of seven Japanese fishing never vet ttained its for r nlace ; A * ; t never yet attained its formr piaC boats and one fish buyer as they lay Japan,â€"though, seems determined to | : ‘ 1 After a salmon hatches, it descends | at anchor in a small cove on the British | have what. it is felt, is her unrightful share of the great sea harvest pr | the river to the ocean, where it reâ€" | Columbia coast. With the great force in pof +5 y t the id of | t white fishermean 1 venf in | Seiji Kondo,. professor of the Imperial mains for four yeal At the end Oof | the white fishermen pushed the Japaâ€" Fisheries School at Hakodata, recently ! that psriod, its cycle of life completed, | nese boats from the cove, anchors and declared before the Institute of Pacific he salmon starts its mysterious homeâ€" , all, to the high seas, with warning "not Relations in Yoseâ€" | * ard trek to its birthplace. In the case | to show ur faces round here again ress assembled in se â€" mits, Cal.. that there s uld be d id D€ CE s of the Fraser river, the fish ysualiy on w Ontario and Quebec to Work for North veloped an international programme of cientific reseat eries of the North Pac moment ho ne| Premiers Agree on Coâ€"Operâ€"| n. In Canada, nets are used. I: ation and Support on Muâ€"| o e e melaa tual Policies to be Agreed. D n ( e natural ré ircé have long argue not g1VvC of Ontario and Qubf through coâ€" nericans more Al I nat oT ordinat: 1 U 1@ l and forests A \\ nnecessarik e 1 R : J t n A ‘ . . 1 4 * | f the No pI inces, was Sm ie ce ie en en mm o o oo BBA eS n en h insl , i Slemay . _ | the spawning ground _ C an Axtra it sHELDON wW. COLEMAN JOSEPH FORTEY in . mMAMING. tHLS . SUMLELIA : CS o6 49 4 ‘an t f rsfâ€"on Monday al 1OTORIO LOHOW â€" A diet of s rels would scarcely meet th istronomic demands of an an excellent example of the modern Underselt Canad‘:an Product ing the Montreal conference between epic ) two )A t it‘s Japanese floating innet An oilâ€" Now tl s much cause for alarm | Premier Hepburn an Premier Duâ€" pré stufl, ¢ NOC M powered allâ€" vessel carrying a crew n both sides Both Canadian and | plessis | Ost 17 t y W $ m j ’ ¢ 1R I m i/ i ye » y 1 t ( 1 t € l dest yV of 70, it has a capaci M 150 full cases| American fishermen al ulpwood formed th o I All t f U C - 1 1A I + | 4 . bha> 5 rrol 1 4 i and Air of halves, or 14.40 ns a day. It is | their petty quarrels and he discussion in Monâ€"| lost for Paint Lake, N.W.T equipped with mal capable of a common enemy, a i0¢ ing problems of 0 aays, are safe 11 physica} hacking mm tin f1 iran them af | it uh fFau sr 4 , nditien. For thrs m short I .LL."..XA;_. sa Hnon in (). er 11SD l.n) Oi ‘;‘..‘.. VA | 10 Will O .‘.m,‘l:.\(.‘(l AT rev Ross? Both Lew Ambers (LEFT») and Jim tions and then for of two There is a reduct )lant with a 1.1;';(1-5:.]@\;:.«.\‘,- establish their floating canâ€" | ig wit the next few kave had recent victories over the great little squirrels which x do you city of five tons per day besides a| neries, the salmon will not even be ‘ weeks, Premier Hepburn said here last ri. which makes them possible future OppO! ke squirrels? Thev‘re OK ~He small freezer, cold storage piant and | given a chance to leave the ocean, les! night on his return | erweight champion. Apparently t re going J m the almon salting facilitiss ‘alons ever reach their spa w is | l)._).\.il;;'...'..n‘ experis wili JOHl in LiE f into a nuddi ver Lae meLidaus 10 cop ith the elusive R se en o c t o0 m 0. c w0 z0s on in in in m an n Mpuance |== ceb i i in im im im an m im m ie m n ie in in m in i io in en n im in am m an m s uin c m i 9 tm im m s J T YÂ¥ T ) Published at Timmins, Ont., Cansada, Yol. XXI. > :No. S1 Every MONDAY and THURSDAY . ONTARIO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22ND, 1936 MORNDAY and THURSDAT PRICE THREE CENTS s w_â€" Mr. Mrs. Klimkowich |(The British Columbia‘s Salmon Industry Regional Conference of are Committed for Trial§ Is Reported Threatened by the Japanese _ Public Health Nurses Floating Canneries Mothering Fishing Fleets in International Waters | Practically All Public Health Nurses of District in Attenâ€" \â€" dance at Event at Kirkland Lake Last Week. Many Inâ€" teresting and Helpful Papers on Work of Health Nurses. Man and Wife Given Preliminary Hearing on Charge of Iliegal Possession of Gold. Quantity of Gold, Said to be Worth $15,815.97, Produced in Court. W. B. Common, K.C., of Attorneyâ€"General‘s Dept., Conducts Prosecution > of pubâ€"| sistant superintendent of Teck Town 9, Reâ€"|ship Children‘s Aid work of the | The first regional lic health nurses ty, described A Mrs. Michael Klimkowich threw $15,â€" | with the Klimkowiches were allowed to | 815.97 worth of gold out the window of | leave but the man and wife were taken her home about 9 o‘clock on the eveâ€" | to the local police station when the ning of Saturday, October 3rd, accordaâ€" | van arrived from there. The material gistered Nurses Association of Ontario was held in Kirkland Lake, Saturday | October 17th Edna Moore, Chie{ Public Heal ith nurses can coâ€"operaté District No. 9 covers th reograâ€" | Of Provincial Department of ing to Chief C. F. Hitch of the Hollinâ€" | thrown from the window was taken to istric C Ta y P I + ) ; Kis y mAÂ¥ l ught ereeting ind lead th ger police fore who gave evidence| the Provincial police office, packed, | phical districts of Algoma, Sudbury rought greetings and lead th | ) , ; l | , n a ina Ts against her and her husband in poâ€" | sealed and placed in the safe. On Monâ€" | Nipissing Manitoulin Temiskaming, | Sl0n. In closing Miss Smi the nurses for attending and those who prepared papers for the programme She mentioned the importance of such lice court on Tuesday when the two| day morning it was taken to the Holâ€" faced a charge of having illegal posâ€" isre the seals were broken in j session of goldâ€""high grading." the presence of the four officers, the Both asked trial before a higher| material was weighed and sampled With the exc doing public | served by er wh gatherings in development of Public court through their counsel, Charl then bagged, seal signed and placed present, representing Victorian Ord@r| Health Nursing in districts removed H. Kerr. and both were committed for| in the vault at the mine, along with | Nurses. Board of Health, School Reard | from centres of téaching She anâ€" services and Red Cross This group in.| hounced that the Ontario Hydro C« trial by Magistrate Atkinson. who| the rags in whi was wrapped when | heard the evidence against both in a | thrown from the window of the house. single preliminary inquiry. W. B. Comâ€" Was "Getting Dark" mon, K.C., solicitor from the attorneyâ€" Under crossâ€"examination by Mr gâ€"neral‘s office, Toronto, conducted the | Kerr, Chief Hitch said that it "was thief witnesses were Chief | getting dark." Mr. Bateman was not | e Alvin Peters, of Toâ€"| there, said witness in reply to a quesâ€" cluded graduates of courses in public] Mission had placed a public health health nursing from McGill University,| BUSe in Fraserdale. Miss H. Wilson { h University of Western Ontario and Uniâ€"| £00k up her duties this week Toronto Miss E. MacEachren, f Kirkland Lake District Hospit tertained the group to tea served at the Windsor Hotel and conâ€" Those attending were Mrs m versity of Conference began with a luncheon prosecution. C Hitch, Const: ronto, and I Lainsbury, assayer at !tion. The door had had to be smashed the Hollinger mine. All witnesses were, in before entry could be gained to the | tinued in the ladi( parlour of the| North, Cochrane; Misses R. Brooks, J excluded at the suggeston of Mr. Comâ€"| house. While standing at the *.\111(1()\\'.! United Church. District chairman, H.] Richer, F. Farr, of Timmins; L. Win | E. Smith, presided, papers were given| Schumacher; G. Fowle South Porcu mon "in fairness to the accused." the chief had seen the younger of the Had to Break Down Door two other women in the bedroom and Telling the story of the raid on the| on entering the piace he had "ml(i[ house at the rear of 157 El eet| them to sit down and shut up." One north, Chief Hitch said Constables| of the women was between 30 and 35, Peters, Hayes and myself went to the | p by Rita Brooks on "Infant and Preâ€"| pine; H. Atkinson. R. Roy. E. Lynton school Hygient s Docker on | M. Kidd,. S. Batersby, of Kirkland LIke; [ "Place of Bed Care in a Public} E. Smith, New Liskeard; C. Keith, Health Nuring Programm Kat Haileybury; K. McKenzie, M. A. Clouâ€" | McKenzie on Generalized tier, F. Docker, North Bay; F. Sparlâ€" chief judged, and the other was door at the end of the house, on the|; about 60 | Health Nursing M1 Nora Fox, asâ€"| ing, lane. The blind on the door was down I. Lainsbury had spent 20 years at | ' en uen . on c c c : s We knocked. Klimkowich lifted the) the assay fice of the Hollinger, he | new conference to aid in solving proâ€" | \‘ y d' 1\/1' S 14 blind to one side and at that time P tâ€"| told Mr. Common when he took the blems of detail in the proposed agreeâ€" | 3 ()l dll dl lnt‘b \‘ lll ers and Haves shouted ‘Open the door ; rtand. Previous to that time he had | | ments. | l) 1t > P} y We‘re the polic« and they showe:| Â¥fone custom assaying and smelter and | | Unifermity in Wages (‘el()p ()“ ll l ““ el' their badges Klimkowich droppe\| fine wor | Greater uniformity concerning wages | the blind and walked away At thei| Great Heavy Chunks of Gold and labour conditions in th« iber inâ€"| President Murdock Says it time I thought they might make an cpened the bags one at a time / i(IU,\'\I',\ of the two provinces will be | \\” \[ $ 4 is ; effort to dispose of whatever wa in | 4 the court and drew out great sought with the two governments proâ€" | 1 Mean a say ng In the house so I left the back and '.\".'Ilf, ' of gold about the >1th posing greater coâ€"ordination regarding (‘U.\‘IS, M | | cutting operations and forestry conâ€" | â€"â€"â€"â€" servation. the Premier said Noranda Mines Limited will spend "Both government: going to make | $5,000,000 on development of its own every effort to administer our natural| power with erection of a new powel! ‘ } ind shape of muffins. Some were largâ€" to ‘the bedroom window at the fron. ' er, some small and flat. All looked more| . I saw Mrs. Klimkowich come to the window carrying a rag bundle which she set down on something near the poorlyâ€"moulded hrass than the | they were proven to be. Bag No.| window. Then she flipped up the winâ€"|" contained $9,140.90 worth of the preâ€" dow, grabbed the rag bundle and went l cious stuff, 85 per cent. goldâ€"$29 an resources in a way that will be of most j Plant at 30,000 horsepower capacity in of view of j Northern Quebec or the| President James Y. Murdoch anâ€" | benefit both from tl employmen treasury," he said ;nvwmw(! at Toronto the new project session of | would be undertaken ‘"in the very near | future," anrd added that "only a few details remain to ‘be anproved by the Quebec government before tenders are granted." to throw it out. I trisd to grab her |ounce. Bag No. 1 had one piece of gold wrists ut missed and grabbed the bunâ€" l dle instead. As on as she felt the t ian any of the others, and a| few small pieces. Its contents were worth $6.075.07. These two groups Of larger t | "As soon a 1 | the Quebec legislature is | propose to meet a | weight of the pull she heaved it out metal were the ones alleged by the crown to have been thrown from the window by Mrs. Klimkowich. and the gold buttons fell all over. Six Quart Basket of Gold The Hollinger officer produced a sixâ€" quart basket full of white bags. These No. 4 bag cortained a small brown | he deposited with resounding thuds on | parcel, inside of which was a second ; the magistrate‘s table parcel which, when opened, revealed Trouble is foreseen in Paciftic coast waters as Japan m akes a vigorous invasion of salmon waters now conâ€" tire administration of our lands and Continuing with the story of the arâ€" | partlyâ€"treated ore. It had been hamâ€"| trolled by Cangda and the United States. Floating ca nneries in international waters menace $50,000,000 inâ€" | forests departments and there will be rests, Chief Hitch said that Constable| mered flat and there were gens rous | dustry. The ABOVE layout shows B.C. salmon fleets, a day‘s catch, a rare picture of a salmon snapped as 1 uniformity in regard to policies and adâ€" Johnston, another one of the provincial | quantitis of laceâ€"like gold in the | leaped out of the water and UPPER RIGHT. a Japan ese fisherman‘s wife displaying two pink ministration. We have also agreed to | salmon. Much antagonism is reported between B.C. J apanese and white fishermen. | ing there will be all the officers of the various departments of both governâ€" j | | | | I | ments to discuss our mutual problems I He forecast a saving in power costs "We are going to coâ€"ordinate the enâ€"| to Noranda and a boon for Northetrn Quebec, as well as Canadian construcâ€" tion companies Surveys were reported made last month of the proposed plant site where water flowing out of Grand Lake Vicâ€" | extend the share of our opsrations in | regard to our natural resources.‘ | toria into the Ottawa River provides a men who had ibeen sent up here from | quartz, No. 2 bag contained a button Toronto with a search warrant for | said to have been found in the bedroom ; By JOHN B. TOMPKINS Made Hugh Catch to hatch They will instead be scooped Klimkowich‘s house, arrived at his side|of the Klimkowich place, valu@d @t} goentral Press Canadian (‘orrvspondcntf She carries a number of smail boats| from the high seas by hordes of Nipâ€" U. S. Markets |natural situation for such a developâ€" and helped pick up the gold 1$530.80. Witness was confused someâ€"| vancouver, B.C.. Oct. 22nd.â€"As the| mothered two 32â€"foot, 45â€"horseâ€" | ponese fishermen operating beyond the The premier said United States newsâ€" | ment. The proposed site is 75 mile The other officers had gained enâ€"| what by Mr. Common‘s inquiry @S U0| preatest British Columbia salmon 11<h»il"4““1' launches manned by eight men | threeâ€"mile limit print importers and paper mills were | from Noranda Mines trance to the back of the house by | whether the metal was worth mor€e! ns season in years draws to A (.1(.503(‘:1('31 and carrying radio directionâ€"findâ€" The floating canncries will harvest| curtailing thsir imports from Scanâ€"| Tenders have been asked for reâ€" smashing the door down, and the two| than 25e a pound. This question WAS| ang ihe 1,500 ;'1_\11‘.:3“(\“ of the Praser| ing equipment. Off the coast of Alasâ€" | the homing British Columbia ~ukmoni<1mu\'nm countries dus to the disturbed | Sarding freight charges from Rouyn officers who had the gold went in the | asked because the information had “1â€"‘Ri\‘m' area alone. count wages in excess | ka, the Hakuyo Maru released its hordes| as they proceed from area to area inâ€" 'l state of Europe and were turning to ' and Amos, Que.. into the power site t | Effort is being made to obtain definit ply | particulars regarding construction costs C h t ie e esc domeh and | leged ore (Mhan hk Y4l of $1,000,000, fears are being felt here | Of small boats and had not the slightest | dicated by the scientific information. | Canada to assure themselves of a supâ€" Mrs. Klimkowich, two other women and | ue had been found difficulty in catching, with nets, suffiâ€" | The fish will be processed and then reâ€" a child. Chisf Hitch asked Mrs. Klimâ€" Samples had been taken from the salmon to pack 57,600 | leased to the world marketâ€"lowâ€"priced that Japan may put a stop to annual salmon runs from the ocean to | Clent sockeye "These people contract a year or two it was learned. p \ Tha t re voOU lni > ere?" | button with lo ) p the ackâ€" 1 1 4 . i¢ Wi+ ) 1 ; ) ¢ hn . kowich What are you doing here buttons with a file, and from the pack the upper river spawning grounds. halfâ€"pound tins. first quality British Columbsia salmon | in advance and are now fearful O | Option For Two Years "I‘m the lady of the house," she reâ€"| age of native gold by choosing W“i*tmRan“,-h that the Japanese plan to inâ€" There is. of course, nothing to preâ€" | Competing with our own salmon of the | what may happen and as a result they The company still has two years to same quality but higher price are coming to Canada."he stated exercise its right to the power site, Mr plied appeared to ‘be an average piece, | vade the rich British Columbia and | vent Japan from operating her floating "Why did you throw that stuff out ) Lainebury said Alaska fishing areas with great floatâ€" | canneries in the unrestricted internaâ€" Unless Ottawa, Washington and Toâ€" Hon. Peter Heenan, Ontario minister | Murdoch said, and tenders will not be the wndow? I nearly caught your .az‘::} Handed Search Warrant in 'l‘urnnl({} ing canneries anchored ten to forty | tional waters. Such an event, however, | kio reach an agreement, it is felt lwnn:ol lands and forests, and Hon. Oscar |let until all governm@ental details have person. (oughed NY : 61M .. SA9 §‘ Cf “'\:”!)‘fi“ Alvin Pelers said fic h"““xnxhn\ offâ€"shore in international \\;lL«‘I":~v will prove drastic to the British Columâ€" 30,000 people connected with the $50,â€", Drouin, Quebec minister of lands and | been settled replied s peeni c 0 fnrlln es on are T(): are current along this coast from the | bia, Alaska and state of Washington | 000,000 fishing industries of the North‘ forests, attended Saturday‘s conferencs. | Operating facilities of Noranda Mines No Doubt of Identity ronto to search the premises of Micha€1| grare of washington to Alaska fishsries. The International Fisheries | Pacific coast may find their livelihood ; Premier Hepburn said it was also deâ€" | have been steadily increased since inâ€" r ‘ interrupted hief | Klimkowich in Tir ins at 157 Elm s ; 4 ¢ > ide luring } talk witl cemier M 2 Lk ME pAuprewich }1 s “m“‘\l o o || _ Canadian and American fishermen Commission, which administers the | gonk | cided during his talk with Premier i ception of operations in 1928. Today y stor here sk "Ts there| street north e. three other prov ‘la smcs 24e S 5k § rrang i the Inited € y ananese lessis the tw nrovince antinue y ®, Hitch‘s story here to ask I € et no Ie, other provincl halibut resources of the North Pacific| In ths United Kingdom Japanese| Duplessis the two provinces continue | Noranda is the second largest producer and thsir governments, have wrangled } 1s oo , R PR W the North ! for Canada and the United States, has pink" salmon sells for less than it | their agre¢ment whereby municipanlUes | of copper and third largest producer of ish Columbia to can it, deâ€" , are prohibited to bid competitively for 1 gold in Canada. fact that Canadian products | industries by offering tax exemptions In gold production it is exceeded by any doubt in your mind at all that|officers who had accompanied him ; I I Cz ll.ukv Shore and Hollinger and in copâ€" over the respective rights in ned war oe that + d 11 d . Pacific fishing area for years. here | issued warnings that it will spell doom out the window? arrived about 100 yards from the cific fishing area for y€ Th 4 this is the woman who threw the stuff| from Toronto and Chief Hitch had| ' +ur P t} nracsont ip ali + . S j p ie atht the| w i cmlah . t 745 that| Aare. at the present time, two very effec. | to the present gigantic halibut conser "Absolutely no doubt at all he| Klimkowich place at about 745 that| e vation scheme, the result of five years | avre given preference chlaf yanifad | Saturday evening. They kept observa.| UVée Ureabies, the Halibut Treaty and | Y440n S C1 pH itE Fear Ssen eniel repieo i s priy °C‘ "..|the Sockeye Treaty, under which both | 0f the commission‘s surveys eb Â¥rouble | tart] f per production by The International Constable Hayes had found one small| tion on the place for about an hour | / / 7 . t n an the.foumal | ‘raser River Depleted In the event that thé Canadian,|â€" North Bay Nuggel:â€"iInsfead 0f TC~ . Nmickel Company A 4 had seen several people come and j countries operate. In the formation of Fraser River Depletec e y PX mnaime cont? trRe: een: $ j gold "button in the bedroom and and had seen severai peop C o f | j o es 4 s t ; | American and Japanese governments do | commending )irth controi n 161 I In 1935 j)l'u(iuclmn included. 74.500.â€" ht F q 1| go vidence fr the followed | these treaties, however, they seem tO | [wentyâ€"three years ago a disastrous | i manh s + ; 5 barat Comnmeil af the United Churel ( ' Constable Peters had found a small | 80 His evidence from then on followed | : | + Inot reach an agreement and the Nipâ€" j eral Council of the United Churtch 01 goy nounds of copper and 268,000 ‘e istabl eters had. [ the same line as OChicf Hitch‘s | have forgotten altogether about that | rockslide into the Fraser river during | Aarermenr "istior the" i1 i'v : Cansda‘ ‘has ‘chaneca name to I nds of pper and 268, unces package of native gold in a drawer in | * y on m t + Nee h4 > nawar_â€"â€"Tanan | x . _\ _ pon‘se fishermen ignore (he / sSHAID | DCV 0C onl s es of gold the kitchen. The officers also found | was asked by Mr. Commons to idenâ€"| other North Pacific powerâ€"Japan.| the construction of the Canadian NOTâ€"~â€" | warnines of Canadian fishsrmen, seriâ€" | "voluntary parenthood." The terminâ€" what appeared to e a set of kitchen | tif} Klimkowich from the people in the| what are her hts? is a questi0n | thern Railway, blocked the salimon from | ous racial riots may result ! ology may be different but the idea is scalesâ€"but they found them on a shelf | © urtroom. After looking everyone over | now causinms l"\“ nding the river to their SDpaWNINS _ mwentyâ€"five years ago there was not l the same ITry The Advance Want Advertisements in a cloth« -'(Q t rather _ carefully Constable â€" Pet rs | Japanese Start Operations 1:1‘()111}(5. Thousands upon thousands i Japanese in the fishing industry m' 1 a clothes closet £AL 4 f ut $ a Japalcs 1 1 143 LUSUIY | in tha "Raiita anHinrin s on Tu "aj h none!" declares one Canâ€" | Were deprived of the right of returning | pritish Columbif Of a sudden. t} 27 7 n The two women found in the house (Continueg on Page Two) She has none! leclare:s C . 4 . : Columbia f a sudden, thousâ€" | / 1 1 \J F3 rp y 1 : adian fishery official ‘"The fish belong | to ther birthplaceâ€"which is the OMIY | angs of them "invaded" the Fraser rive * \“;hl{b M\ l) ‘\](L\l{hll\ ('() IN l () Hl l)l)l‘l“ 3 4 fishery officié he 1ist l 24 im‘ se 2 se uo. |ands of th inva ts as 1j : 3 t ts stt e o on m n on e o ~ o+ Inited Stat inpa | place [ spawn.. Since then, | ) F7 k ) A o on T to Canada and the United States since | Place a saimon wil SpawHh salmon fishing industry, which, unt ; 4 en mm 5 4 7 7 t orn a TD 10 1 y ie A a o + A0! Â¥A4 ) 1UL} f f * Page T FLIERS UI DUTIES AGAIN they have always caught them excluâ€" | what was once the worlds grealest | inen had largely besn in the hands of * Nee m us â€". . | sively. As to salmon, they are hatched salmon river has been depleted. B Indians and Caucasians $ y h 4 lLeause for vear 4 striction was m !.,‘ n K in Canadian and American rivers so | Cause for years no restriction was MaCC) â€" In june, 1934 | there is no dispute. or should be no disâ€"| 0n the amount of fish that could be sixty trolling boats manned by white fishermen bore down | ‘ : n itaken fror the y the 1 T 1asS on f j pute, as to whom they belong | taken from the Fraser, the river ha@S| on a group of seven Japanese fishing never vet ttained its for r nlace ; A * ; t never yet attained its formr piaC boats and one fish buyer as they lay Japan,â€"though, seems determined to | : ‘ 1 After a salmon hatches, it descends | at anchor in a small cove on the British | have what. it is felt, is her unrightful share of the great sea harvest pr | the river to the ocean, where it reâ€" | Columbia coast. With the great force in pof +5 y t the id of | t white fishermean 1 venf in | Seiji Kondo,. professor of the Imperial mains for four yeal At the end Oof | the white fishermen pushed the Japaâ€" Fisheries School at Hakodata, recently ! that psriod, its cycle of life completed, | nese boats from the cove, anchors and declared before the Institute of Pacific he salmon starts its mysterious homeâ€" , all, to the high seas, with warning "not Relations in Yoseâ€" | * ard trek to its birthplace. In the case | to show ur faces round here again ress assembled in se â€" mits, Cal.. that there s uld be d id D€ CE s of the Fraser river, the fish ysualiy on w Ontario and Quebec to Work for North veloped an international programme of cientific reseat eries of the North Pac moment ho ne| Premiers Agree on Coâ€"Operâ€"| n. In Canada, nets are used. I: ation and Support on Muâ€"| o e e melaa tual Policies to be Agreed. D n ( e natural ré ircé have long argue not g1VvC of Ontario and Qubf through coâ€" nericans more Al I nat oT ordinat: 1 U 1@ l and forests A \\ nnecessarik e 1 R : J t n A ‘ . . 1 4 * | f the No pI inces, was Sm ie ce ie en en mm o o oo BBA eS n en h insl , i Slemay . _ | the spawning ground _ C an Axtra it sHELDON wW. COLEMAN JOSEPH FORTEY in . mMAMING. tHLS . SUMLELIA : CS o6 49 4 ‘an t f rsfâ€"on Monday al 1OTORIO LOHOW â€" A diet of s rels would scarcely meet th istronomic demands of an an excellent example of the modern Underselt Canad‘:an Product ing the Montreal conference between epic ) two )A t it‘s Japanese floating innet An oilâ€" Now tl s much cause for alarm | Premier Hepburn an Premier Duâ€" pré stufl, ¢ NOC M powered allâ€" vessel carrying a crew n both sides Both Canadian and | plessis | Ost 17 t y W $ m j ’ ¢ 1R I m i/ i ye » y 1 t ( 1 t € l dest yV of 70, it has a capaci M 150 full cases| American fishermen al ulpwood formed th o I All t f U C - 1 1A I + | 4 . bha> 5 rrol 1 4 i and Air of halves, or 14.40 ns a day. It is | their petty quarrels and he discussion in Monâ€"| lost for Paint Lake, N.W.T equipped with mal capable of a common enemy, a i0¢ ing problems of 0 aays, are safe 11 physica} hacking mm tin f1 iran them af | it uh fFau sr 4 , nditien. For thrs m short I .LL."..XA;_. sa Hnon in (). er 11SD l.n) Oi ‘;‘..‘.. VA | 10 Will O .‘.m,‘l:.\(.‘(l AT rev Ross? Both Lew Ambers (LEFT») and Jim tions and then for of two There is a reduct )lant with a 1.1;';(1-5:.]@\;:.«.\‘,- establish their floating canâ€" | ig wit the next few kave had recent victories over the great little squirrels which x do you city of five tons per day besides a| neries, the salmon will not even be ‘ weeks, Premier Hepburn said here last ri. which makes them possible future OppO! ke squirrels? Thev‘re OK ~He small freezer, cold storage piant and | given a chance to leave the ocean, les! night on his return | erweight champion. Apparently t re going J m the almon salting facilitiss ‘alons ever reach their spa w is | l)._).\.il;;'...'..n‘ experis wili JOHl in LiE f into a nuddi ver Lae meLidaus 10 cop ith the elusive R

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