uiiiii PROVINCIAL LIBRARY VICTORIA, B.C. Today's Weather Tomorrow's Tides prince Rupert Raining, southe; O: barometer, 30.20; itnip" -p w.v. i v. """""" " . . vvtv No. 277. TANO Backing hmbargos Against Italy British Attitude Is Unchanged by Statement OTTAWA, Dec. 2: (CP) Dr. Walter A. Riddell. Can 1 I. r i nrrMknrnH AV'TnMninMf "T crmstriswtf ri rrn intir rn Mr ttnnn hh m i i i' tT.-n-i i I'ALt-uniiii n 111 .fii i lmii n i 'rii inL i Ldi v to oil. coal by-products, iron and steel, it was staled last by Acting Prime Minister Lrnest Lapomte who - f furthor stated that the Dominion's a u mm m m mm Dictator Seeks Aii For Needy i uiRifil for funds for the relief of German people during the com-iter Yesterday he rattled a :a a m tn strepts ror aona- 3a finnipeg Doctors Hope to Save Two Men's Frozen Feet Well 0 1 lUZ-UU 1 CCl Secretary Of State is Dead OTTAWA, December 2: (CP) Thoma; Mulvey, for many years Under-Secretary of State, died hcre yesterday at the age of seventy-two years. Conscription In Germany Decreed in . "'hi Between Aces Of Eichtcen A"'l I'ltty.Five Must Take Trainine In Field With Armies BERLIN. Dec. 2:In a decree th?M at the end of th weck e Nazi government made it com- twe7ry,ufor a11 0man men be-n the ages of '18 and 55 to Uke BtITlSH 1 A MI I lT -Hit.' r r fc.T r LONDON, Dec. 2:-A meeting of RlBltlfil1 cabinet was held . on rn,!.J ay .whcn one"o' the matters --uvrea was the 8ue of against Italy; question of patriclpation in sanctions will be limited to co-operation "in purely financial and economic measures of a pacific character" without going so far as backing them up by military force. Riddell Is Silent t GENEVA. Dec. 2: (CP) Dr. W. mm. Dcc"2: Dr. Hjalmrr,A- Riddell. Canada's permanent re- StfV president of the Reich- prcsemaure ai ueneva, utxuuiu baai:l der fuehrer" of Oer- today to comment on the an- f!;iancltl field. Is making nouncemeni irom uttawa in regara to Canada's stand with respect to sanctions against Italy. . British Attitude Unchanged LONDON, Dec 2: (CPi An authoritative source said today that the British .government's attitude to-,ward the proposed oil embargo against Italy remains unaffected by the statement on Sunday by Acting Prime Minister Ernest Lapointe of Canada Ethiopians To Attack auuis ahaba. Dec. r. u-j .Combined Ethiopian armies total ling 400,000 men were reported to-WTEO. Dec. 2: Local phys-jday to be ready to attack Italian ri'' hope to be able to sav;! forces in Northern Ethiopia, pos- 'm( of Donald Lambert and A. slbly at dawn tomorrow. tabe i who have been brouzhtl 'oray House where they were Irtta iili-r having been marooned for Ax days on a rocky Islet in We Winnipeg after their small boat broke down. The two men flown out by airplane from Norway House. Their feet wer Witt badly frost-bitten and it m (cared at first that they might have o he November List Of Building In City Was $3305 She OF Building permits for the month of November In the city totalled $3305 In value as compared with $1925 in the same month last year, bringing the total for 1935 to date up to $42,894 In comparison with was as follows: M. T. Lee, shingling building, Third Avenue West, $50. C. S. Obata, foundation repairs, 719 Third Avenue West, $100. R. E. Mortimer, foundation repairs, Hays Cove Circle, $300. C. O, Minns, general repairs, 855 Summit Avenue, $100. Charlie Quong, addition to Chinese Free Masons Hall, 808 Third Avenue. $400. Dominion Cafe, foundation re pairs, Third Avenue, $650. Superior Radio scu-vicc, aacuuun, Second Avenue, $175,. Empire Publishing Co., repairs to roof, $70. Harold Slmonsen, general repairs, Sixth Avenue East, $500. H. Phllbert, roof repairs, Comoxi Avenue, $10. , Mrs. Wilfrid Gratton, foundation repairs t6 rpslden;cs,mird Avenue NO HALIBUT SATURDAY No boats being In with catches, Nations oil. embargo there was po ABERHART "it men in the service, declarln that, with their assistance, h felt he would have little difficult Jin carrying on the program of hi' laita . IS HEARD Addresses Civil Servants In Ca! gary Leaving For Ottawa Todar Calgary, Dec. 2: At a banque on Friday night in connection with the annual convention of th Alberta Civil Servants' Assoclatlor ada's permanent advisory officer at Geneva, was speak- KSZ I0r niiHMiu tiiiu uui iui uie cuiciuiau guvuiiiiucia.pald high tribute to the callbvr P DL ww in a i m u m m m x So:lal, Credit government. Premier Aberhart spent th? week-end here and yesterday conducted a meeting 'Of the Prophetic Bible Institute after which he le'v for Edmonton. He leaves the capi tal today for Ottawa to interview Premier W. L. Mackenzie Kin? prior to the Dominion-provincl! conference. Metlakatla Boat Damaged by Fire Cabin of William Lcask's Haxel Badly Burnedy Saturday Night Fire at 11:30 Saturday night jutted the cabin of the seineboat Hazel belonging to William Leask of Metlakatla. The boat wa moored it the Cow Bay floats, having arrived earlier in the day from Metla-katlat There was no onfe on -board at the time. A cigarette stub is believed to have started the fire. Nc insurance was carried. The fire de partment was called and soon had the fire out. Damage is estimatec at $100 or upwards,, the engine hav ing been unharmed; Broadcasting Of Church Services Will Henceforth be Regulated Bj Ministerial Association To Hold Week of Prayer $66,565 in the first eleven months Prince Rupert Ministerial !of 1934. The list for this November Association, at its regular monthly i consisted entirely of repairs or ex-.me!tmg this morning, decided-that tensions to existing buildings and ncnceforth all broadcasting of local church services would come under the association. The question of broadcasting was discussed at some length with Clarence Insulander and Sidney Anderson of the local radio station. It was decided to go ahead with the observance of the Universal Week of Prayer soon, after the first of the year along the usual lines. Those present at the meeting were Rev. C. D. Clarke, the president, in the chair, Rev. Dr. F;. W. Dafoe, Very Rev. J. B. Gibson, Rev. W. D. Grant Holllngworth, Rev. E. J. North and Adjutant Eva Customs Revenue Is Falling Off Customs and exdlse collections "at West, $350. -,!hp nnrt nt Prhiee RupcTt for the City of PJ,"cn3";B month of November this year fell repairs to S. D. Johnstone 'Office Of$6045.89 as com- t CKIlll v - . building, secona avchu-i ; pared with $29,674.26 last year. Enrolment at King Edward High School In November totalled 287 and 161 girls, The average , sale of halibut on the 126 boys S S Exange on Saturday, at&ndance was .9705 IS TAKEN NORTH Taking north mill machln- Not ery which Is to be Installed at ! the Esperanza mine, a party consisting of 'Bruce McGregor, A. E. ThomDson and J. Nes- bitt was here aboard the steamer Catala last evening going through from Vancouver to Alice Arm.' t Five Bridges On Yukon Telegraph Line Washed Out which will be carried out as soon is possible, It is impossible to get oackhorses across most of the 'treams until after they become "rozen over for the winter. John Grant Of Wrangell Dead Well Known Pioneer of Alaskan Town Passes Away In Seattle After Lengthy illness John G. Grant, well known plo-leef of Wrangell who operated a WHEAT KING FOR 1935 CHICAGO, Dec. 2: (CP) W. Freland Welford of Staveley, Alta., was crowned Wheat King for 1935 at the International Livestock Exposition's seventh annual grain and hay show today with an exhibit of Reward Wheat. ' , NATIONALIST GOV'T IS READY TO YIELD MUCH TO NORTH CHINA SHANGHAI, Dec. 2: (CP) ; Reliable reports tonight stated that the Chinese. Nationalist government has- decided to grant North China- far-reach- lrig powers of self-government amounting to autonomy in all but name as a final move to block the secession of the northern provinces from the republic. ! ', NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER PRINCE RUPERT, B.C. MONDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1935 CANADA ON Certain Yet Whether or Not Jesse Livcrmort Jr. Will Recover SANTA BARBARA, Cal.. Dec. 2: Seattle Officers Honored in Death Police To Department Pays Patrolmen Sickles Stephens TrlbuU And: awmlll, and hotel at that' cannery th but steDhen, Uved fcr wtnt and for years was mayor, a day or so and it had been valnlv ilea last nigni in oeauie auer an hoped that he mlght recover llness of three or four years, ac-, ordlng to word received today by I. H. McLeod, collector of customs 'iere. A native of Plctou, N.S., Mr. "3 rant was widely known through the north. The body will leave Seattle Saturday for Wrangell where the funeral will take place. Mrs. Grant was with her husband at the end. There are several ?rown up children. SEATTLE: Dec. 2 r Full honors it the Seattle police department were paid Saturday at the joint funeral of Patrolmen T. E. Steph ens and T- A Sickles, both of whom were fatally shot last week when they Intercepted yeggs who were robbing a beer parlor during the night. Sickles died soon after Ag6d Pioneer4 Of City Passes Away Death of Mrs. Sarah Mussallem Mother of Mrs. N. Mussallem, Occurred Saturday Mrs. Sarah Mussallem, aged 86, mother of Mrs. N. Mussallem, of this city, passed away Saturday night at the home of her daughter after having been In falling health J ror some time. By a coincidence, her death occurred within a week of that In far-of Syria of Mr. Mus-sallem's mother whose name was also Mrs. Sarah Mussallem and who was ninety years of age. YOUTH IS GUILTY ALERT BAY, Dm, 2: A twenty-two year old youth with a record In Duncan and Vancouver has pleaded guilty to breaking and entering the NOVEMBER WAS RAINY Precipitation Was" High 6:55 a.m. 19.0 ft. 19:06 p.m. 17.5 ft. Low .. 0:15 am. 55 ft. 14:10 p.m. 7.1 ft. SANCTIONS apoinie Says Riddell IF A IfillHY OVFR C1RL CA IKF OF TRAfiFhV Spoke Personally. Not I ' ' A lLUU A II I I TTTTTTT npi I II VIKIf ' 111 XT WW. 1 On Behalf of Dommom 'Hss.,, MACHINERY ESPEKANZA FOR MINE :1IU 1 1 IV V Aoofemij Late Farmer Slain by Rival Who Takes Own Lite Using a rubber lung and other de- 1 viws, local physicians labored over Gordon Palmer, Aged Twenty, Shot and Killed Saturday the week-end to keep alight the Night in Presence of His Fiance Whom He Was To .park of life In the body of fifteen- Married This Week year old Jesse Llvermoie jr., who jvas iho ;arly Friday by his mo- . ther, Mrs. Dorothea Llvermore. dur- lNLiCjUJN, uec. L (Ksf) UOraon maimer, agea twenty, ing a drunken quarrel in. their Willow Point farmer, was shot and killed Saturday night fashionable home. Giving the boy while working -on his farm near Balfour on Kootenay a 50.50chan to live after a lung j ke 0n Sunday the police found the body of John David, hemorrhage had developed, doctors . , , , J u . , J . , ,vliU "'Pfu i.uuumK uic anuunay. x minei wuts .uau on Saturday performed an opera- tior. to remove the 22-caiibre bui- i shot m the back while pitching hay in the barn. His fiance, let from his liver, I M'ss Grace Noakes, whom he was 1 J The father. Jesse Llvermore sr., it0 have marrled thh week, wltnes-i i i T . Belated word from the interior famous Wall Street operator, who sed the snooting which resulted, it.noiner Y Oie -ells of considerable damage hav- became known as the "boy wonder" j ,s oeuevea, irom jealousy on tne 'ng, been done to. bridges along the after he had amassed millions j nart ot Davld- Yukon Telegraph line north of trading In Wall Street during his ' lazelton as a result of recent high earlv twenties, arrived here by air-water. No less than five bridges plane on Saturday from Kansas were taken out, Including tnree Clty- accompanied by his second more than 100 feet in length. One wlfe- He had been divorced from if these was at Kuldo River, one at the first Mrs. Llvermore, the boy's Deep Creek and ione at Driftwood, mother, who is being held by the The smaller bridkesTwere at Poison Dollce as a. rcsu,t of-the-shooting? :reek and Fourth Cabin. Pending &ne was removed irom nospitai to he replacement of the bridges, ine county Jail Saturday, 0ver""TweIVe Inches Year Still Show's Improvement With precipitation totalling .12.06 Inches as compared with 9.2 inches in the same month last year, this November was a rather rainy states month in Prince Rupert. So far this year precipitation has totalled 58.66 Inches as compared with 91.74 inch3s in the first eleven months of 1934. Sunshine this November totalled 31.1 hours as compared with 24.2 hours In the same month last year, 1 bringing the total sunshine for 1935 ( to date up to 1010.8 hours in comparison with 986.6 hours in the cor responding period last year. for the month of November was Issued Sunday by the Dominio nMe- teorologlst at Dlgby Island:. Highest barometer reading, 30.50 on November 4. Lowest barometer reading, 29.24 on November 15. Maximum temperature, 51 FIRE AT on November 27. Minimum temperature, 26 on No vember 1 and 9. Mean temperature, 40. Precipitation, 12.06 inches. Sunshine, 31.1 hours. CORDOVA Quarter Of Million Dollars Loss When Big Cannery Burns CORDOVA, Alaska. Dec. 2.- A nloneer resldpnt of Prlnee Ru-ton Saturday night, starting pert, the mother of Mrs. Mussallem, came here first In 1910 bill moved' south in 1920 and until seven months ago, when she returned here, had Uved at Port Hahey with her son, Solomon Mussallem, reeve of Maple Ridge. She had lived in Canada since 1907. The remains will be sent south tomorrow aboard the steamer Catala for burial. -Fire ! from the backfire of a gasoline engine destroyed one tof the largest salmon canneries vln Alaska at thl: point. Damage is estimated at $250,000, Sixty Chinese Drown as Ferry Boats Collide SHANGHAI, Dec. 2: (CP) Sixty persons were drowned when two ferry boats sank near Chowtlen In government liquor store here .and North Klangsu Province of China Is. awaiting sentence. : . Saturday. ' ' ' -.-' ' j .. 0 Confidence In Laval Gov't PARIS, Dec. 2: After a biUc'f debate in which Socialists assailed the Laval government, another vote of confidence wa, accorded the French xablrjet dt- the i- end of the week by a majority of seventy-seven votes on its financial policy. Despite the government's efforts, gold continues to flow out of the country. $20,0000q6 of the yellow metal being shipped to the United on Saturday- Swallowed Open Safety Pin, Girl Making Recovery NEW YORK, Dec. 2: Lillian Lenehan. aged 15; who swallowed an open safety pin while travelling The following weather summary aboard the liner Kansas and who, was taken off the ship and brougnt here for hospital treatment as she was slowly strangling, is now making a good recovery following removal of the pin by surgeons. CHIEF McKAY HOME Chief Mark G. McKay has returned to the natlvs village of Kit--, selas On the Skeena River after a visit with friends at Hazelton, Glen Vowell and Klsplox. He says', that a good many men are out ; on the traplines because of .th? high prices that are expected for furs' this seasons Today's Weather Terrace Cloudy, calm. 31-Anyox Snowing, calm. 31. Stewart Snowing, calm. 31. Hazelton Cloudy, calm, frosty. Smlthers Cloudy, calm, frosty. Burns Lake- -Fog, calm, 25. nHIv&SiB