7VIfTIMS Chartered Shin Injured Nine .Miles l'aris Lat Night VILLKNEl'VE ranee. From St. George I CANBERRA, Australia, July 30: CP) The keel of Captain Cook'B ship. The Endeavor. In which he sailed round the world from 1768 to 1771. I. tlonal Library here. Other souvenirs presented to the Australian government by Lord t n n v. a wm "w w t w wi w r m r. m rwwwr r w r KA1IN WKLUV zr zr V. J l o r enticton Members of the Gyro Clubs in convention at Xelownn chartered e. July yOr-p-ThtlratlitolI,itle old-lake jteameSicamoa-L,r f the derailment of! -thi, Faris- fl to The vessel, whieh had not been in- nm .1 . - " . . a v, Etjuaas oi rescue worncr (aculur arrival at the Ukanagan I . , I. ll . I .11 it lL.LIinHtn 1. I I . . I W - m-m - UCU11I1M Un IT lllHo WASHINGTON. D.C., July 'Mi ll wa flci-Jilpfi hpm vrstiTdii' lhi the nlai place . were were out out tn to - receive receive aboard certainly pood time. were having a Body Forwarded To Rupert Today J adoi.t thn newir Derfected VICTOI1IA. July 150: (CP) . .i . .... i . . 1 1 u ".viiuin rir iiravn niuiv imk nrui inn iiiiiiv ill. uiui in v ii - - " ice on thn winirs and nrone oio ester, former mayor oi i nnct of planes when flyinir in the win-'Rupert, who died here Wednesday ter The leinir nf the winirs ardUnfed 70. is being forwarded to l'ropcllora hu in the past proved day to Prince Itupert for burial, the greatest danger in winter or He resided in Prince Rupert for arctic flyiiiR. 5 years Jap an Will Not Tolerate Any Outside Interference With Plans In North China MARITAL MIX-Ur LONDON, July 30: (CP) Mrs. Vera James sued a solicitor for-damages alleging he obtained for WiSfleW. theAd' her a decree of divorce without her pof ZS, r iZl VICTOR . nt -a Today s Weatner Tomorrow's Tides (8 AM.) High 7:08 ajn. 15.7 ft. Prince Rupert Moderate to fresh 19:21 p.m. 19.0 ft. K.W to W. winds, mostly fair and Low 0:56 a.m. 5.8 ft. cool with probable showers. 12:42 p.m. 7.8 ft. NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER Vol. xxvi., no. PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., FRIDAY, JULY 30, 1937 PRICE: 5 CENTS il iry-Naval Activities In China ientsin Still Being Battered By Japanese Chinese Army Moving TIENTSIN, July 30: Japanese artillery and air- planes battered the Chinese sections of Tientsin 'with shells today in renewal attacks which devasted large areas. Meanwhile in Tokio the government planned "second steps" in the campaign in North China. Ships of the Japanese navy arc proceeding along the coast of China with a view to action and the Japanese demanded from the Chinese government immediate cessation of hostilities. SHANGHAI, July 30: Chiang Kai Shek, General in command of the Chinese army, is moving his forces northward against the Japanese with the hope of driving the invaders from North China. WASHINGTON, July 30: President Rusevelt is reported to be using every possible influence to stop the war in North China. i PREMIER KING OPENS CHELSEA BRIDGE DURING CORONATION During his visit to England to attend the coronation ceremonies, the Rt. Hon. W. L. Mackenzie King, prime minister of Canada, cut the taps which opened the new bridge at Chelsea, London. The bridge, built at a cost of $325,000, Is shown at the left, as automobiles streamed across the new span after the official opening. At the right Is shown Premier King as he cut the tape i type of aircraft. Flying In all weather conditions j and at night is assured. Four power, ful floodlights, operated from the new control tower, turn night Into day on the landing ground; an illuminated wind indicator gives the strength and direction of the wind; a neon beacon enables the airport to be Identified at a distance of 30 miles; and the radio beacon will bring aircraft safctly to port from a distance of 25 miles in thick fog. Pilots will only have to pick up the radio beam, steer along It according to automatic signals and glide down over the boundary beacons. Apart from the cost of the site, 164,000 has already been spent on the Speke airport and the expenditure of another 80,000 has been sanctioned. Already 27.000 passengers have entered and left In commercial planes In a year, whereas the total number in 1932 was only 223 T0K10. Julv 30: Japan announced to the world. . ,h nrltlsh oovemmenfs yesterday that she would not tolerate interference from aircraft factories, in which 5000 Milt L ..... . i. -- !. .. I.n! T n. f 1- PKllin ' J.nn. irl11 Dllfl M ( 1 1 0 1 1 T VlA PmnlftV TIENTSIN, July 30; Dombillg planes devasted this U being constructed near the city yesterday ami many non-combatants lost their lives , lM MaMesler or wore in mi-pi Mnnv nf them foreigners. . . iU..1 ... . ....mi.,. .j....-. -. j . ..... . .... Municipality s mjucuic w iuih Government Gets Famed Souvenirs I JU'y r- - "T.i an airnort at Itlngway (Cheshire) k inline aunv nnH Hip tnnnhlnpa . iniiv mi-" I j i will be assemoiea ana lesiea ai Rlngway. Funeral Notice jring the opening ccivmonles. FAST GOING CROSSING OF CANADA TODAY Transport Minister C. D. Howe On Way to Vancouver From . . Montreal Passes W innipeg look eight hours, 3C Rock Slides Near Field Yesterday Eden, Foreign Secretary, stated in of about tmm ha5 VANCOUVER, July 30:- The airport at ; ;: v v: -new work LIVERPOOL : KS : OCEAN FALLS New Hanger and Control Tower .. ...l -A 7 1. - V . T, . Mersey t Ttftpn nrr1 Titltf m .With flip. I least Uftv uprii in ill red in tht of . . ', - . J. - - l MAant nnfln n(T nT a niltrn I1HW 2000 yards, can house the largest1 id nuwuuucu t' VICTORIA, July 30: II. T. Lock',. Fire Chief of Saanich, has resigned to take a similar 4 position at Prince Rupert. 4 Mr. Lock will succeed Fire' ,M... I,,.!' -ir.1,4 wk.,, .. Imll. hor Inplllrtlntr Wllhlir naWSOn. WhO 'W" w. " . 'J. r-hlof Mnrrlcnn -rnhw hie nr.. 4. . ... . . ...... .... haiiEer and 90-leel control lower at . -.. - - - - . , n u,1ir"CK ",",e. , I V.' . ,ut , . ' SDcke. Liverpool claims one of the Pueu iUt upM-imuMim. . . c lv.., iu " - I .1 n Hr fa n ThP npw f . . . . , t, . i : iincsL airiiuibs 111 uuuiui, w 1 of 418 acres with runways up to Construction of Docks and Ware house and New Apartment,.. Building OCEAN FALLS, July 30: Con-1 structlon work on the new $20,000 addition to paper warehouse and, dock, for Pacific Mills Ltd., at Ocean Falls, Is well under way, the- foun dation being completed and the 1 . - r (Uy. Win U,t1rt1r,ft cVi nnH n rT Cf n.a nn Steamer Baltimore Was Floating Furnace; Only Four Missing Holocaust in Chesapeake Bay When 96 people Had Take to Water to Save Their Lives From Burning Ship iralllc Ul UlC Ulg uuuuuio ubuia up. The addition to the wharf ts Relief, 16,000, 8.5c and 6.3c, Atlln. also making progress, the piling Atli, 8000, 8.1c and 5.5c, Atlln. having been driven and the dredge ; Doreen N., 5000, 8.1c and 6c, Pa-which has been at work making clflc. a deeper chanel alongside the wharf has nearly completed Its task. Several new dwelling houses have been built here wltnin tne past year and apartment houses have been altered to make room for the ever-Increasing population. ine uc ui uuiiiumiis yvn.iuay ,. 0ennK of hang. cj. I . u. train was aeiayed ai . ete f that representations had been made PK5 SSni'Fleld yesterday by a huge ruck "ws print, pulp, to .BALTIMORE, July 30: All but four of the 94 passengers and crew driven by flames from the liner City of Baltimore in a night horror on Chesapeake Bay, reached land with stories of amazing rescues. Of the four unaccounted for, two are known to be dead. The liner became a floating furnace late yesterday when fourteen miles from Baltimore. The pilot boat William D. Sanner rescued 61 persons. The vessel is now nothing bul a floating hulk. United States Is Vatching Situation In North China TWO FLIGHTS ON ATLANTIC Imperial Airways and Pan-Ameri can Cross Over Ocean In WASHINGTON, July 30: The Brjef Time State Department Is in close touch with the situation in China and f-QYNES, Irish Free State, Japan with a view to enforcement JuJy 30. The pan-American of the Neutrality Act. Clipper III landed here after1 a crossing which took 12 hours, 44 minutes, for' its second. eastward TJriJlf ColT' nrTntlrrrSssing -fromW" OallOUl ualCO wood, Newfoundland. Meanwhile the Imperial Air American ways flying boat Cambria landed Wabash, 4500, 9.1c and 7c, Cold at Botwood from an east to wet Storage. crossing. Her flight took seven- Canadian teen and a half hours. Toodle 16,000, 8.3c and 6.4c, Cold Storage. r m r i Tramp, 2500, 8.5c and 6c. Booth. IjOVS 1 0 LiXOlOrfi " Melville. 17.000. 8.5c and 6.4c. Pa- J cific. Clipper, 11,000, 8.2c and 6c, Cold Weather Forecast Furnished t.hrouiCi tire courteay o, 1 Domtnlon Meteorological Bureau Victoria ant rrlnoe Rupert. Thla fore cast la compiled from observation taken at 5 in. today ana cuvrr m- u hour nour period pTr,oa rnam ending 8 pxa. VJa' tomorrow), wra"rw" Isolated Coast Party of English Students Will Visit Newfoundland in August LONDON, July 30: (CP) Seventy-seven English public schoolboys, thrilled by the prospect of adventure, left England for Newfoundland on an expedition of exploration. It will be the largest exploring party organized In England and Is twice the size of the expedition which visited Newfoundland two time large At the present a very WINNIPEG, July 30: Kldipe ......, hlot.k is belne built, con- on an wind, eleven-mile-an-hour tail I the all-metal Lockheed pressure nas ianen in ine inter- years ubu u a suiium uuwu, skiing ,.,, of . ,R 36 suites -,)pa and ,,ri wm will h, be a a lor or B.C. and rain is reported inj ine party, unaer ine leadership vp r v n,nHprn and im-to.the-mtnute the Rupert District and the Queen of Surgeon-Commander Murray Lc- monoplane bearing transport m'"!bUikihig and when completed will Charlotte Inlands. It Is warmer In vlck, will concentrate Its explora-ister C. I). Howe and party on arelleve tne shortage of housing ac- the Okanagans and Kootenays ac-Hons In the little-known land on the trans-Canada daylight to t,ark I COmodatlon jcompanled by showers. j west coast of'Newfoundland. Three flight from Montreal to Vancou-1 Rupert and Queen Charlotte Is- theodolites and other scientific ln- ver, arrived here just before ten The lake which supplies water for lan Moderate to fresh N.W. struments have been made avail, o'clock this morning and left half I power has been very low since the vinciS( mostly cloudy and cool with able to the expedition by the Wax nh hour later for Vancouver. I fall of 1936, causing a. shortage of showers. I Office, Admiralty and the Royal The flight to Winnipeg irora Metric power. Due to the lncreas- West Coastr-Moderate to fresh Geographical Society to aid in sur- Montreal minutes. ed production of pulp and paper, niW. to W. winds, mostly fair and veys and mapping of a section of a greater drain on the water than coo Wuh probable showers. the country, ever before also the machines run- , j ning faster usre more power. The company Is preparing plans for additional steam boilers and turbo-generators to operate In con-Junction 'with the present hydroelectric plant. Changes have been made throughout the whole mill to speed up production of craft and to tne governments oi uuna ana e oflws of the Falfey Avia. slide whicli came down on Mount; Delegates from the twp newly Japan with a view to securing pro- any Lld. The company Stephen with a deafening roar!formcd unions, The Paparmakers tection for nrltlsh subjects. i manufactures aeroplanes at Its that startled the passengers andand xhe Pup and sulphite Wojk- works at Heaton Chapel, Stockport,; epecny me pcuiue v. u.e erSi which are affiliated with the American Federation of Labor, have WILL ASK HOUSEWIVES 1 been tent to Vancouver to Join wtth similar unions from Powell River LONDON, July 30: (CP) Thirty 'Jid Cpmpany representatives at thousand housewives will be qucs- a convention, the object being to tloned this October when the gov- negotiate a wage scale agreement The funeral of David Olennle will ernment makes inquiries on the satisfactory to the union which is . 1 and as a result she lived take place Saturday afternoori at cost of living, bringing the figures asking for a base rate of 62 Vic per Phillip Memor a , were com husband for four 2:30 P.clock o' irom'aynor Bros. ''up-to-date In connection with un-'hour. and time and one-half for missions u"d first granted to Phillip, founder' with her divorced The henrlng was i.djourneri. Chapel. governor of Australia. yeurs. employment heneflte. overtime. ' Investigating Alleged Plot To Loose Disease Germs In HENDAYE, July 30: Spanish insurgent authorities announced today that a military court had quickly condemned to death two Frenchmen charged with plotting to spread disease over insurgent territory. However General Franco is reported to have ordered sentence stayed until an international commission could review the alleged evidence of an international plot to loose typhoid and sleeping sickness germs behind the insurgent lines. , Spanish Insurgent Territory I