' f 14 W All But One Stood Over Until Next Month There are only four actions on p cr inr nparinir in Louniv uuuu i . ill iL. .irn aiift t n mnrninv wucu H.I.. naturalization application m p lin onn u-ns nnnrnvHi. The list of cases for February was follows; King Tal et al vs. John Dohl. 143.85, Brown & Harvey for plain- nnn rtvni until novr nmirr Jack Lambert vs. John Clausen, Patmore & Fulton for defen- ant, stood over until next court. LaSalle Extension University vs P J, Hughes, $150, Patmore & ey for defendant, stood over until Hans Christen vs. John Preece, 365. E. F Jones for plaintiff, R. L. fixed, Weather Forecast (Pumlchcd Uiroiiffh the courtcM O. ifiorta aiui Prince Rupert. Tlila lore- synopsis- -Pressure Is lower on anmilVnf Ts inrl nrA 4Vin cmitn 3t'utiV4; Utiu v V owl sh Columbia with snow In the Prince Rupert and Queen Char- "iui tiirur ana coia. West Coast of Vancouver Island norm io norinwest winas, wlcratlng temperature. Funeral Notice VANCOUVER, Feb. 2: (CP) Final results of the voting of members of the medical profession of British Columbia on the terms of the proposed system of state health Insurance In British Columbia will not be known for from ten days to two weeks, it was stated yesterday by Dr. Wallace Wilson, vice-president of the health insurance committee of the British Columbia College of Physicians and Surgeons, In announcing that doctors of the lower mainland and lower Vancouver Island had by almost unanimous vote rejected the terms of the plan. Ballots have been sent out to members of the profession throughout the province but outlying parts have yet to be heard from. . Of the $5.50 per year which would be put aside under the scheme for each insured person. $4 would go to the general practition er, 35c for obstetrics, 65c for reier- The funeral of Mrs. Sarah Cation " red surgery, specialists and consultants and 50c Into a reserve fund for distribution every six months.' To forestall unnecessary sailing of medical assistance, the Insured patient must pay direct to the doctor $1 for the first call if in the day time and $1.50 If at night. Each insured person must register with the general practitioner who would decide when the services of a specialist are needed. Persons Injured In Derailment Of Train Doing Well VANCOUVER; Feb. 2: I CP) J K. Cummlntrs of Calgary and W E. Mlltno, sleeping car porter, -vho wpm in hosDlUl here yesterday for treatment for Injuries received in the derailment of a Canadian Tm.r.ifle transcontinental passenger train near Salmon Arm Saturday makine a eood re- CummhiRS had chest In juries and lacerations wruie mu had a bruised scalp, seven uw.vi and members of train crew who were less severely hurt did not require hospital treatment 111 1- . . . . ... 4 V me piace Wednesday at 3 j Distiller And ui me u, u unaeriaKcrs lapel. No flowers by request. 'AKKS- GENEROUS DONATION LONDON, Feb. 2: (CP) Lord Snortsman Has Passed in East TORONTO, Feb. 2: (CP)-Ed' r. p Rnaamm. oiiM4"i airea warn -- . . 150,000 to .h rvmii f fVm n nf .1 E Seagram & Son Ltd ower HI11 lmn, im. Canadian sporuii" nnelnir hd Hr,u i hnrso owner, died nasi. .... 11 M1V lUim hlliu "vv . - P to $250,000. ' 'night. William Delmar Moxley, senior conductor of the Canadian National Railways out of Prince Rupert and a resident of the city since 1910, having come here from Eastern Canada during railway construction days, passed away at noon today following a lengthy illness. He had been In a critical :ondltion for the past few days. Mr. Moxley was born In Ottawa md was fifty-seven years of age. He started railroading with the 3rand Trunk In the east in 1906 Predeceased by his wife a couple of years ago, Mr. Moxley Is sur vived by a daughter, Miss Eleanor Moxley of the local school teaching staff, and a son, Robert, who teaches school in the Vanderhoof district and had been called here a few days ago. Mrs. Fred Cook of Smlthers, a j lister, had been here for several days. There are also brothers and sisters In Ontario; . . Mr. Moxley. was well knoyni, throughout this district, particu-I larly In the Interior through which ; popular and his passing will be greatly deplored by his numerous friends. Deceased was a member of Tyee Lodge A. F. & A. M. Funeral arrangements are In the hands of B. C. Undertakers. Today's Weather (Government Trlegrapha) Triple Island Part cloudy, easterly wind, 12 miles per hour; lght chop. Langara Island Light snow flurries; northeast wind, 20 miles per hour; barometer, 29.50; temperature, 19; moderate sea. Dead Tree Point Clear, fresh northwest., wind; barometer, 29.63; moderate swell. Estevan Westerly wind, 10 miles per hour; barometer, 29.52. Victorla--Cloudy, southeast wind, 8 miles pejr hour; barometer, 29.55; smperature, 13. Vancouver Cloudy, barometer. 29.56; easterly wind, ,4. miles per hour. Prince George Cloudy, norther ly wind, 20 miles per hour; baro.-meter, 30.00. Terrace Part cloudy,, north wind, 6 above. Alyansh Cloudy, northeast wind, 6 above. Stewart Clear, heavy north wind, 9 above. I Hazelton Cloudy, northeast wind, zero. Smlthers Cloudy, east cold. wind, Cabinet Crisis In Japan is Still On '7 iJbhA? t vjctonti: es.c Todays Weather Tomorrow's Tides (8 AM.) mm High 6:15 a.m. 18.2 ft. northeast prince Rupert Clear, 19:26 pjn. 14.6 ft. barometer, wind, 8 miles per hour; 29.68; sea moderate. Low 13:02 p.m. 8.3 ft. NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER V. - - - PRINCE RUPERT, B.C. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1937 rRICE: S CENT V; 4 cyVNorth . Wind - Hits Flood Area nion Votes Strongly to End Strike merican Steamers Getting Ready For Service Again 1 TH!.-I-1 T 1 . ! . I ..;- I,l Vncenla aSBVllVl UIIU """.....p, - O r CI.! feei l..,.., .1 f T'.n . ... KCCping Quipping unices nuay inu ui xic-ujj Expected Thursday SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 2: (CP) Passenger and . . i j i i r i. . . i. i ,i ".. . i i t i i .1 i: i: 1r Cnnlocmon -fny couon ovilnntr 1ininn Raifl i iv i i. ICllVU If VMHVWJ m.-.-.-.v ' " The first sailings from coast r riitiiiw uuu L-iu bu u t via vaw ssnmn mil i.iiiil liic iiitrn win otut w at nnntv 1 nnrr Is Quiet Here rn i aiuwo OBJECTIONS Final Kesult of Voting; on Health Insurance Will Not be Known For Two Weeks CONDUCTOR SUCCUMBS William D. .Moxley Passes Away This Afternoon Following: Lengthy Illness BATTLE AT SEA Insureena Aircraft and Submarines Attack Loyalist Boat Heavy Land Attack Expected ' MALAGA, Spain, Feb. 2: (CP) The Spanish ffo.vcrnment freighter Deflin was the target for a torpedo attack by a submarine between Point Torrox and Nerja today. Torpedoes crashed into the ship after guns of a nearby government warship had driven off an insurgent airplane which circled over the ship before the submarine attack. Meanwhile Leftist commanders arc hastening preparations to repulse expected insurgent land attacks. Seldom does It happen that the same individuals play the stellar role In two periods of mining development in the same camp se parated by the time cycle of a j quarter of a century. LOOKS FOR SUBMARINE Sir George Hubert Wilkins Tells Plans For Drift Under Ice Across Tole LONDON, Feb. 2: Sir George Hubert Wilkins is in London endeavoring to purchase a submarine of some type of submersible craft for his projected 2200-mile drlf across the North Pole under the lc from Spltzentergen to the Bering Sea. Wilkins believes that the Arctic Ice Is no more than fifteen fee thick at any point and he believe that it will be possible to come U the surface for at least twelvi hours every day. He will have i crew of seven. Already there at 5703 applications- to take part 1: the adventure. Reopening of American Boy Mine to Give New Lease Of iLife to Hazelton; Mill Plan W-T- HAZELTON, Feb. 2: "Plans for the reopening of the ne naa run so long. He was mgmy : American Boy mine on Nine Mile Mountain are well irt hand and mining development will be started within the next thirty days by the Vik.'ng Gold Mining Company," is the encouraging statement of Al Harris who returned today from Vancouver where he has been for the past nonth. " AURIMONT PROPERTY . AT HAZELTON BONDEb Another Important 'mining 4 Back in the summer of 1910 . deal for the Hazelton district Hazelton's first mining excitement ; Is announced In the bonding 4 of major Importance occurred. AtJ by Arthur Skclhorne, Vancou- ' that time W. S. Sargent located j -t ver mining man, of the well valuable gold-copper deposits on 1 known Aurlmont (formerly loche de Boule Mountain, which Hazelton Gold Cobalt) pro- i najestlcally towers above the town,' perty. The Aurlmont Is a high. ind Interested Portland and Butte grade gold property on Roche capital in their development. About de Boule Mountain. The plan important silver-lead deposits on Nine Mile Mountain, six miles from town, naming his group the American Boy. The Sliver Standard group, lying on an offshoot of Nine Mile Mountain, was also located about this time by George McBaln. These properties on Nine Mile and Roche de Boule Mountains that Silver Standard and American Boy groups from 1914 to 1920 show n rnmhlnpd nrodurtion nf nnnrnvl- northeast wind. Anyox-Cloudy, matdy ujm lons of ore from 't UUUVC I .i,ltttV ae r anew? a rpH crnlrl t n flio ! C. C. F. Campaign Against Defence were intensively developed over . the next few years with the result Effort wi be. Made to Mobilise I tlUIIC upill'UH onanist vju- ermnent's Program OTTAWA, Feb. 2: (CP) A nat'.cn-wlde effort to mobilize pub- nnlnlxn nnrf-ncf lncrprvH rip. extent of 1000 ounces; silver, 600,- "m ' mhv WpH in 000JOl,""l;J,250,00?pOl?n(?Sofiead the House of Commons has been! ana i.ou.uw pounas zinc, nav- declded upon by the Natlonai nig u iuiui vaiue ui uvei uuu,uuu rMinH nf tihp nn.niwratlve Com Roche de Boule mine from 1915 mnnwwllth Fedrratlon. All orov- to 1918 recovered from 39,833 tons ,hiclal councilSi affiliated organiza. Sand Boils Threatening Sand-Founded Cairo And Other Downstream-Towns Latcst Estimates of Greatest Disaster in History Uhited States Place Known Dead at 368 and Over $500,000,000 Damage CAIRO, Illinois, Feb. 2: (CP) Dread "sand boils," bursting up in the heart of beleaguered Cairo, forewarned oday of deeply undermined barriers guarding the flood- besieged city. Emergency squads rushed to danger spots, dumping hundreds of sand bags on miniature "geysers" boiling through the thin strata of protective surface over RAILWAY CAMPAIGN Committee Carrying on Plan of Urging Building of Outlet Toward Prince Rupert From Peace The Peace River committee of the Prince Rupert Chamber of Commerce at a meeting yesterday afternoon, received letters of ac knowledgement of the resolution passed at a recent mass meeting under. Chamber, .of Commerce, au pices asking for Immediate com meneement of a railway from Peace River by the most direct route to the seaboard at Prince Rupert. These acknowledgements came from Hon. C. A. Dunning, minister of finance, Hon. J. E. MAchaud, minister of fisheries, Hon. J. T. Hsley, minister of national revenue, and from Olof Hanson MP. Mr. Hanson promised every possible assistance and made suggestions which will be followed, The committee decided Ao write the Prime Minister and the Minister, of Fisheries further in regard to the matter, sending copies also to Olof Hanson MP. Page Rldeout of Peace River sent some valxlable publicity ma terlal, part of which at least will be used and also urged that the campaign be kept going. Plans are also being made for further publicity along several the same time Al Harris located is to start work of development ines, one being .the preparation of as soon as weather permits. 'sr way along the route of the! proposed line. Those present at the meeting vere J. J. Little, president of the "hamber of' Commerce, City Com-nlssloner W. J. Alder, Theo. Col-iart and H. F. Pullen. W. H. Tobey was In bed with the flu but he sent valuable suggestions. Weather Finer In January Here But It Was More Cold Prince Rupert had somewhat more sunshine and considerably less precipitation In January this year than In the same month a year ago but had to pay for it with orc OUIli;ci U1 8UW oo; members and sympathizers tions, lower temperature average. The ounces or silver, and 5,740,300 wlll be urged to undertake a vig.'64-9 hours 0, sunshine which the pounds of copper, having a value CTOU3 campaign against increased clty enjoyed durlng the past month of over $1,000,000. tdefence expenditures. compared with 55.9 hours in Jan- The collapse of base metal prices j uary 1936 whlle the 4.7 Inches of juitcr me tuupn-u w.m mauc- Vancouver Wheat precipitation this January was General Hayashl Strikes Snag(quate milling facilities and high; considerably under 6.4 Inches In When General Sugayaml Re- ' freight rates on raw ores, dlshear- VANCOUVER, Feb. 2: (CP) - the same month last year. The fuses War Ministry tened ine owners and mining op- wheat was quoted at $1.21 Vg on mean temperature this January eratlons ceased and the mines have .he Vancouver Exchange yesterday. was 30.2 above zero in comparison TOKYO, Feb. 2: (CP) The Ja-Ilaln ldle ror thc Past 15 vears- !wlth 34.4 last January. This Jan- jancse cabinet crisis continues. It! A Revival Now ; RAILWAYS EXTEND iuary the maximum temperature Is considered doubtful If General 1 With the recovery of base metal DERBY. Eng.. Feb. 2: (CP) reading was 46 whereas In January Senjuro Hayashl will be able to prices during the past few months More than $5,000,000 will be spent. 1936, It was 47 while the minimum form an administration. He struck! making the operation of these on passenger vehicles by the Lon- this January Was 15 as against 18 a snag when General Sugayaml, mines a?nln profitable, W. S. Sar- don, Midland and Scottish Rail- The highest barometer reading at his choice for the Important postjgent at&LAi Harris have for the se- way which has completed its roll, jsea level this January was 30.47 on of minister of war, refused to ac- cond tlmefyjioneered In interesting ing stock and works program for January 18 and the lowest 29.42 on t tUn ltlnH fPnwHn mm Dana IPmi . 'Vi1a vno r Tfiniiarv Of "the city s foundation or sand. Army engineers said that eruptions of water caused by the terrific pres sure of the flooding Ohio River were slowly eating their way under the man-guarded levees and were seeping under the city. Meanwhile, ftuge waves, lashed by a freezing aorth wind, swept against the .hree-foot emergency bulkhead which tops the sixty-foot sea wall. Other towns on the Mississippi River below Cairo are similarly .nenaced. Weary men found some encouragement in the slow rise of the Ohio River and that the crest, expected tomorrow or Thursday, would not exceed sixty and a., halt eet,slx inches iesSth'an 'wasi5ri-viously feared. Revised estimates of havoc already wrought by the flood confirm previous descriptions of the disas-1 'er as the worst In the history of the United States. It has already driven more than a million people from their homes and done damage if probably over $500,000,000. The death list so far stands at 168 known. Minority Report Being Awaited Findings of Conciliation Board Between Rail Companies And Employees Not Public OTTAWA, Feb. 2: (CP) The findings of the majority report of the board of conciliation dealing the wagedispute between the tidustrlil develonmcnt already uh-lwlth Canadian National and Canadian Pacific Railways and one hundred j thousand of their1 employees will not be made known until the minority report has been received. Immediate restoration of a part of the ten percent wage cut with a gradual return of the whole reduction as railway earnings Improve is reported to be the recommendation of the majority report while the minority report is understood to favor an immediate re storation of the whole cut. WAS INGENIOUS T1HKF BOMBAY, Feb. 2: (CP) Ran- chodlal Veljls ingenlousness in thefts from a temple here earned him a Jail sentence'. It was said he waxed one end of a stick and pushing it through the bars of a offer, removed coins. Annual Meeting LIBERAL ASSOCIATION Mctropolc Hall 8 P.M., Tuesday AH Liberals please attend. Election of officers,' V '. X 2, 1 8