Tides Tomorrow s Today s Weather. Eigh oW 7:37 ain. 18.8 ft. 19:55 p.m. 17.6 ft. 0:53 ajn. 5.6 ft. 13:36 p.m. 8.0 ft. .XXVII N' lifer 6Vi : "g.- EW H0M FOR JEWS IN AFRICA 1937 It Britain seeking ouiuu bid Co-operation of United i year States land The ore Persecution value, was an fof Hebrews In Helen Intoler able Banned from Schools Now 3NDON, Nov. II: (CD With -Jewish activity in Germany latening European peace, fat Britain will seek the sup- and co-operation of the led States for the establish- Sir it of a new Jewish territorial in South Afrlcfa. .Prime ster Neville- Chamberlain Dunces that Great Britain is pared to offer land for such irpose. i Henry i addition to eiiles from Euro- roantries, some of the Jews of Palestine mijht be remov- on The British political party rs are protesting at the per- who She Demands PULP AND PAPER UP, Was Banner Year For Production in Canada OTTAWA. Nov. 14: (CP) The 1937 was a banner one for pulp paper production In Canada. output totalled $200,000,000 in the highest since 1929. Eighty-four and one-half per cent newsprint 3.600,000 tons for all time high value of IPLAN FOR tion of Jews in Germany and isald that Premier T. D. Pattulio J Archbishop of Canterbury I his voice lo ine protest n- mwuu o suinmiitu, I m nunarcd jewisn lamn- Ircfugres from Germany and plria. sailed from Liverpool at iteek-end for Australia and f italand. I British government has f led to Germany over Nazi attacks on British political nf "fj following the assassina- to of the German official in at Prime Minister Chamber- Ptold the House today, iwond protest has been lodg- over damages done B.itish Pifcts in the recent anti-Jew . . ! riots, The government nas rvtd the right to claim prop- WHOLESALE damages. ARRESTS j mm Berlin came news of I tinned wholesale arrests of ' over the week-end. The ar-s appear to be on a per capl- lasis with 2000 in Berlin alone. ffws say that the 5100,000.000 P imposed on them collectively pine killing of Ernest von Rath exhaust all their resources. ' the fine will be collected l in the hands of the German fernment. It represents $C56 capita for each of the half "ion Jews in Germany. EXPELLED FROM SCHOOL he latest move towards separ I 1 fi of Germans and Jews came in Berlin uhpn Bernhard . pst. minister of education, or- 1 Ffd the expulsion of all Jewish , wnts from universities, tech- ' "1 schools and other institu- Bn of hither learnlne. A de- MIGRATION Henry Page Croft Tells Of Proposals For Settlement In Western Canada LONDON, Nov. 14: (CP) Sir Page Croft Saturday nigln presented plans for the settlement ten thousand British emigrants the land In Western Canada cost of the migration is est'.-. mated at $50,000,000. s,ir Henry,! visited Canada last summer, had offered him the full co-oper- Columbia. The report of Sir Henry and R. L-Dalgleish of Newcastle, who sur-Iveyed vacant agricultural lands rom the'- FraserValTeytd tricPrtrfce George area when they made their' tour throuen Brmsn uoiumoia lasn August, calls for the establishment 4 an Kmnlre development comrjanvi nromote the settlement venture an early date. The cost would be met by British government contribution or public subscription under the Trade Facilities Act. It Is suggested that immediate ttpns hp taker! to take advantaee of , h '"generous offer of free land." The London press considers the report sympathetically. Three Federal By-Elections (London and Waterloo, South, On tario, and Brandon, Manitoba, Voting Too OTTAWA, Nov. 14: (CP) Three federal by-elections are taking (place today. In London, Ontario. Hon. Dr. R. J. Manlon. Leader of the Opposition, has a C.C.F. oppon- ent, C. O. Hall, for the seat wmcn has been consistently conservative since 1917. In Waterloo South, On tarlo, and Brandon, Manitoba, both nf which were Conservative seats following the last general election Doctors To Take Part In Clinic Their Advice Will Henceforth Be Available Once A Year The Well Baby Clinic is very for tunate in that the doctors oi ine ritv have now oltered . o lane i oart One of them will be present for the latter pari oi eatu mun, In order lo fit in better with the doctor's time the clinic day will be Tuesday henceforth. The clinics will be held at Borden Street School November 15 enrt 29. December 13 and January m onrt24. and at lung moth School November 22, December 0, January 3, 17 and 31. P is being prepared embodying j there are three candidates Liberie order ThU m9n.h final al. Conservative and C.C.F. Imlnation of Jews of all ages . flm the German school system. 1.0. To Form manent Body rrrsBURu, Nov. 14: Support- I01 the Committee on Industrial pnlzatlon are meetine in na- convention here today to set Eal Permanent rival organization he American Federation of La- ! ious Cat Puts Kit FIpp fANAlMo, Nov. 14: (CP) Nan- ru trlc lichts were out for minutes Saturday night when R caused a shortj circuit in the NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., MONDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1938. Bulletins HONORED ON RETIREMENT Members of the dry dock staff gathered at the machine shop this afternoon to honor W. L. Sandison, asistant storekeeper, who is retiring on pension. With expression of suitable sentiments, T. J. Boulter, the superintendent, presented Mr. Sandison with a i purse of gold, the recipient responding appropriately. PROWLER DISTURBED A prawler was dM-jred in the Home Oil Distributors Ltd. warehouse on the local waterfront at 2 o'clock this morning. A city police officer on patrol ' found the sliding door unfastened. I Goin? in and plating his flashlight, the officer saw a man making his getaway through the back door. The man did not stop but made his getaway. As far as can be learned, nothing was taken. CATHOLICS UNDER FIRE BERLIN Anti-Catholic demonstrations continue in Germany. ..Yesterday Nazi ..mobs Jeered and dispersed five thousand Roman Catholic worshippers In St. Mary's Square. Police took a hand and checked the disturbance but not until only anti-Catholics were left in the square. CHANGSHA MAY FALL SHANGHAI Fall of the Important city of Changsha on the Canton-Hankow" railway lintels' believed imminent. Early today. me ty - to be in flames and it was consiaerea likely that the Chinese would withdraw and leave the place to the invading Japanese forces. The British' bunboat Sandpiper was standing by. The Japanese government has rejected protests of Great Britain, United States and France against closing the Yangste River to all but Japanese vessels. ATTACK ON BARCELONA BARCELONA Two British freighters, the Lake Halliwell and Clear lily, were struck by bombs from insurgent fighting planes yesterday but no serious damage was done and there was no loss of life on the ships. Fourteen persons were killed and twenty-one injured in the city. The insurgenis claimed new advances on the- Ebro River front. They asserted that' they had driven the loyalists back four miles, gaining domination ofall main highways. Government forces are declared to have suffered heavy losses. JERICHO OCCUPIED JERUSALEM The ancient city of Jericho fell' again yesterday when, after having been occupied by Arabs for the past two months, it was taken over by British troops following military operations in which airplanes and tanks took part. It was the first time it had been occupied !...,. it was cantured by Gen eral Allcnby during the Great War. PASSING OF CAPITALIST NEW YORK Clarence II. Mac-kav. President of the American Telephone and Telegraph Co. and ,onc of America's most promin- cnt capitalists, died here yes- tcrday. Fierce Gales Tie Up Great Lakes PORT ARTHUR, Ont., Nov. 14 irpiFierce northwest gales yes that future provincial candidates new Canada-United States trade post a $200 deposit as a guarantee treaty wit! run for two years end-ot worthwhile ha"klng Such a de- lng December 1940. posit is required in federal and all The dispatch says that details ether province's elections. A can- of the treaty are being carefully half as many votes Jas the win- nlng candidate to ensure the re- turn ofhls dejosy,, Ahother proposal uoula require states, will be? moduiea. twelve months' provincial resl- The tariff on cattle w'll be low-dence and three months' residence ered and the quota will be ex- m me nauig to en u lie one to vuic instead of the present six and one month requirements. Another suggested change is that hours of voting -on election day be from seven in the morning until seven in the evening in stead of from eight to eight as at present. , 1 SNOWFALL IN SOUTH Blizzard Throushout Northwest at End of Week Inch of Slush in Vancouver VANCOUVER, Nov. 14: (CP) Snow fell throughout southern Bri tish Columbia and the Pacific Northwest States at the end ofthe, week. Vancouver was not missed j and Saturday night the streets in' some parts of the City w ere covered with more than an Inch of slush. In the Interior the snowfall reached bllzzardllke proportions. - In Lethbridge there was .a ten-t inch fall with drifts of three to four feet depth. Street car service of the city was tied up. The blizzard, continuing for twpntv-four hours, extended west erly into British Columbia with Cranbrook reporting a six-Inch snowfall. One transient was frozen to death at Monarcn, Aioerta, ana anotner, I suffered frozen hands and feet. Prince George To Welcome Monkman Pass Pathfinder t PRINCE GEORGE, Nov. 14: (CP) The Monkman Pass highway tpathflnder car, although having been held up late last week by .heavy snow at McGregor River, . north of Hansard, Is expected here today and the reception in cori-.nectlon with Its arrival will pro- There will be a'clvlc welcome at the City Hall, a .dinner by the Prince George Board of Trade and a dance. tprriav tied ud shipping in theceed as soon as lt gets in. Great Lakes but, as far as could be Earned list night, there had been no damage. More From Czechs MORALE OF CANADA LOW, Both This Country and the Mother land Need Bolstering up, Says , Premier of Ontario TORONTO, Nov. 14: (CP) Can-jada's moral needs bolstering up, said Premier Mitchell' Hepburn In addressing the Twentieth Century Club here. More national thought and action Is required. Much the Eame thing could bejsald for Great Britain, Hepburn said. "There is no such thing at the present moment Domazlice Now By as invincibility of the British Em-jplre," Premier Hepburn remarked. Canadian . , United T-i w n srY yv n t 1 ELECTION DEPOSITS Legislative Committee at Victoria Considering This Proposal Other Suggestions Made ' VICTORIA, Nov. 14: (CP) The special redistribution legislative committee is studying Elections Act revisions including a proposal Demand For It To o B PACT LIFE TWO YEARS Lumber To Get Into States More Easily Concessions to Atlantic Fish WASHINGTON, D.O, Nov, 11: (CP) Secretary of State Cordell Hull indicated today that the new Canadian-American trade agreement would be reached within two or three days. He also said that it was htped to sign the British agreement before No- ! vember 2G. VANCOUVER. Nov. 14: (CP) The Vancouver Sun, in a special dispatch from Ottawa, says the lelve that the nrohlbltory lumber marking regulation "Made in Ca - nada,jmrof ed by . thefUnltpd - canaea. Concessions will be made on nsn coin.? into the United States from the Marltlmes. ; TODAY'S STOCKS (Oourteny 8. O. JohnAton Oo.) Vancouver Pacific Nickel. .25.- Big' Missouri. .25. 'V , Bralorne, 9.55.: Aztec, .07. Cariboo Quartz, 2.40. Dentonla. .06. i Minto, .03. f Fairvlew. .044. Noble Five. .03 Vi-Pend 'k Orielle, 2.15. Pioneer. 2.60. Porter Idaho, .03. Premier, 2.20. Reeves McDonald, .38 (ask). Reno. .23. Relief Arlington. .13 V;. Reward. .053,i. y Salmon Gold, .08. Hedley Amalg.. .03. Premier Border, .004. Sllbak Premier. 1.80. Congress, .01. Home Gold, .01. Grandview, .10 (ask). Indian. .01 V,. Quatsino, .04. I Militia JLOCd.1 nr IlllllUa ij rri fj Unit 1 0 llaVe Annual Inspection Brigadier J- C. Stewart, D.S.OM District Officer Commanding, Military District No. 11. and Lt. Col. R. L. Fort, officer commanding the Royal Canadian Artillery fqr the district, will arrive in Prince Rupert Wednesday in connection with local fr, mattprs and Thursday ev- ! enlng the annual inspection of the 102nd Battery will be held. otner . , . Department of National Defence. A iiib-lortfl I IPfl PvnrtPd here this week. I ntUlIlallU 1 CU wv WINNIPEG WHEAT WINNIPEG. Nov. 14 (CP) Win ninpir wheat futures were up to lc Saturday with November closing at 59c. Region Is Coveted Nazi Dictator; Sends Formal Note Addressed From Reich Today to Prague Government Seeking Further Territorial Concessions PRAGUE, November 14: (CP) Germany today demanded new territorial concessions from dismembered Czechoslovakia in a formal note addressed to the Prague government. The Reich demands that the Domazlice region, inhabited almost entirely by Czechoslovaks, be handed over. May Die For I Hitler Plot I PARIS, Nov. 14: (CP) The Rightist newspaper Le Fitraro, in a dispatch from its Berlin pnrrptjnnnrlpnr. said that twenty persons charged with a plot to kill Hitler and Other iNazi leaders .1' would probablv-be put v to'death: BREEDER OF FEVER "Typhoid Mary" Mallon, Isolated Since First of Century, Dies Of Old Age NEW YORK, Nov. 14: (CP) Typhoid Mary" Mallon, plump cook, whose body was believed to be the breeding place for germs that caused several typhoid epl-. demies in New York and vicinity, early this century and who had been in isolation ever since, is dead at the age of seventy of old age,1 not typhoid. Alberta Session Opening Tuesday Six Bills, Including One On Oil Conservation, Are Coming Up EDMONTON, Nov. 14: tCP) A special session of the Alberta Legislature will convene tomorrow af ternoon to consider six dius in - cludlns one providing for oil con - servatlon. The session Is expected . v... of thi. to conciuue uj w week. Col. Johnston Is Going East Lt. Col. S. D. Johnston will be, leaving Friday for Trenton, Ontario,'. where he will be attached to tne C i. 1 Royal Canadian Air Force for a jW OentenCeil course of study in army co-opera-1 ( tion. He will be away about six v , weeks. ( Up By Strike - AUCKLAND. Nov. 14: (CP) c Anrkland's waterfront has lied up for the past ten-days. by strike of marine workers, . j , Prince Rupert Overcast, showery, southeast wind,six miles per . hour; barometer, 29.70 (falling temperature, 42; light chop. , ', i PRICE: 5 CENTS -. i i : De vjiven Up ANOTHER TRAGEDY . STRIKES Fire Disaster at Rouyn is Followed By Six Pedsons Being Drowned From Automobile ROUYN, Quebec, Nov. 11: (CP) Major tragedy for the second time within forty-eight hours visited this Northern Quebec mining district when an automobile plunged "off a,frrry,landing..into. Icy river waters yesterday, carrying' six persons to their deaths, making fourteen to be counted dead accidentally after the blackest week-end in Rouyn history. ' Of the six victims, five were members of one family of Russians father, mother and three daughters. They were returning to their home at Val d'Or after a visit to Rouyn. The ferry was on the opposite side of the river when the automobile took the death plunge over the end of the ferry wharf. The car tragedy followed the hotel fire holocaust of early Friday when seven persons are believed to have been burned to death. The remains of A. J. II. Stevenson, Toronto travelling salesman, were found at the week-end. Four others W. H. Browhell, North Bay; Etienne Pelland, Rouyn; I. Legare, Val-d'or, and Aime Letourneau, Las-arre are known dead as a result of the fire while Romauld Coutu and Jack Clenachan are believed dead and given up as such. The fourteenth fatality was the crushing to death of George Kradinovich in a mine accident. . Former Premier ) ' Sails For Home Bennett Leaves For Canada Sat urday Following Visit In .. . England -JM'-. LONDON, Nov. 14: (CP) Former Premier R. B. Bennett oflCa nada sailed Saturday on ; his re turn to Canada after a visit in .England. ! Violated Padloclc Imprisonment For Breaking Into His Own Ilome QUEBEC, Nov. 14: 1CP) A sen-tence of two years' Imprisonment 'was Imposed Saturday on Francois iLessard, 42-year old carpenter, who broke into his own home last sum- been mer in defiance of the Quebec a anti-communist law; under which . lt naa peen paaiocKea. T - 1 t 1. i. : . i ' V-i : I' v 1 ': it ; 1 U . if K. ! m s -