80 Taxi '-i . nne w iiri i iimiiri r f j -1 f - n rnr -mm m m m m m m m carters, inaeca, n is cvi- opponents. UC.M. err ana winsion unurcmii. tr.i nnnsirv!iL vps nave J 1 L II - r . . L. n v J - Archbishop of Canterbury tir . nri nuniinii in fill art churches on Sunday tin i nimnnrmin nan nnr N" VIlUlllULllUlll 11UU k'V Chanrillnr Arinlf Ilitlor and r Mil- nl tn n nrrrl loin n 7r(VrnrtiT iTith rlrni t lr ll'tl ranr' mmM inrjiv nn r.nrn- problem. reception which Chamber " w 1V4 JtiCW i ,1111 pupuiui auiimunu-u "''sgyffle nirh mLinn which averted i many continuing high. Tele-from all parts of wnen I'aniamenw convents i l 11 ...Ml .. ..Ui tv T-nriiiiaiii ill. iMiLJJk. aiiu received in London was Edouard Daladicr in Paris Tremler rionltn Vnnlinl ill - v tnuoouiiiii) ilk wii'- iiut-.i1. n om nn p n 1 1 n no n "j w been accorded by his Fascist wa, was acciaimca as me that France and Germany nnUT llvn cUi. V.,, cMa In 1 1 V Q1UL 11, kvuvv; was uxprc&si'u u News Accncv corrcstwnd- by Field Marshal Herman ntf . v,ujidiijr in UU oimiiar sentiments were cx- itivii un nva German news Agency. v ucaicu mj ue auuut t' c capital of Eurone in which was not rejoicing. 'et Hussia. which hart nnnral. -v.. winmny- ana v;zccno- for nn nnnnnfnl crttllo. appears to be not overlv en- :iSt,c about the Munich ar- eni, MMITS SAILPLANE AOGAPOORT, Oct 1: (CP)- 'uniccn Evlson. a Rand n -.in.-r. Dccamc uie first 'i'iiii n nr im IMA lint. PRAGUE, Oct. 1: (CP) Poland and Hungary have proceeded with their demands that then uea mouueuons ior national) minorities n Czechoslovakia be accorded treatment similar to that given Germany In respect to Sudetenland. Poland had already sent a new note to Prague making such a demand and a similar note from Hungary is expected at any time. Today it was announced that Czechoslovakia had accepted Poland's territorial demands In full, thereby averting a threatened invasion. Under terms of the demand, part of the city of Teschcn will be transferred to Poland before 2 p.m. Sunday. Within ten days Czechoslovakia will transfer the remainder of the Teschcn district and the entire Freistadt district. The matter of other territories and plebiscites will be settled in direct negotiations between the two countries. TODAY'S WEATHER Prince Rupert Clear, northerly wind, six miles per hour; barom eter, 30.04; temperature, 41; light chop. trebled shortIy wind, eight miles per hour; barom- i eter, 30.05; moderate swell. I ' Triple Island Clear, northeast wind, light swell. Dead Tree Point Clear, light northwest wind; barometer, 30.04; temperature, 35; moderate swell. Bull Harbor Overcast, northwest wind, two miles per hour; barometer, 29.04; moderate swell. Alert Bay Raining, calm; barometer, 30.01; temperature, 50; sea smooth. Estevan Raining, northwest wind, ten miles per hour; barometer. 30.00. Victoria Clear, northerly wind, twelve miles per hour; barometer, 29.96. Vancouver Clear, calm; barometer, 29.99. Prince George Cloudy, westerly hcr she passed final tests "hv wind, four miles per hour; barom 0 00 minutes. ' ctcr, 30.00. mim entering Sudetenland to make for u'li k ririnii imi i 111 i im i iimr ii ii mv i iiiniit. x. lib a ii a w ii w u v w GRABBING STARTED Poland Demands Its Piece Of Czechoslovakia And Gets It Hungary Next were only reconnouenng units oi a main German army which will enter four districts. Up to 2 p.m. (5 a.m. Pacific 'Standard Time), a force estimated at ju.uuu men. commanded by Colonel General Rltter von Lees had crossed the Czechoslovak frontier. It was nlanned to occunv about one-auarr ter of the first zone of ceded ter-' rltory during the day. As the Germans advanced, they were separated from the Czechoslovak forces by a neutral zone about two miles wide, running roughly parallel tOj the new frontier. Thousands of more German troops are poised along the 120-mlle frontier and across three other Reich zones ready to anneJbem before October 8. International Commission Great Britain, France, Germany Italy and Czechoslovakia will be represented on the international commission to supervise the cession. An international army or police force will also move Into the coun try shortly in connection with the J cedelng of territory ana noiaing of plebiscites. Six British battal-i 'ions will form a part of the In- lernational army. At Asch on the German-Sudeten frontier all fighting has stopped as free corps men prepared to move back to their homes from Germany behind the German army. Entry was( however, temporarily denied Sudeten refugees in Germany because they had threatened to take revenge for German blood spilled during early disorders. Meanwhile more than fifty thousand Sudeten Social Democrats, .a dissident clement among the German minority, have already fled from Sudetenland into the Interior of Czechoslovakia. Officials say thev expect the number will be Building List In September Light Only Two Permits to Total Value of $550 Only two building permits were issued this September and the value was light at $550 in comparison with $4895 in the same month last voar. So far this year permits have SEPTEMBER WEATUEIt During the month of September there was 64.9 hours of sunshine and 8.4 inches of rain in Prince Rupert., Maximum tem perature was 78 on September mal occupation early today as anl H and minmum on Septem international commission began' bcr 29. Mean temperature oreanlzation work for the super-. 56.4. vising of details for the ceding of BOAT ... GETS PILOT was Tomorrow s Tides Brown) High 8:25 ajn. 15.9 It. HAY AND NIOIIT SERVICE Careful and Courteous Driven (New 1938 Plymouth) NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1938. An Interpreter. Amos Vickers, had been secured in the Laura ! Windsor manslaughter case at Su preme Court Assizes yesterday but it was found that the accused understood English just as well as the interpreter if not better so the case proceeded with the interpreter sitting near. Mr. Justice H. B. Robertson presided and the Jury was composed of S. E. Parker, foreman, E. B. Baker. J. J. Little, John Arkle, Robert Greenfield, W. M. Watt, Rbbert Henry, B. Moultf Harry Lincoln, Robert Clark, Wil liam t arr ana J. s. Brown. m outlining the case for the. Crown. L. W. Patmore said thel accused lived on the Campbell Island Indian Reserve with hei son, Hector. Up to 6:30 an Indian woman, Mrs. Abraham, was with her About 7:30 Laura went to the hospital and said her son was ill. The doctor and nurse went to the house and the child was dead. .a. A a. post-mortem examination was held. J Dr. Dr. Lloyd uoya George George Bray Bray told told of or , of Nau0ns covenant from the After having been held up for ,belrg calleQ to the hoUge and . Tnls . vera! days of Triple Island found the cnlld dead, He wlln remove one Qf scv awaiting a pilot, the Norwegian freighter Oliver Olsen has, been able to continue a voyage from Ketchikan to Ocean Falls to load paper. Capt. McManus, Vancou- E. P. RANCH STOCK SALE woman and child. The woman was HIGH RIVER More than 300 subnormal but physically all right. buyers from Canada and the Un- So far as could be seen she had ited States were here yesterday been a good mother. In school she for the sale of the pure bred Shorthorn cattle stock on the Duke of Windsor's E. P. Kanch. MINE EXPLOSION nRUMllfcrtREK, Alberta One hundred miners were sent scurrying to the surface and two were injured when an explosion occurred yesterday in the New Midland colliery here. STOCK MARKETS SOAR TORONTO Stock markets are ,ur. uaroy, penormea a posi-j Germany's chief arguments j mortem examination. They found ,4 against membership. The uie crmas uver Daaiy laceratca. 4, Leaeue was born nf of the the nost- rxst- iui main, iiicie wtric sxjuie mumi ver pilot, came north from Alert I bruises on the outside of the body Bay. on the Cardena last night Just below the rhest. and was taken out ,to.Jriple. Is- I . . - Woman Subnormal .... land to board the vessel. ' ' . Dr. G. E. Derby of the Bella JBella Hospital said he knew the the other children and had not been able to keep a job in th-cannery. She was .not insane. Cross-examined by Reld McLen-najitTdeferice counsel, Dr. Derby said that Indian mothers were usually good to their children. Thi injury to the boy could have beei the result of a fall or of someont stepping on It. Miss Ida Conniff, acting matror at the Bella Bella Hospital, wa with the doctor when the child was found dead. She said she had soaring following the settlement scen the child well and happy of the European crisis. Toronto the afternoon in had the heaviest buying rush in I Edith Isaac Abraham, an Indian ' t , i i 11 four years yesterday. i , rwi There were broad advances on the New York market. GOOD BRITISH CROP LONDON England is harvest-in? its best wheat crop in Several years, the total being estimated at 56,500,000 bushels. There was a good deal more land in wheat this year. More Fire Calls In City In 1938 Department Has Been Busier Far This Year Than it Was Last 4t The city fire department responded to four alarms during the month of September, making the total for the year to date fifty In all. Last year in September the alarms numbered one and the total for 1937 up to the end of that month was thirty-two. Fire dam age In the city this September is aggregated $366,530 in comparison ; placed at $250 occasioned on Scp- with $26,144 in of the late Mrs. G. Reda was. partially . destroyed. , . Thereof v a,. r. also slight damage on September 11 in' a fire on the boat of Billy Alexcce inaa not Deen aDie to learn use woman, saia sne oeiongea 10 u.e English Church at Alert Bay. She was at the home of the accused up to 6:30 on the evening In question. The child was then playing on, he floor with some apples. 'TWo Ocean Falls policemen, F G. Saunders and Victor J. Bond told of visiting the reserve and searching the house. Mr. Patmore then said he did not think the crown had estab- llshed a case. On behair or the Attorney General, he asked the Judge to take the case away from the Jury, which was done and the accused was dismissed Mr. Patmore said that death might have been due to a dozen causes and there was nothing in the evidence to show that the mother had any thing to do with It. The Judge thereupon took the case away from the jury and discharged the prisoner. September Fines Are Not So High Total For Year To Date, However, Is Considerably More Than 1937 the first nine tember 26 when an old building on Citv police court fines collected months of 1037. Permits this September were: A. C. Cromp, Seventh Avenue East, concrete foundation, $200. J. W. Pottingcr, Seventh Avenue West, addition to residence, $350. Fulton Street owned by the estate ih September amounted to only $210 as. compared with $520 In the same month'; last year. Fines in 1938 to date have totalled $2702 as against an aggregate of $2174 in aC Cow.Bay. , ... . .. the first nine months of 1937. and evidently this was the cause war peace pact and the cov- enant of the League was writ' ten into the Versailles Treaty. TODAY'S STOCKS (Courveay b. D. Juhuuu OuJ Vancouver B. C. Nickel, .07. Big Missouri, .32. Bralorne, 9.00. Aztec, .06 (ask). Cariboo Quartz, 2.30. Dentonla, .03. Golconda, .09 (ask). Mtnto, .04 (ask), tail view, .06 12. Noble Five, .02. Pend Oreille, 2.00 (ask). Pioneer, 2.90. Porter Idaho, .02'2. Premier, 2.25. Reeves McDonald, .26. Reno, .37. Relief Arlington, .13. Reward, .032. Salmon Gold, .09 VJ. Hcdlcy Amal., .03 V2. Premier Border, .003,i. Sllbak Premier, 1.85. Home Gold, .0034. Grandview, Ws. Indian, .01 V2. Quatslno, .04 (ask). Oils A. P. Con., .152. Calmont, .26. .C & E., 2.12. Freehold, .04 i. Hargal, .25. McDougal Segur, ,14. Mercury, .07 . kalta, 1.28. ome Oil, 1.20 (ask). 1 Toronto Beattle. 1.21. Central Pat., 2.55. Gods Lake, .46. Little-Long Lac, 3.00. McKenzie Red Lake, 1.15. Pickle Crow, 5.10. San Antonio, 1.25. Shcrritt Gordon, 1.20. Smelters Gold, .03 V2 (ask). McLeod Cockshutt, 3.45. 20:10 pjn. 16.2 ft. Low 1:22 a.m. 7.9 ft. 1348 p.m. 10.6 ft. PKICE: 5 CENTS Cooper Quits Chamberlain Our Time!" So Says British Premier As Populace Cheers OMDON. OtnW 1: fCPl "Peace with honor! for our time!" Such was the way in which Prime tr his return from the Munich four-power confer- described the Outcome of that momentous gather- He further expressed the belief that it was only t I A m r r r OA Fitt f oil mitcfanrifnr fill. JA Ull Vfc Wv crowds continued cheering in the streets as Mr. unam- demonstration as the King ii npii ;iiiii ifcii .mill iiii. .1I. 1A -n 4Uf of the palace. . niv Kft cnmft HHMcm In .i l iit: iiiiiv iiaii: tunc iasu iti& efforts for peace, merely t I t. tvn Prrnnlnr's in ha noarw majority of the people. He OVER $1000 ISJTOLEN Bandits Slue Manager of Hotel in Vancouver and Get Away With Substantial Amount of Cash quarters iiiuv v,uauiuv:i- VANUUU VUt, UCt. i: (ur iyo on Main Street last night and fled with $1280 In currency after slugging William Stewart, the manager and A. B. Wilkinson, hotel engineer, when they attempted to frustrate the robbery. GERMANS MOVE IN SUDETEN Meantime International Commission Starts Flans for Dismemberment of Czechoslovakia Social Democrats Flee Before Nazis Thirty Thousand Soldiers Cross Frontier up to Early This Afternoon PASSAU, Germany, Oct. 1: (CP) yielded to the dictators bandits raided the Ivanhoe Hotel ( Grey clad German soldiers started One bandit lost his hat and $280 .that part of Czechoslovakia to Ger ii France Now iUlUUUUUtbO PARIS, Oct. l: (CP) Gen- eral Marie-Gustave Gamelln, chief of staff of the French Army, today ordered demob- ilization of more than a mil- lion reserves who had been called out during the Czecho- slovakian crisis. Bulletins - EVIDENCE OF CASE Testimony In Dimissed Manslaughter Charge at Assizes First Admiralty Lord Breaks With Cabinet Over Foreign Policy Profoundly Distrusts" Course Which Government is Pursuing and Which Appears Likely to Continue LONDON, October 1: (CP) Alfred Duff-Cooper, First Lord of the Admiralty, resigned from the Chamber lain government today because he disagreed with the government's foreign policy. In his letter of resignation Duff-Cooper said: "I profoundly distrust the foreign pol- -i i ley which the government Is pur- I Germany May I Join League I GENEVA, Oct. 1: (CP) The League of Nations Assembly jesterday accepted the prin ciple of separating the League ' Duff-Cooper is seen as lining up ,wltn Aninony ixien wno resignea as Foreign Secretary last February In protest at the government's foreign policy. : NEW MILL OPERATING Lumber and Shingle Plant On Local Highway Goes Into Production Construction of the new lumber and shingle mill of- the Kalen Cedar Mills on the local highway three-quarters of a mile .this side been completed and the plant Is now in production. The daily1 capacity is ten thousand feet of lumber and 20,000 to 25,000 (shingles. Martin Miller Is the man-ager and associated with him in me uwiiciaiiij 10 iiviui w ui t TAXATION REDUCTION (Joint Action by Governments Urged by Canadian Manufacturers' Association Is QUEBEC, Oct. 1: (CP) Meeting at the Seigneury Club yesterday the Canadian Manufacturers' Association urged co-operation of th (various governments In the reduction of taxation. Only by joint it . 1 . . , 1 j ncuun ui uie guveiiiiueuka tuuw any effective 'relief In this matte: be brought about, It was felt. A minimum of government petition and interference with prl-ivate Industry and business war urged. It was felt that It should be possible to reach some settlement of the national railway problem In the interests of greater efficiency and service. Limit Set On Freight Rate No More Than 7c May Be Charged'' For Wheat From Lakehead to Montreal OTTAWA, Oct, 1: (CP) The Board of Railway Commissioners has set the maximum grain rate from the head of the Great Lakes to Montreal at 7c per bushel. Efforts had been made to Increase It ' Oklend, .WA. . to 7VzC Mosher, .21. Madsen Red Lake, .50. - r Stadacona, .42, Aldermac, .48. Francoeur, .25. Kerr Addison, 2.02. 1 Moneta, 1.56. Uchl Gold, 1.99. - Bouscaddilac, .06. ' ' Int. 'Nickel, 51.50. .f , Thompson Cadillac, .24. Noranda, 72.50. "l Bankfield. .46. Con. Smelters, 57.50. East Malartic. 2.18. Athona, .05. ' "1 Preston East Dome. 1.42. Hardrock, 2.08. Hutchison Lake, .02a; " .Barber Larder, .20. ; "