I Today's Weather , prin-e Rupert- Overcast, calm; baromiter. 29.92 (steady), temperature 43; sea smooth. 5c, i "iff i im n m m n iu i r m 11 Ml II . 1 AWARDED - t A k A .n:tin nf Lasi Aiirim iear run Moody is Proving Costly lo Someone, Under Supreme Court Judgment irivrnUVERli April 22: (CP) .. .'niiinir M7 nnn were imttst. v- ' - - ..aa in Knnrpme uoun vcsier- , a result of an automobile tiUii parbv Port Moody on -rest 14 of last year. John Ed- j t,lr nnpH fi2. U'AS allowed UU "r 4p T 34UO Mi v.j i tin t1nrortrA Mrlcav . HJ. ft!' - - w nn(inrcAn H r .To an alia ivuj ----j ..j billot awArris. LAtnliKo CONVENTION Bn.. it.infrt llrcntntlon Is ""M - Cnrnli ll'f.11 Innlli.. to niinarawn nunc Defeated VICTORIA, April 22: (CP) A . .11 ' Dplnna T3ltnarf oclf. ai li : I t MAtrlntilflHnn ."Iff I II VI'IAILI llln Ll II 1III1L1U1I .1 i . - It nll-l . ,ti annua) convention here last I resolution from Prince Rupert Halibut Sales Summary Amtri:an- 44.700 pounds, 7c and Canadian- -63,300 pounds, 6c and in i. .hJ i - w v-v aim ic. American Arrow, 38,000, Cold Storage 7c Frisco. 8,700. Booth 7c and 5c. Canadian Takla, 36,000, Cold Storage 6c and Thrasher 2 300, Atlln 6.2c and 4c P Dorreen 14.000. Cold Storage cand in "tena M. 6,000, Pacific 6c and Bvalbard, 5,000, Atlln 6.3c and4c. Today's Weather (Ooerrunnt "'lTHt i Triple Island Overcast, calm i SmnntVi Angara LJand Part cloudy ineast wind Hvp mtip ner JOUr: harnm.t.. on on. i.n,iJ - lishtchop. Bull Harbor part cloudy, south- " ma two miles per hour; bar-)mel, 29.88: temperature, 45; sea smooth, Alert ,r- 1 sea -mooth. I ,tevan- -Cloudy, southerly wind, mucs per hour;, barometer, Victoria- -Clnudv nnrlhonst wind Smiles per hmir- hummotor an oo. Vancouver . nalnlnw eastprlv tint iuur miles per hour; barom- 29.98, "rlnce Qenron riiriu cnntti. w WIWUUJ, ma, four miles per hour; ( rrace. Cloudy, calm, tempera- JfWtth, -cloudy, calm, 42. 5 Arm- -Clear, calm, 42. Clear, calm, 42. -Clear, calm. 42. MUc Clear, calm, 42. Burn Lake- -Dull, calm. 40. . ulUjinc Mllcnen returned wiC mier. nit.. ... . . BULLETINS PLAYER STRICKEN The Smithers girl' basketball team left early this morning by wayfreighl with the intention of playing a game at Terrace to night but the star sharpshooter of the team, Miss Eddy Morris, was suddenly stricken lit aftei leaving and the train came -back from Inverness. On arrival al hospital, it was found the girl was suffering from acute appendicitis. An operation will be necessary. Last night's games with Smithers were largely a repeti-tion of the previous games. The Prince Rupert boys won 46 to 34 over Smithers and the Smithers girls won over Prince Rupert 34 to 17. Up to half time, the girls' game was fairly even. The Smithers players will leave tonight on their return to the LOYALIST BOATS TAKEN HENDAYE, France The insurgent war fleet captured or sank a score of fishing boats which government militiamen were using In an attempt to get from Catalonia to the coast further) south to join General Miaja's forces. JAPS BREAK THROUGH SHANGHAI A Japanese gar rison of 5000 soldiers, under siege for two weeks and recently reported facing starvation in Yih sien, broke through Chinese lines today, the Chinese. .high. com;. mand admitted, and joined columns advancing from Lini. FIGHT FOR QUINTS OTTAWA Reunion of the 1)1-onne quintuplets with their fam ily is the motive behind uiiva Dionne's request for a judicial investigation of their guardian ship, Henri St. Jacques, counsel tor Dionne, said today. GINGER COOTE SAFE VANCOUVER While two seaplanes and a police .launch sought him. Pilot Ginger Coote, Northland mercy flier, paddled his Fairchiid cabin monoplane seven miles to shore after being forced down in the Gulf of Georgia. Coote was flying from Zebalios. One of the company planes took off a passenger after the forced landing and said it would send a tugboat for Coote. When the tug failed to arrive, Coote began paddling and tied up at a fish dock this morning. The plane was towed by a fishboat to the airport. Swiss Ski Expert And Cameraman Swiss Skiicr City On and Cameraman Way To Alaska Norman G. Dybrcnfurth Drcniuru, in Alaska The expedition headed by Brad Washburn who has already spent a "" engaged in slml- season in Alaska laMnvhrenfurth Is a skiing ex- pert and Mr. Gabriel is a camera man. station agent at n c. Sessions, for a trip to Vancouver omorrow s 1 ules . High 7:37 ajn. 155 ft. 2C:55 p.m. 184 ft. '-10.2 Low 1:25 aai.. j 13:58 pjn. . 74 ft. NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER a. . wvtl No. 94. PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1938. iKIK S (l'.Sl A Start On Alaska Highway PEIfHSTAn HEAI1S HITLER DEMAND COLO JV TT IN a Lpv B gSw j j sKjigi m-SSS 1919 Proclaiming with voice and gesture that he alone was the rultr of the Reich, and that Nazi-fled Germany will demand more loudly each year that Britain return her war-lost colonies, Chancellor Adolf Hitler delivers his militant speech to the Reichstag assembled In the Kroll Opera House, Berlin. The radlophoto at top shows Der Fuehrer making his aggressive demands which he significantly pointed out were backed by a modernized army. The maps .below, Indicate the territory which the Reich lost, in Europe and In Africa, as the price of defeat in the world war. Return of the African territories was the sole rtuarrel Germany still has with Great Britain, Hitler declared. Hospital Tenders Being Returned Contract Will Be Let By Local Board on rians and Specifications From Victoria VICTORIA, April 22: (CP)-The provincial department of public works announces that tenders for the construction of a new hospital I unit at Prince Rupert, which have been received here, will be returned were PITTSBURG ! Employment In UNBEATEN A"sir.afaJs , I At High Mark Pirates Are Going Strong in National League Both White S&x and Cubs Lose For First Time CINCINNATI, April 22: (CP) . , Atiou ucicata vnt. ouaouii tui v m the ,n Prince Prince Rupert Rupert - the covernment on bc- Pcter Gabriel of St. rt f the local hospital' board In na o tart crland, arrived In he c ty on night's train from Jasper Parte j ana reg will proceed irom ncrc on the Princess Louise Sunday morning. They are heading fw ;valdez, Alaska. wnere v loin a mapping ana lurvey which will spend the sum- Weather Forecast General Synopsis The pressure is high over Northern British Columbia with a moderate disturb-nff the coast. It has been raining on Vancouver Island and the weather has been slightly unsettled and becoming colder in the interior. Prince Rupert and Queen Charlotte Islands Fresh to stron? northeast winds, becoming unset tied and colder. Showers or snow flurries on Saturday. West Coast of Vancouver Island - on me Prince Rupcrtiine the interim inn;i' - ,- . ntinert Fresh Fresn south snuin winds, wmus, nicn-aaniB Increasing to- i-'vening sailed on the Prince nui wUh scattered shower, after a week's' visit to and "tiif J?rv Is Laid At riest W. M. Brown sa ued as n.gin w over St. Louis Card- for Victoria to . T mills 111 a JLlUbc iianuiiai Licauc game at St, Louis and are the only Major League team so far unbeaten this season. Yesterday's Big League scores: National League: Boston 2, New York 3. 1 Chicago 2, Cincinnati 6. Brooklyn 9, Philadelphia 0. Pittsburgh 6, St. Louis 5. American League ' New York 2, Boston 3. Detroit 9, Chicago 3. St. Louis 3, Cleveland 4. Hugh Forrest, district represent atlve of the Canadian Medical As soclatlon. sailed last nieht on the Prince Rupert to attend the annual ment ln Vancouver. Funeral of Former Qifecn Char lottc Island Man Takes I'iace This Afternoon From B. C. Undertakers to Fairview Work On North Road May Get Actually In-Hand Following Meet Si Premier Pattullo In Conference at Washington With Secretary of Interior Ickcs Congress To Be Asked For $15,000,000 Loan WASHINGTON, D.C., April 22: (CP) Plans for an early start on construction of a $20,000,000 highway through British Columbia from the northwest United States to Alaska were drafted on Thursday at a confer ence between Premier T. D. Pattullo of British Columbia, Harold Icks, United States Secretary of the Interior, and . other officials. It was indicated GYROS WIN IN DEBATE that Congress might be asked this session to approve a $15,000,000 loan to finance British Columbia's share of the 2200-mile' road. The proposed highway would be extended from the present British Columbia system through the Yu-Enjoyable Time Last Evening Fol- kon to Aiaska boundary. It would lowing Joint Dinner of Two mean construction of 520 miles In Service Clubs nriMch nninmhi nnd 480 miles in I the Yukon. I Last evening, at a joint dinner 'of the Prince Rupert Rotary and Gyro clubs, the Gyro debating team T. W. Brown and Dr. R. G. Large defeated the Rotary team Dr. C. H. Hanklnson and Lee Gordon 60 uoints to 50 in the first of a Immigration Board In Local Sessions proposed series of Inter-club de-' bates. The winners will receive a wilLLeaye.pn Iliif.XenincTjraln cup purchased by the losers p0 j pTfnce' ' George AfTer two' Judges were W. W. C. O'Neill, R. M. ' Winslow and Dr. H. N. Brocklesby. Day Stand ' The subject of the debate was "Resolved that Service Clubs The immigration board of review Should be Abolished" and the af- consisting of Dr. H. L. Keereyside firmatlve won. Yet the service of Ottawa and F. W. Taylor anl clubs will carry on in spite of the Inspector G. W. Fish R. C. M. P., arguments made against them. W. Vancouver, appointed to obtain in-R, McAfee and D. G. Borland were formation In regard to illegal joint chairmen, one opening the try of aliens into this country, was proceedings and the other closing, in session yesterday at the Court Mr. Brown, in opening, remarked House and is sitting again today that service clubs were so called nrior to leaving by this evening's because they rendered Up servlci train for Prince George where the and little else. He said that there next session will be held. The was a certain childishness In all hearings are of an informal nature people but most people kept it to and are conducted strictly In prl- themselves. In the service clubs vate. Nor are any statements ls-they exhibited their childishness ;ued to the press. He quoted "When I was a child I! After Prince George, the boaid acted as a child but when I grew ( will proceed to Kamloops to hold old I wanted to be young again sessions and then to Vernon, Kelso I joined the Gyro Club." e owna and Pentlcton. ' . . . told of experiences In visiting Mrs. F. Miles Is secretary of th CANBERRA, Australia, April 22: Uons. Clubs and he rldlculed thfi bQard Australia's industrial ' (CP) - em- metnods by whlcn members of ser- 1 ployment Is hitting an all-time culti- ,vlce clubs were SUpp0sed to high, with more than 500,000 per-; yate frlendship He handed out William Lamble, after spending sons engaged in factory work. jsome S2vere crl'tlcism of the past, the Past week at Premier and Employment .In factories Is 15 Bnri nrpvnt mcthods of the local Stewart, returned to the city on the League and Detroit Tigers In he Pe1' cent than ln 1928'2?. clubs and suggested that, in back- i Prince Rupert last evening, broke into the winning American, to the secretary of the Prince Ru-1 es -.jour per cent higher considering Rotary club blackmailed people . subsidized" civic laziness tal bv whom the . nonula- i"j they "-. ouuoiu.tu '"' nnrot Wrvsn i tho Increase In emn ovee v,,,i ilotc pcik 7 . 7,7 m,Kt he.the first time tnisseason yesterday. -" ,"IWJ "u,", on the part of the authorities. awara oi . - The Reds scored a 6 to 2 victory i "v c 6 I Line of Twadd,e i Lee Gordon, who was surrounded made. ri 0ver the Chicago Cubs while the ODWineo. Hum "-., q tn , nvpr thp nhicaur. w nr works department here and sent here for checking 'H in tenders were ,nt , u " uvu. j"'- ine a musical oreanizauon, uie the the" , . , . H nnvi In nvnnn 11C1111 IfaUlCUU In defence of the clubs, Dr by massive volumes, explained thai Hankinson referred to the line of the books were Intended to throw twaddle peddled by the first speak- , at the opposing speakers but theh er and then proceeded to show the arguments had been so futile the benefits derived from service clut books were unnecessary. He urgeti membership where members were that the clubs were a stabilizing free from religious or radical strife: Influence ln a world that badl Not only were the members banded needed it. He claimed that if onl.v together to increase Internationa", one club was doing more good goodwill but they helped their than harm the arguments of the own community. Membership ln other side all fell to the ground the clubs broadened the outlool. Mr. Brown, in three minutes of i and d"eloped the spirit of tolera- rebuttal, said the opponents tlon. Also It tended to develop . chief claim was that the service The funeral of the late Henri leaders ln a community. He quoted c'ubs had not made the most of Morreau, formerly of Queen Char- Klpilr), to show the value of lean-, their opportunities and for thai, lotte City, whose death occurred on work reason should be disbanded. Sum- Tuesday afternoon at' the Prince Df Large made four polnts wnIch mlng up he claimed that the lun-Rupert General Hospital, took he ciamied were against the clubs cheon Idea was. bad, the actions of place thl3 afternoon from the cha- He sald tney wcre a distinctly Am- !lhe clubs sometimes illegal, what pel of B.C. Undertakers to Fairview erlcan jdea and tended to develop J they did was essentially silly, the Cemetery. Rev. J. C. Jackson, pas- a yankce Invasion of Canada; ! clubs were American and commer-tor of First United Church, officii they were a menace to health in cial and resulted in loss of civic ated and Miss Lois Judge presided; that the meals and surroundings responsibility, at the organ to accompany the; were anything but of the exot'c President Borland, speaking hymns. Joe Morreau, a brother, , kind called for by Oriental ex-j while the judges wcre considering arrived In the city on the Prince ' perts; they destroyed civic respon- John to attend the. funeral and lability on the part of the people will sail by the same vessel tonight! by Inducing civic authorities to meeting of the board of -'maiiage- bn his return to Queen, Charlotte look to the clubs for providing the City. needs of the community, and, fin- their decision, said the Idea of the clubs getting together appealed to him as an admirable one and he hoped this would become a regular feature.