Today's Weather Prince Rupert Fair, calm; baro-mfter 29.82 (falling); 51, sea smooth. I UUIC W w----- r in u iv i j - U IIldllrifcit . !! -II. Canadian XXVII , NO lit. A i. Tn it wlnrfril Almost Im mMliatfir on rorcnt-r maim r P. Itlrl nrrsldent . it!Hln annnitnrrd fh ittlh fit rtnvtrtir- IIKUia v i - - . - maw n ii rl ttn.tn.flnta IV-lOll HUH II II 3LIVIHI " F " , i I... fir- U'lthln I hi . .. ... nifpr ni ,n i-nrriicr isiduu I.. Mr Cmtth Itavinr for the East to take tological postgraduate work. Utlier directors o uewaru arc IV, Taylor, secretary, fieorgc tiriiltc. J. Mclnnis and M. vin. Halibut Sales American itnr ' i rmn Hnr.M, 7 w nnrl fic. n"iin,n ,', iiiui ifnnuin j rr Mini Idtnjton, 25,000, Cdd Storage, and 6c ureka, 12,000, Royal, 7.8c ani Jininr It 1 " tvn ntn 1 tit nrH i ru 'ii i ii in Aiiiti . it an ow Formed ' ana air of Jacks, 12,00, Royal, G.BC 5C and 5c v ft T I. 11 aa . r.i and 4.5c. ynic 9,000, Atlln, C.9c and 5c. ...v., n,uvv, VUiU 'ULUlui and &c ,,wu, iiwui, o.ot; ii iu --, i iniii .iiiiv urner -nU ius mm n. riprir in airitr -i store In Berlin to one - - - v itib.iii.Lii, aiiiain ii . una Mvrnn Scznrt prim , .. " 110 IVWnnrl nrrnnt ncnv. v announrrH f..n . 1 Ul II 111 III III III 11 in-w uuuuing company. The' unit, W KllOWn as Rm( Tnhlttrh p C- Waa formcd as first t SPriPS nf nrnrlnxl nn "panic ', hninn. 1.. . . . . znipif i R tunvcmpiatca Dy 'Llt m HartnnritViin ,wv. urs a"d 1 ' writers. s . She Mine, Head of Company otvjix i iuvvu, juiy ucuei ' Announces itnat nationalization, of the Bank of Canada will prove successful was urse of the next ten days, w .-ffiCu-nstruclion of the mill will be erick Handley Page and A. H. Self, mill ulll "woii WJ wau, oai.cu jur vjtir- .... .... rl Tl,- n-u, Tl. in Pnrrhrr Island to visit CUM ,n.l Ih- nrn. i is estimated for fifteen to be years' . Jl . 111 tl Tit a cir a ni irif ii rw mm. 1 lie aiv w- -- - - Mlllan on his arrival from London. AIR BO ARD" IS COMING British Mission Leaves Southamp ton For Quebec ifiin i i nvicn -t inn t i lesinn n ai n All 1 A U LVVOV till tc0l ItVUU' rty, when it gets Into produc- nardman Lover is to ar- f ...111 -Mnltf mt flftv najaui, win i-mi-uj rance wlth Canadian manufactu i - crs for the production of bombing planes for the Royal Air Force and j to investigate the possibilities of establishing tralnlmr schools for f announced, would be on the J Royal Air Force pilots under Cana- dj rass property ai m icci dlan Jurisdiction. uiA nf ii n (hehlll on the hurl I int property as was the last r I , i I Jlr Kiel Is proceeding by V llllinieer eridl nit ihi Afternoon to Porcher I ".m? lhcltZZ t Keserve rormed , lit will be accompanieu ny i v . ...II lnnu-n .1 ....I .!,..ht.,l. llin Cll(llivi: dim hv-fiw.- I I ... .. a.,l.n I , r- l"l Un IIIIS illllllivuin .... m iimiiipri rmiiiiiT hiicil i i v. New British Body Would Be Sub Ject.To.CaH With Air Force LONDON. July 25:-Crcatlon of a new organization Known as inc Civil Air Guard which will train voluntary aviation reserves to be called Into service with the Roya! Air Force was announced Saturday night by Sir Klngsiey Wood. PROMOTED IN POLICE Constable Clark Made Corporal 'Terry Stewart Gets Higher Constable's Rating Constable George H. Clark, M. C, until recently a member of the city police detachment of the provincial police and now at divisional I headquarters, has been promoted to the rank of corporal Corporal Terry Stewart is pro-' moted from third to second class, constable. Announcement has already been made of the promotion of Corp- 5 liaroia uayoonc to rank of scr-. ARECL0SE TO HANKOW Weather 'forecast .J?d?.viMurri: at "J."T, rR.u,rrt. Til la fore-1 kmi at 8 am, tocvay hour Period mMnt Pn tomorrow General aynop613 i""-1s comparatively high on the north coast nnd the temperature is somewhat lower over the Interior. West Coast of Vancouver Island-Moderate north to northwest winds, fair and' moderately warm. nrinrn Tiimcrt and Queen Char- ito Tinnds Moderate winds, lUVki v. , moltly fair and quite warm. HOLY LAND TERKOKISM HAIFA A bomb killed thirty nine Arabs and 'wounded fifty in the latest Palestine terrorism today. BIO INSURGENT DRIVE HENDAYE A swift insurgent drive has given the rebels more than 3000 square miles .of new-territory with population of about 400,000 and twenty-three import- ( ant towns in Estremadua Province. The government defence ot Valencia is weakened. MANY ACCIDENTS TORONTO Twenty-six per-, sons were killed during week-end accidents throughout Canada, the heaviest week-end toll of the year. Nine died in Quebec and Ontario, three in British Columbia, two in Alberta and Nova Scotia and one in Manitoba. AUSTRALIA WINS CRICKET LEEDS Australia won the fourth test cricket match today, defeating England by five wickets. English batsmen fell disastrously before Australian spin bowlers on the wicket. Scores were: HORRIBLE TRAGEDY BOGOTA, Colombia A death toll of fifty was fixed today after a stunting plane plowed, into the .centre ,o( a crowd of 50,000 during a military 'review Saturday. Victims' heads were severed by proprllors and many were burned to death by burning gasoline spray. CRISIS IS SETTLED TOKYO Settlement of the Si-bcria-Manchukuo border crisis, which threatened a serious rupture between Japan and Soviet Russia, has been reached, according to unofficial reports circulated here yesterday. The Tokyo Asahl said it "understood" that a Russian radio broadcast from Moscow had declared that a "virtual settlement" of the dispute over occupation of a fortified hill on the border near Changkufcng, already had been reached. . SPAT ON HENLEIN Free For All Rioting in Bohemian Watering Place IFRAZENBAD, Czechoslovakia July 25: Free-for-all rioting broLe iout yesterday at this Bohemian I watering resort when a young Jew ospat upon Konrad Henlein as the cznchoslovaklan muer" . roac Naval Plane Crash; Three Officers Die TOWOOD BRIDGE, Conn.. July 25: A United States Navy bombing piane crashed Saturday In a driv- two passengers all naval officers. SIX JAPS CAPTURED Another Siberian-Manchukuoan Border Incident MOSCOW, July 25. A new bord- and Mancljukuo was Veported In ' dispatches from Khabarovsk, Siberia. The dispatches said six Man- 'Price Fixing and Export Limits Commerce and Industry. It was MATRIC RESULTS .Maple Ridge Girl Headed Province. Local Students Among Those Succeeding VICTORIA, July 25. (CP) Grace Cuthbert of Maple Ridge in the Fraser Valley led 851 candidates( in recent senior matriculation examination In British Columbia with' an average of 89.1 per cent., the. Department of Education announces. Two students, Robert Mark Lane of Oak Bay and John Margeson of Tralr tied for first place hi the Grade XII. examinations with 92.55 per cent. All these leading students obtained scholarships. Maxwell Sweeney of Ocean Falls Japanese Said To Have Effected UhrouEh the street In an automo-ialso won a scholarship In Grade - Of W . ... ,, ..... VTT .,111. A Be - - i. Landings Within Ten Miles Chinese Capital v i, i,,WJi uootn, o.ac anai aiiAnuiwn, omj PW Mnirin 1 v end communique said tnat tne (Japanese had effected" landings - I at several points within ten miles of Hankow In the course of their I drive up the Yangste River towards the capital of China. bile. Deputy Anton' yvoiincr, iien aii. wira an average oi oo per cent, Bohemian leader in parlla- leln's Succe5ful students ln the mcnt. uraped r J. .matriculation examinations in- collared the Jewish youth, holding him until police arrived, Wheat Prices Winnipeg July, l.Ole. October. .773i. November, 77 A. December, 76l4. Chicago September, .G934. , ' December, 71 . March, .724. May, .733,4. LONDON METAL PRICES LONDON, July 25: The U. S, do'lar was 4.92VB to the pound Sat eluded Rupert Fulton of Prince Rupert and George Durham of Smlthcrs. Grade XII. results show the following among the successful Prince Rupert Alma Dybhavn, Kathleen Fortune,. Robert Gibson, Sumako Kanemachl, Alan- Kergin, Helen Lakie, John Manson, Marguerite Menzles, Albert O'Neill, Lloyd Rice, Margaret Smith, Hiromi Tanaka and Helen Valentine. Witchorse Mary llacBrlde. Dawson Creek Eileen Shaw. Terrace Freda Hall. Ocean Falls Elsie Benson. NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., MONDAY, JULY 25, 1938 CONFERENCE OF LABOR Experts To Confer With Employees and Employers at Couchiching LAKE COUCHICHINO, Ont., July 25. ff!PI nispiisstnn nf r-omrfliv, . . .... ... . ' " - v.w. MSJU.wa. U . V.UUU1HII ng rainstorm. Kunng me pnoi ana labor probems and four.d con... ference. of employers, employees and government officials will feature the seventh annual session of I the Canadian Institute of Econom ics and Politics at Lake Couchlch-ing August 6-19. Under the chairmanship of Prof. J. Finkelman, of the University of Toronto department of administrative and industrial law dlstingu-j lshed Canadla'n businessmen will! discuss with trade union officials er incident between Soviet Russia , and anthoritl-s in Pfnnnmir ani I business such subjects as: the: committee for industrial-organiza tion, the American Federation of cnuKuan somiers vioiaiea tne Labor, national unions. Catholic frontier and landed on the Soviet employers to trade union organiza-lsland of Falnaov in the Ussuri tions. The labor discussions begin Kiver irom two motor boats, nnngj August 12. . I on a passing Soviet cutter. All six what Britain Is doing in the prob-were captured and two wounded. iem of labor and unions will be A light machine gun, five Japanese ri!ccu.pd hv Kir Francis t. r. i Falling Reli Tomorrow's Tides High 0:05 ajn. 22.1 ft. 12:59 p.m. 20:0 It.-Low 6:47 a.m. 0.9 ft. 18:55 p.m. 5.4 ft. aimf j In Fight Against Fires 0 BUILD lOptimistic For NEW MILLKonalizaion. uttanada Dank I BULLETINS FKICE: 5 C2TS Of Wind Has ievea situation un Vancouver Island Now Towns of Courtcnay and Cumberland Arc Believed Out Of Danger Outbreaks at Terrace and Hazelton Are Reported II.M.S. YORK STANDING BY COURTENAY, July 25. (CP) II.M.S. York ar-, rived at Comox Sunday from Prince Rupert and Alaska to assist the Canadian destroyers St. Laurent and Frascr which are standing by to help the fighters of the Vancouver Island forest fires which remained tranquil over the week-end because of lack of wind. The huge blaze, covering 100,000 acres, would, however, threaten half a dozen settlements if a northwesterly wind came up. These towns include Bcvan, in the most precarious position, Courtcnay, Cumberland and Campbell River. VANCOUVER, July 25. Smoke-blackened men scat- rifiec, a Mauser pistol, more than'pioud. high commissioner for the'tered through the great forests of the Vancouver Island, lone thousand cartridges and other united Kingdom, a distinguished , lower mainland and Pacific Northwest anneared last night England. 223 and 123; 'arms wre seized, dispatches said., leader In labor relationships who. to be winning their fight against the WOl'st Series of forest Australia, 212 and 107 for five. will attend the sessions is Phillip I c; t- ... t tu v,ntLn Murray, chairman of the Steel , , . ... the ,. , of them , due , to , , . low workers committee. Pittsburg. 1 against blazes, most exceptionally Canadian labor men present will : humidity, was reported on all fronts. Higher humidity and include A. R. Mosher, president of. (the All-Canadian Congress of La- ... bov. and John .Bruce, Toronto Decrees Arc Issued J By Oovernment ,jeacjer Of Japan I ,u,-. i m i,(ific' 1 Tnvn ti oS.n,. f.v, discussions Include Hon. J. G. Tag- 'lmTlm..m 8art. minister of agriculture nrirM for rnvnn wPn- Saskatchewan and Dr Hans Si- (issued Saturday by the Ministry of mons, former director of the Deu- Hochschule for Politik in decided also to link Japanese lm-'tsche ports of wood pulp with exports of DCIU" auu a "-"'ucl Ui "1C lAUU rayon yarns and fabrics. ate faculty of the New School of Social Research, New York. Among the subjects to be discussed In the four days when labor problems will come to the fore are: legal status and right to organize of trade unions In Canada; present forms of trade union organization; relations of government to trade unions and labor questions; what can be learned from British and American experience. R. E. G. Davis, secretary of the committee sponsoring the institute said prospects were for a successful conference. ROOSEVELT AT EQUATOR; Ceremonies in Connection With President's Cruising Taking Place Today ABOARD THE UJSJS. HOUSTON, Enrouote to Cocos Island, July 2f : President Franklin D. Roosevelt HOME WAS DESTROYED Residence of R. L. Gale At S mi t tiers Consumed By Flames Yesterday SMITIIERS, July 25. (Special to Daily News) The home of R. L. Gale was totally destroyed by fire at three o'clock Sunday morning together with all the contents and personal belongings of the family. Mr. Gale and one son were asleep in the house when the fire started, the rest of the family being in camp at Lake Kathlyn. Fire had a good start when discovered and nothing could be done to save anything. Mr. Gale drove into town for the fire department which was quickly on the scene but could only direct its efforts to the sav ing of the home ot Angus McLean cry close by which suffered no damage. The loss is a severe one to the Gale family as many articles were lost which cannot be Flood Threat In State of Texas and his party crossed the Equator yesterday and anchored ln Sullivan I Bay off St. James Island in th Heavy Rains Cause Rivers to Swell Gallapagos group, completing the ! Tw0 Dead, 13 Missing longest unbroken leg of the Presi nttw YORK. Julv 25: A last high levels. Four persons have ready drowned with 13 more beln-j missing. An army of doctors and nurses took measures yesterday to prevent orities were taking no chances of an epidemic starting. More than James Cochrane, Winnlfred Robert-minute buvlnc rush, centreing In , 1.100 persons already have been I son, Douglas Jessup, Christine Mil-motors, nushed stock market lead-! Inoculated with typhoid serum a drop in the velocity of prevailing winds aided the fighters ln the woods of .Britlsh.Columblat Oregon, Washington and Northern California. The greatest fire was still on Vancouver Island where 1,600 men slowly gained ground against a blaze that had swept over 130 sauare miles of timberland, des- ! troylng one resort and several log-Jging camps and still threatening I small towns in the Campbell River j area. Slackening of the winds per-1 mltted the crews to get a foothold in their fight and, for the first time ln several days, the town3 of Courtenay and Cumberland were believed out of danger. All sources reported that while conditions had improved the danger was not yet over. Forest fires have broken out in the Terrace and Hazelton districts, the local Forest Branch office was advised over the week-end. They have not reached Serious proportions, as yet, it is understood. Crews of thirty or forty men are beuig ; organized ln each case. With the weather hot and dry, the forest fire hazard is now very high throughout the interior and special precautions against outbreak are being urged. The Terrace fire has started on the high ground about four miles north of town. Crews of men have been organized by Forest Ranger .Cooper and the boys at the forest ry camp in Lakelse Valley were brought ln to battle the blaze early Saturday morning with around thirty willing workers on the fire-fighting job with good prospects of getting it under control, the wind having died away. dent's vacation cruise in Pacific t fill K nflnavnill waters. Because It was Sunday, the I gAN SABA Texas juiy 25: 'ulUI JuIlUcaYUUl ' ceremonies marking the crossing ralns 'are threatening "one nn O ..1 'IV,-. of the Equator w-ere postponed ur, floods ln the history , 1 0 settle DlSOMC til today when the Houston will go dan- r of outhwestern Texas over a j north of the line and then recross f .nn ., , and 50' if in order to get to Albermarle 1. ml'es . wide . . with .tll ,. n, rppnrrl Hope of Ending Sudeten Crisis In Island. New York Market Still Moves Up Last Minute Buying Rush Saturday, Centreing in Motors " - i 1 I 1- Z Czechoslovakia LONDON, July 25: Prime Chamberlain is disclosed authoritatively to have given the1 Ger-. outbreaks of disease among the, man ambassador certain assur-1,000 persons made homeless by the ' jances of continued British efforts San Saba River flood. The rlvei for solution of the Sudeten Ger-had receded but city water sup-1 man dispute ln Czechoslovakia. plies were cut off and health auth J. C. Brady, district engineer for the provincial department of public works, sailed this morning on the Princess Alice for a trip to the urday. Bar gold was 141s 5d ard;ler, Harold Shorter, Maxwell Swe- ers up fractions to more than two. Hood' damage is already cstimater" Telesraph Creek district on official bar silver was, 19 5-8a. ' ( . - feny,i Herbert ' Brown; ........ '. points . Saturday. at well ...... over $1,000,000. .... duties, ' n4'