Low 1 be POLF HITLER HEARD FROM ' ; -j-. XXVIH No, p9. AT. . ft jew 141 Capitol TAXI 9 .59 a.i t m. .1 22:28 p.m. ft. 3M4 a m. 6 b Vj 18:03 pjn. 5.1 ft" I ... L f 1 rn an i hiihi i iiu n ii vsva 1 ...... a 1 A . bauie fleet, trans-Atlantlc U Pacific . w oawlnz through ILL MUVt JUNE FIRST " i mi ern. It is now ex- the furnishings will be fcbout May 20. aly To Soeed p Armaments Tax Iyy Will Hi Aniwrr To A il - - lion By Great Britain lllinnc Vfw l rvf attleshiDS IIINQTON. I1C. Anrll 28. Pfopriatlon of saoooooo with zn to carry out extensive ovcr-and re-cqulpplng of five first c battle cruUrr. la-jemeni 10 inose wno conaioereai . . . 01 Ala"a it lone overdue. While It was only ,lerMt a limited measure and might no. I iam vMf (tMnAr4 Aril vat it miirT v be remembered that, in the bai-iYOUlQ ance of peace and war. often ai very little turned the scales either way. Many changes ln the Euro-Dean situation had taken Dlace since March 29 when he had ex I prccsed himself on the subject of .conscription and Indicated he was 'opposed to compulsory service. lOreat Britain had assumed certain 'liabilities and must be prepared to enforce them. Chancellor of the Excheouer Sir John Simon declared that the ac tion of Oermany had been responsible for the new foreign pol- , i anal Yesterday the icy. r- - 1 ;-e It was expected' Clement Atlee. Labor leader. 1 t,ake thim twenty-'while opposing the Rovernment ' all ftet through. 'measure, said that there was no - v,n at Balboa until difference between the Ijibor reo- Jas-.to-the 'defence of the country IThe differences lay only as to I how It was to be carried out AI' twere united In regard to the need of defence and the determination carry out the commltmenU- mht Hon. Winston Chruehll' una eested that the bill should In- ........ ... H..IIJ mnrjft ABM flnU'fiVr MP SUD' r l. l I hi I . rnrri I 1 1 u 1 1 ti - liuuv iiiv..v - " " -- . . .. . u it nnt tn HIH AlfrM Duff r n. i ii. nrf iiniMi .inmu 11111 Lnn " "- u n I .,1,. Time cooper. uu iu ijup.c. I Right Hon. Leslie Hore-Bellsha Secretary for War said the army an-iclDsted that the was short 20.000 men and. whllf HuuauK in rnnccuu-. nmHif t for occupation ready It not fwt . . iraniri rut. was enough . t,LZlrwya.nnot' IrST a h7 said '-..a the building was not , o( lne nortn ot c by the governmen un-l J" ' tcd thplr . Arcording to contract.. wre to have been dc Aru 2 but. tn this con t delav has been en 3 - wing to the stipulation' elusion from .D'lm the scope nW of thc the bl bill Halibut Sales ! ings should match the' . f r"tntngl which were of J Summary : ambia wood whereas the( American 78.000 pounds. 7c aw f ir the furnishings are . tn 1 V- and 5 5c. -v .. . ... Canadian 28 650 pounas, o-i and 5c to 7c and 5c. American r 5c. RweluU", 38,000, Cold Storage 7c and 5c. Tongass, 34,000, Pacific. 7c anfl Pierce, 6.000. Booth, 7c and 5.5c Canadian Signal. 13,000, and Belief, 0,000. .Cold Storage. 7c and 5c. Point May, 5,000, Atlln, e.c ana 5c. ' R K.. 1.050. Booth, 6.8c and 5c vt Anrii 28: A new lax Tuuwcii. uw, avuu, ' provide for additional ar- A. K., 2,300, Pacific, 6.3c and 5c -M' . may be Italy's, reply to It Tl.lt...-. . .t .. a III utuiii5 aaopiion oi nun- mmmmm A 'oZrDrShpr:" Will Accompany Italy lu lllllIIUUUVC UC11IIOI... King And Queen II. M. S. Southampton And Glasgow Will Convoy Empress of Australia Across Atlantic TrtNIVlW' Anrll 28: H. M. Bnnlhamnlnn nnri QlaSTOW. battle t;uuviwmfvii v.. v Pacific Standard Time. I JUNEAU. April 28: Some con-; eern U felt In Alaska over the . . ,. ... ... adminUtratlon reorganization nlar. : uwuuin, npni i&. wane nn , ,. . V , Z. ' - t ri -"--'did not think war was Immlnen:, T. L " ,1 si- r n i.uiuuv.-vu 1 prim . Minister Chamberlain stated - f, .:rc of the Federal Bare 01 AUska under almMt Com" . : m the HoUJ. of common, yester-l10 x h an agreement Jn a day that thc ""-"a , " ot lhe v NR. ' piete control or secretary of the r. i i j i the C. I and the O. boat- American Bm. rmfnr. ,n n. nritai,.', already had dashes with the ter t Labor Longsnbrr- -1 wages and closed shop liave been demanded hundred union work-me tntolvcd. t. 1 Pi iiiilu uiatv.0 .-, T-i ti-.t C..4 "ivciwi uiiiu icucs. ic.ca iui-i - - -n.ii ...ii. i.i a t-i. friend and a relief and rncour- nw . uin"" " ,a . . . .j..j are aald to be Inimical , . to .k the . In- Inm Jap Wings Senator Pittman Introduces Bill Which Would Authorize Economic Restrictions Spring Break-Up Grounds Planes Air Traffic In Omlncca Mining District Is Temporarily Suspended Thc fee on Stuart Lake and IRiot; Sixty-Five Lose Their Lives PEAK FOR ADOLF IS NOT YET Curves Indicate Nazi Leader 50 Has Life Expectancy Of ) "3 Barring llaiards NEW YORK. April 28. AP The world would rUe to know what lays ahead for, Adolf Hitler now he has passed ms mucin WASHINGTON. D. C April 28: birthday. -Senator Key Pittman. chairman e prooaomiy curves oi science of the Senate foreign relations ie tnis answer: ine e years committee, yesterday Introduced ot his life. ThU U based on sta- a bill which would give President ic " at n01 propnecy Franklin D. Roosevelt power to an individual, but u snows ... w.nrr.t. rtrirtinn probabilities, in science. proDaoiu- gainst Japan as a violator of its tlc "t considered signmcani. treaties. MOSCOW TO NEW YORK tuian Airmen On 4600-.Mile Non. Stop FUtsht Thus, at his d resent aee. th? probability Is that Hitler wtll Uv to be 73. This Is tht chance tn Oermany. In the United States, this -expetUtlorv'rilht life In surance tables would be one year le.s. This expectation could be great ly modified by one set of figures, which for Hitler are not available These are the life spans of h'; ancestors. His chances are defin- MOSCOVY. April 28: Brigadier ltely tnos ot the ancestral aver-eneral Vladimir Kokklnakl. Sn- age let Russian long distance flier. These missing figures could eve-i topped off this morning on a wrjte a sharp change in Der Fueh-rojected non-stop 4600-mile flight rer.s age prospecu. a possible la Iceland and Greenland to New margi,v 0f 26 years. That figure is Tork. He expects to reach New the average gap between short fork by Saturday night in tlrre Jlved long-lived persons, as for the opening of the World's f0und by Dr. Raymond Pearl of Fair Sunday. Major Mikhail Oor-.John Hopkins University. llenko accompanies Kokklnakl. Another statistical field, ages of Passes Iceland leadership. Is all ln Hitler's favoi REYKJAVIK. Iceland. Abril 28: Thi ais have e been been found round bv d.v CP Brigadier Oeneral Vladimir Dr. Harvey C. mkinakt, Soviet filer, attempting, university. i non-stop flight from Moscow to' Some Comparisons Vnrlr naxsM ovpr the south- if tutiar n-iri a military leader 'ast coast of Iceland at 4:05 a.m. only, or even an American college . IllUil-lil other waters ln the Omlncca mln- dl 1937 D Lehman finds Ing district Is now breaking up,that 81 Dercent of the years of and airplane traffic to the mlii-,.rvlc. .... after the age of 50. Ing fields of that area has beenT.enty.two percent 0f those years temporarily suspended. It is lm- werc aIter 65 Qniy 19 pcrceni possible at tne present time oc- beforc 50i tween the seasons to use euner Among American presidents, 5kl-cqulppcu or poniooii-eiiuippcu' nimiAs James Warren arrived at Vanderhoof a few days ago from his mining property on Tom Creek and will not be returnlnc nnrth until the planes are able to make their regular trips again Indian Natives .cruisers, which were to nave nnvTnAY .. 28: (CP)-It Is companled H. M. S. Bepuisc. w... slxty.flve persons wumaica make the trip across the Atlantic Ocean with the liner Empress ;t7ln mdla. when which, Instead of the f1?1" Australia fl mob of Tlotlnii na. Repulse, will carry Their Majesties, King aeorge and Queen tuzaucui 87 NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1939. REACTIONS TO HITLER1 Lnds Peace Talk, Says Borah Paris -Comforted lurww ucfiant i Lonuon Lnperturbed WASHINGTON. D.C. Senator W. E. Borah, Republican, Idaho, dean of thc United States Senate foreign relations comtrut.ee, said: "it seems to me Hitlers speech in the Kiichilas ends the matter ot further world peace discussion." The Department of State istued no comment. PARIS War planes seized by Germany ln Czechoslovakia have betn offered Xor sale to France, a source cloe to the government said. Reports of this offer and the ?lH!r speech, which was Interpreted as ""m-HJerate,'' are taken as em fort in j-peace Indication. ,... WARSAW Poland replies to HU'er with the warnint; that attempts to put pressure on Poland will be an5wered "promptly and in the same manner." LONDON Naval quarters as--erted that they were "unsurprised and undisturbed" by Hitler's repudiation of the Anelo-German naval treaty but claimed he could not letally repudiate it without British consent Italian Foreign , . Lehman of Ohio iYliniSlCr 1 0 066 Victory Parade j president, his peak of accomplish- rome, April 28: Count Clano jment might, statistically, be Italian foreign minister, is cx-i passed already, or be over in two pe:ted to go to Madrid to attend years. But his work compares bet- ,he Franco "victory parade" on ltet with government rulers, Am- May o. . lerican presidents, business and I financial leaders and American ambassadors. For all these classes the agw mnst llkelv for attalnlne their peak of success are from 55 to 59 Inclusive. Among the world'r t 1 1 a . 1 na tO iAne' VOLUNTEERS , ARE SOUGHT Ex-Service Men Between 43 And 51 In England Invited To Join Up For Home Defence LONDON. April 28: In connection with Its defence preparation program, the British government nercent attained their leadership VPsterdav called for volunteers after 50,. and 71 percent after 65. from among ex-scrvlce men be-Hltler's abstemious and celibate twccn the ages of 45 to 51. They uf has hxon nnhllrizpd and cuess- niM ho pnHttrd ln the territorial es have been made as to wnctner army for use at home ln the event .. . . .. .. - v I . . i ri. . UllS indicates some yiiyaicai iiav.0i War. However, It should be remembered i hof r.nrof,il llvlnc Is lint stn.tlstl-1 cally credited with filling early Present psychological studies tend, rouo a ivmninr snviniF nsserts to show that the young may ha c that having an ailment and tak- greater mental speed but that the Ing care of It Is a good way to old may have unimpaired quality, live long. accuracy mentally. j Hitler, now or soon will no Eccentricities nave Deen cnarseu' longer be considered a "youns(to Hitler. But history has a host man." But psychological studies of great who were eccentric. Thl3j lndlate that the most useful ablll- host has not been reduced to me ties may not drop for many years! "probability curve, uui pyscnoiogi I . i..j.. I ll..tK tUM4 HAi not amI after ace 50 The Idea that the peaks of men tal ability men and eal studies indicate that only eccentricities but also lnstablllth-s belong only to younjiof body or mind were oiten a vuai women has changed, jcause ln the drive to greatness. Maccy's Coffee House TRIKEIS 'LEADERS IN ALASKA IS !D:JL n,anoIUr Answers . n..in. i:..rkrri of United nil .uaiiv -.ki. t iifirn Arree- mtnt With Employers ..... a. Whil . .. inaio miv be a lone f r vr boat and barce . ... - - we h mimIddi wuw and other i i nr fin i nn Chamberlain, At lee, Churchill, Duff-Cooper and llore-Briisha Give Vlewi on Conscription Territory Does Not Like Idea Of Being Controlled by Secretary Of Interior Ickes Refers To Czechoslovakia's PUICE: S CENTS j Roosevelt Plea For Peace Does Not Want Arms Ra DENOUNCES NAVAL TREATY WITH BRITAIN AND PACT WITH POLAND BUT WOULD GLADLY ENTER NEW NEGOTIATIONS FOR SOLUTION OF PROBLEMS Fate In Speaking of Poland TALKS OF "LYING INTERNATIONAL CAMPAIGN" AGAINST REICH REVEALS FOR FIRST TIME DEMANDS CONCERNING DANZIG AND POLISH CORRIDOR BERLIN, April 28: (CP) ChaRccllor Adolf Hitler announced denunciation of the German naval treaty v.ith Great Britain and the ten-year non-aggression pact with Poland in a two hour and seventeen minute oration in which he replied point by point to thc peace appeal made April 15 by President Franklin D. Roosevelt of the United States. Addressing he Reichstag, Der Feuhrer offered assurancepfwAlic-kind desired by President Roosevelt on the condition of absolute reciprocity provided that the" state affected wislWit and itself addresses to Germany a request for s"rb assurance" of non-aggression. Hitler specifically gave assurance to Roosevelt regarding the United States and other states on the American continent. Der Feuhrer made a long twenty-one point analysis of the Roosevelt message which appealed for German-Italian pledges to thirty-one states and countered w ith his ow n views on points raised by the President. Some of thc states, he said, he had asked whether they felt themselves menaced and added that the reply in all cases had been negative "in some cases strongly so." All assertions concerning impending German attack or invasion on or in American territory Hitler classed as rank frauds and gross untruths. The Chancellor of the Reich laid thc blame on British war mongers and Poland's calling up troops for cancellation of ' thc Anglo-German naval treaty and thc ten-year peace agreement with Poland. He contended that Poland had rejected a just offer for solution of thc problem of Danzig and thc Polish corridor. Hitler said that he hoped to avoid an armaments racc.with Great Britain and added that, "should thc British government wish to enter once more into negotiations with Germany on this problem, no one would be happier than I." REMINDS POLAND OF CZECH FATE Announcing his decision that the non-aggrcs-sion agreement with Poland had been infringed, Hitler ominously referred to Czechoslovakia's fate, saying: 'The worst is that now Poland, like Czechoslovakia a year ago, believes, under thc pressure of a lying international campaign, that she must call up troops although Germany, on her part, has not called up a single man and has not thought of proceeding in any way against Poland." German demands upon Poland revealed for the .first time thc return of Danzig as a free state into the framework of thc German Reich, a sovereign German route across the Polish corridor to East Prussia and a railway line across the corridor at Germany's disposal. Der Feuhrer intimated that he. was agreeable to a free harbor for Poland at Danzig, acceptance of the present boundaries between the two countries, a final twenty five-year non-aggression treaty and guarantee of independence of Slovakia by Germany, Poland and Hungary. To France Hitler repeated his guarantee, to respect Alsace-Lorraine as French.