I B. McNalr in Yoric. Mln- i'jra'.lon A. 11. Paterson In I M t ..1 I titLTJ In the Liberal ru .... . JjUU Wdt- "9 a mpjuuire or ron- f irm inioitfi rn I'm m i r H.J tnililltUIl lAHLKITA- n mr ti m -m Maninn i rnm tiur Bauire. w ... t war exprcuca nimwu, uUlnJ The government1 tblfta go ahead with Us' R BONDS '' Three thousand canvassers iv r j. i. jvptixco uiuurai uiiminisrrarinn waa fa. to power in the New Brunswick provincial election X'iT -ton . I. 1 Mn n I 1.. . I 1 1 A w. " w . " - rIV IIUL II 1L11 Ik 111 linLlL.1111 V I 11 I 1 II'I'I I II 1 I III 1 1111" 1 I tnlTD " . .. i iic oi me ciosesi ngnis in naif a century of provin- tinp. iwenty-seven Liberals were elected aeainst W L.ilfIUH.1 IBMIVA 111 kllC the Liberals had thirty- Conservative leader. the latter In Carleton. Premier Dysart's cabinet were defeated Attorney i - i RUSSIA HAS MANOEUVRES Bases Finland Warned That Peace Must Be Kepf rr,.nHMl(.,,nrfnTn. r WM noiamg large . ii i . i . uiaiiwuTrcs irom ncwiy-won Dases In that area. 4 iivdescrlWna .ih,. jm. At the same time Admiral V Tributz. commander ol the Baltic fleet, warned Finland in an artlcls appearing In the newspaper Kom-somolskaya Pravda that nothing "will ever break our decision to establish a strong peace all over the Finnish Gulf." P.G.E. HEAD s r-He of confidence In Robert Wilson Expires After He- r-. , . : n t iit.rin. i . n m t .... m t !ff'lon Wli fouitht out Vancouvrr rUnaurt W HIlBilllUI Oil PASSING OF 'Robert Wilson, aged 54. general manager of the Pacific Great East-'em Railway since 1927. died last I night shortly after addressing a dinner ot the British Columbia Tourist Council. He slumped into a chair and expired while recclv- i . t .in . . intr np.iriv nmi iiiiM! iui a. iiumut Public j K.'nuam nav , i -1 . . savin? is rrrtlflrntf certificates for sale to the public finance the war. He said ous address. Mr. Wilson was born i In Scotland and had been a resi dent Cf British Columbia for fortv nonf Chancellor of the vin issue tomorrow na- AffrarHnor iWOre IVIniP and dc-lliraCUIlg lean on the open market. t nee Ivors is un Tourist Travel Major J. Gordon SmHh Tells Vancouver Body of Advertising Program VANCOUVER, Nov. 21: (CP) - Major J. Gordon Smith of the Provincial Tourist Bureau told a tourist council luncheon here yes Victims of Crash on Lake terday of a provincial government So Quest Abandoned I attract more tourist visitors IX to LUl LIIIIUK 1 KlftV TI ' 11 1 l Pay and Yukon Route of-sald today that the search DRIVE PROCEEDS 0ler Raises $160,000 In First Chest Funds Urst week pf 'lhe War Chest In Vancouver, combining the 1 of the RpH Clrnia nnrl Mia v'i Liin stuu ii in nnippiivn cmiecled. Another week re- s to raise the remaining Vwo- the province next year papers would be used extensively he said. There had been Increased tourist motor traffic In the Okan- auan and Interior this year, Major m into Lake LaBarge near i Smith said, but on Vancouver Isl-hone on November 0 had been and the the Lower Mainland there j m . . I. nr vi oesse nice, mikc mcuci- rA T tr f . i i t 1 Whltehorse to the Yukon U trashed. i Weather Forecast General Synopsis A deep depression Is centred northwest of the Queen Charlotte Isands and has caused strong winds on the West Coast of Vancouver Island. II continues mild throughout the province. West Coast of Vancouver isiana -Strong winds or gales, cloudy and mild with rain. Hockey Scores ' Pacific Coast League Seattle 2, Vancouver 1. Miss Phyllis Barber, after a six visit here with her uncle and aunt. Inspector and Mrs. C. G. Barber, sailed this afternoon by the Catala on her return to her home at Port Moody. Drltish was boat. A FYench shlo was alo reported to have been sunk yesterday. The loss tof these unVdenUfled ships is not confirmed. Japanese Ship Sunk Today the Japanese embassy in London received a report that the 11,930 ton Nippon Yusen Kalsha Line steamer Terekun Maru had been sunk off the east coast ot England after striking a mine. The sinking of the vessel was not soon thereafter confirmed by the British Admiralty. The Terekun Maru was i a combined passenger and freight lcarry vessel. No lives were lost. ( - Another reported' Victim today of enemy mine Hcvion in uie norm Sea was the trawler Sea Sweeper. Still another ship to be lost to day Is the British minesweeper Mastiff with one member of the crew killed and five missing. , Yet another was the trawler Hanklns. If all these reports of additional victims of mines are correct, it would mean that the war at sea has resulted In destruction of fourteen ships since the end of the week. The worst wave of maritime cas-, ualtles of the war over the disastrous week-end resulted In a total loss of an estimated 133 lives and 37.O.-0 tons of shipping, most of it being neutral. The toll of life in the slnling of the Simon Bolivar, Dutch liner, which struck a mine on Saturday. has now been revised at 85 known dead or missing, considerably less thatrf had been at first feared. Survivors, 34 In number landed at a western English port, said that the British ship Pensllva, at first reported to have been sunk by a mine In the North Sea, had been the victim of a torpedo attack and not a mine. Two British merchant vessels were reported todav to have been attacked off the Spanish coast. Although British authorities sun insisted that the Germans had d.e liberately placed drifting bombs without notice In the neutral ship ping lanes, U was suggested that some of the mines might have brok en away from their moorings In the week-end storm. Allied Reprisals Allied reprisals for the Indiscriminate Nazi floating mine cluster campaign, will take the form of blockading German exports as well as Imports, This was announced to the House of Commons today by Prime Minister Neville Chamber-Iain. Announcement that Britain would retaliate against German "violations of international law" by seizing German exports on the high seas was made by the Prime Minister coincident with the re ports of the several more victims of Oerman u-boat action or by striking uncharted mines. Referring to submarines and uncharted mines, Mr. Chamberlain said: "The government Is not prepared to allow these methods of conducting warfare to continue wllhout retaliation." United Stutes naval authorities COPENHAOEN. Nov. 21: As an assurance ol Danish neutrality be- ine atrlftiv obtained, a mine har- Freighter Arlington Court Sunk By fage j, be ,n Danbh watefS BUDmanne on ireiana i lh ,ty. o,im a. cv.ir.ntn.l nes will be kept open day ana sn steamer Arlington uoun;-i 1 T torpedoed and sunk by a Ger- 'A aptlired WaZl submarine inhmsrlnK 200 mllc miles nff off Cork, f!ork.f man Ireland. Jt became known late yes terday. With one known dead. 11 members of the crew" are mlMlnu and are believed to have perished In a lifeboat which U thought to have capsized In the rough Atlantic waters. Twenty-two survivors twere picked up from Another Her Might On Baltic Sea boat In which the chief enilneer following inning ol .Vew died of Injuries. The Arllnzton 1 - Court was bound In to Cork. Another unidentified British ship I was reported to be the victim of a 'German mine off the Danish coast MOSCOW. Nov. 21: (CP)-RussU yesterday. 17 of the crew of 3S be- dlKlosed today that the Baltic Iln rescued bv a Danish flhlne scale night to merchant vessels warships of all nations. Freighter Now Taken To Port On and LONDON, Nov. 21: CP The German IreUhVr Relntold captured by the British Ifavy. hai been taken to a Scottlsr port- MORE MEN OVERSEAS Its War Kffort On Behalf Of Great Britain. MELBOURNE, Australia, Nov. 21" CP - Australia is preparing to send a second division of twent housand men to France as an ex- pedlUonary force with the Allied armies. The men are now being en listed and will be sent to England -.t o- h completed four months training. Australia is increasing , Its war ffort by doubling its order of air planes in the United States and Its navaV personnel, arming sixty. mercriliWiht creasing its supply of goods for the United Kingdom. MAKING UP TO FASCISM Third Internationale Taking New Battle Cry As It Strengthens Its Bonds With Nail Germany Accidents, Crime And Anti-Nazisni Up MOSCOW, Nov. 21: (CP) Rus sia has entered into a propaganda alliance with Germany. It Is reported. Newspaper Pravda says it is no longer a fight against Fascism but against capitalism and Imperialism. All Are Increasing In Scope In Germany As Result ot Black-outs BERLIN, Nov. 21: (CP) There has been a serious Increase in crime and accidents as a result of black-outs in the Reich. Anti-Nazi activities are also Increasing under cover of darkness. AGREEMENT FOR TRADE Mission Headed By Prince Axel Of Denmark Is Coming To England This Week LONDON, Nov. 21: Prince Axel and government representatives will arrive here this week from Copenhagen to negotiate a trad? aereement between Denmark and England. declare that the mine warfare Is shocking all the world." Floating mines, against all rules of warfare, may endanger lives far afield and for years. The Dally Express said today that Hitler would reap a harvest of hat red from neutral nations for every mine he laid In the North Sea. PROVINCIAL LIBRARY Tomorrow's Tides High 10:J4 am. 19.0 It. viands - Strong southeast 22:42 pjn. 17.1 It. ,r gales shifting to south, Low 3:38 ajn. 85 It. end mild with rain. 16:41 pjn. 7.0 It. NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER VIII. KU. 411- PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21,193'j. PRICE: I CENTS RAL GOVERNhV 3j IS ISHIP TOLL TIIRNFT) IN MaWvime i jliju i v, mil j 0V1NCE: LEAD RL j'CED t i IT . ffi r - narcd With Tbirty-Ninc Before CntiKPrvntivna Made Notable Gains INT JOHN. New Brunswick. NnvpmW 91 (r. - - . j --..SV MA , S . ' ' r. a a n..,,....'., i :i i . i WORST YET Fourteen Vessels Sent to Bottom Since End ol Week Jap Is Latest LONDON, Nor. 21 Tenth victim MAINTAINS NEUTRALITY Denmark Decides To Operate Mine Barrage In Baltic So'.All Ship pinr Mar Pais Is Good Nazi 'ANXIETY I JAPAN IS FORM EH CROWN PRLNCE BERLIN. Nov 21: Fotmer Crown Prince Wllhelm of Ger- ences had arisen between the former ruling house or Hohen-iollern and the Nazi regime. Yesterday similar denials had been made by Prince August, a. younger brother of Wilherai. Bulletins GERMANY "PLEADS GUILTY" j LONDON Germans. ha ad for the campaign of frightful- ness which is meeting with success in the North Sea and elsewhere. ILS NO SYMPATHY VANCOUVER Without mentioning names Conservative Leader R. J. Manion, speaking yesterday at a luncheon of the Bltisti Commbia Association, said he had no , sympathy with persons who go out of their way to criticize the Dominion and Empire in wartime. HART FLOATS LQAN VICTORIA Hon. John Hart, minister of finance, introduced bUI for a loan rf $3,000,000 to finance unemployment relief should federal aid not be GER.MANY IS SORRY BERLIN Germany has officially apologized for dropping leaflets from aircraft on Switzerland. Breaches by Germany of Dutch neutrality will be POLES ARE CONSCRIPTED WARSAW Poles, both men and women, are being conscripted for service in the Nazi Army. STUDENTS INTERNED PRAGUE Twelve hundred IS LESS DESIROUS Dutch Leave .Itestoration For Army I Indicates Easing Up OI Invasion , Menace Til EHAGUE, Nov. 21: of the anxiety of a German in vasion of Holland was seen day when Dutch Army leaves, which had been cancelled recently, i were ordered restored. Meat Shortage 'In Germany Is More Serious Front is Broken Flood Waters Inundate Some of Maginot Line? BERLIN, Nov. 21: CP- ed. t BERLIN, Nov. 21: The shortage, ARTILLERY IS ACTIVE! Some heavy artillery exchanges j between the Germans and the French are reported. German aerial reconalssances WASHINGTON, DC, Nov. 21: At a meeting of the Inter-American Economic Committee here yesterday the necessity of an agreement on currency stabilization be tween twenty-one naUons of the Western Hemisphere was recognized. A new monetary unit at fixed rate of exchange for making jof settlements between the western .nations .was proposed. Such an arrangement would not Impede in ternal currency clrculaUon of the I Individual nations. Czech students have been sent Arifl PorUI'rillf a to concentration camns for hav- lllli'i alClCllULC ing been involved in recent Russo-Japanese Trade Pact Now Near Conclusion Patrols Active PARIS, Nov. 21; (CP) British and French aerial and motorcycle units are active In parachute patrol against the possibility of enemy spies alighting on French territory from German reconnaissance planes. No captures have, however been made as yet. MOSCOW, Nov. 21: Basis for, negotiation of a most favored na- T- V 1 Ol. 1 tlon trade agreement between Rus- fleW I OHC UlOCK sla and .Japan was reached between Premier-Foreign Commissar Molotov and the Japanese ambas Mart Is Steady sador, It was officially announced last night at the Kremlin. NEW YORK. Nov. 21: Yester- Meantlme at Tokyo the Japanese day's turnover on the New York Foreign Office announced that tha Stock Exchange totalled 740,000 Russo-Japanese conference on the shares. Closing averages were:: in- Outer Mongolian - Manchoukuo j dustrlals, 151. 9, up .16; rails, boundary would open November 29,34.08. up .23; utilities, 25.93, . off at Chita, Siberia. 146. force since 1911. OF PACT Does Not Wish to See Treaty With United States Lapse as Threatened WASHINGTON, D.C., Nov. 21-The Japanese government will ask the United States to renew the commercial treaty with Japan which expires January 26, it was announced today by the Japanese ambassador to the United States. "Failure to replace the treaty would be of distinct disadvantage to both countries," the Ambassador says. The Japanese Foreign Office will take the matter up with United' States Ambassador Joseph C. Grew at p meat in Germany as a result iokio, it was statea. of the British naval blockade is I In July the United States gave brvuninz serious. More and more 'notice of Intention to terminate the substitutes, some of them rather agreement when it expires because ineffective, are being resorted to. ' Japariese disregard of American Australia Doubling Up All, Around many today denied that differ- Thirty-Six Hour Silence on Western rights In Its China campaign and i because of the opposition of a large body of public opinion in United I States against shipment of scrap Iron and other war materials to. Japan to assist it In prosecuting J the war against China. rae existing treaty nas been in In Tokyo 'Premier Abe today declared it would be fortunate If th treaty eould be renewed before it exnlred. However, th Jann Ftench .eovemment wi studvinir mMmm artillery abruptly ended a 36.-hour to cope situation should it .silence on the Western Front to-lbe anowed to day with heavy shelling in the Perl . sector, a uerman news agency re- uv ni tt a mTtri ported. The rest of the front be-tIAl P A J H tween the Rhine and Moselle Rivers ' A MUi L i ju wa; reported to be quiet. I Flood waters, it was claimed here.J had caused the Frenchjto retreat' f'om some parts of I '.ne.along the. upper Rhine, a num mi lira uiai sue is responsioie u iuintnuw.n cvu.-i r SHOT DOWN Sn'e.nuiEnemr Rider Is DisP Of By British Claim LONDON, Nov. 21: (CP) The British Air Ministry announced today that a German airplane had V. Un -i . i . . over both Fnsland and France were foa5' said by a Oerman ccmmunlaue totof, gnd ,lnCom.bat plan"s have been attended with significant jof the Royal Air Force. Other Ger-jpjuI I man planes had been driven off by PUfSUlt Craft. A Parle mmmimln,,. eM nnn. Conservative ' that thereVhad been nothing to re ! port during the night." I Inter-American Monetary Plan Currency Stabilization and Rate of Exchange With New Monetary Unit Favorably Considered German fighting planes appeared up and down the east coast of England and Scotland yesterday but were" driven off by squadrons of Royal Air Force pursuit planes and anti-aircraft fire and were unable to drop bombs. Among the parts visited by the enemy aircraft Ulrons of London, the Firth ot Fixed l Pnrth norfhorn 3rM'iriH onA tVi ( " ... ........ ..u ...... . ia. , k. u.& Orkney Islands. In the most of cases . the planes were Hying at great height. Today one German plane flew over Sutherlandshlre in Scotland and over the Orkneys. There were no bombs dropped and no gunfire. Bad Weather-Along Front Germans Unable to Make Reconnaissance Flights "No Special 1 Events" Occur BERLIN, Nov. 21: (CP)-J'Bad weather prevented German reconnaissance flights on the Western Front yesterday, the German nrs agency said in elucidating a High Command communique which said simply "no special events" had Kermit Roosevelt Hopes For Action Son Of Former President of United States Taking Machine Gun Training In England' LONDON, Nov. 21: Kermit Roosevelt, son of Former President Theodore Roosevelt, who Is training with the British army in a machine gun instruction camp near here, expressed hope in an Interview that the war would last joni enough that he Would 'be able to' get Into action. ; -ff '