Tomorrows Tides j 3:31 jn. 199 ft. ,Jlth " 1 15:28 r 19.8 It. Low 9" 69 If) Llil' iVllttliktV VkKWI kJOI-ulllUJ "l"IV llllllt HUill 411,11 i tw - . 1 r t t . t . 1 . I ,i ti. . a .. . .1 ork to Hermuua, were rescued aaturnay nigm by tnei De ne,Q D"ore inB ri tnnUi Voan Tlntrf rt-t-n TVivnr. rUna t,Un present session Is over. The re- v' . - - - - - Lailuaiii j ere aboard the plane perished. 1 he ship itself hroke r. .fter hitting the water. Tnose hj furvived saved, their Uvea by ..Hint f'ir ome eleven hours to bbff life belts The three prr- ,ns who were drowned weakened t.4 were unable to continue their ip. Ttie rescue was effected two jrdrrl miles off the Maryland, DEMANDS TO BE RENEWED It a: at 11 o'clock Saturday Italy It Waiting Only Until After :jh? 'fiat '.he rewue. wm effected rpan.n mi r is t.noca !he Baytown Cruising the po-i .r fo niuurr ma Dem si i r. .:.e from the surface of .concluded. Italy will assume Its . ... , ik 4 rr n A tl f ' rim nrln fnr Frpnrh rnlnnlnl mn. m m . r . nil: m k .in -w . . . v .... . w. - . . . w.. . .. mA flnllw nn rMiml It vol mkA In In J.VJ it ,1 1.... ) 'hen the others were formed quarters here Saturday. taken aboard. AU The expectation appears to be by Their condition that France will capitulate at the st it ww considered suteUon of Great DrlUln. ramfcr them to an- :ie Baytown turned r New York wtth the ..e other . vew ur the waters In the . r M i BWAA MhAP tS UU4I1( S-C Slv j ?;-an r, mHft an nour owing, cMiir.'.m KM. wa due here p ' o Fnminff I nn mrriiuii Survivors Improving passengers and a steward Donald Miller. J. Ogrdn Noakff and Robert Spence. Hope for them Is abandoned after hours of searching without avail by United States oaftlfftiArti and Canadian naval .pr...:. auer exposure u rold kCDt her irom leaving ai me ock ar.d, on arrival, wwild be Ia,t minute. Early reports said she !e to travci by motor car They:WSU on the n-lng boat 're meantime comfortable mi ,. w,,,, rn n-anv. bL-j on the Unkcr but would-., ,, nf nav,nl.n i, - native' Tilre clothes on landing. In mostj0j NJva e haUs ,rom mm nnditlon was Capt Alder- napoUj Valley and ha5 en at K& a ! since he was sixteen years of age. The rurvlvors were: Mrs. Ocorgei ... znarr IlamtHnn ntirmurta: Mrs. "a nsison. uermuaa: Mrs. uon i-tr Lincoln. Ncbraika: Charles . ntviiai ineir own oiuicj du P f" 1 1 n V. V. - I ... I J 1 v.. nirtKs us are jjruviut-u ujr continued on Page Three) L. Wager returned to the city n the Cardena last night from a 'P t0 Vancouver. Cause oi iMsasier i Ice forming In the carburetors of the four giant motors of the Cav- tv . ... - - . . M .. . I .....a t IK. th n tt so' urookime. Mass.: Mrs. j. u.iauer was mc cux -" v- kr- Malba, New York: Miss Nel-.tng forced down on the ocean. Smith, rembroke. Bermuda;' The watertight nun oi uw Jt' M R Alderson. commander twenty-one ion wavancr was the Cavalier. Navigating Officer turcd when she alighted on tne URLnhardson; Radio Officer Pat- water. The survivors were ptckcJ k Chapman and Steward David up a few minutes before the 'Cam:. wreckage sank under the choppy Tht three lost persons were two Atlantic THEIR BIT TO UNREST IN TROUBLESOME EAST ...... ,....! nirl 'ui unuer liovcrnmeni 01 nuua, oi,uuu,uuu i mint . Country's Area Have Their Own Problems By G. E. POWELL Canadian Press Correspondent CALCUTTA. Tndin. Januarv 23: (CP) Agitation w . , ... , , - v . , . trainer tnn Tm nn Qfntno' ovototYi nt rrnvemmeiu is neuiu ntensified by a section of Indian politicians. The States v.,v 111 t tjl UMIKI. ilv-J . ---- . oi oy the Government of India but by manaraja, rajmia On one side are the Princes, au- rrnta n.uui u. .1 A... WINNIPEG WHEAT WINNIPEG, Jan. 23: (CP) - Wheat prices were uncnangea 10 t8c higher on the Winnipeg market Saturday with May closing at 62?iC. 4 tA. j ' w turning officer appointments Include Thomas W. Brwn of Prince KuDCrt for Skeena and Bruce Parker of Prince for Cariboo. VIOLENCE IN DETUOIT mrrnniTViolence broke out at a meeting of 2000 automobile j workers under the chairmanship J of Homer T. Martin, president oi the Automobile Workers- Union, who is hairing a fight for control with Inturtent on the e xecu- . , . - i nri rp T . ..n, . . ., i ! i. i .4 tfr in ?irvai wirricja mnNsct, ju. iwri u. a i ne. Tne meeiinr was uim in a technical schooL Three hundred police were on hand and finally quelled he trouble but not until there had been Injuries and arrests. TO TOUR PROVINCE VICTORIA Capt. MacGregor Mscntoth, Conservative provincial organlier. announces that R. UMaitUnd K. C Conervative , IradVf; wlli tour the province as Mwin as weather conditions VPASClS. civ-rrvnti TO IIAS'G Mrs. Watson came from Mont-, m;GINA Harry Ileipcl. 21. ws real, being the widow of Robert' Saturday night sentenced to rung Watson of that city. I for the murder on or about Nov- Olnger Rogers, noted screen ac-; mber 9 of J. A. Kaeser, 63. Sln- r.r from the Baytown to- tress, was to have been a passen-, tulata farmer. Helpel. who comes f aid hat they appeared to be ger on the Cavalier but a severe from Arcols, offered no defence. KING BEING GUARDED LONDON Special police guards and patrols have been assigned to Sandrlngham Palace, where the King and Queen reside, and Checkers, the country home of Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain, In view of recent disturbances for which members of the outlaw Irish Republican Army have been held responsible. The King went shooting on Saturday and with the Queen attended church yesterday. Two women have been arrested following the finding of explosives in the base-'ment of a store. This makes seventeen arrests that have been made since last week's bombings. BIG STORM ON ATLANTIC LONDON S. O. S. signals buzzed from eight ships In the Atlantic as mountainous seas, propelled by terrific gales, Imperilled the lives of 390 seamen and an unknown number of passengers. Lloyds reported to be In difficulty the Chilean motor ves-sel Aconcagua, with crew of 200 and unestlmated number of passengers, the Greek freighter Tur-kla, the Greek steamer Avra, the Danish steamer Svend PII, the Netherland steamer Parklaan, the Greek steamship St. Amos, the British steamship Terllns and the British ship Bramhill. FKEPARE FOR KING German Co-operation to Continue Despite Scbacht'i Removal General Gocring Says B EH LIN. Jan. 23: CP-Oeneral Herman Ooering. vice-chancellor of Germany, assured George Rublee of the Intergovernmental refuge committee that Germany was read I to continue trying to find way ind means of sending Jews abroad. This statement was made in view of fears that negotiations to assist n the migration of Jewish refugees might terminate as far as Germany was concerned following the removal of Dr. Hlalmat George Schacht as president of th? FOUR BURN TO DEATH nrhw NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., MONDAY, JANUARY 23, 1939. YOUNG MAN IS VICTIM Aubrey Ivarson Dies In Hospital Following Accident With Shotgun ! pirh.hav Auorey ivarson. agea i. Terrible Fire Ust Night Tragedy hls Ws Wn and lnjurfd elder Mnntimf th fplintr amnn son of Mr. and Mrs. A. Ivarson, lu thmtilTi U hMVYRiln mnm Eighth Avenue desperate and they fear persecution. .si uorooT. .M.nr, .n unun. Un f) fnd he had . . . gained conciousness. CORDOVA. Ont.. Jan. 23: CP Besides his oarents. the young Four children were 'burned to man r survived br a sister. Mrs. death last night wherr fire licked JcV Oarrett. and brotner, Harow throuth the home of David John- Ivarson. son. air compressor operator at the : : mine here. a . -The. dead are: Melbmr'' Johnson. 'aged 14; Dorothy. 12; John. 10; Wallace. 8. Donald, aged five, was carried to safety by his mother who was badly burned about head and bark when she rushed back into the house in a futile effort to get upstairs where th others were sleeping after she had carried out the other child. The fire broke out while the fam- Date of hanging was set for jlly was sleeping April 26 by the presiding Judge, Mr. Justice C. M. Henderson. An adjoining house was burned but none were Injured. ' The temperature was fourteen 1 below zero. I: Another Cold'"' Wave Recorded Six Below Registered at Winnipeg And Twenty Below at Edmonton WINNIPEO. Jan. 23: CP Another cold wave with sub-zero temperatures clamped down over the prairies since the week-end. Six below was recorded in Winnipeg and twenty below. at Edmon ton. The bitter weather extended jinto Ontario with London gettng a blizzard wun nity-mue gate. i Roads were glazed with traffic at Dr. Hugh Morrison, Inspector of ! a standstill. At North Bay 12 be-schools. will sail on the Cardena ' low was recorded today and In tomorrow for a trip to Ocean Falls . Montreal the theremometer drop-on official business. I ped 41 degrees yesterday. i Warning Issued Against Jap Shaving Brushes Found Laden With Deadly Germs of Anthrax OTTAWA, January 23: (CP) The National Health! Department announced last night that all provincial health departments had been warned against Japanese shaving brushes infected with deadly anthrax germs. It is not known how many of the germ-laden brushes there are in Canada but it is believed some have been sent to 1 . Western Canada, having been dls- jtrlbuted by a United States firm. 'n AAnnrri nn 'KUUofcVLLl 'Revenue officials are tracing the i TOrn1 The brushes are believed to have Knit KK A I H I I! been made from bristles of animals Seen By Communist Leader To Be "Bravely Fighting Against Nazism MOSCOW, Jan. 23: Browder, Communist (CP) Earl leader, In a suffering from anthrax, a splenlx . - .V 1 1.1 i . . icver ui siieep ana came wmcni produces malicious bolls on man. At Washington D. C. Dr. Thomas Parran, United States public health j service surgeon-general, last night said that he had requested an embargo on all Japanese-made shav ing brushes as a result of a death VICTORIA E. H. Coleman K. .statement here Saturday, praised traced to infection from one. He C Under Secretary of State, (President Franklin D. Roosevelt of'8'0 'na a" United States collect-n hl return t.. Ot- United States who. although still ! ors of customs were being asked to irii " - twa after spending a few days :a defender of capitalism, was here In connection with the '"bravely fighting for the best tra- maklng ot arrangements for the idltlons of democracy against Naz-vlslt of the King and Queen, 'ism." The release of Tom Moonry The arrangements are left In the I from San Quentln Penitentiary hands of local committees. was acclaimed by Browder. 141 S Macey's Coffee House PRICE: 5 CENTS Britisher Sunk -- Seven Are Killed EN PERSONS ARE RESCUED AFTER SINKING OF FLYING'- BOAT; THREE DROWNED Standard Oil Tanker Found Survivors Clinginp; to Kuhtar Wt - . . r t f 41 if i t i Life ileus several noun Aiier Aircrau mopped Into Ocean NEW YORK. January 23: (CP) Ten survivors from! the Imperial Airways flying boat Cavalier, which dropped Bulletins A.MKl) RETRUNLNG OFFICEK OTTAWA Announcement of returning officers for the most of federal constituencies, made today, may confirm the belief of many member that a general election will be held this fall rather than next sprint. Official explain, however, that the ap nolntments mutt be made now and are of no political significance. There may be more de finite nunc Indication of when the el- win uriD r MOVE JEWS ighter African Mariner Struck By Insurgent Bomb; Barcelona Appears Doome East, sustained further "rious gunshot injuries In a tragic accident at his home about 3 Vi-wi ir-nciuai s.swsi ti i 1 11 t i died shortly after midnight at the ireighter African Manner was bombed and sunk in an d General Francisco Franco Quickly Closing in With Rapidly Advancing Drive By Land Bolstered by Naval Blockade and Deadly Air Raids CIVILIANS ORDERED EVACUATED IIENDAYE, France, January 23: (CP) The Spanish government today ordered evacuation of civilian population of Barcelona, the capital, under threat of insurgent armies little more than fifteen miles from the city gates. Premier Negrin's cabinet announced that the ministers would remain at the capital to fight to the bitterend. BARCELONA, January 23: (CP) The British prince Rupert General Hospital surgent an ram on Barcelona today, bix sailors are re-The younz man. who returned ported to have been killed. At Valencia two British home recently from premier where freighters and a French ship were damaged by insurgent the , ? , , he had been emnloyed In mine. -1 mi , , which bombs in air raids. The raids formed part of the great was uostairs cieania? a gun deharged. The shot entered his nMnmrn nn thi lrft nld shatter- staging staging in in the uie final irnai drive onve w to cap- . nrsn lip TT1-VT cap-Arrr Al S r I iK 'ture Baf"Iona and possibly end the A 2-liTLl-llJ 1 wlV Spanish SDanish civil civU war war with with a a ereat great vie- vlc- VOLUNTEERS Premier Neville Chamberlain Addresses the Nation on Voluntary Service LONDON, Jan. 23Whi!e he and his government would continue their policy of preserving peace, Prime Slinister Neville Chamberlain, in an address to the nation toni-ht. referred to the possibility of Great Britain being forced into war. The Prime Minister was speaking on the government's scheme of voluntary national service and expressed his sure conviction that the people would co-operate in such a manner as to show to the world what Britons were prepared to do should war come. Modern warfare was not like it was before in view of the development of possibilities of aerial attack. There was urgent necessity for the organization of civil population and it was essential that preparations should be made in advance. There would be no time after war started. Security must be organized in advance. .Mr. Chamberlain referred the people to published matter on the subject of voluntary national service and, leaving it to them to decide, asked immediate co-operation in selection of the occupations to which they would be best fitted in war effort "If you are ready to volunteer," said the Premier, "I ask you to ask yourselves to w hat service you are best fitted and to give your answer." Statin? that the government must have the number for which it asked in various services, the Premier said that those who volunteered first would be placed first. Those who did not come forward at first might have to be assigned later. Mr. Chamberlain made an appeal to all to do their parts. "We hope to get all the volunteers we want without compulsion," he said. Prominent Church Man Is Retiring bar brushes until they are tested) EDMONTON. Jan. and states where shloments have i Archdeacon S. D. 23: (CP) 1 Cornish, tor tory In their favor. The line of defences in the mountains having evidently collapsed, the loyalist government has order-led all people of Barcelona to quit j their Jobs and turn lo the task of 'digging trenches around the city fondworlr on -fortirteations,thTthe final effort to save the capital from capture. AU men under fifty-fire and all women from eighteen to forty have been given picks and shovels and set to work. With the insurgent armies, estimated to number 300.000, now less than twenty miles away Barcelona now has its back to the wall. General Francisco Franco's forces are declared to be advancing rapidly on every sector of the Catalonian front, land operations being supple- by naval blockade and vicious Imented air raids. There were no less than fourteen air raids on Barcelona yesterday with planes dropping their deadly cargo with frightful effect upon people and property. Tin-Canners In Toronto Resume Street Begging TORONTO, Jan. 23: (CP) Thirty-eight men were dismissed Hn city police court on Saturday on tin-canning charges despite their j threat that they would resume their begging today. CONSCRIPTED IN GERMANY All Abie-Bodied Men in Reich, Except Jews and Criminals, Must Serve BERLIN, Jan. 23: (CP) Under a new decree Issued at the end of Xhe week all able-bodied men In Germany are being conscripted for Germany's shadow army. All except Jews and criminals are belnj made subject to compulsory mlll-tory service. AGED CYCLIST DIES LONDON Jan. 23: (CP) Britain's grand old man ot cycling, Henry . , . n i. - U. AM I. J I been distributed are advised to seize I many years one or Eamonion SjKeven ueynoms. o. oeau most prominent churchmen, is re- During more than 60 years of us- all such brushes. A death is said j in hvo mvnrrpd in North Dakota tiring ana wm leave tor vu.wwa w....v . due to anthrax. . I to reside. ridden more than 400,000 miles.