MBER OK MOVE NOW Eiport Business From Saw- H - - ...... " oi i rinre wrorge iimnti to t nitrd States : brisk movement xpnrt to the United ft mills in the district' Groree. It U report er W If T.-bev. CJiJl. dlvlslon- nt. who returned to -day ntRht's train ; !lie line on Inspected, a thortago of umber la dcvclop-i the mllU arc op- Bulletins WlllTr miv viv c"lCA(io, Thc Chicago White - -n jn i over Chicago yes-"I lo even up thc Inter-'W wrics. SCHMi: I.lVfl iv nrni iv DtUN Ma Schmcllne. fur- . c orld s heavyweight cham-on- " back In Rerllii frnm liN Tin in i . ... . . "urania, nc nas iaK- a UP light trnlnl 11 tr C fit Im " "t been called to thc colors. MI'OS REM) OUT ONCWNATI - The Interna- 1 )Pneraiilili!il ni.. 'CS WCrC ,,cn,ca ion I ,, f ill A"trlcan Federation Un,0n 1,9,1 "'"S"'1 ODavn enr. V asscssmcnt to the de- Ct IUlUl Whirl. It .1.1.. .1 he Uh whlch t0 flRhl c ! I o Che HIS VISION World Series- 0F WARFARE Teams Travel Adolf Hitler Will Now Await British and French Iteply to His Peace .Message occupy myself with what tney think. I make these statements simply because It goes without saying that I wish to spare my own this suffering." rw Fuehrer time and time again lliatorv. specifically to rn-Mt nrltaln and France. He said, .however, that neither force of arms I nor lapse of time would conquer Germany." "It Is Infantile to nope ior a disintegration of our people" he declared. Typical Speech Der Fuehrer's speech was a ten20gl CINCINNATI. Oct. 6. The World' Series will be resumed here tomor- row. The teams are travelling to-j day following the first two games at the Yankee Stadium In New York l t m t i ii , 1- . he will start his rookie pitcher.) Gene Thompson, on the mound lnj tomorrow's game. Lefty Oomez Is expected to be.. Joe . McCqrthjrs :holce for the Yanks. TODAY'S WEATHER Prince Rupert Clear, northerly wind, four miles per hour; visibility, thirty miles; barometer, 30.-02 (falling); temperature, 35; sea smooth. "Irlple Island Clear, west south west wind, eight miles per hour apparently!vjibMty. 23 miles; sea smooth. Langara Island Clear, souther ly wind, four miles per hour; visi bility. 25 miles; barometer. 30.04; temperature, 38; light swell. Dead Tree Point Clear, calm; I ,,. ir !h Allies to Inter- barometer. '0.08; visibility. 25 ' . li. nininn ax cowardice If. miles: 11 eh t swell. npn uia uui"" . i ' " ;, liked, he said: "I need noi Bull Harbor Clear, northwes: wind, two miles per nour; vlsl blllty. 35 miles; barometer, 30.04 (rising) temperature. 36; light swell. Alert Bay overcast, westeny age. wind, two miles per hour; barometer, 30.03; visibility, 20 miles; temnearture, 40; sea smooth. Victoria Raining, nortneast meter, 29.89. wind, ten miles per hour; baro- Vlctoria Raining, northeast wind, ten miles per hour; baro meter. 29.89. Estevan Clear, northerly wind, twn miles neh hour; barometer. A word document. It was vnnr.nnvPt.Fnlr. northerly wind, delivered la his customary man- four mlles pcr hour; barometer, r.r. ranclng from guttural ana 2!) 91 stolid thickness of voice to high, prmcc acorge Clear, northerly pitched range of excitement ana wlnd) four mlies per hour; baro also emotion. There were frequent imetcr, 29.97. rounds of applause, particularly a-hon ho referred to the valor of German erman lALTA. ACJ i DISALLOWED Limitation of Actions pleasure is -I New York and Cincinnati to Meet Up Araln Tomorrow in Bed's Home Town Afain Thrown Out By Federal Government' OTTAWA, Oct 6: (CP- Disal lowance of the Alberta alt amending the Limitation of At t ions Act was announced in a special Issue of the Canada Gazette. The same legislation was dlsallowedasKLear but was Immediately re-enac&q! It would outlaw 4ebte contracted be-, fore July 1, 1938, unles4recovery J actions were started before July l,' 1940, or the debts revlveo by-new agreements. War News LONDON The British Broadcasting Corporation quoted Copenhagen dispatches I mm .Mot-cow a indicating today that the Soviet Union was coflin; off towards its German partner. NO INVASION PLANNED BERLIN The German Foreign Office reiterates that there Is no r rntion of nvadlnc Holland or Belgium, both of which are earning out their ncatrality WANTS SUPPLIES COPENHAGEN Germanywill I invite neutral nations to trade ', with her. Dr. Ilalmar Schacht. I former President of the Reichs-bank, to be in charge of Ui' (Mganlzation. From Latvia Germany would take butter, baron, livestock and timber in return for machinery. Russo-German traffic through the Baltic States is expected to commence soon. SOVIET DELEGATION oom oi wnicn wie ixew ior ianK-, (rom ,osfow ,s due , Berlin on ces won from the Cincinnati Reds. Saturday. " Manager Bill McKentle announces1 ALL QUIET PARIS There is a continued lull on the western front. It was a calm day on the whole, said a French communique last night. There was scouting activities on both sides at various points. SOVIET HOLDS SHIPS MOSCOW The Soviet is holding twelve British and five Swedish ships in Baltic ports. They are laden with cellulose products destined for England. Halibut Sales American Yukon, 26.000, 10.7c and 7c. At Un. Sentinel, 25,000, 10.4c and 7c, Royal. Canadian Selma, 7,500, 10.10c and 6.5c, Storage. Dover B., 30,000, holding over. 'omorrow s Tides Weather Forecast 8:38 ajn. 17.0 ft. Prince Rupert and Queen Charlotte 20 31 pjn. 18j0 ft. Island Moderate northeast i 40 ajn. toil. x winds, clear and cold today becoming 14 04 pstL 90 ft. unsettled Saturday. NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER ... i t L xxr v s tt u ; PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1939. PRICE: -5 CENTS Insists On His Own Terms wt r m rt HAS SPLIT .., Without Portfolio (uili ... rrrmirr Alter Hearing S pert OVTKEAL Oct. U: (CP) Hon. iton yesterday an- ntfd bU resignation at mln- tlrtiool portfolio from ue- f.i. Vitinnale eovern- ' " - IUI t brf'e of the ttand that km taken bv Premier Mau-DuplfKis against the Domln-.oTtrnmfnt He Mid, after tiai la a pcerh of Premier 1 . it Three Hirers Wed- bat to rrftifn. .1 ..Ll.4 Mt li i.j t..-1t-ii1v In arrrnt i tt i i n rniriiiiiiiii VII - - Ujrlan- Premier Duplcwii Mfipjpermrn. . IV V ftiilfn-rlf NiUiuie member for 1L. .tarMmvnl HiriV ax iui fa " " ...... - s - tfl - fc Premier iiuplewU rt ef the Provincial el- . ; t 1 ...... .I.J..vllr.. nf ... .1.. I. -I ......I l . ...I :teH;nn had been railed ltir anon were inut-Ir hsr-ed that the Dom ini iftr-nptlnr to "starve" . . . - . I I . n m MV v. ni. . iir fx nr rr u i i - hm u iv liniiin in 1 111. 1L. Head 01 German Navy Tips Off President Roosevelt Of Threat Upon Refugee Ship LONDON, October G: (CP) The British Admiralty, commenting today on a German statement that the United States liner Iroquois might be sunk, said it was surprising that an officer of the former Imperial German Navy like Admiral Raeder should "bemean his uniform by lending himself to such baseness." The Admiralty asserted that the suggestion" enables us once more to realize and measure the criminal mentality of Nazi party leaders." The suggestion emanating from Germany and conveyed in a message sent to the United States that Great Britain intended to sink the Iroquois and blame it on Germany, as Germany still insists was what happened in the Athenia sinking, was so absurd as not to be worthy of reply. Meantime in Washington it was reported that United States Navy coastguard craft had moved to guard the Iroquois after President Roosevelt disclosed receipt of the startling report that the refugee-laden ship, with at least five hundred Americans on board, was to be sunk. The tip came from the head of the German navy but left unanswered how, why and by whom the sinking was going to be done. Likewise it offered no information as to how the Reich acquired the information. The Iroquois is now on the ocean enroutc to New York. MUsmite rroup wa nppo-wa , nmLIN. Oct. 6: (CP) coiiaoor- wist'en and ecelve par- ld today M. Fu;nin;ar . ...... .u. o.i-au 'lowing his aaaress mj vc .iw.- .w.. it,. rh!inrillnr would now IUlilk await the : British and French reply Afirr nronoslnir his European peace settlement "on a comprchen-! ilve basis.- adding that. It the Al lies rejected his "outs rcicnea hand." this statement will have "then we ahall h,rn mv last and ti.ht." Hitler nlctured a new war sure to bring un-nrecendented as one that was "horror. Saying that. It the war was al-t a on on." the vigor of every nation would be sapped on the bat-tt.n.M iiiilpr added It would be a struggle In which no longer would ik.m ho nnv isianas. r.fPrrinB to Qreat Britain's vulner ability to air attack. Such a war would leave a frontier of ruins and between France and endless graves Oermany. London Gives Der Fuehrer's Plan For Peace Very Remote Chances Of Being Accepted If Allies Reject His Outstretched Hand, This Statement pil A PQ WilI Have Been His Last, Chancellor Declares lOriijiO KJa Pictures Horrors of War Which May Ensue 1 A fiyrnfinT XTpr SPEECH BEING EXAMINED I "Ul VlinilVL LONDON, October 6: (CP) Chancellor Hitler's peace terms, as conveyed in his Reichstag speech today, will be carefully and unhurriedly examined by the British government in conjunction with France and Poland but observers here give them an extremely remote chance of acceptance. A government statement added: "But it is necessary to remember two things first, no peace proposal is likely to be accepted which doer not effectively free Europe from the menace; second, something more than mere words will be renv!-er! r wtnhb'sh confidence" in any German proposals. It was noted that the proposals did not inrluHr nnv itorfrecinii of reparations for wrongs done hv Germnnv to other peoples. The average oninio- n ihc street here is still that Hitler's v rd r "t to lv tmtod and that the war must be rar-iod on until Hitlerisrn and international unrertnintv is removed. That appears to be also the general view in France. parently enthusiastic German Reichstag today, proposed that a conference of nations should be held before millions of lives should be sacrificed in a senseless war. This statement. Hitler said, would be his powers as a democracy, there was rule of Poland by a fifteen-percent aristocracy and for the remainder IILULIN nriiLiv A i iraHp trade HriVr.iln delegation ' and' lf 11 dld not meet vth'y ere beyond description. As response, crin ,KrA there would, .rt,H -nmrontir apparently.! i mv .o im nnri J im hp .,. mit .m 9 be nothing for it but to fight. He I ier, had made every effort to was confident. Der Fuehrer sald.i bring about a reasonable compro- Ihat nprmnnv u-nnlrl ht vlrtnrifms ' .itu rinn j rs..., nn.n of Warsaw. An Irresponsible Pol ish government, however, had sac rificed lives uselessly. The whole city of Warsaw had entered the flchL Its population had been summoned to battle. German proposals had not even been considered by the Polish government but had been treated with utter con sacrificed lives In a most un scrupulous manner. Polish soldiers Nornen, 6,000, 10c and 6.5c, Stor-1 had fougnt bravely but the be Halt Of German haviour of their leaders was inex t many's what happened to the Russian Ukraine but Germany must think of the thousands of Germans who suffered at the hands of the Poles who have not tempt. On September 25 he had I belonged to the civilized nations ordered the attack. Poiana naa.or tne wona, Refused Reasonable Offer Continuing. Hitler said the Poles had refused every reason able offer because they felt them The following were material pbiises of the speech, delivered before the German Reichstag to- day by Chancellor Adolf Hitler: 1. Renunciation of further territorial claims except for old col- onial demands. I J 2 Declaration that Germany I and Russia together would "re- Iieve one of the acutest danger ! spots in Europe" by working for the German iitionsthat b to say resettle. i BERLIN, October 5. Justifying con- :ouest.Qf PplLdiogiil&n of which country he asserted' furth deelaratUm 1nat it was a wa.entfelv a matter for Germany and Russia to deal I problem not restricted to this ' - ith. and reneWner his demand for removal of the injus-J particular sphere but a task of tiees which had been imnosed UDon German v under the! rr widcr implications for the Treaty of Versailles through the return of her last colon- "f1 ands0t'; of Eurhlch ,are .filled with i . ru "u.if Adolf u:n Hitler nt were ial possessions Chancellor addressing an ap an Eastern peace zone. 3. Specific assurance to the world that he had ho designs on the Roumanian Ukraine or the Urals of Denmark and the expression that in Eastern Europe generally and Scandinavia his in- terests are wholly economic. 4. Declaration that one of Germany's tasks in dealing with fallen Poland was "establishment of a new order of ethnographic con- splinters of German 'nationality whose existence cannot be rank nnnrpjwlnn Conditions Jn theiOennany and Russia (country were so utterly bad that reason to co-operate other. had every with each It was claimed by some, th Chancellor went on, that Germany sought world domination. "It is our objective . to bring w about peace and I - 'j - " i tuia miLti ruuiau. bicijr ukku.p, ( t The fate of Germany In 1918 would r Oeimanv to solve the Question 1 establish stable conditions," he not be reoeated. There would not had met with rejection by thelasrted. "Germany and Russia be another Versailles at the end of i p0i.Sh government. Millions of i have now established definite this war. j Germans had been forced to leave Germany,,, HiUer declared, had the country. Poland had declined lachleved a great victory In Poland every reasonable offer owing to the I which augured well for the future activities of war mongers. The 'success of German arms. The! Poles had been told that the Ger- greatest part of the PoLsh army man army was utterly inefficient been destroyed. He had given although no French or English gen-orders Ihad not to sacrifice any more:eral would have permitted himself .lives particularly women and such an opinion. "We knew th' children than were absolutely German army could utterly destroy I necessary to break the resistance Poland. The reason of the Polish boundaries, we want to eliminate every source of conflict in eastern and south eostern Europe. In this connecUon Germany and Russua will support each other. This Ls a deserving element for peaceful relations between Germany and "The League of Nations ls today a dead thing but the nations' are not dead. I have given the German nation my word of honor to remove Injustices. The German nation has the right to exist. I have the Prince John a Queen soldiers. foi.'saSed the Prince Rupert last Charlotte Island points on official have have been been a a breakdown. Dreaicaown. Minorities Minorities capitalistic states sunto would uum have nic liked u has been mogntod. rfpllverv of thc hpeecn ioi-.santu on un mc , i r , . . ... ,. , iP.,dr treated. De- n. tn to hnvo have ninvrri played nprmnnv Germany and and Tins-! Rus-i The return oi tne baar Wed Hitter's Ktum last night fromlght for a business trip to v.n-.auue Mrs. Turnbull. ue wm oe accompan.ea W n had splte been It being barbarously 7 hailed hailed to by western, tem.Sa sla against against each each oVher'. other. However, However.' (Continued on Page Tub). 'a triumphal tour to Warsaw. couver. Submarines Are Now Destroyed given. ... V ... U ..11 Im rnKAlAH . resistence was that two great powers thought they could punish another great power with Impunity It was not any business of Ger- declined to submit the settlement cusable. German forces had shown -selves protected. Oerman offers of great efficiency, declared Hitler,! peaceful settlement and Its feeling who extolled the great courage of j0f responsibility had been looked German soldiers. ''We all feel proud upon as weakness. Germany had of the strength of our armed made efforts to bring about forces," he said. German losses compromise but this had led to had not been one-twenUeth the mobilization. number that had been anticipated. 'There was nothing left for us They had been small considering i to do but strike back with the inMnnn rvt fi: (CP) The i what had been accomplished. The same measures as they had used Ministry of Information says that German dead in the Polish cam- agalnst us," asserted Hitler. 'Then It has reason to believe that half of palgn, the Chancellor reverted, hadlthe Polish state had fallen within h-npmvm submarines which were been 10,572 dead. 30.322 wounded . a few days." ..... TU r.arn1!in t.i.i II.. ...J . at sea when war broke out have ana j.iui nusniB. c uermany, iuer cuuuuucu, uuw now been destroyed. No figures are had taken 6,091 prisoners. had a working agreement with oerman iorces were now m mc. Kussia Decause we naiurauy cunj-readlness for war In the west. , plement each other." Germany and The state of Poland had been Russia had come to an under or oerman ngnts to otner coun tries. It cannot be denied that a revision of German relations with surrounding nations has taken place. I have removed the gravest injustices of the Treaty of Versailles which pulled down the victorious nations Just as much as It did the defeated ones. I have en deavoured to bring about clearer relations between ourselves and our neighbors. Friendly With Neighbors. "We are on friendly relations with Denmark and have no territorial claims upon that country. "We have tried to keep up the traditional friendly relations be tween Holland and have Improved relations with Belgium. "We have never had thc slightest trouble with Switzerland. "I have notified Jugoslavia that our boundaries are unatlerable. "Hungary ls a friendly neigh bor. "I have brought about a friendly understanding with Italy with whom we have strong political and schools, will sail Friday night on 'entirely on an artificial basis, Hit-, standing because there "Ojeconoml c "IoJf ' for visit to ler declared. There was bound to reason for hostile attitude The! The inpendence of Slovakia a was the