Tomorrows Tides Weather Forecast Lew 12:10 pjn. 195 (L 5:59 a m. 2.8 ft 18:03 p.m, 12 ft. Plot Ul fcrr-ie of 245 member!. Mr irt fj. owing had Increased to ID if the end of the Ust parlla- fcUnr session The tU'uforr term of the Cana- tat unent Is five Tears and r;fri. election is not nccesai- I'.ed t: ' j late tn 1940. This Is th -4 tr i of office for Mr. Klnff. . ... j at I a a 1. r uaa uiru mic luitvii at 1 rf four years. Mr. Klni izn dI his Immediate prc- -i-r ri lion k ii. uenneu z ir J. . . . il X III UtlKC IIIC IT. . .1 i.J Farty Nominations If'"'!: parties are loainc no .1 ftr'J. Loea! nominating cen tre "being "held almost ri"7ui parU of the coun- T ? bera' party, the general TTr.Tir i , ! n ni vnvn m as muni a V:.t Ca; n the eleetlon da'e utr or.e rue has already placed! sir 7 a:;fiidate in ihe eonsUtu-i tries, a; hate the CorwervaUvsai isl "-. c operative Common- ei::,i toleration. Rf' between the C. C. F. Cirii neit approatth to a fe-i ' varty. and the new Dfaaerary Movement, headed bl Ha. W 0 Herridge. former mm-r to the United State, have bffa f,4r;fd, Mr Herridge started out to Kite ra he termed all progressist f :r:f j n one movement op- PPd ta the traditional Liberal r:d CorsrrvaUve parties. He in-tiaded the C C. F. and the Social Credit pary together with Indl-nduiis in both the old-time pa-ti Li the general term T6e Social Credit party sup- Pted Mr Herrldee'a plan, but the C C F rejeoted his overtures. The Communist party without waiting or a direct Invitation, tendered U support to New Democracy. International .Upect Apirt from the political aspect government is bound to con ildtr International affairs In reach to Its decision on an election. It requires nearly two months to tostiU a new parliament In Cana- . cwbg to the vast distances nd the difficulties In preparlna Trj fct- Should a crisis, or war Ititlf break out rtnrW thU ln- rtal Immediate action would be required and the country would be ywout a parliament. As all par-"J are on record as bclne on- Ped to Canada's participation In except by the decision of Pirliamcnt. th rnnllnnlntr nnrir- lnf,j oi affalrj abroad adds t() we difficulty of setting an election dale Wlnclne A hv.iWtlrn In ml. fmy.t.Wcst for Ptfmber 25. to "U thf spat Vacalpfl hv nt TInn R Ti . .. I ' "Cnnett. nmir In rnnlanrl iMiti i 8a,d 'hl,e lhe European .y have Improved somj-h. e PbUlty remains that r- canadln pprllament may have c,tet.agaln lhls year to decide "Muestion, ot and war ' . new ministers arc exnocted J?. the cabinet before the Ir u clectU)n- Hn Fcrnand Rln TODAY'S STOCKS (Oouruy B. O. JutxuAoa On.) Vancouver Hig MlMNrt, .12. BrsJome. 11. Cariboo QuarU. 2.18. Dentonla. .02 H. Falrvlew. M. Gold UeiU JO. Iledlejr Mascot, .74V4-Minto. Dl?. NoWe nve. .01. Pend OrWk. 1.49. Pioneer. 2.45. Premier. 1A5. Prtvateer. 1.13. Reeve McDonald. 3. Reno. .48 S. Rsltef Aritncton. .13. Reward. M. Salmon Gold. .03 H. Sheep Creek, 1.19. Crtto9 Hu'Wn. JB3. . IIedlrJUnalgOU - oils A P Con.. J3. alfnoRt, JO. C & E . U. freehold. .NI4. Home. 2M PrnH m. 'val Ctnftdten. .)7Mi. OkftJta. .01. Mercury. M. Prairie RoyalUe. 21V,. Toronto Aldermac. Jl. Beattie. 1.20. Central Pat.. 2.41. Con. Smelters, 43.75. East Malartte. 2.65. Fcrnlartd. .03 V.. Ftancoeur. .60. Gods Lake. J9. Hardrock. 1.05. Int. Nickel. 49.25. Kerr Addison. 2.00. Little Long Lac, 2.92. McLetl Cockshutt. U9. Madsen Red Lake. .38. McKenzle Red Lake. U6. Moneta, 1.01. Noranda. 82.25. Pickle Crow. 4.50. Preston E. Dome. 1.53. San Antonio. 1 88. Shcrritt Gordon, .99. Stadacona, JO. Uehl. 1.09. Douscadlllac. .04. Mosher, .12. Oklend. .07. Smelters Oold. .02Vi. Dominion Bridge. 25.75. ing, the minister of finance, is retiring through Ill-health. Premier Mitchell Hepburn of Ontario, who has been at war. with the Federal prime minister! for some time, announced he; would take no active part In the; Mr. Juttire Murphy Witholds De tMon In Retard to Committal , Of Sheriff If LlLKd AlvEi ! UNREPORTED word has been heard from the .New York transAUantlc filers, Alex jLocb and Dick Decker, who took off from St. Peter's, Nova Scotia. .yesterday on a proposed flight to This afternoon's train, due from glrc. The deadline for their fuel the East at 2:30. was reported thls5Uppiy was reached today morning to be one hour and ten I minutes late which would bring It In at 3:40 p.m. Halibut Sales American Rainier. 32,000. Royal, 9c and 6c. Haicl !!.. 22.000. Booth, 9c and 6c. Canadian Joan W. II., 40,000, Cold Storage. 8.3c and 5c. federal general election. The Lib- . eral provincial premier and former) Weather JVOreCaSt 1 member of the federal house, said j thot h hat no Intention of mal:-l ! ,. ...ii v,. I nenornt Rvnonsls A degression ing any cjccwuu oi.-r."ca. -r -- ----- Mr Hepburn, who has said tie on Vancouver uuwu uppcui j w would oppose Mackenzie Kings disposing after having caused conUnuance or leadership of the showers on the coast. The wcath-fcderal liberal party, said iy.s at-'er has been mostly fair and warm H..rf inward the King govern- In the Interior. ment has not changed. They have West Coast of Vancouver Island- not done anyUuntfln my opinion Fresn smiting winas. notiiww ai to commend thcmselvot to me cinigiu. uw wiwi twwu jiuw- lly ani Hon. Charles Dunn-'cctors," he said ers. Early Plebiscite On City Managership; Government To Meet Wishes Of People Sentiment in Prince Rupert is strongly in favor of a city managership being inaugurated here on the retirement of City Commissioner W. J. Alder at the end of this year, according to the joint committee of the Prince Rupert Chamber of Commerce, Junior Chamber of Commerce. Prince Rupert Retail Merchants' Association and Trades and Labor Council which has this matter in hand. The committee has been assured byHon. A. Wells Gray, minister of municipalities, that the provincial government will be prepared to givs Prince Rupert a form of city management or permit it to roturn to the old form of city council government, whichever the ieople themselves desire as Indicated by plebiscite. Meantime, arrangements are going ahead for the holding of a plebiscite at an early date. The plan which the committee favors is a council of five members serving without pay which would appoint a qualified city manager. The council would direct civic policy and financing and the manager would have complete authority in administration. JUDGMENT JAP OFFICE RESERVED DYNAMITED F.xplotion Demcllshes tMriers t 5hippinr Concern in Shanghai, Injuring Several VANOUVET Aucust 12: CF- SHANGHAI. Aug. '12: CP- A .Mf. Jnstlce Denis Murphy yester- bomb explosion tonight demolished day adjourned until November 1 the oUl6t5 ot a Japanese-controlled the Sn Life Assurance Go's ap-; company here. Injuring pHeatkm for committal for eon- nlne chlnese wriousiy and scvfral j tempt ot court 0f Sheriff Monte E. others sUghtjy Harper of Nelson alter Attorney! ' Oeneral O or don Wiamer said he ,w1H ask the forthcoming session of QIC DT A 7C I the Legislature to consider the fjlj DLA4E1 Miuauon in me uouxnoDor-seiuea . areas of the interior. . The Insurance company asks (committal on the ground that the' sheriff failed to carry out provisions of a Supreme Court order foreclosing on several thousand acres of land occupied by some four thousand Doukhobors. rT irnn 1 nr IN FOREST Spirit Lake, Villaee of 900 Ne-ti ' SpoWanri Menaced Sl.OOepOO Of Lumber Destroyed SPOKANE, August 12: (CP - Wind from the southwest todav whipped a forest blaze toward the village of Spirit Lake where nine hundred persons reside. The fire has already destroyed 40.000.000 1 feet of stacked lumber and a ware- No Word of Two Youths On Oceanlhouse with damage estimated l dossing As Their Fuel Deadline more than $1,000,000. Flftecr I Is Reached - ntrm TV Axwiet 1 iPPi Mn hundred-fire fighters are attempting to control the fire. MOTOR TRADE THRIVES LONDON. Aug. 12: (CP) For the first time the number of private automobiles In England has passed the 2,000.000 mark. The number of cars exported during June. 1939. was 2,500 greater than the 1938 June total. Bulletins ANTI DKITOMSM TIENTSIN Leaders of the an-ti-nritish campaign In North China predicted today that more intensive and widespread measures against Britons would result from a , three-day meeting starling here on Monday. . TRAINS IN COLLISION One man Mas killed and thilty-fire Injured today In a collision of two passenger trains on a, crossing switch In South Denver. NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER PRINC E RUPERT. B.C.. SATURDAY. AUGUST 12, 1989. HOSPITAL IS ABOUT TO SHIFT Removal to New Building to Take Plate in About Ten Days- Board in Monthly Session In about ten days time it Is expected to move the Prince Rupert Of serai Hospital Into the fine new week. Arrangements are also being made to move the x-ray equip ment about the same time. The building and house committees, to- gether with the lady superintend- ent. managing secretary and doc- tors, were delegated to make the 4. moving arrangements. : In connection with a balance re- 4 , quired to pay off the new building, it was decided to sell city bonds in more special hospital bonds. Routine business at last night's Chief H. T. Lock who reported having made his monthly inspection, finding the fire alarm system In the Nurses Home in good order and brasekeptas" renditions rn julldings well maintained. Jboth An offer of the Oldeons Society (Commercial Travellers' ChrisUan Association to place Bibles on each bedside table In the new hospital was accepted with thanks. The offer was made through Rev. E. E Brandt, secretary of the Prince Rupert Ministerial Association. In regard to the moving of the x-ray equipment from the old Into the new building, there was a letter from the Victor X-Ray Cor- po ration stating that its representative. Mr. McKenzle. would ordin arily be here some time during the last three weeks In September but suggesting that. If he was required sooner In view of the moving, it might be possible to arrange it. The company will be asked to send Mr. McKenzle to Prince Rupert by the end of August and, meantime, arrangements for x-ray moving were left in the hands of the managing secretary. H, W. Birch. Another letter from the Victor X-Ray CorporaUon referred to the proposal of a class in operative x- rav technique being given. The board, however, was not Interested in this. Many Babies Due In her report for the month of July, the lady superintendent,. Miss Jean Harrison R.N., stated that tne hospital was not very busy Just now and this would appear to be a good time to move. A little later a large number of maternity cases were expected. Miss Harrison menUoned Improvements that were being made to their wards by Queen Mary Chapter and Hill Sixty Chapter, Im perial Order, Daughters of the Em plre, and the Prince Rupert Gyro Club. The presentation of a blanket warmer and violet ray ma chine by O. W. Dunn was acknowl edged. For the house committee, W. M, Brown reported that the work o' putting in a lauridry at the Nurses' Home was being proceeded with and It would be ready within week or ten days. F. A. MacCallum chairman ot the finance committee, reported there had been 1394 hospital days during July at a cost per diem of $3.75. Disbursements for the montn had amounted to $5231M and capital expenditures, $537.34. The chairman of the finance commute was asked to call a special commit tee meeting In regard to hospital rate revision. The building committee reported 1 (Continual on Paye Three) REFUGEE CAPITAL Prince Rupert and Queen Charlotte Islands Moderate wast winds, winds, part cloudy with not much change in temperature. Ambassador To Is Reported To PRICE: 5 CENT3 v pon Life Of British Envoy IAIN AIM O DLLUllUlVEiYL ACTIVITY; EXPECTATION OF FALL FEDERAL VOTE . i-i r u'..i,i !.-,...,. vt-t:., it is ncncvi-u OTTAWA. August 12: (CP) Midsummer in Canada " . 1 T r ...1 A 1. 1 I i .l. ua nmnirinir ikwihiiiii iiii u inir iir rim zm iriunr;ii Al iM r . S a ...... FT1 W1 1 . . . i .l.allAn Ifl fUl II II 1 I Illft IMI I If I ill It" I ill l'lll'l IIII I'lll . Ff It ,i . I t 4. I i j ifnir 7 i I 4 1 . . . a ww9 w a a f C:x3: ns. the ConsenraUvej 31.; Ul rrediteri 17. Co-operaUve- c: wealth Federation seven. d varteta other made up the Tokyi Have Been Marked To Die Officials of Japanese Court Also Said to Have Been Proposed- Victims of Murderous Designs of Hot-Ileaded Youths recently completed building. It was 1 indicated at the regular monthly TOKYO, August 12: (CP) Fragmentary reports in meeting of the board of hospital japanese political circles today indicated the discovery of dlrCCitled U? before" rkta? the )lots to assassinate Sir Robert Craigie, British ambassa- Sove is the putting in of window dor, and officials of the Japanese court Well-informed blinds, the order for which has been Japanese saiu me piot against an aavisor 01 tne tnrone placed with Fraser & Payne, deiiv- . as an adventure of hot-headed youths stirred up by ex- ry being expected to be made next Britain Can . tremlst propaganda. No conflr- Whip Invader I LONDON. Aug. 12: CP 4 High officials today concluded 4. tl.it Tlrititn 4fnr4or ri14 A possession of the board at the high- .. wW ; tMtn , est price posslhle rather than to sell ,.lhi3 waj determlncd a(Ur three days of mimic warfare nnr "!rat Rritoln n-h1h oil. A meeting of the board included the . maxNj a blMkMWt over half of England last night. mation could be obtained of rumors 4 that two persons planning an at- tack on the British ambassador had been arrested following an anti- British demonstration. ; RADIO IN DISTRICT Official of C. B. C. is Visitor Here Trying To Do Best But Cost Of Extending Here Obstacle Admitting that this part of ths country was one ot the most poor-ly 'served in Canada as'iarlu radio bioadcasting Is concerned, II. N. Stovin of Toronto, station relations officer of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, who was in Prince Rupert last night, said Canadian Cities and Towns One that the Commission was verr Alert For Industry anxious to extend its program ser- vices more effectively into Prince OTTAWA, August 12: CP 'Rupert and the rest of Northern Canadian cities and towns are on and Central British Columbia, he alert for "refugee" industries However the great expense of car-rom Central Europe seeking to rylng a line into Prince Rupert for jut down roots far away from emission from here was proving wmbs and decrees of confiscation, an obstacle in view of the limited Just how many European Indus- resources of the Commission and rialists and promoters have made the many demands that were plans to establish in Canada Is un- made through the vast 'Dominion. ertain. Groups engaged in fos- There were many other parts ot terms new business are reluctant Canada, said Mr. Stovin, iri which j give details because they fear radio broadcasting was Inadequate , he information may get back to and where the people were clamor-urcea in Europe which seek to ing for improvement ainder the emigration ot capital Anything the Commission could nd personnel. jdo In co-operation with the local Most publicized new industry is station in Improving its programs hat of the Bata shoe flnm of would be gladly done said Mr. xechcSlovakia which plans a Stovin who, during his stay, was manufacturing plant at Frankford in consultation with officials of n eastern Ontario employing 13M station CFPR, discussing with them aen uho will live in a model vll- the possiblllUes of making C. B. C. iige, according to this concern's programs available for local dls- long-time practice. Reception ot tribuUon. the Bata project illustrates the Mr. Stovin stated that Keith varying degrees of welcome the McKinnon of Montreal, chief re-mmlgrant industries encounter, search and development engineer Shoe manufacturers opposed it. of the Canadian Broadcasting Cor- munlclpalities competed for it, the poratlon, was at present in BrlUsh federal government allowed en- Columbia looking into the whol? trance to the country of key tech- radio situation in the province niclans but not rank-and-file .from a technical and physical workers. standpoint.. One proposal was that Other prospective businesses in-! power of basic station CBR of dude a French-Czecho-Slovaklar. Vancouver be Increased to 50,000 glove factory and a Czecho-Slovak- watts In order to more adequately lan toy factory for Prescott, also serve the whole province. Another In eastern Ontario: a Polish textile. was that there be a series of basic plant for Huntingdon. Quebec, and j stations at various points In the an alumlnumwareplar.t for Levis, ; province. Quebec, planned by a Belgian. Relaying of CBC programs Into Beet-Sugar riant Prince Rupert either by wire or by In Manitoba, Albert Flagenhelm- special short wave transmission tr, a German Jew, who owns sev-: would be a cosUy undertaking run- eral sugar factories and distilleries. nlng into thousands ot dollars, Mr. In Central Europe and the Balkans, ; stovin said.. The Commission had Is promoting a $2,000,000 beet- estimates. sugar plant. European interests,; Mr. Stovin arrived In the city supported by British capital arc on the Princess Adelaide yesterday said to be organizing a $2,500,000; afternoon from Vancouver, return- rayon Industry at North Vancou-;ing south on the same steamer last vcr. uritlsn coiumoia. iwo smaii wood-working plants, backed by an Austrian and a Czecho-Slov-aklan. are already operating In British Columbia. night FARMVORT1I INCORPORATED FARNWORTH, Eng., Aug. 12: (CP) Incorporation of Farnworth Arthur Sutton, principal of King! as a borough will be marked by the Edward High School, sailed this; presentation of a mayoral chain, morning oa the t'ardena for a trip valued at $53450, by the Farnworth to Vancouver. and Kearsley Co-operative Society V1 1 J