i (Continual on Patio Fire) Angeles. Tomorrows Tides Today's Weather High 8:23 a.m. 18.1 ft. Prince Rupert Overcast, south 20:45 p.m. 18.0 (t. east wind, twelve miles per hour, ' Low 1:28 a m. 8.0 It. barometer. 29.12 i falling); temperature. H:35 pm. 8.7 ft. 61; light chop. NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA'S NEWSPAPER mm XXVII PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., WEDNESDAY, N OVEMBER 30, 1938. i PRICE: S CENTS Vol French !f Strike Smashed -- . By " Premier RECEPTION TENDERED ARMY HEAD 1 i' BfpreentatlTe Gathering Ut Night In Honor of Commllonrr and Mrs. Carpenter Insplr-Ing Speechei With rrprentatlve citizen takim ort In the proceeding as well a comprising the auaience. a pudir ekome meeting was held at First f Presbyterian Church last rSght in connection with the visit to the; C'j of Commissioner and Mrs-i Oeorie L Carpenter, territorial leaders of me eaivauon Army iw Canada Alaska, Newloundland and The principal speaners . Bftfflida uarTn ui a iiv w r- - Commissioner and Mra. Car-ptnter a ere r A. MacCallum. president of the Pnnce Rupert Chamber of Commerce acted as chairman and u tWtd In conducting the meeUni b Hngadier Walter 3. Cana'heti of Wrangell. dlvUlonal commsnrttr for. Northern British C ambii and Alaska. The offkr- ui sr.i 'me on behalf of the city, s rx'ended by Commissioner W. J Alder with Dr. Joseph T Mandy slio being one of the featured l ipeakera Local clergy took part In! tie service and there waa special ETMDjee the Marrh in the course of which b ktched the orlln and expan-n.:n of the actltttlei of the 8aha- ' n Army whose work of saving j . .. t . I . A Milt I I cu:s was loaay ocing cn uu cany lands and In the four comers, cfthe earth. At the outset. Com-1 r loner Carpenter ld that he be'.leTed the Army had played ai' Dionne ana ur a. k. uaioc twin irasi wmc pari In promotlnj good-say they are opposed to the Dlonnej UI and trust between the nations quintuplets going to New York for, He told of the romanUc clrcum- exhibition purposes. Premier M. F. lUnccs under which William Booth Hepburn says he agrees with them-lad founded the Army In London, and that, as far as the government t.Vlrlg UP Hie Of COmiOn ana pu-U rocn, uwt w. i, lege for one of sacrifice and hard- ship, possibly little dreaming at the C:cLAC time the widespread and important I ldUCl IXZO proportions that the organUatlon p ws to later assume In evangelical ontCrenCe tndeavour. In 1U march against. arongdolng In many lands. mKpina nil Hplfl iiuiu mlssloner first referred to the cam- WCHig oslcn asalnst the cvus oi svrons drink There was still great need today to prosecute this fight The Army had been Instrumental In recovering many unfortunate persons Iran the ravages of the alsohol traffic. Then there was the march of the Arm asalnst social Impurity. The Armv had ever stretched out arms. of romnaaslon to the "sisterhood sisterhood of the night." extending to them ajattle on the Prince Oeorge to att helping hand. Today there wereVd the annual meeUng of the In- 1600 institutions for the reecpuon of these women. In 1937 alone 17.-000 such women had been received In these Army homes and no less than 18.000 had bcrn re-established tn society. Facilities for this ser vice were being Increased in Canada, There was also the march against crime through the visitation of lalla and nrlsons and the Army had been responsible for the putting of many criminals on the road to better lives. Hie Army had also been active on a large scale among the unemployed, endeavouring at U times to help those who tried. With lessened Income on the one hand and arcater demands on the o'her. the Army also had had its Pernlexlntr nroblems during the de pression but it had carried on vail-ntly and unfalterlnalv. "But we fe always on the march against' nr concluded the Commissioner.' "Hon of the problems of the any. Ho k1l...- I -.1 ...rtrlr U believe X III'VF I .III IP f I'll I I'.ll, VI Ul l - - - -- - FASCISTS 1 ARE DEAD' Leader And Thirteen Followers Slain In Koumania While At- tempting to Escape Jail i BUCHAREST, Koumania, Nor. 30: (CD Cornelius Zelea Cod- , reau, 39, Roumanian Fascist lead ! er, and thirteen others serving I prison terms for treason with him were killed lodajr as Rou- j manlan authorities utruck at terrorism attributed to Codreau's outlawed Iron Guard organlza- . Hon. ! An offlrial statement said they j were killed while attempting to -escape. OCSSlOll UpeilS . On January 1Z OTAWA. Not. 30: (CP Parliament will open on Jan- uary 12. Prime Minister Wll- Ham Lyon Mackenzie King an- nounced last night after a meeting; of the cabinet. De- 1 fence measures arc exoected to loom large at the session. - AKfc p ' . NOT GOING Dionne. Dafoe and Hepburn Are All iVyw I ... Prn iu v -A tKlklt!nn .......... At New York TORONTO. Nov 30: CP-OHva A. J. Whltmore. member of the International Fisheries Commission from Ottawa, arrived In the city on last night's train from the East and, with L. W. Patmore K.C.. local i member. Is meeting this afternoon with local boat owners and fisher- men Tomorrow night Mr. Whltmore' ana Mr. Patmore will leave for Se- ternatlonal Fisheries Commission. Oeorge Anderson, representing the' Deep Sea Flshccmen's Union, and J. M. Morrison and 8am Hougan,, representing the Canadian Halibut Vessel Owners' Association, will al-i so leave tomorrow night for Seattle as delegates to the meeting. Grizzly From North Going To California BURNS LAKE, Nov. 30. Bill Mc Nelll, well known guide of the cen inirlor route, killed a trai canoe "'"'T ...I,: .1 ,"r' 'L rdn 1 hiiccj"'" ...w CJ o llie secumtha Pass In Tweeds ulr parjj. The complete nice wus vpr nnd the head, after mounung, ... . Inn In IVJ mm ft I f n III H llllllllllll AUU flk v - Will PV -w - is Dead Hon. J. w. fordhanv Johnson TODAY'S STOCKS Vapnacx ilckel. 5 asked. Big Missouri. 25. Bralorne. 0.90. Aitee. .05v Cariboo Quartz. 2.47. 1 Dentonla, .06. 1 Ooteond. 05? i. Mlnto. .02i. Falrvicw, JM. u Noble Five .03. Pend Oreille. U0. I Pioneer, 2U8. Porter Idaho, .03. Premier. 2J21. nelief ArUnstpn. .14li. Reward. .07. Salmon Gold. .03. Taylor Bridge. .01. Hedley Amalr. .03. Premier Border. .00. SUbak Premier. 1.75. Home Oold. .01. Orandvlew, .06. Indian. .01. Quatslno, .03V4. V; 0115 A. P. Con.. J5. Calmont. 54, C. & E . 2.01. Hargal, 22. McDougal Segur. 12&. I Mercury. .O6V4. KkalU. 1.00. ! Home Oil, 1.18. j ! Toronto Beattle. 1.37. Central Pat.. 2.44. Oods Lake. .29. LltUe Long Lac. 2.70. McKcnzle Redlake. 159 X Dlv. Pickle Crow. 5.10. San Antonio, 1.22. 8herrltt Gordon, 1.32. Smelters Oold, .03. McLcod Cockshutt, 3.05 -Oklcnd, .17. Mosher. .16. Madsen Redlake. .42. Sladcona. .51. Francoeur. 23. ... , . Moneta. 1J0. . i;, Bouscadlllac, .10. Thompson Cadillac, .27, . Bankfleld. JO. East Malartlc. 2.38., " , Preston E. Dome. 1.41. Aldermac. .48. Kerr Addison. 1.80. Uchl Gold, 1.45. Int. Nickel, 53.50. ' 3 " . Noranda, 810. Cons, Smelters, 60 00 Athuna..b7. i&m Hardrock. 1.69. Rarber Larder. .16, t Fernland, .13 V4. Dominion Bridge. 34.00, 1 Hunters Blocked ;iBy Heavy Snows M,..,rd In Maine and Similar r ' Number St.,. Out j AURORA, Maine, Nov. 30: (CP) e i" ..., SHICIV. A BUHUUi uuinuv., iiiuov.j - hunters, are expected to be rescued. 'GAS PRICE REMAINS No Change Until After Case Tried ' In Appeal'Court Decides Two Judges VANCOUVER, Nov. 30. The government ordered the rasoline price reduction held up until January at the earliest when the Court of Appeals yesterday dls-ml' ed the Crown's appeal from Mr. Justice Hanson's Injunction restricting the provincial Fuel Board rutting the price. Mr. Justice' MtQuarrle dis-enl-' ert from the Judgment of Thief Jii'tlre Archer Martin and Mr. Justice Gordsn Sloan. One of the conditions of dismissal was that the oil companies do their best to hasten the trial of the validit f .the Brltl-h flumbU Coal d PetrMeum Products Control Board Art. BIRTHDAY OF KING ,whi n Oherred on Mar 2 This Year While ..Monarch Is In. Canada OTTAWA. Nov,, 30; (.CPPrime Minuter WilUam Lyon Maclcenzle S?. "It. Llh?. Klng George 'would be obsenrrd . 111 ,.,au w. ..w - - - HU Majesty Is visiting Ottawa. lis Retiring As ' Montreal Mayor Present Incumbent Will Not Seek Re-r.lection Hnude is Again in Field MONTREAL, Nov. 30: CP May- or Adelard Reynard announces (hat he will not seek re-election at the forthcoming election. Three candl- dates have announced Intention of running Including Camillen Houde iwho was beaten by Reynard two years ago. Geological Survey Engineers Making Reports For Year OTTAWA, Nov. 30: (CP) Twenty J? are now In Ottawa preparing their rnltrm-tntr tht sooviri'jt field . t, .1 WOrK. in ail wicic cic iwikj -., . i-rinr parties In the field from one end of j0 and Queen Char canaaa 10 uirouierwia Easteriy gales, un- lng geo logical examinations, the miid w1th rain. value of which to prospectors and,5"""1. VflnPOUVer Island . . t 1 11 1 the mining inausiry generally is becoming more and more recognlz- ed. CHRISTMAS ALLOWANCE There will be the usual special Christmas allowance for relief ref I Iclplents this year, it Is announced , by City Commissioner W. J. Alder.: For families there will be $3.20 and for single men $1.20. Trie government pays eighty percent and the city twenty percent. ) Dr. John Gibson, son of VeryRevi J. Bv Gibson, who, was doing Interne duty at the Montreal General Hos - p.tal at the time of the recent European crisis, at once sent In an application to Join the Royal mW h u nnW snr -ith that -v vr,- o 'Unit. Nationwide F orce vji ni rianne u New Zealand In Favor Of CrOlt Plan WELLINGTON. New Zealand v Nov. 3i): CP Prime Minister Michael Savage of New Zea- land has endorsed the plan of S'.r Henry Page Croft for gov- ernment expenditure of 10,- 4; 000,000 to permit or the setUe- ment of ten thousand British families In central British Col- umbla. Cultivated Area Sharply Reduced , More JhM mUm Aw ,n Manl 1 toba Have Quit Growing ,..,. Nov. 30: CP More than lj000,000 acres of land have gone out of cultivation since. 1921, Prof. J. H. Ellis of University) of Manitoba said in a report to' the economic survey board. 1 With total land area of 143,000. ; 000 acres, Manitoba has only one-' seventh 0f this territory organized Into municipal units after 65 years 1 0f active settlement. In the or-'. ganlzed area only 7,789.920 acres were under the plow In 1936 aga-, int 9.022,738 acres in 1921. Manitoba's policy in the past 60 years has been of the' more or le hlt-and-mlss variety, the report says. All Manitoba soils 'are net suitable for agriculture, he said. , "it is vitally Important." Prof-i Ellis reported, "that factors which lhave determined the varied sotl types and conditions should b?, carefully studied and land -use po!- j ' Icies planned not for exploitation .but for maintenance and conser-i jvatlon. Weather 1-orecast General synopsis A deep de .. t l0 ,.n(,A n-oct of LJIlPAn :i the coast with rain. Weather Is somewhat unsettled . 1 11 v -j - - - I Southeast 8aies, shifting to! southerly. ..nettled 'and mild with' rain. Cougar South JI DUmS LidKC , Two Big Cats Herding Moose in Vicinity of Tchesinkut Lake ' BURNS LAKE. Nov, 30,-Two big cougar crossed from the Whltesall tange to Francois'' Lake and are herdlne the moose In the neigh- borhood of Tchesinkut Lane, moon and deer are plentiful In these hills is tne terrain is musi Coming from the deep snow fall of the Coast Range, the big cats are xtpnnln? around with ease and nothing but an organized hunt can stop their depredations, Arrav Of i i n i uicKiv DreaKs i le-up m d Bv Labor Today Inside of a Few Hours Nothing is Left of General Federation's Movement With Exception of Few Isolated Walk-Outs PARIS, November 30: (CP) By a nation-wide array tne twenty-four hour general strike which today constir tuted organized labor's first big challenge to his govern ment and its economic program. Inside of a few hours there was nothing left of the strike movements directed , , by the General Confederation of Bulletins . RAZOR SLASHINGS SPREAD HALIFAX, Enc-lhe menace of raior slashings from phantom assailant, in this Yorkshire In-dustiiai town has spread to four ether touns where slashings have occurred. These towns are Wig-an, Manchester, Brentford and Piatt Bridge. NEW CZECH PRESIDENT PKAUUE Dr. Emil Hacha, former "head "of th'e 'Supreme Court -.administration,, has been eierted third president ptCiecbo.-slorakia by the National Assembly, He being the only candidate, the election was a mere formality. MOSLEY RE-MARRIED LONDON Sir Oswald Mosley, 1 British rascisl leader, announces that he married Mrs. Diana Guin'ess, daughter of Lord Redes-dale, two years ago and that a son was born to them Saturday. NEW JEWISH DECREE BERLIN A new decree against Jews requires them to carry special identification cards. SIR JOHN AIRD DIES TORONTO Sir John Aird, former president of the Canadian Bank of Commerce, died suddenly at his home here today. Heart attack was given as the cause of death. Sir John had celebrated his eUhty-third birthday November 15. He returned early last year. Juneau Congress - Drew Bur Crowd No Less Than One Hundred Dele gates From All Parts of Alaska At Salvation Army Gathering No less than 100 delegates were In attendance from various parts of Alaska as rar oil as Yasuiai at the Alaska Congress of the Sal vation Army In Juneau last weelc, it is stated by Brigadier Walter J Carruthers of Wrangell, divisional commander of the Army for Alaska and Northern British Columbia, who arrived In the- city Monday afternoon on the Princess Norah from the Alaska Capital In com-Dany with Commlsslon;r George L. Carpenter who Is paying a two day visit to Prince Rupert. Attendance at the Congress meetings in Jun- au were larze with as mariy as 250 persons present at some of the gatherings. Jarvls McLed received word this morning that Frank M. Burns, in- spector of inland revenue, had been aken 111 at Victoria. He was taken to Vancouver. Armed " t. I I j Labor except for a few isolated partial strikes in some private indiU-' tries, dock workers' strikes In some (ports and a few street car strikes. Mobile guards of police and. 'ln many cases, army units were in aounaani exiaence 10 prove me Premier's determination to, smash the Labor demonstration against decree laws. Canadian Liquor Exports To U.S. Still Dropping . - ; OTTAWA, Nor. 30: (CP) Canadian exports of liquor to the- United States continue to steadily de cline, maintaining the marked drop of the past two years. For the first ten months of this year exports of Canadian liquor to the United States are three million gallons less than in the corresponding period last year. Fresh Disorders In Palestine Twenty-Three Arabs Reported Dead ' As A Result of Latest Clash ! JERUSALEM, Nov. 30: (CP) Fresh disorders have broken out In the Holy Land and twenty-three Arabs ate reported dead as a result of clashes with British military forces and police. TODAY'S WEATHER Hazelton Cloudy, calm, temperature, 30. Smlthers Cloudy, calm, 30. Burns Lake Foggy, calm, 23. Terrace Cloudy, north wind, 38. Alynash Cloudy, calm, 34. Alice Arm Cloudy, south west wind. 38. Anyox Cloudy, calm, 38. Stewart Raining, calm, 34. Women Of Today Better Mothers V MONTREAL, Nov. 30: (CP) Maybe grandmother was a remarkable woman but present-day women are better mothers', better cooks, better house-keepers and better shoppers In the opinion of Helen G. Campbell of Toronto. Addressing a business club here, Miss Campbell said Canadian women have "the last word" In busi ness. They are becoming more ahd more Interested In the nation's trade and more discriminating iln-thelr purchasing. She warned advertisers against cloaking their products with too much glamor. Understatement, said Miss Canip- , bell, was a good British trait, arid j used in advertising it orten prc jvlded a pleasant surprise. i" in: 1' r V 1 I S3- 1 is.f