— ae. a — ee wee AS ee = Sa —- ; PAGE FOUR The standard of VALUE For 25 years, Kellogg’s Corn Flakes have been the leader — simply because they have always been the best corn flakes possible to make. Today, you get a delicious flavor and crispness in Kellogg’s that no other corn flakes can equal. And you always get oven-fresh corn flakes — assured by the sealed inside WAXTITE bag, which is a patented Kellogg feature. Insist on genuine Kellogg’s when you buy corn flakes. ‘ Substitutes are seldom offered in a true spirit of service. Kellogg’s are personally guaranteed by W.K. Kellogg: “If you don’t think them the finest corn flakes you ever ate, return the empty red-and-green package and we will return your money.” Made by Kellogg in London, Ont. ‘ iif The Fish which made Prince Rupert Famous “Rupert Brand” SMOKED — BLACK COD — Prepared Daily By Canadian Fish & Cold Siorage Co., Ltd. PRINCE RUPERT, B.C, Promot'ons Announced (Continued from Page 1) Skaland, Magnhild Storseth, Bobby Taylor, Norma Walters, John Watt, Rudolph Warne, John Wilson, An- nie Service, Sverre Jerstad, Stanley Franks. To Grade 5 Olaf Anderson, Stanley Ballinger, Melbourne Bussey, Nancy Bremner, Malcolm Campbell, Wilfred Chand- ler, Bessie Chandler, Eva Chandler, Engina Christisen, Christina Cook, Sylvia Croxford, Nancy Delgren, Ole Dybhavn, Harry Daggett, Spen- cer Davies, Wallace Dell, Teddy Drake, Joyce Edwards, Harry Em- merson, Marion Eriksen, Tommy Flewin, Harry Basso, George Baker, Joan Forrest, Florence Gillis, June Gilker, Lester Grimble, Forstad Housoy, Emil Jensen, Floyd Joy, El- sie Johnsen, Clifford Johnson, Helen Krause, Jean Krause, Matilda Lar- son, Sigrund Lovstad, Pearl Men- zies, Billy Manson, Ralph Morin, Bobby McLean, Walter Perkins,, An- | nie Peterson, Peter Rorvik, Margar- et McMeekin, Duncan McRae, John Nicholls, Marie Norton, Mary Pierce, Jack Ritchie, Jimmy Stiles, Stanley Scherk, Dorothy Shrubsall, Hjordis Skaland, Norma Smith, Goodwin Stromdahl, Ned Tobey, Edith Tuck, Harry Skogmo, Shirley Walls, Betty Wilkinson, Myrtle Valpy, Victoria Zaharuke, Malcolm Wilding, George Sook, Jack Bremner, Sam Currie, Joe Norton. To Grade 6 Harold Anderson, Margaret Arm- strong, Alex. Bailie, Maud Bagshaw, John Bunn, Ethel Bury, Fanny Call- breath, Jean Cameron, George Car- lyle, Isabele Connery, Angelo Chris- tiano, Jack Corbould, Edith Cromp, Clara Dahl, Tom Dalzell, Dorothy Davies, Betty Dickens, Frances Dag- lish, Alex. Galland, Josephine Gay, Margaret Gilker, Anna Gregory, &mma Giske, June Gomez, Winni- fred Grant, Bobby Hale, Auslaug Holkestad, Norman Hebb, Phyllis Hill-Tout, Nona Hodgson, Helge Holkestad, Peter Husoy, Clara Kur- ulok, Maureen Kirkpatrick, Hazel Lear, Bruce Love, Evan Love, Gus Krause, Mairi Matheson, Ian Ma- theson, Mimmy Johnson, Louis | Knudson, Katie Kurulok, Hector} (eee nears Hazel Mastin, Isabel McCrimmon, Andrew McDonald, Ida Moorehouse, Bobby Parsons, Jean Robertson, Tongeir Rysta 4, |Merjorie Peachey, Margaret Penney | Jean Ponder, Ruth Scherk, Jane} Service, James Sheddon, Mary Sie- vert, John Skog, Kiyo Suehiro, Ro- bert Rudderham, Aslaug Skaland, Gordon Stamford, Malcolm Smith,| Jean Storrie, George Tuck, Gladys Wallace, Joan Watt, Alfred Wickdal, Asle Wick, Bobby Williscroft, Jack | Wilkie. To Grade 7 Peter Allen, Eric Berner, Howard | Beale, Beryl Birch, George Brown, | Geraldine Cade, Russell Cameron, | Violet Cavenaile, Herbert Chandler, | Elmer Claus. *, Marjorie Cook, Jean Dalzell, Violet Dell, Nancye Dawes, | Donald Eastman, Muriel Eby, Frank Elliott, Clarence Finley, Gertrude |Garlick, Jim Gulick, David Geary, jIrene Giske, Alice Gomez, Joy |Green, Phylis Hamblin, Aiice Hun- | ter, Harold Ivarson, Ivar Johnson, oo Kergin, Winnifred King, Geor- gina Lamb, Charles Lord, Rudolph | |Lovstad, Bjorg Luth, Robert Man- json, Ray Montgomery, May Mac- | phail, Bobbie Morrison, Donald | Norton, Keith McLeod, Lloyd Rice, |Edith Sievert, Ida Slatta, Marjorie | Silversides, Edith Smith, Nora Syl- lvester, Annie Sorensen, Victoria | | Stamford, Jennie Strand, Velma! |Thurber, Helen Valentine, Melvin | Walls, Gwyneth Walker, Jean Watt, !Philip Williamson, Dorothy Wilkie, |Dick Wrathall, Sydney Croxford, |Jean Sunberg, Margaret Christison. To Grade 8 | Cissie Armstrong, Ellen May Bell, |Donald Blake, Dorothy Blake, Am- jaranth Bury, Mary Bremner, Maisie | | Cameron, F. Eby, Bobby Elkins, AIR DRIED SHINGLES Retain the cedar oil in the wood, affording extra and better pre- servation than kiln-dried shingles from which the essential oil has been evaporated. Our shingles are made on Queen Chaclotte Islands and, as a home product, deserve your preference. Shingle makers wages on the Islands are spent eventually in Prince Ru- pert, while Vancouver wages nevér come north, Support a home industry and your own weatare by specifying Air Dried Shingles. Prices: No. 1 5X $3.75; No. 1 3X $3.25 HYDE TRANSFER—PHONE 580 |/Martin Erikson, Edith~ Ferguson, |Linda Field, Robert Gibson, Terry Grimble, Margaret Sue Gulick, Wil- | lie Hale, Bob Kelsey, Jeanetta King, | 'Mayko Izumi, Harley Lear, Alf Lar- ,sen, Harry Lundquist, Marguerite} |Menzies, Adele Mussallem, Billy! ;Nelson, Florence . Parker, George | Parsons, Charles Perkins, Harold| |/Ponder, Tarjar Rysstad, Robert! |Ritechie, Dorothy Shearman, Honora | |Silversides, Alex. Strachan, Reta/| |Stromdahl, Sabra Woodhouse, D.! |McMeekin, Jack Storrie, Audrey | | Vierick, Betty Wood, Alice Worobec, \Isame Matsumoto, Margaret Dou- gherty. Regular monthiy meetings of the | Daily News Want Ads. bring quick Results |Prince Rupert Ministrial Associa- tion have been suspended for the} | Summer owing to absence of a num- ber of members from tbe city. Meetings of the Association will be | | Soran in September, Taxpayer, how in the name of com- ‘cent commission appointed by the }cite only one instance, the city of Ser eee EN ELLA — Ped ’ ee me bo | The Letter Box RE DEPRESSION Editor, Daily News: Following up recent correspon- dence in your columns I would ap- preciate an opportunity to submit a few facts which would apply to this district, the proper proportion of which can only be realized at a time like the present. Certain economic factors have come into being under the preserit| social order over which we a workers have no control. Let us} take vested capital, with which our banks, the storehouses of capital,} are bursting with over-abundance and no place for re-investment: | our warehouses stock-full with commodities, the necessary things| of life, and no market to sell. Un- employed, 1929 starting with a! very small figure of something like | one million some odd hundred | thousand in the United States reached the astonishing number in 1932 of approximately 12,000,000, | and without being gloomy or too pessimistic, there are reasons for its still increasing, unless the pow- ers that be who have it in their power to make drastic change in the present order instead of wait- ing for things to turn better when there is nobody to turn them bet- ter but they themselves. Now, Mr mon-sense can we as workers, who have stored up the said banks and warehouses with that portion of unpaid abor called profit, so great that we cannot buy it back? Therefore unemployed and unem- ployment breeds and creates more unemployment, because we are the people who are depended on to consume those surplus commodi- ties. Just a little simple econo- mics appied to the common rea- son of sense would show that it is not a question of one group of workers pitting themselves against | another, i.e. the employed against the unemployed and vice versa The thing has to come to a ques-, tion now of co-operation. If the | vested interests do not take some} drastic measures to make the change, we as workers who have created all wealth, must together do something to succor humanity. As regards footing the bill for re- lief, I have no hesitation in stat- ing that it is a question for the Federal Government and not the Provincial Government or Munici- palities. This is perhaps best il- lustrated by the findings of a re- Government of the United States to enquire into the question of fed- relief or federal insurance as com- pared with the present haphazard system of community chests. To Detroit, it was found that in the winter of 1930-31, 46,000 Ford workers employed at the Ford plant at Dearborn, but living in the city of Detroit, applied to the munici- pality of Detroit for relief. It seems that the procedure for the ‘issuing of relief in Detroit was for the ap plicant to complete a form giving his last place of employment and how long. These 46,000 workers be- came a public charge on the city of Detroit. Henry Ford in his fac- tory pays no municipal taxes to the city of Detroit, and neither does he live in that city. His share of the year’s earnings was ap proximately $50,000,000, while his gratuitous donation to the com- munity chest was $150,000, Mr. Taxpayer can find a strik- ing parallel in the City of Prince Rupert with its fishmg, mining and logging industries. The workers are piling up this surplus wealth for the benefit of the absentee Prince Rupert oe ee “Listen to me on \ INDIGESTION **Fruit-a-tives ave me lasting relief “Not only this, they helped me overcome constipation and severe headaches. I actually feel years young- er.”—Mrs. A. L., Cornwall, Ont. Because it exerts a healthful influence on the stomach and FOUR other vital organs, Fruit-a-tives gives results far beyond those obtainable from ordi- nary remedies, A brilliant doctor spent 15 years perfecting Fruit-a-tives. It will make ‘you feel fine in a very short time. Thousands of people have learned this. 25c. & 50c. a box. Fruit-a-tives MAKE AND KEEP YOU WELL ywners of said industries, who pay no taxes to the city, but still the city is saddled with the responsi- bility for seeing that these unfor- tunate workers are fed during a crisis of unemployment. In all fairness to the unemployed and taxpayers the question should be federal, because then the respon- sibility of the cost of the unem- ployed could be equally distribu- ted amongst the people who are most able to pay for it, and not start from the underdog, but start from the top down This naturally brings us to un- earned income—people who have so much wealth invested that the interest alone provides them with more than the necessaries of life and no obligation to toil or spin We are agreed to be very fair with this individual and allow him $5,- 000 a year to live on, which is away in excess of what is allowed us by the Government Gazette, and any-| thing above that can have a slid PICNIC IS ENJOYABLE Annual Outing of Children of St. Andrew’s Cathedrai and Japan- ese Mission Held Monday The Sunday Schools of St. An- drew’s Anglican Cathedral and St. Andrew’s Japanese Mission held their annual picnic at the end of the Skeena River highway yester- day afternoon. Weather was ideal, there was a large crowd in atten- dance and the outing proved thor- oughly enjoyable to all. Very Rev. James B, Gibson, dean of St. Andrew’s Cathedral, was in charge and was assisted by Mrs. W. J. Greer, Mrs. C. W.. Homer, Mrs. Bert West, Mrs. W. C. Aspinall, Mrs. R. Morgan, Mrs. J. B. Gibson, Miss E. G. Lenox, Miss N. Gibson, Miss Beagley, Miss Eleanor Moxley, Miss Kumia Kahara, Miss Norika Yam-| anaka and T. Matsumoto, } Those making cars available to! take the picnickers out were Stanley Smith, Frank Russell, Percy Cam-| eron, G. J. Dawes, W. E. Collison, C.! V. Evitt and Miss R. M. Davies. Races were run and Miss Davies} added much to the pleasure of the| children by taking them for short! drives throughout the afternoon. Ice cream and sweets were distri- | buted. Sven Watund, why errived in the} city at the end of the week from/! Norway, travelling via England. Tuesday, July 5, 1939 Monday & Tuesday TWO SHOWS—7 and 9 p.m. Feature Starts at 7:38 & 9:38 The Glitter of Life or The Glory of Love Ann Harding ~-in— “PRESTIGE” With Adolph Menjou, Melvyn Douglas. A Dramatic Story of Heart-Break and Happiness Comedy—AL ST. JOHN in “THE DOOR KNOCKER” Travel— “COME BACK TO ERIN” PARAMOUNT NEWS WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY “Strangers in Love” WEDNESDAY REVIVAL “Animal Crackers” Premier, left on yesterday after-| poration, noon’s train for Montreal where he! sailed by the Catala this afternoon will embark on the steamer Auso-| on his return to Vancouver after a nia for his home in Stavanger,| brief visit here on official busi- | ness. W. A. Wallace of the British Cor- marine underwriters, ing scale of taxes e We are sympathic with the citi-| zens of Prince Rupert, knowing; that there are no ultra wealthy in| their midst, but in view of the above facts they should unite to force the issue with the federal authorities who thority to collect and distribute equally and without partiality Thanking you Mr. Editor Yours truly, GEO. MURRAY CN. R. Trains For the East— Mondays, Wednesdays and Satur- lays 12:30 noon Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fri- days 3 p.m, From the East— Sundays, Thursdays and Fridays 11 p.m. Mondays, Wednesdays and Satur- days 1:30 p.m. SPECIAL Cleaning & Pressing One Suit or One Dress $1 25 for e Suits—Made. to order $23 50 at ° Phone Blue 909 A. H. Benkendorf Next to Daily News Hotel Central Limited Covenient to business district, homelike, beautiful harbor views. DRY DOCK SHIPYARD Operating three Dry Docks Total capacity 20,000 tons Shipbuilders and Ship Repairers for Steel and Wood Vessels Sawmill and Mining Machinery Repaired and Overhauled Iron and Brass Casting Electric and Acetylene Welding 50-ton Derrick for Heavy Lifts Rates reasonable. Spacious sample rooms. Hotel Central Ltd. First Avenue & Seventh Street BOSTON CAFE Is Reopened Thoroughly Renovated Bright and Cheery Better Than Ever as stated above,| have the necessary power and a Extensive copper deposits siderable part of the country. a trolling hook. “ale hy sardines. to loaf and enjoy life, (Prepared by a Resident of Long Standing) RESOURCES The Queen Charlotte Islands have the last and only great stand of Sitka Spruce in the world The Queen Charlotte Islands have the largest stand of Cy- press or yellow cedar in the world. This timber for railroad ties will outlast treated or creosoted ties as three to one .There are | millions of yellow cedar poles on the Islands and it is believed i by many that a very high grade of turpentine can be extracted from the trees; also oil for mining and flotation purposes Queen Charlotte Islands have very large red cedar timber stands, When recently examined by Japanese experts it was pronounced to be the toughest and best in the world. Large quantities of this timber are suited for piling, which when treated with creosote will outlast fir four to one millions of feet of alder on the Islands for which there is said to be a ready market in Japan Queen Charlotte Islands have over 100 miles of gold-bear- ing sand on the east and north coast beaches and known to exist. Also antimony, iron and other ore showings have attracted considerable attention For many years oil prospectors have been attracted by oil seepages at various points. There are extensive oil shale beds and evidences of natural gas, Coal is known to underlie a con- SPORTSMAN’S PARADISE The Islands are a sportsman's paradise numerous, and there are also plenty of deer, wild cattle, ducks, geese, pheasants and quail. King salmon can be caught with Pink salmon abound in countless numbers and Chums run up the creeks in the proper season. The Islands have fine razor clams and scallop clams, said to be the only extensive beds in the British Empire. The scal- lop, a rival to the oyster, has not yet been introduced to the world's markets, They are found in the neighborhood of Naden Harbor, Rose Spit, Tow Hill and Skidegate Inlet, Crabs abound in the waters adjacent to the mouths of streams on the north and east coast of Graham Island. Other commercial fish found in the adjacent waters in- clude grey fish, sable, various varieties of flat fish, herring and THE CLIMATE The climate of the Islands is mild and tourists who wish to get out of the beaten paths will find it a wonderful change from usual routes of travel, There is a great field for archeolo- gical and natural history studies, for mining ventures, for tim- ber industries, for oil speculation, for Sport or just as a place There are gold-bearing quartz are Black bear are esaaeaaaaSaaaSaSaSuaSIoSoOT—™_EESOSSS =