sae SS Oe a ee _ = & C—O SOS eS eee 7c ——— as } ee] eS — el eE——— —* = Cc. oe _a * le pe : er = - we Ee - as == os pi: a ate: PAGE FOUR minim =.) aa) as) ya) ee) se fo | EIRE SALE paring For Fiddler DLs ee ee on Bargains Still Offered and Many Buyers Are Pleased The Montreal Importers’ Fire Sale is still in progress. Prices are lower than ever and people with a small amount of cash can secure big bargains. Men’s wo- men’s and children’s clothing and shoes, all going at ® fire sale prices although untouched by fire. 5 | for outside capital, Mr. Looney has| REPRESS eee ee | NEWS OF THE MINES |!HREE STAR AROUND PRINCE RUPERT Big Things Predicted For McConnell Creek—Pre- Creek Mill—Premier Stock Still Strong | i 1 i } i ination of a territory extenc taining gold in profitable quantities that it has ever commercial been his pleasure to examine up to | the present time. Apart from acting several claims of his own in the dis- Looney stated at Smi- be MONTREAL IMPORTERS —Biiess has its"Wook nea consist over the wide' |of an examination | territory extending froma point at head of Snowslide Creek to } the Steamship Sailings For Vancouver— Monday—ss. Pr. Rupert ...4 p.m. Tuesday—ss. Catala 1:30 p.m. | Wed.—ss. Pr. Robert 9 a.m.| |where McConnell Creek joins the o : ' Friday—ss. Prin. Adelaide 10 p.m. | Ingenika River, a distance of eleven Ss. Cardena Saturday—ss. Pr. George .. 7 p.m. | tance did he fail to pan gold in pay- July 9—ss. Prin. Alice p.m./;ing quantity. A similar test of the July 13—ss. Prin. Louise p.m. | Ingenika River for a distance of one July 16—ss. Prin. Charlotte . p.m.| mile disclosed equally satisfactory July 20—ss. Prin. Alice p m.| results, While the service of air- July 23—ss. Prin. Louise p.m. | planes was a great convenience, Mr. Made of selected Virginia tobaccos ... blended to produce a cool, sweet, fragrant cigarette and one that is more easily rolled. This tobacco has always sold on its merits. OGDEN’S FINE CUT CIGARETTE TOBACCO Your pipe knows Ogden’s cut plug. The Classified Ads. Many people have something in the house they would like to sell which could be turned into money if they knew of a customer. Try a classified adver- tisement. Most people read the classifieds. For about fifty cents you can let them know about it and it may prove a profitable transaction. Renting the House There are a number of houses in the city not rented yet and many people make little effort to secure a tenant. Others who are wise to their op- oprtunities try a classified advertisement in the “For Rent” column and often get results, As one satisfied customer said recently: “Those little ads certainly do bring results.” Some Like Reader Ads. . Some people after trying other kinds of adver- tising decide to try a reader among the locals and personals, Then they have got results. The cost is a little higher but they have been well satisfied. When conditions are like they are today the news- papers can often help. The price is not very high. Do not lie down and bemoan your hard fate. Trya different kind of advertisement and if that is not successful try again midnight | miles. At no point in the entire dis- Hvi i 3] ini : ino “of z }gascline advertised by Imperial Oil; Ss cons ype ya care l exam-| 24 cline advertise Giving his considered opinion following a carefu Company has airived apd is for ling twelve miles on the min- eralized zone, C. M. Looney, mining engineer represent- ing United States capital in a reconnaissance survey of the} product and gives a car plenty of 1, McConnell Creek country, stated at Smithers that the Mc-! pep, especially in hill climbing. It i ;|Connell Creek district represented the largest area con-|'§ S#id to make second gear un- and. Looney stated that a ground trans- | |portation system was essential to| |permanent work on a large scale and he advised interior communi- }ties and organizations to concen trate on obtaining at least a trac jtor road to the McConnell Creel country. Such machinery § anc equipment as was required for pre liminary through the air but the required when the field was defin- itely established would call for land | transportation, Mr. Looney predicts that many large companies will en- ter the McConnell Creek field with- jin the next five years. Mr. Looney |was one of the passengers coming jout on the Junkers monoplane of [the Airland Manufacturing Co. pi- tests could be handlea huge plants loted by Capt. McCluskie which jlanded at Lake Kathlyn a few {days ago. Other passengers wer M. J. Brown, one of the promoters of the McConnell Creek undertak- jing; H. J. Skinner of San Francisco who is acting for substantial capi- }tal which has become interested in the field, and K. K. Langford of Los | Angeles, who was making examina | tions in the McConnell Creek are |for another syndicate. Capt. Mc Cluskie was the first pilot ever t }Set a plane down on Lake Kathly jand, as such, he picked up a priz | Of $50 offered by Charles Wilson of | Lake Kathlyn for the feat | “Black” Olsen has been engager |} by P. O. Peterson, Vancouver min jing engineer, to look after work }which will have to be carried ou on the road from Dorreen to the |Tredway gold property on Fiddler |Creek on which the establishment | of a mill is being planned. Mr. Ol- |sen is awaiting further instruction: | from Mr. Peterson in Vancouver b¢ en proceeding with the work | Considerable preparatory work wil have to be done before any mil construction can commence Premier Gold stock has been an | outstanding performer during the jlast few days on the Vancouver iStock Exchange. Rising steadily | from its low level of a few days ago |Premier has been lately turning lover at 49c and is in steady demand lat that price. Strength of the stock jis induced by improved reports of | operation Big Missouri has been somewhat firmer lately at 815c. ' | Mrs. E. P. Jenner and children | who have been on a visit to Lakelse returned to the city on this after-| |noon's train. Game Warden Ed. Martin re- lace to the city on this after-| }noon’s train from a trip to up-river | | points on official duties. monet | H. E. DeWol! W. H. Malkin Ci the city on this from a business | River points local manager of Ltd., returned to ifternoon’s train trip to Skeena| Miss Edna Gillies, daughter of} Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Gillies, returned | to the city on this afternoon's train | from McBride where she has been | visiting for the past weeks with friend two or three} - | Mrs. J. E. Jack and Miss E M. | Earle, who have been spending the past couple of weeks holidaying at Smithers and elsewhere in the in-| terior, returned to the city on this| afternoon's train Hotel Arrivals Hotel Central Limited Covenient to business district, homelike, beautiful harbor views. Rates reasonable, Spacious sample rooms. Hotel Central Ltd. First Avenue & Seventh Street J. L. Neville, Wrangell ON MARKET Kik!yzed Gasoline Has Arrived and| Proves To Be Peppy Product The new Three Star Ethyllyzed sale at all Imperia] Oil pumps and stations. It is a new anti-knock necessary in many cars. Many people have been wonder- ing what was meant by the display of- bunting on the Imperial Oil stations. It is Three Star that has done it. The Three Star has put pep into the management and staff and is said to be a real win- ner. George Woodland, local head »f the Imperial Company, says the new ga 5 of a light green shade but there is nothing pale about the juality. He warns against buying it unle the purchaser wants more miles, less knock, more efficiency, more pep. Three Star will almost make an old car into a new one. Twenty Years Ago| In Prince Rupert July 20, 1912 A great ?remier Sir orney was accorded McBride, At- W. J. Bowser and ther of the provincial overnment who arrived in Prince Rupert from Victoria on the steam- r Princess May. The government vyharf, where steamer landed, was gaily decorated under the di- reception Richard General members tne ection of Shef Thomson of the Longshoremen’s Union Launches | vent out to the mouth of the har-| A FOUR STAR PICTURE akkk With SYLVIA SIDNEY, WM. COLLIER, Jr., Wednesday, July 20, 1939 ‘9 8) 0 AR Wednesday & Thursday TWO SHOWS — 7 and 9 p.m. ADMISSION 5c & 50¢ A GRAND DOUBLE BILL With TWO GREAT SHOWS “Street Scene” ESTELLE TAYLOR A Simple Story of Real Life And DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS SR, in “Around the World in 80 Minutes” EXCITEMENT FOX NEWS “Street Scene” THURS. Matinee at 2:30—lic & 35c—‘Street Scene” starts 3:35 THRILLS COMEDY Starts at 8:05 & 10:20 FRIDAY & SATURDAY—Another Good Dovble Bill “THE BIG SHOT” and “PARTNERS” 2 see TOUR WITH obtained by a man like Fairbanks who is so well known and so well \liked the world over. I am glad and you will be too—that he did FAIRBANKS not forget to take his camera with him when he went on his world Cpr at tour Two Outstanding Pictures Being “Street Scens the film adap Offered on Double-Bill at Cap- tation of Elmer Rice’s Pulitze: itol Theatre This Mid-Week | prize-winning play. The stars are Jerome Carve well known Can- Syivia Sidney and Estelle William Collier, jr., Taylor. The picture is adian moving picture critic, who,|very higkly spoken of by all who @enera)ly, is anything but liberal! have seen it in” his ocmments, speaks very} highly of both “Around the World SS in Eighty Minutes” and “Street . Scene” which are being offered on e. N. R. Trains a grand double bill at the Capitol Theatre here the midale of this ' week. Of “Around the World in For the East— Eighty Minutes” Carver says: “Be sure to see it. Anyone from eight Mondays, Wednesdays and Satur? lays 12:30 noon to eighty will find entertainment Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fric in it. “As for ‘Street Scene,’ Car lays 3 pm ver says: “It’s well worth seeing Around the World in Eighty’ From the East— Minutes” may be called a travel- Sundays, Thursdays and Fridays ogue but it is entirely different ll p.m from any other travelogue. Says Mondays, Wednesdays and Satur- Carver “Douglas Fairbank has) days 1:30 p.m. | given us a travel picture that 1 bor to meet the steamer as she came jinteresting without being too ser- ; h Evelyn Wrenct verseas Club organizer of the addressed a meet- | in the McIntyre Hall. The occupied by Mayor 8S. M and F. A. Ellis, president of | he local Overseas Club, was among | those on the platform. ng nere hair wa Newton Hon. Frank Cochrane, : federal minister of railways, has been pay- ing a visit to the city im’the; course of a tour to the Pacific CoaS8t. ‘He was accompanied by H. 8. Clements, M.P. for Comox-Atlin. They re- | turned to Vancouver on the Prince Rupert | HOME OIL LINE-UP The following line-up for Home | Oil for tomorrow evening’s Stuart Benefit Shield football game is an- nounced Pierce Mowatt and} Skinner; Stalker, Currie and Wood- side; Fisher, Tony, Vierira, Del Rio | nd Davis Kenley, Parks | and Eide reserves When a recipe calls for MILK Use ST. CHARLES | | Whenever a recipe calls for | milk it is a safe rule always to use Borden's St. Charles Evap- orated Milk. St. Charles is | economical, simple to use | and definitely imparts an improved flavor to your cook- that has been subjected tothe highest tests for purity and richness is good enough fot acceptance in the St, Charles | plants. Packed underthe mostsan'- tary conditions, St. Charles Milk represents the best evaporated milk you can buy—see that you | ask for it by name. erent Filer Ey, ST. CHARLES MILK ious, instructive without being hea- vily didactic, amusing without be-| * * ing doggedly facetious. There is a'® The following is the scale @ delightful informality about it and,.|® of charges made for reacing # in a light-hearted manner, views | # notice > of real places are interspersed with|® Marriage and Engagement @ fantastic scenes of Mr. Fairbanks ® ar en $2 7 floating about on his ‘Thief of # Birth Notices 50 7 Bagdaa’ magic carpet. Mr. Fair-|# Funeral Notices $1 > banks’ running comment through-|# Cards of Thanks. $2 > out the film is amusing. Everymo-|# Funeral Flowers 10c. per ¢ ment of the picture is interesting’ # nam + and entertaining and many of the! * Sequences could only have been'® @¢@#¢@#4¢44¢404¢64¢4¢6¢6096 +++ eee eeeeeee ene Summer Sickness Mothers Tell How BABY'S OWN TABLETS Relieve Children's Distressing Troubles “My baby was so bad with summer Baby's Own Tablets are wonderful for complaint that we de paired of saving mmer complaint”, writes Mrs. Laura her”, writes Mrs. Hazel Allard, Whitby, | Wheel r, Indian Road Crescent, Ont. “A friend advised Dr. Willian Toronto Baby's Own Tablets. After the third Wien ven add dose baby fell asleep. By noon the next . ir children get cross and fret- day she took the usual bottle feeding ful, refuse to eat, and manifest recog “At the first sign of baby’s peevishne toms of summer complaint, or illness in the trying months of sun a 3s tin give them Baby's Own mer, I give him Baby’s Own Tablet Tablets. Easy-to-take as candy. Effec- and in a short time he is well, and smi tive, and absolutely SAFE—see ana- ing his thanks”, writes Mrs. Alton | lyst ertificate in each 25-cent package. Parcher, Glenalmond, Que Over 000 packages sold in 1931 DR. WILLIAMS’ BABY’S OWN TABLETS 226 Make and Keep Children Well— As Mothers Know The Fish which made Prince Rupert Famous “Rupert Brand” SMOKED ~ BLACK COD Prepared Daily By Canadian Fish & Cold Storage Co., Ltd. PRINCE RUPERT, B.C, Via Waypoints a eee a: EVAPORATED 7 7 ‘ _ ‘ , UNION STEAMSHIPS LIMITED Steamers leave Prince Rupert PSS, CATALA EVERY. TURSDAY, 1:30 PM arriving Vancouver T.S.8. CARDENA EVERY FRIDAY MIDNiGurt, Arriving Vancouver Sunday midnight approx Weekly sailings to Port Simpson, Alice Arm. A en oY \ River points, Sunday. @ pn o Stewart and Naa Further information regarding all satlings ana tickets at VRINCE RUPERT AGENCY: Second A venue Phone 568 for Vancouver bhureday am