PAGE TWC t . THE DAILY Wean. The Daily News Music and Other Entertainment PRINCE RUPERT - BRITISH COLUMBIA. on London Streets Told About Published Every Afternoon, except Sunday, by Prince Kuperl ?pe emJwd'' Daily News, Limited. Third Avenue. by Former Resident of Rupert .H.,F. PULLCN - . Managing Editor. DAILY EDITION. Thia Mood and nerve restorative wm devised for use in two great itisau of diaeaaea, one ol which usually deve)oi from the other Anaemia or bloodlefwnewi, and Nerv-mu Kxhauntloo. If the' blood is thin nd watery, ai is indicated by pallor o( the li. eyelids and rums, or if you ar affllrted by some form of nervous trouble, ' you will find in Dk. Chask's Nbrvk Food the moat certain means of relief and restoration. Some of the symp-Uma and ailment which come upder ,Mhj Reading are: TV" Uood. sallow complexion, Mllor pf eyelids, lip" and gums, lirod feelings, lom ot energy and caaatioa, tendency to fear and asaatiy. loss ot breath and easily latirueo, weak heart action, loss W flesh and weight, neurasthenia, r, it -H- J, SUBSCRIPTION KATES: ; ' ' W City Delivery, by mail or carrier, per month 1.00 By mail to all parts of the British Empire and the United - States, In advance, per year $5.uO To all other countries, in advance, per year f . $7.50 Transient Display Advertising, per inch rr insertion Transient Advertising on Front Page, per inch Local Readers, per insertion per line Classified Advertising, per insertion per word . . , Legal Notices, each insertion per agate line . . Contract Rates on Application. Advertising and Circulation Telephone 98 Editor and Reporters Telephone - - 8C ... $1.40 .... ?2.80 . . . . 25c ,V.. 2c .... 15c All advertising should be in The Daily News Office before 2 p.m. on day preceding publication. All advertising received subject to approval. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations. Wednesday, June 1, 1927 IF BUSINESS IS POOR, PAINT THE STORE If business is poor, paint the front of the store, varnish the shop furnishings, brush your clothes, get your hair cut, have an interview with a Christian scientist and then smile a little at each customer. Such action will banish the blues and make you and your place of business attractive. Then make the business over so that iUis a pleasure for people to enter and they will be loath to depart. Set your house in order and you may expect people to deal with you. They say the early day Prince Rupert newspapers were mud-slingers. It's a cinch they're dust-collectors ; now says the editor of the 'Ten Years Ago" column. MANY FACTORS OF SUCCESS There are many factors that make for success in business. One of these is cheerfulness and another is persistence. Cheerfulness is usually the result of happiness but happiness is to a. certain extent the result of one's own mentality and can be controlled. Those who have read Dickens will remember the persistent cheerfulness of Mark Tapley under the most discouraging circumstances and the blessing it was to everyone around him. People Hke to go to a store or office or bank where the people are cheerful. Personality goes a long way in business and all this shows that it is good business to cultivate the cheerful spirit and avoid ,the grouch as one would the plague. Grouching is a disease that is as catching as scarlet fever and much more injurious to the patients. Faith is just as necessary in . city building as in character building. The place whose citizens have no faith might as well call in the civic undertaker at once end carry out the corpse. GREAT OBJECTION TO BIG CITY One of the great objections to the big city of today is the transportation problem. To live in a big city usually means to live miles from the office or store or whatever the work may be. It means hours lost each day in travelling back and forth. The man with the motor car is little better off than one without because the streets are crowded and movement is very slow. t So we have an advantage in Prince Rupert. We have plenty of room to move and we do not live far from our work. None of us do." .We do not have car fares trr pay and we can stay in bed half an hour lonjrer in the morning through not having to come in on the tram from 125th street. Some great writer once said that to understand a person you must put yourself in his place. Yet it would be too bad to have anyone put himself in the place of the hapless editor who hands out bouquets mingled with brickbats but gets mostly brickbats in return. SWIMMING BEST POSSIBLE EXERCISE , The swimming season is approaching and with the facilities for the sport offering here it Is a wonder that more do not take an interest in it."" When swimming, almost ever' muscle in the body is being exercised and the exhiliration of the cool water is something that cannot be obtained in any other game. It iSfnot difficult to get to the Salt Lake across the harbor and the facilities there are excellent; The only excuse for not taking part is" either one of indolence or of the prior claim of some other occupation. , ' ' .. f "is Now that government control has been given a pretty good trial, what about trying a little self-control? If you are out of repair, put in the necessary stitches jfor get someone handy with the needle to do it for you. There was a visitor came to town last week who was so shabby he was several times mistaken for a million aire. Make this Test To Pind out if you need Dr. Chase's Nerve Food. A study of these symptoms will enable you to decide. nervous prostration, nervous headache, indigestion, sleeplessness, irritability, nervousness, twitching of nerves and muscles, sensitiveness to sound and light, gloomy forebodings, lews of memory, inability to concentrate the mind. ' Dr. Ch are'8 Nerve Kood is easily the greatest of restoratives. IJy forming new red corpuscles in the blood this food treatment nourishes the starved and depleted nerves back to health and vigor. Try it when you are run down and out of sorts. It will restore vigor and energy and make you feel that life is worth living. Dr. Chase's Nerve Food 60 cU. per box. all dealers, or The Dr. A. W. Chase Medicine Co., Limited, Toronto, Canada. I r 1 Some Really Good Turns and .Money Contributed Freely: Clever' turn.' Revue Named "bplinters Done by Me Only I By Sid Webb) LONDON, June 1. The variety of beggars, street musicians, and miscellaneous entertainers in London, and the various methods adopted by this class of fraternity to eke but 'a livelihood from ; the pockets of the producing British public strikes a, "Colonial" as quaint and in many cases very amusing. Hardly a street in the busy parts of London, includipg the suburbs, can be traversed without one meeting, or being met by, several beggars of one description or another. From match selling to solo cornet playing, organ grinding and thence to light and heavy opera musical snd vocal selecttsns. the : 1 0 round of entertainment goes on, and , many of these street artists derive a big financial Income frcm their ef- VAKIKTV ENTEKTAINEKS away before the inevitable money box is hmlMl atuttit amnnir tH nnlankm The In fact it is very seldom one hears a dog howl. The only Instrument vhtch dries get the dogs "goat" Is the cornet, forts. Wai; many of them are nothing ,n(, tau to Jirr upon more or less than beggars there are thetr to nerrej u Uugh4be see a ethers who are really clever and deserve treet e:tTutpUjeT outiWe . -pub- patrohage from those who enjoy thetr -Queen of the tTylag Q put paUlos lo Earth" with about a dozen dogs fitting around hint on their hsunches howling During a two hour walk In the vicln- rrt. lty of the west-end of Londsn recently tvilV Is IT? - the writer encountered no less thin , , thre separate bands of variety street en- murnrth 'J U tertalners. but having boasted of hi. "TlS?" Scotch friendships in Canada watched " , , , ' , ... " the proceedings from the "other side , , " ""- , " ol the street where one can easily get . . . " as the British Empire Is rated to be, is another matter. But it certainly does uPa the 4 of first entertainment consisted of a man f the Onion Jack. Of course some of them w,,h . v.-r.i n,n .Bt!,- member " ,n Uet ol the -Jaa orchestra" played a trom- -" bene, another a banjo, while two V " ' the u one young men kept time to the various tunes with plates and spoons very cleverly manipulated to sound like the . ( u: tK kkvh: The writer witnessed a very clever eld "bones" In the original minstrel and pretty revue at one of the London troupes . This "orchestra" rattled eut theatre recently The revue was entitled all tte latest "Jazz" tunes, and in spite "Splinters" and the company taking part of the absence of a leader kept wonder- uureln. consisting entirely of men. It was fully good time. There were at least trig tax ted by a Canadian and Australian some hundred people standing around soldier In France during the Oreat War. taking in the fun and the street artists The entire production was portrayed by must have collected a goodly sum. men. and the chorus of "beautiful girls" judging bj the ready manner In which had to be seen to be believed that men the pennies and slxpepces bounded into could possibly "take off women as they the collector's! 'hat. A few streets far- did. Unless one was acquainted with '.her on the writer ran into a regular the fact beforehand they would natur-concert party, consisting of three mu- ally suppose that they were actually slclans. and a real up-to-date affair it women. The 6rtue and scenery were was. A piano was mounted on an old superb, while the dancing, both jazz "Ford" covered truck, with string! of and classical -was excellent. The pro-bells hanging around it. A lady pre- duetion spake Volumes for the orgsn-sided at the piano while two men took lzera and It must have taken a long time care of the bells and vocal part of the , to collect such a galaxy of men that entertainment respectively. The tunes could perform the parts of women as on the bells, accompanied by the piano, they did tn "Splinters." The "leadln were well rendered, mostly old favorites, lady" part was, taken by Reg. Stone, who while the man with the voice, although is reputed to be a Canadian born young a cripple, was remarkably good. The man. and his Vortrijral was. to say the latter performer sang sentimental songs least, wonderful. In figure, speech and tn a very fine voice and received the gesture he was every bit the real "lady." plaudits of the crowd. This trio raked and did some really clever work. It Is In the money easUy and were doubtless chly In the last act when Father Time .doing as well by entertaining the pub- turns all the women into men, and lie on the streets as they would have the men take their wigs off. that one been entertaining the public from the can really realize they have been variety stage. hoaxed. The third street entertainment was , put on by a bunch of returned soldleri In the form of a miniature "MUltary"' band. The band consisted of a big drummer, a side drummer, a trombone, two cornets and clarionet, and they made as much noise as a real band. This CROP PROSPECTS IN EDMONTON DISTRICT ARE VERY FAVORABLE form of music was confined to military march tunes Interspersed with popular; Speaking of the area known as Ed-jazz selections, and while there were a monton district, latest reports on crop tew flat notes in the renderings the conditions are. on the whole, very performers doubtle,u meant well, and favorable says the Edmonton Journal. seemed to be well patronized. (Although the present season Is all of rooKEK ENTERTAINMENTS two weeks later than that of 1926, it is On Saturday nights the street musl- now anticipated that approximately the clans and beggars do quite a thriving , same acreage as last year will be put business, when Fa and Ma and the under crop. At least 90 per cent of kiddles are abroad with the weeks intended wheat area has been seeded, wage to dlnpoBe of. ind the odd penr and cf the coarse grains something nles find ther way into the pockets of juke 40 to 50 per cent. On the whole, the needy. The publlchouse constitutes j the land Is in excellent condition, the great rendezvous for the poorer There jva, ton an gp,, ,uppiy cr class of musicians and hawkers, and ; moisture' to carry1 tii crop well the latter peddle anything from patent ; through June medicine, to jewellery. Some of the! 0rande p,,, nporU ,atl. players even far as to dress go as uPrnate tnat whtat u practlcaUT in costume. One old fellow pulls off the I completed and oau well advanced. It Chlrgwin-the White Eyed Kalflr-stuntL, babl, v ftn and stroll, about dlsgued with a black Ki , 2Q u ,n oaU face, with a guitar, and white diamond , laaetst w y!,, " rif? H,UPB, u W U 1 flnUhe Uk hat t and frock v cdat. Standing out- . ... . . ... . . There was a fall of snow in Orande side the doors of the bars he winds out - , ... some of the old favorites and seems on U"da?rJ T W"""r Prevailing The outlook, to make qtilte a good business out of if00' T,r P"mln8 nJ it. This class of people who are not!,OW gifted in any way. musically or vocally. ! J '"" ,pleDd'd' re,t, push a perambulator with a gramo-jmay 1ooM or' phone thereon and rely upon the squeak nnpTnn . of the instrument to attract the atten-' IJIH.IUK TnI I III ,.IP Mlk AS Hon of passers-by In th hope that the i mitnrmvi a irum i n i rnr odd penny will drop Into the cup. lUfljLKYAIIYfc LfcAUfcK AM. SCOTC H. TO(l The English public seems to fall very 1 heavy for anything with a Scotch twist j tVancouTer Star) 111 the Ir mnnihi that Tlnn Dt 11 w"? ! 8CtCh i0tT onof! Simon Tolmie ha. been leader dt the the biggest street crowds the r Iter ha. ; conserv.Uve party he ha. made a good 4 - twuaa4 wi as a v aki v. V many speeches. The speeches ' have entertainment was gathered about a'l.- . . . Scotch o.,h bsrolner . renmnan1ri , . . turn . i i been very human, very bright P and very Scotch lassies doing the Highland sword dance. It looked to the writer as though the performers consisted of father and two daughters, anri the optimistic. They have been well fram ed to please and Inspire his audiences. The outstanding feature throughout has been a recitation of fact and fig- could sure do their "stuff." " T'mgs cont"""8 the vastness of the all three were dressed In Highland! costtime and' looked very peat In their' kilts and sporrans. The old gentleman with the bagpipe sported the regulation i Scotch sandy whiskers, plus brawny j legs, and possessed some excellent lungs Judging from the size to which he blew the bagpipes and the distance the sound i rescnea. The girls were neat limbed and danced beautifully, and were amply repaid for their exertions, even the writer donating a couple of pennies to the cause. THE IintiH I.IKK IT There U aq much "music" In the sir In the CitV of fnrinn tViat 4Vi Hnm AH fl aw spr w i W Their teeth are of a tough M new hich makc them hold M mm their keen cutting ed un- ,1M dee every utace. A HH siMonos cuuh saw Co. ltd- M MONTRKAW ,LMW vncouvt , st. jem. m.b Mr wa Tonorre WW I seem to have become quite used to It I VsVaaWfesflaBT I He's not the sort of man that says everything is "jolly good". It must be really good to win his p raise. Ogden's Cut Plug did the trick he couldn't help saying it beat all the other tobaccos he'd ever tried. crea and the richness of the. produc tion of the Province over which he ' plrts to become the Prime Minister. The annual value of the fisheries, the alneraU, the fruit, the limber, the live lock and the manufactures are quoted it great length and with accuracy by, the Conservative leader. This, as a eat of memory, is altogether praise- .orthy. and it Is a splendid and re-.ssuring thing that any politician is so ell informed. .MAIL CONTRACT j SEALED TENDERS, addressed to the Postmaster Oeneral, will be received at Ottawa until noon, on Friday, the 10th ' June. 1927, for the conveyance of His Majesty's Malls, on a proposed Contract cr a period not exceeding four years is required time per week on the rout , .etween Prince Rupert and Railway 1 itatlon (C.NJt.). and Wharves CNJt. ind C.PM.t. and Transfer of Malls be-.ween Railway Station and Wharves C.N.R.. U.S.S. Co.. and CPJI.I from .he Postmaster General's pleasure. Printed notices containing further In-, formation ai to conditions of proposed Contract may be seen and blank forma i of Tender may be obtained at the Post Office of Prince Rupert, B.C.. and at , the otfl-.e of the District Superintendent ' A Postal Service. Vancouver. B.C. ! J. F. MURRAY, j District Superintendent ot Postal Service. District Superintendent's Office. ! Vancouver, B.C., April 39. 1927. 3tfe "MALE MINIMUM WAGE ACT T KMPl.OVKHs AMI KMI'l.OVIDs Notice Is hereby given that a public meeting, for the purpose of discussing the provisions of the "Male Minimum Wage Act" and it application to adult male employees in every occupation, other than those already dealt with by the Board, will be held at the Court House, Prince Rupert, B.C.. on Wednea. day, May 25th, commencing at a pjn. To hear those who may be unable to attend during the afternoon a meeting will be held in the evening commencing at 7.30 o'clock. Before further Minimum Wage Orders are made for any Industry or group of Industries the Board desires to hear the views of those interested. After an Inquiry la made throughout the Province the Act will be made to apply to all persons who come within iU provisions Written statements are requested from any group or organization of employers r or employees. F. V. FOSTER, T. F. PATERSON. Members Board of Adjuitment. administering the "Male Minimum Wae Act." , t r: Victoria. B.C.. May , lBth. 1837. LAND ACT. XOTirE OF INTENTION TO PP.Y TO LEA HP. lOnr.MIOHE. In Piinc ttiir-aftrt t vA n Dlatrlct of Prince Rupert, -Queen and sltuatS at Moresby Island. Charlotti island. TAKE NOTICE that Kelley Logging Company Limited, of Vancouver Be occupation Timber Merchants. Intend! to apply for a lease of the following "mt described foreshore: Commencing at a post planted spprox-lmately one-half mile south 80dea east Z. wit ijwoo itiver. Mores- i 71 "'Vv.' u"n tnariotte Islands: thence following the high water mark lii I a northwesterly, westerly and aouth1 n 1 Iicanadiah XssiurtvX 0GDEN CUT PLUG Save the valuable "Poker Hands' i ' 1 fiV I m:. t - irrrr-Ti r r s ET ice Crem MANUFACTURERS PRINCE RUPERT Corner 3rd Ave. and Second St. PHONE, 758 r - To Krlrhlkan, U'rantell, Juneiiii. anil Sksway May 3fi. Ju To nin..mer. t IHorlu anl heatlle June 3. II. I. ' J- P.O. Itat & Canadian Pacific Railway B. C. Coast Services Sailings from Prince Rupert s IS.-II.H I'KINCEHS HCATItK E. laf For llule.li.le. IUut Bella llella. fleean f all. Nama, M'ti .'iiit Itiver, and Vanooiner eer) tialurda. II a.m. Ageney for all Hteam.hlp ' Lines. "' f,,r""" " V. r, OHCimtll. Oeneral A tent. nc Corner nf 4th Ittreet and Srd Avenue. I'rlnre ltufi. " westerly direction for. a distant r one and one-hair miles; thence In an easterly direction to the point of commencement. ana containing icq acrra, more or len. JOSEPH DOUOI.AS WILSON. Acting as Agent for . Kelley Logging Co. Ltd. Dated 30th April, 1927. IN THE SUIMtEMB COURT OF - 1IHITISII COLUMUIA In the Matter of the Companies Act wemg unapieT as of the Itevlwd Chapters of British Columbia, 1824, anri In the Matter of the Delta Copper Com- i'nj uuiiiiea in.r.ij.i TAKE (imiri' it... . i, will be mad before the presiding Judge " - - ...v wwu . , lyu.HJ "V.J iiuuirv, uruisn Columbia, iooV uy oi way, n.u. : . r"' ur oi ten inirty iiujiu am. I O dock In tli fnnnnnn f, n Order permuting the above named Company tc be restored to the Register of Companies in the Province ol British Columbia, In the office of the Registrar of Companies, Victoria, B.C DATED at Prince Rupert this 10th ' dav nf Annl a r inn WHLIAMS, MANBON to OONZALES, Solicitors for the Dlta copper Company (NJ'i) MILK -:- PKltn Reduced to 12 pints for r, 7 qiiarM fr 12 pintn for Cash !ric lJKe--McHrlile Street store no closed Valentin Dairy Offfrennd Dairy ; ',nk on i. IS? 8ANTAI. B. surf to ,h';,,of