THE DAILY, .NEWS PAGE FOUR' WIISJH II WlsMSTlWsWSg 1-S'asM The Daily News PRINCE RUPERT - BRITISH COLUMBIJ Published Every Aftemoon, except Sunday, by Prince Rupert i Daily ;News, Limited, Third Avenue. Ul-'F-'rULLEN - DAILY EDITION Managing Editor. SUBSCRIPTION RATES City Deliver, by mail or carrier, yearly period, paid In advance $5.00 For lesser period, paid in advance, per month 50 By mail to all parts of Northern and Central British Columbia, paid in advance for yearly period $3.00 Or four months for $1.00 By mail tc all other parts oi British Columbia, the British Empire. andt United States, paid in advance per ye'ar .... $G.O0 By mail to all other coui'.tries, per year ,....($7.50 Transient. 'Display Advertising, per inch, per insertion $1.40 Transient Advertising on Front Pag per inch $2.80' Local Readers, per insertion, per line .25 Classified Advertising, per insertion, per word ' ( .2 Legal Notices, each insertion per agate line 15 Contract Rates on Application Advertising and Circulation Telephone - 93 Editor and Reporters Telephone ... 86 Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations JST Thursday, October 18, 1028 GOOD NEWS FROM C.N.R. Many people have wondered that the C.N.R. should NEWS OF NORTHERN B.C. 0 BURNS LAKE v P Sandnes has returned to hia home here after spending several weeks on the prairjes engaged in harvesting. The Burns, Lake and district Board of Trade is asking the provincial, government ,,to, take steps to keep, the. road open between here and(1Grassey Plains during the winter. W. McAdams, Bob Shaw, Fred Carder and F. W. McDonald of Vancouver, while inspecting a mining property in the Ootsa Lake district, bagged a fine bull moose. Hobart Parrott, who sold his farm and moved away last spring has returned from Vancouver ami states that he intends to take up residence at Franco' Lake again. allow their bier dock to lie idle here when the salmon from ! Tie camps in this district havr this district was allowed to be all taken south. Efforts jow resumed .operations for the were probably made to secure this business but they were ! winter- . not eiiective efforts and those are the only ones that count. Possibly the industrial agont may be able to do something to betted Icbnditions. At any rate an effort would be worth something. VANDERIIOOF The Women's Auxiliary to the local Anglican Church held r meeting at the home of Mra. 4xTiinii Mniircm t nnn mi nv 11. V .lavlnr Vff v tfturnnnn ivnwuirjiv i Ei orvi Hiiv iiuvirx ! ' I il . 1 1 1 A - L t I nnomer uanatuan newspaper cnain nas oeen start,- i tr win. j tr od. When Charles Campbell sold out his interest in the neth Ellis have returned honw Star at Vancouver he went to Edmonton and bought the I after sending a month or so at bulletin and made a success of it. Then he reached out Keiowna. and joined hands with another newspaperman, getting . :, control of tho Calgary Albortan, a paper which has a large sale at Edmonton m the morning. The next step erator of the United Church maia-w as to start a new paper in Regina, the Star, for which tenance and extension fund com a Canadian Press franchise has been secured. Further mittee for Cariboo presbytery, east, the same publishers took advantage of the northern 1 . . Manitoba movement to institute a daily paper at The'T J? ?wf.tly Nw ! tf Light of Day was rendered at t mu i. u e i il i Pas. That chain of lour newspapers may be only the be-eveDinK wnice ln the Unjtet! ginning of things. It is possible that they may again step ; Church here on Sunday. Soloist? back into Vancouver. were W. E. Pearson and Stuar E. Dally. MORE BRITISH NEWS T ,V v a aM t The Canadian Press meeting at Toronto in which af tZt Ausu the Prince Rupert Daily News is a shareholder, has de- jn Alberta' engaged in harveat-cided to etejl.:fits direct British cable service to give:ing. Canadian people more first hand British news. This will I ' to some extent nullify the advantage gained by the spe-i- v?16 A- Aflt. w has beer-cial rc atives in Eurojk It is in keeping with the &fJ" trend of thottimes. The only difficulty is that we expect Rank 0f commerce, has beer to learn next of an additional assessment against mem- transferred to Ocean Falls, bers each month to pay for the increased service. Already I the Canadian Press charcres are hitrh. A Publlc noting was held by ' o v the JI1 LIBERALS TO CHOOSE CANDIDATE You Can Quickly Limber Up- Sore, S iff, Swollen Joints Kvin Chrnnii' Ifhcuniatfr Swell-1 Joint and In just a few , ... m, c, ... pi)trte to ths bon ana in nun-. mi;m, oiiouiun fort or Finger Joints Yield to the Mighty rowerful Influence of often nd cm thereby reeuiu much mere JUIiW-JA&t.. iniNT.PASK cuickly, when the Joint u tnrhned and the agony intent. It's here, right In town and every !n ,u. Pf,!li-0OlSi2 1 rfrmariit hi 1" fsl!t-. ;t cannot help bringing iplT and village commissioners last Thursday evening to receive sug milHnni In MnnMitAli uriih On Choosing a candidate for an election which is not building bylaw that is beinr likely to take place for the next two years seems rather drafted, an unwise proceeding. It is possible that before the elec- , tion some man not now in the public eye may become out- George E- Hamilton, one of thr standing in the affairs of the north and it would be more "J? ZJfZ 1.11,1 . tt ,i .i . . i area nas been ror a number oi desirable to choose him. there However, are possibly cir- years identified with the Forest cumstances which justify the action of the executive in Branch, has left or Prince calling the convention. One justification may be that the George where he will spend the constituency is a very large one and it would take a couple winter prior to proceeding to thr of vears to get properly acquainted with its people and Mrs. p,e"ce Hamilton ruM!r "JffV1!, will follow later. t- their needs , , Mias Anne Fountain of Vancou ver, provincial secretary of the Canadian Girls in Training. hile here laat week, waa the guest of Mr. and Mrs. E. C McGeachy. I'KINCE GF.OItGE it win i W- G. Rogers and H. Estes, whr I OOlXl- i o ti farmlmr atiama4fitlim In 4 Via mm i MnUUM 1 v- ess ws up nuvvenot Mil j it absorbs instantly and so dean Nesa Lake district, were visitors in town last week. A number of neW settlers are coming Into that part, they report. niprui reaiuu in congesuon. eore thraat, t a Srtpr nf llnnxnnl waa bvt that d'ttui't stop it from tRking tnuih quicker than almost any iwnetfy minted a divorce from his wife. the kink, iiuneneea or torture out oi y-u can ouy I A1K. f o, , ,u Cl, vour troubled lolnta. Rut vml mint MnunihM Ih.l I. ( fw , Joint-Ease ts ttle' ilame, no called be- Joint afflictions that It Is mostly die- preme Court Assizes here last cause It la compounded sikly for the pensed and ite helpfulness will astonish .a, tIia ilnclrnt at fhe Auls S. B. PARKER, LIMITED 3rd Ave. East. Phone 83 Dominion Royal Cord Tire Agency Ford Cars and Trucks Flat Kate Repairs USED CARS We have several excellent bargains in used Cars. Kasy Terms If desired. MacDonald, was very light. The local' public library will shortly get' a supply of new books from Victoria. Paul Wieland has brought u number of prime steers from the Brlckson ranch on the Dlack ! water road. The Women's Auxiliary to the Canadian Legion held it month ly bridge party in the Legion Hall on Frfday evening. The regular meeting of the focal- Rebekah Lodge was held on Thursday night. Miss Ingn Anderson has opened physical cluture classes for boys of all ages here. URGES CONTROL BY PROVINCE V. E. Williams Would Hand Over Fisheries for B.t'. Government to Administer Control of the fishing industry on fhcl'acific eoaat ought to be handed over by the dominion to the. provincial government in the opinion of W. E. Williams, barrister, who has- had wide experience in Prince Rupert. B.C., and who is in Vancouver as solicitor for fishing interests, says the Canadian Fisherman. "It would pay the province of British Columbia.; which gets the direct and indirect benefits of a prosperous fishing industry," he aaid, "to spend the money rein f red to rebuild our coast fish-ries. If proper steps are taken we can double, our output in 16 vears." Mr. Williams' proposal arises "rom the changed interpretation of the dominion's jurisdiction aris- ng out of the recent decision of .he variouJ courts in the now amous Somervilk cannery case that the dominion government had no right to regulate or license the operations of cairtneries, as it had been doing up to that time. Once ! he fish were landed the courts ' eld that they eame under provincial jurisdiction. Cae to be Decided Soon This case was fought for th. Somervilte cannery company by Mr. Williams, and who later con-tested the case as representative of the provincial government, states that although v futthe lppeal has been token by the dominion governsent to the privy .ouncil, he 'is confident that th utcome will , he the same as in he courts that , have already ealt with the issue. The privy council .ease will be esrd in October and decision hould be given in time for the .egislature to set up measure of ontrol of the i alining industry at its next session, he said. Inasmuch as this decision de ) rives the dominion government of control of that portion of the iahinir industry from which the principal revenu- is derived, ilf! .Villiams expres ed the belles 'hat the interests of the fishing industry as a whole would be best served by giving the province complete control. "It will not pay the dominion to undertake .the expenditures 'necessary to rehabilitate the indus try when it loses the major portion of the revenue? he said. Amy Way the fishing intjntry on fM Pacific coast i.s a matter that sf Ifects British Co'1Jmbi exclusively! Dominion Should Help "The dominion should pay Ae province a fixed annuity to carry out Its responsibilities for the pro tection of the fisheries and then it would pay the province to spend about 12,000,000 within the next four or fire years in re-seeding some of the streams and inlets, in clearing awny obstruction and otherwise encouraging the Ml mon to return to British Columbia waters. There are inlets where the fish come only every two years. Seeding would make them come every yesr. There are streams blocked by removal obstructions, such as log jams. These could be opened up with comparatively little THROUGH SLEEPERS TO THE SHIP'S SIDE The Canadian National Rail ways have made arrangement to oper te opeekl rains and through sleeping cars from the Pacific Coast to the ship's side at Montreal and Ha'lfax in connection with sailings for the Old Country durfrg November and Decem ber. Fu'l infovmition from City Tirke orfj,.,., n-'s Third Avenue 1 I Prince Jtu pert. I'hone 2f.O. 28? i Why Children need Bovril to fortify them against cold and illness. Bovril is the best of the beef in its most concentrated and digestible form. The special body-building powers of Bovril are due, partly to the actual nourishment in Bovril itself, and partly to its unique power of enabling the human system to derive far greater nourishment from the ordinary diet It assists development and increases stamina. Give the children Bovril every day for a month and note the difference. The Body-building powers oS Bovril have been proved by independent investigation to be from 10 to ZO times the amount taken. THE deep, glossy black of a crow's wing- that's the kind of polish you get on your stove when you Thursday, Oct oh,,, i as a Ctovvts Win use ZEBRA, the wonderful new liquid stove polish. t Easy, too: rub Zebra on with a cloth let it dry a minute brush and you have itl And it endures fbrV weeks. STOVE POUSTN IN BOTTLES BOTTLES For those who prefer it, Zebra Panto Stove Polish is still to be had at all dealers'. 4 ' ;