l i Jli J -U 1 V iNC0IBMg x com iial lMfj v I CWFANTTf. AiKiAcnoMCutA)m Sajly Til ', v , ci. M n 1929 2r Mnneu-back $ Guarantee -41ichy gcntiiuc Congolcuin lias this Seal on tlio Htirfuco of the nig.' 1 It gUnrMiilccs Sntisfaction or your inouoy. JVack. .:ONt:OLEUM CANADA LIMITED, MONTREAL RICHMOND 3 aSt 1 ."' "Vat .. V ONG OLEUM igk Rugs If you want .anything! try a classified ad. 'S WUVRE vi a .r 1 1 RVU Sale Lasts Two Days Only ' aTSKSS3(S"l HALIBUT BOAT ONAH REFLOATS Vessel Which Stranded on Met-lakatla Bar Tuesday Night, Proceeds to Ketchikan The American halibut boat Onah, Capt Harry Selig, which went ashore on a reef just this Bide of Metlakatla Bar about midnight Tuesday nfght, whs refloated about 1 o'clock! yesterday afternoon by the Pacifw- Salvage Co.'s salvage tug Pachena and, after a few minor repairs had been made, proceeded about 2:16 to Ketchikan. The veaeel was practically undamaged except fo the, splintering of her gumwood nhoe. The exhaust pipe was broken but was patched up before :ne set out for Ketchikan. SCHOOL REPORT FOR THE MONTH (innlen1 Being Planted By Pupils At Westvicw At a meeting of the school board Inst night the following reports were submitted by the principals: In the High School there wore lfW p'uplw' enrolled of which 71 ,were boys and 108 girls. The average Attendance for the month was 05. 15 per cent. i In liordeji Street School there were 31C enrolled of which 154 were .boys and 1C2 girls. The average attendance for the month wns 97.3 .per cent. , , In the" Booth Memorial Son.oal there wejre. ilO enrolled of. which 246 were boys and 216 girls. The average attendance for the month was 9G.4 per cent. The savings account now amounts to In the AVestview School, thore w-ere' J! cnrolfiSif'oI whrtll '10 TIIE DAILT NEWS PAGE FIVE Friday and Saturday Special Every hat displayed in the store in- includes models from Society Hats, Boyd,' Natty Hats and Jeanctte. Lvm mil 13 pirls.' Th 'av- ( iMoyitttndnte for the month wstVia.?.'? per cent were tasee cases of ----- -rr- : chickenpox i during the month which accounts for the low attendance percentage. Miss Vie-kers reported the children were Knowing a great deal of interest in the planning and planting of gardens in the school yard. AMUSEMENT TAX IS LIFTED IN ALBERTA War Measure Reiajned 'Only on Jilgh I'riced Few and on iV' Dance Halls. t, 'teoNTOK May k: .-',0ff the amusement tax-rO some it An order in cpuneil has lihiiRed bv the Alberta cov- iant cnntellinir the existing 'JSh.lmv rvlpri tickeia and af- ym..., . , , fectfng all such places of amusement as moving picture houses, .1 i -1- A .lt! I rnauiauquMB, etc. nuiuiwwu prices not exceeding 25 cents will hereafter be exempt, the only execution being places for pub lic dancing. The order Is to be effective June 1. Taxation, on. amusements has been in force since war times and has now come to be taken more. ..or less for grajited. Nu-ne.itt protests, however,"' have bqvft made from time to time, and ll taic cawwft to sa'dlo have eVtf"lmn jiopular with the show-going public. The government has Kjpw found it poxsible to lift it to lar as ,the low prreed form of 'entertainment are .concerned. In the case, of tickets fcharged at . 1 A 1 A ...fill more Uian ko cenis, uw iax win stnnu,. . For leaving the engine of a motor vehicle running while unattended, Sam Hatidensghlld was fined 6 by Magistrate McCly-mont in city police court this morning. James McKay, King Tal, Dr. L. W. Kergin. Dominic Rossi, Joseph Uaron, George Tite and Hubert Wnrd were each chanred Under the city parking bylaw and 'remanded for.eight days; - District News ALICE ARM J. Peacock is on a brief busM ness trip to Prince Rupert, lie arrived here last week from An-yox and will spend the summer in the district developing his min ing claims. i Mrs. J. Weir returned herert last week after having spent a lew days in Anyox. . VANDERHOOF . f V. Schelderun B. C. L. S. of Hums Lake, accompanied by Pete San dries, was here recently sur veying the cemetery north of the Nechako River for the village j commissioners of Vanderhoof. The cemetery is to be fenced. Hon. W. A. McKemie, acting minister of public works, has written the Vanderhoof and District Board of Trade giving assurance that the matter of a road from Fort St. James to Manson. Creek will be given serious consideration by the executive council and some action may. be expected on the return 'to Victoria of the minister of public works, Hon. Nelson Lougheed. A daughter waa . born las Thursday morning to Mr. and Mrs. II. E. McClelland. Sheriff E. 8. Peters and his Hon, K. Petem, of Fraser Lake, vere visitors in Vanderhoof last week. Roman Catholic Church ser vices were conducted here on unday. Rev. Mr. St M .Emanuell "olleire. Saska&ML li to 'befiome Anglican Oivttmmita here, We v.U be oraaiiM!p2$aiupert ,, -rt SnnHnv VlAar 'iaatiM.have hnn earrvinJIha .aaridBJaT here T(Vr Tev. L. i. JimMHl tor rmvMhere. Mrs. CH'tvles E. Allan and fam ily leit at the first of the week tor Chinman, Alto., where they will join Ir. Allan, former local arbywo is now. located there, ,T.rvitl I Avorill ia blllldlnif a inew garage for Gilbert Hofe. Bert McCorkell of the fakla Uke Trang Co.. Takla Lake, la' now practically recovered following a rather serious Illness. TO DISMANTLE BARGE TODAY Heavy Machinery and Equipment to Be Lifted From Pezuta at Mouth of Tlell Kiver A wire received yesterday by the Pacific Salvage Co. stated that it waa expected today to lift the heavy machinery and fittings ! from the log carrying barge Ptauta which was wrecked lost full near the mouth of Tlell River on the east coast of Graham Island. The Salvage Princess and derrick scow Lion left last week for the scene of the wreck to carry out the dismantling "H expected to return to port by the end of the week. Nervous and Run Down The Letst Noise Would Bother Her Mrs. It. Burton, Oshawa, Ont., write: "Thre ywws ago I tu to nervous and run down 1 could hirdly brar to hare the children make a ooi it would bother me so. "A friend advised me to take and after taVini two boxes I began to feel itronger, looked better and the color fame bark into my checks, and now I am feeling line again " Priee 60c. a box at all druggist and dealer, or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Ltd., Toronto, t)nt. A FEW FACTS ABOUT PRINCE RUPERT Prince Rupert is: The terminus of the Canadian National Railway, The Central administrative point for the whole of central and northern British Columbia. The nearest point in British Columbia to the Orient. The centre of the halibut and salmon fishing business. The centre of an extensive mining and. lumbering district. Prince Rupert has: One of the finest harbors in the world. The largest fresh halibut business in the world. The largest fish cold storage plant in the world. A large, strictly modern drydock and shipbuilding plant. A grain elevator leased to the Alberta Wheat Pool with ca pacity of 1,250,000 bushels. A large, modern ocean dock. A new modern lumber mill, planing and shingle mills and box factory with capacity output of 60,000 board feet, daily. Fish reduction plant. A new mill at Porpoise Harbor and. another building along side it seven miles from the city. Railway shops employing about 75 men. , ,; Several ship sheds for building and repairing small craft. Provincial government district offices and court house. ' Dominion government fisheries, customs, and other offices. Marine department central station. Dominion government wireless station.. Canadian National district offices. Dominion fisheries experimental station. B. C. Packers district offices. . Consolidated Mining & Smelting district assay office. P. Burns Co., Ltd., modern abattoir. Several docks and wharves used by coasting vessels t Number of fish houses doing an export business.' About twenty salmon canneries in the neighborhood. Several fishery supply and shipchandlery establishments. f';KSeveral wholesale houses do:ss a large business in the di- ,;Fine modern retail stores; '.' V Good steamship services to Alacka and south to Vancouvet '-fond Victoria and westto the Queen Charlotte IslandsV ! i' Three large oil and gasoline distribution stations. . Good hotels and restaurants. r ..Prince Rupert has: ' 'V) Modern high school with first year university classes: Four public schools with over thirty teachers. Seven churches representing the most important demoniaa Hons. ' ' Paved streets and concrete sidewalks in the business section. VelI kept gardens and pretty residences.1 Number of clubs and fraternal organisations. Prince Rupert has: No severe cold in winter. f No extreme heat in summer. No mosquitos or other insect pests. Great opportunities for boating, fishing and hunting; Fewer climatic or other disadvantages than most places In Canada. A harbor that never freezes. li 1 A.Km I 0' nv BomkM cnCth'Hmrmany ( m l,frR bflVvmt om, Sar py Jrm yo.f 4lw t vrilt lit' ml la Ih fmnyl MtnlrttU nra. lood "I'm going to take one room at a time and do the whole house. This book has so many wonderful ideas" Distinctive new color schemes for every room in the house and suggestions for charming exteriors are featured in this new book. It is making homes happier and brighter from Coast to Coast. RRANDRAM.HENDERSON Our,ntnl le contain Btudrtm'i Gtnuint B.B. Whit, Lead and Pare Whitt Zinc, combined ia tlx Mtl proportiona ol 70 to 30. lomiaf IB atronicit covering pigmcat kowm to acxnc. Gordons Hardware i . , .t. '".Ht ) I I l h : y. '!: f .,;:. t ... i : -c I'. . 'i I' ft I'il i! . , y, iM! 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