ft! PAGE SIX THE DAILY NEWS Monday, August 5, 1929 niUTISH FLIERS PREPAIIE FOR ANOTHER LONG HOP Above are the heroes of the England to Indian non-stop flight: Squadron Leader A. G. Jones-Williams, M.C. (left), and Flight Lieut. N. H. Jenkins (right), who came within an ace of breaking th'e world's long-distance record, are here seen on their arrival home, at Cranwell Aerodrome with Air Marshal Sir John Ilirglns, who greeted them on behalf of the British Government. These intrepid fliers are now preparing for another long hop. This time it will be from England to China, distance of some five thousand miles. SUITS! SUITS! MADE TO ORDER Cutting, Workmanship and Slyl All Guaranteed SUITS STEAM CLEANED AND PRESSED We Deliver to Any Part of thr City. Ling, the Tailor Phone !t9 LINDSAY'S Cartage and Storage Phone 68 Cartage, Warehousing and-Distributing. Teanvor Motor Service Coal, Sand and Gravel We Specialize In Piano and Furniture Moving. liifUTiVOorkt. Xcbtt CATARRH el th BLADDER Silt, StccmM Hied Ciniuh fumvA " 'nntirfci' S.D. Johnston Co.Ltd. Representatives for MILLER COURT & CO., Limited Through our 'connections we can make prompt execution of buying and selling brders on the Vancouver, Calgary and Toronto stock exchanges. Closing prices from the so exchanges posted on our stock board twice dally. Orders from out-of-town clients, by wire or letter, will receive our prompt S.D. Johnston Co.Ltd. j 610 2nd Avenue Phone 130 . Prince Rupert. ILC. I CANADIAN NATIONAL STEAMSHIPS Prince Rupert DRYDOCK AND SHIPYARD OPERATING (1. T. P. 20,000-TON FLOATING DRYDOCK Engineers, Machinists, lioilcrmakers, lllacksmlths, Pattern Makers, Founders, Woodworkers, Etc ELECTRIC AND ACETYLENE WELDING Our Plant Is Equipped to Handle Ail Kinds of MARINE AND COMMERCIAL WORK PHONES 43 AND 385 LUMBE Thoroughly seasoned Shiplap, S4S Dimension and Boards. KILN DRIED Sitka Spruce and Cedar Finish, Coiling, and Rustic. . SPECIALTIES 1 x 4" Edpegrain Hemlock Flooring 1 x 3" and 4" Sitka Spruce Ceiling 1 x 4" and 6" Cedar Rustic BIG BAY LUMBER COMPANY, LIMITED PRINCE RUPERT, B. C. Head Office, Seal Cove, Telephone, 3G1 Retail Yard, Cow Hay, Telephone 423 News of the Mines AROUND PRINCE RUPERT Consolidated Takes Salt Chuck Mine Near Ketchikan; Silver Crest Having Active Season; Southern Cross at Stewart Looking Good The Consolidated Mining & Smelting Co. have taken nntions on the Rush-Brown copper mine and the Sail iChuckpa-ladium mine at the head of Kassan Bay, Prince !of Wales Island, about forty miles from Ketchikan. The j Rush-Brown mine shipped considerable high-grade copper lore from 1917 to 1920 and the Salt Chuck mine, which also contains a big percentage of copper and gold, having shipped concentrates to New Jersey through Prince Rup- ert for several years, is equwpeu wmi a mouum nuumim mill of 350 tons daily capacity.' Under the management of J. C (ni Trp A IM T A OtP Chilberg, the palladium property' I AIM Aim I IVH went on the financial rocks some JtU 1X1111 UFLVlk time ago and both it and the Hush- T- 1 1 I i. ltn l,nnda tt TnKn JUrOWH I till UHU Uic uaima ui uv.- Kohl of Ketchikan, who made the deal with Consolidated. The nnrchasinir comDany is now in stalling 7000 feet of pipe line lead ing from the Salt Chuck mm to deliver compressed air for running the pump in unwatering the Rush-Brown mine. D. S. Campbell, Consolidated engineer, is in charge of the work which is being carried out on the two properties. The Big Four group of four claims, owned by George Mathe-lon and Louis Legge, and adjoining the George Copper and Rufus-Argenta groups in the Bear River section at Stewart, have been sold o the Consolidated Mining & Smelting Co., which has also bought the George Copper. With further financing arranged for by the increase of cap-tal from $500,000 to $1,000,000, Silver Crest Mines, Ltd., will hav a busy season both on the Saddle property in Hastings Arm and on the Portland Canal property beyond the Big Missouri in the Salmon River section. It will tako jut little time to complete the 'ramway on the Saddle, all that remains uncompleted being the last tower and the unloading terminals and ore bins at the mine. Nego tiations are under way to purchase the other thirty per cent of the Saddle. Ore on the property averages around $60. In view of the discoveries on the Big Missouri. further work on the Silver Crest will be watched with interest. A. B. Armstrong of Stewart has been very busy lately with his pack trains delivering large quantities of supplies to the Mountain Uoy mine, upon which a big pro- tfiam of development this year is plannea. lie nas aiso oeen wkihk in supplies and equipment to the A. and T. property, near the head of Goose Creek, upon which the Consolidated has taken an option und has started development. A plane of the Western Canada Airways recently look t . O. Green and survey party, as well as several hundred tons of equipment, from Stewart into Twenty- Mile Creek beyond Bowser iaKe to survey the big group of 57 claims acquired by the Consolidated Min ing & Smelting u. iasi ian irom Tim Williams ana unanes Knip- ple. Williams and C. II. Allen accompanied the Green party to do some prospecting on the ground and the plane'also took a party in to the Tehran K ver lor tne isonn- ern Syndicate to stake some show ings found many years ago oy nlacer Drosnectors. The plane also made a number of trips intoi the interior as well as delivering a quantity of supplies at the head) of Bulldog LreeK to? a. ignite ior use in developing the Gloria Co.'s ground. W. E. Gilbert, pilot of the plane, was enthusiastic as to the possibilities of aerial service to mines of Stewart district. Ted Morris and Charles Lake have been taking out some fine ore from their Southern Cross group in the neighborhood of George Copper and George Enterprise. The ore is peculiar In ap-nearance. there being a quantity of brown material in the gangue, the nature of which has not yet been determined. The values, however, are evidently In grey copper content and assays went as high as 500 ounces to the ton. Morris av there is an Immense min- nmlizntinn Ivinir between two dykes and that the property has all the earmarks of a big mine. It. Tilton. an engineer connect ed wltH thff Monarch mine at Field, spnit'Aeyeral days in Smith' HERE, 50 THE FIGHTING'S ON Victor McLaglen's New Role is That af Battling Seaman Who Meets Clever Girl "Captain .Lash" is in town, stopping at the Capitol Theatre, where, at many intervals, and for more than an hour at a time, he is to provide some real love-making and some thrilling two-handed knock-down, drag-out fighting tonight and tomorrow. "Captain Lash," is Fox Films' newest starring production for Victor McLaglen, of "What Price Glory?" fame, and it is a whale of a picture. McLaglen, in the name part, is called Captain Lash because he drives his men in th'e stoke hole of an ocean liner like a human whip. Off duty he is a gay Romeo or a fighter as the mood seizes him. As usual, a girl Claire Windsor gets him in her power, and thus into a series of exciting situation from which he finds it hard to extricate himself. Miss Windsor furnishes the feminine qujAritude and some mighty good acting. Comedy moments 'are many when Cocky (Clyde Cook) and his concertina combine to eave Lash from trouble. KIDDIES HELD OVER TWO DAYS Winnipeg Younjrsters Stay That Many May Enjoy Entertainment So The entertainment offered by this splendid troup of children, has been so much appreciated by the Capitol Theatre patrons, that the management has made arrangements to have their en gagement extended two days, so that a further opportunity will be afforded "the people here to enjoy their tery pleasing and vnriori show In a complete chango of bill. TALKIES ARE HERE TO STAY, ASSERTS G. BERNARD SHAW Fault is Voice Exaggeration, De clares Playwright LONDON. Aug. 5: Talking pictures have come to stay, ac cording to Gorge Bernard Shaw, who celebrated his seventy-third birthday yesterday "The mechanical side of the talking picture Is now sufficient ly developed," says Shaw. "It is the actors arid the actresses who need improvement. Artists are- Infinitely more adaptable, natur ally, than machines. "The problem of talking pie tures is that they exaggerate the voice as milch as a silent film exaggerates a', gesture. Look at the picture bf the new Labor cabinet in England. "The ministers were introduced by Premier ilacDonald, just af ter 'they tODtyofffcei' tor the bene- cru,eTt,y0lh,CSlLtffSl' 'of th. movietone. Philip while there, made an examlnatrol; rhonrpllor of the fni-nnnrlrt nron- snowoon, tne cnanceuor oi me ertles on Hudson Bay Mountain,) exchequer, was uncertain whether near the Dutlile mine. , or not to shake hands with tho (lOOP COPY premier. He lia.lt began to uo bo, then changed Ms mind. In real life the twltetewas no doubt in- furtiwr flnitesimal. On the screen you detolU about thlt magnificent etu! cannot fail to seo it. you offer tor let . "Ramsnv MacDonald is magni- "No? AUhihl uJ'iour flcent Hfi ' the reateRt "rtl8t glowing cucrtption of it in my aewj since Gladstone. And Gladstone nowi." run. . was a thundering good actor 4 E txa.a k iTwu r i-u 4 Wia"EfjiM wnwibja n.VAMa tvnvv mn hi i TP? I he Frl. & Sat Uwrta Stone , in "Freedom of the Preaa." some people think that is all he ever' was. ' "This film is the beet since mine. It is even better. "When films first began, the producers secured the services of actors and actresses who, anxious to 'get across,' used the same ges tures as on the stage, and, of course, overdid It. When the talking pictures began, the producers secured line services of film actors ami actresses who "were not used to using their voices. The result has been that, ccustomed to saying things with their factjs, theyjstill do this most effectively, jnd then, After wards, they still have voices to continue with. "When I made the experimental "icture of myself, I told the pro ducers and the men who worked the machines what to do. When it was all over they told me that I had told them in 10 minutes the secret of getting effects on which they had been working for the past year." , AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHY 1928 During the 1928 season, 88,000 aerial photographs of areA Jn different Darts of Canada were taken by the Royal Canadian Air Force for the Topographical burvey, l)eiaj-tment of the Interior. Of these 17,500 were obllaue views and the remainder vertical views. Those Splitting Sick Headaches! "FRUIT-A-TIES "Stop'Those; , ' ' HcaltK.RobtinjlPama ' Mrs. Michael Coulis, Killaloe Station, Ont., write: , Afiw uitni 'Frali-a-ttrti' ifi htiJxUt mil tird-M Inline toon diaappurtd, and lot two yf mow I bm bua la il tun ( bulla." Sick headaches that come back on you ume alter time will yield to "Fruits- tiveV. Mrs. CouIm Is only one of thou- anm wuo nave uncovered thlj, "rruit-s-tivei" is a natural medklr. made of lntj.nufi.trl frasl. f . i I.. ! u L! i. hwi tiutt juke wiuuinru I with the finest medicinal Ingredients. It always relieves, iry it today. V MON. & TUES. Held Over Two Days IN A CHANGE OF PROGRAM ON THE SCREEN TWO SHOWS 7 and 9 p.m. Winnipeg Kiddies Victor McLaglen in " CAPTAIN LASH" COMEDY LOUD SOUP Prince Rupert Feed Co. Received fresh supply PratU' Baby Chick Food, Bulkley Valley Hay and grain, Robin Hood Flour, Spralts Dog ahd Bird Supplies and COAL guaranteed to please you . PHONES 58 AND c!8 t! PATHE NEWS NO ADVANCE IN PRICES ADMISSION, 15c AND 50c WEEK AT THEATRE . 4 Mon. & Tues. "Winnioesr Kiddies and Victor McLag- lan ,1'n "Captain Lash." Wed. & Thurs. --, Double bill. Greta GarW In "Wild Orchids" and "Honeymoon Abroad." " - Dr Alexander rilOf.E 47 KCHVKK IlLOtK DENTIST FURNACE or STOVE WOOD Inside Spruce and Hemlock, Cut 11 and lG-Inch $1.50 PER DOUBLE LOAD DOX CUTTINGS, $3.50 PER LOAD HYDE TRANSFER 171 3rd Avenue East PHONE 580 Heated Storage RAG CAGE DEMAND COAL Rupert Brand" "THE DAINTIEST BREAKFAST FOOD." 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