PAGjJ rwo The Daily News TRINCE RUPERT - BRITISH COLUMBIA Published Every Afternoon; Except Sunday, by Prince Rupert Daily News, Limited, Third Avenue H. F. PULLEN - - Managing-Editor SUBSCRIPTION IliATES By mail to all other parts of British Columbia, the British Em- pire and United States, paid in advance, per year COO By m&il to all other countries, per year 7.50 By mail to all partB of Northern and Central British Columbia, paid in advance for yearly period 3.00 Or four months for 1.00 For iescr period, paid In advance, per month 50 06y delivery, by mail or carrier, yearly period, paid in advance $5.00 Transient advertising on front page, per Inch 2.80 Legal notice, each insertion, per agate line 15 Local readers, per insertion, per line 25 Transient display advertising, per inch, per insertion 1.40 Classified advertising, per insertion, per word 02 Contract rates on application. , Advertising and Circulation Telephone 98 Editor and Reporters' Telephone 8G Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations , ,. ' DAILY EDITION 'JSWt Monday, October 6, 1930 Circus and Dance Is Planned to Run Two Days Because of Great Interest: More Prizes Donated The Society Circus and Dance being given in aid of the gymnasium fund under Rotary auspices has grown to such large proportions that the Rotary Club has decided to extend it to two nights, Thursday and Friday at Exhibition Hall. There was a meeting at the hall yesterday to lay out the various booths and attractions and it now promises to be the biggest event ever pulled off in the city. More prizes have been donated and the mammoth drawing takes place Thursday night as far as can be handled with the remainder on Friday night. Tickets of admission will be shown at the door but not collected and the same ticket will be honored for admission both nights without extra charge. Dancing will be free both nights. Music for the dancing Thursday night will be furnished by the Premier Orchestra arid on Friday by Balagno's or-cnogtra. Additional prizes donated since the last list was published, follow: u innA i i i i juuu rvm, siupiap, lumoer Dig uay liUmDen One gallon paint ..... Jed Scadili One pair travelling slippers George Arsen One ease Carnation Milk Carnation Co. One bath crystals Rupert Pharmacy $6 JO in repair work Rupert Motors j One arm chair Hunt's Furniture Store One China tea set (23 pieces) Gordon's Hardware One box chocolates A. E. Phillips One box cigars (50) .A. e. Phillips 100 Two-cent stamps j. r. Morrison- (Post Master) Three China sets (3-plece) Q. & s. Grocery One month piano lessons Charles Balagno $10.00 first instalment on 20 shares Yorkshire Savings St Loan MeCaffery, Gibbons St Collart pne pair chiffon hose Mrs. H. 8. Parker r(f y1 t Ulazing First All-Canada Motor Trail AUTOMOBILE TACKLES N0UT1IEHN ONTAIUO BLSH COUNTRY Healy Needhara in his sturdy roadMer i- ..hotvn hero threading his way through birch and spruce in the lake-dapplnl cuuntrv wet of Hearst. He has hundreds of utiles ol Just such terrain to traverse if he is to win through on his arduous Journey from Halifax to Vancouver by all-Canada trail. No ear has ever been driven through Um 600 miles of wilderness which this McLaughlin-Bulck is slowly conquering. Try a Daily News Want Ad. jrswu'Vt Moose and deer are reported to be more abundant this fall in the central interior woods than they have been for ten years and hunting parties are meeting with great success. Numerous parties from Southern British Columbia and Washington have come north for the hunting. While hunting about ten miles from Telkwa' last week, Alex Tiljoe, a native, oame upon a huge black bear which had killed another large brown bear and a smaller black bear. Tiljoe shot the victorious bear and thus had three skins. The local Parent-Teachers' Association had a successful whist and bridge drive last Friday night in the Anglican Parish Hall. Winners at bridge were Mrs. A. E. Campbell, Mrs. N. P. Moran, George Bowie and N. H. Kllpatrick and at whist Mrs. C. A. Bowland, Mtos A. Jones, William Dunn and Mr. Forseth. Mickey Dellaire, who spent the past summer in the district south of Barns Lake with a Dorr)irtton government water power SHrvey party, returned to . Smithers last week and will spend the whiter here. As a result of questionaires sent to all parents, school hours during the fall and winter at Smithers will be from 2) ajn. and not from 0:30 ajn. as' has usually been the opening time in the past in fall and . Bmltheie merchant the farmers 11.75 ner month. are paying hundred pounds, for oats atd $2 for wheat. With the drastic out that has been made by the Canadian National Railways in tie orders this fall, the outlook for the central Interior this winter does not seem to be very bright. A son was bora on Tuesday of this week at the Smithers Hospital to Mr. and, Mrs. H. Willis. A son was bom at the Smithers Hospital on Monday to Mr. and Mrs. J. Laurie. A daughter was born at the Smithers Hospital on Sunday to Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Van Home of Telkwa. W. H. Tobey. C. N. R. divisional superintendent, Prince Rupert. spent several days in Smithers on I company business during the past! week. new duties as government liquor vendor here this week. He succeeds W. J. Dawson who has resigned. Mrs. II. F. Noel, after spending a mire wnu uuiiuay in Vancouver, Victoria and elsewhere in the ; south, returned home last Saturday j night. Mrs. James A. Macdonald and daughter, Patricia, after having spent a year in Ottawa on account of the illness of Mrs. Macrionalrt's sister, who died last month, returned to Smithers on Tuesday of last week. ! Mr. and Mrs. Alex McLean, who were married recently in Prince Ru-I pert, the bride having formed" been Miss Bernlce A. Clay R.N., returned , here this week after spending a 'honeymoon in the south and havo I taken up residence on First Avenue Fire Insurance adjusters have been here recently to Inquire into the circumstances of the fire which destroyed thcMi'sanex building lust week. . William Flnnigan Is leaving this week for Vancouver to enter the Shaughnessy Military Hospital for treatment. GU BAT TENNIS CHAMP At the ago of 37, William T Til- A.Um,t I Vi ITU . W . . -I 1 uvii una nuu me i, luiuicuuii auiKics i tennis championship. He has won this coveted British trophy three ' j time since defeating G. L. Patterson in 1020. Monday, October xiiii DAtV NEWS b. NORTHERN B. C. NEWS 1 SMITHERS ! - - New officers have been elected by the local badminton club and it expected that play will get under way about the middle of the month. TERRACE The many friends of Miss , Nell Malott will be pleased to learn that she is now on the staff of the Lord Selkirk School in Vancouver. Mrs. A. McLeod, who was south recently, found Miss Luella Slbary of Chilliwack, formerly a teacher at Copper City, very much improved' in health which pews will be welcomed by her many friends in Terrace and vicinity. Grandma Little is now at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Ttfoirias Brooks. W. H. Manuel, C. N. R. travelling auditor, was in town this week on official business. George McRae, representing the wholesale grocery department of he Hudson Bay Co., Vancouver, is a business visitor in Terrace and is "gWtered at the Terrace Hotel. Miss Scott of Vancouver was the guest of Mrs. H. T. Allen here during the week. She also visited with friends in Bums. Lake. Messrs. Graham and Wllscnm. representing tlft Yorkshire Savings! and Loan Association of Vancou-' ver, are bntlhass visitors in town. D. MAN. Lowe, W. H. M. Collison f and R. M. Cory left today for Kit wanga to resume work on the high' i way survey east of their place. FRINGE GEORGE Edward Leith of the Geological j Survey of Canada arrived last Sa- j turday from Ottawa to pay a visit with his parent!,' Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Leith. It is ftve years singe he was last in Prime George. Five hundred lots, an unusually i large number, 'were offered for sale ' at the annual city tax sale here on Tuesday. LerTftfilham is contemplating the establishment of a miniature j golf course in the Capitol Theatre , here. Mr .nd Mr. n v f...nor The finishing touches are now to WUliam J Allen's preparing to leave for the United ngput new States about the middle of thl'cncrete nefl,.block on Tnlrd LAvenue wnrcn wm soon De reaayi for occupation. The thermomeier has been dropping below freezing a good deal here lately, the lowest reading so far having been 15 above or 17 degrees of frost F. A. Matheson, local manager of the Canadian Bank of Commerce returned to town on Monday after; spending a holiday on the prairies. The Dallv News can be mir. chased at Post Office News Stand. 325 i Granville St., Vancouver. Karl Anderson, Prince , George, B.C. Smithers Drug Store, Smith- era, B.C. R. W. Riley, Terrace, B.C. General 8tore, Anyox. If you suffer from biliousness or indigestion there is nothing better than Beeeham's' Pills D16 (HiM6 BRING HEALTH UUH'-' .. if'- Department of Trade and Commerce OTTAWA, CANADA '?ifl8 fflOoT lflfer.PJ0. To My Fellow Citizens, In Every Part ol the Dominion. To Give Canadians Work, Buy Canadian Products i To-day the opportunity is yours to render your country a scrvicevbf inestimable value. And you can do it absolutely without cost to yourself in time or money. Exercise a little intelligent discrimination in your daily buying, and the thing is donel As you know, thousands upon thousands of your fellow Canadians are out of work. Unemployment, always a serious problem when it dCOUrs, is more serious than ever just now, not only because it has lasted ao long and been so widespread, bjit because of the unusually large numbers who, by reason of it, are being forced to suffer real hardships. And it is all so unnecessary, so easily preventable! Every year for the past few years Canada has been importing $800,000,000 worth of merchandise that she might just as well have been producing from her own mines, on her own farms, or in her own factories. Some things of course, likeraw cotton and raw rubber, she must import. But making due allowance for such items, the tact remains that $800,000,000 of her annual imports have been of a class or kind that she was quite capable of producing for herself. With the aid of statistics giving the annual value of Canadian factory production and the number of person employed therein, it requires little figuring to show that every $$,00 worth of goods turned out has meant a job for one person. Assuming that something close to that ratio would hold good as the average for all alettes of products, it follows that were we to produce in Canada the $800,000,000 worth of merchandise that we have been importing unnecessarily, we would be giving direct employment to 147,527 workers more than are now employed, to say nothing of the thousands of others to whom employment would come indirectly, as a result of this new stimulus to business in general. Now do you see how true it is that were we all to practise a little intelligent discrimination in our daily buying, our unemployment prdbtem would quickly and permanently disappear? Every time we buy an imported article, when we might just as easily have found a Canadian article to serve our purpose equally well, we are helping to do some fellow Canadian out of a job, and making the job of some foreign workman just that much more secure! Conversely, every time we purposely give the preference to a Canadian article, we are helping to create employment for Canadian workers, and doing our bit towards making Canada as a whole more prosperous! !' Think it over! Discuss it with your friends! Study it if you will not only from the standpoints of patriotism and charity, but from the standpoint of self-interest. The fart her you go into it the more convinced you will become that giving Canadian products a preference over foreign products sa wic buuimon sense imng to ao. ' Very sincerely yours, .bsialnup ; Il IvT ...... r1 ' - - I ! I Society Circus and Dance in Aid of 7 New Gymnasium Fund Minister of Trade and Commerce. Thursday and Friday, Oct. 9 & 10 Commencing at 8 p.m. Doors open at 7:30 and fun begins at once SPLENDID MUSIC, FUN, FROLIC AND DELIGHT: PLENTY OF SIDESHOWS Approximately 200 Prizes valued at $1000.00 Entrance fee o 50c includes chance in the biggest mammoth drawing 1 uuperi nas Known Tickets are an investment rather than a chance Illl. V