is PAGE TWO The Daily News PRINCE RUPERT - BRITISH COLUMBIA Published Every Afternoon, Except Sunday, by Prince Rupert Daily News, Limited, Third Avenue H. F. PULLEN - - - MWaginKlEjjjtofjjj fjjjj f( SUBSCRIPTION KATES By mail to all other parts of British Columbia, the British Em- . pire and United States, paid in advance, per year 6.00 By mail to all other countries, per year 7.50 By mail to all parts of Northern and Central British Columbia, paid in advance for yearly period .......... t.. ............. 8.00 Or four months for I.99 For lesser period, paid in advance, per. month .50 City delivery; by mail or carrier, yearly period, paid in advance, ;$5)0 Transient advertising on front page, per inch 2.80 Local readers, per insertion, per line ........ f 25 Transient display advertising, per inch, per insertion 1.40 Classified advertising, per insertion, per word vy. .02 Contract rates on application. Advertising and Circulation Telephone Editor and Reporters Telephone Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations DAILY EDITION look tor Tony's picv.r on top of fvy ;.. , Said ryw litre A tKK.klt living rjflj for ror'ti binge to t will r.f s:" to mny d-drew up 1. request. PREMIER WAS RIGHT Anheuser-Busch .98 .86 Wednesday, May 21, 1930. Premier Mackenzie King was right When he refused to sanction the passing of money over from the Federal Government to be expended by provincial administrations. Each one has its own work to do as provided bv the con stitution and the work should not be relegated to others es pecially to those who have different views on how to spend it. What is needed is not spasmodic relief but a system of un employment insurance that will be operative all the time and will prevent conditions such as have been seen in the past. All governments of all countries are considering this matter now. LADY SQUIRES ELECTED Newfoundland has elected its first lady member in the person of Mrs. Squires, wife of Premier Squires. The selection is doubly interesting because only a few years ago Lady Squires was a strong opponent of votes for women. The Womens Franchise League endeavored to secure the vote during the former administration of Sir Richard Squires, 1919-1923, but he opposed the bill, and, on his suggestion, it was not defeated, but criven six months' hnist Outside of the legislature, the activities of the Women's Franchise League met with no more vigorous opponent than the lady who is now exercising the privileges givn to her sex by the succeeding administration of Hon. W. S. Munroe, 1924-1928. Women have often been reproached for the instability of their opinions, but we do not know why they cannot be allowed to change their minds for gooa causes, and this, no doubt, is the reason that Lady squares was elected. (At Iht ARABS put it J and it means. "h best money can buy." When Mother Nature can iuppl better materials and science better methods, then and not until then can you obtain something better than Budweiser Barley. Malt Syrup. No adulterants or fillers. No artificial coloring or flavors'. No substitutes Guaranteed 100 per cent pure. . . Aged 3 Montht in the Making Budweiser Barley-Malt Syrup LIGHT OR DARK - RICH IN BODY - NOT BITTER Dittributort; Frank H. Wiley, 1114 Hamilton St., Vancouver, B. ANHEUSER-BUSCH - ST. LOUIS AUo Maker oj Butch Extra Dry Ginger Ate ' BUMS fourth and fifth levelst All work at the mine was suspended on Janu ary 15 last pending developments on the B. C. Silver property." Regarding the B. C. Silver, the engineer's report says: "Vigorous development has been carried out on, No. 6 level with encouraging results, five payable ore chutes having been f encountered. A well mineralized; tfjne was encountered in 676 cross- lit at 145 to 170 feet from the main 37 drift. A five-foot sarriDle at 137 : p 162 feet assayed $25. This would ! appear a De tne aownwara exien -1 s!6n cf the ore encountered on the h lrd level." Last summr an electro-magnetic urvey was made of a number of i properties in the Salmon River dis-! frlct including the Premier, B. C. i jjllver, Sebakwe. Cobalt, Bush Con- j g&lidated and National Silver," u. u- uusn, wen Known tsiew-1 5'nies ft mining man. "This survey ihows a large mineralized zone on Premier ground southwest of the I mill, this being an extension of the ' Stain Premier ore zone which will I E'robably be fully prospected with-j i the next few years. The ore zone : as followed through the B. C. and southern portion of Sebak-' we and showed several fair-sized i ore bodies on the foot and hanging Wall sides of the ore zone. Two other quartz porphyry zones running parallel to and west of the Premier ore zone were tested, particularly the one furthest to the west which runs through the Cobalt. This latter proved to be the largest ore WHY SUFFER FROM YOUR LIVER? Why be handicapped with untightly Notches on the face, eyei with yellow tinge and that tired and languid feci ing? This indicates a torpid liver Headache, Dizzintft and Bilionsneis surely follew, You must stimulate your lazy liver, start the bile flowing with Carter's Little Liver Pills. They also act as a mild laxative, purely vegetable, free from calomel and poisonous drugs. Small, esy to swallow, andliot LCit forming. They sre not a purgative that cramps or pains, unpteatant after" effect follow inff, on the contrary a good tonic. AH DruggUti 25c and 75c red pkgs. Get pays. Tilt QKfLY NEWS Wednesda - lu. . .V M:. News of the Mines AROUND PRINCE RUPERT Premier Sixth Largest Gold Producer in Canada Report of B. C, Silver- Electro Magnetic .. Surveys on Salmon River m RELIGIOUS EDUCATION Program of Big Convention in Toronto in Jane 'Provides 1 For liroadenlng Out . Premier ranked as the sixth largest gold producer in1 Toronto. May 20: Deveiop-Cahada during 1,929 according to official estimates com-Wnt of the Sunday school move piled by S. J. Cook, chief of the mining, metallurgical and ;me2t lnt a reat church P"m chemical branch of the Dominion Bureau of Statistics at efie sSeierilhragTnda Ottawa. Total gold production for the Dominion at 1.914.-L, OOQiihe' ounces valued at $39,585,000 gained 1.2 per centime international convention of oyer the preceding year and Ontario was the principal pro- Religious Education, to be held in filler nf that mpfn vip dino- n nno 1 Kfift 1QK fino nunnaa Toronto June zs-i next,, rne con- In the order of their output, the leading gold mines in Canada for the year were: Hollm-'- ': ger, Lakeshon?, Teck Hughes, Mcln-, 2one tested m Hip district and was tyre, Dome, Premier, Wrlght'Har : found to hre of feet wide, greaves and Noranda. , containing six veins from 20 to 40 ! feet wide and running through a Though apparently completely I number of properties in the dls- ventkm will celebrate the one-hundred and fiftieth anniversary of th Sunday school. The memory of Robert Raikea, founder of the movement, will be honored by the unveiling of a statue a replica of that in the Embankment Oardens, in London, Bnghmd. Delegates are satisfied with an development work trlct. The northern part of the Se-!expected f'rom aH rU of to date on the B. a Silver and Se- ibakwe and Bath Consolidated show j awJ tbe Unlted stetM to th Selukwe Gold Kilning it Finance ably, to a numbs: A cross veins in-r Co., in their annual report, give no tercepting the oie zmie. The large .Inkling zz to That policy will even- .vein were found . br well mine'r-fyaliy be followed In putting these. allzed but the ac ual vp.Iups can two mines on a producing basis. i only be ascertain ci by putting Rumors that the company hid : down a few diamond drill hoies and pome to an agreement with the (.assaying Jhe Premief Gold Mining Co. are shown ihonstrattd that to -be Unfounded as the directors 1 south quartz porp:ii y ore zones eon-Iperely reaffirm what has already tein the value and that the large been said in the Premier report: 'ore bodies occur nnr the intersec- No basis acceptable to the Selukwe . tions of the cross v"ns and. finally. Oold Mining & Finance Co. Ltd. has that no one comp. ii this district Jieen found that would at the same i has a monopoly w thf ore audit'.-.." time be beneficial to Premier." Of the Sebakwe" property the company inglneer reports: "Cross-'cuttlng in ) south-wsterly direction on the sixth level encountered a strong slliclfied zone at 375 feet from the lhaft. One sample here assayed $11.30 over a width of five feet but' mineralization was not persistent: throughout the width cf the zone sxposed. Some commercial values were encountered for a distance of 1 25 feet In the southerly drift on the one up to a pent where a large fault was encountered. No sillclfl-cation or mineralization was found beyond this fault. The face oi this drift at roughly 150 feet from the main cross-cut is on the edge of the same broken and faulted country that was encountered on the fifth level. A considerable amount of drifting and cross-cutting was done on the north side of the 601-foot cross-cut but no favorable country was exposed. The zone encountered on this level is appar ently the downward extension of the main ore body exposed on the with representative Religious Education leaders from Europe, Asia and othnr parts of the world. DenMru? with the features of the convention program the executive cr 5in-ilf.ee points out the gathering will lsn rplphrat thp nln(wnth This survey de-! tf-nnlal of the great corrfmisslon. he north and .n.t.,i,,.. the Ad. nuoing habit. I( "But the program will be definitely forward looking," the announcement goes on. "The Oreat commission remains as yet unfulfilled, and the Sunday School, with all its noble achievements, must -jaedily give place to a great church nrosrram of Christian religious education " The vision of the conven- A. m M tion will be the development of Robert Raikes' idea into a move ment that will touch the lives of; ill ages of man, from the cradle to the evening of life., Rev. Charles E. Raven, canon of Liverpool Cathedral and one of; the King's chttifldlhs; rtn addri8!.ttfe .: convention at one of the evening sermons. ; Prominent leaders from unlvetsl-' ties will speak on the main pro- gram, including Luther A. WClgle, Dean of Yale Divinity School; Theodofe O. Soares, Professor of Religious Education. Chicago Uni- j versity, and George A. Coa, until his ' recent retirement. Professor of Religious education- in Teachers jl : lege, Columbia. Uhlyrtslty.'-Sorrnan' E. Richardson, of the Presbyterian Theological Seminary, Chicago, will take the leadership of adult wotk in the convention. H. Skelton Smith, of Yale Divinity School, will lead the study group in supervl-; sion arid leadership training. Among the prominent clergymen on the program will be Rev. Dr. Er- , nest F. Tittle, Evanston, III.; Rev. Dr. Lyon Harold Hough, Montreal, Dan.; Rev. Dr. John McNeill. Toronto, Can.; Rev. Canon, H. J. Cody,' Toronton; Rev. Dr. A. W. Beavon,' Rochester, N.Y.; and Bishop E. D ! Moulon, of the MeViodtot ItylScoffel Church, South. Russell Colgate is president of) the International Council and Re-, rt W. Horftdns chairman of the' executive eontmlttee. Union freighter Chtlkoot, with Capt. W. W. Kfounee in command.! wi(l leave, Vancouver tomorrow with a cargo of freight for this San I Summer CoTnl Quick Relief from any Cold, t Sore Throat, Headache of Other Pain DC-NT treat a ! lightly! The! summer cold can in : dangerous illnesn it tablet or two of Am ' a cold as quickly -you will get immHia' the headache that y If there's a sore thr 2 tablets in 4 UhU andtrargle. Tbusdw the true value of A without it in am year. It's always headaches, neurit) . a long iitt of a h proven direetiuim i-, . Aspirin does not 1 or upset the -m everywhere have if Trace u.nK nj, SPIRIN the freighter Chiliw.i k w:,nhi to be withdrawn from port and is due here early nent he of the pres week. The Chilkoot is relieving annual overhaul. ILLUMINATION "XyfELLOW candle light . . . so kind to beauty, so unkind to the cyesl Yet candles were long considered to be the ultimate in illumination.Thc past cen tury, however, brought us kerosene and the modern oil lamp, then illumination by gas. Surely these would remain supreme! But this swift age of science finally harnessed electricity, and with an endless supply of power flowing continu The onhcrn Electric Company mamfeaurtt tn telephone and itt accessories, wins and cables for the transmission of power, fit alam systems, public address systems, talking motion picture equipment, and also distributes well Ipioum brands ofelectricalhouuholdappli' ances of all lrjnds. ously in her rivers, Canada can become the best lighted country in the world. The Northern Electric organization contributes to the better lighting of the Dominion by manufacturing In its plants many of the miles of wire and cable used to convey the current from power plant to electric bulb; and by distributing through its branches, a large quantity of electric lamps and fixtures of reputable make. MrAetff Eecrc J COMPANY Li MIT CO A National Electrical Service iSd robSon street VANCOUVER, us w '..1 -ill "TVlCf .if: la