PAGE TWO The Daily News PRINCE BUPEKT BRITISH COLUMBIA Published Every Afternoon, Except Sunday, by Prince Rupert , Daily News, Limited, Third Avenue i!!5pF'. PULLE, - iiiWi'ginA'-Editor.ijjj J SUBSCRIPTION RATES j By mail to all other parts of British Columbia, the British Em- j pire and United States, paid In advance, per year 6.00 By mail to all other countries, per year .. . . 7.50 i Transient display advertising,. per inch, per Insertion .t....... l.-JV Classified advertising, per insertlon.'per wprd.,. .'.Vl...'. . .02? Legal notices, each insertion, perfagate l&e U fy j .........'.A Transient advertising on frontyare, pittjPih ; . . 2M Local readers,;per insertion, per iih'Q; A: . . . v . . . . . . Jft.i- City delivery, by mail or carrier, yearly period, paid in advance $5.00' For lesser period, paid in advance, per month 50 By mall to all parts of Northern and Central British Columbia, paid in advance lor yearly period ,. . 3.00- Or four months for - 1.00 Contract rates on application. Advertising and Circulation Telephone ...... ..98 Editor and Reporters' Telephone 86 . .Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations DAILY EDITION Monday. January 13, 1930 COLONEL HUM'S ADDRESS Last week Colonel Hiam gave an intensely interesting, address to the Women's Canadian Club in which he gave some of the inside history and workings of the League of Natipns. It was a great treat to Prince Rupert people to j get an insight Into . something far above the plane of petty! 9 it li i News of the Mines AROUND PRINCE RUPERT Taking Heavy Machincn Into MaWmv l!nnanza:'Rig Program Planned For Babine Silver King; Northern B. C. Helped Boost Production culty in transporting the machinery over the mountains Into the mine.! tDe Premier mine in the Portland The big compressor has already j canal district during 1929. accord-been loaded in anUclpatlon of the, ,ng to a preiimlnaty report on the trip. Ste horses will be required to, year's mining operations In British move this one piece of equipment , Columbia issued by Hon. W. A. Mc-over the long road on which a half Kenale, minister of mines. The bulk way camp has been established. A I of th nrnvw. .n- 1 .w Will MmnUl.J.III.1. , .... . uiui aiiurpvmng ouiiu ana a large quantity of other mining supplies will also be taken in. At the property itself the outlook b most hopeful with several larec bodie.s of ore opened up in recent U-r Mountain th. ft.. lng carried on at present, most of nrt!.iiiari-1. utu k J.the crew being engaged in prepara-' E ' TZ fum lor receiving and installing the anoth,r large ,ncreu,e ln the P pro " "y which will put de- - auction of the nroicfi vcioimicnt and mining on a power batia Th property has a large' The namp ,n th u quantity of proven ore of unusual (tongue, means "out of the eTodds plalnTd TonSon En ls in become a profitable producer. wlth avnrtlHlt, nhMMM . A shipment ol tures of the famous nearby river. rails and other ...... t. . . . ---l., """i ew appeareo in an - vuiijiiicjii. uincu ui ssmuners re- i, ,.. . cently for the Babine Silver Bn,'5S lThur Thursday, Say mine and was taken right out to the property. It ls.understood that - - -- 1 1 - - operations on this property will be resumed on a large scale with the 1 firs indication of spring arriving. (Lode gold output of the province, which shows a decline of some $700,-000 odd dollars, came largely from Pullcn Suggests Free Sites For New Industries The city has a great many vacant lots 'which are today unproductive " $nd useless. There is no demand for them. I suggest this: It I am elected. T will urge upon the city council the desirability of laying down a pollcv of encouraging nw ntfn-cempetitive industries by giving them a choice of free si Us Jroru among the lots owned 'by the city, subject to such restrictions as shall be thought wise. In this matter I wwild co-operate with the Power Company, so that by our united efforts we may be able to make conditions such that the city may sell the remainder of the lots it owns, that the credit of the, city may be Improved, that local people may find employment and that there may be general progress all around. Even If we get no industries, we shall have advertised ourselves as a progressive city and we shall have the satisfaction of having done what we can to Improve conditions. (Advt. H. F. PULLBN. municipal pontics. : In an isolated place we are apt to get narrow in our; rtf-ciir friTrl r yievvs and fail to realize what it means to have An organ-, (.fliP I IT LO world wars. The women of the Canadian Club are to be congratulated on their activities along this line. It is to be hoped tjjey will carry on in spite of difficulties. SMALLER NAVIES SUKE It is now practically certain that there will be a great reduction of armaments within the next few years and especially in naval armaments. The countries of the world are slowly coming to a realization of the foolishness of spending money in huge sums for what they term "protection." It is a protection that does not protect. Navies do not protect from war and they do not protect women and children from untold sufferings. In the past they have been necessary and even yet there must ... be protection , : i. iL. i i i j. ii. i i' ii against, me lawless, dm as me worm comes gradually to a IS ACTIVE! Former Topley Company is rushing Work on Palling Property With Three Shifts Three shift are now busily engaged In development work on Three Star Mineral Group at Palling, which was optioned by F. H. Taylor and has been turned over to the Topley-RichlleW Mining Company, for further develdpriierit. by Mr. Taylor. ' ; !' B. A. Smith, who has.hadjrnanjij years mining experience., says .it realization of the uselessness of war the nations will scrap , 1 kned x Ty . lilgftV -ivjio. vc uuuc gxauuuujr ua auiiieia of subdividing his farm into town-IB ItSiavor grOWS, i Istte property. (in the "Preliminary Report of UNITED STATES OF THE WORLD ! Mining Operations. 1929", issued, by There is nothing unreasonable about expecting thatjtne ,ProTlnciai Government some day there will be a United States of the worfd just ' foIlow,ng fa the rePor m , as there is today a United States of America. There isjpr Ster.hl8 no thought of war between those states. Troops have to discovered during the year by v. uv iueu uui. ULX-asiunany to queu a not, DUt tnat IS not a Schjelderup, P. Sananes and K. clash between states but a purely local condition. So in Nyvn. and wa optioned by p. time the nations of the world will lpnm r.n Uva tno-nrlior in I11- Taylor, who later turned his op- Kichntt,united by ties o Wend8hip and ready ?SZ2SS?IJZ edtn Oiner. Iltip Mountain tu-n mlli n,,tV.at nf Palling Station and some ten miles west of Bums Lake. "At the time of inspection on September 22 very little work had been done and exposures were therefore quite insufficient to form any definite opinion, beyond the fact that the showing of chal-copyrlte certainly merited further work. The country rock ts volcanic, which has been subject to shearing, and at the time of examlna- iir . , . . tlon it seemed likely that the zone Work is about to commence on the , big . tusk , of moving . of shearing might extend to a heavy machinery from Telkwa to the Babine Bonanza width of 100 feet, the zone strik: mine. To facilitate this, men have been at work lately on i,n& about N-80 degrees e. (mag.)', the long series of switchbacks near the mine and these iCnalcopyrlte and sPularlte oc- KjSK i01' Tt faHen In fc'ViTS nPSt inferred .....v.,, uuw uae rtiicduv utun run over ine,that the copper mineralization Is road and it is not anticipated there will be any great diff i-1 necessarily 100 feet in width. The best exposure shows a heavy mineralization of chalcopyrite and a small amount of specularite. These minerals, together with quartz, form the cementing material between the rock fragments. Exposures were Insufficient to form an opinion as to width. A selected the Sullivan and Premier proper-1 sample assayed: Gold, trace; sil-ties. Copper output for the yearlver, 1.5 oz. to the ton; copper, 6.6 established a nw record because! per cent.'' of the greater tonnages mined by he oranby Co. at Anydx and Cop- WEATHER REPORT Prince Rupert Clear, calm; temperature, 28. Haysport dear, light wind. 27. Terrace -Clear, calm. 18, Rosswood Clear, oalm. 14. AnyoxClear, calm, 11. Stewart-Clear ioalm, 24. Port Simpsons North wind, clear, 28. Hazelton Clear, slight wind, 10 below. Smithers Clear, calm, 1 below. Burns Lake Cloudy calm. Vanderhoof Clear, calm, 18 below. Eighth Cabin Clear, calm. Atlin Clear, calm, 12 below. Carmacki Foggy, calm, 30 TnEtA!tT NF.W3 ' , . 'i-'.'i- . FREE TRADE IS PROPOSED : This Is Only Condition; Which Lord Beaverbrook Will Support Ex-Premier Baldwin LONDON, Jan. 13. Lord Beaver entry British manufacturers in return for advantages in the British market over agricultural produce from outside the Empire. STOCK QUOTATIONS (CourKwv of B. D. JoTinicon On. Ltd. ) B. C. Silver, 1.00, 1.20. Bayview. ifr, 2. Big Missouri, 62, 70. Cork Province, 4, 5V4. Cotton Belt, 16, 30. Duthie Mines, 46. 50. George Copper, 3.15, Z20. Golconda, 90, 95. Grandvlew, I4i, 15. Independence, 4ft, 5. Indian, 25. Intern. Coal & Coke, 25, 35. Kootenay Florence, 6, 8. L. It L Nil, 2. Lucky Jim, 5, 7. MohAWk, lifc, 2. Morton Woolsey, 7, 8 ft. Marmot River Gold; Nil, 20.' Marmot Metals, IVi. 2. 1 National Silver. 6; Nil Noble Five, 3.6. 40. Oregon Copper, 10ft, lift. Pend Oreille 3.70,. 3.75 Premier, 1.53, li5. Porter-Idaho 31, 35. Reeves Macdonald, U8, 1.42, .Rufus-Argenta, 8, 9. Ruth-Hope. Nil, 25.' Sliver Crest, 5, 5 ft, Silverado, 30," 35. :S Silversmith, 5, 7.' Snowflake, 12ft, 13 Vi.' Sunloch. 68, 70. Topley Richfield, Nil, .5. Whitewater. Nil, 22. Woodbine, lft, 2. Oils A. P. Con., 1.707-1.71. Calmont, U0, W2. Dalhousie, 1.79, Nil. Devenlsh, 15, Nil. Home, 8.20, 8.30. Mayland, 1.70, Nil. McLeod, 2.60, Nil. United, 78 ft, 80. Hargal, 1.10. Iil2. Freehold, 70, Nil. TORONTO STOCKS (Oourtnr of s. D. Johiuton Oo. Ltd.) Amulet; 1.64, :lco:; ' t .Dome, 7.00, 7;15.; ' Falconbridge, 4.60, 4.05! ; ' Hudson Bay, 10.25, 10.50. International Nickel, 35.80, 35.95. Imperial Oil, 26.50, 26.75. Mandy, 30, 32. Mining Corporation, 2.86, 2.90. Mclntyre, 1650, Nil. Noranda, 36.45, 36.50. NIpisslng. 1.56, U9. Sherritt Oordon, 21, 2.93. Sudbury Basin, 3.40, 3.45. Teck Hughes, 5.10. 5.15. Treadwell Yukon. 6.00, 6.50. Ventures, 2.70, 2.75. Wright Hargraves, 155, 156. Canadian Legion -Has Heavy Lead Billiard Match In a postponed Billiard League game Saturday evening. T. G. Pylc (Canadian Legion) defeated J. IUlfman (Grotto) by a score of 250 to 222, bringing the total for the fixture, with one game yet, to go, 974 to 785 in favor of the Legion. The game yet to he played ls J. Andrews (Grotto) vs. O. P. Tinker (Canadian Legion). ENGLAND WINS CHRISTCHURCH, N.Z., Ji.n. 13: eeikirk Cloudy, calm, 40 below. ' England won the first cricket Dawson Clear, light wind', below. 30 match from NeW Zealand by eight wickets. 4.44 I ENGLISH HEADY TO ABOLISH SUBMARINE SHEFFIELD. Eng. f Great Britain Is Jan. 13: prepared Under. to aeree at the forthcoming naval disarmament conference to the complete abolition of the submarine, declared Rt. Hon. A. V. Alexander, First ; Lord of the Admiralty, in an 1 ?. address before his constituents , the , leadership u. of .u the n Conservative ft i . . . - ncre t loaay' ! party of Ex-Premier Stanley Bald-IT . i . ............ ..." T win u mp leaner win aaopi a piai I form of free trade within the Em-jpire which Beaverbrook Is now earnestly encouraging. Beaverbrook makes this statement in a letter to the Morning Post and at the same time threat- ens to oppose any parliamentary candidate, no matter what his ' party. If he Is an opponent of the Empire free trade policy. ! The Post, In a discussion of Beaverbrook's plan, suggests that Beaverbrook should go to Canada I and see whether the Dominion is favorable to such a policy. He Is ; urged to assure himself whether the FIELDING WON BOUT Scored Two Knock-Downs Over Wildcat Carter in Saturday Night Bout at Victoria TRIALSET WEDNESDAY Moriday, January 11 1fl33 Many Casualties, Including Thr Solloway and Mills ltd Be Charged j; ,Pcaths, and Severe Property Jointly in Calgary Provincial" Police Court Another Gale On British Islands .Damage LONDON, Jan. 13. Many rnsual. EDMONTON, Jan. 13. When I. ties ana severe damage were rt W. C. Solloway and Harvey Mills, ported early today as a resiil oi Toronto stock brokers, face Provin- ,'severe gale which struck the British clal Police Magistrate Saunders inles'on Sunday. There wew thew Calgary on Wednesday only one deaths from falling trees and ;igjj. charge will be laid against them. ; boards. That will be a common law charge I of conspiring together to do civlUfc;;::: wrong to divers' citizens. Mills is now en route to Calgary . t 1 1 r. -1 1 ...II Y I ' Hum luroniu, wiuie ouuuway win leave Vancouver tonight for there. Mills is in custody of E. O. Burnett, Ontario police Inspector, while Solloway, who U being nominally detained by the British Columbia police in his suite at the Hotel Vancouver, will be accompanied by VICTORIA, Jan. 13. Scoring two j Commissioner W. C. Bryan of the knock-downs in the first round, one Alberta Provincial Police, for no count and the other for a ' . 1 nilcu CH1IK AWUIIII 1 ICIUUIfti V ' . - ... - ZTTH1 from D,"ug t0 g?nI : toria lightweight, gained a decision Solloway was busy over the week Mart in the Moon Jake says he's very little usr ,, newspapermen and yet he wic a a wicked pen himself. They always draw their pay For thinking up sensation They also draw, alackadav On their Imaginations over Wildcat Carter. Seattle negro. ! end in his hotel suite here carrying ' th . nthln(r tn rift . ,. J'w night. -Roy Baker, referee, gave Fielding ujree rounds and Carter two, with five even. ST. STEPHEN HAS BAD FIRE Loss as Result of Conflagration in New Brunswick Town Placed At ?250,ew ST. STEPHEnTnTb., Jan. 13. The business section of this town was swept by fire on Sunday, the loss being estimated at a quarter of a million dollars. Seven buildings ln the retail business section were burned or seriously damaged. They contained thirteen stores and three tenements. . CRIBBAGE January 13, I.O.O.F. vs. Seal Cfeve Sawmill: Grotto vs. L.O.L.; Moose vs. Cold Storage: Eagles vs. K, of C; Operators vs. C.N.R.A.; New Empress vs. P R. Hotel. way. Mills & Co. The company's offices were open here and elsewhere today as usual. Lillooet Indian Frozen To Death William Porter, Aged Eighty Years,, Loses His Life on the Trail LILLOOET Jan. 13 The hnriv nf VANCOUVER, Jan. 13: Wheat was quoted on the local exchange today at $1-1 ft. We are told that when Jehovah created the worId he. saw tjjat it was good. What would he say now? Bernard Shaw. I wonder5 how many people ur saving their Christmas prefer give away on the occasion of the next wedding. Jake ls still bemoaning th" f. that he sent a five dollar pr- i to a person who sent him a "i .: for a nickel Christmas card Every little vote, sir Is a token all its own: Every one that's marked will Be Just a seed that's sown Wllltem Porter. 80-year-old Indian eIcct,oe At thU 7J k ; . : I There'll be defection, it lull WIVCII Itll UllJB au w uavvi two miles to the Bridge River reservation. He had wandered off the trail and was frozen to death. VANCOUVER WHEAT And some will wonder wlr. And some will simply si i In undertone. TIIEX AND NOW Time was -when women used dress to make women Jealou ' they dress to make other u : (Jealous. Montreal Gazette Let us treat the men and wur,:r welft TTa5t"tfiiht as'lf the ft err real; perhaps they are- Emn aaonaa0Dooaoooooo0ooDO0aH30oo0ODoooo0OOioooooooooooocooooooooiKiooooooD v That old troublesome word "IF" ONCE upon a time most people were worried a lot' by "If." A few still are. You'can tell tliqm if you listen to them when they'll shopping. '.,' - .-. .. "''It you are sure that rugyon't'.fadQ.-:,.'. " :. . , "U you're positive this is pure wool ..." ' : "If you'll guarantee these eggs as fresh . "If you think this washing machine will work : abetter than the othor one . . ." " ; " "If if if The trouble with such people is they don't read the.advertisements. People who do read them do not have to depend upon "ifs" in their buying. They know what they are getting, because they have the definite, printed, reiterated assurances of the ad vertiser. Most people nowadays do read the advertisements. They shop intelligently and quickly. They V"iT . , knpw Bef orehand what they want, why they want it, how much they will have to pay, and where to go. Intelligent buyers substitute "know" for '!if" by reading the advertisements MMWS.VMWVVM-nr---------,MVMWWWWVMVMMMVN.MMWMMMVVWWWMVPgOPOaOaa0P0a0000000