PAUE l'WO kr yi i. usun c, u frtw ov Covered With Bolts on Arms, Back and Neck yui Mirjirtt Higglm, Dtkm, 0t., vriUti "I wu eortrd witi boilf Oft trmi, fic tad ntck. J um1 plMttri au4 cttr rustdiet with bi) rtialu. My attention wu dwm t Burdock Blood BltUrt, to I dt-ti&H t fti t bottU. Th retail! wert mtrTtlloiu, 11 in no timt tho boil Ltd toafltttlj dLmppcuod, and mj skia wu tlttstr and fiwhcr thaa nr. THE DAILY NEWS. PRINCE lUJPERT . BRITISH COLUMBIA Publlshert Every Afternoon, Except Sunday, by Prince Rupert Dally News, Limited, Third Avernu K. F. PULL EN Managing-Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES City delivery, by mall or carrier, yearly period, paid In advance 5.00 For lesser perierth, paid In advance, per month ..,., .50 By mall to alrparts of Northern and Central British Columbia, paw in advance for yearly period , 3.00 By mail to alt other parts of British Columbia, the British Em pire and united States, paid In advance, per year $6.00 By mall to an other countries, per year 9.00 ADVERTISING RATES Transient display advertising, per Lnchk per Insertion Classified advertising, per insertion, per word Local readers, per Insertion, per line f Legal notices, each insertion, per agate line ... Contract rates on application. Editor and Reporters' Telephone ....86 Advertising and Circulation Telephone 98 Member ol Audit Bureau of Circulations DAILY EDITION Our Prices Will Please You Come In and let us show you how little it costs (o equip your far with GOODHICII SILVEK-TUWNS, A complete Garage Service Distributors Dodge Cars and Trucks RUPERT MOTORS Night Calls: Phone 1C1 1.40 Sit .25 .15 Monday. June 22, 1931 WORK FOR THE WORKLESS If the government of a country during bad times curtails alljexpenditures to the very limit, discharges thousands of employees, raises the taxes so as to take more than ever from the very decreased incomes of the people who are earning, then bad times will become worse. Nothing else can happen. Business people suffer, wages are beaten down and many people are idle and almost starving. The duty of any administration is to meet a bad times situation with remedies rather than to join the hue and cry to make things worse. Just now the Bennett government is in that situation. It "has done its worst in the way of making bad worse, at .any rate, in the west. It has taken no step to alleviate the difficulty except to vote a paltry twenty million dollars, part of which it held back when it was needed. However, there is still time to repair some of the harm that has been done. Premier Tolmie has made some suggestions which are in the rigfct direction. He has made proposals, some at least of which would be beneficial. The next move must come from the federal government. If Mr. Bennett has courage and vision he may make a name for himself as an able administrator who was not afraid to move vvhen the need called. It Is not enough to sit back and build the trade fence higher against the outside world, meanwhile filching from the taxpayers to pay his deficits. The need today is for a constructive policy to take care of the unemployed. We suggest the building of the western outlet to the Peace River as one such national undertaking for the benefit of the west. The east is being cared for by the protection granted their factories for which the west pays. Liberal co-operation wth the provincial government on trunk highways would help a lot. Money is cheap today and millions are crying for investment. Let the men who are crying for work use the money that is prying for investment, doing work that is a crying need in the west and the whole pfpblem is solved. H 1 U H A SIGN OF THE TIMES A Cloveland man gays he will know In future how to predict hard times. He writes: "Horeaf ter, I shall pay no attention to car loadings, bank clearings, crops or commodity prices. I shall concentrate on just one indicatorthe rise and fall of fools. When I look about mo and see young men half my age, driving high-priced cars, leaving their offices at three o'clock in the afternoon, boasting that they made $2o,000 last year, and exchantrint? tins irnml fnr n th ci---cj " 0 - " .'v.... uunui d uu lilt; week-end; when I see boys rolling in money, boys whom I wouldn t hire to wash the rollers in my printing plant J Hiuu "fcmt siuin rusn 10 my oanK and i sell II every share of stock I own. God never intended wiut iwis mwum mane a Deuer living man nonest workers. Whenever a situation arises in which they do, I know that it is contrary to the fundamental laws of the universe and cannot last." Phone 5G6 LOCAL ITEMS Mrs, J. Barrowclough. wife of tN purser of the steamer Prince ies, l, a passenger making the round rip on that vessel which Is ! In port today. WtofwiMV J n ov 'l m l w y i may decide to relocate here. Mrs. George Sellg of Ketchikan was a passenger aboard the sr. Princess Charlotte Saturday after noon bound for a trip to Seattle known American halibut boat THE DAILY NPWS Monday, June 22 irj, LETTER BOX riSlIEKM AX IS CKITICAL Editor. Daily News': " I I read in your paper, statement from Mr. Lord resenting the print-; Jug' of salmon arrivals m Pjince, Mrs.. Sid Peters of Anyox. wot. Rupert. This U nws of (mem to has been on a trip to Vancouver us all and I believe should be prin-and elsewhere in the south, is a ted. Perhaps Mr. Lord may resent passenger aboard the ss. Prince this letter from non-union man. i Charles today returning to the,. In the first rilace. what kind of a j smelter town. lunknistheN.B.0.8JA.? A few men I meet on little or no notice and de-!l After an absence of severalielare a strike, thus putting hun-j i years in Portland, Joseph Rowait dreds cf men out of work. What arc; Well known pioneer of this city. the heads of a union for if a dozen has returned to Prince Rupert. a j members can call a strike any hv Itr Rnuratt Ho, time? I, myseir, ua off for iz days until I heard a few facts from North. Island. We were told that North Island men were a.11 out on strike which we found untrue. A man arrived here from that camp and told well1" ot em aU tetm out for three Mr?. Sellg is the wife of a E. lleaphy, general manager of the Los Angeles Lumbar Product Co, is a passenger aboard the is. Prince Charles today bound for Buckley Bay. His company owni the Massett Timber Co. sawmill at Buckley Bay. days. The first men 10 start fishing were union boats and when they arrived in harbor there was a little noise and those fishing were made to take down their flags and then most of the fleet went out including a large number of union members, which accounts for the Cold Storage and Edenshaw bringing in such good trips. No doubt Mr. Lord does not liko, th fapt nrlntri hut In fairness J. B. Woodworth, Well known Lflni think nw of interest should! Vancouver mining man. was a ;fliwavg be minted .If there had been 1 passenger aboard the Princess ja good at salmon at Squadree; Charlotte Saturday afternoon r-! there would have been no strike as i turning south after a trip into the the man who seems to be respon-! Taku River country to examine 4 property there James Dunbar of the accounting staff of the Premier mine, who has been on a trip to Wrangell and the Stikine River country, arrived here on the Prince George thii morning and will proceed to Premier later In the week. Lloyd Monroe, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Monroe, sailed Saturday afternoon on the Princess Charlotte for Nanalmo where he will ota his parents, who left for there a couple of months ao. i;oyd had slble for this strike could not afford to lay off last" July when a meeting j was called when the cohoe were 25 i cents. He had quite a few dollars in 1 his pocket and didn't see fit to lose ; ten to twenty dollars a day. ' Mr. Lord congratulated Ketchi-! kan on their going out on strike a bit previous. Their meeting only took place at 7:30 on the thirteenth i and his wire was prior to that. What he means by the figures of eight' and four seems a' mystery as we ! have never this year received lessj than eight and six. i If the union took a leaf out of the Alaska t rollers book and handled remained here to complete hUitnelr wen right, thing would be year's studle at the Prince Ruper-idl'ferent- ,ve m chance High School. P vole y ballot arid common sense , . fbbuld have reigned. , A party of Roman Catholic f " Takmf ,nto ""erotlon thej Church . nuns Including Sisters rno,e world's sIumD-the fWiermen j wary Am arose and Miry Antonn "v - of weU 83 a eooi, ' one' Dawjon and Slstm Mary Corde f , , Jesus, Eulalia and Rosalinda at Yours truly. JnnMll nar thrnnoh tVi ,Uu I '" rUK . r ....uu., ...v v.. 1 the Princess Charlotte 8aturdr, afternoon bound south. THey will spend a vacation in Victoria. Bringing north 50 passengers. four of whom disembarked nerv i C.P.R. steamer Princess Alice. Cap-! tain Thomas Cliff, arrived in port at 8:45 this morning from Vancou-1 ver anc sailed at 1L o'clonk fo-Skagway and other Alaskan pointi whence she will return here south bound next Saturday afternoon. William Gore, well known To ronto consulting engineer, and Mrs Gore were passengers aboard tb-?! Princess Alice this morning golmr north to make the round trip to I Skagway. C.N.R. steamer Prlnc! Charles. Capt. Dan McKlnnon. ar 1 rived in port on t me at 11:30 this! morning from Vancouver and will ran at 8 odok this evening lor Stewart, Anyox and Massett Inlet points whence she will return her.' ' next Thursday southbound. Twenty Years Ago In Prince Rupert June 22, 1911 Heavy sentences were imposed in Victoria by Mr. Justice Denis Murphy on rioters who participated in the "Battle of Kelly's Cut," staged recenuy In Prince Rupert. One foreigner, who used a gun, was sentenced to three years, five got two years for rioting while four others were given a year apiece. Hon. William Templeman, federal minister of mines, left on the Camo-sun for Stewart In the course of his tour of the coast. Yesterday a visit l wub kiu iu wic murine suiiion ana I quarantine hospital on Dlgby Island. The decomposed body of William Tully. former engineer on river boats, was found stranded on some rocks near Mile 21 by Special provincial Constable Godson and M. Ingalls on the launch Cloyah. Have you palo your suDscrlptlon to the Dally News this year? Victory Cove. B.C. Wwvdi Anotwtl with dilution (TheNalioa'tLmtiTt) B22 SUIT PRICES REDUCED Any Material you choose made to your measure. QQfi Prices up from VOU M. T. LEE CO. 323 3rd Ave. W. Phone CC3 TELEPHONE 657 VAI.KNTIN DAHIV FOK SKF.ICNA KtlAMt Creamery Butter & Cottage Cheese vnv.m i'ASTt',imiZEi milk and chi:am daily Erlr Delivery Throuslioql the City Prepare Now For til Ik r rince '4 Rupert's Fall Fair This year the Prince Rupert Fair Hoard is offering Ribstanlial prizes for the best individual farm and garden exhibit. There is a special prize for floral displays. Several new classes have been added to the flower show section. The tone of the fair will be improved by the exclusion of the ordinary sideshow touts, the sideshows being mostly in the hands of the Hotary and Gyro Clubs this year. Growers thoughout the district are cordially Invited to exhibit this year and visit the city if possible during Fair Week. Watch the Daily News for details, both before and after and during the time of the Fqir. , Capital, J 36,000,000 Rest and Undivided Profits, J()8,947,047 Total Assets, 826,96937 r' ' BOARD OF DIRECTORS ' f v . PRESIDENT Sw ChajuuGosdon. G.B.1. Ouirm4 Dominion Ttxlilt Cemfny, LimiteJ 1 VICE-PRESIDENTS H. R. Dhummond. Esq. Major-Gen. tub Hon. S. C Mewsus.n, dua Doctor Carudi & Do. VicPittiJlTI Ihion fi . minion Sitr Co., Limittd Erie Mtrtfi Corfetthe Six Fredemcx Woiiams-Tayica. Farmrr General Mdiurr, Rink cf MontrtA D. Fomes Angus. Esq. Qwinrun in Cnd&, SltnJarJ Lift Atturanet Company LT.-CouHERBERTMoL$ON,CVta,MG PrtitJeot, Slolson't Brtwtrf, LimitrJ Harold Kennedy, Esq. Dirteltr, Jofmsem'f (thtilei) Company G B. Fraser, Esq. Dirtetor, CittnJntUs, UmittJ Tug Hon. Henry Gockshutt Chairman and Prnident, CockJiult Plow Company, JJmiitJ E W. Beattyesq., K. C Chobman anj PmiJmt, Canadian Patift Railway Company Gcn. Sir Arthur Currib. Principal, McQUl Vnnrrnty F, E. Meredith. Esq. k.c Panutrr, of Meredith, lUtden, Hcward OMdcn Th Hon. Thomas Ahearn, p.c Prnidmt, Ottawa Light, Heal aUPowrT Company, Limited J. W. McCoNNttt, Esq. PrtuJtnt and Managing Dirtetor', . St. Lawrence Sugar Rffntrit Lmiltd W. A. Black. Esq. Prttident, The Ogilne Hour Milli Company, Limited A O. Dawson. Esq. Prttident, Canadian Cottons, Limited W. N. Tour. Esq., tc Banister, of Tttley, Johnston, Thomson and Pa rm enter Patrick Burns, Esq. Chairman, Bums 6V Company, LimittJ Chris. Spencer, Esq. Preitdtnt, Darid Spencer, Limited, . Departmental Stores Ross H. McMaster. Esq. President, Stetl Company tf Canada, Limited GENERAL MANAGERS 'W. A. Boa Jackson Dodos BANK OF MONTREAL Established 1817 OVER 6JO BRANQICS IN CANADA