PAdJJ TWO lianuiftrtuied Dizzy Headaches and Fainting Spells Mrs. Lloyd Babcock, Hartiafftpn, Ont.. writes: "Some time ago 1 wai all ran down in health. I had diiiy Leaila"lies, and suffered a great deal with faintipg (pells. I was adWsed to try Durk Blood Bitters and after taking rW bottles I felt like a ' new person. , "Mr husband as troubled jrith Inrtipestion, after meals, and could pit nothing to do him any good until he took B.B.B." for th. rut l mn. oaly Ijr Ti T- Miat.ro Co., Ui.. Toronto, Oat, THE DAILY NEWS.. PRINCE RUPERT BRITISH COLUMHIA Publlihed Every Afternoon, Except Sunday, by Prince Rupert ? Dally News, Limited, Third Avenue "v.. H. P. PULLEN - - Managing-Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES py mail to all other parts of British Columbia, the British Empire and United States, paid in advance, per year $6.00 By mall to all other countries, per year 0.00 By mail to all parts of Northern and Central British Columbia, paid in advance for yearly period .r...-..,. Thursday, Jan. 29, 193! ANOTHER INVESTIGATION Another investigation is to be held in connection with the fisheries of Canada with a view to enabling the government to consider what legislation if qny shall be passed or regulations issued. This, is one of a series that have been held from time to time, most of which have nroved of little value'It is to be presumed that the question of fish ' reason, traps, methods of issuing licenses, limitation of number of i wm, Mme. Ouepln, daughter of M. Dlmitri Strancloff. former Bulgarian minister ln London, whose resemblence to Queen Ne-fertltl, consort ot King Akhenaten, , early European ruler Is remarkable world tangible and positive impres sions. They are all nice men and women in their way, but completely absorbed in earning their bread, playing their "little games, breeding dying and going, well content in not knowing whither. Tour hundred years ago the candle came, and back of that four thousand years of torch and tallow dip. Within one hundred years th" cook-stove came, then the dawn ot creation and invention, slenderly 3.00 1 unfolding coal-oil, the lamp, gas : .50 i the incandescent, until the very City delivery, by mall or carrier, yearly period, paid in advance 5.00 , avalanche ; of wonderful creation Or four months for 4 1.00 ; within the thirty years Just closed. Legal notices, each Insertion, per agate line ...... .15 1 is It. not iirne to at least thin Transient advertising on front page, per inch 2.80 about sitting up and taking no Local readers, per Insertion, per line -25!tice? From whence come the Transact display advertising, per men, per insertion 1.4Q i marvels? All the wonders yjassmea aavercuing, per insertion, per worn am Contract rates on application. Advertising and Circulation Telephone .98 Editor, and Reporters' Telephone '..8G Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations DAILY EDITION of, th cfflce, the drawing-room and dally Ufa foaVA ttopn nnulHlA ctnr ttia snllstl world began, and yet we find them all all . surging into existence within the space of fifty years! Does it not appear within the range of reason that Ood has found us ready to receive them? But all this is leading up to an experience which happened to me! on the ocean, crossing over from Vancouver to Naples on board the motorship Celllna. on the night of December 28, 1930, after leavinr Las Palmas, Canary Islands, and after we entered Gibraltar. The night was warm. I had been reading late and for some unusuai I could not sleep. As on I found myself living over canrierie&.and cannerv licenses and methods of Dronaira-! Past events, suddenly a night in !ll v 0l'At0 ,lnoH ,sn. i Mexico flashed vividly upon the . . J. . " I crrppn Tf Vi n H hron n rn t Vi or mpm. In any case Prince Rupert will be much interested and should be considered in connection with uny move that is made. CREDIT SYSTEM The suggestion has been made that the credit system be abolished, especially in connection with purchases on loner ;orable night and I was so deeply interested that I tried to recall the whole night even to certain things that were said In the language with which I was only partly familiar. The fact that I had Just spent an evening in Spanish Las Palrpus time payments. As we have mentioned before these sys-imore than likely had fathered the teins are ouen aDusea ana sometimes tney anecc unanciai retrospection. The nignt was nacic conditions," yet it would be a pity to abolish them. How ,n 1896-when-ln my capacity as a many pianos' would be sold if the purchasers were requir-,1"1" e"lne-1 was camped on ed to pay cash ? Possibly the same question might be asked ' TXJkTS in regard to machines, radios, motor cars and sewing j saddie, i had gone over the border inner articles, it is a great convenience ior a person on salary to be able to get the use of a piano' while paying for it and also to purchase his home on time payments. These things canont well be abolished without replacing them with something just as good. Some men have wives who cannot cook and others are poets and their wives have nothing to cook. GOVERNMENT AND RADIO Discussing the policy of the Bennett Government, the Winn"ipegTribune says that in only one subject was the Premier Teticent and that was in regard to radio broadcasting "He declared parliament would be asked to deal with thfe question at the next session, but the line of government policy remains his own secret. It is a troublesome question, one with which the late government was obviously reluctant to deal. There will be keen public interest in Mr. Bennett's decision for or against national radio broadcasting. The general public mind, The .Tribune believes, favors national broadcasting in the hope that something outstanding in the way of a national service may develop here, as against the confusion an'd commercialism in the United States. But sentiment on the question is by no means unanimous, and powerful interests are constantly at work to influence opinion in the opposite for some aguadlente which I had promised the boys for their Thanksgiving dinner. TA A 1 11- l , was a iwcuc-niuc tiuM-tuuu- i try no-trail trip. When I arrived, a Spanish Fandango was on at tlr: hacienda and I was invited tosta j During the dancing a tropical thunder storm brought down p.! terrific rain for several hours, and j without moon or trail. I to wait until morning. The" housa was tilled with other guests who were also remaining and I arranged a hammock under the trees. Many birds had taken shelter from the storm ln the surrounding foliage and the seranade wai simply wonderful; but the mocking bird's singing ranged high over all. And so it was that the night came back to me on the Medlter-anean, hirty-four years later. I have related this Incident ln all fairness, simply as the only possible conscious thought to urge the dream; and then only ln the wild singing of the mock-birds, which can only be accepted as an exceedingly unreasonable hypothesis. Finally I fell asleep, and sleeping dreamed ot sitting in a palm-filled plaza ln Las Palmas, surrounded by tropical flowers the night - air heavy with their perfume. Little round wicker tables were scattered through the garden under bright electric bulbs and filled with a noisy fun-loving people. A wonderfully beautiful girl was With me drinking wine. Pretty toon a Spanish boy strolled by with some scut of a small harp .under lis arm. anc5 the lady called 1 to hiin lh Spanish saying "Come here to me. my boy, and accompany me I wish to sing." She arose to her feet with the partly emptied glass in her hand, and ln a voice as clear and lovely as the tones of a golden bell, sang a song so exquisitely" that the pack had gathered round 6ur chairs, and seemed to be wanting breath for a moment then broko into the wildest appaluse. And when she had finished she THE DAILY NEW8 Thursday uaiu. m.i - Morte Craig Tells of Vivid Dream I in Which He Heard and Reproduced ! a Song Never Heard by Him Before tey'rMoi:te CtoigV i This article Is very apt to cause a quick curl of the lip and a goor natured snarl from ninetenths of the living world from that infinite army of people who do no believe In the possible communion dropped the glass and threw her head upon her arms in an abandon of grief. The story is given you as one more link In the ever strengthen-! ing chain which proves the truth with, and receiving from, the spirit of inspiration. And what is inspl- raton but communcatlon through one of the thin places in the dark veil that intervenes between the human and the spirit world Communing with some unseen Intelligence. What else could It hsve been in the case of my dreamt For see: I never wrote a word of music in all the days of my life, and so it cannot be attributed to me as having, however, unconsciously originated it. I never heard the music in my ife. I never heard the words be- ore In my life. Mr. Paul Bchwei-zer, a native of Blere, Switzerland, very fine musician, homeward bound, wrote the melody on board his morning at my dictation. In consequence of all of which, the words and music originated Ith the dreamland girl, who sang in Spanish, although the words came to my conscious mind in The Song "Long years ago In the garden ot my girlhood, Strong arms around me In love's early life, Sailing at midnight we clung to one another, He whispered his promise to call me hivs wife. Now I'll tell you e'er wc part All the love within my heart-Listen, while I sing my song to v yous-Then he sang a sweeter song Tfian rnpcjt-blrd ever knew Long years ago. To make the narration lntelligen. there were three quatrains, onl one of which I remember and car give. The missing erses told of t 1 gjrl. a ifiajal Wicer, a ship order ca 10 ine-irni ana iosi in Dame But I distinctly make recbrc" that the melody antl words are no of human origin, unless It be pro ven that all lnpiratlon is only hu man. Finally, It may be pertinent to mention that in old age, Beeth oven states ln his memoirs "I discredit myself of havine written some of my finest rhapsodiesthey came to me from the other shore." (The music and words of the firs: verse were enclosed, but the mu sic cannot be reproduced owing to lack ot facilities. Ed. Man in the Moon One of the thlnes that won't eet concluded j you anywhere is thinking that the world, is going to the bow-wows. Another thing that won't get you very far Is trying to gouge a living out of your neighbors without giving value ln return. Jones How do you spend your Income? Smith About 30 tor shelter. 30t tor clothing, 40 for food and 20 for amusement. Jones But that adds up to 120. SmithThat's right. Dinah Is you made all yo' rangements foh yo' wedding? Mandy not quite, I'se got to buy a trooso, an' rent a house an' get my husban' a Job, 'an get some regula' washln' work to do. An' when them Is done, Ah kin name de happy day. Extremes meet on Broadway like a cat cutlcU up before a log fire. When ywbuy tickets at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre an attendant escorts you into the darkened auditorium and invites you to assume a sitting posture in the particular chairs offered you for sale. tafeaireTyjSCjOrandJIo-teC" the hltof the season, Is located, tpmrfilfe'Wxflfe'Snls "The best I got Is two seats In th' fifteenth row, two weeks from tomorrow nlglit." "You have no better'n 'at. eh?" "Yes." replies tho attendant, "I can give you two In the fourteenth row but that'll be three weeks from nex' Saturday." John Williams, well known mining man of Usk. B.C.. Is a guest at the Itoyal George Hotel. Edmonton Bulletin. LUCE ON . SALMON i Humorist of Vancouver Province 5,1,1 jias Urain Wave on Subject Because United States politicians won't play fair with the salmon treaty, a plan has been outlined to circumvent their little game, writes P. W. Luce, humorist of the Vancouver Province. At present, sock-eye salmon breed in British Columbia at our expense, and get caught, chiefly In American waters by American fishermen. It is now suggested that the salmon be Induced to abandon the i any better for the salmon himself? A fair question, but not much weighty thought has been expended i upon it. Is this transplanting of sockeye pawn from the Fraser to the Naa 3 be undertaken without prayerful :on8ideratlon? Is It fair? Is It hon-jrable? Is it orthodox? Is It Christian? The answer is ln the negative. A century and more ago there was a vile slave trade between Af rica and the southern states of the American Republic, but what was that ln comparison with this proposed Interference with the life and liberty ot the salmon? The nigger, after all, was only wanted for work. The sockeye is wanted for food. The shipping of spawn to the cold waters ot the northern rivers would j be a colossal trek, an enforced migration without parallel in piscatory history. A migration? Say, rather, a deportation, a banishment, a drive of extinction! What About Room? Where, may we ask. will room be found in the tiny Nas and the little Skeena for all the fish that have crowded the 800-mlles-long Fraser River? How will they adapt them selves to their restricted quarters,1 and how will they fare ln these re- j mote regions so different from the 1 riffles that would have given them j birth had all been well with the! spawn their parents left behind them? I Bear in mind that these baby fish will have no papa and mamma to I guide them when they hatch out on i the frozen gravel beds of the Naas. The poor fish will feel deserted, lost, perhaps even humiliated. They won't even know for sure that they are native son salmon, and the pride of family may be lost to them forever and forever. Let us remember that the sockeye, who was here thousands of years before the white man came, U greatly putxled by International controversies over fisheries treaties. Try though he may, he hasn't yet been able to grasp the fundamental difference between a free-born American and n loyal Canadian, and he is apt to confuse on national anthem with another when the singers are none too sutp eft the words. The salmon's brains are small, shallow, soft and usually inactive. Politics are beyond him, and vote-catching devices leave him cold. His life is guided by some dim Instinct reaching 4ack into the dark ages, and there is little hope that he will ever make any intellectual progress. The sockeye Is affectionate by nature, and his love ot home is perhaps more strongly developed than that of any other lovely creature. For uncounted generations his motto has been "A Fraser River salmon I was spawned; a Fraser River salmon I will die," and right nobly has he lived up to It. Extreme Youth His extreme youth saw him venture forth from the riffles of the great river and drift down to the sea. HU advanced age saw him swimming courageously against the swift current, striving, ever striving, to reach the gravel bed of h la baby-1 hood, there to love, to mate, to die. The, years of his adolescence and his maturity he spent In the vast deeps of salty reaches unknown to man, leading a passive and prosaic existence until the mysterious urge , of nature turned his face again to the sweet watera of his forefathers. So It harbeen since the dawn of time. From Fraser River to Fraser j River the rvrlf hnrt hun rnmnlete. ! But what of the future? What of the hapless fish that -CUBES Add Nutriment and Relish to Stews, Gravies. Croquettes and Meat Pies In Tins oS 4 and xo Cubes Fraser River as a breeding ground, t . i. . and made to take up thejr abg e f ttr!mlanted farther north In the and; J ; Skeena Rivers, where the couW'erfte Ocean and wand. in that wll-travel In and out without crossing . . . , . i fljUr ,on And American waters. The modu, oper-for andl would be to collect the-spawn , ' hereditary initmct will tall S?K5,?or taffl? and sh,p tt;uKrtSi.wS S; uprZsZitt so good fori yts r?tr I,- am.Ho n.r wh-n beckon them. t the fast-flow- iritC&Vbnon remains' of th, Skeena. Pulled thu th the forever British, but will times be an? PulIedt jyr u.-ii win never ue uuit' u uitthe up thctr minds which course to, take, and so will keep swimming round and round Vancouver Island until diray, and then finally blunder up the Albernl canal, there to die of old age while the fishermen argue civic politics Instead of casting out their nets.v What a sorry end for a noble flh! Twenty Years Aji In Prince Itupe-t January ". : r Between the va. expected there a week on the rni couver and Prm the coming su.ui will bo the Priiui dcr construction .. try. Prirmcss iv .r . George. Prince R n,. Princess May an! I Chief McCurvcl! A. J. PhilllpiPun t ! gant of city po m Cases ln which four local yo'iu j : men are charged wRh contribi'l-j. The coroner's lur lng to the delinquency of a ycunt ; the death of Radc t girl have been further adjourned was crushed by ;i for eight days in city police court, the First Avenue w: The hearing la awaiting the return ter Street, has l,,w to the city from Vancouver ot Ma met death through glstrate Thomas McClymonl. his own part. For $200.. r. Can you equal this? For $200 invested yearly, a younU man can capitalize his youthful vigour and effectively prepare for life's contingencies through the Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada. 3 CHEAT BENEFITS 1. NOW $10,030 Immediate Protection and 2. I N A FEW YEARS $10,000 In Paid-up Assurance, earning Dividends. or 3. AT MIDDLE LIFE $10,000 in Cash. qii J P P1" n1 irnUlioiv ut uiuftiiuiitiun na growi naw neiimymn, .im-jiuk u equilly good for iem, ulitri nd pu ior int amy mu. Mp lucn u burnt, KtU. tun, bniutt or cold uim. A tamtilt jrwtana postpaid win oeitnion application to am- ItukCo. Toronto He can secure for his c! immediate protection"!' 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AM-BUK it t pur herbd ointment known i ever u.e wouu iti woujerftd oothinff and h.lin i. htve t""' J 7.fnJVlk I ( thn thirty in tliit time I t 1 1 ' htndi, tkin trouble" ' ' 1 i. turn . n.1 If k.ft lwfl b UHl ulufirtinn in krilinlV" nd relieving ptin. My p" " Ion it tk.t If I. An f the I ' rntntt on th muktt. i