Ski :4 v. ffWU, . IT. PAGE i WO Tor ! t all ln lti.t! (. bf Tin T. AUUura Co . Ud., l'wuino, uut Pimples On Face Humiliated Her W:-. Frances Lodge, R. B. 30. 8, Uiiuiivillf. Out., writrs: "I it4 ip Itvl vi-r v humiliated whenever I would g. to junn, on areouut of the breaking "Ut uf pimplff on my face, uii' I from impure lilooil. Now all rt.ut Ua mnifWil and I have iiut l.een bothered since I took part of a Ixittle of roar wonderful nedieint Bui Jock HUd BitUM." mnnuftitcrtil, (or ti put II yeari, only THE DAILY NEWS. PRINCE RUPERT - BRITISH COLUMBIA Published .Every Afternoon, Except Sunday, by Prince Rupert . Dally News, Limited, Third Avenu- H F-PULLEN - - Managing-Editor SUBSCRIPTION KATES City delivery, by mall or carrier, yearly period, paid In advance 5.00 For lesser periods, paid in advance, per month 50 By mail to all parte of Northern and Central British Columbia. paid in advance for yearly period 3.00 By mail to all other parts of British Columbia, the British Empire and United States, paid in advance, per year $.00 By mall to all other countries, per year - 9 00 Contract rates on application. Editor and Reporters' Telephone 86 Advertising and Circulation Telephone ! .98 Member ol Audit Bureau of Circulations , DAILY EDITION IV Thursday, May 21, 1931 JIM McNIVEN, RETIRES J. D. MeNiven, known to many local labor men as "Jim," deputy minister of labor, is about to retire on a pension. He has held the position for a long time and the change in jrovernment made no difference to him and to his work. He is generally regarded as a real labor man but at that a safe one. He is not a Bolshevist. CONTROL OF PRODUCTION I Uolsteriny Consuming Power Slakes ! For Better Business ! "You know, Mr. Wittnark. I can't I help wondering sometimes at the I way my business has come along. It : can't be all due to my own ability, I ; I'm sure of that. It seems everybody : wants an airplane of bis own." chin and looked out of the window ( of his bank upon the row of model j 1946 airplanes parked in the dealer's ; landing field. He lei his tlioughu , slide back for a moment to the try- jlng times of business in 19S1. FiX-j teen years had made a tremendous , difference. There was no doubt! about that. i "Yes, you airplane fellows are f having a good time." he said. "And, 1 if you'll pardon me for the remark, ' i it isn't all due to your own ability I by any means. We bankers are in a I position to see that. Your business i is good Jbeesvuee everybody's btwioass ' if good. People are prosper ous." j . "Yes." replied the airplane dealer, i "bat what makes sbeta prosperous? Back Hi 1930 and 1931 there were, imttUon unemployed. Thousands of banks were closing their doors. Everything was in a mess. And they put it down to overproduction. What's become of overproduction now? Our Industries are producing j more than ever." ! "That's a fact. And what's more. ' we haven't overproduction, as you say. well, industry nas jearnea to control production. But that's only 1 half the story." "The other half of the story U that industry has learned that ftoy steps to bolster up the consuming power of the people are Just so Sir. MeNiven w&s a printer for many years. For a long imany steps toward better business. time he was in ream n of the cnmnnsinp room at Hif Vi p-' cexuman science Monitor. toria Times and he was just as popular there as he later became in his other work. His retirement will be a distinct loss to the province. &. . BUYING FOR CASH There is a great tendency these days toward buying for Cash instofli of mnninor mnnnia Rv Anlntr an 4e to nffon I --'. vvu? j v to uvui 'Editor Dally News possible to save money. Much bookkeeping is saved to the j w,th reference to the question merchant AS well as the risk of losing accounts and the COSt : raised In your Wednesday editorial: of ''ollpctino-. ' I am Informed by a man with 30 On the other hand if no credit were given there would be !yemrs experience that cedar should no Dianos nurciiasfid. vrv few ran. radioa nmi tW lnv.i1"4 Unotlf not quite as long as uries. LETTER BOX SIDEWALK LUMBEK Douglas fir for this purpose. nut ir. uMni in ma u.-a am rather I It is claimed by some citizens that practically all mer-, missing the point, suppose a local! chants are given credit by the wholesaler and there ino Itimber should wear out a year or) reason why this accommodation should not be passed enleven two yeftr sooner tnan tne! the merchant who pays cash can often buy to much greater , by the gm in business? j advantage than his rival and his customer gets the benefit 1 Let the financial authorities n-1 w w . Kure it out. First the direct returns ; , TrT, . . . ;to the city resulting from the em- WAS IT BRITAIN'S FAULT? jployment of local men at the local I It is stated that Great Britain may have been largely plant. Taxpaying citizens instead of responsible far the present business depression. Ordin- 10Cl1 burder. Jlve industry instead Jendei but that has all and those stopped requiring capital to affect the district very largely. uiiwiii M.W iat wuaiuaiesi oi creaiior nations and Then consider the indirect res-j-tands today at the base of the world's credit structure, uiu. surely the tradesmen bring With that country financially crippled, all the World SUf- Jueh revenue to the city. Won't lo-fers. That is the way one writer puts it cal ,ndu mean m busine to them and more dues to the city? " """' ! We cannot expect to develop John A. Mooney TjrtlNGING to bear upon the aC fain of tbs World's drain hibltion and Conferancc a long agricultural expMrisnce, John A. Mooney ii th managing director of thin coming event to be held at Regina in 132. Mr." Mooney was born In Quebec Province aad after leaving- public school made hi a entry into th world of commerce by acceptinc employ, nwnt in a sawmill. In 1896 he en tered the Ontario Agricultural Col-lege and four year later, heeding the call of the West, secured a homestead at Dauphin, Manitoba. He soon had TOO acres of heavy scrub land under cultivation. In spare time Mr. Mooney devoted his energies to the study of agricultural matter ami soon became recognized a a competent judge at seed fairs. In 190G he travelled Western Canada on a "good seed" train under the auspices of the Federal Department of Agriculture, and in 1908 moved to the Regina district, where be operated a 480 acre farm. Mr. Mtoney estafatifhed the Mooney Seed Company, dlstributori of good teed. He 1s closely aisocfcttcd with the Canadian Seed Growers' Association and with other producers' organizations. Prince Rupert by supporting outside . industries at the cost of idle local plant, .it seems a shortsighted policy to take dollars out of the locality in order to secure a possible few cents worth of longer service. I True, all the country needs help and work, but "charity begins at ' home" and I venture to think that !if the city authorities consider the i local needs first, the local resources I will automatically provide the i money to replace the sidewalks far j ahead of the time they will be re ; quired. And the cedar may last as long after all. AN UNEMPLOYED MILLMANS WIFE Strawberries on Retail Market; Cherries in Too The first strawberries of the coming from Oregon, made : their appearance on the local retail market yesterday. Retail price Is 25c per basket. Cherries are also In. F. W. Crawford, president of the Vancouver Tobaceo Co., who has been a visitor in J.he city for the past, few days in the course of on of his periodical inspection trip, will sail by the Prince Rupert to- night on his return to Vancouver THE DAILY NEWS :4,. nuve nau to 0 eisewnere. united btatefr and France are but, coming at a time when even r- . holding a large part of the world's gold and they have proverbiaj straw seems lacking failed to open their purse strings with result which have some of us its ultimate occumu-IDrrn IMPORT hppn fpli PvivwVi(.-o ,)toA result ten years hence Is hard AvJ-iJLilV lllll VlV 1 IS PROTESTED Delegate of Trade Councils Interviews Government A delegation from the anti- na tional trades councils of Vancouver, Victoria and Prince Rupert waited upon the British Columbia government to protest against the Impor tation Into, the province of beer from St. Boniface, Man. In the good old days of the five- cent schooner, these parochial pa triots never objected to the impor tation of beer from .Seattle or Mtl request to regard Eastern Canada from far away Quebec. I B0VRIL SBtSal HI makes M I Children H damp mop raises Consider liow-ca.ay.lt J to keep your home dean and spotlesa when you use CQCOLEUM Goia Seal RUGS. No sweeping or heat in?, no clouds of dust to settle on oilier objects. A simple rub over with a damp cloth or mop is all that is iierrary to keep them bright as new. Consider, too, the beauty of their artistic colourful patterns. Hie many effects from which you cun choose. How easy it is to make durk rooms bright and dreary rooms coy. CONGO LEUM Gold Seal RUGS keep their beauty no matter how hard the service. The extra thick felt base gives them wear-refeistins; qualities far fcujwrior to any timilur type of floor covering 3Ioderate in price well uithin the. raxie of every purse long in eenicr. Wliat greater economy could you ask f GOLD SEAL l COLO SEAL jj W citAitAWTa; s Junsncnaeotaunujf) V wtnioDiintiai JJJ Jook 6 for Uie GoLlSea The GOLD SEAL U on the face of rtty genuine Coiigolcum Hun. It i a guaritiilreof alwfaclion or luonrjr Lavk and your assurance uf heavier quality felt Laoe. MONTREAL Twenty Years Ago In Prince Rupert slay 21. 1911 winiam rnmniiPii rinmininn Moiustreus Animals Used ernment commissioner and well known British newspaperman, is paying a flying visit to Prince Rupert today during the stay of tht steamer Prince George. He will include descriptions of Prince Rupert in articles for British newspapers and also In lectures. ! John Thomhlll F. R. O. S. Is In 'the city preparatory to visiting the "lon whl he wUl waukee. 'por? The boundary between make the for Canada and the United States was, of course, merely an imaginary line. But the provincial boundary between British Columbia and the rest of Canada should now, they declare, be made a real barrier to trade. The provincial government not only turned down the delegation's subject a number Of articles for leading Canadian, American and British newspapers and periodicals. Ooorge Leek has written from Vancouver on the eve of his de-parture for London where he will I attend the coronation of King Oeorge V. Major Hart Mcllarg Is in charge of the which from ! party goes as a foreign country but also Bave " Tl fit loll rnl'iml.ln orders to permit the supply of beer V""""J"' Seaplane to Be Posted at Prince George This Year Western Canada Airways will post a seaplane at Prince George this summer to offer special charter rervice to mining companies, big game hunters and others who may wish to use aircraft. The company, Incidentally, has considerably cut its rates on passenger flying. dust lis Thil ir "SAPH1KI Cmgoitum Nv. u; I SSSSSSSI 1 A afSsV SSSSl I f J THE "'-WORLD'S BEST VALUE CONT.OI.Ktl.M CANADA I.1MITKD IN HOME FURNISHINGS TRACES OF DINOSAURS to Hoam Peace Hirer, Government Report Says VICTORIA, May ai -The government of British Columbia has begun to learn something of the family life of this province's first Inhabitant, as lived well over a mil-' lion years ago. These Intriguing facts, concerning dinosaurs which'! Jived in the Peace River country 4 even before the extension of the Pacific Great Eastern Railway was proposed, were given to the govern-; ment In the final report of engtn-1 eers and geologists who conducted ! a survey Af P.GJS. laud areas In the 1 last two years. While the discovery of dinosaur tracks in the Peace River district was reported some lime ago, the present report provides the first authentic details of these relics and their meaning in the Jong story of British Columbia's past. The report declares that up in the Smoking Valley, tributary to the Peace River, particularly in Burning Canyon, a few miles west of Hudson's Hope, numerous tracks of this mesozolc order of fttntasLIc sized reptiles are graven in the ltv-, ing rock. Jack Bocock, geologist on the P.O.E. resource survey, reported traces of the dinosaur tracks early in the survey. Dean Brock, of the University of British Columbia and other scientists, examined fos: alls set In the rocks at Otter Tail,' 50 miles west of the Peace River from Rocky Mountain Portaae. near the site of the i covered spurs. Photographs and made of the track n and effort nrn to be out the rocks ronUiim Ized remains at otic construction cf the plastic molds. ...u V , tL lT-SS Kaien Motors Limited General (Saraie Station OMFyiioLirr Open Dov mm Phone it Srnk' and MUCK Third Avenue DOMINION DAIRY IKI-Sll M1I.K AND CIlEAll From our own row. r.nsn AVTirn ri'KE onlT ANB FUKU FROM ALL I'M SEItVATIVES Inspection of our premise W the public cordially J"ltffl' Phone Refi ! O. Box 475