n i cent years and there Is no indica tion that the decline has been permanently arrested." says Mr. Found. "Our invstlgatlons, so far as they have proceeded, have given us a fairly complete knowledge of halibut on certain parts of the coast, but much work remains to be done, particularly In the southern area. It has already been demonstrated that different stocks of halibut exist in the southern area comprising Hecate Straits and water contiguous to the Queen Charlotte Islands that are distinct from the stocks found further west, and the International Commission will concentrate on that area in future." A notice to mariners Issued this week announces that the fixed white light formerly located on the north extremity of the Inner Island on. the south side of Captain Cove In Ogden Channel has been dis continued. The annual harvest of herring Is now being taken at Pearl Harbor near Prince Rupert the run being, if anything, a little earlier than usual. Capt. Ole Skog, with his boat Frcdella. is busily engaged In seining for the bait supply of the Canadian Fish & Cold Storage Co. The herring are being packed Into Prince Rupert by Cold Storage packers and put into the freezers immediately upon arrival, the first It's got to be good to be ADVERTISED READ THE GROCERY ADS TODAY All the king's horses . . . and all the king's men can't mako a success out of a bad product. No amount of advertising will create a market for it. The more it's advertised, the more its defects become known. 1 A Good Product Well Advertised grows as swiftly and naturally as a healthy plant. People try it and like it. They tell others. They like it. Soon that product is found everywhere . . . and its name, spread abroad by adver tising, is on every tongue. When you see something widely and consistently advertised, you can be pretty sure it's well worth having. If it weren't ... if it didn't represent an honest and worthy value ... the maker couldn't afford to advertise it. Look Over the Advertisements in this Paper Some of these names you know. Others, perhaps, are newcomers, all are entitled to your trust ... all are here because they have potential friends bringing some new comfort or convenience. But something real to contribute to your advantage . .. . your service . . . your happiness. THE'DAILY NEWS TELEPHONE 98 Let the Daily News Classified Ads. work for you. i :? I load having arrived on Wednesday of this week. Gammon & Watt with the boats Bertha a. and Zenardl are seining for the Rupert Marine Products reduction plant, R. M. P. boats doing the packing. Gammon iz Watt are also to fill a herring pound at Pearl Harbor from which fresh bait will be dispensed during the early part of the season to the halibut fleet, The herring for the start of the season are rather smaller than usual. Returning Next Week II. N. Brocklesby, acting director of the Prince Rupert Fisheries Experimental Station, Is expected back In Prince Rupert next week from a month's trip east during which he attended the annual meeting in Ottawa of the Biological Board of Canada, later visiting points on the Atlantic seaboard on sfflcial business. Mr. Brocklesby left here on Christmas Day. Official announcement this week C. N. ... TRAINS For the East Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays 3 p.m. - Fronr the-EaJt , Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays 10:40 am, A palace of culture, costing over $4,000,000, Is being built In Moscow, Russia, for metal workers. Tho structure will contain two theatrm and a club. More than 12,000 pv-oon will be accommodated within It. .. .. Twenty Years Ago In Prince Rupert January 23, 1912 There are 104 men engaged on construction of the City Hall and Fire Hall buildings. Aid. D. W. Mor- rlssey, chairman of the board of works, reported to the city council at its meeting last night. Constable John Merrltt, who went south recently on escort duty, re turned to the city on the Princess Beatrice today. He reports that thousands of unemployed men are parading the streets In Vancouver and there is uneasiness for fear that there may be a serious out break. Mrs. James Jabour U making satisfactory recovery after having undergone recently one of the most serious operations ever per formed in the city. The surgeons wre Dr. N. M. McNeUl and Dr. C. A. Eggert. fig ess In bos Bceausa it dot! poti tivclv rclitv tkt itch ine almort ai toon onlitd and effects a healthful healing of the ikin.Dr. Chaie'i Ointment it a mow eatitfactory treat ment for Eciema, Hemor rhoid or Pilet and all Irritation! of the (Lin, Fifty or tube. vr ot ueu. BOAT ENGINES Also 10 to CO 11.1'. From $8.50 Generators $5.50 from and Guaranteed New Storage Batteries from $7.95 VANCOUVER AUTO WRECKING CO. 1249 Granville St., Vancouver Branch Yard at 330 Second Ave. East COAL Buy the real Coal our famous Edson and Casildy Wellington In any quantities. Also Bulkley Valley Hay, Grain and Robin Hood Flour. Prince Rupert Feed' Co PHONES 68 AND 658 NaVaWMBSMW Saturday, January 23, PAGE SIX TOT DAILY KBWi 1)3 Telephone Service to Vancouver Victoria etc. NOW OPEN II is now possible to telephone from Prince Rupert to points throughout Canada and the United States. Ask the operator for "Long Distance." Kate to Vancouver : One minute .... $3.00 Two minutes .. $3.15, , Three minutes $3.90 Kate to Victoria One minute $2,83 . . Two minutes $350 - ' Three minutes . - $3.55 . For the present the hours of service arc 9 a.m. to G p.m. North-west Telephone Co. WATERFRONT WHIFFS Scientific Study of Halibut to be Continued To Ship Halibut Livers Again Co-operative Marketing Discussed A Canadian vessel will leave this coast early in the new year for the halibut banks to continue the study of that mysterious member of the fish family. "We have found out many things about the halibut during the last few years, but not half the story is so far known," says John P. Babcock, deputy commissioner of fisheries, regarded as one of the outstanding authorities on the halibut and Pacific salmon. The vessel will got to the Hecate Straits to dredge In the sea bottom for evidence to reveal the home life of Mr. and Mrs. Halibut and their families. The proposed work of the International Fisheries Commission, under which these operations will be carried on, has been the subject of a series of conferences between Mr. Babcock, W. A. Found, federal deputy minister of fisheries, and other experts. "There Is no doubt that the halibut has been seriously depleted In re of the re-appolntmcnt of D. B. Finn as director of the Prince Rupert Fisheries Experimental Station was received with considerable Interest. Mr. Finn's many friends here will be gratified at the news of his return. While he will officially re sume the post on April 1, It Is understood It may be a little later than that before he actually arrives here. He is at present at Cambridge University, England, engaged In special scientific work. Mr. Finn's re-appolntment was forecast In these columns several weeks ago. The season for the hunting of geese and ducks la this district will close on January 31 next week. As usual, there has been little in the way of hunting activity during the month of January. Bad weather of late has hampered the operations of the nlmrodS' and at least one trip was called off during the past week on account of the boisterous-ness of the elements. Halibut livers from both Canadian and American fish wUl again be shipped east from here during the coming season to the Abbott Laboratories at Chicago where they are to be used In medicinal preparations. Use of halibut livers in this way was experimented with last year by this concern and it appears evident that the experiments were successful. Shipment of the livers to Chicago was inaugurated last fall and will be carried out on a much larger scale this year. It is understood. The livers will again be handled by the Bacon Fisheries and will be dehydrated before being shipped east. As a result of the visit here this j week of F. J. Kwapll or the united Pacific Fisheries, Seattle, the matter of co-operative marketing of halibut U once again a very live question here. Possibly there is not the same whole-hearted enthusiasm as attended last year's efforts In this line. Yet there are still many who are hopeful of some such sort of system eventually working out for the benefit of the producers of fish. The feeling seems to be general, however, that the ground should be very sure before anything is actually again attemp ted. More will, doubtless, be heard of the matter. Mr. Kwapll is re ported to have presented a very attractive proposition to the boat owners and fishermen while here. TURK GIRLS GO MODERN Things Not What They Used to Be In Land of Former Sultans MONTREAL4, Jan. 23 Turan Aziz, sole Turkish journalist on the North American continent, on a recent visit to this city said In an interview: "But yes, we have the flappers in Turkey now. We have our girls doing all that girls on this continent do. They play tennis. They also box; they dance; they go to work In the offices and put 'kohl' on the eye-lashes and use powder." "Do they behave like the girls here, too?" he was asked. "They dance Just as well," Aziz said. "But they do not smoke, and that Is funny because In my country we grow the best cigarette tobacco. But still, they don't do that" "And how do you find the girls on this continent?" "How?" he repeated. "They are very curious. Curious about me, I mean. They ask lots of questions about the harem. I tell them it was a nice place. They ask me whether the stories from 'A Thousand and One Nights' are all true and if Turkey still Is like that. They are sorry when I tell them that It is not." mi R R B e B S afKiiasTOiJismre FRIDAY and SATU1UJAY Two Shows 7 and 9 p.m. Feature Starts at 7:45 & 9:45 SATURDAY MATINEE at 2:30 Feature Starts 3:15 15c & 40c THE OLDEST BACHELOR IS INVITED TO SEE (FREE) A JOYOUS LOVE-STORY "The Beloved Bachelor" With Paul Lukas, Dorothy Jordan, Charlie Rules, Vivicnne Oj. borne A Great Cast A romantic adventure turns to lore A PARAMOUNT PICTURE Comedy "It Ought to Be a Crime" Kraiy Kat In "Soda ropp "Cannibals of the Deep The Swordfish" "Pictorial No. 4" Mnnrlnv & Tucsdav "THE DEVIL TO PAY" WE SPECIALIZE IN COAL Ifvou want 'So uhlrh rives the rrralrst FpreVfyoxireWSe. for the money expended, be- t-uy me u - ueving inai a sausuea cuj tuhtj-."--'' lomer is me greatest asset a , . merchant tan have. Phone us --'- r- Jrf for a trial order and join the laiiiuj 01 lumciiixu nuucnoia-ers who are using the best fuel in town. Philpott Evitt & Co. Ltd. Phone 6IS TheFish which made Prince Rupert Famous "Rupert Brand" SMOKED -BLACK COD- Prepared Daily By Canadian Fish & Cold Storage Co., Ltd. PRINCE RUPERT, B.C. ALL OUR COALS ARE IN A DRY SHED Delivered Dry to'Your Rin. You are assured in getting full weight JASPER WILDFIRE EGG Per Ton, $1 W0: Cash Price $11.51 IASPER WILDrlllE LUMP Per Ton. $1150; Cash Price KM PE.Mni.SA EGG He. Price, SI2.50; Cash Price 11 J Dry Jack Pine and Cedar HYDE TRANSFER-PHONE 580 PRINCE RUPERT Likes the Best! Prince Rupert merchants say that their customers like to buy goods of the best quality. They are a discriminating people. If there are any Prince Rupert people not taking the Daily News regularly we suggest that they are making a mistake in not taking the best. The price is now so low that it is a mistake to do without the paper that circulates throughout the district. Call up the Daily News business office and ask that the boy call and collect. 10c. Weekly Commence Getting the Paper Tomorrow If you lose anything, try a classified ad.