--J;J.;' fit .l.-a,4.'.,iB8:;-,B 1 Wibj! 4 . f;-v 4 ; ! fl f . V, t IP 8 PAGE SIX THE DAILY NEWS .Quality has no substitute V i'. ICcl yrvm iie gardens' The Fish which made Prince Rupert Famous "Rupert Brand" SMOKED 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 Bin. You are assured in getting; full weight JASl'KK WlLDFlRI' EGG Per Ton, $12.50; Cash Price SlUO 1ASPEU WILDFIRE LUMP Per Ton, $13.50; Cash Price 1150 P11MBINA EGG Reg. Price, $12.50: Cash Price 11.50 These Coals are from Alberta. Dry Jack Pine and Cedar HYDE TRANSFER-PHONE 580 COAL! COAL! Satisfaction guaranteed with our Famous Edson Alberta St Bulkley Valley Coal; No. 1 "Bulkley Valley Timothy Hay, Wheat, Oats & Barley, Pratte Baby Chick Food, Seeds & Fertilizer. Prince Rupert Feed Co PHONE 58 & 558 rrM It 1 Quaker Flnift H tJV TELEPHONE 657 VALENTIN DAIRY FOK SKEENA BltAM) Creamery Butter & Cottage Cheese FKESH PASTEURIZED MILK AND CREAM DAILY Early Delivery Throughout the City "Y"OU can make delicious bread in half the time and with half the effort if you use Quaker Flour and follow the instructions given in our booklet "The Quaker Method of Easy Bread Baking." No kneading ... no setting the sponge . . . you'll make bread more delicious than you've ever made before. But only Quaker Flour will give perfect results. Made from selected western wheat which must pass our rigid requirement for food quality. Tested every hour during the milling, and baked daily in our own kitchen. If you're not satisfied, your dialer will refund your money. Write us, or ask your dealer, for the free booklet. The Quaker Oats Company, Saskatoon. If you lose anything, try a classified ad. BUILDING NOTICEABLE Jubilee of Opening of London Law Courts Observed LONDON, March 18 Perhaps the building which most readily ac-tracts the eye of the newcomer to London who passes up the Stranu Is the great Gothic pile of the Royal Courts of Justice. When the Law Society held its annual meeting recently, the meeting not only marked the centenary of the So-(ciety but the Jubilee of the opening of the Law Courts. Most lov-ers of the O liber t and Sullivan ' operas who listen to "Trial by Jury," are somewhat puzzled when the judge, in recounting his early days at the Bar, sings: "In Westminster Hall I danced a dance, Like a seml-dcspondent fury, For I thought that I never f-hould hit on a chance Of addressing a British Jury." For many centuries before "Trial by Jury" was written, and for some few years later, the Law Courts used to be at Westminster Hall. The Courts themselves madi' a sort of annex to the Hall. Not all Law Courts were at Westminster, though. Readers of Dickens will remember that the famous action Bardell vs. Pickwick took place at Guildhall and that the parties in Jarndyce vs Jarndyce encountered the Chancellor in Lincoln's Inn. Seventy years ago the Society finally triumphed, after more than a generation of tussle with Parliament, for the bulldin? of a place where all the Courts should be held and where the Judges should conduct business In Chambers. In the 50 years since their competlon well over half-a-mlllion suits have been tried within them. PRINCE AT UNVEILING Heir to British Throne to Officiate At Thlepval on May 16 LONDON. March 18 The Prince of Wales will unveil the Memorial to the Missing at Thlepval, on the Somme. on Whit-Monday, May 16 ,M Paul Doumer. President of the French Republc, will attend the 1 :eremony I Adjoining the memorial a small AnRlo-French cemetery has ben rcated to symbolize the sacrifice made by France and the British Empire during the war. The cem etory will contain an equal num Der or British and French graves and will be used for the reburin of th bodies of British soldiers still being found on the nelghboi ing battlefields. The Imperial War Graves Corr- mission Is construct int the cemetery, halt the cost being borne by the French Government, and the British cross of sacrifice will be one of the main features. Upon this will be engraved the total Joint lossess of the armies of the British Empire and of France Generators from $4.50 New Guaranteed Batteries $7.95 Lighting Plants Quoted on Application VANCOUVER AUTO WRECKING CO. 1219 Granville St, Vancouver WATERFRONT WHIFFS Halibut Boats Continue to Tic Up Herring Seining CeasesCannery Crews Arriving . , . FrjQin South to be tied up. Seattle, hpwever, has a considerable proportion of its fleet still out. Many of the boats remaining In port will be ready to leave for the grounds Immediately there should be any prospects of Improved price conditions. So far this season it has been a sorry tale of "hole" trips as far as most of the units of the fleet are concerned. The highest share recorded by any boat of the Pacific Coast fleet so far Is reported to have been $310 which was paid by a Seattle boat to each man, the vessel having struck the market luckily with a big catch of fish soon after the opening of the season. The highest Prince Rupert boat so far has shared $125 per man. It is reported. Such figures as these, rhen's Co-operative Association for shipment to the eastern market on consignment. At Seattle during the week ending March 8 landings aggregated about half a million pounds, prices ranging from 4c and 2c to 9c and 6c. Capt. Don Yelf has offered to take out a fleet of trailers to prospect for spring salmon. It Is reported from Skidegate. Islanders are said to be wondering why the fisheries' department, wlUi all the facilities at its command, has not been able to do a little prospecting to help out the fishermen. Prince Rupert halibut landings, passed the million pound mark for however, are very much the excep- ' the season to date during the past 1 tion and, for the large majority of week when a total of 356,200 pounds 1 bpats, actual losses rather than 177,700 Canadian and 178,300 Am-profits have been the order of the erlcan was landed to bring total day. : fares for 1932 up to yesterday to It is becoming more and more 1,021,650 pounds including 523.050 evident that a crisis is developing, pounds from Canadian vessels and the only means of meeting which 500.700 pounds from American. would appear to be mutual agree- Throughout the week nrtces re- ment on the part of the entire Pa-fmained at a dlscouraglngly low citlc Coast halibut fleet to curtail production. The bringing together of the different sections of the fleet In such a way would appear, how ever, to be a very difficult matter If possible at all. Having filled their fresh bait pound to capacity, Gammon & Watt have concluded seining operations for herring .at .Pearl Harbor, near Prince Rupert. The selneboat Zen- ardl Is standing by the pound to dispense the bait to the halibut fleet. A goqd, run of herring Is reported to be continuing at Pearl Harbor despite the lightening. If not entire caseation, of fishing op erations, t Late March sees considerable acti vity at Prince Rupert In the way of getting the trolling fleet ready for the season's work. Machine shops are busy with engine overhaul work. Early April will witness many of the boats getting away to the trolling grounds. Cannery crews are now beginning to arrive on the Skeena River to in stitute work at the plants which will be operated preliminary to the actual start of canning operations which will eet under way around June 20 with the opening of sock eye fishing. Canneries on the Queen Charlotte Islands are also being Inspected. All signs point to a considerably bigger output of canned salmon this year than last and more attention will be given to fall fish which were practically not touched at all last year. Spring salmon landings here were rather light this week. Billy Green of Port Simpson, bringing 175 pounds on Thursday, and the Flew-In St Brown packer Taplow II yes terday, with 100 rwunds. were the only boats bringing in springs dur lng the entire week. The fish are reported to have been rather scarce during the past few days around Warke Canal. Port Simpson and adjacent waters. Doc Clapperton, popular second ln-command at the government wharf, is feeling somewhat better this week-end after having been confined to his rooms for a few days early in the week suffering from a severe cold which had been coming on him for some time Friends will hope that his recovery Is immediate and complete. No definite word has been re 'ceived as to the exact date when D, B,. Fjnji .wUl.bc.herc. ia.mumc-hl. duties as director o the PrlnqpiJWt. pert Fisheries Experimental Station after an absence of about two years. He Is expected, however, to arrive somewhere between the middle and end of AprlLj At Other Ports During the week ending March 12, some 250,000 pounds of halibut j was Unded8,t Ketchikan, all being turned ovcrUo the Alaska Fisher-1 ebb with 4.1c and 2c the maximum price for Canadian fish and 5.1c and 2c the high for American. Pacific Salvage Co.'s power tug Salvage Princess, with Capt. Paul Armour in personal charge, wu used Thursday afternoon to take Frank L. Buckley and party to the waterfront at Seal Cove to make in Inspection of the proposed new pulp mill site here. Official announcement of this important local Industrial project this week caused quite a flurry along the "front" as elsewhere In the city. It Is generally conceded that the project could not come at more timely stage of the game than at present. Blelni on you. Mr. Buckley I C.P.R. steamer Princess Ncraii. Capt. William Palmer, inaugurat ing tht company's Un-day sche dule on the Alaska route for the spring, arrived In port at 9 o'clock this morning from Vancouver and sailed a couple of hours later for Skagway and other northarn points whence she is due back here next Wednesday afternoon uMMMxmsmMwmmmmmmBmau is E p ifl Owing.to the continuation of low price conditions on the H market," barely one-quarter of the vessels of the Prince 5 Rupert halibut fleet are now continuing operations one g month after the opening of the 1932 fishing season. The prevailing price at Prince Rupert and Seattle is lc and 2c f while at Alaska ports prices arc even lower. Practically, 2 the entire Alaska fleet is reported Friday & Saturday rWO SHOWS 7 and 9 p.m. Feature Starts at A0Si 9:40 SATURDAY MATINEF. at 2:30 Feature starts 3:10 15c & 35c !'BaBj:::-Rr ' A Happy Leap Year to You ROBERT MONTGOMERY in "LOVERS COURAGEOUS" Willi Madge Evans, Roland Young. Girls brush up on mi I Year technique See this witty 1932 romance "i Comedy Clark & Cartoon "DIZZY RED Do McCullough in ".MELLON I) KAMA" KiuiKU uouiv METRO Xm MONDAY Si TUESDAY "HUSBAND'S HOLIDAY" SEASONED SITKA SPRUO Wn urn n)p:itnri tn nfffr thf fnltnwtno Ktuwf'jl f.., .. . i. ... 1X4 1' X 4 1'; X 4 Mill Run Common either Random Lengths SIS SIIII'LAP T Si G $12.00 per M ft. BIG BAY LUMBER COMPANY, LTD, Your Spring Repaint Build Your C.iranI STILL MORE CARE rjot ipuvt OWectton CARNATION is "Protected at the Source" through the fostering of better dairy stock. Then, Carnation field men check and re-check dairying methods used to produce milk destined for Carnation con-den scries. And then comes still more scientific testing until the can is finally hermetically sealed. In cooking Carnation makes favorite recipes better. Use it with coffee, fruits and cereals. You'll find Carnation economical. Approved by highest medical authorities for baby feeding that's how good it is! a tea Writ fr Irti Cth Bh ami Rth, Bth Cirnition Co, Limited, 1M Abbott St, Vmoouttr, B.C Carnation. "from TVfJllr Contented Cows" XVJLlilx fiiiii MILK FROM CANADIAN CXJWS, TACKED IN CANADA IN CANADIAN-MIDI OM AND CASKS "How do they do it? Among your friends there's sure to be at least one smart young married couple who are the envy and admiration of nil who Know them. With an income that is frankly abbreviated, and with no benevolent Aunts in the offing, they still have n home that is correct nnd comfortable in all its appointments, a 'home that is admired and copied by their friends. "Yes, Jane is a remarkable little manager," will probably be the young husband's proud answer. And there is little doubt about it. THEY DO IT THIS WAY Take a look around that home and you will find no end of well known advertised products. Tor Jane is an efficient little manager. She can't afford to take chances that must only be debited to "Experience." When she buys for her home she must. get tried and tested and trusted products which carry an honorable name to guarantee her satisfaction. You will find that Jane is a consistent reader of the advertisements. Arc you?