I ,'FAUfi twu i 3 p 5 9 I p id P i I I P lAV NOTtJING The lyitem tyitem that maltct you light-iim of correct fitting. UNKNOWN J WHEN YOUR BOY OR GIRL WEARS JTackand Jl 11 HEALTH SHOES Tou lnowby teeing inside the ttioc on th child foot you axamina the quality of the thoei. Solid quality thioughout flexible comfortable and tmart in style. OXFORDS, STRAPS AND BAREFOOT SANDALS Published Every Altemoon, Except Sunday, by Prince Bupeit Dally News. Limited, Third Avenue a f: PULLEN Managlng-Edr.or ADVERTISING RATES Transient display advertising, per Incn, per insertion , Classified advertising, per word; per insertion SUBSCRIPTION RATES City delivery, by mall or carrier, yearly period, paid in advance For lesser periods, paid In advance, per week By mall to all parts cf British Columbia, the British Empire and United States, paid in advance, per year By mall to all other countries, per year Local readers, per Insertion, per line Advertising and Circulation Telephone 98 News Department Telephone 80 Member ol Audit Bureau of Circulations DAILY EDITION THE BIG CELEBRATION P ! 1 The Family Shoe Store j Third Avenue LIMITED Phone 357 Inn m rmtummiM r.a iitbtb rm tmmim tntntm : t.m tiuu THE DAILY NEWS. PRINCE RUPERT - BRITISH COLUMBIA 1.40 0)2 $5.00 .10 3D0 U 00 2b Wednesday, May 8, 1935 The King's Jubilee celebration was a great event in Prince Rupert. The whole population of the city gathered at the various events and took part with a heartiness which did the heart iiood to watch. Arran cements were excellently made by a very able committee and the weather affected. Troublous times they are, we grant but, withal, j joyiui times, we are in the throes of a new birth from which will spring a new world, a better world, a more joy-0us world, a world in which there will be less poverty, less drudgery, less suffering, less degradation. Everything points to it. While the change is going on there will be a certain, amount of suffering as in the birth of a new child. Intorder that life may not seem to be a failure, let us adjust ourselves . to the changing conditions, not weep over the changes. It is fonthe leaders of our day to make the adjustments in such a manner as to bring about the desired results .with as little inconvenience and suffering as possible. Bat above all, we must move forward. Sadness there may.be, but only) among those who try to stem the Ude of progress. 'SPORT' Baseball Scores SATURDAY SCORES National league Pittsburg 1. Brooklyn 0. St. Louis 3. Boaton 0. Two games rained out. American League Boston 2. Detroit S. Philadelphia 12. Cleveland 1. Washington 4. Chicago 5. New York-St. Louis, rain. SUNDAY SCORES National League Cincinnati 2. New York 2 (called at end of tenth owing to rain). St. Louis 7. Boston 0. Pittsburg 9. Brooklyn 2. American League Washington 0, Chicago 4. ' MONDAY SCORES National League Pittsburg 8. Boston 6. American League Boston 2, Cleveland 1. TUESDAY SCORES American League New York 3. Chicago 4. Washington 7. St. Louis 3. Philadelphia 3. Detroit 5. One game postponed. National League All postponed. Baseball Standings National League W. L. New York - 9 3 Chicago 8 5 Brooklyn 10 7 St. Louis 9 7 Pittsburg 9 9 Cincinnati 7 9 Boston 5 10 Philadelphia 2 9 American league Chicago 12 Cleveland 8 New York 9 Boston .... 9 Washington 9 Detroit . r - 8 Philadelphia 3 St. Louis 2 4 5 6 0 8 8 12 11 LONG LIVE THE KING Wllhemina of Holland. Victor Emmanuel of Italy, Pctj .750 .615 j .588: ; .562 .500' .438 .333 .182' Plant Up JUST IN BEDDING PLANTS Lobelia Pansies Asters Geraniums Stocks Rock Plants Kaien Hardwan PHONE mwmwm''' THE W .015 .600 .600 .500 .200 .154 Only four rulers today Queen MOST FA MO FLAVOR THE DAILY NEWS WAtadBy Mm Edgcurabe And Mrs. Jabour In Tennis Victory i Phil Edgcumbe and Mrs. 8. J. Jabour won over W L. Stamford and Mrs. C. E. Starr 7 to 5 In the final of an American tournament Sunday at the Prince Rupert Tennis Club courts. There were seventeen teams divided into three groups. Stamford and Mr. Starr won the first group after having tied with Mr. and Mrs. J. II. Hor-vton and later drew a bye hiln the ; final. Edgcumbe and Mrs Jabour. winners of the third group, advanced to the Una! by defeating William Crulckshank and Mrs. a. P. I Tinker, winners of the second group. Following the play, refreshments were served by Mrs. a. W. Laldler and Mrs. C. Q. Bartie. SPORT CHAT Babe Ruth, King of Swat and friend of all the cRIldren. is giving away 7,500 baseballs and softballsj to Canadian boys ana gins. The Babe Is giving 500 baseballs and soft balls for the 500 best letters received each week telling "Why Quaker Puffed Wheat and Quaker Puffed Rice are the most popular summer cereals." The 500 best letters each week receive the 500 prizes. The baseball section of the 8ml-thers AthletlbtfClub has been or ganized for the season. Clarence 'Ooodapre h.tK hppn nnnnlntMt manager for bothnlors and all-stars and Herji Leach has been I I named captain of both teams. 8ml-"Mthers playenQtffiiea'Hiut for their nrst work-out. last Tuesday evening. Mike O'Neill and Vic Glraud are to do the hurling and they have a strung Infield and outfield to back them up. As a result of vlrtnrlM nvor King . Washington Senators in Chicago 'n8'on Saturday nnrl ftnnd.iv th rM. was all that could be desired for a May day. Could theaa!?on ot Norway King pustav oi)Caso wmte moved lU thf ft u i. i i.i v.. . ' i . rvedn were on their thrones atin lead n. of the American m.i. King have been present he would have most certainly neen pleased to see his loyal subjects enjoying such an event carried out in his honor. SHOCK TO COMMUNITY Selrkm have Prince Rupert people been shocked so severely as they wore on Saturday when they received the news of the death under tragic circumstances of Peter Black, son of Mrs. Peter Black of the Central Hotel. He was a young man of whom the people here expected much. As a student he excelled most others and his death is a loss to the scientific world where he had already commenced to make hi3 mark. BE NOT SADDENED : Professor Ira Dilworth, when addressing the teachers Recently in Victoria, said: "No thinking man, no sensitive inan, can be alive today and not feel his heart bewildered and saddened by the things around him;" He was speaking as a poet discussing contemporary iwetry. We are sorry Tor Mr. Dilworth. ; Of course we are all rather bewildered by the changes that are taking place, not only in conditions but in the gen-eraj trend of affairs. Nations seem as bewildered as do individuals. Evidently there is nothing static. Everyone and everything is movingimd he who does not keep pace with the times is lost. But Mr. Dilworth suggests that we should all be saddened. Not so! Let us rather rejoice that the world is changing. Those who may be saddened are the extremely wealthy who see the insecurity of their wealth. The mass of the people, however, will see nothing but good in the unrest that surrounds us and bv which we are bound to he King George'R accession, HOWLING May 9 Grotto Carnation Girls vs. League. The Cleveland Indians, by losing to I Philadelphia Athletics on Saturday j and the Boston Red Scot Monday. vs Annette's ' t,ro,Ped from the. top of the league Doodads 1 10 tnlrd P1"' ,eavine the Idle New York Yankees In weond position. (The St. Louis Browns were left In ; exclusive possession of the cellar as a result of tlie Athletics' victory on Saturday. In the National League, the Brooklyn Dodgers had a bad weekend, dropping two games to the PUUburg Pirates, and fell below the Idle Chicago Cubs to third place, leaving the New.York Giants, also idle, in a commanding lead. The Pittsburg Plrales followed up their two week-end defeats of the Dodgers by trimming the Braves yesterday In a game in whlch.clther side used Jx pitchers and moved up from seventh place to the top of the second dlyision ahead of the idle Cincinnati Reds and the Braves. BralorneJYIen Join Strike OOLpRroqETTlay 8: CP Employees of the Bralorne Mines Ltd. have decided th"at they will support 350 employees of the Pioneer Oold Mines of DrIUsh Columbia Ltd., who are on strike, In their demand for Increased wages and reduction In living costs. mmmnmmmmmmmmKm RLD'S BpWB -Cr2r(mw . i SUNNY LIVING starts at the table How drxnd Uri lariflf tlf TIk1 bUntd . it . . i k Toll Il MM! uwm 7 - Ui fJ J"0 null provkMt Ua Lull" to irnt aomu- lution nwd hj Utt. 1 Wt acntial fibrr. Common eonitlpatlon frelintly rana Lradarbra, lott of aKtila and nfrjr. Yt, In mo It ran to trrraai pUaMntlf aaJ Mff lj l.y ealin a dalkiout caraal. K..ntt't AtlUaAi U m raatavat foutl for normal indiilual. It fur. aithra -bulk in annlnl anal runrrntratnl form. Att-Ba4N alio liraildi vitamin B and iron. hn Ibla tunnT way letter than Uliuf iialent meJirino? Two taliU puontuli of AllBairr Jallf are im -tally (HRu-ienl. CkrMl cit,with earl nwwL If relief it not obtained, re )mit iktelor. Serve AU'Baan aa a rcrral, ar ua in rook In. Get I bo red-anI-reen pak $ at your troeer'a. lj KelUfl in London, Ontario. Keep on the Sunny Side of Life June Bugs Are SB Defeated Again Onlookers Witness Thrilling (lame In Girls' Softball Starettes inflicted another defeat upon June Bugs yesterday after noon In the High School OlrLs Softball League by a score of 25 to IS. At the end of the first Inning the score was seven all. Then the starettes gained two runs In the rand and one In the third and the June Bugs three In the third to tie tt up! 10-all. The June Bubs made three in the fourth but the Starette doubled that and made six At the .end of the fifth the score was 18-all. In the extra Inning tlir June Bugs did not score white the starettes added seven runs. The final score was 25-18. Umpire Miss M. Delaney. Base Umpire Margaret McLach-lan. Reporter Kay Fortune, Scorekeeper Margaret McLnrh-lan. Btarrett Uebc Menzles icap-talni. Dot Blake, Violet Cavenlle. Linda Pteld, Laura Jonasson, Kay Fortune, Eileen Deen. Kay Murray. Adele Mussallem. Xtargaret Clark. Charlotte Phllllpson Lorraine Jabour. June BugsJune Armmrr (cap- Ltaln, Rita Stromdahl. Norlko llayakaiva, Chlea Nishlkaze. Jean MacLean, Ethel Cousins.. .Betty Wood. Ruth Nelson. Winnie Cameron, Helen Lakle, Heien The Letter Box UNITiril FRONT CltlTICAL Editor. Dally News: You editorbl of Friday night regarding the poor financial showing made at the United Front May bay meeting merits a reply. Prince Rupert furnishes a poor standard by which to judge progress of any movement. I would ask: Where do you find in the Liberal or Conservative parties men and women who are prepared to sacrifice their liberty for tlielr principles? Further, where do the Liberal and Conservative parties get their funds? Individual contributions are negligible. Party funds for the most part are swelled by levies on the privileged class who contribute in the hope of greater returns through monopolies or under direct threat of exposure. Buc caneering tactics are sometimes used as witness the Beauharnols scandal. There Is more than a suspicion that the Stevens' Investigation la simply a stratcgem to extort party funds from wealthy corporations under threat of exposure else why the frenzied efforts to hush up the findings? In our own (province of B.C. there have been I and still are similar scandals In- ' SHIRTS w a v ' mm ii i jLf. jf t i a f i m ni i CQc. ii - mm m I hrnm VJ nn I at The Peoples Store Ltd. THIRD AVENUE nrata:s.iiiii'i miMim-zmtrnmiM : rmm rm in sm ta 'in :. t For One Week Only May 11th to' J 8th A WONDERFUL BUY AT ONLY 2- 99 CO.MPLLTi; WITH COKO A TWO-BURNER HOT PLATE Ideal for tight Cooking Just the thing for warm weather when light meal are In prilcr. Sue time, effort and fuel wllh a Twu Burner Hot Plate Get yours wlUwut delay Hi start the summer season, while the low ibari-atn price Is In effect Northern British Columbia Power Company Limited stance the beer monopoly, The cause df the United Front movement Is Just but we have no financial barons who pay for protection to whichever party Is in power. I wager that thq United Front miiunmAlli WlU strong when .the be goin oki W' and their methods are on tlon. Thanking you for c.