Nownber30, 1935 I am at the REGAL SHOP tikinff orders for Gifts for the whole family. Also Cards, Toys, Hooks, Etc. Our Hear Store Bazaar is now open It. pc Uorv cordially invited Goods gladly reserved, j nil' tat mBB-sara Awy-Etnir Want Ads AGENTS WAN TED A Comp. te range of Men's anu Wu3iC!i footwear. Exclusive jatn. cd features. The most ap pe.g. The most wanted. The eiiiest selling; And the fastest muiiry making line ever sold. Pay- bi $2,00 commission. Don't 'his. Write for salesmen pr position now! Super Wear Eli Co Montreal. )!All HELP WANTED 4 USSON from the depression-Be a Civil Servant Postman Customs Examiner, Clerk, Stenographer, .etc. Free Book'e "How to get a Government Job. UC.C Civil Service School, Win nlpeg, FOR "SALE TOR SALE DTnirig suite, chairs bed: cot, electric fireplaces and Jtove etc. Jellies, Jams. Jars, girl': bi.-ycle Gulick. Phone 778. (278 K)R SALE Two-room house on two lots fairly close to dry dock. Apply Dally News. (277) rOR SALE Office safe, extra thick walls, giving perfect protection against fire. Daily News. (tf) PERSONAL PRIVATE Home Kindergartens pay We start you. The Canadian Kindergarten Institute, Winnipeg. 1 (tf) mm S IN TIIK SI I'HIIMK COI KT Of ItKITISII ( Oi l MltlA III I'rolcilr And l' Mattrr of the "Artmlnlstratloi; Ait" 'Mil Mattrr of tlie Kstatc of Snmnr llfliriim -Moorr. Hrrpawil. WX NOTICE that by order of HI- Judge Fisher the Cth day 01 ffttiber 1935 I was appointed Admin """or of the Estate of Samuel Steph " Moore, lat of Anyox. B. C. I tMd. irvl J1 rairtlni hnAlne claim- Jf lnsi aaitj estate are heteby required y 'umuu same properly verified to m "S Uore December IMh 1033 and Persons indebted to the eaUte ar. required to pay the amount of then "wbtcdness to me forthwith. NORMAN A. WATT .. Official Administrator v Trlnce Hupert. B. C Jla the 7th day of November 1935. tASlt ACT S""' nf Intention to apply to l.ea IjlDll In PRINCE IIUPEBT Land Recordlni, rl-net of Range 5 OmM, and situate oout 1.2 mile south of the W. A St.-!? IIomelt Lease 0n Sklakl Bay. tphen8 Isiarul. Rri,1 noce that William Anthony tenrt.110" ''''rnfian and Trapper In- rv!mi'3 foreshore lands:-.T?ru?1ncn8 at a cost Dlanted 6n a -ui island within an inlet of Skl-thouse, which la located approxlm- Broin ?. mll outh of tne w A' 1 2on tJ,omeellte I-ea.se thence Weat therL : thene North 900 Feet 800 li.1'800 FvH- th'm 801,111 Pointer Ulnc Weat 000 Feet t-J Thirtv 5tnmnmen and containing cri. mtr br law, Dt WILLIA& ANTHONY BnOWN "uvrmrjer 4th, 1935. TIMHKK SALE XlflHOT D fv ived by the xl807 rZ'ly"' Purchaw of Ucence 3. tocU?7fA?lth Unck Arm, O. n, mU ftllowed iot re" Mttoto 4rVteLrt,ar8 01 the Chief For- LIONS IN LEAD NOW Vancouver Defeats Move Out on Top in North-western Leacue VANCOUVER, Nov. 30: (CP)- Vancouver Lions regained leadpr- shlp in the Northwestern Hockey league sianaing last night by defeating Edmonton Eskimos four, to three in -contested a hotly game on Vancouver ice. The Liomnow have i one-point lead over the Portland Duckaroos in the standing. W the season is announced as December 2 Annettes vs. Doo dads, Rangers vs. Maccabees. December 5 Brunettes vs. Blue-)Irds, CNRA vs. P. R. Grads. December 9 Rangers vs. Annettes, Maccabees vs. Doodads. December 12 Bluebirds vs. P. R. 3rads, Brunettes vs. C.NR.A. December 16 C.N.RA vs. Rang-ts, Doodads vs. Bluebirds. December 19P. R. Grads vs. nnettes, Brunettes vs. Maccabees. January 6 Rangers vs. Bluc- airds, CNil-A. vs. Doodads. January 9 Annettes vs Brunettes, Maccabees vs. P. R. Grads. January 13 C. N. R. A. vs. An nettes, Maccabees vs. Bluebirds. January 16 Rangers vs. P. R. Orads, Brunettes vs. Doodads. January 20 Maccabees vs. An nettes, Bluebirds vs. C.N.R.A. January 23 Doodads vs. Ran gers, Pit. Grads vs. Brunettes. January 27 Maccabees vs. C. N. R.A., Bluebirds vs. Annettes. January 30 Pit. Grads vs. Doo-iads, Rangers vs. Brunettes. NEW ROYAL HOTEL J. Zarelll, Proprietor n -A HOME AWAY FU()M HOME" Rates $1.00 up 50 Rooms Hot & Cold Waer Prince Rupert, B.C. Phone 281 P.O. Box 1B OF. A "isirvir-i"s.iNv CANCELED AM OtiOEli OM ME Yesterday- vvt -TILL. iTELL HIM OHGTHINS LO, BUBBLES ' ' - - DAILY NEWS . ' " " l. r . . I SPORT CHAT This has been a successful football season . for United States coaches in the west and Canadian coaches In the east. It has been an even more successful year for American players In the west and Canadian players in the east. Prairie football seems to have reached a formative stage such as the other end of the country passed through two or three years ago. While the gridiron sport in Ontario and Que Beach, whose team made a brave stand against Sarnia in the O. R. ing, hard-hitting bunch of boys at Kingston was the more impressive because he started with a team that seemed destined for certain defeat from Toronto Varsity. It wasn't on the books that any college team would stop a Varsity "TILLIE THE TOILER" VJ HERE'S MPK1N5 I've aw 1 SOMETHING -U) SAY TO HIM - VMU-t. TELL. him: OH.TILLIE DARLINS, XM I'M SO SO B,uteu'.l EXCiTED with Bobby Coulter, Joe Connelly, Hugh Marks. Cam Gray, Mike .Va-leriote and Bob Isbister on the backfleld. Yet Reeve accomplished it after first holding the Blues to a 3-3 tie and then losing an 18-15 decision. He proved at the start that Queen's was almost as good as this Toronto team, superbly coached by Warren Stevens, and he toppled the Blues In a play-off. Veale, former Queen's outside wing, had spent several years joachlng Hamilton's second team, the Cubs of the O. R. F. U., before ire was given his big chance with bee produced dozens of great na- Tigers this fall. He started with an tive players, the best crop In many all-star cast, including Frank Tur- D. L. F. A. P. i veafs it. hast.pnprt tn srmr nn the ville and Huek Welch on the hark- Vancouver 4 2 1 25 14 10 j imports from the United States, field, and spent a most uncom- Portland 3 3 0 0 13 13 7 7 9 There were nntahlo pvrpntlnn siirh fortable month durine which the Calgary 2 Seattle 2 Edmonton l 3 15 22 4 11 15 4 15 21 TIME TABLE OF BOWLING The Ladles' Bowling League chedule for the second quarter of 5 as Abe Ellowltz of Ottawa, Pat Bengals behaved like anything but 4 Ryan of Montreal, Johnny Ferraro champions. They dropped two of 4 and Jerry Brock of Hamilton and: their first four games, both to Ormond Beach and Rocky ParsacaArgos, and then Johnny Ferraro, I of Sarnia. J1934 coach, came back as a player under Veale. Turville was injured Canadian coaches rose to the but evcn tnat didnt matter. The occasion to tiirn out teams that comDinauon 01 veaie, weicn ana uDset the well-drilled sauads i Ferraro was unbeatable In the Big coached by Americans. It seemecr j Four- Just possible near the close of! league hostilities that the influence of Uncle Sam may be greatly re duced by 193C. Having taught the Canadian to use the forward pass and improve his blocking in the line, he may be turned out. This is unlikely to be the case with such coaches as Lew Hayman of Toron- One of the best forward pass instructors in the Canadian game Bill Storen from Detroit, made a success with the Western Mus tangs. The '. former St. Michael's College ccach, helped by Johnny Metras, 1934 all - eastern snap built the Mustangs from not much to Argonauts, Warren Stevens of j 01 anyining imo a leam mai couia University of Toronto, Art Massuc-1 battle the test in he college union ci of Sarnia and Bill sforen of ja the finishHe'll be back next sea-University of Western Ontario. Butip-n- Sarnia'-Art Massucci, who led it undoubtedly will be the case fmperiais to' the Canadian title in with manv nlavers. inis Iirsi year nei wgeiner nis great team mrougn a series 01 in A V. , U J 0 were Desiowea upon lea neeve 01 Queen's, who brought the Tricolor its second intercollegiate title dur- In the west, three exceptionally able coachihe Jobs were recorded .ng his tnree years siana at K.ing-,Bob FritZi brought ,in from Cor on. a rea veaie s sian wun nam-1 COrdia College, Minnesota, did ilton Tigers, shaky at first, became I everything that was expected of an overwhelming success when thehlm by winning the western title Tigers came rrom oenma to capture for Winnipeg in his first year In the Big Four championship. These,' the Canadian game. Al Ritchie, as Had little edge on otner Canadians, j abie as any of them, turned out including Alex Ponton of Balmy jwnat he (described his best Reeina ....!' ...... Roughrider team and saw it fight gamely but vainly against the F. U.; Joe O'Brien, noted referee (powerful Manitobans. At Calgary who took over McGlll and made the Redmen a great early-season threat, and the veteran Bill Hughes, who rallied Ottawa Rough-riders near the finish so that the capital team twice defeated Ar gonauts. Reeve's success with Carl Cronin built from the ground and produced a bang-up western finalist in November. Perhaps Cronin's feat was the most note worthy. The former Notre Dame quarterback of Rockne's days helped Winnipeg to the Canadian I final in 1933, then disappeared back a big, will-1 into the United States for a year. Hamilton Tigers wanted him and Cronin almost vent east, but he didn't. At Calgary he taught his Bronks real football. By next season he may present Alberta with a western title. This year's team was beaten only 7-0 by Winnipegs. Yes, your XOTEMENT JS. " AS a! APPAIZENT a oft ArscrMT 'SrSH-HEftE HE COMES Mova ym YI ttSfej 0,,fOTmf "i jwrrgPfftf , r"l ...... - 1 PAGE FIV2 STUDENT McEVOY BAKNEY KOSS DISPOSES OF GARCIA DECISIVELY RfiWMNfi: WINNER -' Trojans Leadlrffelligh School Boys Barney Ross, worlds .welter.- ., And Twirlers, the Girls suits today: t ' Boys Cubs 667, Big Four 690. Squirts 659, Bombers 632. Wolves 757, tigers 767i Punks 784, Trojans 775. .High scorer, Hugh Forrest, 215. Girls Aces 835, Quintuplets 542. Lucky Strikes 600, Five Clams 602 Best Bets 667, Twirlers. 627. Tigers - 2414 r..l.. OOtfi Gymnasium For Unemployed And East End Children committee In charge of this work , Is composed of P. Hilton, chairman; V. Lehto, secretary; M. Hapala and T. McKenzle. As soon as the work is completed the public will be invited to attend and see what has been accomplished and .the children of the district will be allowed the use of the building and apparatus. The committee says that, when the money is expended, it will publish a statement of all receipts and expenditures. LADIES BOWLING LEAGUE G. Ttl. Ave. Annette's 14 10408 Doodads 14 9404 P. R. Grads ..14 9289 Maccabees 14 8536 Bluebirds 14 8579 Rangers 'J..J.U 8453 C. N. R. A 14 '7932 Brunettes 14 7472 Brevity and Speed! VJEL.L., BE QUCV., Vajhat have fau 30T TO SAY TO ME? p It's Her Game, Too A BS CiSOEtiWHTl' MR. MRT VALEMTIKie VAJ.EMTIMEfTJ24 TP I I . OH . ' HERE VVAt.Er4TU.lE; 743! 672', 604 i 610 013 1 604 j 567; 534 AFTER THREE YEARS BOSTON. Nov, 30: (CP) Whertj Cooney Weiiand returned to .Boston Bruins after a three-year ab-" sence he fitted neatly into .the pic-j ture. His No. 7 jersey arid No. 7' locker, vacated by Nels Stewart, j who went to New" York Americans,! were waiting for him. y r s&x weight champion:, decisively High School Bowling League re-1 ger, Ceferino Garcia, in a blistering ten round battle in" the Chicago Stadium . last i night. you Aee, mk. t-s-v . N 1 - - .11 v .ir-i rwi r- r- ru 1 11 Five Jokers Stil! Ahead High scorer. Margaret Gulick, 260. Defeated Lambie & Stone in Five Boys' League I Pins-rioneer Laundry ueais Trojans 2529 j Empress Five Jokers retained their lead-i runivs .. . . . ,u n( n.ll., . cramp ui mc tiic fiu uu"5 w r''m ; , League by defeating Lambie & g 5lve - 1 fiAi to one. Pioneer Laundry beat Old Bombers - -...4 1842 ..., . , Wa toj OirlS League 'fMnra-nt fViA AVPnfna Hlwh rtr- Twirlers t...t..i 2107 , e...,. Cef ' -. ZtZ Old Empress with 235. Lucky Strikes. ,.. 2059 Tn nn1. finrIn(r. Best Bets .2021 ' ; ?ioneer Laundry-V. Houston, Five Clams 1885' - . lf , ,ne, ,u Quintuplets 1772 ' n mittn ! Old Empress Schriaberg, 705; jCalderone, 437; McKay, 4G3; Sta-'cey,,617; Ciccone, 537. I Five Jokers Dingwell, 555; Barton, 635; Morrison, 672; Smith, 503; Andrews, 690. W. L. 1 rritislior Starts American Cam 11 13 14 save' P paign With Victory Over Huskr, French-Canadian NEW YORK, Nov. 30: (CP) rpek McEvoy, British middle and light heavyweight champion, be-an his American campaign last nlgHt with a clean-cut ten round decision over Al McCoy, rugged French - Canadian, in Madison Square Garden. Old Country Soccer ENGLISH LEAGUE First Division Aston Villa 4, Stoke City '0. Bolton 2, Birmingham 0. Brenjtford 2, Laeds 2. Derby 2, West Bromwlch Albion 0. Eyerton 0, Sunderland 3. Huddersfleld 0, Arsenal 0. Middlesbrough 2, Manchester 0. Portsmouth 2, Liverpool 1. , Preston 1. Grimsby Town 0. Wednesday 4, Chelsea I. Wolverhampton 8, Blackburn 1. SCOTTISH LEAGUE First Division Aberdeen 2, Hearts 1. Alrdrieonlans 3, Arbroath 3. Ayr 1, Third Lanark 3. Celtic 1. Partick Thistle 1. Dundee 2, Motherwell 2. , Hamllton-St. Johnstone (post- Lambie fc Stone Mcintosh, 546; poned on account of waterlogged Stiles, 666; Alexander, 522; John- The Prince Rupert Unemployed fX , Association is taking up a subscrip-i "v - tion for a fund with which to pur? chase apparatus for their gymna sium which is being fitted up in the Five Jokers 16 Lambie & Stone :.....:. 14 Rupert East Hall donated for their try ZIIZn field). Hibernians 2, Dunfermline 3. 0ueen's Park O, Albion 1. Queen of South 2, Clyde 2. Rangers 2, Kilmarnock 1. If you wish to swap something 16 Trv a ".lasslflec" Here We Are Again Yes! . . . wise "roll-your-owners" are back again with Ogden's Fine Cut. Why not do the same and smoke the best there is, when it costs so little! Don't deprive yourself of the smooth satisfaction only Ogden's can give you . . . and roll it in "Chantecler" or "Vogue" papers, the best combination known. OKER H OGDEN'S Your Pipe Knows Ogden's ET2.- 6000 CAV. AnD SOOD- HEU-OAND'ER- eCOD- B.V?, T1LJHE V 1 VP T H V J A. MAC'S HOSE .AND HS'-S A N D S FINE CUT Cut Plug By :Yeslnvr - - - - r I I MP. SIMPIOMS- v RVIE !l i n HUN BUBBLES ' BOSS PLACED A BVS ODEIS- AMD MR.VALEMTINET TAXES HEP DWOMG, VJELL, TVJO CAN PUV AT THAT GAME 1