La . PAGE FOUR Hyde 2 Things to Do TO EASE COLD INSTANTLY Discomfort and Ache Go Almost Instantly This Way two "Aspirin" Tab. ITake lets. Make sure 70a jet "Aspirin." Instead of taxing your system with strong medicines for a cold, try the way pictured above the modern, cany way. Your own doctor will approve it And it takes hold of even a bad cold almost immediately. The "Aspirin" you take will start combating your cold internally at once; if throat is sore, crush and stir 3 "Aspirin" Tablets in a third . DEMAND AND GET IX THE MTKEME COl'KT OF MUTISM IOI.I.MIH.Y In Probate In tlir Mattrr of tlir "Administration Art" anil in the Matter of the lUte of William liunran, Ilrrral, Inte-tate TAKE NOTICE that by order of His Honor W. . E. Fisher, the llin day of January, AD. 1936. I was appointed Administrator of the estate of William Duncan, deceased, acd all parties having claims against the said estate are hereby required to furnish same, proper-ly-vertfled to me on or before the 13th day of February. AX). 1936. and all parties Indebted to the estate are required M pay the amount of their indebtedness it me forth witn NORMAN A. WATT. Official Administrator. Prince Rupert B.C. D.ttcd tbe 13th day of January, A.D. Vm. (23) I.AMI ACT Notice ot Intention 10 apply lo l-e Ijiml In PillNCE RUPERT Land Recordlnj District of Range 5 Coast, and situate about 1-2 mile south of the W. Brown HomeSite Lease on fiklaki Bay Stephen Island. Take notice that William Anthonj Brown of Sklakl Bay. Stephens Isl occupation Fisherman and Trapper Intends to apply for a lease of the following described foreshore lands: Commencing at a post planted on small Island within an inlet of Sklakl Bay, about 20 Feet west of mi boatnouse. which is located approximately 3-4 miles south of the W. A. Brown Homesite Lear thence West 1.200 Fet-t; thence North 900 Feet thence East 1.800 Feet: thence South 900 Feet: thence West 800 Feet t? point of commencement and containing Thirty acres, more or less. WILLI AM ANTHONY BROWN Dated November 4th. 1935- I'EKTU'lCATLS OF IMPROVEMENTS SILVER KINO No. 1; SILVER KING No. 2: SILVER KINO No. 3; SILVER KINO No. 4; SILVER KINO No. 3: SILVER KINO No. 6; SILVER KINO No. 7; SILVER KINO No. 8; BLUEBIRD No. 1 & BLUEBIRD No. 2 MINERAL CLAIMS. Situate in the AUln Mining Division of Cassiar ijlstrlct. Where located: Whitewater Creek. Tuleequah River. TAKE NOTICE that D. C. Sharpstone. acting as agent for Raymond L. Walker, Free Miners Certificate No. 64891-D; Daniel H. Moller. Free Miner's Certificate No. 64877-D; Harry C. Bracken. Free Mln-era Certificate No. 64376-D; Arthur Hed-man. Free Miner's Certificate No. 64890-D; Alaska Juneau Oold Mining Corporation. Free Miner's Certificate No. 98028-D; Walter Barron. Free Miner' Certlfl-oate No. 64888-D; D. J. MacDougall, Free Miner's Certificate No. 64889-D. Intends sixty days ftom the date hereof, to apply to the Mining Recorder for Certificates of Improvements for the purpose of obtaining Crown Grants of the above claims. And Further take notice that action under section 85 of the Mineral Act, must be commenced before the Issuance of such Certificates ot Improvements. Dated this first day of December. 193& Try a Daily News classified advertisement for best results. Transfer Coal Wood Cartage Storage PHONE 580 Office 315 Second Avenue 2 Drink a full lass of water. Repeat treatment In 2 hours. of a glass of water; gargle twice. Do not rinse mouth. "Aspirin" Tablets arc made in Canada. "Aspirin" is the registered trade-mark of the Bayer Company. Limited. Look for the name Baver in the form of a cross on every tablet. ASPIRIN" Miss Grace Howe Honored at Party .Miscellaneous Shower Last Night For Bride-to-Be Mrs. George Howe and Miss Doris Webster were Joint hostesses at a delightful shower held last evening in honor of Miss Grace Howe I whose marriage takes place shortly. The evening was spent In card playing, the winners being: first. Miss Margaret McKay; second, Miss Grace Howe. Dainty refreshments were served after which the bride-elect was presented with a beautifully decorated basket filled with many useful and acceptable gifts. Those present were Misses Grace Howe. Dorothy Ballinger, Rosle Smith, Jean Scott, Mary Colussi, Margaret McKay, Angelica Colussi, Betty Eastman, Mary Macfie, Nora Rudderham, Doris Webster and Mrs. Parent, Mrs. Rudderham, Mrs. Ellison, Mrs. Dabb, Mrs. Montgomery'. Mrs. Webster, Mrs. Boulter, Mrs. George Howe. The evening was brought to a close by singing "For She's a Jolly Good Fellow." Hotel Arrivals Knox G. Constable, city. Central H. Galleon, Pacific; O. Hunt, C.N.R.; J. Skletnes Stewart; E. Warren, K. Hansen and N. Carl son, city. Prince Rupert W C. Stevens, H Singleton. A. Ferguson and S. F. Boomer, Royal J. A. French, Vancouver. Satisfy Your Taste . . For Chocolates at these reasonable prices. Our selection and assort ment is the best in the city. See our windows. CHOCOLATE CARAMELS QC0 , per lb OOK, CHOCOLATE COCOANUT OCn CHEWS, per lb. UU BULK CHOCOLATES Cft per lb. 35c to uUC BOX CHOCOLATES All sizes, all prices. 10 Discount from the regular price of any box in the store. Come In and choose yours. MUSSALLEM'S CONFECTIONERY 319 Third Avenue COAL TO PLEASE EVERYBODY Satisfaction Guaranteed FAMOUS EDSON ALBERTA COAL BULKLKY VALLEY COAL VANCOUVER ISLAND COAL PRINCE RUPERT FEED COMPANY PHONE: 58 and 558 WATERFRONT WHIFFS Arrival of Herring Now Being; Awaited Pete Byrne Still Fishing Chris Parkvold Arrives With the fish beginning to show up in limited quantities in Prince Rupert harbor anil elsewhere in adjacent waters, mid-January sees preparations under way to take the annual harvest of herring. Nelson Bros. Fisheries Limited have the Tucks Inlet reduction pant in readiness to start grinding immediately deliveries can be made. The ammon & watt selneboat g irdi will seine for Nelson Bros, and went out on Its Initial prospecting trip yesterday During the week the packers Western Spirit and Vlctorac arrived from Vancouve: to act as tenders for the Zenardi delivering the fish into the plant The Canadian Fish Si Cold Storage Co. will be taking herring, a? usual, for halibut bait purposes, having again arranged with Capt. Ole Skog to do the seining. Capt. Peter Byrne is conUnuing flatfishing a short distance oat-ide of Prince Rupert Harbor with his halibut boat Helen II. Every two or three days he makes del-verlcs of one thousand pounds or so for the local fresh fish market. Just after having started fishing operations, Walter Hansen, loocal gill netter had the misfortune Wednesday to have his ne and pontoon drift away In Prlnca Rupert Harbor. He would appreciate hearing from any one who may have located it. Capt. Chris Parkvold. owner and kipper of the well known halibut Mat Takla, which recently ex-Jloded and sanw a total loss near Seymour Narrows while running from Prince Rupert to Vancouve.'. arrived In town yesterday afternoon on the Princess Adelaids from Vancouver. Union steamer Cardena. Cant. John Mulr, arrived In port at 8 o clock last night from the south and sailed at 10:30 on, her return south. James Boyd, supervisor of fish eries for this district, returned to the city on the Princess Adelaldj yesterday afternoon following a trip to Vancouver on official business. Massett To Be Busy According to Information re ceived in Prince Rupert, three sal mon canneries will be operated in Massett Inlet, Queen Charlotte Is lands, this year, This Is the eye'e year for a good run of pinks there. The canneries which It is being planned to operate are Massett Canners at Old Massett, Nootka Packing Co. at New Massett and the B. C. Packers at Shannon Bay. Neither of the Massett canneries operated last year while Lagoon Bay has not packed since 1930 Alex Ferguson, manager of the New Massett cannery, arrived in Prince Rupert from Vancouver on Friday and proceeded Immediately to the Islands to make preliminary arrangements for the John Dybhavn returned to Prince Rupert yesterday after attending the annual meeting of the Blolos- ical Board of Canada In nt.fan.-a jDr. Ncal Carter, director of tne Prince Rupert Fisheries Experimental Kfatlnn vletfvf Vf I . . . u ...s.V. VAl land Toronto after the meeting and will return to Prince Rupert next week. John Buchanan, formerly of tti accounting department, has been appointed general manager of the B. C. Packers in succession to C. Thomas, who has been in ill health for some time. Another Important I change in cannery executives of j Interest in this district Is the ap. (polntment of David Wilson, for- iiciijr manage! ui wie a. Vs. rac tiers cannery, reduction plant and cold storage at Klldonan, West Coast of Vancouver Island, as general manager oof the Nootka Packing Co. In succession to the late J. J. Petrlch. who died last fall. MACKENZIE'S FURNITURE FURNITURE FLOOR COVERINGS, BEDS SPRING MATTRESSES All Kinds Phone 775 Third Avenue BRITAIN IS PROSPEROUS Old Land's Economic Re-armament Leads to Trade Victory Old Time Vigor Undeniable Figures Show How Empire fs Forging Aheadj (By Sir T. Cato Worsfold, Bart., LLX), Commissioner In England for the British Colonies). There may be two opinions I ex press none myself op the question whether Britain has done herself justice In these recent years In the matter of defence, confronted as we are with a world political situa tion less stable than one would wish to see it. Only one view Is pos sible on the question of the nation al effort to maintain our trade at the standard necessary for protec tion against the Increased competi tive forces arrayed against us. In a world crisis which called for stern measures of economic re armament, we were not found wanting in our old yigor and resource. The armies were mobilized In the field of industry; mechanized forces were the predominant influence in the revised strategy of the workshop; the fleets of commerce found new trade routes and recharted the old. Down But Not Out Four years ago we were thrown by a vast, economic upheaval into the trough, of an unprecedented depression. It looked as if we might never emerge. We were so much more vulnerable in one sense than other nations. Overseas commerce was the backbone of our existence. At that time our total trade exceeded that of the United States, a country with a population more than twice that of ours. We sold over thirty percent more goods to the world at large than Germany did, over four times more than Japan, and five times more than Italy. And the greater a country's dependency on the sale and Interchange of commodities in the world's markets, the more likely It Is to.suffer material damage In an economic catastrophe. However, It Is one thing to be knocked down. and another thing to be knocked out. Britain lost much, but she did not lose her spirit. After four years she has not only recovered the position she held immediately before the depression. She has In some of the most vital directions beaten her pre-depression records: and the British people stand today as the most prosperous in the world. Ahead of Japan That, you may say, is merely the opinion of business men; it is a barometer of prosperity, rather than concrete evidence of it. For the latter we can have recourse to the statisticians. They have shown us recently that exports of United Kingdom products and manufactures for the first nine months of last year exceeded those for the same period of 1034 by nearly 23,-000,000, being. In fact, greater than fori the equivalent period of any year since 1930. There are even more encouraging comparisons to make. Figures for 1934 show that Britain's industrial production has Increased by five percent over 1928, while the United (States was still 29 percent down on I that year, France 22 percent and (Germany 19 percent down. The lat-icst available figures for this coun- try showeven further progress. For j the first half of last year the Index ,of Industrial production reached a , figure of 10 percent above that at-' jtained In 1928, I Taking Industries separately, 'wo (find that, in engineering, the average monthly production irj. Britain during the first half of 1935 was 1 10 percent ahead of 1928. while I Germany, France and Italy were still down by appreciable amounts. In textiles oyer the same period, we were four points, down, but the United States, Germany, Italy ai.d France have leeways by 6 percent, j nine percent, 15 percent and 35! percent respectively to make up. Our ateel production Is up by 13 percent while the world total Is down by about the same proportion. In certain trades, such as machinery and textiles, Japan haj leaped far ahead of all her rivals, owing to exceptionally favorable factors in the eastern markets, but our, energetic friends In the Orient have still a long way to go to aihieve "prosperity-parity" with ourselves. Neither In outpu per head of the population nor In aggregate production are they yet within reach of us. Houses, Cars and Shares We have not yet solved the tragic problem of how to find work for all those of our countrymen who are capable of earning their ivlng. Until we can do this we cannot claim real prosperity as a nation, but we can at least taks credit for the fact that we have done more than ha3 any other people for our brothers who have fallen victims to the mal-adjust-ment between the demand for and the offer of Individual service. If we have not yet been able to give all of them a Job. we have at least given them more than twice as much, on the average. In un- smployment relief, than the world's unemployed have received. The authorities have Been accused of not having done enough to provide suitable and adequate housing for our workpeople; bul It will not be overlooked that, in the seven years since 1923, Britain has increased Its activity in this direction by twice as much as Italy, five times more than in Oer- many and France, and ten times' more than In the United 8tates. During the first half of 1933, compared with 1928, the averaje monthly production of British automobiles, which, thanks to the enterprise of the makers have become a democratic luxury, has more than doubled, compared with Increases of 38 percent and 4 percent In the case of Germany and Italy, whilst the United State3 and France are still" 9 percent and 33 percent down on the eartirr figures. The market value of British industrial' shares was higher during the first half of this ysnr than for any time since 1929, and in August last exceeded the previous high figure for 1928 The average monthly bank clearings were higher than those for any year since 1930 while the value of notes in circulation at the end of the first six months of 1935 was 25.000 000 higher than the average for 1928. LADIES' BOWLING STANDING O. Ttl. Av, Annettes . 22 16676 758 P. R. Grads s. 24, 16557 688 Doodads 24 16330 680 Bluebirds ; 22 1 4434 656 Maccabees ;f 22 13990 636 Rangers 22 1 5046 627 C N. R. A 22 12596 572 Brunettes 24 13665 567 I . for tastier gravies STEWS SOUPS add 2 or 3 OXO cubes NEW ROYAL HOTEL J. Zarellr, Proprietor -A HOME AWAY FROM HOME" tutet $l.tt af 50 Room Hot 'St Cold Waer Prince Rupert, B.C. Phone .281, P.O. Box m High School League Bowls Girls Go Into Action For Second .Half of Season High School Bowling League rc-j suits today were as follows: Boys Trojans 721, Wolves 404. j Squirts 804, Tigers 728. i Punks 713.. Big Five 682. j Bombed; 894, Cubs (defaulted). . High scorer, B. Houston, 2H5. Girls 1 Lucky Strikes 675, Aces 647. Best Bets 641, Twirlers 716. , Quintuplets 578, Five Clams 718. High scorer, E. Skattebol, 205. The standing In the Boys' League to date: O. Ttl. Av. Tigers 2 1707 854 Bombers 2 1598 799 Squirts .2 1545 775 Trojans .2 1542 771 Punks :......-.2. 1530 765 Big Five .2 1371 680 Wolves .'. ; .2 989 495 Cubs 2 KETCHIKAN MAY BOWL HERE Local bowlers, who visited Ket- chikan with -the Sons of Norway excursion party this week, are hoping that a return bowling competition may be . arranged to take place in Prince Rupert before long. j i.N nit siri!i:.Mi; ioikt ur ukiiish lOlOlBU In rrvbate , III tlir Matlrr of tlir .tlniluhtratlon Art" and In the Mattrr of the EMatt ot lMifjr MarMIn, ,lrvil TAKJ5 NOTICE that bj order at IUs lUoaijr W. IT. Piaher, the 11th day of January, A -D. 193. I wai appointed Ad-mlnUirator of the ' estate of Ocorge Maxlin. deceased, and all parties having claims against tne said estate are heresy required to turnlah' aame, projier-lj .verified to, me on tor before the 13th day of February, AD. 1936. and all parties ' indebted, to the eaUte are required to pa; the amount of their Indebtedness to me lorth1th. ' NORMAN A. WATT, Official Administrator, ' Prince Rupert B.C . Qtl the. 13th .day of January, A D. 1936. (23) CHURCH i -i : i -j l rrm LAST snomNGs JOE E. BROffl Whether you like him 0r . Sivcs you Mimcililnc (lifftttl. and it's swell, entertain, J "Bright Lights" - with Ann Dvorak Patricia Kllis IAt 7:30 tt 9:30) ADDED Charlie Chase in "Manhattan Madness' World News PRINCE RUPEfn DRY DOCK AND SHIPYARD t kl pita UiW and aavi Brass Ca B4tr4 aaj AeatrUM W,Mi0. aJ MUlng MaeMany, AU Tjpm t Caa EniU. KTlr4 and 0)i,l. Grotto Taxi 456 S CARS AT YOIU SIKVICll Proprietors Bert Morgan & Bud Bar I Don't forget the number NOTIC1 FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH i reacner liev. w. v. tirant HolIIngworth, B.A. inptf Organist: Mrs. E. J. Smith .' .y.'. 11 A.M., Sermon Subject; "GREAT POSSESSIONS' ".';. 7530 P.M., Sermon Subject: "CAMPAIGNING WITH THE ARMY IN ALASKA" Guest Speaker: Adjutant Eva Laycock Come and hear this gifted and popular speaker Good N ews For Our Library Subscribers FREE SUBSCRIPTIONS Tell your friends about mir liiirnfvlirimr tlicmin with you to join and you will be credited with one month's rental. (New subscribers must be persons who have not held active membership since last Uctober.) SPECIAL INDUCEMENT For quick action. Any person joining our library before February 1 will receive books for the balance . of this month FKKK. 75c ... ii 1 j ii cnuues you 10 an tlie hooks you can read from no until March 1. (Double subscription, $1.25.) Act quickly and give your friends the benefit of these extra days. Win a subscription or more for vonrsnlf. One month given for each new subscriber you bring in. This is the time to rcail lib rary, subscription. New books added "every week. DB