DON'T WAIT Until the thaw comes. Prepare now against -cold, wet fect.j Our stock-f Rubber Footwear is complete for your protection. Get yours now! SPECIAL WOMEN'S BROWN ZIPPER OVERS II OES-.T0 fit Cuban or Higher Heels; AH sizes up to 8. C"i (? Regular 82.75; Special J)J.UU WOMEN'S "SENORITA" SHOES Get In on these values. We sell these .'ordinarily for $6.50:but!due to the broken sizes-we. have marked them down for a ''leader" special. You have a good choice of patterns and fittings. Exceptional quality at this price. Off Special i?LtOU Third Avenue DAILY EDITION THE DAILY NEWS. TBINCE RUPERT - iBRITISH COLUMBIA we are progressive. EDUCATION Phone 357 Published Every Afternoon -Except Sunday, by Prince Rupert Daily-News, Limited, Third Avenue H. F. PULLEN Managlng-Edtcor SUBSCRIPTION RATES City delivery, by mall or carrier, yeany period., paid in advance .. $5.i By mall to all parts of British. Columbia, the British Empire and Forleswr periods, paid In advance, per week By mall to all other countries, pei- year 9.00 Advertising and Circulation Telephone News, Department Telephone. . 'Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations on 98 86 Tuesday, Feb. 25, 1936 This is Education Week and an -attempt is being made to interest everybody in education. For .those who have children 'attending' the schools, the week is unnecessary. All parents must be interested in education, whether they wish to be or not. Never a day passes but they hear something about it. Usually they have to struggle "with one or more pupils to make them prepare their homewoi-k or, easier still, do it for them. They have the problems of the school yard to deal with, the language .question, For instance, they find their children coming home and telling that their side won two "ghouls" in the football match. Evidently it is the language of the school grounds in playtime and -arguments against it are useless. Jqhnny knows he is right because all the others pronounce the word the same way. A writer in sl Vancouver paper suggests that,, as an ex periment, they might-close all the schools and then he goes on to suggest what the effect would be. on the children. Possibly it might also be well to consider what mirrht be the effect on the parents. Before any such thing could be done the. parents would have something to say and, after all, the. parents are the people thatTeally count. They are the people who bear . the brunt of caring . for the next.gen- l: 1 .11 ii. ii .i i .i uriaiuir-anu air me recognition tney get ior tne worK tney do is a reduction of two or three dollars ta. year from their income tax. If teachers ;are underpaid, -what about parents? Just now there is a movement toward making some changes in the method of teaching. Fewer examination tests are to be made, it is said, but fewer exams with a good many teachers means less effort and less- nroeress. If aliteachers were perfect there would be no need of any examinations. The examination system was found necessary because, without it, the teachers, did not do their duty. I he -pupils did not make mwress. Education methods move in cycles; One year we adopt a new system and after testing it a few years we find it desirable, to revert, to the .old system in order to show that Without the intervention of "a week" we shall all be interested in education as lone as the race continues. We might even consider the education of teachers with a view to having them keen up-to-date. However, there is no harm in this effort to focus public attention on the schools and uieir problems and we hope good may come of it. This advertisement not,. published or displayed by tne Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia. , J PAGE TWO DAILY NEWS .... - . - , . . The Family Shoe Store Ltd. GREAT MY tDEEEAT X)F OF SKIING Carl Strand and John Fredhelm' i Winners; in Cross-Country Raring- Carl Strand, with a time of 57 minutes, 30 seconds, was the winner of the eight-mile cross-country ski race held onsSunday on Mount Oldfield by the Sons of NorwayiSki Club tor men under Sthirtyv years bt age John' Frcdheim, with one hour over thirty years of age. evening OILERS ON Last night's scoring: BIO. .STATION 1st Large - 9G Balagno -105 Brocklesby 74 Sunderland .-. 72 Carter 89 2nd 92 85 .92 117 Totals 430 .485 511 OILERS 1st 2nd Bulger .....M27 136 Roaf 175 116 Hibbard ;:i55 143 Morris .114 150 McLeod 129 114 A. Astoria Ill 126 McLean 96 139 L. Astoria 151 96 3rd 140 153 138 138 Totals .v.611 : 589 709 C. N. R. A 1st' 2nd Rogers 135 101 McLeod . .'...-.Ill 101 West :.155 113 Bond ; -. 118 99 Teng 109 139 Rutter 3rd 150 156 127 126 132 Totals r.628 553 685 The League Standing The -leaguesstandlng . to-.date -W. Three .Two Taxi 9 Oilers 9 Bankers ....8 C.. N.R.-A. ......7 Kalen: Motors ......t.6 Butchers 5 Watts' Orocery .2 Biological Station 1 basketball games last near the end of 'the game. !Thc witness the races, between three gelect managed to spear a .penalty and four hundred persons calling t0 get wlthm two ,of at the Sons of Norway Ski Cluo's Rest )but tney could not ,gei cabin during the day. i through for' the tying basket. Timekeepers were John Storseth j Simpson ' Loses ' and Harold Hllland. In charge for the day were Ole Larsen. Claus Aune. Harold Sels-fjord, Mrs. Hans Underdahl and Miss Margaret Rensvold. The Port Simpson All Stars, playing on a strange iloor, lost to the Canadian Legion1 Intermediates 139 to 30 in a hectic struggle. The Vets outscored the Simpson5 lans two. to one In the first half to have a 25 to 12 lead at th Interval. It was In the second half that the Villagers started to show , , .v'wT -their wares.and they cut .down the 1 1111' IMI -I W ilead of the Vets but it was toot bii; liw Arilv f a margin to overcome. Pull . . . 1 score was 39 to 30. t Share Bowling League Leadership Ladies'i Leasue 1 before the final whistle. 3rd , ...wn 1 . . . 114 112 91.1 .05 109 3rd 173 112 159 114 Totals .-. ,700 ' 659 .699 BUTCHERS .1st. 2nd Morgan Ill 111 Fisher ...142 117 ' ICC . 1 IIIUlllg bUIUCM : Calderone, Stalker, .'Smith and Lindsay are ln the semi-final til the free throwing contest. These four will playoff yn Thursday and the final will , be on Friday. the winner to get two, free passes donated by Dave Borland, man ¬ ager of the Capitol .Theatre. 'Individual -scoring: Junioor. League High-School Fulton (12). Lund ...Jquist, Yamanaka 121. Fitch 2) Junior MooseCromp.r Blake 15); Hale, Husoy (8), Lear (8); Total, 21. Ladies League Orottettes Dickens (2), Smith. Beale (5), Croxford (l),-.McMeekln 1), Brand; Total, -9. : High School Blain 151, T- Davis 140!'3. -E. Davis (U, McLeod- (1), El lison, .Wilson,.Mussallem 13) r:Total, 13. i Intermediate . Port -Simpson McKay . (1 Spence (2), Cooper (10), Pollard tl), Cooper, :Talt, Scott, Johnson', Ryan; Total, 30. Canadian ! Legion 'Armstrong (121,1 Brown; Campbell l2vChrlstl-son 11), Eby,.Beynon 14),-Sue-hlro, Velreck; !Total, 39. .Senior League .All Stars Johnson (12), Lindsay, (21, Smith (6), Stiles (6), Mitchell ( 4 ) , Morrison, Stalker, .'Jlatchford f6); Total, 36. 'j : Rest McPhee 6), Wingharh 3 HID, Arney (2), Armstrong (3V. ' 4SPIerce 16), Oillls,' R.-Morrison 11); 0ITotal,'38 "7 10 n LADIES' BOWLING February 27 Annettes vs, nettes, Macacbees vs. P. R. Gradi MDMINOT L STARS 'GUNrlNUto The Unchosen of Senior (Beat Quintette Picked For Metlakatla Series Were No Match for Canadian Ler- 1011 flat, won the same race tor men r0lir goocj SimpsoirLoses Jntermediates Ladies iTurn ' In I Interesting: tOame A fairly . large orowd, witnessed League I Further Play Last Night in C.N.IRA. "time nun iaxi .cn , Tne icague fading Grottette machine lost to a scrappy High Oilers 'defeated Biological Station) School outfit 13 to9 in the Ladies" . t.tn n 4lo n Ih Thmo Turn " naii.c o nic oiuuniw uuu u a Taxi-for leadership in the Commer-!to I4t1?ai,Jatt hff thn,e andu : !Pint at the end OI the claV Bowling League .standing. in .lead third; the -second fixture of the; evening j pr; u . . . I uuu' "" OI " p3on two to Rupert: -Butchers-, won one, Canadian Recreaf,red J1 from -National ' . ... I Smith and Beale of the Grottetlcs ;ion Association. ,and students to the High average scorer for the- eve- showers nlng was Howard Hibbard of the 1 Junor ue 152. The next Cummer-! Oilers with h School Juniors .lost to tnc slaV will-be Friday League .games lMoose 2, to 18 ln .a fast ,althouah niBiivu&iiuuuwft. .aCu mu.a "-.gcrappy junior game. Biological Station; .Three Two.Taxl The Students -were on the-shcrt vs. Canadian National Recreation end of airl2 score.at; half ...tun Association. nnH iniiH nnlv trof. n nnliit i-Iacif Tournament Last nisht's; results iliv the Cana dian National flRecieaUon Assocla- tion badminton tournament weie ns follows: I Men's Singles J R. Summers iplus4)itoeatiDr. Poole iscialch)! 15-12, 15.-12. !D. Greggor beat! R. Franks U3l 15-9, 15-9. ! Mixed, Doubles Mrs. Stamford and -W. Murray The times of the finishing con- (The "Rest" took the Senior -All; (-1) beat E. Flnley ana ureggor testants, were as follows! Stars Into camp. 38 to 36 in a, lasi, c-2) 15-n, ia-u. nvpr 30 vpars-John Fredhelm. and sometimes good and some-i K. Fortune ana it. narueu t-J one hour;. Oscar Sather, one hour, umes xaggea game, ane un-i three minutes, 35 seconds; Gunnar chosen" opened mp (the scorinj Selvig, one hour, 12 minutes, 32 se- ?nd for a fewminutes aiadia.3 t0, conds; Hans Petterson. one hour, P lead. Then the ,AllStars sank 1, 14 minutes, 40 seconds. coupie io taice a.,one,jpoim lecu 57 and or the next 15 minutes the Strand, Under 30 years-Carl. ast with the .AllsStars minutes, 30 seconds; Herman Rens- 6amf was on the def ensive .most void, one hour. 22 minutes, 50 se-! J ' ithe time. Half time score -was; 17 "c ' , iZ The All Stars sank a basket at shortage o snow wh ch made the q the mparougnone.roruHyca-i the bu th ,dldYt the jumping events could son not,ho,d ,ead very long as th) be held. R(.rllh:, ran In n fnr nnlnts ,ti The largest crowd ever to ascend haye ft three ,nt ma m ,untn Mount Oldfield was on hand to beaf.Mrs.i Horton andl R.Summers Kblus:lt'15'40,,a5H4. Registration at the- provincial government's recreational and phy- - 1 1 - J -. 1 V,w- sim i ruuciiiiuii ctiiLic licit: iilis iiuw Ml 1 Brunettes C. N. R. A. Seattle Vancouver reached a total .of 519308 ladies I Portland and girls and 211 men.and boys. ! Edm"ton The following new schedule of CalRary certain clashes Is announced: . Coxing : Men, Mondays and j mmbmh Thursdays, 8:15 pirn.; High School ; boys. Saturdays, 4 p.m. (Benny Wlndle, instructor). i: Wrestling Men, Saturdays, 81 p.m. (James -Bryant, Instructor) . Ledders-kFrlday, 8:30 p.m. Basketball iftuzz .The. brand of ball handling that the fans will -see on Thursday and Friday rtWhen. the locals and New Metlakatla. clash Is expected to bo something different than that which has been seen ln the past Although the visitors . might be hampered by the low celling, they have a system doped out to overcome that. They will have to go some to beat the team that Lambie and Barrie have picked out, how ever. The! Rupert ,'All.Stnrs are 'holdr lng another .practlcenln- ithe. Moos? Hall Wednesday -night. BASKETBALL STANDINGS 'Senior'League W. L. P. Lambie & Stone '.-5 4 10 Grotto 4 3 8 Moose .'.3 ."'5 6 IntrrniediaterLeague Scythians ..,..i...;.X..:;5f: il Canddlan Legion ..:...:.:4 4 High School i..,..-2 f.O Ladies'' League - Orottettes n.fi i3 Hlgh'sSchool .t'4 3 Annettes i2 6 .'Junlon League - High School :.....:-3 -3 jtMoose ;..ai4 ,2 Bru- Scythians , i 3 4 Boy Scouts ...2 3 10 C 4 I 12 6 A Blue Birds And Doodads'Winners - Missl !L.-.McRae and W.Stamiora i beaUMlssAVxathall artd E. Wilding I)efeatfd Rangers and c N. K 15-5,! -158. In Ladies' Bowlin? Last MisO:.Munro. and Dl Blake beat NJ M MrsIQibson nrtd J. WickcttH54, ' 15;!L.ft.,., ..nH-.ht! 'Doodads defeated Canadian 1 ,Ml.-vrciu.u.Uu. , ,. . . H iMissBernernaMM.iwjixMmiij- , ..., lo.f A. " aunsin Blue Birds won over Rangers, u 'a .ko! 1759 to 1434. High average scorer , the evening was Boulter bf the Franks, and' Juxmaln (.4)115.6,5-' Blue Birds with 205. ine anmvmua, scoiuns -w ,, .Mcintosh and 'Poole V7)l,bcat Bartlett.andvMcGlashln 7)ia0r55. follows: I . Doodads Ingram, 312; Parent. 15 6 15 4 ' '.Ti.vvnraw 1 301; Ciccone. 297; P. Smith, 287;;, . West, 166; total 1363. -This. eveningVgames -wUISbe .as follows: 7 p.m.-3Iofton Blake- vs.: Edgcumbe. I '7:30 .p.m.-J. .Murray . and '.Mrs. 1 McAulcy vs.Frahks.and S. Stuart; ; O. Vance and .Mr& Stamford vs.' D. , Berner and! E.. Finley. I 8 p.m.-M3. .Young vs. W. t Brass; stamrora . vs.vw. stamiora .ana L ; C.- N. R. A. Teng. 248; Petersen, .v, - fiummprv 245; Munro, 310; Vance. 179;: Hor-. ton, 191; total, 1179. Blue Blrds-Pierce, 350;- Church, 377; Boulter. 410; Webster,! 174; Hartwig, 174; Keron, 272; total, 1759. Rangcrs-i.'Montgomery, 257; Ar- Mrs: Young.antt Hortoh vs. ElDavis mour. 32Q: Fortune, 252; Deane. and Jurmaln. ,27: Rayboncf-.329; -total, 1434. 8:30: p.TO.-CW.Murxay andNMrs. standing of teams to date: 9 p.m.-?aibson und i llorton vs. Hangers Greggor and Wilding; Stamford Blue Birds and Wickctt ys. W. -Murray and Doodads Blake- P. R. Grads The Orottettes never' hadl E. Rivett vs. E..Davls. three games to nil last night and-League. ... .. ... , n rhnnno n tli"RtiiHpntc hnH n idi -" 1 - 1 Registrations t At RfccreationTjrowing G. Ttl. Av .6 4817 803 8; 5986 748' .,8 5874 734 v.8" 5485 C86 .6 4077 680 .6 3896 64S 6 -3761 627 8 4452 557 Hockey Standings NORTHWESTERN LEAGUE W.D. L. F. A. P. 10 6 12 85 77 38 15 13 13 13 5 16 103 109 35 8 13 70 00 34 7 .13 82 78 33 4 16 92 93 30 JONES Family Market PHONE 957 PHONE 05" SPECIALS Lamb Stsw, 2 lbs. & 1 tin Peas Veal Stew, 2 lbs. & 1 tin Peas Shoulder Lamb Chops,. & 1 tin Peas Loin Lamb Chops 3 lbs Hamburger, 3 lbs. & 2 lbs. Onions Pot Roast or Beef per lb Round Steak,.2:.lbs'A 1 lb. Kidney 8hort Ribs 3 lbs Shoulder of Veal 4 lbs Veal Chops 3 lbs Sirloin Steak, ' per lb Liver, l lb. & Vz lb. Bacon Pork Hocks . per lb Pork Chops . 2 lbs. Shoulder Pork per lb. 4 ';eu-i . . uiiuuiuci LiUmD 4 :lbs Swifts 'silver Leaf Lard 2 lbs 25 c 25c 3ibs50c 50c 25c 10c 50c 25c ;50c ;50c S20c !25c lOc ;45c 18c '50c; 35 c Tuesday, February 25, 1935 f Grotto Taxi 456 3.CAKSWVT VOWK SLIIVICE "Proprietors .Jtert JVIorean & Bud Barri Don't forget ' the number 15G CO A L TO PLEASE EVERYBODY Satlsfoctlon Guaranteed . FAMOUS EDSON ALBERTA COAL BIJLKLEV VALLEY COAL VANCOUVEK ISLAM) COAL IMtlNCH UUPKKT FKKI) COMPANY I'll ONE: 58 and 558 SEEDS Our new stocks of flower and vegetable seeds Is arriving dally. Choicest varieties suitable to local climatic conditions. ARTHUR BAYNE Successor ta Glcnnle's MACKENZIE'S FURNITURE FURNITURE FLOOR COVERINGS, BEDS -SPRING MATTRESSES All Kinds Thonc 775 ;Third Avenue Hyde Jranster i Goal 1 'Wood ; 'Cartage Storage 'PHONE .580: Office i I la'Scconcl Avenue , Try a Dally News want-ad. -