PAGE TWO SHOES For Evening Wear Every model the DAILY JOUTiON They re Gems of the Shoemakers' Art last word in fashionable design and material Silver, Black and Silver, Black Faille Low and High Heels . , Take a look at the window for styles Just Arrived Gold and Silver Braided Sandals Where Most People Trade F AMILY SHOE STORE LTD. PHONE 357 (Estab. 1908) THIRD AVENUE THE DAILY NEWS. PRINCE RUPERT - BRITISH COLUMBIA Published Every Afternoon, Except Sunday, by Prince Rupert Daily News, Limited, Third Avenue H. F. PULL EN Managing-Editor ADVERTISING RATES Transient display advertising, per inch, per insertion ... ............. 1.40 ClaL;ifiprt a A Famous Diva Died Last Night At Hollywood Several Blood Transfusions an operatic and concert prima donna and, in the twilight of life, won a huge popular following In vaudeville, radio and moving picture theatres as a singer of, .simple German "lleder." In the hey-day of her career she was reputed to earn $135,000 a year from concert work alone while royalties on phonograph records of her voice brought in additional $50,000. Thrifty Investments mostly dri Chicago and California real estate, were made and managed by her with a skill that brought steadily Increasing values and she became one of the wealthiest singers of her day. But her own generosity to num erous friends and relatives and uie wonas turn rrom mgn pros perity to acute economic deprea sum 'shrank her fortune to the vanrsnmg point, when she was past 70 she was glad ;to take en gagements which paid for a week less than half what she had received earlier for single perfor mances. In 1933 she said she had Lcvnl rPnHorc , H . l011 Wearing Me Sam -.. jy J,l Uluv k uuu ,o 0 SUBSCRIPTION RATES City delivery, by carrier, yearly period, paid In advance .. For lesser periods, paid in advance, per week '. By mall to all parts of British Columbia, the British Empire and United States, yearly period, paid in advance , By mail to all other countries, per year .. Advertising and Circulation Telephone ,. News Department Telephone Member of Audit Bureau or Circulations ......98 j 86 V $5.00 .10 3.00 9.00 Wednesday, , Nov. 18, 1936 Become Leaders of Men At the celebration of the nineteenth anniversary-of the formation of the Russian Soviet government the guests of honor were those men and women who had been outstanding in setting up new standards of rapid and efficient labor. These are known, as Stakhanovists or super-shock workers and were hailed as the "workers of the future' It was declared at the- gathering that they were leading the Soviet Union to unprecedented heights of labor productivity.' This is very different from the practice of some labor unions in Britain and America who seek to hold back production for fear of throwing others out of employment. Evidently the Russian leaders of today would have no use for the men who demand two men on a strppr.. oar whinh could very well be operated by one. They would not agree with others who make it impossible to speed up work of any Kino. The tendency of the movement to. slow down 'is to make the worker less capable and less efficient. This was being' felt m Russia until the leaders hit upon the idea of speeding up as a national virtue. Newspapers and radio, all controlled by the state, were used in putting over the campaign until today it is gradually spreading and workers are, rathier unwillingly, falling in line and increasing production and improving their work. Military Might Another feature of the Soviet celebration was the military display so thoroughly condemned in other lands by socialists as being one of the big features of capitalism. I here were military narades. m.nvhps nf tbn mn-v. civilian auxiliaries, all settiner forth tho power of the military machine which has been created bv T ID CrtlTlfn ......1 If uiv juv:ta aa u jjimecuve measure. f It is seen from the features of the celebration that Rus sia is not far removed from thods and that, judging from their experiment, it would seem as 11 the world were moving in circles and that in the end all come back tot he same viewpoint sooner or later. Wc loan you free a complete Home Permanent Wave Machine for 3 months. All you need do is send $3.00 to cover the cost of shipping and e 01LIor 6 complete Permanents. Will not u harm the finest hair. Any one can guarantee it perfect wave with this machine. No electricity or experience needed. When you have used these supplies more oil can be obtained from us at fifty cents a Marvel Wave Factory 1183 East 41st. Ave. Vancouver; B.C. transfusions.. Ernestine Schumann - Heink, who passed away at her, home at the age of 75, aczlalmetl as prob ably .the world's greatest Wagner-Ian contralto, achieved riches as I coat for two years. hat and Her voice by then had become compressed to little more than half Its former ranee and she was limited to such numbers m Brahms' "Lullaby," the tradiUonal Christmas hymn "Holy flight" and similar songs of short range and brief ,phruses,--Butr the1-ftrtlstry -of character of her personality and undlmmed stage presence, overcame the effects of obvious short comings arid she remained a drawing card. Also in these late years she took a few pupils, but this work was limited more to coachlm? than tn vocal training. She was a star in her own ris-ht. backed by 20 years' experience on German operatic stages when she made her first appearance in America on November 7. isqh 'cr- lng "Ortrud" In a presentation of Wagner's "Lohengrin" at the Auditorium .theatre in Chicago. Her Impressario was Maurice Orau of the firm of Abbey, Sohoeffel & Grau, predecessors of the Metropolitan Opera Company of New York. She had just signed a 10-year contract with the and was. on a four-year leave of absence, from the German capital, bait her su&ess was so great, that aiK uuugni ner wav ant. nt t,v.0 nome contract, paying first io,000 marKs unen $2,5001 for an extension of wo vears in her finally 25.000 marks to ,n. eel the Berlin agreement T - 1 A AO 4 ah iiuj- sne matte a eonreM wur or the United States, travel ung lu.uuu miie3. In the latter year sh ,also appeared in an Am erican comic opera, ".Love's Lot iery. ner Health broke In 1905 and her voice was reported ruined Duit she went back to Germanv fnr resi, accepted encasements there and came back to the United Vi'il.1 n? fr inn -. . orwra and concert in 1006-T. in Becomes American Citizen The next season .she gave 113 1 cencerts and then went to Europe j ior a year, where she created one of the Drinclnal rmrtx in flt.rnit new opera "Electra." Her return for a 1909-10 concert, tour proved the most profitable of her Ameri-1 can career. Thereafter she tapered off her strenuous work,, but continued briefer annual tours and limited operatic engagements.' One of her last stage appearances took place February 25, 1926, when she emerged from "retirement" to sing "Erda" in "Das Rhelngold" with the Metropolitan company. 1 In 1 ci Hjuit ramous roles were , "Fides" in "Le Prophete," "Ortrud" in "Lohengrin," "Erda," "Fricka" in ;"Dle Walkuere' and "Orpheus" in utucKs opera of that name. But she mastered 150 other parts and in her youth was a famous "Carmen." For many successive years, beginning In 1896", IfiT angat" the dailt rawe .rV,WuTeBbl Twenty -Five Years Ago November, 18, 911 With Constable Forsyth in charge, the provincial police this mornlnz dlsratched the launcn HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 18: Ma- ,Rovcr for Porcher Island to dame Ernestine Schumann-Helnk,israrch for a party of'land seekers famous operatic- singer, died last i consistinE of Donald McRae, Jack night. She was suffering from recurrence of an old complaint. There had been several blood M:Rae and, Angus' McKenzie which is overdue. ' The recent stormy weather is believed to have held the young men up. A survey party of thLiy-five, which had been misrlng for some time up the Naas j River, arrived here; today on the teamer Venture. Seme seventy-five men have been paid off for, the winter at the Goose Bay mine. ijhip four hundred ;ie by next fall. tons of picked GEESE HOE GARDEN CANTON, Texas.'Novia: (CP) Geese have been put to work by East Texas farmers who report them "capable hard" working farm hands." Five geese do, the work of J one farm hand. The jowls an estimated 25,000 are employed in Van Zandt county alone-pluck weeds and grass from about the cotton plants. Experience has convinced farmers the feathered farm hands are worth the UttleTre' lhey need. Wagnerian festivals I'jn Bayreuth and from 131 to IGOincluslve sang every season. In Covent Garden, London. it. She was widely popular among war veterans and was an honorary officer of the American Legion. RAW FURS Trappers, Mink Ranrhyrs & Dealers We have large orders to fill lmmi. djately for eastern manufacturers. ana we are Interested lri all your furs. Ship to us at once and we are assuring you a square deal, quick returns and much more money for all your furs. A trial shipment will convince you. ' W.1.HHK you me very pest or luck for the season. TRAPPERS' FURS LTD. Raw Fur Market injr Agents PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. PERFECTION IN CANNED SALMON GOLD SEAL Fancy Red Sockeye PINK SEAL Finest Pink Salmon Packed by the only! Salmon, Canning Company with an all the year round payroll In , Prlnpft.Wnpprt ROOSEVELT SUCCESSOR prevailed. No Choice HEAL QUESTION Who'll Carry on New Deal Gospel When ,"F. D." Quits WASHINGTON, Nov. 18: : (AP) Will President Roosevelt, like four of the most famous two-term presidents of the United States, "pick" lis successor In the White House? fio far no one apparently has been singled out in such fashion as .o suggest that Mr. Roosevelt was attempting to develop a New Deal "crown prince" and to build him up ,Jn public opinion for the 194 ODe- Hugh and W. S,t,(Duke) Harris, mocratip .presidential nomination, ell known ILozelron. mining rnen, what might happen in the next passed through the city yesterday f 0Ur years, however, promises to be nroute from Hazelton to spend. a rnattar of considerable specula- trie winter in Vancouver. They are tjon planning extensive development of ; Tne tWo men hailed as the pat- ;he American Boy property on ron 0( the Democratic party. Nine Mile Mountain and expect to Tnomas jefferson and Andrew Jackson, openly designated their publican congressmen joined in Is suing a formal protest against his selection of the party's standard bearer, but, the prestige of the "sage of Montlcello" (Jefferson) I th .Tarlcxnn "dvttastv" lasted' Otllv 12 years, Van Buren falling of re-, election. j Tho ! npvt nroQlrtpnt: tn he re- elected, was sassinated ADranamuxjconj iiB less ss thari six weeTfA' at1- Some Two-Term Presidents Named ter his second Inauguration. Whe Successors While Others Had ther he would have indicated a possible successor for post-war Republican leadership is unknown. Sensational Revelations sor. To the dismay of Mark Ilanna and other old guardsmen, Vice-President Theodore Roosevelt stepped up to the presidency and was elected to that office in 1904. As his second term was drawing to a close, the popular Teddy picked the similarly popular "Dill" Taft the 1908 nomination. With Roosevelt's support, Taft won the nomination "in a walk" on the first ballot. Woodrow Wilson was a second-term president who spurned importunities to Indicate his preference Andrew Jackson, Idol of the oi a party leader in lszo. caivin ''plain people,' 'has been rated by, coonage maintained a character- Isticallv discreet Coolldee silence t . iaici.aior oi me wnue iiouse sue- n-wuu..tuw umi tu She took out American citizen I n business of chooslns n notential ship papers at Cincinnati in 1905. van Bureri of New York as his heir successor to him in 1928. Married three .times, She' was the 1 Ann-iri-nf' 1'f.lr.' ITIrVnrv" tvn. re- No United StntM nreslripnl has mother of eight clTlfdren. fehe lost ported to have laid down a pro- had three terms. Eleven were clec-nertivoiceaemp gram of succelwii for4 years tedtwlGearEe.Washmgton, lirst'cphtirxa'riellrnit later re- Jackson Brnteif; eight years; Van TlTomas effersoK'jamesTMadlson, gained it with a note; added to'her puren. eight years, and Thomas James Monroe, Andrew ' Jackson, register and In later years she said Benton, eight years. . That rennrt Abraham Lincoln. Ulvsses S. Grant. that each of her eight experiences was never verified, however, and Grover Cleveland, William McKin- in motherhood had added a note to her range. She was born June 15, 1861, near what is now Praha, capital of Czechoslovakia, and then was Prague, Austria. Her father was Major Roessler, an Austrian army officer, and her mother was an Italian. The world war years were diffi cult for Mme. Schumann-Heink. She had sons In both the American and German armies and another was aboard a German submarine. But she held loyally to the land of her adoption, touring the training camps, singing for the soldiers and begging indulgence for her boys in the German army because they were doing their duty' as they saw Hotel Arrival 1 1 Prince' RQptrt Mr. and, j.Marrisori . ton; Cnufofflar, .Stfe MtAtdle and and L L. b B. Wh i'i,.rt, couver; Kcnney Mr. and "ire. n. L Mr. aiid SheUa and n, Mrs- S. CMUls, Terrace; A Z ner and. Mrs. W. Noonan Frances, Telkwa; L. E Sensational revelations- of graft and cotruptlon, involving members s '" m, . .. .. . .' I r- ... , wiuuDurn qf the cabinet and. congressJqnal, Miss.. p. Peters and" leaders, brought disrepute. to the, AjcenWeU. Vancouver. A i second administration of war nero mtWi Ottawa- Ulysses S. Grant. The Republicans Vancouver. were split Into three groups at the end of the term, and President Grant made no overt effort to sig nify his choice for the 1870 noml , Vl: Vlci A. a. Lamb, Royal Cyril D. Morgan. J. e. HUaitch, J. T. Sutherland and W J, Mc-L&an. Paul de Buzoonnv on,t t..L nation. Grover Cleveland ran into Uppn. Vancouver; A. G. pcl FlsdeMctcn. Nil - Mrs. O J r,. cond term. The Bryan-free silver an, Terrace; D, J. Douglas and v iciutrili., uuiiiuittiiiiK uic iuau j. "cross of gold" conventWh, repu diated Cleveland's leadership of the Democratic Dartv oarticularlv ueiger, u. n. ii,; w M. CorU- raaa, cdty, M. J WUllanu and w ' Qted-stone. Skldegate Mission Realise of his rigid advocacy of the Savoy told standard. M; C- lscn and A Han- son, Oona River; R, Hanson city William McKlnley, -first of the jleaty coiuson, KHkatla J Mel front porch" campaigners, was as- Morran and J; Sonsary, Snmrahoe-sasslnated six months after his se- t p Weaver, Hutton Mrs B cond inauguraUon. He had evi- Bazshaw and Mrs. MaA u' " D p VtCr choice of "heir." Theodore Roose- denced no preference for a succes- retrace; W. A. Smedley, Smlthm. velt virtually dictated Republic selection of William H. Tart. James Madison, "timid little husband" of the famed Dolly Madison, put on oressure for James Monroe as his successor. Many members of Jefferson's Re-pjubllcan-DempjcraU? party were eppsea t'oi MaSlsonr' Several Re ley, Woodrow Wilson and Franklin D. Roosevelt. Theodore Roosevelt and Calvin Coolldge served more than one term, but neither was elected iwke. for Each succeeded .tii theityhlt Hfiusi, WPLENTYOFM Jj' " '- i w v K FISH CHOWDER l'l Poundt of fr,h fuh (cod, (ud. dock other fh) 2 Cupfuli of dicod polatoti 1 Cupful of dicod carrot! 4 Cupfuli of wattr k Pound of Mil pork, dird 1 Medium onion, chopptd 2 Tablc-ipoonfula of flour 2 Cupfult of milk Rrmow tlie lln ind bonrt from the b ind cut Into imall plrcn. Cook Hit fih, Ui dicrd potaion and lh carrots in the wntrr lor IS mlnutrj. Fry the salt pritk until crlri, remcivp the plrcra and cook Oie onion in th fat until trndrr. Add the flour, lllr until wrll tlcndrd and (railually add Uie milk. tlrrln unlil the mlilure bmooth aM thick. Coioblne this mil-ttire with rtietftsh inif vctctaklri, trivia to laite with aalt and pepper, almmrr for about 10 mlnutei, nitring Irrquently, from the vice-presidency pn the deatlv ot a president Jrv vf f(ce. and then was elected president' In hit own right at the end of his part term. COAL TO PLEA8E EVERYBODY Satisfaction Guaranteed FAMOUS KDSON ALBEKTA COAL Itttl.KI.KY VALLEY COAL VANCOUVER ISLAND COAL I'KINCK: RUPERT FEED' COMPANY PIONEi 58 and 8SS HEALTH PEOPLE throughout thc world keep Canadian Fisheries busy supplying their" demand because Fish from cold, pure Canadian waters arc famous for quality and flavour. Bring Canadian Fish and Shellfish more often to your tabic. Benefit by their-' richness in proteins, minerals, vitamins and iodino. .Get a new variety and pleasure in your meals with the delicate, easily digested and ;finctasting meat of Fish Foods. And remember, FUh gives full value in nourishment for every cent spent. Serve Canadian Fish more often. Make "Any Day a Fish Day". Fresh water fish or jeafood ... in fresh, frozen, canned, pickled, dried or smoked form. . whatever way you prefer .this delicacy . . , it is available in prime condition. DEPARTMENT of FISHERIES, OTTAWA --WRITE FOR FREE jOOKLET Department of Fliherlea, Ottawa rirav tend me your free Sl-paie Booklet, "Any Day I Flh Day", containing 100 delightful and ecuoomica FUh krclpts. 39 I t I Ntm:.. j MW"""'M""M"''''" " SDl j 't V" DK Y A F I S H D A V I m'.M 4 'A 4