PAGE TWO DAILY EDITION -, DAILY NEWS FrWay. October 23 Work Boots For Men Every Pair Made For Wear Plain Toe or Toe Cap, solid leather soles or Panco 4 soles. Felt Boots for cold storage use. $2.95 All Rubber Boots with or without cleats. p-$2.95:$4.50 Where Most People Trade F AMILY SHOE STORE LTD. PIIONE 357 (Estab. 1908) KOTCH WHISKY EJ THIRD AVENUE THE DAILY NEWS. PRINCE RUPERT BRITISH COLUMBIA Published Every Afternoon, Except Sunday, by Prince Rupert Daily News, Limited, Third Avenue H. F. PULLEN - - - Managing-Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES Clty'dellvery, by carrieryearly period, paid In advance $5.00 For lesser periods, paid In advance, per week 10 By mall to all other countries, per year 9.00 By mall to all parts of British Columbia, -the British, Empire and United States, yearly period, paid n advance 3.00 ADVERTISING RATES Transient display advertising, per Inch, per Insertion 1.40 Classified advertising, jer. word, per Insertion .02 Local readers, per line, per Insertion .25 Advertising and Circulation Telephone 98 News Department Telephone 86 Friday, October 23, 1936 GIVING YOUNG MEN A START Speaking beOre a local eervice club Wednesday, the district forester gave his listeners an idea of the spjenclicl work that the provincial government .is doing for young ... iiiuioi uiraujf miming nun. j.jie plan is to take selected -and likely looking voung chaps who require employment and have been unable to get it into the forests of the province (arid there give them training in a number of valuable Jines associated with sylviculture. The intention is not to get work done cheaply for the government, although some very useful things may be incidentally accomplished, but to tide the young men over the dull period and, in so doing, give them training in a number of "subjects which will serve them in good stead in later life no matter what trades or professions they might go intq. The results of this innovation, according to the district forester, have so far been very gratifying particularly from the standifbirit of the, benefits the voung men themselves have derived. While instituted primarily 'as a depression measure, the Young Men's ForestrvlTriaininrr Plan io 8nmnti,;M which it appears might be useful very as a permanent in- amuuuii. it is 10 oe noped that the government will see tit and be able to continue it in permanent operation. THAT ONE MISTAKE! Inadvertently a week ano the chief plitn-inl 1Vvif nf UIJ1 This advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Boardor by thf Government of British Columbia. a widely read London daily used the word "numismatists" instead nf "nViilnfoi;Qfofwuv.: .i .1 . r....w.nab0r iiHimi n ,uav ui so me journal in question was literally swamped with "letters to the editor exuding superior knowledge. Under the heading of "Thanks .Indeed" this is what appeared ' afterward: Thank you indeed, kind and .learned readers, who have written to us by the score jn order to correct us for writ-!nT.?fi","umi8matist's" when we meant as you know philatelists"! We expect, to be put right when ' we h fro wrong. Thank, you. Do we expect to be congratulated when we happen to 1 1 be 4 .right ? -s . Wp In nnr Wo 1nnur trtr. win.'U ar 1 n- 1 ha. i,u wju diMtii, e Miuw mar., " ior one ntrHrt nil.HM..LJ ,1 - -vM...,A,,uWjeugKH accuracy mere are iu,tnj() who correct BRITISH FASHION WATCHED Coronation Trends Will Have Their Effect on This Side of Atlantic Impending coronation of Edward VIII Is making Itself felt in the fashion circles cf the world. Fashion experts are agreed the crowning will have a decided effect on autumn fashion trends in United States, quite as much as in England. A regal note is creeping into the latest collections of famous designers, and is expected to become more pronounced as the season approaches its maturity, it ,1s said. Margot drahame, British actress in American films, who has re cently returned from a vacation In England, describes the tendency toward greater formality, especially In evening clothes, In anticipation of next spring's brilliant festivities. The purple of kings and the regal wine reds and royal blues, she reports, are being used a great deal, while another noticeable Innovation is the lavish use of feathers and plumes. Many of the plumes on the hats are modifications of the three used In the coiffures of women presented at court. Ermine is going to be used more lavishly, too, in line with the coronation trend. The coronation card has been issued to members by the British color council. It contains six colors in addition to coronation red and coronation blue. The six are coronation gold, coronation green, Marlborough blue, Holyrood green, Buckingham lilac, Saint James rose. The last four are pastels namecL after the British royal resi dences. Coronation gold Is a soft, rich tone" found in works of art from Persia and China. Coronation green'ls a bright clean shade dyed to the original Vert used In the science of British heraldry, from the Thirteenth Century. Marlborough blue is named after the new home of Queen. Mary, and is a pale forget-me-not shade. Holyrood green is named after the Scottish palace of the royal family and is a delicate-pastel used from earliest times In decorative art, especially glassware, pottery and enamel. Buckingham Colors Buckingham lilac, named after the King's London residence, is as sociated with Aubusson tapestries and was used freely by Eighteenth Century painters like Fragonard, Boucher and Laricret. and was later worn in England by the "bucks" of the regency period. St. James" rose is romantlc-looklne faded old rose, named after St. James Palace In London, likewise occurring In Aubusson tapestries. St, James' rose is close to Duskrose on the American spring, 1936, silk card. Holyrood green is slightly bluer than green-glaze on the same color card, i Coronation green is slightly darker than dryad green on th2 spring, 1935, woollen card. Evening gowns typical of what the well dressed Englishwoman will wear during the coronation season are being shipped to American department stores from London dressmaking houses. One, cabled for recently, is in crush-resisting silk-back velvet in red, in a slen- er Princess silhouette with a train, ruched hemline and matching capelet trimmed with' Silver IOX, f WANDERING NEWSPAPER HERE . Continued irom Paso It MAN are good and the working people are happy. Mr. Cade' has been in the news paper game all his life and was glad to be, back amid the good old smell of printer's ink in the Daily News office yesterday. He started outt as a Jack of all trades in the office. of a country weekly, became a rural, correspondent for the Mel bourne papers and eventually moved into the city. The Melbourne Sun Is a morning paper and s published by the same interests who get out the afternoon Herald. The same concern also turns out bi-weekly and weekly publications as well as monthly magazines. Mr. Cade's father Is the medical superintendent pf a mental .hospital in .Australia. He also has a brother .a doctor. Among his credentials Js,a per&onaliy.slgned certificate from th Premier of Commercial Bowls Play Prince Rupert Butchers Win Over McMeekin's Prince Rupert Butchers defeated McMeekin's in the Commercial Bowling League last night, winning three games to nil Scoop Bury of :he Butchers was high average xorer with .189. .Individual scoring was as follows: McMeekin's " 1st ,2nd., 3rd. Hibbard 131 222 196 McMeekin 128 ,115 117 Menzles ..... 132 143 ,143 Morris 121 .136 104 McLeod 168 184 111 Handicap . 29 29 29 Total ...... P. R. .Butchers 709 829 1st 2nd Louis Astoria 127 161 J. Jack 140 156 McLean .110 128 Bury , 182 216 A. Astoria '. 146 140 Handicap 43 43 TD0 3rd 161 138 140 169 146 43 Total 748 844 797 CHALLENGE ACCEPTED The challenge of a team headed by Jimmy Ciccone for a bowling match has been accepted by Max Asemissen on behalf of a team lonslsUng, besides himself, of Stan Morin, Nels Ounderson, Scoop Bury and Jimmy .Glenstrop. The match will be played Saturday night. SPORT CHAT When Streathain and Mitcham defeated Newcastle. 39-3 in an Eng llsh rugby league fixture, George Nepla, veteran Maori star, kicked ilx goals for the victor Bedtime for Australian woman cricketers aboard the liner which will carry them lo England next spring will be 10 ofclock. There will be no moonlight promenades on .he top deck and gambling and moking will also 'be forbidden. Maintaining a tradition that has ixtended more than 160 years, Charles L. P. Grace has been appointed to succeed his father as honorary treasurer of the Itoyai md Ancient Golf Club at Edln-ourgh, Scotland. ' ': j Winner in 1934 and finalist last year, Calcutajjgfjyjbjworthe All-Indian rugby tournament, "de feating Bengal-Nagpur Railway In the final 16-3. Portsmouth, one of the leading' contenders for the championship m tlw English Football league this season, won promotion to the first division in ,1927 by the 200th bart of a goal. Manchester City was hosed out. Jack Crawford, Australian tennis star, believes Great Britain will be hard pressed next year to stave off the challenges of Australia and United States for the Davis Cup. A. E. .Bryant, Buckinghamshire's oldest councillor, -von the Individual angling championship in the national competition with a record catch of 35 pounds. It is estimated there are aboutj 80 ice-hockey players on the Rand In South Africa and officials believe the big rink erected for the Empire Exhibition In Johannesburg wll be retained and regular matches played. Hugh Gallagher, Scottish international soccer star, transferred from Derby to Notts County, is a much-travelled player. He also played for Airdrleonlans, Newcastle United and Chelsea, ...t la MUard'a. Cbacka enlda, Ulua fa. Itraalljr. Kada akla Watxa. AtaVvfclata i h regular and nrw (ana conamatMa. m Hi i v ii in mu ! i QUIT ARMY FOR WIRES Pteuire ,of First Telegrapher In New Brunswick is Presented To Telegraph Company SAINT JOHN, N. B., Oct, 23: tCP). An enlarged colored photograph of a distinguished looking man in the full dress uniform of colonel has been presented to the St. John office of Canadian National Telegraphs by Charles V. McKee, retired dean of local The picture was that of Colonel J, Mount, first "electric telegraph operator at Saint John .who Join ed, the .New Brunswick Telegraph :cmpany when it was founded In 1849, five years after the famous message "what Wonders God hath wrought" clicked over the firs. telegraph line In the world. Colonel Mount came to Saint Jphn with Imperial Army troops. The army -was interesting Itself in the new science of telegraphy "new-fangled" wonder invented by Samuel .Morse. When a group formed a ;company and arranged! financing for a .telegraph line linking the Maine and Nova Scotia boundaries, Colonel Mount was the ixpert they obtained to direct op erations. Until he trained assistants, he was the only telegraph operator In this district. Framed and Inscribed, the pic ture presented by McKe is one he had reproduced from a minia ture given him by his grandmother, a friend of the Colonel After the ceremony McKee gave the miniature to Arthur Mount Gregg, great grandson of Colpncl Mount. Old records of the New Brunswick Telegraph Company, still ex-lsting with Its original line under the lease, shows that the first issue of stock at 10 a share found a ready market. These books are In the possession of McKee, no secretary-treasuer of the company. After the presentation formal Itles old timers recalled storla of days when telegraphy was so little understodd that many per sons thought goods could be sen; over the wires. One woman wanted to telegraph socks to a son In Montreal. Another wrote a raes sage and carefully sealed the en veiope Deiore nanmng .it acrus the counter In an apparent belief the original communication could be sped mysteriously through space. Keacn the most people In city and district with an advertisement '.ji the Daily News. Her Next Book On "Civilizer" British Author Hopes Fascism Not Coming; But Says Some Conditions Favor It TORONTO, Oct. 23: (CP1-Phyllls BenUey, the noted British author of "Inheritance" luid other novels, interviewed here by W. A, Deacon, said she could not travel or "live" and write, too, but she jsflll be engaged next winter pn dn-pther Yorkshire story. "This time about what happens to a man who tries to do good to others, I think of him as a civilizer." Are conditions all right now In the British woollen Industry?" she was asked, "Yes. Unemployment is very much reduced." "Is that due to armaments?" "No. Jmprove ment began in 1932 and arma ment did not start till a year ago." Jn "Freedom, .Farewell" she said, she had tried to picture a country ceasing to be 'free .and laying under a dictatorship. "I did not force the analogy, but Jt needed no and the colonel had studied the forcing Here were the .same ,con dltlons that have brought about contemporary dictatorships increasing corruption Jn public .life, increasing disregard of the mar- rlage tie and easy divorce; and ,an increasing vearineRS of ,people in bearing their own burdens and wishing to throw them ph some body else. "I find several of the same con ditlons In England and America that produced dictatorships in thft past and Fascism In Italy and Germany today. I do not say we shall hive Fascism and fervently hope not, but J see slowly rising those- conditions Avhich, If not re medled. ultimately produce Faj clan." VICTORIA, Oct. 23: (CP) Trevor Le,wls wagered he could ride curie J Jnslde a large truck tire while it was rolled four city blocks. He won the wager but staggered R trjf'.e after his release. It was es-limatjd he made .176 complete revolutions. No More Coughing or Sleepless Nights Mr. II. A. AlUn. of fiarnU. 0Url, vritMi "far ynn I iatv4 wry Fli mI WitUr .villi UrriU (uih. 1 h h4 u7 luplm nlikta 'and a(h4 nUI tMn ran. and my slamMa ackad. I alartad train with tht urn aid rauik about Ortanrr ant bit aftar a ft daita at BuckWr'i Mlitara my couth waa fan.' Kreoirnlte the fart that BUCK LET'S HIXTL'KE la economical trltl acUnc- -aJkaline- -ptnetrataa air pauaf aa auothta t-httU- -helpa you inntantly vet rid of rf rp-ladim pliWm- -Tut It today at any Ural ! dm (tort and. find out why UUCKLEY'S outatUa all othar ,eough and told nnwdlaa In Canada. i in which tobxco tn bt.Mnokcd.-tfffrfi TheRsh which made Prince Rupert Famous "Rupert Brand" SMOKED BLACK COD Prepared Daily By Canadian Fish & Cold Storage fo., UA. PRINCE RUPERT, B.C. lttl Potatoes i -aaJ .x acre are no finer potatoes in ll.C. than MURRAY'S POTATOES Grown in ihe Bulkfev Valley, Obtainable at any of the following stores: Alberta Market llulkley aiarket Jlanuau's firocery Jailinson's Grocery Liny Uavies E. Lipwtt LU, OverMaitea Ltd. IMilllipt .firwery Q. &.S- Grocery Sunrise Grocery eteriing Market Thrift Cash & Carry Watts Grocery Distributed solely by S. C. Thomson MacKENZIE'S FURNITURE Steel Panel IJed, Slnmbfr King Spring; Deep Sleep Spring Filled Mattress. 327 Third Ave. I'hone 775 NEW ROYAL HOTEL J. Zarelli Proprietor "A HOME AWAY FUO.M JIOMK" Rates 51-00 up SO Rooms Hot & Cold Water .Prince Mupert B.C Phone 281 P.O. Box 191. COAL 3X) .PLEASE EVERYBODY Satisfaction OuaranUed FAMOUS EOSON AL1JEKTA COAL BULKLEY VALLEY COAL VANCOUVEU ISLAND COAL PRINCE RUPERT FEED COMPANY .PIIONE.'.SS and 558 Rupert Table Tennis .Club OPE.V EVERY DAY 3 to 6 and 7 to 12 Ppone C72 for reservation Rex Bowling Club Exchange Block Sixth St. and Third Ave. Phone 658