paqi roxm It Pays to Buy From MUSSALLEM'S Our prices are always right with the markets and we sell for less. Mail or phone your order and save FREE GIFT COUPONS for a Dinner Set and Rogers Silyerware. Prince Rupert, B.C. MUSSALLEM'S ECONOMY STORE COAL TO PLEASE EVERYBODY Satisfaction Guaranteed FAMOUS EDSON ALBERTA COAL BULKLEY VALLEY COAL VANCOUVER ISLAND COAL PRINCE RUPERT FEED COMPANY PHONE: 58 and 558 MacKENZIE'S FURNITURE and Home Furnishings Furnishings for all your home Coverings for all your floors. We Invite you to call in and look around 327 Third Ave. Phone 775 NEW ROYAL HOTEL J. Zarelll, Proprietor -A HOME A)VAY FROM DOME" Rates 11.00 n 60 Rooms Hot it Cold Waiei Prince Rupert, B.C Phone 281 P.O. Box 189 PERFECTION IN CANNED SALMON SEAT. Fancy Red Sockeye IfflMW PINK SEAL. Finest Pink Salmon Packed by the only Salmon Canning Company with an all the year round payroll In Prince Rupert. Hyde Transfer Jasper Coal All Kinds Of Dry Firewood PHONE 580 Office 315 Second Avenue SMITHERS MAN DIES Donald Simpson, Prominent In Interior Mining:, Passes Away SMITHERS, Sept. 2: Word was received in Smithers Monday of the death an Vancouver on Sun day of Donald Simpson of Smithers, one of the old timers and one of Smithers' best known citizens. Mr. Simpson had always been In robust health until a few months ago when he declined rapidly Upon medical examination he was found to be suffering from an incurable disease. He went to Vancouver for medical attention but could get no . relief and passed away in hospital there. Mr. Simpson was one of, those who had unbounded confidence In the mineral resources of this district and of .the Hudson Bay Mountain Where he held the Victory Group of mineral claims and was Interested in other properties. His claims are among the most promising on the Hudson Bay mountain. It would appear' that In passing away at this time he has followed the course of a great many other prospectors and min ers who have passed out Just as the realization of their hopei was near materialization. Present indications point to great activity fdr Hudson Bay Mountain where Mr. Simpson's interests lay. He was a great student and was well grounded In mineralogy and In economics and often wrote articles for the press which showed a great deal of study and thought. He was a native of Scotland and was about 67 years of age. He la survived by his widow who accompanied him to Vancouver and s still In the south. Announcement After two months which have been most wonderful for my health I will start practising dentistry again on September' 2, However, having found the long hours Indoors necessary to handle the work coming to my office too hard on my health, and having read in current dental magazines about the now so popular Idea in the United States which they call the Bungalow Office and the convenience of same as compared to the downtown office, I have decided to move my office to my residence, corner of Fourth Avenue East and Green Street (the white house with the red roof next to the Prince Rupert General Hospital) and believe that I will be better able to handle the work for those of my patients who wish to follow me to my new location, than I could In a too busy downtown office. My telephone is as before 109. Dr. H. 0. Johnsen DENTIST "ft' rOOT BETTo?. SEP Its .3 Al M I WAS r-OOS OlS MAC ALOJB Fno AVC4TW ON DEVIL'S ISLAND Smithers Fair About to Open Splendid Display of Bulkley Valley Agricultural Produce This Year SMITHERS, Sept. 2: Preparations have been completed for the Fall Fair at Smithers on Thursday and Friday, and It Is expected that the exhibits this year will exceed both In quantity and quality anything shown here Uafnra WlVi cfenafe nt nat.s and difference between them. This Is because the whole system Is plotted but above ground. Work ing at night, the surveyors mark out the route in the streets, with all the necessary twists and turns, Shafts are sunk at various points, and, by using an instrument called a theodolite, the engineers down below can strike the exact direction of the lines marked out on the surface. A great circular shield is used in driving the new tunnel. It has a sharp edge, and is forced along by hydraulic rams. As it moves, men take away the earth through doors In the head of the shield, and. the newly cut tunnel is encased In cast-iron rings. If the tunnel has to go through areas where underground rivers or streams are likely to cause trouble, the work ts carried out In com pressed air, which keeps the water back. Mrs; Jack Watson and daughter. Miss Janet Watson, returned home on the Prince Rupert this mornlns following a visit in Vancouver. "TIME THE TOILER" SJOUi WHERE ' CO VOL) SUPPOSE THAT PERN BEAK nATiiiii' ri m-p7 yak -IP b'OOMBNTlOW HAC isj.ttUM OFF OR lOME-TVU Men Mill 11 -V OtJ, I... t,.f..m . ,, tvln w.,,. ) CA2L7 NStTB GUARDING SHIPLANES Skipper of New Nantucket Proud Of -His "Unsinkable" Craft With all Her Modern Safeguards CHELSEA, Mass., Sept. 2: (AP) v v. ,1 u.-.-' v. - ' ...... . . , . timothy over six feet in height wm snipping .saieiy pa..-the shoak off the tucket dangerous Judges will have to use step the'" New" England coast ladders to get a good view of heads of the various varieties ofl ne maa u. u grain and hay that will be shown at the fair, The livestock, too, is In exceptionally fine condition and all the root and' vegetable crops are of a snlpnrild nnaHt.v. ship Nantucket with the most modern devices to guide trans- loggy morning two years ku, when the liner Olympic, Inbound for New York, ran down the Jightship H7. Seven of the lightship's crew drowned. The new Nantucket, built at a cost of $350,- ls double-hulled and has five watertight compartments to pre-success to make cthe fair an outstanding .vent another such occurrence. The 'smithers Brass Band will' S&'?" be in 'attendance on Friday after- . ? the douole , noon. Begin Extension Of London Tubes Central London Underground Rail way Project to Cost Seventy-Five Million Dollars LONDON,, Sept. 2! (CP) A $75,- 000,000 project the extension of the Central London Underground railway from Liverpool Street to Stratford, Leystone and Newbury has Just been started. Another $1,-250,000 is to be spent on straight ening and enlarging the existing Central London line which was completed in 1900. A new underground tunnel is usually built In mile-long sections, and so accurate do the big tunnel- builders work today that when these sections meet there is never more than a fraction of an inch slnkable." He explained hull as "really two vessels in one" oen hull built' Inside another with a six-foot alleyway separa ting the two walls of stout steel from stem to stern. Cantaln Studley. recalling his first days and nights, on Nan tucket shoals, nearly 28 years; ago, raid "We had oil lights on thpje stubby masts, fog horns powered by steam, cramped quarters and food that didn't always keep too well In the underfrigerated ship." Then, he turned again to his new vessel. "That submarine os cillator," he aald, pointing , to a pear shaped Instrument on the forward deck, "carries sound 61 miles. It is lowered Into the water while on station, he explained, and throws a horn-like note across the ocean floor to oncoming vessels, which pick It up with specially made equipment. Radio Very 'Powerful" The grizzled old white-mous- tached sea dog, pointed aloft to a two-toned horn he called the warbler, which sends, its eerie cry 10 miles. He stopped at the radio shack aft, from which a radio beacon sends its warning buzz sometimes, as far as 1,500 miles, The crew of, 19 spends two months oh. the;, shoals then brie month on shore. When on duty the men stand by during the day. At night the sailors alternate on two-hour tricks above decks, ex cept when raging gales or heavy fog sweeps down, when stronger watches are needed. Just about ,,once a year the 7,000 pound mushroom anchor pulls; her 180 fathoms" of. li Inch chain loose and the ship drags off her station. Then it will be thej duty of her small, .powerful dlesel nglnes to bring her back to her anchorage and hold her nose against the gale decks buried under tons of steel -ripping green combers. There are even more frequent nights of fog, when the lookout can see but a few hazy feet, and the tow-toned horn tears through the darkness. THIS IS A HECK OF A DESERTED ISLAND. A 6UV CANT TAKE A SVUIK WITHOUT HAVMN6 HIS CLOTHES STOLEN.1! 1 Ho- THAT'S A DEA .TOM . ajHV NOT TOIM MACT HE'LL &E LQMESOMg WHIFFLETS From the Waterfront Northland Transportation Co.'s steamer North Sea, Capt. A. W. Nlckeirson, arrived in port at 6:30 this morning from Ketchikan and, after discharging frozen' halibut Uncle Sam remembered his own and canned salmon for trans-ship- when he equipped the new light- iment east over Canadian National Railways, sailed in continuation of her voyage to Seattle at 11:30 ajn. ;she brought in' four car loads in all. Union steamer Catala, Capt. James Flndlay, returned to port at 8 o'clock last evening from Stewart, Anyox and other northern, ports, sailing about an hour later for Vancouver and waypoints. CNit. . steamer Prince Rupert, Capt. Nell McLean, Inaugurating the fall and winter schedule be tween here and Vancouver, ar rived In port at 11:30 this, mom Ing from Vancouver, Powell River and Ocean Falls and will sail at 4 o'clock thisafternoon for Anyox and Stewart whence she will re turn here at 8 o'clock tomorrow evening and sail at 10:30 pro. for Vancouver via Ocean Falls arid Powell River, . The Indian. Department power cruiser tfaskeena, with Dominion Constable A. J. Watklnson in charge, returned to port last night after .a trip to Kltlmaat with the departmental auditor, F. W. Holmes of bttawa, who Is n the district on official duties. The Kaskeena will take Mr. Holmes to Port Simpson tomorrow. Armour Salvage Co.'s big power tug Algie was taken on the pon toon "at the dry dock this morning for inspection and such hull work as may be necessary after a busy season. Women's Labor League Meeting Last Night A meeting of the Women's Labor League took place in the" p, L. D L. Hall last night. There were a number in attendance, Many Important Items were discussed. Mrs. Bowden was in the chair. HEN LODGES WITH DOG ABERDEEN, Wish., Sept, 2: (CP) A bantam hen flew out of Ray Brasfield'a chickenyard and roosted in the dog-house. When the dog re-appeared and crawled in the bantam refused to leave. Nowi the two occupy the house every! night. But these lonely guardians don't talk much of the raging seas that j romet'.mes sweep their comrades overboard, of the mighty ships 4 that have borne down upon their There are days on end when the anchored vessel, or of the many lightship pitches and rolls, her narrow squeezes, when death only Just passed them by. It's in their blood this business of being guardians of the transatlantic highway. It's a Job to be done, and a Job they're Justly proud of doing. That Suits Mac! OK, SO YOU'VE BEEN FOLLOWING Mb -COME ON, GIMME THAT BATBING- SUIT NEW TYPE AIR FILM "Sky Parade" a thrill-packed drama of the skies with Jimmie Allen; radio star making his screen debut, and "Spendthrift 'a high spirited fast-moving romance with Henry Fonda, Mary Brian ana av Paterson In the leading roles, com prise an Interesting mid-week double bill at the Capitol Theatre, "Sky Parade" Is a new kind of air film, turning from the daredevil pursuit of 'thrills to the development of safety and sanity in flying. In a swift succession of fascinating episodes such epochal events as the Atlantic crossings of Lindbergh and Amelia Earhart and the round-the-world flight of Post and Oatty are re-enacted. There is also a clever and interesting story surrounding the activities of a gang of racketeers. The cast In cludes William Gargan, Katherlne DeMllle, Kent Taylor, Grant With ers and Billy Lee. . "Spendthrift" relates the story of ji; wealthy youth who lets $23,000, 000 slip through his fingers, gets married to a gold-digger and loses his last cent on a horse race. His means of regaining a financial foothold and finding real romanco form the plot. POC.TEtly 13 SUT -HHB "STUff Td coorc n I H : I 'J ITJiTI TONIGHT ONLY Last Complete Show. 8:21 The horse-raclny, jirl.chj ' Inr romance of a madc millionaire! "Spendthrift" with HENRY FONDA Pat Paterson, Mary Brian, George Barbier (At 7:03 & 9:34) PLUS Fearless Jimmie Allen-..fii.. by right of courage! America's most popular birdman--th. idol of radio fans- -wins hi. wings with a dramatic coup. hi mia-air JIMMIE ALLEN in - "The Sky Parade" with t- -William Gargan, Kathfrin DfMille, Kent Taylor (At 8:21 Once Only) Coming Thurs., Fri., Satur. GINGER ROGERS FRED A'STAIRE "Follow the Fleet" Specials for SCHOOL OPENING EXERCISE BOOKS Best Quality Ink Paper Regular 5c size, speciaf, 10 for !5c Regular 10c size, Special, 4 for 25c 180 and 200 Page High School Exercise Books, doz. $1.50 ii $2.M REEVES SCHOOL PAINTS. 12 pan. 5 color box Complete with brush , SCHOOL PENCILS. 2 for '. .. First quanity, H. B. Rubber Tip, 3 for per dozen Seconds, 5 for per dozen -v REEVES SCHOOL CRAYONS, 12's .'..f . REEVES INDIA INK School Paste .. SAV THese look. lKE mm CONT1MI Hey. Knuckle1 DOWM-SAy, THE BETzraiCrS ' urn .35c 5c 10c .40c Jc 10c 15c .20c ;15c RULERS .J.yl,....!. ..1 5c, 10c & 15c Measure Compasses .....i...;......i ,.u..,i-A -.. Erasers, Art Gum, Red Pencil or inland Pencil, each Protractors, celluloid :.........'.. Drawing Portfolios .15c 5c 15c 10c Complete Stock of Text Rooks for All Grades Standard Government Prices Terms Strictly Net Cash. No phone or delivery service. Postage on Mail Orders Extra By Wstover