paoi roun BOVRIL THE DELICIOUS The Economy Store Features Libby's Products 19c Sale SOUPS Vegetable, Asparagus; Pea, Spinach 1 Qp VK' 2 tins TOMATO JUICE Large 1 Q 2 tins CHILI CON CARNE 1 M.VI, Qf Picnic, per tin RIPE OLIVES l's 1 Qp per tin ... , A,i PORK & BEANS 2 squat Qp iVk' 2 Uns PREPARED MUSTARD "i Qp 2 Jars POTTED MEATS VVs 4 ftp . 2 tins CRUSHED RIPE OLIVES Qp VVs, for sandwiches, 2 tins''' SMALL WHITE BEANS Qfn in 6 lbs DOMESTIC SHORTENING -t Cp Ad'1' per lb FAIRYLIGHT CAKE 9fip FLOUR, per pkg. BLUE RIBBON MATCHES 07p per pkg. CASH SPECIALS MUSSALLEM'S ECONOMY STORE I Where Dollars lUvr Morr Crnls" P. O. Box 575 Phone 18 FRESH milk and CREAM DAILY VALENTIN DAIRY j Phone 657 COAL TO PLEASE EVERYBODY Satisfaction Guaranteed FAMOUS EDSON ALBERTA COAL BULKLEY VALLEY COAL VANCOUVER ISLAND COAL PRINCE RUPERT FEED COMPANY PHONE: 58 and 558 ! Hinton Coal . Phone 51 CENTRAL HOTEL SPECIAL Chevrolet MASTER SEDAN with Trunk Complete 1936 Licence Just Like New $950.00 Kaien Motors Limited CHEVROLET DEALERS Third Ave. Phone 52 mmmmmmmmmmm BEEF DRINK 7 Man in the Moon Slush, slush, beautiful slush, How we all like through the streets to mush; How we enjoy our best clothes to splash. As close to the sidewalk a car goes slap dash. The salary may not be so hot, but most people know how to blow it. j Jake says chickens are curious things. Nobody seems to know why they cross the street. Another curious thing about them is that they may be eaten before they are born and after they are dead. The modern version of the word "hermit" is one who spends two or three -evenings at home alnost every week. College is a great place. One parent says since he went to college his son can ask for a ten dollar bill such a way as to make him feel that it is a privilege to give it. Most people will lie to prove that they are right. A local teacher asked who was the greatest man in the world. The reply of the little girl who had kept up to date by reading the newspapers was: "I think it's Hitler or Mussolini or Premier Aber-hart, or Gerry McGeer or Pattullo and I don't know which." JONES Family Market I'HOMi 957 PHONE 05" SPECIALS PRIME STEER BEEF Sirloin Tip, 4 lbs. $1 1 lb. Bacon T-Bone Roast, 4 lbs. & si 1 lb. Bacon Prime Rib Roll, 4 lbs. & SI 1 lb. Bacon Rump Roast of Beef, 6 lbs. & SI! 1 lb. Bacon Shoulder Roast of Veal 10c per lb .". Leg of Veal $1 6 lbs. Round Steak 50c 3 lbs Sirloin Steak 50c 3 lbs Leg of Mutton About 6 lbs 18c each, ner lb. Shoulder of Lamb 50c 4 lbs Lamb Chops 50c 3 lbs Veal Chops 50c 3 lbs Shoulder Roast Pork 15c per lb Leg of Pork 20c per lb Loin of Pork 20c per lb ; Ayrshire Bacon ' 25c per lb. Side Bacon By the niece 25c per lb "TILLIE THE TOILER" j English DAILY NEWS JWedneslay, March 25, Canada and the United States are not the only countries to be hit by storms. Here is a picture from England, showing how roads near Perivale Middlesex, are flooded as the River Brent overflows its banks. Storms lashed the British Isles and most of Europe. TAKING OF WHITEFISH Northland Pilots Aid in Bringing 0f the To make an lnspection Catch to Railways Often At Jnghthouse tender Newington, Risk of Lives I last which sustained hull damage (week in a stranding at Barrett EDMONTON, March 25: (CP) ! Rock at the entrance of the har-Provldlng freshly-caught whltef Ish I bor, Albert Farrow, steamboat in- for delicious meals to thousands of New Yorkers Is one of the northland's most romantic indus tries. Only a few hundred men, operating In northern parts of the western provinces, are employed in catching and tBansportlng thou sands of fish daily to railroads in he south, which rush the catch to :astern and southern markets. Supply is almost directly dependent on air transport. No other apid means of freighting the fish !rom areas hundreds of miles from teel exist, and the northlaiid's Pilots who engage In the annual ;ransport cf whltefish have a man- sized Job. Almost a dozen machines are in jse flying the fish to railways, where they are placed in refriger ated cars. The Journey accom plished by air in a few hours would take several weeks by dog-sled, the only other means of transportation. . On an average a pilot takes 15 minutes to load a ton of fish and tart on the return flight. Unload- ing at the inspection plant can be done In ten minutes. Pilots aver-ige at least three and often four return flights daily. At Inspection plants the fish are examined and placed in shaled ice 'n a warm compartment, and the long pull to Chicago and New York Is made by fast express. Production has Increased tremendously with the use of air transport. Hundreds of northern lakes have not yet been touched by fishermen. Pllots must make their flights witnout weather information and with the possibility of encountering a snowstorm or fog. In such cases the airman is left to his own resources. Emergency landing places arc few and far apart owing to heavy forests and the rolling Countryside Swept WHIFFLETS i IYom the Waterfront ispector, arrived in, the city on the Prince Rupert this morning from Vancouver. The 'Newington Is now on the pontoons at the local dry dock. It Is expected repairs will be carried out here although no de finite decision has yet been made. The halibut boat John W. I., formerly Lysekll, Capt. Al Woie, left today for the fishing grounds. The Southend was among today's arrivals, coming In with a small ?atch, two members of her crew being ill with influenza. Local salmon trailers had a conference last night at the C. C. F. Hall on Fulton Street when the matter of co-operative marketing by Sigmund Elnstoss was gone further into. Mr. Einstoss addressed the fishermen and gave details of his plan. Having been delayed by snow on the Islands, C. N. R. steamer Prince John, Capt. Neil McLean, Is due In port at 4 o'clock this afternoon from Vancouver via the Queen Charlotte Islands and will remain here until" Friday night when she will sail on her return south over the same route. With a good sized list of passengers, C. N. R. steamer Prlnde Rupert, Capt. H. E .Nedden, ar-' rived in port at 10:15 this morning from Vancouver, Powell River and Ocean Falls and will sail at 4 o'clock this afternoon for Anyox and Stewart whence she will re- ! turn here tomorrow evening south- bound. nature of the country. The planes are .equipped with skis for winter use. Most of the landings are made on lake or river' Ice. by Floods Jack Lovelock For Olympics LONDON, March 25: (CP) Jack Lovelock, New Zealand mllcr. will soon begin training for the Olympic Games. Recent acceptance of nomination as an official of the Amateur Athletls Associa tion and knee trouble led to rumors of Lovelock's retirement from the track, but it is now stated -he will definitely represent his country at Berlin. Less Than Just Another Touch of Realism GOOD FILM ! BILL HERE "The iUishop Misbehaves" And "Whispering Smith Speaks" i 1 At Capitol Theatre The story of "The Bishop Mis behaves," on the screen of the (Capitol Theatre this mid-week, deals with madcap revenge of a young English girl (Maureen O'-Sullivan) on an old dodo who has embezzled her ailing father's money. Failing to find justice in the courts, she resorts to an ingeniously planned robbery, in j which she is aided by a young Am- J jerican architect f Norman, Foster). iwho sets himself up as a friend of Al Capone's and a cluster of en thusiastic but non-professional English characters. Into this melee walks the kindly Brshop of Broadminster (Edmund Gwenn), .full of crime theories gained by a lifetime of reading de tective stories. Humorous and sus pense-charged episodes follow on the heels of one another until, miraculously, the bishop stumbles upon a solution. Railroad Story When a rich man's son sets out to prove that he b the match of his father, things happen in the thrilling George O'Brien's picture. "Whispering Smith Speaks," the other end of a double bill. A rcd-bloodcd, action-filled story of railroading, "Whispering Smith Speaks." stars O'Brien, with Frank Sheridan as his father, Irene Ware as his romantic leading lady, and Kenneth Thomson as his rival? INTERNATIONAL TABLE TENNIS . LONDON, March 25: (CP lans are being made for a table tennis match between Great Brl tain and the United States a' Earl's Court, London, prior to the world's championships at 'Prague. 1 cent an hour It has been estimated that the average person reads three hours a day approximately 90 hours a month? Our Rental Library provides you with this much reading, and more, for only 75 cents. Recreation, Education and Pleasure for you at the lowest possible expense. Here arc some recent new hooks: "THE EXILE" Buck "THE PURSUER" Golding "FIVE RED HERRINGS" Savers "WHITE HAWTHORN" Borden "SHADOW OF THE CHEKA" . Kennedy "MARCHING, MARCHING" Weatherwax "DUST OVER THE RUINS" ..: Ashtort "INNOCENCE AND EXPERIENCE" Bottome "FLOATING PERIL" Oppenheim "THE SEA WITCH" Lalng "THE DEVIL MAN" Wallace ' ' "THE HURRICANE" Nordholf and Hall "MEN AND BRETHREN" Cozzens "STAR OF MIDNIGHT" Roche "SLEEPERS EAST' Nebel "HOUSE IN PARIS" Bowcn "IF I HAVE FOUR APPLES" Lawrence "UNCHARTED" Parkman Join now! Read all you want for 75c a month. Double subscription (2 books at a time) .$1.25 a month. eMaAs.Mi 3 He Dropped His A-Men to Join The "G" Men! He knew his detective thnn as well as hi wwl he crashed right into lime mvsto.i t.. . oa'- preacher .nnranb erlmw ! love tables Mr. "The Bishop Misbehaves" With EDMUND GWENN Maureen O'Sullivan Reginald Owen Norman Foster At 7:05 & 9:33t 1 PLUS Something New In Excitement! George O'Brien - in WHISPERING SMITH SPEAKS" He Swaps His Krone For j Steed of S.tecl . . . With love at the throttle and death lurking 'round the curve he shatters all records for speed and excltemeit, too! v.!th - Irene Ware fAt 0:23 Once On!y Last Complete Show at 8:M TONIGHT & THURSDAY r-rnrtr-rc .WW J ' FOR COOKING' N v -OIRECTLY ONlHEFlM N.r Mort ert duk.l lil VIJIBll COOKlNO-i tlt.r. IrantptrtM Lit diilifl thai do Ml diKolor r growrd. BOIl-BAKt-5RVl-$TOlt-ll la hm up.f.h.ilrttillii'l glilldilh. IMMOVABLE HANDll,Oii.lll kiuk-$ifl C. II Ik. Ubl. (A- BlTTtR FOOIVrV jM tool I mi nan rnf. m i"n a5 tpi bnr "P Y REX" TOP OF STOVE ntl Gordons Hardware I'lionc 311 Mc Bride Street -By Whatever