tteAe'i tiiat fait "PluiUpi'Wcu, ro.itaiirc5fomoci Quickly On all sides, people are learning that the way to gain almost incredibly quick relief, from stomach condition arising from overacidity, is to alkalize the stomach quickly with Phillips' Milk of Magnesia. You take either two teaspoons of the liquid Phillips' after meals; or two Phillips' Milk of Magnesia Tabids. Almost instantly "acid indiges-. lion" goes, gas from hyperacidity, "acid - headaches" from over-indulgence in food or smoking and nausea are relieved. Try this Phillips' way if you have any acid stomach upsets. You will be surprised at results. Gel either the liquid "Phillips" or the remarkable, new Phillips Milk of Magnesia Tablets. Only 25 for a big box of tablets at drug stores. AISO IN TABLET FORM: Each tiny tablet U the rquiv ftltat of teupoonfuf .of ffpnuine Phillips' Milk of AMgneua. MAOC IN CANADA Phillips' magnesia C 0 A L TO PLEASE EVERYBODY Satisfaction Guaranteed FAMOUS EDSON ALHtltTA COAL UULKLLY VALLEY COAL VANCOUVER ISLAND COAL PRINCE RUPERT FEED COMPANY PHONE: 58 and 558 ' PERFECTION IN CANNED SALMON GOLD : SEAL Fancy . Red Sockeye mm PINK SEAL Finest Pink Salmon Packed by the only Salmon Canning Company with an all the year round payroll In Prince Rupert. Hyde Transfer Phone 580 DRY WOOD JASPER COAL Furniture Moving Light Delivery 315 SECOND AVE. OLD IDEAS FALLACIES Stefansson Spikes Theory of Snow-Kubbin; For Cold and Credits Ostrich With Sense NEW YORK, Feb. 6: CP The ostrich does not bury its head in the sand, the hair of the dog that " bit you will not cure you, and If you rub snow on your face when it is cold, you are crazy. Arctic explorer expert on kimos, who makes a hobby of run-! ning famous fallacies into the i ground. Stefansson, Canadian-born j in an Icelandic settler's cabin on I the shores pf Lake Winnipeg In 1879, has headed several expeditions to the-north. Under the heading of "like curing like," a species of "sympathetic magic," he puts all the "halr-of-the dog" variety of cures, Including snow on the face. "If you put enough snow on. your face will freeze," he says. "Far from making your face warmer, the snow withdraws heat and injects Its own cold, for when two bodies meet, one hot and the other cold, there Is anlnterchange of temperatures." Widely-travelled, Stefansson has found no country and no people without a characteristic set of be liefs difficult to believe. He started out to become an anthropologist, but found it too big a field. He de- O j . . ! duty after many years of service. THE DAILY NEWS Waterfront Whiffs New Lighthouse Tender is Centre of InterestDry Dock is Being Kept Fairly Busy These Days The Alberni comes from Halifax A1'beml u moored which port she left on November 8 ! docj. for Victoria via the Panama Canal. ! docked and overhauled there before coming north. Capt. Harry Ormls-ton and crew of the Newington transferred to the Alberni at Victoria. The Alberni, had been brought around from Halifax to Victoria by Capt. Oscar Mercier, French - Canadian skipper of the Ice-breaker Mlkula, biggest ship of her kind on the St Lawrence River. Capt. Mercier and his crew of at the - K i i I The centre of interest on the local waterfront this .ij.j , t.in. , . ,, , . thaTsUn 5"?' ment COal n the "' ready to go back into com-iouna found round that mat still stilt too too big Die a a field. field. I rence, wucn was r y,m built at . Soreil. cni-n rt.,knn ! . . .... Then he decided to specialize In beliefs that aren't so. "Adventures in Error" From time to time he has pub lished results of his investigations, the latest being called "Adventures m Error." . The much-praised O reeks get some of the blame for false beliefs that have persisted. 'The Greeks," says Stefansson, saw the earth as a symmetrical Slobc, with Greece the country 01 ideal location and climate. To the north of them they depicted a region of intense cold where no life existed. To the south; they saw an area which they called 'the burning tropics' where it was too hot for man or beast to survive. tor almost 1,800 years this theory found a place In men's be llefs. When explorers reported ab undant life at some northern out- past, men said, 'Yes, but beyond there Is no life.' And when others penetrated far south, and found it no hotter right under the sun than elsewhere, people said, 'But beyond, further south, It Is too hot for life.' "As a matter of fact, when Peary got to the north .tip of Greenland. he found bees and butterflies. Greenland Itself, pictured in Imagination as an Icy waste, is an ag ricultural country. Alaska is hot in the summer, yet people who start out in warm weather for that country buy fur coats and ear-muffs. "And the hottest place on earth is not in the tropics at all.' but in Death .illey. California." gross tons and 197 tons net with a dent this week to the steamer be able to carry out heavier work i mornlnir. With fishing nnH nthor Junior Moose Hold Banquet Highly Enjoyable Affair Last XiRht Willi Twenty-Three Tersons lit Attendance The annual banquet of the Junior Moose was held last night at the Knox Hotel and proved to b. a veTy enjoyable affair for the tweuty-thiee members who were present. Ned McLeod, dictator, was n the chair and speakers, beside? So says Vilhjalmur Stefansson,! Week-end is the Steamer Alberni Which arrived in port himself, were D. C. Schubert, w "t irt flvnmror n and ovnorr srt Es I 1 n I IT! i . i l i 1 1 n ii i-n i t-m ti... la&L evening irom victoria to mane ner iuture oase nere Awwuium, raoya toy, mc as lighthouse tender for waters of the. British Columbia straehan and Martin Erickson than It was possible for her pre- vessels getting in readiness for the'Ught disappeared each time groups UtteaiOr lO GO. fnrthrnmln t.n. fV.M ! Coming around from Halifax to ' a good deal of miscellaneous work at Prcsent in at the local Victoria, -the Alberni had an ex- i progress ceptlonally rough trio which am-1'3" and the machine shop has ply tested her seaworthiness. For about a11 11 can handle in the way days and days the Alberni rolled , 01 engine work these days. Jerribly. She shipped gallons of sea ! water, that plunged from side to union ieamer venture, capt. J. side on her decks. Several times " aoaen arrived in port at 8:3p she dipped her bulwarks into the seas. The days seemed interminable. The only bright spots were the visits to tropical ports, and San Fran-. clsco and several days at sea, steaming across blue seas and un der a warm sun. It was between Halifax and St. Georges, Bermuda, the little ship ran Into her worst storm. She took a heavy beating, but came out little the worse. From Bermuda she went to Cristobal, at the Atlantic entrance to the Panama Canal, and remained there four days. Her next port-of-call was San Francisco. Christmas and New Year's Days were spent between Panama and California. Practically all the way up the Pacific Coast the Alberni fought big seas and strong head winds. One of the worst gales she experienced was off the Mexican coast. It was stormy, too, from the time she left San Francisco until r..v,u..uCU u, OUUK5 0n Arctic, she turned around Carje Flat- expioration, Stefansson Is busy ; tery into the quiet of the Straits these days editing the more impor-;of Juan de Fuca. One twenty-four tant documents relating to Martin; hour period she did only sixteen "j-b. mis, ana nis . miles. Her ; 7' average speed on the ..o.j yuo wmi me united states government and Pan-American Airways on flying conditions in the north, necessitates four secretaries. To pronounce his first name; Vilhjalmur, one should learn . to say "he" and "owl" together very fast. This sound comprises the middle syllable, which Is the most difficult. The accent is on "Vllh," which Is pronounced like 'vlllaee,,, The "mur" Is hardly heard, parti-1 cularly the "r," which is peculiar to Icelandic. voyage was about six knots. The SNAP "TILLIE THE TOILER" TlLLlE told mac he'd have T& GIVE up his SHEEP 006 OR ELSE SHE'D BREAK OFF THeib EM- K3A6EMEWT SO MAC DECIDED hb Pact HERBERT dravj His bath, biffins. He meeds a 3ood SCOUR- IN6 AFTER. HIS QUESTlflu ABLE ASSOCI- POWDER CLEANS AND POLISHES Bathtubs. Wathbasina, Wbdowa, and Mirror. CaiMt scratch. -y - . A -3 ' i , ( last evening from. the south and sailed at 10:30 pjn on her returii to Vancouver and waypoints. i ' C. P. R. ktemtn Princess Ade lalde, Capt. S. K. Gray, returned al 7 o'clock' this morning from another special voyage to Ketchikan and! sailed at 8:30 for Vancouver and waypoints. . The Ketchikan motorship Eskimo was in port this mornlne with a carload of frozen fUh for transshipment east over Canadian . National Railways. , FINDS PEAKL IN OYSTER REGINA, Feb. 6: CP R. J. M. Parker. Saskatchewan minister of municipal affairs, will wear a new tie-pin for the Legislature opening February 11. He found the pearl when eating oysters. , of men sought to encircle It. It then reappeared outside the ring. The phenomenon, witnesses said, bears a resemblance to a. will-o'-the-wisp which usually Is a pale flame found floating over marshy ground, thought to be the result of SDontaneous combustion of marsh I gas formed by decaying organic matter. Tonight's tram, due from the east at 10:20, was reported this morning to be on time PRINCE RUPERT DRY DOCK AND SHIPYARD Shipbuilders and KnglMcn. It9m and Brax Catiat. Brri and AcctyUaM SpcJalUu ia SawuM and Mining Machinery. AO Typ a Caa Euginaa Rrpalrrd and Orerhauled. ATTENTION! Home Gas Hour of Music 9 - 10 P, M. Sundays 1100 Kilocycles-CKC V, now 5000 walls Absence Makes the Heart Grow Fonder LADy ( SOLOMS DON'T LOOK. AT ME LIKE THAT PAI I CAN'T rrAMD (30TROCKS My DO6-O0ES THAT MAKE THIMGS OKA V41TH US I Plan to Blaze Road to Coast PEACE RIVER, Alta.. Feb. C: j (CP An automobile will leave Peace River next summer in an, attempt to blaze a trail through) j the mountains to the Pacific coast, j Arthur Smith, of this town, says, j It Is thus hoped to prove the feasibility of a Peace Rier-to-Paclf Ic highway, long sought by residents of the huge Peace River j district of northern Alberta and British Columbia. Mr. Smith said the end of the j Alberta road was within. 10 miles coast north of Queen Char.otto Sound, placing the vet- SEp-SSJK SSTStJTSZ eran steamer Newington which has been retired from wM.n those present going either to tne cariboo highway at the othe: to the students dance In the Odd- ide of theMonkmin Pass through ocean fellows' Hail or to th Caplto! the mountains. He believed th Theatre. Guests of honor were Mr and Mrs. D. C. Schubert and W. B After a stormy voyage she reached j Crossing swox-as with Hon. J. E. MiCar.nm. Victoria on January 18 and was dry ! Michaud, minister of fisheries, Oiof The committee In charge consls Hanson, M. p. for Skeena, in the -ted of . Bob Ritchie, James Schu-House of Commons at Ottawa re- bed.. Ned McLeod and Russell cently, took a definite stand against ' Cameron, fish traps and announced he would i support a resolution of A. W. Mc Neill, Independent member Comox-Alberni' in opposition traps. The local dry dock, although the staff is not as big as it used to be. twenty-one returned to Montreal 15 oems Kept.iainy ousy tnese aays. from Victoria bv rail. All the eouin- The Principal job, of course, is the ment of the Newington was also ! carryin5 out of the annual .over"l transferred to the Alberni. !haul of the "teamer Prince George rlC- for! Dancing Lights Puzzle Farmers Attempts to Trace Saskatchewan Will-o-the-Wisp Unsuccessful REDBERRY, Sask., Feb. 6: (CP -A mysterious bright light racing The Alberni, formerly a - o-- govern-; coming week wt'CK in in uiuer order to to have nave the tne lover the countryside at night mys- tlfies residents of this Isolated dls- Quebec, mission next week, earlier than wasltrict 145 miles northwest of Saska-in 1929. She Is registered at 502 1 at first planned, owing to the accl-' toon. Attempts to trace the will-o'- length of 157 feet and a beam of 37 feet. She was converted last summer at Soreil. She is a larger ship than the Newington and will Prince Rupert which is to be given her annual overhaul here concur-broken crankshaft. The Prince Rupert moved into the yard this the-wisp so far have been unsuccessful. Peter P. Prokop, district farmer, described the light as "about the size of a baseball and very bright." First seen several weeks -ago,, the pass mtos mc-tly Turn and Ifvcl terrain- with 3,350 feet Its high est elevation. SASED IF THAT N'.tTAM? LANVTHlMa 0 TOO J V't K K Saturday. February g , i VSBBBkJ LAST TIMES TOMcirt Last Complete Show, g:12 America's Bengal Lanc' "The Texas Rangers" With Fred MacMurray Jean Parker Jack Oakie At 7:34 & 9:46) AI.SO News and Mickey Mouse Coming Monday IIEKBKUT MAKSIIAU in "Till We .Meet Asain-Pliis lluggles-IIoland in "Wives Never Know" FLAVOR ! A New "MultiBran" Blend Say it with Valentines This is a Valentine Year Select a cheerful greeting for friends and relatives from our Very complete stock of. serious and comic cards. Come in and see litem. We have cards for everyone, from ,') for 5c to 35c each Also Valentine Tally Cards, Seals and Napkins St. Valentines is a delightful time for a party -By tVsfovei s-: ohetimdSITpaktinq witvTTvvstT" I VJONDEJ? I PCQ Ha-s got tea j volj VJHETHETiJ r;or OF SOriTS -ZlAP oul IF DOES j yoF T, MAC J i .. . ir 1