FAOl TWO Onyx Arch Grip Shoes THE NEW SPRING MODELS IN ... . OnyxSkoes ONYX ! The very name suggests the brilliance and elegance of Onyx Shoe styles for Spring! The dainty tie (sketched above) is typical of the luxurious footw ear we are showing to harmonize with your new suit ot afternoon ensemble, but, a word to the wise, come in early while sue ranges are complete! THE DAILY NEWS. PRINCE RUPERT - BRITISH COLUMBIA ADVERTISING RATES Classified advertising, per word, per insertion -Jocaj readers, per line, per Insertion News Department Telephpc Advertising and Citculation Telephone oatl,y rprnpN Member ot Audit Bureau ot Circulation! If You Are Having Trouble. With Your Feet Can Hplp You TV FWe AMILY SHOE STORE III). The Home of Good Shoes Published Every Afternoon, Except Sunday, by Prince Rupert Dally News. Limited, Third Avenue H. F PULLEN Managing-Edltoi SUBSCRIPTION KATES Ctty delivery, by carrier, yearly period, paid in advar.ee Paid In advance, per week paid in advance, per month By mall to all parts ol British Columbia, the British Empire and uniieq biates. yearly period, rxild In advance 3.00 uy mau to au otner countries, per year 9.00 86 Si J02 .25 Saturday, March 4, 1938. PETTICOAT GOVERNMENT Recent references to petticoat government in England, doubtless, have reference to the political influence of Viscount Nancy Astor, a former Vjrginian, wife of Viscount Astor, owner of "The Observer" and brother-in-law ot Hon. John Jacob Astor, controller of the London Times. Lady Astor has the facility of gathering about her at her country home at Cliveden, in the valley of' the Thames a group of very influential politicians and it is charged that at these weekend house parties the policies of the .Chamberlain group are decided upon. The Astor influence is very strongly pro-German and anti-Russian and it is said that is the reason Germany had been allowed to keep her guns trained across' the btraits of Gibraltar at Tarifa so that i ish ships could not get through the straits except with the 14 fetrcen. it is aiso to De the reason Britain , . loaned Germany the money with which to rearm at a time when it was being found difficult to raise the money for aid of a smoke screen. It is said to be the reason Britain tor the sending of Lord.Halifax to (iPrmanv. T'rnminonf members of the Astor group include Lord and Lady Astor. Major Astor. Lord Loth Dawson, editor of The Times, Barrington Ward of the Same newspaper, Sir Neville Henderson, British Ambassador to Berlin and Lord Halifax, foreign secretary. Also closely associated are Sir Samuel Hoare, home secretary, and Sir John Simon, chancellor of the exchequer. V "When Lord Halifax returned froiu his visit to Germany the terms discussed were made public through a leakage at the Foreign Office, generally thought to be due to Sir Robert Vansittart, head of the permanent staff, whp is not friepdly to the Astor group. Anthony Eden also is not au fait with this group, hence his removal. The curious suggestion made in connection with the policy of this group is that .while every effort is being made tp placate Germanv. this is donp lflrwlv hppnnco Germany is the nation most to be feared by Great Britain ! anu as most uneiy ot any European nation to drag the Empire into war once more. The policy is based qp the line that it is better to have Germany for a friend, than . an . . enemy. t SOCIAL CREPIT'S I)QQA The, Supreme Court of Canada yesterday pronounced the doom of Social Credit so far as the province of Al-;berta is cpneerned. The court being un'aniipops in de-pjqripg .every jniportant move of the gpyernment .uncqn-stff-utiqna), jt wquld seem that the Aberhart government will have to change its policy or resign. It is scarcely likely to resign. 1 . RECEPTION OFRADIO Matter Dealt With at Some Length Br Chamber of Commerce Following Presentation qf IteporJ Following the reading of a report from the, radio committee, the Prince Rupert Chamber of Commerce last night discussed Q length the question of lqcaj radiq reception and how best to deal with it. Finally t was le(t fpr the radio committee to continue Its ... $5.00 lect it. It was felt there should be - V .12 .50 1 something cense fee, solution was for the Canadian Broadcasting Company to have its own station at some point nearer to Prince Rupert than Vancouver possibly at Prince Rupert or at some interior point. It did not matter where as long as people got good reception. There qu;ht to be plenty of revenue from licenses to pay for the cost of such a station. C. G. Minns suggested that all li censes shoulcj be collected. He did not see why some should pay and jsome should not. He hoped the scheme Mr. Little suggested would prove a possibility. It was suggested that all agree. ;not to pay licenses until some re-' ilief was given but this did not In ,-.4 1L. 1 TSM DAILY NEWS Saturday March WINNERS OF BRIDGE CUP .Musketeers Take Season'? Chjm; ' pionshin Honors Tip Top j'jjy Now in Progress efforts on behalf of improved con , . i Musketeers A have won the second ditjon3 half ot the Prince J. J. Little explained that it ns ?"rt rl?I ! linn mrtlv tn tre tn hrln nrnPm LRUC J"1"!'' "J " ' emblematip o.f cjty bndse ti....Ki mt.h h. .1.1. Cup. championship In Myte ame nV,ht, Pm Rupert Northwest Radio Telephone Com- ?W over Ramblers 10585 to to convey programs by short pany Uvp to th, ci v for -Vbrnadciil 0 TH?. Top Cup. sernl- ial me' MuWr won bv the local station This h ' oyet .Sou ht would bf &' JSS L of pnajjsn w. "Jfjg W flJ the difficulty. Tests were being .j?ln lsff lit iWild taviAC G. W. Nickerson Nickerson suggested suggested The the'L" ; rVri Hie jmai league Muiiuiiig iu; the second half of the season Is as follows: Musketeers Grotto Ramblers S. O. N. b. & k. C. N. R. A. Rupert Dairy Legion ... Fpr Against Point." 79935 77370 77364 74626 68748 66198 .65379 59257 7126C 79987 61158 63989 69947 76121 72205 75906 HOTEL ARRIVALS Royal Arne Corkum, Vancoucer. Prince Rupert Mrs. J. A. Brown, Miss Ada Brown 'seem tQ meet with general favor. ,slnston- lit was nnintpH nut tViot vio Central cense fee was set and the eov-' Mrs. Auriol, city E. J. White and eminent had a legal risht to col. Jnn Sandanger, Surf Inlet Mine I r.f tViP Prinnp PnrvH. Phmnhpr rT A number of members then toftU bommeree--last night that Briga: nart in the discussion including .... 1 cRr?f- the interior, W expected, ta arrive In gfrmlttee - -w ihe city X dnd tfet pwas prob- J? rfrT R,Ert a'be dinnef would bp arFanged WhV wards cief of the air services iat wnlch ,0Xila ber askfedSl0 t.o Olof HanMn M. P. In regard to speak on lmmlira'tion. The Cham-local conditions He said that it ber went on record as supporting was not to send i,hp practical an in Prin nnr, tn. soector to Prince Rupert fqm settllng British people on the land times a year as requested as theii ,jn thlo country staff h?4 to cqyer practically thej " " yhqle of the province and aimed , -- -- - to do that at least once a year.,erate interference sounds extreme- He said records showed that, while ;iy loud. there were said to be from 1200 1 "Our investigators have received to 1500 radios in Prince Rupert ; valuable co-operation from the of- only 534 licenses were Issued dur- ficlals of the iNorthern B. C. Powe ing the year 1936-37. ; Company who have done all nos- Report of Official sible' to reduce the interference The following report on local ; Recently, developments have been conditions was enclosed with Com-, made in power line construction mander Edwards' letter: whereby the interference mav ht Low Sifmal Strength Prince I reduced, and the Power Corpora- Rupert is beyond the range of re- i Hon of Canada is considering ap- napie recention rrom all but the I plying same In Prince Rupert at local broadcast station. The re- j considerable post. Thjs will prpb ceiyed signal frpm distant stations ! ably be the first application of Its is usually 0f low iptensity and,' re: kind in Canada. cenUy. during the preer4 period Interference from Apparatus -of poor reception apparently as? Considerable interference is caused sociated with sun spofs the sis- by the operation pf various type nals in Prince Rupert have almc pf electrical equjpment and, on ac disappeared. count pf the low signal strength "Interferenpe from Power Lines in Prince Rlipert, jnterferenet The radio interference from the from this sourcp is, also, more 66,000 volt power line In Prince troublesome. We haye recommend-Rupert Is similar to (hat from ed cures for 'all' the prpycntabl': other corresponding lines but, tin- sources of interference "which wc fortunately the effect on reepp- have been able to locate, and th, jtlon rom this line is more pro- users of such equipment have ap , " account, oi tfle ipwei pJieo suppressors in npary a', strength of broadcast signals In these cases! Regulatfops are new Prince Rupert. When s i g ri a 1 bejng drafted which wU shortly be strength is low the automatic vol- put Into effect, whereby the use oi ume control of the receiver In- Interfering eaulnment 'wlll' he nm. creases its sensltlvjty so tha mod- hlbted by law." ''How would you .U to Uy thf Big AppU?" "I'd rather hav g Swt Copl" I' SWEET CAPQRAr- CIGAREJJES "Th purttl form in which lobttco tin ht imoktd." Survey of G reals in Hoxinj; 1. James.I. Coj)t(. 2. Robert Fitzsimmons. 5. Jqlu) L. SuUivnn. 4. Joe Gans. f). Jack nenipsey. G. Benny Leqnarl. 7. George L. (Tex) Bipkanl. 8. Gene Tunney. !). .Jack AlcAuliffe 10. Sam Langfonl. n ALAN (1011LU Associated Press Sports Kditor NEW YORK, March' 5: (CD-Boxing's ''Hall Qf Fame" echoes with arguments, most pf which it is quite impossible to settle. The many factors involved, fqr which few yardsticks of measurement or comparison are avail- !?'able, make any fistic honor roll a matter of conjecture. 77361 ve M"v" consulted nip uracie, snatiuwMMApii wii tup 74626 jre"fQS- 687481 ur top ls PPnfincd to the ggiog . Marquess pf Queensbury pra. Ob- with helping Tunney and Dempsey to make ring history as ytfl as fan-1 65377 1 'u s" "i" tastic profiU Tex Rlckard cer 59257 knuckle aays, to compare Tomayr talnl belon in our , lstlc ...,all pf .2. :ers. Richard Heenan, Jqhn Mprrlsey. Fame 7n olcj Kiondine gambler 'the ereat Bendleo and Jem Mace , v.i- . i - - r . - utguu ilia cuitrci aa o. yiu:nun:i ii( with the stalwarts of the gloved- , ,9C6 at Goldfleld; Nevada. He bid fist period, would merely invite $10loO0 for tne JcfirCs.johnson further trouble. Oir research.' heavywelght matchi whJch he pro-therefore, has concentrated uponmoted at Reno ln 1910 Comlng llstic history of thf last half cen- F,lst he took over the old Madlson and Miss Betty Webber. Port Es- tury. wth a bow q recoanltlon on- Square Garden, put boxing on its . iy to two neroes wno spannea tne fppt as a sportlng business, and iransmonai penou. joiii u. ouiu- brought the ..best people" back to van and Jack McAullffe. tne rjpg5ide- Sulllvan belongs close to the top. ' Xcver a charopion not because he was the last of the Twc Joe great lightweights. Oan$ great bare-knuckle belligerents bu and Ecnny Leonard, rate high on because the Boston Strong Boy ber 3Ur honor ,lst. champion from came an American legend. H llnkr i901 tc. 1907 when ne yielded to ed the fugitive days of pugilism Battiine Nelson and to the ravaees with the reform period. He be- cf lne,s 0ans wag a m,)del bf fls. came himself an advocate of, piety lo skU1 Leonard wiio retired un- apd died a symbol of solid citizen- dfcated in 1924. came closest ship, far removed from but still al, Uccesding lightweights best remembered for the days when t0 the Gans standard. Benny outr he off2red. from the stag, "to Uck boxed and calfought a formidable yan man in the house." McAullffe, claSc 0r rivnls whe only recently joinepV Suhiyan Tne flghter who rounds out ou. lp Fistlana's VaJhaUa, was the first top 1Q Sam Langford, never held a pi a greai une pi American ngnir titip hnt riimit h nstnn weights. Their ranks alone chal- ..lar nataw rinim t, CrintnP lsnge the heavyweiht monopoly in Hc is considered by many compe- Hall of Fame" debate. McAullffe tent Judges the hardest hitter of retired undefeated in 1893 after aU heavyweights, with the possible nine years a$ undisputed light- evcen,ion nf ruymm hi' weight champion. Hs met and " , T I career covered 21 years but he was conquerea an cnanengers. Jn his prime in the days when Jackl Only aft,er weighing the evidence Johnson was a fugitive champion parefully do we conclude that and thereby a victim of the'handl-1 gentleman Jim Corbett rates the cap? associated with the fistic for-Nq. 1 spot in our honor roll in pref- tunes or misfortunes "of his race, srence to Ruby Robert ntzsimmons. Sam was born ',n Weymouth, N.S. Strictly on the competitive side, we of heavyweight champions since favor FiU. He was mjddlewelght retirement xunney's not one comes Champion (at 158 pounds) six years close t0 a place on the honor foll( before he knocked put Corbett in I save Jim p-rhaps Braddock, on the 1C97. He won the llghtrheavy- basis of courage alone. Max Schmel-1 weight title six afterward. ' years lng dlsslpated the extravagant "Hall Fitzsimmons was active ln the of FameH bulldup for Joe- Louis, ring fqr nearly 30 years, was 47 Honorable mention belongs to Tom-years old when he finally quit, and my Ryan and Mlckey Walker teT in every respect was a physical and mlddlewelght Pack marvel as well as one of the great- McFarland, uncrowned master In est punchers of all time. nre-wnr rtnvv mivo nnrf rnmm! Corbett's prlglnal claim a. fame Glbbons; Terry McOovern, bantam . . fACIt rvf rr llrPO 1 1 - - Vila Irnnnlrm.t ulJU.. m.ucuw and featherweight In the early f Sullivan in 1892-an for explqit 1900.s; 0 Dixon and Joe Wal-j which many an old Sullivan ldolat- cotti ncgro champions, and ionyl er never forgave him the -but one- canzonerl, best of the modern Tea-time, San Francisco bank clerk thcr and HBhtWeight before retlre-ylelded great influence along twq ' ment ' j lines of fistic development. By showing what clean living I could do, Corbett helped raise stan- NEW MEMUK RS pi' ciIAMIiKH ' dards of competition as well as con- The Prince Rupprt Chamber of duct ,in pugilistic circles. His car- Commerce, at ts dinner iast night, eer not only helped lift the game passed a vote of regrpt at the res-from disreputable atmosphere but ignation of Kf. P. McCaffery pwlng his boxing skill stimulated its to ill health. The chairman ex-' ' scientific side. plained that l)ls place was being Two. Ofhey "Successes" taken DV a member of the firm, studles'ln c-Mhell wh.q was elected, Twq other fistic sue- fr8e cess. Jack Dempsey and Genp Tun- th" new bers were R. G. ney, are inc udecMn our iut. Np manager of P Panadlan, matter how you think they would Bank 0f M1'' ? - Rok. have fared In combat with Ve 1m- ZlVu thStandHarf P? C,- of Dr'"sh Columbla. L- mortal Big W h aw-ter, Thrpe or for that mat- with Jim Jeffries or Jack John- orth' mana8" P the elevator. son, they must be cpnpeded tq bp Members of the Piinpp Rupert . .t . . wei"hts" Jirlt mrt npn. h,,, th. vmmcrce wprp last SiSest EL'S 2!n-r 'eht requested' two biggest gates ln nrlze-flcht h his- ' "H in M a clrpuar LP4)3F icner letter, tory torv. DemnLv Dempsey's nurses nlnSL Z, 'm irom H9n. ,,on' lap Ian M.acHcnz MacHcnzle, e, minister minister wlshcd to thq m 1 tia .... fprpes Tnn(.v Tunney rrtiiPMH collected ,v, the u biggest In dividual end, $990,000, for the fam ous "battle of the long count" and retired a rnjlUonaire in 928.. Both fought their way to' the top by the hard route, Dempsey as a fiery youth with dynamite in either fist, Tunney as a ring student who took Corbett for his model, The man who had most to do time off for training. HEX BOWLING ALLEY Basement of Exchanjn Block PHONE 658 vvr m a. . !H RPHpd Kijglisi, r, Tnttnnhnm (11 IT lanu i. Aston Villa 3, Manchester c mPRCTT THRS RRT7F . Pstal(Mk, VVAWUi x x vrx J-r x York City 0, HuddcrsfieM BINfl'Q HAT I HP FAMP Third Round Scottish r.. IVIPVJ U IITIJUIJ VA iijiutj Morton 1, Ayr ynlted I ' : East Fife 1, Aberdeen 1 r,cntlenian Jim Earned .First By NpW York YrcT W- Rar,u Thistle i. Raith Falkirk 4, Albion Rovers 0 iviuuici wen .. i ami inn . rpicais u. Byes Rancers and Rt n-,.. NftllfKIl l.i.1li. li:..: "131 I'lVISIOt Aroroain l, (Jueens Park J Dundee Q, St. Mlrren Q. vvi'f"! oi aoum o. Ranrs! injrq Lanark 2, Clyde 3 English League First livWQt Arsenal 4 stoke City 0 Bl.tKkiKKjl 2, Port-jimiith 0 ini ion vyanneri-rs l Ch Athletic 0. Derby County 0, irmlnhans Overton 3, Qrlmsby Tovm J Leichester City 2, Livery j Wolverhampton Wandeten Leeds United 1 tft' nnrt Htm.-. T" r J iiii . til in rri i-r s . "T,CUi. efl to the city on the Prin:si ise yescrlay afternoon from a : to. Vancouver and Seattle Back In Business Re-enterinc the transfer bo Iness equipped with a nq duty truck, stake boy,-draulip dump. Prompt arid ri- riciept service. Any Tatronase AppreciatH UVU IU UU 4111 1KI of excavation work i buildlue wrccklnj can supply any amouri no muskfj 1 WOOD and COAL Casey Transfe; I'h one GREEN 5 THE SEAL ' QUALITTf GOLD SEAL Fancy Red Sockeye PINK SEAL Finest Pink Salmon Packed bv the only IWW canning cpmpany with M th vA.tr round prince Rupert Hyde Transfer WOOD COAL TRANSFER Phone 580 315 SECOND AVt