lit I? 4 2 PAGE POUR THE DAILY NEWS SATURDAY, Expert OPTICAL SERVICE - iimsmmsmmmsmmsMmmsm Chas. Dodimcad J Optometrist la Charge ' Watch, Clock, Jewelry Repairing; Hand Engravinr VISIT OUIl BASEMENT STOKE for Fine China, Dinnerware, Glasses, Baggage and Novelties. MAX HEILBRONER Jeweler Diamond Merchant Public Notice Due to the uncertainty of receiving premiums, the Rupert Peoples Store, Cut Hate Shoe Store and Rupert Men's and Hoys' Store are discontinuing the issuance of gift tokens until further notice. THE TOKENS YOU HAVE ARE WORTH MONEY We will redeem all tokens which have been issued on a 2' basis. Thus $50.00 in tokens, which you have received free, are now worth $1.00 in store merchandise. The next time you make a purchase at the Rupert People's Store, Cut Rate Shoe Store or Rupert Men's and Hoys' Store bring in all your tokens with you and receive a cash credit. THIS OFFER ROOD TILL AUG. 1, 1913 BUY... RUPERT BRAND Sole Fillets ... At Your Local Butchers NO WASTE READY TO COOK fanad an Fish & Cold Storage PRINCE KUPEKT Co. Ltd. BRITISH COLUMBIA FURNITURE SPKING-FILLEI) MATTKESSES with foundations. Sizes 1-6, 3-3. COTTON FELT FILLED MATTRESSES in sizes 1-6, 1-0, 3-3. UNPAINTED FURNITUKE: Drop-side Tables and Chairs. BEDROOM SUITES: Dressers in Walnut Finish. FLOOR COVERING: Congoleum Rugs and Congoleum by the yard, 6 feet and 9 feet wide. AXMINSTER RUGS. All sizes. WE HAVE THE GOODS SEE THEM AT ELIO'S FURNITURE THIRD AVENUE PRINCE RUPERT, B.C. TRAPPERS b Don't be foolish, can't you see plain enough there's a trap for 1 you, not to let you go Up town where I'm paying 30 more Thev I are paying $50.00 a week and a big commission to keep yo'u 1 trappers from going up town where Goldbloom is paying 30 W. GOLDBLOOM lllllllllllllllllllll,,,,!,,,,,,,!,,,, ,, Fresh Local Raw and Pasteurized MILK 1 VALENTIN DAIRY PHONE 657 fi J. M. S. Loubser D.C.. B.A. Chiropractor Wallace Block Phone Btl ii H CFPR (1210 Kilocycles) SCHEDULE Saturday ' I'M. 4:00 Afternoon Concert 4:30 Dick Todd 4:45 Marek Weber's Orchestra 5:00-Shall We Dance? 5:30 Stan Kenton's Orchestra 6:00 CBC News 6:05 Top Tunes or Yesterday 6:30 Cubano Rhythms 6:45 Salon Group 7:00 National Barn Dance 7:30 Jubilee 8:00 Command performance 8:30 Hit Parade 9:00 Madam Chiang Kal Shek 10:00 CBC News 10:05 Anita Boyer and Ivan Dit-mars 10 ;30 Aristocrats' Orchestra 11:00 Saturday Dance Party 12:00 Silent Sunday AM. 10:00 Hymns lor Sunday 10:15 Down South 10:30 The Choristers 11:00 Recorded Interlude 11:05 CBC News 11:10 The CBC Sunday Morning Concert pjl 12:00 Mart Kenny's Orchestra 12:30 Old Country Mall 12:45 Marching With the Band i:ou Nat snilkret's Salon Orchestra 1:30 Shall we Romance? 1:45 Novelette 2:00 Symphony Hour 4:00 Jack Benny 4:30 Fitch Bandwagon 5:00 Etchings in Ivory 5:15 Just Mary 5:30 Dramas from the Bible 6:00 CBC News 6:05 Singing Strings 6:30 The Army Show 7:00 Personal Album 7:15 Jesse Crawford v 7:30 Mall Call 8:00 Front Line Theatre 8:30 Fred Allen 9:00 Classics for Today 9:30 Vesper Hour 10:00 CBC News 10:05 Organ Reveries 10:30 Silent ' Monday AJII. 7:30 Strictly Informal 7:45 CBC News 7:50 Strictly Informal 8:00 Musical Minutes 8:30 Morning Meditations 8:45 Composers Corner 9:00 Songs by Linny Ross 9:15 Mirror for Women 9:30 CBC News 9:35 Freddie Martin's Orchestra 10:00 Morning Visit 10:15 Musical Americana 10:30 March Time 10:45 They Tell Me 11:00 Scandinavian Melodies 11:15 Broadcast of Messages 11:17 Vernon Geyer 11:30 Let's Go Modem p.il 12:00 Midday Melodies 12:30 Songs of the Range 12:50 CBC News 12:55 Today's Program Highlights l:oo One o'clock Musicale 1:30 B. C. School Broadcast 2:00 Silent ISOLATED HAWAII The Hawaiian Islands form one of the most isolated archipelagos in the world. Wafpr front E Pivl tin rr - Whins Local Man in Fisheries Conunission-I'light of Eb Hatchford in North Herring Hun Virtual Failure Commercial fishing of herrine closed at the middle of this week In this area after the worst sea son on record. The only catch made was some 1,000 tons around Laredo Inlet which was divided between the B.C. Packers. Cana dian Fishing Co. and Nelson Bros. which had packers on the Job. The herring was now In spawn but it is sua permissible to take them for bait purposes and It is hoped mat this may be obtained in a run which usually develops in the vicinity of Butler's Cove or Jap Inlet around the end of this month. Each year for nearly two dec ades, the- Dominion fisheries de partment has sent a killer expedi tion to the sealion rookeries of Queen Charlotte Sound waters and slaughtered sealions. Now an other venture Is to be under taken against the deepsea pirates oi me racmc. mis time it. a private enterprise against sharks a sort of buccaneering raid. Sal mon canneries aire planning on wiping out large numbers of the TO THE ARMY SHOW Every SffltayMffi 6 O'CLOCK P.D. S.T. Over Station CBR ASt I An announcement of outstanding interest to waterfront and fisheries was that this week concerning the appointment of G. W. Nickerson as a member of the International Fisheries Commission in succession to L. W. Pafmnvo Tv P vpcicmprl Tfr 'no rrrnf Jfvinrr tVinf fn fill the position a Prince Rupert man should have been ap- rr? pointed r tori Ctna Drlrtsva T3irerf rl a I i , spite the loss of some of the fleet as far as winter quarters are concerned, Is still the operating headquarters of the Canadian Pacific halibut fleet, it is quite fitting that a rit!7pn nf thl nnrt shonlrt have been named. As far as Mr. Nickerson Is concerned one thing that all arc agreed upon Is that the interests of this oort and its operator will always be kept to the lore which is quite as It should be.- Those who know the district around Cordova, Alaska, out of which port Lindsay (Eb) Ratch-ford, formerly of this city, Is missing since February 4 while on a crab packing trip believe there may still be a chance of his still being safe, no matter how hopeless the position may seem after the lapse of time. Eb, who was a brother of Joe Ratchford of Cow Bay and who had plenty of friends here from the pioneer days, was last seen at Johnson Bar, near Cordova, aboard his seineboat type packer Jacqueline which was swinging at anchor. The vessel previously had, apparently, lost power and started drifting, with anchor dragging, before a strong north wind. The sea was aulte rough and the vessel was obviously not under control. Due to a misunderstanding, aid was not imme. diately sent out. A bad feature of the whole affair Is that there was a good deal of Jammed slush ice. The Governor of Alaska sent word that no expense need be spared in the search but there was difficulty in getting aircraft which might1 have helped. The missing man had 1 planned on leaving that Dart of Alaska this soring and movine south, possibly back to Prince Ru pert. He went to school here in the early days and, after having been engaged in plumbing for a time, finally went fishing and for the last twenty years he had been a fisherman. great basking sharks that frequent Rivers Inlet during tne salmon seining period. These great brutes, each weighing tons, and 30 and more feet long, have in the past caused serious damage to the nets of the thousands of fishermen who conereeate there. The sharks lie on the water and go through the! nets. Their rough skins and ini-! mense strength cut and tear the seines to tatters. This year, starting a fortnight before the season' opens, It is planned to send a; punitive expedition against the j sharks. It will be manned by men ; with rifles, and it will have boats with steel-shod bows and good speed. These boats will ram and slash the sharks. Death may come then to the sharks so attacked. The blood of slaughtered sharks is expected to drive others away, as it has done in the past. The basking sharks are entirely unlike manklller sharks who tear wounded pals to bits, but quite like dogfish who also are said to flee waters bloodied by the life fluid of their own people. That is why old-time fishermen on .he B.C. Coast used always to slash a dogfish open before throwing it !back into the ocean. Of course the modern fisheVman now takes the dogfish liver because it has vitamin content and money value. GLYCERINS FOR v ffGf EXPLOSIVES J HERE'S WHATTODO. IYou can tale your fat drippings, scrap fat and bones to your meat dealer. He will pay you the established price for the dripping and the crap fat. Ii you wish, you can turn this money over to your local Voluntary Salvage Committee or Registered Local . War Charity, or You can donate your fat dripping, 2 scrap fat and bones to your local Voluntary Salvage Committee U they collect them in your community, or You can continue to place out k vour Fata anH Rnnoi Inr lection bv vour Street Qn- ing Department where such a system is in effect F VI (IMIIMINT or MMI0NU WI mviaj PIANO TUNER Piano Tuning, (Organ Tuning, Piano Accordion Tuning and Repairing. GEORGE TAYLOR Phone Oreen 12." S i STARTING MONDAY FOR 2 DAYS Complete Shows at 1:00, 2:45, 4:50, 7:00, 0:05 Ends Tonight Complete Shows 7:00, 9:05 Tin "Black Swan" At 7:41, 9:4(? f L'tew ANOTHER THEIILEI rR0M IHE "HOI f OASHIELl CS HAMMETT MASIEB 0r MYSTE1I At WHO GAVE TOB TIE 1:20 xmit FALCON 3:25 HD 5-3o T,IIW MM BIB WITH THE SENSATION R m m n III a cl "THIS GUN TOR HIRE" iftLLAIV LADD MILAN DONIXVY VE310MCA IAKI J.a.ph Call.L. Bonita Or.nvill.. Richard Diwun, EXTRA ADDKI1 A "Zip Your Lip" Special!' "Safeguarding Military MfoJ With Walter Huston Walt Disney's "Education For Death" "Vaudc?ille 1.1 GIVE TO TDK RED CROSS CAPITOL MMOIH (TIM TMflttl Sundajl Dcnss i Broil IMPORTANT N0TI Charge Accounts become due and payable on the 25th of month (con the month in which goods were purchased Tift w that goods bought in February must be paid for tat U' than 25Ui Maicn. This ru'.tng is by order of theDL' of Consumer Credit of the Wartime Prices and T& Board. Mussallem's Economy Store "Where dollars have more cents' Phones 18 and ,19 f.O. BoiT MONEY IN YOU POCKET IAI1, UV tMTlLVHlll wi Mnilf ri71 M P,F,' ' ou iov.'ivuimi xu iu J""-" W Canada's 'Leading Magazine, Published Tn l a 'Month ONE YEAR b. TWO YEARS , $1.50 III Thimbu vimiip '2,i imniii i i!mno " IMPORTANT NOTICE Effective .May Price of Maclean's will he increased to 10c $1.50 per year. M SUBSCRIPTIONS and RENEWALS placed T...r 1,.t ..'tl l. ..1 il... ..1.1 role. iMuv ii win lie ai uie mu '" ..... .., illiu iMMlll,T UU!l"h nnnorttin'l I PLACE your Subscription or Renew your f one for 1, 2 or' 3 years. DO IT NOW AND SAVE $ S AT Dependable Subscription Service on a MarlInH 'JIL Anywhere.