PACIE TWO Cltyli DAILY EDITION THE DAILY NEWS. PRINCE RUPERT - BRITISH COLUMBIA Published Every Afternoon, Except Sunday, by Prince Rupert Daily News, Limited, Third Avenue H. F. PULLEN - - - Managing-Editor SUBSCRIPT! ellvery, by mall or carrier, yearly x -i- , v 9 The 8tewart Board of Trade -has endorsed a resolution from the solution UWmedrabre particularly at wild -cat mining companies in advance "5J par lesser pentas, paia m auvance, permonu). ...f...,.. By mall to oil parish Northern and CeWai Brrtlshi Columbia, paid In advance for yearly period ., .,08 8C 3 .DO By mall to al otrjcr parts .of British Columbia, the British Empire and Un)ted States, paid in advance, per year $0 00 By mail to all other countries, per year ....... 9.00 " ' ADVERTISING HATES' Transient display advertising, per inch, per Insertion Classified advertising, per insertion, per word .. Local readers, per insertion, per line Legal notices, each Insertion, per agate line Contract rates on application. Advertising: and Circulation Telephone Editor and Reporters' Telephone Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations 1.40 .02 .25 .15 Thursday, March 26, 1MI INVESTING MONEY There are different methods of investing money, some of which are good and others not so good. Many people speculate and think they are in vesting, but there is a vast difference. .; ; People who wish peace of wind in connection with their investments buy government, municipal or other very high grade bonds. Those who wish to get a "kick" out of their investments buy high grade stocks such as C. P. R., Bell Telephone or similar securities. Those who take a long shot by buying oils, mining stocks, new flotations or stocks that are peddled about the country are not investing. They are speculating. Sometimes they make a lot of money and sqmetimes they lose everything. Taken as a general rule it is wise never to buy from a high pressure salesman, never to buy a stock that is hawked around the country and never take a tip from a friend in regard to a "good thing," Buy standard stocks that are handled on the stock exchange and consult either your banker or a reliable stock broker. Seldom will either lead you astray. Any young man starting out in life who makes up his mind to buy a bond every timeJie gets $100 and who never sells in order to speculate on the easy money proposals that come his way, is bound to be rich before he reaches middle age. Most people are poor because they did not know what to do with their excess earnings. COMMON MOTORING FAULTS The biggest accident insurance company in the United States has made an analysis of traffic accidents in that country, says an exchange. Of more than 660,000 accidents in 1930, the insurance officials found, 68 per cent were caused by drivers who were guilty of one of these faults refusing to give the right of way. to the car thatshoiild have it; exceeding the speed limit, and driving on the wrong sides of the road. These, it may be said, are the three cardinal sins of the bad driver. Probably the proportion in Canada is similar. It is worth noting that none of these major causes of ac cidents has to do with driving skill. In other words, thoughtlessness is the cause of the greater proportion of automobile accidents. Accidents would, be negligible if ordinary respect for civilized amenties were observed. NEWS OF THE MINES AROUN DjlM jJgCE RUPERT To Resume "Work on.UrilcDrn Property at Stewart; Spring Staffs Plans For Season's Development; Toricfo Reopen When Silver Price Better Work is to bo resumed at once on the Unicorn property in the Salmon River section of the Portland Canal district, it is stated by John Hovland, who arrived in Stewart last week from the south. Ample supplies of powder, etc. and general mine equipment are on the ground to enable the' property to be opened up with a minimum amount of work. Results obtained from last year's operations were very encouraging and Mr. Hovland will continue the program outlined with all possible dispatch. The Unicorn, one of the most promising properties in the Portland Canal district, adjoint n ion of the tunnel will Up the1 the Big Missouri. I vein. w .. ley. locators of-the proiSTsfng Met- Stewart Prwif. Mars' Association calf and Fendley group on Banded asking the government for more) Mountain In Jhe Chlckamln dls-adequate promotion for sharehold-1 trict plan to leave Stewart for pri in mlnlnw rrmtunlu TH. r. Texas Crek as soon as the weather Settles 4 to freight In suddIIcs anajpquipmenl for summer devel which hafe no asfetp beyond jthert opmtnt vork.lTheV wilt take alons options oooundlnj brjto.be. a Mtistimjata to assist In developed. ' eUaiuporfc-rfcvijlch ,wW?bi- H. B. Smith John ftonan and William McOrcw left Stewart last week for the Hobo group pf the Century Mines Co. to start a further extension of the main tunnel with a view to getting under an important copper-gold showing which promises to develop into an extensive ore body of depth. It is believed that a 45-foot ex- volve several crossings of Chlcka mln glacier and U rendered very difficult by the absence of a hors trail. As soon as jjlyer values tliow a material Improvement the Brl-tanla Mining St Smelting Co. will resume operations on the Torlc property at Alice Arm, It Is WAS STAR IN DRAMA Robert Edeson, Famous Actor IP (Started i Career in Novel Way ! waeer with a producer enabled i RnVisrt Priocnn uihn HIpH this U7ppl? in Hollywood, to Jump from the; box office tq the stage tq begin his career as a character actor in ; legitimate productions on tho screen. Some years later, while still playlijg minor parts, a bit of initiative pp iijs part w&s the means off startng him on the road to stardom. , Mr. Edeson's first connection' with the theatre was as box office cleric in the Park Theatre. Brooklyn, In 1888. The next year when all was in readiness for the initial performance of "Fascination." ap actor in a minor part became 1)1, 'threatening postponement of the; production. j ' Seeking out Colonel Sinn, the dl- i rector Younf Edwpn volunteered to play the part, but the colonel had his doubts, as to the ability of the box. offUe clerk. In an at- j tempt to put off Uiq persistent! young man, the producer sugges-1 ted a bet of $100 that Edeson could not succeed. The wager wail promptly accepted ancj Edeson did. so well that PoloneJ Sinn was glad to pay him the $100 for hi first appearance as an actor, Thereafter, Mr. Edeson became a regular member of the company The young actor was In a cast, which he characterized "as lethargic and showed It" "I tried to pep them up," he re-, lated some years after, speaking of the incident. "Imagine my surprise a few hours after a performance when I received a messagt from Chas, Frohman, even then a well known producer, offering me $1G0 a week. I was gtttlng $23. I did not know it at the time, but learned later that Frohman was sitting in the front row at tho performance where I tried to pep up the company. He told me he liked the way I tried to spur the cast on." ' After Joining Frohman, Mr. Ede son made rapid progress In hlaJ profession and soon attained the ambition of all actors and act-resses-rftardora. He appeared in many notable successes In the first two decades of the twentieth century and then turned to motion pictures. In whleh he played Important roles. He was in one of the Ht long film? produced, "The Girl I Left Behind Me," and later appeared with William S. Hart In "On the Night Stage." Mr. Edeson was born at New Orleans, June 3, 1868. Ill father was George R. Edeson, a widely known' comedian and stage manager of hlii 0ay. The family moVed tq Brook-! yln, where Robert attended public. rcnoois until he became a box office clerk. He married four tlmea. His first 'vlfe was Ellen Burs, an actress whom he married in lJQf She died two. years later. The actor's second marriage; to Georgia porter, daughter of a Boston novelist, in 1808. ended in divorce In. 1017. a did his third to- Mary Newcomb, an actress. They were .divorced In 1924. Mr. Edeson's fourth wife, was Alda de' Martinez, a South American girl, wtio hid gone to Hollywood. She did not. however, become an actress, Mr. Edeson was best known, per-, haps, for his roles in Wcharu Harding Davis "Soldiers of Fortune." vhlch was dramatized by Augustus Thomas; as eladlng man for Maude Adams in 'The UtU" Minuter," one for his big hit, irt "Strongheart" A DMIy New vnnNurt wlf DR. HUGH L, DICKEY SPECIALIST Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat At St. Elmo Hotel Eyes Tested For Olasses TT FIRSTtCHOICR OF SUITS oil Spuing coats New samples Just arrived of spring and summer goods of the finest quality and the patterns of the very latest. UNO TIIE CUTTER Steam cleaning;, pressing and alter Ing. 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