PAGE TWO The Daily News PRINCE RUPERT - BRITISH COLUMBIA. Published Every Afternoon, except Sunday, the Prince Rupert Daily News, Limited, Third Avenue. II. F, PULLEN, Managing Editor. Advertising and Circulation Telephone - 93 Editor and Reporters Telephone) - - . 86 SUBSCRIPTION RATES! V City Delivery, by mail or carrier, fr month $i 00 By mail to all parts, of the British Empire and the United States, in advance, per ysar $0.00 To all other countries, in advance, per year $7!bo Contract Rates on Application. Transient Disnlav Advert v f.RaL Nolices' each i,lsfirtion iGc per agate line All advertising should he in The Daily News Office on day preceding publication. All advertising received subject to approval. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations. DAILY EDITION IrVCKKi sz&&3!& Thursday. October 2, 1924. Railways Should Work Out Plan. In connection with the railway rates, which seem to be in much confusion just now, it is undoubtedly the dutv of the railways to gel together and work out a plan which will giv equitable rates to all parts of the country while at the same tim securing for the railways an adequate income. That is the only reasonable method of adjusting the matter. No one but a raif-way man who is accustomed to dealing with rates can possibly handle .the situation. There are just twi great railways in Canada, the Canadian Pacific and the Canadian National. Everyone is agreed that they must be- paid for the services they render and paid adequately although not extravagantly. The objection we all have is to any system whereby any part of the country is discriminated against. Parent Teachers Organization. There is in this city an organization known as-the Parent-Teachers' Association. The object of this association is to so co-ordinate the work of parent and teacher that the best educational results may follow. Parents are the most vilirlly interested in the; children but next to them come the teachers. Each wishes to have the young people develop mentally, morally and spiritually in the best possible manner. By co-operation this can be best brought about. In a town this size-the te'nchers often know very few of the parents of the pupils. The result is that they have little opportunity to learn anything about the children except what they see in school. The Parent-Teachers tend to bring together ' the teachers and pupils and to aid in any possible manner so that the best results may be obtained. Pity To Hold Up Business Of Port. Without expressing any opinion in regard to the strike now going on at the Cold Storage Plant, the Daily News is strongly of opinion that some way should be found by the parties interested on both: sides to get together and effect a settlement. Apparently it seems to be the usual plan for strikes to run for a number of weeks and then for the sides to gradually weaken after much money has been lost by both and a great deal of ill-feeling engendered. It is understood that, the management of the Cold Storage plant is willing to arbitrate. If that is correct, there should be no difficulty in effecting a settlement and getting back to work. Arbitration is the acknowledged method of settling disputes. The tendency, is to have it succeed the method by which might triumphs whether right or wrong. It is being proposed in internationalaffairs as well as in industrial disputes. When arbitration is refused it is usually because the cause is weak and it is hoped to effect by force what cannot be obtained in any other way. Scots Editors On Canadian Settlement. One of the editors who recently visited Canada Irom Scotland, on the staff of the: Dumfries and Galloway Standard and Advertiser says in his paper : "What we did see filled us with admiration for the machinery set 1 1 1 in Canada for advising and guiding and protecting the man who wishes to settle on the land. Canada seems to recognize that her agricultural population is the backbone of the country and that it is the soundest political-wisdom; to laenrps-perous and contented settlers. 'A good 'deal of ihf complaints that on bears about Canada arise from the fact that many men go out who are not really of the class that Canada requires. For their failure to make good the country cannot be blamed. In the cities there are many unemployed, just as there are in our own. But the fact remains that many thousands or Scotsmen who went out to 'Canada have found it a country where they can do well ami live free and happy lives." Hills Br Underwood LondonDryGin The standard of purity for over 100 years. $2.50 a bottle The Gin you will ask for again This advertisement is not published or displayed by Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia. the The Man in the Moon SAYS:- people," say the men. Soviet think of that? I I THE joys and sorrows of the first of the month are epitomized in the expressions "salary check" and "dunners." IF the ash trays are clean you know it is not a bachelor A I'HOTOCOL issomelhingthat paves Ihe way for a real treaty and a real treaty is an expedient for keeping the enemy occupied until you are ready io break it. YESTERDAY the niakcun man left flie wont "baseball nt the nd of the despatch which told of the dispensing? with the ser vices of Franks Browne, member of the legislature. Jake says he thought it meant "Now you're in and now you're out." THE Anglicans have not much faith in women. "We are- the -4 IT was curious how thosV potatoes and annles irnintr into the Yukon turned into whiskey and bottled themselves en route It is also curious how the limior shipment to the Yukon govern ment disappeared and nobody seemed to know where it went. TELEPHONE subscribers have been used to turning curled corners so long that they will not know how to use a new book when it arrives. THE soviet army is used to quell strikes and to subdue a Ismail republic. What will the Prince Rupert friends of the - THERE are a lot of goals in this country. They are always butting into someone else's bus iness. ,.. ; THE only objection I have to this liulkley Valley beef is that I can't ?ef enough of it. ROMANCE OF BOOTLEGGING British Columbians Take Prom-! Inent Part in Business at j Seattle; Fine Offices (Special fo Daily News) SEATTLE. Oct. 2. The ro mance of I lie boot leaser should be the next big moving niclnro jto be made. Every day; here ;sees a battle of wits going on between prohibition enforcement ollicers and bootleggers, many of whom hail from the' Canadian side. One in particular, who Mils hither and t hit her. and 'whose home is said to be in Northern Hrilish Columbia where he still has interests, has led a most romantic life. Sometimes he loses out and' his stuff Is confiscated by the police hut us- uaiiyv.uer ,wm.H ana.-: lie makes ' enough money in a month to make up for all the losses of a year. Rootles offices are not in tum ble down shacks on the water front but in sumptuously fur nished rooms in the largest bus iness blocks. Secrecy can be obtained belter there than in what are usually looked upon as secretive places. The bootleggers do their work openly among the crowds and they use the re- gular commercial wires. Now! jand then Ihey move offices, but, Inot often. Also they somctiinesj 'change their names or the' i names under which they operate. The men at the head keep them-J selves aloof from any appearance of connection with the handling of strong drinks. They dress well and usually have some other business as a blind. Two Irishman were turned over by a wave while out for a row. One of I hem swam to the shore, and, after a siorf rest, was seen lo start lwck toward the other man, who was still wrestling with the waves. "Why, what are you going back Into the water for. Pal?" inquired a bystander. "Why. didn't Oi have to -save meself fairs! " said Pal. "And now. beforra. (li'm nni save Moike," Yorkshire Post. THE. DAILY HEWS ThuKsiIay, October 2. 10 COATS We- have a very select assortment of Ladies' Coats in the cloths. newest styles and CUT VELOUR TEDDY BEAR CLOTHS MARyELLA 'DEMERS' Phono 27 P. . Box 327 J. I.. Christie sailed last ni?hl on the Prince lieorge for Stew art. He wilt be back Saturday. - K Ten Years Ago in fiince Rupert October 2, 1914. Sterling Furnace COAL Dtllxrtd In Bulk, At $10.00 per ton. This l vfry tuprrlor furnir cual. It kIvm t clou hot rirv tn l It entirely rree from loot, clinkers, lack and dirt. Snm of the Urgent iiratlnir pUntu In ilxt city ir now uilnr It with entirely ituriitorf remilu. 8TERLINQ STOVE COAL, Delivered In 8rkf. At S12.60 pep ton. We ire tlio A rent! for the Finioui LADYSIWITH-WELLINQTON .and TELKWA COALS. Prince Rupert Coal Co. Miln Offleai MoOl Otnlril. fho 18 i The Northern B.C. Agricultural A Industrial Association, at its annual meeting last night, elected olllcers as follows: President. A. J. Prudhomme; vice-president. A. 11. Allison; secretary, L. Uul-lock-Webster; treasurer. M. .M. Sleuhens: auditor, D. C. Stuart: directors, (ieorge Friziell, L. Oippen, O. 11. Nelson, (5. . Nickei'son and I). McD. Hunter. - In the Fair Hoard's hand contest yesterday afternoon, the Mellakallu band won over the Kit kat la aggregation. A. 11 Hoel scher was judge. In a match that was keenly contested especially In the earlier rounds, Frank llarrieau de feated Romeo llagen last nighi Harrieau had things pretty well his own way mid Hagen nearly look the count in the fourteenth round. The battle wnt twenty rounds. J. Kaddell refereed, FREWEN KNEW ALL NOTABLES Romantic Career of Man Who at One Time Owned Prince Rupert Salt Lakes Morel on Frewen, the man who at one time owned .the subdivision surrounding the Prince Rupert Salt Lakes, recently secured by Hon. T. I). Pattullo for the people of Prince Rupert to be used as a park, had a mmnnlic career. The London Times savs of him: There "was a lime when no Englishman was heller known in America than Moreton Frewen, traveller, sportsman, and 'financial critic, whoso varied and interesting Uff has,bef)h coiicludi rd. JIM dicdi at lirede Place. Susseix, m Tuesday of last week I'orn-jri lHr,:i 'alt tflvkwall, of me r.ssex stock that sent Archbishop Accepted Frewen to York, his life wits a series of "Adventures of a Younger Son." At Trinity, Cambridge, he took a degree in spile of "whipping" Ihe Drag. His bunlinjt manhood was passed in the Mellon Country, of which he left some-amusing memoirs. He joined Whyle Melville, Peter Flower, 'Chicken llarlopp, and flay Mfddlelon in the first flight of the riders. He was the hero if a famous run from Ranksboro' florae to Ows- FREE" DELIVERY IN PRINCE RUPERT "Cascade" BETTER BEER Better Beer ! keiiiio-K and taking a berth (onion Ilennett's expedition the North Pole, chose to hunt hutTato in Texas. The Maries O Mtilley period of his life ended in raring the mail from Dublin lo Cork on a special and catching the moving liner amid a cheering crowd! Crossed 100 Times Afterward he crossed Hie Allan-lie more than IflO limes, for a very serious period opened with his pasxjon for currency questions. .No "dime' novel could deeribe his American life, som of which is reflected in Wisler's "Virginian." Under Ihe aegis of Ueneral Sheridan he saw Ihe lat of the greul buffalo herds, while taking up ranching, lie. wm Shown round the Arena iif Hie UuW nifiMaerbyKiitit.iKi.BuU himself, and he crossed ihe liijj Horn in December snow with a parly who saved their lives bv driving buffalo as . a snow plough! He pioneered In the un- railed prairie, but his career as a cattle king was foiled by Iho order of (Irani ordering entile oh Indian lands ami by Ihe Chicago Heef Trust. In West. Superior Cilyj which rose on one of his tracks, the schools are called after his now legendary name. Ho became Interested ih it lifetime of scliemes and several limes approached great wealth, but his success and utility proved to be social ami international, for he camo In know everybody in America, from Itanium to Hryan. Senator Hoar wrote in his Memoirs that lie deserves Ihe gratitude f bolh nations for what he has done lo promote good feeling between the Iwo countries by his courtesy to Americans nf lt parlies ami ways of thinking. Hr has helped lo make the leadlnir men in bolh countries know each other. ' lie knew all thrf presidents from Hayes lo Wilson, especially Itoosevell, and it was said he largely upsel Tom Reed's changes of Ihe Presidency by acclaiming him as a convert lo Ihe fetish of Free Sllverl Dlmetalllst Bimetallism had no more dc better "Cascade" IS beer! It is the outcome of forty years of brewing experience, aided by scrupulously selected ingredients and the most elaborate brewing system known to modern science. We are proud of our product, and we want to make it known that "Cascade" is now as near perfection as science and experience can make it. We say that "Cascade!' beer, brewed, and bottled in Vancouver, is second to none in the whole Dominion. Therefore Insist on cause of (anil reform, he took the curious step of entering parliament as a member of Mr. O'Brien's party for .Norlh-F.a! (kirk (ttilO;, where ho was a popular landlord. But his political audience was more often in America, and records show that United Stale committees on Currency were mow often addressed by "Mr, Frewen, of Kngfanil," than by jiny other foreigner. In Mnglaud he found his clarion in the Daily Telegraph and his megaphone In Ihe .Nineteenth Century through a generation of restless writing. He was a 'typewriting pioneer ami a naturalist hunter. He tracked tigers in India, elephant in Africa, kangaroo in Australia, ana" in Florida the manojeej "a strange, mnmmfll . witll'.tloC fore legs of a hippo and the (nil of a whale." He introduced Ihe tied Sussex bull into Alberta and wa o " Ml ..CO The BETTER BEER that SATISFIES! VANCOUVER BREWERIES LIMITED iilin the In i though a ..s. V 1 A tBeer without tiPeer This advertisement is not published or displayed hy the Liquor Coutil Hoard or by the Government of British Columbia. ton Wood. Hut in 1878 h sold voted English champion than Ins hinders, and between the al- , Moreton Frewen, who became tri'uutive of Mastering Ihe Kil- j Chamberlain' mot vivid apostle one of the first to apprecute Kipling in India. Friend of Kipling Kipling and Scions were among his many life friends. His sport was interlarded geogriihU!iillf with his finance, whether he was writing on Indian rupees or American currency or tin shekels of Kmnirt. lli Uilnklng l ederally," and, back ed by Ihe friendship of Albert (irey, Lord Milner. and Lord Dunraven, he became II. n preacher of that way of thmklnx In every comer of II.h t.i.,ni.. the There was no more Interesting raconteur, and wilh Mr. Keynes lie musi be accounted on., nf those Cambridge economists who write ns brilliantly as novelists Few of his generation touched ! many sides of life or lr..v,.i or accumiilaled so many friends' mini .1 Mill, (lie Ai,.,i,. railway king, to Sir Salar .lung who brought him In the 'eighties lo Hyderabad, where ,e set in order the, dubinn. Nizam. With the war he found In rd of hfHi: plicl and pioneer ntdu v he reltred to end hi- i . -Squire of HmhP, ittt "m i home in Hit lli-Zfi i-ri Iniiishaunou, Imriii f IVtners, and hi i ii'ui iU'd T,v w 'keeper n-"JnuteiJ, require a vuiummi dvn enlhuiiMni and itii-nd1 - nd veil I urif. Ills hook. I'OHOO(H' Ci'ivia," I.it.iiii. "Silver" chxic and mte. a of his fratdin nni ,nd nlily. He m i.. Nmiiiti a thwarted Klixul.elrVUn. Three Children He wu a br .'.her nf iSlcplien Frew n uim4- ,,( plorer ltieli;i , Frewen. uncle of I ,vU Carwtii I .,i :.; in.' c am In tn:-i he nmrt-b'd Miss Ch,, :, j, , Ihe stolcr of Ijflv ll.. nd. Churchill, and lie e. ' children, who have all miUc his lusle for travel ;h,.i u.., Illlg4 Mor. h.n I. enanf (.iiimi.ttn(-i i , Wen, It X . ami Mi - . ! , , dan. .. , 1 & Kills ell MOTHS , l Bolllti Only 1. s wi.ui nei..7J I II oi. 4 00 Trl! Iprintrm Al Ctorni t Ota(li I FI4BES Mosquitoes Roaches Anls v...,.r,B.c lieduufi; rtf. ill run. 1 Advertise in "The Dailv News" THE PAPER THAT n PTC All.n..