.PAdtf TWO. Hand Ot.Se, SI Oi.ll.W HO1.H lZSOi.4.00 MoutK Sprarc PREB W. K. Betty & Co. Ltd. yncour. B. C an MOTHS ifoes ecMSues.JKXeas, Roaches .House An ta Will not ttala finest fabrics. Harm leu to human and animal. Pleasant Odor. No dust nor dirt. v .71 The Daily News PRINCE RUPERT - BRITISH COLUMBIA. Published Every Afternoon, exc9pt Sunday, the Prince Rupert Daily News, Limited, Third Avenue. H. P. PULLEN, Managing Editor. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: City Delivery, by mail or carrier; per month i.OO By mail to all parts of the British Empire and the United .States, in advance, per year $0.00 To all other countries, in advance, per year Advertising and Circulation Telephone Editor and Reporters Telephone - - 93 S3 $7.50 All advertising should be in The Daily News Office on day preceding publication. All advertising received subject to approval. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations. DAILY EDITION Monday, July 28, 1921. Difficulty Of Working When Weather Is Hot. People here just now can quite understand why the people of tropical or semi-tropical countries are not as full of enthusiasm and energy as are those of the north. Often we complain of the cold but it is the coolness of these climates that makes for our progress, initiative and success. Canadians are in demand in the United States because they have been brought up to be active. They have not been trained to lethargy by example and precept. A few; hot days make a pleasant change but as a steady thing, heat is to be avoided.. Let MacLaren Know This A British Country. It has been suggested that as this is the first British soil Stuart MacLaren, the aviator, will have reached since leaving Hong Kong, he and his; companions should he made to know it in some very conspicuous manner. It is to be assumed that lie will land at Seal Gove and the scheme as outlined is to have the Cove decorated with Canadian and British flags. Every available spot should be flag-bedecked. Even the float to which he is io tie might well have the Union Jack conspicuously flying, the buildings all around and the shore line and boats in the cove all would be decorated in the same way and pictures of- these would be shown in such a way as to let the world know that this place is, British and is out to do honor to the Britisher that has made ?' n sulendid effort in his long and trying flight. Details in the way of banners or streamers might be worked out that would be particularly attractive and slrikinsr and would add to the effectiveness of the seheme. Doubtless the local regiment, the war veterans, the Daughters of the Empire and others would join in making this event a really big one. Preparations jvould have to be made in advance and it is possible the time may not be long before he is here. No one can say just when the British, flyer will arrive but it should be within two vVeeks and possibly less. If the weather is like it is today it would be a unique occasion. ' ' i Further suggestions will b'e gladly received and passed on by this paper. Cijizens are reminded that this is an event that will be recorded all over the world and anything we can do here, If of sufficient interest, will be telegraphed to the ends of the earth. Rupert People Will Understand. 1 Prince Rupert people will quite understand the sentiment expressed in the following editorial from "Overseas" published by the Overseas League in Great Britain: "The weather is not what is used to be," so say the grumblers among us, and they call to our minds the wonderful sum mer or four years ago, when day of sunshine succeeded day of .-Miiiniinic mm num reumury in aepiemjier we only pad a dozen or so days of-rain. "But humanity hns a curious way of forgetting the unpleasant things of life and remembcri lie onlv Din nloncnil ntul hence during the rest of the year, when we think of June, we tun iu jiiiiiu memories oi a monm or roses, or blue skies and summer heat. As a matter of fact, despite our grumbles, if we are of a statistical frame of mind and enred In past meteorological records we woiild probably find that a wet June was no Uncommon event. "The charm of our British rlimnl io Mini vm, ,. i, what quite to expect of it. Just when you have douned your ......... w wiuiiiiiiB in uii prunanuiiy you nave ro put up with two or three weeks of damp or raw days. Certainly during the past lour weeks we have had more than hup fnir tk storms and downpours of almost tropical intensity." The best To be n 1 1 tor the pipe THREE PILLARS OF THE INDUSTRY PROGRESS OF PROVINCE DUE TO MAINTENANCE OF HUGE PURCHASING POWER. Vast Developments By Land And Sea Due to the Initiative Of Lumbermen. There are three great spending forces in I ho British Columbia forest industries with its purchasing power of $100,000,000 per annum. 1. The Tirnberholder the pioneer investor in the raw material. 2. The Logger the harvester of the timber crop. 3. The .Manufacturer the builder up at markets. Upon the unimpeded functioning of these brandies depends the. fair progress of British Col umbia's vital industry. A setback to one spells disaster to all three. The timberholders of the pro vince, faced with fire' and storm risks against which there is no insurance, have contributed over $45,000,000 to the provincial treasury during the last fifteen years. A worlds record in similar taxation. The logpers spend anpually very large sums on new and cost ly equipment to keep pace with modern science and overcome (lie ever varying obstacles thai nature puts in their paths. Eight hundred miles of private rail roads, now in actual operation, is one memorial of this energy. The manufacturers of lumber, shingles, pulp and paper boxes and other forest, products are also forced to expend millions every year on new machinery to maintain the elliciency of their plants. In that way alone can they meet the keen world competition and justify their product. The British Columbia lumber manufacturers, by dint of strenuous market extension work have increased their export, shipments twelvefold in ten years. Their efforts have indisputably been the main factor in building up the sea ports of British This series of articles communicated by the Timber Industries Council of British Columbia. The Man in the Moon J SAYS:- THIS is a free country for any person that has the price and does not try to go .beyond the limit oT the! law. WHAT is needed in Prince Hu-pert is a kind of lawn grass that will keep green but will not grow morn than an inch high. SUCCESSFUL men are those who do not mind spending a dollar if they can see two in the offing. HANK Ingratitude is when hav ing taught a girl to llirt she goes to another fellow for a post graduate course. . . . - THM person the editor says he likes is the one that goes without saying. CANADA is a good country that is, fairly good. COMMUNISM as it is practised in Hussia does not seem to protect the country against famines. THE publisher of a newspaper just, south of the line injured his ankle when he stepped into a F CUT PLUG OGDEN'S LIVERPOOL W W THR DAILY NBWa Monday, July 28, 102 FASHIONS & FOIBLES by Shirley Sharon From dresses that do not close at al , to frocks thai open from neck tc ( hem is a characteristic nolle face ej fashion. The button which has long been absent from the best circles of society has re-retumed and is used more for its decorative qualities than for its practical virtues. Crystal buttons are employed on straight-line dresses of flannel in the Summer colors, and red glass buttons that look like clear candy are smart on heavy white silk crtpe. Yellow bone buttons are very pretty on the narrow vestee of these one-piece dresses of yellow and gray or yellow and bran check or plaid material. The very small collar and the invisible sleeve are having a great success. squirrel hole. The brand of squirrel is not mentioned. VK are told that the first newspaper was published' away back in ancient Home. Some of the papers today have Hie appearance of being a contemporary of that sheet. WHEN' it's hot we kick, when it's cold we kick, and when it rains we swear. The ideal would of course be some other kind of weather. HARD TIME WHEN BOAT BROKE DOWN Natives of Kltkatla Rigged up Temporary Cooling Apparatus to Take Place of Pump The seine boat Doreen X. had a difficult time getting here from Lowe Inlet. She left, there yes terday at noon and did not. reach port until eight Ibis morning. Capt. John M. Nelson of Kilkatla reported that the pump broke down and in order to travel they rigged up barrels on deck and by dipping water from the sea kept a sm'all stream of water running through the engine cooler and were IJius nble to make the trip. As a barrel of water was needed every fifteen minutes they were kept working hard all the time and took two hour shifts all night. In addition to Capt. Nelson on the boat was Henry llrown, engineer, and Cecil Hush and Wilfrid Ilootli. FORMER NAYAL MAN IS NOW MISSIONARY Commander O. T. Hodgson Known Here In Early Days, On His Way To Stlklne River. Commander O. T. Ilpdgson, H.N., who, in the early days of Prince Rupert, was on H.M.S. Egeria surveying the waters of this region, arrived in the city on the Cardena yesterday afternoon and left on the Princess Louise this morning for Wrangell. While hern, Commander Hodgson had an interview with Archbishop Du Vernet and received his license as a missionary in charge of the Upper Sliklne -mission to lake effect when Rev. P. Thoruian and family leave for England iu August. Commander Hodgson has been retired since the war and has been residing al Alherul with his brother. If you find you cannot get the daily News regularly, call n ami subscribe for It and have It delivered to your home. tf RATTENBURY TO PAY ALIMONY Head Of Telkwa Firm Resident of Victoria, Sued By Wife For Non-Support. F. M. Haltonhury, brad of Ral-tenbury Lands, Ltd., a II im that within the past few years' operated extensively iu selling wild lands to settlers, was sued by his wife iu Victoria and ordered to pay $300 a month until such time as a divorce suit against hini'caii b heard, lie is well- known in the' northern interior where he purchased large tracts of wild lands from the (ioveru- ment during the Mcllride-Bowser regime, and later sold a large part of it to settlers. The. case was heard in supremo court chambers, Robert Cassidy K.C., acting on behalf of Mrs. Ratlen-bury and .II A. Maclean for the defendant. Reporting the case. the Victoria Times sayaj-Llved Apart Ten Years. Taking I he stand in support of an affidavit alleging desertion and , non-support, Mrs. Hat ton -bury staled that she bad been married twenty-six years to the respondent. The past ten years I hey bad lived apart, though sharing the same house. This was the residence at 1701 Beach drive. The past six mouths, wit nes said, she had been deserted iu the house except for the pres ence of her two children, a boy and a girl, both now grown' ly adull age. For four years she had re ceived no money from respon dent, continued witness, hut the bouse bills had always been paid. Within the past two months the bills were no longer paid, and she bad no money with which to carry on. The water and elec tric light had been turned olT al the house, and even two servants formerly employed, had been taken to the four-room dwelling now inhabited by respondent iu James Hay district. .Men acting on the orders nf the respondent, alleged witness, stripped the Heach drive homo of all its furniture. A couch and a stove, with some meagre essentials were the only articles left, she continued. The petitioner requested ali mony, even on a temporary basis, by means of which she could support herself and ob tain her civil right al law. Willi out this redress she could not even prosecute her suit, it was pointed out by Mr. Cassidy, in an impassioned address to the court. Husband's Earnings. Questioned on the income nf the respondent witness could .not state the amount, but pointed to the professional services of her husband, who had designed the Parliament Buildings, the Em press Hotel, the Bank oT Montreal, a C.P.R. hotel in the moun. tains, and more latterly the C. P. R. terminal building, and the amusement centre project. Witness understood her husband held .'18,500 in valuuble brewery slock in Alberta, but could not say for certain what income he derived from this or other invest mollis. Mr. Maclean challenged the as sertion that I be respondent was a wealthy man. He said the sum or ino,000 had been dropped in unimproved farm land In this province, and the income now was of such a nature that the one-flrih available for alimony would be negligible. Remarking on Hie absence of the respondent, who did not appear to answer to the allegations made by petitioner, Mr Justice McDonald made the award staled. The order was in tended as a temporary measure, he Kiiid, not as a linal solution of I he problem. JAPANESE WOMAN DIED IN HOSPITAL Mrs. N. Tateyama Of Sunnyslde Cannery Is Survived By Three Young Children. Mrs. N. Tnleyama, Japanese, of Suniiyside Cannery, died on Saturday evening in I he Prinre Rupert Oeneral Hospital. She was to years or age, bnd resided in this country for sixteen years and Is survived by three children or lender years. The funeral look place (his aflernoon al 12.30 from the li. C. Undertakers' Parlors to Fa I rv lew Cemetery, Rev. Archedeacou O. A. Itlx How about those pictures you made Sunday? Better bring the films here for develop, ing and printing. You want . them developed correctly, printed properly, and returned promptly. That is the kind of Kodak finishing service we render. v' Finishing that's, right, and right on. time is our.speciclty. Ormes Limited The Rcxall Store Phones 200 and 82 Third Avenue Lakelse Lodge Lakelse Lake, via Terrace, B.C. Now open for service under management of Mi .M. Haven. Ideal place to spend your summer holiday-1, lb -enable rates, flood home cooking. Comfortable j,m Fishing, Boating, Bathing in Lakelse Lake and Slrem 5. BATHS AT THE LODGE CONNECTED WITH THE HOT SPRINGS. Terrace T-AuKlI Motors Operating Taxi and Launch Service between Terr-; and Lodge landing, assuring guests of quick, comfort-trip. Also operating taxi service to all parts of the vnllev For reservations nod rales, npply lo LAKELSE LODGE, OR TERRACE MOTORS, TERRACE, B.C. SHOE FASHIONS OF THE SMARTER KIND ONYX FAULTLESS FITTINC FOOTWEAR ONYX There is an appreciated touch oT novelty and smartness in the much admired ONYX styles. Made in Patent Coll Kid, Calf Skin and (in If Suedes and Satins. Priced at $7.50 to $11.50. Family Shoe Store IgM.m u ii .. : 1 ii .ATjMBft "l . II llilliuu m is A superb Bourbon whUk nt L highet quality- bottled in bond under Federal Government Supervision. "AWAKENS OLD MEMORIES" 'ml I I (ulpCrowI 'I'liis ailverlisomcMil Is not published or displayed liy 1,111 l.kpior Control Hoard or by U10 Oovcriiinoiil of Urlllsli Columbia, '