FAlllf TWO. 83OT The Daily News PRINCE RUPERT - BRITISH COLUMBIA. Published Every Afternoon, except 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.00 By mail to all parts of the British Empire and the United Slates, in advance, per ysar $0.00 To all other countries, in advance, per year $7.50 Transient Display Advertising. . . .$1.40 per inch per insertion Transient Advertising on Front Page '...$2.80 per inch Local Readers, per insertion .................. ,25c per line Classified Advertising, per insertion . . :2c per word Legal Notices, each insertion . 15c per agate line Contract Rates on Application. Advertising and Circulation Telephone - 98 Editor and Reporters Telephone - - - 86 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 Position Of Senate Being Discussed. Why Can't We Save? Saturday, July 26, 1921. The position of the Senate is being discussed by newspapers and others. The Edmonton' Journal in a recent issue says: From the time the Senate came into being, nearly sixty years ago,- there has been talk of reforming it. When a government has been in a minority in that body and had its legislation held up, it has niade threats of "mending or ending,, the upper chamber. But when it has been long enough in power to ob lain a majority mere, it lias immediately lost us interest in bringing about any change. So, at this stage at least, the pub lic is not likely to take very seriously the statement made by Mr. King in the closing hours of the session that, when Parlia-i ment next assembles, he will place proposals before it for limit-! ing the power of the appointed house , to prevent the carrying of measures which have passed the Conunons. There are, it must be recognized, many practical difficulties in the. way. If it is quite clear that there is strong popular! sentiment in Canada in favor of an alteration in the R.X.A. Act, the Parliament at London, which under existing conditions is a body which must put it into effect, would offer no objections to enacting the necessary legislation. But the act was the result of a pact between the different provinces and there must be a general demand for a change of any great importance before it can be brought about. Determined opposition in any section of ihe Dominion would probably serve as a bar to any such m'ove. Mr. Meighen asked the Prehiier to be more specific as to his intentions and to inform the House whether he. contemplated consulting the provinces in connection with his plan. To this Mr., King simply replied that the form of action to be taken would be considered during the recess. It is quite a possibility that he will listen to those-supporters of his who have been urging an appeal to the country during the. autumn, and that his statement on Saturday was a prelude to going before the electors and attempting to make this the principal issue. When questioned as to whether there would be an election before another session, he answered that he was unable to give a pledge that it would not be held. If he really intends to seek to bring about a reform of the Senate, he would certainly be wise to endeavor to secure a definite popular mandate to proceed with it before he enters on the subject. Been Unwise In Their Actions. The Senators, if they wish to retain their powers unimpaired, have pursued an unwise course during the session that has just been concluded, continues the Journal. Such confidence as the citizens had in them has been much weakened by the treatment given by the majority to some of the C.N.R. branch lines bills. There is very strong feeling in the west over that accorded the extensions in this part of tfie Dominion for which a clear case has been made out. The opposition to thent was. it is apparent, dictated by no sound public considerations, but simply Py a desire to embarrass the government railways pro gram. The fact, however, should not be overlooked thatUhe majority, which was responsible for burking these projects, was oy.no means wnouy composed or opponents or the uovern menL It included strong Liberals, while western Conservative Senators pleaded the case for the lines in question. It was a Conservative premier who launched the C.N.R. as a publicly owned enterprise, and it is hard to believe that thai partv will undertake to defend the Senate's action, in case the government seeks to curb the appointed chamber's powers on the strength of this. QNCE again you say this as you find that expenses have eaten up all your income. How is it that other people, with no larger incomes than yours, are able to buy many things you cannot afford ? Perhaps it is because you have no definite plan of allotting your income. Our useful Memoranda Book, which the Manager will be glad to give you, contains Budgets for both families and individuals. It will help you to plan your expenses with something to spare. A few hundred dollars in the Bank will give you a wonderful feeling of oecurity and independence. THE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA B. J. MACLEOD, Manager, Prince Rupert BrancL. BOX MAKING ' A GROWING INDUSTRY 65,600,000 FEET OF B. C. LUM B. BER CONVERTED INTO BOX SHOOKS IN 1923. C. Possesses Woods Admirably Suited for All Classes of Packages. An important branch of the British Columbia Forest Pro- duels industries is t lie manufac ture of wooden boxes. There are 25 box making; plants in British Columbia representing a capital investment of between $3,000,000 and About 1,200 persons are em ployed in the manufacture and handling of wooden boxes in British Columbia and t It o annual payroll is not less than $1,250, 000. Lumber Converted. Over 05,500,000 feet of selected lumber was converted . into box material in 1923 and Jbe value of the product was well over $2,000,000. British Columbia's box making branch, which is as yet in its in fancy, furnishes its quota to wards She great purchasing nower of the combined woods products industries. B. C species individually anil collectively offer an ideal selec lion of woods possessing all the most desirable dualities for the packing of all classes of coiumo dities, from the most fragile and perishable, to those calling for containers of exceptional dura bility and strength. Woods that. give out no oiior, take nails as- ily, and are otherwise suitable for all classes of box making, are amongst the common species in this Province. Over 15,000,000 feel of box shook were exported froni British Columbia in 1923 to all parts of Ihe world, and strenuous market extension work is being carried on to increase I hose tlgures manifold, This series of articles communicated by the Timber Industries Council of British Columbia. U.S. THEOLOGICAL SEMINARIES SCORED Students Are Mediocre Men Says Report on Institute of Social and Religious Research NEW YORK, July 25. Many theological seminaries in this country can scarcely qualify as educational institutions and many of their students are mediocre men of comparatively little training, according to a report on seminaries .in the United States and Canada issued today by the Institute of Social and Re ligions Research. The widespread popular belief that America faces a serious Rhortage of Protestant ministers is dispelled by Ihe report, accord ing to which the shortage is not in the iiuaiilily but in the quality of candidates for the ministry. A tendency toward "denomina tional and institutional inbreed 'ng," the fostering of divisiveness rather than of unity, Ihe exclusion of the scientific spirit, and inefficiency in financial account ing are among other shorlcom ings of the' seniinaries staled to have been revealed by Ihe study 1 I In the Letter Box ! 8HOWER OF UNION JACK8. Editor Daily News: In answer" to your request for suggestions as to how lo fittingly receive Stuart MacLaren, the. Urilish aviator, would it not be a good thing lo have a lot of small colored Union Jacks printed on paper and mixed up in n sack like confetti and when Ihe aviator arrives lo have one of the local aviators to lake up the sack and give him a shower from the air of Union Jacks. The Americln aviators arrived in a snowstorm. The Hrilishcr could arrive in a storm of British enthusiasm. ENTHUSIAST. When you buy advertising you buy CIRCULATION, and see that you get It. tt Falurday, July ?fi io;( THE DAILY NEWS. HI 9- JAKE says tie is going to lead a belter life. Yesterday was plenty hot enough for him. The most important work in the wJfld is cooking and yet look at the cooks. '. HKIATIVKS are" people you usually feel that you want to dodg-i when you meet I hem out. - THE age of discretion is anything over one hundred. ill runs i always irouhle for n husband. " The next thing will be the fall hat and yet the bath ing suit is scarcely paid for. , ' IF a person worries you now if is all right to fell him or her to "go away and play." .... w4' "SOW I'ni elected and now I'm not," sing. Manion and Mc Kay, in a nice little duet. Possibly also (ieneral Stewart and Alary Ellen may also get up a little byplay on (ho political stage. AXOTHHR song hit that should be popular in Prince Rupert would bo "How shall we make the tourists believe it's hot like this all Ihe time.' . DAWKS, when he wrote bis report suggesting a way out of the reparations, difficulty for Germany, never had any idea he was going to stage a little play in Loudon in which the representatives of all the. allied countries might exercise their wits in trying to get the belter of each other. I'ARKINO in the front parlor is an old fashioned method of getting to know the girl. ' Nowadays parking of any kind is A CORRKSPONDKNT wants to know what women have heads for. I may tell him Ihe first and most important thing is to have it properly and scienl ideally bobbed and shingled and then the next is to keep it before a mirror as btii: as possible each day. THOSE" Klks are always horning in on something. XOW I bat the American bar has drunk tea with the King and Queen of England and shaken FLY-TOX WEEK July 21st to 26th K.UL.L.S kfoths -nd othtr houathold Inieclt Harmltaa to human and anl mala. Pltaiant cAorv,. Went atatn. UtWbf- ' V.. 'W, K. Bratt & C. Ltd. Vanroo.tr. It. C cm i r j... r www, , Dr.ni.li, lie vhands I jought spectablc. with their lo become majesties, it eminently re ALHKHTA is selling beer the glass and at once the city Kdmonloii adds sixteen acres its cemetery. BOAT ARRIVALS. by of to I T V A I i en i cars in Prince Rupert J July 26, 1914. The (i.T.I'. barge Itangor is lloading a shipment of lumber. and 'twenty carloads of 45-inch water .pipe for Prince Rupert at The Sophia is due In front the north at 2 o'clock this afternoon. The Zabassa ami Foster brought in over 100,000 tons of halibut to jlhe Canadian Fish A Cold Storage plant this morning. W. L. Westhall leaves for the south on the Princess Sophia lo- day. A. J. liurrnugh will also be a passenger on the Sophia. The following passengers arrived from the south on the C.X. steamer Prince Rupert, Capf. Donald, at 3.15 yesterday afternoon: M. Knlsuyama,- Miss Malsu Hara, Miss Kalsuyama. Miss Maude Turner, Miss Fanrhon Turner, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Turner, Miss II. Slewart, Terrace; Mrs. A." J. Craig, D. O. Scott, Mr. Shobert, Mr. and Mrs. Hayashi, Miss Rose Morris, Mr. Hell-Irving, Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Fallis, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Titus, Mrs. X. Tress, Miss F. Trees, G. Folsom, Miss K. Dig-gary, Miss II. Hardy. Mrs. F. Ock-lesbaw, Smitbers; Miss A. A. McKinley, William Fisher, O. W. Rowse, W. Slewart, W. H. Derry, II. 11. Hamilton, Miss McQueen, Mrs. Keeler, J; II. Turner, Miss Hover, Miss Myers, H. P. Scott, Miss Robertson, W. Ross. Miss Cora Kinney, Mr. and Mrs. Patterson, Dr. and Mrs. Hnhnfal, X. A. (mod, l C. Qulatl, Mrs. Howard While and family, Mr. and Mrs. O. A. Hunter, II. W. Einmel-mnti, K. S. McfSougan, W. (law-rock. Rev. and Mrs. J. J. Siuith-son and family, A Peterson. For Stewart Miss D. Puckle. Mrs. K. Puckle, Miss M. Puckle M. J. SI. Clair, Misses (larllnkel, Miss McEwcn, Miss Eraser, H. Leiser, X. Stechisin, Mrs. J. Lnz.- zar, 3. Hall, H. Wilkinson, Mrs. S. Maguire. Miss A. Mara, L. L. Crocker, Mr. Lamb, Mr. Johnson, Miss C. Hoult, Miss J. Wilde, Mrs. Soheranski and child. HOTEL ARRIVALS. Prince Rupert. W. Laing, F. Parry, Victoria; M. Murehio, Mrs. O. S. Craig, J. Slater, Vancouver; X. A. Oood, New Westminster; C. M. Harbeau, Ottawa; Rulb Wanless, Merrill. II. C; Mr. and Mrs. A. Xelson, Mr. ami Mrs. A. M. Patching, Mrs. A. M. Higmoe, Ketchikan; O. S. Pragnell, Knmloops; J. A Hrown, Eekslall; J. H. Shnberl, Hrookville, Pa.; Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Turner, Mr. and Mrs. P. Turner, San Francisco; O. W. Howse, Pawlucket, R.I.; Mrs. W. I.I. Falr-bairn, Queen Charlolle City. BURNING STOMACH relieved in two minutes with JO-TO Jo -To relieves gas pains, acid stomach, heartburn, after-eating distress and all forms of indigestion quickly without harm. All Drug Stores. 0i The Man in the Moon SAYS:- :BBBBT Jb .JbIBBBBB Hk. .BH 'bHSmhhbwHbbHibh Canadian National Railways Prince Rupert DRYDOCK AND SHIPYARD Operating G. T. P. 20,000 Ton Floating Dry Dock Engineers, Machinists, Boilermakers, Blacksmiths, Pattern makers, Founders, Woodworkers, Etc. ELECTRIC AND ACETYLENE WELDING. Our plant is equipped to handle all kinds of MARINE AND COMMERCIAL WORK. PHONES 43 and 385. For panelling your rooms it rivul the m l ti hardwoods. i Rejuvenate your Home Quickly and Permanently. Solo Agents Albert & McCaffery, Ltd. Phones 116 and 564. 1 Joy those who discriminate one XLiyrrii 1 . L Special Ola jqueur Whisky This advertisement is not published or displayed by He Liquor Control Hoard or by the floveriiincnl of Uritish Columbia.