YACHT-TWO. The Daily News PRINCE RUPERT - BRITISH COLUMBIA; Published Every Afternoon, except Sunday, the Prince Rupert Daily News, Limited, Third Avenue. II. P. PULLEN, Managing Editor. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: City Delivery, by mail or carrier, per month $1.00 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 $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. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations. DAILY EDITION ROTARY CONVENTION ?AS IMMENSE AFFAIR There Were 8,600 In Attendance -and Arrangements Were Perfect, J. W. Nlcholls Tells Rotarlans Here The Rotary convention in Toronto, -attended by J. W. Nicliolls the official delegate from this city, was a wonderful gathering. At St. Louis last year there were OjCOO present and at Toronto they prepared for 7,500 but 9,600 were (here. All spoke in the highest terms of the arrangements ami there was not a hitch. As he drove out through the The best Tobacco for the pipe ' Friday, July 25, 192 1. Suggest Plan To Welcome Flyer. It is evident that the old method of banqueting the visitor cannot be followed in the case of the forthcoming visit of Stuart MacLaren, the British round the world aviator, who is expected here within a week or two on his w.ay east. At the time of the visit the eyes of the world will be turned this way and the reception should, if possible, be of a spectacular nature which would make the city known all over the continent. In view of the unusual situation the Daily rsews would welcome suggestions which it might put before the people of the city for consideration. What can we do that will focus attention on Prince Rupert when the flyer arrives. In other words, how can we exploij'the occasion for our own advantage? Any suggestion will be heartily welcomed olid published with a view to possible adoption. Bear River Evidently Will Have Mines. Evidently valuable mines are being developed in the Portland Canal district and more particularly just now on Bear River. There the Dunwell mine is making such a good showing it is surprising all who have been interested in the country in the past and who have often been disappointed. The ow'ners of the Dunwell have always bad faith in it. The Stewart brothers, after whom the town of Stewart is named, for many years hung on, even when almost everyone else left the district. They always declared that Stewart -would come back and that the mines would yet prove rich. Their .prediction has come true and it is due largely to them that this has been the case. Difficulty In Getting Vote Through House. The discussion in connection with the passing of the small Prince Rupert elevator vote gives an idea what difficulties there are in piloting a vote through Parliament and why sometimes we are not able to get those things we should like. The Hansard report as reprinted in the issues of yesterday and the previous day has provided interesting reading for Prince Rupert .people and from it they get some idea what it means.. Also from it thev realize what a lot of education is necessary in the East in order to secure what is needed in the West. !lt must be remembered that the population of the country is chiefly in the East and most of the members are Kasterners. Very few of them have ever been to this coast. country be found at every centre a marquee with a Toronto Notarial! within readv to act na guide or to advise as to the route. In the exhibition orrminria whern Ithe convention was held were' 150 loronto Rotarians ready to act as guides to the visitors. The halls were large, the grounds perfect aim me water ideal. In the course of the. convention there was an enormous pageant to witness which 35;000 paid admission. Everyone voted that the Toronto convention was the finest thai had been held yel. Mr. Nicliolls suggests tbnl there were too 'mjuiy speeches but many did not listen to them. People were there from all over the world. OGDEN'S LIVERPOOL Interesting impressions of his trip through the United States and Canada were given to the Prince Rupert Rotary Club yes terday by J. W. Nicliolls in which lie told of some of the incidents of an extended tour. He visited all the important towns of Can ada and many of the big cities of the United States. In Winnipeg when going Mr. Nicliolls found the greatest pessimism expressed but on his return, the promise of a good crop in Manitoba had changed the. outlook somewhat and people were more hopeful. The farmers he found were the greatest optimists. He mVt all .sorts and con ditions of people and talked to them all. Wonderful Change In Chicago, the most extreme optimism prevailed. A wonderful change had taken place tiiere in two years. The biggest real estate gamble of which he had known was taking place, far ex ceeding anything that had ever been known here. Skyscrapers and apartment houses were going up, millions Of dollars were being spent on purks and boulevards reclaimed from t lie lake. Prices had mounted and every where were signs of extreme booming. "New York -is always wonder ful," said Mr. Nicliolls. On the occasion of his visit it was crowded. At the Belmont Hotel, not by any means the best hotel in the city, they charged him! $9.00 a day for a room on the sixteenth floor. A meal in the grill room cost him $3.0 and a theatre ticket to sec a play worth about seventy cents cost him' $7.70. Naturally he did not stay in New York long. In Boston he found business conditions poor, due to the shut ting down of the textile and boot and shoe factories. Herman shoes were imported at prices 'against which American factories could not compete in spile of the high duties. In the textile branch British, manufacturers were un derselling them, sometimes as much as fifty per cent. Montreal Busy Montreal was the same as ever, tourists from, the United States were there attracted by the same thing that Jbrought them to Vancouver. All the hotels were full. These, with Toronto, were the principal centres visited. GLORIA SWANSON IN HUMMING BIRD HERE AT THEATRE TONIGHT Famous Movie Star Takes Dual Role Now 'a Boy and Now a Ql rl flloria SwanSori appears as a boy for the first time in her stel lar career in "The Humming Bird," a .'Paramount picture di rected by Sidney Olcotl and com ing to the Wcslholme tonight. As Toinelte, idol of the Paris underworld and leader of a gang of Apaches, Miss Swanson alter nates from boy's to girl's clothing. Her dual personality as Toinetlc and the notorious "Hum- liing Hird," for whom the Paris police search in vain, gives the star a wide range of 'dramatic possibilities in this production of Maude 'Fulton's play, which Forrest Halsey adapted 'for screen presentation. Edward Rums is leading man and others in the support are Jacques d'Auray, Mario Majeroni arid Casare Ora- vlna. The Mmitmartre, that quarter of 'Paris' artists known throughout the world and especially vivid in the mfemory of American sol- niT di 11 is THE DAILY. NEWS Friday. July "25, 1 921 Success Begins With Saving IMPRESSIONS OF BIG CITIES A Savings Account with the Union Bank of Canada will give you the right start. J. W. Nlcholls Tells Rotarlans of By systematic saving you can lay the foundation . or Visit to United States and stone of future success. Eastern Canada Do not wait until you have $25.00 or $50.00. A Savings Account can be opened with $1.00. 944 UNION BANK OF CANADA Prince Rupert Branch A.T. Broderick, Manager - NWTOk Kv r iTr THH II ill I f Ho w a kid does I pitch into Kellogg's L I and grow healthy K I from the pitching! Mm I lei NbeHeren On won QmJ 'Save your JLoL ergizer than 4aillvi dor fully 'OJTC1 time and HI t l I Kellogg' with milk crisp and tatty. Has strength. No cook H 1 V or cream. .All pure -a snappy flavor ing. No sticky dishes Kg I nutriment, little that's simply im- to wath. Ready to B I waste. mense. Good always, serve. H mm i mm Ar ' mmmmmmmmW J09 I I CORNFLAKES I diers who fought indite "battle of Paris," was transplanted in Astoria, L. I. A section of the outer boulevard I)e Clicby, intersected by a small street which winds up the bill towards Sacro-Coeur, sprung up like magic at the Par amount studio where scenes for Oloria Swansnn's latest Para mount picture, "The Humming Hird" were filmed. The corner cafe is there as are the tobacco shops, the funny kiosk's, and quaint bouses. The story deals with lifo in the Mnnlmartre section of Paris, where nrtists and. "apaches 1H0-hemlans all mingle in '4 lie tiny studios and restaurants. Miss Swanson, who plays the dual role of Toinette and "The Huuvning Hird," rubbed her eyes when she walked into the scone for the first tlmo. She knows the sec-lion, having visited it many times when she was abroad. "It is perfect," she cried, and It is down to the last detail which is the vermoUlh-cnssis glass on I lie sidewalk-table in front of the cafe. Many dramatic scenes, take place in the Mnntmarlre section and Director Sidney 6loott, who also has spent much tlmn in, Paris, has given n very colorful background for the work of Miss Swanson and her 'gang of apaches. Ten Years Ago in Prlnce'Rupert July 25, 1914. Mr. Sheer of the 'Haysport cold storage plant says the spring salmon Ulsbing lias igreally improved in the past few days on the Skeena. The company are also pelting good catches of halibut. A. Hull has relumed from a trip to Fort, (leorge and will spend the balance of the slimmer with his son-in-law, W. T. Robinson. Mr. Hull found business good in Fort Oeorge nnd quite a lot of building going on. Ho leased a businis corner, which he bad purchased at. (ho government sale. , A. A. Cox, provincial architect, arrived on the PrincoOeorge this morning. 'He will spend a few days in I lie city looking over the provincial work, which is in course of preparation. LET'S GO! We am nTfl We're nwayi! Twenty-sixth Is the day, When the Klk plunges. Northward with joy; With a thunderous roar, We are out to explore Just what tac-lics Alaskans em ploy. When a visiting team, Willi a ,puncii with' slcarn', Tries lo show lliem their National game, They'll have m'any a mjll That will miss a ball hit Ily a Hupert Klk looking for 'fame! So come on, boys! Let's goll! Let us iput on "the show That our Minstrels know how lo produce, Then at basehnll we'll score Say a hundred or more! My 'heel hoys, weMI igive 'em the ithMico.M John iPlndor-Moss, Subscribe for the Dally News. amatco For panelling your rooms it rivals the most Costly hardwoods. t Rejuvenate your Home Quickly and Permanently. Sole Agents Albert & McCaffery, Ltd. Phones 116 and 584. Fly-Tox Week JULY 21st to 26th HandSpra MOIL MOTHS souitoes fedyBixgs, Fie as oachesTnouseAnts lot italn finert fabrics. TUna humaniand anlmaji. PImmdI rio Uuit nor dirt. I OtJitc. 32 O1.IUS N rs W',t' U,t'' Co. Ltd. 'JHEs