PAdS TWO The Daily News PRINCE RUPERT - BRITISH 'COLUMBIA Published Every Afternoon, except Sunday, the Prince Rupert Daily News Limited, Third Avenue. II. P. PUI.LRN, Managing Editor. Staging" Exhibition Is Important Work. SUBSCRIPTION RATES l City Delivery hy mail or earner, per month $1.00 By mail to all parts of the British Empire and the United State?, in advance, per year im. $0.00 To all other countries, in advance, per ear , . 7.50 Advertising and Circulation Telephone , - 98 Editor and Reporters Telephone - - - S8 AH advertising should be in The Haily News Office before A p.m. on day preceding publication. All advertising received subject to approval. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations. DAILY EDITION ur iiiimihm vii in inaMiip arrangements. Jtni us your' namsendoi will send vou JICTUeS.,. Supp this illustrated boob of beaubful tier w 1 -I I distributors fors (fDham K9L9RED -3HIN0LE3. 'Friday, Sept. II, l):,. tagmg an exhibition i.s imjiortaiit work. Originality, enrrg aim organizing anility i necessary to do it successfully. snmeimng nt'w has to be done each year and old things have to be done in a new way. Did exhibit's if shown differently iiate a new- appearance. , ... - While a great inapy visitors Voine' to Prince Rupert for tne i.ur.tlic resident or the. vity, are the ones on whom the management depend chiefly for support. They are the one uiirmiumu iuuiii. u iijey are auracieu me luir is a success and if they Ure not it fails. .aiunwy mere nas to tie ro-operalion from outside. We have often spoken or thai ami done whatever was jmssible to foster it. At the same time it must always be remembered that the people at home put up inot of the "money and have to Having that in view it is well to carry on the work of the lair accordingly. Flaying The Enemy To Be Chief Sport. ( Flaying the political encniy will bethe chief sjort during the next few weeks. We shall have reports come throirgh on 4he wires telling of vlml ""l" politician says about anther and of the terrible things either has done or left undone. The country is going to the dogs of course under the King regime and from the other fide we shall be told that if it goes u the dogs the opposition is responsible. Happily we do not have to believe all the statements made on either side. We, out in this far wot, may sit back and watch the game ahd enjoy the sport, if such it may be called. .Sometimes we do not like the spectacle and other times it is verv amusing. The tragedy of the political, game is that politicians are nrten unscrupulous and do. not mind injuriifg the country in efforts to injure political opponents. For the past year or two the Athelsloii press has been .sending, out its "whNper of death"" propaganda which has done much ,to injure Canada. Happily the people generally have, sense eiipiigji to ie,. through nil- i .iiuiiiiiies inai nave iieen poured out. ; ' ' 1 ' ' Age Of Adventure - ' i Not Yet Passed. The adventurers of the world have been (hose who have gone uiu in insiory .is greai ami wnoe achievements have been applauded. The steady plodder has seldom been heard of. We like to read of the piratical exploits of our forefathers, who scoureu me seven seas in sfarcu of adventure. We thrill over me oaring or the polar explorers. - The men who tried to con-quer the world become more or less heoes. So today we have our adventurers. Every day almost we read or the feat of some hardy group. The flight of Colonel Williams to the interior or the province, the attempted flight of the U.S. aviators across the Pacific, the search for placer gold by a group of men who trekked without provisions to the interior of Caviar and arrived back hair starved and thoroughly exhausted. These are deeds or adventure that look nerve and spirit. We admire the men who made the attempts as welli ns those who .sun-ceded. They become more or less heroe.s in our eyes. General Interest In Airplane Crew. Oeneral interest was taken here in Hie crew or the airplane that was lost orr Honolulu and which .today we are glad In record are quite safe. The flight was not at first watched with very great interest here, except by aviators, until one machine dropped out and later no word could be obtained of the oilier. At once the flight went into the limelight and since that there have been dnilv inquiries as to the fale or the -crew. Happily the advenlitra ha ended without falnlilv. . ws Lumber Brick Cement Lime Plaster Stock onr winter's supply of Nanaimo- Wellington Coal now Albert & McCaffery, Ltd. Phones 116 and 117 ni URGE EDUCATE FOR LIFE WORK John Kyle Addresses Rotary Club on Tendency of Modern Systems A plea for education that will train yiiunjr people to do that which is to be their life work, was the theme f an illuminating address delivered yesterday afternoon to the Itotary Oluh at their weekly luncheon in the t. Iteis care. President Thomas .M :) mini I in tli.. chair. Mr. Kyle opened hy stating that there was a school of academics today which taught that there' was a general education course which would prepare pupils for auylhinp in Hie world al which they might haxe to work. Thinking people today were sayin? there was no such , thin, a aj general course. Iho scloud of the future would provide inorspeel-l rir Iralniii?. Iluskiu said that' no teaching would truly promote the caiisM of etliication thai ilid not take into consideriition the condition of life to wliieh they had In prepare the children. In other wonls they must educate them for life. i Business Enterprise Technical education, Mr. Kyle defined as a business enterprise. It was lriiiK to find out what Hie child was fitted for and train for that. This system would effect all education In Hie ?0lh century Ituskin's idea was to train to do some one thins with the hand well and in that way to train the fac ulties The Nintecnth century had not been famous for technical educa lion but the twentieth would he. II. (5. Wells stated that education had to be invigorated and rein vigoraled to counlenict class! calism and the evasion of Ufa.. There would have to be a change in the present system. The, school of the '-future would be different froin.lliqt of today. He anticipated that the reKrt of the educational commission would pay preat attention to education for trades. The establishment of a junior hi?h school would enable pupils to specialize at an earlier ace and to find out what they were filled for. In the junior lii-h school there would he four divisions devoted res pectively to academic education. technical, home economics and commercial education. A I read v il had been tried with success in (real Britain, Ontario and some! parts of the t inted Slates. In this province people would lie com pelled to adopt it to keep up with the I rein of the time. "It can he done and is helm? done" he said. "II is pood business." I'he speaker said they were of- to lie fomnicrciallzimr education ioiliZ lu Normal school is rntn- iiMr:iaIi.ii(v' education. It is necessary for the younji people " mjii uvvt tiifj in i:ai ii their daily bread for doing no i important." Mr. Kyle sooke of the movement ill .United .Slates ijcyelop UlJc.l labdr in their' owii Country. He told of how skilled labor applied to Ii block of clay chaiiKinsr il from a three rent hrick to a dollar piece of pottery work. He told of a lecture nicn to jtudents at a KnuluatiiiK dinner, where it was urtted to respect those who worked with their hands and who were ailisls al their trades. More Moral Concluding, Mr. Kyle said that people who worked with their bands were as a classmore moral mid had a limber (one than those who did not. Hi the oaicy fftzvra fri.Uj, Sn,!,.,,,!,,., .. tM Puhlie tuhieription it invited for a nu ittu of $75,000,000 DOMINION OF CANADA Fifteen-Year 4Vi Bonds Datea September ltt, 1925. Due September 1st, 1940. Principal payable at the office of the Receiver-General, at Ottawa, or 'i ,4 that of the Assistant Receivers-General at Halifax, St. John, ' CharlottetoWn, Montreal, Toronto, Winnipeg, Retina, Calvary or Victoria. Semi-annual interest (March 1st ont? Sep-- , tember 1st) payable at any branch in Canada of any ; 3 chartered Dank. . Denominations: $100, $500, $1,000. All bonds may be registered at to principal only , and bonds in denominations of $500, $1,00P, $5,000, $10,000 and $100,000 may be fully reiistered. These bonds arc authorized under Acts of the Dominion of Canada, and Ixjth principal and interest are a charge upon the consolidated revenue fund. They are secured by the full credit, faith, and taxing power of the Dominion of Canada. War Loan 5 Bonds maturing December 1st, 1925, will be accepted at par and accrued interest in settlement for the new bonds at the purchase price. This offering is made subject to prior sale and advance in price, and the right is reserved to allot a less amount of bonds than applied for. These bonds are offered for delivery, in interim form, when 't as and if issued and delivered to us. V . PRICE: 97! and accrued interest, yielding over 4.75 Ordtrt maybe ttlephontd or Uhiraphi (colled) to any cjjhe under siined, or may be submitted Arctri your usual bond dealer, ttock exekante broker, or throuik any bank in Canada. Bank of Montreal Royal Bank of Canada Canadian Bank of Commerce iiiR through tin' high school, lie iteauly. Just a she fnuzht fur t (till of Distances where tins li.nl lir in fruit in far ten warned not to commercialize, i,,.,.,, , lL.i uiiere uorihv x..rm t.in- ni r... i... education. This was hii:lifalutin! Vf Itlficr riln 111. I fmifljf limit iir li..mn ti,l I. - aI.iI.I- -. I t isenese. Have we to despise' uriUnilv. , t.i..i,n,l"- iv work?" he asked. "In Hrltish ivo ,f th Jndce. Mr ' Ami i.iiv n.r t. v. I :ojint.la we have In ilvelnp the!niack ail( ,ieil )ukl, ,,,,,,,, aKtsU wrlnklil. white-haired: natural resources around in ami Mr. Hiuck said he had been as- marked hy the l,tll f nr. bt we should n..l consider doi. this toi,i,od at the quality of the wilhal still beautiful, who Ail A (rrauis, grasses and field roots Hie bedside of her husband, do-! shown al Mie fair. in? her best to help him fight off ' . dentil and succeeding. ! i1 1 I'll i1'!'!, in nTnnii I i . . . . i . i ... n n.i..i ..r i...... ii..... ...in i.ir.i.nr.i. i." .-miiki t here Is Norman. I lie I.omiIhii spoke of the school Kirl in hfllnvtl Mifral low moral lorm of Uu! u I'linrii'liiii artist and the literary man and pointed to the work or Hie carpenter or Nazareth. "Who arc the moral men?" he asked. "Arc they the opium caters, the drink ers, those who live, low live'" It elopes with her rather' clerk on a hfxh wheel bicycle in IHU5 and sails ror America. There Is Norma, the young wile ami mother- plnncerlnj; in ..r tl. r it lai-iui it tumour ean in n was seldom Ihev ever heard nfi fw.i.li.,,. v,..... ...i... ..t.-. """"" "Hill Willi llllv.CS I1ISIIM in unmoral scientist because, in hand ami aliens herself with cienlpd xver,. seekers aHer Ihc the men who h.-,ltb td save her .V'1, , husband and babe from an oul- Ihe present syslem would have law band. ' 4 to chanjfe. Here In Prince nuperl Next there is (he .Norma ol II would lip easy o ..-ran ailew, ml.l.lle ajje, hark in London In the on Hie old. Already there was n Wfs. This fie tjie little roinmerriat das In ,e high; mother, who lost her first born school and It would bo easy lo.ln Hie. bleak foothills or the "Hid on the present plant rpr u Itnckics, Is seen In the selling technical school. MKlit schnolsjor luxury ns t,c matron or a would be avrent aid. These dIkIiI growing family. 81,,, N sllll the schools were the most democratic finding mother )Ut fKhllng this InsllliiHons in the world. Hy lime to save her Inronslnnt bus-means of them a person could band from disgracing himself in reach Ihc university without ifo- an intrigue with a notorious i i ne wnoie siory is splendid " I: " . llU,riUetiU,"i nt "'c steadfast love' OF FOUR PERIODS """i" or - i wife, and of all the pictures In! Norma Talmadge Seen "In Varied dulses In Picture at West-holme Tonight The story Secrets" showing tonixhtat tin-Westholiue, utarts in l.iiiHand, goes hack by way ot the heroine's diary lo the romantic days of the IKOO's, moves to Hie frontier or Western America, and winds up where it bi-Kiin in the London or modern limes. Thus it is that lour differenl -Norma Taltiiadxc's, in four ifif- lerem penou appear. i which she lias anneared Norma says she likes "Sccrefs" best, 1 "IV a story of the days of our Knwiddaddie and grandmother's with such an appealing theme," says the star. "At times, while working on the set. I imagined I was really the Iff f f 0 mother of the slory and had a good cry then and there. And with an orchestra' playlmr old time melodies it Isn'li so dirricult lo cry as one would think." LAND ACT. Notlt tl Intuition U Apply to PurcM I a In lli IjimI lirronliiii Dl.lrlrl of rrlnr !!!,pi',. '' the iimum of !?'.'.?" ., Tnk u,rtl "Ho liar f.' vtr ,b""1 '"" from ....... iiiiiimi mi ai'iny nip iirnu nil Uj imrrlMM the follm'nr ilMrril." I.nd, Uiiiimeiirlnr II I tmu plaiitnl h jh, ;oiltlirM .llirr'of .'t t K; i.nre Voir .11 lllvrr; Ill-lire 30 rlwln, ..mlhrlJ 1011.1 A. SMITH, .. .. Afit.Ilraiil. n.ii 1,,. m ! stent. ' '-T mm i LAND ACT. tiv'i" yiVr!n,,.pi,rrt ru,r. TK MOTICK 1 I hat r.lililt .1i,lt l-iillrr. of w York. I.V.. I s" wru. PU..n linikcr. Itnrmlf tn inpiy r7r Me i.f Tsrl.h I..H..-.I ,.,7 ""ren lnl' 'V' N'nM.l.fy Un'"Zwl wml to rhiilnv llwuri. nr Ii it rl ,i,. Iieiir ... tl rlMliiv lll.r Lihh"V Mlnwlliir linn l. ,u.,f llim f T.h l.ke to point i.f r uriiiiiotn-r men t. II m parrel rontnn-, mr.. 'r 1',, r.Ml'lll.l-T SOTT priTTrlr . . Appllrsnt. DIM AU,u.l 10tb,rmVUW"""' Dominion Securities Corporation, Limited A. E. Ames & Company, Limited The National City Company, Unwed Wood, Gundy & Company Our New Coats Are bey.iinl : style, cdor-- rt r ' "DEMURS" Ladlen" Iteadv W Is n menilier "f MerrhnHts' A--extends a hem 'v oul-of-lM Fair Prices Fair Dealings "Doners" Phono 27. P.O. B01 Third Avenue CORRYS snrriAi. srirrTPn CANADIAN RYE WHISK Botoifin Bono 'umvf Dominion Cowrnmcnt 'supervision H10 Quality Wlii$iy of Caiioda- sinco!859 This advurtlsement is not published or displayed W Mipior Control Hoard or by the Ooveritmcul 01 UriUsh Columbia. 327