PAGE fC I $170 ROUND TRIP These Cunard, Anchor- Donaldson Third Cabin Vacations are a veritable boon to people with moderate incomes." The World", Is Not Against Anybody. ' ' From Montreal to Plymouth. Cherlou rjj, London, June 26. July 10th, Au$. 20th Liverpool, July 2 and 30 Belfast and Glasgow; jlas&ow; m m June 26, July rd Particutmrf- from ANCHOR-DONALDSON LINE Th ROBERT REFOKD 00, limiUd, TOROttTO Phom or any STEAMSHIP AGENT The Cunard Steamship Co. Limited, 622 Hastings St W., Vancouver, or any STEAMSHIP AGENT. The Daily News PRINCE KUPERT - BRITISH COLUMBIA Published Every Afternoon, except Sunday, the Prince Rupert Daily News, Limited. Third Avenue. V H. P. PULLEN, Managing Editor. SUBSCRIPTION RATE8: City Delivery, by mail or carrier, pel4 month . . .. Si.P1 By mail to all parts of the British Empire and the United States, in advance, per year ' f O.Ot To all other countries, in advance, per year $7.5i Advertising and Circulation Telephone -Editor and Reporters Telephone - - - Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations. daily edition 98 se Tuesday. June 15, 1,026. Terrace Berries Coming To Town. Terrace strawberries are beginning to come to Prince Rupert and from this 'on for the next month it should be possible' to gel the real fresh fruit, .Mime thing that has not been possibly so far. , To the Terrace shippers it may be said that it would be worth their while to put up the fruit in such a manner that-the reputation or the community for the best berries obtainable "is kept tip. Each shipper should rememlier that on him rests the-reputation of the whole place. A few boxes of poor berries sent to market gives the place a black eye. Second grade fruit should i.rt ..... , ' . . . . . . . 4.. ; ; i i j j .1 1 11 - we iiiauc 4uiu juiu or sum an such a way mat mere is no uouoi for what it is intended. If the output of Terrace continues, to increase a small jam factory ought to iie a profitable enterprise, especially during a wet season when it pi dirncult to send the crop to market. - . - c , 1 i-4 1 , ... ! rr "Z Always Finding Something New. i This is an age of progress. New inventions are welcomed and improvements are the order of the day. Yesterday the despatches told of the use of the gyroscope on a giant airship which kept her stetidy and on her course even though the pilot left the lever and read a newspaper for half an hour. Progress is shown admirably in the improvements of instrument for reproducing music We all remember the old fashioned harsh blaring gramophones. Compare them with the line mstriMfienis 01 last year and the contrast is very greatH compare again uioe 01 lasi year with the newest product of this year add once again progress of a very marked kind is recorded. Perfection is our ideal in everything, but hnppilv perfection is never reached in anything. If it were progress would end. . Why Worry Over Small Things? . Why worry over small things? Needlessly we fuss and fume when there is really nothing to fuss about. We magnify defects and fail to gel improvement because we worry. Nothing kills so (Juickly as worry. If we do bur best at 011 work, act the best we know how in our spare time and eliminate worry, life will lte worth a lot more to a great many of us. Yon ail know men and women' who ure never hannv lo calise .they are not doing the right thing themselves or they fear somebody else is mit doing the, right thing. Cultivating a'habit 01 tolerance is. a great help. Worry leads to inefficientV arid inefficiency leads to failure. tines who. fail. People-who' worry are usually Ihe I he -world is not against anybody. The person wh,o' fail does so because of failure in himself and not through outside lnuueiires. a reiturr to a strong man is only an impetus to iuruier ami stronger effort, onen it is the best stimulus leading to success, btrong men build on their failures and rash in on their mistakes. The world is looking for men who can do things and -whf are willing to work and strive for great things. The man who-1 is a failure should for a whole hour sit down and analvze him self. He should locale the weak soul and then set resritntptir in this three times a day and in the intervals work, and work still harder, nothing can hold him back. Success is already achieved. Crisp.Tasty Nourishing TRISCUIT made of perfect whole grains of wheat-Delicious with butter, cheese or marmalades STRIKE MEANT REVOLUTION IN combine and to strike as a means hf putting pressure, if they think ft tiepe.-sarj to do o, on their employers. I iusisted strongly upon these trade union rights in the firet speech I made on the ceneral strike, but unforlunatelyjsuperior force. firoups of that part of what I said did not eceive the same amount of publicity as some other portions. It is just because, these valuable and legitimate rights were put in jeopardy 4iy the general drike and would certainly have Jeen the objeot of reactionary attack if it had gone on that it is so essential for everybody to appreciate its distinction. The es sential difference is litis. The riaht to strike m the right of workmen, after giving due notice, to put pressure on their employer iry withholding their la bor. A trade dispute, properly Understood is a dispnte in which workmen combine to try to lhake tlieir employers do some-, tiling. Hut a general strike J ike this is a perfectly, different operation, for tt necessarily -works iu an entirely different way. If it succeeds, the ffect of it is to make not. employers ibnt the government do something and Parliament, if Parliament survives, do something. The -(mention is not whether the people no sensible man believes that the ordinary Ilrftish .. ..).. i 1 . 1 . . workman wants revolutnon "viuinon-.iiie -the work to eliminate - that weakness and rise above his depressing , 1WBnl". surroundings. The only real enemy a person has is lUni'elf 1 . , 1 7'""' l!Ty Let him look himself in the face, straighten his shoulders griti " Ktryin ,.tl his teeth, close his fists and declare that he will succeed and A K pl'n wheihcr that mat nothing nouitng ..in in oou Cod's s wide wide world world shall shall nrever.t prevent it. it. If If he rf-V"" doe "reeM. of a general strike does not necessarily Involve the substitution of Ihe strikers' will of parliament, and therefore the overthrow of constitutional Government. What Labor Bald fat tt - in mis sense, tuereiore. a" genexaj strike is not a trade dispute, but inevitably Involves- whether those who decide nnon' it' intend it or ifota .wholly un-constitutional nse of power. No-body has frtrt this more clearly' in time past llian some of the most respected leaders of labor. Mr. Clynes made a eViurageops speech at the Trade Triton Con-: gress at filaxgow in September,! I0III, when lie said: "I have no doubt. that we shall be told that ' this new-found and ill-digested policy is worth a trial. Those who have thought this matter out know thatMn giving it a trial I Hi? wVmldWa-tri by paratj-lng, jour ihhtrip,aiid our "whole go-, jcial sy-tliiuflliat j.aralj Mis would i affect first and worst the nia&sos of the ; cannot poorgrj population. you do UTwiili.Mit anUoipatinif GREAT BRITAIN!!;E": Sir John Simon and J. R. Clynes Speak on Great Struggle LIBERTY IN DANGER Success Would Have Raised Re-, actlonary Movement and . Civil War ji LONDON, June 15. Following the failure of Ihe general strike a uumoer of speecnes were mane hy prominent men in regard to it hot those of Sir John Simon, and J. It. Ulynes were anions the most important. Sir John simon, speaking at the Town Hall, (lleckheaton, said:- There are many workmen and trade unionists in this country wno still do not clearly see the essential difference between a general strike such as this and lie exercise of the undoubted right to strike, whether on a iiuall or large srale, w hie 11 is .icrfectlv lawful and, which liberal-minded men of all parties have, recognised as a legitimate veapott in a conflict with employers. Before we pass from the sullied, I hope, for ever for the collapse of the general strike and the demonstration that .it is .'undamentally illegal have made it certain that in the future- it can always he stopped alike by lie courts and by public opinion 'jefore it higins I want to make plain what the distinction ist It does tint turn merely on the .'allure to (five notice, though this was a very .serious matter, but the real distinction" lies deeper. It does not depend on some legal quibble, but on consideration of common sense and an understanding of the Constitution under which we live and which is the only spurce of alt our" liber ties. The law in matters like ttris.jja not nearly so technical as some people' suppose. I did not speak in the House of Commons a fortnight ago as a lawyer hat as a citizen and a Literal who believes tremendously in the right of wage -earner to Til F1IK. S poor fish, it lion ege. ' ' ; l' war.- J. II. lejKMjhon 1 siinJirestei masA aft-aett'hy till (tie Union must. by Ihe er nature of things be an attarJkmu'ii Ihe congintjinily as a-wholes i4nnsHy Ma,Mnahl wrote In Apffl. 1 02 i "All my life I have J)-" opposed to the " Hvmtratlietio'nke. II has no praciieal AVaflie. It j is mply liealhiE the air. tt has one cer- tniti resptt, abutter 'and htiutinpl nvirtioit." . . Confusion of Ideas It has nofhtttp' whiter er to do' with it that many Uiido unionists who have Jenl Uiiv'lvis 10 this departure profess, no 1onid nincerely, a deep regard tor Hie 'onMitution. The means which is being adopted is n4 'he means which Parttamenf aidhonsed when it ga eeptkinal privileges hi those r-ondiictiiuf a trade lispnte, nd it 1 a confusion of Idea, though most dangerous -on fusion, whn li I hope recent events have ilone siiiiietliinu U clear away, to unapine that all that recently happened is a pro clamation of :m ordinary strike on a large seal . Al my publ'r life, ever since I made jny Qu-i eerli in the lloue of .t'Miinoiis exactly wenty yers I hae sIokI ip fr the ix- rijfhl of organ-Ued-tabfir. 'l'iio-t ridlits were fHlt in tlaitfter by the mistakes of the last fortnight, hut it will tie ihe business, r I.nWal like myself, if reflctioiiaries attempt to jfdoH reent events in tlieir own interest, to lake Bp our old tak ami throw alt oar influence into the .scale to untie the use nf industrial comhinatten wtth the realities of freedom. Mr. Clynes' Position J. 11. Clynes, in his presidential artrtres to the annual eonferoiee of the National In ion of Oeneral and Manieipal Woriers, said he opiwsed the'klea of a general strike as ixn us he heard It one thine about u "an aflen lay n mil- .A A... J J OXj;y (u?'hVitfrieh to be,r;bom into a wftallpfam family. MANtV-a .virtlj beitdffrf Inrne.I by clothes, sjie jook back at the other woman. . A m.7 eTt.eels himself to bt an angel while probably he is a devit. THF seldom tfeis - a ' rto fiirht ehnmpiorr rouble is ttia WTffrWl- ILlAndHnnnvl I Wm3ijm han N.k.'a I i fl ffJ kmtr .N'Tablt) j tagTV" ibU U ioa ' V orfam and ttlima Ccmatipation. BtKouanesf, V Sick Heaibche. lMiaf Hut vior an J aood IhI. I in M muhd, to bainf wall and r Cat aSOo. SO Yin Chips off the OM Nock M JUNIORS Uttla ISa Tha aama M In ona-third doaaa. c.odyHioat.d. For child t.n anil adulta. m. ie ar Yaur Dritaaltt jt.mm " .. . . . .s-m-ZH&tiTt Ji, 1; ,. ' 1 . 1 1 1 11 7 ' 1 . 1 1 - -. , , , was proposed, on the ground that, - M wm fte anil wasfefnl Hn.I!n(Ddy pay him for that kind because it eon Id not succeed and rishttag. ' has oever sdcceeiled elfewhere. j !r' - " - W i"ues.! is troe the Ml rises. Not so and the .n.Hr industrial pur-.iri !,, famih;. MHe is represented as some ne-l farious iw.Wm-h.1 design. In-f t KXEXV uhn ,,,, ei-un 11 h nraKKie u!t) uie em ployes it henomes a st niggle xrUb IImi iioveritnient. which i backed by unlimited resource. , nation'al strike would itar Ihe poorest rint, and an airnal In fm-ee would le anwerei by workers wouhl soon te detached pretty lll Mil I) u lie OLD CHUM fQ Joboccoqf QuqIHij 15- per pGcfenne - and la V2 Ib.VflcuiirnCAiriIJUar leclh and who kejit her lnii when her pic turf in); taken LAWN IS PLANTED AT NURSES' HOME from the mam body, and the? The e hmie imii committee committee of the worst of ail forms of a class wnrj'P'lal bmril 11 1 the meeting would speedily develop uamnly.ita' nitrhl reported on the mnk-war I'letweiMi tectums of workers.' '"K of a '" bark and front al LManifetatii'is of solidarity aMi4',' Nurxex- Home. Thi work admiraide. hi t solidarity without1'" ''one by I. Laporfe and i a wisdom bcc.mc worthless. j ureal improvement in the place. Hiras ha been sown and flower X .1 nlolanloi-l inn! i.pv Aiuiti Il.i.ra THE MAN IN THE MOON ay: Imnld be a green swnnl snr- oumlinsc thi instilufiou. riAVIfiABLC WSTtRt mOTICTIOM M.S.C. Chtpur 11s. Ami taki initio, that ari th. ACT Tlwi linii.h (UiluniUa fitilnt 4 l-rk In ciiiitf) l.imimi, lp.. iv m, lire tint II iiihI., mtilhi 7 ,,f Uw Mlif n, oriH.ii.-(i with thr MiiiMIrr t.f ruble 1 Wurk. oi )iua. and in ilw nffM-e i.r; IIM! lllMrlcl n.rUlrtr l.f I h.- 1 nrl II.. I. Irj tiimrlft or Prlnre nitixrl. il frinrc i twpm, ii. i d., fnis.n ir Hi u ref llw .Ijn uf hlf r pur ml mum ih ilirmifl armmm-d m i i.nin . ,h-. UcrUio l-irtl. of laml titutu- almut iwni pneni Dharlotu ln.ifi. i, ami kiw.n a-1 IIS, Imn of rinr mmith rrritn itw dali- nf 1h flral 'UUIralMl itf Oil ivillif I lie Srlli.li l.lmllrd will uiwlrr MTimn 7 of th aairt Sri. apl- tn Ihf MiniMor of I'ulilir Uurkf, al hu orrire m lh nir nr 01. Ua. for aprrival r tlio aaiil it ami rlan. ana ror Iran- m ri,nlrui t llw aald lmrf ir plrr ami hiilldiui. tmreon ,m':sh. Bx- ,'" BHItlsn Mil l MHU nsilINO it l'Af:kl0 CO. 1.TII. Bf U Solicitors: Wllliama, l aiinn k Oonal. MINERAL ACT. Notlca of Application foe Cartlflcat of I lmpro,amanta. " Mi1!. ' ' 'K"Tal inn . t Mln ' 'i. aim Summit Mineral laini MUmir i. Jo Km ske.-na .vnnm hvi .... ifwi, tIIIIIIBIIl. Blllllllttf Vall.a. I ' ''" . w. I o.MHtwm, rrw i K .M.mre. rn-r MUer a rirtit,'...:'"' TAKE NOTICE Hat t. Cliarlea E Moor rrw Miner, crrtirirat" 7n.E aim' w .... ...iii.nir n-rnrill'r Ilr fMI. fir-tie of Jliiprovomrntii fur Ids purnoaa ",f '.!!n2 Tiinher tk nottr thai anion nn ?'r-..'.L,,"n !s. ' Mineral Aei muai i I r.r KnZi. rtiriral .? nr Imprnvrnicnta ",r ,n '""r of nirll luiwl tl 7ih liny f Ar tat LAND ACT. Notlca of Intantlos t Apply to Laaia Lanii TAkE NOTirt ih.i .... till. frlnei iii.r-..i "V;" "J" "nin, of . ."enpail.ui Mariner hi JX. Of It follow. Inir rirarntied tanita 1 eoniatniiit 60 arrr. . morJ or P.I' A1.FIIF.I) BWANRO.X, Dktea April J7, uie. PH'cnt. Canadian National Railways Prince Rupert DRYDOCK AND . SHIPYARD Opemtlnfl O. T. P. 20,000 Ton Floating Dry Doc engineers, Machinists, Boilermakers, Blacksmiths, Pitt makers. Founders, Woodworkers, EU. CLECTBIC AND ACETYLENE WELDINQ Our plsnl is equipped) handle al' k nrfu MARINE AND COMMEnCIAL WORK. PHONES 49 and JW Steamship and Train Service saiiinr- nun princc auecaT tnt vancouvir, victow. ea.li WONOAY and THUNIDAf D0 m, aATUBOAT. 00 F.if ANVOX awl rrCWANT MONOAV, raiDAT. 400 " T it ALASKA - WtDNCAOAT, 4 00 p.m. w MAttKTT INLCT aJONDAT, 4X0 p.m. ir MIDC0ATK INLCT and SOUTH QUtIN CMARLOi Tt foflnlgtiilf, PAMCNQCR TRAINS LEAVE PRINCE RUPERT "' tl.no am for prince oeoroe, idwonton, wiNNieia. Canada. I.rilled Stain. Aginc alf Oeaan atamMp Ltflta. i e '.anadlin tutumwi r.irea rr Min oriirf' aHi) for your nci ninpswnt CK Tkkal Oftlaa, 62 S Third Aa., Pflnca Rap luMii vriTnicL PkaM afTHl MCiric Canadian Pacific Railway B. C. Coat Services P. Sailings from Prince Rupert To RaCtnlkan, Wriaoall, Junaau, nd Bawaf J una 1. 14. IS. o, T Vaacoutar, Vletorld, and attla ..,.. a j 1t 4uno . IZr iff w, . a. I Jul " " 14. Campkall Rltar, pad Vascputar fr Ratprd ,...m--u. 11 Po Buta!.. m.. a.. i ii. alalia. Ooaan '"' ir' Asaac, for all Slaanhlp Llnaa. . . Oorna of 4th W. O. OROHARD aanarai '" ...,!. i.e. traat psd tr Aanua. rnn. UNION STEAMSHIPS Balllnn from Prtnrp fluparl. AW000IR. VIOTONIA, Alarf aa, and Swpsaoa LIMITED1 Tu' For PORT SIPIPPON and Naaa Rltar Cannafloa, Thuriaai r- Por PORT arPSON, ANVOX, ALICE ARM, STEWART US Sad Atanva. 4, Barsalaf, AponL avrinstw '