PAGE TWO THE DAILY NEWS mm NESTLE VAPQRAI0 Mtt.1T PrtpaiaL 6y the makers ofMstliS 3ait3bafj Ci whole world knows NESTLS tor its richness purnV The Daily News, PRINCE RUPERT - BRITISH COLUMBIA. Published Every Afternoon, except Sunday, by Prince Rupert Daily News, Limited, Third Avenue. H. F. PULLEN - Managing Editor. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations. DAILY EDITION. P Saturday, April 30, 1927 SMALL PARK LOOKS ATTRACTIVE. A prominent Visitor to the city who was driving around enjoying the sights of Prince Rupert was very rrtuch impressed with the view of McCIymont Park at the corner of McIJride Street and eleventh Avenue. The green sward and the Gyro apparatus and wading pool give it a very attractive appearance and indicate that the people here are intrested in the welfare of the young people and in providing for other than the gross material needs of the community. In most cities to the south a good deal of money is spent on parks and gardens. (In one notable case a small city taxes itself two dollars a . head for every man, woman and child in order to keep up the parks. They consider it a good investment and they make a fine showing. Now that the city has commenced the work and that it is- securing the co-operation of the railway company, it is probable that the work will be extended gradually until it is possible to show visitors that Prince Rupert Is not located in the area of perpetual snows but is a cjty with great possibilities. When you visit a store you get about all you pay for. If you pay a low prtceyou get a cheap article. NOISE IS NOT ONLY MEANS OF EXPRESSION. The Torontb'Star says editorially: 'A Toronto lady having won a ten thousand dollar priie for the best n6vel,against twelve hundred competitors from all over the continent, the Hamilton Spectator asks whether Toronto will be as-enthusiastic over the achievement of this writer as over George Young who won the great swimming race. ' "In Toronto there are several Torontos," the Star continues. "While the great throngs that welcome our athletes home do not turn out to cheer for those who make notable discoveries in medical science, or who achieve triumph in fiction, these do not passs un-welcomed or unacclaimed. In quieter ways their home city greets them. They get the approval they prize. And quieter though it is, u. is enduring. the scientist is great only while -he continues to excel others." , Things are not always what they seem and it is a good thing for some people that they are not. TOO GREATLY IMPRESSED TO CLAP OR SHOUT. What is true of Toronto is true also of other places. It is not always the loud demonstration that indicates the true feelings of the people. Take as an example a concert in any large city. A humorist or clown is likely to get a large response from the audience. There are times, however, when the hearts of those present are deeply touched by some appealing music and they carry home with them the memory of the song or musical selection and.it remains with them for many a day and has an effect on their lives and actions. People too often mistake the frantic yells of the noisy throng for the real: voice of the. people. v General election announcements are starting' early. There will probably be many dozen yet before the Legislai ture is dissolved. MANY GOOD CANADIANS NOT HORN HERE. The other day a Prince Rupert man, visiting in Oregon, was asked what was his country. The reply was "I am a Canadian, born in England." The inquirer looked curiously at him as if he were some new and hitherto undiscovered species. Yet he was perfectly justified in calling himself ' a Canadian and had as much right to do so as any native son. The person born in Canada has no exclusive right to the word "Canadian" although he possibly may feel he has more cause to be proud of his country than one who has spent onlv part of his life here. Time is the most precious thing in the world. Watch the moments as they fly and use them well. R)rpringlieaIllianJ strength SHREDDED WHEAT Crush the crisp loaf -top For fruits both fresh and stewed With cream of half-and-half n SERMON FROM REV. FRIZELL ftlllllST THK I.OKIl OMNIPOTENT UKKINKTIl: All. HAIL? A IX haii.:- By Rev. J. R. Frteell, B.A., LUB.. First Presbyterian Church) Story has It that Columbus et sail from Spain in search of a shorter road to India, but found a continent. We are often nonplussed by life's surprises. We find .what we do not expect and expect what we do not find. What a tragedy It would nave been had these gentle Oalllean women found the tomb as they had left It. They expected to ree a seal Intact, they found a broken one. They came to see a lifeless Christ, they found a living one. The came to view a body, they met a spirit "Life is real, life Is earnest. And the grave Is not Its goal. Dust thou art. to dust retumest. Was not spoken' of the soul." ' The subject Is "An Easter Greeting, the scene, an "Empty Tomb: the text. -All halir Matt. 28: 9. . This greeting comes ringing down the Ules of time like the chimes of an ethereal bell, swinging from the belfrey of heaven. Let us stand close to the two Marys and make a mental note of what they found. WHAT' MAKVS I01;M (1) They found the stone rolled away. Mountains are not barriers In the pathway of Ojinlpotence. He rolN back the sea. Ills storms sweep towns and cities from the ace of the earth, and plough passages through the thickest forest. But the storms of life, the doubts, the fears, the mountains of difficulty, how they cause us to stand hesitant upon the life's threshold! "Let lng I dare not wait upon I would." With the faith, however, of a grain of mustard see Qod's saints move mountains, cloud i fade away upon the horizon, the blackest night Is shot through nd through with starlight, and icy leviathans Using up In the path of the falth.fllled mariner melt Into the sea. 12) The seal broken! Before and be. hind us, and on every side we face sealed mysteries; aln, pain, death. The doors are locked and the keys are lost. Then we lost '.faith, because we appear to be hemmed ln.( We wUl not trust, because we cannot see the other side Many a .man; has kept locked within the walls of hlsbeart sealed secrets, because OX love and pride. Many a- woman hides away some Injury, and while her heart aches she faces ilhe World with a smile. Many a mother - pays the penalty for her wandering boy. trusts him to the uttermost, and when he falls Into an Untimely grave takes her stand 07 his bier like the angel with the .flaming sword, to guard him from all slander. "Silence." says Carlyle, "Is deep as eternity, speech Is shallow as time." One day God wUl pull aside the veil and allow us to pass Into the Holy of Holies where we shall understand the mystery of his redeeming love and death, and taste the glory that excells. Speaking of Lazarus, Tennyson writes: "Behold a man raised up by Christ, The rest remalneth unrevealed. He told it not, something sealed The lips of that evengellst." Sealed doors, sealed hearts, sealed Hps. (3) The tomb empty! Empty did we say? Ah, no. filled with the Invisible presence of Christ, the fragrance of his memory, the shadow of his person, the glory of his victory, the splendor of bis power. The invisible Is more real than the visible. Thoughts are more potent than things. God is everywhere. Christ i omnipresent. "The dew on the hlll-slde Is as fresh as when the morning stars first sang together for Joy." What Ood was he Is. what he did he does, what he said he says. Thou are here, thou flllest the solitude, thou art In the soft winds that run along the summit of the trees In music.' We are living In a whispering gallery. Television Is now an , established fact; .Radio eliminates vpace. Qod's messenger . was right, when be, ?Mfd: "In him "we live and move and have our being." A KW UlltlHT 4 Found Christ, but not the Christ they expected to find, nor where they expected to find him. We do not always want dais Christ, nor do we search for him where we know he is sure to be found. We like to make our own gods, take them with us Into our temple of Idolatry and worship them there. Our palates have not yet lost the flavor of the cucumbers, the melons, the onions. leeks and garllck of Egypt. We would like to make God's will bend to ours and God's mthods conform to ours. Knowing that we are transgressing his laws and thrusting the steel Into his bosom we want to gloss over our sins, and persuade ourselves that he thinks well of us, "All Hall!" a greeting from the risen Christ. Could it be established as an historical fact that Jesus never rote from the dead,' then the whole structure upon which our Christianity Is founded would come tumbling to the ground with a crash. Oethaemane would mean nothing more than the setting -up--of the will of man against 'the power not ourselves which makes for., righteous ness," the crucifixion, the' -work of de signing and plttUess friend' and man must gar hopelessly Into Impenetrable darkness, "All Haiti" the voice that called back Lsiarus from behind the bolted doors of mystery, caused the widow's son to rise from the bier, and Whose presence and paweV filled with wonder and oorw fusion the hoary headed scholar from the synagogue. I am not here, but risen, As Ood's sun rises over the eastern horl-con gladdening the heart of nature and cwiMng her to smile, suddenly the seal ; breaks; the atone rolls away, and the I Son of Righteousness rises over aU and j death with healing In his wings. "All 1 Halll" fretful and troubled souls; be of good cheer! the chains of death are ', snapped as threads. "The wages of sin ; j Is death," but death hath no power over the sinless; No longer la man called ; upon to go grpplng In the darkness faiid j uhcertafrityof ' the past. "For: Wi In! AMarnJtllj, dle, even tso - in (t-'nnst snau , alUbeTrnade alive.' ' '"!, . ! mwti. hail! iu. hah.: ; 'All Hall!- The voice that' stilled the j tempest on the turbulent Oalllean sea ( 'the look that shrivelled the soul of t Peter like a Cbiast from a fiery furnace. I and melted the heart of a Magdalene j I the handthet. pulsating with the power j let Omnipotence, touched the eyes of tht j I blind man and they opened, .and lifted j jthe damsel from the bed of death "Oh. death where Is they stlngr OH : j grave where Is thy victory?" Christ the ! i Lord's Omnlpatent reigneth. "AH Halll All Hail!" SALVATION ARMY SELF-DENIAL WEEK "r l'nrMie of IWl-lnj Money fr I'm iiMiallv lleuty Item-mid The announcement Is made from the headquarters of the Sllvatlon Army that the annual period of Seir-Denlal In the organization will occur during the second week In the month of May. For this period the officers of the army are asked to give up the use of tea. eoffee, butter or some other articles of 1 food, and from this and other sources 1 to make a 'special contribution to Army funds. All the soldiers and officers pt , the Army look forward to this period lit the year and make preparations for service beyond the ordinary t that time I The service which the Salvation Army ( renders Is well unden'-ood and the funds collected In the period of Self-Denial are used to maintain these services. From the beginning- the Army has ssught to feed the hungry, to pro- , vide homes for the homeless, to care tor the unfortunate, and In general to minister to all In distress. In Canudii It ' has discharged these duties on a large' scale In cities and towns from coust to coast and each year It is asked to as 1 tume hew responsibilities to meet press- lng needs. None of the money collect-ed In Canada Is used In , Army work' In the Mother Country. The Army in I Britain sends money to all countries j Mid receives for the work at home from none. 1 During the past few yesrs the de- j minds made on the Salvation Army lnl ' Western Canada have been unusually heavy, and the organization has under- taken responsibilities in all the pro- i vlnces. including British Columbia. In the effort In connection with Self-Denial It is hoped that money may be provided to cover. at least In part, some of these large undertakings. Ten -Years Ago in Princ Kupert A I'll 1 1. The application Trade, to the city, has been met by iod per month. 1. 30. 1917. from' 'the Board of for the financial aid granting the Dourd this to date from April A communication addreaeed to the Minister of Marine and Fisheries and piepared by representatives of th Prince Rupert council last night, the- motion bring by Aid. Dybhavn and Aid. Montgomery. A fire in the roof of A. ft. Holtby'ij residence called out .the. , department this morning. The' damage. was slight. Alex Saint formerly of the provincial police office, la in the hospital at Brighton, (England. Alex Joined the ' navy recently. A train of fourteen cars of fish, for delivery In the Old Country, will leave here shortly. The shipment. It Is ssld, will Include many varieties caught by the trawlers. Beginning today, . all passengers leav lng here for Alaskan ports will be called upon to pay t head tax. This pplles to ail those who are not Amerl can cltleeni. The Dominion Telegraph quarters are to be moved from the upper to the lower floor In the Stephens block. BATTALION ORDERS By Lleut.-Coionel J, W. Nlrholls, Officer Commanding. 1st Battalion North British Columbia Regiment, 102nd Bn, O.E.F. Th Battalion will go into Camp at Terrace, leaving Prince Ril pert buturday night, May 21 aud returning from Terracff Tuesday. May 24. Recruits attested Monday at 7.4$ pjii. All recruits will be" permitted to attend the four day camp at Terruce. Signal Section parade (or Instruction Tuesday at 8 pm, Musketry MicMrhoi Creek ran if e mm Champion National Change Week B.'D. JOHNSTON, Uajor and Adjutant. Attd lit Bn N.I1C. Regt. Advertise In tie Dalit News. TKOVINCIAI, ELECTIONS ACT I'MM'K itrreiTr "m.kctoii t ntYiiiurr M.lCKF.7ir. II.KCTOItU. DISTRICT NOTtCt Is hereby given that I shall on Mondsy. the loth day of May. IS27 at tne hour or 10 ocioek in the fore noon, at the Courthouse. Prince Rupert hold a silting of the Court of ReUslon for the purpose of revising the lists of Board of Trade and the 1 voters tor tne saw Electoral District Civic Fisheries Commit!. nminUn. "u" na "wrauran, any and all ob lections to the retention of against we new testnctlons on salmon I any name on the, said lists, or to the trolling, was endorsed by the city I 'ttratlou as voter of any applicant w. 5 m v. t.uu, a .... v. vviki ui poees set forth in the 'Provincial Eire tions Act." . Dated at Prince Rupert. B.C.. this etli day of April, 1827, NORMAN A. WATT. 114 ReMttrr of Voters. m NQTICE THE MATTER Of air anDllpatlnn for 'trie Issue of Provisional Certificate 0.' Title .for hoi -twenty-one add twenty-two U)t Bloat, seventeen ,in; Map Wfi May 1 to 7 t'ipert Satisfactory proof of the loss of ths Certificate of title covering the above anu naving oeen proaucea to me. It Is my intention, to luue. after the expiration of one month from the first puo llcatlon hereof, a Provisional Certificate of Title to the above land in the name of Murland De orasse Evans, the original Certificate of Title Is dated tne mm .ucwroer, iuif, and la num bered 8730 1. Laud Regittrt office. Prince Rupert v B.C., 6th April, 1827. n. r. mjcijeod, Registrar of Titles. " NOTICE Under and by virtue of the nrn.i.i. of Section 28 of the "Mineral Act." no lice is nrreoy given Messrs. La MalcniRi nels. Harold limun ana mom Moore, mat there Is nwm 1 o the undersigned tor Assessment Wor! perrormra on tne cordllla Oroup of Mineral isiairus. rnncess itovsi i.i.nii sxeena Mining Division, the aum of t3tri.B8. and that unless aald persons oar their proportionate share of the cost of rich Assessment, together with all coat, of advertising, etc., to the undersigned a', Uutedald DO., on or before Mav 12 . . wumih ... win ur t 1 1 a 11 rn .n. Summer vwmuiw.uiier, rnnce Kupert, D.O, iu tucir reapecuve interests in the erein mentioned Mining Oroup of M.4irii wisuiio Tcnicu m me unnpr slgied. DAVID CORDILLA, ' IACOB KOtlKl. water Notice NOTICE IS HEREBY OIVEN that Ills Honour the Lieutenant-Governor of Bnttsil Columbia, bv and with .hi fviee f His. KMeutite Council, hu been I pleased to .onleri I that tne reservation of the unrecore). ed waters of Browri'r River and uL (ItnlBht creek, tributaries 0f toian River, established pursuer to Order 7a Council Number BM approved the 131S ' 0 day of June, 1921. be caoeelled, The cancellation of the said reterva. Hon will be effective on April lth. lim DATED this Uth day t( March Vm ?. p. PArrUtUi, I U lnu in of Lsnai Chi INSTALL y s"260 w C40 r sis7 D " ctul Vtrt, 7aj rvriuon pscka tUJ Set of 1 CHAMPIONS NOW Chumplon Im track J ihtr ttata totdt packed in Iht Mm Bs- Soturda: Irtctori 1 1 J la lbs C "320 s , , iiFi TM TT Once again Champion reminds you that to enjoy maximum cnjinc performance durin the next twelve months you should install a complete new set of spark plugs now. Car manufacturers recommend and hundrejj of thousands of motorists are changing pjtk plugs every year to insure better and mote economical car operation. This ii true, even of Champion, in irdte of their world-wide reputation for remarkable long lift. If you have utcd your ipark plugs more than 10A mile, a new ul of dependable Champions will restore power and speed and save their rot many timet in less gas and oil uied. Make Champion National Change Week your yriHy reminder to install a complete new Kt of Charupuini. AMPION Sparkplugs WINDSOR, ONTARIO CANADIAN- MADE .pen for prsetlce shoot. Sunday. May I, , I boat leaves Cow Bay at B mm. j I All Tanks must attend at least two, .ranee practices at MacNIchol Crtek! range, during the summer season, uo comply with Musketry regulations and .am the Government grant. I P R O D U C I Dr. Jos. Maguire Over Ormes Plinnr .'2. CROWN, BRIDGEIand PLATES EXTRACTION OFgjTEETH Uy nn Expert. Sunday Appointment. Open KujM PRINCE RUPERT FEED New Stock of Garden and Field Seeds and Fertilisers Pratt's IJnby Chick Komi and Poultry Supine-' lUII.KI.EV VALLEY HAY AND (WAIN Our Famous Edson Coal In nny iinntltle also Telkwa Coal Store Phone, 58. Trotler I)kK I'lwnrV The Salvation Army In In urgent need of fund In carry on It Klffii"'''' nn'' IncreaslnL' MiirL In U'vularn rnnnrln ,d daft1 The character, value and nll-embroclntf nature of lnal U known to everyone, The 8.A, hetfete It will M1 Keiierou nupport during the t'omlnc; Self-Denial Effort