PAOE TWO DAILY EDITION T4 Packed under spotless conditions. The Daily News PRINCE RUPERT - BRITISH COLUMBIA Published Every Afteraorn, except Sunday, by Prince Rupert Daily New, Limited, Third Araue. II. F. PULLBN Managing Editor. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: City Delivery, by mail or carrier, per SMafli By null to all parta of the Britiah Empire and the United States, in advance, per year To all other countries, in advance, per year .75 .00 $7.50 Transient Display Advertising, per inch per insertion $1.40 Transient Advertising on Front Page, per inch $2.80 Local Readers, per insertion per line .25 Classified Advertising, pur insertion per word . . . , Legal Notices, eaeb insertion per neat line 16 Contract Rates on Application Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations. Monday. Nov. 21. 1927 - .'.j - HANKERS OF PROVINCIAL POLICE While everyone recognised that the establishment of the Provincial Police system at this point broupht about a considerable improvement in the city over the former administration, there are certain dangers connected with placing too much power in a centralized authority and the ckief of these is that the police may come to look upon themselves as arbiters of the destinies of the community. They become interpreters of the law and often do not interpret it correctly. Also they become overbearing in the method of administering police: affairs. This is particularly so when the local administration happens to fall into the hands of men who are not fitted naturajjy for the work. Such men become puffed up with a sense if their&wn importance and do and any things which a bigger man would h&t tlo. One, of the first things for consideration in carrying on as important a department as that under discussion is to have the very best men at the head of the district. Any other course means that the system falls into disfavor and the alternative is a return to a system of local administration. CANADA IS BEST CUSTOMER Fi ifurea comDilad in the Ueuarlmenf of CamtruirpA.at-.Wsialiinfr. ton indicate that at the present moment Canada, is the largest con" sumer of American products, replacing the United Kingdom in that distinction, says the New York Sun. For the first efglft'motfis of VJll Canadian purchases amounted to $541,053,208; those of the 'United Kingdom we,re less by $J8,617,389. As Great Britain has hitherto been the largest single export market for American goods of, all sorts, this means an interesting change in the economic situation. Much as this may mean tp the United States it perhaps means more to Canada. It would not have been possible for the Dominion to buy so much if that country had not been in such admirable condition financially. The truth is that Canadian business has been healthy and prosperous and is still climbing. In agriculture1, in manufactures and in mining the conditions have been such as to warrant sound expansion. WHEAT IS KING The great wheat crop of 1925 started Canadian agriculture upon a new career of prosperity. It came at a time when world prices for grain were satisfactory. As those prices continue reasonably good in the world markets there is no reason why this advantage should not continue. Water development has provided cheaper power for the factories, which in turn have been aUe to employ more workers and turn out more goods. That this prosperity has been national rather than local has been made evident through reductions in income taxes. Automobile purchas.es in the United States for the period covered by, this survey aggregated about? $22,000,000 in value. There were corresponding purchases of motor trucks and parts for replacement. In the same period American ex porta at eotlon iroorla in Canada aggregated 88.0Do.00O duTfdir,iW ftjtftnat .... a3 total ti75,00b AAA t if. uw lvr a corresponuing period last year. ir estimates made by the Department of Agriculture are correct. Canada is now buying about two-thirds of all her foreign goods in the markets of the United States. , If Canada is a good customer of the United States, so also is the United States a good customer of Canada, concludes the Sun. Last year we bought more goods in Canada than in any other one fpreign country, the total running well up toward half a billion of dollai. As good neighbors, riving side by side in reciprocal trust and good will, observing the same standards of honesty in trade, the two countries present to the world an object lesson in interna' tional relationships. Quick as a Flas it stops the Cou UNTIL you've tried it, yoa cannot realize how quickly Buckley's Mixture relieves any Couch. The very first doe of this de lightful, different remedy -stops a spasm of couching and there are 40 doses in a 75-cent bottle I Children like it and so will you. Jut Mr "BuekWV to any (jroniit, tad hTl hand r arnni remedy tkat hat, (or yeart, Jq giving: poaitiv reiirf to nfferert from Coucha, C!d, Brvneaitja, Irritated TbrMU, Wboopinf Couch or Croup. Try it today. W. K. Buckley, Limited 142 Mutual Street, Toronto 3 (01 RUCKLEY1 9m M IXTURE i fat tikg a flash -a single sip proves it ( 77k HI Frtaril uW rhrrr u an old saying that Ood made ib country sat man mad tb city The country cannot get along without the city: Ma city cannot get along without Mat country. Human nature awn the jam. tat main thoroughfare, the busy earner. Bvary city has Ma main street. It may be named fust avenue or third, but it la the bus! street It i the street where merchant saaibii their good; th street whet people gravitate How shall I arrant my window ao that my goad may appear to the beat advantage, the greatest value for the least mooeyf Of the stain street you ate always seeing new facas: there you meet old friends. Blranger and viators always enquire for It. If a pocket la picked tit may he a dollar or a thouaand) tha thief mixes with the crowd and burtea nlmteilf in the thoroughfare on amain tract. Oh. to road the minds and near tha heartbeats of the man and women in ;he throng of too great city. Those ho began lift wU ad tailed Those who began bad ana atYtfed woma. Those who began wttb nothing and coded with a competence. Walk aloof the mala ttreet. look at th ltaea en men's facta. the glance of th eye. tat nod of bead, the anxious forward movement. and you wUl tee th seething ma ei humanity, aaeb striving to arrive at tome goal: each aarrying some burden jf which the man wba hraahea ahoukler in the great walk of Ilk eseu Ma intimate friend knows """"-g AWAY IKOM HUME Now the main street of a city pea-Meat many Domibuttiea. In the ttrst place a 'young man or woman of even an old may get hart on main street. How many have com from hamlet and soun- try flramd Just to get tost? There may be one hart tonight. In far-off Eastern Canada, or th old land aeros th seee. you were accustomed to hear your XUfcer or mother arty or read the good book, ind as a child yoftyfe doed your -yes at night withal turning your face to Ood. Now taja art lost to the oKl and you never icay or thtak of OhAsC What haa bt&mt of that Bible your ahsther gM' yo when you were leaving 'homeT You phuigad into th rear-rearn of etty Ufa and were quickly ngulfed in the murk and mire. You at aakad to assist In the Sunday school or join a BHle etas, -and -the reply you ouke la. - that yew. ara ioobusyvlou belong to this club and that, this so Oety and that, and It may be when you come to the gates of heaven, some day that Ood will sUo be too buty to admit yoi. "In as much as ye hare done it not to the least of thtse, my brethren, ye have done It not to a, and these shall go away Into everlasting punishment, but the righteous Into life sterna.'' MX OK THE CITY If I had the m sanation of a Dante and the , brush of a MwlUo. would paint one picture: The Angel's yia't to the Cpuntry Home." On the tw door post, he weuM see not the ttaln of blood but the stain of tear. -Father, mother, . where is your saat Where your dauchterT" why they went away to the city long ago. We have had n word from them. We fear they are dead or what la a thousand times wish. lost in the sin of th city. "One more unfortunate. Weary Of breath, BasUy importunate, Qone to her death! "Take her up tenderly, ; I4ft her with care; 'Tsuhloned ao alenrlerl. v "Who" was her father? Who was her mother Had she a Ulster? Had she a brother? Oh. it was pitiful. Near a whole city full. Home she had none!" In the second plan, many people think the city la a Place In which to nae a good time. .But a good time depends not so siuch uoon ltie Dlare the person. "You can't run Iway from trouDie or responsibility," said a country mother to her son, "it will follow you." Drive back nature," said Emerson, with a fork and it wUl come running back " "The parted water reunites te- nind ones own hand. We are continually atklnar visitors anrt new arrival if they like our city. Do tney like lta location; do they like lt acenery; do they like Its streets and the people who have labored so hard to mate it what it is? For the people make the city and not the eitv th. people. It depends very much upon we fbitauvus, Vfiictirci new irnTfl 1 I1lrm Ujur city and Us environment, an whether or not they remain and make v.eir nome amongst us. Paul had Rood time In hi dungeon. Nero had bad time in his golden house. Many a man has come to the eltv tn havo good time and has become a slave to the base. I'l.AYIMl U1TII II UK He played with the fir and it scor chd his soul. He lost himself and his God on the streets of the city. What I Christ and your mother and father r j garded as a good time has become out of date. THE ?J)fiILY NEWS Munaav Purity Above All SERMON LAST NIGHT ON CITY Kev. J. IL Friiell Urges That Prince I(upe rt l Clean and lteautiful M g tW Her t R. Ik. JTN the bright heydtiy of youth, who could tell him of the storms that lay ahead? Liter, when he had the full strength of manhood, who could hint to him of weakness or ill-health ? The need for Life Insurance protection always seemed dim and remote - - and because of this the day of decision was deferred. And then came the time when he tried to get Life Insurance, but the attempt merely brought a Thirdly and lajsUjVjnaay people think the city la a placo to- plunder. A place to get rich quick. A pUee to get two price for an article which la only worth one. When General Blucher visited th Duke of Wellington In fjonaon some time after the battle of Waterloo the latter took him about tha eity. They climbed to the dome of St. Paul's. The Iron-hearted Oerman looked out over the magnificent metropolis. Then he looked at Wellington With a wliu fire In bis eye, the same fire which burned there when he marched on Paris anr would have destroyed it for revenge bu for Wellington. "What a city to plunder" he eclalmtd. Every city is filled With men and woman woo may become good, and good men and women who may become better. Ood wants u make every city four squared "And th eity lieth four square, the length and the breadth and the height of it are atiual. a .aymbolX paraction. And there sbali iu jio wise enter into t anything tpa deliietu. neither,, worketh abominar Ifon nor nuketh a lie: but they that ar written in tb lamb't Book-of Life." Provincial Constable Oeorce Wvman 9f Iacelton reached the city on last IVlgnt train from the Interior. He wl be uno of the witnesses in the Sankcy caw t the Supreme Court As tute tn.. week MUU)n Gonzales returned to the city on last nighfs train from Smlthers wjiere lie appeared as coimstl In County Can cases. XOT1CE OF INTEXTIOV TO APPLY TO I.KAhE UVXI) In Prince Rupert Land Recording District and situate on the southwest corner of an unnamed bay on the south bank of Port Ohanal. Oraham Island. Queen Charlotte Islands. In the Province cf British Columbia. TAKE NOTICE that Arthur Robertson, of Massett, B.C., occupation a lumberman, intends to apply for a lease of the following described lands: Commencing at a post planted about one chain westerly from the mouth of an unnamed creek flowing into an un- amed bay on the south bank of Port :hanal. Oraham Island. Queen Charlotte iianui, nwince 01 umun Columbia' .hence 4 chains southerly; thence 10 heyly to the horellne; thence following be shoreUn to point of commence" containing 3 acres, more or iea (8lgned) A- ROBERTSON, APPllc8nt' Dated October 8, 1927. IN I'KOHATE tx tiii: M'l'iii-ME coi rtT of hkitish COI.IMISI A tAJMUr-I "-AdmtoUtratlon Act , and In the Matter of the Estate of James T$lrf& ,rrd' inteatatt-TAKE NOTICE that by order of un uctooer, AX). 1937. I was appointed Ad. mlniatratilx of the tatate of Jamel Dar us Wells, deceased, ,Sd aU parUea having claims against the said estate Provlrtf Atd 10 '"SiS same oSJil S?'' 10 Se on r before the of dy. December. AD. all ii 1927 and partlen Indebted to the estate are J9Dated VS'ffSSS more grim realization of his need. His health was not what it had been. ' Too late! Avert this tragedy from your life I Obtain the security of Life Insurance while you may. Now, while you are strong and well, the protection of Life Insurance is obtainable, and the yearly outlay will be ess than in the future. Decide today, and see" a Life Insurance representative before you, also, are too late. LAND ACT. j II Canadian N ati o nal rflic Largcfl Railway Syflem in AtneM STKAMSIIIP AND Sailings from I'KIXCE 111 I'l.HT for and intermediate points, each For STEWAitT and AXYOY. each For XOItTII mid MM Til ((I'l'KX C I'ANSESflEIt THAIXS I. Each MOXIIAV, HEIMIAY and UKOUflE, EIIMOXTOX, HTX.MI' States. AOKNCY AIJ, OCEAN I'se Canadian National Etpren CC"I?VirE mil t 1 XT iivnn j"' ..-it vAxcoivr.K. .lT(ll!lt. Bt-"' ntlliW. 9.00 a m itiiivCNlitY. lo OP IIA1U.OTTK IM.AM1H F HAVE PUlXCfi KII'KKT M t Tl KHAY at 11 3C e " I.O, all points East' ' .. I Ml tlKAMSIlir fM,,. for Money Order.. Forrll" etc.. alio tor your neat alilpinent, CITY TICKET OFFICE. S TIIIHI AVE.. PKIXCE KDI'EHT BADMINTON Supplies Kaien Hardware Co. Telephone 3