PAOB TWO DAILY EDITION few Londoners are Insensible to the i air mass Infection was not possible. One discomfort! of overcrowding in public i gathers that Professor Hill would not vehicles. How can they be. when every favor the equipment of every omnibus osy oi tfteir uvea they are subject to v.:h a covered top. The public con-them? The dancer of the discomfort veyance. he held, ought to oiler to Is not so fully realised Attention 'bow confined to sedentary occupations been called to it by Professor Leonard In stagnant, wirm air an Invigorating um m a lecture oerorc t:- Rt,v,i! mow and exposure to sunlight while Society o! Arts He poinic! jut th.i: ;olii to and from their work. A very pollution of the air and inlecuon ;ih :i - rl.r.itr degree of warmth, dryness. micro tses were the great causes o' rood ventilation, an arUflclal light glv- catanlia! compi.v.nt.- tin rxpnmirr to inn the ultra-violet rays ln sunlight, cold t; -m -oirKi tyrx .. i-.-.utriv! and no overcrowding were the desirable disease such . elcpni" !:... !.: mnd'.tions "rxr a Hit rcvcwr" pl' GimMjMJ UMk THE DAILT NEWS Fritkn .,....m . W-JH4 JU-1JI .11 .i- - .. The Daily News PRINCE KUPJEKT - BRITISH COLUMBIA PuMtaad Every Afirnon, aseept Sunday, by Prince Hubert Daily New. Limited, Third Avenue. H. F. PULLEN - - Managing hditor. City DeUifrJ By jrmf m&wmftjLltJ. (THE ORICIAL) Pure Scotch Whisky RICHEST IN FINEST HIGHLAND MALT Crtat & tomt Limiud. OtlMit tni BJ.CInL Dutfltnu. Duff. This advertisement is not publinhed or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia .75 By mall U all part at the Britirih Ktnpire am) the United State, in advance, per year $5.00 To all other countrtefl. in advance. ;r year $7.50p"i Advertising and Circulation Telephone - 98 Editor and Reporters Telephone - - 8G Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation VERY CRITICAL OF HOSPITAL Dr. Maguire Objects to .Many Things and Kspecially to Attitude of Sir. Rochester The fatkrwtng open letter has been cot to the lMMttM Board by Dr. in mil tnara Prior Rupert General Benptul. OenUrmen: In answer to a threatening letter re reived through the bead of row secre- tan. IB i art to my indebtedness. It . tarings to niy mind mom of the neglect subjected to while in tint Fridav ' Dec 10 IDS?-1"" ... ! Institution. The cause was. as your honor bit INTERNATIONALISM AND PATRIOTISM to Hie re- One of ike iiiteraatiiiR ideaa brmnrht " fonvnnl in the address ;"n u.e,uf . . um. ... ,. ... ideblllty and under the advice at Dr. U oi ,.v. ' to uw noutry v,iuu y-ateroay ,wa. tne iubito .on w , , u lb. Ihql hnvil mjm m. iinnf Ila. 1. ........ - iMU.nallnalI.fM n .1 unlmAllaM iisv " iiv vuuiiivi mmm uiwi iiaiivsiciiiaiii uiiu p 1 1 iw. i .1 ill. p f WCS ny III! SJfasI UlSf W OT lie did not carry the argument further than to mention that because neVtr BaVe the attendants a moments a )eraon waa loyal to his own family waa no reason he could not also trouble i cud. however, ring my ben be loyal to the community. twice in the Bve daya time. I needed Mr. Wilson miKht have jrone a great deal further with his 11- to drtnk tr9m " lustration. Take this country as an illustration. A man may first' ta-' ,n m room HurM " k loyal to his family and yet not disloyal to Prince Rupert. He may ln vf taL WOUJd " " y room Yet my i... u. , i .1 i t.i;.u r.i. u:.. .,-.,.,...,.- u,-:.i -Hu u. . iu ...h.m. i-mumum. phj..lcl adrlMd me to drink plenty He be to the .and not Canada. Taken may loyal province disloyal to 0l ,, to nnunt the potw- bat one step further he may be loyal to Canada and yet at the same authority veated m a poor aaret-aa time be loyal to a confederation of all the nations of the world or, may be the eaue at her r-rwaiag any part of them. ' her mount. Her nuance at ant eaa- rfuctve to the patient at hand. b4 ENTERTAINING OURSELVES M P wrttaat. b We all like the movies and practically everybody sees them. 1 tT'l. some tVKUlarly and other occasionally. Many of the pictures have M to paMeata in thetr deoreue preat educational value. Suppose one sees the movies once a weekjeandtuon. there are atill six evenings a week to be occupied. We suggest herej I'btee retommended tnta noiul to that doing aomething constructive is always better than have some- j my aatienu and. in the past, bare had one else do it. Imany patleast there, hut the treatment While reading is good, iris quite secondary- to doing as an edu- bu-n Bd cational factor. The person who is a critic of literature is quite tpr8wriOD1 manner eatwe. me to ad-secondary to the person who writes. The person who is a musical v TLJZJLLTZ ... . , ... . , . ... 1 that taatnatton. wnue under my aare. critic aoea not compare with the musician. The art critic is a i:ju:rr or .Mu:itiMi c.wxs second-rater compared with the artist. The person who does is an 1 Telephone eau an mw-i aneared. active agent, wherens the person who simply takes what someone ii know of a patient w oali seren ttmea else doea, la more or leas a passive agent. That is why many un i' before the call aaawered. Tfet the versity students are uneducated. They have not learned to do but only about what others have done. They have not grasped the first rudiments of education. The lady who does beautiful needlework is an artUt. She is several grade higher than the lady who spends her time reading novels. She is in the line of development whereas it is doubtful if there is milch development from the reading of a great deal of current literature. A study of the classic is helpful bdt not as helpful as the effect to write classics. Learning by means of the senses is useful but skill cornea only from doing. The real men and women of the world who have made name for themselves have been those who did things themselves rather than those who did nothing but study what others have done. Study of the efforts of others was necessary but only as a means to an end., So It is suggested that to get real joy out of" life',' creation ia necessary. It is those who do who have the fullest enjoyment. All others take secondary place. They are the hangers-on of society; Tfiey 'havF'no future other than what they are today. WRONO VIEWPOINT Many of us get the wrong outlook on life. We Imagine that a life of ea,se would be heaven, whereas usually it is hell. We sometimes envy those who have nothing to do but read novels, play card and take;part in social activities. Yet deep down in our hearts we know that the person spending all the time that way is more to be pitied thSn envied. The salvation of the race is activity. Creation brings the greatent joy. The child of the brain, the product of the hand,.tha,crention of anything useful or beautiful brands the creator a the man or woman who can do things, the only one who amount to anything In this' life. The view that work is eviland laziness good seems to have originated in Eden. Possibly It was Moses who was wrong when he wrote that beautiful epic and made God say that Adam and Eve were cursed because they had acquired knowledge and the curse was that hereafter they would have to work. Perhaps the curse was that it was impossible to get the most out of life in any other way than by working. Working is life; idleness Is death. DANGERS TO CROWDS tart in epidemic form, great clanger would ariae from crowded conveyances. FROM AIR POLLUTION S ( i might not arise in fact probability 1 London Times i favored Its occurrence but In toe open nune could hM a conversation ln the tmall kitchen wtth some friend. whUe this was going on I had plenty of tune, upon my last visit of ftve day, to observe the neglect of the patlenta under the care and treatment of our local physicians The rooms are poorly heated and dust laden. The windows and their praBertes should be kept clean. At the rate of IS 00 a day at can rooms and proper food can be had In any hospital in this continent. While there. I noticed the young girl in training eamr to the room with a Lyaol solution and give the woodwork of the room a small once over. The procedure was completed In a haphazard manner and not In detail, as It should be. ln a place where bacteria of every description lurks, either pathogenic or otherwise. Till; tdilli The food is very unpalatable and this is the same, regardless of the diet, advised by the physician. While 1 was there sick. I was served a cold boiled potato and one hard boiled egg. Try this on a sick patient, whose Intestinal track is in an Irritated condition. No physician cTer ordered a diet of this description for a paUent In my condi tion or otherwise. Several meals t was never served and was obliged to send out and have them .brought ln from a restaurant, after the dinner hour at I the hospital was over. My expense re mained 13.00 per day. One dollar would pay for all the food consumed by me In 'my five days' stay ln that institution because It was unpalatable and pborly arranged. Mlsn Clay, a nurse employed at the hospital at the time I was there, kindly con sented to make some sandwiches, after I waa neglected at the dinner hour by those ln ebarge. Medicines. I happen to know some of the rates at the corner Drug Store and the Hospital rate equals to a plain hold-up. 1 paid R9c a drink for whisky while, there a boot-iegefa price. Ex-trsct of 'triple bromraea Is 8 ounces for 11.50 at any drug store but the hospital price la three times this. Bathrooms and tubs therein are a disgrace to any hospital and should be Inspected by a health officer and condemned. The walls and floor covering are in an unsanitary condition and the tubs are not safe for patients to bathe ln. Diseases are communicated in this way. A fifteen inch shelf covers the bathtub at elbow helghth and gives a paUent no chance to atand ln an erect position. The shelves that surround the bathroom are filled with the various drugs and washes used ln hospital service and should be removed from the presence and access of patients who. under delirium or depression, would take such drugs with suicide Intent. The hospital would be legally respon sible for the result. A man attendant should be on duty with the night nurse to meet any emergency which might arise. -ONVKH.TION ,N SIVdlNO Loud talking and tinging of sentimental songs by those employed or In training is not ln order, when the patients are trying to think of the outcome of their particular case. The song "Lay My Hesd Beneath a Rose" and "When I'm Done Youll Soon Forget Me." the thoughts of these and other sentimental songs are not conductive to the welfare of the patients who. through the advice of their physicians ln their Illness, are compelled to stay there. The halls, whUe clean, are the rende- vour for gatherings of visitors who are 1 In the habit of loud speaking at home, and it may be quite impossible tot modify the sound of their voices while mveulng with nurses or othen (n the confines of the hospital halls where tttstw fttouUt prevail. t iM!tTM HA Mr. ttoihesrtr's suggesUoa U that patients suffering from tntoataalhif liquor aMuM no: a permitted M enter the hospital. racmnUeas of the cause of entrance. Mr Rochester It not a paysiataa and knows very Utile l re-gaffitofc trcntmant of sua sasea. Our nospwaa&MA tensrai mam whtcmaeni whe oorl .'p!yfWI or lave'dK.-wltft M knowieoge to treaftaud. tHree the treatment of such eases, or i it possible that Mr. Rochestor wants these etass patients at bts hotelT It would he cheaper far the pa80M but the batbwvtet. la this ( parlttu&t hotel u never warm ana pneumonia might foltow My object, sn fagVt the hospital, was In order to get Hie hot baths and eliminate the various aammulated torts upon Ost of Dr. L. W. Kergm. whose' Mendsaup I did not wish to part wtth. It has ulstev several yeses, list atftlce bm beea MHawed on several oaeaslaaa andtalaUfmtfessMnas ptiymelan he Is mom caaeabLi than Mr. Ros ester, to vtate and direct the treatment of pnMcate suffering from the effects of Intoxicating Usjwor or other conditions of health. Mr. Rochester a Idea is a nos-pltal without hospitality In the close i would stale that those who are serving on the hospital board, should ao-apente with the phytclana aa. tqson thetr advice, the patlenta sup- Ipoet the mstnutton A dentist an also advise hat patients as to the hosptUl and its atttskdinx treatment. No mem ber mt the board wishes to farce a hard- , ship cm these who. ln the past, have' been very libera! to the cause and sup- i port Of the local hospital, by forctnt ! eollecajoit through ! procedure or; the tdhs$ out three teniisg unbusl- i i tlfc i 1 m mmn ft I I have fceeo ashed to sign notes to cover bf sndehtcdness M the hospital. I era In business, here, and say Intentions are va remain here. The eeadtng of s registered letter to -me and the cost thereof only goes to shew the carelessneaa In handling the bustaess end of the hespital. A telephone call to my offiee would sunVe. Thanking ywu kindly for the space given this article in your paper. I remain, your sincerely. DR. JOS. MAQUIRE. I Man in the Moon n- v MONEY talks perhaps but a nickel la about as dumb aa some people we know. CONTRARY to commcm belief dto-courtesy Is not a sign of Importance. ONE of the 'illusions of the present century la that a toothpick Is an article of adornmensT EVEN .an interesting conversation Is apt to be annoying In a motie theatre. WHAT Is the use of licking a loser PROBABLY "the most humorous thing ln the world Is a small town IT'S easy enough to love yemr enemies. but its darned difficult to have any feeling but that of hate for superiors. A LOT of Prince Rupert people must be made of dust because It is well known that dust settles slowly. Ten Years Ago In Prince Rupert lllXKMUF.U 10. 1917. Messages of sweeping victories In the voting at the front are heartening the home supporters of Col. C. W. Peck as to the outcome of the voting In the federal flection here tomorrow. A Japanese, whom nameihas not' yet been learned. ws drownect '.at Georgetown ( 11 this morning. . It Is being urged that airplane spruce cut on the Queen Charlotte Islands for war purposes be shipped direct from Prince Rupert rather than sending It flrtt to Vancouver. TIDES AN INTRODUCTION TO "ROUGH HOUSE ROSIE" (llrl Men Xem Forgot lo lie torn Tonight at Vet holme Theatre Oents, step right up and meet "Rough House Rosle"- the girl men never forget I When she meets 'em they're greeted with a right to the Jaw. When she leaves, she doesn't even take the trouble to distribute headache powders. Black eyes? ' Broken limbs? Say, bo. you dont know this hard boiled gal. She's tough'n That Chronic Ceugh call for PERTUSSIN, the pleasant tatting, harmless remedy that soothes the irritated air passages and helps Nature to effect a tptedy recovery. Physicians hsvc recommendti PERTUSSIN for rtars for coughs and bronchial trouble. At all ir( iteret. Battle ate. aasllJO mm Safe for Every Cough KEE IT HAN K imHHUII t weiiaiiP. The best of Beverages HENNESSY B TIMBER SALE X9590 Sealed Tenders will be received by the District Forester not Is '.er than noon on the 15th day of Decern.-, 1927, for the purchase of Licence :no, south shore Dranev Tnif r. n n of. n feet board measure of spruce, cedar, hem- 'wv iuu oaisam sawiogs. Two (3) years will be allowed 'for removal of timber. Further partlculara of the Chief Forester. Victoria, or the District Foreiter, Prince Rupert. B.C. IN PROBATE l the MLi-itKMi: roritT or niiirisii tOMMIIl.t In the Matter of the Administration Act; and In the Matter of the Estate of Robert Hudd, Deceased, Intestate. Honor, r. McB. Young, the 1st day of December. A .D. 1937. 1 was eppoInteYAd: '12 me saia estate v"L"l,: are herehv mi.ifi i rrou?. !:"lMf!L i.j.v, K ' wmum oi tneir lndebtedu a; to me forthwith. i.uiuiAH a. WATT Official Admlnutrator, . Prince Rupert B.C 3rd day 0t "mber A D. 1937 Phone 9. THREE STAR This advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor C ontrol Hoard or l of British Columbia raugh'n ready! No "minute man" atufl with her. Rosle may eome from Tenth Avenue but she can go anywhere without having the old street hang Its head in shame. She know'a her opinions Just a bit better than any Fifth Avenue debutante yau've ever met. And oan the dance? Say. she knows her Charleston. Black Bittom, and anything else that's apt to be Invented. EyesT When she's out tiding at night, the guy she's with can turn out his headlights. They're not needed. A form? Luteal she leads the chorus In h night club and any gal who csu do that Isn't far behind ln fig-urn. Cleopatra, Salome and all the oldtlmers put together would have to take a back seat and give this little girl a hand. Youll have a chance to meet her tonight. "Rough House Rosle" comes to the Westholme for the week-end. They Ull us she's smiles and smiles -ahead of anything that's hit town yet. And. oh yes. Clara Bow Is Rente) Advertise In The Dally Newa 'rev TIMBER SALE X700I Sealed Tenders will be received by the District r"oreer. not later than noon on the 29th day of December, 1937. for the niirrhsa T lman V7M1 Tl Cove. Princess Royal Island. C.R. 4. to .it IfiOfVW. W ic. uimu mruun OI Spruce. Cedar. Hemlock and Balsam auwlogs. Two (2) years will be allowed for removal of timber. Further partlculara of the Chief Forester. Victoria, or the District Prince Rupert, B.C. H. S. WALLACE CO., LIMITED You can be assured of a widr range of t .. LADlLSV-fllEN'S, AND ( lULDHnN'S (.()0I)S Our boxed Handkerchief are particularly k an exceptional line of the finest hosiery. Silk Underwear ia always appreciated. Our Fur Trimmed Clove nrc wonderful values. SEE OUH WINDOWS H. S. WALLACE CO., LTD. 3rd Avenue and I ulion Street Canadian National Steamships Co. Limited Prince Rupert DRYDOCK AND SHIPYARD Operating C.T.P. 20.000 Ton Flouting Dry Dock Engineers. Machinists, Boilermakers, Blacksmiths. ltterrn maker's. Founders, Woodworkers, Etc ELECTRIC AND ACETYLENE WELDING. Our plant U equipped to handle all kinds of MARINE AND COMMERCIAL WORK. . a mO PHONES 43 ana job UNION QTFAMqHIPS LIMITED sailings from Prince Hupfrt. , tW' ' lor VANCOUVER, VICTORIA. Hwanson Hay. Alrrt mj- f or V lor I a ANCOtlVEIt. VICTORIA, nattattt-97 AS0X, wis. a r'tw-nf?t fm.!J ss " oiCtfAId. UttlM ISiartCI, BUnuaj, I'-"' . Prints HTU ''Ia aintruj(ii innni mm 11 ninMijsn iu ufBiinauon,