PATTE. TWO THE DAILY J?ET?3 ftiita. i. ! ' I "II llLlULJ-a Danger Lurks HEIRESS TO in Skin Diseases RICH ESTATE Bioie. Clean them up with "Sootha-Salva" A.50cboifFFlEEli !?"- Hies, rwma, Netehea, boiti..' FREE OITEIt S'.LZtLt To areiaint every cm with tha irksome and emkrraastsi- t he, wapr&es of Sooth. and dangerous diseases. These bothersome sources of pain asd infection are riid and cleaned ud in an imumilv chart time by Sooth Salra a prescriptive nMK S.vMts or ir..i. The rst Britlih nurvey of Prince Edward Ufand ws marte in 1765 by Captain Samuel Holland, an army officer who had fought a: the edges of Lou..--burg snd Quebec He named u larae number of featurts after fellow offlcers. Including Murray river after the 6cot-tlh General Jamen Murray aovrruor of Quebec. 1704-60 I S!vs Wain, dm gist have bet n suppled with a Hmed number of fall size packages to be given free. while they last, witn purchases ol 50c. boxes of "Frtrit-a-tires". This ihy wo diicoTrredr;"Frit 10 drurE1t l onr " mm . a a I For aama SMM Wal we tires", the fruit medicine which has many thousands of friends all over Canada. Sooths Salva not only heab and soothes but also positively arrests and removes any further infection. some years hare sold Soot ha Salra on a guarantee of money back if not satisfied after trying this wonderful ointment. Made by Fruits-tires Limited. Ottawa, Out The Daily News PKINCB RUPERT - BRITISH COLUMBIA Published Every Afternoon, except Sunday, by I'rinee Rupert Daily N'ewa, Limited, Thirti Avenue. H. F. PULLEN - MaMiatins Editor. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: City Delivery, by mail or carrier, par aenth . M IIE Ol' NATIONAL IWISKS 75 By mail to all part of Use llritlah BMpir and the United States, in advaure, per year $5.00 To all other countries, in advance, per year $7.50 Transient Display Advertising, per inch per insertion $1.4') Transient Advertising on Frorrt Page, per inch $2.80 Local Readers, per insertion per line .25 Classified Advertising, per insertion per word J Legal Notices, each insertion per agate line 15 Contract Hates on Application Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations. DAILY EDITION Friday, Dec. 2, 1927 FLIN FLON MINING DEAL The completion of the deal for the Flin Flon mine in Manitoba, one of the largest copper properties in Canada, it an outstanding epoch, in the mining world, so far at least as this country is concerned. It means the building of over eighty miles of railway, the building of a smelter, the installation of a modern mining plant, the development-of a jHwer plant and poaefbly the putting in of a paper mill. If the power plant is developed, as is proposed, it is said the investment will approximate eighteen million dollars in addition to .the raihvay whteh the Canadian Notional, aided by the Manitoba government and the mining company will build. I'ROI'OSED NEW PROVINCE There have been people locally who criticized local inaction in regard iofthe proposed new province. Tonight there is a meeting of the Board of Trade and if any person has a proposal to make, that is the place it should be diecussed. The business people who have a Btake in the country are practically all represented on the board. If there are any who are not, they should join at once. To ask private individuals to do what the Board of Trade will not do is hardly reasonable. FIGHTING FOR GERMANY When the people went to France and other parts of the fighting front to take part in the war, they did not realize that they were going there to fight for the liberation of Germany as much as for the prevention of other countries falling under the military yoke. Germany has benefited, perhaps more than any other country from the change that has come over the world as a result of the war. EheRnow has a republican government conducted on truly democratic tine, she is prominent in the demands for disarmament and world .peace, her commercial life is recovering, and she has ceased to be the bete noir of the political world. With' the liberation of Germany came also the liberation of Rugsift.-AUhough the Soviet nytem is abhorrent to the person who believes in .the riilp of nil th tunl The unexplored regions of Canada's national parks are now mere and more pr.-ivlnf! u loadntone to out-of-doors ad- vvntiirer. explore, and nature lovers r:-.ory eaon bring news or some newly-explored area, attendant on the JourneylnaK of Individuals, or parties reekiiiK acesK to the hidden wonders of ' rKtp di.itrir!H. When you want hot breakfasts Meat to restore crispness Pour on hot milK .Add cream and sugar or salt Half Ilreed I Jell? From Caviar Saidjlo lK:.I)authIfr uf a 1 Many yeast) as, whea all serts ' and aencntaons of men. sold -erased wttB the tatos of the wealth to be rassae) "under the grass roots" of the Yukon tundras, were stampeding madly north ward by pack-bora aaal dog-team, the aohlc lord arrived teas Easlaad to ex plore the started rtti. Chained wMh the Casstkr country, he stayed m the bills for at On XaB h ws sa the country, smatewg and .lehtng. aaal teadlng the tree tUe of a Whan fai say came, be to reach the ssrtsafle m Mmei to eaxda a boat, aad settled down in the Ms for the wtattee. The haWe lard did fee sara ss many other aoad meat dtd la those gtamonra da ht beeasne a sqtuw-man. Better thaa aome. hawetref. Bmrth added, he married the soaaw with ta the rites oil bell, book aad adle. n-lth a mission ary to perform the eefemony. Whea sssrtaf oame aaatn to the tiorthland. the avble lord ptned far hi Engllcb home and departed by she first boat, learlag a pood sum with bis wife for ber support sad that of the ehSd then cspested. The jM shews Httle trace of ber mixed ancestry, ssys fimlth. and was. to alt sppesrance. a white girl with every eVrdeace of the blue blood of her parent. Maajr year passed: the atd squaw j died, leaving the seeret of ber dssigh-ter'i birth with a responsible man in the community m which she had been raised. Before hi first wife died, however, says Smith, the lord married s woman m England and now ha a large family over there. How the affair will turn out Is uncertain, says the prospector, but tt was an open secret In the northland that the man who had been lett the papers In addition to the Flin Flon. other mining protiertiee will be which win establish u tdentttv of the opened up by the railway and the country will become, temporarily i "mystery Kin." u nw taking steps to at least, one or the most active in Canada. - The-plan of the promoters is to try to arrange a joint development of-Jhe. power plant with a paper company. By way of the Hudson Bay both the mines and the mill will have close connection with Europe, where the market for the pro ducts is unlimited. BUJONTOK. Dec I lHg the far trsa feabatr fife of a peetty gM as iHR isolated frontier mining town, a hH bread Belle ol the Caaalar Wtr Uvsw until ae rradieo ttat at f IS without brSag aware that ate? Is tsje bMrtss to taw attataa aad weaHfe of an Eafttoa lard. The ssaa) Is her father, soeordlng to O. W. South. Tatftftapb Creek prospector and trsavper. who is la tbt star out-flttluc at taw Empire tiehsnat. De layed fiwaa getting back to at ismatwg ground la the hills at aor Stern British CotumbkL be tbt wk tar I Paa. Uaortoba. have her given her rightful Inheritance. BLIND BROKER CHICAGO PIT CHICAGO. Dec. 2. In the shouting, gesticulating mob of broker mining about the gram pit m the Chicago board of trade often Is seen a strangely calm figure In unhurried fashion the trader does business on a large scale, but he never takes part In the be wildering system of band signals which transfer ownership of millions of bush els of grain with the raising of a finger. The oroker who goes aboMt his busi ness so quietly Is John Schaack. He Is etone blind. When Bchasek. In the turmoil of the pit. decides to buy or sell. he listens for a suitable oiler from some broker within Immediate reach and then closes the transaction with a shrill quick word "sold." Always the kindly hand of the broker nearest him pencils the necessary re cord of the transaction on the sightless man's trading card. Bchasek formerly represented In the t on of the largest grain, companies the world. Overnight after ah excit in ,h rir,1. unA iSr TaZ u .i JT-ST 'Eft went blind, his optic nerve. .... ..... ' rv uu miu a UClllUUilC. . I A L Already, we are told. UuHsian representatives are showing a better spirit in the League of Nations. Tolerance is one of the things they have to learn, and noHsibly it is a leason we. even in Canada,, may do well to study and apply to ourselves wherever pos- 'A6oylief aavlmnroTlftu ramTliar corridors of the board of trade, but when he reaches the pit he becomes si keen a part of the rough and ready trading as in the dsys when he had hit sight. LECTURE ON PEACE TO BIBLE STUDENTS targe Number Listened to Kl-ionrfce at I.O.K.F.. Hall I-nst Night An Interesting discourse on the select ed sublect. "Laitlne Peace Worldwide' Soon." was delivered last night by C.I W. Cutforth of Toronto, lecturer of the International Bible Students' Association, before an audience which comfortably filled the Imperial Order. Daughters of the Empire, Hall. The speaLt-r't remarks were listened to with rapt at tentlon. Fred Cameron presided and Clifford Cameron acted as accompanist for the hymns. Mr Cutforth sailed this morning on the Prince Rupert for Vancouver. In The Letter Box ui:n;ui:i:i(i ijoximi iioi'ts Editor. Dally News: Regarding the letter In your paper yesterday alimed Chas. H. Brown, and his explaining to the Prlnoe Rupert public the ordeal he went through at the hands of Fred Brown at Anyox. Suppose all he ha: said is true he in bound if. admit, (ha he received very good twsitialisj Tya (gkeGift that keeps on Giving wo years Tr ago I oday Crfdenza $385 1 SL- or with fJecirtc drlvi $425 December Second marks the Second Anniversary of the "Great Otrthojhonic Revolution1 ' which gave the world a new musical outlook. On that momentous day (December Second 1925J the Victor Company overthrew all previous notions regarding the possibilities of home music. Since that time, the day of its conquest over Canadian hearts, the new Orthophonic Victrola has climbed ever from one glorious triumph to another. Toddy you may. have a new Orthophonic Victrola which does tvtrytkini for you gives you music from a whisper to tremendous volume, operates electrically if you wish and even changes your records for vou! Today you rrta have your choice of eijrht beautiful cabinet yodr choice too, of the fixe11 Orthoph "Trua Sound" unequafid repertoire of V. E. Orthoplwrac Victor records Which ha len busk up in lbee two years. Today the new Orthophonir Victrola gives vou everythtHt you so inad desire in beauty, in convenience, in the musical art! Today there is nothing in the way of music enjoyment, no means of attaining superlative reproduction which it not reprwnted in hs highest form in tome model of the new Orthophonic Victrola. Since 1925 it has moved ever upward-increasing in its splendid isolation. Models (mm $1400 down to a low as Si IS on Rm-vt-nient payments at His Master's Voire dealers. Hear them today t omc Trade Mark Rrg'd Victrola Victor Talking Machine Company of Canada Limited, Montreal treatment compared to the treatment I P. r skinner tt.ic- p T.nM he himself dealt out to Eallasson who ! R. M Martin n,,m fjiw.- m, fought pido Ourvlch Just a few days Mrs. L. O. Saul. Decker Lake: Mr and oeiore tney left for Anyok. I talked; Mrs. Fred Nsh. Terrace: 8. II. Seukplel. with one- fellow Vho sctuallv saw a! New Hazeltan: P H Ramiw nmnn. letter sent In by some good boxing fan, I ton; ft. H. Ley, Victoria; J. V. Jones. aklng;lhat they cibpse a referee other J Anyox; A. Moore. Buckler Bay; A. Rob- than BrlCk Rklnn.r Hnt that aVImilltftjAII f aautt . .. . on account of Skinner being so friendly with Dido tt might cause a lot of talk which It did. Ealiawon himself objected to Skinner refereeing, and was told that he had no ssv In the matter, and when he asked for two Judges was told notning doing. The fight was staged and the five or six hundred people who witnessed It certainly would not, I think, want to see a repltltlon of same JOE BROWN. Ten Years Ago in Prince Rupert lllX'EMBKIt 2, 191T. There Is a movement on foot to change the name of one of the Hazel tons of which there are three New Hazelton, Old Hazelton and South Hazelton. Tha. Vimr Ride airlsVKnJttine Club Is getting Christmas comforts ready for me suiuiers. offlucig ufmie tinpflrer prestdantr MlM Tatlander: seewtarr- Miss Lita Carrall; treasurer. Miss Mary McLennan. Mr. Blaaw, who has resigned as caretaker of Borden Street School, was presented with a purse by teachers and pupils. HOTEL AKKIVALR. I'rlnre ltiirrt Joseph 8. Rogers, city: B. A. Moore. Francis Glover g. r. Crlbb, A. O pnighr and M or ley Bhler Vancouver; A E Davey and Duncan D. Munro. Smlthers; Paul Mendovos, Merritt Mrs Savoy R. O. Cunningham. Port Esslngton: H. McDonald, city: Louis Ooldthorpe. O. Bourget. J. Hogan and R. Nethereote, Stewart: A. Ounrud, Port Clements, t'rntral H. H. Aldred. Ceylon, Bask.; A. Berg, Moose Jaw. Man in the Moon 51 -Hi AN old timer Is one who can remem- ber when the streets were bad, the ; sidewalks dangerous, the houses shacks and money plentiful. Them were the days! i I WOULD not object to being mired As I wander down the street I would not mind breaking my leg Or hUrtlng the soles of my feet. If only I could think I was rich Or likely to be that way soon. Yes. I'd willingly live In a shsck While I write for the Man In the Moon. THESE are the days when the women are making their Christina nu.. and Christmas cskes. JUST give me a real Christmas pudding A slice of the old fashioned kind; Just like they mad them In England And as good as they taste, in my mind. You can top tt with red and green holly And burn tt with brandy galore: Then give it- the real homev flaior Tticy gave them so well there of yorg r .:' v- Ort)ipphoniconx if it bears the dog Trademark v aasaasaar assmr Make Your Selection Eady Tomorrow A Kroehler Chesterfield Suite for Christmas Sold on terms or for cash Barrie's Home Furnishings A a) .trrf Avpnno rh0ne BURGESS Flashlights and Batteries aBsB)SBBassBVVsaBsaMSBsaBssasaBniiiJiJHkJlaf) Kaien Hardware Co. Telephone 3 Advertise in "The Daily News"