Park; stay over-night at Kamloops, Prince George and Smlthers; automobile trips and entertainment at all these points, also automobile trips at Vander-hoof and Hazelton. Pull particulars from City Ticket Office, 528 Third Avenue. Phone 2G0. INCREASED MINERAL PRO- DUCTION SHOWN BY RE PORT OF MINISTER MARK ING VERY DISTINCT AD VANCE. (continued from page one) Mr. Sloan's report shows. . having made a larger output In 1926 than Ontario, which for many years has been In the lead. This province also continues to be the largest producer In Canadaor lead, copper and Elnc. Since 1921 the year ot an acute depression In the metal markets of the world British Columbia has made Impressive progress In Increasing Its mineral production each year. The value of, the 1926 output was nearly two and one-half times that ot 1921 and the yearly Increase has been nearly 8,-000,000 a year. The Increase In the value of -production last year was made notwithstanding lowered average metal prices as compared with 1925, Indicating a very satisfactory condition In the Industry, with production steadily Increasing regardless of fluctuations In the metal markets. INCH RASED. TONX.U1K In his report Mr. Sloan points out that the tonnage of ore mined and treated In the province last year also shows a considerable Increase; 4,775,0,73 tons of ore being produced compared with 3.849,260 tons In 1925.. Metal mining led In the value of production at a figure of $51,863,634, followed by coaf mining with an output valued at $11,850,180 and then came structural and miscellaneous totalllni tugemer ej.o.a.no. me quantities of lead, copper, rlnc and silver produced In 1920 were Hie highest In the history of i mining In the province. Due to the steady expansion of the Sullivan mine. of the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company of Canada, at Klmberley, ieaa nas easily maintained first place In the value of mineral products oro- duced In the province for the last three years, last year's output of 363,023,937 lbs. being nearly ten percent of world production, and the present rat should I'M V PAClE C. twc i THE DAILY NEW3 .3tur4ajr, Jut The Daily News PRINCE KUPEKT - BP.lTlSfl COI.UMUIA. Published Every Afternoon, except Sunday, by Prince Kupert Daily News, Limited, Third Avenue. 11. F. PULLEN - Manatfinjr Editor. subscr! I'TfnrYf A -rip?? 'fmmm ; City Delivery, by mail or carrier;per1month AyTf "S.0O By mail to all parts of the British Ernplfeand the United States, in advance, per year $ij.00 To all other countries, in advance, per year $7.50 .transient uispiay Advertising, per inch per insertion 51.40 iransient Advertising on Front Page, per inch $2.80 ixicai Keauers, per insertion per line 25c Classified Advertising, per insertion per word . 2c Legal Notices, each insertion per agate line 15c Contract Rates on Application, Advertising and Circulation Telephone Editor and Reporters Telephone - - Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations. DAILY EDITION. 98 86 Saturday, June 4, 1927 NOBODY THINKS HIMSELF A SITf'KET? Nobody thinks himself a sucker, but the clever people who use underground methods to extract wealth from those who earn-it, very soon find out who the easy ones are and they are put on the "sucker list." It has been shown that if you sell bogus shares to a man once you can do it again. He is that kind of a man. A sucker list is worth a lot to clever rogues who use the poor boobs to replenish their exchequer whenever cash is needed. The men who are .on the list ujicji uiiuiiK win,; wno are prominent in the community. They live in cities as vell as in the country. It has been reasoned out that to take the money away from these people does them good because H keeps them working whereas if they saved their cash they would eventually retire. Unless an employee can co-operate, with other employees he loses .much of his value to his employer. SAVED LIFE OF THE CHILD , Down in New Brunswick IVip nther r?nv in nr,a nf v. districts where a Red Cross Home Nursing Class had been recently joimeu ana me course nnisned, a tiny child, in a busy farm house spied an attractive looking blue bottle on a shelf. Her mother and grandmother were both occupied with household tasks. They did not see what the child was about until she had climbed to the shelf and was drinking from the bottle labelled "carbolic acid." They both ran, and the mother frantically seized the toddler, but already she had swallowed some of the poison. The mother aghast, was helpless. But the grandmother who had taken the Home Nursing ' instruction, went into acti on At nnriv Shp aaw tVmf on r-r.J ..... administered, and then as rapidly as possible she poured the whites ui socmi ckks inio uie now screaming child. When the doctor arrived, he told her ahc had aavcil tho diilrl'a llf ir. . - ' . ...v 0 itiv. uti aiiswei was I could have done nothing but stand and cry if I had not learned from those Home Nursing Classes what to do in such emergencies. They taught me to think Instead of cry. and so we haP our mil girl alive instead of dead. I think that every woman ought to learn wnai we aia, ana i wisn tney could. 0 So does the Canadian Red Cross which in the- past year has tojiuucieu juo jiome cursing uiasses m the provinces ,of British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Ontario, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Prince Edward Island. You can'tvery well have friends unless you are one yourself. FUR FARMING POPULAR TODAY Fur farming is every year becoming more popular. .North and south, east and west, the farms are spreading and in many cases are bringing good results. The failures are mostly among those who imagine if they have a fuf farm they do not have to work. ' Industry is necessary in every walk of life and especially so in any kind of farming and raising fursifor the market needs it as much as any. Fox farming has been established for some time and now the business is spreading to all lines of furs. Yesterday we told of a muskrat farm on Queen Charlotte Islands and before that of one near Pacific. Others have been reported in the Ootsa Lake country. The best way to celebrate the Federation Jubilee is ; to make of yourself a useful citizen and to do your part In carrying on the work of development of the country. MINERAL PRODUCTION IN PROVINCE The increase in mineral production as shown by the report of the minister of mines and published on another page is a healthy sign,. especially in this district where mining is gradually being developed into a stable industry. It is a pretty safe prophecy that in the next few years the mines of this district wil Ibe producing ten times as much as they are today. If the proposal to establish n smelter at Prince Rupert should go through the Increase would bo even more marked. It takes the nicest kind of discrimination to between a new joke and a chestnut. Summer Excursion FARES Tickets on Sale from May 22nd Kcturn limit, Oct. 31, 1927 EASTERN CANADA UNITED STATES EDMONTON-CALGARY JASPER NATIONAL PARK Full information from CITY TICKET OFFICE 528 3rd Avenue Phone 200 Canadian Nationai tH CANADA IN CANADA'S DIAMOND JW1U1 YEAR-imTiw ) DELEGATION TO SMITHERS TllltEE, PROMINENT MEMHEKS OF . HOARD OF THUIK. TO OFFICI-- AI.LV REPRESENT PUINC'E Kl'PEKT A delegation headed by M. P. Mc-Catfery will attend the Board of Trade convention at Smlthera on Friday next. Others who wUl be present are O. W. Nlckerson and Olof Hanson and It U expected that yet more will Join the party. At the Board of Trade meeting last night President Fulton made the announcement and said he hoped a strong delegation would be present from here. Any who were going he asked to send In their names to the secretary. BRITISH GROUP IS TO JISIT THE CITY When the convention of Chambers of Commerce of Canada meets at Van couver and later proceeds north and visits this city It will be accompanied by a British Parliamentary party which is travelling through Canada with them. The entertainment of these In Prince Rupert Is In the hands of the enter tainment committee of the Board of Trade vh(h will lay plans and report to the next meeting of the local boafd. This was arranged at the meeting ol the board last evening. In The Letter Box KANIIMASTEK REINSTATED. Editor. Dally News. Regarding the resignation of Band master Wilson the undersigned committee and president of the Rotary Club met the bandmaster who complained of lack of support from the committee which we admit as being somewhat Justified. We have received the following letter from Bandmaster Wilson: Dear Sirs: "I am sorry that I announced fast Monday to the boys at band practice that I had resigned without first of all notifying you. "I withdraw the remarks regarding the committee contained In my public letter of Thursday last which were substantially Incorrect. "Yours truly. "T. WILSON." In view of the above we have rein stated Mr. Wilson as bandmaster and rehearsals will continue as heretofore. J. W. NICHOLLS. : J. OREER. W. D. VANCE. SECOND ANNUAL ALL EXPENSE TRIANGLE TOUR TEN DAY TRIP- FARE $110.00. Special train leaves Vancouver via Canadian National Railways, Monday, July 25. Fare Includes meals and berth on steamer. Prince Rupert to Vancouver, also all meals and berth on train, Vancouver to Prince Rupert via Jasper; and meals and entertainment at stop-over points; two full days at Jasper National "N mm. H ' a In390 DEATH threatened l9'yearold Clarence Helgerson. An operation might save his life. But no doctor was available . . . the nearest hospital was 100 miles away ... no train for two days ! Helped by a railroad worker, the Red Cross Outpost Nurse put her patient on a "gas jigger" and started the same even ing' ... It was 20 below zero ! The gas container sprang a leak . . . in the biting darkness, the nurse and her helper pushed their hand' car four miles to a wayside .station where the agent gave them food and an' other jigger . . . they litpostll areAxiMs Since the War THE RED CROSS has disbursed 7 Million Dllasrs arrived at' the hospital early next morn' ing. Helgerson was found to have a ruptured appendix and peritonitis ... he was operated upon at once ... his life was saved. On the fringes of Canada's advancing civili' zation stand the 39 Red Cross Outpost Hospitals. In these remote districts doctors Dspitals RED C805S Nurses i to Frontier Settlers are few, skilled nursing attention is lacking. The Red Cross comes to their aid. Each Outpost serves a population scattered over hundreds of square miles. To it the settlers come . . . ten, twenty, Jifty miles ... to find the skilled attention they must for the Soldiers.Women, Children and Frontier Families of Canada. " STILL SERVING " have if their lives arc to be saved. Here the Red Cross Nurse is a true Angel of Mercy, serving with skill, courage and unflagging devotion. Last year 743 mothers gave birth to their babies under the Red Cross care . . . most of them must other wise have gone unattended. In all, 3088 patients spent 30,896 days in the Outpost Hospitals. Operations were performed . . . fevers allayed . . . suffering mitigated . . . many lives saved to Canada. More of these Outposts are urgently needed, and will be established when you provide the funds. Canada needs the Red Cross. It brings to thousands the skilled help and kindly attention' no other agency supplies. y Contribute generously to the Canadian Red Cross Society National Appeal Empire Day to Dominion Day Send Contributions to: British Columbia Division, Canadian Red Cross Society 626 Pender Street West, Vancouver, B. C. at least be maintained for many years. C'OPPEK INTKKASKD Last year copper reached second nlace fln point of value of production having been nearly $700,000 greater than coul. Dllrinff th Q,T VMM .n w,W price for copper, the production of thl metal assumed first rank in mining In the province. Commenclni In 1919. a heavy .slump took place In both the quantity and value of the coDDer out put, but a steady Improvement has taken place in recent years, with the result that the output of 89339,768 pounds of copper In 1926 was the highest ever made in the Industry. Zinc production In the last three vears has also shown a large Increase mainly due to operations at the Sullivan mine, but oyier mines-jare also, 'contributing in part, A still larger production Is iuu.tu.iui uim y?ar as me zuic-rennery at Trail, bf the, Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company of Canada, Is being runner i enlarged to a capacity of 230 tons a day. '.'"' SII.VKII Ol'TITT (mows Silver production Is rapidly Increaslnz. the two largest contributors last year being the Sullivan and the Premier mines. The value of the year's produc tion was $8,875,606, compared with $5,- 7C8JB23. the value of the Ontario output. The decline In the price of silver mav have some effect In possibly retarding future production In the Blocon district, where In many of the mines silver Is the mot Important value in the ore. But approximately elehtv nercent nf t.hk silver production of tlie province cornea from mines In which. the silver value Is of less Importance than the other metals, such as gold, copper, lead, zinc, contained therein. While the decreased revenue from a lowered silver nrice la to be regreatted for these mines, no material lowering, of production In the tuiure may be anticipated as a conse quence Production of gold (Including placer gold) has averaged about $5,000,000 annually during the last three years. No great .Increase is expectod, but as much gold Is recovered as a 'by-product .of copper mining the outlook is favorable for an Increase from that source. There Is jlsolncreased development activity In certain gold-quartc camps. j Coal minim has not been In a dx- tlcularly, flourishing condition In re rasa cent years chleflyowlng to the compe-l tltion from fuel oil, but the outlook now , s believed to be better than for some ; :lme past. Last year there were pro-1 Sliced 2.330.036 long tons valued at $11. :50,180 compared with 2428.522 tons Of i value of $11,642,610 In 1925. LAND ACT. NOTICE OF INTENTION TO APPLY TO l-EASi; LAND lOll INIU MTItlAL Pl'lt POMES In Prince Rupert Land Recording District of Prince Rupert, and situate it Sewell Inlet, Moresby Island, Queen Charlotte Island.1. TAKE NOTICE that Kelley Logging Company Limited, of Vancouver, U.O., ccupation Timber Merchant. Intends o apply for a lease of the following described lands:- Commencing at a post planted approximately 8 chains south 20 decrees east jf the northeast corner of Lot 472, Scwcll Inlet, Moresby Island; thence follow. !ng the shore line In an easterly, southerly and southwesterly direction to Its Intersection with the eastern boundary of Lot 472; thence north 10 chains, more or less, to the point of commence- unui,, uu i-umuuuug d'j acres, more or JOSEPH DOUOLAS WILSON, Agent for Paled a . . ... . Kelley Logging Co. Ltd. 29th April. 1927. LAND ACT. NOTICE OF INTENTION TO APPLY TO LEASE LAND I'D It INIM'TIM.U. I'l IIIONKS In Pr1nA nnnrt f.avwl n n i District of Prince Rupert, and situate at Sewell Inlet. Moresby Island, Queen Charlotte Island. TAKE NOTTfTP tho v.tl. t , - " "tin ..AJKX1I1K Company Limited, of Vancouver, fie nnntni,tl.i Tl V. , i . . . ' wvi.u)j.iivu tiuiuri uaiTuiiania, intends to apply for a lease of the following described lands: ' Commencing at a post planted at the southeast corner of Lot 471, Sewell iiiiKh, muresujr isiana, tueen Charlotte Island, north, 31.43 chains; thence 'east 51.17 chain. t)hnr In a n.thn.KA ----- ... ujuLiincLrilt direction, folowlng the shore line to m jvuii. ui viNiiuixiitcmrni, and con talning 30 acres, more or less. wanril uuuuuia WILSON, Agent for Dated aOth Ap!.! LAND ACT NOTICE OF INTENTION TO APPLY TO Record nr niHrt nf ni ri""r a . , iino imperii. and . situate In vlelnltv nf r.t.tn. A ' ' v v'u,0 Pitt Island. B.C. TAKE. NOTICE that Qosse Packing Co. Ltd, of 325 Howe St, Vancouver. B.C., occupation Fish Packers, intends to apply for a lease of the -ouowing followlne described lands- Commencing at post planted about Y all? distant In a northerly direction from Lot 1253, Range 4; thence north 5 chains; thence east 20 chains; thence south to shore; thence west along shore to point of commencement, and containing 10 acres, more or less. OOSSE PACKING CO. LTD, , Per Chas. L. RorU,AAPKenttL ' K Dated April 7, 1927. ' DENTIST Dr. J. R. Gosse Helgerson Block X-RAY SERVICE Phone 686 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Evening Appointments Ran ad ian NAHM Qfce Largcfl Railway Syflem in America Steamship and Train Service HUI.INOH frn, PRINCE . UCPEllT for VANCOUVER. VICTOKl. HEATH " srla Tlllllluliaif a .,ik.aA t iu or anyox v:? "r.:.:r . . : wmsmy. For NTEWAUT ! i 1 : NAT,','l.,,tM Si'rfr s.. PRINCE JOIIV for VANCOUVEK via OL'EF.N auiaorib .-.-..., fnrtnljEhtlv. kiiiit. IIAILY EXCI PANHENUEK TKAINH LEAVE PIUNCE l I";,... tM()N-EPT KIJNOAV ut 11.30 a.m. for PUIM K M Ml., UIVMPI-ri nil tu.lnla I': tin: open IPEN MAV MAV 1 i TO to kepiw .'hl,.i, JASPER PARK LOnOE HER I'AVIIIt IN IV CANADA I'lVlhl'H M JI'lltf.EK JCHU.EK VE.I YEAR lT I immrv .it iuwiw MTKAMMIIM I.INEK. . .. Use Canaiiinii Nutloiml Express for Money Orders, lorelgn ii'i r.c. .iu lor jour next shipment. - h., M CITY TICKET OFFICE, '528 Tllllllt AVE, PRINCE RUPERT. Phn UNION STEAMSHIPS. LIMITED ' Por VANCOUVER, Vl, p.m. ...... . For VANCOUVER. VICTORIA, lluted ale. Alert lUy. f"r? l,'d' id pu tu"' For POUT uniPHON. ALICE ARM. .IN VOX. STEWART, Wnln tlllV. II nm p.m. a. . .7. Illi-svi Dnliii. s. al miittim. ThlirsdatT D.H1. a. iiC. .iikmiiii iirnria SOU if) Vll'IOriU noil prmtm . - - "tunge ilifrltfd tliroiigli to d e tliiutlon. m.0