PAGE TWC The Daily News PRINCE RUPEKT - BRITISH COLUMBIA. Published Every Afternoon, except Sunday, by Prince HuikmI Daily News, Limited, Third Avenue. H. F. PULLEN - Managing Editor. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation DAILY EDITION. m Saturday, June 18,". 15)27 PROGRESS IX INTERIOR H.C. CATHOLIC .MISSIONARY HACK TO R.V. TO COM- ; PI.ETE lMK ! "-: WINNIPEG, June 18. (Canadian Press). Rev. Father A. q. "Morlce. I O. M. I., missionary, anthropologist, i author.' explorer and musician. la return-1 Yptrr1. 8 10 u worlc among Britlsn Columbia ., i . 2 - -'--- i v v uuic -v iCIl ui WiC alii ll1 Jig UC ClUpJUCllb ill flminnsa W!naio Hiattiit Hint 'nnd n t 4 .... SV SV 1 1 1 A A. 1 1 L I 1 1 1 a a o o i n a wii.... u.awm ouu luuaj we icu ui me improvea conauion 01 js ,ears ago because of HI health. the farmers due to improved market conditions. This is narticularh- good for the Bulkley Valley people and is bound to reflect to the be taught to write have been sending j ''Umber or Harper' Bazaar that M. Paul behefit'of those living on the coast. ' him letters, urging him to return. One PclreV the famous Parla dressmaker. We are always glad to hear of the success of the fanners and reads: '"" shadows are falling ow 'Wnki that the women of the next gen- business men of the interior. We like to see their nockets hulaW aad V" ve to fall asleep wui wear trou,ers-m pumic- with money and we are glad to hear of them driving around in fine pretty "oon: " before th,t ' wUh t0 cars. It is a sign of the development of the north arid refutes the plj Tes . m of vea doleful wail of those who sometimes tell us that everfone I. leaving ,"1 iiiciiiiciiui tuu iitMiiK 10 some more iavorea jana.; If a woman Is not a worker, she isnot much of a woman. SOCIAL SEASON AT OTTAWA OPENS WITH BRILLIANT DISPLAY (innlrn Party at Itlilrau Hall lilvrn bv l-ady Wlltingrion Attended by Three Tlmuanil OTTAWA. June It. The first social event of the summer season was a brilliant one a garden party given at ftkieau Hall and attended by 3.00C guests. Her Excellency wore a smart gown designed on severe lines and fashioned of pearl gray crepe satin. She wore pearls and diamond orna ments and her hat was a large model of anire blue. Most of the ladles curtseyed, the grace of the gesture depending on thlr knowledge cf courts or their practice cf the gesture before a mirror. The interest that Her Excellency takes In the arrangements for entertaining atl RMeau. Hall was evidenced In the securing of the "Troupe de Bytown," who gave a delightful and melodious concert of old French- Canadian Folk tongs. The sport costume, the popular dress tt the present day gave way to lovely dressy gowns. and ;arge drooping hats and vivid parasols, that are so typical of former summer social events. Tht shades rivalled those of the tulips In the garden, the soft pinks and blues and orchid tones being chosen bv many of the fair sex. All white cos-tumes were noticed here and there but the most striking ensembles were those touched with vivid crimsons and the rmnrt black and white of the present mode. IIOTKI. Alllll V.M.H Prlm-e It n pert F. WUlan and D. Greenwood, Vancouver: C. A. Procunler. Sunnyslde: A. n. Futmore. Winnipeg; J. A. Oodard, Edmonton; Mr. and Mrs. P. M. Monck- isin TarMa t s?u Tn - Binns, Balmoral; O. Ltllevlk Bcott. Port Edward: J. F. Malon. Wales Island; Mr. and Mrs. Oeorge Eckcrman, city: 8. Ellertsen, schooner Grant, I Savoy R. Morrison, J. Mclaughlin and Mr. and Mrs. Thistle'1, 'Btnitriersrsji Martin Clausen, Balmoral; Paul A??! and W. Balllle, Sidney, B.C.; .Mrs. McMaJel-ing and' Dr. Joseply Maguire. Uty: D. W, Ashwood, Port Edward. Central J. E, Byers, Vancouver; 3. W. Douglas; Prince Oeorge: W. 11, MacLeod, Union stesmer Cardena, Capt. A. Johnstone, after spending the whole day in the Skoena River, arrived In' port at :35 last night from the south.i The THE DAILY NEW3 Saturday, june l8 FATHER MORICE TROUSERS FOR IS RETURNING WOMEN NOT TO r.vMots CO.MIN.G BE TOLERATED; WHITEIC SHOWS HUT VEX avoi:i: HIEM 1NS1EAI ' intEKcw: ami xilories PRESENT FASHION FIRST in LEGS MADE FOR DISPLAY (T.B.R. In Manitoba Freee Press) We are told In an article In the May a matter of course. And before we have time even to gasp at -this Idea, we are told further that M. Maurice de Waleffe hopes that the men of this (for a time to make sure of a few of the ! generation will oon put off their trous- fine points of his combined dictionary ; trs nd uke to knee breeches and long and grammar for the use cf Indians. I ,,lk stockings: a perfectly horrifying When printed it will have 800 pages. Some years ago he prepared an English- BUY FROM OUR OWN PEOPLE Indian dlstionary which required 13 The News was surprised to hear from a local man that while ly"re cw00': T ??r0J'1 heas able to do business and a lot of it with the businessmen' at Duck BC" w of the interior he could not sell to the people of Prince Rupert. That! when the priest had charge of 14 surely is a reflection on the Jocal dealers and one that is worthy jmiwion stations la British Columbia, he of further consideration. When a firm is located here it deserves explored and mapped large aecitons of. the patronage of the people who live in the place. the province, discovering 13 lakes, the Of course a merchant may buy his goodi wherever he likes and Urst of wn'cn ' long. it is none of our business, at the same time Prince Rupert people r'4ps re used by wUwa's nd th &0T' generally would like to know that the goods they purchase - are jermnnt W Br,tl4!l Columbia. handled exclusively by local firms rather than; through outside!,. ,h" f ?f T . . . . , , .. , , ., 6 ; :f , HUhcd t7 volumes, including the His- agencies. In union is strength and if we stick together, we shall be ;tory ef the ltlMe church m western more likely to succeed than if favor we thefooutside firms in pre- Canada, crowned by the French Academy. xerence 10 our own. If a man is not a worker he is just a common ordinary bum, no matter how much money he has or how fine clothes he may wear. POWER CONSUMPTION INCREASING suggestion. Messieurs Poiret and de Waleffe are, of course. Frenchmen. The French are supposed to have cold clear minds, which always Insist on the logic of the situation, yet we never saw two statements in which the logical essential, the prime element in the calculation, ha been so blindly and fatuously missed. Poiret and M. de Waleffctalk as though His " were trousers, or orrrencs, iaat con stituted the heart of the problem; whereas trousers, and breeches, are merely the variable tissue, which undergo modification and variation at the Impulse of powerful organic factors. It is not trousers that are the problem at all; It Is and History of the Northern Interior of i Ana miess mis is wen graspea. British Columbia. In addition, he has j u thinking cn the subject is condemned himself printed five books and many'ln sdvanoe to be foggy or nonsensical, pamphlets In his own original language. jth ROrt c thinking to which we are which Is still written and spoken by lDS treated by M. Paul Poiret and M. hnnrirrrtx f RrttUh cviii.rM TtT'n , Maurice de waiene, It was among the Stuart Lake Indians, where he spent 19 years, that The power and light consumption in the city is increasing and P,tx.r hm . ' LOOK AT THEM this is a sign that there is something doing here and that the-place ; the ted men by inventing some kind oft Trousers came into general use is going ahead. Superintendent Little sees that in a few years fur-, hieroglyphic language which could be 'among men m the early yean of the ther developments of plant will be needed and we must look for-! understood by many difierent tribes who i nineteenth century; not any earlier ward to it. If we can get some big concern to undertake it. we honei11011 t0 wht" u termed the Dene 'than that. They were seriously Intro Prince Rupert people will give them encouragement but if not, we Hmuy B0" ana nP wer shall have to do it ourselves, PUDllsb, in th MW ton m just as we have done it in the past The city must make progress and power is one of the necessities if .f!" prtnMn presSl optme1 by we are to become a real city. life.. Every person has a future, even if it is not in this WHEAT POOL TO CARRY ON There never was much doubt but that the wheat pool would jbe, able to carry on. The farmers have benefitted to so great an extent from operations that it was unconceivable that it should have to go out.of business? Now we hear tliat the "farmers are sign ing up theirtenewal contracts and that another lease of life Jor five .years at least has been secured. It is good news for Prince Rupert because it indicates that the pool will be interested in continuing rnnce riupen as an ouuei ior meir grain, bo far nothing but pool grain has come this way so the stronger the pool is the better for this city. Don't explain, except to those who sympathize with you. All the other kind want is mud that they can throw. him. When a man finds an easy job, that's the last of ' Let's set up a soviet and get savage with the rest of the world. Poets are said to be crazy, but so are a great many other people who create beauty and refuse to be carried away by the money craze of the day. It's a great big beautiful wonderful world if you only, get the right perspective and do not fasten your gaze on the trivial and ugly. ' - Many a man has the zeal ironed out of his mind and his soul sterilized by the rebuffs of his friends and the things his wife gives him to eat. Fasting may be all right for some people, but the taking of food should be a stimulant, awakening to activity many of the functions of the body which otherwise He dormant. A great many villagers live in great cities and in some of the villages are men who tower high above their fellows but their neighbors are not big enough to recognize their abilities. Summer Excursion FARES ' Tickets on Sale from May 22nd Return limit, Oct. 31, 1927 EASTERN CANADA - UNITED STATES EDMONTON-CALGARY JASPER NATIONAL PARK Full information from CITY TICKET OFFICE 528 3rd Avenue Phone 2C0 Panadian National- UX CANADA IN CANADA'S DIAMOND JUBlUa YEAS IM IttT duced to society by the Duke of Wellington, and they Immediately raised a storm of protest. In the Interests of tredle. decency, from the English clergy, and. In Born In Prance In 1859, Father j the Interests of the British constitution. Morlce came to Canada In 1880 end wllrbm the English universities. Welling- Immediately assigned to 'missionary work ton himself, on turning up at Almaek's in the coast province. Man; Indian i one night dressed In trousers, was re- boys passed through his hands and he fused admittance by an affronted and taught them everything from catechism 1 blushing door-keeper, and had to go to music. He was expert on all' wind i home and change Into breeches. The instruments and knew enough about : whole conservative element In England strihged ones to teach his pupils to play. , was aroused on the question, yet It was the great Duke himself, the most crusted Tory ot -his age, who began the revolution against breeches. We must now note this. During all the years and centuries that men were exposing their legs In hose and doublets and breeches and abbreviated nether garments, women were concealing their legs under voluminous robes and skirts and petticoats and crinoline and trains. While men as in Renaissance Italy were showing their legs t. the hips, women were hiding even tht tips of their toes. While men as lc Puritan England were showing theli legs from the knee, women scarcely show ed their ankles. And so It continued this curious and ridiculous arrange ment, until the arrival of trousers, whe: things at last began to right themselves ; i:Kitu. oim'omtion Despite the opposition of the clergy the universities, and the flunkeys ol high society, trousers swept in and covered the legs of masculine England like a tidal wave. Men everywhere plunged precipitately into trousers with shout? of gratification and thankfulness. A I last! After aeons and centuries of not In the least knowing what to do with the confounded things, men had a? length found a decent place' of concealment for their unfortunate legs. It was the male- leg that seized upon trousers nd made them permanent and Its own. The male leg was made for the trouser because the male leg was meant, aesthetically, to be invisible.. Tnu u the point M. de Faleffe had so entirely failed to appreciate. This Is the fact that guarantees immortality to trousers for men. let us now deal with Paul Poiret. The revolt against the full length skirt, the bustle, and the train, gained lt strength and won Its victories only, as It were, yesterday. The female ankle had for long been a sufficiently conspicuous detail in community life, and did not arouse more than a general Large. Red Pimples Covered Her Face Miss liable Moor. niilielm. fW writes! "A vn.t U.ML 7 ... ihutt. Brantford. Ont, A. risk. Prince, ZZ flLZJt ,"h" ?? "7 B- WVM fcS AJUgtSl UOUiilC, W. F.I I tried several remedies, but alt failed, and nd H. At last a friend advised me to take Ja I took three bottles. I will never regret the day I did this as my face U entirely bleared ap. Mjr mother has taken B.B.B. for headache, and she hasn't had the least jign of a headache for a longtime." TM ..1...V1. . . . vessel later Droceeded to the N.u .vJ u?ul. remedy nas rn on eellng of chaste approval; but sud-enly. almost without preparation, the emale calf appeared In myriads in ll our public places, and Its success as Instantaneous and triumphant fere was the beginning of the real hlng at last: here was the first revela-.Ion of human legs that did not rend he architectural harmonies of the sidewalks: a vast deep sigh of satisfaction everberated throughout clvtllnd so-1 :ety. STIttTTl lttl. St'C'CF..SS What came next? Skirts to Just be-jw the knee came next, and It was een with enthusiasm that the earlier romlse had been abundantly fulfilled, rhe female leg was one of nature's chief tructural successes; and the Inference as freely drawn from the available evidence and It waa copious that at you proceeded It got better and better. That Is now being borne out by fur .her additions to the evidence. Skirts to Just below the knee are now giving place to aklrta which come tu just above the knee. And this J all we need to refute contemptuously Paul ?olret'a Inane theory that women will :ver take to trousers In public. What has been demonstrated In the shortening of the skirt Is that the female leg. Kke the tall of the peacock, like the rose, like the song of the lark, was designed by nature for display, and that this Is the fact that will determine the future habiliments which the female leg will accept. It will never go under cover again; Its emergence. Indeed, may be aald to have Just commenced. Trousers for women! Bah I , Advertise In the Dally News. LAND ACT. NOTICE OK INTENTION TO AIM'I.Y TO LEASE UMI nilt INIIl STUIAL Pfltl'OSES In Prince Rupert Land Recording District of Prince Rupert, and altuate at Sewtll Inlet, Morenby Island, Queen Charlotte Islands. TAKE NOTICE that Rellev Lncvlntr Company Limited, of Vancouver, 5.O.. occupation Timber Merchants, Intends to apply for a lease of the following UCflVllWCU IBllUal Commencing at a post planted approx imately 8 chains south 20 decrees east of the northeast corner of Lot 472, Seweli timet. Moresby Island; thence follow- i Ing the shore llnejn an easterly, south erly and southwesterly direction to its Intersection with the eastern boundary of Lot 472; thence north 10 chains, more or less, to the point of commencement, and containing 20 acres, more or leas. JOSEPH DOUGLAS WILSON. Agent for Kelley Loggln3 Co. Ltd. 4 Dated 29th April, 1W27. elightful Victrola Victor Talking Machine Company of Canada, Limited , Montreal "Granada $200 or ith 'Elrrtrk Drt "It gives a new and delightful definition to the bass, so desirable for dancing" says Paul Whiteman King of jazz music. Truck ol having the world's greatest dance organizations at your beck and call! Orchestras that would cost a small fortune to engage for a single evening! Through the new Onhophonic Victrola and the amazing new V. E. Process Victors Records you can bring these self-same Victor orchestras right into your home, exactly as you would hear them at the smart supper clubs and hotels! Listen to that crooning saxophone carrying the melody . . the plinkety-ptank of the banjos underneath beating a rhythmic accompaniment. Now the clarinet with its toe-teasing cadences. Now the guttural "bong" of the bass sax or the mellow "ooinp" TV1 uunopn of the big brass tuba. Who can resist dance music like this ? Not only il.mct music but all kinds of music are yours whenever you wish through the Onhophonic Victiola. Given with a clearness and fidelity to the original that is simply unbelievable. "Matched Impedance" ihentw scientific Victor controlled principle of "smooth sound flow" is responsible for the matchless tone of the marvelous instruments. Volume juit right for the home. There arc five beautiful instruments of exquisite design from all these you may select at "His .Master' Voice" dealers. They are obtainable on convenient terms front S775 down to $115. Etiuipped with electric motor to eliminate winding, if you wish, at slight additional cost. Demonstrations are given daily. onic Trad Mark R d Made only by Victor Look, for this Trdoairk Backward : Season SALE Sl'KCIALS FOlt MONDAY ONLY KIDDIES' Play Suits Well made and Btronjrly sewn, In denim, khaki drill and chambray, and in nil colors. Itejrular $1.G0 value for 95c CIIILimttN'S SWKATEHS The famous St. Margaret's llrand, all pure wool, In navy and brown only; pullover style. Just the thlnj? for the summer play days. Regular $:J.50 values, for Acme Importers Third Avenue IcANADIANl VAciric P.O. Hon m" Canadian Pacific Railway B. C. Coast Servicea Sailings from Prince Rupert To Kflrhlkan, Wrnntrll. Junenu. nntl SkiiRway-l'ine J. I4 Tn Vum outer, VIHnrl.i mill Scuttle June II, IS. 22, Vi. PKINTKHH HKATltlfE. Ynt lltilrdiile. East llella IK-llu. O-ean IHIK NumB. Alert lay. t'umpl.rll itiver, and Vancnmer every Saturday, H " Ageney for all Nteninshlp l.li.r. Full ItifornialKin from W, C. OltCIUKIl. Oenrral Agent, Corner of 4lli Htrrrt and Srd Avenue, Prince ttupfrl, m-