PAGE FOUR The Daily News PRINCE RUPERT - BRITISH COLUMBU Published Erery Afternoon, except Sunday, by Prince Rupert Daily News, Limited, Third Avenue. H. F. I'UIAEN - - - Managing Editor. SUBSCRIPTION RATES . City Deliver, by mail or carrier, yearly period, paid in advance $5.00 For tester period, paid in advance, per raontto 50 By mail to ail parta of North eni and Centra British Columbia, paid in advance for yearly period $8.00 Or four montha for 11.00 By mail to all other parts ot brttish Columbia, the British Empire and United States, paid la advance per year .... $6.00 By mail to al! other countries, per year $7 50 Transient Display Advertising per inch, per insertion $1.40 Transient Advertising- on Front Page, per inch $2.80 Loral Readers, per insertion, par line -25 Classified Advertising, per insertion, per word .2 Legal Notices, each insertion per agate line 15 Contract Rates on Application Advertising and Circulation Telephone 93 Editor and Reporters Telephone - - 86 DAILY EDITION Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations Saturday, Sept. 29. 1928 STARTLING STATEMENT The statement of Premier Baldwin in which he issues a direct challenge to Socialism, making it the chief issue in the coming campaign is a most startling one in that it recognizes ttie hold which Socialism has on a great number of the British people and is an admission of the strength of the movement. It is one of the customs of British forms of government for what is the opposition today to become the government tomorrow. It opposition today is socialistic, the government will be socialistic tomorrow. However, it is recognized that the present labor leader, Ramsay Macdonald, is a fairly safe and sane person, and as long as the opposition is constituted of such men as he, the country is safe. Perhaps Premier Baldwin is tilting at a windmill PESSIMISTS PUT TO ROUT The pessimists have been put to rout. They prophesied that the P.G.E. railway would have to be abandoned and the steel taken up. It is possible that part of the route is not of the beet but the greater portion of the route will undoubtedly be utilized and probably the whole of it Capital is now bidding for the line and someone will purchase it Premier Tolmie says it is increasing in value every day and he ought to know. INTERVIEWS WITH CRIMINALS The Attorney General has issued instructions that no further interviews are to be given by young North-cott, alleged boy murderer. That is very good policy. We get too much death bed publicity for murderers and sensational interviews with criminals or those allegedly criminal. If Northcott is innocent, nothing is to be gained from giving interviews to the press. Mr. Pooley was wise in closing the mouth of this spectacular youth whose record is said to be beneath contempt. GREATEST SPORT EVENT The annua! baseball world series is one of the greatest sport events of the world and probably the greatest and most spectacular of all on this continent It commences next week and attracts general attention on this side the Atlantic. Prince Rupert people have been following the Big League results and this paper has received many compliments on the good service given in this regard. Next week we hope to give the reports on the days on which the games are played. The series opens Thursday. News of the Mines AROUND PRINCE RUPERT Silver Dollar Group Discovery Believed Import an I OuIIrikI Silver liar Developing on Large ScaleSilver Tip Looks Encouraging Samples from a new discovery on the Silver Dollar group on the upper Bear River were brought into Stewart recently and Indicate that the new find is apt to prove one of considerable importance. No work ha yet been attempted but some open cutting will be done this fall as well as prospecting with a view to ascertaining the extent of the mineralization. The find was made in an almost inaccessible place but the vein appears to be thirty feet wide with bunches of galena and grey copper occurring throughout thi. width. The property consists of ciKht claims and lies east of the Red Top and north of the George Enterprise, both of which are being developed. Th.' Silver Dollar group in owned by William Fors- . , man. William Dnnn, Thomas' Tfiofotfgh examination Powers and J. H. Wilon. fc.W around, Mr. Jackson intends K outh and endeavor to in- . . ' tr Oakland,. San Frandsco ,, or T T Joe Jackson, well known Texas ,.03 AnKe, ,u . treek discoverer has taken an n,, owr and deveIopinir the ' tion of the White Bear group of While more than 2,000 feet of underground work has been done on the veins, the property has reached the point where ore extraction may commence at any time provided transportation facilities are provided. A new road has been built up Texas Creek by the United Slates government which can be connected with by means of a road through Texas Pass and up the Salmon Glacier. Two new veins have been found on the property within the past two weeks and the machine drills are already in on one of them for a distance of thirty feet, following a four-foot vein that carries 25 Inches of 42 ore. On the good vein, which is arsenical iron similar to the Nickle Plate at Hedley, the tunnel encountered a cross-dyke after being driven 30 feet. The formations here are simple, the surface showing that the vein continues on the opposite side of this dyke. The veiu is thirty feet wide and assays $28 in gold and four ounces silver amenable to treatment by the cyanide process. This is the only vein of this character known to exist 1n Stewart camp. Eight veins have been opened up to a certain degree on the property, five of. which carry commercial ore. and an enormous tonnage that will run $100 per ton and better in value is already in sight Out- land-Silver Bar, within the next two years, should become a large scale producer. No. 1 tunnel on the Marmot River Gold Mines is now is ISO feet and is expected to cut No. 1 vein at 350 feet No. 2 and No, 3 tunnels are also being driven and good progress is being made. Two shifts are being worked on both No. 1 and No. S to posh them as rapidly as possible and supplies are being moved up to the property to assure continuous Developments this summer on the Silver Tip property in the upper Salmon River basin have been very encouraging, the man-: aging director, George E. Winkler, re porta. The tunnel on the May P. J. vein is now in MO teat and some nice ore is begin ning to appear in the face, the expectation being that the east shoot will be encountered within the next twenty feet On the Bella Coola butte, where dry ore was opened up last season, sur face trenching this season has proved the persistence of qsarti- porphry mineralization. As sur face outcrops have been difficult to obtain owing to glacial drift, a tunnel has been started at the base of the butte to cross-cut the north and south zone in a length of 400 feet and a vertical depth of 200 feet. The Abbey and Butte zones have also been receiving attention, an open-cot across the Butte showing heavily oxidised material for a width of between 11 and V2 feet with a sprinkling of lead, sine and iron sulphides Near the hanging wall of this zone a narrow streak of galena and zinc-blende occurs, an asai of which showed only a trace of gold but 685 ounces in silver. I J Man in the Moon I I It is about time some civic issue was raised. I know of none hut it may develop at any time. Here's health then to Prince Rupert The hub of the north country. Look may she keep on Qourisb- As busy as can ba. Jake says health tt about the only thins we have in this town. Come on you baaebaJ! sharks. let s see the color of your money. Who are you betting oaf Will you bet your money on the Yankees Or place your mazumaa oh the Care. For the games are on next week That will bring the u.h we seek If ynu place a dollar on the old dk'-h-Hs of 3 Bi ni ter r Creek ? about Thfc0ul,nSiv.rB.rpropertv TV A II one milejl. being developed into a mining fl en Years AgO ! from the Bear River road " wagon proposition of considerable mair- RPrt I and owned liv f Vaah V .Tnnlm ,.;.. j tl: 7...... : "u" summer oper.t- . , , j j fcli Uatland, Joe McDonald and t,(,ns, it is said, have nt le-tt Ernest Peterson. As soon as he doubled the value ot the pnp(!'ty. 1 K Septfm.her 1 9 M. A nifi'tiiiK wa- In Id last niKht TIIE DAILY NEWS A FTER all, there's no place like British Columbia, Which to work and live and piayl Here, there $. r ff long "off seasons" to cut down a man's worki -tfoie. Our temperate climate keeps a man fit . .enabi mm to produce more . . . earn more. IP producers' average weekly wnfie in h-Cohrmbia Is S28.3C . . . 49 hlfiher than thenar of Ca.inda. In 126 seven teen imlustrtoa IncfVascd weekly watf.es by $12.95! Actually in ttn fears our annual payroll has grown from ff miHirm dollars to 175 mBlion dollars . . . the greatest advance by tar of any Province during that pcrJod. This, of courts, oWs not Include s cultural workers, profession k, clerks and irn. British Columbia's ftros payroll m mtturtatcd at 219 million dollars! life Ismore enjoyable ... we have more time to :oJoy the year-round pleasure and recrea-ti' "s ar our doors, while our general standard of Iftteg la ery much higher. Ttiaeton dttrlng the last four years has bet reduced by two and a half mill ion dollars . . . c :eteta nrof of our province's sound tuAOfiaj condition. British to ortnnixe for the Victory Loan eamnairn ia this district which opens on October 7$. The principal speaksr MeDiarmid of VajMnuver. Mavor MeClyrnont was ajKfnasd ilsiapii of the cxecatw committee. The eb- ctive for the disirmt is $80a- 000. "',.r -p - ' .--rig nn important par in'tlte antifacture of munitioj.H In thf Old Country. LINDSAY'S Cartage and Storage Phone 48 P. rl. nM IL ....(. .-j liiatrrhutfnft Team or Motor Serviee. Coal Sand and Gravel, ffe peeinHte in Piane and Fnrnltum Msrfnz. OnarrncHoti- ttisft ah i want faith mm hmvm la nur nnwiaiM Irrge part In the wage situation. B'ith Columbia's contrucrif Ann tin fan Hi . In it t 2,lWf.tM ...ftar It months in 1927 Mnitytt nmimctmmt md esaVrimW ym pnmmtU PW rWs eaf serf tntrf Am ffhnuU If yea .StHrt m npui linn mmtentMi i nott r tktt mwtpptr will lni Hem. Jjmtiit year Pmmttt a LOCAL MAN IS BADLY SHOCKED C eerie Ostorw .A lay Not Recover From AccMtit al Pel rr bora Today PKTKRBORo. Ont.. Snt. 20. ;Georjr! OsLorne, aRed 23, Prince ; Rupert electrical engineerinif stu- e'ent at the Canadian Genera! ; Electric Co.'s plant here, was se- iverely shocked while worklnr In the plant today. Men are still working on the young man bjt , little hope in held out nn method of resc imitation have n far pro ciuced i.ot a a park of life. K.-:rl'n dauKhters take it'-huI p.; it wms in the factories whi;-it h"i m.'iidK become skilled arti-z.;r . other womsa raa cranes! and mm hincry. i asrls1saaa nf i 1 IS T.' I admit i " ;i This actWty has an tmraedmtr ettrr current conditions. Cash funoV aro'sfiati. for materials, etnploynient is good . . fairly steady . . . mon In circufarM. It Increases the capital Inretm4u (n Province. And there can be no siinfpmfK : of future oroflreas than whaji nstj.iu machinery mcreaaae .. . a !n eT mark eta ... el On thoif Birth ri ptdduct art winnblg ateoa In the mark the world. t MSIAS PROGRESS SIMONDS SAV H Cross-cut, Crescent Ground, will saw 10CT- n1 HB timber, time and labor being equal, than :"' ; H made.This guarantee has never been challen SIMONDS CANADA SAW CO.. LIMITED, t. mim rrnttr aho mmm . MOMTMSAfc. Swt- VANCOUViR. B C roRON TO. CNT . -IT. IOMN N ' rTlalsalsalRBalafnaSa 1 City Meat Mark-: (SELVIG 1IKO&) Jrd Avenue 'hmi-31KAT. FISH, VEGBTABfS and ALL KINDS OF NORWKCIAK PBOl)t!'i: ' at low prices, and Immertiate l)lvsry Oliserve! All articles are of superior quality sad fresh.