PAGE TWO The Daily News PKINCE RUPERT BRITISH COLUMBIA Published Every Afternoon, Except Sunday, by Prince Ruperi Daily News, Limited, Third Avenue H. -T F. PULLEN - 1 ' Managing-Editor SUBSCRIPTION IfATES . City delivery, by malt or carrier, yearly; period, aid in advance SS.O'i For lesser period, paid in advance; p?r month ... .50 Or four months for .....L. 1.00 By maii to ail parts of Northern and Central IMt.'sr Ccluribfi. paid in advance for yearly period ...... , 3.00 Transient display advertising, per Inch, per Insertion 1.40 Transient advertising qn font page, per inch 2.80 Local readers, per Insertion, per line . .25 Classified advertising, per insertion, per word ! 02 Legal notices, each Insertion, per agate line .15 By mail o all other countries, per year 760 Bj mall to all other parts of. British Columbia, the British Empire and United States, paid In advance, per year 6.00 Contract rates on application. Advertising and Circulation Telephone 98 Editor and Reporters' Telephone 86 Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations DAILY EDITION Tuesday, August 13, 1929 ,1 MODEL FOR PUBLIC SPEAKERS : ; Doubtless the large audience that last night listened to Hon. R. B. Bennett, leader of the opposition in the Canadian House of Commons, were much impressed wiEh him as a public speaker. He laid his case clearly and forcibly before the people in a manner which could not be mistaken and he omitted everything which did not have a direct bearing on the subject matter in hand. He had a message and he told it without trying to discuss any other issue. Therein is Mr. Bennett a model for public speakers and especially for po'itical speakers who are in the habit of rambling all over creation and dealing with every possible subject that may be thought to have a bearing on the political fortunes of their party. If these speakers learned to keep to their subject as did Mr. Bennett, people would be more inclined to go out and hear w,hat they had to say. Anyone who listened to the address last night was bound to be impressed with the causebfiqaw?. of .the ability of the advocate. . : l, .; !?it' ) ' Conversation crystaljzes knowledge. ' EXCHANGE COAL FOR WHEAT (r ine sugpcstion has been madeitf'IidnUon that Canada mirht t be willing to exchange her wheat for British coal, and that the minister of unemplbymihVthdre might discuss the proposal on his arrival in Canada. Proposals of this kind are hardly reasonable. There Is D'enty of market for Canadian wheat. Coal is different. While there is a shortage of Canadian coal in Ontario, the British coal would be used there if it could be sold at a price to compete with the American product. To try to make a direct exchange without considering the monetary value of each commodity would ho Why powder a lobster. It's ruddy enough already . ' r .... Now will you holler about one-arm driving? Suppose we had not been holding hands I" Tho Humorist, London. Looking for a house? There arc some listed in TIk Daily News classified columns. HON. R. B. BENNETT URGES policy which would give as much T 1 prn HATTI V MORE PROTECTION FOR IN.' work as possible and keep the peo- J , fJ ILL xiuMKius ij UAIvAIJA TU A pie nere, vnatv tanaaa couiu noi( LARGE AUDIENCE. make itself, he urged should be ' bought within the Empire. (Continued From Page 1) such unfair competition. decent opportunities which we of the Dominion were determined not to put up longer with such eral policy of keeping hands off the ta iff, so as not to provoke the United States. Could it be pos We would be much more inclined to urge that some of i 8b,.e that CaPada. was fallinK t0 the British Columbia coal properties be opened up and,5ew0?tSt."3 tne product taken bv water routp tn Ontn minCt : T . VI l,lc ouppose, ne sug- ...ttiiL, Muuiaua iinu i mantei. ai any rate, tne Uritish suggestion does not look feasible just now. gested, "that we try legislating for was here. All he asked was that the people study these questions which he had presented. Democracy was but a mockery unless the voters knew what they were doing when they went to the polls, unless they had a knowledge and understanding of the affairs of the nation. By studying these ques-tions-which ; profoundly affected the life of the country came the opportunity for development of TI?R DAILY NEWS Tuesday, August is, 1929 General McRae dealt with fish-! eries matters' and declared that the Conservative party was abso- upon another-.cpuntry fpr its ne- Jutely opposed to fish traps. The cessities. .Instead pf being .self- party also favored making the inv reliant. as, it,sl)ould be. And it was dustry an exclusively white one. all because Ihe present govern- General McRae charged ineffec- ment had been reducing the tiveness in conservation work for tariff. It was a Liberal boast that the industry and stated thai, ,if Caada had been the only country the Conservatives got in power, in the world to reduce its tariff they would have a minister of since the war. Was 'it possible fisheries who knew something that the policy of this small min- about the business. General Mc- orlly could be right and that tho Rae alsq expressed favor for na- rest of the world was, wrong? tional assistance in highway Mr. Bennett scoffed at tho building and- enco trade treaties that had been technical education brought into effect by the Liberal the Mackenzie King government, PLANS SERVICE BY AIRPLANES vice. ACROSS OCEAN;! If we were given power today "! The fra mtle Cfafl , which declared Mr. Bennett, "we would he flew from Calais, France, . to 1IC lien , l uiil vuiaio, . t. v , . , ... , . , . - not this and tha for play way England) July 25 19W is votes, but would take means to ac complish ends that have in mind defending this country against a far cry from the monstrous plane Blejiot has designed. This Mvnft nnur ftfellf nn fn nol- will such unfair competition by using!"""' " '' " drawbacks i. i. iL in - have wings so thick passengers tariffs, or the' like. We would just as soon as we had own country with the x vo v ui nit ; world worlrt. . We We would would not not necessarily necessarily; be seated within them. a majority in parliament vote for ' . . . . . . . ; . ...... is under construction a plane he anil pass laws thai would give Ca f il ! believes will be the forerunner of mIi maMn rr frri Inr t tia across the ocean. It is a mono will have a cruising range of 3,000 miles and will be equipped with the latest direction finding lia.c IIUI fcUl I..J il JI I He could tell f-om his tours of ' " "..:u"Vu, "'J'-;-Canada, said Mr. Bennett, that.L w,lf Pjf,n? ' ,s P,anr;"d 1 to make long flights over Africa with an increase of the United RtntM tariff mnPHHino- thn(.on1,.land and then an ocean hop to obtain data for use In con structing the trans Atlantic VrnmUn. nnrf fn,nnrt,ln0- . thV WW bt Bleriot nOW plans to had received from the Uberalj"" J""" V"'K" f J government. covernment. He He decried decried the the Lib Llb.,,osS the Atlantic by way of the Azores. RUBBER FARMS IN CALIFORNIA Canada and let the United Slates - legislate for itself." He charged fiuayule is Mexican Shrub From that Premier Mackenzie King had Which Valuable Product no loreslght, no vision and no j Obtained care for the morrow. His policy was to deal with (rouble when it came. It was just such a policy that brought about bankruptcy in SALINAS, Cal., Aug. 13 1 Sue-cessful manufacture of automo- business. Such policies had re-'M'e tires from Guayule, a rub-' suited in the downfall of Babylon,! ber-producing plant, has led to an I II...H.I.UI. T.J a I nhn. .nil ni-.M r. a n f 4n Tnvltin' A04IIII, AllCaUpULUlIlta, ,gyJl, L.OtU HVIGajB VI WfcrtUttll ; Rome, Greece, Carthage, Spain and i shrub in 18 counties jf Californit! (Holland. All had fallen because I and Arizona. More than 4000 they lacked foresight. Hawaii acres are planted to Guayula In had finally asked to be made aMnterpy county, Cal., alone, part of the United States after the! The development of this new United States had excluded its 'Industry has progressed to the sugar with the tariff. point where 1,600 pqunds of rub- Study of AffalrK Per 9 obtained from a single Speaking for himself, Mr. Ben- acre at one harvesting. Since it nctt said that he had done well In! re1uires four yeara for the P,ants Canada, far better than his merits t mature, this is an average of had warranted. He owed a debt'400 ,poUnd8 f rubber per nC" to Canada and that was whv he!Jrcar,y Use of the Guayule plant, pro nounced "Y-U'Lee,", for extracting rubber is not new. It has been practiced ln Mexico fpr more than 20 years, and from one to two per cent of all rubber used in automobile tires has been Guayule. Hpweyer, the Call-fprnia and Arizona undertakings are the first successful attempts to grow the pjanU commercially. The Mexican rubber product i.i Canada intd a place of homes and' obtained, from native plants that happy people. I grow wild. .... J. C. Brady, M.P., the first speaker, paid tribute to the leader-ship of Hon. R. B. Bennelt, a statesman such as Canada needed today. He referred to pther distinguished members of the party. Sir George Perley congratulated Prince Rupert on this fine gather, ing, which showed Prince Rup ert's healthy interest In public af fairs. NEEDED IMPROVEMENT Neighbor Why are you painting one side of your car red and the other green? Speed Manlac-rlt' fine Idea. You should hear he witnesses contrmlirt Inc nnn nn ntner Pas- He urged for Canada aj8ing Show. J 1 FOR MILK NOW New Invention Said to Be Most Sanitary in World, hnd .. " Milk Will Keep .-- i LONDON, Aug. 13: It has taken seven years ,o' research, and has cost over" 120,000 p&unds to produce the perfect milk bottle. But it has been done. Already the new bottle is being used by one big London dairy. Milk delivery has long been the . , greatest problem of the conseien-urngement of tious dairyman . When Jt com The sins of ' , ., , ujr unu nee uuiu uic grjiua ui government. The effect of these, he charged, had been more of om- infection as rigid inspection, per-he declared, was that Canada mission that commission. ; fect 'eanlinesa and hygienic lowered its tariff to these nations, Before the opening and after management can make it. It is In while they wen) ahead raising the close of the meetingthere its subsequent transfer from tholrs, giving Canada; of course, were orchestral selections. Prom- milking shed to kitchen that It the minimum of these raised fnent Conservatives acted as so often becomes contaminated, tariffs. Nor had these treaties iwWs ntul ntWwl. assisted in: with results that are seen In t had the effect of increasing Can-' handling the crowd, ada's exports, which, indeed, had fallen off since the agreements, had been signed. Exporting Capital Not only was Canada exporting its raw resources, but now it was exporting capital and was sending j its men and women away to work , on Ihe Dominion's raw products in' other lands. Industries and man-; ufactures were being crippled in i Canada because they could not1 compete with foreign commodities rapid souring, intantne diarrhoea and the like. ; The present glass bottles are open tp many objections. They are usi over and over again, and although the best dairymen take every precaution to sterilize them befr.-e they are filled, the consumer 'has no guarantee that they are sufficiently well ster- uzed. v hen it is remembered that germs breed in milk more t lapidly than they do in almost WASHINGTON. Aug. 13: any other substance, the need for after the Liberal government bad Twenty years after he pioneered the most superlative standards of removed the tariff. And in the, the way by air across the English cleanliness becomes obvious, matter of agriculture, Canada was! channel, over which tens of thou-' The ideal, as has been seen being made a dumping ground for ! 8ands n0w fly annually, Louis by the best dairymen for a long foreign produce at the expense of ipieriot in France is bending his! time, is a bottle that is corn-Canada's own farms and gardens, j efforts toward establishment oflp'etely sterile, and hermetically It was just to prolest against roanr rnn.-AtlAntip lr er-lealed. is used once onlv. and that is destroyed immediately tfter use. Such a bottle has at last been Invented. It is made of cardboard, actually In the dairy and in th process of filling. After being shaped, it is automatically dipped into pure wax, which completely sterilizes it and makes it air-tight. The bottle is then in continuous process filled with milk and sealed. Neither bottle nor milk is touched by hand, and unce the whole operation is con- . ducted ln one bullding aupplted e,? X 'with a wynj spread of 01 feet, ft" specially filtered and germ tective tariff, so that Canadians t might receive decent wages and; free air, the milk cat be guar anteed as pure as it is possible to supply it. In such a bottle, specially cooled milk has been kept sweet for a month. In ordinary practice it will keep fresh for a week. Among the thousands of Boy Scouts from ail tuii world attending the International luri-.l'oree at link -nr.. , . ) were these fine looking lads from ntit'i V i -a. The i the left .has a python skin ! i a ha; l..wl. ami -ite one mi ! , a Cape Western Si.ut. -'- . 1. vl-.v.t. Boo Jun, owned b.v If. P. Whitney, and said t. ' o hp tot two-year-old in the country and another Man-o'-War, -"B here being led out dn the track for a tryout in prep.u atiwi for the races at Saratoga Springs. N.V. IMPORTANT C.N.R. CHANGES I HI xnS 1 1 PPin'mnt ot a vice-president In chard of ,y w i.VMVi.rnvRf.ff!on of the CJln National Rail-VL lit mrtew In Winnipeg, was the out-standing feature of a number of Important changes in annS,irdtP",?mnt P'"01""' o'e company JmTT1 t0 take pIace, on AuWt 1st Three of the chief officer, concerned are shown in the photographs. In the centre is A. E. Warren, formerly General Manager of the Central Region, who V' ' ,PJ Vice-rrenident of the Western Region. On the trht Is W. A. Kingaland, formerly General Manntrer f Western Region, who becomes General Maniu-. - of the Central Region, and on the left ts A. A. Ti ''!. formerly assistant to the General Manager ( f the Western Region, who becomes Genera! Man.-ig'X ' alls-. IKirr,:: Kwm WJ!Eu ,TIJtB UIS',TE,) STATES PACIFIC FLEET GATIEHEI) FOR MANOEUVRKS ine United States Pacific hnttln floo cQ