PAGE TWO THE DAILY NEWS The Daily News FRINCE RUPERT - BRITISH COLUMBIA Published Every Afternoon, Except Sunday, b,y(, Prince Rupert, Dally News, Limited, Thjrd Avenue . , , II. F. PULLEN V- Maniglng-fiditor ' ', '.' DAILY EDITION SUBSCRIPTION RATES City delivery, by mail or carrier,' yearly period, paid In advance $5.00 For lesser oeriod. taid in advance, per month , -SO Or four months for ., , LOO J By mail to all parts of Northern, and Centra), BritJsb-QsIoribJj, paid in advance for yearly pe'rfod . . . . -.v. . . . . Transient display advertising, per inch, per insertion ATTITUDE OF SOVIET The Government of Russia is chosen from the Com munist Party, known in Russia as "The Party." would need to be a million patriots to enthuse the rest of the country. China is emerging but she has not yet reached the gtage of revolutionary development attained by Russia and will hot oppose the enemy as a unit Possibly there will be no war. but if there should be. it is welltp bear in mind the re'ative conditions of the two countries in estimating the prospects for the outcome . GIANT SEAIiniI.lf.IfT Tn Ain Aiiisuma baal station at Lakehurst. New Jersey, is with "fflait learthliifht on roof , of hanirrr tn nirl airofifna Unl- lng at night BRITISH ASSOCIATION PRESI- plete lack of indications for DENTIAL ADDRESS DEL1V- treatment in the late Sir William ERED CAPETOWN. j Osier's text book on medicine, . i which was in wide use, was u.vv , i jni'ntf Transient advenising on front page, per inch 2.80 . at .it Oft (Continued from pae one) I largely responsible for the Rocke 1 ' in Now it is these higher faculties ' of the mind which are most res-: 'ordinary sensation so that Wednesday, July 24, 1929 gunersensitlve DcoDle under influence of narcotics lose exaggerated effect of their sations and become more the the sen like jare no longer exaggerated out of proportion to their significance The Party is an exclusive set of enthusiasts devoted ana intd nf bMn nnnr. body and soul to the Socialist cause, usually the sons of siv? and anxious, becomes pieas- SociaMsts, bred and trained in a Marxian atmosphere, ant and free from worry. Hence They see the regeneration of the world in the adoption of ft ,9 eav t0 understand the mod- their system. They think ... and breathe it and radiate it Tm!, ?f T,? , hiRh y . J j . ., , ,, . civilired nations to indulge in and are willing to sacrifice themselves, even their lives, narcotic drUKi Hke morphlne. so that it may prosper. We may call them fanatics and heroin and cocaine they are that, for Socialism is their religion, the cause It ,8 another cuHoU9 fact that Which to them makes life worth living. jt J6 just these super sensitive With such a group,' numbering less than two mil-ions, people who drink the caffeine at the centre and heart of Russia, it is not difficult to con- beverages like tea and coffee in ceive how hard it is for them to make terms with a capi- xce8; ThiB caffeine relieves 3 talist Government which they despise and the destruction JjX " tfT I n of which they think would be of great benefit to the world. In ,arge th 1; If Russia fights, It IS a holy war, and Will differ in thlS erages induce restlessness and respect from the other countries in that the people who nervous excitability and they may bring on the war are the same people who will be among produce disturbed sleep, headache the leaders in actual fighting. nd coniusion rew people no Th Ruec-l'on nmmmmonf Ancc crctnrry ovl V,a OOUOl tSKe Calleine tO thlS CX- V i C1" tuc tent but most of us take from two peop.e who are its leaders. They look down upon every tn fh.P rfa,iv nn h. at. government except their own, but are earnestly sincere in feet of this continued as a daily trying to maintain it. ration throughout life is a factor If this Russian attitude of mind is remembered in con- significance of which is un-hection with all news despatches coming through telling l7Tvn wf do, 1now' Twweyer, about the present Manchurian situation it will help read- " oldw X"ie."eM well ers to interpret the actions of the Russian Government. ns mental sensations. Jjoubtiess when nussia signed the reace.racjt it was with the idea that permanent peace could come only through the eventual triumph of their system and that a brief war Drunken Nation "England was onte a drunken nation and the larger towns con- how followed by lasting peace under Communism was pre- tained such notices as: 'Here you ieraD'e to a paicnea Up peace. may get dnink for a uennv: dead j While all Russian people do not share the enthusiasm drunk with clean straw for two of "The Party", they are So influenced bv it that thev will Pnce-' the industrial fijrht with patriotic fervor. Whether China is yet suf- j1"" the consumption of ficiently imbued with a -similar spirit in regard to their, v!ir,tTnww ,ead J . . i . j ti i Pcr ypi! it is now about a quar- own countrv.to make the troops formidable opDonents ls'tw of this. With this diminution doubtful. The men who surrounded Dr. Sun Yet San at of beer drinking is associated a the beginning of the movement doubtless were. They truly enormous increase in tea were natriots who were wil'ing to make great sacrifices and coffe drinking. To me it for the cause, but for n bncre rnnntrv Hke f.hfnn Mierpsirn not unlikely that this sub- stitution of tea and coffee for beer Is not wholly unconnected with the tendency of highly civilized nations to become supersensitive and neurotic, for this is the frame work on which drug addiction is built." At the outset of his address Professor Dixon stressed the fact that the ultimate aim of medicine was the prevention and cure of disease. "This practical aspect so far dominates all other." he said, "that medicine is often re ferred to as the healing art; indeed it is difficult to think of medicine apart from treatment." Continuing, the speaker explained the nature of disease as any unusual functioning of the tissues which might be the result of accident, hereditary weakness or I he presence of pernicious germ-life. Organized Common Sense "The science of medicine." he aid, "is nothing.more than traln- tia ana organized common sense based on .physiology. It is still usual to speak of it as an inexact science; obviously wrong since medicine uses the same methods as every other science and the .results of observation are as de finite as those of the chemist or physicist, although it is true that in the complexity of the problem with which the physician has to deal all the conditions of importance may not be known and the results of an investigation though correct for the conditions under which it is taken may be misleading." The speaker directed the at tention of his audience to the progress made latterly in the treatment of disease. During the nineteenth century he said medicine was exclusively occunled with diagnosis so that the medi cal literature of the neriod deals almost entirely with the symp-tons, activities and results of the! various diseases and contained' no indication of treatment what-1 ever. It was said the almost con feller millions Riven to medicine. This T,hl,9u,8tat! state of ' af,r8 affairs was unav ' to understand the excessive use v nt n,-: oidable at the time tobacco! D'on I,n.ted out- on account people since one effect of HD Unafn(; lie laCI mat effort ia in nt-roate th thrca- Physiology and the sciences pathology " . ... . . 111. J. hold of sensation in those super- in,e,r iniuncy. v" w knowledge of diagnosis was sensitive. When this supersen-'ur far of that of treat' sitiveness reaches extreme limits , V these people are referred to aslment' he aald- ineurotic!' Theay easily weary of , the strain and anxieties of seek- a livelihood. i Local reaaors. per insertion, per une . Iponsive to narcotic poisons which Classified advertising, per inMrtion, ptr word 01 1 Influence these long before those l '. .. ". V concerned with movement and the Ten Years Ago In Pr nee Rupert July 21, 1919 BRAVEREBEL The salmon run in the Skeena cause. DIES A HERO Prbfessor Leader of Religious Movement of were Mexico Kmletl Ills i.ne righting MEXICO CITY. July 24: Knowing he must perish, Gen. Enrique Goroztieta, commander of all the "Crfsteros," or religious continues unabated. The sockeye The story of the death of Gen. are coming in large numbers and Goroztieta. which dealt a severe humpbacks are also running. This blow to the irregular rebellion, means that every fisherman is normal people; the everyday j making good money and the can-trifles and Inconveniences of life neries are getting practically all the fish they want. Miss Etanda Marsh of Terrace, who has been attending tlje King the Edward High School in Vancou ver, was successiui in passing her junior matriculation Word has been received by the Board of Trade Commissioner that at least GO members of the Vancouver and Victoria Boards ofv Trade will arrive here on Saturday morning. On their arrival they will be met by President IcCaffery. has just reached .Mexico isiiy. Disheartened by the constant reverses his men had suffered in their engagements with the augmented federal 'forces sent against him after suppression of Escobar revolt, Goroztieta gathered his leaders and a few of his men at the Hacienda Ibarra in Jalisco, preliminary to disbanding them. There was deceit in the camp, however, and Gorotieta's headquarters were revealed before his p!.ins were consummated. He' but that he realixed htj.jnust pay I with' his life for, hWadeh(p! "'and Woolly campaign against, the ' govrnment Heard Mass First , After hearing mass, he ordered his horse saddled and brought to the patio of the hacienda. There he mounted, a six-shooter in rebels, In the state of Jalisco andi'1" hand- ! fiercest of the fighters who ral- The gates of the hacienda were lied to "Viva Cristo Rey," chose thrown open and the doomed his own manner of meeting death -leader, once a trusted federal and went with a gesture that general and rated as among the aroused admiration throughout finest artillery officers in Mex-Mexlco. even among those who ico, raced forth, lying low on the were not in sympathy with his neck of his horse, with his re- jvolvers blazing at the enemy. He managed to get some 600 yards outside the hacienda before a sharpshooting federal soldier got the range and knocked him from the saddle. He was dead when he dropped, but he had died in a manner that stirred the quick admiration of even his enemien. 1 Goroztieta's 40 officers obediently surrendered and were used as emissaries by the federal army. Goroztieta's body was embalmed and sent to his family in Mexico City, where it was given a private liurlal in one of the pity's oldest eemeries. i awoke the next morning to find1 the hacienda surrounded by 2,000 Among the bookings from An-federals. He was trapped behind yox to Prince Rupert on the the thick walls, with escape im- Catala yesterday was J. M. Hoc-W"' kin of the Granby Consolidated. Wednesday, Calling his men around him, A MMTMf A TlAlT Gorotieta told them to surrender UlNUlllllAlillN IllUlUUlfl 0 fcliv ....v.,, - , cape the consequences of their acts because of their lesser ranit, SCHOOL PASSES The Ijafs list for Ai ,,,,,, school. Prince Uuimm v t, ! tb Wgh school follow I tfa'ifek E. Palm. --, n IJlitfer Antonello. ::ti Sophia Johnson, ilTii Margaret Stalker, Dorothy Larson. :',f,o Frederick Reisrh, ::i;o -they call him Tliemanyou cant rank' Many luccetiful builnen an' rtgularlyuic WrieUy't. Tlx ut 4 chewing hat toothing effect Ik healthful cleansing ictloi Wriglty! rcfrcthet the mouib-gendy atlmulatea the flow of b natural Julcei iteadica the Ida digestion WR1GLEYS ryfii.OBidj Ml t - 7 CLEARANCE SALE Ladies' Dresses and Coats at DemeYs STARTING TOMORROW (THURSDAY) REAL SUPER VALUES ONLY A FEW LADIES' COATS LEFT-up to $35. Now LADIES' LONG FLANNELETTE value $15.00. Now Summer Hats to Clear at $1.95 LADIES' COTTON WASH DRESSES 2.95, 6.75 CELANESE AND SPUN SILK DRESSES Regular, values to $15.00. Now $9.75 THREE-PIECE WOOL SUITS Regular $29.50 values. Now 23.75 LADIES' WOOL SUFI'S Regular $25 value. Now 19.50 , LADIES' WOOL SUITS Regular $19.50 value. : Now -14.75 Great Reductions on ail Silk and A ;;i Georgette Dresses DEMERS Regular va'ur 19.50 COATS Regular 812.75