PAGE, TWO The Daily News I'lllNCE KUPEKT - 1JKIT1SII COLUMMA Published Evfir Afternoon, Except Sunday, by Prince Rupert Daily News, Limited, Third Avenue V II. F. PULLEN - ManagingEdJtoi.v - X'' K" HOTEL ARRIVALS SUBSCRIPTION RATES City delivery, by mali or currier, yearly period, paid in advance 15.00 For leaser period, paid in advance, nsr month 50 liy mail to all parts of Northern and. Central Brit'sr- Celvm'iis, paid in advance for yearly period,. , v.vr '. - ACC Transient display advertising, per incjh,)eriiie'rti9nlAt . .. j 1.40 Tnihslent advertising on front page, per inch 2.&0 Local readers, per insertion, per line .25 Classified advertising, per insertion, per word 02 Legal notices, each insertion, per agate line A'5 Or four months for 1.00 Contract rates un application. Advertising and Circulation Telephone 98 Editor and Reporter' Telephone .....86 Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations DAILY EDITION Prlnee ltuirrt Oeorge Rlngstsd, Port Edward; lilssss Roblits. 8akatooa; Mrs. J. R Morgan. Billow, Ross J. Dlegan. Mr. and Mrs. p F. Atkinson, W. E. OUbert, o. D. Taylor. Mlwi Helen ITeemsn. K. O Davidson. O. W. drum and A. P. Smith, Vancouver: O. 11. ilolioway. Montreal; It. O. CHwn, emllhers; Dr. and Mrs. D. R. Lea-roya and family, Anyoi; Miss Mar W11 rft.'n i ... ...... - ... ... wn, uyrw umK9, w. Harrison, HsMltonl K E. OMwon snaawviH Friday, 'iuly 10, 1929 ON TO THE PEACE "On to the Peace." That should be ithe slogan of Prince Rupert today. The great wheat fields' of the practically virgin country are looking for an outlet to the Pacific coast and Prince Rupert will have to put una struggle for that outlet if she is to get it . Whatever point becomes the terminal for the Outlet will be wonderfully benefited from every point of view . The thing is to secure the outlet. Early in September the Canadian Chamber of Commerce convention is being held at Edmonton and Calgary and an excursion wil' be made into Peace River district This convention comprises the most influential businessmen from all over Canada . The opinion they form as to the outlet will be a great factor in-determining the result. Prince Rupert may get it or she may not, much depending upon whether the advantages of Prince Rupert are placed before this convention and the delegates individually. ... A nalf a hundred delegates will go from Vancouver to this important gathering, as they fully realize the benefits likely, to be derived from being strongly represented. What will Prince Rupert do? The Board of Trade is planning to send five delegates, but that should not be enough. There should be at least another five gofrom the city4. A total delegation of ten is all too small considering the importance of the occasion. We are 'not suggesting how they should be sent, but it does seem imnor-tant that they go. Ten emissaries from here would be a faiSJmimms before the visitors the importance of .opening..tip,northern British Columbia and securing a northern Pacifjc outlet. If we al'ow such opportunities as this to pass we can expect little consideration. . , There are three kinds of greatness . There Is the greatness which consists in giving birth to an Idea; there is the greatness which consists in making effective the idea already born; and there is the greatness which refuses to be drawn aside by false ideas and ideals . THE HYBRID MOOSE Considerable interest seems to have been taken in the story published yesterday in regard to an animal which is evidently a cross between a Jersey cow and a moose. Some readers fancied it was a pine dream and several suggested it was probably the beginning of the fiction story promised for Monday . George Wilson of The Daily News staff, the writer of the story, has seen the animal and vouches for it it is a curious freak and possibly may develop into a new species. Full bred moose have not hitherto been a success in captivity. The change of food seems to disagree with them and they die Perhaps this hybrid may live and thrive. At any rate, it will be interesting to note its career. Woman is a wayward creature, but she loves that man only who is able to overcomt her waywardness. STEAMER ANNOUNCEMENT The announcement that all threo new Canadian National steamers will be ready for businoss next year is the best news we have had recently. Doubtless the vessels are needed as a means of inducing travel over the Carta-(Han Nationa' linos. That the number of tourists cpming to Prince Rupert will be greatly increased as a result of the addition to the fleet seerrs quite cortnin. t Wa thtth? Nrttional providing three fine steamers for' the Alaska trade and a fine little boat for local business,! Prince Rupert people will begin to feel that the C. N. is making good, as far as this city is concerned. Let thenl add a tourist hotti' and we shall have little to kick about 1 ROBBtter, New Westminster; M. E. Mo WiuUh, eourtstuy . . Royal A. Kul, An voi : n. Beaula. O'Brien BucUef Bay; H Day, ..r.T " rweo and J. hi, K. Olaon, Seattle. I trntral Wllllsm Swinaon Krfmn..-. w , M. MaAMi and A. W. Vaneouverr a. nhM. n.... . FIFTY NATIONS WILL JOIN IN WAR0NCR00K LOKDOS, July IS :--Scotland Yaw la to td the police of at tout fifty ctlver countries in a warld-wld war on organist rlme. There la to be a Police Letfftte or Nation. At the bead of. the world police alliance wilt be the "Big FtW'-Oreat Britain, nance, Osnuany, Austria and America, IB Lctadoiv today are three df -tne '-BIc F1' LoM Byng. the' metropolitan pcllor chief; Monsieur! Jean Ohtoppe. the Parte prefect of the Surete (the French' Scotland Yard), and 11m Zorglebel, head of the Berlin police force. - The laat two are In Ima on ostensibly to study tM traffic problem, and to "sSmlre the acenery." But tbeir real puipose la to seek, with 'Lord Byn. the beat meatts of securing closer cooperation and ooordlna-tlcn of the police forces of the world. It i fact acknowledted. by other! nations that orsat Britain mas ine wcrid m ettme detection ana prevention. That Is. one reason why the German and FYetxsh polios chiefs are now in London. Scotland Yard Is to be ,.tbe headquarters from whjch tbe world war on crime will be directed, and la even new being directed. Tbe alma of the Police league of Nations were finely maimed up re-crutly y Richard E. BnrlgM. piesl-dent of the International Poll re Conference, and for seven year oofeimls-slonrr of the Kew York police. En right sera. "Tbe police f areas of the world must, bring ail their Idea together, and pool tbelr resources, to checkmate that highly-skilled, gtoiie-trotting crook who recognizee no frontlets the International criminal. "This worta-'wMe police crusade Is to be staged criminals in gen eral and In particular against: "White slavers and drug traffickers. "International forgey and mall robbers 'Jewel thieves. "Oonfidente trlckatren. "Oangater " Police methods of the larger nations are being reviewed by the "Big . Five," and the results will be laid before a conference In November, at which at least fifty nations will be represented. ILLNESSFORCES - ESKIMO RETURN Boyn Sent To Secure Education Unable to Stand Climate and Habits of While .Men TORONTO, "July 19. When the Hudson Bay Company's Icebreaker "Nascopie" sailed from Montreal, on July 1G, for the great Arctic wastes, her passenger list included the names Of "Ben" and "Sam," tyo Eskimo boys who are returning home, fo their own good, against their will The return of the two lads will write another failure in thtf book of attempts to transfer the Eskimo from his native land to the abode of the white man. Two years ago an Eskimo chieftain far up in the silent Arctic, asked the head of the missionaries to send his son to the unknown lands to the south, to learn the ways of the whits tnan. "Aly people haven't a chance unless they are able to meet th white man on Jils own ground." he said. And so, last fall, nine-year-old Ben. son of 'Chief John Ell. head of the Southampton Island Eskimos, accompanied by his frknd of the same age, Sam Pudlutt, of Lake Harbor, Baffin Island, were handed over to the headmaster of the Lakefield preparatory school, near Peterboro, Ont They had been brought down from the north by Itev. F. H. (libbs, a returning missionary. "It is of the utmost importance that these boys should not be spoiled and that they should be considered In every way upon the tasis of white men." were the in structlona of Ven. A. L. Fleming, archdeacon of the Arctic. Unique Experiment It was a unique experiment. Ben nnd Sam knew no English, but they were good natured, good sports, and Intelligent. In a short time they were unanimously ftc claimed as general favorites by their new while nlayrhates. Shortly before Christinas Hen and Sam wern forced to relin guish their jtudie to face an ordeal of sickness, from which thy barclv esaped with their lives. Hardy, and foreign to sick- neer in their own land, the two little visitors were soon attacked by contagious diseases, common among the white men. After Influenza they "took" pneumonia, numles, tonsillitis and underwent operations for mastoids and Ben and Sam at least will go THE DAILY NEWS tfriday, back to their Isolated 'homes better able to brave the element's of the Arctic than when they came away, according to Dr. N. D Buchanan, of Peterboro, who attended them. "1 think they- will be better for having got All those things out of their systems," the doctor said. , Prior to sailing for, their lonely homes, Ben and' Sam were placed on a farm near dickering, Ont, where they both showed remarkable Improvement after their long 1 3 4 5 6 7 A OUTIIOPHONfC VICTKOLAS AND RECOUPS , V l .winter illnesses .The boys were accompanied on their journey by missionaries' returning to their northern outposts. Not Inferior : "This .experiment has- been thoroughly satisfactory from : one point of view," declared Archdeacon Fleming, who bore the responsibility arid expense of the trip. "It has shown that the Eskimo is in no way inferior to the white roan. They are an intelli T features of Victor's Greatest Instrument A ttmarkAt fitw dud imhrntmd Vltt-hold that rtirodiists V.E. Otlhophonit RtcvrJj a llb thrilling Jnu poit tr Jeflkrvfor. MitfO'Sjftchrondus balante: ttvry tit-mtnl fa micro-exact rejormrt dt M) jttqutnej. Silfttivr and sttuitlv to a taftt-dtgtti. ' Imfrovtd tidio-tirciiit ifvtloftd by Viclor-Krecedtnltd fUtlitj, TW vtw tltdiitrens 245 in lb circuit; incrtatd velum Ho distortion. ilxtUsh tupf-Mtdmatit full vision nation stlictor as illaslratta. Tbr distinct units till sfontifl't-ally ibitldtd. Quickly rtmotablt for hisftc'tson a) any time. MimIohs ntl alUVictor tltclro-dynt-mic Sptaktr rt-crtattsMiusic from lb air cr rtcoru Dtxiiiiuy. 8Exqnisilly dtslgntJ compact Victor cabintts in waiiml. Q TtaJtmatird "Itis MasUr'i Voice". J Tbt 'ufld't most famous guarantee in thrtt woidi and d picture. gent race, nnd I wish White men said. "When Peary hi ,URi; could learn the Eskimo language' as qulfkly as Ben and Sum Tlekjd up' English." He sitld he.wanfell to have them stay with ntf-sionaries at Lake Harbor, Baffin Ind, ian(t!'Mtnd school there. TherajSraJfiiBo school near Ben's homfwjpoiithampton Island, and It was 'liopiit 400 mits from Baffin Land. In only one case has an Eskimo been known to survive aWay from his native haunts, the archdeacon jjoddtf IT is here I The instrument millions have waited for . . . by the makets of the marvelous Orthophonic Viarola . ... by the producer of the wonderful ne- V,E. 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