jpa;:?. tv.'O The Daily News PRINCE RUPERT . BRITISH COLUMBIA x Published Every Afternoon, Except Suuday, by Prince Rupert Daily News, Limited, Third Avenue , II. F, .RULUv-N, - Managing-dltojMf g 1 ' SUBSCRIPTION RATES it I !-()!(?'; jCity delivery, by mail or carrier, yearly period, pnid In advance 5.00 For lesser period, paid in advance, per month 50 By mail to all parts of Northern and Central Brll?sb Columbia, Or four months for , 1.00 paid in advance for yearly 'period ... 8.00 Transient display advertising, per inch, per Insertion '. 1.40 Transient advertising on frbnt page,( per Inch 2,80 Loea) readers, per insertion, per line' . j. ., ,jj. .;.J. ... Classified advertising, per insertion, per word 02 Legal notices, each insertion, per agate line ,13 By mail to all other countries, per year .... 7.50 B mail to all other parts of British Columbia. tb British Empire and United States, paid in advance, per year 6-00 DAILY EDITION Tuesday, October 8, 1929 RAILWAY AND PRINCE RUPERT The Attitude taken by Vice-President Warren "of the Canadian National Railways is full of hope for the future of Prince Rupert. Having the railway officials fully realize the need of co-operation with this port will go a long way toward improvement. . Not onlv is a hotel nromised NOT BY ANY MEANS SHELVEbW- WASHINGTON CATHEDRAL BEING BUILT ijlany Canadians Hare Visited" In United, States Capitol (By The Cansdlni Press) WASHINGTON, Oct. 8: Hundreds of Canadians visiting here this summer have gone to Mount Saint Alban to admire the great pile which will be the Washington Cathedral. They have perhaps felt the sentiment expressed in recent address made by Vincent Massey. the Canadian minister at the annual meeting of the National Cathedral Association. He Jald, 'To those of Us who have nurtured in English tradition this corner of your capital makes a peculiar appeal. As it happens there is a special affinity between your cathedral church and that or the diocese in which I live because the later bears the name which la so familiar In your cathedral close that of St. Alban the proto-martyr of Britain. But apart from that, the quiet gardens, the gray walls with an occasional touch of Gothic sculpture and the clustered buildings in medieval style which, are rising everywhere for the near future, possibly next year, but more tourists on this hillside, together with the 6'n f n tin Vnnl,) l iti. aV nl v'' E.' i i. ...rfll. ... J -fflft urent pdlflfp edifice whlrh which prnwns crowns fhi- the ic m uc uiuugut next;, wie iircai aieuuier is wen uilUel way ' at the drydock to ply out of this port in the spring, canned i Jjjj hole sannon is 10 do nanuiea nere, ana mere are other things in sight, Mr. Warrdn -Says. While none of these are big things that are going to make us rich over night, they are all pointing in the right direction and the city is bound to benefit materially. IMPROVEMENT ON ISLANDS In another column will be found an article indicating all this suggests the at mosphere of the little island of the North Sea which we in Canada affectionately call the 'Old Country'." The cathedral is as yet only a beautiful fragment, an apse, three. oVinnolc onH envna Vir1r wra lie that business on Oueen Charlotte Islands will ho herlpriseatms capacity of 7.500 this year. TheKelly production of logs is to be inarea8edjTTMhu;,gS:!w- lour times, if their plans materialize. Other camns afetrai tower. 262 feet m heiaht win tured bosses the T1IE DAILY NEWS Tuesday, October 8. 1 concept jt the symbolism of the cathedral; quoting Henry Adams on the medieval cathedral as, "from the cross on the fleche and the keystone of the vault, down through the ribbed nervre., the columns, the windows, to the foundation of the flying buttresses far beyond the walls, one idea controlled every line." 'The one idea," the minister leald, "td which the author re. When it is finished it will be an i ?5rred' ? !d . "??n tot whch the wthedral immense and exquisite temple, j nds f truth a11 ranking in size with the largest 'its as .fm1 n cathedrals of the world with a forms the truth of science. and : aesthetic truth or beauty, and the goodness next year and it has not been bad in the southern section TillV'Z S- morai -n iruin to wnicn welcome is suT to operate and a quantity of the logs will be cutJnt,o lum- rise 107 feet above the tip of the; 1 , , , t-tr ... ber at Prince Rupert. This will make it possible to give a ; Washington Monument which is LaSl V etenUlS guou service 10 me lsianus. . 1 6 w,c black sands, of oil activity, of copper ore milling in' the 1 held by a vaulted vista of 500 ! south and other activities soon develop where conditions feet, through the nine bays of tnej are right, as they seem to be today. We look for a great ,nave and bays of the choir, toj improvement on yueen Unarlotte Islands in the near fu-i sanctuary, a mousana sciup ture as well as at Prince Riipert. ornaments niiprmrrti u tn h crnnni placed at the Intersections of the In London ribs of the roof vaulting will il-l . lustrate the story of Christianity.! LONDON, Oct. 8: -A famous old nisi ueunue sit-ps wwara me wariaosniiai wnicn used to re- An editorial article in the Winnipeg Free Press1 'tin the building of the cathedral were ta-i 8tre to railway situation says: "One thing that seems to stand ken In 1891 and ww congress elevator would double that amount , , H,V4fcMVV Anotner independent this fact. He said, "there In Need of Surgery human shape the faces scarred war veterans Is out is that Prince Rupert appears to be shelved as the grant?1.a charter 10 the Protcs- purpose. The last war veteran has Of " 1 Episcopal cathedral Founda-i passed through the wards and its great port enress cfeics&iium from the me Peace rtdtt, River countrv couniry . rri.l itiyer Uon usefulness Is at end. T? empowering it to establish a an The Free Press IS wrong Prince Rupert has not been cathedral and Institutions of " U the Queen Mary Hospital Shelved, by any means. Wheat IS pouring in here today ! learning, "for the promotion ot at Sidcup, a pleasant London sub- from Peace River, even though it has to go west to Ed- religion, education and chanty.-, ff win i vEm ft monton and then return here. With a western outlet, Yet some y1" p358 before the wiu devote his time to the morei even if it comes to Vanderhoof as proposed by the Van-i-Jf couver Board of Trade, Prince Rupert would get a great; nL r iu ravages. deal utMi ui of the ine business uuMness. With vnn thp ine peuer hpttpr graae rrridp tn 10 th tne 7n coast 1 The Episcopal . Church L of thelmous 1 Dr- amies during madc the war. the hospital He was fa-, as- by this route and With the facilities at the port, the OUt- United States Is now engaged in sisted by the best beauty doctoral put to Prince Ru)ert is bound to increase. What is need-buiWln 'our cathedrals, pne in whici?nhaifantheATaecua ' ed is an independent elevator here and a cash market and Wasnlngton' and others ln 81111 ! away did not deter Dr. amies, of-' way. The present elevator can conveniently handle ten Mr mv ma fn. ce before he was satisfied. , I Til" l i a . . . to twelve million bushels a season . w Twenty thousand Datienta nac. arc sed through the hospital ltnee its ; people, of course, who regard a opening in August, 1917. It hag a The Free Press says the Stewart line is being built modem cathedral as an ana-,cmPifte scientific equipment for eastward. There amiri it seems tn he mictnlron Km chronlsm. They tell us that the surveys are being made, but surveys galore have been , SmTh the stitution takes the concern over, mnrl in Prta P,,04.f ,L " i T,,.:u 01" . bulldln which sprang up lock, stock and barrel it is prob-i a. iiuw uFn, j-ci uiuy unu iiuc uuuu. oicwuri'in England and ln France throuen nDle inat an tnis valuable equip is so far only an open roadstead, and it takes time to build :Uie twelfth and thirtnth rA.;ment wU1 b w as "junk.1 a port. Some day there will be one on Portland Canal 'turiM has passed; that modern .1 ..U1 U..t. t i ! Tl. ' rt l , . 71 fn to emhAlkiul .. ., uuuuuuss, uui, in me lutHuiiuie, iTince uupert is aoing1 ",u'c ";uraiciy 11 r f business and will continue to do more, in spite of occasional fa TrMdlTl' th' Rallying try 01 8UU'1U3' (lofty buildings which are the tri-l - - --- - ,umph of the present day engin eer. I remember a few years aeol having some hours to spend in the' city of Liverpool when I thought f AH Pessimists (Victoria Times) could pass the time by visiting iJmlste and the die-hards has al- the new cathedral which is slow J ways been the flat statement, "You ly taking form there under the'Sann?,t change human nature." genius Sir Giles Scott I vnp TUsuaUy nobody bothers to take is- !f sue wlth lt- But ollver Baldwin, T fTnn . . woih wosld find a structure m possessing, the Socialist son of Britain's former great beauty but I felt it might , Conservative prime minister, got be found to bear a rather artlf i-' vexed when a heckler flung the re- clay relationship to its commun- i l hu2 lnJhe course ? a Kt 1'tical speech, He answered it with iv T Hinr ... . lty. I discovered to my surprise this question: that my apprehensions were 111- "Does man still support bear founded. One has only to walk I baiting, cock fighting, the pillory, through the choir and chapels of,publ!c executions, drawing and people of all classes thronging it.ithlnas he mentioned were iwtah- iand to watch the simple folk from'Hshed institutions only a few years me country and the shawl-cover-1 aB- WODOay inougnt or oDjecting ed women from T.!mi ! to them. It was human nature to ping their pennies Into the boxes as a contribution to the completion of the fabric, to realize that Liverpool Cathedral is a genuine and natural and honest expression of the feeling and aspirations of the people of West Lancashire. It Is going to""be a people's cath- Village blacksmith: "Aye, these are 'ard times for the likes o me.,edral- H"e ln the United States First them motor cars, and now a dentist 'as come along an' busted up you' too are bu,ldln& cathedrals." me side line.-The Humorist, London. ' LJr,:SS.ttthen dre frm sfvJ .eral authorities support for his The great rallying cry of the pea- accept them, Not one of them survives todav. Why? Because human nature has changed to such an extent that mese mings which formerly pleased lt now revolt at lt The matter Is rather important You will never hear any reform proposed, you will never hear anv change for the better ln human society discussed. The first United States postage stamp bore the portrait of Ben Franklin. HOLY LAND QUESTION DIFFICULT to Mcttlem siMMlblll TO 1IICLP SOLVE AKAB-JEWISH FKOULEM The British Government has asked a number of well known British Jews to serve on a committee to old in solving the problems which have arisen from the recent Arab-Jewish riots In Palestine. Among those who will serve on the commission ure Left to right), Lord Melchett, Sir Phillip Sassoon, Lord Reading and Sir Herbert Samuels. pointed on the occasion of prior j eflt to Great Britain and url ! slaughters of Jews there and came to notning. Sir John cnancellor, high com-1 mlssloner of the mandate of Pale-' tine, has Issued a high sounding proclamation saying all found ' guilty of disorder will be punished and some 200 Arabs await in chains the disposition of the mandate's courts. I But these circumstances are ,.,, . .,.,. I purely incidental. The fundaamen- umnii ugycrnmrm nciwrrn uctu ,xai question Wnicn Uie British gOV- and Deep Sea in Palestine Today LONDON, Oct. 8. With the anti-Jewish outbreak In Patestine now apparently crushed after a toll of about 120 Jewish lives and some thing leas than 100 Moslems; with wrathful protest meetings In Lon-idon, New York. Warsaw and even iar 1 u r away nwnw ?niirn South Africa, Amfn anv and the n n big ernment muat face is, "What's to be done about the mandate of estlne?" Shall it be given up, contrary to the Balfour declaration and the decision of the league's supreme council at San Remo April, 1920? Shall the British government- revise Its mandate resDonslblllte downward in aeierence IC.L lions of pounds to the taxpayer 0111. Throughout the Near E.,-t int dla there are certain monitor, nm bllngs which convey to the tniw ear of the colonial qf flee certain it formation that any further h croachment on what thn A.Ahir Palestine consider their rights t lavor 01 uie jews is iixeiy to 1. all Islam to revolt. From Jewry all over hc toft wnetner allied with the Zionu'j not. Is the unanimous cryUut it good iaun 01 orcat Britain j hi on iriai. A perplexing situation for a n ernment largelv composed r Ists and with not a trained c:p:: mat among me 101 01 uiem It is now pretty well detr. r.;!R ed that somebody blundered m i ties in other narta of th Rmnir ! mandate Government bv Dcra;. . - - w( , .... w. : mpn nf "7)nnTm mVktniT7nr.ik or snau Ine government listen to JC cw "wa a reeeiins w p dd.ZtSlakJ.r 8 the stern demands of the Zionist Jwt at the Walling .Wall m a & I Oreat Britain to Tilv rn ,:"'H.r , particularly tnat radical wing of ' im noiy nay ana oy g;-.. t WIf ,.iSr i-S ."JiL Zionism calling themselves Revi- Moslems a chance to have a z Macdonald and hi siataSn slnsts-and put the screws on the , meeting of protest the nrx fi to an embTiL ?itatn CyC3 the so-called Zionist state? ! and particularly the provinces " 77 . : a nome inere s a strong segment side the Holy City were inula If D T1 1 1 hA ;'r,ir.TiT: .? u,lUU',"V 01 pu"c opinion leany tne Rotner-uy policed against an up: -.;!f HaS 1100 Been WCC11 I 1 reated 1 CttlCU I M ?ftf?KSH iforthe IWrtta resPnt,bl- but . mere press which says: "Chuck the i whfch there had been p programs; whole business of the mandate for 1 warning. 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