page, rwo The Daily News PRINCE RUPERT BRITISH COLUMBIA Published Every Afternoon, Except Sunday, by Prince Rupert Dally News, Limited, Third Avenue II. F. PULIaEN r r - UaMg-EWKi;M4 SUBSCRIITION RATES By mail to all other part of British Columbia, the British Em- nira .laii ITnitaH Rtnt mid in advanee. Br Tear HOTEL IMPORTANT One of the important features of future development in ; Opinion Strongly Divided. .Amone past" Mrs. E. L. HU1 spoke briefly. I xiiiw lvuyci t nm oc mc new uuvci 10 jjiunureu ujr wa, more Britten jan Britain hf- the railway company provided the money is voted by Par- j self, had its own flag as New zea- liament. The planf Will be completed jujt Sfi soon as the : land and the Irish Free State. A site is definitely chosen and work is expected to commence, vot on Question will be taken early in the fall and continue throughout the winter, so ! at. w mu nj that the hotel be for business for the of may ready season ; 0UtaWe the home u a condtUon that 1931. ' has come to stay," Mrs. Margaret The proposed building will be sufficiently large to han-i Lewis of the Alberta government die the traffic that is expected to pass through the city. tabor bureau and ct m- Needles? to say it will be modern in every respect and will SlfLSl , , . , add ress at tne close of the business ixi j xi i i ii i. be so designed as to be of particular value under the cli- ln whlch dea,t xti matic conditions of Prince Rupert. the protective Industrial legislation Not only will Prince Rupert benefit from the expendi- for women and girls, ture of the money required to erect the building but it will "We flnd as on lt 18 that tourists will make this It will mean a stop-over point TlJZ?f ... . . . ., . . . , . . i, i i the home to help supplement the be the greatest step that has yet been taken in the develop- fatnliy income.- Mrs. Lewis also felt ment of thexity as a tourist centre. i no bar should be put on women's economic freedom and if women are ' i , to be kept out of Industry and the I THE PULP PROJECT professions because of marriage. lt The pulp and paper project that brought the vice-presi-!nite an objection to young peopiel dent of the Canadian National Railway to Prince Rupert nrrytng. which is unwise for thd last week is still m the organization stage and, while the: staCe enforcTment of the organizers are hopeful of carrying it through successfully, niinimum waae act Mrs. Lewis it is not ysfr.f ar snough advanced to be looked upon as a. abated, giru in hotels and cafe; CeriaintV. ' were on an eigni ana nuie-nour Prinfo RnnPi-t upoiiIp will nnrlniihtPfllv Iia tnpnlv nn. schedule, and since this is work xious to help fonvara the pulp and paper project. Work if jLy.uilS ueen qaosen aim me railway company nas promisea to uo Tney are tne only ones wno at pre-evprvtnino imssihlp in hpln it. armtr. 'Rvprvnnp hprp will sent do not come under the provl- hope that it comes to be a successful industry. j?" ?f c . w1 "ker ; m - ouier uiausinaj icgui&iion is tpas- ised to empower the state to pro-THREE POSSIBILITIES tect the health of 1U people. Here then are three possibilities for future development that would mean a great deal to the city. Last week we IVifinP IjanrP K spoke of the great thing it would be if the Ecstall minei . !w should operate. Now we add a like suggestion to the hotel! GrC&t SUCCESS and the pillp and paper projects, none of which are new j w ousiness in the city. A WORLD EVENT Blessed is the man who says an encouraging word now and then for encouragement is sorely needed by most of us. ' Hundred Tenons Attended Caster .Monday Affair Last Evening The Batter Monday dance of the The signing of the Naval Pact in London is one of the Moose Lodee last nlcht ln the great world events of the present century. It will be a Moose Hall was a' great success, great step toward peace and also toward the relief of sev-80,116 two h"1111 persons being in eral countries from a great burden of taxation. , &ut unti2m tunesome A minor effect of the pact will be to increase the prestige masic payed by the Premier of the Britiih Labor Government with its premier. Ram- orchestra which introduced a jium-say Macdonald, ?.s the outstanding figure. If that govern- ber of new selections for the oe-ment does nothing else it will have justified its existence. slon- car ser was master of They succeeded where the former administration failed, tSSS SSIt for not only have they been able to agree with United bers of the committee being v. restates and Japan but they have drawn together to some tersen, George shenton, Sam Haud-extent the other two powers of Europe that might have enkhiid, c. n. Biggart, h. Boas and proved a menace to peace. ip- Petersen, w. b. Mccaiium pre- sided at the door. At midnight, delicious refreshments were served, Mrs. P. J. Ryan being in charge of the catering. Twenty Years Ago In Trince Rupert tJt ' April 22, 1910. There were only twenty-five appeals against the first city assessment at the court of revision which was conducted by Alfred Carss. William Manson, M.P.P, :at public meeting ln the Empress Theatre, gave an account of his stewardship at the recent session of the legislature In Victoria. J. A. Klrkpatrlck was chairman. The deal whereby the steamer , Rupert City was to be purchased ;by the Washington Steamship Co. jhas fallen through and McKen-zl Bros, are still the owners of Here U one of Canada's ships in the south sea, 83. Lady Hawkins ontlnuT'he?-carrylng trade to the Islands of the British West Indies here InTvllcomtl TSfiS DAILY HET57S Tuesday, Apru a ft CANADIAN lAc'adiinsPIan FLAG TALK! Big Pilgrimage r or September ; Member of Edmonton Cans- ' " j , ;-. dian Daughters' League BOSTON. April 22-On next Sep I Hember 6, Boston will welcome the j JjDMONTOM, April 22 : -Strongly descendants of the Acadians, who 6-C0 divided opinkm on the question nf;m m5 sanctuary In the By mail to all other countries, per year . T.S0 om-uwi iK "( southwestern section of Louisiana. By mail to all parte of Northern end Central British Golifmbia. ' ?llia,D J a ra.ut broaght j peaded by Dudley Leblance the paid in advance for yearly period 100 J'JSSHSH "rlT i party' to number 15353 Or four months for LOO fSXS lf:through the c,t? enroute to Grand For lesser period, paid o advance, "per month . 1. .y.-.'..' Zn.il Pre' Nova Scotla- to he,p edebrate City delivery, by null or carrier, year.rriod, paid in k'dranfce T " Trans.ent advertising on front page, per ,nch 2.80 Bmjire. d travel Local readers, per insertion, per line , 25ttKm'ihr a.fnt a Canadian spoke flap ey y tra P3 partly by Dy aul auto- Transient display advertising per inch, per insertion S?SMC Classified advertising, per insertion, per word 02 a Canada's many na- l 0afdfP ln the JfJ"1111' can map Legal notices, each insertion, per agate line "jflonaUtlei. Canadian 21 cm. I U,t , iSffeU"1?VB?i: ' lTr. . V T' 'igellne National Trail, which will Contract rates on application. 3,"j C ? tend from the Grand Pre Val- Adrertisins and Circulation Telephone 93 m J?.!! M "iJ?!. t.v,.-,0!. n Iley through Boston and New York " " Vn, s0. v-vx ft,v aOTs - i . t 1 -. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations ! men. stated that anyone oppasL this move was opposing a mov-. , -- .y. mefit of progress. Mrs. W. J. Roas, DAILY EDITION 1 Tuesday, April 22, 1930 j president-elect of the local council, j pointed "thit we have the naval .", ; design which has done duty in the Most of the Acadians travelling northward wfll be from St. Martin-; rllle. called "St Mar," in the poets , 'mmortal story, where sleeps the original of his "Evangoline. ' At Si ! Martbivflle Is the grave of Emma-' line Labiche, the girl whose stor j the poet told ln the world's most beloved poem. i Those making the pilgrimage to the land of their great grandfathers will tell' the story that there was no happy ending to the' storv of Emmallne Labiche, but that she died of a broken heart when she J earned that her lover had wed 7 . Hi a . a v a. i .JiORTHAMPTO N VSS. Northampton in drydock at Charleston navy yard before her standardization tiu; rf Rockland, Me. COMMUNICATION IT i . , gkl -iU;t: no .man insu -rr, m'$a .am iriaia ifii'i .vbs-IO mm dTA Jl mm a 11 ' u i INFORMATION TJ Hjftfcwn lUttric ComfKnj cljo runuiicfavu dtCtricd tmil(mtnt far (ndiu pitpout, end iuttJbuUl wuir) decthul ffJidni indupn IhROUGH the jungles of darkest Africa the voice oftheprimitive "tele phoneM-the drum-still reverberates. By means of a code ol drum-beati which no white man has yet been able fully to decipher, one duky operator speaks to a community miles away. There another drum Is pounded, and so, In relay fashion, long distance messages are transmitted from one tribe to another. Perhaps the greatest asset to the social and business life of Canada is the modern telephone. A network of some four million miles of wire spreads over the Dominion and links up a million and a quarter telephones from coast to coast. A large proportion of the wires, instruments and other apparatus involved in this vast telephone system was manufactured in the plants of theNor-them Electric Company. i . NorthemEkctm Companv Limited A National Electrical Service ISO ROBSON STREET VANCOUVER, B.C, "i.., If your paper docs not arrive, telephone the office