PAGE TWO 5W2 DA!!? 'Wednesday, w i-tsnP!. - -' -I'-- The Daily News miNCE HUPEKT BRITISH COLUMBIA Published Every Afternoon, Except Sunday, by Prince Rupert Daily Ntws. Limited, Third Avenue H. F. PULLEN - - Managing-Editor SUliSClriPTION RATES "Ldtel readers, peHnsertlo'h'.'tier line .... Transient display advertising, per inch, per insertion ,.v Classified advertising, per insertion, per word Legal notices, each insertion, per agate line Contract rataa on application. Advertising and Circulation Telephone, .98 Editor and. Reporters Telephone . . . . . i 86 Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations DAILY EDITION OFFICERS OF GRITS Fergus Park President and L. 3. Preston Secretary of Nechako Valley Liberal Association VANDEHHOOF. March 12: The Nechako Valley Liberal Association fiicriorn By mail to all other parts of British- Columbia, the Britlslr,iEnv plre and United Statesf paid In 'advance, per year , . ..w. 6j'W By mail to all other countries, per year ..... 750 For lesser period, paid In advance, per month .50 By mail to all parts of Northern and Central British Columbia, paid in advance for yearly period ....'..,...... 3.00 Or four months for ' 1,00; City delivery, by mail oricarrier, yearly period, paid-in advance $5.00 j Transient advertising on front page, per inch . . . . i'. i. . i i .t I I .Vt.. :,su .25 1.40 .02 .16 Wednesday. Men. 12, 1930 BKITISII POLITICAL CRISIS If the MacDonald Government has not the confidence of Parliament it is difficult to see how it can constitution ally carry on. Possibly Premier MacDonald will resign and hand the government over to some other party or he may possibly advise the Kinjj that he should hold another election before resigning, with the hope that the people of the country will back him in his policies. The position is a most difficult one and the fight between the rival forces will be intense. The whole world will be keenly interested in the result, especially the English speaking world. DISARMAMENT CONFERENCE It is to be hoped that any action taken by Premier MacDonald will not affect the disarmament conference now in session in London. British policy is to carry out any arrangement or treaty made with a foreign power, no matter what party makes it. The honor of the nation must be upheld. If the Labor Government makes a pact with the other four great naval powers, it will be faithfully pb-served, even though the Government that makes it may; be tottering to a fall at the time it is made. RESULT UNCERTAIN The outcome of an election in Great Britain t'odav would 'be very uncertain. If MacDonald goes to the country he will get a great deal of support from former Liberals. The chief difficulty is the lack of cohesion of his own party.' rVUn ovt;tn ,i: :f:,i rpi j . t ,1 nu cAuuiiiioio me uis-t.jsixeu. iney CAjjetteu more rQI cal action from their leader and many of them cannqt see how the position of the worker has been improved since tho change of government. The foreign policy of the government has pleased a great many and it by itself would undoubtedly receive the endorsement of the people of Britain. The difficulty is that domestic and petty affairs will be introduced into the fight which may bring about almost any result. Second vice-president, Mrs. Desire Turcotte. Secretary treasurer. L. J. Preston. Executive Mrs. A. A. Hutchinson, A. M. Stewart, Owen Burdette and William Smith, all of Vander-boof; L. R. Dickinson, Fort St. James; H. C. Ludwig, Engen; l Zogas, Hulati'; H. Fallon, Lakes pis-trict; A. Vincent, Stuart River;' R. Hartman. Mapes; Mrs. N. J 14c-Bride. Finmoore: tfYank Reld.chll- has elected officers lor the year as'co, and Frank Lind, Webber Like roiiews: j Honorary officers are Rt. Hon. President, Fergus Park. W. L. Mackenzie King, and Hon! A. First vice-president, E. B. Smith 'M Manson K.C i.D. inry n t mamwKrss- ir-crifl a Two passengers on world cruise with Empress of Australia are seep here trying to decipher some of the Arabic inscriptions in one of the tents of Abdul Salam Fald at Carlo, Egypt. MUCH WORK 7 CHURCHILL Next Season Will See Great Progress in Railway and Docking ' Facilities WINNIPEG, Men. 12 -At the dis-, tant end of a railway Hue ?ig-ag- glng 1000 miles north from Winni-; peg, lies Canada's most ambitious settlement. Today It Is' Churchill a group of buildings all but, abandoned to the fury of winter In i the barrens. Tomorrow It will be; Churchill new seaport for the eager West. ! The frontiersman's toll establish- j ed medem Churchill Just as truly' as it builded the old fort at the river mouth two centuries ago and , more. No more sturdy hearts ever beat than those of Michael John O'Shea's I extra-gang that laid first steel into! Chttirblll when March gales whistled off the bay. No more adventurous he-men toll than that thousand and one-half who left their homes and families for months to aid in this season's dock construction and terminal work. And no more sturdy folk exist than the 30 members of -the keep-over! gang living through this winter at the Isolated port. Since spring, Churchill has made mighty strides. But Churchill has work to do and many a problem to face before it will be entitled to take its place as a real harbor on the bay. Indeed, the past season's work, has been extensive. Under the su-' pervlsion of Major J. G. MacLach-j lan, at The Pas, engineer, and O. SJ C. Johnston, divisional engineer for the. Hudson Bay Railway, three miles of terminal steel have been put down in the Churchill yard. A six-stall brick roundhouse unique in its double-wall construction to bridge and building gang. Important work, as well, has been effected in harbor Improvement and dock., construction by the' depart- fmnt.of. railways and canals staff. A large portion of the necessary dredging has been completed dur-tnoiithe; summer and the inside or shallow crib for a large dock was sunk and loaded. The work has been handled under the supervision of George Kldd, resident engineer for harbor work. The coming fall, however, will show even greater development In railway improvement at Churchill and the appearance of the harbor proper will have been Elevatsr t B Built Eight or nine miles of trackage will be laid next summer, It is planned. A 2,000,000-bushel elevator will be constructed, as a start towards a scries of storage bins that may some day be called on to earry a large portion of the west's grain crop. Freight sheds and warehouses will be built. More dock work Is to be done. And thousands of yards of gravel will be poured Into a shallow portion of the harbor between the dock and the curve of . jsheltertd bay at the river mouth, Included in next summers Improvement program will be the Item of levelling off a large portion of the townsltc with gravel fill. Tracks already raised two or three feet at the terminal will be brought still higher. Buildings perched above the land with basements exposed will be bepught to normal level by raising me graiie wun uu 10 sun the construction of the buildings. Conveniently, gravel Is available along the Hudson Bay line in almost limitless quantities and of high grade. To this advantage must Deaf Hear Again Through New Aid 't?K.Wo D!eter lha mm Wins Enthusiastic Follomnt Tett-Day Free Trial OJJer U ir tw mi tj- Bt rear Jrrorx.esrhulr.t- - hJirultan Ao..(cir LMVoE tH new model AtouUcoo dai. ThU UMt A-auBtlmn I. 7..T... T?2T.,!,5? fcttSW thd nd dUtlactlr trl,i ... r..-!i n lth wondwful btnrlt to trta Bad health alika. Tk. . Uttm will bring on. of th. rtS-TKbU TAivlnli , ' . , loorauth Timd Men seldom invited Edna twice . . . "B.O." is so unpardonable resist sudden and extreme thermal . . . . (Body Odor) ehanges has been erected. And j he ascribed the fact that the line several smaller buildings have been .tIom The Pas to Churchill is seDa- added to the modest list of struc- rated only by pure ballast from the vures-ui, wm nu ui steei, oil nines , frost-laden muskee. At M e 507. 'JiorttieoiUof The Pas. . fOUr mil. u from ChurehilL Is At Churchill, Joe Wright has been ; an extensive eravel Dit that did not resident engineer. George Brown . ciose down last fall until November has been. general supervisor of con- m. when the eravel nit at Mile 472 structlon along the rail line. Pete ceased toperations several days later LampDen nas Been la cnarge o: tne ; jt had been onened weeks after TTE had begged so bard for this date, other pits had frozen up, hundreds of miles south. The solution of the seeming paradox centres about the fact thdt the far-north pits are extraordinarily free from moisture and hence the more impervious to : S frost. ;g New problems will be brought a when Churchill's gates are thrown open to the entering surge of new residents next spring. Even though the Dominion government, owner of the harbor town, places limitations on the advance to the north, the forming nucleus of a bay community will necessitate prompt solution of water supply and Sewage difficulties. Churchill has no water supply sufficently large for a town; so far, water has been hauled from Rosa-belle Lake, three miles from the projected townsite. Some new and larger source must be found. It is not impossible to obtain water from Churchill River. But at high tide, it Is necessary to go- hall a dozen miles upstream to avoid the salty tidal fW At low tide water could be drawn from the river at a point much closer to the townsite: in this case it would be necessary to construct a reservoir' tf carry the town over the high tide period. The difficulty of laying pipes in such a way that they are protected from the severe cold of Churchill's winter ha not yet been overcome. In borings for water frost has not been penetrated even at 200 feet. It has been suggested that a steam Jacket might encase sewage and water pipesor even that the pipes be electrically warmed but so far, deliberating engineers have made no decision on the matter. Even in the torrid days of midsummer, frost Is not far below the crisp surface of the barren muskeg at Churchill. In last July, for Instance, railway workers perspired in the sun as they cached a surplus quantity of meat six feet underground. Six weeks later, when they sought to unearth the supply, It was necessary to use axes to chop " " 4 m : ,tj , ... uui, uie meat, irozen poua in me narklnir ras. RfHprfltnr n'ro c . -n-T'""" "Ti de trop at Ihe bay port of the West. ( uaov yai uic i,ulo it nua gull luc I rail into Churchill In the spring and to complete as much dock and ! terminal work as possible during! the summer. Next year's toll will be directed to laying the founda-1 tlon for a town and pressing for- oHowoenoooootioocto ooo 00 .j;')U 6 :i'M.' t iM IBilifiH 'V And JLJL now ... I Harry was still nice to her. But Edna felt the change. Miserably, she wondered why men always lost interest. Then Elna learned the troubl. Today she's showered with invitations. She found it's easy to end "B. O." Zody Odor. Just keep perspiration odorless. . Unpardonable yet tricky. Quick to betraybut alow to warn. "B. O." hurts its victims while they least suspect it. In any ueathcr "li.O" annoys Never be caught off guaid. We lieconic insensitive to ever-present odors, but we're always perspiring. Pores give oil as much as a quart of odor-causing waste daily. And the hotter it is, the more we offend. HE THOUGHT: You're not as sweet as you Wi " Yet, to be polite, HE SAID: "HoW nice you look today." tor safety s sake, always bathe with Lifebuoy. Favorite of millions. Mild, yet wonderfully in-vibrating. Lifebuoy's deep-reaching antiseptic lather purifies, l'ores breathe again. You feel fresher cleaner than ever before. No chance for "B. O." Keeps skins fresh and clear, too. Guards health by removing germs. Lifebuoy's pleasant, trtra-eltun scent, which vanishes as ytm rinse, tells you it purifies. Adopt Lifebuoy today. (crar Brothm Limited, Toronto IbUI Lifebuoy HEALTH SOAP stops body odor How much is a dollar ? "ITSTHAT your dollar is worth depends on you. To-'day, a dollar will buy a full one hundred cents' worth of merchandise or service. The advertisements in this newspaper will toll you where you can make your dollar do its full duty They will tell you what a dollar will buy. They will tell you, by name, those articles on which you can depend to give a worth of value for every dollar invested. '. give ward thehyllding of a harbor. And ,0HiHooi00aoooooooaoM rKHXiOOllKaOOaaOOBiMdH-.tinneoonnnnonrt a In 1931 the polishlng-off process i " , -... ''ru will benln preparatory to tho start of real shipping. 1 The .advertisements in this newspanenrwil! you a new conception of values. They Will demonstrate t6 you tho qualities of any article in which you may be interested and- tell you where you can buy it at a price you can afford to pay. By reading the advertisements you will soon become familiar with the most desirable articles of merchandise in all lines. You will learn to have the confidence in them that they deserve, and, when you buy, you can do so with full assurance that you are ? .getting one hundfed' cents' wOrth of value for your dollar. ' '..ris' X t-ti y,r ' t, .... Head adverliscincnin daily to enable your dollar do its fiill duty. 'cfOOoooooiKHaootW0oaa0nooooa00O0OC0ooi600a0OiHO00ow The Daily News Goes Into 95 Per Cent of the Homes in Prince Rupert.