PAGE -fWO what to ,do. Th Daily News PRINCE RUrEUT BRITISH COLUMBIA Published Every Afternoon, Except Sunday, by PrinceRupert Daily News, Limited, Third Avenue H. P.TULXEN J'i - Maifrtfing-Editor DAILY EDITION SUBSCRIPTION KATES By mail to all other parts of British Columbia, the BrHiab Empire and United States, paid in advance, per year 6.00 By mart to all other countries, per year ........... .. 7.50 By. mail to all narts of Northern and Central British Columbia, paid in advance for yearly period 3.00slde, Tor lesser period, paid in advance, per flionth 50 ,City delivery, by mall or carrier, yearly period, paid in advance $5.00 Transient advertising on front naire. Per inch 2.80 Wednesday, July 30, 1930 LOOKING BACK AT ELECTION As a matter of fact, it was a hard time election, one that usually goes against any government. It might have been I IMPERIAL CONFERENCE UNEMPLOYMENT SITUATION Doubtless the unemployment situation has been overemphasized for election purposes.. Possibly the best means of dealing with it would be the undertaking of important public works especially in the west. The building of the coast outlet from thq Peace, River country would be a popular move. The federal government will now be in close harmony with the provincial administration and it is to be expected that thev will co-operate in the matter of railway building. Promise has also been made that provincial highways will have support from the federal treasury and that probably the highway through Central British Cor lumbia would be included in the scheme. It would seem to be much more reasonable to put men to work on developments of this kind than to pay out relief money and have them hang around the streets in the ,big cities. The men would also much prefer to think they were earning money than receiving it without giving value in return. Whether an extra session of parliament is called or ot, it would seem that auick action will be required. The only object in calling parliament together, it would seem, would be to vote money for large public works. ALLEGED IRREGULARITIES This morning G. M. Hunt, the well known local furniture man, was in the police court on a charge in connection with the elections on Monday. "While it Is not admissible to comment on the case before the court, Mr. Hunt is so well known in the city for his scrupulous honesty that no one will believe he knowingly dM&iwthing contrary to The election Jaw; wMch waa frtfnWby a committee of both partiesvseemTto have been framed in such a way that some of its provisions were not very clear. Mr. Hunt identified some of the members of the crew of the steamer Prnce George and it is claimed that he did so without actually having known them sufficiently well. At any rate what he did was anything but criminal. There possibly may have been things done on both sidos which were not in accord with the intention of the new law. Liberals claim Conservatives were guilty and vice versa. What is clear, however, is that Hanson secured about a thousand votes more than Brady and he is undoubtedly the choice of the riding. Should the verdict be upset by some technicality, another election would certainly show a similar result, The Letter Box ILLEGAL PRACTICES AT JtXECXXOX 0 Editor, Dally News: There toss been .considerable -talk arour.U town by an unsportsman like element of the Tory party ithat Ihe .Liberals won this election by 11- plego,! -methods. Let me jay Jn reply .that every thing he Tpries point to as irregu lar a& flupiicRtea ;py tneir own ana tney also indulged m u- Or four months for 1.00 legal practices which the Liberals never atte.mp.ted. One glaring .example .Is where hey Illegally .appointed more than Local readers, per insertion, per line .., ..... .23 two agents for one polling hooth in! T . - - . . . . . . a J I A.- A. - 1 I 1 A. Transient display advertising, per inch, per Insertion 1.4U uruer w voie peupte wno coma not Classified advertising, per insertion, per word 02 have otherwise voted. Under the Legal notices, .each insertion, per agate lne iff j Elections Act each candidate is entitled to have two agents only at rntr9 -or -nnHonflATi I each polling booth. At Seal Cove Advertising and Circulation Telephone 98 Editor and Reporters' Telephone 86 Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations air. jiraay appoimea aour, me xwo f regular agents from the city And 1 two other out-of-town voters, who were not .entitled to vote liere, and who merely presented .their papers, voted and Immediately left neverfor , one moment even attempting to en-1 gage In the dutiec of an .agent. The 1 two original agents from the city i ' remained all -day at the booth and the others should never have been allowed to vote, and a more Illegal manner of obtaining votes could not be Imagined. Looking back at the election and trying to understand! i do not .know in how many other its meaning, it seems to us that it may not necessarily be ! booths this illegal .practice was in-a hostile move against the British Preference or against i?ul?'f Torie"' " Jt closer trade relations with Great Britain and the other jtSTknd countries of the Empire. Hon. R. B. Bennett seldom men- i on the other hand. know of ,no tioned these things in his speeches. i instances where the Liberals delib erately broke the lav as the Tories did in the above case. With regard to voting the sailors "U 8w wrtivcu a jcai, uut,from t"1' tne ..pjlnce Oeorse tne the difficulty was that it might take more than a year for; Tories themselves voted some .of the country to recover and feel itself again prosperous, i these men, for i myself saw Mr. With the price of wheat still falling and with a general 'Brady's agent vouching lor one. and tendency toward curtailment, it wasf difficult to decide l'te ftttatjrrom TZTf. ? Liberals got only & fair share of these votes. In jny humble opinion, these men were entitled to vote here. The majorities secured by Mr. Presumably the new Premier will -attend the Imperial;1111"1 nearly very part of the Conference fc" September. He willrttidTre with a man-lnfu'uen?r , hm! ,cousiv date from the Canadian people but just what that man-, S JKtUSiS date was it will be for him to discover. ' ' j why not "play cricket" and take Mr. Bennett is an imperialist, although he has also de-1 the beating in a sportsmanlike clared that he is a Canadian first, and heandhis suDUor-l"1411""? ters have been cheered for the statenwnfeaimodetry campaign meeting. One of the first and most important matters with which the new government will have to deal will be the settling of what will be their attitude toward Empire policy at the big conference. There is not much time in which to do it. Yours truly, L. W. PATMORE. Man in the Moon Now that election rumors and forecasts and half of the candidates have been laid to rest, it Is. time I took a sleep myself. I don't mind being a Tory Or Liberal of note, But what 1 hate on election day Is losing my precious vote. Jake says he placed a bet the day before election day and now the blankcty blank, blank, blank, blan-kety blank poor measly, creeplrig, crawling, disgusting blankety blank j losers won't pay. ! Suppose we forget the election now that it is over but in future leam the lesson that It's unwise to call a Canadian a foreigner. In some parts of Canada people are complaining at the price of bread. In Prince Rupert the only complaint is that Mackenzie King and Brady should be beaten at the same election. Jake says when the price of wheat was a dollar and a half a bushel bread was ten cents a loaf and nowi its down U ninety cents, he still has to fetch out a dime in order to get enough of th staff of life for a good square meal. Some of the local people are said to be wondering if the Gypsies had anything to do with the way the election results went. ' 1 ..v' r A woman ma not accept a proposal of marriage, but she will always admire the good Judgment of the man who made It. PUTTIXa XT CLEAULY Irish Magistrate The defendant swears he was perfectly sober. Policeman lie was absolutely intoxicated. If he had been perfectly sober he would have known he was drunk and not made a Dally News quick results. 'Wunt Ads" bring j l -a- r" '.' 1 ' " 5- I Amono- the I j Members-Elect Humboldt A. change) . Melville Hon, 'no change). Prince Albert Rt. Hon. W Mackenzie King (no change). Quppelle John Millar change). Weyburn E. J. Young change). Yorkton O. W. MacPhee i SASKAXCUEWAN Liberals Asslnlboia Robert McKenzie i no change). J. Totzke (no : W. R. Motherwell (no change). Conservatives Moose .Jaw W. A. Beynon Con' servaUve gain from Liberals). Reglna f. W. Turnbull (Conser vaUve gain from Liberals). Saskatoon F. A; McMillan (Con servaUve gain from Liberals). Progressive Klndersley A. M. Carralchael ! (no change) . MANITOBA .Conservatives Brandon D. W.Beaubier (Con-jscrvatlve ' gain from Liberals). Springfield Thomas Hay (Con-servative gain from Liberals). Winnipeg .South .Hon. Robert Rogers (Conservative gain from Liberals.) WinnJpeg South Centre W. W. Kennedy (Conservative gain from Liberals). Liberals Macdonald W. O. Weir (Liberal gain from Progressives). St. Boniface Dr. J. P. Howden (no change). Labor Winnipeg North A. A. Heaps (no change). Winnipeg North Centre J. 8. Woodsworth (no change). NEW BRUNSWICK Conservatives 'Charlotte A. D. Ganong (no change). Kent T. Arsenault (Conservative gain from Liberals). Northumberland O. M. McOade Conservative gain from Liberals). Restlgouche Madawaska M. D. Cormier ConservaUve gam from Liberals). Royal Hon. George B. .Jones (no change).. ' , ' ' St. Johnk, Albertf-Thomas , Bell and Col. M. MacLaren (no 'change). Victoria Carlcton F. B. Smith (no change). J Westmbrclaod-rUr. d. B. Price (no change). York Sunbury R. B. Hanson (no change). Liberals -.Gloucester Hon. P. J. Vcnlot (no change. UltlTIKII COLUMBIA Independents Comox Albernl A. W. Nelll (no change). Conservatives Fraser Valley H. J. Barber (no change). Kpotenay West W. K. Esllng (no change). Nanalmo C. H. Dickie (no. change). Victoria D. B. Plunkett (no change). Yalearotc Stirling (no change)., Liberals East Kootcnay J. F. Gulmont (no change). New Westminster Tom Reld (Liberal gain from Conservatives). Skcena Olof Hanson (Liberal gain from Conservatives). Burrard W. F. Hanbury( Liberal gain from Conservatives). Vancouver Centre Capt. Ian Mackenzie OLlberal gain from Con servatives). Vancouver North A. E. Munn (Liberal gain from Conservatives). , Labor, Vancouver South- -Aid, Angus Mclhnls (Labor gain from Conservatives). ALBERT A United Farmers ' Acacjift '.ob.'ardjner, , (no nanei. i Athabasca -DS F. Kellner no '! ishange) JBattle JUveriU. JEt JSpencer .(no ; change). I " w JRlver E. J. Garland jio change). t Camrose W. . T. Lucas (no ichanee).. Maclepd-riDr. ' . p. ..Coote ' (noj hange).. ' Peace River D. M. Kennedy (no I change). Red Deer A. Speakman (no change). Capt. R. O. Latta, who brought ! Vegrevllle Mike Luckovlch (no the Empress pf Japan over to change). Quebec, where Commander 1 Wetasklwln William Irvine -(no Robinson, hero of Yokahama change). took charge I Liberals Medicine Iat Dr. F. W. (no change). Conservatives Calgary East J. D. Stanley gain from United Farmers). Calgary West Hon. R. B. Bennett .o change). Edmonton EasU-A. U. -G. Bury onservaUve gain from Liberals). Lethbrtdge Brig. Gen. J. S. ittewart (Conservative gain from "nited Farmers) . NOVA SCOTIA Liberals ; Antigonish Ouysboro William ! auff (no changed. j Colchester M. L.' lUrquhart (Lib- 1 a mo 1 vain frftm PAncArvoiitfAtt ; V.IU VU4WV1 IWHr V ' . ! shelburne Yarmouth Hon. J. L. ""ijfcalston (no change). Conservatives Cape Breton North Victoria Dr. J W. Johnstone tno. change). . j Cape Breton South Flnlay Mac-jdonald (no change). , Cumberland R. K. Smith (no : change). ! Dlgby Annapolis II. B. Short (no i change). I Halif ax F. P. Quinn and 41on. W. A. Black (no change). Hants KlngsA. deW. Foster (Conservative gain from Liberals). Inverness I. D. Maedougall (no change) . Pictou Thomas Cantlcy (no hange). PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND Conservative King's Hon. J. A. Macdonald (no change). Queen's Hon. J. H. Myers and W. C. McLure (Conservative gains flom Liberals). Liberals Prince A. E. MacLean (no change). YUKON Conservative Yukon Capt. George Black (no change). Much Tourist Money Comes In From the States Only Small Proportion of Amount Goes Out, According to Official Estimate In 1929, United States visitors to Canada spent about $289,000,000, and Canadians spent in the United States about $91,000,000, according to a report prepared by the Department of Commerce at Washington, D. C. Of the amount of United States money which flowed over the border, about $208,744,000 went by motor car. A table prepared by the Depart-jnent of Commerce, on the basis of questionalres furnishe automobiles curing 1929 was as follows: CO-day cars $163,652,000 1-day cars 44,416,000 .6-month cars 676,000 Commenting on the enormous Increase In automobile touring by United States' citizens in Canada since 1922, the statistician says: "One-day cars and total cars more than quadrupled during that period. The increase In total cars during 1929 was about 24 In 60-day cars, 15.3. HAVE YOU TRIED A CLASSIFIED? More and more people are turning to the classified columns of the Dally News to find what they want. Used cars, furniture for sale, lost and found, houses to rent or for sale, positions wanted. All sorts of things are advertised there. If you do not read tho classified page, get the habit now. Try it today. "flies are highly j, dangerous" !! say Health Authorities r i . yrim.t lUJ0 8lnco Im. Wednesday, July no I3Q FUt it told r- in this ytLau, can uiuh ti.t Hie World's . r band. II n 8 KILN DRIED SPRUCE, CEDAR AND HEMLOCK ii FINISH, CEILING, RUSTIC, MOULDINGS, ETC. Specialties Edge Grain Iloat Cedar. Kiln Dried Edge Grain Hemlock Flooring Spruce and Crdar Shlplap, Boards, Dimensions and Timbers Doors, Windows, Shingles, Etc. Odd lots off-grade material at reduced prices. BIG BAY LUMBER CO., LTD. - Lumber Manufacturers Prince Rupert, IS.C 'TV E r .Hi oAre YOUR Holidays ? Carefree or Otherwise? Outlays on holidays -should be money well spent Often what otherwise would be a real, beneficial vaeation is spoiled by thoughts of the cost perhaps by the thought of sacrifices to be made afterward. Get the greatest pleasure and benefit by saving well in advance. Enjoy the thrill of anticipation as well as the carefree holiday itself. Regular deposits, begun well ahead of time, and piin a separate account if desired, will ensure the kind of holiday you want to have. f IANK OF MONTKEffi Established J8l7 Total Assets In ExceM of $809,000,000 Prince Robert Branchi A. H. CARSON. Manager. If you lose anything, advertise for it. Daily News Want Ads. bring quick Resulis