4 PAGE TWO THE UMLt NEWS UnlHoodi Best Eecause Jt's "PAH-DRIED" HI ITT THE DAILY NEWS. PRINCE RUPERT - BRITISH COLUMBIA Published Every Afternoon, Except Sunday, by Prince Rupert Daily -New; Limited, Third Avenue - H. F. PULLEN Managing-Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES ing tons of compensating gold. The hills outside the wails of the city By mall to all other parte of British Columbia, the British Em- are covered with delightfully de- plre and United State, paid In advance, per year $6.00itached private villa$, etretching By mail to all other countries, per year 9.00 1 miles in every direction, and the By mail to all parts of Northern and Central British Columbia, nald In advance for yearly period 3.00 For leiser periods, paid In advance, per month 50 i modern Contract rates on application. Advertising and Circulation Telephone 98 Editor and Reporters' Telephone -86 Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations DAILY EDITION Friday, February 5, 1931. QUESTIONS OF CLIMATE ,, .? the square on square of priceless chapel over the roadway and the property sifted all through the city, preserving of the footprints - i vacant, and yet there is much vir- The Catacombs " I tue in their madness. There never The next pIace of interest to xae was a people who loved and vener- CatBcom-0Sit Is wa tne an exper-! ated their dead like the Italians. to be remembered. The Frap-i You find it everywhere, but from a Monk furnlsn vou With a! (western standpoint of wasted values for wnlch you pay him jthey let too much valuable land go Tee llre and you win need it usi Idle. The city remains the mecca of mut.n M you need tn, service of the (the tourist and traveller who crowd Menk As descend into the sub-1 i the streets the year through, leav- terranean miierles vou could ex-' magnmcent Dunaings wiinin ine city will hold their own in all the world, with the intensely Citv delivery, by mail or carrier, yearly perioa. paid ln; advance 5.00, Interesting addition of thousands Or four months for Legal notices, each insertion, nerk state line 100 1 of monoliths and marble statues of Tmnsipnt ndwtuintr fin front tiaee-ner inch 2.80 Golden Palace and Gardens, 'and Local readers, per insertion, per tine ..'.I" as; hundred of patrician tomes and Transiet display advertising, per Inch, per insertion Classified advertising, per insertion, per word1 1 i:........- Morte Craig Visits Rome, Sees the Catacombs, Looks Into Crater of Vesuvius and Inspects Pompeii I t .!,... u, .'..i 'By Morte Cralfc) , I Rome at last, everlasting, beautiiuland eternal Kome!i With her 800,000 people camped upon her storied seven' hills, and with the rajs of her passed .splendor all scattered, through her present beautifully paved and sumptuous streets Rome ! How often has the word thrilled boys and i girls in the days of their Latin ! Hard boiled brokers would weep1 ' back heme if they could only see of meeting, the building of the olore them for, marvellous as It! may seem, 600 miles, two or three) of which was enough for me, andj vou will find the passages scarcely j three" feet wide with niches cut out I :f the eolid rock for the bodies of the early Christians, and were begun In the life of the Apostle. We ! entered the home of Peter and Paul who undoubtedly lived down : iXTTIiff" rild masters, stolen from Nero's i nn " - LliCIC, MttVlIl OCUlCfc LitUUllLLiJ ui- known to the authorities who believed the Catacombs to be the ce- 1.40 .buildings of days when ancient meterv of the Christians and hence ' 02, Rome was in her triumph and glory. were never disturbed because the! As an example. I just eame from o jaw oi tne pagan Roman rulers rebuilding with twenty-four life spected the dead. An Inspection of , marble statues pf passed emperors, even a f ew 0f these galleries leaves heroes, gods, etc. decorating It out- one amazed at the Industry of the side walls. earlv Christians. Bv the fllckerlne! In sailing in on the blue Medlter- jight 0f our tapers one could see the ranean I lost one of my Illusions boneg. And m the chaDel overhead 1 which I am sure has been shared by re wonderful things on exhibit I I all the western world, and that was found ln the underground chapels the weather. The soutii of Franc. an(j hjmes also long wordy lnscrip-i j Genoa, and the Riveira generally tlons undoubtedly written by the: are very cold, and even come ana Apostles and Christians. 'Naples, hundreds of miles farther There Is also an exquisitely grand so.uth, have been wearing heavy gtatue of Saint Cecilia who Alma- ! winter wraps during the four Jan- chjus ordered to be nut ln a boiling mi i. . r i.T, i ooll i uary days that I have been here, ln- th: to her H was only cool and re- The Climate of Other to' be better places Usually seems eluding Naples eight days, and both iiething- and they tried to behead than our own, no matter Where we live. We have heard a towns are fullaf prosperous looking ner, Tbe gwojdsraan failed In three great deal about the California climate yet a despatch re fur -shops, in all honor the general rtroke:; and the law did not permit ceived yesterday states that it has rained there almost all dhruUe north of San Francisco on fourth. The stoy of the recum-winter Cba8t te tm a" statue all there pamted on a and rained hardThe climate of Southern Europe 0emPeaclflc Jent There are only two kinds, or galleries symbolic paintings of the Morte Craig, who has been Visiting there, says that while names for money in Italy and fox rock that Moses struck, the triumph he was in the SOUth of France and in Genoa the climate that reason it is easily understood 0f Daniel, Ihe resurrection of Laz- was much like that in Prince Rupert at this time of year. th.e llre and the Pa,rte, B llre The and many others dated Anno This has been a pleasant winter in Prince Rupert except nepnpr cne ZLvV nSfIand,a? l : . -11 ri . 1 thing even to property or am- The Trapplst m Monk Is a mild vole- , j. .i i - a mi. i i i for the extra supply of moisture. The Coal, bills have .been monds worth tens of thousands and d German He said he had learned kept down through the absence of Cold WeathemnrJ Spring Its value is five cents. Then it is dl- the English- language in three Will be along in a few Weeks.. , r.f ' ' . vtded up into copper and nickle waei. ?)Nqw. I am fairly credu- j pieces called centimes and It takes' ious and reasonably Christian but - " ' lone hundred of them to make a lire, withal a trifle stupid and hardboll- THAT H Ultli a u iliL so that 5 centimes is worth In our etj. However, these wonderful " Imoney exactly one-twentieth of mentt ,hould not be sprung on me five Cents and Vet it has a buying all In a hnn I hnvp rnt. tn hnv 'f ' 1 power. time to "hear, ponder and digest." , ,,.! Mgnweeine lour and you know, a on. well, our ian- "Our jdea . of a SW0ll novel IS . the comment of the Chi-. Let me tell you what I have done iuage Is a pretty hard nut for a CagO Tribune on a certain new book, says The Ubyssey. 'ln ray first four day In Rome. I ar- German Monk of the present epoch the Student publication of the University of B.C. Coming rved on January 13 and was met to prack in three weeks, so I Just sit from a responsible and respected newspaper, the choice of f"d Aplacf ,n 'he 8a!.0le "otelbry mih!i?n- i , . . mi 1 1 . i -.i I the American Bxpres Co. who cour- He was very nice w thnoh though, and an somewhat The of the Chi-' language is startling. prestige mecU yo on requert l00kg told uc very internum stories OagO Tribune gives a certain Weight to SUCh radicalism after your baggage and every ar- as he interpreted endless Inscrlp-and We hesitate before COndehinjngs't Utterly. Irivlng detail, with no charge for tlons but some way you arc haun- One Of the Chief Virtues Of the EJlglish language is its their services and remembering the ted by the uncanny effect which 1 IMMK i I J 1VIIM 111 T T-U ITIIIIUI !I1M II' llt'lllir IIII'll-IWII':il Mil IIILI1 ... ... . . the language as the need arises.. fhe only qb?3tWn is, where to stop. Up to the present "swell" has been considered a vulgarism used only by the uncultured. Apparently efforts are HOW being made to raise It to the dignity Of established , trough the entire heart of the city. Appian Way and leisurely write for Usage. The word's fitneSB for this position may be que's- ' lined on both sides with massive hours and then not tell the half of tioned but the final test rests with the function it per-i ancient and modern building and auV Interesting story. Let me step fnrmH. If "awnl!" fills n ffnnnmo ran m back a moment and visit Naples, nnn iB ; ;,i,l off,f: ti, im,,00;u i fine stone bridges carved and bear- Pompeii and Vesuvius, and exhibit wwuimi j, .. muccu ljCiFm..b kuc .ii.iu.uk, ,ng marble atAtu. The next day. ln sufficient to lure one fully half way to il u puiye. ii n ib supuniuouB u win ue su mwn u quaint little barouche, where the round the world. neauwooa anu win soon oe tuscaroeti. io narm, tnereiore, and possibly some benefit may result from the experiment. Lady Austen chamberlain a In arrived in New York aboard Aquttaniu, shown with Mrs M R Dunda.s nor ;i.st.T-in-law. whom she is visitlnf, I will nay thee back until the again into Ood s fresh air and sun- River Tiber is red as frothing wine, shine, and in its deepest ooze thy life- Looking Into Hell blood lies curdleoi This hurried description is hard I honored it first and followed Its ly intelligible, one could take the beautifully walled - ln course matter of the Catacombs and the step dips low and the wheels are but two feet in diameter, drawn by a splendid horse, my guide and I visited the to me next place of importance, the Colllseum, a splen did ruin, saw the arena where they The funicular railway takes you up within a few hundred feet. Take the path which leads you to the very lip of the crater and you will find yourself looking down Into the half-mile mouth of Hell. It was a were crucified and where gladiators gloomy day, a cloud liad settled be-fought, the underground cells lew .us, completely shutting out the where the victims and lions were world. The smoke and steam hung ! held, the entrances from them into over us. You may boast, but there the arena, the seats of the sacred are certain moments ln one's life I vestals and the emperors and whn superstition gets him ln spite nobles, and seats for 50s000 of the of all To read Pliny the Younger's i populace, took tn the sacred temple description of the great eruption of the vestals where they lived and ln AD. 70 when Pompeii was corn-kept trimmed the never falling pletely covered with ashes, then sacred lamps. Nero's famous Ooldcn followed centuries of forgetfulness. Palace and Gardens where he It had been the summer resort of burned" and crucified' o 'entertain the nobles of Rome. The remains his guests, the vast ond wonderfully nJvfcover four square miles and constructed forum and many near-'under the wonderful rule of Mushy palaces of the Roman nobles, saw sollni the government is still ex-the alleged footprints of Christ, cuvatlng. when he materialized on the Appian j I snw great mailed chests now Way and met Peter, who had sud- emptied which were found full of denly acquired a couple of cold enormous value In money and Jew- feet and was beating It out of els, piles of kitchen utensils, sta-Rome( when the Saviour sald:tuary, charred clothing and re-"Domlne, quo vadla?" Understand .produced bodies of women nnd me, I do not question the meeting 'children. The heavy weight of ashes and things said, but the exact spot had covered them with so solid a txs Everywhere in Canada Thursday Eeonur.n tool Cold When you feel a cold or a chill coming on, go to bed and drink Hot Bovril. You may save yourself an attack of influenza and avoid the risk of serious illness. may save you weeks of weakness To Women, Department of Trade and Commerce Ottawa, Canada Protect Your Beadwinner's Job! Are you one ot those whose lot in life consists in looking after the home? If so, unlessyou happen to be among the fortunate ones who have means of their own, you are dependant upon some one husband, lather, brother, sister, son, daughter to provide you every week with the money you must have to pay the grocer, the butcher, the baker, the milkman, the druggist, the dry goods merchant, and all the other dealers for the things you have to order from day to day. It would be a terrible thing, wouldn't it, if next week your house allowance were suddenly to be shut off Yet that is what might happen it your breadwinner were unexpectedly to lose his business, or his job! Are you doing everything you could do everything you should doto spare yourself a misfortune of that kind? Your breadwinner may be a professional man, or he may be in business as a merchant, or as a farmer. If so, he wants customers, more and more of them the kind who pay their bills regularly in cash. Isn't there something you might be doing to help those customers, so that they m turn could do more business with him? Some of them are probably growing or making things of the kind you have to order from day to day. So long as such things find a buyer, their jobs are secure. But if they should fail to find a buyer, for no better reason perhaps than that you and other women thoughtlessly allow yourselves to be sold articles that have been imported, they lose their jobs, m which event your breadwinner loses them as customers. And naturally you don t want that to happen! Orperhapsyour breadwinner is himself an employee. If he is, the safety of his job depends upon there being plenty of people, who are steadily employed at good wages, to whom his employer can cater. Obviously there will be more of such people, the more you and your friends see to ,t that for your daily needs you buy things that have been produced right here in Canada. Because when you forget and buy an article that has been made in some other country, you are depriving some one of a job tn this country. Otier women, everywhere in Canada, are being urged to protect the job of your breadwinner by always giving a Canadian made article preference over one that has been imported. Won't do you the same for their breadwinners, and incidentally make your own income that much mors securer blanket that when their bodies had In the passing of centuries, vanished, the skeletons were found In moulds that had not collapsed. The excavators carefully filled these moulds with fine cement actually Very sincerely yours, Minister ot Trade and Commerce. reproducing the expressions of agony and even the gowns which were slight and evidently night-wear. The teeth of one woman grinning in fear and agony can plulnly be t-en and the pro-Christ ,'J paintings, bronze, marbl KluPjJI biu. ijuuvra oi uuu- jffi and collapsed and dncil UP J and all that. Most of the ' I lllrn. !,.. t, ,1(0)1 ' 1,11 I itiHa jiuvc UCttl derful musoum in W.ij"