de th! AQE TWO THE DAILY NEWS Wednesday. Jan THE DAILY NEWS. OPPONENT rmxcE hupekt - mutism Columbia Published Every Afternoon, Except Sunday, by Prince Rupert Daily News, Limited, Third Avenue ; -.i!- 'kSH r . .1 n. p. ruiAjKN Managing-saiwuvj : SUBSCRIPTION RATES By'jrnall to all other parts of . British Columbia, the British Empire and United States, paid 1b advaoee, per year By mall to all other countries, per year By mail. to all parti of Northern and Central British Columbia, paid in advance far yearly period 4 .-. For leaser periods, paid' in advance; per month City delivery, by maM or carrier, yearly period, paid in advance Or four mantis tpt y.i.M.-.., - - Legal notices, each Insertion, per agate'Hne ; Transient advertising on front page,-per Inch .. .. Local readers, per Insertion, per line r ... Translet display advertising, per inch, pfcr insertion ' Classified advertising, per insertion, per word Contract rates on application. Advertising and Circulation Telephone ....98 Editor and Reporters' Telephone 86 Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations DAILY EDITION IMPROVING IN HEALTH AGAIN UNSIGNED ' $6.00 9.00 V Wednesday. Jan. 28, 1911 PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENT DOCK For several years there have rMhirUmoraihat the C. P. R. was about to take over the prulflncial. Government dock. ; promnci Now the minister of public worftB&ft'tne prbyincial government announces that he has Mrh looking over the nock If "Pro Publico" will let us knjjSfflPEo shall be pleased to publish his letter. H& oflgm tlrknW by this time that we do not publish letters unless signed by the wrjter. Although we do not in every case insist on the name of the writer being published, this is one where the person writing should be illing to back up his statements. Wm T Tildrn. 'left' most fan ous tennis player, signing with Metro Ooldwyn -Mayer for a series of short films dealing with tennis Major Edward Dowes is losinu the deal which turned Tlklen from Amuieur to professional. ik3Bt,'Tav' , '-'sr. v f This is coy bow to camera made by son of Michael Arlen, noted author, in his mother's arms, in London, England. The latter was Countess Atalanta Mereati before her marriage in 1928. with a view to making some change in connection with its A l T" 1 . i p conduct. Local people will, at once jump to the conclusion AnCieM lailgierS and yuaillt beilOa that the L. r. K. is taking the clock. Although we are assured that up to the present no definite step in connection therewith has been taken; it is not unlikely to occur. , We have maintained for a long time past that the C. P. ' R. would come here, and with a friendly government at Ottawa and another at Victoria it seems bound to happen 1 before long. If they take over the local dock it will be the first step toward greater interest at the port and we feel sure Prince Rupert people will welcome their advent. RELIEF WORK Visited By Local Citizen; Many Things of Interest Are Found (By Morte H. Craig) Up this morning and saw Tangiers. four miles awav on the Moroccan coast, rising out of the coiling fog. It is very j strange ana novel over there where much adventure and cules, one lands in Taniriers as on another nlanet. Camels. It is satisfactory to know from the minister of public elephants, turbans, mosques and covered features, all the works nnrl hie rlpnntv nfror anonrlinrr cavaml Ar,,,a i tVio polyglot and mysteries of the de- the city and on the highway earned is being out in a satis- m0oniight, the scent of nowers and factory manner, so far as results are concerned. The min- the resistless lure of the orient, ister is interested in the city work because of his govern- some day soon, i shall take that rnent's contribution to it and all the records were made p8001 Moslem in. pass-available to him and his deputy. Members of the city coun- ing here' one,fIn,ds tljf du bI cil who came in for some criticism at the recent aldermanic SZSJZft. election will be glad to know that their work has been pas- mirai Parregut of the u. s. Navy, sed on by a competent outside engineer and found to be landed there with his squadron, tish and American flags and said: "Do you see these flags?" From !that very day there were no more British and American maidens stolen from merchant ships and Envoys from home and relatives of misting girls at times were re ceived with every courtesy and systematic searches were made no girl was ever recovered; the author- Hies, expressing deep sorrow and sympathy, gave every apparent help in the search, always damning the pirates, "over whom they had no control." A Beautiful Nun We remained in Oenoa five days and I took one day for a quick trip to Monte Carlo. The villages and various local color would fill hackneyed pages, but the most worthy of mention mayhap of the journey was a young lady, chaperoned by a pulpably younger sitter or nun, who was so very beautiful that, In spite of her unseen or non-existing hair, a plastic imagination in colu-slon with the dissolving habit of the screen, might easily transform . . , .. 1 J I .11 M MU line drapery uiwj a uuuy wuu noeu (from the looms of the dead Oods, who still hover over this country, and the religuese into Juno. My natural reticence In the presence of ladles made it Impossible, but I had a longing to step over "onrl urVitcnor In liar oop' "Not the black eyes of Juno, "Nor Minerva's of blue, no, "Could rival yours you know, "You- exquisite, thing." Her knitted rope girdle and her white frock were like a symphony in music. I mention this incident because one would hardly expect to meet. with such beauty among the cloistered women ot the world. Now back to Genoa, where the old part Is the very embodyment of former pagan existence and ancestry. To such as dwell In the New World, and have never visited the old, it seems Impossible to convey any true eunct.'jjtion of Uic wonder- ful creations here in marble. on canvas and that is where the statues found thousands of them, rich He there on both sides. In niches on the wall or underneath the marble floor. pace is allotted to the families according to their I means and wishes. And In ah arched alcove back of each space Is It is satisfactory to know that the minister of trade and lo ZSpSS. 'SZ'SSl commerce, Hon. H. H. Stevens, who is well known in nad been i01" on tor ' statues do not stand as symbols but rnnce uupert, is not so seriously ill as to cause uneas ness E;raT unaerne cu amonir his friends. Hp hnR mtaApA nnr nttv urll in ha nn yanoe ofthe dey of Morocco ..i ; ... : . : r".' ""J " " "u ana tne uey or Algiers, irrespective ca maty as responsible head ot one of the most important of the social status of the young partmonts at Ottawa and it would be a calamity if any- ladies at home. ng should hannon to him. We hone he. will he kirk nr. his work in a very short time. in actually reproduced features and clothing of the mourners represented. In one alcove, the sculptor hat carved of life site mourners around the bed of a dying mother, out of one vast block of marble, expres- rlons of grief with falling tears, and clothing so life-like that one easily distinguishes Its quality-lace, silk, wool, etc. The money spent and the devotion of the people to their dead is beyond all comprehension, with burning lamps and flowers everywhere. A Wonderful City In my letters I have and wUl try to avoid hackneyed subjects with which all readers are familiar. Oenoa is a very large city and to a westerner, a very wonderful one. The older portion, built in and back of the Roman era has streets where arms and touch the walls, barely Ax feet wide, built back In the days of imminent invasion where a very few could rain down death from overhead and hold the street against countless hoards. Columbus' home stands In the ' present heart of Oenoa completely covered with vines and lichen,! built before a single house was er-: ected, aside from the AzU-cs, on the North American continent. I shall visit Pompeii In a few days and take the funicular railway to the lip of Uie partially active , crater of old Vesuvjys, The Dally News can be -pur- eha.vd nU-- Post Office News Stand, 325 Oranvllle St., Vancouver. Karl Anderson, Prince George. B.C. R. W. Riley. Terrace. B.C. General Store, Anyox. Smlthers Drug Store, Smith- ers, B.C. OF DRYS Late Senator Edward Opposed Prohibition But Never Drank Himself to United States Senator Edward I. Edwards, whose death was reported yesterday, was one of those men in public lire wnose ssanu on nroniDi-; tlon was somewhat anomalous. On that issue he was one of the i most vigorous and, outspoken opponents, yet he did not use intoxicants, j Although holding liberal views concerning the use of intoxicants, the senator's opposition to the pro hibition amendment and the Volstead Act was based primarily on his opinion that both were an in-, vasion of the liberties of the people. He was elected governor of New: Jersey in a campaign conducted on' ' the issue of personal liberty, and in his inaugural address attracted na-. tional attention by his bold dentin-1 elation of prohibition and the Vol' stead law. Three years later when Mr. Ed-i wards made the race for the United , States Senate against Senator Jo-; sepn o. ! renng nuysen. he again m-1 jected the personal liberty issue in to the campaign and was elected by the unprecedented plurality in Newi Jersey of 89,000 votes. Throughout his service in the upper house of Congress. Senator Edwards never lost an opportunity to express hit views opposing fcro-MMUon and he frequently made them the subject of addresses at public and private functions other than of a political nature. Wettest of Wets By hir consistent stand against ohibitlon. be came to be known :.; 'en? of the wettest of the wets." This was the cause. of one of the! i . i , , . i vnmor, o Ua V.o,1 Poo? t,w,,,l, ft, T:i1.. f tj musun btto rurpnnn incidents; .v,.....v.w i.au. ,iug Kv"c iiuaio uj. iici-Hf the Democratic National Con v.mtton at Houston in lt38. The Houf'on Democrats named as a reception committee for the New Jerseyites, made their plans lion? lines which they deemed pro- Genoa is fairly decorated In sU-1'"; t B"lt"Hfc " "cc , ,,,rv K7h l . . , gater from a putative "wet" state. mav be I tion committee deemed an oppor-so very . , u& iHbit. life-like that like Oalatea, one ."T"; " tTL ' d could almost expect them to step TO.ftonohfa'e j, . ,Mt i I do not drink, tne senator natnr re-down and a The speak one great, emphasi2i; the decUnatlon palace of the dead, built of marble 17 ' !t "vZu ll j tasE aviruw uiaiwci us wihvii 1 1 Thp miniatof nf nnVilm ttnrl-o vrmn innA try n nn:u. t... with a platoon of Marines, tramped ... ..,.: i ..A.-iwas made '";''':7:. Zl "U""J'"V , , a'Y to the palace of the dey. "B" "'"u i"u" V8 iviJiiroviiutuvu tiiuL uiey were nanicuianv uieaseu at tne ... .... ... Ul spacious mu. jnt ooaies oi me manner in which their money had been handled 'by the SoffiSTiS: Senator Edwards was born at (Jersey Cltf, December 1, 1863. After !hls public school education he en-jtered New York University in the .class oMB&l, but quit at the end of his iunlor year to study law In the I office of his brother, WUllam D. Ed-I wards. After determining that the legal I profession did not appeal to him, he obtained a minor position in the First National Bank of Jersey City ; and while there devoted himself to the study of banking and taxation. ' He lef c the bank to form a partnership with his brother in the construction and building business, but In 1908 returned to the bank as as sistant to tne president. lie was advanced to cashier in 1911, to pre sident in 1916 and became chair man of the board in 1035. On November 14, 1868, Senator Bdwards married Miss Jule Blanche Smith of Jersey City. They hal a ton. Edward I. Edwards, jr., and a daughter. Mrs. Edwards died Aug ust 3, 1936. C. N. S. OFFICIALS IIEUE Richard Knox, assistant superln tendent engineer. Canadian Natlo na1 Steamships, and C. W. Tour tellotte. assistant Pacific Craw manager, arrived in tne city on the Prince Oeorge this morning from Vancouver, being here ir coimectlon with the docking of th company steamer Canadian Win ntfr. They will sail tomorrow night on their return south. f SORE THROAT Rub on Vicks; also overy few hours mell a litlto n the mouth and let trickle slow ly down .i . inroat. OVER -U MIUION JARS UStO YEARIV j- : :.. 1 .v.,1.. 7 J ! TN 1 1 JLorit lie a)ake toniffhU s. i "81 I V7HAT a depressing state fs slcH W ness! Minutes seem hours seem endless. Back of it usually arc n r strained, raw and fagged out. Ncn, are starved for nourishment to t exhaustion caused by over-work, w or sbdal effort. If you are bothered with sleeplessnc your nerves with Uvttltinc. You wili rti-ir rhrv will calm down, diccstiw t ! z z 7, ' ... ... . i' . wjll stop and you will sleep soun,: v .4 naturally. Ovaltinc at bed'time is the world's K night -cap. Millions of people have t . J this to be true. The natural nourishnu-: 1 Ovaltine restores mental and physical .x almost immediately. Ovaltinc is prepared scientifically from ft barley malt, fresh eggs and creamy r ... iNaturc's finest tonic loods. It conta:' a 1 the essential vitamins and other i ' rlrmwirs in correct tr - .. OVALTINE RUSKS art iKttllmt fr Utlk tuti now ana aim rt adthiktfuiUHuftfad. Tiff art dum (ran finttt Canadian WMdtaii flunr to uMcA OmHn if 1 tufau ftaa much nor t nuurisJtint than tkt outrage ru r bitaiit. Dilkimu wAcn trntd uith chtttt. tions. It not only so r! i feedsthencrvesbutcoir; : 1 rebuilds your exhauste l I Ij alls ana tissues while vou sleeps You wake up v. r -a fully refreshed. Try the world's best "rht cap" tonight. Sold dt all good storey r-x c:, 75c, 5l.25 and spaui1 . 3 family Size tins; alw x . soda fountains. tu DVq LTl N E' TONIC FOOD BEVERAGE &nsuhS Sooad, NcdxiAoX SCeep A. Wander Limited - 455 King Street West - Toronto. Uie LAMP to read bij - Mtat I 1 . 9 1 A comfortable chair . . something interesting to read . . . and soft, well diffused light. What more could you desire I Be sure to choose Edison Marda Lamps for they are frosted on the inside and protect the eyes from harmful glare. Buy them by the carton and always have a home supply. EDISON MAZDA auoznasccKiEEiaac LAMPS A CANADIAN GENERAL ELECTRIC PRODlCT