v '-,5f PAGE TWO THE DAILY NEWS. PRINCK RUPERT - BRITISH COLUMBIA Published Every Afternoon, Except Sunday, by Prince Rupert Dally News. Limited, Third Avenu; H. F. PULLEN - - - Managing-Editor SUBSCRIPTION KATES City delivery, by mall or earner, yearly period, paid In advance $5.00 For lesser periods, pal I In advance, per week .. 10c By mail to all parts of Northern and Central British Columbia, paid- In advance for yearly period 3.00 By mall to all other parts of British Columbia, the British Em- plre and United States, paid in advance, per year ..... $600 By mall to all other countries, per year . .-.,..-., 9.00 ADVERTISING RATES Transient display advertising, per inch, per insertion Classified advertising, ptr insertion, per word '. Local readers, per Insertion, per line Legal notices, each insertion, per agate line Member ol Audit Bureau of Circulations DAILY ED.ITAON WAS IT RUSSIA? 1.40 .02 .25 .15 Wednesday, Nov. 4, 1931 While most of us have been giving credit to the League of Nations for the settlement of the Manchurian embrog-lio, it has been suggested that while the League sent messages and made more or less polite demands it was Russia that induced Japan to withdraw her troops. It is said that not until Russia began to move her troops in the direction of the scene of trouble did Japan seriously consider the present reasonable action which she is taking. Possibly warlike Russia is replacing Great Britain as the powerful peacemaker. FEARS EXPRESSED Fears are being expressed that within the next year there may be such a revival of industry and conditions may improve so rapidly that the improvement may not be permanent but that it will be quickly followed by another slump. We also remember the people of some parts of the world got much worked up over the prospect of the earth colliding with some other heavenly body and both being consumed in the contact. ' If we can only get rid of all our fears we shall have the millenium. ANOTHER OPINION Immediately after the result of the British pWH nn ivns known, Premier Bennett wired to Premier MacDonald asking that the Imperial Conference should again assemble. The proposal was well received In a great many quarters but the Manchester Guardian, the outstanding organ of Liberalism in Great Britain in an editorial article at the week-end said: "Mr. Bennett is in too much of a hurry. He is anxious that the Imperial Conference should reassemble now that 'difficulties hitherto prevailing have been removed.' The chief difficulty has been the British government's unwillingness to fall in with Mr. Bennett's idea of a bargain. He suggested that Britain should tax foreign wheat, but allow Canadian wheat free, while Canada would retain her existing and prohibitive duties on British manufacturers and raise by a trifling amount duties on foreign goods. "The 'difficulties' have not yet all been 'removed.' It was Snowden who declared we were not going tb change our fiscal system to suit Bennett, and the latest report is that Snowden will be a member of the new government. "It was Thomas who woke up the House of Commons by calling Bennett's bargain 'humbug,' and Thomas is very far from being removed. "The alacrity with which Bennett acted to ensure that our manufacturers should not benefit in the Canadian market through suspension of the trold standard shows he has not changed. His maxim is still the Canadian manufacturer first, farmer a bad second, and Britain can have third place if she pleases." PRINCE RUPERT Likes the Best! i ; x Prince Rupert merchants say that their customers like to buy goods of the best quality. They are a discriminating people. If there are any Prince Rupert people not taking the Daily News regulnrly we suggest that they are making n mistake in not taking the best. The price is now so low that it is a mistake to dp without the paper that circulates throughout the district. Call up the Daily News business office and ask that the boy call and collect. 10c. Weekly Commence Getting the Paper Tomorrow Because of their Interest tn gossip, which gave thtm t k irresistible an opportunity for leaning on their brooms, women street sweepers have proved a failure In Istanbul, Turkey. THE DAILY NEWS Wednesday, November 4 1631 Mrs., Douglas Fairbanks jr. Mrs. Douglas Fairbanks. tr or Join Crawford whichever you will. And would believe it. she Uinrrd under the name of Lucille Le Sueur before ent? Ing the pictures NEWS OF THE MINES' AROUND PRINCE RUPERT Telkwa Coal Is Hluhly Lauded Big Missouri Staff Curtailed Winter Sets In In Rainbow Creek District Telkwa Coal is a good quality bituminous coal and is much superior to the Alberta coals imported into the Northern British Columbia market declares a pamphlet entitled "Some Facts About British Columbia Coal" which has just been issued by the British Columbia Coal Committee. It is evident that there are suitable British Colum bia coals of superior grade available r. to entirely shut out this Alberta im- Q, , ft portation, it Is declared. Northern i OlCWcirt vES6 British Columbia has several coali fields but, as yet. only a small production has been made from the Is Appealed Telkwa field. A coal analysis con- j talned in the pamphlet shows that John McNeill of Stew art and James Telkwa coal has 13,020 British ther- j Conners of Juneau Not Satisfird mal units ad Is exceeded in this I With Supreme Court Judgment among British Columbia coals only j by Crows Nest coal which contains John McNeill of Stewart and 13,042 B. T. U. Sulphur content of James A. Conners of Juneau have Telkwa coal is 1 JO per cent which Is opened an appeal before the British much greater than' any other B. C. Columbia Court of Appeal from a coal. Telkwa ash Is 8.60 per cent Supreme Court Judgment of Mr. which is less than Island, Crows Nest Justice D. A. McDonald in which and Merritt-Coalmont coal. Fixed Harry Quickstad was awarded $10,- carbon In Telkwa coal Is placed at 000 damages for breach by defen- 62.1 per cent, volatile combustible dants of an agreement to sell the matter 28.35 per cent ahd moisture Red Top mine adjoining the George 65 per cent or less than any other Copper In the Portland Canal dls- Brttish Columbia coal. J. O. St. Denis, accountant at the Big Missouri mine for the past sev eral months, has left there for Trail in line with a heavy curtailment of staff at Dig Missouri. It Is understood that there are only eight or ten men still left at Big Missouri, most of theee being engaged In diamond drilling. Joseph Murray and W. Steele have returned to Vanderhoof after another trip Into the Nation River district where they staked more claims for Interested parties. They had a rather hard trip coming out. In the Rainbow Creek district winter has t In and mow is a foot deep. Fish Well Trained Answer Dinner Bell Fish Are Too Easy to Cateh In Lake Near St. Paul ST. PAUL, Nov. 3: Arnold Vogfs trained fish soon may answer the dinner bell without danger of being hooked. He hat asked Mayor W. A. Anderson of Minneapolis to help bring a halt to angling in Long Lake Crow Wing County, near his home. The fish are too friendly ahd easy to catch, he said. Mayor Anderson In turn, asked W. D. Stewart, state commissioner, who said he would consider a ban. Vogt said he has the fish go well trained they come to shore and eat from his hands when he rings a bell. Neighbors, he complained, have taken to ringing a bell and catching them. "They've been taking out some of the largest and best trained." he said. trlct. Quickstad alleges that McNeill and Conner broke an agreement whereby the mine was to be sold to him (Quickstad) for $230,000. The plaintiff was in tum negotiating a tale to 3. F. Duthle, Seattle Electri icmns Seek Business t'ttthipUml Mensem of ThL Trade to Become Salesmen NfW YORK. Mr. 4 A nation ld campaign in which Joblen electricians, are to become salesmen In an attempt to boom th electrical business and get their lobs baok has been started uncc union auspices in coorperatlon with contractors. The International Brothrrhori of Electrical Workers, which ejti- mates there are 26,000 to 33,000 unemployed union electrical mechanics, has outlined a nlan for a house-to-house canvass, which al ready has been submitted to President Hoover's unemployment; committee. The object Is to secure business especially from householders, so that contractors may employ moi" , men. For Qutt Rtlhf from COUGHS' & COLDS TAKt BUCKLES Th ttrr first sip of thit patent, pungtnt, ptnttrstitt minors gets result. ACTS LIKE A FLASH ASINGLESI TROVES ITI U-Jl RESCUE BY BLUEN0SE Cnjtt. Walters Tells How She Clawed , Off Sable Island in Driving; ! Sou-Wester t - j HEU GREATEST ACHIEVEMENT ' LUNENBURO, M.S.. Nov. 3: Much has been written of Lunenburg's ' champion Bluenose; of her victory over the Gloucester schooner Elsie off Halifax, to bring to Canada the title1 of sailing supremacy on the North Atlantic; of her triumphant defehse against the Henry Ford and Columbia, built to beat her and taUe the cup to Gloucester. Within the month, front i;ngo u-to.-;? the continent have pictured her btatlnc home to banish from i he racing lanes the speed rpecr.c of Massachusetts' new Gertrude L Thebaud. But the greatest pe: formance the Bluenose over gave was none of thef. Capt. Angus Walters will tell you. with a quiet emphasis foreign to hi fiery confidence In the ves-tei's racing ability. Captain Angus and 20 other men of Lunenburg remembers a night of snow off Sabu Island: snow driven in the van of a howling gale the like of which had not been seen by a generation of Banks fishermen. It was then that the Bluenose parted her cable off Safcle Island's Northwest Bar; it was then that a living gale from the rw'"3:i'went drove her so close to that sinister outpost of Davy Jones that sand stuck to the log in fourteen fathoms of water; It was then that Bluenoee, facing her supreme test, brought to bear her weatherly qualltie, the persistence In heading I up towards the wind's eye. that had made her the greatest thing tn the fUhln fleets and saved a score of i lives thereby. : A look of almost reverence comes oret Angus Walters' face when he telle you about it: he stopped in the midst of after-race celebration., when the beaten Thebaud was on; 'her ,iy to Gloucester, to tell the' story. Someone had dug up the front nage of a Halifax newspaper for Ap-: Til 25 1926. carrying the eight-col-' turn streamer: "Bluenose Nearly Swept To Her Doom." The story re-' counted how she had been badly damaged in a storm early In the month, and had gone through another harrowing night off the Island on April 20.' Dangerous Hook Angus took out an envelope and pencil and drew a map of Sable Island. "Here is where we were," he began, marking a spot close under the dangerous hook known as the northwest point, on the southwesterly exposure of the Island. "At anchor, off a lee shore. It had been snowing aQ day. and a gale blowing from the sou'wuVest There was nothing to do but wait it out. The wfty the coast Is there. It was wind-yard work to get out either way, northwesterly around the point, toward the Nova Scotia coast, or out to the open. "It must have been about 6 o'clock that night, with the storm at Its worst, that the grandfather of all seas rtruck us swept her forward, breaking the cable, smashed out 14 ttanchton. carried away part of the rail and bulwarks. And there we were driving far a lee shore in the worst gale I've even seen on the Banks. "We got the jumbo, double-reefed foresail and a r!dln-mll onto her. j and believe me. that was plenty. If v gssssssssssHIX Vgfl ggHIIIX W BgtsssssH BlBBSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSST I I I I m s w- gggHri LgW ik mm M WW TitAmn i Ciitrtl thtii ii ... 3 II rt(sui tsars rHKOIMi. Jmt esse iMtw scnears Faced Burglary Charges Before Grand Jury Faint Print Traced Him One niH last Octolier a yoimjc man broke Into it jewellery store in Norwich, Conn. He liad broken into other stores and escaped tie police. He wore doves to leave no trace. He wokI break a wirolowpane, tlien turn the eatrb and raise the window. This time he received a slight cut And then It began even hours of heading to windward, trying to get out around that point. We kept sending down the lead until we got Into 11 fathoms. After that we were too busy, and It wouldn't have mattered anyway. "Out she kept heading up, biting her way Into thru gale: I dont know as any other vessel could have done It. Wei', all you could do was keep her going and hang on. Finally the wind hauled more westerly; that ended ahy chance of getting around the point and Inside of the island. Out it was luck for us, because It hauled enough so we could tack ship and let it drive us batk, far enough outside to clear the south coast and get In the open. t"And that's about all." said Angus. Captain Walters Is of two minds as to whether that experience off MADE IN from the rkss and took off his rI iy to examine it. Then he made h -h:- ,taj criminals do. Ha forgot anil i.,u, i,-a the glass with the rut Gnnr , l'olice found the faint print aixl tr-,. j him. Soon he was on hi ri:i u ',,.,- the grand jury. Ilia prints be-.jwj him. Prints on Food Danger! Your finger prints are dangerous to you teo. Not localise of rrimw of course you do not commit any. liut lieraase of the disease germs your finners leave on food as you eat it. There U ibn danfjer. Theee genu you have nicked up from things that other people bare touched with hands that per Imps checked a eough or sneeae. Colds ami flu germs are transmitted most twnmonly thk way life Kitension Institute fists 27 disease which may be transmitted through the hands. Tlist is the way your prints are dangerous to you. Through germs. They enter your mouth on a chocolate, a biscuit, a fruit and if you are run down you may become seriously fll Safe With Lifebuoy Germs are everywhere but a way to safety la by kiUiug or uwking dormant the germ on your hands. Frequent washing elwsjra lief ore a meal with the one soap made for this jiurpese will do it That one soap is Lifebuoy. It contains a germicide. Laboratory tents proved that the germicide in Lifebuoy kills virulent Stops Body Odour disease germs where oilier f , Yet this remarkable protection i- one of the good qualitim .i 1 1 It is made from two tuU i - have wonderful value us u -U-and benutifier. No soap n..,-i. where can do more for your uu ., '. ...a than lifebuoy. Skin Health Too Instead ofa perfume in I.if- . note a clmn Itealth smit U world over m the to of nm (i vanishes quiekly after use i "i with lifebuoy's rich, penetn.' in. ; t destroys ldy odour, nwV.n i: j -..I from offending for many I ;- Safety from germs- and li'V ' your sun, with lifebuuv, t no more for it than for nn toilet soap. Keep a rake A I . on the wash bawn and fur t 1 1 Cneounc your wliok fimik espnislty to benefit by n.- y ) etenasiBg and by its wooderf i j on the completion. Your dealer has Lifebuuv f, j. Get a supply today. Lerer Brothers Limited. T n; Lifebuoy Health Soap A Luxury Soap Plus a Germicide Sable Island was the 'w isd at sea. It was un i .-the worst on the flshim o he worst of short durut i remembet? the time N' Muriel B. Walters to (i-. ried fish and was 45 o r ick to Luncnburrt wiih ;dte, Spain. That was -' -We lost our rudder th. : ah out of provisions n tub from steamers haitce. Tltey never exii ts back home." but Ahjits Is Hill thr . the Bluenose. There are 001 MO golf oers in the Unlt&d Stair- the thousands whu i one to the clubs. with ' L EDISON MAZDA LAMPS THINK what eyestrain can mean In headaches and nerves! And how easily avoided If you banish gloom and glare with Edison Mazda Lsmps. Use these dependable lamps freely throughout your home. Ldi CANADA i I KM sBsassa r&H CANADIAN GENERAL ELECTRIC CO. LIMITED Si'