PACJS TWO DAILY EDITION THE DAILY NEWS. PRINCE RDPERT BRITlSIl COLUMBIA spubllsbed Every Afternoon, Except Sunday, by Prince Rupert Dauy News, umitea. Tmra Avenu H. F. PULLEN - - Managing-Editor . SUBSCRIPTION KATES City delivery, by taatl or carrier, yearly period, pa I advance 5 00 Tor lesser periods, paid in advance, per month . . 50 By .mall to all parts of Northern' and Central .British Columbia, paid In advance for yearly period - . JSXX3 By mall to all other parts of British Columbia, the British Empire and United States, paid In advance, per year ..J.- $6 00 By mail to all other countries, per year - 9-00 Member o! Audit Bureau oi Circulations LEAKN YOUR JOB WELL Saturday, 'Sept J 9, 1J31 Its a great thing for any man to know his job weU. He will never be out of a job long if be is an expert in any particular line. He wll be always in demand, even in hard times. The men who are put of work are mostly the men wfjo are not quite as good at the job as their neighbors. " To the young man in particular, the message eomes with great force: "Learn your job so that you know it as well or better than any other man you know;" NORTHERN GROWN FLOWERS . . A number of Prince 'Rupert gardeners are developing their nurseries to a point where they will be in a position to supply northern people with bulbs or plants grown in the north and acclimatized. When they do this to the extent of being able to fill the demand it will be a great thing for the north. To bring plants and bulbs from the south is not always satsfactory. Often they die when exposed to the winters here. To supply the northern demand there is a fine opening for several local growers, for the demand is always increasing, not only in Prince Rupert but throughout the district. WISH GREATER INCREASE. In yesterday's paper was published an article showing that there had been an increase in the amount of power generated by the Northern B C. Power Company. That is good news, What we all would like would be to see the amount doubled and trebled. An increase in the use of power usually means increased prosperity. While that has' not been true of the slight increase so far recorded, which has been due largely to the increased popularity of ejectrjoal apparatus, it is bound to be true if any large increase is shown. Power is the great hope of Prince Rupert today, Without it we should not have been in a position to talk business to any big concern wishing to come here. . New Carrier Collection System In view of the depression and to make it as easy as possible for people to pay, the Daily News is to be told on a weekly basis, payable in adranre. ' The delivery boy will collect eath Friday evening for the week following. He bays the papers and 'sells them to the customers, so there will be no credit riven. The boy cannot afford It. Please do not ask him to return for the weekly payment. Have It ready for him. Customers now In arrears will pay the amount owing at the of f ice, but fhis will ha?e nothing to do with the regular collections ude by the hoy. lie will be doing business on bis own, and if he does not make his own collecUoos will pot deliver the paper. Those paid In adranre will continue to receive the paper until the subscription expires. Any wishing to continue (be yearly pay menU may do so. and we pay the. boy. The price of the paper will be He a week, payable strictly in advance. That means six, papers for ten cents. It will take ftw weeks to get the new system running smoothly, and in tbe meantime we ask for the co-operation of the readers of the paper. The routes not jrojng on the new system this week will do so ust as soon as the lists are made, up and the boys properly instructed. Help the toys to set up in business for thernselyes! WE Altl? OFFERING; DISCOUNT ON COAL For Cah at the Kate of 50c Per Ton Alberta Lump, $13.50, for cash, $13.00 Alberta Egg, $12.50, for cash, $12.00 PeWna Egg, $12.50, for cash, $12.00 HYDE TRANSFER-PHONE 580 PHONE 580 DYSENTERY IS DANGEROUS CHECK IT AT ONCE a The Letter Box RAILWAY VISITORS they may in mindwto before the Commission and .Sir Henry. My contribution is that our Old Man Winter71 get you, pretty soon if you don't watch out. There are people who try to eke out their scanty fare with & JltUe venison, and some of Jt costs at least a dollar a pound. You can put off the collector and you can put off the unemployed, but you can't put off the grim reaper, so' keep your house' in order. The Lleutenant-Oovernor Is com ing and Sir Henry Thornton is coming. Who'll be next as a dinner guest? "The Dollar Is Very Low" said a headline in this paper yesterday. Yes, the dollar has been very low 'for a longitime and most of the time hides from sight completely. f Just let me see one dollar 1 The sight of It would cheer I'm getting so used to nickels and and dimes . 7 , I'd scarce know a dollar, I fear. C. N-JICAIN For the East-Mondays, Wednesday and Saturdays, 12:30 noon. From the East Sundays, Tuesday and Thursdays, 1:30 pjri. Rep THE DAILY NEWS Saturday, Scptcmbt: : t9Jl it the remedy you snowa use. vith vun a a view view to to recommending reoommenaing such sucn it is not nn u.Y,r Vr tn J by-law. amendments as might be preparation tht i& tad proved used in CnJ for lhe pt eighty wn for all bowf 1 conjpUint. Price. COcabot tie at aU drugpaU pr dealers; put up only by ThejT. ilO-burn Co Limited. Tomnto, Ont TRAFFIC IS I DISCUSSED, Present By .law Held SuiUbleiYYith Minor Amendments t Automobile operators oi the eity, ! in coniejen.ee last night ithja-sp.e-cial committee of the city council delegated to go Into traffic matters deemed advisable, expressed general satisfaction with the traffic by-law ,a3 U. now stands although sugges tions were made that the parking distance from the curb be increased up to 24 inches Instead of 12 as at rreent nd Jhat tome -.steps , be taken to prevent jaywalking to the j Aid. O. V. Rudderham. chairman, Aid- W. J. UcCutcheon and Aid.; Theo Collart wen? the members of . lhe jcoraroittee present, Others in ' attendance were Constable Oeorge Editor. Dally News: - Wyman representing the city police. City Eng -. Re the proposed visit of 6ir'CltyE.r Henry Thornton And toe Railway ff- J Good, Large. Jeff Commission to the city in the pea? J' ' ' v""ovwi future and your-suggestion that IT1' . , : ... . . The vility of onal parjt-T.rt citirens nuke such suggestions as', have .! 7 ItTrl he laid 7? WS W Third Avenue In the business fections was suggested by Aid. Cot-! Jart but met with general disapproval on the part of aii operators representatives who are in charge aI th, oricer. It was of affairs forget the art of apolo-! m giting for pur ktence Uaffjc would cause greater risk of munlty and demand that common iat sense and fair play shall tor; suggestions were made that there once take the place of red tape and. frjforcement of the official fallacies, that the RaU?, relation requiring sir feet space Commission be taformed that the between cars parked alongside the crossing that Js sought to the dry,cnrb. xhe suggestion that the limit dock and, fishery floats crosses 4,at which cars might nark from the piece of track with no traffic but increased to li Jnehes was that of a switch engine, a. couple approved in view of the fact that of times a day, too and from the there are a number of high curb-Cold Storage, that levej crossings itUits xhe city alongside which exist lr. most aU cities of the Do- iit y impossible to open the doors of minion and over main Jines tja car parked within It inches. It that: That the people of the city I was also uggested that the regula-are put to the greatest Jnconvep ,tion prohibiting cars from being lence through this little piece of ipa.rked within 15 feet of anlntersec-lape. If it is safe to cross the dead tton be stsicUy enforced. Hne a: Cow Bay and the Cold The U turn was held to be safe Storage why not at the Dry Dock? j providing proper precautions were Last but not least that few bun-exercised. dred feet of road line existing be-' Stop signs came in for general tween the Government wharf and ! discussion and the concensus of the C2iR. wharf alon? the water- opinion was that no further of these front that was hailed with high 1 should be required in addition to approval by our local railway off!- those already installed and those on eaU a few years ago when thelMcBrfde street which have Just been idea was first lntrpduced In the j provided for. Jt was felt by almost Council, has since died because the all present that there was no neces-R. R. Officials have withdrayr aity for a stop sign at Second Ave-their blessing. Now in view or the and Second Street Joe. grown many long tons of consideration jdiffered from the rest, however, and that has been given to the ON Jt. j "pressed the belief that many more by the citizens of Prince Rupert top signs wefe warranted as a in the past I for one would have I Precaution against possible accl-no hesitation in pressing the city's idenU- Joe Brown also spoke of the claim before Sir Henry, that the bit I "tion of Jay walking. The only of road in quesUon between the I1 history of the city government wharf and C. N. R.lta wbJeh Pson had been Wiled hart along the water front bche trucK bv automobiles had undertaken and completed this'1" d'recUy dne to Jaywalking, coming winter by the CUM. m There should be reguIaUons to eov-eensideration of the many favorjlern PleiTians as well as cars. The extended to the CNJR. by the cit-j commlttec in talte UP Question iMn of thi roM nmhirift,.. vonr.." Jaywalking and make some rec- eity Prince Rupert Thanking .you for space. OEO. B. CASEY. Man in the Moon ' ommendatlons along this tine if it has power to do so. Aid. Rudderham assured. I The matter of bicycles being oper ated without lights was mentioned and Constable Wyman stated that lhe police were endeavoring to prevent this practice. airs Are Made to Monument of Prince Charlie EDINBURGH, Sept 19.-As the result of representations made by the Association for the Preservation of Rural Scotland certain necessary repairs have been made to Prince Chariioa monument at Olenflnnan, to which a good deal of mischief has been done by unscrupulous .souvenir hunters. It was feared that th? tower was in some danger of collapse. A further contact with the "Forty-five" is a proposal before the Council to remove and preserve the withered stump of the well- known thorn tree on the site of the i Battle of Prcstonpans.'or Oladsmulr, as it was known to the Jacobites. With Lord Weymss's sanction it is desired to olfpo?. of this relic in rome fitting manner, and to erect a simple memorial calm on the spot. Petettve Sergeant Maclirayne oil provincial police force from Vic toria came north on the Pruia Oeorge this morning as escort for Cart Fredericks, who was taken onj to Prince Oeorge by train by In- fpector William Spliler to fare!. trial on a charge of murder at th-1 Supreme Court Assizes there next week. lAna 4ul SAillll f..a hir PIPE TESTED : S RURAL ;; Wf MAIL COURIER COURT "Aft a iMuil Courier mUo smokes n lot, I uIwhjb curry Turret piMj tobacco on my roumls; and wlicn I K.top, Its like as not, the farmer eotnen .out with Ills pipe and enjoys u fill of thin good tobacco. At first, some of them imagined it was n very expensive brand und were astonished when I told them liow little it costs. They all buy nnd-smokc Turret pipe tobacco now, because it is 'a tobacco with a diirenJiiee' Enough sitid!" ,60 per cent oi total sates in some days. Ready atSaskatoon s-rrSSSSS'SE Livestock Pool Plant Started erations This Week an anagtment whereby it 'ould fell .t0 to the Ej3rUh Co-operative wP?m; I Wholesale ore ma, it ( tkl tw a remarkable stimulus to Wc t.ve- TORONTO, Sept. 18,-Work has lie. mnJ tOc, packagrg alui In i(uund terwtvp tin$. 1 U : li I i 1 TOBACCO A good, cool smoke Pipe tested Turr,t ! f ul Jpr that teho roll Iholr own iNew Packing Plant Twenty Years Ago In frlnce Rupert September 19. 1911 Op-i!': The commiuee room vi i --- Rom. Liberal candidate fi i uBJ- AtUn in th fdrjl ; tseek twde bete and ensure a good atf1iAtd jjrrt-wjen .. S.KSKATOOS. &wk.. Sept. IB- mtrtet rlfce ' projucu ot the SJJS, InVrt of;h, The new packing Unt of the SM-nt bw wautO eoiHlrueUwiv w Patmore pr u! katehewan livestock pool began Such an agreement is jelicved to ;hespeakajs included Duiw . handling cattle and hogs Sept. 16.' be pepding. ijhomaa Dunn. A. M M.u- bORHo on a $100,000 building eten-1 iaclk adequate electric "ton project at Bishop Straehan year to 50.475 at Uie last report ' 8ch00' The . bulWtng will be a this year. Calves and rtieeD iUoltote struct Are of three storeys and Iflth (be red, white and blue II. M, Queen Victoria, wben Kin TV barred rtsndard of Slam fluttering sbove them in tne summer aunshlae, pipers from all part' of Canada proudly marched and counter-marched in tb (rounds of the Banff SprloRS Hotel, Banff, A Ha,, durlnr the recent Highland Gathering, which was rracd by the pretence of T.y King Prsjadhlnok and Quwn Rambal Darnl of fUm and their suite and a large number of dls tlpgulshed ruests. Ills Mslestr, who opeaed the festival by raising the Oar of St. Andrew, met an intsrestlDg character in the per-on of "Willis" Campbell, of New Westminster, B.P., who was a piper on tho personal staff of buldalontkorn of Slam paid an official visit to her. at Oshorn House, Isle of Wight, in 1194. Piper Campbell cars a special performance for King rraladbi pole, at the BnXf meeting. Anew feature of the Gathering waa a competition for representatives of pipe hands of the IT Canadian 8yttUh mtlttla rsguneats. which was won br PJpr Hector Mac doasld, of Montreal. Danclnr and Xllghland sports rounded out an excellent program, with apedally rtreoeiiU'd (teoteh Ilrht operas lrt the cvenlBKS. The picture sbowg the rssMAd pipers, psradlnx under the Siamese flag and (Inset) T, M. the King and Queed of Blaol and Upcr CampbtlL The city couneillast nieh- te t't me pin a e move towttrd derel-; Charlei Hunter. oping an extensive livestock busV( j .' T n6S direct from prodtretr to 001; - nn 1 C L 1 1 prtnee Ruperfe new Cif. Hull on Aimer. 1 1 lirillllll LlCIllltll 'mrumstreemnow unorr - uui 1 1 , 1. .. t . It ion The estimated com if the plant an added stimulus to a sap-dly growing business. Figures av ailable to Aug. 30 show that 5,704 L rattle were sold through the Saskatoon stockyards' this year, &t compared with 4 32 teat year Being Extended juM$,4 to purehase'two Rtdgewav n.in." With the InataHatlon of 'm n- fur ali he eHv-wiH be avaHabie t) Decem ber. increased. The stockyard here are! will comprise another quadrangle. CJt. PRINCESS MARY wrving a constantly enlarging ter-! This wtil carry out the original plan j CALLED YESTERDAY ritory as northern farmers became 'fer cmnsleUon of the school. Au- - aware of the advantages, of Uae' thortties state that Ua DUrpose C P. R. sleamet Prinr shorter haul to Saskatoon than tojrmttoaQOornmodatemorepupUsbut Capt. James nodd. arm other stockyards. Of the total stookito house aatlsfactorily the prevent at i 20 yesterday atten xAi here a considerable properth i pupils. The enrdllraent at the school , the eouth and sailed r-is shipped east to Toronto and is 400, one hundred of whom are on her return to Van Mantreal, the shipments reaching boarders. waypolnta. L-aaa-va iji-i . .jlblj . n 1 1 ..j v 1 -.ji - - 1 por. Ill :! Ill