fACiCi TWO WHITE SHOES fo Comfort, Coolness and Style . . New Lines Just Received All White Sandal, Cutout effect, Dress Cuban Heel, Bend fiJO AC Outsole ... White Punched 3-eye Ties Dress Cuban Heel Bend Qr Outsole ... HtJt Have you visited our Bargain Dep't? It will pay you. The Family Shoe Store Tlltp An..... 1UI1U AICI1UC, jsVlliSsiliisiliillilsilBliiliilil I fclj Phnn. M . THE DAILY NEWS. rKlNCK RUFEKT - BKITISU COLUMBIA Published Every Afternoon, Except Sunday, by Pnnc Rupert Dally News, Limited. Third Avenue H. P. POLLEN - - - Managing-Editor SUBSCRIPT! ON RATES City delivery, by maU or carrier, yearly period paid in advance Wi pcnuua, paw in aavance, per week By maU to all parts of British Columbia, the British Empire and United States, paid In. advance, per year . By mall to all other countries, per year - .' ADVERTISING RATES local readers, per Insertion, per line Classified advertising, per word, per insertion Transient display advertising, per lncnt per Insertion Contract rates on application. Advertising and Circulation Telephone , Editor and Reporters' Tolephobe DAILY EDITION Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations 98 88 SUMMER SUPPLIES SCREEN DOORS Galvanized Screen Wire Cloth24, 30 and 3C Inches . K.Mk SCtnn Wlre c,oth-- SO and 3? Inches am Adjustable Window Screens - Screen Door Sets Fly Swatters Lawn Shears Lawn Rakes THOMPSON HARDWARE Co. Ltd. 255 Tliird Avenue Phone: 101 $5.00 JO 3.00 0.OC .25 X)2 1.40 Tuesday. June 19, 1934 A NATIONAL CONSCIENCE NEEDED One of the pressing needs of today is a national conscience. Individuals are to a considerable extent guided by the rules of humanity. They consider the position of other people as well as their own. Nations consider only themselves, except possibly at a time of national calamity, In private life the average man tries to keep on good terms with his neighbor. He is willing to give and take He would be averse to doing anything that would damage the . value of his neighbor's property or hull the feelings of the man living next door. He is considerate of how he would fee if placed in the position of the other man. He is guided Hio Kuiisvieiice in nis dealings witn the man on the other side of the fence. . " international life everything is different Nations are v c iicignuur nations, iney , . think only of ' their own wplfarp Whn fnV; tional action they never seem to consider what effect the iiiupuwuaaion may nave on any other nation. They think-only of their own country. In other words, there is no international conscience developed. Take the matter nf cnstnms rnviffc tw,, o j lowered at will byany nation without any consideration of J ii . . , n,ay De ony any otner nation. We in Canada think only of Canada; United States thinks only of herself; Great Britain considers only the effect its action may have on its own group of islands. Internationally, we have not yet emerged from the state of the savage. That is why the League of Nations cannot succeed. There is to be sure, a glimmer of light on the horizon. When a national calamity occurs we find that nations are willing to make slight sacrifices. In the case of famine they send food to the hungry and lend aid in time of flood or other disaster. At all other times they become wolves ready to prey upon any weakness of neighboring nations with less conscience even than the big corporations. or two thousand years the churches have been preaching the desirability of doing to others as we would they should do to us. Cut this preaching has had little effect -tor the moment people begin to take mass action it is as t RAILWAYMEN WIN MATCH Defeated Moose in Softball Girls Play Opener Grotto's Double Win The Canadian National Recrea tlon Association, erstwhile companions of the Moose and Royal Canadian Naval Volunteer Reserve in the City Softball League cellar position, did not find it hard to boost itself into fourth place by virtue of its 9 to 2 win over a weak Moose team last Friday evening. Pitcher, the railway chucker. held the Moose to six hits while the Morrison brothers were nicked for ten blows. The Rallwaymen look the lead right after the Rone, show ering Roy Morrison with six hits In the first two stanzas and gleaning for themselves eight runs two in THE DAILY HEV73 Tuesday, Jone jg, 1634 PREMIER INVITED Dominion Day Celebration May Be Opened by Mr. Pattullo Progress Being Made With Plans The Dominion Day celebration committee, at a meeting on Sunday With the rhairmnn Rprt Mnnnn In ...... J ... v. gull, .14 . V, - V- - I , . - I mc vuir, received rvports irom various sub-committees indicating that good progress was being made with all preparations for a big day. Premier T. D. Pattullo. who Is expected to be in the city on Domin the first and six in the second In-1 the second eame. findlne it (imp nlns- 'work to administer the second de- j The Lodgemen obtained their I at of the afternoon on the Junior ,oniy two tames in the fourth in- "ks and also win their fifth! !ning. Postulo and B. Armstrong.! straight league victory of the sea-j vwui iv wren away, srarea on Bill'"- me Juniors commenced er-Tobey's three successive errors ating right off the gone when Mox- shortstop. Bill has since left town. I ley. Steffensrud and Santerbanl weas ana maiuerent nltchinir oegan vieinr with each othr tr, was largely the cause of the Moose defeat. The line-ups: r ion Day, Is being invited to open the proceedings by giving a brief talk at the Acropolis Hill grounds. Hie first minister and local member is expected to otherwise participate in the day's festivities. see who could throw the ball the farthest away from its objective.' Some time in the miv midst IIIIUJl YJ1 of this II 1 1 Moose Postulo ss.. B. Armstmr.fr' fumbllns carnival fmir nmtmi.t. - " x "-' w v ivio to lb.. Menzie 3b.. J. Armstrone c . R. succeeded in crosMns the mIa'p Morrison p., F. Morrison If.. Lemon FUUrred on bv D. KtalVrp', Inn. rt'. Hunter 2b.. Hickey cf. bagger. By tills early lead the To- C. N. R. A. Coverdale rf.. Horton bacconls.ts ironed to take nil tl.P 3b Cameron cf.. Oeddes c, Hibbard PP out of the batered Junior Elks If.. Stiles lb.. Pitcher p.. Tobey ss . fr the rest of the game was un-Astorla 2b. marked bv anvthin? wHin. i. Ladies League Game j though the "Blundering Herd" did In the opening game of thinanage to save the Grotto' vir. Girls League, the hard-hitting , lry from being a shut-out by tak- Grotto Iemmes swamped the lighter rln8 advantage in the fifth of sev- and younger Moose Amazons 21 tojeral ' 'heir opponents' infield er- 7. The game was replete with er-1 rors to smuggle Moxley across the rors but, as this was the first gamejPlate fr their only tally. for both sides. It was to be expected I MIke Budinich and Sam Joy were that the ladies would be a little ner-1 umpires. vous. The fans at least got quite aj The teams were: kick out of It. i Grotto Fone 2b.. Gun ih n..,- The teams were: vlch c. Hill If . Nelson !U A lit nn - Moose Girls Stromdahl 2b m. lison 3b., Hunt lb., Turgeon cf .. Dic kens p.. Blake c. Armour If.. Davis ss.. McLachlan rf Grotto Girls Budinich r Rnrv lb., Sdnberg p.. Johnston rf . rtatrh- ford 2b, Oulick 3b.. Nishikaw . Smith cf, Gurvlch If. Games en Sunday Two soflball eames were hlvi on Sunday between- Gmtto aH Junior Elks with the tobaeronlxt winning both. The score of th fint which they didn't need. - - ... I being the opener of the Dominion! uay knock-out series, ended 5 to 3 and the second, a postponed fixture from last Wednesday, resulted In a count of 8 to 1. The field was wet but fast. In the opening stanza of the first nm Smith, Young Elks' centrefirtrtrr and pilot, slid across the treacher ous grass to muff Fong's high fly. With Fong thus on second hasp on. other error by the Elks rmniH with hits by Ourvich and Hill, ser-, ved to send the Orotto's first torn runs across home plate. The Juniors grotto piled up an early lead In We buy anything: and sell everything: in household floods at THE BON .Phone Green 698 Between 5 and 10 p.m, Van's Bakery Opposite Boston Cafe Quality Breads 4 for 25c At All Grocers Labelled on Bottom For Your Protection . . Plione190. . elll cf.. Yager p.. stalker lb.. Hatch-ford rf. Junior Elks Santerbane Smith cf.. Nakamoto 2h Rteitm. rud 3b, Moxley lb.. Morgan c. Nay. lor rf.. Camubell and navu if Lindsay p. The League Standing The league standing to date: W. Grotto 5 Elks - 4 Junior Elks 2 C N. R. A. 2 K. v. N. V. R i Moose i L. 0 1 3 3 4 4 ROCK FALL KILLS MEN Pet. 1.000 00 .400 .400 .200 Rain last night caused rjostnnn ment of the City League fixture between Elks and C. N. R. A. and the Laldes' League game of Moose vs. Annette's. FOOTBALL! Tonight REGIMENT vs. LEGION Acropolis, G.30 p.m., Adm. 25c. Ladies I Here's Something Vou Have Wanted Curtain Stretcher $1.65 each Strawberry Hullers 10c each Lawn Mowers Sharpened $1.25 Phone 3 We Hill call for It Kaien Hardware .200 NACMINE. Alta.. June 19: (CP) Alex McLeod, Ivor Jones and Hugh McDougall were killed In an explosion followed by a rock fall at the took the lead in the fourth inning if1 e of the Thomas Coal Co. yes-when when two two error errors hv bv Pif First Rasm n.... 1 terday Stalker and an overthrow by Nel-J ai snort and Joe Naylor's Urr drive tallied Smith, Steffensrud and Morgan. The Tobacconists re-medied this situation in the sixth when two more runs, which proved to be the winnlne ones. wcit rmr- ed on Moxley8 attack of "butter-fingers" by which he erything that came his way. Frcm then on the Grotto sat back and maintained their lead, marking up another run in thp eiohth f, BALL RACE VERY KEEN Yankees Have Mathematical Lead Over TigersOther Crucial Series In Traitress NEW YORK, June 19: (CP) The New York Yankees lost a close game to the Detroit Tigers at the Yankee Stadium yesterday and. as a result. hae now but a mathematical lead over the club from the automobile city for the American League supremacy. Boston Red Sox took both games of a double-header from the St. Louis Browns at Boston and ouftec" the Browns from the leadership o. the second division. Washington Senutors and Cleveland Indians, who have been staging a hectic scries for third place honors, were Idle yesterday on account of rain as were all the National Le.iRue clubs. Yesterday's Big League scores: American League Chicago 3-5. Philadelphia 2-0, St Louis 5-9. Boston 6-14, Detroit 6, New York 5. All others postponed. ACCORDING Tells Gyros Of Mrs. Cripps Holds Great Pyramid Delightful At Home Hobert Martlet! Speaker at Luncheon Today of Local Service Organiration airing a highly interesting discourse on the subject of the Oreat Pyramid or Glzeh from archltec ural and historical standpoints, rtobert Battlett was the speaker to-my nt the regular weekly luncheon tf the Prince Rupert Gyro Club tn he Boston Cafe. Stating that, tn he best knqwiedge. as checked by strpnomy and archaeloglcal rt-earch, the date of the building of he Pyramid had been set as 2625 J.C.. Mr. Bartlett told his listeners nany enlightening facta In regard o the marvellous structure which layed such an Important part In .nclcnt history and based some fu- ire predictions on its authority, miong other things that the pre-snt depression would end In 1930 nd the second coming of Christ juld be on August 19-20, 153. Past-President Cratekshank was :i the chair and tendered the tlianks of the club to Mr Bartlett Keceptlon of Nw u,csil Wa Prefty AflVir The home of Mrs, Oeorg m Cripps was the setting of delight, ful reception last Thursday after-noon. Assisting the hostess in re celvlng were Mrs. J, H. Piu.,bl,fr and Mrs. S. P. McMordle. Tle dainty appointed tea table was coveir d with a lace cloth, en tred with a low bowl of plnlc, mhuve and whit aweotj peas, Uny iim vase of violas and was lighted by pink and mauve ttpefs In surer sconces. Presiding at the urns er iir J. C. McLennan, Mrs. w. H. Toby r. r. Mcciymont and Mrs. L W Kergin. Servlteurs were Mrs. O p Tinker. Mrs. Fred McLeod, Mr C C. MilU, Mrs. Win. Crulcksharti Mrs. Olen McMillan, Mrs Oeoft Laidler and Miss Alice Plllsbury for his discourse Ihere was a fair attendance pf members at the Happy the Bride the Sun Shines On I j B K u 1 Lright future for the fortunate bride and grown. But nowadays, a hushand-to-he trusts less to the weather nian--i and more to Life Insurance for guarantees of future security ' and happiness. ' He makes certain, through Life Insurance, thit his liride Will Le protected from any unforeseen "rainy days" ahead. If you are ahout to he wed, or already married, you need Life Insurance. You need it to establish a financial reserve for the year to come. Life Insurance -'Guardian of Can adtan U omn IU4 On f t gH, f M.i..,.. Sppotottd j Lift l&nriDt CtnFinj