PHONE 357 7. (Estab. 1908) THE DAILY NEWS. PKINCE RUPEKT - BRITISH COLUMBIA D THIRD AVENUE Published Every Afternoon, Except Sunday, by Prince Rupert Dally News, Limited, Third Avenue II. F. PULL EN Managing-Editor ADVERTISING RATES Transient display advertising, per inch, per Insertion J.... 1 40 Classified advertising,, per word, per Insertion j, Lu,..' I 02 Local readers, per line, per insertion ... .........lT.........rl" TZ1I j5 SUBSCRIPTION RATES - ' City delivery, by carrier, yearly period, paid In advance ......,...... ' $500 For lesser periods, paid in advance, per week ,io By mail to all other countries, per year "Z'2Z"Z. 9.00 Advertising and Circulation Telephone . 98 News Department Telephone ...... 86 DAILY EDITION .Wednesday1, Oct. 21, 1936 THE NEWS reel PiioThnii apiipi KemaiKuure.mueeu are some oi tne pictures pi the ac tum civii war conuicc raging' m spam yucn are 'brotiijnt tu ua un me tcreen even ot our own tneatre m Prince nu-pert. Possibly, some ot us, so deeply impressed with tne pictures tnemseiVes, ub not stop to think of the ingenuities and risks that must be continually irivoived uv the men who get such pictures. The job of the news reel camera man is, indeed, no 'easy bhe when a person comes to realize it. He is in about as grave peril as the actual combatants, it would seem, but he is ever on tlW job and; seeing how well he can do it. ; And the candid camera, it must be admitted, brings a picture oi warfare, as of other events, which could be: provided no other way. Press and radio: dispatches keep us informed on the instant but 'thejiews reel brings us the clinching visualization. It-permits neither of censorship or propaganda. It must ot necessity b3 the record of thintrs as they actually, happen. The news reel is, indeed, another ol the wonders of the world although its accomplishments' are rapidly becoming commonplace. Npw we hear they are beginning to broadcast the sounds of actual warfare from the battlefields to . the world. Next thing we will see war by television. And we cannot help but think that when the horrors can be brought in this way to the eyes and ears of non-combatants it ought to some day be a means of developing the sentiment of the world's peoples against war CREDIT IS EARNED There is scarcelv a srvtal which we are confronted today that the Greeks and Romans, Chinese and Egyptians did iiol wrestle with to reach their own inevitable conclusions based oh practical experience, says Financial News. , ' One of the oldest of all problems, js that of debt and the sanctity of contracts and one of the wisest of the old philosophers was Cjcero. He it was' who said: Nothing so cements and holds together all parts of a society as faith or credit, which can never be kept up un-IesS men are under some force or. necessity of honestly paying what they owe to one another." Credit being what it is, a precious possession, it is not remarkable that from time to time men of little' understanding should attpmnt in traU if UU,i : price of faithfulness to contracts, , Credit is not "given," it is "earned." And there the Social Creditors who dream qf free credit make their first and most fundamental mistake; Premier Aberhart in Alberta is going to attempt giving free credit;' next month ami is going to prove-4xpen-sively for his provmce-that there cap be no such thing. . IP.renVfr Aberhart had listened to Cicero instead of to Major Douglas and had realized that honest payment of honest debts is, as Cicero says, the "cement" that Holds society together, he might have saved his province and its people the travail through which they are passing and must still pass on the road tp disillusionment. As it is, Aberhart and his followers have shown all too clearly that the very meaning and significance of the word "credit" are unknown to them. TRAIL OF OLD MINE Secret to Itlch Silver Storehouse Lies Buried in Lost Mother Mill WINNEPEO, Oct. 21: (CP) Somewhere in the Middle West, along an old Indian traU, forgotten footsteps hold secret the location of the Lost Mother Mine. En croaching forests hnve obliterated signs Dolntlne the wav to a store house of silver believed to have made the Ojibway tation the rich est Indians before the coming of the white man. For years the mire his been forgotten except by a few honeful prospectors domiciled in the north. Today it lies near an old Sioux trail leading from the Big Sea Water (Lake Superior) to the wps- small creek, In a ravine." "From the hillside my father cut snecimens of native silver to barter for knives," he related. "When he had carefully covered every sign of the vein and our own tracks he warned me never to reveal the spot to a livine soul and that if I showed it to a white man I would.sureiy.de," orin or superior Many old Sioux trails thread the region northwest of Lake Superior. One of the lost trails via a main artery connecting the Oreat Lakes with the western pralrlei.: Along tliis same pathway Sir Oar- net woiseieys expedition passed westward to the relief of Fort Garry In 1872. With construction of' the lines usefulness of the old route vanished. It' now lies deserted arlrf overgrown, a pioneer pathway tos ed by time Into the discard. Per? haps Increased demand for the white metal will again spur pros pectors io the search and disclose the secret that has hidden the mine's existence; DUDAPEST, 0:t. 21. (CP)-T)f-flcial hcfiors were acMrded 101 city women who have given birth io most cni'dren, Frau Alodsla Oy-tiTcslna, mother r 18, being It Pays to Buy From MUSSALLEM'S Our prices are always right with the markets and we sell for less. Mall or phone your order and save FREE GIFT COUPONS for a Din nef Set and Rogers Silverware. Prince Rupert, B.C, MUSSALLEM'S ECONOMY STORE ft j Twenty -Five , Years Ago ; j l . 11 -11 : October 21, 1911 With every available berth booked up, the steamer Princess Royal was in port this morning southbound from Slcagway to Vancouver Them wr 'iin 1 'than 220 parsettgers on board, consist ing niainry pi yuxoneri ana Alaskans going outside for th2 win ! r. Among the better knon of them were Frank Manley of Fair banks, Bill, and Tom Scouse of Dawson, "Doi" Ralmea of Fair-';anl!s, Mrs. "Charlie Vtfqulri",of Dawson and George De Lion of rawson. A smoker was held last night in tJj-e .Mclntyrc, Hall in honor of II S. Elements, , the newly elected mem be"- of Parliament for Comox- Atlin. Ainn. Dr. uv. W. w. B. u. Clayton uayton was was In in tftrn t u v. i j J SiS teLbI tne chair ar,i among L speaker, First word of the mine's existence came from John Cummings, a native of Orkney, Scotland, who died at St. Paul in 1913. Veteran trader and closely associated with the Sioux he secured fpecimens and learned the shurilah (silver) wajs taken from a sacred calumet mine which Indians declared no white man should ever see. ' With Martin Raynor. St. Paul! engineer; as partner Cummings searched for and eventually loca ted the great vein. Returning with samples they became lost and rarj short of food. After'many hardships Raynor died of exposure and Cummings, who buried , the sliver near the body, was picked ud bv a' Dartv of Indians, Tried to Find It The following spring the veteran trader returned to take un the tlaim. The place where Raynor was buried with the silver was easllv found but extensive search failed to uncover the mine Huh efforts proved no more successful and the story of the Lost Mother Mine, concluded by many to be of legenaary origin, was nassed akin William S. Pineri' Tliiinitet. Ino.J uowii prospector, claimed to have once found the mine but was al ways side-tracked by other derjosits in the years he tried to. re-locate It. He died eight years aeo. his nersU- tent hope of again finding the elusive treasure undiminished. In an old diary he descriherf itj location as "a creek, two miles lone and quite narrow." The pntranm was "ten feet high and seven feet wide and, opens into a circular cavity witl a dome-shaped roof." To such a place Jack Flower. Rh-vpn old Ojibway now living at Squaw Bay, recalled a visit when a boy. With his father he camned "in a Manon, Dr. Traynor of Terrace and, of courss, Mr: Clements. Optimistic prophecies were made as to Canada's future under Uih new Conservative government.' There is 'talk of a pulp and baper mill being establlshid at Prlnse Rupett or close by thf city. With so: Vnany'i other Indus tries .in the .cfflngfor the city jt.-elf, thsie may be some diffir ,-j'ty in ot'aihlng a suitable site right In town; W CONCOLEUM CANADA PIANO AND BABES AID Foimer Ottawa Girl Tells of . Two Years at Chesterfield Inlet'. uouousiy ireiemea norm, uwa uiuer. .." SIT -t. r. , J !' PAGE TWO DAILY NEWS m m " - Wednesday 'October ft 1836 Work Boots For Men Every Pair Made For Wear Plain Toe or Toe Cap, solid leather soles or. Panco soles. ; price-$3.95 $6.00 Felt Boots for cold storage use. $2.95 All Rubber Boots with or without cleats. Price- t0 $4.50 $2.95 . t . T v j Is Honored By Norwegian .King fir JOHN'S. Nf!d . Octl 21: 'iftT Sweden, fiauand' and' ,L:ra,,iu, ,. her story at the Hartney Women's ' - . ... . . Institute. She was Mrs. Fred' Wood-; -uiree nights a week." row of Ottawa. She had lived ini once a year the Nascople brought Hartney as a girl, and stopped off supplies. The government supplied to visit. the coal, worth 840 a ton. to warm Thejplano was a novelty in Ches-j their house. In the fall the trek to terfield Inlet. For a week after its- walrus Island was .an event, for the arrival, Mrs. Woodrow was kept! annual kllhnir of the walrus. After busy exhibiting it to the natives who came at all hours to see it and hear it played. When she decided to accompany her husband, who was in charge of the government radio station, she decided also upon taking the Instrument. She had You, can easily make your home the bright, cheerful place you want it to be . . . and at surprisingly low cost, CThese mo(lern,ea8y.to.cleahjrut;b are your answer .. . the pick ofarime of the world's smartest pud most beautiful patterns ... buili to long-wearing surface that will keep cheerful lor years . . . Yet your dealer will surnriso you with their astonishingly low prices that "we began to look forward to Christmas." For December 25 everybody at Chesterfield Inlet went to the Hudson's Bay post-"where we enjoyed a Christmas dinner and all "A" PASSING OF Newfoundland, nas xejeiccu , me jesuu vveils Dies at Tort. Simau, Order and Insignia ol a first class' Affer Colorful and AdventuroW Knight of the Rayal Gidr of Si). v. Career Olaf, from King Haakon .VII ol j , Norwav s : POUT SIMPSON rw -i .... " WINNIPEG. Oct. 21r; (CP)-A .The Qider, which was plndod U -sciortul and adventum,,, ..T (modern pioneer who .spent' two by King . Oscar I in 1847, Is Joshua Wcl'j. well known years years at Chesterfield Inlet, on awarded for distinguished servk-j.ideni of Port Simpson and one Hudson Bay with her husband, and; to the country or humanity. Kin-; jf the patriarchs of the ' wni. oegunea me iiuurs wwi a piu, i jtaaKon is urana jvuvsier u uieip-in-pj away on Thursday 'ertnlrij f jast week" at the age of ei(rtii. nine years. ; ' Eslore steam vessels ever plied Notthern British Columbia water? Mi. Wel.8 was well known to hli ftll6 natives up and down th ;tatt and on the Queen Charlotu Islands and in southeastern Al-,i$ka. He Journeyed far and nat by, canoe hunting for fur seal and ea otter and trading with other tribes. In hunting, shooting mi :4lng h was second to none In his day and he was also well known as a logger. Deceased' Is survived bv his ivm. sW sv and and two two daughters daughters - one in taught music before her marriage VinstpoH nf tnruew h. nniv ,nf. at Bishop Bethurie-College, Ottawa, lcouver and e 0" In Port i ference." Last, year .the party num- l and "loved to clay." j'herp'rt n hut. nnMv'uin .wr. .Q'mpson Two years In the riorth was a long time away from friends and ' customary activities, but Mrs. YOUR urn IS YOUR LIFE the feast. ' u m- ,; .v.-. u. lunerai tooic p:ace on Won. stltlous enough to let that harm! day. opting came enn me garnering ehsea, Eng., Oct. 21: (CP).- .,yv. ioouc . uiwi, ui iici ai mossDernes was tne eeuiement s uiamondless for 20 years Mn piano and her babies. The second chief diversion. The berries had' re.- Ernest Orsvall, wife of the'rectcr year three more white women ar-'malned under the snow -all win- of Pltsea. found her engagement rived, so a bridge cluh was formed ter,. but that didn't harm Ihem, -olJ'alro behind' ths lining of her and a tea table game enjoyed They made a delicious Jelly. hop che&t. im&wr is i?" Mil i fw m IMI 1 1 1 H fcH III STR 'i'"! 1111 l ! . J mil m Th n$ ihu w il PEIPING' N. 41). . montrIaT Gordon's Hardware We carry a large stock of the newest and most popular patterns in G0NG0LEUM RUGS Unsold. SeW Il ymi'dalf f'' MIM .i U I uiat iod four onljf unitian of MYow Mowr Btck II Not i MacKenzie's Furniture We carry a complete line of CONGOLEUM. All latest patterns, yard Koods and in rug sizes. Phone 775 for your requirements i