PAGE TWO F. Hedley Auld (By Gee) JflR. F. HEDLEY AULD. Deputy Minister of AgrieuHur for Saskatchewan, it chairman of the Exhibition Committee of the World's 0 rain Exhibition and Conference and, like many other prominent westerners, was born in Prince Edward Island. He came to the West some twenty-eitfht years gfl and In 1906 Joined the Dominion Department of Agriculture, becoming associated with W. A. Wilton in the dairy branch. 1 A year later Mr. Auld organized the statistical bureau of the Provincial Department of Agriculture and afterwards went to Saskatoon to fake charge of the agricultural ex tension work of the University. For a short time he was a member of the Mooney Seed Company and in 1914 returned to the Provincial Department of Agriculture, organizing the debt adjustment bureau. In 1916, when the late Frank Mantle, then Deputy Minister of Agriculture, went overseas, Mr. Auld became acting deputy and deputy upon the death of Mr. Mantle. For the past two years, Mr. Auld has been president of the Itegina Provincial Exhibition Association. In 1928 Mr. Auld was secretary of j the Koyal Grain Inquiry Commission. He Is a director of the Regini Y.M.C.A., nd has membership In the Canadian Society of Technlcat Agriculturists, the Saskatchewan Live Stock Board, and the Saskatchewan Stallion Board. bungalow, a comparativel) THE recent home building develop ment, seems the best medium foi the expression of the modern home-makers ideals. To attempt to follow in bungalow design, any precedent originated for two-storey nouses often results la an incongruous appearance which Insistently makes one thing "imitation." What is wanted in bungalow building is good honest design and construction, and in this example at least, these requirements have been met. . Interesting features of the exterior are the extension Of the roof to form a hood over the front entrance, the use of window sash bars to make six lights in the upper sash and nine in the lower, and the Judicious placing of diamond shaped wood medalllonsto relieve the possible monotony of unbroken expanses of stucco wall. A good impression would be received right at the vestibule, which Is larger than the average, and which, with its tinted walls and celling, antique electric fixtures, and a well chosen picture or two would make something out of what, in most homes, is merely the space between the doors. Travellers returning from abroad have Invariably been stricken with the lack of color in our buildings. The present trend toward the use of colored materials, however, Indt cates that Canadian eyes will not long remain color starved, certainl.i those of the dwellers In this house will not, for the Interior walls and celling are tinted throughout. Imagine the furnishing opportun ities of the living room with this color treatment, antique electric fixtures, a big fireplace, and doors to the sunroom and dining room. The kitehen cannot fall to appeal to any housewife. It contains an electric range, sink, refrigerator, and a large cupboard, and is conveniently related to the remainder of the house. One of the greatest advances in modern home building Is the Increasing Importance of the baUi-room. Here, this la welt exemplified, it being tiled, and equipped with a THE DAILY NEWS Tuesday, junP 1, 1921. THE DAILY NEWS. r. Dr r r j T PIUNCE RUPERT BRITISH COLUMBIA . flfj fgj, (jflfgn 100 Published Every Afternoon. Except Sunday, by Prince nupert ' '. ' Dally News, Limited, Third Avenu: h. f. pullen - - - Managing-Editor On nearly every sketch plan of a house the architect is careful to arrange part of a mm ana i m mwmmmmmmmmmm smbbm a wwmm a j a a a l. r- 111 Jl tall SUBSCRIPTION KATES City delivery, by mall or carrier, yearly period, paid In advance 5.00 For lesser periods, paid In advance, per month .ou By mall to all parts of Northern and Central British Columbia, paid In advance for yearly period ... 3.00 By mail to all other parts of British Columbia, the British Empire and United States, paid in advance, per year --..- $6.00 By maU to all other countries, per year . 9.00 Contract rates on application. , Editor and Reporters Telephone 86 Advertising and Circulation Telephone ,.,, 98 Member ol Audit Bureau of Circulations DAILY EDITION GIVEN GOOD LEAD Tuesday, June 16, 1931 . The Vancouver Sun in a leading editorial article recent ly gave Prince Rupert a good lead in the matter of securing the right to export logs from this district Since the permission was first asked conditions have changed. Today we are faced with a situation in which nothing should be allowed to stand in the way of providing work for the unemployed. If the cutting of logs in this district for export will help; bring back a more normal condition, a governmental regulation should not be difficult to overcome. The Sun editorial, evidently written by Robert Cromie, the publisher, who was in Prince Rupert recently, stresses the fact that men are more important than logs and the conservation of men is more important than the conservation of timber. It has been suggested that permission be granted by the government to export a certain definite quantity of cedar and hemlock logs from this district Even then the market has to be found and cultivated and transportation arranged. The first thing is the permission to export the logs. t& ts, AN INDUSTRIAL ARMY The suggestion has been made in many places that the unemployed shall be organized into an industrial army by the federal government and that camps be formed where the men will be well fed and given a small rate of pay just as in the army. Suitable work of a constructive nature would be found for this army and from it the men would be drafted to industrial or agricultural life aa opportunity offered and more normal conditions obtained. The proposal is worthy of serious consideration. The removal of the surplus labor temporarily would enable bona-fide residents of a community to get more regular employment and incidentally the country would benefit from hav ing some important public works carried out by the surplus labor. . FLOWER THIEF DESPICABLE Complaint is made that flowers are being stolen from the gardens of residents. There are always, it sems, in every community, some despicable persons who stoop so low as to steal flowers from gardens. Usually these flowers have no particular value to the thief but they have great value to the person who raises them. The ordinary garden is as much benefit to the public as to the owner. To cultivate flowers which can be seen from the street is a public duty and the whole community bene-l .fits. In Prince Rupert a great many people are doing that, with great benefit to the city. Then comes the contemptible thief and spoils this effort toward making a city J beautiful. Can any more criminal action be imagined ? ' the clever architect knows that the house is not really complete without it. The house should be so placed on the lot that the best possible garden results may be obtained. A great many people want to have a perfectly level, lawn around their, house. This is not necessary unless it is to be used for games such as tennis or bowling. A sloping or undulating lawn is often much more effective than a level plot. It has to harmonize with the remainder of the garden the trees and shrubs and flowers and it helps wonderfully in improving the appearance of the building. A BUNGALOW OF MODERN DESIGN TiftnK. P.ttaiTiA CjtounD' By Frank P. .Martin, Architect 3 L)t-rCHmU Diwn ton I i c,L7l Hall 1 U Jp-l li Jp fcyuvinc EH I 1JOIU noj LxCAvAJtD fcAJtnr.T milt-ln bath and a pedestal basin. ?ear the hall door is a linen closet. Constructed with concrete fountains, Insulated walls of white :ement stucco, and. a variegated hingle roof, this home costs approximately $7,000. Readers desiring further information regarding the plans and specifications of this house should communicate with the architect direct. Address Mr. Frank P. Wilson, Imperial Bank Bldg, Saskatoon, Sask. Copyright, 1927. MacLean Building Report), Ltd. fUEL e n. Twenty Years Ago In Prince ICupert June 16, 1911 Capt. Smith of the city polto department.'was found dead in his bed In ltls room in the Knox Hotel the victim of heart failure. He ha. a son in Australia. There will b a Masonic funeral. "ls pected steel from the east Design No. 75. Approximate cot er ected at Saskatoon. Sask.. $7,000. 0,1 t!lf 0nn Trunk pcl"e H-Measurements. 11 feet hr 28 feet. Wy "h Tete Jaune LETTER BOX BUILDERS AND DKSIONEK COMPLIMENTED EJItor, pally News: Your Readers will have read of the launching and dedication of the new Northern Cross. And may I thank you for the excellent account given of the dedication service and of the boat itself. There is one matter which I did not stress as it should have been. I refer to the fait of its having been built at the local dry dock. The Northern Cross, of course, is a, small boat as boats go, but into it there has to be put the same skill and planning as would have to be put into a larger boat, and I beg to say that all the diocesan authorities concerned in the matter are entirely satisfied with the really excellent work and especially would we mention the outstanding work of Donald Ross, the designer, who has reason to be proud of the result of his work. Yours faithfully, O. A. RIX. For the Awakening of China? A Chicago mail order houe has shipped ten thousand alarm clocks to Peking Industiial Canada. Cache by November. ! A man who is believed to be In ranc attempted to ta!:e the life o' A'ex v.athl son at th? Cold Star-aac plant. He fired several sho but th :y did not hit and then turned th? gun upon himself. V I If reiovrrmg at the Prince Rupert General Hospital. 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