Paul two bnans TO At Camp Fresh caught fith, giggling hot bacon I Food for the Gods with a da sh of freshly mixed Mustard to bring out the flavour. Be sure Colman'g is on your list I n itstard , digestion. The Daily News PRINCE RUPERT - BRITISH COLUMBIA Published Every Afternoon, except Sunday, by Prince Rupert Dally News, Limited, Third Avenue. H. F. PULLBN - - Manajrine Editor. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: City Delivery, by mail or carrier, per month 75 By mail to all parts of the British Empire and the United States, in advance, iht year $3.00 To all other countries, in advance, per year $7.50 Transient Display Advertising, per inch per .insertion $1.40 Transient Advertising on Front Page, per inch $2.80 Cbcal' Readers, per insertion per line 25 Classified Advertising, per insertion per word 2 Legal Notices, each insertion per agate line 15 Contract Rat on Application Advertising and Circulation Telephone Editor and Reporters Telephone .Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations. DAILY EDITION 9S 85 Friday, August 12, 1927 ' V MUSEUM COLLECTION Something over a ago the. museum board thought they might secure a collection of Indian curios for the museum. They were offered a collection belonging' to Mrs. Large, widow of the late Dr. Large of Port Simpson. However, the price of this collec lionVas go high that the board felt it would be difficult to rai?e tne money wiin winch to buy it, so it is Domg sent to hngianu. ; Now the museum hasto start ovet fcg&ln.. Already there are a number of specimens, some of them very valuable, in the collection which is being steadily although slowly increasing. It is located temporarily in the Bank of Commerce building and can be during banking hours by any citizens wishing to view it. The Board is not ready to purchase curios but is always glad to receive them in trust for the citizens of Prince Rupert as the foundation of a collection which some day it is hoped will be ' valuable. ,-. Aviation, is no new thing. Machine 'sufJprjrfed by alr'have been titillzed for many years. They are usually called political machines. seen NEW GOVERNMENT LEADER Today we ar publishing an article telling about the new leader of the provincial government. It is written by an able British Columbia journalist, Charles L. Shaw, grandson of a former well known and able editor of the Victoria Colonist, Charles Ir. Lugrin. It is taken from the Financial Post, published in Toronto. As Dr. MacLean will probably be premier of British Columbia before long, it is suggested that everyone should know who this man is and what he has done. We commend this article to the people of the district. If something is not worth fighting about, it is not worth having. That's what the bull moose sings to his mate. COST OF CITY GOVERNMENT We have been asked to publish some comparative figures in regard to the cent of administration of this city compared with others. Jfanaimo, at the last Dominion census, had 8,000 population, yet the co3t of administration of the city of Nanalmo is $16,910 as compared with Prince Rupert's $33,075. For protection of property such as fire and iwlice, Nanalmo pays $21,109 as against $33,487 in Priijce Jvupert. For health and sanitation Nanaimo's bill Is $2,156 against' our $19,943. ' '.' ' '".... It Is perhaps unfair to compare the public works of Prince Rupert with that of other cities but the figures givere are Nanalmo $49,102 as against Prince Rupert's $209,221. The total cout in Nahaimo is given as only $89,337 whereas the total cost here is $420,425. We know nothing about the accuracy or otherwise of these figures but we are assured that they are correct. There may be factors which make this comparison unfair. If there are it would be interesting to know what they are. If it costs in Nanalmo only ten dollars a head and in Prince Rupert $50 a head for city government there must be something wrong. The difference In the two places seems too great. We should like to be set right on these figures because they do not seem reasonable, and we hope they are wrong. Cheer up. If other men don't do it, it is because they have not the courage. For 'choosif'summev appetites Tempting and nourishing, with cool milk, and fruit 2d complete refreshing meal RC'S PREJUER-TO-nC WAS i COUNTRY DOCTOR ELEVEN YEARS AfiO (continued from pc one) ' British OolumMa. but the tnittl U lnk-in in. There U no dancer of aaytblnf, like that happening now Mid the peo-: pie know It. ' Dr. MacLean told tbe ' writer jvceutit r"Britlaa Coluvjbta Is in ' brer fohxton financial!! today J than ever before, and that to , pimply becauae we have tried to be Mile and i sane In handling our credit." British Columbia grew debt la about , aS0.0O0.CO0. That I a let of money for ! a province with a population of barely J bait a million pe-pJr. put Dr. MacLean a I View la that tbe mere tun of the debt U relatively unimportant, j I'AYIMI Ol I" ITS HIIIT ' "The important thing la that ao other province in Canada la tnaluutf anythlua like the effort wr are to pay off It debt.' declared Dr MacLean "Brttfcfc 1 Cotamate to (till in the pianrer stale and it'a only natural that big borron-Iuh would have to be mad. Tbe coun ' try need to be opened up and we cant build loads, brtdgeo, railway, aehools and Irrigation dltehea by a touch of a I magic wand. But wHh all our bor-. rowings the debt of the province la but ten per cent of the osaablned debt of all the provinces. And here the bW difference our staking fund to fifty per j cent of the amount of the sinking fund I tor all the province. MM of the pro- j vlncea aet aalde only one half of one j per cent each year for the retirement ot debt. We lay aalde enough to liqui date the entire debt at maturity of tbe loan. That Is our basic policy In fin not and It It tne main reason tor my optimism about the province economic future. In choosing MacLean as their .leader. members ot the Liberal party were not overlooking the personal element, and they recognized In the man who had graduated from doctor to financier handling millions of the people's money every year, the qualities that made him the only member ot the Oliver cabinet who In all his years of office had no. Vbacn Involved In a bitter political con troversy. MacLean I above all things a (:eaemakrr and conctuattr. HI pre-Attestor, John Oliver, was a believer in the big stick and he did hot hesitate 16 wield It upon occasion. So did some of lus other colleagues, who once In a While made the discovery that the man it ho gtes armed for the fray Is apt to find his foe similarly accoutred. But It MacLean believes In the big stick at all, he believes In having It comfortably padded. He believes In the political philosophy that a government should be able to administer the affairs ot the country efficiently without hurting any one and without treating bitter an tagonUm. "So leng as there la a party system the outs are bound to be In healthy opposition to the 'ins.' snd vice versa. but this sort of rivalry la purely of a political nature and Inevitable." said Dr. Ma;Lean not long ago. "But there is no Justification for bitterness in politics, and where you have bitterness and spite pklng their fingers In public affairs you "cannot reasonably expect to have good government." 'Ol'l I.AU WITIIOl'T IIAIIY KlrtMMl It to became Dr. MacLean believes that and, furthermore, has adopted it and stuck to It as his working policy In and out of public life, that be has traversed a decade of uninterrupted cabinet service without an enemy and stronger politically than he ever was fcefcre. MacLean la popular and yet he Is not of the hand-shaking, baby-klsslng political fraternity. He 1 a quiet man and one ot the least talkative members of the cabinet, and yet he Is in no sense taciturn or exclusive. He may not have a great many words for everyone, but he has a smile for everyone and he doei not spare it, and if you want a "Yes" or "No" answer from him you will get it, Quiet and untalkatlve and a - believer in the padded stick perhaps, but MacLean is not a pusey-footer. He la about the most easily' approachable member of the cabinet and that Is one reason perhaps why people Inside and outside the cabinet, have, made' It a habit to gtf'tohim with every conceiv able question and problem. T.tf'KLKII IMi.E. ENTAMSI.KMKNT Throughout his long administration. Premier John Oliver always regarded MacLean as his right-hand man. Whenever he left Victoria it was always Mac Lean who was asked to carry on as act' lng premier. Oliver waa always a jlut-ton for work and he glorified In piling Jobs on himself, but whenever he felt the load getting too heavy he usually sought relief by shifting a part 'of the burden to tbe broad ahoulders of the country doctor. Dr. MacLean was already minister of finance and education and had been provincial secretary when the Job ot railways minister ws offered ! to him and, because MacLean' eagerness I tor work matched even that of John ! Oliver, he accepted It and straightway started in to untangle the snarled skein ' wh!:h has enmeshed the Pacific Oreat Eastern Railway ever alnce that ill-starred political child was given birth, i But tasks like these are not merely : titles to glory In, for Dr. iMacLean. He 1 has a passion tor making a serious responsibility of his many duties and when the P.O.E. problem was placed In ' hia hands he was wise enough to' per-1 eeive that it was the biggest single i 18 ue belore the province and that its ' st,tiement jn a manner designed to benefit the railway and country alike would be the biggest conceivable feather in the cap of the ruling administration. And so he has wrestled with the P.G.E unceasingly and doggedly, gradually fssbloning the government-owned rail- I way which has caused ao much political urrow in to past into a going concern, with a semblance of business manage- i about it. On ot wt nuna u dM was arrant fur the appointment of a board of director etnbraaing Sum ol the not otinpeirat buatoena men in tbe pro In.- and now. convinced thai the auoreaafu future operation of tbt road Ilea la nuking part of one ot tbe tranaoMkUaentsd ifateam. M-Lata and bia aucltm are negotiating with private interest lor al of the , r-4 and lu extrnaton northward late te great P9 B-vr country and south- ward to Vancouver. WUh ttwwe BnUj established. Dr. MacLean bri teres the raUway w be la a fair way to eart. dividends netblng which It has never done before. The FO E. is aUll the big-!! single problem of the British Cot umbla Ovver&nient and when MaeLean ; leads bis party w -sad that ma) not be ao far oft either -the battle ery I till oaBcern the fate of tiie POE, n terms worked out fa the menttt labor- j atory of MacLean and tbe men he hat, gathered around htm to put the road on its financial feet ikom I'.r.i. to nr. I MacLean la a true Westerner in spirit j and In outlook and yet hto birthplace ( U In Canada farthest eaat Prince Ed-! ward Hlsnd; Hto parrot, of Scottish i descent, had come to Canada from In-1 vernens a tew years before the boy who i was to beettne famous at the extreme! wesftera end ot Canada was born, fifty- four years ago. The elder MacLean wa a farmer and the boy attended a rural achocl during the morning hours, hurrying home after his school duties to help dad In the field. Later, he attended Prince of Wale College at Charlotte town and It was while there that he ftrit conceived the notion to go west. He reached the prairie as a youth of nineteen, fortified by hto nerve, hi determination to get somewnere. and net? a cent of money. He undertook the work which seemed most familiar to htm at that period ot his youth and instructed a class ot half a doeen farm chSdren. He liked the work and moved from place to place as the ::hool terms pa toed, seeing new scenes. meeting new people and Inspired by the aUcnt vastness ot the prairies In their pioneer daya. llltT'H M IIOOL TKWIIKK Then someone told him of British Columbia the province of big timber, big trees, big rivers. He created the Rockies and found a Job as teacher In a little school In a farming commu nity along the Fraser River. His success as a tutor won promotion and he was appointed principal of the public school t Rowland, then the centre ot mining activity, with- a population of several thousands. Teaching, he felt, did not offer him the scope for advancement that he sought, and ao he contrived to jve enough money to finance a medical course at McQUl. He did not actually embark on his medical career until he had reached the age of thirty-two. but his personality and the reputation he had built tor himself In Rossland as a sober-minded. Intelligent youni; .nan. won for him a large and profitable practice. He moved to Greenwood, another Important mining town then, and broadened his activity by service as an alderman and mayor. These offices gave htm the spark of ambition for public life and In the 1926 general election he was Liberal candidate for Greenwood It was' this election, this dramatic po litical turnover which smashed the tor-tunes of Sir Richard McBrlde. WUUam J. Bowser and other Conservative powers, that gave MacLean his oppor tunity and paved the way for elevating the country doctor to the premiership it hi province. PREMIER BALDWIN IS RATHER A HUMORIST Incident Indicate Something of What llrltMi Leader Is Like Premier Baldwin evidently believes In the slogan of the British bulldog: "What we have we hold." When he stepped from the grand stand at the unveiling of the statue of Sir Wilfrid Laurler at Ottawa for the purpose of delivering his tribute to the memory of that great statesman, Hon. J. C. Elliott advanced and said: "Let me .bold your v WATER NOTIClt IUVKItSKIN AM) t'SE TAKE NOTICE that Francis Henry Cunningham, whose address Is 80S Board of Trade Building, Vancouver. B.C.. will apply lor a licence to taae ana use i cubic foot per second of water out of unnamed stream which flows northeast and drain Into Humpback Bay, Porcher Island, about 400 yards southeast of northeast corner post of Lot 102. The water will be diverted from the stream at a point about 200 yard from the mouth of the river and will be used for fish, cannery and domestic purpose upon the lands apolled for. being por tion of Lot 102. Range 5, Coast District. This notice waa postea on tne grouna on the 25th day of June. 1927. A copy of this notice and an application pur suant thereto and to the "Water Act" will be filed In the office or tne water Recorder at Prince Rupert. B.C. Objections to the application may be tiled with the said Water Recorder or with the Comptroller ot Water Right. Parliament Buildings, Victoria. B.C.. within thlrt- days after the first appearance ot this notice in a local newspaper. in date of the first publication of this notice is August 4. 1927. F. H. CUNNINGHAM, Applicant. NQTICE. in the inrrra nf an amplication tor the issue nt . Provisional Certificate of Title for Lot one (1) of Lot three hun dred and sixty (380). Range live to. Coast District. Map 970. Satisfactory proof ot tbe leas of the rvrtifirnte of Title covering the above land having been produced to me, It Is my Intention to Issue, after the expiration of one month from the first publication hereof, a provisional Certificate of Title to the above land, In the name of ALICE CLAPP. The original Certifi cate of Title 1 datvd tbe zum jxovemoer, 1017 n1 miinhared 2605 1. Land Registry Office, Prince Rupert. B.C. July 15, 1927. . H. P. MacLEOD, Registrar of Titles. Good News Advertise In The Dally News LAND ACT. SOTICK OF INTENTION TO APPLY TO LK.1K1J l,AM In Queen Charlotte Island Land Re-ordlng District of Prince Rupert, and ituate on the west' coast of Burnaby stand. v TAKE NOTICE that British Columbia Fishing it Packing Co. Ltd.. of Van couver, B.C., occupation Packers, Intend.? to apply ior a lease or the following escribed lands: Commencing at a post planted on the weft coast of Burnaby Island. Q.C.I. : thence east 3 chains: thence south 41, chains; thence west 3 chains, more at less, to bign water mark; thence north along high water mark to point of com mencement, and containing 14 acres, more or less. BRITISH COLUMBIA FISHINO 4c PACKING CO. LTD., Applicant. Dated June 10. 1927. LAND ACT. NOTICE OF INTENTION TO APPLY TO LEASE LA Nil In Queen Charlotte Island Land Recording District of Prince Rurert. and situate at the head of the south arm of De La Decne inlet, Moresby Island. TAKE NOTICE that Brltlah Columbia Fishing ti Packing Co. Ltd.. of Van couver, B.C.. occupation Packers, intends to apply for a lease of the following described lands: Commencing at a post planted at the head of the south arm of De La Beche Inlet. Moresby Island: thence south 3 chains: thence east 20 chains; thence north 8 chains, more or less, to high ater mark; thence west along high water mark to point of commencement, and containing 10 acres, more or leai. BRITISH COLUMBIA FISHING is PACKING CO. LTD., Applicant. Dated June 10. 1927. LAND ACT. NOTICE OF INTENTION TO APPLY TO LEASE LAND Queen Charlotte Islands Land District, Land Recording District of Prince Rupert, and situate north of Lots 1658 and 1657. . TAKE NOTICE that The Langara Pishing and Packing Co. Ltd. of Mawett. occupation Canners, Intends to apply for a lease of the following described lands: Commencing at a post planted twenty chains north of Van Indian Reserve and on tbe shore of Mclntyre Bay; thence north 5 chains to the low water mark; thence westerly following said low water 160 chains; thence southerly 5 chains; thence easterly 160 chains to the point of commencement, and containing eighty acres, more or less. LnANGARA FISHINO & PACKINO CO. LTD, Applicant Fred Nash, Agent. Dated June 27, 1927. AS IT WAS scores of years ago so it is to-day a pipe tobacco of satisfying flavour and mellow fragrance OLD CHUM Ambassador Extra-ordinary to happy smokers. OLD CHUM suits your taste and your smoking disposition whenever you seek its soothing, restful comfort. Every puff a pleasure in itself . . . because it rings true to your taste. The blend never varies . . . the flavour never varies. Smokers willing to pay any price for quality . . . find that OLD CHUM gives them every good thing . . . they want in a pipe tobacco . . . gives them presents, too for the "Poker Hands" now packed in OLD CHUM ... are good for valuable presents. LD CHUM I hat." "No, thank you, " replied the British Premier, "Til stick to that " And he hung on to tbe "topper" until he had finished hi speech. The breezlnesa of "our Mr. Baldwin" waa manifested' more titan ever at tbe Canadian Club luncheon atvnoon. In thanking the British Prune Minister for his address. Brigadier-General C. H. MacLaren, president of the club, referred to the former's trans-Canada tour, and hi tbls connection said: "Hope you find both rest and pleasure." "You Just keep on hoping," smiled Mr. Baldwin. Kirtin n i i ' I lULULHUKa. L - - - r i KSmOKlHG Ml S c' TOBACCO Caps A new arrival of a large assor': of the smartest styles and colors in shapes and weaves. Unbreakable pi Price . $2-0Q up Acme Importers Third Avenue DEMAND "Rupert Brand K THK DAINTIEST IIKHAKFAST FOOD" Smoked Daily by Canadian Fish & Cold Storage fa, Prince Kuperi. II.C. P.O. I!" l