h Price 50c a box tutored From Heart Trouble Bcame Weak and Run Down Ufa. Wat Dlotte, Olenaaodiield, Oat., writ: "Tor a loaf periol I roffered tram heart trtubl. and beeatte 117 weak and rua dawn. I tried Ti'riout femeliee, kut they did me bo good. On &j I mt a frUad and told tier of mj tronble. Sli H'd a kad lad heart trouble for two jeara too, but after ating Uilbum'i Heart and Nerve mil for a abort tiaie be bad beea rtlieted of her trouble, to I fot two boiet aat after taaifig them I wai again feeling' flae, and Jwaj- recommend ft. k N. Pilli to aaroai complaining of heart trouble," Mia at an rt a teatral iteiea, M aullea tlreci ea me!) of price r Tke IVlV. C., 1x4 Turotto, Out THE DAILY NEWS. PRINCE RUPERT - BRIT1SM COLUMBIA Published Every, Afternoon, Except Sunday, by Prince Rupert Dally News, Limited, Third Avenu H. F. PULLEN - - - Managing-Edltor SUBSCRIPTION KATES City delivery, by mall or carrier, yearly period, paid In advance For lesser periods, paid In-advance, per month By mall to all parts of Northern and Central British Columbia, paid In advance for yearly period By mall to all other parts of British Columbia, the British Em plre and United States, paid In advance, per year By mail to all other countries, per year .. ADVERTISING RATES Transient display advertising, per Inch, per Insertion Classified advertising, per Insertion, per word Local readers, per Insertion, per line .......... Legal notices, each Insertion, per agate line Contract rates on application. Editor and Reporters' Telephone n,..,,,,. 86 Advertising and Circulation Telephone n W Member ol Audit Bureau of Circulations DAILY EDITION MONTREAL GRAIN TRADE 5.00 .50 3.00 $8.00 Sj00 1.40 .02 .25 .15 Saturday, June 20, 1021 DISARMAMENT MOVEMENT A letter published in this issue sets forth the argument in favor of world disarmament, a question that will be discussed by the nations of the world at a convention next year. The League of Nations organization in Canada, assisted by many other organizations, is preparing a petition which will be presented to the convention in favor of disarmament The movement is backed by most of the prominent men in Canada including the Governor-General, Premier Bennett and Ex-nremier Mackenzie King. We are heartily in accord with the disarmament idea and a copy of the petition wlI-be-at-thrrDaily News office for anyone who wishes to sign. It seems s if a country like Canada, Wholly unarmed and at the mercy of warring nations, should support such a movement unanimously. Prince Rupert has been disappointed in her grain business but she was not alone in the shrinkage of shipping as is shown by the annual report of the Harbor of Montreal just received. It shows that through the four elevators at the port a total of 81,669,864 bushels of grain was shipped in 1930 as against 211,295,379 bushels in 1928. The grain shipped was an average of slightly over twenty million bushels to the elevator. The grain was shipped mostly to Great Britain and Italy, the latter leadinc slitrhtlv with lfi.770.n54 lmshpls ntw PICNIC SEASON NOW The annua) picnic season is on and during the next month or so there will be plenty of opportunities for the people to forget the bad times and cross the harbor to gome suitable point and there enjoy the sunshine and fresh air and pleasant companionship. It is not good to be always thinking and talking of financial conditions. Forget, those who can, and join one of the merry crowds at the beach. ENTERTAIN OVER RADIO music. and classical ; to the regular Sunday evening con cert hour which commences at 7:30 o'clock M. T. over the network of the Canadian National Railways. District News buying countries in the order of precedence were Belcium, ! h? .h" J?een on a tour ot the cen' Unllonrl "u"M""i "iv.c, uicuu, vjciiiictuy, ixurway, inunii, uen-mark, Brazil, Japan, Sweden, Algeria and Malta. It muse be remembered that the Port of Montreal is closed by ice from the middle of December to the middle of April whereas Prince Rupert is open all the year round, jiu ivc cci uiiuiiuriii wim navigauon in me iocai narbor . . ' . . fnt- a t a 4 ar PRINCE GEORGE C. F. Freeman, city electrician. George Caus of the public works department made the gruesome discovery on Monday morning of the body of a newly born baby wrapped in a piece of sacking near the entrance to the City Hall. The bundle had been there for two days. Dr. Carl Ewert, who performed a postmortem, declared that the body had been that of a normal, healthy child which had died of exposure. The police are making a rigid H. 8. French, district agriculturalist, returned to town last Sunday evening from Burns Lake, having driven that far with Hon. William Atkinson, minister of agriculture, According to Information receiv ed by the city council and the board of trade, a large number of persons are dodging the census enumerators ; and that, therefore, the population - au. ia. ...Ill 1 1 a a . me auijjuiwn mtu iuuiiueut u.re fomuuraiiveiv small, me less than It actually is. Whole amounting to less than five million tons last year, according to the report. It. was chiefly coal, petroleum, Tom CorleM had a miraculous raw sugar, corn, gasoline,' manganese ore, dry goods. "2 luiv? Autlh ,,a,t fn.lt .ulphur stA wood pulpf moUss s,Wi S J 'c" ?SSS X phates, sheet glass, toys, liquors, salt, tin plate, tea, wire, after his engine had stalled at a machinery, fire brick and muriate of potash. The last men- Plnt whe it was impossible to tioned was slightly over ten thousand tons whereas coal 1Ueu to water crah occurred imports amounted to about a million tons with the other !! ,,? T:ka ur Co?ess was articles f adunted between t'hoso -JSSL iStS&tSJK exports In the order of importance were wheat, flour, 'damage but there win be some sai-nuto parts, fruit, lumber, yard, printing paper, meat,!vaee-cheese, rubber manufactures, hay, oats, wood pulp, ce-' AaS; blu'ley' ''ye' Qomr mMe-tom ri SSTSS usuc.mos . ilDre. , week, elected officers for the ensu- Many people may be interested to know where the coal ing year as follows: honorary presi-qomes from. According to the report there was British an- dent' c Prout- vanderhoof . presi-thraelte, 740,803 tons; Russian anthracite, 200,651 tons; dent. e. j. Down, woodpecker; sec- tons; American bitunious; SSo Sr .86,420 tons; British bituminous. 45,115 tons; Nova Scotia McNeill and Albert Biederman. bituminous, 1,4Q7,34B tons; British anthracite by rail from ... St. .TnVin in wintnt. iVi 1K1 tuna A nniu..!i. t... rail, 4,265 tons. . J SUIT PRICES REDUCED Any Material you choose made to your measure. QQft Prices up from vol! M. T. LEE CO. 323 3rd Ave. XV. Phone C63 THEj DAILY; NEWS- LETTER BOX INTFRNATIO.VAL DISARMAMENT ; Group of Vocalists For Jasper Park (Editor. Dally Newl: Now Complete j n might be well for each and all - 'of us to give a moment's thought to whre ttieoxecrit mad .ace In ar- trio of clever entertainers, who will ' iwracnU is leadirr .v. depicted by man?. This lias been but never more I i JrVCr1rt t7... vlvld'y han John Galsworthy: broadcast a f rom Jasper Park Lodge, ..wuh of lhc fct alr- every evening during the summer; mnnlh, h. nnmnlptorl wllh ' v ' i " ; "y.,,, ;Vi".'n recent year, the men. women u i A v ,, u . 7 "d to creep like rats into a draln-,shart Campbell, baritone, and Her- w1, n eh)va, hrt M-iporoorAS tpnnr hnth nf r . " ' , ... .tonor. or ?lory m a future war: no whom are Toronto sheers with HhtlncfJon of e or or conUnent-w de reputations gained "J K , wU, he through their broadcasts from east. em staUons. Irvin Plumm's Jasper ., There fwn,, m flv. Park Lodge Orchestra will continue ,0 ,,IKT ,,,,. ,Mlh . i t . . ta tk a i a i wiv tpaaAUVv ibiuii aj v a anc desolation. Th country that Inrftilaoe In mrnt iH 1 ! KannmA ft thn Miss Fair promises to be one of "f j d sHf and snk Canada's most versatile radio i- Jnt0 J tertainers. She is a silver medallist .. . . . . . from the Royal Academy of Musfe Zt? London where she studied the. R ntjtws of tnP nathn, of piano for four years. Ir i addition. (b she has attained marked access h qooference on World with her syncopated songs at the'D. . u. planoSh, possess what has be,n S&S 5-termed a 'flexible voice" with an M(tn m7JrL n th. tnr. of three octaves. - amazing range h musi.feel and be able to One of her greatest successes has ,e f Canadft been the splrtuals. hlhl,Xm negro ; stHli: in th!, nt frr Miss Fair will make her debut ,7' - over the air from Jasper Park Lodge der de, fnm tonight. Together with Campbell he k wUh and Hargreaves. she wUl partclpate conf(den present tlme ln in the t regutar week-day pro- fortvountrtes League of Na- period from 7:S0 to 8:00 pjn., M. T., and the dance hour which commen ces at 10 o'clock, M. T from Vancouver and Red Deer stations. On Sunday the artists will contribute organ tsa- tions are circulating disarmament petitions that are to be handed to their governments and forwarded to Geneva. i So that Canada may not lag behind in the matter of signatures to this petition, and in the hope that jit will be well to- the forefront the League of Nations Society in Canada and other organization are at the present time placing in circula tion a petition for world dlsarn.a ment by international agreement. To give as many Canadians as possible an opportunity of signing the petition, it is being placed in me hands of the various organizations, such as the British Empire Service League and Labor organizations who have already; promised their support as well as women's organ!-zatons, service clubs, religious bodies, teachers' ' organizations, etc., and ln all the post offices and banks throughout the country. The work of circulating the disarmament petition cannot be done without the expenditure o( money, notwithstanding the fact that a great deal of voluntary holp l being cheerfully given. The society It at the present time whoi'y unable to carry on this special work without assistance. It to therefore the earnest hope of the executive that men and women interest rt In the cause of peace will send in their contributions, small or large to the general secretary at Ottawa. Very truly yours, , C P. MEREDITH. I Oenerat 8ecietary League of Nations Society of 1 Canada, 391 WeTltnaton Street, Ottawa, Canada. i For drunkenness. T. Belangi was fined $25. with option of thirty days' impriionment. by Magistrate I McClyrnont In elty police court yes-1 terday afternoon IP Em 3) Consult him today. Life I yo With Capital and Reserves of over 74,000,000 and Assets in excess of 800,000,000, the Bank of Montreal, whose always-high percentage of liquid reserves Is traditional, Is one of the world's strongest banks. BANK OF MONTREAL Established l8l7 TOTAL ASSETS IN EXCESS OF 800,000,000 Over 650 branches throughout Canada Saturday, Jun, 2n f93, U your children ITHOUT realizing the fact, you may be robbing your wife and children. Perhaps, like many other men, you have taken from your dependants the protection of Life Insurance which they should have. Face the situation squarely. Remember that a lapsed policy is a menace to the future happiness of your family. Hardships may suddenly fall on frail sKouldcrs'unaccustomcd to man's burdens. By maintaining adequate life insurance you can be sure of independence in your later years . . . sure that your wife will never want . . . sure that your children will have the advantages of an education. The sound advice of a Life Insurance Representative will help you solve your personal problem. t.tii nsurance service Ont of a ttriet o mtstagu ifonsoud by CinaJkn end Brithk Lift luturtnci Cofouaiei cfttttUt In Canada.