We Have the Following Cheap Properties For Sale Exclusively Section 7. (5-16-17-18, Block 29, $500) ich; 4 Section 8. 18.19.20, Block 20, h: 1-3 cash, bal, 6 and 12 ‘ 1-2, Block 16, 8900 pair; { cash, bal, 6 and 12 12-13, i cash, bal. 6 and 12, Block 3, $450; 6 and 12. Brokers and Financial Agents cond Ave. Prince Rupert ou Do Not Know ere to ones : ell you There should be no shout @ matter of this kind if) ak e trouble to exercise ordinary | ‘ mmon sense You would not id decaying city whose pulse t ceased to beat, would you?! “ juld put your money into a} ping Concern where there is life and ope! ell! Why Don’t ou Try the West ? We suggest the west, because the west wells Progress! Here are the cities of future, where hamlets existed a few s age Here are the towns which pos sea and rail transportation fa Here are the towns whose strat ical positions ree commercial distributing centres in he near future re Liverpool q ut of Canada Seaport Town no Small Renown so situated at the head of Alberni Cana! the west coast of Vancouver Island, its bportance as @ seaport town cannot be ted, or too str ugly emphasized. This nal opens itself out into the Pacific ean, after its land locked course fron | berni, extending for a distance of 26 Its water of great depth, per ne of safe navigation to the largest ssels plying the west coast, being one| three miles in width An investment/ a Place possessed of such enviable fea Surely be ed the Best ! t a shadow sent served by ne great transconti nial railway system, the Canadian Pa © Railway Canadian Northern will have completed track into Alberni Then will come dredging seymour Narrows, con cle the island with the mainiand Mall and passengers from the Orient bd other routes via the puver, Saving from eight to twenty-four yurs to the present route ALBEKNI therefore is where you should vest Lots can be bought for $150, imside the pwn limits. Easy terms, 90 cash, 6% r month. rest it for yourself Buy a lot today xd help to develop the west Frank A. Ellis Real Estate Agent rince Rupert - . : B.C. SMITH & MALLETT THIRD AVE. Plumbing, Heating, Steamfitting and Sneet Metal Work Office: 8rd Av. °. Workshop Phone 174 2nd Ave. bet, 7th and sth Ste OW.... That we have oy front on cet eaek he oS are at the Foraiurs seen, See, tae Lampe on and kitchen needs on 2nd avenue. Entrance front. F. W. HART CORNER 6TH ST. AND 2ND AVE. PRINCE RUPERT FEEI FEED (0. Big stock of all kinds of Garden Seeds, Timothy, Clover’ and Grain Seeds. Mail Orders Promptly Attended to * eas hee Stock Food:- ~ALL KINDS OF FEED~ IMPERIAL MACHINE WORKS ENGINEERS AND MACHINISTS H. RK, Love, Prop. Prince Rupert Up-to-Date Equipment, Work and Prices Right. Engine Work and General Repairing. Shop, Cow Bay 3 eash, bal. 6 and 12,| $400) Block 18, $950 pair;! | 1-3 cash, | amuel Harrison & Company ensure them becoming) Here is Alberni, the fu! of @ dowbt it} ole f the best Don't be asleep to! . gre at chances, which do not come) » often Kemember Alberni is ati Panama Canal, | be opened next year, will be landed at/ berni, and transported by rail to Van-/ THE GREAT G.T. P. RAILWAY BRIDGE AT SKEENA CROSSING NOW COMPLETE | | | i | | THE er NEWS. a - il} AM} fc It was visited by the Premier of the Province on his recent trip to Hazelton. The bridge is 900 feet long. of the tracks above water is 187 feet. i HM It is now being painted. —— Its two central spans are each 240 feet long, and the height and by the end of the year) | 8 Gordon Munro W. Nicholson Lailey Tee | LOS Ee ee ae eee — MUNRO & LAILEY THE SPIRIT OF DISCONTENT Pre PPR RPBRREPRBBaRPi mMwteanTt Architects, fe } Stork Building, Second Avenue. | IS A SIGN OF THE PROGRESS es P worse | ASTIRINTHE WORLD TODAY B= A. Modern F Accountants TH orce 109 2nd Ave Phone No. oo c e Prince Rupert P. O, Box 351 ale ie a cas fC e . Auditors for Gity of Prince Rupert| The world wide spirit of un-[seat of power is blocked by the a lrest and discontent which is ag-|#overning Classes, am S litating the ranks of the toilers Phe popular delusion that a Ss | ALFRED CARSS, ©. V. BENNETT, B.A. |, he f the most dim. |2°%°"Rine class cannot exist in ey | @f British Columbia of B.C., Ontario, Sas- | 1!!! >! tes one of the os PE demnawnt is eountii ae ee fel = Pincers geet i and pressing problems offiemocratie countries has been} Hi DVERTISING has established a new CARSS & BENNETT. leur times, Widely divergent} States is the revolt of the people] f@ order of things in commerce. It has BARRISTERS, NoTARIEs, Etc. we obtain as 06 the Ghuce Ghblaaniant clase privates end He I i ct ti é « if 3) . . . n-th Gotan bea ioe Oe oe te en oe elec.» Re become a mighty power in business prog- ” Le : the old struggle of Cromwell! § $ WM. $ HALL, L.D.S, D.D.8 {platform and in the press the) inet charles, of the people] i ress; a complex yet comprehensible trans- DENTIST. |subject has been treated from] ,caingt the barons ) 0s fe) . . a Crown and Bridge Work a Specialty. | jiaiiy standpoints. What aston. waist Oe ee mitter of many parts for the distribution wal seated sinianerl for fee mings | stirs the onlooker most is theliy based on class rule. Author-| fi and selling of merchandise and i Consultation ‘ree. Offices ndue emphasis laid on the spir- : on ° uthor-| [@ se 1 g 0 e Cc a se a service. flelserson Block. Prince Rupert. fi-12 cue empna ; t i ity claims obedience and respeet| [J | of diseontent vat prevails, - amin mn ; ss - aoe : } ‘ : ; «10 be pailail Aa aeeeck = y + ig = oe © oe fe Its function is fivefold: bottle provides us with cold drinks . ce ed class, bu oO » e =) . Alex.M.Manson B.A., 7.5, Witlema8.4.. 1-1-0 li i¢ novel that the masses of people. Govéernnibnt, ie ‘Mivinels (2) ‘ with the weather at 90 degrees or waaseme © = he people no longer aecept the} | dered when it draws its inspira-| To enlighten or educate—te cicate gives us a warm beverage when Jack Barristers, Solicitors, ete traditiona terpretation of StJiign and life from the whole] @ eer entialy ot enorme Frost dips at 40 below. Box 286 Paul's counsel to the Philippians]. cael f .| fe protect and foster legitimate enter- Prince Rupert, B.¢ ; nat . community, recognizing all the] { a. : [ have learned in whatsoever} y.orned as active partners in| fe prise—to establi a medium o! sos ” x re > Cc a ; ; 7 : vertisin 1 le ite Tam, therewith to be ean the responsibility that gives it] f@ understanding between buyer and oe _— ae has ane P.O. BOX @ PRINCE RUPERT | ;,.)); And vet, if one reflects, birth. Subordination to authority} jm seller as a basis for mutual profit standard o iness ethics. t this dissatisfaction with present ie protects the manufacturer from un- JOHN E. DAVEY TEACHER OF SINGING PUPEL. OF WM. POXON, B9@., A.R.A.M., 1ON,, ENG JOHN DYBHAVN Real Estate — Loans and Insurance Phone $84 $19 8rd Avenue HAYNER BROS. UNDERTAKERS ano EMBALMERS Funeral Directors Srd Ave. near 6th St. Phone No. 86 E. L. FISHER Funeral Director and Embalmer CHARGES REASONABLE THIRD AVENUE PHONE 356. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT Prince Rupert Lode, LOO. Meets in ant ae Block Every Tuesday Evening All members of the order in the city are requested to visit the lodge. \ H. ALLISON, N. © W. G. BARRIE, See. “Valhalla” of S.H. & E.F. (SCAN DINANIAN Society) Agente for imperial Gasoline Motors. Phone Biue 269 ~ P. O. Box 067) Meets every 2nd and 4th Tuesday at 5 p.m, in the hall at 319 Srd Ave has been too long preached by the few to the many. There is a revolt against the political idol- atry thal substitutes the worship of the golden calf for the gospel of equality and liberty. Happy the statesman, the party, or the nation that recog- nizes in this universal unrest the voice of Truth calling men back is a healthy and commendable quality when identified with the legilimate and progressive de- sires of the great bulk of human- ity. Throughout the world it is identified today with a growing demand for a fuller measure of Ores, self government as opposed to Immediately the symptoms ap- Po renin Globe: pear learned economists proceed » social rash as a to examine the ¢ chemist would a new bacillus. They theorize and dogmatize, but onditions is the locomotive on which all seeial, moral and poli- tical reformers rely for progress From time immemorial men have provoked unrest and dis- content and employed it as a lev- er for the wrongs. But throughout this whole dis- eussion there is an undertone of surprise and a feeling of vague apprehension beeause the mas- ses of the people, without any apparent lead from the govern- ing classes or political leaders are simmering with revolt and challenging old-established the- redress of class rule, the patient is not satisfied to be treated as a doctor would treat an obscure disease. The patient MONTREAL ADDS in this ease claims lo know more about his malady than the lear. ned men whe surround the dis- T0 CAPITAL secting table or pore over weighty tomes in search of pre- cedents and remedies, In short, fhe shareholdets of the Bank he denies to any ciass of men, a . “ur wh }however learned in the ‘ in authorized eapital to conceit, the right to supply rem. wi odies without reference to his ren the | vy desires. It is this phase offissue of $1,600,00 is fully pail | es up in August the eapital will at 816,000,000, so that the| asked = for of Montreal have authorized the licrease $25,000,000 recent he labor unrest that causes as iishment rhe workingman isftstand contented and in a state of re-Tauthorization means i not only because of his con-Jthe fit but also by reason of the} thorized capital. fact that under existing party ems of government he may Launch Alice B., W. J, Thomas, | have the power to vote on legis-|Phone Green 391, Govt, Wharf. | . but has no power to in il Kvery ; avenue to the Subscribe for the Daily og Liat a a el) fe) @ (2) { fe (3) 2 (2) (2) (2) (ed) (2) (ee (2) (2) ie iC ‘(e addition of $9,000,000 to au.) and advantage—to prescribe an eco- nomical price and the maintenance of a fixed standard of quality. None know better than the buying public how well these functions have been fulfilled. Modern advertising has given us an insight into various manufacturing processes. The producer has taken us, the consumers, into his confidence and told us just how his mince meat, his flour, his clothing, etc., is made. We know why certain things should or should not be. Advertising has told us— broadened our understand- ing and guided our judgment. Modern advertising has enabled us to unlock the treasure house of the world’s divinest melodies through the medium of the player-piano. The motor car has lengthened the business day and brought the fra- grant countryside to our door, Men shave in comfort in ten minutes where they used to take twenty. A magic scrupulous competition and the con- sumer from base imitation. It con- serves trade—extends business— creates good will. It enables the cor- poration, the manufacturer or private individual on trial to take his case directly to the public, and to secure the public’s judgment on his policy or character based purely upon their respective merits. Modern advertising has opened up new opportunities to the oppressed and poor of far-off lands. It has turned an unceasing tide of immigra- tion to new countries. It has de- veloped nations, and made the name of the New World a promise of better things among the people of the Old. All this advertising has done and will continue to do. It is the ever- increasing :nfluence for the advance- ment of mankind—the most potent, indeed, of the many forces influencing human action. Advice regarding your advertising problems is available through any good advertisin Press Association, agency or the Secretary of the Canadian ‘oom 503, Lumsden Building, Toronto, En- quiry involves no obligation on your part—-+o write if interested, TO) ee) ee eye} ele) (eo) ey eye) eye eye ere ey ey ere c ae for The Daily News a m “ida | ' { es a ilies —_— a , ie Ma 0 nite ccs maar: 5 eae eet ei nahi ew canoer by ee ne a ee Sas eine ge ee erste rere :