Pebruary 17, 1944 THE DAILY NEWS erreere i | pevnreet ' } P.O. Box 1704 f oy 01 HOTEL d Running Water in j all Rooms prands of Liquors and Cigars kept HOTEL IN NORTHERN iTISH COLUMBIA | | mime & FISHE? / Proprietors CORPO ROPEOPODLILLOOLS Hotel Directory |. Vintners Association | winNDSOR HOTEL ve. and Eighth St 1] vy w. Wright, Prop. HOTEL CENTRAL e and Seventh S81 sod American Plan Peter Black, Prop. KNOX HOTEL ween Eighth and Ninth Rates S0c to §1.00 Geener & Bes ,» Props. Vv. D. Casley EMPRESS HOTEL Between Sixth and bh Streets Pian, 60 to $1 Per Day PREMIER HOTEL aud European Pian WwW. Henning, Manager ROYAL MOTEL Burgess, Props and Sixth St. ropean Pian Steam Heated AVER WHOLESALE LIQUOR CO., LIMITED Ave. aud Sixth St Phone. 102 | | MINCE RUPERT IMPORTING CO., | LIMITED j a . Sixth Sits | hone 7 | ae ne ea District of Coasi it Hume Cronyn, of pation manager of 4 ids to apply for per the following descri a post planted at the f Lot 1968, thence west 80 chains, nortl chains to point oi iaining 640 acres more HUME CRONYN 2 1, 1¥is eb, 20, 1044 } 3 , ng = 7 an ne an rrr == ee — eee ——— ‘ r 7 ni op | Great crush to buy the women who buy pr itting out the mid ol, and several we sales the police ha current retail prices TRYING TO BEAT THE HIGH COST OF LIVING Housewives’ League” bargains in Toronto. This is an organization of oduce direct from the producer and sell it direct to the consumer, thereby dleman and his profit. At the first sale by the league there was a xwmall men retired with torn clothing and other damages. At all subsequent ve been in charge and order maintained. The prices obtained are less than but a very small portion of the crowd which wants to buy can be served. TUE OUR COR ARR RAA ACAAAIO | > * ¥ « * * *« * * Newest Paper overshoes have b nted by their New Yo A 30,000-acre vanila yn is planned for the island of} shit Non-spoilable salts o 1) handles The Russian governme ols the prices charged for mede al prescriptions. A sanitary guard has | vented to prevent persons hand- ng spigot outlets. * »* Notes on Science : + PII III IAIA AIA ASA SASA SISA A ASAI IAAI III III IAI AAA AA AOI I IK IH een pa. Children’s wagons can be con rk M-|verted into sleds by the use of }new runners with clamps to en- |gage the wheels. planta- | ; - re For experiments with model aeroplanes a French inventor r scent} mounted the wings and tail of a bottles are mounted in new par- | crow on a wire frame, pi: scan i A recording meter to measure nt con-|/the amount of steam used in an industrial plant has been in- vented to cheek waste. esrues ce een in- Although a new German auto- | matic ® pistol weighs but little ks for the general ‘ ie "s District—District o ueen jutiets a minute. Distr! f : } _|100 bullet I ute Charlotte felende Bricks made of peat are being r secessfully used in Sweden for] : hat Wilfred Charles ' : : } As against 140 aviation fatali Rupert, f ( a buildings. 4 nd e e : ities in 1912 there were 192 last ‘r I } ne for fue » new! Year, 26 of them occurring in the} Ini States shan isle n i ' hn tie At ae Paty United State e 1 1 cigarette sg Noss ain e e ° Traces of radium have been dis . ! r \‘\ { psa a deleovered in the interior of Mada 817 . : , | : rg } hair have beer vented|#asear and a conipany has heen Locat » Jar ese army officer formed to exploit the ' 1 . e . | * * . | | | 7 ” Name have been given to 727] Folding compactly for carry-] PE ROE RA nets and new ones arejing, a new eve shield for motor ATLIN RAILWAY COMPANY ] e discovered all the time jists also protects the nose from . . r l dust and can be worn over | given that applica Pyed ere re spiders 1 Java;j glasses to the Parliament of rh pes pide be ; | AS5O5 | ession thereof for an} which make webs so strong that] Roe maiiwaw cae, ee t requires a knife to sever them.| German military authorities} istruct and operate . * . jare investigaling a new device to siiway, commencing at i 4 1 ' rm end of Atlin Lake Calif 1 leads all the other jeu ible men to walk on water, & a a piae alrene tates in the number of automo-| vith a view to its use n the taku River where siles . proportion to popula army the Internationa | . . . ;no ° m @ point on said| tion | 4 Se eee ics tae : Among the new self alarters| t construct and g h scientist has 1 for gasoline engines is a f \ | 1 telegraph lines and 1 ‘ f thereon t6 build juced minute diamonds by ex hanical cranker which imitates ° struet and Orne nloding » powder made of cord the accelerated speed of a hat d| nhnection with wi . mpany, and to enter/if{e and carbon rank | bd bh ther companies of the company be : | 1, this Oth day of June, i! & JOHNSTON, for the Applicants, Ottawa, Ont 7 ————— i ie ie ie ee ee nn nn FIRE ALARM SYSTEM CIRCUIT NO, 1. and Srd Ave apd 3rd Ave and 3rd Ave h of ist, 2nd and Ave., between &th and x Hotel.) and 7th St. (Cen CIRCUIT NO, 2. \Ve and 3rd St Ave. and McBride St and McBride 8t ve. and 3nd St, \ye, and 6th St ee CIRCUIT NO. 8 and Fultop St n and Taylor Sts \ve. and Fulton St Ave and Comox Ave, and Dodge Pl 4nd Thompson St CIROUIT NO, 4 ’ \ve. and Emmerson Ave, and McBride 8t Ave. and Green 8t. Ave and Basil St. 7th Ave. and Eherts. 1 Nn Ave, and Young st OOOOIICISIIIINIOeicteiek E t box 4 DERE EE I : ENGLISH This is the old-fashioned lace m variety, and imparts an air o the village lace-mmakers, bringing th man’s wage Write for desoripti Co Plast Ficht Cloth each. tion ft 450., yard, Mrs, over DAINTY HANDKIBD—o, No, 910,—Lace 1j in. deep, by the Flemish Refugees. It is still made by the village women in their quaint old way. Our Laces were awarded the Gold Medal at the Festival of Empire and Imperial Exhibition, Crystal Palace, LONDON, ENGLAND, for general excellence of workmanship. } Bt Y some of this handernade Pillow Lace, it lasts MANY times longer than machine made containing 200 striking examples of the lace makers’ art, and is sent post free to any part of the world, Lace for every purpose can be obtained, and within reach of the most modest purse. kerchiefs, Stocks, Cami D'Oylies, Mats, Meda!- lions, Quaker gnd Pelee Ban ete aj in. deep.) STOCK Wheel Design, $1.50 $2.00. up to $5.00 Price ube. each. (Half shown.) in yard lace and inser- IRISH CROCHET. HAND-WMAaDE LAGE MADE BY THE COTTAGERS OF BUCKINGHAMSHIRE, | : : ade on the cushion, and was first introduced into England { distinction to the possessor, at the same time supporting em little comforts otherwise unobtainable on an agricultural | ve little treatise, entitled “The Pride of North Bucks," | liars, Fronts, Every sale, however small, is rons,Jabots, Yokes, q gupport to the industry. is, Berthes, Hand- Chemise Sets, Tea 8, Table Centres, Over 900 designs rom 100,, 150,, 250., up to $5.00 per Armstrong having 100 Irish peasant girls connected with herindustry, some beaut) {ul exe amples of Irish hand made laces | | } may be obtained, All work being sold direct from the lace-makers, both the workers and customers derive great advantage. No, 122,—80e, per yard, Mrs Rupert Armstrong, Olney, Bucks., England | Daily News ‘‘Want Ads.’’ Bring Home the Goods: i | | | | Camper Robbed and Maitreated— bility and taking his entire camp BANDITS BEAT VICTIM LEFT HIM TIED TO TREE Posse Is Chasing Criminals Los Angees, Feb 16. After | | | | beating him almost into insensi- ing outfit, including a horse and wagon, three highwaymen strip- ped Wm. Jones, a rancher, of nearly ali his clothing, and left him tied to a tree near Whittier. ct until after daylight, when he wa fc jtrail of his assailants. highwaymen awakened him as he la more than two pounds, it can fire | morning. MUST NOT DRINK Vancouver License Commission- \é er th yuuind, and a posse set on the suburb. Shivering iu the early morning ill, Jones vemained trussed up i Jones told the police that the| y in camp about 3 oclock this AND TANGO T00 | | } | ers Put a Limit on Popular | Recreation | In the opi mm of the Vance u-| | i r board of license commission s. there is thing wrong with tango eas danced in the Var couver hote! or elsewhere iv Lha city, and accordingly thes have | de l lo same time. Che report of L- lcensey Inspector Reid slated Virat he la cided to place no ban on it so ng as no liquer is sold at the} | j had attended a few of the} ngo teas and so far as he » as | a position to judge there was | objectior. to it, With bhis| fexpression the board agreed. |A BEAUTIFUL EVENING GOWN Of | , { tango colored charmeuse, | showing the newest phase of} the fishtail train supplemented | with a beautifully embroidered | tunic in which all the most ex_| quisite Persian colorings are} introduced, The upper portion] of the corsage is of ninon, the | draped sleeves being decoy- ated with charmeuse buttons. ;}tbe Grand Trunk Pacific Railway Com-/| jeasturly direction along the westerly | }shore of said river a distance of thirty) |; Company; thence westerly along the said | tem (410) chains more or less to the place | | The TaleThe Wagons Tell My office window faces a street, close to the railway freight The cocoa had been grown in Brazil, sheds. shipped to Bristol, All day long a steady x a ig eh of trucks and ad hs ot treal an inally orries lumber by Arlo. RY ni Rosieny | distributed from loaded with boxes, m (y se Toronto. barrels and bales. The tea was gath- ered by swart- skinned natives of the romantic island of Ceylon; from sunny Portugal the luscious, big grapes had been gathered years ago, fermented, bottled and branded with a famous name; from Egypt had come the cotton and from South America the dyes that entered into the product finally stamped with the brand ofa well-known hosiery. One truck I noticed the other afternoon was particularly in- teresting. No two boxes were the same, and stencilled on the \ end of each was the name of some well-known pro- duct—soap, tobacco, socks, breakfast food, cocoa, port, tea, chocolates, perfumery and baking powder. Gathered there in prosaic wooden boxes were the results of thousands of hand’s labor in all parts of the world. There, behind that obviously prosaic truck-load of freight was the whole romance of modern commerce—the skilled production, the universal demand for food, drink and raiment, and the world-wide distribution of the things we use every day. And then I speculated why we use these things every day, instead of some other things; and that brought me plump back to my own job of advertising. The names of some of the boxes on the lorrie were known everywhere to-day, but had been unknown a few years ago; and I saw then more clearly than ever before that Advertising is really a great channel digger. It is like the Panama Canal. You can sail from Montreal to Vancouver now, around the Horn. You can get there, but it is going to take months. A year or so from now you will sail through the Panama Canal and chop the journey to less than half. A new channel will have been dug. The great names in commerce to-day are those of the manufacturers who have let modern advertising steam-shovel a channel across the isthmus of distributing difficulties. The great names in the commerce of to-morrow will be those of men who widen and dredge this channel so that the greater trafiic may pass smoothly and quickly from the source of production to the homes of the consumer. a local business talk over your advertising problems with the Advertising Department of this newspaper. Tf you are doing a provincia! or national business it would be well for you te have counsel and assistance of a good advertising agency. A list of these will be furnished, witheut cost or obligation, by the Secretary of Cans 2 Press Association, Room S03, Lamsden Building, Toronte, Skeena Land District—District of Coast-— | Range Five. } TAKE NOTICE that I, Thomas NcCly- | mont, of the City of Prince Rupert, in Whether the Province of British Columbia, preee | intend to apply for permission to lease} urself thirty (30) acres of land bounded as} For Yo follows orasa Commencing at this post planted where | the northerly limit of the right-of-way of) pany crosses the westerly bank of the| Zimmergoetz River, and being about 400) feet east of Mile 87; thence in a north-| 30) chains; thence easterly parallel with | the northerly limit of the Grand Trunk/ Pacific right-of-way, a distance of ten| 10 chains; thence southerly parallel | with the westerly shore of the said river to the northerly limit of the right-of- | way of the’ Grand Trunk Pacific Railway | northerly limit of the said right-of-way of commencement. DATED this seventh day of January, | 1914 | THOMAS McCLYMONT. Pub. Feb. 3 to April 6. A man never realizes how Gift to your Friend PERRIN’S GLOVES The well known Perrin trademark as shown in cuts should be on every glove you get, as this assures you perfection of Style, Fit and Finish. : | Best dealers the world over sell the heap talk is until some woman| maui al We Ne genuine PERRIN’S GLOVES. 94 offers him a penny for his tho-} e Nees lights. ST, ~~? ~er eee ~~ } { FOI IAA AAA AAA AA AADAAA AAA AAA AASAK IAA AAA AAA AAA AAA AAA AAA AAA AAI IDA II * i tt eee [. Aes A I a THE DAILY | for Prince Rupert and Northern B.C. EW Bt rice aos 4 teed aecalas coe ee the city because it is clean and reliable. It has all is the news of the eity, and keeps in touch with events and topics interesting to Northern British Colum- SAFE bia. It treats these subjects with moderate opti- SANE mism and reliability. The Daily News is the most valuable paper to SPIOY advertisers because it is read by the buying public. IMPARTIAL It has a bigger circulation than any other paper in the city. It is read by the class of people the l { INDE PENDENT advertisers want to talk to INTELLIGENT aS ——— Ferre | DAILY NEW my ean, Oe ert ee re ee es es a + RRR RE RRR RRR ERR RRR EERE IK { { ! *) + me te ee vali > lus