jeaday wedr a to heliet From The Pain Until She Took “ Fruit-a- tives” Caurnetivt! “| canne Certificate District Improw : ut three-qua: r less, from 45B., and for t be ee PEDRO SALINAS. SUBSCRIBE FOR | FIRE ALARM SYSTEM CIROUIT NO. 4. ere “t and Srd ave his “| and Srd@ Ave. gin 14s and Srd Ave. sm 3 J of ist, @nd and *<--—orrr gin 6 ©, between 8th and wh 8 i Hotel.) Or 17 t ° and 7th St (Cea val How CIrOUIT NO. 2. Se 22 Ave. and Sra St to 23 ® and McBride St fo ‘ve. and McBride St tu e. and @nd St. Ou 26» ‘ve and 6m St 27-6 TP OROUIT NO. & * snd Fulton St and Taylor Sts. ‘ve. and Pulton St. and Comox Ave. ‘ve. and Dodge Pt. and Thompson St. CIRCUIT NO, 4. Or 414i) Ave. and Gmmersoa rrrrrr essere fer 42 and MeBride 8t br as and Green St. Ben 44 \ve and Basil St. Oe 45—7.n Ave. and @herts. Oo 14) Ave and Ywng St Rietten ow neemeeiaeele ile irony | eee eee Members PLR |, Vintners Association =— a WINDSOR MOTEL Corner of Firsy Ave. and Bighth St WM Wright, Prop. j —_ : ) WOTEL OENTRAL : Pirst Ave sod Seventh #1 ! European and American Pian - Peter Black, Prop. y ) . KNOX MOTEL Ir os BL Ave ween Eighth aad Ninth ! “repean Pian, Rates §0¢ to $1.00 er Dey Beener « Beuner, Prope. a LY. Rochester Vv. D Gasley APRESS HOTEL Third Ave Selween Sixth and “erent Streets. Pian, 60 te $1 Per Day Grob ean —. "OYAL HOTEL Corey 4 Surges, Props Third ave sod Sixth St Wrepean Pion Steam Heated SAVER WHOLESALE LIQUOR co, LimTEeD Beeon. “00d Ave. ang Sixth St pe Phone 108 LT ONCE RUPERT IMPORTING 00. . CIMITED Fran *o0 Glath Bue Pine ee... th me 7 POODOSOSSSS SOP SCSS O00 S00 00005, Cee “The Daily News” CLASSIFIED ap POPCCP OCP CO bees Proce RALGIA SETTLED r IN HER LUNGS g. ONT., Mav 5th, 1913, + speak too highly of ver thirty years, and cold water Only $2.50 per Fulton and Seventh and new i wprait-a ee ; ronie Neuralgia [have sue ation, experiencing untold ant CON ia settled in my eer ere tles of medicine jongs 0 ; tor told me I —,. r but “ Pruitea- — the doctor was me. ick relief and wrong”? curing me finaly aA present health t-a-tives’’ and if it were ity of giving jem ‘eI t h a splendid , remedy HAN DUNN. — trial size, 25¢6 os cipt of price At Ottawa, br I pif of Improvemente. 1, and Black Bear n the Skeena Min- vance it Fraction lly Bertha” and alan near head of niet, and “Black neared one mile r rinwett point of Lore omgpd & Gib 4 branch of Ob- edro Salina, Free s0313B., Intend, ste hereof to apply r for a Certificate e ee irpose of ob- t above claim. ce that ction, be commenced be- ertificate of im- { September, A.D, EDRO SALINAS, WANTED —Four- room : month until pai , Daily News ements. aim, situate in the x sion Of Cassiar Dis- b; close in;|”’ sae , 700 ay Tee | j he morning and the last bead of Alice Arm « Bear Mineral claim Pedro Salinas, as Vaughan, Free Min- er’s tfeate No #0343B., MISCELLANEOUS " m the date hereof, \ ng Recorder for 6 imy ments, for the pur- ong © Crown Grant of the riber tke notice that section, es ummenced be $1,000 Box h Certificate of in- \) Of September, A.D, lub As pri Men wanted everywhere, no , for few hours work in experience Co-Operative Union, = THE DAILY NEWS. ee CERMAN ARMY COOKS WEAR IRON CROSS FOR HEROISM |F ARMY CANNOY COME TO THEM THEY TAKE THE FOOD To THE ARMY WITH ALL THE CHANCES OF GETTING SHOT IN ATTEMPT. Nov. 24.—There isn't th herole about a cook. One ul t imagine a cook, in i} nand a mussed white i 1 of valor, When ze one either ap- hasing a waiter ead ‘ r Fivingg way Section rea News |, But the German army ‘ ipon whose angie the Iron Cross I Cross is conferred thing only—for 100 per Age ‘att ! e earned it rid ss the os i had seen them They $2 est men in the Kaj iler nillions I've seen lee Ay “ureasy, pa ehy The | to feed the ene i Each Ger- wed, of }pre led y a eld chen on down and $95 | Whee s rel the fires are - title the device trun- es b The cook stands on if footboard and thumps his s always the first man jto sleep at night He is held to he strictest accountability rhe reuton believes in plenty of food Block of a sort A well fed soldier uu, orjwill fight \ hungry one may foinet hot When the company gets into west |Camp at night,” said the man who 264¢ Vancouver,| knows, “the cook is there before il, swearing at his fires and the THE DAILY NEWS MISS B. KAYNE Professional Masseuse speeeeneey SUPERS E RE EEE Seeneeneeeeeeeeeeeneeeneny FOR A TAXI: 75--PHONE-75 PRINCE RUPERT AUTO CO RRERERERERAARER ARERR rhe ma second cook, and turning out The| 1" intities of a depressing looking veal stew, which is, nevertheless, very good to eat.” When that company goes int the trenches the cook stays be- hind. There is no place for a field chen a four-foot trench. But those men in the trench must be fed rhe Teuton insists that all soldiers must be fed—but espe- cially the men in the trench. The others may go hungry, but these must have tight belts. Upon their staying. power may depend the safety of an army. A Mark for Enemy's Bullets. So, as the company cannot go fed on time The hero of the German campaign is the fat cook of the field kitchen.” } who knows really does know Hie has been along the German battle line, under the Prince Rupert Feed Co. Hay, Grain, Feed and Seeds DOMINION NURSERY & ORCHARDS CO. Mail orders promptiy attended to °° PPOOOOOOODODIDDD ODN 808 Third Ave. protection of a headquarters pass. “IT have heard stories of Ger- mans being reduced to eating ca iss and beetroots and turnips, | la lost soldier may have eaten | jdier who stayed with his company such ensilage. The German sol- | didn’t have to. Whatever may Ihave gone wrong with the Ger- jman strategy nothing whatever |, went wrong with the German lcommissary. The food is pretty lrough, from my point of view; it lis sprinkled with large, furious CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY Princess Sophia southbound Sunday at 8 p. m. Princess May northbound for Alaskan Ports Monday, Nov. 30th 4. @ MONAB, General Agent Corner Fourth Street and Third Ave lsausage, and is built on a dis- | pleasing foundation of stew, but lit is good, filling, sustaining food. }And the soldier always gets it. | Even when the trains of wound- ed wheel their frightful way to the rear a commissariat provi- sion has been made for them, to the eook, the eook comes to lthe company. When meal hour comes he puts a yoke on his shoulders and a cook's cap on his lhead and warns the second cook LATEST WAR NEWS off sii Cole's Cigar Store ; , ord * | times ee ee eee SRS Ree Se eee e*eeeeererr Soin fin rumbling Teutonic orations as eee HH oe will happen if he lets the * =| are s go out, and puts a buecketful #/of that veal stew on eithr end of withe yoke and goes to his men, * Maybe the trench is under fire, */ being a trench, it most probably s. No matter, His men are in ©) inet trench— patztausend—they ted Ave : must be fed, Sometimes the seeond cook | cots his step right there, Some. the apprentice cook——the @| dishwasher, the grub murderer university graduate who has bd just learned what to expeet when «| Pabrenheit is applied to spuds— ird «\'* summoned from his job of rus. oeee @| ting firewood to pick up the fire But he always marches. t} cook's yoke and refill the spilled buckets and tramp steadily for- ward to the line. Sometimes the supply of assistant cooks, even, runs short. Dut the men in ‘the trenches always get their food, That's why so many cooks in the German army have’ tron Crosses dangling from their lumpish breasts,” said the man who knows No braver man ever lived. The man in the trench ean duck his head and light his pipe No fat|®2¢complish. He says. and he relatively safe cook yolked to two buckets of veal stew can ever be safe as he narches down the trench under men are always fed, and they are The German theory is that a man vho is able to eat at all can eat 1 sausag So soldiers walk Along the platfor: with their arms full of sausages, Other sol- diers follow with buckets of wa ter and me dippers. “Each wounded man who ean if is given a sausage. If he ecan- wot eat and may still get some mmfort out of a sausage, he gets it—two feet-long and as thick as your arm I've seen dying men and dead with these great green sausages nestled in the erook of their arms.” It is this man’s belief, based mn What he has heard, that the mmissariat of the Allies has from time to time broken down, but that of the German never has. Generally speaking, I think the British seldier has been well fed,” said he. “The English de- pendence is in bully beef, just as iat of the Teut py Is . sausage Wherever you come upon an ibandoned « imp ground of Tom- my Atkins you will find a deep stratum f empty cans. The French and Belgian neighbor is pt to feed wel n English beef jalso Atkins is a generous and : ewhat mprovident beggar rhe French _ piou depends st on wine. Give him wine ind bread and he will go through any hardship His spirit im- proves if you add to that a little ugca But is the German who is plumped with excellent food e is an expert at living | Peace River & Athabasca Railway, upon t countryside, too al-j|and loeation plans for the two thous his man says he doesn’t|lamways proposed in connection, loot ept by way of Teprisal pon a hedge-firing country- sick He pays for what he gets irgely, even if that payment} | - holly valueless bits of paper, said he “Maybe here and there ; rtifying that a German soldier up 1 certain day took the farm- s hen away. GERMANY SHORT OF LEAD. Requisitions All That Can Be Taken From Pianos. New York, Nov. 24.—A cable from Londen to The Tribune says Besides the shortage of anaesthetics already reported, there is a considerable lack of lead \in fiermany, aceording to br. Kk. K. Johnstone, of San Fran- cisco, an officer in the U. 8. Med- ical Reserve Corps, who has just returned from a long stay in Bel- gium., Incidentally, Dr. John- stone pays a high tribute to the German Red Cross, which he was afforded opportunities of studying comprehensively, “There is no doubt that sup- plies of lead are running low in Germany owing to the stoppage in Galicia and Silesia,” said Dr. Johnstone. “A few days before I left Berlin a seeret order was iy vcd calling upon the music otores to turn over to the govern- ment all lead in pianos and other musical instruments in which that metal is used. This demand, which, of course, is being rigor- ously enfoveed, has aroused feel- ings of the deepest dejection in the music trade, which foresees an immediate ruin bo itself, “The shortage of anaesthetics is due chiefly, T think, to the Ger. GERMAN EXPERT Removes British and French entlow, the German expert, writ. ing in Das Groesser Deutsehland. Berlin, lays down very clearly what the German navy expects to of war is based on geographical conditions, and especially on the His|POssibility of closing the North Sea. vorable nature of these geograph-| ful politician in France—it seems cal conditions, must make every extraordinary that such a man ‘Tort to correct them, and thus|should leave his country at such alter in our favor the basis if a time, vard connections. he British idea of closing thelprove that the French people North Sea, collapses. "Through|have not forgotten about Caillaux, such continuation of our coast-/he and his wife were publicly in- ine, Britain could no longer|/sulted while driving through the naintain her present naval dispo-|streets of Paris. A crowd that sition. gathered greeted him with cries verthrown and we possess the - sur mavy as far as possible in-|cent lamp which, when lighted, fact, unless some unexpectedly|volatizes a perfume surrounding favorable oceasion arises for the lit. ‘mployment of the whole or part —_. wf it.” Chopped hair has been success- GOING RIGHT AHEAD WITH grafting by a French surgeon, due 1ouneement was made here by sentative of D. A. Thomas, the Welsh “coal baron,’ saciates interested in the big ypening of vast areas in north- ‘rn British Columbia, that recon- naisanece plans for the Pacific iave been completed. geney, the promoters of the son. provide for the eonstruction of the Naas River to the Groundhog Albert. man General Staff's belief that it PARIS SUSPECTS could readily replenish its sup- ply from captured Belgian and Freneh stores, and as Germany does nbt produce the basic in. wT Mf ether or chlorofo he ¢ at ics be - ‘| Stayer of Editor of Figaro and e a Cross is in bad shape in Her Hu this respect.” ; cunt aheen, m School of Music and Shorthand VINCENT C. KNOWLES (Violinist Westholme Opera House) or TEACHER Violin, Piano, Mandolin and Binging MRS. KNOWLES Teacher of Pitman's Shorthand Suit 16, MoMordie Apt. Paris, Nov. 26.—Much mystery is connected with the sudden de. PLANS FOR NAVY parture for South America of Joseph Caillaux, former Premier and Minister of Finance, who was Armies Out of Way and Finds Opening for Attack on Britain's Shores. accompanied by his wife, the cen- tral figure in a sensational mur- der case a few months ago. The : ; newspapers here merely mention London, Nov. 24 Count Rev. ue n the fact that M. and Mme. CGail- laux left from Bordeaux on the liner Perou, Friday. It is hinted, however , that the man whom Germany has called her closest friend in France is going into en- “Britain's general conception forced exile. This may be a bold statement, but it is believed ex- traordinary that a man who holds the rank of paymaster in the army, who was recently re-elect- “These basic ideas are reflect-led a member of the Chamber of ‘d in the strategic disposition of] Deputies, and who up until the he British navy. trial of his wife for the murder “It is not difficult to guess that of Gaston Calmette, the editor of iermany, recognizing the unfa-| The Figaro, was the most power- ritish ~stategie caleulations.|- Mme. Caillaux took up Red ‘rench harbors and their land-|sinee been actively engaged along the line until her departure. For Rent Across Hays Creck—Well Furnished $30 PER MoO. EIGHT ROOMED HOUSE With Bath—8th Ave. East $30 PER mo. FOUR ROOMED COTTAGE Near the Drydock $20 PER mo. THREE THREE ROOMED COTTAGES Across Hays Creek $7.50 TO $10 PER MO. APPLY TO— Phat will be the case when our] Gross work pfter her acquittal G. R. Naden Co., Ltd. armies command the coast, thelin the latter part of July, and has 324 SECOND AVENUE “The movement that is the case, Only about ten days ago, to “Thus, when France is oncelof “German spy.” telgian-French coast, we can For scenting the air of rooms in the real fight with Britain.|there has been invented a porce- ‘ntil then our business is to keep|lain jar enclosing an ineandes- manny isintontesniahinitnan aiid fully substituted for skin in skin PEACE RIVER RAILWAY LINE to the faet that hair cells can be Vancouver, Nov. 95.—-An-|?ansformed into skin cells. PATTULLO & RADFORD FOR RENT FLAT PATTULLO BLOCK coro ive | harles F. Law, Canadian repre- and his as- ransportation scheme for, the Despite the financial strin- ransportation and allied devel- pment sehemes are confident hat a start will be made on ac- ual construetion work next sea- The charters of the companies ‘ailway lines from the mouth of Yet Ave. and McBride &t. | | ‘oal district and thence to Prince | va -— SHINGLE’, MOULDINGS, SASH, DOORS PRINCE RUPERT LUMBER CO. A. 4. BURROUGHS, Manager PRINCE RUPERT, 8.0. Branch Yard at Smithers NEWSPAPER mism and reliability, advertisers want to talk to. for Prince Rupert and Northern B.C The Daily News goes into nearly every home in Prince Rupert. It, is the popular newspaper of the city because it is clean and reliable. It has all the news of the city, and keeps in touch with events and topics interesting to Northern British Colum- bia. It treats these subjects with moderate opti- The Daily News is the most valuable paper to advertisers because it is read by the buying public. It has a bigger cireulation than any other paper in the city, It is read by the class of people the THE DAILY NEWS + aeaenan eekeenrneeeee *