W @qdnesgey, vanuary fo, TW VETERAN WHO WAS ITH LORD ROBENy. Laid Low With Rheumatism —But Gured By “ Fruit-a-tives”, CHATHAM, ONT., APRIL ard. ror, “Lam a veteran of the Crimean Ww nd the Indian Mutiny, volunteer; rom the Royal Artillery into the Ro, gineers, and served wider Jy berts during the Indian Mutin am a pensioneer of the Priti vernment, Fierce hatid-to-han| ting and continual exposure left a great sufferer from Rheumatien ruch so that my legs swelled wu, iy it impossible for me to walk ruit-«-tives’’, They cured me of ‘he Rheumatiem and Constipation regular employment, walk y miles a day and enjoy perfect th GEROROE WALKER xc. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, acc. dealers or sent on receipt of by Pruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa S af a OU gy FOR A TAXI 75-PHONE-75 PRINCE RUPERT AUTO CO * PARA RARER ITAT HN PRESSES MER Oe BD errr ere ee LATEST WAR NEWS the latest war bulletins received exclusively by The Daily News are posted im- mediately after coming off the wires at the following Cole's Cigar Store, 3rd Ave Wark's Jewelry Btore, 3rd ave i¢ Prince Rupert Hotel, 2nd avenve Royal Central Windsor Knox Daily Hotel. Hotel. Hotel. Hotel. News 3rd wh vs, eee eee errr eee + Hotel : Directory Members PR. L. Vintners Association ————————————==— * * * * ca * * * ” * * * > * * > a * * o > 7 ——=s WINDSOR HOTEL ot? and Eighth s: WwW. & Wrient, Pros. Corner ret Ave MOTEL OENTRAL ave ropes ai Seventh St and American Pian Peer Gieck, Prep BNOX MOTEL Between Eighth ead Ninth Pian, Rates b0c tw 81.00 Per [ey Seener & Beener, Prope Ave ves J. Y. Rochorter V SRPRESS HOTEL Ave, Between Siath end Seventh Streets Pian, BO to 81 Per Day ROYAL HOTEL Cortey & Burgess, Props Third Ave. gud Sixth st European Pian Steam mesiec D. Casal Third European SEAVER WHOLESALE LIQUOR CO | - } Second Ave. and Sixth St Phone 102 } » Gor 425th Ave. and McBride St : Gon 43.5ib Ave. and Green 81 2 Box 44.-4th Ave and Basi) 81 Bou 457th Ave. and Eberts ? Bor 141 7th Ave a ’ 8 . * TREN EN REE EEE Cee SUBSCRIBE THE DAILY NEWS FOR GUARANTEED FREE American Silk HOSIERY We Want You to Know These Hose fa . ‘ miort They all others real foot « Ho seams lk become lox the pressed in ANTEED when They give hey rip. They never and baggy as knit in not They are GUAR- for for style, for superiority of ma terial and workmanship, ab- solultely stainiess, and to wear six months without holes or replaced by wuew pairs free. OUR FREE OFFER To every one 50c to cover shipping charges, we will sub- ject to duty, absolutely free: Theee pairs of our famous AMERICAN SILK HOSI with written GUARANTEE, any color, or Three pairs of our Ladies in Black, ‘Tan colors, with written nave ise shape is lineness, sending us send, Hose W hite GUARANTEE DON’T DELAY—Offer ex- pires when dealer in your locality selected. Give color and size desired. international Hosiery Co. 21 Bittner Street Dayton, Ohio, U. S. A. or Is FIO, PEACE nven ATHABASCA RAILWAY COMPANY. *, Peace River and Canada, at its heat ses "re : ; for on Act, | ompa. 4y Out, con- ‘i aud operate the foliowing lines of Watery, Commencing at a point rat or pear the head of Kitimat ne flowing the Kitimat River that ne teetion to the summit between | i! And Lakelse Lake, thence in a nor- | ores rection Slong the valley of the | , * bake and river to the Skeena | Teansne? crossing the Skeena River | Gang fp & Meh level bridge and over | aera n Trunk Paciie Hallway with the, Clearances north-easterly | re ttouth of the Kitsuinkalem Kiver lowing 18 course to the summit of , ‘iver, and thenee, following the ‘ the Nass River, at or near 4 ~ 4 distance of approximately one ction Abd twelve iniies; (b) from the | = the Blackwater Hiver, with | iver, following the course of River, to the summit be- | a the nelapakoes’ River, thenve | “ . Gslanskeest Kiver er to tha River, thence up the Skeena 0 - \y_ Vifty-poenes ue River approxi ober Ottawa this nineteenth day of ber Solicitors ‘for the Applicant. NOLE, THOMPSON, BURGESS & COTE,|_ The Whisky | of Quality Aged in Wood 8 Years before bottling GUARANTEED BY THE GOVERNMENT of CANADA MOE SABA sii, tec, Demand,the Bran kK OOEBLTE OCB GE PACIFIC |" Credit | vided ~~---4 WHEN PEACE HAS RETURNED-- THE DATLY NRWS8. HOW CANADA WILL PROSPER LEADING ECONOMIST THINKS THE WAR HAS SILVER LINING FOR CANADA—GETS ADVANTAGES WITHOUT LOSSES OF CAMPAIGN. Nineteen hundred and fourteen i year the et I ir one stands world will never for- doubtful if sinee the a more momentous date the annals of man- of this world-up- happen- economic out in In face many ten ind heaval Canadian and dencies, have shrunk in inter- ‘sent have that ti make ever and so many been introduced it is impossible approximate esti- mate of the j diMieult ts current situation, It stock of an still in take earthquake while it progress End of Speculative Spree. the early part Ir sobering of the year the up after our long spec- still going that future ative We spree was on. were realizing the alike we had years speculative discounted ithead in ues and in much of our rail- iy and municipal the construction that so freely from over and millions wif ired it ig, and the arti- yrosperity they brought was fading away industry The bumper crop fillip did gleam longed to not give 9 fresh and An Calgary oil back the ind the recklessness of the good of 1911, but for ist part the people of Can- investment come the ought occasional like episode Dt locally hopes days 1900 ida, even ible te those who had not been find still greener tender- to whe to to m pass on their Wings Eldorado City subdi- the property, were facing frankly came the crash of war. At st it brought dismay and eate but realiza- tion that the war had to be fought ned paralysis, doggedly at home as in the} hes and that there were table silver linings, soon i d business men, in Canada ' elsewhere throughout the It would be foolish to that the war has not ind will not work great jury, but the claim that the silver linings are broad ! substantial is based on solid is not merely an uncer- iin plan of self-hypnotism Canada's Fortunate Position. I one thing, we are now in 1 sa box with all other lands. the war we stood out be- the world as the chief of peculative sinners, and our trou- es brought little sympathy but uch patronizing advice Now wreater crash has swallowed the lesser All lands, warring and neutra alike, have been shaken to their eeonomic founda- tions Our troubles become fair- y respectable when viewed as the t of a world cataclysm, not sur own bad judgment. We can blame it all on the Kaiser; one little burden more or less on his head will.not matter. When we start again we shal! start more early on a level than if the war had not come, even though all ations will be nearer to the bot- tom Nor does war mean to Canada tenth the suffering it brings to the warring Our one economic loss and lands in continental Europe crops are not trampled by mareh- factories not The to the superiority our shelled the foe. to thanks overwhelming allied fleets, of normally, Benefit to Producers. With equipment for pro- duction uninjured, all that was market and credit the after the patch. up of the broken down ma- ing hosts, by sea is open us, abso- lutely of the ehinery and the ma- working exchange is fairly our needed was a facilities for marketing facilities, chinery of international exchange, been reasonably well In spite of some natural have pro- leriticiam from disappointed bor- it appears clear that the of not only rowers banks Canada have proved able to weather the storm themselves but to give essential accommpdation. And as to mar- kets, the crippling of the Euro- pean food producers has given our farmers a market at war- time prices, and our manufactur- ers have been greatly stimulated by war material orders. While jthe conclusion that as many in- dustries have been helped as hin- dered by the war is unduly op- timistic, as railway traffic returns and other general indexes show, conditions are than any but the most courageous dared to hope in the fateful days of early August. War, by stopping immigration and by absorbing the unemployed, or rather a number equivalent to those who would have unemployed, better too, been in mili- tary service at home or abroad, has left Eastern Canada, at all events, seemingly less affected by unemployment than in 1907. Borrowing From Grandchildren. The bill for all this will come in some day. We shall have to pay in heavy taxes and in scarcity of capital, we and our children. We have, in fact, tided over a crisis by borrowing from our grandchildren. It is perhaps ex- sometimes to ask pos- terity to do something for us who are doing so much for posterity, but it is a dangerous remedy, only to be like breaking the baby's bank, in last resort. It is true that, even from the strictly economic point of view, the war cannot all be ac- counted waste. We save more, take up another hole in our belts, spare other luxuries to provide the funds for the luxury of war. And if the Allies win, and win de- cisively, if they smash Prussian militarism and, true to their pro- fessions, surmount the tempta- to Prussianized in their own ideals, then part at least of the load of armament will be | taken off the staggering nations’ |shoulders, and posterity be given | more than we have taken away. | And it is not only in money scales that this war is to be weighed; freedom and honor and democracy and all we fight for balanced against any economic advantage. For all that, a waste is no less waste be- cusable used, expenditure | tion be of course cannot be j cause it is the lesser evil. and if any one nation reasonable war outlay way be considered a necessary insurance premium, for all nations together it is absolute and shameful loss. Gain to United States. The United States stands to gain relatively most by the war. Already the tide there seems to and when the war ends it will apparently be launch- jed onee more on a period of pros- That means much for since, for weal or woe, of all tariff ar- or political sympa- commercial fortunes are very greatly affected by those of great neighbor. Pros- perity south of 49 will be reflect- After the war, too, though perhaps particularly the United States, is going to look very good to war- Europe; immigration may fairly be expected on an even greater scale than before, a scale such as to compe! and to permit more careful sifting than in the past. Increasing Production. One of the most obvious fea- tures of the year has been the awakening to the need for in- creasing production in every line. We have built the machinery, we have discounted the profits; now it is up to us to deliver the goods. The fear of “draining the coun- try" by exports which prevailed some three years ago has given way to a feeling of the absolute need of making ends meet by in- creasing exports, even to the dan. gerous United States. The “Made Canada" movement, pressed | for have turned, perity. Canada, independently rangements thies, our our ed north of it. this continent, rent with the vigor of necessity, will do its part in making exports and imports more nearly balance. The new sense of the importance of the farm, of the diMfeulties which the farmer faces, of the need for the investigation of farm methods, credit, marketing, which was 80 notable a development of last year, has mark 1914, Co-Operative Action. Especially significant was the recent meeting in Winnipeg be- tween the farmers and the manu- facturers, the frank recognition of need to study the other side, and the constructive policy joint- ly advocated. There will be less barren criticism on both sides hereafter if the promise of this meeting is sustained. Another important tendency is the grow- ing co-operation, among producers and consumers alike. Such experiments in both buying and selling as those made by the grain growers of the West, the co-operative credit associa- tions of the Desjardins type in Quebec, or the yet untried Saskat- chewan form indicate the possi- bility of our finding a happy me- dium between the stark individ- ualism and the looking to the State for help which have been too often our own alternatives. More co-operation between in- dividuals in the same occupation, as well as between different classes and sections of the com- munity, may well be the best gift of 1914 to the economic Canada of the future, just as greater co- operation in political affairs one of its legacies to the Empire. —0O. D. Skelton, Professor of Eco- nomics, Queen's University. not continued to interest in is _ 1 September, A.D. this 2ist day of . PEDRO SALINAB. A Real Lever Simulation a LD WATCH FREE. cont: for one of our jashionable Ladies Lona cr Gents’ Alberts, sont carriage paid to wear with the wach. which wil be uiven Free re JOHN HALLAM LimizED eee = Our 1915 Catalogue Which Has Just Been Distributed Will aid you In making your selection of Christmas Gifts. Werte for this book If one has not reached you. Note the fine range of SIGNET RINGS on Page 11 and our assort- ment of Ebony, Silver and French ivory Toilet Ware from Pages 45 to 53, inclusive. Henry Birks & Sons, Limited JEWELLERS AND SILVERSMITHS Granvilte and Georgia Streets Geo. E. Trorey, Managing Director VANCOUVER, B.C THE UNION STEAMSHIP CO.. OF B.C, LIMITED SS, VENTURE SOUTHBOUND TUESDAYS AT 9 P. M. Sailings for GRANBY, SIMPSON AND NAAS SUNDAYS AT MIDNIGHT For Further Particulars Apply to PHONE 568 JOHN BARNSLEY, Agent, SECOND AVE. AGENCY ATLANTIC STEAMSHIPS cuts Monday’s labor clean in half. The Sunlight way is so easy --just note. First you soap the garment; then roll it up tosoak. After a while you tinse it thoro ly and the dirt drops out magic. Why scrub, and rub, and wear and tear the clothes when the gentle strength of Sunlight Soap will do the work with never a hurt to fabric or hands. Siw th alates this Sunlight way. At all grocers A NEWSPAPER 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 al! 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- mism and reliability. ‘he Daily News is the most valuable paper to advertisers because it is read by the buying public. It has a bigger cirewlation than any other paper in the vity. It is read by the class of people the advertisers want to talk to. DAILY NEWS o~~e~