THE DAILY NEWS, —_ HOLE FAMILY USES THEM ruit-a-tives” Keeps Young And Old In Splendid Health —— Goxr 12 5th St. and Srd Ave Bor 136th St. and ard Ave J. W. HAMMOND Esa, Bor 14 41h St. and Srd Ave LAND, ONT., Atig. 25th, 1918 Bor 15 —Junection of ist, 9nd end tives” are the only pill ord Aves ed, to my way of thinking Box 16 ist Ave, between 8th and courpletely, no griping vith Sts. (Knox Hotel.) nd one is plenty Re any Bor 17- ist Ave. and 7th St (Cen person at a dose. My wife tral Hotel tyrto Constipation. We tried on the calendar. without CHMROUIT NO. 2. , Te ee large onsets of Bor 22--3rd Ave. and 3rd 8 til we happened on “ Fruit Post Office.) , cannot say too much in Sox 23-3rd Ave. and McBride St used them in the family for Son 26--ist Ave. and McBride St years and we would not us Bor 26--2nd Ave. and nd st else as long as we can get Box 26--2nd Ave. and 6th St tives”, | Bor 27 6. T. P. tion is mild, and no distress | CIRCUIT NO. 3. | have recommended them to re r people, and our whole | Box 31 Sth Ave. and Pulton st es them”. j Box 32 Borden and Taylor Sts J. W. HAMMOND, | Box 34 7th Ave. and Fulton St shave been cured by “Fruit | # ges 389th Ave. and Comox Ave ire proud and happy to tell a ng friend about these won. | tablets made from fruit juices. 1 box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25c. vlers or sent on receipt of price it-wtives Limited, Ottawa. ai ANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY INCESS MAY NORTHBOUND MONDAY, JAN. 25 INCESS MAQUINNA SOUTHBOUND SUNDAY 8 P. M. J @ MoNAB, General Agent rner Fourth Gtreet and Third Ave ee rere er eee LATEST WAR NEWS bulletins by The itest exclusively war ‘s are posted im- after coming olf s at the following s Cigar Store, 3rd Ave ‘8 Jewelry Store, 3rd e Rupert Hotel, 2ud Hotel al Uotel lsor Hotel. Hotel, | News windows, 3rd fever ee eee ereeereeeen eee ee ee eer ee ee ial. Directory A AD bers PLR.L. Vintners Association WINDSOR HOTEL PEATE EEE EEE EE ee eee ee eee Prince Rupert Feed Co. DOMINION NURSERY & 908 Third Ave. DEALERS If Fe Seeds Hay, Grain d and FEED A SPECIALTY Agente for ORCHARDS Co. orders promptly attended to ——eceee Phone 68 SENTERO R EERE NNO FIRE ALARM SYSTEM SHEARED ON. CHR E HEHE He HO4 Bor 37 Bo: 38 Bor 47. -4th Ave. and Emmerson Pl Bor 425th Ave. and MeBride St Box 435th Ave. and Green St. Box 44.-6th Ave and Bast! S81. Box 456.—J7th Ave. and Eberte. Box 141--7th Ave. and Yung 8t CIROUIT NO. 1. eth Ave. and Dodge Pi on Ave, and Thompson 8t CIROUIT NO. 4. CREREEERE EERE ERE EERE EERE EERE EERE PORE ERE REE REE REE EEE EE ‘SUBSCRIBE FOR | THE DAILY NEws FREE We Want You to Know Th all © real no seams to rip. They never become loose and bag@y as pressed in. They are GUAR- ANTEED atyle teria solulely wear holes pairs free. OUR FREE OFFER To every one sending us 50e charges, we will send, sub- ject to duty, absolutely free: Thsee pairs of our famous AME with any color, or Three pairs of our Ladies’ Hose White GUA be pires when local color and size desired. international Hosiery Co. Dayton, Ohio, U. 8. A. GUARANTEED American Silk HOSIERY These Hose ey stood the test when thers failed. They give foot comfort. T hey have shape is knit in not for fineness, for , for’ superiority of ma- | and workmanship, ab- Stainless, and to months without replaced by new Six or to cover shipping RICAN written SILK HOSE GUARANTEE, Black, with Tan or written in colors, RANTEER., IN’T DELAY—Offer ex- dealer in your is sé@lected. Give ity 21 Bittner Street ; ver of First Ave. and Bignth 8+ W. 4. Wright, Prop. tl HOTEL CENTRAL } First Avenue snd Seventh 8: | -uropean and American Plan Peter Black, Prop ANOX MOTEL st Ave. Between Bighth aud Ninth na iver Mining District, EvOvIRS eH war : British Columbia, have done the required) pepean Plan, Raves 60e to 01.00 lamount of work on the above mentioned Per Day jelaims for the year 1914, aunounting | to Beener & Besner, Pro $100, in order to hold the same under ” }Seection 24 of the Mineral Act, and if json or transferred that you “Hastings” head of Hastings i, in persons to the OWNER. ENKY JOHNSON, whom you may interests, Take Notice undersigned Co-Owner with “Gold King No. 1” and the Mineral Claims, situated at the or to any per nave your the } within 90 days of the publication of this jnotice you fail or refuse to contribute 7 VU Cenley your portion of such expenditure, a TEL gether with the costs of this advertise rors ment, your interest in the said mineral a A ‘aims will become the property in; Cotwene: Bate ane undersigned under Section 4 of the Min face with the eonservative par- Seventh Streots eral Act Amendment Act of 1900. + ‘ : epeen Plan, BO to 61 Per Day 3) Tr. H. COVERT. Jties, the anti-clericals face to a= § | Dated at Prince Rupert, B.C, JanuarY) faoe with Catholies, and political 6, 1914 WOvAL HOTEL | ate gg hie aml ———--= leoteries face to face with their ort ; } 10, PEACE RIVER AND ATHABASCA 8 eee PACIFIC, TEAILWAY, COMPANY. rivals. , third Ave end Sixth St NOTICE. fia : 3 : ropean Pian Bieum rested Pacifie, Peace River and Athabasca Rail ro sum up, I foresee a long . of Canada, at its next session, for an Act, the Germanic AVER WHOLESALE LIQUOR OO. LIMITED on Ave. aod Sixth se Phenue 108 Se ' HNCE RUPERT IMPORTING ©O., LimiTeD fraser apa Sisth Sts Phone 7 OPPO OLODOD OPO DOOD FREE Ouw T Guide Su ott Write today, address LAM iMigED Po PPO e hip your UR 'OWN HA Desk B. 1g” authorizing the company to lay out, oe ratheays 1)” Commencing a6" a oy|block and the Allies, followed by tide water, at or near the head 0 Kitunat) |. duous difficulties among the Al- Art. northe therly direction along the valley of the) ial, economic, and dynastic re- Lakelse Lake and river to the Skeena| torial, ec , : River, thence crossing the Skeena fiver) ..onigation of Burope and its by means of a high level bridge and over the Grand Trunk standard clearances to the mouth Seeax valley hund uneton tie the B water River, aa the Galanskeest River, thence south easterly along the Galanskeest River to the Skeena River, thence HP, River to the mouth of Bear Riv October PRING ollowing the Kkitimas River . fiy direction pe a lies themselves, before the terri. Kittinat @ Lakelse Lake, nee . of the Pacife Hallway wit! of the following at or the Nass thence, or River, a twelve miles; (Db) " the Blackwater River, , following the course 0 to the summit be of er approxi Fifty-seven miles, D al Ottawa this nineteenth day © 1014 , THOMPSON, BURGESS & COTE, Solicitors for the Applicant. Arm about three-quar- | ters of a mile from the beach, in the Skee thence north- easterly Kitsumkalem River and following its course to the summit of River, the hear . roximately one Alyansh, a distance of appro trom the wit the Skeena GLOOMY FORBODINGS OF FUTURE ECHOED IN AMERICAN PRESS FEAR ALLIES NOW FIGHTING TOGETHER MAY QUARREL OVER SPOILS AND START A MORE CRUEL WAR THAN THE FIRST. The consoling thought that the terrifie confliet in Burope will at any rate settle old seores and ine sure peace is now denied us by two experts on such subjects. One is the editor of The Navy | (Washington), who foresees a distant struggle, and the other is a well known Freneh peace advo- cate, who looks for hat fact, a nearer com m ies of them this Whether America can preserve its | iramediately after one. neutrality through all the turmoil s not stated, but one of these | writers warns us to be prepared. | Urbain Gohier, who has written am illuminating book about ns as The People of the Twentieth Century,” believes that when the diplomats gather at the end of this war to arrange terms of peace, they will find the task im- possible. In an artiele translat-} ed for the New York Times he} ; deelar that “the international | and social question whieh the jpresent war is going to raise are too numerous, too complex, t6 be} settled beyond appeal and irre- | vocabls by any diplomatic argu- iments whatsoever.” Then will |come the fight over the spoils. He “Remember two the Balkan | iwars. The first was terrible; the| jsecond was still more cruel. The had Turkey re each other in their struggle | } allies who crushed to divide the booty. “After the collapse of the Ger- jman Empire and the dismember- of the | |} Empire the booty will be richer, jment Austro-Hungarian | the participants therein more nu- i the difficulties more in- | While the great con- : 1916 works for ous, extricable. gress of 1915 or probably but the first of of tremendous world-wide eon fliets that will be fought the inhabitants of the earth, for na. a series by tional supremacy, until that su- premacy is obtained by some sin. gle people, or possibly by an amalgamated race, the ingredi. ents of which are just now being thrown into the melting pot He reminds us that despite civiliza- tion, despite religion, despite ey- erything, we now see that “prim itive brutal instinets are as strong And if enlightened Ru suddenly as ever.” rope bursts into an orgy of savagery, what can we ex. pect of the black, brown, and yel low they to handle the white man’s weapons? millions when learn As he argues: “It would be idle to expect that the next fifty, one hundred, or five hundred years would materially change the nature of the human race. In fact, it is much more reasonable to assume that when the which has been discovered by the white scientific knowledge race has not been assimilated by the peoples of Asia and Africa, who have not had the advantages of the culture accompanying that but who will be able to use for their own scientific development, ends the highly developed mod- ern offensive weapons, there will be an attack made by those races upon the white civilization, and if the white has not by that time deteriorated so as to be un- to offer effectual to their attacks, there will be a series of wars race able resistance of such tremen- dous extent that the wars which have been fought previously will appear insignificant. “In the past, rivers and moun- the reorganization of Europe, of Africa, and a part of Asia on new | bases the combatants of the day | before will not lay down their} | arms for good; perhaps they will | take them up again with greater fury. Within each country formid-f ible disorders will arise. Several | millions of men will return home| {to their hearths with new souls. | Their |have given other ideas, other manner. They | ‘will not dread violence | it, j will not have the same respect | fi life; | seen death too near by, and will otj sufferings and perils will} them other desires, as yes- terday they dreaded and they rv human they will have jhave marehed over the corpses friends or enemies. | Now they will find, in their re-| spective countries, political life, | jeconomie life, social life, a |turned topsyturvy. They will ex-| jpect to regulate it anew; but | their ideas will not be in concord | and harmony. NOTICE TO DELINQUENT CO-) = \ciually one wishes no long ler to recognize parties or cliques. Common peril reconciles adver- | bsartes, as common hatred of Ger- his reconciled the Freneh hanany land Enelish, the English and the Russians But these reconcilia- tions are but conditional, They will last as long as the ordeal lasts that determined them, On the morrow of the peace England will find herself face to face with Russia, and the Socialists face to jbattle between . thereafter, social disorders of great violence,” dependencies ; rurning from the peace adyo- cate to the naval expert, we find the editor of The Navy looking for a world-wide convulsion that may set race against race and conti. -lIneont against eontinent. Instead fief this being the last grand war, he believes, it “is much more tains have that alliances to territories, but formed barriers, it was difficult for tribes or of wage war beyond the no so neighboring tribes their own and insur- The oceans rivers mountains longer mountable obstacles. are alone, at the present time, fur- nish an obstacle to the transpor- tation of large armies; but if the past fifty vears is a criterion of what is coming within the next century, the oceans will present no more diffieulties to invading forces than did the narrow Tiber to the enemies of Rome at the opening of Roman history. “When Afro-Eurasia has pass- ed under the domination of the final wiriner and its now undevel- oped peoples have assimilated the war science of the modern world, then will come the test of the New World’s strength. May Literary Digest. we be prepared!" JACK JOHNSON TO BE BARRED FROM MEXICO FOR WILLARD CONTEST Kl cause 23.—Be- it would increase the war Paso, Texas, Jan. chest of Villa, the Carranza gov- ernment will oppose the entry into Mexico of Jack Johnson, the American negro prize-fighter, who is booked to meet Jess Wil- lard in Juarez on March 6, ae- cording to Andres Gareia, the Carranza consul here, Garcia telegraphed today to the “first American passports before he be allowed to pass through any port held by the Carranza forces. Johnson at'present is at Bue- nos Ayres, Argentina, or on his way north, He naturally would attempt to enter Mexico through the east coast of Tampico or Vera Cruz, both of whieh are held by the Carranza troops, The trip from some Central American bor- der port would be diffieult, as would any entry from the west coast, The latter Would require a hard ride over the mountains, which might affect the condition of the negro. chief” that Johnson was a fugi-|’ tive from justice in the United States, and suggested that he must present recently-issued QUEBEC TIDAL FISHERY CONTROL IN DISPUTE. Ottawa, Jan The Domine} ion Fisheries Department is pre- paring to assert Federal juria. diction over the fisheries in all | tidal the of ’ Ouebee, a claim which has been } waters in Province resisted for yeare by the provin- | rhe conflict of} jurisdiétion may lead to an inter. | The} was made today by} cial government esting situation next spring announcement the Federal Fsheries Department that arrangements are being | made to administer the fisheries | licences, ete., in all the tidal | waters of Quebec, covering the | St. Lawrence Gulf and River to the limit of the tidal flow west of} Quebee city. The Quebee govern- ment, on the other hand, asserts its rights to continue to control the fisheries in these waters. Dominion Contention Upheld The Dominion Government maintains that the British | North the Federal power has control not only of the tidal, but of the waters, statement unde America Act also non-tidal In the the is noted to the } issued today by it reference Fisheries that supreme Depart- ment, i912 a in Court f MAKE SURE YOU HAVE A Birks’ Illustrated Catalogue In Your Home During 1915 As 4 medium through which you may select Gifts suitable for every occasion, you will find our Catalogue of the greatest valve. Birks’, Vancouver, is the great gift store of the West. Our Mail Order Department and our Widstrated Catalogue forms a convenient avenue tead- ing to & selection from our immense stocks. ——————— ——_—_—_—— TALOGUE—YOU WILL WEED IT. Henry Birks & Sons, Limited JEWELLERS AND SILVERSMITHS Granville and Georgia Streets Geo. E. Trorey, Managing Director WRITE FOR THE CA me VANCOUVER, B.C S sot voo LUMBER SHINGL~ , MOULDINGS, SASH, DOORS PRINLE RUPERT LUMBER CO. A 4. BURROUGHS, Manager tet Ave. and McBride st. PHONE 26 PRINCE RUPERT, 8.0. Branch Yard at Smithers of certain questions affecting the} Provincial and Federal fisheries | ees _—2 Government proposed a reference to the but this favorably received by courts, “18 not} Quebec. The Federal government has now| decided to force the taking over control of the fisher- by issue j i - ies in the tidal waters of Quebec, | and has so informed the Quebec} government and the fishermen | interested.” The latter have been | informed that they must take out} Federal allowed to fish this year. before being If the a licence | Quebee government also contin- ues to issue licences there is | likely to be “a certain liveliness” | in the Quebee tidal waters as soon as the fishing season opens. AN thal a PRICES Write To-day ~~~ Address JOHN HALLAM ‘'™'“£2 toronto “Desk 512° a ' jurisdiction was agreed to with | : Britich Columbia. There mice. THE UNION STEAMSHIP CO OF B.C., LIMITED tions were so framed as to ie] 2 cide the matter in all the other VENTURE sea-washed provinces. The Su- SS. bt preme Court maintained the con ; SOUTHBOUND TUESDAYS AT 9 P. M. tentions of the Federal govern- Sailings for GRANBY, SIMPSON AND NAAS SUNDAYS AT ment, and an appeal to the Privy! MIDNIGHT . Council upheld the decision = For Further Particulars Apply to 1913. Following the final decision, | tay. Ca, a ae a Quebee was ‘requested to hand} AGENCY ATLANTIC STEAMSHIPS back the administration of the ti.| dal waters it has controlled since | ~~ er ee the Provincial arrangement of e 9 1898, and this it refused to do, urging that thePrivy Council de- Subscribe for the ‘News cision applied only to British Co- lumbia. Last year the Federal i light Soap cuts Monday’s labor clean in half. The Sunlight way is so easy --just note. First you soap the garment; then roll it up to soak. After a while you rinse it ony 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. Try it once— this Sunlight way. At all grocers THE DAILY NEWS SAFE SANE SPICY IMPARTIAL INDEPENDENT INTELLIGENT } NEWSPAPER SESS 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 Lhe 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. The Daily News is the most valuable paper to advertisers because it is read by the buying public. It has a bigger cirelation than any other paper in the vity. It is read by the class of people the advertisers want to talk to. DAILY NEWS RARER ARR RRR RARER RRR RRA RRR RRR Re Ftc