= TPT Vw owe PI teers» Vwrrww* 16 MAD FROM HE TERRIFIC PAIN inent Merchant Thinks His Life Saved By “ Fruit-a-tives”. ALN, ONT., JUNK 15th. 1913. ma general storekeeper at the uldress, and on account of the yood I have experienced from ‘ Prait-a-tives’’, I recommend omy Customers. They were a won to me, lean tell you, for wo years ago, I was laid up in th vomiting and a terrific pain base of my skull. The pain drove me mad. Doctors feared d turn to Inflammation of the but I took ‘“ Pruit-a-tives '’ y until I was cured, I have fifteen pounds since taking atives’’, and.I verily believe aved me from a disastrous ill- J. A. CORRIVEAU, a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, sent postpaid on receipt of Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa NADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY NCESS MAY SOUTHBOUND FRIDAY 8 P. M. NCESS MAQUINNA SOUTHBOUND SUNDAY 8 P. M. @. MoNAB, Genera! Agent or Fourth Street and Third Ave —-- ————$—$———— ee ee ATEST WAR NEWS ie latest war bulletins ved exclusively by The y News are posted im- ately after coming’ off wires at the following e's Cigar Store, 3rd Ave irk's Jewelry Store, 3rd ice Rupert Hotel, 2nd yal Hotel. ntral Uotel. Hotel. Hotel. News indsor 1OX tily ue ‘ec cCerrc eee ee windows, 3rd a **** POCCOCOPOOOCOOPOOOD OOO OOOIE | lel : Directory TS ers PRL. Vintners Association WINDSOR HOTEL ! First ave. ead Bighth 31 Ww. © Wright, Prop. MOTEL CENTRAL st Avenue and Seventh #1 ropean and American Pian Peter Gieck. Prop | NOX MOTEL Ave., Between Eiazhit aud Niott pean) Plan. Rates $4e ‘to 8t.Ce ' Per Day | Seener & Geener, Proos } Hocbester Y UV Uses, EMPRESS HOTEL rd Ave, Between Sith end 3) Seventh Streets ean Pian, BO te 61 Per wa, ROYAL MOTEL sortey & Burgess, Props j Third Ave. end Siath st ean Pian Steam rieaied ER WHOLESALE LIQUOR CO., LimivTED Ave. and Sixth St Phone 102 second fraser apo Sixth Sts } Phone 7 E To DELINQUENT co- OWNER. ENAY JOHNSON, or to any a us to whom you aay have your interests, Take Notice | undersigned Co-Owner with | Gold King No, 1” and the Mineral Claims, situated at the Hastings Arm about three-quar ‘ale from the beach, in the Skee Mining Distriet, Province of lumnbia, have done the required work on the above mentioned the year 1944, amounting to ‘ order to hold the same under “4 of the Mineral Act, and if “days of the publication of this “ fail or vefuse to contribute ruon of sueh expenditure, to with the costs of this advertise- vur interest in the said mineral will become the property of the Hed under Seetion 4 of the Min Amendment Act of 1900. T. H. COVERT, Co- Owner. Rupert, at Prince B. C., January ertificate of impro lance It Fraction, mad piack B Bear the Min- Claims situa is “On Of Cassiar District, » located ;..’ between the er Bertha’ aud an” Mineral © our of 1, Observatory i, and * Mineral Claim, ted one into, at Ara fhe, ariprsel Peas! lie rm. of Ob- OnIGE t Free Certificate Nis _ te riher Y ction 85, tust bee ta a nine of such Certificate o , “his 2st day of September, A.D. PEDAO SALINAS. Prince Rupert Feed Co. DEALERS IN Hay, Grain, Feed and Seeds Agents for DOMINION NURSERY @ ORCHARDS Co. Mal! orders promptly attended to SPECIALTY 808 Third Ave. Phone 68 ONE * : FIRE ALARM SYSTEM * . : OMOCUIT NO. 1. ‘ @ox 12 5th St. and gra Ave 7 Box 13--6th St. and Sra Ave t Gor 144th St. and Sra Ave. , Sor (46 Junction of ist, @nd and t " * Box 16--ist Ave, between 8th and z ¥th Sts. (Knox Hotel.) @ Box 17-18 Ave. and 7th St. (Cen t tral Hotel, * * CIRCUIT NO. 2. r Box 22--3rd Ave. and Sra St * (vost Office.) t Gor 23--3rd Ave. and MeBride St % Sox 24 -1st Ave. and McBride 8t. t Box 26.-2nd Ave. and @nd St » > 80x 26-—-2nd Ave. and 6th st. 7 * Gox 27-6. T. P. t CIRCUIT NO. 3. : t Box 31 -5th Ave. and Fulton st. * * Box 32 -Borden and Taylor Sts x] Box 347th Ave. and Fulton St. >» % Bex 869th Ave. and Comox Ave. x t Box 378th Ave. and Dodge Pi. * % #o* 38 4th Ave. and Thompson St. | * t CIRCUIT NO. 4. x ; Box 41 -4th Ave. and Emmerson x rl » Box 42. 5th Ave and McBride St. » & Sox 435th Ave. and Green st. x : Box 44.--6th Ave and Basil St >» Box 45—T7th Ave. and Ehertes. » * * Box 141- 7th Ave. and Young st. x * * a ome ahtforward generous rom on ished » We ars giving away Watehes to of people all over the word of 6@ advo tiserent. ’ is your chanes to obtain one =6=Write now, cents for one of our fashionable Ladies lone Guards, oF Gents’ Alberts, sent carriage paid to wear with the wateh. whieh Guaranteed five . Should you take ad vantage of oor marvel ‘e expect you to tll your, fiends show them the beautiful S watep offer too good to be true. bat send » day z cee end cain @ Free Wateh You VW LIIAMS & LLOYD, Whoterale inh, Corews.iia Read, London, B., FREE American Silk HOSIERY We Want You to Know These Hose They stood the test when all others failed. They give real foot eomfort. They have no seams to rip. They never become loose and baggy as the shape is knit in» not pressed in. They are GUAR- ANTEED for fineness, for style, for superiority of ma- terial and workmanship, ab- solutely stainless, and to wear six months without holes or replaced by new pairs free. OUR FREE OFFER To every one sending us 50c to cover shipping charges, we will send, sub- ject to duty, absolutely free: Theee pairs of our famous AMERICAN SILK HOSE with written GUARANTEE, any color, or Three pairs of our Ladies’ GUARANTEED Hose in Black, Tan or White colors, with written GUARANTEE, DON'T DELAY—-Offer ex- pires when dealer in your locality is selected. Give color and size desired. International Hosiery Oo. 21 Bittner Street Dayton, Ohio, U. 8. A. “Safety First” is the Slogan of Business” @ em 75 years of Banking in Canada, has demonstrated the strength, security, safety and service of The Bank of British North America. The history of this bank for over three- quarters of a century has been one of progress and development, and of consistent growth in the regard of the business world, THE BANK OF British North 78 YEARS IN BUSINESS. CAPITAL AND SURPLUS, $7,854,000. PRINCE RUPERT BRANCH P. MARGETTS, Manager. PEN PICTURE OF TRENCHES — WERE OUR SOLDIERS FIGHT |HOW THE FIGHTING 18 ‘CARRIED on AND HOW RATIONS ARE | BROUGHT TO THE TRENCHES—HARDSHIPS OVERCOME. | | wonder how many people|sunrise in the morning There there are who have a mental pie. /@te, maybe, an Indian cavalry ture of the trenches whieh is at jall like the thing. TI have Seen photographs of men stand- jing in a trench behind a covering line of mange! wurzels, which are [ue enough, but hardly charaec- No doubt the and formidable earthworks which | valley real | te ristic many people | imagine trenches to be a reg- of a whole | wtee series turn into a sort of fortress. heard of all sorts of le laborations which get mentioned letters, | characteristic, they of fact, the everything else little appearance [= hey have in not because but peculiar. the trenches they are just As surprising that, war, they difference to the of the land- scape until you get quite close to them If could walk because are matter thing like a | about is in this make so normal an invisible wayfarer past them during the might get them noticing janything peculiar unless an artil- |lery bombardment be going Rifle tacks are nearly all dawn or He would have to for any visible w near the by day would, of course, be sniped. A few day he very easily through without happened to fire and at- at on. dusk or night. be invisible, way- farer trenches do make their way to and fro— with messages mostly, who creep along ditches and dash orderlies across exposed intervals. But the traffic is by night. Every even- ing a little party of men and mules go to a point as near as it dare to the battalion and takes shelter behind a house or a wall, where it or two men of each company to take the daily rations back to the trenches. the way is met by one Every evening, stretcher- into the too, bearers make their trenches and remove the men who the And every evening all these the en- emy as they go about their work. have been wounded during | day nen are “sniped” at by ' }As you approach the trenches in | the dusk the lack of anything ab- | normal in the whole aspect of jthings is, of course, even more }deceptive than by day. And know- jing as one does that one is with- jin a few yards of two lines of ,,;communicating THE DAILY NEWS. es regiment which has never yet had a chanee of fighting on horseback and can contribute only in this way to the defence. From your ditch by the road- side will probably be a communi- cating trench to the first of these reserve trenches, and from here, if the entrenchments have been in time he a whole rabbit warren you will of From here to get to the fire putting your Walking and there bricks thrown rubbing clay on to your shoulders from either wall of the exigtence for some find yourself at the beginning you may be able every not only in but the without ever point, trenches, reserve trenches, too, head above the ground in slush (here fled by down), straws or narrow passage, you may pass along a whole series of reserve to be de- up one of trenches, which seem serted unless you lift the pieces of canvas fixed against the wall and see a silent Indian cavalryman curled up in his lit- tle niche. It will be for many rea- sons a very tortuous way before at the fire trenches, the eolonel’s little ‘“dug- First of all, because the trenches are planned in every sort of zig-zag and curl and twist, to be as little as possible end-on to the enemy, and so enfiladed. The colonel’s headquarters, for instance, tered from the back, and ap- proached by a trench which twists around behind it. Moreover, the line of the fire trenches is broken at intervals by traverses—also to you arrive or at out.” is en- protect against possible enfilad- connected by little semi-circular which skirt round the solid interval of ing,—and trenches earth. But the way will be tor- tuous for other reasons. The whole line of the two armies is tortuous beyond the suspicions of who sees it twist little the but supposes will straight The chief cause fact that the trenches is a rear spectator, along frontier, it enough inside. of this the whole of developed from a skillful use of a be is series natural conditions. Sometimes extend from the to Switzerland, the blank | jmen which sea lcoast i of everything is tin-| suggestive. You are | walking along an ordinary coun- | try road. iglingly | just house where the medical offi- You have passed ithe a and his assistants have taken jup their and they pass on the wounded by mo- to the field A couple of days ago he had a house }farther up the but he was shelled out of it. You pass otber you are walking’ crouch-| led in the ditch by this time. By jday you would notice that many in quarters whence tor ambulance. road, houses jof these nouses have holes jthem and that there are patches of tiles wanting in the raof; but the light they look quite normal, except that the win- by evening dows are lit up in none of them, Cattle about over the flelds and the They look quite normal, though in daylight you would and fowls wander across road too, see that the cows have not been milked and the fowls are starving. By daylight, you might tice here and there in a field a cow that has been struck down by shell killed or another poor beast—that has beer merely It was to put such a out of its pain that an ofi- Loo, no- a and wounded, one the other morning and was killed as he crawled back. A little far- ther still you may at last come upon the teenches themselves at where they ehance to touch the road, The reserve trenches these will probably be, and they have perhaps just been lined by battalion that has marched out to be in support dur. ing the night in expectation of an a point a lwhich has been deepened. At other jtimes the adaption of a pit or a cer of ours crept out uf his trench | the trench is merely a_ ditch Ee officers, killed in last night's at- tack! Tonight hope to get him baek. His hand is hanging on is his and from where we are we can see the time | letter the | Manchester Guardian. we down, and his wrist watch. It is still going, From an officers in Number of Jewish Officers Have Been Killed or Wounded—300 With Canadian Forces. London, Jan. 27. 10,000 Jews the British and the army casualty lists show that More than are now serving in army and navy six officers and over forty enlist- ed men have heen killed and 150 wounded or The figures Rev. Michael Jewish in addition. by senior missing, are compiled Adler, the to the Adler has a son in the Royal chaplain forces. Rey. Fusiliers and he himself expects to leave for the front soon. “Before the rabbi, “there war,’ says the were only 500 Jews in the serviee. Since the war all sections of Jews, rich and poor, have responded. Two of our men | MAKE SURE YOU HAVE A Birks’ Illustrated Catalogue In Your Home During 1915 As a medium through which you may select gifts suitable for every occasion, you will find our Catalogue of the greatest value. Birks’, Vantouver, is the great gift store of the West. Our Mall Order Department and our Hidetrated Catalogue forms a convenient avenue lead ing to @ selection from our immense stocks. WRITE FOR THE CATALOGUE—YOU WILL NEED iT. Henry Birks 6 Sons, Limited JEWELLERS AND SILVERSMITHS Granville and Georgia Streets Geo. E. Trorey, Managing Director VANCOUVER, B.C LUMBER PRINCE RUPERT LUMBER CO. A. 4. BURROUGHS, Manager tet Ave. and McBride &. PRINCE RUPERT, 8.0. have received distinguished con- PHONE 26 Branch Yard at Smithers duct medals. There are a large number Of Jewish Ree a o——_—___—_—__—_—_—_——— men mm the Australian forces in Egypt, while others took part in the operations in Samoa and New Among the Canadian troops are about 300 Jews, most- ly of Roumanian Guinea. sons naturalized Russian Jewish to be found also in all the training centers in Eng- land,” and Jews. soldiers are WILL DIE STANDING UP. THE UNION STEAMSHIP CO., OF B.C., LIMITED S.S. 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 Maxmilian Harden Says Germans Will Not End Unworthily. London, Jan. 26.—Maxmilian Harden, reviewing the war in the latest number of his organ Die Zukunft, “Beat us! says: Drive us into the into the Rhine! Starve us submission! We shall die die standing up with We do not know shall win, but we know we shall not end unworth- ily. We are conserving both our confidente nourishment for long struggle, yet, in a year, using thorns and thistles for a time, instead of bread. We are quieter than in the first current of the war's enthu- siasm, but cowardly; nor are we to be intimidated. In sea, into honorably, clean arms. whether we and our a very we may be not more prayer we are ever joyful, still hark to the German maxim, | hollow makes it ten feet deep, jand the men have to climb re jon ledges to fire out of it. Here and there the connecting trench | between a tunnel, *by having been roofed in. a convenient affords quite becomes bush cover which has little cavern places hedge enabled a be dug under its protection. Though the hardship is severe} | attack and will mareh back before - At other# or{ ‘Rely upon theyself; then wilt | hou never deceive thyself. ,” EE Write today, address | ’ | | } to JOHN HALLAM LiMiTED | “Desk EB. 18” | and 4 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 Sonne 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 enough, the men manage to make themselves more comfortable e * than might be supposed. They |¢ J have charcoal braisiers, which; } help to keep them warm, and S there is even talk—serious talk ; of installing eleetric light. The ; adjutant has made quite a little office of his ‘dug-out,’ and pins up notes and orders and _tele- fi P . Rupert and Northern B C grams on the clay wall in front or rince owe of him. When the trenches have been in existence long enough ‘The Daily News goes into nearly every home in there. is communication every- Prince Rupert. It is the popular newspaper of where, though it is often dificult the city because it is clean and reliable. It has al! to squeeze by and as for sleep— | the news of the city, and keeps in touch with events well, you can take a little of that | and topics interesting to Northern British Colum- as soon as the shelling starts, bia. It treats these subjects with moderate opti- 4 for yor know there will not be mism and reliability. : : The Daily News is the most valuable paper to an attack till that is over! The ; ; advertisers Decause it is read by the buying public. only thing you ean Rerdiy any- It has a bigger cirewlation than any other paper in where do is to stand up. If you the city. It is read by the class of people the try it, ‘ping’ almost at onee, and advertisers want to talk to. you are lucky if you only gel your faee spluttered with mud.) And just out there-——sometimes THE , only fifty yards away——they are taking the same, precautions | DAILY NEWS about all of us, and peeping with the same curiosity. And between the lines is fifty yards of ordinary fleld, where no one dare venture by day, and only at imminent . danger by night In that fifty + OOOO Ooo ok yards is now lying one of our| Pe