priday, April 9 rom mineRAL ACT. rv provements. OWES HER LIFE 10 oft certinoat ri0k i, and Sun tb 3 s 1 , the Skeens pera sy «District, — ES" in Shore of 1 ' sora and Falls «x sae Gured Both Stomach T be | N I /959B, act- U ac rou | i mchostie, Free nd Head he agent f sap, and James a ac Ss certineate No, i ya from the} PALM#RsTon, OnT., June 20th, 1913, i the Mining Re- “TI really believe that I owe my life peor, om f Improve-| to ‘‘Pruit-a-tives’’ Iver since chiid- , obtaining &| hood, I have been wader the care of y lalms physicians and have been paying ant hat action, Um doctor's bills, I was so sick and worn out that people on the street often furtne venced before t of improve- mareh, A. D. nh. NADEN. DELINQUENT CO- asked me if I thought I could pet along without help. The same old Stomach Trouble and distressing Headaches nearly drove me wild. ‘Pruit- Sometime ago, I got a box of ‘ a-tives”’ and the fret box did me good My husband was delighted and advi- sed a continuation of their use ~ TO Today, I am feeling fine, and a OWNER. physician meeting me on the street, noticed my improved appearance and asked the reason, I replied, “I am _ w to any i. taking Pruit-a-tives”. He said, ‘Well Ht you may Have! if rruit-a-ti ki ; Take Notice ves are making you look so owner with) well, ahead and take them They o. 1” and the! ere do’ ng more for you than I can’’ suns, situated at the , "Ml out tree quar Mas. H. 8. WILLIAMS ae seh, in the “ Pruit-a-ti ” i province of nit-a-tives” are sold by all er Minine ce the required) dealers at soc. a box. 6 for $2.50, trial ubove me atone’ | size 25¢. or sent postpaid on receipt of i4, amounting ice by Pruit-a-ti Li ’ t +s coe - 2 _price by Fruit-a-tives ‘rd Ave and MeBride 8t. ” isl Ave. and MeBride St. = a snd @nd St % ‘ve. and 61 oo, ™ ri hb St. CROUIT NO. B& 2 ot Ave. and Fulton 8, - b sad Taylor Sta. = Ave. and Pulton 8t, > vih Ave. and Comox Ave, Z e Ave. and Dodge Pi, “Ave and Thompson St, . CIROVIT NO, « i : 41D Ave. and Emmerson > sm ‘ve, and MeBride 8t. = “) Ave. and Green st, 6 Ave and Best St. oT Ave, and Ebert. "7th Ave and Young 8. SADR O O ono tinite Ol Dye that Cloth ie eof —— ist OF Deales. ach perdeons ie Ca. ummable Ladies Goarts, oF Alberta, sent carriage paid to wear with the watch. which will te given Free (these watches are vantage of cnr marvel @ expect you to tell your triends thow them the be and aS vateh Don't think this offer too good & ‘ send 25 cents today ont vain 6 ie “Wateh Yoe wil! be amare’ ' i oe Jewetions (emt 1+), @ weie Koad, Low x. GUARANTEED BY THE GOVERNMENT of CANADA eee the Brand Mill PERG La: MATHIBUS NERVINE POWDERS —One tria! will convince you that asure and safe remedy for any headache ts at your service in MATHIEU’S Nervine Powders 18 tn a box, 25c. Sold everywhere. If your dealer does not se!! them we mal} box on receipt of price, 25c. J.L.MATHIEU CO. Props. SHERBROOKE, Pa 6-5-0 ais LiMiTED Desk LieetT Ee The salty and Gregrence of Baby’s Own Soap have macde it @ universal favorite, Its use is beneficial to any skin. ats Albert Soaps Limited, Montreal. SUBSCRIBE FOR THE DAILY NEWS = Ne lenevecienne WORK | OF TOLSTOY AND its | INTERESTING ORIGIN | 1 FY Two.) beauty, m Page vith her p he mile, her jewels rush of them especially. in eternal courte. Nations each eager | itiract her an, flirts with a In her hair jornament f diamonds and ru. | Pri engraved her name: ‘Come. j Mercialis \s alluring and be. ” tet i much de. truet follow in her eee Her breath, reeking of me. jtallic cha ld, and her look of ¢ much poison ito the nati ho fall vietims to jhe F ones | And behold, she has three gi- | ea tie arm witl three torches jot universal cort ipti in her | hand The first torch represents ithe flame of war, that the beauti- ful eourtesan carries from city to city and country to country. Patriotism answers with flashes of honest flame, but the end is the roar of guns and musketry. rhe second torch bears the lame of bigotry and hyprocrisy. It lights the lamps only in tem- ples and on the altars of sacred institutions. It carries the seed of falsity and fanaticism. It kindles the minds that are still in eradies and follows them to their graves. “The third torch is that of the law, that dangerous foundation of all unauthentic _ traditions, which first does its fatal work in the then sweeps through the of literature, art and statesmanship. “The great conflagration will start about 1942, set by the torch of the first arm in the countries family, larger worlds of Southeastern Europe. It will develop into a destructive calam- ity in 1913. In that year I see Europe in flames and bleeding. L hear the lamentations of huge battlefields. But about the year 1915 a strange figure from the north—a new Napoleon—enters the stage of the bloody drama He is a man of little militaristic training, a writer or a journalist, but in his grip more of Europe will remain till 1925. The end of the great calamity will mark a new political era for the Old World. There will be left no em- pires and kingdoms, but the world will form a federation of the United States of Nations. There will remain only four great giants the Anglo-Saxons, Latins, the Slavs and Mongolians. “After the year 1925 great change in religious senti- ments. The second torch of the courtesan has brought about the fall of the church. The ethical idea has almost vanished. Hu- manity is without the moral feel- But then, a great reformer arises. He will clear the world of the relics of monotheism and temple I see a ing. lay the cornerstone of the God, and immortality will be molten in a new furnace, and I seethe peace- ful beginning of an ethical era. The man determined to this mis- He is of pantheism. soul, spirit sion is a Mongolian-Slav. already walking the earth——a man ef active affairs. He, himself, does not realize the mission as- signed to him by a superior power “And behold, the flame of the third toreh which has already be- gun to destroy family rela- tions, our standards of arts and The relation between and man is accepted ag a prosaic partnership of the Art has become a realistic degeneracy. Political and reli- disturbances have shaken our morals. woman sexes. rious ia spiritual foundations of all nations. Only small spots here and there have remained un- touched by those three destructive flames. The anti-national wars in Europe, the class war in America, and the race wars in Asia have strangled progress for half a century. But then, in the middle of this eentury, I see a hero of literature and art rising from the ranks of the Latins and purging the world of the tedious stuf? of the obvious, It is the lieht of symbolism that shall out- the light of the polygamy monogamy of today—-there ah ana THE DAMY NEWS. rela. tion of the sexes based fundamen- tally upon poetic conceptions of! life. “And I see the nations growing wiser, and realizing that the ale| luring woman of their destinies is after all nothing but an illusion. There will be a time when the world will have no use for armies, hypoeritical reiigions and degen- erate art. Life is evolution, and evolution from the simple to the more complicat- ed forms of the mind and the body. I see the passing show of the world drama its present form, how it fades like the glow of evening upon the One motion of the hand of com- mercialism and a new history be- will come a poetogamy—a is development in mountains, gins. The late author-reformer fin- ished, opened his eyes and looked at me slightly confused. “Had I gone to sleep?” he ask- ed me. “I beg your pardon!” When I read his vision-talk to him, he listened gravely and nodded, saying that it was cor- rect. Upon my request, he signed the document and handed it to me a blessing. I left him the next day, and immediately upon with my arrival informed the Czar of my readiness to see him. I was received at the court an informal way and led into the Czar’s private study. I handed him the paper. He opened it ner- vously and read with pronounced agitation. “Well, it’s very interesting. I will make a copy for myself, and then forward other copies, with a translation, to the Kaiser of Ger- many and through him to the King of England. The original shall kept in my _ private archives. I shall ask the Kaiser and the King not to make any comments on the matter, as I do not like to figure as an interme- in be diary between them and the old man whose seditious writings I do not like, generally.” It is because I have heard that one of the royal principals is go- ing to include the secret message in that I take this opportunity of publish- ing the whole truth about it, and how I received the unusual docu- ment. The Czar had told me re- peatedly that the Kaiser of Ger- many thinks it is one of the most impressive literary prophecies of his private memoirs, this age. NO MORE WAR FOR THIS SEVEN FOOT MAN R. F. Gardner, of Baltimore, Says He Was Urged to Poke Head Up to Locate Snipers. New York, April 9.—Rutledge F. Gardner, of Baltimore, who stands nearly seven feet in his stockings and who fought with a British regiment in France, will never fight again. He's cured. He said so positively yesterday, hav- ing returned from abroad only recently. “Because of my height,” he claims, “the British officers used me to draw the fire of snipers. The big idea was that I should poke my-head above the trenches, the snipers would fire and the British sharpshooters would then locate the snipers. No more for mine. I'd rather be the periscope of a German submarine in the Thames River.” 68th REGIMENT, EARL GREY'S OWN RIFLES. _— Orders by Major J. H. MoMullin, Commanding, April 3, 1915: —-— Parades. “A" Company will parade at the Exhibition Building on Wednes- nesday and Friday, April 7 and 9, at 8 p. m. “B” Company will parade at the Exhibition Building on Monday Thursday, April 5 and 8, at 8 p. m. W. 8. MARSHALL, Lieut., 78-85 Acting Adjutant, When the man to whom you are telling the story becomes restive that is no indication that it is a poor story. It merely is an indi- cation that he wants to tell a story himself, The latest thing out—your last match, NEW WELLINGTON COAL CO., Second Avenue Sundays at 7:30 p.m. following described ilands:—Commencing @ & post planted on the northerly limit ot the Right-of-Way of the Grand Trunk Pa- cific Railway Company, and about 85 chains southwesterly from Mile 84, east from Prince Rupert, B. C.; thenee north 20 ehains; thence west 20 chains; south 46 chains, more or = Company; thence northeasterly a e northerly limit of the said Right-of-Way commencement; 80 acres, | Delivered to any part of town, or can be had at «Spurs §=—- Market, Knott's Bakery and the Fulton Cash Market. Govi. Inspected Cows The Best Equipped and Most Sanitary Dairy is the Prince Rupert Dairy HELP THE LADIES They are busy knitting for the soldiers; you ought to supply the cash to buy the yarn. Any amounts grate- fully received. Leave at McRae Bros., Ltd. Sixth Street New Wellington Coa The favorite Household Coal Cleanest, Brightest, Best Rogers & Albert, Agts. Phone 119 Salvation Army. Public meetings, Tuesday, Yhursday and Saturday at 8 p. m, LAND NOTICES. Skeena Land eo of Coast, Range Five, TAKE NOTICE that William Watson, of emo, B. C., occupation Contractor, in- tends to apply for oe to lease Po thence less, to the north- limit of the Right-of-Way of the 6rand Trunk Pacifie Railwa to pom and containing more or less. WILLIAM WATSON, Dated December 26, 1914. 25-85 WATER NOTICE. about Use and Storage. TAKE NOTICE that The Port Essington Water Company, Ltd., whose address is 517 Granville St., Vancouver, B. C., will apply for @ license to take and use one and one-half cubic feet per second and to store 400 acre-feet of water out of Cunningham Lake. The storage-dam will be located at the outlet of Cunningham Lake. The cé- pecity of the reservoir to be created is about 400 acre-feet and it will flood 2.238 acres. The water will be diverted from the stream at a point about 5 chains below the said outiet and will be used for Water- works purpose upon the land described as part of Lot 45, Range 5, Coast District, being the townsite of Port Essington. A copy of this notice and an application pur- suant thereto and to the “Water Act, 1914," will be fled in the oMce of the Water Recorder at Prince Ruperk Objec- tions to the application or to the petition mentioned below may be filed with the said Water Recorder or with the Comp- troller of Water Rights, Parliament Builld- ings, Victoria, B. C., within thirty days after the Orst appearance of this notice in a local newspaper. The territory within which the company desires to exercise its powers is described as the townsite of Port Essington, A petition to amend the Make so Meal Ironing Day ET Sunlight Soap do your washing Mon- day morning and you can do the light ironing Monday rnoon. The rub, rub, rub at the board has no place in the Sunlight way—so with the hardest part of washing cut out you'll feel like making it a ood day’s work by doing at least part of the ning. Follow the directions that cut your work in half and remember there’s nothing in Sunlight to injure fine fabric or dainty hand. A $5,000 guarantee backs this statement. unlight Soa All grocers sell and recommend it 1311 ' MAKE SURE YOU HAVE A Birks’ Illustrated Catalogue In Your Home During 1915 As a medium through which you may select gifts sultable for every occasion, you will find our Catalogue of the greatest value. Birks’, Vancouver, te the great gift store of the West. Our Mall Order Department and our Illustrated Catalogue forme a convenient avenue lead- ing to a selection from our immense stocks. WRITE FOR THE CATALOGUE—YOU WILL NEED IT. Henry Birks & Sons, Limited JEWELLERS AND SILVERSMITHS Granville and Georgia Streets Geo. E. Trorey, Man: cing Director VANCOUVER, B.C the Certificate granted to the company in respect of its former right so as to in- clude the right applied for herein will be heard in the oMfce of the Board of Inves- tigation at a date to be fixed by the Comp- troller. The date of the First Publication of this Notice is March 23, 1015. “PORT ESSINGTON WATER CO., LTD.,” ———— Se ~~ gi Subscribe for the‘News’ A NEWSPAPER for Prince Rupert and Northern B.C. The Daily News goes into nearly every home 'n 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- 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 cirenlation than any other paper in the vity. It is read by the class of people the advertisers want to talk to. DAILY NEWS ”~—o— ~~ ee ee ee fn Mnpnnnmnnnntnantacancdenpantanasaenentnatannesnes