garoh 22, 102 day Ma TORK’ ~ SELL VOVE eys commenced mak- ate in 1843. Still in 4 , of business ds in use In , game line H Hundre 9 Rupert. prince On SALE AT 7 3 red Stork s Hardware spCOND AVENUE Phone Black 114 a rad (EOUR SIGHT yy~—The most valuable of a senses — 18 the most . ‘ al | the least understood. per fr0m ills, which, upon pina, can be traced directly vrective eyesiant. 1 of the cause will often restore the delicate and gown sufferer tO robust health. glasses are properly prescrib- ibey restore the vision to nor- and eliminate all eye strain. He remova ——— a Fred Joudry ‘Practical Optometrist jAve. - - Prince Rupert Opposite Post Office gston (rill WHITE COOKS ONLY tarry nothing but Swirt’s lam and BACON and Strictly Fresh Eggs. ——ed a Good Breakfast, try our wkfield Sausage and Eggs Country Style. make a spec alty of Good Steaks ora Well Cooked Dinner, JUR fool Room moved to tl Third Ave. Opposite The Empress Hotel a CARS SODA WO per cent, Beer, 3 OFFICE HOURS; 12} 1:80 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. OR. J, 8. BROWN a OENTisT th Block » Third a i” venue, u OP day ang up. F _—— A La Carte, ee, MUG Cy liable eRANTAGE, LTD. We na Peasonable Rates &e Porter? facilities. 7 1 Manager IN ONO OES ENTISTRY el Prince Rupert ! errreneg ~ Sport Briefs The Pacific International Lea- gue will consist this year of six clubs, Victoria, Seattle, Tacoma, Yakima, Spokane and Vancouver. The decision to admit Victoria came with the city council of Victoria allowing a large base- ball fleld to be built right in the heart of the city. Operations on it are commencing immediately and it will be ready by May 5. The team which was to have rep- resented Astorja ‘will be trans- ferred to Victoria, The appear- ance of a Yakima nine will mark the apple city’s first participation in professional baseball. It is said to be a good baseball town and the magnates are confident that the team will pay. . . * i Seattle this year for the first time in its history will have con- rHe hot be prevented from oottipiliné| jlists showing who's on top, but! |Mr. Kennedy wishes to put an end to this. Ambition to lead the scorers badly influences a play- er’s usefulness to his club for he won't pass the puck when he ‘thinks he has a chance to score, even if one of his own team- mates is in a better position. ;‘Newsy’ Lalonde has been a flag- rant offender in this connection and has been reprimanded by ‘Manager Kennedy, Lalonde _ is leading the sharpshooters but if he doesn't pass the puck there will be trouble.” SMITHERS Representatives from all the ‘Farmers’ Institutes in the district ihave been appointed as an advis- ory board to the Bulkley Valley Fair Association. tinuous organized baseball ac- cording to present plans. The games will be played by the city’s two clubs, one in the Pacific Coast, League and the other in the Pa-| cifie Coast International League, a new Class B organization. The Pacific Coast International team will play in the big city while the Coast League nine is on the road. * * * The Old Country football fans are up in arms over the action of the Football Assoviation in send- ing teams to Belgium and France when it is desired that these teams should be sent to Canada and Australia, South Africa and New Zealand. As the result of a regu- lar policy the encouragement of the sending yearly of first class teams to these countries may be inaugurated in future. Simul- taneously it would be a _ good thing if some legislators were sent out to teach the Dominion! Football Association how to gov-| ern football‘in this country. This | knowledge is just as much re- quired as the method of playing | first elass footbail. } The following from an old} country. paper gives an intenest-| ing side light on old country foot- | ball:—‘From time to time } ( vari: | jus charges are levelled against | the Football Association. One is| that it is a limited company and} a purely commercial concern. | Another is that it legalized pro- | fessionalism and thereby ruined} the game as asport. Yet another | is that it is a mere figurehead and) the mere handmaiden of the league. These accusations ema- nate from amateur circles, and particularly, from that type of amateur who cannot or will not see any good in the Football As- sociation or professional football. When the split occurred between the Football Association and the Amateur Football Association, certain matters came into the law eourts. Counsel for the revolting amateurs was* put up to make much of the fact that the F. A. was “F, A., Limited,” and poured scorm upon it as a commercial un- dertaking, and therefore, totally divorced from sport.” * * * E. W. Ferguson, of the Mon- treal Herald, says that George Kennedy, of the Canadiens, is go- ing to make a motion the next time the National Hockey Léague meets to the effect that the publi- cation of the official scoring lists be prohibited. He continues:— Mrs. Page, of Railway Avenue, has received the King George Cross fro mthe War Office. This award is sent to mothers of those who died in the Great War on the fleld of honor. Mrs. Page's son, Fred Heffernan,, was © killed at Festubert in 1915. . * . George McBean who is in charge of operations at — the Babine Bonanza Mine, was in town last week and reported that the new tunnel at the mine is now in 600 feet. If the G. T. P: are successful in their action against the Cas- siar Coal Co. for the expropria- tion of land convenient to Telkwa, the yards at that place will be ex- tended and widened and a’ new modern station will be built. Judge Young, of Prince Rupert, has spent the week in Smithers receiving applications for natun- alization from seventeen residents of the district. SATURDAY'S FOOTBALL GLASGOW, March 22.—Satur- day's Scottish League games re- sults were:—Aberdeen 0, Rangers 2; Airdrieonians 0, Morton 0; Ayr 2, Queens 2; Clydebank 3; Hiber- nians 2; Dundee 3, Dumbarton 1; Hearts 0, Clyde 3; Kilmarnock 2, Hamilton 1; Motherwell 3, Lanark 3; Raith 2, Albion 0; St. Mirren 2, Partick 0- The international .game_ be- tween Scotland and England was won by the latter by a score of 4 to 0. LAND ACT VANCOUVER LAND DISTRICT—DISTRICT OF COAST, RANGE Il, TAKE NOTICE that J. C, Clausen of Jeean Falls, B, C., occupation superintend- nt of logging, intends to apply for per- ee to lease the following described ands :— Commencing at a post planted 2% miles n @ nortiuerly direction from the north- west corner of Lot 897 on the west coast of Calvert Island; thence north 40 chains; hence west 40 chains; thence south 40 ‘hains; thence east 40 chains to point of commencement and containing 160 acres, nore or less, J. C, CLAUSEN. Date January 2ist, 1920. IN PROBATE. = IN THE SUPREME COURT OF BRITISH COLUMBIA. IN THE MATTER OF THE ADMINISTRA- TION ACT — and — IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF JOSEPH BROWN, DECEASED. TAKE NOTICE that in order of His Honour F. McB. Young made the 3rd day of February, A.D. 1920, I was appointed Administrator to the estate of Joseph Brown, deceased, and all parties having claims against the said estate are hereby required to furnish same, properly. veri fled, to me, on or before the 6th day of March, A. D. 1920, and all parties indebted to the estate are required to pay the amount of their indebtedness to me forth- ice JOHN H. MeMULLIN, DAILY NEWS aaah Tage § , ‘il Hu Sudts that are pressed Srequentiy and cleaned occasionally wear 23 to g0 per cent longer. Hn A | J iW iit p 7 ts 1 Re A el a vit eae v3 f rs Oh t “It is not every man that can afford to wear a shabby coat,’ Robert Colton once wrote. The words hold as true’ now ag when first written, three-quarters of a century ago. Nevertheless it is needful today to make the old suit last—though not at the expense of becoming tattered. Between the costliness of clothing at the one extreme, and shabbiness of them at the other, there is a middle ground where economy and good appearance meet. Our modern-dry cleaning estab- lishmentis this middle ground. Here our experienced cleaners can tune up your old clothes and preserve your new. Every person realizes the business advantage and the social value of clothes well cleaned and neatly pressed, but there is more in these details than improvement of ‘‘looks”’ alone. Ask your tailor or yeur clothier. They will inform you that apparel frequently pressed, and cleaned at intervals of two or three months, will wear from 25 to 50 per cent longer than clothes that are not so % ,. considerately Send it ; cared for. ey | Hii I bi a - ‘ a we, How to make your old suit last Capt ie) js to|the Dry # nia whi I ! There is a sound reason for this. You wash your linen when it be- comes soiled—it is a matter of self- respect and personal hygiene, of course, but it is also true that if left unwashed your shirts would wear out much more quickly. Perspiration, oils, grease, and fruit juices have a corrosive effect; dust and dirt have a grinding action— your outer clothing needs purging of these equally as much as does your linen. The cleansing gasoline baths used in our dry cleaning process, and the pressing of the presser, with hot steam working through the fabric, have a sterilizing action—your ap- parel is made, by our scientific treatment of each garment, as im- maculate outside as inside, it keeps its shaper better, and is saved from tell-tale shininess. Your old suit will last longer, and your new suit will do double duty if you will more frequently use our modern cleaning and pressing ser- vice, which is specially organized to meet your individual needs, Get started on the road to clothes economy. We offer you prompt de- livery and all the advantages of our up-to-the-minute dry cleaning methods. Tele- phone us today. Phone 8 PO ys | Cleaner FORM OF NOTICE, PRINCE RUPERT LAND DISTRICT. DISTRICT OF CASSIAR. TAKE NOTICE that Lenora Mabel Smith, of Duncan, British Columbia, occupation | Spinster, intends to apply for permission | to purchase the following described lands: | Commencing at a post planted at the outh West and only South corner of Lot} N 434 (Portland Canal) Cassier District,| address is province of British Columbia; South 55/] or a& licence degrees 06 minutes East, three thousand feet thence; North 34 degrees 54 minutes East, two thousand one hundred and fifty | eet more or less_ thence; j Atl reed 06 minutes West, two thousand five |jInict of Alice WATER DIVERSION Alice Arm. Omectal Administrator. “The newspapers, of course, can- Dated this 6th day of February, 1920. Gene Byrnes Say hundred and fifty feet more or less thence; | North 85 degrees 55 minutes West, four |natural outlet of LENORA MABEL SMITH, by her agent, A. A. Forsyth. Date Sth January, 1920. NOTICE. AND USE. Arm, to take The storage-dam will be located near Clearwater and use second-feet and to store about 400 acre-| he feet of water out of Clearwater River which flows southerly and drains into the Kitsault) thirty North 55 de-|River abcut 22 miles from the head of the! his notice in a local newspaper. . M. P. OLSEN, Ap The date of the first publicat The | 1otice is February 5, 1920. }dam and will as the Climax Group, 19!4,” will be B. C., will apply} Obiections to nent Buildings, Lake, } be used for jiuning purposes upon the mine described — ———___—_—___ —- --——-- ————-- — —— LAND ACT hundred feet thence; South following high! capacity of the reservoir to be created obi Core, water line to point of commencement. jis about 450 acre-feet, and it will food (Form No. 9.) Approximate area one hundred and forty-|}a>out 50 acres of land, The water will eoreremene our acres, more or less. jbe diverted from the stream’ at storage power for | This notice was posted on the ground lon the 26th day of January, 1920. A copy of this notice and an application | ursuant thereto and to the “Water Act, - filed in the office of the TAKE NOTICE that M. P. Olsen, whose) \Water Kecorder at Prince Rupert, B. C. the application may be 50 cubic-| sled with the said Water Recorder or with Comptroller of Water Rights, Victoria, . > cays after the first appearance of Parlia- within icant. nm of this ———————— s:—“It’s a Great Life If You Don’t Weaken.” OF THE CITY FOR THE SUMMER AND LINE THE SIMPLE LIFE ears < oe \M E “| WANT FREE LIFE AND | WANT FRESH AIR” | GUESs THE GOY. WHo SAID THAT DIDNT KNow A THING en | \'H Goins “To wove OvT A MAN OF TALK THAT WAY- WHY THE MOSQLITOS WOU? AKE IT FROM ME— \ Seana { TRIED «tT AND ‘ s Oo 1G— (vs ITs ALL Wet HOTTER (Nh THE COONTRY THAN (er tS RIGAT HERE SURPRISED “To HEAR YOUR JLOGEMENT) AT YOU met ! SEE How You CAN BE SO FOeLISH AND LIVE DONT MAKE ME LAvSH! (VE TRIED THAT CoMMUTING STUNT AND ITS AWELE— DO YHORSELF A FAVOR AND Le « } ote i ( Ly A Pf 4 Ey 4 i 4 ITS @ GREAT Lies W@ YoU Got WEAKEN J a ee _, a_i ee, py: => me. . e- - — ie eR ee ——— =~ _wT Bk ~- SS ee |< .» «2 - =