Tuesday, June 20, 1916. THE WONDERFUL |" tess FRUIT MEDICINE == a, appear to be effective in Thousands we Health And oes at the Guards in strength To “Fruit-a-tives” | writenat. that a man of co onel John Wesley Allison's Petrograd as it Horse IT-A-TIVES”, the marvellous made from fruit juices — has jest size should be “PR mod if ) isting ' ved more eases of Stomach, Liver, seen by war burea se netly piood, hidney and Skin Troubles than wor ld si Uh yt medicine. In severe cases over 18 nothing short o| of I itism, Sciatica, Lumbago, pnarvelous. What does Dr, Watts Pa Back, Impure Blood, Neu- | Say: The mind’s the heart ralgia, Chronic Headaches, Chronic | of the man. What ; | , n and Indigestion, ‘Fruit- | | a mind Col-| tive : given unusually effective jonel Allison must have to be vis | ‘ ty its cleansing, healing | #DFe at these long distances! | ’ the eliminating organs,| It seeins a pity that after al! “| tives’? tones up and invigor- |{ } es @ wonderful performances ates t lesystem. | with rr ss ; . 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25e. , 16h governments the \ or sent postpaid by Fruit- [Colonel should write himself at ted, Ottawa, down as less than the super- vatriot Sip S; MINERAL ACT Rae oo eeeribed hint tp ; pee Stas ccording to Sir Sam _ the |Colonel was exercising his won. Certificate of Improvements =|... 1 ; NOTICE L ! Spell on foreign war offices nd “Sunbeam” Mineral Claims, for nothing less his expense bills, tua the Skeena Mining Division of /but according to the Colonel his Wh ¢ vie About five miles trom | SPel! cost anything from ten pet the head of Alice Arm on “Middle Creek.” ;cent, up But—mark that but rAkKE NOTICE that I, Wm. T. Kergin! > Rupert, B. C., Free Miner's Cer-|~!! Sam doesn’t know anything ile 5B, intend sixty days from!) about it. The ( olonel was taking jJate hereof, to apply to the Mining he er for & CertiNeate of Improvements, |©O'! Missions going and coming, e | se of obtaining a Crown Grant he was hand in glove with rollick- ef the above claim, “and { er take notice that action, un-|!"8 bands of wap profiteers in at 7, must be commenced before jleast five countries and Sir Sam such Certificate of Improve jdidn’t know anything about it. ‘ a Date this 16th day of March, A. D.) Can you beat innocence like that? | THR DAILY NEWS. CREAM BARING POWDER. MADE IN CANADA Pure—Wholesome—Reliable For sixty years Dr. Price’s Cream Baking Powder has been the standby of countless housekeepers who have relied upon it for healthful, delicious, home-baked biscuit, cake and other pastry. Dr. Price’s contains no alum. There is never any question about the absolute purity and healthfulness of the food it raises. That is why the best informed housewives prefer and use it. WM. T. KERGIN. |Una and the Lion have nothing | —— — | » & ' , | ; schemes, on Sir Sam and his John Wesley its hide and tallow and that gen-! surprise when she lays an égg.— ] sn 4 . al SKEENA LAND DISTRICT—DistTRicT of | *!!!S01. tlemen act advisedly when they| H. F. Gadsby. COAST, RANGE 4. According to Colonel Allison's carry out the agreement, but re By eat any fevidence he was artner f ’ Zi TAKE NOTICE that Frederick Bradshaw, vee } pertner in a fuse to sign their names to it Salvation Army. Nevada, occupation mine man-| Humber of “gentleman's agree- ; i hes toe raliottan ausortbed tendo ”/ ments” to take all that was com-| It looks better that way. Public meetings, Tuesday, purchas follo sc 2 8: ’ ; r g at @ post planted about;/ing to them, including the “gen-| Colonel Allison has also ex-!Thursday and Saturday at 8 p.m isterly from the northwest cor ; tleman’s 40, Range 4, Coast District; agreement” rth 20 chains; thence west 20|)himself, Yoakum and Lignanti,|$200,000 set aside for him when alms; thence south 20 chains more or which was not ened. but hicl ] , : MINERAL ACT shore of Surf Inlet, thence|Y@/¢h Was not signed, but which| Yoakum, Cadwell and Bassick following the shore jine to the place of |Was nevertheless carried out. Our! split a million dollars between NOTICE TO DELINQUENT PARTNER ent, containin forty acres “ , . - & y jexperience of a gentleman’s them was a genuine surprise, We|TO J. A. ROGERS, February 18, 1916. |peroarnont is that it is generally; have noticed the same thing on|.. TAME NOTICE that, whereas I have FREDERIC ADSHAW. DERICK BRADSHAW an agreement to skin a louse for the between | plained that the commission of|Sundays at 7:30 p.m. : caused to be done the assessment work farm. The hen always voices |for the year 1915 on the mineral claims My office window faces a street, close to the railway freight sheds. All day long a steady stream of trucks and lorries lumber by— loaded with boxes, barrels and bales. One truck I noticed The cocoa had been grown in Brazil, shipped to Bristol, transhipped to Mon- treal and finally distributed from Toronto. The tea was gath- ered by swart- known as “Ladybird No. 4” Mineral Claim, situated in Cascade Creek valley, north of Stiver Lake, tn the Stewart, B. C., Mining District; and the “Stumpy” Mineral Claim, situated on the east side of Cascade Creek at the head, in the said Stewart Mining district, and have paid for said assess- ment work the sum of $200.00; unless you pay to me the sum of 8100.00 tor your share of the said assessment work together with the costs of this advertise- ment, I shall, at the expiration of ninety days from the date hereof, apply to the Mining Recorder at Stewart, B. C., to have your interest in the said “Ladybird No. 4” and “Stumpy” Mineral Claims vested in me in pursuance of the provisions of the “Mineral Act.” Dated at Prince Rupert, B. C., this 5th day of November, 1915. A, LUND, troduction ana |hrift 2,000,000 Belgians Depend on us for Bread! Since shortly after the German invasion, the Belgians have depended for food entirely on the ‘Commission for Relief in Belgium”’, Their own store of food, even if not destroyed or pillaged, would last only three weeks—they have had no chance to raise more— and the ruthless Germans refuse to supply them! Backed by the ‘| Belgian Relief Fund so generously contributed in the British Empire and the United States, the neutral Belgian Relief Commission has imported enough wheat, flour and other foods to feed the whole nation so far. The great majority of the 7,000,000 Belgians left in the country have been able to pay for their daily allowance of bread—but a steadily growing number have no money left. Unless we are willing to let these hundreds of thousands of women, children and old men starve, they must be fed at the expense of the Belgian Relief Fuud. To make this possible someone must contribute nearly $3,000,000 a month—every month—all this winter! No people under the Allied Flags are as well able to contribute generously as we Canadians! No cause has ever been more deserving of help! In the name of Justice and Humanity—for the sake of our own self-respect—let us give all we can to help our martyred Allies! Send your subscriptions weekly, moathly or @ one lump sum te Lecal or Provincial Committees, ot to the 5 Central Executive Committee, 59 St, Peter St., Montreal $2.50 Feeds A Belgian Family A Month. ZAG UUUUGUUUUUU UU UUUUUUUUUUUUUO OOO OOO UU OR UCC Ramsay’s Empire Cream Sodas tn 2-lb. Tins Have attained their enviable reputation by their superior quality and uniformity. The most discriminating house- wife insists upon “Ramsays Empire” when buying Soda Biscults. They are made in B. GC. and your grocer gets his supply frequently and quickly, Insuring freshness, which means crispness. Prove it by buying a tin with your next order. Manufactured by RAMSAY BROS. & CO., LTD. Vancouver, B. C. PIAAAAIAAAAIAIAAA AAD ASDA AAD AA AAA ASDA AAI AA AAA A AAAAAAA IM * AAAI AIAAAAAAAAAAAI AAA AAA A AAA AAA SA ASA ASA SA SA SSSASI SIS SIS SIDI A AH the other afternoon was particularly in- teresting. Wo two boxes were the same, and stencilled on the \ end of each was the name of some well-known pro- duct—soap, tobacco, socks, had been gathered years skinned natives of the romantic island of Ceylon; from sunny Portugal the luscious, big grapes 4 ‘To win the war with the decisiveness which will ensure lasting peace, the Empire will require to put forth its full collective power in men and in money. From this viewpointit is our true policy toaugment our financial strength by multiplying our productive exertions and by exercising rigid economy, which reduces to the minimum all expenditures upon luxuries and non-essentials. Onfyyin this way shall we be able to make good the loss caused by the withdrawal of so mafiy of our workers from indus- trial activities, repair the wastage of the war, and find the funds foritscontinuance. It cannot be too frequently or too earnestly impressed upon our people that the heaviest burdens of the conflict still lie before us, and that industry and thrift are, for those who remain at home, supreme patriotic duties upon whose faithful fulfilment ago, fermented, bottled and branded with a famous name; from Egypt had come the cotton and from South America the dyes that entered into the product finally stamped with the brand of a well-known hosiery. breakfast food, cocoa, port, tea, chocolates, perfumery and baking powder. Gathered there in prosaic wooden boxes were the results of thousands of hand's labor in all parts of the world, There, behind that obviously prosaic truck-load of freight was the whole romance of mada Peneee the skilled production, the universal demand for food, drink and raiment, and the world-wide distribution of the things we use every day. i instead of some other And then I speculated why we use these things every day, instea things; and that brought me plump back to my own job of advertising. he lorrie were known everywhere to-day, but and I saw then more clearly than ever before that Advertising is really a great channel digger. It is like the FARAA Canal. ten can sail from Montreal to Vancouver now, around the Horn. a OD can. gas there, but it is going to take months. A year or 60 from now you w an S ou, pthe Panama Canal and chop the journey to less than half. new channe been dug. The names of some of the boxes on t had been unknown a few years ago; facturers who have let The great names in commerce to-day are those of the manu 10 have! Roamer advertising steam-shovel a channel across the isthmus of distributing difficulties. " : ‘ ill be those of men who widen and The great nz the commerce of to-morrow wil dredge ihe autanad so that the greater traffic may pass smoothly and quickly from the source of production to the homes of the consumer. “ IL you_are doing a local business eres talk over your advertising problems with the Advertising Department ef this now neanate cs ! ' s' ness it wou well yea Tf you are doing provinels ae — a list of these will be furnished, to have counsel and assistance of a 00° ads un ee ‘ without cost or obligation, by the Secretary of Canadian Pres com $08, Lumeden Building, T Our success, and consequently our national safety, may ultimately depend.”— SIR THOMAS WHITE, Minister of Finance. ~ PRODUCE MORE, SAVE MORE. MAKE LABOUR EFFICIENT. SAVE MATERIALS FROM WASTE. SPEND MONEY WISELY. LET US FRODUCE AND SAVE-—— LET US NOT WASTE MATERIALS— The war is now turning on a contest of all forces Begin at home. The larger portion of salaries and resources—men, munitions, food, money. The | and wages is spent on the home—food, fuel, light, call to all isto produce more and more. It may be | clothing. Are any of these things being wasted ? necessary to work harder, The place of those who | $20.00 a year saved from waste in every home in enlist must be taken by. those at home, men and | Canada will more than pay the interest on a war debt women, old and young. The more we produce the | of $500,000,000, more we can save. Produce more on the farms and LET US SPEND OUR MONEY WISELY— in the gardens, Save more and help to win the war, Are you spending your money to the best advan- tage? What do you think of extravagance in war time? Tens of thousands of Canad’ans are daily risking their lives for usat home, !sit not our duty as efficient as possible. If your labour is on something | to be careful and economical? Canadian dollars are that can be postponed, put it off till after the war and | an important part of the war equipment. Make them make your labour tell now. Making war is the first | tell. Have a War Savings Account. Buy a War business of all Canadians. Efficiency in labour is as | Bond. important as efficiency in fighting. ~ THE GOVERNMENT OF CANADA THE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE LET US NOT WASTE OUR LABOLUR— In this war-time all labour should be directly pro- ductive or should be assisting in production, Make it 3 THE DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE oe ee me ae oe