Wednesday, June 24, 1916, —— THE WONDERFUL "72S on FRUIT MEDICINE 2°. i. in the end a detriment to the com- Thousands Owe Health And ma: '% werstont boys Strength i0 “Fruit-a-tives”’ 7 no the manulacturer “pRUIT-A-TIVES”, the marvellous tieine made from fruit juices —- has re s ed more eases of Stomach, Liver, Blood, Kidney and Skin Troubles than other medicine. In severe cases of Rheumatism, Sciatica, Lumbago, pain in the Back, Impure Blood, Neu- |pens? He must lose | ! ( Ol ihe wholesaler at a certain fixed price and he offers them to the mi consumer at a price to which his prot is attached, Now when he any starts to cul prices, what hap- lis legitimate) Chronic Headaches, Chronie Iprofit to sell the - nation and Indigestion, ‘‘Fruit- | x consumer for ves’ has given unusually effective By its cleansing, healing |0r he must sell these lines at cost on the eliminating organs, t-a-tives’’? tones up and invigor- Just what the goods cost him. a re | ) vr less than cost and sell othe ines at prices away above the whole system. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 250, |POINL of legitimate profit. If hey At alld vers or sent postpaid by Fruit- | is honest he will not descend to a Limited, Ottawa. lthis method. If he is dishonest no principle if MINERAL ACT DUSIN@SS ethics a dishonest person in their midst. | Certificate of Improvements NOTICE and “Sunbeam” Mineral Claims, |tracted by cut wate in the Skeena Mining Division of | fassiar District. } Where located:-—About five miles from | | | ' | | | | jcounts with him. But who wants | | | | Think it over when you are at- Don't | take advantage of the other man’s prices. dilemma, The laborer is worthy f Alice Arm on “Middle Creek.” | : rAKE NOTICE that I, Wm. T. Kergiu | Rupert, B. C., Free Miner's Cer- tincate N 94035B, intend sixty days from | she date hereof, to apply to the Mining} r for a Certificate of Improvements, | the purpose of obtaining 4& Crown Grant} above claim, | | of his hire, and = standardized goods are worthy of their adver- | tised price, See the ad of Wim. Braid & Co. in this issue. STREET IMPROVEMENT Mayor McCaffery this 16th day of March, A. D. | th council Monday night that the | je7 snd further take notice that action, un- | 1 37, must be commenced before of such Certificate of Improve intimated at estimates included 87,000 to be | | spent on street improvements. As} WM. T. KERGIN. there is none of the board of SKEENA LAND DISTRICT—DISTRICT OF COAST, RANGE 4. works in town at the present, he EES ED ;suggested that he be given per-| TAKE NOTICE that Frederick Bradshaw, } h, Nevada, occupation mine man-|Mission tu instruct the engineer | iger, intends to apply for permission to /{9 proceed with the work at once. hase the following described lands : f ng at @ post planted about; A motion to this effect was made easterly from the northwest cor 40, Range 4, Coast District; rth 20 chains; thence west 20) Nelson. ins; thence south 20 chains more or - shore of Surf Iniet, thence | following the shore ]ine to the place of | SUBSCRIBE FOR neement, containing forty acres by Ald. Smith, seconded by Ald. | bruary 18, 10916. FREDERICK BRADSHAW. ; TO J. A. ROGERS, |eaused to be done the assessment work |~™ineral Act.” | situated in Cascade Creek valley, north of | Silver Lake, in the Stewart, B. C., Mining idistrict, and have paid for said assess- _THE DAILY NEWS : THE DAILY NEWS. pea 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 | Belgjan Kelief Fun 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 7,040,000 Belgians left in the country have been able to pay for their daily allowance of bread—but a steadily growing number have no money leit: 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 Fund. 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! Inthe 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, monthly or im ene lamp sum te Lecal or Provincial Committees, of to the 5 Central Executive Committee, 59 St, Peter St., Montreal | $2.50 Feeds A Belgian Family A Month. together with the costs of this advertise- at the head, in the said Stewart Mining ment, | 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 TAKE NOTICE that, whereas I have/in pursuance of the provisions of the MINERAL ACT NOTICE TO DELINQUENT PARTNER ror the year 1915 on the mineral claims Dated at Prince Rupert, B. C., this 5th known as “Ladybird No. 4” Mineral Claim, |%4Y of November, 1915. A. LUND. District; and the “Stumpy” Mineral Claim, situated on the east side of Cascade Creek ment work the sum of 8200.00; unless ou pay to me the sum of $100.00 tor your share of the said assessment work aaa SIRS The Tale [lie Waso My office window faces a street, close to the railway freight sheds. HA! : All day long a steady =; treal and finally stream of trucks and Severe distributed from lorries lumber by— Perlouier ; nto. loaded with boxes, Toro barrels and bales. The tea was gath- One truck I noticed ered by swart- the other afternoon skinned natives of Rt a sno ae pe in- the romantic island eresting. o two : ; eylon; from PR rpnatpatsy* ; boxes were the same, of Cc ¥. ell expenditures upon ; \ sunny Portugal the and stencilled on the : : trial activities, repair end of each was the name luscious, big grapes cannot be too frequen of some well-known pro- had been gathered years tho remain at hom duct—soap, tobacco, socks, ago, fermented, bottled who ren breakfast food, cocoa, port, 4 and branded with a famous bali hovaats oe Oe name; from Egypt had come the ne DOE: cotton and from South America the Gathered there in prosaic wooden ‘ dyes that entered into the product Pt Bye ‘ie ‘ the ans of sooneanss finally stamped with the brand ofa aie 6 labor in all pa well-known hosiery. KE There, behind that obviously prosaic truck-load of hin wae See. eer tee of modern commerce—the skilled production, the universa men Se dae ’ and raiment, and the world-wide distribution of the things we u . And then I speculated why we use these things eve day, instead 9 some other things; and that brought me plump back to my own Jo ' where to-day, but LET US PRODUCE AND SAVE— Then 3 of { the boxes on the lorrie were known every b of The war is now turning on a cc : ni ames of some of ars ago; and I saw then more clearly than ever before oe er eee een om een unknown a few vei oe channel digger. It is like the Panama Canal. You call to all is to produce more and at Advermeinn i pesly & Gre ver now, around the Horn. You can get there, necessary to work harder. ‘The 1 é Sai : ¢ i i “nis mus e ker » those a — ry a i eantree! oder year or so from now you will sail taroney s58 s rs oe aera ha mo ae ne a. rae FA ; less than half. A new channe . e. miore We can save, Produc e more Panama Canal and chop the journey to been dug. The great names in commerce to-day are choy across the modern advertising steam-shove! a chann difficulties, . ill be thos The great names in the commerce CE ee ad pass sm dredge this channel so that the greater oo “if sonsumer. the source of production to the homes o! the ¢ foing a local business Ifyou are 1 obleme 4 alk over ¥ MO eT eee ee ah inti heaanenel ae ae eT ee al ee THE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE ae ph ae be furnished, Gif you are doing 1) A list of these will eae to have counsel and assistance o' snadian Press Avsociation. Room 503, Lumsden Building, without cost or obligation, by the Secretary of & duction ana {hrif ose of the manufacturers who have let oothly and quickly from - ae 2 4 WY —-, 4 sl — The purely and frayrance of Baby’s Own Soap have made it a ufiiversal favcrite. Its use is on Mie Le ees eas YI yD ROASTERS oo PURE ss at ban A(c A Pound These three famous Braid Blends of the world’s best coffee are on sale today in Prince Rupert at the prices stated (no more—no less) by the following well-known dealers. They are all good coffees—each one a little better than the other, according to price. Dealers’ Names: LYNCH BROS. MILLER-PHILLIPS FULLER & McMEEKIN MUSSALLEM GROCERY CO., LTD. G. P. McCOLL T. BRAMLEY 3RD AVE. CASH MARKET CAVENAILE & HANNAN FULTON CASH MARKET SPURR’S CASH MARKET A. FERGUSON LIPSETT, CUNNINGHAM & CO., LD. CANADIAN FISH & COLD STORAGE CO., LTD. COFFEE Wm. Braid & Co., Direct Importers, Vancouver, B. C. Stewart & Mobley, Ltd., Wholesale Distributors, Prince Rupert — ae ————— eee SSS o (P 7106 SECOND AVE i Carpenters’ Toois Suilders’ Hardware Ship Chandlery ‘ { Wire Gable Stee! Blocks Fishing Tackle i { fron Pipe Pipe Fittings Rifles and Shotguns i Rope Valves Ammunition } } Pumps Hose Paint | i Stoves and Ranges Fubberoid Roofing Corrugated Iron i i “WE SELL NOTHING BUT THE BEST” FRED STORK’S HARDWARE The cocoa had been grown in Brazil, shipped to Bristol, transhipped to Mon- ° O win the war with the decisiveness which will ensure lasting peace, the Empire this viewpointit is our true policy to augment our fine neial strengt» by multiplying our productive exertions and by exercising rigid economy, which reduces to the minimum to make good the loss caused by the withdrawal of so many of our workersfrom indus- burdens of the conflict still lie before us, and that industry and thrift are, for those our success, and consequently our national safety, may ultimately depend.’’— SIR THOMAS WHITE, Minister of Finance. ut forth its full collective power in men and in money. From luxuries and non-essentials. Only in this way shall we be able the wastage of the war, and find the funds foritscontinuance. It tly or too earnestly impressed upon our people that the heaviest e, supreme patriotic duties upon whose faithful fulfilment in the gardens, Save more and he isthmus of distributing In this war-time all labour sho ductive or should be assisting in pr that can be postponed, put it off ti make your labour tell new, Mai business of a!! Canadians. Eflicier iimportant as efficiency in fighting, e of men who widen and SPEND MONEY LET US NOT WASTE OUR LABOUR-— as efficient as possible. If your labour is on PRODUCE MORE, SAVE MORE. LASOUR EFFICIENT. SAVE MATERIALS FROM WASTE. WISELY. LET US NOT WASTE MATERIALS— Begin at home. The larger portion ef salaries and wages is spent on the home—food, fuel, light, clothing. Are any of these things being wasted ? $20.00 a year saved from waste in every home in Canada will more than pay the interest on a war debi of $500,00,000, yntest of all forces ood, money. The more. It may be jaee of those who it home, men and re we produce the on the farms and Ip to win the war, | LET US SPEND OUR MONEY WISELY— Are you spending your money to the best advan- iage? What do you think of extravarancc in war uld bedirect!y pro- | time? Tens of thousands of Canadians are daily oduction, Makeit | risking their lives ior usat home, Isit not our duty inethin ts be careful and economical? Canadian dollars arc laftertho war and | an important part of the war equipment. Make them ng-war is the frst | tell. Have a War Savings Account. Buy a War icy in labour is as | Bond. THE GOVERNMENT OF CANADA 3 THE DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE Fk NE PIT ar.