THE DAILY NEWS. - L HARRISON yrTARY PUBLIC) Samuel Harrison & Co. | Real Estate and Stock Brokers APPROVED AGREEMENTS FOR SALE PURCHASED Prince Rupert - and - Stewart fs ~ ~h ap s / em +o4 ~~ a LYNCH BROS { = = i { General Merchandise * . Longest Stock 4 are ; j ‘ ‘ '' Lowest Prices in Northern B. C. ica ; " ee v3 ee ee ee, = EEE — GREAT MEN IN C. P. R. CIRCLES Sir Thomas Shaughnessy and His Probable Success as President of the Road—Details of Their Career. Sir Thomas Shaughnessy, president of the C, P. R., whoge retiral from that posftion to be- chairman of the Board of Directors at Montreal was pre- dicted recently, is now in his 59th year, He was born in Milwaukée on October 6, 1853. He entered railway work on the Milwaukee Railway in 1869, in the purchas- ing department. He became the purchasing agent of this road and remained with it until 1882, when the eagle eye of Sir William Van Horne fell on him, and he was made the purchasing agent of the Canadian Pacific. He rose rapidly under Sir William Van Horne, becoming assistant to the president in 1889. Two years later he became the vice presi- dent and a director. He has been the president since June 12, 1898. come G. M. Bosworth, vice president ) of the Canadian Pacific Railway, “FROM HOME TO HOME.” who is slated to succeed Sir ; Thomas Shaughnessy, was born at Ogsdenburg, St. Lawrence HOTEI ELYSIUM County, New York, on January 27, 1875. Sid. Sykes, Manager Since 1882 Mr. Bosworth has » ‘ ; been identified with the work of The Finest, Newest and Most Up-to-date Hotel in Vancouver. the GC. P. R. and has been con- \ Excellent Cafe. Moderate Prices. nected with the traffic depart- » 1142 Pender Street West - - Vancouver, B.C. ment, of whiten sor none o Ss years he has been the head. Phone 8500, The fourth vice president is a we man of medium height, well built and clean shaven, and in manner ast —_ lexeeedingly alert. He is recog- aviwvys 2 nized as a fine type of the suc- ‘ > cessful man of affairs. He has ~ When in Vancouver You Should Stay at the 2/the general supervision of both . m 2| the passenger and freight busi- > ness of the company, these two CARLTON HOTEI 3 branches being included in the . : traffic department. K t Cafe in B.C. European Plan. Rates $1.00 to $2.50 perday. $ The supervision of the steam- ‘ Hot and Cold Water in each room. > ships, telegraphs and hotels was @)| passed over to Mr. Bosworth by CORNER CORDOVA AND CAMBIE STREETS $ the president at the close of the Vancouver, B.C. 3 Past reser: Wass $ PANAMA FARMING Maes Agriculture in the Zone of the Serene ravararorancrconnnan ts ’ For the The best NEW Y EAR present ° , h is aq years Ssuvd- scripltionto.... OLS at Home ¥ It has all the news of the oe week’s progress in the city and district. It tells more about the place than you could write in a month. It will come regularly each 3 week like a letter from you. ‘ ‘We feel as if we know t everything and everybody in Prince Rupert through : reading your paper. It’s % the most interesting paper we receive,” writes a sub- scriber from England. —POST PAID TO ANY ADDRESS IN— nited States or Eng. Canada 2 50 per year $2.00 LI IRIR TATRA IAA LAI MB ccs For The Daily News Great Canal. of agri- Zone how be In order that the value culture along the Canal might be determined and agricultural conditions could improved, Secretary Wilson some time ago ordered H. H. Bennett of the Bureau of Soils and William A. Tuylor of the Bureau of Plant i Industry to visit Panama and ex- jamine its agricultural conditions. iA report on the subject, which is be published by Secretary | soon to | Wilsen, says, in part: “Agriculture operations in the Canal Zone are confined mainly ito the meagre efforts of the na- tive and West Indian population, jand are restricted to pateh farm- ling. The production of the local |}staple products, principally trop- vegetables and fruits, rice jieal and corn, is little in excess of the factual food requirements of the loperators. The greater propor- ition of these farms, although oc- lcupying the smoother slopes of the larger valleys and never dis- tant more than five miles in a direct line from the canal, and isolated and inaccessible, owing to the broken topography and the absence of good highways. They reached only by narrow, wind- trails, at no time passable for often well-nigh or for are ng | vehic les and quite impassable horses.” Choicest hiGamen and cigars— Sails Every Friday at 8 a.m. for VANCOUVER, VICTORIA, SEATILE 8.8. PRINCE JOHN Every Wednesday at 1 p. m. for Stewart. Also maintains weekly service to Queen Charlotte Island points For particulars | Phone 2 Train Service to Van Aredol Mixed trains leave’ Prince eae ee Wednesdays and Saturdays at 1 p. m For all points East of Chicago travel via the Grand Trunk Rallway System for safety. speed and comfort For full information, reservations and tickets to all poinis apply to A. E. MCMASTER GENERAL AGENT GRAND TRUNK PACIFIC RY. CO. Agency all Atlantic Steamship Lines ee U Cie L | DEVOTED PRINCIPALLY TO oe This is a little section of the paper Subjects of special interest to women are invited to contribute gestions and criticisms are invited by Cosy Corner’ will find a social need. the A COURT FOR. Latest Innovation for the Settle- ment of Domestic Disputes Is Now Instituted in Chicago and Is Making Good. Chicago has instituted a special court to listen to domestic com- plaints. “A great many people have had to tell their troubles to a policeman who have blushed at PACITIC Pa B.C, Coast service — Famous Prir'cess | Line e Princess May Saturday, January 20th, at 9 a. m. For Victoria, Vancouver and Seattle J. G. McNab - General Agent | | Servian Labor Benefit Soctety| No. 195, S.S.S.S. Meetings beld every Ist and 8rd Sunday of the month in the Carpenters’ Union Hall G. VUKOVICH, T. MAZLUM Secretary P.O. Box 991 President ©0000 —¢ as FRED. STORK { —General Eperdware ~ Hardware Oxford Stoves t| * | Builders’ ] | Tinware ¢ | { Valves & Pipes Graniteware o—-+—+-e-+— SECOND - AVENUE —@-+ 4-4 — @ -¢ 9 ¢ ¢ @ Flat in Rand Block, corner Sixth Avenue | and Fulton Street. Also stores in same block. | Two cottages correr Second Avenue and. Ninth Street. FOR SALE Lots in all parts of the city. FIRE INSURANCE We represent some of the largest Com- panies doing business in the City. C. D. RAND Secend Ave. Phone 112 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF BRITISH | COLUMBIA, IN THE MATTER OF THE ADMINISTRA- TION ACT, and IN THE MATTER LUDGER ROY, OF THE ESTATE OF| DECEASED, INTESTATE, TAKE NOTICE that by an Order of His Honor, Judge Young, made the 23rd day of November, 1911, | was appointed Ad- estate of Ludger Roy, Deceased, Intestate, and all parties having | claims agatimst the said estate are hereby required to forward the same to me at) Prince Rupert, B. ( depen ke verified, * or before the i2th day of arch, A. 1912; and all parties indebted to the seid estate are. required to pay the amount of their indebtedness to me forthwith, Dated this 5th day of January, A. D.| 1912. ministrator of the OY, Administrator. Prince Rupert, B. C. THOMAS A Feb. 3 LAND PURCHASE NOTICE = | BESNER & BESNER, Proprierors The New Knox Hotel is run on the European »lan. First-class service. All the Latest posers mprovements. siete BEDS & P FIRST AVENUE, PRINCE RUPERT Savoy. ——__ ——— Qe. Prince_Rupert Land |, Distriet—District of $ bY Take notice that 1, Lemuel | Freer, of 4 Vancouver, B c., occupation roker, in- 3 Prevention of Eye 3 tend to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands: . Trouble $ Commencing at & post planted on the | , $ishore in a northerly direction from Port > " b §$ | Nelson ( Aner y, marked eee s wy corer] Prev i i thence 20 chains north, ence cha } : rene vo a sane sible 4 west, thence 20 chains south to shore line, It is cheaper, : Oe ° thence east along the shore to point of > ee cure to, impress b ere commencement, containing 40 acres, more > trouble may be avoide y the Q/or less. Sen ch 2 timely use of glasses, averting eee POT Wee FREER. 3 discomfort, suffering and per- § Pub. Jan. 5, 1941 } manent impairment of sight. We § /@ are properly equipped to adjust ¢ oor an 1% glasses and guarantee satisfac- $ 1$ tion. > 2 NOTICE 2 eeeeee 3 F : Notice is hereby by given, that an Spplica- tion will be made to Slative As ; R. W. Cameron & Co. > sembly of the Province of Brit a0 Columbia i at its next session for an act amending > GTP. Official Watch Inspector 3 Section 3 of the British Columbia & Alaska $ Cor. 6th St. and Second Avenue Railway Act, 1910 (Ch. , Statutes of $ HONE &2 )| British Columbia, 1910), by striking out | > F S/ all the words after the ‘word “Columbia” ; $\in Line 10 of said Section and substituting POC CCCCV CCC COU CC CCV OTC UT therefor the following: PE ee ee ee ee “And or from Fort George in a north. | easterly direction to the valley of ~~ Parsnip River by way of Fort McLeod thence along the Parsnip River to a june: tion with the Peace River, thence along the valley. of the Finlay River through | Sifton Pass, thence down the Stikene | Telegraph Creek; also powers to build braneh lines either through the Pine River or Peace River passes to the eastern boun- | dary of British Columbia, or by way of ' the most feasible route itive by the most feasible route Detween Lytton and Teslin Lake, also to build from | a point on said line of ratlwa of Vancouver or from the City of Van | couver to a point on sald line, by the most | | feasible | And further, for an act extending the time within which the company has to commence construction and expend ten per cent of its capitalise pon. | C,, this 5th day of Dated at A 0718, B December, NOBERTSON & HEISTERMAN, Solicitors for the Applicants, the British Columbia & Alaska Kallway Company, | the | Consequently, | of male deaths, j rate } countries, | tween | The River to & june tion with the main line it | < or tn the alterna- | &% to the City | ) route. | jthe telling of it,” says Rev. Dr. William Barton, and he goes on with an account of the Chicago Domestic Relations Court, that |represents a departure from the roads of legal endeavors to serve in other than ays. The head Goodnow, conventional cedure and community simply punitive w of the court Judge and the people who are saved by {him from telling their troubles to a policeman are mainly women, while the people aboul whom they jare troubled are men. The troublous story is first of all told to a woman, Mrs. Leavitt, not a pro- 18 |police matron, but a sort of hu- man sympathizer intelligently guided. She is able to adjust many domestic jangles without their going into court at all. When the court ecmes in as a | factor “she keeps the record, and | has friendly relations with the home side of the case.’ All cases involving women as women, and all cases of children, except those belonging to the Juvenile Court, now are segregated and tried by the Court of Domestic Relations. MORE MEN DIE. Women Have ‘Better Chance of Life Than Men in the States. ~ At birth the number of males always exceeds the number of fe- male mortality is al- than female, says a bulletin. through the excess the number of fe- males gradually approaches that of the males and in the years of life exceeds it. tries where the death rate an equality paratively early age, sequent inequality in favor of the females outweighs the previous inequality in: favor the that in the population as a whole there are more females than males, In the United States there is generally a lower death than in Northern European and the difference be- the death rates of males and females is not so marked. | equality in the number of the sexes occurs here at a later, than in European countries, | the slightly greater male but ways greater males, United States census is high of age and The New Jewelry Store oom Any and ai) to its columns and to take FAMILY JARS later | In coun- } is reached at a com-j| and the sub-| males, | |} loops and buttons. Mussallem & Co. sis, THE INTERESTS OF WOMEN ~ which from day to day will be devoted to of the ladies of Prince Rupert part in its discussions, Sug the native waite population of the United States generally an excess in males. KEEP YOUR HANDS PRETTY Reliable Recipe for the Care of the Skin Well Worth Trying. ae ee rrr reres ae = THE COSY CORNER = | H. Gordon Munro ALFRED CARSS, wilh BARKER Architect Second avenae and Third street Over Westenhaver Bros.’ Office. W. Nicholson Lailey MUNRO & LAILEY Architects, Stork Building, Second Avenue. editor. The hope is expressed that ‘The Weer cae ae ee ee ae STUART & STEWART ldeath rate does not overcome the ACCOUNTANTS -:- AUDITORS initial advantage which the males | Law-Butler Building Phone No. 280 have at birth. The result-is for Prince Rupert P.O. Box 351 = C. V. BENNETT, B.A, ritish Columbia of B.C., On Sas- and Manitoba Bars. kate! at Al- berta CARSS & BENNETT BARRISTERS, NOTARIES, Etc. Office—Exchange block, corner Third avenue sg Sixth street. Prince Ruvert. It happens sometimes that just when one desires to have the hands look their best they grow WM. S. HALL, L.D.S., D. D.8. DENTIST. Crown and Bridge Work a Specialty. be made by mixing the following ingredients: Three and one-half one and red and ugly. It is always well eid eam eaanieeta ae Oe seas to have something at hand that | jregHonof teeth. Consultation free. Offices; can be quickly applied by which the redness of the hands can be illia temporarily hidden, An _ excel- ener lent paste for this purpose may Barristers, Solicitors, etc. Box 285 Prince Rupert, B.C spermaceti, one ounce of subni- ounces of oil of almonds, one-half ounces of lanolin, one] pso, pox 2s PRINCE RUPERT ounce each of white wax and JOHN E. DAVEY applied. to the occa- most may be arms whenever with the face, but hands antl demands trate of bismuth and one-eighth TEACHER OF SINGING of an ounce of oil of bitter al- mionds. PUPIL OF WM. FOXON, ESQ., A.R.A.M., L.ON., ENG Melt the spermaceti and wax over a water Math then add the GEORGE LEEK & CO. lanolin and oil of almonds, re- MERCANTILE AGENCY move from the bath, add the bit- COLLECTIONS AND REPORTS ter almonds and when the. oils Fire, Life and Accident Insurances ~ are well blended sift the subni- | 68 3rd Avenue Phone 208 and Greer. 262 trate of bismuth into the oils, PRINCE RUPERT constantly stirring until smooth and creamy. This cream is too A. M. BROWN strikingly white to be used on the wishiaae £ Ganntany wisabioriene Repairing a Specialty. Complete Stock Carried. Outside Orders Promptly Filled. ind Ave. between 10th and 11th Sts sion gratifying results. It is always best to make the application 2 after washing the hands and arms well with soap and tepid water. Chiffon Taffetas. Chiffon taffetas are confidently offered as the ultra-fashionable silk fabrics for the coming sea- Twelve Tables THE IROQUOIS POOL English and American Billiards SECOND AVE. Glace chiffon taffetas are in ultra style. son. the Like Fur. Owing to the high cost of furs imitations are now on the market; zibelinette, for instance, is greatly used for linings. It looks like sable, some Velvet Collarettes. Collarettes fashioned from vel- vet, silks and chiffon are warm outside wraps which take the place of furs. The wrap light and graceful, brocade, is First Ave. Hotel Central eo; FirstAvs; eee and American plan, steam eated, modern conveniences. Rates $ 00 to $2.50 per day. ; Peter Black - Proprietor =F, EBY @& Co.=>= REAL ESTATR Kitsumkalum Land For Sale KITSUMKALUM - R.C. Chimney Sweeping and Furnace Cleaning In Quilted Silk. Dressing gowns in silk are most quilted Japanese interest- Practical Chimney Sweep Prepare for winter by getting your fnr- naces and flues put in order by C. H. CUTTING Address: Knox Hotel, or PHONE 71 ing for the winter season; they are adorned with embroideries, most artistic and original. Newest Skirts. Many of the new skirts are trimmed. Some show the tunic with under petticoat; others have side trimmings, and some have Watches All kinds of watches at decidedly prices. in reduced Largest stock E. L. FISHER Funeral Director and Embalmer CHARGES REASONABLE THIRD AVENUE PHONE 356. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT HAYNER BROS. UNDERTAKERS anp EMBALMERS Funeral Directors 8rd Ave. near 6th St. Phone No. 86 Howard watches. Exclusive agents for South Bend watches. Reg- ular $5 parlor clocks for $3.25. Phone Black 228 of towu 423 Ave. East cy apoE SSSESRESRERES ESSERE ESBS ER ES ESET Qur Vancouver IS Jewellers and Silversmiths Geo. E. Trorey Managing Director p Vancouver -: rying the e. sup i need through its MAIL ORDER & + SERVICE—a system organized to ¥ Jewellery Store cater to every populated district $Y Be ey in Canada, This is the sister et Sey —=——=—= af our great eastern stores, car- g moderate Ottawa but giving the westerner a quick- er, more satisfying service, Our illustrated Catalogue is a book that will interest everyone who 34 MZ. reads it, It is the Canadian buy- y SS ers guide to quality goods and QQ} di moderate prices. Tt puts you in 8 Henry Birks & ODS touch with the imperter and + Limited— manufacturer, Study this book, 3) sele thus insuring satisfaction in your urchase, plies s you with the things you same goods at the same prices at the Montreal, Winnipeg branches, and PHONE 301 Seventh Ave, and Fulton .Grand Hotel.. Phone 178 LINDSAY P.O, BOX B04 PONY EXPRESS SYSTEMATIC MERCHANTS’ DELIVERY SERVICE Baggage, Storage and Forwarding Agents. For Rigs or Motor Car day or night Phone 301 Workingman’s Home Free Labor Bureau in Connection Ist Ave. and 7th St, GEO. BRODERIUS, Proprietor; ‘CARTAGE and STORAGE G. T. P. Transfer Agents Orders promptly filled, Prices reasonable, OFFICE-—H., B. Rochester, Centre St. Phone 68, eSeeceoorocseececsoole coo‘. SMITH & MALLETT THIRD AVE. Plumbing, Heating, Steamfitting and Sheet Metal Work Office: 8rd Ave, Workshop Phone 174 2nd Ave. bet, 7th and 8th Sts ct through it from our stock, ES SSS ee osea Oe Cor, Fraser and 5th. RUPERT'S PALACE Savoy Hotel Choice Wines and Cigars OF COMFORT a re ie pn te ¥ ri oF a } a 4 a -é ‘ ve ba we ; 4 i + LA Bi} i: ' pt + xf : K W P| 7 aa dy E 1 aa 4 r ie Nay