TLE DAILY NEWB, PANS GS mm \ = ry Since Taking “FRUIT-A-TIVES” COFFEE Here is a Coffee an ideal Blend and an ideal Value. No More, No Less - $0.40 per lb. Mt the following well-known dealers: W THE FAMILY mee Poms Teel Ta BRAID’S No Sign Of Dropsy And Kidney Trouble | y "¥e | , ) IDE AL BLEND LYNCH BRCS. o MILLER-PHILLIPS é FULLER & McMEEKIN MUSSALLEM GROCERY CO., LTD. G. P. McCOLL T. BRAMLEY 3RD AVE. CASH MARKET FULTON CASH MARKET SPURR’S CASH MARKET A. FERGUSON LIPSETT, CUNNINGHAM & CO., LTD. CANADIAN FISH & COLD STORAGE CO., LTD. "Stewart & Mobley, Ltd., \ Wholesale Distributors, Prince Rupert. WM. BRAID & CO., = CAVENAILE & HANNAN DIRECT IMPORTERS, VANCOUVER - BC. HATTIE WARREN Port Robinson, Ont., July 8th, 1915. “We have used ‘ Fruit-a-tives’”’ in our house forover three years and have always found them a good medicine. Our little girl, Hattie, was troubled with YW Kidney Disease. The Doctor said she l/ SZ y, was threatened with Dropsy. Herlimbs Uf Way oh . and body were all swollen and we began 4 ih , tothink she could notlive. Finally, we D lecided to try **Fruit-a-tives’’. She YS began to show improvement afler we had given her afew tablets. Inashort time, the swelling had all gone down and her flesh began to look more natural. Now she is the Aealthiest one in the family and has no signs of the old ailment, We can not say too much for “ Fruit-a- tives’? and would never be without them’”’. 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 oi Wie wal Ni Mow 1 ae Rec AA a + WILLIAM WARREN. SOc. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25e At all dealers or sent postpaid on receiptof price by Fruit a-tives Limited, Ollawa. —_— c OKEENA LAND DISTRICY—DIeTRICT of |CLORY ABROAD WITH DEMOCRATIC PLATFORM COMMITTEE AT WORK. As seen by the artist of the New York Sun. |Flemming after his government|Smith, defeated the Hon. P. G. ~ See ee COAST, RANGE 4. BRIGANDAGE AT HOME | was found guilty by a Royal Com-|}Mahoney, Minister of Public s S TAKE NOTICE that Frederick Bradshaw, jmission of extorting $100,000) Works, by a substantial majority. f of Tonopah, Nevada, occupation mine man- (Continued from Page two.) ifrom timber limit holders and|This is the first time the New ager, eae none Pasa. _— ss Fraladministering the St. John|Brunswick people have had a tit . Pe : : ‘ coeaadiel at a post planted about case was something like a million! Valley Railway funds, is tottering|/chance to express their opinion ph ome gd tral tin Keil Coolees ap per : 200 feet easterly from the northwest cor- | , ; Tene , : eal : oe ; ; ; : ates, the Hewira o oe 7 : 0 ot éieak ak Rican: Wisastess and a quarter, a small sum beside | to its fall. The other day the|/since the Pringle Commission enough wheat, flour and other foods to feed the whole nation 4 thence north 20 chains; thence west 20)the Ottawa stuff, but the best|New Brunswick government had a brought in its report and they so far. The great majority of the 7,000,000 Bedgians left in \ chains; Se ae ae ren a orjthey could do and considering!family jar with the result that|certainly did swat the fly the country have been able to pay for oe daily ee less to the shore o ur niet, thence ne , ’ Ms ’ . e € ’ s e ° . ¥ following the shore jine to the place of Manitoba's size, very creditable. | the Hon, John Morrissey stepped In British Columbia Premier bread—but a steadily growing number have no money commence , taint f ’ : } Nie dbe tt : : commencemnemt containing forty acres} 7, New Brunswick the Clark-|out and caused a by-election in|Bowser makes belated efforts at Unless mt ve ew these eee o | February 18, 1916, Baxter government, which warms} Westmoreland, in which the Lib- repentance for the McBride gov- Soe a starve, they mi ave PREDERICE BRADSHAW. the chair left vacant by Premier] ‘ral candidate, Dr, Ernest A : *s suce i i expense of the Belgian Relief Fund. To make this possible act jeral candidate, Dr, Ernest A.jernment’s success in gutting the someone must contribute nearly $3,000,000 a month—every ee ee a . on 3 re’ resources of the province, The month—all this winter! tale of graft and exploitation in No people under the Allied Flags are as well able to contribute British Columbia is already fami- ously as we Canadians! No cause has ever been more liar to the public. It is all of a deserving of heb! ge xan. tbe eer oe piece with the revelations at Ot- | a a os 1 Allies! SPOREIO = ove we can to tawa, Winnipeg and Fredericton. ae . susie ; Several by-elections in British Core. sees qvonietions-srestiny mantily: 0 a! 7 . / Columbia have shown what the Central Executive Committee, 59 St, Peter St., Montreal people think of the rotten-ripe B il outfit at Victoria, but the main $2.50 Feeds A Igi F A Month. verdict comes next month when provincial general election, The Tale The Wagons Tell oo Advertise in The Daily News | Hroduction ana [hrift My office window faces a street, close to the railway freight sheds. All day long a steady grown in Brazil, shipped to Bristol, transhipped to Mon- treal and finally stream of trucks and distributed from lorries lumber by— . to loaded with boxes, on barrels and bales. The tea was gath- ered by swart- skinned natives of the romantic island of Ceylon; from One truck I noticed the other afternoon was particularly in- teresting. No two boxes were the same, mS po win the war with the decisiveness which will ensure lasting » 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. Only in this way shall we be able and stencilled on the sunny Portugal the luscious, big grapes had been gathered years ago, fermented, bottled and branded with a famous name; from Egypt had come the end of each was the name of some well-known pro- duct—soap, tobacco, socks, 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. dyes that entered into the product finally stamped with the brand of a well-known hosiery. i i i oad of freight was the whole romance There, behind that obviously prosaic truck-loa aad ia adh pie pe y iy Ay 3: of modern commerce—the skilled production, : and raiment, and the world-wide distribution of the things we use every day. gs every day, instead of some other own jo And then I speculated why we use these thin of advertising. things; and that brought me plump back to my The names of some of the boxes on the lorrie were known eve mepate tordats Out had been unknown a few years ago; and I saw then more slant Sons aver Dans that Advertising is really a great channel digger. It is eas the emptor Al bry can sail from Montreal to Vancouver now, around the Horn. ny 0d Pa See ene but it is going to take months. A year or 80 from agw ou " b aee. Fe 9 Panama Canal and chop the journey to less than half. ne been dug. manufacturers who have let re those of the e isthmus of distributing Th : to-day 4 € great names in commerce hannel across th modern advertising steam-shovel a © difficulties, | be those of men who widen and ill : morrow wi EE ee aber and quickly from The great names in the commerce of to-morrow dredge this channel so that the greater traffic may pas the source of production to the homes of the consumer If you_are doing a local business talk ¢ ver your advertising probleme a »V ou Advertising De partment of this newspaper. mom oe OS ) }oainess it would be well for you : ill be furnished, A list of eS Bi , Torente. Sn eee sing agency: ess Association, Room 3S, are doing a provins to have counsel and assistance of a good advert Pp without cost or obligation, by the Secretary of Canadian Pr cotton and from South America the. LET US PRODUCE AND SAVE— The war is now turning on a contest of all forces and resources—men, munitions, food, money, The call to all is to produce more and more, necessary to work harder, The place of those who enlist must be taken by those at home, men and women, old and young. The more we produce the more we can save. in the gardens, Save more and help to win the war. LET US NOT WASTE OUR LABOUR— In this war-time all labour should be directly pro- ductive or should be assisting in production, as efficient as possible. If your labour is on something that can be postponed, put it off till after the war and make your labour tell now. Making war is the first | tell, Have a War Savings Account. Buy a War business of all Canadians, important as efficiency in fighting. THE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE to make good the loss caused by the withdrawal of so many of our workers from indus- trial activities, repair the wastage of the war, and find the funds forits continuance. 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 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 NOT WASTE MATERIALS— Begin at home. The larger portion of salaries and wages is spent on the home—food, fuel, light clothing. Are any of these things beirg wasted ? $20.00 a year saved from waste in every home in Canada will more than pay the interest on a war debt of $500,000,000, LET US SPEND OUR MONEY WISELY— Are you spending your money to the best.advan- tage? What do you think of extravagance in war time? Tens of thousands of Canadians are daily risking their lives for us at home, [sit not our duty to be careful and economical? Canadian dollars are an important part of the war equipment, Make them It may be Produce more on the farms aud Make it Efficiency in labour is as | Bond, THE GOVERNMENT OF CANADA 3 THE DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE