nday Auguet 11, 1924. Swi't'ii Willi n lirocim then j use a u'l" ' ' i. i indoor kioju-' i('Hy clean. .Sow iisp liuon it- it Hnnvor ko.ptmu Swei'iH'r anil il will ,0 (JIIICMX in'inmmi i iii i-ii ,411 inl,ltL :i ,'( Mini llini'iiuKli i'l":in- .i iiV , : .. i 1 1 p s - ami ri.iMiiuM'm run ,). tip -lOi'iirnl liy incident - l....lj Uiij'Ii 'i I ta-i . i . 11 ....... 111! Lfi' u iIMioiistralo nno in mip Imniit Bold tin Inw ;m Id. id 1VJ- HIWlll. Kaien Hardware Co. The HauifjMwly, Slorc nu -ifii a vo 'lu'e iiiuformily I never varies." aid is ijlapjahlc nv roiu ii'w.iv '11. MI'r illlfl l'hoiie 3 Hardware and Sporting 'Goods Pure Silk. lieite. Hosi- at the 'inl old Q U1I. P 11 1 a -m m mm nira Ave. ft i-uuon street. iformity Mr.s Stephens use about sin- sa,i. t" use "in the sapie, mi mjlk. Limited 328, DRAKE STREET, VANCOUVER. Factories at Ladner and Abbptsford, B.C. ll I Ten Years Ago rjmce Kupert August 11, 1914. l'"ijliii(.,(i ,f,. 1(l (ir,.at War nwivpd t.y 1 ri-u Slork -nf thi ' Hy liuvc liv(!ir caiiri-ilcil follow-iii,.' riTi-ipt ,,f a.hice from iho I-ail tnfiif of MiiiMa al 01- "mi Muiinjr thai tin; forn ix' Iiiij "I milish iii.i. n'sulai .., A largo, calhering of ladies look place in the Knights "f Pythias I!al -yeslerday after-iiiinii to consider ways and means "f raisin? money Ur a hospital -liii. Piiiiee lluperl's share is jl!0. AGE OF MAN ON THIS CONTINENT DOES NOT DATE VERY FAR BACK Fossils Indicate Only Few Thousand of Years; Los Angeles Oldest Yet TimoXTO, Aug. II. Six human skeletons unearthed dur- !I)iscussing specimens of varying antiquity which have been found recently, he inferred that a geo logical autiquity for man's habi tali"') in. Amcrjchas sliU to bo .proved, despite thru fact; that some of tlie remains have been found under condition! which strongly suggest it. "According to- indications, man's antiquity here is still not geological, it is not an age to be measured in lens f thousands of years." Thus the soecimens of Pacific f0,Jn,i in America are relatively ilk each in..!. ill. and she. says j ,.,.,,, jn comparison with latest nit. even al'"e Ms rich, na-,lii. hn i.o.i i, l'upm.n ivhteii ll fhiMOv rhe tik. s ils alr-L(n .t i.u Iirlil iwniidv lmn o! quality ilreds of Ihousands of years. WANTED IRON Hardware Dealer Anything for ymi today, Moso? Muse Yes, sub; tie doctor tolc nle as how I mus' take some iron fur my blood, and I s'pect.t I might, as well buy it from you. Oood Hardware. Advertise in the Daily News. FINE LITTLE YACHT ARRIVED LAST NIGHT Arro Brought Mr., and Mrt Frott Snyder From Tacoma En Route Ketchikan nal mid haver thn stain., .... .. . . ..I " m norm contingent. Word has been received that Hit) Irish FtiHiliura are coming li'oui 'Vancouver to guard the railway and terminal facililies "'r. Ihd city is to furnish quarters for tint men who will -aii within 18 hours. .nr. nf t.,1,,,1 w"'" hlnu-imr nonlnil a fW Slork w hwu . . . Canadian of which he has hoard ami which lie was nersnmleil lr visit sihre local ;,ia visit here. Mrs. Snyder says she did not mind the waves going' over tire boat hut she objected' to (he long swell on Queen Charlotte SoimkI, THE DAIMT NEWS page five 40 minutes without any change In thn lrmnernlnrp. with the result jjiikiiki t'j tiif niiii a lie vtiiin;r crops tliPi-e have perished com pletely, while in tliosn districts where they still survive the har vest will not be above that of . "T"T7 1921 I.e., 15.300 lb. per acre. , ., It was only in Johnstone. Slrai 0, . -c 0f r0 u,e fa ,(, that u.e power i.nai Arro owneu (JW U(, norma w ,,e as mtlch lv Frost Snvilor of Urn Taronia will voni.t m..i. i. ...i . i.... ..i.i.. m as 50 per cent. fliere follows in the same issue 'iWa sn.l.len squall ct;mbMnicatioii ano,,r from the . wiling tlMI1"'1 ' " !" iiiuu mry mini; the yacht ami made lliinKS pleasant for a few ntjnut.es. the Northern Caucasus' "In (he Saar district. In the north 'eastern nor- mer lion of the Stavropol and Terek "n provinces, and In' the whole of 1 ',fili. VXuWnv rnirlrln 11. n ;(.... Arrn : arrived In port last ,' evening fri(p9 mX am ., nd t el ,, at he Yacht Club ami tJ fls left for Ketchikan today. Mt. . . Snyder has Mrs. Synder with h.im' , . ... and a pilirt. On the return he is MAN IV AN UfrdHUUl proposing to visit (iardner Canal FROM ANTHROPOID STEM Common Ancestry of Ape and Man Argued Before British Association, at Toronto Today hoiii visitors expressed them- TORONTO.' Aug. 11. Teeth in selves as very pleased with the three low'er jawsof fossil apes cruise. Ketchikan was to be their ;rrceYilly lYfscoVereii; in the Siwal-furthest point north but a'so Uiey .jks by narmim-T iirpwn, tit the Imped In get some fisltings ' In'1 American' VSluseu'm -of' Natural Alaska. . History afford an' added confir- Mrs. Snyder said they walked mation of' the common origin of all over town and they were par- Miei'r former owners and the hu-tirularly pleased with the gardens, man specfes. This Was shown in and flower. The lawns were so the. anthropology section of the green and Ihe hom.es had an air flritish Association today by V. nf prosperity. This was one of K. Oregory, associate professor the things that particularly of paleontology at. Columbia Uni-pleased her. versity, and Milo Hellman, who Ihe Arro is or the seine, noat went into anatomical detail.' ng the course iif excavations forlypp 53 feet long arid powered which linked the- contour of the I ewer in the outskirts of Los Vngles are -to. dale Ihe oldest evi- teiiee of the existence of human vii'e on this continent according In Hr. A. Hrdlicks, curator of the I'niled Slates National Museum, who discussed .Man's Antiquity in America in the anthropology sec. lion of (lie Uritish Association today. "Findings of fossilized human remains in Ecuador, Ihe Valley of Mexico and parts nf the I nili d Stales, especially in California have stimulated research on the early inhabitants of this continent," Dr. Ilrdlicks said. BOURBON WHISKEY mm ma m a f m m w mw w m Bm m if j m.i m m w m m rw Mm w m wmL . m. i II mm 111 m m m ft M ta MX X. V X 1 11 I ff III .TTTV y I f f m iu l nM im Mn1A VAU M M vim wrauticvz,: .w-vsammHtfsfirsf.os 'ss--jm m mmmXmwmmi'AtHn? In lis Field Superlatively the Best Noted for its great age and mellow' maturity. " Awahens old memories." Y:i " 2G or. bottU m No.80 32 or. bottle I ..':. .".'J w.fv': is fttlvertis-Muent is iut ixthlishetl or tlisnlnvml ly Hie Liqtior uuiuroruoaru or' by tlie uovcrnnient of Uritisn uoiuuiuiu with an Enterprise gas engine, newly discovered bones with sim- She is filled nut very eonveni- jlnr structures In existing apes, enlly for cruising and has every and man himself, The fossils are convenience for a long trip. examples of the Dryopilheous RUSSIAN CROPS type of .anthropoids, and the dis-tinclite markings on the lower molar teeth, known as the Dryo-pitheous Crown pattern, have ADC A C AIT IIDU "n ,racfHi i" t,Ja,'i n, ,ne m"- AKr. A r Allil IKri ,ar erown patlerns'of jach of the milJ " raxiiyitu existing anttttrtpftrdsTattd also in- to those of primitive hurrnan Famine Again Stalks In. Land or .types. The anterior molar of Soviet But Full Extent Not Dryopilheous fals n. between the Known ,compressed type exhibited by chimpanzees, and Ihe bicuspids of LONDON, Aug. 11. (Canadian the human being. Press). Soviet Russia s again "These facts, In the light of faced with famine, says Prof. S., cumulative anatomical evidence Prncnnnvitcli. n well known RllS- for the relnfivelv rln relnlinn- sjan economist who was a mem- ship of man with the existing an-1 lierof Ihe Famine Relief Commit- Ihropoi.ls affoiil strong support j tee formed, in .Moscow in in for Darwin s view thai man is an a communication to the London offshoot from, fhe anthropoid Times. Professor I'rocopovilch stem," Ihe scientists decided. was a member of Kerenssky Pro- The discoveries also locale on visional Government in, 1917. The the geological calendar 'the time. Famine Relief Committee in 1921 at which the distinctively human was dissolved by the Ilolshevists, modifications of dentition look-many of its members arrested, place. and some, including Prof. Pro-, copovitch, were exiled, from Rus- ' ' sia. The professor writes to the irr; nCMAWnC IID7UI Times ns follows: Ul U11 Soviet Russia is again faced with fanfinc. The south and south while i!ie north' and northwest are suffering from continuous cold and rainy weatherrt!lmler FAT-SOLUBLE VITAMIN east are under the influence of - . TT ""w-ni, oi .umr ana uream prolonge.1 heat and drought, normal conditions, lb is wnnldl only result in bad harvest, a calamity which would be merely local, and which, like that of 1891, could be overcome . by local means. llnl now it is otherwise. Cummunlst Rule For seven years Ihe country has been under Communist rule. The national revenue has fallen below 10 per cent of its pre war figure. Profesor Liaschenko, a well known corn indilRtry expert, writes In n Soviet puhlicalion thai the' cereal harvest per head of Ihp population in Russia was 10.0 cwl. in 1913-11 and .7 cwt. in 1920. The year 1020 was the last of a systematic Communist poU icy. Lenin's partial renouncement of Communism in March, 1921, resulted in an increase, of Ihe culllvaled area and in Ihe site of Ihe harvest. The extent of this increase we do not, unfortunately, know, as Soviet stnlicians are wont In increase the figures given them of the area under cul tivation by 10, 20, and even 30 per cent. Even Stalin, one of Ihe Triumvirate which at the mo. men I rules Russia, has expressed bis disapproval of Soviet statlcl-ans on account of their untrust-wnrlhiness. This, nl nil events, is certain, (hat after sthe export abroad in 1923-21 of 2,700,000 tons, the population Is left almost entirely without a supply of grain. Wide Region Tho failure tif harvest In south and south-east Russia is spread over a wide region. According to Ihe Soviet press the harvest has failed completely In many areas. It was found by the expert eonv- mission that the local June showers lasted only from 15 to Necessary to Reproduction and Lactation OHONTp, Aug. 11. The average length, of life, and success in. reproduction and lacta tion depend on tlie existence in Ihe body of a' 'sufficient amount of the vilntnlji known to science under. the name, Fat-Soluable A. This was announced by Prof. H, C. Sherman of Columbia University at h joint symposium on vitamins held by the Chemistry and Physiology sections of 'the Hrilish Association today. For ten years ft has been ktiown that this constituent of butler and cream is essential to growth and the prevention of eye disease,; hut its importance for ;bthcr'., functions has hitherto not been recognised. fhev vitamin 'has been named Fat-Soluble A because it is. dis solved by the solutions which dissolve fats - Luna Diseases Diets, in which it is present in relatively small amounts, fail utterly to support successful re production nnd Jactation, though the individual may be enjoyine apparent good health. It is be lieved, also, that susceptibility to lung disease is due in part at least, o the absence front Ihe diet of sutlicient uanlities of Fat -Soluble A. , Professor Sherman pointed out that sufficiency of (his vitamin in what are considered normal dietaries qannol be taken for granted. Enormous variations may occur ,Jn lp' plant tissues, from which the cows, and in lurn, the human beluga, obtain their Store of; this important substance., Measures must be taken to ensure its presence In amounts which provide a ii" adequate sufficiency. j . ' -. - - f 'v.: !R Yours truly, John Smith A LL the world despises an anonymous letter. We like a man to sign his name to what he writes. But did you ever think that unknown merchandise is 'anonymous? Nobody to vouch for it. No name signed. Notice the advertisements in this paper. There in bold print are the names of those who stake their reputations stake your good-will towards them on the truth of what they have written. , The maker of advertised goods realizes that he might fool you once but never the second time. His success is dependent upon your continued confidence in what he says in the advertisements. Read the advertisements with confidence. They tell truths that you should know. The measure of satisfaction is largerihi advertised products Bargains in Summer Dresses "DEMERS" Phone 27. P.O. Box 327. Sterling Furnace GOAL Dallvtrcd In Bulk. At $10.00 per ton. This l a very tupcrlor furntee coil. It (rives a clean hot tire and U entirely tree from soot, clinkers, alark and flirt, sxune or Dm largest healing plants In th city are now uslnff It witti entirely sailsrauory. reults, STERLING STOVE COAL, Delivered In Sacks. At $12.50 per ton. We are also Agents for the. Famous LADYSMITH-WELLINGTON and TELKWA COALS. Prince Rupert Coal Go. Main Offlcai Hot. I Oantral. Phone IS LAND ACT. Notice ef Intention to AddI to Leeae Lend In Oneen Charlotte Inland Land District, ReconllnK District of Prince linpert, U.O., and situate near Tow Hill, Graham island. TAKE NOTICE that I, Oeorre V. How llnr, of 5C8S Cambridge Street, Vancouver, B.C., occupation manufacturer. Intends to apply ror permission 10 ieaw m iuihiw tnr described lands: Cnnimenclnt- at post planted near the font or Tow II tit. east side, thence northerly to lw water mark; thence westerly' following low water mark 80 chains; thence southerly three chains; thence easterly SO chain to point or commencement aim conianim? j& seres, more or less, tt 0F.0P.0E W. DOWMNO. I Applicant DAVE, nUTTEN,. Agent. uaie, June , ivm. , STEAMSHIP SERVICE S.S. Prince Rupert or Prince George Will sail from PRINCE RUPERT for VANCOUVER, VICTORIA, SEATTLE and intermediate points each Monday, Thursday and Saturday at 11.00 p.m. FOR ANYOX Wednesday, 10.00 p.m. FOR STEWART Friday, 10.00 p.m. QUEEN CHARLOTTE ISLANDS SERVICE. S.S. PRINCE JOHN for Masset, Port Clements and Buckley Bay, every Monday, 8.00 p.m. For Skldegate and all ports south every Wednesday at 8.00 p.m. PASSENGER TRAIN, DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY. Leave Prlnre nupert S.OO pjn. for riUNCE OEOnOE, En.MONTON, W1N-NIPEO, all points Eastern Canada. United States. AGENCY ALL OCEAN STEAMSHIP LINE8. City Tlekat Office. E2S Third Ave Prince Rupert. Phone 260. CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY B.C. Coast Services Sailings from Prince Rupert PRINCESS ALICE PRINCESS LOUISE For Vancouver, Victoria, and Seattle August 2, 6, 13, 16, 23, 27 For Ketchikan, Wrangell, Juneau, Skagway August 1, 8, 11, 18, 22, 29 S.S. PRINCESS BEATRICE. For Butedale, Swan son Bay, East Bella Bella, Ocea.i Falls, Namu, Aiert Bay, Campbell River, and Vancouver, every Saturday, 11 a.m. Agency for all Steamship Lines. Full information from W. C. ORCHARD, General Agent. Corner of 4th Street and 3rd Avenue, Prince Rupert, B.C. UNION STEAMSHIP COMPANY OF B.C., LTD. v ' Sailing- from Prince nupert, or VANCOUVER. VICTORIA, Swanaon Bay, end Alert Bay, Tuesday, B P.M. For VANCOUVER, VICTORIA, Alert Bay, end Swanaon Bey, Saturday, 10 A.M. For ANYOX, ALICE ARM, STEWART, Walea Island, Sunday, 8 P.M. For PORT SIMPSON and Naaa River Cennerlea, Friday A.M. 623 2nd Avenue. l. Barniley.i Agent. Prince Rupert, B.O.