PACE set. DEMAND upert Brand" fvippers 'THE DAINTIEST BREAKFAST FOOD " Smoked Daily by Canadian Fish & Cold Storage Co., Ltd. PRINCE RUPERT, B.C. "Exclusive But Not Expensive" To' Be WcII-Drcssed In Prince Rupert, Sec ' -ANNETTE- . Shoes, Hats, Coats, Dresses, Lingerie and Furs ANNETTE LADIES WEAR COMPANY LIMITED Third Ave. & Fifth St. Two Stores 703 Eighth Ave. W. KAIEN MOTORS LTD. Chevrolet and Buick Automobiles Good Used. Cars Boat Engines Goodyear Tires , Raybcstos Brake Linings Expert Mechanics Telephone 52 Reliable Wrecking PEMBINA EGG Delivered, Per Ton $12.00 MINEIIEAD EGG-Delivered, Per Ton 12.50 MINEIIEAI) LUMP Delivered, Per Ton . . . 13.50 FURNITURE and PIANO MOVING A Specialty HYDE TRANSFER-PHONE 580 PnONE 5S0 LINDSAY'S Cartage and Storage Phone 63 Cartage, Warehousing, and Distributing. Team or Motor Service Coal, Sand and Gravel We Specialize in Piano and Furniture Moving. Smith & Mallett LIMITED Plumbing and Heating Engineers Automatic Domestic Oil Furnaces Telephone 174 Show Koom 259 Third Av. W. I Dr Alexander X-RAY SERVICE rilONE 575 BLSNER BLOCK DENTIST Progressive mercnants advertlst SPECIALS Malkins Best Spin-ach, 2l2s, 2 tins . . Oo Buffet Fruits, 8 oz. 6 tins OUL Orchard City Pears QAn 2s' ner tin A De Lux Plums, 2s 5 tins Corn Starch 3 pkts. for 95c 35c Paulin Chambers Cream boclas 2 pkts- for .... Heinz' Ketchup 3 bottles Rowats Sweet Pic kles, per 28-oz. iar 45c 85c 55c King Oscar Sardines I 3 tins i Out -of -Town Orders Receive Prompt Attention Fresh' Vegetables & Fruits Arriving Every Boat Mussallem Grocery Co. I Limited 417-423 5th Avenue East I'HONE lb AND 81 CLOSEDOWN BLACK BEAR When Interesting Discoveries Made on Bornite Property at Stewart j STEWART. Sept. 29: Work on' the Black Bear property, which now goes under the name of the Bornite group, has been closed down on account of weather con-' ditions after a very successful sea son which brought to light some Interesting discoveries. .Late in: August a well mineralized vein of1 quartz porphyry, eight feet wide.! was uncovered, and, though no as- i jays were available at that time, it j Is since learned that the samples, ran to 8.37 ounces silver, 15.46 j copper, and a trace of gold. The: copper content is especially inter esting. The Bornite group adjoins the Red Top near the headwaters of Bear River, and 'is owned by Messrs. Bolen, Garner and Gillof. THANKSGIVING IS OBSERVED; Special Services Held Yesterdav In First Presbyterian Church Both i Morning and Evening Special Harvest Thanksgiving services were held yesterday in First Presbyterian Church. The hurch was specially decorated for he occasion and there were appro priate sermons and music. Large :ongregations attended. At morning service, there was jpecial music by the Junior Choir. At Sunday School, the annual Rally jay was observed. At the evening service, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Teng sang as a duet "The Lord is My Shepherd." Mrs. W. W. O'Neill and W. E. WiUlscroft were :Jie soloists in the anthem "Ye Shall Jwell In the Land." Mr. Kennedy of Vancouver sang a solo and Mrs. lames Waugh sang "Abide Me." There were special sermons both nornlng and evening by the pastor, Rev. John Kennedy. HINTS FOR GARDENERS PLANTING Twenty Years Ago In Prince Rupert September 29, 1910 R. C. W. Lett, colonisation agent of the 0 rand Trunk Pacific Rail way, is in the city after having led a globe trotting party over the railway grade from Edmonton to the end of steel and thence to Prince Rupert. The necessity of a water main be ing laid on Ninth Avenue was pre sented to the city council last night by Mayor Stork. A Jury which held an inquest be fore Coroner J. II. McMullln Into the death of Charles Dayley, who lost his life In a fall between First and Second Avenues, brought in a verdict to the effect that deceased had come to his death', through misadventure. ,, ,,.), . , i;i tha. THE DAILY NEWS Monday. Sep' constipation thiatens,;:; these age-old non-liabit-, forming correctives BRING HEALTH District News VANDERHOOF Last Thursday the new Indian church at Fort Fraser was dedicated by Rt ev. Bishop E. M. Burma With iu- M- J- oi Prince Rupert. HU Lord- :shlp was assisted in the dedication ceremonies by Father N. Coccola of Fraser Lake and Father Oodfrey of Smith!. The public works department Is I busy with extensive improvements Ion the highway entrance to the town. Much blasting and filling is going on. Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Moore have returned, after attending the Exhibition in KamloofM. Native bites from Stuart Lake were on of If the fall bulbs are planted in the features of the Kamloops fair. clumps of at least half a dozen of ine variety, or better still about 20, j The Hammond Building on Bnr-a better decorative effect will be j raid Avenue, occupied by the pro-produced. The tulips may be mas- vtneial government Forest Branch sed In odd corners In the perennial and Royal Canadian- Mounted Poked, along the walls of the house, in lice of if cera, was destroyed by fire iron i oi snruDDery, or In special last Friday afternoon. A. J. Mas- beds of their own. The crocus. . grove Norman resided in the upper and similar small flowers, are often portion of the building, scattered through the lawn, or used j .. In small clumps in front of the! Rev. David Donaldson, formerly higher growing tulips. All of these ' of Vanderhoof and now located at bulbs may also be planted among OlscapM, has ben Invited by the uie auruooery wnere meir dying uoara oi iiome Missions of the foliage is screened after the bloom , Unlted-Chursh -ef Canada to tour Is over. chun rfls atite intonate of the rMtf he Vpas, Mr. Donaldson. wtlf bo away for several months. Marco J Baronne. globe trotter, who was here last June on his way west, passed throufh here again last week with his donkey. He went within a few miles of Alaska but had to turn back on account of the conditions of the passage. From here he is taking the Blackwater route into the southern interior. The Forest Branch has closed its look-out stations on Tslnkut and Pope Mountains for the season. The stations were of much value during the past summer In detecting fires. Close finish to English county m iddleu eight handicaps was witness ed at Oatwick, recently, when Musical prjnee won -from Ellen bor ough and Clarette. 2 Glasses Water, Not Too Cold, Help Constipation I- 4 4 ,UK 2 ginfttr ft half hour before ." 4 , Ibreakfast You get quicker and bet- The Dally News can be pur- J tr results by adding a little simple chased at glycerin, saline, etc., (known as Ad- Post Office News Stand, -325 ,JMika to one glass. Oranvllle St., Vancouver. Karl Anderson, Prince George, B.C. Smlthers Drug Store, Smith- ers, B.C. R. W. Riley, Terrace, B.C. 4 Unlike other remedies. Adlerika acts on BOTH jjpper and lower bowel and removes old poisons you never thought were in your system. Adlerika stops OAS and sour stomach in 10 minutes! Relieves constipation In 2 hours. Ormes. Limited Druggists DUKE WAS DYNAMIC Great Nobleman, Descendant of Hotspur, and Head of l'ercics, i Had Slronjr Character LONDON, Sept ad: Under the heading "A Fighting Politician, The London TJmes, in a recent is sue says of the eighth Duke of Nor thumberlancL, who died on August 24, at the age of 50: "The Duke of Northumberland was a man of many and varied activities, appear ing before the public in that char acter no Jess from his own energetic sense of duty than from hia inherited position. He was at once an ardent patrioV. a keen party l man, a patron of art and educa tion, and a ready champion of that order of Industry and society cf .6" which it was his lot to be so typ ical a representative. Alan Ian Percy was born onApril 17, 1880, a younger son to the Earl Percy who succeeded in 1809 as seventh Duke, by his marriage to Lady Edith Campbell, daughter of ;the eighth Duke of Argyll, siates-man and author of "The Reign of : Law." In 1899, therefore, he became i Lord Alan Percy: two of his elder brothers had died prematurely, and in 1909 his eldest brother. Earl Percy. MP., a young man of bril-nA promise who had been under-Jecretary for Foreign Affairs in Mr. Balfour's cabinet, died ly, and he became Barl Percy until uiwv tctnn fn tlin fttilrAHntn in The Vanderhoof Creamery, which. May. 1913. In January, 1900, Lord has been operated again this sea- Alan Peicy, Joined the Orenadler son by P. Burns Co. Ltd.. will re-1 Guards, und served in the South main open until the end of Octo-1 African War. 1901-02, being prumo-ber. After the cjoslng of the cream-1 tad to brevet lieutenant-colonel ery, the provincial government will : and receiving four clasps to his assist cream shippers of this dls- : medal. He served also on the Sudan trict to dispatch their cream to m 1908, when he received the Egyp-Prince Rupert, Hem. William Atkin- itian medal and clasp son. minister of agriculture, has! In 1910 he accompanied Barl promised. tOm tn nnnarta a A n f! onH uhll.. there he made many friends among the Canadians, who liked him for his complete lack of affectation and admired him for hU physical competence. In particular, a walk which he made in remarkable time from Montreal to Ottawa, along the railway track, through the bitter coici of a Canadian winter, for a day and a night in a. temperature below aero, was regarded as a remarkable feat. The walk was supposed to be strictly private, the result cf a bet. Lord Percy having engaged to reach Ottawa in time to receive the guetts arriving at Government Housr for the annual Paardeberg dinner (a wager which he won by minutes only), but accounts leaked out and made a great Impression on the sport-loving Canadian Vigor Most Conspicuous This vigor, both physical and mental, was perhaps the Duke's! most conspicuous characteristic. It ' maed him a forceful and combative fighter on behalf of any cause which enlisted his sympathies. In politics he war) a strong Tory, militant and uncompromising, and. as such! he had no patience with the doctrines either of the advanced Liberals or of the Labor Party, while his position as a great landownerand especially the owner of great coalfield inevitably mad him an object of attack to Socialists and the advocates of nationalisation. His itrst conspicuous pub-he appearance, however, was as a champion of a larger army and an opponent 'of the Haldane reforms, in which he held the provision of an Expeditionary Force of only six divisions to be ridiculously inadequate. In articles whiah he wrote on the subject early in 191318 months before the outbreak of the war he showed a clear appreciation, of the direction in which I events were travelling. We have, he said, certain obligations on the Continent of Europe "W-; are one of the signatory powei-s to the Treaty of 1889 guaranteeing the independence of Bel-glum, and we have an entente with France and Russia. Oermany and Russli have been within an ace of war at least four times in the last ! eight years, and since 1904 Gcr-j many has made no secret of her 1 Intention to violate the neutrality of Belgium, an dshe has built railways purely for strategic purposes along the frontier. It is certain that that country will become the seat ot war in ktxf future cam- Daian France can dumoae of an I army of some three millions Oermany considers herself strong enough to fight both France and Russia at the same time, and we are prepared to gamble on the bate possibility of being able to send an expeditionary force of nix divisions, fo relnlorce an army of 3.000,000. He threw hiaiseif with rn'.hua-iasm Into the r.impalKii In favor of HauaiiiK.aTiiaUMiim a u B m n n M at W n H m AND lUt&Uill Two Shows 7 & 9 p.m. The first lady of the screen Kuth Chattcrtoii in universal military service. He served himself In France from 1914 to 1916, and was mentioned in dispatches and created C.B.E. When In the last year of the war he succeeded to the dukedom, one of the legacies which he Inherited was some unfinished litigation In which, on an intricate nolnt of law ! under the new Finance Act, his father had claimed against the Inland Revenue a reduction tn the amount of excess profits tax pay able on certain mining leases in re- pect of income-tax paid. The re feree decided in favor of the Duke, and this decision was later upheld ' by Mr. Justice Sankey (afterwards Lord Chancellor) In the Court of King's Bench. The Duke thoroughly disagreed with what he thought the waakitess of the coalition government lr. its dealing with Ireland and its concessions to labor, and In October, 1921, in an address to the council of the Northumberland and Newcastle Conservative Association, he declared hia own inability any longer to suoport the government. and called on the Conservative par- ran va I or a tu ixm rare ran fa Little Things Like Cufflinks We have variety enough to suit every purse. Oold -filled In fancy and plain designs with double ends for soft shirts $1.00 to $2.00 Better trades with hsavter layer of gold in engraved designs $2.00 to $U0 Solid gold links In the new tints snd engravings in 10-K and 14-K From $5.00 W To $18.00 jjOHNglJlJGEfe ! J (Jewellers H.THC STOHE WITH THE CLOCK fla:3.a.i muA an bmutbj i. n. j ki k . TELEPHONE 6$7 VALENTIN DAIrtY FOR S KEEN A BRAND Creamery Butter & Cottage Cheese FRESH PASTEURIZED MILK AND CREAM DAILY Early Delivery Throughout the City vniLi9 ii "SARAH AjND SON" A SENSATIONAL, DRAMATIC ALL TALKK Comedy "Don't Believe If Novelty "Mill) FAROMOUNT SOUND NEWS Admission 20c & C5c Feature Starts at V Wed, Thurs. and Thurs. Matinee "SHOW OF S. E. Parke r L i FOR FAIR D wi I'ROTEC'l s Y"t We have a rral r, t)l maintain in selhni; as well as new ' Prices are exception., cause our trade-in r : it unnecessary to n , car prices in ord- r t , over generous allot an. You pay no mon- ih 'is really worth in u aje LOOK TIIFSI 1911 FORD TUI. ( K Price 1923 FORD TL'DOIt Prkc ty to secede from the coalition; but 1 lm nnw ronnov he failed to carry the meeting with Price OVi A.W.EaVeG. Wholesale & C VI Plate, Window and tal Glass. Wallpap- Muresco IJrushi v P . Vanishes, Oils. r.i;;' Paperhancrrv Sup; Phone Red 53 P t 20 Sen(I Ave. P OILM'KNi Agents for tin Burner" for tiuiu hotels, apart::.( ) and the sik-nt v autotnatlc. (or i guarantee a : ..'. one-third to . consttmptinn Knqulrir, Walter Lor Hestin;: l -Phone 584 P SUITS, SIT RealRainc: Reliable quality n. . for partlciii.ii : See Win. Au' ' WEE TAILOR Near Post OfM "'COAL fl 3 him. He continued, however, at n p ninin,,! Primrose League meetings and else-, N H K A 1 K - ' I I where, to attack the government, and when at last the Conservative, 1 under Mr. Baldwin, came Into power. h rejoiced that the country , had at last got 'an honest Prime1 Minister." i Setting Up lights If Oi-ttintc 11 a NlKhU. Rm-karh. frequent rty rnlla. Iog rnlni. Nerv-ouanma, l(h(umUni, Aridity, Hurn-Ir.ic. Smarting, Bladder Irritation, or Kidney Wftknaaa makaa you foal tired, dtpreaaed and dlacouravml, try tha Cyatri Tat. Work fat. Urt cirrulatins thru tba yataai In IS tninutaa. rraiaad by thouaanda. Don't glva mp. Try CyMax (aronounrod BlM-tas) today, undar tha Iron-Clad Ouarantae. Kuat quickly atop thaaa eondttlona, Imarova raauiil aleep and nanry, or monajr bMk. Only TSo at ail dtK tra. Telrphoii N. M. Met n ijoat mif r ii Seal Cove Can fftke you utMter rooi f Any boat bu; abk , ,i Boats For Salt- R-.: l Uuy the real Coal mous Edson and I Wellington In any qn ' Also Bulkier Vull Grain and Robin HooJ l" ur Prince Rupert IMION 5 AM' 10