fAGE BIX TITE DAILY NEWS Man and Wife Gagged SPRING WORK IN PRINCE RUPERT GARDENS and Robbed at Night Old-Fashioned Gardens, New Varieties, Cultivation of Soil and Brief Hints Dealt With in Timely Articles A Finger Print Jails Robbers Two men broke into a little shop in London, England, one night. They crept upstairs to a bed room where they knew the shopkeeper and his wife kept their money at night. Tlio man and his 'wife heard them, but before they could give an alarm or hide their money the robbers ovcrcamo them, tied hem up with bed clothes and rendered them helpless. Then Stops Body Odour the robbers rifled the cash box and got away. Long afterwards the two men were arrested on a totally different charge. Their finger prints were taken and tho right thumb of one was found to bo identical with a faint finger print that had Been found on the cash box of the shopkeepers. Both men were sent down for long prison terms. The finger print had dono its work. Your Finger Prints Your prints are dangerous in another way. They are not criminal prints of course but they may wreck your health. You leave them on everything you touch. Those prints aro full of germs disease gsrms of all kinds. Where did you get them? Everywhere. From things that other hands have touched -r-a public telephone, a street car strap, dollar bills, books. People toaohed these things before you did primps they were ill and coughed or breathed germs upon their hands. So these germs get upon your hands. Then you touch a piece of bread, a candy, cake, or fruit in taking it to your mouth. The gertns on your finger prints enter your system and make you ill. According to the Life Extension Institute there aro 27 germ diseases that may bo conveyed in this way. It kills germs Wo must avoid this danger. Wc must um) a soap that will kill these genua or make them inao- tive. Wo should wasli with it often and always before meals. Any good soap will not do. Lifebuoy is the soap that makes us safe. It contains a germicide. Laboratory tests have proved its value. A safe way a luxurious way Washing often with Lifebuoy Soap makes one safe from germs but it does more than that. It is a luxurious soap, based on two palm oils and its creamy lather is a delightful beauty treatment for the skin and complexion. Millions have found this to be true. They get all the joys of an exquisite skin soap. Protection from germs is there too. Use Lifebuoy in tho bath and . you will be safe from body odours for many hours. No tcrfume in it just a mildj refreshing, extra' clean scent which ilisnpiwars after use, but tells you that you are safo and protected. Children need Lifebuoy's protection. At school and at play they cannot escape disease germs. Keep Lifebuoy on tho wash basin stf that all the family can lienefiUby its protection against germs. It will beautify their complexions and keep them healthy. Your dealer has Lifebuoy ready for you. Order a supply today. Lever DraUwn Limited. Toronto Lifebuoy Health Soap A Luxury Soap Plus a Gcrmlcldo OUR COAL IS IN A DRY SUED When you are buying coal look on the economical side of life. If you buy wet coal, you arc losing 10. So start today and burn dry coal and see what 10 means to you. PK.MRINA EGG Delivered, Per Ton . $12.50 MINEHEAD EGG Delivered, Per Ton 12.50 . MINEHEAD LUMP Delivered, Per Ton 13.50 HYDE TRANSFER-PHONE 580 PIIONE 580 Easter Brings New Ideas For Your Living Room Sec our selection of occasional tables and floor lamps all new designs and quite stylish. Barrie's Home Furnishings If your paper docs not arrive, telephone the office Old-Fashioned Garden Making An old-fashioned garden with beds of Balsam. Cockscomb, Foliage Plants, Verbenas and other annuals. "Old-fashioned gardens" In var-ous parts of the country have mucH reputation and admiration tnd have been popular stopping jlaces for automobile tourists. They iiave proved to be no mgre than Tardcns of annuals, some of them lid-fashioned, but not many, the Treat part of them being the most noaern development of old-timers. They are truly old-fashioned Har dens In that annuals were used al- nost exclusively in gardens of two r three generations ago and were .he mainstay for color and beauty luring the summer months. These )ld-fashloned gardens astonish and lellght by their wealth of bloom and iolor. There is nothing difficult, occult, or at all mysterious about them nor does any flavor or real anti- lulty attach to them but their beau ty is undeniable. Anybody in the world can have ne of these old-fashioned gardens n his own yard and It will attract ;he same admiration and draw de-'ighted visitors in tile same manner as some of these gardens of great reputation on automobile trails. It is merely a matter of orderine a supply of annual seeds and planting them in beds. Sbme of the unusual plants noted in some of these display gardens of annuals are so old that they are really new. A big bed of double balsams in full flower was one novelty The balsam or lady slipper is seldom ; grown, compared with its. vogue of some forty or fifty years ago. It i a beautiful annual and as a pot plant for t15Te decoration' rivals any greenhoflfce product and is obtained by merely transplanting a balsam into a flower pot and growing it there. A brilliant-patch of scarlet, arousing much comment in old-fashioned gardens, is made up of the old- fashioned Flora's paint brush or tassel flower, formerly known bo-tanlcally as Cacalla but later changed to Emilia. It Is a showy annual easily grown and for cutting giver a color that no other annual affords. A spectacular plant proved to be no other than the Martynla, usually found among regeta.bles, the large pods of peottliar shape being used for pickles. It has large and unusual blooms. A strange and unusual display of foliage plants found in one garden which had gained fame because they retained iheir color all winter were kales, long lost from Canadian catalogues. Plant annual8nnd have an old-fashioned garden. Try Some of the New Annuals The really new annuals, that is. new. species, not varieties of old well-established- annuals, are com ing to us from the great wealth of South African flora and all ure composites of daisy types in a great variety of gorgeous coloring Unfortunately all are not of the easiest culture and do not grow as vigorously and with as littl" trouble as the advance guard" of South African daisies now fairly familiar In gardens, the arctotls md dimorphothecas. Most brilliant of these Is venl- dium fastuosum, glittering orange j with a black disk and black zone about the disk. This annual comes to us with a European reputation for glittering, gorgeous beauty but it has not , proved easy to grow being difficult of germination to itart with. Much seed was sown last year without resulting plants. It is worth a struggle, however. and once sUrted and given a warm well-drained situation with all. the sun possible It will give a grand display of color. Seed should b-sown indoors, kept reasonably moist and fairly warm, not dlffl- Tho The vnM1nm venldlum Vina has liun been reunl Mnt". cented by a form Introduced with alluring description some years ago as venldlum calendulaceum." It la now classed as an arctotls and re- FIRST CHOICE OF SUITS SOUTH . I I P VSNIDIUM V if fAtTUOJUM. r- sembles a slngfo calendula. It Is easy to grow but no better than a single calendula and we prefer the double onrs. The ursinia. is another SouUi cult In the average dwelling. ...J African daisy iftf orgeoui colorin-: . . . , i somewhat similar to tho new venldlum but alar, a little difficult but easier than the venldlum. It should also be planted Indoors. The Kingfisher Daisy, fellcia bergeni-ana, Is another, of these novelties, a daisy- pf beautiful blue coloring and- rejmed the easiest of the three to stow. It will be a rOR SPRINC-eOATS nmtolgreat New samples Just arrived of spring and summer goods of the finest quality and the patterns of the very latest. resulting In unusual beauty. If sue cessful, for gardeners to try our. at least one of these new annuals There are some new forms of the better-known arctotls and dimor- LINO THE CUTTER photheca also ,well worth giving a Steam cleaning, pressing and alter- trial. These daisies have a trick of ing. Free delivery to any part of shutting up at night, which makes the city. '.them poor cutting material for ev- ening display, but they are gkr- M LIMi -,11114 lilh TAILOR 11071 jibus bouquet material drulng th 817 Second Ate. Phone CI9 day. Turning Over the Soil There are two distinct schools of gardening when It comes to digging. The old orthodox school proclaims for trenching the soil, that is, digging it out three spits deep splt being a spade length, putting manure and top soil In the bottom of the trench mixed with fertilizer. The modern school of gardening discards to a great extent the ol.l dca of trenching, which ordinarily would take the soil out for a depth of from eighteen inches to two feet. Few plant roots of garden use particularly annuals and vegetables, send down roots to that depth and the fertilizer In the bottom ot the trench might as well be In th.3 barnyard or in its original sack a3 rar as doing the plants any good. If stable manure is available, renching has the advantage of increasing the moisture retentlventss f - the soil by incorporating humus, although In proloni??d -Iroughts such as last year, It will not avail much as humus can hold moisture only where there Is mols-ure to hold and dries out ultl-nately with the rest of the soil, ai-houph less speedy. When humus dry It Is very dry indeed an.1 oaks up moisture more slowly han porous, sandy soil, although t holds it longer when it get? it. Ordinarily the depth of humus will serve the purpose of motstur? retention and there is that advantage to trenching. The great muss jI feeding roots of all garden plants with few exceptions find food in the first foot or less of soil. Good spading In ordinarily fer The Man With the Hoe Says- Cold frames may be covered with glass substitutes which can be tacked or nailed upon the cash at jreat saving in the way of glazuv? and also in the price ot glass with no liability to breakage. They are temporary, however. Make a tool rack in the garage utd you will know where the tools ire when you want them. Gardening is a combination of icadwork and footwork. lt the! icadwork guide the footwork and iirre will be less of the latter. If you like yellow and soft ch ides with plenty of yellow lu hrm order promulinus hybrid gladioli. Not ir" the annuals at the flower ias particularly the lupins, larkspurs and schlzantbus. You an mow them in your garden. Plant your vegetables In rows nsfad of broadcast. It is economical of seed and gets bigger crops. Don't be afraid to sink the pade when you do your garden digging. Lawns must be fed regularly to grow regularly. Oet In fertilizer fo; the lawn. WR1GLEY-S All Point To A BIG Buy 13P jit THE laitirtK long flavor! appeal to taite and help to keep mouth freali and breath iweet the sugar tup pliet the body fuel that burnt up exceii fat and keepi you keen and alert. Wrljlty'a it good and good for you. mm WW V0 tile soil will suffice for all practical purposes, but good spading means good spading thrusting ths spade Into the soli In as nearly vertical a position as possible to Its full blade depth and turning over the soils This Is rardy done, particularly with day labor. The spade goes In at an angle and rather a wide one and If soil Is well turned for six Inches the gardener s fortunate. Good spading is i low and arduous task. A plougr can do the Job quickly and efflri ient!y but unfortunately plough I are not as handy as they were In i more bucolic days, so the spadin fork is the main implement. I Endcnvor to sen that the garde igets a thorough digging this year ,It will give returns for the extr; work. On ordinrrv CONVERSRTION PEOPLE UTTER RBOUT lt3 WORDS R MINUTE .INTHIJ SENTENCE THERE ARE J 36 WORDS READ THEM OUT J LOUD AND TIME YOVRSE Lr I SEE IF VOU CAN DO IT 1 IN FIFTEEN SECONDS) AND WHILE YOUR HEADING IT THINK) OFENJOVINOR' BUCKINuHHNI . AFTER Y3UAE J THROUGH If UlfJ V 1 Help Giindericn and Win a Prize SmJ in your intrrating fact tolay. It nerd not neccauriljr refer to toljacro. For every fart we ue we will nxl you i nail-age of SO llix iungliam Cigarette. Give a reference with your fact. If intrmting cnouifH Mr.Guiilenen will cartoon itarx you will receive the complimentary palt-Hgtot Hudintfhamx, Canada 'a moat popular blended cigarette, liuclingltamiareall t bat U f Dili, cool and mild a blend of all that it fiorat in tobaccos, parked for your 4eafare and enjoyment. Addrru your facta to George Gundtraen, DrpLD. TucLett Tobacco Co. Limited, llatmhon. Set of "Do You Know"Crdi For ten cent in "lamp we will tend you a aet of "Do You Know"carda tialy inler. rating iuhjet-M (iruitcd in color with full deaenption (io of card t'j" x lj,") or for twenty cmti we will include cards and alao an album in which tbe cardt ran be placed to give a complete collection in iH-rmanent form. HOTEL ARRIVALS Savoy Hotel I I'rtnce Ruiwrvx leadline tain lly hotel Hot .tnd cold water In all roomt A. J. rKUIMIOM.MK. I'rop. Cor. of Frascr i.nd Fifth 8ts New Royal Hotel I. Zarrlll. Crop Tin; iiom, uoktii while Hut 6i Cold Water bteam Heat Wc 1'EIl DAY AND UP TrlCii,nr H Boston Grill I'lione 157 Prince Rupert Laree Cabaret SI'KCIAL DINNERS Thursdays and Saturdays DANCING Every Saturday Nijht, 9 to Dance Hall for Hire Accomodation for Private firtl.. Phone 566 Rupert Motors Garage apd Service Station DODGE and BANTAM AUSTIN Distributors FENDER AND IJOUY WORK ftsriXIALTY Wednesday April 8, J LOITIS wni in, in- rt .it.. 11 I ureal uanroad Tltri "DANGER LIGHTS With JEAN AKTIlim aild ROBERT AKMSTHOY, anu Heroism, Comedy CHARLIE riM-i l ib.v PORK SPAItE KlU 1 lb. SOUR KRAUT LEG OF PORK per lb .OIN PORK CHOP& per lb 'ORK STEAK 2 lbs tOUND STIAK 2 lbs. . SIRLOIN STKAK per lb. r-BONE STKAK per lb ZEAL STEW per lb, JHOULDER VKAL 5 lbs. JILL PICKLMS per dot 4U8TARD PICKLE8- per gal TOUR KRAUT per lb. SHOULDER LAMB -S lbs. LEO OF LAMB per lb. f.O!N QF LAMB CHOPS per fb. til Landslides, FIotk t, Iron (Wants Crashiu, :1U Each Other. A Storv of Loti iu THUNDERING TL ;o! v Novelty "HIS Plltf j Talkertoon "TKEE ; rv FOX NEWS AllMKClnV in . ...... . , Feature Starts at M:, . J THURSDAY .MATINEE ai. J Friday and Saturdaj "Half Shot at Sunrise' MUSSALLEM Meat Market 55c 25c 25c 35c 45c 30c 25c 15c Sl.CQ 30c si.oo 20c S1.00 30c 30c m,niiitii.uutgta Kaien Motors Llmltcri General Garage and Scr w ' Station CIILVUOLirr anil IltICK Ojicn Day and Nn:'i Phone 53 Third Avuue TELEPHONE 657 VALENTIN DAIRY FO It SKEENA DRAM) Creamery Butler & Cottage Cheese FRESH PASTEURIZED MH.K AND CREAM DAILY Early Delivery Throuchoat the City Wednesday Special APRICOT JELLY KOI.Ii 20 cents The Electric HaKery We Deliver Phuncfii7