paoi roxrm tbm vikx mrwi - Tur Etlvwiralsllpiii'fj Beached On a Sand-Bar DEATH OF WHIFFLETS 1RAND SCIENTIST From the Waterfront a LAST ROWI IQM SYRUP cERGY FOOD THAT uA wW NOURISHED 'MS MORE CANADIAN CHILDREN THAN ANY OTHER CORN SYRUP .1 pruJucf of Tht CANAl'V STARCH CO.. limited Much Interest Is Shown in Lectures Resident .Mining Engineers Discourses Drawing Between Forty and Fifty Persons Intereet in the lectures for prospectors and all interested in mining being held Tuesday and Friday evenings by Dr. Joseph T. Mandy. resident mining engineer, continues to be well sustained with between forty and fifty persons present each j evening. Ore deposits, occurrences, characteristics and favorable factors of deposition are now being discussed. Tonight coal, oil and placer deposits will be dealt with. It is expected the lectures will conclude next week. Spring Cleaning Yet? Start early and save money on your requirements CHLORIDE OF LlAlfc 1 s G) f? r 2 Rkgs GOLD DUST CLEANSKtt BON AMI Cake or Powder each '. SOLVENE SHREDDED SOAP, 3 tins PEARL WHITE SOAP 5 bars ( FELS NAPTHA SOAP . per. box PRINCESS SOAP FLAKES '3 pkgs., SUPER SUDS Large 3 pkgs, : PALMOLI VE SOAP- . 6 for HANSLICK For cleaning hands, 2 tins PINEOLA The Miracle Cleaner, 12-oz. tin 2-lb. QCp 5-lb. OOK tin tir Highly recommended cleaning purposes. STEEL WOOL 3 for .. D. it L. TASTELESS COD LIVER OIL, per hottie EPSOM SALTS Bulk 3 lbs 15c 17c 49c 50c 81.90 for all Garden Seeds now on display. Select yours now while our stock is complete MUSSALLEM'S ECONOMY STORE "Where Dollars Have More Cents" P. O. Box 575 rhone 18 MANURE For Sale $1.50 a Load DOMINION DAIRY I'honc Red GO 8 COAL! COAL! Our Famous Edson. AlU-ru and Bulkley Valley Coals are guaranteed to give satisfaction Try a ton of No. 1 Bulkley Valley We also sell Timothy Hay, Wheat, Oats and Barley. Prince Rupert Feed Co 58 Phone Daily. News Want-Adi always bring quick results. i Sack . 1 Qo ion8, B-9-- e Market Box Delicious, fancy wrapped, 3 lbs. Box Fruits Hothouse Rhubarb, lb Lemons, doz. 15c to Oranges, doz. 25c to Grapefruit, Cal each, 5c to .: Grapefruit, Florida, each 10c to ! Bananas, lb ' Butter Fancy cartoned, lb..... .j. No. 1 Creamery, 3 lbs. ; lard - Pure, lb. Vegetables' Sweet Potatoes, lb. .. Potatoes, No. Sack 1 Terrace li lbs. Ashcroft, it lbs. q Cabbage, local, per lb. 49c 29c 27c Carrots, 10 lbs (Turnips, upriver. IO.Ibs. Beets, bulk, a lbs. Celery, Cal., Head 15c to , Leeks, bunchj Mexican Tomatoes, lb. I j Lettuce. Cal., head 10c to 4 - t- Garlic, imnorted. ner Ih t 4c to L Cauliiiower, lprge, Cat. 40c t Parsley, bundh -.,....4..J. Ham. picnic, first grade, lb Bacon, side, sliced, best grade . Pork, shoulder, lb , jPork, loin, lb. , ; Pork, leg, lb. I mam mam msa mn at, ntmmm hsb. i Pork, dry salt, lb. .. . Lamb, leg, lb Lamp Chops, lb. n Retail prices current here are as follows: Escs B.C. Pmh Extras, Grade A Large, cartoned, dose .27 Lol, new laid, cloz. .37 Fresh Pullets, doi .24 Apples Winesaps, fancy wrapped, 3 lbs. .25 Box 2.75 -C" Grade, 3 lbs. .r .25 Box 2.60 Yellow Newtons, fancy wrapped 3 lbs. u. . Box "C" Grade, 3V4 lbs 2b 2.7f .25 2.50 2: 2.8J .10 .30 .6C .10 .11 .15 .35 .92 I .10 .25 1.65 .25 1.75 M 2& .06 .33 .06 2S 2$ 25 2b X6 .25 .13 Brussells Sprouts, CaL, lb. ......l. .25 California Spinach, lb .15 Lettuce, Cal., head .13 Feed Hay, Bulkley Valley Timothy 100 lbs. . Wheat, Alberta Bran (Middlings U5 2.15 1.90 255 OCTf i Shorts 1.90 4Dtoats 2.20 QAplFlne Oat Chops 2.35 ' ! Crushed Oats 2.35 OCp ; Barley 2.20 'J O 4JUV Oyster Shell 1.65 Meats Fowl. No. 1. Ib 25 Roasting' Chicken, lb: 20 Ham, sliced, first grade 40 20 .45 .18 25 .25 .25 Veal, loin, lb : 2b i Beef, pot roast, lb. 12c to .15 Veal, shoulder, lb . ,15 Beef, boiling, lb. .10 Beef, roast prime rib. lb Beef, steak, lb. 20c to Lamb, shoulder, lb .. . .20 "TILL1E THE TOILER" TO A"5.K you WHy you didm" LIKE tMPVCtUS MR . BUTTEN isaMslK-Z.- ' 1 ft," " v v - " I II n-Mwr a !,, The Alaskan steamship Northwestern br ached on an Eagle river sand-bat after tb ship sirack a rock a. Sen inf Island, near Juneau. The 131 passciirr- and cr w wore tal; n off safely and the ,ship wi' . taken to Seattle for impairs. TERRACE Several sourdoughs are In from Kalum Lake. They report snow is rapidly disappearing from the gold diggings at Douglas Creek ann hope is running high, especially In lew c the rising price of gold. Rev. Mr. Birchall, preparing the Anglican Church for SundayV ser vice, was dismayed :U) find no hymn Passing ai empty iulldlAg his ears waght theHqundS of infant Volcei oined in what appirel father a jrabbly chorus. Exng the build. ng JEO se what the-youngsters were ip to he was delighted to find thei.,t pissing books. It seemed thiyouni fj d k'borhmed the hymVoook, I L5 "Church". Fish Halibut, lb .1 Smoked Kippers, lb. 15c. and 29 ialmon, fresh, lb 20 Honey extracted Honey, per Jar 20c to 20 -omt Honey Dried fruits alack Cooking Figs, lb Dales, oulk, lb., 8c to Smyrna Natural Figs, lb. Lemon and t.range peel Citron peel Prunes, 30-40, lb Prunes, 40-50, lb Prunes, 60-70, lb. , Raisins, Australian seedless, lb. Raisins, Cal.. seedless lb . Currants, lb. . Apricots, lb Apples, dried 14c, to t KNOVAJ ONS Or 1 VERY MUCH-I 2S Nuts Walnuts, broken shelled 2' Walnuts, shelled halves, lb .45 Almonds, shelled, lb .45 Hour Flour, 49's, No. 1 hard wheat Second Patent Pastry Flour. 10 lbs. 45c to . Aust. Pastry Flour. 10 lbs 2b White Figs, lb. . .12 Peaches, peeled, 16c to 19 ugar 20 .White, 100 lbs 6.20 21 j Yellow. 100 lbs 5.70 i Cheese 10 .11 .10 22 .1C .14 12M, , .14 .15 .15 20 .17 .30 -Ontario solids, new, lb 22c & .25 .30 Edam, lb ARMAMENT MAN DIES Carl Dulsberff, Dye Majnate, Sue-i cutiibs at Ase of "I Was , : Self. Made. Man' . 1 Berlin, V I ill LL.1..L j Thej week has brought bright TOnny days! but rather cold nlgtn Local; gardening enthusiasts hive received a decided jset-back kni hoes and rakes have disappeared again. Aiirth 19: books in the churchpews. Cogttat- Duis&crjftAnidtir atd business rrian, inv'fnlo'r'inU 'ccoud-.' mistichemijt andjnoUUc''Carji Dulsaerg wis a oafling ctmffanlc; what haieome tdtiejre as the lyJcaf, - selitrnade, were- having a great etaie of """"n ne oaiueq nis way 10 the top of the Oermari dye Indus try by virtue of his own unaided achievements, it was not; in the "university p..r.ard knocks" thaUie got his preliminary training. : He wis 6orh at Barra'err. t Germany. September 29. 1861, "the'sort of a well-to-do business man and he thus inherited as a matter of course the opportunity of equipping himself with what the best schools had to offer. At the universities of Ooettingen and Jena he developed an absorbing interest in chemistry and economics, a linking of enthusiasms which struck some of his professors as peculiar. The link between chemistry and Industry was not very obvious In those days. Young Duisberg's laboratory re searches, however, always leaned towards the practical. He wrote his doctors thesis at Jena on what housewives unfamiliar with chemi cal terminology would call vinegar. And soon after that what captured his interest was the practical prob lem of synthetic dye production. For a while he worked with Professor Hans von Pechmann, the Munich chemist whose researches were arousing the Interest of German scientists. Here Duisberg's brilliance soon attracted attention. The head of a dye-manufacturing concern in Eiberfc'.d heard about the young' chemist, and in 1834 Dulsbcrg was on the payroll, devot ing his talents to the practical problems of the plant. He had not been 'here a year before he found the formula for a new red dye, Benzopu'-purln, which turned out to be a bonanza for his company. Through iurther research 45 he developed Azo-blue, Benzo newt namw va fti-s V -V ic 1.70 .50 BUT VJE'LL. SKIP TKAT PAOTl KieAl MATEB.IAV. Mlrluel Tupin 1'asNCS Away at Age Of "6 Following Heart Attack NEW YORK, March 19 Michael weeks ago. He cam as an immigrant boy from Europe to this country sixty years ago and graduated from Columbia University as president of the claw. For many years he was a leader In the self n tlfic world. Inventions which revolutionized telephony, wireless telegraphy, and the x-ray were Michael Pupin's contributions to the scientific world. The man who passed from immigrant to Inventor In 22 years returned a rich reward of more than he received from "the land of opportunity." The "Pupln colL" used In putting telephone and telegraph wires underground, he regarded as his greatest achievement. It made pos ilble the New York to Bart Francisco telephone line, the Boston to Wash ington underground cable, and the submarine cable between England and Holland. , , In 1896 he discovered a rapid if.ethod; of xray photography, which shortened the tline of ex-rWirc from a)out an ltour ton few ' second f At that time, he njaiie a Cl'J-Cari itluiioarauh tomewhat the worse : ior t wear, An orpantzer of phenMnrtiafVe'r-sccrned to Wm a ba(flih problem. Lai,ty. . who could Id Juzjlc lujtgle atoms dr, industrial projtcls lions It's No Secret Havemt ct-oset) CO NT PACT. BUT Vfl i THAT -3 BEENOFFFSEtl of a wounded hind Dreildchl vf contalnlne 100 small sIkjL 'ill of Ing umn this dilemma he wondered a fnmnir nfrrmnn lrii 'tuliiK tt hirh tnmMui hi ki'is. bout the village to thtnk up some is playlp a prominent part Ul ihe picture, waable to Remove In the way of solving the ridole. Whbevex German ( rc-armamejrtt program, ' 3amuyear he also cllscoveftd the -outa want to steal hjnn bookj. died today at the'age'of 7i. - Secondary x-rey radiation principle tqual skill, at ontxf sdtofar'&hd -v ' .... . .. uuucrsuiiy empioyc now in me tuaj of x-ray spectra. . wircjess uiegrapny. nowevin-was the first fltld to bctwlit. IcdMiib research and lnvenonshwiH the appearance of wlrplc IrT 183 come the problem f sendnc messages so thai they would not Inter fere with etih othtr. Puptn Invented a( method o( el&ctrlcal' tuning, later purchased ,.1he Marconi company, ana prcmed; univer sally now in radio.telejraphy. He al detlsed a method of receiving wlreles4slgnals thfojjgh electrolytic tcctlflcatlorr of hlg frequency, os-cillaliocs ai wireleelelvlng -ta- Michael Idvorsky Pupin was born in Idvor. Banat. thep a province of Hungary but now in Jugoslavia. October 4, 1858. of peasant people. His mother supplemented his school lessons with her own teaching. His loyalty to Serbian tradition resulted In frlcUon with constituted authority and he determined to go to the land where Franklin had made his experiment with a klte.J Encouraged by his mother he sold his watch, his cap and almost everything he possessed for sufficient funds to make the trip, and In 1874 sailed for America without ven enough money to buy at mat-tress for his steerage bunk. Some days later he landed in New York with a single nickel to betrln ih career which led him from the most menial tasks to a professorship at Columbia University and the In-ventlons and discoveries which so benefited the scientific world. Miss Nicholls. Chllllwack nurse, who has been making the trip north to Port Simpson in charge of a student from Coqualectza Institute, who has been taken 111 to his home there, was a passenger aboard the Catala today returning south. azurln, Sulfonazurln and a host of other new coal-tar derivatives which helped to establish the popularity of German dyes throughout the world. H'M VJHAT bO V0U CALV. iy: ir 1 ' v : 11 11- Ht 1 ; ij 1 Union steamer Catala, Capt. James Ftndlay. returned to port at S 10:15 this morning from Anyox. 5 Stewart and other northern points 8 Pupln. noted inventor of electrical anJ at 1:30 thU afternoon communication transmission sys- for Vancouver and waypolnts. , pf terns, is dead at the age of 76 after ; t. Koin uffrMi a heart attack two. The well known steamer Prince Albert, which for years was oper a ted as a freighter out of Prince Rupert by the Grand Trunk Pacific Steamship Co., has been pur chafed by the J. R. Morgan Logging Co, according to reports received here, and is now being reconditioned In Vancouver for use as a tugboat in towing Davis rails of logs from the Queen Charlotte Islands to the mainland. The Anglican mission boat Nor- them Cross, with Rev. Captain W. A. Delap In charge, returned to port yetterday after having spent the winter at Metlakat'a and Is now sj tied up at her regular berth at the floats of the Prince Rupert Rowing -Si Yacht Club. Trie Northern Cross will now undergo engine overhaul before taking up her summer's work along the coast out of Prince Rupert. Oolachans are mailing on the Naas River. First, deliveries of tint popular "candle tlth" arrtvod yesterday and were morttng with rt-ady sale loday. Tho IiKilnn.1 arp alto rr-Mrted tn hate alrt ifly tarti-d on their ' lurvcdt of h-- (.ojarhar mqvaj movaj. Mis i OL- lEUUING-lT'S A 1 " IH I -VII 1 . n SllOw1NKt MARCH ANNA STEN 'We Live Again' The eKttin sia. with An,, tor tn -History Tolstm .heart ., t' C. Al'lJKLV SMITH At 7 4 L , Special Added Altrittwo From Dawn to Bedlimf TIIE DIONM; 'It'lNTlTLETS' It's Entirely N J MIWS and MISICAL which, from tut,-been uted by n -and Interesting v,, i .1 7o n,)nl1irnu lfl I t aiauuvci uiieai VANCOUVFJt W'li-.it wit s "It's More than a Marvellous Radio it's a Lovely Piece of Furniture" Tht' what prrwnt owrvn are (tying bout the IlCA Victor GloU Trotter lUdio. Thii remarkable instrument not only 1-rino the auuranre of proven world-wide prrformancv but earh caliiVt b fine pir of furniture for the home. A wide range of models and prlcea to suit every purte and taste. Ka.y terms. Rtmtmbtr. . . Ghbt Tntters art madt only by RCA Victor. Al-V. RKfiHT . T'S eys f . 1 II II I I I I Am ' I II II. V .WnrtAla uu I II 1 I lun-fcH ..I I SAILED I RCA Victor Globe Trotter with the MAGIC IlltAIN ' II II 111 A J-l ZtF& V'Z 1" .11 jkW ITte caimjrrv..-' hv. DSCHlM euTuw 1 WtTUTTTl I rY.Tl II U III dc0A IBSri m W-JaA ,&XM I rm r-VJtv5 mrJm U )i.xtA lha iiij-h x-c j t mmmmmmm i init i i Y jmnm vajbuu, rip hy MOST HAVfJ BEBM 1 j. VSM0 By Westover 1