——— THE DAILY NEWS THE LEADING NEWSPAPER IN NORTHERN BRITISH COLUMBIA Published Daily and Weekly by THE PRINCE RUPERT F UBLISHING CO. LTD., PRINCE RUPERT, B.C, TRANSIENT DISPLAY ADVERTISING—50 cents per inch. ~ Contract rates on application. SUBSCRIPTION RATES—To Canada, United States and Mexico—Dairy, 50c per month, or $6.00 per year, in advance. WerKLY, $2.00 per year. All Other Countries— Daily, $8.00 per year; Weekly, $2.50 per ; ar, strictly in advance. HEAD OFFICE Daily News Building, Third Ave., Prince Kupert, B. C. Telephone 98, BRANCH OFFICES AND AGENCIES New Youk—National Newspaper Bureau, 219 Bast 23rd St., New York City SRaTTLE—Puget Sound News Co. Lonpon, EnGLAND—The Clougher Syndicate, Grand Trunk Building, Trafalgar Squary. Susscrisers will greatly oblige by promptly calling up Phone 98 in case of non-delivery or inattention on the part of the news carriers. ie See = DatILy EDITION. Fripay, Juty 5 RESTAURANTS AND LIQUOR. At the Police Commission meeting yesterday afternoon there was some little discussion introduced by the Mayor regarding the proz‘mity of certain lunch counters to the bar rooms their proprietors’ hotels. Nothing definite was done in regard to the matter, which was merely commented upon, the com- missioners being concerned only to themselves thal nothing in the nature of a licensed restaurant business in liquor was being carried on. They feit satisfied that all was in order, and the city solicitor probably voiced the opinion of the License Board when he said the intention was to restaurant licenses in Rupert. It is interesting to note, this tion, that in this country, as in the United States, nine-tenths of the whole restaurant business has with the liquor trade. And yet it is not so very many years since res- taurants had to depend on bars, and were notoriously unprofitable where liquor was not sold. ol assure not issue in connec- no connection NO HALF-AND-HALF STATUS. It is to be hoped that Premier Borden will succeed in se- curing recognition of the full British citizenshi p of any for- eigner who becomes naturalized in Canada, Sir Wilfrid Laurier, on his last visit to London, called attention to this matter as one urgently needing attention, and it is stated in a despatch that Mr. Borden will press the point. At present a newcomer from thee United States or any other country becomes only a British subject so far as Canada is con- cerned. This kind of qualified and local cilizenship, if asked for by foreigners entering this or any other country, would not be granted, and should not be undesignedly on strangers entering Canada. The arrangement, while it is permitted to continue, reflects upon the full British cilizenship of everybody in the country, for by means of it men are naturalized as Canadians, and their status is limited to that. It a distinction and a difference altogether out of keeping with the idea of a British Empire.-— Toronto Star. conferred is THE CHINESE LOAN DETERMINED. After many weeks of diplomatic communications the an nouncement has been definitely made that the bankers of Great Britain, the United States, France, Germany, Russia and Japan have agreed to lend the Chinese government three hundred million dollars to enable it to pay off the troops employed in the late revolution and to put the public finances in a sound condition. China has to submit conditions that would be both onerous and odious to a solvent government, but the first four out of the six powers are friendly, and they may be trusted to see that Russia and Japan get no more advantage out of the transaction than is properly coming to them. Part of the under- standing finally arrived at is that politieal conditions and prob- lems are by common consent left entirely out of the international agreement. It is hardly too much to say-that the slower the progress made just the tutelage the friendly to now under of powers the more likely is the new Chinese political organization to prove enduring. national agreement as a potent guarantee of general peace.— Toronto Globe. : It is safe to cite this politico-financial inter- Phone 379 606 3rd Ave. TRY US FOR Graniteware, Tinware, Crockery, Glass- SATURDAY SPECIAL. Full Dinner Sets $10 Up CARRIGAN & MILLER Prices Always Right We Deliver YNCH BROS. L iad Gleshiiinn 3.) Largest Stock — Lowest Prices in Northern B. C. bad PRR ~M ne, ~-o- Subscribe For The Daily News neatly ~~~ << H. Gordon Munro W. Nicholson Latley tht DALY SEW MUNRO & LAILEY WOLGAST WON FROM RIVERS IN THIRTEENTH ** « ‘= Fight at Vernon, Cal., Yesterday Resulted in a Decision for Ad. ae aes Wolgast From a Foul---Rivers Had Best of It at Start Accountants First and hook to the nd Ave Phone No, 280 Prince Rupert Pp. O, Box 351 Rivers, also} ing Ad. The round lhard clinch slight! mo Vancouver, July 4 right second rounds all shade in third, Up to the end of jaw stagger. ler to the jaw and foreed Rivers ended in ajaround the Rivers in favor of; right to face and left jab to jaw ring swung titors for City of Prince Rupert Offices traction af teeth. Consultation ‘ree net Helgerson Block, Prince Rupert round Closed stronely in favor of Wolgast, Round 3 foul. | gast was improving his position.; The eleventh round was open | He upper cut Rivers with his Jeft led by Wolgast in an aggressive several times and landed twice) fashion. Landing on the] on his nose, Rivers landed a} stomach, he followed right anal one Wolgast wins on a | Alex.M.Manson B.A., WILLIAMS & MANSON Barristers, Solicitors, ete GRAND IR UNK jwere descendants of the ship a | , Sole lfever survivors of 1817-8, “| FORGOT WHO HE . Prince Rupert, B.¢ protests were made to the gov. | | OBEYS ORDER ernment and to the railway com- | | PLO. BOX 28 PRINCE RUPERT ies ion, After hearing beth} WAS AND LEFT JOHN ‘“ tates sides of the case, the late Judge! Mabee ordered the Grand Trunk | - fo replace the monument. This| leading Lawyer Found in Lone) purn or we. roxon, msg, ARAM, LON. ENG TEACHER OF SINGING Ship Fever Monument Replaced by the Company as Ordered by Judge Mabee—Rude Monument don Hospital After a Search of| a Year—L. M. Jones Lost His| JOHN DYBHAVN the fourth round Rivers had all| vers. lbut missed right swing, Round| LFRED CARSS ©. V. BENNETT, B.A. the best of it; Wolgast clinching} Tenth Rownd—The opening of ended in favor of Wolgast, wot British Columbia of BG. Ontants ORT to save hineelt. lihia round ‘was marked by heavy| rwelfth Round oe round) and Manitoba Bars. sare Rivers has big lead in sixth.) /i#hting, Wolgast landing OR saa Rivers pat th tet fa ee a. ea. wre Right to jaw sending him down./ livers’ ribs and forcing him to} and gota stiff blow in exchange ap once cope hamtay come a After being heavily punished) jhe ropes, Rivers retaliated with} Wolgast showed up strong and ia Wolgast had a shade the best of two bad jabs to the neck and} as the round finished landed tw WM. 8. HALL, L. D.S., D. D.S. it at the end of the etighth. jmanaged to stall him off up to; hard ones on Rivers’ nose, tap DENTIST. Ninth Round—As this round/the end of the round which was) ping the claret itivers seems f Crown and Bridge Work a Specialty. opened it was evident that Wol-j|an even break, ack punishing power, and the se lil! dental eperations skilfully the painless es W.E. Williams,8.A.,L.1.0 | Respectod hy Commission. Montreal, July 4.—Acting un- der instruetions from the Rail- way Commissioners, the Grand rrunk Railway vesterday replaced what is known as “Ship Fever Monument.” This is a huge boulder of Canadian . granite, weighing fourteen tons, on the face of which is inseribed the following: “To preserve from desecration the remains of 6,000 immigrants was done yesterday. LANDMARK GOES Memory Three Years Ago. Pulling Down Historic Inn tal London, Juiy 2—Luther May- England. nard Jones, a former law part is ‘ jner of the late William €. Whit New York, July 1 According} "ey, and the first seeretary of ic’ kh cable Stele London the old| the Yale Alumni Association, was | tot ’ , ' found today in = Streatham In ilobe room in the Reindeer IDM.) tinmary after a disappearance of at Banbury, in which of mem Cromwell] jhree vears, due to loss held counsel before the battle of| Kdgehill, being pulled down, The ceiling and panneling of this historie room is in course of caused by abscesses brain, Mr. Jones came ory an ts the here severa who died of ship fever, A, D.|/removal to London by a firmM/ important Jawsuil, but was com 1847-48." This stone is to be| whieh is about to re-erect them] yelled to give up practice owing| erected by the workmen of} in their premises, to brain trouble. He afterwards} Messrs. Peto Brassey & Betts, Up to the present it has not} peeame a noted antiquars employed in the construction of} been decided to remove the win- J. RK, Quain, of Ottawa, a life the Victoria bridge, A. D. 1859.|dows and gables of the room, be-| jong friend, found Mr. Jones to- For nearly half a century the/cause the people of Banbury ex-|qay as ai result of as year huge boulder rested in “Ship| pressed the wish that they re-| search, Fever Cemetery,” at Point St,;) main, dejpseciealiinienceyinphinneieasititaaie Charles. A few years ago it be- een An Old Hand. gan to interfere with the develop- Pathetic. Mrs, Regstaff’—Did your hus ment plans of the Grand Trunk, “You can't. sit up with my|band ever try his hand at sus and was removed by the com-|daughter after eleven o'clock.’ | tained fletion? pany to St. Patrick's Square, a “Would vou mind telling her} Mrs. Pereollum—Did he? For few blocks distant. This roused/‘hat, sir? I have been trying to/at least len years he’s been try the ire of the Irish residents of|get home early for six months.” |ing to make me believe he like} Point St. Charles, many of whom Life. my cooking.Chicago Tribune j | = = JULY To-day’s Impressions To-morrow’s Sales » Many a Septem Many a man is — = = = —— —-———— -- Tt’s the Adverti and October. Advice Many a woman is fluence her se ronize for his Fall suit and overcoat. Many an October piano porch of a summer How unwise, then, to put off the Advertising of these and similar articles until the actual time of their use arrives. renogniecd Canadian advertising a adian Press Association, Room 503 Lumsden Building, Toronto Kaquiry to-morrow’s sales. | ; ; involves no obligation on vers part--so write, if interested ber purchase is really decided in July. pane information to-day that will in- ection of a stove two months hence. thinking right now about the store he will pat- parcene is really determined on the otel or home in August. One advertisement seldom makes a sale. It is the repeated impressions created by Advertising that develops purchases by a discriminating pub- lic—and these impressions are seldom built up in a day, a week or a month. Yet some manufacturers and merchants still procrastinate until the first nip of frost is felt and then besiege the public with belated an- nouneements of Fall clothes, kitchen ranges, home furnishings, winter underwear, and other articles usually purchased in the Fall. Purchased in the Fall—oh, yes—but decided upon in the Summer. Decided in favor of the goods that are continuously advertised. sing read in July that bears fruit in September For to-day’s impressions inevitably lead to your advertising problems is available through any , or the “coretary of the Can- vears ago in eonnection with an} Estate Loans Insurance Real and HAYNER BROS. UNDERTAKERS ano EMBALMERS Funeral Directors Srd Ave. near 6th St Phone No. 86 | = 3rd Avenue | | E. L. FISHER Funeral Director and Embalmer CHARGES REASONABLE THIRD AVENUE PHONE 356. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT Prince Rupert Lodge, 1.0.0F. No. 63 | Meets in the Helgerson Block Every Tuesday Evening All members of the order in the city are requested to visit the lodge. | A. DOUGLAS, N. G. W. G. BARRIE, Sec. (SCAN DINANIAN Soctety) Meets every 2nd and 4th Tuesday at 8 p.m. in the hall at 319 3rd Ave. “Valhalla” of S.H. & E.F. SONS OF NORWAY Meets ist and 3rd Thursdays at 7 p. m., at 319 3rd ave. All Nor- wegians are welcome. LINDSAY CARTAGE and STORAGE G. T. P. Transfer Agents Orders promptly filled. Prices reasonable. OFFICE—H. B. Rochester. Centre St. Phone 6 SMITH & MALLETT THIRD AVE. Plumbing, Heating, Steamfitting and i Sheet Metal Work Office; 3rd Ave. Phone 174 Workshop 2nd Ave. bet. 7th and 8th Sts i NOW.... That we have more front avenue, we are able to di large stock of beautiful oa 2ne our ‘urni~ Gee our craters ves norco on the street Crockery and kitchen needs on 2nd avenue. Entrance front. F. W. HART CORNER 6TH curtains, drapery, show windows at the e. Linoleum eto. 8 side; ST. AND 2ND AVE. PRINCE RUPERT FEED CO. Big stock of all kinds of Garden Seeds, Timothy, Clover and Grain Seeds. Mail Orders Promptly Attended to - Agents International Stock Food:- ALL KINDS OF FRED IMPERIAL MACHINE WORKS ENGINEERS AND MACHINISTS H. RK, Love, Prop,, Prince Rupert | Up-to-Date Equipment, Work and | Prices Right, Engine Work i and General Repairing, Shop, Cow Bay Agents for imperial Gasoline Motors. Phone Biue 269 - P.O. Box 957 Advertise in The Daily News Phone 384 j ture and some of our upholstery, Silversides Bros, ‘The up-to-date Mouse Dovcora. tors of Prince Rupert | | Sign Writing.. | Paper-Hanging Our Specialties we ORIGINATE. OTHERS 1m). TATE jens Street Phone 156 Groen | ——— . La St Labor in Storage | A percentage of your wages deposited in a Savings Account is so much of your labor in storage for emer- gencies or old age. What seems an inexhaust- ible supply of strength may not last as‘ long as expect. you Begin storing some of it now, this week, in the Savings Department of | | | THE BANh OF British North America 76 YEARS IN BUSINESS CAPITAL AND RESERVE OVER $7,500,000 | Prince Rupert Branch, F. S. LONG, Manager. = Georgetown Sawmill Co. Lid. Lumber | Mouldings A large stock of dry finish- ing lumber on hand. Boat lumber a specialty. Delivery made at short notice, } . ; Our prices are as low asany. Call on us before ordering. OFFICE: EMPRESS THEATRE BLDG. Cor. 6th St. and 2nd Ave. Sixth Ave.---Best Buy in City Lots 7 and 8, Block 2¢, Section 7, avenue, $:00 each; %& cash, 6 and months, or $660 each cash wH, DOUGLAS 339 Third Ave. +. O. Box 606 (Opposite Post Office) Westholme Lumber Co. ~-LIMITED Lumber and Mouldings All Kinds of Bailing Supplies COAL New Wellingtoa Ceal. Best on the Coast Phone 116 Rogers & Black For Kitsumkalum or Lakelse First Avenue “Fruit Lands write or call on the Terrace Land Co. TERRACE, B. CO. LAND PURCHASE NOTICES. Skeena Land District—Distriet of Cos fake notice that John M. Buehanan Atlin, B. C., occupation teamater, intend to apply for permission to purchase |! following eseribed lands; } Commencing at & post planted at U ; southeast corner Of Lui £450, Range ‘ /oast District, thence 40 chains jor'! slong east line of Lot 4450, thence eas! 40 chains more or less to northwest | " Lot 507, thence south along west |i) | Of Lot 697 40 chains more or less to shor: | ine, thence west 40 chains more or les» | \ place of commencement and containing 160 aeres more or loss J. M. BUCHANAN George M. Shirley, Agent Dated May 30th, 1012 Pub. June 13, 1042 | Sheena Land District—Distriet of Coas! Han Take notice that | liam Agnew of Mov treal, occupation Capitalist, intends | apply for permission to purchase the { | lowing described lands Commencing @t & post planted on t) west bank of the Hocsall River, about ‘ mile above Browns Falls, thence west * chains, thence north 20 chains, thence ¢4 20 chains, more or less to bank of Hocse Kiver thence southerly following riv' bank to point of commencement, to col win 49 acres more or less WILLIAM AGNEW, Locator | Augustus W. Agnew, Agent |; Datel May 26th, 1v12 | Pub. June 8, 1018