a wes” THE DAILY NEWS. THE DAILY NEWws THE LEADING NEWSPAPER IN NORTHERN BRITISH COLUMBIA Published Daily and Weekly by THE PRINCE RUPERT PUBLISHING CO. LTD., PRINCE RUPERT, B.C. TRANSIENT DISPLAY ADVERTISING —50 cents per inch. on SUBSCRIPTION RATES—To Canada, United States and Mexico—DatLy, 60c per month, or $5.00 per year, in advance. WrexLy, $2.00 per year. All te aaa $8.00 per year; Weekly, $2.50 per year, strictly Contract rates HEAD OFFICE Daily News Building, Third Ave., Prince Rupert, B. C. Telephone 92. BRANCH OFFICES AND AGENCIES New YorK—National Newspaper Bureau, 219 East 28rd St., New York City SEATTLE—Puget Sound News Co. LONDON, ENGLAND —The Clougher Syndicate, Grand Trunk Building, Trafalgar Sduare. Susscripers will greatly oblige by promptly calling up Phone 98 in case of non-delivery or inattention on the part of the news carriers. Ge. wo — TO GET THE BEST FOR THE WEST. DaILy EDITION. Monpbay, JULY 8 SS Most encouraging of all the many interesting features of the Panama Canal Convention, held in Calgary, is the evident recognition by the delegates, from whatever quarter of the west, of the need for the fullest co-operation of every section in the interest of the whole. There is no room for the strife of conflicting claims among the members when the whole body may gain or lose so much. Rivalry there must be, where oppor- tunities are so numerous and development so rapid, but only rivalry of the sort that makes for efficiency by stimulating well directed effort. That the delegates realized this was evident, for the unanimous opinion that now, never before, British Columbia, Alberta and Saskatchewan must stand shoulder to shoulder and use their united strength in forcing a path to a common goal. If the recognition of this truth by the people of the three provinces had been the sole fruit of this conference it would have justified its existence.—Calgary Albertan. yas as ——$— HON. MR. ASQUITH PROPOSES IMPORTANT IRISH VISIT BRITISH PREMIER WILL ADDRESS HUGE ASSEMBLY IN DUB- LIN NEXT WEEK ON THE BURNING SUBJECT OF HOME RULE—JOHN REDMOND WILL PRESIDE. Dublin, July 5,——Prime Min- ister Asquith has fixed the date of July 15th as the date of his visit to Dublin. The Trish people are preparing to give the Pre. mer a magnificent welcome, On the day of his arrival here Mr. Asquith will address a meeting in the Theatre Royal, the larg- est auditorium available, Al- ready almost very seat has been allotted and many will be disappointed owing to the im- possibility of giving tickets to all applicants. John Redmond will preside at the Dublin demon- stration, at whieh John Dillon and Joseph Devlin, among other Irish members of parliament will lestify to the fealty of the Lib- eral leader to the cause of Trish persons home rule, Mr. Asquith will spend only three days in Ireland and will not speak in Balfast as he had first intended, His visit recalls Gladstone's greatest disappointment. After the flying of the famous Haward- en kite in 1886, when the “grand old man” risked = splitting his party on home rule, Gladstone Parnell that if a ma- jority were obtained he would to Dublin to solidify the friendship between the people of both countries, He never realized his ambition. When the CGom- mons passed his second bill in {8093 if was evident to everybody that th® Lords would throw it out, they did. So ill health and discouragement prevented him from fulfilling his pledge. promised go as where it should be, and the find- ing of the ore‘’was left to await another day and the work con- centrated on No, 3. vein. No. 1 vein is a big fine sur- face showing of high grade sil- ver lead ore, from two to five ft. wide and has a shaft down a7 feet; this summer the shaft is to be continued down to at least! 100 feet. | No. 4 vein, about 18 inches! wide, shows fine ore but no work has been done beyond surface) stripping. Hoisting at the shaft is done! with a horse whim. 1000 ore SYMBOL OF CIVILIZATION. sacks, the first to be received, To the unquestioned fact that it embodies within itself so completely the modern ideals of ugliness and discomfort, we must attribute the extraordinary appeal which the silk hat holds for all savage and semi-civilized peoples. Next after whisky, it is the one gift of the white man that finds universal acceptance. It seems impossible to question, the essential unity of the human race when we find the Parisian man of fashion and the Zulu/ses, but the difference of $7 or chieftain exhibiting the same aesthetic standards, It is true that] % 4 ton between transportation Afri hieftain too frequently staves in the top of the hat|°*t* now and five monthe from the ee . 4 ys ae : i ; \ |how, when the rails can be reach and wears if as an ornament around his ankle, but that is only|,q with a sleigh, is causing the a matter of detail. To both men the silk hat is a thing that takes} management to hold back to a high polish and creates discomfort and looks like nothing in|/realize the best possible profil out of their shipments——-Omin- nature, and as such it serves admirably as a symbol of civiliza- tion.—New York Nation. dump and the ore that to the mine this week being filled from the being were sent and are is to is hoisted from day day The ore that coming out now, if it were being shipped as it is being hoisted, would show a nice profit above working expen- eca Herald a 2 DANGERS OF GASOLINE Something Everybody Living in Prince Rupert Should Know. How many persons know what happens when a pint of gasoline left in a If the lemperature is normal the liquid is room? open entirely evaporates in twenty- four hours, The vapor is heay- ier than air and therefore sinks to the floor. a disturbed, it will remain there for hours and by mixing with the air form an explosive compound about seven times as powerful as gunpowder. One. pint of gasoline will make two hundred cubic feet of this compound, Tt is net necessary that a lighted mateh come in eon- tact with it. A spark struck by a nail in a shoe will explode it. So will a gas jet or even the en- closed fire in the kitehen stove. If it is necessary to use gasoline for cleaning gloves or other ar- ticles, there is only one safe place to the work. That outdoors, do is The modern, high class place for billiards and pool. Seale's, Third avenue. tf W. Nicholson Lailey THE [DEAL Be “MUNRO & LAILEY IN WIVES Stork Building, Second Avenue. A'so Woman's Usual Idea Con-| cerning Good Husbands—How Happy Marriages Are Made— Not All Housekeeping. STUART & STEWART Accountants 300 2nd Ave. Phone No, 280 Prince Rupert Pp, 0, Box 351 Auditors for City of Prince Rupert “There is not a woman in the C C. V. BENNETT, B.A. world who, if given her choice, ap! ,, “4 B.0., On . San wouldn't rather have a husband! and Manitoba Bars. katchewan a who came home drunk onee a CARSS & BENNETT month and gave her a black eye, but who was amiable and pleas- ant and agreeable all the balance Office Albert Block, Second Avenue. WM. S. HALL, L.D.8., D. 0.8. of the time, than to be married to a man who was as sober as DENTIST. the village pump, but who was! Grown and Bridge Work a Specialty. | . ly t tec as A | always grouchy and cross; who soil! dental cperations siured for the painless ex: | never spoke a pleasant word i0| qaetion of teeth. Consultation ‘ree. Offiess . ‘| Helgerson Block, Prince Rupert. > the family circle, “And precisely the same thing concerning women, W.E. Williams, #.A., LL.D Alex.M.Manson B.A., WILLIAMS & MANSON may be said The "s ’ varth, and the v The worst wife on ear ane ( Barristers, Solicitors, etc one that can bring most misery Box 285 down on her husband's head, is Prince Rupert, B.¢ the nagging wife. Compared with ie a ann her the woman who is a poor #50. BOx PRINCE RUPERT | cook, the woman who is a_ bad manager, the woman who is ex- JOHN E. DAVEY travaganl, even the vain and TEACHER OF SINGING flirtatious woman is a_ capital PUPIL OF WM. FOXON, BSQ@., A.R.A.M., 1ON., BNG } prize in the matrimonial lottery, “ JOHN DYBHAVN | Real Estate — Loans and Insurance “In proof of this, if you notice, you will observe that long as a man’s wife is sweet and affectionate and cheerful and good natured and sufficiently liberal to. give him some degree of individual freedom he will put up with a deal of bad housekeep- ing and wastefulness from her.” Phone 384 $19 8rd Avenue HAYNER BROS. since UNDERTAAERS ano EMBALMERS Funeral Directors 5 Professional Affinity. iiatiinali: cavGie Os a “There goes a happy “How did she happen to marry him?” couple,” “Oh, they had common inter- ests. She was a brick throwing E. L. FISHER suffragette _ ue was . “oe FE 1D a 4 Resboboor fessional bondsman. ansas CHARGES REASONABLE any ,Ponenet. THIRD AVENUE PHONE 356. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT Hope. “And you still have hopes of|——— on . » influencing old Titewad to be- come a regular attendant at your ehureh?” “Yes; and I am more sanguine than ever.” “You are?” “Yes. If the government really begins the coining of half cent OD ————s } Prince Rupert Lodge, |.0.0.F. No. 63 Meets in the Helgerson Block A NEW EXCUSE FOR DYING. Ope of the latest communications from the spirit world is a message, expressed in execrable English, from the late W. T. Stead, in which he declares that he has now recovered from the) shock of the disaster of which he was a victim. The world | beyond must be a dul! place when so brilliant a man can find | so little to say and say it so badly. Gladstone, when communi-| eated with a year or two ago, was still worrying about politics, What would be the use of dying if it were not for the high cost of living? ' GREAT THINGS FROM THE HARRIS MINES ON NINE MILE Harris Mines bas arrived. If one were asked to state in a nut- shell the result of the develop- ment work carried on continuous ly since September of last year, This ore assayed $80 at the wid- est point and $140 where it is 16) inches wide, The aim of the two Harris) brothers, Duke and Al, who are! it could not be better deseribed. The rock formation on that part of Nine Mile mountain may be best described as comparable to the leaves in a book, being built up layer after layer and lying practically level. The force that opened the cracks in the rock erust in which the veins now are broke through all the various Jayers. This is enough for the permanency of the veins as this formation is very thick, as likely to be three thousand feet as less, However, the main thing is that the ore is there, On the No 3 vein the shaft is down 457 ft, with 44 inehes of 8419 m the bottom. There ‘s a drift north from the shaft, at 110 feet depth, of s.out 100 feet with ore varviug from six inches to three and a half feet in width for that distance, Three little faults or slips were met with but the ore in each case was picked up flush with the point where it broke off, running things is to get in shape) the shaft carried down to the 200 foot level by August 1, when} drifting will be commenced both | north and south on the vein. It} speaks well for the mine and the | district that although this shaft} was started last September and | carried down to 87 feet and then | left to stand over the winter that not a single bueket or drop of | water has yet been hoisted out of it, Number 2 vein surface showing of high grade) on the property, A tunnel} over 300 feet long was driven | last winter to eut this vein at 130 feet depth but the ore was not is the biggest | ry ~*® oe ~+0o-~ LYNCH BR —~+1 SA = Lowest Prices in Northern B. C. Sndinde wr? i — pieces I regard it as a cinch, Every Tuesday Evening Houston Post. All members of the order in the $$ city are requested to visit ' the lodge. A. DOUGLAS, N. G. W. G. BARRIE, Sec. If we think we cannot keep our business booming in Jogging Laziness into Activity The merchant whose business lags in the summer has himself to thank. To slacken the selling pace in the hot season—to lessen Advertising activity—indicates a resignation which has no place in modern business. summer time, we surely will not. eters. . aeeee ae. just a What a jolt it must have been to the fur trade, when 1 i 1e G.T.P. rails get to a poin .£ 1 ‘ ae : ° | where the ore can be taken to| the first mid summer fur advertisement was run in the cars without using a steam-| a daily paper! Now many fur stores are following bows Many handlings of ore| the example of that progressive fur man who dared ! cost money. ° Sinking from the betiom wit | to be ieve that fur sales need not go down as the be started again on July 2nd and mercury goes up. H| mouth of January into the biggest selling season for white goods. tive power, combined with a disregard of “seasons,” | have opened up automobile selling two months earlier than was once thought possible. Advertising has started Christmas shopping early in October instead of the middle of December. Advertisements of | Energy, linked with Advertising, has turned the Advertising rises superior to seasons and thermom- The right kind of Advert responsive cord in human nature nature is the same in August as in December. Advice your advertising problems is available through an ane az. advertising ey, or the Secretary of ae ay adian Preas Association, Room 503 Lumsden Building, Toronto. Enquiry involves no obligation on your part—so write, if interested, '*Valhalla” of S.H. & E.F. | (SCAN DINANIAN SoctETY) | | Meets every 2nd and 4th Tuesday at 8 p.m. in the hall at 319 3rd Ave. | SONS OF NORWAY Meets ist and 3rd Thursdays at 7 p. m., at 319 3rd ave. All Nor- wegians are welcome. CARTAGE and LINDSAY'S “storace 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 Sheet Metal Work Office: 3rd Av Phone 174 e, Work: Zod Ave. bet. 7th and sub Bee 2nd Street Barristers, Notaries, Ec. 2 a high stimula- ising strikes a and human NOW.... Avenue, we are ‘able to display out w large stock of beautiful oak furnle =, and ee of our Capetiere, show wledeue at "une Purnhure Store. Linoleu Bloves and Lam on the street side; ery and kitchen needs on the 2nd avenue. Entrance front. F. W. HART PRINCE RUPERT FEED CO. Big stock of all kinds of Garden Seeds, Timothy, Clover and Grain Seeds. Mail Orders Prompily Attended to ++ Agents International Stock Food:- ALL KINDS OF FEED— “IMPERIAL MACHINE WORKS || ENGINEERS AND MACHINISTS || H. K, Love, Prop., Prince Rupert Up-to-Date Equipment, Work and Prices Right. Engine Work and General Repairing. Shop, Gow Bay Agente for imperial Gasoline motors. Phone Biue 259 P. O. Box 957 Advertise in Silversides Bros. The up-to-date House Decora. tors of Prince Rupert Sign Writing.. Paper-Hanging Our Specialties WE ORIGINATE. OTHERS imi. TATE Phone 156 Green 1836 THE BANK OF 1912 British North America 76 YEARS IN BUSINESS Capital and Reserve Over $7,500,000 Bank by Mail and Save Trouble If it is inconvenient for you to get to town every time you wish to deposit or with. draw money, call or write the Manager of our nearest Branch You simply mail us your depositsor write for whatever cash you need. Interest paid half-yearly on atl Savings Accounts, Prince Rupert Branch, F. S. LONG, Manager. Georgetown Sawmill Co. Ltd. Lumber: and Mouldi dings A large stock of dry finish- ing lumber on hand. Boat lumber a specialty. Delivery made at short noti¢e. Our prices are as low as any. Call on us before ordering. OFFICE: EMPRESS THEATRE BLDG. Cor. Gth St. and 2nd Ave. Sixth Ave.-—-Best Buy in City Lots 7 and 8, Block 22, Section 7, 6th avenue, $700 each; % cash, 6 and 12 months, or $650 each cash, wh. DOUGLAS 339 Third Ave. P. O. Box 606 (Opposite Post Office) Westholme Lamber Co. Lumber and WN Mouldings All Kinds of Building Supplies First Avenue For Kitsumkalum or Lakelse Fruit Lands write or call on the Terrace Land Co. TERRACE, B. C. LAND PURCHASE NOTICES. Skeena Land Disirict—-Distriet of Coast Take notice that John M. Buchanan, of Atlin, B. C., occupation teamster, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following deseribed lands: Commencing at @ post planted at the southeast corner of Lot 4460, Range V. Coast District, thence 40 chains north slong east line of Lot 4450, thence east 40 chains more or less to northwest post Of Lot 597, thence south along west lin of Lot 697 40 chains more or less to shor: line, thence west 40 chains more or less to place of commencement and containing 160 acres more or less, Goores u dhicley. hee t eor b rley, a Dated May 30th. 1949. ase Pub, June 13, 1042, Skeena Land District District of Coast, s Range 5. Take notice that William Agnew of Mou treal, occupation capitalist, intends to ‘pply for permission to purchase the fol lowing deseribed lands Commencing at 4@ post planted on the west bank of the Hoesall River, about one mile above Browns Falls, thence west #0 chains, thenee north 20 chains, thence east 20 chains, more or less to bank of Hocsa!! Kiver, thence southerly following rivet bank to point of commencement, to con tain 40 acres more or less WILLIAM AGNEW, Locator Augustus W. Agnew, Agent Datel May wdth, 1012 Pub. June 3, ite