lon mu D vriday, January 30, 1914 THE ATLIN RAILWAY COMPANY i { vor to the at the next session thereof for an a company of the Atlin Railway Company, with construct and operate or lines of raltlway, Commencing at t on the southern end of Atlin Lake at a point at or near the Town of Atlin hd following 4 generally southerly direc ) a point on the Taku River where pada ywel line and also from & point on said easterly to the southern end of Tesiin Province of indary, and telegraph lines and use par nJertaking of the company, and to enter works of the given thet applica- Parliament of under the TIGHTNESS OF M thy International British Co to construct and Oceans of ink ar thereof; to build]ging of tongues h ‘ 1 that kibert M ivilowilg described lands sud sixteen (16) Hauge V mmencing &4t @& pust planted on the rd of skiabl Bay, HERBERT W ND Land District.— 26th, cause. The recurre! LEES . L. R. W. Beavis tween European powers dad. 1914 a sense of the need the part of the me ERS CLAIM THAT MONEY IS NOT SCARCE BUT WASTED ONEY DUE TO PRECAUTIONARY MEASURES —WASTEFULNESS OF THE BALKAN WAR RESPON- SIBLE FOR SHUTTING OFF CREDIT id much wag-ja result the brake was applied to ave been ex-|Ventures of a sepeulative nature, e yessels, construct and operate 5 s alwnave Po ¢ P eeeurTi connection with thel pended in explanations of the \s always, the value of securi- ; 1. jlies declined, owing to foreed other companies,| ‘financial stringency, the aa ling company be , a realization by holders who were for the general strike of capital and the ino lon: ble to secure financial this 9th day of June,} ‘Scarcity of money Much of} suppor for their speculative JOHNSTON, the amateur explanation is futile| holdings, and this process ‘of the Applicants, : eliminatior as n “Ocree y Ciawa ont, Jand meaningless, which is not has been proceeding , ; ; now for about a year and a-half. surprising when the complexity; ,),,. ;, Petia ; Distrret of Coast, | ‘ sidered A : ne public holding off ‘ of the question Is consideret the falling market, the downward Morgan, Off papa S fi » var acts | progress ( . ae 1, Dootpaiion prospec: | CAL! ful study of the various fact | progre f which has been ac- for permission tw] bearing on the situation and anj|centuated by professional bears. ; |p , 4 post planted on the] intelligent reading of the opin Phe de | gill-edged seeuri- isiand, opposite Mink} jons of men really competent tojties is ex ed } orece “oali ted two (2) miles anu io i FEE ry forced reali- chains wore or less} Judge, reveal the fact that there} zation on the part of under. daaaie sud pevent 1 Lone F ’ as s 5 rs \ ‘ ‘ ‘ c amg oe on y one is no searcity of money as suc h, | writer vho have had to take up chains more or less} There is probably more money in|enormous blocks of new issues, miues anu forty-eight 8 ’ . ang Toragelgh 4") the banks today than at any time|including municipal and colonial ayer ies) epatns, during the past several years | bonds Consequently it became 4u hails, ELL ” chains more or less Ww If the term “credit” be substi- | in reasingl difficult to float Chantel, thence fol . » #6 aw?’ ¢ . oy ¢ 0 8 . Ww » > souinerly ‘to point a tuted for money, a clos r ap- bonds or ne securities of any conmiming eighty (8v)|\preciation of the situation is at-|kind and a proportionate “slow- ELBERT M. MORGAN tained. Owing to many and di-|ing down" process set in, the dau. 12, 1914 verse causes, the credit of the/result of which is naturally more (iibaniibione : commercial world has hecoine|keenly felt in countries which Diswict of Coast,}strained and this process has|previously were bounding for- Mefbert W. Lees, of NOt been a sudden one, but was ward, But it is not by any means occupation gentieman,} foreseen and predicted by emi-|corfined to those countries, the permission to pur- 1. = ineact ¢ , fuuuwing described jands: nent London bankers nearly two|"eaction having become very a bay a Mtle to we|YC@rs ago. The enormous ex- | marked in many large industries Stephens isiand,| pansion in the field of commerce|in all the great commercial and adjacent to the ap- t 33 fish: berate ; ; | ntres jor of L. &. W.|and the extraordinary demands | centres. © nortu twenty chains, thence} »f e vol , countries >| Meanwhili the ‘onservative Wence south twenty of th oo creo” untri for | 7 h Conservative cast twenty chains foliow-}capital for development pur-|attitude of the great financial to the point of com- . to ‘ w , ‘ , containing forty acres} POSES were the originating | institutions who have, for once, it tension be- | apparently been working in com- created|plete harmony has created a of caution on|healthier, if somewhat n at the head | Stringent situation, than existed more 5; District of Coastiof the world’s finance, and no]a few months back. It is the Hume Cronyn, of} secret was made of this among | opinion of “the men behind the vceenmatehcanniy: Tos oe I inner financial, circles although] sun that easier money rates the following deseri- | was apparently not apprecia-| wil! prevail shortly after the first mit on ing at @ post planted at the | ted by the general community. | of the year, but a return to the yy chains enorth| Late Balkan wars, with their|former high water mark of easy chains to pointof}enormous waste of money and|{credit and cheap money cannot, containing 640 acres more) -.iarial and stoppage of pro-jin the light of past experience, HUME CRONYN jduction in those centres, empha-|be any but a_ slow process 30,4012 jsized the need of caution, and as Speculative interests will be the , AOR those go The Largest Plant of Its Kind fi, LL (a eee ES; me SY = . I ne —old friends—the real a good story now and then, good cigars, Budweiser One of America’s Institutions The Anheuser-Busch plant covers today more than 142 acres-—-equal to 70 city It gives steady employment to 6,000 people, and to 1,500 more in its branches. Every process, every room, is immaculate. Anheuser-Busch, St. Louis in the World PRINCE RUPERT IMP. CO. Distributors imi i od fireside friends i WN) \ Mi Nee) Me —_— NTI rs Sass kind. Old reminiscences, and a bottle of eee Cc Ht Every bottle is Pasteurized and inspected. This Quaiity-Plant, started nearly 50 years ago, is a model of modern facilities, The hundreds of visitors who go through every day know that nothing of its kind could be made any better than Budweiser. Some of the Principal Buildings anna anat B. C. PRINCE RUPERT, ia) THE DAILY NEWS GREAT BRITAIN MADE ANOTHER TRADE RECORD Last Year’s Trade Returns Show There Is Life in the Old Dog Yet The British board of.trade re- turns for December and for the whole year 1913 were issued at the end of the year. Contrary to expectation, the exports for De- increased by nearly £2,- the exports of the year to the £525,461,000. are the more they follow- cember 000,000, raising British goods for amazing total of The high figures remarkable because ed two years of enormous in- crease. This is how British ex- ports have moved in the last three years: BOS S516 dows 546 .£454,119,000 NARs ese 487,223,000 PESO 55% 525,461,000 Thus, in the past 12 months, exports have risen by over £38,- 000, compared with 1912, and by over £71,000,000 compared with 1911. As 1912 was a record year there was no general expectation of another record in 1913. ENGLISH LANGUAGE DEFORMS THE MOUTH This Is the Statement of Son of Late Irish Lord Chancellor Jan. 26 meeting at —Speaking in Fermoy, London, Gaelic ata County Cork, Lord Ashbourne, son of the late. Trish lord chan- ecellor. stated that continually speaking English deformed the mouth. He described Englishmen as having “thin, prominent lips, long front teeth, and the general appearance of a measly rabbit.” The German Janguage, he ad- ded, is strohg and vigorous, while the English language is in a State of decay “John Bull's “to use a bull, is behind He is insular and nothing bring him into touch with outside world.” said, him. will the future,’ he THREE BODIES TAKEN FROM BURNING MINE Helmet Men Enter Utah Shaft Filled With Poisonous Gases Bingham, Utah, Jan. 29.— Three bodies were taken from the Boston mine by. a_ rescue crew of helmet men late tonight. The seach was continued for the two other men, who are sup- be dead. The rescue crew reported poisonous gases had been generated by the burn- ing timbers. The men were cut off from escape this morning by timbers. posed Lo burning Worth Looking For Prof. Butler, of Princeton, is off for Syria to seek the buried wealth of Croesus, Croesus was the king of Lydia who subdued all the Asiatic Greek states and was overthown in a war against Cyrus, the Persian. He was the owner of slave named Aesop, who wrote fables, Those fables are lost, and yet they are‘said to have been far more charming than the spurious “Aesop's Fa- bles’ which were concocted later an@ which we still read. It would be interesting to find the pelf of Croesus, very interesting, but how the world will open its eyes if Mr. Butler finds the lost’ fa- bles of Aesop! Brass Nozzie for Nose Cineinnati, Jan, 29,—It is be- ing demonstrated by residents of Mount Healthy by Bill, who is Joe Stoeppel’s horse, that a reg- ular nose is quite a superfluous thing. When Bill’s nose ceased to work well, so that it seemed that Bill would die of suffoca- tion, Joe said it would be a‘shame to let such a nice horse go to the discard because he had not the use of his nose. Stoeppel consulted a horse doctor, who told his to cease grieving because he could give Bill a new nose by the way of his neck. The doctor made a hole in Bill’s neck, open- ed his windpipe and put a tube in it. On eold days Bill's brass nose emits steam just like a reg- ular horse's (nose. last to benefit, as money will be absorbed for some time to come by demands for capital for en- terprises which afford .ample security. Fortunately British Columbia offers many such openings for investment, and there is. there- fore, no reascn on the part of this province to look askance al a financial position which is irk- some to the whole commercial world; but those who look for, or hope for, an early return of “easy money’ to assist opera. Lions of a speculative nature, re- quire to be fatuously optimistic. we +t af wreow™ ¥ aint. - A nahn position. the land. @ Wwe Ww Ww But this principle is not con- | fined to persons of noble birth 3 —it has a hundred applica- ; tions. It applies, for example, } to those manufacturers of reputation and prestige who make goods of high quality and who advertise them con- 3 stantly in the newspapers of By their advertising they have attained an eminence where the very best in quality and good service is expected of Rank imposes obligations— or—as the French put it—‘“Noblesse Oblige.” It is a very natural and right principle that those who by their position in life command the respect of others should deserve it and be worthy of maintaining their “Much is expected of those in high station.” them. They have set a stand- ard and their very business life depends on the constant maintenance of it. So that when you buy adver- tised articles you rest assured that you are getting the best value that money can buy. Well may you place your faith in advertised goods. Well may you give them prefer- ence over articles which you can only hope may prove satisfactory. For the principle of “Noblesse Oblige”’ is your guarantee of excellence in Advertised Goods. If_you are doing » local businers talk over your advertising prob- lems with the Advertisin; Uepartment of this newspaper. If you are doing a provincial or national business it would be well for you to have the counsel and cssistance of a good advertising agency. A list of these will be furnished, without cost or obliga- tion, by the Secretary of Canadian Press Association, Room 503, Lumsden Building, Toronto. a ee $Sadoe)-+ + Does ¢ + fete; +} | Cnetectt ¢ ¢ Poche + + eet + + ete + \ WHION S.S. COMPANY OF 8.6., Ltd To the’ WINTER SCHEDULE : } i. B J Twin Screw Steamer Wedding Gift uyer. ! . . . . « V en t ure 4d Regarding Appropriate Wedding Gifts. ! ——____—_—_——— ' you who tive out of town are often in a quandary, when the matter of FOR VANCOUVER appropriate wedding gifts comes before you. The a eee, ° Wednesda: } iting f ILLUSTRATED CATAL whic a0... os ; eae waa ae vast sehdetooutiia in all tines which are especi- ally adaptable as wedding gifts. We are careful in packing and deliver- ing wedding gifts to out of town points, all goods being sent at our risk. FOR GRANBY BAY { In our Catalogue will be found many suitable gifts - or — : : . ite f his Catal today if you are considering a w ait aoe soo ~ Dec. 2g Panag cane sett pe a through our mail system. is , we a taeE TESS ® a.m. Tuesdays, Nov. 25, Dec. 9th, 23rd and 30th Bi S = Li ° d enry Birks G Sons, Limite tot Biekets-as, JEWELLERS AND SILVERSMITHS Rogers Steamship Agency _ Geo. E. Trorey, Manawing Director’ VANCOUVER, B.C Second Ave. Phone 116) (\U 3 y + PTAA IIIA AAI A DADA IASI SAS SISDI SIS ISIISISSIS ISIS A SOOOODAA AAA A AAA IAAI ¢ » »” * cae > | ENVELOPES LETTERHEADS BUSINESS CARDS Summer is over and the Fall trade has begun. To get your share you must have some sort of 2s printed matter—a circular, folder, booklet or cata- SKIPPING logue. Be sure to hfive that work done properly. TAGS You would not send out a shabby salesman to BLOTTERS represent you; then don't make the mistake of $ VISITING CARDS sending out a poorly printed circular or booklet, BALL We are QUALITY PRINTERS and can produce a piece of printed matter that you would be proud } nae of and which will get results. Try us. Phone 98. MENU CARDS — == ————S BILLHEADS THE aes D: \ | L Y N EWS JOB PRINTING DEPARTMENT * * * ER ORI A RRR ROR IAAI AAAI AAI AIDA AASAAAASAAA. r