April 13, 1045. “ue ONLY CURE FOR opySTIPATION « Fryit-a-tives""—That Wonderful medy Made From Fruit Juices, MAY 14th, 1913. Is AVON ONT., “t} 1 \ Pruit-e-tives” for 43 .nd Constipation with om + results, and they conti- ng rag my only medicine, yhen I Hie etod about six years ago to use them, 1 100% « four at d dose Sut gra- — setoced the dose to one tablet at re Refore taking ‘Fruit-a- tives’’ Tok calts and other pills but the soi nt was too harsh, [Soe I ‘oht as well suffer from the illness on these treatments, Finally, I ane rt sa tives’ advertised with a oll in which some one recommended them very highly, 60 I tried them, and I have no hesitation in recommending them.” ANNIRB BE. CORBRTT. soe, a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25¢- At all dealers of sent on receipt o price by 'ruit-a- tives Limited, Ottawa MINERAL ACT. Certificate of Improvemente. NOTICE. Starligh stake No, 1, and Sun- se M : vms, situate in the Skeena Mining 1 o of Cassiar District. Where on the North Shore of anby Bay between Bonansa and Falls eks rAKE yore that I, George RK, Naden, ee Miner's rufecate No, 60353B, act- as Agent for Thomas MeRostle, Free ner’s ste No. 80348B, and James natch, Free Miner's Certificate No, 396 (B, sixty days from the 1e hereof, to apply to the Mining Re- fer f a rtifcate of lmprove- pis, f purpose of obtaining 4 wn Ora f the above claims. And furt ike notice that action, un- section 8 | be commenced before iss Certiteate of Improve- nts, ated this 15th dey of Marek, A. D, GBO. R. NADEN. TICE TO DELINQUENT CO. OWNER. HNSON, > to ) HENRY ¢ ou may Rave whofn nveresta. Take Notice signed éo-Owner with in whe hing No. 1” and the ings Mineral Clattng, situated at the f of Hast ‘rm out a a. of @ mile i (he beach, in the - River M Distriet, oe ish Columbia, have dope rs nt of work on ee p By ms os for the year 1044, amountin: in orde hold the same : ot of the Mineral » 90 days of the publica: fms e you fa t 7 se > a porti uch @¢@ ture, te- r with sts of S sadvertise- i y ‘| in the said mineral is will be the property of the reigned Section 4 of the Min- Act Amendment Act of 1900. v. & COVERT, Co-Owner. ed i Prince Rupert, B. G., January i“ AEE ROR BO a a a FIRE ALARM SYSTEM CIROUIT NO. 1. 12-5) St. and Srd Ave. a 18-6) Si. and Srd ave. 148th St. and Srd@ Ave, 16—Juncion of 1st, @nd end Srd Aves 16—ist Ave, Detween 8th end th Sts. (Knox Hotel.) 17—jst Ave. and 7th St. (Cen wal Hovel CIRCUIT NO. 2. 22-—Srd Ave. and (Post Office trad Ave ist Ave 2nd Ave, 2nd Ave. 6. T. P, CIROUIT NO. & oth Ave. and Pulten st. Borden and Taylor Sts, Tt Ave. and Pulton St. ‘th Ave. and Comox Ave, 8th Ave. end Dodge Pl, th Ave. and Thompson St. CIRCUIT NO, 4, ‘0 Ave. and Emmerson Sra St. and McBride 8&t. and McBride 8t. and @nd 8t and 6tb 8t. SSees SS&ese “1 Pl 42--5th ave. and McBride 8. m 4351p Ave. and Green St. 46 Ave ana Basil St. 7th Ave. and Eberts. mn 141 ‘bh Ave. and Young 8, sevevecnnal ee ee * Sever Simulation LD WATCH FREE, A atraigh no *ehtforward generous * from en wa — | GN. Sina saa , bs be ry all over the r wor Vi, a cdvertionmens fae 4 ” ‘your l 78S Pe \ obtain one, eS A \ —, = . ‘& z J conte for one our = bps fo ra (sahionable Ladies’ Pra | ong Guards, oF N " , Wy Gents’ — ua . \ wiih the wae a ‘which ey even < — waiches = Guerentend five years, 2 should you take we ans”? OxveCt pom te thins ® hem ' Se te Writs To-day os HALLAM LIMITED Desk Sig ‘TORONTO ee SUBSCRIBE FOR E DAILY NEws Mrs. G. T. Fulford, of Broe GEN. SAM HUGHES ON DEFENCE---STANDS BY THE ROTTEN BOOTS (Continued From Page One. swore that the men were obliged to parade with their feet tied up in shingle?” this from Macdon- ald, M. P. “I'd like to have the handling of that for five minutes,” snorts the Major Gen- eral. “The man’s a liar!” And there you have the Major General at top heat. Almost other witness would have put it in the parliamentary may, able gentleman mis-stated the facts,” or some- thing soothing like that, but the Major General pins his faith to Anglo-Saxon, officer any “The honor- has knowingly plain This brief resume of the more picturesque parts of Major Gen- eral Sam's evidence is not by way of}of demonstrating High Commission- his short way with Generals, ers, King’s Counsel and such but merely to show how far a seven- league friendship for bad carrying a Minister of Mi- litia once he gets started. In the Public Accounts mittee, where he appears next, is a more subdued Major General, but still a valiant champion of old friends. To give the Major Gen- eral's friends their due they put his defensive powers to the full- est test. For instance, there is Honorary Major McQuarrie, who had sworn just a few days be- fore that he received $1,200 for using his influence with the Min- ister of Militia. What is the Ma- j General's answer? “One of my old boys. He began his life as a parson and is very green, like most clerical gentlemen. He signs foolish receipts.” The Ma- jor General says this with such a charming smile that we are al- most persuaded of Honorary Ma- jor MeQuarrie’s innocence, espe- cially if he would cough up the twelve hundred. Surely, no Ma- jor General hath greater than this, that he give his word for a friend like McQuarrie! Another friend whom the Ma- jor General stands by is Honor- ary Major Thomas Russell, who handled the transport problem in the first rush, Major General Sam having chosen him as the best man in Canada to bring order out out of chaos. -Major Russell, be- ing in the automobile business himself, not only brought out of chaos, but also orders for his own company. He went fur- ther, and secured the agencies of various United States companies and sold to the government at the list price with 10 per cent off, The Major General did not go back on his good friend Major Russell foX getting all that was in it, but the hurry being over, he found an- other friend in New York by the name of Thomas, who got 25 per cent off the list price and effected a saving of $200,000 on the same quantity of motors as was pur- chased by friend Number One. The difference in having a friend whose first name is Thomas and one whost last name Thomas thus figures up to about O00, Major Thomas is as some newspapers have He is of that New breed which does not acknowledge boots will Com- he or love order is gS? 00,- not British, said, pure York have as the Canadian government THE DAILY NAWS. Mr.A.C FULFORD FAMILY WHICH MAKES BIG WAR GIFT. . HARDY kville, eral Sam and his colle agues would have no truck or trade as far back September, 1944, then ithey have not only had truck, but as Since fact that all the motor purchases took place when Major sent, better and extravagances in General but that now that the emergency broken, Hughes was ab- going is over things are the rush price is Incidentally, it explains Major Thomas Russell had to pay $200,000 more why Honorary than he would have paid a few months later on. This report, ed- ited no doubt by the Major Gen- the facts with the art which conceals eral, expounds all necessary are and proves that while Major addicted to friendships they can’t make a fool of him. General Sam may be The Major General is as wise as the serpent when occa- sion arises, as indeed you might expect of a warrior who has flocked with Mackenzie & Mann as long as Sam has. Honorary Major Thomas gives this be- ing headquarters. Major to the committee that he makes all his friends who have anything to do with contracts honorary ma- jors so that he will have a hold on them. If they do not tell the truth while in uniform he can hale them before a drumhead court-martial of business. his evidence in uniform, orders from General Sam explains out some of the friends ma- and put them Consequently, stands by are honorary while others are honorary —the higher the rank the On his he jors, colonels more standing by they need. the ot¥er hand, some of friends like “the Ellis boys—nei- ther of whom can be a day over sixty—are neither honorary ma- jors nor honorable colonels and can tell the truth as well out of uniform as in. Meanwhile, Major is not only cleaning up the trans- portation problem for Canada, but who also has a long job ahead of him buying ammunition for the British and Russian governments in New York, uniform as a guarantee of good faith. The Major ed, high-purposed, priced and if the war goes on long enough he will accumulate a neat but man Thomas, who always testifies in is high-chest- and high little fortune in commissions, more than an The Major General has a not honest should. 4 1-2 per cent arrangement with him savings effected which beats virtue being its own reward by many thousands of dollars, It pays to be friends with the Min- ister of Militia. A friend in need is a friend indeed—and the Major General is no piker. friend the Major Gen- Another eral stands by is Honorary Col- one! MeBain, one of the C, N, R, lands headquarters staff, who helped to purchase the ground for Valeartier Camp, Colonel MeBain has the whitest of teeth, the blu- est of eyes, the rosiest of cheeks, the merriest of all smiles and no one wonders at the Major General taking a shine to him, mistrust a cherub and as leave the Colonel has a portfolio full of $100,000 wherewith to equip a © Canedian regiment, her son-in-law and daughter, with jthat the letter r has a place in | the alphabet. He comes from the jcountry with which Major Gen- Major | farmers trucks—hundreds of ‘em. Thomas’ reports, to which Major | General Sam listens with un- feigned approval, drags in the One would | « Mr. and Mrs. . Hardy, who documents to back his innocence up. Meanwhile, tells the committee what a fellow he is. the Major General fine Colonel McBain, by the way, has come across twenty- four of the four hundred missing horses and has placed them with the neighborhood of until they get well and Of the remaining and seventy-six there is no trace, but the Major General promises to cable to the British authorities about it. The in Valcartier strong again. — hundred } fact that there is no duplicate record of these animals in the Militia Department is, so to | speak, a horse on the Major Gen- leral. So passes the Major General's i busy eight solid hours de- jfending friends and patriots who day, have undertaken to see contracts through at the smallest profit a friend dare take. Eight hours and still the Major General is not weary of well doing. He con- cludes gloriously with a touch of He befriends a lady, he rescues a damsel in distress, his Miss Ina McAdams, in danger of being de- Miss Ina has invented a shield shovel with a hole in the middle to shoot through. The hole has been patented and 25,000 of the shield shovels are now on their way to the front if the su- percilious British War Office will let the Canadians use them. But, males, col- chivalry. secretary, who is spoiled. alas, envious some onels among ‘em, state that the shield shovel is as old as the Mid- die Ages and that the hole is not much younger. This spurs the Major General to a supreme ef- fort of gallantry. He tells how Miss McAdams came to invent the shovel. In the course of her du- ties she had accompanied him to France and Belgium, the scene vf the present war, and while there the idea visited her and was com- mitted to paper. It vas all very simple and convincing. The Ma- jor General is an inspiration in himself. Anything may happen when valor and beauty travel to- gether. Salvation Army. Public meetings, Tuesday, Yhursday and Saturday at 8 p. m. Sundays at 7:30 p.m. WATER NOTICE. Wee and Storage. TAKE NOTICE that The Port Essington Water Company, Ltd, whose address is 517 Granville St., Vancouver, B. C., will apply for @ license to take and use one and one-half cubic feet per second and to store 400 acre-feet of water out of Cunningham Lake. The storage-dam will be located at the outlet of Cunningham Lake, The ca- pacity of the reservoir to be created is about 400 acre-feet and tt will flood 9.23 acres, The water will be diverted from the stream at a point about § chains below the said outlet and will be used for Water- works purpose upon the land described a8 part of Lot 45, Range 5, Coast District, being the townsite of Port Essington, A copy of this notice and ap application pur- suant thereto and to the “Water Act, 1944," will be fled in ghe office of the Water Recorder at Prince Rupert. Objec- tions to the application or to the petition mentioned below may be fled with the said Water Recorder or with the Comp- troller of Water Righ's, Parliament Bulld- ings, Victoria, B. C., within thirty days after the first appearance of this notice in a local newspaper. The territory within which the company desires exercise its powers is described as the townsite of Port Essington, A petition to amend the the CertiNeaté granted to the company in respect of its former right s¢ as to in- clude the right applied for heref? will be heard in the oMfce of the Board of Inves- tigation at @ date to be Axed by the Comp- wwoller, The date of the First Publication of this Notice is March 28, 1015, PORT ESSINGTON W4TER CO., LTD,,” Applicant. “Wilson & Whealler,” Agent, t 60-76-81-87 RRAAAIRIAIIAIIISNE ae B.C. MILK You will find it Just as wholesome, as con- venient for you as it has proven for the many families round about you. There is so much absolute goodness and purity about B. C. MILK that it is a really safe kind to use. SOLD BY ALL GROCERS Made in B. C. by The B.C. Milk Condensing Co. Ltd. Factories at Chilliwack and Ladner, B. C. JOU UU OU II Ramsay’s Empire Cream Sodas In 2-ib. Tins Have attained their enviable reputation by their superior quality and uniformity. The most discriminating house- wife insists upon “Ramsays Empire’ when buying Soda Biscuits. They are made in B. C. and your grocer gets his supply frequently and quickly, insuring freshness, which means crispness. Prove it by buying a tin with your next order. Manufactured by RAMSAY BROS. & COQ., LTD. Vancouver, B. C. kkkkkhkik PAID AIAAAAIAADAIAAISI AAA AAI a= = Read ‘THE DAILY NEWS’ Prince | Rupert’s Leading Paper! Circulation Guaranteed the Largest in Northern -_Beitich Columbia Read ‘THE DAILY NEWS’