day March 18, 1944 ed nes poeeeeret wn p.0. Box 1704 AVOY HOTEL finST OLASS CUISINE Running Water In d ¢ Rooms ie of Liquors and C kept IN NORTHERN LUMBIA mE & FISHE? | . Directory | HS , Associahon winDSOR HOTEL avd Eighth St w. 4 ght, Prop CENTRAL Seventh St perican Piao ‘pever Black, Prop. ae HOTEs KNOX MOTEL kighth and Ninth stes 50c to $1.00 Ave oer r fay Besner & Besner, Props. R V. D. Casley capnese HOTEL s ave. Between Sixth and ' Seventh Streets sean Pian, 50 to $1 Per Day PREMIER HOTEL nerican and European Piao F. W. Henning, Manager ROYAL HOTEL corey & Burgess, Props Third Ave. and Sixth St n Plan Steam Heated ER WHOLESALE LIQUOR CO., LIMITED econd Ave. and Sixth St Phone 102 £ RUPERT IMPORTING CO., LIMITED Fraser ana GSiath Sts Phone 7 PEPELOLELELEPELODLELOL LADLE For OBSTRUCTED SINKS and Sewers DESOLVO le substance is a new discov- nd will quickly remove accu- of grease, rags and Get some and save plumb- dill For sale by HARRY HANSON ‘llesley THE DAILY 5 ‘ “YOU SHOULD INOCULATE THE WHOLE OF CANADA WITH TYPHOID VACCINE” hospital. The noted British disagreement President | fol ( ot imp oe ed HE RELIABLE PLUMBER | i e 489 9739 Second Ave. | n exhibition at Orme’s Drug Store, Third Avenue COPEL EELELOLOLOELEOLODOOOODS DR. GILROY, DENTIST Bridge Work a Specialty, : Smith Bik., Third Avenue RIAL MACHINE SHOP pairing Quickly Done PHONE RED 156 Tel. 448, SCH, AGNEW & CO. Engineers and B, ©. Land Surveyors Power, Whalf Con- ans, Dominion and ying, Mine Survey- ubdivisions, Electric ‘egalives and White Ce St. Prince Rupert, B. C. Phone 43 | PYILUAM T. HOUSE B« Land Surveyor E RL we RUPERT P.O, Bux 518 TUG AND SCOW FOR HIRE W. R. MORRISON PHONE BLACK 166 JAMES GILMORE Architect MeBr ide Street ON TRANSFER CO ERA L TRANSFER AND STORAGE South Wellington Coal it RESIDENCE 110 PRINCE RUPERT 1 pion might cause jerland ; ber Aston Leishma ) the King, met a number of To- i Known/ people ire shown, from left to right, Dr. ones, Dr. Aikens, Sit eishman, Dr. Abbey, and Sir William wel | of Canada SS ERS OES IN ME 2 RS DUE TAO ULE HU | BASEBALL (AR LAWN TENNIS FOOTBALL HOCKEY { f (GEM POLE ELE UE E. a The Chicago wo teams playing in The Georgia idopted a schedule « split season, |April 16 and the sec uaaptees, When the Pirates and rers meet in an exhibition jin Pittsburg on their first clash jworld’s series of 1909. pleted Secretary Cave-Brown-Cave the Northwestern | Laygn Tennis ounces the oming season's ows Spokane, md week in July; ‘143; Vancouver jtoria, July 27; 3; Seattle, August August 417 Glasgow, March owing players @helleacue against wks, Gord . Mercer at Midlothia Atee and MacMenemy, teid Glasgow Falkirk Smith Geordie” Drummond ithe famous old invincibles, away at the age Geordie was iwingers Seotland J. W. Crabtree, halfback and international, said that he had rward = line been |Gordon, Ross, jand Drummond. tr Sheffiel Wednesday -|been endeavoring to secure the Clyde back, sultigive the £2,500 | gow japproached — the {|bernians for Templeton, Hibs’ regard priceless, and the question. Here is what considers to be was | the disposal of i lectors Crompton Taylor (Buraley , Roberts {turned from the old country with *| almost everything up to the time International } tournaments represent l j|many years i on Saturday is independent for life. Young Corbett,” lives in New | York Is practically penniless. ¢:. faa Bob Fitzsimmons, trying a) tlallow him to box. Declares he iwill starve unless allowed to re- club asked Hardy Blackburn ———————— a FRED STORK’S | HARDWARE Carpenters’ Tools Steel Blocks Pipe Fittings BOAT BUILDER | NINSTON Phone Green 321 | 710 SECOND AVE Builders’ Hardware Ship Chandlery Fishing Tackle Rifles and Shotguns Ammunition Paint Stoves and Ranges Rubberoid Roofing Corrugated Iron “WE SELL NOTHING BUT THE BEST” FRED STORK’S HARDWARE Spurs), Halse (Chelsea), vr Buchan Sunderland), Cantrell Spurs or Lillyerop (Bolton Barnes Derby County), and Wall (Manchester United —_—— Harry Cowan, who has just re- ;|Con Jones, has been taken for that Winnipeg Irishmen hailed him as Erin’s distinguished poli- Lician Sport Items of the ae What has become of the old- timer of the ring? Here is a lit- tle dope that will be of interest to those who have followed the boxing game for the past decade: Jake Kilrair well fixed in earthly goods, owes much to his id rival, John L., who used Jake as his stage partner for Jack Root uubled his ring earnings by clever theatrical in- stments Has retired from ac- tive business Jake McAuliffe, still on the 1udeville stage. Looks good for twenty vears more of stage life . . * Billy Papke, following a busi- ness career iv Illinois. He saved every dollar of his earnings, and nduce the eastern promoters to iter the ring. . * . Jim Corbett, in vaudeville. It s his proud boast that he earns $800 a week as an entertainer, and will command this salary for vears to come te ee Jim Jeffries, Los Angeles cafe owner, The richest of all the veterans. It is estimated that Jeff is safely over the $200,000 mark, Spends most of his time hunting and fishing, on)” ait te Abe Attell, although one of the shrewdest boxers of his day, is reported to have less than one- tenth of the money he earned in the ring. Is living in New York, where he is an inveterate poker player, \ One truck I noticed | { mencement, containing 640 acres. Jimmy Britt, still following the theatrical game. Here is an-| other man who will never ask for | a “benefit.” James Edward has | earned several fortunes. He has them: all, Tom Sharkey runs a cafe in New York. It is an open seandal thet the sailor cults his own hair to save the barber fee, | The Royal Cafe gives the best | meals and the best service in the city, Visitors to the city are ad- | vised to’ make this restaurant , their seleotion 52tf) Port E ‘dw ard’ 8 power plant ma- chinery has arrived. 54tf | My office window faces a street, close to the railway freight sheds. All day long a steady stream of trucks and lorries lumber by— loaded with boxes, barrels and bales. the other afternoon was particularly in- teresting. Wo two boxes were the same, and stencilled on the YY end of each was the name of some well-known pro- duct—soap, tobacco, socks, breakfast food, cocoa, port, tea, chocolates, perfumery and baking powder. Gathered there in prosaic wooden boxes were the results of thousands of hand’s labor in all parts of the world. The Tale The Wagons Tell The cocoa had been grown in Brazil, shipped to Bristol, transhipped to Mon- treal and finally distributed from Toronto. The tea was gath- ered by swart- skinned natives of the romantic island of Ceylon; from sunny Portugal the ‘ luscious, big grapes had been gathered years ago, fermented, bottled and branded with a famous name; from Egypt had come the cotton and from South America the dyes that entered into the product finally stamped with the brand ofa well-known hosiery. There, behind that obviously prosaic truck-load of freight was the whole romance of modern commerce—the skilled production, the universal demand for food, drink and raiment, and the world-wide distribution of the things we use every day. And then I speculated why we use these things every day, instead of some other things; and that brought me plump back to my own job of advertising. The names of some of the boxes on the lorrie were known everywhere to-day, but had been unknown a few years ago; and I saw then more clearly than ever before that Advertising is really a great channel digger. It is like the Panama Canal. You can sail from Montreal to Vancouver now, around the Horn. You can get there, but it is going to take months. A year or so from now you will sail through the Panama Canal and chop the journey to less than half. A new channel will have been dug. The great names in commerce to-day are those of the manufacturers who have let modern advertising steam-shovel a channel across the isthmus of distributing difficulties. The great names in the commerce of to-morrow will be those of men who widen and dredge this channel so that the greater traffic may pass smoothly and quickly from the source of production to the homes of the consumer. If_ you are doing a local business talk over your advertising problems with the Advertistng Department of this newspaper. {If you are doin: rovincial or national business it would be well for yes to have counsel and assistance of a good advertising agency. A list of these will be furnished, without cost or obligation, by the Secretary of Canadian Press Association, Room 503, Lumsden Building, Toronte, ; ; * | ‘ 567—PHONE—567 TAXI ALF HALLIGAN Large Seven-Passenger Machine Prompt Service Special Rates for Parties STAND, ROYAL HOTEL REAR KAKAAKAARAKI RAR FOUOUUUULYOL A UL y 6446444444444 44644444644 I / [; Skeena Land District—District of Queen Charlotte Islands TAKE NOTICE that I, Frederick L. Pusch, occupation clerk, of Prine Rupert, B. C., intend to apply to the Commis- sioner of Lands for a license to prospect for coal, oll and troleum cver the following desribed lands on the west coast of Graham Island: Commencing at @ post planted at the northwest corner of L. 7977, thence south 80 chains, thence phat 80 chains, thence north 80 chains, thence west 86 chains to place of com- FREDERICK L. PUSCH, Locator. Wilfred Charles merenne. Agent. AS Date, December 29, 191 Advertised Feb, 26 to April 7. Parcel Post Information -- FREE! We are compiling a very interesting booklet which will contain the regulations of the new parcel post system, along with other valuable postal information. This book we will mail to all who will return the attached coupon filled in with their name and address. KENRY BIRKS & SONS, LTD., Jewellers, Vancouver, B. C. j Gentlemen: Please forward as soon as published, your booklet of parcel post information. NMame..... 2.200% ee Address........... Henry Birks & Sons, Limited JEWELLERS AND SILVERSMITHS Geo. E. Trorey, Managing Director! VANCOUVER, B.C Sens oes reese tte + PRAIA AAA A A AAAI IA AAA AAPA IA AAA AAA SISSISSASSISISAS SASSI SIS ISAS SISIS IIASA ISSA SIAN eel THE DAILY NEWS SAFE SANE SPICY IMPARTIAL INDEPENDENT INTELLIGENT OO IA A A I l { r | | l NEWSPAPER for § Prince rince Rupert t and 1 Northern B.C. B.C. The Daily News goes into nearly every home in Prince Rupert. It is the popular newspaper of the city because it is clean and reliable. It has all the news of the city, and keeps in touch with events and topics interesting to Northern British Colum- q bia. It treats these subjeéts with moderate opti- , mism and reliability. The Daily News is the most valuable paper to advertisers because it is read by the buying public. It has a bigger circulation than any other paper in the city. It is read by the class of people the advertisers want to talk to DAILY NEWS mere + SIAR IIR IAAI IIA IAA DIARRA AAA RIAA AAAI IIIA IAA AAAI AA ITN —~ +