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This serves as a link between CONTENTdm and Archivematica."}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"label":"AggregatedSourceRepository","value":"CONTENTdm","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:dataProvider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who contributes data indirectly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"DateAvailable":[{"label":"DateAvailable","value":"2016-08-24","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DateIssued":[{"label":"DateIssued","value":"1915-12-25","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"label":"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord","value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/gvchinook\/items\/1.0315576\/source.json","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:aggregatedCHO"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The identifier of the source object, e.g. the Mona Lisa itself. This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"FileFormat","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"FullText","value":" MALCOLM MacBEATH, WHO HAS SERVED THE CITY SO CREDITABLY AS ALDERMAN AT THE CITY HALL, IS THE MAN NEEDED IN THE\nMAYOR'S CHAIR FOR 1916. MALCOLM MacBEATH HAS BEEN FAITHFUL IN THE SMALL THINGS. HE HAS BEEN COURAGEOUS, CLEAN. PROGRESSIVE. HE UNDERSTANDS THE VALUE OF A DOLLAR. AND AS CHAIRMAN OF THE FINANCE COMMITTEE DURING 1915 HE HAS SAVED\nTHE PEOPLE OF VANCOUVER MANY HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS. VANCOUVER NEEDS MacBEATH.\nfiTUROAV\nVANCOUVER\nBRITISH\nCHINOOK\nCOLUMBIA\nCANADA\nVol. IV, No. 33\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEstablished 191\nSATURDAY, DECEMBER 25, 1915\nrice rive\nCents\nGEORGIA HI. >H BRAY\n\"Till- trut'i nl nil times firmly MhihIh\nAmi shall from use t<> aj?c culture\/'\nREGARDING NEWSPAPER RUMORS\nVsANCOUVER is one of the. greatest cities in\nthe world for newspaper rumors. One day\nthe WORLD is broke and the next day\nthe NEWS-ADVERTISER is about broke: You\ncan hear in the course of a day seven different \"inside\" stories regarding the SUN, its ownership and\nprospects. Some even say the PROVINCE owns\nthe WORLD and runs it as a sort of auxiliary.\nMayor Taylor is always about to launch next\nweek into the daily newspaper business, and next\nweek Joseph Martin is going to breathe new life into\nHis journalistic flesh\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdso we are told.\n'Many rumorsJiave beep circulated regarding the;\nposition of the SATURTDAY CHINOOK. One j\nis to the effect that Mayor Taylor is interested in\nthe paper, and another Taj\/s that some else is going'\nto \"t^e\"the sh^e'U for; certain sinister purposes.-t ' 4\nWhy should such unusual interest be displayed in\nthe ownership of a public journal? Any newspaper, |\nto be successful, must submit itself to the service of\nthe public, and in that case the public has absolute\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdspiritual control of the newspaper. A certain section of the public think theyhav* spiritual and tem-j\nporal interest in every publication. These people\nnot only decide the policy of a newspaper, but also j\ntend well to their neighbor's business and specialise!\nin care of other people's affairs.\nIt would be a good thing for Vancouver if a day\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwere set aside for the hanging of a large number of j\ncitizens, the first, on the list to be the parties who\nstart on their way the foolish rumors regarding the\nlocal press.\nTO THE SATURDAY CHINOOK\nHail, hill-crest herald of ihc trulh!\nYou clean-limbed, lusty, active youth,\nYou come amongst us lil(e a siealh\nTo settle down;\nSuccess altend your wisdom-tooth\nAnd gild your crown.\nA Merry Christmas filled with cheer.\nAnd oft-repealed glad New Year;\nThis token from a friend sincere\nWe granl'you freely.\nPredicting busy, bold career\nLike Horace Greeley.\nTo many men it is not given\nTo hit so hard and still be livin ;\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBut bang away as you have striven.\nThere's game in sight;\nTill Bill is gone where Dick's been driven\n'Twill be alright. '\n'\"'With s^otand shell, or hand grenade\n' Vou'rd breaking^down their barricade,\n\ufffd\ufffd , And every timeHhe charge is made\nIt carries home;\nBeware their mighty cannonade\nWilh gas and foam.\nIn local news or toWn-hall chal,\nYou get the same fresh off lhe bat;\nThe man that's talking through his hal\nYou tell him o' it;\nOr some official on the mat.\nYou let us know it.\nSo, blessings on your tidy sheet.\nLike Sandy's letter, full of meat;\nThrough storm or shine or summer's heal,\nRouse up Vancouver;\nAnd daily come three meals to eat\nTill times improve her.\nVancouver, Dec. 22, 1915. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd V. V1DETTE\nTHE SATURDAY CHINOOK\nwishes a\nMERRY CHRISTMAS\nand a\nHAPPY NEW YEAR\nto everyone everywhere and forever\nround of occupation appeared in the NEWS-AD-\njVERTISER:\n'SETTLER MAROONED FOR THIRTY-FOUR DAYS\nFlores Island Rancher Spends Over a Month on Small\nIsland in Pacific Ocean Before eBing Rescued\nQlayoquot, II. C.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .small island in the\n1 eretl Fitzpatrick,\nbe\n! al\nDe\nPac\n1 1 he le\n12\nt \\housa\nlaiiue, li.\nes ir.iin\nPREMIER BOWSER AND HIS\nGOVERNMENT\nw\nexisted for i \t\nstorms which wrecked the Careliiiapu,\nover the small island, which is nothing\nBETTER BE A TORY THAN NUTHIN' '\nBRITISH COLUMBIA Liberals have been\ntwitted by the Government forces with \"hav-! .*l\ufffd\ufffd-a\t\ning too many leaders.\" fevery young.Con-\\A CHRISTIAN (?) CHRISTMAS\nE will have a change; we will have a business government,\" says Mr. Bowser.\nMr. Charles Tisdall, the man Mr.\nBowser wishes to install as Minister of Public\nWorks, is a religious man and a successful merchant.\nHe goes to church on Sunday and on the Sabbath\nand upon week days he keeps good hours.\nMr. Tisdall entered the legislature some years\nago, took his seat, clapped his hand to his ear and\nwhile the looting of the Province was proceeded with\ndirectly under his eyes, sat like a graven image.\nAll the questionable deals put through by the McBride Government received the assent of Mr. Tisdall. He voted for the payment of monies to the\nGrand Army of Graft whose names and titles, with\nsubstantial amounts set opposite, filled hundreds of j\npages of the public accounts.-\nIf Sir Richard, Mr. Bowser, Dr. Young, Mr.\nPrice Ellison or any other members of the Government were in any wise guilty of wrong-doing, Mr.\nTisdall backed them up. For he sat in the house\nlike a dummy and voted with his party on ever item,\nlarge and small, which came before Parliament.\nMr. Lome Campbell is a leading Rossland min-\nMamoiied fur ,i4 days on a J\nan is the experience nf I'*v- ^\nII..res Island, iln Xovem- j\nie had purchased provisions^ .,\nhir- pre-emption, and when t\n Dn llie west coast uf I'Mures\nIsland, he was caught in a squall, his canoe swamped and!\ndrifted ashore and was broken in two nn the rocksk\nFitzpatrick, who cannot swim, saved his life hy holding! .\nuntil ihe r.cks. Fortunately he managed to save a sack j\nof fiour, a package of oatmeal and a lew matches, and a;\nease of coal oil washed ashore. On these provisions he j\nver a'month. During the time of the terrific\nhig waves washed;\n piore than a reef, I\nand by lashing himself to one of the few trees, managed to\nhold on. When found yesterday by two Ilesquoit Indians\nwho were returning to Ilesquoit from Clayoquot. J-itzpat-\nrick was in a demented condition and at times raving.\nThe two Indians saw a man mi the island and went to\nhis rescue. Fitzpatrick lives alone and is the only settler\non the west coast of I'lores Island. During thc winter\nmonths,the Indians very seldom venture out in the open\nsea. but take the inside passage or else Fitzpatrick- would\nhave been found before. Tile rescued man will lie taken to\ntlie Presbyterian .Mission at AhoUsat and will be cared:\nfor until he has recovered.\nMr. Bowser says that there shall be no further\naid to settlers upon the lands of the Province. We\nwould like to ask the Premier if he has any record\nof the number of settlers who annually fail off their\nranches into the sea, who lose their lives in flooded\nrivers, or who lose their minds out in the solitude of\nthe wilderness in the fight to make British Columbia's valleys bear forth fruifr\nBY THE WAY\nCalgary Eye-Opener Sends Season's Greetings to\nSaturday Chinook \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Husband- Murderers\nMake Bob Edwards Pause\ndeclare that thev belong to no horrid political party\nare neuters, and are not much use to themselves or\ntheir neighbors.\nWHAT OF THE PROHIBITIONISTS?\n^HAT has happened to the Prohibition\nw\nMovement?\nBarleycorn has been given his death blow in British\nColumbia?\nWe have a new premier in British\"'Columbia\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nthe Hon. W. J. Bowser. Where does he stand\non Prohibition? Is anyone going to ask him where\nlie stands?\nA determined effort has- been made to use the\nProhibition Movement for .machine purposes. But\nthe movement has grown so rapidly that it will steamroller -the petty influences- which fell in line with\nthe idea of controlling it. ,\nIt would seem that the Prohibition Movement\nis about to have a shake-up in the executive councils.\nProhibitionists throughout the Province are in\ngreat fighting mood, but in Vancouver and Victoria\nthey are resting upon their oars, it seems.\nEVERYONE INTERESTED IN GOOD\nGOVERNMENT SHOULD GET OUT\nA^DHGHT,FOR PROHIBITION.\nKI&|A^L#feLIT|C^|;\n_^^^^^^__^_^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,^_ |0U WH0 ARE householders may have ex-\ning and business man. In his private affairs he has | perienced the ordeal of moving or house-cleaning.\nbeen successful. He has made money for his direc- * * *\ntors, shareholders and himself in all his ventures. | WELL, MOVING A newspaper plant is fraught\nHe is a man who has travelled much, is highly edu-1 with the same grim terrors, magnified many thous-\ncated\ufffd\ufffd\ufffda man of standing and personality. Yet j and times.\nCampbell, the man who wishes to become Minister * * *\nof Mines, sat under Bowser and McBride and sol THE EDITORIAL NERVES were much on\ndisgraced the annals of his clan as not to have the! edge when the postie called the other morning with\nbravery to utter one single word at any time in oppos- j the mail in which was a letter from Calgary contain-\nition to lhe sinister plans and policies of the machine.: ing Christmas greetings from Bob Edwards, editor\nIn Mr. Flumerfelt, the Province has a man who i of the CALGARY EYE-OPENER,\nhas been successful as a financier, and who is un- * * *\nqualified to handle the important: FORTHWITH THE DARK clouds which hov-\nlost of Minister of Finance than either Mr. Bowser j ered over the debris of whal once was the finest\nor Mr. Price Ellison. j printing plant on the coast, disappeared. The letter\nStrange is it not, lhal in those days when there. was read aloud to the printers, the linotype men, the\nwas not a \"business administration\" at \\ ictoria, f teamsters, and the strong men and tiie other mem-\nother w,th deadly weapons, the most murderous everl^nen Sir Richard and Mr. Bowser were hitting the bers of the bombers brigade All laughed heartily\nknown we can still KFEP CHRISTMAS \"'g'1 spots w people s money, Ihe voice of Mr. and there was temporary relief from the expressive\n\"Man never IS but alwavs TO BE blest \" I Flumerfelt was not raised in protest. Possibly it language which is always in order in the time of\nwas because Mr. Flumerfelt was, in those halycon moving,\ndays in with the big fellows gobbling up a goodly * * *\nshare of the natural resouces of this Province. It Here is the letter:\nThe man who falls in the water must continue to | was Mr- Flumerfelt and men of his ilk who came out \"Am glad to see that you have hewn your way\ntruggle or he will SINK! Keep Christmas andjvv,nners d\"r'n8 the Pff ^ of the McBndc-Bow-; out of the Reeve belt and emerged to the broader\nser era. The price of their winning was the impov- field where you belong.\neris'hment of the great mass ol the people of the Pro-i \"I have been expecting this for quite a while\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nvince. j and told Ccl. Porter so\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdbecause it was obvious\nThe Hon. Thomas Taylor is taken from the De- j that tHejCI IINOOK had become a power on the\nservative orator takes trouble to point out that Lib- ^ . _ ^^\neralism is rent in many pieces because \"Brewster's a' A RE we to really believe that the present reign\nleader, Ralph Smith's a leader, Macdonald, Joe J-^ of horrors in Europe is \"the darken hour that\nMartin and John Oliver are leaders.\" comes before the dawn?\"\nPermit the editor of this journal to also subscribe May we hope that the nations of the earth will\nhimself as a leader of the Liberal party! one day- and *at\ufffd\ufffdy \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* ^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^ wake up from the\n, ,',, , ,, ,-i ., \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,i , .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd (j nightmare ot murder and rapine and realize that on y\nIn the true, old Liberal parly there are no fol- ..,-, _ , ^ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd f\n. v.'.:'.\"' ' . reace on Earth and Goodwill among Men is\non\"',s' compatible with existence in comfort, happiness.\nWe are all leaders. 7hat awakening seems a jong way 0ff.\nThe Liberal party allows its members to do their | [\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd js Christmas time. Christian nations are at each\nown thinking in their own way. others throats. There can be, there must be NO. , , ,,\nWe are all leaders in the Liberal party. We suf- REST until the issue is decided. Are we to hark | doub\";diy, bettel\nfer no party chain; we endure no party lash. j back to the days of brutal might or shall National\nAny man who believes in giving to others all that Liberty give way to despot militarism thai enslaves\nhe claims for himself is a Liberal at heart, regardless ( body and kills soul?\nof his nominal party affiliations. \\ Yet\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwilh Christian nations slaughtering each\nEvery citizen should belong to a political party.\nThe men who fold their hands sanctimoniously and, __.__,.,\nan never lb but always 1 O BE blest.\nIt is only by keeping in ourso uls lofty aspirations\nthat we can keep from sinking back to the brutality\nof the primitive cave man of the stone age\nthe New Year as a time of cheerlul festival, a time\nof love, a time of hope. Lillte children on the\n.... threshold of life need not have the gnstlev hand of\nAre we to understand that already John | D\ufffd\ufffdATH thrust into their notice. The holly of the\nbrioht hedge-row, net the sombre yew of the church- i partment of Public Works, the department where, coast. The way you handle political' matters and\n'tlie machine has its base, and is placed at the head ; political four-flushers is just right, because in draw-\n* the Department of Education! Here is a busi-jin\ufffd\ufffd attention to an opponent's misdeeds you are big\nyard is for them. Do not hang the Christmas tree\nwith crepe. All too soon they will know their losses.\nYet let hot- \"Absent Friends\" be out of your mind.\nI-f \"Somewhere in France\" or Flanders, cr by the\nness man after whom the pupils of lhe public schools, 'enough to give him credit for such good deeds as he\nhigh schools and the Provincial University may ma>' have inadvertently performed. I noticed this\ndistant Dardanelles, think of them as they think of shape their lives. The boys and the young men may ! ir> a recent article on the unspeakable Bowser.\ny0U\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdas only away for a while \"on duty\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwhich shape their personal habits after those of Mr. Tay- \"In the issue previous to this one I also noticed\nwhen done will be followed by a joyful rc-union. lor. Then the generation of the future Bntish Col-j 'hat you had ME engaged to be married. ***** *\nAnd if there is an \"empty chair\" never to be filled umbia will be a generation of business men capable; I have been seriously'thinking of taking the plunge,\nby a loved one* again, let your imagination fill it with of forming a Business administration. j but just now in Alberta there is an epidemic of mur-\na spiritual figure, of one who went by sacrifice along j Forthwith Sir Richard is sent to London as the ;ders wherein husbands are either shot or chopped to\nthe path of glory and won the hero's immortality! \\ business agent of our new business administration! .. , pieces with an axe\nGod is still'in-His Heaven, and though we cannot I 3 ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *'i\nsay \"All's Well, with the .World\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwe can fervent-1\nly HOPE, that dawn will follow darkness. We can i LAND SETTLEMENT IN B. C. .\nsay\nBrothers, step forth in the future's van,\nThe night SHALL pass.\nRight will conquer\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdat last\nAnd a better day da^ on suffering man.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdX\n\ufffd\ufffd\nS\nO loryr as settlers in British Columbia have, to\nput up with conditions worse than those encountered .tiy Robinson Crusoe, food production in Brijtish Columbia may be expected.tp fall,off.\n\"The following stoty of hardships suffered -by a\nBfitish'CbJurftpik rancher ih the-course .6f his re^ulkV\n:fi?}<\/iHi ,.-*'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-.li.'iV-. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd: ._ .1- . \ufffd\ufffdl '., i. : !.. .; ({it I. :,-.., :, i;\n\"Ever unreasonable, the wives,object to.infidelijty\non the part of their husbands,.' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd> \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd> >. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\"It is too ridiculous for worels. 'Theyate always\nexpecting too much. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' '*'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"'.'\" '\"*'_'\n\"As soon as this unfortunate $pic)emic subsides; I\nshall issue cards.,,, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-, ,k ;,v..,-i -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. .....\ufffd\ufffd, * > \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>\ufffd\ufffd.*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd!\n.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \"In>the meantime *!\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd&\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*$ * *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*-.\ufffd\ufffd Merry (Bferirt-\nmas and c\ufffd\ufffdntiiwe*d.!firv\ufffd\ufffdpe'\"nty to the'Ghftittok:\" ''J'\n.,:.-. *,,..*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, i. -^iSirtl^y-'y'dirfi;' ;**'\"';',, -: ^s\"'\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd :,:''-^--:;>:U>^rW^.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd<.;,u \ufffd\ufffdii *mi ivi* i.''t*\ufffd\ufffd<' \ufffd\ufffdM(J \ufffd\ufffd*fc>ni
--\ufffd\ufffd \t\nTHE FOOL FOR LUCK\nit\nTHE DEVIL'S COUNCIL\nOnce, according to an oidj legend, there was a council\ncalled in hell. The Devil was much concerned over a new\nkind of creature called Man with whom God was populating the Earth. As it was his chief aim in life to oppose\nand undo thc works of God, he was now casting about to\nfind the best way to ruin Man.\nHis seven head imps were therefore summoned, and he\ninquired of tlielri who would undertake to destroy this\nrace of human beings.\nI ' First came Anger, red-faced and fire-eyed, and offered\n' himself. \"Let em go,\" he said, \" to Earth and I wilt\ndestroy Men quickly. -1 will set brother against brother,\nt magnify trifles to serious quarrels. Hate and violence will\nsoon bring murder in the house and war in the' fields. So\nshall tlie race be extinguished.\"\nThen up spoke Lust. \"Rather send me,\" lie argued. \"I\nwill defile their minds \ufffd\ufffdnd bring disease to their bodies. J\n.lev:' :- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nThc Fool and the Wise Man passed the blacksmith shop\na block apart.\nThe Fool saw the horschoe in the road and whistled two,\nlines of the ditty ancnt what may happen if \"you pick up\nin the road a horse's shoe.\" But he was the Fool; he didn't\npick it up.\nThc Wise Man was of an acquisitive turn, anyhow. lie\n| picked up the horseshoe, took it home and hung it over\nthe arched gate to the front yard.\nThe Fool owed the Wise Man $10. That evening be\ncame to say he couldn't pay. When he opened the gate he\njarred the shoe, which fell and struck him on the head.\nHe went straight to the doctor. The Wise Man chuckled:\n\"Now I'll get that side-bar buggy that secures the loan\nof that ten.\"\nHut the garrulous Fool told his troubles to a hungry\nlawyer, who forced the Wise Man to see that it would pay\nhim to settle out of court for $25. Ten of this went to the\nlawyer, five to the doctor and the Fool rode in his sidebar buggy to pay the remaining ten over to the Wise Man\nin settlement of his debt.\nMoral: This isn't a moral subject.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdKansas City Star.\nMUNICIPAL GOVERNMENT\nIn 1882 at the semi-centennial celebration of the incorporation of Buffalo as a city. Mayor Grover Cleveland,\nafterwards president of the United States, said to a distinguished gathering of citizens: \"Brick and mortar may make\na targe eity, but tlie encouragement of those things that\nelevate and purify, tlie exaction of the highest, standard of\nintegrity in official place and a constant'activc interest, on\ntht part* of the good people are needed .to make a great\ncity.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWinnipeg Farmers' Tribune.\nATTENTION!\nThe Saturday Chinook\nHas Moved Its Premises\nVANCOUVER'S PREMIER PRINTERY MAY NOW BE\nFOUND IN THE CENTRE OF THE CITY AT\n426 Homer Street\nWHERE WE HAVE TAKEN OVER AN ENTIRE\nOFFICE BUILDING\nTHE SATURDAY CHINOOK\nwill henceforth be published at\nthe address mentioned, in the\nbuilding formerly occupied by the\nVancouver \"World.\"\n*\nWE NOW BRING TO THE DOORS OF THE VANCOUVER\nCOMMERCIAL WORLD THE BEST PRINTING OFFICE\nON THE PACIFIC COAST\nHERE ARE SOME CHINOOK PRINTING CUSTOMERS\nWHO BEAT A PATH TO OUR DOORS WHEN WE\nWERE LOCATED AWAY OUT IN SOUTH VANCOUVER. WE SERVED THEM WELL IN THE PAST AND\nRETAIN THEIR PATRONAGE \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd AND CONFIDENCE\nB. C. E. R. Company\nVancouver Province\nMerchants' Bank of Canada\nUnion Bank of Canada\nPeople's Prohibition Movement\nHenry Birks & Co.\nClubb & Stewart\nCrehan, Martin & Co.\nMartin, Craig & Anderson\nCampbell & Singer\nD. G. Campbell\nMatheson & Carter\nCoast Lumber and Fuel Co.\nDominion Creosoting Co.\nS. T. Wallace\nShelley Brothers\nHampton & Pinchin\nMackenzie, Mann, Limited\nCampbell Storage Company\nLeckie & Co.\nJohnston Brothers\nMcNeill, Welsh & Wilson.\nMacdonald, Marpole Limited\nAlaska Bedding Co.\nBoard of School Trustees\nD. E. Brown, Hope and Macaulay\nBurnaby Municipality\nDeither Coal Company\nIrish Linen Stores\nLinde Canadian Refrigerator Co.\nMaple Leaf Dairy\nTurner's Dairy\nMcDougal & Cowans\n>\nNew Phone: Seymour 470 SATI-KIMY. DKCKMHI'.k 25; l'\ufffd\ufffdl?\nSATURDAY CHINOOK\ni UKr.ii\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd liose \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ii has nol brightened -in\nthi centuries sinci the First Crii\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdade\nllenrv iv.r.l may be a philosopher,\n.y l,e a fanatic. Such men al-\nfined peace plan. But, to have faith in\nhim in such a project, one must absolutely renounce the idea\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcontrary\nto the general opinion concerning the\nleopard and hi* sput\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtliat Mr. Kurd\nlias any plan of self-advertising.\n=ra\nve spread and enveloped in-\nand nations like German\nrases,\nBond Investments\nThose having funds available will find mr list ..i Municipal\nSecurities a guide tu sale investment, We offer a variety of\nthoroughly safe-guarded bund issues sold to net 0'.- per cent, to\n7 1-8, being a charge oh all properties within each ri spectivc municipality, Consult our Hond Dcpt. by mail or in person.\nCanadian Financiers Trust Company\nHead Office: ' 839 Hastings Street West. Vancouver, E. C.\n....... P. Donnelly. General Manager,\nJ .Im Brown's bod) In- a mould' I wai i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ha\nring in iln gra,, j dividuals\ni i in Brown's bodj lies a mould' trench\nri*\"8 in thi grave, Metaphysicians sa) there are ps) I\nJ\"1\"' Brown's body lies a mould\" chic planes and currents which pas.-1\nring in the mine j aiming small groups of men, then to\nI'ni his soul goes marching on! j larger groups, (hen to'states, then to\nnations, and then around the world.\nSomehow. I cannol help thinking that] \"The guns of the'Sumtcr bombard-jj\nthere was more than a metaphor in this ineiil woke ihe country from the poli-\nold -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd iii. and thai John Drown, fana I tical nightmare whicfl had su long tor\ntical .vas, and obsessed as he was merited and paralyzed it. The li\"ii oi\nwith fulfilling an impossible self-im the North was fully aroused. Betray-\nCut Freight Rates -w\nHousehold Goods packed and shipped to all parts of the world at a savin? to\nyou of from' 25'; to 45'\/', owing to our improved method of parking and\nsuperior shipping facilities. For \"Fireproof\" Storage, Removals in \"Car\nVans,\" High Grade Packing, or Shipping at \"Cut Rates,\" see us \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd prompt\nreliable, and courteous service.\n\"WE KNOW HOW\"\nCampbell Storage Company\nOldest and Largest in Western Canada\nPhone: Seymour 7360 Office: 857 BEATTY ST.\nposed las] . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd hicli he sincerely believed\nhe was called upon b) God to perform\nsialic' a -ciitiineiit which became a ps-'\nychol gie wave, speeding from town\nIn l iwn. state to state, until the N'ortli\nwas afire. When natii :.- go mad the)\ngo mad l.y herds, bul men recover\ntheir -.-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ses one by one. \\nd lhe mad\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ue-- ol nations comes through those\nlittle known psychologic conditions,\nonce ih .tight to be Black M\niii-u scientifically considered as coexistent with ihe natural laws governing\ntl e :nman mind.\nWe have had these psychologic\nwaves iu the past, and we have them\nt -day. Millions of people have becume\nasm' v:\nii,i\ufffd\ufffdi|i:i.,'ii\niniultaneously impressed with one del l'\"''1.'Imt. his soul went marching oh\nj lusion, and they have rushed madly ,,n-j from tlie spluttering gunpowder trail\nward, intent on its fructification. al Harper's Perry lill it ignited the\nI There were the Crusades for the re-1 N <\ufffd\ufffdW<\"< \"f a \ufffd\ufffd1'\"1'-* \"riti,m-\n1 every, of the Sepulchre of Christ, ' The'y call this sort of thing the mind\nI which drove all Europe into a frenzy; | \"f thVm'ob, and the mind of the mob\nthere was the universal fear uf the De-1 may cause a local lynching or a na-\nI s. il. which resulted in the sacrifice of tional uprising. Scientifically, it is\nJ.imdreds of thousands of victims to the known as social psychology.\nI delusion of witchcraft: there was the 1 Is For(j Switching On the Current, Or\ni!il!!!l':<,:;,'!:!!!i:i!ll!l|ill!!l!l!lll\ufffd\ufffdr 111 I llillllllill\nThe Telephone Will\nTake You Quickly\nThe telephone is the short cut. It will take you anywhere, in a moment.\nWhether the objective point is in town, in the province,\nor anywhere along the coast, it's all the same.\nphilosopher's stone, which it was earnestly believed would prolong life\nand produce gold; there was the poisoning mania which led gentle women\nof high birth into a contagion of inur- i\ntier: there were tlie child pilgrimages,\nthe flagellant epidemic, the dancing\nmania, the great religious revivals in\nIs He a Peter the Hermit?\nWhy do groups of men lynch other\nmen?\nWhy do soldiers become panic-\nstricken? Why do men sign the |\npledge ?\nWhv do men. women and children I\n\\merica in 18C0, 1X30, 1858, and in the enter into a state of religious ecstasy\n-\nEvery telephone is a long distance telephone, and one\nplace is as near as another.\n1\nDay or night, any kind of weather, the telephone is\nalways in service.\nB.C. TELEPHONE CO. LTD.\nlillHIIIIIIIlB\npresent year, and there were the women's temperance crusade, started in\nOhio in'-1873. and the tulip mania back\nin 1634, when Dutchmen sold their\nhouses for a single bulb; there was\nthe Mississippi scheme; there were\nthe South Sea bubble, the \"Ho for\nTexas\" cry. the California fever, and\nthe Klondike rush for riches, and ill\nour own time, there have been the\nfrightful Russian programs,\nThese are some of the delusions of\nthe past'. Some of them have gone\noil for generations\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdas dueling; others\nhave blown by, as the winds, and have\nbeen forgotten.\nToday we have Ford and his peace\nship.\nPsychic Planes and Currents That\nMake up the Mind of the Mob\nEvery man has his fetish. Some\nmay be only an uncntrollahlc desire to\nhave it in milder form than \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .fliers. 11\nmay he to possess first editions of\nrare books, or to own the fastest\nhorse, or the highest bred dog. or the\nsmartest cat, or a $100,001 hen. or the\nsweetest blooming ruse, or\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdit may\ngo further\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdand culminate in incendiarism or homicide.\nFrom l'eter the Hermit, creator of\nbrain storms; John Law. juggler of\nfinance; Alberlus Magnus, Thomas\nAquinas, Raymond Lulli. Cornelius A-\ngrippa, Varasclsus. Dr. Dec and the\nrest of the alchemists and magic\nworkers; Mother Shipton, Winston,\nMerlin and thc rest of thc soothsayers; Matthew Hopkins, the Witch-finder General, and King James, detnon-\nologist and great enemy of thc devil;\nMrs. Carrie Nation. Kansan saloon-\nsmasher\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfrom all these and others\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffddown to Henry Ford, the psychic\nUnderground Telephone Construction on Seymour Street in front of the new\nHudson's Bay Building\nPhone Seymour 9086\nIs Your Home\nInsured ?\nWe writeCEire Insurance in\nGood Companies\nFRASER\nTRUST CO.\nr\\22 Hastings Street West,\nMAPLE LEAF DAIRY\nPURE PASTURIZED MILK\nWe are Milk and Butter Specialists\n-\ned, insulted, outraged, the free state\nat ise as with a cry of pain and vengeance. War Bern* ins from pulpit-;\nwar speeches in every asesmhlagc;\ntenders of troops; offers of money;\nmilitary proclamations and orders in j-\nevery newspaper [every city radiant!\nwith bunting; every village green a\nmustering ground. . . . parades, drum.-.\nflags and bay.nets in the streets.;\nbut I knitting ..bandage rolling and line\n.es- scrapping in nearly every household,\"\n-aid ' N'ir-ulay and Hay, and. if you\nctosely read your history Of the world\nyou will find each great epoch marked by suine small individual beginning. John Brown might have been a\nA. Tommason Mgr*. Phone Bay. 1417\n1935 -2nd AVE. WEST\nA phone call will have prompt attention\nat revival meetings?\nBecause the psychic wave reache\nthem. It arrives out of an interplay of I\nminds. .Most of lis like to imagine\nih'at we are original and are going\nour own pace along a-path that we |\nhave selected for ourselves, but few\nuf us \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd probably none of us in all I\nthings\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdabsolutely act in an individual\ncapacity; for wc are influenced more\nor less\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdgenerally more\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdby the ideas\nof others, and fresuently, the closer\nwc are to a subject the less independence uf thought we have on that |\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdt.\nCooley says:\n\"The more thoroughly American a\nman is the less he can perceive Americanism. Ile will embody it; all hei\ndoes, says or writes will be full of it; |\nbut he can never truly see it, simply\nbecause he has no exterior point of 1\nview from which to look at it.\"\nThere are many men who think\nthey make up iheir own minds, whereas i\ufffd\ufffd is generally some masterful associate who makes up a man's mind!\nfor him. >\nAre we nol all led by these ni's-j\nrteious psychic waves?\nIs Henry Ford cognizant of them?\nIs he sailing forth without mental\nchart ur compass into an unknown\nsea. seeking an intagnible peace, obsessed by the idea tliat somehow this\nis the psychologic moment to start\nthe psychic waves in telepathic motion, floating from trench to trench,\nfrom war-mad Germans, Austrians. j\nHungarians. Turks. Russians. Serbians\/Frenchmen, Englishmen, I tali- j\nans and Montenegrins, and. by the ]\n.\nLady Van\nWill Write for\nSaturday Chinook\nPOPULAR VANCOUVER WRITER\nWILL CONTRIBUTE, WEEKLY. A\nPAGE FOR MEN AND WOMEN\nTo the Readers of the\nSATURDAY CHINOOK:\nWe wish to announce that we have been\nsuccessful in securing the assistance of Lady\nVan in introducing changes in this journal\nwhich will, we trust, make it more interesting than ever.\nLady Van (Ethel Cody Stoddart) is\nknown from coast to coast, and is one of the\ncleverest women in Canadian journalism.\nHer stories appear regularly in Eastern\nmagazines and she has been for years a contributor to local publications.\nLady Van's writings will interest men and\nwomen of all classes and ^conditions. Her\npage will be a feature to lpok forward to\nfrom week to week. Few women know tlie\nProvince of British Columbia as intimately\nas Lady Van, and few women are as well\nknown. , '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nTHE PUBLISHERS. FOUR\nSATURDAY CHINOOK\nSATURDAY, UK.CRMP.ER 25, 1915\nI\nlii\nm\nV\nWhat It Is, and How To Get It \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Some New Thoughts on the Dear Old Day\nA POLICE COURT DEFENDER\nAS WELL AS A PROSECUTOR!\n' down for thc Struggling workinginai\nI in the police cuurts would make as\nrlllS\nTrades and Labor\nappointment of a\nleiender for the local police\nThe Vancouver\nCouncil urge the\nBy H. SHERIDAN BICKERS, L.L.B.\n(\"Yorick\")\nDo you want to feci Yulcvolent?\nHave you got the true spirit of old\nfather Christmas\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthat dear old guardian of fun and loving kindness, who\nbeams with the happiness he lives to\ncreate? His is more than magnanimity. It is Yuleanimityl It is the\nspirit of Yulevolonce!\nLet us all this memorable Christ-\nmastide be Yulanimous, Yuleficent\nand Yulcvolent. Otherwise wc shall\ndeserve- to be despised aV Christmas\ncurmudgeons..\nThe Christmas Curmudgeon\nAre you a Christmas Curmudgeon?\nIf so, you are right out of season. The\ncurmudgeon\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdlike Toussaint L'Ourer-\nturc, is the most unhappy man of men.\nTie has a full purse but an empty\nheart.\nFather Christmas is very hard on\nthe poor old curmudgeon, lie cuts\nholes in bis pockets. He makes his\nmoney run out at the heels of bis\nboots, lie drags him into toy shops\nand forces him to buy expensive toys\nfor his little nephews and nieces\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nyea, even unto his own children. He\nknows that the more Mr. Scrooge\nspends the more miserable he becomes. He is generous without joy,\nbeneficient without being benevolent.\nHis old heart is like a bundle of dried\nup sticks\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwet with thc tears of lost\nhopes and disappointments\ufffd\ufffd\ufffddry sticks\nthat will crackle but will never glow.\nHis heart is like a dried up pea, his\nbrain like an addled egg. and bis conscience like all over-ripe Camembert\ncheese. Ile is green with the jealousy\nof joyousness. All the year round\nhe boasts that he can keep children\nin their place, just as his wife\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdif he\nhas one\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdkeeps him in bis. Hut\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nwhen Christmas conies round, the\nchildren overwhelm him.\nChristmas Childmasl\nChristmas is Childmasl The tyranny and seriousness of life are for a\nwhile suspended. Thc fetters of thc\nsoul are shaken off; the gags of convention taken out of our mouths.\nFrom a hundred thousand schools,\nour boys and girls come laughing and\nleaping.\nLet us at least laugh, if we can no\nlunger leap with them. Cannot our\neyes be bright with hope? May not\nonr old hearts bound with anticipation?\nWho will not glow with Yulcvol-\nence when one sees those jolly regiments of boy and girl scouts marching\ngaily along with flags flying through\npur wondrous west? They are blowing tin trumpets and beating toy\ndrums. So do wc! We staid old\ngrown-ups. Yes! but we do these\nthings for self-advertisement and\nself-advancement.\nKeep on Laughing\nLet us this war-clouded Christinas\nlearn at least one lesson from the\nyoung. Let us learn to keep on\nlaughing! If only we could be filled\nwith a sense' of our own ridiculousness! If only we could see the clown\nin the clergyman, wc should respect\nhint just as much and like him a\nwhole heap more. If only we could\nsee, the pantaloon in the party politician! I low we should poke fun at\nthe preposterous old fellow with pokers of plain-speaking and plain thinking. If only tliat consumptive-snulcd\ncrusader against her fallen but God-\ncreated sisters could be \"converted\"\ninto a columbine! She would be no\nworse a woman and a much happier\nand more helpful citizen.\nThe\nForces\nof\nFairyland\nBut\nhere come\nthc\nchildren\nnf\nour\ndear\nold\nworld.\nTh\ney have\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdbri\nken\nout of sorrow's jail, and arc moving\nin long, lithe and glittering columns\nto the conquest of Toyland and Can-\ndytand.\nThey are thc forces of Fairyland,\nwith Father Christinas as their Commander-in-Chief. He is cracking jokes\nwith his young field marshals and\nbaby brigadiers, with his rollicking\ncolonels, his merry majors and his\ncreeping captains! Listen to that\ntoddling trumpeter sounding thc Reveille! God bless yon, little trumpeter! May you go bravely on through\nlife sounding the call to arms fearlessly\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdsmiling through thc strife,\nready never to revile but always to\n\"reveille\" the fallen in life's battle.\nGod bless you, old boy, and make you\nacquit yourself in all things like a\nMAN!\nThe Christinas curmudgeon bears\nthe tramp of tbis happy host. His\nspirit sinks. He curses. He flies to\nCalifornia. Monte Carlo or Chicago,\nand is there \"plucked\" cleaner than\nthe turkey he- forgot to send to his\npoor relations.\nHow to be Happy s\nLet us this Christinas not rob our\ncity's children of the joy of games.\nSuperior to the child. Wc arc only\na little nearer death.\nll does the kiddies good to play\nwilh us, but how much more good\ndoes it ilo us to play with them, ll\nrevives latent youth we have left in\nus. It starts the withered pulse of\nwonder throbbing again in our stodgy\nSold minds.\nIt teads lis-back to our belief in\nmiracles.\nThe Kiddies Christmas\nIt is hard to amuse you, but how\neasy it is to delight a child.\nThere are many children in Vancouver tbis year who face the coming\nof Christmas with little or no prospect of delight. Seek these out. It\nis to YOU that their little arms\nstretch out in mute appeal, to your\ngood nature must they look for joy.\nSonic have no parents. Others have\nno presents.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtheir \"Daddy\" or\n\"Mummy' can scarcely keep body and.\nsoul together. They have little or no j\nmoney for food, let alone for games |\nor toys.\nThe Christ Thought\nWill you celebrate this Christmas\nby enabling some one else to celebrate it too? No one is so rich as I\nthose who help the poor. None so'\nhappy as are those who make others\nHow fast do our own childhood's\ngames fade from our memory. The happy.\nmodern father and mother do not Don't be content with sending some\nplay with their children. They know I institution toys or money from the\nlittle of nursery rhymes and less of' plentitude of your happy\nnursery games. Let it not be enough'out this Christmas Eve\nfor vou good folk to fill your\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdor hour. Ring up one of the City's mis-\nvour friend's \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd kiddies' Christmas sions and thc Churches' charitable in-\nstockings with dolls and toys ami |Stitutions, or scour the highways and\nwooly bears. More precious to bur,byways of our city, until\nkiddies than all these is the human |\ntoy. A real mother with real hair 1\nand a real father with real whisker\nare much more fun than a gollywog\npubli\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdourt.\nBefore the resolution to ibis effect\nwas passed, a spirited debate look\nplace on the floor of the council.\nA local mail who is deeply interest\ned in reform work, but whose name\nis little mentioned in the press, gave\nthe SATURDAY CHINOOK the\nfollowing statement supporting the\nplan to have the city employ a man to\ndefend as well as a man to prosecute\nthe unfortunates who pass from day\nto day through the local criminal\ncourts: : r-\nWHAT'S THE USE?\n\"What in heaven's name is the use\nof sending a man to jail who ought to\nbe with hia family? What the use of\ngiving a man a bad name when a good\nword will set him right?''\nThere's no use following the old.\nmethod, but we've been a long time\nfinding it out. Sending a man to\njail is a poor way to take care of thc\nman's family, but it's the way we've\ntaken for ages.\nGiving a man a bad name instead\nof offering him the good word his\nheart is aching for to hear is wasteful, but it was easier, we thought,\nthan the right way. , The strange\nthing about these matters Is that tbe\nwrong way always seems the easier.\nSending a man to jail instead of\ni sending him to his family is a relic\nof the old belief, now about worn out)\nin the dual nature of man\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthc good\nand the bad\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthat all men have two\ndistinct natures, one struggling to do\n;iy failures themselves under the\nsame conditions.\n\"Men are alright.\nthem predominates;\nthe social atmosphere\nThe good * in\nHut the evil iu\nall around them\nhome,\nif but (o\nor a monkey! Try you funny old.,child\nthings to get rid of your fearful sense\nof superiority. The man is md really\nyou\nlonely or longing little\nj whose poor father and mother\nnot\" or ''can not!\"-\n' I I lave compassion\nchildless doll and\nfind\nsoul\n'are\ndear folk, on the\nin the doll-less\nGET THE SENSIBLE GIFTS AT\nTHE IRISH LINEN STORES\nHelp fill two empty little arms | ..\nand some hungry little body. Help lo\nmake happy some lonely little heart!\nPerhaps then, you will he rewarded\noil Christmas Night with a veavenly\n! vision of a sleeping angel vv ith a\n\"two-hit\" infant clasped to her pas-\n'sionatc breast. Then you will\n! deed, have had\nA HAPPY CHRISTMAS!\nni-\ng I. the other fighting to do evil.\n\"That, somehow, the bad is always\nstronger than thc good and overcomes\nit. That the bad nature can be overthrown only by severe and painful\npunishments which drive out the\nevil in men and allow the good to assert itself and hold sway.\n\"Men have only one nature, and\nthat is naturally good. If il doesn't\nshow as much as it should, it is because the good in men has been attacked by forces against which it is\nnot strong enough* to hold out. The\ntbe wrong, the bad. is not in men,\nhut in the circumstances all around\n(them, against which tbe good iu them\n, is struggling.,\n\"It is as impossible for hienl-surrounded by influences which cannot\nbe successfully resisted to remain\n50 out ill a\ntheir cloth-\nis stronger than their powers of resistance. Change thai and the men\nvvill look better.\n\"We've had ihc carl in front of tlie\nhorse all the time, but now that we're\ncoming to see the failure to progress\nthere shouldn't bc any loss of time or\ntrouble to get the social horse in\nfront.\n\"Give men a fair chance to be good\nand they will be good. We shall not\nneed to sepnd so much for punishing:\nthem or 'reforming' them.\n..\"A good way to begin is to stop-\nsending men to jail for trifling acts\nwhen their families need them. Their\nwe shouldn't waste their lives at one\npoint and their families at another.\n\"And we shouldn't look so foolish\nwhile we're \"doing\" it, either.''\n \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 1\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 1\t\nPure Milk Dairy Co.\nThrough an error, the advertisement of the Pure Milk Dairy Co. in\nour paper last week was made to read\ntwelve quarts for one dollar, when it\nshould have been eleven quarts for\none dollar.\nTRUSTEE A. A. BROOn.a\ufffd\ufffdjUSF.\nTO THE ELECTORS OF\nWARD VI\nIt Was the First Time\nMEN'S HANDKERCHIEFS\nPURE LINEN HANDKER-\nAt,\nCHIEFS\na dozen .\nA fine one at.\na dozen \t\nJ.\n$1.00\n$1.50\nWe have several Is i nils\" iu fancy\ngift hoses. Each contains six\nHANDKERCHIEFS\n$1.00, $1.50. $1.75,\n$2.50\nEMBROIDERED IIANDKER-\n60c\nCHIEFS that will be\ncleared out. at. dozen\n-FINE EMU ROTDERF.D\nHA-NDKERCHl-EFSi -in hose's\nof six each for gifts can be had\nat box, 75c, $1.00,\n$1.25 and \t\n$2.50\nBABY PI ELOtV*?,CASES,\nhand embroidered pure Irish\nlinen. Special,\nat _;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nMADElRA\"f\"*tLL'6\\V CASES, beautifully embroidered.\nSpecial\nper pair ;.,\nEMBROIDERED LINEN-\nLUNCH SETS, 25 pieces.\nUsual $10.50. \ufffd\ufffdg CQ\nSpecial, the set . \ufffd\ufffdP\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdM\/\nf. dozen only. POINT VENICE 200 HAND EM1.SKOI DE RI'.D-\nI.ADIES' HANDKERCHIEFS TEA APRONS that sold regu-\nTo dcai at. OKf larly for *''25' *1,5\ufffd\ufffd :\"\"' ^\"*\neach each. Choice of tbe lot. ^g^.\neach \t\nWc will clear out half our stock Kl EA'CHgD DAMASK T V\n,,f EMBROIDERED PILLOW ^'. NAPKtKS He.nmed\n^SrlfeOO an! ready to use. J J gA\nPer dozen T\n500 pairs of very line PILLOW \\:\\s\\\\ NOTTINGHAM LACK\nSLIPS that sell regularly at (J-JRTAINS. In neat and pretty\n$1.25, to clear, at. 7C\/, designs; woven edges -and fin-\n-, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.,lr I *J\\f _-i%-\n'' ,,'\"r \".' 'shed around the top. ftfe\nPer pair \t\n$1.5(1 PURE IRISH LINEN\nGUEST TOWELS-Balance of $4.50 TABLE CLOTH.\nthis week'for. 7,- 2 x 2 yards. $3.00\npair 'OC for T \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nta* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.' ,. ins \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd 50 TABLE CLOTH.\n10O DOZ. LINEN HUCK ?5-**'-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*- *0pA\nTOWELS-l'ine pure Irish Un- 2 % H^y^^- $3*59\nen. 22 x 40 inches, and of the for \t\nfinest quality\" we have'in the SETS\nstore. Regular $2.00 J|* OC TABLE CLOTH. 2 x 2 yarji,\npair'for \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"*. f 7 and 6 napkins to t^ A\nmatch, for -T f\nOne lot of '200 dozen HAND- *\"** I -\nEMBROIDERED BUREAU TABLECLOTH. Finer than\nSCARFS. OC the above, same size #|J tfk\nEach \"MC C|0th, etc **'''\"\nJones was a past master of the\nhabit of carelessness. lie dropped\nthings around in any old place and\nafterwards never remembered where\nthat place was. One night he rose\nfrom bed to get some medicine and\nswallowed bis collar button 111 mistaVe\nfor a cough drop,\n! \"Mary,\" said he to his wife when\nthe awful truth dawned upon him, \"1\nhave swallowed niy collar button.\"\nj \"That's all right,\" responded wife\nin a tone of evident satisfaction.\n\"There's nothing to worry about.\"\n\"Nothing to worry about?\" returned father. \"Do you\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\n\"That's what I said.\" interrupted\nlittle wifey. \"For once in your life\nyou know where you've put it.\"\nsuccessfully resisted\ngood as it is for men to\ntorrent of rain and keep\ning dry. But the fault is not in the\nmen. It is in the circumstances surrounding them which are stronger\nthan themselves.\n\"The thing we ought to have seen\nlong ago is that the way to shut out\nwhat we cal the evil in men, the bad\nnature, is to change the circumstances against which they are spending\ntheir lives in resistance. Give men a\nchance and they will respond. Keep\nthem ifghting against .untoward conditions and they will drop every now\nand (hen. the good temporarily checked, the had apparently in control.\n\"Society sets up ajl endless string\nof social hurdles and obstacles deliberately intended to prevent the\nprogress of thc social runners and\nthen when they fail to go over tbe\nhurdles and obstacles, society brands\nthem as bad and evil and unfit. .The\nsame society which turns thumbs\nLADIES \"AND GENTLEMEN:\nIn offering ir\/yself as a Candidal*\nfnr Councillor of Ward VI, I woul\nCall attention to tlie critical period\ntliat Hurnaby. as well as every other\nmunicipality, is going through. I\never there was a time when the selec\ntion of your administration require\ncareful consideration, that time i-\nnow. My experience ill school affair-\nduring the past year will be of consid\narable assistance, and if you feci\nam worthy of your support. I cai\ntruthfully promise that my sole ei\ndeavpr will be to serve you faitbfull\nhonestly and without fear or favori\nism. I am. and always have be .\na strong supporter of the policy 1-\nlaid down by our present Reeve a- I\nwill, if elected, endeavor to suppo 1\nthat policy, so that not only can Bu\nnaby hold its own with the surrouu\ning municipalities, but take the lea\ning place. 1 have no \"full dinu-\npail\" or other promises to make. 1\ufffd\ufffd\ncan only say that if elected my polii\nwill bc \"Hurnaby first, last and a\nthe time.'\nSincerely yours,\nA. A. BROOKHOUSI\nTHE NEW B.C. CABINET\n- The Irish Linen Stores\nEMBROIDERED HANDKERCHIEFS, in boxes of .1\neach.\nPer box\n65c \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 75c\nT. E. LEIGH.\nLADIES' LINEN\nKERCHIEFS.\nPer dozen \t\n532 GRANVILLE STREET\nGOVERNMENT STREET, VICTORIA.\nWiliam J. Bowser, our premier now, sir,\nHas won the position he stormed, - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd**.'\nWith his cabinet six he'll be up to all tricks\nThough he claims he's already reformed.\n\"To business then, as good Hon'rablc men.\"\nIs now the main watchword and cry;\nThough the new broom be clean, it's the same\nold machine,\nOld habits will show by-and-bye.\n\"Lorny Campbell to Mines, he must aid my\ndesigns,\nTo chase all the whites from the pits,\nWe have Chinks underground, digging coal by\nthe pound.\nAnd we made some concessions to Fritz.\n\"Flumerfelt to Finace, to old music must dance,\nWe borrow and salaries pay;\nA million and quarter, it seldom grows shorter.\nMy friends get the jobs that I say.\n\"Charlie Tisdall, Vancouver, may be some improver,\nHe's been a most true rubber-stamp;\nPublic works need a man, you can read as you\nscan,\nWhose tools will bring trade to our camp.\nVancouver, Dec. 17, 1915.\n\"Billy Ross still in Lands, it's in capable hands;\nHis record Columbians know; **\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ' j\nThe grabbing and stealing is past all concealing,\nYou hear it wherever you go.\n\"Tfftmiais Taylor,'Education,\"imiist hin^'gone in\nliquidation,\nHe's surely the equal of .Yqung;\nAs state secreka^y he's heavy to carry.\nHe'll savvy as well as Fong Wung.\n\"Billy Manson, of course, is our Rupert war-\nhorse, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' ** ' -'**\nHe'll sit iii the chair and look wise;\nWith the key in my hand, they will all understand\nWhen I go from the table they rise.\n\"I'm attorney for years, and it surely appears\nI am pretty well on to the job;\nExecuting the law, to the miners I'm raw.\nNor care I how workers may sob.\"\nBye-election come next, \"I will give you a text,\nThe game's in our hands if we win;\nSo boys come along, and as bluffers be strong,\nI always look after my kin.'\n* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdV. Videlte. BATURUAV, DECRMBRB 25. W\\i\nSATURDAY CHINOOK.\nfIVR\n!f\" \" '::' v*^*HM*MMM^\nExcelsior Life Insurance Company\nHEAD OFFICE: TORONTO\nA strictly Canadian Company, with a twenty-five year\nhonorable record.\nDAVID FASKIN. M.A., President. Toronto\nF. J. GILLESPIE, - Manager for British Columbia\nOFFICES: 514-515 VANCOUVER BLOCK\nIs Bowser The Man B.C. Wants?\nfliiM^ \\-m. :\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. mm\n| Champion & White\nd | Best South Wettihgton Coal\n\" Lump $6.50 Nut $5.50\nK\nIf \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_\n1\n** PHONE 9570 1083 MAIN' STREET \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nRilll\ufffd\ufffdi!il!lBliliailii!E::;vIM I SU I lii .\/^^llWaililSIIEIlliiBiS\nPRESENTATION OF MEDAL\nOn Friday afternoon. Trustee Nee-\nlands presided at the closing exercises of the General Wolfe School,\nSouth Vancouver, at which there was\na very large attendance of the parents and friends of the pupils.\nAfter a programme of songs and recitations rendered by tbe pupils in the\nvarious divisions, Trustee Ncelairls\nRave an address to. the parents and\nchildren assembled to (1\ufffd\ufffd honor to\nM|jsI,sobel Miller, the winner of\nHis Royal I Holiness, the Govcrnor-\nGeiieral'.s medal for the student winning the highest place in the South\nVancouver schools al the Government\nexaminations held in June of this\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdyear. .The occasion was a memorable\none. and more especially so because\nthat it was the first occasion on which\nthe Governor-General's medal had\nbeen awarded to any but cities of the\nfirst and sec-.ml class.\nI u an eloquent address. Trustee\nNeelands spoke of the earnest and\nconscientious work, in addition i\" thc\nnatural ability, necessary to the attainment of the first place in any field\nof endeavor, and especially in that of\nscholarship where the competition is\nso keen and so universal, and he heartily congratulated Miss Miller on the\nlaurels which she had won.\nWhen Trustee .Vcclands hail finished his address, the exercises of the\nday were brought to a close by the\nsinging of the National Anthem by\nthe school and by the parents and\nother visitors assembled.\nA Dead Horse\nThe smart travelling man stood oil\na corner in the little country village\nat dusk. Ile wis looking for amusement and the first object that atract-\ned his attention was an overgrown\nboy. perhaps fifteen years of age, riding a horse that might have come mil\nof the ark.\n\"Hello, sunny!\" shouted the salesman. \"How long has that horse been\ndeadr\"\nQuick as a flash the boy replied.\n\"Three days.b ul you re the first buzzard that has noticed it.\"\nThe travelling man moved on to the\nhotel.\n\"We are experiencing a time in our Provincial history when we\nneed an administration conducted along the lines of solid, thoroughgoing business.\"\n\"We propose to have a business administration by business men.\"\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Hon. W. J. Bowser, Prime Minister of British Columbia.\nIf secrecy of operation is the soul of business, Mr. Bowser's new\nadministration has surely got the root of the matter. No Turkish\nadministration by rapacious Pashas could have kept its \"subjects\"\nmore wholly in the dark on the matter of a Grand Vizier's resignation\nthan Victoria has done in launching this momentous change upon a\nProvince of the British Empire. On the day of the change of ministers, all Vancouver were in blissful ignorance of this supremely important public event.\nBut even business\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-the-vague master-word which Mr-,,Bowser\nthinks all sufficient as the backbone of a first message to the people\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\neVeri'business is not wholly dependent upon the arts of stratagem and\ndelusion, arid keeping people in the dark.\nTrue statesmanship is aware that political Surprises are not good\nfor any community. If the Lieutenant-Gerutral at Victoria had time\nto invite to a banquet on that same night members of the Cabinet from\nVancouver as well as Victoria, the press and the public must have\nbeen most carefully and deliberately excluded from knowledge of the\nfirst importance to everyone of them, during at least forty-eight\nhours.\nThough I do not think so meanly of business as to define it as\nthe practice of trickery wholly and solely, I admit that such stratagem\nis an essential part of good business. But that it is an essential part,\nor any part of the science ot good government, our commensense leads\nus emphatically to deny.\nBusiness! Business! Business! The word is an insult to free\nnationality. Is the government of a free people nothing more than\nthe watching of material processes of prosperity and adapting deft\nmeans to selfish ends? Were Fitz Walter and the men who managed\nMagna Carta business barons? Though Pitt and Laurier, Seddon\nand General Botha, Gladstone and Sir Charles T upper were glorious\nbusiness-men for all the business needs of the high offices which they\nheld, was perfection in business the limit of their aspirations or of their\nachievements?\nI !\n* :.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd * \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd :\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *\nMay .we not appeal to language itself?\nWhat does \"Business is Business\" mean, if not lhat there are\nother things in heaven and earth and common life than are connoted\nby that singular^ and etymologically misbegotten word?\nMaterial prosperity is the first of blessings, but the science of\ngovernment and self-government is not primarily concerned with\nthings. Its chief concern is society, made up of men and women, quite\napart from their bank-balances or even from their food and drink.\nThe government of a free people needs men of vision to control the\nvisionaries, men of learning to overawe the learned, men of strong\ncharacter to govern the good, professors of mercy to mend the bad,\npatriots, who have known the riddles and the tortures of reasoned\npatriotism, to inspire soldiers to fight and to kill, without becoming\ndemons or killing their own souls.\nWhy should we speak commonly of the \"Business World\" if\nthe \"World\" and the \"Business World\" are one and the same thing?\nGod forLid! Let us all go hang ourselves if there is no beauty and\nstrength and desirableness in this large, quaint life of ours outside\nbusiness and its astuteness and subtleties and harlot satisfactions'.\n* \"What is the good of a social order in which the men at the top\nare commoner, meaner stuff than the men underneath, the same stuff\njust spoilt, spoilt by prosperity and opportunity and the conceit that\ncomes with advantage?\"\nWhen Mr. Well's hero in \"The Research Magnificent\" made\nthat complaint he felt, or the great novelist felt, something of the profound appeal of war-time. \"We are experiencing a time in our history when we need an administration conducted along the lines of\nsolid, thoroughgoing\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\" what, oh, inopportune Mr. Bowser?\nNot \"Business,\" but \"along the lines,\" often parabolic and tentative, but never downhill,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"along the lines of change.\"\nThere is nothing dynamic in your \"Business\" slogan.\nThere is only fog\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnot even smoke. British Columbia wants\n\"thoroughgoing\" spadework, and plenty of trenching and mining and\n\"solid\" dynamite for the uprooting of rotten forest-giant? and rub-\nbishy foundations. ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd i\nWe want an administration of fighters, not of window-\ufffd\ufffdta\ufffd\ufffdeis:\nburrowing moles, rather than speculating vultures and bald eagles;\nEating between Meals is perfectly Natural for\nHealthy, Active Children\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGive Them Good, Energy-Restoring FOOD!\nSMAX and SUNLIGHT\nThe BETTER Breads\nARE JUST SUCH FOODS\nMade of Canada's most nutritious flour and pure water in British\nColumbia's most sanitary, clean, modern baking plant\n5c\nFULL 16 OUNCE LOAF\nEvery one \"sealed at the oven\"\nHAMPTON-PINCHIN\nBakers of BETTER BREAD\n60 LANSDOWNE AVE. WEST PHONE FAIR. 443\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1013\nSafe Milk for the Babiet* Tntf\nMeans Turner's Milk\nHere is a milk which has been pronounced \"Good Enough\nfor Babies.\" A milk which has. passed the severest inspection\ntests. A milk on which constant watchful care.is never relaxed. A mUk of pure origin, the product of healthy, well-\nfed cows. ,\nSO WHY JEOPARDIZE, YOUR BABY'S HEALTH, AND\nYOUR OWN HEALTH WITH UNCERTAIN MILK?\nTURNER'S MILK IS \"BEST BY TEST\"\nPhone Fairmont 597 and Our Driver Will Call\nTURNER'S DAIRY\nSEVENTEENTH AVENUE AND ONTARIO STREET\nWas it business proficiency or the absence of it which consigned beavers' wlth miShty Pr\ufffd\ufffdPe--\ufffd\ufffd*-*s. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* oily porpoises, swollen and blow-\nto execration or to fame such administrators as the Governor of ing and pIaylng ln the sun' Men of toil and bload \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"< who love\nAntwerp who did to death Edith Cavell, or the American President lhe;r land to\ufffd\ufffd wel1 to \"advertise\" it, without troubling to make it first\nwho abolished th, oractise of slavery? oi a11 a sPectacle of P**\ufffd\ufffdS**e\ufffd\ufffd a\"d wisdom for all the world: men who\nI am glad to appeal to the example of a Lincoln, for that noUe- bel'eve that thelr own \ufffd\ufffdJH2\ufffd\ufffd not'CeS' as s?atesme5 who have well\nman belongs to this continent, a continent which seems to be hypnotised andtluIy served their generation, are the best of all national or pro\nr , j r i . l l it. c \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.! . .- vircial advertisements.\nI rom sea to sea and from pole to pole by the mean magic or tnat tiresome and inadequate word. ' A. N. ST. JOHN .MILDMAY.\nALDERMAN MacBEATH FOR\nMAYOR\nMonday, Jan. .1\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdKing Edward High\n'School\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWard 6; Ash Hall\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWard 8.\nTuesday. Jan. -I\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLord Tennyson\nSchool\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWard 5; Oddfellows' Hall,\nAlderman MacBcath has i-sucd tlu\nfollowing platform upon which he ' i]a;n Street\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWard 5\nwill stand in the forthcoming mayor-j\nalty contest:\nPLATFORM\n1. The strict enforcement 'if all\nlaws now on the Statute [looks,-, or\nwhich may bc enacted during my term\n.if office, having\" special regarij for\nthose pertaining to the liquor traffic\nand the moral welfare of the City ill\nueral.\nWednesday, Jan. S \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Alexandria\nSchool\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWard 5; Orange Hall\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWard i\n3\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd4.\nThursday, Jan. 6\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCambridge Ha\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Ward 3.\nFriday, Jan. 7 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nCranvilli\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWard 6\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWard I.\nSaturday, Jan. f*\nOddfellows' Hall.\nAberdeen School\n-Labor Temple-\nWa\n\\n economical financial admlnis-1 \ufffd\ufffd,\ntrillion, maintaining the lowest prissi-1 __..., , ',\nhie ra'.io of overhead or fixed expeu-| ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n,...., I ucsday,\ncliture consistent with cqcieticy.\nJan.\nIan.\nIll-\nSevinour School | \"I\ni\n11\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWomen's Forum I\n3. The licensing of Hanks and all\nbranches thereof. ...\n.4. The conducting of civic husiness\non a strictly husiness liasis, the amalgamation and reorganization of-certain civic : departments\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthereby! decreasing departmental expenses.\n51'The discharge of all unnecessary\nand inefficient employees, and . the\nfilling of.their,places where required\nwith Competent men. thus enabling the\nCity to pay- a fair wage to. those in its\nemploy.\n6. Thc enforcement to the letter of\nthe terms and conditions of thc agreements entered into between til*-City\nand the Canadian Northern and Great\nNorthern Railway Companies.\n7. Thc giving of every possible encouragement to new industries as well\nas those now in operation, thereby\nincreasing the pay rolls of the City,\ngiving special preference to those employing white labor exclusively. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n8. The purchase of all civic supplies\nin so far as they can !>c nfftaiucd,\nfrom local firms.\n9. Thc inauguration of a movement\nto induce local manufacturers to employ returned soldiers in their I'ac-1\ntorics as far as possible.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWard .'.\nWednesday, Jan. 12\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDominion Hall\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWard 2.\nA QUAINT LETTER FROM\nCHILLIWACK\nMen live to great old ages in the\nFraser Valley and Chilliwack, this\ncitizen claims, hath many charms.\nMEETINGS\nMonday. Dec. 27\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMeeting of Supporters. 521 Tender West.\nWednesday, Dec. 29\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFinnish Hall.\nOld Beaconsfield School\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWard 7.\nThursday. Dec; 30\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Britannia High\nSchool\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWard 4.\nFrom a recent issue of the Chilliwack PROGRESS, we clip the lol-j\nlowing letter written by ,an old gentleman.\nIt is a quaintly, worded epistle, of\na style seldom encountered in the\ncorrespondence columns of the press\nof thc Province.\nThe old chap has kindness in his\nheart. He is proud of his town. He\nsets out to scold, but the good cheer\nspirit gets the better of him. Here is\nthe letter:\nTo the Editor: \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd For thirty or\nforty years. Chillwack was known as\na place of good rich land where it was\neasy to raise things, but not so easy\nto get them to market. Still people\nliked to live there and when steamboat was the only way of communication, and once when the boat stuck in\nthe middle of the river, I heard a bevy\njof girls remark to themselves, \"that\nif they ever got back to Chilliwack\nthey would never leave again.\"\nThere is still the good land and\nstill better opportunities for bringing\nup a family, as thc educational ad\nvantages are equal to those of a large\ncity, and people .an go and come and\nship produce three or four times a\nday, and it may be noticed tliat when\npeople make a visit to the coast cities they often try to get hack to their\nbeloved little town the same day.\nI also think it musl be a very healthy place. Two or three years ago\n1 was told that if I did not take a rest\nI would have a sickness. So I and a\npony, both of us quite elderly, went\nby road from Vancouver to Chilliwack. We had nol been there lung\nbefore we began to feel as if our youth\nna- renewed, the pony often kicking\nheels and as regards myself, it\nmay be remarked that I acted unbecoming t\" my years. Then every daj\nI met on the streets old gentlemen\nwlio^were nearer ninety than eighty,\nand still attending to their business\naffairs.\nThen, since I left the city, I have\noften noticed iu your paper the wonderful doings of old men. one gentleman who I bad put down'as about\nsixty from his gait and the way he\ncarried himself, now I find he is over\neighty, still doing Sunday School work\nand on week-days atending his office\nand is a pattern to 'others in his up-\nto-date newspaper advertising. This\nreminds me of an old publisher in\nPaternoster Row, London, who started business for thc third time at the\nage of eighty-two. He had already\nmade two little fortunes and settled\ncomfortable incomes on his children.\nThen he felt the need of an occupation in his old age. Referring to old\nage at Chilliwack again, your last\nweek's account beats all. When I used\nto see. Mr. Gibson hurrying to the\npost office, when he was ninety-five.\nand 1 used to wonder whatever could\nhaiipen that would make him shuffle\noff this mortal coil, but it seems he\nhas departed at last after a life's\njourney over ninety-six years; and\nleaving thirty-two grandchildren behind.\nStill I would not want Chilliwack\nknown as a health resort, though it\nmight help the place financially. In\nmany of these so-called health resorts\nyou see so many people, very old\nlong before their time; and might have\na depressing effect oh the younger\nfolks.\nT prefer the city of Chilliwack and\ntownship tn be known as it has always been, good healthy places to get\na living and brtng up a family.\nT. II. MOORE.\n^ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\t\nWhen Christmas Comes\nWhen Christmas comes, I never mind\nthe cold.\nI like to get up prompt an' go to\n'scho'oi,\nAnd do my -inn-.\nAn'cleah the walks 'fhout wditin' to\nbe told\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nThough I like sleddill' bitter, as .\nrule.\nOr Jiuildiu' (\"ns\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdI'.ut nothin' ain't so\nbad.\nWhen Christmas conies,\nW hi-n Christmas comes, I'd just as\nlief k>- c half\nMy cooky to the baby, an' ti.kc care\nAbout the crumbs.\n.It's fun to make the little fellow\nlaugh.\nAn' I don't mind his taggin' everywhere,\nlie can't help bein' h'ttle\": - i'm -,:.'.\nmad\nWhen Christmas conies.\nWhen Christmas comes, I don't forget to give . '\nMy shoes a wipe, an' scrub my cars\na lot\nTill my head hums.\nAn' mother says. \"That boy's too\ngood to live!\"\nBut I m not afraid of dyin'. cause\nI'm not\nXo different from always\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdonly glad\nWhen Christmas comes!\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAbigail Williams Burton, in the St.\nNicholas,\nThe Flattering Beaux\nGirls, don't listen to flattering\nbeaux, for while as friends they always pcaux. you will find in reality\nthey, are feaux. They flatter your\neyes, mouth and neaux, and sing your\npraise from head to teaux. They take\nyou to balls, parties and shcaux, and\nare adepts at concealing their wcaux\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdalthough as fickle as thc wind that\nblcaux. \/ 1 ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\t\nSIX\nSATURDAY CHINOOK\nSA'ITKDAY. DECEMBER 25. 1915\nINGLE\nCOAL\nP\nOT\nASK YOUR\nNEIGHBOUR\nWe Sell Stove Wood\nCoast Lumber & Fuel Co., Ltd.\nPhone Fair. 2500 Phone High. 226 Phone Fraser 41\n[ ]\n; ra\nChristmas Light and Christmas Day\nBy Louis Seymour Houj'.itcn\nThey were expecting hint in all\nparls of lhe world, though they did\nnol know whom ihey were expecting.\nChristmas liulit was shining, though\nChristinas day had not ye| come, for\nChrist wai llol vet born. Did vou know\nthat? Did you know that .for years\nbefore the first Christina- day wise\nand good people everywhere were hoping for and expecting tbe coming\nof One who would bring great k Ij Mary's deep joy lhal she was tli bc\nfo ihc world:'-* ' , the mother of the Christ brcT'e \/orth\nPar away in il)L''*Ka*si.. on tbe high in a J.eaniifiU l'#mn, that is Bung in\ntowers that dotted .the Kah.ylon.ian many churches lo JlijSjXjay, \"The Slag-\nI lim to I e afraid bin si c was puz !c\nn i quite understanding i o mc ra.\nthai thc angel was bringing her. :\nthe angel said to her- \"Fear not, Mar-,\nfor thou hast found favor with Q'.id.''\nThou shall have a sou, and th u\n\"shalt call his name Jesus. II,; shall\n1 e greal. and shall be called the Sou\nof the Mosl High. . . . and of His\nkingdom there shall be il\" end,\"\nplain, wise men, magicians, whose an-\ncist'irs .had for centuries been studying the stars were expecting hijil,\nifir.it.\" .we call i.l. because it begins\nMy soul doth magnify the Lord.\"\nMary; could not write poru-v, bur l:er\nthinking lhat he would be a powerful mind*.was so full of the Bible that\nim\n;\nBC\nSEWER PIPE\nWe are the sole Manufacturers of\nMachine-Made Concrete Sewer Pipe\nin British Columbia.\nDOMINION GLAZED CEMENT PIPE CO., LTD. j\nOffice: Dominion Building, Vancouver, B.C. Phone Sey. 8286\nliiiiiiiiii!^\nElectrical Gifts Will Give Greater Satisfaction\nDO YOUR ' SHOPPING EARLY\nLight th\ufffd\ufffd? Way\nTo Better Business\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdUtili*.- the brilliant white radiance of the Tungsten\nLamp i.i your show windows and throughout your store\nfor thc holidays.\nTake advantage of our special price offers:\nSize I'rice\n25 Watt....'..' 25 Cents\n40 Watt 25 Cents\n60 Watt 25 Cents\nA whole case (1(10 lamps) or a half case (50 lamp's) will\nbe sold at 22-r\nper lamp mtitt^^\nSec display of these lamps at our salesrooms.\nCARRALL AND HASTINGS STS.\nPhone Sey. 5000. 1138 Granville St., near Davie\nCold Weather Poultry Hints\nThese cold mornings feed Warm CHICKEN CHOP mixed with\nJOHN BULL or PRATT'S EGG PRODUCER,\nOur special \"DRY MASH\" is excellent to keep fowls heal'.hy.\n(See our window for home made dry mash hopper).\nMANGELS are a good substitute for green food, only 60c peil\n100 lbs. i\nKeep your fowls busy and healthy by a plentiful supply of Dry!\nStraw, Shell, Bone, Charcoal, Beef Scrap, and clean cold water.\nTHE VERNON FEED CO.\nTHREE STORES-\nMOUNT PLLASANT 49TH and FRASER COLLINGWOOD\nPhones: Fair. 186\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd878 Fraser 175 Coll. 153\nThe Scenic Highway Across the Continent\nTHROUGH TICKETS ISSUED\nFROM VANCOUVER TO\nALL PARTS OF THE\nWORLD\ntt\nThe Popular Route to.the\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nOLD COUNTRY\nHAWAII\nAUSTRALIA\nALASKA\nCHINA AND\nJAPAN\nUp-to-date Train Service Between Vancouver and the East\nAll trains equipped with Standard and Tourist Sleepers.\nJ, MOE, C P. A., 434 Hastings St, Vancouver.\nC. MILLARD, D. T. A., Vancouver.\nH. W. BRODIE, Gen. Pass. Agent, Vancouver.\nRAIL TICKETS TO ALL POINTS\nGeneral Agency Transatlantic Steamship Lines\nC. E. Jenncy, O. A. P. D.\nPhone: Sty. S134 327 Grenvill. ItrMt\nking, such as, perhaps, the world had\nnever before seen. Far away in the\nWest, in Rome, the capital of thc\nworld, great and good thinkers were\nexpecting Him, believing that He\nwould be the \"just man.\" Who would\nset an example of perfect goodness to\nmankind.\nAll over the known world, from\nIndia to Spain, wherever the Jews\nwere scattered, who were known to\nbc worshippers of the one Cod, people were expecting thc Messiah of the\nJews, the Christ, the \"Anointed One\"\nof God; iu little Palestine, which ever\nsince Jesus came we call \"the Holy\nLand,\" they were devout men and women who were expecting Him; in\nJerusalem, near the temple aged saints\nnamed Simeon and Anna were expecting Him; away up in the hills of\nGalilee, in the village of Nazareth,\namong the \"devout ones,\" a pious carpenter named Joseph and the sweet\nand holy young girl who was his\nbetrothed bride, were expecting Him;\non the meadow slopes of Bethlehem\nthe shepherds whose work it was to\nkeep the flocks of spotless lambs for\nthc temple sacrifices and the Passover\nl'east were expecting Him! even in\nheaven, wc may believe, the angels\nwere expecting Him to bc born on\nearth, and were ready to break into\nsongs of praise when God shouV.d\ngive Himself to men iu thc person of\nHis dearly beloved Son. In a palace\nin Jerusalem a wicked king was expecting Him, not with longing, but\nwith hatred and fear, lest He should\ncast him from his throne and Himself\nrule as King of the Jews and Lord\nof the whole world.\nNo one knew when He Whom the\nprophet Haggai 511(1 years before bad\ncalled \"thc Desire of all nations\"\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWould come: but so many hearts were\nawaiting Him that it was not strange\nthat God should send word before He\ncame to someone who loved Him\nmost. For though God is always\nspeaking to us, it is only when our\nhearts are ready to hear that we can\nhear and understand what He has to\nsay to us. Thc heart of old Simeon\nwas ready and to him the Holy Spirit\nhad said that he should not sec death\nbefore he had seen thc Lord's Christ.\nThe heart of Mary of Nazareth was\nready, and to her God sent an angel.\nPerhaps she was reading in her ltible\nsome of the promises about the Messiah, that is. the Christ, when the angel Gabriel came to her saying. \"Hail,\nthou art highly favored, the Lord is\nwith theec! Blessed art thou among\nwomen.\"\nMary had thought too much about\nGod and thc angels that attend on\nshe could make a hymn just from the\nbeautiful words of praise and gratitude with which the Bible is stored.\nSoon after, Joseph, Mary's betrothed bridegroom, had a wonderful\ndream, lu his dream an angel of the\nLord appeared to him and said, \"Joseph, thou son of David, fear not to\ntake unto thee Mary thy wife. For she\nshall have 'a Son, and thou shalt call\nHis name Jesus, for it is He that shall\nsave His people from their sins.\"\nThat is what thc name Jesus means\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\"Saviour.\"\nJoseph felt sure that God had sent\nthis dream to Him, and so, when he\nawoke, he did as the angel had commanded, and he and Mary were married. So this righteous man Joseph\nbecame the earthly father of Jesus the\nSon of God, and helped his mother\nMary to bring Him Up in a sweet and\nholy home.\nHut other things were to happen\nbefore the Holy Child was bom. The\nRoman, emperor, Caesar Augustus,\nwho ruled over nearly all tile world,\nsent out a decree that everyone in his\nempire should be enrolled: probably\nbecause he wanted to know just how\nmany thousands and millions of subjects he had. In order to prevent\nmiscounting, m-ry person wherever\nhe might he was directed to go h, hi-\nancestral city or village to li'e enrolled\nand so Joseph, who was a descendant\nof King David, must go to lletlvk-\nliem, where David was born, to be en-\nr died there.\nWhen Joseph and Mary arrived in\nBethlehem, Ihey found the little city\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdroiuicd with people coming i to be\nenrolled, from all pari- of the world,\nIf they had relatives in Bethlehem,\nas they probably had. their houses\nwere already full. The inn was\ncrowded, too; there was no room for\nthem except in the Stable. An in that\nstable, among the cows and oxen, the\nSon of God. the little Lord Jesus, the\nSaviour of the world, was born, and\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdlaid to sleep on some bay in a manger.\nWc call His birthday Christinas, and\nin all parts of the world Christmas is\ncelebrated with joy and gladness because on that day the Suviou1**'of the\nworld came to the world as thc tittle\nBaby Jesus.\nThat same [light the shepherds ill\nthe- fields -near'Uc'threhein were keeping vv-iitch over, their flocks of spoilt'-.-, sacrificial -lambs. Perhaps they\nwiei*e talking together off <$6*lilctlling\nthat the prophet Micah had -aid 81 >\nyears-before, about tile \"tower id' the\nflock\" jn .tha.1. very field where tlK-v\nwere wat(*Jiing--.the. sheep,-.'being, tlie\nplace ffoifi where the kingdom would\ncome to Jerusalem, They knew tlv.it\nthat -meant that the Christ would\neolni1 from Bethlehem, and they may\nhave been wondering if the time of\nhis coming was not near. Suddenly!\nan angel of the l.ord stood hy them j\nand the glory of the Lord shone a-1\nbout them. They were sore afraid, i\nfor though they thought much about\nangels they had never seen cine be-\nfore.\nHut thc angel said, \"Bc not afraid; |\nfor behold, I bring to you good till-1\ning.s of great joy which shall be to i\nall the people', for there is born to I\nyou this day in the city of David a\nSaviour who is Chri.st thc Lord. And |\nye shall find a babe wrapped in swaddling clothes, and. lying in a manger.\"\nAnd suddenly all the sky was filled\nwith angels singing:\n\"Glory to God in the highest.\nAnd on carth-peace among men\nlu whom He is well pleased.\"\nWhen tbe angels were gone back\nto heaven, the shepherds hastened to\nthe town of Bethlehem, and there they\nfound thc little l.ol.rd Jesus in a manger, just as the angels had said: and\nthey glorified and praised God, and\ntold all their friends who were expecting the Messiah that he bad\nreally come.\nWhen thc Baby Jesus was thirty-\nthree days old, Mary and Joseph carried him to Jerusalem, to present him\nto God in thc temple, according to\nGod's command. While they we're\nthere old Simeon and old Anna came\nin. When Simeon saw the little Lord\nJesus he knew at once that God's\npromise to htm hail come true; and\nhe took the Baby Jesus in his arms\nand blessed God.\nThen Simeon hies > 1 Mary, but be\ntold her that a sword should pierce\nthrough her own soul, for every one\nwould not receive her holy son as she\nexpected that they would do. Old\nAnna, too, rejoiced to see the Holy\nChild and gae thanks to God and told\nall her friends, devout people who\nwere expecting the Messiah, that lie\nhad really come.\nJoseph and Mary took the little\nLord Jesus back to liethlcheni. for\nthey naturaly thought that \"David'.-,\nnoval city\" was the right place j\nwhich io brinn up lhe (\"hri-l. 1'rol\nably Joseph found work al bis track.\nLoMg before this ihey hail left tile\nstable and made a home of their own\nflue day they bad a strange visit\nThree Wi-*- men from the Fast came,\nbringing presents to the Baby Jesu-.\ncalling Him \"King of the Jews.\" and\nsaying that they bad seen a stranuc\nstar, which they felt sure niant thai\ntin- Person they had so long been\nexpecting was born. They had come\nfar across the wide Syrian deserl\nlooking lor the wonderful Baby, am!\nwhen they reached Bethlehem, the;\nsaw lhe same strange slar again, and\nthey knew thai they hail come to lhe\nvery Baby they were looking for. S\"\ntltey opened their packages and took\nout gold a-'-'l frankincense -and myrrl\nand nave ilu-in to the little Lord Ji\nsns. The gold meant that they fell\n| sure that. il.e was a.kitig; tin frankii\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcehse was what they offered to theii\n,'',0,1; the myrrh was a ni re ihysteri\nIons gift, fur il meant bitterness Bin\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd sorrow. They did not understand\nI that ihe Saviour must suffer if Hi\nI was to be a Saviour, but we know i:\nnow-; and ihis is why Christinas da>\n, is more lo us lhat merriment. Is not\n! Christmas day the very day when vv i\nI ouglit ao love Jesus so dearly an\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd thankfully as to resolve to try alwav -\nI to be very good for (five! of Him?\nPHONEi 8EV. 900\nMacDONALD & HAY\nBarrister!, Solicitor!, Etc.\n1012 Standard Bank Bldg.\nVancouver, B.C.\n&>aturitai) (Eliiunnk\nPUBLISHED\nEvery Saturday by the\nGreater Vancouver Publishers Limit- I\nHEAD OFFICE:\n(26 Homer Street, Vancouver, B.C\nTELEPHONE;\nAll departments Seymour 17\nNight Cnlls Fairmont lOtli I\nRegistered at the Tost Office IV\npnrtment, Otliivva, as Second Clas\nMnil Mutter.\nSUBSCRIPTION HATES\nTo all points in Canada. Unite I\nKingdom, Newfoundland, New zkalai I\nand other British Possessions: \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n$1.00\nPostage to American, European ai I\nother Foreign Countries, $1.00 per ye r\nextra.\nWANT ADS\nCASH RATES\nOne cent per word per Unite. No a\ufffd\ufffdlv<\nthing lor leu than 25 cenll. Following inn\nfifteen centi per insertion.\nCHARGE RATES\nOne cent per word per iiiue.\nFAITH and WORKS\nThe few forbids the sale of liquor ancLcigarettes*\nto minors,, .but it docs not restrain newspapers from going into res-\npectablb hpriics and soliciting the patronage of the boys and girls with\nflaringjand alluring advertisements. .,\nCareful fijesides'must rely, therefore; Upon newspapers ! that; voluntarily banish liquor and cigarettes, those great\nenemies of youthful strength and.purity,>Worn tht'ir columns.\nIn the campaign for saloonleffs''slate it is vital that\nthe forces of temperance cast the entire weight of their influence\nagainst the wets.' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -.\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\". .*.- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -.\nTheir subscription jgdjy for a newspaper is a vote\nfor or against liquqr; according as the advertising columns; of that\nnfcwspaperrare Tor or against liquor.' '- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .\nThe Saturday Chinook is against lhe selling and\ndistributing of liquor and cigarettes.to minors through its advertising\ncolumns. '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *.' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' ' \" ' -' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-'\nFor true temperance should begin at home and\nwith thc Home Newspaper. - \t\nyour door for i\n10 cents a month.\nCall Fairmont .1874.\nThe Saturday Chinook VTURD \\ V. DECEMBER 25, 1915\nSATURDAY CHINOOK\nSEVEN\nII\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nI\na\nI\n-3\nH\nI\nIlillll\n$108,384 Shipment of Silver Bars\nfrom Trail, B.C., Refinery\n-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdv. ^,-,\ufffd\ufffd.*, ^g\nGOLD, SILVER, COPPER AND LEAD\nBRITISH COLUMBIA HOLDS UNTOLD TREASURES IN HER HILLS \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd THIS YEAR HER MINES\nPAY DIVIDENDS OF MANY MILLIONS\nflilfiitlllilll\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd mi:;. : ; :.;:\ni\nThe big consolidated Smelter at Trail, B.C., where B.C. gold,\nsilver, copper and lead flows in a molten stream. This smelter had\nits beginning in the days of the Kootenay boom twenty years ago.\nAugustus Heinz built the Trail smelter, which is down the hill from\nRossland'.\nx Granby Smelter at Grand Forks, the largest copper smelter in\nthe British Empire. The Granby is playing a big part in this war\nfor the Government takes all the output of the copper concerns of\nthe Province. Approximately $10,000,000 a year is the output of\nthe Granby properties.\n(Courted \ufffd\ufffdf '-Txtephoiic Talk\")\nIngots of metal\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe real stuff\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdin lhe Matte yard of the Trail\nsmelter. Today the Rossland mines are busier than at any time in\ntheir history. Up to December 1st, 1914, the Trail smelter ore\nreceipts amounted to half a million tons.\nInterior view of Trail smelter, showing a blast furnace. The;\nmolten metal runs in a white stream from the truck in the centre.,\nEvery week the Trail smelter turns out 10,000 tons of ore. Some of\nthe high-grade product of the Slocan carries hundreds of dollars to\nthe ton. Few British Columbians realize the vast mineral output\nof B.C. even under present trying circumstances. 1 IGHT\nSATURDAY CHINOOK\nSATURDAY, DECEMBER 25, 1915\nii !\nu\nRaincoat and\nUmbrella Weather\nAnd here are the goods:\nRaincoats at practically your own figure \ufffd\ufffd\ufffddown as low as\nhalf, and less, of ordinary price \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdbest makes \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Currie's and\nCow's \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd the best made in all England \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd guaranteed by the\nmakers and by us \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd all the stunts that make for perfect\ndryness and comfort. Now priced at\n$5.00 T0 $15.00\nUMBRELLAS\n75c\nSilk covered\nTO\nfancy handles\n$5.00\nMalcolm MacBeath for Mayor\nI\nX those :;'i>i><1 days when money was easy and no\npaid inudi attention to municipal affairs\", there was\nWm. Dick Limited\n33, 47-49 HASTINGS EAST\n\"Your Money's\nWorth or Your\nMoney Back\"\n CLEAN, RICH AND WHOLESOME \t\nVancouver Creamery Butter\nMade under scientific conditions in a clean dairy where only\n: l pure sweet cream and ingredients are used, and where every\ncaution is taken to guard against impurities. You'll enjoy\nVANCOUVER CREAMERY BUTTER because in addition\nto its quality it lias a rich, natural butter flavor. Try a pound\ntoday. .... .... \" K\nYOUR GROCER HAS IT\nASK HIM\nSOUTH VANCOUVER AFFAIRS lie is enthusiastic, energetic, and wil\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd - \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd make a fine business reevc.\nHow It Can Be Done\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAn 'Interesting, Letter and Some Awful Poetry\nfrom a Ratepayer\nMr. T'.ditor,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe time fur municipal\nelections is now drawing- cl isc, and\nmany i-f the ratepayers of South Vancouver arc debating and arguing, on\nthe best means to be adopted t.i pull\nthis muiiiciaplity out oi the Sloujrh of\nDespair into which it lias sn needlessly been cast.\nTbe majority of the ratepayers have.\nagreed that the best mean; of raising\nthe municipality to its proper position is that of changing the present\nreeve and putting him in his proper\nposition, that is, at some much lower\nlevel llian lie holds at present.\nVarious organizations arc working\n(ut one candidate or another, they\nhave all the same goal in view, but\niirtrortunately they have a great diversify of opinion on how this object\nshall be attained,\nThey have further agreed that it\ncan be doc, but still tliev have not\ncome to any final decision on the methods to be adopted, Unfortunately\nthere are too many candidates in the\nfield, each one patting himself on the\nback tllat lie has a good chance of\nluccess,\nNow let ns discuss the candidates.\nIvx-Counclllor Winram, a good, upright man, but t ixcitablc, 1 as\nily- roused to anger, too erratic to\nmake a g I reeve.\nW'e don't want a man who's long and\nthin, long and thin, long and thin;\nlie might run for reeve but never\nget in,\nSo we don't want a man who's long\n. and thin.\n-..Councillor Campbell, a good cabinet\nmaker. I have no doubt, a man of\nhigh ideals, but too boastful, too -.in-\nknown, and not at all popular\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe\ngreater portion of his time is spent\nin the city.\nWc DO want a man whose name is\nBruce, whose name is Bruce,\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 'whose name'is Bruce,\nWhen he'runs for reeve all the others\ncut loose, for ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd''''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nWe do want a man whose native is\nBruce.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIAN\" Macl.AKI-'.X.\nPANTAGES THEATRE\nThe popular vaudeville house closes\nthe year 1915 with a bill without a'\npeer. One of the finest one-act musical comedies 'shown this year heads\nthe bill next week. Ten beautiful fashion girls with stunning costumes\nand good voices, along with a special\nline of gorgeous scenery, is a treat in\nstore.\nHob .Ibrighl, the \"Male Melba,\"\nwill be remembered by patrons for\nhis pleasant rendering of some of the\nsong hits of the day.\nThe four Standard Bros, have achieved the highest point in strong\nmen stunts, and thrill their audience\nwith their feais of strength.\nIlillie Seiilon. a dainty singing comedienne, has a very pleasing voice with\na good line of comedy.\n\"A Double's Double,' a skit In\nPotts Bros, & Co,, has n laugh ai every lurn, and has won greal praise\nfrom Pantages' audiences.\nA real reel of motion pictures with\nmusic by the papular orchestra, closes\na very bright bill.\nClassified Advertising\nFLORISTS\nBROWN EROS. & CO., LIMITED,\nSeedsmen, Florists, Nurserymen, 48\nHastings St. E., and 782 Granville\nStreet, Vancouver, B. C.\nWATCHMAKER\nW'i\ndon't\nwant a\nman wl\no goe\ns to\ntown,\nwho g(\n>CS t'l\nown.\nwho-\ngoes t\ni town.\nHe\nmight\ndown\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nrun for\nreeve al\nii then\nfall\n. o\nwc don\ntown.\nt want\na man v\ns to\nReeve (\nbombastic,\nmid\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNi\ni morel\nidstrong\nToo\ntoo-\n* '\n-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdif\naltogether.\n\\V\"<\ndon't\nwant a\nnan wh\nise been in\nbefore\nwlu\ufffd\ufffdse\nbeen-\nin before.\nwhose\nbeen in\nbefore.\nIk\nmight\ntry again and b\ne wipe\nd on\nthe fh\nior,\nSo\nwc don't want\na man\nwhose\nbeen\nin bef\nire.\n10,000 WATCHES and CLOCKS\nwanted-to' clean and repair at the\nfactory, 438 RICHARDS STREET.\nlittle man at i he Cil y I hill who made a fuss al meeting\n\"i the councij and who cautioned the City Fathers tn g<\nslowly and who charged that there was waste and extrava\ngance in many civic departments.\nOne day Vancouver awoke to find that an investiga\ntion ni
Published by Greater Vancouver Publishers Limited from 1912-05-18 to 1916-01-01; Chinook Printing House from 1916-01-08 to 1916-04-15; The Standard Printers from 1916-04-22 to 1917-04-07; and The Standard Company from 1917-04-14 onward.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Vancouver, B.C. : Greater Vancouver Publishers Limited","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http:\/\/digitize.library.ubc.ca\/","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"Series":[{"label":"Series","value":"BC Historical Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","classmap":"oc:PublicationDescription","property":"dcterms:isPartOf"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"SortDate","value":"1915-12-25 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1915-12-25 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title","value":"The Saturday Chinook","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. 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