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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","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":"Full Text","value":" \u00ab> YESTERDAY'S  WEATHER \u00ab\n\u00ab   \u00ab\n<** Temperature, r.corded at. tha v\n* meUorolofical station at Naleen #\n** Minimum v..^..      1 '?'\n* Maximum      TT' <\u00a3\nICista\n6<f\nTHE DAILY NEWS     t 4>\n!\u2022  read  everywhere  in   South- $\neastern British Columbia (Koot- v\n\u2022nay   and   Boundary   District) <&\non the day of publication.\nVOL. is}\n8 CAGES.\nNELSON. B. C. FRIDAY MORNING.  FEBRUARY 6, 1914\n50c PER MONTH.\nNO 254\nfNGLAND HAS\nNew Tactics   Planned  by\nv UnWiir Leaders\nDE FOREST GIVES\nSURPRISE TO DERBY\nTakes Up Offer For Sale of\n;  Estates-Ulster The\nIssue,\n(Western   Associated   Press   Special\nCable.)\nLONDON, Feh. 5.\u2014Ecclesiastically\nEngland has been n-divided In such\na way as to provide tliree new diocese.*- with consequent alterations of\nfour existing bisnojirlcs. One new\nbishopric is formed- o! the city of\nSheffield,, to which art1 added six rural\ndeaneries, the whole-aroa being carved\nowt of the dlooeBO of York. To tbia\nRight Rev. Leonurd Hedley Burrows,\nD.D., vicar of Hove, Sussex and suffragan Btehop of LeweB, bas heen appointed. \/\nTbe new dloceso of Chelmsford,\nwhich will havo a population of one\nand a third millions, is formed of the\ncounty of Essex and that portion of\nICent lying north of the Thames.\nThis urea. Ib being cut away from\nthe dloceBe of St, Albans, the net effect being that the population of tbe\nbishopric of St. Albans is reduced\nfrom over 1,500,000 to just under 500,-\n000. The new bishop is Hev. John\nEdwan Watts-Ditebfield, D*D\u201e vicar of\nSt. John's, Bethnal Green. -The Ely\nbishopric suffers a reduction bf area\nby the transferase of western Suffolk to tlio new bishopric of Bury St,\nKdmonds and Ipsvyich, Ely tints being\nreduced from 500,000 to a third of a\nmillion souls, whilst tbe new bishopric is brought, tin to an area of .[.16,000\nInhabitants by the transfer of eastern\nSuffolk from tbo diocese of Norwich,\nwhich thus suffers a reduction ..om\n.750,000 to 500,000, In population. The\n-first bishop'.pf this new see, is ,Ven.\nHenry Bernard Hodgson, M.A., vicar\nof Berwick-on-Tweed since 1807 and\naj-chdeacon of Lindisfarno since 1004,\n, Before the ecclesiastical commissioners consented to the formation of\nthe new sees, there had to he fur\nnishert in each case an endowment\nfund of not leBB than -812,500, and a\nfitting episcopal residence oi\" a sufficient capital sum to provide such a\nresidence. In the case of Chelmsford\na sum of \u00a310,000 has been subscribed for the provision of a residence.\n[n the other new sees residences have\nbeen secured.\nNew Tactics Arranged.\nAn Important meeting \"* the opposition leadera was held today at Lans-\ndowne house, the residence of the\nMarquis of Lansdowne, at which 10\nwere present, including Lord Lansdowne, Austen Chamberlain and Lord\nRobert Cecil, the last two the only ones\nwho were not members of the Unionist administration. Tho Pall Mall Gazette Bays that the \"leaders\" decided\nupon the meeting of parliament next\nweek to raise tbe issue of Ulster and\nthe necessity of a general election In\n* such a way aa will mark a memorable\nevent In parllaraentary procedure and\nInaugurate promptly aud decisively\nthe great struggle of the session. Tills\nis interesting In view of the fact that\nthe Pall Mall Gaaette ls the originator\not the. scheme that the opposition\nshould conthnially shout \"resign, resign\" and thus make business impossible. The P\u00abH Mall Gazette states\nelsewhere that the recent conference\nbetween Premier Asqulth, Chief Secretary Burreii and JoBn Redmond produced a scheme of home rule within\nhome rule for-Ulster as outlined by\nSHr (Edward Grey, The newspaper\nadds: \"To bucji a scheme the opposition cannot agree, hi view of Bonar\n. Law's promise to the Ulster covenantees.\" ,\nEndeavors are being made to In*\nI dtice a general wearing'of the Union\nI Jack by the spectators at the opening\nf of parliament by the King on Tuesday\nj next.\nSurprise for Derby.\nThe Earl of Derby has probably sot\nI the'surprise of hla life.   On Monday\nlast he declared that Baron De Forest could have his Bottle estates If ho\npyt down   \u00a31,500,000 In cash and  today his offer was accepted; Lord De\nForest,  who   first  arouse^   the  earl's\nIrb by stating that ho cecured an in-\n[ cbme'df1 \u00a3100,000 ai year  from    the\nBOtt!Q''estates which he claimed were\nvalued fli!between \u00a33,000,000 and \u00a3\/|>\n' 000,000 returns the attack by showing\n| that the Derby family bought    these\nBottle estates in, 172-1 for \u00a37,000, and\nj declares that acceptance*, of his offer\n[ must include, the following conditions.\n\"In cases whereby sales,  fines    or\nI mortgages, the values of portions of\nj the sites niay have heen already con-\nI verted  Into cash  and  the  increment\nI thus  realized,  yob  will  transfer  the\n1 equivalent of such value thus added\n| to the estate which Is dearly .part of\nI tho property,\"\nBaron D0 Forest is Radical M. P. for\nI the north division of West Ham ond\nj a sturdy Advocate or land reform. An\nhereditary  baron   oil  the   Australian\nempire, ho la authorized by roynl warrant to  use  his-title  in  the  United\nI Kingdom.   The Earl of Derby Ir.   the\n| eon of the former governor-gen oral of\n] Canada (Lord .Stanley of Preston) and\nacted as A. p. C. to his father nt Ot-.\nJCpnUaiwA os Page Three.).\nCONTINENT SAVED\nFROMMILITAfMSM\nAgreement as to Frontier Saved North\nAmerica From Worst Follies\nof Europe.\n(Canadian Associated Press Cable.)\nLON0-ON, Fob. 5.\u2014The .Manchester\nGuardian, referring to the great Anglo-American pence celebration yesterday, addressed at the Mansion\nHouso by Premier Asqulth. the Archbishop of Canterbury and others, says\nthat had there been no agreement as\nto military and naval forces by which\nthe 1'rOntIer was to be guarded, the\nAmerican continent might have reproduced the worst follies of European\nmilitarisnu Our relations with the\nUnited Slates, says the Guardian;\nwould have been a clog on political\nprogress. The agreement for the neutralization of the great lakes was singularly a casual affair. Negotiations\nwere begun iu 1806, but it was not till\nfive years after Uie war in 1812 that\nthe agreement, terminable by either\nside on six months' notice, was formally'drafted. No such notice has\never been given, nor ever will be now.\nlust ub the European doctrine of the\nbalance of power was excluded from\nthe new wprld by the Monroe doctrine,\nthis frontier agreement has saved the\nUnited States from economic waste\nand political dangers of the European\nsystem of defence.\nCLUB LICENSES\nTO BE CANCELLED\nAmendments  to   Liquor   License  Act\nProposed by Attorney-General\nof  Manitoba\n(By Daily -Newa Leased Wlre.i\nWINNIPEG, Feb. a.\u2014Ono Conservative and one Liberal voted against\nhis party in the legislature today.\nOn an amendment to the resolution\nto repeul tho Coldwell amendments to\nthe Manitoba Schools act, W. Molley,\nof La Verandrye, an opposition member, voted with the government. Earlier ln tho day William Ferguson, of'\nHamlota, Conservative, voted with thi\nopposition in a resolution introduced\nby-himself to cancel the licenses of all\nManitoba clubs) to bo followed by\namendments tu-the Liquor License act.\nThe motion was defeated by a vote\nof 22 ftps 12. Hon. .L H. Howden, attorney-general, had previously announced that -he had a bill on the order\npaper with 'the same 'purport as that\nof tho motion.\nThe Conservative amendment to lhe\nopposition resolution**- to repeal the\nColdwell resolution -was 'to the effect\nthat the bill bo given a- six months'\nl-oleW Mr. Motlny, who .Ir a Catholic,\nsided -with the government. The vote\nwas 24 to 8, a number of Liberal members not being present.\nHart Green, opposition member from\nNorth Winnipeg, gave notice of an in'\ntrillion to Introduce a motion calling\nfor the appointment of a royal com\nmission 'to Investigate all clubs In\nWinnipeg that are licensed under the\nLiquor License act.\nBILL TO  IMPLEMENT\nFISHERIES   TREATY\n(By Daily News Leased Wire)\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 5.\u2014Representative Flood, chairman of the house\ncommittee on foreign affairs today introduced a bill lo give effect to a\ntreaty of April, 1808, between the\nUnited States and Great Britain, concerning fisheries in waters contiguous to the United States and Canada.\nThe measure would authorize tiie\npresident to promulgate regulations to\ngovern the season and methods of\nfishing in the great lakes regulation;\nto he effective after Jan. 1, 1905. Il\nwould also direct the' United Statei\nInternational fisheries commission tc\nconduct an Inquiry to determine what\nmodifications are required in regulations on the United States side of the\nboundary    line. The    commission\nwould be directed to report at the\nnext session of congress. Maximum\npenalties of ?r-00 tine or six months'\nimprisonment, or both, together with\nforfeiture of fisheries equipment,\nwould be provided for violations of tbe\nregulations.\nMountain lumber Manufacturers Interview Premier\nFIXED RATE OR\nSLIDING SCALE\n8AYS  ASSOCIATED  PRESS\nVIOLATES ANTI-TRUST LAW\n(Bv Dallv News LenSfid Wirei\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 5.\u2014The Sun\nPrinting & Publishing association of\nNew York has presented a statement\nto Attorney-General McReynolds ask\nIng that he institute, on behalf of -tiie\ngovernment, proceedings in respect of\nthe Associated -Press for violation of\nthe Sherman Anti-Trust law, alleging\nrefusal to sell news to the New York\nSun.\nThe newspaper declined to apply\nfor membership In the Associated\"\nPress and claimed tho right to buy ithe\nnews of .tjie organization, Tho officers of the Associated Press bave notified tho attorney-general that nny information In their possession will be\nfully -placed at his disposal.\nSEVENTY-ONE REBELS KILLED\nIN  UNSUCCESSFUL ATTACK\nfBy .Dally News Lease* wire.i\nMEXICO CITY, Feb. 5.\u2014Seventy-\none rebels were killed at, El Puerto,\nnear Tdmpico, according to the war\ndepartment, in an unsuccessful attack today by the federals.\nGen. Blanquet, minister of war, says\nthat efforts will be used to open the\nline between San Luis Potosi and\nTampico in order to get fuel oil into\nthe interior, \u25a0   \u201e .\nMonterey today for. tho firat time\nin many weeks was. In communication\nby telegraph and railroad with the\ncapital. B\nSUMMER  HOTEL  BURNED\nORILLIA, Ont, Feb. 5.\u2014The, Peninsula House, a* summer hotel, situated\non the narrows between Lakes Simcoe\nand Couchiching, was burned lo the\nground this afternoon. Thc loss Is\nestimated at 18,000, with $5,000 insurance, ...\nLegislation Will Be Introduced if Agreement Is\nReached.\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nVICTORIA, B. C\u201e Feb, 5.\u2014Members\nof the lumber interests of the province met Hon. W. R. Ross today in\nregard to the question of royalties and\nground rents. . In the event of an\nearly settlement of the differences of\nopinion that exist legislation will be\nintroduced ou the question or royal*\nties. There are two alternatives, one\nadvanced by the lumbermen of the\nprovince and the other advunced by\nthe minister of lands. The lumbermen are desirous of having a fixed\nrate for a period of years, generally\nestimated at 21, while the government\nfavors a sliding Bcale of rates.\nOne of the leading arguments advanced by tbe lumbermen in favor of\nthe fixed rate over a long period\nthat the bonding houses refuse to deal\nwith them on account of the uncertain\nelement in the rate. They say it interferes with their calculations in\nreckoning the prospective value of\nproperties.\nAmong the lumbermen here are: A,\nE. Frank, secretary of the Mountain\nLumber Manufacturers' association\nW. A. Anstie of Revelstoke, N. Murray of Kamloops and F. W. Adolnh of\nliaynes Lake, all members of the\nMountain Lumber Manufacturers' association.\nThe delegation will be joined tomorrow by representatives of the\nCoast Lumbermen's .association.\nENGLISH ACTRESS\nREFUSED ADMISSION\nFor Second Time  Maris  Lloyd  Finds\nDifficulty  in   Entering States\u2014\n:     Appeal Taken.\n,      fBy Dai'iy News Leased Wire)\nVANCOUVER, B; C, Fob. 5.\u2014Marie\nLloyd, the .English commedlenne, was\ntoday refused admission to the United\nStates when sbe applied t0 be allowed\nto cross the border on the conclusion\nof , her theatrical engagement here.\nThe ground taken against her Is \"moral turpitude,\"\nIu her behalf an Immediate appeal\nla being taken to the immigration department at Washington, disputing\nthe right of the action of tile board\nIn Vancouver. Miss Lloyd and nor\nhusband, Hoi-nurd Dillon, were subjected to an examination extending\nover deafly an hour this morning.\nGOVERNOR ARRESTED\nBY GARRISON\nGOVERNOR GENERAL\nWARNED MINISTERS\nViscount Gladstone Could Not Prevent\nDeportation of Labor Leaders-\nFought Revolutionary Conspiracy\n(By Dally News  Leased Wlro>\nCAPETOWN, Feb. 5.\u2014After speaking for four hours yesterday in the\nparliament of -the Union of South\nAfrica. Gen. Jan. Christian Smuts,\nminister of defence, continued today\nhis Justification of\" the government's\naction In declaring martial law in the\nrecent strike and deporting the strike\nleaders.\nHe ^declared the labor leaders had\nplanned serious military operations,\nhud organized small commandoes of\ndynamiters and had deliberately Inflamed the spirit of the mob and incited it to crimes of all sorts until the\nstrike had developed into sheer anarchism.\nEvery Industry, the minister continued, was to be brought to a standstill by tho strikers, but the declaration, of war by thc Federation of\nTrades was met, by the proclamation\nof martial law and the mobilization of\nthe citizens' defence force by the gov-'\neminent.\nTho situation had ibeen one of civil\nwar, the minister continued. Thousands of miners were in possession of\ndynamite, a native outbreak was\nthreatened, and food supplies were\nscarce. The government was amply\njustified in proclaiming martial law,\nwhich had proved effective. In order\nto insure future peace In the country,\nthe government decided after consideration >to deport the ringleaders,\nfearing that if the men were brought\nto trial the courts would not convict\nthem on the grounds of high treason.\nThe government did not seek to destroy the trades organizations, Gen.\nf-muts declared, but intended to deal\na drastic blow to criminal and revolutionary conspiracy.\nThe minister exonerated Viscount\nGladstone, tho governor-general, of all\nresponsibility, pointing out thut under\nthe constitution Lord Gladstone could\nn-ji ptvvc t the deportation, although\nho warned- the ministers of the seriousness of such ;i step.\nMEDICINE HAT ALDERMAN\nWITHDRAWS FROM MEETING\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nMEDICINE HAT, Alta., Fell. 5.\u2014\nAid. McLean tonight withdrew from\nthe council meeting during a discussion of the license by-law. Ho refused to voto when called upon to do so,\nand when Called upon ito apologise- to\nIhe chair ifor disrespect again refused.\nHe -was given the choice of walking\nout or going lu a policeman's arms\nand chose the former.\nTlie resolution for ejection met with\nonly ono dissenting voice. On Monday\nnight the samo alderman caused some\nflxol'teimcnt, by calling \"Liar!\" every\nfew minutes und today was pursuing\ntho same tactics.\nSCORE INJURED WHEN\nTflAIN 8TRIKI.S AUTO\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.J\nJACKSONVILLE, Fla., Feb. 5.\u2014\nFour persons were Bertously Injured\nand 15 more were hurt today when\na railroad train struck a sight-seeing\nautqmpbHe, AU Wfl,r\u00a7.FlprWfl {oik*\nIncensed at Refusal to Recognize1 New\nGovernmentV-Organa of r-ornter\nAdministration Suppressed\nfBy Daily News Leased Wire.)\nLIMA, Peru, Feb. .\">.\u2014Oreste Feiro,\nprefect of -tha important Inland city\nof Cnzi'o, today announced his refusal to recognize the new government of, Peru, brought Into power by\nyesterday's  sudden  revolution.\nThe garrison off the town, Incensed\nat .the \u2022 .prefect's attitude, marched\nforthwith to his office and.placed him\nunder arrest.\nFerro was a dose friend and supporter of the deposed president. Bit-\nifnghurst, and was the leaner of the\nrevolt agaln&t President Leguia In\n1811.\nThe newspapers Nacion, A-cclon and\nPopular, semi-official organs of Pre^\noldont Blllinghurst's government, were\nsuppressed today and will not bo allowed to reappear.\nIn Lima and Ca-l-hio normal conditions were restored today.\nObjected'to  Dissolution,\n(By Jjaiiy .News Leust-u Wire)\nLONDON, . Feb. 5.\u2014Ex -President\nAugusta B. Leguls of Peru, who was\ndeported from Cullao fn August lust\nby President Blllinghurst, .and who is\nnow residing in London, received a\nnumber bf cablegrams tdday from his\nhrother, Carlos Leguls*. a member of\nthe  Peruvian, administration.\nAccording to Senator Leguls, the\nrevolution against the Peruvian government was due t0 President Blllinghurst's decision t0 dissolve congress\nbecause it had refused to sanction his\nbudget.\nThe arreSt of the president, Senntor\nLeguis cabled, was in defence of the\nPeruvian constitution, and he added,\n\"as a result of tht\u00bb glorious action of\nour army, we are free of- Billlnghurst,\nwho now is In the penitentiary,\"'\nEx-President Leuiils commenting on\nthe military revolt at Lima, declared\nthat he had no aspirations foj- re-election t0 the presidency, hut said he\nrejoiced In the joint aellon of the\ncongress and the army, \"in restoring\nby constitutional methods thnt which\nbad been destroyed by president BI1-\nllnghurst.\"\nNEWSPAPERMAN  BECOMES\nSECRETARY TO MINISTER\n'OTTAWA, Feb. G.\u2014Thomas Ahern\nwrtll become private secretary to tlon.\nC. J. Dohenty within a few days.\nJohn Hackett, who has occupied the\nposition, has returned to the practice\nof law in Montreal. iMr. Ahern, who\nwaa at one time secretary to Hon. Mr.\nThe 14,000 rifles contracted for will\nnewspaperman of wide experience. He\nwas on the Montreal Star for many\nyears and afterward on newspapers In\nBoston and New York. For the past\ntwo years he has been the New York\nrepresentative of the Canadian Press.\n$ HANS SCHMIDT GUILTY <\u00ae\n&                           *_ <j>\ntj> (By Daily News Leased Wire) <t>\n\u00ae NEW   YORK,   Feb.   5.\u2014Hans <\u00a7\n<S> Schmidt   was   found   guilty   of <?-\n<$> murder in the first degree ,for *\n^ killing Anna Ammuller, a young <S>\n\u25a0^ . woman ho had married through \u25a0$\n3> a   self-performed  ceremony   \u00abs <\u00ab>\n<S> priest at St. Joseph's church. <i>\n<S> The penalty of the crime Is \u2022;*>\n?\u2022 death In the electric chair. He <$\n\u25a0?> will be sentenced next Wedhes- <i\n3> clay. <?>\n\u00ae Schmidt's defence was insnn- <r\n<3> ity.                          \\ <S>\nITO OF\nmis\nPresident Will Ask Congress\n,.  to Take Action\nFOSTER FRIENDSHIP\nOF GREAT BRITAIN\nPublicity and\nPure Foods\nPublicity has done mere to\nraifip the standard, of food products In the last few years than\nhas any other cause.\nToday the leading advertised\nbrands on the market are standards of food quality) Their names\nnre liousehok; Words standing\nfnr purity.\nThp use of these advertised\nbrands Is growing because they\nhnve made good.\nIt does not pay to advertise a\npoor food product \u2014 and1 tlie\nmanufacturers and dealers know\nIt.        .\nIt does bring Immediate and\ncontinuous returns to call public\nattention to some gn0d brand\nthrough the advertising columns\nof a carefully read newspuper\nlike The Dally News.\nNotice the food products that\nare airvcrtiscd here from time\nto time, and yen will see that\nthey me the brands whose\ndames are known the country\noyer ns standing for distinct\nquality and character.\nIt Is a safo arid profitable'rule\nfor you to give J'cUr patronage\nto the dealers who feature these\nadvertised products.\nAnxious for Settlement Before Panama Canal\nOpens.\nfBy Dally NeWs Leased Wire.)\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 5.\u2014President\nWilson announced today that he\nwould endeavor to hiwn repealed nt\nthe,present session of congress that\nprovision of the Panama Canal act\nwhich exempts American coastwise\nships from the payment of tolls. He\nmady his position cleur to callers today In unequivocal terms. The pre-\nfl.dent believes that the Hay-Pdunce-\nfote treaty with Great Britain guarantees equality of treatment to all na\ntions, including the United States, in\nthe matter of tolls, and the United\nStates is In honor bound to charge\nAmerican vessels the same tolls It Imposes on foreign nations. The president impressed upon his callers that\nhe would use every legitimate influence at his disposal to have thc clause\neliminated from the Panama Canal\nact. This announcement waa expected\ned by administration lenders at the\ncapital. - The president's views will be\ncarried out in .tho house with little\ndifficulty, according to Representative\nAdamson, chairman of the inter-state\ntind foreign commerce commission,\nWho said tonight congress undoubtedly\nwould act quickly by a \"straight out\nrepeal,\"\nNot so certain, however, arc some\nof the Democratic leaders in the sen\nate that the president will be sustained in his resolve on this question,\nwhich has agitated American relations\nwith Gre^t Britain for several years\nand has been a subject of interna\ntlonal controversy since tlie passage\nof tha Panama Canal act in August,\n1912, Senator O'Gorman, chairman Of\ntlio interoceanlc canals commission,\nwho lead the victorious fight In the\nsenate to exempt American vessel;\nfrom tolls, tonight declared his purpose to stand by his convictions and\ntight tbe president's desire.\nOther senators pointed to the recent\naction of tbe foreign relations commit\ntoo on the arbitration treaty, tffo fe-ir\nof having to submit to arbitration hav\ning delnyed -Us extension iby the senate hist summer. Senntor Stone, who\nvoted for the provision, has said he\nwould vote for the repeal, taking the\nposition thnt under the treaty the\nUnited States still has tbe right to\nlevy tiny tolls It wishes, but that the exemption should bo stricken out In line\nn'lth a desire to avoid any ill-feeling\nwith Great. Britain.\nThe president's announcement grew\nout of a report that be did not seek\naction at tho present congress. Senator O'Gorman, on leaving the White\nHouse today, said he bad discussed\ntho tolls question casually with the\npresident, and expressed the view that\ncongress could do little else at lhe\npresent session beside passing ibe\ntrust bills and appropriation measures. The president sought ito make\nclear today that this was Senator\nOjuqrman's own expression of the\nlegislative situation, but that so far\nas he was concerned be earnestly hoped for action at the present session.\nThere bas been considerable ulk ln\nthis connection by Hepresentatlve\nAuamson, who would suspend tor two\nyears tho operation of the exemption,\nso that Jt might be definitely determined whether or not the canal woula\nbe self-supporting, and at the same\ntime allow time for further diplomatic\nparley.\nThe president, however, has abandoned the idea of having the question\nsuspended or postponed, and wishes a\nsettlement of It from the present congress, so that the great waterway may\nbe opened at the beginning of next\nyear with the nations of the world on\na basis of equality and with friendship\nunimpaired 'by any pending Issues oi\ndiplomacy*\nThe illness of C.halrman Bason, of\ntho senate foreign relations committee,\nwhich ls holding up consideration of\ntho arbitration trouUes, Including one\nwith Great Britain, also may delay action in congress on ithe tolls question.\nThe president has not communicated\nhis views of tho subject to the committee.\nAIR FLEET FOR\nMEXICAN REBELS\nRifles  and  Artillery Also  to  Be  Pro*\ncured\u2014Only  Mexican Aviators\nto Be Employed\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nCL'LIACAN, Mexico, Tab. 5.\u2014ami.\ntary aeroplanes will be among the war'\nmunitions to be ordered at once from\ntbo United States by Gen. Carranza,\nthe rebel chieftain. This was announced today after Carranza bad\nmade his arrangements to take advantage Immediately of t'he American government's action In lifting the embargo\non the exportation of arms. The aeroplanes will be used in campaigns in\nnorthern Mexico.\nFourteen thousand rifles, with sufficient ammunition for a long campaign,\nulready have been ordered.\nIt Is also stated that the Insurgeats\nwill toport artillery with mounts\nsuitable for use on board vessels, which\nwill be armored for operations against\ntho Pacific coast seaports still held\nby the Huerta forces.\nThe organization of the war aerial\nfleet will be perfected by Gen. Angeles,\nsub-secretary of war In the Carranza\ncabinet. Only Mexican aviators will\nbe usedfc including two members of\nCnrranza's staff, who are qualified\npilots.\nFlynn, when premier of Quebec, Is a\nbe need to equip rebel troops In Chihuahua,\nMINER'S STRIKE\nWILL BE DEBATED\nNO SPECIAL STAMPS\nNEEDED FOR  PARCEL POST\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, Feb. f..\u2014Tho postofflce\nauthorities are completing final arrangements for the Institution of the\nparcel post system on Feb. 10. AH\nth0 regulations, rate cards and so forth\nhave been sent throughout the country ho as to avoid any trouble in\nstarting or operating the system.\nThp, postmaster general announces\nthnt no speciul stamps will be used\nfor the parcel post, ln tbo Unitpd\nStates this wjis done at first, but wiib\nabandoned, and the department here\nwill profit by the American experience.\nVANCOUVER  APPOINTMENTS\n(By Daily News Leased Wire)\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Feb. 5. \u2014 The\nprovincial government lias made the\nfollowing appointments In Vancouver:\nLicense commission\u2014Walter Leek\nand W:-J, Balrd; police commission,\nW, li, Burns and Aid, Thomas Evans.\nQuestion    foP    Debate    on    Supply-\nSpeaker's   Ruling   Challenged\u2014\nT0 Keep Lists Clean,\n(Special to The Daily News)\nVICjOKIA, B. C Feb. 5.\u2014At today's session of the legislature, Parker Williams, Newcastle, fought hard\nto set the hou\u00bb;e t0 dcuate the str.ke\nSituation at Nanaimo, His resoluLon\nto this effect, Speaker Eberts exp,am\ned, was out of order as it involved the\nquestion of the oxpeiid.ture of pob.lc\nmoney and as such could '.n'y bo\norought forward by a report from a\ncommittee at the house. The member for Newcastle protested agam.it\nwhat he considered an ai-o.trary\ncourse, he challenged the ruling ol\nthe chair and refused to accept u'eied)\nuntil he had culled far a division. He\nstated that if a resolution upoft he.ng\nIntroduced i<> tbe house was fmgnmt.y\nout o.\" order that it would be more\nproper If its legality was passed il,oii\nby the house Instead of being ruled\noff by the speaker. The premier In\nreplying said:\n\"I think this houso will agree with\nme that it has Invariably been the\npractice when a resolution hav been\nprinted on the orders of the duv, if iii\ntho judgment of the speaker of the\nhouse it Is not within the rule* of\nthis assembly than an announcement\nIs made before any debate or controversy Is proceeded with, If he Is\nanxious to have this question fully\ndiscussed   when   th0   bousu   comes   to\nconsider supply he will bave an abundance of opportunities of bringing u\nnn. There Is nn disposition on the\npart of the government to be other\nthan fair and even generous to him,\nat the same time it Is for the efficiency\nof this assembly that nothing in the\nway of generous treatment could be\nexpected save and except that which\nIs consistent with the rules of the\nhous.\"\nMr. Williams formally appealed to\nthe house from the ruling of the\n\u25a0hair. The division bell was rung and\nthe question Was put with the result\nthat the chair was sustained, the only\ntwo members voting l',->r the appeal being the members for Newcastle and\nNanaimo.\nThe hill to amend the provincial\nlections act came up in due form for\nits second reading and the lion. VV. J.\nBowser took lhe opportunity of e\u00ab;-\nplainlng its provision to the house. He\npointed out that the proposed amendment aimed at securing some check\nupon applicants for registration. There\nhad been considerable difficulty in\nsome of the larger centres In gaining\naccurate information and It had been\ndeemed advisable to take this action\nIn order that the voters' lists might\nbe kept as clean as possible. He stated\nthat under the present system there\nhad been more or less carelessness In\nsonie places. Due care had t0 be exorcised In amending the section t0 see\nthat no unnecessary obstacle.! were\nplaced in the way of legitimate applicants. HL> made a point of explaining the tw0 form system which tht\namendment provided, one for British\nsubjects toy birth, and the 0ther ror\nBritish subjects by naturalization and\nbriefly recounted the precautions tn\nb0 adopted in securing accurate in-\ntormatlon in the way of certificates.\nMr. Williams moved the adjournment of the debate.\nInteresting Debates in House\nof Commons ' :\nWOULD DRY UP\nFOUNT OF HONOR\nBill for Abolition of Titles\nKilled\u2014Use of Detect-\naphone Restricted,\nWITNESS TAMPERED WITH\nJUDGE WILL INVESTIGATE\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nVANCOUVER. B. C, Feb. fi.\u2014It wa\nwas decided today to ask a judge op\nthc supreme court of British Columbia\nto hold an investigation into the\n\u2022barges that have been preferred by\nAid. Macbeath against Watcr Super'n-\ntendent Maddlson, of his accepting\nbribes from tho firm of Bobertson.\nGodson & Co., who supply a quantity\nof goods to the city. The statement\nwas made that tho amount is ;i ja^gfe\nime, hut nn sum was mentioned.1 \"The\nallegation was nia.de today that one\ni*i tbe principal witnesses had already been tampered with.\nPREDICTS IMPROVEMENT IN\nSHIPPING  BUSINESS\n(Canadian Associated Press Cable)\nLONDON. Fob. 5.\u2014The chairman of\na leading shipping company remarked\ntoday regarding Canadian prospects,\n\"1 Judge from the reports we are getting from the majority of our agents\nthat business Is likely to be much\nquieter this year than for tho last two\nyears. I look for a falling off of immigration to Canada though I hope and\nexpect you will have a good number\nout to take up land. Improved conditions In tho United States and the easier condition of the money market\nlead mo to expect that in the course\nof a month or two, shipping batters\non tho north Atlantic *\\vlU improve.\"\n(By Dally News Leased Wire)\nOTTAWA, Feb. 5.\u2014The commons\nhad a field day for the consideration\nof public'bills and motions. Two bins,\nwhich havo excited some general interest, wero killed at the second reading stage without a division. They\nwero both' fathered by J. H. Burnham,\nWest Poterboro. One was to abolish\nthe granting of titles to Canadians\nthrough the medium of recommendations of the cabinet; the other to provide that in provinces where candidates- for the local house do not have\nto put up a deposit, the same rule\nshould apply to candidates for federal elections.\nHon. Georgo E. Foster, on behalf ot\ntho government, refused to bo moved\nhy Mr, Burnham'a measure for tho\nabolition of titles. He confessed to\nbeing a democrat, but titles were conferred for meritorious performance of\npublic and other duties.\nSir Wilfrid Laurier, whllo agreeing-\nwith tho principle of the bill, said that\nthe member for Peterboro was going\nabout the matter in the wrong way.\nAs the granting of titles rests with the\nhomo government, ihe proper method\nof procedure would be ito send an ad-\ndross to tho imperial authorities.\nA prolonged discussion was evoked\nby the motion of Sir Robert Bdcker-\ndlke, of Montreal, for tho abolition of\ncapital punishment. It received support and censure from both sides of\nthe house, but It was apparent that the\n'joncensus of opinion was opposed to\nthe proposed innovation In the**'1* ri\nof dealing with those who ha.\u00abueen\nproven guilty of taking human life.\nMr. Foster urged that it would not ibe\nwise for parliament to decide upon\n.such a momentous change in the system as the result of one -brief debate\nIn the commons. The fact that the\npractice of hanging murderers was an\nold one did not prove .that it was\nwrong.\nThose who supported tho bill included Hon. George P. Graham and\nLevi  Thompson, Qu'Appelle.\nHon. c. J. Doberty declared himself\nagainst the bill and adjourned the debate, which Is not likely to be renewed\nthis session.\nMany Questions.\nAnswers were given to a number of\ninteresting questions during the hour\nof routine. W. A. Buchanan, Lethbrldge. was informed by the minister\nof trade ami commerce that there\nwould be a grain storage elevator\nerected at Calgary this year, construction to start as soon as the question\nof site was settled.\nG. \\V. Kyte was told by Hon. Dr.\nReid that appointments to the outside\ncustoms service since September,\n1011, numbered 768, There Had been\nno transfers to the inside service except after proper examination had\nbeen passed.\nThe minister of agriculture informed J. H. Robb. Huntington, that the\ngovernment was considering the continuation this year of tbe bonus, to\nthoroughbred horses.\nFirearms Forbidden.\nA, Verville, Maissoneuve, introduced\na bill to amend the criminal code.\nTbe general purpose of the bill was to\nextend \"\u2022 larger measure of protection to Canadian citizens against Indiscriminate use of firearms and- tae\nnone the less dangerous employment\nof certain modern contrivances whereby the characters of private individuals as well as the just secrets of deliberative meetings were exposed to\npublic attack.\nThe firat clause. Mr. Verville explained, aimed at preventing employers of labor from employing on their\npremises any man or men bearing\nfirearms. The proviso to the clause\nsafeguards the watchman who has a\nlicense to carry arms as provided for\nby section 118 of thc criminal code.\nTho member for Maissoneuve took a\nconcrete -case, instuncinfi th\u00a9 -riots\nand bloodshed In Buckingham a few\nyears ago.\nDictaphone Restricted.\nIn explaining the second clause of\nthe bill the member for Malsaoneuvo\nsaid that it dealt with the dictaphone,\na new contrivance whereby conversations or deliberations may be overheard and made public afterward. Unless legally restricted in Its use, It.\nwould be a menace to society, no man\nbeing safe, no family secure, no or*\nlumized body safeguarded while such\nmeans of detections and revelations\nwere In existence.\nThe first sub-section dealt with the\nuse of such contrivances regarding the\ncharacter of any person or disclosing\nthe deliberations of any body. To explain tbe Bub-section Mr. Verville\nasked the house to suppose that In a\nMasonic lodge or even in the privy\ncouncil over which the premier presides, such nn instrument were made\nuse of, where would be the secrets\nbo jealously guarded from those who\nhave no right to use tbem.\nPublication of Records.\nThe second section of the bill dealt\n(Continued on page four.)\n pr PACE TWO\nCtie Ball}? Jletos\nFRIDAY   FEBRUARY t\nVALENTINES\nRemember the Date\u2014February 14\nValentine Invitation Cards and Envelopes, per Ixjx    65c\nFolly Cards, assorted designs, per dozen 25c\nHand Colored Dutch Valentines, nicely boxed, Bin. x 74n., with such mcttos\nas \"To Dere Von I Luf,\" \"Luf Mo Luf Mine Dog,\" \"Vat's Dore Use of j\n~ Mo^UighrL Von There's No One Tlerrfto Luf,\" etc, each     25c\nHearts and Cupid Cutouts, all .si-ies, per packago  10c\nHand Colored Polders, Scenes and Heads, with large seal. Imprinted \"Seal\n\u2014\"of Affection,\" 10c each or, per dozen $1.00\nGood Old Stings for the \"Boss,\"  Mother-In-Law or the  Maiden   Aunt,\nfrom   .' 5c   up\nGET. IN LINE\u2014BUY NOW YOU  KNOW WHY\n. ,      . ,     SEASON POSTCARDS ALWAYS ON  HAND\nCanada Drug & Book Co. Ltd.\nftone 81        Nelson's Pioneer Drag Store      P.O. Box 502\nMAIL ORDERS GIVEN SPECIAL ATTENTION.\nTRAIL SCHOOL REPORT\n(Special to ThB Daily News.)\nTRAIL, B. C. Feb. 5.\u2014FoHowing is\nthe. school report for the month of\nJanuary, the shield for punctuality going to Miss Thome' room:\n. Division; I. (MIbs Thorn, principal)\u2014\nPerfect attendance: Harold Brown,\n-Frank Downs, James Hardington, John\nHlntz, Jenny Hesketh, Olga Larsen,\nSlgna Larsen, Mike Lunduccl, Jean\nMarshall, Richard McKinnon, Vida\nMcCam, Fraser McKay, Gussie Newton, Jack Schofleld, Fred Sibbald, Wll-\nHe Thomson. Proficiency, entaanec\nc'ass: Jack Schofleld, Slgna Larsen.\nG-ussio Newiton and Fred Brown.\nJunior Fourth\u2014Vida McCain, Free\nSibbald and John Hintz. Percentage\nof attendance, 93.97.\n\u25a0Division II. (Miss Cavers, teacher) \u2014\nPerfect attendance: Fred Bartle, Ernest Clay, Charles Duncan, David Forrest, Ruth Heskclb, Walter Howard\nJames Hurley, Stella Hurley. Fred\nLaurlenite, Jessie McCam, Doris Mas-,\nkail, Susie Rossman, Marjorle Sibbald,'\nElla Thomson, Ray Williamson.\nFourth reader, junior: RUUh Hesketh, Mary Rossman, Ernest Clay.\nThird    reader,    senior,    proficiency:\nFred Laurlente, Charles Duncan, Fred\nGuernsey.   Percentage, 92 1-3 per cent.\nDivlBlon III. (Miss Cameron teacher)\n\u2014Perfeot   attendance:   Florence   Dtin-\nkerly, Olga Butorac, Wray Donaldson,\nBaiHy Eyera, Fritz Hlntz, Florence .lef-\nfery, Mairgaret McKinnon, Lillian Xfc-\nCready,    Maybelle     Newton,     Marion\nSkill, Carloute, Jcames, Charles Cerem-\nI aUe, Vera Cnalg, Ylvian Bartle.    Pro-\nH fielency,   A  class:    \"Wray   Donaldson,\nMargaret McKinnon. Ruth McDermid.\nB class:  Olga Butorac, Florence Be-\n-   goln and Vivian Barbie..   Percentage,\n86.57.\nDivision IV. (Miss de Gasne, teacher)\u2014Perfect atitendunee: Dnaga Butorac, Harold Begein, Shep Coremelle,\nMargaret Davison, Lloyd Donaldson,\nJessie Floyd, Benjamin Morely, Jack\nM-cKInnon. Arthur K'monson, Vincenzo\nOrlando, Bernard Wadswortlh, Mildred\nBarnes, Fred Butler, Roy Cameron,\nBatham Dovey, Ernest Dibble, Margaret Graham, Esther Larson, Dorolhy\nMcKay, Isabelle McKay, Neville Skill,\nBrain Thompson, Malcolm WilttieS.\nProficiency, A class: Rosa Rossman, Ernest Dibble, Mildred Barnes. B\nclass: Margaret Davison, Harold Begein, Draga Butorac, Mary Campion.\nPercentage, 93.09.\nDivision V. (Mrs. B'rnwn, teacher)\u2014\nPerfect attendance: Lottie Bartle, Joe\nBelleu, Jimmy Bnrkes, Edward Cec-\ncanti, Pasqualo Conccs-nio, Eva Duncan, Walter Duncan, Gorty Eyers. Jim\nForrest, Bessie Forrest, John Gian-\nehiglia, Aaneriffo Laurlente, Jim Mc-\nCall, Pearl Murdock, Sebermann Newton, Leonard Nollie, Mike Popp, Loa-\niso Rossman, Mary Shaw. Helen Szabo,\nCeoil Tench, Lottie- Wilson, Earl\nYoung.\nProficiency, first reader: Pearl Murdock, Gerty Eyers, Helen Szabo. Second- reader: Jessie Floyd, Amerigo\nLaurlente and Margaret Hlntz. Per-\n. cenitage, 92.7.\nDivision VI. (Miss Nicholson,\nteacher)\u2014Perfect attendance: George\nBaralch, Jack Barnes, Stepbe'n Butorac, Carlo Butorac, Dick Ceecanti,\nTony Cuifltelle, Eugene Chabn, Pat-\ni-ick Dalgarno, Helen Ferry, Alice\nFerry, Paul Gavrillk, Joey Heyiwood,\nMinnie* Johnson, Gavetinle Laurelnte,\nMary Marshall, Alice Morln, Leonard\nMurdock, Marjory McCam, Iolandl\nPreorl, WlIMe SommerviMc, Thurlow\nTaylor, Dorollhy Tyson, Edward WoW,\nJoe Wolfe, Dorothea Young, Lina Sza-\nbo, Guido Martlncnelll, Harold Jeanes,\nProficiency, Class A: Stephen Butorac, Dorothy Tyson, Eugene Chaon,\nClass B: Charlie Morley, Lina Sza-\nbo. Jack Barnes.\nClass C: Arlnald Laurlente, Paulo\nBaralch, Guido Martlnelli. Percent-\nige, SC.73.\nMIRROR   LAKE   NEWS\n(Soeclal to The Dally News.)\nMIRROR LAKE, B. O, Feb. 5.\u2014A. T.\nDavis, who was confined to his bed\nEur several days last week, Is again\nfully recovered and uible to be at bis\n.work.\nE, Norman is back from the British\nColumbia Fruit Growers' association\nat, Victoria,\nA number of the resident voters and\nsome of the ladles of Mirror Lake went\nIn to attend the Liberal meeting in\nKaslo on Friday night to hear Messrs.\nBrewster and Oliver.\nWliliam Wilson, of Nelson, was here\non Monday looking into the prospects\nfor an lee harvest and making ar-\nrangi-ments accordingly. The pros-\npouts now look good as the. Ice Is forming rapidly with the colder weiiuher.\nA pleasant surprise party took possession of A, T. Davis' premises a\nweek ago. It was attended by nearly\nall the residents and was thoroughly\nenjoyed.\nSLOCAN   CITY   NEWS\nSLOCAN CITY, B. C. fc'eb. 5.\u2014The\nLiterary club bold their first meeting\nfor tbe season on Tuesday evening at\nihi* home of Mrs. J. A. Amierson.\nAnother of the old buildings on Main\nstreet, lu-nlng the Presbyterian church,\nhas been torn down by order of the\ncity council and the lumber sold to Mr.\nfop off.\nTattersall & Steinger are engaged\nhauling home tlmber which they cut\nup on the lake and towed t0 tbe landing for fire wood. Mr. Rue's teams\nLire doing the work.\nThe Ottawa teams are hauling between town and the mine every day.\nThe Ladies' Aid of Knox church\nmet at the home of Mrs. W. Cotterall\non Tuesday afternoon. They propose\ngiving a concert soon,\nA da nre will be given In the T. O. O.\nF. Hall on Friday evening, Feb. 6 by\nsome of the young people. Several\nfrom the Ottawa mine nrP expected\ndown   for the  occasion.\nThe first skating of the season in\nthe new rink wns enjoyed on Monday\nevening. The' ice was good. It is 10\nyears since the lot-'al skaters had thc\npleasure of skating in their own rink\nJ, O. Covinston went tQ Silverton on\nTuesday.\n\"There's a Reason\"\nYou may have small care what\nthe reason is, so long as your food\nreally nourishes your body and\nkeeps your brain healthy, active\nand a money-maker.\nBut when signs of nervous prostration set in, you want to know\nwhy you can get sure help from\nGrape-Nuts\nFOOD\nA 10-days' trial usually brings'^J^\nimprovement in body and mind,1 ]\nand the experience will show %\u00a3n-*\"L- ^\n\"There's a Reason\"\nGrocers everywhere sell Grape-Nuts\nCanadian Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Windsor, Ont.\nKootenay and Boundary\nTRAINING COLLEGE\nFOR ENGLISH WOMEN\nBuilding Erected en Princess Patricia\nRanch\u2014Students Have English\nDiplomas in Agriculture.\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nVERNON, B. C Feb. 5.\u2014A new $7,-\n000 college building has been built on\ntho Prlnceas Patricia rancTi on the\nColdBtream, about four miles from\nVernon, TIiIb ranch, which Is maintained by the Colonial Intelligence\nleague, Is an English institution, numbering among Us patrons the Princess\nChristian, PrlncesB of PlesB, Princess\nPatricia and others The object is to\nestablish hostels for educated English\nyoung women in the different colonies,\nto give thorn an idea of colonial life\nand local conditions before they set\nup for themselves.\nThe Coldstream branch consists of\n15 acres, all under cultivation, and on\nwhich all of the work Is done by the\nyouns lady ranchers, who learn practical farming. The new building accommodates eight young ladles and\nthe matron-superintendent, Mrs. Snel-\nus. The pupils sent out from England are those who have already obtained diplomas in agriculture from\nsome English school. They stay on\ntbe institutional ranch for one year,\nthen strike out for themselves. The\nnew building Is built like a large\nhome, with -living room, large fireplaces, principal's office, dining room,\nkitchen, full basement and bedroomB\nsufficient to house the pupils.\nThe Vernon board of school trustees\nhaB decided that two new four-room\nschools are a necessity, and ha--e decided to adopt the plans submitted\nlast year for the structures, which\nwill cost tn excess of {30,000 each.\nA committee consisting of Trustees\nD. M. Logle and Hamilton Lang has\nbeen appointed to proceed to Victoria\nto lay the matter before the provincial\nauthorities with a request tor governmental aid.\nThe following committees have been\norganized for the year: Finance, Trustees S. A. Muir, Hamilton Lang and\nH. W. Knight; maintenance, Trustees\nT. Harwood, Knight and Muir; buildings, Trustees Knight, Lang and Harwood; school management, Trustees\nLang, Logle and Muir. The first\nnamed In each case acts as chairman.\nThe city of Vernon Is about to become embroiled with tbe Okanagan\nTelephone company because of the refusal of the company to give free telephone service to the city hall and city\npower house. The original telephone\ncompany was given a pole line franchise and agreed in return to give free\nphone service to those two buildings.\nThe original company, however, was\nreorganized under a provincial charter\nand the new phone company claims it\nIs not bound by the original agreement, At Monday night's meeting of\nthe city council Aid. C. F. Costerton\nadvocated refusing to pay rent for the\ncity phones until such time as thc\ncompany cut off the service, then having the city solicitor get out an Injunction and make a test case.\nCity Health Officer Dr. E. J. Duncan sent a letter to the council ad-\nvialng the passage of a by-law to regulate rooming houseB, because of the\nprobably overcrowding next summer\nwhen th\u00a9 Canadian Northern railway\nwill be building down tne Okami>'nn\nvalley through Vernon. The matter\nwill receive attention and various\nsewer, connections will be enforced ln\norder to protect the health of the city.\nELK  SEEN  ON  STREETS\nOF WEST FERNIE\n(Special to The Dally Newa)\nFERNIE, B. C, Feb, 5.\u2014Owing to\nthe heavy snowfall the deer are seeking the valleyB and an elk waB seen\non the streets of West Fernie recently.\nOn Wednesday the first blizzard of\nthe season struck Fernie, but was\nmild compared with eastern weather,\nas the thermometer registered eight\nbelow at the coldest point.\nFred Ritchie, a prisoner at the city\njail, was sent to the hospital Buffering from appendicitis.\nJudge Whlmster committed William\nGarrett, charged with theft, for trial\nthis morning.\nThe mines at Coal Creek were Idle\non Monday last, owing to car shortage.\nWANETA   NEWS\n(Special to Thp Dally News.li\nWANETA, B. C, Feh. 5. \u2014 Ralph\nGillespie, one of the \"old-tlmei-H\", well\nknown to many in this district, hat-\nrecently died at Spokane.\nMiss Molly O'Brien has gone tn Spokane for treatment for the poisoned\nband from which she has been suffering.\nW. A. Duncan returned from Victoria on  Monday.\nOn Tuesday a social evening was\n'?Iven by invitation at HUlcrest ranch.\nSleigh loads of guests drove both from\nup the river and from Waneta to tht\nranch house where the dining room\nhad been cleared and soon a whist\ndrlvp was In progress, eight tables being filled. At the conclusion of tho\nplay scores proved that of the ladlco\nMrs. A, G, Lang had won first place\nwith Mrs. Cooper a close second, while\nthe consolation prize fell to Mrs.\nIrvine. In the gentlemen Douglas Hay\nwas first and W. A. Duncan second,\nwhile John Sterling had the consolation prize. Mementoes had been provided by the hostess and these being\ndistributed refreshments were then\nserved.\nThe following was the program:\nPiano solo, Mrs. Adie; monologue,\nCapt. Duncan; reading, Mr. Gullupe;\nsong, Mrs. Gulllaunfe; piano solo, Mrs.\nLang; organ solo, Miss Galbraith;\n(luurtette, Miss Kingwell, Mrs. Gullluume, Mr. J. Buckley, Mr. Gulllaume;\npiano solo, Mrs. Churches; song, Mrs.\nGulllaume; duet, flute and piano, Mr.\nand Mrs. Stalls; song and chorus, Mr.\nJ. Buckley; monologue, Capt. Duncan.\nARM WANGLED\nSHUT OFF POWER\nSleeve Caught In Gearing and Drew In\nArm\u2014Pump Was\nStopped\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nGRAND FORKS, Feb. 5.\u2014Nels Larsen, who met with an accident In the\npower house at the smelter yesterday\nmorning, and; whose right arm was\namputated shortly afterwards just below the shoulder, Is doing well, his\ncondition this ftiornln-i being considered very satisfactory by the doctors.\nIt Is supposed that the sleeve of his\n\"jumper\" was caught In the searing\nof ohe Of the big pumps drawing **n\nhis hand and arm nearly to Ihe elbow,\nowing, it Is thought, to the hardness\nof the 'bone, the gearing was broken,\nthereby stopping the pump, otherwise\nthere is no doubt that be would have\nlost his life. As soon as he got free\nhe Walked over to the switch and\nshut off the power, then walked aouie\n30 or 40 ft. and called William Towe,\nwho was nt work In another part of\ntbo building. The blood spurting\nfrom the severed arteries of the arm,\nTowo Immediately applied u tourniquet\nclose to the shoulder and telephoned\nfor Dr. Kingston, who arrived and rendered first aid within 15 minutes.\nKASLO  MAY  PURCHASE\nELECTRIC LIGHT PLANT\nOption   on   Plant   for   Twetrty-eeven\nThousand Five Hundred Dollars\n\u2014Part Payment in Bonds.\nfSpecial to The Daily News.)\nKASLO, B. C, Feb. 5.\u2014The details\nof tbe arrangement existing between\nthe Kootenay Electric company and\nthe city wero made public yesterday\nby Mayor McGregor. The city has\nan option to purchase tbe plant as\ngoing concern for $27,500. A petition\nIs being circulated among the real\nproperty owners by which the signers\npray that a bylaw empowering the\ncity to borrow $30,000 bo enacted. The\nmoney will be used to purchase the\nplant, equipment and fixtures aB\ngoing concern, with enough over to\nattend to repairs which may be neces\nBary, as well as to increase the ramifications of the Hues and make some\nfew alterations which seem desirable.\nThe petition met with an enthusiastic\nwelcome from tho tax payers, who\nwith very few exceptions offered their\nnames to the petition.\nThose who arranged the deal up to\nthis point have been able to make the\ncondition that the company take over\n$15,000 tn bondB hearing il per cent\nInterest at par, and it is felt that the\nbalance will be subscribed locally, as\nthe Investment Is sound. -\nThose of the aldermanic board who\nare most active in promoting the purchase believe they can convince the\nratepayers that the loan can be taken\ncare of by the earnings of the plant,\nand It Is not to be forgotten that the\ncity Is at present by far the electric\ncompany's best customer.\nNEW  DENVER  NEWS\n(Special to Th- Dnlly News.)\nNEW DENVER, B. C, Feb. 5.\u2014Miss\nLizzie Burgess left on Monday morn\nIng to spend carnival week In Rossland with friends.\nMost of the employes of the Rambler-Cariboo mine and mill come down\nto New Denver on Monday nfornlng\non their way to other points. The\nmine and mill have cloBed down for\nshort time on ax-count of the shortage\nof wuter for operating mill and compressor plants.\nA. E. Cable, of the Rambler-Cariboo,\nwas in town on Wednesday on his way\nhome -to Spokane.\nJ, Hartley Burgess, of Sandon, spent\ntho week-end in town with his parents.\n\u25a0Many turned out for the first skating In the new rink on Tuesday even\ning. The Ice was In excellent condl\ntlon for a first night. After the skaters were through the two local teams\nhad a hockey practice.\nMiss Mary Gordon, of Silverton,\nspent the week-end In town the guest\nof the Misses Vallance.\nMr. and Mrs. H, H. Falding and\nMiss Harris went to Rossland to the\ncarnival on Monday morning.\nService was held In the Presbyterian\nchurch at Silverton on Sunday morn\nIng and In New Denver Iti the evening.\n,   R. C. French,\" of the Swift-Canadian\ncompany, was In town on Tuesduy.\nWalter Scott, of Nelson, wiis in town\non Wednesday.\nOn Wednesday afternoon tho lake\nwas so stormy that the steamer was\nunable to land on her north trip, so\npassengers and mail were taken on to\nRosebery and landed on the return\ntrip aflter the storm had gone down. -\nJ. C. Harris and J. H. Strickland,\nwho were\" delegates to the Farmers'\nInstitute convention at tbe coast, returned on Monday.\nMrs. William Eccles returned\" frbm\nNelson on Wednesday.!\nJohn Batt came down from the\nRambler-Cariboo idn Wednesday\nmorning to spend a' few dnys Ih town,\n\u2022Julius Wolff went to NelBon on\nWednesday.\nThe Joke 'Broker\u2014These wheezes\nare all old and worn out.\nThe Broke Joker\u20141 know they're\npretty bad, but If you ascribe them to\na lot of prominent men they'll go in\nthe magazines.\nAINSWORTH NOTES\n(Special to The Sally Newa.)\nAINSWORTH, B.C., Feb. 6.\u2014W. M\nArchibald left, for Nelson yesterday,\nhaving spent a few days here among\ntho -properties of the Consolidated\nMining & Smelting company.\nH. Glegerich leaves on Saturday for\nFlorida to Join his wife, who is now\nvisiting friends there. Mr. and Mrs.\nGlegerlch will then pfan a visit through\nthe Panama canal also to Cuba and\nother islands In that1 tropical country:\nMr. Glegerich exrpects tb bo away some\neight weeks. On his return trip he\nwill visit Toronto, Hamilton, Chicago,\nand other eastern cities.\n. The new dynamo and power plant of\nthe .Consolidated Mining & -Smelting\ncompany is now being Installed\nCedar creek.\nSam Hunter, of Kaslo,\" representing\nByers, Glegerich, Green & Co., spent\nWednesday and Thursday In Aine-\nworth.\nR. Wailker, accountant for the Consolidated Milning & Smelting company,\nom\nlo\n3-in-One oil\ni Rost off all Tools\nIt's the oi| the wise\ncarpenters always use for\nlubricating the action\nparts of wrenches.brace-\nand-bits and all similar p\ntools.\n3-in-One oil also\nkeeps all cutting, planing and shaving edges\nbright and sharp beeause\nno nut can form while\nthey are not in use. It also\ndeans and polishes all the g\nWooden parts.\nAlwayi pui a lew drops\nol 3-in-One oil on your\noil itooe and tee now\nmuch quiclcet andeaiiet\nyou gel the keened edge.\nPol \u25a0 bottle in your tool\nchest right now, today)\n3-in-One li (old al all good\nhttd-tviie, diug, mocu*\/ and\n%,  qeaqal itotet id  3 mm   ^\n*\u25a0   Mtlen   I oi- I0ci 3of\u201e *ir\n253 8oz..Jipmt.50c <J\nIlumly 'Hi oioil fiinn-.'5e \"\nTbroo-tD^neOilCo.\n l.P.olSt.,\nteft on Wednesday for Rossland to attend the carnival there.\nSkiing is now the leading sport here.\nA great number are riding the hills\nnear  town.\n\u2022> ROSSLANO  NEWS <?\nh <?>\nH^?*\u00ab^>*i^<^l*4-l*i?*<M*^ <!\n(Special  to  The Dally  News)\nROSSLAND, B. C, Feb. 5\u2014Miss\nHelen Truswell, of Trail, is the guest\nDf Mrs, A. M. Betts during tbe carnival.\nH. Varcoe, secretary of the Rossland\nMiners union, has returned from a\nbusiness trip to Denver, Col.\nThe Ladles' Musical and Literary\nclub will meet on Friday afternoon at\n3:30.   '\nA special meeting of the Farmers'\ninstitute will be held In the old clly\nball on Friday, Feb. 13. Co-operative\nbuying of feed and lho shipping In of\nstumping powder will be discussed.\nThe delegate will report proceedings\nof the Central Convention meeting.\nMr. Spies and daughter, of Annable,\narc visitors In the elty this week.\nMrs. William Reese, of Trail, is the\nguest ci Mrs. Stout for carnival week.\n-Mrs. Homer Folding anil her sister,\nof New Denver, arc - visitors in the\ncity.\nBOUNDARY   BONSPIEL\n{Special to Th*. Dnfl*.- News.)\nGRAND FORKS, B, C, Feb. 5.\u2014The\nlovers of \"the besom and the stane\"\nare still making the curling rink resound as they fight the battle for the\ndifferent cups. At the close of play\nlast night the score stood as follows:\nSmith Cup, second round\u2014Gardner,\nGrand Forks, 15; Campbell, Phoenix.\n<i; majority 0. Mclnnes, Grand Forks,\n11; Melntyre, Grand ForkB. 5.. Miller,\nPhoenix, 10; Moirin. Phoenix, u.\nBurns Cup, second round\u2014Gardner,\nGrand Forks, lfi: GeddeH, Phoenix. 11.\nMcIhneB, Grand Porks, Hi Savage,\nGrand Forks, 7. McKim, Grand Korku,\n12; Melntyre, Grand Forks, 7. Mc-\nCreath, Mother Lode, lfi; CJampheil,\nPhoenix, 6.\nGrand Forks Cup, second round\u2014\nMcCreath, Mother Lode, 14; Savage,\nGrand Forks, 11. McKim, Grant!\nForkB, 12; Gardner, Grand Forks, 9.\nGrand Forks rinks having won In\ntho first round for the all comers\ncup, will play off later.\nTen belbw zero this morning at 7\no'clock Is tbe record so far this winter.\nIN   REAL   LIFE\nDeath and the divorce court, those\ntwo great dividers, were recently responsible ror nn encounter In actual\nlife, stranger than many that have\ntaken place on the stage or in a novel.\nA gentleman, who mny be called\nMr. L\u201e lost his first wife many years\nago and waB left with one little girl.\nBy and by he married again, but after\nsome years bis second wife instituted\ndivorce proceedings against him and\na decree was granted. Mrs. L., who\nhnd become attached to her stepchild, took charge of her. Mr. L.\nwent abroad, where he got married\na third time, and again a lUtjle girl\nwas born to him.\nThe child grew up, and her parents and she paid a visit this year to\nMr. L.'s native land. During a walking tour It occurred to him that he\nwas about to pasB through the town\nwhere his second wife and first-born\nchild were living, and he wrote to the\nformer, said by whom he was accompanied, and begged permission to call.\nThis was readily and even graciously granted, and he was received, with\nMrB. and Miss L. on the footing of\nan old friend. A pleasant afternoon,\nto all appearances, was spent, but\nBtrange sensations must have been\nexperienced in a party which included\nthe daughter of a first wife, a second\nwife, a third wife, her child, the fatb\ner of both daughters and the huBband\nof both wives.\u2014Manchester Guardian\nTHOSE  NOVA  SCOTIAN3\nIt ls remarkable how many successful men Nova Scotia has contributed\nto all walks of life. What a great\nman, for Instance, was Jumes W. John*\natone, with Intellectual power ot the\nhighest order and the broad vision of\na statesman. Then there was Josepb\nHowe, Incomparable aB an oralm*. and\nbis great antnennlHt. Charles Tupper.\nwith Ids Imperial vision. Johnstone.\nHowe and Tupper were successively\nprime minister of their native province. Many other Nova Scotlana have\nbeen prominent ln our public, profea-\nSHIWH,\nCURII\nCOUGHS\nMOLDS\nSpring\nDress Goods\nWe have just received a large assortment of new\npiece goods, including: ,!\nPRIESTI.BY'H   FAMOUS   SERGES HULQAE1AN\nHI.AIDS\nSHEPHRRD'S CHUCKS\nMOHAIR\nSII.K AND WOOL MIXTURES\nROMAN STRIPES-\nSILKS AND SATINS IN\nBROCADE\nPLAIN MESSALIlJra\nROMAN STRIPES   .\nBLACKS IN\nPEAi! 1)H SOIE\nMOIRE\nCORDED\nDUCHESS\nMcCall Patterns\nFEBRUARY PATTERNS JUST TO HAND\nALSO THE MpOALL MAGAZINES AND PATTERN BOOKS\nWE SHALL BE PLEASED TO SHOW YOU OUR STOCK\nSmillie & Weir\nBurns Block\nBlonal and buslnesB life, and touay a\nNova Scotian, in the person \u00abf Robert\nLaird Borden,..is prime minister of\nthe Dominion.\u2014Montreal Mull.\nRADIUM   TREATMENT   FUTILE\nCONGRESSMAN IS DEAD\n(Ry Dallv NCwo Leaded Wlrpl\nBAI\/riMOR13, Md., Feb. 5.\u2014Congressman Robert G. Uicmner, whose\nbrave fight for life against, cancer attracted the attention of the country,\ndied today at the Kelly sanitarium\nhere, -where he underwent nullum\ntreatment. In a final effort to save\nMr. Iliemner.'s life, Dr. Kelly inserted\nItpO.OOO worth or radium In the shoulder.\nCALL ISSUED FOR THIRD\nPEACE CONFERENCE\nfRy Dally News Leased Wirei\nWASHINGTON, Feb. T,.\u2014The United States, it became known at the\nWhite House today, has issued-a call\nfor the holding of the third peace conference at The Hague next year. This\ntfovernment took Ihis action, It is understood, at the request of Queen\nWllhelmlnn of Holland.\nEATING RELIEVES\nSTOMACH TROUBLE\nA Prominent Physician's Advice.\n\"Eat Rood foods ami plenty of them.\nDieting, in many cases, is almost criminal. Get back to tiorni.rt. Tn do so\nyou must have the proper quantity of\nnourishment. You need it for bruin\nor physical work. Probably there in\nm-thliiH- the matter with your stomach\nexcept acidity. That Is merely an abnormal secretion of acid in the st'-m-\nach. Neutralize that acid and your\nstomach trouble will end at once.\nNewieet may mean ulcers if not cancer\nof the stomach, 'Do not take patent\nmedicines or pepsin tablets for dyspepsia. Simple take a neutralize]- of\nacid. Decidedly the best neutrallzer\nIs ordinary druggist's bisnratod magnesia. Vou can get It at any drug\nstor(. for a Tew cents. Take a tea-\n\"\u25a0poonfnl In a quarter glass of water\nafter each meal. The relief will be\nImmediate.''\nThis\nMorris Chair\nOak\u2014Spring Upholstered\nSeat and Back\nPrice\n.00\n$10\u2122\nStandard Furniture Co\nComplete Houis Furnishers\nNELSON, B.C.\nTHORPE'S\nDRINKS\nForest Mills of B. G, Ltd.\nManufac   LUMBER\nturers        LATH\nof\" \u2022 ' MOULDINGS\nSHINGLES\nEuimates Given on All Kind* of%Building Material\nYARD8\u2014FRONT StREET\nP. O, BOX 1068\nWILSON'S\nINVALIDS* PORT\na la   Quma    du   Pet-ou\nAFTER FEVER\nCaln.nl - Pby.Llan. - Frequently - PreaerllM\nWILSON'S INVALIDS' PORT\n{k U Qulnft d*> PtSrou) a mild stimulant nnd nutritive tonic, Ixcnuse it can he\n\u25a0 admrnuteatedwlthoiit danger of disturbing tho most Bi;rtMtlvcstomnch, aad\ncan betaken by UiOMWhose condition prohibits hitler or imnKent tonics. After\na KriOBi IUne\u00ab, partlcutaily l,a Grippe or Fever, this salutary rccoaatructlve\ntonic promote*\nHealth-strength.\nBOTTLE\nASK    YOUR      * \u25a0 \u25a0% \u25a0        ALL\ni DOCTOR l DRUGGISTS\n FRIDAY ..-.....\u25a0   FEBRUARY I\nCfje Batty $eto*\n13$\nPAGE THREE\nSHEFFIELD WINS\n,. REPLAYED MATCH\nFour   Injured   by   Collapse  of  Wall\u2014\nWanderers'  Goalkeeper  Faints\n.-\u25a0\u25a0\u2022' at Spectacle\ni (iBv Daily News Leased \"Wire)\nNLOJjpON, Vol). R.\u2014The roplayed'.cu-p\ntier, resulted lu a victory for the home\nte^up, Sheffield Wednesday winning*-\nby,, tile score'of 1 to 0 from \"Wolver-\nbatnnton Wanderers. The same was\ntlndsbed after -those Injured .through\nthp wall. collapsing had been attendee}\ntOw neither team scoring after the accident. Four men were seriously hurt\nbut there were no'fatalities. E. j;\nPeers, the Wanderers' goalkeeper,\ntainted'at tho spectacle and did not\nreat*Jme. playJng. The attendance numbered 43,000.\nMARCUS TEAM TO\nPLAY HERE TONIGHT\nLocal High School Boys Will Be Opponents\u2014Two Good Preliminaries\nArranged\ni Tho' ussomlbly hall \u25a0 of the public\n\u2022School Js expected to be crowded to\nite utmost capacity tonight,, when the\nbasketball teams of 'the Marcus and\nNolson -high schools will meet .for the\nipeond .timo in the history of those institutions. { On a previous occasion\nsome tliree years ago :the Mureus boys\nplayed hero and bunded a beat ing to\ntho, local scholars,' which they expect\nto 'be alble to \"wipe out tonight.\n\u25a0 Besides the main..event of ithe evening, two good preliminaries have been\narranged, one botVeen -the girls of the\npublic and high schools nnd the other\nbetween a picked team from the Y. M.\nC. A. and tho team from St. Paul's\nguild.    ...\nThe line-ups of tho teams were announced last night as follows:\nHigh School\u2014C. E. Armbrister and\nBradshaw, guards; H. Nagle, centre;\nH. Gibbs and R. Maurftr, forwards.\nY. \u25a0 M.\" 0. A.\u2014-C. Emory ,and J*~- B.\nCummins, guards; R. S. Turner, centre; Hi Roe and J. Evans, forwards.\n,St. Paul's Guild\u2014 C. E. ArmbHstcr\nand A. Simons, guards; W. A, Cui'tup,\ncentre; H. Frauds and G, Brown, forwards.\n' Central School girls\u2014Pauline An-\ntlorson and Elsie Thompson, guards;\nIteinlield Olseu, centre;.Dorothy Whit-\nmore and. Gladys Matthews, forwards.\n. iHlgb, School girls\u2014Frances Wolverton and Hazel Thompson, guards;\nFlorence Peters, centre; Lillian Oates\nand Isabel Forin, forwards.\n;.H. Gibbs will referee the game between the Guild and the Y. M. C. A.,\n\u25a0yhlle tho other two attractions will\nbe handled by J. Evuns.\nCRANBROOK WINS\n\u25a0     0VER_BLAIRM0RE\nCrow City Enthusiastic Over Hockey\n\/ \u2014May Arrange Game With\nNelson.\n(Special'to Tho Dally News.)\n, GltANBItOOK, B. C\u201e Feb. 5.\u2014The\nhockey match at the arena rink tonight between Blairmore and Cranbrook resulted iu a win for Cranbrook,\neight to four. The game Was very\nfast. From start to finish tho Cran-\nlirdok boys playeil very good combination. They had a hard team t0 go up\nagainst, as the Blairmoro team hold\nt|i0 championship of southern Albcrla\non the Crows Nest pass. The attendance at the rink was very good considering the very cold snap.    .\nCranbrook sports are very enthusiastic in support of hockey and propose-giving-Nelson a game In the near\nfuture. >\nTHREE CURLINp  GAMES\nPLAYED   LAST  NIGHT\n, At the curling rink last night tliree\ngames, were    played    between    rinks\n\u2022 skipped by A. T. Walley, C. D. Blackwood, W. H. .Jones, A. Hundcn, A. J.\nDill and p.  W. Hutchinson,    Walley\n.Jones  and  Di|l  skipped   the  winning\n,rinks.   Tho scores were:\n.A.   T.   Walley,   \u00bbUlp;   Gt  BovclL, 4;\nf A. A. l'orrler,3;  I).  Proudfoot, 2;  C.\n.D. .Tarvls,  lead\u20148.    C.  D.  Blackwood,\nskip; J. H. D. Benson,-I; W.-M. Archibald, 3; W. A. Thurman, 2; H. Bush,\nlead\u2014 B.:\n\u25a0W.' H. Jones, skip; D. C. Fraser, 3;\nT. Smith, 2; W. J. Aslley, lead\u201412.\nA. Hunden, skip; A. Jeffs, 3; A. Mnl-\nllnson, 2; V. Eperson, lead\u20148.\nA. J. Dill, skip; J. Cartmcl, 3; T. D.\nStark, 2; N. H. Johnson, lead\u201412. D.\n\"y?, Hutchinson, skip; J. Smith, 3; R.\nJ. Winters,- 2; A. D. Emory, lead\u20147.;\u00ab\nROSSLAND CURLERS PRESENT\nit   SILVERWARE  TO  G.  HUNTER\n...So.dqlighted wus the Rossland Curling club with thc manner in which\nQVorge A., Huntor managed, the re-\nqent bonsplei of the British Columbia\nCurling association at Rossland that\nIt -presented blm with a splendid case\n. of silverware, which is on view at\nThunmun's cigar store. -Sir.' Hunter\naptetr-fls 'bonsplei secretary.\n\"He Family Friend for 40 yeare.\"    A never\nI relief for Croup and Whoopmr Cough.\nSKATING\nAT THE RINK\nEtch  Afternoon  and   Evening  dur-\n)n$: the cold i weather.\n'AFTERNOONS, 3 TO 5 O'CLOCK\n'\u2022\u25a0\u25a0   EVENINGS, 0 TO 10 O'CLOCK\n'.Saturday Afternoons, 2 to 4 o'clock\n.  -     A-   ALL\/.N-\nA member of the Toronto Central*-Y,\nM.C.A'., who ut present\" holds the' div*\nlag championship of Canada.\nGOLDEN SPIEL\nCOMES TO CLOSE\nHonors In Three Competitions Remain\nat Home\u2014Banquet In Honor\nof Visitors.\ny (Special .to The Dally News)\nGOLDEN, B. C., Feb. 5.\u2014With Henderson winning the grand challenge;\nBowes, the Peter Dawson; Shfrlock,\nthe P. Burns and grand aggregate,\nand Edwards of Banff the consolation,\nGolden bonsplei was ; brought to a\nclose -tonight.\nThreo of the four competitions have\nbeeu won hy local rinks, despite the\nfact that several of the visiting rinks\nwere strong. A well attended smoker\nwas held in the Lyric theatre tonight\nin honor or the visiting curlers, at\nwhich the prises were distributed.\nCITY BAND WILL\nACCOMPANY SPECIAL\nLarge Crowd  of  Nelsonitse  Expected\nto Attend Gamo in Rossland Tonight\u2014Many Ladies Will Go\ni -What is ej-jjpeted to provo the larg\nest gathering that over lett Nelson by\nspecial train will leave tonight for\nRossland* at B:30 o'clock, when the\nmembers of the hockey fraternity of\nNelson and followers of the Nelson\nhockey team will be enabled to attend\nthe final game for the British Columbia championship, which will be played tonight at the golden city between\nthe RoKslaiul and Nelson teams.\nArrangements were last night completed for the special, which will bo\nrun under the auspices of the city\nband.. The band will accompany the\ncrowd and last night they arranged\nwith the railway company to provide\na special coach fur the ladies, .fnany\nof whom had Intimated their intention\nof making the Journey and encouraging the local boys in their fight for\nthe big event of the Rossland winter\ncarnival.\nReturning, the train will leave Itoas-\nland as soon after the hockey match\nas possible, and it is expected that the\narrival back in Nelson will be made\nabout 1:3U o'clock.\nIt Is expected that a large contingent will be picked up at Trail, and\naltogether from the two places fully\n300 aro expected to be In attendance\nat tlic gamo tonight.       .    *\nThat there will be lots of noise in\ntbe Rossland rink goes without saying\nfor the city band promises to keep\nthings lively and will be a decided as\nslstance to thc club's boosters.\nLAPGE  CROWD  WATCHES\nGAME  AT  FERNtE\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nFE-RNIE, li. a, Feb. 5;\u2014The most\nexciting hockey, guine of the seusbn\nwas pullod off on Tuesday at the rink\nbetween teams from the Trftes-Wood\ncompany and the Crows Nest Trading\ncompany, resulting In six to five in\nfavor of the former team.\nHarry Weir, goalkeeper for tho\nTrltes-Wood company, displayed great\ncleverness an,-1 skill and saved the\ngame Tor that toani.\nThe game was witnessed by about\n30*1 spectators.\nMONARCHS AND VICTORIAS\n.ON EVEN TERMS\n., (By Dally News Leased Wire)\n.WINNIPEG, Feb. li.\u2014The Monarchs\njuntped-on-even-terms with the Vic-\ntqtfasfor tho'leadership of 'the-Winnipeg amateur, hockey championship\nby defeating'the Victorias at the auditorium tonight 'by a scoro of 6 to 3\nafter a fast game. .-, >;, \u25a0 >    < <\u25a0   \u2022 '\nFOURTH CITY LEAGUE GAME\n'.\"    TOMORROW AFTERNOON\nTomorrow afternoon at 4, o'clock\nthe Bankers und Y.M.C.A. Hockey\nteniuB will meet at the rink In the\nfourth game of the city umateur\nleague.\nFew voting, men rise In flip world\nuntil altpr (hey. settle down.\nTRAIL WINS INTERNATIONAL\nCHAMPIONSHIP AT CARNIVAL\nROSSLAND TAKES FINAL OF I NTERNATIONAL SERIE6\u2014 NELSON\nTHIRD IN INTERNATIONAL\u2014B RITISH COLUMBIA CHAMPIONSHIP\nFINAL TONIGHT.\nROSSLAND, B. C, Feb. 5.\u2014The\nfinals in two events were fought out\nat the fourth -day of the Rossland winter carnival today and. the final for\nthe International championship fell to\nthe Trail team, which administered .a\ndefeat to.the Rossland boys this evening to the tune of nine goals to two.\nIn the Intermediate final between Kaslo and Rossland the home boys proved\nthat they were the best team entered\nand they defeated Kaslo by the score\nof five goals to one.\nBy defeating Fernie by tbe score of\n10 goals to two this afternoon the\nKelson hockey team captured third\nmoney ln the international series and\nIn tbe first game of the junior series\nthis morning Kossland's younger element again proved victorious by a\nscore of 14 -goals to five.    ,\nTomorrow night Nelson and Rossland Seniors play, \"off In the final of\nthe British Columbia championship.\nSki races with horses was one of\nthe feature events of the day and\nmuch interest was .manifest in the ski\njump, for hoys, which was held during\nthe morning hours.\nLucca Wins Fight.\n\u2022 The, fight in the. evening between\nCharlie Lucca of Rossland and Young\nMaxwell, of Great Falls, -Mont., went\nthe full 20 rounds and In each round\nLucca had th\u201e best of tho mill. Referee Boyd awarded the decision to\nLucca, which was favorably received.\nThero was a large attendance at the\nbout and it was a good fight all the\nway. ,\nTrail Takes International\n: Trail won .the final of the-International championship hockey, played\nhere tonight before the large audience.\nIntense interest ts being taken.-Jn. nil\nthe games, but the ono tonight was\na ,top notcher. The ganie started at\n.8:25, and It \u25a0certainly kept the rooters\nshouting,.\nWhen the puck was dropped, Trail\ngot the break away and shot it away\ntowards Rossiand's nets, but It quickly\ncamo back and soared up and down\nfor two minutes, then Mercer captured the first one for Trail and one,-\nImlf minute later Haddock scored another for Trail. The play then rolled\naround for five minutes, when Sex\nsmith got a pretty shot in from centre\nice and scored the first for Rosslnnd,\nThe Play now went along for 10 minutes before another one was made.\nThis time McDonough took ithe puck\nup from his end and with bard work\nshot it in. There wore two penalties\nin this period. Ramsay was off just\n10 seconds before the gong sounded\nand Mercer 40 seconds before. They\nboth had to go Into the box at the bo-\nginning .of. the, second period. The\nscoro at this timo was 3\u20141 in Trail's\nfa voi'. .'\nThe second period was very fast and\nsome heavy checking -was Indulged in.\nHaddock scored one for Trail after\neight minutes of play and threo minutes later punched It in'again. After\nsome hard work Sexsmlth managed to\ni*ea*h Trull's net and,when this period\nended tho score was 5\u20142 for Trail.\nOno penalty was all- for this period.\nSexsmlth, of Rossland, being off. Mc-\nCammon's knee got bad from the effects of bis sprain last night and Griffith replaced him. Ellis replaced Roland for this 'period also for Rossland.\nThe third period started off with a\nrush, but not half so fast as last\nnight's game. Trail took the lead from\ntho start in this period and gained\nfour more points without Rossland being able to find the net. Three of\nthese were made by Haddock and one\nby Saunders, making tbo score 9\u20142 In\nTrail's favor. There was ono (penalty\nduring this period, Mercer being off\ntliren minutes.\nTiie line-up was:\nTrail Rossland\nVannatter    goal    Cook\nMcDonough   ... .point    Roland\n.Atkins ... ...cover point.. McCammon\nMcDonald   ..... .rover    Jewell\nHaddock    centre.......   Sexsmlth\nSaunders   ... .left, wing    Ramsay\nMercer right wing...*,.  Corbctt\nJudge of play, Rochon, Grand Forks;\nReferee, McLeod, Calgary,,\nNelson Takes Third Place.\nThe senior game bf hockey for thij-d\nprize lit the international championship was played here this.afternoon\nbetween Fernie and Nelson. Quite a\nlarge crowd gathered to see this\nmatch. It started with a good lively\ncombination landi they played until\nnearly the finish of tho period before\na goal was scored, then Nolson got\ntwo just two minutes before the tlmo\nwas called.\nThe second period was much about\nthe same, Nelson scoring three more\nIn this period.\nThe third period was slightly faster\nbut Nelson kept their lead and added\nfive more to It, while Fernie got two\nIn this period, making a score of 10-2\nIn* Nelson's favor.\nHaddock of \"Trail was referee and\nMercer of Trail Judge of play.\nThe lineup was:\nPernio. Nelson.\nClode ......... Goal  Cadden\nWallace  , Point  Ross\nBurland .... Cover point ..... Bishop\nStewart  Centre Grant\nMcQuinn Left wing Taylor\nDunlop ..... Right wing Hacking\nThrasher Rover  Oliver\nMcKay of Nelson Is out of the game\nFor two, weeks at. least und it is doubt-\n,fu.MMie wjft,nla,v'again- this season,\nas. he has a ,v,ery;bad..knee.\nDuring the second period Rogers\nreplaced Wallaco on tho Fernie team.\nRosslamf Juniors Win.\ni Tbe hockey game between the Ross-\nland, and .Trail'Juniors this morning\nivas pretty, good hockey for the size\nof tbe players.' Rossland won by a\nscore of 14 to five.\nIntermediate Final.   ,\nRossland won. the final In the intermediate championship hockey by- a\nscore of five to one, when this after-\nnoon they defeated the Kaslo septet.\nThe game started-under the vary\nbest- of..conditions, the ice never, being better, but the crowd was not as\n,large as was expected for this final\ngame,. , RoBslatid scored the onlv goal\nIn the firat period,. Watson got the\nfirst from a pass by Keefe and Hamilton getting, tne other by a shot from\nright-wing. There was ono penalty\n'during- the period, a Rossland man\nbeing,off one minute. Ono of tho\nKaBlo.boys-;got fl.'ijastyr^calp wound\nby being cut by a skate when he fell\ndown'\nThe second period was a repeat of\nthe first, in that Bosslaiid won all the\ngoals,; Meikle got the first by a shot\nfrom centre and Dixon got Uie next on\na pass from Keefe and Watson scored\nfrom left wing, the total score now\nbeing 5-.0..\nThe third ronnd was a little raster,\nbut still Rossland was able to hold\nthem down to one goal and won hy a\nscore of 51.\nTh0 lineup was:\nKaslo. Rossland.\nDunn    Goal   Evaps\nVallance ....... Point.  Dixon\nHume Cover point .... Stanton\nBurgess '.*.-....- .Rover  Keefe\nWhite ..... .. Centre   Mickels\nLink  teftwing  Watson\nTapanllla .... Right wing ... Hamilton\nSaunders of Trail, referee.\nNovel ski Race.\nAn exhibition ski race with horses\ntook plaoo at 10 o'clock thl3 morning\non Columbia avenue. There were four\nentries, the money being ' divided\namongst the four.\n. In the boys' ski jump, which took\nplace on Spokane street this morning,\nfor thoBe under lfi, the first prize was\nwon by Fd Freeman and the second\nby A. Sharpe, Following were the\njumps made: Ed Freeman. \"5 ft.. A.\nShape, 32 ft. 6 1-2 in.: William Liiina,\ni.8 ft. 9 in.; Brooks, 21 ft.\nIn tho Jump for boys under 12 the\nfirst prize wap won hy T. Sharpe. The\nJumps made were: T. Sliarne, 30 ft\n10 in.;- B. Rinqulst, 30 ft. 8 in.: Louis\nFirst,\" 29 ft.; Ed Robertson, 24 ft. 9 in\nToday's Program.\nFollowing Is .the program of sports\nfor Friday:\ni 10 a.m.\u2014Junior hockey, final for\nsilver cup. Property of team winning\nit two years; also medals to winning\nplayers.\n| 11:15 a.m.\u2014Log-sawing contest, two\nmen, four cuts, 24 to 20 luck log,\nagainst time. Four teams to enter or\nno second prize. Takes place on Columbia avenue. First prize \u00a520, second $ 10\n12 a.m.\u2014Log-chopping contest, two\ncuts In 11 to 10 inch lo*;. Ono cut\nat each end. First prize ?10, second\n,?5. Takes place on Washington\nstreet.\nAfternoou\u2014vClvfc \" holiday dtefelared\nby Mayor Wilson.\n2 o'clock\u2014Ladies hockey, Nelson vs\nRossland.\n3:30\u2014Skating, race, one mile, championship of British Columbia. Opon\nto all amateurs. Will be run between\nthe hockey periods or after. First\nprize, locket, value $5; second, locket,\nvalue $3.. Three to start or no second\nprize,\n4 o'clock\u2014Senior hockey, third prize\nBritish Columbia cup certes.\n. Evening, 8 o'clock\u2014Senior hockey,\nfirst prize British Columbia cup series.\nShield to winners and ?400; second\nprize, $150 to'losers.\nCarnival . dance , at Miners' Union\nball at conclusion of gain'e. Presentation of prizes by Mayor Wilson.\nWILLINfTTOllSE\nOPEN SIGHT\nOttawa   Marksman   Willing   to   B8  on\nEqual Footinq with Competitors\n\u2014Targets   are   Difficulty.\n(By Dally Nows Leased Wire)\nOTTAWA, Feb. 5.\u2014Local riflemen\nare much concerned over tho changes\nIn the Bisley piogr.-.im, and the probability that there, will ibe no Canadian\nteam sent to the mulches In the oh\"\ncountry this year.\n\"It is unfortunate.''* said Sergt. W\n0, Russell, of tli? Governo\" General's\nFoot Gu.ii.rds. who is one of the n-\"i\u00ab\nconsistent^ rifle shots In Canada, ' thirds hitch has occur'-ed, ovp\u00ab th'\nBlslev- matches. However, If I intern\nret the eom'munlcaHons r'trht. the 'on\ndltlons at Rlsley do not tn-f-. off\"f\nnv>r two or threo yearn, .gnri if pucJi ir\n.thf. case, of course, -It would not affect the team this year. I da not \u25a0\u25a0*\u2022'\n\u25a0the same objection to tho ellmlnatioi\nof tlic'p\u00abcn sight that some do.\n\u25a0 \"I would be mdtf p-'eoflr-vi to g\" t*\nHlsle.- and up*> *he Lee'-'ft'*field rlfl\"\nThq National Rifle asu-'cintion lv>s nl-\nwavs enou-rh extra rifles nva'hhl\" i'\norovlde n team such a\u00ab tin Canad'.-.i\n\u25a0team and l ha-\" u\u00ab ob.t'-c'inn to v-\n'na- any sight that the others use. Ii\ndiet. I would prefe* usln-r llie i ee-En-\nfIpUI rifle, T believe ttmt Mie Ion.\"\nRobs if. fiq he'te\u00ab mutch rifle an-1\n.would prefer not bavinjr this ndy'nnt-\n\"(ro over the men nsin? the Lee-En,-\n<\"le?d. even if the association' did allow it.    .\n\"The PTCut difficulty T .\u00abe. is ir\nthe,\" tar-rets. The use of targets flvi\nvou cannot -**>e, imk\u00ab-- It to a g*'e><\nevtent, 'i matter of lu^k ns t-> w\"*\"\nwins, Tf is' liardlv worth .wli^e t--\n\u2022\"erivi a teom'o'-'&r to \u25a0t;i.ke. pnrt Ir\nmatches Bo much-decided bv ohmve. \u25a0\nC   VfeZINA\nThe marvelous goalkeeper of the Cull-\nadienst   Vezina is the bnst not guardian In the National Hockey ussocia-\n':       tion.\nSCARLET   FEVER   EPIDEMIC\nCLOSES   OWEN   SOUND  SCHOOL\n(By Dally News Leased Wire)\nOWEN SOUND, Out., Feb. 3.\u2014An\nepidemic of scarlet fever has spread\nover Owen Sound and as a result one\nschool has been closed and will remain\nso for three weeks. In Ryerson school\nthere are 'safd to-be no less than 10\ncases and for the lust five or six days\nfresh cases have been detected every\nday.\nWEARING    THE    HEARt- ON THE\nHOSE .\nLadles'  stocking^, embroidered .with\ntbo name of. tho favored'sw,aln, '\nSUICIDE  AT  WATERLOO\n(By Daily News Leased Wlret\nWATERLOO, Ont., Feb. 5\u2014The dead\nbody of Andrew Beachy was found\nthis morning In bis room:* at .the\nBwitld hotel, his throat cut from ear\nto ear and a razor by his side. -He\nwas a married man, his family residing In Walkerton. He has been in a\ndespondent mood for some weeks.\nLICENSE INSPECTOR IS\nDISPOSSESSED BY  MAYOR\nCALGARY, Alta., Feb. .WLicense\nInspector .Manarey. who refused to\nslve up hi:j office, after the council\nhad .dismissed him on the contention\nthat .a, fnihscqucnt vote of counci!\nrendered its former action void, wus\ndispossessed of hlsoft'ice today by the\nchief uf police, acting under the 'mayor's orders.\nGIRL'S ARM  BROKEN\nWHEN RANGE EXPLODES\nMOOSE JAW, Sask.. Feb. 5.\u2014A\nrange exploded In a house on Hrioh-\nenhtga street this morning, driving the\nmetal In ull direction*! and Ruth Mc-\nfhee, a young girl, who was standing\nneiir, was struck on the head by a,\nflying piece of metal and knocked\nsenseless and also sustained a broken\narm,     v \u25a0\u25a0 - ti\nENGLAND HAS\nNEW DIOCESES\n(Continue.- from cage one.)\ntaWii from ISSD io 1891. He also was\nchief press censor during the South\nAfrican war.\nDetails of an alleged threat to wreck\nthe train by which David Lloyd\nGeorge travelled tr) Louden after his\nGlasgow speech have jusl ccrne to\nlight. <m Wednesday afternoon Lib-\ncial officials In Glasgow recolved a\nletter warning them that an attempt\nwas to be made to wreck the eharieol-\nlor of thp exchequer's tialn. Though\nonly sliglll Importance was attached\n|o thc letter. It was handed to Jhe\npolice, who passed on tho wafnirg tu\ntho railway officials iii),| telegrams\nwen* sent to ntntlun agents and signal\nmon to be on the lookout for any suspicious circumstances that might\ncome under their notice.\nThe political world n greatly exorcised as to what developments will\ntake place when par Lament rem-jiis\nTuesday next. It Is believed that home\nrule and the Ulster issues ,vil! bo\nraised immediately by official opposition amendments tu tlio address in\nre*\"'\"   to tho Fticech from   the throne.\nThe Ohrohlelo (Liberal)  says todu\nthat If these take the form nf a specific  demand  for a  genera!  election,\nthey will be refused.\nTin* Telegraph (Unionist) says the\nUnionist-- will accept only the. ub.-'o-\nlule exclusion of Ulster or a general\nelection, while the Express assert.'\nthat the Unionists wil! u'nhe3ltatlnglj\nInsi-St upon f.niimM'i'.e sjenetul' election -as the only solution of Ihe situation. It is nnteworlhy that Sir\nGeorge Cave, M. p., speaking ufter Uie\neonfereiuv of the leaders of tlie Unionists, declared Ihat the government\nmust omit Ulster from tho Irish bill\naltogether or otherwise modify the bib\nSo a3 t0 secure the fullest protection\nfor the protestant minorities in the\n\u25a0.vest and south of Ireland <aa well us\nIn Ulster.\nThe Mail says that the statements\nthat unprecedented step; are tu be\ntaken *n tho first week, lu force an\n'\u25a0lection arc unfounded.\n. The Graphic records the existence\nof a force of 15,000 Englishmen, Including active and retired officers, aviators and wireless exports us reudv to\nfume to the aid ui Ulster in the event\nOf hostilities. It says that the force js\nbeing recruited at the riite of -.'tto u\nday. Liverpool alone has furnished a\n\u25a0corps 100C- stroh,( and London one of\nSOO strong.\nThe Pally News (Libera]) and the\nMorning Post, (Conservative), agree\nthat the cabinet on Thursday 1 mt\nagreed t0 revive naval estimate!*, re-\n\u25a0Uielng thc demands to a total of\n1151,000,000. but still leuv.ng the four\nnew capitul-shliiH. Tbo Cost suggests\n\u25a0 Unit thc ministers a*e actuated bv n\ndesire to present tlie most fa>orablu\nbudget .possible- with n view to a possible, general election In lli0 very near\nfuture.\nBurleigh   Convalescent\nThe Earl and Countess,bf Harrow\nby have returned from South'America,\nUennett Burleigh, tha war correspondent, whose death waa expected\nlast week, lias made a remarkable recovery aud is now considered out of\n;danger.\nLord Templetuwn has made a provisional selitme for paving hfs creditor^ in full which Is like.lv to be accepted by them, .    ,\nAMATEUR  HOCKEY  EXECUTIVE\nTO   MEET  THIS   AFTERNOON\nThere will be n meeting of the executive ^r the Nelson Amateur Hockey\nleague nt the Y.M.C.A at 5 o'clock\nUiis ufternoon.\nKootenay and Boundary I\nL- -**!,\u201e j -*\nLITERARY  AND   DRAMATIC\nSOCIETY  AT  ARROW  PARK\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nARROW PARK', Fob. Ii.\u2014At a we'll\nattended meeting, held In the town\nhall on Monday evening*, it was decided to form a niusk-al, literary and\ndramatic Society. T. Sonierville whs\nelected secretary and with an executive under the presidency of J. Naylor.\nwill manage affairs. Tho first meeting will be held on Saturday, Feb, 14. '\nwhen a discussion on the \"Development of Arrow I'arl;\" will take place.\nHALCYON  NOTES\n(Special to Tha Daily Npwp.V\nHALCYON, B. C, Feb. 5.\u2014Mrs. H.\nW. Atkinson of Rossland arrived on\nMonday for a fortnight's rest.\nP. P. Armstrong and G. W, Pease\nof Nelson were here for a day in the\nbeginning of tho week.\n.Mrs. f. H, Paulson returned home\npn Saturday. Mr. Paulson stayed until Wednesday and left entirely free\nfrom .rheumatism,\nH. Glenn and L. W. Humphrey of\nNelson returned home on Wednesday.\n.lames Walker and Richard Koller\nof Rqyplstbke arrived on Tuesday, suffering from rheumatism.\nP. Halbon oi' Sandon returned home \u25a0\ncu Friday, much benefited by his two\nweeks' stay.\nMr. and Mr*}, Boyd arc attending the\ncarnival at Rossland.\nRev. VV*. Stephen of Nakusp held his\nweekly Service on Wednesday even-\naing.\nThe temperature touched zero on\n(Thursday, the lowest it has beeu at\nHalcyon for several wftitera.\nSHIPLEY   IS  TREASURER\nOF LAW SOCIETY\nTORONTO, Feb. 5.*\u2014George Shipley.\nK.C., ono of tho best known members of the ba- in Canada, was today\nInaugurated as treasurer of the 1'ppoi'\nCanada Law society, in succession to\nthe late'Sir Aemillus Irving, who held\nthe Post for many years.\nSTOMACH HEALTH\u2014\nOR M COST TO YOU\nVery likely others have advised you to\nuse Rexail Dyspepsia Tablets, because\nscores of people in this community believe\nthem to be the best remedy ever made for\nDyspepsia and Indigestion. That is whan\nwc think, ton, because we know what they\nhave done for others and what they are\nmade of. Wc have so much faith in them\nthat wc urge you tp try them at our risk.\nIf they don t help you, they won't cost you\na cent. If they don't do all that you want\nthem to do\u2014ii they don't restore your\nstomach to heal tli and make your digestion\neasy\u2014just tell us and we will give back\nyour money without a word or question.\nContaining Pepsin and Bismuth, two of\nthe greatest digestive aids known to medical science, they soothe thc inflamed stomach lining, help in the secretion of gastric\njuice, check heartburn and distress, promote regular bowel action, and make it\npossible for you to eat whatever you like\nwhenever you like, with thc comforting\nassurance {hat there will be no bad aftereffect;*. Wc believe them to be tlie best\nreined)'- made for dyspepsia and indigestion. Sold only at \"the more tlian'7,000\nRexail Stores, and in this town only at our\nstore. Three size-., 2fic, fiftc and ft.fNl.\n\u2014Tbe Poole Drug Company.\n PAGE  FOUR\nC&r Bail? llrm\nFRIDAY  FEBRUARY S\"    I\nCtic Sail? jletos\nPublished   at   Nelson   Every   Morning\nExcept Sunday, by\nTha Newt Publishing Company,\nLimited\nW. G. FOSTER, Editor and Manager.\nLEGAL   AND   OFFICIAL\nADVERTISING.\nEffective  on  and   after  Jan.   1,   1913.\nLegal Advertising 'includes municipal\nand government notices) \u2014 12c\nper line for the first insertion\nand eight cents per line for all\nsubsequent insertions.\nIn certain esses, however, for tbe\nconvenience of the public, flal\nrates have been set, as follow*:\nApplications re Liquor Licenses:\u2014\nOnce per week for fiur weeks,\n16;  daily for month, $*J0.\nApplications   for   Trancfer  of   Liquor\nLicenses:*\u2014 Ore e    per    week    fo.\nfour     weeks,     $7.50;     daily     for\nmonth. $45..\nLand    Purchase    Notices;\u2014Once    per\nweek for *.0 days, $;.\nLand  Least Notices;\u2014Once per week\nfjr 60 days. 17.\nCertificate   of   Improvement   Notices:\n\u2022^-Once   per   week   for   60   days,\n112.50.\nOelmquent    Co-ownership    Notices:\u2014\nOnce per week for 90 days, ?25.\nDuplicate Certificate of Title Notices:\n\u2014Four   Insertions,   $8;   eight   Insertions, |14.\nWater     Application     Notices:\u2014Four\nInsertions   up   to   100   words,   |C;\nover 100 words, in proportion.\nWhere  any  of  the  above  appllca-\nI tlons contain more than one appllca-\nj tlon   or   notice,   each   application   or\nnotice will be charged for as a separate advertisement.\nFRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6\n| THREE   MEASURES   OUT   OF   THE\nORDINARY.\nMeasures   somewhat   out   of   the\nj ordinary routine  were tho order of\ntho day at Ottawa yesterday.   Three\nin particular can he  placed in that\nclass,  that of Mr. Alplionse Verville,\nthe I<abor-Liberal member for Mais-\nsonneuve, providing for the restriction\nof the use of the detectophone; that\ndf  Mr. .1. H.  Burnham,  Conservative\nrepresentative of West Peterborough,\nj to prevent the Dominion government\nI from recommending persons for titles\nof honor, and that of Mr. Robert Bick-\n1 erdikc, Liberal member for St. Law-\n1 reuce, Montreal,   to   abolish   capital\npunishment In Canada.   All are measures worthy of consideration by par\n1 lament.\nThe usefulness of the detectophone\nin the proving of crime cannot be\nquestioned and Mr. Verville does not\npropose to Interfere with the use of\nthis Instrument for this purpose. Hut\nIt is quite conceivable, as the introducer of the bill pointed out, that it\nmight be put to wrong use. The pro-\nceedings of the cabinet might, through\nthis means, bo laid bare and immense\npublic harm done or the secrets of\nfraternal orders or even the confidences of the home might he revealed\nwith annoyanco aud even serious injury to those concerned and no benefit to the public. What has already\nbeen accomplished by the detectophone has demonstrated the usefulness of the Instrument and also tlie\npossibilities of its abuse. Anything\nthat, will prevent, the latter without\ninterfering with the former should be\nwelcomed.\nThe control, or practical control, of\nthe awarding of titles to Canadians le\nalso something which demands sen\nous conaiderutlon. There can he no\nreal objection to the bestowing ol lin\nperial honors ou persons who havi\nrendered signal public service, but\nthere exists the danger of the be-\nBtowal of titles becoming a part of\ntho party machine as so many say it\nis in the mother country. In the past\nfew years a number cf titles have\nbeen bestowed In Cauuda which un\ndoubtedly would not have been had it\nnot been for party reasons. A tendency of this kind is more L.an likely\nto grow with the years.   Any meaa-\nGAS, SOURNESS AND\nINDIGESTION VANISH\nJust   as    Soon   as  \"Pape's  Diapepsin\"\nComes in Contact with the Stomach  all. Distress  is  Gone,\n\"Ueally does\" put bad stomachs Iii\norder\u2014\"really does\" overcome indigestion, dyspepsia, gas, heartburn and\nsourness in five minutes\u2014that\u2014Jusi\nthat \u2014 makes Pape's Diapepsin\nthe lurgost tolllrg stomach regulator In the Wt,rtd. If wlut\nyou eat ' ferments Intj stubborn lump--, yuu belch gas and erue\ntate sobr, undigested food nnd acid;\nhead Is dizzy and aches; breath foul\ntongue coated; your inside,* tilled will-\nbile \u00abnd Indigestible waste, remember\nthi moment Diapepsin ei\u00bbmen In contact with the stomach ,'*.'l such dlst\nvanishes. H'B truly .\u25a0\u2022\u25a0*lnnlshlng \u2014\nmost marvelous, and the joy Is ItB\nhnrmlepsness.\nA large firty-cent ra\u00bb*- -of I'ape's\nDiapepsln will give you a hundred\ndollars\" worth of satltftictlon or ypni\ndruggist hands you your money back.\nIt's worth it's weight in gold to men\nand women who can't gel their stomachs regulated. It belongs In your\nhome-should always be kept handy\nIn ease or n sick, noiir, upset -doniaeh\ndaring the day or at night. It's the\n. quickest, surest and mee' Imrniles.-\nStomaeh doctor hi tin. world.\nure calculated to check this tendency\nor limit the conditions upon which\ntitles may be bestowed should be welcomed in Canada, for this is a democratic country, one in which there is\nno room for any recognized class distinction, such as it is -conceivable\nmight be developed through the indiscriminate awarding of titles Io party\nhacks 'or to the contributors to party\ncampaign funds.\nOn the question of tlie abolition of\napltal punishment there will undoubtedly be some division. The old\nMosaic law of an eyo for an eye und\na tooth for a tooth savors In these\ndays to some as a relic of barbarism.\nAs civilization advances thc more sacred does human life become in the\npublic mind.. A' century ago men Were\nexecuted for crimes that now appear\ntrivial. The application of some of\nthese old laws In Canada today would\nraise sue]} a public protest as would\ndrive from office any government or\nofficial Who tried to enforce them. But\nhuman life .being h,eld more sacred\ntiinu ever before, what is to be the\npunishment of thc man or the woman\nwho deliberately slays another human\nbeing'.' Has that man or that woman\nIn so doing forfeited the right to he\nculled an ordinary human being, or\nis it necessary that the life of that\nman or that woman should be sacrificed as warning to others and thus\nfor tlie protection of human life generally? Thut is the manner in which\ntho matter must be considered. Present-day conditions at least call for\ngreat discrimination in the infliction\nof the death penalty, but the public\nmind in. Canada, and perhaps It would\nbe fair to say the public interest, does\nnot as yet demand the abolition of\nthe death penalty.\nWhile it can be taken for granted\nthat neither of the last two measures\nwill be adopted in the Immediate future, there Is no reason why the first\nshould not at once be made law. The\nothers are likely to remain before the\npeople of Canada as subjects of discussion for many years to come and\nmay finally secure adoption when the\npublic mind has become sufficiently\neducated concerning them.\nPENSION  IN AUSTRALIA.\nAustralia is the home of new legislative Ideas, says the Toronto News.\nThe latest is that all members of parliament should be pensioned upon retirement. The proposal has been ud.\nunced in tbe house by a Liberal member, and has the support of some of\nhis colleagues. The amount of the\nproposed annuity is not mentioned,\nbut it Ib difficult to Bee how any pension scheme would work out satisfactorily. Would it be based upon tbe\nlength of service in parliament?\nWould a member under conceivable\nconditions i ide for a fall in order to\nsecure the life Income?\nIf members of the federal house\nwere given pensions should not members of the provincial legislatures In-\ntreated similarly? If so, would not\nthe consequent burden on the community be intolerably heavy? There\nwould be Justice in providing handsomely for former premiers and other\nretired ministers who have given all\ntheir lime to tbe service of the country, but ordinary members cf parliament cannot be regarded as having\nany particular claim to like treatment,\nWHAT THE PRESS IS SAVING  *\nToo Common.\nTenpins arc recommended for i-irl.-\nho desire to hiive nicely rounded\nno-. -Hut won't tlie broom afjoi'd\ni. it the same kind of exercise?\u2014\n1'jveland Leader,\nThe World's Religions.\nThe world's population viewed fioin\n!ie viewpoint of rel gion. Is chissiried\ns follows: Protestant, 150 millions;\nGreeks, etc. 105 millions; Remun r'uth-\nnllcs, L'10 millions: Jews lo millions:\nMohammedans 2i}9 millions; Heathen\nI'lS millions. Total world's population\nlfi:!3  millions,\u2014Presbyterian.\n\"One Touch of Nature,\" Etc.\nGraft has been -discovered in the\nJapanes,' navy, hn admiral taking big\nsums of money to sbcure contracts, foj\nu certain firm. While we do no- approve of graft the Japs have been b'.'l.\nup to us as eo blamed virtuous thai\nthe story brings a feeling almost ol\npleasure.---Ottawa Journal.\n$\u25a0 <*\n$>                 THE WEATHER <1\n\u2022> .. y\nThe weather in the west yesterday\nwas fine and very cold.\nMin. Max.\nNelson        1 17\nVictoria     28 33\nVancouver  ...\u25a0    -(! -12\nKamloops        '\u25a0\u25a0 n\nEdmonton       -3-1 -8\nCulgary   \u25a0'-$ \"\nMedicine Hat    -^ 18\nBattleford       -M -lfi\nMoose Jaw       \u2022\u2022;i \"1r>\nWinnipeg       -3fi -Iii\nPort Arthur    -12 6   ,\nParry Sound     -10 U\nLondon       17 28\nToronto        IS 2R\nKingston          - 8\nOttawa     -2 8\nMontreal-         I 12\nQuebec      -2 8\n'St. John*     18 2(!\nHalifax       22 28\nForecast\u2014Alberta, decidedly colder\nFine In London\n(Western  Associated   Press Special\nCable.)\nLONDON,   'Feb.    n.\u2014London    fine;\nmaximum '56, 'minimum  -11.\nParis sunny, maximum IS, minimum\n4 AT THE THEATRES\nOn account of sickness, Miss Catherine Henry and Eugene West will be\nunuible'to give their show at lhe opera\nHouse this evening and   tomorrow.\nAt the Starland tonight will be presented \"The Streets of New Stork,\" by\nDion lioueiciiuit, dramatized for film\nproduction. It Is a real fine attraction und is well worth seeing. There\nIs a touch of comedy in the Btor\/i\nshowing a hobo beating bis way from\ntlio Pacific coast to New York city.\nThe .three parts of the story depict\nmany stirring and exciting scenes and\nthe various characters are drawn from\nreal life. The action of the photoplay Is laid in Now York and lias to\ndo with -the machination**, of a set of\nrascals intent on securing \u2022the fortune of a family. The play Ib pro-\ndueed by Trovers Vale, who was the\noriginal producer when the late Prank\nMayo appeared in the leading role.\nTho story is founded on. an Incident\nof the great -panic of 1907 in New\nYork city. Tlie great fire scene,\nwherein Paul rescues a family from\nperishing ln ithe flames and eaves the\ndocuments that prove his Innocence\n-ind the final overthrow of the villain.\nis Intensely sensational.\n'\u2022\u25a0 COMMUNICATION\nGOVERNMENT GRANTS\nAND PRIVATE   HOSPITALS\nTo the Editor of The Dully News.\nSir: I have read In a few numbers\nof tbe Nelson Daily News the resolutions passed by different Conservative clubs In regard to the gun tax\nand revenue tax. I for one would like\nto see the gun tax abolished and the\npoll tax In force again.\nBut as regards the government collecting taxes and turning them over\nlo help private hospitals, 1 must say\n1 am not In favor. If the government\nwould build and operate the hospitals\nas government hospitals, ivfhere people could get treatment even though\nthey wei'e unable to pay Tor it, I think\nit would he a very good thing; but I\ndo not believe in the governmeht giving away the money they nave collected by poll lax or by other laxa-\n\u2022:on ilo private [cornierns. 1 think\nUrititb Columbia would bo benefited\nby government hospitals, but I for\none would do all 1 could lo withhold\nEiipport to private parties controlling\nihem or getting bonuses from the\ngovernment, which I think is unfair,\nas surely people here in Hritish Columbia bave to pay pretty heavy hospital tax. Wherever one works It is\ncustomary for the employers to keep\noft a dollar a month. Now, 1 think\nthat ought to be sufficient to support\na hospital and make a handsome profit after paying all expenses for running, so do not see wliere or why so\nmany are agitating to turn over the\nmoney collected fur taxes, as I don't\nthink private Institutions aro entitled\nto anything like that,\nJ. B. PAUL.\nHosaland, B. C, Feb. 3.\nNOTICE\nMembers of Nelson lodge No. 23 A.\nF. & A. M. and sojourning brethren\nare requested tu meet at the lodge\nroom on Baker street on Saturday\ntl:e 7th Inst., at 2 p. m. for the pur\npose of dttendjng tlu' funeral of\nVery Worshipful Brother E. K. Beeston.\nBy order :'f th.* Worshipful Master.\n. COLD STORAGE\n'\"       THIS DAY  IN  CANADIAN       *Y\n\u25a0v HISTORY <t\nIii this country a little over a century ago It was not an uncommon device to attempt to raise money needed for the public service by lottery instead of by taxation. In 1770 tbe assembly of Nova Scotia passed a bill\nto Institute a lottery for ibe raising\nof \u00a3 1,000 to be expended on the useful and necessary work of making\nroads and bridges. But the governor,'\nLord William Campbell, being \"doubtful of the success\" ot the measure,\ndid not immediately assent to It, reserving It till the pleasure of thc\ncrown could be known. In the following year, however, on this date,\nFebruary G, the lords of trade advised\nthe king to assent to t'he bill, \"though\nthere are objections to the principle\nof it.\" Some years later they confirmed a similar bill for raising money\nby lottery to build a public school in\nHalifax because It was such a good\nobject, though they feared that lotteries might divert the people from\nIndustry. In Chat instance 5,000 tickets at \u00a31 each were advertised, with\nprizes amounting to ,C-1,250,. so at the\nbest the school funds could gain only\n\u25a0\u00a3750, and there Is no record that they\noctunlly gained anything.\n\"A TRIUMPH\" IN TEMUAUTY\n\"SALADA\"\nPURE, OLEANLY PREPARED ANR DELICIOUS >\nB LAC Kt    MIXED     Ori   Free Simples mailed on inquiry.\nNATURAL GREEN\/*\"\"\u2014' \"t*fjioft,\u00bb t\u201e.\u201ei..\nABOLITION OF\nDEATrfPENAlTY\n(Continued on pace two.)\nShow us an architect who believeB\nIn keeping his plans to \"himself.\nLove docB not always wait for po\\-\nerty to enter the door before It Hies\nout of the window.\nA woman knows her new hat Isn't\nbecoming to her because her dearest\nenemy tells her It is.\nWhen you see a woman wearing a\nclinging gown It's a sign that she Is\nwilling t0 admit she taw a good figure.\nParliament Is still talking dear food,\nbut when times get really hard politicians can*always eat their own\nwords. f ^\nIt the average man only hud all the\nmoney he has dropped in trying to\npick up more he would have enough to\nhold blm for a while.\n\"Aro you giving this splendid party\nto entertain your friends?\"\n\"No. I'm giving It so that people\nwho Haven't Invited me will take notice that I haven't Invited them.\n\"la your daughter Improving in her\nmusic?\"   ' .    \u2022\n\"No; I'm \"Slog hair dye\u2014that's what\nmakes me look younger.\"\nwith the publication of records of the\ndictaphone* or similar Instruments.\nThe bill left to the attorney of the\nprovinces the power to accord the\naccessary permit allowing such pub\nllcatlon and he becamo the judge as\nio whether or not such publication\nwas in the general Interest of the\npublic. Mr. Verville stated that he\n.Ud not wish to interfere In any way\nwith the legitimate prevention of the\npunishment of crimes when the dictaphone wub used, by lawfully authorized persons for the purpose of doing\nso, and In the third sub-section It was\n\u25a0dearly stated that, nothing In the Bee-\nnnd section should be held to prevent\nar restrict the use of thp dictaphone\nor other like contrivances in the defection of crime or fraud.\nIndian Reierve.\nHon. Frank Oliver iiuiuired as to\n'.lie truth of the report that instructions had been sent to Winnipeg to\nmiter action In the courts to annul\n'he St Peters reserve sale. He asked\nwhy this action had been taken.\nDr, Roche said the action was being taken to find out If the surrender\nwas a legal surrender. The commission had pronounced it legal, but the\ncourts would say finally.\nWestern Freight Rates.\nHon. O. P. Graham nskod-if any decision had yet been reached iu the\nwestern  freight rates case.\nHon. Frank Cochrane said that he\nhad recently spoken to Chairman-\nDrayton of the railway board, who\nhad told him that the board was still\nut work on the judgment. It was impossible yet to give an exact date\nwhen the judgment plight be expect-\nud.\nIn reply to another question by Mr.\nflrahttjn, the minister stated that he\nexpected to table the report of the\ncommission which inquired 'into the\ncost, of the National Transcontinental\nrailway yesterday. He had not been\nable to ,do so, but it would be tabled\nnext week for certain.\nElection Act.\nJ. II. Burubum then proposed the\nsecond reading of bis, bill to amend\nthe Dominion Elections act, His proposal was to raukt. lhe Dominion practice in regard to the deposits by candidates conform to the provincial practice. In other words, he desired that\nIn provinces where candidates for the\nlegislature <lo not have to make a deposit, one should not lie required from\na candidate for tile Dominion house.\nMe asserted that his proposal was in\n\u2022onformlty with the spirit of the Dominion Elections act because the Dominion accepts the provincial voters'\nlists.\nHon. C. J. Doberty, minister oC jus-\ntl.ee,-said that it does not follow that\nbecause the Dominion accepts the provincial voters' list it is necessary, in\norder to be consistent, that the provincial basis of qualification for candidates should likewise be accepted.\nIt was highly undesirable, he said,\nthat the Dominion should leave this\nmatter to be settled In one way in one\nway in one province and another way\nIn another. The house, he thought,\nwould act wisely in rejecting the bill.\nThe speaker then put thc motion\nfor the second reading. There was a\nloud chorus of \"noes\" and a few faint\n\"yeas.\" Including Mr. Burnham and\nMr. Verville, the Labor-Liberal member for Maissoneuve, Montreal.\nAbolition of Titles.\nMr. Burnham then moved the Bee-\nond reading of his bill to abolish titles.\nHc explained that be did not, propose\nto Interfere with the prerogative of\ntho crown to give honors to anyone\nwhom the King might choose for distinction.\nHe did propose to prohibit the representatives of tbe people ln the government, of the day! recommending\npeople for titles. He thought It was\ncontrary to the spirit of democracy\nto perpetuate claSB names. In addition to being undemocratic, it was unscientific and objectionable when the\nrecipient of au honor might be a\nfeeder at the public trougn. Mr. Burnham added that there was the danger\nof drifting Into the barter and sale\nof honors. It was nn established fact,\nhe said, that In England there have\nbeen sales of 'honors by the representatives of tbe people. . Mr. Burnham\nmild that another objection to the system was that many people who are\nmost worthy' of being honored are too\npoor to accept.\nObjects to  Bill.\nHon. G. E. Foster said that one objection to the nM wag that the Canadian parliament had no authority to\nabolish titles. As it had no power on\nthe subject, It 3hould not pass legislation. He had n great respect for\ndemocracy and respect for the old\nadage '\"virtue Ib its own reward.\"\nHowover much people differ from one\nanother ns to the desirability of titles,\nhe thought thut men who served tho\nstate were not Injured If they were\nrecognized by some honor. He admitted that in bestowing honors even\nkings made errors. However, he was\narguing for the general principle.\nDemocratic as he was, he felt that a\ntemperate democracy might not he a\nbad thing in this country. The principle of giving titles to men who had\ndone patriotic deeds, or who have\nserved their country was. In his opinion, a good one. It had resulted In' a\ngToat deal of good in the past and he\nhoped that it would m the future.\nIn  Wrons Way.\nSir Wilfrid Laurier thought that Mr.\nBurnham had approached this subject\nIn a wrong way. There should be an\naddress to the King, who had the bestowing of titles, and not legislation.\nHe was largely disposed to agree with\nMr. Burnham that titles were undemocratic. They were not in consonance\nwith the spirit of the age. \"The title\nwhich I bear.\" he said, \"ts a relic of\nfeudal times.\"\nW. F. Maclean, South York, said\nthat In England ho understood) the\npremier assumed the responsibility In\ngranting titles. He would like to\nknow If thero was a e,ovcrnmental\nresponsibility in this country,\nPremier is Consulted,,\nSir Wilfrid, in reply, said that he\nunderstood there were certain honors\nwhich were in the hands of the pre,;\nthief and the leader of the opposition.\nHo had taken the stand while premier\nthat this was tlie prerogative of the\nnro'wh aud not a ministerial question\nHowever, the governor-general did not\nmake a recommendation without con-\nsuiting the premier. Tho mutter\nshould not. he one of ministerial responsibility.\n'You admit there Is responsibility\nIn England,\" said Mr, Maclean.\nSir Wilfrid repeated that there was\nunder certain circumstances, In clos\ning Sir Wilfrid pointed out that even\nIn republics there was always a tendency to seek titles, pointing to the\nUnited States as.au example. It.wub\napparently a weakness of human na\nture, ,,\nThe second reading wns declared\nlout without, division.\nAbolition  of  Capital   Punishment.\nltobert Bickerdyke next Introduced\nIlls bill to abolish capital punlahmeiil\nittul punishment was a blot on\nChristianity and a blight on religion.\nHe said that the stale declared ti mail\nwas not fit'to live In this world. He\nasked If the state was sure in so deciding Ife was fit for the next world.\nA man who wns not fit for earth was\nnot fit for heaven.\nCapital punishment was against the\nluw of God. He then went on lo\nshow that it was not a deterrent to\ncrime. It branded the children to thi\nfourth and fifth generations, and was\nbe brand of Cain. \"No man who he\ntlevei; in tlie Creator.\" remarked -Mr.\nRle.kerdyke. \"dare vole against the\nbill to abolish legalized murder.\"\nTo this there were cries oi' \"X*\nno.\"\nHangman's Fees.\nMr. Bickerdlke went on to condemi\nthe system prevalent in Canada ol\npaying the hangman so much pet-\nhead. \"Think,\" he said, \"of a government making a contract at so much\nper head for sending fellow citizen:\nInto oternltj and giving him a bonus\nof M plecs of silver If he makes n\ngood Job cf it!\"\nMistakes Irrevocable.\nMr. Biekerdike said that in 1837 ami\n1R:IS many men were hanged In Canada for political crimes. There was\nsuch a revulsion or feeling that for\nthe next 20 years no man was hanged\nIn tho country. He asked parliament\nto give his bill an experiment if It\nwas only one year. A most terrible\nfeature of capital punishment was that\nFor nursing mothers\nNa-Dru-Co Laxatives\noffer the important advantage that tbey do not disturb\nthe rest of the system or\naffect the child.\n25c. a box at your\nDruggist's.\n'   National Dmi \u00abnd Ch\u00abmic*I Co.\nIt was irrevocable. When a mistake\nwas made it could not be rectified.\nPunjjhment should be Reformatory,\nOct vindictive. There waB a tendency\nall the world over to abolish capital\npunishment. He named a number of\n\u25a0countries; including six states or the\nUnion, whicli had abolished It. He\nread letters from the secretaries of\nstate of Kh6d,e Island, Wisconsin,\nMaine and Kansas, caylng that the\nithoUshment of capital pit. ishnient had\nworked well \u00bbnd they wptild not think\n>f returning to the old' system. He\nwent on to show that a great many\ninnocent ihon had been hanged. Ib\nwas better to let off 00 guilty men\nthan that on,. Innocent man should be\nnnged. Capital punishment was ,a\nrelic of the Neroism of the pestilential, days of Home,\nMr. Bickerdiko proceeded to give\ntho opinion of a laiye number of authorities In' Great Britain and elsewhere, who are opposed to capital,\npunishment. In conclusion he said\nthat if tlie government would enact\nthis legislation und give It a trial he\n\u2022TC'ontinued nn  I'liirt*. Six.)\nGILLETTS\n\u2022LYE-\nFOR   MAKING   SOAP,  SOF\nWATKR, CLEANING  AND\nDISINFECTING  SINKS,\nCLOSETS, DRAINS,\nAND FOR\nMANV OTHER\nPURPOSES,\nTHE STANDARD\nARTICLE\nDaily News \"Want\" Ads. Gtt Result*.\n.The..\nColdstream Estate Nurseries\nVernon, B. C.\nI\nAll Kinds of Fruit and Ornamental Stock.\nI Strictly Home Grown.\nj  ,__,\nJ For Prices, Etc., Apply\n,Mana-jer, OB\nColdstream  Estate Nurseries,\n1 Vernon, B.C.\nO. W. Humphry,\nLocal Agent,\nSouth Slocan,  B. C.\nCOAL!   COAL!   COAL!\nWE ARE AGENTS  FOR THE  FOLLOWING:\nACME COAL CO. BANKHEAD   MINES\nCROWS  NEST PASS COAL CO ,     LETHBRIDGE COLLIERIES\nPRINCETON COAL & LAND CO\n8pecial Prices Quoted on Car Lot..\nWest Transfer Co.\n723 Baker St.\nSullivan  Machinery  Co'y\nRock Drills\nDiamond Drills\nAir Compressors\nQuarry Machinery\nLARGE STOCK OF DRILLS AND PARTS CARRIES  IN NEL80N.\nV\/RITE  FOR  PARTICULARS  OF SULLIVAN   STOPER.\nUSED BY  MOST OF THE MIRING  COMPANIES   IN   THE  DISTRICT.\nAGENTS\u2014\nThe \\elson Iron Works, Limited\nA BETTER REMEDY\nTHAN NASTY SALTS\nFew people like to take physic, especially\nsalts, because they are so disagreeable to\ntake and because of the griping and pains\nthey cause, Rexail OracrTies enable you to\ntake less physic, and all without griping,\npurging or excessive looseness. Salts and\nharsh physics usually give only temporary\nrelief and often leave the bowels worse on\nthan before. .\nRexail Orderlies move the bowels\npromptly, and soothe, tone and strengthen\nthc intestinal muscles, leaving.\" them\nhealthy and regular in action. They taste\nlike candy, and the movement they cause\nis as easy and natural as though your bowels\nwere in perfect health and you never had\nto take any physic at all. We have so much\nfaith in Rexail Orderlies that wc urge you\nto try them with the understanding that,\nif they do not satisfy you in every way, alt\nyou have to do to get your money back is\nto tell us. We honestly believe them to be\nthe best bowel remedy made. In vest\npocket tin boxes; 10c, 25c, 50c.\nYou can buy Rexail Orderlies only at The\nRetail S'ori-s. nnd in this ***--\u00abn onlv nf tm\n\u2014The Poole Drug Company,\nNEW TERM\nNOW OPEN\nBusiness College Courses\nSpokane ^-\"^s.       Court\nGUARANTEED INSTRUCTION\nRAYMOND   P.   KELLEY,   Principal.\nJones Uliiff. (North or POBtofflco).\nMain 27 SPOKANE .        A2727\nThe Canadian Bank\nof Commerce\nSIR  EDMUND WALKER, C. V. O.\nLL.D., D.C.L.,  President.\nALEXANDER   LAIRD,   Gen.   Mgr.\nCapital    \u25a0 $15,000,000\nRest    $13,500,000\nPlace your Securities, Titles,\nDeeds. Mortgages, Insurance Policies, Wills and other values In\none of our Safety Deposit Boxes,\nwhere they will be secure from\nibs hy fire or otherwise. Rentals\naccording to size of box.\nNelaon Branch, J. S. Munro, Mgr.\nBank of Montreal\nESTABLISHED   1817\nCapital authorized   $25,000,000\nCapital all  paid  up $16,000,000\nRest    $16,000,000\nHEAD  OFFICE:    MONTREAL\nRt.   Hon.    Lord    Strathcona   and\nMount   Royal,   G.C.M.G.,   G.C.V.O.,\nHonorary President.\nH. V, .Mer\u00abdith, Esq President\nSir Frederick Williams-Taylor,\n,      General   Manager.\nBramhes lu British Columbia:\nArmstrong, Athalmer, Chllllwack,\nCloverdale, Enderby, Greenwood,\nHosmer, Kamloops, Kelowna, Mer-\nrltt, Nelson, New Denver, New\nWestminster, Nicola, Pentlcton,\nPort Alhenii, Port Haney, Prince\nRupert, Princeton, Rossland, Summerland, Vabcoiv'er, Vancouver\n(Alain street), Vernon, Victoria,\nWest Summerland, Alberni,\nNelson Branch, L. B, DeVeber, Mgr,\nJohn Burns & Sons-^3 SSSf\"\nSASH  AND DOOR  FACTORY. NEL80N   PLANING   MILL!,\nVERNON STREET, NELSON, B. C.\nEvery Description of Building Mate rial Kept In Stock.   Ettlmatei Olven\non Stone, Brick, Concrete and Frame Buildings.\nMAIL ORDERS PROM PTLY ATTENDED TO.\nBOX 134. PHONE 171\nSkate Bargains\nIN ORDER TO CLEAR OUT OUR LARGE STOCK OF SKATES BEFORE\nTHE SEASON CLOSES WE WILL GIVE YOU A DISCOUNT OF\n\u00a3\\3 Cent\nON   ALL   LINE3  OF SKATES,   HOCKEY   PADS,  ANKLE   SUPPORTS,\nTRAPS,  ETC., FOR THE  NEXT TEN   DAYS ONLY\nCOME EARLY WHILE THE ASSORTMENT 13 FULL\nSkit,   Bindingi  and  Poles    , 10 per Cent. Discount\nFlexible Flyer Sleds          20'per Cent. Discount\n15  Doitn   Hookey  Sticki  at     25c  eaoh\nThe Nelson Hardware Co.\nPHONE 21 \u25a0 NELSON, B.C.\n IDAY ....*.-...  FEBRUARY \u00ab\nt*-w*i.iM 6&s4-&\"y\n!>\nPAGE  FIVE\nriday's\nFish\n) housekeeper's chance to cut\nthe meat bill.\nHORSESHOE SALMON\nThe Salmon De Luxe\ncans, 2 cans 45c\n...25c\ntins, 2 cans\t\nNABOB  SALMON\nFirst-class red Sockeye.\n20c\nL. C. BRAND\nEvery can guaranteed,\nsize, 2 cuns 25c\nALL TINS  WEST  BRAND\n;';\". 25c\nbRESH ATLANTIC COD\nlJBonelwiB\u2014Ready for use.\nCLAM   NECTAR\nMINCED CLAMS\n\u25a020c\n25c\n15c\n 15c\nSARDINES\nItsify '\"\"o Imported Norwegians.\n\u25a0 10c\nCOVE  OYSTERS\nLettuce\n* Fresh  by Express  today.\nSoups\nMllirig more Invigorating than\ng te of hot soup.  Stimulates the\nI ai^lve    orguns    and    prepares\ni f For tlio heavier food.   They\nbut a trifle.     These    three\n.   Three Plates for Sc\nfell '\nIty, MAGI\nIt Je favorite selections aro Pea\nI-fljnacon, nice and Julienne and\nIiiiT0'' ancl \" ym l'l'o'or other\nI'liprs wo luivo them.\n.,\u201e SYMINGTON'S\nIpd Green   Pen,   Tomato,   Vege-\n\u2022'rt, l.onlll and Onion.      '\nEDWARDS'\nDrown, White und Tomato,\nany or their,-, to your'meat\nand you will llavo a delicious\nall make throe places ot ox-\nlent soup for1 ,...5c\nCAMPBELL'S .,,\n\" u society soup of the Say.   All\n'\u25a0tre.\n 15c\nOXO CUBES\no ideal Houllion for coasting\nes. curlers, skaters and\nBy players. Always ready. All\nneed Is a kettle of boiling\nr end your Jloullion is ready\nJiffy.\nsb.es.. Tins 10c, 25c\nOr, a cup, 2 l-2c.\nKit\nf::\" If It's Seasonable.\nWe Have It\nE BELL\nIADING CO.\ne Up to-Date Grocers\nBaker Street\nLakeview Hotel\nCor. Hall and Vernon.\nSCHULTZ and M. KOSZKA,\nK Props.\na iniiii Home Cooking.\nit of Liquors and Cigars  al-\non hand.\nrJftATES      1.00 PER DAY\nJ-\n\u2022ISVIEW \u2014 r.  Magulre,    Giund\nW. Daniels, Calgary, \/\nm\nEft KING\u2014J. Cllno.\nilver King Hotel\nBaker -Street\nUnder new management.\nII furnished   rooms,  $1.00   a\nand   up.    Best 25c meal ln\nn. Best hrands at liquors and\nserved by union men.\nMcLEOD, Proprietor.\nMadden House\nE, C. CLARKE\nBaker and Ward Sts., Nelson.\niDEN\u2014Frank Myokovlch, Mar-\nil; W. A. Orolff, Grand Porks; F.\nPaulson: C. It. McCallum,\nlver;..T. K. Rogers, Beattie; D,\nssen. M: Jnckson, Rcnnt-L; W.\nIns, Spokane.'\nWhen: Taking\na Vacation\ngo to tbe Great Halcyon Rot\nSprings, where you can secure not\nonly rest, but at tbe same time\nhave the benefit of the best medicinal waters on the continent, un-\nequaled for rheumatism and kindred aliments. Tbe springs are easy\nof access to travellers and tiie\nbote! has been fitted up and Is\nconducted wltb a view to the maximum of comfort and convenience\nfor rgUG.Q8,\nRates: 912 and SIS per week, or 12\nper day and upwards.\nHalcyon Hot Springs\nSanitarium\nWM. BOYD, Proprietor.\nHalcyon Arrow Liket\nHOTEL ARRIVALS OF A DAY\nThe Hume\nTable d'Hots and a la Carte\nHUME\u2014A, E. Bennett, Grand Forks;\nH. V, Denne,, Appledale; Ivan DeLOsh-\nmutt, Silverton; B, G. ti. Rennle, Tag-\n\u25a0lum; F. C. Gamble, Victoria; P. .).\nGibson, Hi Musliam, Vancouver; M.\n8. Middleton, Mr. and Mrs.. C. D.\niJIackwoud, Mr. pn-1 Mrs. R. Andrew,\nAl. Simpson, Ram Huddlesteln and\nfamily, City; M, It. FuJHnson, Spokane;\nCarl tilndow, Salmo, A, C. Me.kcr,\nMidway; S. l.. Taube, Oaigaryj J. F.\nMorris, C. Henderson, Vdncocvor; G.\n\u25a0R. Cress, R. U. Martin, Seattle; Fr.uin\nW. Twins, Toronto; T. W. AllshousO,\nSummit Luke.\nJAMES   MARSHALL.   Proprietor.\n- STHATH'L'O'-^V^Fi'e'l' \u2022 A\/ StrtYltf y,\nA. H. Grn.oey. Mr. and Mi's. A. G. Carl-enter, Miss It. Betts, .1. G. Devlin, P.\nWiiiaon, .1. tl. Nelson, R. H. Smith, F.\nIrvine, Mr, aiui Mrs. S. S. Mitchell,\nCity: B. .1. Walker, Windsor; T. H.\nHarrison, Toronto; A. J, Becker, Now\nDenver; A. X. Kimball, K. .1. Mar-\nShall, Vancouver; C. F. Caldwell, Kaslo; C. T. Genae. Lethbrldge; Dick\nSledding, Winnipeg; John Rochford,\nWalkei'Bvillo; U. Campbell, Grand\nForks; D. Mathesoll, Silver King mine:\nJ. T. Kerr, Calgary; R. B, Bell,   Sal\n1U-J.\nM9PHERSQNS\nGETTHEHITCH\nHockey Shoes\nAt Reduced Prices\n$5.00 hockey shoes for.. $4.00\nS-I.r.u hockey shoes for.. $3.60\n$4.00 hockey shoee for.. $3.20\n$3.75 hockey shoes for.. $3.00\n$3.60 hockey shoes for.. $2,80\n$3.00 hockey shoes for. .$2.40\n$2.50 hockey shoes for.. $2.00\nThis Includes our entire stock.,\nof men's women's and children's\nhockey shoes.\nThe Royal Shoe Store\nLeaders In Foot Fashions\nR. ANDREW & CO., Props.\nTHE DEAN'S OFFENCE\n\"Who is that Dean Swift they are\ntalking about?\" a parvenu once said\nto Laity Bulwer. \"I should like to invite him to my reception.\"\n\"Alas, madame,\" replied Lady Bulwer, \"tbe denn has done something\nthat hns shut him out of society.\"\n\"Dear me, what was thut?\"\n\"Well, about a hundred years ago\nhe died.\"\u2014Boston Transcript.\nQueen's Hotel\nSteam Heat In Every Room.\nBusiness Lunch 35a\nRates:   $1.50 and $2.00 Day.\nQUEEN'S\u2014C. Erickson, A. G, King,\nAll's. A. Brown, Htllyard; h. IS. Swan-\nson, Kaslo; Miss O. Pelton, Miss E.\nR. Pelton. Sunshine Bay; W. L*. Dunning, 13. Fan*. Troup Junction; .lames\nWill's, Charles C. Whyte, Vnneouver;\nT. L. McAllister, T. Hftlford, Calgary;\nFrank L. Western and wile, \"Seattle;\nA. Thomas, City.\nKiondyke Hotel\nVernon Street\nHeadquarters for miners, Smel-\ntermen, loggers, railroad men.\nRates, $1.00 per day up.\nNELSON & JOHNSON, Props.\nKL ON DYKE\u2014John YettBrtlahl, Ja-\nob Antonson, North Dakota; Anton\nStrong, Creston; James Haglund, A.\nAndres.\nNelson House\nEuropean Plan\nW. A. WARD, Proprietor\nCAFE\u2014Open day and night\u2014BAR\nMerchants' Lunch 12 to 2\nPhone 97 P. O. Box S97\nKootenay Hotel\nTwo Doors from Postofflce\nVernon Street\nRates $1.00 and $1-25 per day.\nEvery convenience given to tbe\ntraveling public. Electric piano and\nunion bar in connection, where the\nbest of wines and liquors are kept.\nMRS. MALLETT, Proprietress.\nKOOTENAY\u2014Julius Jackson, Calgary; S, Romano, Vancouver'; Joseph\nLlspornnco, Knllspell, Mont.; J. Mar-\ncoly, Barton City.\nSHRRBROOK.T \u2014 Joseph Rldgwfly.\nManchester, Enff.; W. M. Mills, Peterborough; L. B. Erickson, .7. U.\" Kramer, Marcus; A. H; Skinning, R. R.\nBryant, Winnipeg.\nR. H. Bell, t(f Salmo, earn,\nbight und registered at the\neona,\nlast\nmth-\nBetween Women's\nHealth or Suffering\nThe main reason why so many\nwomen suffer, greatly at times\nis because of a run-down condition. I Debility, poor circulation show in headaches, languor, nervousness and worry.\nBEECHAM'S\nPILLS\n(III, tarjnl Salo oUny Hrilclaa In 111. WortO\nare the safest, surest, most\nconvenient and moat economical remedy. They clear the\nsystem of poisons, purify the\nblood, relieve suffering and\nensure such good health and\nstrength that all the bodily\norgans worknaturallyandprop-\nerly, In actions, feelings and\nlooks, thousands of women have\nproved that Beecham's Pills\nMake All\nThe Difference\nSold everywhere.   In boxen, 25 cent*.\nSIR HUGH GRAHAM\nTO GIVE EVIDENCE\nTremont House\nBaker Street, Nelson\nRANSOME & CAMPBELL\nProprietor*\nEuropean plan, BOc np\nAmerican plan, $1.25 and $1.50\nMeals, 35c\nSpecial Rates per Month\nTREMONT \u2014 John Raljlk, Ainsworth; George Graham, SIIver King\nMalcolm Mcleod, Granite;. Jacob\nKnndnry, Cranbrook; A. C. MeDOugnll,\nVancouver.\nNew Grand Hotel\nFireproof\nJ. Blomberg & D.  Maglio,\nProprietors\nAMERICAN AND EUROPEAN\nf    PLAN\nEvery1 room steam heated, fitted\nwith hot und cold water service\nand with telephono connection.\nBath on every floor.\nALL WHITE HELP\nGRAND\u2014E. F. Robley, Silverton; T.\nBowen, Fernie; D. Wilkinson, Hosmer;\nF! Lai-OttO, P. Thurston, M. Clarke, (J.\nTurner, Kaslo) H. Kirk, Eureka,\nWash.; E. Hammond, H. J. Gerrai'it,\nEngland; Mrs. Towgood, Thre0 Forks.\nGrand Central Hotel\nOPPOSITE  POSTOFFICE\nAmerican and European Plana,\nH. H. PITTS, Proprietor.\nGRAND    CENTRAL \u2014 P.    Dumas.\nAinsworth;  I<\\ Hough, Rlnndel.-\nAssault on Newspaper Man Denounced\nby   Members\u2014Macnab   Accepts\nApology From Lanctot.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nQUEBEC, Feb. 5.\u2014There were two\nfeatures In today's happenings In connection with the Quebec graft Inquiry,\nfn the legislative assembly Jean Pre-\nvost, In direct and scathing terms,\ndenounced the assault made yesterday by Charles Lanctot, deputy attorney general of the province and right\nhand man of Sir Lomer Gouin, on B.\nA. Macnab. In tho council committee of Investigation Mr. Macnab moved that Sir Hugh Graham be subpoenaed to appear before the committee and give evidence as to whether\ntlio information gathered by the Burns\ndetectives had Deen submitted to him\nwhen the ownership of the Herald\nhad been sold.\nThe significance of Mr. Macnab's request ts that the presence of Sir Hugh\nGraham will probably tend to throw\nconsiderable light upon recent happenings In the journalistic stage In\nMontreal nnd disclose som0 of the\nmotives which inspired, those who\nworo actors In the drama.\nTh\u00a9 chairman of the committee\nread the report of'the apology made\nat the sitting of the committee by Mr.\nLanctot to Mr. Macnab and also reported the text of Mr. Macnab's remarks when he accepted the apology.\nThe leader of the opposition discussed tho attack in Its dual quality\nas a private infraction of tbc law and\na public offence. As far as It was a\nprivate affair it had been closed by\nthe tendering and acceptance of the\napology. But as a public offence It\nwas deplorable that the highest officer\nof the government should assault a\nman who bad come to Quebec under\nan order of the house and under the\nprotection of the house.\nMr. Dorris, a Liberal, said that he\nhad once gone to Mr. Lanctot with\nregard to a bill. The deputy attorney-\ngeneral had asked him what was his\nprofession and on being told that he\nwas a farmer, said thut if hq wanted\nany information he could get it from\nthe farmers. \"There will be no one\nto sympathize with Mr. Lanctot,\" con-\neluded the speaker.\n\"Everybody weeps for Mr. Lanctot,\"\nsaid Jean Prevost, minister ot Terro-\nbonc.\n\"Weep for him, ye daughters of\nJerusalem.1*\nIn th0 council committee Mr. Beck\nsaid that after the detectives had concluded their operations and collected\ntheir information the ownership of\ntbo Herald had been changed. He had\nsubmitted his evidence to the new\nmen In control of the Herald. But\nthey would not take the responsibility of publishing it. Then he took it\nand laid H before Messrs. Nichols und\nMacnab.\nMr. Macnab asked to whom Mr.\nHeck h\u00abd Bent his resignation and if\nbe hud submitted his evidence to\nthem. Mr. Reck said be did not think\nhe should answer this, and Mr. Macnab then asked the committee to\nswear out a subpoena for Sll- Hugh\nGraham to appear before It in order\nthat tbe truth might come out. The\ncommittee will report on Mr. Macnab's\nrequest tomorrow.\nSir Hugh Graham wired Hon. Mr.\nChapals tonight that he will appear\nhero tomorrow, Tt Is also likely that\nthe medical committee appointed by\nthe legislature to examine'Mr. Mousseau will also arrive in the morning\nANYONE\nCAN\n> THEIR CLOTHES\nWITH\n'DYOLA\nkTlic Dye that colors ANY KIND!\n'       of Cloth Perfectly, with thc\nSAME DYE.\nNo Chance ol Ml.takc.  Clean un.l Simple.\nMining News\nHARTIN HEADS\nUTICA COMPANY\nNelson   Doctor   President   of   Mining\nCorporation\u2014C. F. Caldwell\nManaging Director.\nDr. Gilbert Hartin of Nelson has\nbeen elected president of the Utica\nMines company and C. F. Caldwell is\nvice-president and managing director.\nOther directors are W. M. Archibald, H. E. Douglas, w. H, Power and\nA. G. Caldwell.\nMr. Caldwell was at tiie Strathcona\nyesterday on Ills way to Victoria. On\nlib return he expects to commence an\nextenslv? plan of development of the\nproperty which has been laid out.\nBIG CORPORATION\nENGINEER HERE\nVERNON TO VOTE\nON MONEY BYLAWS\nTo    Provide   for    Deficit\u2014Two    New\nSchools Needed\u2014To  Re-Stock\nOkanagan   Lake\n(Special to Thc Daily News-.l\nVERNON, Feb. G.\u2014The finance\ncommittee of tlie city council has\nevolved a way out of the city's flnnli\nclul difficulties, and recommends the\npassage of five money by-laws to pro\nVide a total of JIJG.uOO toward taking\ncure of the general revenue deficit ot\n$11>,G00 now existing. Tho deficit was\ncaused by shrinkage in 1912 and 11)18\ndebentures, but various expenditures\nwore made, which can now be legally\ncovered by by-laws, if tho people will\nvote for them, and so reimburse the\ngenoroil revenue account. The flvo bylaws contemplated are: City hall improvements, $5,000* pureha.se of cemetery addition, ?4,000; electric light extension, ?11,000; Lakeview drive,\nJ-J.iiOO; and waterworks extensions,\nS4.000. In addition to liie.se the ratepayers will bo asked lo vote for\n$3.3,000 worth of school building bonds,\npossibly for $10,000, hospital by-law\nand for a large by-law to provide\nmoney for <the construction of an up-\nto-datu sewugo disposal plant. The\nlatter may run as high as $90,000.\nThe elty council, al a special meeting called to meet tie seit-i.1 tiu.-j.tces,\ngave their endorsnlion of lhe plan of\nthe board to erect this year two new\nfour-room schools, nit a cost of $40,000\neach, one to be in the north-east section of thc city, tlie other In -lhe south\nsection. Uf llie total of $80,000 necessary for the work it Is Imped to get\nSO per cent, of tho total, or 948,000,\nfrom tho 'provincial government. In\nthmt event the city council will place a\n$35,000 money by-law before the people\nto provide the 'balance necessary.\nThe Vernon board of trade has been\nasked by R. Leckio Ewliig, of Wiring's\nlanding, to petition tlie Dominion government to stock Okanagan lake with\nrainbow trout from the hatcheries at\nGeriard, 13. C.\nA request for 75 lbs. of pine slump\nwood from Vernon has been received\nby Industrial Commissioner Richard\nObee, from a firm of cheiiiieal manufacturers iu the stale of Mississippi,\nwho contemplate establishing a reduction plant here If the Okanagan vine\nwood is found to contain sufficient\nquantity at .turpentine, rosin and pine\noil.\nBECKER   RETURNS\nA. J. Becker, manager ot the,Apex\nmine, near New Denver, where a.\ncrosscut tunnel to tap the ore nt depth\nls being driven, returned Inst night\nfrom a visit tn Spokane and registered\nnt the Strathcona.,; Hu will Iflave'foi*.\nthe Sloenn this morning.\nOtto   Sussman    Represents    Heaviest\nProducer of Spelter\u2014Looks Into\nZinc Situation.\nTestimony to the interest in zinc\nmining In this section of British Columbia which is being taken by the\nlargo United States mining and smelting corporations Ib given by tho visit\nto this district of Otto Sussman, chief\nengineer for the American Metal company, which operates three zinc smelters, is building a zinc reduction plant\nwhich will he the largest in the world,\nand which operates, through subsidiary companies zinc, copper and lead\nmines in various parts of the continent, as well ns holding interests Iu\nnumerous other smelters,   .\nMr. Sussman, who was at the\nStrathcona yesterday on bis way to\n.Montana after visiting tbe Kaslo and\nSlocan districts, stated that be had\nbeen looking into the zinc situation\nin this district rind that it was probable that some of the properties in\nthe Slocan would ship ore to one of\nhla company's smelters during this\nyear.\nThe American Metal company baa\ntwo zinc smelters at Hartlesville,\nOlila., and ono at CollinsvlU'e. The\nfoilrth plant Is now under Construction near Pittsburg, which has been\nselected as the location on account\nof the coal fields adjacent. This plant\nwill be the largest of its kind in the\nworld.\nLast year, said Mr. Sussman. the\nAmerican Mctnr company produced\nprobably more spelter than any other\ncorporation in the world, and its heavy\noutput will be very greatly Increased\nwhen the new plant is completed.\nAfter visiting Butte, Mont.. Mr.\nSussman will return east. He may\npay another visit to Kootenay in tho\n3 prin g.\nLUCKY JIM BOND\nISSUE PLAN UP\nStockholders Will  Vote on  Proposition\nat Meeting at Victoria on\nMonday\nShareholders of the Lucky Jim zt\nmines will meet at Victoria  on Mn:\nduy to  decide  If  the proposed .bond\nIssue of $150,000, secured by a mortgage on the conipanys property, slial\nbo made.\nIf 'the proposal to make this Issu\npasses und the bonds are sold, It is\ncalculated that the company's liabilities can ibe paid off and sufficient\nmoney left in the treasury to carry on\nthe operation of tho mine successfully.\nThe bond issue plan is the second\nto bo put up to the stockholders. The\nfirst proposal was that the stock\nshould ibe assessed, but the shareholders would not agree.\nTho bonds are to bear interest at\nthe fate of 7 por cent, per annum.\nFriday and Saturday\nSPECIALS\nBelow we offer some extraordinary values for Friday and Saturday.\nThey are lines taken from stock, some In which the sizes are broken and\nwhich we desire to clear out. Others are lines wanted badly at this time\nof year, and as special Inducements for today's shoppers are offered at\nspeoial reductions, .:.'\".>*\nWrapperettes at 10c\nTwenty Pieces Wrapperettes in  light and  dark calp;\nspots and floral designs.   Full 28 Inches -wide.\nRegular values up to 20c per yard for \u2022 \u2022 '\u25a0\t\niu  stripes,\n10c\n$1.50 Sweater Coats for 75c\nFifteen Only In tho Lot, made of nico soft wool, in colors navy, red,\ngrey and white. Sizes for misses or children. ( 7\/lrt\nRegular values up to $1.50.   On Sale Today .\/ C\/C\nFlannelette Gowns\nLadles1 While Nigbtgowus, made of fine soft flannelette, sonic\ntrimmed with lace and some with embroidery trimming. Extra value\nat tiie money, for today wo sell:\n$1.50 Gowns for  (p ItJ&U\n$1.75 Gowns for     $1,40\n$2.00 Gowns for ipl\u00bbQU\nKnit Underwear 40c\nThree Dozen Ladies' Drawers, odd lines, made of fit\nwool und cotton mixture, good full make.\nRegular values up to 75c \t\nuft fleecy\n40c\nLadies' Silk Blouses for $1.95\nFifteen Only, Silk Blouses in good range of sizes, mostly black and\nwhite, somo plain 'tailored and some in fancy slyles. If J  Q g?\nRegular prices up to $0.50.   On Sale Today al V * e\u00abtl\nBug a Silk Dress Todag for $9.95\nTwenty Silk Dresses to choose from at ibis price.    Made of nice\nsoft   messallne   in   colors   navy,   brown,   Copenhagen   and    reseda.\nRegularly sold for $20.00.\nOn Sale Today for\t\n$9.95\nMEAGHER & CO.\nThe Store for Style and Value\nBaker Street\nSTANDARD   SUPERINTENDENT\nPAYS VISIT TO  NELSON\nIvan De Lashrautt, superintendent\nof lhe Standard mine at Silverton, is\na guest at the Hume.\nDEVLIN   BACK  IN  NELSON\nAfter months lof prospecting and\nhunting lu the virgin country north of\nEdmonton and some weeks spent in\nEdmonton, Vancouver, Seattle und\nSpokano, J. G. Devlin returned las\nnight   and   registered   ut   the   Strath\nWHY ARE YOU SO TIRED?\nThe Weather Is Not to Blame for That\n\"Dragged Out\" Feeling.\n\"This weather simply takes the life\nright out or me, I can hardly drag\none foot after the other,\" said a rundown, tired-out woman tho other day.\nWo want to say to every such person in this vicinity. Don't blame\nthe weather, it's your condition. Vou\nneed n strengthening tonic und the\nvery best we know is Vinol, which Is\na combination of tbe two most world-\nfamed tonics, namely, the medicinal,\ncurative elements of cod liver oil and\ntonic iron, for the blood.\nA case lias just come to our attention from Mllford, Mich. Mrs. Julia\nBarber says: \"I was run-down and\nhardly able to drag about; my appetite was poor and I was not able\nto work. My druggist nsked nie to\ntry Vinol. The first bottle helped me\nand after taking the second bottlo I\nwas able to work and felt well and\nstrong, Vlnol Is the best medicine I\nhave ever taken.\"\nTry a bottle of Vinol with the understanding that your money will be\nreturned If It does not help you. Win.\nRutherford, Druggist, .Nelson, B. C,\nPUBLISHES   APPRECIATION\n\u25a0 OP MRS. H. H. CLEUGH\nThe Confederate, published ai Na\nvllle, Tenn., has the following app\nelation in its Docomber issue of A\nH. li. Chfugh, formorly of Castlegar\nand now \/j, resident of Victoria,\nMrs. II. H. Cleugh (Eugenia Chirk\n:leugh.) of Kentucky, is an ideal typo\nif the southern woman, and is one of\nlie most devoted workers of the C.\n). i'. In her efforts in behalf or\nSouthern history she lets n0 political\nippositlon dlscourago her in her\nsplendid efforts to establish tbo truth\nin the annaly of the south. She is\nwriting a scries of classics on \"1 It-rues\nof the Confederacy,'' and they luue\nbeen announced by eminent authority\nas most polished literature and the\nablest works of the kind published in\nrecent years, not only by the highest\ncritics of our own country, but from\nhigh sources in Great Britain and Europe.\nMr**. Cleugh comes from the most\ndistinguished Virginia ancestry. She\nis n. descendant of the Woshingtons\nand is a grundulece of Gen. Sterling\nI'ri<*e.\nAmong the Confederal,' veterans\nwho Indorsed her Inspiring classics\naril advocate their use in the schools\narc: Gen. Bennett H. Young, head of\n-be U. C. V.; Governor McCreary, of\nKentucky; Gen. Basil \\\\\\ Duke- Gen.\nHnldeman; Gen. Adam It. Johnson,, of\nTexas; Judge C. C. pummlngs, Texas\nHistorian; Senator Alex Hunter, of\nVirginia.; Senator James '<\u25a0 Varda-\nmnti, of Mississippi'' and, In fact, every\none who has read them.\nHi,- Moses Ezekiel, of Rome, Italy,\nstates of'her \"Stonc-wuM Jackson'1: \"i\nhaVe read a great many books about\nour war but your booklet surpasses\n\u25a0ill i\" vivid, concise, beautiful, and\ntruthful writing about our great hero,\nand Incidentally also out- sacred war\nwas for a just and constitutional right\nI cannot helh sending you these few\nlines. \u00ablS I have Just' read your book.\nWhich every southerner should know\nby heart or carry It with tbem a?\nAlexander did with his Homer. As 1\nam hard t0 pjeoso In literature, I am\nnot sending you any empty compliments but the slricorost expression uf\nhighest esteem. I shall have\nyour classic bound in white parchment\n.ml always have 11 on my table.'\"\nHer recent poem \"The Little Bronze\n'rose,\" Inscrled to the U; C. V\u201e is one\nif the most exquisite things io the\nEnglish ]ait\"-uuge and is worthy of\npoet laureate. A copv of the poem\nwas enclosed In the libit thai wus\ned In the corner stone of , the\nBeauregard monument at tiie roceni\nmonies lu New Orleans, in her\nown town, Pndueah, she js corresponding secretary and is paying nil the\nxpenses of that office.\nCLOCK  HA8 ONLY ONE  HAND\nA new clock face, 0r dial, bus been\npatented which may be placed on any\n-.\u25a0lock and by removing tlio hour hand\nand placing tho minute hand on tho\nhour spindle transforms tho clock Into\na one-hand, casy-lo-read time teller.\nChildren have difficulty iu telling tho\ntime by two-banded clocks, and those\nwho have occasion to send a child\nInto the houso for the time can hardly 'e*'er be sure that the youngster\ndoes not confuse the \"long\" and\n\"short\" hands. By this device neither\ndark days, glare on tbo glass of the\nclock; face or a child's inability to\ndistinguish between hour and minute\nhands can prevent correct time reading. In this there is no possibility of\none mistaking, for instance, 12:L'5 for\nI o'clock.\u2014\u25a0Popular Magazine.\nCHAIN OF WIRELESS\nSTATIONS NOW COMPLETE\nTORONTO, Feb. [..\u2014When a wireless station was opened on Toronto\nisland on Sunday tbo chain of nine\nstations extending from Montreal to\nPort- Arthur and including Kingston.\nSarnla. Tobermory. Midland and Sault\nSte. Marie, was completed. During\nMonday and Tuesday the operators\ntemporarily placed there were in communication with Port Burwell and\nMidland.\nYOU CAN'T EARN MONEY\nWHEN YOU'RE LAID UP\nThere are a loi of people in this town who\ncannot afTord to be sick. Perhaps none of\nyou feel that you can, but certainly some\nof you can't, for as soon as you are sick,\nyour wages stop and worry and debts begin to pile up, The sensible thing for you\nto do, as soon as you feel run-down and\nworn out, no matter what thc cause, is to\nLake something just as quick as you can to\nbuild up strength and health. Make yourself more comtortablt* and provide against\nserious sickness.\nWe don't believe there is any other\nmedicine made that will do as much\ntowards saving your health and thus helping you save your money as Rexail Olive\nOil Emulsion. It is a medicine that got;-\nright at the trouble and relieves it by toning the nerves, enriching thc blood, and\ngiving new strength and health to tlie\nwhole body. It doesn't do this by means ot\nalcohol or habit-forming drugs, because it\ncontains none. Its strength and health-\ngiving power is due to pure Olive Oil ami\nthe Hypophosphites, long endorsed by successful physicians, the one for its food\nvalue, the other for its tonic value. Here.\nfor the first time, they are combined, and\nthe result is a real nerve, blood antl bodybuilding medicine\u2014a real strengtheher\nthat we arc proud to tell you about. You\ndon't need to hesitate in using it, because\nif it doesn't do oil we say it will and satisfy\nyou in every way, it will cost you nothing\nIf it doesnit make you strong and well\nagain, come back and get your money. It\nwill be given to you without word or question. Sold only at the more than 7,000\nRexail Stores, and in this town onlv bv its.\n\" 100.\n-The Poole Drug Company.\nThe B. C. Assay and\nChemical Supply Co.\nLimited.\nAssayers' and Chemists' Supplies.\nBalances and Weights of precision.\nPhysical and Chemical Apparatus.\nChemically pure Acids and Chemicals\nPlumbago   and   Plumbago  Crucibles\n567 Hornby Street. Vancouver, 0.G,\n fr\nr Ml lilt\nW Irtlf'iWwk.\nfc'-e&i- \"(Wi\n\u2022FRfDAY  FEBRUARY!\nWhy do folks\nkeepCprns?\nWhy do you? Why\ndo you merely pare them,\nor doctor them in old-\ntime, ineffective  ways?\nBlue-jay ends corns\u2014takes-\nthem oit completely. Does it\nwithout pain or soreness. Does\nit to a million corns a month.\nWhy don't you employ it?\nBine-jay contains a little drop of\nwax. When you apply it the pain is\nstopped for good.\nThen the wax gently loosens the\nCorn. In 48 hours you can Hit the\ncorn ont, and that ends the com\nforever. New corns may come, but\nthat old com.. will never trouble\nfurther.\nThe Blue-jay way is simple, easy.\npainless. It is modern, scientific.\nIt Is so effective that it now is used on\nabout half the corns in the country.\nParing merely cases corns, Other\ntreatments palliate. Blue \"jay takes\ntht whole corn out, root, branch\nand everything.   It costs but 15 cents\n\u2022to prove this, and never after wilt\nI you suffer from a corn.\nBlue-jay\nFor Corns\nIS and 25 cents\u2014at Druggists\nBauer ft Black, Chicago asd New York\nMaker* of Phyikiom* Supplies\nFOR YOUR CONVENIENCE\nMoney Orders issued.\nLetters of Credit for tho con-\nvenience of those who travel.\nSavings) Department. One\ndollar opens a savings account\nEstablished 1871.\nHEAD OFFICE:\nTORONTO, ONT.\nCapital  (paid   up)    $6,925,000\nReserve and  Undivided   Profits    8,100,000\nD. R. Wilkie,   President and\nGeneral Manager,\nHon. Robert Jaffray, V.-Praa.\nNelaon   Branch,\nH.  D.  Benson,  Manager.\n^M^Md-i^M^1\njftONALDSONHNE\nNow Is the Time\nTo think of arranging passage for\nyour friends and relations In the\nOld Country whom you expect to\nbring out in the spring.\nYou can secure their tickets here\nand all arrangements will be made\nfor their forwarding by\nTHE   DONALDSON   LINE\nFor Information, rateB, etc., apply to any rail or steamship agent,\nor H.J3. LIDMAN, Gen'l. Agent,   \u25a0\n349 Main Street, Winnipeg.\nStandard Furniture\nC. J. CARL30N, Undertaker\nUndertakers Embalmera\nand Funeral Directors\n. The finest and most up to date\nundertaking parlors and chapel In\n.Interior of B.C. Lady attendant for\nwomen and children.\nDay Phone 85.\nNight Phone 252 and L64\nWaters & Pascoe\nSF,      j;            FOR '\nStorm Windows\nand Poors\nKOOTENAY     LAKE     SASH     &\nDOOR  FACTORY                i\nFRONT  8TREET,   NELSON,   B.C.\nPhon. 1M.                    P.O. Box 836.\nOPPORTUNITIES\nWITHOUT NUMBER\nare to he found In the Want.\nColumns of The Dally News,\nand a few moments each day\nspent In reading them over may\nsoon result In a start on the\nroad to success.\nGET TO RELY ON\n&HE WANI A039\nINVESTMENT GOOD\nBUT MARKET WEAKER\nMany   New   Foreign   Issues tn   Sight-\nDominion Scrip  at Seven\nPremium.\n(Western Associated ' Press Special\nCable)\n-LONDON, Feb, 5.\u2014The stock may-\nItets weakened again today and became\n.nnctlvo after realizing. Conditions\nnow seem more stable as professionals\ndiscourage fresh speculation until the\nnew account. Investment, however,\ncontinues, though the fear of developments at the assembling of parliament\nnext, week has a restrictive effect.\nBelgium has Issued a 3 per cent lean\nat 77 for $00,0(10,000 nnd of this $16,-\n250,000 comes to London.\nTho' Prussian government will shortly Issue 4 per cent treasury bonds for\n137,500.000. completing the years financial rumors, but Berlin remains\nfirm and there was a further reduction\nof % nay cent in the German bank\nrate to 4 per cent. A Russian loan for\n$100,000,000 Is due In Paris on Feb. 11.\nConsols'were not so fb-m and closed\nat 76 15-16.\nThe new scrips are still good, tho\nDominion being quoted at 7 premium.\nC. P. P. resisted the profit taking well,\nbut closed dull at 224U*- G. T. R. was\nlower again and 'the bears were active\nwith the result that quotations were\ndown from *& to a full point. Canadian\nIndlstrlal and South American tractions, declined one. or two points,   \u00bb\nCall money and bill rates aro unchanged. The bank rate was not altered this week and' the bank returns\nshow a decrease of $500,000 in tlic re-\nservo on the week reflecting the further Investment of nearly $10,000,000\nof Bank of England funds in the past\nweek. Bar gold was easier at 77s, ad\nper ounce, Tuesday's rising having\nchecked the buying of gold by the continent. The Swedish and Danish\nbank rates Will be reduced one-half\nper eent tomorrow. Sperling it Co., u\nDig financial house, announce their retirement from llie stock exchange, as\na protest against the increasing stringency of the regulations of the committee of tlie exchange. The firm,\nwhieh is largely Interested In Canadian securities, intends to develop as\nan issuing house.\n* *:^'>rr;^---: s-svi-is^-iri-irt^\nNEW YORK MARKET\nQUIET AND WEAKER\n(By Daily News Leased Wire)\nNEW YORK, Feb. 5.\u2014The trend ol\nthe slock market today was toward a\nlower range but the movement was\nslow and hesitating and the average\nchange was small. There was no sign\nof the vigorous professional operations\nand outside buylivg which attended the\ncent advance.\nPrices hardened slightly in the early\ntrading but an Increased supply ut\nstocks was met and thc Improvement\nwas chocked promptly. Traders faVj\nOred the short side and occasionally\nsold stocks but met with--little success in searching out weak spots. Only\na few uf the representative shares sold\nat any ttnie as much as a point under yesterday's close. Somo of the\nspecialties which have advanced rap-\nIdly yielded part of their gains, hut\nothers of these shares moved up.\nW-oohvorth rose briskly on appearance\nof its annual report,*-showing nearly\n11 per eent earned on the common\nstock.\nThe bond market moved uncertainly\nwith a preponderance of slight gains.\nTotal sales, par value, $4,415,000.\nThe following New York .stock market quotation., are supplied by Osier,\nHammond  &  Nanton,   Winnipeg:\nOpen   Close\nAmalgamated   Copper     77%    77\nAmerican   Car   Foundry   .. 53       52*!4\nAmerican   Locomotive   .... Z5%    35\nAmerican   Smelting    60%   69%\nAmerican  --Sugar     107\"\/j 107'-i.\nAmerican Tobacco   247% 216\nAnaconda  ...., 3S      '31%\nAtchison    99       9S%\nBaltimore  &.  Ohio    04%   iM.*J4\nBrooklyn Rapid T ill.%   91%\nCanadian  Pacific   ,''10      217%\nChesapeake  &  Ohio     60%    06*4\nChicago  &  Alton            10\nChicago  M.  &  St.  Paul   ..106*4 106%\nChicago & Northwestern  ..131%   134%\nConsolidated  Gas   ... 136^135%\nDelaware & Hudson  158% 157\nBrie        1  31%    31 %\nErie   1st   pfd  41)      48'^\nErie   2nd   pfd.  39U    3D\nGeneral Electric       117%\nGreat  Northern pfd 134% 133%\nGreat Northern   Ore     38%    37%\nIllinois   Central     114% 114%\nInterboro          15%\nKansas City Southern        26%\nLehigh   Valley    154% 153%\nLouisville & Nash    138% 1WA\nM. St. p. ft 8.S.M. (Soo)  .137      135\nMissouri Kansas & T 23       22%\nMissouri  Pacific     27%    27%\nNow   York   Central I  fl4'\/i    03%\nNorthern   Pacific    117% 117\nPennsylvania   ;il3'4 112%\nReading    168% 167%\nSouthern   'Pacific *[  08%    98\nSouthern Ry 27%    27%\nTenn.   Copper     35%    35\nTexas   Paclflic       1-6%    15%\nTwin  City    -     106%\nUnion   Pacific 163     162%\nI\".   S.   Rubber     59%    50\nU.   S.   Steel     65%    65%\ntl. S.  Steel pfd Ill'A 110%\nUtah   Copper    1 55%    55Vi\nWabash      2%     2%\nWestern   Union          C3\nWisconsin Central       ,.       45\nTotal sales 342.800.\nSPOKANE   MARKETS\n(.Reported toy St. Denis &. Lawrence)\nBid     Asked\nB. C. Copper     $ 3.25    $ 4.00\nCaledonia     .53 .\"30\nCanadian     ,     05.00\nGranby          8't.OO     01.00\nInternational  .32 .40\nLucky <Hni  ...;  .03 %     .05\nMeGillivi'ay     |.. .14%      .18\nRambler    *.... .14 .20\nExtension            .01%    .02\nSnowstorm  .25      '\".30\nStandard            1.58       1.75\nStewart           1.22       1.10\nSales\u2014100 Granby SO; 2,000 Rambler\n16.\nWINNIPEG  STOCK  EXCHANGE\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nWINNIPEG, Feb. 5.\u2014\nBid   Asked\nCan. Fire        150\nCom.   Loan            110\nEmpire Loan        109%    112\nG. W. Life        242\nG.  W. Perm     126       127\nHome Investment   .,   136\nMan. & Sask. Coal  89\nNor.   Can.   Mort     120       130\nNor.   Crown          86%    87%\nNor.   Mort     103%    105\nNor.   Trust     108\nOccidental  Fire        ...        100\nStandard   Trusts    1   ...        17E\nUnion   Bank            160\nWinnipeg L. & M     150        ...\nWinnipeg P. & Q ,        no\nSnles listed\u20146  Union  Bank 145;   20\nNor. Mort. 50 per cent 103.\nMONTREAL MARKET STRONG\nPRICES GENERALLY FIRMER\n(By Dalh- Now-* Leased Wire.)\nMONTREAL, Feb. -5.-Following tub\nearly strength and tale reaction of\nWednesday, the locul market presented an Irregular appearance today. A\nfew stocks rose to new high levels\nand retained their advances, others\nmade some recoveries from tlie setbach\nof Wednesday afternoon, and a few\ndisplayed weakness. The tendenc*\non the whole was upward, mure stocks\nfinishing with gains than with fosses,\nand the undertone remained strong.\nThe outstanding feature of the market was a two-point rise hi Shawlni-\ngaii. Which rose 140 en unusually heavy\ntransactions for that stock. The advance, following the rapid rise of\nPower in the last week, brought out\na variety of gossip affecting ihe power\ngroup, the expectation of a good showing in the coming statement, was probably the basis of tht. movement.\nOttawa Power, whieh gained % to\n171% and closed strong at 172 bid,\nand Winnipeg railway, which sold at\n210 to 211 for small lots or about 3\npoints up, closed strong at 211 bid,\nwere other stocks to attain new high\nlevels on the movement. Amcs-1-Iol-\nden common was active in the afternoon but closed  easy at 15%.\nBrazilian and Iron were the principal stocks on the reactionary side,\nBrazilian again fell 1% points, selling down to 88% and eloslng only '\/\nbetter. Iron declined 1*4 to 40 nno\nfinfshed 40%. C: P. R. weakened,\nwith New York after a firm opening,\ndeclining from 21ft\" to 218 and finishing at the low with a loss of %.\nVANCOUVER\nSTOCKS\nfBv PaiK- News I\n.eased Wire)\nVANCOUVER,  B. C\n., Fi*. ;,.-\nBid\nAskef\nVugget\t\ni   ...   )\n.29\n\u2022Cootenay Gold \t\n.10\nOom, Trust ..;\t\n1.08\n1.12\nU. C. Perm. Loan\n1.22\nTORONTO STOCK SALES\n, (By Dallv News Leased Wire.)\nTORONTO, Feb. 5.\u2014Brazilian 3,816\nshares at 90% to SS%; Barcelona 410\nat 34 to 34%; Toronto rails 215 at\n130% ty 141%; Nlplssing 1075 at 7.40\nto 7.70; Winnipeg 109 at 204% t0 210;\nCement 125 at 29% to 27%; Mackay\n130 at 85 to 83%; Spanish'River 180 at\n15% to 16; Bread 105 at 24; Bread pfd.\n500 at 90% t0 91; Can. Perm. 100 at\n189; C. P. R. 125 at 213 to 218; C. P.\nR. rights 554 at -1% to 4 9-16.\nUnlisted\u2014Peterson 1600 at 28 to 28%.\n<s> \u00ae\n\u00ab> GRAIN <i\nTRADING   QUIET BUT\nWHEAT PRICES FIRMER\n(By Daily News Leased Wire)\nWINNIPEG, Fob, 5.\u2014Trading on the\nwheat market was -pilot and fluctuations within u narrow limit. The\ntone was firmer, however, on higher\nLiverpool cables and continued unfavorable crop reports from thc Argentine. It Ik anticipated world shipments will be liberal this week and\nwith Russian offers, the tendency for\nan advance waa checko'd.\nFlax options wore more in demand.\nWinnipeg opened Vi lo %e higher and\nclosed Vi to %c advance; Minneapolis\nopened %c higher for .both months and\nclosed Vie advance; Chicago opened\nunchanged to %c higher and closed\n%c advance.\nThere is nothing new in the cash situation, offerings being practically nil\nwhile the demand is good at market\nprices. Cash wheat closed %c higher\nfor contract grades; cash oats closed\nunchanged to V.c higher; cash barlej\nClosed unclmngod; cash fjax closed %c\nhigher for all grades.\nWinnipeg wheat close\u2014May 90%;\nJuly 82%. C\nOats\u2014Mav 36%; July 37%.\nFltix\u2014May 1.32%; July 1.34%.\nMinneapolis   wheat close\u2014Mav   S9%\nJuly B0%.\n,   Chicago\u2014May  82%;   July 88%.\n\u00ab> PRODUCE <\u2022\nMONTREAL   PROVISION    MARKET\n(By Dally News Leased  Wire)\nMONTREAL, Feb. 5.\u2014Butter Ib\nsteady under an Improved demand.\nCheese is quiet and f;rm. Demand for\neggs is good.\nCheese\u2014Finest westerns 13% to M\neasterns 13%  t0 13%.\nButter\u2014Choicest creamery 28 tu\n28%; seconds 27 to 27%.\nEggs\u2014Fresh 40; selected 37; No. 1\nStock 33;  No. 2 stock 26.\nPork\u2014Heavy Canada -short mess\nbarrels, 35 to 45 pieces 30; Canada\nshort cut buck barrels, 45 to 55 pieces,\n29.\nspondine: week\nof i!U3, aro\nis follows:\n1914\n1913\nMontreal   \t\n..S54.KI7.S1S\nS54,933,73t!\nToronto   \t\n.. 4ii.4SO.322\n15,483:170\nWinnipeg\n..  22,18\u00bb,664\n28,837.251\nVancouver   ...\n8,789,946\n15,627,010\nCalgary   \t\n..    3,29,1,303\n4,768,317\nEdmonton   ...\n..    3,l:W, 962\n3:S63,159\nOttawa '\t\n..    3,910.757\n\u20221,274,392\nHamilton   \t\n..    3,504,771)\n3,669,396\nVictoria   \t\n..    2,868,03\n3,206,902\nQuebec   \t\n..   3,170,889\n3,201,027\nRegina   \t\n..    1.707.097\n2.387,764\nHalifax   \t\n..    2.141,149\n\u20222,159,885\nSaskatoon   ...\n..    1.226.028\n2,078,070\nLondon   \t\nSt. John  \t\n..    1.676.532\n1,812,818\n..    1,681,250.\n1.717,557\nMoobo Jnw  ..\n751,880\n1,241,341\nPort William\n757,803\n812,701\nBrantford   ...\n661,822\n560,999\nBrandon   \t\n452,357\n521,822\nLethnridge   ..\n309,311\n610,722\nNow  Wtmina\ner      412,718\n.5162,533,336\n510,636\nTotals   \t\n$192,294,301\nMedicine. Hat\n..     (365,404\n$\n\u00ab\u25a0 METALS <*>\nNEW   YORK   METAL   MARKET\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nNEW YORK, Feb. 5.\u2014Copper firm;\nstandard spot and Feb. offered at 14.75,\nMarch,   April     and   May   offered     at\n14.87; Electrolytic 14.87 to 15.00;  Lake\n15.00, nominal;   casting  14.62  to 14.75.\nTin  irregular, spot 40.17;   Feb. 40.70\nto   11.00;   April  40.75   to  41.12;   March\n40.85  to  41.25.\n\u25a0Spelter steady 5.40 t0 5.50.\nIron steady and unchanged,\nLondon   muikots closed  as   follows:\nCopper easy, spot \u00a365, 18s, 9d; futures\n\u00a366, 6s, 3d; Tin weak, spot \u00a3185, 15s;\nfutures \u00a3186, 15s; spelter \u00a321, 7s, 6d;\nIron Cleveland warrants 51s, 9d.\nNEW YORK,  Feb, 5.\u2014Silver 57%.   .\nLONDON, Feb. fi.\u2014Silver 26%;   lead\n\u00a319, 15s.\nBANK  CLEARINGS  FOR  WEEK\n(Bv Dally News Leased ' Wire)\n.   TORONTO,  Feb,  5.\u2014Tbo Canadian\nbank clearings1 for rthn week ending\nFob. 5, as compared with tho corre\nABOLITION OF   ;\n. DEATH PENALTY\n-     (continued from page four.)\t\nbelieved the people of Canada would\nnever again return'to the present system of legalised murder. \"Capital punishment Is not a deterrent, then It becomes 'Simply vengeance,\" he declared.\nOpposed to Bill.\nHon. George 13. Foster said he did\nnot thinfe the house would he disposed to affirm the principle raised\non so slight a discussion and thereby\nchange ai policy which had prevailed\nso many years. Mr. Bickerdike had\ndoubtless convinced himself that be\nwas right, but it did not follow thereby that those who took another view\nwere all wrong, as some of his statements might possibly Imply. It was\nvery arguable that modes of punishment should not be perpetually continued, but. ou the other hand, it was\nnot allowable to argue that because\nthis custom, precept or method dated\nfrom far back that it was not therefore entitled to hold its place. He\nhoped that the world had not always\nbeen wrong and that it was still progressive. It was a gruesome thing to\nhang a man. but alter all Bociety was\ncompact and must adopt procedure\nfor its own protection. It was apparently true that the abolition ol' capital punishment had In some countries\nloosened respect for law and had a\nbad effect on morals generally. Society would be impotent unless the\nbetter sentiment for law and order\nhad the means of deterring those who\nInfringed against It. Improvement was\nbeing made in methods of justice and\nthe day might, come when capital punishment would bo uneconomic. Bul\nhe did not think it advisable that on\na short discussion of the matter the\nbouse should affirm tho principle that\ncapital punishment should be abolished.\nDeterrent Not Revenge,\nF. B. Caivell, Carleton, said his\nopinion was opposed to the principle\nsought by Mr. Bickerdike. As society\nund conditions existed in Canada today It was not In the best interests\nto abolish capital punishment. Mr.\nBickerdike had assumed that the prin\neiple behind it wae revenge.-But-tlia*.\nwas not the original Intention. The\nIdea was to deter others from crime.\nMr. Coryell said that In the state of\nMaine, next to his own province, he\nwas satisfied that there were more\ncases of capital crime than In the\ntwo provinces ol New Brunswick and\nNova Scotia together. He cited the\ncase of 0110 parish in New Brunswick\nwhich dining a long term of years\nhad more capital cases than might\nhavo been expected iu a whole conn\ntry. Some liino ago there bad been\ntwo capital cases with tho death pen\nfllty, nnd since then there had not\nbeen a criminal sent from that parish\nto the penitentiary. Crime had almost censed In a district which be\nfore had boon almost. Infamous;\nGraham Supports.\nTlon. George P. Graham spoke\nstrongly in support of the abolition of\nthe death penalt-- and asserted the\nstate had not the right to take the life\nof a man. Mr. Graham declared that\nthe mosaic taw did not conte.mpjat\nthe taking of lit',, for crime.\nThe commandment \"tliuu fill tilt not\nkill\" was very plain and was not In\ntended to ;;P;ly merely to the Individ\nuat as distinguished from thc stile.\nWhen he was a minister In the lati\nLaurier cabinet,  one of the most try:\nIng questions he bad U> deal with in\nconjunction with the other members\nwere those in connection witli capital\neases upon which the privy council\nhud to pass final judgment,\nHc declared the question of nboHCon\nuf the death penalty would, have U, be\ndecided in a few years, as public Xe;d-\nIng was growing against It. It would\nbe well, he thought, if there were\nplaced in the schools books for children to study, a chapter on the saered-\n|iess of human life.\nW. F. Nicol, Kingston, spoke briefly In opposition to the bill. Capital\npunishment, he held, was justified by\nthe scripture which declared \"Whb>o\nsheddeth man's blood, by man shall\nhis blood be shed.\"\nHe believed that mistakes had occurred In the world, but the question\nshould be considered from the standpoint of justice rather than that of\nmercy. He disagreed with the statement thut capital punishment was not\na deterrent to crime, and provided\nstatistics to prove his paint. He concluded with the declaration that the\npresent t.m-1 when foreigners- from\nSouthern Europe were pourimr ,lnu\nthe west wn*. i.uc ti.o -.'me to consider\ntho abolition of tbe death penalty.\nMagistrate's  View.\nLevi Thomson, Qu'Appellc, who Is.\nmagistrate, gave support to the measure, on th'o ground that'Canada had\nreached the singe where -capital punishment was not necJSaary, He expressed the conviction thnt it did not\nact us a deterrent to crime for tho\nmurderer did not consider consequences when be committed murder.'\nWorse Than Death.\n, Dr. Edwards, Fronfenac, who has recently heen connected with the investigation in the' Kingston penitPntinry,\nexpressed the opinion thnt there were!\nworse things that could be done with\na man than depriving him of life. He\nbelieved that lir0 imprisonment in tin-\ncourse of which the victim rotted men-\ntaJly and moraUv until, at the end, he\nwas unable to make his final appeal to\nGod, were worse thad death, Having\nknown of conditions which prevailed\nnt Kingston, he was Inclined to think\nthat banging was not h(I had after all\nHe- believed that if capital punishment were, abolished the prospect of\nbeing released after a term of Imprisonment would be1 silo'va;* t,\u00bb mnk\ncriminal laugh at the hiw,\nDAILY NEWS\nCLASSIFIED AD. RATES\nOn\u00bb cent a word per Insertion, four\ncents a word per we\"k, fifteen cents a\nword per month when cash accompanies the order. Otherwise on8 cent\nper word per insertion straight. No-\naccounts opened for want ado. Minimum charge 25 cents.\nHELP  WANTED\nNELSON   EMPLOYMENT   AGENCV\nFA. Newell, Manager\nHELP PROMPTLY FURN1SHEP,-\nPHONE-278 BOX 465\nTHE     WORKINGMAN'S     EMPLOYMENT AGENCY n*f\nWANTED \u2014 Tiemakcrs.   W.     1 arKer\niU2 Baker.    Phoiie 283.\nCharles Wilson, Laval, who 4s a\ncriminal lawyer of note in Montreal,\nbslleved that the house should be in\nmil possession of the rccoru of convictions for capital cr.mu in Canada s.net\nConfederation. The question was IJ\"\n.patter of great Importance, he believed. He referred to the case of\n.he negro. Campbell, recently hanged\nIn Montreal, after having confessed to\nthe commission of nine murders.\n\"What,'.' bu asked, 'would be' dolie\nwllh a specimen of humanity like thnt\nf capital punishment were abolished?\nHow could n man like that be prevented from satfefylng his craving by murdering tho warden if committed to\nin\"?\"\nJury Should Decide.\nMr. Wilson believed that the jurors\nwho gave the .verdict should be' the\niie'i tn I'ech'o between capital punkh-\nment and life Imprisonment. He disapproved of the 14 or 15 members ol\nt -.ablnet to give the final ruling In\n!i, capital case without bavin-: seen tlu\nprisoner or heard the evidence.\nTime to -Repent\nKdmond Proilbt, f'rescott, supported\ntbe bill for** many reasons. Life io.-\nprisonment, he said, Would give mer,\ntime to repent before they met thelt\nMilker. He was also opposed to capital punishment on inorni grounds, ije-\ncause it does not provide for the moral reform of the criminal.\nUnfortunate Necessity.\nAlphonso Verville, 111 a rJfelbi! speech\nfavored\" the principle of tho bill. He\nwas followed by Hon. Frank Oliver,\ni'vf'io expressed the belief thai capital\npunishment was an unfortunate necessity, n was a dcterr-nit 01 fir-nip una\nalways would be. It was the enfi,r.e-\nmeiu of this law which had made the\ndifference between the law abiding in\nmining camp's of British CoIufnWh and\nuit. lawlessness of nulling camps 01\nwestern states. The safety of the sot-\ntier on the prairie and the safety ynu\nhonor of his family was concerned \"i\nihe present Issue.\nlie asked that no legislation be\npassed rendering the rendering of justice less swift and ud-qnate. He expressed himself as absolutely opposed\nio the bill.\nHon. C. j. Doherty congratulated Mr.\nBickerdike iu the manner in which he\nhad handled the subject. He \u00bbad no\nhesitation in pronouncing himself,\nhowever, as opposed t\u00bb tho measii-o.\nThe minister then adjourned the debate and the house roue at 10:30,\nMAKING  SURE\nA young attorney in Nova Scotia\nwas conducting his first case, where\nthe plaintiff testified-that he hud been\n.struck by tlio defendant, and the\nyoung fellow arose to cross-examine.\n\"Was tho blow fatal?\" was his first\nquestion.\u2014Saturday Night.\nNOTICE\nThc annual meeting of Hie Ymir\nWater Works Co., Ltd., will bo held m\ntheir office a.- Ymir, B, C.( on Feb 7,\n11114, at 1:30 o'clock.\nS. F. ROSS, Sec. \u25a0\nROSSLAND. KETTLE RIVER, NEL-\nSON AND SLOCAN ASSESSMENT\nDISTRICTS.\nNotice is hereby given that a Couri\nof Revision and Appeal, under the provisions uf an order in Council, for thi\nRossland, Kettle River, Nolson and\nSlocan Assessment Dfstriets, respeet-\n'ng the assessment rolls for the yea:\nlull, will be hold at the Court House\nNels.tn, B.C., on Monday. February\nSSrd, 1011, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon.\nDated al Nelson,1 B.C., this 30th duj\nOf .January,  1914\nR. S. LENNIE.\n252-1 I .lodge of the Court of\nRevision and Appeal.\nFOR SALE\u2014Brood sows, due to farrow In March, from $25.00 to $40.00.\npominlon Dairy.- \u00bb248-6\nSYNOPSIS OF COAL\nMINING REGULATIONS\nCoal mining rights of the Dominion\nr -Manitoba, Saskatchewan und Al\nberta, the Yukon Territory, the North\nwest Territories, and ln a portion o;\nthe Province 0f British Columbia, ma-\nbe leased fo.- a term of twenty-om\nyears at an annual rental of ?1* pei\nacre Not more than 2,BcO acres wil\nbe leased to one applicant.\n. Application for a leuse must be mad-\nby the applicant In -person to In.\nAgem. or Sub-Agent of the district 0\nwhich the rights applied for are situ\nated,\n. In surveyed territory the land mus\nbe described by sections or legal sub\ndivisions of sections, and in unsurvoye-\nterritory, the tract applied for shall b-\nStaked, out by the applicant himscd\n, Each application must be uccompnn\nied by a fee of $5, which will be re\nfunded If the rights applied for an\nnot available, but not otherwise. A\nroyalty shall bo paid on the merch\nantable output of tho mine at the rati\nof five cents per ton.\nThe person operating the mine shal\nfurnish tiie Agent with sworn return.-\naccounting for the full quantity tn\nmerchantable coal mined and \"pay tlu\nroyalty thereon. If the coul minim\nrights are not being operated,, sdel\nreturns should be furnished at' leas'\nonce a year.\nThe lease will include thc coo! minim\neights only, but the lessee may be per\n\u2022bitted to purchase whatever avail\nable surface rights mav be ccmslderei\nnecessary for th0 working of the mln\u00ab\nat the rate 0f flO.OO an acre.\nFor full information npnllcatloi\nshould be made to the Secretary of thi\nDepartment of the Interior, Ottawa\n.Or to any Agent or Sub-Agent of Dl\n;minion Lands. w. W. CORY,\nDeputy Minister cf the interior\nN.B.\u2014Unauthorized   publication    0*\nthis  advertisement wil!  not  bo  paid\n1. for,\nFOR SALE\u2014Dry, four foot wood.\nI price $5.00 per cord delivered; terms\ncash'. Apply S, F, Fond at Taylor\nMilllne Co. office. 245-tf\nFOR   SALE\nSTRAWBERRY PLANTS\u2014100, 70CI\n1,000, $5.00; Currants 10c; Gooseberries 15c; Raspberries 5c; Rhubarb 10c;\nFlowers, 12 perrentals (nil \"different)\n$1.00: Pansies, 12, 40c; Daisies 12, 40c;\nRoses 12. $1.00; Dahlias 12, $1.00;\nPotyuntltUB 12, $1,00; earring^ prepaid,    Chas. Provan, Langley Fort.\n250-104\nFOR SALE-\u2014A few R.-.C. Urbwii Leg,-\nuirns- and Am-onn. hens,\"from prize\nwinners; threo ' sows, one .antl two\nyears old; 120 ogg Cyphers. Incubator.\nR. W. Chalmers; Thrums, B.C.   \u2022252-S\nFOR SALE\u2014Single Comb White Lo;\nhorn cockerels, from  prize  winning\n\u25a0stock.    S. Smythe, box 502 Nelson.\n251-fi\nFOR SALE\u2014The property known at\nlhe Cottage hotel, sIjMfted on Dominion avenue, Phoeniifj, ByOjj^anc\ncomprising house of 23 rooms'tui-nlsb-\ni>d with, barn and chicken house, etc.\nFor terms address M. IL Kane, bo>\n'01,  Phoenix, B.\"C, 251-J\nFOR SALE\u2014Baby    chicks,   .Leghorns\nRocks, W-Vandottes,-   Bantams,    etc\nChas. Provan, Langley Fort.       250-10*'\nFOR IMMEDIATE SALE\u2014S. C. Trap-\nnested White Leghorn Pullets, 0\ntnonths old, certified direct from Tailored Farms, Washington; prolific layers; also 2 .sows, five months and twi\npigs-three mouths o'd. Box 99 Daily\nNews. \u2022J49-C\nSHERBROOKE  HOTEL ]\nt Nelson, B. C.\nOne mlnuto'-s walk from C. P. ]\ntlon.   Cuisine unexculled;  well\n.and ventilated,  \u25a0       *\n.   LAVIGNE ft* DUNK\nFOR SALE--At onC'e, good milk   Cow,\n$80.    H. R. Kltto,  Molly Gibson.  B\nC. \u2022 .-.'...      248-C\nFOR SALE\u2014Fine Belgian Rabbits,\nI two and three dollars a counle. II\nBourgeois, Crescent. Valley, B. C.\n*2-I8-C\nFOR SALE\u2014Hdrse consisting of single\ndrivers;- driving and work teams\npack horses, or will Hell livery business\ncomplete with outfit and buildings\nOwner retiring from business, kpnl*\ntb Box 14, Creston, B. C. * .    *230-2n\nFOR SALE\u2014improved or unimproved\nfruit lands, from 5 acre* Op, 2,000\nacres to select from. Situation, Kootenay \"jafto. District. Easy terms. H.\nL. Lindsay, owner and locator, Nelson.\nB. C. 210-tf\nTHOROUGHBRED    registered    Berkshire pigs.   Harry Anderson, Birch-\nbank. 202-ti\nCITY   &   FARM   LANl>b,  LTIJ'.\nSuccessors to\nWestern Canada  investment Co.\nRE3AL  ESTATE   AND  INSURANCE.\nJohn E, Taylor, Manager.    .\nFOR SALE\u2014One of the finest homos\nhi the district, 8 rooms, hath,' electric light, hot and cold water,- fine view\nof lake,.i2 blocks from car line, small\ncash  payment, balance easy terms.\nFOR   SALE\u2014Easy  terms,  modern six\nroomed   hom'\",     every    convenience,\nalso   fruit,  chicken     house  and   run,\n$2,500i   $500 cash.\nWELL ESTABLISHED BUSINESS for\nsale; owner leaving cit.v only reason\nfor selling.   A money maker.\nFOR SALE\u2014Good heavy coaster bob,\nheap' for cash.\n$150(1   or $20(10  can  be  placed   at     10\nper   cent   first   mortgage,   good   security.,. Have you got It? 254-2\nCITY  R-  FARM   LANDS.  LTD.\nCorner of Baker and Josephine streets\nFOR SALE\u2014In rend d'Oreille valley\nexcellent fruit land.    Clearing light\nCheap,    Terms.    P,   O. Box 9(15. Nel-\nonn 1J7-t'\nWANTED\u2014MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED \u2014First    class   painter,    fasi\nman, wants employment for summer\nof 1014.   Outside of Nelson   preferred.\n.1. P..,  Dallv News. 252-12\nIF YOU WRITE PLAIN ENGLISH\nyou may earn steady income writing\nfpr newspapers; experience not required. Capital Press Syndtcato.Wash-\nIngton, ,D. C,\nENGLISH GIRL, 21, educated, strong\ncapable, wants post as help Or nursery governess.    Box 907 Daily News\n\u2022250-7\nHIGH    CLASS     DRESSMAKING    at\nhome    or    customer's home.      Mlsp\nRiishen. 315 Richard street.     ,    *25i-6\nWANTED-^-By first class cook with\nhotel' experience and housework, n\nhousekeeper's place; can tako full\ncharge. Apply Miss James, Revel-\nStoke, B. C. \u2022349-6\nWANTED\u2014Position to cut cord wood,\nmake lies or any otld work.    Apply\nbox 902 Daily News.   . *219-6\nWANTED\u2014To purchase five, heifers,\ni or steers, one or two years old.\nWrite price and particulars to box 'JO]\nDaily News, *249-7\nWANTED\u2014Light rowboat or rowboat\nwith attached   motor,  must be bargain.    Box 903 Dally News. 219-f!\nTHE WINDSOR boarding house, over\nj   City   and   Farm Lands, Ltd., corner\nBaker iind Josephine; moderate terms\n\u2022247-26\nWANTED TO HIRE\u2014Cook and cookie\nand couple of teams J also would\nbuy cedar polos delivered on\nArrow lakes. For information .upply\nto E. R- Vlpoml. Nakusp, 11. C,     246-tf\nMONEY TO LOAN on improved securities or first mortgage in small or\nlarge amounts.   Box 1053 City.\n246-tf\nLADY BARBER SHOP,    GO?   Stanle\n. street, near Baker. *241-26\nONE RELIABLE MAN WANTED-\n- In every town to take orders foi\nbest custom made clothes in Canada\nHighest commission. . Rex..-' Tailoring\nCo., LImitc-d, Toronto, Canada.\n.  . gjH.75,\nNOTICE\nNelson Cohservative Association\n\u2022 Notice Is hereby given that the'an-\nniial general meeting of the Nelson\nConservative, atfsociatlon will be held\nin Eagle hall', Nelson B.C., (1n Tuesday,\nFebruary loth onxt, at 8 o'clock'p.m.\n., Dated Fcbni.ii.rv 3rd, 1B-14.\nFRED C. MOFFATT,.\nSecretary\nNOTICE\nThe strike at the Queen mine, Sheep\ncreek, U. On Is still on,' All. working\nmen are warned to stay away until\ntire strike Is settled.\nBy order of the Ymir Miners' union\nW; B.M'IHAAO.\n'-JttftB; 0., Jung 37tfi, 1918,    6Hti\nFOR RENT\nFOR  RENT\u2014Large  furnished I\nIng house on Silica street, clcl\nApply   Western   Provinces'  CoJ\ntttlve Realty CO., Ltd., McCulloch!\nFOR RENT-^Large room, cheap!\nnlsluid or unfurnished;  sultabl\nlight housekeeping.   -Apply ',Cam*T\nGallery. 715 Bakur' street. '' *\nFOR  -RENT\u2014Well   XufnlRKed\n' keeping rooms, <dean,   closo  Id\nSilica'street, quiet place.'\nFOK KENT\u2014Two-roomed -suit-\"\n.Apartments.\nFURNISHED *H-OTJS EK\u00bbR-:l|\n\u2022 rooms, Brick block, corner HaJ\nBaker.\nFOR RENT\u2014Furnished room's.\nQueet; Cigar Store.;,    ...\nFOR RENT -** -Furnished    hou|\nBaker street for Feb. and\nApply box 77 Dally News.   ,..\nFOR   . RENT   \u2014   Housekeeping ]\nroom'7   Victoria blook.\nFOR RENT\u2014Furnished , room.\n[.203 Silica street. '    \"\u2022\nHOTEL DIRECTX\nBusiness  Directoij\n2sSAYJ\u00a3*C\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, ASSAYER\nChemist.   Box AU08,  Nelson, I\nCharges:   Gold,    (diver,    eppd\n..lead,   $1  each;   \"gold-silver;   \"I\nsllver-lend,, r f l.pQ.    Other., metal\napplication.\nAUCTIONEERS\nC. A. WATERMAN & CO.\u2014Open\nNELSON    AUCTION    MART\nCUTLER,  licensed auctioneer,'I\ntion  and  saie.a  room, 609 Waif\nPhone 18. '\u2022\nGROCERIES\n1. MACDONALD & CO., Wild!\nOroceis nnd Provision Mercw\nImporters of Tens, Coffees, si\nDried Fruits; Staple and Fancy!\nccrles, Tobaccos, Cigars, B|\nEggs, Choose and Packing '\nProduce.\"  Office and warehouse!\n. ner of'Front' nn,| Hair sti'ecfB.I\nO. Box 109iyt-   Telephones 28 'aif\nriT^HTmswnX\nImporters and  Maufactucers\" -A\nProduce, FrultB, Flour and Feel\nO. Box 04, Nelson^B. C. PhonJ\nELECTRICAL SUPPLIE8J\n,T.   R^RINGR0^e7394BAJCEH|\nReid     Block.    Installation   of\ntrlciil maiichlnery, telephone pB\n'house wiring. -Repair-wqrk.\npliog carried. Phone A227.\nBox 155.\n HOUSE   CLEANING\nWINDOWS, CARPET AND C|\nNEY cleaning.   House cieanlngT\n1. specialty. Awnings, ne^ and re]\nVacuum  Cleaning  Company, :\n|M33.   Box   Hrli.\nPROFESSIONAL C\/\nGREEN .BROS.,  BURDEN  A '\nCivil Engineers.   Dominion and I\nLand Surveyors I\nSurveys of Lands,  Mines. Town)\nTimber Limits,  Etc.\nNolson, 510 Ward Street;   A.H. <\nMgr.      Victoria U4 Pemberton :\nF. C. Green.    Fort George, Han\nStreet, F. P. Burden.\nGEORGE H. PLAYLE, ChnrtereJ\n,  countant.    Auditor,    Assignee,!\n1 Annablo block, 513 Ward St.,\n.. B. C.\nWILL HALDANE.    ARCHITECT,\nWard   street.     Plans,' specific!\nand estimate's.   ' -   '\nA. L. McCULLOCH\nHydraulic  Engineer t\nProvincial  Land Surveyor I\n1?. O. Box 41 \u25a0 s T\nOffice phopo L8tf; residence phonL\nOffice, Suite fl, McCulloeh Bll\nBaker Street, Nelson, B, f\nT.   M.   RIXEN,   AUDITOR  AN\u00ab\n' couritiiiit.   Room IB, K. W. 61\nH.   PERRY   LEAKE,   CONSUL\nEngineer,   Nelson,   B.' C.\nIMPERIAL COLLEGE OF,\nWood-Valiaiiee Building,\nProfessor Handley-Welis wilt I\nI. view intending pupils from III\ni daily. Reference permitted tol\nj  (-nl bank and to every, existing!\nKOOTENAY LODGE No. 16, I\n\u2014Moots ever.v\/Monday night ll\nfellow's hall; at 7:30 o'clock.\nQUEEN   CITY    REBEKAH    L\n1 No. 16, I.O.O.F., meets first\nthird Tuesdays, Oddfellows*\n7:30 o'clock.\nNELSON ENCAMPMENT No.\n'.  O. F., meet-*   second   .and\nThursdays in Oddfellows', hal\no'clock. *\nCANTON    CORONA    No.    T^\n' every second Tuesday in Odd!\nhall at 8 o'clock.\nKNIGHTS     OF    PYTHIAS   .'ft\nTuesday nights    In K.?-oJ! I\n. Englo Bldg.\nJUL\nlO.Pt\nNELSON lodge 1\nmeets    2nd.   ant\nThursday   at   8\nin Eagle hail.\nNelBOn Aorle No.. 22\n2n,d and 4th Wedn\nIn Eagle hall.. I\nAM\nCourt Royal, Nelsc\nH204 meets on 2nd a\nMondays each mon\nK.   P.   hall   at '8\n[Ladles' Court meets-first and\n(Wednesdays..\nCM\nCourt .Kootenay-.\nmeets 2nd and 4th 'I\nIn K. P. hall, Eagle\nCLAN JOHNSTONE 212   MEE\n7 II O. 0. F. hall first and thlt\ndays, 8 p. m.    .\nNELSON LODGE, NO. 6, ,B. P.\n, igeets, first and third Thursd\n8xp. m. in the\" Etigre hanl'-'A\n- Journing members invited.\nWANT ADS BRING HOOD HEI\n 157\nFRIDAY    FEBRUARY 6\nCJic BaUu $euis\nPACE 8EVEN\nSweet, Juicy\nRANGES\nPrices Away Down\n20c mPozen 30c\nPhone 10\n'he Star Grocery Co.\nStore of Quality\n|RNE LUMBER MILL\nIS  SUBJECT  OF APPEAL\nBy Dally Newa t-ensed Wire.)\nfl'TAWA,   Feb.   fi.\u2014In   the supreme\ntoday .the arguments were eon-\nfed in the case of Bergklint vs.\nJtern Canada Power company and\n\u25a0ment was reserved.\nIe. appeal wup next heard i\" Em-\n|\u00ab\u00bbn vs. Manitoba Lumber enm-\nThe lumber company bf Ing in\n|ieial d fficulties obt-4,lned advances\ni the appclulnt upon security of a\n\u25a0gage  on   their  mill   property  at.\ne, B. C\u201e and on default, after\ncorrespondence between the\nlies, the appellant went Into pos-\n\u25a0lon of the mortgaged property, op-\nled the m'l)'*\"- i.-si-'e'-s. made ex-\nlive improvements nnd accumulat\ncons.ueniu.u bloi.it of logs, etc.\n|?etnieiitlv the company began ac-\nJ and appealed to the court of apis for British Columbia which de-\nTsd that Ihe company lias tbe r'ght\nledeem the mortgaged property in\nJession of lhe appellant, to have\nbenefit of the improvements,\nhh It cV'lms are a flag on its\nIty of redemption, ordered a counts\nu taken and a declaration that thc\nIberty will be the property of the\nBpuny. The principal contention of\nlappeal i\u00ab that It' the company Is\nJtled to redeem, it could only do so\n['nndMiiin tlvt in addition to pay-\n\u25a0 the debt with Interest, it should\nJ pay appellant the value of lhe un-\n\u25a0emonls and the logs and lumber\nTie mill .a.-) agreed upon In the cor-\nlondenei. which had taken place at\nJtlme of the threatened foreclosure\nlet-dings.\nB'lonr, K.C., and Bull for theap-\nlnt;,.l. Riisavll ami M. A. Mue-\nlild  for  respondent.\n\\RGE   FOR   DETENTION\nOF CARS  DISALLOWED\nDally Newp Leased  Wire)\nTTAWA,    Feb.   5.\u2014The   board    of\n\u00a7,vuy commissioners Issued an order\nJ morning In the matter of special\nffTs filed by railway companies, he\nNOTICE\ni tiie mn.'.(er oi* an application for\ni ti.-- of a' puplcate Certificate of\nto Lois 4 end 5,   Block 48,  Nel-\nICity, Map 266.\nlitlce fs hereby given that it is my\nJntion to is3ue at-the expiration f'f\nI month after thc first publloaUnn\n' i duplicate of .the Certificate\nJ'itle to the above mentioned lots\nflii' name, of P.'i.trlek J. Butler whieh\nB:flento Is dated 2Sth day of May,\nj anil numbered 1447A.\nfd at thc Land Registry Office,\nBison,   tlCs 4th   day     of Feid'tiary,\nS. R. ROE\nDistrict Registrar\nNOTICE\n! the matter of an application for\nIssue of a duplicate Certificate of\nto Lots 13, 14, 15 and Hi,  Block\n|MeGUIIvniy's Addition, Town    of\nDenver, Man 5B7,\nJitiee Is hereby \u00abIven that it Is my\nffition to Issue at. the expiration of\nVmonth after the first publication\nlof a  duplicate. of  the  Certificate\nIfrtle to  the above mentioned  tots\nBie name of    Henry  Lower whieh\nBificate  is  dated   the  22nd   day   of\nMI, 1S07, and numbered 6852A.\nS. R. ROE\nDistrict Registrar\nBon, B. C., 22nd .laminry. 1014.\nilKE NOTICE   that 30 days after\nJj an application will be made to tlie\n\u25a0d   of   License   Commissioners   for\nBoity of Nelson for tlie transfer of\n\u25a0retail  liquor  license now   held   bv\n[ Schultes, In respect of the Lake-\nHotel, situate    on Lots Thirteen\nFourteen (14), and  Fifteen   (15),\n\u25a0lock Sixty-seven (67), of the C.ty\nf'elson,  lo Mik\u00ab  Kosuka     and  Mir\nT.T. G. SohullOH.\nlied this 20tb  day of January, A.\nL 1*1-1.\nJ. G. SCHCLTES\nLicensee\nM. KOSZKA\n'.l^'d.. SCHULTES\n\" ApnHcanl.'\nIng certain charges for the detention\nhy   shippers  and  consignees  of  refri\ngerator ears whPn loaded with perish\nable  freight,  over and  above  the ea\nservice toll \"prescribed by the order of\nthe board on .Ian. 25, 1908.    Tho mailer wns heard  In Toronto on Jan. 27\nlast In the presence of counsel for the\nCanadian   Pacific   railway,   the  Grand\nTrunk railway, tho Toronto board of\ntrade, the Canndlnn Manufacturers' as\nsoclatioh and the Ontario Fruit Grow\ners' association.\nTho  order  of   the   board    resulting\nfrom the hearing is as follows:\n\"It ls ordered that the special tariffs\nor charges for the detention of refrl\ngerator ears when used for shipments\nof iperiflha'ble freight, published and\nfiled by railway companies subject to\nthe jurisdiction of the board,\namended by eliminating -the clauses\ntherein relating 4o detention at thi\npoints of loading of the said cars. , \u25a0\n\"And it is further ordered thut on\nthe publication and filing of inriiffs so\namended, the general order of th\nboard No. 115, dated Dec lit, 1913, respectively, ibe rescinded In so far as\nthey affect the several railways filing\nthe said  amended larlffs.\"\nFORMER   MINISTER  ILL\nUNABLE TO TAKE SEAT\n(By Daily News Leased Wire)\nOTTAWA, Feb. 5.\u2014Although it was\nsaid before the session opened that\nHon. F. D. Monk, former minister of\npublic works, would take his seat In\nthe house, tt Is now considered' ((iilte\nprobable that he will, not be able 'to\ndo so. Mr. Monk has been confined\nto b!s -bed for tho last three -weeks\nand hla physician has advised him\nthat he should not think of resuming\nhis  parliamentary duties this session.\nr;.v^^.,-jvi-^i-i'i>\u00ab.i..J-j-.;v^.>-.;..v.i-^i:.<^^>i>-.\nS> <\u2022\u25a0\nj>        WANT   AD   HOROSCOPE '\u2022\u25a0\n$ \u25a0  <$\n<\u2022'\u2022 FEBRUARY 6. '*>\n\u2022Wiunrfus Is the sign of the Z6dla<\"\ngoverning this birth date. Unee overcoming past, regrets and sighing ove.\nios't opportunities the world of rich\nopportunity is yours.\nSaturn; the goverbhur planet, brings\nquick and unexpected changes In yo.ui\nlife, but -one,, having i-oiiijiieri'd fear\nand indecision, all the vlbnit'.nhs of\nthis planet wb'lch are \u2022\u25a0> powerful wil.\naitl you. Learn also to concentrate\nyour forces on your ambition in life.\nBring apt and quick tn understand\nmany things you will h;ive a tendency\nIo fritler :iw-t.y at your time.\nLook at tho great men of your sign\n\"Aiinaiius;* who have been successful;\nThomas Edison, Lincoln, the great men\n(if public careers like Sir Henry Irving, doe Jefferson, the writers and\nmusicians, Mendelssohn, Ole Bull, the\nNorwegian violinist; Victor Herbert,\nMozart,\nAil at these men wero horn under\nthe sign of Aquarius and governed by\nthe planets Saturn and Uranus, but\nthey all CONCENTRATED FORCES\nN ONE LINE OF ENDEAVOR.\nElectrical trades are 'well favored\nfor' the coming period. Works of\n\u25a0onstructlon, bridge builders and contractors will nil find the Want Ads\nhelpful   for   the   coming   two   weeks.\nRAPID PROGRESS MADE ON NEW\nTAGHUM GOVERNMENT BRIDGE\nAN  OBLIGING YOUNGSTER\nWhen P\/ofessor Vambery, the famous orientalist, whose death 4b announced, was staying at Sandrlngham,\nlie rang the bell ln his bedroom for\nsome 'hot water. No one came, so be\nrang agnln, and yet again. Toen a\nyouth, after knocking at the door, entered tho -room, \"Do yod Want something, professor?\" he Inquired.\n\"YeB,\"  replied Vambery.    \"I have\nbeen ringing for some hot water.\"\n. \"Oh,\" said the youth, \"wait a moment and I will get you some.\"\nTwo or threo minutes later t'he boy\nreturned with n can of hot water,\nwhich he placed on the professor's\ntable. The obliging hoy was King\nEdward's second son, now King\nGeorgo V.\u2014London Chronicle.\nThe construction of the new government bridge at Taghum was commenced by the contractors, Messrs.\nHodgson, King & McPhoJlen Bros., of\nVancouver, on Nov. 4, 1913. Before\nthe actual start on construction could\nye made, a large amount of preparatory work was necessary and a special\nsiding bad to be arranged for und put\nin by the Canadian Pacific railway for\nunloading tho heavy material reoulr-\nl*d In construction, The first month\nivas taken inp in assembling and unloading machinery for plant, among\nwhich was included four hoisting engines, two large derricks, air compressors, nlr locks for cylinder sinking, motors, concrete mixers and riveting plant, large quantities of heavy\nsteel cable and narrow suture railway\ntrack. At the same -time this plant\nwas being assembled the camp building were erected, Including iwo brick\nhouses, cook house, superintendent's\n.ind foreman's quarters, engineers and\ntimekeepers' offices, cement shed and\nblucksmithfs shop. The contractors\nInstalled their own water supply,\nwhich is worked by steam pumps. The\nwhole of the buildings and offices are\nlighted by electricity, supplied by the\ncity power plant. The various machines are run by electricity, steam\nand 'gasoline engines. As soon as line\ncamp building's were far enough advanced to accommodate tho- men, u\npile driver was built und work started on driving the piles for the false\nwork across the river, starting from\nthe Taghum side. This part of the\nwork is now completed -and there are\nover 300 piles, from 30 ft, to f-5 fit.\nlong, driven 'Into the river bed, the\nlast -part of this work was 'through\nlhe rapids, about 200 ft. wide and was\na. most difficult task for nnyone to\nundertake, but was successfully carried out without a hitch. In order\nto keep these piles In place when\nslanting to drive, It was necessary to\nattach cables to the bottom of the\npiles, and to the rocks on the up-\natream side of the bridge, owing lo the\nforce of tihe rapids, otherwise there\nwould have been danger of the force\n\u00bbf the water carrying the pile which\nwas being driven and the pile driver\nengine into lhe' river. While jthla\nwork was In progress excavation was\nlieitig rushed for the nbutuncnt, to carry\nIbe (heavy steel spans from the Tag'\ninim side of the river. This excavation was carried down to low iwntel\nlevel In order to avoid any danger of\nwashouts or scouring from the effects of an exceptionally high water.\nAs soon as the excavation was completed, which was about Dee. 10, a\nstart was made \u25a0putting In the concrete for this abutment. This work\niVOi? carried on night and day for 10\ndays, and during this time albout 700\ncubic yards of concrete -were put in\nplace. This abutment is albout 17 ft.\nthick nt the base, narrowing at the\ntop to about 4 ft., and Is about 45 ft.\nhigh, forming a solid mass of concrete\nweighing about 1,500 tons.\nAs soon as the false work was far\nenough advanced, heavy timber frames\nwere erected and strongly bolted to\ntemporarily keep In place the steel\ncylinders forming the three river\npiers. Those cylinders ure placed in\npairs, 9 ft. diameter ea'ch, formed of\n.in outside shell of plating riveted together, 9 ft. diameter, with an Inner\nshell.\nStarting from the cutting edge at\nthe bottom of the cylinder and rising\nS ft., cone shaped, to 3 ft. diameter,\nthis forming the working chamber for\n\u25a0\u25a0Inking the cylinders under compressed air, The work of sinking these\ncylinders Is now going on night and\nday, tho men working in elght-boUr\nshifts, the material being excavated\nand loaded into buckets in the working chamber, then hoisted with a derrick through the air lock doors. These\nmen are working below tbe water\nlevel, the water being forced out of\nthe working chamber Iby compressed\nair, in which the men work. The air\nlocks, through which both men and\nmaterial pass, are constructed with\ntwo air-tight doors, operated and eon\ntrolled with valves and levers and\nsignals from tho outside by a lock-\ntender man. One of these cylinders\naro now sunk about 30 ft., and another\nto about li> ft. Preparations for sinking the remaining four cylinders are\nnow well advanced, as well as the\nconstruction of a concrete -pier and\nabutment on the Nelfcon side of tho\nriver.\nThe total length of the bridge when\ncompleted will be about 620 ft., made\nup of three river spans of 173 ft. each\nand two shore spans of 20 ft. each.\nThere aro two concrete shore abutments, ono on either side of the river,\nthree cylinder piers and one concrete\npier. The contractors have been favored with the exceptionally open winter and are to ibe congratulated on\nthe splendid progress' they are making with the work. The work Is under the supervision of J. P. Hodgson\nand W. A. MoPhalen, of tbe firm of\nHodgson, King & MoPhalen Bros., and\nis being supervised on behulf of ithe\nprovincial government by Engineer C.\nW. Gamble. The photographs were\ntu<ken by the head timekeeper, B. G.\nRennle.\nView  showing  huge  steel  cylinders used In construction of piers.\nSite of bridge, with north  abutment in  foreground,   and  showing  Granite-\nPoorman   mill   and  tramway   to   mine   on   opposite   side.\nShowing false work for use in construction of bridge practically complete.\nFIRE AT LEDUC\nEDMONTON, Alta., Feb. fi.\u2014Fire,\nwhich broke out at noon today, destroyed the entire Canadian Pacific\nrailway depot building at Leduc, thus\ncutting off both telegraph and telephone communication, The damage\nIncurred is estimated at $5,000.\nRemoval Notice\nMcQuarrie & Robertson Will be open for\nbusiness in their new office, 414 Ward Street, on\nSaturday morning, Feb. 7\nRELSOS NEW& OF THE DAY\nA toa In aid of lhe funds of tlu\nchurch helper- of St. KavUmr's vchurcl.\nwill be given by Mrs. Blnylrick and\n.Mrs. Harry Bird at the residence of\ntho hitler, 203 Bake,- street, Tuesday,\nFebruary tbe 10th, from ;i tu li o'clock.\nCarl Undow, of Salmo, came in bv-t\nnight ami registered at the Hume.\nA.   C.\ning thc\nHume,\nMesker, o\ncity.    HD\ns visit-\n!     Jl.t      til!\nH.  V.   Pernio,  of Applettule,\nguest at  the Hutno.\nNELSON   ELKS  INSTAL\nOFFICERS  FOR YEAR\nNelson Elks lodge last night installed the following officers:\nExalted ruler, William QofUiflll; past\nexalted ruler, Dr. J, W. Collin, qf\nRossland; esteemed leading knight,\nHerbert Keele; esteemed loyal knight,\nEdward Roach; esteemed lecturing\nknight, Julius Roisterer; treasurer, E,\nH. Smith; secretary, Fred A. Starkey;\nchaplain, Samuel Thomas'; esquire;\nNap. Mallettj lime,, guard, Mi Mickle-\nson; tyler, Charles Anderson; trustees, G. S. Hawthorne, George Benwell.\nand F. L. Boyd,\nGOVERNMENT ENGINEER SEES\nKASLO   AND   SLOCAN   LINE\nHeavy snow on the Kaslo & Slocan\nline prevented F. C. Gamble, of Vic-*\ntorloj chief engineer for the provincial government, from making a complete inspection of tlie new line from\nthe Kaslo end yesterday, but tomorrow he will go to Three Forks' and\nwith the aid of a snowplow hopes to\nrun over part of the line from the\nBear lake end. Mr. Gamble returned\nfrom Kaslo lust night'and registered\nat thc Hume.\nSMITH ACTING SECRETARY\nOF   BOARD  OF  TRADE\nE3. H. Smith was appointed acting\nsecretary of the board of trade, to\nhold office until the monthly meeting\non Thursday next, at a meeting or\nthe council of the board yesterday\nafternoon. Those present were J. E.\nAnnable, president; John Toyo, I. G.\nNelson, Aid. T. D. Stark, E. H. Smith,\n0. W. Widdowson, W. M. Cunliffe, A.\nO. Carpenter and \\V. H, Jones,.\nNAVAL TUG UNABLE\nTO   RESCUE   FISHERMEN\n(By Daily N0Ws Leased Wire.)\nCL'RIJNG*Nfld., Feb. 5.\u2014The Halted Statea navu] tug Potomac, not onl.\nfailed tu free the f-ihing schooner.\nHiram Lowell and Frances Wlllard In\nthe Bay of Islands today, but narrowly escaped being caught in the iee\nwhich was being heavily brought from\n' \"t.   Lawrence   before    a\nThe\n\u2022ossels, bul\ntblc to  re:.\ngale.\n< remain on board Ihoii\nit is believed they will be\n-'b  shore  if the   schooner*-\nCROSS OR FEVERISH,\nHALF-SICK CHILDREN\nif    Tongue   is    Coated,    Breath    Bad,\nStomach Saur it Means a Torpid\nLiver an-J Cor\u00a9:ctod  Bowels.\nMother! Don't scold your cross,\npeevish child! L*ooli at the tongue!\nSee if it is white, yellow and coated!\nIf your child is listless, d: doping, isn't\nSleeping well, Is restless, doesn't eat\nheartily or is cross, Irritable, out of\nsorts with everybody, stomach soar,\nfeverish, breath bad; bus .stomach-ache,\ndiarrhoea, sore throat, or Is full .of\nSold, it means the Utile one's stomach\nliver and 30 feet of bowels are filled\nwith poisons and foul, constipated\nwaste matter and need a gentle, thorough cleansing at onc-e.\nGive n te.ispounful of Syrun of Figs\nand In a few hours nil the clogged up\nwaste, undigested food and spur bile\nwill gently move on and out Of its\nlittle waste clogged bowels without'\nnausea, griping 0r weakness, and J'OU\nwill surely have a well, happy and\nsmiling child again shortly.\n\u25a0With Syrup of Figs you are not\ndrugging your children, being composed entirely of luscious figs, senna\ntnd aromatic., it cannot he harmful,\nicsides they dearly love lt.\u00ab delicious\naste.\nMothers should always keep Syrup\nof Figs handy. It ls the only stomach,\nliver and bowel cleanser and regulator\nneeded\u2014a   little given today will save\nsick child tomorrow.\nFull directions for children of all\nages and for grown-ups plainly prlnt-\n'd on  the  package.\nAsk your druggist for the. full name,\n'Syrup of Fig8 and Elixir of Senna,\"\nprepared by the California Fltr Svrttp\nThis Is the delicious tasting, genuine old reliable. Refuse anything else\noffered,\nExtra Special Values\nIn Men's Overcoats\nFor Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday we\nare going to offer better values in Overcoats than have\never been offered before, comprising the newest in\nChesterfield and Ulster models, in cheviots, friezes,\ntweeds, diagonals, etc., in the season's shades of olive,\nbrowns, greys, etc., etc.\nConvertible Collars, Belt Effect, Strapped Seams and Cufs, shapely Skirts\nfor freedom  in walking and shoulders fitting snugly.\nThe following descriptions are a few of the many special values offered:\n\u25a0iims,  con-\nOlive   Tweed,   strap\nvertlble collar.\nRegular $22.00.    Special   $16.00\nTweed,    velvet\nBrown   Dlagoni\ncollar,  fly  front.\n., $11.50\nRegular $14.00.    Spec\nCheek Tweed, in\\ islble stripe,\ntwo-way collar, cuffed stitched\nseams.\nVienna    Chesterfield,    fly    front,\nself collar.\nRegular $19.60.   Special\n$15.95\nLovnt   Frieze,   convertible  collar,\nstrap cuffs, stitched seams.\nSpecial $18.50\nRegular $24.50.\nBrown   Chinchilla,   shawl   collar,\n3-inch  cuffs,  stitched seams.\nRegular $12.50.    Special $10.00      Regular $19.50.    Special $ 15.00\nGrocery Department\nELEPHANT ORANGES\u2014Tlu-sc- Oranges nre sued und full of iutee.\nbeautifully ripened on tho trees. an.    .a.\nP.r Dozen        HO*j,  DUl\u00bb\n40C\n^_35C\n Z...45C\n35c\n65c\n40c\n50c\nBEST SICILY LEMONS\nPer Dozen   \t\nFANCY CALIFORNIA RIPE OLIVES\nP.r Tin  \t\nSPANISH  PIMENTO\nPer  Tin   \t\nSELECTED ANCHOVIES\nIn Salt, 1s, per Tin  \t\nIn Salt, 2b, per Tin  \t\nFINEST CREAM  BRICK CHEESE\nPer Lb\t\nFINEST GORGONZOLA CHEESE\nPer  Lb\t\nWrite or call for our revised Grocery and General\nPrice  List.    It will show you how to obtain the\nBEST QUALITY GOODS AT A MINIMUM COST\nHudson's Bay Company\nIncorparaterl 1670 Incorporated 1670\nimih t0  the  fore,, of the\npres\nThe Potomac wa;- working her way\nInto the bay when the wind shifted\n;ind great flOos of Ice which had been\ndrifting about In the suit' began driving In. She managed to break her\nway out. and made a quick dash into\nthe clear water.\nThe Potomac will make another attempt to rescue thc fishermen when\nthe ice and wind conditions are more\n,'avorable,\nMINISTER  OF  FINANCE\nMAKING   GOOD   PROGRESS\nfBy Dally News Leased WIre.1\nOTTAWA,    Feb.    5.\u2014The    following\nTry Us for High-Glass\nConfectionery\nAlways Fresh.\nThe best fruits In season always\nIn stock.\nWe have a very complete stock\nof tea, coffee and cocoa.\nTry us for values.\nThe Palace Confectionery\nWe Can Give You\nPrompt Attention\nIt you phone us.\nWe can fix those leaks.\nB. C. Plumbing & Heating Co.\nOPERA   HOU8E   BLOCK\nP.O. Box 481 phone W\nbulletin was Isued today regarding the\ncondition of Hon. W. T. White, who\nunderwent nn operation 10 days ugo:\n\"Mr. White's condition is much improved today and no complications ure\nlooked for. From Ihis on, he will make\nrapid progress to recovery,\"\nShiloh\nquickly stops  coughs,  cures'colds, and  heals\nthe throat and lungi- as cents.\nThe \"Order of the Bath\"\nls very often \"repairs to the pipes'*\nor some other connection. For the\nsake of health be sure to have your\nbathroom, sinks, water closets, etc.,\nin a sanitary condition at all times.\nWe are sanitary plumbers and experienced In our business, we are quick,\nthorough and efficient In our work\nand very reasonable in charges. Ask\nyour neighbors .about our workmanship.\nE. K. STRACHAN\n120 Baker Street\nPhone 202 P. O. Box 50V\n'\n PAGE EIGHT\nCfr \u00a9afty iitto*.\nFRIDAY  ...;.......  FEBRUARY!\nPICKLES\nHEINZ 58WEET MIX*\u00a9\nQuart ...50c\nDILL  PICKLES\nDozen    30c\nINDIA RELISH\nBottle    35o\nC. A. Benedict\nJosephine St.\nQueen Studio\nE.lebliah.d 188D.\nPortraits\nViews\nPictures\nPicture Framing\nALLAN LEAN, Manager,\nRO. Box 812. Phone 186\nNelson. B. C.\nI i I.\nW. D. Alderson, manager of the\nMother Lode mine at Sheep Creel',\n\u25a0till leave on the Great Northern this\nmorning for Montreal* where he   will\nqonfer with the directors of thc company.\nFor Sale\nA two-storey residence on Carbonate street, only three blocks\nfrom the centre of tlie city. The\nhouse contains three bedrooms and\na bathroom, dining room, \u25a0 parlor,\nkitchen, pantry, large basement and\nhot air furnace.\n$7ii0 cash and the balance on\nensy terms will handle this.\nPrice $3,000\nH. IN. Bird\nNelson, B. C.\nSHOW INTEREST\nIN THIS DISTRICT\nMrs.M. J. Vlgnonx, sill \"Slllcn stroet\nMI) receive Iriiltiy. \"        ' -\nFor the Cough\u2014\nOur\n\"Wild Cherry,\nSpruce and Tar\"\nIS  THE   BEST  COUGH   SYRUP   POR  THF,  RELIEF  AND   CITIE   OF\nCOUGHS  AND COI.DS  ON  THE CHEST\nWo make it here nnd It holds the record for ton years and hns heen\nwidely used all through the kootenays.   Nothing so good.   TRY IT!\nIn 25c and 50c Bottles\nRutherford Drug Co., Ltd\nIN  NEW STAND\u2014503 BAKER STREET\nNELSON, B.C.\nLetters Prom Prospective Settlers and\nInvestors In Old Country Reach\nPublicity Bureau.\nFive requests for Information from\nold country residents who are considering the question of Investing or\nlocating in Kootenay and. Boundary\nand one letter from a Seattle man\nwho is anxious lo invest money ln\nNolson city property were replied to\nyesterday by H. \\V. Rust, who hat-\ntaken temporary charge of the publicity bureau until some definite arrangements for carrying on .the work\nhave been completed.\nTheso six letters were among those\nwhich have been received by the publicity human of the board of trade\nduring the past week or 10 days.\nEIGHTY-FOUR HUNDRED   -1EN\nIDLE   IN   TORONTO\nTORONTO, Feb. 5.\u2014Developments\nof the last fortnight which have to\ndo with the unemployed situation In\n\"Toronto ure demonstrative of the faat\nthat, relief can come to thousands^\nworkless men and women daily only\nthrough the resumption of Industrial\nactivity. The establishment of a reg-\nIstiatlon bureau by the civic social\naervico commission only succeeded in\n\"\u25a0lovidbig temporary employment. The\nHies of the registration bureau Up to\nthe present show that there are OVStf\n8.4(10 men idle in Toronto. Leaders\nof   the  labor  movement  assert  Unit\n' i winter has been more severe in\nthe way of slack em ploy m ont than any\nseason since 1907,\nCILKER'S\nClearance Sale\nStarts Today, Friday\nThe weather says you must wear hnivy clothes and Gttker says\nbuy pood goods at my store and you will get them at the lowest price\nobtainable In any place,, I\nOVERCOATS!   SUITS!   HATS!\nSPECIAL FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY\nSuits  and   Overcoats  at        $12.00   Each\nNOTE.\u2014Watch our windows change every day and fitlod with\nSpecially   priced   goods.\nWinter Underwear, Heavy Ribbed, $1.65 Suit\nOur store will be placed for easy serving of the \u25a0crowd of -customers\nthat tvc look forward to at the prices wo are marking the goods at.\nBargains all over our big store,\nJ.A.CILKER\nGents' and Boys' Outfitter      Baker Street, Nelson\nAuction Sale\nContinued\nThis Afternoon\n417 Hoover St.\nResidence of J. S. Munro, Esq.\nDrawing  Room  Furnituro,  Gourlny\nPiano,  Bedroom Furniture, etc., etc.\nTERMS: \u00bbCASIT.\nChas. A. Waterman & Co.\nAuctioneers.\nBEESTON FUNERAL\u2022\u25a0\nMASONIC AFFAIR\nBoard   of  Trade   Members to  Attend\nin  Body\u2014Sons of England\n!   to . B?   Present. \u25a0   t\nUnder Masonic auspices the funeral\nof tlie late E. K. Beeston will take\nplace at 2:30 o'clock tomorrow afternoon nt Bt. Saviour's church.\nMembers of the hoard of trade will\nattend the funeral in a body, a meeting of tho council o,\" that organization\nyesterday authorizing the president,\nJ. H. Annable, to issue a call to- members to attend.\nTho Sons of England will attend the\nfuneral as a lodge and it Is expected\nthat scorea of citizens, in addition to\nthose connected with organizations\nwith whieh the late Mr. lleeston Wat-\nassociated, will lie present;-\nMasons will nicer, -at. Masonic, hall\nat 2 o'clock and the members of thf\nboard of trade will assemble at tin-\nsame--hour at tbe board of. trade\nrooms.\nS\nj *y.>.!,....\nWe Are Sole Agents for the\nCelebrated\nWaugh Drills\nREPAIR   PARTS  ALSO   KEPT  IN   STOCK\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co. Ltd.\nWholesale and Retail\nNelson- B. C.\nTHE\nGEM\nThe Quality Photoplay House.\nTONIGHTI\nThe Crimson\nStain\nA Three-Rtfel Feature by the New\nYork Motion Picture Co.\nA southern drama, full of exciting\nevents and thrills\u2014a  strong play,\nbeautifully si aged and well photographed.\nTwo Great Keystone Comedies\n\"OUT ANO IN\"\nand\n\"THE  TALE OF A  BLACK  EYE\"\nTwo., crackerjaeks\u2014ono   continual\nround of laughter.\nComing   Saturday,   Pathe's   Great\nTwo-Reel Feature\n\"WARDS   OF   SOCIETY\"\nW. P. TIERNEY, General Sales Agent,\nNelson, B. C,\n, Cars shipped to all railway points.\nWANT NAMES BY TOMORROW\nFOR THIS PACKING-SCHOOL\nAt lhe rajncluslon tomorrow of the\npacking bcIiooI now being held in- the\npublic hall at Shirley a second school\nwill be held in the same hall, commencing, on Monday, if sufficient pupils are reported ''>' lhe end of this\nweek. BliHlclenl names haVg not been\nreceived to comply with tlie requirements -of the department of agriculture for the formation of a school in\nNelaon city. There are. however, some\nnix or seven persons resident at Bel-\nford, and one or two from Nelson,\nwho are most, anxious to tuko the\ncourse at Shirley.\nTho instructor at Shirley, S. Guy\nGreenwood, or It. T. Hickes, the secretary of tiie West Kootenay Farmers'\niustitule, will receive the names o'\nthose willing to take L'he course, bul\npoint out that all names must be sen'\nin on or .'before) tomorrow, for If t\".\nficiont names are not'received by that\ndate it will not be possible to form\nthe second school at Shirley.\nMANY NOVEL  FEATURES AT\n\\ HOSPITAL  AID   BALL\nTho members of the,Women's Hospital Aid society are going right ahead\nwith arrangements for their Valentine\nday \"hard times\" ball, which will\nheld on Friday, February 13. Tho affair will be something quite different\nfrom anything previously given under\nthB auspices of the society and the\nmembers feel confident that the fact\nthai, the ball is to lie held on Friday,\n\"the- thirteenth.\" will not hi any way\ninterfere with the success of the undertaking.\nThere will be many novel features\nto the ball and many old-fashioned\ndances will- be revived during the\nevening. The supper which will he\nserved will lie featured with such delicacies as niince and pumpkin pies\nand eider, and it Is expected that it\nwill bo one of the most successful\nhalls In tlie history of the hospital\naid.\nOften times an old relic Is revived and becomes a favorite jewel.\nBring In all yobr old jewelry\u2014there\nmas he some valuable piece uncovered; It happens very frequently to'\nthe very great satisfaction of the\nowner. We will be pleased to sub'\nject, designs nnd quote you prices.\nJ, O. Patenaude\nManufacturing Jeweler, Watchmaker and Optician.\nlailv   Newa \"Want\"   Ada   Get   Raaulta\nV'Makcs more\nI       bread\nand better bread\"\nPURITY FLOUR\nThe Brackman-Ker Milting campanv, Limit|\n\"Kryptok\nBifocal Lenses\nTwo Pairs of Glasses In pn\u00ab.\nn\\\nOlD5TVtE\/ ^KRYPTOK\nThe absence of the customary lines\nand aeams which mar the vision are\ntruly a revelation to wearers ol\nBifocals\nR. L. DOUGLASS\nTHE GRADUATE OPTICIAN\nAND OPTOMETRIST     '\nCertified by a Provincial Board e>\nExaminers ln Optometry.   \u25a0\nRoom 1\", K. W. C. Block.\nYour Eyes Are\nGood [As > Your \u00a3las\n\u2014If It is necessary for yo\nwear glasses to Improve\npaired vision, restore lost vi\nor conserve good vision. Re\nIng this, we aim to so n\nyour glasses that your eyes\nGOOD when yqu wear gla\nwe make for you.\nYou   need   us   if  you   i|\nJ. J. Walkei\nJeweler and Optician\nBaker St. Nelson,]\nExpert Watch Repairing\n' Mrs.  A. IL Grpr-ii   will  not  receive\ntmiivy. nor again this season.\nAuction Sale\n409 Latimer st.P Monday, February 9th,\nat 2 o'clock.\nWe have received instructions from\nD. F. Chapman, Esq.-, to sell by public\nauction his household furniture, consisting of bedroom suites, mission oak\ndining room furniture, rockers and\nother chairs, nearly new \"alley New\nYork piano, nearly new Singer sewing\nmachine, kitchen range, heater, kitchen utensils, etc.\nTERMS:   CASH.\nW Cutler: Auctioneer\nSPECIAL NOTICE\nThat we may handle our many mall orders from our out of town customers.-promptly and satisfactorily!\nwe bave opened a special department to handle this Increasing business. Wboh1* you want DRUGS itn\nSTATIONERY or anything else you would like us to get for you, (lend your orders to us nnd let us show yOfJ\nJust how well we can serve you.   \"Wo are at your servlee.\nOUR WINDOWS TODAY\nShow Bargains' In Talcum Powders, regular 25cj for 15c.   Also Hydrogen Peroxide at 25c, 40c nnd 60c a bottle.|\nVALENTINES OCCUPY OUR STATIONERY WINDOW\nIt's tlmo to send these to your distant friends.   Our line Ih new, just In, and is priced from Be upl\nCity Drug & Stationery Co. ^c'\nNELSON'S   STORE   POR   THE   PEOPLE\nP. O. BOX 10S3\nADVERTISE\nCHAHKO MIKA\nBanner Is Sent to Rossland Carnival-\nHume  Hotel   Uses  Rubber\nStamp on Stationery.\nA large banner advertising Chahko\nMlka was despatched last night\nRossland and will ho displayed by tbe\nNelson hockey team ut. the game this\nafternoon and evening.\nGeorge Benwell, proprietor of the\nHume hotel, has commenced already\nto advertise lhe big carnival and has\npurchased large rubber stamps bearing the imprint of an Indian's head\nantl tbe words \"Chahko Mlka, Nelson,\nB. C, July 13-18, 1914. When in Nelson stop at the Hume.\" The stamp\nwill bo used on the backs of envelopes\nand similar places.\nManufacturers' Samples\nDry Goods, Sweaters, Hose\nAT WHOLESALE  PRICES\nThe Ark\nNew and second-hand furniture.\nCheapest In the city.\nPhone 1-396. (506 Vernon St.\nNelson, B. C.\nDo the Citizens of Nelson Know?\nThat the Hoard Insurance Agents have been fighting for lower\nrates, with the result that the rales on many places of business\nand on all residences bave been reduced?\nDo the Citizens of Nelson Know?\nThat thc basis rate on dwellings' was reduced from seventy-\nflve cents per hundred dollars per year to sixty-five cents, antl\nagain recently reduced to sixty cents, which is the same rate as\nVancouver pays?\nDo the Citizens of Nelson Know?\nThat the present.rate means that on a modern frame house,\n.Sixty feet from another house, tbe owner would only pay twelve\ndollars for one thousand dollars insurance for three, years\u2014that\nis, four dollars pe-* thousand per year? In other words, absolutely reliable insurance companies will make a wager with you\nat ?.!50.00 to $1.00 that your houso will not burn down.\nTAKE   UP   THE   WAGER\u2014IT   IS   GOOD BUSINESS\nCITY PROPERTY. FRUIT  LAND8. INVESTMENTS,\nFIRE. LIFE. ACCIDENT  AND  EMPLOYERS\nLIABILITY INSURANCES.\nBONDS. STOCKS. SHARE8.\nChas. F. McHardy\n  THE GREEN BLOCK, NELSON, B.C.!   L-i\t\nLICENSE  AND   POLICE\n.  COMMISSIONERS  GAZETTED\n(Special to The Daily News)\nVICTORIA, TJ. C, Feb.  fi.\u2014A   nutn-\n\u2022r of provincial arpomtmeiits nre\ngazetted thlc week, the great majority\nof them consisting of members of thc\nboards of license and police commissioners for the various cities of tbe\nprovince. Among them are license\ncommissioners:\nSlocan\u2014Aid. Albert Teeter and Solomon Banks.\nGreenwood\u2014Aid, L. Jenkins and A.\nMcArthur.\nRossland\u2014Aid. G. W. Gunn and C.\nF. R. Pincott.\nPolice Commissioners.\nSlocan\u2014Aid. J. H, McLean and R. .T\nThurston.\nGreenwood\u2014Aid. O. A. Rendall ,-i.nd\nR. G. Hargreaves.\nRossland\u2014Aid. G. W. Gunn and C.\nF. R. Pincott.\nRobert nnd Ernest Doner, of Silverton, will leave on the Crow boat\nthis mornlnjr for New York whence\nthey will sail by the steamer St. Paul\non Feb, 18 for Plymouth, Em?.\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\nMrs. M. J. Vigneux will reeelve today.\nMayor Malone will leave on the\nGreat Northern this morning on .\u00ab business trip to Spokane,    i\n- There will be a meetlntj of the council of the board of trade .nt 4 o'clnck\nOh Thursday afternoon.\nThe regular meeting of Clan Johnstone No. 212 will be held tills even-\nIns at 8 o'clock in Oddfellows' hall.\nGlasses today at the Y, M. C. A, nre;\nHigh school 4 tO 5 o'clock; professional men fi'lfi to 6 o'clock; young men\nS to 10 o'clock.\nC. A. Waterman &\u25a0 Co. will resume\nthe auction sale this afternoon at 2:'.]0\no'clock nt tlie reHlflehco of .1. S. Munro\n\u25a0117 Hoover street. \u00bb\nWilliam Lyric, of Greenwood, will\nleave on the Crow boat this morning\nTor St. John, whence ha will sail by\nthe steamer Royal Edward on Feb, 11\nfor Plymouth, Ens\\\nIT. R. Christie, noting district for.\nester, left lust night for Victoria. A.\nM. Black, of the forestry department\nin this district, will succeed him as\nacting district forester.\nCottage prayer meetings in conne,\u2014\nneetlon with the congregation of St\n\" ul's church will he held thl3 evening at the residences of  Rev.  Joseph\nmith. SOU Silica street; N. D, Stewart, 118 limbs street; W. R. Blanchard.\niiview; W. A. Robertson, Sliver\nKing road and at Shirley hall, Granite\nroad.\nE. Jnekman has been appointed mot- i\norman on the street railway system\nto assume the position mad\" -vacant\nby the resignation of D. F, Chapman,\nwho Is now in charge of an electric\nplant at    Coeiir d'Alene, Ida. Mr\nJackman is well known to many in the\ncity as be was previously connecter*\nWith the street railway system In a\nsimilar capacity.\nA. B. Netherby was among Uio 1\n\u2022ion visitors  to the Rossland carnlj\nyesterday.\nReductions ii\nChina\nAll lines of fancy china, excei\nIng stock patterns, are being sol\nat greatly reduced prices. ,SoJ\nbeautiful designs going at alinoj\nany price to clear out.\nA visit will convince   that\nmean what we say.\nSome good second-hand articlf\non hand.\nCHINA~HALL|\nA.   W.   MUNRO,  Prop.\nP. O. Box 588\nPhon.  L-261 321   Bak.r I\nOvercoat!\nSTARLAND THEATRE\nTONIGHT\nTONIGHT\nSPECIAL ATTRACTION\nIN THREE PARTS\nThe Streets qf\nNew York f\nFrom the Well Known Play by Dion Boucicault\nThe scenes are laid in New York and every action is in keeping with\nthe tale of Boucicault's celebrated story. Don't miss seeing the great\nfire scene in this picture.\nFrontier Comedy\nThe Village Pest\nA RIOT OF .FUN A\nNO ADVANCE IN PRICES\nNO ADVANCE IN PRICES\n25 per Cen]\nOff All Heavy Overcoaj\n$20.00 Coats $15.0\n$22.00 Coats $16.3\n$25.00 Coats $18.;\n$28.00 Coats $2IX\nLots of time yet to use a hea|\nOvercoat, and then you have It i\nanother. winter.\nTrouserl\n25 per Cen\nOff All Men's TrouseJ\n$2.00 Pants for fl.S\n$2.50 Pants for $1.9\n$3.00 Pants for $2.^\n$4.00 Pants for $3.'\n$5.00 Pants fpr.....$3.;\nThis week only.\nEmory &Wallej\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"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. 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Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","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":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","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 Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.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."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1914-02-06 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":"1914-02-06 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. 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