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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":" ^ffs\nTT\nP-< \u00bb\u00ab*\u00bb.\u00bb*.*>M.-WM*. I >..l .,\u00ab\nThe DaUy Now* carries thp; full night'. !\u2022\n, leased wire new* servlco of Canadian >\n' Press, Limited, which Include* the As*:.\n',', soclated Press service; ,\nM\nThe Dally r\/ewt has tb. IsrgMt dr-J\n*m***. \u00b0' Jm tott* m-topwot in.*\nCanada ln '\/Proportion to the population f\nof It* hptr* town J\n, *. >\u2022.**.. 9 ..**.***.*.**S '\nJVOJi. 17 \u00abo. 2|>\niSEtiSQN, B. C, MONDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 3, 1919\nW\n' 50c PER -MON.TP\nI PEOPtFS\nNAWllffld\nPARIS, Fob. 2 (Associated Press).\u2014\nI An international people's purpose to be\nestablished tn connection with! the\nleague of nations is a striking proposal\ncontained In a memorandum submlt-\nten to the peace conference by Hon.\nCharles J. Doherty, Canadian minister\ni of justice, through the BrltiBh league\nof nations commission, of which he is\na member.'\nEvery nation of the world would be\nrepresented on thiBbody and the delegates would be representatives of the\npeoplo themselves. This plan is to be\npresented to the various deelgatlons\nin the peace conference.\nMr. Doherty's view Is that it would\nbe a vital mistake to declare at this\ntime the principle tha tthe interests of\nhumanity are to be confined only to\nsovereign states. He believes that tho\npresent time is opportune to interest\nthe peoples pf the world directly in\nmethods for the prevention of war, and\nthat the opportunity ought to be\nseized,\nThe plans thus far suggested are for\nthe constitution of judicial tribunals\nand for the exercise of executive powers by tho governments, especially of\nthe* -Teat powers. Mr. Doherty declares\nthere would be greater assurance of a\ngeneral delegation of the peoples of all\ncountries to maintain peaceful relations if a body, mainly executive in\nfunction and composed of representatives directly elected by the nations,\ngreat and small, were added to supplement the work of these judicial and\nrepresentative bodies, In such an assembly the principal powers would be\nthose of Inquiry and legislation, talcing\nthe form of recommendations of sovereign states. The necessity so far\ninsisted upon of equal representation\nwould disappear and members assigned\nto each country conforming rather to\nsuch considerations as Influence the\ndistribution' of scats in any legislative\nas cmbly. <*\nThe main point in Mr. Doherty's\nargument Ib that though the enormous\ncasualties in this jvar have been borne\nby peoples without organized governments having proven themselves able\nto prevent each disaster, the democracies of the world have a right to fu|l\nconsideration in any plan that may\nnow be agreed uppn for tho future,\nand that, moreover, if the league of\nnations fails to provide such recourse,\nthe failure will strengthen the hand\n'cjf those agencies internationally\norganized which declare themselves\nopposed in the interests of humanity\nitself to all organized governments.\nGOVERNMENT TO SPEND\n925,000,000 FOR SOLDIERS\n(By Daily News Leased Wire,)\nOTTAWA, Feb. 2\u2014A big scheme\nof vocational training for the\nwhole 'dominion, involving federal\nassistance to the provinces totaling $25,000,000 to be expended during the next 10 years, is being\nworked out by the government and\nprobably will be enacted into legislation during tho coming scsiaon.\n(lOBERTSON 8PEAK6 AT\nHAMILTON'S OPEN  FORUM\n(by Daily News Leased Wire.)\nHAMILTON, Ont., Fob. 2.\u2014Hamil-\n1 ton's open forum was opened this afternoon and the chief speaker was\n[ Hon. G. S. Robertson! minister of la-\n| bor, who said he camo as a fellow\n! vorkman and not as a minister of the\nI crown.\nHe spoke of unemployment and he\nuhsured the audlenco that no alien\nshould hold a plaeo that a .soldier needed whon he returned. Tho government had taken up the question of returning undesirable aliens to their\nnative land, he said, and if they were\nunable to pay .their way tho government would assist them. The friendly\naliens who wished to remain should\nIte assimilated and It was the duty of\nCanadians to aid in this work, the minister added.\n[EXPRESS OttDERS STOLEN\nFROM WINNIPEG OFFICE\n(Uy Dally News Leasod Wire.)\nWINNIPEG, Feb. 2.\u2014A took of Ca-\n|nadiii.n   express money  orders,   {.<..\u25a0-i.il\nnumbers 860 to 879, Inclusive was st,ol-\npn on Saturday morning from Leo Koy\n|o.f Lee Koy and company, Portage avenue, agent bf the Canadian Express\n\u25a0company, at the point of a revolver.\nVh.Ue Koy was making out an order\nPat the request of the robber, tho man\nf whipped out' a revolver, and pointing\nTit at Koy's heiid, grabbed the book of\nBO orders and made his get away.\n\u00bbETER  WRIGHT ARRIVES\nIN  VANCOUVER\n(By Daily News Leasod Wire.)\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Feb. 2.\u2014Peter\n\u25a0.Wright, chairman of the seamens and\n(flremens union of Great Britain arrlv-\nhero today, accompanied by Com-\nnodorc \"AemtUus Jarvls, head of the\nSavy League of Canada. Mr. Wright\nwas appointed by the executive of tho\nunion to come'to Canada aijd thp Unt-\n[ted States and tell why the sailors\n]dC Great Britain have boycotted the\nHuns. He will deliver speeches hero\nbefore the Canadian club.\n[CAPTAIN RIDEOUT GETS\nTHE MILITARY CR088\n(By Dally News Leasod Wire.)\nOTTAWA.  Feb. 2.\u2014-News has been\nIreceived In Ottawa that Cnpt, Q, S.\nRideout, royal engineers, has been\nawarded tho Military Cross for service\non the Italian front. Ho is a. son of\nA. W. Hideout, manager of the Canadian Bank of Commerce, Heglnn, Sask.\nIDLE LAND-TAX FOR\nYEAR JN MANITOBA $137,000\nWINNIPEGL,| Fob. 2.\u2014Hon. Edward\nBrown, proVJndal treasurer, announces that the unoccupied lands tax for\nthe. past financial year will bring the\nsum of $137,000 into' thu provlneliil\n(rofiaury,, ^_  .._.\nProf,  Osborne   Declares   Big   National\nView Has Never Been Taken and\nSalaries Are Too Low,\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, Feb.- 2.\u2014Canada has\nnever taken a big national view of education; there are no facilities in Canada for keeping abreast of the educational progress of the world; Canada\nhas boen systematically bled for 40\nyears of its best scholars and Canada's\n.'est teachers' salaries are a national\nscandal. These aro four points in a\n.\u25a0\u25a0tinging indictment of this country's\neducational affairs contained in an\naddress given by Prof. W. F. Osborne,\nprofessor of French in tho University\nnt Manitoba, on \"National Ideals in\nEducation,\" before the members of tho\nOttawa Canadian club at the Chateau\nLaurier Saturday.\nSir Henry Drayton, president of the\nclub, in introducing Prof. Osborne referred to him as a keen and warm\nnpostlo of education in Canada. Tho\n-\u25a0rimary purpose of Prof. OBborne's ad\ndress was to outline tho plan for tho\ngreat educational conference which it\nis proposed to hold In'Canada this autumn. -     \"   ,\nBRITISH GOVERNMENT To\nHOLD RAILWAYS NOW\n(By Daily Nows Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Fob. 2.\u2014(British Wireless.)-\u2014-.Lord Claude Hamilton, presiding nt a meeting of the East London\nRailway company today, said that a\ndeputation of the chairmen of. tho\neleven great railway companies of\nEngland, had waited upon Andrew\nBonar Law, the government spokesman, to elicit, if possible, the government's Intention regarding railways at\nthe close of the war.\nThe delegation learned, according to\nLord Claude, that the.government considered itself absolutely pledged thnt\ngovernment control of railways would\ncontinue for two full years alter tpq\ndeclaration of peace.\nMr. Bonar Law also \"\"informed the\ndeputation lhat tbe question of tho\nfuture management of the railways\nstill were receiving lho close attention of the government, hut tiiat so far\nno final decision on the subject had\nbeen reached.\nSAY   PETROGRAD   HAS\n8EEN*-B0M\u00a3ARDED\n.\n(By Dully News Leased Wile.)\nSTOCKHOLM, Feb. 2.\u2014PetroB.'nd\nhas boen bombarded by. Ki-ons'tadt\nartillery and many people have beon\nkilled, according to travelers, who are\nquoted to this effect by tho Finnish\npapers. Motions disorders are prevalent in Petrograd.\nPOUR  TRAWLERS  TO\nBE BROUGHT TO COAST\nVICTORIA, p. C., Fob. 2.\u2014 Four trawlers,! tho Stadaconn, Armentiores,\nThiopvnl and Olvenchy, which wore\nongoffod iu patrol work out of Halifax\nduring tho war, nre being transferred\nto the department pf marine and fisheries and -will be brought to the Pa*,\nclflc const for serv.loo. They will leave\nHalifax at the end of Maroh on thoir\nway he.*' ...   ,\nStrikers in Glasgow Resent the\n\u2022 {Presence of Over 10,000 Soldiers\nDESIRES OF\n* 12 SINN FEINERS *\n* 8ENTENCED TO 6 MONTHS *\n* (By Dally News Leases.\"Wire.)     \u2022\n* DUBLIN, Feb. 2.\u2014Twelve Sinn \u2666\n* Feiners woro found guilty yeB- *\n+ torday of Illegal drilling in a pri- +\n+ vato  hall   here  und   were   sen- \u2666\n* tonced to six months' imprison- *\n* mont. \u2022\n* When arrested today they de- \u2666\n* nloii the authority of the British \u2666\n* laws and one of them while in the *\n* dock, waved a republican flag. *,\n<\u2022\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666 + *\u2666\u2666*\u2666\u2666\nBRITISH HOUSE\nTO BE BUSY\nPremier Lloyd George Has Big Prob\nlem on  Hit  Hands at  Home\nand  in Paris\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Feb. 2.\u2014JJBy the Asso\nciated Press.)\u2014No British parliament\nin a century except the parliament of\nPremier Astiuith which had on Its\nshoulders the heavy responsibility,\nwhether or not Great Britain would\nenter the European war had more important work to deal with than tho\nhouse of commons of Premier Lloyd\nGeorge will find when it holds its first\nmeeting.\nThe problems of the now house may\nbe summarized in the ono word\u2014reconstruction.\nThis Is peculiarly k one-man and a\npersonal house of commons, its nil in?\npower is not a political party but a\ncoalition group whoso members represent widely different schools and\nwhich depends for its guidance upon\ntho personal leadership of the premier rather than the putting into effect of any party platform. Premier\nLloyd Georgo is in Paris and ho must\nstay thero. No one expects him to\nleave tho peaco conference. He has\nthe double burden of directing Great\nBritain's destinies In foreign and imperial affairs and in keeping a hand\non the domestic policy and at this\ntime of realities no one expects him\nto leave tho peace conference.\nLeadership in the two houses of\nparliament, therefore, for the time being, will Tall on Earl Curzon and Andrew Bonar Law, both of whom aro\nConservatives and before the war\nstood for almost everything that was\nopposed to Lloyd George and his present program. That seems to mean\nthat parliametn will mark time until\nthe prime minister can return and take\nchargo In person in parliament.\nTROUBLE CONTINUES TO BREW IN EUROPE, ALTHOUGH QUIET\nPREVAILS ON CLYDE AND IN BELFAST \u2014 TR00P8 STATIONED\nON TOP OF BUILDINGS IN SCOTTISH CITY, WHICH ELICITS\nSTONG DISAPPROVAL OF UNEMPLOYED \u2014 A STRIKE BULLETIN.\nAFTER BEING RAIDED BY POL ICE, COMES OUT WITH STRONG\nATTACK ON GOVERNMENT\n\u2022   <By Daily News Leased Wire.)        !\nLONDON, Feb. 2.\u2014There were no\nstriking developments in the labor\ntroubles today, either on the Clyde nr\nIn Belfast. Quiet prevailed in both\ndistricts.\nIn Belfast, many of the churches\nwere obliged to abandon tho. evening\nservices owing to lack of light. It is\nhoped that a number of the shipyard\nworkers may be induced tu resume\nwork during the courso of the week.\nMore troops have arrived in Glus-\ngow, where it is now said there aro\nover 10,000. Soldiers are still mounted on the roofs-of the buildings surrounding George Square In Glasgow.\nThe military display is provoking\ngreat resentment among the strikers\nthere.\nBulletin Attacks\nTho Strike Bulletin, the offices of\nwhich were raided yesterday by the\npolice, today issued a strung attack\non the government, which It accuses of\nacting illegally in employing troops\nand seeking a pretext to employ arms\nagainst the Clyde workers.\n\"Tho workers aro not so foolish .as\nto fall into suoh a trap,\" .the newspaper says.\n. . . Tho workers have advised\na practical scheme to avert unemployment and instead of discussing it,\nthe government has made an attempt\nto crush its advocates by czaristic\nmethods. The government is clearly\nin league with the employers to buck\ndiscussion of the scheme whicli had\nboen bofore them for years.\"\nThree moro arrests wero made today on charges of inciting to a riot.\nable attitude.    He thoroughly sympathized with tlie strikers.\nCongress Summoned\nDUBLIN, Sunday, Feb. 2.\u2014(Associated I'ress.)\u2014A labor congress has\nbeen summoned for next week to\nmeet in the Mansion House here to\ndemand a universal 41-hotir week at\nwages ISO per cent above the pre-war\nrates, with a minimum of GO shillings\n(approximately $12.50) weekly for all\nworkers. \"\nWinnipeg Hears That Parliament Wil\nBe Asked to Extend Regulations\nAnothar Yaar.\nWINNIPEG, Feb. 3\u2014The prohibition\nlegislation is to bo brought before parliament at the coming session has been\npractically decided on, according to a\nspecial despatch to tho Manitoba Free\nPress from its staff correspondent at\nOttawa. .\"It Is understood,\" the de\nF-patch adds, \"that parliament will be\nasked to extend for one year from the\ndeclaration of peace the regulations\nenacted last spring by orger-ln-council\nundor tho war measures act prohiblt-\nIns tho furthor manufacture and im-\npj-...tl..n of liquor and also prohibit-\ning: transport of liquor from a \"wet\"\nto a \"dry\" area within Canada. The\nyour's further trial of tho present prohibition regulations Is to bo followed,\naccording to the legislation as now\ncontemplated by a national referendum\ngiving the majority of the people of\nCn.nn.da tho right to say whether or\nnot Llie whole Dominion shall wipe out\nentirely the manufacture and sale of\ninto_..oup.U.\"\n2000 More in  It .\n.BELFAST,. F.ob. S.-^Two l^cu-sand\nhouse builders today joined the\nstrike for a 44-hour week.\nJoseph Devlin, member bf parliament for West Belfast, addressing his\nconstituents and referring to tho refusal of the government to intervene\nIn the situation, said ho had never\nheard of a more callous or indefens-\nRailway Clerks Restless\nBIRMINGHAM, Feb. 2.\u2014A meeting\nof \u00a3.00 delegates of the railway clerks\nassociation, which is having a controversy with the railways over tho question of its resognition today adopted a\nresolution, with only 12 dissents calling upon the various branches und\nmembers to take such action as the\nexecutive deems advisable in the event\na satisfactory settlement Is not1\nreached by Tuesday. This, in all\nprobability, moans a strike.\nBishcp Gives Opinion\nLONDON, Fob. 2.~-The bishop of\nLondon, speaking at a Canadian meet\ning today, said that the present strikes\nwere a reaction of war and tho result\nof a natural deslro of the people for\na fuller and better life. It might seem\nstrange to some, he added, that men\nwho hud suffered the horrors and hard\nwork of tho trenches, should want to\nstrike as soon as they returned to\ncivilian life. The reason was simple.\nThey missed the brotherhood of the\ntrenches, where all had combined to\ndefeat the common foe, and found\nthemselves once more face to face with\ntajll -.sQQ-fel \u00abondit,!ons,. which they\nthought their sacrifices had removed.\nAll Britain Uneasy\nLONDON,  Feb.  2.\u2014(By   the   Associated   Press.)\u2014The   industrial   unrest\nhus  superceded  the peace conference\nas the chlof topic of interest in Great\n(Continued on  Page Two.)\n1200  RETURNING SOLDIERS\nREACH ST. JOHN PORT\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nST. JOHN, N. B., Feb. 2.\u2014The\nCanadian Pacific ocean services'\nHnar Grampian docked hero today\nwith a total passenger list of 1554,\nof whom about 1200 were returning\nsoldiers. Among the number were\n20 members of tho Princess Pats\nand 10 of them were original members of that unit .\nLABOR MEN IN CALGARY\nCALL OFF MASS MEETING\nBOMBAY STRIKE COMES\nTO END WITH INCREASE\n(By Doily News Leased Wire.)\n\u25a0 BOMBAY, Feb. 3 (Canadian I'ress\ndespatch from neuter's).\u2014Tho big\nstrike, which rendered, $(i cotton factories Jdlf. and lasted threo weeks, terminated upon the employers, on the advice of tiie government of Bombay,\ngranting a 20 por cent. Increase In\nwages and a bonus of 20 rupees to the\nmen, I\nTORONTO, Feb. 2.--University\ntraining schools defeated Upper Canada college by a score of ii to 0 in a\njunior o. If. A. -fixture at tho arena\nSaturday afternoon, _ _____\n(By Daily News Leased Wiro.)\nCALGARY, Alta., Fob. 2.\u2014The decision of tho labor men to hold a meeting on Sunday afternoon in the Al-\nhuzzer temple, was called off owing\nto the hall being denied them.\nIt was intended to have passed similar resolutions ns were passed last\nSunday, demanding the release of political prisoners, and asking for the\nremoval of the ban from prohibited\nliterature. Had such a meeting been\nheld It was the avowed Intention of a\nlargo number of returned soldiers to\nbreak up the meeting. Officials of\ntlie G. W. V. A. hero claim that they\nare by no means in sympathy with\nany lawlessness on the part of their\nIndividual members, but could not\nhold themselves responsible for nny\nthing they did.\nSTARVED TARS\nEAT COMRADES\nArmy Deaterter Telia Court of Experience in Lifeboat Whan His\nShip Waa Sunk\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nVICTORIA, B. a, Fob. l.\u2014Pto. Frank\nl-'redetto, sentenced hero today to two\nyears' imprisonment for desertion from\nthe Canadian army, told a story ln\ncourt to the effect that he ami othor\nsurvivors of the American . steamer\nDumaru, which was struck by lightning In-the South Pacific last October,\nsaved themselves from starvation by\nconsuming the bodies of two of their\ncomrades who had died. .\nFredette said he and 33 others loft\ntho Dumaru In one lifeboat and 18 of\nt.ham succumbed to exposure and slur-,\nvat J on, according to his story. Tho llfe-\nGOODS LEFT\nON FREE LIST\nCheapor Farm Tractors and Meat Cattle Remain on Present Schedu.e\u2014\nOther  Things  Affaetel.\n(By Daily News Loused Wire.)\nOTTAWA. Feb. 2. Gasoline farm\ntractors costing less than (1400 remain on the free list, until otherwise\nprovided for. Meat cattle remain on\nthe free list for another your, dating\nfrom Feb. 7, 1919.\nBoth wore originally placed on tho\nfree list for ono year, dating from Feb.\n7, 191S. By further order-in*?council\nthe period ln which remission and refund of duty aro authorized is now\nextended as indicated.\nAn additional order bus been passed, granting a drawback of 99 per cent\nof the duty, paid on imported materials\nused after Feb. 7, 1919, in the manufacture of gas or gasoline traction engines for farm purposes and repairs\ntherefore designed to be combined with\nautomobiles in Canada for use as traction engines for farm purposes. It is\nunderstood that the number of these\nengines imported for farm purposes\namounts to several thousand per annum, while the quantity manufactured\nin Canada each year has been loss, than\n5 per cent of importations.\nLY SET F\nOF SETTLEMENT\nPARIS, Feb. 2 (Associated Press),\u2014\nThe delegates of the five great powers\nare now in a position to compare clearly their own aspirations and tliose of\nall their allied frionds and to see the\ndifferences that must be recomciled.\nThe maximum of hopes, often overlap*\nping, has been told freely, and it remains for the peace conference to adjust them, into a co-ordinated whole.\nTho desires of the several contries as\npresented may be compressed thus;\nFrance wants first of all Alsace-Lor.\nralne unconditionally and the right to\ndiscuss and ultimately to fix the\nFrenoh frontiers in relation to the\nRhine, which may require tho creation\nof buffer states; one of these would\nbe tho Palatanlte and another Rhenish\nPrussia. France desires, nlso, to annex the basin of tlie Sarre river, which\nmight ;.o called a re-annexation,\nWants No Military Works\nFrance will insist that so far as the\nleft bank of the Rhine farther on the\nnortli Is concerned, the conference\nshould forbid military works of uny\nkind-\u2014barracks*, bridgeheads, forts and\nfortresses\u2014in that zone. The feeling\nis that the pooplo Inhabltatlng that\nstono should bo free to decide for themselves whether they wish to join\nFranco for an Independent state or return to Germany.\nTho French bill for repatriation is\nnot yet complete, but it has been announced by the chamber of deputies\nthat It will be about sixty-six billion\nfrancs.\nTho French government does not ask\nfor a protectorate in Syria in tho ordin\nary sense because it considers that the\npopulation there is too advanced to\nmake a protectorate necessary, but\nFrunco, on account of her traditional\ninterests i.i that country, feels that\nsho should ho called upon to overclse\nsome sort of guardianship or guidance\nuntil Syria should bo fully able to\ngovern herself.\nDesire Society of Nations\nGreat Britain's delegations believe\nthat a socl \u2022\u25a0: of nations la desirable\nand obtainable, and that it must be\nestablished by ihe peace conference.\nShe advances no continental purposes\nother than those of permanent and just\npeuco under tbo principle of self-determination, and that there shall be\ninternational freedom of transit by\nrailroads and waterways, whicli is\nGreat Britain's gcenrul definition of\nfreedom of commerce\u00bb in times of\npoace.\nGreat Britain will take mandatory\npowor over the German islands, so of\nthose equaler forced Australia and over\nGerman Africa for the union of South\nAfrica.\nShe will nlso have the mandate\nover German East Africa and somo\nparts of Arabia, and she particularly i\nhas claims in this respect over Meso- j\npotamia.   Great  Britain  will  enter\nman.an and Serbia have moved troops\ninto Banot to secure their claims, and\nFrench troops have established a neutral zono to prevent hostilities between\nthem.   \u25a0*\u25a0*\u25a0\nSerbian Claim*\nSerbian claims to take from the\nHapsburg monarchy the provinces of\nBosnia and Herzegovina are \"opposed\nby no one in the entente group. The\nplans for tho incorporation into Jugoslavia of the province of Crotia, excopt as to the coastal region ofFlumo\nnre also considered as subject to the\nInternal decision of the southern Slavs.\n.lugo-Slav and Italian alius are In\nsharp conflict In the settlement of the\nAdriatic coast problem, involving the\nfuture of Fiume and the Croation\nseaboard along with the islands of\nDalamatia and Albania. The union of\nMontenegro and Serbia as part of a\ngreater .lugo-Slav state hus been voted\nby tho Montenegrin parliament, but\ntlie faction representing King Nicholas\nand his adherents protests against a,\nunion which shall not leave to Montenegro entire local self-government.\nThero is nlso a conflict between the\nplans of .Tugo-Sluv statesmen and\nthose of Czecho-Slovakia, who desire\na wldo corridor from Bohemia to the\nAdriatic to Hungary and Croatia to\nsecure1 nn outlet to the sea.\nDemands of Greece.\nGreece\u2014Greece wishes northern Kpi-\nrus and Thrace, with thr exception of\nConstantinople, and the shores of the\nBosphorus and the Dardanelles, whicli\nPremier Venizelos wishes to place under   international  control.\nGreece asks for tho Vlllayct of Smyr-\nnia In Asia Minor anil the former\nTurkish islands In the eastern Mediterranean, including those known as\nthe Dodocanesus, claimed by Italy.\nBulgaria\u2014Although Bulgaria capitulated without conditions and her,future demands oh the Gonseqi.ohoes.her\ngovernment bus not abandoned hop*.\nof apping extensive terii tori ties and\nit even hopes to receive territories In\nsouthern Macedonia along the Aegean\ncoast and In Thrace.\nCiiecho-Slovakia\u2014Tho now Czechoslovakia is carving out its territory\nalmoLt entirely at the expense of the\nold Austria-Hungary. The old kingdom of Bohemia, Moravia and tho\nSlovak regions in northern Hungaria\nalready havo been incorporated into\ntiie proposed state, but there are oer-\nlonfllcts with the Poles, Kuthen-\nlans, Rumanians and Germans, as well\nwith the Austrian:, and the Magyars,, because the Czechs claim that\npart, of German Saxony and German\nSilesia belong ethnolographlcally -to\ntho new stato.\nTho Czecho-Slovaks are coming-into\nopposition to Polish claims tu Silesia\nand sections of Gallcla, while to tho\nnortheast, Czecho-Slovak expansion\nhas brought thorn into contact with the\nRuthenlans, or Ukrainians in eastern\nGulf da. The new stato desires expansion .southward over a frontage on\npool with other allies in tho mater of|t\u00bbo Danube and over a corridor to the\nindemnities,  especially  reparation  for Adriatic.\n! Poland Has Ambitions,\nPoland\u2014The   Poles   witli   an   iuado-\nEDMONTON  FARMER IN\nTERIOUS TROUBLE\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nMDMONTON, Alta., Feb. _!.\u2014A. W.\nHunt, a well known farmer and old\ntimer of the Toffold district, was arrested upon a serious chargo Saturday\nby tlie provincial police. A large\ncrowd of townspeople demanded that\nthe arrest be made.\nHunt lived with his wife and a young\ngirl employed as a servant. He had\nsold his properly and was propurlsg\nof leave town when taken into custody.\nSASKATOON   BUSINESS\nMAN GOE8 TO AUSTRALIA\nSASKATOON, Sask., Pel.. 2.\u2014H. H.\nBoss, assistant manager of the International Harvester compnny ut Saskatoon, left today for Austral hi, whore\nhe will bo assistant manager with M.\nS, Rodney, formerly of Winnipeg, as\ngeneral umiiugur of the International\nHarvester company's buslm-Hs for Ans-1 Sert*\ntrullu und N\u00ab\\v Koulaml,\nair raid damages and shipping losses.    \\\nItaly asks for the Trentino as far as\nthe Brenner pass, including tho wholo\nof the Southern Tyrol, Trieste, Istria,\nFiume. Cara, Zebinico, the larger part\nof the Dalmatian islands, Avlona and\nIts hinterland, a protectorate ovor Al-\nbnnia, possession of tbo islands Iu tho\nAegean which wore taken from Turkey during tho Tripolean war, and the\nprovince of Adalia of France and England should take territory in Asia\nMinor.\nWould  Neutralize  Islands\nThe Italian contention is that the\nDalmatian islands and such parts of\nthe Dalmatian coast as aro not resigned to Italy shall be neutralized. Should\nFranco und England extend their colonial possessions in Africa, Italy desires to enlarge her possessions in\nTripoli.\nRumania \u2014- Territorial Contentions\nIn the Balkans aro complicated nnd\npresent difficult problems,\nRumania desires to retain -possession of that portion of Russian Bessarabia glvon her by the central pow-\npowors under the cancelled treaty of\nBucharest and now In her possesses!on.\nRumania also desires Southern Do-\nbrudja, acceded to her by Bulgaria, after the second Balkan war. Possession\nof Bessarabia nnd the Dobrudja commands the mouth of tho Danube.\nTo the westward Rumania wants to\nannex lho Hapsburg provinces of\nBukowinu ami Transylvania and a considerable part of the rich agricultural\ndistrict of Banet. It is here that the\nRumanian aspiration conflicts with\ntliose of Serbia, which affirms that under her war agreement., with the entente sho should huvo a largo portion\nof Banet as well us other section.-, of\nformor Austria-Hungary adjoining old\nto the north, to round out the\nurupusca Jiitfo-Slivv stat.1.   Both  Ru-\nquate army are endeavoring to establish possession of disputed regions on\nthree sides of Russian Poland and Ga-\nUeta, which constitutes the nucleus\nof the now Polish state. The Poles\ndesire eastern Gallcla to include Lem-\nberg, which is in the Ukraine und thu\ndisputed province of Cholm in little\nRussia.\nTo the northeast, the Pules desire to\nhavo Vilna recognized at Polish. Both\ntiie Lithuanians and tho Bolshevlki\nhave raised claim.? to Vilna, the Bolsheviki supporting their pretentions\nby making a military offensive. Tbe\nPoles are contending against the German.*-., not only for Gorman Silesia and\nPosen and west Prussia, as provinces\npopulated chifely by Poles, but also\nCor the city of Danzig, so as to provide\nPoland with direct access to the sea.\nShould the Poles have Danzig East\nPrussia wouhl be cut off from the\nrest of Germany and would remain an\nisland populated by Germans surrounded by Polish dominions.\nBelgium Wants Reparation.\nBelgium\u2014Belgium asks that her repartition for damages wrought by.Germany shall be the first Hen upon German assets to the extent of at least\n15,000,000,000 frands or a much larger\nsum if Germany does not return the\nmachinery and materials takon from\nBelgium. Belgium believes that she .\n.should be paid first because she has\nuttered moro from despoliation than\nny other country in the war.      \u25a0   \u2022 .\nBelgium, which has reasserted her\nindependence and thus emerges from\nher old stale of neutrality, desires from\nHolland the left bank of the Scheldt\nand tiie peninsula of Maastricht, which\nprulrudos into Belgian Lomburg.\nHeigluni will assent to a plehlsuU-.-)\n(CoutUiueij on Efcfft TEO'i .._;i\n \u25a0\u2022PBI-PBBP\"---\"\nIIPI^P*******-^***-^!**************************\u2014\n.ypftJWij\npa:e two\n?*'<\u25a0. ..HA.!. .Y.NEWS\nMONDAY  FE-.RUA.tY  3,  1919\nLeading Hotels of the West]\nWhere th.  Traveling  Publl.  May  Obtain  Buparlor  Accommodation.     |\nA  LA  CARTE            SERVICE UNEXCELLED        TABLE D'HOTE\nBpteial Sunday Dinn.r S1.00\nTea Room Open Daily 10 a.m. to Midnight\nMUSIC AND DANCING\nICES, ICE COLD DRINK8, LIGHT REFRESHMENTS\nAfternoon To*. 3 to S 25c\nHUME\u2014T. M. Eowman, J. A. Kenny,\nI*. R. Wllaon, Ray Bard, city; A. L.\nStevens,  Vancouver;;   J.  E.    Taylor,\nCalgary; H. P. Leake, Spokane; J. H.\nAllen, Calgary; F. O. Hyde, Lethbrldge.\nHotel Strathcona\nH. W. SHORE, PROPRIETOR.\nNELSON'S FINEST HOTEL FOR TRAVELERS AND TOURISTS\n8\/MPLE ROOM, ALL GROUND FLOOR, WITH NATURAL LIGHT\nMOST COMFORTABLY FURNISHED ROTUNDA IN THE INTERIOR.\nLARGE DRAWING ROOM FOR LADIES.\nEUROPEAN RATE, $1.00 UP. AMERICAN PLAN, $3.00 UP.\nSTRATHCONA\u2014H. A. Nicholson, .1. D. Young, city; C. Sharman, Montreal; J. G. Burnett, Toronto; G. B. Steadman, Granite; Sergt. D. McA.\nLinn, overseas; F. Hardy. Spokane; H. \\V. Johnstone, Rossland;; G. McDonald, Fernie.; G. Preston, Calgary:; G. Thompson, Vancouver; 'G. II.\nRowling, C. F. Westhead,  city;   S. Sanderson,  Saskatoon.\nQueen's Hotel\nEuropean     and     American     Plan\nSteam Heat in Every Room\nA. LAPOINTE, Proprietor\nQUEENS\u2014R. G. Billlngsby, Paulson;\nH. D. Griswold, Paulson; J. Hyslop,\nNorth Shore; M. E. Kernard, Birch-\nbank; J. Iwasaki, Salmo; Mrs. W. A.\nPowne, Frultvale; Mr. and Mrs. J. O.\nCovington, Elmer Covington. M. A.\nMcLeod, Slocan City; G. W. Pratt and\ndaughter, Castlegar; P. W. George,\nGreenwood; Miss E. Berkley, Benton\nSiding; M. Barkley, city; Mrs. W. G.\nSpendlow, Mrs, E. R. Chugg, Granum,\nAlta; Pte. M. Waldo, overseas; air. and\nMrs. Brady and family, Trail; Sergt.\nW. A. Powne, overseas; Mr. and Mrs.\nH. Rogers, John Rogers, Glasgow,\nScotland; P. Airam, Lethbrldge; S.\nDomlnicl, Medicine Hat; J. Braford,\nProctor; Miss S. Johnson, city.\nMadden House\nM. J. MADDEN, Proprietress\nSTEAM  HEATED\norner Baker and Ward Sts., Nelson\nMADDEN.\u2014G. Garrow, Coleman; D.\nP. McLean, Creston; M. J. Watson,\nSirdar; E. G. Hutton, England.\nGrand Central Hotel\nJ. A. ERICK80N, Prop.\nOpposite Postoffioa\nRoom  and   Board,  $35  per  Month\nEuropean Plan, Roonis 50o up\nMeals 35c\nGRAND CENTRAL.\u2014E. Erlckson,\nCranbrook; G. Lund, Cranbrook; T.\nT. Curran, Cranbrook; J. N. Dougan.\nArrow Head; W. Dolln, Grand Forks;\nS. J. Cuslck, Grand Forks; J. C. Potter,\nEdgewood; L. Jacobson, Ainsworth;\ntr, B. Crlsman, Revelsto'.to; s. S. Arch-\nott, Porto Rico; A S.vdstroni. Slicr.n\nOity; J. Humpy, Cloran City; John\nTi*.tman, city; Nelson lirown, city; M.\nM. Mauvy, Cranbrook; J. Bundeu,\nCranbrook; M. Murray, Yahk; W. M.\n\u25a0Rice, Slocan Park; Chong Choy, Slocan\nPark, Perry Wright, Winnlford, Alta.;\nT. Curmyn, Spokane; G. Lund, Fernle;\nE. Erlckson. Fernle; H. J. La Brash,\nHowser.\nNelson Houst\nELI JULIEN, Propriator\nEuropsan Plan\nCafs Open Day and Night\n$5c\u2014 Merchants' Lunch, 12 to 2\u201436c\nPhone 275.    Rooms, SOo and up.\nNELSON\u2014J. Vaughn, Tamarack, B.\nC; J. M. Young, Scotland; W. Brlstow,\nNapance; J. W. Harrltt, Rossland; G.\nTurner, Sandon;  P. Smith, Rossland;\nCD. Ogllvie, Harrop.\nThe Kootenay Hotel\nMRS.  MALLETE,  Proprietress\nA Home (or tbe World at 11.25 a\nDay. First-class Dining Room,\nComfortable Rooms.\nIll Vernon Street, Near Postoffice\n; KOOTENAY\u2014F.   Parent,  A.   Bron-\nobu. J. McNaugliton, Slocan;  W. Co*\nll,'oity; .!_, Plamont, Cranbrook;  J.\n\u25a0^MftOfH Procter, H. Bander, Salmo.\nNew Grand Hotel\nJOHN BLOMBERQ, Proprietor.\nUp-to-Date  Brick  Building, Steam\nHeated.\nHot and Cold Water in Every Room\nAmerican and European Plan\nNEW GRAND.\u2014C. M. Slenbers,\nSwalwell, Alta.: A. M. Jsler, Calgary;\nA. B. Roberts, Lethbrldge; H. S. Wilcox, Nanton, Max Augustus Bailey,\nSpokane.\nOCCIDENTAL HOTEL\nThe Warmest House in Town.\nRun by Canadians. All white help\nMeals, 35c, served family style.\nBeds 35c and 50c. All you can eai\nand a good, clean bed to sleep in\nGive us a trial. Auto meets nil\ntrains and oats.\nED  KERR, Proprietor.\nWHERE DO YOU EAT?\nTHE RAILWAY Y.M.C.A.\nWhen in Cranbrook give ua a trial\nA TREVERTON, Prop.\nCRANBROOK,   B.  C.\nUp-to-date  dining  room  reopened\nAll white help employed.    Regular\nmeals and short orders specialities.\nSPEND YOUR HOLIDAYS AT\nHalcyon Hot Springs\nSanitarium\nAND STOCK UP WITH HEALTH\nIf you suffer from muscular, inflammatory, sciatica or any othor\nform of rheumatism, or from\nmetalic poisoning of any sort, don't\ndelay. Come at once and get c-red.\nMoat complete and best arranged\nbathing establishment on the continent. All departments under one\nroof, steam heated and electric\nlight.\nRates: $3 per day, or $17 per week.\nDAVIS & DAVI3, Props.\nHalcyon    *    -    Arrow Lakes, B.C.\nGrand Forks Hotel\nThoroughly renovated, well beated\nsample r_om_.\nRates, |2 to 13 psr Day\nFood   Board   License  No.   1462.\nCLEARLYSETFORTH\n(Continued from Page One.)\nin Luxembourg to decide whether that\ncountry wishes to join Belgium or\nFrance or to retain Its autonomy.\nThe foregoing may be considered the\nextreme claims of Belgium. They come\ninto conflict with Holland, which resists any transformation of the frontiers asked for by Belgium. The government of Holland appears willing to\nrevise the Scheldt navigation treaty\nso that Belgium enjoys equal rights\nwith Holland.\nJapan\u2014Japan enters tho peace conference as Baron Makino, the senior\ndelegate, has said \"with no territorial\nambitions in China,\" and that as for\nTsln Tsau, she will hand it back to\nChina under the terms of the notes\nexchanged between China and Japan\nin May, 1915. .\nThis Is interpreted by Japan as permitting her to retain certain former\nGerman concessions on the Shangtun\npeninsula.\nJapan, Baron Makino explained,,\n'neither intended nor desires to interfere In Russians affairs* but. If solicited, Is willing to aid Russia in res'*.... in gorder.\"\nThese declarations dispose of two of\nthe main questions In which Japan is\nnterested except that she desires to\nretain *flhe southern Pacific islands\nnorth of the equator, which formerly\nbelonged to Germany.\nChina\u2014The Chinese delegates ask to\nle guaranteed from foregone Imperialism or aggression and desire the\ngradual abolition of \"consular rights\"\nand to be allowed to impose higher duties on importations. The Chinese\naik for the return of Kiau Chau.\nSwitzerland Wants Outlet.\nSwitzerland\u2014Switzerland aspires to\nbe the only neutral which has so far\npresented her desires to the peace conference. The Swiss government has\nrported that while Switzerland would\nbe glad to participate In a society of\nnations, yet, because of her mixed nationalities, she could not do so If that\nshould mean the use of her troops in\npolicing the world by force, as, perhaps, against Italy, France or Germany.\nIwitzerland desires un outlet to the\nsea by making the Rhine a neutral\nstream. This is In accord with France's\ndesire, since if Alsace-Lorraine becomes French from Bnstel northward,\nand an Independent buffer state should\nbe erected out of the Palatinate and\nRhenish Prussia, as suggested hy Marshal Foch, it would bo necessary to\nneutralize the Rhine. If this were\ndone, It would give Switzeralnd an\ncutlet   to   tho  sea.\nScandinavia\u2014The territorial aspirations of the three Scandinavian powers\n;-. i e considered modest. Denmark\nwishes to ennex that part 61 northern\nSehleswlg inhabited predominantly by\nDar.es, but has not asked to regain\nthe provinces of Sehleswlg and Hoi\nstein taken from Denmark by Prussia\nin the war of 1304, or to extend her\nrentiers southward to tho Kleli canal,\nNorway has certain aspirations to\nSpitzborgen or a part of it, but is not\nl raising these claims energetically.\nSocialistic Movement.\nA strong Socialist movement In Swe\ndim favors tiie union with Sweden of\nUie Aland islands, which are regarded\nby the Swedes ns the naval key to\nStockholm. Swedish interests, in this\nconnection, are in conflict with those\nof Finland. Sovereignty over the isl\nands has belonged to Finland since the\nfall of tlie Russian imperial government, and nothing lias been heard\nsnee the collapse of Germany of earlier Finnish plans to secure an outlet\nby the annexation of parts of Russian\nCarelia, lying between Finland and\nthe Murman coast, and even of adja-\nent Flnmark, which belong to Norway. This contention on the part of\nInland led to the landing of allied\ntroops at Murmansk to prevent the establishment of a German submarine\nbase in the northern seas.\nThe delegates of the five powers who\nWill straighten out this plexus of rival\ninterests, are obliged also to tako into\nj on si deration the passionate racial\nllalms as well as the history of all\nEurope   for centuries.\nTHE STANDARD RESTAURANT\n320 Baker Se., Nelson, B, C.\nTwo Doors West of Stanley\nOPEN  DAY  AND  NIGHT\n12 to 2, Special Lunch     -   \u25a0   \u2022   85o\nMeal\nTickets\nWELL PRINTED ON ATTRACTIVE CARDS.   SEND IN YOUR\nORDER TO\nThe Daily News Job\nDepartment\nTHE HOME OF OOOD\nPRINTING\nNELSON, B. C.\nCasualties\nOTTAWA, Feb.    2.\u2014The    following\ncasualties wore issued today:\nInfantry.\nDied\u2014Lieut, W. Paterson, D. C. M-,\nVictoria.\nRailway Troops.\nIll\u2014J. Charlesworth, Vancouver.\n(Continued from Page One)\nBritain. Many of the leaders in the\ncamps of capital and labor are bringing out specific plans -for a general\nremedy.' The proposal of J. R. Clynes,\nformer fooil controller, for an industrial congress representing aU interests seems to be the most popular today. It has a rival in a now society\ncalled \"the national alliance of employers and employed,\" which representative men on both sides are promoting.\nOne point on which everyone is\nagreed is that some general principles\nparticularly applying to wages and\nhours, must be recognized. Local\nsettlements of disputes in the different trades and factories only create\nunrest and confusion. Whenever one\nsection of workers secures any particular concession, the others who have\nnot equal advantages become dissatisfied.\nSir Eric Geddes has made a novel\nproposal\u2014that some trade union take\nover a large national factory and run\nit. as an experiment to show what can\nbe done hy such cooperative management. .\nPolitics  Involved\nNaturally, politics is becoming involved in the agitation. Some workers and free traders assert that the\ngovernment in keplng back stocks of\nfood which might be released now in\norder to keep up prices in the interest\nof the dealers and also that the board\nof tcade has an understanding with\nthe manufacturers to maintain an embargo against imports in the Interests\nof English goods. The protectionists\njustify.; that policy by the argument\nthat it guarantees employment for\nBritish workers while the free traders\n|,*argue that the whole community would\nbenefit more by cheaper prices. The\nnewspapers are' divided roughly into\ntwo parties, one claiming that the unrest Is duo chiefly to the desire of tho\nworkers for better conditions of living and more leisure and the other\nthat the strikes are engineered by\nSocialists and syndicates, who want to\nrevolutionize conditions of industry\nand capture control for the working\nclasses.\nThe Morning Post asserts that the\nchief instigators in the Glasgow and\nBelfast strikes are Emanuel Shinwell\nand Simon Greenshon, both Russians,\nwhom it calls the \"Trotskys of Glasgow and Belfast.\"\nSome of the paper's commend the\ngovernment's policy in keeping its\nhands off.\nWant Labor Leader\nThe Observer attacks the government policy of wait and see, and urges\nthat the now labor minister, Sir Robert, Horne* \u2022who is a lawyer, be rer\nplaced by a labor leader, who should\norganize a council of employers and\ntrade unionists.\nWhile tho debate rages, the strike\nmovement threatens to spread beyond\nthe ranks of the manual workers,\nThe association of railway clerks is\ndiscussing action bocause the government will not recognize their station\nmasters and agents as a body.\nThe postal employees are arranging\na meeting to put forward a scheme\nfor a seven-hour day with a half-holiday Saturday.\nMeeting Held\n.LONDON, Feb. _!.\u2014A largo meeting,\ncalled by the  Clyde workers opposed\nto tiie strike, was held in the Govon\ndistrict of Glasgow today.\nCouncillor Wardlow, a well known\nlabor leader, presided. There were a\nnumber of interruptions and interjee-,\ntlons during the meeting but finally\ntho following resolution was passed:\n\"We, trade unionists and citizens of\nGovan, condemn wholeheartedly the\nundemocratic and unconstitutional\nmethods which forco us to take part\nin the strike. We pledge ourselves to\nsupport tho representatives of the\ntrades unions in this country and to\nuse our influence to maintain law and\norder.\"\nA movement also has been started\nIn Glasgow to form a patriotic workers league on the Clyde side, the object boing to take control of the trades\nunions out of the hands of the extremists and to appoint shop stewards.\nto work in harmony with the oific.a_\nunion leaders. A big demonstration is\nto be held Tuesday to discuss the\nmatter.-\n\u00b0TEAMER ARRIVAL8.\nPenmorvia  at  Halifax  from   Great\nBritain.\nI. D. S. Adolph at Halifax from New\nVork.\nProsporo at Halifax from Newfoundland.\nSagamore at Halifax from oBston.\nDepartures.\nCablo steamer Jeremac from Halifax\nfor sea,\nAquitanla  from Halifax for Liverpool.\nGlendeyon   from  Halifax  for  London. \u25a0*\nMrs, Isabol Carberry, a pioneer of\nPeel county, Ontario, died at Brampton. She was 90 years old and came\nto Canada In 1822.\nFighters are not permitted to go\nout of their class, yet heavyweight\nwomen seem to delight in making\nmatches with lightweight men.\nDr. Horace F|etcher, widely known\nas ap expert on dairies, is dead. *\nSpring Goods\nWe Have Placed in Stock a Fine Assortment\nof Spring Fabrics, Which You Will\nFind Most Inviting\nTHESE INCLUDE DRES8 MUSLIN  , PRINTED CREPE8.    PRINTS,   TUSSAH    SILK,   TUB    SILK.\nDUCHESSE 8ATIN, SILK POPLIN, TAFFETA, WASH 8ATIN, SHANTUNG, ETC.\nALSO FULL LINE8 OP LADIES' WHITE WEAR, INCLUDING 8KIRT8, CORSET COVERS, DRAWERS, COMBINATIONS, CHEMISES, GOWNS, PRINCES8 SLIP8, ETC.\n'*asr\"-->MB-''\nSMILLIE & WEIR\nLADIES' WEAR SPECIALISTS\nEl\nOF\nPRAIRIE PUPILS\nSaskatchewan  Will   Devise  Means  of\nBetter Education of Children of\nReturned Soldiers\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nREGINA, Sask., Feb. 2.\u2014The Saskatchewan government will devise some\nscheme to assist children cf soldiers\nwho havo been killed in the war or who\nhave suffered disability to continue a\nhigher course of edcat.'on beyond the\npublic school and poss.bly beyond high\nschool, it Was announced by Premier\nMartin In the legislature on Saturday.\nThe question was being considered, but\ndetails had not yet been formulated.\nThe income of pensioners and dependents of pensioners will be wholly exempt from municipal income tax, according to an amendment to the Village act, and a similar amendment will\nbe made to the City, Town and Rural\nMunicipalities act.\nThe legislative assembly proposed to\nattempt to secure for the people of tho\nprovince redress for grievances which\nhavo been debated duilhg the session\nand over which the federal government\nhas control by way of a direct appeal\nto the governor-general of the Dominion. The appeal concludes with the following demands:\n\"Tho immediate adoption by tho federal government of an efficient policy\nof soldiers* settlement which will ensure the speedy settlement of as great\na number as possible of our returned\nsoldiers upon lands in Saskatchewan\nwithin reasonable proximity of railway\nfacilities and community centres.\n\"An Immediate and substantial all-\nround reduction of the customs tariffs.\n\"The reduction of customs duty on\ngoods imported from Great Britain to\none-half rates charged under the general tariff, and that further fradual\nuniform reductions be made to the re\nmaining tariffs on British imports that\nwill ensure complete free trade between Great Britain and Canada in five\nyears.\n\"Tho acceptance by the parliament\nof Canada of the reciprocity agreement of 1911, which still remains on\nthe United States statute books.\n\"The placing upon the free lists of\nall foodstuffs not included in the reciprocity agreement.\nAgricultural Imprements\n\"The placing on the free list of all\nagricultural implements, farm machinery, vehicles, fertilizers, coal, lumber,\ncement, illuminating fuel and lubricating oils nnd all raw materials and\nmachinery used in their manufacture.\n\"The immediate extension to Great\nBritain of all tariff concessons granted to other countries.\n\"The obligation upon all corporations\nengaged in tho manufatt ra of products protected by tho customs tariffs\nto publish annually comprehensive and\naccurate statements of the r turnovers\nand earnings.\n\"Tho public hearing before special\ncommittee of parliament on every claim\nfor tariff protection by an industry,\n\"Such changes in th? bank n; system of Canada as will permit the establishment of agricultutral barks in\nclose touch with local co-uit'ons and\nwith the needs of the farming Industry.\nRailway Policy j\n\"Tho . early announcement by the\nDominion government of its railway\npolicy in order that the uncertainty\nnow surrounding tho railway situation\nin Saskatchewan be revised and that\nthe provincial and other authorities\nmay, if necessary, mako suitable arrangements for the requred f.icll tics.\n\"The tiansfer to the province of the\npublic domain within its limits together with compensation for such portions of the same as hnve been alienated for ths general pursopes of Canada.\n\"The transfer to the province of the\nschool lands and of the school lands\nfund.\n\"The addition by the Dominion parliament of th   principle of applying the\nqualifications of the provincial franchise to federal elections.\"\nHUGHES SAYS HE OPPOSES\nHUN   COLONIES  SETTLEMENT\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nPARIS, Feb. 2.\u2014(Reuter's.)\u2014Interviewed by the Matin, Premier Hughes\nof Australia declared that he refused\nto subscribe to the provisional arrangement made by the peace conference was the sole league of nations\npresumably and it should draw up a\nmandate for tho jurisdiction of these\nterritories and issue It immediately\nTho problem of New Guinea was a\nmatter of life and death for Australians,\nCANADIAN MISSION HAS \u201e\nOFFICES IN SIBERIA\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nVLADIVOSTOK, Feb. 2\u2014(By W. E\nPlayfair, Canadian Press Correspondent)\u2014The Canadian economic mission\nin Siberia has opened fine offices lu\ncentral Vladivostok in chargo of C,\nP. Just and Trade Commissioner Wil*\ngress. The general policy of the com*\nmission remains undecided pending the\narrival of tho other. commissioners,\nwho are expected shortly.\nThe commissioners report a great\nneed here of Canadian manufactured\ngood, particularly farm implements'.\nDifficulties in the establishment of a,\nSiberian market for these goods aro\nfound, however, in the disorganized\nfinancial and transportation conditions\nand tlie plan adopted may be along the\nline of government guarantees of man*\nufacturcrs'   credits.\nThe Royal Bank of Canada cxpectff\nto open Its local branch early in February. Jlr. Rae, who came to Vladivostok in this connection, is returning\nto Canada shortly.\nThe residents of Burlington, Ont<\nare standing pat in their fight against\nthe increase of fares on the Hamilton\nradial line, and are hoping that th*\nhydro commission will come to theif\nrelief.\nOFFICERS CHOSEN AT\nBAPTIST UNION  MEETING\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nWINNIPEG, Fob. 2.\u2014At the afternoon session of the Baptist union convention on Saturday the following officers were elected.\nPresident, G. F. McNally, Edmonton;\nfirst vice-president, D. H. Hudston,\nWinnipeg; second vice-prts\u00bbdent, Rev.\nH. F. Widen, Mldale, Sask.; third vice-\npresident, Rev. J. W. Lltch, Vancouver;\nrecording secrotary, A. W. Ward, Calgary. The appointment of a successor\nto C. R. Sayres, who recently resigned\nas secretary, has not yet been made.\nThis will be discussed tomorrow by a\ncommittee specially appointed for the\npurpose,\nPAUL PAU EXPECTED\nTO RETURN SOON\n(;By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, Feb. 2. \u2014 General Paul\n1'au, the famous French soldier, who\nhas been head of a mission to Australia\nand the Orient, Is expected in Ottawa\nabout the middle of this month. Ho\nwill arrive In Vancouver this week.\nThe government is providing a special\ntrain td carry the1 distinguished veteran\nacross the continent.\nSixiisKine and\nHappiness iitl\nplace of Gloom\nWli-i-itability\nis the experience of many\non changing from coffee or\ntea to Instant Postum\nNot at all incredible!\nFor Postum is free from\nthe distress-causing elements in tea \u00a3 coffee. At\nthe same time it is a delicious nourishing drink\n\"There's a Reason \"for\nINSIMTPOSTOM\n-4-j-it.*\u2022:.,.-;.; -.\u25a0\u25a0\n fl%\n'     r   fvlONDAY  --'I._IHUAHY .,  ,91.\nI    .'  . .\n'THE DAILY NEWS\n-aoi THiier\nCOEUR D'ALENE LEAD\nPRODUCERS  MEETING\n.'.SPOKANE..\u2014 Important.' lead, producing Interests of the Coeur d'Aleno\nHeld a meeting In this city during tho\nweek. Particulars ure not available,\nbut the. matter, discussed are said tn\nhave Included combined treatment ot\nthe wage question and curtailment of\nThe only publication of ita\nkind In the world and the only\netoluslvely mining periodical In\nthe Interior Northwest fields.\nEdited by Sidney Norman, an\nold-timer in the Kootenays and\na Hrm believer in the future of\nBritish Columbia's mines.\nPublished twice a month. Subscription price, $3 per annum,\nMINING TRUTH\n-      SPOKANE,  WA8H.\nproduction to meet market depression.\nAmong those present were .I*. W.\nBradley and..Stanley ^.'.I^gton, president and \"general manager respectively, of the Bunker Hill, the world's\npremier lead-silver profit payer. l*ast\nyear Idaho produced approximately\n20 per cent of the United States oi(t-\nput of lead and about 9,50(1.000 ounces\nof'sllver.\n; An authority ln New York denies\nilie statement of Mining Truth that\ntbe Smelting Trust is financing 'Bunker Hill in tlie matter of its lead production, which Is now' being plied up\nat its Kellogg: smelter.\nHe also says that the surplus has\nbeen underwritten by a well known\nNew York firm that anticipates big\nImprovement In the market whet import restrictions in England have been\nremoved and that the surplus of lead\nat the Northport smelter of the Day\nfamily, where the ores of Hercules\nand Tamarack and Custer are treated,\nIs negligible.\nCLOSING  QUOTATIONS\nON   NEW  YORK  MARKET\ni         High. Low. Close.\nU.S.  Steel common 90        89% 89%\nChino Copper  83%     33 33%\nCanadian Pacific- s;.l_7% I5T*A VeVA\nInsurance\n8TOCK3. RENTALS\nVICTORY BONDS BOUGHT AND\nSOLD\nD. ST. DENIS\nMNROF-M\nESTABLISHED OVEIt 100 YEARS\nBoard   of  Directors :\n1 SIR VINCENT HEUEDIIH, But., FrcaJ.il.\nSIR CHARLES GORDON, tB._,,Vk.-P\u00ab\u00bb1\u00bbi_l.\nRB.AKUS.Em. lORBSHAU-It_ESST.K.C.V.O.  C.R.KOSHER,Eh.\nH.R.DRIMB0ND.-*,.       I     \u00bb. PORBES ANOUS. E\u00ab. W_LMcHA_TER,Eh.\nHU0RHERBERTM0-S0N.HC. HAROID KENNEDY. E.,. H.W.BEAUC_ER-(.E\u00ab.\nGEORGE B. PHASER, bf COLONEl HENRY COCSSHUTt   J.H.ASHDOWN,_M.\nSIR FREDERICK WILUAHS-TAYIOR, G.M..I Mu.nr.\nCapital Paid Up \u2022        '\u25a0'\u25a0\u2022\nReat \u2022 \u2022.\nUndivided Profits      , \u2022 \u25a0\nTotal Assels (Oct. 31st. 1918)\n$ 16,000,000.00\n16,000,000.00\n1,901,613.22\n558,413,546.12\nBranches throughout Canada and Newfoundland-also in London\n'   England, New York, Chicago, Spokane and Mexico City.\nTi- i_DeVeber.Manal_.er,      -      -      Nelson Branch.\nS_hJS.ta.tr SSwcSSraUI. NEW DENVER, ROSSLAND, TRAIL,\nTHE NELSON IRON WORKS, Ltd.\nPARTIAL LIST  OF SECOND-I\n1 14 x 16 Phoenix Horlzovital Engine.\n1 80 x 7. Vertical Boiler.\nI 36 x if Vertical Boiler.\nt 00x10 Horizontal Ret Tub.\nBoiler.\n110x10x10 Steam Driven Compressor.\n1 12 x 12 Belt Driven Compressor\n1 12 x 18 Steam Driven Compressor.\nI 16 x 18 Steam Driven Compressor,\nSectional.\n1 No. i Cameron Boiler Peed Pump.\n1 No. 6 Cameron Sinker, Piston\nTypo.\n.AND MACHINERY  FOR BALE\n16x5 Hoist, Steam.\n16x8 Hoist, Steam.\n1 2-h.p. D. C. Motor, 220 volts.\n_-h.p. A. C. Motor, 220 volts.\n1 6-h.p. A. C. Motor, 220 volts.\n1 6-k.w. D. C. Generator.\n1.%-k.w.. D. C. Generator.\n110-k.w. D. C. Generator.\nIV, tons 12-lb. Mining Ralls.\n1000 feet   10-inch  Hydraulic   Pipe,\nRlvotted.\n2400 feet 4-inch Casing Pipe.\n1 12-inch Pelton Motor.\n1 24-inch Pelton Motor.\n1 30-Inch Pelton Wheel.\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting Co.\nof Canada, Limited\nOffices,   Smelting   and   Refining   Department,\nTRAIL, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and ZincOres\nTADANACBRAND PIG LEAD, BLUESTONE AND 8PELTER.\nCANADIAN  ,\nPACIFIC\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nNew Time Schedule\nEFFECTIVE   MONDAY, JAN. 20.\nArrive; Nelson\nTIME AT NEL80N\nLeave Nelson\nDally\n8:10 p.m.\nNelson,   Kootenay   Landing' steamer,\n..row's Nest train, connection Spokane,\nCalgary, main line east of Medicine\nHat.                          i\nDally\n6:30 a.m.\nEx. Sunday -\n\u00bb:30 a.m.\nKootenay Lake local service: S.S. Kuskanook,  Tuesday   to   Lardo,    Service\nLardo to Gerrard and return, Saturday only, connecting with barge from\nand to Kaslo.    Leave Kaslo 7:00 am.\nArrive Kaslo 6:46 p.m.\nEx. Sunday\n4:00 p.m.\nThuisday,\n10:00 a.m.\nS.S.    Moyie    Crawford    Bay    Route:\nCrawford. Bay service on  Monday to\nand from Proctor only, connecting wltb\nS.S.  Kuskanook  at- Proctor  to   and\nfrom Nelson.\nThursday,\nS:Q0 p.m.\nMonday,\nWednesday,\nFriday,\n8:46  p.m.\nNelson-Vnncouver through service via\nKettle    Valley    Railway.      Standard\n.deeper,   dining   car,  etc,  via  Grand\nForks. Greenwood, Midway, Pontloton.\nSpence's Bridge.\nTuesday,.\nThursday,\nSaturday,\n1:66 p:tn.\nEx. Sunday\n6:46 p.m.\nSlocan City and Intermediate Points,\nwith boat connection at Slocan City to\nSilverton. New Denver. Rosebery.\nEx. Sunday\n8:10 aim.\nMonday,\nWednesday,\nFriday,\n5:46 p.m.\nKaslo, Sandon, Slocan Lakoand Intermediate points via Slocan City.\nMonday,\nWednesday,\nFriday,\n8:80 tun.\nEx. SUnday\n4:20!p.m\nSouth    Slocan, i - Brilliant,    Caatlegar,\nTrail,    Rossland    and.   intermediate\n'             points.\nMonday,\nWednesday,\nMonday,\nWednesday,\nFriday,\n11:00. p.m.\nFriday,\n12:46 noon\nEx. Sunday\n8:36 pn.\nMonday,\nWednesday;   '.\nFriday,\n11:00 p.m.\nColumbia Rlvar and  Ma(n Una, via\nRevelstoke, connects Train No. 1 going\nweat\n._.\u25a0-__. : __ ! ___\u2022 : _\t\nMondiy.\nWadneaday.\nFriday.\n8:26 p,m.\nJ. B. CARTER, O. P. A. Nelson, E. 0.\n^mmmmm\u2014mmmmm I    j     I    |   mm*\u2014mmmm~\nMining mid Markets\n***.\u00bb. st..tt**.t***. \u00bb..**.**.**\u00bb****)**\u00bb***\u00bb .ft***.**\n11.8. NINE MAY\n1\nBUSY DAY\nLOCAL\nSpokane Hears That Electric Point la\nNegotiating With tha Consoll-\"\ndated Company       \u25a0''.\"]\nSPOKANE.\u2014There Is a rumor hero\nthat shipments from Electric Point to\nTrail smelter of Consolidated Mining\nand Smelting company may be resumed n the near future. The ore\nis, a low grade lead, carrying around\n26 per cent in large quantity, with no\nsliver content. Freight rate to Trail\nis about |2 per ton, while rate to the\nonly other market available, at Mid-\nVale, Utah, Is $10.15. Tho dlfferenco\nbetween these two figures is of great\nimportance to the company and may\nspell the margin between profit and\nloss in normal market times. It Is\nsaid that Trail smelter will require\nfurther supplies of clean lead ore, owing to tho fact that Queen Bess, in\nthe .Slocan district, has just entered\ninto a two-year contract with United\nStates Smelting company, at Midvale,\nUtah, thus withdrawing Its product\nfrom Trail. However, there has always been intense opposition to importation of lead ores from this side\nof the International boundary lino and\nIt is not believed hero that the outlet will be available to Electric Point,\nat least until'tho investigation of Trail\nsmelter, now under way through a\nspecial committee, has been completed.       '    -\nNOTHING DEFINITE ON\nCOPPER COMPANY RUMOR\nSPOKANE.\u2014No further Information\n.is available regarding the rumored\ndeal with Now York interests and tho\nUnited Copper Mining company, except that a telegram was received\nfrom President Wolfle during the week\nsaying he had been entirely successful and was on his way home. Ho will\nreach hero within a few days, when\nimportant statements should'be forthcoming. As to details of rumored\nreal, wa are still compelled to guess.\nHowever, it is fairly safe to say that\nit involves a big sum of money to be\nexpended in additional milling facilities and extension of hain shaft to the\n2000-foot level.\nQUEEN  BESS CONTINUE8\nIN  THE  LIMELIGHT\nQueen Bess, in the Slocan district,\nis taking rank among the msot prolific profit-payers of the northwest.\nDuring 1918, with a payroll at no* time\nexceeding (5000 and 30 men, profit of\naround $750,000 was made. Edwin\nHolter of. Now York sold his half interest to Clarence Cunningham in\nMarch, 1918, for $200,000. The amount\nwas paid off from profits within five\nmonths. Cunningham's mill at Alamo,\nIs now under construction, on the\nCanadian Pacific railway, to treat the\nores from several othor properties in\nwhloh ho is interested In tho Immediate district. The main Queen. Bess oro\nshoot is 660 feet long nnd all the output has so far como from above the\nNo. 5 tunnel level. The former owners, who sold to Cunningham for\n140,000 on long-time bond, hod developed tho ground to tho No. 10 adit\nlevel and by intermediate drifts No. 6,\n7, &8 and 9. None reached the ore\nshot now being mined and Cunningham will extend them to tap It as ore\nreserves are needed.\nSupplies on Stalls Quickly Sold Out-\nHome Cured Bacon and Ham\nArt Offered\nA busy day, with nearly everything\non hand sold out before the close, was\nthe result of Saturday's local market.\nThe supply of beef and pork was\nsmaller than usual and was soon sold\nout Fresh eggs were ln good demand.\nHome cured bacon at 50 cents and '55\ncents a pound and ham at 46 cents\nwas on sale at one stall. The demand\nfor apples was greater..\nMarket Prioaa.\n'Following   is   the   list   of   market\nprices:\nFresh killed beef, lb t .15\u00ae$ .35\nFresh killed veal, lb 18\u00ae    .85\nFresh killed pork, lb 25\u00a9   :30\nHome cured bacon, lb. ..    .50\u00ae   .55\nHome cured ham, lb. ... .45\nMutton    .45\nPotted meats  ,20\nChicken, lb.   .16\nFowl, lb.  .80\nFresh eggs, dozen      .70@   '76\nFresh butter, per lb 55@   .00\nHomemade cheese, lb,        .459   .60\nCream, U-pint bottles .. ,26\nHoney, extracted, Jars ..   .36\u00ae   .40\nHomemade Jams, 1 lb. Jar ,30\n4-lb.   fins :.   .70\u00ae 1.00\nPotted plants .'. 15\u00ae   .50\nVegetable!.\nPotatoes, 10 lbs  .36\nPotatoes, 100 lbs \u2022'.'. 2.00\nCarrots, per lb  .02**\nBeets, per lb   .02**\nParsnips, per lb  .03\nTurnips, per 8 lbs  .25\nOnions, per lb  .06\nGreen onions, bunch ..*. .06\nLeeks, per bunch   .06\nCelery, per bunch ...... .OS\nSavoy cabbage, lb  .08\nPurple   pickling  cabbage .03\nEndive, two heads for... .06\n\u2022Kale, per bead 10\u00ae   .15\nSquash, per Ib  .08\nPumpkin, per Ib   .02 V.\nMarrows, per lb.   .08*4\nCitron, per lb   .04\nQuinces, per lb  .10\nPears, lb  .10\nApple older, gallon   .75\nApplet\nCulls, per box   1.00\nN. W. Greening, No. 1.. 2.26\nN. W. Greening, No. 3 .. 2.00\nR L Greening, No. I  .. 3.00\nNorthern Spys, No. 1.... 2.25\nNorthern Spys, No. 3.... 1.50\nHalf Boxes.\nGolden Russets, fancy .. 1.60\nRed Cheek Pippins, fancy 1.50\nMONTREAL   PRODUCE\n(By Dally News Leasod Wire.)\nMONTREAL, Feb. 2.\u2014Local egg\nmarket Saturday closed 4c to 5c lower\nthan a week ago. Potatoes stendy.\nVery firm feeling In cheese market.\nQuotations:\nCheese: Finest easterns, 2 lc to 26c.\nButter: Choicest creamery, 62c tu\n53c.\nEggs: Selected, 56c; No. 1 stock, 53o\nto 54c.\nPotatoes, per bag, car lots, $1.05 to\n$1.70.\nCORN   PRICES  LOWER\n. (By Dally. Ncwb Leased Wire.)\nCHICAGO, Feb. 2.\u2014Corn averaged\nlower In price yesterday, weakened\nmoro or loss by tho fact that country\nofforlngs had become a littlo larger.\nThe market closed unchanged, with\nthe flnnl range varying from Mc net\nto decline ot %c \"advance.\nIn oats, tho result was unchanged\nto \u2022Sc down, In provisions off 32c to\n60c.\nC U N A R  D\n.ANCHOR\nANCHOR-DONALDSON\nAPPROXIMATE SAILINGS\n\u2022N6W  YORK\u2014LIVERPOOL\nPrincess' Snxonla   ..Fob. 12\nJuliana   Feb.- 5     Royal George\n\"\u2022armnnla Fob. 17 Fob. 22\nCaronla Mar.   3\nNEW   YORK\u2014LONDON\nPannonla Feb. 18     Pulmormo Poonn\nIxlon   ....Mar,   6 \u25a0 Mar.   1\nByron   ...Mar. 22 \u25a0   Noleus  ...Mar.   8\npannonla Mar. 18\nST. JOHN, N.B.\u2014GLASGOW\nCassandra .Mar. 14\nPORTLAND,  ME.-LONDON\nJason .Feb. 6\nDrafts and Mensy Orders\nBritain, Ireland, Italy, Scandinavia.\nFor all Information apply to any of\nour agenta or to company's office, 48.\nHastlngs Streot West, Vancouver.\nPhone Sey. 3189.\n_________\n8-Altar   Quiet   at   New   York\u2014Metal\nExehange Quotes Lead Prices\nLower\nNEW YORK7 Feb. 3.\u2014Silver\n|1.61%! at London, 48 7-10d.        <   ..\niend\u2014St. Louis, $4.95; New York,\n$5.25; Montreal, $6.43; London, \u00a332\n10s.    , '\nNew York metal exchange quotes\nlead unsteady; spot and February offered at $6'60. Spelter nominal; East\nSt Louis dellvory, spot and January,\n$6.65.\nCopper dull; electrolytic, lH%c to\n28c; Iron nominally unchanged.\nBANK OF COMMERCE\nSHARES ADVANCE  IN  PRICE\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nTORONTO, Feb. 2.\u2014Strength in\nNova Scotia Car, a sharp advance In\nBank of Commerce shares and brisk\ntransactions In the 1933 war loan, rur-\nnlshed the chief features In the Toronto market Saturday.\nNova Scotia Car common, which advanced more than a point on Friday\nto 7, following the announcement of\nthe securing of a big contract, oponed\non Saturday at 9 and rose to 10, clos\nIng at the high.\nBank of Commorce opened nearly\n8 points higher at 308, and, on light\ntransactions scored a further advanco\nto 211%, a net gain of six points. The\nannouncement that Huron and Erie\nwill double its capitalization by taking\n$2,500,000 from reserve and adding this\nto the capital stock, was followed by\na transaction In a large block of tho\nstock at 196, a decline of 8 points from\ntho previous salo price a few days\nago.\nMaple Leaf Milling extended Its\nrally half a point further to 126%\nand Toronto Railway was also %\nhlghor. Steel of Canada, after a dip\nto 57%, recovered to 68, closing only\n% below Friday's level. Canada\nSteamship common at-42\"l. wns V4 off.\nTho 1933 loan remained steady\naround 101%. The other war loans\nshowed little change.\nWAR LOAN TRADING\nLEADS AT MONTREAL\nMONTREAL, Feb. 2.\u2014A substantial\nvolume of trading ln the war loans\nwas the one feature of interest In the\nshrot session ot tho Montreal stock\nexchange on ijaturday. Tho 1933 Victory issues continued to leud the bond\n1st, ruling firm to strong nt 101% to\n101%, closing unchanged at loo's. Tho\n1922 and the 1923 maturities were In\nsteady demand at 100 nnd lOO'\/i respectively, but thel 927 and 1937\nmaturities cased off small fractions,\ntho former to 100% nnd tho latter to\n102%.\nSteel of Canada sagged back ',_ to\n58, Its low of tho movement. At the\ncloso olds improved slightly to :,S%.\nDominion was unchanged at 69.\nSpanish River preferred sold off 2\npoints to 65 on tho salo of one lot;\nAmes preferred wus 1% tower nl \"3%;\nSteamship common; 1% lower at 42;\nand Car common, 1 lower at 30%.\nTotal soles: Shires, 1343; bonds,\n$343,350.   '\nSaid tho colored lad as he was being\nmustered out, on being asked what\ntrain he was going to take for home:\n\"Bose, I ain't gonna take nu train.\n1 lives 20 Omile. away and Tso gwine\nto run the first 18 Just to mako sure\nthey don't change their minds befo' I\nleavo camp.\"  ,\nRAILWAY MEN\n1\nCLAIM  VOTING PLAN AT\nVICTORIA IS  WANTING\nVICTORIA.\u2014Convinced that there Is\nsomething wrong with the present system of voting in Victoria, the olty\ncouncil Monday night Instructed the\nIeprislativo committee to' Investigate alleged shortcomings of tho regulations\nand report its findings. '\nAid. Fullerton Introduced his resolution, printed in Sunday's Colonist, suggesting that nil road tux and license\npayors should be entitled to a vote\nwithout having to fill out statutory\ndecimations.\n\"It is regrettable that one-third of\nthe city's property owners does not\nsee it as their solemn duty to vote at1\ntho civic elections,\" he remarked.\n\"Thcto Is a serious lack of Interest\nunder the present system. This sug-\ngesli.n of mine Is the remedy.\"\nPower to Foreigners.\nAid. Sargent asserted that it would\nbo \"un-British\" it tho customary declaration was not taken out. Ho claimed the voters' list might be \"swamped\"\nby foreign shipyard workers If anyone\nwho paid taxes had a voto, whether or\nnot he ,was. naturalized. He felt that\nAid. Fullerton had not given proper\nconsideration to his proposal.\nAid. Andros favored raising tho road\ntax from $2 to $5 a head.\nAid. Johns maintained that the road\ntax was not collected as It ought to be.\n\"I know several young men who have\ngone through life too Selfish to marry,\nand they havo escaped the road tax repeatedly,' he said. \"They should be\nrounded up and forced to come\nthrough.\" '\nToo Many Mistakes.\n\"There aro altogether too many mistakes In our voters' lists,\" admitted\nMayor Porter, who said he knew of\nmany people whose names wore omitted through carelessness on somebody's\npart.\n\"A mnn who does not tako the time\nto register Is not the kind of a man to\nhave a vote,\" assorted Aid. 1'atrlok,\nwho contended that Aid. IFullerton's\nplan would lead to endless confusion.\n\"Dangerous,\" was the opinion of Aid.\nDlnsdule   In   respect   to   the   scheme.\nThe whole matter was referred td\ntho legislative committee.\ni\nShopmen  and   Machinists   in  Canada\nand United States Will Demand   -\nBetter Conditions\n. (By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nWINNIPEG; Feb. 2.\u2014Drastlo changes in the wages and working conditions of railway shopmen and machinists in Canada and the-United States\nwill be demanded when the annual\nschedule of wages is presented to the\nrailway board next spring. The wage\nscale demands will be:\nMachinists, 85 cents per hour; helpers, 60 cents per hour.\nThe present scale of'wages Is:\nMachinists, 68 cents per hour; helpers, 48 cents per hour.\nThe railway shopmen will also demand that they be given two weekB\nholiday each year with full pay and\nthe right of free transportation.\nOne hundred and twenty thousand\nrailway men will make those demands\nnlong with thousands of other machinists employed In factories and repair\nshops throughout the country.\nEmployees of every ra'lway concern\nin Canada and the United States will\namalgamate in d\u00bbmand<ng these conditions. The rallwav men will demand also that conditions ond wages\nbecome universal In rn'lwav shops on\nthe continent. Should the demands nf\nIhe rallwav shonmen he met, It would\nmean that, the Rum of npnro-rlma'ely\nS1K4.R00 would he afl'-ad to thn nav\nlist of tbo rnllwavs of Canada a--d tho\nUnitM Stnton each rlny.\nIn'rt'u'.Pd In the railway shonmon\nwho. tvi'i malr. th\u00ab. demand-- oro rna-\nohln'cts   boMormoko-s.   \\rrvn   oh'n''Ul'<l-\n\"t-s. hoinors bin. kcrn'the. sbeot metal\n'vnrkors piootrleal workers and rall-\nu\">- (inr-mon.\nTbo riro\u00ab\u00bbnt wrHn\u00bb dflv of e'fh'\nbnnrei nor dsiv wil] onnMnuo in forco.\nnr\"n*iVrttr to tbo domnnrlg.\nThwoo mon tn ronroemnt Wr.-**irn\n\u25a0\"-anuria at tbo intornntinnnl nnnforonre\nwhl\u00abb <s bolnir hn',1 ot Wrto'-'nr't.-n.\nl\"ft, rriilnv nl\"ht for h-nrV.nnr'ors at\n'bat plnce. Those who will renr-enont\nemployees of western rnilwnv lines are\nB. J. Tallon of Calgary, Frank Mc-\nKenia of Vancouver and Charles\nDickie of Winnipeg.\nFurlong.    The widow of the deceased.\nhad kit him 20 yours ago, when tin*\ntwo child.renw.ere.infants.    . a\nThere are. six  brothers and .slst^ra\nwho have a claim on the estate if the\nchildren cannot be found.\n... \u25a0 m  \u2014  \u25a0\nLONG DISPUTED CASE    ,\nIS  FINALLY SETTLED\nBUTTE.\u2014A case that has been In\nlitigation for several years, that Of\nC. E. Klnman and Basil Soalabln, both\nof Woodvllle, over a mining claim,.\nhas been settled in favor of Klnman\nby the federal land office. Klnman\nhas been a resident of Woodvllle for\nthe past 36 years. Scalabin Is alleged\nto have tried' to secure title to the\nproperty under the law relating to\nland for :i grtcultural purposes.\nThe property in contention is located on the Continental divide and is In\nthe Butte district according to a decision of the land office. The case\nwent previously to the secretary of the\ninterior, who ruled against both parties, but gave Klnman the right to relocate for mineral, the land office now\nsustains the claim of Klnman as a\nbona fide claimant.\nThe property was bonded to a mining company In 1906 as a mining property, for $65,000 and $5000 was paid on\nthe bond. It is bounded on all sides\nby patented mining claims. The claims\npersonally investigated by land offico\nofficials are the old' Glory and Martin\nLuther. Assays, it is claimed,' show\nthat Kinman's values run higher than\nseveral of the local mines when.at the .\nsame depth.\nPRAIRIE  VISITORS\nMUST BUY LICENSES\nVICTORIA. \u2014 Victoria gets her\nvisitors too easy. She need3 some\ncompetition to wake hor up,\" declared\ntin irate prairie visitor yesterday to\nMiss Taylor of the Development association. This man and another, with\ntheir families, had driven 'to the coast\nIn their cars to spend the winter. Thqy\nrocolved a certificate good for three\nmonths, allowing them to use their cars\nwithout buying a license. Their time\nis now up und if they wish to stay\nhere any lunger, thoy 'must come\nthrough with $20 to buy a permanent\nlicense, which will be useless shortly. They contend thnt there should be\nsome system by which either the cars\nmight remain free for longer than\nthree months or a tax might be paid\nmonthly.\nThis prairie gentleman also contends that Victoria does nothing for\nthe winter visitor. He points to\nCalifornia, where they have various\nforms of amusement and entertainment. The Development association,\nhe says, does its work well.as far as\nit goes, but it only attends to the\nbringing here and settling of visitors.\nA big assemgly liall where band\nconcerts und social affairs could bo\nheld is suggested as a suitable means\nof keeping the visitors content. A\nswimming bath also would be a good\nfeature.\nThere is no doubt that something\nmust be done by this city to hold\nvisitors brought here by the expenditure of large sums of money. The\nPrairie club is doing good work in the\nway of entertaining, but the matter\nmust be taken up extensively by the\ncity itself.\nThe visitor who mado tlie statements quoted abovo bos come hero\nfor several years.\nA  BARGAIN.\n*'Oh,-John,\" sobbed Mrs. John, \"I've\ndone something awful and I'm afraid\nto tell you\u2014I must. I made a most\nawful mistake this morning nnd sent\nyour new dress suit to the rummage\nsale Instead of your old one and when\ni found out what I had dono and ran\nto get It back it had been sold.\"\n'That's all right, Mubel dear,\" saia\nJohn, amiably. \"1 stopped in at tht\nsalo myself and bought it back for 36\ncents.\"\n'     EXPLAINS\n\"Aro you down on matrimony!\"\n\"Not nt all,\" said the old bachelor.\n\"Matrimony is well enough.\"\nyos7\"\nAnd I b'ollovo In lotting woll enough\nalone?\"\nHEIRS TO $18,000\nARE STILL SOUGHT\nThe whereabouts of the two children, a son and daughter, of the late\nRichard O'Connor of Ottawa, who recently died leaving $18,000, is still a\nmystery.\nThe Captital Trust corporation has\nbeen continuing its investigation. It\nIs bolteved that the heirfi are living\nsomewhere in Texas as it is known\nthoy lived at San Antonio for a while.\nThe oldest of the two heirs is the son,\nChester Stanley O'Connor.\nAccording'to J. J.'O-Meara, solicitor\nfor tho Trust corporation, thero is a\nstrong belief thnt both children aro\nliving in San Antonio and advertisements have been inserted in the newspapers In that city but so far without\nresult. Mr. O'Mcara's firm has ulso\nbeon In communication with certain\nparties who worn acquainted with tho\nO'Connors and through them, a'fded by\ntho advertisements, the firm hopes\ndefinitely to locate tho missing heirs.\nIt is known the late Mr. O'Connor was n locomotive engineer and\nthat he had lived in Mexico, Texas\nand Peru, another medium through\nwhich tho Capital Trust corporation\nhope to discover the son is the military authorities.\nThe son being of military ago would\nhave regisored when tht United States\nwent to war and it is btlievod trace\nof his parents' abode can be learned\nthrough tho records.\nTho lato Mr. O'Connor died at tho\nresidence of his' sister, Mrs. Hannah\nShock Left Her\nWeak and Nervous\nCOULD NOT SLEEP.\nWhen the system receives a shock of\nany kind, the heart becomes weakened,\nthe nerves unstrung, the appetite poor,\nfaint and weak feeling come over\nyou, you can't sleep at night, and you\nwonder If life's worth living.\nTo all those who suffer from nervous shock we would recommend Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills as the\nbest remedy to tone up the entire\nsystem and strengthen the weakened\norgans.\nMrs. J. J. Bunyan, Pilot Butte, Sask.,\nwrites: \"2 have used Milburn's Heart\nand Nerve Pills after having suffered\nfrnm a terrible shock to my whole system. I was so utterly weak and nervous I could not sleep at night and\nmy appetite was very poor. I could\nnot walk across the floor wlthou*\ntrembling all over.\n\"I had hot flashes and fain tin*\nspells.\n\"When on the second box of your\nHeart and Nerve Pills I began to feel\nthat they were doing me good, so I\nkept on until I had used six boxes,\nwhen I felt like a different person.\n\"I am never without them In ths\nhouse and highly recommend them to\naU who suffer with  their heart >\nMllburns Heart and Nerve Pills.are\nBOc a box at all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Mil-\nburn Co., Limited. Toronto, Ont\nSTIFF JOINTS\nORE MUSCLES\nliaber Up Quickly Under the .\nPenetrating Application at\nHamlin's Wizard Oil\nIn cases of rheumatism and lame\nback it penetrates quickly, drives out\nsoreness, and limbers up stiff, aching\njoints and muscles.\nWizard Oil is an absolutely reliable, antiseptic application for cuts,\nburns, bites, and stings. Sprains and\nbruises heal readily under its Booth-\ning, penetrating qualities.\nGet it from druggists for 30 cents.\nIf not satisfied return the bottle and\nget your money back.\nEver constipated or have sick\nheadache? lust try Wizard Liver\nWhips, jpleasant little pink pills, 30\nceiits.   Guaranteed. \u2014\u25a0\nF)AILY (Except Sunday)\nU Service to Spokane\nand Coast points, with\nclose connections for California and Eastern points.\nLv. Nolson   7:20 a.m.\n1W   Mountain   8:04 a.m.\nAr. Mountain    5:40 p.m.\nAr. Nelson   6:20 p.m.\nSteamship Tickets\nto European and Asiatic Points\nAuthori.od Agency for all Steamship Companies. Full information regarding rates, sailings, etc., furnished promptly upon request.   Reservations made and tickets furnished without dclny.\n609 Ward Street,\nE. I*. BUCHANAN,\nCity Freight and Passenger Agent,\nMadden Black, Neiaon, B. C.\nAll kinds of Special Mint or Mill Building Work. Special Attention to\nOut-of-Town Work.   Windowa,  Frames, Doors made to any atyla or\nai\u00bb, fitted or knock down.\nT. H. Waters & Co.\nBuildera.     Kootenay Lake Sash and Door Factory.     Contraotora\nBex 836, Neiaon, B.C.    If it'a in Wood We Can Do It.     Established 1907\nGet Your Lifeflnsured\nI am agent for tho North American I*lfo Insurance Company for Nelson and Trail. I understand\nthis business and urn always prepared to explain the different kinds of policies and recommond tho one\nbest suited to your needs. , \u2022 >\nEvery man should have some protection for his wife and family. Call and see mo and talk it over.\n\u00ab14 WARD 8TBEET.\nHMgh W. Robertson\nNELSON, B. C.\n '\u25a0\u2022AGE FOUR\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nMONDAY FMRUAVW 8, 19W ^\ntHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished   every   morning   except\nSunday by The New* Publishing Com-\ni Hay. Limited, Nalaon,. B.C, Canada.\nBurin*** letura should ba addressed\nand checks and money orders made\npayable to Tb* News Publishing Company, Limited, and In no ease to Individual member* of the ataff.\nAdvertising rate cards and sworn\ndetailed statement of circulation\nnulled on request or may be seen ai\nthe office of any advertiaing agency\nrecognised by the Canadian Press Association.\nSubscription Ratea: By mall CO cents\n\u25a0\u25a0per month; 12.50 for alx months: $F\nPer year.  Delivered 60c per month; IS\nCor alx month*; 16 per year, payable ln\nadvance.\n.\u00ab\u2022\u00bb*.\nMONDAY  FEBRUARY 3, 1919\n\u25a0  \u25a0  __- \u2014-\nCUTS AWAY A LOT OF RED TAPE\nThe order in council which was re-\n\u25a0Ssiitly passed by the Dominion government to eliminate certain defects\nIn the existing pension regulations\n.does not, aB certain, accounts might\nlead one to Buppose, introduce an entirely new set of pension regulations.\nThere are important clauses In the\nnew * order ln council which add considerably tb tbe powers of the pension\ncommissioners. Chief amongst these\nIs that which applies to cases of prospective dependency.\n'The claims of prospective dependents, have now been officially recognized and the amendment will enable\nthe board of pension commissioners tc\naward pension to a large number of\nsoldiers' dependents who, under th.\nOld regulations, were ineligible.\nAnother Important clause which will\nhave a far-reaching effect is thai\nWhich empowers the commissioners U\naward' pension to parents or person:\nIn the place of a parent of a deceasei\nsoldier' ln accordance with the degrei\nof their dependency on the decease,\nsoldier, and in accordance with theti\nneeds.\nFormerly It was necessary that these\npersons should have been wholly ot\nmainly dependent on the deceased sol-\ndler to be entitled to pension. Now.\nhowever, cases where a state of only\npartial dependency existed, may be\nconsidered for pension.\nThere is also a clause relating to\nsasrs of \"special hardship.\"    It wil)\nbe the task of the. board of pension\nIcomm'ssloners carefully to investigate\nI all doubtful cases, so that proper provision may be made.\nThe Important feature of the new\n(regulations is that they enable each\nse to be dealt with on its merits.\nIThe board is no longer bound by hard\nland fast rules.\nRESPECT FOR THE NATIONAL\nANTHEM\n.Thoughtlessness is the cause of an\nI uneasiness wh.ch often lakes hold of a\n[gathering  on   the  commencement   of\nIthe.j-inglng ot \"God Save the Kiag.\"\nMany times there are a Ian. r number\nj of pe. sons ln an audience who grab\n'for their coats, hats, rubbers and um-\nbraQ&s than there are who join In the\nfainting of the national anthem, or at\nI least respectfully wait for its conclu-\nlfl<'n-\nThe singing of the national a .them\nI at the conclusion of a program is a\n[patrlotlo custom which loses .ts mean-\nI Ing In the noise made by pushing back\nIchairs, shuttling to get o_t .nd gen-\nleral.y showing, although i n.nuntlon-\nf ally, d srespect for all li.at Its singing\nI conveys.\nThe.e are no more loyal people in\n| the world than Canadians, and it would\nI be a pity if apparent lack of respect\nI tor the national anthem should give a\nI false impression.\n*   A QUESTION  OF  8ALARIE8\nPerhaps the highest salaried man.in\nUnited States Is Edsel Ford, son\n[.'the famous Henry. At any rate, ho\ni the highest-salaried man of his age,\nlaaya the Concord Monitor. At 24 he\n|finds himself drawing $160,000 a year\ni the head of the Detroit flivver fac-\n|\u00a3aiy- Think ot bringing home a pay\nlapivelope with $1000 in It .every Sat-\nturday night Think of pulling down\n1(00 plunk* a day right along, regard-\nIlM* of weather, health or anything else.\n\u25a0Maybe young JBdael earns It Un-\nEtoubtedly he trie* to. He haa the\nI reputation of being a worker. But ao\nIts the president of the United States\nla worker; and he only gets $76,000.\nIA United State* senator may work or\n[talk more hour* than Edsel put* in,\nand yet draw only one-twentieth aa\n[much salary. A cabinet officer haa\ng^t through the whole year on about\ni much a* Ediel get* ln a month. A\ni of tlte supreme court, who pre*\nMy punches the time clock with\ni regularity and even take*\nL'_io_ta*-wRh him, ha* to be\ni of *_d\u00bbel** pay.\n..'.ttiey are negligible.\nMo: enow. how- very\n.'  \u25a0    .\nto human progress and happiness as\ntbe making of flivvers.\nEverybody likes a knocker when he's\ngone ,\n\"What does K-B mean?\" asks a subscriber. It's \"Kootenay-Boundary,\" or\n\"Kant B-Beat.\"\nThe echo' of a \"boost\" sometimes Ib\nshortlived, but It Is a whole lot better\nthan the \"knock\" that lingers.\nA pessimist Is a man who lives ln\nBritish Columbia and talks about California. He's worse than that; he's a\nmember of the can't-sce-the-good-\nthlngs-at-home-and-distant-flelds-look\ngreen class.\nIf there Is anything on earth that\nno one will regret doing it's looking\nup and grinning, says an exchange.\nThat's all right so far aB It goes, but\nwhat about the man who trips on a\npiece of wire?\nPremier Oliver has stated that he\nintends to place an item of $200,000 in\nthe estimates tor the construction of\nhe Johnson street bridge ln Victoria.\nNow the Interior should get after a tew\nthousand tor its essential rural roads.\nCOMMUNICATION\nAN ACT OF RESPECT DUE TO ALL\nTo the Editor of The Dally News:\nSir,\u2014-I read with great interest in today's issue of The Daily News nt the\nadmirable BUgestion. made thit when\nilitary funerals pass through the\n\u25a0 treets men who are standing by should\nalse their hats in token of lespect.\nUI honor and respect be sh wn to the\n,-allant men who made victory possible\nor the allied cause, and most certainly\nhats off,\" but why not hatB off when\nill funerals pass, as is the custom ln\n-nany countries?\nIt would would not take long out ot\na lifetime it. when funerals pass, men\nraised their hats and others paused as\nHome one passes on his or her last\nlourney? Nor would It be amiss to\n-each the children to pause In their\nnl-iy and keep quiot as a funeral passes.\nThis is a Jorney we will oil have to\ntake sooner or later, and the passing\nIn such a journey demands the respect\neven it only an \"outward and visible\nsign\" of all, both old and' vo-ng.\nS. TIMAENS.\n-\u00bb\u2022\nWHAT THE PRESS IS SAVING I\n $>\nFather's Out\nEveryone seems to be aski-g for a\npension   nowadays   except   father. \u2014\nKingston Standard.\nAfter a While\nWhen there Is aoth'ng left tn steal\nand vo decent people left to murder,\ntho Bolshevlki will put on a i-lous air\nand bee for something to cat\u2014Colling-\nwood News.\nBlagest on Record\nA son of HeTirv Ford Is drawing a\nsalary of $160,000 a yenr. th\"S establishing a new precedent for sa'aries\npaid editors- sons.\u2014Brockvllle Recorder\nKeeping Dry\nThe United States have r-one drv\nbut the most difficult part of 'he Job\nIs still ahead\u2014to keep the     dry. \u2014\nQuebec Chronicle.\nLike B. C. Probe, EhT\nTf enr*h returnlnc tra-s*-ort 's to be\nfollowed by an lnves'lgatlon It is to be\nhoped the returning home won't be\nheld up till the probe IB finished, or\nthe men will never get back.\u2014Ottawa\n.Tournai.\n| TOLD  IN   RHYME I\n\u00bb \u2014; : '   i    \u00bb\nTHS MOCKINGBIRD\nNot the radiance cf the rose\nHas been lavished on thy wings,\nYet thy golden music holds\nBeauty's fond imaginings.\nChorister ot silver sound.\nTinkling bells and fluting fine,\nMatchless melodies that spring\nFrom a source that seems divine.\nTrills and ecstasies of joy\nPiccolos of pure delight,\nTroubadour of dawn and dark.\nMusic vested day and night\nOriole and lark and thrush,\nAnd the veery\u2014all are thine,\nAnd the Linnet's lilting note\nMingled sweet in music's wine.\nTrumpeter of triumph still,\nThough the day be dun or gold,\nVou have found the secret sought\nBy the world for years untold.\nHolding still the heart of hope,\nBrave and buoyant is thy word,\nSoloist of jov unfeigned,\nI salute thee, mockingbird.\n\u2014W. Lomax Chi'dress.\nALWAY8 DICTATES IT\nBooth Tarklngton tells of an old\nnegro who appeared as a witness before one of our committees, ln the\ncourse ot his examination these questions were put to the man:\n\"What is your* name?\"\n\"Calhoun Clay, Bah.\"\n\"Can you sign your name?\"\n\"Sah\u00bb\"\n\"I ask If you can write your name.\"\n\"Well, no sah. Ah nebber writes\nma narne. Ah dictates it sah.\"\u2014Atlantic Chronicle.     \t\n| TWENTY   YEARS  AGO  TODAY.\n\u00bb~\n(From Tlje Dally Miner.)\nMr. Hewitt Bostock, M.P., arrived ln\nNelson from Kaslo yesterday.\n..\u2022\u2022'*\nAt a meeting of the Nelson hockey\nclub lust hlghf It was decided to have\na lacrosse match on Ice and a hockey\nmatch at the Crystal ring on Monday\nevening. For the lacroBse match the\nDoukhobors will. _41ay. the Dirvishes. A.\nJeffs will captain the former and Joseph Thompson the latter.\n\u2666.- \u2022'. \u2022\nV. C. Rackllffe, formerly of Slocan\nCity, now in the' hotel business ln\nFisher, is in. the city en route to visit\nsome .mining properties in the Slocan\ncountry, . >\n\u2022* \u2022   *\nMrs. W. Pear cy, fourth assistant\nteacher in the Nelson public school, Is\nill and Miss Wlskham took her class\nyesterday.\nTEN YEARS AGO TODAY       |\n ! : \u00ab\n(From The Daily News,)\nJ. Lindblad, night clerk of the Canadian Pacific teleghaph office in this\ncity, leaves this morning for a -short\ntrip to RosBland.\n\u2022 '  \u2022   \u2022\nC. W. Bourke leaves this city this\nmorning for a four months' trip to the\nold country and will sail on the Empress of Ireland from St. John, N. B.,\non Feb. 12.\nMrs. J. E. Poupore left Nelson on\nMonday to meet Mr. Poupore ln Spokane, whence they are going on a holiday trip to Montreal, Chicago and Baltimore.\n.   *   .\nRobert R. Robertson of Ferguson has\nbeen appointed by the provincial government to be resident physician at\nTrout Lake. ,\n*, \u2022   \u2022 \u25a0\nMrs. M. E. King has again taken\ncharge ot the hotel Allan at Rossland.\nTHE REAL SUFFERERS.\nDobson\u2014It was an awful trial for\nme to make that speech last night,\nClublelgh\u2014Don't mention it; Just\nthink what the rest of us Buffered.\n. Burlington ratepayers voted $30,000\nto build a new school.\nA FORTUNATE GIRL.\n\"My sister Maggie Is awfully lucky.\"\n.Why?'.' \"*\"'     \u2022 I\n\"She went  to a party last  night\nwhere they played a game In which\nyou either had to kiss a girl or pay a\nforfet of a thrift stamp.''\n\"Well,- how was Maggie, lucky7\"\n'She came home with two book* of\nthrift stamps.\" ...     ,.>\nSign in front of country church:\n\u25a0'Do not hitch here.\" Notl'lng tor\ncouples desiring to get married to do\nbut eo elsewhere.\nFlexible Flier Sleds\nWe hav* * good assortment of Children's Sleds left and can fill orders\npromptly.   Wa have\nGENUINE FLEXIBLE FLYER, SAFETY  FLYER and ALL; STEEL\nSLEDS.   PRICES RIGHT\nNelson Hardware Co.\nBOX 1060\nNELSON, B. C.\nJohn Burns &* Sons GenSlS;!SSfr8\nSASH AND DOOR FACTORY NELSON PLACING MILLS\nVernon 8treet, Neiaon, B. C.\nEVERY DESCRIPTION OF BUILDING MATERIAL KEPT IN STOCK\nEstimates Given on Stone, Brick, Concrete and Frame Building*.\nMAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.\nO   O. BOX 7H4 P.HONP 17*\n\u2014\nWhy\nExperiment?\nWhy experiment In so  Important a matter as the pur-\n\u25a0haalng of diamonds? . Why\nake   any   risks: when   you\ntnow   poaitlvely   that   Birks'\nDiamonds are guaranteed?\n\u00ab \u25a0\nThe attention given to our\nmall customers' Is just as\ncareful and as personal as\nthough   they   shopped   In\nperson.   Try this and see.\nBirks\nMilk Tickets\nThe Dally New* Job department\nmake* a specialty of printing\nmilk and other ticket*.   Band In\nyour order to\nTHB      NEWS     PUBLISHING\nCOMPANY, LIMITED,\nNeiaon, B. a\nYes, Indeed\nTt Is . hout t'me pnm\u00b0 nTed statesman explained to the central n\"t'nns\n\u2666hat to th*> hv(.tnnd*\u00bbrs '.'\u25a0long net the\n\"polls.\u2014Edmonton Bulletin.\nWretched Monkey\nTf the kaiser, as Varden savs, was a\nrnnTe tool in the war. th-n we surpose\nthr* ornwn m-ln'-e was a mere monkey\nwrench.\u2014Kingston Whig.\n-A\nCOLD    STORAGE\nMra. Exe\u2014Why do you say that Mrs.\nBrown is very thoughtless?\nMrs. Wye\u2014She had the parson to\ndinner th_ other evening and Bhe serv-\ndeviled  eggs.\u2014Boston Tr.nsr.pt\nShc~D:d you hear the chimney\nswallow?\nEmbarrassed Youth\u2014That wasn't\nthe chimney, Ethel; that was I.\u2014\nLampoon.\nOet up and try again, young man.\nDon't sit around and sigh;\nI'd rather be a failure than\nThe chap who didn't try.\nLeading Man (ot the stranded\ntroupe)\u2014Nothing to do but wa'k back\nto dear old Broadway, m\"t*i'nks.\nLead'ng Woman\u2014But Ihink of the\ndisgrace!\niTurenur\u2014And the rustic gib ry!\nComedl-m\u2014Pence bo wl'h you all\nWhy we'll send the advance man une d\nto scatter the Interesting t'dlntts tht\nyou ladles are hiking suffragottes end\nwe men the accompanying newspaper\ncorrespondents.\u2014Buffalo Express.\nCopy Boy\u2014To dee'ded a bet Bill,\nwhat form of government haa Russia\nJust now?\nLlnotyper\u2014Pled form!\n_. Johnny\u2014What kind ot hen lay* golden egg*?\nlather\u2014Any kind that lays at all.\nOvercoming a Belt Difficulty\"\nwith Extra Power\nPrice is not always the measure of a\nbelt's ability. Several times we have prescribed Goodyear Extra Power Belting for\ndrives where the higtVesi-priced belts have\nfailed\u2014and Extra Power has made good.\nThe machine illustrated here is in the\nplant of the Pacific Coast Pipe Company, of\nVancouver. The overhead belt is an 8 inch\nx 5 ply, Extra Power. The middle belt is a\n4 inch x 4 ply, Extra Power. The end belt\nis an 8 inch x 5 ply, Extra Power.\nNote especially the middle belt. This\nbelt runs free until the carriage reaches the\nend of the track- Thenit is brought into service by throwing a heavy idler against the\nbelt.\nHeavy belts of other types snapped at\nthis work, but Goodyear Extra Power has\ngiven every satisfaction. Mr. C. J. Haley,\nthe Superintendent, writes, mentioning several kinds of high-grade belting that had\nfailed.   He goes on to say:\u2014-\n\"We are highly gratified over the success we\nhave attained in the service given by your Extra\nPower.\n\"Our special machinery is so constructed that\ncertain belt drives present an annoying problem.\nWe could not get reasonable service from the belting\nreferred to, due to slippage, and the consequent heat\nand belt destruction.\n\"That we are satisfied with Extra Power is evident\nin the fact that, since it has solved our difficulty, our\nentire plant is equipped with this very satisfactory\nform of transmission.\"\nYou will be interested in the reasons that have\ninduced many plants to standardize on Goodyear\nExtra Power. You will be interested in the difficult\ndrives Goodyear Extra Power, has conquered. A\nbelting man trained by Goodyear will bring you\nthese facts, and he will offer his adyiee on your own\ndrives. No obligation. Phone, wire or write the\nnearest branch.\nThe Goodyear Tire & Rubber Go. of Canada\nLimited\nBranches: Halifax, St. John, Quebec, Montreal,\nOttawa, Toronto, Hamilton, London, Winnipeg, Regina, Calgary, Edmonton, Vancouver.\nService stocks in smaller cities.\n\u25a0GOOD\nMADE\n g<2^^\u00a9\ntM'ONBAV FEBBUARV 9, 1919\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nmriwi''\nllew Arrivals\n'\nLobster Butter\nTin   -   -   30c\nm\ntemon Pie Filler\nTins   -   -   35c\nOntario Honey\ntf lb. Pails - $225\nkar Grocery\nt* PHONE 10\njiREAN,PRINCE TO WED\n* JAPANESE PRINCE88\nTOKIO.\u2014Tho   wedding   of   Princess\n[q-tako,  eldest  daughter    of    Prince\nl^shlmoto,  with  Prince  Yl, Jr., the\nunger brother and heir of the former\nng of Korea, is to be celebrated with-\n0. few months. The marriage be-\nreen  the   princess  and   the  former\n>rean-'crown prince, which Is    the\nst  instance  of matrimonial    union.\ntween ;a- member of the Japanese\nperl a 1 * family    and    the     former\nyalty of Korea in the history of both\n5 oples,  now  amalgamated  into   one\n|i tion by Japan's annexaatlon of that\ni-uiitry,   has   nece-stf\/tated   a   partial\nvision or addition to the provisions\nf the imperial house law.\n,In   observance   of    tradition,-  the\nlianges'in  the  law  were  announced\nWore the sanctuary of the imperial\njicestors in the imperial palace with\n\u25a0proprialte   |Shinto   -ceremorVes.     At\nje  same time similar reports  were\nbmitted to the grand shrines at Ise,\nIdicated  to the  grand ancestors  of\nJ3 imperial house and the mausolea\nthe first Emperor Jlmmu and the\ne Emperor Meiji.\n[rhe wedding ceremony Is to be eel-\nrated at the Kasumigasekl detached\n.ace ln Toklo ln pure Japanese style,\n;ording to the time-honored code of\n[emohies observed in the Japanese\nperlal court. After the. wedding the\njde and gridegroom will proceed to\n1 imperial palace and have audience\nh the emperor and empress. The\neymoon will be spent in Korea.\n25261\nwas the winning number In our\nweekly, drawing for a pair of ff\nShoes. Ask for ticket with your\n'purchase.\nR. ANDREW & CO.\nLEADERS IN FOOT FA8HION\ncon JOINED\nAS A PRIVATE\nAuatralian Soldier Concealed H!ia Rank\nin Order to Fight a Second\nTime\n\"rocrastinatlon   is   a   banana ; peel\njlch has caused the downfall of many\nMothers!\nWatch the tongue of your young!\nClean the clogged-up places!\nBrihg joy to little faces!\nKiddies will eat and smile,\nWhen you do away with bile.\nCareful mothers o'er the land\nAlways keep Cascarets at hand.\nChildren think -them dandy\u2014\nThey are mild cathartic candy.\nCascarets sell for a dime;\nThoy \"work\" every time,\nThen ft child, has a coated tongue,\njtted breath or in bilious, consti-\ned, feverish, or full of cold, give\ncarets. Children gladly take this\ntmless candy cathartic which tho?*\nfhly cleanses their little stomachs,\n.it tnd' bowels without griping.\nh 10 cent box of Cascarets contain\nj-etlona for dose for children aged\nyear and upwards.\n.LONDON.-\u2014The story of a colonel of\nAustralian infantry who was wounded\nin the Gallipoll campaign and sent\nback to Australia'but who concealed\nhis rank and reenlisted as a private to\nserve with the Australians in France\nhas added to the esteem in which\nAustralians are held' in London, Col\nCharles Melville Macnaghten, the\nhero of the story, is hailed as a man\nof gallantry and grit.   ,\nHe was the son of Sir Melville\"Macnaghten, chief of the criminal investigation department of Scotland Yard,\nsays the Dally Mail, and was practising law in Australia when the war\nbegan. He was the major in command of the first'brigade which landed, at Anzac Cove on Gallipoll peninsula. Within two days he was wounded three times.' After recovery in\nEngland he returned to Gallipoll and\nled his battalion . in- their immortal\ncharge at Lone Pine.\n..Alt I . the evacuation of Gallipoll\nhe served lo^a. time In Efypt, and.was\nsent frbm<theVI_rio England suffering\nfrom wounds and fever. Surgeons refused him permission to return to active service and he was sent to Australia as second ln command of an\nAustralian training camp.\nOne day he slipped away from the\ncamp and joined a replacement battalion In Queensland under the name\nof Charles-Melville and soon afterward\nwas back in England training on\nSalisbury Plain ns Pte. Melville. He\nwas quickly promoted to be corporal\nand one day was asked by his commanding officer: \"Corporal, do you\nthink you could drill this Company?\"\nHaving commanded a brigade, the\ncorporal put the company through its\npaces like the veteran he was.\nBack in France again he was recognized by officers who. had known\nhim in Gallipoll as the daring anu\nbrilliant soldier they had called \"fight\nIng -Mac.\" \u25a0 General., Blrdwood, with\nwhom-he had served at Lone Pine,\nsent for him and gave him a commission. Not long afterwards Colonel\nMacnaghten was again sent as an invalid to England, where he was summoned to Buckingham Palace to receive from the King a decoration as a\nCompanion of the Order of St. Michael\nand St. George which had been con\nferred upon him several years betore\nfor his gallantry at Gallipoll. While\nserving In the ranKS In France as\n\"Corporal Melville\" he had. oeen personally congratulated by the commanding general for valor at Mcsslnes\nRidge.\nMacnaghten's fighting days are now\nover and he is compelled to recognize\nthis fact for, as one of his men put it\n\"he is riddled like a colander and It\nIs only his fighting spirit which\" keeps\nhim alive.\"\nOFFICIAL   LIQUOR  STOLEN\nVICTORIA.\u2014By the simple expedient of smashing the glass tn the\nfront door of the provincial government's liquor store at 755 Yates streot,\nthieves secored entranle some time\nearly yesterday morning and purloined five bottles of Scotch whisky and\nabout $36 in cash, taken from the till,\nEntrance was gained to the place\nsome time between 2:30 and 3:30. At\nthe former hour Constable Pook found\nthe door locked and everything ln\nproper order. At the latter hour\nSergt. Boulton, in passing the premises, noticed the smashed window and\ninvestigated.\nAbout 5 o'clock one of the Colonist\ndelivery boys saw two men on Douglas\nstreet, both of them drunK. He overheard one of them say he had \"got one\nbottle anyway.\" Later the boy heard\nof the robbery and notified the police.\nGood descriptions of the .two men were\nsecured.\nKootenay and Boundary\nAt the provincial' school inspectors'\nconvention at Edmtonton Hon Mr.\nBoyle, ex-minister of education, now\nattorney-general, waB presented with\na club bag and a gold-headed cane.\n\"The  wedding  cards  are  out  and\nthey are rehearsing the ceremony.\"\n\"Where's tho groom?\"\n\"He seems to be lost ln the shuffle.\"\nAlfalfa Hay\nIS THB ONE VARIETY OP HAY THAT HA8 NOT ADVANCED IN  PRICE SINCE  LAST PALL-  AND AS A\nPEED FOR MILK COW8 CANNOT BE BEAT. WE HAVE\nA  NICE STOCK.    GET OUR QUOTATIONS.\nThe Taylor Milling and\n^ EleVator <|6., 'Ltd.\nt \\aU tii-lift t\u00ab\u2022,_>.-'\nHEWTDENVER\nWELCOMES BOYS\nOfficial  Letter to be Given  to  Eaeh\nSoldi.r Returning Home-\nPersonal Items\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nNEW DENVER, B. C.\u201e Fob. 2.\u2014A\nlargely attended public meeting presided, over by C. P. Nelson was held in\nBosuh hall Tuesday to make arrangements' for the > reception of the local\nmen returning from the front within\nthe next fewdays,\nCircumstances rendering the hold*\ning of a public reception impossible at\nthe present time, it was decided that a\nletter should be drawn up expressive\nof the community's appreciation and of\nwelcome, and handed to \u2022 each on arrival.\nA permanent committee consisting\nof J. B. Smith and E. E. I*. Dewdney\nand Rev. A. J. Mitchell was chosen to\ncooperate1 with the Ladle Patriotic\nsociety in this regard.\nA great reception was accorded 3.\nHartley Burgess and Martin Kennedy,\nwho reached New Denver on Wednesday from overseas. Appropriate selections ot music were rendered by the\nband.\nThe Boy Scouts and the Wolf Cubs\nparaded ln full force. J. B. Srrlth pre\nsented each with a letter which had\nbeen drawn up by the reception' corn'\nmittee, Pte. Geo. Davis, son of Mrs,\nJ. 'CV jBoiah'dei*,'' received a letter of\nthanks and appreciation from Major\nC. D. Louther, A.P.U., Edinburgh,\nScotland, for assitance rendered by\nhim to the military police in Edinburgh Nov. C, 1918, when the latter\nwere being roughly handled by a large\nand hostile crowd. Pte, Davis was on\nleave from France at the time.\nMrs. H. S. Nelson met with a painful\naccident when as the result of a fall\nsho broke her left arm Just abovo the\nwrist.  She is progressing favorably.\nAlex McMillan was a visitor to New\nDenver Wednesday.\nNEWS BUDGET\nPersonals   and   Notes   of   Last   Pew\nDays Told Briefly by Correspondent.\nKASLO WOMEN'S INSTITUTE\nHOLDS ANNUAL MEETING\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nKASLO. B. C Jan. 31.\u2014The annual\nmeeting of. the women's instiute was\nheld on Friday, Jan. 31, The following officers were elected:' Mrs. C F.\nCaldwell, president; Mrs. C. Roberts,\nsecretary-treasurer, and Miss McKen-\n2le vice-president. Mrs. Catherine\nRoberts was appointed as the government delegate, and Mrs. W. V. Pap-\nworth and H. S. Whellams appointed\nas auditors. Mrs. S. Milllngton, the retiring president gavo an address, and\nMrs. C. Roberts gavo a complete report of the work done by tho institute during tho was yeear.\nA standing vote of thinks was given\nthe retiring oficers and Mrs. Mll'ing-\nton, who has title dthe office of president during the last two yenrs, was\nvoted tho position of honorary president.\nMiss Winifred Corcoran, who has\nbeen teaching ln tho public school here\nfor the past year, has resigned her position and will go to the const. Sho is\nsucceeded by Miss Ona Laurie from\nNelson, who assumed her new dut.es\ntoday.\nFred Hendricks, who returned from\nHalifax and received his discharge, after a short porlod at his former occupation with the Bank of Montreal staff\nhere, was transferred to Kandahar,\nSask.\nHALCYON NOTE8\n(Special to Tho Dally News.)\nHALCYON, Jan.  31.\u2014Mrs.  Stewart\nof Spokane, who has been at Sandon as\nan emergency nurse, arrived on Tuesday for,a week's rest.\nHugh D. Hall of Sandon arrived\nTuesday, and Thomas Carley and John\nBeaton of Sandon and John Slmonson\nof Trail arrived Thursday.\nJ. Robinson of Edgewood returned\nhomo today, quite recovered from hla\nrheumatism.\nRURAL MAIL CARRIER8\nFORM ASSOCIATION\nARNPRiOR\u2014A meeting of rural\nmail carriers was held in the town\nhall here recently with a large attendance from tho surrounding district.\nThe object of the meeting was to form\nan association In order to beter conditions under which the rural mall carrier work. Arthur Martol, the first\nvice-president ot tho labor congress of\nMontreal, addressed the meeting.\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nGRAND FORKS, B.C., Jan. 31.\u2014Jim\nSmith returned Saturday from Rochester, Minn., where he underwent an\noperation in November.\nSeveral children in the A. E. Savage family are ill with influenza\nQrand Forks lodgo, No. 30, Knights\nof; Pythias, installed their officers for\nthe ensuing term last Tuesday evening. R. Gardner, deputy grand chancollor, was Installing officer. The new\nofficers, are: Chancellor commander,\nP. C, .layman; VIce-chanJceHor, N'.\nSetterland; prelate, K. Rueter; master\nof work, R .Scheer; keeper of records\nand seal. R. Gardner; master of finance, R. Jenne; master of exechequer,\nO. G. Dunn; master at arms, W. Brewer; inner guard, J. Simmons; outer\nguard, J. McLauchlln. A midnight\nluncheon, music and speeches was enjoyed by the members after the ceremonies.\n', Mrs. M. Morrison and her children\nare all down with Influenza. They live\non a ranch nbout eight miles up the\nnorth fork.\n' Mrs. Watson of Nelson arrived in\nthe city Thursday evening to visit her\ndaughter, Mrs. E. Vant.\n'Mis.* Ethel -Cook,, who has been ill\nwith Influenza, Ib recovering nicely.\nThe members of tho Knox Presbyterian church celebrated their annual\ncongregational meeting at Paris hall\nWednesday evening.\nMrs. George Swain and her granddaughter were' Drank Forks visitors\nWednesday and Thursday from Green\nwood.\nJ. J. Smith of Nelson was a business\nvisitor in the city Thursday.\nN. Otterburne who Is operating a\nsawmill at Deep Creek was a Grand\nForks visitor for several days this\nweok.\nMrs. Carl Holm who has been 111\nwith  influenza   Is  recovering.:\nTho O'Conner home' on tlie north\nfork has been quarantined on account\nof Influenza.\nREPORT OF COOK AVENUE\nAND M'LEAN SCHOOLS\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nROSSLAND, B. C, Jan. 1. \u2014 The\nfollowing Is a report of tho attendance\nat   the   McLean   und   Cook   Avenue\nschools for the month of January:\nMcLean School\nPerfect\nEnrollment. Attendance\nDivision 1      23 21\nDivision a       40 87\nDivision 3       35 28\nDivision  4     36 28\nDivision   5        33 21\nDivision  0         14 31\nDivision  7     37 19\nDivision  8        44 27\nnivlslon 9    46 33\nDivision  10        45 25\nDivision 11      52 32\n. Cook   Ave.   school   39 25\nTotals 478 315\nSept. totals  509 280\nTho Lord Nelson shield for the most\npopular attendance was won by Miss\nTrembath's division with a percentage\nof 97.43. It can be seen by a ref\"rence\nto the September record that the attendance for January was more reg-\niilnr than for September. Indlctntlng\nthat the pupils have been free from the\nflu or any ailments incidents to the\nwinter months.\nThe splendid vent'latlon of the new\nschool bulldlntr and Its good acemmo-\ndatlon doubtless have had a beneficial\neffect on the health of the pupils.\n\u2022m\nFIND  LIQUOR  CARGO\nIN A LOAD OF HAY\nOTTAWA\u2014Adolpho Mondoux of\nDassett, Que., drove into Hull comfortably seated ln some good clover\nhay. His trip through the city was\nhalted by Detective Daoust, who, on\nseeing the outfit, thought that the\nhorses had to pull too hard for the\nsmall amount ot hay that waa on the\niloigh. Probing through the fodder\nthe dectlvc's hand struck some blankets that onveloped stout cases. The\noutfit was taken to the Hull police\nstation ond the hay was removod from\nthe sleigh.   Then tho secret was out\nNeatly piled and carefully wrapped\nwith blankets, tarpaulins, etc., the\npolice found 25 full casee of intoxicating liquors. The cargo consisted\nof soven cases of gin, 18 cases of\nWhiskey, fivo one-gallon cans of high\nwines and eight well-wrapped bottles\nof gin,, tho lot being worth about $500.\nA charge of transporting liquor into\na prohibited area was laid agalns.\nMondoux. Ho furnished ball and was\nallowed his liberty until Friday morning when ho will appear In police\ncourt. Mondoux told the polleo to\nwhom the \"cargo\" wus destined and\nproceedings will be taken against tho\nImporters. Tho Hull police would not\ndivulgo tho names ot the persons to\nwhom tho liquor was consigned ns\nthe BUtnmonBes had not been served.\nMother\u2014Now,. Freddie, at the party\nwhen asked it you'll have something\nyou muat say, \"Yea, thank you,\" and\n. If you don't want It yoii-\u2014\"..\nI Freddie\u2014Don't bother, mar I don't\nexpect to refuse anything,\nTRAIL GIVES\n$1212 TORINO\nWar Loan Commission Goes to Canadian Patrlotlo Fund\u20141142\nApplieanta In All\n(Special to Tho Dally News.)\nTRAIL, B. C, Fob. 2.\u2014Commission\namounting to $1212.44 has been turned\nover to the Trail branch of the Can*\nudlan branch of the Canadian Patriotic\nfund by tho Trail Victory loan committee. This amount was earned by the\ncanvassers during the recent campaign.\nBonds to the amount of $271,400\nwere sold ln Trail and district to 1142\napplicants. The district included\nCastlegar, Columbia Gardens, Frultvale and Waneta. Of this sum $20,160\nwas applied for through the local\nbanks and $3050 represented converted\nmoney, leaving a sum of $248,200 on\nwhich the commission was paid.\nAt % per cent, that amounted tb\n$1241. Local txpe-.ses, which It had\nbeen decided to pay out of that fund,\ncame to $28.56.\nThe Bum of $19.50 was pa'd to the\nWaneta patrotic fund. In ndd't'on to\nthe sum for expenses of $28.66 the sole\nexpenses claimed from headquarters\nwere $30.10 for telephone and printing.\nTherefore the Trail snd district sales\nto the amount of $271,400 were made\nat a total expense of $58 or slightly\nover 2 cents for $100.\nLONDON, ONT., GIRL\nDIES OP INFLUENZA\nLONDON, Ont.\u2014Miss Dnlsy Wiggins, who was a victim of Influenza,\nwas held by her fellow nurses, and\nthoso In authority. Miss Wiggins performed wonderful service at '\"Camp\nCody, New Mexico, during the height\nof the epidemic and later contracted\nthe disease herself, resulting in her\ndeath.\nTho following poem was found in\nthe writing portfolio of Miss Wiggirs,\nbut the author is unknown. It is\nthought that probably sho was the\nauthor:\nThe world grows better year by year,\nBecause   some   nurse   ln   her   little\nsphere,\nPuts  on her   apron   and   grins   and\nsings\nAnd keeps   on   doing   the   samo   old\nthings.\nTaking the temperatures, giving pills,\nTo remedy mankind's numberless ills,\nFeeding the baby, answering bells.\nBeing polite with a heart that rebels.\nLopging for home and all tho while,\nWearing   the   same   old   professional\nsmilo;\nBlessing   the   new-born   babe's   first\nbreath,\nClosing  the  eyes that are glazed  In\ndeath;\nTaking   the   blumo   for the  interne's\nmistakes,\nOh, dear!   what a lot of patienco  It\ntakes;\nGoing off duty at seven o'clock,\nTired, discouraged, Just ready to drop.\nBut called back on special at seven-\nfifteen,\nWith woo In her heart, but it must not\nbee seen;\nMorlnng und evening, noon and night,\nJust doing it over and hoping Its right.\nWhen we lay down our caps and cross\nthe bar,\nOh Lord, will you give us just one\nlittle star, . ,\nTo wear ln our crown with our uniform new,        \"'\nIn that city above, where the Head\nNurso is You?\nLANCASTER PARTY\nENTERTAINS PATIENTS\nVICTORIA.\u2014 A lively entertainment o a quite novel oharact.r was\ngiven for the patients at the Esquimau Military hospital recently by a\nconcert party off H.M.S. Lancaster.\nTho entertainers came in chargo of\nPaymaster Lieut-Commander Stewart,\nLieut. Manning welcoming tho company to tho hospital before turning\nthe proceedings over to tho Incomers.\nThey, for their part, sustained the\nsplendid reputation which had preceded them, and for two hours the audience was carried on the high tide of\nhumor or pathos as found ln song or\nrecitation. Thero were brief moments\nof less emotional delight, us, for Instance, when MIsb Betty Newton and\nMIsb Molly Hlbben, two youthful artists of undoubted talent, danced for\nthe pleased onlookers, the program being further supplemented by other than\nsailor entertainers when Miss Peterson, Miss Watson and Mrs. Macphorson sang.\nThe first sailors- contribution wus\npVovl6Y.ll hy- Leading Petty Officer\nHart, In plerrot dress, who, during\nthe evening, was henrd in a number of\ncomic songs. In welcome succession\nthere followed Petty Officer Jackson,\na singer of merit, the chnlplnln, whose\nmusical monologue, \"The Man With\na Single Hair,\" was decidedly tnnny.\nLeading Stoker Phllllrs. who first revealed himself as a clever vet-trllnqulst\nwith a very smart little mannequin,\nnnd subsequently returned to the stage\non a second turn consisting of some\nrather wonderful tricks with handcuffs,\nand Pte. Burns, a basso.\nPetty Officers Reynolds furnished\nquite the star turn of the eevnlng In\nhis Impersonations ot Bransby Williams as \"Devil May Care\" and 'An\nUnconventional Parson,\" and' wps permitted the only recall during tho entertainment for a sorcaminglngly funny\nparody of \"Alice, Where-Art Thou 7\"\nThe paymaster, after claiming Australian origin, told a few stories which\nrevealed no small gifts oa.raconteur\nand Incidentally threw some sidelight\nbn \"Australian Discipline as I Know\nIt.\" Tho Slok' Bay Steward's singing\nn*____ta______l______________l____\nDress SOS a\u201425 cents\nOPENING OF\nPictorial\nReview\nPattern\nDEPARTMENT\nCO many requests have bent received dur-\n*'-' ing the past from the patrons of our\nstore for ..'\u25a0\u25a0,  \u25a0;.\nPictorial Review Patterns '*\nthat, after thoro. eh investigation of their\nmerits, we have decided to sell Pictorial\nReview  Patterns   from  now on  in  our\nestablishment.\nThe New Hobble Silhouette, Long Waisted\nDresses,   Redingotc   Frocks,   Back   Closing ,\nDresses, Long Narrow Skirts, Skirts Buttoning\nup the Back, Corselet and Cuirass Bodices,\nKimono Blouses, New Shawl and Low Draperies, Bouffant Draperies, the Irregular Tunic,\nCollarless Neck Line and Bell Sleeves for Cr.pe\nde Chine, Tricolcttc, Charmeuse, Cr_pe Meteor,\nSatins, Duvetyn and Satin Duvetyn, Georgette\nCr.pe, Chiffon Velvet, Silk PopUn, Tricotine,\nGabardine, Metal Brocade and Serge are the\nlatest notes in Spring Fashions.\nFebruary   Patterns\nAre on Sale Now, also the\nSPRING   FASHION   BOOK\nof Pictorial Review Patterns\nWe recommend to aU women who are not yet acquainted with the superior merits of thest\npatterns to try one-\u2014JUST ONE.    It will convince them that Pictorial Review Pattern\nfully deserve the reputation they are enjoying all over tbe country. ,*\u25a0\nMEAGHER & CO.\nSTORE FOR STYLE\nSTORE FOR QUALITY\nother of the-contributions to a program which was enjoyed to the point\nof cheers by everyone present. Mrs.\nMacpherson made an excellent accompanist and vocalist, and Petty Officer\nTaylor excellently filled a similar role\nfor the Lancaster entertainment party,\nwhich expressed its appreciation of the\nasistance of the ladles and the small\ndancers by three hearty cheers.\nAfter the singing of the National\nAnthem the whole gathering waB invited to remain for refreshments\nserved by the nursing sisters at the\nhospital, this feature bringing a happy\nevening to a close.\nPROVINCIAL JOURNALI8T\nBACK FROM  GERMANY\nVICTORIA.\u2014His many friends will\nbe delighted to learn that Capt. \"Jack\"\nDnniell, son of Mr. and Mr3. C.\nBampfyldo Daniell, formerly of Michigan street, now of Prince George,\nB. C, has reached England after\nlong imprisonment in Germany. The\nparents have just received a cablegram telling them of their son's safe\narrival on friendly soil, and they are\nnow looking forward to his homecoming.\nOne of the last things of Interest to\nthe outside world which Capt. Daniell\ndid before leaving his prison camp\nat Schweidnitz In Schleslen was\nto bring out a 58-page magazine.\nThose who have followed his career\nknow that Capt. Daniell was making\nrapid headway in the Journalistic and\neditorial field in British Columbia,\nand since he was taken prisoner his\nold taste has asserted itself on several occasions by the compilation of\na prison camp magazine. Also within\nthe last few months ho succeeded in\ngetting possession of an old cinematograph at Trier, and when he left that\ncamp for Schneidnltz he took it with\nhim, where it was much appreciated\nby the prisoners.    Ho was invited to\ngive shows twice weekly at another\ncamp which had French and Russian prisoners of war. His youthful\nspirits do not seem to have suffered\nfrom the confinement too much -aa\nthe relatives have received many\nphotographs of him in costume parte,\nwhich he played tn theatrical entertainments got up among the\nBritish prisoners and those who\nknow him will appreciate his humorous criticism that his \"feet are rather\nlarge for female impersonations while\nhis mouth Ib rather email for the role\nof comedian.\"\nCapt. Daniell went overseas from\nPrince George in the early days of\nthe war and had been a prisoner of war\nfor nearly two years.   \u25a0\nHUBBY SAYS WIFE 18       \u2022**\u25a0-\nMENACE TO  HIS SAFE1 \u2022\nBUTTE.\u2014Alleging that his wife,\nwhom he married 28 years ago, has\nthreatened to do him bodily Injury If\nhe remains in her vicinity, F. G. Mc-\nNeal started divorce proceedings ln\nthe district court against Anna L. McNeill. The couple were married, according to the complaint, on Nov. 13.\n1891. They have threo children all\nover the age of 21 years.\nBOY FIRED BARN SO HE\nCOULD EXTINGUISH FLAMES\nWOODSTOCK, Ont\u2014Leslie West.\nwho confessed to fi.l.ig h.s father's\nbarn, was remanded on a charge of\narson yesterday. According to Constable Hill, to whom the confession was\nmade, West set fire to the barn with\nthe Intention of discovering tt and extinguishing the blaze with renown to\nhimself. It got beyond his control ho\nsaid. H\nBeautiful\nthings are\neveryday things\nnow\u2014\nLook around you. See the large number of dainty silk\nblouses in beautiful tints that are being worn. And the\nquantities of dainty underwear the stores are showing\u2014\nsheerest, most beautiful things you have ever seen. It was\nnot so a few years ago. What has caused the difference?\nCertainly and surely\u2014one big (actor haa been Lux. Women,\nwould not buy these things right along unless there was a\ngentle, sure way of washing them\u2014without discoloring, warping or fading.\nThere is\u2014it's the Lux way. Won't turn silks yellow\u2014won't\nhurt chiffons\u2014won't shrink woollens. Lux won't hurt any- >\nthing that pure water itself may touch.\nLEVER BROTHERS LIMITED, * TORONTO.     .    .\nLUX\ni\u00ab__i__3_^M_a_iB__i\n page \u00abx\nTHE bAILV NEWS!\nMONDAY  FEBRUARY 3, 1919\nCALGARY   MAN   TO  TAKE\nCHARGE  OF TORONTO STRIKE\n{By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nTORONTO, Feb. 2,\u2014Thc latest der\nvelopftients ia the strike of the artificial .limb workers in the department\nof soldiers civil re-establishment here\nare the dismissal by the department of\nFred 'F^rlce, chairman or the strikers'\ncommittee, and the arrival in Toronto\non Satutday of A. Haaelton of Calgary,\npresident'of the amputation section of\nthe (Ji-eat \"War Veterans' association\nand Western orsa:.i\/,er, lo take eh urge\nof thti strike.\n\u25a0F.  MAY  BREAKS   LEG\n\\ WHILE   AT  SKATING  RINK\nF. May, a commercial traveler of\nVancouver',- liroke his right leg in an\naccident at the skating rink Friday\nnight,( Dr. Gilbert Hnrtin wan summoned and gave the man prompt attention, and then took him to the hospital in-' the ambulance; The injured\nmnn'Is stated''to be resting easily and\nthe frtjcture Is not a serious one.\nA Perfect Treatment For This\nDistressing Complaint\nWasiso, Out.\n\"I had an attack of Weeping\nKcicvna; so bad that my clothes\nwould be wet through at times.\nFor fonr months, IsuCTered terribly,\nI could get ne relief until I tried\n'Fruit'-a-tWes and 'Sootha Salva,'\nThe first treatment gave me relief.\nAltogether, I have used three\nboxes of''Sootha Salva' aiid two of\n'Fruit-a-tives', and am entirely well\"\nG.W.HALL.\nBoth these sterling remedies are\nsold by dealers-*. SOc. a box, 6 for\n$2.50, or sent on receipt of price by\nFruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa.\n\"Fruit-a-tives\" is also put up in a\ntrial size which sells for SOc.\nCLASS l LEADS\nE\nDivision   Makes   Percentage   of   96.66\nDuring  Month of Januifry\u2014;Ptipils'*-\nMaking   Perfect  Attendance\nA Load of \"Comfort\"\n~-ill be In your bins, and a load of\ntrouble oft your mind, if you order\ncoal from us. No need to worry as\nto whether It will arrive in time; If\nIt will be an honest -weight; or If\nthe price will be down where It\nshould be.   It will.\nWest Transfer Co.\nPHONE 33.\nFURS\n\u25a0Guaranteed high-class furs, nice\nMTectlote.-kept in stock-or made to\norder from selected .skins. Customers' furs made up, remodelled and\nrepaired. Skins dressed and mounted at moderate prices.- Best price\npaid for raw skins.\nG. GLASER\nManufacturing. Furrier\nWard Street. Nelson, B.C.\nDivision Ii led the Hume school for\nattendance during the month of January. Following: are the , names of\npupils making perfect attendance during tho month:\nDivision 1\u2014Class percentage, iW.titi.\n\u2022\u2014Perfect attendance: Margaret Allen,\nRobert Clerihew, George Faweett, Roy\nFirkins, Harvey Floury, Jean Glen-\ndennlng, George Hancock, Hugh Horswlll, Viola Macbeth, Harold Pike,\n1-iernice Rendell, Joe Rowling, Arthur\nGodfrey.\nDIvlBtoh 2\u2014Percentage, Sli.80.-Perfect attendance: Kennt'th Campbell,\nGeorge Gillett, Percy -Hawe.*., Rose\nUartwlg, Doris Jerome, Evelyn Mc-\nICim, Lewis Nelson, Walter I'nolo,\nGordon Roynon, .Marjorle Stobo, Alfred Saunders, Orrln Si, Denis, Cameron St. Denis,\nDivision   3\u2014-Class   percentage,   82.1-1.\nPerfect attendance; JMarjork. Drant,\n.lack Firkins. John Kleury, Norman\nLiaur.ltz, William l.ee, Theodore Meln-\ntyre, Bllzeb'eth M'idtlU'ton, Robert\nMUburn, Violet Howling, Lillian\nSmith. Dorothy Smith, Robert St.\nDenis.    *\nDivision -I.\u2014Percentage :-.S.2t!.\u2014I-er-\nfect attendance: Alvln Halcom, Norman Faweett, Morris French, Ruth\nHancock, Cyril Hr.wes, Ruysi-l French,\nDouglas Rendall, Amy Walker.\nDivision r-.\u2014-Percentage, 83%.\u2014Perfect attendance: SUap Balcpm, Thomas\nBlshdpj Beatrice French, Charley Mc-\nLean, John Nelson, l^ottio Nelson,\nMnry Roynon, Hazel \u2022 Shacklpton, Edward SlumieUnv, Mora SkllUcorn,\nSadie .Smith. .Tames Sutherland, Flor-\ne Treglllls, Dorothy Vyse, Eileen\nWVlior, Harvey Weber.\nH. HANSON GIVEN\nWHY M WOMEN\nWhen There is Such a Remedy _ or Their Ills as Lydia\nE. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound?\nMishawaka, Ind.\u2014\"I had such a\nsevere female weakness that I could\nI not do my work and\nI could not get anything to relieve me.\nA physician treated\nme, but it did no\ngood. I had been in\nthis condition fot\nthree months when I\nbegan taking Lydia\nE. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound\n(tablet form) and\n,,!t cured me. I\nilkeep house and am\nable to do my Work now. I certainly\npraise your medicine.\"\u2014Mrs. Suda\nOldpather, 648 West Second-Street,\nMishawaka, Ind.\nWomen who suffer from such ailments\nshould'not continue to'drag around ond\ndo their work under such conditions, but\nprofit by the experience of Mrs. Old-\nfather and thousands of others who have\ntried this famous root and herb remedy,\nLydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and found relief from such suffering. If complications exist writo the\nLydia E. Pinkhom Medicine Co., Lynn,\nMass. The result of their 40 years'\nexperience in advising women on this\nsubject is at your service.\nMany 54th  Battalion Veterans Attend\ni :   Funeral of Soldier Who bled  ,\nat Sanitarium\nH. O. Hanson, who died ill Balfour\nsanitarium on Friday, was burled with\nmilitary honors in tlie Nelson cemetery. The burieal service at St. Saviour's church was conducted by Rev.\nF. H. Graham, and Rev. E. P. Hughes\nof Balfour officiated at the graveside.\nThe pallbearers, who were all of the\nG4th battalion, to which deceased belonged were: W. Puseoe, W. 11. Mc-\nPhe.Ron, A. Smith, W. Jasper, A. C.\nDee and W. Holmes.\nAfter the casket had been lowered into the grave a firing party fired the\n\"lust shot\"; Bugler S, Langill sounded\nthe \"Last Post,\" ami Drummer I. McDonald played the drums.\nThose in the firing' party wero seven\noriginal 5_th men und the others were\nfrom British Columbia battalions, The\nparty, which was In charge of D. O.\nThomas, consisted of T. Dolphin, A.\nPainting', F. Moore, S. Bpstock, G, Morris, C. H. Robinson, A, Bartholomew\nnnd D. Danielson.\nBalfour sanitarium, was represented,\nby Capt. G. E. Shaw, and tho ladies of\ntha Grout War Veterans' Association\nauxiliary wore represented by Mrs.\nCobbet Airs. Bangui, Mrs. McDonald,\nMiss McDonald Mrs. Gu'tji'io. Mrs.\nLtmdy, Mis. Barbour, Mrs. Goucher,\n.Miss Webster' Mrs. Rowling, Miss Hop-\nwood, Miss L. Hopwood, Mrs. Durham,\niyid Mrs. Shaw. There wero also a\nlarge number of other veterans present. Wreaths wero sent by tho following: The family, Mr. und Mrs. J.\nAnderson and Mrs. Kemball of Kaslo,\nMr apd Mrs. H. Amas and family, Sir.\nand Mrs. F. Goucher, Mr. and Mrs. J.\nJohnson and family, Mr. and Mrs. Mar-\ncpiis and family, the patients of Balfour sanitarium,'the Nelson branch G.\nW. A., tho Ladies' Auxiliary G. W. A.,\nKaslo Great War Veterans, and Kaslo\nbranch Red Cross society, .\nNELSON NEWSOF THE DAY\nFernle draft beer at Club hotel. BlE\nBchooner lOo. - r (1030>\nFor sale or service, two thoroughbred boars. ' White Yorkshires and\nDuroek Jerseys.\u2014Ma radon, Taffhum.\nNelsun Rod and Gun Club, instituted\n.for the greater increase and protection\nof fish and.game, will meet Monday,\nFeb. 3, at. -8 p.m., iii board of trade\nrooma. Your asaistance, advice and\nattendance at \u2022meeting is requested.~-\nA. M. 1-mick,-Secretary. :(13r.l)\nThe deferred annual meeting of the\nBoy Stout association will be held In\nJudge Forin's office on Monday, Feb.\n3, at '5 ].,m, Alt persons interested will\nbe welcome. (1359)\nA  meeting of lite  creditors  of the\nKootenay  Gold   Mines,  Ltd.,  will   bo\nheld   at W.  It, Allen's   office,   \"Ward\nstreot, Monday afternoon at 4 o'clock.\nJ. J. MALOXE,  Liri.tidator.\n(KIT.-.)\nThe annual meeting of the Womens\nHoslJltai Aid -will bo held in Y.M.C.A.\nthis afternoon at 3 o'elock. ...taction\nof officers. (13.-...)\nMrs. Footo's Circle of Trinity\nMethodist church will hold a \"music-\nale\" and tea on Tuesday, Feb. \u2022!, nt\nthe home of Mrs. N. It. Kalll...' ,._..!\nVictoria  street. **(13SG.\nThe regular meeting of the W. C.\nT. IT. will be held in the \"Y.\" Tuesday\nafternoon, 3 o'clock. Please remember the soldiers ''Cocoa\" fund. Ono\nmorfe chance to help-the boys overseas.\n(i.iii()>.\nbEN.JOHNSON. VICTIM\nOF INFLUENZA, BURIED\nBen Johnson, who dlod in the emergency hospital of influenza, after com-\n!np down from the Molly Gibson mine\nfor treatment, was burled lii the Nelson cemetery on Saturday. The funeral was under the auspices of the\nNels'in Miners' union, The services at\nthe Standard undertaking parlors and\nat the cemetery were conducted by\nRov. D. T. McCHntock.\nThe rallbearers wero: Axel Gustafson. W. Jordan] F. C. William, Gus\nJohnson. Siguard Sorenson and Nels\nr.e;-..on.\nTwo wreaths wore sent by the crew\nof the mine.\nSASKATCHEWAN TO PAY\nPART COST OF BUILDINGS\n(By Dally News Leased Wiro.)\nREGINA, Sask., Feb. 2.\u2014One-third\nof the eost of buildings of each of the\ntwo cooperative stockyards at Prince\nAlbert and Moose Jaw will be borne\nhy tlie Saskatchewan government in\nthe form of a grant to be paid when\nsufficient capital has been subscribed\nto pay for the site and two-thirds of\nthe eost ,of the works. The capital\nstock of each company is to be |100,-\n000 in shares of ?100 each.\nTho  Ontario government will close\nup all private labor agencies.\nSome   apartments   are   more   apart\nthan  others.\nSHUBERT\"WAHTS f|\nALL THE BEAVER>,M\nYOU CAN SHIP ,__\n\u25a0__^2*^:\/\nBEAVER\nMUSKRAT\nWINTER\nFALL\nHEAVY\nFURRED. CASED\nWOLFor\nCWOTE as\nN?I.EXTRA LARGE\nEXTRA 10 AVERAfiC\n30.00io 25.00\n3.00.O 2.50\n130(o 1.90\nN5I.EKTRAIARC.\nl.Tfl.T- AVEHAGE\n30.001*24.00\n\u25a0 i\n22.00tol8.0O\nK?I.UR6E\nE.THATO AVERAGE\n22.00tol8.00\n2__5to 1.75\n1.80to 1.60\nN= I. LARGE\nEXTRA TO AVERAGE\n22.00lo 18.00\n16.00lol4.00\nN.I.HEDIUH I  NHSMALL\nEXTRA TO AVEMO* | LKTRA TO AVERAOt\n16.00to 12.00\n1.60(o 1.30\n1.50lo U0\nN-.I.HED.UM\nETTHA TO AVERAGE\n16.00(014.00\n12.00tol0.00\n10.00(0 8.00|\n1.10(0  .90'\n1.00to M\nN-I.SMALL\nCTTRHTQ AVERAGE\nI2.00IO 10.00\n9.00(o 7.00\nN?2      I     N\u00bb3\n!-T05IEE.0m-*V|>8TpSIZEgQUAUTV\n10.00(0 5.00\nLOOio   .75.\n.85(0  .60\nN\u00b02\nASTOSIKOQUAUTYl\n12.00to 6.00\n9.00IO 5.00\n4.00to 2.50\n.50(0  .40\n.35(0 25\nN9 3\nA3T3S_r8*UAUTY\n3.00to 2.00\n2.00(0 1.50\nj TO 5^E 6 QUA-TV\n2.00to 1.00\nSHOT.DSMAGEB\nAND KITTS\nAT HIGHEST\nHAtlKET VALUE\nTHESE\nEXTREMELY^\nHIGH PRICES\nQU0TE0FOR\nIMMEDIATE]\nSHIPMENT\nFor more thai, thirty-five yean \"SHUBERT\" has been _!v'n_ Fur Shippers an honest and liberal uaortmant\u2014paylns the highest martc\u00abt\narieas\u2014seadina r-turas ent promptly\u2014randerini \"hotter .er\u00bbice\"~-\"qBieker.\" No license Is required to ship Canadian Raw Furs from\nany part of Canada to \"SHUBERT.\" Shipments valued at more than $100 must be marked \"GENERAL IMPORT LICENSE PB F 30.\"\n\"SHUBERT\" Wants British Columbia Furs-All Yen Can Ship\nA \"SHUBERT TAC ENVELOPE\" on your shipment m_ans.\"moro money\"\n.  .v...-, loryour lui_-\"<Iol__er''--'U.b<.taj_.p\u00ab>mpt(>it SERVICE hi On world.\"\n'\"-:\/'\u2022  GET A SHIPMENT OFF TODAY   .\n\" Urn It No My m\na,- o \u2022 SH\u00a5'iEi:i,iiifiv\/ici\n^w        JiTjTil   HOUil   :.'<  THL   IVOP:i>   DEALING   \u00a3 Xl LU. \/VELY\"  I r\\P -\nAME RICAN_RAW    F=UR.S\n> s    \">''  W Ait-.' iii.  Ave.\nl.i'iST\u2014lilfick Silk Handbag Siitur-\ntlay, prohably on Vornon Htroet, con-\n'iilncil $4 and vanity e;iiw. Ri'....r.l.\u2014\nMiss  Laslett, c.o. General Hospital.\n(138\u00bb)\nMr. anil Mrs. Frank Hanson wish to\nthank the many frlenils foi*-their kindness and sympathy shown them in\ntheir recent bereavement; nlso to all\ntliose   who  sent  flowers. (1391)\nWILLIAM   CARSTUK   OF\nMOLLY  GIBSON   BURIED\nWilliam Cart-tuck, one of the employees of (he Molly Gibson mine, who!\ntiled in Nelson shortly aftor being'\nbrought to the hospital here, wns buried on Saturday afternoon. Rev. Fathom Althoff officiated a- tho services\nat the Standard parlors and at the\ngraveside. The funeral , waa1 under\nthe auspices of thj. Miners' union.\nThose who acted as ;po(llbearers\nwere: John Kelson, P. Allen, Andrew\nI'orliiKiuette, Nell McEachern, Sam\nGriffiths and Charles Richards,\nWreaths were sent by the following!\nNap Malletto. two wreaths from the\ncr.w of the'Molly.jGlbson mine.\nWANTED -i-j Six-Horse    Teamster.\u2014\nKootenay  Sh'nglb Co..  Ltd.,'Salino,\nB.C. (137C)\nFOIt SAT.ii^ciooiT\" tiu'ifty Ptes; 7\nweeks old; i*6 eaclv f.o.b. Ainswot'lh.\n-A. T. Sherraden.  '  '.(-1370)\nNO  NEW CASES  OF  FLU\nAT  BALFOUR  8ANITARIUM\nNo new cases bf lnfhuicnzn havo\nappeared- at the Ball'our sanitarium\nduring ;the last 'two. weeks, reports\nF. .1. Kenny, acting medical superintendent, in the aliscence of Capt, B. __.\nOlson, who has been at tbe coast.\nTho influenza epidemic there Is\ngradually lessening! and only four patients are 111 at the present time.\nDuring the epidemic six deaths occurred among the soldiers, four of\nthese were advanced cases of tuberculosis. The remaining two deaths\nwero due wholly to .tuberculosis.\n1919\nNo-flash from the rusting Runs;\nNo rifle lights the plain;\nNo clotted crimson riven runs\nFrom Flanders to Lorraine;\nThe whit! .year dawns above the hosts\nBeyond the last red flare,\nSavo for tea million drifting ghosts,\nWho neither know nor care.\nHow quiet now the lost -trench socrhB,\nHow still across the fold,\nWhere  lately    through    our    broken,\ndreams\nTho mighty thunder rolled;\nWhere   thorugh  our  restless,   shaken\nsleep\nWo henrd tho big shells sing.\nOr saw at dawn lho long line lenp\nTo takt Its final fling.\nCan It be that nt last the rod\nHas brought Its final lash?\nWhere no more out the bloody sod\nA bayonet shell flash?\nOr crtn some white dawn know nt last\nThe final charge Is through,\nWith flames or war forever past\nWhore life and love are due?\nCan It he down the world we mny\nWake up at last to know\nTho soft white dawn, of some lost day\nWo dreamed of long ago?\nWhere   with    tho   ghostly    shadows\nblown\nSoft arms onco more Bhall hold their\nown\nAcross the silent night?\nToday      storming van-ruard leaps\nTo leave its share of slain:\nAt dawn no rolling thunder sweeps    '\u25a0\nFrom Flanders .to *_o'rralne;\nThe \u25a0white year breaks ntrainst the sky\nBeyond the last red flare,\nSave where ten million ghosts drift by\nWho neither know.nor caro.\nPOLICE CATCH MAN WHO\nPUT ACR088 BOOZE DEAL\n(Bv Dally Now\u00bb Leased Wire.)\nVANCOUVER, Bl'C.,.:Feb. 2.\u2014Arrested as ho stepped froin(tho steamer\nPrince George Saturday -light, Alexander Johnson, alleged to have defrauded two women in tho *a'e of n\nbarrel supposed to contain wh'sky at\nFrlnoe Rupart, la held for tha Prlnoa\nCONDENSED ADVERTISING RATES\nOne.Insertion, per word .........   l.i;\nMinimum charge  Hob\nSix   consecutive    insertions,   per .\nword, paid ln advance    4c\nTwenty-six consecutive insertions\n(one month) per word, paid In\nadvance  15o\nNelson News of tho Day Column\nper word each insertion ........   So\nMinimum charge per Insertion,. 25c\nBlack face type, per'word, eaoh Insertion .........................   8c\n(n black face capitals, per word,\nper Insertion    4o\nSingle   line   black   lace   capitals,\nused as heading  20c\nBirths, one Insertion ............. SOc\nMarriages, one insertion, up to five\nlines ',....,...      COo\nAdditional lines, per line   10c\nDeaths;  ono  insert Ion,up  to five\nlines  50c\nAdditional lines, per line ...... IOC\n.ard of thanks, one Insertion, up\nto f'vo lines*  50c\nAdditional lines, per line   10c\nEach subsequent insertion 25c\nDeath and Funeral Notice  J1.00\nAll condensed advertisements' are\n:ash In advance.\nln computing the number of words\nin a classified or Nelson News of the\nDay advertisement count each word,\nlollar morlc, abbreviation, initial letter\ntnd figure as one word.\nAdvertisers are reminded that It la\njontrary to tho provisions of the pos*.\ntal laws to have letters addressed to\nInitials only; therefore any advertiser\nlestrous of concealing his or her Identity may use a box at this office without any exti'a charge If replies ore\ncalled for; If replies are to be malted\nto advertisers, allow 10 cents extra in\niddltlon to. price of advertisement .to\noay postage.\t\n'*\u2022\u2022'     POULTRY -\\Np EflOS :\n'FOR    SALE^-Wlilto    I'eldn    Drake;\nfirst prize at poultry Bhow in December;     price     .5.\u2014Frank    Thbi-pe,\nNew Dejivcr.   .      ,....'->      (1381)\n.10, . .' MALE   HELP   WANTED\nWi\\ NTED\u2014Ten   piecemakers  to  Cu*\nFence    Posts     and     Poles.\u2014Salm*\u00bb\nCe'dar Co., Parks Siding, B.(.\\     (1081-\nWANTED\u2014Man-led Couple, no children, to work on ranch; man must\nbe first-class teamster; woman to do\nhousework and cooking.\u2014Apply Box-\n1208, Dally News. ' (1208)'\n33    FRUITS AND\"VEGETABLES\nWll.b PAY CASH for Two Carloads\nbf Potatoes,   Fiv    Tons  Parsnips.\u2014\nMcDonald Jam Co.  (.1342)\n32*       FOR   SAI_E~OR* RENT\nF01^S^Mn^Or..\\Vlll\"ii;);'-hongc   .or\ngood Ranch Horse, Milk Cow, seven\nyears- old;    freshen    in   Miiy.\u2014T.   J.\nOliver. Gray Creek,  B.C. (1313)\nFOR SALE\u2014Eggs and Baby Chicks.\nEggs: Beds, Leghorns, B. Rocks,\nWyandottes -in quantity. Egg Settings:' Anconas, Reds, Orpingtons,\nBuff and Bluo Leghorns. Chicks;' In\nReds, AYyandottes and Leghorns. Leghorn S. C. cockerels, R. 1. Red 8. C.\ncockerels. Just, a few left. CLASSY\nSTOCK.\u2014Prices, apply, to A. H. Blu-\nmonnuor, New Denver, B.C.'      (1388)\nHIOH Grade R. C. Rhode Island Red\n\u25a0  Cockerels   for   Sale;   heavy winter\nlaying strain.\u2014C. G-. Bennett, Creston.\n(.1351)\nA' FEW   BARRED  \"ROCK    COCKERELS FOR SALE\u2014Fino birds; $4\neach.\u2014Robt. Hendricks, Kaslo, B.C.\n..:\u25a0...        (1233)\nCHICKS  AND EGGS FOR HATCHING IN SEASON*-Whltc Leghorns.\n\u2014Crown Hlil -Poultry FrtrthV Bnlfour.\n...       .     .    (12S0)\ntS^SJTUATJOl^^\nWIDOW,  with   three  boys,  wishes a\nPosition as Housekeeper on.ranch lu\nB.'C; m-tir school;, hoys aide to milk\nand do chores.\u2014Box 1320, Daily News.\n._\u2014_____ <'320>\nWANTED\u2014One  good  Four  Hundred\nEgg Incubator.\u2014ApDlcton, Proctor.\n' : ' .. (123S)\nLIVESTOCK  FOR  8ALE\nFOIt    SALE\u2014aood^A^shlre   . fcowB\nrreshens February 1-3;\u2014Apply 3. M\nMclfay, Balfour, B.C. (l8S2J_\nFOB SAM---AT\"good SoiMlo Horse!\nalso broke. to harness.\u2014Apply. 521\nGore street. (1339]\nTHraTSir^uyin.MrtiTor^i'iQ^\nfurniture,-stoves; 406 Vernon; Ph. 66ll\n(ll-tlf\n'\"'-XN'FE'ir'Tifi'^^\nFruit Farm or Hay and Stock Ranch,]\nwith stock and.tools to work same.--.\nE. W. Fowler, Box 775. Trail, B.O.   ,\n(1.84)1\n48\n^PERSONAL\"\nADVICE ON'LOVE OR BUSINESS-1\n50c,   with   birth   date.\u20141405   Malnt\nstreet, Buffalo, New York, D. J. Bus* I\nsell.  (1116)1\n13\nARTICLE8  FOR  8ALE\nFOR SALE\u2014During the \"next\"few 1\ndaj'B, Bed Clothing, Rugs, Kltcheri f\nUtensils, Preserved Fruit, Carpenter's 1\nTool.*\u2014cutlet's Salo Room, Annable |\nBlock. -   (1310)'\nSPECIAL\u2014Alter Chrlstmus  Prices.\u2014\nMetropolitnn Opernphone, cablne* I\nsize, S30; Elgin .Watch, 25-yoar case,\n(12.50. Many other bargains. Send\nfor catalogue.\u2014Wholesale Ttttiil Deal-.\nera Supply Co',, 12C9 Granville Street\nVancouver, B.C. (1072)\n14 FURNISHED ROOMS TO RENT\nFOR,   UENT-.(Jui!   Fui-nisKed   Three-\nRoom Suite.\u2014Kerr lilotk.        (H'Su)\nFOR    RENT\u2014Cleat.   Well   \"Furnished\nFour-Room Suite.\u2014507 Silica street.\n03.3)\nFDR RENT\u2014 Ku.nial.txi Housukeepins\nRooms;   58 per monlh.\u2014Over Poole\nDrug. (1330)\nFURNISHED     SUITE\u2014All    convchi-\nences.\u2014Campbell's Art  Studio,  715\nBaker. (1164)\nCLEAN, Comfortable Rooms for Men';\ncentral location; hot and cold shower\nbaths.     Rates   moderate.     Y.M.C.A.,\nStanley and Victoria. (1121)\nFOR RENT\u2014In Annable block, single\nrooms, two room suites.       .   (1.1221\n24   BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nWANTED\u2014Contractor to eUt-aml deliver on-railway 160 thousand posts.\n\u2014For pnrt'lculars apply Box 1209, Daily\nNows; \u2022 C12B9)\n16\nROOM  AND   BOARD\nHIGH   SCHOOL   G_RL Wnnts   Room\nand Board in return for services; no\nchildren    preferred.\u2014Apply    Box    63,\nTrail, B.C. (1353)\n42\n. MATRIMONY\nMARRY\u2014Many, rich. Particulars free.\n\u2014F.   Morrison,   L3052   W.   Holden,\nSeattle, Wash. (1124)\n32  MISCELLANEOUS\u2014WANTED\nWANT\"Ei*i-\"3l\"Td^\nDally News or Phone 247X.    (1871)\n11     FEMA'Lfe   HELP*'WANTE\"D    ,\ni'EA'c'iif'wT'i'i^f\".\"^^ :\nteed for three years.   Knit urgently\nneeded, socks for us on the fast, simple ;\nAuto-knltt'er.   _-'u*ll particulars today*,'\nSo. stamp.\u2014Auto-Knitter   Co., -jpopt.\n82C, C07 Collego street. Toronto. (1152)\nWANTED\u2014Giii for General  Housework.\u2014413 Carbonate street or Box'\n134.       - (1S10)\n23\"\"\"PROPERTY FOR SALE\"7\"\nl-vm^ALE'^Jo Acr.s^.-irr_a~T*an3\nvery cheap for quick sale; good\nhouse and. outbuildings; %' mile from\nstation, (...ullly, Moyie Valley.\u2014Apply\nto W. Fnhroukrog, Yahk, B.C.    (1384)\nA SNAP\u2014For Salo. Hotel and Store;\n\u25a0 a splendid opening for married\ncouple: good reasons for selling..\u2014\nApply Box 1807, Dally News.     (1807)\n35\n\"FOR  SALE\"\nWANTED\u2014Sixteen or Seventeen Foot\nCedar    Canoe    in    good    condition;\nmust   bo   cheap. for   cash.-rChnrles\nArcher, Kaslo. (1380)\nWA NTED\u20143000-7b.      Motor     Truck;\nmust  be  in   first  class  condition.'\u2014\nApply Box 1383 Dally News. (13S3)\n43\" HOTELS   \u201e_^,to_~\nMONTANA HtlTi-LTWMLTlmrilewi\ntaken over by new management;\nfirst class board; rooms have .been\ncleaned.and all Hew fixtures put In;\nwo cater to the working' -'man; rate\n$37.50 per month. (1387)\nFOR \"SAI*l_---l!ttnch7\"'l. acres,  partly\nImproved;   fenced and cross fenced I\nfor  c'ow   pasture;   cosy   four-roomed\nnew  house,  furnished;  cow barn for j\nthree or four cows; pig houses* good |\nwarm poultry houses;  all ranch  implements; forty fruit trees, apples and\nsweet   cherries;   sunny   location- and\nr.ood frontage on Granite road, three\nmiles from'Nelson;  cause for selling,\nrecent death of my husband.---For full\npurticulnrsi apply Mrs.  E.  R.  Clark,\nGranite  Road, f.O.  Box 377;'' Nelson,\nB.C.       ^_     \" (1315)\n29      \"LOST  AND   FOUND\"\"\"\"\"\"-\nWIL!.. the person who took the tennis j\nracquet arid books front 619  Silica]\nplease return same to The Daily News.1\n' (1*63) I\nPORTABLlS   -*Swmnr7a7___oiy^0,0001\nand    up,    waits    sawing    chance;\nnothing  but fair sized Job and. good |\ntimber considered.\u2014Apply   Box   1362,-\nDaily News. (1362)\nHOSPITALS\nftlrtfte  Hospital\nLICEN8ED BY PROVINCIAL\nGOVERNMENT.\n\u25a0 We give particular attention to all\nfemale' trouble\u2014home-like apartments\nfor ladles awaiting acouchmetit. Certified nurses sent out on .private cases,\ntown or country. Highest references;\nreasonable  torms,   inspection  invited.\nMra. Moore, Superintendent.\nTHE   HOME  PRIVATE   H08PITAL,\nFalli and Baker Sts., Nalaon, B.C.\nPhone 372 for Appointment.\nP. O. Box 772..\n(1M\u00ab)\naccountants\nwTT-TTaTdTncC\nPublic Accountant, Bank of Montreal\nChambers, Rossland, B.C.\n(1127)\nJ. H. LAWRENCE,\nAeoountant, Etc\nRoyal Bank Building, Nelson, B.C.\n'           (1128)\nBUSINESS COLLEGES,\nNELSON    BUSINESS     COLLEGE\u2014\nDay and  night classes.    Complete\nbusiness course.\u2014Apply P.O. Box 746.\n; . .    (ii29)\nFUNERAL. DIRECTOR-'.\nD. J. ROBERTSON, I.'. D. D. & E., 303\nVictoria streot.    Phono  292;   night\nphone 157-L     < (1130)\n*\u2022   .J A88AYERS.\t\n*_fw. wroDOwsoNfijox .\u00bbt-ifo_,\"N_i-\nson, B.C. Standard western charges.\n(1131)\nFLORI8T8.\nGRIZZELLE'S GREENHOUSES, Nelson.   Cut flowers and floral designs.\n :  , _jiiS2)\n<*?\n&\nENGINEERS.\n$TOS.,Bur<fe0\nNalaon, B.C.\nV\nCIVIL  AND   MINING   ENGINEERS,\nB.C., Alberta and Dominion*\nLAND SURVEYORS\nCrown Grant Agenta,      Blue Printing.\n(1133)\nA. L. McCULLOCH,\nHydraulio Engineer,\nProvincial   Land  Surveyor,\nBaker St., Nelson, B.C.\n(1134)\nA.   D,   NASH,\nMining Engineer,\nConsultations,  Explorations, Development Reports. -\nRoom 2, Royal Bank Bldg., Nelson.\n(1185)\nGEARY & JOHNSTONE,\nMining   and   Metallurgical   Engineara.\nConsultation,   Examinations,   Reports,\nEstimates, Design of Mining and\nMetallurgical Plants.\nAberdeen Building, Nelson, B.C.\nTelephone 103. (1167)\nPHYSICIAN8 AND SURGEONS\nDr. A.T.Spankl\u00a9 J\nM.D., CM.\nEye, Nose, Ear and Throat\nSpecialiat\nOffice:   Suite   121*122   New   P. \u25a0\nBurns Building, corner 8th Ave.\nand 2nd Street E\u201e Calgary.\nPhones:   Office,   M2S48; Houae, \u25a0\nM2077.\nInterne   and   House -Surgeon. '.\nI   Manhattan Eye, Ear, Nose 'and..\nThroat Hospital, Now York City, \u25a0\n1911-14.    Specialist  to  Calgary r\nSchool Board,    (lilt) \u00a3\nj_ai_____>\u00abK__a_Ha_aaVH_BBDf__i\nWHOLESALE.\nA, i MACDONALD :&i CO., WHOLE-1\nsale Grocers and Provision Mer-f\nchants. Importers of Teas, .Coffees,\nSpices, Dried Fruits, Staple anil\nFancy Groceries, Tobaccos, Cigars,\nButter, Eggs, Cheese and Packing\nHouse Products. Office and warehouse,\ncorner of Front and Hall streets. P.p.\nbox 1096; telephones 28 and 23. (1137)\nAUCTIONEERS.\nC. A. WATERMAN & CO., Opera Bile.\n(ii8B)\nWM. CUTLER, AUCTIONEER.    Bca\n474; Phone 77. (Ull)\nAlbert .police. Tho barrel was. arranged' with a container of small volumo\nwhich contained spirits, tho, remainder\nof the barrel space being given over\nto'water. The prlco cxactod was $1486\nand the amount of whisky which was\nreally bought was sold at the rate of\n$11,840 a gallon. Johnson denies ho Is\nthe mar. wanted.\nLADVSMITH BOY AFTER\nWORLD'S CHAMPIONSHIP\nLADYSMITH.\u2014The Tacoma papers\ncontain leuRthy aocountsof tho pugilistic achievements of Harold Jones\nand liis brother, 'Morgan, sons of Morgan Jones, a f6mer.''___-i*f'l_ut of .'this\ncity.' .    \". \u25a0    ' ' i\nThe Jones 'family left Ladysmith'\nabout five yoars ago, und Harold en\ntered a law office in Vancouver with\nthe'intention of becoming a barrister.\nLater he joined his family at Tacoma,\nand''during the past two- years has\nbeen taking aii active part ln athletic\nsports, particularly ln the manly art\nof self defense. So rapid has been\nhis progress that now at the age ot\n21 years he has become the lightweight\nchampion of the Pacific coast, having\nwon 14 decisions during tho past year.\n-Harold Is booked to fight Benny Leonard, tho lightweight champion of the\nworld, somo time next month.\nThe  boy,  not  being  satisfied   wllh\nthis, exclaimed:\nI*i_a'se, .air, mother .want?\" 'to:' ltno*. \u25a0\nwhat you will give her to spread 'em\narotind tho town 7 My sister's got\ncm awful.\"\nENTERPRISE\nA small boy entered the office of]\na doctor the other day and, on- catch-I\ning sight of the doctor he whispered]\nquietly into his ear:\n\"Please, sir, mother wnnts to knowj\nis1 measles catching?\"\n\"Toll your mother of course they!\narc,\" replied the doctor.\nTpoUlctoJJI^\n$1500\"rdomvTmkT*reoTl6obTa^\n, of years at\" 8 per cent., secures tout\nlots with two houses renting at $20\npor month each, giving a net profit\not 1'MO (peir 'VMt- wheri \"fees! and expenses are paid. Look this up. Trail la\non tho eve of -big developments. Oeorgi\nHlndlo, Box 812, Trail, B. C.      (13D2)\n g-^-g\n\/\/\u2022?\nMONDAY FEBRUARY 3, 1919\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nMac Hvnr*\nBAD TEETH LEAD\nTO DEAD OWNERS\nOne 6f the \"most -t.lkli.ff \"features\ntout the late Colonel Roosevelt was\nteeth. When he smiled he showed\nest ot them. When he made a point\na speech he was accustomed to snap\nem together. They were large,\nlite and..eyen. Yet it, now appears\nit Roosevelt's death was due to a\nleased tooth. The' direct cause ot\nith was a pulmonary embolism, that\nto say a cot ot bipod that was car-\nd through an artery to the lungs,\nlore it stopped circulation. The croon of this clot, however, was due to\ninfected tooth more tha.. 20 years\n.. Through the diseased tooth a\n.levolent organism entered th-. sys-\nmand manifested itself ln various\nys on several occasions. Eventually\ncreated -the blood clot, which carried\n! the greatest of contemporary Am-\ncans when he appeared to be ln his\nrorous prime. This statement Is\nMe. o nthe authority of Henry James\nxtoh, in the Philadelphia Public Led\nger, who uses it as a text to call attention to the great Importance that\nIs now attached to healthy t\u00abeth by.\nmedical authorities .\nSOME AMBITIOUS WILLS\nRAW FURS\nWanted to buy at best market\njrices, Marton, Mink, Lynx, Coyote,\nBeaver, Weasel. Skunk, Fisher, Rat\nand Hear Skins.\nG. GLASER\nManufacturing Furrier\n116 Ward Street, Nelson, B.C.\nPhona 10).\nEASTERN\nMATS  WCAPS\nA lieutenant who was lately killed\nIn Frapce,- tind has been a lawyer\nin civil life, left \u00a3300 to the King,\n\"humbly requesting His Majesty to\napply the same to the reduction of\nthe. national debt.\"\nAn Irishman who left over a hundred thousand pounds to pay off the\ntown's debt had better luck, but as\nho expressed absolute conviction of\nthe Incapacity and Idiocy of the present town council he made it operative in 21 years!'\nQueen Victoria had some large\nlogacies left to her for her private\n..se. but the funniest was a \"pet parrot\" by an old lady with 100 guineas\ni er annum for Its keep! She made\nt e amusing condition that \"Her\nMajesty publicly exhibit it before the\n\u2022court twice a year, to prove that the\nhi i son entrusted with its care has\nn t wrung Its neck.\"\nA. movement to change the name of\nVf iuwstone park, America's greatest\npu'.I.j pleasure ground and game reserve, to Roosevelt park, as a na-\ntlo-.al memorial to Theodore Roosevelt,\nwas started by Mayor Harry Davis\nand leading citizens of Cleveland, Ohio.\nTry\nF-F\nIt Warms \"You\nNelsrn   Brewing\nComp ny* Limited\n,,.,,   ..NELSON. B. C . ... ....\nTHOUGHT IT WAS A BOIL\nDOCTOR  SAID  ABSCE\"8.\nMr. Gleason R. Toting, Klngscroft,\nN.B.. under date ot Feb. 9th, 1918,\nwrites us as follows: \"About five\nmonths ago a lump came on my Jaw-\nhone. I thought It was a boll and after\nIt had been there quite a while It began\nto get larger. I went to a doctor and\nhe said tt was an abscess and lanced\nit. He gave me a' wash for It, so I\nwent by his directions until It healed\nup, but It commenced coming again\nand In about three weeks it broke itself. I thought It would get better\nbut it didn't. A neighbor advised me\nto get a bottle of Burdock Blood Bitters. I sent and got a bottle and by\nthe ttme It was all gone the abscess\nhad disappeared, and now It Is all\nbetter.\"\nBurdock Blood Bitters will heal and\ndry up sores, ulcers and abscesses, no\nmatter how large or of how long standing. If you have never applied It to a\nout, wound, sore or ulcer, just try It\n. and see what soothing, healing, cleansing power It possesses. It takes out\nItching, stinging and burning and promotes the growth of healthy flesh. So,\ntoo, when taken Internally by Its power\nof eliminating all Impurities from the\nblood and making that vital fluid rich,\nj red and pure, It cuts off the origin and\nsource of the foul matter that goes to\n: make bolls, pimples, sores, ulcers, abscesses and the like, and at the same\ntime the purified and enriched blood\ncreates healthy tissue where there was\nj formerly, perhaps, a sore full of pus.\nBurdock Blood Bitters has been on\ni the market for 40 years.   Manufactured\nI only by the T. Milburn Co., Limited,\nI Toronto. Ont.\n\u00bb. \"\u25a0\u25a0....\nNews of Sport\n.***.****\u00bb\u00bb...*... ................ 9 9 .......9..9...*  I\nCANADIENS WIN\n10-0 GAME\nTorontoe Go Down to Defeat With a\nBang When Montrealere\n' Gat Going.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\n.MONTREAL, Feb. ..-Canadlens\nmade a show of Toronto in a scheduled\nfixture of the N. H. I*, at Jubilee rink\nSaturday night, by defeating them by\na score of 10 to 0. Canadiens always\nhad the edge on their opponents ami\nused every man In their club, starting\nthe game with five substitutes and\ntwo regulars. Play was too one-sided\nto be Interesting, Torontos playing like\na lot of schoolboys against seniors.\nCanadlens were at the top of their\nform, notwithstanding the hard gruelling they went through in the overtime\nmatch at Ottawa on Thursday night,\nand started In from the commencement of play to run up a big score.\nThe fast surface suited the Frenchmen\nand they fairly smothered their opponents with speed throughout the\nPlay. Torontos were without Crawford, who for the couple of periods\nmingled with the crowd at the resting\nIntervals, and whon sent on In the\nthird session only remained on the ice\nfor a few minutes, being ot little assistance to his team.\nLine-up:\nCanadiens     Position Toronto\nVezlna   ..J Goal   Lindsay\nCouture    Defense....   Mummery\nLalonde  Defense.' Randall\nCleghorn   Centre  Noble\nPitre Wing   Denenny\nBerlanquette ...Wing  Adams\nSubstitutions\u2014Canadlens: Malone,\nLalonde and Corbeau. Torontos:\nSkinner, Richie and Crawford.\nReferee\u2014Harry Hyland.\nJudge of Play\u2014Jack Marshall.\nSummary.\nFirst period \u2014 Canadiens, Berlan-\nquette, 11:00; Canadlens, Cleghorn,\n1:30; Canadlens, Cleghorn, 4:00; Canadlens, Cleghorn, 1:46; Canadlens;\nPltre, .'50.\nSecond pqrlod\u2014Canadlens, Lalondc,\n8: IB.\nThird period\u2014Canadlens, Berlanquete,\n3:15; Canadlens, Cleghorn ,3:45; Canadiens, Lalonde, 5:15; Canadlens, McDonald, 10:00.\nGAMES CLOSELY\nCONTESTED ATT\n8. R. O. Sign Required Before Saturday Night's Entertainment Started\n\u2014Many  Turned  Away,\nJust  Accusation\nShe, indignantly\u2014\"Here's a man\neays women are Inherently dishonest.'\nHe (tenderly)\u2014Well, aren't they always- Stealing' me'h's peace of mind\nand robbing thom of their hearts.\nse Window\nEnvelopes\nThey Address Themselves\nTHE WINDOW ENVELOPE IS ONE OF THE GREATE8T TIME 8AVERS THAT CAN BE EMPLOYED IN THE MODERN OFFICE OR STORE.\nTHE ADDRE88 OF THE LETTER, 8TATEMENT, BILL OR INVOICE WITHIN SHOWS THROUGH\nTHE WINDOW OF THE ENVELOPE. ALL YOU HAVE TO DO 18 FOLD THE PAPER INSIDE SO\nTHAT THE ADDRE38 8HOW8 THROUGH THE WINDOW IN THE ENVELOPE.\nNO OTHER PRINTING OR WRITING 18 SEEN FROM THE QUTSIDE. NOTHING EXCEPT THE\nADDRESS.\nTo Save Time Is to Save Money\nWindow Envelopes Will Do It for You\nTHEY ARE MADE FROM A GOOD GRADE OF WHITE STOCK AND ARE IN THE NO. 8 SIZE,\nWHICH 18 MOST 8UITABLE FOR GENERAL OFFICE AND STORE U8E.\nWindow Envelopes Make It Impossible to Send a\nLetter or an Account to the Wrong Address\nTHE DAILY N**W8 JOB DEPARTMENT CAN SUPPLY THEM  IN  QUANTITIES FROM 600 TO\nI 20,000.\nII II\" I  \u25a0       BES\nThe Daily News Job Department\n\"THE HOME OF GOOD PRINTING\"\nNRLSON, B. C.\nSaturday night's entertainment at\nthe Y. M. C. A. brought out so large\na crowd that the S. R. O. sign was\nnecessary before 8 o'clock, the time\n.scheduled to start. Later ih the evening several people were turned away\nnot being ab)o to find standing room\noven. Some 40 high school students\nwere present with their blue and white\nribbons to cheer their team to victory.\nThey almost succeeded, too, for the\ngame was as close as could be without\nresulting in a a tie, the score being\n10:9 in favor of t the \"Y\" unemployed\ngirls. Tho close score from start to\nfinsh kept the interest of the audience at high tension nnd the hard\n\u2022vork of the light school team, who\n\u25a0were younger and lighter, kept the\ncrowd with thom throughout the game\nThe line-up was;\nHigh School \u2014 Helen Whltmorc,\nGladys .Jeffs, captain; Mary Moore,\nFreda  Hunter,   Phoebe  Cummins.\n\"Y\" Girls\u2014Olive Bealby, Dorothy\nWhitmore, Lillian Hunter, Charlotte\nNotman, Phyllis \"Whttebread, Eileen.\nLong, captain.\nMiss Katherlne Whltemorc handled\nlho whistle to the satisfaction of all\nexcept her siBters, one of whom played\nen each team. Between the first and\nsecond half of the gamo, Messrs. Mor-\nlis, Notman and Murphy entertained\nthe audience with several tumbling\nspecialties, and mat work. Their Imitation of the British tank and whippet going Into action was specially\nwell received.\nLater in the evening the same three\nwith the addition of Carl Johnson and\nAllan Dill, put on an exhibition of\nparallel bar work, each of the five\nshowing splendid form and finish In\nthe  stunts  demonstrated.\nThe volleyball game at first looked\nlike a walkaway for the business men,\nHunt scoring seven points before the\n\"fl'urvescing intermediates\" got down\nto business.\nThe first game resulted ln a score of\n9-21 for the business men, and In the\nsecond came the Intermediates seemed\nto liavo found themselves and came\nstrong, scoring tho nocessary 21 points,\nwhile the older men were making 11.\nThe teams were:\nBusiness Men\u2014Hunt, Barnes, Will,\nMcHbrdy and Cryderman.\nInturmediates\u2014Notman,- Blanchard,\nDill, Steele, Barton.\nMany persons having exhibited a de-\ni-iro to sec some real Ju jitsu wrestling\ndemonstrated, Physical Director Morris and Arthur Simmons gave exhibitions of several methods used by the\nJapanese in this form of defense. Each\nexhibition was first gone over slowly,\nwhile Fred Roberta pointed out the\nreason for the various, grips and holds\nof ihe wrestlers;; then the work was\ndone quickly, showing the simplicity\nof the defensive movements, and their\ntreat value tu the smaller and lighter\nman,\nThe big event of tlie evening was the\nIntermediate league basketball game\nbetween tlie Bulldogs and the Bears.\nThis was the first gamo in which the\nlearnt* have lined up in their red and\norange jerseys. Like the girls' game,\nthis also was closo, tho score being\n19-lit with but flvo minutes to play\nand both teams going strong. Within\na i:.i:.ute or two it yfna distinctly no\ndceublc that Capt. Simons of the Bears\nwas not ablo to continue the whirlwind\npace he had set and although he\n\\ orked hard, tho Bulldogs managed to\npile up fivo points to tho Bears' twu\nduring the remu.nlng minutes of tlu\ngame.\nFor the Bulldogs Curran distinguished Wmsolf by scoring four baskets\nfrom the field and five free throws,\nWhile Notman, captain, though he\nplayed an excellont game, had four\niOUls\u00ab called on him.\nFor the Bears, Hinton, a substitute,\nand Barton eacli scored six points,\nwhile the penalties wero almost ooual-\n1$ distributed among the\/five players.\nThe teams were:\nBulldogs\u2014Simons, points scored, 5;\nfouls called, 3. Steelo, points scored,\n4; fouls called, 2. Barton, points\nscored, 17; fouls called, 3. Hinton,\npoints, scored, 6; fouls called, 2. Jarvls,\npoints scored, 0;  fouls called, 2.\nBears\u2014Notman, points scored, 5;\nfouls called,, 4. Barnes, potntB scored,\n4; fouls called, 0. Johnson, points\nscored, 2; fouls called, 1. Curran,\npoints scored, 13; fouls called, 1. Cryderman, points scored, 0; foula called,\n1, Macdonald, sub., points scored. 0;\ntouls called, 0.\nHE GOT A RAISE\nA merchant, whllo engaged in the\nofflco tho other morning, discovered\nthat ho had loft his pockotkmfo at\nhome and, as he needed one urgently\nhe asked tho different clerks, but nono\nof them happenod to have ono. Finally\ntho-errand boy walked in and tho merchant asked him. Jimmy handed over\nhis knife.\n\"How is it, Jimmy, that you alone,\nout of my ontlro staff, seem to havo\na pocketknifo with you?\" smllod tho\nproprietor, eyeing Jimmy with undisguised admiration\n\"Dunno, sir,\" replied the youth, \"unless It's becauso my wages are so low\nthat I can't afford more'n one pair of\ntrousers.\"\u2014London Idens,\nA Ctafjrtfiwl A\u00ab' WlU hrln* results.\nAn Outpouring of Values Absolutely\nWithout Precedent of\nLadies' Underskirts\nMONDAY, TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY OF THIS WEEK WE 8HALL PLACE ON SPECIAL\nSALE LADIES' UNDERSKIRTS AT VALUES WHICH ARE MADE POSSIBLE ONLY BY OUR LARGE\nPURCHASING FACILITIES. THESE GARMENTS WERE PURCHASED ONE YEAR AGO AND POSITIVELY CANNNOT BE BOUGHT FROM THE WHOLESALE  HOUSES AT THE  VALUE8 WE ARE\nA8KING FOR THEM   TODAY.\nLADIES' WATERED MOREEN\nUnderskirt\nSpecial Sale A A  JA\nValue    -$\u00a3iH-.J\nFinished with bias pleated and\npintucked flounce, in shades of\nPaddy Green, Wedgewood, Sand\nand Nigger Brown and Navy.\nThis is our leader.\nLADIES' WATERED  MOREEN\nUnderskirt\nSame    quality   with    accordion\npleated flounce, in black only.\nSpecial Sale  .\n.Value     .\n$2.49\nLADIES' MOIRETTE\nUnderskirts\nSpecial Sale Q4  AC\nValue  *P I \u25a0 WW\nIn black only, with flounce edged with blue and green striped\nMolrette. Three only in this line.\nONE   ONLY   LADIES'   BLACK\nSATIN\nUnderskirt\n$5.95\nSpecial Sale\nValue\t\nHeavy  quality  satin.    Size  28.\nThis  is *a snap.\nLADIES'  MOIRETTE\nUnderskirt\nSpecial Sale Ol  DC\nValue    -piiUU\nFinished with accordion pleated\nflounce.  A good everyday underskirt.\nLADIES' WATERED  MOREEN\nUnderskirt\nSpecial  Sale\nValue \t\nFinished with pipings above an\nccordion pleated flounce. In\nshades of Purple, Brown, Wedge-\nwood, Russian, Green, Saxe and\nNavy. A very .high class gar\nment.\nLADIES SATIN\nUnderskirts\n$5.50\nIn shades of old gold, flame and\nochre.    A splendid dress underskirt.\nLADIES' MOIRETE\nUnderskirts\n$1.49\nSpecial Sale\nPrice\t\nIn shade of Brown, Navy   and\nBlack,  Flounce finished in pin-\ntucks and accordion pleats.\n$4.25\nUnderskirt\nSpecial\n$2.95\nLadies'  Black   Satin   Under-\njkirt. Full flounce finish with\naccordion pleats. Two only of\nthis  line.\nLADIES' TAFFETINE\nUnderskirt\nSpecial Sale\nprice \t\n$2.49\nVery fine quality in shades of\nPearl Grey, Navy and Black;\nshirred flounce finished at base\nwith fine frill.?. Special values ln\nthese.\nMail  Us  Your  Order  To ay\u2014Satisfaction  or\nYour Money Back\n| AT   THE   THEATRES |\nSCENE  FOR  METRO  PLAY\nI:i \"A Successful Adventure,\" tho\ndelightful Metro-Comedy drama ln\nwhich charming May Alison is starred\nand which will be seen at the Gem\ntheatre tonight, a masked ball takes\nplace at a yacht club which Is the\nInst word in beauty of setting and costume for a picture production.\nIn this brilliant scene 200 (lancers\nappear in all manner of costumes and\nglittering jewels. All aro muslud until\nthe usual time\u201412 o clock\u2014and then\nthe unmasking takes place, Th s is a\ntimo of ilangcr for the little heroine,\nplayed by Miss Allison, but It all turns\njut for the best and the fun and gaiety\nis fully sustained through tho evening.\n\"A Successful Adventure\" is a play\nparticularly suited to the beautiful\nMetro star and gives full sccpo for her\n.\u2022lever interpretation of the role she\nplays. June Matiils wrote M'ss A11-\nson'snew play and Harry Franklin directed it.\nFriend of ShopUeeper\u2014 That's a nice\njirl you have in your shop. I've seen\ner in the window several days as I\n;.assed.\nShopkeeper (wearily)\u2014Sho isn't an\nmployee. She's n woman trying to\nlecide on a new hat.\nCharles Soil, a miller of Thorndale,\nwas killed through being drawn into\nthe belting of machinery at his plant.\nHe leaves a wife and four daughters.\nEdith is over thirty but\nShe keeps her age well hid;\nThe family Biole's in her trunk\nBeneath tho well-locked lid.\n\"DELUXE ANNIE\"\nAPPEARING   AT   THE STARLAND TODAY.\nCondensed \"Want\" Ads Order\n*\nForm\nUae thia blank on which to write out your cond en... ad., ona word in aaoh apaoa.    Endow money\norder or oheuk and mail direct to Tha Daily Nowa.   Nelson. B.C.\nRata:  One oent a  word aaoh  insertion,  nx  consecutive   inaertioni  charged   aa  four.    Eaoh  Initial,\nfigure, dollar sign, ate, count aa one word.    No ch ar go leaa than 25 canto.\ni                             1\n1                             i\n\u25a0\nt\n|\n,\nIK_*_M...\nImee, for whleh 1 e\nAddreaa ,\u201e,\ntally Newe Office,\nfive worda axtra\nIf deeired, repliee n\nmelled endow 11\n\u00bbay ba addreeoed to Box Numb ere at Tha t\n\u00bb axtra la oover ooat of postage and allow\nf repliee are to ba\ner box numbor.\n WTT^T-Js-i*-\"\u25a0\u25a0'-\u25a0 \u25a0r\n^mWrnwrnwerngmmmt\n.\u201e',,..*'..;.\n\u25a0--\u2022---eaitajaa-aaBa-aw-ajeaiai\nPMIIIOHT\n\u25a0\"\u25a0\"M*********^^\nwiNa.aUAL_.ID FOR QINIRAl UM\n*. t\\ TIERNEY, Qonoral Salea Agent.\nNeleon, B. C.\nOan supplied to all railway polnte.\nValentines\nSELECT\nYOUR   VALENTINE\nEARLY\nWE HAVE A CHOICE STOCK\nON DI8PLAY\nA NEW LINE OF MECHANICAL  NOVELTIE8\n10c to 25c\nCanada Drug & Book Co.\nEDI80N PH0N0QRAPH8\nMall ordere filled promptly.\nPHONE St\nTHE ARK\nFactory Cotton, 32-ln., 18a. tt*.\nIn., 200 and SBS'\/iO. Colored Flannelette, 30c *nd 36c Apron\nGingham, 39-ln., 36c and a)Oo*\nMiddy Cloth, 36c- Men'e Work\nShirto 91.25 Men'e Work Shoee,\n94.00' Tweed Panto, 82.00.\nLumbermen's Rubbers, 93,00\nMen'e Sweaters, S2.00. , Ladiaa'\nSweaters, 94,00 Boys' Sweaters,\n9.1 -BO- Neet Eggs, eaoh, 5c Cupa\nand Saucere, \"4 doz., 91.50.\nPhono 65 L\nJ. W. HOLMES\nMM Vornon St\nFor Quick and Reliable Service\nKerr's Jitney\nThree cars at your convenience; two\nfor passengers and ono for trunks and\nlight express. Guaranteed to please\nyou. Day and Night. Give us a trial.\nPhone 491 Kerr Block\nPrinted\nVisiting\nCards\nbook much neater and mor.\nstylish than the written card\nHaven't you noticed the difference\"\nThe Daily Newa Job department\nwill print the cards tor yourself\nand your husband.\nA NEATLY PRINTED\nCARD CREATES A\nGOOD IMPRESSION\nThe coat la reasonable and th<-\nwork flrat-clas*.\nCall 144 or mall your order to\nTHE      NEWS     PUBLISHING\nCOMPANY, LIMITED,\nNeleon, B. C.\nO OUR modern\nmethods of Optometry the eye\nserves as a mirror\n|n which we can\nlocate exact'y the\ncause of your eye\ntrouble.\nThe designing, making and\nfitting of glasses that will overcome your trouble-is assured.\nJ. O. Patenaude\nSpecialist In Optics\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nFriends Meet Party of Returned Sol-\ndiere at City Wharf\nSaturday Night\nI\nERS HOI\nANNUAL MEETING\nR. V. Ramsden Heads Nolson Improve.\nmont Aeeociation for Year\u2014Other\nOfficers Elected.\nSocial and Personal \u2022\n\u201e\u00ab.\u00ab.,,..,*,*..t,MI..   .\nH. P. Leake of  Spokane   registered\nat the Hume last night.\nJ. H. Allan of Calgary was a guest\nat the Hume last night.\nF. O. Hyde of Lethbrldge registered\nat the Hume laBt night\nO. Preston of Calgary was a guest\nat the Strathcona last night.\nIH. W. Johnstone of Rossland stayed\nat the Strathcona last evening.\nJ.  G.  Burnetts  of Toronto  was\nguest at the Strathcona last night.\nMr. and Mrs. A. E. Pittaway of\nCastlegar arc the guests of W. J.\nSheppard.\nW. A. Jowett of Edgewood left for\nhis home last Friday after spending a\nweek in the city.\nMrs. W. Garland Foster of Balfour\nspent the weekend ln the city as the\nguest of Mrs. J. A. Gibson.\nW. Richardson has returned from\nVancouver, where he attended the\nfuneral of his son-in-law, J. Balder-\nstone.\nI    Dr. W. O. Roso, M.P.P., and Mrs.\n1 Roso  left  on   Friday   for    Victoria!\nwhere Dr. Rose will attend tbe session\nof tbo legislature.\nCorp. G. A. C. -Walley, M.M., and Pte.\nHilton Nagle are expected to return\nfrom the coast tonight, where they\nwent to get their discharge.\nMrs. Whitehead has received a letter\nfrom her son, Richard, who is ln Germany, saying that he has been decorated with the military medal.\nfiE-ft-\nHiss G. Plttbrooko and \"pte. Male\n'were visitors to the city on Saturday.\nPto. Male has recently recovered from\n1 influenza at Balfour sanitarium.\nMany citizens were at the wharf\nSaturday night to greet a party of returned soldiers as they stepped off\nthe Crow boat. Among the homeward\nbound veterans were Gunner John\nWaldlo of Nelson, rte. M. Halko of\nMiohel; Lance-Corp. Twaddle, Ross\nland; Sergt. Powno of Frultvale and\nLieut. G. S. Rae of Rossland..\nGunner Waldle Is a son of Mr. and\nMrs. William Waldle. He enlisted in\nLethbrldge In May, 1916, with the 61st\nbattery. He went overseas in September of the .same year and was sent\nover to France in August, 1917. He\nwas wqunded . on Oct. 10,  1918, after\n14 months active service. After being six weeks In a Red Cross hospital\nIn Ellsmere, Shropshire, England, ho\nwas sent to Epsom, and then wus\ngiven two weeks' leave. When his\nleave expired he was sent into artillery reserve at Camp Borden in Hants.\nHe was then sent to Rhyl, North\nWales, for three, weeks, aCtci- which\nhe sailed on the Aquitanla for Canada.\nGunner Waldle states that the\ntreatment on board ship was very good\nand that the boys were well looked\nafter. He says that the troops got a\nsplendid reception all along tho lino\nIn-Canada. The troop train arrived at\nWinnipeg at 6 o'clock ln the morning.\nNumbers of persons were at the station with coffee and cake, which they\nserved out to the soldiers.\nGunner Waldie will spend leavo at\nhis home here and will leave on Feb,\n15 for Vancouver, where ho will receive his discharge.\nWaa  Solvation Army  Man\nLieut.    Rae    went   overseas    from\nRossland four and a half years ago.\nBefore leaving Rossland he was captain of the Salvation Army there.\nHe was originally a member of tho\n1st British Columbia regiment, but on\nwinning his commission he was gaz\netted to the 6 th battalion of the Royal\nIrish rifles.\nHe was wounded in the leg, but tho\nlimb was saved from amputation by\nthe eminent British surgeon, Sir\nFrederick Eve.\nLieut. Rae says that London was\nvery crowded when he left there, lodgings being almost impossible to obtain. A traveling soldier could secure\na bed for two nights only at Queen\nMary's club. IHo states that there\nwas a great scarcity of fruit for\nChristmas puddings over there, half a\npound of currants being all many\nfamilies could secure.\nSomeone in Rossland sent him a\npackage of layer raisins and he says\nthat there were looked upon as a\ntreasure.\nSergt. Powne Is on his way home to\nFrultvale after two years service overseas. He was a member of the 41st\ncompany, British expeditionary force.\nHe states that the trip on board tho\ntrain from the Atlantic seaboard was\nexcellent and that they wero treated\nexceptionally well by the people of tho\nprairie towns.\nSergt. Powne was a guest at tho\nQueens hotel whllo ln tho city.\nPte. Halko, who was a member 'of\nthe 1st mortar machine gun brigade,\nwent overseas two years ago from\nMichel. He was in action at Hill 70,\nPasschendaelc, and the Somme, and\nwas in the samo brigade as Corp. G.\nA. C. Walley, M.M.\nLance-Corp. Twaddle Is a member\nof the 2nd Canadian Mounted rifles\nand is on his way to his homo in\nRossland after two years active service.\nYou all like a bright sparkling\ndrama,\nHera It la\nMay\nAllison\n\u2014In\u2014\nA Successful\nAdventure\nOTHER REEL8 OF INTERE8T\nMiss Eva Irwin was among those\nwho sang at the entertainment given\nby Mrs. Annable's circle of the Methodist ladies' aid on Friday afternoon.\nSergt. D. McA. Linn, an \"original\nfirst\" of Fernie, who enlisted at Cranbrook ln August, 1914, arrived on the\nCrow boat Saturday enroute to Van\ncouver to visit his parents.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Rogers and son\ncame into the city Saturday from\nGlasgow, Scotland, and intend locating\nin this district. They registered at the\nQueens.\nC. F. MeHardy left yesterday for\nVancouver to attend the conference of\nchairmen of war savings committees in\nvarious parts of the province. James\nAnderson of Trail and G. .A. Latterly\nof Rossland expected to accompany Mr.\nMeHardy.\nMr. and Mrs. Brady of Trail arrived\nln the city by the Crow boat on Saturday from England, where they have\nspent the last five years. Mr. Brady\nstated that he waa glad to get back to\nthe Kootenay. They were guests at\nthe Queens over the weekend.\nWinter Sports\nNow la tha Time to Enjoy the Winter 8eaaon.   Wa Have In Stook\nSKATES,  SKIS,  FLEXIBLE   FLIERS,  HOCKEY   STICKS\nAND PUCKS\nPROMPT ATTENTION TO MAIL ORDERS\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\n; WHOLMALI ANO RETAIL NIL80N, B. C.\nNORMAL AT DURANT\n18 KING'S DESIRE\nHELENA\u2014\"Come .on in, the water's\nfine.\"\nSuch is the attitude of the county\n(l I vision, at b and authors of bills rc-\nlateing to creation of new normal\nschools, according to Don B. King, of\nSilver Bow.\nAnd Representative King has accepted the invitation. He believes that It\nIt is imperative that a normal school\nbe established within the boundaries\nof Silver Bow.\nNormal schools,' however, should be\nlocated ln a rural community, far from\nthe evil Influences and environment of\ncities, according to the fathers of bills\nnow before the house.  ,\nWith this thought in mind, Mr. King\nhas given notice of a bill providing for\nthe establishment of a normal school\nto be located at Durant, Silver Bow\ncounty, Montana.\nSilver Bow county has one fish\nhatchery, located at Columbia gar-\ndons. But since every city In the stato\nis seeking an appropriation providing\nfor the creation of fish hatcheries\nwithin their corporate limits, Mr. King\nbelieves that Butte by virtue of its\nImmense population should \"get ln the\nsylm\" and secure another fish hatchery,\nMany empty pockets are caused hy\nempty heads.\nNelson , Improvement association\nelected the following officers for the\nensuing years at a-meeting held Thursday: .Honorary president, Dr. W. O.\nRose, M. P. P.; honorary vice-president, W. J. Sheppard; second vice-\npresluent, Mr, Wiggs; treasurer. W. Ht\nJpnps; secretary. A. M. Black and assistant secretary, Miss Hurry,\nH. Selous spoke commended the work\nof the retiring president, J. W. Holmes,\nlie Bald that his indomitable energy,\nhis agility to organize, and his elective ability'were what had, broujji.t\nsuch excellent results to the many\nundertakings of the society.\nReference to the good work Mr.\nHolmes had done during the time he\nhad occupied the president's chair, was\nalso made by A. 1.1. Black, W. J. Sheppard, W. H. Wilkinson, R. V. Ramsden, Mr. Wlgga, E. Frost, J. Goulding. Mr. Dnwson, Mr. Keith, A. Jeffs,\nR. G. Joy and others.\nThe president in his address said:\n\"Gentlemen: In summing up the\nyear's affair I think we may safely\ncongratulate ourselves for the success\nof our many efforts. After having\npaid all our bills, wo carry over a nice\ncash balance to start the new year's\nbusiness. The latter part of last year's\nadministration was hampered on account, of the Spanish lnfluezna epidemic. During the epidemic our society\nsuffered a very severe loss through\nthe death pf our esteemed treasurer,\nwho had acted in that capacity since\nthe association's inception. j\nBeneficial Ideas.\nThe association work of tho past\nyear was the means of carrying out\nseveral beneficial Ideas to the city\nof Nelson and our country generally;\nour first one was a sale of flowers\nunder the auspices of the Junior Red\nCroBB society, which realized nearly\n$200. Then we took over the city farm\nfor greater production and had it well\ncultivated and mnny of the growers\nwero rewarded with bumper crops. I\nfeel that I must also mention the generosity of R. P. Green, M. P., and Dr.\nW. O. Rose, M. P, P., who gave us\nhandsome donations for prizes In the\ncultivated vacant lot competition. The\nC, P. R. allowed us to use as many\nvacant lots as possible, cultivated, and\nsomo 35 lots were cleared and planted\nand one citizen was rewarded with 30\nsacks of potatoes off two lots. We\nmust also thank the old tramway com\npany who, through Mr. Appieyard, al\nlowed us to use a number of vacant\nlots.\nThe rose show being \u2022 held at the\ntime of the-irrigation convention, tho\ncity had the best advertising that it\nwas posslblo to procure, tho visitors\ngoing homo to sing our praises for\nyoars to come, of tho beauty of flowers and tho grandeur of our scenery,\nresulting1 In many of the visitors stating they would spend their next summer vacation near Kootenay lake.\n\"In conclusion I must thank nil the\nmembers and officers and especially\nthe horticultural committee for the\nvery ablo assistance given mo during\nthe   year just  closed.\"\nThe   treasurer's   report    showed\nbalance of $50.60,\nThe report of tho committee as read\nby R. V. Ramsden, was as follows:\n\"At our last annual meeting the hor-\nticultural commltteo was formed, the\nobject In viow being the co-ordination\nof effort as regards all horticultural\nmatters,\n\"We have to report the most successful year in the history of the Nelson\nImprovement association. In conjunction with tho Greater Production committee we succeeded in having the\npiece of land on the Cemetery road\nknown as the city farm properly cultivated, the.city council allowing the\nland to be used on payment of a nominal fee to cover cost of plowing etc,\nA very large amount of produco was\ntaken off this land, very fow of* the\ntenants failing to secure a heavy crop\nof vegetables, and the food situation\nwas undoubtedly very materially Improved in the city thereby, ln addition\na number of vacant lots throughout the\ncity were cultivated many for tho first\ntime, and so far as lyiown there was\nnot a single case o* failure.\n\"Tho committee revised and' compiled a prize list for the annual shlw,\nand also submitted a revised prize list\nfor vegetables and floral entries at the\nfall fair to the Agricultural society,\nwhich list was duly adopted,\n\"The .annual show was an unqualified success and It Is fratlfying to note\nthat. the efforts of the committee to\nwaken the interest of tho citizens in\ntho possibilities of the district In the\nmatter of vegetables and flowers met\nwith a certain amount of success, as\nwas attested by tho large Increase in\nattendance at the show and In the\nmembership increase,\nScientifically Prescribed Glasses\nWill Correct Tbit Eye\nWeakness\nAn examination will show If your\neyes need the aid of .-losses. I\nhave the Instruments and technical\nknowledge arid will be glad to proscribe for you.\nJ. J. WALKER\nJeweler and optician\nIt Pays to Deal at Rutherford'e.\nPure Drugs\nCareful'Dispensing\nPrompt Service\nColumbia Raoorde, Anaeo Camera*,\nColumbia Graphonolae, Thermoe\nBottles, Thermo* Kite, Gillette\nSafety Razors, Box Stationery,\nWriting Pada, Envelope..\nMall ordere filled promptly.\nRutherford Drug Co., Ltd.\nMONDAY  FEBRUARY \u00bb, 1S.B   *;\\\nmsmssssam*Sm*ssstt*sssmm\nm\nHay and StraW\nWe have a fine stock of No. 1 Tim-j\noty, No.. 1 Alfalfa and No. -1 Pralrlel\nHay. Also have some No. 2 TlmothjJ\nfor less money, and Wheat Straw f\nlitter.     Full line of Grain and Ft\nThe Brackman Ker\nMilling Co.,Llmited\nCanada Food Board License 12-1M\nHides\nRELTS AND FURS\nScrap Iron and Metals, Rubber\nJ. P. Morgan\nVernon Street, Neleon, B. C.\nWhen shipping, (end full address.\nsoclatlon are due those of our members\nwho gave of their time and labor to\nmake the show the success it was, and\nespecially our president, J. W. HolmeB,\nwho did tho major portion of the seo*\nretnrlal work In connection with the\nshow and who was, aa usual. Indefatigable.\nWe should also thank those who\nacted as judgeB during the years,\nMessrs. B. C. Hunt, W. J. Sheppard, B,\nDawson and S. Barton, for the fair\nand Impartial manner in which they\ncarried out their very arduous duties.\n\"With the close of the war we do\nnot Intend to slacken our efforts, and\nwe are confident that the year 1919\nwill Bee even greater effort In the production of foodstuffs and an even more\nbeautiful display of the flowers for\nwhich Nelson is justly famed, than we\nhad in 1818.\"\nMr. Ramsden roported several prizes\nhad been donated for the sweet pea\ncompetition. ' \u2022\nTho date of the roso and sweet pea\nshow was left in tho hands of the horticultural committee. It was suggested that the show might also be held\nthe same tlmo as tho raining convention.\nMr. Holmes called attention to an\nerror made in the city electrician's re.\nport ro electrical work dono for tho\nrose show. It waB $10 or $15 instead\nof $125.\nMr. Selous stated thnt before tho\nhorticultural committee 'was appointed\nit was a precedent thut minor shows\nbe held In different part of tho city,\nOno minor show netted tho Red Cross\nsociety nearly $200. This show was\nstaged by Mr. Wlggs. Mr. Selous hoped that other minor shows would be\nheld this year. He also mentioned that\nthe Trail society had various prizes\ndonated by business firms at the\ncoast and asked why not solicit prizes\n.rom tho samo source. It was moved\nby H. Selous, seconded by R. G. Joy,\nthat the personnel of tho horticultural\ncommittee bo tho same as last year\nwith power to add to their numbers.\nThe names of tho committee are: R.\nV. Ramsden, Mr. Wlggs. Dr. E. G.\nSmytho, j. Goulding, B. R. Dawosn,\nW. J. Sheppard, A. II. Black, E. Frost.\nA vote of thanks was extended' to\ntho president and secretary for their\nservices during tho year.\nBest Results\nar* obtained when Bent to\nH.K.Foot\nHigh Claaa Dyer and Cleaner\nFairview, Nalaon, B.C.\nCity Agtnt, M. Papazian\n411 Ward St.\nMY OLD 8HOE8.\nI sadly see you are past repairing\u2014\nAnd put you aside with a fervent\nsigh;\nI knew real comfort when I was wearing\nMy dear old Bhodes ln the days gone\nby.\nI donned you for many a country ram*\nble,\nNo matter how thorny the path 1\nwould choose;\nVou oft have been scratched by briar\nand bramble,\nSo more  yould not spoil you, my\ndear old shoes.\nWhat did It matter If stylo you wero\nlacking?\nIf your lacea were knotted and heels\nrather low.?\nWhat though you were often ln need\nof a blacking?\nTo wear you meant comfort, as full\nwell I know.\nWhen springtime so sweet came with\nMay flowers a peeping,\nAnd brightened the earth with their\nblossomB so fair.\nAnd  as  the woods'  treasures awoke\nfrom their sleeping,\nYou helped ln tho pleasure I took\n.   going there.\nBut your time Is now ovor and I must\nreplace you;\nNever can I your  successors well\nchoose.\nIt will talke all tho tread of the world\nto efface you\nFrom my grateful memory, dear old\nshoes,\t\nHome of Paramount and Artaraft J\nPloturaa\nLeading atara auperbly preeanted\nIn olaan ploturee.\nTONIGHT\u20147 AND >\nJack Pickford\n.... \u25a0  \u2014In\u2014\n'Mile-a-Minute Kendall'\nOne of Jack Fickford'a latest\nand best productions, In whloh\nhe pleases you .better than ever.\nGAUMONT GRAPHIC\nCOMING-NORMA  TALMAGE\n\u2014in\u2014\n\"DELUXE ANNIE\"       '\nBUYS 8ICK COW; KILLS IT\nAND OFFERS FOR 8ALE\nOTTAWA.\u2014Myer Llborman, butcher,\n276 Gulges avenue, paid a fino of $50\nand $2 coats in police court recently\nwhen he plod guilty to a charge of of\nfcring for sale the carcass of a cow\nwhich was diseased, as a food for human consumption.\nThe charge was laid by Dr. J. B.\nHolllnssworth, Inspector of foods, who\nexplained that the cow was originally\nowned by a man named S, Scharf, of\nLeltrlm, Ont., who, when he discover'\ned tho animal was sick and in danger\nof dying, telephoned to the city for\nLiber-nan to buy the eow. He offered\nto sell it for $50, but I.iberman boat him\ndown to $15.\nLlbcrman then killed the cow and\ndressed it for sale, knowing ita condition.\nNOW THAT THE WAR IS\nOVER\nCalling\nwill ba mora generally und than\nfor fiv* year*.\nA calling oard la a aeolal emblem whloh tall* it* own story.\nTo tell it eorraetly, tha calling\noard muat be well printed en th*\nhigheet grade of card.\nSend In your erder to\nThe Daily News Job\nDepartment\nTh* Horn* of Good Printing\nNeiaon, B. C.      i\nSell Your\nRags\nThe Daily News Job\nDepartment will pay\n5 cents a pound for\nclean cotton rags.\nGERMAN WAR PLANT TURNS\nOUT REPAIRS FOR 72 CANNON\n\"Thanks of all members of the aa*\nCANADA LEADS THE WORLD\nDid you read Flro Chief Guthrie's Annual Report to the City Counoll\nwhich report Is borne out by tho report of tho Dominion authorities,\nnamely, that Canada's flro loss per capita is greater than any other\ncountry ln the world\u2014a record due to carelessness and waste that we\ncan well be ashamed of. We managed to burn up over 82,000,000 dollars'\nworth last year, to say nothing of unreported fires nnd valuable timber areas. Fortunately, Nelson cohtrtbutod ' but little to this largo\namount.\nNow as to insurance; Insurance will npt cover your total loss\nahould your place be destroyed, so be careful. Thon be careful apme more\n\u2014but oven then you may suffer by fire, so be protected as far as pos-\nalblo by a policy In a good, strong company. ___.,..\nEither call at my offtoo or call rae. up _n-(li<t telephone, No .125,\nand get your rate.   Nelson's residence rate Is very low.\nCharles F. McHia.rdy\nmtimm     wivtVi    ...,\u201e.:.\u00ab\u00ab\u2022\nCOBU3N7,.\u2014The Krupp plant at Ea-\nsen began working for the United\nStates government Tuesday. The task\nundertaken by the Krupps consists ot\nmaking parts for 72 Incomplete cannon, rejected by tho American authorities as part of the war material offered by tho Germans under the terms\nof the armistice.\nThe Gorman commission which has\nbeen in Berlin considering the ques\ntion of the heavy guns turned down\nby the American authorities have arrived at Coblcnz and reported that 80\ncannon have been shipped to the head'\nquarters of tho Amorlcan army of\noccupation to replace big guns which\nfailed to meet requirements. Tho do\nlivery of the parts for the 72 cannon\nand tbo arrival of the other 80, the\ndelivery of heavy artillery to the\nAmericans will huvo beon completed.\nThe American allotment called for 15:\nheavy guns.\nFriend\u2014Hullo, Scrlbblos, I hoar that\nj-QUr manuscripts are selling like hot\ncaltos.\nScribbles .sadly)\u2014Then the editors\n|iiii-l it|| Imvv d3>\u00ab|\u00bblii,\nOUR Shirts are Quality Shirts, excelling in Fabric In  Design, in j\nTailoring excellence, In Fit, in Comfort and In 8ervlce.\nThey ar* made from the finest foreign  arid  domestic fabrlea  lii j\nmany axolualv* patterns,   Custom out on generoue body conforming\nline*,  Tailored In a manner idantifeal with, tha finer Custom Shirt*,\nth*y com* te you in every respect the equal* of Custom Shirts of mush\nhigher, price.\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. 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."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1919_02_03","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0388922","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. 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":"1919-02-03 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":"1919-02-03 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}