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P>r MONTH\nM Mm ALBANIANS\nEAGER TO FIT JURIS\nAre Being iJuJ>plied \"With\nEquipment\nSfliLOMKI SOON\nloeunm\nMontenegrins Defeat Tea*\nton Attempts to Capture\nPositions.\n(By Daily Newa Leased Wire.)\n. , JBiOJiji. Jaji. l.-^ifty thousand Al\nbanians . have applied for enlistment\nin the army of the' Essad Pasha, the\nformer Albanian ruler, who has de\nclanad\/war on Austria.  They are being\nracrulted aa rapidly as equipment can\nbe obtained for them.\n;1OM300N. iJM. 7,^-Beports df Count\nTlssa's speech before the Hungarian\nparliament, deopuncing tho arrest of\nAustrian and German consuls at Saloniki,\/ strengthen Ore belief that the\ncentral powers are preaprlhg to begin\nOB .attack, ou Saloniki..\n,\u201ei,,\"We are ready to give help to Greece\nm order, to help It safeguard its sov-\nerelgnty,\" said the ^ount.\nAustrlans Are Repulsed.\nPARIS, Jon. 7.\u2014The following official Montenegrin statement was given\nOut- here today:\n\"The Austrlans attacked, energetic\nally in the direction of Beranu-'Roseja\nand.at Goeuovo and Touriakonjan but\neverywhere were repulsed. On the\nnorthern .and western fronts there havo\nheap artillery duels. -\nT'An Austrian aeroplane fell hear\nDulcigno and the aviators were taken\nprisoners.\n\"An Important movement of enemy\ntroops le reported in the direction of\n\u00bbkj^LTJbl!nte.\"\nl&lN'NA.'yjah. 7,\u2014Tonight's war of\n,ftoa report. \u00abay\u00bb:.-,-. \u25a0'-. -\u2022-.   \u25a0-,\nSoutheaatern theatre: The troops pf\nPes, Koev,e\u00abs after v\u00bbHent fighting\nforced thp Montenegrins from their up\naltienB near Mojkovac on the Tara\nriver, near Ooduso, north pf Kerana.\nand north of Hoseja half way between\nInek and Plava. Our advanced troops\nare now within 10 kilometres of Ber\nana,*'\nFEAR CROWN PRINCE\nWILL WIN CONTROL\n(By Daily News loused Wire.)\nPARIS, Jan. 7.\u2014Owing to\nKaiser William's illness the rulers\nof all German states have been\noalled to Berlin, according to a despatch received by tho Matin from\nMadrid.\nGreat anxiety is felt, the despatch says, over the fear that\nGrown Prince Frederick may ae-\naumo governing power. The report that tho kaiser is in a critical condition ia gaining ground.\nTho members of the German embassy in Madrid accept the rumor\nas true.\nSCHOOL SCENE\nOF WILD DISORDER\nCrowd Rushes Into Ottawa Building\n>\"and Again  Places  Ineligible\nTeachers in Charge.\nITALIANS WIN BY\nSURPRISE ATTACK\nAchieve New   Success in\n\u25a0 Riva Zone.\nSTART MOVE TO MAKE\nDOMINION DRY DURING WAR\n(By Pally -News Leased Wire.)\nOTT4W\/\u00ab\\> Jan. 7.\u2014\"We shall have\na. statement ready for the newspapers'\nthis next week. We wanted to get the\nmovement well started, before making\nany announcement^'\nThis, .was the only information that\ncould W^abtalned today from the\nprominent Ottawa men who, in con-\n^aunction with large employers of labor\nin the big cities, are starting'a campaign to Induce parliament at ita\nVI. coming session to pass legislation prohibiting fpr the duration of the war thp\nmanufacture, importation and sale of\nihtoxicftting ,liauprs throughput^ ;p\u00bbn-.\nado; '\u25a0'\u25a0-.'\u2022 ',:V'-yM\nThe present ides, of the committee\n. is ttiat the prohibition legislation asked forehould extend for a period ;of\nthree years following the end of the\nwar, the reconstruction period, and\nthat it should be repeated only by direct vpto pf the people.\n' It is; Understood that ,at the outset,\nowing to the lack of time, there will be\nno effort to obtain a larger number of\nsignatures to the appeal to parliament\nbut an.endeavor will be mode to make\nIt representative and strong pressure\n, in the constituencies will be brought\nto bear on the members and senators.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, j\u00bbn, 7\u2014Scenes of wild\ndisorder marked the reopening this\nmorning of the Guigues school in this\ncity,1 the storm centre in the trouble\nbetween French-Canadian ratepayers\nand the commission appointed by the\nOntario, government to administer the\nseparate schools In tl.e place of the\ndeposed- school board.\nThe two Misses Lesloges, the teachers, formerly employed at the Guigues\nschool by -tho: old separate school\nboard, who were deemed Ineligible and\ndismissed by\" the commission, were\nagain placed at the heads of their old\nclasses by the opponents of the government, commission.\nA door was smashed and BOO excited\nmen and women 'overpowered three po\u00bb\nlice officers and rushed tho buildings.\nPolice reserves wore called and 30 men\nresponded, but in the meantime the\ncrowd was in possession of the school,\nThe officers, finaly withdrew and }oft\nthem there. No force was resorted to.\nThe excited assemblage was. addressed\n.by Artbpr Oharbonnau, French representative on the government commission, who explained his attitude and\ndeclared that there seemed nothing for\niilm to dp but resign.\n\"I think there will be a regular rew\ndown there,\" said Hon.. Howard Ferguson, \u2022 acting minister'of education,\nreferring to the Ottawa sohool trouble.\n\"But at the present time,\" ho added,\nIII have nothing to add to what 1 have\nalready said and that is, that we will\nback up the commission to the limit.\"\nDennis Murphy, chairman of the Ontario, government's separate school\ncommission, after the trouble at\nGuigues school, said that the situation\nwas most unfortunate. The commission, he said, had not been quite prepared for the happenings of the day.\nAsked wha,t the next move ef the commissioners would be, Mr. Murphy said\nthat they would be guided entirely by\nthe advice of the Ontario government\nwhich had appointed them. S. M.\nGenest, ohalrman-bf the old board, said\nit was just as he had predicted a year\nago.\nWho police gping down there,\" said\nMr, Genest, \"was enough to precipi-\n\/UlSTKUtN ASSAULTS\nFl eve!me\nAsphyxiating   Shells   Are\nEmployed in Artillery\nBombardment.,\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\n'ROME, -.Tan. 7.\u2014The war office communication issued today says:   '.\/'\u25a0'\n\"In the Rlva aone our tropps achieved a new success by ooejupying In a\nVigorous urprlse attack a position at\nSan Giovanni on the southern slopes'\nof Mount Sperone.   ;\n\"In the region of Col de Lana, the\nenemy attacked our lines at many\npoints, but everywhere was repulsed.\nAlong the rest of the front there have\nbeen lively artillery actions, in which\ntho enemy employed asphyxiating\nshells.\n\"Enemy aircraft have appeared over,\nthe valleys and heights of the Fella'\nand Isonzo and dropped a number of\nbombs.   No damage was \"done.\"\nVIENNA, Jan. 7.\u2014Tonight's official\nreport says:\n\u25a0'Italian theatre: Artillery fighting;\ncontinued at many points along tho\nfront, being occasionally rather active\nIn the region of Col dl Lana. Near\nFlitch in the region of .'the Gorilla,\nbridgehead and on the Doberdo artillery was also active.\"  \u201e-,'\n600 JAPANS** JOIN\nNEW BATTALION\n(By Dally Newa Leased Wire.)\nVANCOUVER \u00bb.C, Jan. 7\u2014AI-\nthough  the  off Mat  authorisation\nearn' only a few days ago, mere\nthan SS0 naf uralixad Japanese have\njoined th* new Japanese\nregiment f hie ia almost a record\nin local recruiting. Nipponese residents of the ally aro very enthusiastic.\nFRENZIED MOB\nLmi^ A1W BUtll^ DIS\u00bbTISnED WITH\nACTION Of (MESS\nBioterj Create  Bavpe in\nEast Ifoungfljpwn, Ohio\ntate, a riot. I im net blaming the\npolicemen themselves but- those who\ngave them orders lacked a great deal\nof Judgment. The regulation which is\nthe cause of all this.must be radically wrong wheii the mothers have to\noome.out tp protect their children.\"\nRU8SIANS  DEFEAT TURKS\nWHO ATTACK JN ,FO0\n(By. Dally News Leased Wire.)\nPETROGRAD, Jan. 7.\u2014'VJaucaslon\nfront: On Tuesday tho Turks taking\nadvantage of the fog, assumed the offensive near Akla and pildoszo, southeast of Lake Torhim The offensive\nbroke down before our fire, which\nopened when the enemy reached somo\nof our defenses. The Turks retired to\ntheir trenches with, heavy losses.\n.\"In Persia somo hundreds of enemy\nInfantry and cavalry tried to take the\noffepBlve from the tow nof Dowleta-\nb*d> sputliepst of Hamadan, against\nthe Village of Klamary but wered riven\nback beyond the Kendelelm -pass,\"\na guest at'.the Madden.\nPWST TOM) PARTY\nSteamer Company Has One Action and\nDischarged Stenographer Alleges\nHe Is Slandered.\n(By\/Dally News Leased Wire.)\nCOPBNlfMOBN, Jan. 7.\u2014Life fpr the\nFord peace party is just one threatened lawsuit after another\nTiie- Berlin tourist agency today\nthreatened to sue for 50,000 kronen\n(114500) alleging she Ford lieutenants\ncanceled reservations for a ship voyage to the Hague afar getting permission tp travel by land through Germany.\n, Tbey presented a \"Buy or be sucd^'\nultimatum while the Ford, leaders were\ntracking their baggage for tho trip\nthrough Germany. Bexford Homes,\ndischarged head of the Ford crew of\nstenographers, was also threatening\nspit for slander today though Copenhagen atterneys'udvised him an action\nwas impracticable.\nPEAR PERUVIAN  BARK\nLOST'WITH ITS CREW\n; (By Daily Nejrs. teasefl .Wire,)\nVANCOUiVlIR, B.C., Jan. 7.-\u00abrave\nfears *re felt for the. safety, of the\n$$W.W Wi** tbe\u201ewherettbouts\nof Which is still a .mystery, despite the\nclose searoh that has been maintained\nsince the vessel was first sighted off\nCape Beale on Christmas evening. Unless some word of the vessel is received within the next few days It Is feared, that she will have to be given UP\nas loBt.v Providing the Callao carried\nspare set of sails, which is always\nusual, there Is always the ppssibiliy\nthat she succeeded in putting out to\nion and Is awaiting for a favorable\nopportunity to return to the cape and\nthe opinion Is ventured in some quarter* that she may have reached a sheltered haven or have been driven ashore\nat some isolated point ou the Vancouver island coast.   ...   r-\nTHREE ARE KILLEB\nANDMANY\nStrikers   Drink\nFrom Buckets-\nWhisky\nMilitia\nCalled-Block Afire.\nIAB0R SPURNED\nMILITARY VIEW\nResigning Cabinet Members\nVote for Compulsion\nPETim0BADPEOPLE PAY\n$10 FOR CHRISTMAS TREES\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.) .\n, PETROGRA|>,,Jan,:,7.\u2014The war has\nbeen Relegated tosecond place for the\ntime being In the minds of the Russian\npeople, by .the' 'holiday festivities in\nwhich they are now absorbed. Notwithstanding the countless broken family\ncircles there is much of the old peace\ntime enthusiasm being\" manifested In\nthe various observances pf the season,\nboth of a Houiui and religious nature. ... .\n#irtihess came to a staiidstlii \"at 6 .facll\n>'.c^:iri..feu^su>n:-0hrlsunas- ev>;\u00bbr, city.\na tbreeLday    Cessation.    Today   the [ eaoli\n.\"iif\"<eV!We We not Issued, the government offices and Industrial establishments werp. closed and even the\nstreet ears stopped runing for .the holiday: The churches were crowded\nworshippers. The high price of food\nhas not seemed to curtail the celebration slnoe the people, because of the\nbetter wages they are receiving and\nthe abatement of t extravagances in\nother directions, have, been able to indulge In Christmas! luxuries. Christmas\ntrees, a popular, fprm ,of the,festivities, were scarce 'because of the limited\nfacilities for transnnrtlng theni to the\nThey breiight', ns high as \u00bb10\neach, several times the nrdlnaryiprice,\nand thersupply.was early exhausted.\nThe recent cold spell has abated, tbe\nweather, being mild,.   .\nFIRE\nON THE RED CROSS\n\u20220n,iHuncl,,,,<l .Bpi*i\u00bb.il !<S&\u00abn|\u00abd Pr-'c-\nenprs Arrive in London\u2014Two\n\u2022\u2022i\/Canadian. Are With Them.''\n(Canadian Associated PreBs Cable.)\nLONDON, Jan.' l.X^a.t\\\u00a3.ifa< British subjects, who. were.jfriBoners of\nw\u00bbr, i arrived here \"today.' frpih- \u2022 Ger-\nm\u00bbfl)l|. Amnng the number were tWn\nCahodlaii spldlers\u2014Etes. Walsh and!\nQeerge Carr. i\n\"On April 26,\" said Carr, \"we were\nin two motor ambulances approaching\nour trenches in the direction *f St.!\nJulieii. There had been some heavy\nfighting following! the German poison\ngas,attack, German star shells were'\nlighting up the front so that our Red\nCrqBs could bo dearly seen, yet the\nGermans opened fire on us.\n\"Of our party of eight, one escaped,\nTwo of us were captured and the remainder, I believe, were killed. When\nwo asked the Germans why they fired\non us, they replied: 'English sometimes use ambulances to bring munitions to the trenches.'\nVOur captors treated us well, but\nWhen we were taken back to tho main\nParty we had a rough experience.\nThough wounded I was struck in the\nface by one of our guards.. We Were\nhurried on to Roulols, forced to march\nalong by th* points of the bayonets.\nThose whtf lingered, - helping the\nwounded along, hod uhlans back their\nhorses on, them. ^^ ,\n^\"We were sent to Giessen, where\nthere were 600 Canadians. Conditions\nthoro ore jnuoh better than they were.\nOur chief trouble has been punishments, inflicted on our men because\nthey.will not work in. the mines; for\nthe -Germans. Fifteen men are now\nIn prison\u2014they have been thero for\nthree months\u2014for refusing thus to aid\nthe enemy.\".\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nEAST YOUNHSTOWN, 6.,'Jan. 1.\u2014.\nAfter a night of looting and arson at\nthe hands, of a mob, the situation In\nEast Youngstown was gradually being\ngat under control early today, but the\nauthorities expressed fear there would\nbe another outbreak at daylight The\nfire whioh had destroyed between 40\nand' 60 buildings was sti.il raging but\nthe- streets 'Have been partially cleared,\nof rioters and -the tire department has\nbeep brought here f rbm Youngstown to\n.combat the flames. The situation Is,\ntense .however, and fears are expressed that rioting might be resumed. For,\npractically six- hours crowds of men,\nmany maddened by drink ran through\nthe streets smashing the Windows of\nbuildings with clubs and then tearing opt the entire fronts. The rioters\nwould then loot the place .and apply\nthe tqrph,^     - 4 __   y       . .\nTwo rioters 'inya saloon 'fight -were\nkilled, making the-.known dead', three.\nSbf olty Weeks'were burned with a\nloss estimated at $800,000. Rioters\nstole BOO pounds of dynamite and have\ndynamited several houses, it is reported. The bridge from East Youngstown to Struthers -was burned to prevent rioters from entering the town.\nShortly' before midnight -rioters broke\ninto a freight car containing 500 pounds\nof dynamite. They took the dynamite\nand started toward the residential part\nof -Bast -Youngstown,' declaring they\nwould blow that section of the city to\nPieces. At midnight the flames Were\nStill beyond control. Rioters bj\u00bbke Into\na saloon on Wilspn stret and carried\naway hundreds of dollars - worth ,-.of\n\u2022bottled wines and whisky. After looting the saloon they set it pp fire, The\nbuilding which wo* \u00a3 three-story\nstructure, was destroyed.\nDrink Whisky from Buckets.\nShortly after midnight reports were\nSecelved that rlotera had started toward Youngstown, threatening trouble.\nDeputy Sheriffs left at once to meet\nthem at tho city line. According to\ntelephene reports-'whisky-erased men.\nwere drinking stolen liquor from buckets in the flra 4!ghten streets pf East\nYoungstown. '\nFifty rioters were, arrested by, the;\npolice and placed In the 'East Youngstown Jail. When the poli|e were compelled to leave the Jail in order to patrol the fire zone abuut: 1*0 strikers\nsongregated abpiit the. 'place and\nthreatened to release the men forcibly.\naMyor <W. H. Cunningham at once\nswore In 50 deputies ahd ordered them\nU. H. Roberts Thinks General Election Best Way\nto Settle Matter.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Jan. 8. \u2014 Attempts were\nmade yesterday to induce the Labor\nmembers of the government who have\nresigned to reconsider their position.\nArthur Henderson was invited to see\nPremier Asquith uud the two men met\nlate in the afternoon. Afterwards Mr.\nHesderson hod an interview with Andrew Bonar Law, secretary for the colonies. Various suggestions were discussed at these conferences, bpt late\nlast night it was understood that sir.\nHenderson and his colleagues, William\nBrace and George H. Roberta, who resigned Thursday respectively as parliamentary under secretary for home\naffairs and lord commisslpner pf the\ntreasury, adhered to their determination to quit the ministry and that formal letters to this effect will be'sent to\ntho premier Monday,\nMuch Is hoped from the reopening of\nthe Earl of Derby's recruiting scheme.\nThe Chronicle expresses the belief that\nthe premier's, conscription bill, will\nundergo some modifications, in the\ncommmtttee stage, which will alleviate\nthe situation. The Chronicle asserts,\nhowever, that should the bill meet\nwith -serious obstruction in committee\ntiie premier would dissolve parliament,\nlabor eMn Are jitter-\nMuch dissatisfaction' aqd bitterness!\nprevails in the Labor party as a result\nof Thursday's labor meeting, The Express prints an interview with ..George\nRoberts, who resigned as lord commissioner of the-treasury. Mr. Roberts\nthinks that a general election is the\nonly means of settling the opinion of\nthe country oh the question of compulsion and;also that it was a grave thing\nthat the Labor congress should have\nso entirely ignored the country's mill\ntary experts. In his opinion James\nRamsay McDonald, chairman nf. tho\nLabor party, was presumptlpus In setting up his opinion in defiance of the\nexperts.    ' -\nMr. Roberts- declared that he and\nhis colleagues, Arthr Henderson and\nWilliam Brace, intended to continue\nvoting for the compulsion bill and he\nsupposed it would be open to the Labor\nparty to expel them.      '\nCHURCHILL IS\nOIVIN COMMAND\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Jan. 7.\u2014Major Winston Spencer Churchill, former first\nlord of the admiralty, whs resigned his cabinet position of chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster\nmi went to the front with his\nregiment, has been appointed to\ncommand a battalion of Royal\ntcate\" fusiliers at the front in\nFrance. According to Reuter's\ncorrespondent at British headquarters this Kill prove a stepping stone to the .command of a\nbrigade, which is said to be Major\nChurchill's ambition.\nSTOPFORD DEMANDS\nWAR OFFICE PROBE\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Jan. 7.\u2014An echo of\nSen. Ian Hamilton's review of the\nardanellos operations is found In\na report published todayVhat Gen.\nSir Frederick Stopford, Who Was\nrecalled on account of hia actions\nIh ehe Aviv* Say operations, has\ndemanded an inquiry by the war\noff lot into the whole circumstance\nof the landing of troops in the\nDardanelles,\nI\nM BOMBERS OFF\nKhaki   Expected  o  Be  in  Evidence\u2014\nf      $400,000,000 War  Budge  Is.\n'\u25a0 \u25a0    Anticipated.\ny    (By Daily News Leased .'Wire.)\nOTTAWA, Jan. 7.\u2014-The' opening of\nparliament this year will be a quiet affair. The usual ceremonial will be followed and khaki will be much in evidence but there will be an absence of\ndisplay. The usual state dinner will\ntake place on Thursday night at Ri-\ndeau Hall, but the royal drawing room\nwill again bo eliminated. The deputy\ngovernor will preside on Wednesday\nand instruct the commons to elect a\nspeaker, while the formal opening by\nthb Duke of Connaught will take place\non tho following day.' The debate on\ntho address is unlikely to begin before\nMonday, Jan. 17: *\ninterest chiefly centres in two' matters alone, the extension of the term\nof parliament and the war appropriations. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022'  n\nThe government measures In regard\nto the former provides for'a year's extension and It is generally thought that\nIt will be agreed to by the Liberals.\nThe increase In the forces to 500,000\nmen will call for a corresponding increase in war appropriations,.probably\nto upward of J40O.000.0O0. The budget\nspeech Is not expected to make any\nextensive-, changes In the tariff but\nsame important announcenwns on war\nfinance are anticipated. 'TJiere will .be\nno railway or Keneral,legislation, apart\nfrom routine and If the extension Is\nagreed to the session,;, it Is thought,\nWill fioncluie by S*\u00bbt\u00bblSy\nArtillery   Damages  German  Trenches\n' in   Retaliation\u2014French  Cannon\nFire Destructive,\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Jan. 7,\u2014The; British uf-\nficlal' statement issued tonight says:\n''Yfeste'rday morning a hostile bomb-\nihg attack, supported by artillery about\nArmentiers on the Lille railway, was:\ndriven off. Our artillery today bom\nbarded the enemy lines, damaging his\ntrenches considerably.\"\nPARIS, Jan. 7.-rrThe following offl-\nciai communication was issued tonight\n\"In Artois during the day we again\nbomharded the station of Bolaelux au\nMont, to the souht of Arras, and Interrupted the trains:\n'A destructive shelling of the enemy's . positions on the northern plateau to the northwest of Solssons has\npreyed effective.- Two German posts\nWere  destroyed:\n'- \"Jn Champagne our artillery continued Its work. To the north of\nSomme Puy, a convoy peer Souplet\nwas scattered by our fire.\n\".We bombarded the enemy's trenches\nnear liaisons de Champagne and in\nthe region of Main de Masalngcs.\n\"In tho Argonne .one of our mines\nblew'tiii a small' Herman ppBt jn the\nVauquols sector. Kast of the Meuse\none of our long range pieces shelled an\nenemy oclumn at the outskirts of the\nwood near Billy sous -Manglennes, to\nthe north of Etaln. Its ^vell directed\nfire threw the 'column- into disorder\nand started a fire in the village.\n\"In the Bouchet wood, north of St.\nMlhiel, our batteries caused three explosions.\" '''',  ...\nAUSTRIANS FIRE\nON GREEK VESE\nAttacked   Merchant  Craw  at   It Wat\nEicaping\u2014Two Enemy Warships\nSent to Bottom.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\n\/ HOME, Jan- 1\u2014The censorship having been lifted tunight it Is now pos\nslble to t'ive details of the naval en\nsagement    off    Durazzo,   Albania on\nDec. 29, In which the Austrian destroy\ners Triglav and Lika were sunk. For\nseveral   days   an   Austrian   aeroplane\nhad been flying over Durazzo, making\nobesrvatlons and occasionally dropping\nbombs.    At 7 o'clock in the morning\nof Dec. $9 an Austrian squadron composed of five destroyers and the cruiser Helgoland entered the harbor at full\nspeed.\nAs the Austrian warships approached\nthey opened fire on a Greek sKlp\nwhich had put in for repairs to its\nengine. No warning was given of the\nattack and the assertion is made that\nsailors on board were fired on even\nafter they had left the vessel and were\nattempting to reach shore.\nThe Austrlans also bombarded and\nsank several Italian sailing boats and\nthen atacked the encampment of the\nItalian troops, The fire was poor, however and there were no casualties.\nAn atempt was made 'by the Austri\nana to land a detachment with Incen\ndiary bombs to set fire to the customs\nwarehouse, but an Italian, battery prevented, the,.landing.\nThe Italian, squadron arrived, and\nopened fire on the Austrian warships.\nThe Lika, the flagship of the fleet, was\nstruck -by a torpedo and sank after Its\nmagazine had blown up- Most (of the\ncrew of about 100, including Commander Vlncer, were drowned,\nThe Triglav was struck and taken in\ntow by two\/ of the other destroyers.\nThey were compelled to abandon it\noutside the harbor, however, and It\nwas. sunk by the pursuing Italian\nsquadron.\nHEWITT HEADS BOARD.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nTORONTO, Jan. 17\u2014Arthur Hewitt\nwas today elected by acclamation\npresident of the board of trade for\n1916. Charles Marriott was chosen\ntreasurer.\nGERMANY MADE PEACE\nOFFER TO JAPAN, RUSSIA\n(By Dally Neva Leased Wire.)\nIjONDOiN, Jan. T.\u2014Germany recently\nmade overtures to Russia and Japan\ntot a separate peace but whs refused,\naccording to a Tokio despatch received\nhere today by the Japan Advertiser.\nSUBMARINES KEEP\nGRAIN FROM GREECE\n-7-^'    '   ' \u25a0;\u2022 '*: ' \u25a0 \u25a0\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Jan. 7.\u2014In connection\nwith th* submarine activity in the\nMediterranean,   an   Athene   dee*\npatch notes that alflTrm it felt there\nowing to the fact that Keen of the\nnine ship* laden with,grain purchased in Amertee either has arrived or been signalled,\nSERVIANS EAGER TO\nREDEEM THEIR COUNTRY\n.   ..(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nROME, Jan. 7.\u2014Thousands pf Servian refugees are presentedlng themselves at' the Servian legations and\nconsulates in Italy to request that they\nbe incorporated in a new Servian army\nto fight with the allies in an effort to\nwin back their country.\nRussians Attack After Hail\nof Fire\nCZERNOW TZ IS IN\nCRITICAL POSITION\nAssaults Are of Unparalleled Magnitude and\nFierceness.\nGives Guarantee as to Submarine Attacks and Promises to Pay\nLusitania Indemnities.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nWASHINGTON, Jah; 7.\u2014Two communications from Germany reached\nthe United fltates today\u2014one containing a proposal for an indemnity for\nthe American -citizens lost In the Lusitania which may bring negotiations on\nthat'subject to an end, and the other\nconveying assurances that German\nsubmarine commanders operating in\nthe the Mediterranean would not torpedo non-combatant ships of any character without warning them and according safety to their passengers and\nCrews.\nThe communications, were delivered\nto Secretary of State Lansing by Count\n(Continued on Paige Two.)1\n(By Daily News Leaved Wire.)\nLONDON, Janr?.\u2014\u00abome idea of tba\ndetermined nature of the Russian blow\non the Bessarahlan front is conveyed\nby petrograd despatches today which\nstate that the Russians for 50 hours\nconcentrated 400 guns on the Austrian\nposition at Czernowltz as a preparation\nfor an infantry ataok. The Russian\ncommunications do not claim that\nCzernowltz has fallen, but despatches\nfrom German sources admit the poal-!\ntlon  there  is  critical,   .\nIt is not clear whether the Russian\noperations in this theatre herald a big\ngeneral offensive movement of all the\nRussian\"armies from the Battle to the\nRumanian frontier, or merely indicate.\na diversion of unparalleled magnitude\nand fierceness, designed to weaken the\npressure of the central powers in the\nBalkans, and incidentally on the Italian\nfront.\nThe fighting, lum been of the most\nbitter character,, according to both the\nAustrian and Russian' reports. Few\nprisoners are being taken and the infantry engagements are largely In.the\nnature of band to hand'encounters.\nAll the Russian operations thus far\nrevealed are being pressed along the\nrailway lines, which simplify the problems of the winter' supply of food,\nammunition  and^fuel.. _\/_ :'r^ \u201e\u25a0' : {_ ^\nRussian Scouts Rout Enemy,\nPETROGRAD, Jan.  7,\u2014The following   official  \u25a0communication 'wa*   ls-\nsued today:\n\"In the Riga region near OH and\naall the Germans 'discharged gas\nagainst our lines. Near Duckern, in\nthe region of Jacobstadt, 30 Russian\nscouts engaged In a hand to hand\nfight some German scouts who had lost\ntheir way, 'bayoneting a large number and capturing 86, including an officer. Our detachments captured the\ntown of Zcartorisky and the height a\nmile and a half west, We captured\nthree officers, 76 soldlerw and a quantity of barbed wire. Hostile counterattacks, with the object of dislodging\nup from Czartorwsk, failed.\n\"Northeast of Czernowltz the Austrlans, after employing gas, tried a\ncounter-attack but w;ere driven back\nto  their trenches  under our fire.\"\nClaim to Repulse Russians,\n\"VIENNA, Jan. 7.\u2014The following\ncommunication  was  Issued  tonight.\n'Russian theatre: Yesterday on the\nnortheast front comparative calm prevailed, fighting occurring only on tho\nStyr. The enemy occupied the churchyard north of Czartorysk, but were\nson repulsed by the Austrian land-\nwehr. . The enemy repeated his attack\non the Galician front.1 Galician sharpshooters advanced upon our line northeast of Buczacz before daybreak nd\npenetrted our trenches for short distance. Our Honved infantry regiments, Miumbers 16 and 24, by quick\ncounter-attacks expelled the enemy,\ncapturing numerous prisoners and\nthree machine guns.\n\"According to the declaration pf\nprisoners, before Lhc last attacks\nagainst the armies of Generals Pflan-\nzer and Ballin. Russian troops everywhere were informed that' a great\nbattle with a view of breaking through\nhostile lines was Imminent and would\nbring tho Russian army again into tho\nCarpathian   mountains.\n\"Trustworthy estimates of the enemy losses in the New Year's fighting on the Besuarabiun frontier and\nIn the Stripa region place them at\n50,000.\nPinsk Is Threatened.\nLONDO'N, Jan. 7.\u2014Dealing with tha\nsituation iu Russia, the Times' Petro-?\ngrad correspondent says the Russian\nsuccess threatens Pinsk with1 envelopment from the south, while in Czernowltz the Austrlans' counter-attacks\nshattered   themselves   mainly  against\n* (ContinuedVn Page Two.)\nMANITOBA HOUSE MAY\nADMIT WOMEN MEMBER0\nWINNIPEG, Man., Jan. 7.\u2014If the doubt implies recognition of its right\nto choose its own representatives.\nIt is pointed out, however, that tho\nenfranchisement of the women wll not\nin itself, remove their present dlsquaU\nlflcation for election to the houfle. The\nelection act defines the qualifications\nrequired of candidates, and among\nthem It Is required. that \u25a0 they shajj\nbe of the male sex. in order to udmit\nwomen to the house the statutes would\nhave tp be amended, redefining ths;\nqualifications of candidates.\nMore than one cabinet minister, it if\nbelieved, holds the view that the enfranchisement of women must bring; in\nits train the speedy abolition of aU die*\ncrlminatnions against them; ,\nwomen of Manitoba, after getting the\nvote, want to elect members of their\nown sex to the legislature they will bo\nfree to do so. This opinion was expressed today in government cir6les.\nIt Ih known that the government has\n'MNldfred the problem, and the statement was. made this morning that a\ndecision has been reached. Tho government Is prepared, it is reported, to\npass the necessary legislation should (\nthe women express a desire to have\nwomen representatives in the house.\nThere has been ns yet no formal representation to this effect.\nIn afct, the admission of a large neW\nclass to the rights of the franchise no\n w\n{.\u25a0\u2022 V I\nPACE  TWO\n-\u25a0>\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0    \u25a0!\nLEADING HOTELS OFTHEWESt]\nWhara the Traveling Public May Find  Superior Accommodation*.\n...\nTHE  HUME\nA la Cart* Table d'Hot.\nGetorgo- Benwell, Prop.\nSpecial Daily Lunch, 35c.\nESUME\u2014J. F. Gamble, Seattle; A. O.\nLarson, Spokane; A. \\V Allen, Zinc-\nton; P. R. Flanagan, Spokunc; F. C\nSfoorc. Wallace, Ida; James Marshdlli\nVancouver; M. J. Zulgley, Roaslanil; S.\nW. Whitehead, Winnipeg; L.. F. Tyson,\nW. R. Scwortz, F. W. Brown, C. C.\nSnyder, A. Saunders, J. Vannettcr, C.\nAtkins. P. McDonough, G. McDonald,\nO. Haddock. C. White, A. Fraser, Roy\nHcDonell, R. C. Crowe. Hairy Wright,\nTrail; A. C. Meeker, W. G. Mall, Midway; Miss Coroscn, A. M. Johnson, R,\nCarley, R. W. Allen, City; Mr. and Mrs.\nTownsend,.Willow- Point; Miss Laiscr,\nC 'Magunsson, Trail.\n\u00bb \u00ae\n0 SPECIAL 8UNDAY DINNER. \u00ab\n# For reservation, phona 63. <S>\nW \u00ae\n\u2022> \u00ab>'* * \u00ab> <8> ^^xSxSxJ) 6 3> * <3> <\u00a3 .$\n-        '. \"Stfan\nWe Invite You to\nTHE   GREATEST   HEALTH   RESORT ON THE CONTINENT.\nIf you aro weak, nervous, rundown in licalt.li, you need rest, perfect quiet. Our Sanitarium offers\nyou unequalled facilities for restoration. The medicinal value of our\nhot water baths aro beyond description. Open all the year. Natural\nhot water, 124 degrees of heat\nBates |2 per day and up or $12 to\n$15 per week.\nHalycon  .Hot -Spring .Sanitarium.\nWm. Boyd, Prop.\nHalycon, Arrow Lakes\nNelson House\nEuropean Plan.\nW. A. WARD, Proprietor.\nCAFE\u2014Open Day and Night\u2014BAR\nMerchant.' Lunch, 12 to 2.\nPhone 97 P. O. Box 537\nNELSON\u2014F. Korsleff, A. C. Rob-\nnlson, C. H. Long, F. Bauer, w. H.\nBilliard,  Marcus.\nLOOTS AND BURNS\n(Continued rrom Page One.)\nTremont Hotel\nNelson. B, C.\n^.STEAM HEATBD.\nEuropean and American  Plan.\nA. CAMPBELL, Prop.\nTREMONT\u2014J. 'Wallers, tfandon; P.\nJ. McKelveiy, Alnsworth; V M^Davis,\nD. S. Williams, Marcus; 3. Carluon,\nTrail; E. W. Anderson, Ainsworth; V,\\\nMiles, Quebec; J. Riley, Greenwood.\nThe Strathcona\nF. B. WHITING, Prop.\nGrand Central Hotel\nOPPOSITE POSTOFFICE.\nAmerican and European Plan.\nJ. A. 151UCKSON, Pro.\nW. J. BRODIB, Manager.\nSTRATHCONA\u2014J. D. Young, City;\nJ., H. Schoflcld, Trail; A. Slurrock,\nVancouver; B, F. Bowar, Hherbrooke;\nT. ;H. Bollard, Kingston; Miss:Muc-\nCeiman, Spokane; M. L,. Davys, Silverton; A. Dove, City; II. Holmes, A.\nMcDermott, E. C. Flayer, H. Wright,\nTrail; R. Maudslcy, 1'\". B. Johnson, H.\nFremont, .1'. Wlshart, Seattle; J. B.\nWilson, H. Gardner, Tacoma; A. Williams, Cranbrook. H. Defoe, L. Burgess, Crocton.\n\u00ab>\u00ab>\u00ab><\u00a3<8><8><!>^\u00ab><S><S>4>\u00ab>*<S> <8><&<3>\n\u00bb, <8>\n\u2022    SPECIAL 8UNDAY DINNER.    <S>\n<>     For  Reservation.:   Phon. 12.     <S>\n\u00bb: \u00ab\nQueen's Hotel\nSteam Heat in Every Room.\nBusiness Lunch, 35c.\nRates; $1.50 and $2.00 a Day.\nQUEENS\u2014w. K. Guim, Gerrard; A.\nBeck, Lardo; B. W. Amore. Kaslo; D.\nTrickett.: New Denver; R. W. H&'rkof,\nAPPledale; J. T. Price, Ymir; Mrs, h.\nA. Acton, ijethbrldgo; Mrs. McCreatb,\nG.  Lawrence,  Greenwood.\nMadden House\nE. C. CLARKE.\nCor. Baker and Word Sis., Nelson.\n\u2022 MADDEN\u2014Mre. W.\ncan City; J. W. Gallup,\nO'Neill,   Ymir.\n.'. dough, Slo-\nPro'ctoi*; A, C.\nNew Grand Hotel\nBest Place in Town.\n$1.00 a Day Up.\n\u2022 NEW GRAND\u2014P.\nlarmo,   Ainsworth.\nMoKclIcy, V. Pa-\n. When in doubl\u2014Gem theatre,   (alga)\nORAND CENTRAL\u2014A. C. McGregor,\nSandon; F. .1. Oliver and wife, ,G.\nRickson, Gray Creek; W. F McBeath,\nSalmo;   W. B. MeTsuacx,  Ymir.\nHotel Touraine\nSPOKANE\nA contrally located hotel opposite Review Building, half block\nfrom new Monroe Street Bridge; a\nfull view down Riverside Avenue\nfrom lobby.   ,      .    . ,\nRates reasonable\u201450 cents a day\nand up.\nGive Ui a Trial.\nWM. SNOW. R. H. SNOW,\nProp. Mgr.\nto remain on duty at the jail throughout the night.\nCol. Charles Waybrech, of Alliance,\nO., commanding tho 8th regiment Ohio\nnational quanta, conferred' early today\nwith Sheriff Uinstead, regarding the\ndisposition of troops, which are expected to arrive here later in the morning.\nCulmination of Strike.\nThe trouble was the culmination of\na strike of laborers whU-b began at\nthe plant of the Republic Iron & Steel\ncompany a week ago and spread to the\nplants of ttio Tube company, the\nYoungstown Iron & Steel company and\ntho Briar BUI Steel' company.\nThe men demanded 26 cents an hour,\ntho companies offering an increaso\nfrom 19 to 22 cents an hour. Tho\ntrouble started early this morning\nwhen strike sympathizers and workers\nat the tube plant clashed. Stones were\nthrown and several shots were fired,\nbut no one was injured, later in the\nday a riot occurred juBt outside tho\nTube -company plant and two men were\ninjured so badly that they wero taken\nto a hospital.\nThe most serious trouble started tonight when the day shift at the Tube\nmills left work. A'crowd of 6000 gathered at the entrance of the works and\nstoned a squad of private police in\ncharge of TVoltz of the Tube company\nforces.\nFiring Becomes General.\nAccording to thoystutemout made by\nWoltz he fired a blank shot In tho air\nto scare tho crowd, and then firing\nbecame general. Nineteen persons in\nthe -crowd wero wounded, following\nwhich the mob, frenzied, surged into\ntho East Youngstown buslncs sdlstrlct\nand set fire to several buildings; ' As\nthe torch was applied, first to a clothi-\ning store and then a Jewelry store, the\nloting began. A saloon was fired'iijind\nlooted, the liquor being distributed to\ntiie crowd.,\nTho Youngstown fire department\nwent to the scene of the firo but was\ndriven off'by tho crowds, The East\nYoungstown department also attempt\ned to check the 'blaze but the hose was\ncut and the firemen driven away. Tho\nflames were quickly beyond1 control\nuf tho firemen and at a late hour was\nstill beyond control.\nMilitia Called Out.\nGovernor Williams ordered tho 5th\nregiment, with headquarters at Cleveland and the 8th regiment, with headquarters at Bucyrus, to this city. The\n4th regiment, at Columbus, was ordered to mobilize and move to the scene\nof the trouble. The first man killed\nwas fatally shot while attempting to\nloot a store in East Youngstown. Home\none insido the store fired the shot.\nHotel Castlegar\nCastlegar B. C.   W .H. Gage, Prop.\nExcellent accommodation for drummers. Boundary to Coast train\nleaves here daily except Sunday at\nS:45 a, ni. Evening train from Rossland and Trail stops for dinner.\nRates, $2.00 Per Day,\nDAILY NEWS\nr\"    SATURDAY,   JAN.   \u00bb,   1916.    \"M\nWHAT CAUSES CUDS?\nThis question is asked every day.\nA cold, is^ really ay fever, not always\ncaused by the weather but often due to\ndisordered blood or lack of important\nfood-elements. In changing seasons\nfat-foods are essential because they\ndistribute heat by enriching the blood\nand so render the system better\nable to withstand the varying elements.\nThis is the important reason why\nScotfs Emulsion should always be\ntaken for colds, and it does more\u2014\nbuilds strength to prevent sickness.\nScott's Emulsion contains Nature's\nrare strength-building fats, so skillfully\nblended that the blood profits from\nevery drop. It is free from harmful\ndrugs. Sold at drug stores\u2014always\nget the genuine.\nScolt & Bownc, Totou(o, Onl. 1541\nPOUR SHELLS INTO\n6ERMANP0ST\n(Continued from Page One.)'\nthe stonewall of the Russian  offensive,\n\"The fighting in the Styr region,\"\nthe correspondent adds, \"threatens to\nIncreaso in obstinacy as the Russians\nadvance, seeing that the Austro-Ger-\nmuns are tenaciously hanging on to\ntho region of Rafalovka and Czar-\ntorysk as a screen to Kovel, a link\nbetween the Austro-Germans In Galicia\nand the northern army.\"\nMANY OFFERS\n11\n(Continued from Page One.)\nBULGARIAN ARMY IS\nIN   NEED OP SUPPLIES\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nPARIS, Jan. 7,\u2014Tho Bulgarian\nanny;is in a lamentable condition from\nluck &t supplies, according to inf6rma~\ntlon Vlvcu by deserters' who have arrived\" from a love! i, says a Havas\nagency despatch from Saloniki filed on\nWednesday, The commissary service\nof tho army Is totally inadequate,    i\nLeland Hotel\nT. H. BOHART, Prop.\nSteam Heated, Good Service.\nSample Rooms\nNAKUSP, B. C.\nTRAIL HOTELS\nPhone   9. Sample   Rooms\nRooms Reserved by Wire or Phone.\nCrown Point Hotel\nA.  McDERMOTT, Prop.,\nTRAIL,  B. C.\nWo   Are   Crowded,   But There    Is\nRoom for One More,\nROSSLAND HOTELS\nThe Hotel Allan\nRecently Refurnished,\nSMITH  &  BELTON,\nProprietor..\nY. M. C. A. MAN TO\nADDRESS CHURCHES\nH. Ballantyne, Returned Secretary for\nWest, to Speak on Work at Home\nand at the Front.\nH. Halluntyne, national secretary of\nY. M. C. A. work ofr western provinces,\n\u25a0will speak on \"T. II. C. A. \"Work at\ntho Front'und at Home\" at the morning sen-Ice in the Methodist church\nand in St. Paul's church in the evening\nservice\nMr Ballantyne will he in 'Nelson lor\nfour days for the purpose of assisting\ntho directors of the Y M C. A. in a.\nfinancial and membership campaign.\nHo haB expressed himself as toeing\nhighly iplcased with I lie work which\ntho Nelson Y. M. C. A. did for many\nof the soldiers In enabling then to pass\nthe physical test required for service\nin tho army.\nThe Beer Without a Peer\nSOLD   AT   ALL   LEADING   HOTELS\nAlberta's Pride\nMANUFACTURED   IN   THE   MOST   SANITARY   AND\nMODERN   BREWERY  IN   CANADA  BY\nTHE   LETHBRIDGE]   BREWING   AND   MALTING   CO.\nONCE  USED ALWAYS  USED\nMAU,   ORDERS   SHIPPED   PROMPTLY\nCALL   UP  OUR   REPRESENTATIVE\u2014TELEPHONE   12\nNelaon Warehouse: Foot of Stanley 8tr..t.\nP.O.   BOX   261\nEAT WITHOUT FEAR\nOF INDIGESTION OR\nS0UMC| STOMACH\nInstant relief! \"Pape's Dis-\npepsin\" ends your stomach\ntrouble forever\nWonder what upset pour stonmch-\nWhich portion of tho food did the dam-\nago\u2014do you? TVoll, don't ibothcr. If\nyour stomach is In a revolt; If sour,\ngassy and upset, and what you just\nato has fermented into stubborn lumps;\nhead dizzy and aches; .belch gases\nand acids and eructate undigested\nfood; breath foul, tongue coatod\u2014just\ntake a little Pape's Diapepsin and in\nfive minutes you wonder what'v'be-\ncamo of tho indigestion and distress.\nMillions of men and women today\nknow that it Is needless to havo a bad\nstomach. A little Diapeiwln occasionally keops this delicate organ regulated and they cut their favorite foods\nwithout  fear.\nIf your stomach doesn't take care of\nyour liberal limit without rebellion;\nif your food is a damage instead of a?\nholp, remember the quickest, surest\nmost harmless relief is rape's Diapepsin which costs only fifty cents for\na large case at drug stores. It's truly\nwonderful\u2014It digests food and sots\nthings straight, so gently and easily\nthat it is really astonishing. ' Please,\nfor your sake, don't go on and on\nwith a weak\/disordered stomach; it's\nso  unnecessary.\nVon Berhstorff, the <3ermo.h ambassador. 3Jhe secretary immediately sent\ntheni to President Wilson.\nOfficial Washington tonight considered that the United States and Germany at last ryvel'o near a final agreement regarding the conduct of submarine warfare. Officials made no attempt to conceal their gratification at\ntho attitude Germany apparently had\nassumed. It was considered to he virtually in harmony -with the American\nviewpoint,    h\nTension regarding the entire submarine question'seemed to have lessened\nconsiderably. Austria, in its reply to\nthe hist Aueona note having assured\nthe United States of its intention to\noperate submarines \"With due regard\nfor international law and the principles of humanity, Turkey and Bulgaria, it is understood, will next take\nsteps to give such guarantees. It is\nstated authoritatively that Germany\nmid Austria will use.their influence\nto accomplish this end. Tho-Lusitania\ncontroversy, except tor the wording\nof the agreement to be.entered into, Is\nconsidered In Teuton^ circles here as\nvirtually ended. j ..\nUnder tho terms of the proposal\nsubmitted for the approval of the United States, Germany, while offering to\npay an Indemnity makes the reservation that no admission of wrong doing\nthereby is involved. It is contended\nthat tho Lusitania was sunk as an act\nof reprisal for the British blockade of\nGermany;. While Secretary Lansing is\nunderstood not to have indicated to\nCount Von'Bernstorff whether tho pro.\nposal was satisfactory a number of\nofficials in a position to be familiar\nwith the American attitude indicated\nthat it. would be accepted. The assurances regarding the conduct of submarine warfare in the Mediterranean,\nobviously prompted iby tho sinking of\nthe passenger steamer \"Persia with a\nloss of two American lives, are much\nbroader In their scope than the promises made after the Lusitanla disaster,\ncovering the operations of the' submarines in the North sea and adjacent\nwaters. Tiie letter guaranteed only\nthat \"liners\" should be immune train\nattack without warning. The assurances regarding the afeditorranoSn\noperation includes privately owned\nships of every character, freight as\nwell as -passenger vessels, provided, of\ncourse, they, do not attempt to escape\nor offer resistance.\nSaturday Whitewear Sale News\nWHITE   FLANNELETTE\nToday We arc featuring Two Special Values in    Whito   Flannelette, 3li   inches   wide.     These   aro\ngreat sellers. 17\u00bb   1fl\u00ab\nPriced at (    ffC, \u00a3QC\nAgain we offer our Great Corset Specials.    Each day a stack of empty corset boxes testify to the\npopularity of this offer.\nCorset\nSpecials\nCROMPTON'S A LA GRACE\u2014\n-Every pair guaranteed. Regular value. \u00bbl.2B and fl.SO. QE_\nSale  Price      WUb\nROYAL   WORCESTER\u2014\nHigh    Class    Corsets.     Regular\n$1.75   up   to J5.00.    jNow, Qft\u00ab\niNoWj\nHalf price, *2.50 down to\nBRASSIERES\u2014\nNow   so  popular  and   necessary\nan article of dress.    In fino as*\nsortment. 7 En\nPrices, $1.25, $1.00 and ... I 3C\nCORSET    COVERS\u2014\nOf tho finest material, beautifully\ntrimmed and most tempting.\nPrices\u2014 7Ra\n*2.75 down to $1.25, $1X10  I \u00ab|C\nTable Linens\nBLEACHED   DAMASKS\nFIVE   DOZEN   NAPKINS\u2014\nAll pure  Linen.    Size  27  x  27.\nThese   are   neconds   but. almost\nperfect.   A Snap at.\nPer Dozen \t\n$4,25\n$2.95\nTABLE    CLOTHS\u2014\nAir Pure Linen.    A-line of seconds.   Sizes 68 x 80. Regular $4.50.    Now\nLarge  Sized   Cloths,   98   x   120.\nRegular value, $6.00.     tf} BE\nFor  \u00abyiii33\nHEAVY    LINEN    DAMASK\u2014\nSpecial Values\u2014Por Yard 7CA\n$1.76, $1.50, $1.25, $1.00 and I 3C\nSMILLIE & WEIR\nLADIES'    WEAR    SPECIALISTS\nNOW TOTAL 89\nThree' More Men Enlisted Last Night\nfat Overseas  Service\u2014r\"Tim\u00b0\nPlayer to Have Operation\nThree more men enrolled Tur overseas Mervico at the armory last night,\nbringing Nelson's total of enlistments\nup to 8!t.   The men are:\nEdmund ISUindeli of Phoenix, miner;\nnext uf kin, father, Kichurd Blundell,\nPhoenix.\nJohn Murdoch Gillis of Nelson,\nminer; next of kin, sinter, Mrs. Roderick iMuedonald, Inverness county, Cape\nBreton.\nWilliam John MeKie born at North\nShields, England, student; next of\nkin, .father, George McKie, North\nShields, England.\n\"Tim\" Player of Nelson will enlist\nfollowing an operation for varicose\nveins.\nNiEW  $5,000,000  CANADIAN\nMUNITIONS COMPANY FORMED\n.(By Daily Newa Leased Wire.)\n'' OTTAWA, Jan. 7.\u2014A>ew ?*i,OI),U,000\n'war mdni'tloiis eunipaii'y ' With headquarters in Toronto has Ijcen incorporated under the name of the Canada\nNitro Products, Limited,. It is said it\nwill manufacture arms and explosives\nof all kinds,\t\nCLAN JOHNSTONE\nINSTALLS OFFICERS\nAt the installation ceremonies of\nClan Johnstone, No 211i,jieid laat night\nand at which Past Chiefs George\nJohnstone and T D Stark acted as\nInstallation officers, the follower officers wero installed:\nW. A. Thomson, chief; C. H. Stark,\npast chief; D. Kerr, lunlst; H. Fraser,\nsecretary; Leslie Craufurd, financial\nsecretary; George Miller, treasurer; A.\nD. Wallace, senior henchman; C. 1<\\\nMcllardy, junior lienehman; * D;\nllitchlu. Honectaal; W. Byers, warder;\nW. C. Hill, sentinel; E. Harquay,, piper, and W. K. Maclean,  trustee.\nULTIMATUMS.\nSir; 1 demand Ihe.^imniudiate discontinuance of the slaughter of\nAmericans. Wilson.\nDear Sir: I trust that you will shortly find a way to stop killing Americans.   Yours truly,\nWuodrmv   Wilson.\nDear Frith?. Josef: No doubt in a\ncouple of years you will find it \u2022convenient to stop killing' Americans, Cordially. Woodruw.'\nDear Old Pal: Merry Christmas and\nHappy Now Year; \u25a0 Woody.\n\"It -would. .please me very much.\nMiss \u2022Stout,\" said Mr. Mugaley, \"if\nyou would go to the thcarte with, mo\nthis evening.\"\n\"Have you secured the seats?\" <-'\u00bb-\nquired Miss Vera Stout.\n\"Oh, come now,\" he protested,\nare not so heavy as all that,\"\n\"1 see you have your arm in a sling,\"\nsaid the inquisitive passengor* ''Broken, isn't It?\" \u25a0\u25a0 *\n\"Yes, sir,\" responded the other passenger.\n\"Meet with an accident?\"\n\"No; .broke it while trying .to. pat\nmyself on the 'back.\"\n\"Great Scott*    What for?\"\n\"For minding my own'business.\"1\nStarland Theatre\nSpecial  Performance  in  Aid of\nthe\nRed Cross Fund\nOn Wednesday Night.\nThe management ; has given\nthe theatre for the evening to\nthe society and in addition to\nthe regular program Mrs. Tyler\/\nand Mrs. J. \"T. Andrews YiWt.,\nsing. Mrs. Gordon Lambert and'\nMrs. M. \u00ab\\ Vignieux will act as:\nushers costumed  as  Red Cross\nTRAIL'S\nArrow Lakes Hotel\nEDGEWOOW, B. C.\nTho Hotel of Comfort on the\nArrow LaJteB.\nWhen in doubt\u2014Gem theatre.   (2159)\nA BRIGHT ONE\nJames ;H,  Schofi.ld,   MjP;P.,   predict.\nContinued   Prosperity\u2014Opening\nof Zino .Plant.\nJunius H. Sch'ofield, M.F.'P. (or Trail,\nwho viBltcd the city last night and attended the hookey game Is well pleased\nwith the present and, future outlook at\nTrail.\nHe states that at the present time\ntho city, has ,a payroll of 1200 mon,\ncalling for a jnonthly expenditure of\nover $1<M);000. Although, ho says, money\nIs free and'a .number of men of all\nolusses Irve^been atrtacted to the city\nIn tho past throe, tha law aljldiugncss\nof tho community is vouched for 'by\ntho fact that in that period thcro havo\nbeen hut two cases in the police court\nand those of such a minor character\nthat ho had forgotten what tho delin.\nquentB had been charged with.\n'Many people feel that, In view of\nthe number of men on the (payroll who\nare doing 'construction work, there will\nbe a lessening oj activities after.their\nwork is completed,\", said,Mr. Schofield,\n\"but it must .bo rememberod that following thp mon\" engaged in construction wonk will come the crows to fill\nthe buildings that they have been constructing.\" There Is no doubt, he said,\nthat ere long the new xiiic plant at\ntho smelter will be working three shifts\na day., and'that'will more than make\nup for the exodus of the gangs of construction men; \u25a0\nTrail's future Is bright,\" Jlo concluded.. .\"Wo all have.some money, enough\nfor our needs and a,littlo tilt more and\nthe man who has not been In the city\nfor a month would .be much surprised\nIf he could see It today.\" Mr. Schofield returned on the special train that\ntook the team and Its rooters back to\nTrail lost night, while In the city-he\nwas a.gueajt at the Strathcona,    \"     |\nNow that you have your new Grafonola, talking machine\nor phonograph you have a wonderful world\nof music opening up before you in\nColumbia Double-Disc Records\nFor example\u2014go to your dealer.and have him play this:\nKeep the Home Fires Burning till the Boys Come\nHome. (Novello). Read Miller, tenor, and\nFrederick Wheeler, baritone. Orchestra\naccompaniment, and,\nOn the Road to Happiness.   (Albert von Tilzer). N\nSam Ash, tenor. Orchestra accompaniment.\nIt's a great \"popular hit\"\u2014away above the average\u2014right from England-\ntinged with the heroic war spirit.   Hear it by all means.   Price 85c.\nComplete litt of Columbia Made-in-Canada Record*\nat your dealer's or mailed  free on request to\nCOLUMBIA GRAPHOPHONE COMPANY\nCanadian  Factory and   Headquarters,   365-367   Sorauren  Avei.ue,  Toronto  g\nA  BIG ASSORTMENT  OF  NEW\nColumbia Records Just to HandjCTI\nRUTHERFORD   DRUG   CO.,   LIMITED\nCOLUMBIA   AGENT8 NELSON,  B.C.\n ^*\"\nw:\nSATURDAY,    JAN.   8,    1\u00bb1fc..\nfM DAILY;NEWSS-\n\u25a0.oTi; ..iimi m\na\u00ab>\u00ab\u00bbJHMaMpa\nBeware\nof\nImitation*\n\u201e Sold\notv M\u00bb\nMerits\n..'Ol:',    \u25a0\nMinardi\nLiniment\nf*o you want to earn\n10 a week or more\nin your own home ?\nReliable persons Will be furnished with\nprofltable, all-year-round employment\non Auto-Knittlni\nMachines, $10 per\nweek readily earned. We teach you\nat home, distance\nis no hindrance.\nWrite for particulars, rates of pay*\nsend ac. stomp.\n< AWO-KNIWRB B0S1ERT>0. \u25a0\nOeptj 171 857CoUfgeSt,  -Toronto\n\u2666\u00bb\u2022\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u2666*<\ntl\u00bbMMMIM\u00bb\u00bbMH\nof Sport\nwmlMiiiiiini nifi j'i'i \u00bb \u00bb\u00bb*\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab s<\npagh thiictj\nNaSONIHHWfnM\nE OF SEASON TO TRAIL STARS\nThe fastest and best game of the\nWest Kootenay season waH the verdict returned on the game that was\nplaye'd last night at the local rink between Nelson aha Trail. The lee was\nin good condition nnd the many fans\nthat were present were keyed up so\nthat what nofce was larking from the\nband was forthcorrimg from them. Ail\nthe way through, the game was ^ell\nplayed by both septets, which exhibit*,\ned some brilliant \"aria snappy'play that\nst times brought the crowd to Us feet.\nTho Trail team throughout won credit\nhy t!Te way it handfei tftfe puoft, while\ntheir combination und steady pulling\ntogether was the feature of the game.\nIts defense wo'rk w'as^ex'ceHeht, tit tinie\nand time again the local boys seemed\nwithin an ace of scoring only to be\nthwarted bv McDonousrh's. &i,d ftTtiK\"\n*+kiW iieat stick work, while its' forwards showed that they can live up to\n'h\u00bblr reputation as being, one of the\nWt set of stick, handlers ih the\n'enjrne., ., '\nThe local boys seemed to be playing\n\"n'ler a jinx which did not .. lift\n'hroir)r|>. the whole three periods. \"Tho\n^ef^nse work of X. Bishop nnd Muir-\ny>ptv\\i was . of sterling quality, both\n; fi^onpin^hai^.ruhh^siby the smielte>\n\"Uv fprwarjls .ahd time and again\nnlear'nif theij- net with strong fii'Bhbs\n\u2022'u the, Ice. It was the same, with tho\n'hqal forwards, who plaved ohe of the\nmnst b^illlntit and. aa?s*resflive games\n\u2666ha* h\u00ab.v\u00ab b^e'n sfen this eeaion. their\nerees kept this work down. Several\ngood plays featured the next few minutes of play, in which both local and\nopposing forwards whined, especially\nthe Trail forwards. Their neat see*\nsaw again commanded- the play during\nthis period and during one of the\ntushes -by the local septet Dea collided with Atkins' knee and was down\n\"and out for K while, w&Ulnfr for hi*\nwind .to come back.. Th$, laat nart pf\nthis period\" ended up ih a burst of\nspeed, both teams fruitlessly endeavoring to score\nThe stars of this period feerfe: Trail.\nMcDonough and Snyder, while for Nelson, F. Grant, Dea and Deildal had the\npdpular \"ceraict. The score, stood:\nNelson, 1; Trail, 1.\n.   Second Period\nThis period was not quite as fast as\nthe first but all through brilliant and\nneat ptyya \"were,, noticed {hat gaye Jl*\nwhat. interest it lacked in speed. The\npuck Was, at the Trail goal .during; the\nopening of,'this period and.fluring one\nbf the' mix-ups \"In\" front'of tho 'net\nKred*urant aent in the second tally tor\nNelson iyl thin one mniii'tedplaV, ThiB\nscore, started . things and the Trail\nseven \"tried *nard' to break away tfiit\nwas out of lUck and the puck wits Con-\nsUuVtly kept ^t^h^r^js^Mftk^yaii-\neita s'to^pirig' totyi fit,, hot,,,.one'j| thftt\nWere sent' m't'o, jithi    ,  , |('\nMcDonough %\u00a3, 'last 'olea]rea for, Trflll\nbut was quickljH#6flned and Ws p'uck\nbrought back by Mulf-ieftd who starred\n\"omMnation in the lkst period'was all im a brilliant ruMi^TtfiTne^t few min--\n*fc\u00b0**e nnd ,thfi rushes put up by them |ute'B saw Ihe Trail net tightly besieged\n\"*ecp a aonilqtalnf source of worry to,but the local boy* we're unable to het\n\u2666ho Trail il^fAnsfi. \u25a0       :    na^iy^ The.jinx then^brokfrirqm.t^e\n,     Tim PftrioH a Husti fraU   playerA. and,.TO$r'c5uno  oack\n. Thfl first ner|6d htnrted -with a' rush stYonk with' rush anil' counter-rush and\n\"Wl B>an fbftt was kent up all the way | managed .to score their , second tally,\n\u2666hro'is-h. two goals,lipfna: scored, one,tho trick'being ilbno\"b'y Briyder. This\nhv \"irai, n\u201efl nne },v .N\u00abl<inn. |tied the Score again arid eVery herVtt\nThe second period, although not so Wa\u00ab strained by .both teams to  put\nf\u00ab\u00ab' ns the first wasmarkPd bv somo them in the lead for the^ beginning, of\nPOUND DISTRICT ACT,\nPursuant to the,'provisions of Sec\n\u25a0 tions i\\ and 18 of this act, notice Is\nhereby..', given: ot the resignation of. G.\nGbrdoiir Holmes, poundkeeper of the\npound established' In the Proctor School\nWatrict, as from the 31st of December,\n1915, and of .the appointment as his\nsuccessor of F. J, Walton of Prpctor.\nB.C., as ppundkeeper for the above\n' district'.;   .    .' ,\n\\vt   (Sighed) A, C.FLUMBBFELT,\nMinister; of Finance and Agriculture.\nDecember 31, 1916.\nNELSON   ASSESSMENT   DISTRICT\ntfotacE Is hereby giyett that all\ntaxes tor the $4ar ISift for properties\nsituate in the Nelson Assessment District are no% due and payable at m>\nnffdee In the Court House, City of\nNelson.\nAND, moreover, take notice the\npublication of this ^notice is debmed\nto be equivalent to a personal demand\nby. the Collector of all taxes due and\npayable by persons-liable to pay the\nsame. .\"'\nDated at Kelson, B. Vil this is't day\nof January, 191C.\n' S. S. JKfiVlB,\nCbitoctor, Kelson Assesstne'nt pistrlct.\n*^WMiitw^(\u00bbllM 1'ii i  um9wmAm%mlkmimmmmm\n1 UANDRstfelSTrtY Abt.\nTo the .Representatives of liemUel R:,\nDole,    Registered   and    Assessed\n.   Owner of Sublqt 30, or TownBhlp\n','\u25a0. 1^5' of Lot'ln?^.Group 1, Kootenay\nJJlstrlci, Map Xh, and all those fo\n\u25a0 whom it may concern:\ntake notice that an appiicatlpri has\nireen made to register Samuel fearkley\n:is theowher In fee simiple of the above\nhinds under ,^Tax Sale -Deed from. the\nAsseseoir of .the District of Nolson, and\nyou.are,required to contest the claim\nMf,'tne_Tax Purchaser within forty-five\n(15)  days from the first publication\n\u25a0 hereof. ,   . ,, ... \u201e  f    ( ,\nt Dated at the Land Registry Office,\n^elsbn, fe.C., thls^ist day of Deeeta>\n. Jj%;ifiir.,: ..     j .;  - .,.\u201e.,,\n.,,..:'     .      SAMU14L R' ROE,, , %   ,\n\":'\u25a0.\".'\u25a0' District Registrar.\n\u2022 sate' *6f first  publication, 'January\nbHlMnrit rtlftVs and sensatlonat stons\nbv thp pnat keftners..who wew nerslst-\ntftftiy ca'lM upon In this'period, espe-\n''lallv Fovrr, Briiflrflfne*. thft local net.\nfo kepn. otit. the linrd shots stwtmed in\nhv both tennis. Two poals were also\nScored ih 'this \"period, one by\" Ne1fi*6h\nand one by Trail, which made the\nwore 2 to 2 in the opening of the\nthird p>Hod.\nThe third period was the most ex-\nclt'ner and fastest of the three. Both\nteams had only one tally to get and\nthis made play at a fever pitch all the\nway through and constantly kept the\ncrowd on its feet .in .witnessing some\not the plays that were pulled off fey\nboth teams.\nFirst  Period\nThe first period started with a rush\nahd snap that was kept, up for some\ntime, tho players see-sawing up and\ndown the ice final\" Fred %rarit of the\nlocal septet, secured tho puck and\nrushed \"it up the, lc'ejfrom. the local\nnet and 'passed fo^Biay' centra, Who\nwith a neat shot netted the first goal\nfor'Neliion in 1% rnhiute ot trtay. TJiis\nscore livened things up hiore and Trail\naftel* a few minutes of puck- chasing\nhad its first goal netted -by. McDonald:\nTills evened matters and both, tt-iims\ntried hard to broak ^th'e* '.\"tie \u2022 but were\"\nunablo, to.do 'so..' Piiiy.,fo'r the next\nt*H' minutes varied . witli the puck\nrioW- a,t one,end and 'ndlfr. at atioUier,\nboth gqali ,'tenider.B , being frequently\ncalled upon to show some, class in\nkeeping^ out the hot ones that were\nconstantly belh\u00a3 fired in. by both\nteams, Boyes of the loc^l net and Valletta, guarding Trail's riot,, making\nspectacular stopB.arid saves. Quite a\nbit of football was nbtlced in this\nperiod, [botii\" teams, having.'a tendency\nto kick the puck when .they: oould not.\nrfeach it with their sticfe. However,\nclose watching on the part of the ref-\n-JCU-L-\nNelson Steam Laundry\nFRENCH    BAY   CLEANING   AND\nDYEING.\nDsHWb'''tot the WMts; Coinpany\nMo'ibt *CMk\"'KKa\" ttubVS. ' SfiWihobilos\nfor \u25a0hire ^atfy hour day or nlg;ht-^f>as-\naengers, baegago and light freight:\nNelson Steam Laundry\nPAUL NIPOU, M\u00bbl(at\u2022^.\u25a0>.'...':\nP. 0. Box 48 ''   ' \u25a0\u25a0     Jtti. 146\nRAW FHR8 WANTED.\nFarmers, ranchers and trappers, It\ndoes not cost you anything to. get our\ncash offer on your furs. Express them\nto us. We pay all charges over a $5\nvaluation. We make you our offer.and\nhold your.furs tot your reply, returning, them at our expense if not pur*\nohosed. Try us. In business since 18S8.\nMackay & Dlpple, 218 Eighth, avenue\nwest, Calgary. '.'\u201e .\n\u25a0y_ \u25a0 ^ \u2022 ; I, v an e tun\nthe third period. In one of the rushes\nthat followed \"Tuff Atkins wbb sent\nto the fence, foi1 two minutes for trying\nto play .with two. sticks at once, ono\nbf which belonged to Archie Bishop.\n(This period, ended In a burst of speed\nbut no score was .made and the period\nended Nelson 2, Trail 2,      ,\nThe stars for this period were: Nelson, Mulrhead and J. orant; Trail, McDonough, Fraser and Saunders.\nThird Perie'd.\n. The .third was by. far the .fastest;nnd\nmost exciting period of the game, both\ntoams endeavoring to net tho fin\u00bbl tally\nand c|nch.the;game. Opening with a\nsnap and v im that kept, up Ml Hie Way\nthrbbgli tho play Was 'well Worth\nseeing. . Shot 'arid rush them down,\nwas .the oljdeViif theiirjext t'fwVilnptes\napa'both septets cer(olnly carried it\nput \"to a standstill.\" Tills .w&s KooKey.\nand-the fans made note' of it\/ Boyes\nin the local net lived.up to. the reputation he made when playing Rossland\narid wtiile making naVd'- TsiVes',., had;\nnothing, over Vanetta of \u25a0 Trail's net\nWho.acted his part ofya stonewall ,to^:\nperfection. Play .th6j9,.,!8eesaWed dur-'\niho;.which 'Fraser of Trail was sent to;\ntlecorate the fence for one minute. .The:\nnext rush made by. Nelson, sent. both.\nF. Qrant arid Fraser: to the fence:for\ntwo minutes and during the absence of\nthese two stars both teams again started the llaM iiush gft'me but ^without\nsuccess, until after about five minutes\nbf the up and down pliy, aha with but\nthree minutes to go before the end of\nthe game, N\"elson lost out'for Haddock\nof the opposing team -with a -smoky\nshot fram a little past centre ice netted-\nthe third and ilhal-'t'ally of-the game.\nIt Was how three minutes to go, Nelson 2, Trail 3. Time aad again, dur.\ning those' last three minutes! did tiie\nlocal, boys . try to break through the\n'trail'defense and, tie the, score^ but ii\ntoS hiiJ.nse Snd .wj hard and fast\ntoshes iriade,by khe Whole lotal teanf\nwere met hhd 'stOBped'by,the''fpi'all deJ\nfense until the bell rang forjhe final\nperiod, (he game going to Tfiii by a\nfeore of :s to 2. . .   ,        y;; fit t\nThe stars for this period fofc Nelsbp\nWere Bpj'es anil Archie tUBhop?: )h 'fact!\neveftrerie stafred and the same with\nWall, e*6ry\"otie of its .players making a\nname tot himself, although the defense\nof, Vanetta, .Atkins and, McDonough\nWas principally noted.\nThe, Llhi-Up.\nNelson '\n.0641.\nBoyes ........,.!...'\t\npSljSti-\nMulrhead .............\nCo*\u00bbr.\nA. Bishop Atkins\nRoVph ;\n........ Saunders, White\nCentre.   -;\n ;,V.i. ..V Haddock\nLeK'Wiiig'-\n...,..........\":. .Snyjler\nRight wing.\nDeildal ..'.  Fraser\nSpares.\nRichardson, H. LBishop ..'...'... White\nReferee, .-A. Keating; judge of play,\nThiTOher;: timekeepers, F. J. Mc-\nCrohan,  aiia.Harh' W*i\u00bbht;\nWe Guarantee Renon\ntill not grow hall'; If It does you may\nthe and fryyto 'get-y^ur money Wo*.\n-  >A. i.. Wll*0(N,\nO. K.,Barber \u00abh\u00abp. '\n, .JVUr\u00bbduce.Sjfla!n^\nStralBed,\n I Tentirins, Daaments,\nMuscles or Bruises.    StoiMjhe\nlandeneu and paln-from a Splint,\nSide Bono or Bone Spavin,  No\nblister, no hair gone.   Horse can be\nused. $2 a bottle delivered. Describe\n_   -    youc. case- lor sptcial -iastractions\nahd Book2KFree.    ...      .\nHIQRBIrtt, JR., the aritisepticlleimmtlot\nmsnliind.  Recfuces Strained, Torn Llga-\ni\u00ab\u00ab, Enl\u00bbr\u00ab\u00abl OWnds, Veins ot Muscles,\ncnls Cuts, Sores, Ulcers. Allays psln. filci\n.HttbottieMdnlenerAHlttred. - Bt\u00abk\"R\u00bbMMic*\" f\"r\nFiV0DNfi.r.P.r.fT51r*unslU|.,llratKtl,Cn.\nDefeat SMttl* Wh)\u00ab4i  Hid S-1 Lead\nSeen  After Opening   of  First\nt   p\u00bbriod^-8ome Dirty Stuff.\n(By Dolly New* leased Wire.)\nSEATTLE, W\u00bbwh., Jan. 7.\u2014Coming\nfrom behind with, a *Mlm Portland defeated the Seattle club here in a Pacific coast league fixture by a. score of\nj' to 3,and llghtene* Its 'lead in the\nrace. Beatji'e had the game 3 to 1\nshortly-after ft)t>: opening of ithe second period but from then on the visitors simply skated the locals off their\nfeet.' Quite a bit of feeilhg developed1\nduring the game, several penalties being handed out while .fines were also\nplastered on, flowe and .Carpenter of\nSeattle and Harris of Portland. Goal\nsummary:\nFirst ip^rtod-^obin,\/Portland, 12:23;\nFby's'toh, Seattle, 3:\u00bb7; Morris, Seattle,\n3:W., '\u2022,.-....M.   ., -...-k\nSecond peHbd\u2014Morris, Seattle, 2:OS;\nDunderdoie, Portland, 5.35; Dunderdale,\nPortland, :13; Tobin, Portland, 3:21;\nTobln, Portland, :16.,\nTKiird period.\u2014 Johnson, Portland,\n9:24\nSeattle.\nHolmes   ..\nCarpenter\nGoal.\nCover.\nPortland.\n.-vA\". Murray\nJohnson\nRoVer. -\nFoyston  ,. Oatman\nCentre.\nMorris      Dunderdale\nRljgjit Wing.\nRickey  Tobln\n'   ;l\u00bbft fln|r.. .       ';,\nWalker ...:\/...  Harris\nTteferee^-Fred Idh.\ncoffofSM\nSKYWARD\nBattered Irtt*' Submission at End of\nNinth by Frank Moran in\nHeavyweight Beat      *\nhim down with crashing rights on the\nJaw.\n, Coffey was knocked down four times\nIn the ninth round, in each taking a\ncount of nine. The last time Moran\nalmost drove him through the ropes\nbut he managed to get- up in time.\nHis seconds, realising that he wa\u00ab\nhopelessly beaten, threw up the sponge\nto nvjold a knockout.\nThe   weights   were:    Coffey   205*4,\nMoran 10014.\nCOFFEY KNOCKED OUT.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nNEW YORK, Jan. 7.\u2014Frank Moran\nof Pittsburg knocked out JJm Coffey,\nthe Dublin giant, in the ninth -round\nof a. scheduled 10-round bout at Madison' Stjuarfe Oarflep' tonight.\nROSSLAND CHURCH HOCKEY\nLEAQUE   IS  ORGANIZED\n(Special to The Daily News.) .\nROSSLAND, B. ft, Jan, 7.\u2014a! a\nmeeting held lost night In St. Andrew's\nhall a church hockey league was\nformed, the following officers being\nelected: President Rev. W. Robertson;\nvice-president, Samuel Morrlsh; secretary-treasurer, Paul Freeman; captains, Irving Trembath and Ollle Hen-\nder. f he executive Will meet shortly\nto draw up a,schedule for 'the. season.\nANGLERS DESIRE\noWWCED\nKootenay and  Slocan  Association  to\nRequest Government to Alter\nDatss to April 1 and Oct. IB.\nAt a general meeting of the Kootenay and Slocan Anglers* association,\nheld at South Slocan last evening, it\nwas  decided again  to  approach  the\nDominion and provincial au.\nwith regard to the eivtaaMItr et M-\nUring the opening and ctoainjr i&t*\nof the fishing season to Atprtl I afcd\nOct. 15 and to ask the asecfcWraiirfit\nQueens Bay and Rossland tit endona-\ntion. William Ridge of Bonnlygton\nwon the prlie for (fee largest 1'\nt'rought caught oh a fly between 1\nBonnington falls and the Coli\nriver, having landed a beauty w*\ning m pounds. The annual meeting\nwill be held at South Slocan on,Saturday night, Feb. *, at 8:1ft o'clock, ,\nWhen In doubt\u2014Gem theatre,   (ftf\u00bb\nsssteBB-s-xemes>\nFURS\nGet Mori? Money\" for your Foxes\nMuskrat, White Weasel, Beaver, Lynx, Wolves,\nMarten and other Fur hearers ceHenssl \u00abs jom sesOVsi\nSHIP TOOB POR8 DIRECT lo \"SBCBERT\"fktJs\nkMi\u00ab lo UK WsfU staltof eadasrtdr le tsearnj Un-CUD-aT\na rellnble\u2014responsible-safe Fur House with an anblenUahac\nntation existing for morethan athiidof a century.\" Steri*\nceKsful record of sen.JIng Pur Sh,pp\u00abrapToitioi^AT|8PACT\"\nANI> PROFITABLE returns.   Write for\"\u00ab\u00bbtaa>sailHW\nthe only reliable, accurate mark et report and price list pub\nWrite tee ll-BOW-tf. PstSB\nA. B. SHUBERT, Inc. D^c^\nBritains\nGreatest Remedy\nTrail\nVanetta\nMcDonough\nF. GrSnt.,\nDea .....\nJ, Grant\nONTARIO HOCKEY,\n(By. Dally News Leased Wire.)\nTORONTO.y Jan. 7.-^Ten games lit\nthe intermediate O.H;A. were ployed\ntonight. Eleven were sdneduled but.\nCbtmfe, ffliS ttr 'plejy St WMtbV,; de\u00bb;\nfftultfd. There were iio;>j\u00bbmes in the\nO.H.A. senior .or.the Northern league.\nResult:   \u25a0' '\nWeston il, Bolton SiOrlllla 6, Brace-\nbridge r>; Barrie Ii, M.idland '*! TOter-;\nHoro '3, ^Camp^elifbrd 2; Sanila 9i\nWbodsft*oki2; Oshiiwa: 14, 84th battalv\nion 2; Colllngwood.6, Meaford 3; Paris\n^,.1rt\u00abmiltt* ta\u00ab.RJ> 'ii^PrMrm J.-'BeiV\nlevllle B; Port Colborne -8, Niagara\nFalls'B... ...\nSOLDIERS WIN.\nRBG1NA, Sask., Jan. 5,\u2014By winning\ntonight -from tho .Victorias, the <S8th\nbatfalloh team has now tied with its\nlocal rivals'in the South,Saskatchewan-\nAmateur Hockey league. ''The\"-T{nai:\nscore was U to'l'InTiiivor.'of tho sol*\n.llerw, ; The game -'Was a trifle rough\n(By Dally News' Leased Wre.)\nNEW YORK, Jan. 7.\u2014Whatever\nclaims James Coffey the Roscommon\ngiant, enjoyed as a possible heavyweight championship contender, went\nshooting skyward tonight, at -Madison\nSquare garden, .when Frank Moran of\nPittsburg, for the second time withiik\na couple of months, administered such\na severe punishment that, for- pure\nhumanity's sake B'lily Gibson, Coffey's\nmanager, threw a sponge into the ring\nas a token of defeat. This was in the\nninth round aiid will be recorded as 4\ntechnical kbockbut, although Coffey,\nhelpless and hanging on' the ropes, was\nstill on'his ftiet When'the con'tdst was\nstopped. It was a repetition of the\nfirst meeting between the men, with\nedffey knocked out standing on His\nfeet, with the- ditfereilce that Moran\ntook-\/silt rounds more to accomplish\nhis object.. '\u25a0\n'-Unofficial reports placed the receipts at $32,000, which Is ;7000 more\nthan was taken in at the first .meeting\nbetween the big men; \\ '\nIt- was a fast fight on the whole,\nalthough at certain, .stages In the lat:\ntor rounds ft lacked the action which\nspectators bad been Jed,to expect. Not\nby the.Widest.stretch of the imagination could it lie classed as a scientific\nexhibition. Stiff punching there was\nIn plenty. Solid wallops that sounded\nthrough the big building and carried\nplenty of steam behind, them, were frequent, but as a boxing exhibition it\nwa\u00bb far below thai to'beexpected from\nheavyweights.\n1 Moran outclassed Coffey in the majority of rounds and tn the latter took\naway his strength and speed with\ndrives   Into  the   ribs,ahd   then   beat\n n.,.mini ii i';1;\"1-:,- :\n\"CAS$ELl's\nTABLEfS'\nM&\u00bb\nCET A FREE SAMPLE,\nSend your name ani address and\nSe'ekls id* #*\u00ab*&\u2022\u00a3<\u2022, etc., lo Hri'dd\nF, Ritchie & Co., Ltd., II), McCaul\nst., Toronto, ind a gene'o\\tt sample\n\\ *iU_be mmfV you free of charge.\nThe Proved Cure for\nNerve, Stomach, and Kidney Disorders\nin Young or Old.\nThe effect of the Famous British Remedy, Dr. Cassell's\nTablets, on the human system is to increase that vital\nenergy upon which health and fitness depend; The\nstomach and other organs gain new power from Dr. Cassell's Tablets,\nand thus nourishment is supplied to the entire system. The muscles\nrecover strength, and the body is built up anew.' V\nDr. Chas. W. Botwood, D.Sc, Ph.D., &c, the well-known\nscientist, says, \"Having had my attention called to many rernatk-\nable cures effected by Dr. Cassell's Tablets, ami having personally\ninvestigated the same, I am now in a position to state that, as a\nsafe and reliable remedy for loss of flesh Snd vigour, nerve\naffections and bodily weakness induced by deficient assimilation\n\u25a0of beneficial food products, Dr. Cassell's Tablets appear to bft\nunique, an^I have no hesitation in recommending the same as a\nreally trustworthy household remedy for young or old.\"\nThroughout the world Dr. Cassell's Tablets are recognised as\nthe great strengthening medicine, are Nutritive, Restorative,\nAlterative, and Anti-spasmodic, and of taroyed Therapeutic value in\nall derangenients of the Ne'rVe and Funlltional Systems in old or\nyoung. Unexampled success has established them as the modern\n\u25a0 home remedy for Nervous Breakdown; Nerve and Spinal Paralysis, Infantile\nParalysis, Rickets, St. Vitus' Dance, Anasmia, Sleeplessness, Kidney Disease,\nDyspepsia, Stomach Catarrh, Brain Fag, Headache, Palpitation, Wasting Diseases,\nVital -Exhaustion, Loss ol Flesh, and Premature Decay. Specially valuable for\nNursing Mothers and for all women during the Critical Periods \"of Life.\nDruKglstfl and Dealers throughout Canada Bell Dr. CasseH'B Tablets.   If not. procurable ia\nyour city send to 4he solo agents, Harold P. ulteliio & Co., Ltd., Iu, McCaul Street,\n.     .   i     Toronto; ono tubo, 5J centra, 6 tubes for tho price ot fire.\nSole Proprffi'ers:\u2014Dr.  Castells- Co.,  Ltd.,   Manrhtsttr,  Eno.\nTablets\nGEM THEATRE\nTONIGHT\nIN ADDITION\n\u25a0*ss\u00bb\"\u00bbBaP\nin\nBy Charles Dickens\nA    SHUBERT    FEATURE    IN    FIVE    ACTS\nWITH    TOM    TERRlSS\nHIS NEW JOB\nTWO ACTS OF SUPEREXCELLENT COMEDY.\nShows Continuous 2:30 to 11 p. m.\nU8UAL   MICES\nI      I\nPHONG   111\nWHEN    IN    DOUBT\u2014GEM    THEATRE\nJi-..-ire Mfc A'tesis..   land there was some hard checkihp;.  . I\"\n mmmm\nPAGE FOUR\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nSATURDAY,    JAN.   8,    1918.\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished   every    morning   except\n\u2022unday by the News Publishing Com-\n\\4Mny, Limited,  Nelson, B.C., Canada.\nROBB SUTHERLAND,\nEditor and Manager.\nBuaineea letters should be addressed\nand checks' and money orders made\npayable to .the News Publishing Company, Limited, and in no case to individual members of the staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and sworn\ndetailed statements of circulation mail*\ned on request; or may be aeen at the\noffice of any advertising agency recognized by the Canadian Press Association.\n. Subscription Rater\u2014By Mail: 60 cent?\nper month, $2.50 fc\/ six months, |5.00\nper year. Delivered: CO cents per\nmonth, $8.00 for six months, $6.00 per\nSATURDAY,    JAN.   8,    1916.\n*v.\nSHEER   WEIGHT   OF   METAL\nAND    MEN\nPetrograd is not saying much about\nRussia's great offensive upon the\nsouthern section pf tho eastern battle-\nfront but the German and Austrian reports, together with the brief despatches which the correspondents are\nallowed to send out, indicate that the\nCzar's general staff in applying against\nthe enemy the same tactics which\nforced the. Russian retreat from the\nCarpathians last summer, By sheer-\nweight of metal and men an attempt is\nbeing made to force the Austro-Ger-\nmans out of the corner of Galicia near\ntp- Rumania, whero from a political\nViewpoint they are of greatest danger\nto the entente cause.\nThe issue of the struggle is unde\ncided but the fortune of battle so far\nhag.favored the'. Russians. There is\none cause {or great satisfaction in the\nfact that the Russians are evidently\namply supplied with, the field guns and\nshells without which victory in trench\nwarfare is virtually unattainable.\nanswer the people would have given.\nThey would have supported their governments in the only honorable coursu\nwhich could possibly he taken. A vote\nin Russia would also have. been in\naccord with the attitude of the ministry. The people would have supported their \"Little Father,\" the czar.\nItalians would undoubtedly have voted\nfor war.\nSOLDIERS    DEMAND    CANADIAN\nMADE   TOBACCO\nLarge quantities of tobacco are being sent by Canadians to the .soldiers\nat the* front and in hospital but that\nthe needs in this respect are not being\nfully met is shown by the letter from\nLieut D. A. McQuarrle, which The\nDally News publishes this morning.\nThe point upon which Lieut. McQuarrle lays emphasis is the desire\nof the' Canadian boys for Canadian\ntobacco. It is one to which attention\nhasJieen drawn in the past and which\nwilt appeal especially to smokers, who\nknow how much greater is the pleasure to be derived from a brand, to\nWhich they have- been accustomed than\nfrom a grade to which l tlVey, are\nstrangers. Tobacco sold in England\ndiffers considerably from that manufactured in Canada and the United\nStates.\n\u25a0'Organizations in Great Britain\nwhJch.accept cash and forward tobacco\nto tbe front have done good work but\nthere seems to be little doubt that a\nvery large number of the soldiers from\nthis country would prefer to receive\nthe Canadian-made   product.\nP.   McCONNELL   PRAISES   NEW\nCABINET MINISTERS\nJohn P. McConnell, former editor of\nthe Saturday Sunset and the Vancouver Sun, Liberal candidate in Yale\nin lit)12 .and present Independent Liberal candidate for Cariboo riding, has\ncommenced the publication of \"J. P.'s\nWeekly\" at Vancouver. In the first\nIssue he pays tribute to the strength\nof Premier Bowser's new cabinet.\n\"No one can deny,\" he declares editorially; \"that the inclusion of Messrs.\nTisdall, Campbell and Plumerfelt will\nbring new and important strength to\nthe cabinet.\"\n' He speaks of Mr. Flumerfelt's fitness for the 'portfolio of finance and,\nconcerning the portfolio of mines,\nsays: \"By separating the portfolio\nfrom the premiership and putting it\ninto the hands of a capable, practical\nman like Mr. Campbell, Premier Bowser irV-my opinion has made a move\ncalculated to give & tremendous impetus to the mining industry. J look\nfor. a renaissance in the mining iri-\nduatry in- the near future under Mr.\nCampbell's guidance.'1'\n'He says that under Mr. Tisdall\n\"there will be no waste and few leaks\nIn the works department. Mr. Tisdall\nfibva foe to extravagance.\" Summing\nUp,, Mr. McConnell declares that \"all\nthe new men have strong individuality.\nThey are capable and independent.\"\nPOPULAR     VOTE     WOULD     NOT\n\u00a3HAVE PRESERVED PEACE\nEIHm Root, one of the greatest of\nj^rfjerlcan statesmen, -believes that a\nsafeguard against future-wars would\ntie to give the people the power to say\nby-vote- if their country should embark upon a- struggle In which their\nlines' and property would pay the bill.\nLooking back upon the events which\npreceded the outbreak of tbe present\nstruggle it is doubtful if much support\nisi.'-'glveh to'Mr. Roofs idea,\nj If Germans had voted upon the\nquestion there is no reason to suppose\nfhtff'they would have given .a majority\nfor peace. . For four- decades they had\noeeri' educated in the idea that Germany could win world domination by\niotce of arms. A vote in Austria\nIrouMT have supported the > gdVernjaent, -\nPJ$Ucy*' t?       \u25a0\n' As to Great Britain and France there\nJ\u00bb  no  question   whatever .as. to   the\nEnlist for overseas service. Twenty-,\nfive thousand men . are needed' from\nBritish Columbia.\nA few dollars will supply a Belgian\nfamily with bread for weeks. Send a\ncontribution to The Daily News fund.\nDr. Cook, who did not discover the\nnorth pole, is a sincere admirer of\nHenry Ford's peace propaganda. He\nnaturally has a fellow feeling for all\nwho play the chief part in hoaxes and\nfizzles.\nTwo suits are threatened against the\nFord peaco party. One alleges a\nbroken agreement and another charges\nslander. German influence on the Jitney pacificists is evidently becoming\nstronger.\nLittle Reggie McCarthy of Nelson\nsaved his nickels during tho holiday\nseason and has given $1 for the relief\nof the starving Belgian children\nthrough The Daily News fund. The\ngift should be especially appreciated\nfor the unselfish spirit which prompted it.\nGermany has promised the United\nStates that none of its submarine\ncommanders will attack liners in the\nMediterranean without giving warn\ning and* providing for the safety of\npassengers. Von Tirpitz doubtless has\nah ample supply of Turkish or Bulgarian uniforms nnd flags with which\nto disguise his pirates who arc coim\nducting operations in those waters.\nIt \u00bbMMfM\u00bbMM\u00ab*\u00bb1\nCOLD   STORAGE X\nHere is :i ^I'.ef \"appreciation\" of t]le\nGerman from an Irishman in ll)e\ntrenches who has.had some opportunity of verifying his description:\n\"By evolution he is a degenerate; by\nbreeding a brute; by instinct a bully;\nby nature u traitor; toy profession a\nspy; by choice a cad; by accomplishment an assassin; ibyr training a murderer.\"\nMrs. Twiekenbury found the gas\nleaking and remarked, \"I am afeard\nwe shall be gasfixurated.\"\nA washerwoman applied to a gentleman for work and he gave her a note\nto the manager of a certain club. It\nread as follows:   .\n\"Dear Mr. X.\u2014T?hlp;. woman wants\nwashing.\"\nVery shortly.afterward the answer\ncame back:\n\"Dear Sir\u2014I dare say she does; but\nI don't fancy the Job.\"\nClergyman (to tattered hobo)\u2014Instead of spending your life wandering about the countryside and sleeping under hedges why can not oyu\nact like a man and go out and fight\nfor your hearth and home?\"\nWhen Prince William of Weld started to organize the Albanians to attack tho Servians' and Montenegrins\nhe apparently stirred up quite a lot of\ntrouble. Essad Pasha, the Albanian\nleader who was chiefly responsible for\ndriving \"William the Weed\" from his\nAlbanian throne some 18 months ago,\nis now recruiting 50,000 of his people\nto attack  Austria, \u25a0*\n,  -'?\u2666\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb \u25a0\u00bb\u25a0\u00bb\u00bb\u25a0? .\t\nI WHAT THE  PRESS IS 8AYING \\\nAustria's Glories.\nVon Tirpitz and his lieutenants\nmust be gnashing their teeth. It is\nall very well to wish your ally well,\nbut. Austria, in these days Is getting\nmore than its share of the glory that\ncomes from drowning defenseless; men,\n-Edmonton .Totir-\nwoinen and chfldren.-\ni.al,\nChanging Commanders.\nGreat Britain is the last of the chief\nbelligerents to change her commander\nin the field. Germany led the way by\nthe dismissal of Von Moltke from the\nchief ship of the general stafif, and tho\nsubstitution of General von Falken-\nhayn. This was done almost immediately after the 'battle of the Marne and\nthe failure of the plan of crushing\nFrance. Long afterward after the\ngreat retreat from Poland, Russia\nswopped horses by transferring the\nGrand Duke Nicholas to the Caucasus.\nOnly recently the chief command of\nthe French armies on the western front\nwas delegated from General Joffre to\nGeneral de Castelnau.\u2014Lloyd's \"Weekly News.\nWilson and   Next  Election.\nThe Wall Street grievance against\nPresident Wilson Is like the pro-Gorman grievance and there is about as\nmuch patriotism in one as in the other.\nNeither of these elements has been\nable to use the president or control\nhis administration. Therefore both are\nprepared to exert all their power to\ndefeat his reelection.\nA combination of Wall Street, the\nGerman vote, Theodore Roosevelt and\nthe Republican machine may be able\nto control the national election or lfllG\nbut we doubt .it. Our own belief is\nthat there is still a great deal oC disinterested patriotism in the United\nStates and that tho idealism of the fathers has not yet been submerged in\nhyphens or in dollars.\u2014New York\nWorld.\n1\nTHE   WEATHER t\nMill. Max.\nNelson     14 25\nDawson     -34 -22\nVictoria     ,t(j .12\nVancouver       34 38\nKamloops      s IS\nCalgary    4        2\nMedicine Hat       -s ((\nEdmonton     -14        2\nBattlefOrd  -14 -fi\nPrince Albert   -14 -4\nMoose  Jaw  -17 5\nToronto     12 22\nOttawa \u2022... ' -8        4\nMontreal       0 6\nQuebec  -12 -2\nSt. John*      4 12 .\nHalifax    12 22 [\nTHE  WAR  ONE  YEAR  AGO\nAlong the whole front of the Vistula\nterrific .fighting is going on between\nthe Russians and Germans, while to\nthe east of Borjiow artillery and infantry make up the main part of the fighting.\nArtillery and bombing attacks to the\nnorth of Arras make tip the total of\nfighting that occurred along tho. western front.\nThe Russians in the Carpathians\ncontinue to drive the Austrian forces\nbefore them, inflicting severe losses on\nthe rear guard.\n* * tf \"Its*   t,t,AAt\nI       'feAMER   MOVEMENTS\nAt Rotter,daBi-rnNoordam, New^ork*.\na\nt RUSSELL  DID  HIS JOB WELL.j\nIn the days when Briton and Rubs\nwere face to face In the Crimea, Sir\nGarnet Wolseley, writing from the\nsoldier's standpoint, spoke of \"Those\nnewly invented curses to armies\u2014I\nmean war correspondents.\" The editor\nof the London Times was responsible\nfor the invention.\nOne day in February, 185-1 William\nHoward Russell, while in the office of\nthe Thunderer, was 'offered a very delightful position. England was. about,\nto show Russia that Turkey, whose ib-|\ntegrity was then important to BmiSn'\nenterprise, was not to be disturbed.\nThe Guards were off'to Malta. Would\nRussell go with them? The trip would\nbe delightful. Wife and children could\ngo along'and all be home 'by Easter.\n\u2022Russell went, but lie was wise\nenough to leave his 'family behind.,\nMore than two years passed before\nhe saw them again. The Guards went\non through Constantinople to the\nCrimea. When Russell returned to\nLondon he found himself and his paper more powerful than ever before.\nAll because of his despatches.\nEngland hutched tho job. The commissary and sanitary departments\nwere chaotic and the effect upon the\nsoldiers awful. Russell sent the truth\nname. England has -probably never\ndone quite so badly since, but the Dardanelles campaign would have been\nshorter or different If another Russell\nwith the freedom of the first, had been\nWith that disastrous expedition.\u2014Boston. Globe,\nH\nTHE ISLANDERS.\n-+ \u2666\u00bb\u2666\u2666-\u2666-\u2666-\u00bb\u2666 \u2666\u25a0\u2666\u25a0\u00ab \u2666\u25a0\u2666-\ni   V:j^nfn^NE.srd Kipling.)\nNo dotrbt\".but'7e\"are the people\u2014your\nthrone is above the King's,\nWhoso speaks is your presence must\nsay acceptable things;\nBowing the knee in worship, bending\nthe knee in fear-\nBringing   the   word   well- smoothen\u2014\nsuch as a King should hear\nFenced by your careful fathers, ringed\niby your leaden seas,\nLong did ye wake in quiet and long\nlie down at ease;\nTill ye said of strife, \"What is it?\" of\nthe sword, \"It is far from our\nken.\"\nTill ye made a sport of your shrunken\nhosts and a toy of your armed\nmen;\nYe stopped your ears to the warning\u2014\n\u2022 ye would neither look nor heed-^-\nYe set your leisure before their toil\nand your lusts above their need.\nBecause of your witless learning and\nyour beasts of warren and chase,\nYe grudged your sons to their service\nand jytitir fields of their caftiplng\nplace,\nYe forced Ith'e'm glean in the highways\nthe straws for the bricks'they\nbrought:;\nYe forced them follow in [by-ways the\ncraft that ye never taught.\nYe hindered and hampered and crippled; ye thrust.out of sight and\naway\nThose that would serve you for honor\nand  those  that  served  you  for\npay.\nThen   were  the  judgments  loosened;\nthen was your shame revealed,\nAt the hands of a little people, ifew but\napt in the field.\nYet ye were saved by a, remnant (and\nyour land's long suffering star),\nWhen your strong men cheered in their\nmillions   while   your   striplings\nwent to the war.\nSons   of  the  sheltered  city\u2014unmade,\nunhandled, unmeet\u2014\nYe pushed them raw to the battle as\nye picked them raw   from   the\nstreet. - '\nAnd what did ye look   they   should\ncompass?   Wareraft   learned In\na breath, '\nKnowledge unto occasion at the first\nfar view of Death?\nSo! And ye train your horses and the\ndogs ye feed and prize?\nHow arc tho beasts more worthy than\nthe souls you sacrifice?\nBut, he said, \"Their valour shall show\nthem,\" but ye \u00abaid, \"The end is\nclose.\"\nAnd ye, sent them comfits and pictures\nto help them harry your foes,\nAnd ye vaunted.your fathomless power,\nand ye flaunted your iron pride,\nEre\u2014ye fawned on the Younger Nations  for  the  men   who  could\nshoot ahd ride.\nThen  ye returned  to your  trinkets;\nthen ye contented your souls\nWith the flannfcled fools at the wickets\nor the muddied oafs at the goals.\nGiven to strong delusion, wholly believing a lie,\nYe saw that the land lay fenceless, and\nyet let the months so toy\nWaiting some easy  wonder,    hoping\nsome saving sign-\nIdle\u2014openly  idle\u2014In  the   lee  of the\nforesont Line.\nIdle\u2014except for your, boasting\u2014and\nwhat, is your boasting worth\nIf ye grudge .1 year of service to the\n-,*\u2022--^lordliest life on earth?\nMartyred\nBelgium\nCries for\nFOOD!\nYou have Plenty\u2014Share it!\nWe cannot\u2014we MUST NOT let the destitute Belgians starve! No victory\ncould be lastingly glorious if it involved the decimation by famine of a small\nnation that deliberately sacrificed itself rather than sacrifice honor!\nEarlCurzon ofKedlaton, says:\n\"We have to relieve from privation, and from worse, these unhappy people during the\nforthcoming winler, the second winter which they have passed under these cruel conditions; we\nhave to keep alive their Vital resources, to support their courage, and enable them to continue\nto endure\".\n.Belgian Relief fund\nhas been and is administered with an Efficiency and\nEconomy never before equalled in Public Relief Work.\nAll accounts are audited, and every pound\nof food and supplies is accounted for. The\narrangements are absolutely effective for\nsecuring that none of the food or money\ngoes into the hands of the Germans, is requisitioned by military authorities, or in any\nway diverted from tho object for which\nit is given.\nNearly 3,000,000 Belgians must depend\nthis winter on charity I Without help hun\ndreds of thousands will starve! We in\nCanada have plenty! In the name of\nhumanity and of the cause for which we\nare 'fighting, let us do our part toward\nsaying these heroic allies!\nSend your subscriptions weekly or in one\nlump sum to Local or Provincial Com*\nmittees, or to tho\nCentral Executive Committee, 59\nSt. Peter St., Montreal.\n$2.50 FEEDS A BELGIAN FAMILY ONE MONTH\nCheques to be made payable to \"THE     Tn^ASURBR BELGIAN REMHE' F   UND,\"  B9JSt. Peter fetreet, Montreal,\nor to local committees,\nAncient, effortless, ordered, cycle   on\ncycle set,\nLife so long untroubled, that ye who\nInherit forget\nIt was not made with the mountains,\nIt Is not one with the deep.\nMen, not gods, devised It.    Men, not\n* gods, must keep.\nMen, not children, servants, or kinsfolk called from afar,\nBut each man 'born in tjje Island hroke\nto the matter of vi%.r; \\\nSoberly  and   by   custom taken   and\ntrained for the sapie-}\nSoberly an  dby  custom \"taken    and\ntrained for the sapie;\nEach man born in the 'island entered\nin youth  1.0 tho grime-\u2014\nAs It were,--almost cricket, not to be\n\u2022r -     mastered in haste?\u00ae'\nBut after the trial nnd .labor, by temperance, living; chaste.\nAs It were almost cricket\u2014as It were\neven your play.     .,'\".\nWeighed and pondered and worshipped, and practised \"day by day.\nSo ye shall bide safe-Kuarded when the\nrestless lightnings .wake\nIn the womb of the hotting war-cloud,\nand thevpallid nations quake.\nSo, at the haggard trumpets, instant\nyour, soul shall leap\nForthright, accoutred, accepting\u2014alert\nfrom the wells of sleep.\nSo\/at tho threat ye shall summon\u2014so\nat the need ye shall send\nMen, not children  or servants, tempered and taught t0 the end;\nCleansed  of servile panic,    slow    to\ndread or despite,\nHumble because of knowledge, mighty\nby sacrifice\u2014 n\nBut ye say, \"It will mar our comfort,\"\nYe say, \"It will minish trade.\"\nDo ye wait for tho spattered shrapnel\nj     ere ye learn how a gun Is laid?\nFor tiie low, red glare to southward\nwlien    the    raided    coast-towns\nburn?\n(Light ye shall have on that lesson,\nhut little time, to learn).\nWill ye pitch some, white pavilion, and\nlustily oven the odds,\"\nWith net and hoops and mallets, with\nrackets and bats and rods?\nWill the rabbit war with your foeman\n\u2014the  red   deer horn  them  for\nhire?\nTour kept cock-pheasant keep you?\u2014\nhe is master of many a shire.\nArid, aloof, Incurious, unthinking, 1111-\n.thiu-.klhg gelt,\nWill you loose your schools to flout\nthem  till   their brow-beat columns melt?\nWill ye pray them pr preach them or\nprint them, or ballot them'back\nfrom youi* shore?\nWill your workmen issuer mandate to\nbid them strike no more?\nWill re rise aad dethrone your rulers?\nBecause ye were idle both?\nPride by Insolence chastened? Indolence, purged by Sloth?\nNo doubt but ye are the People; who\nshall make you afraid?\nAlso your gods are many!  n0 doubt\nbut your gods shall aid.\nIdols of greasy  altars built for  the\n'body's ease;\nProud little brazen Baals and talking\nfetiches;\nTeraphs, or sect and party and   wise\nwood-pavement gods\u2014\nTHESE shall come down, to the battle\nand snatch you from under the\nrods?!\"\nFrom  the  gusty,   flickering  gun-roll\nwith'the* viewless'-salvos rent.\nAnd the pitted.hail of tne-gullets that\ntell not whence they 'Were sent.\nWhen re are ringed as. with\/iron, when\nyd are scourged as with whips.\nWhen the meat Is yet1 In your belly,\nand tho boast is  yet on your\nlips; & ^\nWhen we go forth, at,morning ahd the\nnoon toeholds you broke,\nEre ye lie down'at even,'yOur remnant;\n\"under the yoke?   *i\nNo doubt but ye are the People\u2014absolute, strong and Wise;\nWhatever your heart has desired ye\nhave not withheld- Trom your\neyes.\nOn your own heads,.in your own hands,\n. the \"sin and the saying lies..\nBuy from Birks9\nby Nail\n!        ' '\n. WIS OFFER THE FINEST\nIJUES OF GOODS AT THE\nMOST MODERATE PRICES.\nOUR ASSORTMENTS ARE\nLARGE. IN JEWELLERY OF\nEVBRi' DESCRIPTION, WE\nCAN 'SUPPLY 'THE' 'BEST\nVALUES. \u2022\nWRITE     OF     OUR   CATALOGUE.\nHenry Birks & Sons, Ltd.\nJewellers and Silversmith,\nVancouver.\nTHURMAN'S\nCarry, a full line of all Hlgh-Grade\nTobacco and BBB Pipes.   Try a tin\nof Thurman's Mixture\nTHURMAN'S CIGAR STORE.\nTHORPE'S\nDRINKS\nFURS.\nG. Glaser, manufacturing furrier, 418\nWard Street, Nelson. New furs made\nup. Old furs repaired and remodeled.\nSkins dressed and mounted at moderate prices. Phone 106. Best prices\npaid for raw furs.\nSYNOPSIS OF COAL\nMINING  REGULATIONS\nCoal mining rights of the Dominion\nIn Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta, the Yukon Territoi., the Northwest Territories, and In a portion of\ntho province,, of British,, Columbia,, may\nbe leased for a term'of twenty-one\nyears at an annual rental of %\\ pei\nacre. No njpre than 2,660 acres will\nbe leased to one applicant.\nApplication for a lease must be\nmade by the applicant in person to the\nAgent or Sub-agent of the district of\nwhich the rights applied for are situated.\nIn surveyed territory true land must\nbe described by sections or legal subdivisions of sections and in unsurvey-\ned territory the tract applied for shall\nbe staked out by the applicant himself\nEach application must be. accompanied by a fee of $t> which will be refunded if the rights applied for are\nnot available, but not otherwise. A\nroyalty shal lbe paid on the merchantable output of the mine at the\nrate of five cents per ton.\nThe person operating the mine shall\nfurnish the Agent with sworn returns\naccounting for the full quantity of\nmerchantable coal mines and pay the\nroyalty thereon. If the coal mining\nrights are not being operated, such\nreturns 'shall bo furnished at leasi\nonce a year. ; '\n; The lease will include the coal mining rights only, but the lessee mas\nbe permitted to purchase whatever\navailable surface rights may be considered necessary for the working of\nthe mine at the rate of $10 an acre.\nFor full information application\nshould be made to the Secretary of the\nDepartment 0 ft he Interior, Ottawa\nor to any Agent or Sub-agent of Dominion lands.\nW. W. CORY,\nDeputy Minister of the Interior\nN.   B.\u2014Unauthorled   publication  ot\nthin ndverHnempril will no* he nnld fr%*\nCANTON CORONA, NO. 7^-JJEBBtfif\nevery second Tuesday in Oddfellows'\nhall, at 8 o'clock. .   ,:,-\u25a0\"'.'..;'A;',\nKNIGHTS OP PYTHIAS MEETS\nTuesday nights In K, of P. hall,\nEagle block.       .\nCLAN JOHNSTONE, 212, MEETS IN\nI.O.O.F. hall first and third Fridays\nat 8 p.m, - '    ,\nJohn Burns & Sons GT\u201eJ ST\nSASH  AND  DOOR  FACTORY. NELSON  PLANING  MILLS.\nVERNON   STREET,   NELSON,   B.C.\nEvery Description of Building Material Kept in Stock.   Estimates Given\non Stone,. Brick, Concrete and Frame Buildings.\nMAIL    ORDERS    PROMPTLY    ATTENDED    TO.\nP.O.   BOX   134 PHONE   178\nWhet la doubtr-Qem Uieatre.   (1169)\nTwenty-Five Per Cent\nDiscount\nIN   OKDEB   TO   CLOSE   OUT   THE   BALANCE   OP   OUR  BRASS\nGOODS   WE   WILL   ALLOW   A   CASH   DISCOUNT   OP\n: TWENTY-FIVE  PER  CENT.   FOR  ONE WEEK  ONLY\nSMOKERS'  SETS\nCANDLE   STICKS\nFERN   POTS\nCIGAR   H0LDER3\nTOBACCO   JAR8\nI JARDINERES\nWATCH   OUR   BARGAIN   TABLE   FOR   SNAPS\u2014IT   WILL   PAY\nl      YOU  BIG  MONEY   .\nNelson Hardware Co.\nPHONE 21\nNELSON,  B.C.\nJ; KMORGAN\nSECOND-HAND DEALER.\nBuys for casta Stores, Furniture, Tools,\netc We pay Ugliest casta prices. SW\nus before you sell. Mirrors re- ilvered.\n\u00bb2 Vernon Street, Nelson, B. C.\n(Two doors from PostotfIce.)\n^Buwn^^j^rectory _\n1. W. WIDDOWSON, ASSAYER ANB\nChemist. Box A1108, Nelson, B. C.\nCharges: Gold, stiver, copper or\nlead, (1 each; gold-silver, $1.50; silver-lead, $1.50. Other metals on application.\nAUCTIONEERS.\nC. A. WATERMAN ft CO., Opera talk.\nWM.  CUTLER, AUCTIONEER, BOX\n474; phone 18.\nGROCERIES.\nA. MACDONALD & CO., WHOLE-\nsale Grocers and Provision Merchants. Importers'of Teas, Coffees, 1\nSpices, Dried Fruits, Staple and\nFancy Groceries, Tobaccos, Cigars,\nButter, Eggs, Cheese and. Packing\nHouse Products. Office and warehouse, corner of Front and-Ball Sts.\nP.O. Box 109B; telephone 28 and 23.\nPR^S^LJARDS\nGREEN BROS, BURDEN A CO.\nCivil Engineers, Dominion and B. C..\nLand Surveyors. :,\\.\nSurveys of Lands, Mines, Townsltes,\nTimber Limits, etc.   '      -\nNelson, 618 Ward street, A. R. Green,\nMgr.;  Victoria, 114 Pemberton Bldg.,\nF. C. Green; Fort George, Hammond\nstreet, F. P. Burden.   \u25a0        ,.\nmDGEjIOTlCES\nKOOTENAY LODGE NO. 16, IiOiO.F\n\u2014Meets every Monday night InOdd.\nfellows' hall at 7:30 o'clock.\nQUEEN CITY REBEKAH LODGE\nNo. 16,1.O.O.F., meets first and third\nTuesdays, Oddfellows' hall at 8\no'cloek.\nNELSON ENCAMPMENT, NO. 7, I.O.\nO.F.\u2014Meets second and fourth'\nThursdays In Oddfellows' hall at 8\no'clock. j^\nSi-O. e;\u2014Meets first and third Mondays in K. of P. hall at 8 p.m.\neuro\nION OF THE\nNOTICE.\nPublic notice is hereby given to the\nelectors ot the Municipality of the City\nof Nelson that I require the presence\nof the said electors at the City Hall on\nMonday, the 10th'day of January,'1916\nat 12 o'olook noon, for. the purpose of\nelecting persons to represent them in\nthe Municipal Council as Mayor and\nAldermen and on ths Publio School\nboard as Trustees. .\nThe candidates shall be nominated\nin writing; the writing shall be subscribed by two. voters of the Municipality as proposer and seconder, and\nshall be delivered to the Returning Officer any time ^between the date of\nthis notice and 2 p.m. of the day.of\nnomination and in the event of a poll\nbeing necessary, such poll will be\nopened on Thursday, the 13th day pf\nJanuary, 1916, between the hours of\n9 o'clock a.m. and 7 o'clock p.m. at the \u2022\nCity Hall for the East Ward, at 609\nKootenay street (the City Band Room)\nfor the West ward, and In the City\nHall for that portion of the school dlB-\"\ntrlct Included In subdivisions No. 98,\n182, 304, 619, 6180, 5290, 6291, 6549\n8349, 9013, 683, 393, 6586, 370, 372, 7672. .\n8212, 909, 908, 3690, 7873, 7706, of which\nevery pers\"on is hereby required to.\ntake notice and govern themselves accordingly.\nThe persons qualified to be noml- .\nnated for and elected as mayor of said\ncity shall be such persons as are male\nBritish subjects of the full age of\ntwehty-one years, and are not disqualified under any law and have been for\nthe six months next preceding the\nday of nomination, the registered owner in tho land registry office of land\nor real property In the city of the assessed value on the last municipal assessment roll of one thousand dollars\nor more, over and above any registered judgment or charge, and who are\notherwise duly qualified as municipal\nvoters.\nThe persons qualified to be nominated for and elected as aldermen for\nsaid city shall be such persons as are\nmale British subjects of the full, age\nof twenty-one years, and are not disqualified under any law and have been\nfor the six months next preceding\nthe day of nomination the registered\nowner in the land registry office of\nland or real property In the city of the\nassessed value on the last municipal\nassessment roll of five hundred dollars\nor more, over and above any registered\nJudgment or charge and who are otherwise qualified as muntcip     votres.\nThe persons eligible to be nominated\nfor and elected school trustees bf the\nNelson School District'shall be .any\nperson being a British subject of the\nfull age of twenty-one years and\nhaving been for the six months next\npreceding the date of nomination the\nregistered owner in the land registry\noffice, of land or real property In the\nCity School District of the assessed\nvalue' on the last Municipal Assessment roll of five hundred dollars or\nmore over and above any registered\nJudgment or charge, and being otherwise qualified to voto at an election'\nof school trustees in the said school\ndistrict.        \u00bb\n' Given'(under my hand at the City of\nNelson aforesaid, the third day of\nJanuary, 1916,\nW. E. WASSON,\n,      i Returning Officer.\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'-'\n T\n31\nSaturday, jan. 8,  wie.\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nDon't Forget\nTo ask\" for, a ticket with your\npurchase. Every week we give\na pair of 65 Shoes to the person\nholding the lucky number.\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLEADERS IN FOOT FASHION\nPreserve Your\nComplexion\nCommon soap injures the\nskin\u2014makes it rough, and\nirritates the pores.\nImprovesi the complexion,\nmakes the' skin smooth,\nand clears the pores. It is\nthe ISflgest lasting and\nmost pleasing of all toilet\nYou can buy it for\n15c. a tablet, or two\ntablets for 25c.\n_ One day Uncle Prank met Willie in\n(he street and aeked him if he was\nWing to the. school treat the following\nf.veek\nJ'No, I ain't going,\" replied the lad,\n\u25a0rlibly.\nf \"Oh, Willie,\" protested his uncle,\n\u25a0'you shouldn't say 'I ain't goln,>' you\n\u25a0must say 'I am not going.' And, think,\nling to teach..the little fellow somo\n(gromamr slyly, he went on: \"You are\nijHot going. He is not going. .They are\nKnot going. Now, can you say all that,\nIWlllle?\" . 'i '.'I\n\"Course    I   can,\" > scoffed   Willie.\nIr'There ain't nobody going.\"\nflDW TO SAVE -\nYOUR EYES\nTry Thie Free Prescription.\nDo. your eyefl give you trouble? Do\nyou already wear eyeglasses or spectacles? Thousands of people wear\n:hese \"windows\" who might easily dispense with them. : You may be one of\nthese, and It is your duty to save your\neyes before it is to late. The eyes aro\nneglected \"more than any other organ\nof the entire body. After you finish\nyour day's work you sit down and rest\nyour muscles, but how about your\neyes? Do ybu rest them? You know\nyou don't. You read, or do something\nelse that keeps yo*ir eyes, busy; you\nwork your' eyes until you go to bed.\nThat is why so.'.many have strained\neyes! and finally eye troubles that\nthreaten partial or total blindness.\nEyeglasses ate merely'crutches; they\nnever cureV'- This -free prescription,\nwhich has.\u25a0'benefited the eyes of so\nmany, may' work equal wonders for\nydu. Use it:;a short time. Would you\nlike your eyb trouble to disappear as\nif by magld? Try this prescription.\nGo to the nearest, wideawake drug\nstore and get a bottle of Bon-Opto\ntablets; fill a two ounce bottle with\nwarm wat\/r, drop in one tablet and\nallow it to thoroughly dissolve. With\nthis liquid bathe the eyes two to four\ntimes dally. Just note how quickly\nyour eyes olear tip and how soon the\ninflammation will disappear. Don't be\nafraid to use it; it is absolutely >harm-\ni. Many who are now blind might\nhave saved- their eyes had they started\nto care for them in time. This is a\nsimple treatment, 'but marvelously eft\nfective in multitudes of cases. Now\nthat you have.foeen warned don't delay a day, but do what you can to\nsave your eyes and you are likely to\nthank us as long as you live for publishing tails prescription. The Valmas\nDrug Co., Toronto will fill the above\nprescription: by mail, if your druggist\ncannot. ,\n\u2022PAGE  FIVE\n^ssmmeaewmAwa\nAid\nMINERS\nS100 MONTHLY\nPatriotic   Fund\u2014Cranbrook   Has\nNinety-Three Recruits for\n102nd .Battalion\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Jan. 7.\u2014The\nmen of the Sullivan mine, Kimberly,\nB. C, are donating $100 per montlvto\nthe patriotic fund.\nCranbrook has 93 men enlisted for\nthe 102ncl regiment to date. The names\nof those enlisted this week are as\nJtfllows:\nJohn Robertson, lumberman, born\nSpringhlll, N. S.; next of kin, William\nRobertson, Springhlll, N. S.\nDuncan Macdonald, lumberman,\nborn Gaspe Basin, N, S.; next of kin,\nNeil McLean, Renfrew, Ont.\nfltftistave Silander, section foreman,\nborn Moriestod, Sweden; next of kin,\nChristinana Silander, Moriestod.\nI Archie Frederick Tolfrey, laborer,\nborn Hastings, England; next of kin,\nCharles Frederick Tolfrey, Portsmouth,\nEngland.\nElmer Orvll Smith, electrician, born\nChatham, Ont.; next of kin, Edward\nWilliam Smith; Baildon, Sask.\nLieut.'Craddock, paymaster for billeted troops, is expected to this city\nthis week to pay the men here.\nDr. and Mrs. F. B. Miles have returned from a trip to Spokane\nFIRE VALLEY NOTES.\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nFIRE VALLEY, B.C., Jan. 7\u2014An en-\ntalnment took place in the Fire Valley\nschool on Dee. 22. The main part of\nthD program was carried through by\nthe pupils. The violin solo iby Mrs.\nMaclennan and tbe solos toy Mrs. Hos-\nkyn were very much appreciated. M^ss\nRika Oroenhuysen pleased the audience\nby her rendering of \"What Will You\nTake'for Mo, Papa?\" Miss Jordan\nplayed the accompaniments and assisted In many ways. The women looked\n.after the refreshments and a Christmas tree and- presents for the kiddies\nconcluded the evening.\nMr. Calder has opened up a logging\ncamp near the old internment area.\nFive other camps are in operation,\nowned by Messrs. Bates, Fillmore, Per.\nguson and Funk, Hopp and De Gah.\nUpward of 6,000,000 feet will ibe taken\nout during the eason for the Edgewood\nLumber company, Castlegar;\nAt the turkey shoot at Edgewood on\nNew Year's day, Messrs. Calder and\nWatt of tbe lumner camp won six\nturkeys.\nMr. Jordan of Nakusp spent Christmas and New Year's at his ranch.\nTHRUMS PEOPLE DO\nWORK  FOR  RED  CR0S8\nA business meeting of the Thrums\nand Tarrys work party for tbe Red\nCross was held Christmas week in the\nschool house to pack and send off work\ndone during November nnd December.\nThe box to the Red Cross head office\ncontained: Six flannelette nightingales,\nseven bed jackets* three scarves, seven\npair .wristlets, six pair mitts, 18 pair\nsocks. 32 knitted face cloths (knitted\nby the school children), two slings,\nthreo dozen 18-lneh handkerchiefs,\nnine dozen It-inch mouthwlpes, six\ndozen 6-inch mouthwlpes.\nTen pairs of socks were also sent to\nthe Women's institute, Nelson, in return for wool received.\nFrom the sale of work held on Dec.\n18, after deducting expenses, $32 is in\nhand.. The proceeds from the tea table\namounting to $13;30 went to the patriotic fund.\nThe meeting of the work party will\nbe resumed on Saturday afternoons.\nTHREE GERRARD MEN\nDECIDE TO ENLIST\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nGERRARD, B..C., Jan. 7.\u2014A farewell whist party and dance was given\non New Year's eve by Mr. and Mrs. .1.\nParisian, in honor of William Gunn,\nAlex and Donaid Macphorson, who intend leaving in a few days to enlist\nfor overseas service.\nLawrence Ogllvle, manager of the\nDominion fish hatchery -at Gerrard,\nwho has been holidaying at the coast\nduring the past month, returned on\nWednesday, accompanied by his bride.\nThe southern end of Trout lake is\nfrozen over as far as Haskin's Point.\nWilliam Ounn, assistant at tbe\nhatchery, left Thursday to visit his\nhome in New Denver before enlisting-\nfur overseas service.\nWANETA NOTES\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nWANETA, B. C, Jan. 7.\u2014Miss Me-\nCorklll has arrived Here and is taking\nup her duties as teacher at the Nine-\nMile school.\nMiss Hill has returned from California, Oregon and Washington.\nif*\nf\u00ab\\\nWhat the  Chickens  Need\ni, THESE  MORNINGS  IS  A   HOT  MASH\ni . .\u2022,.\u2022.:.\u2022,:..\u25a0   . \u25a0\u25a0   TRV -\n\u00ab.\/: \u25a0\u25a0;\u2022.*\u25a0\u25a0    '.-.'\u25a0        r \\\nTaylor Made\nChic Chop\nIT'S A WINNER\nThe Taylor Milling and\nElevator Go* Limited\nOLW MINERS\nGIVE LIBERALLY\nEmployees of Copper Company  Give\nAverage of $4.22 per man to\nPatriotic Cause*.\nIn March of last year the Granny\ncompany employees at Grand Forks\nwere organized for the purpose of collecting monthly subscriptions to be\ndistributed among the different patriotic funds. Early subscriptions were\nsmall in amount, as the mine pad' only\nreopened in December, 191'4 after a\nfour month's shutdown. They have\ngradually increased, however, and last\nmonth totaled fl.906.65 or an average\nof $4.22 per man., Monthly subscriptions for the year were as follows:\nApril ?    606.75\nMay       i        700.90..\nJune ........        723.20\nJuly     1,780.40\nAugust ....     1.767.40\nSeptember      1,791.65\nOctober ,.\u25a0     1,782.40\nNovember    1,833.15\nDecember   ........        1.906.C5\nTotal   \u25a0  $12,872.50\n\u25a0\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u2666\u2666*\u2666\u00bb*\u00ab\u00bb\u2666\u00bb\u2022\u00bb\u00bb\u2666\u2666\u00bb\u00bb*\u00bb\u2666\u00bb\nR088LAND NEW8\nROSSLAND, B. C\u201e Jan. 7.\u2014Last\nnight Rossland aerie No. 10 installed\nIts officers for the ensuing terrn,after\nwhich refreshments were served. The\nofficers installed were: Past worthy\npresident, J. Wilson; worthy president,\nJ.'B, Jarvis; worthy vice-president, R.\nW. Tlmms; worthy chaplain, H. .Wilson; financial secretary, F. J. Harding; recording secretary, J. E. Jay;\ninside guard, F. Deschamps; outside\nguard, P. H. McDonald; trustees.\n'Harry Robertson, H. Stewart, W. F.\nMiller;  physician, Dr. J. W. Coffin.\nMrs. H. H. .Johnstone entertained\nfriends at tea this afternoon.\nThose assisting Mrs. Williams at\nher post nuptial tea on Friday afternoon were Mrs. Gunning. Mrs. Deschamps. Mrs. Atkinson, Miss G. Martin\nand Miss P. Elder.\nThe subject of Rev. W. Robertson's\nsermon at St. Andrew's church Sunday\nmorning will bo \"The Christian Supplies from God's Infinite Resources,\"\nIn the evening Miss McGregor, field\nsecretary of the Women's Missionary\nsociety in Canada, will give an address. '\nThe death occurred this morning at\nthe Sisters' hospital of Miss Minnie\nHall of Nelson. Tiie body will be shipped to Nelson for interment.   v\nAt the Methodist church on Sunday\nmorning Re\\-. Air. Barlow wi|l preach\non \"Pictures on the Hills,\" and in tiie\nevening on \"Spoils and Responsibility\nConcerning the European War.\"\nSANDON MAN ARRESTED\nBY  NELSON  POLICE\nThe Nelson city police yesterday'arrested HRichard Hughes of Sandon,\non advice of Chief of Police McLennan\nof that city, on a charge of fraud. Ho\nwas turned over to the provincial,department and will be returned to Sandon today in charge of .Provincial Constable H.' W. King.\nTO ORGANIZE CARIBOO     \\\nBATTALION AT KAMLOOPS\nKAMLOOPS.\u2014Col. J. R, Vlckera has\nreceived instructions to proceed at\nonce with the recruiting and mobilization of an infantry battalion for overseas services which Is to be representative of central British Columbia, and\nwhich, it is understood, will 'bear the\nhistoric name of \"Cariboo\" as a Part\nof its official designation.\nThe newly authorized nattalion will\nbe moblized -and trained at Kamloops,\nwhere already four hundred men are\nin training and will form the nucleus\nof the corps.\ntFrom the date of first mobilization\nKamloops has been an extremely active recruiting centre, and over 2300\nmen have been enlisted by Colonel\nVicars as officer commanding the\nRocky Moustain Rangers. .The major*\nity of these are now serving 'in overseas battalions, into which they have\nbeen drafted from the Kamloops centre. Some eight or nine,hundred of tbe\nBritish Columbia horse have also gone\nto the front from, the district which is\nto be drawn upon for the \"Cariboo fbat_\ntalion.\"\nINJURED TRAINMEN TO\nTESTIFY AS T OWiftECK\n.MOOSE JAW, Sask., Jan. 7.\u2014The\ncoroner's inquest into the cause of\ndeath of two men ln; the recent Canadian Pacific railway wreck at Moose\nJaw, adjourned this evening until\nThursday at which date It Is sold tho\ninjured members of (the two. train\ncrews will be able to give evidence.\nYou Can't Work with hand\nor brain when the body is\npoorly nourished. Get\nwarmth and strength for the\nday's work by eating for\nbreakfast Shredded Wheat\nwith hot milk. Contains all\nthe body-building material in\nthe whole wheat grain prepared in a digestible form.\nIts crisp goodness is a delight\nto the palate and a life-giver\nto tired brain and jaded\nstomach.   Made in Canada.\nJanuary Clearance Sale\nYou Cannot Afford to Miss These Money-Saving Chances\nSTILL NO LET UP! THE CROWDS YESTERDAY COMPARED FAVORABLY WITH THOSE OF THE OPENING DAY. THERE CAN\nBE ONLY ONE ANSWER\u2014VALUES! IN OUR CLEARANCE OF ALL WINTER MERCHANDISE WE HAVE REDUCED PRICES TO NEW\nLOW LEVELS. AND THE PEOPLE OF THIS TOWN HAVE BEEN Q UICK TO REALIZE IT. THERE ARE STILL MANY OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR YOU TO SAVE MONEY ON YOUR PURCHASE OF NECESSITIES. EVERY DEPARTMENT OFFERS ITS QUOTA OF BARGAINS.\nWE HAVE ROOM FOR ONLY A FEW ITEMS.' YOU MUST COME TO REALIZE THE CHANCER FOn REAL SAVINGS!\nWomen 8 Suits Clearing at $17.95\nA good asosrtment, Styles the Very Newest, Quality the Very Best\u2014All-Wool Serges, etc., In\nNavy, Black, Oreen and Grey. Coats satin lined and well tailored and will keep their shape.\nSkirts are made generous widths, with back and side pleats. A good range of sizes. Regular\nvalues, $30.00 to $35.00. C17 QC\nDuring This Sale\u2014All One Price     $ I I itlv\n$45.00 Suits for $24.95\nUndoubtedly the best Suits we have ever shown for the money. Made of Mannish Serges,\nBroadcloths, Gabardines, etc., in Black. Navy, Brown, Purple and Tan. Coats medium length or\nlong, and skirts in the most modish styles. - \u20ac0A OK\nExtra Value\u2014January Sale Price      f\u00a3HiwW\nThirty Coats at $9.95 Each\n~~~\" ' \"\"VALUES   UP  TO  $25.00\nFinest Pure Wool Tweeds, In a big range of styles.\nSome plain tailored, others fancy trimmed. All\ncolors and sizes in the lot. Values to ...lilj.oo OQ Qg\nJanuary Sale  Price          ydiilU\n$25.00Dresses for $12.95\nDresses of Pure Silk Messalino, Fine Taffeta, Silk\nCrepe, etc. Also All-Wool , Serge. Colors Navy,\nBlack, Copenhagen, Tan, Grey and Putty. All made\nafter the latest styles. Sizes ranging from 14 to 42.\nRegular values,  ?22,ft0 to $25.00. AMI) QC\nJanuary  bale   Price ',.   $|\u00a3iUu\nWomen's Sweater Coats\nVALUES   UP   TO   $730\nHeavy Scotch Wool In several ahudcH, good full\nsIsjch, with large roll collars, Well made and will hold\nshape. Sizes 34 to 42. Regular, $7.50. (fA OR\nJanuary Sale  Price       O'tsifll\nHeavy Tweed Dress Goods\nSplendid materials for Spring Suits or Separate\nSkirts;   42 inches wide.   Variety of shades.      CI\nJanuary Sale Price, Yard   sit\niSt\nMeagher & Co.\nThe Store for Style The Store for Quality\nMillinery at Less\nThan Half, $2.98\nOnly 25 Ladies' Trimmed Hats,\nsome Patterns and others products\nof our own workroom. The kind\nyou usually pay $8.00 to $10,00\nfor. (JO QQ\nYour Choice at This Sale $\u00a3i\u00abjO\nUntrimmed Velvet\nShapes\nVALUES  TO  $6.00   FOR  $1.98\nFifty Velvet Shapes, some of the\nseason's   best  styles.\nJanuary   Sale  Price\nFurs at Less Than Manufacturers' Prices\nBeautiful Sets or Separate Pieces of Mink, Persian Lamb, Isabella Fox, Black Lynx, Natural Lynx,\nMarmot,   etc.,   ranging   in   prices   from   $12.50   to\nSave  Money at These  Prices\u2014$8.50 to $l\u00ablUiUU\nHeavy Warm Kimonas, $4.95\nVALUES  UP  TO $7.50\nDressing Gowns of Blanket Cloth In various\ncolors, plain or flowered designs. All sizes. Regular prices to $7.50. $4 QC\nJanuary Sale  Price     ^TiVV\nFull Bleach Table Linen at'59c\nHeavy Linen, in a variety of patterns;\nwide.   Regular price,, 75c.\nJanuary Sale Price \t\n59c\nHeavy Huck Towels 49c\nLAY  IN YOUR SUPPLY   OF  TOWELS  AT THIS\nPRICE.    YOU'LL NOT GET THEM AGAIN\nFOR  THE MONEY.\n$1.38\nMeagher & Co.\nThe Store for Style The Store for Quality\nR&ai\nAT   THE   THEATRES\n\u25ba-\u00bb-\u2666\u2666\u25a0\u00bb\u2666 \u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u00bb\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\nBright Musical Revue.\n\"The Girl from Nowhere,\" the biggest musical comedy success of 1915,\nwill Ije- the attraction at the opera\nhouse for two nights,; commencing\nMonday, Jan. 10.\nThis 'brilliant musical revue is right\nup to the minute in every particular.\nThe scenes are laid In San Francisco\nand the entire action is supposed to\ntake place during the foig exposition.\nSeveral of the famous landmarks of\nthe fair have been duplicated on canvas and form a vivid background for\nthe story. The most beautiful setting\nof the whole production shows the\ntower of jewels at night, with the spot\nlights playing on it and \"bringing- out\nsparkling shafts of myriad colors as\neach of the thousands of tiny jewels\nreflects the light.\nThe plot is equally as timely as the\nsettings. There is tht dark and desperate plotting of the Mexican revolutionists and the romantic story of the\nyoung British remount officer who discovers the mystery of the pretty little\ngirl from nowhere and proves her to\n\u25a0be an English heiress instead of a\nMexican senorita.\nAlthough the story is thrilling, sensational and sometimes almost melo-dra-\nmatic in its intensity, the keynote\nthroughout is pure poy. The 24 musical numbers are also a part of the\nstory and not just interpolations.\nThere are 14 acting parts in the\npiece and a beauty ebon's of the prettiest, cleverest and most altogether\nlovely 'bunch of femininity ever shown\non the stage.\n\"The Chimes\" Tonight.\n\"The Chimes,\" by Charles Dickens,\nin five nets; a Shubert feature with\nTom Terriss, wil be shown at the Cem\ntonight. Trotty Veck, the licensed\nmessenger, reconsiders his promise to\nallow' the marriage of Ms daughter,\nMeg, to Richard, after being advised by\nAlderman Cute that it is a sin for the\npoor to wed.\nAfter his day's labors he meets William Fern, with 'his infant'daughter,\nLillian, seeking shelter from the authorities, who have threatened to kill\nhim. The kind-hearted little man\ntakes them to his humble home for\nthe night. *. j.\u00ab. _\nLil, now grown to girlhood\u2014Fern in\nprison for his demonstration against\ntbe rich, and Richard a drunkard from\ndisappointment. Sir Joseph Bowley\nvisits the little home and offers to\nadopt Lil, but instead mistreats her so\nthat she is compelled to escape, but\nfinally upon promise from Sir Joseph\nto free her father, gives herself up to\nhim, only to be ejected in time from\nhis fine iiome with an unfortunate infant, She goes back to Meg and dies\nfrom tiie effects of her ill treatment,\nleaving the infant to Meg, who In turn\nis compelled to leave her home, due to\npoverty.   '\nGoing to the bridge, Meg attempts to\nend it all for herself and infant. At\nthis point Trotty's dream comes to an\nend. He now realizes that the poor\nas well us the rich havo a right to\nmarry, and hastens to correct his error. This done, >he goes to check Fern,\nleading one of his meetings. Knowing\ntbe influence of little Lil on her father\nlie takes her and induces Fern to give\nlip his plans. Trotty and Richard are\ntaken prisoners -by Sir Joseph's servants and brought before this despot,\nwho, instead of compelling Trotty to\nsubmit to his terms, is himself forced\nto sign a document giving tiie poor\ntheir rights.\n\"The  Spoilers\"   Drawing   Card.\nThe wonderful drawing power of\n\"The Spoilers\" has been proved by the\nlong engagements to capacity houses\nwhich the great picture has filled. It\nhas played 24 weeks in New York, Hi\nweeks in Chicago, six weeks in San\nFrancisco; four weeks in Los Angeles,\nsix weeks in Seattle, eight weeks In\nMontreal, seven weeks in Toronto, and\nfive -weeks In Vancouver. Following\nare some of the Canadian press comments:\nToronto World: It is the finest pic-\nlure we have ever seen.\nMontreal Daily Mail: A remarkable\nfilm; this photoplay of the north\ncannot -fail to please anyone who sees\nit.\nMontreal Gazette: It is no exaggeration to say that it is the most perfect\nas well as the strongest film play ever\nseen in Montreal.\n\"St. John Standard: \"The Spoilers\"\nIs the peer of pictures\u2014a photo triumph.\nVancouver World: Truly a wonderful picture.\n\"The Spoilers\" will be shown at the\nStarland  today  and Monday.\n1   SAYS    THE    GOOD    JUDGE:\nFERNIE  BEER TS A PROPER DRINK FOR TEMPERATE PEOPLE THAT  DO ALL THINGS IN JUDICIOUS\nMODERATION.      IT    IS    PURE,    WHOLESOM13    AND\nLOW IN  ALCOHOL.\n\/\nFernie Beer\nada for the purpose of retaining property they have been unable to pay\nfor. Local financial men are understood to, plan strong representations to\nthe government for some amendment\nto this, act designed to cheek such\nabuses  as  those mentioned.\nThe archbishop of Canterbury was\nto officiate at an important sen-ice\nin London. The mam entrance to\nthe abeby was opened, and a great\nspaced roped off so that the dignitaries\nmight alight from their equipages unmolested. When a dusty two-wheeler,\ncrossed the square, driven by a fat,\nred-faced cabby, 'bobbles rushed out\nto bead him off.\n\"Get out of 'ere,\" one of them called\nbriskly, \"This entrance is reserved\nfor the archbishop.\"\nWith a wink and a backward jerk\noC his thumb the irresponsible cabby\nreplied cheerfully:\n\"1 'ave the old duffer inside.\"\nPLAN NO CHANGE IN\nMANITOBA   MORATORIUM\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nWINNIPEG, Jan. 7\u2014It was stated on\nundoubted authority today that the\nnew Manitoba government will not in\nany way interfere with tho moratorium\nact passed 'by the former administration. The financial men of'the province are not agitating for changes in\ntho measure which will therefore remain In force for tho duration of tho\nwar, It Is possible, however, that the\nwar relief act will be amended owing\nto the abuses which have arisen. The\nmeasure was designed for the protection of the soldiers on active service\nand prevented any seizure of their pro.\npetty. Cases have arisen, however, of\nproperty holders, in. difficulties as to\npayments, transferrin^ their ipropery\nFar after midnight, Trotty sees his to a relative on active service. Ottyer\ndaughter Meg living in ipoverty and Instances have been brought to light\nacting as mother to Fern's daughter.of men enlisting for service in Can-\nDR, PRICES\nCream\nBAKING POWDER\nPure, Healthful, Dependable\nMade from Cream of Tartar\nCONTAINS NO ALUM\nMade in Canada\nBM\u2014 iiijiymJMs\u2014sni'Hiii' \u25a0 twmsnKwart\n \u2022AOE UX~-\n.... I.   ._Ji.\n SS\u00bbSSS<1S1H1 \u00bb \u2014 HUM I   | CM fl     I ItUhO    Tft    UFUf\nMarkets - Mining - Finance\nmm MARKET\nr\u00abWllSUTER\nSubstantial   Gains Ar*   Registered, in\nLilt Half of Station\u2014Exchange\nI l\u00bb R\u00bb\u00bbctionary.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\n\u25a0:. NEW YORK, Jan. 7\u2014Conflicting elef\nments guided the course of today's\nactive market to considerable, extent.\nDuring. the forenoon, sentiment remained'under the spell of depression\ntit caution caused by the Gary statement and prices ranged from heavy to\nweak, some special stocks losing 3 to 6\npoints, while High priced issues suffered more severely. In the last half\nof the session material recoveries running into substantial gains were registered, the Improvement being concurrent with the report that Berlin\ntiad accepted Washington's terms in\nthe matter ot the Lusltania case.\n'.. United States Steel had been in free\n\u00bbupply during the early operations at\nS86, yesterday's low price, but on the\nupward movement of the afternoon It\nadvanced to 8714, closing at its best.\n\u00a3>ther shares,. notaMy American Can.\npetroleum and copper find rhiscellan-.\n\u00abous issues rose sharply from low lev-\njels and General Motors, which registered an early loss of 25 points at\njil5, rebounded to 460. Rolls also .participated In the rise although to a\nsmaller extent. A .feature of .this\n\u25a0Jrroup was7the better inquiry for ls-\nrmes of minor rbadR at a material gain\ntoward the close. . ; ... :,\nm Among the other specific movements\nwas that of Mercantile Marine preferred which made an-extreme advance\nof 3% to 78% on unofficial statements\nPurporting to glve'est outline of the\nproposed reorganization. Total sales\nj\u00bbf stock amounted to 835,000 shares.\n$ Reactionary tendencies were at work.\n'Up. foreign exchange markets, sterling\nfalling more' than 2 cents from its\nhigh of yesterday. Marks made the new\nlow of 73 on some early-offerings but\nclosed at 7314, yesterday's minimum.\n'iriglo.-French 6s rose to 95%, their\nhighest quotation in recent weeks and\nwithin a fraction of the syndicate\nprice.\n..Bonds were firm. Total sales, par\nvalue, were (4,320,000. United States\nbonds were unquoted.\ngt . )\nEXCHANGE AT NEW YORK.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire:)\n; NH^W YORK,   Jan.    7.-^Mercantlle\npaper, 8K per cent.   Sterling1: 60-day\nhills, J4.71; demand, 4.7514; cables, 4.76,\n\u25a0France:  Demand,  5.86;    cables,    5.84.\nJgrahcs: * Demand, 5.85;    cables,    5.84;\nGuilders:  Demand, 44%;' cables, 45%.\nliires:\"^ Demand,   6.53 ;>   cable's,    6.68.\nRubles:' Demand, 29%;  cables, 30%.\nRECEIPTS BEAR   v\nWHEAT PRICES\nCIom Is Heavy at Decline\u2014\u00a9opr\u00bbi*ion\nGrows Moro Pronounced  When\nContracts are Made Errforcible\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nCHICAGO, 111., Jan. 7.\u2014Increasing\nreceipts and the growing difficulties of\nshippers had a bearish-effect today.on\nwheat. The result was a heavy close\nat 1% net decline, with May at $1.25%\narid July 11.17%.' Oats, lost \u2022 &. oent\nnnd provisions 2%  to, 20c\nIt was a nervous arte. Irregular market in wheat most of 'the tlihe and\nespecially so in the last hour, when'\nthe changes were decidedly down\ngrade. The temporary rallies were\nbased In the main on what proved to\nbe illusive hopes of a generous export\nbusiness. An adVffacO in Vessel rates\nfrom Argentina gave some further encouragement tp the bulls anft so alio\ndid reports that the movement \u25a0 from\nAustralia during January and February\nwould be light. Gradually, however,\nthe bears acquired tho advantage, for\nEuropeans were said' to he offering\nto resell at a substantial reduction in\nprices and there was word of a decided,\nincrease of the stock jn Minneapolis.\nMuch additional significance in regard\nto the accumulation of supplies seemed\napparent when an announcement was\nmade later that arrivals at. primary\npoints amounted to nearly twice the\namount a year ago, where shipments'\ndisplayed a material falling off. De\npresslon In the wheat market grew,\nmoro pronounced on account of shipping contracts here being made on-\nforcible as Boon as the railway embargo\nin the' cast. Ib removed. ..Even on that\nbasis, not more. than i75,p00 liushcls\nwas disROBed of, and the aggregate Of\nthe day's export business for the' .IVhbfc\nUnited States was estimated as , not\nsurpassing .500,000 bushels;'\nOats gave way early in the day,\nSelling ftresaure, though, was not much\nin- evidence*\nProyie'lonrf sagged *bceauso of the\ndown turn, in the hog market and in\ngrains, TPackers were on the selling.\nside.'\nHKHJUOTATION\nIs at \u00a332 1H In London and 7.33 in\nMontreal\u2014Copp\u00bbr Quoted at 24.25\nat Now York.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nNJSW TORK, ajm. 7.\u2014Lead Jumped.\nto  t3216a In, London today.and toj\n6.82ft at St. Louis, 6.90 at New Yortc,\nand 7.33 at Montreal.\nCopper Arm;   electrolytic,  23.75  to\n24.25; at t*mddW4'pot copper, \u00a3'87 10s;\nfutures,   \u00a387   10s;   electrolytic,   \u00a3J14.\nCANADIAN CAB DULL\nON STAGNANT MARKET\nMONTREAL, Jan. 7.-^Caniul!un cfir\nBhares, -Wte1r'-several- days ot heavy\ntrading \u201eand, fWidq price movements;\nrelapsed' into dhlnesB on the local\nexchange today, and with this dulhejs\nthe one feature' o| recent business was\neliminated.\ndealings in Canadian Car common\nfell to less than'200 shares, with the\nprice at 76 throughout the day, That\nreported a decline ar % Crotn Thurs.-\nday but the close was.stronger at \",VA\nbid.       \t\nThe wildest movement and heaviest\ntrading of the day centred in Carriage\nFactories, which fell 2 to 44, but.rallied\n% on trading in 600 shares. Iron,\nScotia and Steel of Canada were dull\nand final quotations showed variations'\nof flnly ft', or a y, off from yesterday,\nwhile General Electric ahd\\Locomotive\nwere steady In still lighter'trading.\nCanadian war loan bonds were fair-\nly. active and firm at 9714'to 8734,7\nCHEESE  FIRM.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\n\u25a0 MONTREAL, Jan. 7.\u2014Cheese is firfn.\nButter is 'barely steady.   Quite a.movement of American eggs. to .points _ HI\nthe United Kingdom is going on.\nCheese: Finest Westerns, 18% to: Wft\neasterns, 18 to %.i\n'Butter;  Choicest creamery, 84% to\n35;   seconds,   32% i to  113.   -\nEggs: Fresh,. 48,'to:-63^ selecteuV33;\nNo. 1 stock, 30.\nPork:   Heavy  Canada  short  mess,\n30%;  short cut back, 29ft.\nHP\n**? S\\..:f\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting Co.\nof Canada, Limited\nOffices, Smelting and Refining Department\nTRAIL,   BRITISH   COLUMBIA     '\nSHELTERS AND REFINERS\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper end Lead Ores\nTRAIL BRAND PIQ LEAD AND BLUESTONE\nBANKOFlVfflTREAL\nESTABLISHED 1817\nBOARD OP  DIRECTORS:\n. H.V.MIUIDlIH.Eiq..PmiatsI.\nKI.Ah\u00ab,Eh. E.I.GtttuUtU>,E\u00ab.\nlit WUka MsrJossM. Hoi. RsU. Micksr.\nSl.n.i.SkiMlnw.E.C.V.O. C R. Uuair, Est.\nA. Bansnrtu, Eis. C. B. Gsrlis, Esq.\nH. R. Dramas'. Em. D. fstko Aini, t*.\nWa.HcMaittr.Eiii.\nBrFtW^WUh\u00bb,-T.,l.,,t,l.P,,G\u00bbml Hussy.\nCapital Paid up      \u2022    $16,000,000.\nRest  -      -      \u2022       16,000,000.\nUndivided Profits   \u2022 1,293,952.\nTotal AsseU (Oct. 1915)302,980,554.\n-  ',',...  A SAVINGS ACCOUNT\nmay be opened at any branch of Uie Bank\nof Montreal. Deposits of J1.00 and upwards\nreceived, on which interest is allowed.\n\u201eHCA\u00bb Orf1CC;MONTREAL.\n. B. DeVeber, Manager, Nelson Branch.\nWHITE STAR LINE\nROYAL   MAIL  STEAMERS\u2014NEW  YORK\u2014LIVERPOOL        J\nNEW 8,8. LAPLAND, 19\/100 tons .............DEC. 29th\n'.   Pint Class, 695.00; Second, $50.00; Third, $36.25\n8.S. BALTIC, 24,000 tons ..JAN.   5th\n.     First Class, $110.00;  Second, $50.00; Third, $36.25\nB.6. ADRIATIC, 26,000 tons   JAN. 12th\nFirot Class, $120.00; 8eeond, $50.00; Third, $37.50\nS.8. CYMRIC, 13,000 ton. ........JAN. 21H\nCarries Only Cabin, at $50.00; and Third Clan, $33.75\n1   To England Under Neutral Mail\n| <jAMERICAN   LINE   (NEW   YORK\u2014LIVERPOOL)    .\nLargo, Fast American Steamers, Under Amerioan Flag.\nNo Contraband of War Carried\nO.O.\nPHILADELPHIA    DEC. 18th\n8T. PAUL DEC. 24th\nNEW YORK DEC. 31\u00bbt\n8T. LOUIS JAN.  8th\n\u25a0nd each Saturday thereafter.\nFir.t Claia $95.00; Second Class, $65.00; Third Class, $40.00\njyCompany's Office, A. E. Disney, Pass. Agent, 619 Second Ave., Seattle.\"\n,W. E. KETCHUM, Agent, Q. N. Ry. D. SMEATON, Agent, C. P. Ry.\ni. R. BLUMENAUER, D. T. A., C. P. Ry.\nW\n<**=\ni*   Aa*    PEOPLE, 'X6l}..Jts,L.'TIMES   AND   FOR   ALL   PURPOSES\nJaily News Display Ads\nBUY ODD LOTS ONLY.\nTORONTO, Jan. 7 \u2014The. stock may'\nket today was mado up principally of\nodd lots.. There.was:nopjpecial movement,, some \/issues being weaker and\nothers *' strorjft-r. Canadian . Pacific\nwas stronger in sympathylwlth New\nYork, , It closed at 180 bid. Macki*\n6'obimon \"was qtiiet at Vfl\/t. Scorae\nsola off to 100, but rallied to 100\u00ab.\nGeneral Electric sold' tt 11054 oM\nEseomotive. at 5994.MyCanadian w\u00abr\nbonds were firmer, selling up to i)7%.\nTotal business, exclusive of mining\nIssues, was only 594 shares.\nCHICAGO  STOCKYARDS.\nCHICAGO, HI.. Jan. 7.\u2014Hogs; Receipts; 5^,000; weak to 10c lower; bulk,\n(1.80 to 7.20; light 6.00 to 7; mixed,\n6.75 to 7.20;. heavy, 6.7S to 7.20; rough]\n6.75 to 6,85|   pigB,  5,66 to -6.79.\nCattls: Receipts, 2000; firm; native\nbeef, 6.30 to 9.60; western steers, 6,85\nto'8.15; cows and heifers, 3.10 to 8.46;\ncafves, T to 7.16, \u2022\u25a0' \/ !\n\"Sheep: Keo'elpts, 15,000; wethersl\n6.90 to 7:50; ewes, 5.60 to 6.80; lanrbs,\n8 (to 10.60. i,:\nWINNIPEG GRAIN CL08E.\nfoNNIPEG,  Jan.. 7.\u2014Wlwaf:   MaV,\nJl.20%;  July, 61.2054.\nOats:  May,  45%.\nFlax: May, ?2.09V6.\nTWENT*.FIVE NAMBB^ON m\n:   '\"\u25a0\u25a0; ^ANADWlfcAStlAtTY LIST'\n''   (By Daily NeiWs Leased wire.) s\nOTTA'vV'A, Jan. 7.\u2014Twenty-lvfe\nnames-werer In last mitlnight's casuKl-\nXy list Issued from the militia aepatt?\nment., Two men were reporteh pe'ad,\n18 wounded; two suffering froc shook\nand two seriously 111. John H. Dayih),\nan Australian in the Canadian 1st\nbattalion, is'reported killed in actlrj'n.\nThe list follows:! j\n1st Battalion,\nKilled in action\u2014John   H.   Davis;\nAtiotralia.\n2nd Battalion.\n\u2022\u25a0Wounded\u2014Ernest Hoelke, Quebec.\n3rd Battalion.\n.Suffering from shock\u2014John. Morrt-\nson, England.\n4th Battalion.\n'\u2022Wo'unaed-rSergt. H. Solomon,   T6-\nrbnto^;{:.i ,v.yv.?.:    .    ,,\nJUh^di-Wliliam^^yift^,^-\n.,   .    7th Battalion.\nl W9Unded;-^rhbmas  , Graham,    Bel-'\nliiighahi, Waftli.  \"    ' \"\"  ',\u25a0'\"' ;\n8th JSattalion.'\n\u25a0Wounded\u2014C. fGaJbraith, Scotland.\n16th Battalion.,\nWounded\u20141. .MeJHJe,,- Scotland.\nDan Mead, England.\nWilliam Milne, Scotland.\n18th Battalion.\nWounded\u2014Sergt;   ,W.. H,   Braisby,\nEngland.\n>       19th Battalion.\nSeverely wounded\u2014William Garratt,\nToronto. \u25a0\nReported wounded, how on duty\u2014F.\nG. Turner, England.\nWounded\u2014Jack ..Nellson, Nofth\nWales.\n20th Battalion.\nSlightly   wounded\u2014W.   j:''Jossbn,\nScotland.\n' '       24th Battalion.\nSeverely wounded\u2014J. H. Gates, Dorchester, Mass;\n26th Battaljon.\nSeverely   wounded\u20146.   Co'le,   !Pbrt\nGrevlJIe, N. B..\nCorp. .Hoy Haiiett, .Hartiand, N. B,\nJohn Parry, England.\nLord Strathcona'. Hor\u00bbe.\nShell shock,  but on  duty\u2014Lance-\nCorp. H^Kirbey, England.\n1st IField Artillery Brigade.\n. Seriously  ill\u2014J.  M.  Smith,  Albion\nBay,p.ai...    ;. . ...\n5th    Artillery ^Brigade    Ammunition\nColumn.\nDied\u2014E. S. Meredith,    Lethbridge,\nAMa...\u201e, XX\"..-,  :.-,\nSeriously ill\u2014Dan McCarty, England.\nTAKE  DEPOSITIONS  IN\nDR. R. M. SIMPSON CASE\nWiNNipEG.y Jin. ' 7r-Deppsltloj>s\nagainst Dr; R. M. Simpson, who was\narrested in England oh request of the\nprovincial authorities., in connection\nwith the parliament buildings scandal,\nare being taken at the office fA Commissioner McRae. H. W. WJtitla, K.C.,\nhowever, refused to make any deposl-\ntlPn. He was ordered by Magistrate\nMcDonald to make a.deposition covering his evidence relating to WilHarn\nS^lt.before, the royal commission. Mr.\nwhitla, however, objected and has obtained leave to appeal against the or-\nd*r. The.ajjpea) wllipe heard by Chiot\nJustice Mathers tomorrow.  .\nSATURDAY,   JAN., 8,   1916..... .\u00abt\nFIRST' OFFICIAL\n%CT TO ARREST tfQTff$R\n\u00bbtofy 'told byJH.vm.rck Under Influx\n\u2022fife* of Wine\u2014Pen 8ketchT\u00bbf\nkmperor Before War\nWHIlam of Germany, tho emperor\nand the man, has. been the HiiDject,\ndurlnK the past year anil a \u25a0 half, of\nmore ajacuHS)on lhan any other per-\nHonaHty,, perhaps of; the present ceiv\ntiwy. ^Inoejtjio.war began, especially,\nhe lias fii^^a more lurisrely. In the\n*rorld'H ey^el'Hntn any ftian Jiving; and'\nthft ^plcttirefe.'<ii\u00ablwn of hini^iniiumer-'\nable as they,ha\\^e been,, haye scarcely\nsufficed to satisfy' the ])opular desire\nfor information, it is the mart, par- \\\nticularly,. a^B \u25a0 jfliffej-entiated from the:\nspectax:UIai'',,'waf Ibrd, that the puhlic\nwish tO'\/JcnOw, 'and consequently in\nmast.$f* t&$a^Ufles on the kaiser-it is\nsought t*7\/r\u00ab?ive intimate lVortraitures\not htin.\n;OhB,.'.ef tHo Very best ofth'ese, -wfit-1\nt^h,;.nWe^r,'tSfyo-years before the\nwaiv and 'therefore more to be de>-\npendM as 'less1''designed to cater to:\na manifest craving in the. oenerp,l\nreadflr,' is,that . by Oetave Mlrbeau,;\npubliHhea', in the American Magazine.^\nThis sicetch is presented in the form\nof a private conversation with, a Ger-<,\nman, baron; Voh B , who had been!\na -fellow,43tudent  of William  at  thel\niniivewtity  qf  Bonn,  and  was on\nfooting of  Intimacy with  him.    The\nin. to to.\n.    Dates, from  Gruenderzelt\nIn..ord,er to understand our emperor,)\nVon.1*\u2014r~ says, one must remember\nhoW far the young man's love of power\nwould lead him.\nThe relations between the Empress\nFrederick.aud her sbn^became at last\nso bitter that William placed spies\nabout her\u2014even in the bedroom of\nhis invalided father.\nFirst Official Aot\n. Through one of these spies William\nlearned of the existence of a journal\n\u25a0which his father had kept fo\u00a3 some\nyears,\" Frederick 'had a taste for writing and tho .fact that there was coldness between him- and his son led\nWilliam to rear that this secret jour-1\nnal might contain some criticism of\nhis conduct. JThe fear of it. haunted\nhim and he bent all his thoughts to\nobtaining possession of it.\n.. The empress,.' however, was clever\nenough 'Jo conceal the diary before her\nhusband's \"death. Eluding the surveillance of her fiion, she sent the\npapers to her mother, Queen Victoria, (\nur to her brother, then Prince of\nWales\u2014I don't renjember which.\nHardly had his father drawn his\nlaSt breath when William, over the\ndead body, performed his first official\nact. '.\nIt was to demand Of his widowed\nmother the journal, which he termed a\n\"memorial.\"\nAnger Drove Him Mad\n\u2022   The    empress; . feigned    Ignorance.\ncharacter 'sketch is given  practically; William Insisted,   .He spoke as mas\nter, giving his mother the order to\noboy. She persisted In declaring that\nshe knew -nothing of--the. paper. Her\nmenaced  her  brutally   with   his\nthaV'he dates from the time'of whatj wrath.    To  his  dry  eyes- her  tears\nwe  Germans   call  the   Gruenderzelt? wero onlsr stratagem.    The more she\nthat' is, tho period of the founders, the\nconquerors -^ excuse me-^ of 'the!\nFranco-Prussian yr&y.. But tho'ugh -Jiei\ndates \"fropi tho Gruenderzelt we' noi\nlonger\"datb from it; that is,\"hot all1\nbf us. \u25a0   \u25a0 .\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0   i\nOur'men. left for the frentier., -poor\nPrussians;- they returned rich, ,Germans. 'The period of muUi':m'illlon-\naires dates from '71; the 'Very'term\nitself first came into : our\/' language\nthen,   Geraany began .to bo btilit up.,\nInflated .with success; we,.ate, drank\nand built. \"We built forts and cannon;\nports, ships -and \"cannon; roads, canals\nand cannon; barracks,, factories, palaces and always cannon.\nfeeding a capital for the Empire we\nhad'Just given ourselves, we rebuilt\nBerlin from ehd to end; and we have\nkept on building ever since.'. The taste\nfor colossal statues,-giant universities,\nfortlike railway stations, cathedrallike\nshops, Valhalla cafes\u2014all this hyper-,\nbolic monumentallsm\u2014dates -from the\nGruenderzelt. If the Gruenderzelt disappears, little by little, from the souls\nof men, it still lives in the souls of\nstones, ahd in' the soul of William II.,\nwho datest ahH.>iiitely from these years\nof megalomania, inflation, uproar and\nchief grandeur.\nV:       Kept Young Ideas\nHe was very young in '70, but one\nkfcepB all the! ideas tha\u00a3 Verc put In\none's head before the age of ,20, unless one-has in one's self the material\nfor the remoulding' of those ideas.\n; William.,I,, the \"unfor'gotable grand-j\nfather,\" Jhady.oone ofn*hiu.i(iCQDii9hneftHi\nabout him. lie was by taste u wirnpiei\ncountry , sciuivt;; by, force, of'circumstances a . conquerpr.. Jn Blsmark,\ntooltk,e..o1nd Roon hp. hq.d 'ambitious\nservants who prosed :him on. Did you\nknow, that ,hc crossed , the. Rhine\ngloomily and that it seemed to him\nan outrage U> bombard. l3arisV , Thoy\nhad to beg h^n; they'.eveu, got put of\nhim by trickery the orS^r to file tiie\nfirst cannon. Poor old Will.iam never\nthought Of mulU-mlllionaires. Success didr not change^ him. There are\ngramUathers like him in'a'gobd many'\nfamilies; grandfathers 'In spite of\nthemselves, continue to smoke the\nSame pipe ahd drink the Saino heer\nthat they loved before their.delniL\nKaiser and Parents    .\nFrederick never spoke of hlsfathpf's\ncampaigns and the brawlers of '71\nwere always displeased with his reticence. ; \u25a0\nAs for the present William, he gives:\nhis \"father scant honor, pushing him-\noutside of history as an uhdutiful \u00ab6hv\nsends his old mother to her' bedi'oonv\nbecaViVe he doesn't eoftsideVliefr-'flress-;\ned well enough to he Seen*'1 Hfe^'rft-i\nproaehes his mother with heit'EHgilSh]\nblood ahd his father \"with hlii-iittpAicl-I\nen'ce, besides which', he 'repfoafches\nthem jointly with the tickets, ftrf affliction which makes hiS^pride auffer\nQrUBlly*;,':..  , . y ;.-\u2022-..,' : ;.\" 1\nI am going, to be .indiscreet enough\nto toll you a little, aneedpife.about William. . It was- told to me one night at\nFrledrlchsruhb-by the late Bismarck,\nWho, had b.een drinking1. . That, Is-to\nSay, that it can be believed, for there\nwas. neyjeg,;, .any. one more brutally\nSincere than he was under the influence of wjne, , j'\n. Bismarck's Story ,\n...Hardly,had'the old chancellor told\nme the stflry which I.am going to. rer\nlate than Iseemed lo.read in his stern\nface that, he would have (given anything to have, it unsaid. But he was\nnot the man tfpeniy to regret an act\u2014\neven a mistake\u2014and he was too much\nan ohemy ('of useless words to ask,\nafter realizing his error, that I keep\nthe story 'secret. Nevertheless, each\ntime X have; wanted \\o tell It I have\nseemed to see bis fiery eyes in their\nwrinkled pockets and\" haVe kept silence.    ...\n-rThe:tftle deals with William's first\nact of authority. \u25a0\u25a0\nTo begin \\vU.h, you probably already\ntthOw of the ifeverlsh \u25a0ataxiety henhow-\ned when as son of the heir-apparent\nhe watched the progress, of his father's\nillness. at Sail Hemo whilp the -old\ngrandfather was slowly petrifying on\ntire throne.\nYou havo heard, too, of his pnrri-\ncilal. fever during the hundred doyn-\nreign of.-his. poor cancerous father,\nFredericlj.. Ah, WllHam.had escaped\nhis -parents long. before.. that tline.\nBismarck had got him away frpm\nthem; an easy game, for the old diplomat , in. whom ferocious energy and\nsupreme cunning Tyefo blended.\nAppetite for Power\n1 Bismarck never cared for the Emperor, Frederick, who., he thought\nwished to change the order of things,\nand ns for the empress he abomin\nuted her because of her English ideas\narid referred .to her as \"the stranger\nlie devoted himself to filling William'\nw,ijh the appetite for. power, taught\nhim to criticize every., written andt\nspoken word of hiSMfather ahd to believe ithat the influence'.of his English mother :was anti-national, andi\n.-t|ie>efoi^ dangerous,';; ^Biit Bismarck,'\nshrewd *s he was, could nojt foresee\nresisted the more determined he be\ncame. It. seemed tq him that the Im-\nportanco.-of. :the papers might be\n^Gasjuri$: by. the stubbornness-of her\nopposition,.,besides .which he was enraged '(n'ai\"ln tho first- hptir of the\nreign ho1 Had' so\" feverishly awaited\nsomeone dared ,to thwart film.1- \u25a0\nf.^Wasf.nQt hlB mother merely n, princess, ot the houss of which he was the\nhead?t,.-Was., she not merely': lady\ncolpnel, of onoiof his .reglmcjnts?-Was\n,?her not his. euj)ject?>';j Anger -drove\nhim stark mad. .\u25a0;'.:\u25a0   ..-.'.;.. \"..\nArrest of Hit Mother'\n\"Well,\" he commanded, purple with\nwrath, \"you will, remain under close\narrest until you have obeyed me.\"\nBismarck, arriving at Potsdam two\nhours after this; found the palace\nsurrounded by - squadrons of armed\ncavalry. \u25a0-.  \u25a0\nThe emperor, whom ho found still\naxcited, told the old .chancellor how\nhe had met the disobedience of his\nmother. .   ' '  \u25a0,\n\"And she need not expect, pity or\nconsideration uhtll she- has. obeyed\nrtie,\" ho declared. \"!you u*\"*er9tand\nthat, Mr.\" Chancellor? ,,TJntil sho has\nObeyed me)\"\nThe pupil imd gone much too far.\nBismardk saw at dnice that tiie buffoonery continued might mar the\nwhole of William's Yeigirt. Later in\nlife, he'sald, he used to wontfer how\nhe ^kep't from laughlnrg In ,'lilM sov-\nereigiVs face.\nBismarck's Strategy\n-What ho did wtts'ti) .^ecei,ve W1I-:\n'Iin'm's hfews witH':^eferemial;'siie'hc'e,!\nand later; when' 'the 'emperor Was\ncalmer, show him that :liis course was\nsure'to meet \\vith'geheml 'disapproval.\nThere was a'way, he'thbught, of \"proceeding1 imieh mofe YigbVohbljf and at\nthe same time TBfflcaciouHly. Why not\nrather cut downr' the- income of 'the\nempress?   Suspend her appandages?\n\"I ,kn6w her jnajesty,'^ said the good\nBismarck. \"Sho has pride. Forced\narrest she can brave out, accepting it\n1   '   \u25a0    . '.  .-II\nas a sort of martyrdom; but \u25a0 the\nmoney aire, the - money-\u2014who \u00abarf-re*-\nsist money?\"\n. Further, he laid tactful stress upon\ntiie probable representations of England. \"Is it really the moment, sire?\"\n> The kaiser, becoming appeased, listened to Bismarck's counsel. The arrest of the empress was removed. The\nofficers . led. their cavalry back to\nquarters, and William turned his attention to the details of his father's\nobsequies, which he wished to be most\nfastidious.\nThe struggle between the dowager\nempress and her son lasted for several months; six at least Finally the\nemperor obtained the manuscript arid\nthe empress her money.    ,\nBrilliancy and Noise\nWas It not a worthy debut, I ask\nyon, for an emperor whb+ .despairing\nof ever attaining the glory of having\nmade a Bismarck, discerned that the\nglory of daring.' to. dismiss him was\nthe only thing that could be thrown\ninto the balance *\nWha), did he risk, after all? Germany was already  made.\nAnd so it comes about that the\nGruenderzelt has, in William II., the\nfirst new fashioned emperor of Germany; an emperor of brilliancy and\nnoise. He squares himself majestically upon the imperial throne and\ncaracoles spectacularly upon the field\nof maneuvers.\nHis character is paradoxical. Sometime I think of him as a good German\nboy. Ho has some true friepds, too;\nsome of them obscure people, absolutely disinterested. To hear him\ntalk intimately, without -arrogance or\npomp, his body slouching in a low\narmchair and bis legs crossed high,\nsmoking his pipe and laughing boisterously, one. can hardly realize that\nhe Is actually the formidable autocrat\nwho terrorizes not only his own country, but the whole world with the\ntumult of his personality.\nHis Deformed Arm\nThe intimate William, son of an\nEnglish woman, has in him a good\nileal of the young English patrician.\nThough graduated from Bonn Instead\nof' Oxford, ho has done his best to\napproximate the English sporting\ngentleman. Bu't his Britainism is too\nmixed; it amounts'-.only to Anglo-\nmaliln; His tihclef King Edward,\nlaughs at his pretentions, and the\nffephew rafteS. Of course, it is quite\nout of the Question for him to manage\nany sport (here Von B\u2014 spoke in a\nlower tone)- on account of his deformed arm. Though lie has a thousand Ingenious tricks for concealing\nit, it has come tp, bo pretty generally\nknown,' that one of his arms has never\ndeveloped. , Look at him or his pictures, and you will see that he has\ntaken.precautions to prevent its being seen. The fact remains that, to\nalt practical purposes, he is one-\narmed.\nHis Ideas Commonplace\nWilliam's cultivation is extensive\nbut vague. The only, think he knows\nIn a. precise and detailed fashion is\ngeography\u2014for geography is commerce.\nIt.w^s a joy to argue with him in.\nthe old days on literature, philosophy,\nmorale\u2014anything at all. Ho did not\nby-.anyr^ans.impose Ids ideas upon\nuse, but accepted differences of.opln--\nion sensibly. I may add that his Ideas\nare usually commonplace. He would\njoke. even in the midst of the most\nlively controversies and .to his credit\nbe it Said that when beaten, in an\nargument he never hurled his imperial\ncrown at his adversary's head in order- to .come- out ahead. Perhaps he\nrevenged himself on his generals and\nhiprministers.;-;:' \"\nIn'ythe. last few iyearH'he has chang-\ned, a good deal. ;.HIs* trembling fits\n^With YestfefdayVj\nQuotations\nOf B6H for silver and 7.14 Hit I\nlead (Montreal) It is natuttt I\nto suppose that the stock* at I\ngood paying sliver lead minw |\nwill advance proportionately.\nWe would advise the purchase |\nof Standard Silver Lead at anything under {2.   Their   surplus I\naa at Dec. 81st Is approximate- I\nly J300.000, and the stock pays\n214 cents per   share   dividends\nmonthly  with  occasional  extra. ]\ndividends ot the same amount\nWe solicit your  buying   and ]\nselling orders      ,\nStDenis & Lawrence I\nexasperate him, aWlie grimaces' urL\ntil one might almost call It facial agul\nHo has formed a habit of snapptoT\nhis fingers \"and making cbhvulalv]\nmovements with his liahd when speatjL\ning. His laugh, formerly so buoyatil\nhas acquired a'false tone. LikewM\nhe shows less tolerance, less klndne]\ntowar4.hls friends. In shbrVthe <\nperor is outrunning the man.\nspells the end .of our friendship.\nDriving Influences\nI attribute these alterations in hlr|\nto three principal causes:\nHis mischief-making statecraft.\nHis sickly condition, which preool\n(Continued   on  Peare  Seven)\nSEAL\nBRAN\u00bb\n(bFFEB\nCoffee-\nthat will make\nyour household\nhaippyj you*\nguests gratefully\nyourself enthusiastic*\nIn }i, \u2022 ahd 2 pound cant.\nWhole\u2014ground\u2014pulvcrjted\u2014\nalto Fine Ground (or Percolators.\nCHASE & SANBORN, MONTREAL.\n. ' ; \u25a0'\u25a0. i'-HM\nThfese columns are devotel^xclusively taclassified ct,ndeassd Want%dvertis\u00abitien:ti,\nwhich appeal directly to all classes,of people, in the home, the office!, the'\/tradesmani:,the\nrahcher and all professions. \u25a0   : .', '\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0> X.\n.. To get immediate results ,aVa minimum cost, the News Want Ad. will find a w\u00bbV.\n..<? t;    \u25a0-'\u2022       :-    >\u25a0     s;u no \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0  \u25a0\u2022\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0'\u25a0 , >Wi\" \u25a0--.    '\n\u25a0 rUlsl .for'.-ii\" '    '\n\u00a3*assifieu^Wan* Ads\nAdyertlsornenta Under  Any  Heading!\nMinimum   charge    .......2Bi'\nOti* insertion, per word  \\<\nSix    oonsecutive    Insertion*,    per\niroTd  to\n2S    consecutive:   Insertions    (one\n\"month) per word ...............lBc\nBirth, one Insertion  ........50c\nMarriages,  one' Insertion   ........56c\nDeaths, one Insertion   ,..60c\nCard of Thanks ...60c\nEach subsequent Insertion .......26c\nDeath and funeral notice  .11.00\nAll condensed advertisements are\ncash In advance, otherwise one cant\nper word per Insertion straight.\nIn computing the number of words\nin a classified advertisement count\neach word, dollar mark,, abbreviation\nInitial letter and figure aa on* word.\nAdvertisers are reminded that It Is\ncontrary to the provisions of the Postal\nlaws to have letters addressed to Initials only, therefore any advertiser desirous of concealing his or bar lnden-\ntlty may use a boi at this office with-\nout any extra .change if 1 plies are\ncalled, for; if replies are to be mailed\n.to advertiser allow. 10 cents extra, in\naddition to price of advertisement to\npay postage, .,   \u2022\nThe News reserves the right to pate;\non any copy, submitted for publication\nAdvertisements ordered (T.F.) till\nforbidden, must be cancelled or stopped\nIn person or by written order.\n.    SITUATIONS  VACANT\u2014MAUB.\nNELSON EMPLOtMBNT AGBNCY-\nW. Parker, 101 Baker St., Phon* 281\nWANTED\u2014Teamsters, skidding; post-\nmakers;  cord wood . nutters;    Peter\nSylvester and, partner, wo'hd-outting at\nmine., y,...\nMEN AND WOMEN make B00 percent\nprofit selling for only 50c my large\ncloth bound family medical book of\nover 1O00 pages: This great book Is\nillustrated witlh ^colored Uthograiphs\nandj contains chapters on the marriage\nquestion, sex .relation, children, babies,'\nhygiene and all diseases. First applicants get exclusive \"territory. Address1\nP.O. drawer 78, Buffalo, 'N,X,   y(2l72)\n\/     1\nSITUATION WANTED-FEMaLE\n^J8\u00aby you saw it in The Newt.)\nWANTED\u2014Qlrl- atendlrig high school\nwants to work for board.   Address\nbox 214G, Daily News.   ' (214B)\nDRESSMAKINO and plain sewing or\nsewing by the day.   Mrs. F. Moore,\nMill St.   Phone L-H86. ... \u25a0. (2160)\nPOUtTflY AND EGGS.\nFOR^AlS^SnigTr^omb^Whluri^?:\nhorn \"and  White   Wyandotte  cockerels, S3 each.   Some beauties can be\nseen at the O. K. Bakery., (2liS)\nFURNISHED ROOMS TO SENT\nFOR   RENT ~ Suites of furnished\nhousekeeping    rooms    In    Annable\nblock.   Enquire room 32. (2140)\nK.  W.  C BLOCK  \u2014  Housekeeping\nsuites and. rooms for rent.   Terms\nmoderate. A. Matdonnld & Co. (2163)\nFURNISHED SUITES for rent.    Ap-\n*ply Kerr Apartrnehts.     . (2164)\nARTICLES FOR SALE\n. (8*y ..you taw it in The Newt.)\nFOR* SALE CHEAP\u2014One nearly new\nEnglish billiard table, one registering\nclock for billiard hall, one dozen pool\nMom chairs, one set of ivory billiard\nboils.    Wm. Mack,  Nelson.       (2140)\nFOR SALE\u2014A gasoline   Wood, saw,\ntruck and sleigh; only new this fall;\ncost MOO Vriew.    Will sell, cheap tor\ncosh.   A. Hedge, Rossland. (2171)\nBUSINESSES  FOR SALE.\n(8ay you taw it in The Ntwt)\nFOR SALE\u2014High class bakery and\nconfectionery business in prosperous\nmining town in. Kootenays. Bargain\nfor quick sale. Only reason for disposal owner going to front. Apply box\n2148, Daily News, . (2148)\nGENERAL REPAIR BUSINESS for\nsale at a bargair Owner going to\nthe front. Fully equipped for doing\nall repairs; doing good business. For\nparticulars apply Taylor, the Tinker,\nNelson.   1-. \u2022 . (2162)\nepucnTibNAi,\nVernon preparatory, tchool, Okan-\nagan valley, Soys 7\"to 16[ thorough\neducation;' English .lines; ideal situeV\ntlbn; Coldstream estate; climate unrivalled; matron; trained nurse,, pros\npeotu*,-Sev. Aj O. Itaolcl*, KSK M.A\n(Cantab) \u2014  -     -\n8rrUATI0NjrjCAfjg^-FEW^Ijt\nHbusEKEEP^^ANTED^o^SnCD^ !\nBtnall wages and -good home offered,\nwork light;   soldier's wife preferred;\nono_chila hot objected to.   Box 2l\u00abf, ,\nDaily NeWs. (Ifiit)\n^^^ai^JE^PE^S^NALS^Hi\n^ELSC^MESSENG^R^CVBaiaii*\nand express. 'Prompt and rsnablt.\nDay and night.   Phone 242.\nB. K. STRACHAN, KO Batter\nplumbers'   supples,  estimates  fretf\nwork aniaraMAen    phone a\u00abS:\t\nWHEN  REPLrNG TO ADVERTliSiS*\nments In Condensed Columns, klhdl* 1\nmention you saw It in The News^-ft\nwill help you. ' \u2022'--$\n\" '   1       ii  '-\u25a0']\u2022\nTAXIDERMISTS\nPRICE   BROS.,   Taxidermists\u2014iai.\ndermy work, rug and robe making a\nspecialty.   Send for price list,   Prtce\nBros.,  Taxidermists, Rossland; S,f}ii.\n...  .. ,     (20\u00abi)\nFOR SALE OR LEASE to reSponellJtB\ntenant, the Aldrldgo building, at\nTrail; 20 rooms, running water, heated\nthroughout. Also building. On Malh\nstreet, 28x80 feet,   Wj.lt BJsling, Trail\nB.C.  \":\"\"\"'   ' (214\u00bb)\nEXCHAJftlE Premo 'camera, complete\ndeveloping outfit; guitar; Velox hop'\nkey skates; leg^uajds; above oust 160;\natso collection postage stamps, for\nGramophone aud records or Empire\ntypewriter. For particulars address\nGeo. MoCready, Zincton, B.C.      (21661)\nLARGE OR SMALL STUMPS can b*\ndestroyed, at the cost of a.few eentfe\neach by our process; no hard labor\nnecessary arid no explosives ' .uatd,\nWrite for particulars. Ideal.Stump\nDestroyer Co., 160 Broadway Bait,\nVancouver, B.C.' .  '  ^^JltJCI\nAPPLES     TO    DEALERS^ltortneW\nSpys,    Ontarlos,    Baldwins.;  3. J,\nCampbell, R, R-.1.   y.    : (Jul)\nWANTED PUBS AND HIDES\u2014Wanti.\n%A 'to b,uy all kliids of  Taw   furs,\n\u00abood price given.   G, Glaser, FurMeBi\nSelson, Bi C.       . ,*. (2127i\nWHEN REPLYis'G TO ADVERTISE*\nments in Condensed Columns, kindly\nmention you saw it in The News\u2014li\nwill help you, . k...:...\n <\u25a0      *\u2022:'\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u2022;\n\"tjp\u00bb*\u00ab?-\n^\nSATURDAY,   JAN.   8,   1916.    \"l\nMTHE DAILY NEWS\nRed Star\nRolled\nOats\n8-pound suck  w. >35c\nJ'3ft-pound sack ........... 76o\nh 40-pound suck  \u25a0\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022$1i40\n[j'80-pound sack  \u25a0    \u25a0\u2022\u2022S2*50\n6 PER CENT DI3COUNT FOR  .\nCA8H.\nStar Grocery\nPHONE 10.\nWING OFFICERS\nFOR NEW ARMIES\nThcro used lo be a saying in the\njr'rmy to tho effect that it took only\n|};ix months to; make a soldier at a\nl.iinch, but five), years to make an officer.   It'sounds as though an officer\nwho had been rcadiing Kipling backwards had said  it says tho Toronto\n[Mail and Empire.   -Nevertheless it ro-\nLnainn as one  of  those .sayings  thut\nl;i\u00bb Quoted to quell argument, -Assuming\n\u25a0'it to bo true, 'how shall tiie new British\ntrniics, numbering 'some 4,000,000, got\njffieers tu comma oil them? It is sut-\nsfactoryvju learn upon tho authority\n\u25a0jjf an American who is tho London correspondent of the Philadelphia Ledger,\n'hat the now British armies will bo\n*is magically officered as the armies\n' homseives have been called into ex-\nstence. Whether designedly or not,\nho machinery for making the new of'\n'tiecrs has been in existence fur some\nimo and the officers can be turned\njut as promptly ay the men.\nThree Avenues of Approach.\nTho young officers of the new ar\nIfnies ai*o obtained -in three ways, omit\njtlng to reckon the product of the mili-\nitary academies, not because they have\nnot done good work, .but because they\nxre now almost negligible in numbers.\nTho three avenues of approach to u,\n\u2022commission in tho British army today\njaro direct from civil life, through one\nof tho public schools or university of'\nfleers' training corps, or through one\niOf tho territorial regiments.which have\nbeen specially designated as officers'\ntraining corps. The most interesting\nfrom the civilian point of view is the\nV ,\nlast of the three. The most notable\nof tho O.T.C. regiments are the Inns\nof Court, the Artists' rifles and the\nHonorable Artillery company, all of\nLondon. The Inns of Court Is familiarly known as the \"Devil's Own\" from\nthe fact that Its membership is confined'to lawyers\u2014members of the four\nInns of Court in London, of the Faculty of Advocates of Scotland and tho\nKing's Inn of Dublin and \"such other\ngentlemen as may bo considered by the\ncommanding officer to bo specially\neligible.\"\nAn Honorable Hiitory.\nIt is a regiment with an honorable\nhistory, for it was organized in 1584,\nwhen under Lord Ellesmere, a famous\njudge, It served in land operations\nagainst the Spanish Armada. It fought\nIn the Civil War under Lord Lyttletoi.\nand it furnished \"two valiant corps\"\nto quote its official history, for service in tho Napoleonic wars. It was\nchristened the \"Devil's Own\" by King\nQeorge III, who Is also credited with\nInventing the bugle call, \"A guinea\nfor the governor and a crown piece for\nthe clerk.\" The Artists'B Rifles is a\nmoro modern regiment. Officially it Is\na battalion of the Kensington Regiment\nand before the war it was one of the\ncrack Territorial regiments of London.\nIts membership is largely composed of\nartists, actors, writers and men of sim\nilar pursuits, It was sent to the front\nwith the other Territorials early In the\nwar, but Sir John French came to the\nconclusion that men of the standard\nof education of its members wero wasted as privates, and -designated the battalion an O, T, C. regiment, and sent\nit home to train.\nVeterans Respond.\nAt first it was a comparatively easy\nmatter to secure competent senior offi-\ncers for Kitchener's army. The best\nteachers in tho world wero ready for\ntho task. There was hardly an English hamlet that did not number in\nits population some elderly officer who\nhad spent the best part of a lifetime\nin India or Egypt, and had retired on\nhalf pay lo cultivate mushrooms or\nrabbits. At the call of war these veterans . sprang to life, and began to drill\ntho young men who had applied for\ncommissions. How successful somo of\nthese old chaps wero is,illustrated by\ntho ease of one of them, who was 75\nyears old. He drilled two battalions\nof his old regiment until they wero\nsent to Franco and then took upon him\nself the duty of preparing a third.\nWhen tho word came for the last detachment to go, the veteran insisted\nupon going with it, and -despite his\nyears lie was permitted to lead the\nboys into action. Ho has since won\nnew 'distinctions and is now recovering\nfrom wounds lii hospital.\nFine New Officers\nAir. Steele, 'the correspondent referred to, says that the young officers of\nthe latest British armies have nothing\nto fear from a comparison with the\nbest officers in Europe, although 90\nper cent of them never thought of war\nbefore 'the present conflict occurred. It\nhas been shown, as Sir Ram Hughes\npointed out, that men who were nothing but lawyers, doctors or merchants\ntill the years of their lives can bo made\ninto ideal leaders of men when once\nthey tackle tho military problem, If\nthey can convey 'the impression that\ntho officers kiibw what they are doing\nand that they will not reeklesly waste\nlife, they have mastered the first essentials of their'avoeations. The men\nwill .follow them, ahd the officers will\nplan for the welfare of tho men, England 'does not tack those who will ful-\nfill these qualifications.\nUse more water ind\nless flour, and get ^better\nbread with\u2014\nWiF14\u00ab?:W?\nPURITy FLOUR\n\"More Bread, and Better Bread\"  ,:\na&fci\nBurns' Ideal\nPoultry Food\nPUT   UP   IN   50-lb.   AND   100-lb. SACKS\nALSO   10-lb.   PACKAGES-SIX   PACKA6ES  TO  THE  CASE\nPoultrymen Who Have Used It Are Now Steady Customers^\nWRITE   FOR   PRICES   AND   INFORMATION\nP. Burns & Co., Limited\nClean, bright utensils mean clean appetizing food\u2014use\nOld Dutch\nPROBLEMS Of 1\nDFMyWED\nSpteial Correspondent of London Ex-\nprett Would Pit British Dirigible\nAgaintt German Zepp\nLondoners are naturally mostly\nconcerned about London's defenses\nagainst Zeppelin attacks, writes a\nspecial correspondent of the London\nExpress. But the real question ia\nhow to prevent zeppelins coming to\nthis country at all, for as the greater\ncovers the less, so If you destroy or\ndrive away enemy aireaft before\nthey reach our coast, there prould toe\nho need to worry about London or\nany other town or 'village In Great\nBritain.\nIn the past certain of our pundits\nappear to have put their faith In\naeroplanes and suns as the sure and\nonly means of salvation again Zeppelins. But what are the facts. Zeppelins being as long as St. James street,\nwould prove an easy mark at a low\naltitude by day. They, therefore, take\nadvantage of the dark, which affords\nprotection against both guns and\naeroplanes. It is difficult enough for\nan aeroplane to' fly at all by night\n\u25a0but it is doubly difficult for aeroplane to land in the dark without tho\nmachine being smasheed and the\npilot's neck broken. To alight\neven by day needs the nicest calculation; what, then, arc the chances of\ncastastrophe in the dark or with a\nslight ground mist obscuring the landing place?\n' In their attacks upon London the\nzoppeiins work at a height of over\n10,000 feet, and are capable of rising\nin the air ten times as (fast as any\nordinary aeroplane. The plane's one\nchance of success is to get above the\nairship and drop bombs on1 her\nButttfly and Hawk.\nTo rlso above her pray she must\nlaboriously climb in spirals at a tenth\nthe speed of an adversary capable of\nrising both perpendicularly and\ndynamically at an angle by means of\nher rudder area, though it Is true'\nthis may causo the airship to lose\nsome of her buoyancy It is liko\nbuttorfly chasing a hawk. The plane\nmay hit the zoppelin several times,\nwith Its machine gun, but the net\neffect of this ou tho numerous gas\ntight compartments and chambers is\nlikely to be negligible,\nWitli Lieut. Warnoford fortune\nfavored the brave. He was high in\ntho jilr awaiting tho zcppelin's return,\nbut even bo it took several bombs before tho brilliant tattle was ended.\nSuch \u25a0 a flight over Jmndon, with\n\"swarm of hornets\" dropping innumerable bombs on tin- offenance of one\nhitting Is easier imagined than do\nscribed; and this pre-supposes the\nplanes to have had time tu time ten\nor twelvo thousand feet before tho\nenemy arrives, to bo able to ace him\nwhen he conies; and finally to evade\nhis bigger gun's in the car and those\npossibly mounted on the top of the\nhull.\nNow as, to the guna for.defense.on.\nland, of which only those of power\nand long range arc of use against the\nraiding zeppelin. shrapnel and pieces\nof shell having a habit of returning\nto earth at much the same rate at\nwhich they were impelled, the bigger the guns the more dangerous it\nis for those in whose defense they are\nfired.\nIt is difficult enough in daylight\nto hit a ship on the water some miles\noff, whlcli, after all, can only go\nbackwards, forwards and sideways.\nHow much more difficult, therefore,\nIt is to hit a zeppelin in tho work,\nwhich can go up and down, as well as\nbackwards, forwards and sideways,\nand which', moreover, docs this at almost double tho speed of a dreadnought cruiser?\nThe Great Use For Guns.\n\\.The great use for guns In defending a city or any other vital spot\nagainst zeppelins is t0 force.the airship to keep above a certain height,\nwhore, even on a. clear night, It will\nnol be able to distinguish important\nareas at which to aim its bombs. If\ntho zoppelin bo allowed to descond to\nfour or five thousand feet It might\nplaco Its bombs witb somo accuracy,\nbut the fact that they cannot sec at\nwhat thoy arc aiming does not deter\nGerman airmen from causing useless\ndumoge and from murdering women\nand children.\nSo, while our guns may bo useful\nin \"blinding- zeppelins when tliey\narc over a danger zone, they cannot\nbo relied upon to keep them away,\nnor can .they stop them from slaughtering our. women folk. Guns should\nbe our line of defense whoh a zep-\npeWn has snipped through our\ndefenses Zeppelins should , be kept\naway from England by some similar\ntype of aircraft, capable of attacking them on their journey here, and,\nshould the need arise, capable-of effective reprisals in Germany itself.\nThis type of aircraft will certainly\nnot ' prove ' to be' an aeroplane. ' As\ntho first lord said In the house of\ncommons on 'November. 11: \"The time\nmuy'come. when'the power of the aeroplane' will so increase its length of\nflight, tho load It can carry and its\npowors of offense that an aeroplane\nstarting from the shores of Norfolk\nmight become a menace and terror on\nthe banks of the Shine. But that time\niff hot yet and it is no use pretending\nthat it is.\"\nTho Great Ship of the Air.\nQuite so; the true weapoln of defense and offense against zeppelin\nattack would appear to be a super-\nzeppelin\u2014superior, at any rate, in turn\nof speed and goneral mobility. And\nin this direction we hope we see Mr.\nBalfour's thought tupiing. For years\nthe expert advisers in the air department of the admiralty have asked to\nbe allowed'to build the <great ship of\nthe air.. They have argued and\nfought against incredible odds to get\ntheir way, and one one occasion the\nthen first lord was persuaded to sanction construction on those lines.\nOn July 17, 1913, Mr, Winston\nChurchill, as first lord of the admiralty, announced in the house of commons that, \"the preliminary construction of two .rigid airships of tho largest size.is.now well advanced. . . .\nProbably a. succession of these rigid\nairships will be ordered. ... We\nhave very good. hopes of building a\nSHARP ATTACK\nCoaatttiu, Relkn-ad Just la\nThat ByTruH-tHJut\"\n\u2014\n'\u2022M.r.J.cJccN\n682 Gerrard St. East, Toronto.,\nFor two years, I was a victim df\nAcute Indigestion and Gas In' THie\nStomach. It afterwards attacked'm^\nHeart, and I had pains all over the\nbody, so I could hardly move around.\nI tried all kinds ot medicines but none\nof them did mo any good. At last,\nacting on the advice of a friend.,. j\ndecided to try 'Fruit-a-tiyes'. I bought\ntho first box last June, and now I am\nwell, after using only three',boxes.\nI recommend 'Fruit-a-tives' to anyone\nsuffering from Indigestion, no matter\nhow acute\":       FRED J. CATEEN.\nSimple Indigestion often leads to'\nffcar\/ Attacks, Catarrh of the SioMcIt\nand constant distress of mind and fc'ojjr.;\nIf you arc bothered with any Stomach'\nTr6ublc,..'iiid especially if Constipation\ntroubles you, take 'Frult-u^ives'.   ,',\n\"o0c. a box, fl for $2.50,, trial sizcv?5fj.\nAt all dealers or sent postpaid.bf\nFruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa.' \u2022\nPAGE 8EVE\u00bb\nWeek End Specials\n. ; VISIT THE \"BAY\" AND SHABB IN THE PLUNDER. THE GREATEST VALUES OK THE\nYEAR ARE HERE AND AWAIT YOUft INSPECTION AND APPROVAL. PURCHASE BOTH FOR\nTHE PRESENT AND YOUR FUTURE REQUIREMENTS. THESE OPPORTUNITIES ARE SUCH\nAS WILL MERIT YOUR SPECIAL INTEREST. YOU, READER, OWE IT TO YOURSELF AND\nYOUR POCKET BOOK TO MAKE A FAIR INVESTIGATION OF THESE REMARKS. WE STAND\nBY. EVERY BARGAIN ADVERTISED.'   READ THESE F^R A START.\nvessel which will be equal In every respect to the latest on the continent.\"\nBut on March 2 of the following year\nMr; Churchill modified that stateinenf:\nand informed the house of,.commons\nthat Messrs. Vlckot\u00bb had an\/order for\none rigid of the latest zeppflUti type.\nNow the -country is naturally curious\nto know why, these two airships are\nnot floating in the,, thin air-into which\nthey- appear to have \u25a0 vanished.\nJust as we kept secret the details\nof bur first dreadnought so tiie Qer-\nmuns has jealously -guarded, the designs,of. their airships. But thoy went\nfufther-and misled the >yoi'ld with c\\)Xr\nculafed lies und.failure.and mishapflftp\ntheir vessels It, is even; .now thought\nthat -Germany allowed tiie .2-4 to fall\nin French territory at L,unevirIo a -few\nmonths \u2022before tihe war in-orderto Advance- the. delusion. Her log was supi\nposed to ho faked, giving faint; details\n'of her trials and eapacfty, which :Wetlt\nto show she was capable of doing not\nmore than 4ft miles an hour on rfuel\ntanks , \u2022containing only-sufficient \u25a0 tot;\nseven hours, and that 'to^\/reach,-va\nmcximum height of tioOa feet about\n6600 puunds ;of ballast had. -to be\nthrown.overboard, And alt -this,.be-Jt\nremembered : at a period -when.;Lr8\ntraveled from tbe FreHcii-frontier*; to\ntho (North sea, covering 2-140-'mileij in\n31 hours, at an average' pace i of;^60\nmiles \"ah hour, and oventualfy reaching\nBerlin with enough fuel Hto'run;ano,ther\n16 \u2022 hours. At the; present -'moment\nGerman -naval zeppelins pAtrortlio\nNorth sen, constantly wateh'iniig tjlc\nmovement of our warships, thus rendering it difficult for us to ma4te Biir-\nprise raids., We want British zeppelins\nto fight them off before we. can' obtain mastery of the air in .this vital\nspot.\nBut on one thing we can rely. Tho\n\u25a0admiralty air department is .sound\nenough if .it is only, given the chance,\nand is fully prepared to produce .in\na, remarkably short time an.air fleet\n;pf rigid, dirigibles second to. pone in\nthe world.and from wjhat >Mr.. Bal\nfour has already done, we .'believe' he\nwJU glveus that.chance by malting it\nmore of a favorito und less\u25a0\"\u25a0of-a*waif\nin the admiralty scheme of things.\nKAISER'S FIRST\nOF\nlit\n(Continued from -.Page Six!).\ncupies him more than is believed.\nThe slow, tenacious influence of the\nempress. ' \"\n\"A False Label\" , ;\u201e\n, Like all- neurasthenics, the .emperor\nshows\u2014even, in - his... most., unbalanced\ndeeds\u2014a sort of ..topsy-turvy, logic.\nHe gets, people's minds off one thing\nby'doing another.. Thus, if .they\nhlamt him for, an \"artistic decision he\nn^uste.rHtatreview;' if they.'Cry.out oCtir\nsomething else ho paints a picture;:if\ntheyi hiss that he writes ail. opera or\ndisguises himself as a, Mussulman and\nmakes a pilgrimage to the Holy Land\nor demands that they discover a' cure\n$ov tuberculosis within 24 hours.\nThe fact is that the emperor Is not\nnearly so popular as he was\/ We don't\ntrust him and believe in him as we\nonce. did.\nThe newer generation of Germans\nreproach the emperor with being\nshowy, false label badly stuck on the\ngood old German bottle.' He' does iibt\ntruly represent the spirit of; tho \u2022 people. But in spite of our real feelings\nwe have to pretend, more* o,r letts,r!to\nbe as our sovereign represents lis\".\nThus it comes about that there are\ncombined in William IT, two separate\nmen seemingly incompatible. One is\nthe charming personal, man, whom I\nhave loved; the other is the emperor,\nwhom I consider detestable: William\nthe man is fascinating; he is agroc-\nable, gay, simple, generous and loyal\nto his friends. I am,only.afraid that\nWilliam the!Emperor, who is such a\nvery different person, will end-b'y\nalienating my affections from William\nthe man. He ahnoys- me more' and\nmore, and In the last few yeo.rsl Hiye\nseen hint hs seldom as possible,\nMEN'S GREY FLANNEL 8HIRT6\nIn various neat stripe. effects, have self collars\nattached; yoke back.   Splendid value at 04 Oft\n$1.65.   To Clear   $li\u00a3\u00abJ\nMEN'S   SUITS\nIt is really astonishing how many Men's Suits\nyou can sell When you are giving them away in\nmany cases at less than half value.\nMen's,'Hard Wearing Scotch Wool Tweed\nSuits, well tailored and finished in the 00 All\nbest styles.   Three Groups, $12.00, $10.00 $0iUU\nWhat is the matter with them, a man remarked today? .Nothing whatever, except the price,\nbut. we are determined not to carry over one\nMan's Suit in stock today. Come in and look\nthem over, try one on and you will be surprised\nat the low prices on such meritorious Suits.\nOVERCOATS\u2014CAN YOU RESIST THEM\nThey have all got to be cleared OUT before\ninventory. Smart and good natty styles, somo\nwith half belts. .Made of strong, serviceable\nTweeds and Homespuns. The prices alone will\nsen them. \u2022 -While They Last\u2014\n\u2022Jutt. Each $17.00,115.00\t\n,    BOYS'  TUNIC  SHIRTS\n\u2022.'With stiff cuffs, just like father's. Come in\nneat. BlackrWhUe, Blue-White, Mauve-White\nStripes.    Usual 85c:    While  They Last:   AOm,\n$11.00\n\u2022Bach\nBOYS'   MULE   MITTS\nWool lined, knit wrist.   Just tiie thing OQ\u00ab\u00ab\n65'\nfor coasting;.    Pair\n-,, BOYS'   LEATHER   QAUNTLET8\nWith fringe; wool lined. \t\nHegulur 85c, for  DUO\nBOYS'  OVERCOATS\n\u2022In'Grey Stripe Tweeds, convertible collars. To\nfit hoys about \"five years; Usual 15.50. 00 fC\nTo Clear  \u00ab>\u00a3ilsi\nB0Y8*  OVERCOATS\nIn Grey or Brown Diagonal, back belts, convertible oollam, fly fronts or button through.\nTo fit boys about nine years. To Clear *(! Q\\Z\nat Just, Each    sJJsfltl\nBOYS'  OVERCOATS\nin   Dark   Grey   Frieze,   thrce-ouartor  length,\n. double breasted, slash pockets.   To. fit\nboys about eleven years.    Kach  .....\nMEN'S  WINTER  CAPS\nWith Ear- FlapB, somo lined fleece, other Q[\nfur.   Usual $1.25.   To Clear .....\n\u25a0   Cape in Meltons and Tweeds.\nUsual'JI.OO.   Now ,...' ...;...\nCaps in Meltons anil'Tweeds.. J5R\"\u00bb\nUsuai 85c.   Now          W\u00abIO\nHOUSE  FURNI8HING8  AT  GREAT  SAVINGS\nNottingham   Laco   Curtains,  in White   Only.\nHandsome border design with stripe centre. QCn\nOnly, Pair  03C \u2022\nFine Bordered Curtains with plain net A\\4 Ml\ncentre.   Ivory Only.   Usual (1*75 for .. <f IstVU\nHandsome Greek Key Border, with small spot\ncentre.' Two Pairs Only. White. Itegu- 9 A sir\nlar $1.95 for   s) 1109\nBeautiful   conventional   design,   in\nWhito Only.   Regular $2.60 for \t\n$1.89\n$3.65\n35c\n75c\nHoniton Lace Effects with fillet insertion, in\nIvory. Only three pairs left. Regular *\u00abJ QQ\n54.35.   To Clear, Pair  i,   \u00abPfc.UtJ\nEcru Laco Bungalow Curtains in HcffiPy Net.\nExceptional, Value.   Usual $2.25. \u2022\u2022<   Oft\nSaturday, Pair      *? I \"OW\nVery Dainty Spot Design Ivory Lace Curtains\nwith new border effect. Wo liavu four <fs] QC\npairs only.    Regular $2.50.   Saturday . .\u00abJI I tOO\nA few Single Pairs of Curtains lo be cleared\nat oven greater reductions than tliuse above.\nAfter Supper Saturday Evening\nScotch Knit Seamless Woollen Gauntlet\nGloves.: In Heathers, Greys' and Loyats. ACf,\nToday's' value 75c.   After Supper Sale ttJO\nChildren's Scotch Knit Seamless Woollen\nGloves, in Heathers, Greys, Lovats. Slues 3 to Ii.\nToday's valued 50c. 0 Q *\nAfter Supper -Sale, Pair  fctJO\nColobriitcd \"Wolsey\" Unshrinkable Knitted\nGloves, ijl.ll pure, wool, Just a lucky purchase\nof that famous Woisey make. 9A\"\n\u2014NUFF   SED.\nISaby's Bibs, trimmed lace, the useful IH.\nkind.    To Clear, Each        IUW\nChintz   Comforters,   full   size.   Who\nsaid cold nights after this.   To Clear at '\nAfter- Supper Sale, Pair\n$2.29\nANOTHER   AFTER   SUPPER   SALE    IN\nLADIE8'   WAISTS\nThese are tho useful kind,   in Flannel, Figured\nDelaine, etc.   A very good assortment. *1   QQ\nValues up to $5.50 at, Each\nRemember\u2014None  of  these wil\nuntil after 7:30 o'clock.\nbe   on   sale\nAlso a Table of Corscls.   AH good makes. QC.,\nAssorted sizos.   Just, Each      UUw\nWHITE FLANNELETTE, 33 inches wide\u2014 10\u00ab\nRegular 22%c.    After Supper Sale,  ...    IUU\nWHITE FLANNELETTE, 33 inches wide\u2014 17.\nRegular 20c.    After Supper Sale       I I w\nNELSONNEWSOF THE DAY\nTho Mission Band of Trinity .Methodist church will meet tills afternoon at\n\/J:30 o'clock.\nWhen in doubt''Gem theatre.   (21'50)\nSkating every afternoon, 3 to 5 and\nevening 8 to 10. Rink phono .98. Season tickets for sale at door.       (2M8)\nH. J. Wilton.who is at present confined to his home with la grippe hopes\nto resume his duties on\/Monday. (2173)\n.-.Nelson Brand'Jam is.made from tho\nbest Kootenay fruits and B. C sugar\nby British Columbia labor. At all\ngrocers. (2167)\nFernie and Lethbridge draught beer\nAnd porter, big schooner, 10 cents, rer-\nqle and., Lothbridge hottlod beer and\nDorter 26e per bottle.   Club Hotel.\n'    . ' ;    ' , (2109)\n'Owing to tho Imperial Order Daugh-\n,j*rs ot the Empire moving to the' store\nformerly occupied by Mrs. Moore as\nJhe Women's Exchange, Baker street,\ntho tea room will, not 'be open until\nSaturday, Jan. IS. ' (2174)'\n. The annual meeting of \u25a0 the Nelson\nand District Women's institute will be\ntold ill the K. of P. Hall on Saturday\nafternoon at 3 o'clock. Election of officers. All members who have not re-\n.ncwed their annual fee must do so in\n'order to \u2022vote.'' (213C)\nCHURCH    SERVICES   TOMORROW\nS ST. SAVIOUR'S CHURCH\u2014Corner\nWard ahd.Silloa streets. First Sun-\n^jay after Epithariy: 8 am.,.holy com-\n'munior n am, matins and holy communion. 2:30 p.m., Sunday school and\nBible classes. 7,: 30 p.m., evensong. Fred\nH. Graham, rector and rural dean.\n' CATHOLIC\u2014Corner Ward and Mill\nBtreet: Low mass, ua; high mass,\n.f0:80 a.m.: evening service, 7:30. Rev.\noi'Althoff.\ni? TRINITY METHODIST\u2014Rev. R. J.\n.Mclntyrc, pastor. Services in the lec-\n|ure room of .the church. 11 a'.m., Mr.\nBallantyne, international secretary for\n,T. M. C. A. for western provinces, will\nspeak on conditions .at the battle front\n\u2022ln,T. M. C. A. work. 2:30 p.m., Sun-\n(\u00bbnj-  school   and  bible  classes.    7:30\np.m., subject, \"Is Evolution the Method\nof God in Creation\"; special music by\nthe choir. Bpworth league, missionary\nevening, Tuesday, s p.m. \"People's\nmeeting,\" Wednesday, 8 p.m. Tho\npublic will be cordially welcomed at\nall these services.\nST. PAUL'S PRESBYTERIAN\nCHURCH\u2014Comer Stanley and Silica.\nRev. R. Van Minister, M.A., B.D., minister. Morning worship, 11 a.m. Regular monthly address to the hoys und\ngirls. Baptismal service if requested\nby 'any ot the parents. Parade of\nKeys' and Girls' Brigade. Sunday\nschool and adult Bible class at 2:30\np.m. Evening worship at 7:30 p.m.\nMr. H. Ballantyne, national secretary\nfor the western provinces of the Young\nMen's Christian association, will give\nan address on the work uf the association. ' Tho minister's Bible class\nwill meet at tho mid-week service on\nThursday at 8 p.m. for the study of\n\"The Life and Times of Jesus.\" All\nInterested are cordially invited.\nBAPTIST CHURCH\u2014Stanley street,\nPastor, Rev. C. W. Corey, 11C Carbonate street. Morning service at 11 a.m.\nEvening service at 7:30 p.m. Sunday\nschool and Bible classes at 2:30 in tho\nafternoon. The pastor will preach\nboth morning and evening. Communion service at the close of the morning service. B. Y. P. U. Monday evening at 8 o'clock. Prayer meeting\nThursday evening at 8 o'clock. Everyone welcome at all services.\nCHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCH\u2014\nCorner Victoria and Kootenay street.\nSunday services at 11 a.m and 7:30\np.m. Wednesday evening service at S\no'clock. Reading room in church building open from 3 to 5 p.m. daily. Visitors cordially invited.\nSALVATION ARMY\u2014Services Sun.\nday, 11 turn, and 7:30 p.m. Capt. and\nMrs. Cox officers in charge.\nGREAT BRITAIN HAS\nLOST 11 SUBMARINES\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Jan 7\u2014The loss ot a\nBritish submarine by a miehutuu) of\nnavigation oft' the Dutch coast makes\na total of 11 British submarines lost\nsince the beginning of tho war. A\nmajority ot these, however, have bcon\nof the smaller tyue.\nC H. Jacobsou of Deer Park is vis-\nting Nelson and will enter the Kootenay Lake General hospital where-he\nwill   undergo  an   operation.\nD0N7SC0LD, MOTHER!\nmm child is\nWS, FEffi\nANDREW   DENHOLM   DIES.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nBIiENHiaiiM,s Ont., Jan. 7.\u2014Andrew\nDenholm, reeve and wai-den of Kent\ncounty in 1910, died laat night aged\n59. 'He was an old newsiwner man,\nhaving at one time managed the Kincardine Reporter*), and established the\nfirst daily newspaper in \"Woodstock,\nthe Sentinel.\nHe was president of the Canadian\nIndependent Telephone association.\nThree sons and two daughters as well\nan his widow survive.\nLook at tongue! If coated,\nclean little stomach,\nliver, bowels\nDon't scold your frotful. peevish\nchild. See If tongue is coated; this\n'is a sure sign its little stomach, live.'\nand IboweJs aro idogged with sour\nwaste. .\nWhen liHtless, pale, feverish, full of\ncold, breath bad, throat sore, doesn't\neat, sleep or act nautrally, has stomach ache, indigestion, diarrhoea, give\na tenspoonful of \"California Syrup ol'\nFigs'' and in a few hours all tho foul\nwaste, the sour bile and fermenting\nfood passes out of tho bowels and\nyou have a well and playful child\nagain. Cbildrcn love this harmless\n\"fruit laxative\" and mothers can rest\neasy after giving It, because it never\nfails to make their little \"insides\" clean\nand sweet.\nKeep it handy, mother! A little\ngiven today saves a sick child tomorrow, but get the genuine. Ask your\ndruggist for a 50-cent bottle of \"California -Syrup of Figs,\" which has directions! for babies, children ol' alt\nages and for grown-ups plainly on the\nbottle. Remember there aro counter-\nfelts sold here, so surely look and see\nthat yours is made by the \"California\nFig 'Syrup Company.\" Hand back with\ncontempt any other fig syrup,\n W.IULJ.    y.i\u00bb'.u.\nPA6E EIGHT\nTHE DAILY NEWf'\nSATURDAY,   JAN.   8,\nUnequalled for G.n.ral Use\nW. P. TIERNEY, General Sals, Agent,\nN.lson, B.C.\nCan supplied to all railway points.\nPatriotic\nCalendars\nFOR 1916 TO BE SOLD A.\nCOST. 15c AND 20c EACH.\nTHI8 18 A MONTH OF BARGAINS. '\nCanada Drug & Book Co.\nF. J. BOLES, Mgr.\nMAIL  ORDERS   FILLED\nPROMPTLY.\nPRESCRIPTIONS OUR\nSPECIALTY.\nThe Ark\nHeavy Gray Cotton, per yard. .10c\nHeavy Flannelette, per yard..fOC\nHeavy Colored Ducks, per yd..fcc\nOverall Aprons, each ....... 60*\nLadles' Cashmero Hose pair . 30c\nCoasting Bobs, per pair 81.50\nSECOND HAND PUBNITUBB\nJ. W. H0LME8, Manager,\nCOG Vernon Street.\nChildren's Eyes\nNEED ATTENTION AT\nTHE FIRST 3IGN OF TROUBLE\npefective vision does not convey\nthe right message to Uie brain and\nthe brain cannot act upon the\nsuggestion received. We can safely\nsay a large majority of children are\nhandicapped in their studies on account of their eyes. Our eye examination is positive. Wo guarantee\nour optical work.\nWe now have time to attend to\nany optical work we could not handle during December.\nJ. 0. Patenaude\nEXPERT OPTICIAN and\nJEWELER.\nf\nNelson Opera House\nSSSSg January 10\nTHE    \"VER8ATILES\"    OPERA    COMPANY     IN\n\"The Girl from Nowhere\"\nAn Original Musical Comedy in Two'Acts\nBIGGEST   MUSICAL   COMEDY   SUCCESS   SINCE   \"FLORADORA\"\nHAUNTING\nMELODIES\nLATEST\nDANCE\nCREATIONS\nCOMPLETE\nSCENIC\nJ'ttODUCTION\nSEVENTY'\nCIIANOES of\nCOSTUME\nPRICES, 50c, 75c, 81.00   RESERVE  SEATS  AT  CITY   DRUG.\nSF\nm\nTHE NEAL IN8TITUTE\nCranbrook, British Columbia\nSome\nMen\nSay\nthat they do not need tho\ntreatmest, yet they go on\ntaking 5, 10 or 15 drinks a\nday, asd soon they cannot\ndo without twice that\nmany and aro confirmed\ndrunkards. \\A stitch in\ntime saves nine. Take the\nNeal treatment and he a\nman.\nA FEW SPECIALS\nPurity Oats,  in round package;\nper package    25C\nQuaker Oats, round package..25c\nPettijohn'e Breakfast Food;\npackage    \"...\t\nB.& K. Wheat Flakes, 2 for..35c\nWE GIVE 5 PER CENT\nper\n15c\nNo. 1 Jonathan Apples, box.$1,75\nNavel Oranges. doz.-35c and 50c\nTry Nabob Tea, per pound\u201450c\nIrving's Special Blend, 3 lba.S1.00\nSPECIAL.\nCarrots, 100 lbs. for S1.00\nDISCOUNT   FOR  CASH.\nJi   A     IDVINr   0    C*.    THE GREAT 8UPPLY H0U8E\n. A..  IflVlllU QC  VO.  Baker  Street Phone'161\nQueen Heaters\nThe most satisfactory C?heap Heating Stove is the old reliable \"Queen\"\n\u2014burns any kind of fuel, can be kept going at night and leaves little or\nno ash.\nWE MAKE THESE UP IN FOUR  STOCK SIZES IN OUR OWN TIN\nSHOP   AND\u25a0 >\nThe Prices Are Right\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co.. Ltd.\nWHOLESALE    AND    RETAIL\nNELSON,    B.C.\n\u00bb \u00bb.\u00ab.\u00bb\u00bb.\u00ab I........H \u00bb.\u00bb.'\nNelson News of the Day\n,<\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb>\nMil ESTATE\nAMOUNTS TO $1600\nLetters of Probst* Granted in Will of\nNotion Man Who Fell in\nAction .   .\nbefore Judge Forin in chambers\nyesterday the following applications\nby James O'Shea wove grunted:\nLetters probate in the estate of the\nlate George Krnest Revell for the ills-,\nintuition ot property valued at $1600,\nbequeathed to two Hinlei's living in\nOntario. Mr. Revolt was killed in ap-.\ntion recently while fighting with tho\nCanadian   engineers.\nLetters probate in the estate of\nMary Christina Thomatf of ThruniH for\nthe disposition of property valued at\n$900\". .\nAncillary letters probute in the estate of John Henry Young, who died\nat Culvllle, Wash. Tho property in\nBritish Columbia is valued at $1000.\nSOWS PRIZE\nHome Brand. Hard to Get, Says Lieut.\nD. A. McQuarrle\u2014T.lls of Nel.\n -   eon Men's Fortunes.\nAdvertisements Are Real Business-Getters\nTRY   ONE   WHEN   THINGS   ARE   DULL\nIn a letcr received from Ueut, D, A.\nMcQuarrle, written Dec: 21, he states\nthat'ho had been'to see Billy Busk\nat the Liverpool Merchants' Mobile,\nhoBpillU, and found him very much\naliye and in fine spirits. He states\ntha.t lie inade very light of his wounds.\nbut that in talking to the doctor later,\nhe found that Billy had been shot in\nthe left side. The bullet passed .between the ribs, missing the heart by\nabout an inch and just grazed the.\nspine. The doctor says it will 'be a\nyear before he is completely w\u00a9ll> but\n.will eventually be as well as ever if\nho takes care  of himself. \u2022 ''*\u25a0\nHe took him up about two. dozen\nboxes of cigarettes and a package';oP\nCanadian cigarette and chewing tobacco. Billy did not look at the cigf\narettes but pretty near fell on Lieut.\nMcQuarrle's nook when he saw the\ntobacco. It is very difficult to got.\nCanadian tobacco'in England and it.JS'\ndouble the price it is in Canada, but\nit makes the 'boys feel like 3iome\/to*\nget it, the detter says.\n. Busk said that tho campaign in tho\nsummer was a huge1 joke, just like\ncamping out, but in the winter is was'\nabsolute hell. \"Thero Is not a house\nwithin 20 miles pf the firing line Witli\na roof on. You are mud from top to.\nbottom and\" even the colonel comes\nout of the trenches looking like a coal\nheaver. -The morale of our 'boya Us>\ngreat and the Germans are a beaten\npeople. We are,firing five shots'to*\ntheir one.\"\nHe asked that Sergt. Robert Quinn\nhe told about.George Blake, who is\nfrom Nelson, and who was killed by a\npremature explosion of a bomby.\nHe says that Blake Allan died like\na hero. He was conscious, for three\nhours before his death and never let\na whimper out of him. , >'   \"\nLieut. McQuarrle's friend, tho fighting parson> D. D. Donaldson of Ymir,\nhe says, is in the artillery now. \"During tho first sermon ho preached,\" he\nsaid, th,ey were al lsinging 'Rocked in\nthe Cradle of the Deep,5 when a shell\njust missed Davo by about three feet\nand buried itself in tho trench without exploding The rest of tho bunch\nd.ucked and beat it, hut \u25a0 It neVer\nphased Davo a bit, ho kept right on\n.singing.\"\n$he letter reports that \/Miy Agnew,\nwho was working at the Edgewood\nlumber mill before ho left and was\nformerly in a bank, has Jbeeii-wounded in tho wrist, hut is getting along\nwell aud also that Reggie James has\na commission in tho 7tii Middlesex\nregiment of British territorials. He\nwas in the Bank of Montreal and formerly worked for McQuarrle & Robertson. J. B. M. Barnum of thp Bank\nof Montreal has a cominiesion With\nthe .Royal Horse artillery. S. G. H.\nSleet of New Denver, Who was in\nLimit. MoQuarrie's batallon, has a\noommisuion in tho Leicesters and\nMurray Scott, who lived across the-\nlake, is at the Gallipoli peninsula-as a\nbomb inspector. Robert Scott, who\nworked In Nelson *W McQiiarrlo &.\nRobertson, is a second lieutenant in\nthe L. H. J. stationed at Kllcragrin,\nScotland.\n.The letter states that Lieut. McQuarrle is slated for a. second two weeks'\ncourse m Franco in February and that\nall the hoys of. tho second contingent\nwish to be remembered to Boh Quinn\nand Charles Mclnnis.\nA young fellow just 'back tfrom op\nleave from the front was relating to\nhis 'friends\u2014fellow members in the\noffico from which he went out\u2014some\not'hia experiences i nthe trenches. He\ndescribed tiie action at Ypres as one\nof the most terrible things possible.\n\"It was hell,\" he declared, \"in the\nmornln*; It was hell in the afternoon,\nand it was hell at night, in fact,\" he\nconcluded, \"It was, only about 1 pet\ncent better than being. 1 nthe old office\nat home!\"\nGEORCE B. HARRISON\nLOST ONTHE NATAL\n\u2022 hi -'{'!\nThird Son of Commander Harrison of\nCrawford  Bay Killed in Explosion That Sinks Ship.\nA despatch from London states that\nLiout Conynunder George Basil Harrison, third son of Commander Harrison\nof Crawford Bay, was lost in the ex\nplosion w,hlch destroyed the armored\ncruiser N&Uii. Another son of tho\ncommander was lost on H-M.S. Abou-\nkir, of which he was lieutenant commander, when in company with H.M.S.\nCreasy and H.M.S. Hogue it was torpedoed fin ^ho North sea early in the\nwar.\nKing Sends Message.\npRAWlrt)HD BAY, Jan. 7.\u2014Com\ninandir Harrison received on Saturday\na cable from the admiralty informing\nhim that Ills last surviving .son, Lieut.\nCommander G. B. Harrison, had been\nkilled by <the explosion on hoard H.M.\nS, Natal. .He has also received from\nthe kecper,(Of the privy purse the fol\nlowing mossagi': \"The King- und\nQueen deeply regret the loss you and\nthe navy'Have sustained by the death\ndf yoursoii In the service of the country. Their majesties sympathize' with\nyou in;yoiir sorrow.\"\n54TH BATTALION\nv SENDS GREETINGS\nCard Received from Lieut.-Col. Kern\nball  Reading   \"From   All   of   Us\n\u25a0  to You and All Your Readers.\"\n' Good 'wishes for the New Year were\nreceived yesterday by The Dally News,\nfrom' Lieut.-Col. Arnold'Kemba II, com-\ninander of the 54th Kootenay battalion,\nwhich Is In. vamp at Bramshott, Hamp\nshire, Knglond.   They came in Urn form\nof a card embossed with the badge of\ntiie regiments'and include all the mem\nhers, reading \"From all of us to you\nand all ,yo,ur readers,  Arnold H.   G.\nKembnll.\"'.;;The.bo'tta1ion's badge con\ns.ist.s of a ..maple leap on which is a\ncrown and the figures \"134\" with the\nname  \"Kootenai  Overseas Battalion,\nCanada.\"  ,;s\nSAVES NICKELS\nLU\nWhen in doubt\u2014Gem theatre.   (2159)\nReggie McCarthy, Whose Fsther, J. A.\nMcCarthy,  Has Enlisted, Sendo\ni..-.-..     .\u2666I*.  Daily  New.  Fund.\nSomething mure than an ordinary\neontnlbutlon for charitable purposes\nhas been received.by The Daily News,\nfor the relief of the suffering Belgians,\nIn u Bifl. of ft, saved nickel by nickel\nout of his .Christinas pocket money,\nfrom Reggie McCarthy, whose father,\nJ. A. McCarthy enlisted recently for\noverseas, service. The letter enclosing\ntile money says:      ...\n\"[. am Mending you one dollar whjch\nI have saved through Christmas by\nsaving all my nickels and should be\ngrateful If you will plettso forward It\ntp a Belgian Witnlly with starving children. Yours truly, Reggie McCarthy,\n801, Latimer street, Nelson.\nAdditional subscriptions which have\nbeen .received at The Pally News office are: Mrs. Donaldson, \u00bb2; Mrs. A.\nP. Emory, *3.50; Mrs. B.. J. McKenzie,\nK; A. B. E., Kaslo, II.\nMILITIA  ORDERS.\n:  \"G\" company, 107th-regiment, orders\nfor ensuing,week:\n1. The company will parade on\nWednesday evenings at 8 o'clock for\nsquad drill;'' In future only one ,nar-\nade weekly will bo held until rifles\nare supplled'for squad drill with arms.\n2. Pte. Joy, Pte. WIIboh and Pte.\nWill have been transferred from ,J\u00a3i\"\ncompany to \"Q\" company.\n(Signed) Capt, J. A. FOBJN, (X C.\n\"H\" cojnpauy, 107th regiment, orders\nfor ensuing, week. Capt. C. J. Archer,\nO. C:   .......\n1. Tiie c'oliipuny will parade at the\narmory on> Tuesday night at 7 o'clock\nwhen oa company rifle match will be\nheldjpver the miniature range.\n2. \"Orderly officer, Lieut. James H.\nGrant. ',   \u25a0\nNext for duty: Lieut. W. J. Sturgeon. '\n. Orderly   non-commissioned iofficer:\nCorp. C. Wales.\nV Next forjduty: Corp. D. McLeod.\n3. Tiie company will parade oi\nThursday night at 8 o'clock for squad\ndrill.    --'\u25a0\u25a0\n'(Slgfied) Lieut. JOHN CARTMEL,\n' \u2022;'. Acting Adjutant.\nA.$.Horswill&Co.\nJap Oranges, large boxes 70c\nFinest large juicy Navels, doz.45c\nMalaga Grapes, per lb 25c\n2 lbs. for  - 45o\nItalian Chestnuts, Filberts, Peanuts,\nper pound   20C\nAlmonds und Brazil Nuts, lb.-25c\nNew California Walnuts, lb. 2Bc\nNew  laid  Pullet  Eggs,  doz..BOC\nWE CAN SAVE YOU MONEV.\nW. H.ve th. Most Compl.ts Stock of\nPOULTRY SUPPLIES\nin th. di.trict. Get th. bnt and keep\nyour bird, laying while egg prices ar.\ngood. \u2022,\nThe Brackman-Ker Hilling\nCompany, Limited\n1    ly.UA\/\nmfaufa\nUSE DAILY NEWS WANT ADS TO SELL. BUY. RENT OM\nThere Are More Bottles of 201 (the Great Cough am\nlung Prescription) Sold Than All Other Cough Cure;\nThere's a Reason\nPrice 25c and 50c\nbill   UbiUU bUi\nNELSONS BUSY STORE   PHONE...34.\nFor DRUGS, STATIONERY .Nelson's\nChocolates, Phonographs, Etc.\nPHONE 34 P. 0. BOX 1083\nA. Bernheim\nTHAIL.\nDealer in new and second-hand furniture, stoves, etc. Will buy, sell, exchange to suit and give good satisfaction and-bargains. Also dealer in hides\npelts and wool at full value.\nDry Cow H|d\u00bb\u00ab, uusalted 20C\nGreen Salt Hides, per pound 12c\nGreen Salt Calf Hides, por pound. 15c\nGreen unaalted hide. I! cents less than\nsalt, cured. .\nBulls and culls of above ar. one-third\nless than sound.\nCORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED.\nAny of tho newest Ballroom Dances\ncan bo learned Iri. a few private lessons.\nMiss Gladys Attree\nWill bo In tho city-for. tho Christmas\nseason. For terms and appointment\nwrite P. O. Box 804, fjelaon.\nRED CROSS FUND\nLAST NIGHTS CURLING SCORE'\nLost  night's curling  results  were*.\nKiclmrdnoh 11, Proudfbot 0.\nJones \u2022\u00bb, .bill 7. \/\nCartmel-ii), Smith 9.\nDouglas 8, Fraser 6.\nGuthrie 1$, Bunyan 2.\nPlayed' previously\u2014Smyth 7, Gutha\nnio 6.\nThe following rinks will play tonight: \u25a0\u2022>     s\nAt 7'pim.T-Smeaton-v Jeffs, Gibson\nv Stark, .Valley v.Perrier.\nAt 9....p,in.\u2014Huiidon V Mclntyre,\nHolmes y: ^IchardBon, Pack v Smith.\n=\u00bb=\nQient Wishes to Place\nON   FIRST   MORTGAGE  ON   IMPROVED CITY  PROPERTY.\nSafety Deposit Boxes For Rent_\nSmalf BoxT\u00bb3flO par\"annum.  .       LargerSox7r|6.00~p\u00abr_.rtnum.\nCALL AND  INSPECT- THEM\nCharles \u00a5. McHardy ^r;\nINSURANTJE PHONE 13S  y'N  -X... REAL ESTATE\nTreasurer  Reports Crtdlt  Balance of\n$243\u2014Appeal  Made for \"Help.\nless Can Shirts.\"\nAt the monthly meeting of the Red\nCross society held yesterday afternoon\nat the depot 1 lie president reported\nthat 130 articles had been made by tho\nNelson brunch during tho month, Including Oiiy :md Burgtcal shirts, pyjamas, pillow slips, sheets and towels\nand BO nabs of socks.\nTho treasurer's report showed that\nJllll.Wi had been received; also fees,\n|18.e0; 10-cent collections, tlG.45j\nfrom teas, *2.0G; other donations,\n?80S.OO, and from, outsldo points,\n$185.76. A total .balaneo on hand of\n8t243.91 was reported... It was agreed\nto sond to the head offico 1300 in addition to the IB41.45 donated by,tho\nmachine gun funds. It was announced\nthat beginning next week evory Tuesday and Friday afternoon will be devoted to the making of surgical supplies and that anyone wishing to help\nIn this brunch of Red Cross work\nwould bo welcomed.\nThe appeal published in a recent issue of Tim Dally News was read asking every woman in Canada to contribute one \"helpless case shirt\" as a\nNew,Year's gift to tho.Queen's guild\nfor Canada's disabled soldiers at the\nfroty. The pattern may be obtained at\ntho Red Cross rooms *t the city h'all\naiid the president has promised to bo\nai, the rooms on Monday and Thursday, evenings to give Instructions' to\nanyone wishing to mako these garments. It is hoped that this appeal\nwill meet with a ready response, not\nonly from Red Cross members, but\nfrom any interested in tho boys at the\nfront. The articles can be sent elthor\ndlreot to Miss C. W. Merrltt, J.I6\nWindsor street, Montreal, or through\nthe Nelson lied Cross .branch.\nTODAY,  TONIGHT,  JAN.  8\nMONDAY,  JAN.  10 '\nStarland Theatre\n\"The Spoilers\"\nBY    REX    BEACH\nIN    NINE    REELS    OF\nTHE    MOST   WONDERFUL\nMOTION    PICTURES       \t\nSTORY    EVER    FILMED~~\nSee a Whole Town Dynamited I A Voloanic Earthquake Extraordinary!\nThe Most Terrific Fight Ever Recorded in Motion Pictures! \"*\"*\nMATINEE TODAY AT 2:30 EVENING, 6:45 TO  11:00 p.m.\nAdmission\u2014Adults and  Children, 25c  Each\nSPKCIAI, CHIUDRBN'H  OFFER\u2014The first DO children Who  pur!\n\"chase tickets at today's  matinee will receive a freo ticket entitling\nthem lo a seat In a sleigh at the Starland Sleigh Ride, Saturday,\nJan.  15.    The\/ second   50  children  will  receive  free  tickets  to \"the\nmatlneo, Jan. 35. ,\u25a0\nComing\u2014Tuesday, Jan. 11\nMAY    IRWIN.   IN   \"MRS.    BLACK    IS    BACK.\"     .\" T\".\nWarm Feet at Bedtime\nBARGAINS     IN    HOT    WATER\nBOTTLES\u2014CASH  PRICES\n2-u.uart \"No-Seam\" red rubber;\nregular $1.25, for  -.S1.00\n2-quart \"Hub,\" red rubber; regular $1.50, for .'. 81.25\n2-u.uart \"Princess,\" white rubber;\nregular 81.75, for SI.25\n2-quart \"Davidson,\" besrf red rub-\nOier, regular, 82.00,-ton... .\u00a31.75\n3-quart   \"Challenge,\"   fancy   red\nrubber; best In town;'\neach S2.50\nFittings for above, each, set. .75c\nFOUNTAIN SYRINGES.    .\nWhite rubber-Fountain Syringo;\nregular 81.75, for SI.25\nKed   Rubber   Fountain   Syringe, .\n2 quart, regular 82.50, for. $2.25\nRed rubber Fountain Syringe, 3-\nquart; regular 83.00, for.82.50\nRubber Gloves, pair  750\nRubber Tubing, fountain lengths\neach ,. 50C\nMail Order. Filled Promptly.\nRutherford Drug Co.\nNELSON, B. C.\nATTACKS WIFE, THENI\nHMSELFJP\nJohn   Tormich,   Paroled   Austrian  at\nPhoenix, Attempt, to Kill Wif. in\nFit of Drunken Julouiy.\nCharged with attempting to murder\nhis wife at Phoenix on Tuesday, John\nTomlch, an Austrian, released from\nthe internment camp at Mara Lake on\npec. 24, was yesterday brought to the\ncity by Chief of Police W. S. Cook of\nPhoenix and lodged in the provincial\nJail.\nTomlch, who is a miner, was interii-\ned from Rossland,,last June and had\nbeen a' prisoner at the\" camp at Mara\nLake until his release on Dec. 24.. Dur\ning the period of his imprisonment his\nwife and three small children moved\nfrom Rossland to Phoenix and it was\nto that city that he went immediately\nupon his release. On Tuesday, the police state, he lef\\the house early and\nobtained sufficient . quorto make him\nquarrelsome, after which he returned\nand accused his wife of misconduct\nwith another man during his absence\nin the internment camp. The quarrel\nculminated In his seising a large\nbutcher knife and attacking her, Inflicting a number of wounds on her\nhead, face, arms and''body.\nThe screams of the woman attracted\nthe neighbors and Tomlch fled to the\npolice' station, whero he gave himself\nup. He was arraigned in the police\ncourt -at Phoenix on Wednesday morning and elected to be tried by Jury. He\nwill appear at the next assises at Nelson to answer to: tho charge of attempted murder,\nJust a Gentle\n\" Hint\nWo only want a chance to show\nand convince you.\nA. D. PAPAZIAN\nWatchmaker, Jeweler and Graduate Optician. ,\"\nMadden Block,        Baker Street\n\u00bb\u25a0\u2666\u2666\u00ab\u00bb\u2666\u00bb\u00bb\u2666 \u2022\u25a0\u2022\u25a0>\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u2666 \u2666 \u00bb \u2666 4 \u00bb\u25a0\u2666\u00bb\u2666\u2666+\u25a0\u00bb<\nt  Social and Personal\" j\nB.  Lock wood of Kelson  is visiting\nVictoria.\nA. \"Williams of Cranbruok is a guest\nat the Strathcona.\nB. F. .Bower of Sherbrooke^ Que, is\na guest at tho Strathcona.\nA. M. Johnson will leave this morning- for a vlffit to Spokane\nMrs, .MeCrcah of Greenwood Is in\nthe city and is'ataylng at tho Queens.\nMrs. Fred A. Starkey yesterday entered the Kootenay Lake General hospital. \\\nH. Defoe of Creston is a visitor to\nthe city and Is registered at the Strathcona.\nA. W. Allen of Zlncton arrived in the\ncity Jast night and Is registered at\nthe Hume.\nM, A. Qulgley of Hossland arrived in\nthe city yesterday atld Is staying at\nthe Hume.\nMrs. W. C. Clough a'rrived:in the\ncity yesterday from Slocan City and Is\na guest at the madden.\nW. H. Ternan and Edward HarWpp\nof Hunter Bros., Rossland, returned\nhome last night after a stay of several\ndays in the city.\nHary Wright of Trail was among the\nvisitors who attended the hockey game\nlast night and remained over in the [\ncity.   He is staying at the Hume.\nW. B. Mclsaac arrived in tbe city\nJ-esterday from Ymir and htglsterefl at\nthe Grand Central. He will return to\nYmir thls.mornlng.\n25 BOXES QF\nApples for Cookings\nPurposes\nPer 1)0:1;\n75o\n12 large'Oranges, weighting 8%\n\u2022pounds,   for  making  mannai   '\nlade; per dozen \u2022\u25a0 ....600'\nJoy's Bainbow' Tea,    pound. -SOo\nThe sale of thie Tea is inoreaslng.\nYou try ft pound..\nJoy Bros. Stores\n415 Ward St., and .corner Josephine\nand Mill Streets.\nTelephones:   \\ '\nWard St., 149.    Mill    St.,   I.   II.\nP. O. Box 687.\nYou Take No Risk When\nYou Trade Here\nMost every man has read \"fairy\ntales\" about the 'Wonderful values some stores offer or almost\ngive their patrons.\nThe man who bites at this bait\nalways learns something,    .\nWe sell nothing but good\nClothes and Furnishings. There's\nnot a risk in all our store.\nThe Best is Always the Cheapest\nEmory &\nWalley\n\u25a0-\" '\u25a0-' L--\nmamm\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1916_01_08","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0386539","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"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.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","@language":"en"}],"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","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1916-01-08 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1916-01-08 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Daily News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0386539"}