—— HE DAILY NEWS . a Special Effort to Nar News Immediately it Is Received —— 2) HE DAILY NEWS NO, 18 ae 1 SRN URRY . : ’ PRINCE cacaanall B. C., FRIDAY, Gee 22, 1015. WATCH OUR BULLETINS FOR THE LATEST NEWS PRICE FIVE CENTS ERAL RALLY WAS BEST EVER SEEN IN RUPERT MANS ATTACK ALLIES’ PASSENGER SHIPS-VIOLENT FIGHTING NEAR OSTEND AND ALSACE E BATTLE PROGRESSING ETWEEN OSTEND AND NIEUPORT | TAKING OFFENSIVE ALL ALONG LINE AND THREATEN JERMAN LINE OF COMMUNICATION AT METZ. tal to The Dally Mews) 9” Jan. 22, progress again ont, advices from ling of a hard Heavy fight- along the Am- battle istend and Nieuport rag- ul interruption for three other end, in Alsace rtillery firing of unusual Lhe Lorraine frontier the enceunter is increasing in se verity. rhe French advance at Pont a-Mousson threatens the Ger man lines of communication at Metz and if carried forward suc cessfully may result in cutting off the German forces in the re- gion of St. Mihiel The German line has been reinforeed, and some lost ground was regained ——- | ON WORK OF PRINCESS PATS: ecial to The Daily News.) | Jan. 2 +4 The casual- n lained by the their first engage- » cradually coming i rporal Bellinger, of Ot- Miecially reported Private Draycott INFANTRY FIGHTING ON WEST FRONTIER (Special to The Daily News.) The oficial report says that very de- | Paris, Jan. 22. French Princess ! wi th| termined infantry fighting ferocious hand-to-hand encoun- ters are taking place in Alsace, but at Soissons conditions are un- changed. Other oned appear of minor impor- 4 Private Oli tioned pI i tance {f the Princess Pa- ; Artillery exchanges, in which Patricias were the French were successful easts in mud and curred between Ypres and the forty-eight hours in} 5 ; ‘)pse neat terry au mac and in He reckons the Pa . ‘ . the Vosges, while in Apremont ( nted for over five! lforest the German artillery drove cermans killed and : . he French away That the Germans! What Berlin Says. t of ammunition is sub ya i j Berlin, Jan. 22 ve Germa dd by the faet that dead official report claims a defeat for earched revealed none the Allies in two important en- ays that an advance of a, ; gagements The French attacks rds now is considered jnear Pont4a-Mousson are said ah five miles in summer jhave been ns, | with heavy "AN CRUISER |AS TESTING MISHAP | ecial to The Daily News.) ard 1 Mexico., 8. 8. Ban 9° Jan. Diego, Four * killed and nine serious- board the armored ~when a boiler Diew after last trial. n completed. San iw out n her Tous hours’ She una} i a | Heueeveevaaee [RE PETITIONS ARE | petitions addressed to overnment asking for concessions for Rupert can be seen at Howing places, sign: n Bank, | Bank dian B, of CG, of BB. MA. of Montreal. ! Prineé Rupert. 1 Hotel, y Hotel. ral Hotel, Knox Hotel, dsor Hotel, Drop Fish e Company. - P. Wharf. Cigar Store, *s Cigar Store. e's Drug Stores. ig Fish Company. Club, ¢ upert Club. tical and Cold derers’ Academy. ee ee eee eRe eRe He He EF ldriven tee Gernay Heights. The Germans were compelled | to evacuate a trench near Berry- au-Bac, but gained ground in the} Verdun region. “NEUTRAL” MR. HEARST. Occidental Brother. Congratulations to Mr Randolph Hearst, who, as Wwe stated in our general news col- infantry encounters men- How Oriental Editor Views Mis | apie William LIBERAL RALLY WAS HUGE SUCCESS— LARGEST MEETING IN HISTORY OF PARTY ‘Hall Was Packed and Crowds Turned Away Who Could Not Obtain .Entrance---Enthusiastic Speeches | And Entertaining Program The pe who ople thought there|;corruption of the MeBride gov- were no Liberals in Prince Rupert;ernment. There can be no mis- were sadly mistaken last night./take about that. That the weak- The annual meeting of the Prince ness of the Federal government |}Rupert Liberal Association dem-|was also behind the sentiment lonstrated that Those in charge | Was likewise clearly seen. A large of the meeting, thinking only/list of clear-headed and able of the size of former meet-/|speakers addressed the meeting, ings, decided to hold it the K. P. Hall, where only a few \the governments were echoed and hundred could be accomodated, |re-echoed throughout the hall. Had they known the throng of|The beginning of the end has sain that were coming they |eome and last night's meeting will | would have chosen the Wéstholme | become historic. | Theatre instead rhe place was Mr. T. D. Pattullo, the capable jpacked to the doors, and chairs |president of the Liberal Associa- had to be secured from all the ihint. opened the meeting with a inear buldings to pack the hall|rousing address. Mr. Pattullo and there were crowds outside|has a record of good speeches jthat could not get in [behind him but last night he ex- The meeting was a great big |celled himself. a at the ewer and; He began by an attack on the ———_——— 'profligacy of.th® MeBride gov- ernment in throwing away the SHIP CAUGHT FIRE land of the provinee to specula- AND WAS BEACHED tors. He reviewed the seandal of the Mackenzie & Mann deal with (Special to The Dally News.) the ( N. AR Great as was the Baltimore, Jan, 22.—The 8.8.\ fraud perpetrated in this respect, Maryland was burned to the wa-|tne pecent action of the Attorney ter’s edge off the mouth of the |General with reference to the Do- Magethy River this morning, but minion Trust Company was even the captain by beaching her suc-| poate, e chickens, however, ceeded, it is believed, in saving | are coming home to roost, and |her passengers, numberin® S€V-/Rowser .nows they are coming, enty-six, and her crew of thirty- | He ready protesting at the four. way (the Liberals are exposing h and in order to hide his vil- ea th "hsenhy "sore AUSTRALIA CALLS FOR EVERY AVAILABLE y he is trying te cover it with false patriotism. He is telling MAN ° people that the reason why | (Special to The ’ Bally News) New Zealand secured money me. : Melbourne, Australia, Jar 2. | per cent while we have to pay |__William Morris Hughes, the higher rates is because that col- | acting Premier of Austra hasjony gave a dreadnought to the | issued an appeal for e Empire while Canada didn’t. He | ruits, saving: “Every in avatl-|has the audacity to say that Brit- is needed for front as|ain would discriminate against a mas possible the German « ny that is today sending of powe « by ni eans shattered lier best sons to bleed and die for and re s resolute with s her cause Australia has built lickdets unimpaired.” jUp her own navy mstead of con- |tributing to the Imperial navy and umeoon Thursday, has succeeded | ALIEN ENEMIES INTERNED. | yet Australia has not been dis- in Printing the case for both : jerimine ited against. “I say shame sides so admirably where th: New Westminster, Jan, 22.— lon the man who will stoop to such story of the European war Predicting that in a little while jlow argume nts," said the speaker. concerned, His paper, the New |i). German flag would wave over|“We must give no quarter to an York American, has printed 4/1. court house here and declar-/enemy of this kind. There never picture, flattering enough, of the ing that he was about to start an/was a time when Liberals had a British Tommy, “who is doing insurrection among the Germans, greater task to perform than the such tremendous work on the bat la German, bearing the Irish name | present in British Columbia. We tlefront in France”; but simul-|.¢ steve Burke, has been taken in|must stand shoulder to shoulder taneously his Deutsches Journal | marge « f by the police and sent juntil the wrongs of our country publishes another picture, to Ito Nanain lare righted and victory is won.” which the legend is subseribed: | Baron Car! Von Mackensen,| Mr. George Nickerson was the British troops that run so fast! 1, Ernest Edward Redlich enhinens speaker. He dwelt chiefly on that it is not possible for Ger. Hans Marcenich, the three Ger- | the fish question. He believed mans to capture them,” This is mans who have been detained in|that H. 8, Clements was doing all war journalism with a vengeance.|ine ppeyincial jail, have been |in his power to secure the fishery Such high-minded impartiality | ..¢ to Nanaimo under armed es leoncessions demanded by Prince should not go unrecorded or un-|....¢, where their case will be in-|Rupert but the trouble was that recognized, But Mr. Hearst, eX- | o.tigated by the military author-|the government he represented cellent man, does not stop here./isieg phe three are suspected of|had wrong ideas about the free- Not content to rest with merely | having aided German reservists|dom of trade. giving the views of both sides, to cross into the United States | At the close of this speech Mr. he has embarked on a third ven~jfron, the baron’s ranch at Port | Dan Morrison, who represented ture; for other newspapers of his Kells, B. C. jhimsett as a fisherman who. has himself leading the van in per . —-- jtolied for many years on this son—are at the head of the For a comfortable room, come |eoast, asked the chairman for a “Stop the War" movement,|to the 8t, Elmo Hotel, 836 Bee-| ance to speak, He stepped to Broad-mindedness of this sort injend Avenue, near Righta Girest. lth latfor 1 if t . ne Newly opened, Steam heat and|the platform and if anybody * affecting, indeed.-Hongkong Tel. hot and cold water in every room. |thinks that a fisherman cannot | Free baths Rates reasonable. jake a good speech he is entirely ee +e ew oHraph injand their telling points against lhope less to him unless something | STEAM ROLLER KEEPS GOING ~~ GERMAN FRONTIER IN DANGER ‘RUSSIANS HAVE MADE GOOD OOD suCcESsEs IN LAST FEW DAYS | (Special to The Daily News.) Jan, 22.—News dis- patches referring to the situation in Poland set forth that north of the Vistula in the vicinity of Lip- London, mistaken. Mr. Morrison express- ed himself clearly and forcibly} and showed the difficulties they | jno the Russian advance guard te ! . on lwithin twenty miles of the Ger- were up against. The business | |man frontier, while in the north- was hemmed about in such a} , east the Germans have evacuated way that a man had no chance to do anything. After twenty) = years at it the task almost looked GERMAN SUBMARINE SINKS A SCOTTISH PASSENGER STEAMER ~ (Special to The Daily News.) Jan. 22.—The Brit- steamer Durward was tor- was done to improve them. Captain Fred it called upon to take the shatinttn,) good | is at his best in a Stork was Fred can always make a speech but he full and the cheers which he received last night shows that/ish house Rotterdam, he has lost none of his old popu-|pedoed by a German submarine sartly off the He saying that the : The crew was saved. Liberals were not confining them- twenty-two miles Maas began by lightship. The Durward was owned by | George Gibson & Co., of Leith, Scotland, being one of their regu- light cargo Leith and The Germans have selves to criticism of the govern- Three. ALLIES WILL UNITE WITH WAR'S FINANCE Paris, a held David British Chancellor of the | marine. Exchequer, and Ribot and P. Burk, the French mes Rus- LATEST | ZEPPELINS — USED IN IN LAST RAID Ministers of Finance. (Special to The Daily News.) Jan. 22.—A Ber- lin report states that the airships which raided England on Tues- day night were Zeppelins of the (Continued on Page lar passenger and . lnoate sailing ® between | Rotte rdam. i a. 29 conference | evide nily begun their threatened i te j was between Lloyd | warfare on the British mercantile George, Alexandre sian is reported the meeting was arrang- ve | ed to consider a joint loan of fif- teen billion franes bearing inter-| est at 3 per cent. | Oopenhagen, | WIFE MURDERER | GETS EXTREME PENALTY | latest type. . (Special to o The Ds Dally News) a ae Prince Albert, Sask., Jan, 22.— TURKS HAVE PROBLEM. John Treland paid the extreme} mE penalty at 8 o'clock this morning | The Turks do not quite appre- for the murder of his wife on/|ciate the serious nature of the their farm near Biggar last May.|Job that awaits them if ever they reach the banks of the Suez Ca- nal. It is stated that the invasion of Egypt is now timed for the The friends of an officer in 8) early part of February, and that well known British infantry regi- ithe Eighth Turkish Army Corps, ment are laughing heartily at his} wel) fitted and well supplied, has experiences on the way to the WORSE THAN GERMANS. | [ ft Damascus for the Sinai Pe- front. After detraining at the!njnsula, where Turkish engineers railway base battalion, Of|are building a railway to aid in which he was in command of the | the invasion. Besides the railway, leading company, marched |8,000 camels will carry supplies. French | There something ludicrous villages. placelin the Turks setting out to con- they greeted by) quer Egypt with 40,000 men. the mayor and his charming two! There will soon be that many daughters, impulsive young la-|,ustralians the dies who threw their arms round his several small At larger effusively through is one were alone along canal, the British captain's neck and — oer kissed him on both cheeks. 1115 | ANNUAL MEETING OF Tommies took it all in with great) THE BOARD OF TRADE glee. And all the rest of the journey, whenever any sort of The annual meeting for the election of offieers for 1915 and jother business will be held at the while | that of- knew that all his men were petticoats hove in sight, fleer at looking him quizzingly, . |Board of Trade rooms, Second they emphasized the joke by |Avenue, tonight at 8 p. The whistling, “Kise Me, Cheriie,” and | attendane e of all ee is ur- “Who Were You With Last} ently requested, Night?” The embarrassed officer eee SNe wrote home: “I am damn glad to THE WEATHER. get into the firing line-——but my Tommies behaved splendidly all| By F. W. Dowling, Observer, the same January es ntl 5 a.m 22 , 1045.) It is sasaible | for a man to turn aime. ea'oes bee ¢ aah eu down his glass at a banquet and|Max, temp, ............. 49.0 have a jug at home, SOR, BRS hice owt on te ade 32.0 —NEW FORCES THROWN INTO FIELD HAVING ENCOURAGING EFFECT. Skempt, twenty-five miles the Prussian border southeast of Thorn. if the Russians follow up their success at Skempt and continue the forward movement it will give them an unbroken front, the Brit- ish observer says, and dangerous- ly near German territory. from and due TURKISH PARLIAMENT HAS LOTS OF VOTES (Special to The Daily News.) Constantinople, Jan. 22.—The Turkish Parliament has voted one hundred and ninety million dollars toward mobilization credits. PRESBYTERIAN CONCERT The Scottish concert given last night in the Presbyterian Hall was a grand success. The hall was crowded to the doors. The address by Mrs. Carmichael on “A Trip Through the Land of Burns” was exceptionally well rendered and proved of great interest to the audience. The following is the program which was given: Chairman's Remarks. Pianoforte Selection ......-+-+s+++5 Mrs. Wells. Address, “Trip to Scotland and Burns’ 064 Hac ob sb dase beseech +0 Country” Mrs. Carmichael. a ee “Jock o” Hazelden’ Mrs. J. McLeod. BORD oo a Finca d case acs Mary of Argyle Mr. Evans. ROOGAB oc cde sce sAgerese grscecee Mrs, Paterson. WS ace adees ».“Ye Bank and Braes” Mrs. Miller, Mrs, Carmichael and , Mrs, Wells. PORMIRE oo oo Hs ninco ng ccsvecesosece » * Mrs. Paterson. WONG occcccces Gsecteee “My Ain Folk” Mrs, Hemmill. BO se 0008 ce éadlos “a Hundred Pipers” Pianoforte Selection .........0s+e+5 Mrs. Wells. eee “Green Gro wthe Rashes 0” Mr. Clapperton. ... BOD on ccccccsasnend “angus McDonald” “Rule Brittania” and “God Save the King” All the numbers were well re- ceived and there were many @en- cores. A goodly sum was taken at the door, 25 cents each being realized. MAJESTIC THEATRE TONIGHT —DOUBLE ATTRACTION— —aAT POPULAR PRICES— FIVE REELS OF FEATURE DRAMAS AND COMEDIES Between Reels, Singing and Danc- ing Through the Entire Two Shows. Miss Reinboid—Sentimental Song The Baliey Sistere—Skirt Dance Mr. Gordon Biack—Comic Songs and Monologues Admission: 10c and 150 F. O. E. 16TH ANNIVERSARY MASQUERADE BALL MoINTYRE HALL THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 11