t 5ft Br S1' I' ll Monday. Jnpi(ay 4, lO'Stt. fc k Sav The Daily News PIUNCKHUPRUT - BRITISH qOI.UMlUA "Published Kvery Afternoon',' except Sunday, the Prince Ilup;rt Daily News,' Limited, Third Avenue. H. V. PUI.LlJN, Managing Editor. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: 'City 'Delivery, hy mail or currier, per month $1.00 .fw; -D' rnoil 10 a11 P'ls f Hie OrHish Empire and the United , Slnle i" iidvaiice; per -eur ., ....... ;$.) ,f To mII ilther cJiiiiilries. in advance, per year )g7.50 Advertising and Circulation Telephone - !98 t Editor and Reporters 'Telephone - - '86 'Aifndvertjsiiig fionlrt he in Tli"l)ailv News Office hefnrn A on day preceding publication. All advertising, received suhiect to approval.; Member of Audit Bureau of 'Circulations. DAILY KDITIOH $jJfBl Monday. January i, 1 02ft. n.J and Mothers . v Favonritcs ThroatXhesuLungs There Is .no better wfenuard ttaintt roldi,' chilli, grippe, tore .throats and bad coughs than the e silver-wrapped Peps tablets. Taking Peps periodically during trying winterly .weather keeps the delicate rrspiratary organs in healthy condition and protects against harm to chest and lungs. Sealed up in erery Peps tabletare powerful medicinal fumes which pass with the breath down the throatandbronchialsintothelungs. Dr, Gordon Stables and other eminent authorities acknowledge Peps invaluable for youngand old. OfHmdtuudtUr$ m. .Wild Winter Not Wanted By All. It is an ill wind that blows nobody good and n mild Avinlcr is now appreciated b, everybody. While people in Prince ltu-ipert are wondering diow much longer this California-like tenr- 'perature -is gbilig. lo last, Hie H(izens tf iillerior at such point as i rrrace anil iluzt'ituiriit; becoming -anxious .about it. They jieeo mhiw and fi-usf so thai .trjyportatioii inwy he provided hi "eoii'iieeliihi with th'tfir Aviiifer1mlir'lric. iattk'uhtriy in the timber business. v jn p,.jH,.e Itnoerl have 'hint vcl hail in wih pv ahoiil our wafer pipes, etc., freezing up but none of us. will kirk now i! we dn nnve to lake the risk. We will, al least, have the consolation or 'knowing that our winter is going to he short no -'matter bow snappy it may yet turn out to be. iCIty Is Losing Useful'Citlzen. The fart that J. II. Piljsbiiry, who lias been manager of Ihe dry dock for many years, is to leave Prince Rupert will be a matter for general regret, Mr. Pillsbury came here before there was a Princy Itupert and vn one of those responsible for the original surveying of the city. Town planning davs over, "Mr. Pillsbury was engaged in the private .practice of hi profession for some time before he participated 'in engineering wOrk in coniiecfion with the dry dock and later became its manager. He has done a great deal or valuable work for the city both professionally and through his connee.tion with public service bodies such as Ihe Hoard of Trade. Ills departure will mean thv loss of a, -useful am!, at the, snje,ijnicj a highly popu-ulnr citizen. His bosl of friends will wish him sneces- in Ills' future locatiou, wherever that may be. Says Meighen Should Resign. 'Of .all the fiascues Hint .have atlended Mr. Meiglien's lead ership or the (iOiiservalive party, none ha been more .damning that the attempt lo set limvIv. L. Pateuaiujc fishing in Quebec's politicnl waters with religion. rts a bait, says -the Vancouver Sun.' yueltec snifreil at tlio bail, all right, but the hook looked supi.--inusly like'lloii. Arthur Meigben. and so the line rarne up empty.. Where Mr. Moighen's psychology erred in this fishing ox-pedilion was the supposition that Hitman Catholic (.luehoo va so uiialterahly Liberal tha it would have to have special treatment. As a matter of fact, the people of Quebec belong to the most conservative institution on earth, the Human Catholic. Uiureh, mill Hie idea of their being fundamentally liberal-minded is one of the grossest myths in political history. Hut so Inug .ns the Conservative Parly is under Mr. Meighen, Quebec could lie. nothing else but Liberal. Mr. Meighen. with all! hi intelligence, has not genius enough to see that n schism is! more difficult to organize than a political landsidc, and that so 5long as he is Conservative lender. Canada will have a weak government, whether it be Liberal or Cniwrvrtlive, because the country will be divided" against ilelf. J ' There' are only two ways lo meet (he situation. One is for Mackenzie King to open up null win. lose or draw give Canada aggressive leadership. The' other is for Mr. ' ' Meighen .to resign. If neither of these things happen, Canadian polities wiP drift until some Ihird party conies along wilh a slogan of "(let 'King out, but don't let Meighen in." Though he .operated from behind the throne, Mr. Meighen is a war premier. "And whatever Ihe psychology -or reason, war premiers are today n drug on Ihe market. The simple solution for Ihe whole problem i for Mr. Meighen to step down and for the Conservative Parly lo -select u new leaner. ') - i WEEK AT THEATRE Monday and Tuesday "Thundering Moots." Comedy. International .Vws. Wednesday and .Thursday "Classified." Comedy. I'athe lleviev. Fr'(day and Saturday "Irish l.uek." confounded. Thomson is cast as have Alnr-shall, son of a big ranchman A ' Through Ihe machinations of Luke isevern, who is I he heao of a smus&diug hand on the Mexi can border. Thomson is placed jn a wrontr light befofe Jinn .luan Kstrada. a wealthy Spanish gen lleninn, and his daughter, Car-nielilu. linrly in Hi- story Thom son is forced by Severn's cruelly lo fichl for Ihe protection of Silver Kins. He wins tho hor" in this battle the stipulation being hat Silver King shall have. Ihe risht lo choose his own masler . Laler Silver King is stolen Ity Severn and sold for "hull hail." Hut Thomson, tniil-insr his beloved horse, finully finds him in the arena in time lo save his life, and Severn is eventually branded as the leader of th" smugglers. LOUIE FISHER TO GIVE OWN RECITAL Will be Assisted In Variety Con cert Tuesday Night by Mrs. Jarvls McLeod and L. McCutcheon Mi.4s Louie Fisher, who has been studying elocution in Van-: couver for the past few months, will appear in recital at Hie Km- press Theatre on Tuesday night assisted by .Mrs. .larvis McLeoil mid iTilpiiHi '.MrOutelieon of HuniH. CLakv. iood teports have been received from 'Vancouver of th" local tiirl's abilities along this line and audiences in large. theatres In that city have rx' pressed approval of her aplitudelf' its an entertainer. Last week she appeared in the WestliolniP Theatre in a "between shows" fame and has nlo been heard privately, pnubltes Prince Itupert people will he interested in Ibis forthcoming recital which will give the local girl full opportunity to display her talent h. CORRINE GRIFFITH IN MID-WEEK FILM "Classified" Is Story of New York Working Girl Who Uses Wits for Wealth A brilliant adaptation of Kilnn l erlier's "Classified" will bo of fered on the screen of Ihe West- holme on Wednesday and Tliurs iliiu ..rill. Z1... t..n si-trrui .1 !... . .. . THOMAS MEIGHEN IS COMING AT WEEKEND Will be Star In "Irish Luck" at Westholme Theatre on Friday and Saturday Lo.-aI hioxie pati'oos will lie irltid lu knv ilia! Thomas Mn:n liep is HI ia! r his iippeuriitici-lSllli l4te silvinr slieel here Mtlwe1fc.'' lie wlU be Ihe star in 'Irlili Lncji" eoiflioi: l. the' WVsthoIme" Theatre l Hie eatl if Hie week. II Is said lo he oiom '" ' "'" """"" "THUNDERING HOOFS" . IS MEXICAN STORV MARY AND DOUG. TO i VISIT-EUROPE AGAIN Fred Thompson 'Star In Colorful' . and Original Picture A story -dripping with color and Originality is ruining lo Wiesl-holme 'l'heali' lonioilil and to- .Famous Film Stars Will Leave Los -Angeles Late this Month "rrov ,,, rn n , m n.son s ' ! Pick loi"( I ,s completing arran imr j 1 1 1 1 in i I 1 1 1 ii imp i i hi. Slory is one of the most unusual of any that have lirouirlit popularity and fame lo the "world's ohaiuiiion alhlele." , The big septic of tliis oiohire. is so in a .Mexioan hull-fight umin, where SilviM' Kiiwr is about lo be gored by n ferocious bulb' LOS AXiiF.LKS. .Ian. L -Mnry nienls for her f i to Kurope he is finishing I lie editing o,' her new picture "Scrajt" nail will have the tiejiuhve reioiy for slup-nieul cat within h few iUyn. .Miss I'inlffiird h looking fnr-wartl wigcrly to the " Irip litis fyear. 'I-I..,,,,.,., ,lll..n. -it...... n ii.n-i.in; nun i..ut.,i. Bil lions ..f h'n,e. ni..l'.l...i.,ff.nBl,,W,,"rW' " nM f wn it. ,.r ii,., I do not luivc to diet nor n? ""I' n trr"'-love horse an.Mneidcutally wn ;H.e , of a pretly Spanish Henrietta. , , tl,e ",pr t ,H sofl hlmsj1 1,0 ' V" HoUt ar played by Ann .May. whom H say the least. nre.iMniislv reseneil from n eiin-lu",H- away stage coach. Thus Luke' W IMomfie,l. k'amm.- .."'.i. ...hi,.!,, ..;.'( He is always on Hie rq. We will V-' v if . -till. lit ii nuo nun. stolen thr King and sold liliul,v" in "autifiil lltt itv In Ihe 'MiTintt n,l iUi.:""il he will at onw declare .p loves the little setiorita i dmihly wnnls lo remain there a year. Ily afternoon he will remark thai it i a bully place to spend two weeks, and at dinner ue ensuallv says : " 'Now, ilear, can you be rnnriv for eofTee hI four in the morn ing? We'll stop for breakfast sonn'wiion- on our way." "Thai the way 11 poe. wherever we are, and m! ill it's tun, for travelling with anyone so eiilhtisinstie as Itoiisla makes the trip a thousand tunes nior. llileiesiiriM and 'm joyuole." The famoos pan- e t to sir some time Imi in .laooiirv. THE MAN IN THE MOON aaya: ITS not good form lo weai carpet slippers when going out to dine. WOOLD someone please give the Man in the Moon lite name ot a local mail who gave an exhibi tion of how to wnsb a white sweater in muskeg water on New Year's Jtay. 14' would be a good idea for someone to suszesl lo the au- thoriltes Mint New Year's Dav annex be observed on January 2. .MAN has written a story cn- lilled 'The Days wlien UhrUtmas (was really merry." He evidently hasn'l been living in a live cilv IHo? IMl, IT miffs, ajiaui6fry Jo bring llhinffif'Tnune'W one "they have never een flifore. SCin.Tlsi say'ttial 'in a few million years there will ho no more coal. Some of us will prob ably he warm enough about that lime. TIIKP.L are less nuichloa in I Mexico than anywhere else. Iloulitless the natives are satisfied with less. A 1I.MI.Y lepliaiil In 'Hngland named "lluuly" caused a romnin-lion rereutlv by running amuck after being seared by the headlights of an automobile. Ituntv wasn't used lo. the bright lights. WOMUN are invading the hell rinsing trade In London. Wei! they've certainly made, a big success of the elothnrt.wriiiL'iiis j. mii v.,pij.iiii: wiiiiiiii in iiitjimnic ior tit n ity yeus roie oi uie iew York working girl wlio uses her wils lo gain her neiprainlatice with men . of wealth -and position. , The picture has been commented upon as .Mtss nriffilh'n tlllksl ;ililin!iliii,r ri.nl l..l....A..ll ' unci i-Biiiin ftOTICK veiucie since "it act inn " it ni..iir. o. A YOUN'f! b.irriiiew is making a big success of a wine business In the old country. Yen. tho business just , pours in. WATER ACT. IS 1 1 Kit Kit V -fllVEN 1Il.1t till i.iriinMiHiii-iiovriixir f nr, is jiubbling comedy concerning, "Xti life-like people and endowed withi"' Vmo' ni... n..iAi.ih oroiiianc fllllia-1 r J" uetiiK ciineier ?l or Uihi t ons The star is supported by ' f u?r lilo'tMl Jac .Mulhall. " ' wrfi im Wiirrl Crane, ! J',"1- , !,", imi-" i:i.arles Murray. Kdylhe Hhap. . ITV. 7v,i m, onirr man .lar.pieline Woll nn,l ''tk A'Tih (enrge Sidney, I t P i'attui.i.o. winuitr or LinJi. HOW MONEY IS MADE Behind the Scenes at the RcyalMint at Ottawa I Melting ftirnarr The H( lornvn burn all ad mtr rharinl nndrr air prr..ar. A rrl trm In a rmtnlln rhamtwr al h bark at mrb. faraar calri aajr nnaplac atrial that la bUa a la tlilmary. a Tlio wrlihlac rtmm lhr.r marklar ar anrratral tram drr -rlr. :r!e v.U" and Hfh rk rt'.m tm Oir rattr-th Pr ( Mlaga laaip. TIIHItE la a vast lUfTermce between making money and coining money. Anyone who U dercr enough may make money, aaya a writer in The Hoyal Ilaok Jlara- dne, but the privilege of coining money belongi to the Sovereign. The only place in Canada where money is actually made ix at the Canadian branch of The Iloval Mint at Ottawa, which wai opened only seventeen yearn ago. In 11)08, for the niajiufucture of all Canadian colna a well a Engblnh sovereign. Great exactneiis in characterUtic of all the work at the mint. A certain weight of metal i given out, and a certain number of coins mut be returned. If one is mowing, it ia Marched for till found. Even the dutt which acrumulate is collected and melted to recover the precious metal it contain. The procentfe through which the raw material ptuaea in being tni unformed from the rough metal into the finished coin are: melting, rolling, atljuftlng, eutting, marklnjr annealing, blanching, cleaning, coining, testing. Caiting Moulds The ingota aa rereired from the mint ofTtce are placed in crucible with the proper amount of alloy, and melted. The molten metal I poured into cant-iron mould. thu forming coinage bant about two feet long, 'two inches wide, nnd half an itieh thick. The bora are not paased on till a report ban been received lrom the Aay Oiliee that they are of the rfght (taiidard. The I.'ollinr Mill In the roll in proce the bars; e thinned by nt-nrrw. t fillet" if 'he Tb. mata ratraara la Iha CtuaU Hraah al Tfc. lttral AIlsi at 01 la Ma. raarlar maliro narlal lata lata! maaldt. A rat J I. Blajrd aa h lla at llw rrarlliU a. iha atrial I. brlat- pml I. krn It la llqald tarai. alkrrxlM a auld ran iblrk aad aeventeen or eiihteert feet rone ami of a thkkneea etuial to Uiat of Uie colna to be made from tnem. Punching Diacs Next the fllleU are taken to the punching machine, where a sample blank ia punched out If this la-found to be the right weight the whole strip is patsed as standard, but if too light, It Is returned to the melting room. Three blanks in copper and two in silver or gold are cut at each stroke, and each machine can produce three hundred gold or silver, and four hundred and fifty bronze blanks in a minute. The fillets from which the blanks have and form the imprewUon on bail I iue at once. The millail tnJire ar, the final poliah are alio put or. y inia one operation. (Uaminlnf and Welshing The next tep i the tetting a viumining oi me coin.. In Uie of gold, ami fifty and twenfv rent aiivcr coin, each i w. or an automatic machine. The tc? cent atvl nve-eent piece, are dollar weight, the one-cent t -. ajraint a pound of avoir-., u p One hundred and forty of the one-rent pieren altould weigh ex one pounu. ine eimv-trirallv OpC' been cut, 'known as sciisel, go back j -weighing machines are so occunv. 10 oe rtmcueu. Uut, when loaded, the beam w The blanks then are paused turn U the seventieth part of through the marking machine, postage ump. Kaeh machine where n protecting edge is raised. weigh twenty coins a minute. The machine eon mark sis hundred! Th m!n hui v. blanks in a minute. i scale o beinc of th nmri ine roiling- arvi nrning nrocees makes the metal hard and brittle. to the marked blanks are softened by panning them through an anneal ing furnace, are cleaned In a weak solution of sulphuric add, and washed and dried, the drying being done in a centrifugal Crying Stamping Coins Coining or stamping is the next process. The presres, of which there are six, have a capacity of '.100,000 coins n day. The top ana bottom diea, which make the impression on each side of the coin, move up and down, the collar nlate. tn wWeh the blank is enclosed, re are taken to the examining marfc: w ue re wey are spread on two tr.. elllng belt and carefully examine One operator examines one le a another the other shle. so that bot side can be inspeetetl u: once Am that are discoloured or onnerfet" are picked out The p.-rfeet coin ae dropped singly or u:. ran Mors to see that they have the com ring; .V),000 sue mini, can tx sounded in a day. A-iy found ' be imperfect are put through t; deseing nvachane. which cu'. notebes around the rim, and th' the are sent to be mltel. The coins that have torl all the tests are then vreiched into certa ' mbining stiyionary. The blanks are! Axed amounts and forwarded to the piarea in a ieeo luoe, and are ten i mini oince, wnere ir.ey are coumr-to the dies by teel finger-, which Into bnir by the telling machine eixe one at a lime and place tt In The coins are then esdy for dr 'Me row tirether culation at tmstl ehamre. "Big Game Hunter Lauds Canadian Rockies rA i y Cot. rnuip Moore, Princeton. Graduate. Mg .jame hunter, war veteran, and mountain climber, is so well known in the Canadian Pacific itockler that, as on kuiub i uV ii, oh nans a griHiy when It passes h m and asks after its missus and the cubs." Ever since Col. Moore first visited the mountainous regions of Alberta and 1 r t h C.n iimi.t . i to spend part of each year hunting, camping, and climW K ivuuiiua. . i io reiurneu recently lrom a summer en-11, ,'?n 0 Vallcy whe.r he odded a few more miles lo his J.SOO mllu m record on horseback as a member of the Trail Hiders of the Canadlan ltoekles. ' The buildinir of irnofl rnn.In 1 hr.irl, V. .n..t.i j in-1 in resultant growth in automobile traffic Is a new iure wnicn atias Rreatiy to the increase in tourists. The opening it the Hanff Windermere road, and the read from Lake Uuise to Wapta. thus making a splendid highway all the way from Calgary through the Kicking Cbt-PwuP Horse pass and the valley of the Yoho, has iflven tourlsti jtlimpses nf wonderful precipltjus canyons topped by some of the most majestic ire-cUd peaks in the ltocklei. Then, 'oa, '.he growth Jf the hangalow camp Idea has been phenomenal tt.is season. Tlione whom the palatial summer hotels d. not .attract yield to th.'lure of lof cabins, perched on the shore of a crystal lake, and -shadowed by overhanjlng mountain peaks. With a haversack on one s back, one may hike from camp to camp, or, If one does not scorn the saddle, ride .a pony along ths leafy trails. All these pleasures Col. 'Moore has proved, and Intends to lecture this win tar. sa h hiiliMn rlinirfnr n numhtr of years, about the marvelous beauty of his beloved mountains, lie is not selllsh. lie wishes others to snsr the rjoys of tho 'lone trail" which has lured him Into mountain fastnesses aver slnca ha forauuk ths academic unit ti 1'ilncstou.