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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" EIGHT PAGES\n50 CENTS A MONTH\nVOL. 11\nNELSON. B. C. MONDAY MORNING, APRIL 22, 1912\nNO. 5\nTITANIC DISASTER\nSo Declares Vicar of Christ\nChurch Cathedral\nSOLEMN SERVICES\nIN MEMORIAM\nCatastrophe Rebuke to Pomp\nand Vanity, Says\nPreacher\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nMONTREAL, Apfil 21.\u2014In twoscore\nMontreal churches memorial services\nfor the Titanic dead were held, and\nhundreds of Montrealers mourned the\nloss of 10 of their fellow citizens. In\nseveral churches the presence of relatives and close friends of the victims\nand the sight of seats never again to\nbe filled by fellow worshippers was\nfelt more poignantly than any press\ndespatches could have given true color\nto.\nMontreal suffered more heavily than\nany other Canadian city when the Titanic plunged tu the bottom, and the\ncily gave vent to its grief today, when\nIn many churches, Anglican, Presbyterian, Methodist and Roman Catholic,\npreachers spoke to grief-stricken congregations of those who had passed\naway in this terrible eataslroiphe.\nMany of the churches were draped In\nblack, and In all special music was\nrendered, the Dead March in Saul and\nChopin's funeral march being played\nin all the churches.\nAt the American Presbyterian church\nwhere the late C. M. Hays, president\nuf the Grand Trunk, was a prominent\nmember and a member of the trustee\nbeard, Rev. Dr. Johnson conducted\nmorning and evening services.' At\nChrist Church cathedral, which numbers in its cuiigregatlon practically ail\nrelatives of the lute H. Markland Molson, and also the widow's mother and\nthe eider brother of llie late Vivian\nI'ayne. Rev. Herbert Syinonds conduct?\n\u25a0\u25a0 ed the faervlue,\" lie look ior ms text the\nwords, \"Here we have no continuing\ncity.\" In the course of his sermon,\nDr. Syniunds declared that at the risk\nof offending some and although it\nmight bo called libel, he did not believe that the Titanic disaster could\nho called the will of God, although ft\nmight mean a rebuke to worldly pomp\nand vanity.\nAt Hie Duuglas Methodist church.\nWhore the lute Mr. and Mrs. Allison\nwere regular attendants and members\nof many church societies, while their\nlittle daughter worshiped witli them,\nDr. Veiling conducted a special service\nand referred feelingly tu the loss the\nchurch had sustained.\nAl HI. George's church, Which Includes in ils congregation the bereaved\nDayidsoh family, and at many other\nchurches similar services were held.\nThe late Q. Baxter was a Roman\nCatholic and a member of St. Patrick's,\nwhile the other two Montreal victims,\nA.bert Maiiat und S. H. Levy, were of\nthe same religion. Special services\nwere held and masses read in the Human Catholic churches.\nMournful Services.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nHALIFAX, April I'l.\u2014Memorial\nservices were Held in the churches of\nHalifax today for the Titanic dead.\nThe service al St. Paul's was particularly aad, for it was this church that\nGeorge Wright, the only Halifax man\nto perish In the disaster, attended. Mr.\nWright was a devoted parishioner of\nthis church and one of its most liberal\nsupporters. The services were attended by Lleulenunt Governor McGregor,\nofficials of provincial and civic governments and members of tlie consular\nservice; At the close the congregation\nstood while the Dead March In Saul\nwas played.\nWinnipeg   Memorial  Services.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nWINNIPEG, April 21.\u2014Thousands\nof church attendants stood a few moments In silence, and with reverently\nbowed heads, in the sacred1 edifices\ntoday, while the Dead March In Saul\nwas played in memory of the men and\nwomen who had lost their lives In the\n\"Titanic disaster. The scene In each\nchurch was probably the most Impressive In its history, for as Hie low,\nreligious tone3 of the beautiful composition crept from Hie big organs, ihe\nsaddened people thought grlovirfgly of\nthe final ' scene in the great catastrophe,\nTho   memorial   gatherings   of   chief\nnote were held In two of the Presbyterian and one uf tlie Methodist\nchurches. At Knox church about 86\nmembers of the Winnipeg real estate\nexchange were present to express their\ndeep sorrow at the lamented death of\nCotir members of their organization,\nMark Fortune, Hugo Ross, Thompson\n[Seattle and T. McCafrey, while at St.\nAugustine the assembly was marked\nh'y deep feeling owing to the fact that\nthe late Hugo Ross.had been closely\nidentified with the congregation. In\nGrace church the service was In memory of the late George 13. Graham, who\nduring his residence in the city had\nbeen actively connected wilh the congregation. At the morning service\nover 100 of the departmental managers\nof the T. Eaton company, with which\nMr. Graham had been associated, were\npresent.\nWhile the chief interest centred in\nthese churches there were few religious gatherings in the city in which\ndeep distress nnd sorrow were not expressed. In many churches the subject was the theme nf the pastoral\nexpositions, appropriate hymns were\nsung and appropriate prayers were offered up for those bereaved. In St.\nMary's church a solemn requiem high\nmass will he celebrated tomorrow\nmorning. At Knox church ft was announced that the members of the\nchurch had decided as a mark of their\nregard to their deceased members to\nfurnish a public ward tn the Children's\nhospital. References to the disaster\nwere also made in the .Jewish synagogues of the city, tributes being paid\nto those who sacrificed their lives for\nthe women and children.\nBells Toll Requiem.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nNEW YORK, April 21.\u2014The chimes\nof Old Trinity, of St. Patrick's and of\nthe cathedral of St. John tho Divine\nlolled in unison today a requiem for\nthe Titanic's heroic dead. Bowed by a\ncommon grief, men and women of\nevery religion and creed assembled in\nthe places of worship, where memorial\nservices were conducted, to join in\npaying tribute to men who died fearlessly that tho women and children on\nboard the sinking ship might live.\nLast  Hymn.\n\"Nearer My God to Thee,\" tho\nstrains uf which were heard by the\nsurvivors as the Titanic took her final\nplunge, was sung in all the churches\nof the city. There were prayers from\nthe pulpits for the survivors and the\nrelatives and friends of the dead, while\nIn Catholic churches requiem masses\nwill be sung tomorrow for the repose\nof the souls of those who went down\nwith the Titanic.\nAt Trinity church, the Rev. Dr. Wll\nHam T. Mnnnlng, the rector, spoke of\ntlie world's greatest maritime disaster\nand tlio greatness of character shown\nhy those who perished.\n\"At the present time there is sadness\nund sorijow in many homes throughout\nthe world,\" Dr. Manning said, \"but\nthere are tilings apparent which aro\ncomfort to everyone. We may give\nthanks fur the heroism; Ihe calmness\nnnd the courage shown on that ship lu\nthe last few horrible moments,\"\nAt nil other churches the preachers\nspoke In similar strains.\nMourning in London.\n(By Dnlly News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, April 21.\u2014Sunday was\nobserved as a day of mourning\nthroughout the kingdom. Every place\nof worship, from cathedral to the\nsmallest hillside chapel held special\nservices. In each of those \"Nearer M;\nGod to Thee\" was sung. Eloquent\ntributes ware paid by eminent preachers to the captnin and crew of th\nTiianic and the notable victims of the\ndisaster like W. T. Stead and other\nIn many cases the offertories were devoted to the relief funds, which now\naggregate more than Sf.00,000.\nNavy Mourns.\nSpecial services wore held abo-itrd all\nhis majesty's warships, and mourning\nwas generally observed in the same\nmanner in the British colonies. In\naddition to an almost universal movement In the direction uf providing\nbetter lifesavlng appliances on ocean\nliners, there are indications of a movement for taking better advantage of\ntho wireless. The necessity of two\nwireless operators being aboard every\nvessel owing to the fact that the liner\nParisian missed the Titanic's call for\nhelp, only through the operator being\noff duty at the time, and an agitation\nhas commenced here in favor of tho\nboard of trade formulating regulations to govern wireless arrangements\non board ships.\nThe Austrian government has also\ntaken steps to assist in the installation of a wireless system on all ocean\npassenger steamers. Hie government\nbearing part uf the expense nn condition that ft will receive a percentage\nof any salvage money obtained\nthrough  wireless  calls.\nWins by Distance Between\nThree Telegraph Poles\nMANY DEAD IN\nFIERCE STORMS\nTornadoes Sweep Across Illinois and Kansas Leaving\nRuin in Their Wake\nENGLAND WILL SUBSCRIBE\nHALF  MILLION  DOLLARS\n(By Dally News Leased wire.)\nLONDON,   April   21.\u2014Over  $250,000\nhns now been raised lor the benefit of\nllie   Titanic   sufferers.   Subscriptions\narc eomlnB In fust and England will\nndoubledly subscribe over Jlioo.ooo.\nChildren Burned To\nDeath In Ontario Fire\n(By Daily Newu Leased Wire,)\nNORTH BAY, Ot., April 21.\u2014Sellwood, on tho Canadali Northern railway, north of Sudbury, was lho scene\nof a fire in which seven dwellings\nwere destroyed and two children, a\ndaughter of Fred Rlvanl, aged 2, and\nnnother daughter -I years old, were\nburned   to   doalli.    The   parents  hud\nleft the house to visit a neighbor living near, leaving their six children In\nbe'd. A lamp which had been left\nlighted, exploded, and tho flames\nspread rnp'dly and before the children could bo rescued two had perished. Only a bucket ibrlgade waft\navailable to fight lho flames, as Sellwood Is a small village.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nKANSAS CITY, Mo., April 21.\u2014\nThree persons are known to havo lost\ntheir lives in tlie four tornadoes that\nlulo on Saturday visited southern and\ncentral Kansas.\nA. Brlllos was killed in the wreck\nof his homo near Waldron, Harper\ncounty, and Prockoh Kortnl and his\n4-year-otd granddaughter were killed\nin the storm at Bison, Rush county.\nA total of nearly 30 persons are known\nto havo been injured in Kansas nnd\nproperty damage will aggregate $200,-\n000,\nAt Copan, an oil town in Oklahnma,\none girl was killed and 25 persons injured.\nA race between a Missouri Pacific\ntrain and the storm was won by the\ntrain near Nashville, Kingman county, the twister crossing tlie track only\nthreo telegraph poles behind the train.\nPassengers crowded the rear platform to see tlio tornado at close range.\nTwelve Bodies Found.\n(By Dally News Lensed Wire.)\nCHICAGO, .PL, April 21\u2014Twelve\ndead were found al Bush, 111., and it is\nunderstood more will bo found when\nthe debris is cleared away, tho result\nuf tornadoes.\nFive persons were killed at Willis-\nvillo and Hi houses were demolished.\nSeventeon   Dead,\n(By  Daily   News Leased  Wire.)\nCHICAGO, 111., April 21.\u2014Seventeen\npersons are believed to have been\nkilled in a series of tornadoes wh'ch\nswept across parts of Illinois and Indiana just before nightfall today.\nTwelvo deaths have been confirmed\nand five are reported on information\nwhich appears reliable. One hundred\nothers were Injured, at least eight uf\nthem so severely that they may die.\nDamage dune to property will amount\ntu thousands uf dollars.\nTlie storm swept through the north\nern part of Murphysboro. III. Toi\nhouses were demolished at Murphysboro, and the Illinois Central deput at\nFinney was carried 300 feet.\nTEN   THOUSAND  DAMAGES\nFOR   NEWS   VENDOR\n(Special to The Daily Xews)\nVANCOUVER, B.C., April 21.\u2014\nPeter Collins, a blind miner, who\nhas been a familiar figure as a\nnews vendor on Vancouver streets\nduring the past year, has been\nawarded a'verdict of $10,000 by a\nspecial jury at the assizes in an\naction against the Britannia Mining & Smelt'ng Co. This awa<-d\nts larger by $2,500 than the verdict\nof a jury a yoar ago against which\nthe mining company appealed and\nsecured a new trial. The ground\nof appeal on that occasion was\nthat Justice Morrison had delivered his charge to the jury during\nthe absence of E. P. Davis, counsel for the company.\nIn the present action the case'\nwas heard by Justice Murphy and\na special jury. S. S. Taylor, K.C.,\nappeared for Collins and Douglas\nArmour for the company. Collins'\neyesight was destroyed and his\nright hand crppled by a blast in\nthe mine two years ago.\nCHINESE  TROOPS SLAY\nWOMEN  AND  CHILDREN\n(By Daily News Leased \"Wire.)\nLONDON, April 21\u2014 The Calcutta correspondent of the Central\nNews Agency cables that Chinese\ntroops mowed down 2,000 women\nand children with Maxim guns in\nquelling an  uprising at Llassa.\nBLOODY   FIGHT  AT   FEZ\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nTANGIER, April 21,\u2014Latest reports from Fez, where a revolt is\nbeing suppressed by the French\ntroops, say that the French lost\n25 killed and 60 wounded in the\nfight in the c-ip'tnl. It is estimated that more than 100 Jews\nwere killed during tho course of\nthe pillaging.\nNO NEWS OF\n-    FINDING BODIES\nCAPS EXPLODE\nMAN IS KILLED\nContractor   and    Blacksmith's    Helper\nAlso   Injured\u2014Accident   Is\nUnaccountable.\n(Special lo The Dallv News.)\nLYTTON, B.C., April 21.\u2014With ills 'eft\nhand blown off at the wrist, his thumb\nand two fingers gone from his right\nhum], both eyes blown out and a number\nuf Rhastly wounds in his abdomen, Goi-\nfrey Rugg, powderman for ,1. S, Washtok,\nwas brought In from Cisco last night anil\ntaken to Kamloops hospital where he\ndied this morning*\nJust before quitting time he started\nto open a box of dynamite detonators in\nn rockcut where the Washtok ste.in\nshovel Is operating, and hi some iniiii-\ncountubic manner Wfl cops exploded\nThero were 100 caps exerting a force oi\nHO pounds. Contractor Washtok, who was\nnear Rugg, had his left eye badly Injured anil several of the copper cups\npenetrated his left arm. A blacksmith's\nhelper  was also  wounded   In   both  leu..\nBugg was ii German, his family living\nIn llalford, Wisconsin. He was eon\nscions and able to converse immediate)-]\nufter the accident hut was unable to assign a cause for the accident.\nALL PASSENGERS\nBEHAVED WELL\nForegners  on   Board  Titanic  Allowed\nWomen   to  Get  Life\nBelts F-rst.\n(Western   Associated  Press.)\nNEW YORK, April 20.\u2014That the\nred colored stories of maddened foreign steerage passengers beiihg shot\ndown by ships officers as thoy tried\nto crowd into life boats in tlio sinking Titanic are the product of the\nimagination of New York's best\n\"scoop\" writers, is proved by Hie story\nof Miss May Howard, sister of Edward   Howard   of  Toronto.     She  wns\nthird class passenger on Hie liner\nsho said. \"I was In my berth about\nmidnight on Sunday when there came\nrocking of tho bont that tossed us\nabout a bit then came a terrible ringing of bells followed by tlie doctor\nwho said everything was all right but\nthat we had bettor get no our life\nbelts. ,\n'The foreign men, and there were\na lot of them, bohnvced finely. The\nwomen were left get the belts first,\nfhen some of the foreign women\nwanted two belts. I was In the second\nlast boat to leave. I heard afterward\nHint two boats were upsol hut did\nnot see them.\"\nCable  Ship Out of  Reach  of Wireless\nCommunication\u2014No News Yet\nReceived.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nHALIFAX, April 21.\u2014The cable ship\nMackay Bennett must have been cruising at the scene of the Titanic foun\nderlng for 24 hours now In search of\nbodies but no word has been received\nfrom her except 11 was learned that\na steamer proceeding westward had\nseen bodies floating at sea and notified\ntiie Muckay -Bennett, which immediately proceeded lo the locality indi\ncated. There had been rumors that\nbodies were found, one of these being\nCaptain Smith's remains hud been\npicked up. All these rumors wero absolutely baseless. The Mackay Bennett sailed with orders to report, her\nperiod of search being left indefinite.\nHer reports would be by wireless but\nwould have to be sent by relay tu some\nother steamer for her range is only\nlfiO miles by day and 200 by night.\nAny message would lie sent to Cape\nRace, which is almost 350 miles from\nthe Mackay Bennett and 100 miles further to Sable Island. Al these distances the searching ship could receive\nmessages by wireless but she could\nnut send lliem without relaying. The\ncable ship's Instructions were to report\nfirst to New York and then tu Halifax.\nThe White Star company said today\nthat nothing had come. The Empress\nof Ireland'sailed last night for Livor-\npnol and by (i o'clock tomorrow morning would be In the waters where tlie\nTitanic went down. It is likely the\nEmpress of Ireland will speak wilh the\nMackay Bennett.\nSTRIKERS FEAR TO\nRETURN TO WORK\nBut     Railway    Strike    Is    Practically\nEnded,   According  to   Canadian\nNorthern  Official.\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nVANCOUVER, B. \u00a3., April 21.\u2014An\nofficial of the Canadian Northern railway who arrived hero today said that\nvirtually all strikers who were driven\nout of Y'ale on Thursday by the provincial police have returned to their\nold quarters. He says tlie strike is\npractically ended.\nFear  to   Risk   Lives.\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nVANCOUVER, B. C\u00ab April 21.\u2014The\nIndustr'al Workers of the World held\na street meeting here today, about 70\nbeing present. An agitator from'Yale\nwas the chief speaker;\nThere has been no trouble reported\nsince Thursday night. There Is still\na big camp of strikers at Yale and\nono near Ashcroft. Work is proceeding favorably between Ciscu and Hoprf,\nEn3t of Cisco everything is still\nclosed down except tho steam shovel\nat Savona. Ii is stated that a number of contractors on this section\nwould resume operations could they\nsecure men. A large percentage of\nthe strikers aro said to be willing to\nreturn tu work but aro kept terrorized\nby threats of violence nnd do nut care\nto risk their lives for ordinary day\nwages.\nWireless Operator Gives Evidence Before Committee\nTHOUGHT CALL\nFOR AID TRIVIAL\nShip Nearest to Titanic Disregarded   Danger\nSignal\nVANCOUVER   MAN   WINS\nRICH   PRIZE AT HARVARD\n(Special lo The. Dallv News.)\nVANCOUVER, April 21.\u2014Arthur R.\nBuak. sun of II. W. Bonk, barrister, of\nVancouver, has won at Harvard university the best prize open to postgraduate students. He lias received\nthe Raymond Cutting travelling fellow\nship uf an annual vnluo of $1,100 ln(\nthe department uf history rand economics.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nNEW YORK, April 21.\u2014With dramatic suddenness the senate investigation of the Titanic disaster came tu\nan end yesterday, so far as tlie New\nYork hearing was concerened. It will\nbe resumed, however, in Washington\non .Monday when J. Bruce Ismay nnd\nP. A. S. Franklin, the chief officers\nof tho White Star line and more than\na score of officers and crew of the\nsunken vessel will appear before tbe\ncommittee. Incidental to the sudden\nclose uf the hearing here was the story\nof Harold S. Bride, Ihe second and\nonly surviving wireless operator of the\nTitanic. His tale was ono of suffering and death. He told of the final\nplung of the vessel . to Us ocean\nburial. The captain's end was also\nrevealed. He leaped from the bridge\nwhen the waters were closing over his\nship;\nNo Explanation.\nTho hearing was abandoned without\nany explanation from the committee\nas to why It was transferred to\nWashington. It was intimated, however, that the power of the senate on\nfederal territory would be undisputed\nfn getting all the real facts and no\nquestion uf senate rights would arise\nto Interfere. Throughout the hearing\nalso officials of the White Star line\nhad portrayed tho dangers nf sailors'\nboarding houses in New York as r\nreason why those delayed by the committee should be allowed to sail on\ntho Lapland, which left port today\nThroughout the hearing this morning Wireless Operator Bride, crippled\nus a result of his experience and seat\ned in an Invalid's chair, told his story\nof the last moments on the Tltaitic.\nHis narrative, drawn from him piecemeal by Hie questioning of Air. Smith\nof Michigan, held enthralled the com\ninlttee and the audience. When his\nordeal ended he was almost on the\nverge of'a collapse. The hearing was\nresumed in the afternoon and announcement of the change of base in\nthe committee's plans were made.\nHerbert J. Pittman, the third officer\nof the Titanic had been called to tho\nwitness chair and sworn. Senator\nSmith directed one question to him\nrelating to the whereabouts of th\nship's log. The witness said he did\nnot know. Promptly Mr. Smith an-\nnounced the committees decision to\nresume the Inquiry In Was'hlngtun on\nMonday.\nWanted   First   Hand   Ev:dence.\nLater Mr. Smith issued a stutement\ngiving      his   reasons   for   Ihe   change\nuf plans as follows:\n\"The object of the committee in com\ning to New York coincidental with the\narrival of ihe Carpathln was prompted\nb.v the desire to avail Itself of first\nband Information from the active participants in this sad affair. We have\nbeen guided solely by this purpose\no obtain accurate Information without delay. Wo were, told that some\nf the officers of the Titanic, Who\nwere British subjects and resided\nEngland, desired and intended to r\nturn to their homes immediately upon\nival atthls port. \"We concluded Hint\nwould lie most unfortunate if we\nwere to be deprived of their testimony\nfor any Indefinite period, and their re\nmoval beyond the jurisdiction of our\nauthority might complicate and possibly defeat our purpose. AVe went directly lo the Cnrpathia on her arrival,\nwere received courteously by the cap\nlain and officers of tho ship, were\naccorded a prompt interview with tlie\nmanaging director of* the White Star\nline. Wo satisfied ourselves that their\npromise to appear insured their presence nt the Investigation nnd have\nnot been called upon to use more\ndrastic means lo accomplish this result.\n\"Mr. Ismay intended to return to\nEngland forthwith, but at our request\nhas remained here, as have two nfthe\nother officers and members of the\ncrew\". It was found necessary to take\ntho testimony of the captain of the\nCarpathia immediately, thnt ho might\nnot be further inconvenienced In his\ndeparture with his ship after ills must\nadmirable conduct, worthy uf highest\npraise. We felt that It would not be\nn evidence nf our appreciation to detain him and his ship and passengers\nft or he had brought tlie survivors of\nthe Titanic voluntarily to this harbor.\nWe examined the second officer because ho was in command during the\nhours immediately preceding the collision, and we thought It wise to take\nthis testimony Immediately.\n\"Mr. Bride, the wireless telegrapher\non llie Titanic, who survived, had been\ninjured and was unable to be conveniently removed from New York.\nAs his testimony and the testimony\nof the wireless operator of Hie Onr-\npalhia were su Intimately related we\nconcluded   to   tukc  lho  testimony  of\nboth forthwith, and In order that we\nmight beyond peradventure have the\nstatement of Mr. Ismay formally on\nrecord we decided to take his testimony Immediately. All were notified\nof the fact that we had not finished\nwith them and they wero requested to\nremain.\n\"After conferring with our associates, we concluded to exercise our\nauthority and formally subpoena those\nofficers, together with about 20 of the\nships' crew nnd take the further testimony, nt least for the time being at\nWashington, where the entire subcommittee could be present.\n\"In summoning the surviving passengers, many of whom were distressed,\nsome quite ill and others injured, we\nhave thought it wise to proceed with\ncare and consideration for their physical and mental condition. Many of\nthem have already been subpoenaed,\nbut returns have not yet been mnde\nand I am unable to give a list of those\nsubpoenaed  to   ihe press.\"\nThe committee devoted its attention\ntoday to an investigation of the conditions leading to the disaster. H.\nT. Cottam, the operator on the Cnr-\np.ith'a, was the first witness. Senator\nSmllii sought to establish certain testimony he had given on the stand\nyesterday. Then came the \"star\"\nwitness of the day.\nNights Without Sleep.\nSeated in nn invalid chair, Bride was\nwheeled to the end of the long table\nat which the committee sat. He was\nhollow cheeked nnd with n wan appearance, and had just come from a\nphysician's care. His hands were\nnever quiet and he Intertwined his\nfingers constantly. Mr, Cottam, who\nis 33 years old, Bride Is merely n boy\na year younger than Cottam. Neither\nhad any telegraph experience previous\nto llie taking up of wireless tele\ngraphy and both told tales of long\nhours at the key, and of days and\nnights spent at the key without sleep.\nThis inexperience and the mental\ncondition uf the young operators were\ntwo points on which Mr. Smith bore\npers'stentiy. He had put Cottam\nthrough a gruelling examination in\nwhich the youth testified that he had\nnot slept more than eight or ten\nhours between Sunday night, when\ntbe Titanic called for help, and Thursday night. His story was one that\nbore out nil that Cottam's had established, except that his was one of nervous strain and worry and high keyed suspense.\nThought Call Trivial.\n\u2022 Bride was closely questioned as to\nthe first call for aid sent out by the\nTitanic. He snid the first vessel to\nanswer the call was the Frankfurt uf\ntho North Go.rman Lloyd lino. The\noperator on tiie Frankfurt, .according\nto the witness, apparently considered\nthe call more or less trivial, for half\nan hour after the imperative appeal uf\nthe sea he called the Titanic to In\nquire specifically Just what was\nwrong.\n\"Mr.   Phillips  said   he  was   a fool,\nBride testified,   referring to  the chief\noperator on the Titanic, who lost his\nlife, \"nnd told him to keep out.\"\nBy keeping out Bride declared Phil\nlips meant that the Frankfurt should\nnot keep its wireless going, but should\nleave the air free for the Titanic's call.\nNo effort was made to re-establish\ncommunication with the Frankfurt,\nalthough Phillips felt certain that the\nvessel was much nearer than tho\nCarpathia, with which communication\nhad been established. This Bride said\nPhillips Judged by reason of (tie greater power of the hertzian waves.\nSenator Smith expressed astonishment at the statement. He repeatedly\npressed tlie witness to answer why the\naid of a vessel mnny miles nearer a\nsinking ship was not Invoked. Bride\nevaded a direct answer by saying lie\ndid not know, that probably the\nFrankfurt operator could nut understand and that Phillips, his superior,\nhad used Ids own judgment.\nAnother phase of the laxity of the\nwireless so far as man Is concerned\nwas developed by the chairman. He\ndrew from Bride an acknowledgement\nthat on tlie evening of the tragic Sunday Bride was sitting, the telephonic\napparatus strapped to his ears, adjusting his accounts. The steamship\nCullfnrn'uti. seeking to warn tho Titanic that icebergs were Invading the\npath of ocean travel, called incessantly. Bride said ho heard the call but\ndid not answer because he was busy.\nIt was not until half an hour later\nthat tiie Californian, striving to reach\nthe steamship Baltic, raised the Titanic, whereupon the warning was\n (Continued on  page  two.)\nGovernment Will Give Up to\nFifty Thousand   ,\nLOCAL MEMBER\nURGES YMIR ROAD\nTemporary  Ferry  May Be\nPlaced in Operation Over\nKootenay River\nThe provincial government will give\n{50,000 for tho new hospital building\ninstead of $40,000, on the dollar for\ndollar basis, as a result of representations made to Hon. H. E. Young by\nWilliam R. Maclean, member-elect for\nNelson city, who returned last night\nfrom a visit to Victoria, during which\nhe consulted with the members of the\ncabinet regarding a number of matters\nof importance lo the city.\nRegarding the Nelson bridge Hon.\nThomas Taylor told Mr. Maclean lhat\nits construction would necessarily be\nvery costly and that the practicability\nof a ferry to do duty in the meantime\nwas being considered.\nUrges Road to Ymir.\nMr. Maclean pressed on the attention of Premier McBrlde and Mr. Tay-\nior tlie immediate construction of a\nwagon road between Nelson and Ymlr\nto connect with the road already built\nto the south and the matter will be\nfurther discussed during Mr. Taylor's\nvisit to Nelson next week.\nMr. Maclean stated that Dr. Young\nhad promised that the request of the\nAgricultural association for a grant to\nliquidate its liabilities would be attended to in the near future,\nThe local member on Ids return from\nVictoria stayed off at Halcyon Hot\nSprings, where he saw Mr. and Mrs.\nJames H. Schofleld, who are taking\nthe baths.\n\"Vancouver and Victoria are booming, but while I am much impressed\nwilh Ihe activity at the coast I am\nvery glad to get back to Nelson,\" said\nMr. Maclean,\nEVERY WHEEL WILL\nSTOP AS TRIBUTE\nGrand  Trunk  Pacific  Will  Pay  Striking Tribune to Memory of Dead\nPresMent.\n(By Dally News Lensed Wire.)\nMONTREAL, Que., April 21.\u2014It Is\nplanned during the coming week to\npay a trbute to the memory of C, II,\nHays of the Grand Trunk Pacific,\nwhen the wheels of the road will stop\nfor several minutes during the ceremony. Il will give the employees of\ntho company in the two countries an\nopportunity to attend tho memorial\nservices for the chief they have lost.\nDefinite plans have not yet been made.\npending an expression of the wishes\nof the late Mr. Hays' family, but It is\nexpected that the memorial will take\nthe form of a service during tho latter part of the week at the American\nPresbyterian church, of which Mr.\nHays was for many years a member.\nSu far as possible the headquarters\noffices will bo closed down, so as to\ngive the officials and staff an opportunity to join in the service. While\nlho memorial services will be pe-\npecullarly for the colleagues and staffs\nof the late Mr. Hays in the various\nrailway enterprises of which he was\nthe head, it will also be one for his\nfriends. It is also likely that tho\nother great transportation systems\ncentering upon Montreal will be repro-\nionted.\nCourt Holds Marriage Is\nValid In Common Law\n(Canadian Associated Press.)\nLONDON, April 21.\u2014The appeal\nfrom Mr Justice Kenny's decision, In\nthe now famous No Temere case, was\ndismissed by the ford chief justice on\nSaturday in a judgment Which said;\n\"In my opinion, the decision in the\ncouncil of Trent as It hus been promulgated in Ireland is applicable to\nand controls Catholic marriages and\nmakes tlie presence of two witnesses\nnecessary to the ceremony, and any\nceremony which is uot in accordance\nwith its requirements in regard to the\nsenco of a priest nnd two witnesses\nIs null and void. The desree of the\notinell of Trent though coercive and\nconclusive frum the standpoint of the\nRoman Catholic church is not recognized by law, that is, common law.\nTills distinction must not be lost sight\nof when dealing with Ibis question\u2014\nwhether the marriage In which the\ncourt was concerned was good at common law.\"\nTurning frum the law of the Rom.nn\nCathiille church tn the common law,\nhis lordship said, in the present case\nthey had the substance and essential\nconditions uf a marriage valid at common Jaw. Tlie contracting parties intended marriage and Hie couple married had interchanged their mutual\nconsent, one lo be husband and the\nother to bo wife, in the presence of a\npriest in holy orders. At common law\ntho presence of any other witness was\nunnecessary tu constitute a valid marriage. Ho was therefore of the opinion\nthat there was a good and valid marriage, according to the law uf tho\nrealm, and (lie matter was an absolute\nand non-condltlonni contract of mnr-\nrinjve.    There was cumulative evidence\n111\nnt\na nil!\nformula as a who;e.\nThe Lord Chief Baron in cono\\trrlngr,\nsaid thai tlie contract was absolute\nand nou-coiiditiunal and in his opinion\ntho mnrriaKo was valid according lu\nthe laws of the country. \"I lake thee\nto be my wedded wife, if tho holy\nohurch will it permit,\" uf which so\nmuch has been snid. are wholly immaterial to the case, Mr. Justice Clhson\nalso agreed and the motion was dismissed with costs.\n Ct)e Bail? $eUisJ.s\nMONDAY .............. April\ngaegfc\n:\n%, [VllID[iii?[iaP'Sr3E^\n\"Count Your Blessings\"\nWOULD you be willing to go back to the standards\nof living that prevailed in 1812?\nIn spite of all the praise of \"the good old days,\"\nwould you be content to give up the many conveniences\nwe have gained in the past century?\nFormer generations knew nothing of the luxuries of\nmodern travel with its observation cars, individual lights\nin Pullman berths, phonograph recitals, rich appoint\nments, home-like comforts, and special safety devices\nwith which the modern railway system surrounds its\npassengers.\nThe rural telephone now places the\nfarmer, in instant communication with\nthe source of the latest market reports,\nand saves him many hours of precious\ntime in the event of sickness or accident.\nThe introduction of the typewriter\nand adding machine has lightened the\nload and lengthened the day of the\nbusiness office.\nIt was Advertising that first proclaimed the usefulness of these devices, that created an immediate and\nuniversal demand for them, that established a world-wide distribution which\nmade them readily accessible to us\nall.\nMcCormick invented the reaper and\nthereby made himself an everlasting\nbenefactor of the farmer. But it was\nAdvertising that carried the wonderful\nnews with its far-reaching significance\nto the \"man with the hoe.\"\nYou know what hoii6ework used to\nbe. Realize what it is now, since the\nadvent of sanitary plumbing fixtures,1\nhot-water heating, vacuum cleaners,\nand electric household appliances,\nAdvertising has brought these things\ninto your home. It has eliminated\ndrudgery.\nAdvertising is service. Science, invention, commerce,\nare all indebted to its aid. It has raised the standard\nof living, elevated business ethics, and put us within\nreach of more real comforts, more real blessings, than\nwe ever enjoyed before.\nAdvice regarding your advertising is available tnrough any\nrecognised Canadian advertising agency, or the Secretary of\nthe Canadian Tress Association, Room 503 Lumsden Bldg.,\nToronto. Enquiry invokes no obligation on your part\u2014so\nwrite if interested.\nQlMIMMlrM^MMMMMiMlllr^l^MMliliBiliMr^iBillBl\nENQUIRY MOVES\nTO WASHINGTON\n(Continued from pace one.)\nnoted by Bride am verbally communicated to tho liner's captain.\nSenator Smith established by Gug-\nllelmo Marconi, the inventor of th.'\nwireless system bearing his name, that\nboth the Titanic and Hie Frankfurt\noperated virtually the same kind of\ninstruments. In tlie opinion of Hie inventor there existed no reason why\ncommunication between the two vessels should not have been perfect, provided the weather was favorable.\nFinal Scenes.\nUnder questioning Bride began to\nshow signs that he might collapse, so\nSenator Smith ended the wireless Inquisition and questioned him about\ntiie final scenes aboard the Titanic.\nBride and his superior, rhillips, were\namong the last to leave and were witnesses of the closing scenes on the\nboat deck, tho topmost parade deck of\ntho lust ship.   Bride's story was frag\nmentary and was drawn frum a memory that had not ceased . to eliminate\nlho living horror of it. Without Senator Smith's interrogations it ran\nabout as follows: \"Wo did not feel\nHie shock when the ship struck. In\nfact, I was asleep at the lime and was\nnot even awakened by tlie Impact.\nWhen the engines stopped Mr. Phillips called me and I put on the telephone apparatus while he went out to\nsee what was the trouble. A little Inter\nhe camo back. He said things looked\nqueer. By queer I supposed-he meant\nthat everything wns not as it should\nbe,\n\"At this time however, neither of\nus worried a bit. When he heard confusion on the deck I went out to investigate and when I returned I found\nMr. Phillips sending out a \"C. D. Q.\"\ncall, giving our position. We raised the\nFrankfurt first and then the Carpathia and then tlie Baltic. As I have\nsaid, we did not try for the Frankfurt\nfor any length of time, but concentrated nur messages on Hie Carpu-\nthia, which had answered lhat she\nwas cuming to ouf aid.\n\"The captain came into the wireless\ncabin frum the deck when the Carpathia  advised  us of our position and\nFRED   IRVINE   &   CO.\nFriday\u2014Bargain Day\u2014Friday\nWe  will   sell   special  for   Friday a   large  assortment  of\nNew Summer Muslins\nDress Pallesse\nCrum's and Potter's\nPrints\nAll   new  spring  designs and  patterns; regular lCc and. 20c lines.    Your\nchoice Friday  12'\/2C\nSpecial range of plain and fancy tub   ginghams;, regular lGc and 20c.\nOn Friday   12'\/2C\nSee Our Special Line of Ladies\nTrimmed and Pattern Hats\nfigured out the time when lhat vessel\nprobably would arrive. Ho left when\nthat was disposed of and proceeded to\ntbe bridge. Then we began unofficially to keep in communication with the\nCarpathia.\n\"From time to timo either Mr-\nPhillips or I would go on deck to observe the situation. The last time I\nwent on deck I found passengers running nround in confusion and there\nwas almost a panic. They wero seeking for lifeboats. All of the largo lifeboats were gone, but there was one\nlife raft remaining. It had been lashed on top of the quarters on the boat\ndeck. A number of men were striving\nto launch it.\nPower Low.\n\"I went back to the wireless cabin\nthen. Mr. Phillips was striving to\nsend out a final \"C.D.Q.\" call. The\npower was so low that we couldn't\ntoll exactly whether it was being carried or not, for wo were In a closed\ncabin and could not hear the crackle\nof the wireless at tho mast. Phillips\nkept on sending, hnwever, whilo I\nbuckled on his lifebelt and put on my\nown. Then we both cared for a woman who hnd fainted and who had\nbeen  brought  into our cabin.\n\"When about 10 minutes before the\nship sunk, Capt. Smith gavo the word\nfor every one to look to his own\nsafety. I sprang to aid the men\nstriiKgling tn launch the lifernft and\nwe succcded in getting it to the edge\nuf the boat when a giant wave carried\nit away, I went with it and found\nmyself        underneath. Struggling\nthrough an eternity, I finally emerged\nand was swimming a few feet from\ntlie Titanic when she went down. I\nfelt no suction as the vessel plunged.\nWent Down With Ship.\n\"1 did not see Mr. Ismay at all.\nCapt. Smith stuck to the bridge, and,\nturning I saw him jump in just as the\nvessel glided into the depths. He had\nnot donned a lifebelt, so far as 1\ncould see, and went down with the\nship.\"\nTho witness showed plainly tin*\nmental and physical strain under\nwhich ho was laboring, and both\nSenators Newlands nnd Reod urged\nSenator Smith to excuse him. After\na few more interrogations Senator\nSmith did so.\nThanks Wireless Operator.\nI regret exceedingly having had to\nsubject you to such an ordeal,\" he\nsaid, addressing Bride, \"bocauso of\nyour condition. I would have avoided\nit if possible, but the committee\nthanks you most heartily for theforo-\nbearnnco you havo shown nnd the\nfrankness of your testimony.\"\nFRED  IRVINE   &   CO.\nKootenay and Boundary\nGIVE CHILDREN'S  OPERA\nAT   KASLO  CHERRY  FAIR\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nKASLO, B. C, April 21.\u2014At a meeting of the Hospital Aid of the Victorian order here, held iu the city hall\nculled by the president, Mrs. W. E.\nZwicky, a proposal to stake a children's opera was presented by H.\nTreby Heale, which, after discussion\non the part of the ladles wns adopted\nand the initial steps taken towards\ncarrying it out.\nMr. Henlo will undertake the instruction of the performers and the\ndate, although not fixed definitely,\nwill he the same as that of the cherry\nshow, The name of the opera Is\n\"While Mortals Sleep,\" by Rosamond\nand Caroline Beach Taylor.\nThe characters represent fairies who\nhave grown tired of the dancing and\nother amusements in which fairies occupy themselves, and while seeking a\nnew amusement they see two children,\nordinary   mortals.\nThe fairies decide to hold a reception or fairy \"at home\" for the benefit\nof the children, and all ihe people In\nMother Goose's immortal rhymes are\ninvited to meet the children. The\nmusic Is catchy and tlie costumes, aro\nbeautiful.\nAs tho armory will lie occupied as\ntho main show building al the cherry\nfair time, It Is possible the fairies'\nopera will be staged out of doors or\nin a tent.\nThe pleco has not, it is believed,\nbeen played  before  In  this  district.\nThe contract for digging 3,100 feet\nof flitch for the city water works was\nawarded to James Carey and R.\nTangyo at a price of 23 cents per\nlineal foot. Part of the ground to be\nditched contains a good many boulders\nand as llie pipe line Is to be laid\nalongside the existing une much care\nmust ho exercised in dealing with\nboulders so that the pipe will not be\nbroken. The tenders varied widely, 40\ncents being the highest. James Carey\nand R. Tangyo had, independently.\nboth bid tlie same amount and agreed\nto take the contract in partnership.\nThe bachelors' ball on Friday promises to eclipse in brilliance any recent\nsocial event of the kind. The Gem\norchestra from Nelson will supply the\nmusic and a very large attendance Is\nexpected.\nA carload of frull trees consigned to\nL. A. Lemon arrived here yesterday\nThey will bo distributed to the purchasers throughput the district. The\nbalance of the consignment Is expected\nin n few days.\nJohn Strachan has brought In a\nsplendid team of young horses, which\nhe purchased In Spokane. One of tho\nhorses Is aged four and Hie other rising six years. They arc light draught\nhorses, weighing 1,100 pounds, greys\nand well matched.\nEXTENSIVE CULTURE ON\nEARL GREY'S RANCH\n(Special te The Dally News.)\nBOSWELL, It. C, April 21.\u2014M. A.\nMIddleton, provincial horticulturist,\nspent a couple of days in Boswell last\nweek visiting tlie ranches and giving\ndemonstrations In pruning. He expressed the opinion that evorything\nseemed more advanced than In tho\nother parts of the district he had visited and was very favorably Impressed\nwith the look of things In general.\nW. Pascoe arrived here it short time\nago witli a barge load of lumber and\na large crew of men, who are now\nbusily engaged In the erection of a\n$\u20221,000 house for R. Hills. As the work\nIs being rapidly pushed forward completion is hoped for In about 10 days.\nThe tug Hosmer loft here last Wednesday with a raft 125 feet long by fiO\nfeet wide, composed of 0,000 ties cut\nfor the C. P. R. by J. M. Quinn, II.\nBeaumont and W. L. Hepher. The\njourney to Proctor took over five hours\nns a severe storm was encountered at\nPilot Buy,  during which  heavy snow\nGIRL'S DRESS WITH CHEMISETTE\nBIRDMAN   KILLED.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nVERDUN, France, April 21.\u2014Lieut.\nVilie Davray was killed Friday while\nmaking an aeroplane flight. The wing\nof tho machine dnupled up from somo\nunknown cause. . i ^  ,  \u2022\nBrown poplin with fancy braid for\ntrimming was used for this design,\nwhich is sultablo for cashmere, hen\nrlettn, galaten, gingham, chambray,\nchallle and all other wash\" fabrics.\nThe pattern Is cut in five sizes: 6, 8\n10, 12 and 14 years. It requires fou:\nyards of -li-inch material for Hie 12-\nyear size.\nA pattern of this illustration mailed\nto any address on receipt of 10 cents\nIn silver or stamps.\nPleaso send the above mentioned\npattern, us per directions given below\nto\nName\t\nNo   Street \t\nTown       Province\t\nMeasure\u2014Waist   Bu8t\t\nAge (if child's or mlas' pattern)\t\nAddress Tho Tally News Pattern\nDcpt., Nelson B.C\t\nfell. The men on the raft, of whom\nthere were five, together with a horse,\nhad an exciting time, being wet to the\nskin, cold and utterly exhausted by\nthe time Proctor was reached. ' The\nties will be cut Into lengths there and\nturned over to the C, P. R,\nA large number of men are engnged\non Earl Grey's ranch here. The entire\nplace is to be put under extensive cultivation and largo quantities of potatoes and strawberries are to be grown.\nIt has been realized how admirably\nui'tnble the district is for growing big\nand profitable crops of this nature and\nheavy returns are looked for as a result of this system.\nA very fine teum and rig was purchased fn Nelson from G. MaeDonald\nby H. A. Coomber, who intends using\nthem for ranch work.\nMajor Rigby has left for the coast.\nHe intends being away for some little\ntime.\nJames Johnsto'ne visited Boswell\ntwice during the week. He was accompanied by A, Murdock of Dumfor-\nline, Scotland.\nThe maximum tempcralure registered at tho Dominion government\nmeteorological station for tho week\nending April 1G was 00 degrees on the\n12th and the minimum 3-1.5 degrees on\nthe 15lh.\nNEW SETTLERS ARRIVE\n(Special to The Dnlly News.)\nGRAYS CREEK, B. C, April 21.\u2014\nNew settlers are arriving to take up\ntheir holdings on the new subdivision,\nand several mure are completing their\narrangements for moving In iu a week\nor so.\nA party who arrived at tho beginning of April have already built themselves a house and are now busy clearing land.\nMr. Anderson arrived this week with\na la :gc quantity of lumber and intends\nto settle on ids 10-ucre plot permanently.\nFlank riiilllps was in the settlement\ntills week in charge of a large party\nuf land seekers and prospective pur-\nc' -aers. Tlie visitors expressed them-\n\u2022icl' es as satisfied as to the possibility\nuf trowing trees without irrigation on\n1 - nch lands after viewing the trees on\ntiie older established ranches. There\nis a splendid showing for fruit and\nfrom this season on Grays Creek will\nhave to be reckoned as an apple shipping centre.\nA gang of men are making much-\nl-.e I'ed improvements to the wagon\nro:.d on tiie Kuslu side of the sellle-\ni;-c.-,l. Later on a considerable amount\nof work will be done on the south side\nof the creek, renovating the old road\nand extending tlie same in a southerly\ndirection.\nNEWS  FROM  WANETA.\n(Special to Tho Daily News.)\nWANETA, B.C., April 21.-J>lr.s. William\nBeillie lias l-oturhed after a- visit of\nseveral   months  to  the   coast  cities.\nMrs. A. G. Lnng, who was fur -several\nweeks* under medical treatment at Rochester, Minn., Is now home again much\nimproved la health.\nMrs. William Nellson of Frullvalo way\na  visitor  hen.' on  Thursday.\nAmongst those planting out quite a\nnumber of fruit trees this BpHng are D.\nAlexander and John Stlrlhif,'.\nWilliam arutchfield, the liuilding contractor of Salmo, was a visitor here last\nw.-ek. Mr. Grutehfleld in the early days\nresided In this valley.\nThere was a record attendance nt the\nannual meeting of tho local Conservative\nassociation, held at the schooJhouBo on\nThursday, The election of officers resulted as fellows: Honorary president,\nJ. II. Schofleld, M.L.A.; president, T. J.\nDuncan; vice-president, James Quayle;\nsecretary-treasurer, A. D. Fredericks.\nRaymond T. I licks, manager of the\nKootenay Fruit Growers' union, was\ndown this week In order to interest the\nranchers In co-operation and to obtain\nexact Information as lo the producing\ncapabilities of the district, visited practically every ranch In the valley. While\ngoing through the orchards Mr. Hicks\ngave the settlers much useful Information not only in regard to marketing but\nalso ns to pruning, spraying and elimination of -pests, It would he very helpful\nto the local fruit Industry If the rancher.1- had oftener visits from such capable\nand  enthusiastic experts as Mr.  Hicks,\nSTEWART HENDERSON  IS\nHONORABLY ACQUITTED\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nASHCROFT, B. C, April -JL\u2014Stuart\nHenderson, K.C., who was arrested in\nVancouver on Wednesday on a charge\nof embezzlement was honorably ae-\nqulted in the police court on Saturday.\nThe charge against Henderson was,\nthat a Norwegian farmer, Peter Gill-\nstadt, in October, 1010, gave him 11,113\nto pay orf tho mortgage on 180 acres in\nAlberta, Henderson -was former Liberal member of the legislature for\nYale.\nWILL LOCATE LINE OF\nPACIFIC GREAT EASTERN\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nVANCOUVER, April 21.\u2014Survey\nparties will be placed In the field within the next two or three weeks to lu-\ncate the line of the Pacific Great Eastern railway between North Vancouver\nand Port George according to the official statement made here by P.\nWelch, of Foley, Welch & Stewart.\n\"At the outset the work of this sur-\nvey will be of a preliminary character\nbefore the actual location of the line\nis  undertaken,\"  said  Mr. Welch.\nHe leaves on Monday for Prince Rupert to inspect Hie work of the Grand\nTrunk   Pacific   In   tlie   district.\nGERMANY  WILL  REVISE\nITS  SHIPPING   LAWS\nBERLIN, April 21.\u2014The motion Introduced in the roichstng requesting\nthe imperial chancellor to order an Investigation as to whether German\nsteamships are equipped wilh sufficient Ufesavlng apparatus for all passengers and crew was considered today,\nClemens Delbrueek, minister of the\nInterior and vice chancellor of the empire   said   that   tho   government   was\nShilohsGure\nSTOPS C0UCHS\u00ab?\u00a3!SI\nH\nBest Tea At Its Best\n\"SALADA\" TEA is always the same,no mat\nwhen or where you buy it\nALADA'\nis tha choicest tea\u2014green, black or mixed\u2014from the finest tea-\ngrowing country in the world\u2014Ceylon, with its exquisite flavor\nand freshness protected by the sealed lead packages. on\nalready in communication with big\nshipping companies and would see\nlhat everything necesary and possible\nshould bo done. Positive measures,\nhowever, could not be .proposed before\ndetails of the catastrophe to the Titanic had been learned.\nllorv Delbrueek declared that he had\ninstituted a revision of German regulations as soon as tlie first details of\ntlie Titanic disaster became known and\nin the Immediate future will convoke\na conference of shipping eompaines\nand maritime associations. He Is convinced German shipping companies\nand constructors, who are responsible\nfor the safety of passengers and crew\nwill find ways and means to provide\neverything necessary.\nA question as to whether international regulations of passenger ship\nirafie is advisable has been introduced\nby the Gorman    government and the\ncompanies are ready to act on any\nprojwsitlon with this end in view. The\nmotion, was  withdrawn.\nBROTHERS  OF ACCUSED\nGIVE  EVIDENCE  FOR CROWN\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nVANCOUVER,    April        21.\u2014On   a\ncharge of having attempted to murder\nOswald Graham Bibbs, a clerk In tho\nNorthern Crown bank on Dec. 18 last,'\nand of having attempted to rob the\noank, Albert Keny has been found\nguilty by the jury in tho assizes. His\nsentence was postponed by JUBtice\nGregary until the end of the assizes.\nKinney was arrested several days\nafter the offense. An unusual circumstance in the trial was that two of\nthe accused man's brothers gave evl-\ndenee for the ..crown.\nA Good Buy\nIn\nouth-East\nCalgary\nEnsures Success\nBut in South-east Calgary, asin any rapidly growing city, you must make sure that\nyou are getting THE BEST.\nOur lots are in THE CENTRE of great\nactivity, and are consequently increasing\nrapidly in value.\nWe are selling on easy terms lots from\n$150 to $350 each, according to location.     Every   lot   gna-anteed  LEVEL.\nLots better suited for building purposes\ncannot be found.\nThe secret of financial success lies\nin placing your capital where it will\nbring you the largest returns.\nWe are showing others the way to\nincrease their incomes. Why not\nyou?\nAct Now\nWestern Provinces Co-operative\nRealty Co., Limited\n417 Ward St.   Nelson, B. C.\nPhono 188.    P. O. Drawer 1107.\n .MONDAY     April  22\nCtt Bail? $rtog.\nPAGE THRE|\nNews of Sport\n\/CUP TIE FINAL\nENDS IN DRAW\nMagnificent    Game    Between     West\nBromwich and Barnsley Before\n60,000 Spectators.\n(Western Associated Press.)\nLONDON, April 20.\u2014Special trains,\nwhich ran from all parts of England,\nbrought 'an Immense crowd lo see West\nBromwich and Barnsley play to a draw\nin the English cup final at tyie Crystal\nPalace grounds this afternoon. Though\nboth goals were often in danger no goal\nhnd been scored when the final whistle\nblow. No more interesting cup final\nhus been fought out for years at the\nfamous grounds than that of today,\nmainly for the fact that both clubs\nhave made good records In their respective leagues.\nThe gloom over England as the result of the Titanic wreck undoubtedly\nkept many away, put In the spacious\nstands and around the ground u dense\nmass of humanity was gnthered.\nWeBt Bromwich, who have been in\nthe semi-final on eight occasions, have\ntwice been successful, in defeating\nPreston in the final in 1888 and Aston\nVilla four years later. Barnsley's only\nother notable fight in Hie cup was two\nyears ago, when, after playing Newcastle United to n draw at the Palace,\nHie club lust at Liverpool by two goals\n,to nil. ..sj^WJJ!.\nSixty Thousand.\nA rough estimate uf the attendance\nplaces the figure at 00,000 persons, and\nthroughout the course of tho contest\nihe up and down nature of the play\nbrought many anxious moments to the\nsuppurturs of both teams. While foul-\nbull in Hie cup final is never good,\ntoday's game-was ah exception for it\nwas one uf the most brilliant finals\never played at the Palace,\nBarnsley's captain won the toss and\nthe Thistles Immediately became aggressive and Tailor failed to place a\nbeautiful centre from Bowser. A break\naway by Barnsley was spoiled by\nTi-avers being uff-slde, Bartropp\nforced a cornel* but It was nut successful. After this the Barnsley goal again\nand .again ^underwent narrow escapes,\n..but the defense was admirable and\nsaved tho day. After some midfietd\nplay by Brattley and Bartropp the latter cleverly eluding Peniilnglun placed\na fine shut, which struck the side of\nthe net;    \u25a0\nIn the second half the Albion continued to lie daiigernus, Cooper, Hie\nBarnsley custodian, being called Upon\nrepeatedly and making many brilliant\nsaves. Pennington broke up tho attack of the Barnsley forwards continually when in shooting distance, his\nplay at back being ono of the outstanding features uf tlie game. The\nAlbion goal was also frequently in danger, especially at Ihree quarter time.\nWhen the great contest was over tho\nwords were: \"Wc must seo tlie next\nstruggle.\"\nSherman, Bowser, Jophcott and Pennington were the best players on tho\nAlbion team and Travel, Bartropp,\nBraltley, Taylor and Cuoper tlie stars\nof the Barnsley event.\nAmong the notables present were the\nbird mayor, Lord Rosebery, Sit' W.\nSuulshy and Lord Kinnalrd, the head\nof the football association.\nFOOTBALL   LEAGUE   GAMES\n(Canadian Associated Press.)\nLONDON.   April  2L\u2014Following\nthe    results    of   yesterday's    fuotball\ngames: , \/.    j al\u00a3\nFirst  Division.\nAston Villa, 2; Newcastle United, 0.\nBury; 1;  Manchester City, 2.\nLiverpool, 2; Sheffield United, 0.\nManchester United, 3; Oldham Athletic, 1.   ' \u25a0+'+\nMlddlesborough-Woolwich Arsenal;\npostponed.\nPreston North End, 0; Sunderland, 1.\n\u25a0Sheffield Wednesday, 3; Everton, 1.\nTottenham Hotspur, 1; Bolton Wanderers, 0.\nSecond Division.'\nBlackpool,   1;   Birmingham,   0.\nBradford, 2; Notjs Forest, 1.\nBurnley, 3;  Huddersfield Town, 0.\nDerby Cbupty, 4; Guinsboru Trinity, 0.\nFulham, 1;  Grimsby Town, 3.\nGtossop-Bristol City;  postponed:\nHull City, 1; Wolverhampton \"Wanderers, 1.\nStuckport County, 2; Leicester\nFosse, 3. \\ j\nGlossop, 3; Bristol, 0.\nSouthern  League.\nBristol Rovers, 1; Brighton ond\nHove, 1.\nWest Ham United, 0; Stoke, 0.\nMilwall Athletic, 2; Coventry City, 1.\nQuetm's Park Rangers, 1; Leyton, 0.\nBrentford, 3; Norwich City, 0.\nExeter City, 1;  Crystal Palnce, 1.   ,\nNew Bromplon, 1; Southampton, 0.\nWatford-Plymoulh Argyle; postponed.\nLuton, 7; Reading, 1.\nSwindon Town, 1; Northampton, 1.\nScottish League.\nPatrick Thistle,  1;  Motherwell,  0.\nCeltic, 1;  Rath Rovers, 1.\nPaisley St. Mlrrqn, 2; Hearts of Midlothian, 0. a21\nAirdrle Onions, 3; Aberdeen, 1.\nFalkirk, 1;  Hibernians, 0.\nDundee, 1; Hamilton Academical, 0.\nQueen's Park, 1; Greenock Norton, 0.\nFriendly Games.\nGlasgow     Rangers,     0;     Woolwich\nArsenal, 0.\nRugby.\nNewport, 10; Plymouth, 3.\nDevon, 7; Gloucester, 3.\nCardiff, 13; Lin nelly. 3.\nSwansea, 14)   Bridgend, 0.\nBristol, 13; Ponlipoul, 19.\nNATIONAL\nEASY WIN   FOR CINCINNATI\nCINCINNATI, O., April 21.\u2014Cincinnati bunched hits In the sixth Inning\ntoday and defeated St. Louis easily by\na score of 7-1. Steel was hit hard\nand W-aodburn was wild, Esmond's\nhome run, with two men on bases in\nthe sixth, was a feature.\nScore: R,  H.  E.\nSt. Louis  T  16     0\nCincinnati    , 7     9     0\nBatteries\u2014Steel, Woodburn and\nBliss;  Fromme and McLean,\nCHICAGO  WALLOPS  PITTSBURG\nCHICAGO, April 21.\u2014Chicago defeated Pittsburg today In the opening\ngame of the season, G-0. Cheney wns\nin fine condition and held tho visitors\nat his mercy. The local team won tlie\ngame by timely hitting coupled Willi\nLolfield's generosity.\nScore: R. H. E.\nChicago     G     9     1\nPittsburg  0     5     1\nButteries\u2014Cheney and Archer; Lol-\nfleld and Gibson.\nPLAY CRICKET HERE\nON  VICTORIA  DAY\n'The Nelson Cricket club has arranged a match with Proctor for\nMay \u00a34, to be played on tho recreation ground here.\nHIGH' SCHOOL  CCORSE\nANOTHEH DaCIDED VICTORY\nThe High School met the C. P. R.\non Saturday uficruoon and again administered a severe defeat, 25-8, The\nC. P. It. showed decided lack uf practice hut hope is still retained that they\nmay yet give a good account of themselves. Tlie High Sehuul will meet\nboth the Hungry Nine and thfi Queen's\nteam on Arbor day. The 'batteries\nwere:\nHigh Sehuul-\u2014Pitts and Curran,\nC. I*. It.\u2014Waters, Turner and W.\nJohnson;\nThe lineup:\nHigh School\u2014Pitts, Curran, Ferguson, Glbbs, Cummins, Graham, Gllker,\nWolverton, Johnstone.\n('. 1'. R.\u2014Waters, W. Johnson,\nGarde, Johnson, McCandlish, Turner,\nBrlggs,   Bishop,   Long.\nDaily News Want Ads. Get Results.\nAT THE SIGN OF\nTHE GOLDEN GUN\nThe Ever-Ready\nMultiple Battery\nThis battery is nut affected by water, dampness or atmospheric conditions and is practically leakage proof. Will last a full season without\nrenewing. Install .one in your boat now nnd you will not have to worry\nover ignition troubles this summer.\nNelson Sporting Goods Co.\nSaturday's Games.\nAl Philadelphia\u2014 R.  H.  13.\nBoston     5     8     2\nPhiladelphia     1    7    1\nBatteries\u2014Perduo and Kllng; Seuton\nand Graham.\nAt Pittsburg\u2014 R. H. E.\nPittsburg     7   11     0\nSt.  l.ouls    0     7     1\nBatteries\u2014Camnita and Gibson;\nHarmon, Dale and Bliss.\nAt Chicago\u2014 R.  H.  B.\nChicago     til\nCincinnati    4     8     3\nBatteries\u2014Richie and Archer; Benton, Suggs, Marsons and McLean.\nAt New York\u2014 R.  H. B.\nBrooklyn     3    r,    1\nNew York     4     8     4\nBatteries\u2014Stack and Envln; Tes-\nreau, Maniuard and Myers and Wilson.\nAMERICAN ]\nBURNS BLEW UP\nDETROIT, April 21.-B111 Burns!\nblew up In the lOtli and Detroit lost a.\nheartbroken pitchers' battle to Cleveland today, 4-0. Butcher's one-handed\ncatch of Gainer's drive Into the crowd-\nfeatured. Jackson was hit on tlie right'\nforearm by a pitched ball in Hie fourtm\nund Birmingham replaced him.\nScore: r. h. Ei\nCleveland     4     4      7\nDetroit     0     5     2\nBatteries \u2014 Kaler and Easterly;\nBurns und StanuRo.\nCHICAGO'S  CLEAN  SWEEP\nST. LOUIS, April 21.\u2014Chicago made\na clean sweep In the opening series\nwith St. Louis, winning Hie final game\nthis afternoon. In the sixth, with one\nout, St. Louis had two men on liases.\nPeters was relieved by Walsh, who\nheld St. Louis to no hits hi the remainder of the game.\nScore: R. H.  E.\nSt. Louts   3     7     3\nChicago     3   13     2\nBatteries\u2014Powell, Allison, Lake and\nStephens;   Peters, Walsh and liluek.\nSaturday's Games.\nAt St. Louis (15 innings).   R.  II.- E,\nSt.   Louis     9     0     G\nChicago     9     9     (i\nBatteries\u2014Baumgardnef and Kry-\nohell:  Scott and Block.\nR.   II.   E\n. 7    14\nEXHIBITION  GAME\nAt New York\u2014 R.  H.  E,\nNow York Nationals  9   12    12\nNew York Americans  2    10     fi\nBatteries\u2014Maxwell, Fuller and Wnt-\nEon;   Hurley, McConnell and Fisher.\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nHOLMES  HIT  FREELY\nNEWARK. N. J., April 21.\u2014Stn 11 Ings'\nBuffalo team walked away with a\ngame from Meainnity's Indians today,\n\u25a01-1. The visitors piled up threo runs\nIn tho third inning at lho expense of\nBub Holmes, who was lilt freely. Gas-\nkell, who relieved Holmes, pitched six\nInnings without giving a hit..\nScore: R.  H. E.\nNewark       1    10      1\nBuffalo     4     4     0\n.Batteries\u2014Holmes, Guskoll undBor-\ngen:  Mui-ut and Mitchell.\nWINS SERIES FROM TORONTO\nJERSEY CITY, April 21.\u2014Jersey\nCity captured the series from Toronto\nthis afternoon with a victory over\nKelly's men  by Hie score of 2-0.\nScore: R.  H. E.\nToronto     0     4     2\nJersey City   2      G     0\nBatteries\u2014Bachman and Fischer;\nDoesoher and Wells.\nBALTIMORE   SHUT  OUT\nBALTIMORE, April 21.\u2014The Wash-\nIngton American league team shut out\ntlie Baltlmoro international team here\ntoday,   3-0.     Score:       . R.   H.   E.\nWashington    3   13    2\nBaltimore     0     9     4\nBatteries\u2014Becker, AInsmith and\nWilliams;  Gantl and Klelnow.\nAl Boston-\nBoston   \t\nNow York     0     3     3\nBatteries\u2014O'Brien, Hale and Nuna-\nmaker and Carrigan; Caldwell, Qulnn,\nVaughn and Street.\nAt Washington\u2014 R.  H.   E.\nPhiladelphia    0    li    2\nWashington     3     I)      7\nBatteries\u2014Coombs, Morgan and\nThumus;  E. Walker and Williams.\nAt Detroit\u2014 R.   H.   E.\nCleveland      a    13      2\nDetroit     II    12      5\nBatteries\u2014Gregg and Easterly; Mullln and Stanage.\nCOAST LEAGUE\nSaturday's Games.\nScore:                                      R. II. E.\nLus  Angeles      4 7 2\nOakland      1 U 3\nScore:\nSan   Francisco   ...\nPortland  \t\nR.\nIT.   10\n\u20221      1\nAMERICAN   ASSOCIATIO\nn\nSaturday's Games,\nScore:\" H.\nMinneapolis    7\nTuled.   f,\nBatteries\u2014 Olmstead      and\nWest and Land.\nThe Handiest Article\nIn a man's wardrobe is a raincoat. It looks dressy in wet or\nfine weather. Mr. Man, don't pay fancy prices. We get our\nraincoats from the leading makers, and are selling them at\nBert Lorsch Prices\nYou ought to know what that means by this time.\nBert Lorsch, Ltd.\nThe Nan's Outfitters\nTremont Hotel Block Open Every Evening\nMARINE AND STATIONARY\nGasoline Engine Repairs\nSteam and Machine Repairs of Every Description.   Out of Town\nOrders Promptly and Accurately Executed.\nSatisfaction Guaranteed\nAshton & Smedley\nWATERFRONT\nP. O. BOX 508\n11\n\u2022Smith\nSaturday's  Games.\nAt Baltimore (1st game)\u2014 R.  H.  E.\nBaltimore     3    9    4\nMontreal    2   12   12\nBatteries\u2014Dygert, ' Alkins   Shuwkey\nand Haynes; Carroll and Roth.\n' At Baltimore (2d game)\u2014  R. H. E.\nBaltimore     9    15     2\nMontreal     3     7     4\nBatteries \u2014 Vickers, Smith and\n-\"uyne; Taylor, Long and Brydges.\nAt Jersey City\u2014 R.   II.   E.\nToronto  4     7     0\nJersey City     2     C     2\nBatteries\u2014Rudolph nnd Fischer;\nSwift, Justis, Mason and Wells.\nM  Newark-\nNewark   \t\niuffalo   \t\nBatteries\u2014Leo,  Gaskell\nBroekeit and Mitchell.\nR.  H.  E.\n,5   g    r.\nScore:\nit. Paul \t\nColumbus \t\nBatteries \u2014 Luroj\nCooke and Smith.\n- Score:\nKansas City   \t\nIndianapolis   \t\nBatteries\u2014Bowel 1\nhall and Clarke.\n2     a\nMum\nmd James;   Kim-\nScore: m    :       R.   H.\nMilwaukee      7      9\nLouisville  ..!  4    13\nBatteries\u2014Nicholson   and   Hughe\nNorilirup and Schloi.\nNORTHWESTERN  LEAGUE\nAt Vancouver\u2014 R.  H.  E,\nVancouver     0     4     1\nTacoma     1     ti     0\nButlerler\u2014Smith and Lewis; Hall\nand Criitenden,\nAt Spukane\u2014 R.   II.  E.\nSpokane  5      1     2\nVictoria     4    10     3\nBatteries\u2014Leonard and Ostdeik;\nKaufman and Meek.\nAt Seattle\u2014                           R. IT.  E.\nSeattle    13 S     2\nPortland     4 0     2\nBatteries \u2014 Ingersoll and Shea;\nHirsch and Harris.\nVANCOUVER MAN\nSHOOTS WELL\nJack   Forbes Breaks  All  but Seven  at\nHundrad   Targots\u2014Archie   Bishop\nH'3h   Amateur.\nThere was a large attendance al\nthe weekly shout of the Nelson Gut-\nclub on Saturday afternoon. J. Forbos\nof Vancouver, was a guest uf Hie clu\nand made the good score uf 93 out of\n100 targets. A. Bishop was high ama\ntear with H\" mil uf 75 and llarr\nCramer a close second wilh li'\nOther seures   made  were as follows\nAt 109 targets:\u2014Jack Forbes, 93.\nAt. 75 targets:-\u2014A. Bishop. U7; II. B.\nCramer, lili: I\u00bb. B. McDougal, 02;\nJames Brassfie'd. (il; Carl Larson. 58;\nR. Grubb. 52.\nAt 50 targets: ll. Blsmark, 11; M.\n.1. Morgan, 40; W. A. Ward, 34; 13.\nFoster,   25.\nAt 25 targets:\u2014Prlchnrd. is.\nDoubles:\u2014A.   Bishop;   13  pairs,\nD. It. McDougal,   12 pairs, 10.\nGYM BOYS PLAN\nFANCY EXERCISES\nFigure Marches, Marching Calisthenics\nnnd   Frse   Exercises   at   Opera\nHouse Friday Evening.\nThe junior Y. M. C, A. gymnasium\nclass will give an exhibition of fancy\nfigure marching, marching calisthenics\nand free exercises at the exhibition In\nllie opera house on Friday evening of\ntills week and the class members have\nbeen practising for Hie events very\nsteadily for some time past. The iu-\nlormodlate class is scheduled for a\ndisplay of wand pyramids and fancy\nsteps, With double bar bell drill. The\nhigh school class $vlli give an exhibition of dumb-bell drill, and the young\nmen's class will perform drills with\nsteel wands that are very effective,\n\u25a0lames Thompson, the Y. M. C. A. physical director, is supervising Hie entire\nprogram and rehearsing the respective\nclasses in their work. A full dress rehearsal will be held in the opera huuso\ntomorrow evening at 8 o'clock,\nCRANBROOK BASEBALL LEAGUE\n(Special lo The Daily News.)\nC.RAXHUOOK, B. 0., Aipril 21.\u2014At a\nmeeting held at the Y.M.C.A. it was\ndecided to form a Cranbrook city base-\nbnii league, to be comprised of five\nteams as follows: C.P.R,, Y.M.C.A..\nCubs.   Methodists,   and  Commercials.    A\nlug arranged. Now ground)\nbaseball were donated b.v\nor west of the governmem\nwill bo immediately put \u2022>\nLACROSSE  MEETING.\nled  wire.)\nThe Dunlin.\n(By   Daily  New\nTORONTO, Ai\nion lacrosse season delegates after being session from 10:80 o'clock this\nmorning until 1 o'clock adjourned for\nluncheon, The adoption of the constitution wns the only business accomplished, the delegates coming lo\na deadlock in the schedule discussion. George Kennedy stated that lit\nbad an option on both On- national\ngrounds and tho Montreal basi\ngrounds to play his games, and that\nhe would use wlilch ever one was bos'\nfor him according tn schedule. Ai\nexhibition game will be played In Mon\nreal with the Nationals ',11 May 11\nand on May IS the Nationals and Irisli\nAmericans wil ploy an exhibition\ngame. Dr. CoiiBtneau stated thut\nthought from present indications th\nthe Nationals would open the regular\nseason In Toronto, wilh oho of tin\nlocal teams, and il was learned that\nthe Nationals would play the Toronto'\nall star on May is. Charlie Queorl-\noffered tu trade Jack Shea, who wa\na Lotted  tn  the  Tocumsehs   for  Nick\n>d   Ki\nthem on. It\nanother sec\nhoped   that\nth\n1   signs\nwill be\n-\u25a0hen    it    IE\n;iil  be do-\nFRANKFURT   TURNED\nTO   ASSIST   TITANIC\nBREMEN, April 21.\u2014Tho North\nGerman Lloyd Steamship company\nhas issued tho following statement\nafter taking under ndvisemont the\nstatement made by Harold Bride, the\nassistant wireless operator of the Titanic, regarding the steamer Frankfurt:\n\"Wo sent 0 win-less message to the\nPrankfurl and have Just rece wd the\nfollowing reply: Tin- steamer Frankfurt turned north immediately after\ngetting ibe signal nf distress and arrived at 12:50 at the scene of the disaster. The distance WKa I-10 miles.\nWe found ihe steamers Birma, Virginian and Carpathia there. (Signed)\nHatlurf.' \"\nGOVERNOR   IMPEACHED   FOR\nEXECUTION   OF   EDITOR\n(Bv Dally  News Leased  Wire.}\nHONGKONG,     China,     April     22.\u2014\nFears are entertained of further serious disorders iu Canton.    Thousands\nsoldiers   have   returned   from   the\nnorth   In   a   slate of   discontent     and\ne   been  d'sbandod.    The   governor\nand general in command have bee.\nimpeached for the execution of a Chinese editor. The provincial assemb\nand populace condemn the arbitral,\naction, Several officials have resign^:\nbecause the governor has been'\npointing his clansmen to office.\nWest river is bong patrolIe-J to kef\noff tho pirates. Dr.. Sun Yat Sen. tl\nex-provlslonul president, is due lo aj\nrive here tomorrow.\nTF\nDOCTOR   CHARGED  WITH\nABDUCTING   HIS  CHIL\n(Bv  Dally   News Leased \"Wire.)\nOTTAWA,   April   21.-OH   a   charge\nabducting his child, the Ottawa police a\n\u25a0 '  g fur Dr. rharles F. Magef\nilly In'the 1\na! nf !\u2022'\u2022\u25a0\nhill.\nproi\nmil- Mi-liae.\nntonced to 11\nting <>r Willi!\nhe\ntment nl  the\nyou and  Victoria streets, -\u2022.\nwas   living,   lu   see   the   I\nwent   fur  11   drive,  and  o\nis   Mrs.   Magee  stepped   oi\nhe doctor drove away will\nSAY   HE  STOLE  CALF\nfRv  Dally  News  Leased  Wire.)    '\nSTKTTI.KIt.    Alta..    April  H.-MoL;\nordon   of   Big   Valley,   formerly   a\n\u25a0jrter at Scollard,  was arrested yest\nable   Wheatle;     \"\n:ed police ami brought i\n\u25a0 burn\ncharged with ihe ofrense this 1\nand after a lengthy hearing fouin\nand  committed   fur trial.\nBOY   BURGLARS   CAPTURED |\n(By   Dally  News  Leased -Wire.l\nEDMONTON,  Alta,,   April 21.\u2014F.\ntmys.   ranging   In   ago   from   10   to I\nyears were taken into custody by i|\npolice   this   afternoon,   following\nrobbery of several local bouses durjH\nthe   last   week   and   the   dlscove\na large amount uf booty ranging frit package of cheap tobacco to rev\ners and gold watches cached undo\nabandoned house on  Fifth street\nn'ght. The buys were taken to the\npolice  station and confessed.\nWhen planting vines fur shade .\nthe kitchen porch try the .common 1\nbean   vine,   for   ibis   yields   bountlftf\nof   Its   fruit   nnd   Hie     foliage\nbeautiful and dense. ,Yuu can also p|\nhe beans easily.\nWhen     Hie     purcelain   bowl   nf\ntoilet becomes discolored, dip out\nwater and   pour  into  the  bowl   ah\na quart of vinegar,   l.et It stand fo\n.\u25a0milde   nf   hours  or  mure,   then   fl\nthe bowl, and It will be found that\n'DAMON AND PYTHIAS\n PA6E FOUR \u00abm*WTWW\u00bb\u00bb\nCfie \u00aeaHO&rto&\nMONDAY  T.-.TTTTT..'....   Ai\nCi)f Baity Jieh)-aL\nPublished   at   Nelson   Every   Morning\nExcept Sunday, by\nThe News Publishing Company,\nLimited\nW. G. FOSTER, Editor and Manager.\nMONDAY, APRIL 22\n\"THESE   ARE   THE   TIMES   Th\nTRY MEN'S SOULS\"\nFrom the dark page that tells the\ntale of the Titanic tragedy the story\nof the scenes of heroism and devotion\nto duty that were enacted on the decks\nof the doomed liner during the last\nhour before she plunged beneath the\nwaves stands forth in letters of fire.\nThere is cause enough for sorrow\nand regret. The most callous cannot\nfall to hnve his pity deeply touched\nby the magnitude of the calamity, by\nthe awful loss of life, by Hie sufferings\nof the survivors, by the anguish of\nthose whose dear ones have been\nsnatched from them by the greedy sea\nwithout warning and with no opportunity for farewell. There must be\nIndignation that the prime duty of\ntransportation companies to safeguard\nthe lives of those committed to their\ncharge should have been unheeded in\nthe rivalry of steamship lines and in\nthe frantic craving for si?.e and speed.\nChances were taken for which no excuses can be admitted. An atmosphere\nof security was created that was false,\nand that those in authority must have\nknown to be false. Precautions were\nneglected. An obsolete law failed to\ninsure adequate safeguards, and the\nWhite Star company availed itself of\nthe laxity of the regulations. Had sufficient lifeboats been provided not one\nof tho sixteen hundred lives sacrificed\nIn the Titanic disaster need havo been\nlost.\nIt Is a sorrowful rhapler in the history of lho sea, but its ending stirs\nthe blood and awakens pride and admiration. Not since the Royal George\n\u25a0 went down in Portsmouth harbor on\nthat fateful August day in 1782 has a\nmore splendid picture qf superb courage been shown to the world. After\nthe Titanic struck the officers and\ncrew lived up to the best traditions of\nthe sea, and the passengers, with\nhardly an exception, displayed gallantry and serene heroism that will\nlong live In the memory of the world.\nCaptain Smith's exordium \"Be British\" was nobly obeyed, and the captain\nhimself set an example of magnificent\ncoolness   and   devotion   to   duty.     He\nDon't\nPay\nRent\nGood\nOpportunities\nAt Low Prices\nNo. 1.\u2014Neat cottage, 4 rooms;\ncity water; electric light; $1,000\nonly. Owner will accept $300\ncash; balance monthly same as\nrent.\nNo, 2.\u2014Two lots on good corner\n13 fruit trees; four rooms; city\nwater and light. Price $1,350.\nTerms $400 cash; balance to\nsuit buyer.\nNo. 3.\u2014Three minutes from\nBaker street; four large rooms;\nbath H & C, etc. One room\nwants finishing. A good investment at $1,000. Terms open to\noffer.\nNo. 4.\u2014Furnished house; five\nrooms, all conveniences; corner\nlot; price $1,650. Terms ?650\ncash; balance $20 ptr month\nNo. 5.\u2014-Four lots and newly\nbuilt four roomed cottage; largo\nbasement; situated city end of\nFairview: prlco $1500. Terms\none-third cash, balance easy\npayments.\nNo. 6,\u2014Fifty foot lot with seven\nroomed house; needs little repairing; on car line; price\n$1,150. Terms $100 cash; balance easy  payments.\nNo. 7.\u2014Threo roomed house,\nlarge basement; four lots; well\nbuilt chicken run; bearing fruit\ntrees; price $1,375. Terms $275\ncash; balance same as rent.\nMcQuarrie & Robertson\nReal Estate, Fruit Lands.\nFirs,  Life,  Accident   Insurance.\nAt  Our  New  Offices\nMadden Blook Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 6*\nordered Hie closing of the watertight\ncompartments, personally gave instructions for the issue of the wireless\ncall for assistance and then from the\nbridge superintended the launching of\nthe lifeboats and the rescue of the\nwomen and children. At the last he\nresisted offers of assistance, preferring,\ntc go down with his ship. Whatever\nmistakes he may have made he died\nnobly and set an example at the end\nunsurpassed In the history of naval\ndisasters.\nThe officers nnd crew responded\ngallantly to their captain's example.\nTo the last splendid discipline prevailed and the safety of the passengers\nwas always the first consideration.\nNo more consummate heroism can be\nImagined than that shown by the ship's\nband, the members of which cheered\nthe last moments and allayed panic\nwith music while death looked them\nin the face, nor than that of the wireless operator, who, without a thought\nfor his own safety, continued to send\ncalls for aid as the Titanic sank beneath his feet. Stewards buckled on\nlifebelts for the passengers in their\neuro, sailors handed the women and\nchildren to seats in the lifeboats and\nlaunched the craft, well knowing that\nthey were casting adrift their last\nchance for life.\nNor were the passengers, men and\nwomen, rich and poor, less heroic.\nThere was no panic, no fruitless lamentation. Orders were promptly\nobeyed. Men made way for women,\nand at the end died the death of heroes.\nIt was nobly done. It was an example\nof supreme courage that no battlefield\ncan surpass. It was a triumph of\npluck and self-sacrifice that has few\nequals and that does much to relieve\nthe horror of Hie disaster.\nWhat the Press Is Saying\nTwo Things Indicated.\nThat big New York hotel that had\n' change its dainty, esthetic liquor\nbuffet for women into a common bar\nfor men, because the women would\nnot patronize it, seems to prove two\nthings: First, that the stories of the\ndrink habit among women are greatly\nexaggerated; and, Beeond, that it's always safe to start another bar fur\nmen.\u2014Judge.\nTo St. Helena With Them.\nEngland once got rid of that great\ndisturber, Napoleon, by sending him to\nSt. Helena. Why cannot these suffragettes be herded together and sent\nto some similar place, only farther\naway if possible?\u2014Ottawa Free Press.\nWhat  About  It?\nWith the caution of science, the two\nGermans who have been so successful\nwith cancer in mice warn the world\nnot to conclude yet that tho terrible\ndisease is about to be controlled in\nii.mankind. Suppose, however, that\nhe optimistic view Is right and that\nhe cure can be transferred to man,\nire the aniivivlsectionists of our proud\n\u25a0onntry going tu stand idly by and let\n-aiicer be conquered without a blow un\nheir part for the mice? They have\nntruduced another \"Investigation\" hill\nn the New York legislature, to substitute their knowledge and judgment\nfor the knowledge and judgment of our\nbest scientific bodies, but is that quite\nugh? Summer approaches; what\nthese humane societies doing for\nprotection of the mosquitoes and\nflies7-r-Cpllier's Weekly.\nCold Storage\n\"l hear we have to congratulate you,\nCapt. dabble-by.    Is It a boy?\"\n\"Partly right, dear lady.   Guess again!\"\n\"Not a pair?\"\n\"No; three of a kind. And 'pon iny\nsoul, they pretty nearly make a full\nhouse.\"\u2014Tatler.\nThe Phrenologist\u2014Bless my soul, sir,\nyour -bump of destructlveness Is most\nabnormally large. You must be a\nsoldier.\nOh, dear no, I'm a chauffeur.\u2014Sketch.\n\"Malbel, your'e wasting your time -with\nthnt young Mr. ='ormkley. I don't think\nhi'   has  any  idea  of Ihecoming serious.\"\n\"Oil, mother you're mistaken. He told\nme last night that his hat was In the\nring. All I've gut to do now is to show\nhim that somebody else wants mo.\"\u2014\nChicago Record-Herald.\nScribbler\u2014It took me nearly 10 years to\nlearn  that I coiidn't write poetry.\nFriend\u2014Gave It up then, did vou?\nScrlbbler-Oh, no. By that time I had\na reputation.\u2014-Puck.\nThe Weather\n(Bv Dally News Leased Wire.)\nTORONTO, April 21.\u2014The disturbance\nhlcli was over the southwest states on\nSaturday is just now west of Lake\nM Ichlgan. There have been falls of\nsnow and rain In upper Ontario, but\nelsewhere In Canada fine weather pre-\nvallcs.\nMin Max.\nNelson  ..-    3.1        78\nVictoria       44        58\nVancouver       44        62\nCalgary ..-    32        Rl\nMoose Jaw     29        61\nRegina        22 6\u00ab\nWinnipeg  *.   22       40\nPort   Arthur       28 31\nParry Sound     32        (12\nLondon    \u25a0    20        CA\nToronto       30 Bfi\nKingston      32        EG\nOttawa    92        C2\nMontreal     34       00\nQuefhec       30        K\nHalifax       34        68\nFirst Things\nVICTOR RECORDS\nOut Today\nA Few Gems from the -April List\n10-INCH   DOUBLE-FACED\n90c FOR THE TWO SElECTIONs\n17044\u2014Ragtime Violin\u2014Turkey Trot\nSurprise  Medley Overture - \u2022\n17052\u2014Bring  Back My Lovin'  Man\nHear the Pickaninny  Band\n17053\u2014The  Long  Day Closes\nHo! Jolly Jonkin ...\nA new record by a famous Canadian 'Cellist,\nVictor Military Band\nPryor's  Band\nAda Jones\nPeerless Quartet\nOrpheus Quartet\nOrpheus Quartet\nRosariu  Bourdon\n12 INCHES\u2014PRICE $1.25\n31857\u2014Widmung - 'Cello Solo\nA new record of the most famous of all operatic selections\n96201\u2014Lucia\u2014Chi mi frena\u2014Sextette\nSung  by   Caruso,   Tetruzzlnl,   Amato, -Journet,   Jacoby,  Bada\nCaruso's Second English Ballad\n87095\u2014 Love  Is   Mine j\nThe great Canadian Tenor, Edmond Clement, sings\n64233\u2014Jocelyn Berceuse\nDon't miss the wonderful Victor puzzle record\n121000\u2014Six selections on one disc .... $1,00\nHear these records today at your dealers\nBerliner Gram-o-phone Co., Ltd.\nMONTREAL\nAn Ideal Mixed Farming and\nC\u201ef j.1_   Po-r\u00bb\/>V\u00bb  One of the Show Places of\n\u2022UdUie  JXdllCil the Pend d'Oreille Valley\n200 acres of first class fanning land and URO acres of excellent grazing\nland. Nice roomy house, 2 barns, chicken house, office, storehouse, sheds\nand corrals, Good crop of hay and alfalfa; 7<> hearing trees, principally Wagner and GravenBteln, All kinds of a mail fruits, filbert bushes, tomatoes,\nmelons, squashes, grapes and tobacco .successfully grown. Bight acres under\ncultivation.   Good  water supply with connections to house.\nImprovements cost $4,000.\nOwner will step out und sell at\n$30 per Acre\nfor the whole 850 acres, Including tools, implements and house furniture,\nTerms one-third cash, balance one and two years at C per cent interest.\nItoiit forget that the new railroad which    is    coming      down    tne    Pond\nd'Oreille valley must pass within half a mile of this ranch.\nP. J. GLEAZER & CO.\nBox 316. 412 Ward Stroot. Nelson, B. C.\nBring Us\nAny mail order house advertisement re Edison\nPhonographs or Victor Gramophones and we will\nshow you that you can save money by buying\nright here from us.\nThe cheapest place to buy these goods for  people   In   this  district\nIs right here,\nW. G. THOMSON\nPhone 34      Bookseller and Stationer     Nelson, B. C.\nthe Brazilian government, after considering the evidence, have finally decided in\nfavor of Cabral. The \"Columbus of\nBrazil\" named the land \"Terra da Santa\nCruz,\" or \"Land of the Holy Cross,\"\nand, taking possession In the name of\nthe Portuguese monarch, explored a considerable section of the country. Brazil,\nso called after the red dyewood found\nIn Its forests, was first colonized In In-IO,\nbecame an Independent empire in 182-J,\nand a republic in 3SS9. The area of\nBrazil is almost as large as that of the\nUnited States.\nJOURNALISTS\nELECT OFFICERS\nThe first white man to set foot on the\nsoil of Brazil was Fodro Alvarez Cabral,\na Portuguese navigator, who landed not\nfar from the -present city of Bahla 412\nyears ago today, April 22, 1600.   Credit for\ntlie   discovery   of  the  country   lias  been   .\u201e ,       .,    .   ,..,,,- ....\ngiven to otliera, hut the Investigators at  Toronto, Fort Wlllium, Winnipeg and\nResolutions of Sympathy With    Relatives  of W,  T.  Stead\u2014Conference\nis Postponed\u2014New Districts\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nMONTREAL, April 21.\u2014The Canadian division of the British Institute\nof Journalists held their first annual\nmeeting at the Royal Guardians building on Saturday evening, tho Inaugural meeeting having boon hold on April\n0, 1811, and the formation of the division formally ratified by the London\ncouncil, at tho executive meeting In\nMay, 1911. A. K. Crone, retiring\nchairman, presided. The secretary, J.\nJ. Gallagher, reported 112 now members during the year, Including representatives   frum   Montreal,   Ottawa,\nVancouver, and bringing the present\nmembership of the Canadian division\nto slightly over 200. Two new local\ndistricts, Ottawa and Fort William\nwere formed. It was announced that\nthe scheme of a conference of British\njournalists at Montreal In 1912 was\npostponed until 1013 in order that a\nlarger and more representative\ngathering might be arranged. A resolution of sympathy with the relatives\nof the late W. T. Stead, a member of\nthe   London   division   was   passed.\nThe executive elected for the coming\nyear are: Chairman, Harry Bragg,\nCanadian Municipal Journal; first\nvice chairman, Fred Cook, Ottawu,\nrepresentative London Times; second\nvice-chairman, A. Mousseau, La\nPntrie; honorary secretary, William\nStuart, Montreal Herald; honorary\ntreasure^, Miss M. Meldrum, Montreal\nGazette; honorary auditor, G. II. Jackson; executive committee: A. K.\nCrone, honorary correspondent for\nCanada, Montreal Standard; P. D.\nRoss, Ottawa Journal; J. J. Gallagher, Acton Publishing company;\nGeorge Maedonald, Canadian Press\nassociation; R. Cnrmlchnel, Montreal\nWitness; Rev. Cnnon Chambers. Montreal Standard; James Mulr, Ottawa\nJournal;   Henry Button, Cassell's.\nMELVILLE\nThe Youngest Great City\nof the Future\nTHINK  OF THIS\nIn the year 1909 the building activities in the city of Moose Jaw amounted\nto (50,000 less than the 1912 expenditures to complete Melville's building\nprogram\u2014yet Moose Jaw had over,ten\nthousand people in that year, as\nagainst the present population of her\nyoung sister to the northeast. Tbe\nfigures  speak very eloquently:\u2014\nMoose Jaw Buildings,\n1909 $512,000\nMelville's  Buildings,\n1912 ;... $563,000\nThat over half a million dollars\nshould be Invested In structural Melville with her threo thousand people,\nIs a record without a parallel even\nIn this fast growing western Canada.\nIn IMS Saskatoon, the city which is\ntoday setting the pace for civic development in the west, had a building expenditure of less than $120,000;\nso that the growth of tlie cities In\nthe next decade cannot he based upon\nany past achievenmeuts.\nFrom the Lips of Charles\nMelville Hays:\nPresident of the Gtrand Trunk Pacific\nrailway:\n\"We shall he able to put 2,000 tons\nof freight Into Prince Rupert behind\na single engine\u2014as against 298 tons\nbehind a single engine Into Vancouver\nover Canadian Pacific lines.\" And\nagain: \"The Grand Trunk Pacific\ncuts off the far east, say Yokohama,\nFIFTEEN HUNDRED MILES FROM\nNEW YORK, compared with the San\nFrancisco route, nnd FIVE HUNDRED MILES leas than the Canadian\nPaciric route.\"\nWe are living in a competitive age;\nthe principal of the survival of the\nfittest Is very much alive today, and\ntoo safest, fastest road will get the\ntraffic. Melville, therefore, is linked\nup to the Grand Trunk Pacific railway ond her destiny will be shaped\naccordingly; just on the same basis\nns that Prince Rupert must become,\non the opening of the Panama canal,\none of the greatest grain ports ot\nthe world. So, too, will the opening\nof the Hudson Bay to the grain and\ncommerce of the Nations forge MELVILLE Into one of the greatest and\nbusiest traffic centres in this country.\nMELVILLE\nChoice  residential  lots  from   $125.\nAcreage for subdivision purposes adjoining city limits $150 nnd $200 per\nacre that will make a fortune for the\nInvestor.\nWrite us today for full particulars\nor see our representative, TV. A. E.\nWall, 315 Baker street, Nelson, B.C.,\nP.O.  Box 813.\nThe J.Rowan Company\nMelville, Sask.\nA PLEASANT VOICE\nNothlnB   so   betrays    tho    habitual\nmood ot a member of, the human race\nA Letter\nProctor, B. C, April 2, 1912\nTHE PITNER LIGHT CO.,\nNelson, B. C.\nGentlemen:\nI have very great pleasure\nIn stating that I am perfectly satisfied with the four fixtures you fitted\nIn my house. During the two years\nthey have been running I have never\nhad the slightest difficulty and can\nalways depend upon having; perfectly\nsteady and good light. I have found it\nvery economical as compared with\noilier lumps. I hesitated at first having your system installed as I considered it rather expensive, but I can\nassure you that I should be very sorry\nlo discontinue it now and can thoroughly recommend it to others,\nYours faithfully\nGEORGE F. DANIELL,\nPostmaster\nFor Sale\nSoveral teams of heavy horses suitable for  ranch work or logging.\nWest Transfer Co,\nPhone 33\nThe B. C. Assay and\nChemical Supply Co.\nLimited\nLaboratory equipment for assayers\nand chemists. Complete assay outfits\nfurnished. Agents for Way's Pocket\nSmelter outfits for prospectors and\nmining men.\n513 Pender St., Vancouver. B. C.\nus his voice. Careless habits make\na voice unpleasant, perhaps, when\nsterling virtues of goodness echo on\nit, too; the pit Is that tho unpleasantness should be  there.\nPeople who would be mortified to\nmispronounce such a word, for instance, as indissoluble, and who\nweigh the pros and cons of the rolled\nor obliterated \"r,\" seem actually never\nto have noticed whether the voice Is\nplaced rightly, free from nasality\u2014\nwhich means with open nasal resonance\u2014or from the pinch and tension\nwhich makes a hard sound.\nSome one has said that the desire\nto speak first Is what makes a voice\nsharp or hard, while a self-effacing\nattitude of thought never is expressed\nn strident or loud tones. Conscious\neffort to express sweetness and light\nin the speaking tones, as a singer tries\nlo express them, will do marvels for\nthe most unlessoned, but true, clear\nand gentleness of thought is the best\nrecipe for a pleasant voice.\nLook!   Look!\nDo You Read?\nTHE BARRIER\u2014By Rex Beach.\nTHE    SILVER    HORDE\u2014By   Rex\nBeach.\nTHE SPOILERS\u2014By Rex Beach.\nTHAT PRINTER OP UDELLS\u2014\nBy Harold Bell WrlEht. author ot\n\"The Winning of Barbara Worth.\"\nTHE SHEPHERD OF THE HILLS\ni\u2014By same author.\nTHE   CALLING   OF   DAN   MATTHEWS\u2014By same author.\nGOING SOME\u2014By Rex Beach.\nTHE FRONTIERSMAN\u2014By Cody.\nADVENTURE\u2014By Jack London.\nWHEN GOD LAUGHS\u2014By Jack\nLondon.\nTHE MAIDS OF PARADISE\u2014By\nRobt. W. Chambers.\nLORRAINE\u2014By Robt. W. Chambers.\nYOUNGER SET\u2014By Robt. W.\nChambers.\nAny of the Above Now Selling\nAt 75c\nHundreds of titles to choose from.   Look them over.\nCanada Drug & Book Co., it*.\nPhone 81        Nelson's Pioneer Drag Store      P.O. Box 502\nMAIL ORDERS A SPECIALTY\nThe Canadian Bank\nof Commerce\nSIR   EDMUND   WALKER,   C.V.O.,\nLLD.,   D.C.L.,   President\nALEXANDER   LAIRD,    Gen.   Mgr.\nCapital  .$11,000,000\nRest     9,000,000\nTravellers' Cheques\nIssued by the Canadian Bank of\nCommerce are the most convenient\nform In which to carry money wnen\ntraveling. They are negotiable everywhere, self-identifying, and the exact\namount payablo in the principal foreign countries is printed on the face\nof every cheque. The cheques are\nIssued In denominations of\n$10, $20, $50, $100 and $200\nnny may be obtained on application\nat the bank.\nIn connection with Its Travelers'\nCheques The Canadian Bank of Commerce has issued a booklet entitled\n\"Information of Interest to Those\nabout to Travel,\" which will be sent\nfree to anyone applying for It.\nNelson  Branch, J. 3. Munro, Mgr.\nBank of Montreal\nESTABLISHED 1817\nCapital all  paid-up  $16,000,000\nRest     15,000,000\nHEAD OFFICE:   MONTREAL\nRt.    Hon.    Lord    Strathcona    and\nMount  Royal, G.C.M.G.,  Hon. Pres.\nR. B. Angus, Esq,, President\nSir    Edward    S.   Clouston,    Bart.,\nVice-President\nH. V. Meredith, Esq., Gen. Manager\nBranches in British Columbia\nArmstrong, Athalmer, Chilllwack,\nCloverdale, Enderby, Greenwood, Hos-\nmer, Kamloops, Kelowna, Merritt,\nNelson, New Denver, New -Westminster. Nicola, Penticton, Port Albernl,\nPort Haney Prince Rupert, Princeton, Rossland, Summerland, Vancouver. Vancouver (Main street). Vernon,\nVictoria,  West Summerland.\nNelson Branch, L. B. DeVeber, Mgr.\nImperial Bank of\nCanada\nHEAD OFFICE:   TORONTO\nCapital   Authorized   .....$10,000,000\nCapital   Paid-up        6,000,000\nReserve Fund      6,000,000\nTotal Assets  72,000,000\nD. R. Wilkie, President\nHon.  Robert Jaffray, Vioe-Pres.\nBranches  In British Columbia:\nArrowhead, Chase, Cranbrook, Fernle,\nGolden,     Kamloops,     Michel,     New\nMichel,  Nelson, Revelstoke,  Vancouver, victoria and Wilmer.\nA  general banking  business transacted.\nSAVINGS  DEPARTMENT\nInterest allowed on deposits at current rate from date of deposit.\nNelson Branch,  J.H.D.Benson,  Mgr.\nThe Royal Bank\nof Canada\nIncorporated 1869\nCapital   Paid-up    $   6,200,000\nReserved and Undivided\nProfits         7,200,000\nTotal  Assets     100,000,000\nHEAD OFFICE:    MONTREAL\n1C5 branches in Canada and Newfoundland; IS agencies in Cuba and\nPort Rico. British West Indies: Bahamas\u2014Nassau; Barbadoes\u2014Bridgetown ; Jamaica\u2014Kingston; Trinidad\u2014\nPort of Spain and San Fernando.\nLondon, England, 2 bank buildings,\nPrinces street. E. C. Now York City,\nCS William street.\nBusiness accounts carried upon favorable terms. Savings department\nat ull branches.\nNelson Branch,  A. B. Netherby, Mgr.\nJOHN BURNS & SON SS\nNelson Pinning Mill, Sash nnd Door Factory\u2014Factory and Yards, 706-12 Vernon,\nstreet. Doors, Sash, Mouldings In stock and to order. Coast Lath and Shingles.\nTurned Work and Brackets. Cement, Brick and Lime always In stock. Automatic Knife Grinder\u2014all kinds of grinding done. Store Fronts and Office Fittings, etc., a specialty. Estimates given on stone, brick and all kinds of worit.\nMoving and raising buildings and setting plate glass. Guaranteed against\ndamage,    P.   O.   Box 184.    Telephone Hi.\nBrooke's Motors\nWe arc agents for the Kootenays for\nthis famous English Motor. Cadi and\nsee ono demonstrated. We will convince you of its superior merits.\nLaunches, boats, canoes to soil or\nhire.\nAgents for Peterboro canoes.\nNelson Boat & Launch Co., Ltd.\nJ. W. ASTLEY, Manaaer\nPhon. 154 P.O. Box 145\nCarpet Cleaning\n10c   PER   SQUARE   YARD.\nWork called for and delivered promptly.\nClothes of all kinds cleaned, renovated,\ndyed and repaired.\nGents' suits cleaned and pressed, 75c to\nJ2.    Dyed,  (3.\nLadles' skirts cleaned, Jl; dyed, J2.\nGloves  cleaned,  25c to  50c.\nSpeclnl rates for hotels, restaurants\nand steamers.\nFamily washing, rough dry, 35c dozen.\nNelson Steam Laundry\nGM-G03   VERNON   STREET.\nTelephone 146. PAUL NIPOC, Prop.\nw\no\n\u25a0*\u2022>\nes\nA\nH\n' MB. 9               _\nii.\niz^JLss=\u00a3k\n9mtna      '\nHa l\u00a3J|\ng\u201e*Jr\u00abt\nJl\nUsi^J\n'\u25a0      fi---*\n* '\ne-.,'*\\\n\u00a33\nill\ns2\u00a3*3\n7-  ..\n7 .. \u00ab\n\u2022s=^^==sJ\n7 \u25a0\u25a0 '\u25a0*j\n5\u2014^^w\n7\u00bb  ..\nIIv\n^\"1^^\n6'..  \u00bb\n6-   \u2022*\nmil\n\"   w         (\nj..  -\ns\u00bb -\n\u2022\u25a0  ti - ;.,\n4~    ~.\n. rf..      \u2022\u00bb\n-     9\nrf..      \u2022'\nnip*\nIDEAL WIRE FENCE\nWc have just put into stock a carload of the above fenco In the following sizes:\n26-inch  Hog  Fence. 48-Inch   Poultry   Fence.\n40-inch   Farm   Fence. 48-inch   Farm   Fence.\nThe Ideal fenco Is mndo of extra quality nard drawn wire and mado\nto stand lots of strain. Tho Dominion government used it exclusively\nin fencing the Buffalo Park at Wainwright, Alta.\nWrite for catalogue and  prices.\nNelson Hardware Co.\nSportsmen's Headquarters\nNelson, B. C.\n 40f\nMONDAY ......-tt.%...  April 23\nCtie Baity $etoa.\nPAGE  FIVE\nBell Trading Co.\nWe Don't Need\nYour Honey,\nBut\nWe aro after\nYour Trade\nWe want your monthly account.\nAll you noed is a reliable reference\nto do business With us,\nWhen it1 comes to a cpicslion of\nquality, price and service we lead.\nSomo of our competitors make a\nlot of fuss When they try to meet\nour ordinary prices.\nSeasonable\nSuggestions\nNico new Prunes, 2 lbs. 25c.j 25\nlb| box $2.50.\nLarger size, 15c. lb,, $3 per box.\nExtra large, fancy prunes, ZUc.\nlb.,.$4.00 box.\nCooking Fig\nSpecial\n10c. Ib.r or $2.00 box\nSome Canned\nSpecials\nCalifornia Apricots,  can    25c.\nPeas,  large car.  20c.\nEurtlelt   Pears,   largo   can   \"in\nheavy   Syrup    35c.\nPeiiches,   largo  can    ..20c.\nCrawford Peaches. In heavy syrup,   large   can.    35c.\nPineapple, 1% lb., sliced, 2 for 35o.\nAssorted table fruits, in 2 lb. cans\n6   cans   for   $1.10.\nLombard Plums\nand Blueberries\n..$1.00\n., .85\n.. .85\n.. .75\n..    .85\nTomatoes, tl  cans   \t\nBeans, 6 cans  \t\nPeas,  fi  cans   \t\nCorn,  fi cans   \t\nPumpkin, fi cans  \t\nCereals\nCorn   Flakes,  6 for 55c.\nQuaker Oals, large premium packet, 35c, each.\nOgiivie's Scotch Rolled Oats, 4\nlb, packet 25c, -\"\nMalta Vita, 2 pks. Z5o.\nSt. Charles Cream\n2   large  cans  25c.\nWhat's the Matter\nWith Your\nCoffee ?\nIf you are not suited, ours ought\nto fill tbo bill. Fresh roasted;\nground as you need it by the latest Improved method. Delightfully\nfragrant, delicious flavor. No mat-\ntor tho price, blended to our order,\n30c,.  40c,   and  50c.\nEvery price a specialty, and wo\nguarantee every   one.\nOur Teas\nAre the envy of our competitors.\n\"You can't buy them nt any other\nstoro. They are our own creations.\nWe save you 10c. a pound on your\ntea bill, 25c, 35c, 40c and 50c,\nBell Trading\nCo.\nThe Up-to-Date\nGrocers\nUse Phone 56\nHOTEL ARRIVALS OF A DAY\nThe Hume\nTable d'Hota and a la Carta\nJTUMK\u2014Mr. and Mrs. Pert Lorsch, D;\nII. Whitehead, It. L. Hlrsclt, tt. A.\nAndrew, city; Mr. and Mrs. IT. ttutliveu\nMcDonald, J. CoateB'iLockhart; Jl. W.\nOeiiney, Charles E. Stanley, Toronto\nC-lee club; C. G. Vemvlck, Slocan .let.;\nH. Waiter Evans, S. J. iMoDonaid, ItorfS-\nland; J. P'. O'lirlan, Annable; W. JO.\nProwse and son, Kokanee; W. E. White,\nTacoma; C. D. Colder, Calgary; Alex\nStewart RoSSlandj Major (Jloode, tton-\nnlngUin Palls; I). W. Uriggs, Portland;\nEna Miner, Orient; G. Ti. Renata, P.. .1.\nMeKeuzie, Vancouver; T. C. Peck, Midway; Zimmerman- Detroit; A. W. Scripture, Toronto; Mr. and MI'S, King, Miss\nKing, Mr. Mews. London; J. Aylmer,\nQueens Hay; F. G. Campbell, A. G.\nEnsteln, Mlntreul; Q. H. Jernboig, P.\nAnderson, J. It. Grant, A. Jl. Kersdal'-,\nVancouver; W. S. Fisher, St. John, M.\nCavers, F. A. Macfarlano Toronto; H.\nSmith. Victoria; J. McGiilllvray, L. 1-1.\nMosher, II. S. Reynolds, G. D. Bell,\nVictoria; F. A. Routledge, London; J.\nRi-ed. Cranbrook; Henry CI. Green, Seattle; Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Bradley,\nMi*, and Mrs. II. R. Cramer, Mr. and\nMrs. E. F. Gigot, Harris Mnnhart, C.\nA. Larson, Douglas Xagle, Raymond\nHard, Frank Penwlok, Mrs. c. D. Goepel\nMiss Ilcen Bradley, Miss Bate, city; Tl.\nGuttle, Granite; J. A. Kinney Rossland.\nF. Tl. Ogden, Calgary.\nrSTRATXraCONA\u2014Mrs, C. W. West, Wh\nlow Point; Mrs. T. Morley, Kokanee; It\n.1. Henley, Macleod; A. Carney, Kaslo\nMr. and Mrs. M. P. Thomson, Vaiicouvei\nC. R. Hurl, Hubert Simpson, Toronto\nW. 11. Slater, A. II. Greyer, DYofl Porter\nL. Vlneberg, MbntreMi Charles Water\nHamilton; J. Talton, London; H. Mcll\n.T. A. Tanner, William MoLeod, 13. -I.\nMackay, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Me-\nSweeney, Viiiicoiiver; W. II. Archibald\nTrail: .1. TI. Smith Seatlle; li. ,1. Long\nCrestoli; T. Konna, Balfour; I). IO. Cam-,,.\nhell. Winnipeg; W. Smith, New Westminster; Q. K. Bradon and wife, Hi'O'\nkauc.\nQueen's Hotel\nB .i k e r Street\nA. LAFOINTE,  Proprietor\nRenovated throughout. Sixteen now rooms added, all eloc-\ngantly furnished. Steam heat\nIn every room.\nQUI9BNS-T. Jackman, I3JT. Dougherty,\nMiss A. SwihffBione, Salmo; O. Wheeler,\nWestley; L. P. Coleman, A. G. Gelln.is,\ncity; J. R. Williams, Vancouver; Uv.\nand Mrs. .1. T. LnuMe, Ca&tlegfir; W.\nArmstrong, K. J. Duffy, Crescent Valley;\nF. F. West, F. J. Larkins. W. J. Whlp-\nptes. Calgary; J. Fytfe, Nakusp; Felix\nLeister, Revelstoke; James Rooke, Grand\nForks; Alex J. McDonald, A. Whyte\nPembroke.\nMadden House\nThos.   Madden,  Prop.,  Baker  St.\nRates;    $l.b0 to 52.00 per day.\nMeal  Tickets,  $7.00 per week.\nA Comfortable Home\nMADDEN-ir, Rlppin, II. C; Bell, Mra.\nMorten, M. c. Monaghan, Taghum; J.\nA. Riddell, Kaslo; c. Greonan, H. Hill,\n(T. Sliuond. GutellUB! J. C. Payne, Revel-\nBtoko; G. M, Benney, ,T. Serson, 11. McKay, R. G. Cain, Trail; A. Anderson,\n)\u25a0:. Nicholson, J. 'Ross, Three Forks; A.\nri.  Maurer, Winnipeg.\nKootenay Hotel\nTwo Doors  From  Postoffice.\nVernon   Street.\nRates $1.00 and (1.25 per day.\nEvery   convenience   given    to    the\ntraveling public.    Electric piano  ami\nUi.lon   bar   In   connection,   where   the\nbest wines and liquors are  kept.\nMRS. MALLKTT,  Proprietress.\nKOOT.ENAT-S. M. Mlchelelo, R. G.\nBrown, Kochs; C. Romanes, W. li.\n.sweet, Ymlr; K. A. Karlson, Brio; U\nF. Collins, A. Thomas, It. Wilson, O. M.\n\u25a0Mortimer.\n\"How Long Will It Last?\"\ntho cnroful man asks.\nWe can't tell how long a\nBurroughs Adding and\nListing Machine will last,\nbecause In 21 years wo\nhave never yet seen ono\nworn out.\nFor the careful man our\nlittle folder \"Durability\"\ncontains Rome Interesting\nfacts on this subject.\nMay we mull you a\ncopy?\nBurroughs Adding Machine Co.\nW. K. TASKER, Sales Manager,\n347 Pender Street,\nVANCOUVER.  B.C.\nWhen Taking\na Vacation\ngo to the great Halcyon Hot\nSprlnga, where you can secure\nnot only rest but at the same time\nhave the benefit of the best medicinal waters on the continent, unequalled for rheumatism and kindred ailments. The sprlnga are\neasy of access to travellers and\nthe hotel has been fitted up and\nIb conducted with a view to the\nmaximum of comfort and convenience for guests.\nRates: $12 and $15 per week, or\n$2 per day and upwards.\nHalcyon Hot Springs\nSanitarium\n, WM   BOYD, Proprietor\nHalcyon Arrow Lakes\nNelson House\nEuropean Plan.\nW, A. WARD, Proprietor\nCAFE\u2014Open  day and  night\u2014BAR.\nMerchants' Lunch 12 to 2\nPhone 97 P.O. Box 597\nNEDSON-r-Majbr Gioodlh, Castlegar; T.\nMaudl.\nGrand Central Hotel\nOPPOSITE POSTOFFICE\nAmerican   and   European   plans\nH.   H.  PITTS,  Proprietor\nGfRAND CENTRA!.- Mrs. Wilson and\nfamily, elty; C. A. Swanson, Wanetn;\nA. E. Wan. Harrop; Gl. H. Lounsberg,\nWevlnirn; 10. H. Coffman J. Q. Kendall,\nSalmo; W. l>. Rldgei Bonningtbn; G. D\\\nNostore, Pinchor Creek: A. r.. Swanson,\nQ. Hoogland, 13. A. Saorobeo, E. S.\nTnvh.r. Crescent Valley; W. A. Archibald, Plymouth; Frank Tachtno, N'ew\nDenver: P. Uircukon, Poorman; Jnmes\nGorden, Alex Kerr, 10. Ertokson, .1. H.\nWilliamson, Trail; G. C. Common, Boss-\nborg; ti. C, <'. Carter, J,. F. Carter,\nWlnlawj M. Llghthous, D. Egehnaon,\nl-'i-raie; j.   10. McDonald, Cranbrook.\nTremont House\nBaker Street, Nelson\nRANSOME   &   CAMPBELL\nProprietors\nEuropean plan,   50c up.\nAmerican   plan,   $1.25  and   $1.50\nMeals,   35c\nALL WHITE  LABOR\nSpecial   Rates  per   Month\nTREMONT\u2014Donald McKay Coryell; A,\nBornhelm, .lames Rush, E. J. Nichols in,\nTrail; A. Bremner, Shoe,]) Creek; Bort\nRiser, Salmo; M. Headle, Brockvlllo.\nKlondyke Hotel\nVernon Street\nStrictly   Union   House\nHeadquarters for miners, Smel-\ntennen,   loggers,   railroad   men.\nRates, $1.00 per day  up\nNELSON   &  JOHNSON,   Props.\nKLONDVKT\nson,   Casfclegn\nP-, A. Merrau\n\u2022Ity.\nr-Robert   Dans,\n;   J.   N'ilsson\nW. Slmproe, ,\nA. Ander-\nA.   Mundt,\n. Tumblau,\nSilver King Hotel\nBaker Street\nUnder new management\nWell furnished rooms,  $1,00 a\nday and up.    Best 25c monl in\nNelson.    Best brands of liquors\nand cigars, served by union men\nN.   McLEOD,   Proprietor\nSILVER KXG\u2014(). Williams, Ml Mc-\nClbsky, A. Falen, M. Moore, 10. Rotli,\nR. MoClollap, I''. Haven, Sum lOrim, F.\nTelford, Frank Bubedo, D. L. Taylor,\nA. Grlnlnw, A. Draganich P. Wukovlch,\nA. Holln, city; F. Handy, Cranbrook;\nTom English, Lardo; .lack Anderson,\nVancouver; Frank Subalt, >Hloean; E.\nWeaver,  F. Tedford, Spokanei\nSHERHROOL'10\u2014W. J. Trlsby, Revelstoke; A. Gtbeau, F. Iiesgnrdlii p,\nWhite, .1. Dussett, Crescent Valley; G-\nL. Lavello, Proctor; S. Mitchell. Cran-\nHrook; A. M'cDoiikiiII. Porcupine; W.\nItanillle, Wlulaw; I,, Denny, Kochs; P.\nCommon, c. Nolan. K'aslo; - Barnard,\nKoohs: C.  F.  Collin,  a.  io.   Brouseenu,\nVancouver:     M.    RubldOttU,     Golden;    N.\nChapok,    Cfilgnry;    P.   Blanchette,    E.\nCralnc,  Mrs. Blanchette, -Evans Creek.\nUnion Men, when in Nelson'\nPatronize\nLakeview Hotel\nCor.   Hall  and Vernon  Streets\nNAP   MALLETTE,   Prop.\nWhite    Union    Help    Employed\nOnly.\nCjAKBV-TIEW\u2014H. C. Frith, II. A. Collins. Colville; El. Dnnce, ll. Daliec, Spokane; o. Rayner, Robert Relne, Cran-\nln-ook; M. Haggen, 10. Chander, Crelson.\nRoyal Hotel\nStanley St., Nelson, B.C.\nUnder new management. Pleasant location. Best family hotel in\nthe city. Good homo for steady\nhoarders. Rates $1 and $1.50 per\nday. Special rates by tho week.\nCuslhc unexcelled.\nJ, S.  BARRATT, Prop.\nROYAiL-S.    Wade,     W.     G.     Pollock,\nSalmo;   1). G.  Kemp, Upper   Bonnhlgton;\nw. lodge. Proctor; Thomas Minor, Loth-\n\u2022brldgo;  to. d. iCrttnoy, L. MoCann,  W.\nHollls,   Fort  Steele.\nYORKTON, Snsl(J. April 10.\u2014The\nCanadian EloValpr company's elevator\nhere was burned todny with a loss\nestimated at nearly $20,000. Tlie fire\nstarted nl 2 p. in, and was caused hy\ntiie manager's lantern. The heat set\nthe ties aflro on the railway track and\nwarped tlie rails. The elevator hnd a\ncapacity of 35,000 bushels and thoro\nwere 15,000 bushels of wheat and oats\nIn store, most of which is ruined.\nShilohh Gum\nQUICKLY   STOPS C0UQH8,  CURES  COLDS,\nHEALS THE THROAT AND LUNGB. 2S CENTS\n'REMEMBER ME TO\nFOLKS BACK HOWIE\"\nLast Words of President's Aide as He\nStepped from Boat to Doomed\nTitanic,\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nWASHINGTON, April 21.-A graphic story of the heroism of Major\nArchibald W. Butt, on the Titanic, was\ntold yesterday In an Interview given\nto the Washington Star's staff correspondent in New York liy Marie\nYoung, a former resident of this cily.\nMiss Young Is believed to have been\nthe last woman to , leave the Titanic\nand the last of the survivors to have\ntalked with the president's military\naide. She and Major Butt hud long\nbeen friends, Miss Young having been\na special music Instruutor to tho children of former President Roosevelt.\nMiss Y'oung said:\n\"The last person to whom I spoke\non board the Titanic wus Archie Butt\nand his good, bravo face smiling at mo\nfrom the deck of the steamer was the\nInst I could distinguish as the boat 1\nwas in pulled awuy from the steam\ner's side. Archie himself put me inlo\nthe boat, wrapped blankets around me\nand tucked me in as,earefully as if\nwe wore starting on a motor ride. He\nentered the boat with me, performed\nthe little courtesies as calmly and as\nsimingly as if death was far away,\ninstead of being but a few moments\nremoved from him.\n\"When ho had carefully wrapped\nme up ho stepped up on the gunwale\nof the boat and lifting his hat, smiled\ndown ut me.\n\"'Goodbye Miss Young,' he snid\nbravely and smilingly. 'Luck Is with\nyou. Will you kindly remember mo to\nall Ihe folks back home?'\n\"Then bo stepped to the deck of the\nsteamer and   the   boat   1   was   in\nlowered to the water.   H was the\nboat to leave the  ship;   of this  I\nperfectly'-sure.   And 1 know that I am\nllie  last of those who  were saved t\nWhom Archie Butt spoke.\n\"As our boat was lowered and left\nthe   side  of  the   steamer  Archie was\nstill standing at .Uie rail, looking down\nat me.    His hat was raised and   I\nsame old  genial,  bravo smile was\nhis face.\n\"The picture he made as ho stood\nthere, hat In hand, brave and smiling.\nwas one that will always linger in turn em ory.\"\nMrs.  Henry B. Harris of Washing\nion. in an Interview In the Washing\nIon Star yesterday, also described th'\nheroism of Major Bull.    She said*.\nFirm as a Rock.\n\"Archie   Butt  wns  a   major   to   lb'\nlast.    God never made a finer, nobler\nman than lie.    The sight of that man,\ncalm, gentle and yet as firm as a rock,\nwill  never  leave   me.    The American\narmy is honored by him and the way\nhe showed some of the other men how\nto  behave  when  women  and children\nwere suffering that awful mental fear\nthat came when we hnd to be huddled\ninto   those   boat's.     Major   Butt   wu\nnear me and 1 know very nearly every\nthing he did.\nI ;.   Women  first.    |   |||||\n\"When the order came to take fo\nthe boats he became as one in su\npreine command. You would have\nthought he was at a White .House reception, so cool and calm was he.\nWhen the time came he was a man to\nhe feared. In one of the earlier boats,\nfit) women, It seemed, Were about to be\nlowered when a man, [suddenly panic-\nstricken, run to the stern of it. Major\nButt shot out an arm, caught him by\nthe neck and jerked him hack like a\npillow. His head cracked against the\nrail and he was stunned, 'Sorry,' snid\nMajor  Unit, 'women will  he attended\nfirst nr I'll bn-ak every damned bono\nin your body.'\nTho boats were lowered away one\none, and as I stood by my husband\nhe snid to me: 'Thank God tor Archie\nButt.' Perhaps Major Butt heard it,\nfor lie turned his face toward us for a\nsecond, .lust at that time a young\nman was arguing to got into a lifeboat, nnd Butt hud hold of the lad by\nthe arm like a big brother and appeared lo he telling him to keep his\nlead!\nSoldier to the Last.\n\"I stayed until almost the last and\nknow what a man Archie Butt was.\nThey put mo into a collapsible boat.\n[ was one of three women in the first\n-aliin in the thing; the rest were steerage people. Major Butt helped those\nr frightened steerage people so\nwonderfully, tenderly and yet with\nli cool and manly firmness.   He was\nloldler to tin- lust. He was ono of\nGod's greatest noblemen and I think\nI can say he was an example of hrav-\nary even to llie officers of the ship,\nle gave his life to snve others.\"\nPresident Will Spenk.\nPresident Taft today accepted an\nnvilalion to attend memorial exorcises\n:o he held by Temple lodge, Free and\nVccepied Order of Masons, of which\nMajor Butt was a member, to bo held\nn this city May n. The president\nprobably will in:ike nn address and\nthose in charge of the meeting, which\nwill be held :i memorial for Major Butt,\nhope to have Henry Watterson as another speaker.\nFIGHT ATTEMPTS TO\nEXTRADITE   NESBITT\nNow   Charges    Filed    Against    Doctor\nNcsbitt\u2014 Fresh Charges of Less\nMagnitude.\n'CHICi\nto  To\nlonnei\nNews Leased wire.')\nApril 21.\u2014Dr. Beattie\n\u25a0 bunk president of To-\nwtll face new charges before\nssIiuut F\"\"le tomorrow. He is\ncounty jail awaiting extradition\nonto \"a charges of forgery in\nHon with tho bunk of which he\nice president. William D. Greer,\nsenior Inspector of the criminal investigation department of the Toronto\nirovlncial police, arrived hero today\nnd filed new charges against Dr. Nes-\nhitt, oharglnK fraud by concurring in\nL falsified statement regarding the\nInanelal condition of the lunik made\no the minister of finance of the Do-\nninion of Canada. Bofore lho new\nharges w-n1 filed Attorney Pitttlson,\nounsd for Nesbltt, declared that his\nllcnt would wave extradition on the\nE\n\"FRUIT-A-TIVES\" THE BEST\n\u2022PREVENTATIVE\nThere is practically no danger of\nTyphoid Pever as lontf bs you keep the\nbowels regular with \"Fruit-a-tives.\" '\nTyphoid is an inflammation of the\nbowels, due to a genu. This germ enters\nthe body iu uiiiU, water or fuod. If Uie\nbowels arc constipated, the r;criu remains\nin the body long enough to attack the\ndelicate lining and thus Typhoid begins;\n\u2022'Fruit-a-tivca\" acts directly on the\nliver, kidneys and shin, and cleans the\nsystem of all impurities. \"Pruit-a-tivcs\"\nwill not cure Typhoid \u2014hut it will cure\nConstipation, assist Digestion and tone\nup the system\u2014thus preventing\nTyphoid.\n50c. a box, 0 for $3.50, or trial size,\n25c. At all dealers, or from Fruit-a-tives\nLimited. Ottawa.\ncharges of forgery and proceed to Toronto. When the new charges were\nfiled and another warrant was Issued,\nAttorney Pnttlson declared that extradition would tie fought to a finish.\n\"We were going to waive all legal\nproceedings,\" said Mr. l'attison, \"and\nmy client was going back to Toronti\nto stand trial for forgery. Tlie prosecutors had no evidence to convict him\nof forgery but when they filed their\nnew charges, although they are of\nmuch less magnitude than the previous\nones, we nre forced to fight attempts\nto extradite him.\"\nWhen tho hearing is called the forgery charges, it is expected, will be\ndismissed and Dr. Ncsbitt will bo arrested on the new warrant.\nNOTED HORSE THIEF\nAT LAST CAPTURED\nJohn   Anderson   Convicted   of   Selling\nStolen  Horses\u2014Another of Gang\nUnder Arrest\n(liy Bally News Leased Wire.)\nMOUSE JAW, Sask,, April 21.\u2014Gnat\ninterest was taken in tho openli\nof the supreme court when tho cu\na gainst the horse rustlers, arrested k'\nfall, was brought up. Vov years a clev\ngang of horse tliloves have been opi\natlng In southern Saskatchewan close\nthe boundary line. As many as CO hors\nhavo been lifted at one time and I1CV\nlliis a Case been proved to tile satisfii\ntlon of the law. The delight of cvei\nbility in the south may bo imagined wh\nit was heard that one, not the leadi\nibut a member of the gang, had be\ncaught wilh the noods. No expenses wc\nspared to get evidence, and five w\nnesses from tho south, Including n depu\nsheriff, were brought lo Moose Jaw a\ntheir   evidence   convicted   John   Anders\nconclusively of disposing of stolon hors-\nIt was also proved that he lifted 1\nHorses from n Frenchman mi miles soutli\nlo tell lust how main* v\nwhat tlu-li- respective bran\nthe moment they appeared io tho stand\none, .after anotiier. IdentifyIpR tin\" .\nctftld MSW&mrftlling \u25a0drflir.'hitiV'.Mv\npalnstaklng accuracy, Anderson ne'\nhad a chance. He'was condemned a\nheld for Sentence while Q comrade ca]\nHazlewood   is  being  tried   f\niffel\nHa\narrested Is In the fin\ndistrict, a veritable bad lands wlthoi\ntraits. Iiillv and profusely timbered,\nveritable robbers den.\nCHILDREN'S NAMES\nARE UNKNOWN\nTwo   French   Boys   Saved   from Tltanii\n\u2014 Horn,; and Parentage Unknown\n\u2014Found in LifcBoat.\nfBy  Dallv  News  Leased  Wire.l\nNEW  YORK,  April  31.\u2014.Among thi\nsurvivors of tho disaster are two Itttli\nboys,   probably mnde  orphans   by   tin\nsinking of the Unci*.    They are bright\nlittle French chaps, 8% and '1% yeai\nOld, and answer to the names of Lu\nand  Loin.    What their surname is he\nnot   been   established  and   nothing\nknown of their relatives.    Some of tl\nrescued   Tiianic   passengers   say   the\nwere in the second cabin  In  the eni\nof a man named Hoffman, and accord\ning to the list a Mr. Hoffman and tw\nchildren  were  on   board   the   ill-fated\nliner,    tloffmnn was not mentioned as\nhaving been rescued.\nThe two boys were found in ont\nthe lifeboats without any clothes,\nwere wrapped in blankets,   As no\nActual Starvation\nFacts About Indigestion and  Its Relie;\nThat Should  Interest You.\nso   prevalent,    most   people   do   \t\nthoroughly understand their cause am\nire. Thero is iu> reason why monl\nidplo should not cat anything they de-\ni-t\u2014If iney will only chew Ii carefully\n1.1  thoroughly.    Many actually  starv*\ny  obligation  whatever.    Surely,   nntli\n- could be fairer.    We are located riRh\nIio'rc and  mil* reputation should be silffl\nlent   assurance   of   the   genuineness   o\nWe  want  every  one  troubled   with   in\nRexall   D:\nhe\nlets.    Take    the\n1 reasonable trli\nis.     Then,   if 11\nsatisfied, come to us and get your money\nback. They aro very pleasant to take;\nthey aid 10 sooth the Irrltoible stomach,\nto strengthen and Invigorate the digestive organs, and to promote a healthy\nand natural bowel action, thus leading to\nperfect tind healthy digestion and assimilation.\nA 25c package of Rexall Dyspepsia\nTablets furnishes 16 day's treatment, In\nordinary oases, this is sufficient to pro-\nlonger treatment, of course, Is necessary,\nand depends upon ihe severity of the\ntrouble. For such cases we have two\nlarger Bin as which wc sell for B0c and\n$1 HO.    iHenieniher,   .vou   can   obtain   RcXttll\nRomedles lu this copimunltj* only at our\nstore\u2014Tho BexaH Store. The Poole Drag\nCo.. Ltd.\nWhat  Every   Woman   Wants\nHer Spring Hat to Be\u2014\n4\u00ab\nUp to the minute, becoming, distinctive, moderately priced.\nNo others meet these four requirements so well as the hats\nwe are showing for this season.\nIt is easy enough to find millinery that meets one of these four requirements, but it is quite a different matter to find hat-Si that meet all\nfour. Our collection of spring millinery is unusual in this particular respect, Nowhere else in this Beetlon, we behove, will you discover beautiful spring millinery thnt so rally conforms to every dictate of style.\nIndividual  taste and  pocketbook.\nHere you are noi handicapped in your choice, either. Our variety is\nbroad\u2014broader than ever. Pokes, turbans, sailors, very small shapes.\ntricorne and numerous other new effects are here In every variety of\nstraw Imaginable, embracing every new style idea and in trimmings of\nflowers, feathers, taffetas, etc., etc. Every hat is irresistibly lovely am\ndistinctly above the ordinary in every respect, for they were all designed\nby the best metropolitan artists.\nTry several on today. Sse how becoming the new styles am.\nYou will need no urging to buy after you have looked at the\nprice tags.\n&  CO.\nThe Store for Style\n\u2022wnWBTitrii Jiii-Jiiiiii Willi iiiiiirTTnrrFn\n,01 the Carputhla claimed them Miss\nMargaret Hays of this city, who was\nrescued from the Titanic, took them to\nher home, when- she is keeping them\nIn tho hope that somo of their relatives will be found: Miss Hays says\nthoy ure remarkably bright children\nand evidently came from 11 good family. When they awoke this morning\nUiey insisted upon being bullied. Their\ntable manners are declared by -Miss\nikays to be perfect.\nFLOODED   CHAUD1ERE\nCAUSES   MUCH   DAMAGE\n(By  Bally   Xews  Leased  Wire,)\nQUEBEC,  April  21. -Dispatches received  here from BeaucevHle intimate\nthat the Chaudiero has overflowed its\nbanks. The village was flooded yes-\nten lay. The iron bridge lias been\nmoved several feet, while many private bouses are full of water. Tin;\npower house lias been flooded. No loss\nof life Is reported.\nCITY UNDER CONTROL.\n(By Dolly News Leased Wire.)\nPARIS, April lit.---The latest advices\nfrom Fez to the foreign office Indicate that tho French troops are gradually placing the city under control.\nThey have lost ten men killed In the\nstreet fighting. Reinforcements are\nun the way to Fez, where a serious re-\nYou cannot afford brain-befogging headaches.\nNA-DRU-CO Headache Waters\nstep them in quick time and clear your head.   They\not cjiitain either plienacettn, aoetaniiid, morphine,\ni drug.   25c. a box at \u2022\nn      %Tr7^- -fc^X \u25a0-',,jt contain either phenacetin, s\nf^W% \u00b0P[um cr my other dangerous d\nI     \/FSrl Your Druggist's.\nA        r*-(Vk   fff     j Nation si DnUQ and Chemical Co.\nir Canada,  Lim\nCANADIAN\nReduced return tickets to St. Paul and |\nMinneapolis only on sale April 25, 2C, 27.\nTickets to principal points In Manitoba,\nand all eastern provinces, also principal j\npoints in the Bailed States,  Duluth, St.\nPaul and east on sale good commencing\nJourney on May 2, 3, 4, :>, 1\", 17, 18, 21, 23, ]\nOthi r  dates on application.\nRETURN   FROM   NICLSON\nSt.   Paul   ....$00.00   [   Winnipeg    ...J 00.00\nNew York ... 10S.C0   ! Montreal  105.00\nEnquire   for rates   to  olhcr   points,\nR. K. SCARLETT   City  Pass. & Ticket Agent.\nF.   L,   PADDON,  Depot Ticket Agent.\nJ. A.  McDONALD,  District  Passenger  Agent,   Nelson.\nffli.wifrfmrmvmrtiw-~mH\u00bbM.\u00bbJii,.ii'--^\nuys\nLocation\nIvor In tho Sloes*\ndiureh and ratlwi\nImprovements\ntin acres of first-class land, half of which is suitable for frull growing,\nthe balance suitable tor mixed  farming.\nFronting on   tho Slocan  river In tho Slocan Valley nnd within half ;\nmile of postofflce,  school,  church and railway station.\nSeven acres cleared; eight acres Very easy clearing; 150 fruit trees of\nbearing age (30 very heavy bearers); small fruits; 15 ueres dyked; good\nmeadow or pasture land; L^-story house. 30x32, seven rooms; natural\nspring 70 feel from door; hay shed; cow stable to Hold 10 cows; stable\nfor two horses; pig stys and chicken house! Stock may bo purchased\nseparately.\nINVESTIGATE THIS. You will find it the best buy offering In kinds.\nEasy terms offered.\nD. St. Denis\n605   B.iker   Street.\nNelson,  B. C.\nP. O. Bo* 197.\n PAGE 8IX\n11 'w>im\nCfje \u00a9ally JSetos.\nMONDAY  .............   April 22.1\nThe Rapid Growth\nof the City of\nMoose Jaw\nmnkes HILLHURST a sure big\nmoney maker. Study it out. Figure its location, then act quickly.\nEARNSCLIFFE\nHILLHURST\nROSS PARK\nHI LLCREST\nHIGH  PARK\nCity Postoffice\nHILLHURST LOTS, $160.\nEvery lot a good one.\nKootenay\nFruit\nRanches\nTo every man who is looking for\na ranch, either for a home or an\ninvestment, we Invite you to call\nand talk the matter over with us.\nIt costs you nothing to consult us\nand we think we can be of service\nto you.\nFor Sale\nA Good\nHouse\nCheap\u2014Only\n$2,800\nEight rooms, every convenience,\nnew foundation, newly painted and\npapered. Lot 25x1(53. Everything\nIn first-class order. Close in. $500\ncash, balance as rent, bundles it.\nSee us quickly.\nWestern Canada Investment Co.\nFinancial A-jenti. .teal Estate, Fire, Life and Accident Insurance; Timber    Lands,    Rent*    Collected,    Loam\nSafety Deposit Boxes for Rent\nJ.   E.   TAYLOR,   Manager. H   .E.   DOUGLAS,   Insurance  and      C.   A.   VAN    HEMERT.   Timber\nALEX. CHEYNE, Secretary Loan   Department. Department.\nPG.   Box   1042.     Riont   254 Cor.  Baker and  Josephine Streets.\nAbout Wedding\nPresents\nOur display of table sliver is\nexceedingly _ tempting and contains many new and original designs suitable for wedding gifts.\nAlso In Cut Class we are constantly showing novelties fit to\ngrace the daintiest table.\nJ. J. Walker\nJeweler and Optician\nBaker St. Nelson, B.C.\n(   MARKETS\nSPOKANE   MARKETS\n(Sharp ft Irvine.)\nBid       A sited\nB. C. Copper  $6,00      ? 5,60\nCaledonia    (W .70'\/.\nCanadian Consolidated .,..65.00\nGranby    50.50       00,60\nInternational Coal  61 .57\nLucky  Jim    28\nNugget    i\nRambler-Cariboo   ...\nRoyal\nSnowstorm   .\n-Standard   \t\nStewart   \t\nSales,    afiei\nCaledonia\ncoil Satewort\n.-46\n.03Vi\n.02\n.10\n\u2022l.S\n1.15\n    1.40\n\u25a0moon call, April 19-1,500\n600 .Snowstorm at 40c;\nat Jl.lfi. 700 at $1.47.\n\u25a0Sales, niui-itlng call, April 20\u20141,600 Caledonia at 60c, 1.000 al 70, 600 at 71; 26\nGranby at $68.60,\nNEW   YORK   MARKETS.\n{By Dallv Xews Leased Wire.}\nNEW YORK, April 20.\u2014The course <>f\nthe stock market during today's two\nhour session suggested that It had not\nyet recovered from the gloom and depression of the earlier days of tbe week,\nTbe statements of commercial agencies\nindicated n slight retrograde movement\nin sonic lines of trade.\nThere was seme, heaviness In Western\nUnion, widen rose Impressively the day\nbefore that working agreement With\nMarconi company bail been made. The\nold slock fell us sensationally today as\nli bad risen, declining to 160 after having\nbeen quoted less than 21 hours before at\nexactly :iO points above that price. S\u00bbecu-\nIntion in this stock has been confined\nto a few venturesome persons on the\nciinb. but In-as-muCll as yesterday's\ntransactions were said to have been for\nrush It Is not thought Improbable that\nsome genuine losses have been made in\nthe stock's gyrations.\nThe actual condition of the associated\nbanks for the week disclosed another\ncontraction In loans in excess of I'.'.non^nno\nWilli 11 audi gain or about JI.OOO.OHJ, which\nwus slightly under estimates. The reserves .increased by almost (6,000,000, putting excess cash reserves ut approximately ,$20,000,000. Bonds were Irregular\ntoday. . (Total sales, par value, aggregated .ill.601.000. United Slates government .bonds were unchanged on call\nthroughout the week.\nMONTREAL   STOCK   EXCHANGE\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.}\nMONTREAL, April 20.\u2014The local market was dull and featureless on Saturday. Power held ground the level of the\nprevious dav's dose and fluctuations on\ntransactions totalling nearly !W0 shares\nwere wllbln a range of % point. The last\nsu lu at 21)0% Bhowed at net decline of 'fi,\nbul was % point over the low on Friday.\nCement common and Rio were the only\nother stocks dealt In to any extent on\nSaturday. Through tbe greater part of\nthe trading Cement sold over its high\nmark of the previous day at 30%; the\nlast sale showed a net gain of V2 point.\nRio worked lower, declining Vi point from\nthe opening, and nt UN In the Inst sule\nclosed with a net loss of 1%. The bidding\nwas off to 117 at the close of the market.\nPacific was <|iilel but sold % point higher\nthan on Friday. Dominion Steel was unchanged; Spanish River common was\neasier, working off to 46% In the last\nsale. Sao Paula said at a new higher\nrecord on 20216 for the^ Montreal market.\nSberwln Williams common, after its repent   smart   advance,  reached  iy> points\nto -10. The bank stocks were featureless\nwith prices firm. Weakness In Quebec\nHallway bunds was a feature lu the\nbond  list,    The price declined 2 points  lo\n74. the lowest point of the year, witli the\n'bidding off to 72. The slock on Friday\ntouched its lowest .point In nearly iwo\nyears 111 40, Total business, 2, 80S shares\nand $8,600 bonds.\nTORONTO  STOCKS\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nSpanish River, 45%; Riisse] pfd., tony.;\nSao   1 'aulo.   20::'\/i|   Traders,    107%;   Poi'tO\nRlro,  79tt@79%.\nUnlisted-Swastika, 23; noway, ll.\nMETAL   MARKETS\nfSpeclal to Tbe Dallv News.-i\nLONDON, April 21.\u2014 Silver. 27 6-10.\nNEW YORK,   April 21,-Silver, 59%.\nENGLAND MOURNS\nBUT ALSO REJOICES\nBlood   of   the   Race   Triumphs   Over\nDoath\u2014Titanic's  Heroes  Move\nHeart of Nation.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, April 21. \u2014 England\nmourns, but England also rejoices. She\nmourns her death hut boasts their noble\nbearing in the face of death dealing\ncalamity and every man walks prouder thrutigh Loudon's streets today\nknowing that'tho soils of the empire\nand of the union have proved under\nan almost overwhelming strain that\nthe blood of the race and its adherence\nl-i discipline can triumph over death.\nThough the elemental forces of Nature have destroyed man's handiwork,\nyet man's soul rides victor over all\nNature's harshest menaces.\nThroughout England today the note\nol thousands of sermons and innumerable leading articles Is \"Our Sons Still\nKnow How tu Die.\" The story of the\nTitan Id's heroes has moved the heart\nof the nation as it has never moved\nbefore In my  time.\nWhen the news came Monday morning thnt tlie Tiianic had struck an\niceberg and  was dangerously damaged\npeople refused at first to credit it.\nThe \"White Star offices on Cockspur\nstreet were thronged With hosts of\nEitger people demanding intelligence of\nthe stricken steamship, Por a few\nhours their hopes were raised on false\ncables, and their hearts were\nbuoyed up,\nIn  Silent  Grief.\nThen the worst became certain, and\nthe truth was known. I saw men grow\nold within an hour, their faces turned\ngray and shrunken, their vitality almost shrivelling up under the crushing blow. Little was said, for men's\nhearts were loo full for words, and\nwomen even forgot to cry, but waited\nIn sorrow tor further news. Cockspur\nstreet became a scene of woe as London waited Impatiently for further\nnews.\nStory  Not  Credited.\nThe long hours passed by and nn\nThursday men began to ask: \"Why\nis the Carpathia silent? Why Is she\nnot sending news?\" It was thought\nby many lhat her message was too\nterrible for words, Public anxiety was,\nnever so tense as in those hours. Then\nFriday morning came, and with It the\nCarputhla's message, which carried\nIhe worst blow nf all. The earliest reports declared the captain of the liner\nhad committed suicide, and that the\nchief engineer had shot himself. Several of the morning papers including\nthe Times and the Dally Mail, refused\nlo credit the story and declined to\nprint it. Others, notably among them\nthe Dally Chronicle, printed special\neditions with flaring headlines, emphasizing the worst.\nBitter   Hours.\nThese gray morning hours were\nEngland's   bitterest.     Men   turned   to\nThe Cream of Kootenay Lake\nHas an exceptionally fine situation anil JuhI enough elevation to afford\na  beautiful  view of the west arm  or Kootenay lage ns well as the main lake.\nDoes not require irrigation, yet lias a registered water right and a plentiful supply of pure mountain water ditched and running through It.\nModerately easy to clear and  free from   stone  and  every   Inch   good  land.\nWe have nothing choicer on our lists\nPrice $1,700.   Tenns one-third cash, balance arranged.\nTF\/W-O  &   Trtiri* Doalers  in high-class  property.\n1 Uy C  IX    X UyC   Exclusive selling agents. Box 147, Nelson, B. 0.\none another with doubt and dread\ntearing at their souls, asking had manhood really failed under the Intolerable\nstrain? Those who, like myself, knew\nCaptain Smith and his officers, having\noften travelled with him, were confounded, and our high hopes and confident predictions almost failed us.\nHut two hours later we knew the truth.\nThe story of the suicides was a lie\nand the sailors had more than risen\nto the great occasion. Now England's\nnote is not of lamentation. We weep\nnot for the dead, but strive to emulate\ntheir achievements.\nNote of Alarm.\nThe pride for llie deads of the dead\nIs now mixed with the surprise and\nalarm over the revelations of the departmental folly of the board of trade\nwhich have now been made public.\nPor many years old pilots and master\nmariners who have grown gray following the sea., have vainly urged the\ninadequacy of tlie existing lifosnving\nregulations. They maintained that not\nalone was the number of boats on the\ngreat passenger steamers Inadequate,\nbul lhat llie boats In many of the\nBteamers were unseawbrthy and leaky,\nwhile many of the life buoys were so\nrotten and leaky as to be worse than\nuseless. In another famous recent\nwreck llie seamen freely affirmed that\nal least one boat could scarcely keep\nafloat on the short journey to the\nshore, owing to the gaping seams allowing- the water- toipoui-'dm' i\nBuxton Bad Quarter of Hour.\nIt was learned with universal amazement that llie board of trade regulations concerning Hfesaving apparatus\nwlilch were drawn up in 1894 were\nbased on the assumption that 10,000\ntons was the maximum size of ships.\nRight Honorable Sydney Buxton,\npresident of the board of trade, had\nan unhappy lime on Thursday explaining to the house'of commons the-departmental neglect In this respect.\nEven oilier than Conservative journals\nadmit the absolute necessity of immediate and drastic changes in the regulations. It Is freely suggested that the\ncare of ships be removed from the control of the board of trade to tho admiralty. There is no disposition hero\nto blame the While Star people for\nthe Inadequacy of the llfesavlng apparatus curried hy the Titanic for It\nIs shown that the Titanic's equipment\nwas above the official requirements.\nI'nlversa 1 sympathy is felt for the\ncompany because of* Its splendid record In maintaining British mercantile\nmarine supremacy, its admirable\ntreatment of ils people Is well known\nhere and despite the tragedy the White\nStar line retains universal respect and\ngoodwill.\nUngenerous  Obituaries.\nNo victim of the tragedy has attracted more notice than W. T, Stead.\nTwo or three ungenerous obituaries,\nnotably by T. P. O'Connor In the Dally\nTelegraph, nnd his old paper, the Pall\nMall Gazette, have only served to\nthrow inlo greater relief the splendid\nappreciations elsewhere. While admitting his peculiarities, he has been\nacclaimed tiie most original journalist\nand the most able correspondent of\nour generation. We journalists of London have often laughed at Slead's peculiarities, but we admired his disinterested zeal, his amazing Initiative.\nhis originality and his wonderful\nmastery of facts. We loved him for\nhis simplicity, unconventlnnallty and\ngenuineness. The greatest of British\njournalists have acknowledged that in\nhim we lost the supreme publicist of\nour generation.\nPolitics   Forgotten.\nOvershadowed hy tlio great international calamity, politics here have\nbeon almost forgotten. Right Hon. A.\n,T. Balfour has made a great Speech,\nand Honor Law has greatly strengthened his position as Unionist leader.\nItaly has opened a now chapter In\nEuropean history by attacking European Turkey, hut England cares for\nnone of those things\u2014the loss of the\ngreat liner has cast a shadow over all.\nWILL  INVADE  MASSACHUSETTS\nfBy Daily News Leased Wire.)\nWASHINGTON. April 20.\u2014President Taft will Invade Massachusetts,\nthe next big stale to hold primaries.\nAccording to an announcement made'\nat the White House last night the\npresident will spend next Thursday\nspeaking in Springfield, Worcester and\nBoslon. The Massachusetts primaries\nwill lie held April ,10. Close friends\nof the president expect  him  on  this\nPOULTRY AND LIVE STOCK\nFOR SALE-Eggs for 'natchIn- (18 tgg\nsettings). No. 1 pen. Single Comb Reds,\n$3; No.' 2 pen, Single Comb Reds $2;\nSingle Comb Aneonas, $l,.5ii; Single Comb\nBuff Leghorns, $2.60: nine AndalUBfons,\n$3. R. R. Shrum, Ymlr Poultry Yards,\nYmlr. B.C. *301-2fl\nSALE-Eggs    for    hatching,   froir\nl  winning  Black Mlnorcas, $3 set-\n(\u2022..\u201e\u201e.      r...    ...|,,\u201e!      [.,.,\u25a0<\u25a0     1,,...;.,...\nifon s\nPrize      tWUUIIIg      IJIIll'ri     JIIIIUI LtlO,     CO     SCI\nting; from prize winning Buff Orpingtons. (2.50 setting. II. A. Slieads, Grand\nForks,  B.C. \u2022308-25\nFOR SALE\u2014Barred Rock  eggs,  Rcdurns\nstrain, $1.50 per 1i>.   T.  Roynon,  Somerset   Poultry   Yards,   Selwyn   street,   Nelson. B.C. *309-24\nFOR SALE\u2014Mam 1110tli Pekln dtick eggs,\n$1.50 for 11.    Hawes, New Denver, B.C.\n\u2022311-12\nFOR   SALE\u2014Indian   Runner   duck   eggs\nfor   batching,   $2   for   12;   Single   Comb\nAneonas   12.60.     Mrs.   F.   Adle,   Waneta.\n  313-20\nFOR  SALE-Two  bear  cubs,   one  black,\none brown.    Cull or write W. T. Jones,\nCrescent Valley,  B.C., \u00bb314.G\nFOR SALF-B. T'. Rock eggs for hatching. Jl for IB, S7 for 100.   B. P. R. day\nold  chicks;  25 cents each.    Mrs.  J.  Fred\nlunie,   Box  55,   Nelson. 315-0\n'OR SAM-:\u2014Young pigs,   six  weeks  old,\nJ5 each.   Apply K. Popoff, perry Siding,\nor P. O.  Box 574, Nelson. \u00ab2-0\nFOR  SALE-Trio    White    Leghorns.   JG.\nBantams, $2.50 a pair.   Apply Thtirmnu's\nCigar Store. ->]-G\nFOR   SALE\u2014Horse,   wagon,   sleigh   and\nharness,  Apply Box A. d., Dally News.\nFOR SA I.E-iHorse. 12 years old, linrnofts,\nsleigh and side hill plough, $176. Cow,\nwill calve May IT,, ll years old, for $06.\nThree half Jersey heifers, 0 weeks, ]2\nmonths and IK months old, $50. One\ndozen thoroughbred Ptymouth Rock\nhens and cockerels for $14. Apply Mrs.\nW.  B.  Melneruck. Slocan Junction.     *2-G\nFOR   SALE-Eggs    for    batching.   Buff\nOrpington, prise stock, $2 per 15; Fancy\nllonilan, $:t  per 13,    G.  Hamilton,  Perrv\nSiding.  B.C. \u00bb4-0\nFOR  SALE\u2014Three or four good,  sound,\nyoung   horses,   weighing   from   1300   *.o\n1600.    Apply  A.  G.  Lambert Co.,  Ltd.\n'   4-tf.\nFOR SALE\u2014Pekin duck   eggs, $1   for  10.\nSinclair,  Stanley  street. *5-0\nIN THE MATTER OF THE \"WATER\nACT.\"\nNelson and Slocan Water Districts\nTake notice thnt the Board of Investigation, acting linden Part III. ot the\n\"Water Act\" will meet at the times and\nplaces hereinafter mentioned to hear\nand determine claims to water rights on\nstreams in their respective vicinities, existing on  the 12th day of March, 19119.\nOn the 10th day of May, 1012, at 10\no'clock In the forenoon iu the Court\nHouse  at  Nelson.\nOn   the 21st  day  or     May,  1012,   at  10\n'clock In tlie  forenoon at Kaslo.\nOn the 23rd day of May, 1012, nt 10\no'clock   In  the  forenoon  at  Proctor.\nOn the 24th day of May, 1912, at 10\no'clock In tile forenoon at Slocan Junction.\nOn the 26th day of May. 1012, at 2\no'clock  In  the  afternoon  at Slocan City.\nOn the 27th dny of May, 1012, at It)\no'clock  In  the forenoon at Silverton.\n1   tho 2Sth   dny  of  May,   1U12,   nt 10\no'clock  In  the forenoon  at  New Denver.\nOn   the  29th   day   of May,   1012,  at  10\nclock   in   the   forenoon   at   Sandon.\nDated at  Victoria, B. C, this 9lb day\nf April. 1012. .        \u201e    , ,\nBv order \u00abf the Board nf Investigation.*\nJ.   F.   ARMSTRONG,\nActing Comptroller of Water Rights.\n313-39\nTenders aro Invited for the purchase\nor Lot twelve (121, Block forty-three (43),\ncity of Rossland, being subdivision 'if\noriginal Lot 636, according to the map\nor plan deposited hi the laud registry\noffice ut Victoria, and there numbered\n570. Easy terms will be given oil account\nof tbe purchase money. Tender to Include amount due for taxes up to date\nof purchase. Highest or any tender not\nnecessarily  accepted.\nPEMBERTON  &  SON.\nP.O.  Drawer 729,  Victoria,  B.C.\nApril   12th.   1012. 314-0\nWanted to\nPurchase\nWe hf-jvc clients for improved nnd\nunimproved properties on Hie West\nArm of Kootenay lake. Those\nwishing to sell should send in full\ndescription of tholr properties lo\nus without  delay.\nWe    get    results.      Owners   only\ndealt  with. .\nB. C. UNITED\nAGENCIES\nDealers   in   High   Class   Fruit  and\nFarm  Lands.\nBox   232 Phone   391\n311   Baker St.., Nelson\ntrip to break his silence under the\ncriticisms of Colonel Roosevelt. Men\nin close touch with Mr. Taft believe\nthat lie will not hesitate to mention\nMr. Roosevelt by name, something\nwhich he has not done so fur in his\n\u25a0pecehi's  exedpt in  commendation.\nThe president's decision to reply to\nJolonel Roosevelt, It was slated on authority of those in his confidence, was.\nreached reluctantly only after he was\nInsistently urged to become more aggressive by somo of his campaign\nleaders,\nSTEAMERS WILL CARRY\nPLENTY OF LIFEBOATS\nfBy Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, April 20.\u2014All Allan line\nsteamers bound for Canada this week\nwill carry extra lifeboats, sufficient, in\nfact, to accommodate every soul on\nboard. Tho Canadian Pacific railway\nsteamship line manager slates that\nall their ships are being equipped immediately with such llfesavlng appliances as will accommodate passengers\nand crew In case of emergency. It Is\nalso probable that the Cunnrd Royal\nMail steamers and Ihe Booth line will\nfollow suit.\nFOR SALE.\nFOR SALE-Frult land In the famous\nGrev creek district. As evidence of -Jib\nvalue of this lawtpfor, fruit farming, we\nhave sold over Jd' dozen 10-acre lots tu\ndifferent parties who have been residents\nof Kootenay for from five to 12 years.\nIt is situated on the east bank of Kootenay lake, \"vi mile from the postofflce\nand steamboat landing. The lake Is\nfrom two to five miles wide and\" 75 miles\nlong, to our knowledge the only lake in\nthe Dominion of Catinda that does n-jt\nfreeze. The land Is direct from the lo-\noatpr to the purchaser. For further particulars address Lindsay Launch & Doit\nCo.. P. O. Box 34, Nelson, B. C, or apply\nRoom 8, Orlffln block.\nFOR SALE-Gasollne launch.  20 feet,  12\nhorse power, first class order, thorough-\nly equipped.    Box 152. Nelson. 2S4-1*.\nFOR SALE\u2014Counter, 12 feet long.   An\"'v\nHazel-wood Parlors, Nelson. 299-tf.\nFOR SALE\u2014Choice blocks fruit land, $50\nto $76 per acre.    Terms to  stilt    Near'\nschool,    postoffl-'e    and    station.      John\nGraham. Perry Siding, B.C. \u00ab2W-20\nHELP WANTED.\nNELSON    EMPLOYMENT   AGENCY\nC. F. Hutton, Manager.\nHELP OF ALL KINDS\nPROMPTLY  FURNISHED.\nTHE     WORKINGMEN'S     EMPLOYMENT AND   REAL  E8TATE\nAGENCY\nWANTED\u2014Railway laborers, day 01\nstation work; lath mill man; lumber\npliers; eilgerman; waitress, $35; girls for\nhousework; man to rent ranch; setter;\n\u25a0harnnian; sawmill laborers;' deckhands;\nmen to unload coal; teamster on ranch;\ndairyman; 3rd class engineer.\nW.  Parker, 312 Baker street.  Phone 283.\nFOR SALE-Gasollne launch. IS'i foot\nkeel, seating for 12, renovated ready for\ntbe water. I bought at a bargain, will\nsell at a bargain, Including boathouse;\n$.175.   Box L., care Nows office. 309-tf.\nFOR SALE\u2014House and five lots, 10 to\n23, Block 21, Anderson street, Hume\naddition. Easy terms arranged. Apply\nGeorge Motion, West Transfer company,\nCity. _^  '313-12\nFOR SALE\u2014First class cake, paBtry and\nconfectionery business on main thoroughfare, close to lake and post office.\nGood reasons for disposal. Applv 411\nWard street. Nelson. '313-12\nFOR SALE\u2014Cheap. 1G0 acres in famous\nPend d'Oreille valley, near Waneta;\nclose to government highway; large\nproportion ready for plow; free from\nroots and stones;-excellent laud; perfect\nclimate; ample water available; $30 per\nacre for block, or would sell la 20-acres\nplots. Terms. This is a snap for rancher\nor   investor.    P.   O.   Box  005, -Nelson.\n818-tfi\nFOR   SALE\u2014Eight    roomed    house    nt\nreasonable   figure.    Apply  518  Victoria\nstreet,   Nelson,   B.C. \"314-11\nFOR SALE\u2014Must sell my 15-acrc fruit\nand poultry farm, one mile west nf\nNelson. Furniture, stock, everything In\ngood going order. Snap for anyone wanting nice home with revenue producing\norchard. Easy terms. Come and see It\nor write Nock, Box .Sou. Nelson. \u2022314-0\nFOR SALE\u2014Fruit  ranch.    Do you  want\na   good   buy?    $1,000.    For   particulars,\nOwner,  Proctor. \u2666814-0\nFOR  SALE-GO x  120  lot.    S.   E.   corner\nJosephine nnd Gore streets; good view;\nlevel.   $460.    Easy, terms. Apply to owner,\nBox  402,  Nelson. 314-tf.\nFOR SALE\u2014Seven acres 330 feet from\nKootenay Lake hotel. Lako frontage.\nSmall house. Two acres cleared, 100 apple trees, good location. Apply owner,\nTom   HelBO,   Balfour,   B.   C. \u2022314-11\nFOR SALE\u2014Two bouses and two lots;\none. property, all kinds of fruits, large\nand small, will be worth about $100 this\nyear. No rock or gravel; on car line.\nParty leaving town, $1,500 ' cash. W.\nParker, 312 Baker slreet,  P.  O.  Box 023.\nFOR SALE\u2014Ranch, CI acres, about half\ncultivated, young orchard of about 100\ntrees, just beginning to bear. Two dwellings, barn, poultry and plgllOuses. Half\nthe land cultivated Is slashed and burned and most of It will set to tlmoiby.\nMost all valley and good sell; water\nsystem for Irrigating and domestic use.\nMining camp, homo market and best\nprices for all produce. $5,000 cash. W.\nParker,  312 Baker street,  P.  O.  Box B23.\nFOR SALE-'Ruspberry canes, Ciitblierts,\n$2 per hundred,   Rhubarb roots, Myatts\nVictoria, 20 cents each,   T. Roynon, Somerset Gardens,  Selwyn street,  Nelson.\n\u20222-0\nPOR SALE\u2014A is-ttcro partly improved\nfruit ranch, good soli, plenty water,\ngood roads, etc. Price and terms very\nreasonable. Apply T, B. Miller, Doer\nPark, B.C, 2-tf,\nPOtt SALE\u2014Five acres of fruit land, two\nlandings. A money maker frum tht\nitart For further particulars apply\nMarc Du Mont,  Wlulaw,  B.C. \u20222-1\nFOR SALE\u2014Seven    roomed    bouse,    on\nHouston street, furnished If required,\nApplv Box  X.  B.,  Daily News. *8-fl\nFOR  SALE-Frult  trees,  cherry,  plum,\npear  and  peach,    W,  J.   McKhn  (,]\\vi\\i'\nshipyard), Nelson. *4-C\nFOR SALE\u2014Two   railway   dump   carls\nand   blacksmith   outfit.    Apply   L. X.,\nDaily News. \u25a0      . 4-3\nFOR SALE\u2014Sharpies Tubular separator,\nsmall  size.    Flreless cooker, new.    Bnr-\ngaln. G. Hamilton, Parry Siding, B.C.   4-0\nFOR SALE-Erle and Tiiylirr~blackberry\ncanes. $1 ner 100; Magoon and (livens*\nTunis, $8 per 1,000.    Wm,\nWilli\nPi\nFOR SALE-*-Cabhuge plants, 76;: per doz.;\ncauliflower, $1 per don.   Strong and'wcll\ngrown:    ready   now.      Bealbv,   Box   S97,\nNelson, B.C. 5-12\nFOR. SAIiE\u2014Ideal 200 Incubator, patent\nmoisture supply easily handled; ICO\nchick brooder, colony house 7 bens, together or singly. Owner lenvln- town.\nKootenay wants chickens and eggs. Big\nmoney In it. Call or write. Qow, Union\nstreet, Fairview. \u00bb5-3\nFOR SALE\u2014Creston fruit lands. Large\ntracts of choice wild land nl $10, $15,\n$26 and $50 per acre. Improved and seml-\niniproved land at from $50 to $200 per\nncre.\nCRESTON   CLTMATE   IS    THE  BEST.\nWrite  the  owner,\nR.   LAMONT,   Creston.   B.   C.\nEXAMINATION    FOR    INSPECTORS\nOF STEAM   BOILERS AND\nMACHINERY\nExaminations for the position of Inspectors uf Sieani-boiiers and Machinery.\nunder the \"Steam-boiler Inspection Act,\"\nwill he \"held at the parliament buildings,\nVictoria, commencing May lath, 1912. Application and Instruction forms can be\nhad on application to the undersigned,\nlo whom tbe former must be returned\ncorrectly filled in, not later than May\n1st. 1012. Salary, $139 por month, increasing $5 per month per annum to a\nminimum of $1.sit per month.\nJOHN' PECK,\nChief Inspector of Machinery,\nNew Westminster, B.C.\nDaily News Want Ads. Get Results.\nCITY  OF  NELSON\nNotice Is hereby given thnt tlie first\nmeeting of the Court of Revision for tbe\nMunicipality of tbe City of Nelson will\nbe held iii tho council chamber of the\ncity hall on Wednesday, the 15th day of\nMay. 1012, nt 10 o'clock a.m., Tor the\npurpose of hearing and determining complaints Against the assessment as made\nfor the current year.\nAll appeals against thr ns? ess mentmust\nbe In writing and delivered to the assessor nt least ten days previous lo the\nsilting of the court.\nDated at Nelson, B.C., April 10th, 1912.\nW. E. WASSON,\n312-28 Assessor.\nFORT GEORGE  LAND CO.\nReal Estate. Employment Office\n315Vj Baker Street, Nelson.\nP. O.  Box SS8. Phone 134.\nJACOB GREEN & CO.\nAuctioneers,   Appraisers,   Valuators.\nPO. Box 233. Nelson, B. C.\nWANTED\u2014MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED\u2014An opportunity for a live\nman. selling our guaranteed- Yakima\nValley grown nursery stock. Exclusive\nterritory. Outfit free. Cash weekly.\n\"Hustle,\" not experience required. Top-\npenlsh   Nursery   Co.,   Tuppenlsh,   Wash.\nWANTEn-deun     cotton    rags.    Apply\nTlie Dally News. 79-tf.\nWANTED-Married  men  to by  five and\n10 acre  fruit  tracts.    Small  cash  payment,   balance   in   work.    Apply  Harris,\nHoneymoon   Place,   Kaslo. 97-tf.\nWANTED\u2014Lady stenographer who has\nhad seven years experience desires\nposition. Quick and accurate and can\nuse any machine. Also owns one. Write\nA, B. C, P. O. Box 721, Nelson, B. C.\n270-tf.\nWAN I ED-Girowers of small fruits to\neotnmunJcato at once with the -Koot-\ncnay-coiumblu Preserving Works Nelson, B.C., stating varieties grown and\napproximate quantities for sale       309-tP.\nWANTED-Good milch cow at once. State\nprice  aim   particulars.    Grosvenor    Atlanta   Ranch,    Riondel,   B.C. '\u00bb3ll-9\nWANTED\u2014Competent log senior,   \u25a0References   required.     Apply   Yale-Columbia\nLumber company,   Hoyal  Bank  liuilding.\nNelson, B. C, 3i:i-t.f.\nWANTED\u2014Experienced accountant wants\nto take charge of books, whole or part\ntime.    Reasonable rates.    Box 51, Nelson.\n\u2022311-0\nWANTED-Suuirt   man    Tor    real   estate\nfirm; splendid opportunity.   Apply  Box\nL.   B\u201e   Dally  News. 814-6\nWANTED\u2014To    rent   five  or    six    room\nhouse with garden.   Box S. Daily News.\n  314-tf\nWANTED-Mnn to trim, grade ami scale\nlumber lu mill 45,000 capacity.    Give reference.   Write Lumberman, Daily News.\n'314-3\nWANTED\u2014Garden plot near Observatory\nand   Cemetery   road.      Box   S.,    Dallv\nNews. *\u25a0\u00bb.\u00ab\nWANTEfi-At  once,  primary  teacher  by\nHume   school    board.      Gi.   IT.   Playle,\nsecretary.  Nelson. *3-0\nWANTED-To buy tent or fly.    Apply N\ncure Dally News.\nWANTED-To   buy  small   portable  saw~-\n mill.   Apply u., care Dally News.      \u00bb3-G\nWONTED\u2014Contracts Tor ploughing and\nscraping of gardens and lots, etc.; general cartage. Drop us a curd 01* leave\norders at City Park Grocery, Plume\nR277.    Address -lames  Reld,  Faf|-vhJW,\n\u20224-12\nWANTED\ntnitomoli\nSteady   en\nGn rage,\nWash.\n-Two  me\nat\nlo   lean\nepaiiint;\nWrit.\nKpokilii.\nWuVNTjap-By young lady wllh tlioroui\ncourse   in   shoi'thandi   typewriting  ai\nhook-keeping, a position as stoiiogrtiphc\nApply   Box 503.   Nelson. *5\nFOR  RENT\nFOR RENT\u2014Five roomed house on Robson street, opposite fire hall No. 2.  Enquire  of  D.   Mngllo,   Kootenay  hotel.\n11-tf.\nFOR   RENT-Thrce    r.ici\nrooms;   also   bedroom,\nstreet.\nhousekeeping\n713    Josephine\n\u2022314-0\nFOR       RFNT-Comfortablo       furnished\nrooms.    501   Hall slreet. \u2022315-0\nNOTICE   TO   CREDITORS\nIn the Matter of the Estato of Charles\nH. Ink, Late of the City of Nelson.\nBritish  Columbia.   Deceased.\nPursuant lo tbe Trustee Act, R.S.R.C.,\nchapter 232, notice Is hereby given that\nall creditors and others having claims\nagainst the estate of the said Charles\nII. Ink, who died on or about the 13th\nday of September, A.D. 1010, are required\non or before the 22nd day of April, 1912,\nto send by post prepaid, or deliver to\nFred C. Moffatt, of Burns block, Nelson,\nBritish Columbia, the solicitor for the\nexecutor of the estate of the said deceased, tlie Christian names and surnames, addresses ond descriptions, with\nfull particulars of their claim, a statement of their account and the nature of\nthe securities, If any, held, by them.\nAnd further take notice that after such\nlast mentioned date tbo said eieoUtor\nwill proceed to distribute the assets of\nthe deceased among the parties entitled\nthereto, having regard only to the claims\nof which he shall then have notice, and\nthnt Ihe said executor will not be liable\nfor the said assets or anv nart thereof\nto any person or persons of whose claims\nnotice shall not have been received by\nhim   nt   the   time   of   such   distribution.\nDated this 2Sth day of March, A.D.\n1912.\nFRED C. MOFFATT.\n293-22 Solicitor   for   Executor.\nNOTICE\nIn the Matter of an  Application  for  tho\nIssue   of   a   Duplicate   Certificate   of\nTitle   to  Lot  55411,   Croup   1,   Koolenav\nDistrict,\nNotice is hereby given that It Is mv Intention to Issue, at the expiration of one\nmonth after Ihe first  publlnitioa bercof,\nduplicate of the Certificate of Title to\n10 above mentioned  lot In  the name of\niiinuel   A.   Wye,     which    Certificate   Is\nated  the 2nd  day of November, 190fi,  al\n10 p.m., and numbered 9339A.\nNelson, B.C., 25th March, 1912.\nSAMUEL   R.   ROE,\n305-2a.w-R. District   Registrar.\nNOTICE\nTn Ibe matter or an application for the\nisiie of a duplicate Certificate of Title\nto  Lot  8101,  Group 1,  Kootenay district.\nNotice is Hereby given that It is my Intention to issue at the expiration of one\nmonth after the first publication hereof 11\nduplicate of the Certificate of Title to\nthe above mentioned lot In the name of\nAlfred Oram Mabee wlilch Ccrllfcate is\ndated the 25th day of Jaminry, 1903,  and\numbered 10130 A.\nNelson, B. C\u201e January 30. 1912.\nSAMUEL ROE,\nDistrict Registrar.\n313-3 a.w.-8\nHOTEL^IRBCTOIi\nSHERBROOKE HpTEL\nNelson, B. c\\\nOne  minute's   walk   fromlC.P.R.\ntlon.    Cuisine   unexcelled; Well   heal\n-and  ventilated. 1\nLAVIGNE  &  DUNK.\nPHOENIX     1\nHOTEL BROOKLYN, PT-IOEHIX, Bl\nThe only up-to-date hotel in Phoem\nNew from cellar to roof, Btst sanj\nrooms in the Boundary. Bath room\nconnection. Steam heat. Oppddte <;,\u25a0\nNorthern   depot.    James  Marshall,  I'|\nBusiness Directory!\nASSAYERS\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, ASSAYER\nChemist, Box AB08, Nelson, B. L\nCharges: Gold, sliver, copper or hi\n$1 each; gold-silver, $i.r,0; silver-lJ\n$1.50. Prices for other metals on T\nplication.\nAUCTIONEERS\nC. A. WATERMAN & CO.-P.O. Box 1\nW. CUTLER. LICENSED AUCTld\neer.\u2014Auction - rooms and warehol\nWard streetr\"Tnext opera house, ll\n474.   Phone 18\/ -\u25a0\nARCHITECT\nWILL HALDANE, ARCHITECT a|\nValuator, 519- Stanley street. Plans 1%\nspecifications tor all classes of bull\nings; entirely modern designs. P. ]\nBox 514.    Phones 308 and 311.\nCOLLECTION AGENCIES\nW. CUTLER, COLLECTIONS OF Ai\nkinds. Returns promptly made. Wq\nStreet, next opera house.\nCARPENTERS  AND   BUILDERS\nROBB ft. THOMPS^N^BUuXerTaiI\ncontractors, Victoria street,  next opt\nhouse.    P.  O.   Box 490.    Special  attJ\ntion   given   jobbing   and   repair  wol\nEstimates given. 50-1\nWHOLESALE PRODUCE\nSTARKEY ft CO., AVlIfB^ESATdTDEAl\ners in Butter, Eggs, Cheese. ProduB\nand Fruit. Houston Block, Joseph)!\nstreet,  Nelson,   B.  C.\nGROCERIES\nA. MACDONALD ft CO.. WHOLES A L|\nGrocers and Provision Merchants. InT\nporters of Teas, Cofrees, Spices, DrleL\nFruits, Staple and Fancy Groceries\nTobaccos, Cigars Butter, Eggs, Cheeil\nand Packing House Produce. QffloL\nand warehouse corner of Front anfl\nHall streets. P. O. Box 1095. TeleT\nphones   28  and  23.\nPAINTING   AND   PAPER   HANGINd\n\\. \u2022 E?BE^r^T^\\PArNl^ER AN1\nDecorator\u2014Wall papers and papel\nhanging a specialty. Estimates glveiL\n<\u25a0\u25a0 ! work promptly executed. 514 StutM\nley street. Phone 311. P. O. Box MT\nNelson.\nWILL1 AM FOWLES-PAPER HANGElL\nand decorator, cornel Stanley a it J\nSilica streets. A good selection 01 *aCl\npapers In stock. Orders promptly atl\ntended to. All work personally super!\nvised. Phone 52, P. O. Box 1C0, Nulsonr\n291-III\nPROFESSIONAL CARDS\nGREEN BROS., BURDEN & CO.\nCivil   Engineers.    Dominion   and   B.\nLand   Surveyors.\nSurveys   of   Lands,   Mines.   Town-sites!\nTimber Limits, Etc.\nNelson. 510 Ward street; A. H. GreenL\nMgr. .Victoria, ill Pembertoli Bldg.; iM\nC. Green. Ft. George, Hammond street*\nF.  P.  Burden.\nA. L.  McCULLOCH\nHydrauMo Engineer\nProvincial  Land Surveyor\nP.  O. Box 41\nOffice phone B80; residence phono B7*l\nOffice-  Over McDermid & McIIardy!\nBilker Street, Nelson, B. C.\n1 MINING\nProperties Inspected and expert reportJ\nfurnished. James L\\ Campbell, M.E.T.\nUnited States hotel, St.  Paul. 130-tfl\nSYNOPSIS OF COAL\nMINING  REGULATIONfJ\nCoal mining rights of the Dominion, InL\nManitoba, Saskatchewan, and Albertal\ntho Yukon territory, the North-westF\nTerritories, and in a portion of the proJ\nvlnce of British Columbia, may lie leased?\nfor a term of twenty-one years at anl\nannual rental of Jl per acre. Not morel\nthan 2,500 acres will ho leased to' one]\nupplicant. I\nApplication for a lease must bo model\nby the applicant In person to the AgentM\nor Sub-Agent of the district in which!\nthe rights applied for are situated.\nIn surveyed territory the land muBt L__\ndescribed hy sections, or legal sub-divls-1\nIons of sections, and In unsurveyed terrl-B\ntory the tract applied for shall be staked!\nout by the applicant himself. I\nEach application must bo accompanied!\nby a fee of J5 which will bo refunded If!\nthe rights applied for are not available;!\nbut not otherwise. A royalty shall be!\npaid on the merchantable ontnut of the!\nmine at the rate of five centa por ton.!\nThe person operating tho mine shall]\nfurnish the Agent with sworn returns ac-f\ncounting for the full quantity of mer-L\nchantnhle coal mined and pay the royalty I\nthereon, If the eoal mining rights are!\nnot being operated, such returns should V\nbe furnished nt least nneo a year, I\nThe lease will. Include the conl mining I\nrights only, but the lessee mny '\"> per-1\nmitted to purchase whatever available!\nsurfnee rights may lie considered neces-f\nsnry for the working of the mine at the\nrote of (10.Oil an ncre\nFor full  Information application should]\nbe made to the Secretary of thn Depart-]\nment of the Interior, Ottawa, or to any!\nAgent or Sub-Agent of Dominion Lands.\nW. W.  CORY,\nDeputy Minister nf the Interior.   _\nN.B.\u2014Unauthorized  publication  of  this!\nadvertisement will not ho paid for. I\n.  202-1011\nNOTICE\nNotice Is hereby given that the under-!\nsigned applicant for transfer will, at thol\nexpiration of thirty CIO) days from thai\ndate hereof, or as soon thereafter as tlio!\nhoard of license commissioners for the!\ncity of Nelson shall meet, apply to thai\nsaid board for a transfer of the retail]\nI in 1 an- license for the premises known]\nns the Nelson House, Baker street, Nel-r\n1, British Columbia, which said license!\niw held in the name of Tnk ft Wimlf\nfrom the said  Ink ft Ward to the said]\napplicant,   William  Arthur  Ward. I\nDated at Nelson, British Columbia, this]\n20th day of'Mawh, A.I)., 1012.\nWILLIAM  ARTHUR  WARD,\nApplicant for Transfer.\nINK ft WARD.\nLicensees.\nWitness: Fred C. Moffatt.\n297-SOl\n\u25a0MM\n MONDAY      April 22\nCfie Batlp jto,\nH(0\nPAGE SEVEN    .1\nSTAR GROCERY\nDirectly    opposite     Dominion\nExpress  Office\nStore of Quality\nPhone 10\nAre You\nReading\nOur\nBreakfast\nDelights?\nHere is list No. 4.\nOx Tongue\nWe   sell   it   packed   In   glass;   In\nlargo tin; or soil it fn bulk, sliced.\nSelected\nChoice\nBoiled Ham\n(Sliced)\nPrice  per  lb ... 40c\nSalami\nSummer\nSausage\nPrice per lb 40c\nBreakfast\nDelights\nThat have appeared in this column\nBRAID'S BEST COFFEE\n(Mocha and Java)\nCURLEW FRESH CREAM\n(In  half-pint bottles)\nHAZELWOOD   CREAMERY\nBUTTER\n(In air-tiffht cartons)\nBEECH-NUT  BACON\n(Wo arc sole agents)\nBREAST OF CHICKEN\n(Sold In gloss Jars.)\nKEILLER'S SCOTCH   MAR.\nMALAPE\nLARGE, JUICY GRAPE FRUIT\n) \"Star\" Coffee,\nof Course\nPIoie 10\nSTAR GROCERY\nNELSON\nStrachans\nPlumbing\nIs all you need to complete the plans\nfor tho now building. Wo cheerfully\nfurnish estimates on all classes of\nsanitary plumbing and heating systems and ,a furnace or bath Installed\nby us means freedom from worry.\nE. K. STRACHAN\nPlumbing and Heating\nTelephone 262 313  Baker st-\nDaily News Want Ads. Get Results,\nth:orfe's \u25a0\u25a0<?,'\u25a0;\nWhy Farmers Prefer\nSwift's Fertilizers\nSwift's Fertilizers contain natural\nplant food, animal matter, properly processed and combined to make\ntlie most productive fertilizers.\nThousands of farmers know that\nSwift's Fertilizers produce. the\nlargest and best Quality crops,\nbuild up tho soil, resulting in increased yields on the crops that\nfollow. Swift's Fertilizers give the\nmost net profit to tho farmer\nCall or writo for free booklet,\nSwift Canadian Co., Ltd.\nNELSON, B.C.\nI \" 1\nWe atene to your\nPLUMBING\npromptly and well\nB. C. Plumbing & Heating Co.\nVictoria Street, near Opera Houie\nTelephone 181\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\nTlie city council will meet this evening.\nJohn McLeod, fisheries inspector, leaves\ntoday for Vernon.\nT. F. Hurley of Cranbrook has been\nappointed a notary public,\nA certificate or Incorporation lias been\ngranted to Bert Lorsch,  Limited,\nSome of Uie best local talent will con-\ntrlbute to tho program at the' It. L.\nDouglass benefit concert at the armory\nun .Thursday   evening.\nThe British Columbia Ghzette contains\nthe announcement that Hon. Thomas\nTaylor Is minister of mines during the\nabsence from the province of Premier\nMolirldc.\nThe usual parade of Hie Boys' Brlgado\non Monday evening of each week has\nbeen postponed until tomorrow, All members of the company are asked to parade\nin the church hall Instead of the armory\ntomorrow evening at the usual hour.\nAsk   c-   write   for   tho   Hudson's  Bay\ncompany's grocery price list. 161-tf.\nA private sale of furniture will lie held\non Aionday mid Tuesday. April 22ml and\n23rd, corner of Elwin and Second streets,\nFairview. 3-4\nTO SHOW FLOWERS\nTO DRY FARMERS\nLethbridge  Man  Thinks West  Kootenay Produce  Exhibit Should  be\nAccompanied   by   Floral  Display\n\"West Kootenay'a fruit and produce\nexhibit at the International Dry Farming congress at Lethbridge next October should be nccompanied by a\ndisplay of flowers,\" declared a well-\nknown Lethbridge man who is v'sit-\ning the city, at the Hume last night.\n\"It will, of course, be sopiewhut too\nInto for Kootenay to send a very\ncompleto floral display but I think\nthat if you can get together some kind\nof exhibit of late roses and other flowers which can bo obtained In October\nyou coiild make a display which will\nbo nhsolutely  unique at the congress.\n\"It is certain that Alberta nnd lho\nvarious' dry farming districts which\nwill exhibit for competition will be\nvery unlikely to have any flowers on\nshow and a flornt display, even If\nsmall, would single out the West\nKootenny booth for special attent'on\nfrom tho thousands of visitors from\nall parts of the world, who will attend\ntho congress,\n\"Flowers, it seems to mo, are the\nnatural complement of an exhibit of\nfruit, which with vegetables will probably be the feature of tho West Koote\nnay display, and would convey lo\nthe visitor to tho congress some Idea\nof this garden like land of lakes and\nrivers and fertle orchard chid slopes\nwhich Is known as West Kootenay.\"\nho said.\nFOR TOURIST ROUTE\nUP SIX-MILE CREEK\n. The King George Cafe, Hall street,\nserves tile best 250 dinner In Nelson.\nShort orders at all hours. Open frum\nG a.m. to 0 p.m. *3-<l\nMr. C. Ross Tale has just arrived lo\ntake charge of .1. J. Walker's watch re-\npairing department, Mr. Tali took a\nin months' course ot tho Canadian Itnro\nlogical Institute, Torunto, and has 11\nyears' experience nt watch repairing,\nhandling nil kinds of high grade watches\nrequired by the railway time service.\nWANTED\u2014Everyone to try Vacuum\nCleaning. No homes upset. No worry.\nNo dust. Try up-to-date methods when\ncleaning. Renovate your home. Phono\nHi for window and chimney cleaning,\nOffice, Stanley Slreet. 310-tf.\nAT THE THEATRE\nAt tho Starland will he shown a pleasing\nand Interesting program, The drama entitled \"On Probation\" is a story with a\nclimax Unit startles and thrills\u2014that is\nhigh mystery and high surprise. Incidentally, the little girl in the garret will\n-go\" straight to the hearts of patrons,\nthat they will have unbounded sympathy\nfor her, and then unbounded applause\nas the big twist at tho end works out\nto her advantage. \"The Legend of the\nBalanced Rock\" is a delicate, mythical\ntale of compelling charm, nnd beautifully\ntinted. Staged in the \"Garden of the\nnods.\" near Colorado Springs. Calitban,\nan ogre, has designs on a little girl.\nShe does not relish the Idea of being a\nbreakfast food, so she runs away and\nhas unite an experience for a little girl\nof tender years, \"Miss Mnsipienuler\" is\na picture that depends tor Its fun on the\ndifficulties which a young <rlrl masquerading ns a boy encounters, it is pleasingly acted as a light society comedy and\nis pretty and charming.\nThe Johtn-nn-.leffrles fight pictures,\nwhich are billed at the opera houso for\nnext Wednesday and Thursday evenings,\nare guaranteed by the management to\nhe Ihe only genuine- nnd authorized\nmoving pictures nf that world renowned\ncontest at 'Hi no.    The  pictures consist\nOf D.000 feet of film Which  Is said lo have\ncost  iii   the noighbodhood  of JoM.iXK) to\nWELL KNOWN   IN  CANADA\n(By Dally News Leased WlrO.l\nLONDON, April 20.\u2014Among the\nLondon passengers to perish when the\nTitanic met her doom nn tho Morning\nof Monday. April 15, was it figure\nmost familiarly known to Canadians.\nThis was .Austin Partner, nn Anglo-,\nCanadian stock broker, who was making his annual trip to the Dominion.\ni\/ the Hair Root\nIs not Dead\nDo not Despair\nFalling hair moans scanty hair, und\nscanty bair means baldness. Tbe whole\ntrouble Is caused Iv dandruff germs that\ndestroy tho natural nourishment that Is\nsupplied to the hair root.\nPARISIAN\nS A 0 E, the\nscientific hair\nnourlsher, penetrates Into the\nroots of the\nhair and not\nonly kills the\ngerms but supplies tho hah-\nroot with Just'\nthe kind of\nnourishment It\nshould have.\nIf you are got-\ngettlng bald; if\nyour bnlr Is fulling, don't wait\ntill too late but get a bottle of PARISIAN\nBACKS] today.\nIt is possible to have your hair and\nprevent baldness If tbe hair root Is not\ndead.\nPARISIAN SAGE is guaranteed to\nsatisfy evory user, or money back. It\nstops falling hair, scalp Itch, nnd banishes dandruff In two weeks. It is a refined\nhair dressing that puts a radiant luster\nInto fnded, dull hair. Fifty cents nt the\nPoole Drug company's and dealers everywhere.\nGrade  Would   be  Excellent for  Automobiles  and  Senery   is  Wonderful\nSays  Bruce.   White.\nA relatively small sum expended\nupon the Improvement of tho trail up\nSix-Mile creek and across the divide\nlo Slocan city would provide an automobile and wagon road connecting\nvia the bridge over the Kootenay river\nwith Nelson, which for* scenery could\nhardly he beaten anywhere in the province, In tlie opinion of Bruce White\nwho knows the route well.\nThe grade, ho says, is excellent and\nat the summit of the trail up Six-\nMile fs one of the most picturesque\nchains of lakes in tlie province, while\ntlie view of the surrounding count r:\nalmost without parallel. The probable\ndistance would bo about 2fi miles.\nSlX-Mile   lakes   are  well  Unown   fr\nthe splendid fishing thoy offer nnd the\n'proposed  rood would  place Ihe tourist\non h's way to tho Six-Mile glaciers.\nIncidentally)    tho    road would gh\naccess  to   what   are   considered   some\npromising  mining  propositions.\nTO PLANT ORCHARD\nAT BAYNES' LAKE\nGovernment Selects Five Acres of Col.\nPayne's   Ranch   for   Demonstration  Purposes.\nThfswcok M. S. Mlddleton, assistant\nprovincial government horticiiltural'st,\nwill supervise tbe planting1 ot the new\ndemonstration orchards at Col. R.\nPayne's rnnchc at; Bnyne's lake. Five\nacres will lie planted. In the demonstration portion of the orchard will be\nset out a number of varieties of the\nhard'er kinds of apples and another\nportion of tho l;snd*will bo devoted lo\nthe experimental testing of various\nvaritlos of fruit with the object of\ndetermining their adaptability t'i Ihe\ndistrict.\nMr. Mlddleton has already pruned\nthe demonstration orchards nt Rossland, Trull and Willow Point, finishing work at the last named or. Saturday.   \u25a0 \u2022\nWhite Swan Yeast Cakes,\ncombined with good flour and careful\nbaking make the most delicious homemade bread you ever tasted. Insist\nupon your grocer giving you White\nSwan Yeast Cakes\u20145c a package of\nC cakes. Sample sent on request,\nWhile Swan Spices & Cereals, Llinlt-\nde, Toronto, Out.\nBRING  SURVIVORS  OF\nWRECKED   FISHING   BOAT\n(Ry Dally News Leased Wire.\")\nGLOUCESTER. Mass., April 21.\u2014The\nGloucester fishing schooner John Hays\nHammond arrived here from the\nGrand Ranks fishing grounds today\nbringing six members of the crew nf\nIhe Nova Scotia fishing schooner\nUranium, which sank nfter collision\nwith lho Hammond in a fog near\nSable Island on Tuesday. The wrecked fisherman believed that their II\nshipmates, had boon drowned but\nlearned hero that they reached Lls-\ncombo, N.K., safely after rowing 100\nmiles  in   their dories,\nMARCH   BANK   STATEMENT\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.l\nOTTAWA, April 21.\u2014The March\nbunk statement, Issued today, indicates\ncontinued prosperous business conditions, with the principal figures as\nfollows:\nDemand deposits, $331,80(1.23S; notice\ndeposits, ?G06,0-14,032; deposits outside\nCanada. $80,737,02-1; rail loans, Canada,\n$6!),84C,338; call loans, outside Canada,\n$lW,6<!7.027; current loans, $815,9-18,318;\nurrent loans, outside, $34,200,383.\nTEMPORARY   PRESIDENT\nOF   GRAND   TRUNK\n(By Daily News Leased wire.)\nMONTREAL. April 21.\u2014Ry direction\nof tlio board of directors of the Grand\nTrunk and Grand Trunk Pacific railways, cabled this afternoon from London, Eng., W. Wainwrlght, vice president of the Grand Trunk railway, will\nbe in temporary charge of the affairs\nof that company and E. J. Chnmbeiiin,\nvice president of tbe Grand Trunk Pacific Will be in temporary charge of\nIhe affairs of the latter company.\nOFFICIAL REPORT OF\nCARPATHIA'S CAPTAIN\nTells of Rescue of Titanic Survivors\u2014\nHugo Fields of Ice Surround\nShip.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nNEW YORK, April -21.\u2014Tlie- Car\npathia sailed within less than 24 hours\nafter she came fn as a rescue ship with\n745 survivors of tho Titanic disaster.\nShe sailed again Saturday afternoon\nfor the Mediterranean cruise, on which\nihe originally started last week. Just\nbefore the liner sailed, H. S. Bride, the\nsecond Marconi wireless operator of\nthe Titanic, who had both of his legs\ncrushed on a lifeboat, was carried off\non the shoulders of the ship's officers\nto St. Vincent hospital.\nCaptain A. H, Rostrom of the Carpathia addressed an official report,\ngiving his account of the Carpathian\nrescue work to the general manager of\nlho Cunnrd lino at Liverpool. The report read:\n\"I beg to report that at 12:35 a. m.\nMonday, 15th, I was informed of urgent\nmessage from Titanic wilh her posl\ntlon. I immediately ordered ship\nturned around and put her in course\nfor thnt position, we being then 58\nmiles S. 52 E. from her. Had heads\nof all departments called and issued\nwhat I considered the necessary orders to be In preparation for any emergency.\n\"At 2:40 a, m. saw flare half a point\non port how. Taking this for granted\nto be ship, shortly after we sighted\nour first iceberg. I had previously had\nlookouts doubled, knowing that Titanic\nhad struck ice, and so took every care\nand precaution. We soon found our\nselves in a field of bergs, large and\nsmall, and had to alter course several\nlimes to clear bergs. Weather fine and\nclear,, light airs on sea, beautifully\nclear night, though dark.\n\"Wo stopped at 4 a. m., thus doing\ndistance in three hours and a half, an\npicking up the first boat nt 4:10 a. m\nboat In charge of officer and he v<\nported that Titanic had foundered. At\n8:30 a. m. last boat picked up. All\nsurvivors aboard and all boats accounted for, viz.. 15 boats, one boat\nabandoned two Uerthon boats alongside (saw one floating upward among\nwreckage) and according to second\nofficer (senior officer saved) one Ber-\nthon boat had not been launched, it\nhaving: got Jammed, making 1G lifeboats and four Berthon boats accounted for. By the time wc had cleared\nfirst boat it was breaking day, and I\ncould see all within area of four miles.\nWe also saw that we were surrounded\nby icebergs, -large and small, and three\nmiles to the northwest of us a huge\nfield of drift ice with large and small\nbergs in it, Hie lee field trending from\nX. W. round W. and S. to S. W and\nas far as we could see either *.\nCalifornia Arrives.\n\"At 8 a. m. lite Leyland steamship\nCalifornia came up. 1- gave him the\nprincipal news apd asked him to\nsearch and I would proceed tu New\nYork. At 8:40 proceeded full speed,\nwhile researching over vicinity of dls*\naster, and while we were getting people aboard T gave orders to get spare\nhands along and swing In nil our boats,\ndisconnect the fall, and hoist up as\nmany Titanic bouts as possiblo fn our\ndavits; also get some on forecastle\nheads by derricks. Wo got 13 lifeboats six on forward deck and seven\nin davits. After getting all survivors,\nand while searching, I got a clergyman to offer a short prayer of thanksgiving for those saved, and also a\nshort burial service for those lost In\nthe  saloon.\n\"ilefove deciding definitely where lo\nmake for I, conferred with Mr. Ismay\nand though he told me to do what I\nthought best 1 informed him that\ntaking everything into consideration I\nconsidered New York best. I knew we\n[should require clean blankets, provisions and clean linen and even If we\nwent to tho Azores, as most of the\npassengers saved were women and\nchildren, and they hysterical, and not\nknowing what medical attention they\nmight require-, thought it best to go to\nNew York. I also thought it would be\nbelter for Mr. Ismay to go to New\nYork or England us soon as possible,\nand knowing I should be out of wireless communication very soon if I proceeded lo the Azores, It left Halifax,\nBoston and New York, so 1 chose tin\nlatter, Again-, the passengers were all\nhysterical about ice and I pointed out\nto Mr. Ismay the possibility of seeing\nIce if 1 went to Halifax. Then 1 knew\nfrom the gravity of the disaster [hat it\nwould be best to keep in touch With\nland stations us best I could. We have\nexperienced very great difficulty in\ntransmitting news, also names of survivors. Our wireless is very poor, and\nagain we had so many Interruptions\nfrom other ships and also messages\nfrom shore (principally press, which\nwo ignored), I gave instructions to\nsend first official messages, then\nnames of survivors; then survivors'\nprivate messages.\nHudson's Bay Stores\nIncorporated 1670\nIncorporated 1670\nComprehensive Showing of\nNew Beautiful Silk Dresses\nThe exquisite colorings, the elegant 'styles and attractive prices make a visit to this display of the utmost\n(interest and pleasure. Following are a few descriptions\nthat will make interesting reading:\nFor $13.50\nBordered Foulard Silk Dresses\u2014Dutch neck, set-In\nsleeves, cuffs irhnmod with lace; high waist lines; colors\ncome in black and white, navy and white, and brown and\nwhite.   Th.-jsa arc exceptional Value at $13.50\nFor $20.00\nNatural Pongee Silk Dresses\u2014Cut on tho very latest\nlines, with new panel effect running from shoulder to bottom of skirt; trimmed with black satin piping. Extra\nvaluo at  $20.00\nFor $19.75\nSpecial Lot Silk Dressos- In assorted stripes, also in the\nnew shot colorings; some have tho new panel effect back\nand front, with Hutch neek and short sleeves; others again\nhavo embroidered fronts and skirls with side panel effect.\nVery special at $19.75\nEvery Woman Can Enjoy\nReal Corset Comfort\nby wearing either a D. & A. or Royal Worcester Corset\nIt has come to be a recognized fact that the success\nof a gown depends not only in its eut and fit, but\neven more so upon the perfection and symmetry of the\ncorset underneath il. Hence it Is that the models of\nRoyal Worcester and D. & A. Corsets come as a revelation to those wlio have never yet tried any but the\nordinary kinds. We have a large range of designs\nand fittings in these corsets. The beauty of shape is\nInimitable; their cutting is mastorly. The new spring\nstyles are all here.    Prices from 75c to $4.50\nPretty Spring Styles in\nNewest Wash Goods\nThe New Brilliants\u2014A new material with lustrous\nspot effects, in both light and dark grounds; 30 inches\nwide.    Per yard 30c\nCo'ored Dr;cc Muslins\u2014A choice showing of these\ndainty muslins In all the newest designs, suitable for\nladies' and children's dresses.   Special, per yard 15c\nMercerized Bordered Foulards\u2014A very handsome\nmaterial for waisls; comes in cadet blue nnd grey; 30\nInches wide.    Per  yard 50c\nCruir-'a English Prints--Extensive showing of these\nwell-known prints. In light, and dark grounds; large\nrange of patterns to choose from.   Per yard 15c\n\"TELL MY WIFE\nI'VE DONE MY BEST'\n-ni-ly oil Tuesday\nI hours; again more\n\u25a0 from 5:30 a, ni.\nrung smith-southwesterly\nar weather on Thursday,\nWe   hud   ha\/,\nmorning for sovi\nor less all Wednesc\nto ,r) ]i. m..\nwinds and\nwith moderately rough sea.\n\"1 um pleased to say that all survivors have been very plucky. The\nmajority of women, first,, second and\nthird class, lost their husbands, and\nL-onsidering all. have been wonderfully\nwell. Tuesday our doctor reported all\nsurvivors physically well. Our first-\nclass passengers have behaved splendidly, giving up their cabins voluntarily and supplied tho ladies witli\nlothes, etc. We all turned out of our\ncabins and kuvc them to survivors; saloon, smoking room, library, etc., also\nbeing used for sleeping accommodation. Our crew also turned out to let\nthe crew of the Titanic take their\nquarters.    1 am pleased to state that,\nowing to pri\ncomfort of si\nworse for exp\ndally menlii\ncheerfully the\nitions made for tho\n,-ors, none were the\n\u25a0e, etc, I beg to ospe-\nhow willingly nnd\n>[ the ship's co:\npuny   behaved,   receiving   the   highest\npraise from everybody.   And I can assure you I am very proud tn have such\ni company under my command.\n(Signed) \"A- H. HOSTROM,\n\"Captain Carpathia.\"\n\"Prepared   to   go   Down   Like   Gentlemen,\" Said  Benjamin  Guggenheim\n\u2014Holpcd Wornon and Children.\n(By Pally News Leased Wire.)\nNEW YORK, April 21,\u2014-\"If anything\nshould happen to me tell my wife that\nI've done my best In doing my duty.\"\nThat was the last message of Benjamin Guggenheim of tho famous\nbanking family, dictated tu a steward\nonly a short lime before the banker\nsank to his death wilh the Titanic.\nThe word from Hie dead millionaire\nwas delivered by .lames Etches, assistant steward in the first cabin of the\nTitanic, to whom Mr. Guggenheim\ncommunicated it. Etches appeared at\nthe St. Regis hotel and inquired for\nMrs. Guggenheim and sal dtltat it had\nto  be delivered In person.\nMrs. Guggenheim was in llie care of\nDaniel Guggenheim, whose apartments\nare at tho hotel. The steward was admitted, but was not permitted to see\n.Mrs. Guggenheim, who is prostrated\nwith grief. Ho insisted that he must\nsee her personally, but finally consented lo transmit the message\nthrough  her brother-In-law.\n\"We were together almost lo the\nend,\" said tlie steward. \"I was saved.\nHe went down with tho ship. Hut that\nIs nut. what 1 want lo tell Mrs. Guggenheim.\"\nThen the steward produced a piece\nof paper, lie had written the message\non ib. he said, to be eertain that It\nwould be correct. Tlie message was as\ngiven.\n\"Thai's ail lie said,\" added the steward; \"there was not time for more.\"\nLittle by little Mr. Guggenheim got\nthe story of his brother's death from\nthe steward. It wns tbe first definite\nnews that he had received from his\nbrother.\nHelped Women and Children.\n\"Mr. Gugegnbeim Was one of my\ncharges,\" said Etches. \"He had his\nsecretary wilh him. His name was\nGlglio, 1 believe, an Armenian about\n2-1 years old. Both died like soldiers.\nWhen the crash came I awakened them\nand told them to get dressed. A few\nminutes later I went into their rooms\nand helped ihein to got ready. 1 put\na life preserver on Mr. Guggenheim.\nHe said il hurt him iu the back. There\nwas plenty of lime and I took it off\nand adjusted it and then put It oil him\nagain.    It was all right this lime.\n\"They wanted to go on deck with\nonly a few clothes on, bul 1 pulled a\nheavy sweater over Mr. Guggenheim\nlife belt and then they both went out,\nThoy stayed together and I could see\nWhat they were doing. They were going from one lifeboat lo another helping the women and children. Mr, Guggenheim would shout out, 'Women\nfirst,' and he was of great assistance\nto  the officers.\nDressed in Our Best.\n\"Tilings were not so bad at first, but\nwhen 1 saw Mr. Guggenheim about\nthree-quarters of an hour after the.\ncrush there was great excitement.\nWhat surprised me was that Mr. Guggenheim and his secretary were both\ndressed In their evening clothes. They\nbud deliberately taken off their\nsweaters and as nearly as can remember they wore no life bells at all.\n'\"What's lhat for?' I asked. 'We've\ndressed in our beat,' replied Mr. Gug-\nStorage     Storage     Storage\nCITY CAB CO., WARD ST.. NEXT OPERA   HOUSE\nHost line of hacks and carriages In tho city.   Furniture moved and stored.\nBaggage  wagon   always  ready.    Phone  IS.\ngenheim, 'and .ire prepared to go down\nlike gentlemen.' It wns then In- mid\nme about the message to his wife and\nLhat is what I have come here for,\n\"Well. Shortly after the last few\nboats were lowered and 1 was ordered\nby tlie deck officer lo man an ear, 1\nwaved goodbye to Mr. Guggenheim,\nand that was tho last I saw of him and\nbis secretary.\"\nAeroplanes to  rind Bodies.\nEfforts to find ihe body of Benjamin\nGuggenheim, who was the fifth of the\nseven Guggenheim brothers, as well as\nibe bodies of oilier victims, will be\nmade by ihe \"--i* surviving brothers.\nAside from scouring the seas with\nsmall steamers, it wns considered\nprobable tonight that hydro-aeroplanes\nwould be rushed to the scene of the\ndisaster. An aviaior named F. C. Dlt-\nmnr, who lias attained some fame on\nthe I1 eiflc coast, telegraphed to Robber! Guggenheim yesterday from San\ntilego, Cal\u201e suggesting Ihe sending of\ntour aviators and as many hydro-\n,-ci-i planes thero on steamers. Ho\n.v.i ild have the aeroplanes equipped\nttlth calcium phosphate signals and\nnuike them scout for a hundred miles\nth- fl'.tonlc with ii view of locating\nfloating bodies.    Mr,   Guggenheim   is\nunderstood to be considering this prop-\nEDMONTON PLAYERS\nSCORE TRIUMPH\nGcvernor  General   and   Princess   Patricia    Present\u2014Committeo    to\nJudge  Competition\n(Bj* iJully News  Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA,     April    21\u2014 The    Edmonton\nDramatic   dub   scored   a   decided   triumph    la their    presentation    of   Oscar\nWilde's play \"The importance of Being\nEarnest.\" Their royal highnesses the\nDuke of -Connaught and Princess Patricia Willi tbe royal sulle were present.\nSir John Hare, the distinguished English dramatist, who was Invited to act\nas judge in the Karl Grey dramatic com-\npetltlon has been ill ever sine- reaching\nOttawa. Me Is still confined to tho\nhome or Lieut. Col. Wljoda. On account\nof the Impossibility nf Sir John to act\n;is judge a (-0111111111, e 1ms been mimed\nto lake his pliVce, consisting of Colonel\nLowther, Norman Smith nnd J. A. Ewart\nICC, While the .dramatic series have\nbeen numerous tills year ihe Edmonton\nplayers last night gave an unusually\nRood account \u25a0->( themselves. Oscar\nWilde's \"Trivial Comedy fm- serious people,\" as the program describes it. was\nmost happily rendered \"by the Albcrtan\nnmntoufrs the anting was delightfully\nfinished, free from the marks one might\nejcneci from amateur -plaij'ers.\nThe principal rotes were each excellently taken. Albert B. Nash and W. n.\nElmslle took tbe hidicrpus parts of the\ntwo young English friends most ac-\ncentably.\nMiss Beaufort as Teeilv CardcW, and\nMiss Bolter as Gwendolln.\nWin Musical Competition\nfB\u00ab Daily News Leased Wire,)\nOttawa. April 2l.~It Is announced\nthat the Ottawa Symphony orchestra and\nthe Orpheus Gltee club of Ottawa, are\nthe winners of first nnd second prizes\nn spectlvely nn the Karl f.rev coinpetl-\nde   by\ntlir\ndramatic collided till Saturday\nSENTENCED  TO   HANG\nfBy Tin 11 v News Leased Wire.l\nRED DEER. Alta., April 20.\u2014At lb-\n\u2022upreitie court sitting yesterday .Tame\n\\irisen was sentenced to he bangei\nit Lethbridge, June 1!\u00bb, for the murde\nif Norman Merrick, near Caslor, 01\nNovember 21, last.\n*$*, ILt.\nGum\nSTOPS soughs glftLTSt\nSTOCKS\nWE WILL BUY\n10-20  Qmnby   \t\n25-50 B. c. Copper \t\n.00-1000  Rmbler-Cariuoo   ..\n10 Canadian Marconi \t\n10 Consolidated\t\nWE WILL SELL\n...550.00 j     500 British Paeltic Coal $   .05\n...   5.00 I     100  Standard Silver Lead..    1.45\n.52  io.OOO. Juno  for    110.00\n...    6.50        100    Sunset   Mills        1.00\n...42.00 I     500-1000   McGUIIvruy    17?i\nE. B.  McDermid -B-k\u00b0r *\"*\u2022N\nel3on I\nC.\n f      PAGE EIGHT\nCfie Baity J&eVbS.\nMONDAY\nApn]\nFOR SALE\n7 roomed house,, stable nnd chicken house, situated on four lots,\none minute front car line.\nThere are on this property 50 full\nbearing fruit trees and the soil is\nIn a high state of cultivation, and\nthe returns from garden and orchard are guaranteed to pay good\ninterest on Ihe money invested in\nthis property. The owner is desirous of disposing of this property\nimmediately and will soil at a sacrifice. For price and terms call and\nsee\nMawdsley, Shaw\n&Co.\nUnequalled for General  Use\nW. P. TIERNEY, General Sales Agent,\nNelson, B. C.\nCars shipped to all railway points.\nStarland Theatre\nWilkinson's  Orchestra\nThe   Rex   Feature\nThrough Flaming\nGates\nThe   Gaumont   Graphic.\nMan  Prom  Under tlie Bed.\nAdmission, 10c.\nCHIVERS JANS\n5-lb. Tins 75c\nPLUM.\nRED  CURRANT\nGOOSEBERRY\nC.A.Benedict\nGrocer\nSelections,   Orchestra\nKalem  Feature\nCaught in the Toils\nLubln Comedy and'Educatlonal, A\nnote in the Orange Celebration\nat Key West.\nPathe's   Western   Drama\nThe   Brothers.\n10c.    ADMISSION    10c.\n10-Acre\nOrchard Lots\nFor Sale\nSituated on the Columbia river, five miles west of West Rob-\nson. Those lots are admirably\nadapted for fruit growing. Thoy\nhave a southern aspect, have\nvery littio stone on them and\nthe  clearing   is easy.\nEach block tins a good water\nfrontage and rims back with a\ngenlle slope. A school is within\nreach of any of these lots.\nPrice $75 per Acre\nTerms\u2014Quarter cash, lho balance In three cipial annual payments.\nH. & N. Bird\nNelson, B. C.\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\n.1. A. RcddeH of Kaslo is at Ihe Madden.\nR. .1. Long of Creston is at the\nStrathcona.\nJ. (i. Patonnudc has returned from a\nI'll* lo Europe.\n.lames Rooke, the Grand Forks fruitgrower, is a guest at the Queen's.\nS. J. McDonald and R. W. Evans of\nT    j.!and arc guests at the Hume.\nWilliam A. Aekhind of Plymouth,\nEngland, is a guest at the Grand Central.\nGeorge D. Hell reached the cily from\nVictoria last night and is a guest at\nthe Hume.\nMr, and   Mrs.  King and   Miss King\nNote Our Prices\nAsheroft Potatoes,  100 lbs\t\nFlour, any  hind.  BOlbS\t\nSchillings' Bk, Powder. 12 oz\nPi-lee's Bk. Powder,  12 oz....\nHomemade Sauerkraut, \u25a0! lbs...25c.\nHomo   made   Dill   Pickles.    Onco\ntried you will avways use them.\n.35 I  Hothouse Lettuce, fresh daily..25c,\nTHE UNION GROCERY\nCor,  Hail  and  Baker Sts.\nNelson, B.C.\nNelson Opera House\nTwo  nlt-lits\nWednesday   and   Thursday,   April\n24 and 25\nJeffries\nWorld's championship fight Films.'\nTHE   REAL  ONES\nTho only genuine and authorized\nmoving pictures   of this world  renowned   contest   at  Reno.\n6,000      FEET OF FILM      6,000\nSpecial   Orchestra\nADMISSION SO CENTS.\nThe Best\nSw^et Peas\nSpencer's in many shades\u2014Separate and mixed.\nFlower    Seeds    and     Vegetable\n~   Seeds by Weight.\nAtylEfttWd  \u00b0y ourselves.\nMost   Complete Slock.\nMost Intelligent Service.\nnnlon   Setts   and   Multiplier\nOnion\nDahlia   Bulbs   and   Glad obis   to\nto arrive in few days.\nPlease Order Now.\nCall and see us for your garden\nwants.\nWm. Rutherford\nDruggist Ward St.\nmilled   the  city   from   London,   England, on Saturday and registered at the\nThe Legion of Frontiersmen Rifle\nassociation will hold a meeting at the\nboard of trade rooms at 8 o'clock tomorrow evening.\nThe Trades and Labor Council will\nmeet in Miners' Union hall tomorrow\nevening at 8 o'clock, l.'rgciit business\nwill be considered.\nSamuel Rodovich of Trail has boon\ntaken to the asylum for llie Insane at\nNew Westminster by Chief of Police\nDowns Of the Smelter Cily.\nThe Woman's Missionary society, of\nSt. I villi's Presbyterian church will\nhold Its annual Easter thank offering\nmission at 3 o'clock this afternoon.\nDuring the past 4S hours the water\nin Ihe west arm rose 3Vj inches, according to the gauge of tho Nelson\nLaunch & Boat company, It now\nshows a lolal gain of 3 feel 5& inches.\nThe social of tbe Baptist Young\nPeople's society bus been postponed\nlor two weeks from Tuesday next. The\nusual junior and senior meetings will\nIn- la-Id at 7 and S o'clock respectively\ntomorrow evening,\nWilliam McLeod of Vancouver, assistant general manager of Hie Thiol\nDetective Agency, reached the city on I\ntha Crow boat last night und registered at the Strathcona. He leaves!\nf.r Vancouver this morning.\nSentenced to two terms of six months]\neach, In run concurrently, by Police,\nMagistrate Plowman of Rossland on\ne! urges of indecent actions, William j\nKean has been brought Into lho pro-!\nvlnclal jail by Constable Stewart.\nI). w. Campbell, for some years.\nKootenay and Boundary representative\nof the Robin Hood Flour Mills, has!\nbeen promoted to Victoria. His placp\nwill be taken by C. P. Calder. who will j\nhave his headquarters in Nelson.\nthis evening. The report of the ball\ncommittee will lie read. Visiting members will be heartily welcomed to the\nmeeting,\nT. Kenua, who has been spending Hie\nwinter in Winnipeg, is here to make\narrangements for the opening of the\nC.   P. R.   tourist  hole! at Balfour for\nthe season. The hotel will be ready\nto receive the first of the summer tourists about the beginning of next month,\nMr. Kenna is at the Strathcona.\nTho regulations of the Nelson Improvement association which govern\nthe planting of shade trees which are\ndistributed free of charge provide (hut\nthe trees must be planted not less than\n20 foot apart. W. R. .larvis, president\nol' the association, pointed out last\nnight that If the trees were planted\ncloser than this they would soon be\novercrowded. lie cited Ibe trees in\nfront of J. A. Irvlng's residence on\nLatimer street as an Instance. Tlrese\ntrees pre 20 feet apart and in five or\nsix years have grown so rapidly that\nIhe boughs meet.\nPRODUCE COPPER\nEIGHT CENTS POUND\nThis is Cost of British Columbia Copper  Company's Operations\u2014Re-   ..\nbuild    Large   Furnace.\nfRpo.-ifil to Tlie Daily News.)\nGREENWOOD, It. C, April 21.\u2014\nOperations will soon be resumed al\nthe Lone Star m'ne.\nA $fi.000 filter press is being Installed at the Napoleon mine.\nTho large furnace at the Greenwood\nsmelter Is  being rebuilt.\nDuring March the Greenwnnd smeller shipped 1.082,508 pounds of blister\ncopper to the refinery nt Ainbny, N.Y.\nIt cost a. little over oighl cents a\npound to produce it.\nTl\nwill  be  a  regulnr  meeting  of\nrl  Royal  Nelson,  No. 0201, Ancient\ner of foresters, at  It of P. hall\nAuction Sale\nOf Household Furniture\nTuesday, April  23 at 2  p.m.;  711   Car\nbonate St., Cor. Hall\nT. G, Procter, Esq.. has instructed\nus to sell all of his valuable household\nfurniture and a roll top office desk at\nhis resdence 711 Carbonate St.. corner\nof Hall, on Tuesday, April 23. at 2 p.m.\nThe goods will be on view morning of\nsale.\nTERMS:   CASH.\nC. A. Waterman & Co.\nAuctioneers\nThe \"Buco\" Cultivator\nDoes the work of hoe- fork and rake\nFor preparing' soiL cultivating, weeding and clearing, there is\nNO TOOL TO EQUAL IT\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co. Ltd.\nWholesale and Retail.\nTORONTO HAMILTON\nNelson B. C.\nWINNIPEO VANCOUVER\nr.MELTER   WILL  NOW\nPAY FOR  MORE GOLD\nfSporliil to TIig Dully NcwB.l\nKASLO,    II.   C.   April   21.\u2014DHO lo\nreprcBcntiitlons mado by n  committor\nif  III MHl   nf   trade  to  lho   Consoll-\nintod Mining .1 Smoltlns fo., the\n,moltor hns agreed to pay tho miners\ntor nil sold over si Inslond of over s:i\no< formerly. Thoy havo also waived\nyardage chaises.\nBOUNDARY   MINES CONTINUE\nHEAVY  PRODUCTION\nollowlng    aro    the    Boundary  01:0\nshipments   for  Ihe past  week:\nGranby smelter receipts:\nWeek      Year\nGranby    Ur.,543    371.-174\nBritish Columbia Copper company's\ncolpts,   Greenwood,  B.C.:\nA Rare\nOpportunity\n\"We have received a package of\nfine, white diamonds, which we\nhave been fortunate in purchasing\nat considerable below market value. Wo ure then-fore showing\nvalues which should induce anyone wishing\nThe April Birthstone\nThe opportunity of makllig u\ngood investment\nSEE   OUR    SPECIAL    DIAMOND\nRINGS AT PRICES RANGING\nFROM\n$25 to $50\nGiving you a good size stono of\nfine white quality in a well made\nLi-karat setting.\nWe carry in slock single stones\nup lo $000.00\nJ. 0. Patenaude\nDiamond  Merchant\nEstablished   1897\nMotor Boat Supplies\nand Gasoline Engines\nNow is the time to buy your\ngasoline engine, Don't wait until\nthe boating season Is here. Agent\nfor Barber Mercury and Loew Victor engines. Call or write and let\nmo quote you prices. I carry the\nlargest retail stock of boat supplies In B.C. Fresh dry batteries\nalways In stock and everything for\nmotor boats.\nThomas Sargent\nP.O. Box 172 Tel. 44\n506 Stanley St., Nelson.\nLinoleums, Rugs\nand Floor Gloth\nCheapest In the City.\nThe Ark\n106  Vernen  St. Phone  L395\nNew and second hand furniture\nIF  YOU'VE  ANYTHING  TO   BUY OR 8ELL, TRY A NEWS WANT AD.\nSeed Oi\nGarton Regenerated Abundani\nBlucstem Wheat, Canada Flea\nSpring Vetches, etc., and grq\nclover seeds.\ns The Brackmaiv\nffi> Milling Co., Liml\nFancy China\nWo have just received a package\nof China which should have been\nhero for Xmas. This Is going to\ngo dirt cheap. Call in and seo\nwhat a dainty article you can get\nfor 10c, lCc. and 2Gc.\nCHINA HALL\nMUNRO & NELSON\nPhono A261\n321 Baker street.      P. O. Bol 688\nEverybody\nRequires\nAt this Time\nof the Year\nDisinfectants        Moth\nHousehold Ammonia\nBalls      Sulphur\nFurniture Polish\nLet us supply you \\Vilh all your requisites.    We recommend   and guarantee Nyals Furniture Polish.   A better polish nnd more lusting finish  than anything you havo ever tried.    Money back if not satisfactory.\nThe Poole Drug Co., Ltd.\nThe Rexall Store.\nAlways at your service.\nPrescription  Druggists.\n.Mother  Lode\nRawhide  \t\nJack Pol ....\nUnnamed \u25a0\u25a0\u2022..\nOther mines   .\nTotal\n8,146    123,013\n5.32S     47,80a\n702        5.400\n320        2.7H2\n4,371\n14,555    181,135\nFURNISH WARD AS\nTRIBUTE TO HEROES\nWinnipeg   Real   Estate  Exchange  Will\nFound  Memorial to Members Who\nPerished   in   Disaster.\n(By Dally Xews Leased Wlre.1\nWINNIPEG, April 21.\u2014In memory\nof the members of the Winnipeg Re-il\nEstate exchange who went to their\ndeaths when the Titanic foundered on\nMonday, a ward will be furnished in\nthe Winnipeg general hospital. S\u00ab\nfar us tiie matter lias yet gone it is\nnot known what steps will bo taken\ntoward the accomplishment of lh's\/ib-\nject. It was learned today that a\nrecommendation had been.made by the\ncommittee of the exchange to the\nmembers that their tribute to the heroism of Hugo noss, Mark Fortune.\nThompson Beattie and ,T. .1. Borebank\nshould lake this form. It is thought\nthat no more fitting way could be devised of perpetuating the memory or\nllie unselfish behavior of these men,\nwho faced death calmly that the women and cbildren might be saved. It\nbus been arranged that the members\nof the real eslate exchange will attend\nmemorial service in Knox Presbyterian\nchurch on Sunday and either before or\nafter the service a meeting will bo\nheld to consider the recommendation\nof tiie committee.\nPHONE R-164\nP. O. BOX 835\nWATERS & PASCOE\nBUILDERS AND CONTRACTORS\nResiliences, etc., built and estimates given. Special attention to out-\nof-town work and orders. Lumber and building materials of all kinds\nsupplied. Store fronts, office fixtures, fancy sashes, doors, screen blinds,\netc., made to-order on short notice. Greenhouse material and glass always on hand. Sole agents for Idaho Lime & Hydratito Waterproofing\nCompound for concrete, etc.\nKootenay Lake Sash & Door Factory\nFRONT   STREET. NELSON, B. C.\nONLY ONE ABLE;T0_\nROW IN LIFEBOAT\n\"Look After Father,\" Last Message of\nMiss Fortune to Brother\u2014Said no\nGoodbyo\nfBj-i Dally News Leased Wire.-)\nNEW YOR)K, April 21.-Stories from\nsurvivors of tbe Titanic continue topour\nIn from all sides. Mrs Mark Fortune of\nWinnipeg tells bow she and her throe\ndaughters,, Lucille, Mabel and Alice,\nwere rescued after being separated from\nNow Is a Good Time to Buy\nNelson City Lots\nThe  following  can   be   purchased on easy terms:\nROBSON ST.\u20140 lots. 150x120 feel $1,500\nHOUSON   ST.\u2014Ono corner   lot,   25x120    $265\nJOSEPHINE   ST.\u2014Douhla   corner, 50x120 $450\nWARD ST.\u2014Double corner, 60x120 $700\nLATIMER ST.\u2014Double corner,  50x120    $600\nLATIMER   ST.\u2014150x120 $660\nBAKER   ST.\u2014Double  corner,   60x120    $2,650\nFAIRVIEW  LOTS '\nNELSON AVE\u2014Two lota  to lane, 00x120    $550\nNELSON AVE.\u2014Double corner to lane,   G0xl2O    $425\nNELSON AVE\u2014One  lot  to lane, 30x120    $225\nKOOTENAY ST.\u2014One lot to lane, 30x120    $225\nFor further particulars see\nE. B. McDermid\n505 Baker St.,\nNelson, B. C.\nor husband and son, Charles, They\nere put in a .liosil wllh a Chinaman, an\nItalian stoker and a man dressed in\nsoman's clothing; of all tbe occupants\nif tills bout, sin- said, only one, the\nitoker, cinild row ami Mrs. Fortune's\nlaughters took turns at tlie' ours.\nWhen Uie collision occurred Mrs. For-\nlaughters hurriedly dressed.\neh- i\nnn to\nf.bied by -M\nK<ir Un)\n< and\nChiirle\nFor-\n.line.    At lb\nBtairwa\nv to t\n10 boa\nMre\nFortune sal.\nher hus\ngroup .\nmud  i\nf offli\nin wt\ni toii\nhem   thoy\nvoiilil    ii'\nt   he\nrjarmll\niscciui  any\nfurther.\nThe\nwomen\nwon\naslruelcl   U\nnroceet\nand\nmats.    The\nwomen did noi\nho shin was\nIn dung\nr iinil\ndid no\nover\nlo tha men as\nthey i\n:>no   of   tlie\nFortune\ncalled\nhack\nlowever, to Charles: '\nLook after f;\nthe!'.'\nTURKISH GUNBOAT SUNK\nBY   ITALIAN   BOMBARDMENT\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.l\nCONSTANTINOPLE, April 20.\u2014It\nconf'rmed that the Italian warships\nsunk a Turkish gunboat in the bombardment on Thursday off Samps. The\nerew escaped. The Italians also seized\none of the khedive'a yachts. The Rus-\nllan ambassador has received Instruc-\nions to protest against the closing of\n.ho Dardanelles. It Is reported that\nthe porte has ortlored lho banishment\nif all Italians.\nNaval DemonBti-ntion.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nROME, April 20.\u2014The official ac-\n\u25a0ount of (be reported action of Italian\njvarshlps In llie Dardanelles lays particular stress on the statement that It\nwas purely a naval demonstration and\nthnt it was never Intended to attack\nor force the Dardanelles or land troops,\nPrior to the operation the cable between the Island of Imbros and Ihe\nDardanelles and the two cables lo\nLemnos were cut.\ntbe hospital at Cliarlottown. Further\nInvestigation Inlo tho case will b'o\nmade  by   tho government.\nMASSES FOR REPOSE OF\n\/ SOULS OF VICTIMS\n(Bv Dallv-News Leased Wire.\")\nMOW YORK. April 21.\u2014Cardinal\nFarley directed that prayers be said\nloday in all the churches in the diocese of Now York for lho Titanic's\ndead and that tomorrow every priest\nIn the diocese offer requiem masses\nfor tho repose of llie souls of the victims.\nResolutions of sympathy with tho\nrelatives of tlie victims of lho Titanic\nwere passed today by the new board\nof Jewish ministers and'the board or\nmanagers of the produce exchange.\nMASONIC  GRAND   MASTER\nTO LAY CORNERSTONE\n(Special le The Dully News.)\nREVUlLSTOKE, U. C\u201e April 21.\u2014At\nThree Valley, 11. C, last Saturday, Edward Morton died suddenly of heart\nfailure. Deceased hailed from Victoria-,\nII.  C\u201e and   the remains were shipped\nThe London CI\nbeg to announce that theyj\nnow open to tbe public.\ncooking, prompt   and   co\nservice together with   the\nquality of everything at re\nable prlceta merits your rfttejl\nWe make a specialty of cauj\nfor private suppers and hanf\nG. & A. Bartlett\n419 Baker St.\nSTUDEBAK1\nWagons  and  carriages   desiJ\nand built to stand all kinds of W1\nJohn Deere farm Implements;\nacknowledged    standard    for\nrancher and farmer.\nJAMES MALCOI\nPhone 221 \\ P.O. Bo>d\nCor. Vernon and Josephine Si\nNelson, B.C.\nHAZELWOOD\nConfectionery and T|\nParlors\n5081-2 Baker St.       Phone!\nTry our delicious Candl\nfruits, Icr cream and buttermf\nFresh stocK always on hand.\nQueen Stud]\nEstablished 1899\nP.O. Box 206 Phonal\nthe oldest!\nand best\nthere for burial.    Deceased  had\nfor the past few weeks assisting I\nllriggs   of Kamloops   to  organize 1\nFraternal Order of Beavers ut Re|\nstoke.\nAt a very interesting meeting nl\nattendance of the prospective plal\nIn the Y. m. C. A. Baseball leil\nwere present and considerable busil\nwas transacted, 1\nTho I. O. P. \"at home\" In the ol\nhouse on Monday evening, Aprill\npromises to be a grout success.\nA, S. Goodeve, member of the \u2014\nway commission, arrived in town^g\nSunday night from Otla\\ya.   Mr. (\neve was en route to his home inj\nland.\nMrs.  Hislop   nf Winnipeg,   wjj\nbeen   visiting  Mrs.   W.  A.  Stn^i\nsome  time,   left on   Tuesday tifflB\nfor Edmonton. ''vh!|\nAt tho regular meeting of thcH\ncouncil  the city cleric was  instru]\nto write to the Masonic lodge, rci|^\nIng that the grand master lay thi\nnerstone of Ihe new courthouse tin\n2 al Revelstoke.\nDaily News Want Ada. Get Ri\nSIXTH CHILD ILL IN\nM'GILL  POISONING CASE\n(Western Associated Press.)\nCHAULfiTTOWN, P.E.I., April 20.\u2014\nTbe Interest in the McGeo poisoning\ncase at St. Mary's road, where five\nchildren out of six died in one day\nIn such a manner as to misllfy\nthe doctors, has been further aroused\nby the il'.ness of the sixth ch'lfl, Johnny, aged 10. He has shown the same\nsymptoms as lho others. Johnny was\nstaying with his uncle on the day\nhis brothers and sisters partook of\ntho meal at which they ate the herrings, which at first were thought to\nhave caused the'r death. Doctors\nFraser and Mclntyre reported Johnny's Illness lo the attorney general\nwho   ordered  tho  boy to   be taken to\nEstablished 1898\nThe Sign of the Fish\nThe Fisherman's Mail\nOrder House\nEverything for the   Fisherman\nE Sutclifle\n411 Baker Street Nelson, B.C\nLooks Count\nHow do people get their first impression of you?    From your upp'jl\nanco, of course!    Very well, then.   'We aro dealing in appearances.\nIn and seo what a variety of good looks  in  Suits  wc are carrying!\nyour stylish and comfortable appearance this spring.\nThe Styles\nThe pendulum has swung frormthe broad shouldered\nathletic idea to closer fitting garments.\nThero arc two nnd three button Sack Suits cut form\nfilling, with long soft roll lapels. Trousers cut closor\nand vests cut higher.\nHandsome now colorings of grays and browns In\nSerges,   Cheviots and Homespuns.\nThe Prices\n$16.50, $18.00, $20.00, $25.00 to $35.00\nWe ore an open door to Clothes excellence,  having a  standard whicj\nilhers seek lo Imitate. , t    ,.,\nWE  ARE  AT  YOUR  SERVICE\nMB*\nEmory & Walley,\nTHE  HOME OF BETTER CLOTHE8\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1912_04_22","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0384766","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1912-04-22 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1912-04-22 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}