{"AIPUUID":[{"label":"AIP UUID","value":"79ac2fc8-6304-4c6b-89ae-a1bd4caa4016","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP","classmap":"oc:DigitalPreservation","property":"oc:identifierAIP"},"iri":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP","explain":"UBC Open Collections Metadata Components; Local Field; Refers to the Archival Information Package identifier generated by Archivematica. This serves as a link between CONTENTdm and Archivematica."}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"label":"Aggregated Source Repository","value":"CONTENTdm","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:dataProvider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who contributes data indirectly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Collection":[{"label":"Collection","value":"BC Historical Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:isPartOf"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included."}],"DateAvailable":[{"label":"Date Available","value":"2019-11-08","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DateIssued":[{"label":"Date Issued","value":"1914-03-16","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"label":"Digital Resource Original Record","value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0385768\/source.json","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:aggregatedCHO"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The identifier of the source object, e.g. the Mona Lisa itself. 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":" 3TD\n*> ->\n0 YESTBRDAY'8 WEATHER \u00bb\n**>                           \u00ab\n$ Temperatures Yeeterdav were, <*>\n<S> Higheet    52 *\n'<\"> Loweat   .:    32 \u25a0 *\n<*> Average    42\n**f*t*fnt*$\u00bbtttttf**w*\n\u00bb THE DAILY NEWS\n3\" ll  read   everywhere   in  South-\n.*> eastern British Columbia (Koot-\n<S> enay  -and   Boundary   District)\n\u2022J* on the day of publication.\nVOL. 12\n8 PAGES.\no Further Concessions on\nHome Rule\nSETTLEMENT BY\nJNSENT NO NEARER\nir Edward Carson Sends\nWarlike Message to Belfast Unionists.\n'By Dally News Leased Wire)\nJ LONDON,.March 16.\u2014A settlement\nIt the Irish home rule difficulty apparently has been' little .advanced by\npe British government's concessions\nthc UlBterltes, and taking the as-\nKertlonB of both political parties at\n\"heir face value, -the deadlock today\njemains aa Immovable aa before Pre-\n'jiier Asqulth's. conciliatory offer was\n-ade In the commons on March 9. The\n|*mers of the Ulster covenant declare\nxrongly that nothing less than the\nletmanent exclusion of the Protestant\nbuntles of Ulster from the Irish government at Dublin, instead of the proposed six-year option, will be consld-\nved by them.\n[The more radical covenanters demand, not only the exclusion of the\n|>ur counties\u2014Antrim, Armagh, Londonderry and Down\u2014in which: the\nf\/otestants are in the majority, but\n\u25a0ley want the entire province of Ul-\nIter excluded. Anything else, they\n\\y. would be desertion of their com-\ntidea In counties where Protestants\n\u25a0re In the minority, and will be treas-\nlii to their covenant.\nTSlr Edward Carson, leader of the\nSilster Unionists, today eent a message\n|f|j Belfast saying:\n\"So far aa our preparations are consumed, the pronouncement of the government,' if anything, necessitates a\nTill more forward movement this\nRear. Wo are going to make good in\nlotion all we have been saying and\ngreparlng 'for' during tho paBt two\n\u00bbrs.\"\nJ' Oh the other hand, the government\nlewspapei-s assert -hat Premier Ab-\nLutth's statement is the absolute limit\nIt concessions and Ib not a basis tor\nurther negotiations.\nFinal Offer.\nI Right Hon. W. S. Churchill,.first\nbrd of the admiralty, speaking at\n||!radtord yesterday, said:\n\"It Beams to'me that in principle-\nJ don't speak of details\u2014it Is the last\nlifter of his majesty's government can\nBr ought to mako.\"\nn Sir Edward RuBSetl, who Is a close\n[Hend of Premier Asqulth, writing In\nhe Liverpool Post, of which he is\nlhe editor, takes a different view. He\nTwites: '\u25a0\n_ \"In non-polttlcal clubs everybody Is\nlonfidont that Premier Asqulth hns\niade up hla own mind to'let1 the\nffnttonallsts go; that sooner Or later\nj will tell Mr. Redmond that the only\n{Sensible home rule is one with the en-\nfire exclusion of Ulster.\"\nj IrlBk Nationalist newspapers declare\nHhat John Redmond and his colleagues\n\u25a0ould not possibly support -a. bill containing a further surrender of the brig lfi schome ot Irish home rule. Some\nlit th\u00bb- Nationalist organs bitterly de-\nlouiitie tho Nationalist members for\n[ubmittlng to Premier Asqulth's terms.\n1 Little talk is now heard that the\nJ)rangemen'8 preparations to fight are\nI. gigantic bluff. They claim to have\n10,000 men drilling in Sir Edward's\nIrrny, with 60,000 rifles and 'some\nlileces of artillery.\n1 The London nowapapera are filled\njVlth pictures of Ulster men in civil\nElothes and with, plfle and cartridge^\nBelts, executing skirmishes. \u2022\nft Winston Churchill, commenting to-\nUay 1n his Bradford address on the\nIraparatlons being made In Ulster to,\nleslst home rule, said: I\nIVThe first British soldier or coast\nguard who is attacked and killed by\n[he Orangemen will ralBe such an\nIxplosion In this country as the Tories\nllll appreciate, and tt will shake the\nfoundations of society.\"\n\u25a0 jurcy Holden Illlngworth, the chief\nliberal whip tn the commons, speaking at tlie same meeting, said there\nl-duld be no general election unless\nJke home rule for Ireland, the Welsh\nDisestablishment and the SlurBl voting bills had been passed by parlla-\nl.ient.\nLords Sp.ctaculir Demonstration\n(Western 'Associated Press Special\nCable.)\n, LONDON,  March  IB.\u2014If,  following\nIr. Churchill's challenge, the Union-\nTrts finally reject Mr. Asqulth's pro-\nosalB, and'the wajot'-ty In the house\nf lords refuses to incorporate them:\n, i the bill, it Is angrgested- afl -good tae-,\nles that the Mil he passed aa it Is, and.\n-Then an amending bill be put through'\nlhe commons embodying the premier's\nluggestlons,  The talk Of drastic treat-\nlent of the army bill by the house off'\nnrda continues, and it would- not he\nfurprlBing If the oUstructlonlsta were;\n|oi make some epectacular demonatru-\n:|on either with that or eome other!\nibney hill- ,     1 ..  i\nJt is atated that a majority of the\n\u2022ablnet desires a dissolution before the\nmd \"of tho year, but that Mr. Lloyd\nJcorge desires to first ->a*\u00bb the billj\na abolish plural voting ana that will\nImpossible before next year.\n-rMilmird nn page seven.1\nNELSON. R C. MONDAY MORNING. MARCH 16, 1914\n1 \"<   \" \u25a0    \u25a0\u25a0  !' i    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   i   ..I  j \u25a0\n50c PER MONTH.\nTEN THOUSAND MEN\nOM CONSTRUCTION\nWork Southward From.Fort George to\nStart This Month\u2014Hundred\nMiles   Let.\n(By Dally News.Leased Wire.)\n.VANCOUVER, B. C, March 15.\u2014The\nPacific Great Eastern railway, which\nIs now building a line northward from\nVancouver to connect with the Grand\nTrunk Pacific, will start work within\na fortnight building southward from\nFort George to meet the Vancouver\nend, now under construction.\nContracts have been awarded for\nthe first 100 miles Bouth from Fort\nGeorge. As fast as men are released\nfrotn construction on the Grand Trunk\nPacific they will be put on the new\nline, ana by fall it Is expected 10,000\nmen will be employed. The first 100\nmiles has been divided between Carl-\nston, Griffith and Burns-Jordan, contractors.\nRUSSIA WILL\nSTRENGTHEN ARMY\nAll Parties Agree to Increase of Half\nMillion   Men\u2014\"Plan Tobacco\nMonopoly  j\n(Canadian Associated Press Cable.)\nST. PETERSBURG, Maroh^lG.\u2014It Is\natated that the army will be increased\nby 460,000, making: the total of the first\nline of defence 1,720,000 men. The extra cost, it ls estimated, will be $25,-\n000,000, spread over three years.\nMay Make Smokers Pay\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, March 15.\u2014A despatch -to\ntho Dally Telegraph from St. Peters^\nburg says the conference between the\npremier and his cabinet ministers' and\nmembers of ithe duma showed unanimity of sentiment on thc part of all the\npolitical parties ln lino with Russia's\nresolirliori to keep abreast of the\nstrongest military nations. How the\nmoney will be found to accomplish this\npurpose is still undecided, the report\nsays, but he adds that the projects\nmooted are tobacco and naptha monopolies to replace the Joss caused by\nthe alcohol reform measures.\nIRELAND MAY SAY\nHELLO, CANADA\nMarconi     Plant    Wireless   Telephone\nExperiments Across Atlantic-\nProved Successful in Italy.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire)\nROME, March 15. \u2014 The Duke\nd'Abruzai lias reported to the minister\nof the navy that excellent results wero\nobtained by William Marconi lost\nweek in his experiments on bonnd the\nbattleship Regina Elena with a new\nradio-telephone apparatus. Commun -\nIcatlon was held with ships nearly 46\nmiles.awav and for 13 miles with ships\nwith lan-j between the communicating\nvessels. Telephonic connection continued uninterruptedly between the\nships for several hours. The duke\n\u2022also reported tlhat experiments in\nwireless telegraph will be held with\nRome, Venice and \"between Cliveden,\nIreland and Canada.\nIN\nLondon Times Appears as\nPenny Paper\nTO LURE ADVERTISER\nFROM RIVALS\nFind Being Raised to Purchase Battlefield of\nWaterloo,\nCIVIL SERVICE EXAMINATION\nHELD IN  NELSON\n,      (By Dally Newa Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, March 15.\u2014A' general\ncompetitive examination, under the direction of the civil service commission, will be held on May 11 and the\nfollowing days at Sault Ste. Marie,\nPort .Arthur, Winnipeg, Brandon, Regina, Saskatoon, Calgary, Edmonton,\n-Nelsonfc Prince Rupert, Vancouver and\nVictoria, The examination will have\nreference to the following positions to\nbe filled during the period from July\n1 to December 31, 1914, in the. Inside\nservice.\nSixty clerkships for men, in subdivision B of the third, division; 20\npositions as stenographer and typist\n(for men), in subdivision, il of the'third\ndivision; 10 clerkships for women in\nsubdivision B of the third division; 50\npositions as stenographer and typist\nfor women) In subdivisions of the\nthird division; 60 clerkships (for men),\nin subdivision B of the second division.\nKRAFCHENKO TO  BE  FIRST\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 WITNESS FOR DEFENCE\n(By Dally News Leased Wire)\nWINNIPEG, March 15.\u2014The crown\nhas submitted practically ithe bulk of\nIts evidence in the case bf P. E. Hagel\nand John Westlake, charged with assisting John Krafohenko to break jail.\nTho -case for the defence will probably open tomorrow afternoon, the\nfirst witness to be Krafehenko himself. As soon as he has finished en\n'the stand, he will be taken to Morden\nto stand trial 0n the charge of murdering H. M. Arnold, manager of the\nBank of Montreal at Plum Coulee,\nMan., last December,\nThe principal witness on Saturday\nwas Frank Holt, who lived with West-\nlake in the suite where Krafehenko\nwas found iby tho police after he had.\nmade his escape. Holt said that West-\nlake had told him that Krafehenko\nwas coming to the suite to stay. He\nwas-so much -upset by the proceedings that his main thought was to devise a scheme to get the fugitive away\nfrom the ibullding. This waB finally\ndone, Krafehenko toeing secreted in\n\"a' room at the plant of the Security\nStorage company, where Holt was employed.\nRAIN  AT .LETHBRIDGE\nBUMPER CROP PREDICTED\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nLETHBRIDGE. Alta., March 14. \u2014\nAn unusual occurrence at this time of\nyear was ta heavy downpour of rain\n\u25a0esterday evening. Rain iln March Is\nregarded iby old-timers as meaning a\nwet year and a bumper crop. The\nlast rain goes back to 1808, which was\na. prolific year, \u201e__,. \u201e\u2022-_\n(Western   Associated   Press   Special\nCable.)\nLONDON, March 15.\u2014With the appearance of the Times for the first\ntime as a penny journal tomorrow\nmorning, Fleet street expects to see\nthe beginning of one of the fiercest\nnewapaper wars In its history. Lord\nNorthcliffe Is entering the penny morning paper field with the object of luring the small advertiser away from\nthe Dally Telegraph and Morning Post,\nand he is hoping to achieve this by\nreason of the somewhat more exclusive\ncirculation enjoyed by bis journal,\nwhich .is largely of an official nature.\nCopies of the Thunderer are found ln\nthe royal palaces at home and throughout European embassies, clubs and\namong families of the peers and great\ncountry houses. During the past few\nyears the circulation has slowly risen\nuntil it now hag a dally sale of 540,000,\naB compared with 300,000, to which it\nMl after the Parnell commission and\nthe exposure of the PIggott forgeries.\nThe journal, which most seriously\nchallenges the right of the Times to\nhe regarded as the official organ of\nthe mane exclusive circles of society\nis bhe Morning Post, and it Is said that\nthe Northcliffe Innovation will result\nIn a concentration, of other morning\npapers.\nTo Buy Waterloo Battlefield.\nA committee, which includes the\nDuke of Wellington, Lord Roberts and\ntfaie lord mayor of London, has been\nformed to raise a public fund of $50,-\n000 to purchase the Waterloo battlefield.\nDuchess Better.\nThe Duchess of Argyle, who has\nheen suffering from influenza, has recovered.\nThe Bishop of London Is confined\nto his residence by a severe attack\nof influenza.\nThe Earl of Carrick, the Earl of\nDrogheda and Viscount Tompleton\nhave gone to Ireland. 'Lord Burghersh,\nthe son and heir of the Earl of Westmoreland, today became of age. He\nwas an officer on H.M.S. New Zealand\non her recent tour around the empire, and visited Victoria, Vancouver\nand Halifax.\nThe Marquis of Litchfield, the* son\nan,i belr of the Duke of Portland, will\nattain his majority tomorrow. He is\na fine all round sportsman.\nHis majesty the King has authorized a special service for the order\nof St. Michael and St. George, to be\nhold in St. Paul's cathedral on April\n23, St, George's day. At that service\nthe banners of deceased^knights, including those of Lord Strathcona and\ntlie Earl of Minto, will be taken down\nand the banners of new knights placed\nIn position;\nNEWFOUNDLAND WANTS TWO\nMILLION   FOR   RAILROADS\n(By Dally News Leased Wlro)\nST. JOHNS, Nfld., March IS.\u2014Much\ninterest was expressed today ln the\nefforts of the colonial government to\nnegotiate a loan of $2,000,000 for railroad development .to which the administration is pledged. Sir Edward Morris, the premier, left for London yesterday by way of New York, and Governor E. W. Davidson will leave direct\nfor Liverpool on Wednesday, trying\nto raise the money. Before Sir Edward left, the appointment was announced of Richard Anderson Squires\nas minister of Justice, succeeding Donald Morrison, who declined reappointment.\nSydney Darius Blandford waa also\nreappointed minister of agriculture.\nBoth filled empty places in the legislative council and took portfolios that\nhave been vacant since Morrison and\nBland ford Were defeated in the general election last November,\nALIENS MAY NOT MIX\nDRINKS IN ST. CATHARINES\n(By Dally News Leased Wire)\nST. CATHARINES, Ont., March 15.\n\u2022\u2022--Hotel   proprietors  and   bartenders\nmust be British subjects in St. Catharines.   No aliens need apply.\nThe St. Catharines license commissioners decided last night that henceforth no license would be granted to a\nhotel whose proprietor or bartender Is\nnot a British subject. The commissioners refused a-license to R. H. Lan-\nham, a former Hamilton hotel keeper,\nbut a citizen of the United States.\nOPEN VERDICT\n(By Daily NewB Leased Wire)\nPRINCE ALBERT, Sask., Maro-h 1*5.\n\u2014Late Saturday afternoon a coroner's jury returned an ohen verdict,\nfinding that M. Prlmeau. whose body\nwas found on Saturday last on the\nCanadian Northern railway near Duck\nLake, came to his death by being run\nover by a train, there being no definite knowledge as to what particular\ntrain,      . ;\t\nBELIEVE ATTACK\nHAS BEGUN\nRigid Censorship Over Telegraph Lines\n\u2014Huerta   Refuses to  Pay\n. Prisoners' 'Board\n'Bv Dallv Newp T,en*-\u00abM Wire.)\nJUAREZ, March 15.\u2014Official Juarez\ntonight was waiting in a state of sup\npressed excitement for -no-vs from thc\nsouth, for-It is now -regarded as certain that Gen. Villa's attack on Torreon is -but a few-days off.\nConflicting-, press despatches were\nreceived last night wdth regard to the\nsituation, but .reports, of a battle ro-,\ncolved no confirmation. Press despatches from Chihuahua this morn\nIng said the report of the battle'was\nbased upon the story of a fugitive\nAmorlcan, who had It by heresay. The\ndespatch added that Gen. Villa did\nnot believe it. There have been i\nnumber of important outpost sklrm\nishes.\nInauguration of a rigid censorship\nover telegraph lines tonight ls believed\nhere to Indicate that the important\nfighting has already occurred in the\nTorreon region, or that Villa has begun the long awaited attack on Torreon.\nBoth Armies Move Forward\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nHOUSTON, Tex., March 15.\u2014A gen-\neral forward movement of both the\nfederal and rebel armies was begun\nearly today at Torreon, It Is believed,\naccording to a Chihuahua despatch tonight to tho Houston Post. In the\nfirst skirmishes the constitutionalists,\nit is said, were put to flight, but in\nlater minor engagements the federal\ntroops were reported victorious. Orders wero given Gen. Francisco Villa\nfor the -advance of his troops late last\nnight. This action was hastened by\nthe interception of a wireless message\nfrom President Huerta at Mexico City\nto Gen. Velasco, commanding the federal garrison at Torreon.\nAb caught by Villa's wireless Station the message directed Volosco to\ntake the offensive against the const!\ntuttonalists Immediately.\nA special train has been started for\nJuarez to bring Gen. Felipe Angeles,\nsecretary of war In the cabinet of Gen,\nCarranza, to Chihuahua to command\nthe artillery with Col. Zirvln, soeond\n[n command.\nGen. Villa ls said to be impatient\nfor the arrival of Gen. Angeles in order\nthat *ho may get to the scene of battle.\nHe has suspended regular train service, as all roiling stock will be used\nfor troop movement.\nJail Expense Up to States\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nMEXICO CITY, March 15.\u2014The\nMexican government, through Charge\nO'S'haughncssy, today \u2022 informed the\nWashington government that 'It will\nrefuse to -meot the cost of maintenance\nof the Mexican prisoners now interned\nat Fort .Bliss. The charge d'affaires\nquotes extensively various International affairs In support of Mexico's contention that the expense of keeping the\nprisoners should be 'borne by the\nUnited States.\nMurdered by Raiders\n(By Daily News Leased Wlro.)\nSAN DIEGO, Cal., March 15.\u2014One\nman was burned to death and another\nwas seriously Injured when a band of\nraiders believed to bo Mexicans, at\ntacked a general storo at. Tren, 45\nmiles from this city, last night and\nescaped. Tho town Is just over the\nborder on tho American side,\nwoman who saw the attack reported\nto the commander at Fort Rosecrans\nthat troops were needed and that the\npopulace wero terrorized.\nAttempted Escape\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nFORT BLISS, Tex., March 15.\u2014Gen.\nHugh L. Scott is Investigating a report given him that Mexican prisoners\nwero attempting to tunnel a way out\nof captivity. The work was slow because every tent In a canvas city of\n5,000 persons had to be oxam-lned for\nthe entrance ito the tunnel,\nHuerta Increases Army\n(By Dally News Leased Wlro.)\nMEXICO CITY Mardh 15.\u2014Another\nIncrease ln the army is announced. It\nis stated that the regular estimate Is\nto bo raised from 200,000 to 260,000\nmon. Including tho irregulars, this In-\ncreaso, if thc official figures of the\nstrength of the army are correct\/would\ngive Presideht \"Huerta 250,000 men.\n(Continued on pag* five.)\nFURBELOWS    AND\nFLOUNCES\nFashion decrees thp returning\nto  favor of the separate skirt\nand 'the making of the skirt   a <$>\nthing of   furbelows, frills and <\u00a7>\nflounces.                                          ' ?\nThe stores \u2014 those \"fashion \u2022$\nindicators are already showing\nthe new style notes and telling <S>\nabout them In their advertise- <\u00a7*\nments. ^\nIt used to be that the news <$*\ncolumns 0f the newspaper made <S>\nthe     fashion     announcements \u2022$\nfirst;  .hut'nowadays the sores *S>\naro so alert and p- anxious io 3>\nbe   first    In   these    announce- \u00ab$>\nments that much of the latest <\u00bb\nfashion news is In the advor- <?\u25a0\nUsing columns. *$\nAny person  who wishes    to <\u00a7\nkeep  up-to-the-minute on'  thc <$\u2022\nnew fashions must be a reader **8>\nof the advertising \"J, live news- <\u00a7>\npapers   like The   Dajly News. <$*\nThe advertising columns are \u2022\u00a7>\nthe mirrors that reflect the ut- -\u00a7>\nmiction of the merchants   and Q>\nmanufacturers.   These men live -$>\nby service, <$\nThey must make   their md*- \u25a0*\nvcrtisln-f*; timely   and   Interest- -S>\nIng*   just   as   they   make   their \u2022\u00a7>\nmerchandise desirable and fair <$\nin price. \u2022$\nThe news of the   frille   -md &\nfurbelows  is only one side'of **>\nadvertising. \u2022$\nRend  the   advertising.,-  ind \u2022!\u2022\nkeep informed. <?>\nL WALLS\n1 DEFACED\nPews Painted With Suffragette Announcements\nSERVICES IN\nAfiBEY DISTURBED\nWild Women Smash Windows-Mrs. Pankhurst Sec\nures Liberty by Strike.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire)\nBIRMINGHAM, England, March 15.\n\u2014.Worshippers Jn the cathedral today\nfound the-walls and floors .of the edifice covered with suffragette -proclamations painted In white letters a foot\nhigh, reading, \"Votes for Women,\"\n\"The Clergy Must Rise in Our Behalf\nand Stop the Torture of Women in\nPrison.\" Every foot of space, except\nthe altar, had a sign painted on it,\nIncluding the pews. The work Js believed to have been that of women who\nconcealed themselves in the cathedral\nlast night. It is thought it was done\nfor the benefit of the Judges of the\nassizes, who attended the services today.\nServices Disturbed j\n(By Daily News Leased Wire)\nLONDON, March 15.\u2014Suffragettes\ntoday chanted prayers In Westminster\nAbbey, York Minster, and the Brighton\nparish churoh for their imprisoned\ncolleagues.\nSylvia Pankhurst has written the\ndean of Westminster acquainting him\nwith the intention of the East London\nsuffragettes to march to the Abbey\nnext Sunday and participate In the\nevening service and pray for the success of their cause. In her letter she\nsaid she would be present personally\nand desired the dean to adapt the service to a special occasion for the suffragettes.\nWild Women -Smash Windows\nA squad of militant suffragettes\narmed with hammers smashed every\npane of glass on thc ground floor of\nthe residence of Right Hon. Reginald\nMcKenna, homo secretary, in .West-\nmln-stor today.\nMrs. Pankhurst Released\nMrs, Emmeline Pankhurst, thi? militant suffragette leader, was again released from Holloway jail today. She\n,had started a hunger and thirst strike\nafter her arrest last week at Glasgow\nand was in a weak and exhausted condition.\nIn Scotland Also\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nGLASGOW, March 15.-\u2014A band of\nsuffragists arose in thc cathedral during service today and chanted, \"Oh,\nLord, we beseech Thee to save Emmeline Pankhurst, Helen Crawford and\nall tlio ibravc women who are suffering for their faith.\"\nTho congregation took no notice of\nthe demonstration.\nMONTREAL GUNMEN CONTINUE\nTO EVADE DETECTIVE FORCE\n(By Dallv News Leased Wire)\nMONTREAL, March 15.\u2014After fowling superior numbers of police twice,\nwhen, tho gang might have been\n\u25a0caught w(ith tcomparativlei ease, the\nMontreal gunmen have now enjoyed\nfive full days of liberty and the whole\ndetective force of the city is at a loss\nto know when or how they will capture llie bandits.\nThJe wanted men were said to have\nbeen sighted at Throe Rivers, 80 miles\neast of here, but the three were found\nto be simply out-of-works, heating their\nway to Montr-eal. An unknown man\nwho threw himself ,'nto the St. Lawrence yesterday and refused to save\nhimself when a rope was pitched to\nhim Is said to have been one of the\nfugitive murderers.\n* Chief Campeau will consult Mayor\nLavalle with a view .to offering a reward that may lead to tbe arrest of\neither Foucalt, Beachamp or Bouret.\nARRESTED SUSPECTS EXPLAIN\nPOSSESSION OF MONEY\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\n' VANCOUVER, B. C, March 15.-\nJohn Bishop and William Wilson, the\ntwo men arrested at Blain by the\nUnited States immigration authorities\non suspicion that they might be implicated in the Abbottsford hank holdup, stated yesterday that they found\n$90 of the money discovered on them\nin the hall of a rooming house in\nwhich J. Boyden lived. Boydcn stated\nhe had Wft the money in his vest In\nthe closet of his room and when he\nreturned for it the money was gone.\nThe two men will come up iu court\nagain tomorrow.\nKING'S PRINTER\nFRENCH CANADIAN\nNephew of Late Archbisnop of St. Bon*\niface\u2014is Quebec Newspaper Man\n\u2014Ratified by Cabinet.\n(By Dally News Leasori Wire) |\nOTTAWA, March 15.\u2014At the meeting of the cabinet yesterday a new\nKing's printer was named to succeed\nthe late Charles Parmalee, who, before his appointment was Liberal member of parliament for Shefford, Que.\nFor the first time in many yearB the\npoBt will be filled by a French-Canadian, the choice having fallen on J. B.\nde Tache, newspaper publisher of St.\nHyaclhthe. The new King's printer,\nwho Is the choice of Hon. Louis Co-\nderre, secretary of state, Is said to\nhe well qualified for the position. He\nIs a nephew of the late Archbishop\nTache, of St. Boniface.\nDEPARTMENT OF\nIMPERIAL STUDIES\nLondon University to Impart Knowledge of Overseas Dominions-\nCommittee Is Appointed.\n(Canadian Associated Press Cable.-*\nLONDON, March 15.\u2014In M Raper\nread before the British academy aome\ntime ago Sidney Low referreo\\;t6 \"the\nappalling ignorance of the average\nEnglishman on matters relating to tiie\nlaws, history and geography of the\noveraeas dominions,\" and\\ suggested\nthat a department of imperial studies\nshould be established In connection\nwith the London university. ^^\nThe senate of the university has\nappointed an influential committee to\nconsider the best means of creating\nsuch a department.\nThe names of the committeemen Include Lord Rosebery, Viscount Edgecombe, Viscount Mllner, Sir Kilspma\nGupta, Sir Harry Johnston, Sir Charles\nB. Lucas, Prof. Sir John Macdonnel,\nProf. F. J. C. Hearnshaw, Sidney Low,\nJ. H. Morgan, Dr. Pakeln, Prof. Pollard and W. P. Reeves.\nWILL OPEN WAY TO\nSPAWNING BEDS\nONLY FIRST ACT\nIN BALKANS COMPLETE\n(By Daily New** Leased Wire)\nBUDAPEST,   March     16.   \u2014  Count\nSerge Witte, former premier of Russia, in an Interview published here -today, is quoted as saying:\n'Only the first act of the Balkan\nAffair has been played. It Is now the\nintermission, which may last for years\nOr perhaps only for months.\n\"The relations between Austria and\nRoumanfa constitute one of the polrrth\nof danger, while the relations between\nthe triple alllance^Germany, Austria*\nrind Italy\u2014and the triple entente\u20141\nGreat Britain, Franco and Russia\u2014are\nin no w'f-e clear,'\"       _ ..  ........\nObstruction in Fraser River to Be Re\nmoved  hy  Government\u2014Caused\nBy Huge Rockalide.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire)\nOTTAWA, March 15.\u2014During an inspection of the Fraser river spawning\nbeds last September, It was ascertain\ned, that in consequence of construction\nwork of tbo Canadian Northern railway, alonty thp side of Hell's Gate canyon, some 'distance above Yale, slides\nof rock and gravel had gone into the\nriver at two different places forming\nobstructions which seriously interfered with the ascent of salmon to the\nsnawnlng iheds in the upper reaches\nof the river.\nAt the time large numbers of salmon were below the obstruction seeking to make their way beyond them.\nImmediately work was undertaken by\nthe department of marine and fisheries in the way nf making a channel\nthrough the obslructions to enable the\nsalmon to ascend-\nBy means of such channels, a large\nnumber of salmon that would otherwise havo perished beyond the blockade, were enabled to get beyond it and\nto their spawning grounds.\nQuito recently another slide took\n-lace which started about 300 feet up\ntho mountainside ajbove tbe railway\nan() In Its descent carried away\nfeet nf the tunnel portal and about 100\nfeet dt tho railway bed. Such it large\nquantity of material came down with\n(he slide and it travelled, with bucIi\nvelocity that it apparently had gone\nright across the channel of the rivet\nmaking a fall or about 15 feet in th\nhod of the river in n, short distance.\nIt will fie quite impossible for sock-\neye salmon to negotiate such a fall,\nso that if tho obstructions were not\nremoved forthwith, no sock-rye sal\nmon, the most valuable species ascending the river, would this year\nreach their spawning beds, which\nWould result largely in wiping out the\nrun in 1018, and each succeeding four\nyear period  thereafter.\nIn view of the large value of the salmon fisheries on the Fraser which can\nWifely be estimated at $500,000 per an\nmini, extraordinary measures tn remove the obstructions are justified,\nThe work can only be done during the\nnext few weeks.\nIn these circumstances, the gov\nernment, on tlie recommendation o\nthe Hon. J. D. Hazen, minister of\nmarine nmi fisheries, has .authorized\ntho nlaclng of a sum of money In the\nsupplementary estimates to cover the\ncost of the work, and the chief inspector of fisheries for British Columbia\nhad been instructed to arrange with a\ncompetent construction compmiy for\nthe removal of *the obstruction,\nLAWYER   IS  CHARGED\nWITH   BRIBING  JURY\n(By Dally; News Leased Wire)\nGRAND FORKS, N. D., March 15.-\nCharged with 'bribing memherii of a\nJury which acquitted MeLane Cooper\nof a charge of murder at Grand Forks\nfn' 1011, Attorney Tracy R. Bangs was\narrested here yesterday, Five men\nare now under arrest on bribery\ncharges growing out of the Ooopet\ntrial, warrants being served on ,T. C.\nStevens, mcmbep of the Jury, J. C.\nMalone, McLano Cooper, the defendant and Harry Cooper, his father.\nCALGARY MAN LOSE8\nFOOT IN BELLEVILLE\ni    (By Daily' News Leased Wire)\nBELLEVILLE, Ont, March 15.\u2014\nArthur Peck, Of -Calgary, 24 years old,\nwho has been visiting Belleville, has\nlost his right foot as the outcome of\na shooting accident last Friday evening. Ho was returning\" from Soimes-\nvllie curryirvg a gun, when he slipped\nand the gun was discharged. The\ncharge entered his right foot and ankle\nand tho foot hnd to be amputated.\nRussian   Towns   Swept by\nTidal Wave\nBUILDINGS WASHED\nAWAY BY HUNDREDS\nEarthquake in Japan  Lays\nVillage in Ruins-Many\nKilled.\n(By Dailv New-*- Leased Wire.)\n^ BKATERINODAR, Russia, March 15.\n\u2022--\u2022-Over 1,000 persons perished today in\nthe inundation of the towns of Stan-\nitea and Achtyrekaja by ia tidal wave\nfrom tfie*%fclea of Azov, The wave\nstrheK-tlfo toW&g during a violent hurricane, wTitohj swept the province of\nKuban, fa ' ^\n'\u25a0\u25a0   Over 140 persrijts also were drowned\n'in flood shin Yasenkahaja.\nA dam collapsed In the town of\nTemryuk, situated on the Taman peninsula, 98 miTes northwest of this city,\nflooding tUe greater part of the city\narid* ortjtvning many persons.\nThe sea washed away 380 -buildings\nof Achtyrekaja.\nTemryuk is a historic town with a\npopulation of R.O00. It once was the\nsite of the Turkish fortress of Adass.\nThe towns of Sanitza, Achtyrekaja\nand Yasekanaja do not appear on any\navailable map and are small towns on\nthe Sea of Azov.\nThe province of Kuban, in which\nthe stricken towns are located, is in\nsouthern Russia and has coast lines\non both tiie Black sea and the Sea\nof Azov, the population of the province aggregating about 2,000,000 persons, of whom two-fifths are Cossacks.\nCrowded Train Swept Away\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nST. PETERSBURG, March 15.\u2014Details of the hurricane which swept the\nprovince of Kuban, southern Russia,\nSaturday, were received tonight from\nEkaterlnodar. A northerly gale caused\nnumerous water spouts off the east\ncoast of the sea of A7,ov, >and the\nshoro from Ylcsk to the strait Of\nKertsch, a dlstanco of about 500 miles,\nwas flooded and -six villages damaged.\nOne hundred and seventy-six men cm-\nployed on the construction work of thc\nKuban railway wore sleeping In a shod.\nThey were awakened by tho roar of\nthe storm and fled before the rising\ntide to a train standing on tho railway\nlino and endeavored to escape on it.\nSoon, however, the engine and cars\nworo overturned by the rushing waters\nand all were swept away. The hurricane raged for 10 hours. When it\nceased the receding floods revealed\nterrible scenes of destruction. Eight\nmiles of railway embankment were in\nruins. The wrecked train was covored\nwith bodies of the dead workmen, all\nshowing evidence of the terrible\nstruggle.\nTho meagre despatches received today reported that many lives had been\nlost, but no accurate reports aro yet\nto hand.\nA similar catastrophe occurred along\ntho shores of tho Azov sea. 70 years\nago.\nKilled by Earthquake,\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nTOKIO, March 15.\u2014A serious earthquake occurred today in the prefecture of Akita, Island of Hono. \u2022 A num.\nber of persons in the city of Akita\nwere killed and many houses wore\ndestroyed or damaged.\nIn the village of Kowakuh, whicli\nwas ruined, there were many casualties. The disturbance badly damaged\nthe railroad and telegraph lines.\nThe volcano Asamat-Yama, nine\nmiles northwest of Tokio, is in eruption.\nFull details of the disaster have not\nbeen received owing to the Interruption of communication. Sixty dead\nbodies woro found in the basin of the\nOmono river, where 320 houses were\ndestroyed. Tho village of Kltamcnu\nwas burned.\nCopper Mine Collapses\nAs a result of the earthquake, a\ncopper mine at Tsunmdate collapsed.\nTho fate of the 300 workmen in the\nmine Is unknown. Simultaneously with\ntho earthquake came explosions and\nbursting of flames from the volcano,\nwhich terrified the Inhabitants.\nAkita Ib a garrison town on the Son\nof Japan. It does a consldorablc- 'export trade, especially In rice. Thc\npopulation of the city Is about 30,000.\nAsaniat-Yanii!, is the largest active volcano in Japan. A majority of Its active periods have been productive of\nonly showers of ashes. Its last -great\neruption was In 1783, when several\nvillages on the north side of the mountain were obliterated by huge streams\nof lava. The crater is about three\nmiles in circumference.\nHavoc on French Coast.\n(By Dailv News Leased Wire.)\nPARIS, Maron 15.-T-A terrific gale\nand the highest tide of the year tonight worked great havoc alon1; tbe\ncoasts of Normandy and Brittany.\nIn the bay of St. Michael, In the\nsouthwestern part of Normandy, no\nsuch tide had been experienced '\u00bb\n40 years. Huge waves dashed against\nthe ramparts of Mont St. Michael, a\nrockey  little island In the  hay,  ou\n(Continued on Pi*** levnu\n\u2014\n PACE IWO\nCfo \"Bail? #en\u00ab\nMONDAY      MARCH  16\nA Beauty Secret\n3000 Years Old\nFOR A FEW DAYS ONLY WE ARE OFFERING\nOne Pot Palm Olive Cream\nThree Cakes Palm Olive Soap\n(Usual Retail Price, 95c.)\n50 Cents\nAt our supply is limited, early purchases are advisable\nCanada Drug & Book Co. Ltd\nPhue 81        Nelion's Pioneer Drug Store      P.O. Box 502\nMAIL ORDERS GIVEN SPECIAL ATTENTION.\nPRUNING CLASS TO BE\nHELD AT PROCTOR\n(Special to Tfla Dally News.)\nPROCTOR, B. C, March 15.\u2014The\nsecretary of the Farmers' institute, E.\nWatson, has received a telegram from\nR. M. Wlnslow, government horticulturist, authorizing him to arrange with\nR. Walthers to take the pruning and\ntopworking class here. Mr. Walthers\nis at present at Boswell taking a packing school and will finish there at the\nlatter end of next week, probably\nThursday, and will stnrt the pruning\ndemonstration d irectly afterwards.\nMr. Watson will give notice of the\nexact date when he hears definitely\nfrom Mr. Walthers, but It will probably\nbe either March 20 or 23. The packing school held by Mr. Walthers at\nBalfour finished on Thursday, and tlie\nmarks obtained by pupils were most\nsatisfactory, though one pupil failed by\none mark to reach the standard necessary for entering the packing competition at Nelson fair for a certificate.\nThe marks obtained were as follows:\nMiss Mary Cameron, 92; A, H. Noakes,\n92; Capt. R. H. Manley, 90; R. Holmes\na Court, 90; J. H. Hoyle, Jr.. 89; H. E.\nMahood, 88; J. H. Hoyle, Sr.. 86; H.\nFairbanks, 86; W. von Beekerath, 85;\nR J. Bashford, 82; Mrs. W. A. Slater,\n80;   S. C. Phillips, 7-i.\nThe age for government competition\nfor boys and girls potato growing is\nfrom 10 to 18.\n<S> GRAY CREEK NEWS <8\n    (Special to-The Daily NewsJ\nGRAY OREBK, B. C. March 15,\nThe finishing touches having been put\nto the new wharf here Foreman Sampson and the piledriver crew iu their\nfloating camp were early on Thursday\nmorning towed by Eugene Montreull's\ntug to Kootenay bay, where they will\nbe busy for some days building a float\nIn place of the proposed wharf.\nA public meeting took place in the\nhall on Friday afternoon, when lectures under the auspices of the Crawford Bay Farmers' institute were given. G. S. Harris, in an instructive\nlecture on \"Dairy Cattle and Hogs,\"\nadvised all intending to grow fruit to\nkeep some form of stock and laid\nstress on the fact that if it is the intention of the rancher to make money\nout of his stock it pays him to keep\nthoroughbred stock and particularly\nto breed from thoroughbred sires. He\npointed out the advantages of communities owning thoroughbred hulls\nand boarB. For this district he recommended Ayishires, JerEeys and Guern-\nBaya for dairy cattle and Yorkshires\nand Famworths for hogs.\nJ. R..Terry gave useful advice on\npoultry and answeied a good many\nquestions put to him, the reply to a\nquestion as to a method of preventing\nhens eating their own eggs being:\nFeed them on nothing but eggs until surfeited with them.\nJ. Lindley of Crestou apoke In the\nplace of M. S. Middleton, who was unable to be present, on \"Vegetable\nGrowing.\"\nHe stated what hud been done at\nCreston in this matter and said that\nin 1909 the gross returns at Creston\nfor apples and vegetables did not exceed $5,000, but in 1913 the $55,000\nmark was passed, chiefly owing to cooperative marketing and reaching markets in the Grows Nest pass and beyond. Tea was provided at the close\nof a very well attended meeting.\n<$> <!>\n<$> SOUTH SLOCAN NEWS -*\n(Special to Th\u00ab Daily News.)\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B, C, March 15.\u2014\nAn enjoyable evening was spent by\nthe members of the South Slocan and\nBonnington Literary and Dramatic\nsociety on Wednesday last, After the\nbusiness meeting was over, when the\nSnndaysSermon spoilt\nby Coughing\nA dote of Hathtea'i Syrup\nof Tar and CodLiverOil taken\nbefore leaving for church will\ncheck tbat service spoiling\ncough.\nThie preparation acts at a\ntonic m well aa a cough can\nand Ha use soon enable* the\nsystem to throw off all eigna\nof cold.\nKeep it In the house \u2014\nluge bottle 35c at all dealers.\n-I. U MATUni CO, FN*,\nwmVMtmnmHe, F.Q.\nm)        mmm Mat *i*v* j***-  l*m*mM* ft*\n\\        \/Mrtrt Midi io takt to -M\u00abMM \u25a0****.\n1-I-13\nconstitution was finally settled and\nthree new members elected, Rev. J. R.\nKennedy continued his Interesting\npaper on \"Charles Dickens As a Social\nReformer.\" He had given the first\npart of his lecture a short time ago at\nBonnington. On this occasion he dealt\nwith Dickens as a reformer of debtors\nprisons and as an advocate of temperance.\" As a reformer of prisons,\nhe uuoted Mr, Pickwick's entrance to\nthe old Fleet prison In London, long\nsince pulled down, and his meeting\nwith Jingle and Job Trotter, both of\nwhom had wronged him -perviously.\nThe filth and squalor that then existed in such prisons Is there vividly por\ntrayed, whieh Is a contrast to the present clean and comfortable system. As\nregards the temperance point, h<\npointed out that the word \"teetotal1\noriginated accidentally, as ait a meet\nIng at Liverpool a prominent speaker,\nwho stuttered badly, was trying to\nsay total abstainer. He read the description of the celebrated Rev. Mr.\nStiggln's arrival at the temperance\nmeeting having previously been made\ndrunk by Mr. Welter's friends and bis\nfinal Immersion In the horse trough to\nthe amusement of his listeners. A\nhearty vote of thanks was proposed to\nthe lecturer by Mr. Dawer, of Vancouver. Refreshments were served by\nthe ladies und the meeting was then\nturned into a musical evening. Among\nothers who took part may be mentioned Mrs, Boomer, who sang \"Robin\nAdair\" in her usual finished style, and\nthe secretary, Gerald Ashby, gave a\nclever rendering of the late Corney\nGrain's song \"Mr. Justice Dimple.\" The\nnext meeting of the society will be on\nMarch 25, when there will be a whist\ndrive.\nThe St. Patrick's day dance, on behalf of the lawn tennis club, next\nTuesday bids to be a great success.\nThe ladles' committee met last week\nand finally settled details and an orchestra from Nelson has been engaged.\nMrs, A. Willie and baby, Miss Hall,\nMrs. C. Gray and Miss Bennett, of\nUpper Bonnington, and Mrs. T. A.\nWhieldon, of South Slocan, were visitors to Nelson on Wednesday.\nAirs. R. G. Long, Mrs. Chamney, A.\nV. Chlsholme, H. Fowler, Mrs. J. D.\nYeatman and Rev. J. R. Kennedy wero\nvisitors to Nelson.\nH. Lome Etter, who has spent the\nwinter   months   at the   Junction,   has\nreturned to Nelson-\nMr. and   Mrs. C. F. McHardy were\nvisitors here last week.\nThe work on the church is making\ngood progress, considerable help having been given during the week. The\nceiling has been completed. The laying of the floor is well started. Funds\nare asked for in order to purchase the\nwindows and doors.\nMr. Rotkeliffe, of the Allen Chalmers\ncompany, arrived during the week to\ntake charge of the installation of the\nnow unit at the West Kootenay Power\n& Light company, Bonnington Falls.\nSLOCAN CITY\n(Special tn The Daily News,\\\nSLOCAN CITY, B. C\u201e March 15.\u2014'\nW.A. Cameron of New Denver, manager\nof the Ottawa mine, went up to the\nmine on Thursday.\nGeorge Long, foreman of the Ottawa mine, went to Nelson on Thursday and returned on Saturday.\nWalter Clough. Canadian Pacific railway lineman, Is moving his family\nto Rosebery.\nR. E. Macmillan went to Nelson on\nThursday and returned on Friday.\nJack Moen, H. D. Lee, Arthur Gould\nand William Thompson are down from\nthe Prince for a few days.\n4 YMIR NEWS *3>\n(Special t0 The Dallv News)\nYMIR, B. C\u201e March 15.\u2014Dr. Vig-\nneux of Nelson \"was in town this week\nto assist Dr. Rehberger in an operation. The operation was successful\nand the patient is doing well.\nA surprise waB given to Mrs. D. E.\nGrohe and Mrs. Clark jointly this week\nat the residence of the latter, the occasion being the birthday of both\nladies. A pteaaant evening waa enjoyed, a dainty lunch helng served at\nmidnight.\nMr. and Mrs. Miflin of Salmo spent\na couple of days In town this week,\nreturning home this morning.\nArrangements are complete for a\nball on St. Patrick's day evening, under the auspices of the Ymir Miners'\nunion. An orchestra from Nelson will\nfurnish the music.\nThe Ladies' aid held, a hake sale\nyeBterday at the residence of Mr. and\nMrs. W. J. Turner.\nThe usual mud slides Incidental to\nthe breaking up of winter so far are\nlacking this spring -all trains helng\non schedule time ard the road in good\ncondition.\nKootenay and Boundary\nBURTON CANNERY\nMUCH APPRECIATED\nReport of Season's  Operations Satisfactory\u2014Entire Product Has Been\nSold \u2014 Enjoyable Entertainment.\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nBURTON, li- C, March 15.\u2014The annual meeting of the Arrow Lakes Cannery company, Limited, Burton, was\nheld on Friday, R. L. June, president,\noccupying the chair. The president\nwelcomed all present and said It was\nvery gratifying to see such a good attendance, which showed a lively interest waa being taken in the loca,!\ncannery. He i'poke nt some length,\nglvlng'details of what had been accomplished last season and explained\nthat owing to the late arrival of machinery canning operations were not\ncommenced until July 14. During the\nseason 380,5 lbs. strawberries, 1287 lbs.\nraspberries, 1078 lbs. gooseberries, 300\n.lbs. blackberries, 2224 Ibs. beans, 8751\nlbs. apples were packed and all hud\nbeen disposed of, which speaks highly\nof the product put on the market. After the auditor's report had been read\nThomas Abrlel, Nakusp, congratulated\nthe officers saying it was much to\nthe credit of the Burton citizens, to\nhave started a cannery, which was of\nlmmense benefit to the settlers and\noffered to take another $100 ln'Bhares\nif another $900.00 was subscribed. The\nelection of officers then took plaoe,\nthe result heing that R. Isilp wus chosen president, W. Old\/dings, secretary\ntreasurer, with Messrs. Abrlel, Schratn,\nFaulds, Podbielancik, Hendry and\nFondeur as directors. A very busy\nseason for the cannery In anticipated\nthis year, enquiries coming from all\nparts of the lakes and an increased\nacreage localh** will he devoted to small\nfruit. The new directors will at once\nget out working plans f0r the coming\nseason, and a meeting will be held in\na few days for that purpose.\nOn Friday evening in the town hall\na farce entitled \"The Persecuted\nDutchman\" was presented by local\nartists; also \"The Trial Scene from\nOacsar.\" A splendid audience gathered, visitors coming from Graham's\nLanding, Arrow Park and other lake\npoints, who all showed their appreciation of the able way the pieces had\nbeen staged. In the trial scene W.\nAgabob and E. Lucler, ably took the\ndifferent roles and the following Impersonated the various characters in\nthe \"Persecuted Dutchman; Persecuted Dutchman, W. Agabob; hotel\nlandlady, Mrs, Hubert; landlord, C.\nPearce; Capt. Blow-hard, W. J. Eades;\ncaptailn's daughter, Mrs. R. Stevens,\nA. Clearstarch, E. Lucler; Teddy the\nservant, V. Adams; perseverance\nwaitress Annie Glover, and Cousin\nSoberly, J. Hellmer. After the performance dancin!g Kvop dnlliulged in\nand refreshments were served at midnight.\nMrs. Pearce and E. L. Schram left\nfor Claresholm, Alta. on Thursday,\nhaving received news of the serious\nillness of their father.\nMr. and Mrs. Barnet, who have been\nresiding here since last fall In S\nLeai-v's house, have left for Nine Mile\nPoint, Kootenay Lake,\nA. A. Burton is a visitor to Halcyon\nHot Springs for a few days.\nMiss E. Keffer. of. Arrow Park, was\na guest fbr the week-end of\" Mrs~ R.\nStevens.\nH. Tnoi'nber, assistant horticulturist,\nwill hold a series of.pruning lessons\nhere next week.\nS. Podbielancik. of the Kootenay\nhotel, has 'been busy this week oulnt-\ning the inside of his hotel.\nGRAND  FORKS <?\n(Special to The Dally News)\nGRAND FORKS. B. C, March 15.\u2014,\nRivetting on the New Canadian Pacific\nrailway steel bridge near the Great\nNorthern depot is now In progress.\nGladys McLaughlin expects to receive today the Shetland pony won\nby her in the Winnipeg Telegram pony\ncontest.\nThe social club will give one of\ntheir dances in the opera house on\nSt. Patrick's night.\nTo assist in wiping off the hockey\nclub deficit the management of the\nEmpress theatre have offeree the entire proceeds of the performance on\nthe evening of Wednesday next. Special feature films will he shown and\nthe McLeod orchestra have kindly offered their services for the evening.\nAbout 75 tyros were fed to the\n\"Tiger\" in the opera house, previous\nto which the Arabs from EI Mabarraz\ntemple No. 92 paraded the main\nstreets of the city, headed hy the city\nband. As the Arabs were alt in eastern coBtume, carrying colored lights-\nthe spectacle was a pretty one and\ndelighted the crowds on the streets.\nA special train arrived from Phoenix,\nleaving again about 2 o'clock.\nTHREE  PRIZES WON\nBY NAKUSP INSTITUTE\n(Soeclal to The Dally News.)\nNAKUSP, B. C, March 15.\u2014The regular meeting of the Nakusp Women's\nInstitute was held at the Exchange\nAssembly room on Wednesday with\nthe president in the chair and 24\nladies present.\nAmong other communications rend\nwas one from the superintendent of\nInstitutes, William E. Scott, announcing results of Women's institutes competitions for 1913, which proved most\ngratifying to Nakusp members, their\nbranch having won three out of a\nnosslble 10 of them. They arc as follows: Second prize for average attendance during year 1913, books, value\n$15.00, to form nucleus of library of\nhome economies; first prize .paper\n\"Raising and Expending Institute\nFunds,\" Miss B. Abrlel, and second\nprize, paper \"Co-operatoin as It Could\nbe Used Beneficially toy Institutes,\"\nMiss F. 'Poole, After the usual order\nof business the president introduced\nF. W. Heathcote, manager of the local\nbranch of the Canadian) Bank of Commerce, who gave ah interesting talk\non \"What a Woman Should Know\nAbout Banking.\"\nROSSLAND\n:v\n(Special to The Daily News)\nROSSLAND, B. C. March 15.\u2014Mr.\nFauldlng left for Spokane on Sunday\nmorning to meet Mrs. Fauldlng, who\nhas been on ap extended vlBlt to the\ncoast.\nSCREAMED WITH THE\nTERRIBLE PAIN\n\"FnH-i4lws\"Complel8tyCiirri\nOistnssing Kidney Trouble.\nSr. Thomas, Ont., April ibL 1913.\n\"In 1911,1 was laid up with Kidney\nTrouble and not able to get out of mj\nchair. Had tried many kidney remedies\nwithout satisfactory results. The pain\nwas excruciating and my screams could\nbe heard on the street. One day a inend\nfrom Ottawa came to see me, and when\nhe found me in such poor health, said\nhe would send me a sample of \"Fruit-a-\nUvea\", which be did and I commenced\ntaking them. The results were so\napparent with the first few dosea tbat I\ncontinued to take \"Fruit-a-tives\" and\nwas completely restored to my normal\nitate of health. I would strongly advise\nanyone suffering with Kidney Trouble\nto take \"Frnu-a-tives\" and cure\nthemselves\" CHARLES CALVBART.\n50c a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25c.\nAt all dealers or from Fruit-a-tives\nLimited, Ottawa.\nJimmy McKay, of Trail, spent Saturday afternoon In town.\nMrs, C. E, Dempster was \"at home\"\non Saturday evening.\nP. W. Racey Is spending a few days\nln town.\nMrs, J. W. Coffin and Mra. J.\nMcLeod, who have been spending the\npast week in Spokane returned on\nFriday.\nJ. M. Doyle, of the Great Northern,\nwob In town on Saturday.\nMiss, Helen de Oagnc, of Trail, spent\nthe week-end In town as tlie guest of\nMrs. G. C. Chubb.\nMr. and Mrs. J. D. McDonald leave\non Monday for California on a month's\nvacation.\nAlpha Chapter No. 1, Order of Eastern Star, will give a dance on Easter\nMonday.\nArthur Cocking was taken to the\nhospital yesterday with an injured\nknee.\nMiss Ethel Carr, uf Trail, spent Friday In town.\n$<J*!>$><S><\u00a7'-*$--$K^^\n<$>\nTRAIL NOTES\n(Special to The Dallv News)\nTRAIL, B. C, March 15.\u2014Preparations for the hockey dance are well under way and a large number of tickets\nhavo been sold. Several Rossland\nvisitors are expected for the affair.\nTho hall wlll'tie gayly decorated with\nthe club colors. A fine orchestra will\nbe In attendance anid suoper will be\nserved at midnight.\nThe concert 'held at the Methodist\nchurch on 'Friday evening wag an\nenjoyable affair. Several good musical numbers were rendered. Mr, Jordan, of Nelson, occupied tho chair. The\nprogram was as follows: Solo, \"Kll*\nlarney,\" Miss Larsen, Rossland; duet\n\u2022\"The Crocket Bawble,\" J-ll'sa Dunn\nand Mr. Jack; recitation, Mrs. Reese,\nsolo, \"Spring has Come,\" Miss Dunn;\nsolo, \"Sweet and Low,\" Aliss Morris;\nInstrumental trio, Messrs. Chapman,\nWilliamson and Carnage; the Pibroch,\nMr. Jack; recitation, Miss Heyes; solo\nMiss Spease; recitation. \"The Parson\nat a Hockey Match,\" Mr. Chester. At\nthe conclusion of the program, a number of handsome baskets were auctioned by Mr. Jackson, some bringing\nas high as $4.00, and a substantial sum\nwas realized,\nThose who will take uart In the \"Al\nHome\" at Mrs. F. G. Morln's on St.\nPatrick's day. afternoon and evening,\nwill be Mrs. Tregonlng,, a new comer\nto Trail, and an accomplished pianist,\nMrs; McLean, theMisses Morris and\nDunn and Messrs, .Jack and Jackson.\nThe affair Is under the auspices of\nthe Roman Catholic church and is\ntaking the phicr. of the usual St. Patrick's concert. A hearty Invitation If\nextended to all.\nA group photograph was taken of\nall tbe championship cups which Ti-\u00bbiil\nIs the possessor of. A picture will be\ntaken of the Trail hockey champions\nC. Atkins returned home on Saturday night from Phoenix whero he has\nbeen visiting friends far the past few\ndays.\nDANGER OF MORE\nGIRLS THAN   BOYS\nSuffrage  and   Other' Feminine   Movements for independence Due\nto  Overtupply.\nDuring the next 20 years it is probable that many more boys will he\nborn than girls, and It Is expected\nthat this disproportion will be large\nenough to moke up for tbe present\nover-supply of women. That there are\ntoo many women in the world Is very\nevident. The suffrage movement nnd\nother plana tb given women more independence are largely due to this\nfeminine over-supply.\nIf there were an exactly equal number of men and women; and if each\nlived equally' long, there would be\nno need for. women to enter business\nlife, because utere would be a husband\nfor each one. As It now is, there av\nnot enough husbands to go around and\nthis brings such an element of chance\nInto the marriage question that most\ngirls think it wise to safeguard themselves against the possibility of never\nmarrying, by learning to make thalr\nliving in some.other way.\nThe younger a woman is when she\ngets married,  the  more  likely   that\nmost of \"her children will be f^lrla\nthe older she   Ib   at   marriage,   tbe\ngreater the likelihood that her children\nBE   SURE   IT'S  THE\nI'AUBURN HAIR. GIRL*\nShe Represents Parisian Sage An Invigorating  Hair Tonic\u2014Quickly\nRemove* Dandruff.\nYou can use nothing better than\nParisian Sage, as sold at ''rug counters everywhere, to make the hair soft\nfluffy and albundant. It stops itching\nhead, Invigorates Uie scalp, und removes dandruff with one application.\nDC your halr 1* getting thin, or is\nharsh, dull and 'lifeless, do not despali\n\u25a0\u2014give It attention. Frequent applications of Parlslun Sage well rubbed Into\nthe scalp will do wonders.\nWhen the hair Is falling out, splits,\nor ia too dry and streaky, surely use\nParisian iSage\u2014h supplies 'hair and\nscalp needs.\" Get a 50 cent-bottle from\nthe Poole Drug Co., Ltd., at once.\nIt certainly makes your head -feel fine\nand gives the halr that enviable gloss\nand beauty you desire. . r\nThe Millinery Opening\nIs Now a Memory\nBut such a memory!   Our ears, tingle yet with the unstinted and\ngenerous praise of our millinery department by hosts of fair visitors.\nThey praised the jaunty shapes.\nThey praised the tasty blending of colors.\nThey praised the fine style displayed.,\nThey praised the milliner.\nWe made a special effort to please the ladies at this our first\nopening, and we are more than satisfied.\nYour new gown will look at its best if\nyou're wearing perfect fitting\nc\\c\nA la Grace\nCORSETS\nWe have made a full range of sizes in\nmany new models to show off the new season's designs to the best advantage.\nThere's one that will fit you as though 'twere made for you\nalone.    Get it.\nSmillie & Weir\nBurns Block\nBaker Street\nwilt be boys. Recent inveatigitio,is\nhave shown that where women have\nbecome mothers at 19 years or younger, there was an average of 44 girls to\n29 boys born. In the case of women\nwho were between 19 and 24 yearB of\nage when married, the figures showed\nan average of 53 girls to 45 boyB. Between the years of 24 and 32, the\nproportions gradually became less,\nand between the years of 31! and 3G\nboys and girls were horn in equal proportions. From 36 to 42, tlie proportion was f,2 hoys to 41 girls, ahd between the ages of 42 and, 48, it was\n04 boys to 27 girls.\nThe two or three preceding generations have been as notable for marrying young as the present generation\nIb waiting until later in life. It follows that the preceding generations\nhad more girls than boys, and that\nthe present generation is likely to have\nmore boys than girls.\nTho larger the number of girls the\ngreater opportunity a man has to\nmake his choice and the less he feels\nthe need of haste. Where women uie\nfew, a nian is more likely to take advantage of the firat opportunity to\nsecure a. wife, lest other chances\nshould not arise. Again, the girl who\nIs self-supporting is well aware that\nmarriage implies tho stoppage) of\nmany privileges and she is, iher-'fare,\nless ready to respond to the adV-tn*'-3i3\nof a lover. The high coat of living\nalso helpB prohibit early marriage.\nAll theBe conditions tend to delay\nthe age of marriage. Our grandmothers married when they were 17\nor 18 years of age, our mothers wh-iii\nthey were 21 or 22. During the hist\n10 years tlie average age of marriage\nhas advanced to 24 or 25. The rate\nof delay Is increasing and shortly will\nhave reached the point at which more\nboyB will be born than girls, and for\na generation or two boy babies will\nbe in the majority, and girl babtea will\nbe few and far between. Within two\nor three generations this will make\nmore men than women. In the world\nand will of Itself make a tremendous\ndifference in the whole question of\nwomen's sphere and women's work:\nKNOWN TO SOME PEOPLE\n' Martin Harvey, the English actor-\nmanager, who Is now on an all Canadian tour to thc Puclfic coast and\ntwo weeks through the maritime provinces before coming into Montreal. As\nhe had not visited America, for ll\nyears, and* then only the larger cities\nhe was comparatively unknown lh the\nsmall towns of Nov-- Scotia and New\nBrunswick, and this circumstance\ngave rise to a couple of Incidents\nwhich Mr. Harvey narrates with gusto.\nWhen the theatre manugcr at New\nGlasgow, N. S\u201e was approached by Mr.\nHarvey's agent with a request for a\nbooking, the manager asked contemptuously who was Martin Harvey, and\nseemed disinclined to continue negotiations. The agent pressed his arguments, whereupon tbe manager, evidently thinking to dismiss the subject, called out to bis property man,\nstage carpenter, bill poster, ticket\ntaker, orchestra leader and general\nhandv man, who was working under\nthe stage: \"Say, Joe, did y'ever heat'\nof Joe Harvey?\"\nJoe, however, happened to be \u00ab\nrather recent arrival from England\nwhere .he Wf-d been employed at Drur>\nLane theatre, so he promptly answered:    \"Sure  I've heard of him.\"\n\"Would he d0 any 'business here?\"\nwas the manager's next question.\n\"Why, he wouldn't! come to this\ndump,\" was Joe's scornful reply.\n\"Oh, yes, he will If I want him.\"\nsaid the -manager. \"Would he draw?\"\n\"Just pack the house, that's all,\"\nwas Joe's dictum, ami tbe contract\nwas thereupon cloned. \u2014 Canndian\nCourier.\nSHEERWATER ON  8CENE\n(Uy Daily News Leased Wire)\nPANAMA, March is.\u2014Information\nreceived here today from Ecuador says\ntlie British gunboat -Shecrwater has\nbeen orderti,! to proceed to Earnera!-\ndos, ut the request of the British vice-\nconsul. Communication with Esmer-\naldus has been Interrupted since Fri\nday night.\nGRAND  MASTER ELECTED\n(By Dally News Leased Wire',)\nVANCOUVER,   a C,  March   lfi.\nDr.  E. V. McEwen has    -been choseul\n\u00abrand mac-ter of the Ancient Order ofl\nUnited Workmen of British Columbia.|\n.Sfca-Jhu^Co <Mt4A*t& -tira^T*\n(^^C^MtUu *<&> 'm^J^ >*>&nJ to1\"*7^\nLEGGETT &PL\nWe Can Recommend the\nLeggatt & Piatt\nSprin\nAs One of the Best Made\nPrice\n$9.00\nFull\nSize\nStandard Furniture Company\nComplete House Furnishers\nNelson, B. C.\nTHE NELSON IRON WORKS, LTD.\nSECOND-HAND MACHINERY IN STOCK,\nHORIZONTAL  ENGINES.\n1\u20147 x *.\n1\u201411 x 18.\n2-12 X 16.\n1\u201411 x \u00ab.\nMINING HOIST.\n1\u2014t'\/* x 10 Link motion and a.v-\nonl lanor onaa.\nBOILERS.\n1\u2014N H.P. Looomotivo Boilar.    -\n1-M x 12 H.R.T. Sailor.\nVERTICAL ENOINES,  1-8x1.\nPUMPS.\n1\u20144\/, x 2% x 4 Duplax.\n1\u201416 x 8 x 16 Knowloa Sinkor.\nMISCELLANEOUS.\n1\u20146 x 24 Surfaoar and Matohar.\n1\u2014Saw Carriago, S blook.\n1\u2014No. 4 Soul. Staarn Faad.    \\\n1 48 KW. Oanaralar.\nBOO Ft. 6 inoh Plpa.\n1\u20146-Ton Triplax Chain Blook.\n oTI\\\n\u00a3\nMONDAY  .......... MARCH, 18\ntfa %tt]> $i>m,\nPAg.E THSEE\nI; L4r\u00a3Sr SPORTING NEWS\nAltoSTICKS\n^ TRIP AND SLASH\nRough House Carnival on New York\nIce\u2014.Hockey Exhibition Surprises\n\u201e, .. Gotham  Fan*. ..,\nl(By bally News 1,-fiaBeS WireV\nNEW YOItK, March IB.\u2014A carnival\nK of rough, bruising skating and a show-\n.-er-of'goals marked the opening game\n..tonight of the series at St. Nicholas\nt rink between the Camvdinn profession-\n'\/al t^ama, the Quejjec team- running\n1 [\u25a0ovpr.jjhe Wanderers of Montreal rough-\n| shod.and winning.by the overwhelming. &cpr$, of 1C to 8. -there was no\n; restraint whatever on the, players, and\n! although the officials Bent the offenders off the Ice continually, a substitute\nj was allowed under the rules, bo that\n\"each team always had bIx men on the\nBI ice.   The-.roughness was never checik-\nd -.-e-rl aiMJL, more thah'.once the players\nj smasheld each other with their sticks.\ni'    Wheh'itlie teams'were not rouptilng\n.'It the^nie'was a fine exhibition pf\ni fast, cleyeir hockey.   The speedy, elu-\njrf1*). efv\u00bb3 skating of the men and their\n' sklllfuj,.stick work was a revelation\n,tto local fans.    Such swiftness is not\n%\u00a5\\ to be seen In the-gameB here, and local\n,u i-playew do.not Jiave the knaek of foi-\n| Io\\^ifa\u00a3'thQ Puck with in intuitive surely, ness ;^hich ninrks the Canadian pro-\n\u25a0^rfeBsioflals. ..',.:..\u25a0,'.,;\nV ^hjjWuebec t;eain wps faster an<l\ni .played^iottuch better th\u00a3n the Wander-\n|7*ers.   CraVfor-i nnd Maione, the wings,\nJ 11,and Joe. Hall, the cov-er point, kept up\ni va contimi'iil: attack' PRiSMl Wanderers'\nT;:s\u00b0al-   VM \u25a0' '. *\u2022.\u25a0-$'&\n\/if For tWSn.Wandorer,a,v-Hyland, Ross\nj Und, theXa^ghprnupyg made many fast\n!,i'uns( down the rlnki, hut their long\nKl'shooting^fftttho Quebec goal most, of\n^\u2022tbe t'lmeT-was successfully thwarted\n\u25a0 by the work: of Moran, Quebec's goalkeeper, -rle turned back scores of\nshots whicli whizzed at him at bullet\nspeed. The first period of the game\nwas by far the best, and after Quebec\nhad taken a lead of three to one, the\nWanderers showed a thrilling outburst\nof speed and fine skating by O. Cleg-\nBj.horn and Roberts, which tied the\nscore.\n\u25a0 \"\u25a0 The game became rough after that\nand was so had in the second and third\n.periods that both teams were con-\n;tinually rushing in substitutes to take\n\u2022the places of the offenders, whp were\nruled out of the game. One exciting\nencounter took place between Art\nRobs oLthe Wanderers and Mummery\nof the Queheca. Both are 200-pounderfi\nan^ t-iey came together with a resounding crash. Both tried each other's alUll at tripping and they were\nse[it from the game for five minutes.\nI&i Later 0n, they repeated the rough work\nan,d were- baniBhed again. Kendall\nand Goldle Prodgers got so excited\nthat they began to use their fists,\nwhen cooler heads Intervened.\nThe, players completely forgot hock-\nW\u00a5\nFIRST OF WORLD'S SERIES\nGAMES GOES TO TORONTO\nCOA8T CHAMPIONS^SHOW 8URPR (SINGLY GOODFORM AT SIX MAN\nGAME\u2014HAD SHADE ON TORONTOS, BUT LUCK BROKE BADLY\u2014\nTORONTO GOALKEEPER PLAYS MAGNIFICENT GAME \u2014 SIX\nTHOUSAND SEE QAME -\u25a0\u25a0-.,\n(By Dally News Leased wire.)\nTORONTO, March 15.\u2014Five to two\nhardly reflects .the. credit due the. Victoria team for their work in the opening game pf the world's aeries last\nnight. With a bit more of luck the\nscore might have been reversed, The\n.visitors in the first and second periods\nshaded the National Hockey association champions, and but for the marvelous work of Holmes, who gave one\nqf thc best exhibitions of goalkecplng\never witnessed on the local arena, the\nweEternera would have piled up a more\nsubstantial lead  in the threo periods,\nIt was a splendid crowd of over 0,000\nthat packed the arena when the game\nbegap, ' The visitors surprised the\ncrowd by their skill with the six-man\ngame.\nTime and again Patrick and Genge,\nafter beraklng up dangerous looking\nsallies by the local forwards, came\nsweeping down the ice, Patrick surprising tho crowd by his exhibitions of\nspeed, while Genge's corkscrew rushes\non the net caught the fancy of the enthusiasts. Of the forwards, Poulin\nwas, probably the most effective man\non the Ice and his work gave Holmes\nmany apxlpus moments,   \u25a0\nThe game throughout wns a fast,\nclose checking affair, and the locals\nattempted little, combination until the\nfinal period, when they caught the\nvisitors temporarily demoralized and\nrati In three goals in quick succession.\nUp to that time It was anyone's game,\nwith the visiting teiim, if anything,\nhaving a. little.the bettor, of.it.\nBut the visitors would not be denied,\nand kept fighting for the goal ttyit\ntied tho score. It came after one bf\nPatrick's end-to-end efforts. After relieving at his own goal mouth, he carried the puck down through the whole\nToronto team, drew out the defence\nand passed to Dunderale well In.\nHolmes was caught alone and was\neasily beaten. A minute later Poulin\ncame down with a spectucular rush,\neluded tho whole team and shot in\nclose on Holmes and the latter was\nextremely lucky to save it. The visit\nors were now playlngthe fastest hockey\nof the night.\n. Ulrlch came on for Dunderdale and\nInitiated a- rush that only ended when\nHolmes ^vent out and met him. Patrick, a minute later, carried it back\nagain, but Marshall secured It, and\nfrom away out, beat Lindsay with the\ngoal that gave Toronto the lead.\nThe Victorias came down time and\nagain, and simply bombarded the Toronto nets, but could not beat Holmes.\nSome of the best hockey of the game\nwas shown by the visitors for the remainder of tho period, but there was\nno further score. Line-up:\nVictorias Torontos\nLindsay goal   Holmes\nGenge   .,.> point    Mnrshnll\nPatrick   . if..... .cover    McNamura\nDiinderdale   . A .centre    Foystpn\nPoulin   .right wing....   Davidson\nKerr left wing  Walker\nReferee,   Russell   Bowie,    Montreal;\njudge of piny, Johnny Brennnn.\ney In the final period and started a\ncampaign of wholesale tripping and\nslashing. Players were sprawled out\non the ice half the time. The officials\nlost all control over them and they\nplayed as tiiey pleased.\nEven in the midst of the turmoil,\nhowever, Hall of the Qnebece gave a\nremarkable exhibition of fast skating\nand wonderful goal shooting.\nNEWS BOWLERS BEAT\nWOOD-VALLANpE\nSixty-Six  Pins  Is  Margin\u2014Whitehead\nHas High Score and High\nAverage.\nBy U pins The Daily News bowling\nquintet on Saturday night defeated the\nWood-Vallance pin,, smashers after\nhaving got away in the first game to\n. bad start. R. Whitehead, of the\nNewsies,\" had high score and high\naverage for the evening with a score\nof 173 and an average,of 145. In the\nfirst game the Wood-Vallance got the\n'Newsies\"   by   35   plna,   but   in   the\nsecond game the newspaperftes came\nright back and bent them by 37 pins.\ngettlng a lead of two pins In the start\nof the final game of the evening. Tho\nlast game was all Daily News, Tne\nscores:\nThe Daily News\nCurran        121    119   136   \u2014376\nStanley     100    13C    121   \u2014357\nBlanchard          96    142     83   \u2014321\nWhitehead        129    173   133   \u2014435\nGriazelle        125    128    HI   \u2014394\nTotal     571 698 613 1882\nWood-Vallance\nDoughis     142 117 117 \u2014376\nRiley  Ill 148 107 \u2014366\n\u25a0Shaw     98 118 103 \u2014314\nBoyes     149 159 107 \u2014415\nAllan     Ill 119 115 \u2014345\nTotal    \u2022   606   661   549:    1816\nA. Shilland, secretary of District No.\nC, Western Federation of Miners, who\nhas been a guest nt the Strathcona\nfor several days, \u2022 will return this\nmorning to Sandon..-'....-\nDEFINES FISHING\n-REGULATIONS\nNo Close Season 'for Squaw Pish, Grayling, Suckers or Char\u2014Weight\ni   -     Limit to  Salmon.   '\n\"There is no close seasvn for squaw\nfish, suckers or this fish you call gray-\nUnfli nw-i* thero.-for char. . You may\nalS9.. catch. landlocked steelhead-*. or\nsalmon-aslong as they are five,pounds\nIn. weight at any-- time.. Am writing\nfurther particular8.\n(Signed) \"A, BRYAN WILLIAMS,\n\"Provincial Game Warden.\"\nThe above despatch was received on\nSaturday afternoon hy R.- J. Ca:mpbell\nof this city in reply to jy letter he\nhad written to A. Biyafr Williams, pro.\nvlnclal game warden, asking whether\nat the present time it was' lawful to\ncatch char dr landlocked, salmon in\nthis district.\nFor some time past there has been\nsome confusion in the minds of the\ndisciples of Isaac Walton In this vicinity as to just what the fishing regulations in this respect were.\nUnder an order-ln-councll passed last\nyear and whloh, so far as is known,\nIs the only present federal authoritv\non the subject, trout, fishing in this\ndistrict opened on M&rch 15, whicli\nwas yesterday.\nSPECIAL TRAIN\nNOW ASSURED\nSo Reports A. W. Smith of Rossland\u2014\nPreliminary Bouts Being Arranged\n\u2014Two   More   Days'  Training.\nWord was received f-rprfi A. W.\nSmith of Rossland last night that he\nhad practically completed plans for a\nspecial train from the golden city and\nTrail to Nelson, for the Maxwell-Lucca\nlight here on Wednesday night. Mr.\nSmith expects a large crowd over from\nthe two cities, where both contestants\nin the bout have a host of friends.\nIt was also announced yesterday that\ntwo preliminaries had been arranged\nfor the bout and \"that there was a\nprobability that there might he three\nsuch encounters. .lack Grant and \"Battling\" Louie Feltz of this city will\nhook up in one of the bouts nnd in the\nother bout which has been arranged\nDick Marshall, Lucca's sparring partner, is hooked to meet a well known\nIccal mit artist,\nBoth of the participants In the main\nbout on Wednesday evening put in\nEome hard work yesterday 'and today\nand tomorrow are expected to do their\nbig work at their respective training\nquarters in tb0 Hume and Grand\nhotels.\nADDITIONAL SPORTING NEWS ON\n, PAGE^EVEN.   .   .\nRexail\nRed Cedar Compound\nSure Death to Moths\nDOES AWAY WITH  THE OBJECTIONABLE ODOR   OF   MOTH   BALL8   AND   NAPTHALENE   AND   18\nMUCH  EASIER TO USE\nTHE MOTHS WILL NOT GET INTO YOUR FURS IF YOU USE THIS COMPOUND\n25 Cents the Package\nPoole Drug Co., Limited\nSEND  US YOUR   MAIL  ORDER8\nNELSON'S  LEADING  DRUGGISTS\nTHE^EXALL STORE'\nPHONE 25\n1  BRITISH   FOOTBALL   RESULTS\n(Canadian   Associated  Press Cable.)\nLONDON,1 March 15.\u2014Following are\nresults of yesterday's scheduled football games, played on the grounds of\ntho first named clubs:\nFirst   Division\nBolton Wanderers 3, Derby County 1.\nBurnley 5, Liverpool 2.\nChelsea 2, Sheffield  United 0.\nEverton 0, Blackburn Rovers 0.\nManchester United 0, Aston Villa 6.\nOldham Athletic 3, Middlesbrough 0.\nPreston North End 4, Newcastle\nUnited  1.\nSheffield Wednesday 3, Manchester\nCity 2.\nSunderland 2, Tottenham Hotspur 0.\nWest BromwJch Albion 2, Bradford\nCity 1.\nSecond  Division\nBirmingham  0, Blackpool 0.\nBradford l, Wolverhampton Wand-\nererB 0.\nBristol City 4, Lincoln City 1.\nClapton Orient 1, Bury 0.\nGlossop fl, Barnsley 1.\nGrimsby Town 3, Notts Forest 0.\nLeeds City 5, Huddersfield Town 1.\nNotts County 4, Leicester Fosse 1.\nStockport County 2, Hull City 1.\nWoolwich Arsenal 2, Fulham 9.\nNorthampton 1, Swindon 0.\nAssociation International,\nIreland 1, Scotland 1.\nIrish   Cup   Semi-final.\nShelbourn 0, Glentoran 0.\nSouthern   League\nGlllingbam 3, Bristpl Rovers 0.\nNorwich City 5, Merthyr Town 2.\nWatford-West Ham United, abandoned.\nCoventry City 1, Plymouth Argylc 1.\nCrystal Palace 0, Southampton 0.\nReading vs. Queen's Park Rangers,\nabandoned.\nNorthampton 1, Swindon Town 1.\nSouthend United 2, Cardiff City 1.\nBrighton and Hove Albion 2, Exeter City 1.\nPortsmouth 1, Millwall Athletic 0.\nScottish League\nFalkirk 2, Aberdeen 0.\nAyr United 0, Kilmarnock 0.\nCeltic vs. - Hearts of Midlothian,\npostponed.\nDundee 2,  Clyde .0..  .\n' Dumbarton 0, Rangers 3.\" \"\nHibernians 2, Queen's Park 3.\nMorton 3, St. Mirren 0.\nMotherwell 3, Ralth Rovers 2.\nPartick Thistle 0, Hamilton Academicals 2,\nThird Lanarks 1, Alrdrfeonians 1.\n-Wales Beat Ireland\n(Canadian Associated Press Cable.)\nBELFAST, Ireland, March 15.\u2014\nWales beat Ireland here yesterday in\nthe international rugby game by 11\npoints to 3, before a large and enthusiastic crowd.\nRugby  Union \u2022\nFollowing are the results of rugby\nunion games played yesterday:\nHarelqulns 13, Old Merchant Taylors\n3.\nLondon Scottish 17, United Service 3.\nBlackheath 16, Old Leyslans (I.\nNorthampton 9, Richmond 0.\nGloucester 0, Leicester 3.\nBristol U, Newport 3.\nBath 3, Devonport 0.\nBirkenhead Park 28, Liverpool 3.\nPenarth 7, Cheltenham 3.\nEdinburgh Academicals 0,  Watson-\nians o.\nPontypool 2, Risca 0.\nAbertillery 11, Tredegar 3.\nStewartonlans 0, Hawk 3.\nNewton 15, Guys Hospital 3.\nNorthern  Union  Cup,  Second   Round-\nHalifax 11, Battery 0.\nBroughton Rangers 24, York 4.\nWakefield Trinity *}, Leeds 8.\nHull-Kingston  Rovers   2,   Huddersfield 17.\nWldnes 8, Oldham 0.\nRochdale Hornets 3, St. Helens 3.\nFeatherstone Rovers 3, Hull 27.\nRuncorn 2, Wigan 13.\nNorthern  Union   League.\nDewshury 15,  Warrington  2.\nLeigh 0. Swinton li.\nBradford 3, Salfor-i 17.\nMONARCH'S  COLORS\nLOWERED  AGAIN\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nWINNIPEG,    March    15.\u2014Weakened\nthrough the loss of the services of Del\nIrvine   the  star  coverpolnt,  and   Stan\nMarpies, the brilliant wing player, and\nworn out through grueling matches on\nHeavy Ice during the past three days,\nthe Monarchs were beaten by tlie Toronto R. & A. A, team here Saturday\nnight by the score of S to 5 in the\nfirst of two exhibition gamea, Tho\nsmallest crowd of the season turned\nout, but were treated to the best exhibition -of hockey of the week. With\nDick Irvln back in the line-up, the\nMonarchs showed a wonderful improvement over their Allan eup form,\nand, despite the wet ice, the play was\nfast from the start. The Torontos\ncame in for a lot of abuse from the\nspectators for their underhand tactics\nin stopping players by sueh methods\noh catching an opponent's sweater,\nhooking or tripping when \"out of reach,\nwhich is foreign to western hoekey.\n\u25a0 The Torontos put up a fast exhibition and deserved their victory, but\nnot by a margin of three goals* Stuart,\nin goal for the Monarchs, H.nl a bad\nnight, and several easy shots passed\nhim. Del Irvine*, was tlie star of tho\ngame, scoring four nf the five goals.\n.lack Brown and Gordon\" Meeking\nwere thc stars of the visitors, they\nscoring several pretty goals. Maxwell\nand Alex Irvin were aggressive for tho\nWinnipeg champions.. v\nNelson Club Cigar Factory\nJ.  D. THOMPSON, Proprietor.\nManufacturer and Distributor of\nNelson Club, El Neta and Kuskanook Cigars.\nNelson,'B. C.\nBox 1121 PhPne 174\nTHORPE'S\n^ DRINKS\nf;p-M\nTE-*K\"?eYb\nVAFIA\nED\nODALISQUE\nEXTRA  FINE\nImported From\n,<->\u00a3** BOX OF  IO\nIP V   %     ,   jiQ\niro, Egypt\nTheodoro Vaf i ad is & Co. Cairo.\nPurveyors (0 the H\/ied\/viaf Family.\n\\^^fi^0S^^!^pa^^^^0S^R$pp^W$^^\nit_\n PAGE FOUR\nCDe San** Jlffoa.\nMONDAY    MARCH  16\nCfce Bail? Jktos\nPublished  at Nelson   Every  Morning\nExcept Sunday, by\nTha Newa Publishing Company,\nLimited\nW. G. FOSTER, Editor and Managar.\nLEQAL   ANP   OFFICIAL\nADVERTISING.\nEffective on  and after Jan. 1, 1913.\nLagal Advertiaing (Includes municipal\n\u2022 and government notices) \u2014 12c\nper. line for the first insertion\n1 and eight cents per Una fjr all\nsubsequent Insertions.\nIn certain cases, however, for the\nconvenience of the public, flat\nrates have been set. aa follows:\nApplications fe<* Liquor Lieaniaai\u2014\nOnce per weak for four weeks,\n$6; dally for month, 180.\nApplications  for  Transfer  af  Liquor\nLicense*'.\u2014Once    per    week\nfour    weeks,    $7.60;    daily    for\nmonth, |45.\nLand   Purchase   Notices:\u2014One*   per\nweek for 60 days, $7.\nLand Lease Notices j\u2014Once per week\nfor 60 days, $7.\nCartificata   of   Improvement   Not.'oti:\n\u2014Once   per   week   for   60   days.\n|1?.M.\nDelinquent Co-ownership Notices:\u2014\nOnce per week for 90 days, $25.\nDuplicate Cartificata of Title Notices:\n\u2014Four Insertions, $8; eight Insertions, $14.\nWalter. Application Notices:\u2014 Four\ninsertions up to 100 words, JC;\nover 100 words, in proportion.\n,,where aijy of the above applications contain more than one application or notice, each application or\nnotice will be charged for as a separata advertisement\nMONDAY,  MARCH   16\nHELPING   THE   POOR    LITIGANT.\nAn interesting departure Ib about\nto be made in England for the purpose\nof enabling poor persons, unable to\nta-t-are -.redress of grievances because\nof want of means, to obtain, without\ncharge, the necessary legal advice and\nassistance, 8ayB the Toronto World.\nThe new department will submit the\n\u25a0various* cases for opinion, and the\nrules governing its operation are now\nin course of preparation hy the lord\nchancellor, the master of the rolls,\nthe president of the probate, divorce\nand admiralty division, Mr. Justice\nPlckfqrd and other members of the\nbar. --\"-the rules are* expected to be\nframed so tbat enquirers can readily\nan^ easily learn where to go. One\ndepartment will handle all the cases\nsubmitted and will forward them to\nthe appropriate division. Lists in\neach diviBion will be kept of counsel\nand solicitors willing to report upon\napplications and to assist those whose\ncause of action Ib approved. No fees\nof any kind will be payable, but remuneration may be granted out of\ntreasury funds.\nScotland for many years has had a\nBj-stem designed to'enable poor litigants to bring their cases hefore the\ncourts. Every year in the supreme\nand local courts members of the bar\nare, appointed to report whether\npoor applicant has a probable cause\nof action, and if they bo report the\nlitigation is handed over to the agents\nand counsel acting for this class of\nlitigant. No court fees are charged\nand in the event of a favorable judgment costs are recoverable from the\ndefendant on the usual scale. Many\nsuccessful lawyers have started o*\ntheir career as agents or counsel fo:\nthe poor and the system has thus not\nonly assisted In the obtainment or re\ndress, but has furnished a field of valuable experience to budding talent.\nTHE    DUKE    OF    SUTHERLAND'S\nLANDS.\nThe sale value of the deer forests\nand- grouse moors belonging to the\nDuke of Sutherland will be given an\nactual test when, about 300,000 acres\nof the duke's lands in Sutherland are\nput up at auction next October,   Pos\nsibly, says the Toronto Mail ana Empire, because of the unsatisfactory ending of his dispute with Lloyd George\nover the value of his Scottish lands,\nthe duke has decided to test their\nmarket value. Lloyd Ceorge declined\nto buy in Sutherland at two pounds\nper acre. The duke pointed out that\nmuch of this land was incapable of\nsustaining crofters, and that he was\ndoing a kindness to keep the land as a\nsporting reserve. He also pointed out\nhow much of his land\u2014he is the biggest land holder in Britain\u2014was Bet-\ntied and \u25a0 productive. Lloyd George\nnever had any Intention of having the\ngovernment acquire any Buch large\nholdings,, hut apparently the duke Ib\ndetermined to prove his point, even\nthough the Lloyd George part of Uie\nincident be ended.\nIt is stated that In Sutherland there\nare about 200,000 acreB yielding practically no sustenance. Yet there are\nstrathB and glens which in former\ndays were occupied by hundreds of\ncrofters, A parliamentary return has\nshown that by the end of last May\nthere were 4,000 applications made for\nsmall holdings in Scotland, and of\nthese few had been granted. A commission reported in 1892 that 1,782,-\n000 acres under deer forest and grouse\nmoors were suitable for agricultural\npurposes. The total acreage in Scotland now devoted to purposes of sport\nis 3,560,000 acres, or about twice the\narea considered fit for agriculture in\n1892. It is possible that the breaking up of the Sutherland estates, now\ngoing on gradually, will enable the\nplacing of the land in the hands of\nsmall holders directly, though If It\nmeans merely the changing of landlords it is not likely the new tenants\nwill improve their conditions. Even\nif the Duke of Sutherland sells 300,000\nacres, he will have a million left The\nworking out of the break-up will bej\nan exceedingly interesting process,\nboth politically and, so far as Scotland is concerned, economically.\n?-<8><e*-$x$>--^^3*3^^ \u00ae\n8> WHAT THE PRESS 18 SAYING 4\nThe Gun and the Book.\nMan who \"totes\" a pistol Ib sure to\nuse It sooner or later, but such is the\nperversity of human nature that the\nsame man may own a Bible 25 years\nand never use it once.\u2014Louisville\nCourier-Journal.\nIs Shorter Here,\nAfter all, our Canadian winter is\nnot so trying. The trouble is we he-\ngin to look for winter too early. We\ndon't get much winter nowadays until\nChristmas, but by getting ready and\npreparing for it away .back in October\nmakes It seem longer than it really\nis. The seasons are changing around,\nActually winter tn Canada only lusts\nfrom January to April.\u2014St. Catharines\nStandard.\nPleasures of Anticipation.\nThese are the days when seed catalogues and magazine articles that tell\nyou all about how to make a garden\nthrow the ordinary best-seller into the\nbackground. If only one per cent of\nthe flower beds and vegetable patches\nthat are being set out in the imagination could be brought to the realities\nof midsummer, what a different world\nthis would be. The spirit Is willing,\nbut the ability to spade and hoe and\nweed ls unfortunately very weak.\u2014\nEdmonton Journal.\nWhy Blame Him?\nAbuse of Gutelius, who exposed incompetence at Ottawa, is morally and\nintellectually on a par with abuse of\nthe detectives who exposed bribe-taking at Quebec. Canada Is asked to\ndiscuss and reprobate the discoverer\nof the Incompetence that coat this\ncountry $40,000,000 in the construction of the National Transcontinental\nT.'lway, Why blame the men whose\nduty required them to carry the\ntc-ches of truth into the swamps of\nnrand Trunk Pacific incompetence or\nhe mire of Quebec corruption'; The\nlight merely revealB conditions which\noriginate in th0 darkness of incompetence or the blackness of dishonesty.\n\u2014Toronto Telegram.\n\u2022> THIS DAY IN CANADIAN <-\nft HISTORY \u2022\npromise mo you wouldn't marry again\nwithin a year, at least.\"\n\"All right. Go ahead. I'll promise\nanything.\"\nFirst Winter Sport (looking at a\nmagnificent view of the Alps)\u2014Not\nhad, that.\nSecond Winter Sport\u2014Yes, It's all\nright, but you needn't rave about It\nlike a bally poet.\nMrs. Hiram Offen (to applicant)\u2014\nBut you have had a good many places\nIn a. short time.\nServant\u2014Yes, ma'am, that shows\nhow much competition ihere is- to secure my services.\n\"Judge,\" said the forewoman of the\nJury of ladles, \"we want to speak to\nyou about that sealed verdict we just\nrendered.\"\n\"Well, ladles?\"\n\"Can we unseal it and add a postscript?\"\nMamma\u2014Harry, this Ib the second\ntime today that you have forgotten to\ndo as you were told. I'm afraid everything I say to you goes in at one ear\nand out at the other.\nLittle Harry\u2014Well, mamma, why\ndon't you stop one of them up?\nLittle Elsie, aged five, was taken ln\nto see her baby brother. After viewing him critically for some time In\nsilence, she finally said: \"Mamma,\ndon't you think ft would be a good\nIdea to get a wig like grandpa's for\nthis one?\"\nGAS, SOURNESS AND\nINDIGESTION VANISH\nJust at    Soon  at \"Pape's  Diapepsin\"\nComet in Contact with the Stomach all  Distress is Gone.\n\"Really does\" put bnd stomachs in\norder\u2014\"really does\" overcome Indigestion, dyspepsia, gas. heartburn and\nsourness In five minutes\u2014that\u2014jufll\nthat \u2014 makes Pape's Diapepsin\nthe largest selling atomaqh regulator in the world. If what\nyou eat ferments into stubborn lumps, you belch gas and eructate sour, undigested food and acid:\nhead Is dizzy and aches; breath 'foul;\ntongue coated; your lnsldeg filled with\nbile and Indigestible waste, remember\nthe moment Diapepsln comes in con-\ntact with the stomach ;*.H such distress\nvanishes, I fa truly Astonishing \u2014 almost marvelous, and the Joy Is Its\nharmlesaness.    ...\nA large fifty-cent case of Pape's\nDiapepsin will give you a hundred\ndollars* worth of satisfaction or youi\ndruggist Hands -you your money back.\n'\"It's worth it'g weight in gold to men\nand women' who can't get their stom\nachs regulated. It 'belongs in your\nhome\u2014should always 'be kept handy\nIncase Of a sick, sour, upset stomach\nduring, the day or at night, it's the\nquickest, surest and most harmles?\nstomach doctor in the world.\nThe SwiBg officer, Frederick Haldl-\nmr.nd, afterwards governor-general of\nCanada, served in the war which gave\nthia country to the British, During\nthe winter following the capture of\nQuebec, he was in command! of the\nforts at Niagara and Oswego, and was\nsadly troubled with the appearance\namongst his troops of many cases of\nthat dread disease, scurvy. It was \"of\na sort prevalent amongst seamen, for\nwhich tho damp air Was blamed.\" Supplies of lime juice, vinegar, elder and\nother things thought likely to alleviate\nthe disease were sent in. On this\ndate in 1760 Gen. Gage wrote from Albany to explain that he had been unable to send \"the molasses\" as expected, owing to the going off of the\nsnow, and that it would In consequence\nhave to wait to go up by water, when\nthe lakes and streams became .navigable. \"Your men will get the better\nof their distemper when fresh herbB\nspring up\" was bis cheerful prophecy.\nAnd unquestionably Col. Haldlmand\nneeded encouragement, for there had\nbeen an -extraordinary number of\ndeaths in the garrisons under his\ncharge. But he also was anticipate\nimprovement in the spring, He had\ncaused large gardens to be prepared\nboth at Niagara and Oswego, for he\nknew the value not only of fresh vegetables as a preventive of scurvy, but\nalso of outdoor work.\n<3> <S=\nS> COMMUNICATION <*\u2022\n-!> <g>\nBACK TO THE  LAND\nTo the Editor of the Dally News:\nSir,\u2014In reading an article fn your\nIssue of March 10, under the heading\n\"Back to the Land,\" 1 want to point\nout a few points in which the writer\nand myself hold different views. He\nsays that to got on the land is the\nonly solution to the high cost of living.\nIt would certainly be a great step\ntowards betterment, but I have been\ntrying it myself for the last few years\nand I find that it Is not so easy as It\nlooks on paper. I would select a piece\nof land to find that it belonged to some\nsyndicate and not for sale. I then\nfound another piece and found* it was\nunder litigation between one Heinze\nand the Canadian Pacific railway\n1 travelled this district north, south,\neast and west and found scores of preemptions taken up years ago and not a\nparticle of work being done on them.\nThe pre-emptora do not want the land\nand they do not want any one else to\nhave It, and the -commissioners seem\nto encourage them In their dog In the\nmanger tactics.\nSome are being held for a price and\nothers are not worked because the high\nwuges the writer refers to does not nl-\nlow a man to save enough to quit his\nemploy during the summer months and\nwork on the land and as no one will\nsupply us with thc necessary capital\nwe have got to obtain It somehow.\nI eventually landed on a jack pin*\nthicket where I thought no one but\nmy crazy self would attempt to settlo,\nand where there Is not $com tovpltch\na 12 1)y*aeig'Et tent, only to find <\napplication that it was covered by\ntimber -license, and there is not a stick\nof timber on it more than four Inches\nthick.\nIf you know anyone who Is anxious\nto go back to the land I will show\nthem where this place Is, but personally I am disgusted with trying. 1\ncan't afford to pay the price, that Is\nusually asked, notwithstanding the fact\nthat I have been working among the\nhigh wages for the past eight years.\nThe writer speaks of Mr. Ford and\nhis $5 a day. It' I did not laud Mr.\nFord, I would not be standing up to\nmy convictions as a working man.\nMr. Ford knows what he can afford\nto pay, and If lu* is making profit\nwhen paying such a wage, what must\nhe have been making when lie waa\npaying {2 to i'i, and who was\nhe making It from but the producer.\nAs a side Issue, he also knows that he\ncan, for the present wage, get the best\nartificers that the country can supply.\nThe writer seems to think that labor\norganizations are a source of evil;\nwhat Is the matter with the fanners\nhaving their union and working on thc\nsame lines. The farmer produces the\ngoode and sells them, not at his prico,\nbut at the price of some trust or corporation to whom he Is practically\ncompelled to sell or else peddle hla\ngoods for miles In a locality that does\nnot need half the staff that the locality produces; otherwise he may let It\nrot on his hands.\nThe consumer pays high enough for\nthe products, but the (me who gets the\nbenefits of the farmers' hard work and\nlong hours and the consumers' high\nprice Is the man in between, who does\nthe buying and selling and In a great\nmany Instances never sees the stuff\nfrom which he derives a huge fortune.\nThe state of Maine is a great potato\nproducer, and by reading you find that\nthe entire crop for 11*10 was sold by\nthe producers for $8,000,000, the same\ncrop realizing $50,000,000 In New York,\nThe farmer got one-sixth of the value,\nwho got the remainder? I have\nclipping from a newspaper that tells of\na farmer who sold a barrel of apples\nthat he had produced and packed, and\nwhen packing ho wrote a little note\nand* buried It amongst the apples. Tbe\nbarrel of apples was eventually bought\nby a gentleman fn a certain city and\nwhen he opened them he found the\nfarmer's note, which read: \"I got 76\ncents for these apples, what did ytou\npay for them?\" The gentleman hnd\nbought them for $5.10.\nEvery sane person must admit that\nlabor unions have done much for the\nlaborer and there Is no reason why\nfarmers' unions could not be run on\nthe same system ao that they will get\na little more of the wealth they pro-\n\"Salada\" Tea Is \"Hill-Grown\"\n\"Hill-grown\" tea has the small, tender leaves\u2014\nwith Full, rich, delicious fragrance, redolent\nof the spicy tropics. \t\n\"SALADA\"\nTeak Brown Ugh up onjBie m-wnt-u-u of(>yIon--**illiH\u00bbn\u00ab\u00abi\u00bb*\u00ab\n-UkaC7*\u00bbd fragrance held captive in the sealed lead packages.\nSUM. 8REKN or MIXED \u00ab\u25a0\nduce, and eventually cut out the use-;\nless middleman, who alone is responsible for the high cost of living in my\nhumble opinion.\nWhen speaking with contempt of\nairy labor agitators, the -writer should\nremember that once upon a time there\nwas one who was credited with discontent, was branded as a thief and\na traitor and called an agitator; he\nwas persecuted in every manner possible and then crowned with thorns\nand crucified. We now place a different construction upon his ideas and\nworship Him os the Saviour of mankind.\nA labor agitator is a very useful being providing he ia not a. fool, and the\nworkers have no more use for a fool\nagitator than has any other member\nof the public.\nIn ,Mr. Nash'a opinion, present wages\nand hours are a great inducement to\nthe farmers' sons and laborers, but\nhow many of them stay In the mines,\nmllle and factories, unless they get an\nexceptional job. There are hundreds\nof men who would gladly go back to\nthe land If they could afford to quit\ntheir Jobs for a month or two, but\ntheir wages are too low, not too high,\nthat ls the trouble, and when pay day\ncomes around and they have paid their\nbills there Is nothing left.\nThere are men working all over the\nBoundary district for $2.75 a day and\nraising a family, who would gladly\ntackle the land and willingly work the\n12 or 14 hours a day and enjoy Nature's pure air Instead of the stifling\nair of the factories, mine gases and\nsmelter fumes, together with the numerous dangers that are connected\nwith these occupationa, If they could\nonly obtain the land ln their own right.\nWe realize that neither the producer\nnor the -consumer gets what ls coming\nto him, but instead of downing the\nlabor agitator who la continually trying to better the conditions of the so-\ncalled lower classes, why, help to lift\nthe farmer as the laborer has been\nlifted and remember that the laborer\nhas not yet quit rising, so it Is time\nthe farmer waa getting busy and keep\nIng time with the wheels of progress\nor he Is Juat about due to get run over.\nWILLIAM LAKELAND.\nGreenwood, B. C, March 13.\nFINE   IN   LONDON\n(Western ABSoclated Press Special\n\/ Cable.)\nLONDON, March 15.\u2014London fair;\nmaximum 51, minimum 4i).\nParis fair; maximum 51, minimum\n42\t\nWANT AD   HOROSCOPE\nmons in London will be the incident\nto he longest remembered in the civil\nlife of the. priest. Father Domey It\nwas who delivered to the Irish parliamentary leader the documents which\nshowed that the informant Piggott'B\naccusations against Parnell were based\non forg-ery. Tbe Plggott charges,\nwhich formed an elaborate* attempt\nto link Parnell with crime upon crime,\nbad threatened to bring about the expulsion of Parnell from tbe commons\nand to cause the wrecking of home\nrule for Ireland, Largely as the result, of Father Dorney's successful mission' the prosecution suddenly collapsed and Plggott not long after com-\nmltted suicide in Spain, Father Dor-\nney had been entrusted* with the documents by his life-long friend, Alexander Sullivan, president of the National\nIrish League of America, and Patrick\nHgan, former treasurer of the Irish\nLeague of Ireland.\nDUMA HEARS REASONS\nFOR INCREASED EXPENDITURE\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nST. PETERSBURG, March 15.\u2014The\nconference begun last night between\nPremier Goremykin ana his cabinet\nministers and the leaders of the chief\nparties of the duma continued* until\nnearly 3 o'clock this morning. The\nministers fully explained t--e international situation to members of parliament and the necessity for increased\nnaval and military credits.\nREAD\nTHE\nLABEU\nMagic\nBAKING\nPOWDEB\nBRITISH TOUR DEFERRED\nVANCOUVER, B. C, March 15, \u2014\u2022\nCon Jones todov cabled P. O. B. Hawes\nof the English Lacrosse association,'\nasking him to defer the visit of the\nall-star British team until July. It\nwas originally intended to open the\ntour ia Montreal on May 24, hut Mr.\nJones believes that the trio will be\nmore successful at a later date. Ha\nhas arranged 14 matches in Canada, j\n5> <?\n\u00bb               THE WHTHCR     j 'i\nFine mild weather prevailed yesterday throughout the western provinces.\nMin. Max.\nNelaon     32 52\nDawson    .H  12 8\nAtlln  24 30\nPrince Rupert  3G 44\nVictoria     40 62\nVancouver     38 50\nKamloops   .-  28 48\nEdmonton     30 44\nBattleford     36 46\nPrince Albert    34 42\nCalgary     28 46\nMedicine Hat     34 39\nMoose Jaw  33 43\nRegina  33 39\niQu'Appelle    ',... 32 38\nWinnipeg     38 46\nPort Arthur  26 42\nPur ry Sound  30 42\nLondon  25 47\nToronto  32 43\nOttawa    .'.'.... 24 40\nMontreal     28 38\nQuebec  16 30\nHnllfax    ,.. 30 40\nThis is the birthday of President\nMadison who waB born March 16,1751,\nand was possessed of a fln0 judicial\nmind, Jupiter, the ruling planet,\nbrines great success to men who\nchoose a political career.\nAll persons born from February 19\nto March 28 are born under, the sign\nof Pisces, mennlnp* the fish. This Is\nthe last sign of the Water Tripllcity\nand denotes a pure, strong honest love\nnature which never falls Its object.\nThe soul attributes of this nature a.re\nemotion nnd Beep silence, and the best\nguidance for such Ib renohed by quiet,\nundisturbed meditation. AD important\ndecisions .should be made by these people when alone.\nThis nature is fond of mathematics,\nleans toward inspirational composition and f'ne technique, nnd many\ngreat pianists and violinists have\nreached lasting fame whose governing\nplanet is Jupiter,\nIf children on this date are carefully\nstudied and encouragement given\nthem along the Hues of their natural\ntalent, they will 'become successful,\nbut it would' be wrong to force them\nInto distasteful occupations.\nMachinists are all well favored by\nthe Want Ads, which will open un new\nopportunities for them this week.\nFAREWELL DINNER TO\nFAMOUS ACTOR\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nNEW YORK, March 15.\u2014Sir Johnstone Forbes-Robertson, thie*. English\nactor, who recently announced his retirement from the stage, and Lady\nForbes Robertson, who before her\nmarriage was Aliss Gertrude* Elliott,\nwere tendered a farewell dinner tonight by the New York Press club.\nAmong those present, were many m-en\nprominent in theatrical and newspaper\nwork.\nSir Cecil Spring Rice, British ambassador, expressed regret at his\nforced absence, in a cordial telegram\nwhich read, In part:\n\"I am glad to think that you have\namong you a fur more efficient speaker of my countrymen than I could he,\nand one who has done more viva voce\nto bring about the best and moat sympathetic delations between our peoples\nthan ull the diplomatic resources ever\nInvented.\"\nShilohM\nA safe. ot-Mfcne remedy for coufihs. colds, bronchitis and whOoplnn cough. Does not upset lhe stomach.\nPerfectly safe for all ages, even nursin-* infante. A small -lose, oniy, needed and gives quick results. A\nhousehold friend io thousands of Canadian homes sicca 1870.   Buy Sblloh for Coughs and colds. S\nLINK WITH PARNELL\nSEVERED   IN  CHICAGO\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.*\nCHICAGO, 111., March 15.\u2014The Rev.\nMaurice ,T, Dorney, a Chicago Catholic\npriest, whoso name is familiar on both\nsides of the 'Atlantic, died today at\nMercy hospital, where tils sister is\none of the nuns in charge. Death was\ndup to paralysis, following heart trouble, which attacked him a few weeks\n'ago. Archbishop Quigley was present\nat the bedside shortly before Father\nDorney breathed his last.  ,\nPerhaps the meeting of Parnell and\nFather Dorney in the house of com-\nSURELY TAKE \"SYRUP OF FIGS\" IF\nHEADACHY, BILIOUS, CONSTIPATED\nSweetens Your Stomach, Clears Your Head and Thoroughly Cleanses Your Liver and 30 Ff-et of Bowels'\nof Sour.Bile, Foul Gases and Clogged-Up Waste\n1IT\u00a351MHLAR[(5TjTEAHERHANADA\nROYAL MAIL STEAMERS\nMONTREAL QUEBEC LIVERPOOL\nNow 8.8. \"Laurentlo\" 16,000 tona Now S.S. \"Moganlio\"\nFirat Claaa, $02.50 Second Class, $53.75 Third Class, $32.50\nONE CLASS (II.) CABIN SERVICE\nExpress S.S. \"Teutonic\"...... (Twin  Screw  Steamers) S.S. \"Canada1*\n-82 feet long. El* feet long.\n$50.00 and up\u2014Third Class $31.25 and up\nWHITE STAR  LINE\nBOSTON QUEENSTOWN LIVERPOOL\nONE CLASS (II.) CABIN SERVICE\nS.S. \"ARABIC\" ... (Splendid Twin Screw Steamers)   ... 8.8. \"CYMRIC\"\n16.000 tons, 600 feet long. *- 13,000 tons, 600 feet long.\nRate, $53.75 Rata, $52.50\nCompany's Office, A. E. Disney, Pass. Agent., 619 Second Ave., Seattle.\nW. E. KETCHUM, Agent, Q. N. Ry. D. SMEATON, Agent C. P. By.\nF. L. PADDON, D. T. A., C. P. Ry.\nHORSES FOR SALE\nFOUR TEAMS, WEIGHING FROM 2,400 LBS. TO 3,200 LBS.\nPER TEAM\nWe are prepared to i-MI these horses cheap for cash at we have too\nmany.\nWest Transfer Co.\nP. O. BOX  116 NEL80N, B.C.\nThe Canadian Bank\nof Commerce\nSIR EDMUND WALKER, C. V. O.\nLL.D., D.C.L, President.\nALEXANDER   LAIRD,   Gen.   Mgr.\nCapital    $15,000,000\nRest    ;. $13,500,000\nTravellers cheques issued payable at par at almost any point In\nthe globe where there ls a Bank or\nBanker,\nThe Bank Issues a booklet of information for those about to travel.\nAsk or write for a copy.\nNelson Branch, L, A. S. Dack, Mgr.\nBank of Montreal\nESTABLISHED 1817\nCapital authorized  $26,000,000\nCapital all paid up $16,000,000\nRett  $16,000,000\nHEAD OFFICE:   MONTREAL\nRt.   Hon.   Lord   Strathcona   and\nMount   Royal,   G.C.M.G.,   G.C.V.O.,\nHonorary President.\nH. V. Meredith, Esq President\nSir Frederick Williams-Taylor,\nGeneral Manager.\nBranches In British Columbia:\nArmstrong, Athalmer, Chilliwack,\nClovordale, Enderby,, Greenwood,\nHosmer, Kamloops, Kelowna, Mot*\nritt, Nelson, New Denver, Naw\nWestminster, Nicola, Penticton,\nPort Alberni, Port Haney, Prince\nRupert, Princeton, Rossland, Summerland, Vancou\"er, Vancouver\n(Main street), Vernon, Victoria,\nWest Summerland, Alberni1\nNelson Branch, L. B. PtWeber, Mgr.\nM\nCOLD STORAGE\n\"John, If I Hhoulf die I want you t\nAll tbose days when you fee) miserable, headachy, bilious and dull are\ndue to torpid liver, and sluggish bowels. Thp days when your stomach la\nsour and Ml of gas, when you have\nindigestion; the nights when your\nnerves' twitch and you are restless\nand can't sleep, can be avoided with\na teaspoonful of -deHclou? Syrup of\nFigs, Isn't it foolish t0 be distressed\nwhen there is such a pleasant way to\novercome it?\nGive your Inactive liver and ten\nyards of waste-clogged bowels a thorough cleansing this tlmo. Put nn end\nto constipation.\nTake a toaspoonful of Syrun of Pigs\nlonlght, sure, and just Bee for yourself by morning, how gently but thoroughly  all   tbe   sour   bile,   undigested\nfermenting food and clogged up waste\nmatter is moved on and out of your\nsystem\u2014no nausea-\u2014no grlplng\u2014no\nweakness. '   ,\nYou simply can't have your liver\nInactive and your thirty feet of bowels\nconstipated with sour, decaying waste\nmatter and feel well. The need of p\nlaxative Ib a natural need, but with\ndelicious Syrup of Pigs you are no\ndrugging yourself. Being compose'\nentirely of luscious figs, senna am'\naromatlcs It cannot injure.\nAsk your druggist for the full r.-'.m*'\n\"Syrup of Figs and Ellxir or Senna.'\nRefuse, with scorn, any of the so-\ncalled1 Fig Syrup imitations. They ar.\nmeant t0 deceive you. Look on the\nlabel. The genuine, old reliable, bear-?\nthe name, California Fig Syrun Com-\nPftriy.\nWhen through old'**^^^%1J\nage the bodily\nfunctions become sluggish\nNa-Dru-Co Laxatives\ngive gentle, timely and\neffective aid, without\n.discomfort or distress.\nbox at  -four\nDruggist's. 171\nflMil ana ssm Ct^aicti\nCs.aJCaaaaa.lMM.\nForest Mills of B. C, Ltd.\nManufacturers\nof\t\nLUMBER\nLATH\nMOULDINGS\nSHINGLES\nEstimates Given on All Kinds of Building Material\nPHONE 15.\nYARDS\u2014FRONT STREET\nP. O. BOX 10U\nGeneril Contncten\nud Builders\nMILLS,\nJohn Burns & Sons\nSASH AND DOOR FACTORY. NEL80N PLANING\nVERNON STREET, NEL80N, B. C.\nEvery Description of Building Mate rial Kept In Stock.  Eatlmataa Olvsn\non Stone, Brick, Concrete and Frame Buildings.\nMAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.\nBOX 134. PHONE 17S\nSkate Bargains\nIN ORDER TO CLEAR OUT OUR LARGE STOCK OF SKATE8 BEFORE\nTHE SEASON CLOSES WE WILL QIVE YOU A DISCOUNT OF\n20\nPer\nCent\nON  ALL  LINES OF SKATES, HOCKEY  PADS, ANKLE SUPPORTS,\nTRAPS, ETC., FOR THE NEXT TEN DAYS ONLY\nCOME EARLY WHILE THE ASSORTMENT 18 FULL\nSkis,  Bindings  and   Poles   \t\nFlexible Flyer Slede\t\n16 Dozen Hookey Stioke at ...\n.10 per Cent. Diaeounl\n.20 par Cent Dlsoount\n 25c eaoh\nThe Nelson Hardware Co.\nPHONE 21 NELSON, B.C.\n m\nKMONDAY-    MARCH   16\njj jj_,ii,.|jww\"   gacjMwpg\nReminders\nSpring\nFrom the Home of\nGood Groceries\nPhone 66 will tell you all about\nCfo BaUp J&ftoa.\n.-\u2014    PACE P1VB\nVegetables\nCAULIFLOWER\nlite flowery beads .^. .j\u00b1.\n* 25eto35c\n8PINACH\nIne large leal, local, freBh gath-\n 2Se\nRADISHE8\nical hothouse, fresh pulled.\n 5e\nGREEN ONIONS\nFresh local.\nInch  \u25a0 5c\nCELERY\ny.i-Ino white plume California,-.\nad lSe\ni-W   CALIFORNIAN   CABBAGE\n4ad ..,..,.; 15c to 25c\nYELLOW.OREGON ONIONS\nlibs, for .-..;  25c\nA pint an* a half high quality\nSalad Dressing\nIfor about  .v... 15c\n1PURE   GOLD   SALAD  DRESSING POWDER\n! pits, for 25c\nSWEET WRINKLE PEAS\nTOMATOES\nRed and ripe.\n15c\n.15c\nPickles\nIn bulk.\nHEINZ SWEET GHERKINS\nHEINZ SWEET MIXED\nHEINZ DILL PICKLES\nuart   50c\nSt. Patrick's\nSpecials\nPISTACIO   JELLY   POWDERS\n3 for    .25c\nGREEN  VEGETABLE  COLOR-\n\\] ING\nBottle   25c\nli\nrfAFFLE BRAND MAPLE 8YRUP\n' Delicious on hot cakes,\niottle   -.c35c\nFARD DATES\njibs ...35c\nJ COMB HONEY\ntomb  \u2022 .2oC\nONTARIO HONEY\nPut up ln Mason jara.\n'Ints -40c\nMaris    75c\n\u2022Salt* gallons  $1.25\n,\nHE BELL\n[TRADING CO.\nThe Home of Good Groceries.\nBaker Street\nNelson House\nEuropean Plait\nW. A, WARD, Proprlator\n3AFE\u2014Open day and night\u2014BAR\nMerchants' Lunch 12 to 2\n\u25a0hone \u00bb7 P. 0. Box 697\nNELSON \u2014 Miss E. Beard, Blalr-\nore, Alta.;   A.    J.    Blaney,    Grund\ntrks; Allen Mcintosh, F. McLeod, H.\nHume, City.\nTremont House\niaktr 8treet, Nelson\nRAN80ME A CAMPBELC\nProprietors\nEuropean plan, BOc up\nAmorlcau plan, $1.26 und $1,11\nMealo, 860\nSpecial Ratoa por Month\nTREMONT \u2014 A. Chapman and wife,\nalgary; R. Mclnnes, Silver King; M.\nConnor, Nakusp; W. Goodwin, Tag-\nurn; W. Manner, Trail; Robert\nrown, Cranbrook; Prof, Zella, Mra.\niiverott Zella,. Gerald*. Reardon, Scott\n.eardon, Zella Comedy -company.\nATHABASCA \u2014 George Wharton,\nV. Hanahan, j, Evans, Mr. and Mrs.\nlarsen, Taghum; O. B, Sanger, M.\ntenfrew, Dawson;  W, O. Rose, City.'\nf SHERBROOKE \u2014 Mrlss M. A. Dunk,\nMrs. Dunk, OHy; A, Kay, Beasley: L.\n[\u25a0 Erickson, J. H. Kramer, Marcus; A.\nJJcott, Edward Has&ock, A. Abbott,\nBssland, \u201e    u ..,\nBELIEVE ATTACK\nHAS BEGUN\n(CoatlnaM from pap one.)\nTown Sacked, Shops Burned\n(By Daily Newe Leased Wire.)\nMEXICO CITY, March 15.\u2014Mon-\nclovo station, on the International\nrailroad between Cludad and Monterey,\nwaa taken yesterday by the -rebels,\nwho burned the railroad shops and cars\nand sacked the town. Minister of War\nBlanquet minimized the destruction\nwrought by the rebels and Insisted\nthat they had been repulsed. *\nj The gunboat Tampioo, which recently joined the rebels, Is declared\nby Minister of War Blanquet to have\ngone ashore ln the harbor of Topolo-\nbampo.\nEx-Minister* Arrested\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nNOGALES, Sonora, March 16\u2014\nSenator Alberto Flna and Llo Bontl-\nliis, secretary of finance in tho cabinet\nof President Madero, were arrested\nhere yesterday, charged with conspiracy against Gen. Carranza* leader of\nthe constitutionalists.\nGeneral's Mind Affected\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nPORT BUSS, .Tex., March 16.\u2014\nGen. Mercado, who led the federals ih\ntheir stampede from Ojiniga to safety\non the American side, wrote to Gen.\nScott today that fellow prisoners in\nthe camp were threatening to assassinate him because they blamed their\nplight on his incapacity as a military\nJeader, Gen, Scott believes that Merc-ado's mind had ibeen affected from\nlong illness, but he promised to see nc\nharm should befall him.\nNewa of the Huerta government's\nrefusal -to pay their keep In the prison\ncamp was received apathetically by\nthe prisoners.\nTESTING AXLES WITH KEROSENE\nIn many European railroad shops\nthey test crank shafts with nothing\nmore wonderful than kerosene, says\nthe American Machinist. The principal locomotive shops in France and\nEngland have adopted the method.\nWhen an engine goes into the shop\nfor general repairs it is thoroughly\ninspected as follows: AU grease and\noil is first removed and the parts given a bath of kerosene, after which the\nsurfaces ar\u00ab all wiped as dry as possible with clean waste or rags. The\nwheels are then placed some -distance\napart on a track, and two pairs rolled\ntogether at a speed of perhaps three\nor four miles per hour.\nThe force of the shock or impact\nshows the slightest crack, from crys-\ntalliation or otherwise, by forcing out\nthe small particles of kerosene-which\nhave been secreted in the cracks. In*\nspe-ction after impact, locates the crack\nby means of these heads of paraflne\nshowing on the surface. It is claimed\nthat this method hus never failed to\nlocate a defective crank axle pin or\ndriving journal, ana in some instances\ninherent defects, which could hardly\nhave heen found in any other manner,\nhave heen detected tn new axles.\nLakeview Hotel\nCor. Hall and Vernon.\nF. 0. SCHULTZ and M. K08ZKA,\nProps.\nGerman Home Cooking.\nBeat ot Liquors and Cigars always on hand.\nRATES     1.00 PER DAY\nLAKEVIEW \u2014 F. Birch and family,\nCity; James E. Kinney, Taghum; J. B.\nStanton, F. Chantisny, K. Ito, Salmo.\nSilver King Hotel\nBaker \"tro-t\nUnder new management.\nWell furnished  rooms,  11.00  s\nday   and up.    Best 25c meal In\nNelson. Best brands of liquors and\ncigars, served by union men.\nN. McLEOD, Proprlator.\nSILVER KING \u2014 Hi Gordon. G.\nGordon, Mansfield Ford, G. H. Cnnd-\nlier, Vancouver; Howard Lulzzlo, J.\nM. Robb, Canyon City.\nNew Grand Hotel\nFireproof\nJ. Blomberg & D. Maglio, Props.\nAmerican   and   European  plan.\nEvery room steam heated, fitted\nwith  hot and  cold   water   service\nand    with    telephone   connection.\nBoth on every floor. All white help.\n-GRAND\u2014I; J. Lucia, Thomas Bell,\nCity; E. Fnlmqulst, P. Stromsteat,\nGreenwood.\nGrand Central Hotel\nOPP08ITE POSTOFFICE\nAmerican and European Plum.\nH. H. PITTS, Proprietor.\nGRAND CENTRAL \u2014 M. Kendrlck,\nJ. Sinclair, Charles Holt, Thomas Oliver, Taghum; A. Randolph, J. Jundl,\nAinsworth; J. Pr-Itohard, Silverton; W.\nHayward, Valllcan, -R, Quaife, Crescent\nValley; W. Derby, Jaffray; R. Hanson, W. Doon, Cranbrook; Prank Phil\nUna. Rock Ranch; C. W. Kldd, Grand\nPorks: A. Crulckshank, C. Shannon,\nCity; E. Anderson, Chewelah, Wash.;\nW. Sternberg, ponoka, Alta.\nKiondyke Hotel\nVernon Street\nHeadquarters for minors, Smel-\ntermen, loggers, railroad men.\nRatea, $1.00 per day up.\nNELSON * JOHNSON, Preps.\nKLONDYKE \u2014 Charles Knutson, J.\nI erickson. Granite .Road; J. Wagner,\nJfohu Ross.   .\nNew Spring  Suits\nFrom $15.00 to $60.00\nIn grace of outline and practical becomingness these new\neults of oura have never been equalled. The coats reach to\nthe waistline or a hit below and show the newest idea, a\nflare effect that is decidedly graceful. Skirta show the\nbouffant hip draperies, tunics and peg-lops, as well ns the\npopular tiered effects. Coats, show the new set-in Raglan\nand modified kimona sleeves.\nThey come In a beautiful range of materials, such as\nBrocade, Matalasse, Fancy Bedford Wool, Ratine, Worsted\nand Serge. We have as well some new Silk Moire Suits. We\nshow such colore as now blue, new green, pheasant, navy,\nbrown, grey and tan. Sizes 14 to 42. See theso while the\nrange is good.\n$15.00 to $60.00\nOur New  Dresses\nAre Incomparably\nLovely\nThe variety of styles Is larger than we have ever shown.\nThe styles themselves are lovelier than any you have ever\nseen. Peg-Top Dresses for street wear are here, some showing\nthe bouffant hip draperies, others with bustle and pannier\neffects, short draped tunics and narrow pleated skirts. Long\nsleeves predominate.\nWe show these dresses In a beautiful range of Soft Silks,\nTaffeta Silks, Crepe de Chine, and light weight woolen goods,\ngorgeous in coloring, showing such shades as cornflower, new\nblue, pheasant, eopenhngen, tango, as well as the more staple\nnavy, black and grey.   Sizes 1G to 40.\n$15.00 to $50.00\nOur New Spring\nCoats Show Many\nNovel Features\nHalf and three-quarter lengths are the most popular for\nspring wear. The popular sleeve Is the set-In Raglan, though\nthe modified kimona Is shown In many of the more extreme\nstyles. The coats shown here were selected from the leading\nmanufacturers. While unquestionably correct in- style, they\nare eminently practical, and will prove a valuable addition to\nyour spring wardrobe.\nThey come In a beautiful variety of cloths and are shown\"\nIn such colors as mell rose, new blue, orange, Russian green,\ntango, black-and-white check and fancy brocade. There are\nnil sizes from 14 to 40, and prices ranging from\n$11.00 to $33.50\nThe Store for Stale\ner & Co.\ni-;\nThe Store for Qualityj\nWhen Taking\na Vacation\ngo to the Great Halcyon Hot\nSprings, where you can secure not\nonly rest, but at the same time\nhave the benefit of the best medicinal waters on the continent, un-\nequaled for rheumatism and kindred ailments. The springs are easy\nof access to travellers and the\nhotel has been fitted up and Is\nconducted with a view to the maxfc\nmum of comfort and convenience\nfor guests.\nRates: $12 and 91\" per week, or 12\nper day and upwards.\nHalcyon Hot Springs\nSanitarium\nWM. BOVD, Proprietor.\nHalcyon Arrow Lakss\nHOTEL ARRIVALS OF A DAY\nThe Hume\nTable d'Hota and a la Carta\nHUME \u2014 B. Rose, C. R. Francis, W.\nA. Moody, N. Thompson, J. Cameron,\nVancouver; George McGiiire, Frank\nPerry, Toronto; P. Lawrle, Thomas\nMcCabe, Wallace; F. Suttill, City;\nG. M. Dingle, Calgary; H. M. Olcson,\nDenver; A. McLeod, Spokane; J, Mo-\nMaster, Seattle; J. Barton, Moose\nJaw; G. Smith, City; H. SplUman,\nMontreal; M. Freeman, Skagway; G.\nFouids, Dawson; M. Barton, Portage\nla Prairie; Jacob Loman, Winnipeg;\nO. V. White, Sandon; G. F. Attree,\nQueen's Bay; C. I. Archibald, Salmo;\nP. L. Churchill, Montreal; Charles\nWarwick, G. M. Sutherby, Toronto; V,\nA. Stuart, Stratford; S, A. Pullerton,\nGibson Siding; Hon, Misses Aylmer,\nQueen's Bay; H. D. Young, E. Dawson,\nR. Andrew, Ray Bard, C. A, Larson,\nMiss W. Bourke, C. W. West, Crozier\nBourke, J. A, Gerton, Miss G. Phalr,\nW. Dickson, Miss J.' McKenzie, C. E.\nRichard-son, City; Miss M. Campbell,\nWillow Point, Mrs. Cummins, Long\nBeach; J-Ir. and Mrs. E. H. Latham,\nKaslo; H. P. Logan, G. W. Mabey, W.\nP. T-lerney, P. N, Stanford, Vancouver; Miss J. C. H. Kelso, Edgewood;\nMax McSweyn, Victoria; G. B. Wilson, Marblehead; J. C. Readey, Victoria;. J, Tremont, Toronto; Mr. and Mrs.\nF., J. MoOrohan, Mr. and Mrs F. F.\nWeir, Miss N, Hinton, Mlsa Margaret\nArthur, The Misses Cummins, Master\nHinton, Dr. W. B. Steed, Mr. and Mrs.\nLatham, Kaslo; Dr. Joselln, Mr, and\nMrs. J. P. Vroom, W. Turner, Miss\nPierce, Mrs. Betts, Mtss Beatrice Betts,\nD. Matheson, Silver King.\nJAMES   MARSHALL.  Proprietor.\nSTRATHCONA \u2014 C A. Waterman,\nH. Selous, J. H. D. Benson, George\nJohnstone, H. P. Meurllng, C. G. West-\nhead, Will Haldane, P. W. Sterling, E.\nH. Mott, Miss Prentiss, Mr. and Mrs.\nH. Y. Anderson, Miss Eleanor Moran,\nMr. and Mrs. Hlpperson, City; E. H.\nBain, B. Hills, J. S. Bowbanks, Toronto; Mr. and Mrs. R. Hurst, Gull\nLake; R. F. -Smith, F. J. Kavanaugh,\nMr. and Mrs. J, B. McFarlane, Winnipeg; Harry Epstein, J. B. Tiffany, W.\nDunn, J. Colbert, John Daner, Vancouver; D. Matheson, Silver Khlgj W. S.\nWilliams, Spokane; S, E. Simpson,\nMorven; I. H. Hallett, Greenwood; J.\nA. Wright, A. G. Pearson, Montreal; R.\nWood, Greenwood; H. Elsmore, P. J.\nSmyth, Phoenix; William Cherry, Calgary; D. A. Movlnek, Montreal; R. F.\nSmith, Winnipeg; B. E. Holt, Toronto;\nH. A. Martin, Regina; Clinries F.\nCooper, St. Louis.\nQueen's Hotel\nSteam Heat ln Every Room.\nBusiness Lunoh 38a.\nRates:   $1.50 and $2.00 Day.\nQUEEN'S \u2014 John Jewitt, New Denver; George Carr, Calgary; E. Dal-\nzoll, Taghum; A. J. Campbell. A. Anderson, Vancouver; H. A. Stuart, Rossland; G. H. Prince, J. Watson, City;\nMrs. G. Ross, Fruitvaie, J, Harpur,\nKamloops; P. Dolan, Revelstoke; Mrs.\nR. E  Frederick, Mls3 J. Bergmnn.\nMadden House\nE. C. CLARKE\nCor. Baker and Ward Sts., Nelson.\nMADDEN-*-- B. McMillan.\n<$> COMMUNICATION *S>\n<8> -2-\nBRITISH      COLUMBIA      MILITARY\nAND AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE\nTo the Editor of The Dally News.\nSir: Agriculture is no longer a\nbusiness in which we can muddle\nalong anyhow and worry out success-\nfully In the end. Competition in the\n! modern world involves on nil sides\n\u25a0 highly trained efficiency. The days\n| are past when it was sufficient, as It\nwere, to poke a potato into the ground\nand watch it grow. Nowadays we must\nspecialize in our seeds, fertilize tiie\nground with the right material, scientifically train our plants, spray relentlessly against diseases, properly\ngrade our products, put them up in\nneatly labelled packages that will attract the consumer -and adopt pood\nbusiness methods the whole way\nthrough,      <\nIf efficiency 1s not essential why\ndo we have these fruit magazines.\nCanadian farmer magazines, government bulletins on potato culture, poultry raising, etc., and a host of other\npapers, all -puVHshea with thfe excellent nurpose of educating the farmer in his business?\nHow often does tt not happen that a\nman having made a little money thinks\nhe will retire to some pleasant spot\nand end his gays In the fas he thinks)\nensv and restful life of farming, only\nto find himself terribly handicapped\nby hia Ignorance of right modes of\ncultivation and proper agricultural\nbusiness methods. In former days It\nmay within limits have been true that\nif your son were not fit for any other\nhusinesB the only thing to do was to\nplant him on the land and let him\nearn a livelihood 'n the only business\nthat did* not require brains. But in\nthese highly specialized days intelligence and efficient training are as\nessential to success in agriculture -as\nin other departments of life. What\ndo we see today but hosts of farmers\nmaking a bare living wage, their properties mortgaged up to the hilt, There\nare no doubt other reasons which\nhave brought this about, but lack of\nefficiency is not the least important.\nThe agricultural commissioners In\ntheir report point out that the majority of those engaged in farming in\nBritish Columbia haye had no training in their profession. Is there no\nway or helping to remedy this situation? We think there is. The government, especially the agricultural department, works very hard to assist\nthe farmer in every possible way, for\nit recognizes the vlbal Importance of\nsettling the country with successful\nworkers.\nWe now propose a scheme for assisting in this work. Recognizing the\nnecessity of efficiency, we propose the\nfoundation of an agricultural college\nfor boys, a Bchoot where, in addition\nto the ordinary school curriculum,\nboys will receive both theoretical and\npractical training in farm work,  SUch\na school would take boyB at a fairly\nearly age and, commencing with the\nordinary school training, hy a carefully graduated system of instruction,\nprepare them for a life of agriculture.\nWhat we suggest is a combined school\nand farm, where the acreage would\nhe sufficiently large to allow room\nnot only for the usual school buildings\nand grounds, but also for as many\nbranches of agriculture as possible-\ntruck gardening, dairy farming, poultry raising, fruit growing, etc.\nThese two branches of the institution would materially assist each other, for while the farm acted as a training ground for the youthful agriculturist, the income of the school would\nbo increased by the profitable working of the farm.\nAlthough what we have presented\nabove\u2014^he union of school and farm-\nis the novel feature of the institution,\nsuch a combination would by no\nmeans detract from the merits of the\nschool considered as an Institution by\nitself. There would certainly be a\nlarge number of pupils attending the\nschool for whom farm life would not\nbe suitable, or who had no intention\nof ultimately becoming farmers.\nThe institution on its purely scholastic side would be equally fitted to\ntrain boys for the university and for\ncivil employment, while a military\nbranch would undertake the training\nof a cadet corps -and prepare youths\nfor military appointments.\nSuch a Bcheme is already mooted.\nIt hns received not only Uie favorable\nconsideration, but the promise of active assistance from Sir Richard McBride, premier of British Columbia,\nand Col. Sam Hughes, Dominion minister of militia. Eminent men in England have commented favorably on the\nscheme.   But in order to bring it into\nAFTER FIVE YEARS\nWlnthrop Child Was Restored to\nHealth by Vinol.\n\"Five years ago our little girl had\na severe attack of diphtheria which\nleft her subject to bronchitis and\nStomach trouble. Sho has been almost constantly under medical treatment. 1 have tried also two or three\nremedies containing cod live? oil but\nfound her stomach rebelled against\nthe oil. Reading your description of\nVinol I decided to try it and did so\nwith most astonishing results. I cannot begin to tell you how she has improved because you do not know what\na little sufferer she was for five years.\nShe baa gained ten pounds -since she\ncommenced to take Vinol, and the\nstory of what Vlnol has done for her\nIs only half told in this letter.'' Mrs.\nAdelaide Mulloy, Wlnthrop, Mass.\nVinol contains nil the healing curative properties of cod liver oil, without ' the oil, and tonic iron added\nThat I? why it helped*, this little girl\nafter other remedies had failed.\nWe ask mothers of weak, sickly\nchildren to try Vinol on our offer to\ngive back your money if It falls to\nhelp them. Wm. Rutherford, Druggist,\nNelson, B. C.\nactual existence the necessary funds\nmust be raised.\nWe would therefore appeal to all\nmen who have the welfare of the province at heart to take a share in promoting what might very possibly become one of the leading Institutions\nin British Columbia,\nH. C. SMITH.\nPenticton, B. C, March 2, 1914.\nGentlemen-\nInvictus Spring\nShoes Are Here\nAH styles and aH leathers.\nButton or Lace. Tan and\nBlack.\nThe Royal WZ\nLeaders In Foot Fashions.\nR. ANDREW * CO., Props.\nKootenay Hotel\nTwo Doors from PoBtofflea     |\n* Vernon Street\nRates $1.00 and $1.25 per day.  ,\nEvery convenience given to tht\ntraveling public. Electric piano and\nunion bar ln connection, where the\nbest of wines and liquors are kept.\nMRS. MALLETT, Proprietress.\nKOOTENAY \u2014 S. Holm, City; J.\nEriey, Taghum; P. Gauth'ier, Montreal; J. B. Johnson, J. Sully, Vancouver; j. l. Versnei, a. Veranel and son,\nWilliam Versnei, Medicine Hat\n_-\n CAGE SIX\n.'ffct WlfMitofi\nrreen\nFor\nSt, Patricks\nDag\ni\nWE  WILL  HAVE  A  SPLENDID\nCROP FOR\nST. PATRICK'S DAY\nPLEASE ORDER EARLY\nFRACHE BROS.\nFlorists\n6RAND FORKS, B. C.\nM. Seanlan, Local Agent.\nFOR YOUR CONVENING*\nMoney Orders issued.\nLetters of Credit for the convenience of those who travel*\nSavings) Department. One\ndollar opens a savings ao-\ncount, *\nestablished 1171.\nHEAD OFFICE:\nTORONTO, ONT.\nCapital  (paW UP)    $6,926,000\nReserve afld  Undivided  Profile   8,100,000\nO. R. Wilkie, President and\nGeneral Manager.\nHen. Robert Jaffray, V.-Pree,\nNelson   Branch,\nJ. H. D. Benson, Manager.\nWaters & Pascoe\nKOOTENAY LAKE SASH & DOOR\nFACTORY\nFRONT ST. NELSON, B. C.\nProviders of Houses\nand\nMaterials for Building\nEstimates Given\nPhone 164 P. O. Box 815\nWe Can Give You\nPrompt Attention\nr  ' -   \u25a0   -If you Phone ua.\nWe can fix those leaks,\nB. C. Plumbing & Heating Co.\nOPERA   HOU8E   BLOCK\nP.O. Box 481 Phone 111\nSYNOPSIS OF COAL\nMINING  REGULATIONS\nCoal mining rights of the Dominion\nIn Manitoba, Saskatchewan aud Alberta, the Yukon Territory, the North\nwest Territories, and in a portion oi\nthe Province of British Columbia, may\nbe leased fo* a term of twenty-ont\nyears at an annual rental of jl pei\nacre Not more than 2,5*30 acres wil*\nbe leased to one applicant.\nApplication for a lease must be mad-\nby the applicant in person to the\nAgent or Sub-Agent of the district oi\nwhich the right***, applied for are situated.\nIn surveyed territory the land musi\nhe described by sections or legal subdivisions of sections, and in unsurveyer\nterritory the tract applied for shall bf\nstaked out by the applicant hhnseif\nEach application must be accompanied by a fee of {5, which will be re\nfunded If the rights applied for art\nnot available, but not otherwise. A\nroyalty shall be paid on the merch\nan table output of the mine at the ran\nof five cents per ton,\nThe person operating the mine shal.\nfurnish the Agent with sworn return*\naccounting for the full quantity of\nmerchantable coal mined and pay tht\nroyalty thereon. If the coal mlninj\nrights are not being operated, such\nreturns should be furnished at least\nonce a year.\nThe lease will include the coal mlnlnp\nrights only, but the lessee muy be.permitted to purchase whatever available surface rights may be considered\nnecessary for the working of the mint\nat the rate of $10.00 an acre,\nFor full information applicator\nshould be made to the Secretary of tht\nDepartment of the Interior, Ottawa\nor to ^ny Agent or Sub-Agent of Dl-\nminioh Lands'. W. W. CORT,\nDeputy Miniater cf the interior\nN.B.\u2014Unauthorised publication of\nthis advertisement -will not ha nal-l\nfnr.\nFORM OF NOTICE.\nNelaon Land District.\nDistrict of West Kootenay\nTake notice that Andrew Willey, of\nBonnington, B. C, occupation electrical\nengineer Intends to apply for nermls-\nsjon to purchase the following described lands:\n\\: Commencing \u201eat a poHt plnntod al\nthe southeast corner of' lot 2721;\nthence south about 1 chain; thence\nwest 14.3(10 chains; thence north about\nJi-chains, more ar less, to an intersex\ntlon with tho southerly boundary of L.\n*!fl6; thence easterly, following the\nsoutherly boundaries of L. 13S6 nnd I*.\n2721, to poipt of commencement, con:-\ntnlning about 7 acres.\nANDREW WILLEY.\nMarch 5, 1914,\nNEWS OF THE MARKETS\nTRADING NARROW\nRALLY CONTINUES\nCanadian Scrip  Firm\u2014Vancouver Issue at Discount\u2014Money Market\nEasy\u2014Industrials Dull.\n(Western Associated Press Special\nCable.)\nLONDON, March 15.\u2014The stock\nmarket continued its rally on Saturday, but trading was narrow, the Btock\nbeing apparently oversold. The tone\nwas more confident. Ulster is still a\ndanger point, but the friction between\nRussia and the triple alliance is subsiding and the outlook is now reassuring.\nConsols were strong and eloBed at\n75 5-8, although the market recognizes\nthat the additional expenditure of $50,-\n000,000 in the Impending budget will\ninvolve a heavy increase of taxation,\nThe new Canadian, scrip was firm\nat 1 1-16 premium, but the Vancouver\nscrip iB at 1 1-4 discount.\nBrazilian securities were buoyant\nand rose from one to three points on\nstatements that the Rothschilds were\nexpressing a readiness to arrange a\nnew Brazilian loan. The terms will\nprobably be severe,, but it is not likely\nthat the issue will take place until\nafter the Brazil'an elections. Brazilian\nexchange was better.\nBrokers report that domestic securities are being steadily more favored\nowing to the numerous financial and\npolitical disturbances abroad in recent months.\nCanadian Pacific railway was bought\non Saturday and cloBea at 2-12, Grand\nTrunk railway was firm hut not brisk.\nHudBon Bay was supported and closed\nat 0 7-8.\nCanadian Car fell one point and other Canadian industrials were dull.\nFinancial correspondence received\nhere from Canada stateB that a further buying influx of British capital\nwill be necessary before Canadian railways can become fully remunerative,\nand this information does not help\nCanadian investment securities.\nThe money market was' easy and\ncheap discounting Ib expected, owing\nto the money surplus In April. The\nmarket has as yet incurred little seasonable indebtedness at the Bank of\nEngland.\nSTOCKS\nSTOCKS MAKE GAIN ON\nNEW YORK  MARKET\n(By Dally News Leased Wire)\nNEW YORK, March 15.\u2014The ribe In\nstocks was resumed yesterday. Mosl\nof -the Import issues made fair gains\non a small business, but a reaction in\nthe final dealings cut Into the advances.\nChesapeake & Ohio, ^ which ,was\nstrong in the early trading,' lost its'\nadvance and gradually the oth\u2014 coalers,   including   the   anthracite   group,\ngave way.\nNow Haven was depressed hy re-\n* rts from Washington of another\nhitch in the negotiations for dissolution of the system.\nIt was the opinion of traders that\ntho outstanding short interest was unusually large.\nThe following New York stock market quotations are supplied by Osier,\nHammond & Nanton, Winnipeg:\nOpen    Close\nAmalgamated   Copper   .... 74*4    74\nAmerican   Car Foundry   i.. 50*34    50\nAmerican   Locomotivo   .... 34^    34 H\nAmerican   Smiting     08%    68%\nAmerican   Sugar    100       p9%\nAmerican   Tobacco    240'4 248\nAnaconda     ?6$    35%\nAtchison   ... -i !I7        96%\nBaltimore  &  Ohio     89       88%\nBrooklyn   Rapid   T 92%    91%\nCanadian Pacific    205% 205%\nChesapeake & Ohio   .      ...  53%    52%\nChicago & Alton  9%\nChicago M. &  St. Paul   .. 99>4    98%\nChloug(> & Northwestern ..134     133%\nConsolidated  Gas 133% 133%\nDelaware & Hudson  149     148\nBrio    -.  28%    28%\nErie   1st   pfd   44%    44%\nErie  2nd   pfd. (..   ..        86%\nGeneral Electric   147% 147%\nGreat Northern pfd 127% 127    :\nGreat Northern Orel        36%\nIllinois Central          108%\nlnterboro   14%    14%\nKansas  City  Southern   ... 25%    25%\nLehigh Valley    145% 146\nLouisville & Nash   186% 135\nM. St. P. & S.S.M. (Soo)  ...      181\nMissouri Kansas & T         16%\nMissouri Pacific    E4%    24%\nNew York Central      (to \"4    90%\nNorthern Pacific    112     112\nPennsylvania  110% 110%\nReading    163% 163%\nSouthern  Pacific     94%    94*4\nSouthern Ry  35%    25%\nTenn.   Copper    i       34%\nTexas  Pacific           14\nTwin  City    104% 104\nUnion Pacific  157% 157%\nU. S. Rubber  \u25a0  62%    62%\nU. S- Steel   64%    64%\nU. S. Steel pfd iu>     109%\nUtah Copper    54%    54\nWabaajj    - ., 2\nWestern Union    68%    68%\nWisconsin Central  \u00ab       43\nTotal sales 129,400.\nWINNIPEG STOCK EXCHANGE\n(By Dally Newa Leased Wire.)'\nWINNIPEG,  March  15.\u2014\nBiar   Asked\nCan. Fire\"     150\nCommercial Loan      ...       110\nEmpire Loan       110       112\nG. W. Life       250\nG.  W.  Perm.        125%    126%\nHome-Investment     189\nMan. &. Sask. Coal -. 90\nNor.   Can.   Mort        186\nNor. Crown       89 91\nNor.   Mort     104\nNor. Trust ',.-     128\nOccidental Fire       102\nStandard Trust        170\nUnion Bank        143       145\nWinnipeg P. & G        110\nSales listed\u20142 Nor. Mort., 40 per\ncent paid, 105.\nTORONTO STOCK SALES\n(By Daily News Leased Wire)\nTORONTO, March 15.\u2014-Braxllian\n678 at 82%; Muckuy 138 at 84% to 85;\nBread pfd. 180 at 90 t0 90%; Barcelona 105 at 30% to 31; Rogers 120 at*\n124 to 128; Cement 100 at 30% to 30%;\nConiagag 21-0 at 8.15.\nUnlisted \u2014 Temilskanring iooo at 21\n.Jupiter 3,500 at 15% lo 16%; Chambers\n'3,500 at -19; Porcupine Gold 1,000 at\n.13%.\nMONTREAL MARKET QUIET\nWITH PRICES FIRM\n(By Daily News Leased Wire) ,\nMONTREAL, March 15. \u2014 LoqJU\nstocks were quiet yesterday but tbe\nimprovement which set in on Friday\nwas maintained and most of the leaders closed with net gains of small\nfractions on the day, yj\nTrudin- here was in exceptional^-'\nlight volume even for a Saturday arid\nthere was no individual feature of\ninterest in tlie days business.\nSPOKANE  MARKETS\n(Reported by St. Denis & Lawrence)\nBid      Asked\nB. C. Copper  -f    1.60 ?   2.00-\nCaledonia             .53 .55*\nConsolidated ..,     102.00 110.00*'\nGranby          86.00 88.00\nInternational 33\nLucky Jim            .02 .03%\nMcGilllvray 14 .15%\nRambler   i 18 -24 '\nSnowstorm 20 .27\nStandard           1.68 1.85*'\nStewart           1.38 1.43,\nGRAIN MARKET DULL\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)   i\nWINNIPEG, March 15.\u2014A dull market without features marked the i;lose\nof the week. Cables were unchanged,\n%c higher to %c lower, both, for Liverpool and the continent.\nWinnipeg wheat closed %c lower to\n.unit-hanged. Chicago unchanged-to %c\nhigher, Minneapolis % to %Q higher,\nand strong in tone.\nContinued fine weather is Increasing\ntalk of the earlv opening of navigation.\nWinnipeg wheat close\u2014May 92%;\nJuly 94%.\nOats\u2014May 30%;  July 37%.\nFlax\u2014May 1.39%;  July 1.42%;   Oct.\n-V-tt-Hi\nMinheapolis wheat close\u2014May BOW\nJuly 92%,\nChicago\u2014May  93%;   July  88%.\nMONTREAL  PROVISION   MARKET\n(By Daily News Leased Wire)\nMONTREAL,    March    K,. \u2014 Butter\nfirm; cheese quiet; eggs weak.\nCheese\u2014Finest   westerns    14%\n14%;  easterns 13% to 14.\nButter\u2014Choicest   orefl.mery   29%   to\n30;   seconds 27%   to 28%.\nEggs\u2014presh   32   to  33.\nPork \u2014 Heavy Canada short mess\nbarrels, 35 to    45 pieces, 29;   Canada\nshort cut back barrels, 45 to 55 niec\n28%.\nNEW  YORK   METAL   MARKET\n(By Doily News Leased Wire)\nNEW YORK, March 15.\u2014The metal\nmarket was dull ftnfl practioally nom\nIr.al. Lake Copper nominal; Electro\nlytic 14.12% tu 14.25; Casting 14.00 to\n14,12%.\nIron unchanged.\nNEW YORK, March 15.\u2014Lead 58%',\nLONDON,    March   15.  \u2014 Silver  23\n13-16.\nMining News\nORDER PIPE FOR\nFLUME AT STAR\nExpert to Arrive Wednesday to Commence  Overhauling  of Concentrator at Sandon.\nTwelve inch wood pipe for the 2,000\nft, flume whieh |3 to be constructed\nat the Slocan Star mine in preparation\nfor commencing operations at the concentrator about the middle of May, has\n\u25a0been announced by Oscar V. White,\nsuperintendent of the property, who\nwas a guest at the Hume yesterday.\nC. L. Culver, Wli0 built the Standard\nCariboo mills, will arrive at Sandon\non'Wednesday to take charge of the\nwork of overhauling the plant.\nThe mine- is looking- very well and is\nshipping regularly, wild Mr. White,\nWORKMAN CLAIMS AGAINST\nGRANBY SMELTER COMPANY\nF-tf-nie    Lawyer     Leaves    for    Grand\nForks to Act in Compensation\nCaseB in Boundary\nTwo workman's compensation cases,\nwhich have been delayed for several\nyears, will bo heard at Grand Forks\nthis week and Alexander Macnell, of\nFernie, will leave for the Boundary\nthis morning to appear for the plain\n'tiffe, Tho cases are Kaskoyn vs.\nGranby, in which evidence was taken\non commission in Austria, and Ailment vs. Granby, in which evidence\nwas taken op commission in Italy. The\nhearing of the cases was delayed in\ntho first place to await the result of\ntho Krzus appeal to tho privy council,\nthe decision In which establishes the\nright of foreign dependents to damages under the Workman's Compensation act, and, secondly, to secure the\nevidence from abroad. Prom Grand\nForks Mr. Macnell will go to Greenwood, where he is engaged on another\ncase. Mr, Mac noil was at the Hume\nyesterday.\nreached on Sa'turd'i\nrepresented the  Slocan-P'\ncompany, *\nMONDAY   ..........   MARCH  10 I\n\\1. Johnson\nyne  Mines\nPROGRESSIVE  LEGISLATION\nIS WARMLY COMMENDED\nBritish Columbia Most Advanced Province in Dominion in Regard to\n. Forest Protection.\n. (Special to The Dally News.)\nVICTORIA, B. C, March 15.\u2014Many\nare-th-e'compliments received by the\nHon.' William R- Ross- minister of\nlapds, for, the timber roytlty hill in\nwhich the principle of profit-sharing\nin the timber resources wab a feature.\nProminent Canadians and residents pf\nthe \"United States, including, members\no'f'ftie cabinet of that country, have\nsent letters warmly commending the\nnew act.\n'. Hon. .Clifford Sifton. president of\nthe Canadian commission 'tf conservation, writes congratulating the minister^ lands, and says: ]\"I have repeatedly said during the last year that\nBritish Columbia was tluf most advanced province in the Dominion so\nfar as attention to the question of forest protection was concerned, and I\nmay n,ow say the same thing in regard to the question of disposition of\ntimber belonging to the province.\"\nHenry S. Graves, chief forester of\nthe United States, writes; \"I have\njust learned of the recenij action by\nBritish Columbia with reference to the\nroyalty on public timber. , I want to\nexpress my pleasure at th^ great progress which has been made in your\ncountry and to extend my heaviest congratulations. Tlie recognition of the\nright of the public to share in the Increasing value of public tiniber Is, in\nmy opinion, a vital one.\"\n. The secretary of the department of\nagriculture   ot   the   Uni ed   States\nWANTED\u2014MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED\u2014Two or mor\ncows -(Ayrshire}   preferl't\nfreshen   shortly;   write   pa\n\" R. Rogers, Brouse, \"~\n,'ood grp.de\nabout to\nrtlculai's  to\nYOUNG WIDOW with child   or four\nwishes work in or near\nF., R. P. D., care of A. D. T\ndary, Wash.\nNelson.   G.\nJioun-\n\u2022285-8\nWANTED\u2014To hire a good\"\nteam  for three  month\"\nWilliam Hancock, Nelson\nWANTED\u2014By    experienced    woman,\nposition as cook  or choiinber work.\nBox 237 Daily News. \u2022285-6\nquiet work\nApply    tt\nrirlek Works\n'286-fl\nWANTEP TO BORROW $-1,000 on gilt\nedge first mortgage security- for flve\nyear*? at 10 per cent interest.     Write\nFarmer, care of Dally News.       285-6\nPROFESSIONAL NURSE Would take\ncharge of hn invalid  by 'the month.\nState salary.   Apply Box 505 Kasio.\n286-3\nWANTED\u2014Cle-Vn   cotton   rags.   Apply\nDally News, 285-tf\nWANTED\u2014TeiuU*r.s for th(| driving of\n33 50 ft. idles'and the construction\nof some 300 feet of floajlng walk.\nFor further particulars address Secretary Kootenay Launch club, box 7S2.\nNelson. B. C. 28-1-3\nWANTED\u2014To bUy a 'horai    tour    to\nfive years.old-\/, .weight about 1500\nmust be. sound.   'Earnest    Green, .Sll-:\nVrr'toiV.'B. C.' \u25a0        *284-ff\nWANTED\u2014Position as servant,    Box\n241  Daily  News. -*284-0\nWANTED\u2014Position with lumber company as shipping clerk or' yard foreman; 10 years experience; (rood references, r Reply stating wages to B; B.\nW., Daily News.     ' 284-12\nWANTED\u2014Dressmaking    (ir    sewing.\nPhone 172. *284-li\nWANT-ED\u2014By April 15th by Alberta\nsawmill, combined millwright and\nblacksmith; wages -one hundred dollars\nand board; capacity forty-five thousand; also planer mechanic^ trimmer-\nman, engineer, at cgstom|iry wages.\nGive references, age, and jif married\nBox 215 Nelson News. \u25a0 281-5\nWANTED \u2014 A second hand row hoax\nWrite P. O. box'226 City. |        *281-G\nEXPERIENCED    ELECTRICIAN requires -immediaite employment,, highest  references.   Box' 207  D-iUy  News,\n\u2022281-0\nIMMEDIATE WORK', wanted for tw-c\nsteady young men; iian dji anything.\nBox 206 Daily News. \u2022281-G\nAN ELDERLY LADY    seeks engagement as housekeeper'; wlaower with\none or two children, or bachelor preferred.   Apply Y. W. C. A., Nelson.\n\u2022281-fi\nWANTED\u2014March    10th    first    class\nwaitress;  none    others need apply.\nKing George hotel, Kaslo, 11. C.\n\u2022279-8\nWANTED\u2014Boy     of   sixtee|i     desires\nposition;    any capacity.     Apply box\n237 Daily News. '283-0\nWANTED\u2014Young bull   call'es,    large\nbreeds preferred; state price. Thom-\nas Zuccolo, Perrys, B. C. '283-6\nLADY BARBER SHOP,    5(18   Stanlej\nstreet, near Baker.       *271-26\nONE RELIABLE MAN WANTED-\nIn every town to take orders fo;\nbest custom made clothes jn Canada.\nHighest commission. Rex Tailoring\nCo., Limited, Toronto, Canada,\n23t-7f\nWANTED  TO  RENT\u2014Si*    or seven\nrooms, modern house, cloijc in, must\nhave good basement.   Apply box 222,\nDaily News. 282-6\nwrites: \"The plan of readjusting\nstumpage values of timber at stated in-.\ntervalB in sales from public lands\nwhereby the public will derive a fair\nshare of the lncrea-se in lumber values\nis pne with which I am in hearty accord. You will doubtless he interested\ntn learning that a provision of this\ncharacter is included by tills department in all contracts for sales of timber from national forest lands where\nthe period of contract is in excess of\nfive years, and that it has been accepted as equitable by timber operators. I feel that you ore to be heartily\ncongratulated on this progressive legislation.\"\nDAILY NEWS\nCLASSIFIED AD. RATES\nOn\u00ab cent a word per. Insertion, four\ncenti a word oer week, fifteen cents f\nword per month when cash eccorn-\nnanies the order. Otherwise one cert*\nper word per insertion straioht, No\naccounts opened for want ads. Mint\n\u2022num charqe 25 centt.\nGETS THOUSAND DOLLARS\nFOR LOSS OF ONE EYE\nSettlement Is Reached in Case of Emil\nJohneon Against Payne Mine-\nAccident List Year.\nDamage* amounting to $1,050 will\nbe paid Emil Johnson, who lout the\nsight of ofte eye in a missed -hole accident at this Payne miffe near Sandon last year. Action was entered\nfor Mr, Johnson by Alexander Macnell ol Fernie  *H settlement waa\nWANTED\u2014Five or six rpoip house ip\nFairview,   on   easy  terms    Box  211\nDally News.\nlorsc\nWANTED\u2014Light    ono    hoi-ae    spring\nwugon.   C. H. Loehernt, iClty.\n\u2022282-6\nWANTED\u2014General servant! for small\nfamily;   apply forenoons, j Mrs. Leslie Crawford, 012 Hoover street.\nHELP WANTED\n*4.^vv-w'wKsvvv-^wvvvv't''*-'-v'\u00bb'''*'vw'fcSVN\/'SS^\u00bb\nNELSON EMPLOYMENT AGENCY\nF  A. Newell, Manager\nHELP PROMPTLY FURNISHED\nPHONE 278 BOX 4BB\nFOR   RENT\nFOR REWT \u2014 Completely furnlBhed\nfour rooljied house, $22,00 ber month,\nWater paid.   019    Edgewood    avenue.\nApply P. O. box 992. *1!84-^\nKERR APARTMENT B^OCK\u2014Furnished suites for rent bj week or\nmonth; a high class home with every\ncomfort; dishes; cooking u enslls and\nlinens supplied; every suiti hus prl\nvate hath, abundance hot water, laundry In basement. 284-tf\nROOMS  TO  RENT  with\nChen, 506 Victoria, street.\nFURNISHED ROOM for i\nIcn street.\nFOR    RENT \u2014 Suite    Of\nhousekeeping    rooms    In\nblock.   Enquire room 41.\nFOR RENT\u2014furnished l\nQueen Cigar Store,\ni of kit-\n\u2022281-12\n, 411 1\n\u2022275-12\nTHE WORKINGMAN'S EMPLOYMENT AGENCY.\nWANTED \u2014' Lumber grader; blacksmith;'good housework places; yard\nforeman, .-rite application together\nwith references; married man preferred. W. Parker, 312 Baker; phone.\n283.\nPOULTRY AND  LIVE STOCK\nFOR SALE\u2014120 egg Cyphers incubator; one Prairie State Universal\nhover; also Btumping maphine with\nabout 130 feet f% inch cable; all in\nworking order, .1. H. Hoyle, Queon's\nBay, B. C. *284-G\nBARRED   ROCKS   setting  eggs   from\ngood  laying strain,  $1.50  per 15 on\nrail    or    boat, Ruhson.   Wlelchnm    &\nMitchell, Robson, B. C. 282-12eod\nPEKIN DUCKLINGS    for   salo   nexi\nTuesday,   40   cents    each.   Crescent\nValley Poultry Farm, B. C. 284-0\nSILVER CAMIMNE EGGS for setting;\nwinners five firsts, special, silver cup\nNelson Winter show, $3.00; unfertll-\nreplaced; Buff Orpington rooster, first\nand special Winter snow; first Provincial show, $7.00; also splendid\ncockerel $4.00. W. G. Kennedy, Harrop, B. C. *281-C\nFOR SALE\u2014Yearling   pedigree   Ayrshire bull;   heavy milking strain. J.\nJ. Campbell,  Willow Point. 285-6\nFOR SALE\u2014White Wyandottes; lis'\nof winnings for 1913, Trail; 1st championship utility lien, Nelson; 1st exhibition pen 1st cockerel Grand Forks\nProvincial show 1st exhibition pen 1st\nand 3rd hen; special for best pen Wyandottes; special for best pen American class; special for host pen in show\nsecond utility pen; a few cockerels f\u00abr\nsale; eggs for hatching in season.\nJames Williamson, Trail, B, C.     281-tf\nFOR SALE\u2014Year old pure bred Jersey bull $75; Sir HI raw Maxim's\nvacuum cleaner with 4 attachments,\n$50, cost $100; Humphrey's Green Bone\ncutter, band or power, $15; Daniels' 50\negg incubator, $7.50; Excell0 power\nwasher $11.00; washer $5.00; Wilson\njunior grist; mill I -$2i50. \u25a0 Postmaster.\nTarrys, B. C. *283-G\nMY S. C. W, LEGHORNS nre all home\nraised; look up my winnings before\nplacing order for eggs; No. 1 pen $2.50,\nNo. 2 pen $2.00; bred to lay $1.50 per\n15; reduction on incubator lots; chicks\n25 cents each; book orders now. R. B.\nHay, ,               281-26\nFOR SALE\u2014One team horses 4 years\nold; ono set harness; one wagon;\none frame sleigh; 2 cows; 2 calves 1\nyear old; 3 pigs, $800 cash for quick-\nsale. Thos, G. Andrews, Fruitvaie.\nB. C. *281-G\nFOR SALE\u2014Chester white pigs seven\nweeks     old,     $5.00     each.   Duncan\nRanch, Waneta. \u00ab284-12\nWHITE WYANDOTTE EGQS for setting; prize winners at leading fairs\nin Saskatchewan and Manitoba, $3.00\npar setting of 15; drop us a card and\nlet us tell you about them. H. Dan-\nlirook, Koch's .Siding. B. C. *279-28\nFOR SALE\u2014 Young pigs 7 weeks old\nApply H. Nix-on, Perry Siding, B. C\n\u2022282-11\nHATCHING EGGS and baby chicks;\nWhite Orpingtons; White Wyandottes.\nR. C. Reds; Barred Rocks; R. C.\nWhite Leghorns; chicks 25c each;\neggg $2.00 per 15; infertlles replaced.\nM. B. Edwards, Hume Addition, Nelson. 275-26\nFOR  SALE\u2014Team   of   ranch   horses;\nwill  exchange   for other live  stock-\nR. Barrie,  Rossland. *277-9\nPARTRIDGE    WYANDOTTES,  black\nand white leghorn eggs $2.00 sotting;\nall    imported    stock.   W.    Thurman\nCity. *273-26\nFOR  SALE\nFOR SALB\"^R^RENF\"-^\"lnfproved\nranch, 88 acres subdlyi-d-ed; 25 acres'\nunder cultivation; Ho stones; soring\nwater In house-aj flume for irrigating;\nadapted fbr mixed farming; orchnrd\nbearing; station; postofflce; dally\nmall; school; lumber yard and planing mill; electric lights. Apply at\nranch. Address M. O. Monaghan.\nWilliams' Siding. B- C. \u2022284-6\nFOR SALE\u2014Baby    chicks,    Leghorn.';.\nRocks, Wyandottes, Bantams, Rods.\nAnconas, etc,   Charles Provan, Lang.\nley Fort. 250-104\nfurnished\nAmiable\n273*tf\nAppl;\nHI\nly\ntf\nPEDIGREED     registered     Berkshire\npigs,   Harry Anderson,  Blrchbank.\n202-tf\nNOTICE\nKOOTENAY iLAUNCH CLUB\nThe annual general meeting of the\nabove club will be held Jn    the club\nat 8 p. m. on Monday, March 16.   All\nmembers requested to attend.\nJ. T. ANDREWS\nHon, Secretary\ni . ,. 284-3\nFOR   SALE>\u2014Black   currant    bushes.\n.John   Mulfen,   corner   Cherry   and\nHoover. ' 285-0\nFOR SALE\u201410 ncres fruit land $500\n\u25a0cash or $600 terms; $300 will handle\nthe property; a few othe,. lots* of Improved and unimproved fruit lands.\nCall or write postmaster, Tao-rys, B C.\n\u2022283-6\nFOR   SALE\u2014C)i\"eap  5   roomed    brjeif\nhouse;   8%    .acres    land;   water  In\nhouse.   Apply or address F. W. Morton, Williams' Siding. \u2022284-6\nfOR    SALE\u2014Thoroughbred    Airdalc\npup;  price $10.00.   Apply P. O, box\n577. \u2022285-6\nFOR SALE\u2014At Fruitvaie, B. C, teh\nacres, five cleared, two nearly cleared; balance easy; twenty bearing\napple trees; acre in small fruit arid\nstrawberries; fine large house; lots\ngood water; 500 yards from centre of\ntown*; soil every foot No, 1; Good buy\nfit $3,000.00; for quick sale \u25a0J2.400.00;\n(1,000 or more cash; 10 ner cept d's-\ncount on any fiirther cash; to see this\nis to buy. W. S. Phillips. Cascade. B.\nC. *284-6\npAUNDRY BUSINESS. I want white\nfamily to rent or purchase established laundry 'business In growing\ncountry town; pays'from $125 to $150\nper month at present.time; new five\nroomed house, outbuildings, etc. Ap-\nply box 234 Dally News.\nPEDIGREE STRAWBERRY PLANTS\nhardy northern grown stock of leading varieties, proppgpted from the R-\nM. Kellogg strain of pedtere,. plants;\nprice, per 1000 plants $7.50; 100 plant?\n$1,25; catalogue sent on request. Mon-\nfad Wigen, Wyimdel, H. O. 283-411\nCHESNUT CANOE in good condition;\na  snap for quick sale.    P, 0.    Box\n1009 City. *283-0\nFRUIT TREES, roses, flowering\nshrubs; no winter injury or rose?\nthat die If you buy Home Grown stock;\nocud for price list. Kennedy, nursery-\nman. Harrop. *281-6\nBANKRUPT STOCK of general mer-\n, chandlse nnd store fixtures, inventory value $2,754,00 is offered in one\nblock or In separate blocks of each\nline of goods; tenders will be accepted\nby the assignee up to March 31st, 1914,\nthe lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted; stock open to inspection every day except Sunday to prospective purchasers. For further particulars apply to R, G. Ritchie, Assignee.\nCascade, B. C.    . 279-12\nFOR LEASE OR SALE\u2014High grade\nSlocan property near Whitewater,\njust the thing for a few miners with\nlittle. Address Peoria Mines, 542 Montreal street, Victoria, B. C. *272-8\nSTRAWBERRY PLANTS\u2014100, 70c;\n1,000, $5.00; Currants 10c; Gooseberries 15c; Raspberries 5c; Rhubarb 10c;\nFlowers, 13 perrenials (all different)\n$1.00; Pnnsies, 12, 40o; Daisies 12, 40c;\nRoses 12, $1.00; Dahlias 12, $1.00:\nPolyanthus 12, $1.00; carriage prepaid,   Chas. Provan, Langley Fort.\n250-104\nFOR SALE\u2014improved or unimproved\nfruit lands, from 5 acros up, 2,000\nacres to select from. Situation, Kootenay \"jake District. Easy term3. H.\nL. Lindsay, owner and locator, Nelson,\nB. C. 210-tf\nCITY   &   FARM   LANDS,   LTD.\nSuccessors to\nWestern Canada Investment Co.\nREAL ESTATE  AND  INSURANCE.\nJohn E. Taylor, Manager.\nCITY & FARM LANDS. LTD.\nCorner of Baker and Josephine streets\nFOR SALE\u2014In Pend d'Oreille valley,\nexcellent fruit lapd,   Clearing light.\nCheap.   Terms.    P. O. Box 96f, Nelson. 147-tf.\nLOST.\nLOST\u2014Green eainoe from-8 mile point\nBox 897 City. \u2022883-3\nCANCELLATION OF RE8ERVE\nNotice is hereby given'that the reserve established 'by notice published\nin the British Columbia Gazette oh the\n27th day of December, 1007, Is cancelled In 80 far as it relates to Timber\nLicensee No. 41426, 9082 and 4-181, nn\n-thntsald landfiilmving l\u00bb*enHiirveyed as-\nLots lir.H, 11515, 11518, 116111, 11520,\n1521, 1152-8, 11081, 11681a, 11088, 116S3,\n11684, 11685 and 11689, Kootenay District, wHl be opened\nto entry by pre-emption\nthe first day of May, 1914,\n0 o'clock in the forenoon.-No pre-emption Record will be Issued to Include\nmore than one surveyed lot, and all\napplications must be made at the office of the Government Office, Fernie.\nR. A. RENWICK\nDeputy Minister of Lands\nLands   Department,    Victoria, B,  C,\n28th January, 1914.\nU'88,\n11489,\n11490,\n11491\n11492\n11,493,\n11494\n11495,\n11490,\n11-97\n11498,\n11409,\n11500,\n11501,\n11502\n11503,\n11B04,\n11605,\n11500,\n11607\nCANCEtLATION OF RESERVE\nNotice Is hereby -riven that the reserve established by notice published\nin the Hritish Celmnblo, Gazette on the\n27th day of December, 1907, is cancelled in so far as It relates to Timber Licenses Nos. 31481, 33411, 34221,\n3935S, 30,602, 26737, 41344, 31201,\n\"1330, 34100, 32711, 21007, 37093, 37992,\n37994, 33460, 33459, 26926, 2S183, 22661.\n34273. 43170, 32022, 81180; 31184, 31183.\n37680, 24432, 23110, 28182, 39353, 34310,\nand 11347. That said lamls have been\nurveyed as Lots 2698, 2699, 2700, 2701,'\n2702, 2703, 2704, 2705, 2700, 2707, 2708,\n2709, 2710, 8281a. 8278, 8279, 8381, 3283,\n10331 10351, 10352, 19353, 10354, 10356,\n10357, 10358, 10359, 10360, 10361, 10302,\n10304, .. 10365, 10366. 10367, 10301\n11489, 11490, 11491\n11494 11495, 11496,\n11409, 11500, 11501,\n11604, 11605, 11506,\n11508, 11500, 11510, 11511, 11511a, 11513.\n11513, 11528, 11529, 11530, 11531, 11632,\n11533, 11584, 11536, 11536, 11537, 11538,\n11539, 11540, 11541, 11542, 11543, 11544\n11545, 11540. 11547, 11548, 11649, 11550,\n11552, 11553, 11554, 11655, 11556, 11557,\n11558, 11559, 11560, 11561, 11562, 11573,\n11574, 11575, 11576, 11577, 11578, 11573,\n11580, 11581, 11582, 11583, 11584, 115S5,\n11586, 11587, 11588, 11580, 11590, 11594,\n11,695, 11596, 11697, 11598, 11599, 11603,\n11604, 11605, 11606, 11607, 11608, 11609,\n11010, 11011, 11612, 11613, 11614, 11G15\nH616, 11617, 11019,' 11620. 11621, 11622\n11623, 11624, 11625, 11781,' 11785,\n11786, 11787, 11788, 11789, 11790, 11791,\n11,792, 11793, 11794, 11795, 11796, 11797,\n11798, 11799, 11800, 11801, 11802 and\n11803, Kootenay District, and will be\nopened to entry iby pre-emption on the\nfirst day of May, 1914, nit 9 o'clock ln\ntbe forenoon. No Pro-emption Record\nwill be issued to include more than one\nsurveyed lot, and ail applications must\nbo mado at the office of the Government Agent, Cranhroolt.\nR. A. RENWICK\nDeputy Minister of Lands\nLands Doparlment, Victoria,    B.\n28th January. 1914.\nHOTEL DIRECTOF\n6HERBROOKE  HOTEL\n'Nelson, B. C.\nOne minute's walk from C. P. R, I\ntlon.   Cuisine unexcelled;  well hea]\nand ventilated.\nLAVIGNB & DUNK\nATHABASCA HOTEL\nBaker Street, Nelson, B, C.\nClose to station, brick building,\nand up-to-date, hot and cold water|\nevery room.\nJOHN PHILBERT, Prop.\nBusiness Directory]\n^AS8AYER8^\nE, W. WIDDOWSON. ASSAYER A J\nChemist, Bos A1108. Nelson, B.I\nCharges: Gold, silver, ' copper I\nlead,- $1 each; gold-silver, |l.l\nsilver-lead. $1.P0. Other metalg \u2122\napplication.\nAUCTIONEERS\nC; A; WATERMAN & CO.-^Opera Bi\nW. CUTLER & CO., AUCTIONEER\nAipiaisers. Valuators, Etc. Auctl\nan.I sa1.* room 609 Ward street nl\nopera liOutfc Sales conducted Inf\nout uf iown. Furniture taken in f\nsnle.   Phone 18, box 47-4.\nGROCERIES\n.'. MACDONALD & CO., Wholes,!\nGrocois nnd Provision MerchanT\nImporters of Teas, Coffees, SpicB\nDried Fruits, Staple ana Fancy QiT\nceries, Tobaccos, Cigars, Butt!\nEggs, Cheese and Packing Hot^\nProduce. Office and warehouse cpj\n\u25a0ner of Front and Hall streets.'\nO. Box 1095.    Telephones 28 and ;\nA,   S.   HORSWILL   &   CO.,   WholtBsal\nImporters  and  Maufacturers'\" Aget|\nProduce, Fruits, Flour and Fflflfl;\nO. Box 54, Nelson, B. C, Phone 1J\nELECTRICAL SUPPLIES\nJ. II. RINGROSE, 304 BAKER si\nReid Block. Installation of elel\ntrlcal mar,ehtncry, telephone plaPtl\nhouse wiring. Repair work. Sua\nplies carried, phorie A227. P.\nBox 155. 22-1\nJlSUjyLJ^A^UjSIG^\nWINDOWsT^CABJ^T^A^jT'' CHI&1\nNEY cleaning.    House cleaning\nspecialty. Awnings, new and repair!\n' Vacuum   Cleaning  Company    Phon]\n438.    Box   16U, 277-f\nBROKERS   \u25a0   .\nJOHN P VROOM&CO^CUSTOmI\nBrokers and forwarding agent's, exj\npert accountants and auditors, roorl\n1, Allan block.    P. O. box 958.        s\n265\nPROfESSIOimcm\nGREEN   BROS., BURDEN   & CO*\nCivil Engineers.   Dominion and B.\nLand Surveyors\nSurveys of Lands,  Mines, Townslte\nTimber  Limits,  Etc.\nNelson, 516 Ward Street; A,II, Gree\nMgr.     Victoria 114 Pemherton Bldg\nF. C. Green.    Fort George, Harhmon\nStreet, F. p.  Burden;\nGEORGE H. PLAYLE, Chartered Ac\ncountant,    Auditor,    Assignee,    et<\nAnnable block. 513 Ward St., Neleoi\nI B. C.\nWILL HALDANE,    Ap-JHITECT, 51\nWard street.     Plans,  specification\nand estimates. ,   .\nA, l. Mcculloch\nHydraulic Engineer\nProvincial  Land Surveyor\nP. O. Box 41\nOffice phone L86; residence phone R7\nOffice, suite 6, McCulloch Bldg.\nBaker Street, Nelson, B. C.\nT.   M.   RIXEN,   AUDITOR  AND  AC\ncountant.   Room 15, K. W.  C. Blk\n122-t\nH,   PERRY   LEAKE,   CONSUI\/TINC\nEngineer, Nelson, B. C. 30(M\nl^QDGEJJOTICES\nKOOTENAY LODGE No. 16, I.O.O.F\n,-\u2014\u25a0 Meets every Monday night in Odd\nfellow's hull at 7:30 o'clock,\nQUEEN    CITY    REBEKAH    LODGI\nNo. 1G, I.O.O.F.,    meets    first    \u2022*\"\"\nthird   Tuesdays,     Oddfellows'     hal)\n\u25a0 7:30 o'clock,\nNELSON ENCAMPMENT No. 7 I. -\nO. F.r -meets second and fofcrtt\nThursdays in Oddfellows'-hall at j\nO'clock.\nCANTON CORONA No. 7 meet)\nevery second Tuesday In Oddfellow*\nhall at 8 o'clock.\nKNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS MEETS\nTuesday nights In K. pf P. hall\nEagle Bldg.\nL.O.O.M.\nNELSON lodge No, 81'\nmeets 2nd and. 4tl\nThursday at 8 p,\nin Eagle hall.\nF.O.E.\nNelson Aerie No, 22 meet\n?na and 4th Wednesday!\nIn  Eagle hall.\nA.O.F.\nCourt Royal, Nelsop No\n9204 meets on 2nd and 4tl\nMondays each month\nK*.   P.   hall   at   8    p.\nLadies' Court meets first and    thin\nWednesdays.\nmonthly\n-medicine for all I'emiile Coaiplulnt. $.') a box,\nor three for {10, nt drug stores. M-tiled to nay\nMl-lre-Moii receipt uf btlpi \u25a0 'I'm: Svonni.i, Dnr-\nCO., Bt.C-itli'irlaefli Oiilnrlo.\n*?H0SPH0N0L FOR MENS'Xmy;\nfor Nerve nnd nndn.lncrenwH \"grey mntter'i\nnToi|fc-ivill build you up. fin box, or Iwa fat\n*5, nt drugstore*:, or by iriaU on receipt of price.\nt hn Broth* \u00bb*vo Coi. St. Ctrwrin-Ji, Qntflrw.\nC.O.F.\nCourt Kootenay Belli\nmeets 2nd and 4th Friday\nin K. P- hall, Eagle Blfc I\nCLAN JOHNSTONE 212 MEETS IN\nI.' O. O.' P. hall first and third Fridays, 8 p, m.\nrs:\nNELSON LODOE, NO. 6, E. P. \"ft\nmeets first and third Thursdays at\n8 p. m. in. the Eagle hall.   All   so-\niournlne; members Invited.        1 Bf,\u2014tf\nNOTICE\nTbe strike at the Queen mine, Sneep\nCreek, B. C, Is still en. All -Forking\nmen are warned to stay away until\nthe strike ls settled.\nBy order of the Ymir Miners' union,\nW. B. M'lUAAC.\nTmlr. B. fl.. June S7th. 19)9.    \u00abfc-J.\nNOTICE\nNoblco Is hereby ffiven that the partnership existing between U. L. Butch-\nart antl II. J2. Stevenson under the\nname ot Butchart & Stevenson, has\nbeen dissolved iby mutual consent H.\nL. Stevenson wlU continue to eonduct\nthe-business. All accounts owing tile\ntirm will lie payable to H. Ii. Uutch-\nart, who will pay all debts against 't\"io\nfirm; ' '.\u00bb';,f ''\n.(Signed) \\\nH. L. BUTCHABT\nI   i H, B, STEVENSON\n MONDAY   MARCH  1\u00bb\n\u20aci>e Sattr JtaM,\/\n\u25a0\u2022AOE SEVEN\n,ocal New Laid Eggs\nPer Dozen   -   35 Cents\nTO  ARRIVE   THI8   MORNING\nABOUT 40 BOXES\nGood Apples\nPer box -   -   $1.35\n[CELERY\nSPINACH\nLETTUCE\nRADISH\nGREEN  ONION8\nNew Dates\n2 Ib | 26o\nBunte's Marshmallows\nLarge Can   19o\n|    Sunkist Oranges\nPer Dozen ...\" 25c\n|       Grape Fruit\nPhone 10\n[The Star Grocery Co.\nStore of Quality-\nSOII NEWS OF THE DAY\n\\ Mrs. J. C. H. Kelso, of Edgewood, is '\ni guest at the Hume.\n: Born on March 15, to Mr. and Mrs.\nRtobert Bell, Mill' street, a son,\nJ Mr. and Mrs. A. Hurst, of Gull Lake,\n1'lan., ure guests at the Strathcona.\nFred J.  Smyth, of Greenwood, was\n, guest at thc Strathcona yesterday,\nBorn at 517 Hall street, on March\n15, to Mr. and Mrs. Peterson, of Koch's\n\u00a7-> id Ing, a son.\nThe Ladies' Choral society will meet\nJit 7:3fl o'clock tomorrow evening at\nflhe Y. W. C. A.\nMembers of *th\u00a9 charity organization\nfllrc asked to bo present at the board\nf;f trade rooms at 8 -o'clock tonight.\n1 There will be a practice of thc Min-\n\u2022-\u2022-.ture Rifle association at tho range\nHit the armory at 8 o'clock tomorrow\n\"\u25a0venlng. \u2022 ,   ,,\nTho Epworth league of Trinity\nft\\ ethodist church will give a St. Pat-\n\u25a0jHck-B social in the church parlors to-\nflplght at 8 o'clock.\n.1. H, Hallett, tho Greenwood .jaw-\ner, returned last night from a visit\nSto   Halcyon  Hot  Springs   ar \u2022   regist-\nped a.t the Strathcona.\nItlchard Mott,  of Howser,  who has\nteen  operated   on ul  tho     Kootenay\nKl,*j,k(j   General  hospital by Drs. Rose\nKind Hartin, was reporte-i last night to\n|Jbo getting along nicely.\n-The anniversary services of Trinity\nwMcthodist church will take place on\njf Sunday, March 29.   Rev. Dr. Sipprcll,\nlof Vancouver, ex-president of Col-\nlumblan college, New Westminster, will\nipi'csiide at the services.\nThere will be a meeting of the\n|. members of tho Ladies' Hospital Aid\nKociety, the Charity organization and\nfithe directors of tho public library at\nlithe board of trade rooms nt 8 o'clock\nXthis evening 10 discuss whether a Klr-\nj!mn.--\u00bb shall be held during Chahko\nA'Mika or- not.\nThe special services nt the Baptist\n{church will'he continued during the\n'coming week on each n'ght except Sat\nSurd'iv at 8 o'clock. Tonlirht's meeting\nwill take the form of a. children's meeting. All adult members of the congregation and. the public are Invited\nto attend tlie services,\n'On his way to Grand Forks to    ar-\n! range for carrying out work -on a contract to make Improvements to the\nCanadian Pacific railway at tho\nGranby   smelter,   w.   P.   Tlerney,   thc\nINALDSONHNE\nNow Is the Time\nTo think of arranging passage for\nyour friends and relations in the\nOld Country whom you expect to\nbring out in the spring.\nYou can secure their tickets here\nand all arrangements will be made\nfor their forwarding by\nTHE  DONALDSON   LINE\nFor information, rates, etc., apply to any rail or steamship asent,\nor H..H. LIDMAN, Gen'l. Agent,\n349 Main Street, Winnipeg.\nStandard Furniture\n=Company=\nC. J. CARLSON, Undertaker\nUndertaken Embalmen\n\u25a0nil Funeral Director*\nThe flnem and most up to date\nundertaking parlors and chapel In\nInterior of B.C. Lady attendant tor\nwomen and children.\nDay Phone 85,\nNight Phone 252 and L54\nThe B. C. Assay and\nChemical Supply Co.\nLimited,\nAsiayert1 and Chemists' Supplies.\nBalances and Weights of precision\nPhysical and Chemical Apparatus.\nChemically pure Acids and Chemicals\nPlumbago aad Plumbago Crucibles\nM? Hornby Street, Vancouver, i.e.\nVancouver railway contractor, registered at the Hume last night, Ho will\nspend today in the city.\nIn order that those who left their\nskates and other skating paraphenalla\nat the skating rink may have an opportunity to get It before the rink is\nclosed for the stias-on, the manager\nWilliam Richardson, will be,on hand\nat the bulldilng this afternoon. Those\nnot taking their -belongings from the\nrink today muy not be able to get\nthem until the opening of the building\nnext skating season according to Manager Richardson.\nMiss B. G. Chouquette, 808 Carbonate; private lessons, French and\nmusic. \u2022282-6\nViolin pupils taken by Miss I Mln-\nota Winter. 704 Silica street, P. 0.\nbox 796. \u2022283-12\nMr. G. F. SchimJdt has been appointed hy tho Coldstream Estate\nCompany, Limited, -as sole agent for\ntheir nurseries in the Kootenays and\nand Boundary. \u2022284-6\nAwning, all descriptions, house, carpet, window and chimney cleaning\nNelson Vacuum Cleaning Co., phon\"\n438, box 166. 284-26\nMr. Logic's subject in* St. Paul's\nchurch Sunday evening will be \"The\nChurch of Christ us a Socialistic\nForce.\"\nLadies* tailoring at Misses Lemieux.\n285-6\nS. I*. Pond, of the Taylor Milling and\nElevator company, Nelson, would like\nto communicate With parties having\nmilk anj cream to sell in rUaii-\ntltles. 285-tf\nDuring the heavy wind and rain\nwhich prevnilcd for a short time on\nSaturday afternoon, lhe steamer Moyle\nbroke away from her moorings at the\nNelson wharf, but was quickly tied\nup again.\nTRAIN WRECKED\u2014PASSENGERS\nKILLED AND INJURED\n(By Daily News Leased Wtfre.)\nST. PAUL, Minn., March 15.\u2014One\nwoman, Miss Julia Highburg, 22 years\nof ago, of Minneapolis, was killed and\nmore \/than 60 other passengers injured,\nseveral fatally, when two_.coa-c.ics of\na nine-car passenger train on the\nChicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis &\nOmaha railroad tonight left the rails\nand rolled down un embankment iit\nMcndota, Minn. The first part of the\ntrain remained on thc track and came\nto St. Paul with the dead and Injured.\nThc train left Omaha for St. Paul\ntoday. After passing the station at\nMendota, two coaches in the middle of\nthe train were derailed and toppled\nover. One of them stood almost upright, throwing the passengers to the\nend of the coach. Hardly a passenger\nin this car escaped Injury.\nRUSSIAN   PROFESSOR\nSENT TO PRISON\n(By Dailv News Leased Wlrel\nST. PETERSBURG, March 15. \u2014\nProf, Ivan Alcxundrov-itch Baudoln de\nOourtenay, member of thc faculty of\nSt. Petersburg 'university, and who\noften has represented Russia In foreign congresses, was sentenced to two\nyears' imprisonment in a fortress for\nhaving published a pamphlet advocating federalism.\nROYAL CITY TAKES\nAMATEUR HONORS\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nNEW WESTMINSTER B. C\u201e March\nln.~Ne\\v Westminster has captured\nthe amateur hookey championship of\nthe Pacific coast. In the final against\nthe Columbian, of Vancouver, the\nEraser Mills team of this city, held\nthe Vancouver hoys to a 4-goal draw,\nwinning the Savage cup on the round\nby a total score of 12 to 8. x\nARMED BURGLARS MAKE\nHAUL IN CHICAGO\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nCHICAGO, 111., March 15. \u2014Six\narmed burglars, after seizing and binding three employes, blew open the\nsafe of the Hartman Furniture company at 3915 Wentworth avenue yesterday and escaped wHh $15,000 and\n$40,000 worth of money orders.\nFIRST WAVE OF\nTIDE OF IMMIGRATION\n(By Dally News Leasee Wire.)\nTORONTO, March 16.\u2014Five hundred immigrants from the British Isles,\na vanguard of this year's immigrant\narmy, arrived ' In Toronto yesterday.\nOver 350 go on to the northwest,\nINSURANCE MAN DROWNS\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.-\nREGINA, March 15.\u2014J. G. Lnng-\nrldge, Regina, was drowned while\ncrossing the ico at Herbert, Sask., on\nFriday. Deceased was an Inspector In\ntho loan department of the Manufacturers' Llfo Insurance company, and\nCttrtto here from London.\nTHOUSAND KILLED\nINHURRICANE\n(Continued from page oneA\nwhich is situated the famous old Benedictine abbey, and several towns on\ntho coast were flooded.\nThree hundred feet of sea wall at\nGranville were swept away. The damage at Dieppe was great. A large por-\ntion of the promenade waB wrecked\nand harbor improvements under *uon-\nstruction destroyed. Pebbles were\nwashed in by the sea. in such quantities that the River Seine was\ndammed at its mouth and the valley\nof the river flooded for several miles.\nIn the region of La Treporte, 16\nmiles north of Dieppe, the sea penetrated at many places half a mile inland, inundating houses, from whicli\nthe inhabitants made hasty escapes.\nAt many places portions of the cliff\nga'*e way, leaving houses built on the\nedges In danger of crashing down.\nVessel Ashore,\nfBy Dally News Leased Wire,)\nLONDON, March 15.\u2014The Swedish\nbark Trefolium was driven ashore on\nLands End last night and Capt. Olsen\nan,i four sailors were drowned. Six\nmembers of the crew were saved.\nStorms all along the coast did much\ndamage during the night to small craft\nand there also were several vessels\nwrecked in Queenstown and Liverpool\nharbors.\nLAST WORD FROM\nGOVERNMENT\n(Continued from Page One.)\nGovernment's Last Word\nMr. Churchill's speech has finally\ndissipated the hopes engendered a\nweek ago that there was a possibility\nof there being a settlement of the home\nrule question by consent. It ls now\naccepted as certain that the prime\nminister's statement this afternoon\nwill not contain any new proposals,\nbut will bo an explicit declaration that\ntho government has said the last\nword.\nRamsay Macdonald, the parliament\nury Labor leader, declares in tho Dally\nCitizen this morning that the Labor\nparty will not accept Sir Edward CaS*\nson's demand for unlimited exclusion\nof Ulster.\nTho Morning Post (Conservative), 1n\nits editorial this morning, headed\n\"Drifting to Civil War,\" accuses the\ngovernment of deliberately provoking a\nterrible catastrophe rather than risk\nthc loss of office.\nIt Is anticipated that tho government\nwill pass tho government of Ireland\nbill, plus the resolutions embodying\nthe concessions to Ulster, over the\nUnionist opposition, and that when the\nbill reaches the lords negotiations will\nbo resumed.\nIt is stated on thc best authority\nthat If ithe government maintains Its\npresent position, the opposition will\ncontinue its- hostile attitude and will\nthus compel Mr. Asquit'h to pass thc\nbill under the Parliament act If at all.\nGOVERNMENT VESSELS\nNEED NOT PAY TOLLS\n(By Dally News Leased Wire)\nWASHINGTON, March 15.\u2014State\nments that government vessels would\nnet be compelled to pay tolls if the\nSims bill repealing the exemption\nclause of the Panama Canal act wiy;\nenacted wore characterized today as\nmonstrous perversions of the truth\nand the most foolish folly enunciated\nsince fools were discovered hy Rcprc\nsentatlve Adamson, chairman of the\nhouse Interstate commerce committee,\n\"Such vessels are not mentioned In\nthc Canal aotj nor in the Sims bill,\nror ought they to be,\" the statement\ncontinues. \"They were owned by the\nsame owners who own the canal, and\npass their vessels by right of ownership, according to treaty. Owning both\nwarships and canal, It could pay tolls\nto nobody but Itself, which would be\nconcentrated nonsense.\"\nThree minority reports on the canal\nrepeal matter wore reported today.\nRepresentative Dormus, of Michigan,\nand Representative O'Shaughnessy, of\nRhode Island, Democrats, declared they\ncould sec no reason to reverse their\nposition in favor of coastwise shipping\nexemption, while Representative Kno\nland, of California, and -Representative\nLatterty, of Orcgoh, presented separate reports attacking the repeal plan.\nANNUITY  FOR FAMILY\nOF MURDERED CONSTABLE\n(By Dallv New*. Leased Wire.)\nMONTREAL, March 14. \u2014 The body\nof Oonstablo Honore Bourdon, shot by\ngunmen last Wednesday, was burled\nyesterday in the policemen's lot at\nCotes des Nelges cemetery. It *'\u00bb\nestimated that 100,000 people lined the\nroute of the procession. At tomorrow's meeting of the olty council 11\nwill be proposed to pass'a special 'bylaw granting an annuity to Bourdon's\nwidow and family.\nCHARGES AGAINST  MINERS\nTO  BE WITHDRAWN\n(By Daily New* Leased Wire.)\nVANCOUVER, B. C-, March 15. \u2014\nIt lis reported that most of the re\nmalnlng charges against miners of\nNanaimo who went out on strike last\nyear will bo withdrawn. The prosecution of about-four score cases has\nso far cost the government nearly\n$150,000. This Is exclusive of a similar amount which the policing of the\nstrike district has cost the govern\nment.\nEIGHT MILLION CHINESE\nEGGS ARRIVE AT COAST\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nVANCOUVER, B. C, March 16.\nWith another shipment of Chinese\neggs totaling nearly 8,000,000, the\nRoyal Steam Packet company's steamer Cardigashin, arrived here today.\nMost of the shipment is, however, consigned to merchants of San Francisco\nand Seattle.\nPIONEER ENGINEER HURT\nMOOSE JAW, Sask., March 15.\nFrank S, Jackson, one of the oldest\nlocomotive engineers in the service of\nthe Canadian Pacific railway, wag\nstruck on the head while driving his\nengine near Maple Creek on Saturday\nand severely Injured, it is supposed\nhe had heen leaning from the cab and\nhis head came In contact with a mail\ncrone alongside thR track.\nSport\n-**j\nBISLEY RANGES ARE\nOPENED ON SUNDAY\n(Canadian  Associated   P'ress Cable)\nLONDON, March 16.\u2014At the adjourned winter meeting of the National Rifle association on Saturday,\nLot',* Cheylesmore stated that >thc\nKing had expressed heartiest approval\nat the postponement of the operation\nof thc new war- office Risley rules until next year, which would allow ample\ntime to consider the whole situation\nboth ns affecting Canadian riflemen\nand rifle clubs at home. His majesty\nhas headed the fund with a subscrlu-\ntlon of $250. It was to send out a\nBritish team In charge i\/ Col. Barlow\nto take part In 'the competition.\nTho result of the election of council\na poll having been demanded at the\nlast meeting, was as follows:\nI\/ord Cheylesmore, Col. the Earl of\nWcmvss, Col. Howard Atkinson, Cal.\nS;lr Edward Ward, Col. G, A. Wilson,\nW. A. Davison, Major Plxley, Lleut.-\nCol. Stanley Cuthbert, Col. H. Mellss\nand Major Stephenson.\nAfter encountering strong opoos'tior\nfrom various religious organizations\nthe Bisley rnnges were, for the flrsi\ntime, on Sunday, opened for rifle practice todav. The reason Is that many\nmen desire to become proficient In\nHflo practice, but have no opportunity\nof practicing except on Sunday.\n\u25a0\u2022\u2022   WEEK-END  BASE. $\n\u2022\u00bb BALL RESULTS   <**\n(Bv Daily News Lea^d Wire)\nNEW ORLEANS, La., March 15.\u2014\nThe New Orleans team today defeated\nthe Detroit Americans, 8 to 4. Ty\nCobb, in his first appearance this (season, struck out the first two times\nat hat, but doubled to left on his third\ntime up. He went out trying to steal\nhome.\n-SHRBVBPORT, La., March 15.\u2014The\nSt. Louis Federals hit better In the\npinches today and won an interesting\ngame, 3 to 1, from the Chicago Federals.\nWILMINGTON, N. C, March 15.\u2014\nThe Phillies defeated the Jersey City\nInternationals yesterduy 3 to 1,\nSHREVEPORT, La., March 15.\u2014The\nChicago Federals yesterday defeated\nthe St. Louis Federals here 3 to 1,\nNEW ORLEANS, La., March 16.\u2014\nThe Detroit Tigers defeated tho local\nteam yesterday 4 to 2.\nTAMPA, Fla., March 15.\u2014The world\nchampion Athletics lost a 3 to 0 game\nto the Chicago Nationals here yesterday, thc series now standing 2 to 1 In\nthe Cubs' favor,\nDALLAS, Tex., March 15.\u2014Thc Dal\nlas Texas league team defeated Hit\nfirst team of the New York Nationals\nhero yesterday 4 to 0. Mathewson\nworked five innings for the big lea\nguers and held Dallas to ono run.\nGALVESTON, Tex., March 15.\u2014The\nfirst team of the New York Americans\nwas defeated here yesterday by\nlocal Texas league team 2 to 1.\nHOUSTON, Tex., March 15.\u2014The\nNew York Americans defeated thc\nlocals 2 to 1' In a fust game today.\nDALLAS, Tex., March 15.\u2014The\nGiants today defeated the Dallas team\n8 to 5.\nTake First Step\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nNEW YORK, March 15.\u2014The first\nknown step by the Federal league to\nsecure control of a minor league was\ntaken today during a meeting here of\nthe Atlantic league, formerly known as\nthe New York and New Jersey league.\nWhile the owners were in session, a\nFederal league agent approached Otto\nDiesseroth, of the Ncwburgh club, and\nattempted to secure admittance to the\nmeeting to submit a proposition on\nbehalf of the Federals to secure the\nAtlantic league as a \"farm.\" The\nminor league men refused to listen to\nthe proposition nnd declared their Intention to stick by organized baseball.\nThe change of name of the league to\nthe Atlantic league will bo effected at\ntoday's meeting.\nMcGOORTY GIVEN BOUT\nDECISION   IS   UNPOPULAR\n(By Daily News Leased Wire)\nSYDNEY, N. S. W., Marc 15.\u2014Eddie McGoorty of Oshkosh yesterday\nwas given the decision over Jeff\nSmith, another American fighter, at\nthe end of a hard-fought 20-round bout.\nTho referee's decision was unpopular.\nThe fight took pluce in the stadium\nand was witnessed by 10,000 persons.\nGRANDMERE TEAM NOT\nAFRAID OF HOODOO\n(By Dally News Leased Wlrel\nWINNIPEG, March 15.\u2014Traveling\non the special car Grandmere, over\nthe Canadian Pacific railway, the\nGrandmere hockey team pas\nthrough here tonight on their way to\nRegina to play off for the Allan cup,\nemblematic of the championship of\nthe world. The boys from the paper\ntown are a husky looking lot and apparently place little faith on the hoodoo thirteenth\u2014they started on their\nway west March 13 with a party of 13.\nPRESIDENT OF UNIVERSITY\nRETURNS ON WEDNESDAY\nVANCOUVER, B. C, March 15.\u2014\nAfter an absence of several months,\nduring which he has visited all the\nleading cities of eastern Canada and\nthe United States, as well as the continent of Europe and Great Britain,\nDr. Weatbrook, president of the University of British Columbia, is expected to return to Vancouver on Wednesday, according to Chancellor Carter\nCotton. The object or the visit was\nto gather data as to methods and to\nobtain the most efficient teachers possible.\nMETHODIST PASTOR DEAD\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nVANCOUVER, B. C, March 15. -~\nRev. F. G. Lett, pastor of the Grand\nview Methodist church, formerly well\nknown In Montreal, died today nfter a\nlong illness.,.\nA Spring Message\nGloves\nCOTTON\n3 Pairs for 25c\n50c\n75c\n\u00bb1.00\n*1.25\nJ1.50\n.1.75\n$2.29\nSpring Is Here\nand with it the summer's work begins. Good strong working\nclothes aro now in great demand and we have a large stock for\nyou to choose from. It has been carefully selected to give the\nwearer both\nComfort and Good Service\nOur prices naturally read very much like any other list, a dollar\nnever looks different wherever advertised, but when we say\nThis Is a Dollar\nPLEASE  BEAR   IN   MIND  THAT\nOur Values Par Exceed Our Prices\nGauntlets\nCOTTON\n20o\n85c\n$1.25\n$1.50\n$1.65\n$1.86\n$2.00\n$2.26\nTHE BEST VALUE IN OVERALLS, STRIPED, BLACK, NAVY AND KHAKI $1.00 and $1.25\nKhaki Drill Shirts\n$1, $1.25, $1.50\nFOR   HARD  WEAR\nBlue and White\nDrill Shirts, $1.00\nSTUNNING  VALUE\nOxford Shirts\n$1.25\nA  BIG SELLER\nTHERE ARE NO CLOTH CAPS IN TOWN TO CO   MPARE WITH  OUR 50c RANGE\nCOLORS  AND   SHAPES  6.K.\nThroe Button, Serviceable\nTweed Suits, superior quality,\nperfect fit and wear.\n$12.00 and $13.50\nEvery Day Suits\nA little higher in price than\nthose just mentioned, but\ngood value for every dollar.\n$15.00 and $17.50\nFREE\nCOME IN   AND   GET   THREE   TABLETS   OF   PALM   OLIVE\nSOAP  WITH   PURCHASE   OF\nONE POT PALM  OLIVE  BEAUTY  FACE CREAM\nFifty Cents\nFREE\nWE  HAVE JUST  RECEIVED 50  BOXES OF GOOD  APPLES\nPRICE, $1.76 PER  BOX\nHudson's Bay Company\nINCORPORATED 1670\nINCORPORATED 1670\nTY COBB WILL\nSTICK WITH DETROIT\n(Bv Dnllv News Leased Wirei\nNEW- ORLEANS, La., March 16.\u2014\nTy Cobb, outfielder for the Detroit\nAmericans, today set at rest reports\nthat he had been approached a second time with an attractive contract\nhy the Federals. He declared no such\noffer had been made. Cohh said he\nhad refused one Federal proposition\nand emphatically added that lie would\nplay this Beason with Detroit.\nPresident Navin arrived her0 today\nand returned to Gulfport with the\nteam. He said Sam Crawford, outfielder, would report at Gulfport on\nMonday.\nFEDERALS  WILL  TAKE\nCARE OF DESERTERS\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nCHICAGO, March 15.\u2014Baseball\nplayers who deserted the ranke of organized baseball to join thc Federals\nwill be taken care of, even if they\nfail to win berths with tlu; Federal\nleague teams. This was announced\ntoday by President Gilmore, who returned from a visit to the training\ncamp of thc Chicago Federals at\nShreveport, He confirmed the report\nthat two minor outlaw leagues would\nbe formed next ycar to provide Federal \"farms.\"\nHIGH SCHOOL BALL\nTEAM REORGANIZED\nWith Everett Brasch as manager\nand Georgo Roc as captain the High\nSchool Baseball team J)as reorganized\nfor the coming season and intends to\nenter a team In thc proposed city league. The boys of the school state that\nthoy have plenty of material mid hope\nto make a good showing during the\ncoining season. Thoy are already limbering up a little at thc school.\nVANCOUVER  HOCKEY  PLAYER\nMARRIED IN OTTAWA\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, March IB.\u2014Fred Taylor,\nthe Vancouver hockey player, was\nquietly married here on Saturday, to\nMiss Thursea Cook, daughter of Mrs.\nSamuel Cook. ItiC Lyon street, Ottawa.\nFrank Patrick acted as best man, and\nonly tho Intimate relatives of the\nyoung couple were present. The Vancouver club presented them with a\ncabinet of silver.\nMr, and Mrs. Taylor Will  reside  in\nVancouver.\nNEW CONSTITUTION   FOR\nFOOTBALL ASSOCIATION\nAt bhe meeting of thc executive of\nthe Nelson Football association on\nSaturday night ai new constitution for\nthe association was formulated for\npresentation at the adjourned annual\nmooting, wiHlch will he held on Thursday evening next at 8 o'clock In the\nV. M. C, A.\nYOUNG MEN AND HIGH\nSCHOOL MEET WEDNESDAY\nOn Wednesday evening at 8:30\no'clock .the second game of the final\nseries for the class trophy basketball\nchampionship at the Y. M. C. A. will\ntake place when the High School team\nmeets tho team from the Young Men's\nclass. Tho winners of Uie game will\nprobably meet tho Professional Men\nIn the final for the championship.\nIMPORTANT BOUTS\nAT VANCOUVER\n(By Dully News Leased Wire.)\nVANCOUVER, B. C, March 15.\u2014\nTwo important Snorting events will\ntake place here this week. On Tuesday Frank Man tell and Billy Weeks\nwill ibattle for the Canadian middleweight championship. The following\nevening, Walter Miller, world's welterweight wrestling champion, will meet\nGeorge Walker, Canadian mlddte-\nwelght champion.\nLIGHTWEIGHT CHAMPION TO\nFIGHT JIM DUFFY\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.l\nBUFFALO, N. Y., March 15.\u2014Willie\nRitchie, lightweight boxing champion,\nand Jimmy -Duffy of Lockport have\nbeen matched to box here the second\nweek In May. Ritchie Is guaranteed\n$10,000, with a privilege of -15 per eent\nof the gross receipts.\nWILL   REORGANIZE\nLACROSSE AT COAST\n(By Dally News Leasee Wire.)\nVANCOUVER, ll. C\u201e March 15. \u2014\nAction is to in- taken this week in\nconnection with tho reorganization 0f\nthe British Columbia Lacrosse league\nNew Westminster and Victoria have\ncalled n meeting for Tuesday next and\nthe Athletics, of Vancouver, formerly\nthe Vancouver Athletic club, have\nbeen asked to file application for a\nfranchise,\nCon Jones has been overlooked In\nthe shuffle, but over half of lhe players will jiunn to the \"bin- four'' if he\nIs out of lacrosse. .ToiiOg returned\nfrom th*-. old country yesterday ami\nannounced that he was prepared to\nluck a professional learn If New\nWestminster would post a bond to\nguarantee their support,\nCLEVELAND HANDICAPPED\nfBy Dallv Now- Leased Wire.l\nCLEVELAND, Ohio, March 15.\u2014\nShortstop Ray Chapman, of the Cleveland Americans, will be out of the\ngame for months, Dr, 11. M. Castle;\nelub physician, said last night. Chapman came here today from the training camp at Athens, Ga., and nn X-ray\nexamination of bis injured leg was\nmade. The photograph shows that the\ntibia and fibula bones wore broken just\nabove tho ankle.   It will be five weeks\nbefore the injured player can walk and\ntwo months before he can get around\neasily.\nAMERICAN CHAMPION\nMEETS DEFEAT\nfBv Dailv News Leased Wire)\nPINE-HURST. N. C, March 15.\u2014\nMiss Gladys Ravenscroft, of England,\nholder of the American woman's golf\nchampionship, met defeat today at the\nhands of Mrs. R. N. Barlow, former\neastern champion, in the play-off of a,\nrecent tie in an invitation elimination\ncontest under the auspices of tho Silver Foils club. Aided by -a handicap\nof five strokes, Mrs. Barlow won on\nthe 17th green.\nHED SOX PITCHER\nSIGNS WITH   FEDERALS\n(Bv Daily News Leased Wire) '\u25a0'\nRALEIGH, N. C, March 15.\u2014Fred\nAnderson, Boston Red Sox pitcher of\nlast year, signed a contract to play for\none season with the Buffalo elub of\nthe Federal league. Anderson wal\npurchased by thu Boston club for Sfi.OOO\nfrom thu Brockton club of the New\nEngland league and pitched several\ngames for the Red Sox toward the\nclose of the season.\nVANCOUVER BOXERS\nCOMPETE AT TORONTO\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nVANCOUVER, B. C, March 15.-^\nCllet Melntyre, plivsical director uf thfl\nCommercial Athletic elub, -today an\nnouncod that he will take a string or\nboxers to the Canadian championships\niu Toronto in June.\nTWO   MORE   FEDS\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.) .''\nLYNCHBURG, Va., March 15.\u2014\nHugh Bradley and R. Onkes joined the\nPittsburg Federal league training\ncamp hero yesterday, bringing the\nsquad -up to 24 men.\nmUITSALT\nThe Natural Way to Health\nEXPERIENCE proves that Health by Coaxing ia better\nthen He.llli by Forcing.   A Mild Remedy is alweye\n.uperior to a Haeardoua Force.\nEno's \" Fruit Salt\" prevents and relieves by Natural Mtant\nall functional derangemente of lb Urn Temporary Con.\ngeetion arising from tbe uae of alcoholic bever.\nagea,  Errors in Diet, Bihousneaa, ilea:\nHeadache, etc.    It acta according to the\nquantity taken, either aa   a   relieving\nagent or aa a cooling and refreahing\nbeverage, and gently atimulate, without\nany weakening after-effects.\nPrepared only by\nI. C. EK0.lt-.,' 'Frsil Salt\" Wetki, Leslea,\nEailaii\nSoldinalhheprincipal tovma.ndcitie.ofCan.de\nAatat. for Caaaa: HaraM F. Illt.li *\nC.   Ltaaila-. lOMaC.al St..T0>0-<I0\nTry Us for High-Class\nConfectionery\nAlways Fresh.\nThe beat fruits la season alwaja\nIn atock. ,        ,\u201e\u201e,,\nWe bave a very complete stoctt\nof tea, coffee and cocoa.\nTry us lor values.\nThe Palace Confectionery\nC. H. BEAN.\nHouse Painter,\nPaper Hanger and\nDecorator\nWORK BY DAY OR CONTRACT.\nESTIMATES GIVEN\nFirst-class work guaranteed. Out\nof town work a apeolalty.\nJ.  J.  ROCHE .\nBox 474, Nelson.\n I    taee eioht\nCf\n\"JlrtW..\nMONDAY   MARCH 16\nFRESH SHIPMENT\nGINGER SNAPS\n'2 lbB.-...- 25c\nNICE ASSORTMENT MIXED\nPer lb .' 15c\nA.E.Johnston\nSUCCESSOR TO C. A. BENEDICT\nJosephine St.\nQueen Studio\nEstablished 1fM.\nPortraits\nViews\nPictures\nPicture Framing\n3        ALLAN  LEAN, Manager.\n***. O. Box 812. Phono 1M.\nNelaon. B. C.\n*';**.  O. T'tttennudo has returned from\nKrylslt to the east,;        '\nCottage\n. We have for sale a cottage on\nHall Street, close to Latimer Street,\ncontaining three rooms, bathroom,\nelectric light, plumbing and woodshed.   The lot is -lF-xiiO ft.   Price\n$600 Cash\nOr ?050.   Terms   $200 cash and\nthe balance to arrange.\nH. & M. Bird\nNelson, B. C.\nSEND CHAIRS BY\nPARCEL POST\nTwo Articles of Furniture Are Mailed\nFrom Nelson to Edgewood\nby Local Merchant.\nBy parcel post a Nelson merchant\non .Saturday mailed two chairs to\nEdgewood, on the Arrow lakes. The\ncost was !).-? cents, which the sender\nfigured was less than the express\nrates. The chairs were sent in two\nseparto parcels, each weighing 10%\nlbs.\nParcel post business at tho Nelson\noffice is growing rapidly as the public\nIs-becoming acquainted with the saving to be made by its use.\nThe^New Parcels|Post\nIs a Great Boon to Out-of-Town\nCustomer^\n. You can get a parcel so cheaply now and so quickly that\nit pays to write us your wants and we will forward them by\nreturn post.\nWe get our mail and despatch it the same night, and can\nH procure other items if not stocked by us.\nWe   have  always  done a   large  mail  order  business,   but\nit's better now we have the new parcels post.\nWRITE   US   FOR\nDrugs\nCarden Seeds\nFruit Tree Sprays\nPoultry Supplies\nPhoto Supplies\nWall Paper\nGrafting Wax\nCycle Hatchers\nBrooders\nRutherford Drug Co., Ltd.\nNEW 8TAND^503 BAKER STREET\n-aaMB\nNELSON, B. C.\nReductions in\nChina\nAll lines of fancy china, excepting Block patterns, are being sold\nat greatly reduced prices. Some\nbeautiful designs going at almost\nany prlce to clear out.\nA visit will convince that we\nmean what we say.\nSome good second-hand articles\non hand.\nCHINA~HALL\nA.   W.   MUNRO,   Prop.\nP. 0. Bex 588\nPhone L-261 821  Baker it.\nFor Quick Sale\nTwo One-Story\nFrame Buildings\nto he removed from present location.   Full particulars on request.\nST. DENIS &\nLAWRENCE\nManufacturers' Samples\nDry Goods, Sweaters, Hose\nAT  WHOLESALE  PRICES\nThe Ark\nNew and second-hand furniture.\nCheapest In tbe city.\nPhone 1.396. 606 Vernon St.\nNelson, B. C.\nChakho Mika\nWill Soon Be Here\nDon't you wish to enjoy the Water\nCarnival. If so, get a detachable row-\nboat motor and make your rowboat n\nmotor boat. They are economical and\nany lady can operate them I am agent\nfor the Koban and Motorow outboard\nmotoi'B. The Koban 2-cylinder 3- h.p,\nIs the heat and only 2-cylinder outboard   motor   made.    No   vibration.\nComplete, ready to run $115\nIf you wish a single cylinder 2-h.p.\nget a Motorow\u2014the only detachable\nreversible rowboat motor made. Complete, ready to run $95\nTHOMAS SARGENT\nMotor  Boat   Supplies\n506 Stanley St., Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 44 P.O. Box 172\nNOTICE\nW. Cutler's Auction and\nSales Rooms\nwill be open every day from D o'clock\nto 6, from now on. This week we\nhav0 on sale large \"Hall\" safe, office\ndesk 8 ft. x2xl0, Biinsmcad baby grand\npiano, also a Mason & Rlsch (good as\nnew), two incubators, Peerless 200-egg\nand Mnndy Lee l-'O-egg; low down\ncombination closet, 1 wagon.\nFurniture,.new and second-hand, always on sale.\nUnequalled for General Use.\na*\nW. P. TIERNEV, General Sale. Agent,\nNelson, B. C,\nCars shipped to all railway points.\nUse\nti\ntt\nPaint\nFOR   SPRING   PAINTING\nThii  is the beet ready-mixed  paint we can  buy and we carry a wide\nrange of colors to choose from\nFOR FLOORS USE IRONITE FLOOR PAINT   ^\nIt li noted for its hardneii and durability\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co. Ltd.\nWholesale fetid Retail.\nNelson B. C.\nNELSON LAWYER\nTO HOLD ENQUIRY\nC. K, 'Hamilton, K, C, Goes to Fernie\nto  Decide if Overman Shall\nLose Certificate\nTo hold a conn of enquiry for tbe\nprovincial govornnidnt at Fernie, C. R.\nHamilton, K. C, will leave on tbe Crow\nboat this  morning.\n'He will decide If an overman who Is\ncharged with having allowed a ropo\nwhich he knew to be broken to bo\nused for three weeks, with thc result\nthat a man was killed, shall retain his\ncertificate.\nODD FELLOWS TO CELEBRATE\nANNIVERSARY BY DEBATE\n: On April 24 tiie Odd Fellows will\ncelebrate the ninety-fifth anniversary\nof Odd fellowship in tho form of a social- They will meet the Sister Re-\nbekahs in a debate, the subject of\nwhich ls \"Woman Suffrage.\" Keen\nInterest is heing taken on both sides\nIn getting the teams together. The\nbalance of the evening will be spent\nsocially.\nTO HOLD STEAMER FOR\nBENEFIT OF RANCHERS\nThrough the courtesy of the Canadian Pacific railway the steamer Moyle\nwill be held in Nelson tomorrow afternoon until 4 o'clock on the occasion\nof the -annual general meeting of the\nshareholders of the Kootenay Fruit\nGrowers' union.\nMr. and Mrs. B. C. Hay left in Saturday evening for two weeks' visit to\nthe coast cities.\nForewarned Is to Be\nForearmed\nThe prudent man takes no risk.\nInsure Against Fire\nI cover Dwellings, Barns, Stables,\nOffices, Warehouses and their contents.\nn. E. DILL\n17 K.W.C. Blook, Nelson, I). C.\nTHE\nGEM\nTHE      QUALITY      PHOTOPLAY\nHOUSE\nTONIGHT!\nThe Special Feature In Two Parts\nThe Witch\nof Salem\nA satisfying story, new and pleasing in its development and whose\nsituations aro of strong interest.\nTho settings aro in close harmony\nwith historical*!ncldents as we now\nknow them,\n\"HIS SISTER'S KIDS\"\nA brilliant Keystone comedy..\n\"THE REAL MOTHER\"\nA conventional story of merit.\nTuesday,   St.   Patrick's   Day\u2014The\nGreat Two-Ree|  Feature\n\"THE   HEART   OF   KATHLEEN\"\nTO PAY, EXPENSES\nOF PRINCESSES\nCarnival  Company Wilt  Be   Host of\nVtaKttig Royalty From Other\nCities.\nPrincesses from points in Kootenay\nand Boundary who aro elected to attend Chahko Mik-, in Nelson aud take\npart iu the festivities will have their\nexpenses to and from Nelson and while\nin the city paid by the carnival company and the freedom of tho city,\nwhich means free mlmission to anything that may be taking place will\nbe ^jyen .to them.\nIt Is also proposed (hat the Chahko\nMIka company should award each\nprincess, who will lie elected by the\np-iople of the district which she will\nrepresent, a gold medal or some film-\nilar-strophy. as a memento of the occasion.\nIDAHOlSHERIFF\n:- LANDS HIS MAN\nTraces Escaped Prisoner from Wallace\nand Captures  Him  at\nRevelstoke\nAfter breaking jail at Wallace, Idaho,\nwhore be was serving a from -threo to\n15 years' sentence for robbery and attempted murder, H, Anderson was captured at Revelstoke ou Thursday night\nby Sheriff Thomas McCa-be of Wallace\nand was hroug*ht In to Nelson on Saturday night. The sheriff, who was a\nguest at the Hume, left With his prisoner on the Crow boat yesterday\nmorning.\nAnderson broke out of jail by Using\na file. H-c was found guilty of sJioot\nIng a watchman who attempted to\ncapture him when he bad broken into\na store.\nSEVENTY-FIVE  MEMBERS\nATTEND INSTITUTE MEETING\nExcellent Address to Women's Institute by Mrs. William Rutherford-\nMusical Program Rendered.   \u2022\nOver 75 members attended the regular monthly meeting of the Nelson\nand District Women's institute, which\nwas held In Knights of Pythias hall\non Saturday afternoon. Mrs. William\nRutherford addressed the gathering on\ngardening. The beautlfication of city\nlots was the gist of .her address, and\nsho dwelt with the methods which\nshould be adopted In cultivating a garden on either a level or a rocky lot\nin the city. She produced sketchei\nto show how city property could be\ndealt with to the.best advantage, and\nshe described different methods of\ntastefully arranging shrubs and flow-\nera in a garden. At the close of her\naddress many questions were put to\nMrs. Rutherford and a lively discussion took place. A vote of thanks was\npassed to the speaker and on behalf\nof the institute .Mrs. Rutherford was\npresented with a bouquet of carnations by the president, Mrs. Hugh\nRoss. A piano duet by Miss Ina\nSteed and Miss Mau<j Simons, and\nviolin solo hy Miss M. Winter were\nrendered during the afternoon.\nA very enjoyable time was spent\nyesterday at R. Mariano's home, Robson street, the occasion being the\nchristening of Mr. and Mrs. Mariano's\nbaby iboy. About 50 friends sat down\not a real Italian dinner, after which\ndancing way lu order.\nJUST   ARRIVED\nFRESH   STOCK  OF\nColumbia\nRed Top\nIgnition\nBatteries\nJ. H. Ringrose\nElectrical  Contractor\n304 Baker St Reid Block\nFIRE!\nAnother houso burnt yesterday and the owner is congratulating himself that he had protected himself with an insurance\npolicy.\nHow About Yourself ?   Are You Protected ?\nIt costs but little. On a house, taking the basis rate in Nelson,\nyou would have to pay for 250 years before you paid out $1,000.\nIs It not well to put on even $1,0007\nBe Advised.   Do It Now\nCITY PROPERTY. FRUIT LANDS. INVESTMENTS\nFIRE. LIFE. ACCIDENT AND EMPLOYER*\nLIABILITY  INSURANCES.\n(.     I        BONOS. 8TOCKS. SHARES. .'\nChas. F. McHardy\n__\u25a0,.._.     \u2122E GREEN BLOCK, NELSON, B.C.        .  \/,'V   ,\nAttention\nTo Your\nEyes!\nDo You\nFrom      \/j\nHeadaches \/\nDo you wlsii Io have your eyes\nefficiently attended to and proper\nlens' fitted?\nWe are prepared to give you a\nmost thorough examination and fill\nyour prescription the same day wltb\nTorrlc, Minlseus or Kryptok lens.\nAll Repairs Accurately and\n.   Promptly  Executed'     'it\nJ. O. Patenaude\nOPTICIAN\nMANUFACTURING JEWELER\nAND WATCHMAKER ,\nTrinity Stihfehine Mission txa.tid will\nmeet tomorrow afternoon in the\njhurcb parlor8 after Sunday school.\nChemical Fertilizers]\n1 \u25a0.'       '  \u25a0\".     \u25a0 .\u25a0\"\u2022\u25a0  <**\u25a0' \u25a0\u25a0 :' \u2022-\u25a0 '<\nWe have Nitrate of Soda, Muriate a\nPotash. Sulphate of Potash, Basic 8laJ\n.Superphosphate Off Lime, also the i\noral   mixtures, viz.:\n'-\"A\"    Brand   Complete   Fertilizer\nHay. Lawns and Grain;\n\u25a0*B\"    Brand   Complete    Fertilizer\nBerries, Tree Fruits, etc.\nThe Rrackman-Kci\nMilling Co., Limited\nNo Longer\nDetract\nfrom\nAppearance\nIn many cases they imin.-oTe. The\ndeep curved Torlc Lens gives a wider\nfield of vision and looks much better\ntjfian the flat lens. ...\nR. L. DOUGLASS\nThe Graduate Optician and Optometrist.\nCertified hy a Provincial Board of\nExaminers Ln Optometry.\nRoom 18, K.W.C. Block.\nModerately Priced\nCrosses and Rosaries\nCom0 in and see our special assort!\nment of crosses and rosaries, lateljl\nreceived. This assortment has heen\ncarefully selected for Quality, artistic]\nmerit and workmanship. f\nThey are made of 14k solid gold\nand include many new deBlgnB in\nBright, Roman and EngliBh finish!\nSomo are perfectly plain, others exj\nquisitely engraved, and others fletwItM\nprecious stones. 1\nThe following prices are surprising!\nly moderate:\nCrosses .. ..*  7Ec to $20.0Q|\nIloBarles  $1.00 to |5.0C|\nJ. J. Walker\nJeweler and Optician\nBiker St. Nelion, B.C,|\nExpert Watch Repairing\nFREE\nThree Cakes of\nPalm  Olive   Soap\nEACH  15c PER CAKE, ABSOLUTELY GIVEN  AWAY\nFor a limited period we will give to every purchaser of a 50c Jar of Palm Olive Cream 3 cakes of the above soap\nPalm Olive Shampoo  .50c per bottle\nPuro Castile Soap, 2 tb, bars, por bar 30b\nPure Castile Soap, 2*>*o lb, bars, per bar  35c\nWoodbury's Facial Soap, per cako   25c\n\u2022Tergen's Violet Glycerine Soap, per box of 3 cakes 35c\nEno's Fruit Salt, per bottle  *.  .85c\nMoth Balls, per lb 20o\n\"Whale Oil Soap, per lb ,2&c\nPRESCRIPTIONS\nLet us be your dispensers.    Wc use only the purest\nchemicals.    Wc do our work accurately.\nCity Drug -& Stationery Co. Tc0N'\nPHONE 34\nNelson's   New  and   Up-to-Date   Store\nMAIL ORDERS  PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO\nP.O. -JOX 1083\nralATTRACT OLD\nTIMERS TO CARNIVAL\nProposal    la   Made   mat    Kootenay-\nBoundary Banquet of Coast Men\nShould Be Held Here.\nEfforts to arrange for the attendance\nof at least GO of the pioneers of Kootenay and Houndary, now residing at\nthe coast, at Chahko Mika, where the\nanimal \"Kootenay-Boundary\" banquet,\nnow held at Vancouver- would be held\nthis year, are to be made by the old-\ntimers committee of the carnival as a\nresult of a suggestion which haB heen\nmade by R. S. Lennie of Vancouver,\nwho is at the Hume.\nThe annual banquet of old-timers\nfrom this district is a largely attended\nevent at Vancouver and it is hojwil\nthat arrangements can be made to pull\noff this event at Nelson this year during Chahko Mlka. If the plan proves\nsuccessful the pioneers will arrive In\nt special car.\nLECTURES TO RANCHERS  -\nH-ERE ON WEDNESDAY\nA short course meeting of the West\nKootenay Farmers-* Institute Will he\nheld, at fettglo hall, Nelson, on Wednesday afternoon at tl o'cloclt, and cv-\n\u25a0\u25a0niu-r at 8 o'clock. The subject at thc\nafternoon session will bo a demon-\n'\u2022ilmllon of pruning by M. S; Middle-\nton and at the evening session a lecture on poultry by J, R. Terry, and on\n[\u2022mail fruit culture by M. S. Middle-\nEon.\nSPANIARDS  IMPORTED TO\nWORK ON CANAL\nfBy Daily Nows Leased Wire)\nOTTAWA, March 15.\u2014The Labor\nloaders have interested themselves In\ntlie report of wholesale Importation of\nSpaniards Into Canada, to work on\ncontracts of the new Welland canal\nand the minister of labor, Hon. T. W.\nCrothers, haB promised to investigate\n\u25a0the charge. .\nIt is said -100 Spaniards arrived *in\nNow York yesterday, bound for Port\nWelland, Ont., to work on section 2\nof the Welland canal for tho English\ncontractors, Baldry, Yordun & Hutchinson.\nIt Is said by local tabor leaders that\nthis is a breach of the fair wage\nclause.\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\nThe quarterly hoard of Trinity\nMethodist church will meet this evening at S oclock.\nChahko Mlka directors will meet at\nChnhko Mika headquarters tit 5\noclock   this afternoon.\nThere will *he a special meeting of\nthe Ladles' Aid of St. Paul's church\nthis afternoon at 3 o'clock.\nIt \\s expected that the estimates for\nthe year will be brought down at this\nevenings meeting (,f the city ouuioi]-.\nBorn on March 15, nt the Kootenay\nLake Maternlt*-1 hospital, to Mr, and\nMrs. Thomas A. Bean, of Proctor, a\nson.\nThe monthly meeting of the school'\nboard will bo held in the dt-- nouncil\nchamber tomorrow evening at S\no'clock.\nTho young people of Trinity Meth-\nodi.-u church will hold a special St.\nPatrick's Day program and social\nthis evening.\nThe regular meeting of kootenay\nlodge No. 1C I. O.-O. F. will be held\ntonight at 7:30 o'clock. The fit'st degree will  be conferred on a class or\ncandidates.\nThe annual - meeting of the\nshareholders -of tlie Kootenay Fruit\nGrowers' union will take place if the\nboard of trade rooms at 11:15 o'clock\ntomorrow morning.\nSTARLAND\nTHEATRE\nHouse of High-Class Features\nSTARLAND ORCHESTRA\nMR. SLADE TAYLOR, Baritone,\nlate of the  Lyric Theatre, Spo-\nkane, In Songs.\nForeign! T.woiPart Feature\nThe Human Eagles\nA  splendid    drama,    replete with\nstirring situations and an Interesting story with specially fine settings and good acting.\nRex Comedy\n\"THE     BOOB'S     DREAM     GIRL\"\nComedy situations galore in this\nunusual picthre.\n\"THE UNIVERSAL WEEKLY\"\nOC lho world's news in pictures.\nComing tomorrow, a Special Program\nFlorence Lawrence In\n\"UNTO   THE    THIRD   -GENERATION\"\nAn   exceedingly   flue   production.\nEXTRA\u2014ED MASON AND SLADE\nTAYLOR   IN  IRISH SONGS\nHALFWAY HOUSE\nOF SESSION  REACHED\nmy Dnlly News Leased Wire.*\n' OTTAWA, March Iii. \u2014 Parliament\nhas now been 'In session for two\nmonths, and the -general feeling is\nthat tho half way point to the goal of\nprorogation is reached.\nThere Is yet considerably more than\nhalf of the work of the session to be\ndealt with, 'including the Wiore important legislation, tho budget and the\nNational Transcontinental railway debate, the CanaitManS Northern railway\nassistance and the bill for agricultural\ncredits. The order paper probably will\nbe cleared by May 15 or 20 at the\nlatest,\nJAPANESE    ADMIRAL    ARRESTED\nfBv Dallv News Leased Wire)\nTOKIO, March 15,\u2014Vlce-Admlral\nTsuru Tafo Matsuo, inspector-general\nOf naval construction on the reserve,\nwas arrested today, charged with complicity tn allege*,] graft In naval expenditures. Admiral Matsuo, who is\n30 years old, graduated fr0in tlle en\"\ngineerlng department of Toklo university in 1885. He served the government abroad for a number of yearB\nand -several times has been decorated.\nOn his retirement he went into business for hfmsplf,\nEmory & Walley\nFit-Reform i Wardrobe\nI     .   I    Ull PI J\nDaily News Want Ads Get Results\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_1914_03_16","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\/1.0385768","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":"1914-03-16 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":"1914-03-16 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":""}]}