{"AIPUUID":[{"label":"AIP UUID","value":"6d467b96-14e8-4124-a260-61ce94e9d217","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":"2019-12-04","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":"1915-03-08","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\/1.0386482\/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":" ^\n\u25a0-\u2014----- --*-'-'\u25a0-\nOAILV   NfWaV\nCLAMIFIIP  AOVBRTISBMRNTS\nAr. An Iffsetlvs Selling Porw\n*  i   i (    \"i, '\nVOL. 13   No. 280\nNELSON, B. C, MONDAY MORNING, MARCH 8, 1916\n'$T4 fER MONTH\nGREEK\nWHEN KING\nPeople Want to Join Fight\nAgainst Turkey\nNEUTRALITYIS\nROYAL POLICY\nDamage to Hditeiiic Interests Irreparable, Says\nRetiring Premier\nfBy Dally Newa teased. Wire.)\nATHENS, March 8; via London.\u2014\nThe Journal Patrls,. whloh Is regarded\nas a Venlzelos organ, gives the following account of the crisis In Greece\nwhich has resulted in the resignation\nof the cabinet Whose policy of intervention i\u00bb opposed by the king:.\n\"During the second sitting of the\ncrown council Venlzelos proposed that\nonly one division of troops had been\nsent to aid the* allies against the Dardanelles, thus overruling the objections raised previously by the military staff that on military grounds\nit was not In the country's Interest\nto join the allies.\n. \"M. Venlzelos then pointed out the\ndanger to which Greece Was exposed\nby the threatening descent of the\nAustro-German forces on the Balkans,\nadding tbat since no guarantee* had\nbeen offered by. Austria or Germany\ntbey would respect Greek interests\nGreece was obliged to join the allies,\nwhohad given such a promise. He\nsaid he was convinced that on the\nallies winning not only were the\npresent possessions of Greece guaranteed aud added that her Interests\nWould gain. - M. - Theotokla, former\npremier and minister ot war, answer\ned:\nPro-German Policy Obsolete.\n'\"I forraedly advocated a pro-German policy, but now- recognize that\nsuch a policy seems obsolete.'\n\"M. Rechallls, a former premier,\nthen addressed the king as follows:\n\" 'Tour majesty knows well that I\nam an opponent of M. Venlzelos. On\nthis occasion, however, I am fully of*\nbis opinion and heartily congratulate\nblm on the nollcy he wishes the country to pursue.'\n\"M. Venlzelos further stated his belief that Bulgaria was ready to Join\nthe allies In an attack on Constantinople. The king nevertheless announced tbat, taking Into consideration the\npresent international position, he considered it not in the country's interest, to abandon neutrality. Therefore\nhe accepted the cabinet's resignation.\" ... .\nInjury Irreparable, Says* Venlzelos.\nLONDON, March 7.\u2014A Reuter despatch from Athens says that M. Venlzelos, speaking in the chamber today, declared that be had advised\nKing Constantlne to send for Zalmes\nto form a new cabinet.\n\"M. Zalmes,\" the retiring premier\nadded, \"will follow the policy of neutrality and I hope that this policy\nwill not endanger our newly acquired\n\u201e. territory.\n11     \"Our party will re'use to support\n\"H any government which may he formed.   Besides, M. Zalmes If he forms\n4   FRENCH TROOPS\n<3> READY   FOR  TURK8\n(By Dailv News Leased Wire.) <*>'\nPABIS, Maroh 7.\u2014The minis- 4\ntry\".of war announces that on. <*>\naccount of the situation In the 4\n(Dardanelles,* and) ln  order (to 4\nmeet every eventuality the gov- 4\nernment has decided to concen- if\ntrate in North Africa en expe- 4\ndltl-nary force- which will' be 4\nready to put to sea at the first 4\nsign that it is needed and will 4\nbe directed.to-the point where 4\nIts presence Is required.\nHouse at Victoria Will Be\nDissolvedToday\nSIR\nMAK\nHUB Mil\na cabinet will not come* before the\nchamber,\" I\nM. Venlzelos told his supporters that\ntho Injury caused hy the failure to\nadopt his policy was irreparable, says\nthe correspondent. He advised them,\nhowever, to submit to the king's decision:\nCabinet at Athens Resigns.\nPARIS, March 7.\u2014A despatch to\nthp Haves agency from: Athens says:\n\"King Constantlne has accepted the\nresignation of Premier Venlzelos and\nhis cabinet and has requested; Alexander Zalmes, governor of the National\nbank and a former premier, to form\na ministry. *\n\"M. Zalmes has asked the king to\ngive him until tomorrow to consult\nwl'h his friends.\n\"The Turkish minister, Sullh Bey,\nhas declared openly during the last\nfew days that massacres would take\nplace In Turkey if Greece broke negotiations with the porte, while Count\nMlrbich, the\" German minister, Informed the diplomatic corps that Austria and Germany would Immediately\ndeclare war on Greece If It moved\nagalhBt Turkey.\"\nReuter's Athens correspondent In\nanother despatch Bays a grand council of former Greek premiers, which\nwas summoned by the king, was presided over by the king personalty.\nKing Disapproved cf Polloy.\nM. Venlzelos and former Premiers\nDragoumls, Theotokls and Rhallisand\nGen. Bousnuinis, chief, of staff, attended. -M, Venlzelos explained at length\nthe policy which his government\nthought it possible to carry out. M.\nDragoumls and M. Rhnlli\u00bb also spoke.\nThe Athens correspondent of the\nHavas agency says the resignation of\nthe cabinet of Premier Venlzelos was\nbrought about because the king did\nnot approve of tbe government's policy regarding Intervention In the war,\nHe gives the following account:\n\"Premier Venlzelos went to the palace at 2:30 o'clock Saturday afternoon\nand remained with the king for more\nthan 30 minutes: The chief of the\n(Continued on Paste Two)\ney&^i>*>QQQQQQ\u00aei&$QQ\u00ae\u00ae\u00aeityWi><s\nTWO TO HANG\nFOR ONE MURDER\n(Bv Dailv Vews i:p\u00absert- Wire, i\nWINNIPEG, March 7.\u2014J. G. i>\ni>   Kusln Was   on   Saturday sen- \u00ab\u25a0\n\u00ab>  fenced to hang on June 9 for the it\nmurder ot Mike KueSlok on a O\ntrain in Selkirk some months it\nago.   A. Malakoff, already sen*' \u00ab\nfenced to death for* the same **>\nmurder, was a witness lh the i>\ntrial. \u2666\nM OBitliiMi'lXi'lW'fttfllt^^it^f*\nON ANOTHER CHK\nUnited   States   Federal   Authorities\nCharge German With Illegal Transportation of Explosives.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire)\nMACHIAS, Me:, MBrcb 7.\u2014Werner\nHorn, the German reservist who at\ntempted to blow up the Internationai\nbridge at Vanceboro early last month\nand asserted that he did so as \"an\nact of war\" against Great Britain, be*;\ncame a federal prisoner tonight. He\nwill be taken to Bangor tomorrow tor\narraignment on indictments charging!\nIllegal transportation ot explosives\nfiom New York to Vanceboro, returned by a federal grand jury In Boston.\nHorn has just finished a sentence\nof 30 days ln the Washington county\nJail here on account of property damage in Vanceboro caused by tbe explosion at the Canadian end ot the\nbridge. He will have a hearing In\nBangor tomorrow.\nProceedings tor the extradition et\nHorn to Canada, on the charge of attempting to blow up the bridge, wbbh\nwere Instituted ln Portland on behalf\nof the Canadian government, will be,\ndelayed until the federal indictment\nhas been disposed of.\nDate and Cabinet Changes\nto Be Given Out in*,\nDay or Two\n(By Daily News teased Wire.)\nVICTORIA, B. C\u201e March 7.\u2014At the\nprorogation of the provincial legislature at Victoria Saturday Sir Richard\nMcBride announced that the house\nwould be dissolved on Monday. He\nsaid that within a day or two he\nwould announce the date of a new\nelection and possibly some minor\nchanges In the cabinet. It Is expected\nthat tbe election will occur Id April.\nHon, Price Ellison, who; la quite\naged and may soon be appointed a\nsenator, will probably drop out of\nthe cabinet.\nNo selection has yet been made for\nminister of finance and agriculture.\nTHOUSAND SHELLS TO\nWOUND ONE RUSSIAN\nAustrlans Expend Much Ammunition*\nat Przemysi\u2014Violent Fire Is Directed Against Aeroplanes.\nfBy Dnllv News Leased Wire.)\nPETROGRAD, Maroh 7, via London.\n\u2014The ollowlng statement was issued\nSaturday:\n\"The garrison at Przemysi no longer ts attempting sorties, but the fortress artillery is developing great' activity and firing an enormous quantity of heavy shells. The fire, however, Is quite harmless.\n\"A thousand heavy shells from the\nfortress have only wounded one man.\n\"The Austrlans are directing a particularly violent fire against our aeroplanes, which fly over the fortress\nalmost dally. We brought down on\nMarch S a German albatross machine\nat the station of Zokolka and captured tbe aviators.\n\"As the Germans require Russian\nprisoners from whom they may obtain information concerning locations\nof our forces on the noitb bank of\nthe Vistula, they are offering a reward ot $25 for each Russian soldier\ncaptured. On March 6 we captured\na German lieutenant with a party of\nvolunteers wbo were out seeking Russian prisoners.''\nGerman Losses Important,\nFrench Declare\nPORTUGUESE MINISTER OUT\n(Ry Dally Newa Leased Wire.)\nPARIS, March 7.\u2014A Lisbon de-\nrpatch to the Havas agency says the\nminister of finance in the Portuguese\nca! lnet has resigned and that the mln*.\nistci of foreign affairs has taken over\nhis department.\nGERMANS LAUNCH FRESH\nATTACK SOUTH OF WARSAW\n(By Dally News teased Wire.)\nLONDON, March 7.\u2014Russia still has\nanother- battle on its hands. While it\nIs declared to be pressing its offensive in north Poland and eastern Galicia and holding up the Austrlans tn\nth* Oarpaihhns, the Germans have\nUuinohed ah attack in the. region of\nthe Piilca river, to the south of Warsaw, where a big battle-Is developing.\nIn north; Poland, the Russians declare they are still forcing back the\nGermans but Berlin asserts that the\noperations there are proceeding \"according to our plans.\"\nfn the itaw(i region Berlin says that\nBJ4TO- prisoners dnd It* machine gun*\nwere taken from the Russians.\nIn the Carpathian region brisk\nfUmiiht a*. cilntlnue*i with victories\nchrtnlcM by bath tbe Russian and\nAutsttrhui war offices.\nSMMmely' heavy snowstorms in Hie\nCarpathians have stopped military\noperations Wmtfettty, Wenwhen*, the\nopposing lines are in close contact,\nsays a VenloS despatch to Rbuter's.\nTh* Austro-Hungarlan troops are reported to be suffering severely be-\noauss of. tb* sudden change ln weather\n.Iter-Hie rosseh tHar flkgny of them are\ntheir lines of communication Have been\ncut off by the snow.\nPush Ruse Offensive\nPETROGRAD, March 7, via London.\n\u2014The Russian war office issued the\nfollowing statement tonight:\n\"Our offensive continues on. the; left\nbank of the Niemen and in the district\nnorth of Grodno. Our troops drove\nthe Germans back behind the front ot\nSopotskln-Lypskov and then pushed\non vigorous'*\/. *\n\"In a Similar manner the Mlawa attacks were crowned with success. We\ntook about BOO prisoners, including\nseven officers and three machine guns.\n\"On the left bank of the Vistula, in\nthe region oi ths Pl'lca, the fighting\nis assuming the character ot a great\nbattle.-\". \u2022'\n\"Tn the Carpathians, between tbe\nOndawa and San rivers, the Austrian\nattacks continue. Southwest of Tuto-\nwlsk i the enemy tried, to cross to tbe\nright bank of the San, But in a ooun-\nter-attaok Saturdav night the Austrian units which had succeeded In\nrossln* the fiver were annihilated.\"\nRussian Night Attacks Repulsed\nVttNNAtvia Eondbn. Maroh 7i 9:40'\n(Contlousfl on Fags Twol\nBISHOP fALLON\nDENIES JUDGMENT\nAsserts   Fsthsr   Beaudein   Was   Not\nAwarded Any Sum Against Him,\nAs Was Alleged\nMONTREAL, March 7.\u2014Right Rev.\n.Mr. Fallon of London has denied categorically an article despatched from\nMontreal on Feb. 19 in which It was\nalleged that bis lordship must pay oft\nan Indemnity of $7,000 stated to have\nbeen awarded by Rome to Rev. Father\nL. A. Beaudoin, parish priest -of Notre\nDame du Lac. Walkervllle, Ont. The\naward waa said to be the result ot an\naction, taken by the parish priest\nagainst the bishop because the latter\nbad taken part ot Father Beaudoln's\nparish and added to. another the detached district containing a school on\nwhich the parish priest had spent\n112,000 to 114,000.\nBishop Fallon Bays the story Is false\nand wltbout foundation and that\nFather Beaudoin was not awarded\njudgment ot $7,000 or any other sum\nagainst himselt\nFOUR KILLED IN ELECTRIC\nTRAIN COLLISION IN EAST\nALBION, N. Y., March 7.\u2014Four per*\nsons are dead and two Injured as the\nresult of a collision this afternoon between an East Buffalo, Lockpirr. A\nRochester baggage express int* urban\ncar and a Southern passenger automobile at Knowlesvllle, s'x miles west\nof here. Three were Instantly killed;\ntbe* fourth dying an hour later.\nM44&pQ4Q*fTHHrws*f$m,\n* *\n\u00ab HAMILTON GAULT ... <$\n\u00ab                  WOUNDED IN ARM   <s>\n\u2666' \u2014  - i\n* (Canadian Associated Press.) *\n*'     LONDON.   Maroh   7.\u2014Major  \u2666\n* Hamilton Gault of the Princess *\n4 Patricias was admitted to the <$\n4> Shornclldfo hospital Saturday <***)\nw suffering from a bullet wound  4\n* Iri.the right forearm. <\u00bb\n'*\u25a0\n(MURE OF BRITISH\nTRENCH IS MED\nAllies   make   Progress  in\nVosges*, Repulse Enemy's\nAttacks\nPARIS, March 7.\u2014Tho following official statement woo Issued today:\n\"Wo continued to gain ground to the\nnorth of Arras. In the region of Notre\nDame de Loretto, where our counter*\nattacks resulted lh the seizure of sev.\neral trenches, the enemy's losses were\nimportant\n\"Ih Champagne we progressed slightly north of Perthes and northwest of\nBeausjour.\nIn the Vosges we captured successively West of Munster two summits of little, and great Reich Acker-\nkopf. The enemy twice counter-attacked from Mulbach and Saint Olla-\nfwehr, that io, from the south and the\nnorth. Theso attacks were completely\nrepulsed. Moreover on tho right bank\nof the Fecht rivor. we tbok Imberg,\nsoutheast of Fultzern. This success\nwas completed further north hy tho\ncapture of Hill 866, south of Him tc-\nsliuttes. Finally at Hartmansweller\nwe repulsod a counter-attack by a German battalion which lost heavily and\nleft many prisoners in our hnds.\n\"In Belgium In the dunes our artillery has executed effective firing on\nthe heavy batteries of Westende. In\nChampagne in the ravlno to tho northwest of Beausjour a German counterattack has been repulsed. Rain, which\nhas fallen all day has caused a slackening in the operations.\" y-\nGerman Attacks Near Arras Fail.\nPARIS, March 7, 11:40 p.m.\u2014The\nfollowing official .-,*\u2022>tement was issued\nthis evening:\n\"To the north of Arras, at Notre\nDame Loretto, the Germans attempted\na counter-attack which did not succeed. Subsequently tliey delivered an-:\nother attack which also failed.\n\"In Champagne, to the west of\nPerthes, wo gathed a footing ln a\nstrongly fortified wood, capturing prisoners to the north of tho samo village.\n\"We repulsed a  counter-attack on\nthe ridge to the northeast of Le Mesnil.\nGround was gained and wo. carried an\naher trench to the north of Beausjour.\nMake Progress in Vosges.\n\"In the forest of Consenvoye. north\n(Continued on Page Two.)\n\u2022*\u00abV'\nINNER iMS OE\nFILES HARD TO RE\n<v   GERMANY BUILDS\n*<\u2022*> NEW SUBMARINES\n(By Dailv News Leased Wire.)\nCOPENiHiAGBN, March 7, via\nLondon.\u2014Germany is reported\nhere, on what appears to be\ngood authority, to ha building at\nKiel is mnall submarines of a\nnew type, which will be used\nfor reeonnolterlng the home\nconst ln the Baltic sea. Etch\nof the submarines, It Is said,\nwill carry a. crew of eight men.\n* Fifteen-Inch Guns of Queen Elizabeth Are Trained on\nStrong Defenses on Asiatic Side, After Having\ni.-f\n\u2022?.*<.>fW^P*^.*^,V.*.rf*lJv%v.v.v,v.v.V,-yiX^^*^e.,\nQUEBEC BILINGUISTS GIVE\nAID TO ONTARIO FRENCH\n(By Dally News Leased Wire)\nOTTAWA, March 7.\u2014*P. E. La-\nmarche, M.P.; Hon. Thomas Chapals,\nM.LA. of Quebec, speaker of the senate; Senator Belcouit and Dr. Barll\nof Montreal, president of the Catholic Association of Young French.\nCanadians, were speakers at a meeting held here tonight to explain to\nthe French-Canadians of Ontario the\nreason their compatriots in Quebec\nare coming to their assistance ln the\nbilingual fight. This was the first\nof a series of meetings to be held with\nthe object of currying the school case\nto the high courts.\nDamaged Those on European Shore\nSUE\nAN WANTS\nOS\nAY AT CONSTANTINOPLE\nCERiN OFFICERS ARE TO CONDUCT DEFENSE\nPopulace Grows Alarmed,  Disbelieving Government\nStories\u2014Foreigners in Danger-British Ships Shell\nSmyrna, Hit Forts-Marines Suffer Losses in\nFight With Turks on Land\nBERLIN\nHEARS MANY\nII\ne)\ni,   WIND DESTROYS\n\u25a0\u00bb GERMAN  DIRIGIBLE i>\n<* \u2014 \u00ab\n<3*   (By Daily News Leased Wire.) it\n<S>      GENEVA   March   7.\u2014Count 4\n4   Zeppelln> arrived at Frlederlchs- <S*\n4   haven Saturday to hasten the 4\n4  completion of two zeppelln bal- it\n4   loons which are now building, it\n\u2022**\u00bb      One of them will be ready ih \u00ab\n4   a few days; it is stated,\n<**>      It is confirmed that one zep-\n*   pelin was destroyed and another <\u2022>\n<*\u00bb   badly damaged at Odogne dur- -\u00ae\nIng a windstorm   which   blow <5>\ndown the balloon sheds.\n'*^t,*\/9wti*e*9MfeS\u00bb.\n\u2022i,t**$e\u00bbi944494W444*4<l4**>\u00bb\nLiners Hurry to Aid of La-Tourslns\u2014\nBlase Less 8erious Than\nFeared   *\n(By Dolly News Leased Wire.)\nPARIS, March 7,\u2014Fire which\nthreatened tho French, steamship Ln\nTouralnc has beon brought under control and all passengers are safe on\nboard, according to a formal announcement Issued at noon today by\nthe- Compagnle* Genorale Transstlan-\ntlque, owner ot the La Touralnc. The\nvessel Is proceeding under her own\nsteam to Havre, her destination, and\nIs expected to arrive there, tomorrow\nnight.\nOnly the Rotterdam, whioh responded to Captain Caussln's wireless call\nfor old, Is standing by as a measure\nof precaution to give assistance.\nCommanders of other vessels which\nspeeded to the rescuo havo been informed that their services will not\nbe required.\nTbe statement given out by the\ncompany said:\n\"The flro which broke opt aboard\nthe La Touralnc was less serious than\nwas at first thought The-flro is under control and all passengers sal**-.\n\"The La Touralne has resumed Her\nvoyage to Havre under hor own steam,\nbut, nevertholoss, for further security,\nshe Is being escorted by the Rotterdam and probably will arrive at\nHavre Monday evening.\"\nAccording to officials ot the company tbey have not been Informed\nWhat caused tho fire. They assert,\nhowever, that tho flames were confined to one of tho departments,in the\nbold. It* was feared for* a time that' It\nmight bo nocessary to transfer the\npassengers to another ship to avoid\ndanger; but tills plan evidently was\nabandoned when It wus seen the blaze\nWas being mastered,\nMore Thvn  8even  German   Plungers\nLost 8inee Beginning of Paper\nBlockade of Britain\nisv Dally Newa Leased Wire.)\nLONDON. Match 7.\u2014A despatch to\nthe Exchange Telegraph from Amsterdam says:\n\"A correspondent of the Berliner\nTageblatt declares that since the beginning of the blockado seven British\nmerchantment have been, sunk but. ad-\nmlt-i that according to news received\nln Berlin from neutral sources more\nthnn seven German submarines have\nbeen sunk during the same period.\nThe German admiralty, the Exchange correspondent says, publishes\nnn Information concerning thc loss ot*\nsubmarines.\nRUSSIANS AND TURKS\nENGAGE IN CAUCASUS\n(By Dally News Leased Wiro)\nPETROGRAD, March 7.\u2014The following statement was Issued tonight:\n\"The staff of the army of tiie Caucasus under date of Mareh 6, says that\nengagements continue In the region\nbeyond the Choruk and south of Khoi\nIn other directions there Is no change\nIn the situation.\"\nFOUR DAYS WITHOUT FOOD\nOR DRINK, MINERS RE8CUED\nHINTON, W. Vs., March 7.\u2014Forty-\ntwo miners were rescued Saturday\nfrom the workings of the Lnylend\nmine-, wre-kod by an exp'oslon on\nTuesday, The men hsd been four\ndays and nights without food or drink.\nAUSTRIA HAY CEDE\nTERRITORY TO ITALY\n.Rome Expected to Press Demands lm\nsistently\u2014No Negotiations Be*\ngun, So Far aa Known.\n!       (By Dolly News Leased Wire.)\nI BERLIN, March 7, via London.\u2014\nThe Italian situation Is occupying the\nattention of serious-minded men.\nNewspapers, Including the Koelnlsche\nZeltung, the Frankfurter Zeltung and\nLokal Anzelger, give prominence to\nlong despatches from Rome which\ndwell upon the Insistence with which\nItaly Is apt to press demands for territorial compensation tor possible Austrian gains in the Balkans. These despatches also emphasize the extent\nof popular feeling on this subject\nwhich Is expected to find expression\nin the policy of the government.\nSo far as can be ascertained no\nnegotiations have been begun.\nThe attitude of Austria In case such\ndemands are made Is problematical.\nA few weeks ago it seemed a* if any\nsuggestion along this line would he\nmet with a flat refusal to cede an\nInch of Austrian territory, no matter\nby what euphonious phrase, such as\n\"frontier regulation,\" It might be designated. At tbe present time, however, there are signs that Austria Is\nmore inclined to enter into the discussion provided the Italian proposals\nare not presented In too brusque a\nform.\nfRv Pally New* Lensed Wire.)\nLONDON, March 7.\u2014Tho allied fleet\ncontinues the bombardment of the forts\nof the Dardanelles, the forcing of which\nwould mako such great changes In the\nNear East\u2014chnnges which It Is considered nono of tlio Balkan states, and\nlenst of all Greece, can afford to treat\nslightingly.\nHaving damaged two oc. tho forts\non the European side of the narrows\npreviously the British battlesMp Queen\nElizabeth and others of the allied warships Saturday started n bombardment\nhy indirect fire on tho forts on the\nAsiatic side of the narrows. As had\nbeen expected these forts are proving\nhard nuts to crock. In addition tho\nTurkish army with modern German\nguns is concentrating on the Gallipoll\npeninsula to oppose any landing and,\nuntil It Is disposed of, naval experts\ndeclare ships will not bo safe in the\nstraits.\nGermans to Defend Constantinople.\n\"According to the latest advices received here,\" says a Reuter despatch\nfrom Sofia \"the sultan nnd the government are still in Constantinople.\nThe government is prepared to oross to\nAsia Minor at any moment but tho\nsultan Is In favor of remaining at the\ncapital.\n\"It is understood that It has been\ndecided to entrust the defense of Constantinople exclusively to tho Germans\nunder Commandor Gen. Lyman von\nSanders, the Instructor of the Turkish\narmy, while Bedri Boy, tho prefect of\npolice, will bo entrusted with tho general control of tho city, with power\nequivalent to that of a viceroy.\n\"Measures of .precaution already\nhave been adopted to prevent the capture of tho city,   it is reported that all\nATTACK ON\nTURKEY\nCONCERNS ITALY\nRome Newspaper Representing Majority In Government Gives Reasons\nfor Intervention,\n(By Daily News Leased Wire)\nROME, Marcil 7, via Paris\u2014The\nGlornalo d'It alia which, although It Is\nnot tho official government organ, represents the political majority supporting -the cabinet, in an editorial argues\nthat It Will be difficult for Italy longer\nto remain neutral, deolarlng tliat the\nattack of tho allied fleet on tho Dardanelles has brought up three great\nproblems affecting Italian interests.\n\"The first of these problems,\" tho\npaper says, \"is the plan to allow Russia\naccess to the Mediterranean through\nthe Dardanelles; the second concerns\nthe equilibrium of the Balkans and the\nthird the partition of Asiatic Turkey,\nwhich affects tho equilibrium of the\neastern Mediterranean.\nIt is impossible for Italy , to keep\nout or the solution of such problems,\nunless It la satisfied to see not only the\npowers of tho triple entente settle\ntheso affairs according to their interests but also the small but audacious\nand resolute nation, Qroece.\"\nthe troops at Adrianople and Derao-\ntlka have been hurriedly despatched to\ntho Gallipoll peninsula.'*\nTelegraphing from Cairo tho Mall's\ncorrespondent says:\n'During the retreat of the Turks after the recent Suez operations the German officers had an open conflict With\ntheir allies and 3000 of the allies were\nkilled in a single fray rear Jerusalem..**\nPeople Afraid; Massacre Talked of.\nThe Mail's correspondent at Sofia\nsends the following:\n'Refugees from Constantinople indicate that tho populace Is alarmed by\nthe allied attempts on the Dardanelles\nand refuse to believe the government's\nassurances of safety In Constantinople-,\nwhich is crowded with refugees from\nthe Marmora coast. The authorities\nare suspicious of all foreigners and\nChristians, even Germans being In a\nprecarious position.\n\"The authorities are seizing all the\ngold in the possession of Individuals,\nfirms and banks. There is fear of a\nmassacre. Tho vicinity ot Constantinople is beln^ constantly strengthened\nwith trenches and  fort If 1 cations.'1\nReach Marmora in Two Weeks.\nAn Athens despatch to the Chronicle\nsays:\n\"Bombardment of the Dardanelles\nforts proceeds with success but with\ncaution. It is now hoped that within\ntwo weeks the allied fleet will be In\nthe sea of Marmora and Constantinople\nwill quickly follow.\n\"In the first place the number of\nmines laid in the straits is enormous.\nThey must all be picked up and the\nwork takes time. The Turks seem to\nhave learned a lesson from the Germans, for they are using floating mines\nto be floatod out to sea.\n\"These swirl around tho capes at\nthe mouth of the straits. Some of them\nhave been picked up as far away as\nTenedos island. Secondly the larger\nTurkish batteries are still fully hidden and it Is necessary to knock out\neach  gun  individually.\n\"Tho latest advices aro that something like 50 gune have been destroyed\nalready.\" j\nAttack Principal Ports.\nLONDON, March 7.\u2014The British\nbattleships Queen Elizabeth and\nPrince George and the battle cruiser\nInflexible, with their eight 15-inch\nguns and an even dozen 12-inch guns,\non Friday opened an attack on the\n(Continued on Page Two)\nITALIAN CONSUL $\nAT CALGARY CHARGED <S>\n  \u2666\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.) ^\nCALGARY, Alta., March 7.\u2014 $\nBail   has    been    refused Louis $\nHoz, the Italian consular agont ^\nwho Is charged by his country- $\nmen with having mis&pproprl- ^\nated $5000 contributed by Cal- $\ngary Italian workingmen to the <S>\nfund  for the  relief of Italians <&\nmade destitute by   the   .recent <$\nearthquake. 4\u00bb\nBRITISH-INDIAN TROOPS\nWHIP TURKS HAND-TO-HAND\n0\n4 RUMANIA MAY BE \u2022\u2022>\n<*-\u2022* PLACED IN SIEGE STATE ->\n*                           \u00ab\n\u00ab*\u00bb (By Dally Now* Lowed Wire,) i\n4 LONDON, Maroh 8.\u2014A' des- \u2022$>\n4 patch  to   tho  Telegraph  trom <\u00a3\n-J, Bucliarcsl says the Rumanian <$\n4 parliament  ha\u00bb  pniwod a  law *\nit empowering tlio government to <$>\n<\u2022* proclaim a state of alego until i\nit tho ond of tho war, if suoh a i>\nit step should bo necessary. *>\n'\u2022' \u2666\n4*WWW9*'W9*)*Wtoe#\u00abi*)WViN\n(By Dally Newa Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, March 8.\u2014Brltlsh troops\noccupying tho head of tho Persian gulf\nlocated two Turkish forces accompanied by hostile tribesmen during the\npast week and in tho fighting which\nfollowed heavy casualties wero inflicted on the Turks and tholr allies, while\nthe British also suffered heavily, according to a report of tho fighting issued last night by tho Marquis of\nCrewe, secretary of state for India.\nThe statement says:\n\"Por somo time it had been known\nthat about two or three roglments of\nTurkish troops, together with Turkish\nBent Tarn tribesmen from Amara (on\nthe Tigris river), with contingents of\nPersian tribesmen and other dlsaf-\nfcotod tribesmen hostile to the sheik\nof Mbhammerah, had boen collecting\nwest of Ahwas (In Khuzlstan) and the\nAhwuz garrison was despatched on a\nroconnalsanoe in force to ascertain\ntheir numbers and disposition,\n\"On Maroh 3 tho enemy, whloh had\nboen located at Ghudlr, and which ap*\nparentlv had been further reinforced\nthe previous day, turned out In great!\nstrength, Iti number was estimated!\nat about 12,000. In the course of our I\nwithdrawal the enemy made repeated I\nand determined to cut off tho recon-\nnoltoring party.\nHand t*. Hand Fights Bloody\n\"Several hand to hand encounters\ntook plaoe, in which tho attackers*were\nsuccessfully held at bay while our\nparty made good its retirement From\nreports received and supported* by tho\nabsence of all further activity it appears that the enemy lost no less than\nfrom 200 to 200 killed, Including\nbrothers of the sheik of the Benl Tiur-\neofs, besides from BOO to 600 wounded.\nOur casualties wero: British officers:\nkilled 5 .wounded 3; British rank and\nfile, klllel 1, wounded G*. Indian officers, killed 1, wounded 4* Indian rank\nand file, killed 65, wounded 115.\n\"On the samo dato a cavalry recon-\nnaisanco was mado ln the direction of\nNakata, about 25 miles northwest of\nBasin, on the Persian gulf. The re-\nconn- Iterers on returning to camp were\nfollowed by a body of some 1,500 hostile horsemen. This enemy force was\nskilfully drawn on to a concealed post*\ntion occupied by infantry with machine\ngum and field artillery. The enemy\nfie-I bacli to Nakala after suffering;\nheavily. Our 'oases In this fighting\nwere: British officers, killed 4, wounded 2; Indian officers, killed 2, rank\nand file killed 4.\"\n PAGE TWO\nCt)e Bail)? jlto.\nMONDAY, MAIJCH 8, 1915\nNEURALGIA SETTLED\nIN HER LUNGS\n.    No Relief From The Pain Until\nShe Took \"Fruit-a-tives\"\nCAMPBBWV1W.5, OnU., MAVSth. 1913.\n\"I cannot speak too highly of\n\"Fruit-a-tives\". For over thirty years,\nI have suffered from chronic Neuralgia\nand Constipation, experiencing untold\nagony. The Neuralgia settled in iny\nlungs and I took bottles of medicine\nwithout relief. The doctor told me I\nwould not get better but \"Fruit-a-\ntives\" proved that the doctor was\nwrong by giving me quick relief and\nfinally  and completely curing me.\n\"I would not have my present health\nif it were not for \"Fruit-a-tives\" and\nI am glad of this opportunity of giving\nyou this letter about such a splendid\nremedy as \"Fruit-a-tives\".\nMrs. NATHAN DUNN.\n50c. a box, 6 for J2.50, trial size, 25c.\nAt all dealers or sent on receipt of price\nby Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa.\nWe Have\nShipped Our\nGoods\nas far west as Victoria\u2014as far east\nas Medicine Hat\u2014as far south as\nSpokane\u2014as far north as Fort\nGeorge.\nThis is a record ol which we are\nproud.\nCornwell's\n320 Baker St.\nNelson, B. C.\nTel. 351.\nSpring Planting Will Soon\nBe Here\nJloses, Shru*'js, Shade Trees, Garden Plants, Vesetable Plants, all\nkinds of Fruit Trees and Berry\nBushes.\nWrite for catalogue.\nFrache Bros.\nFlorists  and   Nurserymen,\nGrand Forks, B.C.\nFID ON H\nBY HIS\nA\nIE\nGerman Government Says Submarine\nCommander Thought Anurias\nWas Troop Transport.\n(By Daily Newa Leased Wire.)\nWASHlNfiTOM. March 7\u201e\u2014The German embassy issued last night the\nfollowing explanation of the recent\nattack on the British hospital ship\nAstiirias:\n\"Government, sorry to admit British\nship Aaturias was attacked on Feb. 1,\n5:05 p.m. Coining up. in the twilight\ncarrying lights as prescribed for ordinary vessels, ship was taken for\ntransport oouveying troops. Distinc*\ntivc marks showing character of ship\nnot being illuminated were only recognized utter shot hnd been fired. Fortunately, torpedo tailed to explode.\nThe moment ship was recognized as\nhospital ship every attempt at further\nattack immediately was given up.\"\nThe statement signed by the Oerman ambassador and in quotations\nas shown, lias the appearance of a\ncablegram whicli had been filled o\"t\non translation form code. No comment on tho statement was obtainable.\nTho Asturias was about -15 miles\nnortheast of Havre, France, when it\nwas attacked on Feb. 1. Press reports\nsiid the vessel's commander saw the\ntorpedo fired by a submarine and succeeded in evading it.\nCASUALTIES MANY\nIN CANADIAN FORCE\nLAUNCH FRESH ATTACK\nSOUTH OF WARSAW\n(Continued from Page Ono)\nTry a tin bf\nThurman's Special Mixture Tobacco\nOne-eighth tins  25c\nOne-quarter tins  40c\nOne-half lins   75c\nTHURMAN CIGAR  STORE\nTHORPEL'S\nDRINKS\na**0]!\nYour Money's Worth\nThis is one place where yon get\nyour money's worth. The best\nquality in Bread, Cakes, Confectionery and Fruit is what we oFfer,\nand the\nPRICE  IS  RIGHT\nMail orders receive careful and\nprompt attention.\nChoquette Bros.\nSole Makers of Mother's Bread.\nPhOne 258. 516 Baker St.\nList  of   Wounded   and   Sick   Is   Given\nOut at Ottawa\u2014None Reported\nKilled\n(Bv Pally News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA,  Ularch  7.\u2014The  following\ncasualties   among    members    of   the\nCanadian expeditionary  force are announced:\n2nd Battalion\nWounded\u2014Starch   3,   Lieut.  William\nJ. Doxsee.   Next of kin, Mabel Agnes\nDoxsee, Campbellford, Ont.\n3rd Battalion\nWounded\u2014Lieut.   II.   R.   Alley,  admitted to British Red Cross hospital,\nRouen, Feb. 21.    Next of kin, Henry\nR. Alley, Toronto.\n5th Battalion\nWounded\u2014I'te. G. II. Slaughter, admitted to Royal Victoria hospital, Net-\nley, March 2.   Next nf kin, Mrs, E. Y.\nSlaughter, Norwich, England.\nPte. E. S. Cooper, admitted to general hospital^ Rouen, Next of kin,\nMrs. Mary Cooper, Lancashire.\n7th Battalion\n\"Wounded\u2014Pte. D. R. .McQueen, admitted tn British General hospital,\nBoulogne. Next of kin, .T. McQueen,\nMount Vernon, P. E. I.\n8th  Battalion\nWounded\u2014Pie.  C,  R.  Swaffor,  admitted   to   general   hospital;   Rouen.'\nNext of kin,   Mrs.  .].   Swuffor* Huntings, England.\nSeverely Wounded\u2014Lance-Corp. B.\nV. Williamson, admitted to general\nhospitn:, Boulogne. Next ot Kin, Mrs.\nB. Y. Williamson, Ludingtou, Mich.\nCorp. Charles Smith, admitted to\ngeneral hospital, Boulogne. Next ot\nkin, Mrs. C. Smith, Glasgow.\nCorp, G. S. Lemousrier, admitted to\nNo. ii general hospital, Boulogne.\n10th Battalion\nWounded- Pte. \\V. .1. Challinnr, admitted i\" No. 14 .-general hospital, Boulogne. Next of kin. Edward Challinbr,\nManchester, England.\nSergt. W. G. Couchman, admitted tn\nNo. M general hospital, Boulogne.\nNext of kin, Charles Couchman, Canterbury, England.\nPie. G. Bryan, admitted t-> No, 10\ngeneral hospital, Rouen. Next of kin,\nMiss Annie Bryan, Tottenham, Kng,\nSeriously HI\u2014Pte, John Smith, admitted to Notley hospital. Next of\nkin, John Smith, Cumphellton, Scotland.\n12th  Battalion\nSeriously ill\u2014Lieut, c. J. Morgan, al\nNo. 1 Canadian hospital, Netheravon!\nwith  Buapected  meningitis.     Next  of\nkin, Mrs. P. L. Morgan, St. John, N.B\nPrincess  Patricias\nWounded    Pte.   W.   C.   .loyncr,   admitted    to    Royal   Victoria   hospital.\nNetley, March 2.    Next of kin, W. L.\n\u2022Toyner, Moose Jaw.\nLance-Corp. Alexander CI. VU-tz, admitted to first stationary hospital.\nRouen. Next, of kin, Mrs. .T. M, Vletz,\nDigby, N.S.\np.m.-\u2014The following official statement\nwas issued today:\n'In Poland yesterday fighting occurred in limited areas.\n'Tho Russians were compelled by\nour artillery to evacuate advanced\npositions in the Carpathians, where at\nseveral points fighting continues. The\nRussians have suffered considerable\nlosses by night attacks which were all\nrepulsed. Five officers and 75 men\nwere captured in one of those attacks.\n\"lit northeast Galicia calm prevails,\"\nGermans  Collect   Booty. '\nBERLIN, March 7.\u2014-The general\nstaff reports:\nIn the eastornf theatre of war our\nentire war booty in the forest district\nnorthwest of Grodno and nround Augustowo has boon collected Jn spite of\nthn energetic Russiun eounter-altaeks.\n\"Our troopa which wero employed in\nthis tiisk are now at our disposal for\nother 'positions. Thero is nothing of\nimportance to report from around\nGrodno and near Lomza.\n\"Northeast of Przasnyrz :l Russian\nattack broke down with severe loss to\nthe enemy. Northwest of 1'lonsk a\nRussian attack was also repulsed.\n\"Souith of the Vistula there is nothing important to report.\"\nAustrian   Fire Called   Effective.\nVIENNA, March 7 via London,\u2014 The\nwar office Issued the following statement Saturday:\n\"Attacks by the Russians on sections\nOi\" our line east of Plotrkow, In Poland, wero foiled by our effective artillery fire.\n\"There is no other news either on\nthis front or In western Gallcla.\n\"fn the Carpathians fighting continues for some ridge positions. Unfavorable weather conditions prevail.\n\"In southeast Galicia temporary\nquietness has set In after recent attacks.\"\nRESIGNS WHEN KING\nOff\n(Continued from Page One)\n(Continued from Paso One)\nCleaning, Pressing, Repairing\nSuite, Dresses, Overcoats, Gloves,\nHats, Purs, Etc.\nCrown French Dry Cleaning Co\nH. J. WILTON, Mgr.\nPhone 107\nP. O. Box 904\n500 Josephine St\nNelson, B. C.\nThe   Best   In   Everything.\nWliy not?\nHume Barber Shop\nKootenay Lake General\nHospital Society\nNotice of Annual Meeting.\n:.i accordance with the bylaws of tin?\nsociety the annual general meeting\nwill be held In the Board of Trade\nrooms on Tuesday, March 9, 1915, at\n3 p.m.\nMembership conditions\u2014All annual\nsubscribers of the sum of $10 are\nmembers of the Society citable to\ntake part In the election of Directors\nfor the ensuing year and ln case of\nIllness are entitled to tree treatment\nIn tbe hospital.\nGEORGE JOHNSTONE,\n , _  ., Secretary,\nTO\nNORTH OT MS\n(Continued from Page Ono)\nof   Verdun,   we   repulsed   counter-attacks.\n\"In thc Vosges we made progress on\nthe flanks of the Reich Ackerkopf nnd\ntouk prisoners at Jlartmannweller.\nHero wo repulsed four counter-attacks.\n\"ijesplte vigorous and well planned\nattacks, the Germans were repulsed\nfor tho fourth time before a blockhouse\nin the Le Pretre woods.\n\"An attack on March 4, in which,\nunder cover of nrtillery fire, the Germans sought to take thc position by a\nhnnd to hand encounter was unsuc-\ncoseful,\"\nCapture   British   Trench.\nRF.RLIN\", March 7.\u2014A statement issued today by the German general\nstuff says:\n\"On March 7 In tho western tihentre\nof war, southeast ot Vprcs, we made a\ncounter-attack and captured nn Knglish trench. An attempt by tlio. French\nto take the conquered positions on\nLoretto heights failed. Wc l-yok 50\nTrench   prisoners.\n\"In tho Champagne district the\nFrench continued tln-ir atotackg near\nPerthes and Lo Mesnil hut were repulsed.\n\"Near Perthes we captured five officers and -10 French soldiers.\n*Mn a counter attnek we occupied\ntho small wood north of Perthes and\nthe Plro trench of their positions near\nLc  Mesnil,\n\"The French attacks agaln-st our positions near Vauquols and east of Ba-\ndonvlllcrs and northeast of Codes were\nunsuccessful.\"\ngeneral staff of tlio army nnd the\nprincipal officers were also at the\npalace to give their advice If necessary.\nReturning to his residence the premier notified the ministers of the\nresolution 0f the king. The ministers\nthen went io the chamber of deputies, where thej premier accepted the\nresignation of his cabinet. .News of\nthis action caused excitement, in diplomatic circles, where it was a surprise.\nYesterday Premier Venlzelos, ou\nreceiving the foreign ministers, announced to them tliat he would resign\nif his .actions did not receive the approval of the king.'1\nCrowd Acclaims King.'\nConcerning other events which took\nplace yesterday prior to the resignation of the cabinet, the correspondent\nsays:\n\"Yesterday morning when the king,\naccompanied by Premier Venlzelos,\nleft the cathedral where a te deum\nwas sung on the anniversary of the\ntaking of .lanina, they both were acclaimed hy the crowds. This manifestation was interpreted as indicating the perfect accord of the nation,\nIn pursuance of Its traditions; The\nnewspaper L;i Patsia in this respect\nsays:\n\" 'The Greek people who have a\nreal admiration for their king have\nno doli'Jt ho will safeguard the rights\nof the nation and will lead them to\nthe way of victory.'\n\"Salih Bey, the Turkish minister,\nvisited Premier Venizelos this afternoon.\"\nIntervention Considered Certain.\nAll the Greek army officers in\nSwitzerland wero recalled Saturday,\nOther Greeks of a military age must\npresent themselves at the offices of\nthe consul-general in Geneva hefore\nMarch 11. The opinion is expressed\nby many hero that, thore is to he a\ngeneral mobilization of tho Greek\narmy.\nA despatch to the Havas agency\nTrom Athens says the newspapers\nthere consider as certain the intervention of Greece in the European conflict. Several opinions nre expressed\nwith regard to the extent of Greece's\nco-operation  witli the allies.\nStudents Favor Intervention.\nLONDON, March 8.\u2014The Exchange\nTelegraph's Athens correspondent\nsays that the university students in\nthe Greek capital made a demonstration today in favor of immediate action hy Greece, The legations of the\ntriple entente powers were visited by\nstudents and cheered.\nThe same correspondent, says the\nGreek press in its comment on the\noperations against the Dardanelles has\ndeclared itself in fiivor of Greece's\nparticipation in the war, taking the\nground that no breaking up of the\nOttoman empire should be permitted\nto take place without the collaboration of the Hellenic troops.\nWhat Will Greece Do?\nLONDON, March 8.\u2014The crisis In\nGreece Is commented on today by the\nprincipal Paris papers, although tin\nannouncement concerning the situation\nwns received here late.\n\"What will Greece do?\" naturally Is\nthe principal question asked and there\nis much speculation as to its probable\nplana. Somo of tho papers declare that\ntho crisis exceeds in proportion the\nmere change in tho ministry.\nCOTTON VALUED AT $200,000\nBURNED AT GALVESTON\n(By Dally News Leased Wire)\nGALVESTON, Tex., March 7.-Ap\nproximately $200,000 worth of baled\ncotton was threatened ln a fire which\nbroke out here shortly after 1 o'clock\nthis, morning.\nAt 2 a,m. the entire city fire department was fighting the flames in the\nface of a stiff northwest wind.\nAt 2:20 a.m. tho firo was under con\ntrol.    It wns estimated that thc loss\nwould total $200,000, fully covered hy\nInsurance.\nprincipal forts upon the European side\nof the narrows in thc Dardanelles.\nTwo of the forts were damaged and\ntbe magazine of a third was blown up.\nThese forts guard the narrow part of\nthe straits from the European side\nand are believed lo be the strongest\nalong the entire waterway, although\nthose on the opposite side of the narrows almost equal them.\nOne of theso foils, marked on the\nadmiralty! mapg as L, is armed with\ntwo 11-inch guns that could hardly\nreach the Queen Elizabeth, which\nfired 29 rounds from its 15-inch guns1\nby indirect fire ami had the advantage of- aeroplanes- to direct its gunners.\nThe other two forts are armed with\nthree ll-inch guns nnd some smaller\ncannon.\nMarines in Clash on Land.\nMeantime lighter cruisers continue\nattacks on the fortifications along the\nconst; of Asia Minor from Beslkn,\nwhich is near the entrance to the Dardanelles, to Smyrna. This was doubtless to prevent reinforcements being\nsent to the straits, where there are\nalready a large number oE Turkish\ntroops with .whom the marines who\nwere landed to complete the destruction of forts at the entrance to the\nstraits have been in contact.\nIt was in this land fighting that\nthe allies suffered casualties, according to the British, of whom 10 were\nkilled n\u00bbd 25 wounded, with three\nmissing-. The Turks, however, place\nthe British losses at a higher figure.\nSmyrna Forts Damaged.\nSaturday night's official despatch\nfrom the admiralty disclosed that the\nEast India fleet, under Vice Admiral\nSir Richard Pierce, who is flying his\nflag ou tbe Euryalus, lias joined the\nallied fleet and that ho undertook the\nbombardment of the fortifications of\nSmyrna, which were seriously damaged.\nOn Wednesday the ships continued\nthe bombardment of Fort Dardanus on\nthe Asiatic side of the Dardanelles.\nDestroyers and mine sweepers are\npursuing tho work of clearing the outer straits of mines. French ships are\nkeeping up a bombardment, from the\nGulf of Saros.\nThe report snid:\n\"Our fire wfifl confined to Forts Ru-\nmilleh, Mnjldeh, Uamldeh, No. 2 and\nHamazich, which are armed as follows: Fort J, two 11-inch guns, four\n9.4-inch guns, five 3.4-inch guns; Fort\nI-., two 14-inch; Fori T\u201e one 1-inch,\nono 11.2-iricly oue ll.l-Inoh; three 8.2-\nIneh and throe 5.0'rlnch,\n\"The Queen Elizabeth fired 2!l rounds\nWith satisfactory results. The magazines in Fort I.j which blew up, is an\nImportant fort, armed wiih the best\nand heaviest guns. The other tw\nforts were d.'imaged.\nSmyrna Forts Hit 32 Times.\n\"The fire of the Inflexible and I'rinoe\nGeorge were ohsoi-Vod Irqtn inside the\nDardanelles by the Irresistible, .''nwi-\nipus, Cornwallls and Albion. Although\nthese vessels were much fired ou by\nconcealed guns they were not hit. The\n.Sapphire again fired on troops in thr\nneighborhood of the Gulf of Adrnmlt)\nand destroyed n military station\nTuzburne.\n\"On March \"> the (commander in chief\nof tho East Indian' squadron Vice-Admiral Sir Richard Pierce arrived with\na battleship nnd cruiser squadron off\nSmyrna} A methodical bombardment\nof Fort Ynnilcnja was carried out dur\ning the afternoon for two hours under\nfnvomblo weather conditions. Thirty\ntwo hits were recorded inflicting considerable damago on the fort and then*\nwere two heavy explosions apparently\nmagazines.\nBombardment at closer range has\nnow 'begun weather conditions being\ngood.\nReduction of the Smyrna defenses is\nnu incideui iu the main operations.\"\nBombardment Continues.\nPARIS, March 7, via London.\u2014The\nbombardment of the Dardanelles fortifications was continued Saturday hy\nthe allied fleet, according to an official statement issued tonight. The\nstatement says:\n\"The British battleship Queen Elizabeth, posted in the Gulf of Saros, bom.\nbarded by indirect fire two big works\nin the Gulf of Saros, alongside of\nChanak and the straits, Forts Hamldieh and Sultanieh.\n\"At the same time cruisers inside\nthe Dardanelles continues a direct, fire\nagainst, the works at Dardanus on the\nAisiaUc side, and Soimlu Here, on the\nEuropean side.\"\nMagazine Is Exploded.\nAu earlier official statement from\nUie ministry of marine says:\n\"At the Dardanelles during the day\nof March r. three cruisers stationed in\nthe Gulf of Saros bombarded by indirect fire across the Gallipoll peninsula the Turkish forts at Kilid-Bahr,\nwhich guards the European coast of\nthe narrow straight between that point\nand Chauuk.\n\"The fire was directed by four vessels stationed at the entrance to the\nDardnnneles. The result of the horn;\nbardnient was satisfactory.\n\"The magazine of one of the forts\nexploded. None of the vessels wns\ndamaged.\n\"During the day of March 5 throe\nvessels of the allied fleet 'bombarded\nfrom a great distance tbe fort at\nYen! Kale at the entrance of the Gulf\nof Smyrna, which was seriously in\nJured and was unable to reply.\"\nBritish Ships Undamaged.\nPARIS,. March 7.\u2014The Athens cor\nrespondent ol the Havas agency, In a\ndespatch dealing with the bombardment of the forts at Smyrna which\nwas commenced by a Brtfiih squadron\nFriday, says that the' alii .13 opened\na, hot Tire on the Turkish batteries t,ft-\nanted on the Mount Dyo Alphi. lie\nadds lhat \"the damages\" are\nknown aa yet.\nTlio five mine, sweepers which were\nking in the Gulf of Smyrna, he\nLondon\u2014Bombardment of the torts on\nthe Smyrna coast by the allied fleet\nSaturday was without result, according\nto an official communication issued tu\nday, which says:      '\n\"Two enemy warships bombarded the\nforts on the Stmyrna coast for three\nhours yesterday without result.\n\"At S n.m. one Fronch and three\nBritish warships, accompanied by three\nlarge mino sweepers, again bombarded\nSmyrna forts for one and a half hours.\nSeveral shells fired by our (butteries\nstruok tho warships which had been\nthe first to open fire, Ono mine sweeper was sunk.\n\"Two airmen who flow across the\nGulf of Saros fell into tho sea. The\naeroplane disappeared into the water.\n\"Our casualties yesterday and today\nwere  four killed and seven wounded.\n\"Tbo enemy's fleet undertook no serious action against the Dardanelles yesterday or today.\"\nAMSTERDAM, March 7, via London.\n\u2014A despatch from Constantinople says\nthat a British cruiser yesterday appeared before Dike!! off MyUleno (off\nth const of Asia Minor) and firod\neight shots without result.\nYOU   HAVE   EG03   FOR   SALE\nTRY A WANT AD\nwoi'k.t.-s ... ..\u00bb-  ----  --\u201e     , ,\nsays, five steamers, four Grecian aad\none Dutch, hastily left tho liort of\nSmyrna. -   . \u25a0      ,   . ,,, .\nXews from the Island of Ci.-s \u25a0-i>b\nthat two English dreadnought, two\nsubmarines .nnd one e'1\"8** arrived\ntoday nt Bryonia (Vulra). The Sm>r-\nmi forts opened-fire during.thc aftc\nnoon but the British ships were un\ndamaged,\nNo Damage, Turks Assert.\nCONSTAiNTlNOPDB,  March.7, via\n*-**-^?.\"$>iS>\u00ab^^ .-iySvS-S*'\n<$> <s>\nI   DISPELLING ILLUSIONS <\u00a7>\n<$> ABOUT KITCHENER   <$>\n\u2022*$> <?)\n'One of the tests of a great man is\nthat ho Inspires legends. Wo hear\nabout Washington and his Inability tn\nproduce an alibi in reference fo the\ndherry tree, about Lincoln- and his inveterate habit of telling funny stories\nand what Is more to tho point about\nKitchener's unsmiling sternness, says\ntho Toronto Mail and Empire. At the\ntimo of the South African campaign a\nwriter of nonsense verso asked a. correspondent who knew Kitchener what\nwould be the most preposterous thing\nthat could be associated with blm. The\nanswer was \"laugihtcr.\" The idea is\nthnt. Kitchener never laughs. For this\nwe nre Indebted chiefly to George W.\nSteevens, the brilliant newspaperman\nwho wrote \"With Kitchener to Khartum.\" He invented the Kitchener\nmyth\u2014the stern, silent man of destiny,\nwho plays the war game as others play\nchess. Then we had a ekotch from T.\nP. O'Connor which revealed some of\nthe more human and likeable attributes\nof the secretary of war. Later still,\nwo had Irvin Cobb, the humorist, who\naccidentally wrote the most humorous\nthing in his career when be represented the war lord ns panting for information :ibnut tihe German army which\nonly Cobl) was able to give.\nThe Kitchener Legend.\nThe latest contribution to tho literature of the subject is Harold P-eghle\nwhose book \"Kitchener, Organizer of\nVictory\" has been published within the\nlast few days. Mr. Beffble is known as\nthe author of \"Twi#o Porn Men\" and\nalso for tho verses displayed In the\nstreet ears to the effect that when\nthe troops return from slaughter and\ntlio ships come homo from wnr every\nhero shall be welcomed, every orphan\nshall ho fed hy the man who continues\nto earry on business as usual, lioffhie's\nwork Is Important chiefly because it\nundertakes to dispel some . Illusion's\n.\u2022bout Kilcheuer. lie does not ylow 'he\nSecretary of war as a demigod an.l the\n\u25a0rather slighting things be says will be\nfin-given because be predicts ihnl gly-\nen 'time Kitchener can and will dn anything thai Is expected of hlm. lllter-\nthlng Ihnl is expected nf him. Interesting as Is his study of Kttehener we\nhave the Idea, that il Is too late nnd\nthat the fabulous qualities with which\nhe 'bus been invested will cling to him\nas long as he lives and even as long\nas lie. Is remembered in history.\nThe Bulldog.\nAccording to Mr. Begble the chief\nllty of Kitchener is not his inn-\nchine llho precision but his tenacity,\nlie Is the bulldog lhat is beaten hut\ndoes not know it cad consequently\nnever quits. This tenacity is, however,\nlititle more than the obstinacy of i\nvery slow and laborious mind*, lleghli\ndenies Kitchener the slightest gleam of\ngenius. Tie is even unconscious of hi:\nown dulness, He is not bloodless, lb\nis not a woman hater. The fart thai\nhe is unmarried is adequately explain\ned whon It is known that he proposed\nto the womnn of Ids heart and was re*\nfused. He is no machine. On1 tbe contrary he has been lhe life of more than\none house party, lie has three hob-\nblos, architecture, gardening and collecting. He is shy and slloiut. He is\nnot. spectacular, lie has an abhorrence\nof rod lape, l\u00bbnt his biographer doubts\nIf he has succeeded In abolishing It\nfrom the Ilritlsh war office. He Is not\nii great general nor a great statesman.\nIn Egypt It is said that he was known\nIn some circles as \"K. of Chaos,\"\nThe Capacity of Taking Pains.\nNevertherteaa, Kitchener la a success.\nHe has achieved \"great and enormous\nvictories\" by Incessant, slow and unsparing labor. An American onco described him as \"silence nnd work and\nsilence\u2014and then the end.\" This Is\naceuriite in the opinion of Mr. Regble.\nIn the present war the biographer snys\nIt. \\yould be difficult to point to n single\ngreat achievement by Kitchener. His\nchief contribution Is thnt of his legcn-\ndary personality. Bnt In the snme\nbreath ho points to a great achievement. Kitchener stcod Uko a rock\nagainst llio popular clamor to hurry\nuntrained troops to Franco. He would\nnot let the mon 'go until tbey were\ntrained and BOgible belloveg that the\nnew armies will bo a sufficient answer\nto his critics. \"With his dogged and\nunswerving passion for absolute efti\ncloncy\" he will iprohably send some\nastonishingly fine men to tho firing\nline. He does not get anywhere for\na long time, but \"when ho arrives, the\n\u25a0man on tlio spot knows immediately\nwhy he ihan come.\"\nKitchener's Eyes.\nOno Illusion which Begble does not\nattempt to dispel is that concerning\nKlmhener's eyes, In the Khartum\ncampaign a private said they were like\nthe day of Judgment. Another observer said \"They strike you with a\nclutching terror; you look nt thffm, try\nto say something and look away; and\nthen, trying to speak, find your eyes\nreturning  to that dreadful gaze  and\nSpring Millinery Opening\nThe formal\nSpring Opening\nof our\nMillinery Department\nwill take place on  *\nThursday, March Eleventh\nand following dags.\nThe ladies of the city and district\nare cordially invited to\nbe present.\nSMILLIE & WEIR\nLADIES'  WEAR   SPECIALISTS\nYou Have Been on the Lookout\nfor This-Don't Hiss It Now\nTO FACILITATE THE WINDING-UP OP A SYNDICATE'S AFFAIRS\nWE HAVE BEEN  INSTRUCTED  TO  OFFER  FOR  SALE\nFive Lots in Hyde\nPark, Calgary\nThe whole five lots are jo-fe'tly level, high and dry. The big\nC. P. R. shops nre almost ad'olning on the one side nnd on the other\nside of tho property immediately adji iolng are eighty acres, belonging\nto the C. N. R., which runs through the subdivision.\nThis subdivision has a number of houses built on il and there is a\nschool and church close by. The C. N. R. offered quite a big price for\ntrackage lots in Hyde Park hist year and as the development of that\npart of the city is already assured, it will only be u short wait till this\nproperty will make big money.\nWhat's Your Offer for the Whole or Any\nNumber oi These Lots?\nTerms:  One-third Cash, balance 1, 2, 3 months, interest 6 per cent.\nmm\u2014\u25a0\u2014a\u2014al^^^l\u2014III!       MMMMMMMNMMMHippMMi^BI^^MMHMM*     \u25a0\nWestern Provinces Co-op. Realty Co., Ltd.\nMcculloch block nelson, b.c.\nP.O.  drawer   1107\nonce more choke with silence.'\" Thero\nis an element of Vrussinnism in his\nchnmeter. He announces that he will\nInspect a eortnln bridge on a certain\nday. and If the engineer sayn he Is\ndoubtful if lhe bridge can be completed\nKitchener merely says that he will be\nready to inspect It. Thc result is that\nhe-hns the bridge to Inspect. He Is not\nlavish  nf tpralse   to  those   wbo   serve\nhim well. Tie merely asks that thoyl\nshall serve hlm still better. Given Mmo|\nKitchener can do anything. Uo Is ;\nreal \"organizer of victory'' and tliol\npresent war will add still] more lni'ircl*d]\ntn those he now wears.\nIF YOU HAVE POULTRY FOR SALE\nTRY A WANT AD\nD0NTTAKE CALOMEL]\nlimtead nf dnimorous, silUVtttlng\nCalomel In llvon your llvor when bll-\nIniiH, hradadiy or constipated (ret a\n10-cent tjox ot? Cnsonrots. They start\nthe liver nnd Ijowelo nnd straighten\nyou up hotter than nnsty Calomel\nwithout griping or making you sick.\nMillinery Opening\nWEDNESDAY\nMarch 10\nMiss Hanlin\nMadden Block Ward Street\nMAKE YOUR ORCHARDS GREATER\nThe British Columbia apples In a world competition with the. best have\ntaken the Gold Medal prlKe. This means that B. C. orchards, if developed,\nwill lead the world. A word to the wlBe is sufficient. Wo are offering\nFruit Tree Stock, such ns Grimes Golden, Mcintosh Red, Winesap, etc., at\nexceptionally low wnr prices. Write and tell us what yon want. Our\nexperts will advise with you ond send yon a catalogue free. Wo have a\nlarge stock of flowering and evergreen shrubbery, holly, laurel and privet\nhedge stock, roso and shade tree stock, follnge and flowering plants. In\nshort, In our stock of over ?1**0.000 we have alt you want to mnke your\ngarden beautiful. '   *   '\nROYAL   NURSERIES,   LIMITED,\nHead Office:  710 Dominion Building, 207, Hastings Street W..\nj     . VANCOUVER,   B.C.\nNurseries and Greenhouses at Royal, B.C.\nBurns' Animal Fertilizer\nSTOCKS CARRIED AT NELSON, ROSSLAND AND GRAND FORKS\nWRITE   FOR   PAMPHLET AND QUOTATIONS\nNOW   18   THE   TIME   TO   PLACE   YOUR   ORDERS\nP. Burns & Co., Limited\n %4.\n-MONDAY, MARCH 8, WtS\n\u00abadeinBfC.\nRoasted In B. C, blended in Nol*\n. aon for the sons Mid daughters of\nthe Empire.\nEmpire Coffee\n'A pound ....40c\nWe pulverize or granulate it by\nour Bteel cut process.   A delicious\nflavoring cup.\n..Why pay more?\nLettuce   Spinach\nFresh today.\nMany Money Saving\nArticles\nyou need; for your table and\nkitchen on our BARGAIN TABLE.\nHere is one\u2014\nSc\nTOR A 15o TIN OF\nStove Polish\n* Only 215 tins to clear out. This\nIs an article that the housekeeper\nuses every day. They wdn't last\nlong at this price.\nRICE\nWe have received another shipment of good quality Japan Rice.\n4 lbs **25c\nSack of 60 lbs.  .$2.50\nAPPLES\nGood Family Baldwin!.\nBox $1.25\nBell Trading Co.\nBAKER   STREET\n.Tha Horn* of Good Grooariat\nBOTEL ARRIVALS OF A DAY\n\\\nhj.f V ^;31;s!*W*u..i\n'\u00ab\u2022-\"-\u25a0!      Pi   si'lff   !,**-\n'-?.?\u25a0...\".-. - * S ' 1-0 .'.\u25a0', h&\nTHE HUME\nA la Carte Table d'Hot.\nGeorge Benwell, Prog.\nHUlfE\u2014Mrs. J. D. Kerr, Miss ' T.\n'DQle,'j. J. Jorram, Mrs. Cookc-Hurle,\n.\"Mrs.1 Homer, Longboach; Georgo J.\nSmith,** C. It. Mutch, 13. W. Flock, F.\nW, Wa,lkerr V. D. Doty, Vancouver;\nW. ,B. Robinson, Castlegar; John T.\nHoyle, Queon's Bay; Mrs. J. Jonkin,\nSllv.e'rtbn; H. Seimons, Wi-.ini.pes; T.\nGougb,-Sheep- Creok; ,T. Wlnklor, Seattle; A. C. Mesker, Midway; P. W.\n.Racey, Rossland; P, Burn Callender,\nCreston; H. B. Rodney, Trail; J. A.\nKinney.-Bossland. E. A, Long, Chicago;\nF. J. Boles, Mr. and Mrs. A. B. John-\nstonV-Mr. and Mrs. e. H. Spiers, J. G.\nDarling. City; W. i?. Mawdsloy, Granite; Mrs. H. V. Cuthbc, B. 'Towns-\nend, Willow Point;. J. T. Russell, Rus-\nsoll's Landing; J. D. Rutherford,\nSheep creek: F. W. Sterling, Mra.\nWlldman, City; Harry S. Ives, Vancouver; '.{J.' B. ^Lawrence, Revelstoke,\nIAMFS   M0*1SH\u00bbI  I     P*-.rr.i*\u201e*\nSTRATHCONA\u2014R. W. Dawaon. WH\nlow Point; W. I. Linton, w. Dunn, H.\nStead, Vancouver; A. Maguiro, j. Cole-\nman, Winnipeg; A. A, J. Collls, Cros-\nton; J. Napier Bell, Toronto; Gus\nDunn, Montreal; II. S. Langford, Ross-\nlund; Mr. and Mrs. Nokamure, Vernon; P. W. Racey,. Rossland; Miss F.\n.'Squarebrlggs, S. P. Tuck, D. B. Dor-\nJoy, W. S. Newbum, O. H. Baker, L. S.\nMcKInnon, City; J B, Tiffany; J. T.\nCairllnd, A. W. Glvin, F. Scott,. O. A.\nStaples, Vancouver; F. J. Kavanaugh,\nWinnipeg; E. P. Dawson, Willow\nPolilt; J.*M. Diinn, Port MeNicoll, Ont,\nHEAVY BRITISH CASUALTY\nLIST IS8UED IN LONDON\n(Canadian Associated Press Cable.)\nWNDON March 7\u2014A heavy cas-\nnalty list was issued tonight from the\nheadquarters of the expeditionary\nforce, 43 officers having fallen In\nfranco and five in tbe Cameroons.\nOf those In France eight were killed, four died of wounds and 31 wars\nwounded.   In tho Cameroons the five\nCfje.\"Pan? J&etoa\nPACE THREE\nBeen Getting Your\nShare of the\nBargains?\nIt not, be sure and come at\nonce and get in on'them.\nMen's Shoes\n(6.00 values for..... $4.35\n$5.00 values for \u2014$3.65\nWomen's Shoes\n$5.00 values $3.35\n$4.00 values $2.85\n$6.00 Tan Suede Button...$3.95\nBoys'High Cuts\n$2.46 and $3.65 per Pair.\nBoys'Shoes\nSize 12 tp .5 $2,16\nR. Andrew\n& Company\nLucky Number Last' Week\n1960. Holder please call and\ngat shoes.\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 comlnent, 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 maximum of comfort and convenience\nfor guests.\nRates: $12 and $15 per week* or $2\nper day and upwards.\nHalcyon Hot Springs\nSanitarium\nWM.  BOYD,  Proprietor. .\nHalcyon Arrow Lakes\nQueen's Hotel\nSteam Heat in Every Boom.\nBusiness Lunch, 35c.\nR.tet: $1.50 and 32.00 Day.\nQUEENS\u2014N. Dunn, McGillivray; J.\nC. Carruthers, Salmo; Mr. and Mrs.\nlicoden, Boswell; A. W. Smith, Creston.\nMadden House\nE. C. CLARKE.\nCor. Baker and Ward Sts., Nelaon\nBISHOP GIVES FIRST\nMESSAGE TO DIOCESE\nCo-Operation of Churchmen   ef   District Asked on Occasion of Initial\nSermons In Nelson\n\"Let us be bound as brethren,\npriests and people by love. Let us be\nunited In effort and in service to advance the kingdom of God and prepare tiie wny. for the coming of the\nSon of God In power and great glory.''\nThis was the first message of Bight\nRov. A. J. Doull, first bishop of Koote,\nmany, to .the churchmen of bis diocese\nat the morning service at St. Saviour's\nchurch yesterday,   ...   y , ..\u25a0,\u25a0'\u2022\nThe bishop reached the,city on Sat\nurday night and yesterday he preached\nfor the first time in .the diocese since\nhis consecration; as bishop., Tho mag.\nnlflcent pastoral staffi. symbolical .of\noffice,, which was presented to him by\nthe .diocese of Kootenay upon hla consecration, .was carried by his, chaplain,\nRov. Fred H. Grohjun of Sty Sav,lou,r*s\nchurch., At the morning service the\nchurch was crowded, while at .the\nevening service many were turned\naway, the church, long before the- hour\nfor the commencement of the service\nbeing filled to. Its capacity.. Ar*-*hd**ar\ncon Beer of Kaslo also assisted at the\nservices.  ...       .   '\n\u25a0 His second message -at the. eyenlnr.\nService took the form of.an appeal to\nthe churchmen of his diocese to assist\nin the work of reaching a universal\npeace which could only be obtained\nthrough God. I'euco - .came, * he- said.\nWhen sin..was destroyed. God .was the\nonly, one who could overcome sin and\nhe could only, overcome It through his\npeople\/who must by godliness, and\nsanctity drive sin from the .world,.\n\" Bishop Doull took as the text of his\nmorning sermon Epheslans 5:1. It was\nhis first message to the church people\nof his diocese, to his. own flock-over\nwhom the Holy Ghost had nude blm\noverseer. He, in his official position,\ncould do nothing without God, which\nmeant that he would be unsuccessful\nin his work without his people, who\nwere .the manifestation of God. \"Be\ny.e therefpre followers of God, as,;d.ear\nchildren and walk ln -love*\"\nThis was a tremendous thought\u2014\"Be\nyo followers of God\"\u2014it brought all at\nonce to the incarnation\u2014to the realization that \"We as human beings could\nnot be followers of God unless he had\nrevealed Himself in human form\u2014unless he bad become a man.\"\nThe incarnation, he sold, was the\nbasis and Pivot of the religion of bis\nchurch people as regards both faith\nand practise. Theirs was the old faith.\nIt was the faith that he and they must\nbelieve and preach. \"God as our\nfather,\" ho continued, \"was roveulcd ih\nGod the Son, who redeemed us from\nsin and left us an example.\" The\nbishop urged, \"that God's steps should\nbe followed by the power of the Holy\nGhost who sanctifies us through thc\nchurch by means of the sacraments\nand the sacrlmental ordinances whereby sin Is forgiven and wc are made\npartaken of the divine nature and able\nto live the life and do the work Christ\nwould have us live and do.\"   *\nThis was the faith which had been\nreceived and must be preached by\nword and by example, but chiefly by\nexample. Men wero fellow workers\nwith God, were members of Christ and\nChrist was the saviour of the world,\nbut through mon. Men in their lives\nshould commend Christ, should be followers of Him who was and is God\nmanifest in flesh.  .    .\nFor that reason Chrstlans should\nwalk in love. \"Love,\" stated tho\nbishop, \"was the keynote of His life;\nlove must be the keynote of your life.\"\nIt should not be a sentimental or emotional love but a love manifesting itself by giving. Each must reallzo that\nGod loved him, that God had given\nHimself for him, that He had greater\nlove for uo man than for any other,\nbut that \"God had commended His love\nto man In that whilst he was yet a\nsinner Christ had died for tho ungodly.\"\nThus if men were to bo followers of\nGod they must give, the kneynote of\ntheir lives must be love of whloh self-\nsacrifice is the token. \"We must give\nourselves to God and to tho service of\nour fellow man.\" Tho early church\nhad won the then world by love inspired lives and today the task was the\nsame; to win the world and, bringing\nthe realization closer home, to win\nKootonay to Clirlst by love inspired\nlives'.\nNor had there boen a more favorable\ntime for thle work of winning the\nworld fnr Phr'at. Materialism had\nbeen checked and men, cons.. ously or\nunconecious.y, wero crying out for the\nSaviour, tho results of antl-Chrlstian\nspirit were being revealed ln the Ger-\n(Continuod on Page Six)\nKootenay and Boundary\n!VE MM\nHarrop Men Are   Two   of   Family\u2014\nCongratulates Kentish Woman,\nMcilher of Boys\n\u201e   fflnpclal..to The Daily News.)\nHARROP,, B* 0,, SJarch 7.\u2014Pies.\n.Leslie and *Syclney I.JVightwick, who\nleft with the. second contingent,, bo-\nlong to a family of which the seven\nsons are serving their country, Mrs.\nWJghtwiek,- their mother, of K>ent,\nEpgla^d,' has recently received a letter of .congratulation from the King*\nThe brothers, answered the call from\nvarious British dominions.\nThe Cose brothers have leased Mrs.\nClark's ranch and are erecting a house\nand several outbuildings for chickens,\npigs, etc.\nThe Harrop and Longbeach Amn\ntour Dramatic, society is rehearsing a\npl*<y tn lje\" given, afte,r Easter in aid\nof churoh funds. -\nThe first texture glVjen by ,W. Oliver\non \"First Aid\" was'held this afternoon.\n' 'ANNAeU NOTE8\n'< *,(Spec|a,l to. The-Daily News.) -,\nANNABLE, B.\" C, March 7.\u2014Mr.\nand Mrs. Allan Merrv returned to their\nhome on the Pend d'Orellle on Friday.\nMrs. Merry spent some, time hero\nvisiting relatives.' .-.- . '\n. The fine weather of the past week\nhap taken the unow at a rapid rate\nand the ranchers ore busy preparing\nfor.the spring work.   -.'\nIt Is reported that two or three\nranchers from the east will arrive here\nBtiort'y fir tiie purpose of taking up\nland and commencing operations.\nG. M. Annabie Jeitt last night for\nMoose Jaw,\nIt is expected that the formation of\nthe Kootenav regiment will find some\ntrom this locality enlisting'in the fight\nfor the Empire. ,\nMrs. Ollls of Rossland bas returned\nto her home after spending a few\ndays with her parents here.\nMADDEN\u2014A. J. Gerrard, City; J.\nNapier Boll, Toronto; E. A. Walton,\nSUverton.\nNelson House\nEuropean Plan.\nW. A. WARD, Proprietor.\nCAFE\u2014Open day and nujht\u2014BAP\nMerchants' Lunch 12 to 2.\nPhone 97 P. O   Boy 89'\nNELSON\u2014R.  J.  Bush,    Fruitvale;\nRobert Stovor.\nNew Grand Hotel\nI Best Place ln Town,\n1,00 a day up.\nROSSLAND HOTELS\nThe Hotel Allan\nComfortable Rooms\u2014Splendid\nTabie.\n|     -SMITH * BELTON,   _\nProprietors.\nLOOK AT CHILD'S\nTONGUE IF SKK\nCROSS,\nWhen constipated or bilious give \"California ,\nSyrup of Figs\"\nLook at tho tongue, mother. H coated, it Is a euro sign that vour littlo\none's stomach, liver and bowels need a\ngentle, thorough cleansing.at onco.\nWhen peovish, oross, listless, pale,\ndoesn't sleep,, doosn't oat or act na*.\nturally, or is feverish, stomach sour,\nbreath bad; has stomach ache, sore\nthroat, diarrhoea, full- of cold, give a\nteaspoonful of \"California Syrup of\nFigs\" and In a few hours all the foul\nconstipated waste, undigested food and\nsour bile gently moves out of Its little\n'bowels without griping, and 3-ou have\na well, playful ohlld again.\nToil needn't coax slok children to\ntake this harmless \"fruit laxative\";\nthey love its delicious taste, and It always makes thorn feel splendid.\nAsk your druggist for a 60>cent bottle of \"California Syrup of Figs,\"\nWhloh has .directions for babies, children pf all ftgos and for grown-ups\nplainly on the bottle. Beware ft counterfeits sold here. To be sure,you get\nthe genuine, ask to seo that It Is made\nby \"California Fig Syrup Company.\"\nRebwo \u00bbay,Wm \u25a0&\"\u2022\u00bb with,S9a.\u00abW.t.\nMOYIE NEWS NOTES.\n\u2022\u2022\u2022Special to -The Dally News.)\nMOYIE, B.C., Maroh 7.\u2014 On Wednesday Mrs. T. Bates entertained the\nwomen members- of the Overseas club\nat an'afternoon session at her residence.\nMrs. Besegh was taken on Monday\nto the St. Eugene hospital suffering\nfrom pneumonia. \u25a0\nv.F. Foroglla returned Monday after\na few days' visit to Cranbrook and\non Wednesday Mr. and Mrs. Martin\nThorpe were visitors to that city.\nMr. and Miss Adams of Fernie nre\non a visit to Mrs. Aigot Johnson and\non Friday last Mrs. Hirer with her\nvU.ug.Mer, Mine Pearl Wilier, left to\nvisit her daughter, Mrs. Edward Hill\nof Cranbrook.\nMr. and Mrs. P. Mead of Lethbrldge\nloft last week for a visit to friends at\nBull River. Mrs. Jennie Cunningham-\nBawer was a visitor to Sirdar last\nweek.\nSLOCAN NOTES.\n(Special to The Dailv News.)\nSLOCAN CITY, B.C., Maroh 7.\u2014Miss\nEthel Lavell of Spokano who has spent\nthe winter ln New Denver was here\nlast week the guest of Mrs. T. Mc-\nNelsh, \u25a0.\nRobert Madden .and son, Charles, of\nTrout Lake are hero the guests of Mr.\nand Mrs. A. Madden.\nGRAND FORKS HEN*\nWjlBST\nContribution to Third Contingent Goes\nto Victoria\u2014Lieut. McQuarrie\nto Be With Them\n(Special to Tho Daily News.)\nGRAND FORKS, B. C, Maroh 7.\u2014\nThe following mon left yesterday, for\nYiotorla, being the contribution of\nGrand Forks trained men toward the\nthird contingent: Sergt. D. McDonald,\nSergt. J. J. Hoadley, Sergt. R. La-\nmond, Corp. John Cameron, Corp.\nJoseph Peterson, Ptes. Harold Walters.\nIsaac Parkinson, Arthur Dutton', Albert R. Dutton, H. M. Williams, Robert Kerr, William Sullivan, James\nWilson, Andrew Smith, C. J. Schench.\nRobert Campbell. Andrew Purdon, R.\nWilkinson. J. Presley, H. T. Williams.\nJoseph- Cavendish, G. B. Grlevo, J. if.\nTo'd-I.-.C. Broxholm, Hark Donnelly, D.\nMcDona'd. This mokes 65 mon that\nhave gone from the Grand Forks\ncompany of sharpshooters en route to\nth * front. Lieut. D. McQuarrie is already at Victoria.\n' Percy Taylor, son of Nathan Taylor,\nof this city, who left with the first\ncontingent and is now in France has\nbe**n promoted to tho rank of sergeant.\nROSSLAND NEWS.\n-  fSnectnl to The Dnllv News.)\nROSSLAND, B. C, March 7.\u2014Mrs.\nWarren Innes was taken to the hospital Saturday evening.\nA. L. Fishor Is in the hospital.\nMr. Donahue of Trail spent the\nweek-end in Rossland.\nOn Tuesday next the Loyal Order of\nMoose will -hold election of officers and\ninitiation, of candidates.\nA-meeting pf the Rossland Farmers'\ninstitute .wilt be held Friday evening\nat 8 o'clock ln the new city hall.\nTho annual dance .of the Alpha\nChapter No. 1, Order of Eastern Star,\nwll' be held on Easter Monday.\nMiss Macttloncy of Trail spent the\nafternoon in Rossland.\nMrs. Chapman and daughter, Max*\nlne, of Trail spent the week end ln\nRossland as the guests of Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. S. Deschamps.\n\u25a0Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bean, on\nFriday, aVin. . .\nMrs. MoNaughton returned from\nSpokano.\nMr. Blackman of Trail is ln tho city.\nMiss A. Themes of Trail is in the\ncltv.\nMrs. L. A. Campbell has returned\nfrom the coast.\nA large oud'ence gathered at the\nSalvation Army citadel on Friday\nevening to hear Brigadier W. H.\nGreen's lecture on the groat congress\na* London and the Empress of Iroland\ndisaster.      ,\nMrs Douglas of Trail Is a week end\nv's.'tor of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J.\nLee.\nROBSON RANCHERS TO\nGET GOVERNMENT SEED\n(Sopolal to The Dally News.)\nROBSON, B.C., March 7.\u2014The\nMerck supplementary meeting of the\nRobson Farmers' institute was held\nThursday evening. A communication\nregarding seed distribution from the\ndepartment of agriculture. showed the\ngovernment was anxious to do all in its\npower to assist the ranchers along\nthis lino and offering liberal Inducements in seeds. It was decided . to\nleave a list open until March 20 for\nthoso desirous of obtaining corn and\noats and until Tuesday, Mareh 9 for\nmangel seeds.\nA communication regarding crop\ncontests along similar lines to that of\nprevious years, was also-received from\ntbp department. It i was decided to\ncompete thle year in potatoes and mangels. A bonus of J5 Is offered by the\ndepartment for ranchers who will keep\nan accurate account'-of the cost of\nproduction of the crops entered for\ncompetition.\nA communication from the dopant*\nmont strongly urging the entering of\nthe boys ond girls of the community\nlu tho children's crop contests, resulted 1 nthe adoption of the suggestion. A committee composed of H. P.\nGolden, A. D. Clyde and Walter Johnson was appointed to act .Id connection\nwith Dr. A. P. McDlarmld, president,\nand Gordon R. Brown, secretary.\nA talk on \"How to .make life more\nattractive on the ranch!' woe. given.\nMiss Ruth McDlarmld Is tho guest\nof Dr. and Mrs. Woiverton. of Nelson.\nTbe monthly meeting of the Robson\nWomen's Mission circle will be held\non Thursday next at .the home of Mrs.\nJames Fowler.\nGordon R. Brown was a visitor to\nTrail on Tuesday last.\nA D. Clyde spent Frida end Saturday In Noison, the guest of his\ndaughter, Mrs. Charles Lindsay,\nHALCYON NOTES\n(Hpec-lnl to The Dally News.)\n\u25a0HALCYON, B. C., March 7.\u2014Mike\nSkully returned from Revelstoke *Prir\n'day and left for Nelson Saturday. D.\nGallanio, Revelstoke, was here Friday\nsJai'V. P. Armstrong arid R.\" A. KII-\npatrlcH, Nelson, from Friday till Saturday. Leslie Prest returned*Jlonae.tp\nRossland this morning.\n' William Ban*. Canadian Pacific railway lineman, who was at -Arrowhead\non Friday, says the town lp on the\nqui viVo' With the prospect of Uie sawmill Industry being ro-cstabllshed\nthere. The Forest Mills eampany has\nbeep awarded the Insurnnoe money for\ntl^e property recently destroyed by fire\nat Comapllx and tbe probability is that\nArrowhead will be the site oboien jtor\nUMiOW-.-jtllU, 1.1\u2014111\nHORTICULTURIST  WILL\n8PEAK AT WILLOW POINT\nA. Scott of Willow Point has received a lettor from R. M. Wlnslow,\nhorticulturist of the department of\nagrloulturo at Victoria, saying that he\nwill address a meeting there on March\n20 on production and field courses. J.\nForsyth Smith, prairie market commissioner, will speak on market conditions in the prairie. In his letter,\nMr. Wlnslow expressed the wish that\nthe mooting be hold under the Joint\nauspices of the West Kootenay Farm\ners' institute and the Willow Point and\nDistrict Fruit Growers' association,\nMr. Wlnslow Is sending notices to\nmembers of tbe two associations.\nMeagher & Co,\n\u00bb New and Dainty\nSpring Waists\nSo many of them have just arrived that no woman.\nshould have the least trouble in discovering just what!\nshe wishes.   We have them in semi-tailored effects,\nwith Dutch and open collars, with long or short\nsleeves. Simple in design and\neffective in appearance.\nIn Cotton, Muslin, Voile.\nCrepe, Etc.\nPr\/ces from\n$1.50\n$2.50\nEach\nStore Notes:\n\u25a0 We do not permit our\nsalespeople to misrepresent\nthings, nor do we present\nthem falsely in our advertisements.\nThe grourdwork of our\nbusiness is honesty-our goods\nare honest, our methods are\nhonest. We aim to sell you\nmore than service. We sell\nthe best of merchandise\nat lowest prices. This,\ncombined with our perfected\nstore service, should make\nthis store your shopping\nplace.\nLook for announcement of Millinery Opening. Miss\nSmith of London, Ont., has tiken charge of our Millinery\nRoom this season and will be pleased to welcome old\ncustomers and new patrons.\nMeagher & Co.\nBAKER   8TREET\nTHE 8TORE  FOR  3TVLE THE  STORE  FOR  QUALITr*\nJ\nBAYNES NOTES.\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nBAYNES  LAKE,  B.C.,  March  7.-\nTliomas Rhclms left for Butto, Mont,\nyesterday.\nTho Farmers' institute held a successful meeting on March 1 aud about\n30 members were present. Tho preliminaries for a local show in thc sum-\nmor wero discussed with enthusiasm.\nAT ONCE!\n\"Pape's Diapepsin\" makes\nsick, sour, gassy stomachs feel fine\nDo some foods you cat hit back*\ntasto good, but work badly; torment\nInto stubborn lumps and cause a slok,\nsour, gassy stomach? Now, Mr. or\nMrs, Dyspeptic, Jot this down: Pape's\nDiapepsin digests everything, leaving\nnothing to sour and upset you. Thoro\nnever .was anything so safely quick, so\ncertainly effoctlve. No difference how\nbadly your .stomach Is disordered you\nwill get happy relief ln fivo minutes,\nbut what pleases you most is that it\nstrengthens and regulates your stomach so you can eat your favorite foods\nwithout fear.\nMost remedies glvo you relief sometimes\u2014 they are slow, but not sure.\n\u25a0\"Papo's Diapepsin'* Is quick, positive\nand. puts your stomach In a healthy\n'condition so the misery won't come\nback. .\n'. You feel different as soon as \"Pape's\nDluppp-un\" comas in contact, with tho\n.^bmadi-7-dletreee Jiuit vanialies\u2014your\nstomach gets sweet, no gases, no belching, no eructations of undigested food,\nyour head clears and you fool fine.\nGo now, make the best. Investment\nyou ever made, by getting a large 50-\n,ce.nt ease of Papo's piapeppin from any\ndrug store. Toil realise ln five minutes how needless It Is to suffer from\nindigestion, dyspepsia or any auunacb\ntUsora-jr, ...  . i u-u\u2014.\t\nPROFESSIONALJARpj\nGREEN  BROST, BURDEN & Col\nCivil Engineers, Dominion and B. C.\nLand Surveyors.\nSurveys of Lands, Mines,  Townsltea\nTimber Limits, etc.\nNelson, 51*6 Ward street, A. H. Green\nMgr.;  Victoria,  114 Pemberton   Bldg.\nF. C. Green;  Fort George, Hammond\nstreet, F. P. Burden.\na. l. Mcculloch\nHydraulic   Engineer.\nProvincial Land Surveyor.\nBaker St., Nelson, B.C.\nHOTEL_piRECTORY\nSHERBROOKE  HOTEL\nNelson. B. C.\nOne minuio's walk from C. P. R. station. Cuisine unexcelled; well heated\nand ventilated.\nUnder New Management.\nT. M. RIXEN, AUDITOR AND Accountant.    Room 15, K.W.C.   Block\n122-tl\nSYNOPSIS OP COAL\nMINING  REGULATIONS\nCoal mining rights of the Dominion\nin Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, the Yukon Territory, the Northwest Territories, and in a portion of\nthe Province of British Columbia, may\nbe leased for a term of twenty-one\nyears at an annual rental of $1 pet\nacre. Not more than 23(10 acres will\nbe leased to one applicant\nApplication for a lease must be\nmade by the applicant in person to the\nAgent or Sug-agent of the district of\nwhich the rights applied for are situ*\nated.\nIn surveyed territory tho land must\nbe described by sections or legal sub.\ndivisions of sections and in unsurvoyed\nterritory the .tract applied for shall be\nstaked out by the applicant himself\nEach application must be accompanied by a fee of |5 which will be re*\nfunded if tbe rights applies for are\nnot available, but not otherwise, a\nroyalty shall be paid on the merchantable output of the mine at the rate\nof five cents per ton.\nThe person operating the mine shall\nfurnish the Agent with sworn return*\naccounting for the full quantity of\nmerchantable coal mined and pay the\nroyalty thereon. If the coal mining\nrights are not being operated, such\nreturns should be furnished at leasi\nonce a year.\nThe lease will Include the coal mln.\nIng rights only, but the lessee ma)\nbe permitted to purchase whatevet\navailable .surface rights may be considered necessary for the working of\nthe mine at the rate of 110 an acre\nFor full information application\nshould be mado tb tbe Secretary of the\nDepartment of tho Interior, Ottawa, ot\nto any Agent of Sub-agent of Domla\nion Lands.\nW. W. CORY.\nDeputy Minister of tbe Interior\nN. B.\u2014 Unauthorized publication ol\nthis advertisement will not be paid\nfnr.     \u25a0\u2022\u25a0*\u2022\"\nBusiness   Directory\nAs1iAVERsT'~~\"'     '~\nB. w .widdowson.'assayer and\nChemist. Box A1108, Nelson, B.C.\nCharges: Gold, silver\" copper or\nlead, $1 each; gold-silver $1.50;\nsilver-load, $1.50. Other metals en\napplication.\n AUCTJONEERS^\nC. A. WATERMAN & CO.\u2014Opera blk.\nWM.  CUTLER  AUCTIONEER,  BOX\n474; phone 18. 100-tf\nIF YPU H.AVE A ROOM TO RENT\n.!_..'IBY \"A WAr*T AB\" ___i\n^      GROCERIES.\t\nA. MACDONALD & CO., WHOL&\nsale Grocers end Provision Merchants. Importers of Teas, Coffees,\nSpices, Dried Fruits, Staple and\nFancy Groceries, Tobaccos, Cigars,\nButter, Ekpts, Cheese and Packing\nHouse Produce. Office and warehouse corner of Front and Hall Sts.\nP.O. box 1095;  telephones 28 and 29.\nLODGEJ^OTigjS\nKOOTENAY LODGE NO 16, I.O.O.F.\n\u2014Meets evory Monday night in Odd-\nfellows* hall at 7:30 o'clock.\nQUEEN-CITY REBEKAH LODGE\nNo. 1G, I.O.O.F., meets first and third\nTuesdays, Oddfellows' hall at 8\no'clock.\nNELSON ENCAMPMENT NO. 7, 1.0.\nO.F.\u2014Meets seeond and fourth\nThursdays in Oddfellows- hall at 8\no'clock.\nCANTON CORONA NO. T-MEETS\nevery second Tuesday in Oddfellows'\nhall, at 8 o'clock.\nKNIGHTS OF PT\/THIAS MEETS\nTuesday nights In K. of P. ball.\nEagle block,\nLnny    NELSON lodge No. 818\nII II PI     meets    2nd    and    4th\n.W\u00bbValla    Thursday at  g  p-m ,\u201e\ni . .., Eagle halL\nCourt Kootenay Belle,\nmeets 4th Friday ln KJ>.\nhall, Eagle blook.\nC.O.F.\nA. O. F. COURT ELLEN\u2014MEETB\nfirst end third Monday In Eagle ball\nat 8 o'dlock..'\nCLAN JOHNSTONE, 212, StAvlg TN\nI. O. *6. F. ball first and third Fri-\ndayp-V 8 p.m.\nNELjl'sOI^oDGE NO. 6, B. P. O. B.\n_J<MeetsVrat and third Thursdays at\n8* P*<n. iiV the Eagle hall. All so-\njjourntagfymber, invited.   .  iso-'tf\nO. E.\u2014 Mots first and third Men*\n-twa j\u00bb k. oS\u00a3 mil\u00aba an, __,\nIjS,\n PAGE POUR\n\u20acfo Batty $tm\nMONDAY, MARCH 8, 1919\nCtK \u00a9aaj? jitu)i\u00bb\nPublished every morning except\nSunday by The Nows Publishing\nCompany, Limited, Nelson, B.C.. Cannda.\nROBB SUTHERLAND,\nEditor and. Manager.\nBusiness letters should be addressed\nand cheques and money orders made\npayable to The Newa Publishing Company, Limited, and in no case to individual members ot the staff,\nAdvertising rate cards and sworn detailed statements ot circulation mailed\non request, or may be seen at the offices of any advertising agency recognized by the Canadian Press Association.\nSubscription rates 60 cents por\nmonth; 12.50 for six months; 15 per\nyear.\nMONDAY,   MAROH,  8.   1915\nGREEKS WANT WAR; THEIR KING\nMORE CAUTIOUS.\nDespatches Indicate that an Interesting situation exists In Greece. King\nConstantlne, a popular ruler, who was\nresponsible for the reorganization of\nthe Greek army, favors a policy o!\ncontinued neutrality, while the peo-\npie wish to enter the war against their\nold enemies, the Turks.\nFor the moment the king's will\nseems to prevail. It is doubtful If it\nwill continue to sway the policy unless King Constantlne Is awaiting circumstances which he believes will develop a more propitious occasion for\nthe Hellenic forces to be thrown Into\nthe scale.\nThe people of Greece are hereditary\nenemies of the Musselmans. It Is\nless than 86 years since Greece after\nnine years of struggle won her independence from the rule of the sultan,\na success in which the destruction of\nthe Turkish fleet at Navarlno by the\nFranco-British-Russian fleet was a\ncontributing factor. And, again in\n1896 Greece took; the part of thc\nGreek Christians who revolted against\nthe Turks In Crete and declared war\nagainst the porte. Greece suffered a\ndisastrous defeat from the full effects\nof which she was only saved by joint\naction by the powers.\nIn the Balkan war of 1912-13 Greece\nafter the Balkan league had beaten\nTurkey attained an extension of territory. But her desires, despite success In the war in which Bhe and\nServia engaged in against Bulgaria\nover the division of the spoils, were\nnot entirely fulfilled.\nBut the Greeks had a taste ot victory over the Turks and the desire\nfor further territorial expansion and\nfor another fight with their hereditary\nenemies Is probably the controlling\n.factor in the popular demand at tills\ntime ror intervention on the side of\nthe triple entente and its allies.\nTHE SALE OF BONDS DIRECT TO\nTHE   PUBLIC.\nThere should he more over-the-\ncounter bond sales. Kaslo about two\nyears ago was successful In disposing of a substantial issue of school\ndebentures to the people of Its own\ncity. N'elson had success ln selling\nbaby bonds of $100 denomination to\nlocal investors. Recently Philadelphia In seven' hours sold $5,000,000 4\nper cent bonds direct to the public.\nThe provincial government of Ontario\nmet with such success in selling\nto the people of the province an\nissue of bonds soon nfter the war\ncommenced that a second issue has\nbeen determined upon.\nIn this province municipalities have\nas collateral against loans from banks\nlarge Issues of bonds. Most of these\nissues could be sold at a price which\nwould bring in 5 per cent or over to\nthe Investor.\nBy selling these bonds over-the-\ncounter to the public the cities could\nsecure a market for unsold issues and\nthe public would benefit by the returns upon its money which would be\nlarger than paid on savings accounts.\nThe security behind the bonds is ample enough to make the investment\nas \"safe as the Bank of England.\"\nTo reach the Investor the cities\nshould advertise their issues, placing\nbefore the public in an attractive way\nthe benefits of Investing money in the\nhome town debentures from a personal and public standpoint\nJOE MARTIN GETS QUICK ACTION\nIN VANCOUVER.\nJoe Martin gets action. During the\nfirst week of publication of his new\nLiberal paper, the Vancouver Evening\nJournal, he has been sued for $25,000\nfor libel, a despatch reports he has retracted the statement complained of\nand has apologized; he has got Into a\nwarfare of words with the two other\nLiberal newspapers of Vancouver, he\nhas been openly designated a \"liar\"\nat a public meeting and his statements regarding the Liberal party In\nthis province have been condemned\nby the Main Street Liberal club of\nVancouver, after a heated discussion\nduring which the president left the\nchnlr to support Mr. Martin.\nFor one week's work that Is pretty\ngood, even for Mr. Martin.\nThere is always room on top. That\nIs where the business of the persistent advertiser arrives.\nThe German government .ays fiat\none of its submarines flro.i on the\nBritish hospital ship Asturlas by mistake. It undoubtedly was a mistake\nbut not of the kind that the Germans claim.\nThe British soldiers in the firing\nline make it \"a duty to keep well,\"\naccording to a war correspondent.\nThey consider it their duty to their\ncountry to keep In the best physical\ncondition for fighting. The citizen at\nhome owes the same duty to the state.\nIt Is said that the people of Constantinople are beginning to suspect\nthe truth of government assurances\nthat the allied fleet Is doing little\nharm to the Dardanelles defenses.\nThey soon will be able to hear the\nshells explode.\nThe Vosslsche Zeltung says that\nwhoever in Germany eats moro than\nhe actually needs to maintain his bod.\nHy strength is guilty of treason to his\ncountry. The Prussian government\nseeing to It that no one has a\nchance to make much of a glutton of\nhimself.\nIt is estimated by Commissioner\nGrace of Lethbrldge that if every\navailable foot of vacant ground In\nthat city were placed under cultivation\nand planted with garden vegetables\nand potatoes the citizens could raise\n$10,000 worth of produce from that\nsource this year. There may, not be\nas much vacant ground in Nelson but\nthis city could do proportionately as\nwell.\nBangert & Lindemann, a firm of\nNorth Dakota land agents, has sent\nout a circular stating that Canada Is\n\"out of the question\" as a country\nin which to buy land at this time\nbecause \"the proposed tax levy per\n160 acres for non-resident Canadian\nland-owners is $500.\" That Is one of\nthe latest lies about Canada which Is\nbeing spread In the United States by\ninterested persons.\nRED CR08S NOTE8.\nAt a meeting of the actlvo members\nof tho Red Cross society Saturday afternoon it was decided that a general\nmeo|(ng of all the members, active and\nassociate should be held the first Saturday in each month at 8 o'clock at\ntho depot when the business of the\nsociety can bo discussed.\nIt was also decided to give a tea and\nsale of home cooking and homemade\ncandy. Mesdames Armstrong, Hlnton\nand R. J. Smith were appointed a commltteo for the tea; Mesdames C. Watts\nand D. Kerr a committee for the home\ncooking and Mrs. G. A. Hunter will\nlook after the candy table.\nTho society acknowledges another\nbale from Creston containing the following: Seven pairs band knitted socks,\nthreo' pairs wristlets, Blx cholera belts,\ntwo pairs bed socks, six wash cloths,\n\u25a0threo days shirts, one nightshirt, seven\nsurgical shirts and one. housewife.\nCOLD 8TORAGE.\n\"She hesitated a long while. 1 wonder how she finally came to decide to\ntake the matrimonial plunge.\"\n''I think her younger sister pushed her off the dock, so to speak.\"\nThe Gourmand\u2014I suppose you've\nhad t0 put up with \"Tipperary\" ever\nsince the war started?\nThe Walter (his labors unrewarded)\n\u2014Yes, sir, and tip a rarity.\nRather unexpected was the reply of\na Mrs. Tommy Atkins to a gentleman\nwho inquired if her husband was at\nthe front: \"Yus,\" she said; \"an' I\n'ope 'e'll serve the Germans as 'e\nserved me.\"\nCaller\u2014Pardon me, sir, but is there\nanother artist In this building?\nArtist\u2014There is not. There is, however, a man on the fourth floor who\npaints.\nNews of Sport\nRESTA CAPTURES\nVANDERB1LT NIP\nItalian Driver Who Won Grand Prix\nMakes 67(\/2 Miles Per Hour\nat San Francisco.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nSAN FRANCISCO, Cal\u201e March 7 \u2014\nD. Resta, driving car No. 9, in which\nhe won the Grand Prix a week earlier,\ncaptured on Saturday the 300.3-mile\nVanderbilt cup race over the course\nof the international exposition, ln\nwhat is said to have been one of\nthe most thrilling contests ever run\nIn this automobile classic. His time\nwas 4 hours 27 minutes and 27 seconds. He maintained an average speed\nof 67% miles per hour.\nHoward Wilcox, No. 26, was second\nin 4:34:36; Eddie Pullen third, 4:35:\n57, and Ralph De Palma fourth, 4:30:\n07.\nOther cars finished as follows*.\nFifth, William Carton; sixth, C. R.\nNewhouse; seventh, Barney Oldfield*.\neighth, Louis Disbrow; ninth, Hughie\nHughes; tenth, A. Klein.\nIt was a gruelling race from start\nto finish. The pace set by the winner subjected the cars to a terrific\nstrain, so that long hefore the finish\nless than half ot those who answered\nthe starter's call were left in the running. . .\nEvery few minutes a car went into\nthe pits for repairs. Upsets were frequent because the track became slippery from oil drippings. Notwithstanding this, only one serious accident occurred. When Bob Burman's\ncar turned over his mechanician, Joe\nCleary, received a broken thigh and\nmay 'be internally injured.\nINDIAN PRNCES\nGIVE TO EMPIRE\nEnthusiasm for Successful Outcome of\nWar Is Unabated\u2014Five Million for Relief\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, March 7.\u2014Through Reuter's Ottawa Agency.\u2014A special despatch from Delhi indicates that enthusiasm for the successfuPoutcome of\ntbe war continues unabated. The Indian relief fund now reaches a total\nof $6,000,000.\nThe largest sum previously raised in\nIndia was $1,263,000, contributed in\n1900 for relief of the acute famine of\nthat ycar. Tile chiefs and nobelmen\nof India continue to present valuable\ngifts of every description for the prosecution of the war. Last month's\ndonations included $8,100 annually\nfrom the Maharajah of Dati and his\nsirdars; from another native potentate, J8.100; from the nizeamo of\nHydrobad, a hospital of 50 beds.\nMore ambulances are given by another and 50 camels come from another, while from others there are contributions of large quantities of hay\nand blankets. Ono loyal rajah announces that he will pay his soldiers\nfrom the revenues of his estates.\n\u25a0***><***'<S*<***v><i'-<\u00bb^^\nAn Eastern View.\nThe Nelson, British Columbia, board\nof trade urges the citizens to grow\nfoodstuffs on all vacant lots in the\ncity. The west begins to learn the\nmost valuable mines have been lying\nunworked.\u2014Toronto Globe.\nLUMBER TRADE COMMISSION TO\nAUSTRALIA,\nThe appointment of H. R. Macmil-\nlan as lumber trade commissioner to\nAustralia is a most satisfactory one.\nMr. Macmillan as head of the forest\nbranch at Victoria has gained a wide\nknowledge of tbe Industry In British\nColumbia which will stand him in\ngood stead In his mission to build up\ntrade In lumber for this province.\nBritish Columbia once controlled\ntwo-thirds of the lumber business to\nAustralia; It now has only 5 per cent\nof it. It is In an endeavor to Improve\nthis situation and, by finding a market for tbe glut of lumber from the\ncoast mills, to provide better trade for\n\u2022tat, J\u00bb4i\u00bbir>i In th* Interior ot tbe\njkotlM* Out R. I*. Oram, W'P.. press*\net' apoa \u00abr George Foet- Vnlnlfter\ndf trade Mia* commerce, <\u2022 neVl for\n* IM appointment ot a c*nmiu*taner\nSir Oeorge, as was anuVunced, (consented and Mr. Macmilfnn ha* M\u00bbm\nAppointed to cony. \u00ab\u00bb. the worlC    I\nThe Common Enemy.\nGermany is the common enemy of\nthe nations of Europe, both great and\nsmall, and the allies are obviously\nprepared to welcome to their stand\nards all who are able to contribute\nto her more speedy and complete over-\nthrow.\u2014London Telegraph.\nPanama Canal Receipts.\nIn the first six months of its operation the Panama canal has collected\n$2,000,000 in tolls. Not so. bad for a\nbeginning, but at the same rate the\nrevenue at the end of the year will\nfall $11,000,000 short of meeting the\nannual interest and sinking fund on\nthe bonds Issued and permit of their\nretirement within a reasonable time.\nBut the canal was something like the\nstreet car system in western cities\u2014\nthey were never expected to be telf-\nsustalning for the first few years.\u2014\nLethbrldge Herald.\nKaiser Worship.\nThe military caste in the kennel\nprovinces of Prussia has always de-\nlighted In a dog-like attitude toward\nits Hohenzollern sovereigns. Prussia\nowed its military success to It; and If\nthe dogs have shown a devoted fidelity, their successive masters have\nbeen careful to throw them the hest\nbones. But what has developed during the last half century, and still\nmoro during the preBent war, has\nbeen the Bteady extension of this\nblind personal feeling, natural and\nalmost admirable in the primitive rob*\nber*noblllty east of the Elbe, to the\nmasses of a great modern nation, in\nwhom It appears not only Incongruous\n'but immoral. Yet the basis is much\nthe same; It Is as the winners and\ndistributors of the spoil of a world\nthat the Oerman nation has learned to\nlook up to the Hohenzollerns; the national self-surrender can hardly be\nthe same when that role has been\ntaken away for ever from Its sovereigns.\u2014London Chronicle.\nACTION  AGAINST LIQUOR\nLICENSE BYLAW HEARD\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, Ont., March 7.\u2014Mr. Justice Middleton of Toronto, at the weekly session of tlio high court here yesterday, reserved deeision in tho decision of the London Licensed VIctualers'\nassociation to quash Uie license reduction bylaw, which was endorsed by tho\nratepayers in January last. The hotel\nmen claim tiiat the petition upon which\nthe vote was based was insufficiently\nsigned.\nMEDICAL STUDENTS AT FRONT\nWILL GET THEIR DIPLOMAS\n(By Dally News Leased Wire)\nTORONTO, March 7.\u2014The medical\ncouncil has agreed to grant without\nexamination its diplomas to fifth year\nstudents, otherwise qualified, who are\ngoing with the overseas contingent.\nPresentation of certificates from the\ncommanding officer saying that they\nare going with the overseas forces and\npayment of all fees are tbe only formalities required.\nOVERTIME PUV\nDown   Presbyterians   in   Hotly   Contested Game\u2014Losers Led by 15\nPoints at Half Time\nIn a closely contested game, the outstanding features of which were the\nhard checking throughout, the great\nshooting of the Presbyterians in the\nfirst half and the excellent work of\nthe Methodists in the last period in\novercoming a 15-nolnt lead, , the\nMethodist basketball team on Saturday night defeated tho Fresbyterlans\nto 33. At the end of full tlmejjhe\nscore stood 33 all and overtime play\nwas necessary. The winning basket\ncamo ln less than a minute after thc\nball was centred, Curran passing the\nball up the floor to Turner, who made\na pretty shot from some distance out.\nThe Presbyterians had easily the\nbest of the first half, leading their\nopponents at the end of the period\nwith a 25 to 10 score. The shooting\nof the losers ln this period was phenomenal, baskets being scored from\novery point on the floor, several being\nshot from some distance past centre,\nand others resulted from difficult one-\nhanded shots from scrimmages. At\nthe close of the first half it looked\nvery much as if the Presbyterians had\nVICTORIAS HOLD\nMELVILLE TO TIE\nSensational      Work      by      Mackenzie\nBrothers Is Feature\u2014Eskimos\nBeaten by Monarchs\n(By Dally Newa Leased Wire)\nMELVILLE, Sask., March 7.\u2014Playing whirlwind hockey all the way, the\nToronto Victorias, winners of the Ontario Hockey association championship and the contenders for the Allan\ncup, held the Melville team to an 8 to\n8 tie in the first game of the series,\nplayed here last night.\nSensational work by the Mackenzie\nbrothers was the feature of the game\nand time and time again either Harry\nor his brother Billy would bring the\nspectators to their leet with thrilling\nend to end rushes.\nMonarchs Beat Eskimos\n.UEGINA, Sask., March 7.\u2014Not\ncounting the thirteenth goal scored as\nthe gong for time sounded ln the\ntimer's box, the score of the first two\nelimination games between the Winnipeg Monarchs, Manitoba champions,\nand the Edmonton Eskimos here last\nnight, was 9 to 3 in favor of the Monarchs.\nAs for thc merits of the game, considering the condition of the Ice it was\nnot as bad as it might have been, but\ncapture of the Allan cup will take\nbetter hockey than either team showed\nat any stage of the game.\nThe ice was lumpy and soft, scaling\noff under the skates and the players\nfound it most difficult to carry the\npuck along with any speed. Before\nthe Ice got bad, which was not long,\nthe players put up some fast work\nand it was mostly in the Monarchs1\nfavor, but tliey found Lyne, the Eskimos' rover, everywhere. He was al\nmost Jn every play. His tactics were\nabsolutely clean and though he ftot\nbruise on the foot In the second half\nit was an accident, Marplcs checking\nhim when he had the puck close to\nhis toes.\nThe Regina fans who saw the Ed\nmonton-Vancouver game declare that\ntho Eskimos appeared to be an en\ntirely dltferent team against the\nMonarchs.\nHorses For Sale\nWe have Four Teams of Heavy. Horses suitable for Logging or\n\u2022Ranch Work which can bo bought CHEAP FOR CASH. These horses\nare all young and sound and weigh from 2,700Jbs. to 3,400 lbs. pep team.\nAPPLY:\nWest Transfer Co.\nBy Buying Goods\nMade at Home\nYou Help the Other Fellow Keep His Job\nAnd He Helps You Keep Yours\nNelson Brewing Co., Ltd.\nPhone 24\nEstablished 1893\nBox 732\nThe A. Bernheim Co.\nDEALERS    IN    ALU    KINDS   OF    SECOND-HAND    FURNITURE,\nSTOVES,   TOOLS,    ETC.\nNow is the time to mako your dollar count as wo need the monoy\nand will sell at great reductions all goods in our stock,\nWE  ALSO  BUY   HIDES  AND  FURS AT FULL MARKET VALUES\nJOSEPHINE   STREET,   NEAR   BAKER NELSON,   B.C.\nROSEBUDS EASILY\nDEFEAT VICTORIA\nFinal   Game   of   Season   In   Pacific\nCoast   League   Finds   Former\nChampions in Deep Cellar.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nPORTLAND, Ore., March 7.\u2014In the\nfinal Pacific Coast Hockey association\nname  here   lust  night  the Portland\nRosebuds defeated Victoria by a score*\nof 6 to 2.   The former champions were\noiitplayei in every position.   Tho final\nstanding of tho league is as follows:\nWon. Lost. For. Against.\nVancouver   ..13      4     113      71\nPortland   .... 9      \u00bb      91      83\nVictoria   i     13      64     110\nWants Western Officials.\nVANCOUVER,   B. 0\u201e   March   7.\u2014\nFrank Patrick, president or the Pa\nthe game stowed away on ice but tbecifio Coast   Hockey  association,\n8TEAMER ARRIVALS.\nAt New York\u2014Ryndam, Rotterdam.\nAt Liverpool\u2014LuBltanla, New York.\nAt London\u2014Syria, St. John.\nAt'  Rotterdam\u2014Nleiiw   Amsterdam,\nNew York.\nAt Naples\u2014Duga u\" Again, New Yorlt*.\ni\nFRENCH AIRMEN NEARLY\nLOST LIFE  IN ARABIA\nA thrilling flight by a Eritlsh niu\na French airman, in which the luUor\nnearly lost his life Is reported from\nEgypt. Seaman Grail of the Fnr.-.-h\nnavy, and Capt. Stirling left one of\nbis majesty's ships on Dec. 31 o,l *-\nseaplant to make a reconnaissance of\nthe Wady el Araba, a 'broadtvalley between tho Gulf of Akaba and the De-id\nsea. On the return Journey the engine stopped at a height of 470>> feel,\nbut Grail cleverly volplaned, alighting\non the eastern side of the valley. The\nlanding was so violent that he was\nshot out of tho machine and 1m Ity\nbruised, while Capt. Stirling received\na severe shaking. Calculating that\nAkaba was 18 miles away they sot off\nout to find their ship, Capt. Stirling\nsupporting Grail. They covered five\nmiles in three and a half hours when\nGrail collopsed and Capt. Stirling pushed on alone. After an exciting Journey\ncontinually hiding to avoid Arabs he\nreached Akaba Beach 11 hours after\nthe accident. He hailed his ship and\nwas taken on iboard In an exhausted\ncondition. Tbe following morning\nparty set out for Grail, but searched\nunsuccessfullM all day. Meanwhile\nGrail by great exertions had reached\nAkaba Beach In the evening but wus\nto exhausted to attract the attention\nof the ship ond wns mortified to see\nher steam away. She returned later,\nhowever, and her searchlights discovered the Frenchman, who was rescued\nafter he had been without food for\nnearly threo days. ,\nG. Ralph Lawrence of Revelstoke, assistant manager of the Forest Mills ot\nBritish Columbia, enme In on the roust\ntrain Inst night nnil registered nt. tlm\nHume.  _ _ .._\nMethodists came back in the lust\nperiod and by steady hard work\ncaught up.\nIn this period Turner, who was\nplaying guard for the victors, replaced\nElliott on tho firing line, und the latter went back to guard. This arrangement considerably strengthened\nthe offensive powers of tlio team and\nJust before tiie whistle went for full\ntime, Nagle, who had been pitting a\ngood game al! evening, dropped the\nball into the basket for the tying goal,\nbringing the crowd to its foot.' There\nwere no Individual stars of the game,\nall the players filling their positions\netpjally well. The Methodists proved\nthe hardest checkers and thus kept\ntheir opponents away from tho basket,\nbut the latter had a little the better\nof the combination, particularly in the\nfirst frame\nA. B. Godfrey handled the game and.\nconsidering the stiff checking, kept\nthe fouls down to a minimum. C. H.\nMcllardy acted as timekeeper.\nIt Is expected that a meeting will be\nheld early this week for the purpose\nof organizing a church league with the\nAnglicans, Methodists and Presbyterians entered.   The teams:\nMothodlsts\u2014Forwards, R. S. Turner,\nH. Nagle; centre, W. A. Curran;\nguards, G. Elliott, R. Maurer.\nPresbyterians\u2014Forwards, J. Laugh\nton, H. Gibbs; centre, Bruce Suther\nland; guards, A. Simons, A. E. Gra.\nham.\nnounced today that he would insist\non the appointment of western officials for the world's series this month.\nHe has submitted the names of\nThomas Phillips and Skinner Poulin\nto the National Hockey association.\nThe dates fixed for the games are\nMarch 22, 2-1 and 26, and on alternate\nnights if further play is necessary.\nBRITISH FOOTBALL.\n(Canadian Associated Pross.)\nLONDON,   Murch   \".\u2014Football    results: Watford 5, Southumpton 2.\nIrish cup semi-finals\u2014 J.Infield 2,\nBristol 0; Shelboume 0, Belfast Celtic 0\nNorthern union\u2014Burrow 10, Brougb-\nton 13; Bradford 11, Hull 23; Bramloy\n7, Battloy 0; Dewsbury 14, St. Helens\n3; Kingston 15. Huddersfield IB; Wid-\nncs 3, Huntsley 14; Leigh 23, Halifax\n8; Oldham 23, Stanford 0; Swlnton 11,\nWarrington 2; Wlgan 13, Rochdale 5;\nYourk 13, Runcorn 3.\nForest Mills of B. C, Ltd.\nHEAD   OFFICE,   REVELSTOKE\nMills: Cascade, Comaplix, Three Valley, Taft, Nelson\nMANUFACTURERS   OF   LUMBER,   LATH,   SHINGLES\nFor Sale: SLABWOOD, 4-foot,\nand 16-inch STOVEWOOD\nPrompt Deliver\/.\nD. A.\nTerms Cash.\nOrders taken by:\nMcFARLAND, Room 6, K. W. C. Block.   P.O. Box 24.   Phone 49.\nJ. H. LEMMON, Manager Nelson Branch.. Phono 15.\nBUSINESS MEN WIN TWO\nVOLLEY  BALL GAMES\n( Aa a preliminary to the basketball\nfame on Saturday night ln tho Y.M.\nCA. the business men's volley ball\nteam defeated the young men's team\nin two straight -games, tiie scores in\nthe first being 21 to'18 and in the\nseeond 21 to 9.   The teams:\nBusiness men\u2014T. D. Stark, C. H.\nStark, A. B. Godfrey, G. Arnesen, -W.\nB, Kinnear.\nYoung men\u2014R. S. Turner, G. Amas,\nGr. Elliott, C. B. Armbrlater, H. GUbbs.\nTORONTO VICTORIAS ARE\nAUTOMATICALLY SUSPENDED\n(By Daily Newa LeaBed Wire.)\nTORONTO, March 7.\u2014-Notice was\nsent today by wire to Secretary Robinson of the Canadian Hockey association and President Haydon of the Saskatchewan hockey association that the\nOntario Hockey association had with\ndrawn its challenge for the Allan cup\nand that it was not represented 'by the\nToronto  Victorias.\nTho latter automatically supended\nthemselves from the Ontario Hockey\nassociation 'by violating instructions of\nthe executive.\nBRITTON BEATS TOLAND.\nNEW YORK, March 7.\u2014Jack Brit-\nion outfought and outpointed Jack To-\nland of Philadelphia In a 10-round\nlimit in Brooklyn last night.- TJio men\nweighed in ns follows: Written-. 1.18',*;\n!b>land, Hji, .   \u25a0, _..\n\u2022^\u25a0*i>-$>*-*^*s-^\n<$> SPORTING  NOTES. <$>\n$ $>\n\u25a0Lacrosse magnates arc attempting lo\nform a national commission which will\ngovern the professional game from\ncoast to coast.\nIf tho basketball gamo on Saturday\nwas a fair sample of the class of ball\nwhich will 'bo played by the church\nteams, the league is assured of success.\nThe Olympic games which wero to\nhave been held in Berlin in 1016 will bo\ncalled off on account of a big military\nmeet which will likely take place there\nthis year.\nThe Pacific Coast Hockey league will\nbe composed of six clubs next season if\nthe negotiations of the Patricks to Include Seattle, Spokane and Taeoma are\nsuccessful.\nIn order to keep his players in strict\ntraining, Manager McCreedie of the\nPortland Northwestern league club,\nhas stated that his players must eat\n'but two mealH a day,'and must also\nhike to and from the park.\nCol. Ruppert, part owner of the New\nYork Americans, has confirmed tho re.\nport that ho has offered tho Philadelphia club $25,v00 tor \"Home-Run1\nBaker. Bnker is likely to remain with\nthe Philadelphia club as Connie Mack\nstates that Baker's price is $50,000.\nYOUR EGGS CAN BE DISPOSED OF\nBY USING A WANT AD\nJ. A. MacKinnon\nWholesale and Retail Tobaccos.\nProprietor   Trail's   Popular   Billiard\nand Pool Hnll.\nXRAIt, B, C.\t\nWestern Money Western Made\nShould Stat) at Home\nfor Western Trade\nWhen you take out your life insurance consider\nwhat it means to you and British Columbia to keep\nthe premium payments in this province. It means a\ngreat deal more than we realize. It will help to develop the interests we have at heart. It will assist\nvery materially to the benefit of the province at large\nand it will undoubtedly come back to you in some\nway during the coming years.\nIs this not sufficient reason why you should insure\nin our company? If not, then remember that our\ncompany's percentage of assets to liabilities is $2.32,\nwhich is protection that is offered by few other companies. \t\nThe British Columbia\nLife Assurance Co.\nWESTERN  COMPANY HEAD OFFICE, VANCOUVER\nLocal Agent:   H. E, DOUGLAS.caro of City & Farm Lands Company.\nSeeds   Seeds\nWE HAVE JUST OPENED UP A LARGE A8SORTED STOCK OF\nField and Garden Seeds\nConsisting of\nCLOVER, TIMOTHY,  ALFALFA  AND  RYE\nQUEEN   CITY   LAWN   GRASS\nSTEELE-BRIGGS 8EED CO.'S GARDEN SEEDS\nONION   8ETS,   ETC.\nThese Are All Fresh and the Most Reliable Obtainable\nWHOLESALE   AND   RETAIL\nNelson Hardware Co.\nP.O. BOX  1050\nNELSON, B.C.\nJohn Burns & Sons\nUeneral Contractor\nud Builders\nSA8H   AND   DOOR   FACTORY. NEL80N   PLANING   MILLS.\nVERNON   8TREET,   NEL80N,  B.C.\nEvery   Description   of  Building   Material Kept In Stock.    Estimates Given\non Stone, Brlok, Conoreto and Frame Buildings,\nMAIL    ORDERS    PROMPTLY    ATTENDED    TO.\nBOX  iit, i. \u201e...     PHON\u00ab  171.\n\\\n \u2014        .:\u25a0   ^=zrM\n5<*\nMONDAY, MARCH 8, 1915\nCfaBaU?\nPAGE FIVE\ntoday's\nSpecial\n2,000 Pounds Good\nCARROTS\n$1.00\nPer 100 lbs.\nStar Grocery\nPHONE 10\nStore of Quality\nWHEA\nWITCH\nPOR EXPORT\n'JL\nAfter   Seed   and   Food   Requirements\nHave Been1 Met Dominion Will\nHave 28,174,973 Bushels\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.) .\nOTTAWA, March 7.\u2014That after allowing for seed requirements and for\nfood requirements until the fall threshing;, the Dominion will have on available for export to Great Britain, if\nrequired, 28,174,973 bushels of wheat,\nla the statement from tho government\nfor publication today. The statement\nshows that on Feb. s last there were\n37,004,717 bushels in elevators and\nflour mills; 12,571,870 in transit and\n29,545,000 in the farmers' hands. For\nseed requirements It is estimated that\n10,250,000 bushels will bo needed; for\nfood requirements until the fall\nthreshing is done, 25,000,000 will be\nneeded, or a total of 44,250,000. Deducting this from the amount on hand,\n34,880,593 bushels are left, to which\nare to be added imports from Feb. 8 to\nMarch 2, totaling 36,370 bushels, or a\ntotal altogether of 34,916,963. Subtracting from this amount exports from\nFeb. 8 to March 2, amounting to\n6,741,990 bushels, a margin is ltjft tor\nexport, if required, of 28,174,973\nbushels.\nWhat Do You Want to\nExchange ?\nIf it is an old piece of furniture that is perfectly\ngood but which you would gladly exchange for\nsomething more useful to you, try a DAILY NEWS\nWant Ad. Thsre is come one among our twenty\nthousand readers who has the article you want and\nwants the art 'eta you have.\nIf you want to sell an article such as a phonograph, a stove, or anything in the household you\ncan got a buyer through a small ad. in THE\nDAILY NEWS classified. The cost is very small,\nand there is no other way in which you can reach\nso many p.oplr quickly and with success as\nthrough these Want Ads.\nTry a Want Ad. Today\nIt's the Economical Way\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nMarkets - Mining - Finance j\nFAVOR SHORT IE\nBusiness Is Small at Short Session in\nNew  York  and  Mostly at   Expense of Quoted Value.\n(By Dally. News Leased Wire)\nW'KW YORK, March 7.\u2014Some reaction from Friday's strong undertone\nwas manifested! by -Saturday's stock\nmarket, trading in the short session being generally at the expense of quoted\nvalues. Dealings were restricted by a\nstorm which cut off communication\nwith Interior points.\nTraders as a whole were again committed to the short side but were cautious in their attitude. Shares of the\nSoo road were almost tihe only railway issues to make further improvement, most of the Pacifies, trunk lines\nand grangers being under moderate\npressure.\nFinancial operations of tho weok\nwere primarily responsible for the\nlargo actual expansion of bank loans\nwhich exceeded $32,000,000, while the\ncash holdings were slightly increased.\nCash reserves were contracted., however, to the extent of over $5,000,000.\nBonds were, steady with total sales,\npar valuo of $1,597,000, Panama registered 3s advanced % on call on tho\nweek.\n$> PRODUCE. <8>\nMONTREAL PROVISIONS.\nMONTBBAD, March 7.\u2014-Cheese:\nFinest wesierns, 17Hi at 18; easterns',\n17 at H.\nButter: Choicest creamery, 35; seconds, 34.\n\u25a0Eggs: Fresh, 32; selected, 27; No,\n1  stork, 24;   No. 2 stock, 22.\nPork: Heavy Canada short mess. 28;\nshort cut hack, 21%.\nfilV!fiVl&!fi6&6\u00a3\u00a3\u00a36fli&\n>aily News Want Advts.\nOAILV   NEWS   CLASSIFIED   AD\nRATES\nOne oent a word per insertion, four\n:ente a word per week, fifteen oenta a\nvord per month when cash accom*\nsanies the order. Otherwise on. cent\nper word per Insertion straight. No\necour,ts opened for want ada.    Mini*\nium  charge  25  cents.        s\nPOULTRY AND LIVESTOCK\njlIIODE ISLAND BEDS \u2014 \u2022 MoVinB,\nmust sacrifice scventy-fivft yr-nrllngB,\nullets, cockerels.   Have a look quick.\n. MoClure, two doors east of\" the sas\nvorks. COS)\nVANTED\u2014One ibul|.\nFrultvalo,  B.C.\nM, II. Williams,\n(20.1)\n'OR BALK\u2014Mammoth\nesffs, $2.00 per eleven,\n'roctor, U.C.\nPekln   tluck\nA. Cameron,\n(201)\nor SALE\u2014Roistered Ayrshire bull,\n. 3-years old, cheap. Aipply S. Barkley,\nMo, B.C. (204)\n.ARY CHICKS. Huolcllngs   inn* ha'Ch-\nIng esse, poultry and    fruit   form\nlaying combination: catalogue fnr-\nvarded on application Charles Provan\n.angley Port, near Vancouver   2?-l-tr\nPLUMBING AND  HEATING.\nE.  K. STRACHAN,  120 Baker street.,\nplumbers'  supplies,   estimates   free;\nwork guaran   ed.    Phone 262.\nFOR  RENT\nIC   W.   P,   BLOOK   \u2014   Housekeeping\nsuites nnd  rooms for rent    Terms\nmoderate.   A. Mn.cdonn.ld & Co. 272-tf\nFOB    RENT -\u2022 Hulto   of    furnished\nhousekeeping    rooms    in    Annable\nblock.   Enquire room 32. 272-tf\nFURlNISHiEI) SUITES for rent.    Ap\nply Kerr Apartments. 228-tf\nFOR  RENT\u2014-Furnished   housekeeping\nrooms; coal nnd gas ranges. Enquire\nQueen Cigar Stove. (178)\nFURNISHED\nstreet.\nROOMS,    .111\nSilica\n   (1S7)\nFOR   RENT\u2014Furnish**!   four-roomed\nmodern  houso.    Apply  1,21 Latimer\nstreet. (206)\nOR SALE-Itallan and Camiolnn bees,\nPrices according to strength of col-\nny and number taken. Also supplies\nnd* equipment. Apply H. I*. -VlcDon-\n\u25a0Idr, Rutland,  B.  C. (160)\nOR SALE\u2014Homer pigeons, $2 a pair,\nIndian Runner drake and laying duck\nJ per pair. H. S. Matheson, Nelson,\n:.C.     *  (185)\n,ARGER, BETTER THAN EVER\u2014\n|j 'White   Wyandottes, White Orplng-\n\u25a0ms, White Leghorn eggs, J2.00 per 15;\nhicks, 2fic, Order early. Inspection\nnvlted. R#bert B. Hay, O. K. Bak-\nfry.   . (200)\nVAR PRICES\u2014Trap-nested White\nLeghorns   and   White   Wyandottes\natchlng eggs, $1.25 per setting, {6.50\nllor 100.   Day olds first week ln April,\n18.00 per 100. B. W. Leen, Crescent\ngalley, B.C. (184)\nOR SALE\u2014Barred Rock eggs (eastern strain)   $1.50 per 15;   also  few\nIfholce Barred Rock cockerels, $3 ench.\nRoynon,  Somcrrfet  Poultry*   yards,\njlelwyn St., Nelson; phono R393. (215)\nOR SALE\u2014Horse, harness and light\nwagon.; price $150.   R. Haigh, Koch's\n\u2022Idlng,  B.C; (198)\n'OR SALE\u2014Cypher standard Incuba*\n., tor, 144-eggs, new, perfect condition,\n^ammo**,*., Proctor, B.C. (217)\n-OR SALE\u2014Or exchange for pullets,\nsingle comb 'Rhode Island Red cock-\nrols, imported birds; 305 Latimer\ntreet. (230)\n^JJELP WANTED\u2014MALE^^\n15    WEEK    AND    EXPENSES\u2014To\ntravel, appointing local repreBcnta-\nIves.    Whitfield  Llnscott,  Brantford.\nJMU8IC^\n|IH, F. WARNER SMITH\u2014Pup1.a received for piano, organ, vlo-tn an4\nInglng;  805 Carbonate;  phone, L401.\nIRS. WHELLAMS\u2014Diploma pianist.\n' Silver medalist, London.. Pupil of\nainouH Garcia. For singing, piano and\njtringed instruments. Daily News,\nox 281. (231)\nFURS\nNow fur coats, muffs, stoles, rugs,\nto.; made to' order or from skins sup-\nlied. Old'furs repaired and remodelled\n\\p newest shapes, at moderate prices.\nkins dressed and mounted. G. Glaser,\nllxpert Furrier, '811 Mill street, Nelson,\nM?. v \u00ab\"l*Mf\nWAWTFD\u2014MISCBLl A UFO 118\nWANTEfJ^leatT^oltoiw^^\nDaily Nows. (170)\nWANTED\u2014Two district managers to\ntravel, salary $20 weekly and expenses; experience not necessary if\nwilling to learn. Niagara Import Co.,\nNiagara Falls, Ont. (184)\nWANTED\u2014Second-hand  democrat  or\nlight delivery wagon.   Apply Buesnel\nBros., Nakusp. (102)\nHAIRWORK WA-NTBD \u2014 Combings\nmade up, switches dyed and renovated. \"Mail orders promptly executed.\nCombings bought. Pearce it Neville,\n507 Silica street. (228)\nGRAIN.\nCLOSING GRAIN  PRICES.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nWINNIPEG,   March     7. \u2014 Close;\nWheat:   May,   $1.42%;   July,   J1.41.J4;\nOct., $1.12*14.\nOats: May, 62%; .Tuly, 62*S..\nBarloyr  May, 7S.\nFlax;:  May, $1.66;  July, $1,089*1\nMinneapolis:   Wheat:   May,  $1.34*\/,;\nJuly,   $1.30%;   Sept.,   $1.07%.\nChicago: Wheat: May, $1.41%; July,\n$1.15:  Sept., $1.07\u00ab.\ni^itiiti^H^^$iiii^>i^iiiti^liti\nit i\nit METALS. i\n<S> i\nimm>i>mM4mi4mi>i4>i>m\u00aeiit\nCopper, Lead, Spelter.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nNEW    YORK,    Marcil    7.\u2014Copp,.\\\nsteady;   electrolytic.   14.75  at 14.S,'*.;\ncasting, 14.25 at 14.02M.\nBar silver, 49*K.        \u2022\nAt  St.   Louis:   Lead,   strong, .3.85;\nspelter, strong, 10.50 at 10.75.\nGRANBY   SHIPMENTS.\nGranby still has six of its entire battery of eight furnaces in commission\nand so fas as can be learned this number is not likely to bo increased for\nsomo time, says the Phoenix Pioneer.\nDuring January, tbo Phoenix properties shipped 42,211 tons of ore to\nits Grand Forks smelter, all but 11\ntons being treated. The February shipments comprised 63,091 tons and the\nquantity treated amounted to 52,500\ntons.\nBOURSE TRADING ACTIVE.\n(By Dally Nows Leased Wire)\nPARIS, March 7.\u2014Trailing was active on the bourse Saturday.    Three\nper cent rentes, 70c for cash were daa!:\nin.   Exchange on Londonyls 25f !.6c.\nJOSEPH WIN HAS\n0 MAKE APOLOGY\nD. Taylor Entered Suit for $25,000\nBecause  of  Statements  Which\nWere Promptly Retracted.\n(By Dally Newa Leased Wire.)\nVANCOUVER, Bf. C. March 7.\u2014\nVancouver is seeing quite an exciting\nelection for the mayoralty. There are\nthree candidates, nominated Saturday\n\u2014ex-Mayor L. D. Taylor, who was\nelected hi January lint disqualified on\n;i technicality; Aid. Hepburn and Wi\nT.   Whiteway.\nOne of tho spicy episodes of thp\ncampaign was an attack against .Mr.\nTaylor by Joseph. Martin, M.P. for St.\nPancras, London, who challenged Mr.\nTaylor to sue him for libel when he\ncharged that, tho latter was getting\nfunds for liis campaign from people\ninterested in reopening of the restricted district and Chinese gambling. Mr.\nTaylor entered ;i suit tor $25,000 on\nFriday and on Saturday night Mr.\nMartin published in his new paper,\nthe Journal, an apology and retraction\nof statements made against Mr. Taylor.   The election will occur Tuesday.\nFIRE   BRIGADE  CALLED  TO\nFIRE   CAUSED   BY   GASOLINE\nThe fire brigade wa.s called out Saturday afternoon about ti o'clock to a\nflro in a clothes denning establishment on the second floor nf tin- Wallace block. The fire Was caused by\ngasoline, An open .gas jet was being\nburned alongside tlio working table\nwhere clothes were hein^ cleaned with\n[asollne.   The fumes caught, fire and\nmattress nnd some   clothing\nburned.    The  fire    was\nwithout water, the chemical being used.\nli  Is thought that the damage will not\nbe more than $50.\nGHS COMMISSI\nIs in Charge of Machine Gun Section\nin Canadian Mounted Rifles at\nSherbrooke, Que.\nHarry F. Mucrling, formerly of the\nDominion public works department\nand engineer in charge of the Columbia river survey nnd wbo went east\nto volunteer for active service, lias obtained a commission in the \"ith Canadian Mounted rifles and is at Sherbrooke, Que. He Is iu charge of a\nmachine gun section and is training\nthe men in that branch of the work.\nHefore he was with the .Dominion\ngovernment, Mr. Mucrling made a report to the provincial government on\ntho Kootonny flats reclamnmtlon\nscheme.\nA NEW WEEK\nOF WONDERS\nEach day our ad. unfolds the advantage of Hudson's\nBay shopping. Each day proclaims to you the necessity of scanning these brief and pithy lines.\n-T0DAY-\nNsvy Dress Serges Go at 89c\n\u25a0jOln. WIDE\u2014IMPERIAL NAVY SERGE JS\nWORLD RENOWNED\nIts matchless excellence is appreciated l,y\ndressers everywhere. Every inch of it is guaranteed. The eolor is fast. It will not spot,\nMate-rial is shrunk and will not cockle.\nSold exclusive at this store in this city.\nRegular $1.30 yard,\nFOR\t\n89c\n$2,75 Pajamas for $1.95\nFINE    COLONIAL     FLANNEL     SLEEPING\nSUITS\nSoft and  warm  and  fully  shrunk.    Double\ncollar .or French neck;  braided fastenings;  in\nneat stripes and colors.\n$1.95\nSplendid values at $2.75.\nSPECIAL   TODAY\t\nA Flutter in Hose\nLADIES' FINE FULL FASHIONED ALL-WOOL\nCASHMERE HOSE IN TAN\nREMEMBER TAN IS  CORRECT FOR  SPRING\nSizes  8'*.   to 10\nRegular 50c.   Today 3 for  $1.00\nA BROKEN RANGE OF\nMEM'S HEADWEAR\nThese are odd sizes, tho styles are right and ihe\ncolors good, in Slate, Navy, .Moss, etc.\nReg. $2.25 for $1.25\nReg. $2.50 for $1.25\nReg. $3.50 for $2.00\nTHESE   BRIGHT\nDAYS   MAKE   A   NEW\nHAT  IMPERATIVE\nThe HUDSON'S BAY CO.\nESTABLISHED  1670\nESTABLISHED  1670\nSANDSTORMS AND BULLY BEEF.\nWANTED\u2014Harness and saddle makers.   Forward applications to Cran-\nhrook Saddlery Co.,  Ltd., Cranbrook,\nB*0. (232)\nFOR  SALE.\nPOR SALE\u2014101)  tons No.  1 timothy\nhay.    Apply  F.   B.  Shaw,  Salmon\nArm, B.C.           (44)\nFOR   SALE\u2014Furnished   modern  six-\nroomed bungalow on two level lots,\nFairview, with or without two adjoin-\nInsr lots.   Box 188. Daily News.     (188)\nFOR SALE^-Ncw flve-roomcd cottage\nIn  Pairvlow,   half  block  from  ear,\ngood cellar and chicken house.   Box\n108, Dally News. (108)\nFOR SALE\u2014Poterboro launch, 2% h.p.,\n10 feet long, will seat six people,\ngood condition; nlso boat house, cheap.\nAppl'v Blncksmith, Box (*>, Proctor,\nB.C. (220)\nGARDEN SEEDS.\nSUTTON8 SEEDS\u2014In original scaled\npa'skots, Imported from Button &\nSons, Reading, England. A. .1. Woodward, 6*37 Granville St., Vnncouver,\nB.C.   Send for catalogue. (233)\n^lEES^PL^^S^ETC^\nSTRAWBERRY PLANTS, 100 70c,\n1000 ?r>; currants 10c; gooseberries\n16c; rhubarb 10c; fruit trees, perennial\nflowers, roses, dahlias, pansles, etc.,\ncarriage prepaid. Catalog free. Charles\nProvan, Langley Fort, near Vancouver. 224-tf\nMESSENGER SERVICE.\n\u25a0MEI.SON MESSENGER CO.\u2014Promp\nand reliable. Day and night. Phon>\n242. 214-7J\nSITUATIONS VACANT.\n$150 FOR SIXTY DAYS EASY WORK\n.\u2014Write for contract.   Bradley -Garret-son, Brantford.\nSALVATION ARMY IN\nCANADA GIVES AMBULANCES\nCALGARY, Alta., March \".- .Commissioner Richards, head of the Salvation\narmy in Canada, in an address here\ntonight stated that the Salvationists\nof Canada have sent five motor ambulances to the war and were prepared to finance the sending of five more.\nFeeble, Aged Woman\nSays Vinol Has Made Her Strong.\nGrand Saline, Texas\u2014\"I am nn aged\nwoman and for a long tlnie was weak\nand feeblo but Vinol restored my health\nand strength so tbat I feci almost\nyoung apain and am doing; all my\nhousework. Old people who are weak\nand feehle should try Vinol and know\nIts merits as I do. It is tbo best medicine to create strength and for chronic\ncolds 1 havo ever taken.\"\u2014Mrs. Fannie\nE.  Rodgers.\nVinol, our delicious cod liver and\niron tonic, Is sold on our guarantee to\nhenefit or yonr money will lie returned.\nWin, Rutherford, Druggist, Nelson,\nB.C.\nAshton & Smedley\nExpert gasoline engine repalrem\nand general machinists. Agents\nfor Gray marine and stationary engines. Kegal marine engines and\nBvinrude overboard motors. Gray\ndetachable motors J82.00. Manufactories of complete electric gasoline engine driven house lighting\nplants $..i>0 up. Drag saw outfits\ncomplete, 1% U*P. \"->\u2022 8mnU Pr0B-\npectors stamp mills, dynamos, etc.\nFollowing second-hand snaps:\nLaunch 88 ft. x li ft. ti in., 12 h.p.\nengine and clutch. Speed D miles;\nin good condition; $.!fil).O0.\nHeavy duty marino engine, '&\ncylinders, 4 cycle aud reverse gear.\nGuaranteed.    $400.00.\n5 h.p. 1 cylinder U cycle, $fi0.00.\n2 h,p. high speed steam engine,\n$15.00.\nA signaller in the 1st Rhodc-stan- enn-\nlingi'iit which is now in German Southwest Africa, writes:\nWe I.-ft Capotqwn on tbe 21st inst.\nand arrived here on the evening of\nChristmas day. \"We travelled with a\nskeleton crew, all signalling, swablnng\n<-f decks, etc., being done by the troops.\nA church service was held on deck on\nChrfstmoa evo which was followed by\n;i, smoking concert. Another church\nservice was held tho following' morning\nand our popular chaplain attracted to\n11 all tho troops of various religions\nand sects. Christinas on board was\nnot a very merry one owing mainly to\ntlio fact that there were too many\nhorses and stores about to permit us\nto Indulge in sports. However, we bad\ntbe satisfaction of catin^ quite ns good\n\u25a0 a Chrtstmoa dinner as we could have\nextinguished \\ Knt (m ...n(1 in nnrm.,i times. Greetings were exchanged between our vessel aud the remainder of the boats and\na message was received from the King.\nWo aro camped Just outside the\ntown, which Is a dreary and desolate\nsandy waste, swept generally by chilly\nsandstorms. The water In brackish and\n.\u2022onseqiient'ly all our fresh water bas\nto be brought from Capetown (about\n700 miles.) Vou can guess it is something of a luxury. We get an issue of\na gallon and a half a day a man for\ncooking purposes, and our water bottles are also filled. Wo cannot run to\nthe precious liquid for cleansing our\nutensils, so we fall back on- sand which\nforms quite a good substitute. As long\nas wo aro near thc sea we are able to\nindulge in a. bathe but once we strike\ninland, we shall have to bo content\nwith a cat's lick\u2014a sponge lielng a\nvery useful article in a man's equipment, as be Is able to have n sluice\non a minimum expenditure of water.\nThat is one hardship which I don't suppose Is being contended with In the\nEuropean campaign, Having to go\nWithout a detent wash, much less tho\nglory of a 'bath maybe for months is\nby no means a pleasing prospect. Considering It is midsummer the.weather\nis cold, the temperature during the day\nhaving kept below 75 degrees so far.\nEvery Morning a [hick Scotch mist\ncovers the country fnr hours and produces remarkable mirage effects. For\ninstance our men posted on'the hills\nlook bigger than if tbey were closo nt\nband, while the hills themselves though\nonly a mile away aippear to be at least\nthree miles distant. Another and disagreeable illusion is thnt you fancy you\nsee wnter at different spots whero it\ndoesn't exist.\nWo have settled ilowu to bully beef\nand biscuits as staple forms of nourishment, having to trust to luck for\nfresh meat and bread. Hut you can do\na lot with 'bully beef and biscuits; at\nleast some of our fellows are proving\nverltablo chefs In covering up tfhe brutal substantiality of this diet. The biscuits wo turn into pancakes and porridge, while tlm beef is at times converted into succulent stews, dry roasts\nnr fried slices. Cigarettes and matches\nare already becoming a. luxury and we\ncan buy nothing of ihls sort anywhere\nnear here. Tobacco is a ration, a quarter of a pound each a week. Today\nshots wero exchanged with tho enemy\n\u00bbo we expect to bo on tho movo aoon,\nOUr fellows aro keenly looking forward\nto a scrap.\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\nBrigadier Green of the Salvation\narmy will leavo this morning for\nCra nbrook.\nTbe past grands will confer the third\ndegree at the regular meeting tonight\nof tihe I. O. O. F.\nThe regular monthly mooting of St.\nPaul's Ladies' aid Will 'lie held in the\nminister's study -this afternoon at 3\no'clock.\nTbo annual meeting of the Nelson\nLibrary association will bo held in the\nlibrary rooms this evening at 8\no'clock. Important business will come\nbefore the meeting and a large attendance is expected. The meeting will be\nopen to nil interested ami will not be\nconfined to the members only.\nAt a well attended meeting ai ibe\nSalvation army ball Saturday night\nBrigadier Green gave an address on\nthe international congress held last\nJuly, at whicli many were converted\nand joined tiie ranks of the Salvation)\narmy. Brigadier Green also spoke of\nthe Kmpress disaster in which several\ndelegates to the congress lost tbeir\nlives. The address wa.s illustrated by\nlantern slides.\nAsk your grocer for Nelson Brand\nJam, made from Kootenay fruit, B. C.\nsugar nnd Kootenay labor. (ISi)\nCANADIAN      [CANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nPACIFIC\nPanama Pacific Exhibition\nSAN FRANCISCO\nEXCURSION FARES\nON   SALE. RETURN  LIMIT.\nFebruary  20 to  February 28 March   18\nMarch  1  to March  8   March  29\nRATES\n$51.70   or  $56 70 via SPOKANE\n$59.20 or $64 20 via VANCOUVER\nCORRESPONDING   RATES    FROM   ALL   KOOTENAY   POINTS\nFull   particulars   from   any   Agent  or write\nJ.  S. CARTER,  District Passenger Agent, Nelson, B. C.\nThe Scandinavian Aid and Fellowship society will meet tonight at S\no'clock in Oddfellows' hall. (227) j\nlleoohnut Creamery will be open to\nbuy cream after April 1, Please communicate with \u00bbS.   P. Pond. (226)\nALL  KINDS   OF   HAY   FOR   SALE\nBoth carloada and In small lots.\nWrite for prices. Taylor Milling Co.,\nNelson,   B.C. (182)\nCard party In aid of public library\nwill bo given at the Strathcona hotel\nWednesday, March 10 at. S:30 p.m. Ad\nmission 2iic. (209\nFor quality, purity and fine flavor\nask for Nelson Brand Seville Orange\nMarmalade. Help to keep your home\nfactory working. (181)\nDon't take elianees. Have your ear-\npets, windows and chimneys cleaned.\nNelson, Vacuum Cleaning Co., phone\nIS. (186)\nBasket ball at tho Y. M. C. A. tonight, Methodists vs. Presbyterians.\nVolloybail, business men vs young men.\nAdmission 25 cents. (213)\nIf You Start Your Tunnel Right\nBY   ADOPTING    SULLIVAN    ROCK    DRILLS\nyou can count on  rapid progress and  low cost.    There's a  SULLIVAN\nDRILL just suited  to give maximum  service  under YOUR  conditions.\nASK FOR BULLETIN 66-H.\nAGENTS:\nTHE NELSON IRON WORKS, Limited\nBULGARIA  NCT AROUSED\nBY ATTACK   CN  TURKEY\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, March S, 3:21 a.m.- A\nSofia correspondent of the Mail says\nthat the Bulgarian premier has promised to make a definite statement regarding the government position and\npolicy to parliament in a secret session.    This,  states  the correspondent.\nI .\nn reply to a question by tbe opposition regarding \"the altitude of the\nRovernment in view of the decisive\nmove ot England in the Dardanelles.\"\nBulgaria is said not, to have been\nnrous-'d hy the attack on tbe Dardan-\nolliS aim is looking to lhe future. It\nU f.t^ted that King Ferdinand is considering ibe formation of a coalition\ngovernment to direct tbe affairs of\ntho country through tin- crisis which\nis expected.\nFOR  BABY CHICKS.\nAlways use Dr. Rusk's Chick Food.\nTaylor Miling & Elevator Co., Nelson,\nB.C. (225)\nJust think, no -more of that awful\ngnawing, burning sensation In your\nstomach tbat only liquor will relieve\nwithout aid. The Neal treatment removes it.\nMiss Helen Corey will give a piano\nrecital at tho Baptist church tonight at 8 o'clock. She will render\n\"Bcrcuse,'' \"Papillon\" and \"To Spring\"\nby Grieg; \"Flsa's Bridal Procession\"\nby Wag ner-Liszt, and \"Priemire Bul-\nlado1' by Chopin. She will be assisted\nby Miss Jarvls (reader) Miss Phillips,\nMessrs. -O. A. Brown ami 10. Lupton\n(vocalists) and by Miss F. Woiverton\nln piano duct, (195)\nRE J. OPENSHAW, INSOLVENT.\nTenders will be receive.] up to and\nIncluding Friday, tlio 12th Maroh, for\nthe purchase of the stock and fixtures\nof tlio above named insolvent, situate\nat 410 Baker street, in the city of Nelson, B.C. Also for the equity of the\ndebtor in two parcels of real estate,\non the Granite Road near Nelson, and\non Chatham street, Falrview, Nelson,\nB.C.\nFull particulars may bo obtained of\nand the stock may .be seen on application to tho undersigned.\nNeither tho lowest nor any tender\nwill necessarily be accepted.\nIS. H. SMITH, Assignee.\nNelson, B.C., March 2nd, 1916,\nThe Consolidated Mining and Smelting Co.\nof Canada, Limited\nOffices, Smeltinq and  Refining Department\nTRAIL,   BRITISH    COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nProducers\nLead,\nPurchasers oi All classes of Ores\nof Fine Cold -and Silver. Base Bullion, Copper Matte,\nLead Pipe, Bluestone and Electrolytic  Bearing Metal.\nThere Is no habit moro easily formed than the habit of\nsaving. If you have not already acquired the habit do\nso now by opening a savings\naccount.\nOne dollar opens an account\nIn our Savings Department.\nEstablished  1876.\nHead Office. Toronto, Ont\nCapital (paid up)  ..$7,000,000\nReservo Fund   $7,000,000\nPeleg  Howland,  President\nEllas  Rogers,   Vice-President\nEdward Hay, Gen.  Manager.\nNelson  Branch\nJ. H, D. Benson, Manager.\nlnP\u00a3RIM.BANKar<Ai#M\nBank of Montreal\nESTABLISHED  1817\n'Capital   authorized    $25,000,000\n; Capital   all   paid   up $15,000,000\nj Rost     $16,000,000\n|     HEAD   OFFICE:    MONTREAL\nj H.   V.   Meredith,   Esq President\nj     Sir   Frederick   Williams-Taylor,\nGeneral  Manager.\nI     Branches In  British Columbia:\nArmstrong, Athalmer, Chilliwack,\n\u25a0 Cloverdale, Eudcrby, Greenwood,\nJ Kamloops, Kelowna, Merritt, Nel-\nj son, New Denver. New Westmin-\n; ster, Nicola, Penticton, Port Al-\n' bcrnl, Port Haney, Prince Rupert,\ni Princeton,   Rossland.   Summerland,\nVancouver,       Vancouver       (Main\nptreet),    Vernon,     Victoria,    West\nSummerland, Albornl.\nInterest  paid   on  Savings   Deposits\nat 3 per cent  (present rate).\nNelson Branch, L, B. DeVeber, Mgr.\nA CLASSIFIED AD, GETS RESULTS\n PAUL SIX\ntE^BatlF^efti\nMONDAY, MARC\nRobin Hood\nFlour\nIS DIFFERENT\nAsk your grocer.\nTry   Robin   Hood\nFinest in tie land.\nRolled   Oati\nJOHNSTON'S   (Nelion)\nFront St., Nelion, B.C.\nUnequalled for General Uso.\nV. P. TIERNEY, General Sales Agent\nNelson, B.C.\nCars shipped to all railway points\nLadies' Winter Weight\nCashmere Hose\nPer Pair .\n. .2Bc\nThe Ark\nNew and  Second  Hand  Furniture\nCheapest In the City.\nPhone L395 60S Vernon  St\nJ. W. Holmes, Mgr.\n\u2014 Nelson, B.C.     -''\nTA\/v | itT-s   Trt   n nce>rv\nFOR SALE\u2014Flvo pood ranch horses\n1 driver and saddle horse. 1 saddir\npony, one double wagon, 2 buggies, al'\nkinds of harness nnd saddles; Phorr\nfor prices before buying elsewhere\nPhone 290.   C. W. Lester. (234>\nDRUGGISTS DO NOT\nFEEL WAR TAX VET\nOnly   Appreciable   to   Liquors   and\nSparkling Wine,, According to\nInformation Received.\nTlio wholesale and retail drug merchants will not for a while have to\nresort to tho work of taking stock of\nproprietary and' patent medicines bn\nhand preparatory to obtaining their\nluota of stamps In compliance with\n'he War Tax act This is the welcome news for the druggists which\n\u25a0as been received in the city by T.\n'. Scanlan, deputy collector of Inland\nrevenue, from Vancouver.\nIt had, up till the time of receiving\nhis notification been the opinion that\n.he tax was Immediately applicable to\ni-oprlctary and patent medicines, but\nhis makes it only applicable for the\noresent to wines and liquors.\nWANTED\u2014At once;\nply Queen's 'hotel.\nnight' porter. Ap\n(386'\nKill the\nChaps\nNow that the March winds\nare chapping your face and\nhands, we would recommend\nCucumber and Witch Hamel\nCream; This preparation is\nvery soothing, healing and refreshing.\nCanada Drug\nand Book Co\nP  J.  Boles   Mm\nMill Orders Filled Promptly\nTRV    OUR    LENDING    LIBRA*?\nSBTTDJO EGGS POR SALE\u2014Barrel1\nRocks, Plymouth Rooks, WhltV\nLeghorns and White Orpingtons, $1.0'\nper 16. St, Campbell, box 160, Nelson\nB.C. (236\nOANCING\u2014MISS GLADYS ATTRE>\nhas resumed hei classes al Nelsoi\nRossland ami Trail. On Saturdays a\nthe Eagles* Hall. Nelson: For childrei\nat 2:2(1; adults R o'clQfk On Friday\nat ABtley's Pavilion*. Adults at 8 Pr\nvate lessons by arrangement Pro*-\npectuses on application Bo* 30*\nNplsnn\nHave Your Suit CI aned\nthe H. K. Foot Way\nIt ensures the thorough removal\nof all dust and dirt, new finish\nand satisfaction.\nemits- M.   Papnzlan,   315H   Bake'\nStreet,   Nelaon.\nRns*\"    FlnmtnE     Fnirvlpw\nTO\nTHIRTY-FIVE CENTS\nLargest Attendance at Market on Sat*\nurday In Considerable Number cf\nWetks\u2014Suggest Improvements,\nEggs wero again retailing at 35\ncents per dozen on the public market\non Saturday and this drop of B cents\nfrom the quotation of 40 cents a dm\nen on the previous week was the\nonly feature of Saturday's* market,\naslie from the large attendance,\nwhich was tho largest in a considerate number of weeks. The increased\nattendance was regarded favorably by\n-hcs3 .nterested in the Institution,, for\nIt wns felt tbat It showed the feeling\nof the people of the city that every\nencouragement should be offered the\nanchers in their efforts.\nThe board of control did not take\ncharge on Saturday, or rather, did\nnot hold a formal meeting, though\nseveral members were In attendance,\nprobably owing to the absence from\nthe city of Mayor Malone. However,\nm<-ml\"**\"8 o* the board of control present did some crltlcl\"1'\"' \u00bb\u00ab\u2022> 0\"\u00bb [\u2022'\n.be most pointed suggestions made\nwas to the efteot tha. \u201e.<.i*0 \u201eoum De\nt.aVen to have the ranchers display\nand handle their produce in the most\n\"vltin\"* manner possible. One of the\nfirst things which it is expected tbe\nban will 'be put on will be the use\nof newspapers for wrapping purposes,\ntarticularly for wrapping meats. Saturday's quotations:\nBeets, carrots, turnips, per cwt, }2;\npotatoes, per sack, $1.50*, onions, per\ncwt., $2.50 to $3; cabbage, per cwt.,\nn.la to $2; squash, per cwt., $2 to\n12.50; apples, per box, $1.25 t0 $1.50;\nhoney, per lb., 30c; butter, per lb.,\n\u25a010:. 2 lbs for 75c; eggs, per doz., 35c;\npork, per Ih., 10c to 18c; veal, per lb.,\nlac to 20c; chickens, per lb., 25c;\nfowls, por lb., 20c; chickens, live, 50c\nto 75c; laying pullets, each, 75c to\n$1.25; bread, white, brown and fruit,\nR- loaf, 10c, three loaves for 26c:\nbuns, per doz., 15c; tea biscuits, per\ndoz., 15c; pies, each, 20c; layer cakes,\neach, ,15c to 40c; meat pies, each, 10c\n1 for 25c; elder, per gal., 75c; dough-\nnuts, per doz., 15c.\nBISHOP GIVES FIRST\nMESSAGEJO D OCESE\n(Continued from Page Three.)\nWe Will Trade\nChina, Glassware, Crockery tor\nsecond-hand articles that you do\nnot need at home. Money is no\nobject to us\u2014we swap our goods\nfor yours.\nCHI>-A  HALL\nA. W. MUNRO\n321 Baker St. Box 583\nPhone L 261\nGem Theatre\nDISINFECTED   DAILY\nA War Baby\nA stirring story of the American\ncivil wnr.\n\"THE 8M0KING OUT OF BELLA\nBUTTS\"\nAnother clever Hicksville comedy.\n\"THE LUCKY ELOPEMENT\"\nMUSICAL    PROGRAM    BY   GEM\nORCHESTRA\nWHY AMERICANS CANNOT\nPROTEST LID ON GERMANY\nFrench Paper Says Similar Blockade\nby  French  Aided  General\nWashington.\nPARIS\u2014The quiet and dignified\nmanner In which the American press\nind public received the Pranco*Brlt-\n'sh declaration of proposed naval re-\nnrisals against Germany has made a\nstrong impression in France. Writers In' the leading newspapers point\nout that a nation so devoted to business Interests as the United States\nscarcely could be expected to retrain\nunmoved at the proposal of closing\ntho sea routes to a country with\n*.**'\"h 't ,ines an annual, business of\n$500,000,000.\n\"We can prevent loss to neutrals,\"\nsirs the Matin, \"by purchasing Intercepted cargoes of which we desire\nto deprive Germany. We should lose\non these purchases what we neither\ncould use nor resell until later, but\nhe loss would be a mere drop tn the\nocean of enormous wnr expense and\nvery little in comparison to the extra\nblood it would have been necessary\nto Bhed for having neglected the enemy's capitulation by economic strangulation.\"\nProf. Charles Rlchet, writing in the\nFigaro, declares that while the Germans contend the allies' blockade Is\n'larbarous and contrary to international law a blockade carried out by a\n\u25a0'ranch fleet prevented British admirals from re*victuallng Gen. Cornwallls,\nbus farcing him to capitulate nt\n\"orktown ln the American revolution-\niry war. Prof. Rlchet 'says no hlB*\norian has pretende-l th's was a dis*\n-1 act \"and we should be greatly\nsurprised If the Americans In 1915\n^cnuemned a proceeding which per*\nnltted Gen. Washington In 1781 lo\nwin American independence.\"\nHELSOR NEW S OF THE DAY\nMayor J. J. Union\u00a9 last night re-\nurned from a visit to Bull River.\nH. S, 'Longford of Rossland is a Nelson visitor.   iHe Is at the Btratrcona.\nMm J: Jenkin of SUverton is visiting the city.   Sho Is at the Hume.\nP. W. Racey, the Rossland mining\nman Is a Nelson visitor. He is at the\nHume.\nG. A. Staples of Vancouver reached\nthe city on the coast train- Inst evening\nand; registered at the Strathcona.\nTho industrial committee of the\nboard df trade will meet m tiie board\nrooms tonight at  8 o'clock.\nTho \"Women's \u25a0Hcspital Aid socioty\nwill meet Tuesday afternoon at 3\no'clock at tlio residence of Mrs. George\nJohnstone.\nThere will bo a meeting of the executive of the synod of the diocese of\nKootenay on Wednesday at which\nBishop A. J. Doull will preside.\nThe annual general meeting of the\nKootenay Lake General Hospital society will be held Tuesday afternoon\nat 3 o'clock in the board of trade room.\nA large attendance is expected at the\nannual meeting tonight in the library\nrooms of the Nelbon Library association. Tho meeting will take place at\n8 o'clock.\n\"Word has reached the city that Judge\nForln will be ln the city to preside at\na sitting of the county court Tuesday\nmorning. The Judge Is expected to\nreach the city on the coast* train to-,\nnight.\nThe' monthly mooting of tho Nelson\nLiberal association will take place tonight in the club rocms, Vernon street.\nA discussion, led by Dr. N. Woiverton,\nwill take placo on the land question\nIn British Columbia.\nTho Local Relief rooms will bo open\niu future only onco a week, on Tuesday\nafternoons from 3 to 5 o'clock. All\ndonations of clothing may be left at\nthe rooms or thu donors may call up\nphone R259. Tho society is in need of\nsummer clothing.\nIn addressing mall matter to mem\nbers of tho 30th battalion, which left\nVictoria a short time ago and is now\nIn England, the rank of tho addressee\nshould bo given, and nlso his company\nThe letters should be addressed to \u25a0\n30th battalion, C.E.F., Army postoffice,\nLondon, England.\nA card party In aid of tho public\nlibrary will be given in the Strathcona\nhotel Wednesday evening when whist,\nauction bridge and 500 will be played.\nThose who wish to play and who have\nnot (handed their names in to tho com\nmlttee nro asked to do so in order that\ntables may be available for all who\nattend. A large attendance is expected.\nWHEN   YOU\nOverhaul Your Launch\nUSE  BAFCO  MARINE  PAINT .\nWhits, Orosn and Red\nAND BERRY BROS. \"LUXEBERRY\" 8PAR VARNISH\nWe can. alto supply you with Paint end  Varnloh   Remover, Sand  Papsr,\nVirnlsh and Paint B. u.hes, etc\nfood-Vallance Hardware Co. Ltd.\nWHOLESALE   AND   RETAIL\nNELSON.   B.C\nBRITISH   NAVY'S  LUCKY  DAY\nIf tho British navy has a \"lucky\nday\" it Bhould be a Friday. It wns\nin Friday, July 29, 1588, that the\nSpanish Armada was destroyed.\nTrue, It was also a Friday, Not. 29,\n'(152, when Van Tromp sailed the\nchannel with a broom at his mast*\n'iead to indicate that he had swept\nthe English from the seas,, but luck\nhas a habit of turning and, according\nto the most reliable chronologies; Friday, June 13, 1653, was the decisive\nday in the battle off the North Foreland, when six of Van Tfomp's ship\nwere taken and 11 were snnk.\nIt was on Friday, April 20,1667, that\nBlake won his greatest victory, In\nihe hartor of Santa Crus; on Friday,\nApril 12, 1782, that Rodney, de'eated\nthe French; Friday, Sept. 13 of the\nsame year, that the British totally defeated the fleets ot France and Spain\nlu the bay of Gibraltar.\nIt was also on Friday, July 16,1779,\nthat the great siege of Gibraltar began, to end in the total overthrow of\nthe hostile armaments. Trafalgar, In*\ndeed, was fought on a Monday, but\nat least It was on the previous Friday;\nthat the French admiral made the\nfatal decision to come out and' give\nbattle.\nNelson would bave been the last\nto dispute* the \"luckiness\" of Friday,\nfor-he was born on that*day, created\na viscount on that day, and It was on\nFriday, May 20, 180.1, that he assumed chief command in the Medlterran*\nean.\nman aggression ln Europe and these\nfacts were Impressing upon Christian*\nlust where lay the privilege and re\nsponslb'Uty of winning ov\u201eer the worlc\nfor Olirlst by love, by love**lhsptred\nlives. '\n\"But only if in our lives and actlonr\nwe commend our craed, only If we arr\nfollowers of God, only if men are abb\nto take knowledge that they have beei\nwith Jesus,- only If one light so shines\nonly if tbey glorify ono Father,\" coulf\nthis' privilege be that of ohurebmen\ncould they shoulder the responsibility\n\"Let this bo our aim: Be follower\no- Christ, lead others. Let ua pray for\nhelp. Let us be bound as brethrer\npriests and people, by love. Let us be\nunited ln effort nnd sorvice to advance\nthe kingdom of God and prepare thi\nway for the coming of the Son of Got'\nin power and great glory,\" he concluded.\nA Yearning for Peace\nThe text for Bishop Doull's evenlnr\nserv'ce was taken from St. John 14:27\n\"What a yearning there Is In the\nworld for ,peace today,\" he said. Th,\nvery essence of the church hymns were\nappeals for peace. Prayers were being 'offered dally for peace and nearly\neverybody was craving for the end of\nthe strife Into which practically the\nworld* had been thrown. \"We are realizing, now,\" continued the, bishop,\n\"that we. have loat peaco and what a\nblessing It was and Is. Hearts everywhere were full of misery, suffering,\nanxiety and sorrow and they were\npraying to God for peace;'-*\n\"How con we have that which we\nlost and for which wo pray? How can\nwe regain it? God never created the\nworld to be what It la today\u2014something has happened\u2014the entrance lhtr\nthe world' of sin.\"\nPeople wore, he said, just beginning\nto realize that It was the result of sin\n\u2014that It was sin that was filling in\ndiyldual lives full of cares, trials, trib\nulations; and that prayers were going\nup\u2014there was no other explanation of\nhow r i been lost,\n\"How can we regain It?\" asked the\nbishop, ond here he offered his second\nmessage to the churchmen of his dio\ncese. Peaco came, he said, when sin\n\u2022**s destroyed. Christ had .come to\ndestroy sin, to crush It, to deliver His\npeople from its guilt, bondage and\noower, to destroy tbe work of the\ndevil and to bring eternal peace. He\nwas thc Prince of Peace. The gift of\npeace was a gift from Christ by Christ\nnp-n H1b own terms and conditions.\nIf there was no peace today it was because sin had entered Into the world,\nbecause there were no Christian nations; because there was no Christian\nworld\u2014only a mere handful of Christians here and there.\nThc bishop then defined Christ's\npeace, -which, be said, was a peace that\ndid not exempt His people from trials,\ntroubles, tribulations and humility.\nThero would - always be tribulations.\nChrist's llfo had been full of trials,\ntroubles and., tribulations. It was this\nfact that rrought confidence to the\npeoplo of the world*\u2014the fact that\n\"Our Father in Heaven\" was doing\nHis best. He was near and nothing\ncould happen to the nation except by\nHis permission and for His own good.\nHe was shielding nud protecting tho\nnation.\nChrist's peace was one that was won\nby conflicts. The conflict would end\nln peace. Thoro had beon a conflict\nbetwe\u00bbn the Son of Man und tho devil\n\u2014It had resulted in peaco The present conflict was one against an anti-\nChristian spirit, a conflict which would\nresult In triumph, a conflict In which\npow.e*- *\"*\u25a0' might attempted to trample\non a small and comparatively defense-\nles3 nation, a conflict against the doctrine of \".Might Is Right,\" andjt was\nthis fpot that Imbued the nation with\n.tonfldonoe. 3?ho confidence did not\ncome with tho realization that God\nwas fighting for tho nation but It was\na realization tbat the nation wns fighting God's  battles.\nWithout Christ there was no peace.\nThose who were advocating the recon-\nfitruct'on of tho world's society on a\nuniversal peace basis without consideration of Christ were placing their\nhopes on a mere heap of sand. People\nwould have to accept his will, which\nwas ensv, and his burden, which wm\nlight. Christ has peace to glvo HI*\npeople but It must be-accepted-by Hit\npeople becoming His servants,'His foi\nliwers, H's dlcclples and in this Blshot\nDoull urged the churchmen of his die\ncese to Join. He wished them to tei\nothers, to enlist, themselves under\nChr'st's banner, join his army\nmake sacrifices, for hlm just as thr\nhoys In the trenches ai the front werr\nsacrificing themselves for the 'Emptor\nand thus they would bring to them*\n\u25a0 \"es that gift\u2014the Peace of God\u2014\nwhloh all desired so much today.\nAfter the evening service Bishop\nDoull attended the meeting of thc\nChurchman's club, where he mingled\nand made acquaintance with Its members and took part ln the discussions\nwhich took place there.\nSpends Week In Parish\nBishop Doull, who, Is the guest of\nRov. Fred H. Graham, reotor of St.\nSaviour's parish, will spend. the week\nIn the parish. This evening he will bt\nat Willow Point, where a meeting of\nwelcome will bo held in Crystal hall by\ntho congregation of St. Andrews-by-\nthe-Lake. On\" TuOBday morning he\nwill be tho celebrant and preacher at\na celebration of holy communion tn St.\nAndrew's church, Willow Pblnt\nTuesday evening Is being made the\noccasion of a semi-public welcome to\nthe bishop in Nelson by tho congregation of St. Saviour's church and on this\nEDISON MAZDA\nThere are lots or other makes on\nthe market, but tbe Edison Mazda\nIs the highest grade lamp of them\nall.\nSizes 10,15; 25 Watt...........35c\nSize 40 Watt*, .'., -Mc\nSize (10 Watt 45c\nMall your orders to ue and gel\nthe best lamp at the best price.\nKootenay Electric Construction\nCompany\nAnnable Block,\nNelson, B. C.\nPhone 211.\ntsaes\u2014astss\nCURLEY SAY8 FIGHT\nINTERESTS GET TOGETHER\n(Bv Pally News Leased Wire.)\nHAVANA. March 7.\u2014According to\nJack Cur ey, the prize fight promoter,\nall doubts concerning tho holding of\ntbe championship battle in Havana\nbetween Jack Johnson and Jess Wlllard have virtually been eliminated by\nagreenfien' of all the conflicting Interests. The only possible obstacle to thc\nfight taking placo here, according to\nCurley. ts the acceptance of terms by\nWlllard and this, Ctirley said) he expected to receive today.\nTbe fullest assurances of financial\nsupport have been guaranteed and\nonlv Wlllard's acceptance of the terms\nand th? choosing of. a site remain un*\nSettled.\nChick\nA balanced ration of CM\nOatmeal, Millet St.d an\nfor tha little chicks. Ull\nmost successful poultryn\nin 100'e, 10's and S's,\nThe Brackmai\nMilling Co., -\n\u2022bat Torlb FIts**tJ Eyeglasses are to\nstrained eyes you would visit mo today.\nR. L. DOUGLAS\nThe  Graduate  Optiolan  and   Optom\nmrlst, Certified by a Provincial Board\nof Examiners In Optometry;\nRoom 18. K. W. C. Blook\nNelson, B. C.\nBell's\nmm\nAGENTS\nThe Nelsoi\nWine&Spf\nCompany\nBox 1099, Nelson.\n11 Vita\nDr. Holt's\nKidney  Pills\nDr. Holt's Juniper Kidney Pills art made\nthoroughly tested and tried out formula. If you'\ntroubled with Backache, Lumbago, Inflammation\nKidneys or Bladder, Brlckdust, Gravel or Mucous Ds|\nyou should us thesi pills si they are very offeotive.\nb.tt kidney pill at any prlbt. Pries 40o box, 3 boxes for I\nMAIL   ORDERS   PROMPTLY   FILLED\nCity Drug and Stationery Co.\nm\noccasion the presentation will bo made\nto hlm of the pectural cross which Is\nthe gift of the congregation of- St.\nSaviour's church..\nBishop Doull will on Wednesday for\n'he first time preside over a meeting\nof the executive of thu synod of the\ndiocese of'Kootenay.\nThe following five weeks will be\nspent iti visiting the \\'arlous portions\n-* his diocese and on April 15 he will\nfor thc -st time' take his seat at a\nmeeting of the house of bishops of\nCanada, which will accemble at Fort\nWilliam. At this meeting he will have\nthe dual honor of being the youngest\nmember and representing tho largest\nMoccse geographically ln Canada. The\ndiocese takes in that portion of the\nTnvince from Tete Jaune Cache to\nthe International boundary and from\n'he 120'h meridian to the Alberta\nboundary.   It includes 36 parishes.\nJust previous to leavl ng Victoria\nfor his diocese, Bishop Doull received\nmagnificent bishop's ring from his\nformer parishioners of the Church of\nthe Advent, Wcstmount, Que., and he\nexpresses deep appreciation of this\nvaluable token of remembrance from\nhis friends ln the east.\nSUPPLY OF PETROLEUM\nIN GERMANY 18 8HORT\nfRv Dnilv Npwb Leased Wire.)\nCOPENHAGEN, March 7, via London.\u2014Reports rcee vod hora from\nSchleswog are to the effect that the\nsupply of petroleum in Germany has\nbecome so small thnt persons who\nformerly were permi ted to purchase\nono bottle a week now havo been deprived cf that privilege. The stock In\nSchlesweg has been practically exhausted.\nTELEPHONE CABLE\nREACHES PROCTOR\nExpected to  Be   Laid Shortly\u2014Will\nConnect Up Nelson and uistriet\nWith Kootenay Landing.\nThe last link In the connecting of\nVelson and other points ln West\nKootenay and Boundary by telephone\nwith the north shore of the Kootenay\nlake line will be completed shortly.\nThis was practically assured by tbe\narrival on the ground on Saturday\nfrom the old country of the long submarine telephone cable which is to be\nlaid across Kootenay lake between\nProctor and Pilot Bay, i\nW. H. Stevens, superintendent of\ngovernment telepbones and tele*\n?ranbs ln eastern British Columbia,\nis expected to reach the district shortly to supervise the laying ot the\ncable.\nFIFTEEN THOU8AND MEN\n8HOVEL 9NOW IN NEW YORK\ntRv Dntiv News l,,>,ispd Wlro.t\nNEW YORK, March 1.\u2014The heaviest Bnowstorm of the winter swirled\nacross New York on Saturday night,\nwhen the storm had swept eastward,\nafter havlnR played havoc with stesm\nand foot tra'flc. The weather bureau\nannounced that 5.2 Inches of snow\nhad fallen. The snow was melting\nfast. Fifteen thousand mon were put\nat work clearing tbe streets.\npleads for clemency for Louise,\nthe general refuses Belle promise!'!\ndeliver to him the lamous woman i'\nif he will delay the execution\nit can be referred to-the autho\n\u25a0t Washington.   The general\nThen Belle turns to Oen. Slogan!\n\"I am Belle Darrlng, general, and\nprisoner.\"\nA good musical program will bi|\ndered by the orchestra;\n       --'1\nA. A. J. Collis of Creston Is al\nStrathcona;\nJohn H. Hoyle of Queen's Bay j\nthe Humo',\nChas, F. McHardy\nFINANCIAL AGENT J\nFruit Lands, Real Estate, City Property\ninsurance of All Kinds\nYOUR   PATR.dNA.jE   RESPECTFULLY;* SOLICITED*\nGREEN   BLOCK\nPHONE  135\nNELSON, B.C.\nNEWS OF SPORT\nY.N.CA REPLAYED\nBrown Wins from Proudfoot\u2014H. Olbbs\nIs High Mon\u2014New Pins Are\nUsed.\nThe bowling game between Brown's\nand Proudfoot's teams which was\nplayed last Wednesday was replayed\nat the Y. M. C. A. Saturday night on\naccount of the arrival of the new pins.\nThe game resulted In a win for Brown\nby 70 pins H. Olbbs Had. both high\nindividual and high average scores.\nFollowing are the scores:\nC. Stooper  -145   171\nF. J. Boles    116    121\nW. Brown  -..122   117\nH. Gibbs  160   146\n98\u2014 414\n140\u2014 377\n140\u2014 389\n208\u2014 508\nTotal , ....\nH. Robertson  144\nJ. W, Howell  124\nC. Grlzzelle  148\nL>. Proudfoot 147\nTotal\n1688\n98\u2014 871\n155\u2014 486\n169\u2014 422\n122\u2014 889\n1618\nOARSMEN'S ANNUAL\nGATHERING TON GHT\nEverything Points to Early Commence.\nment of Activities\u2014Most in tha\nY. M. C. A. Building.\nDuring the past week there have\nbeen several busy little parties around\nthe clubhouse on tho waterfront of tho\nNelson Rowing club preparing for the\ncoming season and that the season Is\nnot many days from Its inauguration\nIs also assured from tho fact tbat the\nsport will be given Its annual big send*\noff at tho annual, meeting, ot. the club\nwhich will be held in the Y. M. C. A.\nbuilding tonight at 8 o'clock.\nElection of of fleers and discussion of\nprospects for the, season are- among\nthe more- Important Items, of business\nwhich will come, up for discussion\nwhilo committees will be appointed, it\nIs oxpocted to Immediately get to work\non preparing, the boatst the boathouBes\nand other equipment for o busy season,\nAn early membership and financial\ncampaign - It (die prsdloted.\nj     At the Theatres     |\nTrey o' Hearts Tonight.\nThe eighth episode ot \"The Trey o'\nHearts\" will be shown this evening\nat the Starland and It promises to surpass any of the episodes yet shown.\nIt is entitled \"The Mock Hose,\" and\nIs of great Interest throughout, owing to the number of exciting scenes.\nA fine one-reel drama entitled\nSrange Evidence\" will also be shown\nand a very amusing comedy. The full\ntheatre orchestra will render a special musical program.\nTomorrow the twelfth Instalment\nof \"The Million Dollar Mystery\" will\nhe shown, together with a splendid\ntwo-reel feature, \"As Fate Wills,\" In\nwhloh Warren Kerrigan has the leading role. On Wednesday some of the\nlatest war scenes will be shown.\nCivil War Story at G\u00abm.\nThe special eature ln tonight's program at the Gem la entitled \"A War\nBaby.\" At tbe opening of the civil\nwar duty calls Capt. Willis of the\nnorthern army from his bride, Louise,\ndaughter of the confederate officer;\nCol. Frear. At the same time Belle\nDarrlng, a zealous confederate, breaks\nher engagement with Lieut Fiske of\nthe union troops. Belle becomes a\nconfederate spy and falls Into the\nhands of her lover, Lieut FlBke, hut\nIs beguiled Into letting her go. Louise\nWillis determines to visit her husband with the baby and writes blm\nto meet her at Simpson's Corners, He\nts unable to .obtain leave, but goes\nto the meeting under cover of night\nHe Is delayed by the presence of con.\nfederates and reaches the corners\nonly to Und that Louise has passed\n.trough In company with another woman, who, he guesses, Is Belle Darrlng, the spy, Louise has secured, a\npasB through the union lines and de*\n9ttds upon her friendship with the\nsouthern o fleets to ohta.n her pis-\nsage through the confederates. She\nand Belle are captured by union soldiers, and Belle persuades her to tike.\na paper which she carries ahd give\nthe pass ln exchange, slhce, as the\nwife of a northern officer, she would\neasily escape search. When searoh**\ned Belle's psper II found on Louise\nand she la takes for the confederate\nspy*\nReturning from the meeting place*\nWillis Is placed under arrest, accused\nof abandoning bis post and of peri\nmining Belle Darrlng to pass through.\nLouise and her husband are both sentenced, to be shot Belle uses Louise's\nput to r-rn* th*. *\u00bbl\u00ab mini M*\nSt irland Theal\nAs Cheerful as the Summer\"\nEighth Episode of\nThe Trey o'HeaH\n(The Mock Row.)\nThis number is fairly bursting v\naction,    A very   strong   offer!\nwith a tremendous fire scene i\na climax.\nFrontier Mystery\n\"STRANGE EVIDENCE\"\nONE  BIG SLAPSTICK  COM!\nFULL    6-PIECE    0RCHE8TH\nSPECIAL MUSIC\nTomorrow\u2014\"The\nMystery.\"\nMillion\nWednesday\u2014Latest War Seen*\n~8*!i.,    ['*'l '\nLEAVE it to\nyoung fellojn\nknow what's wluj\nstyles\u2014and to recol\nthe real thing\nthey see it.\nstance, this new\nStetson,\nWe have Mb \u201e\nments of all the-\nStetsons hen\neasy ittatter; for t\nselect the one:_-\u201e,\nwill like to wear. J\nthe Spring Styles are i\nSee them* In our winds\nEmory & W?\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_1915_03_08","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\/1.0386482","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":"1915-03-08 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":"1915-03-08 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":""}]}