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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" 5&\nV Tt* Ollly New. h\u00ab the largttt circulation ef any dally newapapar In\nCanada In proportion te the popul.tlon\n\u2022f Ite heme tewn.\n_, ^Vnl^ pipiMn th. interior ef\n.tKirarily'pMMH th.  I\nBritish   Columbia ^fttrMng\novtf W ov*r leajsd wiffW'\"\nig   tha  full\niatad-\n60c. PER MONTH\n[Ground is , Also Gained in\nVillage of Meury\n[Violent Bombardments Are\nStarted Along Whole\nFront\n(By Dally News [Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, June 25.\u2014The French dur.\nI ing heavy attacks Saturday night re-\nI captured from the Germans trenches\nI-west of the Thlaumont redoubt, north-\nVcast of Verdun, and also made somo\nI-progress lnJho village of Pleury, says\n\\ PariB.    ^\nSunday saw no infantry activity in\nI the Verdun region. Bombardments on\nI-both sides of the Meuse continue with-\n| out interruption. There was also pro-\nI nounced artillery activity between tho\nI British and Germans on the British\n| portion of the Franco-Belgian lines.\nBritish Statement.\nThe following official statement was\n[issued this evening:\n\"Last night, after a short bombard-\nIntent, a raid on our trenches northeast\n\u25a0of Loos was driven off, leaving three\n\u25a0dead on our parapet. North of the\n\u25a0river Louve, a party tried to cut our\n\u25a0wire, but was driven off, leaving two\n|dead.\n\"Today our artillery has continued\n\u25a0to \"be very active along the whole\n\"front and mutual artillery actions havo\nItaken place at many points, the heartiest being about Ncuville St. Vaast.\n\u25a0-south of Wallly, and to the north of\nJ the Ypres-Menm. road. About the\niThiepval wood and Hamol. the enemy\n\u25a0 did a considerable amount of shelling\nI with trtmch mortars as well as artillery\n1\/ \"Near faulltich a hostile demonstra-\n|tlon'%a-s u%m>y<id by o\\n* artillery.\n\"Since yesterday evening tho enemy\nI has blown Up four mines, two of them\nIat Hulluch, one of them south of La-\n1 bassee and one north of Neuve Chap-\nJelle. No -casualties were caused by\nIthene mines. We destroyed five kite\nIbaloons this afternoon,\"\nParis Statement.\nPARIS, June' 25.\u2014The official com-\n|munication Issued tonight reads:\n\"On the two banks of the Meuse\n|*io Infantry action was reported during the day.   On the left bank there\n\u25a0 was intense artillery activity  In lhe\n\u25a0 region of Hill 304, Le Mort Hommo\n|and Chattancourt.\n\"On the right bank tho bombard-\nIment redoubled in force from 5 o'clock\nI in the afternoon on the sectors of Troy\n|de Terre and Floury.\n\"There was no event of Importance\nIon the rest of tho front, with the ox-\n| coption of tho usual cannonading.\nBelgian Communication.\n\"In the northern part of the front,\n[in the region of Dixmude, thero were\n[reciprocal artillery actions. In the\n[sector of Steenstraete the action with\n[artillery and trench mortars was vlo-\n| lent.\"\nAfternoon Statement.\nThe French statement Issued in the\n| afternoon states:\n\"On the left bank of the Mouse a\n[German attack upon our trenches on\nI the southern slope of Dead Man's Hill\n|,was stopped by our fire.\n\"On tho right bank of the river the\n[fighting continued during the night in\nI the sector of the   Thlaumont   work,\n\u25a0 where our counter attacks enabled us\nI to take a few elements of trenches to\nI tho west of the work.   We have made\nJ some progress with hand grenade\n|i fighting In the villago of fleury.\n\"The bombardment has continued\nI violently in the other sectors on tho\nIrlghl bank of the river, but there has\n[been no infantry action,\n\"In Lorraine, to tho northeast of\n| pott A Mousson, a strong enemy re-\n| connoitrlng party was disposed in tho\n| Chlminot wood.\n\"In the VoBges an attempted attack\nI on cur positions on the La Favo valley\nT completely failed.\n\"During the night of .Tune 24-25 Oer-\nI maii aeroplanes threw bombs on Lune-\n1 vllle, Baccarrat and St. Vie. Tho ma-\n[ terla'. damage was unimportant. Some\n1 children were wounded at St. Die. This\nER SEES DARK\nURE FOR GERMANY\nLack   of   Fertilizer  Sadly   Discernible\nin Peat-Ridden Fields, Says\nEconomic Weekly.\nTHE HAGUE, June 24.\u2014The futuro\nis very dark, says tbe Amtliches Land-\nwlrtBchaftllcher Wochennbladt Fur\nNordwestdeuschland, the official economic weekly of northwestern Germany,\nin reviewing the agricultural and cattle breeding situation.\n\"Hay is plentiful\" the paper says,\n\"but the grain crop only promises well\nwhore artificial fertilizer is available.\nThe lack of nitrates is sadly discernible, especially in respect to the rye\ncrop. Vormin, such as caterpillers,\nhave caused immense havoc to turnips,\noats, summer wheat and fruit trees. It\nis difficult to obtain any antidote at\neven the highest prices and the recent\nrains also have caused a plague of\nweeds. It Is regrettable to see meadows\nempty or \"populated most sparsely.\nCattle, pigs and horses fetch most fabulous prices, If obtained at all.\n\"The wholesale supply of cattle to\nmunicipalities, now that private slaughtering Is forbidden, constitutes grave\ndanger because not only are the number of breeding animals greatly diminished, but the lack of natural manure\nis soon evident. If this condition continues there soon will be no more cows\nin calf, the corisociuonco of which will\nbe no milk, butter, meat and fat supplies.\n\"Trade in Ufa piO-fiUcls of the soil\nlu insignificant. Labor is extremely\nscarce and only prisoners of war are\navailable for farm work. If prisoners\nof war are not supplied, which happens frequently, then farm work can\nonly bo done In part and then under\ntho greatest difficulties.\"\nCREW OF STEAMER HERAULT\nLANDS AT SPANISH PORT\nLONDON, June 24.\u2014Tjilrty-six of\nthe crew of the steamer Herault arrived at Castellon. Tho Herault was\nsunk by a submarine in the Mediterranean.\nThe Herault was 699 tons and sailed under thc French flag.\nhas been noted with a view to reprisals.\nBerlin Statement.\nBERLIN, June 25.\u2014The British have\ndeveloped pronounced artillery activity along the part of the Franco-Belgian front they hold from Labassee\ncanal to the Somme, the war office\nannounced today. The British fire\ncontinued uninterruptedly all last\nnight.\nViolent engagements north of Verdun resulted in the Germans repelling\nall attempts by the French to regain\ntheir recently lost ground. The statement follows:\n\"In the region south ol tiio Labassco\ncanal to beyond the Somme, tho^ene-\nmy developed and continued during\nthe night unbroken lively activity. He\nhas bombarded Lens and its neighborhood with heavy fire, and discharged\ngas without success over our lines in\nthe region of Beaumont Hamol, north\nof Albert.\n\"On tho left bank of the Meuso the\nonemy fire attained great nctivity toward evening, especially at Dead\nMan's Hill. At night minor infantry\nundertakings were successful for us,\n\"Many violent battles developed under continuous artillery fire around\nthe positions captured by us east of tho\nMeuse. Al! attempts by tbo French to\nrecapture lost ground broke down with\nthe heaviest losses for them. Tho enemy lost more than 200 men In prisoners,\n\"East of St. Die, we carried out a\npatrol advanco as a result of which\n15 French prisoners wero brought in.\"\nCANADIANS REWARDED FOR\nDISTINGUISHED SERVICE\n(By Dally News LeaitBd Wlro):\nWJNDON, June 2S.\u2014Tho Gazette to-\n; night announces the decoration with\nth\u00ab..41*!tingu|*\u00bbhed  service    order    of\n' Liout.-Col. Grlesbach,  49th  battalion,\nj nnd  Capl.   Evelyn  William  Uniaoke,\nI King Edward*B horse; of Lieut. Henry\n(Hobba   with   the   military  cross  and\nr nwurd   of  tho  distinguished   conduct\n\\ medal to Pte. H. A. Craig of tlie Prln-\n| cess  Patricias and  Company Sergt-\n1 Maj.   Miles,   40th   battalion.    Details\nfof the acts which  won the diutlne-\ni Hon' are given in each 'case.    Other\nI decorations follow:\nDistinguished service order\u2014Major\n| John Ross, 24th  battalion.\nMilitary Cross\u2014Capt. John Arthur\nj. Cullum, Canadian army medical corps,\n'attached to the 28th battalion; Capt.\nt A|bort Potcr M.illor,    21nt.   bnttnl|nn;\nLieut, .lames Auld, 16th artillery;\nLieut. Peter Browns, 22nd battalion;\nLlout. John Arnold Hackson, 29th 'battalion; Lieut. 'Robert Powell, 4th engineers; Lieut. George Speers, 21st\nbattalion.\nLleut.-Col. Grlesbach was granted\ntho D.S.O. for -'conspicuous gallantry\nand skill in handling his battalion dur\ning a heavy bombardment and subBe\nquent attack by the enemy. On an\nother occasion by prompt action and\ndotting a fine example he was largely\nresponsible for the rescue of several\nmen who had been burled by tho shell\nfire.\"\nThe  official  decoration    of    Capt.\nUniaoke reads;\n\"When a party of the enemy penetrated  an' unoccupied'  portion) of  a\n(Continued nn rngo Two.).\nHON.   W.    R.   ROSS,\nMinister of Lands and Conservative  candldato   for   r-'ort   Gourde   Riding\nAT\nE\nMinister   of Lands   Given\nUnanimous  Vote\nFOR PREMI\nWith Trip Down Fraser He\nBegins Final Part\nof liis Tour\n(Special to Tho Daily Nows.)\nPRINCE GEORGE, B.C., Juno 24.\u2014\nMinister of Lands lion. W. R. Ross,\nreceived by unanimous vote the nomination ks candidate of the Conservative party in Him riding of Fort\nGeorge. His nomination was proposed\nby A. tl. Hamilton, who was formerly\nIn the field and who retired that bis\ndistrict might, havo the distinction or\nhaving a cabinet minister as its representative. Mr. -Ross in accepting\ntho nomination mado a, brief address\nduring which he made a decid'ely favorable impression and the district i*-*\nassured that witb Mr. I toss as lint\nlocal member this northern country\nwill rcccivo even a larger share of\npublic attention than it lias in lhe\npast.\nBowser Warmly Welcomed.\nTho premier commences tomorrow\ntho final leg of this, tho second of his\ntours, proceeding down lhe 'Frasor lo\nQuesnel and on over';lhc historic Carl-\nboo road hy auto stage connecting\nwith tho railway at Ashcruft ncxl Friday. His progress from Mm const\nthrough this country hns been marked\nby enthusiastic receptions and be has\nloft each centre with that enthusiasm\nsolidified Into a concrete feeling that\ntho present government stands lor the\nonly policy that will bring about a\nreturn of lhat prosperity to which Its\nnatural resources and advantages entitle  it.\nThe premier has been careful to explain tbo many measures passed at\ntho last session of Hie legislature which\nvitally affect this northern country;\nthe Workmens Compensation act, a direct, benefit to the miners; tbe provisions for unsaying ore samples ami\nproviding expert mineralogists to givo\nadvlco to prospectors; tho creation of\nthe department of agriculture and the\nattendant assistance to farmers and\nas from Atlln to this place miiiers and\nranchers form lho population', a moro\nrecital of these actions with the certain\ndevelopment that will result from their\nInception Is'sufficient to Insure hearty\nendorsement from the voters.\nWhen on top ot' this it is puinted\nout that tho famous Brewster writ\nthreatens the successful carrying out.\nof these measures and menaces the\ncompletion ot many trails, roads and\nbridges now projected and badly needed by the (settlers, a sentiment Is created that promises to culminate in\nu sorles of interesting hut heated\nscones when tho leader of tho opposition and M'. A. Macdonald mako their\ntour along the Grand Trunk Pacific\nrailwny shortly.\nThe general feeling Is^hat if Mr.\nBrewster can press home to a successful conclusion his charge that tbe\nacts of last session were illegal he can\nonly he regarded as an enemy of the\ncountry, whllo if the writ was solely\nfor political effect the action Is regarded as lhat of a maiY whose partisan bias overbalances his common\nSense and a man unworthy to be entrusted with matters of grave importance to the welfare of tho province.\nSTERN NOTE IS\nSENT TO MEXICO\nDemands \"Prompt   Release\nof Prisoners\nTOLD\nSTATEJNJ\nEN\n0\nSituation     Described     as\nExceedingly   Acute\nby Stone\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nWASHINGTON, .lunc 25.\u2014A do\nniand for thc immediate release uf the\nUnited States troops taken prisoners\nat Carrizal, together with a stern notification that tlie United States expects\nan early statement of the purpose of\nthc Carranza government, was tele-\nigraphed to Mexico City today by Sec\nrelary Lansing. The note and tbe\nmilitary situation of thc United States\nwere talked of ut the White House\ntonight by tbe President with Chairman Stone of tbe senate foreign relations committee, Senator Lodge, ranking Republican member, and Chairman\nFlOod, of the houso committee of foreign affairs. Representative Cooper,\nranking minority member of thc house\nof commons, was out of tho city.   '\nAfter the conference, which lasted\nmole than an hour, Senator Stone said\ntbe situation \"was exceedingly acute.\nPresident Wilson had felt it necessary\nlo acquaint congress with thc state\nof affairs and tbe action taken through\nthe foreign affairs committee. It wiih\nIntimated that be might desire to ad\ndress a joint committee of tho house\nIn a day or two hut would not take\nthis final step until the Mexican gov\nernment. had been given- an oppor\ntunlty to reply. Thc text of thc note\nto tho Mexican dc facto government,\ntransmitted today to .lames Lynn Rodgers, special representative of the\nUnited Stales government in Mexico\nCity, says:\nText of  tho  Note\n\"Mr. Arredondo yesterday delivered\nfrom his government the following\ncommunication: 'I am directed by my\ngovernment to inform your excellency\nwitb reference to the Carrizal incident that the chief executive, through\nthe Mexican war department, gave\norders to General Jacinto B. Trevinl\nnot to permit American forces from\nGeneral Pershing's column to ad\nvance further south, nor to movo\neither east ur west from the points at\nwhich they ale located and to oppose\nnew incursions of American soldiers\ninto Mexican territory. Tho orders\nwere brought by General Trevino to\ntlie attention of General Pershing, who\nacknowledged the receipt of the com\nnuinication relative thereto. On the\n22nd Instant, as your excellency\nknows, an American forco moved eastward quite far from its base, notwithstanding the above orders and was\nengaged by Mexican troops, at Carrizal, state of Chihuahua. As a result\nof thc encounter several men on both\nsides were killed and t wounded, and\n17 American soldiers woro made prisoners.'\n\"You are hereby instructed to hand\nto the minister of foreign relations of\nthe de facto government the following: .       I\nIs Hostile Action ,\n\" \"Tho government of the United\nStales can put no other, construction\nupon fhe communication handed to the\nsecretary of state of the United States\non June 24 by Mr. Arredondo, under\n(Continued on Pate Xwo.j,   \u25a0\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nROME, June 25.\u2014Increasing activity\nby thc Austrian artillery in thc\nTrontino is reported in today's war\noffice statement. The statement follows:\n\"Yesterday between the Adige and\nthe Brenta tho enemy artillery increased its activity.\n\"We carried out a successful artillery barrage In tho Posina sector and\nbetween Monte Clgnc and Monte\nCampiollo, on the southern side of tho\nArsa valley, and between Punta Corbin and Cesuna.\n\"Infantry encounters occurred in the\nCampaglla area, west of Posina, near\nManeghcttl and south of Arsierero, in\nwhich we attacked and drove back the\nenemy.\n\"In the upper Cordovelc and Bortc\nvalley there were violent artillery\nduels.\n\"The railway stations at Innichen\nand Silllan, In the Puslerthal, were\nagain bombarded by our heavy artillery.\n\"At the head of tbe But valley and\nIn the upper Fcllu valley our Infantry\nand artillery were active. We set fire\nto Lepold Skirchcn.\n\"On thc Isonzo, further raids by our\ndetachments resulted in our capturing some prisoners, arms and ammunition.\n\"Hostile aircraft dropped bombs on\nTolmezzo, Porto Gruarb, Pontc Piave\nand the Gardo Lagoon, causing no\ncasualties and only slight damage.\n\"Our CapriOna aeroplanes bombarded enemy encampments on the Asiago\nplateau and  returned safely.\"\nWith Capture of Kimpolung and Kuty-Wisnitz Forcea\nof Czar Seize Possession of Entire Austrian\nState-Many Prisoners Taken\nVIOLENT BATTLES WITH TEUTON ARMIES\nARE IN PROGRESS SOUTHWEST OF JJUTSK\nBoth Petrograd and Berlin Report Repulse of Attacks\nin Conflicts in Volhynia-Forces of Enemy\nDisputing Ground Foot by Foot\nONTARIO TOWNS\nOF\nMasked   Bithdits   Capture   Ville  Marie,\nSet  Bank  Afire  With   Blast,\nFlee Empty Handed\n(By Daily News Leased Wire,)\nTORONTO, Juno 25.\u2014With Jesse\nJames bravado and daring, seven\nmasked men rode into the town of\nVille Marie, on the north shore of Lake\nTomiskaming, just before, dusk and\ntook possession of tho place. Prior to\ntheir appearance telephone and telegraph wires outside the town had been\ncut and communication destroyed.\nThe men were all armed. They rode\nopenly down the main street to the\nbranch of tbe Quebec bank, holding\nthe frightened public at bay with revolvers.\nTwo of them proceeded to work with\na heavy explosive which, contrary to\ntheir plans, set the whole building on\nfire, making It impossible for the\nhighwaymen to approach for their\nbooty. The fire caused a general\nalarm and they decamped. Manager\nLamarche, of tlie bank, who attempted to get away to .give warning, was\nshot In tlie side and leg. Tlie safe,\nwhich contained JIN.OOO currency, was\nfound intact in the ruins after the fire\nwas quenched.\nHEN NAMED ON LISTS\nTwonty-Two     Given     As     Wounded,\nThree Killed  in Aotion and\nThree  Are  Prisoners\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, June .25.\u2014Six casualty\nlists were issued in the course of the\nday today. They give in ail 28 names\nwhose next of kin live in British\nColumbia.    The  lists  follow:\nBritish Columbia Casualties.\nCorp. William Q. Bradshaw, Victoria,\nwounded.\nCharles Stewart Baxter, Victoria,\nwounded.\nJamos P. Carr, Vancouver, wounded.\nWilliam Close, Vancouver, wounded.\nPioneer James Henry Fielder, Victoria, wounded.\nWilliam Flint, South Wellington\nwounded.\nJohn Foster, South Vancouver\nwounded.\nPloneor Collins Mclnuos, Vancouver,\nwounded.\nEdward James Nolan, Vancouver,\nwounded.\nPioneer William J. Parton, Webster's\nCorners, wounded.\nFred 3. Plumrldge, Mission City,\nwouiidcd.\nRobert J. Johnson, Now Westminster, -killed In action.\nPioneer William Taylor, New Westminster, wounded.\nSgi. Andrew Thompson, Vancouver,\nwounded.\nStanley B. Trellhard, Victoria,\nwounded.\nJames T. Tresilove, Vancouver,\nwounded.\nFred Wright, Vancouver, wounded.\nPioneer James Lee, Vancouver,\nwounded.\nWhitby P. McCary, 427 Powell St.,\nVictoria, wounded.\nPioneer Christopher McOlillivray, 217\nGeorge Road, Victoria, wounded.\nPioneer James A. McGregor, 613 Bay\nstreet, Victoria, wounded.\n{Coptlnnnrt op Page Two.)\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, June 25.\u2014The Russians\nhave conquered the whole of the Austrian crown land of Bukowina, and the\nAustro-Hungarians are making their\nway toward the Carpathian passes.\nKlmpolung, iu the southern part of\nBukowina, has heen occupied by tho\nRussians, and thc Austrians have fallen back between that town and Joko-\nbeny and to the northwest have evacuated the heights south uf Betromettl\nand Ulznlc.\nAlong the River Pruth, in their drive\ntoward Kolomea, tlie Russians have\ncaptured Wilischoff and Toulounoff.\nThe Austrians lost heavily In men\nmade prisoners and in war stores left\nbehind in the retreat.\nIn Volhynia. Petrograd reports the\ncapture of a redoubt near Czartorysk,\nthe repulse of attacks southwest of\nLutsk, and aa advance north of Rad-\nziviloff, while Berlin reports the putting down of Russian attacks to thc\neast of Vladlmir-Volynskl and west of\nDubno. Heavy fighting continues\nthroughout this entire region.\nKimpolung Occupied\nPETROGRAD, ,lune 25, via London.\n\u2014Occupation of tlie town of Kimpolung, in the extreme southern part of\nBukowina, ut the foot of the Carpathians, was announced hy tlie war office today, together with the capture\npi more than 2000 prisoners.\nRussians farther north are pressing\nalong thc river toward Kolomea and\nhave occupied the village of Kitiko-\nhuf and Toulokoff.\nPetrograd Statement\nThe following official statement was\nissued tonight:\n\"West of Snltyn, on the Pruth, 20\nmiles northwest of Czernowitz, our\ntroops, as they advanced, occupied the\nvillages of Kilikhof and Toulohof.\n\"On the evening of June 23 thc town\nof Klmpolung was taken after intense\nfighting. Sixty officers and 2000 men\nwere taken prisoner, and seven ma\nchine guns were captured. In the rail\nway station whole trains wore cap\nHired.\n\"With tho capture of the towns of\nKlmpolung and Kuty-Wisnitz we took\npossession of tlie whole of Bukowina.\n\"Il was found that during a hurried\nretirement in the region of Izkany station, north of Suflava, the enemy loft\nbehind 88 empty wagons, 17 wagons\nof maize and about 2500 tons of anthracite, besides structural materials,\ngreat reserves of fodder aud other\nbooty.\nOfficial Day Statement\nPETROGRAD, June 23.\u2014The Russian official statement issued today\nsays:\n\"Enemy artillery affected a concen\ntratcd bombardment of the Ikskull\nbridgehead. In the region of Uloukst,\nwe effected a coup de main against\nGerman trenches. Tho enemy at\ntempted a counter-attack, but was repulsed by our rifle and machine gun\nfire. After this defeat the Germans\nintermittently bombarded at long\nrange with  many  batteries.\n\"Thursday evening tiie enemy opened a violent artillery flro in thc direction of the Berslna farm, bombarding\nthe village of Kilhy on the Berslna\nrivor, to the east of Bogdanoff. Toward night the enemy Infantry In considerable force opened an offensive\nagainst the Berslna farm hut met hy\nour bayonet counter-attacks were put\nlo flight toward their own trenches,\nleaving large numbers of dead before\nour barbed wire entanglements. To\nthe west of Torehyn, due west of\nLutsk, desperate fighting continues.\n\"Thank.s to the united and effective\nefforts of our Infantry and artillery,\nall the enemy's attacks in the region\nof the village of Zubllno were repulsed.\n\"To thc southeast of Svinsky the\nenemy opened a heavy fire in the region 'of the village of Pustonyty. Ho\nthen took thc offensive, but was repulsed with heavy losses.\n\"West of Radzivlloff, one of our'\nregiments got a footing in enemy\ntrenches and captured four officers\nand 303 men. The enemy then concentrated his fire and obliged us to\nretire from the captured trenches to\nour own positions. Wo retained tho\nprisoners and succeeded in repulsing\nall counter-attacks.\nAustrian Statement\nVIENNA, June 21, via London, Juno)\n25.\u2014Thc Austrian encircling advance\nhas pressed the Russians out of Kuty,\nGalicia, according to the Austrian official statement issued today.\n\"In Volhynia the Austro-German;\nforces are disputing the ground foot\nby foot north of the Lipa river, northeast of Gorochow and westrnorthwest\nof Torehyn, where all the Russian\ncounter-attacks have been frustrated.\nBerlin Statement.\nBERLIN, June 25.\u2014Violent attacks\non the Austro-German-* forces whtck\ncountered the Russian farces in Volhynia are being continued. The war office announced today that all these attacks, made repeatedly with strong\nforces had been repulsed. The state-*\nment follows:\n\"Iii the northern section of the frontt\nthe\"e has been fighting between reconnaissances at various points during which we took prisoners and\nbooty.\n\"Army group of General Von Lin*\nslngen: Strong Russian counter aty\ntacks against our forward lines were*\nquite unsuccessful especially on both!\nside s of Zitaurze, 25 miles east oC\nVladimir-Volynski.\n\"South of Pluszowka, in the sectoi*\neast of Bcrestechk (about 30 mllert\nwest of Dubno) enemy attacks In considerable force wero repeatedly re-*\npulsed.\n\"Army group of Goncral Count Vonj\nBorthmer: There is nothing to report.'\"\nPEACE SPEECH HADE\nDemand   of Socialist  Deputy for  Im-J\nmediate   Armistice   Calls   Forth\nCries of \"Shame\"\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nPARIS. June H5.\u2014The government'**\nwar appropriation bill caused a spirited debate In the chamber of deputies\nSaturday evening. Thc Socialist de-:\nputy, Brizon, opposing the credits, demanded an immediate armistice and.\nattacked the recent address of President Poincare at Nancy. Protests\nand cries of \"Shame\" from various\nparts of the chamber followed Deputy;\nBrlzon's statements.\nPresident Desoharidl of the chambeH\nand Finance Minister Rihot. objected t\u00ab\nthe bringing in of the name of ProshU\nent Poincare and also to thc language}\nused by the Socialist deputy.\nNeither tiie chamber nor antf\nFrenchman could consent to an im-:\nmediate armistice and peace would\nmean that wc renounce our rights un-:\ntier repeated violations of justice, said!\nPresident Dcschanel.\nThe appropriations, which are fori\nthc third quarter of 1916, wcrd\nadopted.\nRETURNED SOLDIERS TO\nCOMPOSE NEW BATTALION\n(By Daily Nows Lea^d Wire)\nCALGARY, Alta., June 25.\u2014E. H.\nScaunell of Ottawa, secretary of the\nDumlnion hospltuls commission, which\nhas churge of thc returned soldiers,\nstayed over In Calgary today on his\nway to Vancouver, where he will meet\nand consult Sir Rider Haggard, the\nrepresentative of the ujfter-the-war\ncommittee of the Royal Colonial institute regarding the land settlement\nscheme for the soldiers.\nMr. Scannell announced that an order in council was passed yesterday\norganizing all returned soldiers and\nall soldiers who have been returned as\nmedically unfit, into a battalion organization, which shall be part of the\noverseas forces and subject to the\nsame control. This new unit will bo\nunder   its   own  officers   and   subject\nto tho authority of the district conw\nmanding officer and will have thsl\ndiscipline and management of the returned soldiers in its hands, leaving?\ntho militia officers free to handle and\ntrain the men for tho front.\nHeretofore there has been a cross^\nlog of \u25a0artiLhm-iiy and dil'fllculty in\nhandling the situation.\nLleut.-Col. Sharpies of Quebec who)\nhas'been In charge of the returned sol-i\ndlers' depot at Quebec since the outbreak of the war, has been appointed\ncommanding officer of the new unit\nand Lieut.-Cot. Thompson, M.P. for\nYukon, medical superintendent.\nRegarding the land settlement question Mr. Scannell said that' the hospitals commission was working on aJ\nscheme and hoped to have a concrete)\nplan evolved in the near future,\n PAGE TWO\nTHE  DAILY NEWS\nMONDAY\", JUNE 26, 1816.\n[LEADING HOTELS OF THE WEST)\nWhara tha Traveling Public May Find Superior Accommodation*. {\nTHE HUME\nA la Carta Table d'Hota\nGeorge Benwell, Prop,\nSpecial Daily Lunch, 35c.\nHUME\u2014W. E. Forsyth, A. J. Lovcll.\nF. P. Wilson, Vancouver; .Tames Anderson, H. Giegcrich, Kaslo; F. LoRoi\nThormond, Seattle; Dr. Isabel Arthur,\nMiss Arthur, City; Mrs. Annie Nllnie.\nCalgary; Mrs. J. H. Ryley, Noel Ryley.\nQueens Bay; Mrs. B. Crilly, Granite;\nC. M. Keep, Portland; W. T. Perclville,\nPerrier mine; H. Lascelles Mackenzie,\nGranite; E. L. Lynch, Toronto; J, A.\nMorrln, Phoenix; R, L. Clark, Vancouver; H. F. Jones, Los Angeles; R. C.\nDempster, Rossland; W. S. R. Murch\nand wife, Kingston; I-I. Y. Anderson,\nGranite; W. J. Nelson, Greenwood;\nW; E. Austin, Toronto; Mrs. H. L. Bur-\nridge, Winnipeg; R, J. Essehnond, Victoria; C. S. Hyde, Hamilton; Mr. and\nMrs. W- P. Racey, Rossland; H. T\nBarnes, Victoria; E.** W. Allen, Toronto; J. P. Keanc, Rosebery; Elizabeth Thompson, M. S. Blodtnfield\nJackson, Mich; Walter Childs, Portland; E. M. Macintyre, O, W. Dickens,\nToronto; J. T. Chisholm, Vancouver;\nJ. M. Spader, A. O. Davidson, Winnipeg; J. M. Mitchell, Calgary; Roy\nWarring, Martha Clerk, Mary Clerk,\nLethbridge; Robert Wood, Armstrong;\nE. Lee. Carstalrs; Mrs. J A. McCarthy,\nMrs. Caffery, Lieut, and Mrs. C. E\nRichardson, Miss F. Johnstone, Mir,\nGilroy, Mr. Townshend, L. A. S. Dack\nW. J. Meagher, Mr. Airey and daughter, Miss G. Attree, Miss McCrory,\nClty;D. S. Davys, Silverton; Mrs,\nEskriggc, Willow Point; Mrs. Gordon\nLambert, Granite; J H. Taylor, Mr.\nand Mrs. Billings, 3. Hamilton, M. S.\nMlddleton, City;   L. Lester,  Trail.\nMADDEN\u2014A. Rankin, AKamloops;\n'H. Rippcii, Lemon creek; J. Spiers,\nKaslo; James Seumger, Spokane; Mrs.\nJ. B. Bremncr, Ymir; Mrs. E. E. Lin-\nA'illo and son, California; Miss Maude\nStewart, Ymir; O. P. Sostad, Maple\nCreek J. H. Smith, Ole -Olcson, Maple\nCreek; T. E. Hunnemaker, Medicine\nHat; W. Laughton, Grand Forks; L.\nOgilvie, Gerrard; R. W. Yulll, Boswell;   Thomas   Porter,  Winnipeg.\nThe Strathcona\nF. B. WHITING, Prop.\nSpecial   Sunday  Dinner.\nSTRATHCONA\u2014F .Short, .1. Henry,\nP. Twlss, R. Pranks, Seattle] D. J.\nMcLennan, Victoria; Mr. and Mrs. In-\nsinRer, 11. Stockwell, R. Nlblock, T.\nKelly, Spokane; ,T. P. Keane, Rokc-\nto'ery; Miss Cameron, Miss J. Cameron,\nCity; Mrs. J. A. Mackay, Manila; J.\nH-. Bensin, Rossland; Mr. and Mrs. F.\nCalvert and son, City; I.. A. Jones.\nWashington; S. S. Fowler, Riondel;\nMiss Wood. Spokane; R. Paterson,\nCalgary; H. S. Jackson, R. Minns.\nKaslo; T. H. Ogle, I'. Brett, Ainsworth; M. S. Davis, Kaslo; R. Pratt,\nS. Lewis, Salmo; Sergt, Warner Smith,\nH. Selous, T. M. Bowman, Fred Irvine, J. J. Stephenson, City; S. H.\nAlexander and wife, Misses .1. and R.\nAlexander, B. .1. Throcap, Hamilton;\nM. T. Blonrnficld, B. Thompson, .lack-\nson, Mich; Walter Child, L. Hodman,\nPortland; 1-1. P. Westman, S. L. James,\nJ. H. O'Horon. P, CI. Malonoy, Toronto; \u25a0(!. 1-1. Barnes, T. Nixon, Chilliwack; F, Richards, N. Salmon, Spokane; Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Brigard,\nAreola; F. J. Tonkin, 11. II. Merritt\nand wife, Winnipeg; F. O. C. Wood, J.\nCarter, J, J. DeGrutc, Vancouver; Miss\nTremyne, Spokane; It. Williams', Fernle; B. Pearce, Salmo; Mrs. J. S. Ford,\nMrs. It. E. Borden, San Francisco;\nT. Coulter. Bollingham; Andrew\nCairns. Berkley, Cal; w. R Plillpot,\nSilverton; Leo Brown, C. F. Beach,\nTrail; I). A. McH-arland, Thnrold; Mr.\nand Mrs. J. A. Gibson, Teeswater; O.\nP. . Mount, Ottawa; A. K. McKenzie.\nParkville; Mr. and Mrs. Salisbury, Miss\nGladys Salisbury, Miss Edna Salisbury,\nMiss Nena Salisbury, Miss S. L. Mackenzie City,\nQueen's Hotel\nA. LAPOINTE, Proprietor.\nAmerican and European Plan.\n8TEAM  HEAT  IN  EVERY  ROOM\nBU8INE83  LUNCH, 35o\nRATE8:  $1.50 AND $2.00 A  DAY\nQCEENS\u2014N. Darling, Vancouver;\nA. J. Camyeult, Vancouver; Mrs, E.\nH. Rlcards, Leslye Rlcards, Miss Ric-\nards, City; M. Munroc, Castlegar; K.\nNisbet, Phoenix; Miss A. Curtis, it.\nFlnldin, John May, Winnipeg; L. B.\nLonguist, Spokane; Mr. and Mr J.\nBaney and daughter, Spokane; H. L.\nLindsay,   Johnston's.\nNew Grand Hotel\nBeit Place in Town\n$1.00 A  DAY UP\nNEW GRAND\u2014Mrs. Robert Inglis,\nArmstrong; Mrs. Jackson, J. Herman\nBerthe Herman, W. W. Moran, Summcrland; C. W. Anlquist, City; S. L.\nGraham, Granite; G. Preston, George\nFoveas, Greenwood; N. Hedin,, Three\nForks.\nHalcyon Hot Springs\nSanitarium\nIf you suffer from muscular, Inflammatory, sciatic or any other\nform of rheumatism, or from metallic poisoning of any sort don't de-\nlaj Como at once and got cured.\nMost complete and best arranged\nbathing establishment on the continent. AH departments under\ncue roof steam heated and electric  lighted. -\nRates: $12.00 to $15.00 Per Week.\nWILLIAM BOYD, Prop.,\nHalcyon, Arrow Lakes, B. C\nGrand Central Hotel\nOPPOSITE POSTOFFICE.\nAmerican and European Plans.\nJ. A. ERICKSON, Prop.\nGRAND CENTRAL\u2014-W. H. Flem-\nming, E. Roth, J. Matheson, Silverton;\nA. Jacobson, Castlegar; J. McPhee,\nNakusp; R. Fitawilliam, \\V. McCIough,\nSalmo; D. R. McEachren, Fred Larson,\n\u25a0Ymir;. Fred Wheeler and wife, O.\nSparker, Colville; Mrs. J. J. Jackson,\nSalem; Mrs. M. Jenkins, Coleman; J.\nCameron, N\". Johnson, C\/.ilgary; E.\nJohnson, Penticton; H. Seynedoun,\nTaghum; 3. Bourgoine, A, Jalvc, M. Y.\nCilr, Winnipeg; B. Noble, W. Burke,\nSilverton; J. W. Antagohome, A. Jarvl,\nM, Flino, F. J. Kelly, J. Winflcld, New\nYork; A. Crosby, Kamloops.\nMadden Hotel\nAmerican and European Plan.\nSteam Heated.      Centrally Located\nMRS. E. C. CLARKE,  Proprietress.\nNelson House\nEuropean Plan,\nW. A, WARD, Propriotor.\nCAFE\u2014Open Day and Night\u2014BAR\nMerchants' Lunch, 12 to 2,\nPhono 97. P. 0. Box 597\nNELSON\u2014 Mrs. ,1 j. Mcintosh, rt.\nW. Hamilton, Edgewood; C. A. Phillips. Boston; H. 'Rankin, Procter; F.\nDernby, w. Dernby, iFernle.\nTremont Hotel\nNelson, B. C..\nSTEAM   HEATED\nEuropean   and  American   Plan\nA.  CAMPBELL,   Prop.\nTREMONT\u2014D. McMillan, Vancouver; jucvk Carfra, Trail; .Mrs. Drys-\ndale, Lethbridge; Mrs, Prior, Frank;\nD. Lichen, Ainsworth; Joe White,\nBluebell mine; C. Damier, Silverton.\nROSSLAND HOTELS\nThe Hotel Allan\nRecently   Refurnished.\n8MITH  &  BELTON,\nProprietors.\nArrow Lakes Hotel\nEDGEWOOD, B. C.\nSituate on Ihc shore of the beautiful Arrow Lake at Edgewood, li.\nC. Special, rates for family parlies and week ends. Write the\nmanagement for rates and reservations.\nLeland Hotel\nT. H. BOHART, Prop.\nThe hotel lo patronize when in Na.\nkusp. Arrangements mado for people going to the Hot Springs. Motor\nboats, rowboats and canoes for hire.\nNAKUSP, B. C.\nHotel Castlegar\nCastlegar, B. C.    W. H. Gage, Prop.\nNice place to spend tho week end.\nExcellent accommodations for\ndrummers. Boundary to Coast train\nleaves here daily except Sunday at\n8:45 a. m. Evening train Rossland\nto Nelson stops 30 minutes for dinner Sunday, Monday, Wednesday\nand Friday.\nRates $2.00 and $2.50 Per Day.\nITALIAN   BARK   SUNK.\nLONDON, June 25.\u2014A Lloyd'B despatch from Genoa reports the sinking\nof the Italian bark Gabrlela d'All, 2110\ntons.\nED. FABRE WINNER OF\nSTAR CUP AT MONTREAL\nMONTREAL, June 24.\u2014Ed. Fabrc,\ntho famous Montreal marathon runner,\nagain won the Star cup for the five\nmile race at the Caledonian games today. He led the field all the way and\nwon handily In 35 minutes,\nCANADIANS REWARDED\nEOlt GALLANTRY\n(Continued from Page One.>\ntrench Capt. Uniacke organized bombing parties one of which he led himself. Though twice seriously wounded\nhe continued to fight until lhe enemy\nwas driven out.\"\nAward of the military cross to Lieut.\neHnry Hobba was made \"for conspicuous gallantry on many occasions\nnotably when, after working a half\nhour under heavy shell fire, he rescued\na man from a blown in dugout. He\nhas since been wounded.\"\nPte. S. A. Craig of the Princess' Pats\nwon the D.C.M. hy \"picking up an\nenemy bomb which had fallen in tho\nmiddlo of a group of our bombers and\nthrowing it over the parapet where it\nimmediately exploded. He thereby\nsaved many lives.\"\nCompany Sorgt. -Maj Miles, 49th\nbattalion, also awarded the D.C.M. The\nnotice of award reads: \"During a\nheavy bombardment by the enemy he\nmoved from place to place In t'he open\nunder heavy fire, directing and encouraging the men, assisting tlie wounded\nand rescuing buried men Ho bas frequently been brought to notice for\nbravery.\"\nSTERN NOTE IS\nSENTJO MEXICO\n(Continued from Page One.)\ninstruction of your government, than\nthat it Is intended as a formal avowal\nof a deliberately hostile action against\nthc forces of the United States now\nIn Mexico and of the purpose to attack them without provocation whenever they move from their present\nposition in pursuance of tlie objects\nfor which they were sent there, notwithstanding the fact that those objects not only involve no unfriendly\nintention toward thc government and\npeople nf Mexico, hut are, on the contrary, intended only to assist that\ngovernment in protecting Itself and\nthe territory and people of the United\nStates against irresponsible and insurgent bands of rebel marauders.\n\"I am Instructed, therefore, by my\ngovernment to demand \\he immediate\nrelease of the prisoners taken in the\nencounter at Carrizal, together with\nany property of the United States\ntaken with them, and to inform you\nthat the government of thc United\nStates expects an early statement\nfrom your government as to the course\nof action it wishes the government of\nthe United States to understand it has\ndetermined upon and that it also expects that this statement be mado\nthrough thc usual diplomatic channels\nand not through subordinate military\ncommanders.\"\nMEN NAMED ONUSES\n(Continued rroni Pago One.)\nLxnce Corporal William Motteram,\n252U Burne street. Vancouver, wounded.\nAlex Munroe, 17ii0 Parker street,\nVancouver, previously reported missing\nnow unofficially prisoner of war.\nJohn McCall, (U3 Forty-fifth, E.\nVancouver, wounded.\nSapper Frederick Ferns, Vancouver,\npreviously reported missing, now unofficially prisoner of war.\nSapper Walter Kilhy, Point Grey,\nVancouver, previously reported missing\nnow   unofficially   prisoner  of   war.\nR. C. Burton, 123 Helmckcr street,\nVictoria, lulled In action.\nJames Davenport, Revclsluke, \/illcd\nin action.\nINFANTRY.\nDied  of Wounds.\nPioneer Thomas Landy, Prospect\nLake, Vancouver Island, Lt. C.\nG. A* North, Hamilton, Ont.\nOliver  Patenaude,   Montreal.\nKilled   in  Action,\nGeorge Harvey, Ottawa.\nWounded.\nSergeant Alfred Styres, Oshwekcn,\nOnt.\nlArrriand Vezlna, Montreal.\nWilliam M, Walters, North Vancouver,  li. C.\nIn this Natter\nof Health\none   Is  either wilh   tlie  winners\nor with the losers.\nIt's largely a question of right\neating\u2014right food. For sound\nhealth one must cut out rich, indigestible foods and choose those\nthat aro known to contain the\nelements that build sturdy bodies\nand keen brains. \u2022*\nGrape-Nuts\nis a wonderfully balanced food,\nmado from whole wheat and\nbarley. It contains all thc nutriment of the grain, including the\nmineral phosphates, Indispensable in nature's plan for body and\nbrain rebuilding.\nGrape-Nuts is a concentrated\nfood, easy to digest. It is economical, hap delicious flavour,\ncomes ready to eat and has helped thousands in the winning\nclass.\n\"There's a Reason\"\nCanadian  Postum Cereal  Co.,\nLtd., Windsor, Ont.\nGeorge Ward, 614 -Windermere street,\nVancouver.\nJ. S. Watson, Winnipeg-\nJoseph Wells, Dauphin, Man.\nW. W. Whclah, Newfoundland.\nJohn Wright, Red Doer, Alta.\nG. W. Woodward, Edmonton.\nRobert Worsley, Kearney, Ont.\nT. M. Yarnoll, Verdun, Quebec.\nAlbert Bolvtn, Ottawa.\nJohn Campbell,' Ottawa.\nA. A. Chartrand, Hull, Quebec.\nRobert Parson, Ottawa, Ont.\nWilliam J. Smallcrlclgc, Ottawa.\nAndrew Mackenzie, Scotland.\nP. F. Miles, England.\nThomas Noble, Scotland.\nMichael O'Connor, Ireland.\nHerbert Ogden, England.\nThomas parkin, England,\nNorman Rothwell, Ireland.\nH. E. Shaw, England.\nHatry Williams. South Wales.\nLance Sergeant William Grigg, England.\nCorp. R. G. Halthidc, British West\nIndies.\nJ. A. Hall, Scotland.\nA. ]\",. Hall, Scotland.\nD. B. Halls. England.\nJames Hamson, England.\nE. J. Hall, England.\nT. D. Jackson, Scotland.\nJack  Jacobs,  England.\nGcorgo Johnstone, Address not given\nMalcolm H. Jones, England,\nFrank Jordon, England.\nF. E. Juffs, England.\nGeorge Lindsay, Scotland.\nHenry Valentine. Drumhcller, Alta.\nCorporal D. D. Valenstlne, St. Catherines, Ont.\nDaniel Wade, Port Dover, Ont.\nCaptain, J. C. Wallace, Orillia, Ont.\nG. F. Warner, Beamsvllle, Ont.\nJoseph Watson. Montreal.\nJ. B. Wathcrston, Hamilton, Ont.\nLlout. R. L. Weaver. Berlin, Ont.\nWilliam Wrlghlman, Winnipeg.\nLanco    Corporal   R. J.   Whitoman,\nStratford. Ont. '\nE. A. Wllburn, Blnevale, Ont.\nMajor    G. ii. Wilkinson,    Windsor,\nOnt.\nGeorge Williams, Montreal.\nSergeant William A. Wilson, Toronto\nSidney Wood, Toronto.\nWilliam J. Sponsley, Lindsay, Ont.\nW. C. Spracklin, Toronto.\nLieut. R. W. Stevenson, Ancaster,\nOnt.\nJames Stewart, Verdun, Quebec.\nA. W. Strange, Calgary.\nEdward G. Stafford, Austin, Man.\nPatrick Stundon. Montreal.\nCharles Taylor, Sydney C. B.\nF. W. Taylor, North Hamilton, Ont.\nHarry Tennant. St. John, N. B.\nG. S. Thompson, Halifax, N. S.\nG. R. Tolhurst, Inglelow, Man.\nHarry Tomkinson, Gait. Out.\nJ. R. Turner, Detroit, Mich.\nFrank Oraszck, Berlin, Ont.\nJ. M. O'Tooie. Florence. C. B.\nJohn Ownes, St. John. N. B.\nWm. H. Palmer, Toronto.\nEdward Parker, Toronto.\nLeonard Patterson, Montreal.\nLance Corporal F. G. Pearce, Dartmouth, N. S.\nE. R. Pentz, Truro, N. S.\nC. S. Phinnombre, Trfronto.\nEugene pjola, Bellevue, Alta.\nAlfred  Pollard,   llorlln,  Ont.\nEdouard Partclence, Verdun, Que.\nErnest Powers, Moncton. N. B.\nWilliam Powell, Toronto.\nLance Corporal P. II. Raynond,\nBrookfleld. N. B. '**\nJohn Durferln, Tweed, Ont.\nWilliam L. Reid, 122(1 Klefor street,\n^Vancouver,  B. C.\nE. J. Rcnnie, Montreal\nCorporal Thomas Rennie, Guelph,\nOnt.\nOliver Ridley, Winnipeg.\nLeonard Roach, Que.\nDonald Robertson,1 Buxley, Alta.\nWilliam Robertson, Mount Bridge\nOnt.\nSergeant J. N, Robltalllo, Cape Rouge, Que.\nJohn   Ryan, Quebec.\nW. W. Rye. Keswick, Ont.\nL. C. Rynal, l'aimerston, Ont.\nLance Corporal    Arthur    Maycock,\nFort William, flat.\n,S. D. Meolting, Toronto.\n-Alex M. .Meharg, Toronto.\n' J. M. Miller, Halllfax. \u2022\nH. G. Mitchell, Portage La Prairie,\nMan.\nC. N. Morphy, Weyburn, Sask.\nBugler, A. W. Morton, Bortonville,\nnnt.\nG. H. Murphy, Elmsvlllo, N. B.\nSergt. x. E, Murton, Toronto.\nArthur Nicoll Winnipeg._\nJ. H. Nichols, Woodstock, Ont.\nCorporal Frank E. Oakley, Vancouver,\nLieut. C.  L. O'Brien, Halifax.\nP. J. Odanhaur, Toronto.\nCaptain E. D. O'Flynn, Belleville,\nOnl.\nLance Corporal C. C. Ohrling, Stel-\nlarton. N. S.\nCaptain B. H. Mackenzie, Moncton,\nN. B.\ns. H. McComb) Paimerston, Ont.\nPioneer Herbert McDonald, Glace\nHay, N. S.\nAndrew  McGowan,  Edmonton.\nSergeant R. J. McLeod, Verdun, Que.\nJohn  Mackenzie, Fort William, Ont.\nRod McKenzle, Caledonia Mines, N.\nS.\nErnest McKeslle, Dauphin, Man.\nDaniel  McLaughlin, Winnipeg.\nDan McMillan, Boaverton, Ont.\nJohn McNaughton, Eureka, N. S.\nJohn Mann, Fort William, Ont.'\nW. B. Martin, Toronto.\nJ. L. Martin, Nashburn, III.\nLieul. a. L. Matheson, Baddeck, N.\nS.\nSergeant John Ferguson, Mara, Okanagan, B. C.\nLanco Corporal W. J. Jeull, Winnipeg.\nWm. 1.'. Kane, Rathwoll, Man.\nJ. H. Kennedy, Hampton, N. B.\nR. W. Kennedy, Roslyn Village, Ont.\nCharles King. Browns Burg, Que.\nT. W. Kingwell, Montreal.\nDavid Kyle, Toronto.\nVictor Lacasse, Quebec.\nJohn Kent Joggins Minos. N. S.\nHenri Maroueux, Bedford, Quo.\nJ. W. Lawrle, Frederlckton, N. B.\nWilliam E. Ledbotter, Leduc, Alta.\n- Lieut. O'Neill, Quebec.   -\nErnest Lee, Montreal.\nT. S. Leaman, Calgary.\nG. S. Lcason, Elmwood, Ont.\nCharles 'Lievre, Inverness, N. S.\nA. Leonard, Montreal.\nJoseph Lindsay, 63 Twenty-Sixth\navenue, w., Vancouver B. C.\nLance Corporal John Livcrsay, Mon-\ntreil.\nR. W. Locke, Newfoundland,\nJ. H. Logan, Montreal.\nJ. H. Lesey, Peterboro, Ont.\nF. C. Lucas, Winnipeg.\nG. E. Luke, Halifax.\nO. L. Lundeen, South Minneapolis,\nMinn.\nBombardier John McDonald, Kingston, Ont.\nFOR RENT\nOne and a half storey house, 3\u00bb\nbedrooms, first class bathroom, 2\nlets, good location, close to car. $13\na month. ,\n1 want listings of houses for rent.\nAni getting enquiries daily.\nSTOCKS\nFire Insurance and City  Property.\nC. W. Appleyard\nb05 Baker Street. Phone 444\nThomas Sathin, Glencoe, Ont.\nC. E. Salisbury, He-speller, Ont.\nGeorge Dandison, Winnipeg.\nL. G. Scale, Brampton, Ont.\nL. W. Sharpe, 774 Nineteenth avenue\nE. Vancouver.\nLieut, Harold N. Simpson, Gowan-\ntown, Ont.\nLance Corporal Wm. Sluclt, Hamilton, Ont.\nE. L. Smith, Peglus, Man.\nGeorge   Smith,  Toronto.\nLeslie J. E. Smith, Central Park, B.\nC.\nWalter H. Smith, Berlin, Ont.\nRoy Snyder, Clalrcville, Ont.\nA. A. Soinerville, Guelph,  Ont.\nJ, H; Sowerby, Moncton, N. B.\nDavid Spencer, Montreal.\nPioneer F. G. Brickell, Winnipeg.\nHenry Bermater, Costogan, Man.\nAlex Burgess, Toronto.\nD. S. Burkett, Portage La Prairie,\nMan.\nJ. R. Burns, Home Gtcn, Alta.\nF. J. Caldon, Toronto.\nSergeant Robert W. Cameron, Vancouver.\nR. A. Chard, Dauphin, Man.\nEmil Charland, Outremont, Quo,\nCnptain Henri Chase, Quebec,\nFred Clark, St. Thomas, Ont.\n(Continued on Page Five.)\nSummer Corsets\nPrices 95c to $4.50\nWE    HAVE    AN     EXCEPTIONALLY    FINE    DISPLAY    OF   WARM\nWEATHER    DRESS   GOODS\nAND   FULL   LINES   OF   DRESS   ACCESSORIES\nSmillie & Weir\nLADIES'  WEAR   SPECIALISTS\n\u00ab**V.\nItlll\nm\nm\nm\n\u2022''r.V;\nPhabkJ\ness\n**s;sff\nMm mm\nSM\nWm\nJfote\n\u00ab,\nv*m\n_m\nmm\nSensational Recordings\nby New Operatic and Concert Stars\nTHE first exclusive Columbia Records by Florence Macbeth, the\nmarvelous young American coloratura soprano, and Eddy Brown,\nthe phenomenal new American violinist, are undoubtedly the\nsensations of the Columbia list for July.\n' There are also first recordings by Rothier, the great basso of the\nMetropolitan Opera; Helen Stanley, the Chicago Opera prima-donna\nsoprano, and Orville Harrold, the operatic tenor, in exquisite duets\nwith Lydia Locke, which make an event of this announcement of the\nNew Records for July\nThere's a sparkling list of new popular hits; Al Jolson's singing of his Winter\nGarden success, \"Down \"Where .the Swanee River Flows,\" and song-successes like\n\"The Kid Is Clever\" and \"Come Ou to Nashville, Tennessee,\" included among\nthe new\nPopular. Hits of the Day\nI ARE YOU HALF 7WL MAN YOUR\nMOTHER THOUGHT YOU'D BE?\nCampbell nnd Burr. lenn.* fuel.\nI'VE GOT THE BLUES I* OR HOME\nSWEET HOME. Oscr.ri.Uivw, tmltoue.\nA 2001 i\"ABY SHOES.     Henry Burr, tenor.\nW\/A     io inch], love Yt, J-THAT'S ONE THING\n85c-    I    I KNOW.        ilenry Burr, tenor.\n. fl CAN DANCE WITH EVERYBODY\nJJ I     BUT MY WIFE. D\u00abn W. Quinn, tenor.\nA2C04\nio inch-!\nS5c     WAY DOWN IN BORNEO - O - O.\n^    Collins, baritone, and Harlan, tenor.\nA WO? iMY DREAMY CHINA LADY.  Grace\ni \\, 4.,y\\>\u00a3.       Nosh, soprano, and Henry Burr, tenor,\njo inch-,\n85*:-   iSHADES OF NIGHT, sterling Trio.\nNew Instrumental Triumphs\nIo \\too orchestral field, there arc jnaster-rccordiii,;,^ like the four parts of Grieg's \"Peer\nGynt vSuite'' recorded complete on Double-Disc Records A^fioG and A5807; four favorite selections\nby Prince's Orchestra; four patriotic and'popular airs Superbly rendered by Prince's Band and\nten brilliant records of dance-music, including two by uociety's favorite Blue and White\nMarimba Band.\nThen there are two side-splitting laugh-duets {one well named \"Laugh and You'll Never\nFeel Blue\") by Al H. Weston and Irene Young; two line o)d ballads by Judson House; instrumental trios, patriotic songs, Hawaiian music and great quartettes\u2014all recorded with the excellence that marks Columbia Double-Dir,c Recorfis. By all means see your dealer to-day\u2014he has\na treat in store you won't want to miss!\nColumbia Record list free at any Columbia Dealers or mailed on request by\nColumbia Graphophone Company\nCanadian Factory and Headquarters: Toronto\nBIA\nGRAFONOLAS and DOUBLE-DISC\nRDS\nThe Rutherford Drug Co.\nCOLUMBIA   AGENT8\nNELSON,  B.C.\nDaily News Ads Bring the Business\n Sh\u00b0l\nMONDAY, JUNE 26, 191(1.\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPACE THRM\nUNDER SEA W\nFEATURE OF FILM\n\"Submarine Pirate\" Spectacular Com-\n\u2022dy, Gives Great Opportunities\nTo Syd Chaplin at Gem.\n\"A Submarine Pirate,\" whieh cornea\nto the Oom on Wednesday and Thursday tells the story, ot Glen Cayender,\na shrewd Inventor and Wesley Rug-\nglea, his accomplice, who plan the destruction of a government battleship.\nThe scene opens along- the coast in\na high class hotel. Syd Chaplin Is a\njolly waiter, who likes to mingle flirtation with pretty guests with the juggling of plates and edibles. He falls\ndown a flight of stairs and covers himself with a leopard skin.to hide from\nthe wrath of the landlord. His ruse\nleailc to hysterics on the part of Phyllis Allen, as he is running on fours to\navoid the kicks of the Infuriated hotel\nman. When Miss Allen finds out her\nmistake she is much peeved and pur-\nsuey him with an umbrella. Her at-\ntemps to hit Syd result in moro damage to the bystanders than the waiter-\ncomedian.\nFinally things become quieted down\nand Cavendar and Ruggles sit down at\none table and Miss Allen at another.\nSyd overhears the two men discussing\ntheir nefarious plans by means of a\ntelephone receiver disguised as a floral ornament and placed on their table.\nSyd takes their bag containing their\nplans and slips Into their rooms. Miss\nAllen misses her bag and accuses the\nInventors, They, run for their room\nwlt'i her and all the guests in pursuit.\nThey get into their apartment and\none of them puts a bomb In the box\ncontaining their plans and models and\nin which Syd has hidden himself,\nThere is a great explosion and Syd\nand the inventors escape injury. There\nIs a pursuit in which Syd jumps from\none building to another.\nHe makes his way to a second hand\nstore where he buys an admiral's uniform, goes down to the dock, where\nhe whistles three times, according to\nthe orders he had overheard the inventors talking about. A boat appears\nand conveys .Syd to the submarine.\nThe commander turns over the craft\nafter perusing his st'hfen papers. The\ninterior ofthe submarine, with all Its\nlevers, keys, cogs and wires is Interestingly displayed to Syd. The officer initiates Syd into the mysteries\nof submerging and then walks off. Syd\npulls a lever and starts the boat to\ndip beneath the surface. Another pull\nat a second lever opens a hole overhead and the crew gets a good dousing until the officer shuts it again.\nTh'tn there is an attack on a passenger\nGem Theatre\nFLAWLESS PRESENTATION OF PERFECT PHOTOPLAYS\nWhen we first opened the* Gem we used a slogan, \"When in\ndoubt, the Gem always.\" Since .the debut of Triangle we have discarded that, because every vestige of doubt is removed. What\nremains Is the absolute certainty thnt. the Gem has the world's best\nin pictures.\nThe Coming Week\nMONDAY\n'The Flying Twins\"\nMUTUAL  MASTERPIECE\n( Being the story of the joys and sorrows of a class we know little\nof\u2014the   circus   folk.     Bring   the   children,   they   will   enjoy   this\nparticularly. .-* \u2022%<$     *\nTUESDAY\nOn this night we have turned the house over to the boys of the\n225th. During the first part of the evening \"The Flying Twins\"\nwill be shown.\nFarewell Military\nEntertainment\nConsisting of songs, drills, special music by the band ahd\norchestra will form the record part of the program. On this night\nonly the admission will be 25 cents.   Give the boys a good send-off.\nWEDNESDAY   AND   THURSDAY\nANOTHER  ONE  OF THOSE  \"GET  YOUR   MONEY'S  WORTH\"\nTRIANGLE   PROGRAMS\u2014TWO   IN   ONE\n\"The Submarine Pirate\"\nFOUR   REELS\nWITH   SYD   CHAPLIN\nPositively the greatest comedy ever turned out by the Triangle\nKeystone Co., and that means the world.\n\"The Edge of the Abyss\"\nFIVE   REELS\n'. ,     : WITH    MARY    BOLAND; AND   FRANK    MILL8\ni One of those heart-reachi ng Triangle Dramas\u2014you know what\nthey are by now.\nIF YOU ONLY GO TO THE  PICTURE SHOW ONCE A YEAR\n\u2014!\"i* MAKE  \"THIS THE  TIME\nFRIDAY   AND   SATURDAY\n\"The Coward\"\nFIVE-REEL   INCE   PRODUCTION\n\"Fickle Fatty's Fall\"\nTWO-REEL   TRIANGLE    KEYSTONE   WITH    ROSCOE     '\nARBUCKLE\n\"The Coward,\" for sheer breath taking and gooseflesh producing\nqualities, has been recommended to us as the real thing. They say\nit will shake you to the very depth of your soul, while \"Fatty's\nFickle Fall\" will rook you to the innermost recesses of your\nanatomy with laughter.\nIF YOU  WANT TO GET SHAKEN   UP\u2014COME TO THE  GEM\nMore and more the theatre-going public of Nelson are realizing\ni that Triangle Photoplays are superlative productions for' superior\npeople.\nMANY FEATURES\nPLANNED FOR GEN\nSeries of Splendid Pictures to Ba Seen\nat  Local  Theatre  In  Near\nFuture.\nFrom a glance at the following list\nof Triangle photo dramas which play\ntho Gem in the near future, it is very\nevident that the public of Nelson is\ngoing to bo shown and that their conservatism will bo severely shaken:\n\"Aloho Oe,\" a Hawaiian story with\nEnid Markey and Wlllard Mack; \"The\nDisciple,\" with the famous western\nstar W. S. Hart; \"Tho Lily and the\nRose,\" with Dorothy Oish; \"Fatty nnd\ntho Broadway Stars,\" with seven of\nthe world's highest salaried comedl\nana; \"Cross Currents,\" with the\nBroadway favorite Helen Ware and\nmany others of equal strengt*'\n\"SUBMARINE PIRATE\"\nAIDS RECRUITING\nKeystone Comedy to Be Shown at Gem\nEndorsed by United States Navy\nDepartment.\n\"The Submarine Pirate\" the great\nKeystone comedy, which wns produced\nwit*! the co-operation of the navy department of the United States, and under a special permit from Secretary\nJosephus Daniels, is good for recruit\ning, according to the United States\nnavy department, Respectfully suggested to tho British government as an\naid to Lord Derby's plan of voluntary\nenlistment.\nWELL  KNOWN  ACTOR\nJOINS AMERICAN LEGION\nDonald Qrcgory, former stage manage-\" at the Academy of Music and later director-of the Burns Players at\nColorado Springs, has enlisted in the\nB7t'i- Battalion, known ns the American Legion. Besides being a well\nknown nctor, Mr. -Gregory Is a veteran\nof the Spanish-American war and the\nPhilllpine rebellion. The American\nLegion expects to sail for France in a\nfew weeks. For the present Mr. Gregory may be addressed, care 97th Battalion, Canadian Expeditionary Force,\nExhibition Park, Toronto, Ont.\nBIDS FAREWELL TO\nSHAKESPEARE'S WOMEN\nJulia   Marlowe Recites Poem On Occasion of E. H. Sothern'B Last\nStage Appearance.\nE. H. Sothern nnd. Miss Julia Marlowe, on Saturday night, May 27, said\ntheir farewell to the state at the Shu-\nibert theatre. Mr. Sothern and bin\npomp.iny were seen In 'If -Were\n\u25a0'King,'' and* after' tlie play Mlss-'.Mar-\nlowe recited tho following poem in\nwhich she said gbodhy to the heroines\nof Shakespeare:\nT, dreaming, walking in Arden's wood,\nWhere dream of dreams, roamed\nRosalind,\nDemure Viola thoughtful stood\nBeneath the scented Eglantine.\nLo! Saucy Beatrice! who, long syne,\nHath learned of scornful pride the\ncost.\nHer eyes from leafy ambush shine-\nSweet ladies, I have loved and lost,\nThe fair Ophelia, from the flood.\nWaves a pale hand in parting sign.\nFlaunts Kate tiie Kurst\u2014in Rebel\nmood;\nWeeps Cawdor's Queen incarnadine.\nSad Juliet sighs\u2014her love divine,\nBy cruel stars forever cross'd.\nHore Imogens flees Cymbeline.\nSweet ladies I have loved and lost.\nPortia, who, from the bond of blood,\nDiverted Shylock's fierce designs-\nGreat Egypt's Queen, whom Caesar'\nwoed,\nStrays here from fields ot Prosper-\nin e.\nDeep drink I of your wisdom wine,\nQuaffed I your wit, ye radiant host.\nFarewell! Your service I resign;\nSweet ladies, I have loved und lost.\nYour hands!    Your lips!    Yea thine\nand thine,\nHearts debonair\u2014souls tempest\ntoss'd\u2014\nYour  constant  shrine,   this  heart  of\nmine.\nSweet ladies I have loved and lost.\nBefore Miss Marlowe's recitation Mr.\nSothern spoke a valedictory to the\nstage:\n\"New York is full of affectionate\nmemories for both of us,\" said Mr.\nSothern. \"Here I made my first appearance on any stage, with- my father, at Abbey's Park theatre. Here\nat the Bijou iny wife (first appeared\nas Parthenla and made her first success. Here under Charles Frohman's\ngenerous management we Joined forces in our Shakespeare adventure, and\nhero, our work done, we stand at last\nlo  nay   farewell.\n\"I i America I see a new day dawning for the highest drama. In the light\nof my own experience I have advocated ior years the municipal theatre..The\ngreat power of the theatre should no\nlonger bo left to chance. Its influence should in each community, be directed and helped by thc community.\nMy parting wish is that we may soon\nsee thc plays of Shakespeare being\npresented to the plain people, at a\nnominal price.\n\"No actor, in the present condition j\nof the theatre, can afford to produce\nthese plays. No manager can be ex-,\npeeted to pilot a Shakespearian hopeful through inevitable failure to success. But people\u2014poor people\u2014com-.\nmon people\u2014you\" peoplo want those j\nplays. They love them, Thpy understand them in spite of the critics and\nthose wise men. Do tiiis thing and\nthe mlllonium* is at \u25a0hand.'-  '\nPRESS AGENT NEEDED\nBard   of   Avon's   Name   Disappearing\nfrom Theatrical Bill Boards\nYear by Year\nIf nnybody needs a capable press\nagent, It Is one William Shakespears,\nWith each passing year tlie sight of\nhis name on the bill-boards bus been\nof rarer occurrence. Last season, but\nfor Robert Mantell's four weeks' en\ngagement In repertoire'nnd Granville\nBarker's interlarding of Bernard Shaw\nwith \"A Midsummer Night's Dream,\"\nhe would hove hnd no Broadway showing at all. And now Man tell has gone\ninto the movies and Barker has been\namong the missing.\nTills year the tercentenary celebration of his death will give Shakespeare\na chance to come buck on a grand\nscale. But after nil the memorlnl\nexercises, what? It Is to be hoped, a\nrevival of popular interest\u2014for Shake\nspeare might easily be popular if\nthose who exploit him would allow it.\nUnfortunately, most of his champion.-*\nnre so frightfully \"highbrow\" and\nheavy themselves that tbey spread a\nwrong Impression of tho master they\nset out to serve. And the impudence\nof some of them!\nHere, for Instance, is Percy Mac\nknye, writing what he calls a \"Com\nmunity Masque\" to be produced as tlie\nclimax of the New York celebrations\nip the last week In May. It strikes\nme that this sort nf thing -would be\nmore appropriate at any other time\nthan when the one end and aim of nil\nIs supposed to be to do honor to the\nmaster dramatist. But here Mackayo\nslops forward, unUlushingly takes\nShakespeare's characters from \"Tlie\nTempest,\" and supplies them with\nwords of his own. Is this the way to\ndo reverence to Shakespeare?\nIn a newspaper report of the preliminary rending of the \"Masque\" In\nthe foyer of the Metropolitan Opera\nMouse Inst January, Charles Rami\nKennedy Is quoted as telling Mackaye;\n\"You have rivaled Shakespeare.\"\nYes, the Bard of Avon needs a capable press-agent. Could he revisit the\nglimpses of tho moon, ho might exclaim:\n\"Save me from my friends. Deliver\nme over, in preference, even to the\nmotion-picture men, one of whom paid\nme this tercentenary tribute In an\nadvertisement:\n\"You didn't live In thc age of airships and telephones and automobiles\nand rapid-fire guns and oilier speedy\nthings, Bill, but you put a speedy one\nright over the plate when you said:\n'The play's tho tiling.'\n\"If ail the moving-picture companies\nin tlie world had sat down for a long\ntime and studied over those few words\nof yours, they'd havo saved themselves\nmany a. headache and many a wasted\nshilling, old buy. But, instead of profiting by your wide experience, we all\nhad to find out for ourselves that the\nplay's the tiling.\"\u2014Matthew White, Jr.,\nIn Munsey's.\nship, when the captain tricks Syd and\nthe stcamor Is sunk by a torpedo.\nThen a United States gunboat comes\nto the rescue and sinks the submarine\nas Syd has lost the key and cannot\nsend It beneath the waves for protection. The last scene shows Syd's head\nIn the jaws of a rapacious shark.\nNEW  YORK   PRESS\nPRAISES KEYSTONE COMEDY\nOwing to Us previous enthusiastic\nreception at the Knickerbocker, the\nKeystone comedy \"a Submarine Pirate'' is being repented. Syd Chaplin\nis the predominant figure of the film.\n\u2014New   York  Globe.\n'The Missing Links'' is a detective\nstory interestingly told and with a\nnew flavor. The plot revolves about\na lost cuff link. That, masterpiece of\ncomedy, \"The Submarine Pirate\" lias\nreturned for another week and we can\nreadily say it Is a plcturo tiiat can\nbe seen twice without palling in thc\nleast.\u2014N.Y.  Evening Mail.\n\"Tho Edge of the Abyss\" is a power\nful and well presented play. Mary\nBoland was attractive as the. wife.\nWlllard Mack was a splendid burglar,\nlt (The Penitents) is a beautiful play\nwitli brilliant pictorial backgrounds\nand a story that is consistently intense\u2014N.Y. Evening Mall.\nIn the Knickerbocker theatre Thomas\nH. luce gives a setting extravagantly\nrich to \"Tlie Beckoning Flame,\" a\nscreen drama. Henry Woodruff in this\npicture makes his mow to the Triangle\nclientele. Mirth iu mure than sufficient\nmeasure is contributed in \"A Submarine Pirate,\" in whicli Syd Chaplin\nproved himself as an actor, it is- by\nfar the funniest film turned out by\ntho Keystone Film.\u2014N.Y. Press.\nIN DOUBLE ROLE\nPopular Artist to Be Seen at Starland\nin Famous Players Production of\n\"Nearly a King.\"\nJohn Barrymore who has more than\nequalled on the screen tlie reputation\nwhidh lie won on thc stage as a comedian, is the star of the Famous players*\nproduction uf \"Nearly a King,\" which\nwill he presented at tlie Starland\ntheatre on Dominion day, Saturday,\nJuly 1. In this story whicli combines\na great deal mure of tihe swift action\nof romantic melodrama with the lightness of screamingly funny comedy\nthan does the averago humorous production\/ Barrymoi'i***. plays two distinctly  different   roles,   lhe  one  of  a\nJOHN   BARRY MORE   IN   \"NEARLY\nA  RING\"\nyoung Balkan prince and tho other an\nirresponsible adventurous American\nwho gets into more than his .share of\ntrouble.\nGreat as Barrymoro has shown his\ngift of humor lo bo in his previous\nscreen appearances such as \"The Man\nfrom Mexico'* and \"Are You a Mason?'' his playing of two roles In\n\"Nearly a King\" naturally gives him a\nbetter opportunity to do tola best work.\nLike tlie Jrh'ttators (of vaudevfille,\nBarrymore is seen giving an imitation\nof Barrymore as tlie prince, for the\nidentities of the American and lho\nprlnco become confused in the minds\nof lhe cupspjrators .wliu; are jittympl-\ninij itft jj rorow\u00a7matriliiidh*y down tlie\ntlir'bae of Lhe hapless priiice* and complications develop with lightning rapidity,\n\"Nearly a King\" typifies speedy action -and side splitting mirth from\nbeginning to ond, wilh a totally unexpected twist at the finish that will\nnatch every audience napping.\nTWO HUNDRED MEN\nBLIND BY INJURY\nEleven  of These Are Canadians and\nSeven Are Still in Hospital\nin London\nOTTAWA.\u2014There are 201 British\nofficers and men wiio have been rendered blind by Injuries at the front.\nEleven of these are Canadians, four\nof whom have returned to Canada und\nseven are still In tlie hospital for\nblinded soldiers at St. Dunstans,\nRegents Park, London. There nre MO\nnon-commissioned officers and men\nin this hospital now, Including five\nAustralians, two New Kealunders and\nthe seven Canadians; there are also\nten blinded officers who como there\nfor the special training given.\nFifty men havo passed out of St.\nDunstan's liavlng learned some useful occupation, such as typewriting,\nboot repairing, basket making, poultry\nfarming, market gardening, etc. Ono\nofficer has qualified as a masseur.\nTho. military hospitals commission\nhere is looking after blinded soldiers\nwho return to Canada, and it announces that the efforts for blinded\nCanadian soldiers are unauthorized\nand unnecessary. Nor is it considered necessary to erect a special institution fur such cases. Of thc four\nblinded Canadians who returnod home,\none was trained at St. Dunstans and\nIs now earning his living as an insurance agent in his home town; his\ntypewritten letters are a model for\nmany sighted typists. Another lives\non a farm with his friends, who are\nwell to do. A third is suffering from\nshock blindness and may regain his\nsight. He rctprned from Liverpool on\nthe Hesperian and when thrown into\n'Good   Little   Devil\"  Film,  Dtdnyed  by\nFloods, Attraction at Starland\nTonight\n\"A Good Little Devil,\" featuring the\nfamous Mary Pickford, will be shown\nat the Sta.rl0.nd theatre this evening.\nThis picture was delayed on the\nQrow's Nest owing to the recent floods\nin that district, and consequently did\nnot reach Nolson in time for Saturday's showing.\nThis picture is in four parts and\nwas produced by tin; Faniuus Players\nwitli the original cast used by David\nBeluscu in thu Broadway stage production.\n1\nFIRE\n\"PRIDE OF JENNICO\" IS\nROMANTIC  PICTURE\nHouso  Peters  Is  Featured  in  Stirring\nDrama  at  Starland  Theatre\nTuesday   Evening\nThere are uirllllng situations in this\nsplendid drama produced by ihc- Famous flayers. So also there are strong\ndramatic situations\u2014situations which\nderive their strength from the art of\nthe actors as well aa from the skill uf\nthose who have transferred lo the\nscreen the story of the original writers\u2014Abby Sage Richardson and Grace\nLivingston Furnjas, The climax,\nwhich comes at the end uf tho second\npart, strikes deep and with extreme\nsuddenness. Basil Jenuieu, played by\nHouse Peters, has sworn liy tiie HWOl'd\nof.his dying uncle (hat. lie will Uphold\nthe pride of Jeuuico and that be will\nnot marry below his rank. How lie\nfalls in love witli a supposed maid,\nwho iu reality is a princess, and how\nto keep bis promise lie renounces hells alt beautifully -told in this stirring\nplay. House Peters is given here the\nbest opportunity in- has bad to show\noil the screen liis skill as an actor,\nthe water after thc ship was torpedoed, lie regained his sight temporarily but has since had a relapse. He\nwill probably recover as there Is no\nascertainable organic  trouble,\nKAISER'S LETTER MERELY\nGRANDSTAND PLAY\nMADRID, June 2f-.\u2014Premier Romanes announced today after a council\nof the ministers had been held that\nJvIhl; Alfonso had transmitted to him\na letter which the Emperor of Germany had sent liy submarine, The letter contained simply an expression uf\nthanks for the trealnieui uf the refugees from u German Kauierun by\nSpain,\nTRY   A   DAILY   NEWS  WANT  AD\nFOR SALE OR EXCHANGE\nAcrobatic   Comedian   Rescues   Maiden\nfrom  Burning   Building   in   Film\nBooked   by   Starland.\nIn his rescue of the maiden in distress in a burning building, it is an\nacrobatic Chaplin of rare quality one\nsees climb up the front of a house,\nwhile tho flames and smoke burst from\nthe. wilndows. \"\"Tlhe Fireman,\" tho\nnewest Mutual-Chaplin release, fresh\nfrom the studio, is the second ol' the\ncomedies tu bo shown to fhe Nelson\npublic under the now famous $11711,000\ncontract. As a stage setting for tlie\nstar and bis amusing capers, the Mutual Film people worked the movie\ncamera In a real fire hall at Los\nAngeles, nenr whieh their studio is located. Two burning houses\u2014the fires\ngoing on at the; same time in different\nlocations\u2014furnish realism enough for\na melodrama, let alone a comedy.\nDrilled tu a hair, tho fire company\nis a comedy in itself, but tlie comic\nsituations tho Irrepressible Chaplin\nmanages lo work up, to the confusion\nof the captain and his own discomfort,\novershadow all features. It is the\nbreeziest  Chaplin   production   yet and\na laugh producer of large dimensions..\nIt will be shown at the Starland Tuesday, July 11.\nMACKLYN  ARBUCKLE  FILMS k\nVAUDEVILLE SUCCESS.\n\"The   Reform Candidate\" .Coming   ta\nStarland  Thursday Tells Story     V\nof Heart Interest.\n\"The Reform Cnndidate\" was writ,\nlen first as a vaudeville sketch and.'\nMacklyn Arbuckle played it over the\ntwo-a-day circuit. His performance*\nof Art Hake, the political boss, was a.\ncomplete and eminently satisfactory\ncharacter study at that time. His\nmethod uf embodying the big-framed*,\nquick-brained, large-hearted politician\nis perfectly adapted to the screen and\nMr. Arbuckle finds no difficulty in\nrepenting in tlie silent drama the success achieved in t'he first form of the\nPlay .\nThe very simplicity rn this story is\nlho keynote of its power to hold the'\nemotions of any audience, a little child'\nis stolen by the half-witted \"Loonejf\nJim\" w'ho leaves it at Hoke's (Macklyn Arbuckle) home because the poor\nsimpleton knows that Hoke Is fond of\n\u25a0baliles. Tlie subsequent career of tho\nchild, her growth to beautiful womanhood and restoration to tho arms of\nher mother is made the dominant mo~\ntivo of the play. Included In tbe cast\naro Charles ,Ruggles, Myrtle Stedman\nand Forrest Stanley.\n\"WHERE   EVERYBODY    GOES\"\nProgram for Week\nCOMMENCING   MONDAY,   JUNE   26\nTHE   STARS:\nMary   Pickford\nHouse  Peters\nAnita Stewart\nMacklyn   Arbuckle\nHelen  Holmes\nJohn Barrymore\nTHE  PLAYS:\n\"A   Good   Little   Devil\"\n\"Tho Prido of Jennico\"\n\"The GoddosB\"\n\"The Reform Candidate\"\n\"The   Girl  and  the  Game\"\n\"Nearly a  King\"\nMatinee at 2:30\nEvening, 7:00 to 10:30\nMary Pickford\nTHE    IDOL   OF    MILLIONS\nIN\n\"A Good Little Devil\"\nFAMOUS   PLAYERS\u2014FOUK   PARTS\nSELECTED   COMEDY\nNOTE\u2014\"A  flood  utile Devil\" wns scheduled for Inat Saturday,\nhut owing i\" delays in transportation it arrived loo late Saturday to\nbo shown.\nTOMORROW,   JUNE   27\nHouse Peters\n(Star in \"The Unafraid,\" \"Tho Warrens of Virginia,\" etc.)\nIN\n\"The Heart of Jennico\"\nA  Dramatic  Conflict of  Hearts and  Swords.\nFAMOUS   PLAYERS\u2014FIVE   PARTS\nWEDNESDAY,   JUNE   28\nTHE   LAST   CHAPTER   OF\n\"The Goddess\"\nTHE   SERIAL   BEAUTIFUL\nTHURSDAY,   JUNE   29\nPALLAS   PICTURES,   INC.,   PRESENT\nMacklyn Arbuckle\nIN\n^The Reform Candidate\"\nFIVE   PARTS\nFRIDAY,   JUNE   30\n\"The Girl and the Game\"\nCHAPTER   TWELVE\u2014\"THE   ARAB'S   VENGEANCE\"\nFeaturing  the  World   Famous   Bostock  Animals\nSATURDAY,   JULY    I\"\nJohn Barrymore\nIN\n\"Nearly a King\"\nFAMOUS    PLAYERS   COMEDY\u2014FIVE    PARTS\n \/PAGE FOUR\n[THE DAILY NEWS\nMONDAY, JUNE ?.i, 1916.\nJ\u00a3\u00a3L\u00a3\u00a3MJCTf*L\n. Published   every   morning:   .except\nSunday by the News Publishing Company, Limited, Kelson,  B.C., Canada.\n' ROBB   SUTHERLAND,\nSecy.-Treas. and Manager.\nBusiness letters should be addressed\nand, checks and money orders made\npayable to the News Publishing Com:\npany, Limited, and In no case to Individual members of the staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and sworn\ndetailed statements of circulation\nmaile,d on request, or may be seen at\ntlie office of any advertising agency\nrecognized by the Canadian Press\nAssociation.\nv Subscription Rates\u2014By mail 50 cents\nper month, $2.50 for six months, $T-.00\nper year Delivered: CO cents, per\nmonth, $3.00 for six months, $6.00\nper-year, payable in advance.\ntroops are prisoners In Turkish hands\nbut the courage of such warriors is\nundaunted and undefeated.\u2014Philadelphia Public Ledger.\nMONDAY, JUNE 26, 1916.\n*     :  GERMANY'S CONDITION\nNo neutral country has heen in such\nclose touch with Germany since the\nwar; began as Sweden. The opinion of\nfL leading Swedish trade journal as to\nGermany's chances of victory consequently may be taken as authoritative.' It declares unequivocally that\nGermany Is starving, that ibe people\nwlllvsoon be living on vegetables, that\nthere are not any great quantities of\nthe\u00abe, and that hope of eventual victory by the Central Powers must be\ngiven up.\nThe food situation, says the journal, is far moro serious than is thought\noutside of Germany. It is this condition that brought the German fleet\nout and that accounts fur the \"madness of Verdun.\"\nThere is every reason why Swedish\nnewspapers should be silent about the\ncondition of Germany, as such revelations give great offense in the empire\nof the kaiser, and the trade interests\nof Sweden are too important to be\nlightly disregarded. But apparently\nSwedish commercial interests can no\nlonger feel that the Central Empires\nhave a chance of success and tbey\nsee the uselessness of attempting fur-'\nther to hide the fact that the British\nnavy is winning by slow, relentless, i\nsilent pressure.\nA MECCA FOK TOURISTS\n\"The scenery ou the main line of tlie\nCanadian Pacific railway cannot be\nexcelled in Its grandeur, that and the\nCrow's Nest route through the Kootenays cannot be excelled in Its beauty.\"\nThis is the opinion nf those\\who, having traveled through Europe and\nAmerien, see fur the first time the\nCanadian Rockies, (.ince the tide of\ntourist travel sets this way, as it\nsurety will, the glorious Kootenays\nwill' become a Mecca for travelers,\nwho, satiated with the wonders of\nEurope, desire to sec Nature at her\nbest.\nThe 225th needs yuu to fill up tlie\nranks before guing to camp. Arc you\nready ?\nThe enlistment of 81 members and\nadherents of St. Paul's church is a\nrecord to be proud of.\n\u25a0 Today's lung list of casualties is yet\nanother proof of the gallant fighting\nqualities of thc sons bf Canada.\nThe grain crop alone of the western\nfarmers last year netted six hundred\nmillion dollars. There is no room for\nthe pessimist un the prairie.\nI KITCHENER I\nHe stood alone; like to some old rom-\n\"'     nnce,\nHis wild, adventurous, stormy record rerfds:\nA knightly form equipped with sword\nand lance,\nThe hero of   a   thousand   dauntless\ndeeds.\nTn England's service he has fought and\nbled,\n'Neath  Eastern   skies\",  where tropic\nbreezes blow;\nWherever Kitchener his veterans led    i\nHe won   submission   from   a Vanquished foe.\nWhen from illusive peace with fire and\nsword\nThe nations clashed in conflict fierce\nand grim,\nThe    far-famed    soldier,    worn    and\nbattle-scarred,\nThe nation with one voice appealed\nto him.\nSo long his life  on duty's altar-laid,\nAll human loves and joys tbe sacrifice,\nAt  danger's  call   ho  rose  quite  unafraid,\nHowever  stern   and   costly  be  the\nprice.\nHis knowledge  and his skill alike he\nbrought;\nHis country's good his one and only\naim;\nWith    all    his    old-time    energy    he\nwrought,\nHeedless  of  either  critic  praise  or\nblame.\nAnd then the end;   the fulness of his\nyears\nTo service for liis race and time he\ngave.\nIn death, as in bis life apart, no tears\nShall  fall  upon  our  soldier's  ocean\ngrave.\nBut we shall live and strive till \"Victory\"\nOur hero soldier's monument shall be.\n**+*-* ***** *\u25a0*\u25a0\u25a0* ************* \u2022*?\nT GERMANY'S FUNDAMENTAL t\nI ERROR I\n**\u2022 \u25a0*-*-+*-*\u25a0*-*-*+*-* ******** *-*-*-*-*\u25a0\u2022*\nGerman statesmen have been sadly\nmisinformed from the first as to the\nrelations between England and her\noversea dominions. South Africa was\nsupposed to be ready for revolt. Instead, the Boers are in arms against\nthe German colonies in Africa. Berlin looked for disaffection in Canada\nand Australia. The Canadian and\nAustralian troops aro among the bravest of Germany's enemies in the\ntrenches. All India, in the minds of\nthe German authorities, only awaited\nan opportunity of rising against England\u2014some of the Indian princes were\ncounted upon as allies of Germany before the invasion of Belgium and\nFrance. But here again German hopes\nwere blasted. India remains steadfast,\nwell knowing that England, not Germany, is her friend.\nIreland, too, was disloyal, tbe Germans were assured. Irish troops aro\nfighting with Britain\u2014the rebellion in\nIreland, fomented by German agents,\nwas ii pitiful fiasco, ^ Now Afghanistan\nis added to the list of countries which\nsee nothing but danger in the worldwide propaganda of Germany.\nGermany's fundamental error was In\ntotally misapprehending the relations\nbetween Britain and the rest of the\nEmpire. Would the war have been\nstarted if the German agents had forwarded facts instead of fiction to Berlin?\u2014Providence  Journal.\nI WHAT THE PRES8 IS SAYING J\n******** *-*\u25a0*>\u25a0*- ******* *+*-*-*-* 4\nCelebrating Victories.\nCelebrating victories seems to have\nbeen occupying most of the Austrians'\ntime and energies on the Russian front.\nThey were engaged in celebrating tlie\nGerman. North sea ;'victory1'.' When\nGen. Brusiloff first smashed into them\nthree weeks ago. Petrograd now reports the capture, among other things\nof a monument commemorative of\nAustrian victories.\u2014New York World.\nSeveral Species of Flies.\nA supposedly competent entomologist announces thut there are probably\nfrom (me hundred thousand to five\nhundred thousand species of flies.\nThere seemft to lie a considerable margin of guess work in this and as a\nibeauttful itiriought we Jougiht to 'be\nwilling to concede the possible accuracy of the maximum estimate ibut tlie\nchief fact of importance is that no one\nshould become so interested In classifications as lo forget to swat.\u2014Providence Journal.\n\"Most Uncandid\" Germany.\nIn the diplomatic exchanges immediately preceding the war and since,\ntiie German foreign office has pursued\na course must ;uucandid. By omission and by misrepresentation attempts have been made to create false\nImpressions. The German people have\nbeen steadily deceived, and the at-\n- tempt has been made to deceive the\noutside world. The German people\n*WHl yet wake up to the facts and ask\ngrimly for an accounting. They will\nsome time realize that there is good\nreason for the world being against\nthem\u2014something that they now profess inability to understand.\u2014New\nYork Glo*lte.,\nThe Spirit of the Empire.\nThe success of the retreat from the\nDardanelles was not the success of a\ntriumphant advance upon Stamboul;\nthe surrender of Townshend is not\nglorified as though it were a victory\n*But the spirit of those who Held out\ntill there were but six mules to feed\n20,000 people, till living skeletons, ravaged by dysentery and typhoid malaria\nsubsisted on domestic animals that\nJwere barely able to. crawl\u2014this is the\n'spirit of pie Empire that will live\n,to put to shame skulkers un<} slackers\njind recreants at borne.    The British\n\u2022-*-*\u25a0* **********\nI    NO  TIME   TO  TALK   PEACE.    J\nX \u2666\u2666-\u2666-\u2666\u2666 *-*-*-*-v-*-** *-*\u25a0\u25a0*\u25a0* *** \u25a0\u2666\u25a0 \u2666-\u2666-\u2022> -4\nThe time for fixing details will onlj\ncome when at least one party is ready,\nin a considerable degree, to conclude\nIts opponent's terms. Neither parly is\nready for this at present. Germany as\nspeaking through the mouth of the imperial chancellor, is ready for peace\non her own terms; and she would like\ntho neutral world to think- the allies\nwicked and .bellicose people fur preferring to continue the war. But so\nfar as wo can observe, rio neutral\nstatesman is taken in by the pretense\nAs for the allies, they have at present only two alternatives\u2014 to surrender or to fight. And no serious\nbody of opinion in any of the allied\ncountries prefers surrender. Certainly\nit would bo an amazing thing in the\ncircumstances if Great Britain did.\u2014\nLondon   Daily   News.\n\u2022>*\u25a0*\u25a0**********+*-**** * *\u25a0*\u25a0** * f\nI \/  HALF A WORLD AT WAR.      T\nI* 4>++*-*-*+*-*~* ********* *+-*-*-*!\nFigures covering the cost of Uie war\nbave passed beyond the power of the\naverage memory, but an easy way to\nmake figures convey the idea of the\nimmensity of the present conflict Is to\nbo found in the statistics of population  and areas.\nEstimated so, the number of human\nbeings whoso interests are involved\nin tho war is found to be 10 times the\npopulation of the United States and\nconsiderably mure than half that of\nthe world, while the territory owned\nliy all the belligerents is more than\none-half of the land area of the earth.\nWhoever lias a head for figures will\nbo interested in  the following:\nThe land area of tbe earth is estl\nmated at BB.BOO.OOO square miles while\nlho area of the  fighting countries  is\n32,1)00,000   square   rnilest\nThe population of the earth is about\nl.liOO.000,000; tihe population of the\nUnited States is 100,000,000 while the\ntotal population of all the countries In\nvolved In tho war is approximately\n1,000,000,000.\nIt is no longer a guess, but a fact\nthat half of the inhabitants of this\nplanet are now at war,\u2014Cleveland\nPresS,\nSWEDEN, SAFELY THROUGH CRISIS,\nPEOPL* NOW CONVINCED THAT KING AND GOVERNMENT MEAN\nTO MAINTAIN STRICT NEUTRALITY UNTIL END OF WAR AND\nEFFORTS OF ACTIVISTS ARE SET AT NAUGHT AFTER BRING-\nING  NATION   PERILOUSLY  NEAR  PLUNGE INTO HOSTILITIES.\nSTOCKHOLM, Juno 25.\u2014The Swedish people are breathing mure easily\nnow than at any time since the war\nbegan. They are convinced at last\nthat their king and their government\nare determined to maintain a strict\nand| impartial neutrality until peace\nshall have been declared and they are\nplunging with a renewed vigor into\na prosperity unprecedented in the history of the country .\nThat Sweden would give up this\nprosperity and tlie happiness which\nhas come with It for the perils, the\npoverty and the misery of war seemed unthinkable to the foreign observer, but it cannot be denied that the\npolitical and international crisis through which the country passed tho latter part of May brought it dangerously\nneai^to the brink of catastrophe.\nNot lhat the people want war\u2014far\nfrom it\u2014But the anti-Russian propaganda carried forward by an influential group of politicians known as the\nActivists attained for a time a momentum which threatened all the dictates of neutrality and was outspokenly an effort to force Sweden into war\nWlt'i her traditional enemy Russia, and\nthus allay this part of Scandanavia\nWith the Central Powers.\nThis activist movement was denounced by the Socialists and Liberals in\nthe Swedish parliament as more pro-\nGerman than pro-Swedish and was referred to on one occasion by Socialist\nLeader Blunting as having a \"dangerously strong financial backing.\"\nThe pro-German press of Sweden carried the campaign at limes to avlolont\nextreme and the bitterness engendered\nbetween these papers and those representing the liberal and socialist elements of thc country may hot be of-\nfneed for years to come.\nThe Liberals and the Socialists feared for a time that the influential Activists would win over Die support of\nthe Conservative party, which still con\n'trols tbe upper houso of parliament\nand is supposed to more than hold the\nbalance of power in what is theoretical1\/ a coalition cabinet.\nBut when the test came the situation\nwas at its worst, the Conservatives\nthrough their strength with the other\ntwo parties in a determination to keep\nSweden out nf the war at any cost.\nEffectual  Agreement,\nIt so happened that the Activist\ncampaign, designed to upset tho neutrality of Sweden, actually brought\nabout an agreement among the contending political factions of the Swedish parliament which has given Swedish neutrality a stability and a standing for the belligerent nations It had\nnot enjoyed before. This agreement\nwaa an immediate result of an Activists Interpellation in parliament calling\nattention to tlie alleged permanent\ncharacter of fortifications being erected by the Russians on thc Aland islands In the Baltic, and asking what\nthe government proposed to du abuut\nIt.- At night the lights of the Alands\nire visible from the eastermost points\nof Sweden and the nearest of theso\nisles is about ti hours sail from Stockholm. Russia has given informed assurance to Sweden Unit the fortifications were only temporary, being erected for the purpose of protecting certain mine fields and thus defending\nthe islands from possible capture by\ntlie Germans. Sweden was further assured that the fortifications would be\nremoved at the end of the war.\nTlie Aland Islands command absolutely Ibe waterways entering the Gulf\nof Bothnia and as a naval base tliey\n1 COLD   8TORAGE\nit****.**** '*\u25a0\nFirst Traveler\u2014This 'ere's a terrible\nwar, Bill.\nSecond ditto\u2014Yus. What's the price\no' beer, now?\n\"That girl puts on a good many airB\njust because she was a May Queen.\nShe ain't such a much.\"\n\"Think not?\"\n\"No.. I'm to be a June bride.\"\n\u00bb +************ + *++** \u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2666\u25a0<\nJ    IMPOSSIBLE   PEACE  TERMS    J\nThe \"peace\" terms which tlie German chancellor has shadowed forth\nare utterly inadmissible, They are, In\nSir Edward's phrase, \"terms of victory\nfor Germany\"\u2014terms which are to\nleave the rest of Europe at her mercy\nwhen she chooses to renew the attack.\nNone of us will hear of any such\nterms. \"We are not beaten\" and we\naro \"not guing to be beaten.\" When\nthe German government bring that\ntruth home to the German people it\nwill be time to talk of reasoning with\nthem.\nIn the meantime the British people\nand their allies would look upon suggestions of compromise, however\nfriendly, and from whatever quarter\nthoy came, very much as President\nLincoln and Mr, Seward looked upon\nthem in tho Civil War. The American\nrecords of that period afford the classic instance of how a great democracy\nfighting for its life, and for what it\nprizes more than life, meets even the\nhint of interference from outside.\nNeutrals cannot be too tender of the\nsusceptibilities of belligerents when\nthey undertake to criticize their political action.\nThe comments of The Temps on\nsome words of President Wilson's iu\nIda recent speech to the Washington\nPress club show the painful impression\nWhicli injudicious phrases cause nations girded up to struggle for thoir\nbeing. The telegraphic reports made\nMr. Wilson attribute to Americans a\nbelief that the combatants have been\ncarried su far that they \"cannot be\nheld to the ordinary standards of responsibility\" and that they are \"mad.\"\nApparently he drew no distinction between t'he parties to the contest\u2014between tbe party who are fighting from\nlust of domination and the party who\nare fighting to uphold the common law\nof civilization and the first principles\nof public rigid.\nWhat would America have felt and\nthought, had tlie sovereign of a great\nEuropean power spoken of her in such\nterms in the I hick of the Civil War?\nWhat \"standards of responsibility\" are\nexceeded when Belgium defends her\nself against wanton aggression, when\nRussia protects little Servia, When\nFrance repels the Invader of her soil,\nor England joins them in championing\nthe sanctity of treaties,and the liber\nties of Europe? Is t^is cause less\nsacred than was the maintenance of\nthe Union? Are men more \"mad\" to\nfight nnd die for the one than for the\nother?\u2014London Tlmes\u00bb_,\ncouid command the entrance to the\nGulf of Finland, and hence thc way to\nthe Russian capital. Strongly fortified\nand in the hands of Russia they practically make it Impossible for Germany\nto use her navy in the northern Baltic\nwatc-rs. Tbey also give Russia the opportunity for an outflanking movement in the event of the German naval\nor military diversion north of the Gulf\nof Riga. Military strategists attach\nmuch importance to the Baltic this\ncoming summer and realize that It may\nplay a very prominent part in the German campaign against Russia, All\nthese facts, considered together, led\nlhe Liberals and Socialists to the conclusion that the agitation of the Alands question was designed wholly in\nfavor of the Germans, Sweden, and\nRussia, too, for that matter, fully expected that when the wnr broke out\ntha: Germany would at once seize the\nMaud Islands as a base for naval operations. Thejslands were entirely\nwithout protection at that time and\nthe'.r possession would have enabled\nGermany to bottle up the Gulf nf Bothnia and safeguard all her operations\nin the Baltic\u2014the operations she must\nnow undertake if the German arms\nare to pass Riga in the direction of\nPetrograd.\nDenmark Waters.\nBut at the outbreak of the war Germany seemed to fear a British fleet\nmight enter tlie Baltic through the\ngreat Belt of Denmark nnd she kept\nthe bulk of her navy in southern waters. Finally Denmark decided to close\nthe Great Belt to all belligerents and\nshe strewed it with powerful mines.\nThis action closed tlie only deep water entrance to the outlet to the Baltic, other than the Kiel Canal and the\nGerman fleet was loft freedom of action in that sea. So on August 20,\n1911, there came a naval diversion\nagainst the Aland archipelago. By this\ntime, however, Russia had mined the\nAland waters and the German fleet\nmanaged only lo destroy some signal\nstations.\nAnother element of importance at-;\nInched to the Alands when British\nsubmarines managed to pass the shallow sound separating Denmark and\nSweden and entered the Baltic. Tho\nAlands are now offering them a splendid base, and the recent activities of\nRussian submarines have put a sudden stop to German shipping in the\nnorthern Baltic. The submarines also\nconstitute a continual menace against\nany naval craft which may venture\nout of the south.\nTn the negotiation of the North Sea\nBaltic treaty in 1008, -Russia promised her present allies, Great Britain\nand France, out of consideration for\nSweden, not to fuVtify the Aland Islands. The Swedish people are a unit\nin regarding as a threat and a menace any permanent military works on\nthis archipelago. But they now have\nthe assurance of both France and\nGreat Britain as well as Russia that\nthe works nearlng completion are not\nof that character and will all be taken\naway when 'the presofit war is ended.\nProf. Stoffens, author of the Alands\ninterpellation, has declared such promises are worthless, that the present\nwar has shown that diplomatic notes\naud promises are indeed but \"scraps\nof paper,\" not to he regarded when\nconflicting with the Interests of belligerent.\nTho Agreement.\nBut the renewed assurances from\nthe Entente Powers appeared to have\ncompletely satisfied the government\nand the leaders of tlie three great parties. And so came the agreement, dramatically staged in tlie parliament on\nMav 17, when tiie Foreign Minister, Mr.\nWallenberg, speaking for tlie king and\ngovernment, said he was in a position\nto reaffirm tho solemn declarations of\nneutrality previously proclaimed. He\nsaid tho. government regarded the question of the fortification of the Aland\nIslands as one of vital importance to\nSweden, but ho assured tlie Rioksdag\nand tho people of Sweden that tlie government regarded would \"neglect nothing to preserve thc rights and interests of Sweden. Sweden, he added,\nwould always maintain her right of\nself-determination, but in the face of\na very difficult situation she already\nhad shown her steadfast desire to fulfill the demands of a strict and impartial neutrality as Well as an eager\ndesire not to be drawn inlo any warlike entanglements.\nThe proceedings in tho Ricks tag, or\nSwedish parliament, had all boen arranged In advance, and Mr. Wallenberg had scarcely taken his seat in\ntlie second chamber when the leaders\nof tlie three parties in turn arose and\nindorsed all that he said. This same\nplan was then carried out in the first\nchamber and there was rejoicing in\nall of Sweden that a serious crisis had\nbeen  safely passed.\nThe Activists, however, chose an effective weapon when they took up the\nAlands question. They had attempted\nfrom time to time to arouse the people against England because of the\nblockade, but the response to this appeal was meagre. Ever since the loss\nof Finland, however, Russia lias been\na traditional enemy of Sweden in tho\nminus of many of the Swedish people\nand lt has been comparatively easy to\narouse theii* fears.\nThe wholesome fear on the part of\nLiberals and Socialists that the Activist campaign might force a condition\nwhich would lead to war, was based\npartly upon the significant events in\nSweden which immediately preceded\nthe outbreak of the European war.\nDuring the winter of 1913-14 the agitation against Russia and in favor of\nmilitary preparedness in Sweden had\nbeen carried on to such an extent that\non February 6, 1914, 30,000 Swedish\nfarmers, organized in what was called\n,d bmidetng or \"yeoman's march,\" came\nto Stockholm, marched to the royal\npalace and addressing the king, assured him of their willingness to bear any\nadded taxation required for the national defense.\nPosition of Government.\nThe agitation at tlild time was participated in by thc Conservative party.\nThe government, however, was Liberal\nand had taken an intermediate posi\ntion between' the Conservatives, who\nurged any sort of sacrifice to increase\nthe army and navy, and the Socialists,\nwho claimed it was foolish for a small\ncountry like Sweden to attempt to\nkeep pace with the armaments of the\nlarger powers of Europe.\nThe address of the yeomen, coming'\nas a climax to the propaganda of patriotism waged throughout the country,\nstirred King Gustav to a reply which\nimmediately brought about a ministerial and political crisis.\n\"No king of those who before me\nhave worn the erown of Sweden,\" he\nsaid, \"lias in the same manner as I\nbeen allowed the privilege of standing\n-on this spot, face to face with the commoners of Sweden and listening to\ntheir voices. The knowledge of your\nunshakable confidence in your king invests my royal duty with a doubled\nresponsibility, but at the same time\nmakes it easier of fulfillment, and I\npromise that I will not fail you. You\nmay be assured thut I will never compromise with my conviction in the\nquestion of what I regard right and\nnecessary in order to guard lhe independence of our fatherland. The standards for readiness of service and preparation for war formulated by experts within my army I will not recede from. You all know that this\nmeans an extended time of military\nservice for citizens, especially with regard to winter training. In order to\nperform the great tasks before it my\nnavy must: not only be maintained\nbut very considerably increased.\"\nResignation of Ministry,\nThus the Kiifg spoke without previous consultation with the Liberal!\ngovernment, bended by Karl Staaf, as\nPrime Minister, ft was held by many\nuf the Liberals that tlie king bad fla-\nrantly violated his constitutional limi\ntn tions, and thereupon the ministry\nresigned. The king called upon Hjal-\nmar Hammarskjold, who formed a provisional government not representing\nany political party but known as \"The\nKing's Cabinet.\" Genera] elections\nwere ordered and nn exciting campaign was waged, the Conservatives\nraising the \"war scare,\" the Socialist\ncalling upon the king to resign\u2014if he\ncould do such a. thing\u2014and the Liberals attempting to keep in between. The\nresult was that both Conservatives and\nSocialists made gains from the Liberals, the Socialist, making by far the\ngreater gains. There was talk of a\ncompromise upon the king's policy of\narmament when the European conflagration flared up. Party lines then\nwere forgotten and the compromise\ngovernment has existed to this day.\nTn county council elections recently\nheld, however, tho Socialists, outspoken for peace nnd continued neutrality,\nhave continued to make significant\ngains, bringing about the prediction\nthat when another general election Is\nheld, the Socialists will bo able entirely to control the government.\nThe Socialist nnd Liberals feared\nthere might be another \"national der\nmoiistration\" this year as In 1914 to\ninfluence tiie king and his cabinet, but\nwiser counsels prevailed and it is felt\nnow that tlie Activists have played\ntheir hist card and need not be recoiled with again.\nThere is no doubt that if tlie Activists had succeeded in forcing Sweden\ninto the war this country -would have\nlost the support und sympathy oX the\nother two-thirds of Scandinavia\u2014Denmark and Norway. Ever since the\nconference in Cupenhagen in March,\nthe three countries have been in agreement as to policies of neutrality and\ndefense. They have agreed to act together in matters of common interest\nto all, such for instance, as the stoppage of Scandinavian mails in England, but if Sweden had heen led to\nattack Russia by seizing tlie Aland\nIslands, Denmark and Norway would\nhave felt tlie quarrel was not the policy of an allied Scandinavia. Both\nDanish and Norwegian newspapers attributed the agitation in Sweden to\nGerman influences and as both these\ncountries   arc   decidedly     pro-entente,\n'<    Packet of    x\n'    WILSON'S   \\\nFLY PADS\n> WILL KILL MORE FLIES THAN \/\nx $8\u00b0-\u00b0WORTH OF ANY \/\n\\STICKY FLY CATCHER\/\nClean to handle. Sold by alt Drug*\ngists, Grocers and General Stores,\ntheir  position  can   easily   be  understood.\nThere was much talk in Sweden also of German influence at court, due\nto the fact-that the Swedish queen\nwas a German princess, Victoria of\nBaden, a descendant of the Hohenzol-\nlerns. But In the crisis the king demonstrated that he felt the Interests\nof Sweden were best served by neutrality and friendliness with all her\nneighbors, and there is much happiness through all of Sweden today.\nLEET NOW\nTO ME\nLondon Telegraph Naval  Expert Presents  Interesting Statement of\nTeuton  Sea   Resources.\nLONDON, .Tune 25.\u2014(By Archibald\nHurd, naval expert on the London\nDaily Telegraph.)\u2014Three weeks have\npassed since tlie naval battle and it\nis possible, in the light of an immediate mass of information from British\nand neutral sources, to form what will\nprove the verdict of historians on one\nof the most splendid'incidents of our\nnavdl  annals. *\nThc German high seas fleet, weaker\nby five capital ships, is so lame that\nit cannot move, if it dared to do so.\n'Ifhat Is a matter on which there can\nbe  no  doubt.\nWhen the war opened Germany possessed tho following ships of the cruiser class (built and building) less than\n15 years old, those lost in the course\nof the war being gi^en:\nBattle cruisers\u2014Original number\neight, since lost six, comprising the\nLutzow, Goeben, Soydlitsc (a complete\nwreck), Bluecher,.Hindenberg and another of a similar typb, whieh is believed to be the Von Der Tann.\nLarge cruisers\u2014Original number 7,\nsince lost 5, comprising the Yorck,\nSehornhorst, Gneisenau, Frederick Karl\nand tho Prince Adalbert. The two remaining vessels lire the Roon (launched in 1903, therefore 13 years old) nnd\nthe Prince Helnrich (1900.)\nLight cruisers\u2014Original number 30,\nsince lost 2ft, comprising the Karlsruhe, Magdeburg, Koln, Mainz, Emden,\nDresden, Nurnburg, Koenigsburg Leipzig, Bremen, Undine, Rostock, Wiesbaden, Breslau, Frauenlob, Elbing,\nAriadne ,and three others, the names\nuf whicli have not yet been revealed.\nOut of the 45 effective cruisers of\nall classes which Germany had built\nand Vas building when the war opened, she therefore possesses today only\n14, and of these a large proportion\nwas so seriously Injured In the battle\nof the Skagerack to be at present ineffective. Those 14 cruisers have U\nact as scouts for battle squadrons, pa\nrent ships for, torpedo flotillas and\nfor patrol work in the Baltic,       \u2014\nFine China\nWe have a splendid stock of\ntho best makes of English\nChinawnro, including the famous Mhiton and Aynsley. Cups\nand Saucers, Three-piece Tea-\nsets, Afternoon Teasets and\nComports (alt most suitable as\ngifts) are included.\nWe send particulars and Illustrations of our china on request.\nPlease do not hesitate to order\nby mall; we take every care in\npacking and guarantee safe delivery.\nHenry Birks & Sons Ltd.\nVancouver, B. C.\nTENDERS WANTED.\nSealed tenders will lie received up\nto 7:00 o'clock on tho evening of\nWednesday, July 12, for the erection\nof a four roomed annex to the Trail\nPublic School, to be built of brick and\nconcrete. Plans and specifications can\nbe seen- at the city office, Trail, B.C.\nThe lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted.\nF. E. 4-DOCKERILL,\n(3336) Secretary School Board.\nJohn Burns & Sons GeTdl\u00b0\u00a3rs\nSASH   AND   DOOR   FACTORY.\" NELSON   PLANING   MILLS.\nVERNON    STREET,   NELSON,   B.C.\nEvery Description of Building Material Kept in Stock.\nEstimates Given on Stone,  Brick, Concrete and  Frame Building,,\nMAIL   ORDERS   PROMPTLY   ATTENDED   TO.\nP.O.   BOX   134 PHONE  178\nLawn Mowers\nWE HAV1D  JUST  RECEIVED  ANOTHER LARGE  SHIPMENT  OF\nWOODYATT  LAWN  MOWERS\u2014ALL,  SIZES\nAND   WE ''OFFER   THEM   TO   YOU   AT   THB\nLowest Prices\n\"STAR\"\u201412-inch, 14-inch and 16-inch\nWOODYATT\u201412-inch, 14-inch, 16-inoh and 18-Inch\nEMPRESS\u201414-inch, 16-inch and 18-inoh\nALSO\nGRASS CATCHERS\nNo. i at\n.90c each     No. 2 at\nORDER  NOW\n.$1.00 each\nNelson Hardware Co.\nPHONE   21\nNELSON,   B.  C;\nJAMES ORR  DROWNED.\nCHILLIWACK,    B. C,    .Tune    26.\u2014\nJames  Orr,   tlie  twenty-year-old  son   ,\nof Mrs. Orr, of South    Snmas,    was\ndrowned  thero Saturday while ford-':\ning tlie river on horseback. ,-.\n\"My husband is a regular rainbow\nchaser,\" said one woman.\n\"Mine Isn't,\" replied the other.\n\"Even if he knew there was a pot of\ngold at the end of the rainbow, he'd\nsit still nnd expect the rainbow to\ncome to him.\"\nLAND ACT.\nForm of Notice.\n(Section 78.)\nWEST KOOTENAT LAND DISTRICT\nDISTRICT  OF KOOTENAY.\nTake notice that W. E. Wasson of\nNelson, city clerk acting as agent for\nthe Corporation of the. City of Nelson,\nintends to apply for permission to lease\nthe following described-land: Commencing at a post on the northerly\nboundary of D.L. 6003, Group One, West\nKootenay District, and distant 300 feet\nmore or less In an easterly direction\nfrom the northwest.corner of said lot;\nthence N 27 degrees 57 minutes W.,\n380 feet; thence S., 113 degrees 03 minutes W., 400 feet; thence S. 27 degrees\n57 minutes E., 650 feet; thence N. 72\ndegrees 03 minutes E\u201e 101.5 feet; ,\nthence N. 27 degrees 57 minutes W\u201e 225\nfeet; thence northeasterly, following\nthe northerly boundary of Lot 6003,\nGroup One, Kootenay District, a dls?\ntnnce of 300 feet moro or less, to the\npoint* of commencement;, and .containing, four and one-fifth (4.2) acres\nmore or less.\n:i \u25a0 .. w..e:M8SC>n( .   ..>.-\u2022--\u25a0.:>\nAgent for the Corporation of the City ..\nof Nelson   .\nDated at Nelson, B.C., this 4th day*\nof May, 1916.\nIN     THE     ESTATE    OF    JOSEPH\nBLACKBURN, DECEASED.\nFormerly Attached to the 102nd Battalion, C.E.F.\nAny person having in their possession any papers relating to the sold\ndeceased or having any knowledge as\nto tho whereabouts of any papers relating to the said deceased will pleaso\ncommunicate with Miss Nellie G.\nBlackburn, 8 Richmond street, East,\nToronto, sister of tlie said deceased. \u25a0\nNOTICE.\nNotlco is hereby given thnt Charles\nG. Simpson is not or has he been since\nJune, 1015, connected In any way with\nthis company, lie is not authorized by\nthe company to tako any orders for\nmonuments or other work or to act for\nthe company in any capacity.\nKOOTENAY ORAN1TE &\u25a0 MONU-\nMENTAL Co., Limited.,\nNelson, B.C.\nJ\nSYNOPSIS OF COAL\nMINING REGULATIONS\n.Coal mining rights of the Dominion\ntn Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, the Yukon Territory, the North--,..\nwest Territories and in a portion '6t\ntho province of British Columbia; may\nbe leased for a term oLtwenty-one\nyears at an annual rental of $1 per\nacre. No moro than 2560 aoreB will\nbe leased to one applicant.\nApplication for a lenne mu\u00bbt toe\nmade by the applicant In person to the\nagent or sub-agent of the district of\nwhich the rights applied for are situated, i\nIn surveyed territory the land must\nbe described by sections or legal subdivisions of sections and in unsurveyed territory the tract applied for shall\nbe staked out by the applicant himself.\nEach application must be accompanied by a fee of $5 which will be refunded if the rights applied for are\nnot available, but not otherwise. A\nroyalty shall be paid on the merchant-\namble output of the mine-fit the rate\nof five cents per ton.\nThe person operating the mine shttfl\nfurnish the agent with sworn returns\naccounting for the full quantity of\nmerchantable coal mined and pay the\nroyalty thereon, if tho coal mining\nrights are not being operated, such\nreturns shall be furnished at least\nonce a year.\nThe lease will include the coal mining rights only, but the lessee may bo\npermitted to purchase whatever available surface rights may be considered\nnecessary for the working of the mine\nat tho rate of $10 an acres.\nPor full Information application\nshould be made to the Secretary of the\nDepartment of the Interior, Ottawa,\nor to any Agent or Sub-Agent of Dominion lands.\nW. W. CORY,\nDeputy Minister of the Interior.\nN. B.\u2014Unauthorized publication of\nthis advertisement will not be paid for.\n rT.    MONDAY, JUNE 26, 1910.\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPAGE FIVE\nIN  THIS  MORNING\nASSORTED DOUBLE\nCarnations\nEach  ......   ,.    ......   ..IOC\nDozen       1,00\nGeraniums\nEach    ; 10c\nDozen   ..... -1.00\nStar Grocery\nPHONE 10.\n9192\nIs the winning number In our\nweekly drawing for a pair of $5\nShoes. Holder of this ticket\nplease call.\nAsk for ticket with your purchase.\nR. Andrew &V Co.\nLEADERS IN FOOT FASHION.\nTHURMAN'S\nJUST ARRIVED\nA fresh shipment of Thurman's Special\nMixture. Try a tin today,\n8's,   25c,   4's,   40C,   1   lb.,   S1.50\nFURS\nHave your furs made up, remodelled\nor repaired at a discount during summer. Skins dressed and mounted.\nOver forty years' experience in principal European cities. Best prices paid\nCor raw furs.\nG. GLASER,\nManufacturing Furrier.\n416 Ward St., Nelson, B. C. Phone 106.\nJ. P. MORGAN\n8ECOND HAND DEALER.\nBuys for cash, Stoves, Furniture, Tools,\netc.    Good prices for Hides, Rubber,\nCopper and Brass.   See us before you\nsell.\n812 Vernon Street, Nelson, B. C.\n(Two doors from Postoffice.)\nTHORPE'S\n^ DRINKS\n\"^sL^Sife*    ^S>iu 111\nPIANO TUNING\nINTIMATION.\nMr. Alvin E. Perkins, Expert\nPiano Tuner and Regulator for\nMason & Risch, Limited, intends\nbeing in Nelson and district\nwithin the next week.\nParties requiring his services\nfor tuning, etc., will kindly leave\ntheir orders with Mr. F. J. Mc-\nCrohan, care of Mason & Risch,\nLimited, Nelson, B. C. \u2022\nStrawberries Wanted\n15,000   CRATES   GOOD   SHIPPING BERRIES.\nWRITE US.\nKootenay Fruit Growers'\nUnion, Limited\nBox 1077.\n508 Ward St., Nelson. Phone 110.\nPrivate  Hospital\nLICENSED BY  PROVINCIAL, GOV\nERNMENT.\nWe give particular attention to all\nfemale trouble\u2014home-like apartments\nfor ladles awaiting accouchment.\nHighest references; reasonable\nterms; Inspection Invited.\nMRS. MOORE, Superintendent\nTHE   HOME   PRIVATE   H08PITAL,\nFalls end Baker Ste., Nelson* B. C.\nP. O. Box 772.\nPhone 372 for Appointment\nKEEPING TRACK OF\nPOTATO SHIPMENTS\nEvery time affreight ear full of\nnative potatoes leaves the siding of a\nlittle Florida town, a tack goes up on\nthe map. The tack bears a number\nwhich designates the particular shipment, so that tho farmer who made\nthe shipment enn tell at any time ex-\nnctly what has become of his crop.\nAs most of the carloads are shipped\nto the city markets, a great many\ntucks aro constantly being moved t*o\napproximate the cars' position enroute.\nWhenever a cur reaches its desinntlon\nor is delayed, tho took bearing its\nnumber shows the fact.\nThis system was inaugurated recently by the railroad nt the request\nof Its potntb-farming patrons. Many\nof these had become dissatisfied with\nreal or fancied delays In shipment;\ncars seemed to have been mislaid on\nout-of-the-way sidings, and often good\nmarVets were lost because of the fact\nthat the bottom dropped out of prices\nwhllo tho freight cars lay on obscure\nside tracks.\nSince the tack-map lias been adopted, however, the railroad has made\nmure friends in ifc*. clientele. It shifts\na slight amount of responsibility\u2014the\nfarmer now has himself particularly\nto blamo if his products do npt reach\na market on time, for the tack tells\nhim when ho should register a Jiiat\nand strenuous \"kick.\"\u2014D. K. Green in\nillustrated World.\nThe Peony Party\nunder lhe auspices of the\nDaughters of the\nEmpire\nto be hold at Mrs. Rutherford's\nis postponed until Saturday, July\n1st.\nADMISSION TO GARDEN AND\nTEA 25c.\nWRECK OF  REGINA\nREPORTED FOUND\nCarried $36,000 Worth of Champagne,\nNow Valued at $56,000.\nSARN'IA, June 25.\u2014A story la current that wreckers who are supposed\nto be working on the lost steamer\nPrice are really trying to bring to the\nsurface the lust steamer Regina, which\nit Is declared, has been found only a\ncouple of hundred feet from the overturned steamer Trice. The great\nLakes Company is observing an air\nof secrecy, and has told the crews not\nto talk, but it lias leaked out that tlie\nRegina is near the Price, tho wreck\nbeing the result <\u00bbf a collision during\nthe big storm of November, 1913.\nThe fact that a sailor of the steamer Price was picked up oh the shore\nat Point Frank wearing a life preserver from tiio Regina., nnd also that\nan examination of the Price lhat tho\nboat was rammed by ynot-her steamer\nstrongly supports the collision theory.\nThe United States survey boat Lusk\narrived here last night from Detroit,\nand this morning went out into Lake\nHuron along with the wrecker Favorite. The boat was. evidently ordered\nout owing to reports of the find, which\nhave very likely reached the ears of\nofficials.\nThe steamer Regina was 243 feet in\nlength by 43 feet beam, and was in\ncharge of Captain MdConkey. She carried a mixed cargo including $30,000\nwortii of champagne, which would now\nhe worth $50,000, also large consignments of freight from Sarnla to the\nhead of the lakes.\nKootenai} and Boundary\nWill SOON OPEN N\nKEM VALLEY INE\nEW TRAIL SULPHURIC\nACID PLAN\nHope   Section   Will   Be   Finished\nTime to   Handle  Large   Part of\nOkanagan Crop\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nPENTICTON, B. C, June 24.\u2014It\nnow appears that In spite of the numerous delays caused by the heavy\nsnowfall of lust winter, and ihe backward spring, that the Hope section \u00abC\nthe Kettle Valley railroad will be completed about the latter part of-July,\nAt the present time there is about a\nhalf-mile of track to be laid and two\ntrestles to Jie finished\u2014one at' each\nend,\nSome nf the railway men's difflenities may he judged from the fact that\nlust winter .r)3 feet of snow fell on the\nsummit west of Brodie. During the.\nmonth of May over two feet of snojjt\nfell. In addition gangs are stilt at\nwork clearing slides whieh came down\nlast December. Unfortunately the\nsnowshed work was not. completed\nwhen winter came, Otherwise the\nslides would have gone over the sheds\nand there would have been little delay this spring in getting ready for\noperation. About 7000 feet of snow-\nsheds will be in use nnd only about\n5000 feet were completed last year\/.\nThere nre about eight men at work\nclearing away the slides and 30 employed in completing the trestles.\nWith trains running before Aug, 1, :i\nlarge portion of the Oknnagan fruit\ncrop can be routed over this line.\nThe Hope cut off will easily rank\nas one of the finest scenic routes in\nthe west, und the names of the stations bid fair to make It known ns one\nof the most rinnanilo railroads in\nAmerica.\nEach station, with the exception of\none at the summit, represents a character from Shakespeare. After Brodie\nwe first come to Juliet. Then, after\npassing tlie summit, we come to\nRomeo, a high mountain peak between him and his tragic sweetheart.\nThen follows Jago, Portia, Jessica,\nLear and Othello, which is the lust\nstation before the mala line is\nreached.\nPHOENIX SERBIANS GIVE\nTO  PATRIOTIC  FUND\n(Phoenix, b; c\u201e June 24\u2014we the\nundersigned  Serbians,  of  the city  of\nPhoenix subscribe the amount oppo\nsite our names  to  the  Serbian   Red\n('toss society;\nGust. Vladetlch $10\nSteve  Yoinovlch\t\nEli  Rudack,.  r>\nMrs. Ell Rudack\t\nSteve    Gnllovich\t\nEli   V-iinovich\t\nDan* Volnovlcii! ...'*..I;,-.*,< \".\nLouis  Covicli\t\nSteve: CoVich\t\nJovnn Voihovlch >\t\nBob   Ivorich. ,\t\nBLAIRMORE NEWS.\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nBLAliRMORE, Alta., .nine 24.\u2014D.\nII. Putnam of the Wist battalion who\nhas spent several days in town has returned to Macleod.\nW. Howe loft for Medicine Hat Monday night lo bid farewell to Iris son,\nOns Howe, who Is leaving fur Englund\nshortly.\nV. Norman Harris of th Morning Al-\nbertrtn, Calgary, staff spent Thursday\nIn Blairmore.\nThe Imperial Limited of the Canadian Pacific railway made her trip\nwest through the Crow's Nest pass\nThursday uwing to the washouts on\ntho main line.\nMrs. -R. smallwood went to Mdicino\nHat this week to see her son, Trooper\nSmallwund.\nTiio water In tho Old Man river,\ntinning through Blairmore and district\nhas gone down considerably during\ntho last day or so although the west\nend of Blairmore Is still under water\nin places,\nMIDWAY NEWS.\n(Special to Tho Daily News.)\nMIDWAY, B. C, Juno 24.\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. Griffin of Phoenix spent the\nweekend at. the home o( Mrs. A. C.\nMesker.\nMiss Lottie Borders left Tuesday for\nGrand Forks. She intends lo remain\nthere a month.\nMiss Alice Kerr spent tho weekend\nat her homo here. She is teacher at\nBoundary Falls.\nOwing to washouts on t'he main lino\ntrains have been sent over this branch\nfrom Penticton through Midway to\nNelson.\nManufacture  of  By-Product Will   Begin This Week\u2014Will Produce\nTen Tons Daily\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nTRAIL, B. C, June 24.\u2014General\nManager R. II. Stewart of the Consolidated Mining & Smelting company\nexpects to have tbe new sulphuric acid\nplant finished and iu operation in the\ncourse of a very few days now. The\nbuilding, erected -for this purpose by\nthe company is built of steel and brick\nand, as required for the manufacture\nof this acid, Is completely lined with\nlead. The building occupies a ground\nsiiuce of r>0 feet by llil) feet and will\nproduce Immediately about ten tons\nof acid per day, of which lhe company In Its lead and zinc refineries\nwill use about five tons. The. balance\nwill be sold upon the market, which\nat the present time will give a very\ngood price.\nThe funics from the smelter, which\ncarry a great, amount of sulphur, will\nbe used by the company in this plant\nto make the sulphuric acid. This being the first smelter nf the province\nto put the fumes to such a use.\nAt a. special meeting of the city\ncouncil Wednesday night, a large\namount of routine business left over\nfrom the Monday night session was\nfinished and a number of bylaws for\ntho carrying on of thc business of the\ncity were introduced and read a first\nlime, among which were the tax by-\nluws for the general purposes of the\ncity, the schools, health and sinking\nfund.\nThe fire hall authorization bylaw\nwas reconsidered, finally read, signed\nand sealed, and the fire hall'land purchase* bylaw was ordered lo be advertised aiid left to the vole of thc municipal electors, the date for the poll\nbeing set tor Tuesday, July 4,\nThe Columbia river here bus risen\nto within two feet of the high water\nrecord nf ill 13, according to Lieut.\nRichardson of the government hydro-\ngraphic survey department, who was\nin Trail and took measurements at the\ntraffic bridgojust below the city. The\nwater continues to rise steadily at the\nrate of about one foot in 24 hours and\nhns already flooded several houses and\nsheds near the river and many others\nwill he flooded with a rise of another\nfoot or two.\nA plank wall is being built around\nthe skating rink tiiis afternoon to Ward\noff the current, as the water is almost\nlo a level with the floor of the rink.\nThe shingle mill belonging 10 the\nDoukhobors, just below the rink, is\nalready flooded, there being several\ninches of water over Uie floor.\npresident.    Mrs. M. J. Boyd Is secretary and James Adlurd treasurer.\nThe entrance examination opens at\ntho school Monday with Miss Htirdman\nas presiding examiner. Al Itold some\n20 candidates will ho writing here.\nThe preliminary high school examinations ure under way here this week\nunder the supervision of Principal\nMasterton. Nino candidates ure writing: Misses Margaret Webster, Edna\nHolmes, Mabel Huscroft, Lyda Johnson, Ermu Hayden, Jessie Cameron,\nVida Gobbett, Bertha Peuse, Blanche\nHcndren.\nJ. M. Crookston arrived from Cranbrook yesterday and is releiving Teller Manifold, who is taking two weeks\nvacation.\nThe first notable shipment for the\nseason went eust today, comprising 11\ncrates of strawberries and 40 of goose\nberries.\nM. R. Ross and mother, who have\nspent the winter in Nelson, were\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. R .Staples a\ncouple of days this week, en route tn\ntheir home in Treherne, Man.\nTho county court will hold a sitting\nhero next Wednesday.\nThe water on the. flats is coming up\nat the rate of at least a loot a day\nnow and a number of ranches on the\nlower part of the valley are now pretty\nwell submerged. Tho loss at Creston\nwill not bo serious, hut at Wynndel it\nnow seems certain to be coming strong\nenough tn spoil several acres of stfaw\nberries on the Uri brothers and M.\nWlgen ranches, cutting off an export\nof  at   least   1000   crates.\nWILL   COST  $5000  TO,\nREPAIR   CRESTON   BRIDGE\ne*y\nIt Is So Easy\nTo Remove All\nItching Skin\nTroubles With\nCuticura\nThe Soap to cleanse and purify, the Ointment to soothe\nand heal. Relief is immediate and healment in most\ncases complete, speedy and\npermanent.\nSample Each Free by Mail\nWith 32-p. Skin Book. Address postcard, \"Cuticura, Dept. 3M, Boston,\nU.S.A.\"   Sold throughout the world,\n(Special tn Tho Daily News.)\nCRESTON, H.C., June 24.\u2014The chief.\nloss hero from floods wns the carrying\nawuy of tbe centre span of ihc new\nhigh level bridge over Goat river which\nwent out Monday morning. The structure which cost almost $ 10,000 was\nonly completed the day previous, it\nwill take at least $f*00O to repair the\ndamage to say no-thing of tin- inconvenience to Ike ranchers in that\n.section with the soft fruit season so\nclose   al   hand. %\nPerries will be moving in fail' (|iian-\ntities this week. The more optimistic\nestimate this year's crop ut 20 carloads as against 14 iu loin.\nThe Red Cross treasury was enlarged\n$20 as a result of tlie Culoy lecture and\nCranbrook orchestra dance in tre Auditorium,\nR. J. Long, Conservative candidate\nfor the Kaslo riding bas returned\nfrom a -week spent along the lake.\nDuring Ids trip lu1 i-uuie. in touch witli\nmost of the voters\nMrs. J. A. p. Crompton is in Victoria \u25a0.visiting her husband, Lieut.\nCrompton, who is online staff at Work\nPoint barracks.\nThe Women's institute announce that\ntheir Dominion day picnic will be held\nin Myers' grove, opposite the Gpurgc\nHobden ranch. Should the weather be\nunfavorable on that day it will be\npostponed until tlie following Wednesday.\nMrs. Gordon Smith has gone to\nPhoenix for the summer where she\nwill visit her sister, Mrs. S.  Pool.\nRov. W. M. Lees, the new Methodist\npastor assigned to this circuit liy this\nyeur's conference will be unable to\ncome here for some months, lie bas\nbeen called lo England owing lo thc\nserious illness in his family. Rev Mr.\nGraham will lake charge in his absence.\nTho prize list has been issued for\ntho fail- Ihc Women's Institute is huv-\ning on Sept. 1. There arc numerous\nprizes for flowers, home cooking and\nneedlework.\nThe primary room schoolars held\nclosing exercises Saturday evening in\ntho Auditorium. A varied children's\nprogram will be given and a collection\ntaken for Red Cross work.\nBorn, 011 June 20, to Mr. and Mrs.\nAndy Miller, a son.\nSUIl another Creston man figures\namong those killed in action, in the\nperson of R. Hubie, who was one of\n10 lo go from here in November, Bill.\nHe was 3i> years of age and forsook\nhis 10-acre ranch close to town to respond to the call of the Empire. His\npassing accounts lor three who went\nfrom hero with the 30th, the other two\nbeing W. Burn Murdoch and W.\nTimms.\nA, I. Fisher of Fernie, the Liberal\nnominee, in that constituency, was\namong tho-two dozen passengers hung\nup here for a couple uf days early In\nthe week owing to the tieup of traffic\non the Crow line.\nThe Dominion government survey\nparty that has been here for a couple\nof weeks taking water levels have\nmoved down to Kootenay landing\nMrs. Rosalie Long arrived yesterday from Vancouver and will make\nher homo hero for tbe summer.\nRev. J. Knox Wright, tho Bible society man, will bo here Tuesdny evening to -give Ids illustrated lecture In\nthe Presbyterian church op \"A trip\nthrough Siberia, Japan and Manchuria.\" A branch society has heen\nformed here with Rev. R. E. Pow us\nROSSLAND   NEWS\n(Special to Tbe Daily Nows.)\nROSSLAND, li. C, June 24.\u2014Mrs.\nCarr of Trail was in the city Saturday.\nA lnrge number of friends of Mr.\nand Mrs. Mitchell, who have just returned from their wedding trip, met\nat their home Friday night and pleas\nantly surprised them by showering\nthein with numbers of gifts. Tlie\nyounger set of boys serenaded tin\nnewly-weds,\nA number of friends of Mrs. Otto\nIsaacson met at her home Friday\nnight, the eve of her departure for\nTacoma,. and pleasantly surprised her\nby presenting her with a dozen silver\nknives and forks. \u2022 The evening was\nspent with music and singing. Mr.\nand Mrs. Isaacson have resided here\nfor a number of years and have made\nmany friends, all of whom regret thei\ndeparture. Mr. and Mrs. Isaacson's\ndaughter, Doris, and sons, Roy and\nGeorge, have left for Tacoma, where\nthey will make their home. Tbe rest\nnf tbe family will  leave later.\nMrs. A. Lockhart and family hnve\ngone to  Northport.\nMrs. George Orhen of Nelson is\nvisiting In tbe city.\nH\nN NAMED ON LISTS\n(Continued from Page Two.)\nR. W. Clink,  Dauphiiir^UmT^~^\nC, M. Collurd, Halt, Ont.\nLance Corporal Ijjlzenr Cohnpngnant*.\nLake Megan tie, Quebec.\nII. W. Center, 1'ulhiir.st, N. B.\nWilliam    Anderson,      Campbell ville,\nOnt,\nP. A. Aarnett, Waskada, Man.\nAlbert Uarrette, Quebec.\nWilfred Bennett, Toronto.\nJoseph Bousquette, Regina, Sask.\nGoorge Bowen, Mlddlechifrch, Man.\nCompany Sergeant Major Thomas W.\nBrewer, Seattle, Wash.\nDied  of Wounds.\nJoseph Mc-reau, Juliette, Que.\nWilliam II. Scobie, Detroit, Mich.\nL.  W.  Sharp,  774   Nineteenth  street\ni1!., Vancouver.\nLance Corporal H. R Spencer, Kerit-\nvllle, N. S.\nc. W. Talt, Winnipeg,\nLeonard  P. Towers, Sackville, N.  B.\nJoe White, Winnipeg.\nDied.\nWaller Ridley, Calgary,\nc. G. Robertson, Buffalo, N. V.\nPreviously Reported Missing, Now\nKilled  in Action.\nJoseph  Bell. Calgary.\nPre.'iously Reported Missing, Now Unofficially  Prisoner of War.\nI'*. M. Lesler, West Toronto.\nKm lay Mclnnes,  Liicknow, (bit.\nPreviously   Reported  Killed in  Action,\nNow   Died   of  Wounds.\nAiling Corporal Robert Saplere, To-\nnito.\nMissing.\nK. C. Sale, Dauphin, Man.\nWounded   and   Missing.\nKmil  Peters,  Montreal.\nSeriously III.\nFrederick Hose, Sand Point, N. S.\nDangerously III.\nRichard  Edmonson,  Woodsoeket,  lt.\nI.\nDouglas North, Sydney 1'. O., Vancouver, B. C.\nPreviously Reported Missing Now Admitted to Hospital.\nHenry Graham, SI. Jofln, N. B.\nPreviously   Reported    Wounded,   Now\nRoturnod to  Regimental Duty.\nLieut. J. W. Stagg, Kingston, Out.\nARTILLERY.\nWounded.\nGunner S. W. Campbell, Little River, X. p.\nGunner Duncan Jeffrey, Gnnannque,\nOut.\nGunner A. C. Jennis, Lachlne, Que.\nGunner Coulsou Lecnmptc, Montreal.\n.Gunner Leo Lemlere, Windsor, Que.\nAdmitted to Hospital.\nHerbert   K.  Sansain,  Stanley,  N.  B.\nENGINEERS,\nWounded.\nSergeant  George  A.    Dewitt,    New\nZealand.\nMEDICAL  SERVICE\nKilled in Action.\n\u2022Kdw, F. Abell, KirkfleUl Park, Man.\nWounded.\nCaptain Nell Macleod, Moose Creek,\nOut.\nAdmitted to Hospital.\nFrederick W. Mason, Toronto,\nINFANTRY.\nKilled in Action.\nArthur Oldbtiry, England.\nDied  of  Wounds.\nPioneer T. H.  Briten, England.\nWm, Steele, Scotland.\n. Wounded snd Missing.\nR. S. Ferguson, Wales.\nMissing.\nWm. Lelshmnn, Scotland.\nB. C. Mitchell, England.\nWounded.\nLieut. T. A. Aimnn, Scotland.\nA. W. Bowser, England.\nA. K. Bright. England.\nPercy Clements, England.\nPrepare for a Shower\nGET   AN   UMBRELLA   NOW\u2014JUST   WHEN   YOU'RE   WITHOUT\nONE YOU NEED ONE MOST\nRaino\nseasons  make \"keeping  dro\" a\nreal problem\nTt is better to prepare to meet every need for protection from the\nwet. We have splendid stocks of Umbrellas for Men, Women and\nChildren, the best; and most practical you'll find. Choosing will be\nfound very easy here, as qualities are dependable and_ _prlces\nmoderate.\nFrom, Each  \t\n$1.50 to $5.00\nMiddy Blouses\nTHE  FINEST  ASSORTMENT  YET.\nThese are  Indispensable for warm weather.  We have almost every\nkind of Middy, All White, Awning Striped, Plaln^ Belted, \\vith_Long_nr\nElbow Length Sleeves.    Values the  best and        \" - -  \u2014\u2014\nprices reasonable.   Prices from  \t\n$1.25 to $1,75\nMEAGHER & CO.\nTHE STORE FOR STYLE\nTHE STORE FOR QUALITY\nGeorge W. Hale\nLaunch   and   Boat  Builder\nLAUNCHES,   ROWnOATS   AND   CANOES   POR   SALE   (in   HIRE\nGASOLENE   ENGINES\nTWO-CYLINDER  OUTBOARD  MOTORS IN   STOCK '\nP. O.  BOX 605 WORKS\u2014POPLAR   STREET\nRobert Fell,  England,\nSydney Goodwin, England.\nDied  of Wounds.\nEdwin I'.ryiiii. England.\n.Tames Jenkins, Englnnd,\nPreviously Reported    Wounded,    Now\nMissing, Believed Killed in\nAction.\nI'. .1.  Mail in,  England.\nPreviously Reported Missing. Now Unofficially  Prisoner of War.\nAlexander McLeod, Scotland.\nPeter Morrison, .Scotland.\nPreviously Reported  Missing, Believed\nKilled,   Now   Reported   Suffering\nFrom Shell Shook.\nHenry Thomas, England.\nWounded.\nFred Army. England.\nFicd Blakemore, England.\nSergeant Alexander Bllnmari, Wales,\nl\\ S. Bottomloy, England.\nJohn' Harris.  Ireland.\nW. W. Hayes, England.\nSorgoant I'. G. Illhhs,  England.\nStanley Hicks, England.\nSergeant Wm.  LTouBon,   England.\nSergeant P. S. Horn, England.\n.lames  Inglis, Scotland.\nA. It. Johnston, Sweden.\n.lames Johnston,  Scotland.\nO. Klemuk, Russia.\nDonald   McRae.   Scotland.\nJames McEIren, Ireland.\nNeil McKay, Scotland.\nWm. Bryan, Scotland.\nCorp. Alexander Cochrane, Ireland.\nJ. IT. Colbrook, Englnnd.\nThomas  Cooper,  Scotland,\nW. W. Cowle, Scotland.\nGeorge Dawson. England.\nJ.  F. Garrio, Scotland.\nW. C. Gibson, Scotland.\n.lohn Gilzcan, Scotland.\nSergeant Major    George    D.  Gould\nWales.\nEdward Hunter, Englnnd,\nChris Jensen, Denmark.\nDennis Kenne, England.\nJames Kennedy, Scotland.\nSergeant  Gradwcll    Kilshnw,    England.\nET,   l\\  Lawson, Denmark.\n0. 11. Linton. Scotland.\n.1. McDonnell, Ireland,\nc-01 pi. Alcn McLennan. Scotland.\n\u25a0I. I). McLeod, Scotland.\n.1. 11. Mitchell. Scotland.\nSergeant   Robert   Murray,   Scotland.\nArthur Sen\/,   England.\nArthur Culthorpe, England.\nCorp!, Sllanka, Russia,\n.lames Smith, Ireland.\n'1'. II. Morgan. England.\nIt.  T.  Nelson.  Ireland.\nMltcholl Nlmo, Scotland.\nNick   Ppplak,  Russia.\nGeorge Smith. England.\nCorpl. Tl. Spencer,  England.\nII.  IT. Sliles.  England.\nAlexander Stuart, Scotland.\nThomas Turner, England.\nA. A. Walker. England.\nGeorge Wilkie.  Scotland.\nKilled   in   Action.\nGeorge MeCoaeh, Scotland.\nWounded.\nGeorge Sanders, England.\nWm. Slulihs,  England.\nSergeant George Sutherland,    Scot--\nIn ml.\n.1. J. Sweeney. England.\nCharles  Terrell,  England.\nS. .1. Walling. England.\nCorpl.  A.  M.  Williamson, Scotland!\n.lames  Willins.  England.\nPreviously Reported Missing, Now Unofficially Prisoner of War at\nGiessen.\nF. .1. Gilib, Scotland.\nSIR SAM  AT CAMP HUGHES.\n('AMI' HUGHES, Man., June 26.\u2014\nMajor General Sam Hughes arrived in\ncamp this morning at 2:30.\nSunlight Soap has a high standard of purity which is backed\nby a $5,000 guarantee. If a\nsoap has no standard there is\nno reason why it should always\nbe of uniform quality, always\ncontain the best materials or\nbe anything like as good as\nthe soap with a standard.       ^\nSUNLIGHT\nSunlight Soap\n \u2022*^mm\u2014*~m\nPAOt six\nTHE DAILY' NEWS\nMONDAY, JUNE 26, 191\u00ab.\nseaaaaai\nFRIAR ROCK WINS    ICII\nBROOKLYN HANDICAP   TWO\nAugust  Belmont's  Horse   it   First of\nHis Age to Win Both of the\nEvents\u2014Pennant   Second.\nNew York, June mfwypp fwyp ppp\n; NEW YORK, dune 25.\u2014By winning\nthe Brooklyn handicap, at a mite and\na furlong in 1:50 today, August Belmont's Friar Rock by Rock Sand Fairy\nGold, broke the track record for\nthe distance nnd proved himself to be\nthe best three-year old colt of the year.\nHaving previously won the Belmont\nStakes (and \\he Classiii Surburban,\nFriar Rock is the first horse of his\nage to have the credit of winning both\nof the big handicaps. When he won\nthe Surburban four weeks ago the\nBelmont colt carried only 99 pounds,\nbut today his Impost was nine pounds\nmore, and his Jockey, Haines, used excellent judgment in the handling of his\nmount from start to. finish.\nHarry Payne Whitney's five year old\nhorse Pennant, was second and Short\nGrass third.\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nFirst  game\u2014 R.   H.   33.\nToledo     t     4     2i\nMinneapolis     5   11     ft\nj Batteries: Bed ten t and Sweeney;\nBurke and Owens.\nSecond game\u2014 j R.   H.   E,\n\u25a0Toledo     0-5     2\nMinneapolis     5     1     2\nBatteries:   Kniserllng and Sweeney;\nWilliams and Land.\n\u25a0   First game\u2014 R.    It.   E.\nLouisville     ft    1ft     2\nKansns City      li     fi     2\nBatteries: Palmer, laizowe and demons;  Crutcher and Berry.\nSecond game\u2014 R.t H.   E.\nLouisville      1     4     II\nKansas City    4     8     1\nBatteries:    James     and     Lalonge;\nCochrehnn and JIargreave,\n. First game\u2014 It.   H.   E.\nMilwaukee     7    10     3\nIndianapolis  ft   18     3\nBatteries: Slapnicka, Faeth and\nSpellaman; Carter, Willis and Schang,\nSecond game\u2014 R.   H.   E.\nMilwaukee     4     8     4\nIndiannpoIIs     I     3     0\nBatteries: Comstoclt und Devogt;\nFalkenberg and Schang.\nFirst  gome\u2014 R.   IT.   E.\nColumbus    1     4     0\nSt.  Paul      1    10     4\nBatteries: Lelfield, George and\nCtemnons;   George and Coleman.\nSecond gnme\u2014 R.   IT.   E.\nColumbus    4     7     4\nSt.  \"Paul     5     8     2\nBatteries: Brady and Clemmis; Fln-\nneran and Coleman.\nSaturday's American Association\nLouisville fi, Kansas City  3.\nElrBt game: Columbus 1, St. Pnul 7;\nsecond game: Columbus 11, St. Paul 4.\nIndianapolis 1, Milwaukee 7.\nFirst gome: Toledo 7, Minneapolis\n8; second game: Toledo 12, Minneapolis 5.\nNORTHWESTERN  LEAGUE\nNorthwestern League Standings\nWon. Lost. Pet.\nSpokane        38 19 .667\nButte        28 2fi .Rlfl\nTacoma        27 27 .500\nVancouver        28 29 .491\nGreat  Falls        27 32 .458\nSeattle     24 34 .414\nFirst game\u2014 R.   H.   E.\nVancouver      3     ft     2\nSpoknne     4     7     1\n\u25a0\u2022.Batteries: Acosta and Cheek; Evans\nand  Sheeley.\nSecond game\u2014 R.   IT.   E.\nVancouver     3     4     2\nSpoknne     !>   11     \u00bb\nBatteries: Callahan and Kollman;\nHurst ml nnd Murray.\nR.   IT.   E.\nButte     4      !>     1\nSeattle     1     7     0\nBatteries: Hendrlx und Roberts;\nRose nnd Cndmnn.\nSecond game called off, rain.\nFirst  gnme\u2014 R.   TI.   E.\nTacoma      4      ft     2\nGreat Falls      fi     0     2\nBatteries: Hartmann and Bnrthn-\nlomie;  Kalllo and Shea.\nSecond game\u2014 R.   IT.   E.\nTacoma     1     4     3\nGreat   Falls      2     2     0\nT>ntterson and Baldwin; Kalllo and\nHaworth.\nSaturday's Northwestern Games\nVancouver 7, Spokane 3.\nSeattle 1, Butte 5.\nTacoma 4, Great Falls 3.\nINTERNATIONAL   LEAGUE\nProvidence-Rochester,        postponed,\nrain.\nBuffalo-Newark, postponed, rain.\nSaturday International Games\nMontreal  0-0, Newark  1-1.\nBuffalo  2-2,  Baltimore  4-10,\nToronto 2-1, Providence 1-0.\nRochester 12, Richmond  11,\nOTTAWA DEFEAT* CORNWALL\nIN  STRENUOUS CONTEST\n(By Daily News Leaf fed Wire)\n(OTTAWA, June 24*.-OttawR, was\nthft scene of a rough lacrosse game\ntoday when the home team beat Cornwall 11 to 7. At one time Cornwall\nhad only seven men on the field, which\ngives a good idea of the strenuous\nnature of the struggle. Ottawa led all\nthe way. the score being 4 tn 2 In the\nfirst period, 6 to 4 in the second, 8\nto a In the third and 11 to 7 at the\nclose.\nSt.    Louis    Takes    Both    Games    of\nDouble-Header from  Reds\u2014\nPittsburg  Defeats Chicago\nNational   League Standings\nWon. Lost. Pet.\nBrooklyn        22 2ft ,016\nPhiladelphia        31 23 ,574\nBoston         27 24 .529\nNew'York        2(1 20 .500\nPittsburg        26 20 .404\nChicago         21 22 \u2022 .458\nCincinnati        27 88 .450\nSt. Louis        2li ' 34 .433\nSt.   Louis  Wins  Both\nCINCINNATI, June 25.\u2014St. Louis\nwon hoth games of a double-header\nfrom Cincinnati here today, the first\n2 to 1 and the second 5 to 4,\nFirst gome\u2014 R.   II.   E.\nSt.   Louis     2      7      0\nCincinnati        ]       3      \u2022>\nBatteries: Steele, Amos and Gonzales; Toney, Schneider and Clarke,\nWingo. ,\nSecond game\u2014 R,   11,   E.\nSt.  Louis     5    11     3\nCincinnati     5    11      3\nBatteries: Meadows, Williams and\nAmes, Snyder; .Moseley, Dale and Kll-\nllfer, Wingo.\nPirates Lose Hard Game\nCHICAGO, June 25.\u2014Vaughn blew\nup in the twelfth inning today and\nPittsburg won a hard fought victory\nfrom Chicago 8 to 3. McCarthy of the\nCubs was seriously spiked.\nR.    IT.    E.\nPittsburg     8   13     1\nChicago       3  .10      3\nBatteries: Knntlebncr, Jacobs,\nCooper and Wilson; McConnell,\nVaughn and Archer, Fisher.\nSaturday   National  Games\nFirst game: Cincinnati 5, Chicngn fi;\nsecond game:  Cincinnati 7, Chicago G.\nFirst game: New York 4; Brooklyn\nfi; second gnme: New York 4, Brooklyn  5.\nBoston   t,  Philadelphia 2.\nFirst game: St. Louis 3, Pittsburg\n\u25a0); second game: St. Louis 2* Pittsburg 5.\nTIGERS DROP FROM\nTOP\nLose   Both   Games   of   Double- Header\nto St, Louis\u2014Chicago Wins\nEleven  Innings Game\nAmerican  League Standings\nTJJnn. Lost. Pet.\nCleveland         34 25 .570\nNew  York        33        25 .509\nBoston        31        27 .534\nDetroit        32        2S .533\nWashington         31        28 .525\nChicago        2(j       27 ,518\nSt. Louis        20        33 .441\nPhiladelphia         Ifi        3!) .291\nTigers Lose Both Games\nST. LOUIS, Juno 25.\u2014St. Louis\npushed Detroit into the second division by taking a double-bender today,\n8 to 2 nnd 3 to 1.\nFlrsl game\u2014 R.   II.   E.\nDetroit     2     7     I\nSt. Louis   s   u     2\nBatteries: Covaleskie, Bolnnd, Cunningham and Stanage; Wellman and\nSeverold.\nSecond name\u2014 B.   II.   E.\nDetroit      1     7      I\nSt.  Louis     3     S     3\nBatteries: Mitchell and Raker;\nGroom and Hartley.\nIndians   Lose   to  Chicago\nCHICAGO, June 25.\u2014Chicago defeated Cleveland 4 to 3 in an eleven\nInning game here today. The game\nwas a hitter one, each team fighting\nevery inch of tbe way. Terry was\nspiked In the arm by Chnpmnn and\nhad to leave the game,\nR.   IT.   E.\nCleveland        3      fi      1\nChicago     4   13     fi\nCoumbe and O'Neill; Scott, Russell\nami  Sclmlk.\nSaturday's   American   Games\nFirst game: Washington 1, New\nYork 2; second game: Washington 3,\nNew  York  4,\nFirst game: Philadelphia 2, Boston\n3; second game: Philadelphia 3, Boston 7.\nChicngn 5, St. Louis 4.\nCleveland  10, Detroit 8.\nNATIONALS LOSE TO\nSHAMROCKS AT MONTREAL\n(By Daily News Leattsd Wire)\nMONTREAL, JTune 24.\u2014Shamrocks\ndefeated Nationals today in the N.L.IJ.\nby a score of 9 to 2 before a great\ncrowd nnd In perfect weather ond tied\nup with the Frenchmen for the tender-\nBhlp. It was a regular old time 1a-\ncrosse battle, with Harry Hy land, the\nfamous hockey player, the most con-\n\u2022plcjiou? man on the field.\nSAMPLES  OF  IRON  ORE WANTED\nFOR VANCOUVER  EXHIBIT\nThe approaching Vancouver exhibition Is making a. special display this\nyear nf the iron ores of the province,\nand stress will be laid on their suitability for the manufacture ol' Iron nnd\nsteel.\nThe Vancouver chamber of minesg\nthrough Its representative James Ashworth, on the board of directors of the\nexhibition, is doing its best to make\nlho display as comprehensive and attractive ns possible.\nDuring the exhibition week, n lecture\nby some prominent, mining man or\nmetallurgist will be delivered each\nafternoon on some mining or kindred\nsubject, and specinl attention will be\ngiven to the manufacture of Iron and\nsteel from British Columbia iron ores.\nThe chamber of mines Is a nonprofit earning institution and public\nbureau of Informntion, organized to\nfoster legitimate mining, whose services and ndvlce is alike free to the\ninvestor, mine owner, miner and prospector. It invites the co-operation of\nall parties intersted In mining, und will\nbe pleased to have such people visit\nUs exhibit and library when In this\ncity. In order to make Its end of the\nexhibition us educational nnd attractive as possible, the co-operation of\nmine owners and prospectors Is necessary, and would be pleased to receive samples of their various ores,\nespecially iron, with particulars! of\ntheir properties for exhibit and future\nrefernce, ^\nSamples are to he addressed to John\nCunliffe, Vancouver Chamber of Mines,\n543 Hunting's Street West, Vancouver,\n, B, C. _ j,\nMarkets - Mining - Finance\nHIIMI.M\nPR CE MOVEMENTS IN\nNEW YORK IRREGULAR\nVulnerable   Specialties  Again   Docline\nUnder  Selling   Pressure\u2014Bethlehem   up   17   Points.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nNEW YORK, June 24.\u2014With the\nMexican situation still hanging in the\nbalance, the weekend' sessions of the\nstock market varied little from its recent irregularity. Vulnerable specialties were again pressed for sale though\nmore moderately, hut representative\nstocks held their- own when not making actual gains.\noperations were obviously professional and the general price improvement noted at the close resulted to a\nconsiderable extent from covering.\nRails were fuvorably affected, lictllle-\nhem, on relatively few transactions,\nmade a gain of 17 points. Motors also\nrose materially, but Mexicans and coppers were variable. I'nlted Stales Industrial Alcohol wns again the centre\nof speculative activity, scoring an extreme decline of 3'^. points, only part\nof \u2022which was regained.\nAnother substantial increase of reserves was the most noteworthy feature nf the bank stiitement, that item\nexpanding almost $lfi, 00(1,000 and\nbring im; actual excess reserves up to\nabout $110,000,00.0 against $50,000,000\ntho first week of the month. Loans\nin thi' same period show au increase of\nSlightly more than $110,900,000. Today's\nbond market wan narrow and without\nspecial 1'eatUre. Total sales, par value\n$1,470,000.\nCHICAGO STOCKYARDS.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nOH'ICAdO. 111., .Inn 24.\u2014Hogs: Receipts. 4fi,00O; strong* tu 5c lower, Bulk\n9 at. 0.80; light, 9.15 at 9.75; mixed,\n9.35 at 9.S5; heavy, 9.25 a.t O.lio; rough,\n9.25 at 9.40;   pigs,  7,50 at 9.10.\nCattle: Receipts. 2Q0; steady; native heel', 7:50 ut. 11.30; western steers.\nS.30 at 9.S5; stockers and feeders, 5.75\nat S.70; cows and heifers, 3.75 at 9.75;\ncalves,   8.59 at   11.S5.\nSheep: Receipts, 4000; steady; wethers. 7 at S; fsws, 4.70 at 7.50; lambs,\n7.50 nt 'id;  springers,  8 at  11.70\nWL\nA\nRelation   of   Igneous   Rocks  to   Veins\n-nnd  Ore  Deposits   Described  by\nProf.  Arthur  Lakes.\n(By Prof. Arthur Lakes.)\nThe subject of the relation of igneous rocks, dikes, Intrusive sheets,\netc., to veins and ore deposits in British Columbia Is one of much practical\nnterest and Importance to miners,\nMany nf the ore deposits of our mines are intimately associated with tho\noccurance of igneous rucks, which\nthough generally n good sign in a mine,\nmny at times be nn obstruction in tlie\ndevelopment of thc ore bodies, or in\nfol lowing the continuity of thc ore\nbearing vein.\nProblems sometimes may arise on\nfinding a vein abruptly cut off by a\ndike, as to what to do, where to try\nand follow the vein, if it exists on the\nother side of tlie igneous intrusion;\nwhether it Is worth while tn try nnd\nIook for it, or whether it exists nt all\nacross the Igneous obstruction.\nIt ip proposed at the coming meeting of the Institute at Sandon nn\nTuesday, June 27, tn try and ventilate\nthis subject and to start up a Kcnernl\ndiscussion in which all are invited to\nparticipate and each is asked to recall\nind contribute bis experiences with\ntbe.'c dikes and intrusions so often\nmet with in the mines of British Columbia and tell how he personally tackled the proposition and succeeded or\nfailed.\nA discussion of this kind may suggest hints to practical miners, bow\nto meet and overcome Ihesc difficulties\nIn future with more success than sometimes In tbe past.\nWAYAGAMACK   FEATURE   OF\nTRADING   AT   MONTREAL\n(By Daily News Lcnsfed Wire)\nMONTREAL, June 24.\u2014An nctlvc\ndemand for Wayagamack was tlie feature of trading on the local stock exchange Saturday. Elsewhere tho market wns dull and off fractions. The\nsales of Wayagamack at 53-y( showed\na gain of a fraclion. The last sale at\n4 showed a gain of a point for the\nday.\nSteamships preferred gained H* 'mt\nelsewhere Ihe market was lower. The\nsteel stocks were not ns active as recently, Scotia, Iron and Steel of Canada, closing with fractional losses. Totnl business 3354 shares and $01,200\nbonds.\nBUTTER IS FIRM.\n(Hy Daily News Lent-fed Wife)\nMONTREAL, June 24.\u2014Butter is\nfirm; cheese steady, hut the demand\nIs still indifferent. Eggs active and\nfirm.\n-Cheese: Finest westerns, 17 at *4i\nfinest easterns,  lft%  at   %,\nButter: Choicest creamery, 29*^ at\n30;   seconds,  2H%  nt  29.\nEggs: Selected, 33; No. 1 stock, 28.\nPork: Heavy Canada short mess, 33\nat' 34;  short cut buck, 31 nt.3^\nSTERLING  4.75.75.\n(By Daily News Leai-fed Wire)\nNEW YORK, Juno 24.\u2014Sterling exchange, 4.75.75 for demand.\nMAPLE LEAF IS UNDER\nPRESSURE  AT TORONTO\nMONTREAL, June 24.\u2014The price\nmovemenlson tbo local stock exchange\nSaturday were of little Importance,\nexcepting Maple Leal'. Soon after the\nopening the offerings of this* stock\nshowed some pressure, tbe bearish\nfeeling arising out of the unsatlsfne-\nlory statement for the Inst year. Sales\nof Maple Leaf amounted to 907 shares.\nTotal business for the day 2948 shares.\nWHEAT PRICES RALLY;\nMARKET CLOSES FIRM\nRains in Southwest Which Interfered\nwith   Harvest  Have  Bullish   Effect on Chicago Board.\n. (By Daily News Lensed Wife,)\nCHICAGO, III., June 24,-JRnin's that\ncheeked the harvest in the southwest\nhad a bullish effect today on wheat,\nAfter nn almost continuous display of\nstrength the market closed firm 1 to\nl&c net higher, with July ut $1.00%\nand September $1.03-y4. Outs gained\nVi to* %c and provisions 5 to 57V6.\nBuying which resulted from the unwelcome fain showed conclusively thnt\nthe wheat mnrket had been oversold\nnn Friday's break. Shorts in wheat\ncovered freely during the last part of\nthe session, after commission houses\nhad absorbed the surplus offerings.\nThere wns an evident widespread desire to reduce open risks rather than\nto carry commitments over Sunday\nrgardless of tho fact that no present\ndemand from Kurope was apparent for\nI'nited   States,   either   old   or   new.\nRECEIV\nWEEK\nDUST\n10,770 TONS\nMolly  Gibson   Makes Small  Shipment\nFor First Time This Year-\nLists of Shippers.\nOro receipts at tlie Consolidated\nMining company's smelter at Trail, during tbe past quarter month totalled\n10,770 tons, among which was a shipment of 72 tons from the Molly Gibson\nmine, being the first fnr this year. The\nfollowing arc the mines which have\nshipped since the first of the year,\nshowing thc past quarter month's ton-\nnage and the total tonnage received.\nNelson.\nEureka        107      553\nEmerald     43\u00bb\nGranite Poorman    117\nHudson Huy   71J\nMolly   Gibson          72 72\nPefi'ler   24\nQueen     234\nt'otnl       179      1,511\nRossland.\nCentre Star   3,575    87,540\nLO Roi      3,990    Oii.L'lfi\nLe R11I No. 2         324      7,872\nVelvet\nrota! \t\n71\n7.010 liil.tl'iu\nEast Kootenay\nEmma  \t\n213\nl-.nnnrk  \u25a0\t\n4ir,\n137\nMomtreh \t\n11 r,\nPark Group\t\n12\nSt. Eugene\t\n.3111\nSylltvnn  ..,.'\t\nTotal \t\n2,nsr,\"\n35,7(l|i\n2.O8G\n:n;,!ir,!i\nLardeau.\n31 r,\nsir.\nSlocan.\nApex  \t\n79\n28\nComstoek   \t\n18\nEnterprise\t\n211\n3nlena Farm   \t\n42\n709\nHewitt   \t\n190\n27\n7\nLuekv  ThouKht   \t\n38\n211\n190\nMolly Hushes  \t\n211\nNoomlnv\t\n121\nPerrier\t\n21\n(13\n900\n70\nB07\nSlocan Payne  \t\nill\nMO\n7(1\n.7,51.0\n71\n22\n21!)\n7,337\nAinsworth.\nnine Bell   \t\nir,2\n3,213\n0\n28\n507\n21\n080\n311\nNn.   1\t\n2,107\nUtlon  \t\n29(1\n152\n7.254\nUnited  States  M\nnes.\n2,558\n.    29\n13\n15\n120\n1.393\nT.akovlew \t\n33\nLeal  Trust   \t\n9\nNo\"mnn Mines\t\n28\n184\n4.541\n5\nTorn Thumb \t\n30\n39\n44t\n4,541\n35\n13,335\nOther  Canadian  Mines.\n52\n20\n20\nHenderson  \t\n41\nMB\n5\n41\nSilver Standard \t\n224\n70\n52\n1,127\nConsolidated Receipts.\n107\n5ES\n435\nGranite I'norman\t\n117\n78\nMo ly Gibson    ,\n72\n72\nPerrier \t\n24\nQueen  \t\n234\n87,540\n06,210\nLe Tlol No. 2\t\n324\n7,872\nVelvet \t\n71\nBmma  '..\t\n21!\nLanark   ..;...   .\/.;., -;.\n415\n131\nMonarch   ,\n\u25a0'(\n86\nNO RISE IN EGGS\nAT PUBLIC MARKET\nBerries in Imperial Pint Boxes Sell for\n15 Cents\u2014Fresh Beets, Carrots\nand   Cauliflower\nLocal new laid eggn were plentiful at\nSaturday's public market, showing nn\ntendency to rise In prlco nnd selling\nat 35 cents per dozen. Loco) berries\nmade their first appearance and wild\nal 15 cents tho Imperial pint, box. It.\nwns announced that local berries\nwould be on sale next week In quart\nImxes. There was a splendid showing\nof local beets, carrots and cauliflower,\nwhile dressed and live fowl were In\ngreat demand and went quickly. No\nifflcial  announcement   hns   yet   been\nPark. Group  12\nSt. Eugene ....  361\nSullivan     2,085   65,706\nBonanza  345\nApex.  79\nBlack Prince  28\nComstoek  13\nEnterprise      .... 29\nGalena   Farm       42       709\nHewitt     190\nIdaho Alamo  27\nJo. .To  7\nLucky Thought          38        211\nMeteor        190\nMolly Hughes \u2022.. 20\nNoonday  121\nPerrier \u25a0,.,,, 24\nRambler Cariboo      03      900\nReco ;     70\nRuth  507\nSlocan Payne    31\nSlocan Star   500\nStandard    .,..*.      70     3,510\nWonderful        71\nYuklma  22\nBlue Boll    .,     152     3,213\nCork Province  0\nCrescent   28\nFlorence .*  507\nGallagher j  21\nHighland   ,.. 08G\nMartin Group  30\nNo.   1  2,107\nUtica ',  290\nBen H.ur  2,558\nDelphia  2!)\nEdwards    13\nGreen Monarch  15\nKeystone    ;... 120\nKnob Hill    1.393\nLnkevlew ..'  33\nLend Trust     9\nNorman Mines  28\nSam  Poll    ;..    484     4,541\nSnnd  Point     5\nTom Thumb    31)\nTip Top   1        30\nUnited Copper      441      4,541\nVenezuela  35\nFog  Horn       r....... 52\nGolden Engle  20\nGinr.l   \u25a0;. 20\nHenderson    41\nIron Mask     590\nKokoma     5\nPot Hook    41\nSilver Standard     224\nSally    70\nYellow .Inckot  52\nTotal     -.   10,770 231,301\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nDominion Day\nJuly 1st\nExcursion\nFares\nFare  and One-Third\nRound Trip\nOn sale Juno 20 till July 1. Good\nfor return till July 5. Tickets from\nagents or pursers. Conductors will\ngivo excursion lutes from flag- stations.\nJ. S.  Carter,  D.  P.  A.,   Nelson.\nmade regarding the proposed Tuesday\nmarket dining the berry season, but\nIt is understood that if the ranchers\ndesire the Tuesday selling day It will\nbe begun, Saturday's quotations follow:\nVeaetabtK.\nOnions, dry, per 100 lbs... 2.50\u00ae3.00\nPotatoes, per 100 lbs  1.00\nLocal fresh rhubard, bunch .(15\n,  0 bunches  .25\nRadishes, 2  bunches   .... .05\nAsparagus, per Ib  .10\nBeets,   local,    hunch,    10c\nthree for   .25\nCarrots, local,   bunch,   10c\nthree for  .25\nCauliflower, ench    15Ti* ,20\nMuto,\nSausages, lb 20@ ,25\nFresh mutton, lb ..  .30\nLamb, Ib 250 .85\nPork, Ib 10\u00ae .18\nHome smoked    ham    and\nbacon, per lh 22<ii> .55\nLive fowls 50\u00ae .75\nDressed fowl, lb 30\nDucks 70*91.00\nBeef,   lb.    129 .20\nVeal, Ib.     12\u00ae .26\nPigeons, per pair'  .40\nBeef   steak    180   25\nBeef, boiling 120 .15\nBeef roasts  150 .22\nDressed   chicken,   lb  .30\n,    , Fruit\nStrawberries, local, box... .15\nGooseberries,   local,   in   3-\nqunrt boxes, 3 boxes ... .25\nDairy Product!\nEggs, per dozen    .35\nButter, dairy, 2 lbs  .75\nButter, 100-lb; boxes, 3 lbs. 1,00\nCream, per pint  ,. .26\nButtermilk, gallon ....... .40\nMiscellaneous.\nHome-made Pickles, quart .50\nHomemade bread, white .. .10\n8 loaves    ,26\nHomemade bread, brown.. .10\n3 loaves  ,25\nMINING STOCKS.\nWe  will pay you  the  highest .market\nprice for nny part of\n11)00-2000 shares Slocan Star\n1000-2000 shares Rambler-Cariboo\n1000-5000 shares Lucky Jim\nST DENIS & LAWRENCE\nPhone 39. Box 1102\nHEART BADLY\nAFFECTED\n\"Fruit-a-tives\" Soon Relieved\nThis Dangerous Condition\n632 Gb\u00abiiab*d'Bt; Kast\" Toifen).\n\"For two years, I was a victim of\nAcute Indigestion and Gas In The\nStomach. It afterwards attacked my\nHeart and I had pains all over my body,\nso that I could hardly move around.\nI tried all kinds of Medicine but noue\nof them did me any good. At last, I\ndecided to try \"Fruit-a>tives\". I\nbought the first box last June, and\nnow I am well, after using only three\nboxes. I recommend \"Fruit-a-tives\":\nto anyone suffering from Indigestion\".\n FRED J. CAVEEN.\n00c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25c.'\nAt nil dealers or sent postpaid by Fruit-\\\na-tives Limited, Ottawa.\nXL-ITE\n*\\\nBLASTING   AND   STUMPING\nPOWDER.\nPower considered,   the   cheapest\npowder on the market.\nMade In Kootenay by\nKootenay Explosives\nCo., Limited\nBox 116, Nelson, B. C.\nWrite for Quotation*.\nI\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting Co.\not Canada, Limited \u00ab   \u25a0\nOf Ices, Smelting and Refining Department\nTRAIL,   BRITISH   COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper and Lead Ores\nTHA1L, BRAND HO LEAD, BLUESTONH AND SPELTER\nTHE NELSON IRON WORKS, Limited\nPARTIAL   LIST   OF   SECOND-HAND   MACHINERY   FOR   SALE\n\u25a0 '\u25a0    \u00bb\u25a0 '  \u2022\u25a0'      -'\"    it.    \u25a0    .      '\u25a0 -\"\"ENQINES\nI 10(1 h.p. Hlrh Speed Ball.\n1 13 x IS 90 h.p. Slide Valve.\n1 12 x IB 75 h.p. Slide Valve.\n1 40 h.p. A. O. Motor, 2000 volte.\n1 8 x 10 Mine Hoist.\n1 4 % x 2% x 4 Dpplex Pump.\n1 No. 3 Centrifugal Pump.\n1 6 x 24 *3urracor and Matcher.\n1 20 h.p. Vertical Boiler.\n1 No. 1 Simplex Ore Crusher.\n1 Small ClateH Crusher.\n1 Chiles' Grinder.\nSeveral largo Gyratory Crushers.\n1 Hydraulic Elevator.\nAND  MUCH OTHER  MATERIAL\u2014SEND US VOUR  INQUIRIES\nCOPPER   AND   SILVER   LEAD   MINES  WANTED\nWe have clients looking frir Developed Properties. Must have\nengineer's reports and If nny shipments hnve heen made we want\nsmelter returns, ele. Send us full particulars nnd If your price Is right\nwe can do huslnesH.\nMcQUARRIE  A   ROBERTSON\nBrokers Nelson, B. C.\nKusa Spelter Company\nPurchaiers of All Classes of Zinc Ores and Concentrate!\nNewton VV. Emmens, Representative\nCREDIT   FONCIER   BUILDING VANCOUVER,   B.   C.\n?80O;t)O   BUYS   HOUSE   AND   LOT,   FAIRVIEW\nRented $7.50 per month.   $300.00 ensh hnndles,   Close to onr line.\nApply TAYLOR & DUBAR, 602 Baker Street, Nelson, B. C.\nJ. E. Taylor, Notary Public Paul H. Dubar, Accountant, Auditor\nMONEY   TO   LOAN   ON   FARM   LANDS\nCondensed \"Want\" Ads Order Form\nUse this blank on whloh to write out your condensed ad., one word in each space.   Enclose monoy\norder or oheok and mail direot to Tha Daily News, Nelson, B, c.\nRatei One cent \u2022 word each Insertion, six consecutive   Insertions   charged   as  four.    Eaoh   Initial,\nfigure, dollar sign, etc, oount as ono word.   No oh arge leas than 25 cents.\n\u00ab\nPlease publish the above advertisement times, for which I enclose I..\nNoma   ,i\nAddroso   ,\t\nIf deaired, replies may ba addressed to Box Numbers at The Dally Newa Office.   If replies aro to bo\nmailed enclose lOo extra to eover oost of postage.\n----HM\n Wit\nMONDAY, JUNE Z\u00ab, 1916.\nTHE DAILY NEWS\n.-\u00bb\u25a0\"* PAGE SEVEN\nC0NDEN8ED ADVERTISING RATES\nOno Insertion, ^\u00bbr word... ....lo\nMinimum chtrge    26c\nBIx    consecutive    lnsertlone,    per\nword \u2022 \u2022 -4o\nTwenty-six  consecutive  Insertions,\n(ono month), per word... 16c\nBirths, one Insertion 60c\nMarriages, one insertion ...,60c\nDeaths, one insertion ..60c\nCard of Thanks..... 60c\nBach subsequent Insertion ..26c\nDeath and Funeral Notice $1.00\nAU oondensed advertisements are\ncash In advance.\nIn computing the number ot words\ntn a classified advertisement count\neach word, dollar mark, abbreviation,\nInitial letter and figure aa one word.\nAdvertisers are reminded that lt Is\ncontrary to the provisions of the Postal\nlaws to have letters addressed to initials only; therefore any advertiser\ndesirous of concealing his or her lden\ntlty may use a box at this office with\nout any extra charge if replies are\ncalled for; lf replies are to be matlod\nto advertiser allow 10 cents extra, In\naddition to prlco ot advertisement, to\n. pay postage.\nThe News reserves the right to \u00ab\u25a0\nJect any copy submitted for publica\ntion.\nHELP WANTEDL\nWANTED\u2014Waiter or waitress at the\nNelson hotel. (3280)\n' FOR RENT OR 8ALE.\nFOR SALE\u2014Modern eight-roomed\nhouse, with clothes closet, bath, pantry, basement and furnace; two lots,\nfruit trees, etc; terms. Apply 712 Carbonate St., or phono 340L. (3322)\nTO  LET\u2014ROOMS    AND    BOARD\u2014\nSummer holidays;  4 miles up the\nlake.    Apply  Mrs.  Roberts,   Strobor,\n.Nelson. (3320)\nFOR RENT\u2014Six room house in excellent    condition;  . parlor,    dining\nroom, kitchen, three bedrooms, bath,\npantry, $15.   Apply 921 Stanley street.\n(3356)\nWHEN REPM-INO TO ADVERTISE-\nmonts in Condensed Columns, kindly\nmention you saw it In The News\u2014it\nwill help you.\nFOR EXCHANGE.\nWANTED   TO   EXCHANGE   Piano\u2014\nHigh  grade  Helntzman   upright  in\nNelson for good piano in Toronto, Box\n3321, Daily News. (3321)\nFURNI8HEO  ROOMS TO  RENT.\nFOR RENT\u2014Suites ot furnished house\nkeeping rooms   in Annable   block.\nEnquire room 32.\nSITUATIONS  VACANT\u2014MALE.\nNELSON EMPLOYMENT AGENCY\u2014\nW. Parker, 309 Baker St., Phone 283.\nWANTED\u2014Setter; general servants,\n$20 to $26; lady stenographer; waitress\n$35; woman cook, first class'hotel, $75,\nor better; carpenter for mine; millwright; swampers; filer, circular and\nband resaw; fireman, $60 and board;\noiler for sawmill; men and women\ncooks to register; also berry piokers.\nK.   W.   C.   BLOCK \u2014 Housekeeping\nsuites and rooms for rent.     Terms\nmoderate   A. Macdonald & Co. (3223)\nENGINEER,   third  or  fourth   class,\n$100 month\/.   Arrow   Lake   Shingle\nCo., Nakusp, B.C.. (3349)\nWANTED\u2014Man to work- on fruit\nranch. Must be a good milker; 2\ncows kept on ranch; steady work for\nright man. Apply to A. Miller, Act.\nforest ranger, Creston, B.C. (3327)\nWANTED\u2014Dishwasher at L. D. Cafe.\n(3340)\nWHEN REPLYING TO ADVERTISB-\nments In Condensed Columns, kindly\nmention you saw it in The News\u2014It\nwill help you.\n^J-mMTWMA\/AJfr*--^^\nBY 17 YEAR OLD BOY\u2014Outside work\npreferred.    Apply box 022, Nelson.\n(3344.)\nWHEN REPLYING TO ADVERTISE-\nments in Condensed Columns, kindly\nmention you saw it in The News\u2014lt\nwill help you.\nFEMALE HELP WANTED.\nWANTED^-Good rellanlo general, $18,\nApply postoffice, Rock Crook. (3246)\nGOOD GENERAL\u2014Two children, $20.\nBox 3352, Dally News. (3362)\nWANTED\u2014By an accountant, as pu\npil,< a bright girl wishing to i learn\ncommercial bookkeeping ono with some\nKnowledge of stenography preferred.\nAccountant, P.O. box 375, Nelson.\n(3358)\nWANTED\u2014Good reliable girl, general\n\"work In hotel; must be waitress;\nwages, $45.00, board and room. Apply\nbox 114, Phoenix, B.C. (3335)\nFURNISHED SUITES lor rent, Apply\nKerr apartments. (3224)\nWHEN REPLYING TO ADVERTISE\ntnents In Condensed Columns, kindly\nmention you saw It In Ths News-\nwill help you.\nLIVESTOCK.\nBELGIAN HARES and white rabbits.\nM. B. Edwards, Nelson. (3343)\nACCOUNTANTS.\n^hTfALD?N(\u00a3\nPublic Accountant, Bank ot Montreal\nChambers, .Rossland, B.C\nROOM AND BOARD.\n$1.25 A DAY for comfortable room and\nfull board; good meals; cannot be\nbeaten.    Try  us;   613 Ward    street,\nNelson. (3251)\nWHEN REPLYING TO ADVERTISE-\nments In Condensed Columns, kindly\nmention you saw lt in The Nows\u2014It\nwill help you-\nL08T AND FOUND.\nLOST\u2014Lady's    gold    hunting    case\nwatch between t'he Canadian Pacific\ntracks and the General hospital. Finder please return to 201 Silica street.\n(3302)\nLOST\u2014Brown water spaniel;  anyone\nfound detaining the dog will be pro-\nsecute'd.    Flndor   pldnao ,notify  box\n3S\u00ab3, Dally News.  , (331(3)\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\nThe Doukhobor ferry at Brilliant\nwill be unable to run until the water\ngoes down. - ,      (3357)\nTho Dally News has just received a\nconsignment of wedding cake boxes.\nGot your orders in early\nThe Hume barber shop is operating\ntwo chairs. Prompt and courteous\ntreatment.   No waiting. (3354)\nI have an enquiry now from a C.P.R.\nman who wants a houso closo In. Let\nme know today.   Phone 444.       (3369)\nClub hotel for best draught beer and\nporter, always fresh; big schooner 10c'\nBottled beer and porter 26c; meals 25c.\n(3218)\nR. D. McDonald, general contractor,\nTrail\u2014I have the latest In moderate\npriced homes. Jobbing promptly attended to; estimates given; also shop-\nwork of any description done.  (3235)\nFUNERAL DIRECTORS.\nD. J. ROBERSTON, F. D. D. & E., 303\nVictoria St., phone 292; night phone,\n157-L.\nKOOTENAY LODGE NO. 1\u00ab, LO.O.F.\nMeets e\"Very Monday night in Oddfellows' hall at 8 o'clock,\nQUEEN CITY REBEKAII LODGE\nNo. 16, I.O.O.F.\u2014Meets first and\nthird Tuesdays In Oddfellows' hall\nat 8 o'clock.\nNELSON. ENCAMPMENT NO. 7,\nI.O.O.F.\u2014Meets   second   and   fourth\n. Thursdays In Oddfellows' hall at 8\no'clock.\nCANTON CORONA NO. 7.\u2014MEETS\nevery second Tuesday in Oddfellows-\nhall at 8 o'clock.\nKNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS\u2014MEETS\nTuesday nights in K. of P. hall,\nEagle block.\nWHEN REPLYING TO ADVERTISE-\nments In Condensed Columns, kindly\nmention you eaw it in The Newa\u2014lt\nwill help you.\nFOR BALE\u2014Mentges newspaper folder; folds 4, 6, 8,10 or 12 pages.  In\ntint clasa condition.   Snap for cash.\nThe Daily News, Nolson. (678)\nFOR SALE\u2014Edison Dictograph, complete; electrlo power   Apply to Dally\nNewa Business office. (664)\nFOR SALE\u2014Household goods at tho\nresidence    of    C.    E.   Richardson,\nHoover .and Josephine streets,    (3341)\nFOR SALE\u2014Shaving machine for Edison records. Box 685, Daily News.\nFOR. SALE\u2014First class mlscroscopei\nalmost new; one of the best makes,\n$80.   Box 511, Dally News. (511)\nBELGIAN hares, all ages.   Rose, Balfour,     s (3203)\nWHEN REPLYING TO ADVERTISE-\nments In Condensed Columns, kindly\nmention you saw lt in The News\u2014lt\nwill help you.\nHORSES AND CATTLE.\nFOR SALE-^-Good milk cow, 3 years\nqld.    Apply A. de Bruyn,  Fruitvale.\n(3318)\n\u2022 FOR SALE \u2014 Registered pedigreo\n^ Berkshire boar, 4 years. Two pedigree Berkshire brood sows, twonty\nmonths and one'fifteen months; one\ngrade sow, twenty-four months. Apply Hincks, Howser, B.C. (3351)\nFOR SALE\u2014Black mate, 1400 pounds,\n8 years old, sound; several cultivators, farm wagon cheap.   J; P. Morgan, Vornon street, Nelson, B. C. *\n(3346)\nWHEN REPLYING TO ADVERTISE-\nments in Condensed Columns, kindly\nmention you saw lt in The News\u2014lt\nwill help you.\nJ-OAJji^\nFOR SALE\u2014Astley's houseboat; partly\nfurnished.    Apply  Nlelans,   waterfront. (3229)\nFOR SALE0-Evenrude Outboard mo\ntor  ih  good  condition.    Price' $65.\nApply box 8353 Daily News.      \u25a0 (3353)\nBUSINESS  CHANCE8.\nPROSPECTOR made now discovery,\ngood ore at grass roots; will sell half\ninterest for $1000 or stake you adjoining claim for $109. Box 3360, Dally\nNews. (8360)\nVACUUM A CHIMNEY CLEANING,\nCarpets, windows and chimneys\noleaned. Nelson Vacuum & Window\n. Cleaning Co., phono 18, City Cab Co.\nVacuum machines for hire.\nCLAN JOHNSTONE, 212\u2014MEETS IN\nI.O.O.F. hall first and third Fridays\nat 8 p.m.\nS. O. E.\u2014MEETS FIRST AND THIRD\nMondays in K. of P. hall at 8 p.m,\nGROCERIES.\nA. MACDONALD & CO., WHOLE,\nsale Grocers and Provision Merchants. Importers of Teas, Coffees,\nSpices, Dried Fruits, Staple and\nFancy Groceries, Tobaccos, Cigars,\nButter, Eggs, Cheese and Packing\nHouse Products. Office and warehouse, corner of Front 'and Hall Sts,\nP.O. Box 1095; telephone 28 and 23.\nNELSON JOBBERS, LTD.,\nWholesale Grocers.\nBox 1170 Phono 154, Nelson.\nStrictly wholesale.\nauj-\u2122nj--er8,\nC. A. WATERMAN & CO., Opera Mk\nWM*.  CUTLER,  AUCTIONEER,  BOX\n474; phono 18.\nASSAYERS.\t\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, ASSAYER AND\nChemist. Box A1108, Nelson, B. C.\nChargos: Gold, sliver, copper or\nlead, $1 each; gold-silver, $1.50; sliver-lead, $1.50. Other metals on\napplication.\nPATENTS.\nBABCOCK & SONS, Registered Attorneys. Estab. 1877. Formerly\npatent office examiner. Master of\nPatent Lawn. Book, \"Patent Proteo-\ntectlon\" tree; 99 St. James St., Montreal. Branches: Ottawa and Washington.\nThere will be a regular meeting of\nCffTirt Royal Nelson A.O.'F. tonight at\n8 o'clock when nomination and election\nof officers will take place. Juvenile\nmembers' have been requested to be\npresent at 7 o'clock sharp. (8361)\nGREEN BROS., BURDEN & CO.\nCivil Engineers, Dominion and B, C.\nLand Surveyors.\nSurveys of Lands, Mines, Townsites,\nTimber Limits, etc.\nNelson, 516 Ward street, A. II. Green,\nMgr.;  Victoria, 114 Pemberton Bldg.,\nF. C. Green; Fort George, Hammond\nstreet, F. P. Burden.\nA. L. McCULLOCH,\nHydraulio Engineer.\nprovincial Land Surveyor.\nBaker St., Nelson, B.C.\nDANCING CLASSES AND PRIVATE\nLessons\u2014Miss Gladys Attree at Nelaon every Saturday and Monday.\nP.O. Box 804, Nelson.\nWHEN REPLYING TO ADVERTISE-\nmenta in Condensed Columns, kindly\nmention you saw it in The Newe\u2014it\nwill help you;\nMEMEJJGER8;,\nNELSON MESSENGER CO\u2014Baggage\nand express, Prompt and reliable.\nDay and night  Phone 248,.\nNOW TOMS $12,215\nLast  Week   Contributions Wore   Received Amounting to $523.32\u2014\nGifts  Acknowledged\nContributions to tbe Nelson and district brunch of the Canadian Patriotic\nfund have reached a total of $12,215.01,\nthere being contributed during last\nweek '$523.32. The following are tho\nacknowledgments for the past week:\nPreviously  acknowledged,  $11,691.60.\nMrs. E. C. Arthur, $2.\nP. 3. Bowles, $2. \u25a0     \u25a0\nMrs. E. C. Clarke, $4; Canada Drug\n& Hook conipany, Limited, $5; Canadian Pacific Railway employees for\nmonth of May: Dcsputellers, $11.80;\nstores department, $3; scctionmen,\n$106.30; stations, $53.37; engineers and\nfiremen, $7.20; resident engineers,\n$5.33; bridges and buildings, $08.55;\ntrainmen, $11.40; shops, $23.62; British Columbia lake and river service,\n$22.31;  superintendent's office, $37.79.\nDaughters of the Empire, Kokanee\nchapter, $25; Daily News composing\nroom staff, $6; Mrs. B. R. Dawson, $2.\nMiss II. Eastman, $1; E. H. Evans,\n$1.\n3. 3. French, $2; .Tohn Fraser, $5.\nL. Gobey, $4.\nG. B. Hollington, $1; R. H. Hartman,\n$1.\nR. F. Irwin, $5.\nD. Kerr, $2;  Mrs. D. Kerr, $1.\nN, Mallette, $6; George Motion, Sr.,\n$2;  Thomas Melrose, $B.\nH. A. barker, $5.\nR. B. Reilly, $2; C. D. Risk, $1; Mrs.\nW. O. Rose, $5; .1. H. Richardson, $1.\nMrs. G. Stanley, $3; G. W. Steele, $3.\nD. P. Winter, $2; W. Will, $3; Miss\nI. Ward, 25 cents; Miss E. Ward, 25\ncents; H. Ward, $1.\nWillow Point district as follows:\nMrs. J. Hamilton, $1; R. Boyer, $5; .1.\nGilroy, $1; Capt. Applewhaite, $1; B.\nTownshend, $5; R. W. Dawson, $2.50;\nO. W. Palmer, $1; D. Heddle, $1; M.\nHeddle, $1; J. J. Campbell, $1; E. H.\nApplewhaite, $1; H. A. Masters, $1;\nK. Metcalfe, $1; T. A. Airey, $3; W.\nKcnway, 25 cents; J. Nilan, $1; 3. D.\nMacdonnel, $1.50; D. L. Doyle, $1.50;\nA. B. Shannon, 50 cents; A. L.' R.\nCross, 25 cents; K. Cuthbe, $1; P. F.\nThompson, $1; D. Hi Bayley, $1; Mis.\nDenny, 50 cents.\nTotal,  $12,215.01. \u2022\nEXCHEQUER COURT SITTINGS\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\n*  OTTAWA. Juno 27\u2014Sittings of the\nexchequer court will  be held at Victoria, B. C, Sept 20 and at Vancouver,\nSept. 29.\nAt it Agafy\nWe havo opened up our Ice\nCream Parlor and as in the past\nyears are making obr own Ice\ncream with..  .'.  \t\nPURE FRESH CREAM.\nTry It and let   us\nopinion.\nhave   your\nChoquette Bros.\nThe High-Class Baker, and\nConfectioners. ,\nPhono 258. 616 Baker St.\nFRENCH LULLED\nBY GERMAN GUILE\nFailure to  Foresee Ambition of Teutons To Make Them\nTributary.\nThe fictitious narrator of reminiscences of' the war of 1870 In \"Le Plebiscite,\" one of the Erchmann-Chatrian\nstories of Alsace, tells -with no small\ndisgust, how a German who had been\nemployed by him up to a date shortly before the war, reappeared on the\nscene in tho ranks of one of the invading armies. The Instance, moreover, was only one of a very large\nnumber. The French discovered, but\ntoo late, that for years before the war\nbroke out, Alsace had been full of\nPrussian spies, engaged in various\npeaceful occupations, but all the while\nmaking notes and observations, which\nthey diligently forwarded to Berlin.\nAfter such an experience one would\nhave thought that the French would\nhave become intensely suspicious ond\nsleeplossly watchful of all Germans\nentering their country. For a time, no\ndoubt, this was the case, but after a\nlapse of somo years their suspicions\nbecame drowsy and ever slept. German aggressiveness, insidious and unwearying as the devil, resumed the enterprise of preparation for conquest by\nmeans of commercial penetration, The\npromptitude displayed by the French\nIn the payment of the\" huge war indemnity of five milliards of francs\n(a billion dollars) has disconcerted and\nannoyed the Germans. They had hoped that thc burden of that obligation\nwould cripple and crush France, and\nthat the discharge thereof would make\nFrance a tributary of the German, Empire for many long years. Ponding\nthe payment of the uttermost farthing\nthe Germans retained possession of\nVerdun,   s\nThey evacuated that fortress in 1873.\nThe speedy fulfillment of lhe conditions of it's evacuation could only have\nbeen a disappointment to Blsmnrch\nand Moltke, and it is by no means beyond the limits of possibility that the\nformer, at least, turned ovor In his\nmind the indefinite retention of Verdun, despite the undertaking given for\nthe withdrawal of the German garrison\nimmediately upon completion of payment of the war indemnity. But perhaps such a burefaced assertion of the\nright of might was too much for even\nBismarck to venture upon. Besides\nthat consideration, there was also tlie\ndanger of trouble with Russia, and the\nfriendly relations between Germany\nand Russia wero one of the main principles of Bismarckian policy. However, the day of tho provocation of\nFrance to another' conflict, in which\nshe was to be \"bled white,'1 was only\npostponed to a more convenient sea\nson.\nThc annexation of Alsace and Lorraine, with the strongholds of Strass-\nburg ant3. Mctz, to thc German Empire\nwas a defensive measure, according to\nthe German authorities. Moltke held\nthat the possession of Met;*, was wortii\na hundred thousand men, meaning that\nit were left to the French then the\nforces required for tho defense of Germany on tlie\" side of France would have\nto be maintained at a figure larger\nby a hundred thousand men than\nwould be sufficient with Met\/, included in German territory. At the same\ntime this defensive outwork of Alsace\nand Lorraine furnished a base for aggressive operations against France,\nwhich lay much nearer the heart of\nthat country than the basos of Invasion begun in August of 1870. The\nFrench, however, countered - this advantage by constructing an extensive\nsystem of fortifications on their side\nof the Vosges, which would greatly\nIncrease the difficulties to be surmounted by an invading force.\nDanger from the side of Russia may\nbe set down as tlie consideration which\nkept thc Germans faithful to their undertaking to withdraw from Verdun as\nsoon as the French had paid up in ful\nfor the intellectual, moral and mater\nial damages they had Inflicted upon\ntheir victorious enemies. Tho post\nponcment of thc day of visitation in\nfiro and slaughter enablod tho French\nto construct fortifications round Vcr\ndun, If ml, Epinal, Langres, Bclfort\nand Besancon, which were only a very\nfew years back .rendered antiquated\nby the developments in artillery uc-\nhieved at Essen and Pllsen. The Germans made use of this delay by planting commercial agencies and manufacturing establishments In Franco, and\nobtaining control of various French\nindustrial enterprises. The fortresses\nwhicli the Frcneli had built between\nthe Vosges and the Meuse wore foredoomed as soon as, the Germans and\ntheir Austrian allies had perfected\ntheir enormous siege guns, but even\nso, their reduction would have been\nan awkward obstaclo to the kind of invasion contemplated by thc Germans,'\nviz: tho avenue, through Belgium and\nLuxembourg. These little states were\nIncluded In the German preparations\nfor conquest, the Gorman trader and\nmanufacturer making ready a highway\nfor thc German warrior.\nIn Bolguim, Luxembourg and Franco\nthis work'of preparation by commerce\nfor conquest was carried on very adroitly, vigorously and successfully.\nThese states may justly be said to havo\nbeen manoeuvred toy German astuteness into contributing indirectly to\nthe arming and equipment of tho hordes let loose upon them In tlie summer of 1914. Thero were no doubt Individual Belgians, Luxcmbourgeois,\nand Frenchmen who suspected what\nwas going on, and discussed the end\nfor which the Germans were working,\nwithout haste, porhaps, but certainly\nwithout rest. But the multitude of\ntheir compatriots, less discerning or\nmoro distracted by other matters, gavo\nno heed.\n\"The good-natured French people,\"\nwrites Monsieur Raphael Georges Levy, in the April number of the Quarterly Review, \"made lt only too easy\nTor their foes to prepare an Invasion\nwhich ha<t been decided upon a long\ntime ago. The dissimilation, the ob-\nsequlosness, the tenacity of these emissaries of German trade enterprise\nand imperialism \"were such that we\nought to have suspected them as dangerous to our safety, and implacably\nclosod our doors against them. On\nthe contrary, we invited them to enter\nour homes, a^td we supplied them trustfully with the fullest information regarding our strong, ns welt ns our\nweak, sides.\" Similar observations\nmight  bo mado  by. Belgians, British\niKSif Urodsotfs]\nAn Offering of\nUnusual Merit\nFor Two Days and a\nHalf, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday\nMorning, We Put on\nSale Fifty\nLadies'\nDresses\nDivided Into Two Lots\n$4.98 and $9.79 Each\nThe values in the first bunch are $8.50,\n$10.50 to $12.50 and the second collection\ncontains Dresses $14.50, $16.75, $19.50\nand $25.00.\nThe collection comprises Black and Colored Silks, Crepe-de-Chones,\nFloral Muslins, Lace, Not and Eoliennos and the frocks are suitable\nfor immediate wear.\nGarden parties and launch parties are now iu full swing and this\naffords an opportunity of getting a now rig for each occasion at a\nfraction of the original cost.\nA good many of these frocks only recently arrived from New York\nand embody all tho new features now so prominent on Broadway. The\nsizes are assorted, but also contain several sizes 10 and IS, suitable for\nyoung ladles.\nYou cannot afford to lcL a chance like tiiis go past you, as with\nall materials on the high water mark at the present time it means you\nget a frock ready to wear for the same price as thc material alono\nwould cost you today.\nWith This Offering of Frocks\nWe Also Put on Sale\nOne Dozen Hats\n\u2022ALL NEW, UP-TO-DATE STYLES AT LESS THAN THIS COST\nOl'- MANUFACTURE\nHATS\u2014Wortii Today $7.50. (10.05 and $12.00 each.\nAll In a Rush Salo for, Each \t\n$3.93\nTO OUR MAIL ORDER CUSTOMERS~We wish to particularly\ndraw your attention to this magnificent offer and if you will\nsend us your size wc will mail you one of these frocks. If it does\nnot measure up to your expectations wo will gladly refund you\nyour money\u2014you run no rlBk.\nand Russians regarding German espionage in their several countries.\nGermany is more abundantly endowed witb coal-bearing than with iron-hearing strata. Tlie-output of coal\nin Germany, in tlie years immediately\npreceding the war, rivalled that of\nGreat Britain. On the other hand,\nagainst an output of 28 million tons\nof iron ore from German mines in\n1011, there was an importation of 11\nmillion tons, France Is insufficiently\nsupplied with coal but possesses great\niron deposits In tho departments of\nMeurthe-et-Moselle, and Manche. German syndicates, therefore, as M. Levy\npoints out, sought (and were Infrc-\nquoi tly successful In their design) to\nmake agreements with French companies which had thc effect of securing\nfor German Ironworks and steel works\na considerable per centage of the out\nput of French iron mines, while the\nFrench establishments wero bound to\nimport coal from Germany.\n\"Leverage\" was obtained for the\nGermans by thc acquisition of controlling interests in the working of Fronch\niron mines (and French coat pits as\nwell) or by the leasing or ownership\nof such natural resources in French\nterritory. For example, Herr August\nThyssen, owner of tho \"Dcutscher\nKaiser,\" colliery (with an output of\nfour mitjlon tons a year), iron and\nsteel works near Mctz and elsewhere\n(with an annua! output of two million\ntons), was the owner of Iron mines\nin French Lorraine and Normandy, and\nheld a lease of granite quarries in thc\n\u25a0latter province, at Dielette in the Province of Manche. The acquisition of\niron mines in Normandy was much\nprized on account of the abundance,\nand cheapness of limestone in that\ncountry, which rendered it possible to\nsm-r*H the ore at inexpensive rates. At\nthe time when the war broke out, one-\nseventh of the iron deposits In eastern\nprance, and one-half of those In Normandy belonged to Germans. It is\njruo that Frenchmen had Invested\nSnoopy in German collieries and iron\nworks, but their interest as shareholders In those concerns formed no\ncounter-balance to the controlling In\nterests acquired  by Germany in  similar enterprises in France.\nThe French iron mines of thc \"eastern basin\" and the coal pits of Northern France are now within thc line\nof German conquest and accupation,\nalong with those of Belgium and Luxembourg. The retention of these regions as annexes of the Gorman Empire would add enormously to Its resources and power. Even before tbo\nwar they were largely exploited in the\ninterest of German commerco and Imperialism, and certainly they cannot\n(nave ceased to serve Gorman interests\nsince the war began. Tho Germans\ncould give up Poland, Compel the Austrians to evacute Serbhi, surrender\nall their own former dependencies beyond the seas and yet justly account\nof themselves as having mado a good\nbargain, if they could obtain Belgium,\nLuxembourg and the French torrltory\nnow included within their lines of battle. Still better would their bargain\nbe, If it also socured restoration of\nGerman control or ownership in mines!\nand factories within the territory left.\nto France. Such arrangements would\nleave them excellently well posted and\nequipped for the renewal of their advance to thc attainment of their self-\ndetermined destiny, thc fulfillment of\ntheir assumed \"mission of civilization.\"\nReturning to the consideration of\nGerman enterprise in France during\ntbe years of peaco, we find that German firms, besides purchasing or getting control of iron mines, bought up\nexisting foundries, rolling mills, etc.,\nin their vicinity or erected new ones.\nA grand scheme for the establishment\nof a German-owned, German-built,\nGerman-equipped and German-worked plant for the production of pig iron,\nwrought iron and steel on a vast scale,\non a site about 20 miles from Caen In\nNormandy was In progress not many\nyears before the war, aud was checkmated only just In time by the energy of a French company. The plant\nwas erected, but predominating influence was secured for French financiers.\nIn this instance, German enterprise\nhas provided the French government\nI with plant and material, as Normandy\nhas not been overrun and occupied.\nBut it is otherwise with German establishments in such regions as the Meur-\ntbe-et-Moselle Department.\nUnder German direction a number of\nFrench companies were formed, which\nserved as agencies for tlie marketing\nof vnriuus sorts of German goods in\nFrance. The goods were offered at\nlow prices, ruthlessly undercutting\nthose of the French producers. Losses\non sales in Franco were willingly endured, in order.to get business. Compensation fnr these losses were obtained hy \"combines\" or \"Ivartolls,\"\nwhich behind the shelter of high protection walls maintained prices in\nGermany at excessive figures. The\nFrench purchaser, like the purchaser\nin orther countries, was attracted and\nlime-twigged liy cheapness, long credit\nand quick deliveries. Tho quality of\nthe German goods was by no means\nalways the best, but much is forgiven to thoso who ask only for low\nprices, and offer easy terms of payment. Besides iron works and steel\nworks, German firms built or acquired industrial establishments of othor\nkinds in France, where German materials wero used or parts of German machines and Instruments were assembled, anil German foremen and workmen employed. Thus goods which\nreally were German could be palmed\noff as of \"French manufacture.\". \"Why\nworo they not 'made' in France?\nIn return for their enterprises In\nFrance, tho Germans tried hard to attract French capital to the support of\nGerman enterprises in the Fatherland\nitself, and to some extent succeeded.\nThen came the war, and the French\ninvestors were \"stung\"\nFollowing examinations in music\nhero certificates have been received by\nthose who passed successfully. They\nare: Miss Mayme McPhail, higher division; Miss Flora Campion, lower\ndivision; Miss Edna. Campion, elementary, and Miss Elsie Nipou, elementary. The examination was conducted\nby tho associated board of the Royal\nOendemy of Music and Royal college\nof Music, I^Hfl\n PAGE EiaHir\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nMONDAY, JUNE 26, 1911.\nUnoquall.d for General Um\nW. P. TIERNEY, General Sale* Agent,\nNelaon, B. C.\nCars supplied to all railway point..\nFor Tired Feet\nU8E OUR ANTISEPTIC FOOT\nPOWDER. RELIEVES ACHING AND TIRED FEET AND\nALLAYS THE DISAGREEABLE ODOR OF PERSPIRATION.\nCanada Drug & Book Co.\nMail Orders Filled Promptly,\nEASTMAN     KODAKS    AND\nSUPPLIES.   WILLARD   CHOCOLATES.\nTHE ARK\nLadles' Lisle Hose, pair 25c\nBungalow Aprons, eaeh  50c\nNainsook and Lawn, yard....|5c\nButcher's Llnon, yard  25c\nWhite Bepp, 36 Inches, yard.. .20c\nWhite Vesting, yard 25c\nMen's Heavy Overalls, pair.$1.00\nWill buy second hand Furniture and\nStoves.\nSign of the Red Rocker.\nPhone 65L. 606 Vernon St.\nMilitary Wrist\nWatches\nWe have just received a fine line of\nthese Watches, 7, 15 and 16 jewel\nmovements\u2014nickel, silver and 20-\nyear gold filled cases. Heavy figured and luminous dials. We can\nquote you a good, reliable, neat\nappearing watch  at  a low  prlco.\nCome In and see those Watches at\n$8.00, $9.50, $10.00, $12.00, $14.00\nand $15.00.\nJ. O. Patenaude\nDealer in Fine Watches, Expert Optician, Watchmaker and Jeweler. \/\nSocial and Personal\nH. S. Jackson of Kaslo is registered\nat tho Strathcona.\nMr. and Mrs. I'. W  Raeey of Ross-\nland ai'e guests at the Hume.\nA. H.  Hlglnbotham   Is  visiting  Seattle and  other  coast cities.\nX A. Morrin of Phoenix is visiting\nthe city and is staying at the Hume.\nT. Ogle of Ainsworth is a. visitor to\ntho city and is a guest at tlie Strathcona.\nM. L. Davys of Kaslo\ncity Saturday and is a\nStrathcona.\nirrlVed in tbe\nguest at  the\nH. Giegerich of Kaslo was a visitor\nto the city Saturday and was a guest\nat the Hume.\nGeorge Couzens, brother of Mrs. W.\nS. Stanley, who bas been visiting here,\nreturned to Moose Jaw on this morning's boat to encamp with his regiment\nat Sewell.\nSOLDIERS TO GIVE\nExpected That Entertainment in Gem\nWill Be Last Under Auspices of\nCompany in Nelson.\nIn view of the reported moving of\nthe 225th battalion under canvas at an\nearly date a farewell concert will be\ngiven in the Gem theatre Tuesday\nnight.\nA program of considerable variety\nis promised, which will be contributed\nto by members of thc hattaiion, including the brass band and tlie bugle band.\nOne of the features ofthe entertainment will be an exhibition of bayonet\nexercises by a squad in charge of Scr,-\nMajor Kidd,    Among others who will\ntake part are Miss Ruth Manhart,\nBandsman Padberg, Lieut. W. A. Camp\nbell and a squad in charge of Llout.\nCampbell and Corp. Keatloy.\nIt is expected that this will be the\nlast public event held under tlie auspices of the company, as word has\nbeei received from headquarters order,\ning the men to be In readiness to go\ninto mobilization camp at an early date\nNelson News of the Dag\n1\nTHOMAS LYONS IS\nSwiss  People   Make  Much  of  British\nSoldiers Released from German\nPrison Camps.\nSLOCAN LINE TO\nOPEN THIS MORNING\nTram Went Through From Nakusp to\nSandon   Last   Night\u2014Crow\nService Cleared.\nIt was announced last night that the\nservice on the Slocan sub division of\nthe Canadian Pacific Railway would\nbe resumed this morning as usunl and\nthai numbers 842 and 843 would run\nthrough to Slocan City on thc usual\nschedule. Thc Sandon line opened up\nlast night and a train went through\nfrom Nakusp to Sandon. Officials st.Hc\nthat it will still bo somo days before\nthe Slocan Kaslo lino and tlie Lardeau sub-division will be opened up,\nas the damage to both of these linos\nhas been great and considerable work\nof clearing Is yet to be done.\nIt is thought that the trouble cm\nthe main line has beon completely\nstraightened out as well as the blocks\non the Crow's Nest line, and it is expected that the steamer from Kootenay landing will arrive in the city to-\nnig.'it close to its regular schedule.\nG\nM\nTODAY\n\"THE   FLYING   TWINS.\"\nA regular three-ring circus on\nthe Bcreen.\n\"THE   GREASER.\"\nMexican Drama.\nTOMORROW.\nSoldiers' Night at tiio Gem,\nfine program given in aid of\na worthy cause.\nMake the boys' last entertainment a success, let them\ngo away with the memory of\nyour gonerosity in their minds.\nAdmission Tuesday Night 25c\nWEST ARM WATER\n20 FEET 9 1\nLake   Rises  10   Inches   Since   Friday\nNight\u2014Expect Limit Will Soon\nBo  Reached\nThe water in tho west arm at Nelson reached 20 feet II inches above low\nwater mark last night at 8:30 o'clock.\nThis is six inches higher than was\nrecorded in 1913 and is an increase of\n10 inches since Friday at the same\nhour. This, it is pointed out, is a rise\nof considerably less than has been tbe\naverage for the past week or so and\nhopes are expressed that within a day\nor two the water will have reached its\nlimit.\nJOHN  A. CRAWFORD OF\nBIRTLE IS DEAD\nWINNIPEG, Man, June 25.\u2014A pio-\nncc\" of Manitoba passed away tonight\nin tlie person of John A. Crawford, of\nBirtie, and Uncle of Premier Norris.\nMr. Crawford was born in Halton\ncounty, Ontario, in 1837, and camo\nwest in 1879. He took up ground and\nfarmed on land tiiat bas since become\nthe sito of Blrtlc. Ilo was actively interested in the settling of the prairies\nand brought out tho first excursion\nof settlers from Eastern Canada.\nFor 18 years he was Canadian immigration agent at Kansas City, Mo., and\nlatterly hold a similar position at\nSyracuse, . Y. He is survived by one\ndaughter, wife of Rev. T. E. Holllng,\nMontreal. His only surviving sister\nis Mrs, Esther Campbell, Vancouver,\nIi. C.\nJUST  THE  THINQ   FOR  THE  CITY   HOME   OR  SUMMER  CAMP\nThe New Perfection\nOil Cook Stove\nFAR   8UPERIOR   TO   THE   OLD    STYLE   OIL   STOVE\nALSO   SAFE   AND   ODORLESS\nWe carry tn stock the Two and Three Burner Styles and will be pleated\nto have you examine their many good points. .\nTbo following letter Ims been received by Mrs. B. IC Strachan of Nelson from Pte. Thomas Lyons of Riondel\nwho enlisted at Nelson and went overseas wilh the first contingent. He was\nwounded and captured In the great engagement at Ypres while fighting with\nthe 7th battalion. In Ids letter he tells\nof being released from prison at Gics\nsen ttB being medically unfit for further active service and is now Interned\nat Chateau d'Ocx, near Montreaux,\nSwitzerland.\n\"After 13 long wenry months of imprisonment at Giessen. Germany 1\nwas successful in passing tlie medical\nexamination as sufficiently sick -for\ninternment iu Switzerland, and with\nli) other comrades was on May 2ft\nshipped to Konstanz, lho southern ex\nchange station for further examination,\n\"Three other Cunudians wero in the\nparty, George Fltz of my own battalion and F Hark Ins and T. Gamey\nof the 3rd battalion, Toronto regiment.\nTbo other 15 belonged lo different\nEnglish and Irish organizations. We\nlearned from French nnd Belgian prisoners at Konstanz that tho medical\ntest for those sick and not wounded\nwas rigid and it was amusing as well\nas pathetic to watch the antics of the\npoor devils who were afraid of not\npassing and being shipped back to\nenjoy further hospitality of tho *Kul-\ntured Huns.'\nCatch Cold to Get Free.\n\"Men who were down for bronchial\ntrouble, Jay uncovered all night in\nbunks near open windows, so as to\npurposely catch more cold and better\ntheir chance of getting away. Some\nwith heart trouble stopped eating,\nwent through violent exercise and\nloiible timed around tho camp ground\nholding their breath, while others with\nnervous complaints bought and swallowed quarts of black tea and smoked\nand inhaled tobacco and strong cig-\narettes, from morning until night that\nthey would aggravate their sickness\nand be with the chosen few.\nSmall parties arrived from all the\ndifferent English prison camps until\nour number increased to about COO\nmen and 50 officers. Tiio latter consisted of colonels, majors, captains and\nlieutenants badly battered up, mostly\nall on crutches, many without arms\nor legs, ono officer minus both.\n65 Are Rejected.\n\"On May 27 one half wero brought\nto the main lazaretto and their fate\ndecided. A. German officer examined\nfirst and if not satisfied sent you to\ntho Swiss officers, who if of: thc samo\nmind sent you to n, German specialist\nwho in turn sent you to a German and\nSwiss officer for final decision. That\nnight three officers and 62 men were\nhustled out of camp 'rejected.' Back\nto the observation hospitals from\nwhero they would ho given another\nopportunity to try and run the Konstanz 'blockade' again on July 15.\n\"They wero, us you can well imagine\nthe most dejected, sorrowful, forlorn\nand disappointed bunch of unfortunates, I ever saw. Many faces wore\nblanched and tears wero shed over\ntheir sad lot from both sides and we\nhoped and prayed for better luck next\nday. At 9 next morning the remaining\ninvalids were put through and 12 men\nwere rejected, one of them, my friend\nGeorge Fitz of tho 7th from Grand\nForks.\n\"On May 30 the fortunate ones wero\nparaded under a heavy guard and\nmarched to the railway station at\nKonstanz where we wero loaded on a\n\u25a0Swiss Red Cross train in charge of\nRed Cross soldiers and nurses and after a delay of somo two hours, during\nwhich the German guards hung to us\nlike lice, we were at last on our way\ntoward God's country, friends and\npeace.\nSwiss Cheer British Soldiers.\n\"A large crowd of Germans watched\nour departure with black looks of\nscorn, but we bad hardly crossed the\nfrontier, less than a mile away, when\nwo noticed a vast difference. It would\ntake too much time and space to tell\nyou all about it, but should anyone\ntell you that the Swiss peoplo are not\nwith the allies heart, soul and pocket\nbook, please say to them that they\nlie. At every station large crowds\ncheered us and threw flowers, candy\ntobacco, cigarettes, fruit, newspapers,\nperiodicals and every tilling Imaginable\nlor our comfort into the car windows.\nAt tlie first large city of Zurich thousands met us, bands played \"God Save\ntbo King,\" \"Tommy Atkins,\" and other\nairs wo had not heard for over a year\naud when we pulled out we actually\nwaded in flowers, flags, pillows and\ngood thingH to eat. At Berne we wero\npulled, dragged and carried off tho\ntrain into a splendid hotel for midnight\nsupper and women und young ladies\ncried over and petted us and fed us\nuntil we thought it was a new laid\nplot of Kaiser Bill to actually kill us\nwith kindness, lt was thc samo thing\nduring the night to Montreux where\nwe changed cars to tho electric lino to\ncomo up tiio Alps. We were taken to\ntho Grand hotel, ono of thc finest and\nhighest priced in the land.   Boy Scouts\nand   young  ladies  would  not  let  us\ncarry even a newspaper.\n\"Thousands of roses were Btrcwn\nbefore us, speeches were mado by English, American and Swiss consuls and\nI noticed many a big fellow who went\nthrough Ypres and St. Julian without\na whimper break down and cry like a\nbaby. Truthfully I could not see a\ndry eyo in all tho vast crowd.\n\"After a three hour ride on the electric we arrived hero ut Chateau d'Oex\nwhere the same thing had to be done\nall over again. A colonel from staff\nheadquarters in London stood on the\nstation steps and as he noticed his\nEnglish soldiers unloading with\ncrutches, some on stretchers and others\nwith their prison clothes streaked with\nred and yellow paint, the tears came\nto his eyes.\n\"We are all now nicely settled In hotels or pensions as they* are called\nhore, getting good treatment and food\nand all fervently thankful for our de\nliverence. I occupy a nice front room\nwith my friend Hark ins and another\ngood old Irish lad from the Royal\nIrish regiment, named Jack A'bobt of\nWatcrfbrd, Ireland, who was captured\nat Moris 22 months ago. As I sit near\ntha window writing this letter I can\ngaze up to the top of MontCray, 7000\nfeet higher, whicli is covered with\nsnow whllo down here\u2014and we aro at\na high elevation\u2014all is sunshine and\nflowers.\n\"Thero aro many wives and relatives of tiie officers here already and\nit Is supposed hundreds more will arrive in a month's time. Cards are being issued which are to be filled out\nand sent homo that wives and relatives may visit us at half rale fare for\nthe round trip.\n\"\u2022Please extend my warmest regards\nto all my friends iu and around good\nold Nelson. Tell them 1 would like to\nhear from them at my new address.\n\"Thomas Lyons, interned British\nprisoner ol! war, Pension de la Ohan-\neau, Chateau d'lOex, Canton de Vaud,\nSwitzerland,\" ,\nCalgary\nBeer\nEXPORT\nBUFFALO BRAND\nLAGER\nDISTRIBUTORS\nNelson Wine\nSpirit Co.\nNELSON, B. C.\nand\n^s more\ni       bread\nand better bread\"\nPURITY FLOUR\nThe Brackman-Ker Milling Co., Limited, Agents\nCream of Sage and Sulphur\nUN EQUALLED POR RESTORING,  STRENGTHENING AND BEAUTIFYING THE HAIR, RENDERING IT\nSOFT, SILKY AND GLOSSY AND DISPOSING   IT  TO   REMAIN  IN ANY  DESIRED  POSITION\nIT  IS NOT   A DYE '     ,\nBut It Stimulate, tha Hair Follicles 80 That tha Natural Coloring Prineiple of tho Hair It Readily Restored.\nPRICE 50c   PER   BOTTLE\nSOLD  ONLY   BY\nP.O.   BOX   1083\nCity Drug Company\nNELSON,   B. C.\nMAIL   ORDERS   PROMPTLY   DESPATCHED\nPHONE  34\nSpecialist\nR. L. DOUGLAS\nThe Graduate Optician and\nOptometrist.\nRegistered by a Provincial Board of\nExaminers in Optometry.\nRoom 18, K. W. C. Block\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co.,Ltd.\nWHOLESALE   AND   RETAIL\nNELSON, B. a\nFOR ALL PEOPLE. FOR ALL TIMES AND FOR ALL PURPOSES\nDaily News Display Ads\nST. PAUL'S CHURCH?\nHONORS SOLDERS\nHonor   Roll  Containing  Names  of 81\n-*Members of Congregation Unveiled\nYesterday Morning,\nSt. Paul's Presbyterian church was\nthe scene of an impressive ceremony\nyesterday morning when the honor roll\ncontaining tho names of 81 men of the\ncongregation, who have enlisted for\nuverseas service, was unveiled,\nSeveral special features marked the\nservice, which included the singing of\nthe national anthem and \"Oh Canada\"\nby tho congregation and the reading\nof special scriptural passages appropriate to thc occasion. The choir rendered ia program of special music ano.\nMiss Ruth Manhart sang \"Grant Uo\nThy Peace, Oh Lord.\"\nThere was a large voluntary turnout\nof the members of the Nelson company\nof the 226th Kootenay battalion and\nthe address was delivered by Judge\nForin who wore the uniform of his\nrank as a captain in tho Canadian\nmilitia.\nThe judge spoke feelingly of the\nmany young men of the church, some\nof whom he had watched grow up\nfrom, birth in his 20 years connection\nwith St. Paul's, who had left their\nhomes and loved ones.to take up the\nstruggle against the tyranny of German\nmilitarism. He referred to Lieut.\nKenneth Weir, whose death was recently reported in casualty lists. Lieut.\nWeir, he said, had gone to the front\nus a ranker and had won for himself,\nnot only a commission, tho distinguished conduct medal and the military\ncrows, but what was of infinitely\ngreater value, a record of duty well\ndone, honor proudly borne and gallant\nservice in the cause of right and justice that would ever live in the hearts\nand memories of those who knew him.\nThe church itself, he said, might\nwell be proud and bow its head in\nloving reverence to tho memory of the\nlives of its young men that had ibeen\nlaid down in tne struggle and lift\nits hands In prayer for the protection\nand care of those of its sons who were\nnow in tho trenches or preparing to\ntake their places there, Britain, he\ndeclared, was engaged with the allies\nIn a holy war, the outcome of which\nwould mean much to thc future of\nChristianity and the upbuilding of national freedom of service in the work\nof God. Tho men whose names had\nbeen enrolled, hud entered the struggle as representatives of tho great\nprinciples for which the church stood,\nand it was for the purpose of doing\nhonor to their names that the roll had\nbeen prepared.\nTho honor roll hangs on the south\nwall of St. Paul's Presbyterian church\nand consists of a framed parchment\ncontaining the names of '81 men of thc\ncongregation who have enlisted for active service, with space left for tho addition of the names of others who may\nyet join the colors.    At the beginning\nof the service it was covered by the\nUnion .luck and the Canadian ensign,\nthese were drawn aside disclosing it\nto the view of the congregation.   Thc\nnames of the men recorded are as follows:\nAlmond, E. A.\nArthur, Dr. E. C.\nAnderson, R.\nArmstrong, \"W. H.\nBarbour, T. F,\nSlabs      Wood      Slabs\nWe have just ooncluded arrangements whereby we control the\nslab output of the local sawmill. We would be glad to quote\nprices to large users of slabs to be delivered direct from the saw.\nWe are also in a position to deliver small lots of either four-foot\ner sixteen-inch slabs.\nKootenay Columbia Fuel Co.\nChas. F, MoHardy, Agent,\nBroughton, F. W.\nBrown, A. G.\nBrown, C. E.\nBrown, C. E. Jr.\nBrown, Gwynne.\nCampbell, Murdo.\nCarfrae, W.\nCarrie, Wilfred,\nCi'oy, W.\nCfiiiokshanks, Ii.\nCurran,  W.  A.\nDanielson, D.\nDingwall, A.\nDill,  A. W.\nDonaldson, J. H.\nGllison, Gordon.\nGill's, J. M.\nHalllday, R.\nHansen, T.\nHull, W.\nIngram, J. A.\nKeatlcy, G. B.\nLaughton, W. M.\nLundic, .lames,\nT.imdic, Joseph.\nLunate,  Bobert.\nMaeAndrew, ,T. N.\nMaclnnes, C. G. G.\nMacVicar, Donald.\nMaeVlcar, W. J.\nMcAlman, D.\nMcDonald, T.\nMcDonald, S. J.\nMacintosh, W. M.\nMcintosh, W. P.\nMclntyre, M.\nMcKay, G. C.\nMcNaughton, P. D.\nMcQuarrie, D. A.\nMcTavish, R.\nMlddleton, Hugh.\nMlddleton, T.\nMitchell, 3. T.\nOliver, W. .1. G.\nOgllvle, W. D .\nNigg, A. B.\nPaterson. George.\nPeters, Earl.\nPeters, D. A.\nPeek, H. R.\nPhillips, G.\nPrice, D.\nRees, G. S.\nReid, W. E.\nReid, W.\nRobinson, Harry.\nScott, A.\nSmith, F. Warner.\nSmith, Stewart,\nSpeirs, A.\nSteele, C. W.\nStobo, E. P..\nSutherland. J. Bruce.\nSutherland, W.\nThompson, J.\nThompson, J. B.\nThompson, M,\nWaldln, J.\nWaldie, J. C.\nWaldie, W.\nWilson, J. H.\nWilson, W. F.\nWoods, A.\nWooler, A. D.\nWeir, Kenneth.\nYoung, William.\nFor Rent\n3-room suite offices, Aberdeen\nblock    .$25\nSmall stores, Baker st, $20 to $50\n7-room house, Rosemont $20\n6-room house, Fairview $20\nFew small houses ...$10 to $18\nInsurance\nIN ALL ITS BRANCHES.\nWE WRITE\nMotor boats (marine policy).\nAutomobiles against fire liability,\nthe fire policies in best companies.\nAccident and Life policies are\nmost liberal on market and In\nstrong -companies.\nGET   OUR    RATES.\nMcQuarrie and\nRobertson\nWard Street, Nelson, B. C.\nBranch Office, Bay Ave, Trail, B. C,\nMatinee    at 2:30\nEvening-7 to 10:30\nNary Pickford\n\"THE   IDOL   OP   MILLIONS\n\u2014IN\u2014\n\"A GOOD LITTLE DEVIL.\"\nFamous   Players\u2014Four Parts.\nSELECTED    COMEDY.\nGREECE FORMALLY ACCEPTS\nDEMANDS OF THE ALLIES\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nPARIS, June 24.\u2014Tho entente\npowers have been formally notified by\nthe Greek government of its compliance with their demands. Premier\nZamis, says a Havns despatch from\nAthens today, has delivered a note to\nrepresentatives of tho entente allies\nciting' the terms of thc ultimatum and\nconcludes:\n\"Tho Greek government, taking account of their final declaration hereby\nagrees to execute integrally thc foregoing demands.\"\nAN\nILLUSTRATED\n\" ADDRESS\nON\nBible Society Work in ,,\nJAPAN, MANCHURIA AND\nSIBERIA.\nWill bo Given by\nREV. J. KNOX WRIGHT. D.D.,\nSecretary of the B. C.\n. '       Auxiliary, on\nMONDAY EVENING, JUNE 26\nat 8 o'clock, in\nST.   PAUL'S   PRESBYTERIAN\nCHURCH.\nSilver Collection.   All are Invited.\nTURK OFFENSIVE NEAR\nTREBIZOND REPULSED\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nPETROGRAD, June   26.4-The   following official  statement was issued\ntonight:\n\"An enemy aerial squadron threw\nbombs on Roudnya and Potchaievska,\n\"Caucasus front: In tho Trebizond\nsector In the region of M ado ur tire t\nTepf, the Turks at dawn on Thursday\ntook the offonsive, which our advance\nguard repulsed with heavy enemy*!\nlooses, many prisoners being left in\nour hands. Our aeroplanes successfully bombarded Mumukhatttm.\"\nSIR MACKENZIE BOWELL\nLEAVES FOR THE COAST\nSenator and His Party Make Trip to\nWest Robson in W. O. Miller's\nPrivate  Car Saturday.\nSir Mackenzie Bowell and his party\nconsisting of Senator Harry Corby, J.\nV. Jenkins and Charles J. Bowell, left\nfor the coast Saturday morning by the\nway of West Robson and Arrowhead.\nThe visitors were taken as far as\nWest Robson in W. O*. Miller's private\ncar and were accompanied by Mr. Miller and Robb Sutherland, During the\ntrip Sir Mackenzie expressed himself\nas charmed with the scenery along the\nrouto and referred humorously to the\nlast time he made the journey between\nNelson and West Robson 16 years ago.\nOn that occasion, he said, the trip had\nbeen made on ponies over the old trail.\nSOCIETY  ISLANDS\nNOW HAVE WIRELESS\nThe Society Islands, far away in the\nSouth Seas, now havo wireless com\nmunlcatlon with the outer world, a\nradio station having boen opened by\nthe French government on the island\no fTahitl last winter. Communication\nwith tho United States will be via\nSamoa and New Zealand, and thence\nby cable to San Francisco, It is expected that the cost of messages to\nthe United States will exceed $1.00 a\nword. Later on it is hoped to reduce\nthis moro than half toy sending the\nmessages over an all-wireless route.\nThe Women's Missionary society of\nthe Presbyterian church will meet tills\nafternoon at 3:30 o'clock.\nFarewell\nConcert\nin aid of C. Co. Fund by the\nmembers of C Co., 225th Bat.,\nC. E. F.\nTuesday, June 27\n8:30 P.M.\nIN\nGem Theatre\nTeaching recruit squad, Rifle\nexercise by picked squad, Bayonet Display, Camp Scenes,\nSongs and Moving Pictures,\nBand and Orchestra in Attendance\nADMISSION   25c. COME\nCOME ALL.\nONE,\nIf your bueineea it not worth advertl********\nIng, then advertise tt for tale.\n*-***** ***************\nr\nTHE   WEATHER\n1\nMin.   Max.\nNelson     60\nVictoria    62\nVancouver   68\nCalgary  46\nMoose Jaw  .'  46\nRegina >\u2022  45\nWinnipeg     50\nToronto  58\nOttawa  02\nMontreal   00\n70\n58\n00\n72\nPHONE   135\nGREEN   BLOCK\nThere will be a meeting of. the executive of the Nelson Imin-ovomont association in thu city hall at 8 o'clock\n'onlS'i.l,\nFit-Reform\nBlue Ser\nTHERE'S NEVER BEEN A MORE POPULAR SHADE OR\nFABRIC THAN BLUE  SERGE FOR SUMMER WEAR.      v       *\"*\"'\nAND THERE'S NEVER BEEN A BLUE SERGE TO WEAR AND\nHOLD ITS COLOR LIKE FIT-REFORM BLUE SERGE.\nWc have been selling these Suits, season after season\u2014and .year\nafter year\u2014with every satisfaction to our customers,\nIf you want a Blue Serge Suit that will look well and wear well,\nlet tis show you some of the new summer styles in Fit-Reform Blue\nSerge. \t\nEmory & Walley\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_1916_06_26","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\/1.0386871","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":"1916-06-26 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":"1916-06-26 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":""}]}