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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":" mmmmmW'\n-msuWr-m\n\u00ab\u25a0.,\u00bb. i   in in.\ny$Mm* vm*t^*^Jm*i**i-*p \u25a0\neulatjin ef any dally rwtt.tt.fr In\nCanada In proportion t\u00ab, tJ\u00bbpopulati\u00abn\nof ;,lta, *iom. town.      \u25a0- '     \\\ni*Jj\u00ab+i.*...~.ii...^r.......\n\u2022    -. \u2022\u25a0   \u2022- i. \u2022-\u201e..:-\n\u00aefe\nP-e^ C&pi\n5#\nTh. only piper in the Interior 1\u00ab **'\n\u00abr!ti.h   Columbia  o.rrying 'ft.  f\u00abf\naarvlo. of ih. Western Aseooiated Prm\nover its own Land wire.\nrOL. 15   No. 48\nNELSON, B. C, MONDAY MORNING, JUNE 5, 19*16\nSOo. PER MONTH\nSAUENT SCENE OF\nII!\npnadians Dislodge Enemy\n.from Ground Won\nINFLICT RAGES OVER\ntONT Of TWO MILES\nforts of Huns to Pierce\nI French Lines at Vaux\nSet at Naught\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nI-.ONDON, June 4.\u2014The Canadians\nGermans    have    boen    battling\n\u25a0ccly on the   Ypres   salient.     The\nan guns opened up several days\n[\u00bb, .deluging the Canadian positions\nthe  surrounding  territory   with\ntils.    Then   the   German   infantry\nlanced along an extended front of,\nbOBt two miles, capturing trenches.\nfa  series, of   counter-attacks,   in\n|ch bombs 'and bayonets played an\nortant part, the Canadians regain-\nnost of the lost ground and have\nanized their positions.\nlhe region of VaUx and Damloup,\nftheost of Verdun,   has   been   the'\nhe of further attempts of Germans\npierce the first lines.   All the at-\np were   set   at   naught   by   the\nnoh fire   at Damloups   and   Fort\nbx, where the Germans obtained a\nkhold  In French  trenches.    From\nfee, however, they Were immediately\nfen out by a counter-attack.\nBritlah Statement\nthe. British official statement, Is-\np%t mlMsufr'riMti*- &>**&>+ !\nFighting of a serious nature, con-\nlied unceasingly south of Ypres, be-\nfen Hooge and the Ypres-Menin\nIway. Following their initial ad-\nItage obtained yesterday in pene-\nl.lng our forward line in this neigh-\n|iood, this Germans.pushed their at-\ndurlng the night and succeeded\nbushing through our defenses to a\nfh of 700 yards in the direction of\npbeko.\nThe Canadian troops, however, who\n| holding this sector of the defenses,\npched counter-attacks at 7 o'clock\n{morning, which have succeeded in\nDually driving the enemy from\n|h of the ground he had gained.\nCanadians behaved with the ut-\nIt gallantry, counter-attacking scc-\nIfully after heavy and continued\npbardment.\nThe enemy losses were severe.   A\nnumber of German dead1 were\nJndoned on the recaptured ground.\nferals Mercer and Williams of the\nI Canadian division, who were In-\nptiftg the front trenches yesterday\njlng tbe bombardment are missing.\nosite the line near Fryocourt, north\nlie river Somme, a small party of a\n\u25a0ment railed the German lines last\n|it, bringing back a few prisoners.\nparty had a sharp engagement\nthe enemy in a German trench\nJ suffered some casualties, but suc-\nued In bombing some German dug-\nBouthwest of Angres last night our\nly entered a German trench, dieted of the garrison above ground\n1 bombed five dugouts before retir-\nj without loss.\ntoday there has been artillery ac4\nly about the Loos salient. Yester-\nI our aeroplanes accomplished much\npessful work.\"\n. squadron of 26 of our aeroplanes\nIbed some points of military im-\nlance. Considerable damage is be-\njed to havo been done. Ono of our\njghines was brought down in the\nny lines by gunfire; the remainder\nJJrned safely.   Tho hostile aircraft\n) been inactive.\n.st night thero was increased ac-\nly along the whole of our front,\nnth of Fricourt, after a heavy bom-\njlment. a party of 200 Germans at-\nQfed our trenches, out were driven\nWith  considerable  loss  by  our\nUory and machine guns.\nKorth of, the rlVcr Ancre, about\nH'o, two small'parties of our troops\nREAR ADMIRAL AR8UTHN0T\nVICTIM MfNAVAL BATTLE\nLONDON, June 4.\u2014Among the\nvictims of the tea fight were Rear\nAdmiral Sir Robert K. Arbuthnot\nef the cruiser Defense and Midshipman Scott, eldest son of Rear\nAdmiral Sir Parey Scott, tha former commander of the aerial defense of London. Midshipman\nScott was 16 years old and was on .\nthe Defense.\nentered German trenches and killed\nsome of the occupants. They returned with slight losses. At Monchy-au-\nBois and Neuvilje St. Vaast two more\nparties of our troops broke into the\nenemy's lines causing him losses and\nreturned with prisoners. Our artillery effectively Supported all these enterprises. The enemy exploded a mine\nat Fricourt and four near Hulloch,\ncausing no  serious  damage.\n\"Today the enemy hastily bombarded our trenches to the northeast and\nalso about Souchez and* Loos. Our\nartillery engaged hostile batteries\nsouth of Lens and east of Arras.\n\"The situation around Ypres has not\nmaterially altered. There have been\nartillery bombardments and our troops\nrotaln the ground, regained In other\ncounter-attacks yesterday. No fresh\nattacks have been undertaken by us.\"\nFighting at Vaux\nPARIS, July 4.\u2014Several attempts\nmade by the Germans last night and\nthis morning to turn the French positions at Fort Vaux on the Verdun\nfront from the southeast were unsuccessful, the war office announced this\nafternoon. The night attacks resulted\nin their gaining a foothold in the\nFrench trenches in the ravine between\nDamloup and Fort Vaux, but they\nwere Immediately driven out by a\ncounter attack. The assault this\nmorning Was checked by the French'\ncurtain of fire.\nFrench Statement\nThe following official communication was issued tonight:\n\"In the Argonne an enemy attempt\n4igajjnst otic sniall P\u00b0sts at Ia',i Courtes^\n^hausses* was1 repuTsott*.'.'   .\" ,\"\n\"On the left bank of the Meuse the\nartillery activity, became intense during the course of the day in the region\nof. Hill 304. ' Preparations for an attack reported in the German trenches\n\u2022were stopped by our barrier fire,\n\"On the right bank the enemy continued to bombard our positions in-the\nregion of Vaux and Damloup, and with\nparticular violence at Fort Vaux.\n\"A German attack against tho\nslopes of the Bois Fumin, northwest\nof the fort, was arrested by our machine gun fire. Our heavy artillery\ngreatly damaged three German batteries in tho Caures wood. We took\nunder the fire of our guns and dispersed enemy concentrations in' the\nCaillette wood.\n\"Today at noon a group of German\naeroplanes dropped several bombs oh\nToul. Six persons were klllod and\nabout 10 were wounded. Tho material\ndamage was of slight importance. No\nmilitary establishment was struck.\n\"A pursuit squadron from Toul took\ntho air. immediately and vigorously\npursued tho enemy aeroplanes, one of,\nwhich was brought down in our lines\nat Saricey, 12 kilometres north of Toul.\nTwo other enemy aeroplanes struck\ndescended abruptly into tbo enemy\nlines.\"\nBelgian Communication\n\"Spirited action by the artillery of\nboth sides occurred in tho region of\nDixmude. Thero was the usual bombardment at various points.\"\nSecond  French Statement\nThe second official communication\nissued tonight by the war office says:\n\"On the right bank of the Mouse artillery action continued with great\nviolence on tho front extending from\nthe Thiamont farm to Vaux.\n\"In the Fort Vaux region the enemy\nmado no attempt to develop the advantage which he had' obtained last\nnight.\n\"On the loft bank the bombardment\ncontinued against our second line. The,\nday was calm on the rest of the front.1\n\"The \" situation from May 28 to.\nJune 3\u2014the struggle on tho front\nnorth of Verdun continued with ex-;\ntreme violence all week. On the left\nbank of the Mouse, in a series of uninterrupted engagements from May 28\nto 30, the Germans progressed between\nLe Mort Homme and Cumieres and\noccupied    the   Caurettes   wood    and\n{Continued on Page Four.)\n\\LLIES HAVE TAKEN OVER\nGOVERNMENT IN SALONIKI\n|(By Dally News Leased Wire.) '\nTENDON, June 4;\u2014The entente al-\n1 have occupied the telegraph offi and port and customs houso at\ntnikl, says a. Router despatch from\n1 city. At the same time they have\n|n extensive precautionary meas-\n! about the town to prevent posit opposition,\n|ie commanders of the gendarmes\nj the, police havo toeen relieved of\nEr duties, the despatch says ahd\nftial law has been declared.\nPeople Favor Move.\n\\RiS, June 4.\u2014A despatch from Sa-\nkl saws the proclamation of Gen.\n|rail of martial law in the entire\noccupied by the entente allies,\n'ep taken as a result of the occupa-\n'.of,Fort. Rupel by Bulgarian and!\nnitlt trptyB, ftim been favorably re\nceived by the population. The crowds\nmanifested their friendly sentiments\n(by shouting \"Long Live the Allies.\"\nLIBERAL   MAJORITY   INCREASED\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nQUEBEC, Juno 4.\u2014According to the\nreports received here, the deferred\nelection in.the county of Gaspe for the\nlegislature, added another member to\nthe Liberal  majority.       >\nDr. Gustavo Lemieux, brother of\nHon, Rodolphe Lemieux, was reelected by a majority of 1500. This makes\nthe present standing in the legislature\nas:. Liberals, 74; Conservatives, 6;\nWith one deferred election in the Magdalene Islands, the constituency of\nHon. J. B, Caron, minister of agrioul\ntunes\n17 REPORTED DEAD\n0N.GAWY LIST\nTwo Ar. Given A. Pri.on.r. af W.r\nTwo Stated to B. Ill and Total\nof Fifty Aro Wounded\n(By Dally News Leaned Wire.)\nOTTAWA, Juno 5.\u2014Two casualty\nlists were issued by the department of\nmilitia yesterday, the first In the\nafternoon containing- '72 resorts and\nthe second, at midnight, containing-\n63.: Of these 20 were killed in action,\n12 died of wounds, three died of illness, five are seriously ill and one\ndangerously 111, one prisoner of war,\none previously reported missing now\nreported officially dead, ono previously\nreported missing now officially prisoner of war, one previously reported\naccording to Gorman Hat now officially reported dead, one previously reported now officially reported prisoner\nof war and 80 wounded.\nIn the midnight list Lieut.-Col. Arthur William Tanner of lYtbosomln,\nSask,, Is reported as seriously wounded, and Capt. Prances E. Marfclll, with'\nnext of kin In South America, is also\nroportcd as wounded.\nINFANTRY.\nKilled in Aotion.\nLance-Corp. R. C. Hill, 24842, kin aL\nQuebec.\nClayton Pickoll, 412,116, kin at Belle,\nvllle, Ont.\nAlexander Adams, 40087-1, England.\nCorp. Hcrbort Clark, 477173, England.\nHarry GUI, A36117, England.\nEdward Pyne, 18078, South Wales.\nErnest Sharp, 401020, England.\nCorp. John Stacey, 10971, England.\nLieut. W. D. StevenB, England.\nHenry Young, 81518, Scotland.\nDied of Wounds.\nJ. A-. Scott, 141780, kin at Colllngwood, Ont.\nJohn Watson, 14310, kin at Montreal.\nWilliam Attefield, A4009, England.\nGeorge Smith, 477836, England.\nCorp. A. S. Clark, 421029, Scotland.\nPercy Hodgklns, 126237, England.\nPreviously   Reported   Wounded   and\nMissing, .Now  Reported  Officially\nDead, April 6.\n\"\u25a0fairy Kubery, 424419, England.\nPr.vlou.ly Reported Mining, Now Officially Prisoner of War at Res\nLaterett, Marchlif Aschen.\nM. G. Hill, 76101, kin at Vancouver.\nSeriously 'III.        \\\nH. G. Grigs, 126005, kin at Woodstock, Ont.\nThomas Pcisn, 603197, England.\nPrisoner of War at Hanover.\nH. H. Rainc, 460300, kin at Maple\nCreek, Sask.\nWounded.\nAlexander Boll, 153665, Scotland.\nW. J. Bore, 1*770, England.\nJack Caton, 460673, England.\nAlex Cochrane, A175, Scotland .\nJohn Dytor, 439615, Scotland.\nAlexander Forbes, A30456, Scotland.\nWilliam Gl-ant, 42116, Scotland.\nH. E. Gudgeon,  59406, England.\nSergt. W. H. Lawson, 404399, Scotland,\nJames McMcnemy, 405352, Ireland.\nH. 13. Thompson, 155045, England.\n-Robert Barrowman, A20484, kin at\nMontreal.\nMajor John W. Allan, kin at Winnipeg.\nE. E. BonutUlior, A14313, kin at\nSpring Hill, iN. S.\nL. M. Brady, 153886, .kin at Lancaster, Ont.\nAlex Campbell, 140513, kin at Toronto.\nR. W. Cook, 153822, kin at Regina,\nSask,,\nCharles Cox, 408051, kin at Halifax,\niN. S.\nJ. II. Daly, 622010, kin at Winnipeg.\nCorp. O. A. Donovan, 65278, kin at\nQuebec. . '\nFred Farrell, 458258, kin at Quebec.\nAlex Fonton, 453025, kin at Slmcoe,\nOnt.\n-Wilfred Fox, 450413, kin at Lamblon,\nOnt.\nAlex Gauthlex, 417859, Itln at Quebec.\nW. Grogolre, 472276, kin at Quobcc.\nE. B. Gregough, 65892, kin at Montreal.\nRobert Harland, 424478, kin at Mooso\nPark, Man.\nS. James, 430307, kin nt Morrlasoy,\nB. C. .\nPlonoer \u00ab. Laborgc, 410300, kin at\nMontreal,\nG. Larbcho,  417866', kin at Quebec.\nMelvln Lucas, 18214, kin at Edmonton. \/\n\u25a0F. 3. May, 430250, kin at Wynndel,\nB. C\nCapt. G. G. Mitchell, kin at Toronto.\nW. T. Sandllands, 78000, kin at Ashcroft, B. C.\nWilliam Still, 136582, kin at Toronto.-'\nC. E. Swanoll, 28680, kin at Ol-ange-\nvllle, Utah.\nW, R. Thompson, A40264, kin at\nSouthoy. Sask.\nD. C. Campbell, 153613,-kin-at Winnipeg. '   '\nBNGINpERS.\nWounded.\nCorp. Norman Dent, 5652, kin at Toronto.\nLance Corp. Daniel McGregor, 77166,\nkin at New Hampshire, .U. S. A.\nSapper William Wilson, 508396, kin\nin England.\nMOUNTED RIFLES.\n.Wounded.\nAlfred Neighbor, 144489, Englund,\nF. W. Atkinson, 110018, kin at Montreal.\nA. 3. Briggs, 117105, kin at Vancouver. . ,\nCorp. G. H. Hutchinson 111247, kin\nat. Lockliartville, N. S.\nJ. F. MalUday, 423178, kin at Quebec.\nIANS BEAR\nOf BATTLE\nFight at Hill 60 Fiercest\nIhey Have Had\nHOLD ENTIRE FRONT\nResponded to Test Coolly\n\u2014inflicted Heavy Loss\non Enemy\nifiviiUflwrf on EM^Xxs*!\n(By Daily News Leased Wiro.)\nBBITISH -HEADQUARTERS -IN\nFRANCE, Saturday, June 3, via London, June 4.\u2014Around famous Hill 60\nand Sanctuary Wood the Canadians\nhavo boen doing the stiffest fighting\nof their experience in the course of\ntho last two days' action. They have\nheld the entire front attack and unless the fighting spreads this is entirely their battle.\nThe Germans had been relatively\nquiet for somo days, when they suddenly opened up the heaviest bom-\n\u25a0bardment the Canadian veterans have\nknown, using all kinds of guns from\nheavy howitzers to trench mortars,\nnot only battering the trenches, but\ncovering a wide area of ground In tbe\nrear to prevent the bringing up of\nsupports.\nBut It was not this time as in the\nearlier battles of .the Ypres salient,\nwIimv tho Germans threw three or four\nshells to our one, said an officer. Tbe\nBritish returned shell for shell on the\nGermans after they-v were In our\ntrenches.\nUnder support.j-tf gunfire tho Canadian battalions,, fhalhtalhlhg' file tradition of the first contingent last year\nat St. Julien, Immediately turned on\nthe Germans In a series of counterattacks They fought throughout the\nnight ' and were engaged all day\nSaturday, doggedly bombing their way\n\u2022back to tho positions which they had\nlost. The party rushed in at different points, bombing, and bayoneting\nright and left, and before their fierce\nwor'c was ended they had regained all\nbut a few yars.\nAdvance Over Wide Front.\nTho Gorman advanco had been made\nover a front of 3,000 yards, from tho\nYpres-Comlnes railway to Hooge\nPoint.. This was tho most extensive\nof any recent front attack. The Canadians responded to the test coolly\nand skillfully. In the Hoogo sector the\n.Germans wero stopped with Heavy\nlosses,\nThe porplcxity over the first news\nof the battle between tho British and\nGerman fleets has been succeeded by\nsatisfaction as fuller accounts are received.\nOttawa Awaits Report\nOTTAWA, Juno G.\u2014Up to a lato\nhour tonight tho militia department\nwas without information,on the latest\nbattle of Ypres, in which the Canadians again 'bore the brunt of the German onslaught. Major-Gon. Hughes\nwas expecting a special report of the\nbattle of Friday and Saturday, but this\nhas not been received up till midnight\nand tho department is dependent on\npress dispatches for Its information.\nBrig.-Gen. Williams' brigade, in tho\nthird division, is made up of troops\nfrom Montreal, Halifax, Toronto, Ottawa and a number of western districts, and is composed of Mounted\nRiflo regiments, who volunteered for\nservice as infantrymen.\nThe department has no Indication of\nthe casualties, but they will likely bo\nheavy, as counter attacks have generally beon costly in warfare as carried on  In France.\nApparently the brigade most heavily\nengaged was that of Gen. Victor Williams. It consisted of two regiments\nof the Canadian Mounted Rifles, tho\nPrincess Patricias and the Royal Canadian regiment. Tho other battalions\nof the division which seemod to have\nescaped the brunt of the attack include tho 42nd and 60th Montreal battalions, the 49th Edmonton battalion,\nthe CSth St. Catharines battalion,and\ntho 46th and 62nd Port Arthur battalions. Brig.-Gen. Victor Williams,\nreported missing, has toeen at the front\nIn command of a brigade since tho\nend of February. He was promoted to\nbe brigadier-general some four months\nago. His wife, who Is a daughter of\nHugh Sutherland of Winnipeg, is now\nin England.\nTho front held by the third division\nextended for about four or six milos\nalong the north front of the arc held\nby the Canadians.\nGeneral Mercer, D. S. O., and General Williams, who are reported\nwounded at a Boulogne hospital, left\nCanada In command of the Queen's\nOwn regiment of Toronto. They are\nconsidered among the ablest officers\non the Canadian front. General Mercer Is a lawyer by profession, (but has\nmade soldiering a life hobby.- He was\nmade brigadier-general and placed in\ncommand of the corps troops when\nthe StraLhconas and Royal Canadian\ndragoons went to France. Later, when\na division was .formed including these\nund the Princess Pats and Royal Canadian regiment,' he became a, major general arid took charge <?f Ofe division,\nIN GREAT NAVAL BATTLE\nINDICATED IN EARLIER STATEMENT\nRUMORED IN CHICAGO\nT. R. MAY NOT BE NAMED\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nCHICAGO, June 4.\u2014For tome\nunknown reason, for which no explanation is offered, there is a\ngrowing conviction tonight among\nboth Republican and Progressive\nleaders assembled here for the na-\n\u25a0 tional convention, that Col. Roosevelt will not be nominated by the\nolder party. Among those who\nhold this view are many numbered among the colonel's closest\nfriends, who none the less, are not\ngiving up the fight.\nPRAISE GREEN'S WORK\nFOR SCENIC HIGHWAY\nTribute Paid by  Minister in Connection   With   Transfer  of   Banff-\nWindermere Road to Dominion\n(By Staff Correspondent.)\nPRESS GALLERY, Victoria, B. C.,\nJune 4.\u2014A tribute to R. F. Green, M.P.,\nfor bis work in connection with the\ntransfer of the Banff-Windermere\nhighway to the Dominion government\nwas paid by Hon. Thomas Taylor,\nminister of public works, who has\ntaken a deep interest In the project\nfrom Its inception.\nThe province has expended $202,000\non this road, which when completed\nwill be one of the finest scenic highways on the continent and which will\nopen tho Columbia vailoy and Koote-\nnay-Boundary generally to automobile\ntraffic from Alberta and the great\ntourist hotels of the Canadian Pacific\nrailway. The Conadian Pacific has\ncontributed $75,000 to the cost of the\nroad to date. About 40 of the GO miles\nrenis^'t-to uo completed and the provincial .government, aided by Mr.\nGreen in its negotiations with the Dominion, has arranged for the completion of the highway by the federal authorities. In return the province deeds\nto tho Dominion a tract of scenic\ncountry fK'o miles In width on each\nside of the highway. This tract will\nform a strip of Dominion park and\ngame preserve, connecting the national park at Banff with the Columbia valley.\nThe rights of those to whom land\nor timber in the five-mile tract has\nbeen sold or alienated aro protected\nby tho agreement between tho two\ngovernments and tho mineral rights\narc also' reserved to the province. The\nagreement is ratified by an act of the\nlegislature passed at the session which\nhas just closed.\nMr. Taylor is very much gratified at\nthe success of the negotiations with\nthe Dominion government and states\nthat tbe work of Mr. Green in pressing tlie matter at Ottawa had been of\nInestimable value In bringing about\nthe successful consummation of the\nagreement which will onsuro the completion of the highway.\nWOUNDED CANADIAN OFFICERS\nIN  HOSPITAL AT BOULOGNE\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, June 4.\u2014According to information received here tonight General Mercer has been severely wounded and is being removed to tiio hospital at Boulogne. General Wllliums, who\naccompanied General Morcor on inspection duties, was also severely\nwounded and was taken prisoner. Tho\nfollowing ofFicers who took part In recent fighting arrived in London at a\nlate hour tonight:\nMajor Charles Y. Wenver, 49th battalion of Edmonton, suffering from\nabrasions ou his back; lieutenant, Canadian Mounted Rifles, wounded In\nthe fac\/j; Lieut. Harold Drabble, 4\u00bbth\n-battalion of Edmonton, woundod in\nthe check und suffering from shell\nshock and 'Lieut. Patton, Canadian\nMountod Rifles, scalp wound. All four\ncasualties aro slight,\naohlly e?RanwpL. .Ua. :dnaaiom  1   n\nAUSTRIAN OFFENSIVE\nHAS COME TO HALT\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nROME, via London, Juno 4.\u2014Tho\nfollowing official communication was\nissued tonight!\n\"In the Lagarina valley enemy batteries of all -calibres yesterday bombarded our positions as far as Pasubio.\nOur artillery effectively replied, firing\nthe enemy's troops and posts.\n\"On tho Posina Astico, on the evening of Juno 2, onemy infanty attempted to break through In tho dlreotlon of\nOnaro, southeast of Arslero. They wore\nstrongly couster attacked and driven\nback.\nBerlin Statement,\nBERLIN, Juno 4.^Via Wireless to\nSayville\u2014No further advance for tho\nAustrians in tholr offensive against\ntho Italians in the Southern Tyrol Is\nreportod In tho Vienna head-quarters\nstatement of June 3, received hero today. V\nCANADIAN JOURNALISTS TO\nGET GLIMPSE OF FRONT\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\n- LONDON, .June 14.\u2014Another party\nof Canadian   journnlists   and   others\nwill leave London Monday for a visit\nto the Canadian front in France,\nAdmiralty Now Gives Enemy Losses as 2 Battleships,\n2 Dreadnought Cruisers, 4 Light Cruisers,\n9 Torpedo Boats and Submarine\nFLIGHT OF HUNS FROM CONFLICT All\nTHAT SAVED THEN FROM ANNIHILATION\nTeutons Were Favored by Protection of Mine Field\nand Hugged Shore to Hare Advantage of Light\n-Casualty Lists Tell Sad Tale\nName.\nGerman Losses.\nCompleted.\nWostfalen, dreadnaught  1909\nKaiser class battleship   191*1\nDerffllnger \t\nLutzow, boittle cruiser 1915\nPommeron. battleship  1907\nElbing, light cruiser 1*915\nWiesbaden, light cttuser  1915\nFrauenlobe, third class 1909\nNino destroyers\t\nV-2S, submarine  1913\nTons      Big Guns      Crew\nTotal, IS vessels\nBritish Losses.\nName. Completed.\nQueen   Mary,   battle  cruiser 1913\nInvincible, battle cruiser 1908\nIndefatigable, battle cruiser 1911\nDefense, armored  cruiser    1909\nWarrior, armored cruiser  ...1907\nBlack Prince, armored crulsor 1906\nTIpperary, flotilla leader  101-f\nShark,   destroyer    1913\nArdent, destroyer  1913\n\u25a0\u25a0Fortune,   destroyer 1913\nSparrow -Hawk, destroyer 1912\nTurbulent, destroyer  1914\nNomad, or Nestor, destroyer  1914\nOne unknown dcBtroycr  1914\n19,200\n905\n24^00\n10 12-ln\n1,088\n28,000\n812-in\n1,000\n13,040\n^,820\n411-ln\n736\nNone\n373\n4,820\nNone\n373\n2,087\nNone\n281\n8,416\n900\nNone\n85\n04,812\n34\n5,799\nTons\nBiff Guns\nCrew\n27,000\n8 13-ln\n1,000\n17,250\n812-in\n780\n18,750\n-8 12-in\n790\n14,600\n4 9.2-ln\n850\n13,550\n0 9.2-ln\n704\n13,650\nC 9.2-ln\n70*\n1,860\niNone\n160\n935\nNone\n100\n935   '\nNone\n100\n952\nINone\n100\n935\nNone\n100\n1,110\nNone\n115\n936\nNone\n100\n935\nNone\n100\nTotal, 14 ships .\n113,287\n40\n5,703\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, June 4.\u2014The British admiralty tonight issued a statement\nsaying there was the strongest ground\nfor belief that the British navy, in tho\nbattle with the Germans off Jutland\nlast week, had accounted for a total of\n18 German men-of-war, and that thero\nwas nothing to add or substract from\nthe original announcement of the British losses.\nTho statoment gave the German\nlosses as two battleships, two dreadnaught battle cruisers, four light\ncruisers, nine torpedo boat destroyers-\nand a submarine.\nThe pessimism which prevailed as'a\nresult of the admiralty's original\nstatoment of losses, whieh is now considered to havo been needlessly frank\nand conservative in under estimating\nthe extent of tlie German losses as\ncompared with those of Great Britain\nlias been greatly lessened by the latest statement.\nA despatch from Copenhagen says\nrumors are now current in Hamburg\nthat two additional German warships\nto those announced in tbe German\ncommunication\u2014the battleship West-\nfalen and the battle cruiser Lutzow\u2014\nwere sunk in tho battle. A wireless\ndespatch received here Saturday from\nBerlin said tlie German admiralty admitted the loss of tho Wostfalen,\nWithholds Names\nThe admiralty statement tonight declares the German losses wero not only\nrelatively but absolutely greater than\nthose of the British. Maintaining its\npractise of caution tho admiralty still\nrefrains from giving the names of tho\nlost German ships.\nThe official list of tbe casualties\namong officers siiow that hardly a\nsingle officer of the line escaped from\ntho British cruisers sunk In tbo battle.\nAn additional casualty list of petty\nofficers shows that 43 of them were\nsaved   from  the Queen  Mary,  Invin\ncible, Fortune and Ardent and Shark.\nNone were saved from the Indefatigable, Defense, Black Prince, TIpperary, Turbulent, Nomad and Nestor.\nThe list gives the names of 65 men\nkilled aboard the Warrior and 27 men\nwounded. On other ships engaged in\nthe fight 115 were killed and 8G\nwounded.\nAdmiral Lord Charles Beresford, in\nan interview today, while contending\nstrongly for the view that there was\nno failure in the British strategy and\nthat Vice-Admiral Beatty won a brilliant success, though it was dearly\nbought, declares that the only mlstako\nmade was by the admiralty In allowing the Germans to get first into tho\nfield with the news of the battle, or,\nas lie puts it, witli \"impudent fabrications.\" Otherwise, said Lord Beresford, no fault can bo found with tho\nadmiralty.\nGerman Reports False\nAn early statement issued tonight\nby the British admiralty reiteratoa\nthat the German accounts of the German losses aro false, and that although the evidence, is still incomplete, enough is known to justify stating that the German losses Wero\ngreater than tbo British, \"not merely\nrelatively to the strength of the two-\nfleets, but absolutely.\"\nThe text of the statement follows:\n\"Until the commander-in-chief liarf\nhad time to consult tho officers engaged and write a full despatch, any\nattempt to give a detailed history ol!\nthe naval engagement which began on\nthe afternoon of May 31 and ended iu\nthe morning hours of Juno 1 would\nevidently be premature. But the re-:\nsuits are quite plain.\n\"Tho British fleet came in touch\"\nwith the German High Seas fleet at\n3:30 on the afternoon of March 31.-\nTho leading ships of tho two fleets\n(Continued on Pace Iwo.)\nPHASES OF GREAT BATTLE\nDESCRIBED BY OFFICIAL\n(By Dally Nows Leased Wire.)\nLONDON, June 4.\u2014The first official\ndetailed description of tho great naval\nbattle is a statement to tho Associated\nPress made by a high official of the\nBritish admiralty.\n\"It is tho sheerest nonsense to say\nwe were decoyed by the Germans,\" he\ndeclared. \"With an inferior fleet we\nengaged the entire German high sea\nfleet, interrupted their plans and drove\nthem back to their base. We wero\nlooking for a fight when our fleet\nwent out. ,\n\"Tho great battle had four phases.\nTho. Arat opened ut 3:15 p.m., when our\nbattle cruisers, at a range of six miles,\njoined action with German 'battle cruisers. Shortly afterward the second\nphase began with the arrival on both\nsides of battleships, the Germane arriving first. But before their arrival\nour three battle cruisers had been\nblown  up,  supposedly  the  result  of\ngunfire,   although   possibly   they   uiufj\ntheir fate from torpedoes.\nFollowed   Navy  Traditions.\n\"Such -close-range fighting with <bat^\nHo cruisers might bo considered as bad\ntactics, but our fleet, following tha\ntraditions of the nuivy, went out to en^\ngage the enemy aud on account of\nconditions could do su only at short\nrange.\nThe third phase was the engagement;\nof battleships, whicli never was moro\nthan partial. This phase included u,\nrunning fight as the German dreadnoughts fled toward their bases. All\ntho big ship fighting was over by UMSj\np.m.\n\"Then came one of tho most weirt|\nfeatures of the 'battle, as German destroyers made attack after attack, like\ninfantry following artillery preparation*\non our big ships.   But these onslaughts!\n(CQ-nUAUCKl Qn ft-ft 1*99*1  _\n\u25a0M\n PAGE TWO\nTHE^fcMLY NEWS\nMONDAY,   JUNE   5,   lilt.\n{leading hotels of the west]\n(      Whir, the Traveling Publio May Find Superior Accommodation*.\nTHE HUME\nA la Carta Table d'Hot.\nGeorge Benwell, Prop.\n8paclal Daily Lunch, 35c.\nHUME\u2014J. Berg, P. Drlscoll, Scotty\nFraser, H. Valentine, M. O'Leary, A.\nKeating, M. Mlchaely. Cully Wilson,\nW. A. Nichol, J. Duffy Reid, J. Ross\nTalt, J. H. Secours, Rossland; Alfred\nCullcn, Ainsworth; B. D. Garrett, E.\nF. Murray, B. U Sayre, Vancouver; R.\n*W. Bell, Toronto; E. C. Peck, Loth-\nforidge;! J. V. Griffin, Calgary; U J.\nHall, Winnipeg; A. E. Hay, H. R.\nGanon, T. G. A. Wilson, W. E. Watter,\nO. E. Korde, Vancouver; T. C. Dan-\nnenberg, Chicago; 11. P. Nestor, Toronto; F. J. Bonan, Capetown; P. Mc-\nDonough. Trail; W. S. Williams, Spokane; B. Wanless, Hardlsty; Lieut. W.\nA, Campbell, W. A. Ward, Vancouver;\nW. S. Smart, Toronto; W. J. Russell,\nCalgary; W. T. Mlcklam, Robson; F.\n\u25a0R.. Ronan, Mrs. G. Johnstone, Lewis\nJohnstone, Miss Flossie Johnstone, Mrs.\n' M. F. Shaw, Mr, and Mrs. I. G. Nelson,\nL. K .Larson, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mc-\nCrohan, Mrs. J. A. McCarthy, Mrs. Caf-\nfrey, Mrs. J. Colvln, James Colvln, Miss\nF. Dickens-, R. Andrew, City; Mrs.\nCross, R. W. Dawson, T. Townshend,\nWillow Point; Miss Niciidlson, Mrs.\nGordon Lambert.\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-\nla} Come at once and get cured.\nMost comptote and best arranged\nbathing establishment on the continent. All departments \"under\none roof steam heated and electric   lighted.\nRates: $12.00 to 115.00 Per Week.\nWILLIAM BOYD, Prop.,\nHalcyon, Arrow Lakes, B. C.\nMadden Hotel\nAmerican and European. Plan.\nSteam Heated.      Centrally Located\nMRS. E.'C. CLARKE, Propriety...\nA. E. MORRIS, Manager.\nPHASES OT GREAT\nBATHE\n(Continued from Page Q\"\u00bb->\nMADDEN C. \u00bb. Talt, Rossland; Mr.\nand Mrs. Monaghan, C. E. Rik, Tag-\nhum; P. Cody, G, Trainer, J. Mooney,\nMi', and Mrs. F. E. Hardy, City; R. L.\nDouglas, Halifax; J. Lindberg, P. Jenkins, Calgary; M. Cain, Kimberley.\nGrand Central Hotel\nOPP08ITE POSTOFFICE.\nAmerican and European Plan..\nJ. A. ERICKSON, Prop.\nGRAND.. CENTRAL\u2014H... Crosby,\nBonnlngton; James Watt, L. Gallagher,\nSandon; J. A. Teit, F. Adolph, H.\nSwanson, C. Anderson, Silence's\nBridge; F. Birkland, Bull river; F.\nPearkin, R. D. Konnedy, Lemon creek;\nW. H. Morrison, City.\nThe Strathcona\nF. B. WHITINQ, Prop.\nSpecial  Sunday   Dinner,\nSTRATHCONA \u2014 H, D. Salmon\nTrail; G. F. Stevenson, J. D. Young\nA'. M. Black. City; W. A. Jowett, Edge\nwood; W. A. Wilmot, New Denver;\nA.tH.DIII, Shoreacres; W. H. Johnston\nP. Nolan, S. Watts, Rossland; S. J?\nCoopei', H. P. Alton, T. Coutts, New\nYork; H. R. Newton. F. Hull, Mac\nleod; J. Black, N. Nolan, Hi. Riddout,\nVancouver; S. Newcross, Medicine\nHat; T. Parks, Lethbridge; J. Widdes,\nI\/. Jones. J. N. Simpson, S. Twinning,\nT. F. Landei's, Fernle; R. Bl'own,\nBrantford; G. Bi'own. Paris; -ill. Nor-\ncross, Toronto; 6. Smiley, H. Ditch-\nburn, Toronto; F. Sharpe, Almonte\nL. Vivian, J. R. Noel, Smith's Falls; A.\nAldous, R. Cloud, E. McKinnon, R.\nPratt, Guelph; H. Wright, ... Smith,\nBrantford; H. Williamson, R. J. Purdy,\nH. Weiss, S. Starkey, Montreal; S. S.\nFowlei', Riondel; L. IS. Smith. Trout\nLake; S. Batson, Calgai'y; A Anderson,\nBurke, Itln; H. F. Coicoran, S. R. Field,\nP. Nicholson, Ottawa; .1. Desmond, T.\nKelly, Arnprio'r; H. Birks, R. McPhail,\nP. Jameson, T. Cairns, H. Wilkinson,\nCranbrook; P. Matthews, s. Watts,\nCreston; R. Gilpin, Rossland; Archie\nPlayer, Trail.\nTremont Hotel\nNelson, B. C.\nSTEAM HEATED\nEuropean  and  American  Plan\nA. CAMPBELL, Prop.\nTREMONT\u2014J. Slggie. J. Graham, S.\nMilne, M. McHory, D. Wilson, E. Fowler, H. Smith, L. Routledge, .1. Carfrae,\nD. Forrest, E. Tdwards, A. D. Robertson, Trail; F. Macleod, Ainsworth; F.\nW. Emerson, H. S. \"White, M. H, Emerson, Cranbrook.\nwere similarly futile,, not a single torpedo launched by them getting home.\n\"With the morning these attacks\nended and the scene of battle was\nswept by Jelllcoe's fleet. Not a single\nenemy vessel remained in sight.\n\"Until we get Admiral Jelllcoe's report we can give only fragmentary Incidents of the great battle. Among\nthese is the torpedoing of the super-\ndreadnought Marlborough, which la\nnow safely In harbor. She must have\nstruck a veritable hornet's nest of\nsubmarines as by skillful maneuvering\nshe avoided three of these before she\nwas finally hit.\n\"Early in the engagement, according\nto Admiral Beatty's report, a German\nbattle cruiser, after being hotly engaged, 'blew up and broke in two,\n\"Officers of the fleet also reported\npassing a closely engaged battle cruiser which was left behind while the\nBritish pursued the Germans. On their\nreturn the vessel was missing. Judging\nfrom her previous plight she must have\nbeen at the bottom of the sea. This\naccounts for two of the enemy's battle\ncruisers and we have their admission\nthat they had lost two -battleships,\n\"The admiralty has a report of the\nsinking of the four German light cruisers and the .Germans have acknowledged the loss of six destroyers. There is\nvery good hope that the German loss\nis even greater but we do not intend to\nmake any estimates until we have complete official reports from our com\nmanders, who do not report the loss of\nantagonists without definite evidence.\n\"Zeppelins did not play the Important part attributed to them. Only one\nappeared. It remained In action a\nvery brief time, retiring under heavy\nfire, evidently badly damaged. Weather\nconditions were such that it Is doubtful whether any air craft would have\nbeen of much service.\n\"The enemy sprang no surprises. We\nsaw nothing of any 17-inch guns.\n\"The weather conditions were the\nhardest bit of luck our fleet encountered as may be judged from the following paragraph from the official report:\n\" 'Regret misty weather of 31st saved\nenemy from far more severe punishment.'  .\nFrom the standpoint of actual\nstrength, the navy's losses In personnel, white great, was not serious, as\nwe have plenty of men to replace them.\nFleet Still Intact.\n'With a fight like Wednesday's action occurring every day, we could\nstand the loss much , better than the\nGermans. Ottr battle fleet ts stilt in\ntact, while we still have considerably\nmore battle cruisers than the Germans.\n\"It Is Interesting to note that the\nsober statements in the Reichstag do\nnot confirm the great victory so Jubilantly announced by the German press.\nWith our 'battle fleet intact we still\nhold the North sea and we have prevented the enemy from accomplishing\nany definite object.\"\nTslelson House\nEuropean Plan,\nW. A. WARD, Proprietor,\nCAFE\u2014Open Day and Night\u2014BAR\nMerchants' Lunch, 12 to 2.\nPhone 97. P. 0. Bex 597\nQueen's Hotel\nA. LAPOINTE, Proprietor.\nAmerican and European Plan.\nSTEAM HEAT IN EVERY ROOM\n_ BUSINESS  LUNCH, 35c\nRATES:   S1.50 AND $2.00  A  DAY\nQUEENS\u2014W. Konway, Cedar Point;\n<3. A. Steeves, Kaslo; E. Desllse, Bride-\nvllle; O. Jonhson, Silverton; C. Fran-\nsen, Sweden; T. G. Hanrahan, .1. SOur-\nell, G. Davies, ,H. Nickerson, C. Sttival.\nP. A. Hansen, Vancouver; H. Brouse,\nHall; W. S. Johnson, Edgewood; G. E.\nThroudsan, Eric; A. Johnson, Silver-\nton.\nNew Grand Hotel\nBeat Place in Town\n11,00 A DAY UP\nNEW GRAND\u2014E. McLean, Seattle;\nH. Larkln, Salmo.\nNELSON\u2014D. Forrest,'(i. Routledge,\nTrail; H. Glenn, H. Dow. Rossland; T.\nOley Gordon, Marcus; Geoi'ge Trainor,\n,1. Mooney, Trail; E. Steele, Proctor;\nE. E. Smith, Marcus; T. Melrose, Slocan.\nROSSLAND HOTELS\nThe Hotel Allan\nRecently Refurnished,\nSMITH & BELTON,\nProprietors.\nTRAIL HOTELS\nPhone 9, Sample Rooms.\nRooms Reserved by Wire or Phone.\nCrown Point Hotel\nA. M'DERMOTT, Prop.,\nTRAIL, B. C.\nWe   Aro   Crowded,   But   There   U\nRoom for One More.\n17 REPORTED DEAD\nON CASUALTY LISTS\n(Continued from Page One.)\nH. C. Manning, 107425, kin at Brit.\nish West indies,\nH. E. Ward, 622652, kin at   Saskatoon.\nARTILLERY.\nWounded.\nW. W. Wallace, 84032, kin at Mer-\nrlton,  Ont.\n(Continued from Page One.)\nLeland Hotel\nT. H. BOHART, Prop.\nTho hotel to patronize when in Nakusp. Arrangements made for peo.\npie going to the Hot Springs. Motor\nhoats, rowboats and canoes for hire,\nNAKU8P, B. C.\nDo You Use\nPantry Queen! Flour?\nIT IS MILLED FROM A NO. 1 SPRING WHEAT COMBINED\nWITH A CAREFUL MILLING PROCESS. WE DO NOT MILL\nFANCY PASTRY PATENTS, WITH THE RESULT THAT OUR\nFLOUR CONTAINS THE WHOLESOME PROPERTIES OF THE\nWHEAT, NON-BLEACHED AND NON-BLENDED. REMEMBER\nTHE NAME PANTRY QUEEN AND ASK YOUR GROCER FOR IT.\nPUT UP IN 24-ib, 49-lb. AND 98-lb. SACKS.\n=*=\nThe Macleod Flouring Mills Co., Limited\nMACLEOD,   ALTA.\nJ, J. 8tephenson, 8aleamanager fof British Columbia\nPhono 134 Nelson, B. C. P.O. Box 71\ncarried on a vigorous fight In which\nthe battle cruisers, fast battleships\nand subsidiary craft all took an active\npart.\n\"The losses were severe on both\nsides, but when the main body of the\nBritish fleet camo in contact with the\nGerman high sea fleet, a brief period\nsufficed to compel the latter, who had\nbeen severely punished, to seek rofugo\nIn their protected waters. This maneuver was rendered possible by low\nvisibility und mist and although units\nof the grand fleet were now and then\nable to get In a momentary contact\nwith their opponents no continuous\naction was possible.\n\"They continued the pursuit until\nthe light wholly failed, while 'the British destroyers were able to make t\nsuccessful attack upon the enemy during the night.\nJellicoe Scoured Sea for Foe\n\"Meanwhile Admiral Sir John Jelll\ncoe, having driven the enemy Into port\nreturned to the main scene of the action and scoured the se^ in search of\ndisabled vessels. By n-son the next\nday, June 1, It became evident there\nwas nothing more to be done. He re\nturned, therefore, to his base 400 miles\naway, re-fucled his fleet and the evening of Jun 2 was again ready for sea.\n\"The British losses already have\nbeen fully stated. There Is nothing to\nadd or subtract from the latest account published by the admiralty. The\nenemy losses are less easy to deter-\nHotel Castlegar\nCastlegar, B. C,   iW. H. Cage, Prop.\nNice place to spend the week end.\nExcellent accommodations for\ndrummers. Boundary to Coast train\nleaves here dally 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.\nSpend your summer holidays where\nyou will enjoy them most. The\n~\"\"ARROw\"iXKES HOTEL\nEdgewood, B. C, is the ideal place.\nFishing trip to the Whatchan lake,\nalive with the sporty rainbow trout\nThe hotel management will arrange\ndetails of trip for you oh application. Special rates to\/ family parties and weekends.\nmine. That the accounts they have\ngiven to ihe' world are false is certain\nand we can not yet be sure of the\nexact truth. -.But from such evidence\nas has come to our knowledge, the admiralty entertains no doubt that the\nGerman losses' are heavier than the\nBritish;. |i6t riidrely relatively to the\nstrength of the two fleets, but absolutely.\"      - \"\"\u25a0 \u25a0'\u2022\nAn -official statement Issued last\nnight referred th a German wireless to\nthe embassy at Washington containing .the report of the speech of the\npresident of the relchstag, which notes\nthat the losaof the battleship War-\nsprite again officially Is affirmed.\n\"This Is untrue,\" the statement declares, \"that ship having returned to\nharbor.\".\n\"The loss of the destroyer Alcaster,\"\nthe statement continues, \"also' is an\nnounced.    This  also Is  untrue,  that\nvessel having returned to Its base.\n\"The names of the three British destroyers, not hitherto identified, making a total of eight lost, reported In\nan official statement Issued early In\nthe day, are the Nomad, Nestor and\nShark.\"\nModern -Sea Warfare.\nThere were 6000 men on the- ship\nwhich1 sank and only a few hundred\nhave -been saved. The horrors of mod.\nern naval warfare, far exceeding those\nwhen wooden ships fought and continued to float, even when they ceased\nto be fighting units, where realized to\ntheir utmost. From five of the largest\nships which went under with a complement of mdre than 4000 men only\nsev-m junior officers and a few seamen\nwere rescued.\"\nRear Admirable Honorable Horace\nLambert Hood,' second In command to\nVice-Admiral sir David Beatty, and\nCaptains Sowerby, Cay nnd Prowz\nwere lost, with many others whose\nnames are not yet known -because the\ngovernment! Has not so far Issued\nany casualty \"list. There were no surrenders,; and the ships which went\ndown fcirrled with them virtually the\nwhole crews'.\nOnly the warrior, which was towed\npart way front the scene of battle to a\nBritish \u25a0\u25a0liort,  was nn  exception.\nOf 1000 men on the Queen May only\na corporal's guard is accountod for.\nThe same Is true of the Invincible,\nwhile there are ho survivors reported\nfroth the indefatigable, the Defense\nor the Black'Prince.\nIt is Impossible to visualize any coherent stol-y of the great battle, which,\nlasted many, hours, with the different\nunits at times fighting scattered engagements'. The British and German\nreports contradict each other flatly on\nthe nialn fact. The British assert\nthat the German fleet retired when the\nBritish battleships appeared, while the\nGerrnan official statement maintains\nthat the German forces were in battle\nwith the entire British fleet.\nTlhe British assert that thoy had\nonly two divisions engaged and that\nall the units of these were not able\no participate In the fighting, and,\nfurthermore that Admiral Sir John\nJellicoe, commander of the grand fleet,\nremained In. the area of the battle\nafter the Germans had retreated and\nswept It through In a search for\nenemy ships  and   survivors.\nEvery Modern Agents Used.\nThe King's message to Admiral Jellicoe states thnt the Germans robbed\nthe British of the opportunity of gaining a decisive victory Immediately\nafter the opening'of the general -battle. Admiral Beatty, commanding the\nbattleship squadron presumably on his\nold flagship, the Lion, was again In\nthe thick of the action. Every arm of\nthe modern naval service was employed\u2014battleships, .battle cruisers,\ntorpedo boats, destroyers, submarines\nand even zeppellns. Whether most of\nthe destruction was accomplished by\ngunfire or torpedoes is not yet known,\nBritish officers say that the battle\nwus fought by the methods known and\npractised by all navies. There were no\nSurprises and no new devices of\nweapon or strategy.\nHow far the zeppetins contributed to\nthe German success is a matter of dispute. Only one airship came within\nsight, according to the British accounts, and she was soon badly dam-\nage.l and withdrew. But the Germans\nlay stress'oh the assistance rendered\nby their air service and neutrals re\nPort the presence of six zeppleins in\nthe North see. Tho popular belief\namong the British public is that scouting zeppellns kept the German fleet\nlnfoi-med by wireless of the approach of\ntheir enemy and of his numbers and\nformation. \u25a0\nHorrors and Humanities.\nFrom survivors come thrilling stories of the horrors and humanities of\nthe terrible battle. The British destroyer Shark acted as a decoy to the\nGerman ships In the engagement. She\nwas battered to pieces by gunfire and\na half dozen sailors, -picked up clinging to a buoy by a Danish ship, tell\nof their commander and two seamen\nserving her only last remaining gun\nuntil the last minute, when the commander's   leg  was   -blown   off.\nThere are stories  of ships sinking\nwith a great explosion;   of crew going down singing the national anthem,\nof merchant ships passing through\nsea thick with \"floating bodies.\nA  lifeboat  with   German   survivors\nfrom the German cruiser E-lbtng res\ncued Surgeon Burton of the British\ndestroyer Tlpperary.   He had sustain\ned four wounds; Two well known Loh\ndon clergymen who   had volnunteered\nto serve as  chaplains  at  the begin-\nnlns of the war, Mr. Lyndell and Mrs.\nLepatourel, both of the Church of England, were among the missing.   Mr.\nLyndell la a nephew of Field Marshal\nViscount  French.    He  was   to   have\nbeen married at London Monday.*\nA Town of Mourning.\n-Portsmouth is a town of morung,\nThree thousand of the men who went\nInto the -battle came from Portsmouth,\nand most of them leave families,.\nThe admiralty has been crowded all\nday with, anxious men and women of\nall classes trying to learn the fate of\nrellatiees. (Only the names of the\nsurviving- officers were -published.\nMany persons who have relatives and\nfriends In the navy are Ignorant of\nwhat vessels they are serving onT Accurate casualty lists., cannot he issue.1 until the Identltfy is khown of\nthe survivors who have been taken to\nHolland and    Scandinavian ports.\nThe admiralty has no Information\nconcerning a report that the German\ndreadnaught Eldenurg was sunk.\nEnd of tho Queen Mary.\nThe manner In which the big British\nish 'battle cruiser Queen Mary came\nto her end Is described by an east coast\ntown correspondent of theWeeklyOis-\npatch. The\"ship, acfcordlng to thli\ncorrespondent, was sunk by the concentrated gut) fire of the German capl-\nTHF WONDERFUL\nFRUITJEDICINE\nThousands Owe Health And\nStrength To \"Frult-a-tlves\"-4\"\n\"FRUIT-A-TIVES\", the marvellous\nmedicine nude from fruit juices\u2014has\nrelieved more cases of Stomach, Liver,\nBlood, Kidney and Skin Troubles than\nany other medicine. In severe cases\nof Rheumatism, Sciatica, Lumbago,\nPain in the Back, Impure Blood, Neuralgia, Chronic Headaches, Chronic\nConstipation and Indigestion, \"Fruit-\na-tives\" has given unusually effective\nresults. By its cleansing, healing\npowers on the eliminating organs,\n\"Fruit-a-tives\" tones up and invigorates the whole system.\n80c. a box, 0 for $2.30, trial size, 23c.\nAt all dealers or sent postpaid by Fruit-\na-tives Limited, Ottawa.\ntal ships,, causing her magazine to\nexplode with terrific force. The forward part of the ship was blown away\nalmost bodily and she went down in\nless than two minutes.\nEdinburgh Gets Report of Fight\nBDINGURGH, Juno 4.\u2014According to\nInformation received here tho British\ncruiser squadron engaged the whole\nGerman fleet, which was further favored by the protection of a mine field and\nwith the advantage of light, as the\nGermans hugged the Jutland coast\nclosely.\nAt the critical stage of the fight four\nbattleships of the British grand fleet\nappeared on the -horizon, the Valiant,\nBarham, Malay and Warsplte. The battle then asumed a different complexion,\nThe Warsplte, attacked toy five German battleshipB, fought gloriously,\nsinking or at least seriously damaging\nthree of her assailants. The Valiant\nrammed and sank an enemy submarine\nEventually tho German ships retreated\nto the great disappointment of the men\nof the British fleet.\nAccording to the story of the battle\nreceived here, Admiral Beatty who\ncommanded the BrltlBh cruiser squadron, had cruised many times in the\nvicinity of the 'recent battle without\nsucceeding in luring the Germans from\ntheir mined wateis, but on this oc:aslon\nthe British had an Inkling that some\nthing important was about to happen.\nAbout 4 o'clock Wednesday afternoon\nwhen the squadron was about 100 miles\nwest of the Danish coast the British\nadvance guard sighted the enemy and\nsoon It was apparent that the Germans\nwere coming out In great force, there\nbeing In all about 100 ships.\nThe German squadron lncluded^at\nleast 20 'battleships, and battle cruisers, with numerous lighter craft in\nfront, the whole steaming rapidly in a\nnorthwesterly direction. The condi\ntions were In favor of the Germans,\nwho doubtless soon became aware that\nOuting Clothes\nTHE    MONTH     OF\"   JUNE\nBRINGS WITH IT-THE NEED |\nFOR     WARM    WEATHER |\nCLOTHING.\nOUR SELECT STOCK WILL I\nANTICIPATE YOUR EVERT |\nNEED.\nNEW 8TYLE MIDDY WAISTS |\n, WHITE* SKIRTS\nAt*  Extremely  Moderate  Prices |\nLIGHT   AND   SUMMERY   DRESSES\nDainty in Appearance and Very New.\n'   8UN8HADES\nIn Fine Selection of'Colors and Styles\nOUTING   HATS\nPanama, Java, Peanut 8traw\u2014Also In Toweling and Wash 811k,\nA Fine Line of Girls' Hats.\nSmillie& Weill\nLADIES'  WEAR   8PECIALI8T8\nBritish squadron which, which was\ncompelled to fight In a narrow area,\nwhile the zeppellns and submarines\nwhich were near their 'base, wero able\nto operato In such a manner as to be\n.. most Important factor In the battel.\nRUSSIANS PUT D01\nGERMAN OFFENSIVE PUBLIC ACCOUNTS\nBODY ENDS HUU\nonly part of thi Britlah battle fleet op* -0f KrevS we blew up a mine.   'Aftet\nArtillery   Aotion    Brisk   on    Various\nSectors on  Dvina  Front and\nIn Dvinsk Region\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nPETROGRAD, June 4.\u2014Tho following official statement waa Issued today:\n\"On the western front, in tho region\nnorthwest of Fllkarn, the ..Germans\nafter heavy bombardment attempted\nseveral times to assume the offensive,\nbut were repulsed. On various sectors *of the Dvina front and in the\nregion of tho Dvinsk the enemy's artillery has been active.\n\"Friday   evening  our artillery  dls\npersed dermans who wero attempting\nto assemble northeast of Krevo. South\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nWANTED^-At\niHume hotel.\nbellboy.   Aj\nFOR SALE\u2014Modern 12-room houBd\nperfect condition, furnished or\nfurnished, at a sacrifice price; ,f\narranged, 711 Silica street. Mrs.\nManhart, phone 91-L.\nposed them.\nHad Advantage of Light.\nApart from the fact that the Germans were three times as strong as\nAdmiral Beatty's squadron, they had\nthe advantage of light and adopted\ntheir favorite tactics of hugging the\ncoast, at the same time assuring them\nselves of a safe retreat. Atmospheric\nconditions then took a change which\nfurther helped the Germans.\nA light drizzle reduced the vision and\nthe British gunners thus were greatly\nhandicapped for a whllo with the western sun behind them. The British\nships were easily picked out on the\nhorizon, whereas the Germans were\nable to conceal their'strength, covered\nas they were by the coast of Jutland\nHaving succeeded in drawing the\nwhole German fleet out of its safe\nquarters, Admiral Beatty, although\ngreatly outnumbered and running great\nrisks, determined to hang on grimly in\norder to detain the Germans in full\nstrength. It was a daring maneuver.\nThe British fought with great stubbornness despite all disadvantages con\nfident that reinforcements were on the\nway,\nThe fight had lasted about two hours\nwhen the British* 'battle cruisers Invincible and Lnflextble hove in sight,\nRear Admiral 'Hood flying his flag on\nthe former as second -in command of\nthe battle cruiser squadron. They\nrushed into action none too soon for\nAdmiral Beatty's battered fleet. The\nodds' still favored the German ships In\nnumbers and positions. The British\nships were clearly distinguished against\nthe light, while the German fleot was\nsheltered 'behind a mine field and lay\nwell into the shadow of the shore where\nthe mist mado them difficult targets.\nThe conflict was mainly a battle of\nbig guns. The Invincible, after fight\nIng with the greatest gallantry and\nconsiderably damaging the enemy, met\nits doom and sank quickly. But much\nmore formidable aid now was at hand,\nIt was soon manifest that the Germans\nmeant 'business. The small craft were\nsoon brushed aside and with the big\nships about 15 miles apart the first exchange of shots took place. Judging\nby the columns of water rising on all\nsides there could be no doubt that the\npick of the -German battleships were\nhurling 'broadsides. While the new\nHindenburg had not been] mentioned\nofficially there Is reason to believe it\nwas heavily engaged.\nFight at Ctoie Range.\nAdmiral Beatty's ship, the Lion gave\na magnificent accourjt of Itself, Then\ncame the Queen Mary, the -buttle cruiser Tiger, the Princess Royal and the\nIndefatlglble. From 15 miles the range\nrapidly was-reduced to 10 then to five\nmiles. A perfect hell raged as opposing battle squadrons rained broadsides\nupon one another. -Soon after the battle 'began in earnest, One big Gorman\ncruiser waa seen to receive a direct hit\naiid a moment later it was enveloped\nIn flames, sinking almost immediately.\nUp to this time most of the fighting\nhad been done by German battle cruisers, but vessels of the Kaiser class now\njoined the fray, giving the Germans an\nenormous superiority both In ships and\ngunpowder.\nWhen the story of the -battle Is fully\nknown lt probably will be shown that\none of the deadliest, enemies of the\nBritish was the Gorman mine field.\nThe attackers also had to contend with\nthe danger from submarines and zep<\npellns. The mine field prevented full\nfreedom of notion on tho port of tho\nthe explosion the Germans lit up the\ncrater and opening fire attempted to\nadvance, which was' checked by our\nfire. Opposite the village of Gorod-\nnikl, seven versts south of Krevo, we\nobserved a mass of smoke coming toward our trenches, but before reaching\nour entanglements the cloud drifted\nback, causing great tumult in the German trenches, where large fires were\nseen burning.\n\"In the afternoon one of our aviators was attacked by a German Fok-\nker near the village of Emay. Our\npilot met the enomy with machine gun\nfire and forced him to ddscend rapidly.\n\"An enemy machine dropped four\nbombs on the station at Molodresno.\n\"On the remainder of tho front there\nwere small skirmishes by advanced\nposts.\n\"Caucasus front: The Turks, supported by artillery began a powerful\nadvance against heights southwest of\nEnil(\u00a3l, but were repulsed. South of\nEnlkei on the slopes of the Burnagel\nmountain, our troops drove off the\nTurks and movod forward.\"\nITALY BEGINS SAVING DAYLIGHT\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nROME,   June   4.\u2014Legal   times   was\nadvanced  one  hour throughout Italy,\nbeginning at midnight last night.\nSingle    Irregularity    Disclosed\nCommission Received by Offici**-)\nWho Haa Resigned.\nPRESS GALLERY, VICTORIA, -\\\nJuno 4\u2014Reports by the public aeco-\ncommittee   on   the   various   mal\nwhich have been brought before it f\nbeen made.    The only case of ?\ndolhg discovered was that In\nH. C. Hannington, without the kn|\nedge or consent of any member <\ngovernment, accepted .a commisslol\n$2000.   Ho was Inspector of legat|\nflees and has resigned since the 1\nmission-taking was discovered.\nThe reports are as follow:\n\u2666Deputy  Minister  Renwick    of\nlands department.   His evidence <\nlargely   with   the  Renfrew  lands |\nqulry.   This was a case In whici\nwas -claimed that the government!\nsold as second class lands for *2.50|\nacre, timber lands of high value,\ngovernment   received   117,000   for|\nlands and the company now\nthem, It Is claimed has a valuatioj\nseveral hundred thousands,\nMr. Renwick Informed tho con\ntee that the sworn classification <\nRenfrew district lands has 'been 1\nto  the  department by H. Hargi\nD.  R.  Harris,    J.  H.  McGregor,!\nMeyersteln and A. I. Robertson. \\\nMcGregor has been killed at the-1\nMr.   Robertson  is  with  his  regiri\nin Vancouver and Mr. Meyoratelnf\ncently received military honors in!\ntrenches.\nThere was nothing to show li\nclassifications  said  the  deputy\nlater that these particular lands *\ntimber lands and not ordinary i\nclass agricultural lands.   The, deri\nment at the time the applications I\nmade relied upon tho sworn cla^\ncations  of  the  surveyors.     In\nrespect the act had been compiled j\nby lhe applicants Insofar as the i\nformalities went, he said.   He ]\nout that the timber on the *proi|\nwas still subject to rolalty.   Furl\nmore, under a wild land tax the 1\n(Continued on Page Etcht.) j\nStrength\ni\n\u2014both of body and mind\u2014is wonderfully promoted\/ by including in |\nthe diet a daily ration of\nGrape-Nuts\n(MADE   IN   CANADA)\nThis delioious food oontaln. all the nutriment and energizing I\nproperties of whole wheat and barley from which it i. m\u00abd\u00ab, and!\nis eipeoially~rich~ln~'the mineral phnphate. furnl.hed~b^ftwM|\ngrains. These mineral element, are Lotting in many foods, bull\nabsolutely necessary for proper growth and maintenance ef body,|\nbrain and nerves.\n.V\nGrape-Nuts food ha. delightful flavor, i. ea.ily dig.sted, \u00abnd|\ncomes ready to eat\u2014crisp, sweet and wonderfully nourishing,\nFrom ohildhood to eld age\u2014GRAPE-NUTS.\n\"There's a Reason\"\nCanadian poatum Cereal Co.,\nLtd.\n-t\u2014\nWindsor, Ont.\n ft\";\/.   MONDAY\/ JlilNB- B,   1S\"8.\"\nTHEi^fWaLY \u00abEWSi* s'T\nThis Week's Attractions in the Nelson Playhouses\nW\u00bb-\nsable unr IS\nMURKIK\n[-Triangle  Feature at Gem Wednesday\n'and  Thursday  Tells   Story  of\nChinese Vengeance.\nThe following is a brief story of the\n{'Sable Lorcha,\" or funeral' ship of the\nChinese, which will be shown nt the\npern Wednesday and Thursday,\n! Robert and Donald Cameron are\ntwins in a Scottish family which Is\nseparated by (he death of the mother.\nRobert is brought to America by his\nfather and Donald is adopted by a\n,'amily named McNlsh. Robert prospers in the new land but Donald goes\n'O-jthe bad, runs away to sea and <be-\n'omps a smuggler of Chinese to\n\\mericj*. On ono of these expeditions\n\\e-scuttles a junk, or \"lorcha*' and 100\nphlnese perish. The only survivor is\nhi} cook, a half-bred, John Soy. Soy\n\\n% an Irish soldier of fortune, Mur-\n;ihy, *aid;';the kinsmen of the dead in\ni -worldwide search for MeNish. One\nlay Murphy, sees Cameron, mistakes\nhim for his brother, McKish, and puts\nthe avengers' on his track.\nCameron- receives a warning from\ntho Chinese, the only signature, Being\na silhouette of 'the Sable Lorcha,-or\nfuneral ship. Apparently to&oto'...his\nvery' eyes his portrait\\lias b^eri beheaded. A second warning. 1*^ received.\nCameron at once sends'for a young\nfriend and neighbor, Phillip Clyde, who\nIs in love with Cameron's niece and\nward, Evelyn Grayson, .The second\nthreat Is carried out by the crashing\nto atoms of a mirror by unseen hands.\nCameron and Clyde- are mystified as a\nthird.threat comes, declaring that before the morning of the third day Cameron will pass from sight of man. Tho\ntwo men go to sea in a yacht, but the\navengers follow in a fast tug, drop Soy\nin an open boat in the yacht's course\nand put their man on board when he\nIs picked up In the belief that he Is a,\ncastaway fisherman. Soy now uses a\nChinese anaesthetic with which he has\nperformed tho other two mysteries.\nCameron and Clyde are rendered unconscious and the former is taken off\nto the tug. In a, box the doomed man is\ntaken to Chinatown where revenge iH\nto be obtained:\nLater Clyde comes ashore, moots Soy\nby chance and follows him to a Chinatown cellar.   There a box is found sim\nilar to the one in which Cameron Is\ntaken from tho yacht. It contains noth-'\njng, however, but Chinese merchandise\nSnd whllo Clyde goes to. seek aid from\nie police tlie box containing Cameron\nIk tftken;*'*awfty'. -Mfeanwhile ttf -front- of\nCeraerern's* Fifth avenue mansion* ap*\npears.an,,unkempt and sickly individual who later is, found to be McNlsh.\nHe lias escaped from two' Chinamen\nwho thought' he was Cameron; The\npolico trail, tirte off'the avengers .to a\nhouse in Chinatown-where a large\ntank has been prepared and Cameron\nIs to be.boynd, whileivthe water rises\nand brings \"blow' 'torture and death.\nThoy -arrive With McNish in 'time to\nreveal the error of the Chinese and\nMcNish, the guilty one, dies.\nThe\nTriangle\nTheatre\nProgram for the\nComing Week\nWe wish to thank bur. patrons for their loyal and enthusiastic\nsupport of the past week, also to assdre them that we nre not resting\non, our oars, but, spurred on toy their npproval, bave prepared a\nprogram for tho forthcoming week which will set a high watermark in Nelson.\n.       WE   RING   THE   BELL   ON   MONDAY   AND  TUESDAY\n\"    *     ' WITH\nHENRIETTA  CROSSMAN,  THE   INTERNATIONAL   FAVORITE,\nIN   THE   BROADWAY   FEATURE\nreme\nTest\"\nIN   FIVE   PARTS\ni       How the true heart of a woman gives her strength to pass this\n' supreme test.\n\u25a0        .    We Hit Plumb in the Centre of the Bull's Eye on\n' WEDNESDAY    AND    THURSDAY\nWITH\nI THE    FINE    ARTS    TRIANGLE    PRODUCTION\n\"The Sable Lorcha\"\nDirected by the Master Mind of D. W. Griffith\n,   .This wonderful drama is of the variety which causes the chills\nto chase each other up and down one's spinal column.\n' On the 8ame Program\u2014A Triangle Keystone Comedy in Two Reels\n\\l ''FOLLOWING   FATHER'S   FOOTSTEPS\"\nj' With Ford Sterling, the Man With the Funny Face\n|j. \u2014 _ , , _\t\n1, FRIDAY   AND   SATURDAY\nJ Once More We Ring the Gong With What the Lubin Company Calls\n1 Their Masterpiece\n|\"The Gods of Fate\"\nI A   V.   L.   S.   E.   FEATURE   IN   FIVE   ACTS\ni\nI '   See the great railroad wreck and the marvelous fire scene\u2014the\n.i most stupendous of their kind ever filmed.\nSPECIAL   NOTICE\nBicycle Contest\n- We will give $1.00 to th. boy and \u00bb1.00 to the girl turning in tho\nmeat votes in tha Bicycle Contest this week. This is a special\nprjje arid independent of the filial ouloome of the ooritesl.\nEnclose your votes In an envelope with name and address written\nplainly thereon.\nAT TRAIL .\n....     . | . |\nMonday and Tuesday\n\"THE  SABLE  LOHjCHA\"\n\"FOLLOWING FATHER'S\nF00TSTEP8\"\n\"THE  G0D8  OF FATE\"\nAT   FERNIE   '\nMonday and Tuesday\n\"THE  GODS  OF  FATE\"\nFriday and Saturday\n; \"THE  8APLE.I-OBOHA\"\n. \"FOLLOWING FATHER'S\nFOOTSTEPS\"\nMODEL THEATRE  STILL\nSENSATION OF BROADWAY\nDramatic   Reviewers   Treat   Triangle\nPlays with 'Same Respect as Legitimate   Drama.\nTriangle plays continue to be the\nsensation of Broadway. For many\nwoelts they have heen the talk not only\not the three cities where Triangle\nmaintains model theatres, but have\nbeen the topic of conversation as well\nas the admiration of theatre owners\nthroughout tho country. The general\nattitude of the exhibitor has been and\nstill is when shall he be itble to secure\nTriangle service. The piuys aro being\nreviewed;, bl* the best theatrical critics\nIn America, which indicates to a marked degree the importance attached to\ntheir exhibition.\nTRAIN\nWRECK  STAGED\nAT COST OF \u25a0'25,000\nPAULINE FREDERICK IN. \"THE     SPIDER\" AT THE STARLANI)\nMOVIES li\nGUI THE\nLEGITIMATE DRAMA\nCan the Pictures Find Material to Last\nOut Against the Spoken Play?\neating them to a little later first\ntain, for our plays were all short]\nliy beginning early we got out e*\nThis is a pretty frank admission,!\ncur-\nand\nrly.\"\nIsn't\nit?   And it isn't the Cohan plays -flono\nthat  are   short   measure.\nThe\ndeney In this direction has befen a\nsteudy tine for the past ten years.jdur-\ning which  period,  In many theatres,\niT\/iie, most expensive single'. Scene\never photographed for use in n. motion\nptetiire is the railroad wreck which\nforms cme of the principal incidents In\ntho Ltibln five-reel feature entitled\nTho Gods of Fate,\" to be shown ut\ntho Gem on Friday and Saturday. In\nthis scene, two trains, one a passenger, consisting of an engine and five\ncoaches, and the other, a freight train\nmado up of an engine and six freight\ncars meet In.a head-on collision,'while\nrunning at the rate of -iii miles an\nhour. This scene was staged outside\nAUoona,  Pa., and cost over $25,000.\nTn the making of this picture fifteen\ncamera men were employed and at the\nmoment of the actual crash, they were\nwithin 12 feet of tho explosion. In order protect themselves from clouds\nof steam and flying, debris, -it was\nnecessary for them to work behind armor plate shields similar to those used\nby the United States artillery. i\nThe engines were started at a distance of a mile and a half apart and\ntho. crush came at the exact point de-\nRli'dd: -\"The ' \u2022wafrnintji'Mvas \"gtv-Jfland\n..Tyhile six thousand spectators'^ held\ntheir breath, both trains rushed toward\neach other until finally with a ronr\ntlmt could ho heard for miles they\ncreshod together, When the clouds of\nsteam and smoke had blown away the\ncoaches of the passenger train were\nseen td .be squeezed together like a\nclosed accordion and some of the seats\nof tho passenger cars -were found 50\nfeet away. The frames of the passenger cars were found resting on top nf\nthe passenger engine. Nothing was\nleft of tlie freight train but fragments.\nGem.\n\"Tho Supreme Test,\" which will be\nshown at the Gem on Monday and\nTuesday, is a five-reel feature showing Henrietta Crossman, the famous\nlegitimate star, In a powerful play,\nwhich takes the spectator from the ball\nroom to the slums. The action is\ntense with excitement throughout and\nshows the triumph of a good woman\no^er greed and evil. Considerable, excitement Is being evidenced byr..: tlie\natrial, boys of the city in tho bicycle\ncontest which is being held this week.\nCHAPLIN   ENTERS\nCOMMERCIAL  LIFE\nComedian Tries His Hand at Department Store Work in Amusing\nFilm  at Starland\nSix hundred and seventy thousand\ndollars is some money, but when Nelson theatregoers see \"The Floorwalker,\" which will be shown at the\nStarland next Monday, they will realize he is worth it. Audiences that\nhave viewed this picture have laugh\ned till they could laugh no more. Can\nyou imagine Charles Chaplin on an\nescalator or moving stairway, trying\nto get downstairs to get out of the\nway or the pursuing villain, only to be\nshot upstairs every time he finally\nreached the bottom? This is only one\nof the many amusing incidents in tiie\nfilm.\n: Frank Mclntyre has a new comedy\n\u2022In wiiich'he will star next season. Ho\nlias been appearing In vaudeville in\n. '{The Hb.t Salesman.!' ,\nWhat is to be the outcome? Where\nIs this movie business going to end?\nOr should It be, when Is It. going tn\nend?\nStrange i-uestlon, you may say, when\ntho motion picture \u25a0Industry appears\nto be carrying everything before it.\nBut stop and think a 'bit. Recall the\nnumber lot well known >pl(aysl and\nstories you personally know about that\nhave already been screened, some of\nthem going back as far as \"Les Miser-\nnbles.*' by Victor Hugh,\"to say nothing\nof Shakespeare \"Hamlet\" Or take,', it\nfrom another side. One motion picture\nconcern, the Vltagraph, had.up to July\n1 made 11000 productions and its director has announced that US output,is to\ngo on at u faster -rate thuii ever be\nfore. - And this Is only-one pf the many\nAmerican coiripunl&'and hew ones are\nconstantly startlngf up.\nIf tho stories of the past are being\nused up twice or thrice as quickly us\nsuitable now ones are being'placed nn\nthe market\u2014and this is undoubtedly\nthe case\u2014what arc* the film People going to do for-subjects 10' years hence\nj or perhnps'flve years hence?\n* Hilt; does liui tbe^anie', thing apply\n'to the 'jnaga'\/.iiu* wqnVl\/'i'o the theatre,\nyou ask? By no means. The tnttgusdne\ncomes out but 12 thhes'ii year, a new\nplay is put on with the hope that there\nis life* in it for a. run In one,.city of\nat least 100 or 200 .'uerformanCes. tin\ntbo other hand, most of the moving\npicture Lhreatres change their whole\nprogram every night in the. weel**, Sun\ndays Included; and with the capacity\nthat exists to duplicate films, tber '\nno very extensive \"road\" route left for\nu photoplay after its local lerritory\n.exhausted.\nRevivals Fail. '\nRevivals In picture land are1 few and\nfar between. 1 am told that the John\nBunny pictures became as'dead as John\nBunny 'himself us soon iis he had pass\ned away. Novelty, sornothtng new Is\ntho constant cry.\nNo wonder that the actors who make\na hit In tho film business demand and\nget big prices. Every exlifliitor wants\nthem at once, well knowing that a ilttlo\nlater, except in rare instances, nobody\nwill want them at ait.\nThe most discouraged of ,the legitl\nmate managers In the face oi the movie\ncompetition appears to\"be \"William A,\nBrady who says that it has driven\nhim Into the busbies sof making pictures. According to an interview lie\ngave the New York Herald'lhe theatre\npeople are hit not only in the drawing\naway of their audiences but'also by the\nbig salaries the movie concerns offer\nto the actors. Summing' ii*p,\"Hfe declaim\ned that thero were more' \"-movie, funs\"\nthan baseball fans In the United\nStates and that theatre muiiugers and\nproducers must bestir themselves or\nruin stared tbem In the face.\nManagers Behind Time.\nBut to some person's way of think\ning the timo to have bestirred themselves was long ago when they began\nto scrimp on what they gave the pub\nlie for $2. In this connection let me\nquote from a talk with a.New York\nTimes reported by Josephine Cohan\nsister of George, who, with her husband, Fred Nlbio, recently \u2022\u201ereturned\nfrom a three-years' playing tour in\nAustralia. Speaking of theatrical customs In the antipodes,-she-said:\n\"Performances begin at 8 o'clock and\nare over shortly before 11, -When we\nfirst arrived we had quite a time odti-\ntlie orchestra has been cut out as\nM,ucic at the Movies.\nPAUL NE FREDER CK\nPLAYS DUAL ROLE\nFamous  Legitimate   Actress   in   Film\nProduction, \"The Spider,\" Comes\nlo Starland\n1 It is safe to say that no actress of\nthe screen is so universally admired as\nPauline Frederick. Though it iH little\nmore than a year since she first appeared on the screen In \"The Eternal\nCity\" in every city, town or village,\nher popularity has grown until now\nshe stands, supreme as the leading actress in motion pictures. In \"The\nSpider,\" to be Bhown at the Starland\nnext Saturday, she essays with remarkable success a dual role, that of\nmother and daughter.\nDAYS OF NERO\nPICTURE AT STARLAND\nVaried    Program   to   Be   Shown\nMonday  Night at Mutual\nPlayhouse\nA very strong program will be pre\nsented at the Starland. this \u2666venln*.\ntwo very fine feature films beading\nthe bill. \"A Daughter of the Hills,\" fc\nFamous Players drama In three parts,\nwill he shown, featuring Laura Sawyer, the beautiful atar. This is ft story\nof ancient Rome, In the days of Nero,\nand tells a beautiful story of the love,\nbetween Sergius, a gladiator, and a\nbeautiful shepherdess. ,  '    '     >,\n\"On the Road to Calais,\" a two-\npart British feature, Is a very trilling\nstory based on the present war and\ndepicts the adventures of a girl who\nfalls into the hands of the villainous\nHuns. A comedy, entitled \"A QuesJ\ntion of Clothes,\" completes the program.\nTomorrow .Tack Pickford, the rising\nyoung star, will be featured with\nFrltzi Brunette in \"Virtue Triumphant, a three-part Sellg play. On WedV\nnesday, June 7, the twelfth chapter of\n\"The Goddess\" will be shown.\nNext season De Wolf Hopper wllj\nbo in vaudeville with a monologue based on his motion picture experience,\nentitled \"MiRhops In the Movies.\" ' \u25a0',\n\"The Boomerang\" is to be produced\nin London about the middle of the\nmonth. Pay Compton and Nina Bou-\ncicault will be in the cast.\nten-\nwe(l.\nIn tlie motion picture, bouses one\ngets music throughout, no intervals,\nand, except In very rare cases, t% top\nprloo for seats of 25 cents. You j may\ngo when you please and most important I\nof all in a city of long distances,1 like\nNew York, the business man neetl not\ndrag down over tho route he has already covered twice in going to and\nfrom his office. There are first-class\npicture houses all over .the ui*l\u00bb\\vn\ndistricts of Manhattan.\nA move in tho right direction was\nmudo last autumn when John j Cort\nbuilt his standard theatre at the corner of Broadway and Ninetieth street\npresenting down town successes ifor a\nweek's run, at $1 for tbe host seats. The\nplaco was steadily packed and liow I\nhear ho Is to open two other hiuses,\non the East Side this time, on a similar plan. I seo no reason why a producing house should not lie operated\nin the same manner in tbe uptown\nresidential district.\nBlessing to Vaudeville.\nTbe movies may prove a blessing In\ndisguise, -io^'audeyilltv in the cojnpul\nsory cittllmiV^bw^.of Hhe. absurd\"; salaries deffliCnrffeffby^ert-hirt, pi ay era'from\ntho legitimate; fori their brief fliprs in\nthe \"two-a-day.\" Time was whin the\nvariety managers' consented to pay\nthose inflated prices ou the Idea that\nLOU TliXLEGEN\nAt the Starland, Thursday, June. 8,\nin \"The Unknown.\" !\nLou Tellegen, who created sirjch enthusiasm through bis screen \\ debut,\n\"The Explorer,\" will head the] Star-\nland bill Thursday In \"The Unknown.\"\nThe everlasting mystery of the Egyptian desert fills the whole picture,\nWhich Is a very thrilling one. jit wilt\nno doubt Interest many to learn that\nMr, Tellegen Is tbo husband ofJGerul-\ndlne Pamir, the famous prima [donna\nlie was leading man with \\ Surah\nBernhardt for many seasons.\nS&u'pen \"*1\u00bb SaWo ifojoba\" at th e Stem iV-riBMdt* - and*:tfHft\u00bbta*\nUie public would gladly give 7(s cents\nor 41 to see welt known flgiirps who\ncould be seen for only $2 otherwise.\n$40,000 tor Five Weeks.\nBut the advent, of the white).screen\nhas changed all this. Lured by huge\nprices\u2014Blllie Burke Is suid to have\nsuccumbed to an offer of $40,^00 for\nfive weeks' .work, while for o| single\npicture, \"The Garden of Llcs|'' Jane\nCowl, got ?lo,00p fro'\u00ab the Universal-\nso many of the big names can jo seen\nin film laud for 10 and 15 certs that\ntheir value to the vaudeville stage has\nbeen reduced practically to nil Contracts buve been -cancelled with some\nplayers who have stepped aside pose\nfor pictures and in one case-]that of\nMrs. Leslie barter\u2014the weekly paycheck is said to have been reduced by\n$1000.\nAfter utl, this will work outj to the\n-^vantage ot. the vaudeville patron,\nwho will hereafter see In the varieties\nonly those who land there through the\nIntrinsic, merit, pf .wbjj,t, t,hoy. pave to\noffer and not.,.beicauso^il'^jf have won\nairepji'tation ihjS^ne other.line itt work,\n1 she. .'.quqsjtwi.,still, cotifVon\nor when is the movie justness\nend?\nurepuuui\njjThe..',qi\n,\\ where or\n\/ going to f\nAlmays In the lead tho Starland ;setfc the standard hy which other\nexhibitors shape their course. Everything good Is imitated, but there's\nno mistaking the GENUINE article, which you'll always find at the\nStarland.\n\"WHERE   EVERYBODY   GOES\"\nTONIGHT\n7:00 to 10:30\nTONIGHT\n7:00 to 10:30\nTHE   FAMOUS   PLAYERS   PRESENT   BEAUTIFUL\nLaura Sawyer\nIN A PASTORAL DRAMA OF  LONG AGO\n\"A Daughter of the'\n..Hills\" '\nAlso\n\"ON   THE    ROAD   TO   CALAIS\"\nA Thrilling Two-Part Story Based on the Present War\nComedy\u2014\"A   QUESTION    OF   CLOTHES\"\nTOMORROW,   JUNE   6\nJack Pickford\nIN\n\"Virtue Triumphant\"\nTHREE-PART   DRAMA   OF   STAGE   LIFE\nAdditional Comedies and  Dramas\nWEDNESDAY,   JUNE   7\n\"The Goddess\"\nCHAPTER  TWELVE\nAdditional Comedies and Dramas\nIF YOU  HAVEN'T HEARD THE STARLAND ORCHESTRA PLAY\nTHE PICTURES COME IN AND HEAR THEM TONIGHT\nTHURSDAY,   JUNE   8\nLou Tellegen\nIN\n\"The Unknown\"\nLASKY\u2014FIVE   PARTS\nDo you remember Mr. Tellegen fn \"The Explorer\"!   \"Th. Unknown\"\nwill give you on even greater thrill.\nNote Change of Date\nFRIDAY,   JUNE   9\n\"The Girl and the Game\"\nCHAPTER    NINE\u2014\"A   CLOSE    CALL\"\nEvery Chapter a Complete Story\nTHE\nSATURDAY,   JUNE   10\nPauline Frederick\n:  SUPREME   EMOTIONAL  ARTISTE\nIN   A   DUAL   ROLE   IN\n\"The Spider\"\nFAMOUS   PLAYERS\u2014FIVE   PARTS\nNote Change of  Date\n\u2022   PARAMOUNT   TRAVELOGUE\nCHEEROII\nCharlie Chaplin\nWILL   BE   HERE   MONDAY,   JUNE   12\n\"The Floorwalker\"\nTHE  FIRST  MUTUAL CHAPLIN  COMEDY\nJ\n \u00bbn\u00ab\u00ab. .   . .\nITftE DAILY NEWS.\nPublished   every   morning    except\nBnntar by the News Publishing Com-\nVU]\/, Limited, Nelson, B.C., Canada,\nROBB SUTHERLAND,\nSecy.-Treas. and .Manoeer.\nBusiness letters should be addressed\nland checks and money orders made\npayaBle to the News Publishing Company, Limited, and in no case to Individual members'of the staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and sworn\ndetailed statements of circulation\nnailed on request, or may be seen at\ntbe office of any advertising agency\nrecognized by the Canadian Press\nAssociation.\nSubscription Rate\u2014By mail CO cents\nper month, 12.50 for six months, (5.00\nper year. Delivered: 60 cents per\nmonth, 13.00 for six months, $6.00\nper year, payable In advance.\nTWF.  DAILY NEW&\nMONDAY,   JUNE   5,   1016.\n'MONDAY.   JUNE   5,   1916.\nA CURIOU3 MESSAGE\n.Under the above heading the Toronto   Dally   News   deals   with   the\nStatement that \"Wilson is unquestionably 'supreme among the Democrats as\na trained intelligence and a disciplined\nthinker.\"    The News says:\n.  Jf this Is so, how did ho come\nto.\" make his speech to the Peace\nleague?   Surely it is strange that\n\u25a0 thi clearest thinker in his party\nshould .bring himself to say: \"We\nhtifve nothing material of any kind\nto ask for ourselves, and are quite\naware that we are in no reason or\ndegree parties to the present quar-\n. ret. Our Interest is only in peace\narid its future guarantees.\" Why\nshould the president of the Unit- ,\nK  ed States-thus go out of his way\nto Insinuate that there is nothing\nto* choose  between   the   belllger-  -\u25a0\nents?\n**The Dally \"News has ample evidence that this is not the view of\nthe; war entertained by the majority of intelligent Americans. These\npeople are outspoken in their condemnation of the brutal German\nKultur which precipitated this\nawful struggle for selfish ends,\noutraged Belgium, ravaged Servia\nand aspired to world dominion.\nConscious   of   the   decency   witb\n1 which the entente allies bave\nfought,; and \"of their consideration\nfor neutrals and non-combatants,\nsuch citizens of the United States\nCan oply look with unrest and distrust upon their president's curl-\noils utterances, obviously made to\n\u25a0 catch the votes of Germans and\nAustrians who have gone fur to\n.bring   about   anarchic   conditions\n: throughout the republic.\nThere is a suit of khaki at the recruiting office for you if you are\neligible.   The 22r>tb needs men.\nThe Canadians bave again been at\nclose grips with the enemy at Ypres\nand,'as usBfi.1, have given a good account of themselves.\nBerlin, Ontario, is to change its\nname, but the majority of the names\nsuggested are so bad that it would be\nbetter to retain the original.\nThe 225th Kootenay and Boundary\noverseas battalion publishes the first\nnumber of a live and interesting battalion newspaper this morning. The\nnew paper Is called The Mountaineer\nand should have a ready sale, not only\namong members of the battalion but\namong civilians as well.\nAs the fuller details of the great\nnaval battle in the North sea are received It becomes more and more\nevident that the British navy has\nmaintained its supremacy and that the\nGermans suffered even more severely\nthan the British. Germany already\nadmits equal losses and it is a safe\nsupposition that the full truth has not\nbeen told\u2014at least past experience\nWith German methods of falsifying\nnews would warrant that view.\nThe Calgary Albertan evidently has\na poor opinion of the prospects of the\nLiberal   party   winning   the   general\nelection in British Columbia.   It says:\n.   There  will   bo an   election   in\nBritish Columbia during the next\nfew Weeks,  the   result   of which\nwill be very doubtful.    The Liberals, of course, will make some\nbig gains, but whether or not they\nwill be able to overturn a strongly\nentrenched government Ih another\n'   matter entirely.   The Liberals did\n. not gain ground In tbe recent session.   Had the election been held\nbefore   the   session, the   Liberals\n;. would v. probably have won out by\n... a big majority.\nAs the opinion of an extremely partisan Liberal paper in another province the above Is interesting.\n*******\n[WHAT THE PRESS IS 8AYINQ 1\n*> \u2666 \u2666\u25a0\u2666 *** \u2666 \u2666 \u00bb \u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u2666\u00bb\u2666\u2666\u2666\u00bb \u00bb \u00bb\u25a0\u2666-\u00bb *i\nBernhardt, the Incomparable.\nMine, Bernhardt at tbe front today\n'somewhere in France\" acting for the\nsoldiers! What a wonderful woman|\nOur sister republic need never fear that\nit will have to bend its knee to a con\n\u25a0queror so long as Us daughters are\nmade of this kind of stuff. Who said\nthat words are women and deeds are\nlhen7\u2014New York Globe.\nWheat Area Large Again.\nThe wheat area in Manitoba Is only\n6 per cent less than it was last year\nand only: 10 or 15 per cent less in the\nother western provinces. Given favorable weather, the crop for this year\nought to be at least a good average.\u2014\n\u25a0JToronto Mall and Empire.\nAn Appeal to Neutrals,\n,, It Defoe were alive to write of the\nplague of typhus In the prisoners' camp\nat Wittenberg, in Prussia, we think\nthat he would have to heighten Ids language, apod may come put of this appalling episode If neutral countries\nwould see how directly they are concerned In the very strictest maintenance of the laws and cilbtoms of medi-\n\u25a0eai practise ia war.   We are strongly\nof the opinion that ihe government\n-^iould lay the report before neutral\ngovernment's and appeal to them to\nlodge a protest.\u2014London Spectator.\nThe Antithesis of Christianity.\nIf there is on\u00ab thing more certain\nthan another In the crisis in which we\nfind ourselves, it is that l*ruaslan militarism against which we are fighting\nwith all our inifcht, Is the direct antithesis of Christian ideas. There is in\nit a spirit, materialistic, vulgar,, domineering, whieh erects political ambition into a sort of ethical law, overriding ait the ordinary notions of humanity and lovingkindness. If the German Is a superman he is also antl-\ncbrlstlan. The god of Prussia is a\nMoloch, a god of pillage, barbarism\nand blood.\u2014London Telegraph.\nf'\u00ab*t MMttMMI\nI      THE FAT GARBAGE CAN.      I\n************************* i*\nIt is of no credit to us that \"the\nAmerican garbage can is the fattest\nin the world,\" remarked Senator\nSmoot when he injected into the sen\/-\nate debate on preparedness a plea for\npreparedness for good housekeeping\nand better homes. If I had a\ndozen daughters and was able to give\neach of them a million dollars the day\nof their marriage,\" said the senator, \"1\nwould still want each to know how to\ncook, make her own clothes, and*. In\nfact, be a superior housekeeper.\" The\nskillful cook and honsekeepor Is the\none who secures the maximum results\nwith a minimum expenditure of\nmoney. Any cook should be tfble to\nserve a .good meal with an unlimited\npocketbook at her disposal. The test\ncbmes when this is done at small expense, and tho highest art, as all clever\ncooks acknowledge, is to make a good\nmeal out of left-overs that the thriftless throw away. The wastefulness at\ntho table n*; the American hotel and\nthe restaurant has always amassed the\nforeign traveler.\u2014Leslie's,\nI   A  LITERARY WAR WORKER   i\nl.4>4> **************** *++-\u2022+++\nLondon Punch, hearing that the fa-\nvorite reading at the front is the novel-\nlette of the more sensational kind,\nprints the following tribute to the man\nwho prepared tbo cheering 4ose of\nsentiment for the country's righting\nmen:\nIn these days of stress and tumult,\nwhen the frfghtfulness of war\nReadjusts the private notion^ which\nwero ir-jrejiullcod before,\nIt -behooves the present critic to express his\" deep regrets\nFor his strictures on the makers of the\nnation's novelettes.\nHe has sneered at them and found It\nfar from easy to forgive\nTheir adeptness at tbe splitting of the\nfrail  infinitive.\nHe has sniggered at the love scenes,\nwhere, In sylvan sports apart,\n\u25a0Eva emptied over Ernest all the slop-\npail of her heart.\nBut today the case is altered, now that\nsomewhere that is French\n'Tis the novelette brings comfort lo the\ntroops that man the treneh; ..\nTommy,   resting   from   bis  labors,   is\nperusing with a zest\nHow Sir Brandon bugged Belinda to\nhis large expanse of breast.\nMere's success to such romancing; may\nideas be never short  '\nTo the British novelettist of the sentimental sort!\nMay whatever gods inspire him keep\nhis fancy free and fit,\nFor   he's  Tommy's  favorite   reading;\nso ho docs his little hit, -\n\u2014Ottawa Journal.\nYPRES SALIENT\nMl ATTACKS\n(Continued from Page One.)       .,\nCANADIANS IN ENGLAND.\n**-\u00bb\u25a0\u00bb ********* w-4>*-w-*>++-*w-*+\nThe mayor and council of Folkestone are worried hy charges that Canadians visiting that town have been\novercharged by tradesmen. Recently\nthe council passed a resolution condemning any such treatment of Canadians, and asking for particulars and\nopportunities of investigation. The\nmayor and clerk say thero have been\na fe.\/ isolated eases of. overcharge, but\nthat the whole town should not be\ncondemned for these. Of course, that\nIs quite reasonable.   -\nSomehow the impression has gained'\nground that the Canadian soldier has\na good deal of pocket money to spare,\nand an unscrupulous tradesman might\ntako advantage of that, but we do not\nthink Canadians are inclined to make\na grievance out of an occasional case\nof extortion. There are certain persons\nwho always regard a traveler and a\nstranger as fair prey. They are found\nin every country, and no country\nshould be condemned for their misconduct.\nI BRITAIN UNBEATABLE\n* +*-*-+++**\u2022**** **** >\u2666\u2666\u00bb<\nWhy France has been so splendid in\nwar after being so vulnerable in government is a good deal of a mystery\nto many of us. But she had a\ngood military training and had some\ngood generals, and- after all, to have\nan army wutf to her a life-and-death\nmatter, which, especially since 1870,\nshe has never quite dared to neglect.\nNot so with England, whose indispensable safeguard was her navy. Her\nfirst duty was to have a navy and she\nhad one. Without it and without her\npowerful support in men, money, munitions ond supplies on land and sea.\nFrance, with all her gallantry, could\nnot have held out, and the Germans\nwould have won the war a year ago.\nScold Great Britain -by all means;\nbut, oh brethren, try lo do it with intelligence! \"Beaten in this war\" Is\nshe? You will find, judge, that she\nIs not only unbeaten, but unbeatable.\nCalled upon to be all things to all men\nond Nemesis to Germans, she has\nslipped up in some particulars, but\nshe Is not only going still, but going\nstrong, and she is today the one unbeatable factor In the allied combination.\u2014Life.\nI      WHAT BRITAIN IS DOING.      1\ni **********+-*!\nFrance looks to England not only, to\nkeep a considerable portion of the\nfighting line supplied with British\ntroops, but she also looks to us for\na hundred and one manufactured articles which must be supplied from\nthis country by British hands. Russia\nlooks to England for assistance in a,\ndozen ways. Italy demands British\nships, British gold and British manufactured goods.\nIt is unnecessary here to elaborate\nour obligations to tbe Servian army,\nl-uh aiming of a bun lied thousand men,\nwhi have to be fed, supplied and paid.\nThis also applies to the Belgian army.\nWe have to pu*y our heavy portion for\nthe Saloniki enterprise, for East Afri\nca, for Egypt, for Mesopotamia.\n1 Above all things, we have to control\ntho seas. Tho British fleet makes It\npossible for us, even In the face of\nheavy losses ^by submarines, not only\nto supply this country with its necessary foodstuffs and raw materials, but\nalso to keep the Russians, the Italians,\ntho French nnd the other allied forces\nIn constant touch with their bases of\noverseas supply. Of course, the French\nand Italian fleets aro doing*, their part\nbut on the whole, it is the British fleet\nwhich dominates the seas.\u2014London\nExpress.\ntrenches immediately west of \u2022 the\nwood. The^ were not aide to debouch, from Cumieres. On*the slope\nnorth of Hill 30-1 we maintained our\npositions, as well as on the slopes\nnortheast of Le MorL Homme. In the\nlatter region we captured in addition\na fortifled-*Avork.'\n\"On the, right bank the enemy, after\nhaving bombarded, May 3, our positions between jJDhlamnnt farm and\nFort Vaux, attacked June'l and succeeded In gaining'possession to tbe\nsouth of Fort Dou. an Mont, the great\ner ^ttrt of the Caillette wood.\n\".Tune 2, attacks continued between\nthe Vaux pond and the village of\nDamloup, having as their principal objective Fort Vaux. Our artillery inflicted considerable losses on the enemy, who stopped along the whole\nfront, \"gaining a footing in the village\nof Damloup.\n\"On the night of June 2-3 the Germans succeeded in penetrating a ditch\nnorth of Fort Vaux.\n\"Two fresh divisions, brought to the\nI Verdun  region  have   been   identified,\none on Le Mort Homme and tbe other\nin the region of Dou au Mont.\nBelgian Communication\n\"The day was calm.\"\nGerman  Statement\nBERLIN, via London, July 4.\u2014The.\nGerman drive on the ^Verdun front,\nbetween the Caillette wood and Damloup, northeast of the fortress Is pro\ngressing favorably for' the attacking\nforces, the war office announced today. The capture of more than 500\nprisoners and four machine guns is\nreported.\nWest of the Meuse a French attack\nnear Hill 304 Was repulsed.\n.Attempts by the British to regain\nthe ground they recently lost to the\nGermans near Ypres, on the Flanders\nfront, were fruitless.\n\"Western front: The British directed several attacks against the posl-.\ntions won by us east of Ypres. They\nwere ^everywhere repulsed.\n\"The artillery battle north of Arrns\nand in the region of Albert continued\ntoday. British reconnolterlng detachments were repulsed.\n\"Several attacks by the enemy\nsoutheast of Neuville St Vaast were\nwithout result.\n\"On the left bank of the Meuse a\nminor enemy attack west of Hill 304\nwas repulsed. During the attack wo\ncaptured one machine gun.\n' \"On the eastern hank, of the river\nheavy fighting \"between Cantelle and\nDamloup progressed' in our favor,\nYesterday more than 500 Frenchmen,\nincluding  three   officers,   were   taken\nprisoner, and four machine guns were\ncaptured.\n.   \"West of Markisch; in the Vosges\nregion,  several   day   attacks   by the\nenemy were unsuccessful.\n\"Bombs were dropped in Flanders,\ncausing injuryv to several Belgians.\nNo militnry damage resulted.\n\"Near Holiebeck a British aeroplane was brought down by our antiaircraft guns.\"\nLINER'S CARGO AND TIER\nBURN AT SAN FRANCISCO\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nSAN FRANCISCO, June 4.\u2014A new\nconcrete pier and 5000 tons of freight\nwhich bad been unloaded yesterday\nfrom the Shiriyo Maru Number 2, a\nJapanese liner, recently arrived here\nfrom oriental ports, were destroyed\nin a spectacular water front blaze of\nunknown origin today.\nThe Shlnyo Maru and the Governor\nForbes, a freighter which .were tied to\nthe burning pier, were slightly damaged before they could be moved out\nof the fire's reach. No ^ lives were\nlost.\"\nThe loss was estimated at $750,000.\nTHE   WEATHER\nWater, 10 feet, 3 inches.\nItin.\nMax\nNelson\t\n 40\n60\nPrince Rupert  ....\n 40\n54\nVictoria\t\n 40\n00\nVancouver\t\n B0\n60\nCalgary\t\n 44\n60\nEdmonton \t\n 44\n62\nBattlefora\t\n  50\n(Ml\n72\n73 \u2022\nWinnipeg\t\n 30\n02\nPort Arthur \t\n 44\n58\nParry Sound  \t\n 44\n62\nLondon .'...\"\t\n...... 44\n73\nToronto\t\n 47\n72\nOttawa\t\n 50\n70\nMontreal\t\n...... 54\n64\n54\nf +**************\u2022*+****+*1\nI COLD   STORAGE j\n++*-+-* \u2666-\u2666 \u2022- w+-*-w-*-++~*vw-w-w-+*-w-++1\nThings to worry about: The Increased price of drugs has greatly reduced\ntho use of medicine.\n\"Where are you going this summer?\"\n''Well,\"-   replied   Mr.   Cuinrox   \"I'm\nlooking for novelty.   I want to be in\nsomo placo where 1 can do as I choose\nand where the summer scenery will be\nbrand new to me.\"\n\"Hove you found such a place?\"\n\"Yes;  I'm going to stay home.\"\nMUST HAVE BETTER '\nCARS IN TORONTO\n' TORONTO, June 2.\u2014Bills of indictment will be laid against the Toronto\nStreet Railway company immediately\nby the city for overcrowding winter\nand summer cars, according to a decision arrived -at by the board of control at a special meeting yesterday*\nThe controllers will compel the company to provide a proper type of summer car. In un effort to get proper\nventilation on cars, the medical health\nofficer was instructed to bring action\nagainst the railway for breach of the\nPublic Health act.\nDIAMONDS\nThere is but one quality in Birks'\nDiamonds\u2014THE BEST. Our expert diamond buyer conducts the\nmost severe tests\u2014adheres to\nthe highest standards. In color,\ncutting and shape every stone\nis of the highest quality. T'HE\nSIZE ALONE DETERMINES\nTHE VALUE.\nOur Domlnion-wlde reputa-\n. tion assures you of honest\nand straightforward dealing.\nOur- -complete mail-order\nservico assures you of satisfaction   in   your   purchase. -\nSend for our illustrated catalogue\nHenry Birks & Sons Ltd.\nVancouver, B. C.\nI\nJohn Burns &. Sons rSSBS\"*\n8a8h and door factory.\"        nelson planing mill8.\nVernon street, nelson, b.c.\nEvery Description of Building Material Kept in Stock.\nEstimates Given on Stone, Brick, Concrete and Frame Buildings,\nMAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.\nP.O. BOX 134 PHONE 178'\n'  \u25a0    '\u2022\"' \u2022\u2022-.'.'  JJI>s\u00bba.>l,\u00bb.-J!-\nDid You Ever Stop and Figure\nWHAT   YOU  ARE  WASTING EACH  DAY  IN ALLOWING  YOUR\nVEGETABLES, BUTTER, MILK, ETC., TO SPOIL BY NOT HAVING\nA PROPER PLACE TO KEEP THEM.\u2014A NEW\nREFRIGERATOR\nwill cost you. a small amount and it will save you dollars each month\nbesides  keeping things fresh  and clean.\nPRICES   TO   SUIT   ALI CALL   AND   SEE   US\n'    \u25a0\nI\nStarting with Next Saturday, June 3, this store will close at\nTwelve o'clock and each Saturday afternoon during the summer\nmonths.\nNelson Hardware Co.\nNELSON,   B.   C.\nIVERSoflGEFLOW*\n\u25a0   *\"'   J**    \"   V t\"\"\n-\" f^'\u25a0;*:,-   ,:0\nmesr\n^y^^ffi-~\/y>-A\n...  *U) The Cracks in a Glacier.\nGlaciers.\nSTAND with me on Uie summit of a\nCanadian Facifio Rocky Mountain. What a wondrous panorama Ib unfolded: not only of peaks\nand ranges, tier on tier, line on line,\nbut of vast glittering fields ot snow\nand Ice, making a white world of (ha\nupper heights, a regior ot eternal winter In striking contrast of the flower-\ncovered beds of the v-lleys a mile below us, or the green of the alpine\nmeadows and the forest depths.\nWe are standing In a realm where\nrivers ot Ice flow, for lt Is one of the\nmanifold woudera of nature that these\nhuge snaky lines of Ice'are slowly but\nsurely moving down ' the mountain\nslopes to their death In a terminal\nmoraine. And while they thus travel\ndown hill,' they are at the same shrink'\nIng, so that with,few exceptions the)?\nrtow  a gradual  recession   which   lis\n(2) A Eocky Mountain Lakelet fed by Glacial Wateri.   (8) The Fiiswei in a Glacier.   (4) Tbe Yoho\nmarked In Borne glaciers by scientific\nstudy, huge boulders carrying the year\nwhen the toe ot the glacier reached\nthat spot, with later markings Indicating the shrinking process. Tha\nIllectllewaet Glacier, for example, re-,\ntreated up.the valley, between 1S90\nand 1868, a distance of no leas than\n4B2 feet.\nTHe-Illecillewaet glacier, in the Sel-\nklrks, is one ot the largest remaining\nglacial deposits in the Canadian'\nranges, a gigantic ley river of greeh\nand white-flowing valleyward with a\nmagnificent sweep. Longfellow's description comes to mind as orie gasw\non the scene as \"a glittering gauntlet\nwhich the frost king has thrown In de-\"\ndance of the snn,\" and so It Sosms as\nIt glitters hack its rauianre from Its\n.whits bosom ahd its- crystal archi\ntecture.\nOr stand on Lefroy or Hungabee, or\nbetter still, on Temple, In the Lake\nLouise region, and again the eye Ib\nheld In thrall with the colossal canvas\nand the ley glaciers on every peak.\nWho will forget that superb view of\nthe Victoria Glacier from the Lake\nLouise Chalet, or the white masses on\nthe lofty roofs of the Ten Peaks, when\na full moon floods them with stiver\nlight? The sheen of a hundred sparkling waterfalls makes a drapery, while\nat times the ear Is bombarded with the\nBound of a mighty avalanche tumbling\nfrom Inconceivable heights.\nThe wonder of tbe, glacier Is more\nfully realiud when thoy are explored\nat close quarters, when their fantastic\ncaverns and awesoriio fissures are enured or crossed, whan tha mountain\nclimber picks his way over a masa ol\nice masses thrown up as lf in mortal\nagony by ths pressure ot the upper\ndeposits that causa the downward\nmovement. Yonder Is the snow field\nfrom which the glacier flows, here ti\na \"bergschrund\" aa the ugly-looking\ncrevasse Is called that separates the\nglacier from the mountain side. Ser<\nacs\u2014curious Ice towers\u2014look I Iks\nmonuments ot the gods, and the tongue\nor snout marks the end of the glacier\nfrom whence flow the melting waters\nthat mark the birth of great rivers.\nIn this vast Canadian Garden or the\nGods, of Rockies and Selkirk*. In\nwhich scores of Switzerland* could be\nput,'nothing la more wonderful than\nthe great glaciers ever journeying to\ntheir obliteration, ever sweeping to-'\nwar* tbe valley, beds, tl9INax,..  r\\\n, \/ When using '**\n\/     WILSON'S\n(FLY PADS\n,,    READ   DIRECT iOrtS\n\\  Ws       CAREFULLY  AND\nrflS-'O..   -  ,   FOLLOW THEM\/\n-*? S\"\"-    ~\"~s<     EXACTLY\/-\nFar more effective than Sticky Fly I\nCatchers. Clean to handle. Sold by J\n.Druggists and Grocers everywhere.\nJ. P. MORGAN\nSECOND HAND DEALER.\nBuys for cash, Stoves, Furniture, Tools,!\netc.   Good prices for Hides, Rubber J\nCopper and Brass.   See us before youl\nsell. r\n512 Vernon Street, Nelson, B. C.|\n(Two doors from PostotfIce.)\nPrivate Hospital\nLICENSED BY PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENT.\nWe give particular attention to all!\nfemale trouble\u2014home-like apartmentel\ntor ladles awaiting accouehment.      I\nHighest     references;      reasonable!\nterms; Inspection Invited. ^\nMRS. MOORE, Superintendent.\nTHE  HOME  PRIVATE  HOSPITAL,!\nFalls and Baker Sts., Nelsen, B. C.\nP. O. Box 772.\nPhone 372 for Appointment\nLAND'ACT.\nForm of Notice.\n(Section 78.)\nWEST KOOTENAY LAND DISTRICJt|\nDISTRICT OP KOOTENAY._\nTake notice that W. E. Wasson otl\nNelson, city olerk acting as agent fori\nthe Corporation ot the City of Nelson, I\nintends to apply for permission to l.ease|\ntho following described land:   Com-;\nmencing at a post on the northerly\nboundary of D.L. COOS, Group One, WeBtl\nKootenay District, and distant 300 teetj\nmore or less In an easterly dlrectlolf\nfrom the northwest corner of said lot:\ntjience N 27 degrees 67 minutes W.,j\n880 feet; thence S., 82 degrees 03 mln-l\nutes W., 400 feet; thence S. 27 degrees!\n57 minutes E., \u00ab50 feet; thence N. 72|\ndegrees    03    minutes E\u201e  101.6 feet;!\nthence N. 27 degrees 67 minutes W., 226l\nfeet;   thence northeasterly,  following j\nthe. northerly boundary of Lot 6003,|\nGroup One, Kootenay District, a dls-,\ntance of 300 feet more or less, to the!\npoint of commencement, and contain-1\ning  four .'and  one-flftili   (4.2)   acres |\nmore or less.\nW. E. WASSON,.\nAgent for the Corporation of the City|\nof Nelson   .\nDated at Nelson, B.C., this 4th dayj\nof May, 1916.\nMINERAL ACT.\nCertificate of Improvements.\nNOTICE.\nGraphic Mineral Claim, situate In thei\nSlocan Mining Division of West I\nKootenay District. Where locatedl T\nOn Alpha Mountain adjoining thei\nEcho and the Alpha Mineral f\nClaims.\nTake notice tnat I, A. H. Green, act-1\nIng as agent for J H. Thomps oil\nSilverton, B.C., Free Miner's Certificate I\nNo. 84S33-B, Intend, sixty days front!\nthe date hereof to apply to the Mining |\nRecorder for a Certificate of Improvements, for the purpose of obtaining a |\nCrown Grant of the above claim.\nAnd further take notice that action, ]\nunder section 85, must be commenced!\nbefore the issuance of such Certificate |\nof Improvements.\nDated this 1st day of February, AJ3., |\n1918. '':;'\nA. H. GREEN.\nSYNOPSI8 OF COAL\nMINING REGULATIONS |\nj    j\nCoal mining rights of the Dominion I\nin Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Al-1\nberta, the Yukon Territory, the North- J\nwest Territories, and In a portion otl\nthe provlnoe of British Columbia, may I\nbe leased for. a term ot twenty -one!\nyears at an annual rental of $1 perl\naore. No more than 2,660 acres will]\nbe leased to one applicant.\nApplication  for  a  lease  must be j\nmade by the applicant in person to the I\nAgent or Sub-agent of tbe district ot |\nwhich the rlghta, applied for. are situated.\nIn surveyed territory the land must j\nbe described by sections or legal eub- I\ndivisions of sections and In unsurvey-1\ned territory the tract applied for ahall I\nhe staked out by the apllcant himself, j\nEach application must be accom- j\npanted by a fee of to which will he refunded If the rlghta applied for are]\nhot available, but not otherwise. A |\nroyalty shall be paid on the merchantable output ot the mine at thai\nrate of five cents per ton, I\nThe person operating the mine \u25a0ball I\nfurnish the Agent with sworn return* I\naccounting for the full quantity otl\nmerchantable coal mines and pay thei\nrealty thereon. If the coal mining]\nrights are not being operated, such I\nreturns shall be furnished at least]\nonce a year.\nThe lease will include the eoal m\nIng lights only, but the lessee nt\nbe permitted to   purchase   whatever!\navailable surface rights may be considered necessary lor the working oil\nthe mine at the rate of 110 an'acre.   ' 1\nFor tull information application |\nshould be made to the Secretary of th* I\nDepartment of the Interior, Ottawa, I\nor to any Agent pr Bug-agent of Do-|\nminion lands.      '\nW. W. COKT,\nDeputy Minister of the Interior.\nN .B.~Unauthorised publication oil\nthl* advertisement wlU not be paid left I\n si\nMONDAY,   JUNE  \">,   I*)'*\".\nTHE DAILY  NEWS\nPAGE FIVE\n\u2022STORE CLOSED AT 12 O'CLOCK\n\u25a0    NOON TODAY.\nFresh\nASPARAGUS\n8PINACH\nNEW CABBAGE\nLETTUCE\nRADISHES\nRHUBARB, ETC., ETC.\nFresh Every Morning\nKennewick\nStrawberries!\nBox .....20c\nNa. 9625\nb the winning number In our\nweekly drawing tor a pair ot II\nShoes. Holder of this ticket\nplease call.\nAsk for ticket with your purchase.\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLEADERS IN FOOT FASHION\nTHURMAN'S\nJUST ARRIVED\nA fresh shipment of Thin-man's Special\nMixture. Try a tin today.   ,\n8-s, 25c. 4-s, 40c, i ib., SI.50\nKootenag and Boundary\ns,..........................\n.,,................< .....I\nStar Grocery\nPHONE 10.\nTry Us With Your\nMail Orders\nToilet Water, 7Bc, 11.M and 11.25;\nto clear  -40c\nPoole Drug Co.\nUMITED.\nP. 0. Box 60S. Nelson, B. C.\nFURS\nHave your furs made up,, remodelled\nor repaired at a-discount during Bummer.   Skins drossed    and    mounted,\nOver forty years' experience in princl-\n_pal European cities.   Best prices paid\nlor raw furs.\n.,' O. GLASER, \/\nManufacturing Furrier.\n418 Ward St., Nelson. B. C. Phone 100.\nXL-ITE\n\/BLASTING   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 Quotations.\nAt it Again\n\"We have opened up our Ice\nCream Parlor and as in the past\nyears are making our oWn^lce\ncream -(frith...    \u2022\u2022\u25a0\nPURE FRESH CREAM.\nTry it and let   us   havo   your\nopinion,\nChoquette Bros.\nThe High-Class Baker, and\nConfectioners.\nPhone 268. . 518 Baker St.'\nTHORPE'S\n^ DRINKS\nGRAND FORK8 NEWS.\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nGRAND FORKS, B. C, Juno 3.\u2014The\nofficers and men of D company wish\nto express\" their thanks to theamem-\nfooiVof the Grand Forks vollunteer\nfire brigade for a donation of $50 towards the. company fund.\n\u25a0D Company has received a.shipment of everything from caps to shoes.\nThere are now 41 men In camp and\nthere are sufficient uniforms for GO\nmol'e.\nThe followiiiR recruits have Joined\nD company during the week: Phoenix,\n0; Grand Forks, 4; Greenwood, 3; Cas-\nende, 2.1\"\nThe following officers, N. C. O. officers and men are now in camp hei'e:\nLieut. K. Wilkinson; Sergeants A.\nCarlisle, J. Nye and W. laughton;\nCorporals W. Thorhurn, R. J. Thompson and 3. B. Thompson, Privates J.\nCanipljell, 15. A. Dnbson, J. T. Elliott,\nF. Fitzgerald, .T. Fouhls, G. B. Ganc,\nF Greenwood, D. G. Hnndy, .T. ,T. Hare,\nR. Harris, W, HOcfean, H. A. McDonald. A. Podron, II. .**\"\/. Tanner, W.\nWilson, W. Wilkinson, T. King, W.\nndsoorl; W. .T. Thompson, G. T. Rooke,\nW. .1. Saunders,, R. L. McDonald, A.\nMaKinnon, .T. Gordon, F. Gloski, B. F.\nPrice, Buglers K Wiles, <R. Morris and\nS. .T. iNichols;;  cook, It. W. Storey.\nROSSLAND NEWS\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nROSSLAND, B. C, June 3.\u2014A successful dance was.given In the armory\nFriday, the proceeds of which will go\nto the pjUriutlc and''Red Cross funds.\nE. S. H. Winn, H. M. Tuck, A. M.\nJohnstone and H. S. Langford returned Saturday from a motor trip to\nGrand Forks,\nMrs. Alvin Willis of Portland, Ore,\nIs 'a visitor w thk t>lty\".~':\nW. J. Russell\" Is] i\" the city from\nGrand Forks.\nM. McKenzlo', 3, Kemp, M. Hancock,\nA. M. Belts, A. T. ColllS, T. Embleton,\nE. Stephens, C. .1. Miles and \u2022**, Wilson\nreturned Saturday from a motor trip\nto Vmir. Mr. Wilson, as district\ndeputy grand master of tho Masonic\nGrand Lodge ot British Columbia, paiil\nan* official visit to Ymir lodge,\nL. J. Hall is in tlie city from Win-\nnijieg.\nMiss Margaret Fraser of East Roll-\nson spent the weekend at her home\nhere.\nMrs. Gordon Wright arrived in the\ncity from Ti'ail Saturday.\nOPPOSES INCREASES OF\nPRICES OF  FRUIT\n(Special to The Dally Nows.)\nPENT1CTON, B. C, June 4.\u2014There\nIs apparently a determination in local\nfruit growing cli-cles hot lo permit\nnny undue advantage to be taken of\nthe added protection given to the apjile\nIndustry by the Dominion government.\nLocal .gi-owers state that they want\nlast year's price's- and no mol'e.\nA well known fruit grower who\nlearned It had been rumored thnt the\nmanagement of a fruit selling organization had decided to raise its apple\nprices 30 per cent, intimated that as\nsoon as definite Information wns obtained he would demand a general\nmeeting to voice a protest If the rumor\nwas found to be authentic.\nWANETA NEWS.\n(Special If) The Daily News.)\nWANETA, B. C, .Tunc 3.\u2014The average dally maximum temperature for\nthe month of May was C3 degrees;\nminimum, 37 degrees. May 3 was the\nwarmest day, when the thermometer\nregistered 74 degrees. The night of\nMay 11 was the coldest, 27 degrees being registered. Tho total rainfall for\nthe month waB 3% inches.\nA. E.-Churches and Miss D. S. Hollands wel'e visitors to Trail Thursday.\nIn spite of the lateness of the season\nseeding is well forward, several acres\nof newly broken land having been\nseeded with grain. Potatoes and.corn\naro well up.\nFORT STEELE NEWS\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nFORT STEELE, B, C, June 3.\u2014\nHis Grace the Archbishop T. Casey\nheld confirmation services at Mission\ntills week. Hi's grace also paid a short\nvisit to Fort Steele Friday, accompanied by Father Maguire and Father\nLdmbQj'd.\nJ. P. Forde, distrlcl^englneer of public works, of Nelson visited Fort Steele\nrecently.\nMrs. A. Fenwick *and her daughter\nTheo have returned fronnSpokane.\n. Eddie Walsh has -written from the\nfront, saying he is well and strong.\nMrs. Harrison and Cyril Harrison\nleft Friday for a trip to Wasa.\nThe country roundabout Fort Steele,\nespecially near Rampart and Wasa, is\noverrun with gophers. .The school\nchildren are unite successful in trapping them, sometimes getting four and\nfive a day. However, if there were, a\nbounty tlie sltujitlon might be im\nproved,\nAnother pest are the chicken hawks,\nwhich are particularly bold this\nspring.\nMrs. Attree and daughter nre spend\nlug a. few weeks at their ranch sev-\nei'nl miles out of Wnsa.\nHugh Dunlop is spending a few days\nin town previous to training at Fernie\nwith the 225th,\nTom Chisholm is recuperating nicely\nafter an operation and after a few\nweeks will bo off to ti'aln in Cl'an-\nlii'nok.\nSalesman Wanted\n\u25a0\"TO COVER THE ARROW AND KOOTENAY LAKES AND OTHER\nPOINTS CONVENIENT TO NELSON\nIN THE SALE OF A FULL LINE OF NURSERY STOCK\nAttractive proposition to a man who will give his full time to the work.\nAddress for Full Particulars\n, THE   BRITISH    COLUMBIA   NURSERIES   CO.\n1493 Seventh Avenue West Vancouver, B. C.\nDon't Forget:\nWHEN  VOU  WANT\nHay, Feed or Grain\nOF THE BE8T QUALITY AND AT THE BEST PRICE\nTO  COME  TO    '   '\nThe Taylor Milling and\nElevator Co., Ltd.\nBLAIRMORE NEWS.\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nBDA'IRMORE, Alta., .Tune 3.\u2014The\noutput at .the Greenhill mine of the\nWest Canadian collieries is increasing\ndfiily'and soon will bo one of the largest producing:.mines of high grade coal\nIn southern Alberta,\nTho mine wns put into operation\nson 1 after tho closing down of the old\nRlalrmore mine and although it is only\nin Its infancy it is already producing\nabout an average of SOO tons per day.\nA new incline Is In course of construction in No. 2 seam and when this\nis completed it is expected tho mine\nwllWif- producing; something lilto:,**t0(M>\ntons dally. The. new steel tipple which\nIs being constructed to the railway\nsiding \\\u00bb almost completed.\nSeveral hundred men are already\nemployed at the mine, W. O. Pearson\nis the  pit boss,\nHoward H. Rdderly has been\nplaced in charge of P. Burns & Co.'s\nstores from Coleman to Bellevue, taking the place of .H, Tom, who lias\nheci in charge since tbe enlistment of\n.l-\\ Dennison in the 192nd battalion,\nMr. Kdderly comes from Macleod. Mr.\nTnm will return to Lethbridge to take\nup bis duties as bookkeeper ut I\\\nBurns & Co,\nU H. Putnam, who lately was ap-\npointecKtn tbo ranli of captain in tlie\n1 ill st battalion, Is on a brief business\ntrip to Calgary.\nMaurice Baldwin Is'the latest recruit\nlo jcni\/the ranks of tlie 102nd battalion, He camo in from Faith, Alta,,\nwhere  he was ranching,\nMrs. D. Klnlock left Friday for\nMedicine Hat, where she will spend\nseveral days, Mr. Klnlock is a trooper  n tlie lSUuovct'sens mounted rifles.\nMajor 1*. C. Shaw is spending a few\ndays with his parents in Lethbridge.\nMr. Shaw, Sr., is collector of customs\nfor this district.\nCapt. G.- A. Passmore, 192nd battalion, is on a visit to his wife and\nfamily at Creston, R. C. i\nCapt. \"Boh\" Campbell returned this\nweek from a trip to Calgary.\n,   Mr. Karney of Winnipeg, Man,, was\nin tho district several days this week.\nWEODING  AT  KASLO.\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nKASLG, B.C., June 3.\u2014The home of\nMr. and Mrs. D. Bruce was the -scene\nof 'a pretty wedding last Wednesday\nevening when their only -daughter,\nHelen, was married, to Oswald McDougall of tbe Standard mine, Silver-\nton.\nTim room in whicli the ceremony was\nperformed was decorated witb a great\nprofusion .of apple .blossoms Into which\ntho bride entered on the arm of her\nfather to the strains of Lohengrin's\nbridal march, played .by Miss Irene Bil-\nHngs. Miss Murchison acted as 'bridesmaid and Kenneth Martin of Rossland\nas groomsman. Rev. G. S. Wood officiated, A dainty luncheon was served\nto about W guests.\nTho bride woro a becoming gown nf\nwhite embroidered silk voile trimmed\nwith satin,'with veil and orange blossoms. Her traveling suit was dark\nblue with hut to match. Tlie 'bridesmaid wore white ninon trimmed with\nlace.\nThe groom's present to the bride\nwns a gold watch fob ;to the bridesmaid a silk umbrella; a sterling silver\njewel case to tbo pianist and to tho\ngroomsman a sterling silver match\ncase.\nThe couple loft on the train the\nfollowing morning, stopping off at\nNew Denver where a dinner was given\ntbem by Mrs. Angrlgnon. From there\nthey proceeded to the mine at Silver-\nton where Mr. McDougall has built a\nhome, A reception and dance was\ngiven them by tiie miners that evening,\nThe following were among-tbe presents! |\nMr. nnd Mrs. Clark, butter dish and\nbutter knife; Mr. and Mrs. Mooney,\nfruit dish and silver teaspoons; C F.\nSherwin, electric iron; Mr. and Mrs. J.\nKeen, photo frame and clock; Miss\nMcLellnnt cut glass vase; Mrs. Stii'bhs,\nhand crochet centrepiece; Mr. and Mrs.\nJ, McGuffle, towels and check; Miss\nCatherine 811118, set crochet doilies; K.\nMartin cut glass berry bowl and cut\nglass sugar and cream; Miss Frances\nPerry, Japanese tea plates; Mrs. Mc-\nAndrews, Irish linen napkins und tray\nsloth j Mr. and Mrs. Cosgrlff, silver tea\nspoons; Mr. Nord, cut glass vase; Mrs.\nLilian Smith, check; Dr. nnd Mrs.\nReid, cut glass .bon bon dish; Mrs.\nmd Vera Moulton, crochet platter\ncloth; Mr. and Mrs. Billings, check;\nMr. and Mrs. A. T. Garland, table lin-\nMiss OlivevAbey, silver pepper and\nsalt; Miss Cora Murchison, towels,\ncut glass salt and ltcpper In case; Mrs.\nHughes, huml embroidered pillow case-\nMiss McKeiisde, pair of pictures; Mrs.\nGordon Tuptln, pair of pictures; Mr.\nand Mrs. A. U Mci'hec, check; Mr.\nand Mrs. F. Abey, cut glass cake plate;\nMrs. Palmer,- silver pickle fork; Mr.\nand Mrs. Murchison, rug; Mr. and Mrs.\nGillis, pair bf pillows, Willi hand embroidered cases; Mr., Miss ami Gertrude Hodder, picture; Mr, and. Mrs. H.\nBCAice, silver; Barley Ifcrnee. i'arvlng\nset; Mr. and Mrs. W.*l\u00ab*S>ougall, cheek;\nAmos McDiiiigall.cbcclfi; Mr. and Mrs.\nC; Webster, china tea jglates; Red and\nMrs. Wood, afternoon china salvers;\nMiss Irene Billings, vase; Mr. and Mrs.\nHenry, band painted china tea cups;\nMr. and Mrs. McQueen, earning set;\nMrs, and Miss Cairncy, table napkins;\nMrs. R. V. Bishtm, hajjd embroidered\ndresser scarf.\nSILVERTON PATRIOTIC FUND\n.COLLECTIONS FOR APRIL\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nBILVBRTON, B. C, Juno 3.-\u2014Collections of tlie Silverton branch of the\nCanadian Patriotic fund for tiie month\nof AprU were $1100.30, credited as follows: Employees <>' Standard mine\nand mill, $.xr*ij'.30; employees or Silver-\nton Mines, Ltd., $!l4.r*0; employees of\nEcho mine, ?22.50; employees of\nBuck-y Thought mine, $20; employees\nof Galena Farm mine, $19;\" other\nresidents of Sllverton, $88; total for\nmonth of April, $1100.3,0; previously\nreported, $5382.85; total collections for\nsix months, $0*183.15.\nHARROP NBVV3.\n(Special to The Dnily News.)\nHARROP, B.C., .Tune 3.\u2014Miss Clyde\nof Robson Is spending a few days with\nher sister, Miss V, J. Clyde.\nMrs. J. T, Chapman of Nelaon visited over tho weekend with Mrs. 10.\nHarrop,\nA. Macgerelh arrived from the prairie last week.\nMrs. c. P. Ogllvle received news Saturday that her husband liad been injured on the railroad and taken to the\nGrand Forks hospital.\nITCHING NSTANTLV\nJust Bathe\nwiththe\nCnticnra\nSoap,\ndry and\napply the\nCnticnra\nOintment\nFor eczemas, rashes, itchings, irritations, pimples, dandruff, sore\nhands and baby humors, Cuticura Soap and Ointment are\nsupremely effective, t\nSample Each Free by Mall\nWith 32-p. Skin Hook. Address postcard, \"Cuticura, Dept. 3M, Boston,\nU.S.A.\"   Bold throughout the world.\nrecruiting rally is\nheld at Grand forks\n(Special to The Dally News.)\nGRAND FORKS, B. C, June 3.\u2014A\nrecruiting rally was held here Friday\nnight. The Kmpress theatre was\npacked to the doors to hear \"tiie news\nfrom the front'1 from Sorgt, Mclnnes\nand Trooper Roberts. During tbe\nevening Warner's orchestra played and\na vocal selection by Mrs. Laws as well\nas violin selections by Miss Kerman\nwere kindly applauded.\nMayor Acres introduced tfio first\nspeaker of the evening, Sergt. Mclnnes, who sketched his progress of a\nCanadian soldier from the time he enlisted until be was discharged.\nHe gave an exciting account of the\nfight for the orchard at Festubert.\nTime and again' his speech was interrupted by loud applause as some particularly daring piece of work by tho\nCanadian soldiers was given. Sergt.\nMclnnes' easy conversational delivery\nand occasional touches of humor put\nhim on the best of terms with his\naudience. Trooper Roberts also won\na place In the affections of those present and tbe strong plea be presented\nfor all those who .were physically fit\nto come forward could not fail to\nmove those who had good red blood In\ntheir veins. In response to his appeal\nJoseph Harris, Douglas Caller and\nl-'red Harrlgan, amid the thunderous\napplause of the people, took their seats\non the stage. The meeting closed with\nthe singing of the National Authem.\nBELFORD NEWS.\n(Special to Tlie Daily News.)\nBEDFORD, B.C., June 3.\u2014Privates C.\nRouth and George Galbet spent tlie\nweekend with  relatives here.\nMrs. Hi. Green of Sllverton i.s visiting\nat the home of her father, A. L. Laviolette.\nPte. H. Lindblad has a. week's leave\nof absence ami is visiting his parents,\nA number of the younger people\nsilent a very enjoyable evening last\nWednesday witb Mrs. A. J. Laviojette.\nBlouses\nBlouses   of  Plain   White\nand Striped Voiles\nMade In a variety of styles, all\nhaving low or convertible collars\nand\/ long sleeves. Some are\ntrimmed witli guipure lace. You\ncould not hope to find prettier,\ndaintier nor moro practical\nwaists than we now have for\nyour selection.   Sizes 34 to 44.\nSPECIAL VALUES,  EACH\n$1.45 to $5.00\nNew Blouses of Satin, Crepe-de-Chene\nand Georgette\nVery pretty ami fashionable aro these new Blouses.   We have all\nthe newer models, In such colors as Flesh, Copenhagen, Maize, Green\n$5.00 to $10.00\nand White and Rlack.   Slues 34 to 42.\nPrices  from,  Each\nNew Wash Silk Blouses-This Season's\nFavorites\nHeavy Japanese Silk, made In plain style or with pleats; convertible\ncollars and long sleeves.    These are extremely smart_nnd serviceable;\u25a0\nAll sizes to 44.                                          ^\nPrices from,  Each    \u2022\t\n$2.75 to $5.00\nMEAGHER & CO.\nTHE  STORE  FOR  STYLE\nTHE   STORE  FOR  QUALITY:\nSOUTH SLOCAN  NEWS\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B. C, June 3.\u2014\nMrs. A. Willey of Upper Bbnnington,\nin connection with the Bonnlngton\nPatriotic association, has collected the\nsum of %20M in aid of the Belgian\nrelief fund, which amount has been\nforwarded to the headrpiarters at\nMontreal.\nMrs. Samuels, who has been on a\nvisit to Northport, bus returned,\nbringing hoi\" grandchildren, tlie Misses\nDorothy and Klizuhoth \"Wilson, back\nwith her tu spend tlieiu school vTica-\ntlon at Bennington.\nMrs. G. E. Hotting nnd family, who\nhave been for a two weeks' visit to\nWillow Point, returned\"to Bonninglou\nWednesday.\nJames Macauley returned Thursday\nnight from a two weeks' visit to the\ncoast.\nMrs. Power of Thrums, Mrs. J.\nTarry of Tarrys and Mrs. Oliver of\nShoreacres were the guests of Mrs.\nMacaulay Tuesday.\nB. Van Dulken, who underwent an\noperation in the Kootenay Lake hospital at Nelson, is progressing favorably.\nMiss L, S. Bnlleny has \u25a0returned to\nShoreacres after n three months' visit\nto her sister, Mrs. G. C. Roclifort of\nWanekville, Alta.\nI\nCASCADE NEWS.\n(Special to The Dally News.)\n' CASCADE, B.C., May 3.\u2014A lawn social in aid of tho Red Cross fund will\nbo* given at Mrs. Spinks' residence\nWednesday, May 7, from 2 to fl p.m.;\nThcadmission will be free. Refreshments and fancy articles' will lie on\nsale. v\nMi*, and Mrs. Henniger and soo,\nvVillle, of Grand Forks were tbe guests\nof Mrs, R, G.  Ritchie? Wednesday.\n,T. Correnll of Grand Morks lias mov-\n\/d to Billings.\nX-M-ivatcs W. Hodgson and D. Handy\nvisited their families at Billings and\nCascade Tuosduy.\niMrs. tl. Falkner of Marcus, Wash.,\nwas the guests of Mrs. R, G. Ritchie\nWednesday.\nMrs. Bloomgrin of Frederick, Wis,,\narrived on a visit to berduugliter, Mrs,\n,T. A. Beftols. She was accompanied\nby Mrs. Hatfield from the same city,\n\u25a013, Haynes of Newport, Wash,, and\nTj. E. Stutsman of Marcus aro in town.\nThe following pupils in tho public\nschool made perfect ntendaneo during\nthe past month.\nFirst reader\u2014Freddie Parent, GiUla\nCorrentl, Victoria and Yvonno Parent.\nSecond reader\u2014Emil Carlson, Kenneth Jeffers.   ,\nThird reader\u2014Marlon Carlson, Marjorie Hodgson.\nFourth reader\u2014Ethel Carlson, John\nHodgnn.\nMay school percentage attendance\nwaa 80 per cent. \u25a0 Tho Nelson shield\nisretalned by th-***** fourth reader with\na percentage of 92.4.\nKITSILANO PURCHASE\nSSUED\nCommittee  Finds All  Accounts Were\nProperly Kept and no Details of\nTransaction   Concealed.\n\u25a0 (P.y*.'lStufi'- Co-respondent)   \u2022\nPRESS QALLfORv .VICTORIA, B.C.,\nJune 4.\u2014There was no falsification of\naccounts In the Kitsilano reserve purchase in whicli tho province secured\nfor ?.SO0,000 ibis tract of valuable harbor land at Vancouver, no attempt was\nmade to conceal, any of the details\nof tiie transaction, none of the moneys\npaid went to any member of tbo government, nor to any member of tbe\nBowser, Reid & Wallbrldge firm and\nthy government throughout Hie negotiations recognized no one as an agent\nexcept -H,  O.  Alexander.\nThese conclusions are stated in the\nreport of tho committee which concludes with the finding that the purchase of tho reserve and the removal of\ntlie Indians was of great public benefit\nand was conducted In a fair and proper\nmanner and for a reasonable price. The\nreport which was concurred in by t'ie\nopposition, saya:\nThe Report,\n-Your select committee appointed to\ninipiirw into tbe purchase of the Kit-\nt-llnua Indian reserve 4>eg leave to report as follows. Your committee was\ncomposed of Messrs. 'Miller, Gifford.\nShatford, Williams aud Macdonald\n(M. A.) and held In all 1G meetings.\nEvery scope and latltiide was given\nfor the purpose of ascertaining the\ntrue status of the questions submitted\nLo yoiir committee. In nil, 11 witnesses\nwere examined and your committee\nnow beg leave to make the following\nfindings:\n\"1. Tho public accounts have not in\nany way been falsified, but by reason\nof tlie change In the personnel of the\nauditor general from Mr. Anderson to\nMr. Allison, the entry in the public\naccounts relating to the purchase price\nof I lie said reserve was not made in\naccordance with the plan now in vogue\nand put in force since tlie advent of\nMr. Allison to the position of auditor\ngeneral, 'in tiiis connection no blame\ncan bo attached to Mr. Anderson or to\n,Mr. Allison. Tbe expenditure of the\nsa|d moneys was made just prior to the\ndate when Mr. Anderson ceased to be\nemployed as auditor general and the\naccounts were made up after the said\nAnderson hud left tbe department. No\nattempt was made to conceal the transaction, as appears by tbe evidence and\nby the fact, that the matter of the purchase was at the time fully discussed\nand advertised in Ihe press of tlie province.\n\"2.   Tbo province secured from the\nIndians  the transfer of all  thtfr  interests in  tho reserve for the sum of\nthree hundred' thousand dollars ($300,\n000) since which time, under arrange\nment with the Dominion, tbe said re\nservo is to be transferred to tbe bar\ntaor board hnd nn arbitration Is-to be\nheld to determine the amount to be\npaid  to  the  province,  which  amount\nmust not be  less than tlie sum paid\nliy the province for tho purchase of\nthis reserve from tho Indians, namely,\nthe sum of $800,000.00\n\"Out of the purchase price of tbe\nsaid reserve so paid as aforesaid by\ntho province, Mr, H. O. Alexander re\ncelved the sum of seventy-nine tbous\nand und  fifty dollar's  ($70,050.00)   out\nof whicli the- said Alexander paid to\nMr. Hamilton Reid tbe sum of thirty\nnine thousand five hundred and twenty\nfive dollars  (?30,52r\u00bb.0O.)    No  sum,\nfar as your committee could ascertain,\nwas.paid to Mr:.: Jtiseph Cole.,,     *\n\"None of tho money so paid was\nreturned dtrectlyi.or indirectly to any\nmember ot the government,- nor to any\nmenfber of the legal firm of Bowser,\nReid,&  Wallbrldge,    In view of the\nreference Io Mr. Hamilton Reid in the\npreamble of the resolution appointing\ntiiis committee, your committee finds\nfrom tlu- evidence submitted that\nneither the government of the province nor any member thereof at any\ntime dealt with Mr. Hamilton Reid in\nreference to the purchase of tho said\nreserve, ibut all such dealings were\nwith Mr. 11. O. Alexander; and further\nfind lhat Mr. Hamilton Held was not\nin tlie employ of the law firm of Mr.\nBowser, tlie premier of British Columbia, nor had be any connection\nwhatsoever with such firm at the time\ntbo said purchase was made, or foif\nsome period of lime prior to said purchase.\n\"Your committee further finds from\nthe evidence that.tlie said purchase by\nthe province and the removal of the\nIndians from the said reserve was of\ngreat public benefit a;nd was conducted\nin a fair and proper -manner, and that\ntho   purchase   price   was   reasonable.\n\"Your committee bca: leave to submit herewith a. copy of tho resolution\nappointing your committee and a\ntranscript of the evidence taken before\nyour  committee.\n\"Yes\u2014They're Cleaner, Fresher\u2014\n\"when washed with Sunlight Soap. I find it\ncleans the clothes more thoroughly and with less\nwork than ordinary soaps. It doesn't hurt the\nclothes and I must say my hands never feel the\nworse for it either. I really do not find it hard\nto look after the wash myself, because Sunlight\nSoap does so much of the work for me.\"\nSunlight Soap\nMadam\u2014there's nothing but truth in this lady's remirkl.\nSunlight Soap is made so well and so honestly that our\nguarantee of  $5,000 that it  contains no impurity has\nnever been challenged.\nAll grocers sell Sunlight Soap.\nLEVER BROTHERS LIMITED, TORONTO.\n10\n MOB SIX-:\nTHE^DAILY NEWS\nMONDAY,   JUNE   5,   19'6.\nf I , 11 lamH la|ajl|a),|||\narkets - Mining - Finance\nn\u00bb\u00bb...\u00ab...,,\t\nAUTOMOBILE IMS!\nSCORE BEG ADVANCES\nGeneral   Motors   Takes   Jump   of   87\nPoints While Others Make Substantial   Gains.\nNEW YORK, June 4\u2014Further feverish bidding up of special stocks served\nto distract attention of traders in Saturday's brief market from latest ad-\n' vices regarding tbe great naval battle\noff the coast of Denmark. Automobile\nissues held almost absolute sway, with\nBorne gains of sensational proportions\nund  consequent  new  maximums.\nNew records made Included Willys-\nOverland common which rose 20 points\nth 31-!, with 3 tor. tho preferred and\nChandler Motors rose 11% to 121\\h,\nwhile General Motors made the extraordinary gain of 87 points to 54fl within\neasy distance of its high record.\nRails and International Issues as a\nwhole were affected by the news from\nabroad.\nj Prominent industrials and war issues\nfigured unimportantly in the day's one\nsided .operations. Total sales of stocks\n270,000 shares. Bonds were lower, particularly Anglo-French and Canadian\nwar issues. Total sales, par value, *j*1,-\n840,000.\nBUNKER  HILL PAYING TWO\nDIVIDENDS ON JUNE 4\n\u25a0SPOKANE, Wash., June 4\u2014On June\n4>the.Bunker Hill & Sullivan Mining\ncompany, with mines and mills at\nWhrdner-Kellogg, Ida., will pay the\nregular monthly dividend of 25 cents\nthe share and a special dividend of an\nequal \/amount, making the total disbursement 1163,500. This Is the fourth\nnO cent monthly declaration by the\nBunker Hill company in 1916',' but' '25\ncents the share, or $81,750, having been\npaid in January and February. The tool distribution for the first six months\nIs $817,500, which increased the grand\ntotal to ? 18,244,500.\n\u2022Ground already has been broken for\ntho Bunker Hill company's $1,000,000\nsmelter nt Kellogg and recently the\ncontract was let for constructing the\nmil way spurs and storage yards, which\nare to, bo built toy the O., W. R. & N.\ncompany, but the expense to be borne\nby the mining company. Much of the\nmaterial for the smelter now is on tbo\nground and It is anticipated that the\nplant will be completed and operating\nby April, 1917.\nSPOKANE  MINING\nEXCHANGE QUOTATIONS\n(Reported liy St. Denis & Lawrence.)\nCaledonia   .,\nLucky, Jim\n'. Rambler\t\nSlocan Star\nStandard ...\nSuccess . ,.'\u201e\nBid\n.$ .72\n.:\\2y.\nWto\nAsiced\n$ .73^\n.08 y.\n.33 y>\n..28\n\u20221.02..\nMAY MINE DIVIDENDS\nSHOW BIG INCREASES\nTotal of $5,239,808 Was Paid in First\nFive   Months   of   Year   by\nProperties in.Westj        ^ '\u2022*\u25a0\nSPOKANE, \"Wash., June 4.\u2014Mining\ncompanies operating in, different\nenmps in the Couer d'Alenes nnd British Columbia disbursed $007,152 In dividends in May. making the -payments\nfor, the first five months of the current year $5,239,808 and increasing\nthe grand total of these concerns, to\n$72,04tU4\u00ab iu addition to $10,225,037-\npalrl by corporations now defunct or\nobaorhed by othor interests, which\nmakes tlie aggregate amount paid to\ndate byy tbe mining industry $88,271,-\n183. Tlie dividend disbursements of\nthe same companies in 1015 amounted\nto $10,5\u00ab0,0\u00ab0, which means that the\ndistribution for the first five months\nof 1010 is approximately 50 per cent\nof the entire payments of tbo previous year, indicating that tbe distribution for tlie current year will be materially greater than for tbe previous\n12 months.\nFor tbe year to date the Hecla company, with properties at Burke. Idaho,\nlias paid five consecutive dividends of\n10 cents the share, or $100,000 monthly,\nas against 2 cents the sharp monthly\nin 1015, nnd the Caledonia company,\nwhicli owns and operates the Caledonia mine, nt Kellogg, Idaho, has\npaid one 2-cent disbursement and four\n3-cenl disbursements, while the Bunker Hill & Sullivan company, also\nof Kellogg, which now Is constructing\na, \u25a0$I.OOO.ouo smelter to trent the ores\nof its own properties and those nf the\nCaledonia, Ontario and Sierra Nevada\ncompanies, as well as custom ore, has\npaul ,fwo. 25-.cent the share disburse-\n\"njents nnd three , 50-cent disbursements. These are all lead-silver properties, with the exception of the Caledonia, which also has a fair percentage of copper in it's product, and the\nincreased earnings are due to tbe\naugmented metal prices.\nThe Hercules company, a joint partnership corporation, which owns and\noperates the Hercules mine, the premier lead-silver producer of the northwest, still holds first rank for net\nprofits, tho estimated- earnings ifor\nMay being $300,000 and for the five\nmonlhs $U*50,000. nnd the Interstate-\nCallahan, tbo second largest zinc producing conipany in the world now\noperating, is second.\nBritish  Columbia.\nMny. 1918.\nCanadian Con.     $   354,!t5.'i\nCrow's. Nest  Coal  03,189\nOrnnby $224,077        449,954\nHedley  00,000\nLe Roi No,. 2\t\nMother Lode\nRambler-Cariboo\nStandard '.\n50,000\n137.500\n17.500\n2 .\"0,000\n..$274,977 ' $l,3G3,(fi)S\n'    GHnd \"TdtSI.\nCanndi-in Consolidated ...\n\"^oiv's Nest Coo4  \t\nGrunby \t\nHedley\t\nLe Roi No. 2  \t\nMother   IjJde    ,\t\nRambler Cariboo\nStandard\t\nTotal\nCouer D'Alenes.\nMay\nB. H. & S\t\nCaledonia   \t\nFederal   common...\nFederal   preferred..\nHecla   \t\nHercules\t\nInierstate-Callalian\n.Stewart    '.\t\nSuccess   \t\nTamarack & Custei\n$103,:-00\n78,160\nlOO.OlM*\n300,000\n191\n054,\n364,\n120,\n500.\n1,250,\nGO\"\nTotal\n $722,1\nGrand Total.\n&  S\t\nnla \t\ni Common\t\nI   Preferred   \t\n11. IL\nCalod.\nKeder\nFeder\nHeelfl\t\nffcrcules   \t\nInterstate-Cal In ban\nStewart \t\nSuccess   \t\nTamarack   &   Ouster\n'5    $\n... $1\n...  1\n7.427,\n1.374,\n2,708.\n2,0110.\n4.255\n9,250,\n3.254\n2,043,\n1,850,\n3i\nTotal    ,\nGrand total\n.$54,708,850\n.$72,0111,140\nCOPPER  QUIET.\nNTjJW, YORK, June 4.~Copper quiet;\nElectrolytic, nearby, 27 at 28; Oct nnd\nlater 29 at 2!>V,,\nHEAVY SHIPMENTS\nTO TRAIL SMELTER\nOre Shipmets for Quarter month Total\n13,373  Tons\u2014Receipts for  Year\n199,793 Tons.\nExceptionally heavy shipments of\nore wero received at the Consolidated\nMining .company's smelter at Trail for\nthe past qunrtermonth. First shipments were received from the Velvet\nat Rossland and the.-Lakevlew at Lake-\nview, the former having shipped 38\ntons and the latter 33 tons. The total\nreceipts at the smelter since the first\nof the year now total 199,703 tuns. A\nlist of the mines shipping during the\npast quarter mon Ih, together with the\ntotals received for tbe year follows;\nRossland.\nCentre Star    5,580      70,450\nLe   Roi      ,1,117      57,931\nLe Roi  No.  2          173        0,005\nVelvet           38 38\nTotal    0,244 141.030\nEAST  KOOTENAY.\nSullivan      2,3S2 30.1184\nMonarch         2(i 05\nEmma           100 213\nOther mines ....  ...... 807\nTotal\nEureka\t\nOther mines\nNelson.\n31,100\n310\n1,102\nSloe art   and   Ainsworth. '' +*\"\nStandard     HO rs 3,268\nFlorence   39 \u2022 '    534\nGalena Fariri t .\u201e..    84 561\nHighland . .O.  54 45-5\nRuth \u25a0'.  44 405\nRam bier-Carl hob  41 709\nLucky Thought    80 173\nOther mines  6,159\nTotal   ....,}..: .....',. 502 12,366\nConsolidated  Receipts.\nCentre Star  5,586 76,456\nLe   Roi     3,447 57,931\nLe Roi No. 2  .'\u2022:...  173 6,605\nSullivan     2,382 30,084\nEureka .'.. ........ 24 316\nKnob Hill ;,   i  214 1.237\nSan Poil  477 .3,102\nLucky Thought    80 '173\nEmma     J00 ^213\nMonarch ...'..'.  \u2022 \u2022 26 65\nVelvet  '.  38 38\nUnited Copper  170 3,875\nRambler-Cariboo   41 709\nStandard   ..-.'. i  100 3,268\nLukeview     33 33\nRuth  44 405\nGalena   l-'arm  '...'  84 561\nHighland  54 455\nFlorence '... 39 534\nother mines     11,504\nTol n I\n.13,378   190,793\nThree Important Deals Closed in Nelson Last Week\u2014Others Expected\nSigns of renewed activity are to be\nnoted in the Nelson mining division,\nseveral important deals having been\nclosed in the city recently, one of\nwhich was the bonding for $200,000 of\nfive groups of Claims on Bayonne\nmountain, in the Sheep Creek district;\nto a group of financiers in Butte,\nMont.\nThe groups bonded comprise 22\nclaims, ail of which, are said to havo\nrich showings in free milling gold.\nThe\/ are owned by a number of Nelson\nmen, of whom It Is said, Alex Stewart\nand William Maher hold tbe largest\nInterests. Last week J. McNichol, of\nButte, Mont., closed the deal on behalf\nof his associates, the names of whom\nhave not as yet been made public,\nbut it is understood that they represent some of tho biggest mining Interests in the northwest.\nThe groups bonded are the Topay,\nVanguard, .losepblne, Jack-Pot, and\nthe Ray and Jessie, all of which are\nadjacent to the well known Bayonne\ngroup, on Bayonne mountain. It\/ is\nbelieved that as soon ns tbe snow,\nwhich is still deep on the mountain,\ngoes, development work on an extensive scale will lie undertaken on Ibese\nproperties.'\n.1. McNichol acting for a group of\nButte capitalists has also bonded the\nSilver Reef claim, a promising silver-\nlead property on Payne mountain, a\nfew miles south or Nelson, for $40,000.\nThis property is owned by M. C. Montl-\nhnn and F. Snyder of Spokane.\nA third deal-was tlie bonding of tlie\nParadise   and   Majestic    gold    claims,\nsituate'belweeri Eagle and Bird creeks\non the Granite road, a few miles south\nof the city by M. C. Monahnn *ah\"d L\nGallagher for $20,000, from the estate\nof the late Patrick Milcf?, of Nelson.\nThese properties were examined recently and gave rich showings in free\nmilling gold. It Is said that this is\nonly the forenumber of a period\/ of\ngreat activity In the Nelson milling\ndivision.\nBUSINE^ BRISK AT\nSATURDAY MARKET\nGood  Crowd  Attends  Weekly   Institution\u2014No Changes Noted in -\nPrice Quotations.\nBusiness was brisk at the Saturday\nmorning public market,, there being a\ngood turn out of'both sellers and buyers. Prices showed no change from\nlast week and a considerable quantity\nof ranch produce was disposed of. The\nquotations follow:\nVegetable!.\nCabbage, each 050 .10\nOnions, dry, per 100 lbs... 2.50W3.00\nPotatoes, per 100 lbs  LOO\nCabbage, per 100> lbs  1.00@l.fi0\nCarrots, per 100 lbs     50@ .70\nParsnips, per 100 lbs 1.5002.00\nSwede Turnips, per 100 lbs 1.25tri)!.D0\nLocal fresh rhubard, bunch .05\n0 bunches  .25\nRadishes,   2   bunches   .... .05\nAsparagus 20c ib., 2 lbs... ; .35\nMeat's,\nSausages,  lb 20<ij> .25\nFresh mutton,  lb  .30\nLamb, lb 25@ .35\nPork, lb 10\u00ae .18\nHome smoked   ham   and\nbacon, per lh 22*ffl .55\nLive fowls  5O0-.t6\nDressed  fowl,  lb  .30\nBucks ' 7r>@1.00\nBeef,  Ih 120 -20\nVeal, lb    12\u00ae .25\nPigeons, per pair   .40\nLaying pyllets, each 60\u00a9 .80\nBeef   steak    18(f\u00ab  25\nBeef, boiling  ...    .12\u00a9 .15\nBeef roasts     .15\u00ae .22\nDressed   chicken,   lb...... .30\nDairy Products\nEggs, In case lots, per doss. ,30\nButter, dairy, .2 lbs  .75\nCream, per pint  ,, ,26\nButtermilk, gallon   .40\nFruit\nApples, per box  1,2510)1.75\nMiscellaneous,\nHome-made Pickles, quart .50\nHomemade bread, white ., .10\n3 loaves  .25\nHomemade bread, brown,. .10\n3 loaves  .25\nLayer cakes, each   .2R.\nChocolate cakes, 8x10 .... .50\nMINING STOCKS.\nSlocan Star and Rambler Cariboo\nloo!: like good buys. See us for prices.\nCash or buyer contracts.\n.ST DENIS & LAWRENCE,\nPh-prje 39. .     .\u00bb..,-, ,  Bok 1102\nRoseatea, per dozen\t\nFruit Cake, per lb. .......\nCider. J\u00bber gal. ..'..\t\nRaspberry plants, dozen..\nBlack  currant    yearlings.\neach\t\nBlack currant, 2 years old\nCabbage plants, per 100..\nCauliflower plants.per  100\nCut flowers, dozen\t\nPotted plants, bedding doz\nTea cakes, dozen\t\nDrop cakes, dozen\t\nBuns, dozen  *\nScones, doz\t\nTea biscuits, dozen \t\nCider vinegar, bottle ....\nPot plants, each \t\nPies, 10-Inch, each \t\nCocoanut Maccaroons, doz.\n.10@\n.15\u00ae\n.20\n.25\n.60\n2.00\nCHICAGO STOCKYARDS.\n(By Doily News Leased Wire.)\nCHIICAGO, 111., June 3.\u2014Hogs: Receipts, 10,000; weak, 5c lower; bulk,\n0.55 at 9.70; light, 9 at 9.6; mixed, 0.30\nat 9.75; heavy, 9.20 at 9.00; rough, 9.20\nat 9.35;  pigs, 7 at 8.75.\nCattle: Receipts, 800; Blow and weak.\nNative beef, 8 at 31.05; western steers,\n8.50 at 0.50; stockers and feeders, 6 at\n0; cows and heifers, 4 at 9.60; calves,\n8 at 11.25.\nSheep: Receipts, 5000; weak; wethers, 7 at 7.85; lambs, 7.75 at 10.35;\nspringers, 8.50 at 11.50.\nSTOCKS\nWill bu^at the mtfktt  ., * . (\u00bb\n2000 Skftan Star       '       ' ',r'V-      - '\n,  500 Standard\n, 1000 Rambler\nput of town orders promptly handled.\nStock quotations received dally hy-\nwire.\n\u25a0   C. W. APPLEYARD.\n505 Baker St. Phone 444\nImproved Quarter\nSection, Alberta\nGOOD   HOUSE   AND   BARN   TO\nTRADE\nFOR:  IMPROVED   FRUIT  FAJlMi\nAPPLY TO '   .\nTaylor & Dubar\n1-02 BAKljft ST.,,'     NT5I.SON, B. C.\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting Co.\nof Canada, Limited\nOf Ices, Smelling ana Refining Department '.:,,,\nTRAIL,   BRITISH   COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPurchasers oi Gold, Silver, Copper and Lead Ores\nTRAIL   BRAND    PIQ   LF.AD,   BLUI5STONB   AND   SPELTER   ; ;\nKusa Spelter Company\nPurchasers of All Classes of Zinc Ores ond Concentrates\nNewtan W. Emmens, Representative\nCREDIT   FONCIER   BUILDING VANCOUVER,   B.   C.\nTHE NELSON IRON WORKS, Limited\nPARTIAL   LIST  OF  8EC0ND-HAND   MACHINERY   FOR  SALE\nENGINES\nI 100 h.p. High Speed Ball.'\n1 13 x 18 80 h.p. Slide Valve\n1 12 x 10 75 h.p. Slide Valve.\n1 40 h.p. A. C. Motor, 2000 volts\n1 8 x 10 Mine Hoist.\n1 i% x 2\"4 x 4 Duplex Pump.\n1 No. 3 Centrifugal Pump\n1 0 x 24 Surfacer and Matcher.\n1 20 h.p. Vortical Boiler.\n1 No. 1 Slinplox Ore Crusher.\n1 small .Gates Crusher.\n1 Gates' Grinder.\nSoveral large Gyratory Crushers.\n1 Hydraullo Elevator.\nAND MUCH OTHER MATERIAL-SEND U8 YOUR  INQUIRIES\nDaily News Want Ads (let Resists\nLook Here, RefusiHer\nEnlist Today, Your Country Needs You\naK3SB\nYour Principal Business at k Present is to Punish the Huns\u2014How Can This Be Done if You\nDon't Get at it?\nIs it fair that others should bear the brunt of your        If you call yourself a man come and enlist today. Don't force your best girl tot ask you \"Why don't\nfight?    Do you intend to allow them?                                 _,.                         ,..,,.,     ,                         ,\u201e you enlist?\" When the boys come home can you look\nThere are many eligibles in banks and stores.     We them in the face?   Recruits are wanted for this war,\nWe want your strength not your sympathy.                  require them all. not the next.\nCome Along, don the King's Uniform and Forget the Summer Suit\nRemember\nThe 225th Battalion is recruiting in       \"D\" Company is at Grand Forks and The 225th Batt. is being formed to go\nNelson and district. wants recruits.          ' to the front and help finish this war.\nLieut. B. G. Rennie is recruiting offi-       The 225th wants good bandsmen. There are upwards of 400 single young\ncer at Nelson. Instruments furnished by battalion. men in Nelson elligible to join the 225th\nJoin the 225th Overseas Kootenay Battalion, and Go With the Kootenay Boys\ntar to\nBATTALIQN, C. E.\nMX. ,qa rviAfl^\n;uo ,*Hft'\n\u25a0 ..\"* .- *'*ei\u00bb):\n $53*--I\nMONDAY,   JUNE   S,   1116.    C|1\n(THE DAILY NEWS\nMaESEvM\nLittle Ads that Bring Big Returns\nCONDENSED ADVERTISING IJATES\nOn* Insertion, per word......l....,lo\nMinimum charge  26c\nBIx    consecutive    insertions,    per\nword , 4c\nTwenty-six  consecutive insertions,\n- (one month), per word .....156\nBirths, one Insertion SOc\nMarriages, one Insertion SOc\nDeaths, one Insertion ;. .50c\nCard of Thanks SOo\nBach subsequent Insertion 26c\nDeath and Funeral Notice |1.00\nAll condensed advertisements are\ncash In advance.\nIn computing the number of words\nIn 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\nlawr to have letters addressed to Initials only; therefore any advertiser\ndesirous of concealing his or her Identity may use a box at this office without any extra charge if replies are\ncalled for; If replies are to be mailed\nto advertiser allow 10 cents extra, in\naddition to price of advertisement, to\npay postage.\nThe News reserves the right to re\nJect any copy submitted for publication, .\n^Jw'raATiowj' jy^OT\u2014***>_*%_\nwTCSSfTEMwS-Y-M^\nW. Parker, 309 Baker St, Phone 283.\nWANTED\u2014\"vVoman cook, hotel;, dog;\nger; good general servants, $20 to\n$25; trimmer and grader, planer feeder; setter; waitress; shipper; firemen,\ndeckhands; dairyman; cookee, $45;\ncdgerman; slnglejack miners.\nJFjORJRJENTJOBJJfAjB^\nFOR SALE\u201410-roomed frame build-.\nIng; lath and plastered; stone basement; lot 60x100; near Domlnlm hotel,\nTrail. Six-roomed frame cottage, near\nfire hall, lot 65 x 100. Three-roomed\nbrick cottage, \/Rossland avenue, lot\n11x94. This property will be sold cheap\nand on easy terms; lt Is clear of all Incumbrance; title perfect. , Apply tc\nowner, O. A. White, Trail. (2767)\nFOR SALE!\u2014Modern 5-roomed house\nIn perfect condition, with clothes\nclosets, bath room, pantry, large basement and large chicken house at end of\nlot. Terms arranged. C. Longhurst.\n807 Carbonate St., phone 473-R (3214).\nWHEN REPLYING TO ADVERTISE-\nments In Condensed Columns, kindly\nmention you saw it In The News\u2014lt\nwill help you.\nPOULTRY AND EGOS\n^PROFESSIONAL  CARDS.\nGREEN BROS., BURDEN & CO.\nCivil Engineers, Dominion and B. C.\nLand Surveyors.\nSurveys of Lands, Mines, Townsltes,\nTimber Limits, etc.\nNelson, 516 Ward street, A. H. Oreen,\nMgr.;  Victoria, 114 Pemberton Bldg.,\nF. C. Oreen; Fort George, Hammond\nstreet, F. P. Burden.\nA. L. MoCULLOCH,\nHydraulic Engineer.\nProvincial Land Surveyor.\nBaker St.. Nelson, B.C. .\nDANCING CLASSES AND PRIVATE\nLessons\u2014Miss Gladys Attree at Nelson every Saturday and Monday\nP.O. Box 104, Nelson.\nWHEN REPLYING TO ADVERTISH-\nments In Condensed Columns, kindly\nmention you saw lt In The News\u2014It\nwill help you.\nNews of Sport\nbaseball)\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\nPhone I Macleod Flouring Mills Co.,\nLtd for your requirements In flour and\nfeed.   Phone 134. (3220)\nGOOD RELIABLE COOK, day shift.\nSingle' man preferred; wages $90\nboard and room. Apply box 114, Phoenix, B.C. f (3216)\nWANTED\u2014A  setter  for  Bawmlll  at\n>    Taghum. B.C.   A. G. Lambert Company, Limited. (3220)\nWHEN REPLYING TO ADVERTISE-\nments In Condensed Columns, kindly\nmention you saw it In The News\u20144t\nwill help you.\nFEMALE HELP WANTED.\nGRADUATE NURSE to take charge\n' and operate Cottage hospital. Stato\nsalary expected; references. Secretary,\nNakusp hospital. (3211)\nvjQOOD STRONG GIRL for restaurant;\nGeneral work; wages $40, board and\nroom.    Apply box 114, Phoenix, B.C.\n(3217)\nCHICKENS\u2014One  month   old,  White\nWyandottes and also mixed, 35c each.\nBox 1007, Nelson, (3199)\nTREES, PLANTS, SEEDS, ETC.\nFOR SALE\u2014Snap dragons, Salpiglosls,\nAllyssum, Dwarf Nasturtium, asters,\nmixed; Baby's. Breath; Zinnias; Cosmos; Mignonette, 20c dozen; dwarf and\ntrailing lobelia, marguerite carnations,\n25o dozen. Ed. Grizzello, Florist, Nelson. (3227)\nClub hotel for best draught beer and\nporter, always fresh; big schooner 10c.\nBottled beer and porter 25c; meals 25c.\n* (3218)\nSona of England\u2014Important meeting tonight at 8 o'clock. . Full attendance of members requested.      (3239)\nFOR  RENT\u2014Modern  bungalow,  flfl.\nopen fireplace.   Also 1% story residence, 3 bedrooms. $18.   C. W. Apple-\nyard, 505 Baker St., phone 444. (3222)\nAll members of the Mothers' club of\nSt. Saviour's church are requested to\nbe present on Tuesday afternoon at 3\np.m.   Urgent business tq.be discussed.\n(3231)\nAMERICAN LEAGUE.\nDetroit Takes Second Game.\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nDETROIT, Mich., June 4.\u2014A tremendous drive over Milan's head by Dauss\nIn the ninth today gave Detroit the\nsecond game of the series with Washington, 4 to 3. R.   H.   E.\nWashington 3     8     5\nDetroit  4     4     4\nBatteries: Gallia, Rice and Henry,\nAlnsmlth; Hamilton, Dauss and Stanage.\nWhite Sox Win Easily.\nCHICAGO, ill., June 4\u2014Chicago hit\ntwo New York pitchers for 16 hits and\nwon easily 12 to 4. R. ,H.   E.\nNew York 4     6-1\nChicago  12   16     1\nBatteries: Fisher, Allan and Russell,'\nNunamaker; Albert, Russell, Danforth,\nFaber and Schalk.\nCleveland Takes Two Straight.\nCLEVELAND,   O.,   Juno   4.\u2014Cleve\nland today made It two straight from\nBoston, winning 9 to 3.\nR.   H.   E.\nBoston    3     9     4\nCleveland     9   13     1\nBatteries: Mays, Foster and Thomas;\nBagby, Morton and O'Neill.\nAthletics Lose to St. Louis.\nST. LOUIS, Mo., June 4.\u2014By bunching lilts in the sixth Inning today St.\nLouis defeated Philadelphia 4 to 3.'\nR.   H.   E.\nPhiladelphia  3    6    1\nSt.   Louis     4     7-   0\nBatteries: Mayers and Meyer;>'Koob,\nGroom, Weilman and Hartley.\n'Saturday Games,\nNew York 5, Chicago 0.\nWashington 2, Detroit 3.\nBoston 2, Cleveland 11.\nPhiladelphia 2, St. Louis 3.\nNATIONAL LEAGUE.\nPELBAR   POTATOES,   $1.00   per   100\nlbs. or $18.00 per ton, f.o.b. Tarrys.\nHenry Johnson, Tarrys, B.C.\nWHEN REPLYING TO ADVERTISE-\n- ments In Condensed Columns, kindly\nmention you eaw it la The Newa\u201411\n\u25a0III help you.\nWHEN REPLYING TO ADVERTISE-\nments In Condensed Columns, kindly\nmention you saw It in The News\u2014It\nwill help you.    ,\n8ITUAT.ION8 WANTED.\nA STEADY JOB wanted as compositor,\nanywhere tn southern B.C.; job work\npreferred;, state wages, .etc... J. Vre-\ndenburg, 313 Ave. ~D. So., Saskatoon,\nBask.  .    i (3210)\nARTICLES FOR BALE\nFOR SALE\u2014Mentges newspaper folder; fold! 4, 6, 8, 10 or 12 pages.   In\nfirst clasa condition.   Snap for cash.\nThe Daily News. Nelson. (678)\nFOr SALE\u2014One National cash regis\nter;   first  class  condition;   bargain\nfor quick sale.   Apply box 188, Nelson.\n (8280)\nFOB SALE CHEAP\u2014Two half yard\nRansom concrete mixers, almost new.\nSome 'concrete buckets, and wheelbarrows; alsd cables of various lengths,\nand other concrete outfit. Price no object. Apply Tnland Transportation Co.,\nLytton, B.C. (3198)\nFOR  SALE\u2014Oliver   typewriter   used\nonly a few months, cost $125, will sell\nfor $50.   Apply box 3197, Daily News.\nFOR SALE\u2014Edison Dictograph, complete; .electric power   Apply to Dally\nNewa Business office. ,      (654)\nFOR SALE\u2014Shaving machine for Edison records. Box 686, Dally News.\n\"TOR SALE\u2014First class miscroscope;\nalmost new; one of the best makes,\nMO.   Box 511, Dally News. (511)\nBELGIAN hares, all ages.\nfour. I\nRose, Bal-\ni    (3203)\nWHEN REPLYING TO ADVBRTISE-\nments In Condensed Columns, kindly\nmention you eaw It In The News-\nwill help you. '   ,\n\/HORSES AND CATTLE.\nFOR SALE\u2014Pure bred Ayrshire bull\none year old.   Write s Grutchfleld,\nSalmo, B.C. (3195)\nFOR SALE\u2014Milch cow;  brood Berkshire sow.'  J. J. Campbell,  Nelson.\n(3284)\nFOR SALE\u2014Disc harrow with combination pole and shafts.   Heifer calf,\ntirade Holsteln eight weeks old  W. J.\nMcKlm, Nelson, B.C. (3233)\nWHEN REPLYING TO ADVERTISE\nments in Condensed Columns, kindly\nmention you saw it In The News\u2014tt\nwill help you.        *\nBOATS.\nFOR SALE\u2014Astley's houseboat; partly\nfurnished.    Apply  Nielans,   waterfront. (8229)\nJftSJEIAYERS^\nB. W. WIDDOWSON, ASSAYER AND\nChomlst. Box A1108, Nelson, B. C.\nCharges:. Gold, silver, copper o\nload, f 1 each; gold-silver, $1.60; sll\nver-lead, $1,50. Other metals o,\napplication.\nJjONEY TO LOAN.\nCHST AND^FAwTLANlSrLlmlted,\nNelson, B.C.\u2014Money to loan on improved farm lands. (34481\nFUNERAL DIRECTORS.\nParlors 80S Victoria,St. D. J. Rob.\nertson, F. D. D. & E. Phone 292; night\nphone 157L.\n^WANTBD^\nWANTED\u2014Wall tent, must be in good\ncondition.   State size and price. Box\n8205, Dally Nows, ; (3206)\n^FWNJ8^4JD^OO^I8^TO^^|-JT^\nCOR RENT\u2014Suites of furnished house\nkeeping rooms   in' Annable   block.\nEnquire room 32. *\u2022 (3225)\nFOR   RENT\u2014Comfortably   furnished\nroom.   Apply 203 Silica St.       (3201)\nK.   W.   C.   BLOCK \u2014 Housekeeping\nsuites and rooms for rent, i   Terms\nmoderate.   A. Macdonald & Co. (3223)\nFURNISIJED SUITES.for rent. Apply\nKerr'apartments. \" (3224)\nACCOUNTANTS.\n'wl^rCrAiSifiS^\nPublic Accountant, Bank.of Montreal\nChambers, Rossland, B.C.\nP. H. DUBAR,\nAccountant, Auditor.\nL     602 Baker St., Nelson, B.C.\nROOM AND^BOARD,\n$1.00 A DAY for comfortable room and\nfull board; 75 cents a day for board\nonly;  good meals, cannot be beaten;\ntry us; 613 Ward St., Nolson.     (3118)\nKOOTENAY LODGE NO. lfj'j I.O.O.F.\nMeets every Monday night in Odd-i\nfellows' hall at 8 o'clock.\nQUEEN CITY REBEKAH 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.OiF,\u2014Meets second and fourth\nThursdays In Oddfellows' hall at 8\no'clock.\nCANTON CORONA NO. 7.\u2014MEETS\novery second Tuesday In Oddfellows-\nhall at 8 o'clock.\nKNIGHTS OF PYTHIAN\u2014MEETS\nTuesday nights in K. of P. hall,\nEagle block.\nCLAN JOHNSTONJ-j, 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 1096; telephone 28 and 23,\nNELSON  JOBBERS, LTD.,\nWholesale Grocers.\nBox 1170 Phone 154, Nelson.\nStrictly wholesale.\nAUCTIONEERS,\nC. A. WATERMAN & CO., Opera Mk.\nWM. CUTLER,  AUCTIONEER,  BOX\n474; phone 18.\nMESSENGERS.\nNELSON MESSENGER CO\u2014Baggage\nand express. Prompt and reliable.\nDay and night   Phone 242.\nPATENTS.\nBABCOCK & SONS, Beglstered Attorneys. Estab. 1877. Formerly\npatent office examiner. Master of\nPatent Laws. Book, \"Patent Proteo-\ntectlon\" free; 99 St. James St., Mont-\nreal. Branches: Ottawa'and Washing,\nton.    \u25a0      . ,\nVjJXUMMACjnMflEYC^^\nCarpets, windows and chimneys\ncleaned. Nelson Vacuum ft Window\nCleaning Co., phone 18, City Cab Co.\nVacuum machines for hire.\nR. D. McDonald, general contractor,\nTrail\u2014I have the latest in moderate\npriced homes. Jobbing promptly at<\ntended to; estimates given; also shop\nwork of any description done.     (3235)\nAt St. Paul's church on Tuesday,\nJune 6 Rov. C. W. Wright will give an\nIllustrated address on life and work\nIn Fort Geoi'ge district. Admission 15\nceUts; children 10 cents. _ (3236)\nGet a Pantry Queen Dust Cap. They\nare both pleasing to ok at and servlc-\nable. Your retailer should have them\nif he Is progressive as they *o hand\nIn hand with Pantry Queen flour.\n(3219)\nAll Fairview j'esidents are Invited to\nmonthly meeting of the Falrvtew-\nHume Improvement association tonight\nin tho Hume school. Important matters to be discussed.       , (3242)\nRcddog Is a wheat by-product possessing proven qualities as a feed,\ncontaining very nourishing properties\nof special value for young stock or\nmilch cows. Try It. Sold by Macleod\nFlouring Mills Co., Ltd. (3221)\nMrs.. W. j. Mohr will give a tea\nThursday, June 15 from 3 to 6 o'clock\n(tt her resldohce, Oak street, Fairview.\nProceeds to be divided between the\nRed Cross and patriotic work of the\nWomen's Institute. (3240)\nRED CROSS MAKES\nS\nMuch    Work    Reported    at    Monthly\nMeeting of Nelson Branch\u2014Cash\non Hand $784.10.\nThe general monthly meeting of the\nRed Cross society wus held Friday,\n.June 2 in the city hall. Tho president\nreported that 44a articles had heen\ncompleted during; the month, including\n43 pairs,of socks.\nThe treasurer's statement showed a\nbalance in hand of $784.10. Total receipts for month of May amounted to\n$630.56. Balance from April, $288.62;\nexpenses $130.08.\nThe following shows the various resources from which the money was received:\nSuperfluity sale, $155.55; church donations, $234; proceeds of dunce, $41.50;\nFruitvale Red Cross auxiliary, $18;\nWillow Point Womon's institute, $10;\nCreston Red Cross auxiliary,-$50; Upper Bonnlngton Red Cross workers,\n$.225; donations, $66.53; 10 per cent cot-\nlections, $17.70; fees, $12; raffle, $23;\ntotal,  $630.66.\nIt was decided that $100 in cash\nshould bo sent forward to headquarters, money 'being urgently needed for\nthe maintenance and equipment of the\nhospitals. '\u25a0\nMiss Oliver's sewing class: one dozen\nface cloths; three scrap albums, 27\nhot water bottle covers; 13, property\nbags; 10 hUBhers; Fred L. Irwin, $5;\nUpper Bonnlngton Red Cross workers,\nold linen; collected by Mr. Winearls,\n$15; friend, $5; 10-cent collections:\nMrs\", Hacking, Mrs. Guthrie, Mrs. H.\nBird, Mrs. Blaylock, Mrs. Cuthbert,\nMrs. R. M. Bird, Mrs. Hartin, Mrs.\nArmstrong, Mrs. Hlnton, Miss Nicholson, Mrs. Cobbett, 50c; friend, 50c;\nP.M.. Tahgum, 50c; Mr. Vanbulken,\nSouth Slocan, $1.50; Bonnlngton Patriotic association, $10.50; Mrs. Allan,\n50c; Miss Heppoll, 50c; Maa-garot Allan,\n25c. '   \u25a0\nGERMANS   EATINQ\nEQG8 OF GULL3\nLONDON, June 2.\u2014A Rotterdam\n\"Berlin has made a further reduc\ntion of the meat ration. Beginning\nyesterday, this was fixed at half a\npound of meat or fat per adult each\nweek. Under the new arrangements\nthe ration is, subject to revision each\nweek. It Is doubtful whether the supplies on hand will meet even this allowance.\n\"The shortage of eggs continues,\nand in the absence of the ordinary\nvariety the government la encouraging the use of gulls' eggs, which, it\nIs claimed, are suitable for certain\ncooking purposes,\"     .  \u25a0 ^,\nNo   National   league    games    were\nscheduled Sunday,\nSaturday Games.\nChicago 2, Boston 3.\"\n-   Cincinnati 4, New York 7,\nSt. Louis 0, Philadelphia 2.\nPittsburg at Brooklyn; rain.    '\nNORTHWESTERN  LEAGUE.\nFirst  game\u2014 * R.   11.   10.\nButte 11    15     3\nSpokane   .' 12   18     0\nBatteries:    Meikle,    McGinnity and\nHoffman; Noble, Harstad and Murray.\nSecond game\u2014 R.   H.   E,\nSpokane    12   18     5\nButte  6   11     3\nBatteries: Noble and Murray; Kelly\nand Hoffman.\n(First  game\u2014 R.   IL   E.\nTacoma  3   10     0\nGreat Falls  3     8     !\nBatteries:     Shader    and    Roberts\nEnglc and Shea; 10 Innings, tic.\nSecond game\u2014 R.   H.   E.\nTacoma    -.'. 4     8     1\nGreat Falls ,  3     3     1\nBatteries:   Southerland  and Batho-\nlomy; Kalllo and Shea.\nSaturday Games.\nVancouver 6, Seattle 1.\nGreat Falls 5, Tacoma 4.\nSpokane 14, Butte 11.\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION.\nMinneapolis 2, Milwaukee 3.\n\u25a0Louisville  2,  Toledo  1.\nColumbus 0, Indianapolis 6.\nSt. Paul 3-1, Kansas City 5-7.\nSaturday  Games.\nColumbus 4, Indianapolis 3.\nLouisville 4, Toledo 3.   \\\nMinneapolis 5, Milwaukee 4.\nSt. Paul 6, Kansas City 3,\nllll AND ROSSLAND\nDEFEATED BY NELSON\nFast Games Played on King's Birthday Won by Nelson Teams\u2014Brett's\nPony Wins Horse Racee\nNelson gave Trail a Dad beating in\nthe game Saturday, the final score being 4 to 0 In favor of the boys in\ngreen and white. Trail kicked off before a fair attendance, but it was plain\nafter a few minutes play that the\ngame was not going to be as fast as\nthe former one at Trail.\nNelson were on the aggressive most\nof the first half, the forwards playing\ntheir usual good combination. Trail\nforwards found the slippery ground\ntroublesome, especially Wilson, who,\nhad he been able to stay on his feet\nwhen he got possession of the ball,\nwould have bulged the net at least\ntwice in the first half.\nNelson's first goal came from the\nleft wing, Moray doing the necessary\nfrom close in. Wilson and Cunliffe\nhad hard luck In their trys for goal,\nboth players sending narrowly past.\nThe game in the second half was fast,\nNelson playing a steady gome, especially the half-back line. Trail players\nwero inclined to wrangle over the\nreferee's decisions, but Ritchie referred quite up to standard. It spoiled\ntheir team work, with the result that\nNelson put. in three more goals,\nRamsden, Stenstrom and Talbot being\nresponsible. Trail were best assist\nby Routledge, Mcllroy, Cunliffe\nand Borland, while the Nelson team\nwas   good  all   around.    The   teams:\nNelson\u2014Gibba, Ball, Harrison,\nBorland, Kidd (captain), Marshall,\nCelle, Talbot, Stenstrom, Ramsden\nand Moray. '*\"* >\nTrail\u2014Routledge, Borland, Bell,\nGraham, Rhcad, Mcllroy, Edwards,\nSeggie, Smith, Wilson and Cunliffe,\nReferee, Ritchie.\nLeague Standing\nGoals\nP\nW\nL,\nD\nF   A    Pts\nNelson   .\n.. 3\n2\n0\n1\n8      3     5\nTrail   ...\n.. 3\n0\n1\n1\n2      6     1\nRiondel   .\n.. 1\n0\n1\n0\n1      2     0\nCOLVILLE DEFEATED BY\nROSSLAND TEAM\nROSSLAND, B.C., June 4.\u2014The home\n'baseball team defeated the Colvillc\nboys here today by a score of 11-6.\nPrerar pitched a fairly good game, for\nthe visitors but was wild at times,\nIssuing eight walks. Wyant played a\ngood game In tho box for Rossland.\nLafayette led with the stick for the\nhome team with two 2--baggers and\none single, while Ryley scored three\nruns for the home team.\nThis being Jack Koran's last appearance in the Rossland uniform, he was\npresented with a suit case and a gold\nring by the boys.\nThe game wus not as fast usit might\nhavo been on account of rain and wot,\nslippery grounds.   Line-up.\nRossland\u2014Lafayette, Prerar, Ryley,\nWilson, J. Foran, Isaacson, W, Koran,\nCosgrlff, Hender.\nColvillc\u2014Graham,    Wyant,    Gilson,\nRaftus,  Wernlle, Johnson,  Sill, -Hard,\nWalse.\nRossland ........0 2 <J 0 1 0 0 2 0\u201411\nColville    20^002000\u20146\nKENTUCKY HANDICAP IS\nWON BY ED CRUMP\nLOUISVILLE, June 4.\u2014Ed Crump,\nowned by J. W. Schorr df Memphis,\nTenn., favorite in the (betting, won\ntho Kentucky handicap at Douglas\nPark yesterday, doing the mile and a\nquarter in 2:03 3-5. Ed. Crump's share\nof the purse, said to be the richest on\nthe American turf this year for all\naged contestants, was $11,650.\nAfter the football game was over a\ntwo-heat horse race was run off, in\nwhich Brett's pony, ridden by Raymond Bard, won from Ferguson's\nhorse. \u00ab\nThe lacrosse match started at 4\no'clock and from the face-off every\nplayer put his whole spirit Into the\ngame, making It very faBt and excit\ning throughout and many times bring\ning the fans to their feet.\nThe first period was the fastest\nperiod of the game, in which the first\nscore was made for Rossland by\nO'Leary. A ' little excitement was\ncaused when Murphy and Valentyne\nmixed things up a little and were put\non the fence for five minutes. The\nperiod ended with the score standing\n1\u20140 in favor of Rossland,\nThe second period started with the\nspeed of a whirlwind and the ball was\ntaken from end to end of the field\nuntil finally Nelson boys broke away\nand Murphy scored from a pretty pass\nmade by Richardson. About two\nminutes after'Manhart scored another\nfor the home team. After that the\nRossland fellows thought It was their\nturn and were rewarded when Fraser\nslipped one past Perrier and scored\nthe second and last goal. The Nelson\nboys then came back strong and just\nbefore the whistle blew for the end of\nthe period Richardson scored again,\nmaking the score 3\u20142 nt the end of\nthe second. In this period Murphy\nwas put on the fence for two minutes\nfor throwing his stick.\nThe third period opened with the\nGolden City boys determined to even\nup the score and the Nelson men equally determined to hold their lead. It\nwould be pretty hard to single out tho\nstars of either team, every man holding the position alloted- to him and but\nfor the splendid work of the goal\ntenders the score would have been\nmuch larger. In this period Murphy\nmade a spectacular rush, going like\na streak of greased lightning past sev-\neral of the Rossland men and scored\nthe fourth goal for the home team and\na few minutes later Rudy fooled his\ncheck and made another grand stand\nrush and scored the final tally for\nNelson. After that the game seesawed from end to end, but neither\nteam could manage to pass the pill\nthrough the iron sticks and the game\ncame to a close with Nelson having\nthe honor of getting the first win of\nthe league with a score of 5\u20142 and\nthe Rossland boys giving three rousing\ncheers for their opponents.\nThe game was refereed to the satisfaction of players-and fans by A. Jeffs,\none of Nelson's old lacrosse stars.\nThe lineup:\nNelson. Rossland.\nGoal.\nPerrier       Driscoll\n' Point.\nMcDonough   Valantyne\nCover.\nRonan       Tate\nFirst Defense\nPitts  ,   Wilson\nSecond Defense\nMarquis   Michael and Nickle\nCentro\nMurphy       Berg\nNOTE THE NEW PRICE\nARROW\nCOLLARS\nFavored by all who seek the\nbest irrespective of price\nIS CENTS EACH\n6 tor 00 oil.   12 tor SI.78\nCLurrr, peabody & co., inc. makers, \u00a7t. johns, Quebec\n\u25a0 \u2022    II'\" 1.1  I\ntyyflirft-jjift Bag famm-fa\nWeekly\nHalf Holiday\nThe Hudson's Bag Company wish to f$ve\nnotice that all their stores will close at noon on\nWednesdays until further notice. S\nSeal of Quality\nThe Perfect Flour\nOWE8  IT8  POPULARITY  TO  IT8  MATCHLESS  QUALITY\nIt la milled of choicest Selected Hard Spring 'Wheat and Is rich in\nnutriment and absolutely pure.\nBread Rolls, etc., made of SEAL, OP QUALITY FLOUR are not only\ndelicious and Inviting, but wholesome and nourishing in the highest\ndegree.\nSeal of Quality Flour Is the best and cheapest on the market\u2014it\nyields more loaves to the sack than any other. Try Seal of Quality\nFlour this month\u2014lt will give you greater satisfaction.\nGUARANTEED 49-POUND SACK\u2014\nFor   \t\n$1.80\n$3.50\nFor your next half-holiday up the lake make some rolls of Seal of\nQuality Flour. You will be surprised how good they will be. Helps\nto make the picnic a success when the food Is extra good.\nGUARANTEED  98-POUND  SACK-\nFor   \t\n      -m\nIsmmhiSmWmimim Jmj\nFOR FANCY PASTRY\u2014TRY ROYAL HOUSEHOLD FOR A CHANGE\nSecond Home\nTurner       Reid\nFirst Home\nRichardson    Fraaor\nOutside\nManhart    Keating\nInside\nRudy       O'Leai'y\nTho sum of nearly $100 was taken\nat the gate and will be given to the\nC company of the 225th battalion.\nNATIONALS AND SHAMROCKS\nTIED   FOR   FliRST  PLACE\nMONTREAL, June 4.\u2014Nationals of\nMontreal Saturday defeated the Cornwall club of the N.L.U., winning a\none-sided gamo 12 to 8. The outcome\nleaves Nationals and Shamrocks, the\ntwo  local  teams tied  for the league\nleadership, which will be decided temporarily at least, next Saturday when\nthe   Shamrocks  and  Nationals   meet\nfor the first time.\nSHAMROCK8   DEFEAT   OTTAWAS.\nOTTAWA, June 4.\u2014On a muddy\nfield at Lansdowne Park Saturday afternoon the Shamrooks defeated the\nOtlawas by 5 to 4 In the second local\ngame of the N. L. U. schedule. In tho\nfirst quarter the Irishmen secured'a\nlead of threo to one, and though the\nOttiwas tied it in the second, the Grees\nShirts mado it 4 to 3 and scored another, leading ,by 5 to 3 when the last\nperiod began. In the fourth the Ot-\ntawas had all the better of the play,\nbut were only able to register one goal.\nPlay was rough at times.\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nNew Time Schedule\nEffective Sunday, June 4\nArrive\nNELSON\nLeave\nEx. Sunday\n9:10  p.m.\nCascade,    Grand    Forks,    Hioonlx.\nGreenwood, Midway.\nEx. Sunday\n7:40  a.m.\nTuesday,\nThursday,\nSaturday\n9; 10 p.m.\nThrough   service   to  Pentlcton, via\nKettle Valley Railway.\nMonday,\nWednesday,\nFriday\n7:40  a.m.\nEx. Sunday\n4:46  p.m.\nSlocan City, Slocan Lake and Inter-\nmadlate points.\nEx. Sunday\n8:40  a.m.\nTuesday,\nThursday,\nSaturday   ,\n4:45  p.m.\nSandon,    Kaslo    and    intermediate\npoints, via Slocan City.\nTuesday,\nThursday,\nSaturday\n8:40 a.m.\nEvery Day    -\n10:05 a.m.\ni\n\\\nCastlegar, Trail, Rossland and intermediate points.\nEvery Day\n9:10 a.m.\nMonday,\nWednesday,\nFriday,\nSunday\n9:35  p.m.\n8:00  p.m.\nTuesday,\nThursday,\nSaturday\n10:00 p.m.\nTuesday,\nThursday,\nSaturday\n10:00  p.m.\nColumbia   River,   Revelstoke,   main\nline to Vancouver.\nTuesday,\nThursday,\nSaturday\n8:00 p.m.\nEvery Day\n7:40  p.m.\nS.S. Nasookin,   Kootenay   Landing,\nCrow's Nest, Spokane and main line.\nEvery' Day\n6:00 a.m.\nWednesday,\nSaturday\n9:30  a.m.\nS.S. Kokanee, Kootenay Lake local\nservice,    Monday    and    Friday,    via\nCrawford Bay; Tuesday and Thursday\nto Lardo.    Servico, Lardo to Gerrard J\nand return, Wednesday only, connect-1\ning with barge from and to Kaslo.      1\nEx. Sunday\n4:00 p.m.\nMonday,\nTuesday,      \u25a0\nThursday,\nFriday       i\n11:00 a.m.   ]\nJ. S. CARTER, D. P. A., Nelson, B. C.\n WE*^*****.\n'**\u25a0''*;'.\u25a0'\"\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nPAGE EIOHT,\nTHE DAILY NEWS\n*\"\"   Unequalled for Gir\u00bbr>l Uee\nW. P. TIERNEY, General Sale. Agent,\nNeleon, B. C.\n.., Cora lupplled to all railway polntl.\nPrescriptions\nHAVE YOUR PRESCRIPTION\nFILLED HERE. GRADUATES\nWITH YEAR8 OF EXPERIENCE ATTEND TO THEM.\nDOCTORS RELY ON OUR\nHONE8TY TO FILL PRE-\n8CRIPTIONS   AS   ORDERED.\nCanada Drug & Book Co.\nEASTMAN     KODAKS    AND\nSUPPLIES.   WILLARD   CHOCOLATES.\nMall Ordere Filled Ptromptly.\nTHE ARK\nMen's Work Shirts, each 50c\nCurtain Scrim, 36 inches, per\nyard  15c\nPrints,   good   quality,   per\nyard ,'.. W\/40\nTent Duck, 8 oz., per yard \u00a35c\nAwning Duck, per yard 32V'tC\nPrinted Linoleum, per yard.., .75c\nPillow Ticking, per yard 2BC\nWe buy for cash Second-hand Fur-1!\nniture, Stoves and Ranges.\n. 8ign of the Red Rocker.\nTwo doors east of Josephine St,\nVernon St. 606.\nJ. W. HOLMES, Manager.\nPhone 66L. ,\nSolid Gold Crosses\nOUR OWN MANUFACTURE\nWe have juBt made up a neat selection of Gold Crosses\u2014pretty\nstyles and designs\u2014neat sizes, plain,\nengraved and partially engraved;\npearl set and diamond set.\nSPECIALLY PRICED\nS1.50, $1.60, S1.80. S2.00,\n.  $2.50. $2.80, $3.16,\n$3.60. $5.40\nJ. 0. Patenaude\nManufacturer  of Artistic Jewelry,\nExpert Optician and Watchmaker.\nMM ' ' \"\nI   Nelson News of the Dag\n...\na-. IIIIMHIIIIilllH *\u00bb'*\n\\ Social and Persona\/ j\nCOMMITTEE REPORTS\nON VIC\n0R1A PROBE\nPRESS GALLERY, VICTORIA, B.C.,\nJune 24\u2014Following la the report of the\ncommittee inquiring into the Victoria\nelection charges made by the Liberals:\n\"Tour select committee appointed to\nInquire into offenses against the \"Provincial Elections Act\" during the late\nby-election in Victoria city, 'beg leave\nto report as follows:\n\"From t'he evidence submitted we\nmake the following firidings:\n\"1. Tour committee held fifteen\nmeetings and examined ten witnesses.\nA verbatim report of the evidence\nherewith.\n- \"2.. There were certain premises on\nWharf street in the' city of Victoria\noccupied by Messrs., Slavin and McBrlde* as a meeting -place for soldiers\nand they had beer and sandwiches to\ngive away.\n. i \"3. That Mr. H. Wolverton, a soldier, met Mr, Slavin in the morning of\nthe day of the electiofn, and was invited bj Mr. Slavin to outer the premises\nOccupied by Messrs. Slavin and McBrlde; that he did so, and that he had\nia drink of beer; that he was in Slaving company for about half an hour;\nthat ne was not convassed by anyone\nelse to vote for either of the candi\ndates; that he was a Lieberal and\nvoted for the Liberal candidate that\nday.\n\"4. That only soldiers or men In uniform were admitted to those premises.\n\"5. That   four   gallons   of   Scotch\nwhiskey were delivered to Mr. Mc-;\nBride by the Hudson's Bay company,\nto certlan premises on \"Wharf street,\nbut there was no evidence to1 show'\nthat that liquor was consumed on\nthoso premises.\n\"G. That >Mr. Moore, the returning\nofficer, upon hearing of this place\n.'being open, informed the police and\ninstructed them to tako action if anything was being done contrary to the\n\"Elections Act.\" Such action was Immediately taken and the placo was\nclosed.\n\"7. That Messrs. Slavin and McBride\nwere arrested and finally 'brought before* the Police Magistrate for a hearing, when an officer from the 67th\nbattalion appeared and asked the police magistrate to turn the men over\nto him for trial before a court martial,\nThe police magistrate granted the request and the men were turned over.\nIt was shown that a similar action\nwas taken with soldiers on former\noccasions, and that on this occasion\nthe evidence proved conclusively that\nnoJ influence was exercised with the\nmagistrate by the attorney-general or\nhis department, or the government in\nany way whatever; nor was tbe matter brought to the attention of the\nattorney-general's department at all.\n\u25a0 \"8. TJhat between twenty-flvo and\nthirty excursion tickets Were purchased by Mr. Harry Price for the crew\nof the government dredge \"Ajax\" from\nNanaimo to( Victoria and return on\nelection day, and that -he paid for those\ntickets out of his own funds; that tbe\ntickets were handed to the men by\nMr. Roberts, engineer of the dredge,\nwithout inquiring as to what their\npolitical affillatUms wdrc.\"\nP. Matthews of Creston is registered\nat the Strathcona,\nH. D. Salmon of Trail is registered\nat the Strathcona.\nL. E. Smith of Trout Lafco is registered at the Strathcona\nAlfred Cullcn of Ainsworth visited\nthe city Saturday and was a guest at\nthe Hume.\nP. McDonough of Trail visited the\ncity Sunday and registered at the\nHume.\nLieut. W. A. Campbell of Vancouver\narrived in the city Sunday and is a\nguest at the Hume.\nO. A. Ohren, accompanied by Mrs.\nOhren, returned from a business trip\nto Spokane Saturday evening.\nWhile In lhe city Saturday tho members bf the RoHSlaud lacrosse team\nwere guests at the Hume.\nLieut. C. E. Richardson returned\nfrom Grand Forks Saturday and spent\nthe weekend in the city.\nJohn Snow of Shoreacres was\nbrought to tho Kootenay Lake General\nhospital Sunday suffering from i\nbroken shoulder blade.\nWord has been received that Rich\nard Turner of Nelson who has ibeen\nat the front with the Canadian expeditionary forces, is in hospital in England suffering from shrapnel wounds.\nHe is expected to recover.\nPATRIOTIC FUND\nRECEllSi$310.10\nNelson   Overseas   Company   of  225th\nNow  Numbers  153  Men\u2014More\nExpected During Week\n225th Kootenay Overseas\nBattalion, C.E.F.\nBy kind permission of the Officer Commanding.\nDANCE\nIN AID OF C COMPANY FUND, IN THB\nArmory\nTuesday, June 6,1916\nIt was announced Sunday that C\ncompany 225th Kootenay battalion,\nC. E. F.( numbei-ed 153 men.\nIn addition to these It is expected\nthat several more men will bo sworn\nin during the week. Among those who\nhavo joined within the lost few days\nare K. R. Attree, a son of C. F. Att-\nress of Queen's Bay, who is woll\nknown In tho, city, whero he has a\nnumber of friends, and James Joy of\nNelson, a brother of Pci'cy Joy and\nR. G. Joy. Pte. Joy has heen a resident of the city for some time and is'\nwell known as a crack rifle shot. Tho\nlist of recruits follows:\nWalter Nlchol, miner, born Selkirk,\nScotland; next of kin, sister, Margaret\nNlchol, Topsfleld, Selkirk, Scotland.\nJonathan Wade, fireman, horn Pig-\npleswate, Pedfordshii'e, England; next\nof kin, father, William Wade, Plggles-\nwate, Bedfordshire, England.\nTheodore Padberg, musician, born\nHeerevereen, Frlosland,. Holland; next\nof kin, mother, Allda Padberg, Muhl\nback, Alta.\nKenneth Ross Attroo, rancher, horn\nBrighton, England; next of kin,\nmother, Edith Attree, Queen's Bay;\nfour years service in the O. T. C,\nEngland.\nWilliam Marsland, rancher, born\nNow Mill, Derbyshire. England; next\nof kin, father, John William Marsland,\nMaklnson-s Landing.\nJohn Anthony Ion, rancher, born\nNewton Stewart, Wlgtonshlrc, Soot-\nland; next of kin, wife, Mary Ion, Na-,\nkusp.\nWilliam James Clease, rancher, born\nCombedown, Somerset, England; next\nof kin, wife, Alice Maude Clease, Nakusp.\nEric Nordin, miner, born Camrose,\nAlta.; next of kin, mother, Anna Nordin, Chesterwold, Alta.    '\nJames Joy, plasterer, born Margate,\nEngland; next of kin, wife, Alice Joy,\nNelson.\nTotal Contribute. During Second Year\n$10,740.44\u2014 Further Gifti\nAcknowledged.\nContributions totaling *3H.10 were\nreceived last week by tho Nelson and\n['district blanch of tho Canadian patriotic fund, bringing tho total received\nduring tlie second year of the fund's\nactivities, since Nov. 15. 1915, up to\n110,740.44, according to the statement\nIssued 'b ythe treasui'er os Saturday.\nThe acknoweldgements follow:\nPreviously acknowledged, '10,430.34.\nRev. J. Althoff, }5; Mrs. F. P. Armstrong, |2; Miss C. Armstrong, tl;\nMiss H. Armstrong, $1.\nD. G. Borlasd, to cents; E. H. Beeston, 50 cents; W. C. Burrows, {5; W.\nRay Bail, f2.50; W. Beatty, tt; George\nA. Brown, t5; W. J. Barker, t5; C. D.\nBlackwood, t2.50; Miss A. M. Bruce,\nfl;  Miss B. Barker, tl.\nS. A. Curven, tl; G. Clerihew, tl.\nCi'esccnt Valley Patriotic association,\nsubscriptions from the following: T.\nS. Richardson, t5; Fred Garner, t4.50:\nC. P. Grlzzelle, t3; Mrs. Fred Gai'ner,\ntt; Mrs. N. Wateror, tl; Percy Miller,\nt3; Miss Edith Keech, $5; Miss Elliott,\nt2; Mrs. C. E. Gardiner, tl.\nL. <B, de Veber, tl2.50; L. S. do Vcb-\ner, ?2; Miss D. Dockendorff, tl.\nD. Guthrie, t5;; Mrs. E. Guenettc, tl.\nMrs. J. Harley, tl; William Harkness, tl.\nMi', and Mrs. A. Jeffs, tf.\nJ. D. Kerr, t5; R. A. Kirkpatrlck, J5.\nA. G. Larson, t20.\nH. S. Matheson, $2.50; Miss M. D.\nMcFarland, t2; 3. A. McDonald, t5; S.\nC. Morris, t5.\nJames O'Shea, $10.\nT. B. Phillips, t2.50.\nT. Roynon,-ft; HI D. Robinson, 50c.\nMiss Snell, fl; H. Selous, fiO; Mrs.\nR. H. Spurway, f2.\nS. P. Tuck, f 12.50; II. P. Thomas, tlO.'\nE. J, Vandcrwatef, fl.SO; R. V. Vcn-\nables, f2.50,\nR. D. Wallace, f2; C. A. Watoiman,\nf5.\nProvincial government employees,\none day's pay, $111.10, from the following:- B. B. Botts, A. M. Black, T. M.\nBowman, E. T. cope, R. A. Elliott, C.\nV, Gagnon, J. II. Gibbs, J. T. Hardy, S.\nS. Jarvls, W. R. Jarvls, G. S. Miller, C.\nA. Mix, 'R. It. mori-ow, V. McCoy, C. J.\nMcGuigan, E. McFarland, James McGregor, D. J. McKim, A. E. Pickford,\nA. A. Htchford, J. T. Price, E. B.\nProwd, Robert Reid, S. R. Roc, F. C.\nRonan, J.K. Saltel-, M. C. Steele, A.\nSutherland, A. E. Thompson, D. C. Wilson, L. Wightwlck.\n\u25a0 Total, $10,740.44.\nA. S. Horswill &. Co.\nCor. Vernon and Jeeephine Streote\nWELCOME NEWS.\nRobin Hood Flour, 49-Ibs...$1.85\nOur Best Flour, 49 lbs SI.85\nPantry Queen Flour, 49 lbs.S1.75\nPotatoes, per sack 100 lbs...S1.35\nStrawberries, per box 20c\nNew Laid Eggs, per dozen....35c\nPROMPT SERVICE.\nPhone 121 P. O. Box 64\nOur Boys\nAt the Front\nMONDAY,   JUNK   fc   lil*\n1'\n(AFTER\nThe Chick Food Sta!\nWe Can Supply\nHULLED OATS, CRACK*BD 1\nCRACKED    CORN,    FEED\nCORNMEAL, ETC.\nAlso Have a Full Una of\nCHICK    FOUNTS,    INSECT\nAND REMEDIES.\nThe Brackman-Ker Milllflfl\nCompany, Limited\nLike to be written to and we have just exactly the paper you want tol\nwrite them on.   It'e thin, you can put lots in, but it'e strong and eaey to\nwrite on.   Juit the thing for long di.tar.ee correspondence ae it doee not.;\nmake your lettare overweight.\nIN  PAD  FORM  AT 15c, 25c and 35c\u2014ENVELOPES TO MATCH\nftlTV  nDllf*   Ph    For DRUGS, STATIONERY, Neilson's I\nblr   I    UnUy   UUi     Chocolates, Phonographs, Etc.\nP. 0. BOX 1083\n(Continued rro.n Page Two)\nCommencing 8:45 p.m.\nTICKET8, $1.00 PER COUPLE\nLADIES  FREE\nDRESS  OPTlbNAL\nTlekete to be had at the various stores and from men of the company.\nThe city council meets Monday night\nat 8 o'clock in tho city hall.\nUNTIL   FURTHER   NOTICE\nThis Store Will Close at\nNoon on Saturdays\nBUT FOB THE  CONVENIENCE   OF  THE  PUBLIC  -WILL REMAIN\nOPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS UNTIL 0:30\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co.,Ltd.\nWHOLESALE   AND   RETAIL NELSON,   \u00ab.  C.\nGEM\nYOUR THEATRE.\nTODAY AND TOMORROW\n\"THE SUPREME TEST.\"\nIn five reels, with Henrietta\nGrossman, tbe famous legitimate star, and unusually\nstrong support. A .photoplay which takes you from\nthe <ball room to the alums,\nTho action has very dramatic\nand exciting scenes. Shows\nthe final triumph of a good\nwoman over greed and evil.\nCHILDREN.\nSpecial prize in bicycle contest this week. To the boy and\nigirl turning in the most votos\ngoes  a prize  of  $1.00  each.\nMatinees, 2:20; Night, 7 p. m.\nbrought in ;ia cents per acre where as\nunder special timber licenses they\nwould only bring in. iii -cents -per\naero Thus the government is receiving more out of them in taxes than\nit would get if they had been disposed\nof under timuer licenses. Wince 1912\nsaid the deputy minister the forestry\nbrancn haa been in operation and at\nthe present time reports on lands are\nchecked up by this department so it is\nimpossible to sell timber lands as agricultural lands. The properties referred\nto were applied for between the years\n181)5 and i9lu, ho thought.\nHo gave interesting figures showing\nthe rise and fall in tbo provincial\nsales. In the calendar year li)05, 50,000\naciva were sold, with an average of\nHou.OOG for each year of 1808, 1907, and\n1U08. The totals of succeeding\nyears were: 1909, 640,-OOG acres; 1910,\n2,000,000; 1911, 900,000; 1912, 600,000;\n1913, 4'20,0OO;   1914, 45,000;  1916, 9,000.\nThe public accounts 'committee's report to tho houso reads; **\nReport of tho investigation o\u00a3 the\npurchase of the court house site in\nVictoria.\nEarly in 1913 Attorney-General\nBowser instructed H, C. Hannington\nwho was inspector of Jegal offices for\nthe crown to look for a favorable site\nfor the now courthouse at Victoria,\nMr. Hannington went to Mr. pemberton, a real estate dealer and got options on several properties. Finally\nthey were offered the present site for\n9100,000 but succeeded in obtaining\nit for a cash payment of $75,000 which\nwas a price below similar properties\noffered in the same neighborhood; lt\nwas revealed that Mr. Hannington\naccepted without tho knowledge of the\ngovernment a commission of $2000 and\nwe understand that Mr. Hannington\nhas since tendered his resignation as\nInspector of legal offices.\nReport dealing with order in council\ndated May 15, 1915, directing the registrar of titles in Victoria and New\nWesmlnstcr, to make certain registrations on payment of reduced fees.\nThis matter concerned the registration fees paid in connection with the\nCanada Western Lumber Co.,'Limited,,\nApril 13, 1910, this company gave a\nmortgage to tiie British Empire -Trust\ncompany, to cover a three million\npounds, five per cent issue of debentures stock which mortgage was duly\nregistered in Victoria and in New\nWestminster and fees amounting to\n$7,507.60 was duly paid: After war was\ndeclared the Canada Western Lumber\n'\"to?^ Coadeased Advertisemeiits\nMaking Money\nI knew one man who ie' going to make eome money. He eaw\nhie opportunity, took advantaa. of it and bought a property at\none-third of Ite valuo._Not only Will he make eome money but\nnTbVeomJran interested oitlkan instead of a transient. Why\nahould not YOU. I can etill offer three homea at away lose\nthan ceet.   At least become Interallied enough to Inquire.\nCharles RIMcHardy\nREAL ESTATE  '     FUEL       ,  INSURANCE\nmummm\ncompany found It impossible to. make\npayments or to pay interest so a new\narrangement with tho debenture holders was arrived at whereby a substituted trust mortgage covering the same\nassets but giving the pompany relief\nfrom paying further Interest until after peace was declared was executed.\nThe Canada Western Lumber company applied to the government for\nspecial consideration in regard to foes\non account of tho financial crisis\ncaused by the war, making a secondj\nregistration of the same security to the\nsamo people necessary. The executive\ncouncil under the statutes granted a\nregistration of the mortgage for $200;\nhence the order in council rcforred\nto was issued.\nNew Wing ef Buildings\nThe construction of the new wing of\ntho parliament .buildings was enquired\ninto. In 1911 the government called\nfor tenders and several was submitted. McDonald & Wilson's tender\nwas $970,250. A lower tender than\nwas received from an American firm\nfor $939,000. McDonald & Wilson\nagreed to take $20,000 off their tender\nand tho work was awarded to them.\nIt was shown absolutely that not a\ndollar of tho public money was paid\nout in connection with the construction of the buildings without the certificate of the supervising architect.\nThe architect P. M. Rattenbury swore\nthat it had never even been suggested\nto him that he should give any pref- i\nerence to any particular person or \\\nfirm. It was shown that tho new\nwings were built as cheaply as other\nlarge structures built at that time;\nthat the Inspection of all contractors\nwork was rigid and enacting; that the\nnew buildings cost including boiler\nhouse and library tabout $1,100,000,\ncompnrcd with $800,000 for the original\nbuilding. The floor space in each-was\npractically the same. Tho typo of construction In the new building was very\nmuch superior to that in the old being\nof modern fire proof type and considering the cost of labor and material\nthe new building did not cost more\nthan the old. No irregularity whatever was shown in the department of\npublic works in conection with this\nmatter.\nRenfrew Lands\nAn investigation into the purchase\nof certain lands in the Renfrew district was made. It was disclosed that\nsome 6,760 acres, being lots 71, 72, 73,\n74, n, 101, 113, 114, 529, 530, 531, 632,\n533, 664, 565, 566, 667, 568, 569, 570,\n671, 571A, 572, 572A, 573, 573A, 574,\n574 and 725 which had been reported\nto the department under oath by five\ndifferent firms of surveyors as second\nclass agricultural land and crown\ngranted at various times 'between\nJune 21, 1894, and December 31, 1912,\nwere disposed of ut $2.50 per acre with\nthe exception of one pre-emption, lot\n74. This property came into tho hands\nof the Puget Sound Lumber company,\nwhose prospectus claims the land to\nbe timberland containing approximately sixty thousand feet to the acre.\nA case is in tho court at the present\ntime in which, it is alleged that this\nwas a misleading statement for the\npurpose of selling certain debentures.\nIt was shown that the only way the\ndepartment had at that time according\nto the act of arriving at the classification of lands was -by the surveyor's\nstatement and. that until tho year 1907\nor 1908 there had been very little activity in lands or timber but that such\ngrowth had taken place subsequent to\nthat, that in 1912 the department instituted a forestry branch whereby\nInspections were made 'before crown\ngrants were issued. It was shown that\nthis timber was liable to royalty and\nthat the taxes paid under this 'brought\nto the consolidated revenue aa much\nor more than tlmbor licenses would\nbring. It was also shown that under\nthe new system of forestry branch\nthat many applications wero being disallowed.\nOthers Matters\n\u25a0 The attention1 of the public accounts\ncommittee having 'been drawn by the I\nauditor general to several items carried in the balance sheet of the prov- j\nince as'assets which are undoubtedly\nIrrecoverable your committee bogs to\nrecommend that tho following be\nwritten off as no longer representing\nreallable assets: Advance to farmers\nfor seed and so forth In 1895, $15,525.33,\nAbbotsford Creamery association, old\nassociation under Loan Dairy act $400;\nThomas H. McKay, late collector, Vancouver, $835.85.\nYour committee beg to present a\nstatement showing special warrants\nsigned by the lieutenant governor together with the expenditures thereon\nbetween the session of 1913 and March\n31, 1913, as required by tho Revenue\nact, chapter 202, section 48. Through\nan Inadventaucc were omitted from\nthe auditor general's report presented\nat the session of 1914, such report\nonly embodying -Warrants Issued under\nthe provisions of the Audit act as from\nAprti 1, 1913, being the date the auditor general assumed office and the\ndate of the coming into force of the\nAudit act and to recommend that the\nsalJ \"statement be approved and incorporated in the sessional papers of\nthe house.\nBesides tho mutters referred to lu\nhouse your committee had before the\nfollowing matters\u2014the steel supplied\nby the Canadian Northern Railway\ncompany to the Westminster bridge,\n2 the amount of money paid the Canadian Northern Railway contractors\nfor road construction on the North\nThompson, 3 payments made to P. J.\nCampbell and F. A. Deveresux In\nEsquimau district in connection with\nroad work, 4, tho auditor general's\nreport, -5, the Normal school site at\nVictoria, 6, expense accounts* of ministers, 7. tho wiring of government\nhouse\u2014all of which matters were\nfound to be in order.\nSLOCAN CITY NEWS.\n(Special to The Daily News.)\n-SLOCAN CITY, B.C., June 3.\u2014William Hicks made a flying trip down\nfrom the Meteor mine Thursday evening owing to an accident at the mine.\nC. B. Taylor, ono of the lessees, and\nMr. Hicks were in the blacksmith shop\nwhen a snowslide came down, smashing the shop under its weight. Mr.\nHicks managed to get'into the mouth\nof the tunnel. Mr. Taylor was badly\ncut and bruised.\n. A party of men left early Friday\nmorning to \"bring the wounded man to\ntown, it being necossary to tako a\nsleigh from town to convey him to the\nArlington basin, where M. Cameron\nmet the party with a ibuggy.\nMrs. J. H. Pinchbeck of Three Forks\nis in town, the guest of Mrs. (H. Nye.\nMr, and Mrs. William Cottorill, who\nhave spent the winter at tho Rambler-\nCariboo mine, returned homo Tuesday.\nC. E. Barber,** who was called to his\nhome in Vancouver a tew, days ago, returned Thursday night.\nMrs. J. Law and son, George, went\nto Nelson Thursday.\nMrs. W. A. Hufty wont to Phoenix\nTuesday to visit ono of her sons, who\nhas enlisted.\n-\"Where Every-\nbody Goes.\"\nTonight 7 to 10:30\nThe Famous Players Present\n\"Av\nLAURA SAWYER\nin\nDAUGHTER     OF\nHILLS.\"\nTHE\n\"ON THE ROAD TO CALAIS\" \\\nTwo-part feature based on the\npresent war.\nComedy\n\"A QUESTION OF CLOTHES\"\nSee our Ad, Page 3.\nAUSTRALIANS LEAVE COAST\nON WAY TO LONDON\nVANCOUVER, B. C, June 4.\u2014A\nparty of Australian Imperials, headed\nby Sir James Carroll and Hon. P. M.\nGlynn reached Vancouver by the Ma-\n\u25a0kura and hg-ve left for tho east on\ntheir way to London. Col. George Ham\nand Col. Chambers aro convoying\nthem across Canada.\nSaturday the party was entertained by the Canadian club at a luncheon,\nwhen In addition to tho visitors'\nspeeches an address was given by\nPremier Bowser. .In closing his address Sir James Carroll said: \"Never\nbo alarmed by any news of war that\ncarries disaster with it. We must\nhold on. The moro wo meet disaster\ntho stronger should our resolves be.\nWe must hold up our end of the stick\nand we must 'be there to the last man\nand wet must have faith and Jook with\nfearless eyes 'beyond the world of\nstrlfo and see beyond the dawn of a\nhappier life,\" declared the speaker.\nThe monthly meeting of tho W.C.T.U.\nwill be held in the Y.M.C.A. Tuesday\nal'ternoon at 3 o'clock. A discussion\non tho laws of'British Columbia will\n'bo introduced by Mrs. Corey.\nTho appointment of Aid. English and\nAugustus Carney of the city of Kaslo\nas commissioners of police is noted\nin tho latest Issue of the British Col-\numbia Oazettc.\nGERMAN-AMERICAN  LOYALLY\nTO  U. S.  IS   DECLARED\nCHICAGO, 111.\u2014Loyalty of Germans!\nto the United States was declared Sun-1\nday at a representative gathering of J\nGermans from all over the country. AM\n\"creed\" was submitted by the German'\nAmerican Newspaper Publishers aBBoJ\nelation, in which it was asserted t-hajjj\nthe Germans  \"might be  hyphenate\nAmericans, but their Americanism\nunhyphenated.\"   The \"creed\" present^\ned at the meeting will be acted on i\nanother meeting to be hold today.\nSomo of tho things whicli the tentflj\ntive creed advocated were:\nAn adequate preparedness based *j\npatriotism; American ships for forell\ncommerce; maintenance of the Pan\nma canal fifce to American ships,\nslstence by America on the frecdojj\noiKthe seas.\nThe meeting was presided over\nJ. 11. Meyer, a Philadelphia manufa\nturer, and the majority of the rep\nsentatives in attendance are\nattend the Republican convention,\nIt is the intention to form in Chic*\na central body which shall 1\ntouch with all German-American\nganizatlons in tho country with a \\\nto guiding them in matters. of nation!\npolitical importance and on otlij\nquestions In which they are interests\nDON'T LIKE BERLIN NAMES.\nm\nBERLIN, Ont., June 2.\u2014A storm <H\nprotest  has   developed  following  th*p\npublication  this  morning of the  sb\nnames selected iby the \"committee ta\n99\" from which the citizens are ex*|\npofcted \u25a0 to  choose  one  as   the\nname for the city. The council is bein\nstrongly urged to request the commit*!\nteo to \"think again\" and it is expectei\nthat additional names will bo offere|\nfor selection.\nTho first session of the court of ra\nVision of the assessment roll for 199\nof the municipality of Greenwood wj\nbe held iii the -council chamber at tn\ncity hall in that city on Monday aftej\nnoon, Juno 26, at 4 o'clock.\nBusiness Suits\nfor Business Men\nThe kind of styles that go with\nvirile, aggressive, prosperous\n- men. &,.*\u25a0.\n-1     \u00ab\n;   -Every detail of tailoring\nexactly right.\nMany attractive patterns at\n$18.50, $20, $22,50, $25 up.\n'%i'\nEmory & Walley\n_E1I^REC0RM_  CLOT.MIN**,\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. 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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. 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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. 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