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Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" I?f9^!>:\nLf$\n.\"Jiii iii \"i\nybi.20.\nNELSON, B.C,\nWEpNESPAY MOBNING, MAY 25r 1921\nNO. 21.\nAspect of Silesian Question Changes; Germany Decides to\nClose Frontier and Disband Volunteers; Will Only Advance Into Ruhr With Allies' Support, Declares Briand,\nin Seeking Vote of Confidence; Folly to Believe Entente\n,- Would Founder on Silesia.\nPassengers Have Narrow\nEscape When Steam Ferry\nSinks Leaving Moorings\nMONTREAL, May 24.\u2014Over a\nhundred passengers en board the\nsteam ferry \"John,\" running from\nPort Fortune to Carillon, across\nthe Ottawa river, had a narrow\nescape this' afternoon when the\nsteamboat sank at the wharf as\nit was about to leave its moor-\ninrjr,| ' The boat was filled to capacity with a holiday crowd. The\npassengers were all landed in\norderly manner while#the boat\nas going down.. The cause of tho\nsinking *\u25a0 has not been ascertained.\n\u25a0PARIS, May 24.\u2014The chamber JfcJs\n-evening Hook an adjournment until\n. (Wednesday afternoon without having\nvoted on the question of confidence\nin the government of Premier, Briand\n\u2022with regard to its attitude toward\nG*ermahy.: '\nPremier Briand, questioned by a\ngroup'of deputies before the meeting of the chamber, shtd there wan\niia;'*reasQil for the occupation of the\nRuhr region,  because the  aspect  of\n\u25a0 the Silesian question had been\nchanged, and if the Ruhr were occupied without the sUppdn bf the\niilliOH, it Would be equivalent- to\nabandonment  of  the   treaty  of  Ver-\n- mm: \u2022\u2022 \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0- '\nGermany   replied   today    'to     thu\nFrench   Communication   of   yesterduy\nInVthe  Silesian   situation,   th5   reply\ndeclaring In.effect that Germany had\ntaken   the'   most   rigorous   measures\ntoward closing its frontier with Upper   Silesia. ,\nj    The   French    communication   was\ni, made by Premier Briand  last night\nt*to the German ambassador, Dr. J^ay-\n'W,\" *ho   Waa'requested   to  ask  ills\nffov-srnment  if It'waB understood, to\nend. definitely   all   atitempts   at  aggression  in   Silesia  If Germany   did\nnot  wish   to   expose  herself   to  reprisals by  the allies.\nWill Close Frontier\n^'Dr. Mayer Informed Premier Brl-\n1 i-and that the German government\nhad decided to close tho SlleMan\nWoiitler and oblige tho . volunteer\ncWps to disband.- After .his call,\nFrench official circles were pptlmietlc\nregarding the Upper Sileslan situation.\n\"Premier .Briand in hla statement\nto the chamber of deputies today\non the government's foreign policy\n: a^id With regard (\u25a0& the London agreement for ' non-occupation of the\nRuhi* valley, laid emphasis on tha\n; point' that the math object ho had\nbeen pursuing was to retain the\nsupport of-public Opinion, aa well\nas the moral\/ suppom of the governments .of the United. States and\nGreat  Britain.        ..-,,*,\n'\"tri'tlfe ^drtd aa'-it ia constituted\ntoday,'.' said M. Briand, \"no country\ncon   exist   lu   isolation.     I   do   not\n: Want   France   to   he   in   the   same\nposition    as   Iri    1^70.     If   coercive\n'measures -must be adopted,  itr'must\n. be in 'agreement with our alllfcs.\n\"Tbdiir  France   has   the   strength\nwhich  permits  her  i.6  be  confident,\n\u25a0 but Command's\" hei1 .'to be careful.\nJust at tH<i tfttie When, a me*re show\nof this force waa sufficient tb obtain more  in, tVo  iWioks  than  had\n\u25a0 been   obtained  ih   two   ydara   from\n^Germany,' the use' of this\/ force is\nunnecessary, I dhall not use it unless ' as a*ti Impfifat'lve \"necessity\nwhich   involves     the    security      bf\n. France.\"\n\".< \u25a0       Convinced   of   Good   Faith\nPremier Briand- said  he was con-\n; vi'nced-6'f the good faith and loyalty of the goverhiwent of Chancellor\n..Wirt's*\"  aiid   that - It ' was   trying   to\nWvo up\"to' \\\\M promiSea.-\n:.'Tho'' pt'emtet*   asked'   the   chamber\n\u2022 tdv ttvdie'bf confidence on his policy\ntoward Gerniany. .\n\u2022 \u25a0 \u2022 Mi'-B^add irtBisted that the. chamber 'must \"asSti'me   Its   respbnslbili'ty\n\u2022 ^s\" 3 have .'mlmi,\"' if it wished the\noccupation of the Ruhr,\n\"If. the  ehamber . ia   not   satisfied\n\u25a0 because-.. I  .have   hot   imposed   peh-\n. allies, It. will say so,\" lie added;\nThe pj-e-miej: made it\" .clear after\nthat \"hmesW\" there' were: some flagrant violations of' the disarmament\nor reparations clauses by Germany,\nthe troops on (ihe Rhino would not\nreceive orders tb advance into the\nRuhr, and 'then only conditionally\nupon agreement With the allies. Ho\ncontended that the .mere presenco\nof 200,000 men pn the Rhine was\nsufficient!, to makV Germany fulfill\nher obligations.\nSituation  Clearing\n'Concerning the Sileslan question,\nM. Briand said the situation was\nclearing up and did not necessitate\nintervention by the -Frertch troopa.\nHe was satisfied that the Wlrtz government ,would live up to its promises, -received today, to, close the\n'frontier \"between the plebiscite zone\n.and .Gerlrt&rty and also looking to\n'the disarming .of' tho bands now in\n\u25a0ffileala, and that loyal interpretation\nof -the plebiscite vote would com-,\npletely reatorfc order in Silesia.\n*i \"That ia a tkt cry from your\n-*ha*d on tlie nape of the neck,'\nspeech,\" shouted Deputy Le Provost\nDelaunay, , .while, -the members of\ntho exlrema, right; showed great agitation and' expressed their disapproval of tho\u25a0\" premier's utterances\na& being, a move toward tho left,\"\n\u25a0 Dilating on tho' situation between\n^reat Britain andrFfcahco, Mr. Briand\ndeclared:\n\"It . ia' folly . to believe that after\ntho great storms which tho entente,\nhave weathered, it,. would founder\noh tho Silesian question, upon which\nall are agreed' irt. principle.\"\n\\l Review* London Conference\nv The premier reviewed the events\noT the recent London conference and\nRioted the - British prime minister\nSm sayhig that when the French and\n?ritlsh viewpoints. Were so- far apart\n\u00abe thought It likely that the conference would bHettk\" up and further\ntooted the -^brdlj' of Mr. Ll'byd\nGeorge, and added:\nV\"I.should not'IiKe.to be .the man\nWho would have On his conscience\nthe responsibility of breaking up'\nt\u00a3e god accoi'd between piunce and\nEngland,\"  \"\"      ;.\" '\nSiitsiati Miners Strike\n..BERLIN, Miy 24.\u2014A new government order operative today,  impba*is\n* Aa-xlttiiiih- flrt'e. of   M0,000   iftarlts\nw.   4Coaflg&$  on   Page|3ve).\nI\nLABOR BRTTLEtN\nBUENOS AYRES, May 24.\u2014A number of persons are\nreported to have been killed or wounded during fighting today\nin the port zone when union labor leaders attempted to prevent non-union workers from unloading ships.\nRevolvers were used during the fighting and firing occurred in the affected region this afternoon. According to\nofficials of the labor association, whjch sent the non-union\nmen into the port zone on the basis of government guarantees\nthat free labor would not be excluded in unloading ships, the\npolice did not interfere in the fighting. Late this afternoon,\nthe association sent a committee to the government authorities\ndemanding, protection for the non-union workers.\nPlan Afoot to Link Up Canada With Colonies as United Commonwealth.\nf , WASHINGTON, May 24^-Estab-\n1'lShm'cnt of a confederation of British America, to include Canada and\nthe British colonise of tho Bahamas,\nBarbadoes, Bermuda, Jamaica, the\nLeeWard Islands, Trinidad, the \"windward Island, and possibly British\nHonduras and British Guiana, waa\nreported here today. ijuoffioiaV cireles\nHo be under consideration in the\nBritish dominions and' poaseasiona of\nNorth,   South   and   Central   Amerlcu.\nT'he idea of a united commonwealth of British America waa represented in tho report aa a further\ndevelopment of the union which was\nbegun. with tho confederation with\nthe four provinces of Canada *\u25a0 Jn\n1867.\nrj-JfercncQ waa had to the confer-\neiice which was held in Ottawa in\nJunt, 1920, and attended * by representatives of all the British colonies\nof the Americas for the pufposo cf\ndrawing up a trade agreement since\nrallied by a majority of tho colonies' concerned.\nEfforts .tp convert the trade federation into a political one, beginning with the Brltsh Indan colonies mid British Guiana, was said\n*to, have been made recently at a\nmeeting in Georgetibwn, British Guiana, where the proposal for a universal   currency ' was   launched.\nClement!, the colonial secretary,\nwhile agreeing to the idea of a uniform currency, stated that he considered the'idea of a political federation bon^etm the West Indies\nand British Guiana Impracticable on\naccount of the wide difference be-\ntW^bn th' eptobl'oms confronting tho\nvat-Ions colonies;\nSays Conciliation Between\nCapital and Labor Solution of Problems.\nAmbassador Geddes Refers\nto New Deadly Weapons;\nWhist Abolish War.\ndominionTlag FLIES\n'IN NEW JTORK CENTERS\nDumbells, Canadian Solier\nEntertainers, Perform at\nStaten Island Hospital.\nHead Tax on Canadians\nEntering United States\nSource oi Embarrassment\nWASHINGTON, May 24.\u2014The\nhead tax on Canadians entering the\nUnited States is a source of irritation\nand causes embarrassment to officials compelled to enforce it, W. W.\nHusband, commissioner general of\nimmigration, said today. Before the\npresent law went into effect in 1917\nthe tax applied only to foreigners\nwho had lived in Canada less than\none year, Mr, Husband said, adding\nthat the presont law, which provides\ntin $8 tax on each individual, including, native Canadians, waa unnecessary, disturbed friendly relations and\nshould be repealed.\n^\nDAY IN PARLIAMENT\nHouso of Commons.\nThe commons did not sit.\nSenate.\nSenate defeated the motion to\nwithdraw amendment's to tho judges'\niict,' refuaod by the commons- The\nvote Was '30 to 29.\nDlscusaion of bill creating national\nresearch institute deferred.\nSecond rending given Lake of tho\nWoods Control bill.\n\u25a0Tomorro-tv in parliament:\nHouse of Commons..\nThe house meets at 2* o'clock,!\nThe remaining bills on the ; order\npaper will be dealt with, Including\nthe bill ajneliding the criminal code.\nThe estimates of the departments\nof public works, finance and customs\nand inland revenue will be taken up.\nThe esflniates of other departments\nwill be considered if time permita.\nSeaiato.\nThe aenatb sits'at 11 o'clock..\nThe  bill   creatlhg   a   national   fe-\nsearch institute will- be taken up.\n *    .\u2014r\t\nREGIisfA, Blay 24.\u2122Wheat seeding\n*.. Saskatchewan is practically completed,, and 3 b per cent of the oat-i\nacreage is &own, according to a crop\n.rfc-port iaaued by the provincial depart jnegt ot aBTlcultijEft\nBRANDON, Man'., .May 24.\u2014-Favoring constitutional methods to right\nwrongs and concllliatlon between\n, capital and labor aa a solution to\npresent-day problems, Tom Moore,\npresident) of the Trades and TUibor.\nCongress of Canada, in an addrass\nIjere Monday night, statfcrt iliat gov-,\nerrimehts are- largely what the people mttko them and that it is up\nto the electors to see that' the besti\nmen  are chosen.\nThe speaker stated that he had\ntried his best to atop the Winnipeg\nstriko and expose the leaders of the\nstrike, which he characterized aa\n\"unreasonable and cruel,\" and \"rebounded like a boomerang upon the\nmisled workers,\" He criticized the\nagreement between the Brandon city\ncouncil and its employees and uregd\nthe former to give tlie men the\nright to join tho labor council. Mr.\nMoore stated that the efforts of the\ntrades and labor congress were towards improving conditions for hu-\nmaniHy.\nAward Annuity to\nNova Scotia Premier;\nIncrease  Indemnifies\nHALIFAX, May 24.\u2014The Nova\nScotia legislature today passed unanimously a resolution granting Hon.\nGeorge H. Murray, premier, an annuity of $5000 Mr. Murray has been\npremier of the province since' 1896,\na record for tho British empire, and\nis at present at Mount Clemens,\nMich., recuperating from a long illness. The members also increased\ntheir sessional Indemnities from $700\nto $1500 ahd ministers' salaries from\n$4500 lo $6000 a year.\nMANITOBA PUCES\nBONDS ON MARKET\nWINNIPEG, May 24.'\u2014 In addition\nto the $2,000,000 bond issue sold on\nMonday to a syndicate of Toronto\nand New York houses, the province\nof Manitoba disposed of an issue of\n$2,580,000 20-year 6 per cent bonds\nto another syndlcato composed of A.\nE. Amos & Co., the United States\nFinancial corporation and R. C. Matthews & Co. The price was 95.55\nand tho bonds aro payable in Winnipeg, Toronto and Montreal.\nThe issue is to meet 1921 capital\nexpenditure. Thc salo of Manitoba\nsecurities in Canadian funds marks\nthe first step in this direction aiir\nnounced by Mr. Hon. Edward Brown,\nprovincial treasurer, during the last\nsession of the legislature,\nMr. Brown exprossed disappointment at the bids received. <\nARREST   HOLDUP. VMSll.\nTlMMIlfs, Ont., May 24.\u2014A gang\nof alleged bandits, comprising five\nmen and one woman, ia In custody\nhero.' The prisoners are believed to\nhave been responsible for a series of\nholdups and robberies committed\nhere lately. The woman, when ar-\nrestedl was wearing soldiers' clothes.\nThe prisoners are Italians. Goods\nto the Value of $500, have 'bebu .\u00a3e-\ncovei'ed.: ^ \\\nSTEAMER ARRIVALS\nPresident   Wilson. at    New    Tork\nfrom   Trieste.\nCedric    at    Liverpool    from    New\nYork. \u25a0' '    '\nVeatris   at    Liverpool    from   U-qv?\nYot'k. v\nFinland   j.i   Plymouth   irom   Nc-w\nYork.\nAlgeria\nSeapool\ntreat\nit Moville from Ne*gr York,\nat  Rotterdam   from   Mon-\n\u25a0Slfciii' YORK, May 14.\u2014Canadian\nAssociated Press)\u2014 Sir* ; Auckland\nGeddca, British ambassador, speaking\ntonight at the Empire Day dinner of\nthe British Schools and University\nclub of New York, reiterated PretsI\nderit- Harding's recent utterances\nagainst war.\n\"We must not forget the evils of\nwar,\" he said. \"Let us resolve, aa the\npresident aald yesterday, that It must\n\u25a0not -bb again.1 Another war cannot,\nhe wagod without horrors > indescribable. New weapons have been devised, among them bacteria to spread\ndisease too horrible tp contemplato,\nIt must not be.1\n\"Do not let us forget the awful\ncost of war, or Its horrors, hut let us\nhot forget also that tho prleo of\neternal freedom Is eternal watch'\n\u25a0fulness and let us not sleep in the\nwatch tower. It is drowsiness in the\nwatch tower which is responsible for\nwar.\"\nUnvlels Tablet.\nPrior to the dinner; Sir Auckland\nunveiled a bronze tablet containing the\nnames of members of the cluh and\nsona of memlbera who served in the\nWar.\nThe name first on tho list ia that\nOf the prince of Wales. The club is\nmade up of graduates of schools and\nUniversities of thu British Empire now\nresident in New York. \u25a0 Other speak\nera wero Lieut.-General Sir Henry\nBurstall, K. C. B., inspector-general\nof the Canadian forces, and Martin W.\nLittleton of New York. A resolution\nwas adopted at the dinner extending\nthe1 best wishea of the club to the\nnew parliament of Ulster. Sir Auckland Geddes JWiA, a message from\nKing 66orgo expressing hla majesty's\npleasure at assurances of loyalty\nand devotion to the Empire, forwarded him by the club.\nSwarm to British Ranks.\nThe ambassador paid a 'tribute to\nthe part played in tho war by soldiers\nfrom the United States, declaring\nthat they swarmed Into tho ranks of\nthe British armies before -tlielr own\ncountry entered the struggle and\nfought as Britons without any question of differences in nationality.\nPassing then to the horrors of war,\nSir Auckland said war \"must not be'\nagain,\"  and   continued:\n\"We must apply to international\nrelations the spirit of the game.\nWe must be willing to give and .take\nknowing ^hat everything cannot-\ncome our way, that the other fellow\nhas hla rights, not forgetting tho\nneed to maintain watchfulness. Between our two nations, speaking the\nsame languago and with the same\nideals, there Is tho best chance in:\nthe world to bring about complete\nsympathy, eomplete understanding\nand complete friendship. And I will\nask you all to remember that under\nstanding and friendship l*a not the\nbusiness of any one individual, tout\nid tlie business of every one who is\nresolved that war shall not come\nagain; that there will ibe no war if\nhuman Ingnemilty and good feeling\ncan prevent it. And they can prevent   lt,*~'and  .they  must.\"\nNew York Canadians  En  Fete.\nNI$W YORK, May 24.\u2014(Canadian\nAssociated Pre\u00abs)\u2014Canadians in New\nYork today colebratod Empire clay.\nThe flag of the Dominion-was in evidence'at tho headquarters of various\nCanadian organizations hero and a\nseries of social and patriotic fixtures\nmarked the day.\nThe \"Dumbells,\" the Canadian' soldier entertainers who are appearinng\nat a locfcl theater, celebrated tho day\nby giving a special performance this\nafternoon at the Fox Hills hospital,\nStaten Island, for the benefit of the\nsoldiers   there.\nPress Tnkes \u201eNotico.\nLONDON, May 24.\u2014(Canadian Associated Press)\u2014Most of tho London\npapers mako a display of Empire\nDay rnaller, the Times publishing a\nspecial Empire Day' supplement of\n18 pages, Including several articles\non Canadian itopics. Demonstrations\nwere curried out under' glorious\nweather conditional\nDies During Parade.\nVICTORIA. May 24.\u2014Edward Hall,\naged 46, dropped dead hero today\nwhilo witnessing the Victoria' Day\nparade. He^aves a, widow and'six\ndaughters. -'->\nDynamitqrds\\ Damage\nStation on Canadian\nNational From Spite\nMONTREAL, May 24.\u2014Much\ndamage was caused early this\nmorning at dishing station, on\nthe Canadian National railway,\nabout five miiCG north of Carillon,\nby the dynamiting of the station.\nIt is believed that the outrage\nwas an act of spite owing to the\nremoval of the station from one\ntown to another. There was no\nperson on the premises at the\ntime. No arrests have yet been\nmade.\nAll Ulster Seethes With Excitement; Regular Babel Prevails; Sinn Fein Quarter Flies Stars and Stripes; Rival\nFactions Clash; Pledged Anti-Home Rulers Abstain\nFrom Voting; No Contests in South Ireland.\nI\nTO PROCEED TO UPPER SILESIA\nLONDON, May 24.\u2014A force of four battalions of British\ninfantry is under orders to proceed to Upper Silesia from the\nRhine and it is contemplated, if possible, to increase this force,\nAusten Chamberlain, the government spokesman, told a questioner in the house of commons this afternoon.\nUrgent representations had been made at Warsaw by the\nminister of the three allied powers, acting in concert, Mr.\nChamberlain said, but the evidence at the British government's\ndisposal renders it difficult to form a definite opinion regarding the recent aggression in Silesia.\nURONK flMILY\nWave Swamps Canvas Canoe\nBound for Hudson's Bay\nPost.\nAppoint Curzon Lord\nof Appeal Succeeding\nLate Bar-tin Moulton\n'\u2022 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 <\u2014\nLONDON. May 24.\u2014Sir Edward\n.Carson, who for maiiy .years'. baa\nbeen the leader of the TJfilter forces\niii, parliament, has beSiT. appointed\nICtfd of appeal ln succession tO'Bat-bn\nfirouitor., who died Iii'l^areh.  \"\n\u25a0 BAGMEBBE DE \" \"\u25a0 BIGOHBE,\nFrance, May 21.\u2014S^vea -persons\nwere killed and 13 Injured, when a\nrailway train  was derailed  at Arti\nSUSS*:'8\u00a7ar bSJSt t3J&yi.\nQUEBEC, May 34.\u2014(Canadian\nPress.)\u2014Details of the tragedy in\nvolving the drowning of five persona\nin the Oacalanea river, near Obijuan,\na Hudson Bay post, some 70 miles\nnorth of Parent on the transcontl\nncntal railway, last week, have boen\nbrought to this city by Coroner C\nW. JoIUcoer. who held an inquest\non tho remains of the five victims.\nThe vlctiina .of the tragedy were\nvJotpi Mtiwatt, Mrs. .lohn Mowatt,\nPhillip Mowatt, ago 22', Agnes Mow\natt, aged Xl\\ and Elizabeth Mackenzie, aged 10 years. \u2022\nThe accident practically wiped out\nthe Mowatt family. The only sur<\nvivlng member is a daughter of 19\nyears, who is studying in a convent\nat Latuque and had not accompanied\nthe family on the fatal trip.\nOn Tuesday morning, the 17th in\nstunt, Mowatt, with the four mem\nbera of his family, left Oscalauea\nfor Obijuan, where he had been appointed a factor of the Hudson's Bay\ncompaiiy. They embarked in a canvas canoe which was driven by motor, Althoungh the craft was heavily laden, their progress up the river was rapid and they were within\na mile of Obijuan when a strong\ngust of wind lashed up the waters\nand a big wave struck the canoe\nbroadside and, washing over the\ngunwale, swamped the craft and left\ntho occupants struggling In the water. In spito of the efforts of Mowatt and his son to save the lives of\ntho women folk and their own, tlie\nentire party perished.\nThe bodies were found the following day.\nOntario Veterans Ask\nGovernment Loan for\nBuilding City Homes\nBRANTFORD, Ont., May 24.\u2014The\nGreat War Veterans' association, Ontario command, in annual convention, today called on the Dominion\ngovernment for a loan of $R0,000,000\nto tho soldiers' settlement board to\nenable city veterans to erect homes\non such conditions us veterans who\nare farming receive, payablo in 30\nyears, limit of $5000 and interest at\nfi per cent. It was claimed that this\nwould solve tbe housing problem, aid\nto combat unemployment and give\nassistance   to   tho  veterans    needing\nhomes,\nThe convention also passed arbs\nolutlon against tho Spinney bill as\nbeing a return to patronage, a condition no veteran wanted.\nPremier Drury was a guest of the\nveterans and stiid thc returned men's\nhonor was of tho highest caliber.\nHo declared that the government\npolicy was that, If other things wore\noqual, the returned men received tlie\npreference, tho premior said, but if\nthe returned man could not measure\nup thoy expected him to stand, aaldo\nfor the more efficient. The only exception was that pf tho disabled man.\nA readjustment in lower money\nvalues was wanted, Premier Drury\nsaid, but thero should not be a lowering of the standard of' living, so\nas to interfere with good citizenship.\nCanada's produce could be exported\nout yif at rock bottom prices. He\nsaid that If, instead of falling off\nthe ledge they could climb down the\nladder, they would be better off, and\nhe predicted that the worst- of the\npreen decline would be over fithln\na year. ^\nIiOBSTER   FISHERMEN   STRIKE.\nLOUISBURG, N.'H., May'24+\u2014Lobster fishermen here and in the neighboring ports along the coast are on\nstrike agair.3t the price of $4 per.100\npounds offered by buyers. There^\nhave been previous strikes agaihet*\nthis.rate, which fishermen claim is\ntoo low to  pay-lor, the trouble- of\n 6\u00a3ft&6 i&sm __\nPARIL COLLAPSE\nMRWIHT\nBritish Miners' Strike Pinching Workers Through Need\noi Funds,\nLONDON, May 24.\u2014(Canadian Associated Prens)\u2014Extreme caution\nla being observed respecting the\nminers' dispute and premier Lloyd\nGeorge did not mako the expected\nstatement In the houso of commons\ntoday. Negotiations for a settlement, however, Are stilt proceeding\nand it is expected that a conference\n\u25a0*.vlll  b-e held  this week.\nThe cabinet discussed 'the matter\ntoday. , .,'\u201e       .\u201e;\nSigns are not wanting that In the\n\u25a0(absence of an agreement a partial\ncollapse of the strike is imminent\nas the miners' aro said to bo short\nof funds and eager to resume  work.\nA typical example of the cost of\ntho strike Is shown in Yorkshire.\nThere, the men's unions have paid\n\u00a3400.000 directly out of union funds\nin addition to an issue of \u00a31,000,000\ncredl t coupons In various amoun !w,\nwhile the union is about \u00a3300,000 in\ndebt.\nFLASHES BY WIRE\nHold for Kxtrndiflon.\nSAN FRANCISCO, May 24.\u2014Adam\nPhillpchuck. shoemaker, charged\nwith stealing 700 bushels of wheat\nvalued at $5000, und Mike Grigorew,\nfarmer, charged with concealing\n$BOO0 of assets, wero arrested at\nHerman, Cal., today at tho request\nof the British consul general and are\nheld fpr return to  Pertluo,  Sask.\nAppointed  Tax  Commissioner.\nCALGARY, May 24.\u2014It lias been\nannounced here that W. D. Spence\nCalgary has been appointed tax\ncommissioner of the province. He\nsucceeds to the position formerly occupied by J. H. Lamb, now deputy\nminister of municipalities. Mr.\nSpence. has been a prominent member of the U. Y. A. und ;i, student\nof taxation and assessment, problems.\nHe was a member of the provincial\nequalization  assessment board.\nKstuhllsh London Domnloii Club.\nLONDON, Mny 24?-(Canadian Associated Press.)\u2014At a mooting here\ntoday of prominent Canadian resi-\nlents it was decided to establish a\nDominion of Canada club-tor London.\nCanadians und visitors frum tho Dominions\nNegro Outpoints Chinaman,\nVANCOUVER, May 24\u2014Danny Edwards, colored bantamweight from\nOakland, outpointed and outfought\nGeorge Washington Lee, Chinese Peril, from Sacramento, in a 10-round\nbout eher tonight. Both men weighed\n118 pounds.\nPrice Outgolfs MacCan,\nVICTORIA, May 24.\u2014In ono of the\nmost brilliantly played matches seen\nliero for years today, A. V. Price,\nmember of tho United' Service Golf\nclub, defeated. A, V. MacCan, former\nchampion, onw up, for ithe provincial\ngolf championship.\nManretania Delays Sailing,-\nSOUTHAMPTON? May 24.\u2014The\nCanard steamer Mauretania, scheduled to sail Saturday, will delay her\ndeparture until tho following week,\naccording to an announcement by\nthe company. Tho delay is duo\"ao\ndifficulty In obtaining coal,\nRov. Herbert Symonds Dies,\nMONTREAL. May 24.\u2014Following a\nmild attack of pneumonia supervening on a serious operation performed\nhere threo \"weeks ago, the Rev. Herbert Symonds, vicar of Christ church\ncathedral, died tonight in the Montreal   general   hospital,   aged   01.\nBELFAST, May 24-.\u2014The whole of\nUlster, which has been seething with\nexcitemen\/ all day long over tho\nelectlorT \/ candidates to the new\nparliame^ .. which only Unionists will\nattend r they securo -the necessary\nmajority <a foregone conclusion\u2014ia\na regup hahel this ovening with extreme r nsion In somo  quarters.\nFro if early morning it has been!\nthe tr : of tho workers of the Un*\nionisf Nationalists and Sinn Felners\nto t\\ everyone of their supporters\nto I > polls, wilh tho result that\nthe:*\/ has been an unprecedented rush\nof f. \u00bbtor cars through the streets and\nharanguing of voters, raising passions\nto a white heat.\nIn all sections where Protestants\nand Catholics live\" side by side, thero\nhave been \"incidents\" which \"required the attention of the police.\nBallymacarret, despite the fact that\nCatholics were largely driven from\nits confines last June, proved to bo\nthe hottest eorner of the city.\nMkny of Its residents of both per*\nsuasions are nursing heads tonight,\nwhile the police, reinforced by Black\nand Tans and soldiers in armored\ncars, are In possession of the streets.\nTrouble was started when Protestants held a demonstration outside of\nSt. Matthew's Catholic church, and\nwas intensified when a Sinn Felner\nraised a flag right in a Protestant\nstreet. Stone throwing and a few\nrevolver shots were exchanged 'between the police and tho demonstrators before the crowd was broken up.\nMilitia Busy.\nThe Sinn Fein quarter is an Isolated one, so It kept the militia busy\nin preventing it from being Invaded\nand its flags, among which were\nmany United States flags, from being torn down and the houses attacked.\nIn North street, which connects\nProtestant Shank Hill with Royal\navenue, Belfast's main, street, \u2022 there\nIs another small colony of Sinn Felners who today were also flying their\ncolors, despltee the operwhelming\nnumber of. their opponents, and here,\ntoo, a party of Black and Tans,\nbacked by tly*} police, had all .they\ncould do to prevent the Protestants\nfrom crossing the border line\nIn Lisburne and County Down, the\nSinn FiMners allege that their scrutineers wero driven from the polling\nbooths and motor cars taken from\nthe canvassers. The other side charges\nsimilar treatment In tlie Sinn Fein\ndistricts.\nAbstain From Voting.\nA disturbing element to the Unionists was the fact that a number of\nmen who pledged themselves in 1914,\nwhen Sir Edward Carson was raising\nhis,army, never to consent to home\nrule in any shape or form, abstained\nfrom voting on tho ground that to\nvote for members of the Ulster parliament would bo to break their\npledge.\nCounting of the Votes will not commence, until ii o'clock Wednesday\nmorning and will continue until 6\no'clock in the evening, at which time\nit will be adjourned until Thursday.\nIt is possible the Belfast results will\nbo known Wednesday night, but tho \u25a0\nothers will not he In for several days.\nThere are 53 polling1 divisions with\nB88 polling stations' in Belfast alone.\nOnly in thr* north of Ireland were\nballots cast, as the nominations for\nthe southern* Irish parliament wero\nmado without contest, which was\ntantamount to election.\nThere were a large number of\nchild voters whose votes could not bo\nrefused. They ranged in age from a\n.child of from two and a half years,\n' who were just able to lisp, \"I vota\nfor Moles,\" a candidate in South Bel-\nfasO to bovs and girls \u00abf 1\u00ab and IT\nyears.\nAttack  Polling  Booths.\nLONDON,    May     24.\u2014Attacks    were\nmade at  one   of   the   Belfast   booths\n(Continued   oh   Page  Five;     .\nPOSTAL CHARGES PEMJING.\nLONDON, May- 24.\u2014(Canadian Associated Press.)\u2014It is announced\ntfcat important postal changes are\npending; Including the raising of the\npostcard charge from two pence half\npenny to three pence, also to abolish Sunday collection and delivery in\ntbg'.cauatryi\nWEATHER\nimmie\n r\u2014mm>\n\t\n\u2022a^asfmmmg^- \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0* \u00bbu ww\u00bbw -\nTT\nr THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, ^ .WEDNEpPyAy^OE.NING.MAy^.lMI,.\nLeading Hotels of theWest\nWhir*  th*  Travailing   Public   May   Obtain   Sup.rler   Aceomodatlitl\n$,      THE      *\n^(W Premier Hotel V\n$110^ Of the Interior   SSk\n, \/   ^ SERVICE   UNEXCELLED *   \\\nA la Cartfl Table D'Hota\nSPECIAL   SUNDAY    DINNER   $1.00\nINCOMPARABLY  THE   FINEST  TEA   ROOM   IN   B.   C.\nOpan  Dally 10 a. m. to Midnight Musio and   Dancing\n-   - ' - The Latest Sundaei, Ice Cold Drinks and Icet\nAfternoon   Tea   (2   p.m.  to   6   p.m.)t  25o,\nHeadquarter   for   All   Travelling   Men,   Mining   Men   and   Tourlata\nEUROPEAN   PLAN      - \u2014      ROOMS,  $1.00  up\nHUME\u2014N. Johnson, Spokane; J. B.\nClapp, Marcus; J. M. Harris, Sandon;\nJ. H. Bennett,' Vancouver; J. Hodge,\nVancouver; E. S. Vandervoort, Vancouver; S. V. Marchbank, Fernie; E. Heap-\nhy, FVrnie; Mrs. C. Stackpoole, Willow\n1'ointr  Oscar   V,   White,   New   Denver;\nJ. P. Wilson, Sandon; R. J. Mackinnon,\nTrail; H. L. Breen, Trail; J. C. Campbell, Ainsworth; Frank B, Taylor,\nTrail; J. li. Robinson and wife, Trail;\nJ. P, Schofleld, Trail: J. W. McKay,\nTrail; A. M. Thompson, Trail; G. F.\nPrltclmrd, Trail; H E. Wade, Trail;\nC.  E. Martell, Trail; Miss Galrns,\nWell Lighted Sample Rooms American Plan\nHOTEL STRATHCONA\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTEL\nA Home for Those Away From Home\nSpecial attention to Traveling Public.\nSpecial Sunday Dinner, $1.00\nH. W. SHORE, Proprietor\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nEuropean   and   American   Plan\nSteam  Heat in  Every Room\nA, LAPOINTE, Proprietor\nQUEENS\u2014Henry A. Alten, Brousei\nB. C.J J. C. Murphy. Rossi ana; Mr. and\nMra. A. E. White, Northport; Mr. and\nMrs. G. A. White, Trail; A. B. Cress,\nNorthport; Mr. and MfB.SV. C. Shields,\nTrail; Doris Shields, Trail; H. Twells,\nTrail; Pat Lennon, Ray Jones, J. Meredith, James Melvin, C. J. Minton, E.\nJohnstone, J. Craig, James Leckic, John\nEeckle, Walter Brown, Thomas Lennon,\nGeorgo McKenzie. J. Lewis, G. Master-\nton, J. Cunningham, J. Caldwell, A. McDonald, J. Stobie. Trail; P, Field. Kaslo; F. Dunne, Kaslo; Charles Hewitt,\nKaslo; W. Betram, Kaslo.\nj H.   W.  SHORE,  Prop.\nH.  E. SCANLAN,  Mgr.\nHalcyon Hot Springs Hotel\nARROW    LAKES,    B.   C.\nUnder   entirely    new    managemont\nRenowned throughout tlio weat\nfor the water's wonderful cure of\nRheumatism, Sciatica, Urlnlo Conditions,  Metallic  Poisoning.\nGrand scenery around tho estate\nIn a most beautiful climate.\nLarge hot water swimming pools.\nAmerican    plan,    $3.50   and   up\nper   day,   ?24   per   week.\nFor rates apply Strathcona Hotel,\nNelson, or Halcyon Hotel\nMADDEN HOUSE\nNOW UNDER  MANAGEMENT\nOF D. A. MACDONALD\nEvery  Consideration  Shown lo\n\u2022 Guests.\nCor. Baker and Ward Sts., Nelson\nMADDEN\u2014D. McPhnll, city; II. .1.\nMcGrath. Ymir; J. M. Suott. Trail; rt,\nHewat. Boulder; Jt. Hlllynr, Boulder;\nC. Jlnsburg, Spokane; Oscar Olseu,\nNakusp; P. Gerblno, Coleman; J It.\nJackson, city; J. C. Rally, Kaslo; Jack\nMadden, Kaslo.\nTREMONT HOTEL\nF. NILSON, Proprietor.\nBAKER   STREET\nFurnished    Rooms   by   Day,   Week\nor Month.\nTREMONT\u2014J.   McDonald,   Trail;   A\nJohnson.   Yahk.\nWHERE THE FISHING  IS GOOD\nOUTLET HOTEI,\nProctor\nFishing,    Boating,    Bathing,    Golf,\nTennis Courts\nFishing  Tackle Si\/pplied.    Grocery\nStore   in   Connection\nW.  A.  WARD,   Prop.\nRates  Reasonable Good  Meals\nVANCOUVER HOTELS\nHOTEL MARTINIQUE\n1176   Grandville   Street\nCosy,   bright   rooms.   Just   the\nplace   for    your   vacation,   Rates\nmodem to.    Write   for    particulars.\nMRS.   A.   PATTERSON\nLate of  Royal   Hotel,  Granville St.\nuniiiTi1;!:1!::: i-! \u25a0:::':\u25a0!\u25a0 \u25a0.\u25a0 'i-i'';.! i ;--\u25a0: iir i:: i:'!:;: i r^: is^'ii r; nii: iirni\n....\nTHE KOOTENAY HOTEL\nMrs,   Mallette,   Proprietress\nA home for the world at reasonable\nrater,.\nOpen    night    and    day.    First-\nclass  dining-room.  Comfortable\nrooms.\nl 318 Vernon  St       Near Post Office\nKOOTENAY\u2014Harry Humphrey. Montana; Charles Chancy. Salmo; E. H\nMcDaniel, Salmo; Louis Pulitzer; Sam\nHutchinson.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\n616   VERNON    ST.    EAST\nComfortable Rooms,  Hot and Cold\nWater.   Dining   Room   in\nConnection\nRates  $1   and   up.\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\n320   Baker   Street,   Nelson,   B.   C.\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIGHT\n12   to   2:30,   Special    Lunch,   40c\nPhone 154\nCRACKERS BURN CHILD.\nCALGARY, May 24.\u2014The young\nson of Dr. Shipley of this city waa\nvery seriously burned this morning.\nwhen fire crackers he was playing\nwith set fire to'hia clothing. His father probably saved his lifo when he\nimmediately stripped every bit of\nclothing from his body. The lad Is In\n\u25a0the hospital, but is recovering.\nPETITION    AGAIN8T   BLUE   LAW.\nBISMARCK, S. D., May 24.\u2014Petitions for repealing the anti-Sunday\ntheater law in North Dakota were\netarted here today. The petitions\nwere started by a committee of local\ntheater owners. It is planned to present the proposal to the voters at the\nnext general election, proba-bly in\n1922.\nTypewriter\nPaper\nWe carry typewriter paper in several grades of\nbonds, white woves and\nmanillas and can cut to any\nstandard size required. You\nwill find our prices attractive.\nTHE  DAILY   NEWS  JOB\nDEPARTMENT\nNELSON.   B.  C.\nIIMST??''''!\": \"=-\u25a0 :\u25a0:!'!\u25a0:\"-::\u25a0-!\u25a0!).. ,:\u25a0' :;'.'IIHinSHIIIIIJI\nsoremus\nMotor   trucks   are   rapidly   driving\niiiules out of Bolivia..\nWhether they coma\nfrom bruises or overwork, sore muscles\nwill quickly yield to\nthe soothing effect of\ncAbsorbine, Jr.\nRub briskly into the muscles a few drops of Absor-\nbine, Jr., and the inflammation which caused the\npain wilt quickly disappear\u2014and with it the pain.\nKeep a bottle on  hand\nand be prepared for emer-\ngencles.\n$1.23 a bottle\nat most druggists'\nW. F. YOUNG, Inc.\n344 St. Paul St., Montreal\n,'Absorbme.Jr\nTlSipiN\nGrand Parade, Banquet and\nEighth Degree Work Feature Day's Festivities.\nFrom the arrival at 10 o'clock yea-\nSerday morning of the special cars\nfrom ItoBHland and Trail and automobiles from Northport, Marcus and\nSpokane, bearing their toads of jovial \"Dokies\" to swell thc number\nof tyros and initiates to around\n200, the big eelebrution of the Dramatic Order of lhe Knights of Kor-\nassan raged in a round of festivities\nand entertainments In und about the\ncity a.ll day long and continued\nwell into thc night. Every minutes\nmere wus something doing cither at\nheadquarters, Shenwl Nesshn temple\nIn the K. P. liu.11. or at the public\nholiday resorts, where the Knights,\nconspicuous in their fezes, joined and\noften led in the fun and gaiety going\nforward.\nDokies   Entertained\nIn the forenoon a number of the\nvisitors visited Bonnington falls and\nthe big power plants thero, being\npiloted by A. Lavlolettc and J.\nKenncy and others, whose care were\nat' their disposal.\nLaunch trips on tne West Arm attracted a number during the afternoon, when Messrs. ,T. j. Walker, K-\nJohnson and A. A. Perrler pointed\nout to their launch guests the Uun-\nties(of the  lake and  mountain  scen-\np. Needless lo say, thero were\nmany spontaneous exclamations of\n\u25a0pleasure and admiration. Others of\ntihe visitors accepted the Invitation\nto witness the splendid performance\nof \"The Brat\" by the Allen players at the opera house. Perhaps tlie\nlargos!, body took In the big football mutch at the recreation grounds\nIn the afternoon and witnessed the\nbattle between Nelson and Trail for\ntho first round of the \"West Koolenay\nleague championship.\nAt 6:30 o'clock the \"Dokies\" turned\nentertulners.       At    that   hour   'hey\nLever Brothers\nLimited,\nToroato, Ont.\nMANICURING JUMBO\nlttrywaiKjwrtWi v.iw <*. MVJtSK\nZOO   ELEPHANT'S   BIANNUAL   ORDEAL  .\nEvery \"Six  months captive mammoths must  have their too naits pared,  and\nthe process is a dclioate ono, taxing their keepers* tact.\nThin People\nThin, nervous, underweight people\ntake on healthy flesh and grow\nsturdy and ambitious when Bitro-\nPhosphate as guaranteed toy t'he Canada Drug & Book Co. is taken for a\nfew   weeks.\nCould Your\nAutomobile\n(a) Cause a . person's injury or\ndeath?\n(b) Cause dramjage to valuable\nproperty  of  others?\n(c) Receive serious damages in\na collision, resulting In\nhuge  repair bills?\n(d) Be  damaged   by   FIRE?\nle) Be STOLEN und receive serious damage? Or 'be STOLEN\nand    not   recovered?\n(f) Through the wreck or burning of a vessel or railroad\ntrain fbe badly damaged or\ndestroyed?\nWILL IT?\nSEE\nH I DILL\n608   Ward   St.,\nPHONE   180. NELSON,   B.   G,\nFor\nINSURANCE   PROTECTION\nformed up at the K. P. hall, many\nof them attired in quaint, humorous\nand barbaric eastern robes, .turbans\nor..\u00a3ezeN, und \u25a0 staged the famous\nDokie parade. Two bands were In\nattendance,' the Nelson City band\nand tt*^ ^\"polite\" bund. Elephants,\not\" the NeVsoli manufacture, one of\ntheiii ^fli^ted with the itch, and\nthei o'tfii'f' with a strung desire tlo\nwallow, ' ffgu*red in Ihe parade, the\nrear of which was brought up, by a\nnumber of cars, the. first one supporting of* cdineL un the radiator,\nthe costumes- of tile paraders were\nthe subject? of much speculation\nand comment* on tho part of the\ncr\u201eow$q., (Hping the sidewalks as the\nparade . passed and repassed along.\nBaken ' stiicet. Somewhere en route\ntho Dokie band ' hesitated at the\nburning sands, and cheered themselves and amused tlio bystanders\nWith' w*ViJVdH&L&tQrn renditions of the\n\u25a0'Old -Oak\u00abi) Bucket,\" and \"Genevieve\" beforo making a final dash\nfo\u00a3 the cool Interior uf Shem El Nes-\nsim temple.\nA huge and splendidly served Uui-\nquot at the K..P. hull was enjoyed\nby the 2U0 odd Dokies and Knights\nuf \u25a0 Pythias before tho culminating\nevent of tho celebration was staged.\nA. Tm Morris of Trail was lhe master of ceremonies. Addresses of\n\\yelcomc were given by the grand\nvizier, H. Svoboda, Mayor C. V. McHardy and Dr. W. O. Rose, M.P.P.\nMayor McHardy commended the order for. lis beneficial work in the\npresold tlmo of social and labor unrest. 't\u00bbr, ftoso contributed some\nhnimiruu\/s rcmhiks anent the order,\n(is also, did in: J\\,H. Hamilton pf\nRevelstoke, who stated his belief\nthat Revelstoke \\\\a\u00bb the oasis pur\nexcellence,\" liad undergone a change\nsince ho came to Nelson. Rev. A. R.\ndibson of Revelstoke and Noble\nBinns ot. ..Truil,. >yere ulso among\nthe  speakers.\nThe culminating event of the day,\nahd the biggest and most important\nfunction in all Dukldom, \"Thc\nEighth Degree,'' at which 80 tyros\nfrom widely scattered points In Kootenay and from across tlie line; were\ninitialed. - commenced at !*: 30 and\ncontinued until lhe early hours of\nt'his  morning. * *\nAmong the Duklos that' registered\nworcjthGvfolluwing  from:\nRevelstoke\u2014 C. D. Urqultart, S. J.\nSturgpfflV D. C. Davis. Charles Davis,\nA'. Ernest. ,T. \"W. Middleton, C. 15.\nButton. F. If. Stingley. A. J. Rear.\nC. P. Barren. A. S. Parker, (*. Hap-\nge'Jt, E. V. Nelsop, F. CI. Bcws. E.\nG. Burridge. Ii J. Kelly, T. Wad-\nman, W, Spratt. L. C. Mason, E. N.\n'fruih'an, *\\V. . E. McKenzie. R. F.\nYoung,, Rev. A. Raburn Gibson, R.\nElliott.  A.  Shanks.\nNakusp\u2014A. TIerrlgde, August Leveque,\" J.   S.   Morrison,' Harry   Alten.\nRossland\u2014S. Leveque. Jr., W. N.\nLaugliton, J. Douglas.\n\u2022SraflSM? 'tl*. Sleemau. Charles *A.\nMcLeod..H. G. tireen. C Morran. C.\nFmnsen, R. McKfnnon, C. Cook,\nGeorge Lament. Charles Ling, P. E.\nTaylor, \\V, Shooner. TL Twella, G.\nCooper,,. J. B. Robinson, J. A. Mc-\nJ^aughlln; A. E. Clark, J. Thompson,\nW. Winn Read. Howard , Ferguson,\n,t. M. Paulson, J. A. McKlnnon. Jr..\nM. L. Bdrties, E. Spooner, David\nWatson.\ni Castlegar\u2014-J.  C.  Bradshaw.\nSpokane\u2014C. R. Elliott, Albert' C.\nOgilyte.   John   Bergman.\nNorth*!*) ort\u2014Carl Simpson, L. A.\nKin'irier, h.  A.  Robinson.\n^\u00a3lsonT^Cliai\"les .Walker. JI. Ganr\nchelvyJT. -H. Long. A. Nelson. Charles\nM. Kektner. W. E. McCandllsh, J. C.\niVIurphy, and many others.\nBANK'S RATE CHANGE IS\nAN IMPRESSIVE BUSINESS\nLONDON, May ' 24.\u2014(Associated\nPress)\u2014Announcement of a change in\nthe rate of discount by the Bank of\nEngland, such as tho recent reduction from seven to six and one-half\nper  cent  is an impressive' affair.\nNot one of lhe many hundreds ot\nthe staff vf the Bank of England\nItself knows of the change until the\nactual announcement is posted, except those with the governor Inside\n\"the parlor,\" where tho directors of\nlhe bank and the leading men of\noilier banks and institutions are gathered to deliberate on the momentous\ndecision which affects all parts uf\nthe world.\nWhen these deliberations are concluded a gorgeously attired messenger commonly known In thq city as\nthe \"bank canary\" because uf his\nscarlet coat and yellow waist (roast,\nstalks out of the parlor with deliberate slowness In accordance with ancient custom, carrying a big sheet of\npaper in a glass frame on which arc\nthe magic words, '%%  per cent.\"\nHundreds of banker's clerks, messengers and newspaper men who have\nbeen thronging tho passages push\nforward to read tho notice, which\nt'he messennger deliberately keeps\naway from the crowd until he has affixed it to the wall.\nThen there Is a scramble for offices, telegraph, telephone booths and\ncable offices while press agency representatives wigwag the new rate\nwhich Is Immediately flashed throughout the world.\nHOUSES FOR SALE\n7 roomed house, plastered, all modern conveniences; stone foundation; one\nof best homes in city; near car line.\nPrice. $3000.\nHUGH W. ROBERTSON,\nLand and Investment Agent.\nWart Strwt. (rioae ^8j jfeieos, \u00bb'o.\nPURITAN   DRESS TROUBLES\nDress reformers of the.present day.\nwho dejdore the abbreviated skirt\nand the peek-a-boo waist, may be\nastonished to learn that even In the\ngood old Puritan times the lure of\nDame Fashion had a bewitching ef-\nicct as the young men and maidens.\nResearches into thc ancient laws of\ntlie Massachusetts Bay colony have\nrevealed that the fathers had their\nown troubles with their offspring\nwho recognized a snappy style\nwhen   they   saw   it.\nIn 1634, just four years after thc\narrival of Governor Wlnthrop's\nships, the apparel question had become so pressing that the lawmakers tried their hands as fashion\nmoulders. Here is the statute placed\non the books ln Its original wording:\n\"The court, takehig Into consideration the greate, superfluous and unnecessary expences occasioned by\nreason of some newe and immodest\nfashions as also the ordinary weare-\ning of silver, golde, aud silks, laces,\ngirdles, hat bands, etc., hath therefore ordered that no person, either\nman or woman, shall hereafter make\nor buy apparel, either woolen, silke\nor lynneu, with any lace ou it. silver, golde silke or thread, under title\npenalty of forfeiture of such cloaths.\n\"Provided, and It is the meaneing\nof this court that men and women\nshall have liberty to wears out such\napparel as they are nowe provided\nof, except the immoderate grease\nsleav.es, slashed apparell, Immoderate\ngreate   raples,   long   wings,   etc^,\n\"This order to take effect a fortnight   after   the   publishing   thereof.\"\nPOOL ATTRACTS RECORD\nCROWD OF ANGLERS\nVISITORS\nTo Our City\nWill find our stock of warm weather\nLadies' and Children's Wear choicely\nassorted, and most reasonably priced.\nCOATS, SUITS, DRESSES and SKIRTS are strictly\nthe latest in fashion\u2014from the factories of the leading\nmakers.\nment.\nSUMMER HATS\u2014Cool and dainty, in wide assort-\nDRESS ACCESSORIES of aVwnds.\nHOSIERY,    BLOUSES,     MIDDIES,     NECKWEAR.\nGLOVES, etc.\nCall and see our stock today.\nSmillie & Web\nDON'T\n00\nTHISI\nLEONARD    o\nEAR OIL\nRELIEVES PEAFNESS nnd\nSTOPS HEAD NOISES. Simply\nRub it Back of the Eari and\nInsert in Nostrils. Proof of sue.\n\u25a0\"\u25a0'  will  bt  ilion br Ot. dnnint.\n\u2022 MADE IN CANADA (.\nMtHUI SALES CO. Sales \u00ab{Hti. Tonro\n* I limrt, st. **% a ill lv 11 .Mi\nTor Bala ln Noluou liy TEE  OUT\nOBUO   CO.\nFor tlie man and women who want I\nto tlress well we: recommend thel\nHARTT SHOI5 for style, wear andl\ncomfort.    Prlco  $11.00  to    ?15.00.\nC. Romano\nCANADA   FLOWER   INDUSTRY\nTlie flower in dun try of Canada has\nmany million dollaiH of capital invented in it, and the, glass used 111\nhousing plants amounts Ub twelve\nand a half millions uf square feet,\naald, H. O. Dlllemutli, speaking jn\nToronto lately.\nThe Canadian trade has spread\nfur and wide, and hi shops on li'if'.'li\navenue. New York, one may now\nsets advertised, \"Canadian flowers\nfor sale.\"\nOwing to the perishable nature of\nthe plants ut their best, tho telegraph wires are now extensively\nused ln transmitting orders and notifying those who  send or fill them.\nThe speaker made mention of the\nwonderful success realized in the\nimprovement of flowers by hyridlza-\ntlon..\nSenate Approves Treaty\nfor Salmon Protection in\nPacific Coast Waters\nThe Pool. South Slocan, attracted\nthe largest crowd of anglers on\nrecord yesterday, according to residents of South Slocan. All through\nthe morning anglers in twos and\nthrees arrived there, some traveling\nvia the railway and a large number\nfrom this city going out in automobiles. Fishing was not particularly good,' however. The trout were\njumping to the fly, but catches were\nnot large. A few good creels were\ntaken. Among the Nelson residents\nobserved there were Mra, A .A. Perrler and daughter, Miss A. Floury,\nMiSs .?B? , ST ::Smith, Mv. aiid Mrs.\n,T. McKenzie) Mrs. J. H. Soanes and\nfamily, the Misses Redpath, E. H.\nRedpalh, Sirs. R. A. Peebles, Mr, and\nMrs. Ritchie, Mr. and Mrs. Russell.\n\u2022Mr. and \u25a0 Mrs. Coles and daughter,\nMrs. Lepper, Mrs. Dougherty, Miss\nSloan, Mrs. E. Genest, Mr. and Mrs.\nJ.,. Rauu*ay, ,.M*V and Mrs, Smythe,\nMr. and Mrs. Hoskings, Mrs. Swan-\nnell and A;\u201eLapointe and family.\n\u2022-*-\nSELMA, Iowa, ' May 24,\u2014Walter\nOliver, -son of a wealthy farmer, died\nyesterday on the sixtieth day of a\ns<Hf-Imposed  fast.\nOliver was a conscientious objector\nanfl was sent to the federal peniten-\nit&ry when he refuged to don a uniform. Upon his return to his home\nlift: \u25a0betja^ae, a .jecjuse and later entered a feist,; deciarihg \"I will not take\n\u00a3ood mft$!*tfce\"tprd blesseg tne.\"\n'FREEDOM'  FOR TWO  SHILLINGS\nHow many people know that for\nthe pay men!! of \u00a32 6s 8d they can\nbecome Freemen of the City of London by redemption?\nDrawing attention to the fact at a\nmeeting of the city corporation recently, Mr. Deputy Miliar Wilkinson\nmoved a. resolution; which was carried to inquire and > report as to the\nregulations for admitting persons as\nfreemen, and said -fcjtat most of the\napplicants had not connection with\nthe city, and few even had city addresses.\nMr. Richard Davles said that in a\ngood many cases the freedom was\npurchased for advertisement purposes, and the result was that peo\npie failed to distlnguislk between tlie\neminent personages on whom' now\nand then the city bestowed the honorary freedom with great pomp and\nceremony, and the ordinary man in\n\u20224.he street, who obtained tlie freedom\nby paying  \u00a32 6s 8d.\nFLOWER ODDITIES\nFlower fanciers who cultivate oddities have already given us the black\nrose, the pink and- maUve water-\nlilies, and the green carnation, and\nonly lately in England a i*osb colored violet has been produced. This\nwas tlie work of women gardeners,\nwho have made a specialty of violets. The Royal Horticultural society's recent show in London had\na pink daffodil, in which the color\ndeepened from a white center Into a\nsalmon pink with a rosy hue at the\nedge.\nWASHINGTON, May 24.\u2014Tho senate , foreign relations committee today, ordered favorable report on a\nresolution by Senator McNary of Oregon, requesting the president to negotiate treaties to protect from unnecessary destruction through wasteful methods and otherwise the salmon in the Pacific, off coasts of the\nUnited States, Canada and Alaska,.\nProtection, both within and without\nthe territorial waters, was sought.\nIf the resolution is adopted by the\nsenate the subject will be taken up\nwith   the  Dominion  authorities.\n\"DAMNABLE THING\" SAY\nHON. DUNCAN MARSHAL\nLONDON, Out., M.uy 24.\u2014\"A JUOS\ndamnable tiling for the America:\nagriculturists,\" wns the comment o\nHon. Duncan , Marshall, minister\nagriculture tov Alberta, here today\non the Young einergenep tariff -UI1\nwhich is awaiting the signature\nPresident Harding. The Alberta min\nistur is here spending a couple o\ntlayij wit hhls brother-in-law, Dr\nMcNally, provincial mijdlcal liealtl\nofficer, and sails for England oi\nMay 27, where he will work for-th(\nremoval of tho embargo on Canadiar\ncattle. He believes the passing\nthe emergency tariff bill will helj\nhim materially In his mission\nEngland. Tho bill, he declared, wij\nnot benefit American agriculturist!\nand ls likely to work conslderabli\nharm and stir up a great deal of II\nfeeling.\nROMANS ASK  PASSPORTS  HOME\nROME, May 24.\u2014Members of thi\nRussian commercial mission, whlcl\nhas been in the city lfor the pas\nsix weeks, have asked tho forelgi\noffice to issue passports for then\nto return to their native land, it It\nsaid by newspapers here. They art\n~said to have declared they . wer<\nnot given sufficient power to crtrrj\nout the task assigned to them T\\he>\nsent to Italy.\nChltin, the 'horny substance form\ning the outer covering of lobster\nand crawfish, is the same subsUinc\ncovering beetles.\nThe Canadian government has a\nherd of 3,651 hleon at Waiuright, Al-\nbei:ta-\nAlmost as Easj asWishin;\nTfour breakfast cup is ready\nwithout trouble or delay when\nInstant Postdm\nis the table beverage,\nTo a teaspoonful of\nInstant Postum in the cup,\nadd hot water, stir, and you\nhave a satisfying*, comforting' diink.delightfiil, in taste\u2014\nand with no harm to nerues or\ndigestion. As many cups as\nyou like, without regret.  -.*\n\"There's a Reason\"\nYour grocer sells Postam in two forms,\nPostum Cereal '(in packages)\nmade by boiling' Full 10 minutes.\nInstant Postdm (in tins)  .\nmade instantly in the cup by addingTiotwatet\nCanadian Postum Cereal Co., Ltd;,Windsor, Or.';.\n5BB8\"\n tfft-\n4UW\nPL4rE&\n*tr\n|^d|f %<*r Exhibition in\nFirst Round of Kootenay\nLeague Series.\nPlaying better fpQt^all, with nicer\n,Tibination and finer . footwork on\ns forward line than the Nelson\nIm exhibited, the ThtU'.cjty. eleven\nA to be content with a draw of 2\ni la io 2 through the wonderful\n\\\\l keeping, bf Mlddltetori; In the\npt round, of the West Koofenay\njgue championship series, which\nis played at the Recreation grinds\nre yesterday afternopn. A? glo-\njusly, aunny day and a crowd of\n| feral hundred people iri the Krand-\nl.nd and bordering the' touch lines,\nth a large sprinkling of ladles,\nye the field a real holiday appear-\nbe as. the trjims came oiu. The-\nle_t, expectancy of the crowd as\nty,,cpmmenVi-S4 decisive^ Indicated\n|! depth-of, feeling with. whi6h the\n^ole series Is being watched: hy\nbeer suiiporters both here and at\nall, for. tljere were ..many Trail\njltors amprig the crip,wd following\n)a fortunes of their home team.\nfTen minutes of indecisive p|ay folded the kickoff, during which the\nims-.seemed to be. measuring each\nner. Then flcoflrig* opened. 'A\n-ely worked attack of the visitor;;\nine to grief on Wolverton, who\ntii a powerful drive placed for\naves. Graves beat McKenzie with\nshort pass to Bernard, .wjHopaesed\nj'ball rlfeht along goalward. Tim-\nfit nicely, Talbot, With a splendid\n[id, scored tfye first goal for Nel-\ni. The cneering was' deafening.\nCaldwell made* two trips shortly\ner in a determined afi.Huult on the\nlson \/goal by the Trail right, wing.\nis jonah wis Bradley. A\"foul ,^y\nlson in the penalty area made\njfngs interesting^ but Middletdn\nf\/ed splendidly and Wplvertpn . put\ntouch to clear.' Another ' attack\nthe visitors' forwards, in which\nTrail.boys had 4he edgo.in foot*\n,rk on the local halves and backs,\nV'Stoble shot low to the corner of\n\u00bb posts, ^and brought Mlddlotoh to\nkhees'to save. Mlddteton'again\n; applause.   Stobie beat Wolvertoh,\nJ: lout to Morris, whose pas****? was\nWcepted by*Leckie. Leckie shot\n!t nn\u00a3 powerfully, but Mlddletori\n!*- there with the goods. Bernard\n1 Bowkett both tried, but nothing\nhe of itt The prettiest attack j>i\n, game, with the ball dancing frpm\ni'de to outside right, .and ,to den*\n, brought the Trail boys. in a\nfich to the goal mouth, Where Mc-\nnald shot in a scrimmsige, .tying\n!  score. .\n3arly in the second half Nelson\niln led the visitors, when as the\n1 traveled from Adams to Talbot\nLewis, who jiav-od' with a bunt to\ni left Spiers_rasped jn and.scored\nthe open ftoalV'*, ''\nBowkett tried on a pass from\nleeler, who was Wheeler at his\nit, but Lewis headed off the .shot\nfine' style. A shot by Graves also\nmd Lewis faithfully defending his\narge. In the next 20 nainutea Mid-,\n^ton took big chances several times\nthe fast and tricky forwards . of\ni' visitors made repeated attempts\nhis. goal. Wheeler showed .up in\nlion, beating the Trail left wing\nan awkward tangle. He lost to\niDonald, however, and the lather's\nbt\" cahSed'Middleton some anxiety.\nSecond shot, quickly, taken by Jack.\n|ckie as .the ball camo ou\u00a3 IJrom\n'ddleton's.klck, went home and\nWe''the tying goal of the .game,\nThere were \/ a number of . times\nten the local boys' \" should have\nifed, ' when it looked as though\ney wou\\d, even, but a little slow-\nas In* rushing a man or a wide\nss invariably le?t them, minus the\nilts of. their;good work. ..For the\n;itors it can be said that they exiled in tricky footwork and had\n9- neat short < pass .. doWn to a\nence. Their.whole team played a\nbit; steady, telling, gamo^n^it wub\njdom that a'mari was found away\nma liis1 ..position. The game* was\n;ny foul throws and \"checked the I\nin. but Referee J. Draper found'1\nlyers up Impartially throughout\na- whole game. There was never\n'dispute regarding any of hisl decl-\n>6S- '       '.;'\"'\"\"\". * i\nThe lineup waa:\nill City*   .. Position.\n\u201e kcr Lewis\t\n|f Goal.\nI McKenzie   \t\nIt. Back\nLeckie  N. B. Bradley\n\" '        h: Back,\n\u2022Cunningham  H. Wheeler\nR.  sjtx\\t.\nfflmt\nGillespie Wins Calgary\nCity Golf Championship\nCALGARY, May .24.\u2014Gillespie, runner-up ln last 4 year's Dominion g*Mf\nchampionship,    Won    the    trlty   \/golf\nMiss Verna Felton and associate players in\nin   New York'* with  great  success.\nstrong seen e from \"Outcast,\" a piece used for starring Elsie Ferguson\nBftLL AT KRSLO\nNolson\nMiddleton\nJ, Wolverton\nC. Half.\nL.Half.\nJ. Adams\n. J. Morris\nJ. Spiers\nG. Talbot\nj hn Leckie\ni J. Mintoit\n: Mastci^pn\t\nO. Right.\n;Caldwell ..... ,\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\n\u2022;      i. night. ^\nMcDonald ........... E. Bowkett\nCenter.\nIW. Stobie .A. \u2022.\u2022;\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022 C.flernard\nI. Left.\n V. Graves\n\u25a0)p.\" Lett.\nI Craig\nthe high price of* silver has caused\nE. reopening oi many old mines In\n\u00a5 west.\nLegal Notices\nKOOTENAY.\nfE^KE* NOTICE that four achons\nve been commenced Ugainst you by\nmmons issued out of the above\nidrt by Herman Cleaver, George\nftkett, Thomas H. Hoben and'J- \u00bb\nhith. May 19th, 1921, respectively, for\nind you arp required to enter Difl-\n\u00a3 Notes thereto at WOff ice o\u00a3 the\n*lstrar of\u00ab.said Court at' the Court\n\u00bbW., Nelson;. B. Ci'Within ten day^\n>r nvblication of this noUce.\n\\TED this 23rd day of May, A. D.\nHAMILTON & WRAGGE,\n.\u00ab___. . Plaintiffs' Solicitors,\nj Approved:   T. M. Bowman, Reglplrar.\nNOTICE.\n^ound District Act.\nursuont to the  provisions  of  Sec-\n\"11 *of the   above. Act,, notice \\to\nNelson Wins by Two to Oh?\nOver Lake City Team in\nClassy Contest.\nOne.of the h'est gttih'es of baseball\nthat -has* e*er, mado Kootenay fans\nemit peans of joy, tlie Nelson ex-\ncursloriists agree, wns that at Kaslo\nyesterday, when the Nelson and Kaslo' senior teams battled for honors\nih a neck and neck contest, that .was\nfinally resolved in Nelson's favor\nby' a score' of 2-1. It was the\nclassiest sbrt of ball, with clean1\nhitting, when there was hitting,\nsnappy fielding and fine support!,\nand the opposing pitchers working\nIn' great forhi, while the.great crowd\nof fails was evenly divided into two\ncamps of ardent rooters, whose\nCheers keyed up the diatnond gladi-'\nators to top form.\n1 Ih the early part of the game the\nNelson team appeared to have a\nlittle more than thb edge, and garnered one run; besides Working up a\nnumber of promising situations on\nthe bases, while in only one cf the\n^rst (JJi*ye innings did the Kaslo men\nhaVe more than three men at bat.\n,Tlie Kaalo battery, however, Leh\nCockle and R. Garland, were the\nmalnfaCiior in bringing these various hopes to sudden de.atJv. In the\nlater\"Inrtlngs. the situation wa*s to\nsome extent reversed, with Kalso\ng'etting numerous men on bases, it.\nBey, Nelson's\" pitcher, did some Of\nhis cleverest work in gettfng out,' of\nthe dangerous situations thus arising, with the needed delivery. 0. E.\nDesmond, the Arbiter of the game,\nWas conspiVously fair in his decis-\nIbrts. Ground ruleft were necessary,\nowing to the congestion behind tho\nLt>a'se lines.\nr Play by Innings\nNelson looked promising In the\nflrs:i inning, Kiint, the second man\nup, hitting safe, while Maurer wiJk-\ned. Cockle then started a fanning\nbee, retiring Two men in succession,\nand the side. No Kalso man got to\nfirst.\nThe first score was in the second\ninning, after Notman was hit by a\npitched ball and was' nailed stealing\nsecond, Hosklns walked, and Disereau lifted a two-bagger to the outfield, sending Hosklns to third. Bey\n)yent out at first on. a hi.t to the\npitcher, |, ibut Hoskins crossed tthe\nplate. Kaslo found Bey in this inning, Cockle lifting a ball over the\nleft fence for a two-bagger. With\nI 6'ne dbfrn, Jdurchisort hot to Desireau\nLfn'.o a nice double plfly with Moddrell.\nIn the third Hunt walked and\nMaurer got. a lift on a fumlj-led\ngrouhdea. Hunt Vas bound for\n|Uhird, when Cockle pitched a grounder\noff Lindstrom's Hat and whippod.it\nto Vallence, retiring him, with Lind-\nstrom safe. No run eventuated. For\nKaslo, Hunter potted a center field\nhit, which Notman pulled dqwn after\na hai'd run, the others fanning.\nwith onedpWn in the fourth,.Desireau got first on Vallance's fumble,\nstole second and finally, advariced to\nthlr*3,. on Garland's cassed ball, arter\nI3ey got first on a short fly that\nno ; one was there to handle. Roy\nretire^ the si^e by failing to hold\n\"secbiid on Curritn's fly to Abey. In\nKaalo's half. Vallnnce made a great\nstaft toward the score' board, with\na Texas leaguer over -Wond, later\non taking second on an overthrow\nto first meant to catch him, and\nlater .'negotiating third.. His team-\nfti&tes failed to send him home, however, Garlind And. Coekle popping\nout, andjIJngera  fanning.\nIn the fifth\/ with , two out, Mod-\ndsell and Llndstrom both hit safely,\nand ended the play- on third and\nsecond, respectively. Kaslo paid\ntribute to Bey's nitcliing with one\nout on strikes, and two. en flies,\nKaslo Scores in'Sixth\nO'Nell replaced Hoskins \u25a0_ in' right\n[i;leld and inl tho hatting-order, In the\nl sixth inning Bey dot a two-brl.g(ir\nand stote third. Two men out on\nstrikes and \" one nn a- flv showed\nCockle tn bo ralnr* strnn\"\". Kaslo\nscored its r\"n In *Ms InninT, from\na hit by A bev. wh leh went under\nor. riutn' and' beramo a 'twn.-ha^tfr.\nAbev later com'ner hom^ on Mauser's\noverthrow tn fl\u00bb-st of ,T. Gien-erloh'''\nhit. F- -Oleeer'eh stole second, nnd\nthen third, wfffi nnhe r.\\xt MPytn?^\nnulled' him^lf out nf n bad' hole,\nfn-^nlne' VnlinnT find. Garland, and\nmcklr\"- Llnenr-' fl- n\"t.\n.'In th\" f\">-eith H\u00bbr*' \"foffc+QL t'rq*\nO\" n fumble^ p-rotm-*^ ;>>'Mt T-ont\nJSi't e* ' ppf^^'1, o\"'\u00bb fl^Mer''*\" eho'*1^\n\u25a0\u00bb\u00ab-;.\"-nViJ'lcori h**?\"*'* vo-idl.TA'\" 'T^rt bn'l\"*\nnT\/i^riwU ^\".Urefl +\u2022> .firs* -\u2022^\u2022't'hfly*; n\"-\nthe ball.-.Desireau hit to; left field,,\nand got \u25a0,second1 on Bey's hit to short,\nBey being out at first. Curran lammed, out. a twp-bagger, scoring Desireau, \"f9r the 'third and last run of\nthe I. jjiimc a Kaslo got runners ori\nbiases, dhroughJ. Glegerlch being hit\nby,' a(,pftcjj*ed ball, apd. .Garland' inlt-\ntirig after. .Vallance popped out. After\nLlhgard fanned a passed ball sent\nthe1' runhers forward a base, but\n.Cbdkle\" dashed Kaslo's \u2022 hdpes by fanning. .'\u25a0'-'\nIn the ninth Moddrell ' got first,\nMurchlsotr finding ;the. ball hard to\nhandle^ while UndB.lrom followed\nhim'on.the bases ;by what.amounted\nto,a pop fly that no one was under,\ndickering' replaced. Lnriglll, but did\nript\"..get a:vl|ft, Kaslo also took liberties with;, ita batting order ln. its\nhalf, sending in three gpod sluggers,\nVallan'ce, 'Abey_ and Cockld. Vallance\nwent' out at first, and the other' boys\nfanned,-\nThe  Lineup\nThe  following was   the  lineup:\nNelson Kaslo\nH. : Bey    L.  Cockle\nPitcher\nF. Lindstrom ........  R. Garland\nCatcher\nD. L  Moddrell   .........   G.  Lingard\nFirst Base\nJ. Curran  G. Murchlson\nSecond Base\nR. Maurier  J. Giegerich\nShortstop   .\nS. Desireau    C. Vallance\nThird Base\nJ. Notman    R.  Hunter\nLoft .Field\nE. C.   Hunt    H.  Abey\nCenter  Field\nC. Hoskins      II. Giegerich\nRight   Field    \u2022\nC. Hoskins   \t\nE. Langill  \t\nR.  Bickering\t\nII.   O'Neil\t\nSpares\nSummary:\nStruck out, by Bey 10, by Cockle\n8;' hit by pitched ball, by Bey 5, by\nCockle 1| baseson balls, by Bey 1,\nby Cockle 4; hits, N-Mson 8, Kaslo 5;,\nruns, 'Nelson 2,  Kaslo -l.\nCHICK EVANS AND\n0U1MET DEFEATED\nR. K. V. Finlay, St. George Hill, by\none up.\nDr. Paul Hunter, Los Angeles, beat\nA. E. Loger, Bromley and Brickley,\nby six up and five to play.\nPercy C. Qulller, Walton Heath,\ndefeated P. Hunt, \u25a0 Texas, by one ub.\n'Charles Hodgson, of Baldon, vttis\ndefeated by FJ, W. E. Holdemess,\nWalton Heath, five up and four to\nplgy- '.- .\n\u25a0eby given of .the resignation of N.\nI isSavinkoft, Poundkfeeper, and-of the\n1 oolntfcient in his stead of Alex A\nlSakiwff as Poundkeeper \u2022 of the Br.l\nht' Pouhd District 'Wv ^w*,-% '\n.\u00a7:^vBARRqf,\n .       V'[Agriculture.\nleptrhnphtytif   A^rtcultu?e, Vittdfla,\n1\n(8824)\nHOYLAKE, England, May 24\u2014Cyril\nTolley,' British amateur, golf champion, survived the third round of the\nBritish amateur golf. championship\ntoday by eliminating- J. L. G, Jenkins, the 1914 champion, by one up,\nThe United States team lost two of i\nIts stars 1n today's play, Charles |\n\"Chick\" Evans, of Chicago, being ]\neliminated by Capt. W. C. Fownes, of\nPittsburg, while Francis Outmet of\nBoston, was put out by the York- (\nshire champion, Charles Hodgson, in\nthe second round. Hodgson was\nbeaten in the third round, however,\nby E. W. E, Holderness of \"Walton\nHeath.\nFive survivors of the United States\nteam will figure in the round tomorrow, They are Capt, Fownes, \"'Bobby\"\nJones, F. j. Wright Dr. Paul Hunter\nand J. H. Douglas.\nResults of third round.\nR, T. \"Bobby\" , Jones of Atlanta\nbeat Robert Harris ' of Harewood\nDowns by six up and five to play.\nW. C, Fownes, Jr., Pittsburg, beat\nCharles \"Chick\" Evans of Chicagp\nby: one up.\nF, J. Wright, Boston, beat A. F.\nDixon of Borraby, by five up and\nfour  to  play.   ,\nCyril   Tolley,   British   amateur   golf\nchampion,  defeated J, h. (>. Jenkins,\nthe 1914 champion, by one up.\nDouglas, jr.\nScore is Seven-Three in Interesting Game at Holiday Celebration.\n,-By a score of seven to three the\nKaslo.junior baseball nine defeated\nihe Nelson Junior aggregation In a\nseven-inning game, that wits one\nof the attractions of the sport program of the Kasio Empire Day ce't-\nebration yesterday.\nThe Kaslo youngsters scored thrge\n[\\runH in the first inning, and addqd\none run in each of the diext' tour\nInnings. The Nelson boys, brol^e the\nice with Rutledge's run in the first,\nand Burgess and Marquis put .ov,er\ntallies in the second. The tyst two\ninnings of the game were flanks\nfor both sides. A large crowd watched u the game, with grea**i interest,\nand the. visiting hoys received plenty\nof moral, siippojrt.\nToward the end-of. the game Rut-\n- ledge, as pitcher, ahd O'Nbli on\nthird base, swapped poMtlbris. Len\nCocgle officiated as  umpire.\nThe 'lineup 'Was  as fbllows:\nNelson    ' Kaslo\nP.   Riltlodgo \"... \u25a0;..'%:   H.   Hewat\nPitcher\nG. MacEachern  ,.:...... R.-Goodwin\nCatcher\nG, Burges-s-  D.'Calvert)\nFirst; Base\nG,  Long   ....V    E.  Erlekson\nSecond Base\nJ. Ringrose  .'  E. Perk lhs\nShortstop\nP, O'Neil  .1  W. 'Zwicky\nThird' Base\nG.   Floury    C.   Evoy\nProductions Are Way Above\nAverage;) Costumes and\nActing Striking.\nNumerous curtain calls and an\novatloh; fpr .Miss, Feltoh proved the\ngreat popularity of the Alien players\" at. their first appearance for a\nnumber of years,'at'-the opera house\nyesterday a!1('ernonn. The : tjitire\ncompany is a splendid one apd the\n.costuming, especially in the case of\nthe'ddy members was elegant.\n\u2022_ 'SJJbs Felton' 'has aflded : depth to\nher -acting since her last appearance\nhere and It would be a pleasure to\nsee her again in .s6rno of her old\npopular rQles, sych sis \"Za*za\" or\nVCamllle,\" \u25a0 or ''Second Mrs. Lan-\nquerary.\" All her gowns are wonderful creations and .her manner of\nVearl*hg th^nf'is a pleasure fdr the\n-\"Tire*?' Businessman\" as well as (or\nth\u00ab'feminine parti of the audience.\nAs for Mrs. Allen, she is ono of\nthose woijnen who, It seems, never\ngfow old,' seeming, ln fact, ten years\nyounger than she did during the\nCompanp's last engagement in Nel-\nBdn. .;   .\n' 'Of the now members Marvel Phillips Is a dainty ingenuei who has\na knack for wearing pretty gowns in\n,a cute wav and at the' same time\ndisplay a depth ot feeling and emotion;, in her llheB,'.\n'falsa Florence .Spencer Is also a\nbrilliant member of tho company\nwho displayed Some striking crea-\nItlofaj.' Miss Kathryh Card Seems, a\nneW-conier to the stage, but she\ndisplayed a talent for tihe art that\nWill' come, out with more experience..'\nAmpng, the male members, Allen\nStrlftkfad'en, the juvenile, is1 possibly\nthe strongest man of the cast, tak-\nInlg fils' various parts with ah ease\nand hatluralness that makes his efforts  seem ' bits' of  real  life.\nFred SulHVah Ib also deserving\nof praise for his efforts and is no\nmean .addition  to   the  company.\nOthers of. the' male artlsUiv>wb'\\\neoipe in for distinction ar*3 CIlM\u00bb'd\nPuhstart, Hpv\/ard V:,r, A.istyne and\nAlvin ,BaIrd, who manage character\nparts with cleverness.\nT^i'e ' tfntilre ,\u201ep.nH('\u201emble , Is away\npbpve the average- traveling organi-\njfatioh, in costuming, effects arid acting. .\nThe High ; School orchestra, which\nIs furnishing iho music, received\nseveral'rounds of well deserved applause.\nTOhight the company presents \"A'\nPair of'Sixes.\" ,  \u2022 '\u25a0\ncha mpionship   today,   defeating, \"Uf*!-*\ntori by four up. and thriee to flay.\nA Frenchinan has design a. .T^lfrtl-i\nmill for power purposes' whlcli can\nbe directly.coupled to'the andatufi*\nof th'p dynamo.\nG.  Mai'cii'.is\nB. Frcno   ..\nV-?     Ahoy, however. f\"f? ?\"** tn *f^\nflr\u00abll. ' ........\n\"\u2022eighth,  but  failed  to  connect'witU\n\u2022 Left   Field\nCenter Field\n,T. Hall\n.It. Garland\nRight Field,\nRlHOlDS\n(Tablets or GranuUs)    ...\nE-INDIGESTION\n.      Take dry on tongu\u00ab or\nwith hot or cold w\u00abt\u00abr.\nQUICK REW^I\nPrlco, 25-50-75\/\nMADB BY SCOTT ft aOWNI\nMAKEH8 or\nSCOTT'S.  EMUU8IOI\nJM\nHOW YOUNGSTERS\nDO LIKE MOIR'S!\n\"D.UT big sister doesn't scold very\n\u00ab much for she knows they are pure\nand wholesome and just as good for\nkiddies as for grown-ups.   ,,\nMOIR'S LIMITED     .     HALIFAX\nD.   M.  DOHERTY  LTO,\"\"Aaeht,\n34.  Powell   St.>  Vancouver\nV\n\u25a0j  \u25a0:\u25a0;. - \u2022\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting Co.\nOF CANADA, LIMITED\nOffico,  Smelting  and  Refining   Department\nTRAIL,' BRITISH  COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPURCHASERS  OF  GOLD,  SILVER,  COPPER AND   LEAD  ORES\nPreduoer'k if Gold, Silver, Copper,   Bluestene,   Pig   Laaii,   Zlnt\nTAD\u00bbK*C TRAIL\nA Superb Compliment\nto Any \"Bride\u2014\nIN the chaste simplicity and welcome ex-\nclusiveness of \"Holmes 6\" Edwards\" designs\nthere is a fascination that brings lasting joy\nto theheart of any bride.\nThere is a spurce of pride and pleasure, too,\nin the fact that no other silverware has the\ngleaming, mirror-like lustre which \"Holmes &\nEdwards\" craftsmen secure by hand-burnishing each individual piece.\nApart frpm this exquisite beauty, however,\n\"Holmes & Edwards\" is your logical choice\nbecause of its pre-eminent quality. It is the\nhighest-priced silver-plate made.\nBecause it is -protected, at the wear points, it is\na gift that combines everyday usefulness with\nlasting satisfaction.\nAsk your jeweller.\nirfanufacturcd Exclusively in Canada by\nThe STANDARD SILVER CO. or TORONTO, Limited\nHOLMES\nDeSomy\nIn \"Holmes y Eiwaris\"\nSilver \/nlaib solid\nblocks of pure sibtr are\nfused into lhe back ofthe\nhandle! and bfmls\u2014tht\nfoinls whin wear cornel.\nIn Super-Plate all\njoints exposed to wtar\nare protected by an extra\nirpotit of putt idvit.\nJamestown\n *\n\u25a0\n\u2014\u2014~\n--':\u25a0\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\n \"1WjPy*piW).'pm.*MWjl,ii| ii,<!\n\u2022>.\nf      \u00bb\nFrflsoh. iuily, hews, wed-wesd'ay morning, may 25, mi.\nTH$ DAILY NEWS\n\" Published ever\/ mornlnff except Sun.\nday by the Ne~3 Fubi'.shlrig Cerspar.y,\nLimited. Kelson, B. C, Canada.\n. Business letters should be addressed\nand checks and mcney order3 irAde\npayable to The News Publishing Cerr.-\n?any. Limited, and ln no case to individual members of tbe r.tai'v\n\" Advertising rate cards and A. B. C.\n\u25a0tatements of circulation mailed on request or may be seen at the office of\nany advertising agency recognised by\nthe Canadian Press Association.\nSubscription rates: By mail (country), 60 cents per month; 16 per year.\nOutside Canada, a month, 75c; a year,\n57.50. Delivered, 76c per month; 51\nfor six months; 17.50 per year, payable\nill advance.\nKejnber   Audit  Bureau  ot   oltoulatloD\nWEDNESDAY, MAY 25, 1921.\nlimes Have Changed.\nA Philadelphia connoisseur\nhas returned from England\nwith a manuscript of Shelley's\nfor which he paid $1,700!\n- It is said that the total\namount Shelley received in his\nlifetime from the publishers\nof his poetry was about $250.\nAs one reads of the fantastic\nsums that change hands in the\nauction room today for books,\nmanuscripts, pictures and other works of art, one is moved\nto moralize upon the difference\na small part of the price would\nhave made to the artist in his\nlifetime.\n' Chatterton poisoned himself\nere he was 18 to escape slow\nStarvation, since he, was too\nproud to disclose his utter\npenury; and now a few words\nfrom his hand would bring\nenough to support him for\nyears'!\n' In the last year of Schubert's\nlife six of his songs were sold\nto publisher for 20 cents apiece.\nWhen he died, not 32 years old,\nhis unpublished music was valued at $2 and his whole estate\nwas appraised at about $12.\nSeptimus Winner of Phila-\n.. jcfelphia sold \"iListen to the\nMocking Bird\" to the publishers\nfor $35. They are said to have\nmade $3,000,000 out of it!\n..Decently a movie scenario\nwriter received $100,000 for\nwriting a very ordinary picture\nTruly times have changed.\nmeienf\nLnurti. A.KirKmftn\nEVERY-DAY   SALAD DRESSINGS.\nToday I am going to give some recipes for easily made salad dressings\nsuch as the housekeeper will wish to\nuse dally. Next Wednesday I Bhall\npublish some fancy salad dressings tor\nspecial   occasions.\nMock Mayonnaise Dressing: (This\ncan hardly be told from the real mayonnaise which is made with egg yolks,)\nPut % cup of condensed milk Into a\nmixing bowl and beat with a Dover\nbeater for a few seconds. Then\n1 cup of olive Oil (or salad oil)\nslowly, beating vigorously as you add\nit. Stiffen with 2 tablespoons of vinegar or the Juice of 1 lemon. Season\nwith y_ teaspoon salt, & teaspoon\nmustard (if liked) and a dash qf pep.\nP^r. ,\nSimple French Dressing: Put Into\na bowl 3 tablespoons olive oil, 1 tablespoon vinegar, V* teaspoon salt, few\ngrains papr'.ka (if liked) and a dash\nof black pepper. Beat till welt mixed\n(only a few moments).\nFrench Fruit Salao i3ressrng: Three\ntablespoons olive 611, 1 tablespoon lemon juice, % teaspoon salt and Mi tablespoon powdered sugar. Beat until well\nmixed. (Serve on any kind of fruit\nsalad.)\nHoney Dressing for Fruit SaladB:\nOne-half cup of olive oil, 3 tablespoons\nhoney, 2 tablfspoonB lemon juice and a\np.nch of salt. Beat until frothy and\nuse at oncp.\nBoiled Salad Dressing which will\nkeep for a week: (Use only a little\nof this nt time, thinning it with milk.)\nMix   together   \u25a0%   tablespoon   salt,   1%\ntablespoons sugar, few grains cayenne\n\\_ tablespoon flour and y_ teaspoon\nmustard  (the mustard may be omitted\nSalads: Combine \u25a0% cup of the boiled\n'dressing (recipe given above) with 1\ntablespoon peanut butter, *k tablespoon\nolive oil, and 1 tablespoon lemon juice.\nBeat  well  and serve.\nCheesed Boiled l^-essing: Iteheat 1\ncup of the cold boiled dressing in a\nemail saucepan and add to it 1 tablespoon of finely shaved American\ncheese; let cook over mild heat until\nthe cheese is melted, then cool and\nserve, (It is best to do this ln the\ntop of double boiler. Cheese becomes\nleathery when cooked over intense\nheat.)\n\"How shall I choose a dressing for\na certain aaladV\" is a question my\nreaders ask me frequently, ln selecting a dressing a good rule io follow\nis this: If'the salad itself is very\nrich and contains much fat use a hoiled\ndressing rather than a mayonnaise or\nFrench dressing (the two latter contain much fat ln the oil used). If,\nhowever, a salad is deficient in fat, a\nmayonnaise or French dressing will\ncombine well with it.\nFor a fruit salad lhe dressing may\nconsist of mayonnaise, e.ther plain or\ncombined with whipped cream (preferably sour whipped cream), or it may\nhe of a distinctly sweet type such as\nthe honey dressing given nbove or the\nsweetenpd French drnsslng. Or an unsweetened French dressing mny he.\nused for a fruit salad if desired, or J\nthe boiled dressing containing peanut\nbutter given above.\nBY LENORE\nMany smart gowns this season depend largely on the swing of a taBBel\nor a clever girdle for 'their chic. In\ntho frame of the sketch below is shown\none of the Ingenuous accessories for\ngiving individuality to the simple\ngown. It ia a girdle drawn through\nmother-of-pearl buckles, perforated to\nadmit twisted silk tassels in vivid col-\nlf desired). Put these ingredients Into\na small saucepan with l','. tablespoons\nof butter, % cup of sweet milk and\nthe yolks or 2 eggs; let heat on the\nrange, stirring constantly. Just before\nboiling add 'A cup of vinegar. Let\nboil up onco or twice till thick, then\ncool ahd keep on  Ice.\nPeanut    Butter   .Dressing   for   Fruit\nTomorrow\u2014A Literary Club for Busy\nWomen.\nAll Inquiries addressed to Miss Kirk-\nman in care of the \"Efficient Housekeeping\" department will be answered\nIn these columns in their turn. TlitB\nrequires considerable time, however,\nowing to the great number received.\nSo if a personal or quicker reply is\ndesired, a stamped and self-addressed\nenvelope muBt be enclosed with the\nquestion.\u2014The Editor.\nstory of Gideon, the classical myth\nof Jason's voyage, or the golden\ntresses of the beautiful Marie de\nRambrugge. They say that Philip\nthe Good, Duke of Burgundy, established the order at Bruges and dedicated itto his bride on the eve of his\nmarriage. When the line of the\nhouse of Burgundy became extinct\nthe order and its treasure w^re gathered up by the Hapsburgs and carried away to Spain'. It became the\nmost coveted order of knighthood;\nIts councils were presided over by\nthe kings of Spain, and into its coffers were poured the riches of the\nSpanish grandees. The order was divided into two branches, tho Spanish and the Austrian, by the extinction of the Hapsburg dynasty in\nSpain and the great bulk of the\ntreasure was carried away by the\nAustrian branch to  Vienna.*\nSome of the wealth of the order\nwas in the strong room of tho imperial palace at Vienna. Among the\ntreasures were the jewel of the Golden Fleece, composed of 160 brilliants,\nwith the Frankfort solitaire of 42 1-2\ncarats as a center piece; a golden\ncross of 548 brilliants and many\nother smaller pieces, and rare collars and decorations* But the actual wealth of the order was first revealed to the w.orld when a magnificent collection of relics, portraits and\nprecious stones, which had accumulated in the centuries, was shown at\nBruges 15 years ago,\u2014New York\nHerald,\nDaily Recipe\nWhat the Press Is Saying\nTh\u00a9 Ena ln Sight.\nGermany, rather timn face a further invasion of her territory and\nthe upsetting of her national life,\nhas given in. She has given in,\ntn'-fere is good reason to hope, in the\nBplritof . faithful acceptance of the\nobligation;; to be met, for in that\n'spirit only lies the path' to a restored\nworld order. Germany evidently believes she can pay the debt imposed,\nits Size to be determined by the degree of her return to prosperity, and\nin that belief her crediturs may take\nKood hope. The creditors themselves\nhave abandoned their severest attitude. The chief point nettled\u2014and\nnettled,-we all trust, permanently\u2014\nthe world can begin to take stock of\nItself and look confidently toward\nthe. coming of a stable future.\u2014Baltimore American,   .\nMilitarism and France.\nInfluential sections of French public opinion, and not a few military\nmen, are anxious that France should\nreduce her term of military service\nfrom'two years to one,,so as to increase the ^number of men. available\nfor ,the pursuits . pf pe*ace and to\nlighten hep military bydget. , This\ntendency is significant and it is\nwholesome; An obstacle to its triumph .is ihe existence in Germany of\nBtrong military organizations far ex-\nceodiriK in nnumbers and equipment\nthose of the'armed forces sanctioned\nby -.the treaty. France has shown\nherself ready to s.upply the divisions\nthat may be needed to enforce upon\nGermany the payment of the reparations due to thc allies; but she has,\nWe believe, done so in the hope\u2014\niiay, .with the settled intention\u2014that\nJier.-forces shall he used to insure the\n^eradication from Europe of all military danger* There Is, indeed, no\ngreater Injustice than to attribute to\nPrance \"mllitariet\"' designs.\u2014London\nTlmes^\nNew Quest for Golden Fleece.\n,The reparations commission at\nParis has for settlement no stranger\nclaim and none perhaps more ancient than the one just brought before if by Belgium. What the Belgians are asking the commission to\naward them is the precious Golden\nFleece which was liberally sprinkled\nwith the .gold of the dukes of Burgundy fi00 years ago, and which was\ncarried, away from Bruges tb Spain,\naU the time increasing in weight\nfrom the wealth of yellow dust it\ngathered, to be appropriated eventually by the Austrian Hapsburgs. Or,\nputting the matter bluntly, the Bel-\n^jglans want treasure of the famous\nOrder of the Golden Fleece, which\nthey, assert belongs to them and\nwhich the Austrians will not give up.\nThe Belgians are not Interested in\nwhether this historic order ot knighthood originated from the Scriptural tropics.\nThe Lighter Side\nThe only fish not biting freely now\nare suckers.\nYou can.still  find  dressed chicekns\nat the butcher's.\nLoafing becomes very tiresome.  He\nis still \"the tired business man.\"\nGermany   didn't  lose  the   war,    A\nthing hm't lost if it ia still on hand.\n'A J\nfevs^\n%\u00bb\u00abii\nV_*i\u2014*\n^=7.-^-      ^|| \u25a0 fin\nSsLl\nNerve specialists get rich treating\nladies wno never . were sufficiently\nspanked   while   young.\nHeinle operates on the theory iTmt\nall tilings may be clodgcil liy him\nwho waits.\nEven nn explosion m^ght he welcomed to relieve tho monotony of\nWall  street now.\nHo quits tho farm because he\nwishes to rise in the world without1\nrising at 4 a. m.\nPerhaps tho theory of relatively\nwill enable us to distinguish between.a kilt and a skirt.\nThe reason men brag about the\nindustry of the bee is becauso it\nstores up honey for men to steal.\nWell, If British miners prefer to\nwork in diving suits \u2022 in the future,\nit Is their own business.\n(PaHte this in your cook book.)\nRAISIN PIE.\nAdd one and n half cups of water\nto three-qunrtrrs package seeded\nraisins, mix one cup sugnr and one\ntablespoon flour and add to rnlsins.\nAdd two ttfiblp.spoons butter and a\npinch of salt. Cook 10 minutes.\nCool, nnd add one' egg well tient.cn.\nUse a little nutmeg nnd allspice if\nwished.    Bake with two crusts.\n--4>\nTwenty Years Ago Today\n(From the Daily News, May 25,1001.)\nJ .K. Strachnn, city assessor, hns\nabout completed his assessments for\nthe year 1901 and the roll will probably go beforo the members of the\ncity council at their meeting this evening,\n...\nNelson hns n new case of smnllpox.\nThe patient is Isaac Flemmlng of\nWinnipeg, who arrived Jn the city\nabout  a week  ago.\n\u2022    *    *\nHorn, in Nelsyn, on Saturday, lo\nthe wife of Ralph Bradford, a dnugh-\niterj\nTen Years Ago Today\n(From  the   Dally  .News  of  Mny 2!S,\n1011.)\nFully S00 peopVe went up to Kaslo\nyesterday on bonnl 4he steamer\nMoyle in order to tnke port in what\nwas In many respects oire of the\nmost enjoyable Empire day celebrations thnt has been he)d in the main\nlake city for ninny years.\n,    .    .\nMartin Burre.l, M. T. for Yalo-Cnr-\niboo, and Mrs. Burrell are guests at\ntho Strathcona.\n\u2022 *    *\nJ. C. Moon, superintendent of tho\nMother Lode mine at Sheep creek,\nis a guest at the Crand Central.\n* *    *\nE. B. Dill spent the week-end ln\nNelson with hs brothers, II. 13. and\nA. J. Dill, on his way homo to En-\nderby.\nno \"street  CAR   STRIKE\nLONDON, Ont., May 24.\u2014There\nwill bo no street car strike In London. A settlement was reached last\n, night between the company and Its\nemployees by which the wage schedule of 43, 46 and 48 cents nn hour\nwas accepted.\nOne gallon of paint should be distributed over an area ot 1100 scpinro\nfeet. \u2022 .'\nors,- or  In  colors  to   match  tho  dress.\nOutside the frame is a Georgette\nsash with contrasting ends embroidered with coin spots. These are shown\nn a large variety of colors, with mcot-\n> dedges Sometimes two harmonizing\ncolors arc picoted togothoi, with only\nhemstitching to trim tlio ends. Two or\nthree sashes of tills type may be used\nto vary pleasantry tlib effect of a single  dress. . , ,\nHandbags may tie such a conspicuous Item In the day's outfit that careful selection is n matter of Importance.\nA few out of tlie ordinary models\nshown this week included the soft,\npouchy silk ling In Hie lower right corner-brown, with n curved ivory rose\nfor the top; the gray suede model In\ntlie center ,nnd tin- unique black moire\nsilk  bag  sketched  nt  the   top.\nCOFFEE CAM,i:l) SYRUP OF SOOT\nThe antagonism witli which coffee was received, when it was introduced into England, 270 years\nago, was not without humor. Jt was\nsaid that It caused Impotence, resulting not only In a decrense in tho\nsize of families, but that it was likely to mako \"the offspring of \u00abur\nmighty ancestors dwindle to a succession of apes and pygmies.\" In a\nbiography of John Evelyn it is told\nhow fun was poked at tho now craze.\nIt was declared that If you drank\ntho dreadful black broth It \"kuuhi\nor coffee,\" you might just as well\nproceed to tho consumption of spiders, syrup of soot, or essence of old\nshoes. The first description of coffee to arrive In England was sent by\na traveler to Constantinople, who described how Iho Turks \"sip a drink\ncalled coffa, as hot ns they can suffer It. black us soot, ami lusting not\nmuch [unlike it.\" But thc popularity\not coffee grew. Dr. Harvey, who\ndiscovered the 'eifcittntlon of the\nblood,- iB-said to have been tho first\ncoffee drinker hi Eng;uild, and Its\nintroduction decreased drunkenness\nIn London.' To'qiioto a chronicler\nof the times: \"The coffee drink\nhnth caused a groat sobriety among\nall nations. formerly apprentices\nclerkB,, etc'.used to tako their morning draughts in ale, beer or wine,\nwhich made them unfit tor business.\nNow they play tho good fellow In\nthis wakeful und civil drink.\"\nEES Sill\nIn Mufti Attends Veterans'\nMeeting Presided Over by\nMarshal Fayalle.\nPARIS, Map 24.\u2014'(Canadian\nPress.)\u2014Marshal Fayolle, in the full\nregalia of a marshal of France, dee-\norations, baton and all, was presiding\nover a meeting of French war veterans at the Invalides the other\nnight when he espied Marshal Foch,\nln civilian clothes, seated about the\n10th row from the platform and'trying to appear inconspicuous between\na former private and a corpora!.\n\"What are you doing there?\" he\ncalled out front the stage. \"Your\nplace Is up here; come right here\nihis minute,\" he added in mock serious tone.\nAfter the meeting, an they, were\nleaving th*? hall, some one overheard\nMarshal Fayolle nsl: Marshal Foch\nsomething to .this effect: \"What\nwas the Idea of occupying a hard\nbench In the audience when you\ncould sit on n nice easy chair on the\nplatform?\"\nForh repllod: \"I just wanted to\nsee how a marshal or France looked\nin uniform to a mere civilian.\"\nMarsha] Petaln is a great ndmtrer\nof Shakespeare. When Jacques Co-\nppau's company put on \"The Twelfth\nNight\" at the Vicux Colombler theatre recently he attended the performance  four  times,\nlie appeared to take especial delight In, the scene where the two soldiers In abject fear bolster up one\nanother's courage by bombastic and\nwarlike utterances while shivering\nwith terror.\nclently djrlng the first few days of\nits life and as she carried it tucked\na~ay in her thigh day and night it\nT.*as Impossible to feea it by artificial means.\nHOMEWARD  BDuHD\nQUEBEC, May 24.-rSlr' John\nManlir Harvey, noted Efigliflh actor,'\nand Lady -Harvey sailed for Liverpool today on the Empress of\nFrance after their .Canadian tour.\nOther noted passengers- on the liner\nwere Lady Maud Mcintosh, daughter\nof the Duke and Duchess of Devonshire;  Mayor R.  H.  Gale and  Mrs.\nGale, of Vancouver;  George F.\ncoll,   Montreal.     Mr.   Drlacoll,\nvice-president  of the Canadian\natrlcal enterprise,  is going t\u00ab '\ndon to book  a  number  of\nattractions ' for    Canadian    th*\nnextf *eascn.\nStra-'berry vine production ;\nof the  Wff\" Industries of the  Sij\ndistrict   In    California,    one\nshipping t203,OO0 vines last  seas-i\nLack of automobiles to.;,jyenej\nIs attributed to scarcity of automj\nmechanics.\nioo*\nFLAVOUR\n0F\n\"SALADA'1\nbim I\nis all fresh, flavoury young leaves that yielcj\ngenerously in the teapot.       Always reliable\nREVIVE MEXICAN BANKS.\nMEXICO CITY, May 24.\u2014Ton\nhanks of**- emission which closed their\ndoors several years ago when President Carrnnza ordered their funds\nconfiscated have opened for business\nunder the decree issued January 31\nlast by President. ObreRon. A committee of the chamber of deputies is\nsaid lo have reported favorably on\nthe establishment oC one central bank\nwith sole authority to Issue paper\nmoney.\nNew currency bills now being\nprinted U\\ New York will bo of 5, io;\n20, GO and 100 pesos denominations\".\nThe old banks of emission which\nhave taken advantage of President\nObregon's decree probably will be\nnamed as branches of thc central\nbank, which is to be called the Bank\nof Mexico.\napio ix)st men baby.\nRecently a bahy was born to Bu-\nzette and Boma, in the New York1\nZoological park, says a correspondent. Boma gave himself all the airs\nImaginable as he sal by Suzette's side\nadmiring the baby. But eight days\nlater, Suzette, a very intelligent\nchimpanzee, having appeared on tho\nAmerican music hall stago with shaven forearms, was seen to look anxiously at her child lying motionless\nin her arms. She put her finger tips\nto its cheeks and nostrils and carried it down the cage, fruciuently putting it down to examine :f. Presently the keeper came, RiiW lhat the\nyoung chimpanzee was dead, and ap-\nipreached Suzette to take the body\nfrom her. After a nharp tussle he\nsucceeded. Suzette immediately became furious and rushed madly\naround the cage screaming. Boma,\nrealizing the tragedy, began screaming ho loudly that his cries were\nheard more than half a mile away.\nSuzette, woakened by her outburst,\nclung pathetically for some timo to\nthe bars of .her cage, uttering low\ncries of distress. The death of the\nhaby was due to starvation. Its\nmother was unable to feed it suffi-\nA Duty That Pays\nIt's your duty and your privilege to buy high quality\ngoods Made in Canada\u2014\nand save the heavy duties\nand exchange charges on\nimported goods.\nMake Canada Prosperous\nfor Canadians!\nNORTH-WEST BISCUIT CO., LIMITEJ\nEDMONTON, ALTA.\n'BRAVE   IN   PATCHES\n\"There are 'odd inconsistencies in\nphysical coljrage, too,\" says a writer\nin Punch. \"I know a V. \u00bbC. who\ncan't bring himself to bait a hook\nwith a worm, he shudders so; and\nyou all remember Fhll May's picture\noE the circus hand who took refuge\nfrom liis wife In the lions' den.. I\nmyself am moderately bravo-I have\nbeen downstairs with only a poker\nto investigate noises in the rtlgh'.l\u2014\nbut nothing would get me on to the\nhnck of a horse. Another man will\nhave a tooth out without gas; but\nran twenty miles rather than make\na public siiccch. Even the brave are\nbrave bnly In patches.\"\n^can^.__t_e__t^^\n.   ^[\\.tP Utter DajntineW\nand dauillnKJ ot every operation from the\npicking to the packing of Seal Brand Tea, and\nShe freshnes\u00aband beauty of the surroundings,\nare a combination which play \u00bbn important\nput in thaexdusive flavor of die tea itself.  In\nSeal Brand TEA\nvou will find your affinity, a te\u00ab that you wfflitay with, a rare\nInd prcciou. Wage U*t will ^twr . thint, wnew .your\nenergy, stimulate and chcer-a champagne tmongst tea. in all\nits native purity.,  In pound and half-pound cartons.\nCHASE & SANBORN, Montreal, Que,\nWhen a woman must decide\nbetween a new frock and new tires\nfor the rear wheels, she remembers\nthat walking is good for the complexion.\nThe next few months Rhould deJ\ncide whether allied soldiers quartered on German soil are guests or\nhosts.\nSome girls are beautiful, and\nsome are almost as homely-as the\npictures of s^elety beauties.\nPussyfoot Johnson thinks a- wet\n.England can't compete with a dry\nAmerica, it will be an interesting\ncontest, if America .ever goes dry.\nTemperature of (the s^a at the surface vary from 28 degrees in the polar   regions   to    86,   degrees   in   the\n-RED ABROW bbcuits\nMISS \"   '\ni. BiitijiTsf o\u00bbr\u00abct\u00bbit to\nr_\\ g Arrowroot\nK5i>\"44 Wjt.on.ll      *'\\\nHave you\ntried Haida\nChocolates?\nBee Supplies\nWe have now in stock everything in Bee Supplies,\nKootenay  Hive Cases,   Single  Wall.  Hive   Frames, . Foundation J\nHanging   Sections, Frames   Separators,   Tools,   Veils,   Extractors,!\nMelters and Cans. We manufacture all .the,,1!pood;..W0]tik,' In ,Nelson|\nfrom: local material and'tho patterns are right    *-\nAlso Bees for sale by tbe pound. 1-lb; package with queen-.\n2-lb.   package  with  queen  ...... ....\u201e\u2014____.\u2014.,._.._..\nIll\nORDER  NOW\nBOX 1050\nNELSON HARDWARE COMPANY\nWHOLESALE AND RETAIL NELSON, B.Cj\nWe have purchased the stock of the Fairview Brick V_\\\nCan supply any quantity desired.    Carloads or less.\nBRICK\nJohn Burns & Son\nVernon Street,\nNelson. B.C.\nGood luck is generally\ndue to a good cook and a\ngood Flour. The\nbetter the cook,\nthe more\nshe\nis\nlikely\nto use\nCream of the\nWest Flour for\nher bread.\nHedley Shaw Milling Co.,\nLIMITED\nMedicine Hot, Calgiry. Knmloops. Vancouver\nCream\nFlour\nM4\u00bb\n\"Cream of the West Flour wag formerly sold under the brand name \"King's Qualil\nIt is milled at the big mills of the Hedley Shaw Milling Company, Limited, at Medi<\nHat\u2014the most complete and most modern mills jn Western Canada.\"\n t.. t \u2022_\n H\u00ae,\nWiTF, NELSON BSJ\nMan's\nBrogues\nThe Brpgue  makes  an  Ideal  walking shoe\u2014solitf,  yet  flexible,   and\nvery comfortable to the foot.   Tlie Brogues we sell you are^rimde\n\u25a0hy tlie  best   makers.\n&ow In  stock at\t\n$12.00, $13.50, $15.00\nSPECIAL\nTables of Women's small sizes Shoes at...\nOxfords   at        \u2014\t\nMen's  Work   Shoes  at -...\t\nBoys*   Shoes   at    J   \u2014\t\nt2.85\n2.3K\nssfl't\n$5.40\nTHIS     STORE     WILL     BE     OPEN     ALL     DAY     TODAY\nR. ANDREW & CO.\n\u25a0    LEADERS in FOOT FASHION\nBIRDSEYE VIEW OF LAUNCHING\nSALMO NOTES\n, SALMO, May, 24.\u2014An enjoyable\n\u25a0dance wah held In the Salmo hotel on\nSaturday night. A large number came\nJn from tbe surrounding district, helping  io  make  It  a success.        '.   -\nThe residence of A. Johnson was the\nscene of a small fire on Saturday\nnight, the origin of which is unknown.\nA r number of Salmoites left this\nmorning to take in the 24th of May\ncelebration at  Fruitvale.\nHarold Lakes and Mrs, Lakes came\nout from Nelson this morning and proceeded  to  tbe   Nugget  mine.\nA party of holldayers motored over\nfrom Trail on Sunday and reported the\nroads  to be  in  excellent  condition.\nA party of surveyors under Green\nBros.-Burden company arrived thin\nmorning for the purpose of surveying\ntbe new road which is to ita built from\nthe south  fork of tho Salmon river  to\nthe Boundary, to connect up with the\nroad that the United States government\nhaH built  to that point.\nIrene Pitts arrived from Nelson on\nMonday afer spending the week-end\nvisiting her parents.    ,\nEDGEWOOD NOTES\nEDGEWOOD, May 24.\u2014Miss Hunter\nof Nelson Is visiting Dr. and Mrs.\nChurch  at  the Cotswold  ranch here.\nSeeding operations are in full swing\nwith  very favorable  weather.\nS. Slmcock leaves for Nelson today\non  a  business   trip.\nMiss Jessie Warner entertained ~\nparty of school friends at a birthday\nparty last Thursday. The young folks\nreport a great time.\nSSSSl&i^\nPHOTOGRAPHED   FROM>\nFirst warship sponsored from air and land simultaneously.\nPLANE\nChristened\nwith   champagne   and   water.\n-*\"I\nA certain Ohio mine produces both\ncoal and sand.\nKootenay and Boundary\nYMIR REVELS IN\nKiddies Have Races;\nUp Happy Day\nDancing.\nIS\nWind\nWith\nYMIR; May 24.\u2014Under perfect\nweather conditions, with everybody\nstriving to see who could have tho\nbest time, a jolly crowd, with no discordant note to mar a perfect day enjoyed' a fine program of sports and at\nthe tlmo of this special dispatch by\ntelephone Is tripping away gaily the\ndance of tho season to orchestral\nstrains.\nSporting events for the kiddies resulted as  follows:\nRace\u2014Children under six. Four\nprizes. 1, Otiorgn Bremncr; 2, Lester\nRankin; 3, Woodrow Anderson; 4,\nEileen Gllle.\nChildren 10 to 14\u2014100 yards. Three\nprizes. a, Wendell Schrum; 2, Hazel\n(Mile;  3, Clarence Anderson.\nHoys' high Jump\u2014Three prizes. 1st\nand 2d,' tie between  Clarence  Anderson\nChildren 6 to 8\u2014100 yards. Two\nand Raymond Oillc; 3, Wendell Schrum.\nprizes, l, Mthel Green; 2, .JohnfRankin. ;\u2022'\nSkipping race\u2014(Jirls under 10. Three\nprizos. 1, Edna Burgess; 2, Mary Rankin;   3,  Belle Cawley.\nRack race\u2014Hoys . under 10. Two\nprizes'.     1,   Wendell   Schrum;   2,   Clar-\n10.     Thntc\n; 2, Hfiymftn\nII.    Two prizes.\nClarence Amwrnfc\nirl.-i 10 to 14. Tin-\nBurgegsi    2, Hazel\nTwo\nEdna\nAnderson\nRace\u2014 Boys 8 I\n1, Clifford An.i.vs.\n3,   Nfctlinn  BufHOHf\nRfie.---Iu.vs 10 t\nWendell   Hrlirum:  :\nRunning jiiuip-\nprizes. J. Edna\nGllle\"; 3,  Muriel Mclsanes.\nGirls high Jump\u2014Not oyer 14.\nprizes. 1, lUurii'l Mc Isaacs; 2,\nBurgess:\nBoys' runnlnf high jump\u201414 years\nor under. Three prizes. 1, Clarence\nAnderson; 2, Raymond Gille; 3, Wendell  Schrum.\nThree-legged race\u2014(Mixed boys and\ngirls). Three prizes. 1, Edna Burgess\nand Hazel Gllle: 2, Wendell Schrum\nand Clarence'Anderson.\nRelay race\u2014Girls vs, boys 1, Edna\nBurgess and Hazel Gille; 2, Muriel Anderson and Mary Rankin.\nWheelbflrrow face\u2014Three prizes, 1.\nJohn Daly and Wendell Schrum; 2,\nClarence Anderson and R. Gille; 3, L.\nChristie  and H.  King. \\  , .\nThrowing tho baseball\u2014Three prizes.\n1,   Jimmy   Gllle;   2,   Andy   Burgess;   3,\nC Anderson.   \u25a0  \u25a0\nLadles' nail driving contest\u2014Three\nprizes. 1, Mrs. Gllle; 2, Mrs. Burgess;\n3,  Mrs.  Emilson.\nEdgewood Tennis Club\nStudies the Beginners\nEDGEWOOD, May 24,\u2014A special\ngeneral meeting of the members of the\nEdgewood Lawn Tennis club was held\nlast week. The improvements to the\ncourts' Jiave beon completed and both\ncourts are now being played upon and\nby the dumber of members that have\nJoined a very successful season Is predicted. It has been arranged that one\ncourt will be reserved two (lights\nweek     lor     beglni:\nfor\ntournament  will\nof  May.\nAmerican\nbe  held   on   tne  2ith\nPERRY SIDING NOTES\nPERRY SIDING, May 24.\u2014John Ams\nhas been fortunate in shouting a splendid specimen-of a hear.\nThe war veterans at this point attended a meeting at Slocan City on\nSaturday.\nRev. Scott conducted a service in the\nschoolhouso  on Sunday  morning.\nEthel Graham is home from Nelson\nfor'^the holidays, where'she la attending  business  college.\nMrs. Downey went to New Denver\non Monday for a visit to her daughter\nthere.\nyulte a number of the Perrys folk\nattended Empire'day celebration at Ap-\npledsle, including Ihe baseball gatim\nbetween the district and Slocau City.\nMIRROR LAKE NOTES\nMIRROR LAKE, May H,\u2014Mrs. Cliat-\ntawtiy of Kamloops has sold ber property here, known as the Gruvenstein\nranch, t\" Mr. Amunson, who has already taken possession and has moved\nin  his effect.-!.\nMrs. Harris of Lethbridge. with I)or\ntwo children, Is visiting her parents,\nMr. and Mrs.  A. Link.\nMiss Marion Link is home from\nCooper Creek for a holiday till after\nMay 24.\nE. Eng arrived  from  Vancouver  last\nick and has taken . charge of tbe\nBierkness ranch until Mr. Bjerkness\narrives in June.\nMiss Ivy Avery left last week for a\nvisit  with  friends   In   Victoria.\nA wheat farm of 200.000 acres ls\nheing operated In Montana nnd Wyoming.\nThe Tobacco\nof Qualify\"\nEverybody\nSmokes\nOLD CHUN\nIt hat that mellow\nrichness that appeals\nlo every smoker,\nIt Pay s to Buy the Best\nAsk your Grocer for OUR BEST FLOUR.   Try it\ndnce and you will use it always. Manufactured by\nThe Ellison Wiling & Elev. Co.,\nl_IM!TEd\nDRINK\nNelson Brewing\nCompany'!\nBeer and Porter\nHealthful and Invigorating.\nMado with crystal clear mountain water from pure malt and\nhope.\nNELSON  BREWING\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\nNELSON,   B.C.\n(Continued  from   Page   1)\ntoday on anti-partisan voters, accord-\nng to advices to  the Star.    Several\npersons   were   stabbed   and   beaten,\none so seriously that  ho  lies uncon-\nInus In a hospital. Two policemen\nwho came to their assistance were\ntlso injured. Many voters had to\nbe rescued from their assailants by\narmored cars.\nSimilar attacks with stones and\nbottles were made on Another street\nbooth, as well as In tho Ballymncar-\nret district, and the whole section became the scene of terrorism and intimidation, which completely deterred\ntbe voters from attempting to record\ntheir votes. .\nPive Hours' Fight in Mayo.\nDUBLIN, May 24.\u2014A fight between\npolice and armed civilians lasting\nrive hours, occurred \u25a0 near Newport,\nCounty Mayo, today. One policeman\nwas killed and an inspector was\nwounded.    Reinforcements  outflanked  substitute for oil.\nthe   civilians    and     pursued     them,\nwounding; one.\nForty armed men entered the house\nof Patrick Briordy, a shoemaker -of\nCavan, and took him to the fields,\nwhere tljey shot him dead. A notice\n<Jns pinned to the clothing stating\nthat Biordy ihad 'been shot by order\nof ' \"tho   Irish  republican  party.\"\nEscapes by Swimming\nDUBLIN, Map 24.\u2014Six unarmed\nsoldiers were attacked by 30 armed\nmen at a coast village ln County\nBerry today, according to a statement issued by Dublin castle. One\nof them escaped by swimming out\nto sea and another by taking ito the\nmountains. The remainder were captured, threo of them were shot, dead\nand the fourth was badly wounded.\nThrQe hundred Sinn Felners seized\nI bo village of Kllmanagb, Kilkenny.\nThey fortified several bouses but\ndecamped when police forces approached. Thoy were pursued and\novertaken, one rebel being killed,\nanother badly wounded and a third\ncapttired. ,\nT\nE\n(Continued   from  Page   1)\nCor  illegal   recruiting  or  for  organ\nizlng  military   bodies.\nOrders   Issued   completely  close   the\nSilesian   frontier  and  forbid   tbe for\nmatlou  of armed  corps for action   in\ntipper Silesia.\nThe miners in the lower Silesian\ncoal fields have struck \u2022and all mines\nare idle. The trouble is due to a\nillspu;,e   over wages.\nCurzon   Denies   Note.\nLONDON, May 24.\u2014pfflpgtciios re-\ncolyed here from Paris representing\nEarl Curzon of Kodleslon, the British foreign secretary, as having addressed a drastic note to Germany\nthreatening* reprisals feu; failure to\nimpose a blockade nn arms nnd ammunition to Upper Silesia, has been\ndenied  by  iSaii  Cnrznn's authority.\nIt Is admitted .that Earl Curzon had\na conversation with tho German\nambassador, at which representations\nwere made as to the necessity for\nOermany to maintain the _. Silesian\nboundary inviolate and to lift the\neconomic  blockade.\niris said that while Britain and\nFrance agreed that these measures on\nGermany's part were imperative, no\nagreement was reached as to possible penalties.\nMeanwhile Germany's avowed willingness to meet lhe demands to the\nextent of her ability is regarded in\nofficial circles ns the correct atlitudc.\nItaly Instructs Ambassador.\nLONDON, May 24.\u2014-The Italian\ngovernment, replying to the French\ngovernment's request that the allies\ntako joint action at Berlin to impress the German government with\nthe necessity of checking the movement of volunteers to Silesia, says\nthat It has instructed its ambassador\nat Berlin to join with the French\nambassador In the necessary representations.\nSuccessful experiments nave beefi\nmade In extracting alcohol from lava\nand peat.\nKubherseed is  being developed as a\nLUXURY IN THE AIR\nCWYNIIIHT .HIV1TSM VI\nCABIN   ON   SUPER   AIRSHIP\nCD. HIW YShK\nThe Store for Style\nThe Store formality\nVOILE and GINGHAM\nDRESSES\nAt $12.50 to $29.00 Each\nVery smartly made DRESSES\nin all the new colors and color\ncombinations in both VOILE\nand GINGHAM. Some of these\nare made in styles the exact\ncounterpart of the more expensive Canton Crepe and Silk\nDresses. All sizes. Specially\npriced at, each\u2014 )  \u2022\n$12.50 to $29.00\nVOILE BLOUSES at $1.95 to\n$6.50 each\nFine English Voile Blouses\nmade of plain-tailored\nwith tucks, or novelty\nstyles with ' trimmings of\nlace, emhroideryi etc. Can\nbe had with long sleeves\nand convertible cellars, or\nshort sleeves and round\nnecks. Sizes to 48. Splendid values at\n$1.95 to $6.50\nCHAM01SETTE\nGLOVES\nAt $2.25\nFine quality fabric Gloves\nwith long cuffs, smooth os\nleather. In Whito and\nNatural  color   only.   Sizes\n6%,\nper\npair\n7,\nSpecial  price,\n $2.25\n611 Baker St.\nPhone 200\nDISCOVER NEW AND\nORIGINAL DINOSAUR\nTORONTO, Muy 21.\u2014Another of\nthose gigantic animals which roamed\nAlberta many. centuries before the\ncoming of man, a dinosaur, has been\ndiscovered and will shortly take Its,\nplace in the Ontario Royal museum\nalong with the dinosaur set up in\nthe museum some time ago. Thh\nlatter find is of on entirely new species   and,   according   to   Dr.   W*   A\nParkes, professor of geology at tho\nUniversity of Toronto, It Is the only\none  of Its kind  ever discovered..\nThe bones of this new- dinosaur*\nextinct many thousands of years ago\/-\nwere discovered by a party,which\nexplored Alberta under Professor*\nl'arkes. The party is now in Alberta\nand Dr. Parkes will leave iri a month\nto join the party.\nTbe vampire bat of South America;\nlives entirely on the blood of other\nanimals.\neases Them AH!\ni\nAFTER\nEVERY\nMEAL\nIt appeals to everybody\nbecause of the pleasure\nand benefit tt affords.\nThe longest-lasting refreshment possible to obtain.\nSealed tight-kept\nright in its wax-wrapped\nimpurity-Proof package.\nFitted almost like a liner's stateroom, the modern passengner airship is a\nmarvel of compact convenience.\nThe Flavor Lasts\n\u25a0MUllMlla\u2014m=H\n \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\n\u25a0     ;     '       !\nCtTHE NEISON FATLY NEWS, WEDNESDAY \"MOE\"NTNG,\"MAY 55,**I52T.'\nMarkets and Finance\nEUT DIVDEHDS\nMany Issues Establish New\nLow Records; Stiffer\nMoney Restrains Bulls.\nJfKW YORK, May' '24.\u2014Readjustment of values in conformity with\nsuspended or reduced dividends made\nfurther perceptible progress in the\nstock market today. TL wide variety\nof issues, mainly speculative, -established low records for a year or\nmore. Among the shares which today enlarged the rapidly Increasing\nHat', of ' non-dividend p&yers ' were\nCentral Ijeather 'and Remington\nTypewriter, first and second' preferred.        \u2022 '\nOther developments of the session,\nsuch as further pt-lce cutting Ih steel\nahd iron, a n*w quotation for Liberty bonds and stiffer money rates\nwere among the factors which restrained all bullish initiative. In\ntMo early stages of the market pools\nendeavored to encourage nubile Interest by their support o7'some of\nthe oils, tobaccos, chemicals and\nother closely allied spedalSIes. TheSe\nefforts wene abandoned, however,\nivben pressure became too general to\nbe ignored.\nCentral Leather made an extreme\ndeclnle*' of 1% points, the common\nlosing 3%. Remington Typewriter\nlost iy_ and Baldwin Lofeomot|ve,\nHarvester, Lackawanna and Crucible Steels, Pierce Arrow, American\nWoollen, Royal Dutch, California Pe-\ntroleun\/ and several of the minor\nr\u00a3(,ils and specialties were impaired\nby 2 to 6 points. In a vast majority of Cases final quotations were\nat or within fractions of the day's\nlow.\nSales amounted to 800,000 shares.\nThe money market reversed its\niijSiial course, opening easy, but rising tjO 7 per cent for call loans he-\nfore midday. This was atifbuted\nto heavy withdrawals by the federal\nbankh, necessitating calling of loans.\nForeign exchange was heavy at the\noutset, but strengthened on news of\nt'be   Sileslan   truce.\n\u25a0\"Liberty 3^s exceeded all previous\nminftnums at 87.70 arid others of that\ngroup  tyere  irregular. .\nSome foreign' Issues were strengthened.- but the general tone ot 'the\nbond-'list was uncertain.\nWIDOW     SUES     DENTIST     POR\nDEATH OF  HCSllANI) IN JUMP.\n.Mrs. Ethel Skeete, widow of Bur-\ntoh Skeete, the negro who met death\nby. jumping out Ufa' third story window of the Temple Bar building on\nFebruary ll, has brought suit for\n$(>0,ft00 in the supreme court against\nDfv !Aloysius R. Gaffney, dentist, in\nwhose office Skeete was getting a\ntooth pulled just before he took the\nfatal   plunge.\nIn her complaint, submitted to\nJustice '.Calyla'grhan, Mrs. Skeete alleges that her husband's death was\ndue to the dentist's negligence, in\nthat he administered gas or some\ndrily to Skeete and then pulled his\ntooth in such an unscientific and\nunskillful way that the patient lost\ncontrol of his mind and jumped\nthrough the window. Dr. Gaffney\nshould have had the window guarded\n\u2022after giving Skeete gas and going\nto work on his powerful molar, the\ncomplulnt declares, and for those\nreasons Dr. Gaffriey is charged with\nresponsibility for the death of the\npatient.\nDr. Gaffney in his answer not only\ndenied that, he was to blame, but\naffirmatively charged that Skeete\ncame to his death as a result of his\nown carelessness and negligence In\ngoing through the window.\nThe case came before Justice Cal-\nlaghan on a plea by Mrs. Skeete's\nlawyers thta Dr. Gaffney should give\na bill of particulars, setting forth in\ndetail just what^way the patient was\nnegligent or careless. The dentist's\nlawyer objected, saying a bill would\nlimit;the proof at trial. Justice Cal-\nlaghap., reserved  decision.\nFOREIGN EXCHANGE\nNEW YORK, May 24.\u2014Bar silver,\ndomestic,   39>4;   foreign,   58.\nCanadian dollars, 89.62.\nFrancs, demand, 8.66; cables, 8.67.\nLire\", demand, 5.47: cables, 6.47(4.\nMarks, - demand,   1.65;   cables,   1.66.\nSTERLING EXCHANGE\nNEW TORK, May 24.\u2014Sterling exchange1 f(fm 4t ,$3.91% for 60-day\nbills  and 'at   |3.95  for  demand.\nNELSON, May 24.\u2014Current counter   exchange   for   sterling   $4.00.\nMETAL MARKET\nNEW .' (YORK, May 124.\u2014Copper\nsteady.1 Electrolytic, spot and nearby, 1314; futures, *314 to 13%. Tin\nweak; spot and nearby, 32.00 to\n32.50; futures,' 32.00 to 32.75. Iron\nnominally unchanged. Lead steady;\nspot, 5.00. Zinc qulot; spot, 4.85\nto 4.90.   Antimony, spot, 5.25.\nLondon'\u2014; Standard copper, spot,i\n\u00a374 2s 6d; futures, \u00a374 2s 6d. Elec-',\ntrolytic. spot, \u00a376; futures, \u00a377. Tin,\nspot, \u00a3181, 2s 6d; futures, \u00a3181 12s\nd6d. Lead, spot, \u00a324;'futures, \u00a323\n17s 6d. fclno, spot, \u00a327 16s; futures,',\n\u00a328.\nWHEAT SOARS ON\nCROP FAILURES\nCHICAGO, May 2*.\u2014Crop failure\nnews from. Nebraska Bent the wheat).\nmarket soaring today, although\nearlier a decided break in value's\nhad taken place. The close \u2022 was\nflurried, 5% to 7 cenls net higher'\/\nwith May $1.73% to J1.73&, and\nJuly $1.34% to $1.34%.\nCorn gained, 2% to 3 cents, and\noats 2%  to 3% cents.\nIn  provisions;   the  autcome  varied\nfrom   unchanged   to   10.  cents    advance.\nDOM LIVESTOCK\t\nCHICAGO, May 24.\u2014Cattle receipts\n9000; beef steers slow, steady to 25\ncents lower. BUlk beef steers, $7.75\nto $8.50; bulk calves, $8\\00 to $9.00;\nbulls,  25  cents  lower.\nHog receipts, 36,000; fairly active\n10 to 15 cents lower than pesterday's\ncloBe; top, $8.75; plga mostly 10 to\n15  cents  lower.\nSheep receipts, 12,000; desirable\nnative   springs,   $12.00  to  $13.00.\nCHICAGO PIT.\nCHICAGO, May \"24.\u2014Wheat!\u2014 No. 2\nRed. $1:32; NtJ. 2 hard,> $1.64% to\n$1.67.\nCorn\u2014No. 2 mixta, 60%; No. 2\nYellow,  60%  to 63%  cenis.\nRye\u2014No. 2,  $1.54%.\nBarley\u201450 to 70 cents.\nTELEPHONING WITHOUT WORDS\nIn some countries the natives have\ntheir way of transmitting languages\nIn which the human voice plays ho\npart. Por instance, iri Tierra Del\nFuego, that cheerless group of islands off the coast of South America,\nnews is  conveyed   and   conversation\nThe Tortures of Dyspepsia\nRelieved By \"Fralt-a-tWes\"\nLima Has* D'o*, C. B.\n\"I was a tandble sufferer from\nDyspepsia asset Constipation for jean,\nI hid pain after eating, belchiny gas,\nconstant headaches and did hot sleep\nwell at night. Finally, a friend told\nrrse to try\"Fnit-a-titxs\". In'aweft,\nthe Constipation was correoted ahd\nsoon I was free'of pain, headaches\nand that miserable feeling that\naccompanies Dyspepsia. I continued\nto take this splendid fruit medicine\nand now I am well, strong and\nrigorous\".    ROBERT SEWTON.\n60c. a bor, Gfor $2.50, trial size 25o.\nAt all dealers or sent postpaid by\nfruit-a-Bres Limited, Ottawa.\nUNLUCKY COLORS\n!l\u00bbfr|\u00abp,        -,\t\nGreen, which. Is thought to be unlucky, Is much disliked in China\nand a recent English consular report\nwarns merchants against packing\ngoods In green paper. White and\nblue wrappings are equally to. be\navoided, for In China they are the\nmourning colors. The report points\nout that English pins packed fn\nblue paper proved to be unsaleable',\nwhile much Inferior German pins\nput up In red paper were snapped\nup at ohce. Red Is the color of\ngood fortune among the Ch'lnese.'\nBrown Is liked, if it possesses a reddish shade: so are the brighter tlri:ij\n.of .pink. Carpets '\u25a0-\u25a0 and cUrtdln!\nshould possess a yellow ground,\nwhich is an extremely popular, color ln both China and Korea as well\nas Japan. Purple, too, is liked, and\ngold is the imperial color. While\nyellow is so popular In China, It ls\nby no means wise to use it In Japan.\nThere yellow, or rather saffron, ls\nthe color of the robes of the Sadhu\ncaste of Hindus, who are notorius\nsedition-mongers. Dressed in flowing saffron robes, a number of\nmendicants of this Sadhu caste have\nbeen recently moving all over India,\npreaching sedition. At Dinapur two\nof these men were caught In a\nbarrack room preaching mutiny to\nthe na:;lve troops, and were promptly\narrested. Upon them were found\nseditious letters written upon silk of\nthe same color as their garments.\nThe Sadhu yellow is supposed to represent the combined color of sun\nand sky, and In tndia Is as much the\ncolor of rebellion as the red flag in\nEurope.\n\u25a0\u2014*\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0b^if T\nUtedAtftit.\nReal Estate           \/>|\n\u2022 c*\nJ        1     J\nA \u2022           \u2022\nHelp Wanted\nPositions Wanted\nKoomi                   j    If\n\\C> f>|T w_C\\\ni \/\\\\    n \/ll f\nAMT| \u00a3> in.\nsn   Lost and Found\nBoard                   1  \\_f\nISSI  Ir\nil flilV\nnl   l\\lll\nLivestock\nTo Rent        \\     VII\nlOOII lv\n'H rill ?\nUl llollllt\nLl    Machinery\nBoats and     1;\"\n\"**'*    Farm Produce\nAutomobiles\ni\nTimber and Mines\n56\nBirths\nSoftft^^T-o^rT^Sa^^ \u25a0 Morris\nof    Lethbridge.    at    Kootenay    Lake\nhosjtitul,   Nelson,. May  22,  a,son.\n^ ' ' <3333)\n11 Female Help Wanted\nWA^JTET^Oapable ' woman   or; young\nfirl   for  general -housework.;    Apply\nIrs. M. K. McLenniuv Trail,;B...C.\n\u25a0 \/ (3344)\nWANTED\u2014Servant for family-of .four,'\nwages   $25 i per   month.     Apply' Box\n_3308,i Daily  News.  (3308)\nGIFtLS~wanted at ohce.   McDonald Jam\nCompany^. _     ^    (32S3)\nWANTED-^Chambermald   for   Tremont;\nhotel.         ' (3306)\nWANTED\u2014 Capable woman for general\nhousework.    Two' children.   'Mrs.   J.\nf\\ MacPadden,  New Denver, i.B. C.\n(3280)\nWANTED\u2014A head waitress or' good\ncapable woman who Ib willlngito.be\ntaught.   Apply Hume jiotel.. (32C0)\nWANTED\u2014Waitress.; ,Klng George\nhotel,-KasJo.B. C. (8129)\nW A NT ED\u2014Chambermaid. New Grand\nhotel.   __ (3000)\nWANTED-^Chambermald for Halcyon\nHot ; Springs Hotel. Apply , Strath-\ncona. \u25a0 *        (3818)\n1 ^Sjtuations JVaj^ed Female\nYOuNG woman, seeks posiTfonas^help\n Apply Box 3275, Daily\n(3275)\nin household.\nNews. *\n10   Male Help Wanted^\nIW^A^TElEC^jr^Ginrrofd established Canadian life Insurance company, active\nrepresentative' for1' Nelson and district. Full' course ln salesmanship\nof our poltcteB will be given free.\nApply Box* 3349, Nelson   News.\n,._\u25a0\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u25a0\u2022\u25a0     \u25a0        (3988)\nWANTED\u2014Third or fourth class engineer'. Wynndel Boat Factory, Wynndel, B. C. (3327)\nREMOVED    HIS   OWN    APPENDIX\nDr. Kane, a Pennsylvania doctor,\nperformed an operation upon himself for appendicitis which is described- thus:- - \"After getting on the\/\noperation table, Dr. Kane had a\nfoot rest placed securely at the lower end in order to brace his feet\nand keep his knees somewhat b\u00abnt.\nThe upper end of the table was\nraised and pillows wero placed under his shoulders. This did not bring\nhis head  ijjto the required  position,\nsustained between the different tribes  s\u00b0   the   anftsalhetist   held   his   head\nInhabiting  the islands  by means   of  {^todi   P.r* K*ne then mapped out\nfires on the high peaks of the mountains. The natives are always on the\nlookout for thfese fires, and know\njust what they are Intended to mean.\nThe Bnsutos use a drum, consisting'\nof a large gourd across which the\ndried skin of a kid Is stretched.\nThis Is beaten with a padded drum\nstock, the sound having a range of\nfrom five to eight milesj A sort of\nMorse cade is employed. The aborigines Inhabiting the Malabar Islands speak to each other at a distance \"by whistling, the whistlers being selected for their ability to whistle loudly. They make this their\nlivelihood. Messages are sent from\none hill top to another in a series\nof sharp, separate notes, long and\nshort, from  15 to ^0 at a time.\nFifty-eight per c&rtt of the British\npensions being paid from the last\nare are fdr infirmity caused by disease.\nin iodine the place he proposed to\ncut, and benumbed the akin with an\nanaesthetic he Injected' with a hypodermic needle. Then Dr. Kane\ntook up the knife and cut down\nuntil he. reached the perioneum.'This\nhe sliced through with a small knife\nand scissors. After locating the appendix J>r, Kane direoted me to-draw\nit well up ou| of tihe wound and\nhold it with a pair of forceps. Dr.\nKane then chose tho place preferred\nby him'for tping off the blood vessels w\"hlch supply circulation to the\nappendix, and passing a needle\nthrough between these and the appendix, made sure against danger of\nhemorrhage by a firm llgaiure. Next\nhe took up tho scissors and cut off\nthe appendix, and with a special\nneedle device of his own completed\nthe operation by turning in the\nstump.\"\nSwitzerland   does   not   provide   any\nhome for its president.\nDANGEROUS   DARK    HAIR,\n\"Beware of a dark-haired person.\"\nYou hear the warning wherever there\nis a fortune teller, amateur or professional. Why Is the dark com-\nplexioned supposed to Indicate a more\nvillainous type of character than\nthe fair? That's a matter for conjecture, 'but meantime there Is a real\nreason for- making you feel Just a Httle uncomfortable if your hair Is\ndark. A man of science has for\namusement been investigating the\nsubject of madness and the- complex\nion'. From the figured tie has \"man\naged to collect, it is evident that ln\nmany largfe Tiinatlc asylums the dark-\ntiaired patients outnumber the'fair-\nhaired ones. The actual percentage\nof the dark-haired is 96,' the remaining four in every hundred being fair-\nhaired. It would appear, then, that\nIf you are dark-haired your chance\nof going mad is less remote than if\nyou were fair. But tfxere Is a conso-\nlatioon though only a doubtful one,\nfor the dark-haired. sThe percentage\nof those regarded as7incurably insane\nis much- greater among the blondes\nthan among -the brunettes. Totals\nshow that among the da rlt-haired Inmates only 53 per cent are marked\nropelessly; insane, while among the\n\u25a0blonde 81 per cent are, put In this\ncategory^'\nGLOVING  THE  TONGUE.\nA glove for the tongue has been\n\u25a0patented iby an inventor of. Indiana.\nIt is called a \"tongue shield\" and is\ndesigned to -enable the wearer to escape the unpleasantness of castor\noil or ,other bad tasting medicines.\nThe contrivance might foe said to have\nthe shape of a miniature slipper\nwithout any heel portion, but when\nplaced over the', tongue Is inverted.\nThe tongue IS inserted into the \"toe\"\npart and the -back' part of the \"flole\"\nextends over, the top of the tongue\ntowardB the , thrtat The device is\nmade of thin, rutobeti so as to b-e liquid proof, ahd is so constructed.\nas to fit the tongue snugly without\ndiscomfort. \"When mediclft* is taken\njt pasijes'Wo the throat without:af-\nfeetlngfiifcj^,sense ' of \"taste,' bo that\ntill   unpleasantness is obviated!\nTHE EDUCATION OF YOUR CHILDREN\nHave you the money with which to do it ?\nStart to save while they are young\u2014let thein\ncommence life knowihg you are at the back\nof them.\nSayings Accounts are a specialty with'      .\nTHE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA\nA. D. M0LEOD,\nNelson Branch\nAUDITOR- WANTED.\nCorporation of the Olty of Grand ;.-\nForks, B .C.\nThoroughly  competent and relinble\naccountant   to   audit  City   Books, for\n1921.   State qualifications, exJteHence\nand salary.' '\nJOHN A. HUTTON, City,.Clerk.\n  ___ (3325)\nWANTED\u2014A- firsf-class .nside wire-\nman. Must be able to do all classes\nof wiring, including conduit work..\nApply West Kootenay Power And\nLight. Co.,' Ltd., RoBBland. (3288)\nWANTED\u2014Boy   to herd  cows.    Apply\nH. Bourgeois, Crescent Vaalley, B. C.\n37 Boats and Automobile*\nWANTED\u2014Launch, Speed not less than\nten miles per hour. State partlcu-\nlars to Box 3303; Dally News., (8303)\nONE steel hull  boat,  20-foot, ^horse-\nSower Grey  engihe;   1  wooden' hull\noat, 21-foot, 12-horsepower Grey engine,    imth  in  gooti condition.    Inquire P. O. Box 38, Proctor, B. C.\n*   \u25a0     .    ' , -        (8292)\nWANTED\u2014To rent a small, motor'boat\nfor summer.    Box 3267, Daily,'News;\n-   ' (3267)\nPOR SALEr-7-passenger Cadillac oar,\n1913 model: ran 6500 mites; hvflrst-\nclass condition; new tires ou rear\nand spare; demountable rims; price\n$1000. cash; 5-passenger Bulck, 1911\nmodel, In good condition; battery,\nelectric light, spare tire, $450:cash.\nM.  A. Henderson, Rossland, B. C.\n(3235)\nPOR SALE\u2014Small launch, 18 ft., 2%\nhorsepower engine; good, as new. Can\nbe seen or tried at any time. Speea\n8 miles per hour; At condition; easiest gas burner on the lake; a dandy\nfor fishing. Also boathouse. A snap\nfor quit* sale. Price 9225. For particulars write Box 3217. Dally News.\n (3217)\n40     Agents Wanted\nMEN and women, not to canvass,' but\nto travel and appoint local-representatives, $1032 and expenses guaranteed first year, with good chance to\nmake J26O0 and expenses. State age\nand qualifications. Experience unnecessary. Winston Co., Dept G. To-\nronto  (3242).\nOPPORTUNITY for men or women,\nstudents, teachers and others, to earn\n$10 per day or more for hundred\ndays or longer; guarantee covers necessary expenses; spare time or full\ntime; experience unnecessary. Write\nfor particulars. Winston Co., Dept.\nO,   Toronto.' (3155)\n23    Property FoiSih\nTwo lotB 'southeast'. comer of\nJosephine and 6ore streets, facing\nLake. Assessed value ?fjOO,00. Quick\nsale price, $350.00.\nH. E. DILL\n508   WARD   STREET.\nNext Door to Canada Drug Storo\n.   (3259)\nPOR SALE\u2014In Fire valley, 68 acres of\nland 4 miles from Edgewood; plenty\nof pasture and a good supply of waiter.   Cash or terms.    Box 3343, Dally\nNews. (3343)\nFOR SALE\u2014Bungalow, 6 rooms, large\nbasement, all modern improvements;\nlarge ,  garden,    chicken    house,  and\n, some large fruit trees, in best of\ncondition; clear title.'   Box 474, city.\n'.     -  (3337)\nFIFTEEN acres beautifully improved,\nFruitvale, close to station; Irrigation\nwater; six-room residence furnished;\nfruit, berries, cow, chickens, 'tools.\nRent or sale. Best bargain In B.< C.\nAddress Pf lie, Fruitvale,. B. C. (3290)\n60 ACRES good land, easy clearing;\nplenty of*water; a few minutes from\nschool.     Cheap.\"     Apply   Postmaster,\n'   Argenta, B. C. (3174)\nFOR SALE\u20145-roomed house, all modern conveniences; close Irt; $300 will\nhandle; goodi terms. Phone, 389L1 or\nBox 3302, Daily Newa. (3302)\nFOR SALE.\nThe Rossland government demonstration orchard of M. A. Henderson's, situated 5 minutes walk from\nRossland postofflce, on Government\nroad. All land except 2 acres in the\n' city limits. A 2-inch water pipe running from city hydrant along, wagon\nroad and upper end of land that. Is\nused for irrigation and domestic use.\nThe land consists- of 13^6 acres,\nall fenced and cross fenced: 12%\nunder cultivation, including 51\u00a3 acres\nof bearing fruit trees; the rest Is in\ntimothy and clover. -.All- trees were\nplanted out by the government expert. One a\"cre, suitable for the\nbuilding site of house and outbuildings, has not been cleared, as it was\nthe Intention of the -present owner\nto leave as many evergreen trees\naround th\u00a7 house as he could. The\nwhole of the land has a'nice gentle\nslope to the south and is the best\nranch- in the Robsland district, both\nfrom a scenic and paying point of\nview.\nPrice $5500.\nTerms, one-half cash, balance In\npayments of 3, 6, 9 and 12 months\nat 8 per cent.\nFor further particulars apply to\nowner.\nM. A. HENDERSON,\n. Rossland, B. C. (3281)\nAdvertising   Is    simply   telling   the\nbuyer what you have to sell.\nFOR SALE\u2014Two lota \u25a0 and  seven-room\nhouse, corner Sillcla and Fall street.\n(3286)\nSUMMER CAMP FOR SALE\u2014PeW\nminutes east - of shipyard, Every\nconvenience, including garage. R. V.\nRamsden.'    Phone 326L2. (3250)\nFOR SALE\u20144-roomed cottage, situated on Hots 3 and 4, block-4, Hume\naddition, nearly opposite Hume school;\nhouse needs little repair; $700 cash,\nor $850 terms, cash'.$*zo0\u00bb balance $15\nper month; clear title,. Owner,-22$9.\n\u25a0 46th Av'6nue, East, South Vancouver,\nB._C.    '   \u25a0_    _ '       '_(32?4)\nFOR  SALE^-In\" Bredenburg,  Sask!,  C.\ni P. R. line, 3 minutes, three good\ntown lots all together; cleared, good\nrich- black soil. Terms or cheap for\nCash. ..Apply (Mrs.) R. E. Hughes,\nHotel  Grand, Nakusp,  B. C.      (3?08)\nFOR . SALE\u2014Property yn Fairview,\nneuse and cottage, three lots, outbuildings, fruit 'trees, etc, Box 2967,\nDally News.' '- ...       (2967)\nNURSERY PRODUCTS\nTomato and cauliflower plantB for\nsale. -Apply D. Maglib, V6rnon street,\nor P. O. Box 974. (3088)\nSubscribe to The Dally News, 60\ncents a month or $6 a' year, by mall\nto any place In Canada'.   -.\n35\nFor Rent\nFOR KENT\u2014Rdom In Houston block,\nover Imperial bank. Apply P. O. Box\n1094. \u25a0(3294)\n22      Miscellaneous\nPUBLIC NOTICE\u2014For sale, by, Fruitvale school board, debentures of\ntwenty-five hundred dollars ($2500),\nfor a term of ten years, interest at\nseven per cent, to be. paid In ten\nyearly payments. Apply Secretary\nFruitvale School Board, Fruitvale,\nB.  C. . (3341)\nL is profitable to pay in advance\nfor classified advertising, as you then\nget six insertions for the price of four.\n29      Lost and Found\nLOST\u2014-Diamond gold bar-pin, cluster\nof three diamonds, between cemetery\nand Strathcona hotel. Reward. Re-\n,turn_to 815 Baker. (3315)\nLOST\u2014Saturday or Sunday, canvas_klt\nof tools, Return to Smedley's Gar-\nage.    Reward. (3253)\nFOUND\u2014A four-oared rowboat between Six and Seven Mile. Owner\ncan have same on paying for-, this\nadvertisement and identifying property.     John  Gillett,   711   Vernon.\n\u25a0 ' (3336)\n26  Machinery For Sale\nOPERATIONS\nHEPATOLA romovoB Gall Stones,\ncormcts Appendicitis la it hours\nwithout _iin. K\u00absl\u00bbt\u00abr\u00abil nnaor\nPnto Food and Drntf Acta. SS.50.\nNot sold toy  drnffgiitl,\nBOS.-D   MANUrAtiTOBEB\nMRS. GEO. S. ALMAS\n\u2022 230 4th Avo. s.  Baniatoon, Balk.\nRoi 1073.\nFOR SALE\u2014Complete tievmlll at Kaslo, with 25-h. p. Garr-Scott traction\nengine, $1800. Praser Import Co.. 810\nDominion budding, Vancouver, B. C.\n(3340)\nK. Display Ad in the\nDAILY NEWS\nntera Many Homes\nCatches Many Epes\n19 POULTRY AND EGGS\n'OR SAL\"E^*Cockerels four, weeks old,\n25c eact   M. Hedley, R. R. No.  1,\n^Nelsdn._21 ;      (3256)\nBARRED ROCKS exclusively; eggs'?2\nper 15, T. Roynon, Somerset Poul-\ntry Yards, Nelson. (3191)\nFOR' . SALE\u2014About thirty goslings,\nJ1.50 tp 12 each.' G. H: Praser, Nel-\nson. B. C?. \u25a0 .    .   .      (3382)\n20   Livestock Fdr Sale\npOkSTElN   and   Ayrsliires;   your   selection  for  $110.    AU milking;  none\nreserved* \u2022\u2022Wm. Innen\/ ValHcan, B. O.\nv (31GG)\nWANTED\u2014(Jood Shorthorn bull,-2 .to 5\nyears old.' The Evergreen Cattle\nRatieh, Argenta,  B. C. '     (3173)\nPOR SALE\u2014Six head horses. Robert\nMoser, Grohman Road, Beaslcy:\n..     .     (3321)\nFOR SALE\u2014r\u00bb cows, 1 Holsteln, 2~half\nJerseys, 2 red ones, from 3 to* 6\nyears old: 1 young calf one Week\nold; 1 four-year-old'horse, weight\nabout 1000 lbs, broken for saddle\nand single. Apply to Charles Fab-\nbro,  P.  O.  Box  16, Natal, B.  C.\n' (3323)\nFOR SALE\u2014Yorkshire pigs, ready for\nshipping' 1st of June, |9'each. J.\nDosenberger, Proctor, B. C.      (3309)\nFOR SALE\u2014Two young Holsteln cows,\ngood milkers. J. Dolenberger,. Proc-\ntor, B. Q.       (3289)\nFOR . SALE\u2014Three milch- cows, heifers, 2 years and youngei*; one bull\ncftlf. AU good Hotstefn grades except one cow. : 10 head, all for sale\ncheap. Act quick. Mrs. A. Desjar-\ndlne,. Greenwood.   B.   C.  (3273)\nTWt) cows, one 3 years \u25a0 olrd-, one 4\nyears, fresh last March, 575 each.\nGood milkefB a'fid gentle Ayrshire\nstock. Also one heifer calf 2 months\nold, ?20. F. Stark, Deer Park, B. C.\n\" (3272)\nFOR  SALE\u2014A registered  Jersey  cow.\nKuskanook Jersey Herd, Sirdar, B. G.\n-      '  (3241)\nHOLSTEIN   and   Ayrshires:   your\" selection for-JllO.. AU milking; none\nreserved.. Wm. Innes, Valllcari, B. G.\n.'     (3165)\nCARLOAD of young mares and horses,\n1400 to 1600 pounds. Stables corner\nCedar and Front streets. G'. B. Mat-\nthew.        .   '     (3036)\n21    Livestock Wanted\nWAN TED\u2014Olw^r^wo^younV^ann lei\"!\nWill take Unweaned If price reasonable.    Mr. Hugh  Derrlg, Wihl&,w,  B;\nc.        ;   \u25a0;.      _        (3278)\nHEAVY TEAMS wanted for thfee'to\"\nfour months.for skidding logs, ties,\npoles and' piling. Howland & Waltz\nCo., Limited, Kaslo, B. C, (3032)\n18 Miscellaneous for Sale\nFOR SALE\u2014New^^e Nowton'^rfffo,\n$70; good second-hand- 28-20 Winchester repeating rifle, $20; new\npostcard Eastman kodak, solid leather case,. $25; new 12x12x6 Pyramid\ntent, 12-02., with poles, $60. Box\n3342, Dally News., >        (3342)\nFOR SALlPJ-r-Kenyon canvas three-room\nhouse; also'Peterboro boat. APPly P-\nO. ByrES.    \u25a0     ,:^ -;',., , (3331)\nFOR sS\/L&-35-c.'i|Iibe>' ' high'\u2022; powlr\nRemington automatic, rifle. , Wv R.\nLe Grand, rear of Gem theater.'\n '    \u25a0   * .,;  ' (3329)\nCHICKERTNG piano for sal~ Box\n3310, Dally News. I   -.' (3310)\nFOR SALE\u2014Bees, 2 and 3 fram'd nu-\nkels, pure Italian stock, ?s and $10\ncash with order. Express prepaid tip'\nto 50 miles.,C: il. Loehneit, Bdx 621,'\nNelson. \u2022 -   (3257)\nSPIUELLA corsets.    Mrs, T. Kennedy,\nNelson, B. C. (3150)\nFURNITURE   for   sale   at   624   Baker\nstreet.  (?8&9)\nFor Sale\u2014Community Canners, capacity twelve retort .pens, each holding\n24 pint Jars. Used 2'weeks only. Tye*\noutgrew Its capacity, the first season.\nFull equipment with about.one thousand one, five hundred two lb. cans\nand 12 gross perfect pint sealers,\nPrice' four hundred dollars, two\nhundred cash, balance on time, without' interest, to accommodate purchaser. The Cooperative Frujt Grov?-\nets'j Ass'n of Wynndel, B. C. (2814)\nSHfNGLES\u2014Buy them now from Na-\nkiisn Shingle Mill, Box 1, Nakusp,\nB. C. '\"     n'\"V iT' \".\"  :' \u2022   ;<303'O\n42 Matrimony\nMATRIMONfjfiTlS^FrTendsh^\n-rPamphlet  sealed  25c.    Nti  stamps.\nBox 14. Isherwodd, Ontario.      (3031)\n54    Aiiicl^W^^^^\nWA^ED^PianoP^inUs^ In good\ncondition. Apply Box . 3300, Dally\nNows. (330G)\n14 Furnished Rooms to Rent\nLIGHT    housekeeping    and    furnished\nrooms to rent.    507 Carbonate street.\n(3261)\nFURNISHED rooms to rent    K. W. C.\nblock. (3082)\nSUITE\u2014Campbell's Studio.\n(2996)\nP\nFURNISHED      SUJTE\u2014Kerr      Apart-\nments.      \u25a0  (3030)\n16    Room and Board\nYOUNG \u25a0 lady desires board and room\nrefined family in comfortable country home for one month or longer.\nWilling to help If necessary. Miss\nDavison, Salmon Arm, B, C.    (3243)\nWANTED\u2014By lady not in good health\nwith little girl board on fruit ranch;\nTerms must he moderate; other\nwomen not necessary, but preferable.\nAnswer Box  3326,  Daily New6.\n(3326)\n32    For Sale or Rent\nSomewhere in your house is a used\narticle which you do not need. You.\ncan find a buyer jfor it by advertising,\nin-these columns\/ Sixteen words for a\nweek ror one dollar if cash accom**\npanics -order.\nBusiness und Profession-\nDirectory\nEducation\nPRIVATE tuition ln mathematics, Eng-'\nllsh and ^general subjects by college\nman. Ai'*o shorthand, \u25a0 typewriting\nand Spanish by lady. Particulars,\nwrite Box 3149, Dally News. (3149)'\nKalsomining and Plastering\nC. E.  PAWCETT,\nRalsomlnlnK,   plastering   :in<i   general\nhouse repairs, ete.\n733 Bailor street.\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 tjfl)\nLodges\nNELSON LODGE No. 6, B. P. O. B.,\nMeets 41054 Baker St., first and third\nThursday.        :     . '       (3088)\njACCOUNTAN^\nJ.  H.   LAWKEHCE,\nAccountant-Auditor.'\nBookkeeping, '   Financial *   Statements,\netc.    Phone 29, McDonald Jam Bid?.,\nBox  1030. - (2(92)\nW.  m  PA1DIKB,\nChartered Accountant.     \u25a0\nBank of Montreal Chambers.\nItOBBland,  B.. ~C. (80M)\nBoots & Shoes\nIBE   ZEE   &   OO. \u2022      '\npools and Shoes' Made tit \"Order.    B*\npairing.    tHl_- FRONT'ST.       (80401\nFlori\ntt\nGRIZZELLE'3  GREENHOUSE, Nelson\nCut flowers aha floral designs:\n* (8Q4U\nAssayers\nB.'W:'WIDDOWSON, Box A1108; Ne|.\nson, B. C.   Standard western charges.\n (3043)\nSecond Hand Dealers\nTHE AUK pays cash for Kecond-hand\n\u25a0 furniture, stoves.   006: Vernon. Phone\n6B1,   \u25a0\u25a0\u2022 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0-\u25a0!\u25a0...:t-      -.;\u25a0\u25a0      (MH)\nWholesale\nA. MACPONALD & CO., WHOLESALE\n- Grocers   ahdt.provision .Merchants.\nImporters of, Tejls,   Coffees,    Spleen,\nDried  Fruits StAple and Fancy -Groceries.    NELSWN, %. C.      \"\"W(SS44>\nArchitects\nBay Avenue. Trail, B. O.\n\" *?''   ,.;*B.7. (804S)\nEngineers\nE. D. DAWSON, 8. 0. It. 8.\nCivil  and  Mining  Engineer\nJCABI.O, B. O. (3046)\nNELSON,  B. O\nClVIt   AND   MININO   ENGINEEBS\nB. C, Alberta and Dominion\n\u2022        LABD SirnVEYOBS\nCrown Grant Agents.       Blue Printing.\n :;\u25a0 \u2022- \" '       (304f)\n.     , A. D. McOULLOOH\n\u2022 ' __ Ky\u00abraulio Englnooi' \u25a0\nProvincial land Bnryoyor\n\u2022 Baker- st, Nelson, B. <F\n(3048)\nAuctioneers\n. \"\u2022 'v.       W.   CDTDEB\nAnctloneer, Appraiser, Valuator\nSff-w.!?1-!. \"r'Viael>'   or  at  Auction.\n219 Ward street. Phono IT\nBarristers\nE.  Q.  MATTHEW\n_   ^?JI1\"\u00abi SoUcltoiy Notary. Eto.    '\nBox 1078\", Alan Block,rNeISo^'ph. 644.\n(3061)\nFuneral Director*\nD. J. ROBERTSON, F.D.D. ft tL 80S\nVictoria' Street. Phone 292; Night\nPhono   167J.- (3062)\nSTANDARD FURNITURE ,\nV    COMPANY\nC. J. Carlson, Undertaker. Undertakers and Einbalnicrs and Funeral\nDirectors. The finest and most up-to-\ndate undertaking narlors and chapel in\nInterior ' B. C. Lady attendant for\nwomen and children. Day phone 86;\nNight phono 262 and 64. (8060)\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy George McManw\n H\npit\nNe\nBr\nDh\nBo\nSt.\nPh\nCli\nHV\nTHE NELSON DAILY NKWS,:ayEDNE*\u00bbAY-\u00bbIOMINerMA\u00a5-85I-M\u00bbr\t\n.' JUaJLi-   \u2022.JJH\nTMOSTOF\nHERTIMEINBEO\nVancouver Woman Was So\nWeak She Could Hardly\nMove When S>^ Began\nTaking Tanlac.\n\"When I began taking Tanlac I\nvas so weak I- could scarcely move,\"\naid Mrs. A, Tollman of 867 Union\ntreet, Vancouver, B, C. 'Tjut now I\n.m feeling Just fine. For u whole\n-ear . I had been ailing and about\nhree months before I got Tanlac 1\nrot  In an awful condition.  .\n\"I could hardly eat' anything, and\n\u25a0vha-t ljttle I did furca down bloated\nne until my heart palpitated frlght-\nully, \u2022 and I would get so dizzy I\nrould scarcely stand up. At times\nI was nearly desperate with headaches, terrible pains racked my\nA'hole body, und at one time the\nsmall of my back hurt\" rtie so 'bad\nior, several days I thought I. would\n_ro distracted. I feot to -Where I\ncouldn't sleep well and the least\nlittle , noise would throw me Into a\nmiserable. ' nervous condition' foy\nhours.' I finally got so weak I\ncouldn't du my housework and waB\nobliged U) spend most of my t|mc in\nbed.\n\"Although it seeuted that everything\npossible was done Tor me, i couldn't\nget relief, and tlnully as a last hope\nI told my hubband to gel mc a bot-\nItle of Tanlac. After taking the first\n[bottle ..my. headaches were gone, and\nfive bottles made pie feel like ajienv\nwoman.. 1 eat anything*I want now\n'and just aa much as I w-j.nl without\nthe least trouble, and all the pains\nhave disappeared and my ,ho use work\nIs a real pleasure. Tanlac certainly\ndeserves the highest praise \u201eand ,1\nnever  get   tired  of  talking about .it!\"\nNew|s of SpOf t\nMONTREAL AMATEURS PUT UP\nIT\nGREAT F\nT\nScottish Team Defeats\nAll-Montreal Opponents\nMONTREAL, May . 24.- -The Scottish professionals defeated lhe All-\nMontreal aggregation here this afl-\nL-rnoon  at  soccer,  6   tfti-2;  \u25a0\nEXCITING FINISH TO\nTIMES-JOURNAL RACE\n,   FORT    \\VILLIAM,    May    SI. -The\n'Times-juurnal  10-mile rood race wtiy\nwon   today   by   Frank   Muran\/  nriU*-\nLached,  of  Fort  William.   In   58   minutes, , 40    seconds.     Arthur   Wlddcll,\nSudbury,  was second.    Time. 59  minutes,    (j.  W.  Gibson   of  llw   Eii\"''t\u00bb'l\nP1.  C,  Moose  Jaw,  was  third.    Time,\nfjlP9    minutes,    -30      set. onus.        A.a...,.\n'\u2022\u25a0Woods,  Calgary,  wns fifth,    W\/\u00bb;\u00bbt* v\nt conditions    were    excellent    aud    the\nrfinlsh'was exciting, any of the first\n,!'three being a pcsslble winner.\nMONTREAL, May 24.\u2014(Canadian\nAssociated Press)\u2014Display ing occasional flashes of biilHant football\nand at all times exhibiting real merit,\nthe visiting Scottish football team\nthis afternoon' oh the Grand Trunk\nfield here defeated the composite team\nof Montreal amateurs by six to 2.\nAround 10,000 people witnessed the\ngame and they rose as one man\nwhen Alec Smith, the speedy guardsman, terminated a brilliant daub by\ndriving a swift shot past Jiinmie\nBrownlle and accounted for the* first\namateur score.      ......\nThe visitors 'made a great Impression, first of all with their size and\nweight. They aWa had lota of speed\nwhile their foot work was a revelation. In combination play, too, they\nhad a wide.' margin- over the locals\nand the play of their outsidea, Ben-\nriett 'and Thompson, waB brilliant\nThe \u2022 latter shot two goals, the last\n\u25a0being a  particularly  fine  one.\nAjidy Wilson at ; center showed\nsome of the stuff that has made\nhim famous and found \"the not twice,\nwhile McKenumy and Rankin did\ntheir share toward the visitors' ylij*.*\ntory. McCormack and Orr are a pair\nof ..spectacular' backs who performed\nsome grfat clearances during the\nmatch, and finally Brownlle, the goal\nkeeper, a surprising agile player for\nh-J big a  man.\nTo sum up, tlie Scots are a team\nof men' trained- to the, minute who\nexpend just the sufficiency, .of energy\nto' get to the right spot mid who\nhave tlie exact quantity of sound\njudgment  needed  in tl)'.* game.\nOf  the   Montreal  amateurs  It   may\n\"be said that while there were one or\ntwo weiiks spots and while some of\nthe man Were playing hi positions to\n! which they were unaccustomed, they\nj put up a fine fight against a supe-\nrio team. But It has to be conceded\nthat they totally lacked the finer\npoints in wlil,ch their opponents excelled.\nThe scoring was as follows:\nRankin  and  Wilson   for  the  Scots,\nand   Alec   Smith  fur   Montreal.    Half\ntime score   2 to 1.\nThompson,- twice; ' MuMenamy   and\nWilson for the  Scots, and Adam Rae\nfor Montreal.\nFull time score, G lo 2.\nLineup:\n\u25a0 Scottish.       Position.       Montreal\nGoal\nBrownlle  :.W.    Smith\nRight- Back\nM'cCormack :A,   Smith\nLeft   Back\nOrr -..:   Yule\nRight Half\nGordun   ..\u25a0 \u25a0....:.; :      Hue\nCenter Half\nBrown ; '...\u2022 \u201e .\"\u25a0....' McNaughl\n-  Left  Half\nMcAndrews , ..: .' :    Cralgle\nOutside   Right\nBennett  _    W uutorse\n, Inside   Right\nMcMeriamy _   Angel\n\u25a0 Center  Forward\nWilson  ,  Lliitoi\nI IiiKijj  Left\nRankin  A. Smith\nOutside   Left.\n1 Thorn vv m     :    MeKclI\nReferee\u2014Horace iLyons.\nSALMON BELLIES BEAT\nVANCOUVER TERMINALS\nVANk.i-j'UV.KR. . May. SJ4.\u2014A fine\nholiday \u2022exhibitionj of \u25a0 lacrosse resulted In a win for^the New., Westr\nmiiister Salmon- Be'lies \"over tho\nVancouver Terminals, 9 to 7. at New\nWes'minstc -. , .-    .\nIn: the t penlng guide of the : n-Jw\nCon ;Junes coast league at ' Yan-\nco iver the Vancouver team dei'ea'ed\nthe' Victoria team 11 to 1. the New\nV i Loi'la i-.am. .recently assembled In\ntho cast, were outclassed ly ;he\n'Vancouver team. The -Victorlas, ho^fr\never, showed, promise .of better work,\ngheii moro opportunity for team\npractice. Billy Fitzgerald, for the\nV'sitors, showed up. well In today's\ngame; ;\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nWon\nLost\nPi'l\nCleveland    \t\n    '!.->.\n<'t\n.,!'\",\n   li)\n13\n.I.S4\nDetroit    \t\n    'S't\n17\n.r-11\nWashington    \u25a0 \u2022 \u2022\n    17\nIS\n.480\nSt.   l.ouls   \t\n    16\nIS\n.471\nPoston      i\n    13\nlli\n.1 B.l\nChicago   \t\n..   ..  II\n17\n4r.lt\nMiiludolulila. ...\n......   It\n21\n.311\nYour Insurance\nof Value\n. Buy advertised goods, especially those advertised in Daily\nNewspapers.\nYou may rely upon it that in\nbuying advertised goods you\nwill get full value for your\nmoney.\nThe manufacturer who advertises a special brand of goods\nknows that he has a better\nproduct, otherwise he would\nnot spend money to advertise\nit.\nHe knows that the public will\nnot buy a poor article a second time, no matter how well   .\nit is advertised.\nDaily Newspaper advertising\nis the Buyer's Insurance of\nValue.\nIssued by the Canadian Daily Newspaper Association,\nl Head Office, Toronto. L\nCHICAGO, May 34.\u2014Mtilroiiaii, a\nrt'crult pitcher, wont the ronle for\ntlui Chicago White S 'K 'raliiy and\nwith timelv iittrni' VM-,-* hlnr defeated   Washington   C   to   5.\nI ' It.   II.   1C\nWashington     . ;\".'\u25a0  r>     !i     2\nChicago  s*  ll|     t\nI rattei-tea^Ac sta. ScliucJil and\nI'lninleh;    Mulrennaii   and   Yaryan.\nST.  t\/iUlS; May 24.-St. l.o'iia de-\nI Icil'jd' New   York   S   to  4   t\"dav.\n, \u25a0 Tt*.   H.   15.\n.New   -York      ....'....  f     7     i\nISt    t.O'ils      8.  10     2\nt     r'i'tterlcs \u2014 Mays.   ,   Plcrey      aivl\nI Sehang:     Hnffinan. ' Iloland.    Iturweli\nand   Kevcreid.\nDETROIT. May 24.\u2014Philadelphia\nfttllfrc'd fa. ninth Inn'ap r'ilv lha'\nnetted I wo runs and defeated De.\ntr\u00bblt  7  p.  ft. p. ir.  *_,\nplillnilelpjilk      i   14     4\nj      Pi,tl,Tles-I.\"eefe,        T'onmiell        and\n. PertlMB-   Jllddleton,   Hollaad;   Oldham\nand   Ainsmllh.\n| poston. \"\"\" \"4\u2014 Bost'in-C'levc-\n\u00bb'and,   J.'os'ponod:    r-'n\nPACIFIC ^OAST LEAGUE\n*I\"*^iM.lp,    4:    Yei-nnn.   2.\nPflk'anrl.    ;;    H;mi    rr-M><MfiP*v    1.\nr\u00bbnr 'nrirt,    \";     Kii't    T\/''e     it\".\nLos  Anp'.'les,   3:   Sacramento,   I.\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\n,T0i-vpV city,  2:   Reading.  7.\nBaltimore,   8;   Neivark, '7.\nWvracuse.   10:   Tlufalo.   3.\nRochesterf,   #-a;   Toronlo,   ]-n,\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION.\nColumbus.*8;  St. Paul, 7.\nIndianapolis,   il:   Kansas   Oily.   6.\nLouisville.  4:-Milwaukee,  c.\nToleflo. 3:  Minneapolis 7.\nPACIFIC INTERNATIONAL\nTaltlma,  4-11;  Victoria. 3-3.\nTacoma,  \"5-3:   Vancouver,   6-4.\nPOSSESS GOOD HEALTH\nBV  LOOKtNO  AFTKH\nTHE BOWELS\nA free rniition of the bowels, one*'\n\u2022ttMwlce a day, Bhould he the rule o1\npvery one, as half the Ills of life an\ncaused by allowing the bowelti to ge1\ninto  a  constipated   condition.\nWhen the bowele are allowed t-\nbecome constipated, the stomacl\ntrets out of order, aud the-, liver, doe;\nnot do Its work properly on accotin*\n>f holding back the bile ao that V\ndoes nut puss through the ho welt\nbut Is allowed to get into the blood\nthus causing a poisoning of th<\n\u25a0vhole  system.\nIf you would escape constipation\nalck and bilious headaches, heart\nburn, floating specks before the eyes\neu'iterl' tongue, foul breath; the has\nty. irritating, bleeding Itching am*\nprotruding piles, you should keei\nvour liver stirred up by the use ol\nMilburn's  Laxa-Llver   Pills.\nThese pills, being purely vegetable.\nkeep your liver working actively\nhelping It to resume its proper\nfunctions, and thereby removing the\nbile that ls circulating In the blood\nand  poisoning the whole system.\nMrs. H. Barrows, Enfield, N. S.,\nwrites:\u2014\"I was troubled with sick\nheadaches and constip-*lon. One day\nji friend told me of Kwlburn's Laxa\nLiver jpllls. I got two vials,' and\nround they did me a world of good.\nI therefore have great faith In -them.\"\nMilburn's Laxa-Liver Fills are 2Kc.\na vial, at all dealers or mailed direct\non receipt of price by The T. Mil\nburn Co.,, Uinlteuf Toronto, Oat.\nMIXED\nIdeal weather conditions favored the Nelson Golf and\nCountry club for their \"mixed two-ball foursome handicap\ncompetition. The event was keenly contested by 12 couples\nand resulted in a win for Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Potter, who\nmade the first nine holes in 43 and the second in 53, a total\nof 9G less handicap points 16, giving a net score of 80. T.\nR. Wilson and Miss Ruth Armstrong annexed second prize,\nwith 51 and 55, less 22, a net score of 84.\nFull scores are as follows:\n1st      2nd Hand-\nPlayers, Round Round  TM   icap   T'l\nMr. and Mrs. G. A. Potter 43     53       96     16     80\nT; R. Wilson, Miss R. Armstrong.. 51 55 106 22 84\nMr. and Mrs. Pete Townshend...\" 58     G5     123     33     90\nDr. and Mrs. E. G. Smyth  75    58     133     36     97\nMr. and Mrs. Hugh Robertson 05-   62     127     28     99\nS. Stokes and Mrs. JoMii Cartmel.... 64 66 130 30 100\nJohn Cartmel and Mrs. Jas. O'Shea 64 64 128 27 101\nA. Higginbotham and Mra. Walley.. 60 70 130 29 101\nH. A. Lowe, Mrs. J. H. D. Benson 73     58     131     28   103\nMr. and Mrs. Alex Leith.!  68     64     132     22   110\nMr. and Mrs. C. W. Appleyard... 71     73     144     33   111\nMr. anfl Mrs. C. I. Archibald   80     74     154     31    123\nAn invitation extended to the Nelson Tennis club was\nfreely availed of and the-tvyo.courts in first class condition\u2014\n(hanks to C. W. Appleyard, i,vho materially] plussed his golf\nhandicap by a lot of downright hard work on the courts\u2014\nwere kept fully occupied all the afternoon. \\\nTaken altogether there was a brilljaiitsjjciifl.,gathering at\nthe club house, including visWrf* from Trail and Rossland. In\nthe list, other than competitors, was Mrs. A. L. McCulIoch,\nMrs. L. E. Borden, Mrs. I. G. Nelson, Mrs. Ryley of Vancouver, Mrs. George Ben well, Mr. and Mrs. J..J. Smith, Mr. and\nMrs. C. Brawn, Mr, and Mrs. G. S. Godfrey, Mrs. Evans,\nMrs. Bayley of Willow Point, Mr. and Mrs. Vanderwater of\nRossland, Miss Madge Godfrey, Miss. Jackson, Miss M. Cameron, Miss Jean Cameron, Mr; and Mrs. Caudwell, Mrs. A.\nH'gginhotham, G. Cruieksiiank, Trail; R. W. Dawson, J. K.\nGram, G. Cruickshank, F. C. Irvine, G. G. Smith, A. Batchelor,\nE. G. Matthews and a host, of others whose names it was impossible to collect.       ; i\nThe house committee announce that on June 1st they\nwill be at home to (he public at the dub House and extend a\ncordial invitation. As'Mrs. -McCulIoch, president of tne house\ncommittee, remarks, the two splendid tennis courts could\ntake the surplus from the Nelson club, whose membership is\nas large as they can carry. .-\u25a0\u25a0\u201e\u25a0\nBuy Your Straw\nHat Early\nDerive the benefit of its use through the vrhSle season,\nOur early arrivals in. -I\nMEN'S STRAWS\nInclude   the   following:\nMen's Split Boaters     f\nTho Smart        fl\u00bbQ QK    <\u00a3A  QK\nDress hat \u00abDO.*JU\u00bb  \u25a0tO't.OO, \u25a0\nMen's Toyo Panamas    I\nFedora or Dip Front (P_tt\\ ffA\nStyles.  Special  vallue.  .Seil.UV\nGenuine Panamas       1\nFlno even (P\/J W(?     (PQ i|i|\npleats   wO. I Of  wOAFV\nOur   Men's   Own   Store. ' i\nwide. ' Per\nyard   \t\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\n,;,,.,    Won   lm\\   Pet.\nI'ltui'iii't-    .._,... ar.       7     .7si\nNow   York     22 11   .,  .1107\nIlrooMyn    .;  ID H. .528\nChicago       15 II -517\nBoston     1\u00a3 .16 .500\nSt:   Ciiulfl     10 10' .345\nPhiladelphia     10 20 .SS3\nCincinnati  11 24 .314\nI'lIlUM-lEU'IlIA, May 24.\u2014Phlla-\ndflptila t'tmrge'l., i'tvm last .place by\nwinnlni; [lie firs,' same uf tho Cln-\njiiifiati series today 3 lo 2.\n. .   n. h. . e.\nrincimmli     ..,,   2 B     2\nPhiladelphia     ;-3 8     0\nPatierlcs\u2014LuqilBj Napier and Win-\ngo;    Meadows   and   Ttrugfjy.\nWIOOKLVN', May 24.\u2014Uruuklyil\nended its losing Hlreak today hy\ndefeating   Chicago   C    to    1.\nR.   Tt.   Ft\nChicago   1      7     2\nBrooklyn   0.7      2\nflatteries\u2014Martin and O'Farrolll\nSmith   and Taylor.\nNEW   YORK.    May    24.-Th..    New\nYork Nationals won   Ihi? seend game\nof  the   scries  Willi   Pltlsbur?  5   to   3.\nR.   11.   B.\nPittsburg      -'t     3     1.\nNew   York      6    10     2\nBatteries\u2014Adams, Carlson . and\nSkiff!   Ncl>f  and   Smith.    ' '      .'\nBOSTON. May 24.\u2014 With :!'. Lools\nleading Boston :i to 2 in the; last\nof he etglilli. the bas\"s full and\ntwo ont. p'nel) H'tter Prank (jlbson\n\u2022singled to Jert field, scoring two\nrunners. Powell followed wilh a\nhomer  and   Boston   won   7  to  3. '\nft.   H.   F\u201e\n\u00abC   I,oul3      3     7     J\nPoston       7     8     2\nPnlleries\u2014Peril'-fi. SlierdJi 1 and\n(lemons; Scolt, WatWOn and O'Xeili'\nGibson.\nTWlLIGH'FLEAGUE\n\"VVINNIPEOf May 24.\u2014-The Ma-\nraona defealetl tlie Muoae Jaw Millets\nIn both games Ot their double header  tod\u00bby.    Scores:\nFirst game\u2014 H.   H.   E.\nMoose    Jfl\/iv  2     -6      4\nWi-filpeg   -  3     2     1\n' Batteries\u2014TBliss 1 ami' \u25a0.'\u25a0^lifuhdlhrg;\nAlbreeht  nnd  Milligan.   \"\nSecond  game\u2014 R.   H.   E.\nMoose   Ja*w    t  2     7     2\nWinnipeg     ...:.....\u201e..... '3      3     2\nBatteries\u2014Lesher, Hauaer, Buiiner\nand  Shandllng;   Kauffinan   and'Nel-\nS0!1.\nEDMON'fON, May' 21\u2014Bdpjonton\ntook both ends of the holiday double\nheader from Saskatoon today, 2 jto 1,\nand 13 lo 6. Manush, the Eskimos'\nleft, fielder, featured' the day's play\nWith three home runs.\nTirst game\u2014 R.  H.  E.\nSaskatoon     1     6,1\nEdmonton    \u00bb\u00bb - -'2'     5 \"    2\nBatteries\u2014Stadler and Baehaut;\nJunes and Leake.\nSecond   game\u2014 , ,       R.  H. E.\nSaskatoon    -.-.\".*. 6   12 ' 2\nEdmonton 'M   IB     3\nBatteries\u2014Giil and Bachant;. Valentine  and  Shroeder.\nCALGARY, May 24.\u2014The Calvary\nBronka celebrated Victoria Day ln\ngrand style, by taking both ..qijds- of\na double-header from Reglna,. 0 to\n4 and 2 to 1. therebp copping the\nseries. \"i . -.   '\nFirst   game\u2014 R.  H- 3fc\nReglna     *'-  9    2\nCalgary       9     9     1\nBatteries-^Nofzinger, Connell ;and\nKing;  Gillespie  and  Sullivan. (  \"\n'Second' game\u2014 R. iH. E.\nRegina    * s 1     4,-1\nCalgary     ;....--    5'   2\nBatteries\u2014Zink and King; Sclmell\nand  Kllhullen.\nIn the past year It ls estimated\n20,000,000 persons have died of starvation in northern Russia and Po-\nfend,       ,V--;.\u00a3fcL\t\nSPORTING BRIEFS\nSuspends Joe Lynch.\nNEW YORK, May 21.\u2014Suspension\nof .Km; Lynch, b*intaTmveight champion, wis announced tonight by the\nNuw York state boxing commission.\nThe , commission staled that Lynch,\nand his manager, Eddie Meade, had\nbeen HUHpeiided pending further action by tho Massachusetts slate boant\nuf boxing \\v\"hlcl\u00bb had previously sus-\npeijded tlioiUiun ;i clmigc ot violating\n'a conti-iict tu box at H'jlyoke, Mass.,\nApril 2li.\nTwcnty-o'ne Seconds \/Enough.\nCOLU.^rHIA, May 21.\u2014Bob Martin,\nA. E. if'', ohamplohj Itnocked out Ned\nI'ai-pcuicr jf Niilwaukutfi in the first\nround uf their scheduled 12-round\nbout here tonight, The fight lasted\n'li   seconds.\nDan O'Dowd Wins.\nNEW YORK, Muy 24\u2014Dan O'Dowd,\nof Buslon, received the judges' decision, over Capt. Bob Roper of Chicago alter a 15-round bout in Brooklyn\ntonight.     They   arc  heavyweights.\nCanadian Wrestler Succeeds.\nFOKT WILLIAM. Out., Muy 21--Jim\nLondos of New Yurie Greek heavy-*\nweight wrestler. Called tonight to\nllirow George tVal.krr, light heavyweight '.baiupioii of Canada, twice In\n7fi minutes. Londjs got one fall in\n51 minutes, 30 seconds, Walker had\ntlie best of the wrestling Cur the remaining time, having Londos sroggy\nwith headlucks when the \"75 minutes\nwas up,\nBritish Tennis Players\nBeat Spanish Opponents\nlor Cup Preliminaries\nColored  Cotton  Georgette Crepe\nSky, rose, white, mauve, reseda,\nblack and grej>. fl*\"* fJA\n40 In. wide. Per yd..\u00abDltwU\nFine White Organdie\nLively   even   weave,   41   Inches\n95c\nPure White English\nLongcloth\nHeavy hard wearing quality;\n30  iiii-lics wiae. KKi.\nPor  yard    wt\nWhite   English    Cotton\nDrill\nIdeal    for   middies.     'J8   inches '\n$\u00a3..!!: 79c, 85c\nGreen   and   White\nMosquito or Fly Netting\nHO im.'lR'H wide. 9P*\/\u00bb\nPor  yard    silOC\nLadies' Black Silk Gloves\nQueen   yualiiy.    All QQ\/\u00bb\nsizt.'S.     SpculUI    pair vOv\nInlaid Linoleum     ij\nHandsome 1ile desisnu, 2 yards\nwide. Per square <PQ OC\nyard    ...\u201e  \u2022cDO.ei'U\nAbbey's Effervescent\nSalts\nLarge   size   bottle.\nEach   \t\n50c\nChildren's White Cotton\nStockings j\nI\nAll   sizes   up   to   Vi,.       QC\/\u00bb\nSpecial,  per   pah*   OO-L;\nPlain White Cotton\nVoiies\n69c, 79c\" 95c,\n$1.00, $1.50\nButterick Summer\nQuarterly\n35c\nPer\nCopy\nMloHttJ$o^ Bag (Tompatifl;\nNMininniATim      mro.\nHENDON, England, May M.\u2014Ran-\ndolpli Lycett and Mr. Wousinan, rep-\nrL'seuting Great Britain, defeated\nManuel Alurizo ami Count de Uo-\nmei*, the ypanls;. pair, in the doubles ot tlie preliminary matches of\nthe Davis cup series here today. The\nscore  was ii-ti,   10-8,  6-1!,   6-2.\nENGLISH CRICKET\nLONDON May 21.\u2014(Canadian Associated I'ress,)\u2014 Under glorious\nweather conditions, YorkHhire today\nbeat Gloucestershire by 258 runs.\nThe scores were: Yorkshire, l!3l and\naid for six wickets .when the. team\nih'elare: filnttcPHtcrshire, Ifi.r. and 105;\nOlclro.vf fur Yorkshire made 7\u00bb and\nMit;. ' Warwickshire defeated North-\nlaniptoitshlre, 77 and 36ff. Haywood.\nTur the latter team, scored IW, and\nRullierliam. for Waiwlckshirc, toolc\nCive wb kcts for fjur 'runs.\n| Lancashire won from Kent by 10\nWickets, Ivancashlre scoring '102 in\nthe first innings, including Ellis' 138\nnot out, and Hallows'  102.\nSurrey best Essex 'by 202. the\nscores 'being; Surrey, 2.12 and ,185,\nfur smeii wickets when the team declared. Jcaeoiks for Surrey scored\n170, not out.\nCumbrid^f University deCeailnl\nSumei'Bet by an Innings and 811 runs.\nThe three Asliton brothers -were on\ntfi#; winning learn, one vi\" them scur;-,\ning 71 and another  152. not out.\nLelceslersliire gained a remarkable\nVictory uver Sussex, the latter hav-|\ning declared at 4711 Cor nine wickets\nin the tirst Innings, to which Leicester shin' responded wilh 338 including 150 Cor Sharp. Sussex then only\nmade 177 in the second innings, while\nLeicestershire scored 259 for seven\nand won by three wickets. In the\nsecond innings, .lupp made 179 and,\nEuwley 127 hi Sussex's first Innings.\nDerbyshire beat Notts by 23, Derbyshire scoring 245 aud 163 against\nNutts' 189 and INti. incldlng DO for\n1'ayLon.\nThe Australians beat At C. C. by\nthree   wickets,   scores   being:\nAustralia, 191 and 270 fur seven\nwickets when they declared, and M.\nC. C..  2SI  and 1713.\nI    Llees   mako   both   honey   and   wax\nCr\u00bbm  lhe   nectar obtained  from flow-\nWOODBINEJRACK\nTOKONTO, Ma*y 2'l.\u2014'\\V\"^odMne\ntrack results.\nFirst race\u2014Three-year-olds and\nup, six furlongs. Milk Maid won, By\nJlmlny second, Wrack Grace third.\nTime,' 1:13   3-5.\nSe-.jiul race -Stet)ple'.hasr>, J3.000\nadded, four-year-olds and up, two\nmiles and, a quarter. Bencher won,\nKlbliier second, Minata third. Time,\n1:25   3-5.\nThird race\u2014Victoria Slakes, two-\nyear-olds, five furlung.s. Second\nThought won, Diadem1 second, Wolf's\nCry  third.    Time,   1:10.\nFourth race\u2014Handicap, three-yoar-\noIUs and up. mile and a furlong. Her-\niMidcsy vwn, Hoyal Visitor second,\nMoll  Cut   Purse   third.    Time.   1:56.\nI-'Iflh race-\u2122 Handicap, three-yoar-\nolds and up, six furlongs. Lilly Kelly won. Slippery Elm second, Some\nHaby   third.     Time.   1:13.\nSixth race \u2014Uinsdowne Plate, four-\nlycar-olds and up, one mllw8 'Uncle\nJohn won, Gain De Cause second,\nSweet Bouquet third. Time, lilt 2-5.\nSeventli race\u2014Three-year-olds and\nup,, mile and sixteenth. Antlphun\nwon, Neeuah second, Besty third.\nTime,  1:49  3-5.\nPACER  BREAKS RECORD\nCA'LGARY, May 24.-A11 Canadian\nspring track meet records were\nbroken here today when Main Direct,\na horse owned by K. M. Leech of\nWinnipeg and Calgary, paced a mile\nIn 2:10% to beat Fred Johnson's\nMae Online, by a nose. Tho meet\nwas under the auspices of the Calgary Turf  club.\nOLD   LACROSSE   PLAYER   DIES\nMONTREAL, May 21 -John Hyland.\nwell known hero as a member of tho\nfamuiis Shamrock lacrosse team In\n1871, ts dead. The only living member is now Ed Guurard.\nIf it is not mark\nMACDONALD'\nit is not Macdonald\nTobacco.\n \u2014\n ,\t\n\u25a0-\".IT\n. HELSON   DAILY-  NEWS)  WEDNESDAY MORNING, MAT '25, 1921.1.\n-B\u2014\nTHE ARK\n.|\\     '\u2022\u2022\u2022!!\u25a0   ' 0    MV\"\nDining room suite, rich, dark finish; buffet, round extension table,\npedestal bane; and eli chairs, ?120.\nFumed Oak Suite, $166; Surfaced Oak\nSuite, $125. Bureaus. Iron Beds,\nMattresses. Springs,. Wicker Chairs,\nEMsy CHaira,' White Bedroom Chairs,\nHubs. Linoleums, Wall Paper Staple\nDry Goods, Ladles' Hosiery, Corsets,\nMen's Wei*.\nJ. W. HOLMES\nPhone. 354\n606  Vernon  St.\ns-\nSunburn\nAfter that picnic you\nshould use CUCUMBER\nand WITCH HAZEL\nCREAM for Sunburn and\nTan.\n35\u00abTPER  BOTTLE\nCANADA DRUG AND\nBOOK CO.\nMall   Ordere   Filled   Promptly\nPhono tl, P.O. Box 1067\nPHONE 10\nSUITABLE FOR 8ALAD8     \u2022\nLOBSTER\n'ii-  3 *or  - _ 85*!\nVsB,   2  for   75\u00a3j\nSs,   2  for    --$1.25i\nFresh     Tomatoes,      Cucumbers,I\nRadishes, Green Onions, etc.\nNew Cabbage, lb  lOtt '\u25a0\nBermuda Onions,  lb 15\u00a3 f\nRhubarb, Carrots, Turnips\nORANGES\nSweet and'juicy\n3 Dozen for  _ S5ti \\\n3  Dozen  for. $1.00\n3  Dozen  for. _ $1,1\u00a9;\nClose at 6 p. m. -Closed all'day J\nTuesday.\nBorden's Evaporated\nMilk\nTall   size,  (stunts 20*\nDozen  1\u2014$2.30\n4-Dozen   Case $9.00\n\u2014.\nMonuments\nKOOTENAY   GRANITE   AND\nMONUMENTAL     COMPANY,\nLIMITED\nFront   St.,   Nelssn\nPlumbers'   Brass  Goods,\n' Fixtures  'and   Supplies,\nTile    and    Sewer    Pipe\nB. C. Plumbing and Heating Company\nNELSON, B. C.\nHIP1   HIP!   HOORAY!!\nFLEMING'S  STORE\nHAS   GOT\nIce Cream\nAgain   in   Cones   or   Pails.\nFleming's  Store\nGreater   Nelson\nGroceries.  Dry  Goods,  eto.\nNsttsd Gem Potatoes, excellent for\nseed..   Per, cwt $1.75\nA Handy size for, hot weather and\nemergencies.\nBABY  SIZE\nSt. Charles Milk\nPer can .\nPor   dozen     -$1.10\n-10\u00abi\nJust to  Let You  Know\nA. p. PAPAZIAN\nExpert   Watchmaker,   Jeweler   and\nGraduate  Optometrist\nomfort\nFirst, Style Next\nOften    your    glasses    may    be ;\nalright,   but   your   mounts   are\nthe cause of pain and discomfort.\nTo properly fit glasses and adjust the mounting Is our specialty.\nTry  our  service.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nOptometrist and  Optician.\nHIGH-CLASS FURS\n10 PEB CENT REDUCTION TO\n_'X\u00a3 END OF AUGUST.\nAny artlclo made to order from\nbest selected skins. Customers' owtn\nfurs made into any article desired,\nwith best work at moderate price\nOld furs repaired and remodeled\nInto newest shapes.\nG. GLASER\nMANUFACTUBINa   EUBBIBB\nHEI.SON, B.  O.\nPHOIIE  106. P. O. BOX 787\nFULL  8UPPLY  OF\nFlour and Feed, Chick\nChop and Scratch Feeds\nKing Edward and Wee\nMcGregor Spuds\nSUITABLE FOR SEED OR\nTABLE\nPhone 174\nNELSON UNITED\nFARMERS COOPERATIVE ASSOCIATION\nTRY   A   CLASSIFIED    AD.\nNELSON MD Ll TIK\n1\nFor Twenty-ninth Year in Succession, Lake Capital Entertains Sister Communities; Fine Program of Spoils;\nKilties and Nelson Baseball Teams Participate; Mayor\nAnderson Welcomes Big Excursion.\nPledging anew the ancient friendship that subsists betweeri the cities\nof NelBon , and Kaslo, Nelson ^citizens to the numher of about 150\nitiui.lt' the annual water trip to Kaslo\nyesterday, to witness one of ihe\nmost Interesting celebrations that tho\nlak-a city has put on, in ljs 29 years\nof celebrating the Twenty-Fourth,\nAt every stop between the two terminals' holiday parties joined th\u00ab\nhierry crowds on the KuskatiooU, and\nwhen at last the big excursion boar\nturned into Kaslo bay it flad representation from practically* tho \u25a0entire\nlittoral of Kootenay  lake.\nThe water trip lasted a little over\nfour hours, and waa made under\nabsolutely Ideal conditions. As the\nKuskanook, with capt. 1* o. ,'Mc-\nKlnnon at the wheel, traversed' the\n\"West Arm with its gleaming\nreaches, verdent benches, und dark\ngreen points, and later turned onto\ntho board bosom of Kootenay lake,\nwith Its dissolving headlands, Its\nmlrror-llke surface, broken by areas\nof ripple, and Its snow-capped chains\nof summits, the excursionists Enjoyed tho panorama from the upper\ndecks, and many cameras clicked -on\nscenes   of   particular  appeal.\n\u2022Prom time to time the Kootenay\nKilties, under Pipe-Major William\nMcLcary, rendered selections on iho\npipes, particularly at the larger\npoints of callT At Hlondel tho Blue\nBell mine whistle gave a complicated\nand convoluted welcome, which the\nKuskundok returned ceremoniously,\nbar for bar, and at every point\ngreetings by waved handkerchiefs,\nwere exchanged between the shore\ncommunltls and the holiday-makers.\nVociferous  Welcome\nAt 12:40. o'clock the Kuskanook\nranged past the Kaslo bench, and\nturned Into the bay, lo find a fringe\nof humanity bordering the bench,\nand extending to the wharf, this being the assembled citizenship of\nKaslo. At this disclosure, cheers\nbroko both from tlie crowds on\nshore and from the crowds on tho\nboat, thlB frenzy of mutual greeting\nlining promptly drowned by the\nKuskunook's powerful blast- As tho\nwharf was neared the- Kaslo City\nband, from the eminence of the\nbench, played a lively selection, in\nwelcome.\nMayor .Tames A nderson was at\nthe dock, with numbers of thc leading citizens of Kalso, to shake hands\nwith old friends In the visiting host.\nIlia worship soon singled out ex-\nMayor I larold Selous as the most\nrepresentative Nelson citizen among\nthe visitors, and appropriated him as\nthe guest of himself and Mrs. Anderson for the day.\nCrown   Queen   of tho  May\nAs soon as th*fe excursionists dis-\nertiburked a parade was formed,\nheaded by decorated uulos containing\ntho Queen of the May and her party,\nand played by the Kilties band, this\nproceeding from the wharf to Front\nstreet, and thence to the court house.\nAt the court house, John Keen, ex-\nspeaker of the legislature, crowned\nlittle Miss Edith. Aim as Queen of\nthc May amid stH^os of applause..\nTho queen was aTicoiTn|)ilnie(r*lJJ~TcrOr\nmaids of honor, little Misses Hcleen\nFarrel, Grace Roper, Amelia Hanna\nand  Jessie Benzles.    Leonard  Skillif\ncorn was her military guard, Charlie\nShort was her naval guard, and Allan Hull was her page.\nAfter this dainty ceremony, which\nwas under the direction of Mrs.\nKeen, an impromptu rendering of the\nHighland Fling was given by Peter\nMcGregor, a Kaslo resident of Scotch\nprocllvl'Ies.\nThis ended a morning of great'excitement for the kiddies of Kaslo,\nsports for their benefit having been\nin progress from 10 o'clock in the\nforenoon, on Front street, which was\ngay with bunting. It was noticed\nthat certain points on this street appeared' to have a peculiar attraction\ntot the children, and investigation\ndisclosed that these were the joints\nfrom which ice cream\" cones emanated.\nAt the conclusion of thc parade\nthere was an. interval in the program that permitted the visitors to\nforage from sustenance. -This was\neasy to find, as, in addition to extra\nservice at the hotels, the Ladles' Aid\nof the Victorian hospital conducted a\ncafeteria in thc drill hall all day.\na.' Wftso-tlwJuiiph .liour was oyer ithe\nKilties band led the march -to tho\nRecreation park, on tbe upper bench,\nwhero both grandstand and bleachers wero filled.\nFirst the baseball game between\nthe Nelson seniors was played, amid\nmuch excitement. When it ended in\nNelsoii's .favor, by a margin of one\nrun thgre was general satisfaction\nwith the caliber of the game and of\nthe   score.\nThis was followed by tho announced 'game between the junior\nteams of the respective cities, which\nappealed especially to (he younger\nelement.\nDuring the program at the Recreation grounds the  l-i'dies of tho I., O.\nD. 15.,   headed  by  their  regent,  Mrs.\nE. H. Latham, conducted a very successful ice cream counter for the\nbenefit of tho hospital.\nAfter the program at tlie Recreation grounds thc crowd found Itself\non Front street aud some Impromptu\nraces were run by way of Caledonian\nsports.\nMany scores patronized the Hospital Aid cafeteria for the evening\nlunch.\nAbout C o'clock the lumbermen's\nsports began. Joe Moron was winner of the log rolling, Charlie Jackson coming second. Mike O'Brien\ncreated unlimited fun with his '\u2022 log\nriding.        *\n**' In the sawing contest Fred Wells\nand Frank Bergstrom made the best\ntime, being through tlielr log lu 34\nseconda. I>. McKillaud and J. Vallance were a second more.\nAt woodebopping Bert Bergstrom\ntook first place, with 't lime record\nof t minute 1-2 second. Dugald Mc-\n\u00a33achern took J minute &\u25a0 seconds for\nthe feat*\nKaulo city, won a tug-of-,war with\nHowland & Waltz, pole and tie operators. The winning team was composed of F. Stevenson, F. H. Abey,\nA\/,\u2666Piersob,. 33. Palmer, F, R. Bailey,\nD. McLellend, p. D. Jones, V. E.\nHardy  and George  Tanget.\nWhile   tho   water   sports   wero   in\nprogress, two. of the Kilties did the\nsword dance on the upper deck of\nthe Kuskanook before an admiring\naudience.\nVisitors   Depart.\nOnly a portion of the lumbermen's\nsports were completed when the\nKuskimKok. whistle -summoned all\nvisitors aboard. Music 'by the two\nbands, and parting cheers and hand-\n\\yaving featured the departure of\nthe   excursion  steamer.\nQuite a number of Nelson visitors\nremained over for tho Hospital Aid\ndance in the drill hall, which turned out to be the affair of the year.\nAU the enterprises of the Hospital\nAid for the day were under the direction of a committee consisting of\n.Mrs. James Anderson, the president,\nand Mesdames F. Chandler, J. H.\nStubbs, George Stott S. H. Green;\nW. E. Zwicky and Wl H. Burgess and\nMiss Mackenzie, among others.\nThe general celebration was In\ncharge of a committee composed\nas follows:\nExecutive, Mayor Japies Anderson,\nsecretary, A. W. Anderson: treasurer,\nW. H. Burgess; vice-chairman, A. T:\nGarland. F. T. Abey, chairman general sports committee; children's\nsports, A. MacQueen, A. Taylorson,\nPrincipal L. B. Brown; collection\ncommittee, H H. Latham, A. T. Garland; advertising and transportation, M. B. MacLaren, E. Hacking;\nlumbermen's sports, W. H. Farrel.\nOh the return trip to Nelson the\nKilties furnished one.*or two fife selections. . The , biff boat docked at\nNelson  shortly before 11 o'clocok.\nThe Mystery\nOfthe\nYellow Room\nSIX REELS OF THE MOST FASCINATING MYSTERY\nEVER SCREENED\n, Fox Weekly\nComedy\nPrices Are Dropping\nWe can now sell you a \"GILLETTE\" Safety Razor for\n$3.50.   Former price, $5.00\nARISTOCRATIC STYLE\n\u25a0For $4.00.   Former price, $6.00.\nAlso try us for Shavirtg Brushes, Razor Strops and '\nShavers' Supplies.1\nOur Spring stock ls now complete\nand it Is a very attractive line of\nwall paper which wo Invito you to\ncome and see, ask to be shown\nsome of our high grade paper ln\nthe roll. All lines very moderately\npriced.\nHave us give you an estimate on\npainting your house with pure white\n..lead and linseed oil, which ls the\nbest and cheopest, as it lasts.\nHelp  make  Nelson  beautiful.\nSave the Surface and you Save\nAll,   paint  and  varnish.\nMURPHY BROS.\nPainters   and   Decorators\nPhono 555,    P.O. Boa 185,\nBAPTIST YOUNG\nPEOPLE HOLIDAY\nAbout a score of young people,\nmembers of the Baptist Young People's union, enjoyed a pleasant holiday at the ranch of Dr. N. Wolverton  on  tho West Arm yesterday.\nLeaving the church at i) a. m. tho\nyouths and misses hiked up and\nreached Dr. Wolverton's in time for\nlunch, where a picnic meal was served on tho lawn.\n' The afternoon. was spent in boating, fishing and games, Arthur Waters landing two trout. Late in the\nafternoon Rev, J. E. Tyner rowed up\nfrom Nelson and joined the party,\nreturning with the young people at\n6 o'clock.\nSocial and Personal\nJohn Toye spent the holiday yesterday at Ainsworth.\nClifford Brudshaw of Castlegar spent\nyesterday  in  tho  city,\nMr. and Mrs. W. J. Astley were at\n\u25a0Queens   Bay  yesterday.\nCaptain P. P. Armstrong went up to\nProctor yesterday  for the fish.\nMr. and Mrs. Henry Waters went up\nto  Mirror   Lake  for  thc holiday.\nJ. M. Harris, the Sandon hotel proprietor, was among arrivals yesterday.\nW. C. Todd, secretary of the Kootenay Kilties, accompanied the Kilties\nto Kaslo yesterday.\nHoward Bush and family spent the\nholiday on the main lake yesterday In\nthe vicinity  of  Proctor.\nOsca-r V. White uf New Denver, [superintendent, of the. Silversmith mines,\nIs registered at   thc Hume.\n\u25a0 T. Homersham, who spent yesterday\nin the Outlet, brought In last night\ntwo salmon and seven char as his day's\ncatch.\nEx-Mayor H. Selous, who was at\nDie Kaslo celebration yesterday, slated\nthat he had massed very few of Kaslo's\nTwenty-fourths.\nAl Treglllus and Mrs. Fred Curtis,\nwho made -the phenomenal catch of\nsalmon at the week-end, added to their\nprevious string two salmon caught\nnear  Rlondel  yesterday.\nDonald Black, son of Mr. and Mrs.\nF. M. Black, formerly of Nelson nnd\nnow of Winnipeg, has for the second\ntime in succession gained the scholarship in medicine at the University of\nManitoba. Before enlisting for overseas he had taken a scholarship in\nfirst year arts and medicine at thc\nUniversity of Alberta. He was educated at the Nelson public school,\nWestern Canada college, Calgary, and\nGeorge   Watson's   institute,   Edinburgh.\nNelson News oi the Day.\nHave you seen  J. J. Walker's dollar\nwindow?   The bargains offered are exceptional.     Storo   open   all   day   today.\n(3338)\nFodder Coi\nWe have two varieties\nFodder Corn, NorthweBt De!\nand Longfellow; also ha.\nLong Red Mangel, Gold!\nTankard Mangel, ImperJ\nSwede Turnip, etc.\nTHE BRACKMAN-1\nMILLING CO., LTD. I\n\u2022  i1\nJeise L. Lasky    pxetentf\n'\u25a0! *Wlt*LIAM D. TAYLOR'S\nProctuctiprb\nThewmmm\nHOUR\nWA ELLIOT! DEXTER\nClCpamntount'J'icliire\nlaaaa.\u00aba>Bft^l.i\nWould you lift the veil and peep behind at the unknown things that rule life and love?\nSee on the screen Augustus Thomas' master-thrillerl]\nOne of the greatest popular hits ever played in America..\nUSUAL\np   r  i p  e \u00ab\n\"Won by a Nose\"\nUSUAL\nP   R   I   C   E   Si\nSEE   OUR\nDOLLAR WINDOW\nCHANGE\nDon't miss these bargains. They\ninclude many articles you want.\nJ. J. WALKEE\nJowolor,   Optician   &    Engraver\nI\nWooPaib.ee Hardware Company, Ltd,\nBAKER STREET\nNELSON, B, 0,\n$1,050.00 F. 0. B. NELSON\nCHEVROLET 490 -\nTills car la' jtist as complete as lhe more expensive ones. Self-\nstarter, demountable rims arid electric lights. Economical to operate.\nMor^ miles .per gallon of. gasoline. Ask the many satisfied owners\nabout it.' Demonstrations on request. Just one left. Another carload\nnext week.\nBABY GRAND   - -- \u2022\u25a0$1,895.00\nMCLAUGHLIN   SPECIAL _ $2,76*5.00\nTRAFFIC   2-TON   TRUCK  -.- _ $2,750.00\nFORD 1-TON TRUCK, second hand.\n$750.00\nNELSON TRANSFER COMPANY\n\u25a0* IMPORTANT   BUSINESS.\nEagles   meet   tonight at  8   o'clock.\n(3346)\nA general meeting of thn Nelson nnd\nDistrict 'Horticultural society wilt bo\nheld tonight at Iho city hall at 8\no'cloch. (11345)\nLOST\u2014Brown   Norfolk   coat   from   car.\nPleaso  phono   167. (3347)\nThere will he a special meeting of\nthe Children of Mary sodality at the\nconvent on Friday evening at half past\nseven. (3348)\nA farewell social afternoon to Mrs.\nE. Y. Brake will he given hy the\nWomen's IriHbtutt! Social club In the\nK. Of P. ball Thursday afternoon. All\nmembers and their friends aro cordially invited to attend. Cards and refreshments. (3349)\nFor Sale\nSmall ranch on. Cemetery, road\u201420 lots,'. B-roomed\nhouse, hay barn, stable;.pig house, 40 bearing'fruit, trees,\nsmall fruits.   Few minutes from' caf line, -j\nCharles P. McHardy\nInsurance Phone 135 Real Estate\n\u25a0 -._--j-L_-_:\nNOTICE.,\nThe road will he blocked at China\ncreek from Wednesday, noon until Bat'\nurday noon.\nPROVINCIAL    PUBLIC   WOIUCS    DEPARTMENT.\nMay 24,  1921. (3350)\nDon't forget the home .cooking sale\non Saturday, 28th. by* Circle No. 1 of\nthe Methodist Ladies' Aid, to be held\nin the vacant store on Baker street\nnext   to  Emory & Walley's. (3351)\nThc Daughters of Scotia meet tonight, at 8 o'clock. Initiation, social\nevening. v (3352)\n. The   Mongolian   .antelope   can   run\nat the rate of 60 miles an hour.\nJOHN DALY\nCABINET CIGAR STORE\nHAIL ORDERS ATTENDED TO\nPROMPTLY\nSmoking Tobacco, Snuff, Pipe, and\nFull   Stock   of   Cigars,   Cigarottos,\nOther Smokorn' Suppliot\nIF   YOU   WANT   RB6ULT8   TRY\nA    CLASSIFIED    AD.    IT    HELPS\nFOR SALE\nOne of tho nicest homes In NeJ\naon. Large, well-built house, wlf\nall modern conveniences, situate!\non five full lots, close in, and\"cloa\nto carllne.\nLoto of fruit of all kinds.\nI have residences for -gale t~\n$1,000.00  to  $4,000.00.\nI also havo several Improved\nunimproved pieces of land fbr *a;tl<J\nD. A. M'FARIiAtfD-.\nXnmiranco, GroouliiU Coal, Baal |\nEHtato. >\nBoom 6 X. W. O. Bile.      Phon\u00bb \u25a0\nWILLS & HANSON\nFOR\nShoe Repair;\nParcels   mailed   one   way   free   .\nout-of-town;       customers.       Ston\nopen 7 a. in.; closed 5 p. m.\nJOSEPHINE STREET,     NELSON\nNelson Opera House\nMISS VERNA FELTON AND THE ALLEN PLAYERS\nTopight at 8:30\n\"A PAIR OF SIXES\"\nTomorrow Night\u2014\"Outcast\"\nMatinee Saturday at 2:15\u2014\"The Cave Girl.\"\nPRICES: 85c, SSc, 35c.    INCLUDES TAX'\nSEAT SALE  AT  CITY  DRUG  8TORE\nHow  well   do  you   see\nIf you find yourself frowning or\nsquinting at your work, It ts an\nindication that you are straining\nyour eyes. Such a strain, if not\ncorrected, will seriously impair your\nsfght. Wouldn't It be wise and\nsensible to correct this error NOW\nAn appointment with me will nave\nyour eyes and give you proper via*\nion and comfort.\nA. HIGGINB0THAM\nSxd&sivs Opton:3triet,\nX.W.O. Block Holoon, B. C. .\nSogers Building, Vanconvor, B.C.\nJust Like Custom Made\nShirts\nJust like custom made\u2014only they\ncost so much less. Otherwise you'fl\nfind them just as comfortable,\nJust as et>od fitting and\ndetail aa though you had them made\nto order. And you don't have to go\nto the .bother of being measured;\njust pick out as many as you want.\nWe have all sizes; all sleeve lengths.\nS2.50. $2-75. 83.00 to\nS5.50\nEmory & Walley\nTHE  LARGEST.EXCLUSIVE MEN'S STORE'IN<THE  INTERIOR\n\\ int -|-'i      i **;  '***'*  *'*' '   **\n\u2014\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1921_05_25","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0396785","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1921-05-25 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1921-05-25 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}