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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" 253\nFor Latest\nSPORTING NEWS\nSee Page 9\nt\nFor Latest\nNEWS OF MARKETS\nSee Page 8\nVOL. 20.\nNELSON, B. C, TUESDAY MORNING, APRIL 4, 1922.\n\"NO. 289.\nMARSHALL'S\nIPOfiNT\niculture Commission Vis-\nIs Florida  on  Immigra-\nn Concerns\nOSITION. ADVISES\nINCLUDING EXPERTS\nuidei* South American\nlelegates Should Have\nknowledge of Dairy Cattle\nAWA, April S.\u2014The appolnt-\nof Duncan Marshall, former\niters of agriculture In Alberta, as\nmmlssloner of the department of\nnUure, .was challenged by the\nof the opposition when the\n.salon of the estimates of the de-\n-ment of agriculture was resumed\ne house tonight. Mr. Melghen\n:ed that In this appointment the\nservice commission had been\nridden and an office filled which\nas not thought necessary to fill\nno late administration. In addl-\nthe salary fixed for the position\ne civil service commission had\nincreased by $1800 from $4200\n1000. This was the same salary\naid to the deputy minister, and\ncountry had the spectacle of the\nty minister and the rommlsslon-\nIving out diametrically opposite\nments on departmental affairs,\nn. W. R. Motherwell, minister of\nultme, said that the minister\nsjnder consideration the revision\nle Agricultural Instruction act,\nr which $1,100,000 had been\ntod annually..\nOnly to Investigate,\nact expires  In   March,   1921.\nMr. Marshall had been appointed\ncommissioner to make an inves-\nlon and not to the older office of\nimlssloncr of agriculture.\"\npn. T. A. Crorar asked If the poll then were not permanent,\n\u2022fo,\" replied Mr.  Motherwell.\n,\u00abow long will it last?\" asked the\nTensive leader.\nQt months,\" replied Mr. Mother-\nIK,    Melghen    wanted    to    know\nher Mr. Marshall had visited the\n| Vrn states on pubtte'TniHlTiess.\nI r.   .Motherwell    stated    that Mr.\n^ haJl'a visit to Florida had  been\nI ie Interest nMho department ol\nnterlor In connection with lmmi-\n[ on. It was also proposed to send\n; and Mr. Dryden to South Amer-\n[ o develop a market for Canadian\n[ bred stock.\nIn for a Good Time.\nI r.   Melghen   asked   Mr.   Mother-\nI to make a note of any Imml-\njta   who   came   to   Canada   from\nIda. Kvldently Mr. Marshal:\n| in for a good time.   Was his trip\nlor Ida chiefly for the purpose of\nI iff purebred slock  or to encour-\nI Immigration?    He    waa    afraid\nMr.   Marshall   would   not   have\nII time In his six months of office\n\" tudy the Agricultural Instruction\n, H. Hanson. Conservative, York-\nJ ury. wanted to know whether\nI Marshall  was  engaged  In   for-\nI ling' his  own   business   interest?\nII looking for a market tor pure-\nstock. <\nJ e minister replied that he under-\n[ l Mr. Marshall had sold his live\nA.   Brethen,   East   Peterboro,\n| 1 that some one specially inter-\nIn  dairy animals  should  be  tn\n(deputation which went  to  South\nrlca.\nsj Is suggestion was further pressed\n1 is minister by Hon. 8. F. Tolmle,\nI former minister of agriculture.\nI\nULSTER FUND\nFAMOUS SHRINE IN RUINS\n8T. ANNE OE BEAUPRE CATHEDRAL BURNS\nThe picture shows the famous basellica and other buildings nt St. Anne do Baupre. Quebec, .destroyed by fire\non Wednesday. No. 1, St. AnneSs church; 2, the old church; 8. Hold Stairs; 4, Francisco eOjivent; 6, Convent\nchapel;   6, Redemptorlst  Monastery;   7, St.  Rosero eonvenr;   8, the College, i\n -\u201e.     \u25a0 ,     I 1         . 1 '\u2014r -JC\t\nWARNS AGAINST\nCARELESS WORD\nAmbassador Urges Propaganda to Combat Unfriendliness of Nations\nliast Business Men Dis-\nl.uss Promoting Peace,\nlinppressing Crime\nI'SLFAST,  April   I.\u2014Thrcs  thou-\nV business men'met In private ses-\ntodny and  Inaugurated a fund\n^Ulster propaganda,  aa was  rrc\nTiended recently by Field Marshal\nJ'Uenry Hughes Wilson, former\nI'f of the general staff.   The meet\n[,'discussed plan* for promoting\nand    suppressing crime.    Blr\ntea Craig, the Ulster premier, was\nf1 origins I speaker.\n[PROVE REVISED\nEXPRESS. SCHEDULE\n|;ABHINGTON, April I.\u2014A gen-\nrevlsed schedule for charges on\nLeas shipments between United\n|l*s and- Canadian points, which\n\u25a0(American Railway Express com-\nli\/ submitted to the Interstate com-\nTie commission February 2S, was\nI *oved today and will go into ef-\nI''April JO.\nI.'.e new schedule wag necessitated,\ncommission's report on the pro-\n| 1 declared, by the faot that ex-\n]>s rates In Canada generally had\n|,*me  higher  than  In  the  United\nTea and through rates^on Interna-\nal shipments consequently had to\n.nodlfied. .   ... *    >.\nI ie changes were Hid to be minor\n] aoat cases.\nVANCOUVER, April J.\u2014(By Cana-\ntlan Press.)\u2014\"There Is nothing go-\n;ng on behind the scenes which any-\nV)dy need be the slightest big\" nnx-\nous or worried about,\" said Sir\n\\uckland Oeddes, ambassador to\nWashington from the court of St.\nfames, in the course of bin speech\n>efore a gathering under the nu-\nmices of the Vancouver board of\ntrade  tonight.   \/ \u2022  \u25a0\nSneaking as one whose business It\nvas to know just what was gnlng on\nn world politics, Sir Auckland at-\nmrcd his hearer that there was no\ntruth In the Insinuation, so often\nspoken and still oftener written,* that\n\u2022He nations were on the verge of an-\nHher great war. \"They tell you it\n:ant be avoided,\" said Sir Auckland.\n'Where there is smoke there must\n,e fire.\" is the only ground they have\n'or their pessimism. And that Is only\nmother of those pious sayings which\nmean nothing.\" .\nPrelude   to   Sanity.\nExpressing the conviction that the\nevellng process In world trade, .which\na bringing to this continent and oih-\n\u2022r distant lands the .same business\n'.rpresslon which had afflicted Eu-\n\u2022ope Immediately after the war, was\nhe Inevitable nnd necessary prelude\no the sane and Bound rebuilding of\nvorld trade, the British ambassador\no the United Stairs urged upon his\nlearcra the necessity for pursuing a\nleliberate propaganda against the\n\u25a0arcless word and action, which was\nhe chief cnuse. of misunderstanding\nwtween the_ two great bodies of\nSngllsh-speaklng peoples. He suggested that not only ehonld the busi-\nles men of Canada refrain from un-\nrlendly\" criticism of the people of\ntther nations, but they should take\nin active part In combnttlng the pos-\ndble III effecta of the unfriendliness\nif others. V\nAdviiae   Be   Friendly    \u00bb '\nTime and again In the course of his\n\u2022rave and earnest speech which he\nlellvered to Vancouver's huslness\nnen. Sir Auckland returned to his\nheme of \"be friendly\" with all peoples. He asserted that even those\nnations which behaved clumsily In\nUiese days of reorganization were\nmly striving blindly to find a way\no permanent peace, and ho reiterated\n^lfs conviction that tho perfect un-\nlerstandlng between the ^ Engllsh-\ntpeaking .nations which was a first\nlecessity to world peace, could be\nVst achieved through the efforts of\nCanadians, who were tn more senses\nnan one the nearest neighbors to the\nUnited States, and, therefore, the\n.est ambassadors of tho British Empire.' *\n\u2014\u2014\u25a0        m            \u25a0-\nMANITOBA ELECTIONS\nABOUT END OF JUNE\nWINNIPEG, April I.\u2014The pr.jy.n-\ncial government elections will he on\nir about June 29, according to aa\ninnouncement in the legislature tonight by Premier T. C. Morris. Ii\nwas made in reply to J. T. Halg,\nleader of the Conservative group,\nwho had suggested a date within the\nest two weeks ot June An being tho\nmost suitable to people In the country\nand city alike. The definite statement was made that the registration\nwork to he undertaken would cover\nthe whole province.\nPAY SUBSIDY TO\nRAILWAY COMPANY\nOTTAWJC. April S.\u2014William Ir\nvine. Labor, Calgary East, was Informed In the house of commons to-\nday that the first cash subsidy ins\npaid to the Csnadlan Northern mil-\nway by the Dominion government on\nSeptember 7, 1000. Ths total amount\nof th* cssh subsidy paid to this railway company wns |S1,\u00bb70,01\u00ab. Thr\ntotal amount of deficits p.ild by thr\ngovernment for th* operation of the\nCanadian government railways to De\ncember SI, 1\u00bb\u00abI,' wis |4\u00ab,0I7,072.\nADVISES HAND PICKED SETTLERS\nENTRftL E\nTORONTO, April 3.\u2014That the government should force the railways to\nplace on the market all the arable\nwestern land which they are at prcsy\nent holding for ^speculation, was the\ncontention advanced by Sir Clifford\nSift on, former minister of the Interior In the Laurler governmnt,\nduring the course of an address on\nImmigration problems today before\nthe   Canadian  club. . \u2022\nSir Clifford also deprecated any\nsuggestion of bnnuslng artisans, merchants and other city dwellers who\ndesire to migrate to Canada. Tbe\nonly policy which would -be successful was that of bringing In self-reliant and Independent farmers from\ntho British Isle*,  together with  pens-\nant from Caliclo, Hungary and other\nsuch  countries.\nSir Clifford referred' to the Thunder Bay district, south of Port Arthur and Fort William, as being capable of absorbing 60,000 or 60,000\nsettlers, and sa:a the Peare River\ncountry and the district along the\nHudson's Bay railway would provide\nvaluoblo land for agricultural settlement.\nPeasants from Galicia, Rohemla and\nHungary would mnke splendid settlers^ Sir Clifford said, and they could\nbe  got   by  hundreds   of  thousands.\nHowever, he suggested that If a\nmove were made to bring these to\nCanada they should ba hand picked in\nEurope.\nDean Millar Tells Rotarians\nHow to Abolish Hard\nTimes\nVANCOUVER, April 3.\u2014Suggestions\nfor  the  revival  of   business  and   the\nlul Ion of unemployment problems\nwore made In addresses at the opening\nsession of the Twenty-second district\nRotary convention, which brought\nmore than 2M0 delegates from both\nsides r.f Ihe line Inlo conference here\ntoday.\nKejilurrs of the first day's activities were the pageant of nations nn\niddressj by Vice-President Ralp Cum-\nmjAfft) who represents tho executive\nl*Mty, and an addrcxs on \"unemployment, cause and cure,\" by Dean Miller, of the University of Washington.\nWhen buisncHsmen Hnd governments learn to look Into the future\ntn terms of years and not weeks, and\nwhen luborcrs loae their fear that\nihelr Jobs will not last, unemployment and hard times will be, forever\nbanned;\"   declared   Dean   Miller.\nRev. O. O. Faille, Vancouver, appealed to all Rotorinnd to promote\nInternational friendship. No two countries were rloaer In friendship than\nCanada and tho United States, but\nthere was still some Ignorance and\nprejudice In both countries to be\nuprooted.\nTomorrow'! sessions will bring the\nconference to a close.\nNATIONAL CATHOUCS\nDEMAND RECOGNITION\nOTTAWA, April 3.\u2014The claims of\ntho National Catholic union to government recognition on the same basis as It Is accorded to the International unions were placed before the\ngovernment by a delegation today.\nThe union, It was stated, had a\nmembership approaching 60,000.\nWhen the government called conferences of labor the> National Catholic\nunion was entitled to send representatives to these conferences.\nThe othor requests made by the\ndelegation were that the government\nrestore holidays of New Year's,\nEpiphany, Ascension, Ail Paints' day\nand the Immaculate Conception as\nstatutory holidays; that Immigration\nhe restricted to farm labor pure and!\njlmple for \u2022 period of three yea\/s;\nihat pontage stamps and money be\nprinted in both French and .English,\nand, finally, that etepa be taken to\ndeal with unemployment.\nryemler King, replying to the del-\negattonr Mid that nny organisation\nwas at liberty to appear before the\ngovernment and make Us requests.\nHe wa* out prepared to make a definite announcement In regard to the\nparticular requests of tho delegation,\nbut promise! that the cabinet would\nfive them oareful consideration.\n\u25a0 i   -~ * \u2022\nMerchant Marine Insurance\nExceeds Forgone Millions\n-OTTAWA, April 3.\u2014Insurance ear-\nfled by the Canadian government\nmerchant marine- totals $41,110,720,\nit wss stated in the house this afternoon.\nGillen Conciliation Board to\nBe Renewed Regardless of\nStrike Policy\nOTTAWA, April 3.\u2014Tho allien\nconciliation hoard, which Investigated\nthe wage troubles between the Nova\nScotia miners and the British Empire\nSteel -corporation, will be unconditionally reconstituted irrespective of\nthe strike on the Job policy advocated\nhy J. B. Macljachlun, secretary of the\nUnited Mine Worker* of America,\ndistrict No. I'd. This was stated In\nthe house of commons today by Premier King In replying to Rt. Hon.\nArthur  Melghen.\nHon. James Murdock, minister of\nlabor, has been In communication\nwith Mr. GUIen of Toronto during the\npast two yenrs to obtain hie consent\nto act on the board the moment tt 1$\nreconvened, the premier* slated.\nOLD FEUD SHOWS\nRENEWAL SIGNS\nBERLIN. April 3.\u2014(AsRodated\nPress.)\u2014The old feud between Bavaria nnd Prussia shows signs of\nbreaking  out  afresh.\nThe Bavarian press complains of\nthe presenc of alleged Prussian\n*ples In Munich.- The Prussian commission of public order categorically\nlenics that he has nny agents In Bavaria but the Bayrisehe Staat Zel-\nting maintains that Prussian esplon\ntgo In Bavaria continues and that\nreports are being constantly for\nwarded to Berlin.\nTho Rcgensburg Anzelgor also pro-\nests against Prussian interference In\nBavarian affairs. This paper, the\nirgan of Dr. Held, the leader of the\nBavarian People's party In the diet,\npublishes a noteworthy article on\nhe recently founded Monarchical\nleague in Bavnria.  saying:\n\"The great ma Jorlly of the Ba -\nvnrian diet would certainly bo on the\nside of a reformed monarch. The re\npublic exists only so long aa the\nmonarchists think It expedient. The\npresent system will perish of Itself.\nThen will como a suitable moment\nfor the relntroductlon of- the mon-\nirchy.\".\nSTEAMER ARRIVALS\nNIeuw Amsterdam, at Flymouth,\nfrom New York.\nMatagoma, at Liverpool, from St.\nfohn.\nNUMEROUS POLITICAL\nPARTIES IN MEXICO\nMEXICO CITY, April 3.\u2014(Associated Press)\u2014A mid-summer election of\nmembers of the national congress. Is\nto be held In Mexico and the numerous parties are commencing to name\ntheir candidates and adopt their platforms.\nIt Is said that there are at least 400\norganized parties In Mexico, although\nless than half a dozen of these can\nbe considered factors In the election.\nThe efforts of the dominant parlies\nare now being directed to corralling\nthe votes of these small and com\nparatlvely  Insignificant  groups.\nWELSH NAPOLEON THROWS HIMSELF\nAi GOVERNMENT 10 IHE B\nAND SECURES VOTE OF C\nDevonshire Believes\n*- in the BuU Dog Breed\nfor Populating Canada\nLONDON.- April 3.\u2014(By Canadian Press Cuble).\u2014Tho Duke of\nDevonshire, former governor-general of Canada, addressing the\nRotary club of Sheffield at a\nclub luncheon, spoke of the need\nof population. He expressed tho\nview that it waa essential that the\ndevelopment of the Dominion and\nits direction should be In tbe\nhands of British people, whether\nborn In the old country or Canada.\nSHIP SEIZURE\nLE\nVessel Captured in Piratical\nFashion by Conspirators,\nSays Churchill\nLONDON, April 3.\u2014Tho British\nsteamer Upton, which was seized off\nthe Irltih roast last week by raiders,\nwho stowed Us cargo away In some\nunknown place, contained 400 rifles,\nnot 20,000 a a had been reported, 700\nrevolvers. 30 machine guns and 600,-\n000  rounds  of  rifle  ammunition,  to-\nLloyd George Throws Down Gauntlet on Genoa Conference\nIssue; Amendment of Want of Confidence Fails; Original Motion Carries; Opponents Admire Courage of\nPremier in Presenting Government,Case; Necessary to\nStabilize Exchange; Russia Must Give Guarant'\/\nLONDON, April S.\u2014The house of\ncommon? tonight, after an unexciting\ndebate, adopted by the substantial\nmajority of 278 Tremler Lloyd\nfleorge's resolution calling for confidence In the gov.rnment's policy on\ntho coming economic conference at\nGenoa.   The vote was 372 to 94.\n\"Prior to this the house, by a vote\nof 379 to 84, rejected an amendment\nproposed by John R. Clynes, Labor,\nwhich, whileN approving on International economic and financial conference^ declared that the government\nwas not competent to represent the\ncountry at such a conference and did\nnot have the confidence of the country.\nIn the early part of tho session the\nhouse passed an hour and 20 minutes\nof such tension aa It had not experienced for many months, when the\nprime minister, fresh from his retirement In the country, threw down the\ngauntlet to his opponents and declared that a vote on the hitherto innocuous Genoa resolution was tantamount to a vote of confidence or lack\nof confidence in the government,\nI*remler In Fighting Mood.\nIf Lloyd George has tired of office,\nas his son announctd on Saturday,\ncertainly he appeared in a fighting\nmood as he entered the house, amidst\na storm of cheering. Hi%rest had\nplainly benefited him, aa evidenced\nby his bronzed face and quick step,\nand  as  ho strode to  the ministerial\ngetheri with a  small quantity of ex-  bench hlfJ who]e beari      waj| tftat of\nplosives,  it  was  stated In  the house.\nof commons today by Winston\nChurchill,  secretory  for  the  colonies.\n1t\"*vas announced earlier that the.\nadmiralty had ordered an inquiry\ninto -*he  sehure.\nMr, Churchill said the v&sscl was\ncaptured in the highest piratical\nfashion by a party of conspirators\nhostile to. thn . provisional government and that tho Incident was a\nserious one, constituting a gross and\ndishonorable breach of tho true\u00a9\nwhich had been made, not with the\nprovisional government alone, but\nwith the duly elected representatives\nof the Irish peoplo.\nThe fact that such nn elaborate\nconspiracy pould be set forth In\nCork shows (hat the provisional government's control of tho Cork district is practically nonexistent, he\ncontinued. This Is remarkable, in view\nof tho fact, that public opinion In\nCork Is overwhelming In favor of\nthe treaty.\nMr. Churchill Mid ho was making\nthese, representations to the government, but that be realized tho British government's- responsibility to\nsafeguard Its own arms and ammunition.\nColonel John Ward, Indopendent-\nLobor member for Stoke-on-Trent,\nasked whether Mr. Churchill was\naware that this conspiracy hod been\ndiscussed In certain London clubs\nlast week. The secretary replied that\nif Mr. Ward would Inform what persons knew of the plan ho would act\nimmediately. Mr. Churchill denied\nthat onarchy reigned In Cork, adding, however, that there was no doubt\nthat tho provisional government's\ncontrol over the mutineers was very\nlax. He said he did not think It\ndesirable to statu what action the\ngovernment contemplated to recover\nthe seized property and bring tho\nculprits to Justice.\nPERSONAL PIQUE\n\u201e     PROVOKES CRISES\nSANTIAGO. April 3.\u2014(Associated\nPress.)-^lnstability of Chilean cabinets is largely responsible for tho\n\"great evils now besetting the country,\" President Alessandrl said In a\ncommunication to members nf his\nlatest official family, in which he\nasked them to withdraw their resignations, given Inst month after a\nmotion of lack of eonfldenco was rejected by the  chamber of  deputies.\nTho president haa taken tho stand\nthat cabinets should only resign In\nface of a frank vote to that effect\nin   parliament.\nObservers of politics hero agree\nthat the ministerial crises usually\nare provoked through personal pique\nor, as one publication expressed It,\nwith the \"deliberate Intention of opening the way for a scramble for office.\" Three minlslerles have come\nand gone in President Alessandrl's\nfirst year In office, whilo there were\n18 different cabinets during his predecessor's term.\nThe newspaper El Mcrcurlo bitterly\nattacks tho methods of \"plotting th*\nfall of the government,\" which, It\nsays. Is creating parliamentary anarchy.\nCOXSIDKK  APPOINTING\nTRADK  COMMISSIONER\nOTTAWA, April 3.\u2014Tho question\nof appointing trade commissioners to\nMexico Is under consideration by the\ngovernment, Hon. James Robb, minister ot trade nnd commercej told\nHon. H. II. Stevens, Conservative,\nVancouver Center, In the house this\nevening. The government la also\nconsidering Inaugurating & steamship\naervlce from Canada to Mexico both\non Atlatnio and Pacific coasts.\na man entering upon a great fight\nwith every determination to win and\nwith confidence in his own powers.\nThe house was crowded, Interest\nbeing accentuated by conflicting reports on whether the premier would\ndemand a vote of confidence In connection with the Genoa resolution, or\nwhether, In view of the delicate political situation, he would sidestep the\nIssue.\nLloyd George's speech was obviously not an attempt at oratory such as\nhe is capable of, but was rather an\nexhibition of what critics in the gallery palled a masterly handling of hit-\naudience. He coaxed, rajoled, joked I\nand defied In turn, but each phase of\nthe sptech fitted In with the preceding one like a carpenter's Joint.\nClover Oratory.\nStep hy step ho built up his defence, sometimes with laughter, often\nwith the most serious declarations,\nbut always aiming at the name goal\n\u2014the continued life of the government. Rarely did he encounter a\nhostilo voice, while, on the other\nhand, many times his opponents\nmade good matured Interpellations\nwhich were taken ns admissions that\nhis point had reached home.\nThe premier began in a commonplace manner and then after a few\nmoments suddenly hurled Into the\nhouse his message of defjance\u2014it\nthe Genoa resolution was defeated, it\nmeant a vote of nonconfidenco in the\ngovernment. He delivered his ultimatum in measured tones, with head\nerect, his Iron gray hair thrown back\nand eyes flashing.\nEvery word was followed amide*\nImpressive silence. It was a moment\nthat thrilled even his opponent!*\u2014the\nlittle Welsh Napoleon thus throwing\nhis government and perhaps his own\ncareer Into the balance. There were\nno ironical hoots ns so often greet a\nministerial declaration from the opposition.   They respected his courage.\nThen calmly, analytically, he built\nup his argument, now leaning in confidential attitude against the desk and\nagain standing back and thrusting\nhome somo point with clenched fists,\nas his voice vibrated with emotion.\nTeace was necessary for the rees-\ntablishment of Europe, the Genoa\nconferenco was necessary for the re-\nestablishment of peace, and Interjected with this was the fate of the\npresent British government. He denied that his resolution had been\naltered from the original snd weakened because of difficulties In the\ncabinet.\nTwice he referred to predictions\nabout the fall of his government and\nJokingly gave some advice as \"a dying minister.\"\nIn the midst of bis reference to\nRussia he took a sly gibe at Mr.\nChurchill, who sat- next to him,\nhunched up with his chin on his\nchest. It had been widely published\nthat Mr. Churchill differed greatly\nwith the premier on the policy of\npartial recognition of the Soviet. The\npremier, in drawing a parallel with\nthe French revolution, cited how Pitt\nhad failed to make peace with the\nrevolutionists, and, after a slight\npause, added with a smile:        #\n\"I believe he met with opposition\nfrom ono of the mast influential\nmembers of his cabinet\"\nChurchill Joins In Laugh.\nMr. Churchill joined with the house\nIn the roar of laughter at hla expense, which was renewed when\nLloyd George remarked;\n\"Fortunately, I have no such opposition.\" and turned to Mr. Churchill\naa he spoke.\nThe premier sat  down amid an-\nother burst of apptauff*   nd the debate was begun. \u2022\nResult Satls^   ory.\nThf result la reg T id as exceedingly satisfactory tt,J ae prime minister, as the comb t Laborltea and\nindependent Liber number about\n100 and the dieh > i about 50, all of\nwhom might ht > been expected to\noppose the premlt\/a resolution.\nIndorsee French Policy.\nThe prime minister's speech. Inviting parliament to vote confidence in\nthe government's Genoa policy, was\nnoteworthy inasmuch because it Indorsed the French policy toward\nRussia, although Ltoyd George himself displayed much sympathy for the\nentirely conciliatory attitude toward\nRussia, and further, in that It sought\naccommodation with the Soviet government, lest by waiting it might\neventually be necessary to deal with\na still more irreconcilable or militaristic regime, which might embroil the\nwhole of Europe.\nWhile emphasising that nothing\ncould be gained by waiting for the\noverthrow of the Soviet administration, the prime minister accepted the\nFrench standpoint, demanding guarantees with resptct to Russia's debta\nand obligations, and stipulating a period of probation of nli months or a\nyear, but less If Russia gave'the necessary guarantees before full recognition was accorded.\nThe premier indicated hla belief In\nthe insincerity of the conversion of\nNikolai Lenino and the Soviet government to a' diluted form of communism,\nWould Stabilise Exchange.\nPerhaps tbe most Interesting of\nLloyd George's propoaala was that\nexchange should be stabilized at some\nmaintainable figure, but no details\nwere given as to how ha proposed to\neffect this* except th*tw It might be\nattained by some form of international cooperation and pressure.\nThe debate which followed the premier's speech was rather tame. It\nwaa early realized that there would\nbo no breakaway of tho Unionists,\nwhich would endanger the confidence\nresolution.\nThe rather unusual eourse of demanding division on tho main resolution was followed after the Clynes\namendment was defeated, when\nfinally 94 members recorded their\nopposition to the resolution of confidence. The prime minister and his\nsupporters managed to keep tho\nwhole .question resolutely on the Genoa decision, but a motion will bo\nmoved on Wednesday by Sir William\nJoynson-Hicks, Unionist, to the effect that \"In the opinion of the house,\nlack of definite and coherent principle In the policy of the present coalition government can only be remedied by the establishment of a ministry composed of men united by\nidentity of political principles.\"\nAfter pointing out that the treaties\nprovided for reparation because there\n(Continued   on   Page   2)\nTHE WEATHER\nVICTORIA, April I\u2014Nelson\nvicinity: Cm. rally fair and a\ncolder. Mln.\nNdson 3J\nVictoria    44\nKamloops!    , m SO\nPrlnco Rupert    13\nDawson   _..   4\nWinnipeg \u201e \u201e__.._ li\nSan Francisco         \u25a0    S3\nTontlcton     _....._ .._ 40\nCranbrook   \t\nSaskatoon \t\nVancouver  \u201e.\nBarkervllla  __\nAtlln    _ \t\nCalgary  \t\nTort land\t\nSeattle    .\t\nGrand Forks ......\nlUgina \u201e___.._\nII\n. 30\n. 44\n. 30\n31\n31\n. 40\n4\u00ab\n.41\n. 55\nand\nmtis\nMax.\n47\nII\n\u20220\n40\n40\n44\nII\n\u20221\n13\nsi\n40\n43\n*K\nio\n14\n10\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, APRIL 4, 1022,\nLeadm|I(itdsoffteWest\nWtvsr*\nmmhr timmoaomm*\nTable d'Hota\nA la Carta\nThe Premier Hotel ol the InMtt\nGEORGE BENWELL, Pr.prl*t.r.\nSPECIAL  SUNDAY  DINNER, ft. 00\nService Unexcelled\nINCOMPARABLY THE FINEST TEA ROOM  IN  M. 0.\nOpsn Dally 10 *, m. t* Midnight Mutl* an* Dsn.ln*\nTh* l.t.it Sundsss, le* Cold Drink* and  lc*s\nAfl.rnoon T.\u00ab (2 p. m. I. S p, m.) 28*\nH**dqu*rt*r*  for   All   Trawling   M*n,   Minini   Mail   and   T.urlsts\nEUROPEAN    PLAN\nROOMS,   SIM   UP\nlll'UB-wnilnm Longmife, Calgary: Wlnlaw; G. C. Skinner, Calgary: (I\n.1. S. Usrhamps. Koaslunil; T. A. Hrrrrly, )lathurnt Hall, Karrlu; W. J. JottlMson\nMrtnlrt-al; Robert Strachan, Ferule; John Cranbrnnk; J. H. Thompson, N,w DMU\nKvans,   L.nk*-   Louise;   Airs.   J.   Winters,    ver;   Chris    Nrwooim-n,    Vnlliran.\nAMERICAN AND EUROPEAN PLAN\nWell     Lighted    Sj.mpTc    r.ooma\nHOTEL STRATHCONA\nThe Home of tha Commercial Man\nH. W. SHORE, Proprietor\nQUEENS HOTEL\nEuropean     and     American      Plan\nttaam  Hsat In  Every Ream\nA, LAPOINTE,  Praprlaitr\nyVEENS\u2014E. Norman Mirror Lake;\nA. C. Houghton Crawford Hay; E.\nStone, Waneta; E. Terzian, C Terzian.\nHull; <1. Graham. Erie; F, M. Barrett.\nErullvale; W. Wilton, Psssmore;\ndcorge P. Hushes, l. Kasmusser, Nakusp;  James Adelard,  Creiuon.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\n616  VERNON  ST,  EAST\nComfortable  Rooms.  Hot and Csld\nWater.    Dining  Room In\nConnection.\nRates $1.00 and Up.\nOCCIDENTAL HOTEL\nowned and run by Canadians    No\nalien labor employed.\nKoom and board, per month\u2014-835\nE. KERR, Proprietor\nStirling Hotel\nIf looking for a modern and\nclean room or apartment it will\nbs to your Interest to cell at tht\nStirling Hotel before rentiag elsewhere,       P. H. BUSH, Proprietor\n(Continued from Page 1)\nwas something to repnlr, and declaring that alteration of the treaty of\nVersailles would only transfer the\nburden from Germany tn Frnnee,\nLloyd George continued:\n\"You will he transferring the burden of the *0 millions who are responsible for the devastations to the-\n40 millions who wore the victims of\nthe devnstn lions. Therefore, it Is\nuseless to say Ihat giKantlo reparations nre responsible for the economic disorganization of Kuropc.\"\nThe premier here went into the\ntwo things that he said must be considered in donling with the reparations problem, the danger of precipitating a crisis which would not he\ncon fin,m! to Germany, Jf payments\nbeyond her power were insisted upon\nand the necessity of no! Judging Germany's ultimate capacity to pay by\nher present en purity\u2014conditions\nwhich could properly be Judged, not\nat Genoa, but hy the machinery of\nthe treaty, under which France could\nnot forego her right to have an adjudication.\nrnfRlr lo Frnnec.\n\"It would be tin fall I\" France,\"\nsaid .Mr. LlCjd George, \"nnd she certainly could not be expected to submit lo tbe judgment of I conference\nwhere Germany, Austria and Russia\nwere rtpres* nieil, tin such n malter\nwhich vitally affected her very existence.\"\nThe premier argued that the condition of Europe would never be restored If Hi'' nut Inns proceeded nn\nthe assumption that If the conference\nfailed to achieve anything It therefore was a failun'.\nAiMresMng his opponents, especially the Labor party, the premier\nadvised them not to tie their hands\nin   advance   by   adversely   criticizing\nNELSON'S BEST CAFES\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\n820   Bsksr   8trsst,   N.ls.n,   B.  C.\nOPEN   DAY  AND  NIGHT\n11:30 t* 2:30 Sp.cisl Lunch. .35s*\n6:30 to S:00 p. m, Supp.r..35\u00ab*\nPhon* 164\nMADDEN HOTEL\nMRS.  MADDEN,   Prop.\nFirtt   Class   Rooms   by   th*   Day,\nW.\u00abk or Month.\nEvsry Consldsrstion Shown **\nGu.st., , _ i;\nCor. Bsksr and Ward Sta, N.'aon\nMADDEN\u2014C'harr. Webb, Snlmo: V.\nBcsur, Hanrlon: J. A. Hrumlhurst. Crowr*\nN'errt; Jrrlrn Maber. Slocrrn; .Mrs Swan\nPeters,  Arrowhead.\nTHE KOOTENAY HOTEL\nQ.  Wanuk, T.  Silitch,   Pr.prlst.rs,\nA ham. far tha world at r.a.an.blt\nrataa.\nOp.n   night  and  day.    First*clsss\ndining  room. Comfortsbls rooms.\n318 Vsrnsn St.     Nsar Post Olfio.\nHIGH CLASS RESTAURANT\nROYAL CAFE\nOpsn day *nd night. Quick mit-\nIcs. Dinner, 11:30 *. ill. to 1:00\np.  in,  36c.    Special  Supper   5:30\np.  m.   to   8:00   p.  m.,  35c.\nPh*. \u2022 182 604 Bak.r 3tr**t\nTHE L. D. CAFE\nThe Most Exclusive Restaurant In\nthe City, open Pay and Night.\nService unexcelled. Furnace heated\nRooms  with   Hot   and  fold   Water\nIn   connection.\nBaker Street Phone 134\nVANCOUVER HOTELS\nKOOTENAY\u2014Colin Campbell. W. H.\n>Uri\u25a0iforrt. Vancouver; C. Rouch, Hall;\nK.  l'oshachoff,  Wlnlaw.\nClassified Ads.\nBring Results\nHOTEL MARTINIQUE\n1176    Gr.nvill.   Str.at.\nCosy,    bright   rooms.   Juat    ths\nplacs   for   your   vacation.     Rats.\nmoderate.    Writ, for particulars.\nMRS.   A.   PATTERSON\nLsta \u00abf  Royal  Hotal, Granvill* St\nIF    YOU    WANT   RESULTS   TRY\nA CLASSIFIED ADVT.\nSELL YOUR\nUsed Article,\nWhen you Rive Central\na number, and are waiting\nfor your answer, you will\nhear a faint ringing noise.\nThat signifies that Central\nhas completed your call\nand that the hell of the\ncalled party is being rung.\nAdditional equi p m e n t\nhas been installed in the\nNelson exchange to give\nthis service to the subscribers.\n\u25a0 Listen for this ringing\nfnoise. It is a mechanical\nland automatic assurance\nthat you are lining served.\nThousands of Daily News readers are looking\nfor bargains in household, farm and other effects\nwhich are no longer needed by their owners.\nTell what you have to offer and the price you\nwant for it in a\nDAILY NEWS\nClassified Ad.\nThere is no better way in which to turn used\narticles into money, Vfc a word, 6 insertions for\nthe price of four when cash accompanies order.\nAlso On Arms. Very Sore.\nCuticura Healed,\n\"For three years my daughter\ntroubled with pimples on her face\nsnd arms. They were hard, large,\nand red, and some of them festered\nand were very sore. Her face wss\ndisfigured for a while, and she stayed\nin nearly alt tbe time.\n\"She tried different remedies but\nthey did not do any good so began\nto use Cuticura Soap and Ointment\nand after using three cakes of Cuticura Soap and two hours of Cuticura\nOintment she wss healed.\" (Signed)\nMrs. S. F. McDuffy, 20 Franklin St.,\nExeter, N. H.. Dec. 31,1920. *\nr Olve Cuticura Soap, Ointment snd\nTtlcum the daily cate of your skin.\ntho conference, adding thnt this rov-\nrrnment would not Ian forever.\nLloyd Onrge, hew uttered hla\nwarning, \"to whoever succeeds us,''\nthat there would he further conference* nocopsary for the restoration of\nEurope, nnd then look up the question of international trade nnd the\nessential prohletn of restoring Its ma*\nchlnery. Dealing with this point ho\ncontender! that Great Britain was 30\nper cent more dependent upon international trade than nny other country, and that the complicated prewar\nmachinery of that trade had heen\nshattered*aa If hy a bomh. It was\nnot merely that Europe was Impov-\nrished, he said, hut that tho machinery of exchanges had broken down.\nUrging the necessity of Inducing\nthe nations to balance their budgets\nas one means of stabilizing exchange,\nhe declared that, ahove all, it wns essential thnt there he real pence\nanions the nations.\nPrejudice May Cloud Uea*m,\nThis leads me\/' the premier wont\n\u25a0;to the most controversial issue\nwhich will come before the Genoa\nconference\u2014peace in Russia, and\npeaoo with Ritsfia\/' declaring that\nRussia must recoKnize. as a test Of\nher filness for entering the community of nations, all the conditions imposed upon and expected ot civilized\ncommunities. Mr. Lloyd George conceded Hint this wns a question m\nwhich legitimate prejudice would\nperhaps cloud reason\u2014a situation in\nwhich the doctrines of the Bolshevik\nhad caused wrath nnd Just jingor,\nmaking exceedingly difficult the exercise of a composed judgnient.\nDialing with the constant rumors\nthat Russia was preparing hu^e armies to overrun Europe, etc., Mr. Lloyd\nGeorge argued ihat it was Impossible\nto lenrn what was happening In that\n\u2022impenetrable Jungle,\" bul t\"nt \"\ntrade were opened with Russia the\nforeign traders there would know\nand would not slay It the rumors\nwere true. Moreover, lie continued,\nbene wild rumors wro used ns an\nexcuse nnd a justification for the\nhuge nrmies of other countries, which\nwould never he reduced until there\nwas European peace,\nMust Recognize Conditions\nThe conditions laid down at Cannes\nmeant that Russia must recognize\nall ihe conditions \u2022 imposed and ae-\npted hy civilized communities as a\ntest of fitness fur entering the community of 'nations, because a country which repudiated Hh obligations\nbecause it changed lis government,\nwas n country with which one could\nnot   deal.\nLloyd George here went at some\nlength Into the Russian question,\nnoting that there wen* Indications of\nomplitc chance of attitude on the\npart of Russia and declaring that If\nshe appreciated the conditions to be\nimposed, there would he a real basis\nfor peace, hut that no further recognition nf Russia would he involved\nuntil the hous.- approved it. He went\nlikewise Into the stipulations regarding Itussia that she must recount ze\nher obligations, although not being\nexpected to pay immediately, and that\nshe must establish Impartial tribunals\nand cense nttucks on other countries'\ninstitutions, and upgreHsiVi1 notion\nUKainst    her   neighbors.\nlb facf,*. saldatfie premier. Ihe pact\nembodied In the league of natloiiH\nwould have to be extended in principle to Russia sn that she would\nundertake not to at lark her neighbors, nnd vice versa. Al the same\ntime he did not believe it would be\npossible tn take the responslbillt.; provided In the leapue covenant for rte-\nfendinjr, nny frontier attacked In that\npart   of   the   world.\nAlluding to recent speeches :.y Pre-\nmfer Lenine. describing the retreat\nfrom communism, the prime minister\n,*aid if these utterances represented\na real determination on the part nf\nRussia In its dealings with the world,\nsuch as respect for private property,\nthe rlKhts of Individuals, fairplay to\nthose Invested In Russlu nnd acknowl-\nedgeme-nt of her honorable debts, then\nthere existed n real basis upon which\nthey could  meet.\nRest Depends on Russia\nLloyd GeorRe Indira ten that after\nparliament had npprnved of the prin-\niplc of recognition, the further stages\nof recognition would hv. pursued in the\nmanner of most other peace treaties.\nThe feeling had been very generally\nexpressed, he said, that before full\nnnd ceremonial diplomatic represen-.\ntation had been noonrded in Russia,\nprobationary periods should be imposed.\nThe progress of full recognlt ion\nwnuld -depend   ii|M,n   Itussia.\n\"Frankly, the way some of the\nmore important clauses nf the Rrillflh\ntrade nKreement have been violated\nIs  not   encouraging,\"  he  added.\nIn this connection, tho premier re-\ncalk d the fact that diplomatic representation was actSirded to Germany\nsix months nfter ratification of the\npeace treatv ami he further Indicated\nthat Kussia would l-o required to\nprove thai Khe hail ej*lahlishcd sufficient control over organizations engaged In challenging (he new policy\nof the Soviet. a,\nMeats Psychological View\nRe suggested that during this period\nof probation, representation he 'by\ncharges d'affaires. These, he added,\nwere the conditions which he proposed the Rritlsh delegates would sllb-\nit nt the Genoa conference. Such\nan arrangement, although It might not\nrealize nil expectations, would open\nan nutlet for trnde nnd the effect\nfrom a psu.'holng|cal viewpoint would\nbe great.\nThe alternative, he said, was tn do\nnothing   until   one  day   it   would   be\nJaunty and Crisp\nThe spirit of eternal youth is in these Chiffoi\nTaffeta Frocks with their blithe embroiilerie.'\nand festive ribbon panels. Quaint bateau neck\nlines and picturesque bodies feature bouffan\nstyles, some with petal hemjines. These arc suel\ninexpensive Frocks,' yet sturdy for street wear\nin black, new brown and blue shades. Fron\nS25.00 to 840.00.\nMILLINERY\u2014Tne peak of the Easter style\nis achieved in a shipment of pattern hat* jusl\narrived.   Unusually graceful and charming, oui\ni hats are making a great appeal. Styles of eveo\n\"type  are   included  in  the  spring's  cheiishe<\nstraws and fabrics.\nTHE FIRST warm, bright day come down\nand see our new Voiles, Organdies,  Muslins,\nEponge, Foulards, etc.   They are a riot of beauteous skades and colors\u2014with the prices at\nnew low level.\nSTAMPED WORK\u2014A nice new assortment\nof stamped work. Very handsome in rtesijfl.\nTick out a piece for your leisure hour.   '\nTHE NELSON DRY GOODS CO.\nLADIES' WEAR SPECIALISTS\nreported that the Soviet government\nhad disappeared and some totally\ndifferent government had replaced\nit. When would that happen? the\npremier asked. lie declared ' It had\nbeen predicted every year ainco iai<i.\nT>ld anyone suppose, he asked, that\na similar prediction. In 1022 Would\nsen the end. Lloyd O-orge contended\nthat the world could not _afford to\nwait indefinitely and besides, nno\ncould not be assured that the replacing government would not be\nstill worse, and perhaps a militaristic\ngovernment embracing the: whole of\nKuropc.\nConsider AH Prejudices\nIn concluding his address the premier said: *\n\"It is our huslness and our duty to\ne th<\u00bb establishment of peace In\nthe whole nf Europe so that we may\nleal with the serious problems of\ntrade and unemployment confronting\nus at home, tn approaching Russia,\nwe have taken Into nccount nil reasonable prejudices against a people\nwho have outraged every sentiment\nHut, let us he wise in lime. We propound -these measures, feeling that\nthe people of Knglnnd demand them,\nthat Europe needs them nnd that\ntho  world   is  crying  for  them.\"\nHon. John tl. Clynes, in moving his\namendment, argued that unless the\nGenoa conference revised the treaties\nit would fail. The line of foreign\npolicy which had been pursued had\nhrought the country to the brink of\nruin. No fair peace wns possible\nwithout treaty revision, nor could\nthere be an economic trnde revival\nuntil peace hased on equality was\nestablished. The government's pol-\ntf$ so far as Russia was concerned,\n.vns only half-hearted.\n1 he prime minister's speech, de-\nlared .Mr. Clynes. revealed that he\nwas no longner leader, hut a mere\nparty prlfnner. Sir Donald Maclean,\nVnder of the .\\so,ttlthinn Liberals, also\nattacked the government policy and\ndeclared he would vote for the\ndynes amendment.\n{ Difficult to Understand.\nAifdrew llonar Law admitted that\nit was difficult to understand why\nLloyd CicorRc had moved the resolution rr why anybody should opiiost'\nIt. !\"*ut those who thought the prime\nminister would gain any political or\nelectioneering capital out of the\n(it ona conference were foolish per\nsoius. He further admitted that the\npremier's speech had dissipated some\nnt the scruples he had about the government's policy toward Itussia, nnd\ngtnerally  npprnved  nnd  defended  lh\ner's position. Ho would ho\nwilling to grant dejure recognition to\nthe Russian government tomorrow if\nthe conditions proposed by Lloyd\nti'.orKc were carried oife, but he would\nrefuse recognition on nny more\npromises.\nCecil Disapproves\nLord Robert Cecil, Unionist, said he\nwas nimble to support Ihe resolution because the machinery of the\nleague of Nations was not to be employed and because the exclusion of\nreparations from the conference was\na  backward  movement.\nAustin Chamberlain, government\nleader in the house, In winding up\nthe debate, appealed to the members\nto put aside party preference or electoral considratlnns and think only of\nthe condition of Europe nnd give the\nprime minister authority and strength\nto speak for the Empire. He did not\nexpect too much from the flenoa conference, hut It would he valuable If it\nsecured a satisfactory arrangement\nwith Russia, for then the world would\nhave made a step forward on the\nhard nnd difficult n-ilh Europe nnd\nthe world must  tread.\nWhen asked whether the govern\nment intended to move that the Length\nof Nations formally reeognite tho\nSoviet government at an early date\nand Incorporate Russia In the league,\nMr. Chamberlain replied In the negative.\ngraphed the Spanish consul here to\nfurnish the funds necessary for the\nrequirements of Zita and her family.\nSpeaker Brings Heated Debate to Abrupt Close; Repeal Unnecessary\nOTTAWA, ApTil S.\u2014The ,Mititary\nService act of 1917 Is dead. The\nprime minister, the leader of the opposition nnd the speaker of the house\ntonight united In pronouncing its obsequies, J. a Wnodworth, Lobor\nmember for Winnipeg Center, had a\nbill to repeal the act. There was\nsome doubt, he argued, whether it\nwas operative or not. If it were\ndead, it should nt least, be given a\ndecent hurial. Mr. Woodsworth\nspoke hut a few minutes. He was\nimmediately followed by W. L. Mackenzie King, the prime minister, who\nread legal opinions in support of his\ncontention that the net was dead nnd\ncould not again be invoked. Mr. KlnR\nintimated that had the act still been\noperative the government would have\nbeen only too glad to Act on the repealing bill, but the net was dead.\nA subsequent speech hy Rt. Hon.\nArthur Meighen, leader of the opposition, led to a sharrp encounter, Mr.\nMelRhcn concurred that the act was\nInapplicable to any war hut the past\nwar.\nBut, he complained, tho fact that\nit had not been repealed was used as\n\u25a0 basis for bitter assault during the\nelection campaign against members\nof his administration, Hon. Ernest\nI*apninte, minister of marine, retorted that members of tho Melghen cabinet had attacked Llbernls because\nthe Military Kervlce act had not been\nrepealed.\nIMKile now gave evidence of being\nrntraeted, but Mr. Speaker brought\nIt tn nn nbrupt close. He lind taken\nlegal ndvlce nnd was of the-opinion\nthnt the net was dead. Hence, It\ncould not bo repealed. \"Therefore,\"\nhe added, \"I declare thla this hill be\ndropped and discussion not -proceeded\nwith.\"    And the debate ended.\nDODD'S '',\nfKIDNEYi\nis\u00ae\nNew Shipmect of\nLeckie\nBoys' Shoes\nArrived\nBoys' Black or Br.nvn;\nsizes 1 to B'\/2 ?<\"\u2022\u2022\u2022\nYouths' Black or Brovn\nsizes 11 to 13i\/2... S&\nChildren's 8 to 10W;\nblack   .\"S3.'\nC. Romaac\ngained six seats inthe rtcfrt\nSouth Wales stato elections, s.\nRenter dispatch from Sydney,\ninsures a coalition majority i\nseats, with two additional coa\ngains  possible.\nFLASHES BY WIRE\nPlumbers and Painters St. jV\nST. CATHARINES, Ont., Apr!\nThe union plumbers and painter,\ndecorators of St. Catharines\non strike today against a redi\nof wages.\nAccidentally Shoots S. If.\nREOINA, April 5.\u2014E. T. Lu\nof Wilcox, Sask., accidentally\nhimself this afternoon and dkd\nfew minutes. Burman was In il\nof plclting up a shotgun with\nto shoot rabbits when the wt-.oo\ncharged, the whot going thr aa\nheart.\nBENJAMIN SWIM\nTO STAND TR\\\nWOODSTOCK. H, B., April\nBenjamin Swim was commited t\nby a police magistrate today to\ntrlalat the next session of th\npreme court for the murder of\nvey Trenholm and his wife nt B\u00ab\nRidge on March 27.\nSwim, ueconRng to the authoi\nhas confessed that he shot Tren\nami his wife nnd tried to co\nsuicide because the young womai\nleft   him and  married Trenholm\nLABOR LOSES IN\nNEW SOUTH WALES\nLONDON,   April   3.\u2014(By   Canadian\nPress Cable.)\u2014The antlrLobor forces\nPoultry dealers   In  Tokyo onr\noffer prayers nt a church shrln\ntho   pt^noe   of   the   spirits   of\nkilled  for food.\nEnRland's only woman traffic |\nnger, Miss Elizabeth Hendrlck, m\npert on oceun traffic, Is to mak\ninspection tour of America for\npurposo ot securing trans-Pi\nfreight for carriage across the A\ntic  to   Eurupe.\nEX-EMPEROR WILL BE,\nBURIED WEDNESDAY\nFUNClfAl., April J\u2014Thr funersl\nof former Emprror Charlrs of Alia\ntrla-ltungary will M hrld In thr\npnrish rhurch next Wednesday nfter\nnoon.\nFranets Joseph Otto, eldest son of\ntht dead monarch, who Is now treated hy the family ss a sovereign, wns\ntoday out gathering flowers to place\non the hler.\nFormer Empress Zlta remains beside th* body of her husband night\nsnd day. The funeral ceremony will\nb. sn Impressive one.\nKing   Alfonso  of  Bp\u00bbln   h\u00bb*  t*Z\u00ab-\nOnly ihe tender top leaves of\ntea plants carefully chosen and\nknowingly blended could make\na drink so delicious and so refreshing asTctley's GoIdenTips.\nMakes good TEA a certointi\n-\n 534\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,\nM-t\u00abn--:\nTUESDAY MORNING, APRIL 4, 1922.\nCITY BAND IS\nIN FINE\nElects 'Officers for tEnsuing\nYear; Additional Uniform j to Be Secured\nAuto: Club at Annual Meet\nAdvocates Moderate Bylaw; Elects Officers\nBounding out pretty nearly JO years AVnether the Nelson and District\nof history, the Nelson City band hold Automobile club should, \" or should\nlta atmual meeting last night, reports not, as a club, actively engag* tin\nshowing the organization to be 1n a!getting a money bylaw passed au\nsplenflld condition. The band has at\npresent 2ft active members.\nOfficers and committees were derated for the ensuing year as follows:\nPresident and bandmaster, Fred, L.\nIrwin; vice-president, John Brown;\nsecretary, J, M; Ludwig; librarian, A.\nA,*.,Perrier; advlslory members 'of\ncommittee, D. Laughton, W. M. M*to\nintosh and  J. W.  Turner. *V-\nThe financial report showed $180 en\nhand, the proceeds of the dance held\nfor the uniform fund, and arrangements are being made to get additional uniforms, as far as the fund\nwill go, in readiness for the summer's\nactive program.\nIt waa decided to parade twice on\nYpres day, taking part in the day's\nprogram as mapped out by the G.\nW. V. A., which will consist of a\nparade to the cemetery for the decoration of soldiers' graves in the\nafternoon, and the church parade\nof the veterans In the morning.\nThe City, band was organized In\nAugust, 1902, and thus it Is practically\n20 years old. .\n* I'    \u2014\nOBITUARY\nIn the presenco of a large number\nof mourners from district points ns\nwell as those residing In ths city, the\nfuneral of the late August Albert\nlrf>mrael of Castlegar was held shortly after the arrival of the Rosaland\ntrain, yesterday morning from -ths\nChurch ot Mary Immaculate. Rev.\nFather Althoff, V. 0., officiated. The\npallbearers were, E. Klnahan, P. G.\nSmith, N. o. Chonuettc, A. Scanlan,\nH. C. Muldoon and D. McDonald.\n| Among many beautiful tributes\nwere those from the following: The\nfamily, a wreath; Robson Farmer's\nInstitute, wreath; Mr. and Mrs. S.\nWalley, Trnll, a crons; officers nnd\ncrew of steamer Columbia, wreath;\nMrs. T. J. ITopwood and ramlly, spray;\nMisses l'carl and Henrietta MaQualB.\nwreath; Mr. nnd Mrs. G. S. Hart and\nF. Harkneas, Trail, croHs; Mrs. Clyd*\n\u00bbnd family, Robsoo, wreath; Mr. nnd\nMrs. Btevo Hllliyard. Nelson, wreath;\nJoe Ongan, Nelaon. wreath; Mr. and\nMrs. Defoe, wreath; Mr. and Mrs. T.\nDunbar, wreath; II. Maekezle, J. Kirk\n\u00bbnd F. Cruthers. Bpray; Mr. and Mrs.\nK Mstthew, Trail, spray; Mr. and\nMrs. .Farmer and D., Castlegar, spray;\nMr. and Mrs. P. C. Lindsay, Nelson,\nspray; Mr. and Mrs. N. K. Matthew\nand Stanley, spray; Mr. and Mrs. W.\nJ. Watson, Castlegar, spray; Mr. and\nMrs. S. D. Owens, Farron. B. C.,\nspray; Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Camp,\nbell, Nelson, spray; Mr. and Mrs. C.\nB, Simpson, Wnttsburg,. spray; Mr.\n*nd Mrs. R. c. Bush, spray; W.\nGraves, Nelson, spray; Mr. and Mrs.\nO. M. Ross, Castlegar, spray; Miss M.\nDeBretton and .Mr. and Mrs. Deck,\nspray; W. o. Choquette, Nelson,\n\u2022pray; Mr. and Mrs. H\u00bbrry Olsen.\nCastlegar. spray; Mr. and Mrs. II. C.\nChrlstlanson, Castlegar, spray; Mr.\nand Mrs. }i JfcKlmion, Castlegar,\nspray; T. Ray, Castlegar, spray; Mr.\njuid Mrs. g, H. May, Castlegar, spray;\nMiss ,M. Mats, Castlegar, spiritual\noffering; Mr. and Mrs. S. D, Owens,\nfarron.. spiritual offering; Mr.- and\np. B. Simpson, Watteburg. spiritual\noffering; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph speak-\nman, Cascade, spiritual offering; Mr.\n*nd Mrs.-T. Dunbar, Nelson, spiritual offering; M. w. Bourgeois and\nfamily, spiritual offering.\nANCIENT CHARTER\"\nSTILL OPERATING\n_ LONDON, April S.-(By Associated\nPress.)\u2014The desd hsnd of a king\nwho reigned 100 years ago la today\npreventing many e\u00ab-sefvlce men at\nTeddlngton. a Tlmmes-sld. town a\ndosen miles out of London, from\nearning a living as salesmen.\n\u2022 They proposed to open a popular\nmarket there, but found they were\nbarred by a charter granted by King\nJohn to th* neighboring town ol\nKingston giving that town exclusive\nmarket rights within a radius ot\nseven miles, which embraces Tod-\ndlngton.\n, Protests that living conditions have\nchanged In the post 800 yoars have\nbeen met by the Kingston authorities\nwith an announcement that they Intend to atand by their charter.\nAs rivals to the bolero there is the\nRussian tunic which achieved success\non the Riviera last January and It Is\nwide at the hem, rsther loose below\nthe shoulders, and held In by a tight\ngirdle at the edgo ot tho hips.\nI 1    i    i ,.\n8llken   American   flogs   aro   being\n\u00a3 resented  to British  Rotary clubs as\ntoken of Anglo-Saxon friendship.\n' Nolle. , Is hereby given that all\npersons having olaJms agalti.t Hubert\nHenry Carley 1st. of Nelson, B. C, de-\n\u2022Hased, are required to Band to the\nundersigned  a  detailed  statement  duly\nXerltled, within ons month from the\nate hereof, after which dat. th. ad-\nalnlstrator will proceed to distribute\n* assets of the wild .stat. having\nregard only to such claim* as h.\nShall then have notice. All persons In*\ndebted to th. said deceased ar. required to pay tb. earn, forthwith.\nDated March 13, 192J.\nGKO. A. MORI'HT,\nBollcltor   for   ths   Administrator,\n4        P. a Box 411. Vlotorls. B. C.\n9m\nBONNIE\nBRIER\nBUSH\nthorlzlng the city council to proceed\nwith considerable permanent road\nwork this summer, was a question\nargued at some length at the eiub's\nannual meeting, held In the city hall\nlast night. OiTe of the largest attendances the club has had was on\nhand to thresh the matter out, as\nwell as to dlHpose of the routine matters of the annual meet. President C.\nD. Blackwood was In the chair. The\nmatter was resolved into a decision\nto have Secretary E. W. Wlddowaon\nadvise tha city. council In writing\nthat the club unanimously favored\nthe submission of a moderate money\nbylaw, and to have a committee of\nthree take up the matter further\nwith the board  of trade.\nJ. A. Irving raised the question.\nNelson now has a good auto nark,\nand is advertising the attractions of\nthe city, But when the much desired\ntourist arrives, what doee he find,\nhe said. The roads In Nelson were\na disgrace. He believed the club\nshould organize and boost for sufficient finances to, build permanent\nroads.\nCould   Build   Without   Railing   Taxes\nMayor C. F. McHardy stated the\ncity council wished to do what the\ncttlscna wanted. . It has the equipment and can do the work cheaply,\nand he believed It now has the confidence of the citizens as a thrifty\ncouncil. There waa a Joint effort being made by the cities on the Crow,\nalong with Nelson and. other points,\nto boost the district and get tourist\ntraffic. The city's financial position\nwas strong and sound, and poor roads\nmerely advertised a poverty that had\nno foundation in fact. He further\nstated that the city engineer was\npreparing plans to show in detail\nwhat blocks it was proposed to build,\nwhat amount of work would be required, and what the estimated cost\nwould be. It waa proposed to call\nfor contracts, and to have the city\ntender also, to assure that auch work\nwould bo done at the lowest cost.\nHe contended that permanent roads\ncould be built without raising taxes\none mill.\nC. D. Blackwood was of the opinion\nthat in organized effort tho club\nwould do more harm than good, and\nwould antagonize a certain element.\nBut he believed tho club members\ncould do much Individually by boosting and by placing their cars at the\ndisposal of voters and thus ensuring\na larger and more representative vote\nthan that which defeated the more\nambitious road money blylaW last\nyear.\nSeveral other members sjwke on the\nsubject, but Mr. Blackwood's point\ncarried much weight. Mr. Wlddowaon declared he was opposed to a\nlarge amount of money being raised.\nBut he believed that a bylaw for\n$30,000 to $46,000 Would carry. This\nappeared to be the popular bellof\nand the motion urging a bylaw for a\nmoderate   amount   was   then   carried.\nWhile on thle subject, the club\npassed a vote of thanks to William\nRamsey, resident provincial engineer,\nfor hla services in hie official capacity, and conferred on him an honorary  members!. 1 p.\nIt wns also decided-to nsk Secretary Cuthbert, of tho Northwest Tourist, association, to apeak here at a\npublic meeting and discuss various\nangles of tourist traffic encouragement and direction In the near future,\nMr. Blackwood outlined the effotrs\nbeing made by the boards of trade\nconnected with the Southern British\nColumbia and Southern Alberta Tour-\n1st association to advertise the manifold attractions -of the district in a\nJoint pamphlet that will be Issued to\ntourists. He suggested that tho auto\ncbJb contributor to the levy on\nthe iVclson Board of Trade In\nrespect of the phamplet. Fifty dollars was voted< to  It.\nA motion waa made by W. Smcdley\nthat tho old, and now disused Nelson\nferry bo put Into operation between\nHarrop and Longbeach In line with\nthe wishes of residents of the West\nArm. Tho secretary waa Instructed to\nurge1'the matter on the pubilo works\ndepartment.\nBlackwood Stays at the Wheel\nAt tho election tho following officers were elected for the year:\nHonorary president, Kenneth Camp-\nboll;   honorary vice-president,   Mayor\nC. F. McHardy; president, C. D.\nBlackwood; vice-president, J. A. Irving; secretary-treasurer, E. W. Wld-\ndowson.\nI'lct*.ii|ivu    committee\u2014B.    Brown,\nD. Iiurgess, W. W. Bennett, O. Bennett, Q. Ferguson, S. Thorpe, U II,\nLarson,   C.   W.   Appleyard.\nThe appointment of four sub-committees was left In the hands of the\nexecutive. They will be: Advertising\ncommittee, transportation and entertainments, memWrshlp and finance,\nand roads nnd legislation.\nClub's Activities Reviewed\nThe club'* finances were stated to\nbe sound by the' secretary-treasurer's\naudited report. . The year's expenditures bud been $30 30, and a bank balance remained of $68.71. There wore\n47 members,\nA resume of the club'e activities\nhad been mado and distributed to\ntho members by circular Issued by the\nSecretary Wlddowson, which obviated\nthe neecsslty of a report from the\npresident. It read   In part:\n\"During the past year tbe club has\nbeen mainly Instrumental, together\nwit lithe city council, In getting an\nautomobile i })ark started In Nelson,\nwhich, according to statements- made\nby automobllisis, who have used It,\nIs second to none In the province for\nthe accomodations and facilities with\nwhich It Is provided. Arrangements\nhave been made to have photographs\nof the park placed in automobile clubs\nIn the large cities In A'bert* aud\nWashington.\"\nThe club has also sent each automobile driver In this district a summary   of   tfte   I9ty   \u00bbutQU.obila   ftad yjlor,,\nhighway acts, whTch it nil times wns\nfound very..useful- It has also mada\na good beginning in having sign p-jms\nerected in several places where visiting automoblllsts found a difficulty\nIn choosing the correct road to take,\nand haa taken the matter up with the\nprovincial government officials, of\nmarking the dangerous places on\nmountain roads.\"     .\nThose present were: C. D. Blackwood, J. A. Irving, C. W. Apple-\nyard, L. K. Larson, D. Burgess, Mayor\nC. F. McHardy, Ooorgo Benwe.l, W.\nSmedley, D. Brown, W. M. Cun1 ffe,\nW. Romano. D. Cummins, d. Ferguson, T. Sargeant, B. W. Wlddowson,\nR. Bennett, T. A. Rockcllffo and R.\nW.   Dawson.\nRESIDENT MA\nEOT\nMinisterial Association and\nSport Representatives\nHare Friendly Chat\nA friendly conference was held\nyesterday morning between the Nelson\nMinisterial association and representatives of organized snort in Nelson\non tho subject of the relation to be\npreserved by the various sports to the\nSabbath.\nAn understanding was reached that\nno local tournaments or meets that\nwould Include Sabbath play would bo\nput on thin season. This understanding will not include district events,\nwhere .the considerations are not\npurely local.\nMayor C. F. McHardy waa present\nas the representatives of tho city\ncouncil. It. L. .McBride and C. W. Appleyard represented tho golf club,\nAlexander Leith represented the curling club, and H. A. Lowe represented\ntho tennia club. The representatives\nof baseball, lacrosse, football and\nhockey, though expected, did not arrive\nRev. J. P. West man, as president\nof the ministerial association, was In\nthe chair, and other members present were Rev. Archdeacon Graham,\nRev. J. E. Tyner, Rev. J. B. Stirling,\nRev. N. Larmonth and Adjutant\nStride of the Salvation Army.\nLAUNDRY\nFOR 111\nLadies Claim Public Sentiment Is With Them; Arrange for Annual Ball\nThat the volumo ot work for a\nlaundry produced each year by the\nKootenuy Lake General hospital was\nsufficient to Justify having a small\nlaundry In connection with the hospital, was strongly urged yesterday\nafternoon at the monthly meeting of\nthe Women's Hospital Aid society.\nIt was pointed out that last year's\nlaundry bill for tho hospital was In\nUK neighborhood of $3400. Various\nmembers expressed themselves on the\nsubject, and claimed that public sentiment was with them on this matter.\nCommittees wer* appointed In connection with ths annual hospital\nball, to be held on th\u00ab night of\nApril 21. Mesdames C. V. Oagnon\nand N. M. Cummins wore appointed\ngeneral convenors, and the committees will be composed of Mesdames\nW. It. Jarvla, Feorge Horstead, O.\nAnderson. W. J. Crodle, A. M. Black,\nGeorge Clark. A. T. Walley. Thomas\nGibson, W. O. Rose, Robert Thompson and R. A. Peebles. Mesdames W.\nA. Thurman, J. Murphy and J. W.\nHolmes were designated as the committee mi music.\nArrangements were also discussed\nfor the annual tag. which will tako\nplace on April 16. The proceeds ot\nbolh Iho annual bull and tho tug day\nwill be devoted to th. purchase of\nlinen, the semi-annual statement of\nrequirements In this department being In fact before yesterday's meeting.\nA vote of condolenco was extended lo Mrs. C. II. Ink. a member\nof tho society, upon her bereavement\nin Iho death of her daughter lust\nweek.\nMrs. C. V. Gagnou, vice-president\nof tho  society,  was  In  tho  chair.\nLIBEISSIM\nStrike Committees to Make\nArrangements; Hunter Is\nNow President\nA special meeting of the Nelson\nLiberal association, held last night,\nstruck committees to make the local\narrangements necessary In connection\nwith the approaching provincial Liberal convention here, due early In\nJuno. The committees were named as\nfellows;\nHall\u2014J- A. McDonald, L. H. Cho-\nquetto, A. N. Wlnluw and Marcus\nMartin..\nReception and billeting\u2014W. J. Sturgeon, W. W. Ferguson, Dan McDonald and  El  R.  Redpath.\nEntertainment\u2014W. H. Jones. R.\nSmillle, W. Rutherford, E. P. Dawson and W. J. Meagher.\nKenneth Campbell, now member-\nelect for Nelson, resigned the presidency of the association. Vlce-Preai-\ndent J. R. Hunter waa the unanimous\nchoice to succeed to the president's\nchair. J. A. McDonald wag, elected\nvice-president, succeeding Mr. Hunter. Tho newly elected officers both\naddressed the meeting, expressing\ntholr thanks.\nThe beautiful tiara, which waa the\ngift of the RmphVs 60.000 V. A. D,'\nmemhers tn Princess Mary, had a\nlarge central emerald surrounded by\n(llaiiiunds and the whole surmounted\nby   a   second   emerald   of   beautiful\nAlfred Larson, Pioneer Laundry Proprietor, Dies, Aged\nSeventy: Years\nA resident of Nelson fur over a\nquarter of a century, 27 years in\nfact, Alfred Larson, who retired MRU\nyears ago from the laundry business\nwhich he founded, died in the Kootenay Lake General hospital yesterday\nmorning at 9:15 o'clock of heart trouble, one week after having a seizure,\nat tlje age of 70 years.\nLeaving the country of his birth,\nSweden, at a comparatively early\nage, the future Nelson business man\narrived at St, Paul, Minn., nt 1C\nyears of age. and spent IB yoars\nthere. . Then he moved to Spokane,\nand was in that city for 14 years In\nthe laundry business. Coming- to\nNelson 27 years ago. he established,\nin partnership with a Mr. Drumhel-\nler, the Kootenay Steam, laundry,\nwhich at first was located on Ward\nstreet, but later moved to its present\nlocation on Baker street. Mr. I^ar-\nson was idvntlfied with this business until three or four years ago,\nwhen he was gQCeaeded in the management by his gob* Carl. [\nMr. Larson Is survived by Mrs.\nLarson, and by four ohfldran\u2014Mrs.\nW. E. MpCandllsh and Mrs. 1\\ II.\nHillttn, Nelson; Mrs. ,1. W, Temple-\nton, Calgary, und Carl A. Larson,\nNelson, and hy a sister und a brother Inl St. Paul, Mrs. C. Otto and J.\nA. Larson.\nTho funeral will take place timor-\nrow.\nlocation at the corner of Falls and\nBaker streets. In the resitfitce formerly occupied by the Home hospital,\nThe move to the roomier and more\nconvenient quarters was effected dur-.\nlug tho week-end. One of tse .strong\npoints of the new, location Is said to\nbe abundant light for the classrpoms.\nADRIATIC    LEGEND\nMontenegro, near tho Adriatic coast,\nIs largely coniposed of Judged, tumbling, barren mountain ranges. They\naro   desolate   masses   of   ash-gray  or\nvery dark-gray rock, on which there\nare no patehes-of. earth and apparently no growing thing whatever. A\nMontenegrin legend haa it that when\nthe world was made the evil, things\nin It were distributed by the devil.\nHo \"distributed the.rocks flying over\ntho earth and dropping them from a\ngreat sack. When he flew out with\nhis last load there wera still a number\nof countries that were unrocked; but\njust as he got over Montenegro the\nbottom of the sack burst open and\nthe entlro load of rocks fell down\non    that   little   country,   completely\nJust as he got over Montnegro, thi\nlegend writes a correspondent. Every\nMontenegrin child baa It dinned Into1\nhis ears by hla mother until Wis\nold enough to escape from her and.\nseek  sanctuary  tn  the  mountain*.\nSamoa's copra, output this yettV' 1*\ngreater than ever before, while price*\naro lower than they have been In Id\nyear a. ....       \" ,j\nThe Anti-Saloon League of KeW\nTork Is waging a campaign against\ncrooked officials who do not enforce)\nprohibition. ,  \u25a0\"       :   --\u25a0*\u2022 \u00bbt*\n_i_\nBUSINESS COLLEGE\nIN ROOMIER HOME\nYesterday   found   the   Nelson    Business   college   established   in   its   new\nChapeau\nExpresses Its Moods In Color\nA pleasing assortment of the season's latest styles in Parisian\nMillinery.   Little and big, they're charmers, all.\nJames Weir & Son\nTHE  ONLY   EXCLUSIVE. AND   MOST   UP-TO-DATE   LADIES'  READY-TO-WEAR   STORE   IN  THE\nv INTERIOR.\nAnnable Block Phone 151 * Nelson, B. C.   ,\nAtYourDealen\nThis Week\nPresent the coupon to the\nstore named below. You\nwill receive a 10-Day Tube\nofPepsodent. Get it today,\nthen watch the delightful\neffects on the teeth.\nGive It to Them\u2014\nThis trial tube\u2014watch their teeth improve\ndeposits on teeth which may otherwitt\nferment and form acids.\nIt multiplies the alkalinity of the\nsaliva. That is Nature's neutralizer\nfor the acids which cause decay. ;. *-'.\nEvery application gives these great\ntooth-protecting forces multiplied effect.\nIf you prefer, let your children make\nthis test. Let them brush their teeth a\nfew days in this modern way. Then\nlook and see what film removal means.\nThis is a way to whiter, cleaner,\nsafer teeth. Millions how employ it.\nLeading dentists everywhere advise it.\nLet someone in your home this week\nshow the benefits it brings.\ni        |Why teeth look clingy\nYour teeth are coated with a viscous\nfilm. You can feel it with your tongue.\nIt clings to teeth, gets between the\nteeth and stays. It dims and may ruin\nteeth.\nOrdinary tooth pastes do not effectively combat it. So film-coats have\nbeen almost universal.\nFilm absorbs stains, making the teeth\nlook dingy. Film is the. basis of tartar.\nIt holds food substance which ferments\n\u2022nd forms acids. It holds the acids in\ncontact with the teeth to cause decay.\nperms breed by millions in it. They,\nwith tartar, are the chief cause of pyorrhea. Thus most tooth troubles are\nnow traced to film, and, despite the\ntooth brush, they have constantly increased.\nMust remove it daily\nDental science has long been seeking\na daily film combatant. Now two effective methods have been found. Authorities have proved them by many\ncareful tests.\nA new-day tooth paste has been perfected, to comply with modern requirements. And these two film combatants\nare embodied in it. The name of the\ntooth paste is Pepsodent.\nMillions of people of some forty\nraces now employ it daily, largely by\ndental advice.\nTwo other new effects\nPepsodent brings two other effects\nwhich authorities now deem essential.\nIt multiplies the starch digestant in\nsaliva. That is there to digest starch\nMad. in Cm\/met*\n\u00bb The New-Day Dentifrice\nNow advised by leading dentists nearly all the world over.\nAll druggists supply the large tubes.\n*)    fcj, |.- '      \u2022>\u25a0   ,-,\nPresent the coupon this week to\nmi\n'\u2022r' *. t.\n[Canada Drug & Book Company\n,\"  NELSON, B.C.\n3f=s\nReal protection now\nNow you can know what really clesn\nteeth mean. Pepsodent fights film-\ncoats, starch and acids\u2014all the great\ntooth enemies. Then it leaves the mouth\nin normal alkaline condition. The glistening teeth you see everywhere now\nshow something of the benefits it\nbrings.\nNew beauty in a week       >\nThe Pepsodent effects are quickly\nseen and felt. This test will be a revelation to you.\nPresent the coupon for a 10-Day\nTube. Note how clean the teeth feet\nafter using. Mark the absence of th*\nviscous film. See how teeth whiten as\nthe film-coats disappear. Note the refreshing taste it' leaves.\nIt will bring you prettier teeth, and\nquickly.  But, more than that, it will\nbring you safer teeth.    Cut out the\ncoupon so you won't forget   .\n   \u25a0\na   '\n10-DAY TUBE FREE\nPresent this coupon, with your name and address fillet\nin, to the store named. It is good (or a 10-Day Tub* ef\nPepsodent\nYour Name.\nAddress   .,,\n. Out-of-town residents should msil this coupon to Th*\nPepsodent Company, 118 Sherbourne Stre.t, Toronto Ont\nand the tube will be sent by msil.\nOnly one tub. to a faai'ly.\nin    unnai as\u2014\nlt.wa, tt.lloa, a. 0.\n m\nTHE NELSON DAILT. NEWS, TUESDAY IrlORNING, APRIL 4, 1922.\n;   THE DAILY NEWS\nPublished e?ery morning except Ban-\n\u2022ay by The Newa Publishing Company,\nUBltid, Nalson, & C. Canada. ^^\n\u25a0 BtulneM lattera should ba addraaaed\nlad ehaoka and money orders trwda\nWabla to The Newt Publishing Company, limited, and In no case to Individual members of tha ataff.\nAdTflrtlalng- rate card* and ABC\n\u25a0Utemenu of circulation mailed on ra-\n\u2022juwt or may be wen at tha office of\nany advertising agency recognised by\nthe Canadian Press .aasocialion.\nSubscription rates: By mall (country) \u2022\u2022 cents par month; |C par year:\nOutside Canada, a month, 75e; a year,\n17.10. Delivered, 76c per month; 14 for\nsix montha; 97.50 per year, payable In\nMreaoe.\nlCMB.be*  AUM  Baraaa   ot  OlroalaUoa\nTUESDAY,  APRIL  4,   1922.\nJTsfe Fordney Tariff Sends\nCanadian Exports\nI f Overseas\nThe effect of the Fordney\ntariff on Canadian exports is\ndealth with in the current issue\nof the Royal Bank monthly bulletin.\nIt was suggested that the immediate effect would be to divert an increasing amount of\nCanadian goods to Europe and\nelsewhere, especially, perhaps,\nto the United Kingdom. This\nis borne out by recent figures.\nIn the twelve months ending\nJanuary, 1922, Canadian exports to the United States* fell\noff \"to the extent of 43 per cent\nin comparison with the previous twelve months, but exports to the United Kingdom\ndropped less than 10 per cent.\nThe difference is significant,\nand is, of course, still more\nmarked if we considered only\nthe months since the enforcement of the emergency tariff\n.act. It is evident that artificial\nbarriers such as the Fordney\ntariff have the effect in the\nlong run not of lessening our\nexports, but merely diverting\ntheir flow to other markets.\nThese markets are being* found,\nand negotiations already are\nunder way for furthering the\ntariff preference between the\nvarious units of the British Empire.' Those Canadian products\nwhich are in demand in the\nUnited States will continue to\nbe sold there, while it is probably to our advantage that we\nare obliged to find markets\nelsewhere for our goods that in\nthe past merely have competed\nwith similar American prod\nucts.\nThe   Government   Part\nScientific Reseatch\nm\nANSWERED LETTERS\nMary C\u2014\"Will you kindly print some\nftood lunch or supper dishes? I can\nalways think of what* to have for\nbreakfast or dinner\u2014fl>ut when it\ncomes to lunch or Sunday night supper,\nI never know what to cook.''\nAnswer\u2014Send me a stamped and\nself-addressed envelope (not a tiny, or\na long, narrow envelope) and I will\nsend you a full-page sheet of recipes I\nhave just had , printed up, entitled,\n\"Seven Good Supper Dishes.\" These\nyou will find suitable\/ for both lunch\nand supper. I will send this to any\nreader who writes for one, provided,\nof course, they send me a stamped,\neelf-addressed envelope.\nJ. K. 8.\u2014\"Please tell me how to renew the appearance of my real leather\nhand bag. Also how to clean my silver-\nplated mesh bag without sending It to\nthe factory to be polished?\"\nAnswer\u2014Rub your leather handbag\nwith neatefoot oil. Sometimes leather\nis Improved by sponging with warm\nsoapy water and rubbing lightly with\nthe white of an egg. The sliver mesh\nbag may be cleaned by placing it In\na bright aluminum pan with one tablespoon each of salt and faking soda to\neach quart of hot water used. After\nboiling the bag In this way for ten\nminutes, put the bag Into another pan,\noff the range, filled with hot, soapy\nwater to which a drop or two of\nammonia has been added, rinse in clear\nwater, and dry well. Silver cleaned by\nthis method has a dull lustre, which to\nmany women is more attractive than a\nhigh  polish.\nE. C. R.\u2014\"Will you fclease print again\nthe Baked Potato Cake recipe you published   last   Thanksgiving?\"\nAnswer\u2014Baked Potato Cake\u2014Boil\nand mash 12 medium-size white potatoes. Put this mashed potato Into two\nbread pans and make a hole in the\ncenter of the mound in each pan; into\nthese two holes stir the following\nIngredients, mixed: 2 eggs, 1 tablespoon\n&Y LENORE\n\u201e. \u25a0\u201e..,., v.uniitH, \"4 oiuon chopped'\nfinely, 1 tea-cap of butter, 1 teaspoon of\nBait and H teaspoon of black pepper.\nUse half this mixture, for each pan of\nthe mashed potato. Butter the top of\neach \"loaf\" and bake them 20 minutes\nIn a hot oven. (The chopped onion\nshould be simmered on tho range in a\nlittle butter\u2014not browned\u2014until almost\ntender, before being added to the above\nIngredients).       \u00ab\nMrs. C. D.\u2014\"Clil'you tell me how to\nclean fibre rug? The color is white\nand greaa and the white part Is soiled.'\nAnswer\u2014Scrub the rug with Baity\nwater, using a small, soft bristled nail\nbrush to do the work. If no salt were\nused in the water, the light parts of\nthe rug would turn yellow. One cup of\nsalt to a gallon of water Is about the\nright combination to use.\nMrs. E. M.\u2014\"Please tell me what to\ndo about my window panes, which seem\nto have something like oil-on the outside. I have tried washing them with\ngasoline, but   without   results.\"\nAnswer\u2014Try washing them with hot\nwater to which you have added a generous amount of ainonla and suds from\nnaphtha soap. A good sand-soap would\nalso help.\nMrs. U.\u2014\"Can you resllver a mirror\nat home?\"\nAnswer\u2014No, It must be sent to a\nfactory   to   have   that   done.\nTomorrow\u2014Easy Menus for the New\nMaid's First  Week.\nAll Inquiries addressed to Miss Klrk-\nman in care of the \"Efficient Housekeeping\" department will be answered\nIn these columns In their turn. This\nrequires considerable time, however,\nowing to the great number received. So\nif a personal or quicker reply Is desired, a stamped and self-addressed envelope must be enclosed with the question. Be sure to use YOUR full name,\nstreet number, and the name of your\ncity  and  state.\u2014The  Editor.\nThe aftermath of war is intense\napplication to higher math.\nThe only place where eats conic before sweat is In the dictionary.\nRecipe for solving nny government\nproblem:    First sonk the taxpayer.\nThank God, pedestrians don't have\nto lose time changing gears when\neluding a speeder.\nNo government should be expected to bear all the cost of\ndiscovering new scientific\ntruths; that, of course, is pa\nternalism. Most of the cost of\nthis work must be left to private enterprise since it is by\nprivate enterprise that the new\nknowledge will be exploited,\nproperties laid out, employees\nset to work, and production\ncarried on.\nBut if every branch of Canadian enterprise starts independently in the pursuit of new\nscientific information, there is\nbound to be tremendous waste.\nMany duplicate laboratories\nwould be required. Much over-\ndapping of effort would go on.\nIn one laboratory time would\nbe lost in proving or disproving what had already been\nlearned in a laboratory somewhere else\u2014and perfectly willing to share the knowledge.\nA vast amount of energy and\nmoney would be wasted on\nground work\u2014instead of having the ground work done as\nfar as possible in xommon and\nthe money available for research concentrated .. on the\nreally new effort To discover\na simple formula might cost so\nmuch for laboratory and men\nas to discourage the enterprise.\n- A lack of organization would\nbe, therefore, a drag on the\nwheel.\nIn England, in the United\nStates, in Germany, and in Japan, the need for some central\nbureau of research to synthesize\nthe efforts of- its individuals\nhas resulted in the establishment - of state institutions\nequipped and endowed by public funds, controlled by parliament only in regard to the\n. amount of funds made available for its yearly work.\nThat is what should be done\nin Canada. %\nYou can usually tell a resident of\nEasy street by the fact that he grunt*\nwhen he bends to lace a shoe.\nCredit for winning the war Is Immaterial; the essential thing ia credit\nto keep it won.\n\"The green of spring brings with P.\nsome element of pathos.\" Very unlike tho long green of commerce.\nThey never say \"master\" of the\nsea, but always \"mistress.\" This 1e\nalso true ot the matrimonial sea.\nIn this free land ot Canada no man\nis so great that you cannot approach\nhim and say \"Gotta match?\"\nThere will always be men to express honest opinions without fear of\nconsequences. The poor we have\nwith us always.\nNow If there's any emotion, actlv\nity or ambition that hasn't had i\n\"week\" dedicated to It let It speak up\npromptly.\nThe extreme left clings stubbornly\nto the conviction that only those\nwhose tack ot skill makes them\nworth little are \"workers.\"\nThe original Homer never pulled\ndown $7&,000 a yeat, and from this\nwe Infer that it Is more profitable\nto smite a horsehlde than a lyre.\nCottonwood creek haa been turned\nin,to the new flume, which is working satisfactorily, although It will not\nbe really tested until the water rises\nsomewhat.\na    a , a\nSay ward A Co. on Wednesday\nshipped one car of lumber to northern Alberta and yesterday stut two\nmore carloads to the same destination. Travelers coming through from\nthe territories report a steady stream\nof Immigrants going north toward\nEdmonton.\n\u2022    \u2022    *\nNow that bicycling has commenced\nthe police aro busy keeping those on\nwheels off the sidewalks.\nTwenty Years Ago\nFrom The Daily News, April 4, IKS,\nUndaunted hy difficulties duo to\nthe shortage of funds, attributed to\nhaving commenced operations with\ntoo small a capital, the members of\nthe Kootenay Fruit Growers' union at\na meeting in the hoard of trade\nrooms yesterday unanimously declared to carry on without cessation\nof operations and decided to raise\nfunds for support until the apple season commences.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nThe baseball leant will prac'i^e tomorrow afternoon if tho weather la\nfavorable.\n* \u2022    \u2022\nFred A. Starkey paid his ranch at\nIlarrop a visit >esterday, returning on\nthi evening bout.\nDIVORCE   RINGS\nThere is no limit to the inventiveness of the United Slates, and occar-\nslonalty It la hard even to find a\nreason for some of the Inventions.\nThe very latest exhibition of it\u2014or\nperhaps by now it Is the latest but\none\u2014ii the divorce ring, .San Francis\nco hav Ing come to the conclusion\nthat the divorced, like, the married,\nshould \"bear the gree o 't,\" haa produced It\u2014a thing of gold, with a device of a broken Cupld'a bow and\nstonee Inset, to be'Worn on the little\nfinger of the left liund. WheTher. the\nstones are to be In the ratio of one\nfor every divorce ii left for private\ndecision, nor la It stated whether\nthe ring ia designed to prevent waste\nof energy or merely as a general\nwarning.\n- \u2022 PARIS.\nTo the already Interesting girdles,\nnew Interest is added by various novelties which are featured in the new\ndresses shown at the recent openings\nIn Paris. One of the moat amusing of\nthese    was    formed   of   hummingbirds\nWhatDoYouThink?\nplaced  close   together  In  a   row,   their\nbeaks   turned   outward.   Woe,    woe\nan  audacious   swain! ,.y\nBrilliant lacquered ribbons are used,\nand delightful ornaments are fashioned\not atraw. which la used In narrow or\nwide widths, with ribbons that are so\nsupple they may be used as easily us\nsatin or velvet This It is which gives\nso much charm and individuality to\ntbe dark blue crepe marocatn afternoon\ngown worn by the comfortable looking\nlady In the sketch. The deep \"V\" neck\nnnd elongated side panels will prove\ngraceful and alcnduruing, for a stout\nfigure\/ v \u25a0 ' rj '\nMiss Gilda Varesi, who is drawing\nbig houses with \"Enter Madame'* and\npromises to have a long run at the\nRoyalty theater, Is writing a new\nplay dealing with the trials and tribulations ot an unhappy Italian peasant family which emigrates to New\nYork.\nThe Dally Newa invites lettersi from\nreadera upon matters ol public- Interest. A non-de-plume may. If desired, be employed, but every letter muat be signed by the writer\nas a, guarantee of good J*\"\",\nthough not necessarily for publication. Letters should be brief and\nmust avoid personal it lea. The\nDally News does not hold Itself. In\nany way, responsible for the views\nof correspondents. Letters which\ncontain advertising matter or propaganda which is classed as advertising will not be accepted under\nany   circumstances.\nIan Mackenzie's Celtic\nBlood and Treatment of\n. Camp Lister Settlement\nj  \/\nCamp Lister, April  1,  1922\/\nTo the Editor of The Dally News:\nSir\u2014In view of the recent reports\nIn The Daily News on political speeches\nmade in Nelson, that is \"Ian Macken-\nile's Celtic blood would boll,\" etc., tha\nfollowing   facts   may   be    of   interest:\nEach soldier settler, who came under\nthe original agreement, received under\ndate 2SHh May, 1921, an account for\nthe price of his lot, with house or\nfcther improvements finished or to\nbe finished. Today the same men are\nreceiving the same account more in\ndetail, but with 10 per cent. added\non house or barn or lumber \/received\nto build same. A foot note to account\nreads: \"This 10 per cent is to cover\nloss of- tools, depreciation of trucks,\netc.\" This amounts to $7000 or S8000.\nThe facts are:\nTrucks\nNo. 1 was used In a mall contract\nthe land settlement board had, also\nbringing packages from Creston, for\nwhich   a   charge   was   made.\nNo.  2  wns  used  for  hauling carpenters'  supplies to building  sites,  which\nwan  charged   against  building.\n\u2022 Wagons,   teams,   tractors,  axes,  saws,\netc.,  were used for:\n1. Clearing land operations, which\nwas charged to land, that is five acres\n(more or less)  at  $1&0  per acre.\n2. Hauling lumber to house sites,\nwhich was charged against lumber at\nJ3   per  1000  feet.\n3. Logging operations and sawmill\nwork, which was charged to price ot\nlumber   at   mill.\nYou will see by these facts there Is\nno liability left. All tiu-se tools are\nalready charged on the price given to\nthese men In May last year, as the\nworks  closed  down   in  June.\nTo revert to the cause, of this letter,\n7 may say that while tne above gentleman knows the facts of the case here,\nand voted In our favor at the G. W.\nV. A. .convention In June last year,\nhe'has'not allowed his blood even to\nget luke warm, where It should boll,\non  the  floor of the  legislature.\nI may say in passing, the statements\nmade by the opposition speaker, were\nplain facts as they are to date, as\nanyone interested can prove if they\ncare to take the trouble.\nNow, Mr. Editor, as \"Facs are\nchlels ye canna ding,1* I hope this will\ncounteract a statement which I take\naa an insult to the \"Sons of old Gaul.\"\n  A  CELT.\nHave You Our\n1922 Catalogue?\nWe find that many people have\nnot received our 1922 Catalogue.\nIf you did not secure one please\nwrite us and we will send the\nbook by return mall. *\nFor birthdays and other ' gift\noccasions throughout the year\n^the Dirk's Catalogue la lnvalu-\n'able. \u2022.'\"\u25a0\"'< '    \u25a0\nYour enquiries for special work\nare much appreciated.\nfa?\nr VANCOUVER\nB.C. PRODUCT]\nMM*\nBaking Powder\nAbsolutely Pure\nSinger Sewing Machine Co.\nREMOVED TO\n301 Baker Street\nOppo.it.   Bank   of   Montrsal.\nPhon* 41\nSp*ay Pumps\nAre You\nReady\nFor the Spring Spraying.   We have all.\nkinds of Puipps,  Hand  and Power.\nPrices from\n$23:00 to $550.00\nAlso Pruning Shears, Saws and Tree\nPruners and Sprays.\nNelson Hardware Co.\nBOX 1060\nNELSON, B. C\nBuilding\nMaterial\nLet  us  figure  your  bills  of\nBuilding Material.   Coast Lumber a specialty.\nJohn >Burns & Son\nA WANT AD. IS BOTH CHEAP AND EFFICIENT. TRY IT\nCold Storage\nIT* (reading pspcr): \"Here* a not.\nabout an accident at White's house.\nTh* *ernnt-girl put some gunpowder\nIn th* fire, and sho wa* blown through\nth* root\"\nUm (.ympathetlcally): \"Poor Mr*\nWhit* ha* so much troubl* with ber\nCart*. That make* th. fourth that'*\nhaft her without giving notice.\"\nA Lifetime Investment\u2014\nNot An Expense.\nThe purchase or an inferior piano it an\nezpente. The purchase of a piano made\nby Ye Olde Firme is an investment\u2014an\ninvestment for a' lifetime\u2014an investment,\nthe returns from which are sure\u2014divi-\ndehds of enjoyment and satisfaction.\n* Heintzman & Co. Ltd.\n410 Bsksr Sir.*.  _   N.lson, B. C.       Phon* 117\nWrit* or  call  for  BookM.\n:\u00ab i :l\nmm\nTwentieth\nAnniversary\nEdition\nDaily\nNews\nN\nReservations of Adve*-\ntteing Space should be\njnade as eaf ly as possible\nnrQ commemorate the twen-\ntieth birthday o,f The\nDaily News and the growth\nof the city.and^district during\nthe past score of years, The\nDaily News on Saturday*April\n22nd,vwill publish a-special\nedition.\nThis edition'will feature\nadvertising of local merchants who have been\nX\n*\nIn business fo*\nTwenty Yeats\not mote\nAnd will giye an outline of\nthe progress which Nelson\nand the surrounding Kootenay and Boundary country\nhave made since April 22,\n1902.\nV-\n>\nThe Daily News\nNELSON, B.C.\nPHONE 144\n \u25a0ap\nTHE NELSOT DJILT NEWS, TUESDAY M6&NING, APRIL 4,1022.\nR. ANDREW & CO.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nGRAND FORKS NOTES\n. ORANT> FORKS, April 2.\u2014Urn. J.\nWillis returned on Wednesday from a\nt*hort   trio   to   Vancouver,\n.Leo Mills, formerly of this city, re-\n:unied on Wednesday, after an ab-\nlence of. several years.\nJudge Brown, C. P. Jl. rincott nnd\n*. L. Mackenxle returned on Thurs-\nlay from Greenwood, where they had\njpen  holding court.\nCaptain Atkinson of Brldcsvllle is\n\u25a0pending   a   few   days   In   the   city.\nIn tho Renee spuing collection\nileeve treatments nrp responsible for\nl decided change In the warp silhou-\nitten, and It Is hard to claslfly them\nis either capes or coats, for they are\nitralght, beltless and slender of line,\n>ut have various types of big cape-\nIke sleeves.       y\nf^^^~~  *\u25a0 \u00ab \u25a0!\u25a0 *J \u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb>\u2014.\u25a0\u2014      . \u25a0 m> I B*****-\u00ab)*J\u00bb*\u00bb*\u00bb*.**\u00bbs*\u00bbW\nI Kootenay and Bonndary |\nE\nES\n\"White will bo even more popular\nhis spring than last Is everywhere\niredicted, jynd the all white frock\nr suit worn with a bright-colored\nat in noticeable at many of the\nimart winter resorts, where one may\n:et a foretaste of general spring tenancies.\nThe Ford motor company is making\ncar every bIx and a half seconds.\nA Million\nr\nFrom Milk\nj Last year the dairy industry, the\nbox, can and label manufacturers\nproduced JVTOQ.uQ for British\nColumbia. Our own purchases of\nthe above materials used In the\nmanufacture and packing of Pacific\nMilk were almost 11.000,000, and\nthis did not Include the huge sum\n\u25a0pent by us for wages.\nAnd racific Milk Is the only milk\nproduced  In   British  Columbia.\nPACIFIC MILK CO\n! Limited\nj . VANCOUVER\nFactorial at Abbotsford and  Lad*\nntr, B. C.\nNuptials of Miss Daisy\nBrown Are Almost Community Event^\n' SolTTtt RLOCAN, April 3 \u2014 A wedding of great Interest to the local community was solemnized at 4:30\nthis afternoon by Rev. W. Ramsey at\nSt. Matthew's church, South Slocan,\nwhen Miss Daisy Maria Brown, younger daughter of Mr. and Mrs. <!. Noel\nRrown, of Corra Linn, Upper Bonnington, was nutrrled to William F. Clinton Badduley .of Willow Point, only\nson of P. Clinton Baddeley of Southampton,  Kgnland.\nThe bride, who wore a beautiful\ndress of white silk cire lace over white\nsatin, with a girdle of pearls and veil,\nan heir-loom of white Brussels net,\nwith a wreath \/ or orange blossoms,\ncarried *a shenf of white roses\nand carnations, tho gift of the bridegroom. The bride entered the crowded\nchurch to the strains of the wedding\nhymn, \"The Voice That Breathed O'er\nKdan,\" with her father, who gave her\naway.\nShe was attended by her sister, Miss\nIvy Brown, in a handsome dress of\nmauve silk clre lace over mauve satin,\nwith stiver girdle, a mauve and grey\nhat, and sliver shoes and stockings.\nShe also wore a pearl necklace and earrings and carried a bouquet of daffodils and mauve sweet peas, tho gifts\nof the bridegroom.'\nMiss Juan Broad wood also attended\nas flower girl, and looked perfectly\nsweet In a ruffled flower dress of\nJade organdy, with hat to mfttch, and\ncarried a basket of daffodils. W. J. Q.\nOliver  was best   man.\nThe service was fully choral, and Included the hymns, \"O Perfect Love,\"\nand \"Benedictus.\" While the register\nwas being signed, | Aglward's song\n\"Loves Coronation,\" was beautifully\nrendered by Mrs. Purdy. Friends of\nthe bride had most tastefully decorated\nthe church with daffodils, firms and\nshrubs, and the hnppy pair stood under\na bell  of daffodils.\nThe first automobile which has been,\nseen this year, with J. I). Yeatinan at\ntho wheel, drove the bridal party from\nthe church to the South Sloc.ni hall,\nwhere tho hrlde's' parents held a reception, which was attended by about\n150 friends. Refreshments were served,\nand tho local orchestra volunteered\nIts services, rendering u splendid sel<\ntlon of dance music. The bride and\ngroom cut tho cake together, and after\nsome hours of dancing, the newly\nmarried couple left, via Nelson, for\nSpokane, when, they will spetad a short\nhoneymoon, before returning,; to reside\non the bridegroom's ranch at Willow\nPoint. On account of tho bad condition ot the roads, It was impossible\nfor the bride's parents to entertain\ntheir friends at the Bonnington ranch,\nand the attendance was necessarily\nounfineil  to local   friends.\nThe toast of the bride and bridegroom was proposed by Colllngwood\nGrey, and replied (o by the bridegroom,\nt). W. Humphry proposed the health\nof the host and hostess, which Mr.\nBrown responded to in a very apt\nmanner. After the Hinging of \"lie's a\nJolly Good Fellow,\" and three cheers\nfor the bridal couple, the guests left\nfor   the   station.\nThe bride's going away costume was\na handsomely embroidered navy trlco-\nllne, with her mnrabout ocarf. the\ngift of the groom, aud a lovely picture\nhat, with DOW anil stockings of grey\nTho many varied and handsome wed'\nding gifts testified to the esteem la\nwhich the young couple are held In the\nviclnty.\nDAUGHTERS ARRANGE\nMASQUERADE DANCE\nGRAND PORK8, April ' 2.\u2014The\nmonthly business meeting of the I. O.\n1). E. was held in the chapter's room\non Thursday, March 30, with . 16\nmembers   present. \\\nAfter discussion It was decided to\nhold a masquerade dance In the opera\nhouse on Friday, May 6. Committees\nwere appointed to secure the hall and\nto   advertise.\nA series of afternoon card parties\nwill be held In the chapter's room, the\nfirst one to take place on Thursday,\nApril 0. Progressive bridge and whist\nwill he played and admission, including\nafternoon   tea,  was  fixed  at   60   cents,\nTRAIL NOTES\nTRAIL, April 2.\u2014That the people\nof Trail mean to make the most of\nthe roads this summer Is suggested by\nthe arrival of new autos, a carload of\nwhich were unloaded for a local garage  Tuesday.\nSheriff James Doyle was an arrival\nThursday afternoon, on official business bent, and hoping to be able to\nget aboard the evening train to return   to   Nelson,\nNocessary chunges to the interior of\nSt. Andrew's church, looking to the\ninstallation of the new pipe organ,\nare progressing apace, and all Is expected to bo completed In the course\nof  a   few   days.\nThe old Presbyterian church has\nbeen lifted on blocks preparatory to Us\nremoval to Its new location on the\n'\u00b0t adJolniiiB Balfour's plumbing establishment. It will be fitted up and\n* -\\? becomo the new home of the\nTrail   News.\n\"And so you arc tho noble follow\nwho rescued my wlfo at tho risk\nof your llfu?\" Mi id Mr. Tightfist.\n\"Take this dollar my bravo fellow,\nas an expression of my thankfulness.\"\nThe Hero: \"All right, guVnor, thank\nye,\" and then ho added softly; \"You\nknow- bettern I do what your wife's\nworth.\"\nWHCNYOUUSE\n'amBuk\nNEGLECT of even\nthe tiniest break in\nthe skin leaves the way\nopen for germs to set up\ndangerous inflammation and disease.\nThe best and simplest way of\ninsuring against this ever-present\nperil of blood-poison is to keep a box of\nZam-Buk always handy and immediately\ndress every cut, scratch, burn, cold-Sore or skin\neruption.with this unique herbal balm.\nZam-Buk has a power fdr destroying and repelling\nskin disease which no common salve or ointment can\npossibly have. In addition to its gieat soothing,\npain-killing qualities, Zam-Buk has powerful antiseptic and germicidal properties which are a bulwark\nagainst eczema, ulceration and similar troubles.\nWhen you use Zam-Buk, you not only make your\ncut, wound or sore thoroughly 'aseptic,' but you\nensure its rapid healing with fine new skin.\nCDCF CAUDIF RbbV WMIit 7>m I',k i< \u00abl,i,in\u00bbM. of all ctanltli and\nrilLL OHITirLC QUA! J\u201e|,r,\u201e.v. |\u201e\u201e, 3fnr |1 IIS. Tilt\/.in Buk Co.\nToronto, .ill send any ruder \u25a0 Trial Sjihi'I. Ii.r le. sump.\nHerbal 7am link uiiroors skin rl!r..aM- whr-lher the IroiiMe 1* simple pimples,\nrathe. an,l lilotrh.a, of chronic eerraie. riiiKworni, r^iMinntl aorea or las ulcers.\nInitial], ,oorl at e rr-mrdy lor pilrs. and (ol Uttns tcaldv cut,, sprains, etc.    .\nTHE WORLD'S ANTISEPTIC\n\u2022v L- \"\n\u2022 eOftfCMni\"',\n1 . VJ1SWI 11,'N\nUSE\nL\nCREAMIEST\nFLOUR ,1\n'    HAVE YOU TRIED m\nTha complete satisfaction!\nTha absolute  guarantaal\n\u25a0 \u25a0.*-' Tha firm behind tha goodil\nYou'll' ba   agrwably   surprised.     Order   a.\n\u2022ack   today  from  your   grocer.\n- \u2022    , Manufactured by tha\nHedlaj Shaw Milling Co.v limited\nAffiliated with tha '\n\u25a0   MAPLE   LEAP   MILLING   CO,   LIMITED\nLocal       Wholesale      Repraetntativa       Clarka\nBrokerage\nCARTOONIST AMUSES\nAUDIENCE AT TRAIL\nTRAIU April 2.\u2014Monday e.enlng.\nBenKoiiKh, Canadian rarlrjonint nnd character dellnestor, entertained a crowded\nnoune In the downxtalra im-wiinr room\nor the new Presbyterian church. For\ntwo hours ho kept the nudlenoe amused\nand lntero\u00abtfd with cartoons, sketches\nand Sonus. Hut the two features of the\nevening Appeared when he rjeftlv\nsketched   two   of   Trail's   lending   cltl-\nRaCHL*\" O\" began., the applause of\nnrttlclpotlon became audible. Mrs An.\nthony favored with two songs and\nquite   captivated   her   hearer\"   The   en\nMAY NOT CURE BUT\nARRESTS DISEASE\n\u25a0LONDON, April S.\u2014(By Associated\nPress.)\u2014Dr. A. E. Huywnrd Pinch\nmedical superintendent of the Ra-\ndlum Institute, In his report of the\nwork of that Institution for last yen,\ncombats the Idea that radium has nd\ntherapeutic value. Ho declares that\nthis theory originated from welt\nmeaning but ill Informed prnctltlon-\nM having very little personal e*pe-\nrience.\n\"Radium,\" ho declares, \"is not n\nfailure when used Intelligently ami\nscientifically and applied to tho\ntreatment of those conditions which\nexperience has shown are omenahlo\nto Its action. No honest worker\nclaims, or has ever attempted to\nclaim, that radium is to be regarded\n\u25a0W^'panacoarttrm-Ture-for in-sTE-\nnant disease, and many years must\nelapse and much more research nnd\nclinical work bo done before it will\nbe Justifiable to use the word 'cure'\neven in selected cases of malignant\ntrouble.\n\"It is best, therefore, to speak only\nof 'arrest of tho disease,' anil tlllfl\ncan be truthfully affirmed in very\nmany instances. Patients whose\nlives would have speedily terminated\nnnd who would have suffered much\nintense agony have been enabled by\nradium treatment to ll\\tp for mnny\nyears in comparative comfort Rites;\nall the known resources of medicine\nand surgery had been exhausted.\n\"At the present moment,\" state's\nDr. Haywnrd Pinch, \"the Institute\ncase-sheets comprise the names of\nmany patients suffering from recurrent inoperable malignant disease,\nwho first presented themselves for\ntreatment some seven, eight, nine or\n10 years ago, and who are now leading useful nnd comparatively healthy\nlives, Ihe disease having been rendered quiescent by the treatment\nwhich they have received.\"\nHince the Radium Institute was\nopened in August, 1911, 7\"G0 patients\nhave been dealt with ami nearly 100,-\n000 treatments administered.\nFive Flappers Flood Council Chamber With Fames\nat Chicago\nCHICAGO, April 3.\u2014Five flappers,\narmed to the teeth with practical arguments against Alderman John\nLyle's proposed ordinance making It\nIllegal for a woman to burn cigarettes In public, today Invaded the\ncouncil chamber nnd threw down a\nsmoke screen to cover their attack.\nFrom seats In the visitors', gallery\ntha}; poured down clouds of cigarette\nfumes upon the heads of the circumspect councltmen and promptly threw\nthe chamber Into a turmoil.\n\"This will be urn pes for me when\n1 speak on my resolution,\" commented Alderman Lyle as the Turkish\ntorches in the gallery were kept\nalight.\nAldermen ceased to pay any attention to the routine of the meeting\nand mounted on chairs to gaze In\nscandalised awe ot this disregard for\nthe conventions.\nToman AnUs Clown* View.\n\"Bring those young women down\nhero to'tho floor of the chamber,\"\ndemanded Alderman Toman.\n\"Why get excittd about It?\" came\na voice from across the chamber. \"A\nwoman should be allowed to smoke\nif she choose.\"\n\"Point of order,\" shouted Alderman James Bowler. \"The rules re-\nqtiiro that aldermen should keep\ntheir seats.\"\nTho mayor then ordered the\nshocked ordinance makers back to\ntheir benches and dispatched the scr-\ngeant-at-nrms, Thomas Courtney, to\ninform tho flappers that the rules of\nthe visitors' gallery expressly forbade\nthe smoking of cigarettes, cigars,\npipes, hookahfl, yen-hoks or nakinn,\nhemp or hashish by either sex.\nThe women put out their lights.\nAlderman Lyle, then experienced a\nchange of heart.\n\"I shall not make any comment on\nthis,\" he said. \"I shall allow my resolution to go to the Judiciary committee without argument. The puhlio\nmay Judge for itself concerning this\nmaneuver.\"\nHUMAN FACES\nPituitary\nCauses\nDwarfs\nGland    Disease\nGiants     and\nREOPEN LONG-LOCKED\nDOORWAY OF PALACE\nLONDON*, April 8.\u2014(By Associated\nTress.)\u2014After having beijn closed\nfor 1ST years, a blocked-up doorway\nat Hampton Court palace has been\nreopened.\nIt connects Henry VIII.'s so-called\nwatching chamber and the well-\nknown haunted gallery. Through It\nhave passed Shakespeare, Charles I.,\nQueen Kllzabeth, (Mary Queen of\nScqts, Oliver Cromwell and a host of\nother historical personages, Catherine Howard, one of Henry VIII.'s\nconsorts, passed through It on her\nway to the scaffold.\nShakespeare's company performed\nplays in the great halt of Hampton\nCourt palace at Christmas, 1603, and\nthe rehearsals look place In the\nwatching chamber.\nA feature of tho \"haunted gaHery\"\nwas a picture of the \"Wild Man and\nWoman,\" brought by Martin Froblsh-\ner from America, which Is supposed\nto have given Shakespeare his first\nconception of Caliban.\nThe doorway was closed by Klnf\nGeorge II. In l'.Zu. who had the gallery turned Into a habitable room.\n(By Porfctsor Arthur Keith)\n(Cuaservuior of the British Museum\nand Hunterian professor of the Royal\n.CpUttMJtf .&HfK<fSUM^mthor of \"TnP\nAntiquity of Man,\" '\"Ancient Types\nof Man,\" etc.)\nBy Ihe careful study of experiments performed in the human body\nby disease,,,medical men are obtain\ning a clue to some of Nature's .deepest mysteries\u2014the manner in which\nshe has produced human races, which\nare white or black, yellow or brown,\noblong or round-headed, pug-nosed\nor   sharp-nosed.\nThirty-four years ago, when the\ncelebrated Parisian physlclun. Dr.\nPierre Marie, was a young man, first\none woman came to him and then\nanother, seeking relief for persistent\nheadaches, and mentioning Incidentally that their hands, feet, faces nnd\nbodies had so altered in recent years\nthat their most familiar friends failed\nto recognize them. This Incident\nTorms the beginning of our knowledge of the quite common disease\nor growth\u2014as we now know it to be\n\u2014called   Acromegaly.\nGland   Regulates   Features\nAt the same time we came to know\nthat the pituitary gland, atturhed to\nthe under-surfuce of the brain and\ntn point of size less than a small\ncherry, Is concerned In regulating the\nsize and shape of our features. In\nsome cases where surgeons have succeeded In removing the diseased\novergrowths of tho pituitary, the patient's featutwft have returned to their\nnormal .form. ,\nLater came the discovery that\nthere are certain kinds of giants and\nof dwarfs who are giants or dwarfs\nbecause of disease or disorder of the\npituitary  gland.\nThen, again. Nature In her disorderly moods produces, by another kind\nof experiment on the pituitary, n\ncunnuchold man, long of limb, fat,\nlethargic, beardless\u2014a,, veritable human ex.\nNature's   Cruel   Exptrinents\nMedical men mark these cruel experiments on the part of Nature\nand reek for the means to control\nand circumvent her. For the student of human races these observations arc of great Interest because\nthey reveal tho machinery which\ncontrols the \"featuring\" of our faces\nand bodies. We can best explain the\ncharacteristic appearances Jit tho Ku-\nropean face by supposing a predominance'In tho action of the pituitary\ngland.\nThe Store for Quality\nThe Store for Style\nAnniversary Sale\nThe Second Week of this GREAT SALE presents many new lines at prices that\ncannot be duplicated. The quality for which this Store is noted is maintained on\nevery' article advertised. You are saving money on your Spring Outfit hy purchasing now.\nNew Arrivals in SPRING CO ATS\u2014Anniversary Sale Prices\n$22.50 to $50.00 Each\nNovelty styles and plain-tailored COATS of all-wool Polo Cloths,\nVelours and Worsteds, with loose or belted backs, part lined, or\nlined throughout with plain or fancy silks.    Sizes 16 to 42.\nS\u2122..^ $23.50 to $50.00\nNovelty CAPES and WRAPS, Anniversary Sale Prices,\n$25.00 to $75.00 Each\nThe very newest in dressy Capes and Wraps, some made up\nin serviceable Homespun, others of Velours and Silk-finished\nBolivia. Some lined throughout with plain or fancy silk. Colors\nare Navy, Copenhagen, Sand, Castor and Grey. All sizes and excellent values at Sale d?OK HA        ^J7PI AA\nPrice, each\n$25.00\nTO\nm*\nNEW SUITS at Anniversary Sale Prices, $45.00 to $59.00\nEach\nBeautiful models in fancy embroidered and smartly tailored\nSUITS, made of all-wool French Tricotine or Poiret Twill. Coats\nare made in box-back or belted styles, and have Peter Pan or\nnotched collars. Lined with fancy or plain silk. Skirts are plain-\ntailored. Sizes 16 to 44. An- flJ^P AA d?KQ A A\nniversary Sale Prices, each tP40.UU  TO \u00ab5D\u00ab7.UU\nNew SWEATER COATS at $10.00 Each\nTailored Jersey Gnats, just arrived, in Red, Navy, Jade and Co-\npenJjagen. Finished with narrow belts and button trimmed.\nSizes 80 to 42.   Anniversary Sale (?\"l A A A\nPrice    JMU.UU\nUKIIMAX I.AJ.OK IN FRANCE.\nDespite Aho unpopularity of, the\nplan among the French people, It Is\nannounced from l'arls that an experiment will be made In the use of-\nGerman labor for the reconstruction\nof vnrlous French villages in tho department of the Somme between Pe-\nronne and Chaulnes.' The French\nlabor unions are offering no opposition to the, plan. One reason for this\nIs that France has today \"no serious\nunemployment problem\u2014-at any rate\nshe has no surplus workmen lh the\nbuilding trades. It Is estimated that\nthere are opportunities for at least\n100,000 skilled workers In connection\nwith these rebuilding projects.\nTho newspapers and (roups which\nraised sentimental and other objections to the proposal whsn it waa\nfirst broached seem now to.hav* been\nplacated. They have been brought\nto see that tbe devastated Villages can\nt>\u00a3 much mora quickly. rotorsd by\nr;'\nMillinery for Easter\nDo not forget that Easter Sunday is less than two weeks\noff. If you have not already ordered your Spring Hat, better\nget your order in early so that you will not be disappointed.\nPrices moderate.   Styles the very latest.\n611 Baker Street\nPhone 200\nhaving detmiin workmen lay brick\nupon brick than by taking Herman\nbonds and wilting for an adtquata\nsupply of Kn-nch labor to be forthcoming.\nAssurances have bean given by Ihe\ngovernment that the (ierman labor\nwill be strictly supervised and that\n*hc workmen will not be allowed to\nmove about from one district to another. Agitators arid disturbers of\nthe peace will be promptly expelled.\nIf the Initial experiment succeeds it\nappears prnbable that lb\u00bb\u00ab Wiesbaden\nagreement .relating to material will\nbe supplemented presently by other\nagreements relating to labor.\nNO Molti; miliUOAI) ACt'lOKXTS.\nAn Invention (Of preventing railway collisions was recently tested by\na party of engineers and Journalists\non the London, Brighton & South\nCoast railway. Two engines nnd a\nsection of the railway line were fitted\nSTATUE RILES WOMEN\nMUCH   ABUSED  WORK   OF   ART\nThis Is Frederick MacMonnle's five tons of abused '-'Civic Virtue,\" designed for City Hall park. New Fork, which has aroused female ire. \"Civic\nVirtue*' is represented by s fine looking male with hla foot on tho neck\nof a female figure representing \"Temptation.\" The women are all \"bet up\"\nand ars conducting a spirited campaign against the status.\nup with the inventor's apparatus,\nand an nttempt was then made to\nforce one locomotive Into collision.\nwtth the other. The apparatus, nc*\ncording to the accounts, stalled botH\nof them perfectly, When the en\u00ab\nliin^s arrived within the danger xono\nthe brakes were automatically ap--\nplied without any nrtion on the part\nof the drivers or firemen* The In-*\nVdifor claims that hi* apparatus will\nenable trains to proceed through\ndense  fog  in  nbsohite. safety.\nCol.    Hubert    C. dowry,    president\nof    tho    Western    Union    Telegraph\ncompany,   started out   in   life   as   *v i\nBwantlMf  boy, '\t\n-        IMI-.\n*.****\u2022*\u2022#*\u2022\u2022\u2022*-*\u2022\u2022 *\u00ab*\u25a0\nS-a^M-\nw^sttmk^m\nJj\n M*.\nTHE NEISONITATLT NEWS, .TUESDAY MORHINC, APRTE 3,1952,\nVIGNETTES OF V!MY RIDGE NQ.\nFRENCH AMD BRITISH TRIED FOR IT\n(Not*\u2014Tsschsr* and Pupils, Put* Thi* in Your ficrapbook)\nH\ni;.\n\u2022\u2022 i\nte?\ni?\nThe Battle of Vlmy R.dge waa on\nApril 9, 1917, and six days from to\nday lta fifth anniversary will be celebrated. But this celebrated action.\nIn which the Canadian corps acted\nl\u00abr the first time aa a single striking\nforce, waa prepured for for three and\na half months, and after it waa\nfought the Canadians remained in\nthat sector for six and a half months\nmore. Then after the Battle of Pass-\nchendaele, In the, Ypres aector, they\ncame back again to their favorlta\n\u25a0tamplnr ground, spent a winter\nthere, and were ready for and would\nhave delighted to meet the Germans\nWhen the latter startd their celebrat\ned offensive of March 21, 1918. The\nGermans, however, did not start any\ntrouble, and the Canadians, after\nmoving up and down the line a few\ndays, settled down again, In a little\ndifferent order, perhaps, but still\nguarding that vital ridge, until mid->\nsummer, when they were withdrawn\nfrom the line for a few weeks' rest\nbefore becoming the spear point of\nthe fall battles. -\nThus, Vlmy Ridge Is more than\nthe name of an action. Its capture\nby storm was the culmination of\nmonths of preparation, and for a full\nyear of elapsed time after that capture It was trod by Canadians, who\nWere using It, It not as a base tor attacks against Lens, at least as a convenience, or who were drwn up In\nline ot battle to defend tt. That sec-\ntar for nearly a year and a halt was\nthe Canadian sector. More Canadian*\nwere familiar with that area than\nwere familiar with any other area In\nFrance and Belgium, and some individual spots became so familiar to\nindividual units, or even to brigades\nanj divisions, aa to come to be\nlooked upon as homes.\n\/ In point of time, tho Canadians',\noccupation of the Vimy Ridge front\nfollowed after the Somme campaign,\nFrom Over the Sea\nComes This Advice\nUSE  DODO'S  KIDNEY PILLS  FOR\n8ICK  KIDNEYS\nGeorge   Robert* Who  Suffered   From\nGall  Stones and   Rheumatism Telia\nCanadians   Why    Ha    Recommends\nDodd's  Kidney  Pills.\nMALPAS, Cheahlre, England, April\n3\u2014(Special)\u2014Mr. George Roberts, who\nUvea on Church street here, sends a\nmessage of cheer to sufferers from\nKidney Disease in Canada. His message Is \"Use Dodd's Kidney rill*.\"\n\"For 11 years I suffered from acute\n\u25a0 pain and sickness,\" Mr. Roberta\nstates, \"I consulted 12 different dor-\ntors and each one had a different\nopinion.\n\"My wife, who had used Dodd's\nKidney Pills for the same trouble,\nurged me to try them, and I did so\nWith splendid results.\n\"For several years I have been\nin the best of health and have lost\nno time through sickness,\"\" The rheumatism from which I suffered has\nalso disappeared.\"\nIf you haven't used Dodd's Kidney\nFills for your sick Kidneys ask your\nneighbors  about  them.\nWhere there is a\npenislent cough or'\ngeneral rundown\ncondition, there\nScott's\nEmulsion\nk a positive help.\nUm * Banna, Tama**, Oast,\n> MAKERS OF\t\n, KmioidS\nI tfrntrnt \u00abr Br**.**.*)\nI ess INDIGESTION -.\n1     ^^^       ^^^      \u00bbM0j\u00bbJ\nWITHJJIGE TEA\nIf Mixed With Sulphur It\nDarken* So Naturally Nobody Caa Tell.\nThe old-time mixture ot Sage Tea\nand Sulphur for darkening gray,\n.streaked and faded hair is\ngrandmother's recipe, and folks\nart again using It to keep\ntheir hair a good, even color, which\nla quite sensible, aa we are living\nin an age when a youthful appearance\nla ot the greatest advantage.\n\u25a0 Nowadays, though, wa don't hare\nthe troublesome task of gathering\nthe sage and the mussy mixing at\nhome. All drug stores sell the ready-\nto-use product, improved by the addition    of   other    ingredients,   .sailed\n. \"Wyeth'e Sage and Sulphur Com-\npounA\" It Is very popular, because\nnobody can discover It has been applied. Pimply moisten your comb or\na port brush with it, and draw thia\nthrough tbe hair, taking one small\n.strand at a time; hy morning the\ngray hair disappears, but what delights .the ladlea with Wyeth'a Sage\nand Sulphur Compound ia that, be-\njMdeg   beautifully   darkening  the   hair\n, .after * tew applications, it also pro-\ndttoea that soft lustre and appearance\npi apandaao* which U N attractive,\nComing out of the Somme, in which\neach of tho four Canadian divisions\nhad been in turn, each took a period\nof rert, and then along towarJ\"\nChristmas It was whispered about\nthnt the Canadians Were to move to\na new front, variously described a*\nVimy Ridge or Glvenchy Tlldar, and\nwere^o capture said ridge at the end\nof tho winter. Some units were able\nto cook their llll Christmas dinner*\nbefore movlng-^-by bringing them or\na few days early\u2014but in the main\nChristmas was spent in the trenches\nunder the shadow of Vlmy Ridge.\nNow, to, get the right perspective,\nJust remember that this waa not the\nfirst time Vimy Ridge figured In the\nwar.\nFrench Fought for Souchcz*\nThe French had held the line for\na couple of years. Under the handicap of lying In the valley or the\nplain, with the country for mites\nback under the sweep of German\nfield glasses and telescopes, the\nFrench had made many desperate forays. Tou can follow the old line:\nand come upon old French equipment and bid German equipment, old\nFrench and German cartridges, old\nFrench and German rifles, the German Mauser rifle carrying the me-\nnTum-length sword bayonet, and the\nFrench rifle carrying the needle bayonet. Tou can find great numbers\nof the old original \"hairbrush\"\nbombs, handmade, and roughly resembling a hairbrush, being constructed of a square cr oblong tin can\nfastened to the end of a flat pleco of\nstick, the can containing we.ttheied\nand caked powder. Tho old trench\nsystems stil 1 exist. Yes, this was old\nbattle ground.\nEver hear of Rouchei cemetery?\nEver hear of Souchez river? In the\nFrench days (touches cemetery was\ntaken and retaken, and taken onl retaken, and the same was the 1. te of\nthe little trickle called the Soocher\nriver. Souchei river rises in Z. -iave\nvalley\u2014a one-mile section of a villey\nthat lies below the ridge of its left\nend\u2014and the river is a brook you\ncan step across. After the taking of\nthe ridge, an open air swimming hole\nwaa made on this brook, an excavation being made for a \"tank,\" and\ntrench mats being placed on the bottom for you to hit your kn*>es\nagainst. Well, this little \"river\" circled in a wide sweep partly around\nthe left or north end of Vimy Ridge.\nThero le perhaps half a mile between the end of Vlmy R.dpje nnd the\nbeginning of the next ridge, rhlch is\ncalled Lorette Heights in EnglUh\nJust before Lorelte Heights lies tbe\nlittle village of Ablaln St. Naxalre. If\nyou go to Madame Tusaaud's In Pari*,\nalong with many interesting wax effigies, you mny view, by peering\nthrough a tiny peephole, a m'n'iture\nrepresentation In wax of the French\ntrenches before Ablaln St. Xaxnire,\nwith French soldiers occupying tht.ni.\n:n lifelike positions. Yoit ***\u2022\u2022' nl*\u00bbo\nsee the village nlmoat raxed to the\nground, as the Canadians saw It later,\nand you will also see the gaping\nchurch spire nnd broken waMs. the\nsamo picture that it presented Inter.\nThe point of this is that this was\noriginally part of the French line,\nand a part where so much blood was\nspilled by the gallant French, who\ndied there by thousands, that It wah\nthought worthy to be perpetuated In\nwax for the visual Information of the\nFrench nation, and of future generations.\nBrlilfth Also raid Pricv.\nThe British also had their try-\nThousands of Uvea were lost In the\nBritish attempt to take the rl'.g^. The\ngeneral who was in charge of the\nBritish operations against the Germans in possession of Vlmy Rldpe\nwaa Sir Julian Byng, In the later\nstages of the war commander of the\nThird army, and now, as Lord Byr.g\nof Vimy, governor-general of Cnm.i,.\nThe British were not successful in\nholding the gains made.\nThis operation, however,1 was not\nall loss, for valuable lessons were\nlearned. It was generally report d\nthat Sir. Julian Byng asked to be\ngiven a second chance, and claimed\nthat If he were given ihe Canadians\nhe could now guarantee to take the\nridge. So far os the compliment to\nthe Canadians goes, that is * ctmbly\ngossip.\nThe fact remains that In August\nSir Julian Byng put in an appenr-\nonce In the Ypres salient, where the\nFourth division had Just been broknrt\nin, that he put the corps through the\nSomme, the divisions following one\nanother, but not acting in concert;\nand that Christmas, 1918, as already\nrelated, found the Canadian corps,\nfor the first time, extended in Hue\non a single front, the divisions side\nby aide, and all prepared to put in\ntheir best licks for the common objective, which was a challenge to Canadian pride and Canadian vulor, the\ncapture ot a H-mlle long elcvntlon\nthat the enemy considered it abao\nluteljr vital that he should hold.\nCONTENT-IE MINERS' DISPUTE\nWASHINGTON, Aprjl J.\u2014Both\noperators and miners stand firm in\nthe continent-wide strike, which has\nclosed more than 8000 mines, leaving\nmore than 600,000 men Idle. Operators claim many nonunion minors\nwho were idle Saturday In observance, of the I'ljjlit-hour day Ikivo re\nturned to work.\nBoth sides agree, however, that the\nstrike is practically 100 per cent per.\nfeet in Illinois, Indiana, Ohio and\nwestern Pennsylvania. There is no\nchange In the situation in western\nCanada, where all organised miners\nare out Several nonunion mines In\nnorthern Alberta are still operating.\nOperators assert that many pits are\nin operation in West Virginia. Kentucky. Tennessee and Alabama. Kansas oporators yesterday agreed* to return to the wage scalo of May, 1917.\nproviding for $1.60 a day Instead of\nthe $7.60 named in the present agreement. Union leaders claim victory\nfor striking anthracite miners\nthrough the offer of several Independent companies to grant the miners' wage demands if the men would\nreturn to work immediately.\nPresident John L. Lewis ot the\nminers told the house labor committee yesterday that miners were prepared to \"stay out Indefinitely If\nneed be, until the operators sign up\na basic wago contract for the central\ncompetitive fields.\"\nWait Negotiation Rtsutle\nWASHINGTON, April $.\u2014Discussing before the house labor commltteo\ntoday reasons why 600,000 anthracite\nand bituminous coal miners stopped\nwork last Saturday In the United\nStatea and Canada, John L. Lewis,\npresident of the United Mine Workers\nof America and official leader ot the\nstrike, declared that the anthracite\nworkers merely awnlt the result of\npeaceful negotiations with their employers with regard to a' new wag\u00bb\u00bb\nscale, but the bituminous workers\nwere out Indefinitely, if need be,\nto obtain the signing of a basic wage\ncontract. Tho bituminous workers,\nMr. Lewis declared before ths committee,, which in considering the Bland\nresolution to direct the appointment\nby the president of a eommision to\ninvestigate the coal industry, are out\nto stay Indefinitely,  If need be, until\nthe operators of the central competitive field ot Ohio, Indiana, Illinois\nand western Pennsylvania sign up a\nbasic wago contract, according to\ntheir pledge on which the other\ncoal mining districts of the United\nStates can settle. , \\\nCompetition   Prevents   Scale     \/\nCn reply to ojuestlons by represent\ntatives Black, Democrat, Texas, as\nto why the union would not Betlle\nwith operators In states and districts,\nwhere work could be resumed under\nsatisfactory conditions, Mr. Lewis\nInsisted that competition would not\npermit the operators to fix wages\nlocally without a knowledge of the\nwago scales their competitors would\n[i have.\nAlthough holding Hint a national\nwage scale was tho first essential,\nMr Lewis told Chairman Nolan, of\nthe house committee, that If congress\nor anybody else could get \"a representative number of operators from all\ntho central fields Into a conference,\nthose controlling n substantial tonnage, I mean. I shall advise the mine\nworkers, and I think they will take\nmy advice, to negotiate with them\nfor a new contract.\" *\nFKRNIB, April 3.\u2014The only flurrv\nin the coal mine strike insofar as this\nsection of the district ia concerned\narose over the week-end in respect\nto the check off or stoppage of\nunion dues from the mine employees,\nmembers of tho United Mine Workers\nof America, who ore remaining at\nwork In order to caro for the mines'\nduring the idle period. This matter\nwas amicably adjusted promptly by\ncooperation on the port of the management of the local company with\nthe local union officials by the company undertaking to collect these dues\nand a notice announcing this, w*s\npublicly  posted.\nOtherwise the strike situation is\nperfectly quiet although there appears to be some manifestations on,\nthe part of the mine, workers of\nImpatience In regard to the commencement of sittings by the conciliation board, and It Is equally evident that the concensus of opinion\namong the minera here ia that they;\nexpect the finding of the board to be\nreasonably satisfactory from their\nviewpoint, and\/that consequently the\nstrike will not be protracted indefinitely.\nSTARVING RUSSIANS\nEurythmic Ritual Slow Moving Dance With Incense is\nFeature\nNEW YORK, April S.\u2014Barefooted\ngirls went through a slow dance on\na stage in front of the sanctuary of\nSt. Mark'n-ii,-the-B6uweric yesterday\nafternoon lu what Dr. William Norman Guthrie, rector ot the church,\ndescried as nn \"ourythmlc ritual,\"\nexpressive of the Annunciation. Blue\nspotlights from two reflectors In the\nbalcony played on them as they\nmoved, and the dimly lighted church\nwaa fragrant wilh incense which\nburned in large censers In front and\non Mfih Side of the altar.\nIn a short talk explanatory of the\ndance. Dr. Guthrie attempted to\nahow some ot his purpose in the'\ndances and other unusual adjuncts to\nchurch services which he haa Introduced at St. .Mark'a recently. The\naverage person, he said, comes to\nchurch to got,in the\" \"group-mood.\"'\nand thatwhat he needs is what will\nhelp him to become attuned to that\nmood. His church, ho mild, had lost\nIts old utility, anl be had been fared\nby the necessity of cloning the church\nor finding a new utility for 't. ...\nNecks Worship Through Bounty.\nSt. Mark'a must be open, ho said,\nto the whole religious history of tie\nhuman race, knowing that thero had\nalways bern only one God and one\nreligion, although there had been various manifestations of IL His church\nIs to be open to the past and waiting\nfor the future, he went on, for It Is\nfolly to expert that the church will\nnot change as much as It has In the\npaat The thing to do, he said, li to\nfind a way to the worship of <3od for\nIntelligent people, and he believes\nthis can only be through beauty.\n\"I don't believe thero Is any other\navenue for intelligent peopte,\" he\nsaid. He spoke of the revival of\nGreek religion after the famous\nsculptors of Greece had embodied in\ntheir work the aspirations of Creek\nreligion and given it beauty.\n\"Why cannot a church like this, if\nit gets the backing of public opinion,\nbring about a renaissance of religious worship through beauty, through\nthe plastic arts, through the dance?\"\nhe asked, \"for If we cannot mako the\ndance ji pathway to heaven. It will\nbe a pathway to hell. That Bl my\nIdeal, and I am,trying to realize it.\nIt is difficult for an individual dealing with an Individual institution. It\nIs foredoomed to failure, but Ithlnk\nthe things that seem bound to fail\nare tho only things worth doing. I\nonly know 1 have been called to do\nIt, and; that. ic\\oia what I am trying\nto do.\" -.4\nThe service }preliminary to the\n-Innco was as lUiusual as tha dance\nitself. After a hymn, a gospel reading and tho singing of \"The Hymn of\nthe Bussed Virgin,\" Dr. Guthrie read\nwith dramatic emphasis the \"Ave,\"\nby Dam0 Gabriel Bossettt. The choir\nthen sang an anthem on the Annunciation, written by Dr. Guthrie, and\nfor tho first part of the prayer Dr.\nOuthrle recited, the \"Prayer to the\nVirgin of- Ohurtres,\" a poem by Henry\nAdiuiw, .Tim sanctuary was then\nveiled by drawing across It curtains\nreaching to the celling, and the ban-\nKIXKLEKS  11*111  JI1.IBF.SS.\nA negresa who attracted much attention because of her superb diamonds and pearls traveled from New\nYork In the same liner that carried\nIre Brian d. She waa the mystery\npaaaenger In the ship, and her identity only became known after she had\nlanded In France.\nShe la the daughter ot a woman\nwho kept a scent shop in a poor\nquarter of New York, A negro employed to clean out tbe establishment\ndiscovered a solution to take the\nkink out of negroes' wool. The woman purchased the recipe from the inventor and made a fortune. The\nmysterious passenger was the woman's daughter, who Is now touring\nEurope.\nVlttorio Orlando of Italy, one of the\n\"Big Four\" at the Paris peace conference, is said to be one ot the most\nlearned statesmen of Europe. He\npublished a .work on mythology when\nonly 10 years old.\nTO EUROPE\nBAILIKO* TatOK IT. JOHbT\nAnn. ,5, imiu. ....:....*;\u00ab*\u00bb*\u00bb\nApril SI, Corsica*  ..        Ol.arow\nApril J2, Emp. of Britain Llv.rpool\nApril   !!.  Sicilian   ....... Kln,,t(,n\niAix.no*   noil   momtbiial-qt\/i\n\u25a0BO -\nMAZE   BLISBTATIOVI   BOW\nCh.rbourff\n!m.t >. Erop. of Scotland   Southampton\nHamburg\n...    ..      ., Southampton\nMay   4,   Scandlnavlsn   .\"Antwerp\nMay S. Montcalm .v Liverpool\nMay \u00ab. M\u00aba,am\u00bb  ........ 01*\u00ab\u00abow\nMay  \u00ab.  Montreal    Naples\nMay II, Mlnnenoas   Liverpool\nMay   11   Bcotl.n    OI\u00bbsf\u00abw\nCherbour*\nM.y  U. Emp. of Scotland Southampton\nrail d.tsils from IswU Af\u00abU *\u00ab\u2022\u00bb-\nwh\u00abr.   of   writ.\n\u00bb.'\u00ab.   OABTIB,   \u00bbls\u00ab.   \u00bb\u2022*\u25a0\u2022\u2022*\u2022   ***\u2022\"\u2022\nBala**,   B.   O.\n=^C\n^heCunand Spirit\nThe Canard-Canadian liners have,\ntn appointment! and equipment,\neverything to make your ocean\nvoyage erne of uninterrupted\npleasure.\nAwl thee* It, too, lk\u00ab Cunard spirit that\nla 4tartiSt.lT fowtraa1 and futnird by tb\u00ab\nCosapaaf'a oSkUla-1 cof.tit.uo4u effort\nte nuke life on. !\u2022\u2022 Cunard iKimm \u00abn>\nf*r*bU \u00bb\u25a0\u2022> CMSanlai. Om the Cuoanl\nboatfa \u00ab*u will \u00bb4t*t th* brat ef paoplr snd\n\u25a0MkSawanTMwfrLirada. \\9mt CBttTtala>*\naunt and happinc** U part ot Um Cuaurii'\nOmmm%m Sftioi.\n\u2022m at* Cuaard Aantt la yea* Iowa, \u2022*\nwrist ta\u2014\nCunard Steanuhip C ess pan\/\n\u00ab22 Haitlnti Sir.rt. W.\nVANCOUVER B.C,\n\\mm^^mkv^ms*v\u00a3e%^**mm*.\n\u25a0WAITJNQ TO ENTRAIN FOR RELIEF CENTER '   \u2022\n- Thousands .of starving people congregate at passenge r and freight terminals in tbe Russian'famine area ar|\ncrowd box cars used to transport them to relief centers. ^ # .-.*.'.\nner of. the Annunciation waa placed\nIn front of the curtain and in front\nof>that a nine-branched candlestick.\nDr. Guthrie aald the dance represented the coming to the world consciousness of natural law and then\nspiritual law. Tho four parts of the\ndance were called \"The Heavenly\nGuest of the Four Corners of the\nEarth,\" \"The Lighting of, the Holy\nNinefold Candlestick,\" \"The Heaven*\nly Call of the Virgin Spirit of the\nEarth\" and \"The Virgin Spirit of the\nEarth Fays Her Homage to the Holy\nMother.\"   ,\nThe colored lights of the church,\ninstalled by Dr. Guthrie, which at\nlimes give tho suggestion of Neapolitan ice cream, wore then dimmed,\nthe blue spotlights were turned on\nand tour girls representing the four\ncorners ot the earth moved out upon\nthe stage. The stage was nearly at a\nlevel with the heads of the seated\naongregatlon and was built just In\nfront of the sanctuary rail. It was\neasy to see that the dancers were\nbare of foot and that one of them had\nbobbed hair. They were clad in long\nwhite garments with flowing sleeves.\nInccnm Mingles With Dance.\nThe dancers moved and postured\nand then went off the stage. Then\ncame out two lilt to boys dressed in\nblack, each of whom held two lilies\nand two wax tapers, and the glrla\na gala came out and moved about,\ntaking and lighting the candles, then\ncarrying the lilies about. In one of\nthn final parts of tho dance when\nthey bowed In front of the candlestick, a deep gong rang four times.\nAt the end of the dunce a blue robe,\na Illy, a girdle nnd a red rose were\nlalefas symbol* nil afetand tn front of\nthe banner, and a'girl lighted Incense\nwhich aent a column of smoke up before the curtain. The dancers then\nglided off the stage and the sanctuary was again unveiled.\nIn a circular sent to members of\nthe congregation describing the dance\nand its significance. Dr. Guthrie\nwrote: \u2022 ;\"\n\"For those who are still likely to\nbe scandalized at a Protestant church\nshowing regard for the Virgin Mary,\nmay we state that for 300 years\nChristendom paid its chief homage\nto her. Latert haying cast out from\nour world of ideals, and divide symbols the woman, the Protestant reformers left woman without an adequate spiritual expression, and naturally compelled the unconscious feminization of Christ to meet this need.\nIf we have suffered from an effeminate Christ it hy-bcen because the\nfutthful have not been allowed to\nexpress their ideal of womanhood in\na normal way by the cult of the\nMother of Jesus.\nVlt is surely humorous to see, how\nhuvulng tPuritamcally) rid ourselves\nof the Mother of Jesus, and not being able to understand Iais or Deme-\nler or the great Persephone (in spite\not Pater, George Meredith, et al.), we\nare (culturally) succumbing to her\noriental expression; ho that shortly\neverv one will adore at a, little private Fhnne to Kwanyin.\n| \"Of course, it la so much more intelligent and orthodox to import\nfrom China an Emanation ot the\niiuddga, the Mother of Mercy\u2014than\nto turn this spontaneous ana necessary Htrcam of lde>tltzutlon ana teu-\nder worship to the Mottier of our\ni-ord Jesus Christ! The Kplscopal\nehureh.^thnnk heaven,' has never been\nso   ProU'stant  as *fo   have  forgotten.\nat least in her calendar, all the hon|\ndue the Mother of her Lord.\" ~-\nHEART WOULD BEAT\n.\u25a0\u2022*\u2022\u25a0\u2022   LIKE 'Av\nTRIP HAMMER\nHeart trouble has of late years h\ncome' prevalent. Sometimes a pa\ncatches you - In the region of t\nheart, now and then your heart akl\na beat, palpitates, throba, or boo\nwith such rapidity and violence y\nthink it Is going to burst, i\nYou have weak and dizzy apel\nsinking sensations, are nervous, irr\n{able and depressed, and if you atte.ni\nto walk upstairs or any distance y\nget all out of breath.\nWe know of no remedy that v\ndo  so  much to  make  the  heart  i\ngain  strength and vigor,  regulate\nbeat and restore it to a healthy ne\nnul   condition  as  will\nMILBURN'S    \u2022\n.HEART* ANO  NERVE  PILLS\nMrs. Chadwick, Delhi, OhU writ*\n\"I had palpitation of the heart, a\nthe least exercise, such aa going u\nstairs or up a hill, my heart wot\nbeat like a trip-hammer, and at tin\nI was dizzy-headed and had a sin\ning sensation as if my time we\nnear.\n\\ A friend suggested I try Mllbur\nHeart and Nerve Pills, so I procur\nthree boxes, and by th* time the fli\none-was used I began to Improve.\nall I took six boxes, and now althou\nIn my 66th yea,vl feel like-a.you\ngirl; no dizziness or hearVtBumplr\nand can walk..melee without fatigi\nAt time of airkneasr I Weighed 1\nlbs.,  now  I weigh  15fli>  .; t7*\nPrico,  60c *jt&x at all 'dealers,\nmoiled direct^ receipt *ft price 1\nTho T. Mllburn Co., Limited. Toroni\nOat    vV * 'v*: - ''\u25a0 v\"\n~V\n\u25a0.\u25a05^j.'i-',em,.  j_t__t Jiay,j-i,jj4^!ii'..\u00abj-?\n34,\nEssentials\nA     \u2014\n\u00ab    \u2022\n\u25a0\n[By Frank Thompson\nAmateur Champion of Canada  ,\nStarts Next Saturday, April 8\n;\u25a0:\u2022';\"' \u25a0\u25a0''_ in   ,;\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0::;'r'V:\nThe Daily News\nThis it the first of a series of ten articles written for\nThe Daily News by Frank Thompson, Amateur Golf Champion of Canada. He won the title after a gruelling contest\nin Winnipeg last year, when he was 23 years of age. He\nis the youngest man to win the Canadian title. Mr.\nThompson also won the gold medal at Chevy Chase^WasV\nington, in 1921, and was the winner of Vice-Preiidei'\nSherman's Cup on the same links.' In the last inte\n\u00bb tional match between Canada and the United States,\nin New York in 1921, Mr. Thompson defeated the |\nBobby Jones. One of five brothers, all of whom are well\nknown in the golfing world, Mr. Thompson has been\nplaying the game since he was old enough to pick up\na club with the exception of the years from 1915 to the\nend of the war, when he was on service overseas.\nDon't miss this series if youtplay golf, or intend to\ntake up.the game.\nt Clip out each article as it appears and keep'for refer\nence.\n!\n1\ni\n\u2022nr\nLP\n'JWa*t  '*\n\u2022f    I* \\   l-TMr     f \u25a0\u25a0\n:    i:\"v(:r   \\ic^\n;   1   i \u25a0 <' \u25a0    :\n MM^HI    Wmm\nmm\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, APRIL 4, 1922.\n.y?\nMRS,   MARY   A.   SPENCER,\nof     Watertown,      N.     Y,\naged 75, wlio declares she\ngained fifteen pounds on Tan-\nlac and feels just fine all the\ntime. \\rV\u00ab,i in badly run-down\nconditio'.!.\nat   tho  doorway,   In   the   old   Russian pwn  mind, and  It   remains a  hideous   wharves   hy   men   who   are   underfed  dropped   If   the   session   Is   to   close\nhabit.     They   came   to   tell   of   their\nown famine, to plead  for their ehll-\n' dren.     One   woman   caught   hold    of\nI\n*'Just think of It, at seventy-five\nyears of age to be made well and\nstrong again and gain twelve pounds\nIn weight, but this 1m exactly what 1\ndid after taking Tanlac. Not only\nthat, I feel years younger,\" said\nMrs. Mary A. Spencer, East street,\nlife-long resident of IVatertown,\nM. Y.\n\"for over a year I was In a terrl-\n* My rundown condition and I was so\nnervous and restless that many a\nnight I would hear the clock strike\nevery hour, I was ablo to eat very\nlittle and lost strength right along,\nfinally becoming io wenk I could\nhardly walk from one room to the\nother.\n\"On account of my age I''thought\nmy declining health was natural, but\nTan I nc has proved that I was mistaken. I can do all my own housework now, I sleep all night long, wake\nup In the morning feeling refreshed\nand Just feel fine all day long. Tanlac can't  be  praised too much.\"\nTanlac Is sold In Nelaon by the\nCanada Drug & Hook Co. and leading   druggists   everywhere.\nThe most powerful electro-magnet\nIn the world lias a power of 100,000\nga Uiiset*.\nwill be cut in two here at\nSpokane's Largest\nDental Office\nTLu; extremely large practice means lower percentage of expense\u2014therefore\nLOWER      FEES      FOR      YOU\n1S.YFAR        quality\n1J-1LAU GUARANTEED\n\"Largest Because Best\"\nCanadian     Money     Accepted\nFull   Value\nRooms 205-fl-7-8-\u00bb-10-lM2,\n2nd  Floor Jsmifson  Btdg.,\nWall  and   Riverside.\nPhon.   Main   18153\nSPOKANE,   WASHINGTON\nFOR INDIGESTION, GAS,\nSOUR, ACID STOMACH\nTAKE \"DIAPEPSIN\"\n'Tape's Pla papain\" la the quickest\nstireat relief for Indigestion, Gase*.\nKfcatulenco, Heartburn, Sourness, Fer\nmentation or Stoma,'!, Distress oauaed\n*>y acidity. A few tablets give al\nmoat Immediate stomach rellaf and\nshartly the stomach Is cmrected so\nyon can tat favorite foods without\nfear. I-arg* raaa oosti only few\n\u00ab   at  drug   Mora.     Million!   belpad\nannually.\n; my wrist, tried to drag me away.\n1 could not understand her. She was\nfierce in her despemte desire to take\nme somewhere. She. too, had a dying\nchild, as I found. There was nothing I could do to save It, or any of\nthem. Weakly I offered them money\n\u2014that Russian paper money, which* Is\nalmost worthless. In these villages\ntt seemed quite worthless. They\ncould buy nothing with it. Nobody\nhad anything to sell. The nearest\nmarket was away across the snow,\nand nothing much there. Money could\nnot  help  them  here.      \u2022\nThey seemed already dead, those\nvillages, when we drove through the\ngateways of high stockades t which\nsurround them all. Hardly a living\nsoul stirred, though now and then I\nsaw the white faces of children staring out between the wooden shutters.\nlea Ban the Way\nI vow I do not know how any of\nthe people In those villages can still\nremain alive. I could discover no\npossible way In which they could get\nfood, no earthly chance of rescue.\nSome of the children were getting\na meal a day from the American relief, but In one village only 40 out of\n350. and In others about the Bame\nproportion. The others were starving, and their parents hnd nothing.\nYet I hesitate to say that all of them\nare dying or will soon be dead.\nIs possible, though most unlikely\nfrflm all the facts I could get. that\na few potatoes or some rations of\nbread, or flour, will reach them\nfrom the central government. Here\nand there up tho Volga were barges\nladen with potatoes sent from gov-\nment supplies. Hut the Volga was\nfreezing up when I left, the landing\nstages were taken in. My boat was\nthe last between Kazan and Simbirsk. The potatoes were already\nrotting, because the only way of\ntransport was by bledge, and the\nhorses were dropping dead for lack\nof fodder. Perhaps some of the peasants have little hidden hoards which\nmay keep ihem alive. Perhaps others will get to the markets of Kazan, Saratoff and Samara and struggle back for hundreds of versts with\na little store of provisions bought by\nthe barter of sheep skins or furs.\nPerhaps Irf lugky or accidental ways\nof which I have no idea, some of them\nwill get hold of something to eat. I\ndon't know how. Hut everything that\nI saw and heard seems to make\nsuch hopes fantastic, but I do not\nwant to paint too black a picture, or\nto * exaggerate the Inevitable mortal-\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ lty.-.And.L t no. dike the* people .**\u00bb$><*\nrope would die soon afterward. It Is'ask me, \"Is It true\u2014this famine?\nnot   as   bad   as   that.     Out   of   those; have   a   strange   incredulity,   an    In\nEveryone Starving Is Hopeless Cry of Families Waiting for Death\n(By Sir Philip Glbbs)\nLONDON, April 2.\u2014A hundred\ntimes since I have come-back from\nHussla people have asked rhe, \"Is it\ntrue about the famine?\"\nThere seefris still to be general doubt\nas to the truth of the famine reports.\nIndeed one newspaper has gone so\nfar aa to deny the existence of the\ntragedy altogether, and to put down\nthe \"rumors\" to -a lying propaganda\nfrom Bolshevik sources designed to\nsav* the Soviet Russian republic at\nthe expense of foreign charity.\nIt is Indeed Incredible if nut absolutely certain, that In this year of\ngrace and \"civilization,\" many mil\nlions of people should be threatened\nwith death by starvation, and that\nthe rest of the human family should\nnot go to their rescue, but leave\nthem carelessly to their doom, apart\nfrom a few efforts of private charity\nand tho philanthropy of a few societies, helpless before the immen\nsity of such suffering.\nPeople ask me \"How many mil\nlions will die?\" How can I tell?\ndo not know the measure of the endurance of those Russian peasants\nwho can live on very little, nor the\nexact rate at which typhus is claiming Its victims before hunger' kills,\nnor the exact amount of food which\nsomehow or other will reach some of\nthem, by sleigh over the frozen fields,\nfrom British and American relief\nworkers, or from Soviet sources. It\ntook 60 days, I think, for an Irish\nhunger striker to die, though he put\nno food to his lips all that time. It\nmay take ten times sixty days\nfor a Russian peasant to die, If he\neats some powdered leaves, or a\nbluish clay which he digs from a\nhillside or some rotten cabhage\nstalks, which was all I saw some\nof them eating.\nThere are twenty-five million people in the region that was blasted\nby the drought, and it would be false,\na dreadful exaggeration, to say, as I\nbelieve has been said, that all those\nmillions will die of hunger. That\nwould be one-sixth of the entire population of Russia and would be the\ncause of  such  a  plague  that  all Eu\nthan that of their own bodies, though\nit was 20 degrees below zero in Pet-\nf-ograd, and with thin rations from\nthe government enough to keep the\nflame of life alight, but dimly binning in fever-wasted bodies, until\nburnt' on* nmitfus\/-- tha *\u00abw*i\u00bbkeeW\"0.\u00bb^- -\nthem. I saw their two days' dead\nin the morgue, a roomful of bodies,\na rubbish heap of death. The end of\ntho journey!\nRelief   Schemes   at   Work.\nBritish  and   American  relief  Is  doing something to  rescue  tho  children\nmemory,  of long  bare barrack rooms, and   who   have    starvailna\nof   damp,   dungeon-like   rooms,   where own   homes.    But   there\nfamilies   lay   upon   the   boards,   with stances  of  this  kind,  and  the  Soviet\ntheir    vlrmin,    w.thouut    other    h*?at government has to pay for every loss\nin    their] before   June,\nfew   In-\not ihe kind. At least according to\nthe contract the Americana have\nmade\u2014and they are taking no risks.\nPeople stirred by compassion for\nniHrtnil children, the victims of Immense disaster, not guilty of blood\nnn It'y, or subserslve doctrines,\nbat is innocent and lovely\u2014for they\n.ire beautiful, these Russian children\n--as tiny In the world who sit at well\nspread tables, need no fear that their\ngifts will go to make Soviet leaders\nsleek  and   fat   or  to   Inflame   the   fe-\nHon Manning Poherty, mln.filer of\n,v;rjcultiii'e, Mated tud;iy he would\nIntroduce a bill this session to provide,   for  the  cooperative   handling  of\nthe cheese and butter business of\nOntario, \u25a0dmllar to the cooperative\nfruit selling which has proven so\ngreat a success In the Niagara district.\n\u201e*   i      .,.\u201e,(\u00bb   i\u201e  ,     .i     i . ,     roclty  of  the   Red Army,  which,  as a\nat   least,   and   It   Ih  worth   dung,   al-        ,. ,   ,    ,     ,    , ,    ,    , ,\n\u00b0' matter   of   fact,    looks   p nched    and\nthough It is not yet more than\nenough to touch the surface of all\nthis human distress. The British\nworkers of \"Save the Children Fund\"\naim at feeding WO,000 children. When,\nI left Russia they were actually feeding G0,000. The American, wilh bigger\nresources, hopo to feed 200.000. Tho\nQuakers are feeding something like\n40,000. But there are at least six\nmillion children lu dire need of food\nin the famine country, and more in\ndire need of food in the famine coun-\nMue, made up of narrow-chested boys\nIn   man's  size  uv<rcoats.\nAlthough I am convinced thnt Russia can only be saved by great international effort, securing full guarantees from the Soviet republic In\nreturn for aid, I would cut off my\nright hand rather than diseourng*\nthis energy of relief work, all appeal*\nto private charity, all the zeal, the\nadventure,   the  untiring fight  for  the\nseue   of   starving  children   and   our\nf\ntry, and more in other port* Of Russia   ,        r, .\u201e. , . , ,\n.    ,,., . \u201ef   ,\u00ab.      1L,,   , ...        , few    P-rit sh   workers.     Hundred\nbadly In want. The difficulties of res-   ,. , ,      . ... \u201e M ,\u201e_\n, 'IT    thousands    of    children    are     Icing\ncue   are   enormous  now,   beeauso   the ,   , .  ,      A    tu        ,   ... \u201e\nI saved   from   certain   death   and   they\nworth   saving,  though  others   per\ntwenty-five million some have enough\nto eat (none too much) many have\nalmost enough to eat, others have\nJust enough for life, and the remaining millions\u2014Nansen says ten millions, and I can give no guess\u2014have\nnot enough for moro than lingering\ndeath. Some of those I saw must\nnow be d'.ad.\nWaiting  for Death\nIn one house In a little Russian\nvillage beyond the Volga I saw a\nfamily waiting for death, and they\nhhd not long to wait. They had no\nbread, no leaves, no cabbage stalks,\nnn bluish clay which Is dug out of a\nhill called Beterjisk and sold for human food. The father raised himself a little from a wooden settle.\nHe was bleeding from the mouth, and\nwaa a living skelton with yellow\nskin dra wnly tightly over visible\nbones. The mother lay In the bed\nabove the stove where most peasants sleep. A 14-year-old daughter\nlay by her side, and they hid their\narms about each other, and were dying At the end of the room In the\nwindow Beat a handsome lad sat In\nhis rags. He was nearly dead, with\nstrange staring eyes that looked Into\nthe next world. It was very quiet In\nthe room. The father whispered a\nfew words, but they could hardly be\nheard. Once the mother moaned\nThe boy and girl made no sounds at\nall.    Death  stood  at  the  threshold.\nThe neighbors could not help. I\nknew why, when 1 went Into their\nown homes, ndlage by coltag-:. Home\nof them had a little food. They\nshmved It lo me. An old woman lifted up a small wooden bowl with a\nhandful of chopped loaves. That was\nthe best she had, and she wept when\nshe showed It to me. A tall peasant,\nhandsome, broad shouldered, a great\nman, hut so weak that he had to hold\non to a chair when he stood, showed\nus half a loaf of bread, made of straw\nnnd leaves, and filth. His wife was\nthere, and u little daughter, with big\neyes in a white, flower-like face. The\nman spoke some words In Russlun,\nwhich a comrade of mine translate*?.\n\"We have nothing left but this. We\ncannot  save  ourselves.\"\nA woman dragged me Into the cottage. She seemed a little mud. . A\nchild was there In a raggld shirt, and\nshe stripped It naked and aha wed\nme Its swollen stomach. It Is strange\nthat children are swollen like that\nwhen they are starved to death!\n\"Everyone  Starving   Hera.\"\n\"Everyone la starving here,\" aald a\npeasant In another house \"Sonic are\nnearer death than others,\" He waa a\nrepresentative of the local soviet,\nan important man In tho village. He\nhad a cow which had given hla family milk. Now he was going to kill It,\nbecause there was no fodder. He\nwould send the meat to the market\n(Moscow is full of meat Just now,\nbecause of other peasants killing other cows) and he would buy some\nbread\u2014perhaps some potatoes. That\nwould Inst a few weeks. After that\u2014\nho ahrugged his shoulders. I had nn\nInterpreter who told me what he aald.\nThat shrug of the ahouldera was not\ntranslated.\nA girl smiled and wept, milled and\nwept.\nShe was a typical peasant girl of\nthe Volga, with a broad face and eyes\nset rather far iTpart. She spoke to\nme several times, but other people\nwere speaking and the Ihterprater\ncould not  keep pace.\n\"Wlmt does she aay?\" I asked.\n\"She says her little hahy la dying.\"\nI wss a stranger In these, villages\nand had come over the anowfletds\nIn % carriage with two leans horses.\nThe news of my coming spread\nabout. Thry thought I might help\nthem, and Ood knows I could not,\napj .\u25a0\u25a0(,( hy words I now write. In\nthe cottages where I stood other\npeople  came  In,  crossing thenwlves\nVolga has frosen and the only way\nlo transport from the railways Is by\nsleigh caravans across the snow-\nfields. For that horses are needed.\n3700 in the Tartar republic alone\u2014\nand horses are dropping dead for\nlack  of fodder. -^\nFortunately both tbe British and\nAmerican relief administrations have\npushed out as many supplies as possible to outlying dlnrtlcts and the\n'Save the Children'1 people working\nat Sara toff under Nansen's agreement\nhave been successful and enterprising in this. way. The American relief administration has alto -established big depots as fur east as Ufa.\nOrenburg and-Tsarit-sin and has sent\nsupplies to many village, centers. To\nthose people at home who are anxious iibout the safe delivery of this\nfood lo tha starving children and\nwho are suspicious that any charity\nto which they may he moved will\nbe diverted to the use of Soviet officials or Red soldiers-the idea wa1*\nstrong in England when 1 left\u2014I can\ngive absolute assurances from my\nown observation and from reports 1\nhave received from relief workers in\nall parts of the famine area. Now\nand then a few cases or a few tins\nof food are stolen. That is Inevitable hi the process of unloading In\nthe darkness of station yards or river\n\u2022>;,,,\u00bb\"\u2022     >i.   ....      ........^     . t ... ._\nIsh. I have been among them and\nhave seen their joy, and one knows\nQn  that the work is worth  while.\nThe British workers are few\u2014there\nnre only four, 1 believe, in the whole\nof the Sura toff province, and they\ndepend more on Russian assistance,\nbut they also an doing their job with\nzeal and enthusiasm. It Is a job\nworth doing, and. if I had my way\nl would lay down by pen to join them\nm) that every hour's work might help\nto save more children from the hunger-death.\nHOPES OF SHORT\nSESSION VANISH\nTORONTO. April 3.\u2014All hopes of\na short session of till legislature\nwere shattered today when pane 1mvh\nplaced bill 2003 on the member*'\nfolders. This, it Is said, establishes\na record in the history of the province for the beginning of the seventh\nweek of the legislative asMembly.\nNever before has the number of bills\nIntroduced run so high in such a\nperiod. Both government and opposition members admit that much of\n'the     legislation     will     have     to    he\nstihctlve refusal to believe that there\nis nn hope at all fur millions of brave,\nkindly, patient, splendid folk whom\n1 learned to love, as all men do, who\nknow them, even In the short time\n1 passed among them. One's mind re-\ncolls from  so  horrible a vision.\nThere are people even in Russia-\nIn Moscow, to which much food\ncomes\u2014who doubt the truth of the\nfamine. That Is astounding to ine.\nfor at the very frontier, and along\nall the railway lines, and in every\nStation, there bus been foT month* a\nflowing tide, with many tributaries,\nof human misery, Jn escape from the\nhunger    haunted    regions.\nTha   Flight   From   Hungar.\nI'eople do not leave I heir homes\nand villages because of imaginary\nfears. Peasant folk with the family\nInstinct strong-rooted In their hearts,\nkindly folk as I found them all. do\nnot abandon their offspring\u201422.000\nfrom Fra. 29.000 from Samara, .thousands from every district lu the country of the great hunger\u2014with light\nhearts and carelessness. In homes for\nthese abandoned children I saw the\ngreat measuer of all this misery, and\ncould guess a little of the anguish\nwhich had led to the desertion. The\nchildren In these homes get a little\nfood now, mostly from British and\nAmerican relief societies, but half\nnaked, for the most part, without\nblankets, on hare boards, their grey\nfaces and sunken eyes, so old-looking,\nso monkey-like, and their little withered bodies, told the history of the\nfjinilne from which they had escaped\nAt least a chance of escape, though\ntyphus, dysentery, and weakness with\n.it. \u25a0 Its ailments takes toll of them\nIn places without food, clothes, beds\nmedicines. In Retrogiad I saw the\nrefugees' camp, to which ho many\nhad utruggled across Russia. \"The\nKnd uf the  Journey\"  I  call It  In  my\nHEADS\nTHAT ACHE\n..   :    AND  PAIN\n-fHs hard;le> drag nlmnr wRlciWraaw\nthat aches and pains all tbe time.\nIn nine cases out of ten, persistent\nheadaches are due to poisoned blood,\nthe blood being rendered Impure\nthrough some derangement of the\nstomach, liver or bowels, but no matter which organ is to blame the cauBe\nmust bo removed before permanent\nrelief can  bo obtained.\nBURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS\nwhich has been on the market for\nthe past forty-five . years, removes\nthe cause of tho headache by starting the organs of elimination acting\nfreely, and when the Impurities are\ncarried off from tho system, purified\nblood circulates in the brain cells,\naud the aches and pains vanish.\nMiss Clara Murphy, Centra Dum-\nmer. Ont.. writes: \"My system was\ngreatly run down and my blood out of\norder. I suffered a great deal from\nsevere pains In my head which made\nmo feel very miserable. After having tried other remedies I purchased\na bottle of Burdock Blood Bitters, and\nwas very glad to notice a decided improvement In my health. I took another bottle and tt has done me an\nmormons ' amount of good. I have\nrrcominajtdcd it to some of my friends\nwho were In a similar condition and\nthey all say It Is a wonderful' remedy.\"\nB. B. B. Is manufactured only by\nThe T. MUburu Co,. Limited, Toronto. Ont\nBEECHAM'S\nPILLS\nmWmwamwmmmm\n->-V',f\nMl LLBAN K\nVIRGINIA CIGARETTES\nin the htandy\npacka^o of\ntwenty-five\nCiAarGitos for\n35*\npackets\n__m__m_%m_mm\nSHHSBl\n \u25a0~B~<\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,  TUESDAY MORNING, APRIL 4, 1923.\nMarkets 2* Finance\nOPERATIONS REACH\nMotors and Steels Outstanding ; Studebaker Leads\nList; Money Easier\nNEW YORK. April 3.\u2014The volume of operations on the stock exchange today established a hioth. record for the year, approximately\n$1,300,000   Hhare*  changitiK   hinds.\nMotors, independent steels, oils nnd\nequipment were tho outstanding features at net gains of 1 1-2 to 4 1-4\npolnls. Studebaker led the entire hvt\nand United Steel asserted much of\nits old* time prominence. .Mexican\nand California issues were foremast\nof the oils.\nExcepting Canadian Pacific, Venn-\nsylvan ia, Delaware & Hudson, the Inquiry for rails centered in the preferred stocks of St. Paul, Chicago \u00a3\nAlton and Tolodo, St. Louis *i Wcs.-\nern at extreme gains of 1 to 2\npoints. Coppers and the general\nmetal  list were sluggish  or heavy.\nThe money market favored the further rise of stocks, call loans easing\nfrom 4 3-4 to 4 1-2 per cent n the\nfinal hour. Time funds again ranged\nfrom 4 1-2 to 4 3-4 per cent, h.-t offerings of long term accommodations\nwere lighter than usual.\nSterling rose almost 2c. Fren\u25a0:*',\nItalian and Belgian bills wer- 3 to \\?.\npoint'! higher and Dutch and Scandinavian improved 10 to  15 points\nClosing\nQuotations\nHigh Ixw\nCan.   Pac.  Hy.   ...Ut% 137%\nChino    Copper     ...  27%       \t\nInt. Marine com.  ..  Ifl^i 16Vi\nMo.   Pac.   com.   ...  U% H%\nMo.   Pac    pfd.    ... U% H%\nPlen-e    Arrow     . . .   21V* 20\nStudebaker     118* 114%\nU.  S. Steel com.   ..  S7% P6\nRock   Island       41 It 40%\nCerro de Paseo\t\nWillys  Overland   ..    8K 8%\nPac.  Oil      55% -W\nOlOBt:\n138\n27%\nn\\\n23%\nM\n20%\n117%\n|T%\n40%\n35%\n8%\n54%\nDOMINION LIVESTOCK\nWINNll'lvC,\nthe yard* toil\n1000 hoes ami\nSteers*\u2014Choi.\nto  go\u00abl,   HUM\nApril 3.\u2014Receipts in\niy totalled 900 cattle.\n2j aheep,\ne,   M.r.O   to   10.75;\nto   16.16.\nButcher heifers\u2014Choice. I5.7T, t\n161.T,;   fair  to Rood.   \u00bb4 :!.',  lo  KM,\nUutcher cows\u2014Choice, 14.50 I.\n15.00; fair to good, 11.10 to J4.25.\nHulls\u2014Good.   $3.00  to  14.00.\nOxen\u2014(iood.   J3.50  to  14 50.\nFeeder hteers\u2014Choke, ,1,7.', to J5.S5\nfair to good, 13.50 to K50\nMsnk.r steers\u2014Choice. (3.75 *\nJ4.25;   fair   to   coi.d.   J3.7:,   lo   J4.50.\nBlocker heifers\u2014Choice. $3.50 to\n$4.00;   fair  to  good,  $2.75 to  $3.25.\nCalycs\u2014Choice, $10.00 to $11.00\nfair to good.  $700 to  $0.00.\nSheep\u2014Oood,  $5.00 to $8.00.\nLaml>s\u2014Oood,   $8.50   to   $12.00.\nHogs\u2014Selects, $11.00; heavies, $7.00\nto $9.00;   lights.  $11.00.\nSILVER FIRM\nNEW  YORK,  April  3\u2014 Sllvi\nurday,   05Vic;   Monday,   G5%c.\nLONDON,\nlay,   33\u00bb4d;\nApril   3.-\nM.m.lu.v.\nSilver,\nIliad.\nFOREIGN EXCHANGE\nNEW    YORK,    April    3\u2014Canadian\ndollars\u201497.16.\nFrancs\u2014Demand.   9.09.\nLire\u2014Demand,   5.29.\nGerman   marks\u2014Demand\nbles. IJ**.\n31 %:\nSTERLING EXCHANGE\nWHEAT LEANS TO\nHIGHER PRICES\nCHICAGO,    April    I.\u2014Wheiit    went\nupward    in   pi ii r   today.    Ii'-lpi-d    hy   a\nrlM In LIvstppol nuoiatiims and l\u00bby\np'tiewal of crop damage reports from\nKansis. The oloM was unset tied a I\nle to l\\r in t gain with May |*UIM\nto |1|S% iintl July |l.IS to |I.1S%.\nCorn finished %e to %c up; outs un-\neiiaiiKfd to fcc hlfhMT ami provliloni\nunchanged   to   Lfic   advance.\nNSW YORK, April a.\u2014Sterling ex-\nhJUsVi firm nt 1441*4 for M-&W\nbills  und   14.1*41   for  demand.\nNKJ.SoN*.   April   3.\u2014Current   counter   exchange   for   storting,   N*ll<\nCANADA BONDS\nprle.\nWINNII'EO.    April     3. \u2014Hid\nfor  Dominion  war  issues:\nVictory loans\u20141922, $99.85; 1923,\nlll.TI; 1927. $100.80; 1933. $103 15;\n1937. $103.30;  1924. $9:1.50;  1934. $100.25.\nWar loans\u20141925. $98; 1931, $98; 19S7,\n$100.30.\nMETAL MARKET\nNEW YORK. April 3.\u2014Copper weak,\nelectrolytic, spot and nearhy, 12Hc to\n12\u00ab4r;   later.   1M\u00bbC.\nTin\u2014Firm;   spot  a ml  futures.   29.37.\nIron\u2014Steady; No. 1 northern, 18 50\nto 19.00; No. 2 northern, 18.00 to\n18.50;  No. 2 southern, 15.00 to 16.50.\nl,eud\u2014 Quiet;    spot,   $4.90. .\nZinc\u2014Quiet;   spot,  $473 to  $4.80.\nAntimony\u2014Spot.  $1.10.\nAt London\u2014Standard copper, spot,\n\u00a357   5s;   futures,    t:r.K.\nElectrolytic\u2014Spot, \u00a302 10s; futures,\nCM   10s.\nTin\u2014Spol,   \u00a3113  10s;   futures.   \u00a3115.\nLead\u2014Spol, \u00a321 15s; fulures. \u00a321\n7s   Cil.\nbaaat\u2014 Spot, \u00a325 12a; futures, \u00a325\n15b.\nEXCHANGE RATE\nHELPS MANITOBA\nWINNIPEG. April 3.\u2014A dinet gum\nuf 138.4(H) from exchange on llu> $2.\n225,1100 provincial bond lMU4 floated\nearly in March was made by Man-\nitdlia, Hon, Kdward Brown, provincial\nin'itHiii'ei', announced today. The issue\nwas for the purpose of relirliiK bonds\nwhich fell due in New York April\n1.\nKarly in th* yar it was predictc 1\nthat the province would face a loss\nOf IMLOM but the recent heavy decline   In   exchange   averted   this.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL,\n<piiet;   butter   Uf\nsflgl   steady.\nCheese\u2014Finest     wst.Tns,    It)\nButter\u2014Choices!    at-aim-iy.    A\nKKKK- Selected,   3.r.e.\nPotatoes\u2014Per   bap.\nHe.\nNELSON MARKET\nApril       1\u2014PoUtOei\n3c   to   -le  a   pound;\ncar  lots,   90c  to\nThe   following   prices\nIn  Nelson yesterday:\nBsflpJi I\"'r dozen   \t\nCreamery    butter,    per    1\nDairy   butter,   per   lh.   ..\nHutterfat, sweet, per lh.\nItutterfat. sour,  per  lh.\nwere   quoted\n3.1\nJ. .40  to ,4ff|\n.40\n41\nGIVES   PRICE\nGRAND\nTRUNK   COAL\nOTTAWA.   April   t.\u2014CosJ   Imported\nloto Canada for the Grand Trunk railway totall-d IJItsMO net tons, Oeeol'd-\niim to in tor mat ion supplied in the\nhouse today. Cost at the min\"s was\nlisTUsOOO; deli\\ere.l In Ciinad, with\nduty and ohUgM the value wan $11,-\nH0,0M,\nMINNEAPOLIS GRAIN\nMINNEAPOLIS, April 3.\u2014Floor nucha n(red.\nHra.li\u2014IB 00   to  $23.00.\nWheat\u2014No. 1 northern. $1.49% to\n$1.52%.   *\nCorn\u2014No. 3 jellow. 4914c to Ms,\nOats\u2014No.   3   white,   32 %c   to   33 V\nTORONTO BOARD\nTORONTO, April 3\u2014Cattle receipts,\n3688; prices steady. Heavy beef steers.\n$7.75 to $8.65; butcher steers, choice,\n$7.60 to $8.00;   good,  $7.00 to $7 60.\nCalf receipts, 400; tops going at\n$9.50 and $10.00.\nSheep receipts, 800; lambs, $13.00 lo\n$15.50.\nHog receipts, 200; fed and watered\nselects,  $13.25.\nMONTREAL LIST\nMONTRKAU April 3\u2014In a market\nwhich was the most active of the year\non the local stock exchange today,\nQuebec Hallway led In activity. After\nconsiderable fluctuation, the stock\nclosed  at  24,  tho  opening  figure.\nThe second most active wtotk was\nAbltilH,   which   gained   1 \\i   at   41%.\nWinnipeg Railway was down a\npoint at  M,\nAtlantic Sugar was featured hy\nfairly heavy dealings and closed th\"'\nday up half at  &%.\nDominion Glaes eased off 1 Vi to\n02%.\nEGG MARKET\n3\u2014Montreal   egg\nheavier;    specials\nOTTAWA, April\nfirm and slightly\nJobbing. 87c.\nVancouver\u2014Local fresh laid, firmer; paying c.untry [mints 25c with\n27c  offered   for specials.\nWINNIPEG     GRAIN     QUOTATIONS\nWheal \u2014\nMny   \t\nJuly   \t\nOats-\nMay   \t\nJ uly   \t\nIt., I Icy -\nMay   \t\nJuly   \t\nFlax\u2014\nMay   \t\nJuly   \t\nKye\u2014\nMay   \t\nJuly   \t\nOpen\n134\n132\n46%\n47\nHigh\n135%\n133 !4\n46%\n47%\nIjOW\n133%\n1314\n46%\n46%\n65%      66%      65%\nTOBONTO, April 3\u2014 With but few\nexceptions, listed stocks on the Toronto exchange moved to higher levels\nduring Iho course of today's aesslon. City l>a!ry common advanced\nanother three Batata lo 112. Holh Issues of F. N. Burt were firm. UM\ncommon advancing 2 points to 113\nand  the   preferred     to   115.\nDominion dinners preferred moved\nup 4%  to 78.\nAbillbi was ihe only paper stock\nctlvc and closed up  1% at 42.\nQuebec Railway moved up 2% to\n4%.\nVANCOUVER     STOCKS\nIn!     Coal    \t\nMoOilliMul   CM\nNugget    \t\nStandard Sihcr\nSunloch mines\nSllversmllli ...\nBoundary Bay\nKnipire    \t\nSpartan  (n*w)\nTrojan on\nBid\n.16\n.40\n.0614\n.13\n.15\n.27 L,\n.01-1.\n.1.1 \\\nAsk.'\n21\n.01',4\n.021,\n.01 h\nA \"film fair\" I\nstages of Ihe mot\ntry will be opene\nin January.\ndepict nil the\ni picture indus-\nin   Los   Angeles\nA   LA   BELLE   ANGLAIS\nAn en!, rprising I'.irisicnMe has\nopened a millinery eslnbllshment with\nIhe interior nppenrance of that ceie\nliraled one-storey place in Paris: \"A\nla Belle Anglais.\" The original Ultra\nslap sto**], from ITtt nil soon, few\nJ cars ag.i. In Hi,, ptaos SI. Phllllpps du\nIlonle. and was famed throughout\nKurope. Its clients had included Marie\nAntoinette, I'rlncess de L*Unb*tis,\n.Madame Itecamior, l'nuliue Bunaparte.\nand L'llzahclh Kosier. Ouches, of\nDevonshire. To Ihese was ndded one\ndistinguished male custumer. M, de\nChateaubriand, who preferred over\nall others obtainable elsewhere, th*\ncravats sold at the little milliners.\nA special electric light atlaclimcii\nfor a sewing machine hns been de\nvised  and   put  on   Ihe  market.\nYour Ambition\nwhatever it may be, will be more\neasily achieved if you have created a Strong ally in the shape of a\nSavings Bank balance.\nIt gives courage in present difficulties\nand confidence for the future.\nNo beginning is too small and   no\naim too high.\nOpen an account to-day. m\nTHE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE\nBranches  in   Kootenay   snd   Boundary  at   NELSON,   FERNIE,   CRANBROOK\nCRESTON,   GRAND   FORKS,   GREENWOOD,   NAKUSP,   TRAIL.\nUsed Articles\nReal Estate\nRooms\nBoard\nTo Rent\nCoats and\nAutomobiles\nCLASSIFIED\nADVERTISING\nHelp Wanted\nPositions Wanted.\nLost and Fraud\nUrtittck\nMachinery\nFarm Produce\nTimber and\nClassified Advertising Rates\nWant ami ClaMlfUd AtlvertiBlnj\u2014\nOne Bnd \u00ab half cents per word per inner t ton. Six cento per word per week,\nor 22^iC. per word per month, cash In\n\u2022uHam'sj. If charged 1 Vi c. a word\nitniir-iM. Transient ada accepted only\non a eap.h-in-Advai.ee basis. Each Int-\nftal fi,;uit., dollar r.u;n, elo., counts aa\none word. Minimum 25c. If charged\n*)0c. Display type double above rttM.\n10   Male Help Wanted\nWANTKD\u2014Pinner fore (nan li.lprr ami\niiKu-hiiii' ft'.'ders nt onc\u00ab>. Otis Staples\nLbr.  Company,  Wycllffe. ii\u00ab12)\nWANTED\u2014Partner la work koo4 ranch\non shuns (cows, horae, chlokcna ainl\nfruit)   no  oftpKal   required.   EtulUh-\nman   and    returned    poMier    preft-rn-d\nL*. it. stivt', Crawford Bay,  B. C-\n(IbOfi)\nWANTED\u2014Mill and yard men. Steady\nemployment,  (OOd   board   ami   lodKtnR.\n(Mis  Staple*  Lumber Company,  wy-\nclirfo._ (1684)\nUAJU. MONEY AT HOME\u2014f6 to |60\npaid weekly for your apare time\nwrlttiig showcards for u-s. No can-\nvaasiti*;. We Instruct and supply\nwith work. West Angua ishowcaid\nSvvlce,    7   Colbourne   Bltlg.,   Toronro\n\" Femajlejrle|p Wanted\n-Exporlericd\nWANTGI\nQuei nc\nWANTED\u20140<\nwork. Apply\nl-'orks,    it.\nlint\nchambermaid.\n     UMIJ\nid Kill for general house-\nMra. il. il. Acres, Orand\n(llll)\n\"> ' Poultry and Ezt*\n8ALE-\n11. H.\n.Kick   frXgn.\nii, \u00bb:\u00bb i''iu.\nMITT)\nllATt'IUNd \"h'lICS -Hosu alul Sin^l'-\ncomb li. Reds, M V>-r 15. Twu i:\u00ab-k-\ni-n-in. Ross ilixI Slnclscomhj \u00bb7 s*oh,\nA. I'. Choqustte, Box 2t>4, Nelson,\n(16T1)\nB*M\nApply Nrw\n(1C,T!1\n18 Miscellantbas lor Sale\nsystsm,   -\nV.ivi r   hall,\ni Htstlorarv j\n\u25a0HIS.      IllKl.l.\nstOTS   Pll'\"\nhen   6-hi'lv\n223\n227\n227\n22.1\n223\n101',    100%\nCIOM!\n134%\nmi\n4B%\n46%\n6ur!i\nMl\n224 \u00ab\n223%\n100 %\n       4614\n ia>\u00bb\nWINNIPEG   CA8H\nGRAIN  QUOTATIONS\nWheat\u2014N.i. 1 hard, $1.37%; No. 1\nnorthern, I1.37H: No, 2 northern,\n$1.32%; No. 3 northern, $1,211%; No.\n4, $1.18%; No. 5. $1.07%; No. 6.\n67<';   feed.   92%c;   trark.   $1.37%.\n0\u00abt*\u2014Mo. 2 C. W.. 47%c; No. I C\nW., 42%r; extra No. 1 feed, 42%c;\nr.t\u00abt\u00abl,  46%.-;   track,  47%c.\n...   3  c.   W..   64%e;   No.   4\n\u25a0 ted iin.l  teed, 66%c;\ni        W   \u2022'.. $2.23%;  No  2\nThe Consolidated Mining \u00b0- Smelting Co.\nOF CANADA UMITED\nOffice  Smelting   and   Refining   Department\nTRAIL.  BRITISH   COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS     \\\nPURCHA8ER3   OF   GOLD,   SILVER.   COPPER   AND   LEAD   ORES\nProducera ef Geld, Silver, Copper. Blueetone, Pt|  Lead. Zlne\nTADANAC, TRAIL\nncii.i.inv WlItK naollnc\nllfhta, tank and w\\rvx. t\nnnd fttiachmentH. t'orcplal\nwash iKiwi uml attachm\nMush toilet, never uai d. :\niiruma. nmfly n-\u00ab. i i.i\nruna**i nearly new. i While aewhuji\nin'icli itM' Ma hum model No. 7 bon^\ncutter. Hand or power grain grind-\ner. s BatvaulMd wuah tuba. 1 pen,\nTom   Barron, nana with  record cock.\nedli d   Htovk.   Kneeland,   Ymlr,   B.\n.    , (IC24)\nHATCHING  EGOS\u2014White Wyandottea,\ntwo-fiitv per fifteen: four-fifty per\nthirty; six-fifty per fifty. Hooked up\non chirks until middle of May. Atkinson, Granite ftd., Nelson. (16:15)\nBLACK~MINORCA heu and ono pen\nof White Leyhorns, for pale. Unbeatable for .show or utility. A. Wallach,\nNelson. UMT]\n11\n.t,'hl\nii\nK\n1G8\n\u2014HI*\n\u25a0k   Mincri\nts\njt it\nWill\nr\nW\nand\nittew,\n$1.1(1.   S.\ni:\nWillie\nI..-KI\nMl\nns\n$1.1\nIt,  All  fn.i\ni iood\nlavli\nt;\nKit\n\u2022ilus\n1'.   1\n,. Hkutl\nc\nH.    (\n(llimi)\n23 _JPwperty_ f*jfr t|fo    _\nNEW ui>-to-dat\u00ab' 7^rwoTne3 cottS*. Klre-\nplace, hot water furiiiiee.. $21)00 cash,\nbalance terms. Mrs. J. Kied Hume,\n'1116 mrd Bt  i,H.a3)\nH500\u2014First Claw fi-roOn]ed~ftiin'gatow.\nflreplaee, stone foundation and\nfully modern. On 3 level lots, 1\nblock from car line. Furniture,\nIncluding piano, can be purchased   at   a  moderate   price.\nS-ISOO\u2014An up-to-date- 8-roomed Bungalow with furnace, fireplace,\nelectric cooking ran\u00abe and hot\nwater heater. l*rlco includes garage, 2 good level lots. JUOtK) will\nhandle.\n\u2022jfigijo\u2014A Hplendld 8-roomed Bungalow\nwith furnace, situated on !t\nlevel lot\u00ab with all kinds of\nfruit- tree*, including apricots.\nA fine lawn and flower garden.\n$i:>00  will  handle.\n$7000\u2014One of the finest 7-roomed tip-\nto-date modern Bungalow* with\nfurnace, 2 fireplaces and electric\nrange. .Situated on 8 level lots.\n$1000  will   handle.\nCall to see my Hat of houses and\nfarm   land.s.\na. t. McMillan\nBaal  Estat.  and  Ininrame, 624  Bakar\nBtraBt,   Halaim. 11610)\n20     Lost and Found\nLOST\u2014A   \"mull   '<>\"   \u00b0f   fcllls.   Flndei\npliss return to The  Dally W.lg^\nBusiness   and   Profession\nDirectory\nMonuments\nCampn.ll  and  Sttokl.  *\u00ab\u00ab\"?\u00abt\u00bb,_ Cgi\nP, O. Box 061.\nT.laplicra. 164\nWast Kootanaj Equipment s: Conatxnc\ntlon   Company.   Oeneral   En\u00bblnaarln\u00bb.\nFor Sale\u2014Bungalow\nTwo ticilrooms. living room, with\nopen fireplace, furnace: 2 lots: excellent location: good view. $2500.\nVery  attractive  terms.\nC. W. APPuEYARD\nNELSON,   li.   C.\n(I60t)\nFOB BALE\u2014Cheap. Ideal site for summer home. Hall acre on lake-shore at\nProcter, cleared, small buildings on\nproperty.   Apply   Box   5,   Procter.\nIl6,j5)\nsi null;   comb   wi\n[lardy  heavy   laytai\nana.    Two    dollars\nper   finy.   W   per\nTomiinson,    Willow\nTJS LEOHOKN\nstock hatch In |\nper setting. $:<\nhundred, Frank\n'tiint, (ItiOl)\nFOB SAI-i: -A l-fool li'\nullcs deek, and bureai\nart>onate    street.\ntl   and   spring,\n.  Mrs.  Bourke.\n Oi71)\nCOR BALE -Four largo wooden barrels, suitable for spraying purposes\nor storage, at'\u00abo a number of sniHll\nones.    Call    nnd    lee    aa    for    prices,\netc. Kootenay Bteam Laundrjr. tlti;;it\nBRY     WOOD--For    nit.     All     lengths.\nF.  Willlaroa,   Houston   street,   Nelann,\nlltiSJi\nHATi'HLNC. BOOS White Leghorn.\nHeavy, winter laying strain. Hens\nmai'ii lo oockereta from Solly's Special pins, ?1.&0 per fifteen; $8 per\nhundred. Wtckhnm & Mitchell, Kob-\naon,  B.  C. OB83)\nWHITK WYANDOTTES, for sale. Apply\n<;. Alkln^on, P. O. Box 523, Nelson,\nB.   C. (lltl)\nf 130 ACRES land six miles from Nelson. Oovernment road runs through\nproperty. Five minutes from school.\nAhout 80 acres of the best land procurable for cultivation, balunre makes\ngood pasture. Apply Box 1420, OnllV\nNews.  (H\"\u00bb)\nWIIITI-; WYANDOTTB setting eggs,\nllftei-n Tor two dollars. Marcus hor-\nUU   Utility   strain.   Box   16\u00ab,   Nel\u00abo.i.\nh.   C. *i&A.4)\nLivestock   eella   quickly   voen   It   le\ntilvertifted   lo   these columna.\nIMUi; WHITE\ning ntrain- L>\nPhone   390R.\n54     Article* Wanted\nK\nUSE    I.Alt.\neight    linn.lr\ndiRlara. Co*\npliton     Hrof\nbrooder,\niicity.   M\nnly-flvo\nrk.   A|.-\nllfi.M)\nWANTKfl\nslm    c\nWillow\nB|.l\niiKtoolli.    lei\nor     frnnk\nr    l.urrow\nTomllnaoi\nWynliilotKH.   Oood   lny-\n'k'ge to u aeltlng, ll.li,\n Uffll\nBARRED ROCKS\u2014 Bn*. M.M P'r fif-\nIrcn from Registered University.\nin rgK stock. CaOlQS coclierols, $.',.00\nt-iii'Ii. T. Itoynon, Somerset 1'otiltry\nrancn, Nelson. (l:!G(i)\nHATl'lllNi; mills\u2014Klnent Blnglecomb\nKe.lw, wlnnern nt Nelson anil I'nni-\nl.rook.   |1   |.cr   1.1,   J12   per   lull.   Too,\n1-OTATOEH     WANTKD Karly     varnt\nit J.   sull.il.lc   for   :-ir'l Stale   ijuantll>\nan.I  i.rice    Itiitlie: lord l.TUK  Compilliy\nN.lsi.u.. II.   C. (15721\n10    Room and Board\nCOMFORTABLE ROOM\u2014Close in. l'ar\nHal  tiouril   if   preferred,  i'hone  3SIKL'\n38 Farm and Dairy Produce I cEaSsj rb~\nly   nnd   ecoi\nada.   brln,\nntnicallv,\nFOljt SALE\u2014Choice dairy butter, thirty-\n*lve Oanta   per   pound.   Apply   Box   92,\nresults quick-\n1 'A   c. a word.\n28 Miscellaneous Wanted\nMORTGAGE LOAN WANTED\u2014Fourteen hundred dollara, for two years.\nSecurity  valued at  ten  thouaand dol-\nlari     Apply   to   II.   E.   1)111. (1684)\nWANTKD \u2014500 ft. second-hand, bul\npood, two or one and a half inch\niron pipe. Apply Thrums Storekeeper,\nThrums.   B.   C. UeTf)\nIZ Situations Wanted Female\nWANTED\u2014Wort\nouseki-eper    by\nIn   or   out   of\nDaily Newa,\n (1(176)\n48\nPersonal\nTHE BECRET of happiness la the\ntreat object in lire, Wend your hlt'tn-\nilate, nionth and year, and one dollar to Jaa. Dunstnne, Private Box IW,\nVancouver, B. C. Answer sent by\nr.Kistered    mall. OfiO\n20   Live Stock lor Sale\nFOB   RALE\u2014Six-yend-old,   Unlit   chest\nnut    horse,   1100   lbs.,   mron*   and   reliable.  Kiuiulre  Box  1878, Dally  News\n(1\u00ab7\u00ab\u00bb\nOOOD, youriK horse, eleven\nwith bilKBy, waif on, isletght\nami   hnv   rack.   Only   $1!25.   A\n\u2022rain.  Box   172, Cranbrook,\nWANTED\u2014 Household  furniture,\nplo who will want luiniiut*\ntheee columna Tell what too\nto at 11.     i\u00bbAc   \u25a0*  word      _____\nKon\nhundred\nhnrnes.'\nbig bar\n(llll)\nI'eo\nSALE\ndelivered.\nB.    O.\n-Twi\nold.\ny-nlne Blaek\neven dollars\nerguson,   BAge\n(1\u00ab57)\nHALF JETtSEY cow to freshen about\nend of April. Third calf. Quiet, easv\nmilker. Ninety-five dollars. Good,\ntwo-year-old, pedigreed Short lior\nbull. Ninety dollars. E. Wood, Win-\nlaw, (1622)\nFOR\n\u25a0AtA   or   t1\"1\"10   for   **or\u00bbt,\ni cow and heifer calf. Ncal lira\nKo.ii  Maine,  b. a UIMJ\n42\nMatrimony\nGENTLEMAN, wort\nwould lik.i lo iiK'tt\ninatrinionx. Apply\nBohsland.\nabout   n,Otio.oo\ni fineil  hidv, view.\n.  White, Box  6t\u00ab,\n(1672)\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nSynoptic Forms\nIn a Compact, Convenient Size,\n9V.xl2\nCan Ijc used to show al a glaiire daily, weekly,\nmonthly or annual subdivision of expenses and\nrevenue.\nPer 100 $2.00\nSmall quantities, each 3\u00a3\nTke Diily News\nQuality  Printers\nBAKER STREET\nNELSON,    B.    C.\n\u2014\nFOR HAI.E-\u2014 Yorkshire plRs. 17 at kIx\nw,,-ks. Heady April 15th. W. Boothby,\nl;.lKt'Wooa. .         (1577)\nFOR SAI.K\u2014l^rade Ayrshire cow 2'i\nyears. Just fresliened with fine bul\ncalf. Price for both, $90. Ed. Holland, Wlnlaw, B. C. (1017)\nCAjTADlMf AOIO .na  rtnorsuo.\nBDPPLY   COMPANY\nBattery B.r.10. Btatlo*\nRleotrlcal appliances, motor snd *\u2022\u25a0>\n,rator   rep\u00bb1r\u00ab.  electrical   and   inaohsB\nleal   trutlalllriK.   oxy-acetylen.   waldlnf\nmachlna shop work, slemlt. lubrlr\nsyslems,   basalck   products.   I.   O.\nIS,  101  Bakar  St.,   Nelson,  l'hon.  Ill\nPainters  an^^D\"^*0^\nralntara   and   Decorator*\nDealers  In Wallpaper ..\n411  Josephine  Bt. P    \"'le's\nTim Player Interior decorator an\npaperhamrer. Phone or call 514 Stanle\nStreet.   Prices   reasonable.   I   Kuarante\nCtfet\nJAM):*'  CAP*\nOppoalte Heather's \u25a0!\u00ab\u2022\nDrop tn and try th. beat horn. \u00bb\u00ab\nmeal   In   the  city   prepared   by\u00bbl\nWhit,   help. <i*?I\nIt Is profitable to pay In advi.nC\nfor classified advertising-, as you thai\n(ret six lnseitlona lor tbe price of four\nLodges\nNELSON   I.ODRE   No.   I.   B.   t.  O,,   \u25a0\nMeets 410H Baker St.. llrst and tMr\nTliursdav. \"\"\nBoots & Shoes\nJ.EB SEE  \u00abB  OO\nBoot,  snd   Sboea   Made   to   OrdM.   IJ\nnalrhiK    612   FRONT   ST.  (1B42)\nAccountants\ncxablc* r. Hiiam\nSuccessor to the lat.\nJames   H.   Lawrence\nBo*  llll \"\"\"\"\u2022(* 4r\nFlorists\nQRIZZELLE'S    OltEENIlOUHlll.   NelSOSl\nCut   flowers   snd   floral   desbrn..\n(1B44]\nAuayers\nB   W.  WIDDOWRON, Bos All*!.  N*U\n\u2022on, B. C. Standard weatern ob,Ttn*.\nWholesale\niaroteate,\nl.  MACDONATjD A CO.  WHO]\nQrocen    and     I'rotUloii     Mil\nImporter*    of   Tent,   Coffe*.    Bplooa,\nDried Frultii, BtRpl*  *\"* Fanoy  Oro-\nperlrH,    Nelson,    H.    C.    (184'*\nArchitecti\nl-'Olt SALK\u2014 Sorrel horse. Weight lOr.0.\nTen years. Strong, reliable. Makes\nnn Ideal light draft horse for farmer. Price, |IM for quick sale. Apply\nII.   Aunts,   Nelson, (1(112)\nKOU BALEr-One horse, and set of delivery harness,  which  1\u00ab In new condition.    Apply    Nelson    Meat    M'.rket.\n(10i&)\nFOH SA t\u00ab| \u2014A good wor.i horse and\nharness. Apply Joe Hentgor, William\n.Siding. M513)\n40     Agents Wanted\nWANTED\u2014Live salesman to sell Fox\ncompany stock. Liberal commission\npaid.  Apply  1'. O.  Box  164,  Hosslat.il.\n  tl\u00ab:j)\n^F^^ed^ojjsjoRenj\nWELL  FURNISHED room with board.\n417   Carbonate   St. (H2a)\nSINGLE BOOM and  two-roomed  suite,\nlor   rent.   Amiable,  bio. k.      (lti.V>)\n37 Boats and Automobiles\nFOB SALE\u2014Used 490 Chcviolrt. New\ntop. also new battery. Tires In first\nclass condition. Has been absolutely\noverhauled. Price, $700. P. O. Hox\n2'JO. U65S)\nFOB KALE\u2014Molor boat and (slvsnliei)\nl.oal house. Reasonable. W. J. Bllt-\nIcdcc,  Box   416.  Trail.  B. C.       (U98)\nST. BlOCS Bran. M. B. O. B. A.\nARCHITECT,\nIrall, B. O.\n(1647)\nBar AT.nns.\nEngineers\n^enBros-iBo,^\nBEL80BT, B. O,\nOITIL     AMD     MIMJ.no     XBaiBBBa*]\nB.   O..   Albert,   end   Bomlsio*\niAMD   IOEVEIOBI\nCrown Grant A*enl* Blue Prlntleaj\n  (1618)\nA.   Ik   Mr.CUI,I.OCS\nHydanllo   Engdneer\nProrlnclal Land \u25a0arr.ros\nBaker St. Nelaon, B ft,\n  (1641,\nKINIHO) EMOmiTEB\nB. C. Land Burrayor\nB. s.wson, KMlo, B. O.\nAuctioneers\nw. cniir.s\nAnotloseer, Appraiser, Talsate.\nfloods   sold    privately   or   *t    Auction,\n119  Ward  Btr.'ot. I'hone  7t\n . (1651 >\nFOR      SALE\u2014Three-room      houseboat.\nfiiiiilsli. .1   or   unfurnished   on   beach\nfoot  of old  park, cheap for cash.  J.\nII.   Simon,   .Nelson. (11.44)\nPRINTED stationery of all kinds.    Tn,\nDally   Newa   Printing-   Department.\nFuneral Directors\nD.  J.  BOBEBTSON.   T.   D.\nVictoria   Street   I'hone\n. Phone    117J.\nD. * B   III\nIII;     Nlshl\n(i\u00abm\nStandard Furniture Compiay\nUndertakers and Foil.aimer, and Fun.\nrial Directors. The finest snd nooal\nup-to-date undertaking parlor, and\nchapel In Interior B. O Day Phon. II\nNlKht   phone,   21,2   and   64. (1603)\nBy   George   McMmmi\nA  HOW   Ml^>^- I WANT MJOTO  COOK\n^r\\ DlMNtR FOROi J05T   LIKE\n\"TOO  Dlb por -fo^\nFOIWf:l\u00bbMl\u00bbiTRT\u00a3trS    \\f.\n?\nI   JObT   Ff-lPI.O-<F.t) KSf*  VA.M\nDOt.AN'fc, COOK r\\ND VE   VVH-l\n^^^VF. mem.-3 juijT like ht.K'.\nNOW  WELL HAVE  tx3ME VlXUSH\n'l~\u00bb. m       niM4FS-    ,  '\n<T,Rr-AT HlA,VEN'o-\nTlWb CORNED\ne>PEF AN'\nCA-ftBACiE ::\n\u2022WELL-THM-'^\nWHAT THEX\nHAD \u25a0 F WE DArt'j\nA WEEK !    .\u2014\n__\nTHE OTHEiR TWO\nDA>,t>. THEY'D   EAT\nPlrS'\u00ab> KNOCKLEfe-\n -\u00bb\u00bb\u2014\n'mum\nOof I\nTOE NELSON DTILY NEWS, TUE.su\nAPRIL  I.\ntS22.\nNews of Sport\nJOHiViVr BUFF TO\nMEET JOE LYNCH\nBIG LEAGUE RECRUITS\nBy Wood Cowan\nvtiii.vBUt.wEtL'..\nOKF   \"t.FT-MOOK-\nCHABLBW   EH ;    BACK\nIN   -rut  RuNNiNGr-\nA *VW , KEIT  THINfe,\nNa,   t\u00abOW 4lM C0RE6TT\nViiLL   BE    ^OPPlH'uP\nAN'   TtUHIN'\nDtMncf\nCHARllEV\n*vv*o remember a fight Charity White\nhad with Johnny Dundee at Now Orleans back in 1313. That was the first\ntimo we- ever saw \"Ole Left-Hook\nCharley\" in art Inn. He didn't have\nmuch then except fint feet\u2014he Just\nflatwhecled If around, holding his left\nbark In readiness nnd believe us,\nwhen ho got It working he h.\nJohnny   just   about   Stopped.\nCharley hasn't changed his style\nmuch, or his feet either, in the last\nnine years. Be got to Jaobnon last\nmonth at the Garden, using Just\nabout the same combination that\nmade him famous\u2014tho ol*- left hunk.\nWhite Is n dangerous man as long\nas he's in on upright position, for\nthere's no use arguing, Charley can\nsoak with his left, It's poison. A\nfighter faring White knows about thai\nleft by reputation, and Is handicapped\nright at thf start. He has to keep\nbis eye nnd mind on that left every\nmoment, lip may have lo change\nhis style io keep out of the danger\nsone\u2014that   puts  him   unknowingly  on\nWHftmti. fi6ht champion\nLtONAfcCi   IS PCUNfcS FOP.*\nTHE UWTWEWJHT   UTI* Al\nHADfiOlH   SVUAftV CrfLftWH-\nthe defensive;  ami  having to oonrrn-\ntrate   on   any   particular   punch   u\nmighty wearing on the nerves,\nIf    Penny    flits    Charley    half    j\nchance,   that   left   hook   la   mighiy   II\nable to toko the championship to Chi-\nongo,    in their last hattle at Benton\nHarbor, Mich., two years ago, Leon-\nard flatted While in the ninth round,\nbul the fifth round saw tho champion\n$7000 IK PHIZES THIS WEEK\nFootball Guide\nFirst Prize, $4,000 Second Prize, $2,500\nBooby Prize, $500\nUSE THIS COUPON\n\"FOOTBALL GUIDE\" FOOTBALL COUPON\nMATCHES TO BE PLAYED SATURDAY, APRIL 8\nCLOSING  DATE,  MIDNIGHT  FRIDAY,  APRIL   7\nHOMK  TRAM\nAWAY TF.AM         | Moron Away   Draw\nCsrdiiT City             v.\nNewcastle U.         |        |        |\nSheffield U.\nManchester City      t.\nMiddlesbro               v.\nArsenal\nNotts County           r.\nDerby County      |        |        |\nStoke                        t.\nWolverhampton    |         |\nCrystal Palac*         r.\nLeicester               |        |         |\nNorthampton            t.\nPlymouth              |        |        |\nWstford                    t.\nLuton Town        |        |        |\nHeart*                     t.\nMorton\nDumbarton                v.\nR*ng\u00abr.                 |        |        |\ntar Coupon* must be cut\u2014not torn out\n1 tnttr \"FoOT.au Gplm\" Football Competition In accordance with the\nrut*,  and  condition,  of  aame,  and  aire,  to  accept   Hie   Auilil'ir'.\ndedalou a. SnaJ aai.l Ircallr bludlnf, aud enter oti licit iinilrrstaiiiliriir.\nI'leaj. Had ssduMd. It cent,, aaj sulaKrlpllon to neat week'. Hums.\n\\     \"\/   AooaTM \u201e..-.._\t\nKttp ma en tht mote.    Rttuni ma rtflht away to Football  Qulda,  P. 0\nDraw*'  189, Vancouiar, tt. C, ar tJapoall ma In box at Football  (iuicJa Off lea\n326 Homar Strut.\nTha  Booby Priia af 1900 will   ba  paid   to tha aubtcrlbar  or  tub.rrlbtri\nlubmitllng   comptttaly   fill ad   In   Mupon   u \u2022 ' u   do cu'ract   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0<\u2022< atti   or   tn.\nlowait niiinbar of oerrsct foiactiita.\nOARSMEN MEET;\nSETTLE PLUNS\nHenley Program Same as\nLast Year; Improvements\nWith Regatta\nTORONTO, April 3.\u2014a representative meeting nf tht1 Canadian Amateur\nassociation <>( .Wanton ires hold here\n.Saturday night with President P. J.\nMulquee*.  in the chair.\nAnnngementa were made for th\u00bb-\nRoyal CamadJan Henley, which will\nlikely bo heM at St. Catharines on\n.inly H ;inii tl, if these date* b*r-\nmnnUc with On.se of tho N. A. A. ().\nregatta, which is to be hold at Philadelphia, probebty  the  fourth or fifth\nOf   August.\nThe Henley program win be practically the MM as last year hut\nmany improvement* will be ma<lc in\neonaecUon  with  the regatta.\nIt was decided to Bend a deputation\ntn i-ltaw.i io asl; thai the duty on\nmcing   shells    boats   and    t -<|iilpm<>nt\n| from Kngland he removed and the\nrailway hoard be requested to restore\n| tho   prewar special  rates on   the   rS.lI-\nI way*\nrope\nNEW YORK, April 3.\u2014Johnny Buff,\nbantamweight champion, haa bt*n\nmatched to defend Ms title against\nJoe Lynch, In a IB-round bout at\nMadison   Square   <.ardons   on   Mny   i>.\nT\nMontreal Edifice Destroyed;\nOrigin of Fire Unknown;\nSteeple Collapses\nMONTltKAL, April S.\u2014Tho Churrh\nof Iho .Sacred Hear!, at tho cornor of\nP1***b* and Ontario *tt*j**J, wns com-\nplelely doHtroyod by fire of unknown\norigin which bsote* out at 4 o'clock\nthin nftornoon and, raKinic fiorerly\nuntil nearly 7 o'clock, caused damage\nestimated at about  JlGO.000.\nIn the midst of th* conflagration\nIho 175-foot steeple, which towered\nabove the main portal of the edifice.\ncollapsed into the horning ruins,\ncompleting the work of destruction\nwrouuhf hy the flames and sending\nthe large crowd that had assemble,!\nscurrying tn safety. No one was injured.\nThe greater part of the 1100,0*0\nInsurance carried on the property\nwas taken out on the rectory nnd\norphanage, and the net loss conse-\nouentlv  will  he very  large.\nbeing    knocked     through    l|\nand mighty dizzy.\nWhite Is a veteran. He wns born\nn Liverpool in lsti). Is 5 feel 8 Inches\ntnll nnd has been fighting sinre 1*00,\nCharity has tough) Vm ail, Abe Alien, Mamlol. U'olgasl, Kilbane, Dundee, l'.iitton\u2014and what a lacing Jack\ngave him tin- II rounds in 11113! \u2014\nHltchle, Welah for the lightweight\nchampionship. Ktehie Mitchell, and\nthe tough Willie Jackson. Tho last\nfight found White at his best nfter\n15 years of fighting.\nStruggle for Sixteen Places\nin Championship Play;\nTraps Catch Jap\nGIANT ASPIRES TO\nDEMPSEY'S MANTLE\nMONTREAL, April a.\u2014An aspirant\nJaek IVmpMey'N t it lo Is at pros-\nt kWfofl trained in this city in\n\u00ab\u2022 person of a young; Riant named\noiix, who hall* from Troy I'lMnl.s.\nf> in, his mipporl'Ts claim, neraly fi\n<-t H inel.es jn bstgfet\nJtituix, who was one\u00bb- a himheniian,\nined th* pOttpe forre here, Re\n.\u00bb never don4- any scientific  hoxin\u00ab.\nMACD0NALD3\n%*<**\n^J^\u00b0\nID For 15*\nPIN1HUR4JT, N. C, April 3.\u2014LMT\nfleores were returned today for tlie\nfirst IS holts of ihe 36-hole qualifying round of the Mud annual North\nand Huuih, American gulf champion\nwhip. Heven players did SU or het-\nter and 1H were Imnchvd hotwoon Si\nand K.I. These follaVS will continue\ntomorrow the st rumple for the Ifi\nplaces in the chaVnpionship play.\nHarold Veh.'i- of ToL.lo. H\"nry \"fop-\njiinK of OreenWieJl and Arthur Yaies\nof Rochester led the players, who\nwore assigned to the \\.i. 3 course,\nwith rounds of 71 each, while K. ~\\.,\nSchntleM nf i'lnehurst, lod the other\nhalf of the field on tho championship courso with a 74. The field will\nho  reversed  for  tomorrow's  round.\nW. (*. Kownes .Jr. of nakmont; V.\nC. Newton of Urooklyn, U. I. W.ilk.r\nJr. of Ilichmond county, all favorites\nfor th'- title, did well enough today\nto win places in tho championship\ndivision if thoy maintain the same\npneo in tho final round. It Is helleved\nthat nothing worso than a total of\n16'J will qualify.\nII. Kahaw.'iki of Toklo, amateur\nchampion of Japan, took 90. Ho was\nin traps, on six holes which cost him\nfive sixes and a seven and ho la so\nfar hehind the leaders that only marvelous golf will enable him to qualify.\nK. F, Merriman of Waterhury. winner\nof the championship last year, did not\nstart.\nJOHNNY DUNDEE WILL\nBOX PEPPER MARTIN\nNSW TORK, April 3\u2014 Johnny\nDundee, world's Junior lightweight\nchampion, who defends his title here\ntomorrow lUsfhl against Jimmy Oood-\nrlch of Hnffalo, sijrned Itatey to defend his title for the fir*t time In\nNew York against Pepper Martin of\nHrooklyn, on April 13. Dundee ha-t\nboon gnaiMiiteod $l!>,(iOo for Ilia end\nof tho receipts by Jimmy Kelly, Martin's manager, for the 15-round con-\ntoft.\nOLD COUNTRY FOOTBALL\nLONDON, April t.\u2014<Ry Canadian\nPress Cable). \u2014 Results of football\ngames    today:\nSecond   Division\n\u25a0heftteM,    Wednesday,   2;    Tortvale,\n0.\nSouthern Section, Third Division\nExeter,  2;   Northampton,  0,\nScottish  LVhgue,  First  Division\nItailh   Rovers,   fi;   Kangers.   3.\nNorthern    Union    Rugby\nT^r.ls,   3t:    Uradford,   ft.\nHull.   I;   Swindon,   ft.\nOldham,   I;   WIgan,  2.\nRELATES STORY OF\nQUEBEC FISHERIES\nOTTAWA, April 3.\u2014No request has\nbeen made to transfer the control\nof the British Columbia fisheries to\nthat proviniM-, il was state.! in tie-\nhouse this afternoon by lion. Krnest\nLapointe, Conservatlvo member for\nNew WeatmWslsr. As these Osherisa\nt    f 400,000   a    year    to   adminlstir,\nIt    was   not    likely   that,   the   province\nwould seek the iranstVr,  Mr.  UpOtate\nbled.\n(hi a motion ot* Hon. Charles Mart-il,\nBomventtire, the house heard the\nlong-inv(dved    istoiy    uf    the    fishery\nlispute between tho Dominion government and the province of ijueb.c.\nTho dispute is one harking back over\nM years and only recently terminated   by   tho  passage   of  an  order  In\n\u25a0ouneil by the Duminiuri government\ntransferring tho Quebec fisheries to\nthe   province.\nHon, Knost I\/ipointe, who outlined\nthe history of tho dispute, hold that\nthe transit r had not involved any\ngiving away of rights. The Dominion\n\u25a0OYtrnmenl   could   still   regulate.\n.>      \"\" ' '\u25a0 *|wT-?a\nHoisery Week\nAt the Bay.   These are numbers which we know\nare real value for your money.\nMEN'S WORK SOCKS, brown and (Pi   AA\ngrey, 35\u00ab*.   Three for  \u00abPl.UU\nGREY RIBBED SOCKS, zlOr*\nWOOI, SOCKS, in lovats and brown AKf*\nmixtures  TtOC\nWOOL RIBBED SOCKS, f^Hp\nfor strong wear Ol\/C\nFINE NATURAL WOOL RIBBED \u00a3K\/\u00bb\nSOCKS    \\)DL\nMEN'S ALL WOOL GREY AND BROWN Hrn\nRIBBED   SOCKS    \u2022  lOt\nLADIES WHITE SILK THREAD HOSE, heavy\nquality, sizes 9, 9^, 10. Special, (gl   rrr\nper  pair    *v A \u2022 \u2022 O\nHARVEY'S PAINTED SILK HOSE, black, white,\nbrown, all sizes. (CO CCO\nper pair  , i)\u00abat)J\nCHILDREN'S ALL WOOL CASHMERE STOCKINGS, Penman's manufacture, cream, pink and\nsky; all sizes.   Special value, KQ\/*\nper   pair    \u201ex    D.\/C\nGLYN'S FAMOUS LONDON MADE HATS\u2014These\nHats are made of pure fur felt of the finest quality, and come in the new shades of fawn, preen and\nsteel with self bands. Also in light grey with black\nbands. Smart, shapes for spring wear.     (Pp*  J* fi\nEach   JpD.DU\nWe consider ourselves fortunate in being able to\noffer such a good quality Hat for so moderate a\nprice. .    ,\nDISTRACTED FARMER\nPERISHES IN SLOUGH\nRBQINA, April 3.\u2014After a search\nlasting all nlKht. the d.ad body of\nJ. W. Klassoh. farmer In the Hi-rhcrt,\nSask.. district was found lying hi a\nslouch at on SMly hour. Whil'- de*\nUrlous as tho result of illness, he\nran from his aSMO hist eveninj,' pnr-\ntially dressed. Klasseh had a mother\nand Other rolati\\es in the famine SjOe,\nin Itussia, who had upp'-abd to him\nfor help, and wi>rry OVST their condition    helped    to    unbalance    his    mind.\n!!\u00ab\u25a0 leaves a arils and six children.\nRUSH TO COMPLETE\nINCOME TAX FORMS\nVANCOUVER,     April     S.\u2014-Thirty \u25a0\nfive thousand income ta\\ '.-turns\nwere receive.! at the offfOS Ot AasM-\nsor f'ripps at tho court hOUM Iftat\nweek, and the assessor export;, that\nIO.M0 more will com.- in. TWC tli-iu-\nsand  persons ha\\e MOttred extension\nof time in Which to file because Ihe\nr.ffice ran out of assey^mont form* . n\nsfctOTdaVy mom ing. Many persons\nhave s.'nt Itl post office orbTS,\n(dMsfafl I and even cash in \u00bb> ivinc-it\nwithout waiting for their inc >m\u00ab tax\nbills, under Iho !mprrssion th r. y:\\y-\nmont had to bo mado at tho time \u201ef\nfiluiK their returns, as is the ca^o\nwhen filing the fod'Tal Income tAa\nstatement.\nindicTfivefor'\ntheater collapse\nWASHINCToN, April I.\u2014I'ive of\ntho nine men held by coroner's Jury\nas responsible for the collapse m\n.lanuary   2S     nf     the     Knickerbocker\ntheater, with the loss of ;rx jives, were\nindicted today by the grand Jury on\na chaiRo of manslaughter, with the\nfour   other   men   being   exonerated.\nFORDNEY TARIFF\nHAS DRAWBACKS\nQUBBaPC, April 3.\u2014The F..rdn.y\ntftritt does not sH\u2014 very Bjoyular in\nthe United states, especially in New\nKngland, aeeardlBfJ t<i l'l'i'inier Tas-\nchereaa,     who     returned     (ran     that\ncountry today,    if the Ualted Mates\nSjOVenunsnl     insists    on     raising    the\nduty   on   all   Canadian   goods,   Ottawa\nwill   have   to   impose  an   exportation\nduly on pulpwood, tnl. prenih r\nthOS*fht, This would greatly incon-\nvenlence the Americans, aa they have\nnot got at present sufficient wood in\ntheir    territory    for    their    gre.u    de-\nmanda,\nFREE VOTE WILL\nDECIDE EMBARGO\nLONDON. April 3.\u2014(By fanadian\nPress  Cable)\u2014The decision aa to  the\nquestion of lifting the embargo\nagainst Canadian store cattle will bo\nleft tn the freo vole of the house of\ncommdns, it was announced today\nhy Austen Chamberlain, government\nleader, amidst   cheers.\nTho time for the discussion of tho\nembargo question cannot ho found\nbefore Blaster, .Mr. Chamberlain Mid,\nbut he added that he would try to\narrange for an opportunity to discuss tho queetlon soon after t!h' parliamentary recess.\nMK!li,,r FlX Ml OF TRIAL\nCHURCH ALLIANCE,       F0R BANK ROBBERS\n.1\nCi PENH A 0 EN, April 3\u2014Tin\"\nfourth eonfen -;. \u25a0\u25a0 of the World  Alliance oi Char hi s. at whii li r preei n-\ntativ.'s  of ehur. le I   at N   nati<ms  will\n!><\u25a0  preaont   nil]   bt   held   ban   tt nn\nAUataal   il  io Angu-i   1\"  und.r  the ,m-\nspi.es   ,.r   the   World     Alliance    of\nChurches, which seeks to prosaate an\nInternational    union    of    chinO-   do-  \u00abrew   \u00b0\"1   \"r   :i   robbery   of   a   mill\nnominations I truck   hero   bUrah   I,   1921.   Between\n!tOe,0Oe and  MOO.OOO was stolen, ac-\nItng ti> post office inspectors. Wil-\nmgel-\nLOS EWOKLKS, April 3.\u2014Tho casea\n| Of Herbert Wilson and IKrbort R.\nCox, charged with mail robbery, w\u00bb re\nset for it ill May iti, today by Judge\nTrippet ef the United St.n.'s district\n' court.\nI    Th- ebano Bsialnst Wllaoa and Cox\nThe  president   of  the alttafte\narchhlahop of Canterbury, hopes, Jh coming to post omce Inspectors,\nhs present. i>r. Henry Atkinson, oil\u25a0on *\u2022\u25a0 formerly a tmrellnf een\nths   Amwlcan   Church   peace   uni.,,   ist \u2022\"\"i coma from Uoetdoa, Ont.\nhas   I- en   \\ -i sit in tig   Copenha*t*n\nmake   the   final   an'ang.'mmis   for  tin\nholding of the conference.\nRefuses Naturalization\nto Japanese Subjects\nVANcorvr.it,    April    r   Jwtm\nDavid   Qrant   today   refused   naturaii-\nzation to every It pi lease applicant in\nthe naturalization court. lie nn-\nnounced his intention, BO long OS In*\nwas naturalization judge, of Nfuamf\nto grant naturalization paper* to ftp-\nHiiese   unless   instrucled   tt\u00bb   M   da   by\nthe secretary of state. In regard lo\nthe cases he \\<. making out a report\nfor the secrets my nl state, point ml\nout   that   these   Japanese have no\npr>w\u00bb r to dlVtSt themselves of then\nJapanese  aMegianro.\npaiiH'i.i \u2014 lihod.i chaagad h< r\nbrown hair tt rot. in spit<> of her\nfiance's  pleading  not   to  ii\u00bb>  po.\nNeville-How could she so disregard   a   lov.-il   cote's   dying   rsepMatf\n\\xhi m n\\i:\\\\iii\u00bb in  BRBUV.\nTha case of the IKyear-old hunting   dog   which   recovered   its  youth\nand r\u00ab *t for life after a gland oper-\na'lon Of th*1 Steinach kind has en-\n4-oirig<:d   IhS  hopes of a   great many\neMtriy n*ceona,\nThe dog was s\u00bb tit to a Copenhagen\nhospital fo be mercifully killed, us it\nwas nearly blind and was deaf, but\nI).:   Kutid   Band   of   the   Pathological\ninstitute i.f the Copenhagen Genera!\nhospital saked the owner's permission to Operate.    The animal began to\nraejover strength, its stght and appetite improved, bald patches grew hair\nand in three months It was quite fit.\nNow it goes hunting and is as qui-:k\nat retrieving us any dog in his prime.\nA New v. rker declares \"woman la\nhi \u2022 ternal optlmlat for at the very\nmoment when \"he decides that ono\nhusband doesn't understand her she\nusually lias her eye on another who\nwill.\"\nCRITICS DIVIDED\nCONCERNING JONES\nLONDON, April 3.\u2014(By Canadian\nPress C*bie).~-CrUtOS hold divided\nopinions regarding the merit a of\nSoldier Jones, tho Canadian heavyweight boxer, who lost his first\nmatch here laet week to Albert Lloyd,\nthe AUHtralian, on a foul, after he\nhad  piactlcnlly  put  him out.\nPome declare Jones Ir too alow and\nothers hold thnt ho la able to beat\nany British heavyweight and that he\nshould be given an opportunity to\nmeet tho beat of them.\nCo dene\nUst this blank c\nerdsr  or  check   snd\nRata:    One snd\nwhan   cash   sccempa\nword,    No  charge   1\nPlease  publish  t\nsed    W\nn which to write yo\nmail  direct  to  The\na half cent a word t\nniea   order.      Minimu\n-mi     A'i>    hdei   Form\njr condensed   ad.,   one   word   In   each   space.     Enclose   money\nDaily   Naws.   Nslson,  B   C\nach  insartion,    six   consecutive    insertions   for    pries    of   four\nm,   2&c    Each   initial,   figure, dollar   signs,  ate,  counts   ss  ene\naa  than   60   cent*,\nia  advertisement   below          .   ..            ...  timss. *or which  1  enclose f. -\t\na\nI\n1\n|\n1-                  1\nIf   d.sir.d.   r.pli.s   nil)   b.   .ddra.s.d   to   bo.    1 umb.r.   at   Th.   Dally    N.w.   Olf't..     If   r.pl...   a\".\n1.   b.  m.il.d   ancloa.   10c  MM   \u00ab\u2022  \u2022\u2022\u00bb\u00ab\u2022  O\"1  \u2022'   \u00bb**I*B*  \u00abnd  \u2022u'>\u2122  ''*\u2022  words  sxlrs  lor  bo.  numb.r,\n , \u2014 . \u25a0 -**\n,\n rfflPi\nret\na via   i'-iiL\nTHE ARK\n-\u25ba-*\n0** still *om\u00ab bargains for c*sh buy-\nirs. Nlcs Wool Toques, asaorted col-\nirs, 35ff. \u2022Is*.!' Flannelette, whits\nar colored, 25*? yard, \u2022-ounc. Dock,\n80*>. '-oum-e Duck, 35,* yard.\nlies a Heavy Work Socks, 25\u00abf P\"'r-\nCradles' Hoalory, obc values lor 354?.\n4. Tery heavy winter Hose, regular\ntSc, to clear out at 50,? palr.Oirl.'\nind boys' good strong Hone, 35*?.\n10*?. 45.?. 50<? P\u00bblr. Indies' white\nHm\u00bb. 354?. 45**. 50<? P\u00bb'f- Or*\u00bb\nHale   Uose,   35\u00ab?   P*lr-\nJ. W. HOLMES'\nPh.n.  834\nKM  V.rn.n   tt\nSeeds\nSeeds\nThese Seeds are fresh,\nand will Rrow. STEF.LE\nBRIGGS and MACKENZIE. Two very reliable\nfirms.\nTHE\nARE\nGOODS\nRIGHT\nCANADA DRUG &\nBOOK COMPANY\nP. 0.  Box   1067, Prions  81\nJ. B. TVsrhamps, the Rossland lumberman,  is at the Hume.\nItnbert Rtrachan, (he Inspector of\nmines, came In from  FVrnle last  night.\nKev. O. Uuthurst Hall of Kaslo Is\na cliy   visitor.\nIn the International cross-country\n10 mile rnce, run neii r Glasgow Sittur-\nday, with trams from Prance, Knglanri,\nScotland, Wales am! Ireland the GsOOt-\ntlsh team was captained by O. C. L.\nWallach of Manchester, n younger\nbrother of A. Wallach of Nelson, In\nthe old days, when Iho two WSllaoas\nused to run together, tbe fulure Nelson foot hall magnate used to usually\nlead   his  brother  home.\nROTARY CLUB TAKES\nUP EDUCATION TOPIC\nEducation and particularly tho relationship between the public schools\nand tho university, furnished the\ntopic for discussion nt yesterday's\nweekly luncheon of the Rotary club\nat the Hume, Mayor C. F. McHardy,\nof the educational committee, propounding his view in favor of a\ncurriculum designed for those unable\nto proceed to a university degree\nwith also the popularizing; of the university.\nWith the club depleted by the absence of four of Its members at the\ncoast, the dispelling of dull care was\nperhaps the chief aim of the function, and this was effected through\nthe  medium   of  a   lively   \"sing-song,\"\nADVERTISING EXPERT\nNo Vestige of Truth\nIn Reports Concerning\nPrincess Patricia\nFrank Thompson, who for the past\n12 years haa been associated wilh\nthe Canadian Street Car Advertising\ncompany, has n\u00bb\\\\ joined ths staff of\nthe Canadian Advertising agency. Mr.\nThompson bus an exceptionally broad\nknowledge of rdvertiaing, aa previous\nto his ronnoclrnn In the street car\nfield, he was wilh tho Ottawa Citizen\nand l>eo Tress, the Farmers' Advocate In Winnipeg, and the Moutren\nDally and Weekly Star, Montreal.\nMrs. Kermedy-Kraser and her\ndaughter, Fatuffa, presented their\nHehrldean folk songs with great success at the Aeolian hall, London, recently.\nI   AM    BUSY\nTesting Eyes\nMy patrons do the advertising. My complete,\naccurate system always\ngives satisfactory results.\nGlasses supplied. Broken\nlenses replaced. All repairs\nmade.\nA. Higginbotham\nOptometrist 8p.cl.list\nRooms 3, 4 and 6, Griffin Block\nWagstafle's Jams, Jellies\nand Marmalade\nClngrr  Marina- OK\/,\nlade _ \u00bbJuC\nOrpen Fljr Marmn- OK\/,\nla,!,!    \u201e. aiOC\nTineapple   Marma- OK\/,\nlade       \u2014') L\nBramMo OK\/,\nJelly     UOK,\nStrawberry OPt\/i\nJam \u00abwDC\nCHRISTIE    CAKE     IN     1LB.\nTINS\n| Sultana ....\u201e  30\u00ab\u00bb\nFruit      _ 30C\nCHRISTIE'S   SODAS\nPur'kalr* 35\u00ab*\nCelery, Leaf Lettuce, Hesd Let-\ntuce, C.bbaga, Cauliflower, Car-\nrot*,   Parsnips,   Turnips,   Sweet\nPotatoes\nBananas, lb \"Ot4\nHIGH CLASS FURS\nA very fine selection kept In\nstock or made to order. Cust \u00bbra-\ner's own furs made up Into a .y\narticle desired. Old furs repaired\nand rsmodellod. Beat pries p*Jd\n(or\nRaw Furs\nG. GLASER\nManufieturlnfl    \u00bbuti\u00bb-\nPh.ns 10\u00ab N\u00bbW. 6. Z.\nThrift\n| In aoonactb t with the saving\n] qM Ime and money, It Is well to\n' ^,,*\/i<1ei conaervatllon of energy.\n! Mr-straln means using rnerv.i-\ntvicn that might be saved hy\n' v oner attention to the syaa,\nI Wt can ditermine positivfly\n. tbe condition of your* eyes'If\n1   pM  will  call  st  our office,\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE .\nOptlst and   Optician.\nTONIGHT\nGEM\nTONIGHT\nWilliam Faversham\n'The Sin That Was His'\nA  remarkable dramatic  offering.    The  work  of  Mr.\nFaversham  in \"The Sin  That Was  His\" ia one of the\noutstanding achievements of the unspoken  drama.\nDon't Miss This Rare Treat\nMack Sennett Comedy,\n'DON'T WEAKEN'\nVith Charlie Murray and Ford Stirling\nTopics of the Day\nOLD-TIMERS PLEASE\nGIVE RECOLLECTIONS\nLONDON, April 3.\u2014The Canadian Press Is authorized by a High\nauthority to say that there Is no\nvestige of truth In the story appearing In United States papers\nto the effect that Lady Patricia\nHan.M.jy and her hushand have for\nmonths heen practically separated\nand living apart.\nSENIOR BASEBALL\nEvery ohl-tlmer in the Kootenay\nhaa some slirring tale to tell. If he\nor she will only toll it. In Its forthcoming 20th anniversary number The\nDaily News wilt give space to as\nmany letters describing stirring inci-\nlenls of the pioneer days or giving\nword pictures of the communities of\nthose limes, as the old-timers care to,\nwrite, hut tho letters should not be\"\nton long. In n sense, thh will he an\nId-timers' number, aud rrp.nn.it>\nlive, sturdy pioneers ft is hoped will\nleriuately take care of this phase.\nMutter of thi* sort should he to\nhand early, for it cannot he handled\nf left too near the date of publication.\nExecutive Will Draw Up\nBudget; Talk West Kootenay League\nOver 20 enthusiastic senior hall-\nplayers and fans last night took a\nhand In organizing the Nelson senior\nbaseball cluh for tho season and\nvoiced their opinions (not without\nconsiderable good natured fireworks)\nas to the policy nf the club. T. .!.,\nSeanlan, one of the city's most anient\nfans, was voted to tho ehnir.\nHev. J. P. West man, Coach J. C.\nItyan, Heferee W. Shacklelon, Horticulturist E. C. Hunt, E. Ij. Buchanan\nand others expressed Ihemselves\nwithout equivocation - on the much\nvexed question of whether the club\nshoud run on strictly nmalour lines\nthis yeor, or as In the past, admit, as\nnecessity arises, one or two professionals to coach the rest nnd to raise\nthe brand of ball played.\nPRESBYTERIAN BAZAAR\nHAS MANY ATTRACTIONS\nThere will bo something tempting\nto purchase or something to entertain everyone attending the Preshy-\nMrian Easier bnt.uar !\u2022) St. Paul's\ntiriscmcnt this .afternoon. Judging by\ntho preparations of the large committee. \/\nIn a setting brightened with pussy\nWMOWI and daffodils arranged b)\nAim. J. It.imsny and her assistants,\nall kind'; n' plain afwlnf, ru aprons,\nchildren's i1..'Kjm?k. pliluvs easi-s, low-\nel\u00ab, dainty lingerie und many fancy\narticles will be offered for sale at\nthe booth presided over by JfeedaJllW\nII.  i:. Dill, .1. Allen am] II. McKcnzie.\nThe appetizing products of home\ncookery and toothstimo candy will he\noffered for vale by Mesdames A. Donaldson, \\V, T. Chonte, N. Parke, A,\nShaw. J. Mclntyre, M. Globe and F.\nIt. .lelfs, while other delicacies will\nbe dispensed by Mesdames Mclycod\nand It. A. Peebles, who have charge\nof the tea room. An orcheatra, undei\nP. Warner Smith, will entertain with\nmany delightful numbers.\nI.OWIHS   CANADIAN    UKCOItll.\nUONTRBAl*. April  1\u2014Lowering a\nCanadian   record   for   the   10  yards.\nMIsh l.ll.n ritzenmionv won ihe la-\ndifV swimming ehamplottahip of the\nMoDjreal Amateur Athletic association here tonight, She vwam the distance In 33 hioou'Ir flat. The previous murk of 23 3-5 seconds was established hy .Miss Haaa. KaaritT of\nWinnipeg In her victory in the Cana-\nilian championships held M\u00a5traJ\nweeks ago.\nWILL SMARTEN UP\nFOR GENOA PARTY\nMOSCOW, April 3.\u2014(By Associated Press.)\u2014 A little girl who had\nbeen snubbed by all her neighbors\nfor years and then suddenly received\nan Invitation to a party at the home\nof ihe rich little girl on the hill could\nhardly display more excitement than\nthe Itussian Holshevist government\nhas over IN Invitation to the Genoa\nconference.\nThey now feel they are In the social swim of nations and thus entitled\nto make faces at representatives of\nformer Russian regimes who refimed\nto play with them.\nUnless, for reasons of policy which\ndo not, at present seem likely to he\ninvoked, the Sovipt delegation to Genoa should decide to appear there in\nthe garb of the proletariat, the Bol-\nfhevist representatives will be sar-\ntoriatly as immaculate as any others\natlen.Hng the conference. They are\nSuing lo be woll dii-s ed ul ih.ir fust\nparty.\nfl78,000.(N10   A   DAY.\nAlthough tho reparation* commission sternly warned Oermony that\nthere was no hope of a moratorium\nunless the issue of paper money\ncrnspd, the official report of the\nItclclishank for last week shows that\nthe hank note presses worked at\nhigher speed than ever before.\n(Icrmany was flooded in seven days\nwith an additional 4,7:>0,\"00,000 of\npaper marks. The total bank note\ncirculation now approaches 110.000,-\n000,000   marks   (about   $700,000,000).\nqiiti; safi;.\nA Vrenrh murderer, Just before his\nexecution at Caen, was asked what he\nwould like.to have for breakfast\u2014his\nlast meal,\n\"A dish of lobster In the Anprlcnn\nstyle,\" he' said. \"The dish has always tempted me, but for many years\nnow I have not tasted It because It\ngive* me violent indigestion. Tomorrow I need not worry.\"\nA. S. Horswill & Co.\nPHONE  121    i\nTODAY\nFinest  Swede Turnips,   per\nKirk    - 83.50\nTurnips, 6 lbs. for  25\u00ab?\nGood   Cabbage,   per   lh g,*\nSpuds, per sack 100 lbs $2.00\n\"White  Swan Soap.  20 bars\nrnr    $1.00\nLenox Soap,  IS  bars  $1.00\n.Malkln's    H.St    Marmalade,\nH\u00bb 85t*\nMalkln's  rtest   l*uro   Ilonev,\nMb.  tin   80\u00ab*\nFlorida  Grape Fruit, very larne,\n2   f<\u00bbr   UiV\nCream of Wheat, package. 25-1*\nBananas,   Oranges,    Apples   and\nLemons.\nFresh   Hothouse   Lettuce\nPERE MARQUETTE\nWINS FINAL GAME\nBOSTON, April 3.\u2014In the last\nhockey game of the 1922 reason, held\ntonight, the Pere Ma-'quette team\nwon a victory over the Westminsters.\nUnited States champion-*, by a score\nof 1 to 0. This gives Pere Marquette\ntwo  victories  out sbi  tho  three-game\nNelson News oi the Day\nDAT  LIGHT SAV1NO\nir you a*b in PAVoa or daylight SAVING AND HAVE A OIV-\nTO VOTE PLEASE CALL AT THE OFFICE OF H. A. LOWE AND SION THE\nPETITION IK CONNECTION THEREWITH. DAYLiOM SAVINQ COHMW-\nTEE. ilQW)\nFor rent, private office, siiitnble for\nanyone requiring office room \u00abnd attention to callers during their \u00bbh\u00ab<'nce\nApply   to  H.  A. Lowe,  Ward St.   Phone\nremember  the  Flora I   Rata  to  he\n\u2022riven   by   the Congregation   of  St.   Saviour's on  May 3. tlfiSl!)\nA   meeting   nf   the    NVlsnn    Football\nClub  will  be liebl  In  Ihe   Y.  M. O.  A.  tonight   at   K   p.   m.   Everybody   welcome.\n(1881)\nCARD    OF    THANKS\nMr. and Mrs. A. flailIcano wish te\n'hank the m;.lron and hospital staff\nfor their kind attention during their\nson's    Illness. (167a)\nQueen City IMnkah Lodge, No. 16,\nL O. O. V.. meet* tonight at S oVInek\nInitiation  and   Home   fund   drill.   (IfiS7)\nFor the lust tlMM cooked niPoN In\ntho city,   go  to  904   Stanley. (168T.)\nCARD   Or   THANKS\nMr. nnd Mrn. A. Lommel nnd family\nof WuM pROblOn wish, especially, to\n(hank the nurses of Kootenay I.nke\nQaaaral   hnspimi   nnd   the   talefranha,\nfor  Ihe  ninny  kindnesses  bestowal  ibu-\nInj?  the  Illness of their son.   Also to thr\nmany   frtanaa,   who   sent   flowers   and\nspiritual   offi rings   to   the   futn r:il\n(llll)\nA. G. Lambert Co., Ltd.\nMsnufactur\u00abra of  and   Daal.r, In\nAll kinds of Lumber and BuHdinf Material, Shinglei,\nLath, Mouldings, Windows and Doors and Beaver\nr'.xrr.. it\nNELSON,  1.0,\nSpecial Sale of Tires\nUntil our stock in exhausted we will sell\nGutta Percha (Maltese Cross) Tires\nAt list Prices Less 20 Per Cent Discount\nWb h\u00bbve only a limited number in stock,\nand It will lie to your advantage to order your\nrtsiaUirenirnla now.\n-VaHaoce Hardware Company, Ltd.\nRecognized as the Best\nDr. Rusk's Chick Food\nGET OUR rniCES ON CLOVER SEEDS,\nTIMOTHY SEED, ALFALFA SEED, ETC.\nAll Lines ol Hay, Grain and Feed\nEllison Hilling and Elevator Co.\nLIMITED\n10%    10%    10%    10%\nFirst class\"security*for]loan .\nof $4,500.    Interest 10%^\nCHAS. F. McHARDY\nREAL EBTATE PHONE 165 INSURANCE\nNelson Avenue,  Fairview,  Wednesday,\n5th  April, 2 o'Clock.\nKfcVfof reeeiwil lnslruetlnn\u00ab from\nW. A. Armour, Ksrj., I will offer al\n1'uhlir Auction .ill his household goorls\nat Mr. Stuhhs' residence, eonniHtin(\nof Wieker Rockers, Hrasa lied com\nplelc, Bureau, Chiffonier, Hciirooin\nWare, Fumed Oak Morris Chnir, Arm\ni.'hair, Sinner Mui-hino, new Mnson ft\nRlseh I'lano, fumed oak case and long\nstool (terms ran he Riven!; Bufft t\nand Cahlmt, Ruga, Refrigerator\nRookrase, 11 Rhode Island Red\nChicken**, one CooktraJ, three of these\nare pure hied. Or. view morning or\nsale.\nOne  flve-ortave Dominion  Orgnn  In\nhurl   walnut   cise.\nTERMS:     CASH.\nW. CUTLER, Auctioneer\nAnother Shipment of Old\nColony Maple  Syrup\nHas Just Arrived\nSmall,   per (pi   AA\ncan    \u25a0.\u201e....: tM.VU\nMedium,    per (pi   A A\nenn    wXtVU\n1*z?:l $3.40\nOranges,    Bananas,    Lattuca\nJ. A. IRVING & CO.\nCOAL, WOOD AND\nTEAMING\nFor the best Domestlo and\nFurnace Coal and Dry Wood,\nalso Piano and Furniture Moving,   see\nMcDonald   Cartage   &\nFuel Company\nPhone  504 503   Bsksr   St.\nPURITY CHICK FOOD\nA Scratch Food for BABY\nCHICKS. Cracked and\nsifted prain, carrying a\ngood proportion of Oatmeal, and only a minimum\nquantity of grit. Ask for\n\"Purity.\"\nTHE  BRACKMAN-KER\nMILLING CO., LTD.\n.-!_ 'UfF'.Jf '^1\nLastfShowing Tonight!\nAT STARLAND\n'All For a Woman'\nThe 7-Reel Feature Play Stapendoas.   Also\n\"HOLY SM0KE\"-the Mermaid Comedy\nFirst Show, 7 p.m>   Second Show, 8:55 p.m. Featur. 7:25 and 9:20\nComing Tomorrow and Thursday\u2014Usual Prices\n\"THE BONNIE BRIER BUSH\"\nm       FRAE BONNIE SCOTLAND\nADDED   ATTRACTION\u2014DANCES   BY   MEMBER^   OF   KILTIES'\nBAND v\nNOTICE!\nHfcvtng purchased the Inmirnnce Ajcency, Real FNtate and Rental\nbusiness of Mr. \\V. It Allen, I um hiking over the business from\nApril  1st.\nIt Is my intention to carry on the bunlnesii on the same lines\nns heretofore, nnd (five my personal attention to all business entrusted  to me.\nREGINALD W. DAWSON\nBOX 733 > PHONE 197\nNOTICE!\nOn areount of the Increase In my Auditing nnd Accounting con-\nnee r ion, | have sold my Insurance it ml Heal Kstnte tiutilnefls to Mr.\nRerlnaid W. Dhwsoii us from April 1, Wl. I take this opportunity of\nthanking my many el.4'nts. and frlsnds for Ihe lnisim>nn given me and\ncourtesies extended during the past Hi years and would ask that they\nContinue   to  give  the   Mam.'   consideration   to   my   successor.\nI shall still continue to nreum* the same offlep with Mr. Dawson,\nwher.- I shall carry on my Auditing nnd Accounting business and\nhandle   loans. .\nW. R. ALLAN I\n-ifflSAtf\nOpera House\nSATURDAY, APRIL 8\nOne Night\nThe Laugh Show of Creation,\n\"BRINGING  UP   FATHER  IN  WALL   STREET\"\nGooi\nComedy\nPreHy\nGirli\nCaclhy\nMusic\n\\\njU Natty\n..^31^3      Coslumej\nIP-\nTHE LAST WORD IN MUSICAL COMEDY\nA Real Beauty Singing and Dancing Chorus\nprices  55,., jo,*, 81.10.  81.65\nSr.aU  on  Sal.  Thursday  at   Crty   Drug   Co.\nMACLEAN'S MAGAZINE, SEATTLE SUNDAY POST-INTELLIGENCER\u2014WE      SELL      THEM.\nFLEMING'S STORE\nFAIRVIEW\nA Display Ad in the\nDAILY NEWS\n] Enters Mary Hemes\nCLASSIFIED   ADVTS.   6RINQ   RE- I\n4ULT8   EVERY   TIME.\nI\nCatches Many Eyes\nLadies'Suits\nDy.d,    from      St-00\nOr Clr.n.d, from   Si!.00\nH. K. FOOT\nHigh   Class   Dyer   and   Clesnsr,\n. Faieview,   Nelson,   B.   C.\nRaincoats\n*] Light weieht Tweed  Kaincoats, rubber\nlined with belt.\n>   $11.50,\nfJT Heavy Tweed Raincoats in (lark checks\nwith and without licit.\n$22.00\n*T EnglislL Gabardines,   radian   shoulders\nwith and without belts.\n$30.00\n-EMORY'S-\n TrmsamlsWemLwm\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_1922_04_04","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\/1.0398636","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":"1922-04-04 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":"1922-04-04 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":""}]}