{"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"label":"Aggregated Source Repository","value":"CONTENTdm","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:dataProvider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who contributes data indirectly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Collection":[{"label":"Collection","value":"BC Historical Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:isPartOf"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included."}],"DateAvailable":[{"label":"Date Available","value":"2021-09-17","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DateIssued":[{"label":"Date Issued","value":"1925-05-05","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"label":"Digital Resource Original Record","value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0402180\/source.json","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:aggregatedCHO"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The identifier of the source object, e.g. the Mona Lisa itself. This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" Capt Finglo*, Former Official, RecaDs No Such\nAction\nSMBLLED LIQUOR\nUPON THE MATE\nWhen Too Late to Change,\nBradley Wanted New\nFirst Officer\nComplete Independence\nHis God lor Canada\nVANCOUVER,' Mny 4.\u2014A denial\nby Capt. W, B. Flnglnas, nsatstnnt\nmatins superintendent of the Canadian Governmsnt Merchant Marine\n\/at the time the. cargo steamer\nCanadian Kxporter was v\/recked off\nth* mouth of the Columbia river,\nJuly 11, 1921, that Capt. William\nBradley had declined to take his\n\u25a0hip to sea on ths Friday preceding\nths disaster, featured today's, session of ths hearing of the Western\nInsurance Company's suit for |46,-\n000.\nCaptain Flnglass under cross-examination   aald   h*   had  absolutely   no\nrecollection   of   such   an   action   by\nthe master of ths Canadian Exporter.    He   s_d   he   would   remember\nlt such a happening had  occurred.\nSkipper Didn't Notice I\/lqaor\nI|e told, however, of smelling llq\nnor on Newton  Campbell,  first  of\nI fleer of the Kxporter, two or three\n< days   befors   the   ship   put   to   sea.\nI He   asked   Captain   Bradley   if   he\n1 had   noticsd   anything   wrong   with\n\\ Campbell;' and   received   a   negative\nreply.     He . Instructed   the   Exporter's master te  warn Campbell that\n' he 'did not care to smell liquor on\nany officer's breath during working\nhours. 's\nCaptain Flnglass thsn recalled going aboard the Exporter about II\nO'clock tha night before she sailed.\nCaptain Bradley Informed him\nthat \"Campbell had fallen down\" on\nhim, and that ha wanted a new chief\noff.ee'. .;..,\n'.The wltjjeag'pua,- irf'vteW of the\nour, It waa Impossible for him to\n\"another chief pfflcer In time to\nand  ha, laid  Captain   Bradley\nCampbell  would be nllrntht by\n\u00bb time they reacha* Victoria.    He\niddvd. that the pilot, was aboard the\nejilp. '\nWitness denied, .strenuously that\nCaptain Braijlfy had asked to be\ntaken out of the ship, or thnt hs\nhad Voiced any iiroteat to him re-\ngardlng the tr*,\" on the Exporter.\nINVENTOR AND WIFE\nHIMEJTTOGETHER\nThink He Dropped Dead,\nSmothering: Wife; Odd\nFound\nWALES TURNS\nHEADS OF THE\nCAPE LADIES\nMiles   of   Them   Farewell\nHim as He Starts for\nInterior     1\nJOHN   8.   -WART,  K.C.\nOf Ottawa, author of \"The Roots\nand Causes of the War, ltlM-lllls,\"\nsays that as long us Canada Is politically bound to the United Kingdom\nit cannot keep out of European wars.\nHe Is ln favor of complete Independence for Canada.\nTAKE BREWER'S WILL\nTO PRIVY COUNCIL\nLiquid\nDUTCH GREET HIM\nAT STELLENBOSCH\nStudents Draw His Carriage Two Miles; Waitresses Dainty   *\nFigures Crown Prince,\nBeit Bet for Throne\nRobins Seeks to Establish\nFormer Will Leaving\nHalf Million .\nWINDSOR Ont., -May 4.\u2014Steps to\ncarry the Uoblns-Wulker w(ll suit to\nthe privy .council In England have\nbeen tnken on behalf of the plain,\ntltf. William Roblna. formerly general\nmanager ot the Hiram Walker &\nSons, limited, distillers. Five hundred\nthousand dollars is Involved.\nRecently Robins lost his second\ncourt, case on the subject. ' He Is\nendeavoring to have the last will of\nthe late E. Chandler Walker, one of\nthe sons of Hiram Walker, set nslde\nIn favor of a previous will,*, wblth\nbequeathed blm 1000 shares of valuable distillery atock.\nMONTREAL.' May 4.\u2014John D.\nKennedy, axed ht, an Inventor, nnd\nhis wile, Efde, nged 47, of this city,\nwere found huddled top\/other ileud on\na bed In their home this niter-\nnoon.\nPolice believe that Kennedy, who\ntuffered I om heart trouble, dropped\ndead while standing at the edge of\nthe bed, nnd \u25a0 fell upon his wife,\nknocking her unconscious, nnd then\nasphyxiating her. On a table in the\nfoom detectives found a hoitle containing a ooloiloss fluid, which was\ntaken to the .morgue for ananlysis.\nAn autopsy will be performed to determine definitely the causes ot\ndeath.\nSCHOONER DRIFTS\nVflTHJMITOM CP\nCape D'Or With kails Im-\n' mersed, Abandoned Till.\n- \u2022 Sea Calmer\n' LIVERPOOL. N.8., ,May 4 \u2014\nDrifting bottom up, with ull sails\nset, and anchor chains out, the\nschooner Cape D'Or, rammed and\nsunk with the Iohh of t ve lives off\nCape La Have last Thursday after-\nnoon, and later refloated by action of the sea, was today lying\nabandoned In latitude 4S.57 north,\nlongitude 64.35 west, while the government'steamer Arleux, which had\nbeen attermptln? to tow the schooner\nto port, was lying in the harbor\nhere awaiting fuvorable conditions\nto make another attempt to remove\ntho  hulk' to  a  place  of safety.\nEARLY SURGERY\nA CANCER CURE\nTwo More Bodies\nc , From the Dredge;\n' \u2022\u2022;'.. n Inquiry Starts\n\"jBjiNDUaKT,   Ohio,' May   4.\u2014Two\nmore   bodies   of   victims   In   Satur-\n! day's lake disaster, When the steam-\nel'   Kelley   Island   rolled   over   off\nInt   Pelee.   with   a   loss   of. nine\n.._, were recovered this afternoon.\n'be   bodies   of   William   A.   Slack-\nsteward, - and  Thomas  Moran.\nwere   brought   here   tonight.\nTbe body of Capt. William O. Rlack-\nford  was brought here yesterday.\n.. *tn   official' Investigation   ot   the\ncnpsltlng \u00ab( tin sand sucker started today .between .closed'doors. Tbe\nvessel la still lying bottom up about\nt*> miles ott Point  Pelee.    -\n'\u25a0'...,., *e . ' :\u25a0 \u25a0'\nHardie Is Buried\nin Vancouver With\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0';:\"\u2022!\u2022',;'7\u25a0;.* Military Honors\n\u2022   VANPOUVKR, May 4.\u2014On tul-   ,\n.vices from Ilia mother In 13ng-\n;; land, that he be burled In Can-   ..\nails, In a permanent grave,\nuCaptain  P..If,  Hardie,  recent-;\nly nf Nelson, was Interred bore    <\n*\u00bb sum \u00a3E--\nbin death under * train at F_v\neondaJc,    to    mifc-dti,    wilh    no\nblame alt aching to the asylum\n, \u00abrfflclals.   '* \u2022'      \u25a0\n; \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0 .\n. Massachusetts North\nr   Short Has Jim-Jams\n\u2022 BOSTON, Way 4.\u2014Earth tremor*.\nvajy slight, but noticeable enough\nto cause excitement among resl-\n44*1*. wsre reoanad- from the north\n\u00abbpre or Massachusetts today.\nThat, With Radium Treatment Accounts for Nearly\nAll Cures\nTORONTO, Mny 4.\u2014\"I am not Interested In quacks nnd advertised\ncancer, cures.\" said Dr. Frank I*\nHoffman of New York City, who, this\nnfternoon addressed the Medical\nHealth Officers* association on \"Cancer Problems in Canada.\"\n\"You cannot make It too emphatic,\" declared Dr. Hoffman, \"that\nthere are more cures from., early\nsurgery, and combined employment\nof radium and surgery, than from\nany other method. Many quacks\nhave announced new cures, and have\nnever been heard of since. Early\nsurgery alone  prevails.\"\nThe only possibility of keeping\nrural Ontario healthy la hy the Inauguration of \u2022 combined medical\nhealth areas with permanent medical\nhealth offices and'equipment, says\nthe report of the special committee\nappointed last year, which wns read\nby Dr. J. H. Radford of Oalt, the\nconvener of, the  committee.\nSon ol Nelson\n,   Minister Weds\nat Ocean Falls\nVANCOUVER, May 4.\u2014John Rus-\nkin A. Wright, son of Rev. J. H.\nWright of Nelson, waa wedded today at Ocenn Falls to Margaret May\nTsabelle  Hall.\n'   *m '     \u25a0\nCloverdale Old-Timers\nDance to 'A Hot Time9;\nJazz Goes by Board\nVANCOUVER. May 4. \u2014 Jan went\nby the boards when the old-timers of\nCloverdale held a reunion. Fifteen\nfiddlers playsd while the veterans held\na real old-time liocdown, to such mature favorites aa \"A Hot Time In the\nOld Town Tonight.*'\nCAPETOWN, May 4.\u2014The Prince\nof Wates has captivated Cnpetown,\nand particularly its female population.1' When he drove through the\ncity today on the commencement of\nhla trip into the Interior, women,\nold and young, turned out In their\nsmartest att re, ana gave him boisterous testimony  of  their   delight.\nThe weather waa perfect, ahd the\nentire route over which the prince\npassed waa lined for miles with\nsmiling citizens, waving farewell.\nThe pr nee acknowledged- the\ndemonstrations with the greatest\nanimation. The entourage of the\nroyal visitor says he thoroughly en-\nJoyed his visit to Capetown. .Automobiles were used today for the\ntrip through the old Huguenot country, f\nIn Huguenot Country t>\nAt Somerset West, the first' halt\non the long drive to Stellenbosch,\nwhich la tl miles distant, anfl one\nof the oldest settlements of ^Europeans in thla part of Afr.ca\", the\npoputace for miles around had -gathered to welcome the prince. Dressed\nIn a brown suit, and wearing an blue\nshirt, the heir apparent to= the\nBritish throne made a brief speech.\nIn which he expressed thanks foi\nhla  cordial   reception.\nAfter leaving Somerset West,\nthe earn raced back at the rate\nof 60 miles an hour through the\n.superb scenery,, toward flteltenhflarh,\nwhere* another ovation was accorded   tha  prince..\nflood' Training for Rugby\nAfter another brief speech of\nthanks, the prince stepped Into a\nsmall open carriage drawn by 24\nsnlwnrt. Dutch students from Stellenbosch university. The chancellor of the university jokingly asked\nthe prince whetfier he would like\nthe students to run his down to the\nsport grounds whero a Inrge gathering of women wan waiting to welcome him.\nKeeping up the Joke, Wales said\nhe supposed the students were rugby\nplayers, and that It would be fine\ntraining   for   them.\nThereupon they dragged him the\nentire distance of two miles, and\nfinished fresh, although the temperature In the shade was 90 degrees.\nIt wuh a - brilliant and animated\nscene that met the prince's eye on\nhln arrival. The grnndstand and tlie\nspaces about it were packed with\ncheering crowds*. A luncheon was\nserved J by dainty damsels, one of\nthem, a bob-haired beauty, being de-\nta'led to wait especially on the\nprince. There waa fruit in abundance\non the tables, Including great\nbunches of luscious grapes. All the\nwines served were the product of\nthis mighty fruit district.\nThanks Hosts Jn Dutch\nThere were speeches at the luncheon, but when the prince rose from\ntho table there was a. new storm\nof cheer.ng. Ho merely thanked\nhis  hosts  in  butch.\nJuat before leaving Stellenbosch,\nWales amiably posed for troops of\nyoung girls who had brought their\ncameras  with them.\nFOURTEEN YEARS\nPAYROLUOBBER\nThat Is Thompson's Term;\nDe Paulo Is Given\nTwelve\nVANCOUVER, May 4.\u2014C. C. Thompson, alias Ted Hollywood, convicted\nTuesday of complicity fn the Vancouver city hall payroll robbery of 8ep-\nt.niber 29, 1922, when approximately\n$7fl,0fl0 was stolen, was today sentenced In nsslte court by Justice W.\nA. MacDonald to serve 14 years at\nhard labor in the New Westminster\npenitentiary.\nThompson, who was also convicted\ntogether with Fran de Paulo, of robbing the Capitol theater here on Feb\nrunry 19, 192S, wss sentenced to serve\n12 yenrs. both terms to run concurrently. '\nDe Paulo was given a sentence of 12\nyears' hard labor in the penitentiary.\nMutilated Bodies\non Railway Track;\nOne From Creston\nGOLD.STANDARD\nCARRIES HOUSE\nSECOND READING\nLabor Amendment Alleging\nUnder Haste Lost Without Division\nCHURCHILL GIVES\nTERMS OF CREDIT\nHis Defence of Move In\nHarmony With Empire\nImpresses\nGENERAL VON 4EECKT\nChief of they ftermnn general stuff,\nwho Is siilil to ho slrtiijK with th,' ex-\ncrown prince ' rather thnn the ex-\nkaiser in the underground rnmpnign\nfor the restoration 'of the Hohcnzol-\nlerns   to  the  Teutofr  throne.\nSUES GALEFOR A\nQDARTi MILLION\n 1  \u2022 ' r\nCoast Broken Claims He\nGot Twelve  Millions\nCapital for Elevator\nVANCOUVER. May 4.\u2014Hearing\nopened today in supreme court of\nthe notion of Dal Thomas, broker,\nagainst R H. Gale, former mayor of\nVancouver, and six co-defendants, a\nclaim for $250,000 damages for alleged failure to pay him 2 per cent\ncommission on moneys estimated hy\nThomas at $12,r,00,UOO, which the\nSpilters Grain Elevator Interests invested In western \u2022 Canada following,\naccording to the plaintiff. Introductions which he gave, Mr.' Uale to\nEnglish capitalists.     **tC >--\u25a0\u2022**\nOn (he stand Mr. Thomas testified\nthat Mr. Gale's successful conferences\nwlth Hir William Nichols, head of\nKpltters' Oversells Associated Industries, had been arranged through his\nInstrumentality, as a result of cables\nwhich he and Major Watts, of the\nCanadian Hrltish corporation had\ndispatched to England nfter Mr.\nGale's departure for the -Old Country.\nPLAN A DRIVE ON\nUNIDENTIFIED MEN\nAged Man Found\nin the Humber\nMining Institute Says Pretended Engineers Accept Fees\nVANCOUVER, May ., \u2014 British Columbia will be nn unsafe field fnr\nmining men to po\u00abe as mining engineers without proper credential1., if the\nprovincial government acta on complaints made at today's monthly meeting of tlie Canadian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, here.\nMembers of the Hrltish Columhla\ndivision of the institute resolved to\nstek the cooperation of the Association\nof Professional Engineers In a movement to rid the province of uncertified\n\"mining engineers.\" who make reports or receive fees under the guise\nof   mining  engineers1,\nAt today's meeirng it wns pointed\nout that while n law exists against\nsuch practice. It is evaded by a number  of  men active   in  the  province.\nLONDON, May t. \u2014 The house of\ncommons, after a comparatively brief\ndebate, and without division, tonight\npassed 'the second reading of tho gold\n-\"tnndarrt bill, and agreed to the neoes\nnary money resolution for pulling into force lhe government's arrangements\nfor  restoring  the  gold  standard.\nThe house has been extremely anx\nious to learn the details of the terms\nof the government's agreement for\nUnited States credits to proteot the\nPitnk of England's gold reserve. Hence\nthe explanation of the bill given by\nIU, Hon. Walter Guinness, financial\nfecretary to the treasury, showing that\nthe country would not he liable for\ni.ny Interest payments unless it bc-\ne.:me necessary to utilise the United\nStates credits, wns received with great\nsatisfaction.\nThese credits are for $300,000,000,\nthe first, amounting to *_H...OQu,000.\nbeing arranged with the federal reserve bank, and the second with the\nhouse of Morgan, amounting to f 100,-\n000.000. In each case the arrangement la for two years. ,\nITapclaonlo Precedent\nOutlining the intentions of the bill,\nMr. Guinness for the most part retraced the details as presented by\nWinston Churchill, chancellor of the\nexchequer. In his budget statement,\nand expressed the hope that there\nwould be no delny in passing the bill,\nRe explained that the bill was based\nou the historical preupdent of resumption uf the gold standard tn ISIS after\nthe Napoleonic wars, _but today ..the\ntask was\"insiefV and conditloim wtre\nmore fuvorable because action had nnt\nbeen taken until parity had almnty\nUcn   virtually  reestablished.\nTwo    Yooin    fnr    Credits'\nThe secretary emphasized that any\ncredits   raised    under   the   bill   mutt\nbe   repaid   within   two   yea's.\nHe believed there waa no Tear\nof a consequent rise In the bank\nrate or rise in prices, ns had been\nIntimated by some of the tabor\nmembers. It was the op nIon of\nall the best expert advice that the\ndifference in price levels between\nGreat Hritain and the United States\nwas now so small, if Indeed it existed at all. as to he consistent with\nthe view thnt Hritain had reached\na siage where its purchas ng power\nwaa at parity. The government\nbelief was that there was no serious movement of prices either way\nfrom   the   present   level.\nSnowden Moves .Amendment\nPhilip Snowden, who was chancellor \u25a0 in the _ Labor cabinet. In\nmoving his amendment for tha rejection of the bill, on the ground\nthat the proposed action was unduly precip tate and might aggravate the existing condition ot unemployment and trade depression,\nexplained that the !_ihor party was\n{Continued on Page Two.)\nNorth Vancouver\nMunicipal Clerk\nGets Three Years\nCAPTORS HED\nREVOLVER TO\nRepeatedly Did It With s\nDemand That He Admit\nMurder , J\nWHEN TAKEN OUT\nEXPECTED DEATH\nBakers Sue Society Leader\nfor Alleged Slander on\n- Reported Party\nWILLIAM   T.   LACON\nAkM 8s. whose hotly wos found In\nthe Hum'hrr river tlistrirt of Ontario,\nn few Auytt ago. The iau\u00bbe of death\nremains a mystery. A cohbler by\ntrade, he left an estate worth $ti>,000.\nWANT NO WOMEN\nIN BEER BARS\nHotel   Men   and   Brewers\nFear Will Bring Disrepute\nVANCOUVER, May 4.\u2014Hotel men\nand brewers intend to demand of\nHon. A. M. Manson, attorney-general.\nand Hugh Davidson, liquor commissioner, that women he prohibited from\nentering heer-hy-t he-glass parlors,\naccording to an announcement made\nhere today.\n\"That's where this system is going\nto fall down, If anywhere,\", declared\na hotel man, in commenting on the\nconduct of beer parlors. Hotel men\nhave been advised that they have no\nright to refuse women Admission to\ntheir places, and there is no power\nto prohlhit them by regulation states\nCommissioner Dnvtdson.\nIt is likely the hotel men will ask\nfor legislation tn this end when the\nlegislature meets  next  fall.\nIt Is said that beer parlors have\nheen well conducted. The sale of\nhard lh|iior since the parlors opened,\nhas fallen off materially,  it  Is stated.\nVANCOUVER, May 4.\u2014That Won*\nRing, while held 42 days by captors. In addition to being frequently\nbeaten, waa threatened with death,\nwas disclosed today by his counsel, who stated that often a revolver hnd been held to hla hand, with*\ndemand that he confess to murder.\nThought Execution Imminent\nWhen the Chinaman waa finally\ntaken out of the building blindfolded he believed his captors were\ngoing to carry put their threats to\nkill   him.\nHon. A. M. Manson denes thn\nrumor thnt the police had anything\nto do wtth the abduction, and also\ndeclares not one shred of evidence\nor information has been received\nfrom  the  abductors.\nO, L. Vraser hart announced he\nhas been retained by the Baker family, particularly to refute the ru*\nmor of a party at the.Baker houae\nthe night before the girl was found\ndead.\nHe protests to .Mr. Manson at the\ncirculation of wild rumora white\nthe case pending, and at the disclosure of alleged evidence aald to\nhave been found by 14- B. Jackson,\ngovernment   Investigator.\nMOOSE JAW, May 4.- ___\nIk x lie* of IxniU Koenlg and H.\nPeterson, Badly mutilated, were\nfound (his morning about four\nntllcH eaet ot Krnfold on tho\nCanadian Pacific railway tracks.\nIt la iH-lk-vcd the men were hit\nby train No. 4 east bound.\nOn the body or Kocntg were\nfound patfem ImUratlng thnt\nhe had com\u00a9 from Crevton, JB.C.\nOn the body of Peterson was a\npaper g-iing theaddress of C.\nPeterson,\nEagle River,  Oat.\nFrench Troops Take\nSuccor to Comrades;\nFifty Dead Riffians\nFEZ, Morocco, May 4. \u2014 A illghl\nnet Inn by the French troops today\nalong the Ouergha rlvert at a point\nwhere it was necessary \u25a0 to get food\nand other supplies to French advanced\nposts which had been surrounded in\nthe first drive by the Riffians, sufficed to hrlng comparative calm,alt\nalong the front.\nAbd-el-krlm's forces left (>0 dead on\nthe field, and lost a number nf prison-\nera and a qunntltv of supplies,\nWOMEN BOMBARD\nARM CONFERENCE\nLeague Glass Room Crowded by Delegates Almost\nto Suffocation V\nGENEVA, Mny 4.\u2014Interest ih International affairs seemingly was\nagain demonstrated today when a\nconsiderable number of women vainly sought admission to the inaugural\nsession of the arms control conference.\nCount de Wlart, Belgium, formally opened the conference In the\nLeague of Nations glass room which\nwas so crowded that even breathing space waa almost painful in the\nstifling   atmosphere.\nThe opening session Was virtually\ndevoted to the presidential address\nwhich aketched In broad,:.outlines\nthe alma of the conference.\nNOTE BY NIAGARA\nPOINTS SUICIDE\nWoman Writes Can Stand\nBurden  No  Longer;\nSeeks Surcease\nVANCOl'VEIt, May 4.\u2014Edward\nRay hns, formerly employed as u clerk\nin the district of North Vaneouver.\nwns today st nteneed by Mr. Justice\nW, A. MaeDnnnld tn the assize court\nto three years In tiie penitentiary\nfor wrongful run version of funds of\ntho municipality, the defalcations\nteaching approximately $fi000.\nEarth Movement\nin Florida Keys\nhut Not Serious\nWASHINGTON, Msy 4. \u2014 A\ncabled report indicting an earth\nmovement among the Florida\nkeys r.'ichtd the war department\nlate today, but inquiry revealed\nthst fears of a serious disturbance had  been  unfounded.\nSchooner Goes on\nGloucester Rocks;\nFloats Minus Some\nGLOUCXSTE*, Mass., May 4, \u2014\nThe British sohtontr AUarata, ont\not Lunenburg, If ft, for Boston,\ndragged bar anchor la the heavy\ngale tcday, sod went oa tha rooke\nin fresh Water cove, aeag the\ncoastguard station.\n\u25a0he waa refloated tonight, and\nwhile it was thought she escaped\nserious damage, atr hull wtll be\nlntpsotsd befors ahe proeeeda.\n\u25a0case of her leek load of lumter\nwae lost,\nNIAGARA FALLS. Ont.. May 4.\u2014\nOn the edge of the Niagara river\nlate th's afternoon the police found\na worn a ij'b hand bag, containing a\nnote scrawled iu pencil, addressed to\n\"Dear Brother, William Servey, Kast\nAurora,\" and signed \"Mrs. Lena\nGlover.\"    It  read:\n\"I can stand the burden no longer, I can du all I can. then am\nblamed for more. Pray for me,\nand I hope I will be happy In the\nnext world. Tell them all not to\nfight, and divide all even, and hope\nflod will give them pence now that\nI am  gone.     Have failed.     Good  bye.\"\nA stnl>f of u one-way ticket from\nBuffalo to Niagara Kails was also\nfound  in  the  purse.\nDELEGATION URGES\nEXPORT OF POWER\nNorthern  Electric Willing\nto Develop Hugely at\nCarillon\nVictoria Wants Early\n;       Australian Preference\nVICTOniA, May 4.\u2014Representations urging the Dominion government to bring the preferential\ntreaty between Australia and Canada\nInto effect as early as possible,, will\nbe made to Ottawa by the Victoria chamber of commeroe, . the\nchamber  directors  decided   today.\nOTTAWA. Mny 4. \u2014 The national\nInterests of Canada will be the first\nconsideration of llie government In\ndialing with applications for the export of electric power, ['remIer Kins\nInformed a large delegation, represent\ning municipalities In the Ottawa river\ndistrict, Which today asked the gov-\nfitiiiieTit's approval of the proposal to\nexport power developed at Carillon\nfalls.\nThe premier, after hearing arguments in favor of the proposal to export between ,.00.000 and 400,000 horsepower from the power Station, said\nthat private and municipal Interests\nwould be given *-\\ery consideration\n(enslstent with the national Interest\nand with lhe future power needs of\nl.inn<h*.\nThe Northern Klectric company waf>\npiepured to spend J.*i_.0(i0,00i\u00bb on the\nproposed  plant,  It   wss  said.\nNo Silver Minted\nin Past Two Years\nOTTAWA, May 4. \u2014 No Canadian\nsilver coins have been mjnted in\nOttuwa since 11)23.\nIn answer to a series of tiueatlons\nby GhMirge Black, Conservative, yuk\non. ln the house of commons this\nnfternoon, Hon. J. A. Robb, acting\nminister of finance, stated that\nlarge quantity of silver hnd been\nminted during tho war and demobll\nsatlon perlodr There had been i\nsufficient supply to last until the\npresent time. The mint, Mr. Robb\nsnid, had been engaged on bronae\nAnd. nickel coinage, and the refining\nof gold.\nAsks Her to Prove Her Tale\nVANCOUVER,      May     4.--F.      U.\nBnker and his wife today issued a\nwrit for slander agalnat Mlas Monica Mascn Jtooke,. *-,local society\nwoman. It is alleged the defendant declared there had been a party\nIn the Baker house the night preceding the find ng of threnody of Janet;\nSmith, and \\hat ahe knew two men\nwho   had   heen  there. .\nO. T. Fraser, the lawyer acting\natatts the Bakers are determined to\nput nn end to the sensational ru*\nmors circulated  for some time.\nCouple Were Drinking;\nGirl Thrown and Killed\nVANCOUVER. Muy t. ~ When the\ndentil \u00bb.f Irene McMillan, thrown from\nan auto which crashed into a pole was\nprobed, a policeman declared the girl\nhad been drinking, und that h companion, Junies Sandy, emailed of\nlUiUor.      Sandy,    placed    under    arrest,\nId the girl  was engaged to him.\nQUEENS GRANTS\nWEST DEGREES\nKINGSTON, Ont.. May 4.\u2014Additional degrees in the combined arts-\nmedical course, announced tonight,\nwere conferred on B.A. John Joseph\nCollins, Haskatoon. Sask., und B.A.\nJames   Stuart   Only.   Port   Ilaney.   B.C.\nAUNT HET\n\"I know the Joneses art'\npoor, but it's some thin' more\nthan poverty that makes Amy's\nkitchen   smell   like   thut.\"\nThe Weather\nThe temperatures below are for thd\n24 hours ending yesterday afternoon at\nft   o'clock. i\nVICTORIA,   BC.   May\n4.   \u2014\nSrlttttn\nnnd    Vicinity:     Continue.\nfine,\nwarm\nund   very  dry.   , \u2022 .,\nMin\nMax.\nNELSON     \t\n.    14\nU\n.\u25a0   4*\n70\nVancouver    \t\n<a\nKamloops    e,..\n.    14\n7!\nPrince  Rupert  ....*.\\_.\n.;   14\nw\nEstevan ,...\n.    41\nM\nDawson \u2022,,,.\nII\nf.5\nC.ilgaiy     \t\nv   II\n(2\nWinnipeg     _.\t\ni\n44\nPortland    \t\n1!\nSnn   Francisco   \t\n..    ttt\nIt\nHeattle\t\n; j|\n70\nSpokane     \t\n74\nVernon    ,\t\n.i   14\n\u20221\n... n\nA N\n\u00bb\"\nCranbrook ,. ,\u25a0;','\nft\nEdmonton\t\n..  n\n00\nprince Albert\t\ni   '!\nE\u00ab\nQuebec\"\t\n..   il\n14,\nMontreal      .'..., ,<\n..'  u\nS\u00ab\nOttawa   > .;,\ni4\n; 14\nHalifax   ..'. .'\n14   '\n:i\n*\u25a0'\n___\n\t\n _\u2014,\t\n\"*W*TO*W'\nawm\u2014a-mawM-m\n\u2014*\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014mm\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u00bbm*mm\u2014\u2014\u2014m\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, MAY 5, 1925\nA.;.\n\\Dje in Sedan Fiom '\n'>, Carbon 'Monoxide;\nProbable Toll Three\n< George Benwell, Proprietor\nT_e Premier Hotel of the Interior\nMMICAN PLAH     , HATfS, HM TO UW\n* Booms )irM Banning Water and Privats Baths. \u25a0\u25a0\u2022'\nSatdtjuartera for all Travelling Men, Mining Men,\n'.;\u25a0>\u25a0 \u25a0*\/\u25a0       ,: Lumber Men and Tourists.\nROTARIAN   HEADQUARTERS\nv   '    SPECIAL SUNDAY DINNER, $1.00\nTHI  MOST COMFORTABLE  ROTUNDA  IN  THI  CITY\n;* HUME \u2014 Charles Lln\u00bbr\u00abat, O. P. | Hincks, Howsrr; L. MacLeod, Kdmom\n\u2022_\u00bbIf\u00bb. Seattle: Mr. and Mrs. _; A. ,,\": **\u2022 \u2022>\u25a0 Crocker, w. R. lastt, CN-1.\nsiimmel f_i|. n a w._.\u201e \u25a0\u201e ttrduhart. Vancouver; H. A. Renwick,\nN'immel, Trail, R. A. Warren, Spo- N>w Westminster; K. Miller, Vancou-\nkanej     Commander    and    Mrs.    J.    fi. I vor. \"\n\u25a0    ,i (\u2022',\u201e(   r.sti  iiiiV \u00a7\\.tf\nEUROPEAN  PLAN\nDaylight Ssmpls Rooms for\nCommarelsl Men.\nHotel Strathcona\nOnce Yon Get Acquainted With the Strathcona\n,Y0U WILL STOP AT NO OTHER\nQueen'sHotel\n-THE CENTER OF CONVENIENCE\n-Hot and cola water In \u2022Tery room.\n] . Bteam  heated.\nA.   LAPOINTE,  Wrap,\n3QVEEN8 \u2014 R. U Bybee, Tlromina.\nQpi.i \u2022!. P Morrison, Perry's; C. Ko*\nil.'smot. Rosslnnd; E. Crumps, Kings-\nxntt; O. Browell. ctty; C. W. Woolsey.\nTrail; Hud Steven*-. Vancouver; El-\nfiid Johnson, Slocan City; V. L. Royee.\nHiih Francisco; O. Tervla, Sandon; F,\nA)_eu,  Cultus Creek. '\nSAVOY HOTEL\nTwo  block!   from   Depot\nSteam Heated.    By Day, Week or\nMonth.   Hot and cold running water.\n' For Your Comfort\nJ. A.  KERR, Prop.\nSAVOY \u2014 Mr and Mrs. V, A. Plon.\nKnuth Rloran: H. flmvlfln. J. W. Taylor. Mrs. Nt-puH, Wins Mildred N'-kuh.\nNelson; Mrs. J. O. Covington, Elmer\nH. Covlnnton. Slocan City; W. C.\nThomliniKon, New lH*nver; Mrs. lVvcr-\ncll tferry's; Mrs. ('. Colk, I'rnnbrook;\n}I. IV 1-ea, Slocan; Mr. and Mrs. W.\n.T. Huss.ll. Nukusp; \"v.*. W. Henderson.\n]'. Campbell, B. Mclntyre, Ktvelstoke;\nM.   <I,   Orth,   Vancouver.\nSTIRUNG HOTEL\n2_ Blocks East of Post Offlea\nSteam   heated.    Hot  and   cold\nwater.   Rooms by day or week.\nAlso Furnished  Suites.\nP. H. BUSH, Prop.\n\u25a0\u25a0'Vx'^i'^V.:\/-'-.\nOCCIDENTAL   HOTEL\nA. C. TOWNER,  freprists,\nThs horns of plenty.\nFifty rooms of solid comfort\nere serve ths beat meals In Nslson\nIt's ths cook.\nNelson's Best Cafes\nOTTAWA, May 4.\u2014As the result oi inhaling carbon monoxide\nrae, which waa escaping from a\n\u2022 leaky exhaust heater in the sedan\nin which they were driving yesterday, Sidney Morgan of Ottawa\ndied ih hosp'tal Tier* ton-g'.it, and\nthe brothers Thorp Brow* of\nKasabaiua, Que., and ; Oilman\nBrown of McBain, Que., are not\nexpected to live. \u25a0 ' '  '-\nHer Headaches Were So Bad\nShe Couldn't Do Anything\nOnce the head starts to acke and\npain you may rest assured that the\ncause comes from the stomach, liver\nor bowels, ond the cause must be removed before permanent relief may\nbe bad.\nThere Is no better remedy for\nheadaches  of  every  description   than\nBURDOCK     , l\nBLOOD BITTERS\nas It removes .the cause of the head-\nachea ln a way that no other remedy\nwill do.\nMrs. Wm. Helpnrd, Lower Stewl-\ntcke, N.S., writes:\u2014\"I suffered for\na long time with my head. It would\nache and ache until It made me so\nsick X could not do anything, but\nafter taking four bottles of B.B.B.\n[ feel that I cannot recommend It too\nhighly to all those suffering from\nheadaches of any kind.\"\nB.B.B. has been on the market for\nthe past -6 years and is recognized\nby all who have used It to lie without\nan equal as a remedy for headaches;\nput up only hy The T. Milburn Co.,\nLaimifed, Toronto, Qui.\n| SHERBROOKE HOTEL\n| Nsar C.P.R. Station.\nRooms at  Reasonable  flats*\nH. DUNK, Proprietor\nWhsn   st   Nslson,   Eat   at  th*\nGolden Gate Cafe\nOur   motto   Is   Cleanliness,   Quality\nand  Service.    AH  White  Help.\nMeals,   SOc  and  Up\nAnother Nurse\nPraises Tanlac\n\"As   a   hurts   I   have  seen   msny\nmarvelous   results   from   Teniae.\nFor  anaemia,  nervousness,  stomach  trouble and   building  up  the\nsystem after operations I consider\nTanlac great!\"\nMrs. K. Mi Lowe, Walnut Park,\nCal.\n\"VTt'nSF*   Lowe's   statement   merely\n1 \u00bb backs up what over one hundred\nthousand  grateful  Tanlac  users  have\nsaid   about   this   great   natural   tonic\nand   builder.     Our   files   nre   packed\nwith such testimony.\n]f your system Is run down, If yoti\ncan't seem to eat or sleep, have lost\nweight   or   suffer   from   trying   pain,\nwhy not let Tanlac start to bring you\nback to vigorous strength and health.\nNo long, wretrhed  wait to get re*\nsuits!    Tanlac starts right In to build\nyou up. It cleans the blood, revitalizes\ndigestive  organs,   fixes   up   the   liver\nand makes you feel like a new person.\nFor   Constipation\nTake   Tanlao   Vegetable   Pills\nTANLAC\nFOR YOUR HEALTH\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\n320  Bsksr Street, Nelson,  B.C.\nOPEN   DAY AND  NIGHT\n11:30 ts 2:30, Specisl Lunch  35o\n6:30 to 8:00 p.m., Supper  35e\nPhons  164\nLAKE YIEW HOTEL\nlias   reopened.     Clean,   neatly\nkept rooms.    I'rices  reasonable.\nGive   us   a   trial.\nHORACE   LAPOINTE,  Prop.\nTHE MADDEN HOTEL\nT.  MADDEN,   Prop.\n\u2022tssm-hsstsd  Rooms by th* Dsy,\nWssk   sr   Month.\nEvsry oonsidsrstlon  shown  to\ngus.ts.\nCor. Bsksr and  Ward 8ts. Nelson\n.MAhOKN\u2014John Pinallwood. Wni.d-\nirk Cn-ek; Stove Kox.ih. city; K, Hull-\niiKfr. NHlmu; O. K. Insrnham, Hpo-\n.tn, ;   VV.   II,   Uerrard.   W.   I>fUtn,   K\u00bbr-\nTHE L. D. CAFE\nFinest-equipped restaurant In the\nCity. OPEN DAY AND NIOHT.\nSPECIAL\u2014loe Cream, Soda Water\nand Hot Drinks. Nice, clean, furnished rooma;  bot and cold water.\nWe  Cater   to   Private   Parties.\nROYAL CAFE\nClastic   Rettsursnt\nRefinement snd  Delicacy  Prsvsils\nOPEN    DAY   AND    NIGHT\nLuncheon,  11:30  lo  2 - 35c\nSpcil.il   Dinners, 6:30  lo  8  - 35c\nWe  Specialize  in   ''hop  Suey\n' and Noodlf*.\nPHONE  182\ninn.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\n\u202218 Vernon Street East\nOnly brick hotel ln city.    Steam\nbeated; hot and cold water.\nEuropean and American plana,\nNKW (3HAND \u2014 Mr. and Mrs. Stevens and family. Nelson: Mrs. Winters, A. D. Newton, Winiaw; R** L,\nUyh\u00ab*e,   Ttmmlns,   Ont,\nSummer Resorts\nWHERE THE FISHING IS GOOD\nOUTLET HOTEL \u25a0\nPROCTER,  B. C.\nrishlng,  Boating, Bathing,  Oolf,\nTennis   Courts.\n\u25a0fUhlnr Tackls Supplied. Grocery\n\u25a0tore ln Connection.\nW.    A.    WAKD,    Proprietor.\nBay, \u00ab3;W-_k, |i7to\u00abi9. ip.cUl\nMoathlr Bates.\nYVlicu  S-.irnjj-.iiE Bonds *      I\nOne'Mother  days:\nMy little girl wns Always losing her heads \"when tho silk, on\nwhich they were strung would\nbreak. . Recently 1 bought the finest radio wire to be had, and ahe\nused,thdt to string them On. There\nhns been no more trouble. This wire\nia made of copper and so is pliable enough not to hold the beads\ntuo. rigidly.      .        .\nOPERATE WITH\nNO DEATH RISK,\nBY NEW DEVICE\n.__\n:*H, I hi'\nSurgeon Has Way to Test\nif Patient Can Stand the\nShock\nTORONTO,   May   4.\u2014That   modern\nsurgery, In specializing tp the point\nof almost perfection tn technique,\nhad to a great extent lost sight\nof the medical * risk of their patient,\nla the contention of Dr. F. H. Mc-\nMechon of Avon. Ohio, Internationally known authority on anesthesia,\nwho will address the Ontario Medical\nassociation this week, lie will lay\nhefore that body the result of n\nseries of tests which have been Just\ncompleted on pro-determination of\noperable risks.\nThe Ontario Medical association\nwill be the first medical body anywhere to ba informed of a means\nwhich wus only recently made known\nto - a few surgeons whereby the\nawnUW**famMy physician may lie\nable to foretell with almost unerring\naccuracy, not only the operable risk\nwhich a certain patient would run,\nhm also tell during nn operation 20\nminutes beforehand If a shock was\ndue   to   be   experienced.\nBreathing   and   Eljod   Pressure\nTbe method consists of testing the\nbreathing powers of a patient, nnd a\nblood pressure test, the results of\nwhich are worked nn an arithmetical\nbasis with  the  pulse  rate.\nPr. McMeeluin stated that in far\ntoo many cases patients were dying\nfrom -4 to 4(1 hours after an operation which had been performed with\nabsolute  surgical ne'eurocy.\n\"The trouble; has been too many\nsurgeons have heen leaving the family physician nn tlie hospitnl doorstep,\" was the way he put It. Had\nsuch pntients heen suhjected to this\ntest, t^e death rate would have been\npractically nil, as in *'very instance\nsuch patients hail not been fit subjects (or operation, and this would\n\u25a0have  been disclosed.\nFAVORS\nLETION OF\n\u25a0  -.\u25a0\u201e%.\u00a3-$       ;     --\u00a3{[*     ,\nKnox   Resolution   Carries\nAfter jAH Da^ All-Night\nDebate\n.' lv:'\njOTTAlVA, May 4. \u2014 First resumption of private members' resolutions\nafter the long debate on the budget\nt-roiiffht an all-day discussion on the\nHudson  Bay railway.\nAndrew Knox of Prince Albert renewed his advocacy of completion of\nthe line. He prop-med more effective consideration of the resolution\npassed by the house In March, 1&23,\n\"recognlaing the priority of the Hud-\nftoi. Buy railway, with reference to\nother transportation projects started\nsubsequently.\" Mr, Knox complained\ntbat settlers had 'gone into the district on tha understanding that the\nline was to be finished, and on the\nstrength of that understanding people\nhad   incrensed   their   improvements.\nWouJA Split With WtllajwJ Canal\nHe suggested that one-half of the\nyt-ar'-s appropriations for the Welland\n('anal might be applied to the Hudson\nTiny road.\nSubsequent debate brought strong\nadvocacy of the line from Progressives.\nA, R McMaster, Liberal, Brome, said\nthat before considering expenditure of\nfurther large sums on the Hudson Bay\nroute, he would like to know how\nmany weeks in the year Hudson straits\nwere open for navigation, and what\nthe marine Insurance rates Would be.\nJ, J. Hughes, Liberal, Prince Ed-\n'.; ..rd Island, thought the scheme, commercially speaking. Impracticable. He\n\u25a0suggested that to ascertain what shipping interests thought of the project,\ntht government should call for ten-\nOre for a subsidised line of steamers\nfiom  the   Hudson   Bay  for   ITO   yeurs.;\nHon. W. H, Motherwell, minister of\nagriculture, repeated object inns mad*\nearlier ln the session against 1'urt\nNelson as a terminal. Men who knew,\nhr declared, were of the opinion tbat\nChurchill was much superior aa a\nharbor.\nHun. Q. P. Oraham, minister of railways, told the house that between\n-Urt.UOO and $200,000 would be npent\nthis year to complete all repair work\non the lines already laid. He accepted the resolution of Mt. Knux, stipulating, however, that Its passage would\nnot interfere with the carrying on of\nu<-rk on the Welland ship canal, or\nCanadian National railway branch\nI Ires.\nRt. Hon. Arthur Meighen, leader of\nthe opposition, believed the completion of the road to be a contractual\nobligation to settlers who bad gone\ninto that country. He did not believe\nin any definite postponement, and if,\nas had )>een stated in the debate, the\nihr completion of the road to Nelson\nvoulii give lt a fair trial, then he was\nIn  favor of hastening the work.\nThe resolution was curried without\na division  shortly  before  1  o'clock.\nThe Whole Family\nReceive Benefit\n\"To build up a run-down constitution or to Htrengthen the nerves, I\nknow of no better medicine than I)r.\nPipree's (\"olden Medical Discovery,\"\nsaid Chas. M. Brush of 40H Caron\nAvenue, Windsor, Ont. \"1 had become in n run-down condition, my\nnerves were bad, and my stomach\ngave me a great deal of trouble; I\nwould hnve spells of nervous Indigestion. But after taking a few bottles\nof ln\\ Pierce's Oolden Medical Dis-\noovery my health was much improved and my nerves were stronger.\nI did not have any more spells of\np.tvous indigestion, '(lolden Medical\nI Discovery' seemed to tone up my entire system and made me feel much\nimproved physically.\"\nI At all drug stores.-or send 10 cents\n; to Doctor Pierce's Laboratory in\nBrldgeburg, Ont., for trln! package.\nThanks to   Dodd's  Kidney\nPills; So Says Quebec Lady\nof Dodd's Kidney Pills\nQuebec lady Is vry enthusiastic about\nDodd's   Kidney  Pills\nLAUBI.AT, Que.. May 4\u2014 (Special.)\n\u2014.lust why Dodd's Kidney Pills are\nso popular In Quebec Province is\nshown hy the statement of Dame\nIsidore 1'eau regard, \"H, well-known\nresident of this place.,\n\"It gives me pleasure to tell you\nthat we are all <|Oit* well since taking\nDodd's Kidney Pills. My boy is now\nenjoying goo.l health and my husband\nhas l*een mneh better. His kidney\ntrouble and dyspepsia are nearly\ngone. I am quite well myself and lt\ngives me pleasure to praise your\npills*\nDodd's Kidney Pills hnve becom-*\na family remedy because peopl\u00ab have\ntried them and found them good. They\nhelp Rheumatism, LumbnT*. Diabetes,\nLame Ba<k. Heart Disease nnd\nUrinary trotildes, because all of these\nare either Kidney Diseases or nre\ncaused by the kidneys falling to do\ntheir work.\nObtained from druggists everywhere\nor The Doddl Medicine Co., Ltd.,\nToronto.\nSilk Glov\nQueen quality.   Double-tipped finger?; fancy cuffs.\n. Very new.   In Beige, Sand, Castor, Brown, Black.\nPrices fl.Se snd $2.00.   .\nQUAUTT LINIGERlE- J\nfSilk Knit, Vests, Bloomers and Step-ins, Slips.\nColors: Orchid, White, Flesh, Honeydew, Sand, etc\nThese garments are a little different,   ,    .,      -\nVaiLENCIENNES LACE&- \t\nIn widths 14-inch to 1V4 inches.   Your choice.   A\n\u2022 big snap, per yard, t*f.       . , .   ...\nJAZZ HANDKERCHIEFS-   ' )f\nCrepe de Chene and Lace.   At 40f and 00f.\nNEW WIDE BELTS- ' -\nrrSuede and Patents.   All wanted colors.   At 75*\nto $1.50.\nNelson Dry Goods Co.\nLADIES' WEAR SPECIALISTS\nGOLD STANDARD\nCARRIES HOUSE\nSECOND READING\n(Continued from pare 1)\nnot opposed to resumption of the\ngold standard, but that the motive\nof the Laboritea was to fix full responsibility on Mr. Churchill and\nthe government for any adverse results of hasty action. He contended\nthe government had taken the decision out of the hands of par lament, and that the bill was indemnity tn protect Mr. Churchill from\nlegal consequences of his unconstitutional   act.\nMr. Snowden -charged the chancellor of the exchequer with needless waste of money in buying dollars for the service of the United\nStates debt hefore the pound had\nreached parity, and disagreed with\nthe government view that prices aa\nbetween the United Stntes and Urlt-\nnin   had   reached' purity.\nHome Support* Restoration\nSir Robert S. Home, nlso n former chancellor of the exchequer,\ntaunted Mr. Snowden with heroically and skillfully playing a double\nrole\u2014that of an ex-chancellor, who\nmight again occupy thHt position,\nwhile at the name time adopting\nthe dashing role of leader of financial    criticism.\n\"It would have been an extraordinary confession of weakness,\"\nhe snid, \"If, regarding ourselves ns\nthe financial center of the world,\nwe had declared our unreadiness to\ntake this step, wht n our own dominions and other countries were\nresuming   the   gold   standard.\"\nA number of others having spoken,\n,Mr. Churchill proceeded to Kind up\nthe   debate.\nI'llurrhlll   Says  Snowilcii   AdvW*<l   It\nHe contended that no cuse of sufficient weight had been adduced to\nJustify the opposition amendment.\nThe  government   waa  only   earning\nout the .operation Mr. Snowden himself had  counselled  when   In  office.\nMr. Churchill argued It would\nhave been inadvisable to allow auch\nlong notice aa until the end of the\nyear, of Britain's intention to allow\ngold exports, for fear that there\nmight then, at an inconvenient season of the year, have been a big\nhoard of gold waiting to be suddenly exported on removal of the\nembargo.\nAmendment  Would   Destroy   Bridge\n\"If lhe opposition amendment were\ncarried,\" Mr. Churchill continued, \"we\nshould find ourselves deprived of\nevery effective means Of making the\ntransition safe, Including American\ncredits, which nre Intended to worn\noff speculators,\"\nThe chancellor asserted he had received the finest expert financial advice In the world. The unique posi-\nt'on of Britain, which was dependent\nupon foreign supplies, made it dangerous to diverge from solid economic\nprinciples.\nAnother reason advanced by Mr.\nChurchill ns Justifying tbe nelion of\nthe government hud to do with the\noverseas dominions.\nFollow    Dominions\n\"If we detached ourselves from our\ngreat dominions\u2014nations in themselves\u2014we would, run,'* he said, \"a\ngreat risk of seeing ourselves isolated, and of loosening a bond the\ncontinuance of which and fortification of which are indispensable to\nour well-being. These great dominions, having adopted the gold standard while the United Kingdom stood\nout. would have traded with each\nother nnd with the United States on\na gold basis, ignoring England, and\nthat would have been a disastrous\nstate of things for us. If English\nsterling were not anchored to a standard that everyone knows ond can\ntrust, the business of the British\nEmpire, and even of Europe ai well,\nmight easily have come to be transacted In dol'ars ns well as sterling.\nand that ..would hnvo been a great\nmisfortune.\"\nSecond Reading Carrie*\nMr. Churchill's speech appeared to\nImpress the members of tho house\ngreatly.\nHe closed with the declaration that\nthe government accepted fXill responsibility after careful deliberation, and\nhe believed that the government's action could be Judged even by the\nexperience nf a few years. He maintained that they would have been mad\nand criminal had they neglected any\nreasonable precautions to Insure the\nsuccess of their decision.\nMr. Snowden's amendment was neg-\nhtlved without division, and the bill\npassed its second reading. *\nBRITAIN WILL BE\nFAVORED NATION\nhe\nthe   agreement    was   concluded,\nadded.\n\"In other words,\" he _aid, \"we intend to give her the most-favored-\nnatlon   treatment   In   all   cases.**\nTho statement of Mr. Havenga was\nreceived with loud Jnlnisterlal cheers.\nm\nTwo Move Victims\n'. of Cathedral Bpmh\n ......,-  ' if;    .-,\n\"SOFIA. Mny ..\u2014Two additional\ndeaths of persons injured In the recent bomb explosion In the ..cathedral\nhere occurred today. The men' .vho\ndied were Lieu tenant-Colonel of .Re-\nservea Nichoff and Ambulance Colonel\nTuntcheff.\nAs the entire country. !\u25a0 cilm, the\ngovernment has decided to allow the\npeople to circulate ln the atreeta until\n0 o'clock In  the evening.\nSPOKANE NEWSPAPER MAN\nGETS   NEW   RECOGNITION\nSPOKANE, May 4.\u2014Harvey. J.\nKelly, for the last four yeara executive secretary of the Northwest Newspaper association, with -headquarters\nhere, has been named chairman of\nthe special standing committee of the\nAmerican Newspaper Publisher!* association, it waa announced here\ntoday.\nSouth Africa for Reciprocal\nPreference but No Discrimination\nCAPETOWN, May 4. \u2014 (Canadian\nPress Cable, via Reuter'a) \u2014 Most\nfavored nation treatment will be\nplanted to Great Britain In South\nAfrica's next tariff, so Finance Minister Havenga announced Id the house\n(f assembly  today.\nThe preference proposals, he said,\nmust   be   on   a   reciprocal   basis.\nHe once more emphasised that\nBritain and the British dominions\nwould be consulted regarding South\nAfrica's treaties and trade agreements with other countrft>s and when\nany particular commodity which they\nexported   was   affected.\nThe government had no intention\nof seeking, and did not intend to seek,\nany trade agreement under which\nErltsin would be In a leas favored\nposition than the country with which\nTHE  GUMPS-OH,   DOCTOR!\n ; t\nThis Lassie Has Her\nColds \"Rubbed Away\"\nThe mother of this attractive tittle\ngirl. Mrs. E. E. Emmons, of 216\nSeventh Ave., N. H\u201e Portage La\nPrairie, Man., Is one of the many\nCanadian mothers who are enthusiastic about the vaporizing salve. Vlcka\nVapoRub. for treating children's\ncolds. Mrs. Emmons writes; \"My\nlittle girl had croup at night pretty\nbadly und Vlcks did her a lot of\ngood. 1 have also used lt with very\nsatisfactory results for head and\nchest  colds.\"\nVlcks is Just \"rubbed on\" for eoro\nthroat, tonsilitls. bronchitis, croup or\nleep chest colds. When so applied,\nVlcks has a double direct action; Internally medicated vapors are inhaled\nwhile, ut the same time, externally, tt\nis absorbed through und stimulates\ntbe skin.\n\/    via w mut*- uwe mh-b^vf\nf SvHct \\ v-ftw-fet\u00bb to xn-er- t MM\nVM   vV-WNOUH fctte TO COHTtK\\re\niN.Nd oh * a.\u00ab>sm WWON * .\nFt^C *% U0VXOW fc$ iV* tAAFTM\nt-CKKV tMtTCU * ITS HO V>Ve TWW\u20ac\u00bb\nfcHM CM*MC%* - A  Uv% \u00a3i\u00a3?r..VKT \u00ab\nS^TTtR Trf*4. * Wto\n'fa,.\nL\n\u00ab.**\u25a0 ^*\\|\nORCAKVCM.V.H   .00 AVE AS SOW***, AS\ne**i\\\\.- k* **ov) coNT\\N\\\u00bbe \u2022\u2014 _aa>c_*\u00a3\nM\u00ab>  \u25a0*_*=*?*\u00bb\u00bb>\u00bb WaM OO _\u201e*3WMC\u00bb NOtt'UC\nUVE UNO*c*- **M*\\M A C*cV**WRH VVKKT- tW\nJ.H U\u00bb\u00bbC> ?W_*aCE I WM*; torr VAfcX *\nMORE WEACWM *3**_OM_H ~ MMWOO\\> -\nff \u00abiNCT_.0_M \\B****J *s*J W*cV_ MS MOV) **.'\">\nWWt TO VOV,V t>0\\WN toA,TW^. ttOSWMS\n>\u00ab**, _wu*o        _6TVj*iv\u00ab>wvs\\uv_.\niirnrt veet*\n.. t\\. \u2022%\"\nUqI'\u00bb\n\/^W*h -\u00abmm *j _t\u00bb \u00abja*o m WW.****. I Can\n*_A_ W Ml \\H*\u00bbu*\u00bbAH-*c \"TiWtM - Ik fcOCTOt*.\nI UtVW \"TO tr\\W*> A WeAK WO . OH A QU^ -\n\"*\u00abAT*J   HOW \"We.  MAKE **H*i\\\u00ab. **.OM0,V\u00bb,- (\u2022\u00bb\nTMCT -\"IN** A *rV_VON(i Kfl>>*_**, \u00bb** MEAh*\nA WW A\\yTOM0-<Al._ TO*4-*M*\u00a3rA- VMEM  K\nI s_M)^c^*c. wu. *\u00bbam vo_ a ba.vo st. - vm\n| -WE Kim C\"r A -JA-CIEN. THA**\" \u2022ioCTOtlfc \u00abA*T*j\nVM  \"TOO v^c*Hl -  UWEH WE \u00bbW TA*ms<i)\nV.   *5W)Ht>\u00bbc_ l\\KE *\u00bb\u2022\n-ItVCKSMV-A*. HVT~.H<\u00bb M'ffeNW.*\nUOK-ANa \"-\u00ab \u00abV_KNE_V \u00bbN\nME   \u00bb*\u00bb UKE V_0WVW6 *F .\"I\nA *\u00a9IME \u00bbH A** EM*?'-**\nvoc**_\\-soo*_-\n^ Th, Outta* Ttitaaa.\nu-)t.'i.^L.tltoir    V-'-.\nIB. _iS tm.\nHER NERVES\nBETTER NOW\nReceived Much Benefit hf\nTaking Lydia E Pinkham'i\nVegetable Compound. .\nChatham, Ont\u2014\"I started te (et\nweak after my second child was born,\nand kept on getting worse until I\ncould not do my\nown housework,\nand was to bad\nwith my nerves\nthat I was afraid\nto stay alone at\nany time. 1 had\na girl working for\nme a whole year\nbefore 1 was able\nto do my washing\nagain. Through a\nfriend 1 learned of Lydia E. Vink-\nham's Vegetable Compound and took\nfour bottles of it 1 gave birth to \u00ab\nbaby boy the 4th day of September,\n1922. 1 am still doing my own work-\nand washing. Of course, I don't feel\nwell every day because 1 don't get\nmy rest aa the baby ia ao cross. But\nwhen 1 get my rest I feel One. I Ul\natill taking the Vegetable Compound\nand am going to keep on with it unit\ncured. My nerves are a lot better\nsince taking it 1 can stay alone day\nor night and not be the least fright*\nened. You can use this letter at \u2022\ntestimonial and 1 will answer letters\nfrom women ask ing about the Vegetable Compound.\"\u2014Mrs. Chas. Carbon, 27 Forsythe St., Chatham,Ont\nMrs. Carson la willing to write t*\ntnyone wfferingf rom female trouble\ni\n_\u25a0\nHH\nyy^  \u25a0_,.._.  ..       _\u201e,,'..,..    .._.     .....      ,._     ,*,..\u25a0_\u2022. ;_,\t\n...., jfetW .\n 1 \u25a0 *\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014v\u2014umj\u2014mmaam\u2014mmm\u2014*~\u2014\u2014~m-m\u2014-\u2014ff~~~!\n:J- . \u25a0-.',-  ' \u25a0      , , , *\\     ..   \u25a0 .        i,    . ,. v\n.!\u25a0\u25a0'- -\u25a0',\u2022\u25a0...\u25a0    \u25a0\u25a0 '\u25a0 : '\u25a0\u25a0 '    .'V ''    ;?\u00ab'\u25a0 :;:*. .        ',   \u25a0'    '\u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0,.-...''\u25a0       \u25a0<.  .**\u25a0.\u00bb*\u2022**\n\u25a0->,   <\n;\u25a0\" ...;-_(*\u00bb\nTUESDAY MORNING, MAY. 5, 192$\niBitmoteMEimLw\nl      I      l   f.-e\n\u2022 \u25a0-;,.\u2022\nI   I      j   II I \"Ia?\nOiHAsfTEUf IJ_I ' t ' j' '\nDenny, his blt>\u00ab shirt open at tire\nthroat,' swung- toast' ths rn'sss kail,\nwhere the then Vers1 going* to dlnW,\non through a platoon of nines to a\ncabin on tha ntllsldt. dmokb curled\ngently from the cltlnmey. That mrant\nKaty Insld*. end < perhaps hot biscuits  with  their Weak,'       .      >\nA senile of pbVer trailed through\nhis veins. On the Wrf rokd now.\nHe had his chance. Hero he was tip\nln the mountains\u2014men working.under\nhim. i    .      ...      ,.\u25a0\nNot ihtrch of; a Job\u2014the 'blinding\nof this dam as (Iti first unit df a\nlarger project. Silt '0_'__at beginning\u2014the first step Into 'that glorious\nfuture whsrs Ka(y woaW walk again\n\u2014where ho. Denny, wriuM bo that Big\nachiever, that masterful' follow, with\nhis head above the crowds, his stride\nquickened. All things mete, possible\nto hlm.      *      '   .  \u2022      '    \u2022 r.\nKaty sat at I little Uble near1 ths\nopen door waiting for him. The look\nof awe and wonder: that Tiad dome\nInto her fate When the Vanthess. the\nsilence opened to them, tested cm It\nnow like a beautiful praver. She\nturned to Denny with u whimsical\nsmile.      \"'\u25a0.-\u2022\u25a0 .1    \u25a0   .-   \u25a0\u2022\n\"I feel poemi coming on me. Denny.\nThey've been fuming on all day.\"\n\"Sure It's not the chills and fever,\nare you?\"\n\"And you 'mow, If I stayed here\nlong I'd write iomctnlng noble. And\nif I were the governor of the state\ndo you know wh;it I woil'd do? Ih-\nstcsd of having prisons I would bring\nmen up here nnd muku them look\nat the mountains and the trees and\nthe skies-\nATTENDANCES\nBELOWNORMAL\nFirst Division Leads; Results of March and April\nTests\nA permitJlBn of ?C.!)\u00ab, by division\n1. is the best attained by uny of\nthe Hum. school divisions In April,\nfor attendance. Division VIII.. comprising tho very Junior classes. Is\ndown   to  a  mark   of   80.82.\nAttendance figures for all divisions,\nand the rolls of those making CO\nper cent or over ln the March and\nApril examinations, for all divisions\nbut  tbe first, are as  follows;\nDivision 1\u201e grade VIII.    Percentage,\n95.94.\nDivision 2.. grade VII. PerccntHK*.\n911.48\u2014 Florence Laurits. flllliert Oou-\ncher. Kffle Campbell. Hilda Hlchmond,\nManvlile Porter. Helen Macdrejtor,\nMnna Stulibs. May Dinney. Charllo\n1'rllchard. Jack Hurgeas. Urace Negus.\n.Tosephlno Marartodl, Lewis -Rees. Ira\nMarquis, Gertrude Milne. liana Ahrens, John Harlow, Juliana Melncctuk,\nGrace Young, Helen  Porter.\nDivision I, grade VI. Percentage,\n94.5E\u2014Catherine MacLeod, Melba Kendall. Leonard Truscott, Arthur Kraft.\nJake Rothery. Louise Johnson, Mar-\nJorle Hawkins. Kathleen Scott. Clifford Smith, Mabel Anderson, William\nIlcnnott, Albert Clark, Arthur Anderson.\nDivision 4, grade V. Percentage.\nM.I7\u2014John Cunningham. Edward\nMatheson. Carl Olson, Charles Walker.\nMildred Johnson, John Stout. Louise\nMilburn, Harry Saiidcren. Kva, Massey. Nancy Jarvis. Lily Hillyard. Lillian Cookson. Edna Ball. Margaret\nCampbell. Ituth Kixcn. Klizub.th Lundle. Cecil Skinner. Victor Melnoc.uk,\nVernon Ahrens. Bruce Waldie. Tom\nHarrison. Violet Matassa. Orvlile Harrison, Ruth MrKlm, Nellie Thompson\nand  Ruth  Kraft.\nDivision G. grade IV. Percentage,\n91.19\u2014Beth Dinney. Marguerite Mara-\n. podi, Arthur Lanirill. Margaret Stevenson. Bernard O'Sullivan, Dick Craven, Angelo Marapodl. Annie Coulter.\nLunctta Green. Krfmuml Leemlng,\nFrank Morgan. Archie Bishop, Kvelyn Scott, Fred Gotdsbury, James Leemlng, Henry. Stevenson, Victor Davis.\nLily Bennett, Constance Genge, Janet\nWaldie, Dolly Renwick, Greta Basta-\nble.\nDivision 6, grades III. and II. Percentage, 87.5\u2014Joe Llndaev, Frank\nKruft. Kathleen Pritchard. Archie\nFrench, Jean Burffesrf, Olive Richmond.\nGilbert Hunt. Dennis Webster, F.rn-\ncst Harlow, Nelson Roynon, Jock Berrington, Melvln Sparkes, Aitkin Oos-\nnell, Edith Waterer. Theodore Anderson. Morsaret Thompson, Violet Young.\nD'Arcy lluirhes. Ellen Cookson. Jack\nBishop, Mildred Smith, Lucy Haehti.\nRoy Olson, Evelyn Lank-Ill. Alfred\nVyse, Violet Porter, Ted Little. Wallace Lister. Eddie Rothery, Roy Anderson.\nDivision 7. grades II. snd J, Percentage, 80.82; grade II.\u2014Jean Kendall,\nKlvera Matheson, Alfred Espeseth, Annie Scott. John Pletcrs, Dick Molnnls.\nWllma Milne. Edna Massey; grade\nI.. A\u2014Albert Lindsay, Howard Hunt,\nRuby Morgan, Evelyne Lundle. Helen\nMarapodl. Frelda Horlick. Marcella\nEsneseth. Emily Leemlng; grade I.. B\n\u2014Winnie Jardlne. Donald Fleming,\nRobert Molohon.  Edith Freed.\nEarliest Mayor of'\nWestminster Dies;\nSat at Ottawa, Too\nNEW WESTMINSTER. May 4. \u2014\nJames Cunningham,' pioneer business\nman, first mayor of. New Westminster, and first federal member ot\nNew Westminster riding, died this\nmorning. Ho would have been 91\nyears old next August. *\nLeaving Ireland at the age of 17.\nMr. Cunningham crossed tho Atlantic\nIn a sailing vessel to Join his\nbrothsrs, then resident at Kingston.\nOnt, and cams to British Columbia\n\u20224 years ago.\n-.       an      I        \u2014\u00bb\nFOR\u2014\n. Carnivals,\nParades,\nFancy Ball*,'\nAmateur Sketches,\nComic Operas, etc\n\u2014Wo furnish the necessary\nCostumes and Properties on a\nrental basis.\nSend  for Quotations .,,:\nParisian Costumiers and\nTheatrical Supply Co.\n(41   Hows  ttrsst\nsty. tm\nranibled on In chatty1 Intimacy.    Toward   the   end   this 'paragraph:     >\n\"YeuTl corns down for mT birthday,\nwon't you? I'm going to hav4 a big\nparty and I want you. If the did dam\nbreaks, Jet ltl ' But, lleydlddle. John\nMerchant, the mean tyrant sending\nyou to a wilderness when I'm having\na birthday, says - you can come If\nyou' like. At least, he 'says It's all\nup to you and- that he hasn't anything\nto say about lt,'< so lt means you'll\ncome,' doesn't It? What excuse oould\nyou have as long as It's In your own\nhands?\" ' \u25a0 '    ' \u2022'\nA ' momentary annoyance passed.\nDenny laughed. That Showed how\nmuch *We understood*\u2014asking him off\nto a dance Just when the work was\nIn Its most critical stage.'       ,    -' '\nbut he dallied with Petra's Image;\ndallied with the memory of the nymph\nwalking, on a hill, hand ln his, eyes\nIn 'his,   lips   on   his.\nLife is si niggardly patron. \"It\ncomes tp Us as children do With their\nHands 'behind their' back,. saying,\n\"Which do you want, the right or the\nleft?'' If we take the one we must\nleave the other. But we want both\u2014\nboth!'  \u25a0-\"\nBut life smiles. Ih the one hsnd\nIs purpose and lh the other pleasure.\nNone may seize the two.\nDenny struggled with a long answer, explained at great detail the\nImportance of the work, all that it\nmeant to him. .\n1 No answer came. The day: set for'\nthe big par'y found him restless. He\nkept thinking of Petra, seeing the\nbright turn ot her face, the dimple\nthat was bis.\n\"Oee,  I might as well have gone,\"\n\u201e...\u201e   _ he   thought   Impatiently,   \"If   I   don't\nAnd    they'd    turn    anxels. \u2022 would   \u00bb'\u00b0l> mooning about It.    Wonder why\nthey, and perhaps fly awaj'7 Tou\nforget, Katy. that some j.eople look\nat mountains nnd trees and skies\nwithout ever seeing them. Hope the\npoems coming on didn't ke^p tho dinner from  arriving.\"\nShe nodded to the stone ovon.\n\"Oee\u2014I knew It!\" He put a big\nhunk of butter on the slcamlng table.\n\"Say, working up here gives a fellow an appetite.\"\n\"Oh. were you Ktlffirln-r from lack\nof one, Denny?    When?\"\n\"Hut, say. I'm hungry all tho time.\"\n\"You like this work better than\nthe office?\"\n\"This Is tho real stuff. Well, you\nknow I always wanted to get out\nand do this, and there's more money\nnnd more power, and' before long we\nought to hnve everything we need.\"\nHe was wntcblng her sharply, noticed that her eyes were lowered suddenly, and the paleness he had seen\nIn the last weeks stealing over her\ncheeks. \u00ab\n\"You got a letter from Andy yesterday?\" he asked In an Indifferent\nvoice.\n\"Yes.\"\n\"Pretty  faithful.  Isn't her\nStains of red flooding the pallor.\n\"Yes; you know, some people nre\nnatural letter writers. That'a what\nClay Is.\"\n\"Uh-huh. Kaly, did Clay come back\nhere to marry you?\"\n\"No.\"\n\"To  see  you,   then?\"\n\"Yes; and to tell me he still wantB\nto marry me.\n\"But aren't you going tH do It?\"\n' Katy pretended to have groat difficulty with the green peas otr her\nfork; pretended to laugh because they\nkept rolling off. \"Well, I haven't\nyet.   have   I?\"   ,      .\n\"Arid you wont, either! Vou don't\nlove him. Well, you must think I'm\na fine bonehead,' Katy-Kld. if you\nsuppose I don't know a thing or two.\nI haven't been asleep for the last\nfew weeks. I know Just how you've\nsized things up. Oh, I know you, all\nright!\" \u2022    \u25a0 \u2022 \u25a0 \" '\nTeeth shut, eyes dark. Then he\nlaughed. \"Great little diplomat, ain't\nyou? Going out In the garden and\neat worms, alnt* you?\"\nKaty burst out laugHlHK, a sudden\nwild Joy throbbing in her head. Sho\nkept laughing, tears running down her\ncheeks.\n\"Did you see any trtorr- whh your\nX-ray mln\/l. Mr. Denman?\"\n\"Yea, f did!\" The young eyes tint\nwere so tender pierced like a knife.\nShe dropped hers.\n\"Well, I should think you would\nblush!\"\n\"And now, Denny, what did I do?\"\n\"After alt .these years go and think\nmean things about a fellow.\"\n\"I '914 not!\"' '   - \u25a0\n\"Well, htlywny. Katy,'\"you oupht\nto krtow that nothing can ever mnk.\nany difference between us. I'd like\nlo see the thing or the \u25a0 person thut\ncould!\"\n\"I du know that. Denny. lint Just\nthe same you should have Joy. You've\nearned It, and I'll be tho happiest\nperson Ih the world when 'yob get II.\nAnd 1 don't want you to sacrifice\nfor me. but that's what you've always\nhad to do. It seems as though It\nshould be my turn now.\"\nA pang rasped through him; mn.de\nhis  eyes   sting.\n\"Oee, Katy, you might Just as well\nshoot a fellow as ssy ft thing like\nthat.\"\n\"No, Denny. It's not that at all, but\nIf you let mo get ln your way that's\nthe cruelest thing that \"everv could\nhappen to me.'*\n\"All fight, then. I won't. .You're\nnot In my way and you know you\nnever have been. And If you think\nI'm In love I'm not. and I'm not\nthlnklnr of getting married. I'm\ngoing to succeed first. And.say, Katy.\nIt'll be a pretty tough day when you\nand I have to port company. And I\ndon't care who It's for! That's the\ntruth.   If you don't feel It. I do!\"   .\nShe drew a deep breath, covered\nher faoe quickly. When she took her\nhands dovfn she was 'laughing, but\nher eyes were wet. her lips trembling\nso that she couldn't speak.\n'TU never, never think a mean\nthing about you again, Denny\u2014honest\nand true.\" '\n\"Well, you better nftt! , You won't\nget by the nertt time!\" \u25a0 ,\n.He Wheeled her to a Dig tree. In\nthe far distance black peaks' Wenl\nlike cathcdrnl spires' imp the blue\nsky. Then clouds assembled, passed\nover the ridges.' drawing veils of\nsliver and rose across the rtlgged\ncontours, making more limitless' and\nvast ths aspect of the mountains.\nKaty listened. The breese, the pines,\nthe looming cliffs soeming moving'\nto majestic notes of unknown music-\nThe   rhythm   ontered   with, uplifting\npeace  ltlto   nor   sen!\u2014,.\nShe watched Denny going down to\nIhs camp for the fnall. THe meant\nwhat he said. Meant every word\nof It. There would be flirts together\nfor them ye(t \" '\"'\nAnd\" ks penny sauntered he thought.\n\"Didn't J know, all rl(rht, Whot,stie\nwas thinking? Well, I guess Tm not\ngoing to take on any more problems\nfor awhile. Fellow Wants- a little fun.\nStis (that meant Petra), dossn't love\nme.    Gee. what haVe I tot to offer\n. But _\u2022_;%_* I'ftttrfl-'at'ByoBWt\nWe golden head? Brown tyes. that\nas.enled before him. Just like her.\nQ_   .he   ...    \u00ab,...   all   right.      1,\nshe  didn't answer?*\nHe wat waiting for the mail when\na man galloped in with a mest-age:\n\"Suspend all work on dam at once.\nLetter follows.\u2014Merchant,\".\n(To   be continuedt)f7-    >\nCALLHEARIMGS\nON'PEACE'BILL\nIN NOVASCOTIA\nReenacts Lemieux Act and\nSets Up Arbitration\nAfter\t\nHALIFAX, N.8.. May 4.\u2014A public\nhearing will be given bill 184, the In-\nduntrtftl Peace: act, introduced in the\nlegislative anwmbly Thursday by Pre-\nnii**r Armstrong, according to the decision of the committee on law amr-nd*\nmeritg, reached at its meeting Friday,\n-vhcn'ft majority of the members up-\nhold the request voiced at the late\nsession, when the bill was In its secy\nond' reading, thnt time be allowed to\nlH'i-mtt Nova Scotia labor leaders and\nindustrial heads to be heard on the\nMeasure  before  It  leaves  committee.\n_rt*r__gs 9nMd*y\n' The   heating  will   be   held   tomorrow\nmorning  next,  and  Invitations  will  be\nH>nt   out   to  all   concerned   to  appear\nbefore   the   committee.\nThe Industrial Peace act. 192\"., one\noi' the most outstanding issues of the\npresent session, and unique In the an\ni.als of Canadian labor legislation, re\nenacts tlio Lemieux act as amended to\nfit Nova Scotia conditions, and ndmlts\na second part, to be effective only\nafter proclamation, providing the machinery for a permanent arbitration\ncommission to settle -industrial disputes ufter the findings of part one\nhove failed, tlio finding of the arbitration, committee\" 'to be binding on\nboth  parties.\nFOUR\n(AYS A WEEK\nHosmer lire Leaves Company Boat Short ior the\n, Barge-Passenger Runs\nNASOOKIN MAY U\nCONTINUE TO CITY\nOfficials Nothing to Say;\nBusiness Men Prefer\nWinter   Schedule\nRumors In tho city yesterday\nwere that the present boat service\nbetween this city and Kootenay\nLanding and between the city and\nKaslo would be again discontinued.\nOwing to the tug Hosmer being\ndamaged in a tlve on Sunday, the\nrailway company Is now a boat\nahort In its barge and passenger\nservice. \"> The winter schedule ln\nforce uftt'l Sunday night, lust, may\nbe   resumed   again.\nCanadian Pacific railway officials\nwould have nothing to \u00abay regarding the matter yesterday. However,\nit Is stated that there Is a possibility that the Nasookin may be continued on - the Nel son-Kootenay\nLand ng run, and the Moyie placed\non the run between Nelson and\nKaslo, four times per week, likely\non Mondays. Tuesdays, Wednesdays\nand   Thursdays.\nYmlr  Small  for Work\nThe Hosmer, which waa burned\non Sunday was on a barge service\nbetween Procter and Kootenay\nLanding, Thla tug, probably the\nmost powerful on the lakes, could\neasily handle two large transfer\nbarges. The Ymlr, an older, smaller and less powerful boat, cannot\nhandle two barges easily. Thus,\nfrith traffic over the laken quite\nheavy at present, the Mo-vie will\nrnont likely, have to be used on the\nbarge  run*\nAnother difficulty at present la\nthat the Lardo trip Is an impossibility with the boats at present In the\nservice. Just what will be done, officials will not state. Business men\nll     r\u00bb-T-f>*^->  --    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0>\u2022-\u25a0  n   ,.\nlocally seem to favor ths system ln\nuse all winter, when a train was\nrun from Nelson to Procter, and\nthe Nasookin made the Kootenay\nLanding. Procter and -Kaslo run.\nThis service left the Moyie free for\nany other work that was available.\nHOSMER NOW\nJ UP ON WAYS\nTug Burned at Procter Is\nHigh and Dry at Fairview\nYards\nLeon Daudet fr Oof\nfor French Senate\nPAHIS.    May    4\u2014t^on    Daudet    has\nannounced his candidacy for the seat\nin the senate vacated by the death'\nof Jules l>lahaye. royalist senator for\nthe department of Maine-ct-Loire. He\nis conceded an excellent chance of election.\nA movement hus been on foot for\nsome time to erect at a suitable, point\nin the Qu'Appelle valley a memorial\nto the Rev. Father Hugonard, an early\nmissionary to the lndiuns.\n|AB\u00bb;:'\nfrom Ottawa en    '> '\nEradication Work\na b.\nVICTCUIA, May 4.\u2014Hon.\nMarrow, minister ef agriculture,\nturned from Ottawa this mornlnr,\nafter conferences- thsre with Dominion\nofficials on British Columbia's cam-\nualgn to wipe out tuberculosis from\nthe dairy herds  of the  province.\nMr.   Barrow   accompanied   Premier\nOliver to Ottawa,    fie says the pre-\n' mlor probably will he there for\ntime. -. .\n'       mmmmm-mm^mmmm\n\u00ab\u2014\u25a0\nArchbishop Casey's-\ni Auto Is Stolen; Is >\nFound Over a Bunh\nVANCOl'VEn. Msy \u00ab.\u2014The suto of\nArchbluhop Casey was stolen from\nout.file. a hOBpitflt.' ' It was found\nlater,  damaged,  over  an  embankment.\nOTTAWA* May 4.\u2014Daylight saving\nwent Into effect In a number of\n\u2666astern  cities over  the week-end.\n\"Cood Goods ai Gray's\"\n\"*   it\nDelta and Bluebird\nPearls\nIn all lengths; the newest styles.\n\u25a0\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022m  $5.50  *\u2022  $40.00\n\u25a0\nIB. GRAY\nWstchmsksr,  J.wsler,  Optician\nBAKER ST. PHONE 333\nim\nLiver Oil in\nFor\nforget the nasty tasting, stomach\ntipsettinur cod liver oil and give the\nthin, puny, underdeveloped children\nMcCoy's* Cod Liver' Oil Compound\nTablets if you w*nt to five them a\ngood appetite and put pounds of\nfrond, healthy flesh on their bones.\nDoctor* know all about them and\nso does tho Canada DrugA Book Co.,\nI-oole Drug Co., City Drug Co., and\nall good pharmlclsts all over America, for they are In creat demand,\nbecause they aro not* laggards but\nshow re-tilts In a few days. * # -\n' They are not expensive either\u201460\ntablets~40 f\u00bb\u00abts and children take\nthem like candy.\nA \"very sickly child, age 9, gained\nII pounds In rieven months and It\nstrortg ind healthy.\nOne skinny woman gained \u2022 pounds\nIn \u00ab tfayit*   -  \" *-\nBe rfure to'gtt McCoy'*, the origin,\nal and genuine Cod Uver OU Com-\nWork commenced yesterday In the\nhauling from the water the hulk\nof the Canadian Pacific railway tug\nHosmer, which was seriously damaged In a fire at Procter early\nSunday   morning.\nThe tug was spotted on the cradle\nearly yesterday morning, and, two\nteams   proceeded   with   the   hauling'.\nThe craft Is now undergoing a\nthorough Inspection, and lumber will\nbe ordered shortly for the necessary\nrepairs.\n\u25a0* tm\nWilkinson Makes\nThursday Island\nBRISBANE, Australia. ,May 4\u2014(Canadian Press Cable, via Reuter's)\u2014A\nv.-lreless meBFtage has been received\nfrom Capt. George H. Wilklns, who\nwas a member of the Canadian Arctic\nexpedition under the explorer Stefansson, and about whose safety on the\nnorthweat coast of Australia there has\nbe*-n considerable anxiety. Captain\nWilklns has arrived safely at Thurs-\ndny Island, from Oroote Eylandt, In\nthe northern territory of Australia, according to the  biessage.\nU5E-\nTsfe**\n2,i\u00abl\nShoePalish\nfor your shoes\nIt saves the leather and \u2022\nImprove* your persona! i\nConstipation makes a sallow skin\u2014\ndrive it out with Kellogg's ALL-BRAN\nDon't Ut constipation racAt and\nruin your beauty\nand health.\ntive\u2014that is wh\u00bbt Kellogg's is,\n100% bran. Th.t is why doctors\nrecommend it\u2014they know it brings\nresults. It has brought relief t.\nthousands when all else has failed.\nYou will like the nut-like flavor\nof Kellogg*, ALL-BRAN. Eat ah\nleast two tablespoonfuls daily\u2014\nin chronic cases, with every meal.\nReady-to -eat with milk or cream.\nSprinkle it over other cereals.  Fin.\nConstipation can ruin your Rood\nhealth. Take no chances. Drive\nit out\u2014and keep it out of your\n.!__\u00a3\"i.. sl^ let its poi^ *k'h^-.\"\"_eHoS'r__irB\u201eiBr\ngather in your body\u2014poisons which   \u25a0 ..-.*>\u00bb-\nlead to over forty serious diseases.\nUnpleasant breath is a warning.\nSo are pimples and blotchy skin.\nKellogg's ALL-BRAN brings\npermanent relief in the most\nchronic cases, if eaten regularly.\nIt is guaranteed to do so or your\ngrocer returns the purchase price.\nOnly ALL-BRAN is wholly ef\"ec-\nis made in London, Canada, and\nserved   by leading   hotels   and\nrestaurants everywhere.   Sold by\nail grocers. Get a package today.\nJways a\nsecondcup\nwhen Us.\nChase -Sanborn's\nSCAl BRAND  Cof fee\namii\nTHE Snyder Sani-Bilt Guarantee against moths is a document of\nreal value.   It means something.  It means something right now.\nIt means something ior the future.\nRight now it means that you may buy Snyder's Sani-Bilt Living\nRoom Furniture with evefy confidence; that the furniture to which\nthe Snyder Sani-Bilt Guarantee is attached is the genuine Sani-Bilt\nFurniture, the only furniture which is treated in the Sani-Jilt way.\nFor the future the Sani-Bilt Guarantee means that you will never\n\u25a0 be troubled by moths in this furniture so long as it lasts\u2014and it is\nbuilt to fast many years. The Sani-Bilt process removes all temptation\nfor moths. Moth grubs starve to death if hatched on fabrics treated by\nthis process. The experiment has been demonstrated not once but\nhundreds of times. \u00bb\nConsequently in the Sani-Bilt Guarantee you have a document\nworth preserving. It is the guarantee that banishes all worry. There\nis no other guarantee like it. It covers all points needing guarant\u00abe\u2014\nconstruction,' as well as moths. From moths Sani-Bilt is guaranteed\nabsolutely immune, inside and out.\nIf moths should get into your suite and do any damage, produce\nthe Sani-Bilt Guarantee. Your dealer has our authority to replace the\nsuite without cost to you. .We make this offer with every suite that\nleaves the factory. >.'\nSnyder's\ni*bi\ntfOOMIOBNfint\nVi\n\u25a0 w*.ww_,_\nGwwmteed Math Proof\nConstructed\nFor Life Long Use\nThe frames of Sani-Bilt are more\nthan usually strong, being constructed\nof heavy posts and rails of solid Canadian hardwood. The springs are very\nstrong coils of heavy steel wire, rustproof and oil-tempered, tied and cross-\ntied in place with heavy cord. They\nrest on an interlaced mattress of\nstretch-proof Scotch webbing, fastened to the frames to stay. Every particle of the upholstery fillings is fresh\nand new\u2014and mothproof.\nYou have a very wide choice of designs and coverings in tbe Sani-Bilt\nrange, and the suite you want can ho\nhad at the approximate price you want\nto pay.\nMake sure to lift the cushions after\nthe dealer has shown you our guarantee, and look for the Sani-Bilt trade\nmark. It's proof positive that thcro\nIvis been no mistake.\nSNYDER'S, LIMITED,.',.\nWaterloo, Ontario.\n\u25a0\n \u2014\u2014\"\u2014\u2014  ' ^\"'\u2022i^mmwiiii \\tmiv\u2014w>\u2014wa\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014mmm*K\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014~''\nf-ttFon\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,.. TUESDAY MORNING, MAY 5, 1925\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished every morning exeept Bun.\n\u00ab\u2022; by The New Publishing company,\nlimited.  Nelson,  B.A\nBusiness letters should\" be addressed\naad checks and money orders made\npayable to The Newa Publishing company, limited, and In no case to Individual membera of the staff.'\n' Advertising rste cards and A.B.C.\natat.menta of circulation mailed oa\nrequest, or may be seen st the office\na*f any sdvertlstng sgency recognised\nby ths Canadian  Press association.\nSUBSCRIPTION  JtATBS\nBy mall (country), per month ...I, .\u00ab\u2022\nPer year \u201e ., \u201e .,   ,, ,.,..   I.OO\nBy mail (city), per year _- 13.00\nOoislde Canada, per month        -    .7b\nPer year \u201e..___._.., .   ISO\nDaitrsfad, per week It\nret yaar n.0\u00bb\n_ ,        Payable  In Advance\nVesmbee Aadlt  Bursal  of Clro-.tloa\nTUESDAY,   MAY   6.   19*5\nWatchful Waiting Again in\n.Order\n. \u25a0*\u25a0 - ,j\nWhile in France, Belgium\n,_nd elsewhere in allied countries of Europe the first impressions and comments resulting from the Hindenburg victory were disquieting enough,\nit is reassuring to note a change\nof tone in later expressions of\nresponsible opinion.'- British\nviews, on the whole, have been\nhopeful and moderate, and possibly the influence of this sober\nattitude helped to steady and\nreassure alarmed observers on\nthe continent.'       \u25a0..\u2022,'.\nMost of. the German promises\n) dative to disarmament and\nreparations are \u25a0 contained in\ntreaties which admit of no\nchange without the consent of\nall the signatories.' And, under\nthe German parliamentary form\nof government, the reichstag,\nwith its liberal majority, remains the most active and\nforceful factor in governmental\naffairs. Whether the Hindenburg election is merely a manifestation of the general world\ntrend toward conservatism or\nwhether it has a hidden meaning in the German mind is the\npoint that requires a definite\nanswer before Eurepe can accept the situation with knowledge of what it implies.\nBecause of the effect of the\nelection in France, it is probable that Hindenburg's victory\ndefinitely destroys all prospects\nof another arms conference in\nthe near future. France approached this proposal with the\nutmost reluctance when it was\nmade; now Hindenburg stands\nas a lion in France's way to\nthoughts of reducing its state\nof preparedness for war. It is\nfortunate that the French ministry of foreign affairs is directed by Briand, a statesman of\nquiet strength, courage and ver.'\"\ndefinite ideas of the way to se-\nr_.rity. Briand has said that\nh will work with or through\nthe League of Nations, and that\nYe has not abandoned his belief\nin the principles of the Geneva\nprotocol. He will not decide\nrashly that Germany has forfeited claim to trust and eon-\nfidence.\nVitamines\nThere are all sorts of vitamines. Scientists know very\nlittle about them, save that food\nwould not be nourishing without them.\nLack of one kind causes\nscurvy. I^ack of another kind\ncauses rickets. When rice-husking machines first came into\nuse the native rice-eaters began\ndving with beriberi, for the\nhusks contained a vitamine necessary to health.\nMilk is rich in vitamines, but\nwhere did ,thc cow find them?\nProfessor Drummond of University college, London, has discovered vitamine factories\u2014in\nricroscopic sea plants called\ndiatoms.\nNo animal can create any\nkind of vitamine, but copepods\neat diatoms, whelks eat\ncopepods, and cods eat whelks\n\u2014so cod liver oil is as full of\nvitamines as honey of pollen.\nBut the professor leaves us in\nthe dark as to how the vitamines find their way from cods\nto cows.\t\n\u25a0\/-.' The\nLighter Side\nReaden of The Dally News contribute many of the best Items to\nthis column. Just alRn your name\nor Initial a, or nom-de-plume, and \u25a0\n\u2022end In your brightest Idea*\u2014fldl-\ntor, Lighter Bide.\n.   About   nil   the   lifting   a   modern\nfrock has is girl.\nYouth: \"How fast will sho go?\"\nAge: \"How are the brakes?\"\nWlierc   thoy   know   least\nabout   .-vj-wtlon,  they  need   >\ntlw most of It.\nMost of tho big fortunes are In\nbonds,  Industry  and   litigation.   ,\nModei..ii.m: Spending lt right and\nleft;  wondering  what  became  uf lt.\nAs the Prince of Wales' only pub-\nlis hod  poem  the  verse In  which  he\ndeclined     Neptune's    daughter    on\n\"Crowning the  Equator,\" has considerable  Interest:\n\"I thank you for your kind suggestion.\nAbout   your   beautiful   princess.\nBut may I ask you Just one question-\nWhere ln h  did she get that\nrose?\ni\n\"But  ln spite  of all  I'm forced to\nspurn    her.\nThough    your   offer    make*   me\nproud.\nTes,   my   king.   T   must   return   her.\nPets on board are not allowed.\"\nThe prince's poem has the merit o[\nmaking you feel ^ure he did it himself, int-tcad of ordering the poet\nlaureate to dash off something fur\nthe occasion. Dr. Bridges would\nnever have defied rhyme and mctei\nfor  the   bold   line:\n\"Where ln h  did she get that\nrose?\"\nOur royul poet's work has strength\nand originality. Beauty will come in\ntime.\nWhat has become of the old-\nfashioned girl who wouldn't nccept\nexpensive  gifts?\n*5.;   \u2022\n. #  \u00bb\nI What the Press Is Saying \\\nIlcM|Nt*t   for  I\u00abw\nIt la the citizen's duty to respect\nthe l*w. It Is esiientlal to the\nstability of the soc'al structure that\nthe law be obeyed and respected.\nLaw la defined to be the medium\nthrough which Justice operates for\nthe welfare of the cltisen and the\nKtate. Liberty within the restriction* of wise lawa is the fundamental Ideal of democracy.\u2014C ncinnatl\nEnquirer. '        .\nAnother Way They Might Help\nProposals for cooperation and the\nelimination of needless competition\nbvtWeen the Canadian Pacific railway and the Canadian Northern ral-\n*\u00bb*y have been frequently heard of\nlate. th#y could cooperate ln etlm-\nuUting Immigration. Each could be\nrepresented on tha commission which\n_ p_po_*.-*__\u00abo. *_-.\n\t\nA ph losopher Is one who can go\nahead with hln work nnd let tht\ndarned   phone   ring. '\nIf 'only they would warm up thr\ngrandstand seats us well us the\npitch era.\nAXC1BNT SAYING: \"PUT ON\nANOTHI.K ONE, DEAIIIE; I\nCAN* SEE KIliHT THROUGH\nYOU.\"\nAnother good way to stand in with\nprominent people is lo furnish bail\nfur Hum.\nThe   l-n*i nut  *JU(*-.t\nJudy,   fair as   heather roue.\nNever   luokH    for   handsome    beaux.\nThough  they shun the other dames.\nThey   take   ber   to   baseball   games\nWhen   the   other   women   my,\nBaseball! How d'yuh get that way?\"\nShe amiles shrewdly, \"Well, you nee.\nDiamonds always Interest  me.\"\nA woman who bosses her husband   may  be   happy,   but   he doesn't\nfluid   the   happiness.\nAlan ran be reasonably\nhappy under any form of\ngovernment except a thumb.\nnTtl|,IIIS.S,. I H 1.1 \u00bbl\"l III\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nSy I__0*A iu XX-UtMA-T       fjj\nANSWERS TO INQUlUI-S\nTOMORROWS MKNt'8\n\\ Break fat.\nBruianHS    ,\nCereal\nDropped   Eggs Toast\nCoffee\nJai)K-.(v;n\nCodfish    Balls\nWholo Wheat Bread\nRadishes\nMarmalade COOOH\n1)1 niter\nVegetable  Soup\nPot   Hoaal   of   Beef\nPotatoes Beets\nLettuce Salad\nRasih   Pie Coffee\nThat Bpdy\nlot Yours\nIM1DI W. B\u2014\u2022TOsT, __.\nHM-M-BU__-_H_an_B\nThe Value of Heat\n,Mrs.  .1,   H,  C\u2014('lease tell  tne  how*\nI   can   remove   mildew   front   whit*\nlinen.\nAnswer\u2014Mildew is a mould. If It\nhas not been allowed to reman in\nthe material too long, its growth\nmay be stopped by being covered\nwith a paste made of equal parttt\nof powdered chalk and ni.upm._H,\nwith u few drops of lemoH Juice atid*\ned, and Ihen placed in strong min*\nshine. Kenio.i>.cn the mildewed part\nof the mater.ai with thla paste as\noften as It drle*-. till the mould\ndisappear:*. It mtty hi ne-'tssarj-,\nhowever, to use the follow ii*t\nmethod: Stir two teaspoonfuls of\nchloride of lime into a pint of cold\nwater In un earthen dish, allow it\nto settle, then pour off the clear\nportion; add a few drop* of vine*\ngar, and Immerse the mildewed portion of the linen in this for 30\nm nutes; transfer the material to a\nsolution of one ounce of hyposul*\nphide of sodit to a gallon of water\nto check the action of lhe lime, and\nrinse  in  clear   water,\nYouthful Mat rut)\u2014I have some\npine needles and wish to know\nwhether it is necessary to put anything with them in order to make\ngood pine pillow? Also hi'o two\ncovering!- necessary? And :s there\nany conventional size for this kind\nof  pillow?\nAnswer\u2014Do not l-ut anything with\nlhe  needles.     1,   personally,   likr   two\ncoverings\u2014one  of  white   muslin   ami\nthe   upper   one   of  China   silk.     But\nmany   woman,  prefer Just   one   cover\nof   heavy   cretonne   or   crash.       No, |\nthere is no regulation a'ae, l>ui when i\nI  make one   1  generally  make  ii   oblong   \u2014    1 _    Inches   long   by   seven j\ninches   wide.\nC. H.\u2014Is there anything that can '\nbe put on nn old brick chimney, in !\na room, which will keep the damp-1\nnt-ss from striking through the wall\npaper? I have tried several coats\nul  paint, but that has no effect.\nAnswer\u2014I know of nothing 10 fee- t\nominend ejeept a waterproof point, i\nBut perhaps some reader friend will j\nhave something really helpful to j-ug-\n[*est. ami will write it on a postal [\nand   mall   it   lo  me   in   care  of  this ,\n'.It would appear that other coun-\nlt .Would  appear   that  other'countries   seem   to   appreciate   the   vulue\nof h^at In various aliments more than\nwe db In North America.\nIn Japan the hot bathing and application of heat to various disorders\nis rqutint! procedure. -The use of the\nhuge hogsheads, (Iliad with hut'Water,\nin which the Jap Immerses himself\nafter the toll of the day, was a part\nof the army life during the war with\nUuss'ia.\nTho circulation Is hurried along and\nthus the futiguo wastes in the muscles\nj ar*'Amoved from the system.\n]    Out*  -UhleteS  Iry.: to  secure  n   hot\nI bath   after   (I   *tr*muoua   contest,   bo\nj that they  will not go \"Mule,\"\ni     I'or yeurs it hjis beeit customary to\n{ treat   all   sprains   with   cold   applications \" to   prevent   the   swelling'.    Our\nlatent   books are telling  us that  heat,\nhot applications, are the first indication,  brer,uw a* the damage is done\nIthe  riwtt best-thing to do  is  to gel\nj a   Ktut'l  circulation   there,  to  remove\ntlie debris of Hll the tearing and start\n'early   reptir   of' the  tissues.\nj    In   Holland   a   surgeon   had   beet!\nl treating a severe ulcer on a patient's\n, Ug   for   three   years.     The   ittUlenl\ni was ' bedridden ' and   threatened   with\ni Kiiiu-fem.       . .   \u00ab\ni     He   applied   a   hot   air   box   to   the\n; Un, be*; in if In if with three hours' dully\n: and * Increasing   It   gradually   to   six\nhours,  exposing  the  bare  leg directly\nt to   the   huat.    Between   the  heat   ap-\npllcft'i'.nx, the leg was simply covered\nwith irfi ordinary bandage.\nTin:   first    thing   noticed    was   the\np-onipt  relief froiii  (\u25a0 lin.    This is the\ngreat    factor   in    the   application    of\n; hent   In   sprains   and   other   injuries.\nII   is   very   soothing.\ni     This   ulcer  was  completely   healed\nIn   L_   weehft   and   in   the   majority\nnl'   caws   he   stales,   that   the   cure\nwas   complete  In   three   weeks.\nWhen healing Is slow in  run down\n' individual-*-,   the   stimulation   of   the\npart   by   heat   is  just   what   is   need-\nd   to  gel   some  activity,\nThla   is   the  reason   that   ;l   Is  not\nmitfiiul   for  an   old   sore  or   ulcer   to\nic   Irritated   hy  some  preparation,   in\nrder   to   stimulate   the   circulation\nnd   get   the blood   bringing new  ma-\ni-rial.   nnd   removing   old    materia)\nrom   the   spot.\nHeat is a  meat boon to us all.\n.WHWKR to yi;sti:kd\\v*s\nCROSSWORD  I-TMliE\npaper?\nTomorrow\nDishes.\nj\nSome    Good     Cod j\nCANADIAN MISSIONARIES MEET PRINCE\nA hick lown is a place where nobody works on Sunday except the\ncook.\nThere are 878,642 things you don't\nneed, all of which can be bought on\nthe easy-payment plan.\nA few more weeks and m'Ihhi!\nmIII br out and dad will Ik.' asking wheiv In thunder tiu* car Is.\nThere's always something to make\nyou suffer in spring. If it isn't\nchilblains,  it's love or rheumatism.\nCorrect      this     sentence:      \"Don't\nblame yourself, dear,\" said the worn-\n;   \"It   was all  my  fault.\"\nTwenty Years Ago\ntThc    Daily    News,   .May\nlflu\u201e.)\nOfficers of the Nelson Association\nFootball club elected last night nre:\nPresident. Harry Wright. ML. A.;\nVlce-prenldent, 1'*. B. Hawthorne;\nmanager, James Mieghan.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nPoeeph Patenaude received wortl\nyesterday of the death of a brother,\nDosithc    Patenaude    at    Hun    U ego,\nCal.\n* \u2022    \u2022\nA. II. Gracey and Mrs. Gracey\nhave gone to Camborne, where they\nwill  reside.\nTen Years Ago\n(The    Dully    News,    May    5,    1915.)\nLondon\u2014The loss of ground from\nthe unexpected use of asphyxiating\ngases by the Germans lust week\nhas resulted In a readjustment of\nthe allien' lines.-The new line runs\nwest  of  Lonnebeke.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nReconstruction  of  Trinity  Methodist church, which was gutted hy fire\nsome   months   ago,   has   commenced,\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nA city baseball .league has been\nformed with teams from the high\nschool. Young Men's Christian association and the Hungry Nine club.\n\u2022 \u2666    %\nPte, lOavld Glenday of Cranbrook\nle posted as wounded.\nThat he was an heir to a large\nfortune in Kngland left by his\naunt, Mrs. Phoebe Helmes, who\ndied In January, was the good news\nwhich Thomas Shepherd, engineer\nln a canning factory of the Dominion\nCanners, limited, at St. Catherines,\nOne.,   has just  received.\nDaily News Cross-Word Puzzle\n-\n*\n\\ ,\nr\nr~\n4  1\nr1\nle\n\u2022'\"\n\u25a03\nI\n10\nIt\nU.\n1*\n14\n\u25a0\u25a0\n\u2022\n15\ntb\nn\ni\u00b0>\n1\nW\n17\nSl\n5T\nI*.*\nin 1\nST\"\n\u2122\nii\n3^\n19\n\\x\n*\nST\n41\n'\n_\n39\n\u25a0mo a_Wt\\\n41\n41\n50\n51\nm\n45\nSI\"\n5J\nF*\n.W\n-*1\nHti\n5b\nsr\n156\n5Tl\n\u25a0K>\u00b0\nw\n\\bt\nu\n'\nr\n1\nHO-tXSOZf TAX.\n1\u2014Arrangement   of   the   hair\nr.\u2014The   point-\n8\u2014Auctions\nKi\u20141'iuce; stead\n14\u2014Farm animal\n16\u2014To   cover   with   stones\n17\u2014To make progress\n18\u2014Fundamental\nl;t\u2014perceived\n\u2022jo\u2014Carnivorous  uuadruped\n\u25a0'2\u2014 Prehistoric   weapon\n\u2022_ J\u2014Cord\n;r,\u2014Negative  votes\n-3S\u2014Goes aboard\nm>~Anglo-Saxon   title\nI,\"!\u2014Fatdilon\n1t*__i,c*uf  <\u00bbf  palm\n;-7\u2014itfluctant\n\u25a0t\\\u2014rmpinllfied\n11\u2014 Receiver of  stolen   goods\n(a\u2014Not   either   one\nU \u2014Minute  Insect\ntl,\u2014Serin .its\nr, ft\u2014Rested\n\u20222\u2014Shaues\nftf,\u2014To   the   inside  of\n-.7\u2014lu   a   Wild   state\nr\u00bb.s\u2014A   workslmp\n-Brought' f\"rtli\n-Tliorniiglifuret*\n62\u2014Clear of  trees\n.\u25a0:]_-To acoff\nfl,\u2014A cereal\nii 5\u2014Resists\nVERTICAL\n1\u2014To   shatter\n1\u2014Military  assistant\n:;\u2014At   no   time\nt\u2014Fertiliser\n5\u2014I'ronoun\nb\u2014Latin  for  \"that  is\"   tabbr,)\n-Mexican   laborer\n-At  guild  speed\n-Thorough fares\n-Hinful\n-lb'llglouH    denominations\n-Clan\n-Jokes     \u25a0\n-A   cheese\n-Hanging   loosely\n\u2014Attendants to horses\n-To  play  a stringed  instrument\nnoisily\n-Device  for measuring\n-hurtling\n-Insect\n-At   that   place\n\u2014Resinous   suoatance\n\u2014A   garment\n\u2014(\"rent   act'.r\n\u2014Banquets\n-Heavy   slicks\n\u25a0\u2014Priest's   heudwear\n-Senseless\n.Guide\n-Wind    Instruments\n\u2014Wind   iiistlrunieiKS\n-In  a   little  while\n-Scn.t\n-Created\n-To abound\n\u2014Always\nForgave Fends and\noa\nCKcq; n\ninnenrarj\nIh    \"\u2022\n^H>\n\u2022m\n____\n-^L-iH_H\n::^*_^___\u2122\nll>\n\u25a0 j\n_k       _\u25a0\nR\n_\\Wm,\nnM\nifSf\n-_i\nEX-CROWN   PRINCE   RUPPRECHT\nOf Bavaria, head of the house of\nWlttolsbaeh, who has not only forgotten his eld quarrel with the ex-\nCrown Prince of Germany and the ,\nhouse of Hohenzollern but opposed\nthe Catholic Marx and supported tho\nmonarchist Hindcrburg In the fight\nfor   the  German   presidency.   *,\nJUST THIS MINUTE\nNOT next week or year,\nBUT  Right  Now,  Today, ,**)*\nAND Kvery  Duy,  wo can\nSAVE you money on\nMEN'S  and   Boys'   Wear.\nWE  are  doing   bo  for\nINCREASING numbers all the time,\nBuilding\nMaterial\nLet us figure your bills\nof Building Material. Coast\nLumber a specialty.\nJOHN BURNS & SON\nM^aryfc\nSUNSHINE FURNACE\nInstalled to meet the exact heating requirements\nof your home, no matter what the\nconditions may be.\nHEATS NO MATTER HOW THE WIND BLOWS\nFor sale by R. II. Maber, Nelson, B. C, and C. J. Miles, Trail, B. C.\nMi.\u00abK    .V.    Il'.il'-lil\nOf   l_N!'_Ulll,   Alta..   lint Jrbbu, NUerlu, Hi-al\n< unvpraullon  dm in:; hitt\nSets\nJust Arrived\n1 Ton Dutch Onion Sets, Also Multipliers\nPrices: Dutch Seta, per lb. n t...\\.... ! 25\u00ab?\nMultipliers, pet lb :...... .......HO*}\nORDER NOW   < \"   7\\. ..\n\u25a0''' r * \u25a0   '     . *\u2022\"'\u2022'*\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWholesale and Retail Quality7~ti-riware. .\u2022..\nNELSON B. C.\nNow\nyou can buy i\nA real whole wheat cracker\u2014not made\nof coarse, indigestible flour, but made of\nperfect whole grains of wheat cooked\nin steam, shredded and baked in electric\novens. If you like Shredded Wheat\nBiscuit you will like TRISGUIT. It\nis a crisp and tasty delight for any meal\n\u2014so nourishing, strengthening, and so\neasy to serve.\nTRISGUIT is ready-cooked, but it\ntastes better when toasted\nin an oven and served\nhot with butter.   At\nall first-class grocers.\nThs Canadian Shredded Wheat Company, Md.\nNl.I.r. rails. OnUtl.\nTriscuit\nThe Shredded Wheat Cracker\n______J__\n ^Kf^R^S33SSSS^*7*\n\"*\"*\"\"\"\n\u2014!\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014r.\n\u2014r\n__zr\n\"JIHH I1',..\nTEffi NELMN DAll^'NEWS; TT.JESbAY MORNING,' \"AT 5, 1528\",\nW\nGreets fund Lady\ndeeo OutS-tea Lofty\nObjects of Council   *,\n\" WASHINGTON. : Msy   i.\u2014.Addresses\nths fodr official  languages of  ths\naventlon\u2014English,   French,   German\n-and Spanish\u2014were heard at ths for-\ntjnat opening  tonight  of the   seventh\n\" \"nulnquennlsl  session  of   tha  Interna-\n{tlonal Couhcl] pf Women. ..,.    .   \\\np  The formal opening, at which Seers\nQsry of Commerce Hoover' delivered sn\n[.address ot greetings, and  Lady Aberdeen, as president of the council pre-\n\"sented her message, followed a day of\nactivity   In   the   committee   meetings\n\"for   the ' delegates, representing    the\ncomponent   organisations   ln   41   countries.     \u2022\n. Lady Aberdeen declared the organisation's strength lay ln Its constitutional Inhibition against dealing with controversial, political and religious issues\nbetween nations, -\n.\"Our special powei as women,\" she\n\u2022Id,. \"lies In the formation of that\npublic opinion, In favor of mutual aid\naid International cooperation based on\nfuller knowledge and Intercourse between the nations and their component\nparts.\"\n\u2022sotk* Vatioaa' Kataal IFsam\nAsiertlng   that    the   council    must\n\u00bbtrfvs   to   gather   up   the   war-worn\n' psspls of the earth \"In the arms of sn\nenveloping motherhood, and to soothe\naway  all   their- fears  of  ons  another\naad   of   aa   unknown , futurs,\"   I*e>\nAbeVdeea  oontluwA \u00ab.       .\n\"W\u00ab ars struggling for mastery ot\na nsw hops for the world. In the International cooperation brought about\nthrough   th*  League  .of   Nations,   the\n**i\"'\"___\"l_,      '    '   \"\"\"\"\"*'  \"'*  \"\"\nJmaaltarlaa entsttn_ss.fi whloh an na\nia have Joined during recent years,\nIn which  the United States has\nbeen so  predominant, saving millions\nof lives, restoring prisoners and refugees   to   their homes,   preventing   the\nspread of epidemics, enabling starving\nstudents   and' professors   to   preserve\nthe  intellectual  life of Europe,  feed-\nIng aad giving new hope to famishing children and mothers.\"\nLot mailHas a* ValM\"\nAt the meeting \u00abf the Immigration\nand emigration committee today, foreign delegates voiced a plea, that the\nUnited Statea . Immigration ' law be\ntemporarily relaxed to permit membera of famfiles abroad to Join their\nrelatives In  the United Ststes.\n\"r~i\u2014*' \u2022 \u2022 '\u2022\nHoughton Makes Bow in\nBritain With Plain\nTalking\nBALDWIN SAYS WAR\nMUST BE BANISHED\nSt Catharines\n:   Reelects Most\nof Its Council\n8T. CATHARINES, Ont, May *.\u2014\nJhcob Smith was reelected mayor, and\nfive of the eight aldermen regained\ntheir seats, ln the special election\nheld hers 'today, made necessary by\norder of the courts which found irregularities ln the regular January election.\nDaylight saving was also approved.\n' em\n\u25a0 Charged with being in illegal possession of a bomb, with causing an\nexplosion last March,' likely to endanger lite and with sending threatening lettera demanding money, Raf-\nfello Bmlglio and Faustlno Manfredo,\nappeared in Toronto police court. The\nformer was sentenced to six years ln\nthe* penitentiary, and the lattar to\ntwo years. \u25a0'.._,'.        \"''\nKing and Prince of Wales\nSend Felicitations to\n.     New Envoy   . \u25a0;,.'>\nMISSING DOCTOR\n;\u25a0' 7Mim\\*W\nOttawa Winter Mystery Js\nCleared MJp;    First.\n.-   Thought Pierie f\ni OTTAWA, May 1\u2014The body of n\nman. found floating In the Ottnw**\nrlver, opposite Gatlnenu point, late\nthis *_t..rnoon, wai tonight Identified\na* that of Dr. F. J*. Powell, prominent physician, who haii heen ml sains\nsince January 6 last, when he wuh\ngeen boarding a train in Toronto\nbound for Ottawa. Dr. Powell had\nbeen ln Toronto taking treatment for\na nervoua breakdown. He saw \"$?***\n(coin, the Northwest rebel'too^\nThe' ibody waa flrat thouKht to bi-\nthat of W. J. Pierie, ***\u00a9 reommltted\nHUlclde during the eclipse in January\nlast, by Jumping into the Chiuidlerrc\nfalls. T   r\nHUNT OF COMPTON\nPASSES TO BOURNE\nliament   from  -Compton,\nthis morning. \".\nHe was In his \u20221st year, and was\none of the oldest members of the\ni house, having sat since 1904 wtth\nthe exception of the parliament elect-\n|ed    n   1911.'\nHis  popularity  In-his constituency\nwho died Likes, alleged notorious blink rc*ber,\n\u00bb i|h the .murder of tw\u00ab bask clerks\nduring s robbery In Pesrley, In January, 1M1. yernekes Is under arrest In\nCl.lcago, charged\nbe rle* there.\nTfinff ' Mpitrhpn   Fo'rkp All Wl1\" \u00ab\u2022\"''\u00bb\u00bb\u2022'\"* \"* the majority of\nX-UIR, ^lVieiJ\/HcIl,   rurRt   _l   ,_.lrly  4000 which hs had achieved\nPay Tribute to Old\nBimh Robber Charged\nWith Double Murder\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nSummer Excursion Fares\nTO EASTERN DESTINATIONS\n01, (ALB DAILY, MAY 22 TO SEPT. 15-RETURN LIMIT OCT. SI\nWinnipeg _\nToronto i\u2014\nHamilton \u201e..\nLondon \u25a0\u2014\u25a0\u25a0\nQuebec\nJt John \t\nSt. Paul :\t\nMinneapolis -\nDuluth\n...| 72.00\n... 113.76\n.. 113.76\n... 113.76\n... 141.80\n._ 147.90\n_ 72.00\n_ 72.00\n.\u201e   72.00\nFort William     ...\nNiagara Falls\n} 86.30\n.   - 120.62\n  127.96\nMontreal\t\n._ 132.76\n  147.90\n._   . 163.46\n86.00\nNew York\t\nBoston :\n 147.40\n.. 161.60\nMANY ADDITIONAL DESTINATIONS\ni'je- \u25a0 ASK   FOR  RATES FROM   AND TO  ANY  POINT\n'Ttotit'e'Vla. Port Arthur or via   Soo   Line,   through   Winnipeg   or\nPortal to St. Paul, thence via Chicago or Sault Ste. Marie, via Great\nLakes', or via California at additional fare; or good .to go via one of\nthe above routes, return another, ,\nJ. S. CARTER. District Puicn-er A*ent, Nelton\n\u201e''\u2022\"\"        See Local Apents or Writs.tor  Dstsils\nSpecial Pepsodent Week, May 4th to 10th.\nSee Display in Your Drug Store Window.\nSend the\nCoupon for\n10-Day Test\nGloriously\n% Clear Teeth\n\"r'l\"-Vi-liy yo**may already have\n'them\u2014and yet not realize it\n3M.\u25a0 -'Make this unique test.   Find out what beauty\nV-'.V beneath the dingy film that clouds your teeth\n\\t\nDO TOU seriously want das*\nallngly clear teeth?\u2014teeth\nthat add Immeasurably to your\npersonality and attractiveness?\nTou can have them. If you\nwish. That's been proved times\nwithout number. But not by\ncontinuing with old methods of\n-cleansing and of brushing.\nModern science has discovered a new way. A radically\ndifferent , principle from old\nways;* and based on latest\nscientific findings. This offers\nvou a test, free. Simply mall\n'the ooupon.\n< How to gain them\u2014\nquickly\n There's a film on your teeth.\n\" Run your tongue across your\nteeth and you can feel It. Be*\nnsath it ars ths pretty teeth\nysu snvy in others. Ordinary\nmethods won't successfully remove It.\nThat is why this test Is offered. For when you remove\nthat flint, you'll be surprised st\nwhat yeu find. You may actually Wave beautiful teeth  al*\n\u2022 ready\u2014aid yet not realise It.\nTlnd out!\nWW that film is\nHost tith troubles now ars\ntraced  to* film. \u25a0  It   clings   to\nteeth, gets Into crevices and\nstays. Germs by the millions\nbreed ln it. And they, with\ntartar, are the chief causs of\npyorrhea and decay. ,\nThat film, too, absorbs stains\n\u2014stains from food, from smoking, from various causes. And\nthat is why your teeth look\n\"off color.\"\n_iV\u00abw methods now\nremove it\nOld-time dentifrices could, not\nsuccessfully fight thst film. So\nmost people hsd dingy teeth.\nAnd tooth troubles Increased\nalarmingly.\nNow new methods have been\nfound.   And embodied In a new\ntype tooth  paste called  Pepso-,.\ndent.\nIt acts to curdle the film, then\nharmlessly to remove It. No\nsoup,-no chalk; no harsh grit\ndangerous to enamel.\nIt proves the folly of ugly\nteeth. It gives better protection\nagainst pyorrhea, of tooth\ntroubles both ln adults and In\nchildren.\nTen days* use will prove lta\nbenefits. And that 10 days la\noffered to you as a test. Why\nnot make It, then\u2014have prettier\nteeth, whiter teeth? Send th*\nooupon now. \u25a0 M        _,\n........I.... .........\u2014\u2014\u2014..\u2014\u2014\u2022\u2014\u2014\u2014j\nJFREfe^yTu^  Pggtllefd j\n. | THE PBF9DENT COUPANY,     T*N.\u00bbDs\u00bbt>^wn-\u00ablW-       '\nBoaNN-ii   pi George St.,\nToronto, Can.\nMmal h w-ffU'i D-mt Aid\u2014*\u00bb\n:\\\nJ Nrnt-\nI\nI\nI\n!\n\u25a0\ni\nv*! \u25a0\n^^^..^......H\u2014-*.^.-..- y.|IW,WH_WMr -. |\nOnlr om tab* to a family.' v     1773 Cm. -     |\n\u00bb\u00ab\u25a0\u00ab\u25a0\u25a0_.\u25a0\u25a0_.\u2022\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u00ab\u25a0\u00ab\u25a0\u25a0-\u2022\u00bb\u2022\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0*\n* W' i\u00bb'   \u2022   \u2022 '\"'\u25a0*t.*\/r    \u2022 *'-\"-   - *\n,MA*.-*V it****** '4K>***.m,*'tm.*f.', 1\". \\w*.*.->. \u2022\"\u00bb e\nLONDON, May 4.\u2014Alanaon B.\nHoughton, newly appointed ambassador to the court of St. Jamea,\nmade b!a bow to a British audience\ntonight at the traditional dinner\nof the Pilgrims. It waa a night of\nplain  speaking.\nAmbaaHRdor Houghton, in a. brief\naddress told his audience, which in\neluded the Duke of York, Premier\nBaldwin, and other \/ members of\nthe British cabinet, and the most\nrepresentative men of the realm,\nRamsay MacDonald, and others of\nevery political belief, that the United\nStates wanted a settlement of Eu\nrope's vexing problems, and that\nunless peace ' were established ln\nEurope, he feared . the part. the\nUnited States had previously played\nan interested and sympathetic\nparticipant, might give way to a\nlesser   role. , '.\nIn return. Lord Desborough, the\nchairman, Stanley Baldwin, the pre-\nmler, and former Premier Ramsay\nMacDonnld, assured him of the\nInterest ln which the people of\nGreat Britain held his pronouncements, and laid stress on their appreciation of the bond between the\ntwo   nations.\nStates Wants Good Faith\nMr. Houghton told those assembled\nthat the people of the United States\nwanted the reestabllshment of a\nreal peace\u2014assurance of the return\nof good faith\u2014In Europe, and upon\nthat their participation In the reconstruction of normal conditions\nlargely depended.\nPremier Baldwin, In proposing\nAmbassador Houghton's health, said\nBritain more than realized the\nbloody nature of war, and was resolved it must be driven from the\nworld. If it could be driven.\nOne Tongue Frank noen\nThe very fad that Britain and\nthe United States spoke the same\ntongue gave rise to misunderstandings which were not vailed by the\ndecent obscurity of a foreign tongue.\nThese misunderstandings were mora\nand more being obviated by the In\ncreaBing visits between Englishmen\nand Americans.\nRamsay MacDonald, in proposing\nthe health of the chairman, Lord\n(Desborough, turned aside In hia\ncomplimentary tribute to the chair,\nto agree with Ambassador Houghton\nthat If nations do their duty In the\nright way, that lay at their feet,\nthey could leave the issues to Ood\nhimself.     ,\n\"We need not press, we need not\npush,\" he continued. \"The man\nwho presses, foosles; and this Is\ntrue of nil our activities in life.\"\nBoth the king and the Prince of\nWales sent messages of felicitations\non the first appearance of the new\nUnited States envoy. The prince\nregretted his Inability to be present\nat the dinner, and added his sheerest good wishes to the welcome of\nthe ambassador.\nCanoeist Now at\n\\: Mouth of Tiber;\nttomans Cheer Him\nROME, May 4.\u2014(Canadian Press\nCable.)\u2014George H. Smythe, the Canadian canoeist now on the last\nlap of his paddling trip from London to Rome, reached Flumlcino,\non the mouth of the Tiber, this evening, and was given a great wet-\ncome by Roman canoeists, who\ncheered   him   wildly.\nSmythe probably will leave FI-\nurn id no Wednesday morning, and\narrive In the Italian capital during\nthe  afternoon.\nMember\n\u25a0 OTTAWA,, May ..\u2014Tributes Trom\nlhe prime minster. W. Lr Mackenzie\nKing, Rt. Hon. Arihur Mclshen, and\niWheW 'Vnt'ke, ' were ' pail' In'   tho . ,  - _        .\nhoiim-nodny   to  the  j*w*mory  of   tho   I *ifl .county jfnin.l Jury  mrtay r\u00abHurn*rt\nlate. A. -1st.. Hunt.   menibeV >>*, pur- >\u00ab  Hulletriwnt charging Henry J. Fer-\nNI-UV  CITV,  N.V* May   ..-\u25a0A  Rock-\nwlth    several    rob-\nAU&TRAL1AN   T-WAtUMJ\nPREDICTS   TMWI   WfW\nSTATES WITHIN DSCAOt\nSYDNEY, Austi-fcUa, May 4.\u2014\nK'anadlon Press Cable via R*ut*r_,)\n\u2014Hon. Dr. Page, treasurer of the\nAustralian    commonwealth,    pr_4:cU\nthat within t\\ dtc^ie ^_^\u00ab_Tji\\\\'\nbe three new Australian statea, North\nNew South Wales. North Queensland\nand  Central   Queensland.\nNorthwest Typos\n'Seek Amalgamation\nInto Single Unit\nYAKIMA Wash., May 4.\u2014Delegates\nrepresenting the typographical unions\nof the northweat are meeting-, here\ntodny, with a proposed reorg-iniza^un\nof the two northwest units into oik-\nlarge group as the principal business up. '\nThe session will continue until tomorrow noon. It Is expecte.l that\nby that time a merger of the Northwest Typographical conference it nd\nthe Northwest Service corporal ion\nwill have been effected, le.l'.'rs prut*.\nFishing Party Goes\nOver an Embankment;\nTwo Die, Three Hurt\nWENATCHEE. Wash.. May A. \u2014\nJess Walters, aged 18. Western\nUnion clerk, and Harold Je*\u00absnp, nged\n19, student, were killed, and three\nother men Injured, tn an automobile\naccident while on their way to spend\nthe day fishing. The breaking of\nthe steering gear In loose gravel is\nbelieved to have caused the wreck.\nThe car plunged down a 48-foot\ngrade.\nGANDHI SAYS\nINDIANS MUST\nOBEYjSHORTLY\nDas, Leader of the Swaraj\nParty, Takes the Same\nView\nFor\nSparkling\nOrange-CRUSH\nSparkling Orange-CRUSH is a delicious drink that\nsatisfies every demand hospitality can make. Whether to Oldster or Youngster, how pleasant to offer a\ntoken of welcome everyone likes! And it's so good\nfor everybody. Contains real nourishment. Taken off\nthe ice, served in a moment, Orange-CRUSH is so convenient for the busy hostess.\nThen there's Lemon-CRUSH and Lime-CRUSH for\nthose who prefer them.\nHave your dealer deliver a case of 24 bottles right to\nyour door. Order a case today. Nationally advertised\n\u2014sold everywhere.\nAll sold under\nth\u00ab Oranffs-C-itTSK\nlabel\u2014your guarantee of health\nbeverages.\nHere    Are    the    Six\nIngrodienti    of\nOrang-o-CauSH:\n(1) The natural fruit\nacid i      of      oranges;\n(2) Tho natural fruit\nfields of the eitras\nfrutts (orangis, lemons and Units); (3)\nOrcnge   -   Julca;   (4)\nPure carbonated water; (5) Certified food\neolcr; (6) Pure cane\nsugar.\nfc\u00abCRUSH   J^nfSJJSa\nAlso 0*C Ginger Ale and 0-C Grape\nCALCirTTA, India, May 4.\u2014(Ca-\nnaillnn Press Cable via Reuters.)\u2014\nDifferences which arose at fhe Bengal provincial congress yesterday\nbetween C. II. Das, leader of the\nSwarajists (homo rulers), and some\ndelegates at the congress while in\ncommttee on resolutions, were composed today through ths good offices of M. Gandhi, the formr 8wara-\nJlnt leader. The trouble was in connection with conciliatory resolutions\nproposed hy Das, and which Is\nthought to have been the outcome\nof his presidential address on May 1.\nDas, In his presidential address,\nurged conditional cooperation with\nthe government of India. He coupled\nwith his proposal a threat that if\nthe Swarajists offer of settlement\nwere not responded to, they must\ncontinue to make ths work of the\nadministration Impossible, and be\nprepared   for   ultimate   disobedience.\nGandhi today alluded to Das'\nspeech, nnd said Das could not hurl\ndefiance at the British throne. They\nhad to admit. Gandhi said, the present Incapicty of th* Swarajists to\ngovern. He added thst freedom\ncould bs attained only by Hindu-\nMoslem untly, the removal of the\n\"untouchabllity\" of costs, and the\nadoption of ths spinning whsel. The\ncongress ultlmstsly adopted resolutions condemning. revolutionary\nmethods.\nFrench Tribunal\nHears Suit Over\nMulhouse Policy\nMARSEILLES:, Francs, May 4. \u2014\nThe commercial tribune hers today\nbegan a hearing Into the raid by\nhijackers on the French steamer Mulhouse off tho New Jersey Coast last\nsummer, during which. It Is alleged,\nher cargo of lienors, valued at 12.-\n000,000   francs,    was    stolen. The\nFecamp Codfish Driers company,\nowners of the boat, are suing the\nInsurance compnny which wrote the\npolicy covering the  Mulhouse.\n\u201e J. Cody, postmaster at Embro,\nOnt., has tendered his resignation\nowing to advancing years. Hs will\nbs 81 years of age next month. Mr.\nCody also served as clerk and treasurer of ths municipality tar \u2022 grsat\nmany years.\n\u2022\u25a0 ten r\n\t\nSome People Have\nFunny Ideas\nWhat do you think Carnation Milk is like?\nDo you think it is \"thick as molasses in January\"? It isn't. Do you\nthink it is syrupy sweet? It isn't. Do you think it has a funny taste? It\nhasn't. Do you think something is \"put in\" to make it keep? There isn't.\n- Do you think some of the food value is taken out?   It isn't.\nPuce Milk in a modern package\u2014that's all\nCarnation Milk is just pure milk with part of the natural water content taken oilt by evaporation.\nAll the food value of full-cream milk is left in. No artificial sweetening or other preservative is added.\nEach can is hermetically sealed and sterilized to keep its contents\npure, sweet, and utterly safe.\nCarnation Milk is a great aid to better baking because of its convenience, safety and richness. Always ready for use on your .pantry shelf\u2014\nnone is wasted because it keeps sweet for seyeral days when opened. Sold\nby grocers everywhere\u2014order severaj tall (16 oz.) cans or by the case of\n48 cans. v \u00bb\nCarnation Milk\n-From Contented Cows\"\nThe Label is Red and White\nCarnation Milk Product! Co., Limited, Aylmer, Ont,\n.He-\nag,^_m_t_\nThe Coupon Below Sent\nToday\nwill bring you frea Mary\nBlake's Carnation Recipe\nBook, beautifully illustrated, its 32 pages packed\nwith over 100 tested recipes. Mrs. Blake has\nmade a long study of\nhome-made cooking and\nher suggestions are timely and. useful. Send the\ncoupon today. Meanwhile,\ntry these recipes:\nCARNATION BREAD\nl'i tups water, 'irup Camatioa\nMilk, % Uaapoun* \u00bbaJt. 3 table-\n\u25a0 pogna th-rteiiin|, 7 cupa flour, t\ncake coenprrwd ye\u00abt, 2 ttaopooua\nsugar. Soak ycait ia \u2022 mall\namount of lukewnrm water.\nMeasure the salt, augar aad shortening into \u2022 minng bowl. Add\nthe scalded milk and water. Whan\nlukewarm add Uie yeast and mix\nthoroughly. Then add the ftuur\ngradually. When stiff enough to\nhandle, turn the dough ou a\nfloured board and knead until\nsmooth and elaatic. Put into a'\nbowl, (-over and let rise in a warm\nplace about ocic and one half hours\nor until double its bulk, then make\ninto loaves and put in baking pans.\nCover, and again let stand in a\nwarm place about one hour or\nuntil it haa doubled its bulk, then\nbake about forty-five minutes.\nThis makes two loaves of bread.\nSUNSHINE CAKE\n5 egg yolks, 1 cup sugar, 7 egg\nwhites, )\u25a0 teaspoon salt, ft cup\nflour, .'*j teaspoon cream of tartar,\n1 teaspoon orange or lemon extract.\nBeat the yolks of eggs thoroughly.\nSift flour twice, sift sugar owe.\nBeat whites until foamy, add\ncream of tartar and beat until ttilT.\nFold sugar in lightly, add beaten\nyolks, then add flavoring and rut\nand fold in flour. Bake about\nfifty minutes in a moderately hot\noven. This aervea twelve to\nfifteen people.\nThia coupon entitles you to one\ncopy of Mary Blake's Cook Book\nwhich contains over 100 carefully\ntested recipe*. Cut out this coupon and mail to Carnation Milk\nProducts Company. Ltd., Aylmer,\nOnt.\n.fr.ri9?~i.\" _^~-3_fc.\"._\u00bb,,\n r*\nTHB4_3LSOtf-JAT-Y NBWSi- TUES\u00a3_.YMC*1\u00ab1W;_^Y\"^M\u00ab8\n.Psm. vm\nWork Boots\nHere is a solid leather\nboot at a price that is\nwithin the reach of all.\nt   In Tan Re-Tan leather.\nAlso in Black Grain.\nToe cap or plain toe.\nPrice ?5.00\nR. Andrew & Co.\n,  Leaders In Footfashion\nCity Asked to Raise Twelve\nThousand, Province to\nSupplement\nSTRICTLY ENFORCE\nGOOD SANITATION\nIn preparation for entering Into\nbusiness in Alberta, the T. Eaton\ncompany, limited, have registered\nunder the foreign companies provisions, with Incorporation of $1,000.-\n000 lor Alberta.        >\nF^JDJECK\nItched and Burned Badly,\nHgded by Cuticura.\nMy face slartad to itch and burn\nand then broke out with pimples\nthat were hard, large and red. After\na few day* they festered and scaled\nover and wars very sore. They\nitched and burned so badly thst I\nused to scratch which caused them\nto spread all over my face and neck.\nMy face waa badly disfigured.\n\" 1 read an advertisement for Cu-\nticpr* Soap and Ointment snd sent\nfor a free sample. After using it 1\npurchased more and in about two\nweeks I waa healed.\" (Signed)\nMlas Bertha Wilson, R. R. 2,\nForesters Falls, Ont., Oct. 3, 1924.\nDally use of Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Talcum helps to prevent\nskin troubles.\nknit task Fn* t*j Kail.   Arldress Canadian\nDtpTt;   1>at\"i' tU.. MeatTwO.-   Prl.-e. Soap\nMe  OintmenT '&> and btt>-   Iiicum 26l\nSHW Catfcvr- Shaviar Shek Me.\nDiscuss Protection Work on\nTrail Creek, but No\nDecision\nTRAIL, May 4. \u2014 A bylaw to rata*\n112.000 for the v-reciton of a four-\nroomed school in East Trail will shortly be presented before ctty ratepayers, permission to Introduce the bylaw\nbeing given ut tonight's council meeting. The school in>ai*,l'\u00bb plans call\nfoi- an 118,000 structure, a third of\nwhich amount will be paid by the\nprovinces. .    .\nZnrtnsar Points Out Conditio**\nUnsanitary conditions around real\ndenceH in tbe city were brought to the\nattention of the counoll by .City, En\ngitieer S. K. McDfarmld. Several aldermen substantiated the statements\nof tin.* eni*;ln'*er, nnd were emphatl'' in\ntheir stand lhat tha .bylaws should be\nii mended so that residents, particu\nbuly In the business section, should\nbe forced to ke,ep their premises clean\nT'tnnisnion to introduce n hylnw\nami-aiding the city lit-alili laws w.i;\nr.tiMiied AM. A. A. MiiiiK-in.\n-\u2022\u2022tittc*  for Works\nA largely sinned petliltm of rntepftj*\nei*s fu* a new sidewalk on Spokane\nstreet was presentt<l. Aid. J. William-\nSon mentioned tbat he, nmong others.\nbtilt tbe first walk \u00bbn this street in\nl(ii\u00bbH   by   voluntary   labor,\nA petition was also considered from\nratepayers on Tcpping street for a re-\ntnining   wall   and   walk.\nThe board of worka aad ths city en-.\nglneer will report mi both these petitions nt n special meeting of the council.\nCleaning up of city streets and property has been going on for the last\ntwo weeks, wltb an Improvement In\nthe town's appearance, Oil has been\nrut on a'number of the streets to keep\ndown   the  dust. !\nTrail Greek Xetalnlng Wall\nAn Informal discussion took place\n\u00bbt, what work should be done on Trail\ncteek this year, but no definite action\nwas decided on. Earlier in the year\nthe water nt the mouth of the creek\nbroke through the retaining wall, making a new course. lt was only by\nheavy blasting that the current was\nreturned to its proper channel, thus\nsaving much damage.      i\nAldermen differed on whether further work on the craek should be done\nsc the expense of the city or by local\nimprovement. The Muestlan was left\nlor   further consideration.\nSolicitor  Gets  Baiaa\nPermission    was   granted   the   Salvation   Army    to   hold \u2022 a   tag   day   later\nin   the  months .\nAn Increase. Jnaajaair, -was- fronted\nto ihe rlty sftlfcltrnvH. J. Clegg, from\nfsS  a   month   to  JHIO.\nFirst Municipal Clean-Up\nDay; Chemical Ordered;\nBrigade Planned      m.\nCRESTON. May 4. \u2014 Friday wns\nCreston's first-ever municipal clean-up\nday, and as a result of the wholehearted efforts of those in the business and residential sections, who were\ngenerously supported by the village\ncemmissionnrs, the town presents a\ntidier appearance today , than lt hat*\never known. t\nChairman H. S. McCrwtth of the*\nstreets committee provided free haulage for all the garbage, and three\nten ma were kept busy the following\nday  taking  the  refuse  to  the  dump.\nThe commissioners have just\nordered a .0-gallon chemical engine,\nwhich will be delivered from Edmonton, ana which will supplement the\nhydrant and hose protection that Is\ngiven by the (\u00bboat Mountain Waterworks company. A meeting will be\ncalled early next week for the pur.\npose cf organizing a volunteer fire\nbrigade.\nIn addition to the municipal cleanup, the business section is brightened\nup by the repainting of the post office building ami the real estate office\nol   It.   Walmsley. ' \u25a0 \u2022 I\nCreston Will Get\na Chautauqua Cup,\n\u2022 ' Child Attendance\nCHESTON. Mny A, \u2014 Ward reachinpr.\nC. 1*\\ Hayes, chairman of the board of\ntrt.de publicity committee, from the\nDominion Chautauqua head office,\nsiales lhat of about tin towns playlnj*\nthe six-day circuit In 111.1, Creslon\nhad the largest nttemtanee of cliibfreti\nof them all, and lo critnmemoraie the\nachievement. Cieston wilt he presented\nwith a silver cup at this year's Chautauqua. *\nTpe guarantors are going to make\nthe presentation eminently fitting, nn\u00ab\ni*re planning to have a fancy dress\nchildren's parade, May .\"ft, at which alt\ntbe school children in Creston, Lister.\nWynndel. Alice S.ritnc. Erlckson and\nCanyon   will   participate.\nGRAND FORKS NOTES\nGRAND PORKS; May 4. \u2014 Clare\nI'tnnldson, Clifford Brown and Ken-\nr.\u00abth Campbell have returned to town\nafter completing their preliminary\nyear ut the Hritish Columbia university. Thomas Wilfrid Hrown. son of\nJudge and Mrs. Brown, will graduate\nthis year. He has been editor-in-cliiei\nf ihe university mngasine during the\npast  year.\nfor the worst\nTTnder the flowing tida bf\nlife, carried on the current\nof circumstances, can be\nfound, by those who look for\nthem, the derelict, the moral\ndegenerate, the outcast. Can\ntbesa people b* transformed\n\u2022nd inspired with hope?\nThe Salvation Arm*\nanswers with an unmistakable \"Yes!1* and points to\nths multitude it has influenced who today are reformed, regenerated and good\ncitizens, many fighting for\ntha reclamation of their fellows.\nThe Stlf Denial effort if\nyour opportunity te help the\nSalvation Army officers who-\ndeep' in the gloom of .the\nunderworld ars working day\nand night for God and th_\nPeople,     *       y; ,     \"   .\nsLtmvm\nDiamond Jubilee\n<\u201e    Self-Denial\nEffort, 1925\nGifts -ttsrksd -'Sett*\n~\\~i\\.    Dental\"  cm   bs\nbanded   to   the\nH-Vl,    local representative of ths\nArmy ln Csn-\n_:i-\"f.(      *da West\nIt- \u25a0\nOverhead Bridge\nat the Rock Cut\nNear Grand Forks\nGRAND PORKS. May 4. \u2014 Construction will start nt once on the\nNow overhead bridge, which will eliminate the bad railway crossing at\nwhat Is known as the -'rock cut,\" five\nmiles east of Grand Forks. The contract lias been secund by J-onthron &\nMcDonald, aad work is being proceeded with, and will probably require two\nmonths   ti  complete.\nH. J. Baker has secured the eontrnct\nfor carrying mn 11 hetween the depot\nnnd the post office. It has been held\nfor many years by R. Vant.\nFine Residences at\nForks Change Hands\nORAND FORKS, May 4. \u2014 Two of\nthe fineHt and most Attractive resiflen\ntlal properties in Grand Forks changed\nhands within the past week. K. Vant\nngent \u00abfor the Dominion Kxpress compnny, acquired the commodious property of the late W. K. C. Manly or\nVictoria -avenue, with terraced lawn,\nwhile James K, Hinlth, of the Kettle\nValley crenmery, hns purchased the\nformer home of the sscretarv of\nstate, Hon. .Martin Uurrell, on Third\nstreet. \u25a0 .<   ,    .\nGeologist and Party\nArrive in Windermere;\nWind Up in Lardeau\nTNV1.RMERK, May 4. \u2014 Professor\nWalker of fhe geological survey, OUR\nwa, has arrived with his party t<\ncommence    a     survey    of    the    district\nnorth and  west of here.    He  will end\nup  In   the   l.uttleaii  country.\nSimple Way to Get\nRid of Blackheads\nThere Is one simple, safe, nnd sure\nway tbat never falls to get rid ol\nblackheads, that is to dissolve them.\nTo do this, get two ounces of perox-\nIne powder from any drug store-\nsprinkle a little on a hot, wet cloth-\nrub over the blackheads briskly\u2014wash\ntbe parts And you will be surprised\nbow the blackheads have disappeared.\nBig blackheads, little blackheads, no\n\u25a0matter where they are, simpjy dissolve and disappear. Blnck'ueads nrr\nsimply a mixture of dust and dirt\nand secretions that form in the pores\nof the, akin. The peroxine powder and\nthe water dissolve the blackheads so\nthey wash right out leaving the\npores tree nnd clean and tn their\nnatural   condition.\n'.    \u25a0\nCanoes\nNow is the time to W \u00bb boat, wittier it be a\nrowboat, motor boat or a canoe. If you advertise\nyour requirenienU in the Classified Columns of The\nDaily News you will in a short time be able to procure- just the boat or canoe ybu want.\nTo Insert a Classified Advertisement, Phone 144\nOn* Lusts), Cell At ori Write\nT&e \u00a9ally News\n~ -\"   NEL80N, B.C. *.   .    '\nHOW BOURKE.\nWON THE V.C.\nATOSTEND\nSketch in Vancouver Pro**\nince Tells Kootenay Man's\nExploit\nA sketch of Rowland Bourke, V.C.,\nof Crescent Ray, in the Vancouver\nProvince  of  April   2S,   said:       \u2022\nThe attendance of Lleutenant-Com-\ntr.nnder Rowland Bourke, V.C.,\" D.8.O..\nat the Canadian club luncheon today\nand nt the St. George's day banquet\ntcnlght, recalls bis exploits In April\nnnd Mny, 191X, when he won those\ndecorations, ,\nOne nf the large contingent of British Columbia yachtsmen who Joined\nthe motorboat patrol, he '.eft his Kootenay ranch for the front. The work\nof the young officers In charge of tho\nn'otorboals w,on high praise from ^Vice-\nAdmiral Sir Roger Keyes, who was 1n\ncharge nf the operations against _k*e*-\nbrugge and  Ostend.\nMads Fins Kmcus\nThe official dispatches of 8ir Tio*r>r\nKtysa give the recommendations upon\nwhich Lieutenant-Corn tn an df\u00abr BourRV\nwns awarded the D.s.o. nnd Victoria\nCross,\nOn April 3S, 1918. while the attack-\non SVehrugge was successful, n simultaneous expedition against Ostend did\nr'Ot succeed because the'Brilliant antl\nSirius, blockshlps, grounded too soon\nMr. Bourke wns then a lieutenant In\ncommand of thn motor launch 276, and\nthe dispatch says \"he repeatedly went\nalongside the Brilliant In tho difficult\ncircumstances of her starboard engines still going astern.\" The Bril-\nli.'int crew wss rescued. For thin he\nwss awarded the Distinguished Service Order nnd promoted to lieutenahl-\neemmander.\nWon ths V, O.\nIn the second nttaeh on Ostend on\nMny 10, be won the Victoria Crows.\nOn this occasion the old Vindictive.\nwhich had won such glory at Zeebrugge, was ngain sent into action,\nthis time as a bloci<nnip, and war\nsunk close to the Ostend pier.\nThe official dispatch states: \"Motor\nlaunch .78, Lieut. Rowland Bourke,\nRoyal N-.val Volunteer reserve, having\nfollowed Vindictive into Ostend, engaging both piers with his machine\nBuns en  route, went alongside Vindlc-\nDODD'S \\\nKIDNEYS\n\\ PILLS\nrnoto-ted  to the ^ett^r yesterday.\nMrs. B. B. Westby of Crawford Bay.\nspent yesterday  .shopplWKin ,towa.\nMr and Mrs: Martin of Boulder\nWe In Nelson yft\u00abterday.|.   ,.;;\nMrs. ChHle-\u00bbtt-ift-aiMl. her daughter,\n(.. Balfour. \u2022 spent yeaterday In tl\u00bbe city.\nEdgar,Mason,- Nelso\u00bb ftvanM,.Jfelt>\nview, who has been confined to nis\nborne  for  the  past  four days,   Is  now\nprogressing   favorably.^  ,     \u2022      \u25a0   ,t\nMiss M. Taflsoa left lasi erenlng.\nfor Revelstoke.    \u25a0    \u2022\u2022  ^\nMr. and Mra. J. P. Kerr of Longbeach were  city  visitor* yesterday.\nJ p Cram * of Rossland passed\nthrough Nelson H*tutdi_y eventn* on\nhis  wny to Kimberley.\nMiss Gertrude- Mebonald, B.A-\ndaughter of, Mr. .and Mrs. J. A. McDonald, Mill street, has returned from\nVancouver, wbete she has completed\nu-slvarsity  arts, cojwss. ;\n.       ,, *   \u2022 \u2022\u25a0?     \u25a0\u25a0       \u00ab\u2022\nJoseph Riley of Boanington majors*\nto   town  yesterday; ,   ^ \u00bb\nMrs. J. K. Chandler of I-Tscter' sponi\nyeaterday  lft.Ne-lsan.\nHarry Lee, Slocan City mining msn,\nspent  yesterday  In  Kelson. .\nW. H. Poster,-who Ken* bee* cow-\nrtcted with the Consolidated company\nat Trail for the winter, was in _*l**lson\nyesterday, and left by motor for\nQueen's Bay, where he will remain for\nthe summer months.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00bb\nMiss R D'Bmo**** of Hsxrsp waa ta\nNelson -shopping  yesterdny,\n\u25a0\u25a0 *    *   \"\nuscar  Whits  of  Sandon,   whu  spent.\nthe week-end Uk .\"*J\u00ablso\u00bb,.left by mo*or\ntor his home yesterday.\nm   t \u25a0 4\nMr   nnd   Mrs..  Prank  Thomllnsan  t\"\nWillow Point spe\u00abt yesterday In town.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nMiss Owen Scott-Lauder apent the-\nweek-end with her parents, Mr. wart\nMrs   H.  Scott-Lauder, nt Queen's Bay.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. S. Boyd of Procter hate\ntaken   up  residence   ln   Nelson   at   S13\nSilica street. \u25a0\nMr. and Mrs. J. Ferguson of Long-\nbench  were city shoppers Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u25a0\nMra.   H.   Ev  CoopA*  of  Balfour  with\nher   smull   daughter,   Is  a  guest\/ at   the\nhome of  Mr. and  Mrs.  Douglas Male.\n, \u2022   \u2022    *..\nMrs.* O. Ounn af Bonn tag ton *jwb\nnmong tha city shoppers Huturdny.   _\n\u2022 \u2022-   \u2022\nMrs. W. B. Kvans, who was a patient\nnt the Kootenay Lake O^necal hospital\ni'or a few days, left yesterday for the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. W. G. P. Heathcote, Llwyn avenue.  Fairview.\nMrs. C. W. West of..Willow Tolnt\nwas  ln  the  city yesterday.     '\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nV. Stevenaon at Harrop. cam* to NaU.\nson ' yesterday   to   atten)   the   football\n.ga-me. J* .\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs.  J.   Anderson  of  Crawford   Bay\nspent yesterday i*s Nelson. .\nMr. nnd Mrs. Fisher or Hall Siding\nwere  in  town  shopping yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u25a0 \u2022\nMiss   L.   M.   Cherrington   of  Creston\nis  ln   Nelson. *\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nDr. B. E. Major of Procter attended\nthe football game between Harrop and\nNelson  yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022 f\nMr. and Mrs. Carl A. Larson, Carbonate street, motored to Trail Sunday\nto attend the baseball game.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022    .. t   \\\nMr. and Mrs. Roy Keefe, Cedar sti\u00bbet,\nleft Saturday evening for Victoria\nThey , intended visiting In Vancouver\nor a short  period.\n\u2022\nC. D. Blackburn of Balfour was* \\\\\ntown   shopping   yesterday.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMrs. I. Bourke. Hall Mines road, left\nyesterday afternoon for Crescent Buy.\nwhere she will visit her son and\nrinaghter-in-law. Commander nnd Mrs.\nRowland Bourke,\ni\nMiss Ava 'Ogilvl\u00bb of Harrop spent\nyesterday shopping In town\n\u2022, \u2022   *\nJ. K. Ashman of Four-Mile was' in\nNelson   on   business   yesterdny.\na.   \u00ab\u2022\u25a0 \u2022 \u25a0\nMrs. Jameii H, Ryley of Queen's Bay\nspent  yesterday  shopping   in   Nelson.\n-      \u2022 \u25a0*\u2022*_.\nAustin 'Wlhitt \"8f Vancouver la n\nvisitor ln ibe.city.... .,\u00ab.Si \u2022\n\u2022 \u2022 ,_>'\nMrs. Joseph Thqmpson. who has hren\nsiiending the p-ipc couple of months ai\nHie coast, piiss\/d through the city Saturday, on Jj'r way to her home' at\nWillow Poiht. i\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs.   I.   J.   Anderson   of   Bonnlngton\ncame   to   thp   elty   yesterday   to attend\n\"Tha    Runaway    Oirl\"    tn    tho opera\nbouse  last  evening i\n\u2022 '\u2022    \u2666\nMr. nnd Mrs. Pat Neville mot-rec\nto Trail to attend the baseball game\nSunday  afternoon.\n\u2022 \u2022.. \u2022\nDouglas   Male   left   k\\st   evening   via\nthe, Arrow lakes. Cor the  coast.\n*,  \u2022    \u2022\nCaptain and Mrs, Leslie Smith of\nHarrop were in Nelson yesterdsy.\nSTORE CLOSES'At 5:WtGtAY      * :i \u2022\n. This Sale offers wonc^rful optprtiftiitieB ton|flfver<_)i;\u00a9pfing tnd S\u00bbuam\u00abr.M\u00ab-\nchandiae.   Many lines haye been cleared .out, ,tiut *t^ ^av^ brought pthaj-a forwajjd\nto replace them, and in many cases they srs bette* Talue th\u00abn wer.,*. Only,, t***p\n. days nidTe. *' If you have not been' down ;yet, come today. , ,,: \u2022 i .,,\u201e: :,,,,\n\u25a0'\u2022      ;     \u2022     >       \u00ab\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0* ^ J*.-\/' \u25a0'     \" '.'     \u25a0\u25a0,'\u25a0-'+\u25a0, \"    fffk\" \u25a0*\" *    '     *** \"''\u25a0\u25a0'*\u25a0...-*\u2022      ''\n^ WOMEN'SCfttWsf $16.9S Each \u2022\u25a0.;.*,\nPlain Veloar or Novelty Plaid Coata. Made on1 the liew straight lines,\nand mostly lined throughout. Sizes 16,18. and 20- Values to $36.00,\nSALE PRICE.sio.95.,;; \"  ;\"~ % \\',;;( ;iU   iHj ^.\\,: ^,'17,7\n.       WOMEN'S TAILORED SUITS el S2SM Eaeh    :;f\n* ,i. ..| ...        \". JK\"7_    '\u2022\"**'\u25a0 _ '. (c\u00bb   i.. ,-*,.\nSmartly tailored Suits bf pure Wool 'Poiret'or Tricotine';' Coats are\nmediura length, and come plain or belted. Linings are. of best quality\nCrepe de Chene!   The^e sold regularly up V S\"50.00v. SALE PRICE\n?a_.oo.] v...!\/,   :.';... \u25a0...-.-*?,;\u00bbjj\"Sk>\u00ab *\nWOMEN'S SILK DRESSES, S2SM Each\nDresses for Afternoon or Street weai*\u00ab-.-Mad\u00ab.\nof fine quality Silk. Crepe or Satins. Full-\nlength or short sleeves. Sizes 16 to 42. Regular values to $50.00.   SALE PRICE $38.00.\ntRICOLETTE SUPS,$4M __\u00ab&*%..\nYou Usually pay $6.50 forthis kind of slip.,\nTheyUome in a range of colors. Some; have\nembfoidered flounces. All -fees up to 42.-\nSALE PRICE eU.Sa.     .     \u2022'\nRAYON Silt HOSE, \\% \u2022 For, \u25a0,\n\u25a0 Twenty-five^ dozen. RayoiV'.Silk.,' Hose, i.r, the\nseason's new shades.   S_es 8>\/s to' id..' Reg,, -\nurar 65c.   SALE PRICE 40\"*. \u25a0'\nGINGHAM DRESSES, V& Each\nSuitable for Porch or Baath wear.. In buying them jjow, you save.\nThey come jn checked Gingham, and they are- smartly wade. Misset'\nand Women's sizes up to 44 irV the lot. ' SALE PJM0B' f l.SBi,    *;\ntm\nMr.\n811 Baker Strest.   t^hom too\nHOORAY! THE BALL SEASON IS HERE\nThnmns Hall  nf Hlocan\nymfrday in the city.\nCity  spent\nMiss Lurlr-nne Bourgeois has ,rt-\nturs.il io the city from Wycliffe.\nwhore ah. has been visiting her parent\". Mr. lind Mrs. O. .Ssurireols. who\nwore pioneer residents st Crescent\nValley until tho last eouple of months.\n...\nMr.. Starr, with her 'nWhter. Mm.\nHowm. and little datushtrr. of Persle.\nand hor son. Major Graham Starr,\nwho hsve been wintering In Honolulu.\npuvft. returned to Nel.on and taken a\neulte In  tho Kerr apartment*.\nr>avltlson, chancellor ol t*le Montreal\nAnglican diocese, and oldest .member\nof. the..bar h.ere\u201e Is ds\u00ab4, aged IS.\nGandhi Warns Bengal No Dsfisncs .\nCALCUTTA, May 4.\u2014OilndTil, __- .\nnn national conci-esa. leader, t^|d the\nUehfeal provincial congress.\" India'\n'.cannot defy Britain, and urged Hipdu- \u2022\nMoilem tinity If free4pi\u00bb.,.\u00bbiiii# 1\u00bb be...\nobt^ttted.,       . . '\u2022     i t.      \u2022\nRMN  POTTPONE\u2122  ' \"\"'   '\"    '\n.Km\u2122. 6BEB-BWTTOM  60\nCCLUMBU8. Ohio, Mny 4.\u2014Rain\nand .cold weather caused tho i#o.\u201e-'\n'jioncment until Wednesday of lhe\ntnatch between Harry Greb. world's |\nmiddleweight champion, and Hilly\nUrlUon, scheduled,to take placs Vio\ntoniKht. ...      _  l-\n>~ , ,im. \" (   .\nKeTAffTW KNOCKS OUT'  p '.'      '.'  '\nTRAVERS  W ElBMTH..\nPWIt^inEUPHIA. May 4_-Danny\n.Krnmer, PhUadclphla featherweight; *'\n'lonifibt Itnocketl.Oui Mickey \"*mvers,\n\u2022New Haven\" Cos\u00bb_, m tM eighth\nround of their scheduled lo-iound\nbout. The fight waa (net and hard.\nKranMi* walghod Wit ana\" *|pnrf-\nl*\u00ab*s-- \u25a0   '.     _',.'      ,_','.,\nANDERSON Wlr*9 \u2022\u2022\nNEWSPAPER   DECfSION ;\nCHteAQd,  Jlay. 4.r-l^ldla   Andsr- .\nnon of Mollne. rlT., molt tt newspaper.\ndecision -over   Tommy   Ryan   of   Mc-\nKocapert.   Pa.,. In   a  .bolting .boufr at ,\nEaat  Chlougo.  Init... tofilght.'   ,\nHere's'\u00ab4e of Canada's most snthpilastl* falis-W \u00bb\u00abB*\u00ab*ths openln*\ngames.\ntlve, after motor launoh 164, with her\nfirst rescued party, had shoved off.\nAfter much search, and shouting, snd\nst\u00bbn- under very heavy flrr, Lieutenant\nEourke and 8ub-L|entenknt Petrle manages to find and embark the last three\nof Vlndlctlve's survivors, all baldly\nwounded, ia the water clinging ti a\ncapsliod skiff. >'\n'This fine rescue effected, motor\n\u2022sunenr !7\u00ab. hit ta n places, and 41th\nthree of her crew killed or wounded,\ncleared the hsrbdr, snd continued\nsteering to the weetwsrd until picked\nup by H.M.8.  PrlreSe Eugene.\" '\nNiagara Falls\nArena Paid Way\nNIAGARA. PALLS. Ont., May I.\u2014\n\u2014Some Interesting figures were given\nout st the annual meeting of the\nNiagara Falls Arena company. '. It\nwas stated that ths share of Hhe\nrhookey asaoelaflon tkls season hsd\nbeen I*\u00bb,nit: ' Th\u00ab Hum of lll^st\nwas taken In during ths season. To\n****\u25a0 laWtW* mm \u00bb\u2014 Miit \u00abn Hs\nArsOi.    No dlvldenils wsrs  paid  to\nstockholders, hut mortgage bonds\nwers discharged.. Ths profits on the\nseason's  working was  18700.\nFred Calras, president, and all ths\nold directors were reelected by acclamation, r ,\nBRIEFS PROM THE WIRE\n*\/<\u2022\u00bb fmneH Colsaisa TrsuWous * '\nPAni8, May 4. \u2014 France at \u2022\u00ab-\nperlenclnr tro-Me In two colonies..\nIn Syria troops srsrs Called ost ta\nquell a riot starting over recognition\nof a local prophet, alter two* families\nhad been burned alive In their home.\nThlrty.-\u00bbl\u00bbo . people were killed. In\natorocco French troops repulsed the\nattacks ol Biff tribesmen and 6* wers\nkilled, though the situation was admittedly serious. >\ni   \u25baritiss in .HuoMriot Tsrritssy\n\u25a0 CAP-TOW**,  May  4.\u2014Tn\u00bb Prince\nui   Vales   continued   his   triumphal\ntsar of South Africa by visiting In s\nmotor, Huguenot territory. ..,',.\n'   r*oi*y .*\u2022  Lsnds  Rsprssstrlsd\n' WASHINGTON. Hay  4.\u2014Delegates\nfront   4*   countries   were   present  at\ntne opening of. the quinquennial convention of the Internntloal  Coucll of i\nWomen. fViwaL- \u2022*\n\\e0tacoaoat M#wo#r, Dtad\n.OTTAWA,  May *.\u2014Ajlmee Syre\u00bb\nHunt,  Liberal member for Complon.\nque., Is dead.\n'! dusks   In   Pacific      ' '\" \u25a0\nNEW YORK. May 4,\u2014Fordham\nuniversity seismograph records an\nearthquake 7700 miles distant In the\nSouth Pacific.\nUnci* Sam's Terms.to EureM\nLONDON, May . 4.\u2014Unless peace\nand goodwill l\u00ab established ln Europe,\nthe United States will csaso both\nmoral and monetary aid, Allan B.\nrtoughton.' new ambassador to; Great\nBritain, tells the Pllgrtmn-,,     . . ,.   ,,\nFood for\nBa.ff\nOne of tha letters which reached\nus yesterday 1s from a mother,\nwh* says ah* \u2014rotr teem' yet-\nsonal expwleoos. aii* rewmmends\npnclflc Mlm fof InfatBs that all\nother fort* disagree *nth. With\ntlw first of Iter thre\u00bb children\nshe. tried ' Faclfle In Wefievatloii\nand the boy began to thrive. Th\u00ab\nother two had It fro* the first.\nI'Olrfe.t  Monlrssl   taviysr  Diss\n'MONTTtfirA-U' Mny  I\u2014Leonlda  H.\nHead Office, Vaj\n\u25a0aatorl^ e\/e,j***-ef\n1\n;:,i\u00bbn \u25a0 Chevrolet Cars\n'   Chevrolet Bisnlitacturlng .facilities are taxed ta T.\nyear.   The de*ajvo\"> .so ftmtt  \u00ab_r It W wttho \u00abl\u00abrcj\nfilling orders.   We navir Jtnir received \u00bb earioad,   al\nIs on order. , - , \u2022   \u2022\nIF VOO  ARE   INTERESTED   IN 'THBM8TC\/\nTHE YEAR, VISIT OUR OARAOE TOP\n,     NELSOU TRANSFER COl.\n,-.    GARAGE ,       TRANSFER\nTs) M tfl   I\nadty .this\nr we ,H\naaothea\n\u2022U|QF\n. PHONE SS '\nCO\n\u2014m\nOTSftemt\nH\n\u00bb'm.\nv^\n****ir.rl*tm^*..-:.-.. .__>__     .\n________\n\u2014\u2014I\n_\u25a0\u25a0\n.      at\n \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014<\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014+\nt.\n:risa3i33\u00bb.\nH^3\n\u2022a\/ -A*\nTBE NELSON DAILY. NEWS,\nG, MAT5,;i92f\nGIANTS' AnACK\nBEAT _JPHILUES\nQuaker City Beaten Twelve\n. to Two; Browns Defeat\nRobins in Ninth\nNATIONAL  LEAGUE STANDING\nNew  York   ...\nChicago     \t\nCincinnati    ...\nPhiladelphia    .\nlirooklyn  ..,'..\nrittslntrgh\nHuston   .......\nSt: Louis\t\nw.\n_\nPet.\n..Jl\n4\n.783\n..10\n1\n.6117\n..10\n\u2022\n.625\n.. 8\n9\n.471\n.'. \u00ab\n9\n.400\n..,\u2022'\n\u00bb.'\n.400\n.. <\n9\n.400\n.. t\n10\n.376\nSisler Has Field Day for\nPulb    Many\nBrowns;\nStunts\nAMERICAN    LEAfiCE    STANDINO\n, Cleveland\n'S3 I Washington\nPh ladetphia\nChicago .. \u25a0\nSt. Louis'..\nNew York\nBoston .....\nDetroit ,...\nJaokson Gate Two Homers\nI'UlLADKM'Ii'lA, Muy , 4\u2014The\nGiants won the opening game of the\n_ lea with Phl'Bdelphla today ,11 to\n2. Jiirk Kentley was in fine form\nand w.is t'.tppo-ted hy a forceful attack which vvmm iWI [.y Travis Jack-\nt'nn, with , two homcrj. Trunk FriMi\nnlm>  made ft  homer.   \u25a0 \u25a0 *     fl.   H.   K.\nNew   York     12    l\u00ab      1\nPhiladelphia   .., ..SI\"     1\nBatteries\u2014Bentley      and\nDecatur, Hlllnghum, Ulii.h anl llun.\nline.\nWon\n.._\n..11\n..11\n..11\n..  9\n.-. 4\n..   4-,'\nLost.\n4\n4\n4\n7\n10\n11\n11\n14\nPet,\n.113\n.713\n.733\n.611\n.474\n.267\n.267\n.222\nWycliffe\nEach    Win\nTwenty\nLumberton\nby    Over\nEAST  KOOTENAY  LEAGUE\nSTANDING\nWon   Lost    Pet.\nWycliffe ...\nLumberton\nKimberley \u25a0,\nCranbrook .\nWardner .,\nConcentrator\n1.000\n1.000\n1.000\n.000\n.Doo\n.000\nAthletics Win Hi Ninth\nNEW YORK, May 4.\u2014Tho Yanks\nlost their fifth straight gams today\nwhen   Miller,  whose  homer  deeded\nyesterdays  gams,   delivered\ninning   triple,   which   .scored   Dykes\nwith  a  run  that -gave'. 1'hlludelphla\nthe vlctpry,   8  to  7.'       '   R.   H.   K.\nPhiladelphia    .........., >l   H V, 1\nNew   York   ......a.,'...',  T   11      2 I sort\nBnttei'.ea -Hiiumgiji+liei',    Wdlbcrg, [ Lailole.\nOroveH,     Hummel    'and\nWYOMKFK, B.C., May 4.\u2014Opening games ot the East Kootenay\nAmateur Baseball league wers attended   by   good   crowds,   but   were\n .marred   by   rugby   scores   In   each\nninth! case. Perfect baseball weather\nprevailed In the district for ths season's . aliening.\nAt Lunibcrovn: Wardner, 1; Lumberton,   21.   Buttorles\u2014Dow.  Thomp-\nand    Thompson,    Mitchell    and\n      \u201e,_    Cochrane; !\u25a0    At Kimberley: Cranbrook, 6; Kim-\nOcncdy;   Shawkey,   Hoyt,   Jones,   Francis  and ; beiiev,       13.      Batteries\u2014Woodman,\nil llun-   O'Neill. ., \u2022  . Vi ,Uhle  ond  Hogarth.\n. Nlilcr a Slur lYrlcirmrr I     At  Wycliffe: Concentrator. 0; Wy-\n\"J-\"       ... I     ST.   LOUIS,   Mny   4.\u2014George   Bs-. cliffs;  24.   Butteries\u2014Nagle and Mc-\nMarriotts Drives In Winn.\" I,,r, manager of the St. Louis Browns, | Mahon,   Jahren   and   Hlnton.     .\nBOSTON. .    Miy       4\u2014 MnrriattS   nild   ,.    field   day   today   and   was j    Next    Sunday's   games,    will.be\ntungie   in   the   nln'.h   with   two   out   i..t-c-n!\u201e   ,.nutin_u.i.   ...  ....   ......      .\nscoiod \u25a0 Bancroft   with   the   run   that\nlargely   responsible   for  the ,5   to\ngave   the   Brave.,   a   6   to'.   11   \"vl  .My .Jj1,\u2122' _\"m.^!''1,'_re? r><,,n0't:    In...a.\"1-.\"\"    Cranbrook\nhere   today. '      ., R.   H.'\u201e\nEfoekl>*n  \",   10     1\nIJoilon      .......  ti    12      1\n_uUcrle\u00ab-IVIty, t Isptirne ' and Ds-\nISMTJfi Manjuad, Graham and\nO'Neill.\nClneinnatl-ChlctuT:!, rain.\nOnly three Rumen  tcheduletl.\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nJurscy City, -1;  Syr-icuce,  1.\nHeading,   .:   Toruntn,   c.\nNewark-Duffiito,  rnin.\nT.\\tltlmoie-Hoche**tPi\\   wet   Rmuiids.\nAMERICAN \"ASSOCIATION\nIndianapolis,   5;    Minneapolis,   8.\ni'ol it ni hus,    4;    Kansas   ('Ky.    1*1.\nI.Pjit-vllii'-St.   I'aul;   cohl.\nToledo-Milwaukee; cold.\n-\u25a0 ._\u00bb\n\u25a0 The iMtffolh'sliito polo championship tournament to be held nt Uye,\nN.Y.. will start June IS. At toast\ni-Ight entries ure expected. Including the FMt.ceton tour. Which now\nhold\" the title.\n*\nto  getting  two  singles,  Hlslcr! Wardner.\nhit    In'o   t'm   right   field    bleachers'\nj viih Iv.o  iiifti on nnd  In the e ghlh\nI Iiminjj   pilfered   home   on   a   double\n, nt cal.     It   was   tho   l!Uh   consecutive\ngame   in   which   ho   has   hit   sifely.\nt   It.   H.   E.\nDetroit   4      7      0\nHt.  Louts    .6      ft      0\nH'tUeHeM\u2014 Duuhs      and      Woodall;\n'Vivla,  GuKton und Scvereid.\n4 ; Lumberton at Concentrator, Wycl ffe\n\" and    Kimberley    at\npostponed;\nneon THS\nOti(it\\_l Recipe\nI7\u00ab\u00ab\nFamed for\nStrength\nand Purity\nWHITE HORSE DISTILICRS LTD.,\nUajiiSaS tm..hl^ artommt Omnac.\n *mt \"' 'fT'tr,\n0,itil_p ano aoniia in Scotland.\n, Tbis advertisement is1 nol\npublished or displaved bv tht\nLIQUOK CONTROL BOARD\nor the Government of Britisl\nColumbia.\nBiiHton-Washlnfton,\nrain.\nChicago-Cleveland;   ra'n.\nTWENTY SCHOOLS\nBOUNDARY MEET\nGrand Forks School Field\nDay Saturday Assembles\nNice Trophies\n(IRANI) fatUKH. M\u00bby 4. \u2014 Smite\nhalf .li-t-n Hllvcr cups and a Fcorc of\nnii'liilH, all hniulNiMiifly mounted (\u2022\u2022nl\neiurnived, lm*\/\u00abJ bei*n reet\/tve'l to b\u00ab>\np.ven hs nwurds nf* tho athU'tlc flrld\ndiij of ttportrt to lie stiiKcd ut (.rami\n\"\"'orks nt-xt Saturday under tin* auspices of thp Orand Forks Atlili li*? as-\nisociation. Only school students of the\nUrand Forks-tJreenwood territory are\neligible, but ull schools arc exp-cted\nto S4?nd fntrants, and tht\u00bbre are more\nthan  _0 schools  in   the district.\nThe cups will be for boy und girl\nufnnfnK hiRhext aggregate score fir the\nathletic* of the day, are given by the\nc Ity of (irnnd Forks, anj will be rt- ]\ntulned by the winner?. Other cups\nere  for  school  winnings.\nIn addition to some 40 regular\nevents, th4<re will aUo be about a\ndi'_en novelty events, which will tn-\n(Ir.ne n bicycle r:ic\u00bb\\ throwlnir bisebull,\n11 i\u00ab. wins ba-*k'>tb.ill, skipping con test,\nnnd   like   features.\nENGAGE BRITISH\nStates, Canada, Australia,\nIrehnd Enter Golf Tourney\nLONDON, Mny 4.\u2014Xlnotyfour competitors, iucludinjj; o*ie Canadian, are\nentered for the British women's open\ngolf eluunpioiiHlilp tuunmment com-\ninctn ins ut Troon May 18, und the\ndraw, which wus announced today,\nshows there will bt* strong challenge\nfor the  title by overseas  pluyers.\nMlrs (Jlcnim Collett, Mist* M.\nO'Ouirnnn, Miss II. Klllson und Mlsa\nH. Hunnewi.il will represent the\nUnited\" States. Mrs. K. C. Allen Is\nt'unuda's cnlr while Miss C. Uiscel-\nles and MlMi Ruth Affleck will play\nfor .*ittstrullii% There are svJWfti.JfcW*\ntries   f mu   Ireland. '\u25a0'. ';    .  '     i\nIn llu- tup hu.f of the draw, wlilbfii\nIs the must difficult, Miss Joyce\nWethered, the holder of the championship, will probably meet Miss\nCollett in the third round, and the\nsurvivor afterward will face the opposition of such well-known players\nas Miss Doris Chambers, Miss Fowl-\ne*. Mrs. Dobell. Miss Hunncwell,\nMiss (J our ley and Miss Cuutley.\nIn the culler halt Miss Cccilc\nLeltch must overcome Mrs. (Javliu\nMiss Gladys Bus tin, Mms Stocker and\nMiss Wrusg bifore reaching the\nfinals.\nHas Three Clubs in First I\nFive; Abo Over Third\nof First Divisioo\nLONDON'S THREl^i   *'\nALL   NEAR  FOOT\nSeason Suffered More Than\nUsual Bad Weather; '\nV.\" Some Losses >tr\nLONDON\", May ' 4.\u2014(Canadian\nPress Cable.)\u2014A survey of the football season in the old country, which\nclosed Saturday, reveals that the\nnorth and midlands continue to\ndominate the soccer game, while\nthe south of England, particularly\nthe metropolitan section, shows up\nto little advantage In the general\nrun of the p^y. It Ul noted that\nnot a southern or London team appears on the top halt, ol thf first\ndivis on   table.   \u2022\u25a0      s .,\nWhile the championship went to\nHuddersfield, this Is the only club\nfrom that country that emerges\ncreditably from; the season's league\nencounters, the neighboring county\nof Lancashire famishing the majority of the strong teams that finished\nthe year well. \u2022'With the first H\nclubs of the league tabulated by\ncounties, some Indication le given\nof where the strength In Engliijh\nsoccer   lies. . !\nFooter  Counties' *   .\nThe column would gun la this\nfashion:\nYorkshire,    (Huddersfield).\nStaffordshire   (West  Bromwich).\nLancashire   (Bolton  Wanderers)*\nLancashire  (Liverpool).\nLancashire   (Bury).   >\nNorthumberland (Newcastle United).\nDurham   (Bunderland).      >\u25a0-V .\nStaffordshire   (Birmingham).\nNottinghamshire  (Notts County).\nLancashire   (Manchester  City).\nWales   (Cardiff).\nIn point of fact, Lancashire pro\nv'ded over one-third of the teams\nIn the first division, for ln addition\nto   the   foregoing,   there   were   also\n\"Everton,\nPreston   Northend. \u2022\nAree-jutl's Number Tweirty-threo\nKor Lancashire the past season\nwas a disappointment Three metropolitan clubs were represented In\nthe senior string, West.Ham United,\nTottenham Hotspurs and Arsenal,\nAll tht-ee ended their scheduled encounters In the bottom half of the\nleague' standings. The least Impressive of the trio were Arsenal, who\nsustained 28 defeats out of 42 games,\na record that was exceeded only by\nthe two clubs relegated, Preston and\nNotts  Forert. *\nWhether the ' 1924-25 season was\na financial success or not will not be\nknown until the * box-office receipts\nare counted.** That the attendance*\nwere not always satisfactory Is well-\nknown, for the past winter was characterised by bad weather. Several\nfirst division clubs found themselves\nIn serious financial straits at the\nopening of the season, and the playing yeat just *gone was not of a\nnature to extricate them from these\nconditions.\nThe annual meetings, however, will\ntell their own story, , ,\nThe ringing down of the curtain\nSaturday was also the signal for the\nentry of the equally pleasing, If less\nboisterous national pastime of\ncricket.\nn\nok bur\nBurnley    and\nEbbetts Left Boll\nInterest to Family\nNEW YORK, May 4. \u2014 Charles H.\nEbbetts, late president of the Brooklyn\nNational League Baseball club, bequeathed his interest in the club\nequally among his widow, hla son,\nCharles Jr., and his three daughters.\nIqcal newspapers say this afternoon,\n.\"he baseball property must be disposed of Within 10 years, the newspaper continues.\nBritish Davis Cup\nTeam fs Selected\nLONDON, May 4. \u2014 Britain's Davis\ncup team which will meet the Polish\nDavis eup team, May 15-17, will be\ncomposed of L. A. Qodfree (captain),\nC. K. KIngsley, F. Q. Lowe and J. D,\nB.  Wheatley.\n\"Try a Nip T&rdghr\nWi \u25a0\nBEST PROCURABLE\nP.\nThe Original  Label\u2014took for It at the Vendors* and Insist an\nGWANTS-'BBaT   PROCURABLE\" A\nThis\"adve_u\u00bb-ii]_nt is not published or displayed bf\nthe Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British\nColumbia.   , .-\nMUe. Alfonslna Strada, one of the\nfirst women In .Italy ever to take up\ncycling, has entered the famous classic, the Tour of France, and will\ntrain all summer long with this race\nin view. She will be the first\nwoman who ever has started ln this\nevent, but it will not be her first\nrace In a major event, as she is\nWell-known ln Italy and Spain.\nJack Dempsey's first purse amounted to $180 for whipping Billy Mechan\nln Oakland, Cal.\nVoucher\nWe can supply - voucher check*;  or checks and :\\\nvouchers separately, whichever style you prefer.        I\n., Let us know your requirements. \u2022 \u25a0',\nTHE DAMNEWS JOB DEPT.;\nPrinting\u2014Ruling\u2014Bookbinding\nPhone 144 (Two Lines)\nMontreal Promoter\nRenovating a Track\n, in Salt Lake Area\nSALT LAKE CITY, Utah, May 4.\n\u2014Lugovii, tiie one-mile horse rnce\ntrack located midway \u2022 between Salt;\nLuke City nnd Ogden, Is being put\nIn Hhupe for racing by a syndicate\nheaded by Leo Dandurand of Montreal.. Contracts for grod ng and ru*'\ncondill'inliiK have been let, it wtm\naniioiinr'i'tl. Huriiij. tit Lagoon, or\nany other track, under the new\nlaw reviving the sport in this \u00bb(ate.\nIn d-*p'-ndriit * n granting of II-\nc<'nr*;\u201e Ity tlie racing coiiiiuiHtdon,\nWhich   meets on   May   11.\n\u2022\"la Ku\\ale\" Ik Ibi' setviire uf boxing\nWilli ihe feet an will us with fists.\nHitting Heavy\nWhen Ball Parks\n,     Have No Signs\n\"I nne l'rlnce,\" a point it, Is the\nrhnmi ton deit of K.iiRland. During the\n\"MiM tour years lhe canine hus won\n_4 chairphin**.,!*** and Mia first prizes\n\u25a0tni'cr *\u25a0% different  Judges.\nHOW BALL-APPEARS TO HITTER*,\nWHEN PITCHED OUT OF PLAIN OR*\nDARK  GREEN  BACKGROUND*\u2014^\nMOW  SAME BALL IS OBSCURED TO\nhitter's VISION WHEN brightly\ncolored Sign is in background\nty AL   DEMAREE    '   \"\"\n(Former Pitcher, N. Y. Giants)\nHall pluyers always claim that\nsome parks ure easy to hit In, while\nothers nre tough. While talking to\nDave llancroft, manager of the. Boston Braves, recently, we argued this\nout, and Bancroft advanced th\u00a3\ntheory that much of the heavy hitting 6t the last four years has been\ndue to the doing away almost entirely of the old-time center field\nfence covered with brightly colored\nsigns that dasslcd the batter's eyes\nand camouflaged the ball.\nThe reader con see, by putting\nhimself ln Ihe batter's place, how\nmuch more easily the ball Is fecn,\ncoming out of a plain, dark green\nbackground, than when the fence Is\ncut tip with colored advertising signs.\nHome rluhs have frequently taken\nadvantage of this condition. Some\nhave had green curtains hung on the\ncenter field fence, behind the pitcher,\nwhich were pulled down when the\nhome club was hitting, and rolled\nup again when the visitors were\nst bat.\nA millionsire fight referee he Is\nthe subject of Al Demeree's cartoon-\narticle in tomorrow's piper.\nshe just picks;,\nat her fi\niii\nSomething wrong, there! And\nyet, something easily corrected.\nABBEY'S has frequently changed a pale,\nlistless, nervous girl\u2014finicky about her\nappetite\u2014into a rosy, ready-for-breakfast-\nlunch-and-dinner girl-a basket ball-and-\nhockey girl\u2014without the aid of any other\nmedicine.\nPaleness, thinness, poor blood mean that a child\nis not getting the good she should out of her\nfood.\nIt may Be weak digestion, chronic tightness of\nthe bowels, acid stomach, too much acidity in\nthe blood, or irritated kidneys, or some similar\ntrouble which ABBEY'S will quickly correct.\nJust try this simple and inexpensive treatment.\nGet a bottle of ABBEY'S ot your drt,\u00a3gist'.e to-day.\nHalf an hour before breakfast, give your daughter a\nglass of ABBEY'S. (Full directions for every member\nof the family are on the bottle.)\nShe will enjoy the refreshing, appetizing tartness and the sparkling effervescence; and YOU\nwill be heartily pleased with the results.\nAnd ABBEY'S is just as good for boys as for\ngirls\u2014ask your druggist\n\u2022i     i   \u25a0\n\u2022\"\u2022FOR CONSTANT HEALTH'*\n^^gfegHjl\n ^r\n\/&-_ Tiiint\ni* _.\nLWAYSHARES*\nHAVE A REVIVAL\n'       * * ' -    '    '\nStoiks Make a Further Re-\n'.recovery in an Active\n\u2022~-   , -Market >       v-\n'     \"J  f ' \u25a0        T   .\u25a0 \u25a0       <'\nMtw TORK, May 4. \u2014 Stock prices\nmads, further recovery ln today's ac-\ntlv.. market, which was featured by revival of speculstlve interest In th.\nrsllrosd shares and a continuation of\nbullish demonstrations . In th. public\nutility   Issues,   many  of  whloh   soared\nto new  highs for the year.\n*\"    '*\"        Railway,   Frisco   common,\nSouthern\nSeaboard    Airline\nsnd   pre-\n      -   common\nferred, Oulf. Mobile tt Northern com-4\nir.cn And Hudson A Manhattan all\nbroke through to new high levels to-\nlhe year. N.w York Central closed\nmore  than a  point  higher,  at  118.\nVirginia Railway and Power led\nthe sdvsnce In public utilities by\n.limbing more than 6 points to a new\npeak at  107. ,\nAmerican Can closed IH higher, at\nHZ%. United States Steel common\neloscd fractionally higher at 114Ta,\nSnd Baldwin at 113. Coal shares were\nweak, Philadelphia & Reading Coal and\nIron and Pittsburgh Coal preferred\n.    Sagging  to new  low  levels.\nMaxwell    Motors    \"B\"   was   bid   Up\nSrlskly In the lets trading, closing 1%\nIgher, st 8814.\n- ] Call   money   opsned  at   4  per  oent\n1 and then dropped to SH.\n#      -Time money snd commercial paper\u2014\nI   unchanged.\n- ,, Total   sales\u20141,354.600   shares.\nClose\n120*\nN\n137\n3\u00ab>4\n11\u00bb>,\n761,\n1*\u00ab 14\n32\n3614\n74 V.\n63%\n13%\nzn\n30\n49V4\n8V4\n118\n6114\n67'\u201e\n40\n45\n46'4\n24 _\n103\u00bb4\n64 V.\n64 H\n42(4\n10S\n139\n114'i\n- Amer.   Loco.   .\n* Amer.   Tobacco\n- Amer.  T. & T.\n2 Anaconda    ....\n* Atchison    \t\n\"sit. * Ohio .\n.   Pacific   .\nhlle Copper  .\norn   Products\ngen.   Motors\n.  Nor pfd.   .\nSranby    \t\nj   lnsp.   Copper\n> int.   Nickel         30%\n- Kenne.   Copper   ..\n- Miami   Copper    .'.\n* N.   Y.   Centrul    ..\n* Nor. Pacific ....\n,   Pacific    Oil     \t\n1 Phillips    Petr.     ..\n2 Keck   Island   ....\n3 Hltulebaker   \t\n* Shell Union Oil..\n_ Sou. Pacific ....\n\u25a0 Stan. Oil Ind. ..\n. Sunl Oil Ind. ..\n. Slan. Oil N. J...\n2. Tex. Oulf Sutph.\nr Union Pacific ..\n_ U.   S.   Steel   \t\nHigh\n13914\nl~W\n120\n0314\nt2\u00bb\n137\n136*4\n36*4\n35%\n110\n111*4\n77\n7514\n14414\n144\n32>4\n32\n3614\n3614\n7414\n7314\n6314\n62%\n13\n'iii.\n30%\n30\n4014\n48\nii\u00bbii\nin*\n6114\n61\nSMI\nr.7%\n411V,\n40\n4.'.%-\n44%\n4514\n2415\n4614\n23-4\n10314\n102%\n64H\n6314\n4214\n6314\n42\n108%\nlBltf\n107%\n139\n115\n11414\nVancouver Stocks\n(Reported by C. W. Appleyard)\nBid Asked\n\"   R    C.   Silver....\n_  Oranby    \t\nI   Indian    \t\n* Iml.   Coal    \t\n* Hilversmlth    \t\nI n    C.   Montana\n* Kpnrtan     \t\n* Trojan\t\nS  Dunwell    \t\nHinder    \t\nPremier     \t\n,-, Kufus     \t\nk Selkirk\t\n,. C.  P.  R\t\n1.41\n12.50\n.0914\n.1414\n.20\n.0014\n\" \"-bi vt\n.1014\n.20\n'.H-1B\n.00',\n.01%\n4.50\n.10\n. .15\n. .07\n.144.00\nSPOKANE STOCKS\n~\u00bb (Reported hy C W. Appleyard)\nBid\ni Cork    02*\n- Florence     01 Tt\n.. Nnbob      03\n.. Premier          3.34\n.r Richmond    0114\n. Hllversmlth 23\n. Success    16*.\n.: Hypothetic     16\n..I.ucky   Jim     14\n. llcOUJIvray \u2022\u00ab\n-.Reindeer    .. 1       .01*4\nAsked\n.0.114\n.02\n.03*4\n2.4c\n.02\n.36\n.18\n.1614\n.01*4\n{II\nWHEAT piNS UP\nWheat in Passage on Ocean\nAlso Shows Shrink- '\nr-^\n: ASBESTCK SOLD ,\nI      BtltADYANCES\n;; Common \u2022   Gains     Three!\n;1   Points, New Peak; Pre-\n:i      , ferre^ Gains Also\nMONTRKAL, May .. \u2014 Hravy nell-\ntng uf tho Aitbe-lui- Issues, with a fur-1\nih**r   advance   ln   the   priws,   wan   thp ;\n,    outr<tandln\u00a3   feature   on   today's   stock.\n..  n.iirktt.     The   common   led   In   activity!\n,. rird cloaed at 75 4, a net gain of 3\npoint**,   thu   biggem   advance   scored   in\n..   the Hat. an4 having earlier Hold at tlie\n\u25a0- new peak of 77 *\u00ab* The preferred, after\n-fulling  ut   tha   new   high   uf   107 _   re-\n\u25a0 - acted to 104**, a net gain of \\V_.\nIn th. reat of the list, National\nBrewerloa   waa   the   most   active   and\n;'  reirlattred  an  advance of  *4.  at   .9!*i.\n'tm     Lyall   auffered   the   (,'reatent   decline.\n* that   atock   closing;  at   \\9\\_,  a  net  loss\n\" of  1%.    Other changes were:    Abitibi,\nup 1: Braiillan, up ty,; B, E. Steel\niteeond preferred, off 1; Canadian Car,\nt.ff 1: Canada Cement, off *.>\u00a3; Canada\nSteamships preferred, off 1; _me.lt-\nera, up \"4; Dominion Canners preferred,   up   1%;   Montreal   Cottorta,   up\n\u2022 *4; Holt Renfrew preferred, up 1 %;\nQuebec l'ower, off 1; the preferred up\n1,   Tucketts   preferred,   up   2 \\4;   Winni-\n* peg 'Klectric,   up  1   and   the   preferred,\noff  %.\n,    Cloning   pricea:     Abitlbl.   flB;   Brarll-\n' Ian,   61%:   Breweries,   49 %;   Brompton,\n:    23;  Canners,   105;  Cement,   103%;   Lau-\n'   rentlde.    79%;    Asbestos,    76%;    9.   E.\n\u25a0Hteel   first   preferred.   28;   B.   E.   Ste*l\nHecond preferred, 8; Spanlah cortimon,\n\u25a0 104%; Montreal l'ower. 177; Quebec\n\u2022l'ower,    HV;    Smelter*.    69H;    Steel    of\nCanada,    83%;   Textile,   75;   \"Winnipeg\nElectric,  46*4. \t\ni Dominion Live Stock\n:.     WINNIPRO.  May  4.  \u2014 Receipts  to\n, day    totaled    1400    cattle,    300    calves,\n2100 hogs and 10 sheep.\n.\"\u2666.    Hteers  \u2014 Choice.  $726  to |7.7B;  fair\n\u2022 to  Rood,   $6   to  $7.\n'     Butch.r   heifers   \u2014   Choice,   f6.76   to\n: .87.25;  good,  95,60  to  *6.50.\nButcher   cows\u2014Choice,   |B.7B   to   |<;\ngood, $4.50 to *r,.r.o.\n,      Bulla\u2014Good,   |J   to  14.\n,     Oaen\u2014Oood. |3.50 to $4. \u25a0 r,\nStocker   steers   \u2014   Choice,   |4.76   to\n\u25a0'.fl; good,  $3.50 to $4.50.\ni     Stocker   heifers   \u2014   Choice,   $5.75   to\n, IC.25; good, $4 50 to $5.50.\n-.     Calven  \u2014  Choice,   $9   to   $10;   good,\nIC to 18.\n.   Hog*\u2014 Selects, $11.W; thisk smooths,\n|K'.\u00ab0; heavies, $9.80, ,\nBheep\u2014Oood. $< t\u00bb $\u00ab. *    *^ *\n.   t0\n62%;\nCHICAGO. May 4i \u2014 tiecidefl Upturns In the value of wheat took place\ntoday, largely on account of sharp curtailment of the United States visible\nsupply total, and of the amount of\nwheat on ocean pasi-agel at the same\ntime there was ptpmethlng of a flurry\nIn rye. May delivery advanciag, 11 V_c.\nThe wheat market closed firm. 2c to\n3%c net higher; May, $1.61 H to $1.6_:\nand July, $1.5SH tb IIB*1.; w'th corn\nranging from %c decline to He advance; oats, %c to 'tc up; and provisions at 22c to 2^c ga-A;   ...  .\nSterfing Exchange\n*>JBW YORK, May 4-\u2014Sterling exchange Irregular at $4.80% for 60-day\nbdls and*tt $4.84%  for demand.\nCanadian  dollars\u20141-16  premium.\nFranca\u2014Demand,   6.23 40.\nLire\u2014Demand,   4.10%c. \u2022\u25a0\nMMtrkg-^Oefnand, per trIIUbn, 21.80c.\n* \u2022St*\"0-. ' ^A-^l-^iate Overling    rate,\nTORONTO JIIKNS\nT01KACT10NS\nWinnipeg' and Twin City\nBoth Gain; Asbestos\nStrong ;\nTORONTO.   May   4.\u2014Traction   stocks']\nWttn    the    most    attention    on    todayV\nstock     mnrkt't.       A     high     point    was\nreaohed    by   AkIh -u.x   common   at   77,\nand   ft   closed   at   75%,\n\"rt'innipeK Electric common opene<l\n45',., and advunced to 46, where\nmost of the day's tradinR was. A l.ltjh\npoint of 46 i*i was reached, and the\nclose, at 46, represented a net advance\nof a Point.\nTwin City moved up 1%. to 64V*.\nDuluth Superior also recorded a 1-\npoint -gain, to 39, and Bratllian was\nup   %,  to  BlVd.\nOther changes: Atlnntlc Sugar common, off \",*.; Sugar preferred, up 1%:\nBell Telephone, off %; K. N. Burt\ncommon, up %; C.P.R.. up *i; Consumers' Oas. up %; Canners common,\nup \"(j! Steel of Canada common, off\n1;  Smelters,   up   H.\nIn the unlisted group, Continental\nwas the ntost prominent at 25, A gain\nof % Was made by International Petroleum, whleh finished at 24V Nipl-H-\nslng soid below par for the flrt-t time\nIn several years when a transaction\nwaa put through nt 4H,j. Holltngei\nreceded from Its High point of Saturday when transactions were made, ut\n$14.65. ' fr \\.. j\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK. May 4. \u2014 Foreign bar\nsilver,   67 He\nCopper \u2014 Steady; electrolytic, spot\nand   futures.   13ljc   to   13%c.\nTin \u2014 Firm; spot and nearby. J*it;\nfutures,   $53.25.\nIron \u2014 Easy; No. 1 northern. $20\nto $20.50; No. 2 northern. $l.t to $20.5'\u00bb;\nNo.   2   southern.   $20   lo   $21.\nLead  \u2014  Steady;   spot.   $7.7...\nZinc \u2014 Firm; Kaat St. Louis, spot\nand futures. $$.85 to $G :<o.\nAntimony\u2014Spot.   $12.50.\nAt  London:\nStandard copper\u2014Spot, \u00a3tUl: futures.\nEll.\nElectrolytic copper \u2014 Spot, \u00a36. Ifts:\nfutures,  X04.\nTin \u2014 Spot. I.'t*, 7s fid; futures.\n{241   7s  6d.\nLead\nfid.\nZinc\n17s   fid.\ni\n1    \u2022     \u25a0;\n1\n:\n\\t\n1\neiNO\nmOA\n9AV_\n3n_nd\u00bb\n14         ***ne .\nft          ***_\nM     e*\u00bb.mte. ,\n\u00bb.r  j        HHIm\nMMIttXXI*\nHXIIaM\nan\/H^^v Att&itJ\n\u2022\n1\n6dviioM\n'   _0_9AVd\n-9\u00abli*d*iA0V\n1\nfft*\n1      Alr.iWH\nH_iw9\n-\nTha onlv time Ilia o-tnat ct a \\y~ai-\nnam pa*r_ hia own ad*mtlalmff ooats\nIk wfeMt Ma luaiatf o_ tfCMnoiitr Inefficient oopy. bacanse tha public paya for\n\u2022f(loi\u00abart advartlslng.\n, \u2022   #   \u2022\nSome business men believe that bemuse they own a business they pay\nfor their own advertising expenses,\nand can run the advertising depart\ninent aa sort of a whim or fad.\nIf two similar concerns appropriate\nthe same amount of money for adver\nUsing they ought to have ahout the\nsome eosta. Hbwcvtr, If one advertls-\ntng department la run inefficiently he>\n<ause of the whima of the owrner, Its\nrtlatlve costs are going to be much larjr*\n\u25a0cr than Us competitor's. Assuming\neverything, else is equal- In the two\nfirms, again the wasteful one wtll\nhitve to ratsj, prices to make up for\ntnat   excessive   cost.\nWhen thla fllfferr-nce In prices Is\nlarge enough to become apparent to*]\nthe public, lt will cease buying from\nthe inefficient firm. Then the owner\n>i that firm will pay for hia adver-\nlalng alt right, because 'the public\nwon't. \u2022*. \u00bb\"\nma m\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, Mny 4, \u2014 Butter and\ncheese,   weak;   eggs,   active.\nButter\u2014No. 1 pasteurised. 83c\"; No.\n1   creamery,  32c;  seconds.  31c  to  3Mi*c.\nl*\"KKs \u2014 Fresh specials. 35c lo 86c:\nfresh   extras,  34c;   fresh   firsts.   81c.\nPotatoes\u2014Per  bag,  c*r  Iota.   50_.  \"\nOAWtWtsXst   FACiriC\nBABNUTOS   DCO-tBABK\nMONTRKAL, May 4.\u2014Canadian Pacific rail wav earnings for the Week\ndin-lint April 30. $3,\u00bb3\u00bb,000; decrease.\n$432,000.\nCANADIAIf    H ATI O HAL     i\nEAENINOB   DECMASS\nMONTREAL. May 4. \u2014 The gross\nenrnlngs of the -Canadian National\ntnllwnvs fnr llie 10-day period ending\nApril 30. Itt25. were $ri,7flr..60fi. being a\ndtcrease of $203,812 over the corresponding   period   of   1934.\nThe gross earnings from January 1\nti Anrll 3ft. 1 \u00bb_,*\u00bb. W**rt* $\u00abt..093.343, be-\nii K a decrease of $s.740.37,*; compared\nwith  the .corresponding period of 1821,\nVANCOUVER   EOOl\nVANCOFVBR. May 4. \u2014 British Co\nlutntila  eggs:    Frenh  ettnis.   33c;   fresh\nflists.   31c;   pullet*',   extras,   29c.\nNELSON BUTTERFAT\nSweet  \t\nNo.  1  sour  .\nNo. I sour  .\n.. .Hr\n...KC\n\u2022 i.Kr\n- MINNEAPOLIS.   Msy   4.\u2014Flour\n> clmni.d st 18.85 to ID.\u00bb0 . barrel.\n- B_o\u2014*24   to  I24.S0.\n.,     WneM\"\u2014 No.   1   northern,   U.E5U\nJttt..\u00bbMi   Msy.   I1.MK;   Jsly,   111\n\u25a0 Kpleipber. 1144%.\nCorn.,\u2014.   No.   J   yellow,   lt.\u00bb0\\    to\n\u2022i.o*\u00bbr\nUsls\u2014No. 1 shite, 40s to 40Vic.\n^~-   *.        - M\u2014   .\u25a0     ..n.u     ...   .. ..ii\n    Sliot.    tM    lilt..    futUIYB,    131\n\u2014    Boot.     \u00a331:     futures,     i_\nEgg Markets\nOTTAWA. Muy 4.   \u2014 Egg\":\nToronto \u2014 Jobbing specials, 33c: extras,   3:ic;   firsts.   31c.\nMontreal \u2014 Jobbing extras, 34c;\nfirsts.   81c.\nManitoba \u2014 Dealers quoting delivered extras, 21c; firsts, 25c; seconds,\n20c.\nSaskatchewan \u2014 Prices delivered extras, 23c to 24c; firsts, 21c U'tlc,\nseconds.  17c lo  ISc.\nAlberta \u2014 Quotations lower; eitin^.\n2**c; firsts, 20c; seconds, IRr delivered,\ntied.\nBritish Columbia \u2014 Unchanged; extras.   29c;   flrata.   27c   delivered.\nChicago \u2014 Spot, 28c; May, 29>.c;\nDecembers.  33c.\nNew York \u2014 Extra firsts, 31c;\nfirsts,  80c;  Decembers,  2t*,ic\nHO   QUOTATION\nGerman Producer\nWants Dempsey in\na Honeymoon Bout\nNEW YORK, May 4.\u2014Jack Cur-\nley announced today he hfcd received a cable from Samuel Rach*\nman, motion picture producer In\n(icrmany. offering .Tack Dempsey\n$150,0oi> for ii heavyweight buut in\nBerlin while the champion Is abroad\non his honeymoon trip with Mrs.\nDempsey. the former Eatelle Taylor,  motion picture uctre_s.\nHans Bteittenstratetter, the Oet.\nman heavy we'ght, or K.O. Sampson, who boxed ln the United States\nn few years ago,, would probably be\nselected us an opponent, according\nto  Cur ley. '     \u00ab'\u2022\nammHedAdvertmng Rates\nWant and Olasalflad Advartl-rtng \u2014\nOne and * hSlf cent*- V wor4'i*er in-\naeTtion. If -iaidr Ih advance, \u00abc per\nword-per -week, vt St He'per word per\nmonth. Transient ads accepted only\non a cash- in -advance (basis. Each initial, figure; dollar sign, ere.,* counts as\nbne word. Minimum 25c, if charged\nBOc. ^^\nlocal -Uadlng WotWsi\u2014Three cents\nper word eat*h inaertion. In blackface\ntnaehlne    (Japltttl'a    4c    p*r_   word.\nBlackface capital^ flea vedrd. Twenty-\ntit   diacount   If   run   daily\nwithout change Df copy for one montl\n.TOR RENT\u2014One of the beat furnished\naultea  In  the  Annable   Block.     (9465)\nfive   per   cent   diacc\n* ^hanfee of _<_,_\nor mdre. Where divert lee ment is eet\nout in ahort Knee the., charge I\u00ab ISc a\nline for Roman-type, lie for blackface\nand 25c for blackfaice^ capIUls. Minimum 35c, _f tsharged t$\nite.\n..rtha,   itarrtaijel,   _>Mt_fl   Ut   In-\nmemorlatt Oatta-*-\u00ab-Flfty cents  per insertion   up   to   81' word*    Additional\nW\u00b0J_!ata   Si   vt*i~S*k   True,-.*,   uut\nFloral   Tribatee  at  foatftta  \u2014 Ten\ncents   pe*  line,    \u00ab'; \u25a0____!_____\nMale Help;W.uit\u00abd\nWANTED \u2014 two experienced rock\nminers to flrlve about 400 feet of\nrock tunnel. ' I'or particulars apply\nCorbin CosJ* lilQ\u201e\u00abCorl)]n, B.C. (05Bt)\nBXHBR1KNCED dish washer, male  or\nfemale.    Apply  to _Orlll:____jllB0\u00bb)\nHEN.   WOMEN\u2014To   learn   esrbsrlhgl\nSid   while  learBlhj!  tools  supplied,\ntslsfeus tree,   Holer Osllsfs, V\u00bbh-\n((471)\ncouver.\nSituations Wanted Female\n.a iif -ainr- it    I T n i i      ,'\u25a0 \u25a0'\u2014Tl ff \u2022.\nWANTKD\u2014Work by tbe hour by reliable woman. Apply l:ux 9.40, Dailv\nNeWs. \u25a0  (8640)\nWANTED \u2014 Work, by  young women,\n...  \"ranch   preferred.\nValllcan,   B.C.\nhe   Little   8..\n19424)\nTELL your wants through Tbs Dally\nNew,  classified   column\"-\nFemale Help Wanted\nluXFKHIKNCBp   chambermaid   wanted.\nApply  New Grand Hotel. (9536)\nFor Rent\nHOtISI-3 With  fultiace  to rent.\nHtantey  snd   Slllci 'wtj-ects\nCorner\n(9497)\nteem**      i    i-s\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nONH NUW dlnlnir room suite for Bale.\nHouse. S!2  Mill. (9C53)\nOOOD   used   piano;   snup;\nO.  Bos 8W.\t\nmodern.     V.\n (9548)\nSMALL Crosslcy Itndlophone. suitable\nfor cainptaff purties. Complete. Box\n9646.   Dally   Now.. (9546)\nNKW\" EN81IMBLK~\u00bbult,    \u00bbmall\"*sllc;\nvery chejip.    Box 9019. Dally News.\n(911J)\n\\V00D PIPES\nTWO. three and four-Inch, for sale.\nYour enquiries t-i.liclted. iVer Park\nWood Pipe Co.,  Deer Park. B.C.\n  or, 25)\nKHt   SAT.f!   -\npinnn.    Chen p.\nA    gourt    s\nI'hone 2'J7.\n\u25a0cond-hand\n(94.0)\nVANCOUVER, May 4. \u2014 There\nNo.    1    northern    cash    wheat    quptii-i autymp.\ntfong dn;'thtMi>yft.  enchangetitda^. I\nPrincess Pat Leaves\nBermuda for England\nHAMIUTON. lJermudri, May 4. \u2014\nLady Patricia K.unHay. \"Princess Pat,\"\nwho wilh her little son, him been\nspcndiiiR the winter ln Bermuda with\nher husband, Commander Kamsay of\nthe Roynl navy, left today by the\nsteamer Arunuaya for Southampton,\nKngland. \u25a0 Lady Rnmsny probably\nwill    return    to    Bermud*    *\u00ab    the\nThe Consolidated Minin? & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nOffrcs   \u2022m.lsini   and .Rsflnlsg  Ospsrtrnsnt\nTRAIL,  BHITI8H  COLUMBIA\nSmelter* toil Reiinert\nPurchasers of Gold, Silvtr, Copper, Lead and Zinc Orel.\nProducers ot Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and ZImk\n.  TADANAC TRAIL \u25a0\nFOH SAI.K _ Soda fountain, complete, with filches and silverware. In\nfirst class order. Apply at Hume\nHotel.        \u25a0     . \u25a0 (9472)\nFOIl SALE \u2014 Hardy perennials, flow-\nerlnB' plants, shrdbs. rose liusheR.\nfruit trees, rllllbarh and asparagus,\n\u2022Ic. W. Mawnr- Hardy l'lant Nursery,  MMson.. U.G.   (9179)\nFori BALK \u2014 Cocker spaniel puppies\nY.  H.  Bhlelda.   Trail.   B.C.    ' (9469)\nMAKRBLS, KEQB AM*5 EMPTt\nucks \u2014 MacDonald    Jars   OomnanT\nNcl_n.___  111)68)\nFOR 44ALK \u2014 rure~~hnd Alredal. puppies, *  months old.    J. O. Clay, slo-\nih.Clly.   Uf ''  '\"*      J9443)\nI    !\u25a0'        \u25a0 \"    ' \u2014\u2014 \t\n\u2014)' 'xl.'JU \u2014.\nBoat, and Automobiles\nFOR   SALE   \u2014   Mitchell   Club   Roadster.    Apply Madden Hotel. (9449)\nRoom and Board\nROOM\na.n()   lsuXitn\u2014im\nMill,    nr\njuir.i)\nMiscellaneous\n\u25a0tOBS\u2014Writs\nfor  prloss.\nV.lson,\n(9111)\nPIPE AND FITTlNqsT-TC.\nComplete line Pipe and Fittings,\nall sizes. Special. 1-Inch Pipe, Sts\nper foot. Hoofing Felt 1-ply.\nJl.liO; 2-ply, 12.00; 3-ply, I'.IS per\nroll. Extra heavy 3-ply Mineralised Surfncc, 90 lbs. per. roll,\nspecial, $3.25. %-lnch Air Hose,\nsuitable for gardens, 6c pet foot\nMixed Wire Nails, li.OO per keg.\nWire Rope, Canvas, Logging Supplies and all kinds equipment\nB. C JUNK CO.\n135 Powell 0L Vancouver. B. C.\n  J      \u2022_   '\" (9164)\nFurnished Rooms to Rent\nFURNISHED, housekeeping rooms;  els\nSilica street. \u25a0 (9536)\nFIVE-ROOMED    well-furnlBhed  .apartment, careful tenant; 301 Kerr.\n(9548)\nA BEDROOM to let.    416 Silica. (9JS4)\nFURNISHED  housekeeping   rooms   for\nrent, over Poole Drug. (9341)\nKEBR APARTMENTS.\nSUITE for rent-\u2014Campbell's Studio.\n(9467)\nTELL your wants  tnrougn Ths Dsllf\nN.ws clssslfled columns.\nPOR SAL- \u2014 House.on hill In Kaslo.\n4 rooms partly 'furnished, hot and\ncold water, electslc light; half-acre\ngarden; variety fruit trees snd small\nfruits. Apply Box 505, Kaslo, B.C.\n..       . ',,'.,   .  .   ..\u25a0,\"'\u00bb>\n****.        \u2014   *\u2022 \u25a0\u2014'      ''   '\u25a0 -fc.iiH'        a,      I  ,,-*.\nMiscellaneous Wanted\nCEDAR POLE8 wanted\u2014Lengths elx-\nInch twenty-fives and up, 8. P-\nPpnd,  Nelnon,  B.C.  (8581)\nWANTED \u2014 Three to 4-roomed suite,\nfurnished, or small house. No children.    Box 9517,  Dally News.    (9517)\nCLASSIFIED ads brine results quickly\nand economically.    l*_c a word.\nWANTED \u2014 Four-hole McCIary electric rante In good condition. Box\n9618, Dally News. (9518)\nLtv\u00ab stock sells quickly when lt la\nMvertlMd In these coIumni\u00bbi__\t\nLive Stock for Sale\nRABBlTS   FO   RSALE\u2014 Silver. White,\nBlue   and   Flemish    rabbits; young,\npedigreed    stock.      Bennett, Gordon\nRoad,   Fairview. (9556)\nF#R RALE \u2014 Two Ayrshire and two\nShorthorn \"fcows. Just freshened; also\nthree 2-year-old heifers. Apply C.\nJohnson,   Erie.   B.C.  (U5.0)\nCLASSIFIED ads bring results quickly\nand economically,    lttc a word.\nFRESH HOLSTE1N cow, 4 years old,\ngentle, good milker, sound. |70.\nWrite or phone  Pleters,  Nelson.\n(9459)\nTELL your wants through The Dally\nNews classified columns.      ^^____\nFOR SALE\u2014Pure-bred Yorkuhire pigs,\nsplendid stock. Ag-iasli dams, university sire. S1200 each, Including\nregistration pupcrs. D. L, Doyle.\nR.R. No.  1. (1414)\nTELL your wiinis  through The  Dally\nNews class!ried rolumna. *\nYOUNG I'KJS, Ut-rkshlreK or York-\nshirrs, $7: also purc-brt'd botir ready\nfor service, Iiy \"Vnuxhnll Clipper,\"\n$30.    Cheyne & Nlven, Eric, B.C.\n^(9422)\nLive stock srlla quickly when lt la\nadvertised tn thrsa columns.^\t\nREGiSTEREO Ayrshire, cow, i*i years,\n$7J; registcrcd Ajrrshlre heifer. 21,.\nyears, ISS; grude Jersey heifer, 2\nyears. $60. All milking, und daily\nrecord kept. All bred to Government\nAyrshire Bull. K. Wallace, Boswell,\nB.C. (9142)\nCLASSIFIED ads bring results quickly\nand economically.    1 _>c a word.\nCOW for\" KALE \u2014 Good milker, easy\nto handle, freshened April 29th, third\ncalf.    Groom, Hlocan  Purk.        (8446)\nCLASSIFIED ads bring results quickly\n and frnnoinlrallT.    VHj*. * word.\nFOR SALE\u2014A big, red enw without\nhorns, freshened two days ago; give\n16 quarts of milk a day during her\nbest tast hou son. on pusture feed\nonly. Inspected lust Juno und found\nfree from tuberculosis. Price, .iglily\ndollars with calf, und seventy-five\nwithout calf, r.o.h. Wynndel, B.C.\n-O.  J.  Wlgen,  Wynndel,   B.C.       <9447)\nBnsinm p*)port**nltie\u00bb, jMgfj^\nFotvSale;\n.***>.\nAt a Bargain ,\u00bb .\nThe.Grill Cafe\n=*=\n(tWI)\nCity Prop<a'ty for Sale\nSupplies, Power snd Light Installs*\ntlons. Generators and Motors, Mala.\ntenance and Repairs.     (HI.)\nD_MraS-TUT SBTBLOIim* oo.\nLsn.,   Dunuvn,   \u00bb.\u2022 a\u2014.\nWestlnghouse Radio Bets, Radio Parts.\nComplete Super-Heterodyne Kits, Myers\nTubesv Westlnghouse Maida Lamps,\nIrons, Toasters, Etc. V. A K. Automatic Electric Pumps. Small Mfttte*\njjeogje Wants a sjpsolsHy.        (M74)\nA BEAUTIFUL HOME ,\n>1600 cash and a small monthly\npayment will buy thla beautiful\nnine-room home, one of the nicest\nIn the city. Lovely living rooms,\ntwo fireplaces,, sun room, new furnace, stone basement and all conveniences.     Ar>nly   P.   V-   Payne,\n**'\u25a0\u00bb *\u2014\u25a0 (,MT)\nFor Sale\nClose In\nREAL VALUE\nFive-room House, atone foundation, furnace: 3 corner lots. Fine\nlake view.    $3700, on terms.\nCHAS. F. McHARDY\nClose In\nA real home, consisting of S\n-bedrooms und bath up; dining\nand sitting rooms, sewing - room\nand kitchen on ground floor; full\ncement foundation; beautiful\nlawn. Unexcelled view. A bargain at  $3600  cash.\na. t. McMillan\nPHONE 601 P.O. BOX 61\n(9521)\nLive stock sails quickly whoa lt lt\nadvertif-ed In thesa onlumna.\n\u2022r\u2014i w ~>   \u2014\u2022'__.. '\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0 \"\u2014,1 \"\u25a0\"\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0' \"J*\"\nFarm and Dairy Produce\nin SALE \u2014 Rubber- tiered trniler.\n:ost $13\"). good condition; f50 taken\nt.    Bargenfs Garage^ (9i>33)\n|('Ai**Ul)A*'FIHST*irnd. Kcctf Onld'Coin\npotatoes, |3. Mrs. John Hamilton,\nU*V   1. . <9537>\nFarms and Ranches for Sale\nFOlt SALE \u2014 Near city limits. 3-aere\nranch, all wire fenced, 4-roam house,\ncement basement; large barn, wood\nshed, pood Well; forty bearing fruit\ntrees and small frnlta. Cheap. Apply owner, j. E. Gouldlng, box 434.\nNelson,  O.C. (3524)\nCLASSIFIED ada brink results quickly\nand economically.    IHe \u00bb word.\nNursery Products\nLive nock aella quickly when lt\nadvertised In  theae columna.\nPoultry and Eggs\nIIREAKING UP our breeding pena, we\nhave 100 Toncreed tireedera ln full\nlay. for nale In lota to mitt pur-\nchm-en*; $1.25 each f.o.b. Appledale.\nJ.   H.  C'liiijiinan.   Appledale,   B.C.\n__j, __ii_.i7>\nis\";\" $5.50\n_ _    Roynon,\nmerset Poultry It&nch, Nelson.\n(9112)\nBARKED HOCK Eggs,  $2 per\nper EJO; $10 per hundred.    T.\nwi    \u25a0   \u25a0 -   \u25a0\nVisiting Cards\nFor  Ladies or\nGentlemen\n; We can give you\nprompt delivery of per-\ntonal visiting cards.\nHighest grade printing\nan* materials.\nThe Daily News\nQuality Printers\nNELSON, \u25a0. C,\nTo Out^of-Towo\n\u2022 SybscrJbers\nOtlt*of-town subscriber, who\nwish to answer classified advertisements In which only tha tela*\nphone number of tha advertiser\nIs given, mat send their replies\nto Th\u00bb Dally News, and The Dally\nNews will communicate such replies to the advertiser.\nFOR SALE\u2014Cauliflower, cabbage, celery\u2014pepper* plants and flower\nPlants. N. MuhIIo, Nelson, B.C.. Box\n3\u00abn. (9541)\nFOR SALE \u2014* Ma*toon Strawberry\nplants, S7 per thousand delivered.\nMonrod  Wlgen.  Wjnndel,   B.C.   (9..29)\nInsurance\nTOIT  may   wish   that\nTOU  had   done   It   SOME   DAY.\nWHY   NOT  NOW?\nALL     forma     of .  INSURANCE\nWRITTEN.\nR. W. DAWSON\nP.O.   Box   733\nAnnable   Block\nPhonp   IM\n(!\u00bb\u2022)!?)\nNursery Products\nFOR HALK \u2014 Tomato plant* from\nnelected Meed*, one dollar per box of\n3f, to 40 plant* to the box, size\nl_\"x_2\"x4\". \u25a0 ShtpplnK weight averages 30 Ib . to tht> box. Oet your\nplants so they keep growing without\nstopping when you plant them out-\naide. O: J. Wlgen, Wynndel. B.C.\nI'rice per thousand for plants only\napplication. . (9448)\n\u2014-      !\u25a0   \u2014 i        *m*S+m\u2014-*-*$_,     .il.i   j.\nmWmm,.\nElectrical\nGNU\u2014B \u00bb. MsTCT, iss\u00ab\u00abl\u201e s IH\nEleotrlcal Contractsr, Telephons 75-\nj\\   O.   Box_ 74S.   Nelson,   B.<j7r   R\u00abji<\nTransfer\nAT\u2014oraOS TBAsmnB \u2014\u25a0 Cost sn\u00ab\nWood.    Phon. 42:,      (8475)\nCarpenter and Joiner\nLAWaov\u2014Cedar    Chests,    Bardwooel\nana Panel  Board.    Below Market.\nLife Insurance^\nnr  Lura  inn\u2014in   oo.  \u2022\u00bb\nOAVAD-\u2014J.  C.   Kennedy, District\nRep.   Offices\u2014Gllker Bik. Nelson, B.C.\n'9<7C>\nChimney Cleaning\nW7\n_.    POWLBI,    Official\nleaner. ,\t\nChimney\nInsurance and Real Estate\nR.\nW.   DAWSOW\u2014\nBssl  B.t.ta,  insnrancs,  Bsstals,\nAnnable Bik., P.O. Box 733. Phone 197.\n_   0478)\nHa. si\u2014c, \u00bbsu\u2014tvea, *>_\u25a0_\n.     AsTO   OITT   VSOPBaTT.\n508  Ward   Street.               Nelson, B.C.\n 19478)\nMonuments\naire\u2014ia   _oirtr.\nMaaTAL OO P. O. Box 865, Nelson,   Ii.C.     Telrnhnnf   184. (148.0)\npA-VBBLI.     k\nChiropractors\nDa. a. a. aaAT\u2014Chiropractor, Phons\nIir.. Ullker Block. Office Hours: 10\nto lt a.m.. 2 to G und 7 to 8 p.m.. ex-\ncpt. Humluys. ConHultutlonB free. (9481)\nA\"*\u00a3\u2014\u25a0*\u00ab, Dooaa, S.O\u2014Phone (80.\nOffice hours: 10-12; 1-4 and by appointment- Aberdeen Block, Nelson, B.C\n (9482J\nAccounting^\nCaAaLBS r. auaTaa\u2014\nAuditor,   McDonald  Jan  BullJIs*.\nBox  1191. Nelson.   B.C.\n_. , . (9483)\nFlorists\nGBIZIBLLB'S  OBBBBHOUBB,  B\u2014B.\nson.   Cut flowers and Floral deslRns.\nJS484)\nWK.   I.   JOBBSOB\u2014\nPhons   342.  Cut   Flowers.  Potted\nplants  and   Floral  P-inblenia. (9485)\nMa\u00ab~\u00ab. vraAKBDaBTcemetcry B4.'\nPi-rcnnlals \"\"     \"     \"\nand     Floral\ndesign*.\n(9?8C)\nWholesale\nA. w'\na co.\u2014\nhole.ale Orocers nnd Provision\nMerchants. Importers of Teas, Coffees,\nRnlres. Pried Fruits. Staple and Fancy\ntlnicrli's.   Nilsnti.   Tt.C. (9487)\nEngineers\n_\u25a0\nGteen Bro\u00bb*, Burde,, ^\nnuoi, a.o.\nC1TIL    ABD    MianCO    aBOtBBBJM\nM.C*   Alb.rta   and   DomUlos\nLand   Borvsyoxs.\n(9488)\nHD.    DAWBOW,   la\u2014I   Bnrr syot,\n.  Klnlnt and Clrll _ni_..r.\nKuslo.  B.C.  1111)1\nAssayers_\n\u00a31   W. WIODOWSOB, Box Alio* Bel-\n'\u2022 aon, U.C.   Standard western charges.\n(9490)\nAuctioneers\n=__\nFruits and Vegetables\nAPPLES   FOR   8ALC\n\" D E _\u25a0 1, C t O U S '\u2022      -\n32.50   per   box,'   Fancy   ffru.de.\n32.00   per   hox,   orchard   rup.\nF.O.B.  Creston;\nAll sound, freshly paoked  apples.\nWM.   J. \u2022 TRUSCOTT.\nGrower and Shipper, Creston, ll.C.\nWCTJTI.B*\u2014\na Ooods Boll Privately sad st snotlos\nNeleon   Auction  Mart..    *       - \"\"\nVernon  StreeL\n(9491)\nFuneral Directors\nX.   BOBBBTSOa.  r.D.D.,  a  a^-<\n801   Victoria strest Phons  lit.\nNlKht  I'hone,  167L..  (9402)\nD.\n\u25a0tmnflud rnniit-m\nOO. \u2014 Uadertakafs,\nFuneral Dlrectora,\nAuto hearse, up-to-\ndate chapel. Best\nservices. Prloea\nreaj-onnble.      (9193)\nPrinting\nTKfi DAIXY _TBW_U-Quality  Prlntlntf ,\nRullntc, Loose Leaf Forms, Ledger\nSheetH   arid   Binders  alwayB_ In   stock.\n \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\n\u2014\u2014\u2014~mm~f~\n--_\u2122^-*->_.z:-i-._.:\nl\\dol\nStranded Steamer ~^**\n1 Breaks Into Two\n\u25a0 HALIFAX, May 4. \u2014 Advices from\nthe scene of the stranding last Friday\nmorning of the iteamer Azov, which\nran on the rocks at Cape Hognn, near\nArlchat, Cope Breton, while on a voy\u00ab\nage from Cuba to Montreal with\nmolasses, stated today that thf vessel\nhad broken In two Just aft of the\nengine room, and that the forward section was submerged,\n\u25a0< An acute shortage of horsea and\nmules ln the United States within\nfive years, unless > breeding, la in-\n\u2022creasd, was\" predicted by the United\nStates department of agriculture.\ni-U* BAD SPELLS\n-WlTHHffiffiARI\nMrs. C. ksrfln, _R. No. S, brjlllai\nOnt. writes:\u2014\"I havs been troubled\nwith my heart for a long time and\nvery often had bad spells wish lt   I\nS'oold take, fainting spells, and my\nusbahd had to have somebody to\nstay wtth me all the time. He got\nIne everything he could think, of to\nsee If they would do me any- good,\nbut nothing seemed to help me. One\nday a friend was in to see me and\nadvised mei to try t \u2022 .   >\nr        MILBURN'S\nHEART AND NERVE PILLS\n'\"sty liusbahd went and got line two\nboxes, and after the first one waa\n'finished I felt like a different woman.\nX cannot .recommend them enough to\n- [hll those who suffer with anything\n'wrong with their heart or nerves.\"\n' Milburn's R. * N. Pills have been\non the market for the past 30 years\nand are put up only by The T. Mil-\nburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont.\n> \"All drngglsla handle them.\"\nAmerican Hostesses Have\nSquabble in London Over\n\u00a3,,,<,(\u25a0';'\u25a0 Mansion  -n^-.v,\nEDMONTON LADY\ni    ;. BUYS CZAR, RING\nArtistic Center of the Cap*\nital Now in Blooms*\n:..bury \u25a0:.,<\u2022\u25a0      \u00ab\nTHE NSLSON DAJLT NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, MAY'S, 1925\n\"Mm\n*\"lff*\"**1EB\nCANADIANjj^TPACIFIC\nTO   EtrmOl-E,   MtOM   _COKT_UCJ__.-\nQVKBBO\nto t_M\u00bb\u00bbOTrao-goura____F_ro-r\nB-UCBPBO\nMay IJ, June'10. July 8. .Emp. Scotland\n\u2022May SO, \u2022\u2022June 30, July 22.Emp.France\nMay  SO    Marburn\nto cnccKBOtrma-soTrTKAi-PTOv\nAXTWI1P\nMay 20.   JUn\u00bb17,   July U..,.,,,; .Mellts\nJune 3,   July 1,    July 20 Mlnnedosa\nTO  BELrAST-OLASQOW\nMay 21,  June if),   July It Metagama\nMay 28, June 27, \u25a0 Aug. &  Montreal\nJune 4,   July 2    Marloch\nTO LIVERPOOL\nMay 11*,, June 12,  July 10    Montrose\nMay 22, June 10. July 17 ... .Montroyal\nMay 20,  June 26.   July 24   ....Montcalm\nJune 0,  JulyS,  July 31    Montclare\n'\u2022New York to Southampton-Cherbourg\n\u2022\u2022 Quebec   to   Southampton-Cherbourg\nBerthing sheets now open for above\nsailings,   and    reservation*,   are    helng\nmade.    Apply   to  Local  Agents   everywhere, or write\nIs J. 8. CABTSm\nDistrict  Pqsscngcr  Agent.   Nelson, B.C.\n1-ONDON, England. May 4.\u2014(By\nCanadian Press) \u2014 Princess Mary.\nViscountess* Lascelles,' who has arrived\nat Chesterfield house, May fair, for the\nseason, Is planning the first Dig social\nfunction to lead off the season's festivities. 'There is a great banquet to\nwhich 200. guests will be invited, and\nit wftl be given In honor of King\nOeorge and Queen Mary, who have returned, recuperated, from their health\ncruiss.   . fc.\nThe quests will Include the whole\nof the corps diplomatique in London\nand a large number of Canadian and\nolher overseas visitors. The number\nof London's visitors this year, is, in-\ndead, likely to exAed that of last\nyear, according to hotel  reservations.\nThe great ballroom at Chesterfield\nhouse, which has never been opened\nsince the days of the Earl of Clanrl-\ncarde, has now been repainted and redecorated, and furnished with a spring\nfloor after the pattern of the.Savoy's^\nmain ballroom floor \u2014 an Innovation\nv.hich says much for the future social plans of Princess Mary.\nmaoe for a Mansion\nMrs. Harry Brown of Pittsburgh,\nPc-nn., and Mrs. \"Jimmfe*\" Corrlgan,\ntwo of the most well-known American\nhostesses, are not on speaking- terms\nat the moment It is all over Spencer\nhouse, which Mrs, Brown has succeeded ln obtaining for the season at\na weekly rental of something tike\n*2000.\nMrs. Corrlgan came over from New\nYork a month earlier than usual ln\norder to get Spencer house. So did\nMrs, Brown. Negotiations with the\na&ents opened at once.\nMrs. Corrlgan. however, started with\na severe handicap. Earl Spencer and\nhia. Countess nsked Mrs. Brown to\n\\!i?lt their country place, Altnorp park,\nfor a week-end; and it was not really\nvery surprising that on the Monday*\nmorning Mrs. Brown should travel\nstraight back to London and become\nat once the chatelaine of Spencer house\ntKe omaH: v\u00ab-k!jr _ .oa*sl4ji!\u00bbtlen\nmentioned*--hove * \"*\u2014 '*\"\"\nMrs.. Corrlgan has, howeyJeft, \u2022<w-\nceeded In getting Mrs. Keppell'a beautiful little place in- Mount street, a\nhouse she had two or three yeare ago.\nMrs. Balden Loeffler of Edmonton,\nAlta., a wealthy visitor at the Cavoy,\nIs etated to be th* purchaser, qt. the\nfamous Romanoff emerald ring, which,\nafter having been sol4 *t. Rotherham,\nKent, for, two shilling's,..was resold at\nChristie's for \u00a314*0. Mrs. Loeffler has\nnew bought It frem some Hat ton Oar-\nden   merchant  for  a  little  more   than\n_:ooo.\nThe .ring's history le a ftagtc one,\nfor it Is said to have been worn hy\nthe* csar at the time of his death* The\nemerald la a large square* one, \u25a0 flawless except for a segment chipped out\nof a side of the stone, presumably hy\nthe executioners,\nLondoners and visitors still like to\nthink, thai Chelsea is the home and\ncenter of London's artistic life, though\ntoday lt isn't at all. Neither is it St\nJohn's Wood, that serene antl sedate\narea around  the Zoological Gardens.\nMost of London's artistic anl \"ultra'\npeople^ now live In .Bloamsbuc-r, libeled\nfor years because of ^legendary boarding houses, but now'literally blooming\nln   a  second  youth.\nThe latest and most freakish of London's young artistic Ideas is to cover\nwalls, not with wallpapers or paint,\nbut with newspapers. Harold Speed,\none of the youngest Royal Academicians, who lives In Bloomsbury, has\npapered his rooms with foreign newspapers\u2014Russian, Greek, Chinese and\nEgyptian\u2014and the result is aa startling as anybody could desire.\nIt might be added, however, that it\ncomjes a good deal more expensive\nthan an ordinary wallpaper, and as\nartiste are as poor as ever they ware,\norly the \"fashionable\" painters can\nIndulge  in  the  Idea.\nJipU   .-W\n=P\nCANADIANS IN\nTon of Narcotics Smuggled\nin Shipment of Picture\nFrames\nROTTEtiDAM. HoIInnd, May 4. \u2014\n\u2014The police authorities of the city\nhave refused to divulge the names of\nthe two Canadians who have been\nplaced under arrest here on n charge\nof smuggling narcotics into the country, but It fs known that one ts a\nformer bookmaker and the other a\n<*\u25a0 -.im.ss.nn ..(rent, snd that both belong to Montreal. They are snid to\nhave stated that they were acting\nfor   a   Canadian    living   tn   Tampico.\nMexico.\nThe druirs. which Included cocaine,\nmorphine and heroin, and weigh considerably more than one ton. at a\nvalue of about $.10,000, were purchased in Germany, transported to\nSwitzerland, and handed over to the\nCanadians, who then consigned them\nto Rotterdam for further transport.\nThe narcotics were concealed ln a\nshipment   of   picture   frames.\nClose Inspection by the Rotterdam\ncustoms suthnrltles, following the re-\nCuVed by my palnteen method\"^rititout | relpt of information that an attempt\nsurftery Money refunded unless cured. J\u2122- *\u00a3\"* \u2122** \u00a3 \"J Ju rdJUA\\thh\/\u00b0nutfrh\nBooklet on rectal discuses, free. Ia- H\" \u2022\u00bb\u25a0\"\u2022* lMl to ttw \u2022M'1\u00bbupp \u00b0* ,ne nnr-\ntolerahle Jtehlng   cured. ! cones,\nE________l\nFamous Negro Battler Is\nF$m Wa^pojw; Sputtv\niii Dixie   \/<',;.;  iit\n,LOfl JlfrTpCkES, May 4.\u2014Way-*Way\ndown south; down where the hind-\nshake la a little stronger\u2014where- the\nmoonshine flows a little freer\u2014where\nthe sunshine fs a little thicker- that's\nway dpwn eouth. .     \u25a0, a\nThat's.-H-here George Godfrey was\nborn\u2014Mobile. Ala. *.. .    ,\nHis real name is Feab Smith Wll\nllama. He i* 24. Peab's folks moved\nto Chicago when he was three years\nof Age. ,,He grew up there in the\nfamous colored helt. At 18 he was\nway down south again, working in!\nthe shipyards at  Mobile. j,   j\nBroke Giant's Jaw\nA-Wfiy**, good-natured dnd playful,\nGeorge used,, to exercise hi\u00ab fists\non wboeyer spoke out of turn. The\nfirat yenl. fight he had wae with a\ngiant,named Eddie Jamison. Godfrey\nbroke Jamiron's Jaw In two places the\nfirst shot out of the box. Jamison\nweighed   218;   Godfrey,   1J4.\n\"I decided foh mahself right there\nI wux cut out foh oh fighter,\" says\nGodfrey.\n\"I sex to mahsetf, 'Feab, ole U*t,\nit war too bad dat Jamison's name\nwuxn't Wll lard, foh de results would\nsure hab bin de same and den yoh-\nall's would ha' bin de champeen o'\ndJs   wurld.\"\nGodfrey was a busy athlete from\nthen on. He Joined a colored football\nteam which played all over the south.\nBecause George could fight he was\npromptly elected captain, \u2022 and he\npluyed center so he could be in ^he\nthick of  the   battle.\nNamed for Old Chocolate\nIt wns Dr. Frank C. Cnffev of\nMobile whogHve (\"<-dfrey.'hln flfthllng\nnfime. Dr. C.iffry had boon u,\"great\nadmirer of George Ooilfrcy, \"Old\nChocolate,\" tho event colored heavyweight of 40 years ago. The origin:,]'\nGodfrey wns acclaimed the first colored heavyweight champion of America. He beat Hum Williams in seven\nminutes. In  1882.\nAn interesting thing ahout the old\nGodfrey and the new Godfrey shows\nIn the records.\nOne of the opponents \"Old Chocolate\" defeated wns named Jimmy\nDoherty. He won in 1 minute 2.\"*\nseconds. And the \"New Chocolate\"\nis now being managed hy Jimmy\nDaugherty. Doherty and Daugherty\n\u2014names pronounced alike\u2014cropped up\nIn the careers of both colored heavyweight fighters. The, original Godfrey\nwas once matched to fight John L.\nSullivan, but, friends gave'the affair\nnway and lt J\u00bbMl through. Fighting\nIn those days was against the law.\n\"Old Chocolate\" loHt to Peter Jackson\nin 19 rounds at San Francieco in\n18S8.\nSam   T^ingford,   Jack   Johnson   and\nHobby   Dobbs  nil   have   been   boxing\ninstructors   <*>f   the   new* Godfrey.\nBoston Tar Baby Found Him\nIt  was the \"Boston Tar Baby'' who\ndiscovered Godfrey when he was still\n-world-faMoue rtfereg. bail iUw\u00ab[#J_\u00bbu\na good friend \"\"Of Kearim and Pemp-\nsey. - As long ae Dempsey ruled the\nuniverse Godfrey was held in *__\u2022\u25a0*.\nwaiting for hts big moment. That\nb)g moment has arrived. - Kearns\nand pempaey have come tb the parting   of   Uie. ways\u2014Dempsey   haa   re*\nt-m.. m, --.. -. '..-..< .\nThe opinion of nmny ring critics\nli that. Godfrey will be the next\nheavyweight, .champion  of  the world.\nThe Jtlant negro con claim lt now.\nHairy Willa\u2014rated in the Who'a \"Who\nas the next man to Dempsey\u2014waa\ndefeated by big Bill Tate at Portland, Ore. And Godfrey knocked\nTate out in eight rounds .in Madison\nSquare   Garden. .\n.Then who le champion nowT How\nold ie Ann?,\nA Hint\n. Samuel, If yoh-all's am lucky 'nuff\nto sock dls heah Godfrey pusson\nTuesday night at Vernon, yoh and\nUncle Ton\\ Cox, can move right up\ntown   and   start  receivin\"' guests  aud\nHe member, yoh-all's has tamed\nL-i-o-n-s. l^et yoh consolenre be\nyotl guide. __ . (\nitract .for the construction, of an\nfi 8,oo6,600 hotel In Chicago has been\nawarded to George A. Fuller company\nof New York. The new structure will\nbe erected on Michigan Boulevard for\nA. J, Stevens, president of the Hotel\nLa Salle company.      ;.   .   _\nCarnegie.\" ^etftwb'\nfailed to opeo It. doe.\nTho First National Bank of Oft-mat le\nwas closed by ordor vt tha tKuyrd of\ndirectors  a  short  time, afteg \u00a3 had\nopened for the day's business. ft\u00bb\n*mm-m~-**mi?9**n*^^\nAUCATSCOME\nLos Angeles t)ry Official\nUses Catnip and Cream\n,,   j     tp Lure Stray\nLOS ANGELES, Cal., May 4.\u2014\nAlt the stray cats for miles around\nthe home of George Contreras,\nchief of the county dry squad, at\n852 North-Occidental boulevard, are\nrallying, Contreras haa provided a\ntenst of catnip, cream and fish nnd\nIt is being thoroughly appreciated.\nIn fact, he has provided repeated\nfeaats in the hope of luring back\nMrs. Contreras' silver gray Persian\nkitten who ha\u00bb been lost, strayed or\nstolen since Saturday morning. The,\nkitten, which has a pedigree as long\nas the list of bootleggers Contreraa\nha_ arrested, became part of the\n(.'onIrenes manage about throe weeks\nago, ano endeared itself to tho dry-\nofficer by waiting up for him every\nnight and insisting on rubbing its\nnilky fnr against his legs hefore art\/ring.\nSo far, 1,037,407 cats hy actual\ncount have been seen ' about the\nContreroa home Blnce he hn* been\nputting out the catnip, fish and\ncream, but the silver gray Persian kitten has not been among\nthem. The neighbors) are considering offering a reward for the return of the kitten so that the pus\nting out of choice catbits be discontinued.\n' JtOTHER :i'-1e_h_*V\u00abaa-\nf tori* is a pleasant, harmle$i'\nSubstitute for Castor Oil, Vw-\ngoric, Teething Drops and Soothing Syrqps,s espeijialjy prepared\nfor Infants in arms and Children all ages.\nTo avoid Imitations, always look (or the signature ot\nProven directions on each package.   Physicians everywhere recommend it\nFaU_X   aOSE,   M.S.\n401   laiflsr   Bnlldinc,   co_.r   *fowst_\nsad Blvursid., apokons\nj fiKhthiK In thp Mnhllp shipyard*.\nSwiss clerk trom Zurich Is slso When PnuKhprty tnok Godfrey iw-\nheld In custody with Iho Canadians. \\Aer h|s rnof n \u25a0eomplicntlon arose In\npendlnK further InvesllRiulon Into an blwin(- \u201e|m 0lll nnwgherty. a\nalleged   International   traffic. j \u25a0  -\nJNDIGESTIQN ?\n.   Relieved  of  its  poignant  distress,   flatulent   (gas)   pains,.\n\u25a0' discomfort after meals, belch\ning,     hloating  **nnd     health-\n: ,__ destroying constii>ation with\nCHXlvlBERLJi-INrS\n^\u2022\u2022TABLETS ;*\nThey  make digestion  easy,  prevent !\nharmful clogging, and cause the reg- \\\nular daily movement so  necessary to\ngood health.\nEasy snd plesssnt to take\u2014only 25c\nGAS CAR'\nPauenger Service\nNOW IN OPERATION\nSlocan Branch\nSlocan City -  Nelson  -  Castlegar\nDAILY  EXCEPT  SUNDAY  8ERVICE\nRead Down.\n7:00 a.m. Lv.\t\n7:10 m.m, Lt\t\n7:24 a.m. Lv.\t\n7:39 a.m. Lv\t\n7:45 a.m. Lv.\t\n7:SI tun. Lv._\n8:03 a.m. Lv\t\n8:08 a-m. Lv_\n8:29 a.m. Lv\t\n\u20228:40 a.m. Arr_\n9:00 a.m. Lv.\t\n9:10 a.m. Lv\t\n9:15 a.m. Lv\t\n9:25 a.m. Lv\t\n9:33 a.m. Lv,\u2122\n9:45 a.m. I.v\t\n_ Slocan City _\n- Lemon Creek .\n..___   Perry's   \u2014\u2014\n  Winiaw \t\n__   Lebahdo   __\n    Valllcan   \t\n__ Passmore \t\n    Kochs   \t\nCrescent Valley\n_ South  Slocan\n- South   Slocan  .\n\u2014.  Shoreacres  _>\n__\u2014 .Glade  \t\n Tarry'a  __\n    Thrums   \t\nRead Up.\n.-Arr.   1:00 p.m.\n-.Air.' t:46 p.m._   ,\n-Arr. ,2:38 p.m.\n_Arr.   2:23 p.m.   -\n_Arr.   2:18 p.m.,'\n-Arr.   2:08 p.m.. \u25a0\n2:03 p.m.    '\n1:68 p.m.   .\n1:38 p.m.\n1:30 p._.\u00ab-\n1:10 p.m.\n-Arr.\n-Arr.\n-Arr.\n_Lv.\n-Arr.\nF.rllllant\n _. Castlegar\n Arr. 12:55 p.m...\n _._Arr. 12:50 p.m. .\n Arr. 12:40 p.m.\n* Arr. 12:32 pjn.\n Lv. 12:20 p.m.\nArr. i0:!\u00bb _m.\nI,v. 10:10 a.m.\n10:00 a.m. Arr..\n\u2022Connects at South Slocan with Train 702 (or Nelson, due Nelson\n9:30 a.m.\n\u2022\u2022Connects at South Slocan wltb Train 701, leaving Nelson 12:45\nnoon.\nJ. S. CARTER, D.P.A., Nelson\ni;\n.>\nThis announcement is full of real values\u2014goods which you wfH be unable to buy at these Sale Prices next week.   Buy as much as you can now\nand reap the benefit of the savings.\nShoe Department\nLADIES'-A Group to Sell at $2.95\n\u25a0 ..-. Pair\nIncluding Ladies' Tan Calf Oxfords, medium walking heels; Ladies' Fine Dongola\nKid Oxfords, easy fitting, medium round\ntoes; Ladies' Strap Pumps. Anniversary\nSale, pair  $2.95\nLADIES'-A Group at $3.95 Pair\nSeveral lots of Ladies' Patent Leather\nPumps, with buckle; Patent Leather\nStrap Slippers, with flat or military\nheels; Tan Leather Strap Pumps, with\nflat or medium heels. All real good\nmalces, and good fitting shoes. Anniversary Sale Price  $3.95\nMEN'S\nMEN'S- BLACK LEATHER BLUCHER\n\u2022BOOTS\u2014Without toe caps. These have\nstrong outside counters, and are nailed\nboth sole and heel, so are specially\nsuitable for wear among stones or on\nranches. Briced for Anniversary Sale\nat, 94.50\nBABIES' COTTON SUPS\u2014In fine\nwhite material, trimmed lace and tucks.\nAges 6 months to 1 year. Anniversary\nSale $1-35\nHouse Furnishings I Dry Goods Dept      Ready-to-Wear\nON_ nMI.V   rmiru  nun    urtm  _.n f...   -__>    -   -        '- - \u00ab * \u2014\nONE ONLY, COUCH BED\u2014With coil\nspring. Single bed size. Has mattress\nand valance . covered with cretonne.\nMakes an excellent couch for day use\nand a bed at night. Simmons make.\nAnniversary Sale  $18.55\nSpecial Offer\u2014Complete Bed\nONE SIMMONS WALNUT STEEL.BED\n\u2014Full double bed size. One Cotton\nFelt Mattress to fit; one Coil Spring\nto fit. All these are made by Simmons. : Special Anniversary Sale, the\nset  $42.50\nRUGS-r-\nWool Rug, size 24x54.    Anniversary\nSale  :.$3.95\nTapestry Rugs, size 27x54.   Anniversary Sale ,...$2.95\nJute Rugs, size 36x68.    Anniversary\nSale  $1.55\nJute Rugs, size 27x60.    Anniversary\nSale  $1.19\nBATTENBERG CENTRES\u2014Round and\nsquare shape. Exceptional value. Anniversary Sale  55\u00bb*>\nBABIES' DRESSES\u2014Of fine white\nLawn, trimmed fine lace and smocking.\nAges 6 months to 1 year. Anniversary\nSale ......,.v..... I $1.25\nAN OFFERING OF SiLKS\u2014In plain\ncolors and fancy weaves, comprising\nBrocaded Satins, Printed Crepe de\nChenes, Printed Canton Crepes, Satin\nGrenadine. There is a splendid variety\nand selection in this lot, which were\nselling at $2.95, $3.50 and $3.95. Anniversary Sale offering, a yard... $2.55\nWe are sure thin lot nf Sitkx trill meet\nwith your approval.\nGINGHAMS\u2014English make, in about a\ndozen different colorings and checks.\nUsual selling price 25 cents. Anniversary Sale, a yard 20.?\nFINE ENGLISH NAVY SUITING\u2014\nWith colored stripes. Very wide, fully\n54 inches in width. Makes an excellent skirt, as you only require the\nlength' in this very wide width. Usual\nprice $2.95 yard. Anniversary Sale,\nyard $1.95\nFINE WEAVE ORIENTAL GEORGETTE\u201440 inches wide. Colors:\nMaize, copen, saxe, taupe, myrtle, grey,\nQ brown, purple, pink, reseda. Anniversary Sale, yard .....:....:   $1.55\nSecond Floor\nLADIES' SILK SLEEVELESS SWEATERS\u2014Fancy fronts and plain backs.\nColors are blue, orange, purple, green,\npeach, black and white. Anniversary\nSale, each  $4.50 and $4.95\nDozens of Ladies' New Spring Coats\nThe season's best, all bear an Anniversary Sale tag. We do not remove any\nold tickets, which are all marked in plain\nfigures, so that you can see for yourself\nhow much you save.       '\nHOUSE DRESSES\u2014A useful everyday\narticle. Comes in a striped Gingham.\nShort sleeves, neat collar, finished with\nblack stitching, and black silk tie. A\nselection of good stripes. Anniversary\nSale   $2.95\nDozens of Waists and Sweaters\nAll bear Uie new Anniversary Sale tag,\nwhich will be found on the Sale tables.\nCHILDREN'S 11 RIB HOSE\u2014Strong\nCotton, for school wear. Color: Black\nonly. Sizes 5, 5^., 6, 6V_, 7, V\/._, 8,\n8'_ and 9 inch.    Pair  19<*\nMillinery\nALL NEW HATS a few weeks ago. A\ntable that will astonish you for the\nvalues. On offer at an Anniversary\nSale price of  $3.95\nLADIES' LIGHT-WEIGHT FELT HATS\n\u2014For the bobbed-haired girls. Narrow hands of self material. Colors are\ngrey, fawn, brown, navy, black, blue\nand coral.   Anniversary Sale ....$1.25\nBABIES' WHITE COTTON NIGHT\nGOWNS\u2014Neck and sleeves trimmed\nlace. Ages 1 to 2 years. Anniversary\nSale   75<*\nBABIES' WHITE COTTON SLIPS\u2014\nTrimmed hemstitched frill. Sizes\n6 months to 1 year. Anniversary Sale\n 65?\nMen's Department\nSpecial   at $2.55\nMEN'S KHAKI DRILL BREECHES\u2014\nGood quality. To lace at knee. AIL\nsizes. Regular $3.00. Sale price, per'\npair   $2.55\nMEN'S KHAKI DUCK WORK PANTS\n\u2014Double seats and fronts. Five pock,\nets and belt loops. Regular $3.00. Sal*\nprice, pair  $2.55\n,        ,    \u25a0\u25a0 ..  i. ei   ll. -.u,\nWrite Us a Letter, Tell\nUs What You Want; Leave\nthe Rest to Us.  <    '*\n7.4   ; \u25a0\u25a0    ..\/ -,      C v 1NCO\u00abPO\u00bb\u00bbATBO  *^> trf'-fclfV 1\u00bbl*<*ts, *.<', Jl. \u25a0:\u00ab.*\u2022\u25a0     \\U ~\nWrite Us u Letter, Tell\nUs What You Want; Leave\nthe Rest to (\/*.-\n, \u2022\u00ab\n_ .-\n-,?\n.\"    :'\u25a0 \u25a0   ',;\n....\n \u25a0 .\u25a0-\u25a0_\"..'\n \u25a0 .\n-mm\nmm\nOT NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, MAY 5, 1926\n\"<'*\u00ab_ Crocks, t \u00bbal. to 10; Garden\n-\u25a0\u25a0--, Hoes snd Shovels; Ply Screen\n> yard, Mosquito Netting. Win-\nShades, Linoleum Hu*s; Wilton,\nimister snd Brussels Run; Cur-\niiln  Materials.\nJ. W.HOLMES\n\u2022M \u2022\nRed\nIte Killer\nCreolin, Extra Strong\nOne part lo four sf Crank Cat*\nOil\nIs formula adopted by poultry\nexperts.\nPOULTRY  LICE POWDER\nINSECT POWDER\nFRUIT TREK SPRAY\nWATER GLASS\nGARDEN SEEDS\nNote our prices:  * pkts. 15**)\nMall   Ordsrs   Filled   Promptly\nRutherford\nDrug Co.\nGlasses\nRead Inf (lasses, including examination; perfect ground glass,\nsubstantial frames, (6.50 *nd\nUp.   '\nBIPOCAI-, 89.50 and Up.\nTou need not bo without\nreading glasses, or any kind of\nglasses.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nOPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN\nPROCTER AND\nMACSINATIE\nScore One-All in Best Game\nWitnessed for Some Time\nin Nelson\nChoice Chocolates\nFOR YOU\nMARASCHINO   CHERRIES\nSTUFFED   DATES\nGINGER   FRUIT\nRANDYLAND\n'CLASSIFIED    ADS    BRING    RESULTS.\nNelson Business College\nIndividual Tuition\nNew Term  Commencing  Wsdnssdsy,\nApril  IS.\nDsy snd   Evsning  Clsssss.\nBOX  14 PHONE 603\nI\nD. Pts.\n0 2\n1 1\n1 1\n0        0\nCITY   LEAGUE   STANDING\n1 0\nTeams Vt,     D.\nFairview   1       \u00bb\nMcLearles      0       fl\nProcter       0        0\nCorinthians   0       1\nOne of the largest of crowds on\nhand to witness a football game In\nNelson for some time saw the United cluh of Procter and Sunshine Bay\nand the McLearles of Nelson, draw\none-all, in the second game of Uie\ncity league series. The game was\na fight from start to finish with\naccurate passing and excellent work\nhy  the hacks  on  either team.\nThe Macs tallied first ln three minutes of play when Alf Jeffs scored\non Archibald's pas\". There was\nno further scoring on either side\nIn this halt and the goalkeepers put\nup   a  great  game.\nIn the seond half, when nfter\nnbout 16 minutes of play Price\ndashed In past the faltering Mac\nbacks snd landed the ball home, lt\nwas a deserved goal and delighted\nthe fans who seemed pleased to\nhave some outside competition in\nthe league series.\nThe next game will be on Friday\nnight, whon the Corlnthinna will\nmeet the .Macs. Last night's battle\nwas refereed by B. P. Rogers.\nBRIDGER  IS NOW\nRAILWAY  AUDITOR\nAnnouncement\nHaving; taken over Mr. Higginbotham's Optical\nParlors, I will be pleased to attend to all desiring\neyesight examinations and repairs to glasses.\nSUITE   4-5,   GRIFFIN   BLOCK\nJ. LAUGHTON, R.O.\nOptometrist   and   Optician\n-Bpacialiiing   in   Correction   of   Defective   Eyesight\nA. G. LAMBERT CO., Ltd.\nManufacturers  af  and   Dealers  I*\nALL    KINDS    OP    LUMBER     AND     BUILDING    MATERIALS,\nSHINGLES,   LATH,   MOULDINGS,   WINDOWS,    DOORS,   COAST\n\u25a0DOI GRAINED FLOORING  AND FINISH, AND BEAVER  AND\nWALL   BOARDS\nDrawer 10M\nPhons No. _\nNslson. i.C.\nMONTREAL. Mny 4.\u2014The oflice ol\nthe comptroller o( the Canadian Pacific railway announces the appointment nt E. H. Brldger, nged 42, to be\nauditor of mlRcellancoua accounts,\nvice W. J. Perclval, retired under\npension rules. H. T. Hooper, aged 41.\nIs appointed assistant auditor.\ns\u00bb\nNelson News of the Day\nThe old reliable Kerr's Jitney. Phone\n491. (9530,\nL T. B. Lodge Wh 1st Drive and\nDunce in Memorial Hull. Thursday,\nMay 7th, at 8 (Tclocl*. C.P.R. Orclies*\ntrn 1\u00bb attendance. Admission a.>\ncuit*. l9'r'3*>\nReserve May  12th tor Ten and Rake\nSal\u00a9 at Mrs. T. J. Gallaaher'\n<853tO\nNelson-8almo   stage    leaves    Madden\nurner duily 4 p.m.; arrives  11 a.m.\n, . (\u00bbB42)\nTrinity Ladies' Aid Society thla aft\n.\u2022moon, three o'clock, In Church Par\n\\v.tr*. Special bin*.ness. Full attend*\ni.nce  deisired. 9641)\nWanted\u2014Party  to  share  driving ex\np.-nsfH  on  Spokane* automobile  trip.\nA.    O.    Y.    Juvenile    Rranch    Whist\nDrive  nnd   Dance,  Thursday.   May  7th.\nli'   Odd   Fellows*   Hall.     Admission   3Se.\n(9532)\nIf your Dally Newa ia delivered late\nphona 144. (832!)\nParticulars nf our child's educational\npolicy sent upon request. K. H. Hanley, District Manager, North American   Life,  2-3  Aberdeen   Itlock.     (9444)\nHive your children plenty of milk.\nCltt good value for your money at thf\nCrescent   Dairy.    Phone   619. (949SO\nQueen Citv Rebekah Lodgp No. H.\nI.O.O.F., meets tonight ut 9 o'clock.\nSf.clul  evening. (9554)\nO.W.V.A. general meeting June X.\n(y\">.0>\nXXXQKTB   O*   PTTXIAI\nL\n\"Made Its Way by the Way It's Made\"\nGive Them\nCurlew Ice Cream\nThey Love it!\nHow the eyes of the children light up at the anticipation of a cool, delightful dish of Curlew Ice\nCream.\nAnd the grownups never\noutgrow the taste and desire.\nYou can rely at all times\non the purity, flavor, ingredients and care in preparation of\nCURLEW ICE CREAM\nIHE CURLEW CREAMERY CO., LTD.\nNELSON,   B.  C.\nAll Knights of Pythian nnd vi<-i(lr.R\nbrethren are requested to attend lodw\ntonluiit 7:30, to receive the Orand\nCtinnei'llor. First di-gree tn he conferred. Re fresh men tn and nm .ir.\nJumes McCandlish, CA\\ i'i,.r.l)\nDivorced Couple,\nWed Second Time\nCHICAGO, May 4. \u2014 Josephine\nMarch, daughter of Gen. P. .C. March,\nand* Ma], J. Swing, the general's former aide, ware united In marriage for\nthe eeeond time,, here today. They\nwere married in Washington in 1918,\nwhen the bride waa 18 yeara old, and\nafterward  divorced.\nLIBERALS BACK\nLOCAL DENTISTS\nAPPEALTO KING\nResolution Supports Re\nquest for Grant for Dental Hygine Body\nA deputation from the local den-\nUMs. com-itrting of Dr. E. Q. Smyth\nnnd Dr. O. A. C. Walley, met with\nthe executive of the Nelson Liberal\nassociation In the MnRlio block laat\nnight, Indorsing the proposal for a\ngrant of 110,000 to the Canadian Dental  Hygiene council.\nThe object of the campaign now in\nprogress, the representatives told the\nLiberal association, was to make the\norgan.zation Just effected a truly national organlxation, which would be an\namalgamation of all dentists under one\nparent body.\nThe Liberal association indorced the\nresolution.\nThe objects of the organlxation were\ncompletely set out tn the resolution to\nl>e forwarded to the premier, which\nicads   as   follows;\nFor Public Health\n\"We wtmld like to bring to your\nattention :i ivi'iiem of tho Canadian\nDental Hygiene council, for a grant\nof $10,000.00 from the federal government, tu assist In an organized\neffort to promote public, health\nthroughout   the   Dominion.\n\"It is unnecessary thut wc should\ndwell upon the importance of\ndentistry ln relutlon to public health.\nThis matter has been brought to the\nattention of everyone of us forcibly\nduring the last few years, and we are\nsure we are all aware of the\ntremendously Important part It plays\nin: any health work. Perhaps our\ngren test object lesson was derived\nfrom our experience during the war,\nand It haa awakened In the public a\ndemand that more knowledge shall\nbe given them as to the prevention\nof Just such conditions, as were\nfound at lhat time. The dental profession hns, during the last Tew\nyears, been doing this work from\nits own resources; but this work\nnecessarily Is limited through lack\nof sufficient funds.\nCarry Knowledge, to Home\n\"The Canadian Denial Hygiene\ncouncil hns been formed by dentists\nand public-spirited laymen, and we\n(9545) ] are glad to associate with them ln\nsuch n movement. This council,\nhopes that that with the assistance rf\nthe federal government they can, in\nan organised way, carry to every\nhome throughout Canada, the knowledge that mouth health, means better\ngeneral health, that ohU hygiene, decidedly influences rhei' well being of\nevery Individual\u2014ptfrticulnrly the\nchildren, so that future generations\nwill benefit by the teachings of preventive measures regarding mouth\ndiseases.\n\"Each yenr the government makes\ngrants to assist many health organizations, but as yet nn assistance has\nbeen given to assist dental health,\ndespite the fact that expenditures in\nthis direction will obviate much larger expenditure In others.\n\"We feel sure that you are In\nsympathy with this cause, and we\nask you to give earnoHL consideration to this request,\n\"Hoping thnt your cabinet will see\nyour way clear to accede to It.\"\n'RUNAWAY GIRL'\nMAKES A GREAT\nHIT IN NftSON\nComic Opera by Trail Musicians Draws Packed *\n\u00bb   House\nSONGS, COSTUMES,\nCOMEDY OF BEST\nCarnival Scene Heartily Ap*\nplauded; Visitors at\nSocial\nA.S.Hors\n\\ iv   Phone 121\n, For Good Eats '..'\nPeerless  Creamery   Butter,  psr\nib.  ..._._..:  4\u00a9*\nCurlew   Creamery   Butter,   per\nlb ....  454\nCllendale Creamery 'Butter,  per\nJ\"\u2014 - --\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 -45*\nBrookfleld Creamery Butter, per\nBoneless Rolled Hams, II1...33J\nBacon, from, pet lh. ..  30*\nHorswlll's Special Tea, lb.-70i\nHorswlll's   Special   Coffee,   per\n'\u00bb\u2022  --, \u2022 600\nSpecie! 8esp Deal, with a beautiful liuhber Apron ...$1.1.5\nNavel   Oranges, \u25a0 from,   3   dos,\n_r    - S1.00\nGrspe  Fruit, Lemons,  Rhubsrb,\nHead and  Lssf  Lsttucs,\nN.w   Oabbagse\n*\u2014 I Particular Grocers |\u2014\n<\u00a7 _____\/.>\nP.&W.\nWe Can Help You to\nKeep Out Flies\nSCREEN DOORS\nFour qualities, in various sizes.\nr     ADJUSTABLE SCREEN WINDOWS\n\u25a0,'.'\" To fit any window.\nWIRE CLOTH\n24 to 48 inches wide.    Any length.\nWood-YaDance Hardware Co., Ltd.\n:>\u25a0\u25a0 I\nWH0LUALI\nNELSON.  1.0\nMTAIL\nPHONE 235\nWHOLE     ROAST     COFFEE\u2014\nKresh  ground   lo   ymir   llkluir.\n\u2022*\u2022\"  50t*\nB. C. SUGAR-10-lh. sack 80<*\n20-lh.  sack   $1.75\nCRI8CO-3-lh. tin ..' 85<>\nPURE JAM\u2014Homemade.   I'liim,\nJ'each, Cherry, l-lb. Jur 25tf\nINDIAN  TEA\u2014This hns a  fine\nflavor.    Bulk,  per Ih 70t*\nQUAKER    TOMATOES \u2014 !%*,\n3 tins  _ 55*\nCLOVERDALE BUTTER\u2014\nAlways fresh. 3 Inw- 'or\n- - $1.15\nQUAKER   CORN\u20142s.   3   tin.\nfor 55\u00ab*\nWHITE BEANS-3 lbs 25t*\nJELL-O-Pure fruit flavors. 6\npkts --5W\n250\n-45*\nBANANA\u00bb-Lb\t\n2 Ib. ...\nORANGES\u2014Dos.  ...\n3 <l\u00bb\u00ab.  85*\nLarger   sliss,   at,    per   dos.,\n 35*. 40* \"i 60*\nASPARAGUS  \u2014  Tender    and\nfresh!   Lb 25*\nSPINACH,    GREEN    ONIONS,\nRADISHES,    CELERY,    LET-\nTUCq,TOMATOES, RHUBARB,\nETC.\nDeliveries Twice Daily\nMAIL   ORDERS   GIVEN\nPROMPT AND CAREFUL ATTENTION\nGOLFING CARD\nOVER HOLIDAY\nALL ARRANGED\nThree Days' Handicap Play\nOutlined; New Eighth\nGreen in Play\nThe mutch committee of the Nelson Golf nnd Country club hou\nheld its flrxt meeting, and has gone\ncarefully over nil the events for the\n192S season, and the fixture card\nhas practically heen drawn up. and\nwill he available In full at an early\ndale.\nDuring the May holiday the following events will ho played:\nMay 23\u2014Captain's cup, men's\nhand cup  singles.    Match  play.\nMny 21\u2014Noxon'a trophy, ladles'\nhandicap   mingles.   ,Mritch   play.\nMay 25\u2014Men's foursomes, on\nhandlcnp, ladies' foursomes, on handicap, nil  finals.\nThe handicap* have been ad-\nJusted, and will he announced in\nthe course  of  the  next few days.\n\"Competition play In one of the\nhest methods of improving one's\nname,\" nays lhe committee, in a\nnotification to the members, \"and\ntho match committee sincerely hopes\nthe memhers will turn out in full\nforce nnd ind ti tee In some friendly rivalry while enjoying a good\nday's   golf.\" 1\nThe conditions on the links are\nimproving every day. The new\neighth green wus put into play this\nlast week-end, nnd at least one\nmember succeeded In doing it In\npar with a three.\nGYROS GIVE OUT\nSPORTSJHALLENGE\nBall Nine After Travelers;\nGolfers Wish to Meet\nRotarians\nA challenge to .he Associated Canadian Travellers fo a baseball game,\nand a challenge to the liotorians to\na golfing competition, were formally\nIssued last night at the weekly\nluncheon of the Nelson Oyro club.\nThe baseball challenge was Issued on\nbehalf of the cluh hy R. L. Buchanan,\nwhile Dr. is. Q. sbyth has the Oyro\ngolfers in band -\n ',\t\nNelson theatergoers last night saw\nperhaps one of the most enjoyable\nand well-produced comic operas ever\nstaged ln the city when the Trail\nMusical society produced \"A \"Runaway nirl,\" a comic opera by Lionel\nMonckton and Ivan Caryll, and produced under the direction of Mr, and\nMrs. B. P. Tregonlng of Trail. A\nriot of gay color, excellent singing\nboth In the choruses and the solo\nnumbers, and dainty dancing, together\nwith comedy put over in fine style,\nmade the production exceptional, and\nthe crowd which Jammed the opera\nhouse to the doors went home well\npleased.\n\"Winnifred Oray, on orphan, played\nhy Mildred Garner, Is the ward of\nLord and Lady Cnodle. Hhe left her\nschool to go wandering with a hand\nof Italian singers. Guy Stanley, Lrf\u00bbrd\nCoodle's nephew, is \"betrothed to the\ngirl, although he hns never seen her.\nThe girl leaves school, and Guy goes\non a trip to Italy. He fa'lt In love\nwith a singing girl, who turns out\nto he Winnifred, and needless to say\neverything ends well in Venice.\nLeading Lsdy Good\nMildred Garner, as the leading lady.\nput over her pnrt in an excellent\nmanner, and deserves much credit, a?\nshe was acting in the role of substitute, Mrs. Thompson, who was to\nplay that part, having taken sick.\nGuy Stanley wns ncted by H. B.\nFuller, who needed no Introduction to\nNelson audiences nfter the \"Country\nGirl\",production of last year.\nFlipper, a Jockey, and courier to the\nCoodles, was the comedian and was\nthe life of the whole play, hts difficult part being put over with the\nease of a professional by H. A.\nMcLaren. He was ably assisted by\nAlice, Lady Coodle's maid, played by\nMarion Beckwith. Ronald Kcclee,\nas Brother Tamarind, and Mrs. R.\nW. Watson, as Carmenlta, presented\nsome Interesting and funny scenes.\nThe final act was a bla_e of color\nand lights, and ended in a gay carnival scene. This part of the program wns an outstanding one, and I\nthe gay dances In costumes of various |\nhues, nnd amid showers of confetti\nand streamers, made a great hit,\nChorirtea Beautifully Done\nThe choruses throughout were beautifully sung, \"The Convent Bell,\"\nthe finale, \"To Venice\" and \"The\nCarnival Chorus\" being outstanding\nnumbers.\nMildred Garner, (is Winnifred, contributed several songs, including \"The\nSlv Cigarette,'* \"The Singing Girl\"\nand \"The Boy Guessed Right\" Mrs.\nR. W. Watson, In the final net, with\nher \"I Love Society\" snlo, made a\ndecided hit nnd had to sing several\nencores.\nDuring the evening several of the\nplayers received bouquets of beautiful flowers, and Tim Wheat ley. playing the part of rffon. Bobby Barclay,\nreceived a unique presentation\u2014thai\nof a cabbage hend, which was labelled\nOyro.\" Mr. Wheatley was a former\nGyro in this city. Several othor Nel-\nsonites appeared In the cast, including\nMiss Freda Hunter, Miss Florence\nRutledge, Miss Don Cairns, Aubrey\nPhillips   and   Walter   Brodie.\nFollowing the production, the play-\nprs. who came to the city on a special\ntruin, were the guests of Ihe Nelson\nOperatic society :it a short social In\nthe   Memorial   hull.\nMany   in   Cast\nThe following players  were in th\ncast:\nDramatis  Persons*\nBrother Tainnrlnd. a lay brother nf\nSt. Pierre. Ronald Reelea, Guy Stanley.\nLord Coodle's nephew, M. B. Fuller:\nLord Coodle, C. W. GuUlaume. Blgnor\nPiiloni. consul nl rorslcn, J. H. Owen:\nRon. Bobby Barclay. Tim wheatley:\nMr. Creel, an entomologist. H. H. Allen:\ntliee musicians of .a wandering trmipe\nSanta Crua (E. J. Fowler), Mike\nIiiiha (A. G. Harvey). Dolorosa (A. C\nClarke); Pietro. bond of th.\u00bb troupe, W\nBrodie; gendarme, James Atwoll:\nsecond gendarme. Frank A. Forward;\n,\\:.itor nt lintel AJaeelo, II. W. Hank-\nIn. Flipper, a .'oikey, II. A. McLaren*\nAiire, Lady Coodle's maid. Marjorle\nbeckwith; Dorothy Stanley. May Thomson; Carmenlin. a street musician, Mrs\nil. W. Watson; Lady Cnodle, Dorothy\nDinkey; Miss Willi el in Ina, a , Cook's\ntourist. Mrs. T. II. Ollls; Mrs. Creel\nMrs. J. H. Owen; Winnifred Grey, an\norphan, Mildred Garner.\nChora.\nMrs. O. Bergeron, Mrs. C. H, Bur-\npiss, Maud Docker ill. Dora Rlllson\nHelen Hail. Erica Johnson, France*.\nButoroc, Marguerite Curtis, Don\nOnirns, Doris Emnley, Freda Hunter\nSarah Logan, Louise Merry, Mary\nMills, Anne Munro. Mrs. W. C. Murray, Jean McCalluin, Pearl McDermott,\nMrs. P. Mclntyre. Dorothy McKay\nIsabel McKay. Mrs. J. W, McKay\n.It an McKinnon. EUfabeth Newman,\nMrs. F. H. Owen, Edith Rie.sherry.\nFlorence Rutledge, Ireo* Wilson; J\nli. Anderson, J. Bond, Walter Brown\nC II. Burgess. Oliver Covington, W.\nJ Evans, Jaime** Kwing, Norman Foggo, Lionel Mnddlsun, F. II. Owen, A\nPhillips. S. M lie\u2122, Jack Walker, Bert\nWeldon. R. V. Venahles, William Ter-\nnan,   James   Stewart. <   \u25a0\nOrchestra\nPinnlst nnd director, Mrs. E. F. Tre*\ngonlng; solo violin, T. Wllnon; first\nviolin, F. Brey; second violins, R.\nOrlffln nnd P. I Woe; flute, Max Rel-\niiiann; cornet. B. Fnrteath; horn, J-\nIsnnduccf; 'cello, T. Meachem; saxophone, A. Larson; trombone, JO. For-\nteath; timpani, T. A. Mills. \u25a0, \u25a0\nGYROS MEET\nFAIMOARD\nExpect to Again Run Midway; Club Authorizes the\nAction\nThere Is every*Indlcatlon that the\nNelson Gyro cluh will this year again\nhandle the midway at the fall fair.\nAt Inst night's* business meeting of\nthe club the board of directors were\n\u00bbuthorl..ed to cuter Into negotiations\nwith the fall fair botird. The directors wero mdcred to close the matter\nas soon  us possible.\nBirthdays were celebrated during\nthe week by J. Annahle and J. B.\nJruy. and emit had a, 'birthday Cake\n'or  lhe   occasion.  \u2022\nADO A  SPECIAL  TROTERS' RACE\nKALAMAZOO, Mich., May 4. -\nA spec ta I ra oe for 2:02 trotters,\npurse value $3000, hus been added to\ntha early closing events for the\nKalamazoo grand circuit meeting,\niuly 20-24. his brings the total\namount offered In the special classes\nup to $27,000, lh addition to $25,000\nAmerican derby for 2:08 poeers.\nWe Will\nRepair\nYour Car\nSo That It Will Stay\nRepairtd   .\nWe hnve a mechanical staff\nwhich Is unsurpassed in the\ndistrict, nnd it is our honest\nendeavor to turn out the class\nof work that will create for us\na   permanent   clientele.\nIt doesn't mat ier the. make\nof car\u2014'bring it to our garage\nand you enn he n hah red of satisfaction.\nAGENTS\nDodge and\nNash Cars\n1\nTran Anklet Are\nBusiness Asset\nT3 USINKSS msh. \u00ab__\u2022* tu\n\u2022*-*  the valns oC,\u00bb iood\npearance.     Trim.   n\u00abtly   i\nankles are an important par\nthat   well-groomed look  '\nbusiness    men ' like    to\nHoleproof ' socks    can : pt\nthem.      And    Holeproof\nwear   longer   than   most '\nsocks.   They are as econc\nns  they  are  good-looking-.\nPure\" Thread  Silk,   . (t'i  (\nper pair tpXsV\nir _*\u25a0*\u2022\na ti'1*1'.\"1   *\u25a0\n II I\nLadies' Suite\nCleaned or Dyed\nIL K. FOOT\nHigh-Clsss   Oyer   snd   Clssnsr\n!  FAIRVIEW  \u2022  NELSON, f.0.\nSteam Carpet\nCleaning\nThe only sanitary waf,. la\" per\nsiiuij-s foot.   Also Dyeing and\nCleaning..    . \u2022 i\nSatisfsetlon -Ouararittttf.\n.phons a**,;,;...5\nNelson Steam Laundry\nVERNON  STREET (Corfisf af\nJo..phins  SirtsU\n*\nGsorgs   W.   Pssse,   Mansger-\nOpp. Pojt Offics       Nslson, B.C.\nPHONE   65\nNOTICE\nPhone or\nbring your card\nto us, we will\ntell you how to\nget the famous\nBlue Ribbon\nCook Book free\nof cost '\nWe sell and recommend Blue\nRibbon Goods.\nElectrical & Mechanical j\nSupplies\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nElectrics!  -   Mechanical\nMasonie  Ilk. Bsksr Street\n\"\\\u2014 \u25a0\u2022 \u2022m-m-'fm-.mm'\n7 Can't Stand It;\nLove pad Kisses'\non Hanging Body\nTOJIOKTO, Ksy s\u2014\"Dmi IU, I\ncaasot stand tt aay koafw. Ta*\nsn worrrlar ins ta death. SMee\naad klta.i.\"\nThis Bote was found mi tke body\net John Thomas \u2014cOnlrs, sf.d\naboat 40(7MTs, who haagsd himself front a tu. la Klvsrdals park\nhere this  -furaooa.\n_____\nThe Kn,-ha  llntal  cost fs a  fsvorlte.\nDanclns frocks of the old-fa.hlon.d\nreal laces'are having a dlstlact revival\nIn Parle.   '\u2022\n11\t\nJust buy 1 lb. of Blue Ribbon\nTea and 1 * tin B'.ue Ribbon\nBaking Powder, nnd the Cook\nBook Is yours.\nTou get a full I6-02. tin of\nBaking Powder for 35^. Q-(ll*\\\nIty  absolutely  guaranteed.\nSpecial\n\u25a0 3-lb.  tin.  usual  11.00.    While\nths sale Is on,\nfor\t\n85c\n, Fresh Cabbage, Head Let*\ntuee. Radishes, G^een Oniont,\nTomatoes and Cucumber* ar*\nriving in leed car today.\nIdeal\nGrocery\nPHONE 265\n11\nI\nI\nI\nI\ni\ni\n$40.00 ->\u00b0 $45.00      j,\nTRY  US  FMStl\nThis Is Your Store\ni Spring Suits\nI      For   real   economy   let   you*\nnew   suit   he   a   hand-tailored\none.    It   will   last   lower- and\/\nI   give better satisfaction.'\nTonight, 7'and 9\nBert Lytell\n\u25a0':t:-7km''V\\-\n'Bom \u00abjf&'\n**mm***m*m-m4)ee-*tm+\/*l*+\nTOMORROW a.4;\nI    -THEBi^LE^\nr \" r ' r \u2022 f    \u2022 iii\n\t\n_J_\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_1925_05_05","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\/1.0402180","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":"1925-05-05 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":"1925-05-05 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":""}]}