{"@context":{"@language":"en","AIPUUID":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AIPUUID":[{"@value":"6d467b96-14e8-4124-a260-61ce94e9d217","@language":"en"}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2019-12-04","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1915-04-19","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0386405\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" DAILY Nl\nCLASSIFIED   ADVERTI'-ENIENTS\n. Ars An Effective Selling Fores\n-*\u25a0*:\n345\nTHE  DAILY  NEWS\nCovers Every  Fsrt sf ths Kootanay\nand  Boundary District\n]\nVOL. 14   No. 2\nNELSON, B. 0., MONDAY MORNING, APRIL 19, 1915\n50c. PER MONTH\nFRENCH UNDERMINE FOE;\nONLY CAPTIVES SURVIVE\n^Germans  Caught by S.ur;\nprise, Lose Redoubt\nALUES OFFENSIVE\nHOVE DEVELOPING\n; Prussians on Aisne Cut Up\nby Bayonet Charge-\nBritish Attack\n*     (By Dally Newa Leased Wire.)\nPAIRIS, April 18, 11.20 p. m.\u2014A\ncharge hy u. regiment of Pronch Infantry over a stretch of strongly fortified trench, 'which resulted, iii a\ngain of 1O0O yards at Bnls .Inune\nBrules, near Mesuil-et-Hurlus, is described hy nn eye-witness in ail official statement issued today by the\nwar offico. The French attack was\nprepared by sappers, who dug into the\nfirst, linn of trenches and, annihilated\nthe occupants with hand grenades.\nThe men who survived: wero made\nprisoners.\n\"The Germans, surprised, were nn-\nliblo to defend their front,\" says the\neyewitness, \"and the French advance\nguard was Installed in the first line.\nA general attack followed immediately. The fighting was hand to hand\nI and few shots were fired. Tho Germans scarcely wero able to utilize\ntheir hand grenades and worn obliged\nto rotlre precipitately.\nPrussians Mowed Down\n\"Pursuing their advantage, tho\nIVeniih liifan*xy> captured a strong\nredoubt, in the centre of the woods.\nThey then pushed out. tn the right to\nbroaden the front, captured.\n'The third regiment, of the Prussian\nguards offered a stuborn resistance,\ntrying to deceive the French hy send-\nlnU forward troops dressed in the\nDvjtioue.?. .(.woolen cloaksi) of Itor-\nrpcean riflemen taken from the dead.\nTW'.s 'raise, was iUscoveredl sifter 'a\nbrief Interval. Machine guns which\nwero brought up mowed, down line nf-\n\u00abler line of the advancing Prussians\nuntil the ground' was strewn, with\nhe ties. More than a I bird of the soldiers of this regiment, of the. guard\nWere killed. The French losses were\n300 killed, including several officers.\"\nBritish Blew Up Trenches\nBERLIN, Anrll 18, via 'London. \u2014\nTho statement issued today by army\nheadquarters is as follows :\n''In the western theatre the English, after having caused several explosions Iby means of mines, penetrated last night Into our positions in the\nhills close to the northern bank of\ntlie .canal southeasti of Ypres, but\nwere repulsed again immediately by a\ncounter attack. The fishtlng continues.\nIn tho Champagne the French\nblew up a trench next to a position\nwe captured the day beforo yesterday\nbut without gaining any advantage.\n\"Between the Meuse and the Moselle\nthere hnve been only artillery battles.\nIn the Vosges wo took possession\nof an advance position situated on\nn ridgo of the hllIs,soutbwest. ot Stoss-\nwelre.\n\"Southwest of Metzeral our advance\nposts wero withdrawn toward their\npolnt of support before a superior of\nthe enemy.\"\nFrench Bayonets Inflict Losses\nPARIS, April 18, via London.\u2014The\n^following official statement, was Ib-\nsued tonight by the French war office:\nThe day waB relatively calm, being\nnarked mainly by artillery actions\nand local infantry engagements. In\nthe valley of the Atsne, at tho Bote\nde St. Mord, the enemy attacked our\ntrenches at. the close of tbe afternoon,\nbut wns promptly stopped by our artillery while a .bayonet change Inflicted severe losses on the Germans.\nIn Champagne, west ot Perthes,\n(toe Germans were compelled to evacuate nn excavation which they had\nrtoeen ocoupylng close to our lines. By\nithe explosion of mines, followed by an\n\"jttack we captured. (10 metres ot tbe\nenemy's trenches.\n\/\"In the iWoervre. thero was only\nu'Vinnonadlug.\nGermans Retreat In Lorraine\n\"In Lorraine tho Germans retreated\n\u00aeptp\/PQrW4$4>S&P\u00aeP4*P-P*\"S<v'*P\u00ae&P\nGERMANY HAS LOST\nSAYS HERR BALL IN\n(By Dally Nows Leased Wire.)\nPARIS'. April 18.-Ln Matin\ntoday says It Is in a position to\nstale that llerr Bailing president\nof the Hamburg-American line,\nand president of tlie Deutsob\nbank, declared a few days ago\nthat the war was lost for Germany. Le Matin assorts that ono\no\u00a3 those commercial kings said\n\"Tho battle is lost and the German people know nothing of it.\"\nINVALIDED TROOPS\nRETURN TO CANADA\nHundred and Four Reach Halifax on\nMlssanatale Which Was Chased\nby Submarine\n(Ry Daily News Leased Wire.)\n'HALIFAX. N. S., April 18.\u2014One\nhundred and four invalided soldiers of^\nthe first contingent, eight of whom\nhave been in tho trenches and were\nwounded, returned here by the Canadian Pacific railway steamer Mlssan-\nable. whicli docked yesterday. Seven\nof them belonged to tlie Princess Patricias.\nPte. Laurie of Toronto lost, the sight\nof one eye as a result of a fragment\nof shell striking him. Pte. B. W.\nWatts of Hamilton was In the trenches three months. Privates King and\nHenry of Toronto, Pte. Davis ot Ed-\nmonlon and G. IL Cunningham ot\nToronto, who suffered from rheumatism and frost bites, are among tho\nreturned. The othetra are returned\nbecauso of illness or as unfit for service.\nThe Missanabio was chased by a\nsubmarine when one day out. from\n.Liverpool, but. managed to outdistance\nIt. Oft the north const ot Ireland the\nGerman was sighted, only a quarter\not a mile off. The engines of the liner\nwere put full steam ahead, and a contest between tho ship and the submarine began. The latter tried to get\nthe Jllssanable into a position where\nsho could torpedo her, but the liner's\nspeed was too great, and she was\ndeftly maneuvered.\nCANADIANS ARE\nGIVEN HIGH PiRAISE\n\u25a0LONDON, April IS.\u2014From\nBritish headquarters in France\n\u2014\"The Canadians may hayo\n.been full of boyish spirits when\nthey landed In England but thoy\nhave been good in trenches,\"\nsaid an officer commenting on\ntho report thnt Canadians have\nheen lacking in discipline\nThey have buckled down llko\nBritish soldiers and their conduct has not only been without\nreproach, but deserving tbe very\nhighest praise.\"\nThis is the first official statement of a staff officer in tho\nfield relative to a much discussed question.\nAMERICAN MARATHON WILL\nOPEN AT BOSTON TODAY\n(By Dally Nows Leased Wire.)\nBOSTON, Mass., April 18.\u2014Runnera\nfrom nine states and two Canadian\nprovinces will compote tomorrow ln the\nAmerican marathon over tho i!G miles\nof roads between Ashland and Boston.\nWhile the field of 7r, entrants is the\nsmallest within recent years, it Includes many entrants of high grade\nwho aro expected to make the strngslb\nfor leadership a keen one. to the finish.\nCanadian runners aro prominent\namong the favorites. Among them are\nEduard Fnrbcr of Montreal, who finished second in last year's race; Arthur Jamieaon of Hamilton, Ont, an\nIndian, who won tlie annual Hamilton\nroad race last, fall; and Wnlter J. Bell\nof Monti eal, winner of fourth prize in\nlast year's event.\nln the environs of the forest of Par-\nroy and made several mhior attacks\nwith weak effectives, particularly\nnear Mouracourt, 'Embergenll aud St\nMartin, 'but were easily repulsed.\n\"ln Alsace the Germans thrice attacked, but without, success, our\ntrenches on Little Relchackerkopf.\nWe on our part made fresh progress\nin the region of Cehepfne-Reltskopf.\n\"One of our aeroplanes, after a\nbrilliant, pursuit, brought, down a German aeroplane, wliich foil within the\nenemy's jintes .iuj Belgium between\nLaugemarck and Passucheudaelo.\"\nOffensive  Is Developing\nAll the allied offensive on the western front, is developing, according to\nthe military authorities here. The offensive movement, it. is stated, has\nbeen ini progress for several weeks\nat strategic pointB from the sea to the\nAlps with successes In Champagne,\nat Les Eparges, Neuve Chapelle,\nNotre Dame de Lorette. La Bolsselle,\nDixmude, Hartmannsweiler and South\nof Metz, and1 in Alsace.\nHard righting*1 was iu progress Friday and again Saturday in northeastern France, aud this way the pressure Is gradually being increased.\nTho pressure may simply grow in Intensity without a \"grand offensive1' on\nsomo fixed date.\nGeneral Galieul, the military governor of Paris, reviewed the Belgian\ntroops at Longchamps on Saturday.\nThese Included an Important machine\ngun section which has been training\naround Paris for the last few months\nand is now ready for action.\nRepulse Teutan Attack\nThe following official statement, was\nIssued by the war affico this afternoon: -\n\"In the Vosges a, German attack,\nprc.pi.~ni for by a violent bombardment and carried out by a battalion\nagainst, our position northwest, ot\nUrbels (Alsace) 14 miles northwest\nof Colmar, was repulsed. Tho Germans left many dead in front of our\ntrenches and we mado about i0 prisoners.'\n\"A Belgian aeroplane brought down\na Germau aeroplane near Roulllera.\nIn the same region our small squadrons successfully' bombarded an aviation ground.\"\nAUSTRIA CALLS OUT\nITS  UNTRAINED LANDSTURM\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nVIENNA,  April   IS.\u2014Tho   following\nstatement was issued by (be war office\nSaturday:\n\"Owing to tlie possibility that the\nwar may last a long time and in order\nto secure necessary reserves* the un\ntrained iandsttirm men between Ihe\nages of 18 and CO will hereafter be\nliable for military service.\"\nRUSSIANS TELL\nOFJ\nSet Out to Gain Carpathians\nBefore Spring\nENEMY\nFO\nN STRENGTH\nTFERCEIV\nPositions in 75-Mile Mountain Front Are Now\nAll Held Secure\nIS BEING SENT OUT\nBRITAIN TO RULE ISLAM\nFROM EGYPT TO INDIA\n(By Dally News Leasod Wire.)\nROME, April 18.\u2014Tho Sunday Mos-\nsager publishes today a long inter-\nMew hold in Petrograd by Ita correspondent with Prof. Paul N. Mllukoff,\nloader of tho Constitutionalist Democratic party in tho Russian diinia. Prof.\n.Mllukoff said Russia was ready to\nfight for ono or two years if necessary.\nTho momentary success of tho Germans did not disturb Russia's patlenco\n4s tha people know this was a war or\nresistance and wearing down nnd thnt\ntome wns tho best ally of Russia.\nTho Russian program Prof Mllkuoff\ncontinued, was liberty In tho Black\ntea, with the possession of tho straits\nleadln gfrom P. evidently imploying\nthat Russia purposed to occupy Constantinople in the ovent of thn success\nft tho allies. A written agreement In\ntela tifW, Pot, Jdlluholf said, a'-eady.\nhad been concluded botweon Great\nBritain, Franco and Russia,\nHo was not sure whether this agreement included the islands of Tenedos\nand Imbros, which, according to tho\nconferenco of London in 1913, it was\ndecided should belong to tho power\nIn possession of tho straits,\nM. Mllukoff sold the many interests\nconcerned in Constantinople would be\nprotected by Russia. An international\ncommission would solve tho quostlon\nof tho Ottoman debt. Commorce ln\ntho straits would bo guaranteed oven\nduring wnr. The six vilayets comprising Armenia would become autonomous under Russia. Somo persons\nwere advocating that Gllioia, the ancient division of Asia Minor bordering\non tho Mediterranean and now belonging to tho Turkish vilayet of Adcnla\nbe added to Armenia, thus giving Ar-\n(.Coutlnued. on Page Four.).\nMembers Got Lot of it Together Be.\nfore Franking Privilege Expired\nLast Week\n(By Dally Nows Leased Wire.)\nOTTAWA, April IS.\u2014Thore arc\nstrong indications of an enrly election\naround tbo postoffice. Bags upon bags\nof campaign literature, mailed before\nthe franking privilege of parliament\nexpired, are idled up in the basement\nand every nook and corner waiting to\nbo sorted when the mail clerks get a\nlittle leisure.\nTho now war ntanp L.ws havo provided a lot. of extra work for tho employees of that, department and for tho\ntho hint two days tho campaiiri^matter\nhas received littlo attention. However, every spare, intouto at the disposal of the eiorka asldo from their\nregular duties Is being directed to\ngetting election \"dope\" off their\nhands.\nNAVIGATION FROM PORT\nARTHUR OPENS EARLY\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nPORT AUTHOR, Out, April IS\u2014Navigation out of Port Arthur opened this\nafternoon when tho Beaverton, Donna-\ncona and Empress of Midland left for\nthe Soo with pulpwood. Last year the\nfirst boat departed on Aprit 20. The\nfirst passenger boat, the Hurnnle, is\nexpected from Sarnla Friday.\nA HALF\nDECLARED FOR TODAY\nArbor  Day  To  Be  Observed\u2014Annual\nClean* Up to Be Thorough\u2014\nBeautify Nelson\nA hull*-holiday has been declared by\nMayor Malone, commencing' at 12\no'clock today. This ia part of the Arbor day campaign. In his declaration\ntlie mayor state** lhat citizens are asked io take advantage of the holiday to\nclean up their premises and assist in\nbeautifying Nelson.\nSeven teams and 3ft men will be sent\nout hy the city In tho morning to collect rubbish left on streets or in alleys\nfor collection. Rubbish that can bo\nburned will not bo collected free of\ncharge. Until tomorrow night rubbish\nmay be burned without a permit from\nthe flro chief. Great; care should be\ntaken to prevent tho fires spreading.\nPart of tho. campaign to beautify\nNelson is provision of shado trees by\nthe city. Those may bo secured at the\ncity hall and will be delivered today.\nTho trees include ehesnuts nnd hard,\nsofe and Manitoba maple. They are\nfrom tho city cemetery.\nAUSTRIAN-ITALIAN\nSOLDIERS FIGHT\n<S> (By Daily News Leased Wiro.)\n<$      LONDON,   April    IS.\u2014It   iH\nS> again said that tho German ef-\n<\u00a7> forts to bring about an agreo-\n<S> ment betwoen Austria and Italy\n*$\u25a0 havo failed, a report Which if\n*$> confirmed is llkoly to magnify\n<2> in the eyes.of tho Italians the\n*\u2022$> frontier incident which occurred\n\u2022\u00a7> yesterday. According to I lie lat-\n\u2022$> est roports, tho Austrlans, who\n\u00ae woro passing ovor Italinn terri-\n<8> tory, actually fired upon the It-\n<\u00a7> allnn troops, who repulsed them,\n<\u00a7> and in return penetrated into\n<$*\u25a0 Austrian torritory,\n<3>\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nPETROGRAD, April 18, via London.\nApril 19.\u2014Tho following official communication concerning Ihe progress of\ntho war waa issued lonight:\n\"At tlie beginning of March in tlie\nprincipal chain of the Carpathians we\nhold only tho head of the Dukla pass,\nwhere our lines formed an exterior\nangle. Above, tho pass of Lupkow and\nfurther east were in (he hands of tlie\nenemy.\n\"In view of this situation our armies\nwere assigned the firther task of developing, before tho .season ot bad\nroads due to melting snow? began, our\nposition in Uio Carpathians whicli\ndominated tho outlets into the Hungarian n'ans.\n\"About tho period indicated, tho\ngreat Austrian forces wliich had been\nconcentrated for tbe purpose! or relieving Przemysl wor-3 in a position between Lupkow and Uzsok passes. It\nwas for this sector that our grand attack was planned. Our troops hai1 to\ncarry out a front attack under difficult conditions of terrain. To facilitate their attack, therefore, an auxiliary attack was decided upon on n. front\nin the direction of Biirtfoldl nn far as\nLupkow.\n\"This secondary attack opened\nMarch !9 and was completely develop\nod. On March 1*2 and 23 our troops\nhad already begun their principal attack In tho directions of Bollgorid, enveloping the enemy's positions from\ntho west to Lupjtow pass nnd on the\neast of the souidrp of iho San.\nRussians Fulfil Their Task\n\"The enemy offered a deaperiHo offensive. They hod brought, up every\navailable man on the front from the\ndiroctlon of Bnrtfeldt ;is far as Uzsok\npass, including even German tronpn\nand numbers of cavalrymen fighting\non foot. The enemy's effectives at llils\npoint exceeded 300 battalions (an Austrian ordinary battalion numbers 1,000\nmen). Moreover, our troops bad !\u2022\u25a0\nover me grout natural difficulties &.t\nevery step.\n\"Nevertheless, by April 5\u2014that is IS\ndays after tho opening of our offensive^\u2014the bravery oC our troops en-\nbled us to complete the task nsslt.\"*-'d\nthem and we Mad seized the principal\nchain of the Carpathians on a front\nbetween Reglistov and Votosato, or 110\nversts (about 7.ri miles):\n\"Tlie fighting subsequently has been\nIn tho nature of ncllonn in detail, intended to consolidate tho successes\nwo won.\n\"To rum up: On the Carpathian\nfront, the enemy has suffered enormous losses and has 1-ft in our hands in\nprisoners alone at least 70,000, including about flOO officers. Further we\nhave captured 30 guns and 200 machine guns.\nDelivers Desperate Attacks Vainly\n\"On April 16 the notions ln the Carpathians wero concentrated iu the\ndirection of Rostiki. Tho enemy, despite the enormous losses suffered, delivered in tho ccurse of that day no\nless than 16 attacks in great strength\nThese attacks, all of which wero nbso-\nlutely void of rosults, were made\nagainst tho hoights we have occupied\nfurther to tho east of Telopotch.\n\"Our troops, during tho night of\nApril 1G-17, after a desperate fight,\nstormed and captured a height to the\nsoutheast of the village of Poden,\nwhero wo took many prisoners. Thre=\ncounter-attacks delivered by the enei\"S\n\u00ab.> NO NAVAL ACTION                    $\nQ> SAYS CHURCHILL   <?.\n\u00ab3> (By Dally New,? Leased Wire.)   <S>\n<S> LONDON, April 18.\u2014Winston   \u00ae\n<\u2022> Spencer Churchill, first lord of\n<?> tho  admiralty,  has issued thn\n<$> following denial of recent ru-   <$>\n<$> mors:                                           <?>\n<g\u00bb *'?Thero has been no naval ac-\n<$> tion of any kind in tho North   <\u2022>\n<i> sea during tho past month, nor   4\n<r> any action of any kind In the   <i\n<\u2022> Dardanelles   other   than   local   <\u2022>\n<$ bombardments and reconnnais-\n\u25a0?> ancea by siitgio ships.\n<$> Since March IS only two or\n<\u00a7> threo men have been hit in tlie\n<3> Dardanelles and there lias been   <S>\n<$> no loss or injury to French or   <\u00a3>\n<$> British ships.\"                               ^\nBRITISH DESTROY TURK\nLOSE PL\nGERMANY OBJECTS TO\nATTACKS BY  MERCHANTMEN\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nBERLIN, April 18.~Referring to tlie\nappointment of the captain of the Brit\nsh steamer Thordis as a lieutenant of\ntho naval reserve and the awardng of\na medal to him for ramming a Ger\nman submarine, an official statement\nissued today soys:\n\"It is thereby shown that the Brit\nlsh government approves of rewards to\nits commercial vessels which make at\ntacks on armed vessels, contrary to International law. Such vessels may\nexpect less than ever warning or con\nsi deration.\"\nBOILER EXPLOSION  IN\nONTARIO KIL-S TWO\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nHUNTSVILLE, Ont., April IS.\u2014\nGeorge and William Field were killed\nby an explosion of a boiler in their\nsawmill yesterday. Cieorgo was unmarried, hut William leaves a wife and\nseveral j.mall children.\nGAS POCKET EXPLODES\nTHREE MINERS KIL-ED\n(By Dailv News Leased Wiro.)\nRODERF1ELD,  W.  Va.,  April   IS.-\nThreo men were killed In a mine of the\nDavy Pocohontus Coal company, near\nhere, yesterday morning when a. poekot\nof gas was exploded by a shot.\nITALY CAN M\nBY HELPING ALLIES\nRussia Will Aid Her io Realize Ideals\nBut She Must Act\n.it Once\n(iBy Daily News Leased Wire.)\nROME. April 1$.\u2014Russia will give\nhor complete support lo the realization of Italian Ideals, provided Italy\nIntervenes at once on the side of the\nnllies, according to a statement from\ntho Russian minister of foreign affairs, li, Snzanotf, made public hero\ntonight.\nThe novelist Amphithratoff also\nmade public a telegram from the\nGrand Duke Nicholas, commander ,n\nchief of the Russian army. Tho\nGrand Duke wired lhat. participation\nin tho war was the only course Italy\ncould pursue to insure the realization\n->! her Ideals.\nFORMER SECRETARY AT\nRIDEAU HALL WOUNDED\n(Canadian Associated Press.)\nLONDON, April IS.\u2014The wounding\nof Brlg.-Qen. P. S. Maude, C.B., C.M.G.,\nD.S.O., who wns military secretary to\nthe governor general of Canada In 190-1,\nis reported In the casualty list Issued\ntonight from the headquarters of the\nexpeditionary force. The Hat shows\n10 officors killed, one dead of wounds\nand 16 wounded.\n(Continued on rage Four.)\n<p&pPQ4>\u00aep<p<PQ>p$>p*}\"PPP444'P\u00ae$<Pp\n<\u2022>\n\u20228>\n<i> SUGGEST HOLT\n\u00ab\u25a0 TO BUY SUPPLIE3\n<5> \t\n\u00ab> (By Dally News Leased Wire.) *\n\u00ab>       OTTAWA, April IS.\u2014All ap '\n<5> pointmont    may    bo   expected <?>\n'P soon to the, position of com- Q\n<P mlssioner   to   supervise   army <P\n<S> purchases ill Canada.   Sir Her- <$\u2022\n<!> bert Holt, president of tbe Roy- <\u2022>\n<\u00bb> nl Bank of Canada, and C. A. <p\n<P Magratb, chairman of tho in- <?>\n<P tornatlonal waterways comnils- <\u25a0-\u25a0\n<\u2022> alon, nro now mentioned In con- \u2022P\n\u2022P ncction with tho position.    It *\n'P Is posslblo that instead of ono <p\n<P a. commission of throo will bo \u25a0?>\n<S> appointed. *\n<P   M'BRIDE NOT ILL:\n\u00ab> TO VI8IT TROOPS\n<P   (By Dally Nows Leased Wiro.)\n\u2022P       LONDON, April IS\u2014Sir Rlch-\n'P   ard McHride, who Is busy .hero\n'P   with provincial 'business, hopes\nalso to spond some timo with\ntho troops of British Columbia\nnow at Shorncllffe.   Sir Richard says that tbo story that ho\nwas in lias caused him considerable nrinoynnco.\nPEOPLE OF SMYRNA\nEXPECT ATTACK\nFlee   in   Anticipation   of   Landing  by\nAllied  Flest\u2014Brigands Guilty\nof Outrages\n(By Dally News Leasod Wire.)\nLONDON, April 18,\u2014A Salonika correspondent of the Dally Mall states\nthat, all civil inhabitants of Smyrna\nhave left for tho interior, in expectation of the allied fleet landing a force\nthere.\nTiio garrison, however, remains end\npreparations for 'd-jfenso are helng\nrushed.\nSVRACUSK, via I'arls, April IS.\u2014\nTravelers arriving here from Asia\nMinor say that tho situation in Smyrna\nis terrible. They say that bands of\nMusselmnn brigands aro cr.mmiUng all\nkinds of ntitrageH, piihiglng, burning\nproperty, hilling and taking hoslnge?.\nThe 'people bringing this report state\ntho lOuropeans in Smyrna urgently ask\nthe assistance of the United States\ncruiser Tennessee, now lu eastern\nwalors, or any other aid the United\nStates can Rive.\nSPORT\nSTRIKE TIES UP <3>\n$30,000,000 WORK <v\n  <\u00a7>\nCHICAGO,   111.,   April   18.\u2014 <S>\nTho lockout of 11,000 union car- \u00ae\npenters  assumed   serious   pro- <$\u2022\nportions today, tying up opera- <$>\ntlons valued at more than $30,- %\n000,000   on   4000   buildings   in\nChicago and throwing   out   of\nemployment 12h,000 men, thou- \u00abS>\nsands of whom had no connnoc- <\u00a7>\ntlon with the building industry <$\u25a0\nItself.   Neither side, it was said, <\u00a7>\nwas willing at this time to make\nconcessions.\nESBA\nWITH R\nIE\nESULT\nConditions  Generally  Quiet.  Although\nSnipers Are Busy\u2014Fatal to Show\nHead Above Trench\n(By Dally News Leased Wire,)\nLONDON, April 18.\u2014The Daily Express correspondent, writing of ircch\nlife says:\nWith iho coming ot clearer weather\nthero has been a marked increase in\nthe number of aeroplane roeonnais-\nances on both sides.\nThe cloudless atmosphere is just\nwhat Iho observcis want. Half\ndozen aircraft manciver^d over Ypres\nall Saturday afternoon. Tbe majority\nwero British, attempting to bring down\na German flier who wa,s trying to sup\nport batteries at. the rear of tiie Brit\nish lines.\nAlthough the duels continued for\nhours, no mnchine on cither side was\nbrought down. Living amid the ruins,\nthe population of Ypres almost daily\nunder German shell fire seldom turned\nits eyes heavenward. So sated with\nwar are alt civilians that tlie aircraft\nwere unnoticed as they circled for vantage points.\nBroidly speaking, there has been no\nchange in the British front sinco Nouvo\nChapelle, trench warfare continuing\nalong tho whole lino with only a few\nartillery duels here and there daily.\nPress correspondents spr.idlng tiie\nday in the trenches at Plagotschee,\nless than 100 yards from the German\nline, found the contending armies comparatively inactive. The men aro secure behind ramparts of sand bags\nmerely doing somo sniping occasionally and now and then setting i'tose a\ntrench mortar.\nNothing  Seen Through  Periscope\nPeering through a periscope no sign\nof a living human being eould bo seen\nalong the German line, though now\nand then bullets whizzed from loopholes, cither singing close overhead or\nstriking the sandbags with a vigorous\nthud. No man dares show his head\nover tho top of the trenches. The danger was emphasized, when the correspondent, thrusting the periscope\nhigher than was necessary, drew a bullet which seemed almost to graze the\ninstrument. Nearby stood a young\nBritish officer calming firing through\na loophole at an opening In tlie rival\ntrench, aiming, loading and commenting on hits and misses much as might\na man at target practise.\nThis sort of thing has persisted for\nweeks nnd generally describes the condition throughout The monotony is\nrelieved only hy dashes such as happened at Neuve Chapelle.\nAt one point where tho trenches are\nless than 200 yards apart, tho correspondent saw throe British shells fall\nin the German lines, ono striking\nplumb in a trench and hurling debris\nI high in the air. The Germans lately\naro using less artillery than tho British, falling to reply even to persistont\nshelling except when from their numerous observation points are sighted\nmovements in the British linos.\n>!^<M^>^^>Vii-?\\\u00ab<?'\u00ab'44K\u00ab>S-^*4^HS^\n<j>\n<\u2022>\n<s>\nGERMANY BEGINS\n<S\u00bb\n<5>\nHUNT FOR RUBBER\n<5>\nLONDON, April 18.\u2014Tho Ex- \u00a7\nohango     Telegraph     company <S>\npublishes a despatch from Its *$\nI'orrespondent   In   Copenhagen, <$>\nwho says tho shortage of rub- <j*\nber In Germany is so acuto thnt \u2022$>\ntho government is arranging for Q>\nnext week a special campaign <?>\ntn collect rubber throughout the Q>\nempiro.   Not   a   single   thing <$>\nmado of rubber, ovon soothers <S>\nfor babies and discarded ovor- \u00ae\nshoes, will be overlooked by tho <&\nfleet of wagons which will pa- <$>\nrado   the\ntowns.\nstreets   of   German .**$>\nASKS  GOVERNMENT TO\nSEND UNEMPLOYED BACK\n(By Daily Nows Leased Wire )\nMOOSE JAW, Sask., April 18.\u2014A\npetition signed by 270 members of the\nlocal trades and labor council craves\nco-operation by tho federal government for assistance to the old country,\nwhere labor can be had for thom in\nabundance. The petition declares thc**a\nmen have spent tholr savings In support of themselves and families\nthrough a bad winter and further\nstates that failing a favorable response\nan appeal will be mado to tho Imperial\ngovernment for \"subjects\" stranded in\nCanada.\nSubmarine   (ioes   Ashore\nNear Dardanelles\nTI\nESCAPES\nCRAFT\nIndividual Ships Bombard\nFortresses Defending\n, Straits\n(By Daily News Loased Wire.)\nLONDON, April 18.\u2014The British, as\nan offset to their success in destroying\na Turkish torpedo-boat which attacked\nthe transport Manltou off Chios yesterday, lost tho submarine E-15, which,\nwhile carrying out a difficult recon-\nnaisance in the Dardanelles mine tteldj\nran ashore on Kophez point, tho crew\nbeing made prisoners. According to\ntho Turkish report seven of the crew\naro missing.\nIn Egypt, British airmen havo been\ndropping bombs on the Turkish encampment near tho border, while a\nFrench cruiser, the fire of which was\ndirected by a. seaplane, was throwing\nshells on the Turks near EI Arish,\nwhere tne army for tho invasion of\nEgypt has its headquarters.\nThese operations were undertaken\npresumably to harrass tho Turks, as\nthe Turks have not shown any appearance of attacking sinco the repulse along the canal\nReuters Athens correspondent says\ntho bombardment of the Dardanelles\nwas resumed Saturday. A Turkish\naeroplane also circled over Tenados\nand unsuccessfully dropped bombs In\ntho port and at several warships.\nAllied seaplanes pursued the Turkish\naircraft, which escaped.\nDrop Bombs on Turks\nCAIRO, via London, April IS.\u2014Tho\nfollowing official statement was issued\ntoday:\n\"On April 15 three aeroplanes mado\na flight from the canal to El Slrr, some\n25 miles sout h if El Arish, on tho Slnal\npenlii3ulor, dropping bombs, which\nwere effective. From 150 to 200 tents\nwero seen. The distance flown was\nmore than 170 miles.\n\"No other enemy troops wero seen\nthis side of El Slrr, ihough one or tw>\nsmall posts of about 20 men are known\nto  exist.\n\"On the same date a French cruiser\nbombarded a camp near El Arish, a\nseaplane directing the fire. A large\nnumber of troops wero seen. Enemy\nguns opened fire, both on the cruiser\nand seaplane. Neither was hit, however.\n\"On April 17 a French cruiser, again\nassisted by a staplane, bombarded the\nenemy's camp well to tho south of\nGhazzeh town, some 40 miles southwest of Jerusalem. Considerable damage was done.\"\nBritish Warships Attack\nCONSTANTINOPLE, April 17, via\nBerlin and London, April IS.\u2014The following Turkish official statement regarding recent operations at the Dardanelles  follows:\n\"On the afternoon of April 14 the\nEnglish battleship Majestic bombarded\nland position near Guba. Tepeh on\nSaros bay. The fire was returned and\nthe Majestic was fovcel to retire.\n\"On the following afternoon the Majestic attacked our advanced batteries, but was struck three times. The\nwarship retired and was replaced by\ntlie British battleship Swiftsure, whlcl:\ncontinued tho bombardment without\nresults.\n'On the n!ght3*of April 13 and IB\nenemy torpedo boats tried to penetrate\nthe Dardanelles; they were vastly repulsed.\nGerman aviators dropped bombs,\nwhich struck and exploded on the\nenemy ccal steamers.\n\"Main headquarters roports that yesterday an enemy hyiro-aeroplano was\ndamaged by Turkish fire and fe'l int*>\ntho sea. A second machine attempted\nto salvo it and was struck by our fire.\nAn English artnorod cruiser, which\ntowed away tlie damaged machine was\nstruck hy our shells. The cruiser, with\ntho hydroaeroplane, withdrew.\"\nBritain Loses Submarine\nCONSTANTINOPLE,   April   IS,   via\n(Continued on rago Four.)\nGERMAN DIVER SENDS\nGREEK SHIP TO BOTTOM\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nTUB HAGUE, April IS.\u2014The naval\ndepartmeu announces Ibut It has been\nInformed that, the Greek steamer Ellis\nPontes, which left Ymulden, Holland,\nfor Montevideo, Uruguay., has beon\ntorpedoed iu tho North sea. Ita crew\nof 21 with a Dutch pilot was rescued\nToy. the Northhlnder lightship. The\nmen will be brought to Holland. It waB\na 1,1024011 steamer,\nLONDON, April 18.\u2014The sinking of\nthe Greek steamer Ellis Pontos by a\nsubmarine off the Dutch coast Is likely to bring about some friction between the Greek and Gorman governments.\nLONDON. April 18.\u2014The crew of\nthe Greek steamer Ellis Pontos has\narrived at Flushing, according to a,\nReuters despatch. The captain, who\nwas badly wounded, was taken to a\nhospital aud stated tUat hla steauer\nwas torpedoed without -warning. Tho\ncrow, however, launched \"boats and\nescaped.\n\u00abODY OF MURDERED\nMAN FOUND IN CAR\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nWINNIPEG, Man., April 18.\u2014An unknown foreigner, aged about \u00a35, was\nkilled, probably murdered, in a Canadian Pacific railway box car at Oliver's\nsiding, three miles from Market, Man.\nTho body was found on Saturday by\ntrack walkers. Tho top of tho skull\nwus blown off and thero were wounds\nln tho body and chest. A shotgun was\nfound some dlstanco away. The\nclothes of the dead man had beon\nrifled. Some discarded wearing apparel found in the woods havo furnished tho police with a clue. Thero will\nbe an inquest Monday morning.\n PAGE TWO\nNEURALGIA SETTLED\nIN HER LUNGS\nNo Relief From The Pain Until\nShe Took \"Fruit-a-tives'1\nCaupbsxavxi.xx, Ont., May 5th. 1913,\n\"I cannot speak too highly of\n\"Fruit-a-tives\", For over thirty years,\nI have suffered from chronic Neuralgia\nand Constipation, experiencing-untold\nagony. The. Neuralgia settled in my\nlungs and I took bottles of medicine\n\u2022without relief. The doctor told me I\nwould not get better but \"Fruit-a-\ntives\" proved that the doctor was\n\"wrong by giving tne quick relief and\nfinally  and completely curing me.\n'' I would not have my present health\nif it were not for \"Fruit-a-tives\" aud\nI am gladof this opportunity of giving\nyou this letter about such a splendid\nremedy as \"Fruit-a-tives\".\nMRS. NATHAN DUNN.\n50c. a bos, 6 for $2.50, trial size, S5C\u00ab\nAt ul t dealers or sent on, receipt of price\nby FruiUa-tives limited, Ottawa,\nCfo Baity Jlttoa.\nMONDAY,  APRIL  19,   1916\nNews of Sport\nAFTERNOON NEWS\nSUMMARY\nGist of Despatches in  Day Telegraphic Service.\nLON'OOXi April IS.\u2014German air\nactivities over Enslunil continue. A\ntaube aeroplane flew over Selby,\nYorkshire, yesterday, hut tliti not drop\nany .bombs. Apparently it was engaged on scout duty.\n'PARIS, April IS.\u2014On\u00ab of the two\nZeppelins Germany gave to Austria\n(ell into Ihe Adriatic while maneuvering off Pola, according to despatches.\nEvery member of the crew perished.\nDID il CUP\nWill Keep Cup Until Beaten\u2014Vancouver, Westminster and Victoria\nWill Play for Trophy\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nVANCOUVER, B. C, April IS.\u2014At\nthe annunl meeting of tho Pacific Coast\nAmateur Lacrosse association on Saturday it was unanimously decided to\nsupport the Vancouver Athletic club,\nMann cup holders, In their defense of\nthe trophy. The cup will he retained\nuntil the Vancouver Athletic club is\nbeaten or Joe Lally \"takes it from thom\nby court proceedings.\nVancouver, Victoria and New Westminster clubs will compel.' for ihe\nchampionship again this season, Vancouver will open the Beaaon on .May 15\nnt New Westminster. M. Oppenheimer\nof Vancouver war elected presidenl\nand 11. Fowler of Vancouver secretary-\ntreapuror. It was decided to affiliate\nwith the Canadian Amateur Lacrosse\nassociation.\nNEW YORK  MANAGER  SELLS\nPLAYERS TO  ROCHESTER\nMnn.igor McGraw <.f in.- New fork\n{National club haa announced the\nsale of eight of his young players u\nthe Rochester club of the International\nleague. They are: Pitchers Erickson,\nHuenke, Palmer and Williams; First\nBaseman Holko; third Baseman Rot's;\nOutfielder Plez and Shortstop Beatty.\n'ikM^r*\nBaby Carriages\nGo-Carts and\nSulkies\nWe have a Very fine lino at all\nprices from\n$3.00\nTO\n$35.00\nStandard Furniture Co,\nComplete   House   Furnishers\nAgents:      Marshall     &     Wendell\nPianos,\nTHURMAN'S\nCarry a full lino of all High-Grade\n\u2022Tobaccos and BBB Pipes. Try a tin\ncf Thurman's Mixture.\nTHURMAN'S CIGAR STORE\nJ. A. MacKinnon\nWholeoale and Retail Tobaccos.\nProprietor   Trail's   Popular   Billiard\nand Pool Hall.\nTRAIL, B. C,\n* 0\n$            NATIONAL LEAGUE. <S>\n* <P\n<pQr&p<p\u00ae<P<pP\u00ae\u00a7&\u00a7<p<p$ .S^.MKivMxSvS^\nHY HITTING\nGIVES REDS VICTORY\nSt.   Louis   Beaten   C   to   2\u2014Gerber\nrumbles and Opens Way for\nChicago Cubs\n(By Dally Nowa ]>as.Ml Wiro.)\n\u2022OWOtNiNlVTt, Ohio, April 18,\u2014In a\nftlow iframu Cincinnati 't.y timely lilt-\nting won tlir. firs! game of ibe Bertes\nat SI. I.ouis today li to 3.\nR. II. E.\nSt.. Loui.i  2   1   1\nCincinnati  G 10   I\nl'oak and. Glenn; Sclmcl.lor, Dale\nand Clarke.\nCIIICAtjO, April IS.\u2014Owner's fumble of 'Phobia's grounder paved tba\nway to a 2 to 1 victory for Chicago\nifter 10 innings against Pittsburg in\ntli>- first game of the series.\nR. U.K.\nPittsburg   I    7   :'.\nChicago  2   1   \"\nCoopHr, McQuillan and Sohajig; Gibson, Vaughn and Bresnnhnii.\nSaturday GameB\nli. H. E.\nPhlladolRhin  7   s   1\nat New York   1   \"   '5\nAlexander, Strand and Killlfer;\nMathewson and Meyers.\nR.H.B.\nBrooklyn   i   9   0\nat Boston  t>   8   0\nAtchison, itagan and McCarty;\nOrutcbora and Gowdy.\nIt It. E.\nPittsburg   \"   S   0\nat Cincinnati   2   f>   1\nAdams, Mamnux ami Schang;\nBrown, Omes and Clark.\nR. TI. R.\nSt. Louis   \" 10   1\nat  Chicago      1    'I    0\nXiehaus and Glenn; Zbel, Cheney,\nVaughan and Arclier.\n^^^^^s.i.',^^M.r.;p^f.:t.p*p-i^p\n<p <P\n* FEDERAL LEAGUE. \u2022?\nFEDERALS MAY\nTeams Evenly Matched\u2014Pittsburg ,'nd\nIndianapolis   Will   Be   Well   up\nm the Race.\nThe Federal league promises tn fur-\nlilsli ianilr.ni wilh major loaRue brand\n\u25a0 ii baseball am! ;i real hurtle for 'he\npennant.\nTlioro am r-iuht clultB in the out! iv\nleague ami the eiy;liL clubs ionic tn hive\na ohaneo for the bic: honors. T*iero\nnovo:- was a league in whicli th*1\nwholo circuit seemed as evenly hal-\nonced ns is tin* Federal league Ihi.**\nyear.\nThe Pittsburg club in one nf tha best\nlooking outfits that o\\'or was pathC'ed\ntogether. It is a team lhat Seems tn\nlie strong in every department and\nwith a secondary outfit aim'-*! is\npowerful as tin- first.\nThen there's the Indianapolis I'Vls\nwho ranlf, .\u25a0\u00bb. the -jrenleflt nluncin;r on! \u2022\nfil In -baseball history. Tho tea.-\" linil\nnine nr ten -rt-nr* hitters last year and\ntho team as a wholo averaged oiis; to\n.800 in clubbing. It seems just as\nstronii -even stronger\u2014this year than\nIftsi nml tho tonm thai heats Inrtlnna-\npolls  probably   will  lie the  t^un  that\nets\npenni\n.!..<\u2022 Thiker'a Chicago Whales certainly will he In thn fight.\nThose DnUtmoru fellows who put up\nsuch it gamo flh'lu in l f* 1 -t threaten tn\nrepeat in lOlfi. The pitching staff has\n\u25a0been Btronglhencit greatly by the iil-\ndltinn of \u2022'Chief Bunder, tho old Athletic- star.\nAnother club lo watch ii Harry\nSi hiiifiy's Buffalo aggregation; nnd on\npaper the St. UiuIb team doesn't ln.de\noverly powerful, but it hns a manager\nWho has the ability to win pennant.';\nno matter what soil of material he hai\nto operate with. Fielder Jones won a\npennant   with   the  White-  Sox  team\nthat never looked us good as the Slou-\nfeds do today.\nThe Brookfcds have a boy manager\nIn Loo Mttgce. It is a team of .etornns\nbut its veterans aro still great ball\nplayers,\nTho Tenni lhat George Stovoll will\npilol this year under the Newark, V.I.\ncol oro, is another uiio that looks like\na real ball club. It has everything a\nbull club needs\u2014speefl( good pitchers,\nbatters, a fine infield, a steady, hardhitting outfield und a bunch ot youths\nwith brains.\nEvery club has a chance\u2014and n fine\none.\nSaturday Games\nit. IT. E,\nChicago   -I   7   0\nat St. Louis   3.   5   :i\nHendrlx and Wilson; Watson and\nHartley,\n1MI.E.\nKansas Cilv  1   S   1\nat Pittsburg   A   0   n\nCullQp, Hentilg and Easterly; Blackburn. X. Allan and Berry.\nR.H.E.\nBaltimore    1   0   1\nat Newark   5 11   1\nBender nnd Owens;  Reulhacb and'\nUnvidon. i\nIt. H. E.\nBrooklyn    8   9   1\nat Buffalo   4   R   f>\nLaflt.te, Seaton and Land; Scluilla,\nKrapp, Ford and Blair.\nSunday Games\nIL H. E.\nChicago   1   3   ft\nat St. Loufe   3   6   2\nJohnson and Fischer;   Wilson, Davenport and Hartley.\nSunday\u2014 ft,   H.   E.\nBaltimore   ,12   IU     -1\nNewark   5   10     3\nBatteries: Qulnn, Suggs and OwenB;\nMosely, Moran und Barlden.\n<$ AMERICAN LEAGUE. \u25a0$*\nTV COBB'S TI\nWINS FOR CHICAGO\nRetires John Collins at Plate in Ninth,\nMitchell   Holds  St.  Louis\nto Five Hits\nIBS' Daily iNc.wa Lraiscrl Wlrrt.)\n1\")RTI10I,T, April IS.\u2014Ty I'obb'e\nthrow, froih .loep cfiivl.ro, which rotlrod\n.lohn. Collbis at Uin plats in tho ninth\ninnlns, ftftvo Detroit l.ho optmlnff gamo\nof tho Roriot. with Clilfihgo S lo 7,\nn. TT.K.\nChicago    7   B   \"\nU'otroll  S   li   2\nScott, Johnson, Wolfgang and\nSchalk; Covnleskle, HcynoUlR, navla\nand Stanagfi.\nST. LOUIS, April IS\u2014Mitchell held\nSt, 'I.ouis to five scattered hils today\nand beat Si. Louis (nl,\nli. II. R.\nCleveland  II 1.0   3\nSt, Louis  1    a   I\nMitchell and O'Nell: W'eilman, Ilem-\nnas and Agneiw,\nll.II.B.\nNew   York      il    S    0\nall Phlladelphlu   I   (I   2\nMc.Hale.   and    Sweeney;    Wlckoff,\nBresler, llnrper and Lapp.\nII..TI.T3.\nCleveland   0   4   1\nat Detroll  fi 10   0\nMorton, Steen, Combe and Kagan;\nOnell, Online and McKay.\nIt. II. R.\nBostoa   7 10   1\nnt. Washington   a   S   :l\nG. Fosier, Shore and Cady: Boehl-\ning and Henry\nTL.TT.E.\nChicago    \"   'I   \"\nat St, Louis   -I   \u25a0!   1\nJasper nnd. Sehnlk; James and Sev-\neroid.\n-\u25a0      AMERICAN  ASSOCIATION.      '?\nSaturday Games\nLouisville  \t\nal Columbus\t\nBills   and   Clemnns\nColeman.\nll.IT.E..\n  I   r.   n\n   0    f,   \u25a0!\nItonihby  and\nIt. U.K.\n  S   S   1\nIndianapolis  \t\nat Cleveland    :i   \"\u00bb   \"\n'ripple,   'Merso   and   flossel.t.;   Cln-\nmore, IMlllncor and Itasler.\n\u2022R.. IT. E.\nSi. Paul      I   (I   t\n:,!  Kansas Cily  12 17   2\nGardner, (ripe and  Johnson-.   Mar-\nshall. Delhi and Ceihel.\nrt.ii.E.\nMinno,ii>noli:-i    1* M   1\nat   Milwaukee   .....!',   r,   3\nFiene, Williams and Sullivan: Slan-\nnlekn nnd  Hughes.\n<P' ^\n# COAST LEAGUE. -P\n<P \u00ab\n^^ti^p^^^p^p4.t-p^><P^<.^.>'.ypp\nSaturday Games\nSail, Lakei I. Oakland u.\nSim Prariclirco 10. Los Angeles 2.\nVenice 2. PorUnnd 1. .11 innings.)\nSunday Games\nAi   Portland It.  II.  K.\nv.-iiiei,    il    If.    0\nI'oril 1     \u25a0\u25a0    :,    4\nAi San Franolacn\u2014 II. II. E\nSalt Luke    '     s    1\nOnklnnil     S    :.    o\nAfternoon wamc\u2014 1:.  II.  vZ\nSaul,   l.nke       !      II      2\nOnkland     1     7    2\nAi  Lou Angolcs It,   II. E.\nSau  Kranclsci  '\u2022'.    7     i\nl\u201eis Angeles   2      li     1!\nAfternoon game\u2014 11,  II. E.\nSan KrimciM  :,     7     2\nLos Angeles    .;    12     1\nNATIONAL BOWLING TOURNAMENT CLOSES AT NEW YORK\nNew   York   Bowlers  Take   Majority  of\nPrizes\u2014New York Man Averages\n215 for.Nine  Games\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nNEW ynrtK, April is. Tlie clinm,\npionsliip tournament, of the National\nBowling association enme to a .-lose\nlate today after Ihe following had been\ndecided:\nAll-Around\u2014Thonins   .1.   Scatniell   of\nDin New i'ork Athletic olub, 1,1185;\naverage of 215 for nine games.\nSingles \u2014 George    Newman,     New\nYork, 675.\nTwo Men\u2014Arthur Waller and .1, A.\nSmith, Rutherford, X. J.. 1,2.12.\nFive    Mcn--Auraui    Bow'llng    club.\nNew York, 2,9113.\nFORTY THOUSAND DOLLARS\nFOR PURSES AND PRIZES\nIn Grand Circuit Races at New York\nStale Fair\u2014Empire Stake\nPrize $10,000\n(Bv Dally News Leased \"Wire.)\nSYRAOIJSB, N, v., April. 18.\u2014Forty\nthousand dollars hns been offered as\nnurses nnd prizes for tile annual grand\ncircuit races, lo be held in connection\nwill. Ihe New Vork stale fair here next\nSeptember, or this sum *2l,non is re\nserved for six early closing cvenls, onirics for whicli will close on Mny 10.\nTlie evcnls will bo headed by the\nEmpire Stake for 2:12 Irollers, worlh\n? 10,(100.\nHarry S. Neolley, secretary nf racing,\nhas announced that each race will bo\ndecided by the three heal\u2014every heat\nn race\u2014plan.\nJOHNNY   HARVEY  TO\nMEET FREDDIE WELSH\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nCOLUMBUS, Mo., April 18.\u2014Johnny\nHarvey of Mew York will .box 12\nrounds with Freddie Welsh, world's\nlightweight champion, horo April 23,\naccording to announcement made\nhere.\nA Spring Cyclone\nWill Strike Our Store on Tuesday Morning Wrecking Prices for\nThree Days Only\nBy Following Closely in Its Path You Will Pick Up Values\nWhich Will Surprise and Delight You.    Read Very Carefully\nPrints and Ginghams-A choice selection of\nimported Prints and Gin&liams. Regular 15c,\nSale price,        -       -       -     ' \u25a0 10 I-2C\nChildren's R0mpcrs--ln wash ginghams, gal-\nateas, and crepes.\nReguhr 65c value for       -       -      '-       49c\nRegular 90c value for       -       -       -       69C\nRegular $1.00 value for    - 79c\nThese will appeal to the mothers.\nBoys' Shirt WaiStS--Odd sizes up to 15 yrs.\nTo clear, just think  .-'-\u25a0-       39C\nBoating Cushion Covers-Made of washable\ncretonne.    Reg. 65c value, sale price    -   35C\nOnly two dozen in the lot.\nLadies'  Cotton   Vests-Short   sleeves   and\nsleeveless.   A leader, 2 for 25c and 2 for 35C\nThese will not last long.\nA Millinery Sacnfice-Eighteen beautiful\nhats, every one a little gem. Regular values\n$5.00 to $10.00'.   Sale price $2.95 tO $6.95\nSurely a time for quick action.\nReady-to-Wear\nBargains\nLadies' CoatS--Fifteen only, beautiful   and\nstylish garments.  -  Reduced 25 Per Cent\nLadies' SuitS--Our line of $20.00 suits which\nhave proved themselves of exceptional value\non sale for three days at       -       -       $14.95\nA Collection of High Grade Suits-Values\nup to $25.00 and $30,00.     To clear at $7.50\nThese suits  are last year's  models but are\nworthy of your examination.\nThis Sale Will Only Last Three Days.    Out-of-Town Customers Should Seize This Opportunity to Do Their Shopping\nSMILLIE & WEIR\nLadies' Wear Specialists\nEASTERN LACROSSE\nIIS ME DOOMED\nN, L. U. and D. L. A. Out of Game for\nSeason\u2014New   League   May   Be\nFormed.\n(By Dally .Nows LonMPil Wirr.i\n.MUNTUKAU April 19.\u2014Dovclop-\nmenttt ypKiPnlsty in tho lacronao situation IndicntPd thai hnfii the old or-\nr^nlKritlonfl tiio National IVipi'obho\nunion nnd thn Dominion Uht<i.sw> us-\nsot'iiitifin nro mil, oC tlif- gamp for this\nsojiHiin, if not for ffood'. A meeting of\ntha Nationnl LnbroHsc union called for\nToronto yostordiiy w,in postponed fop n\ntjilt'd tliiio hocilimo somo clubs could\nnot bo represented and upon being rud-\nvlsod  of this  llii-  National   Amateur\nAthletic (Montreal) notified the president of tbo union. Percy Qulnn, that\nunless throe clubs immediiilely put up j\nguarantees for tbo season, the Nnlion-\nols wore through. H is understood nn\nother club will rtn this. Reports from\n[Toronto nuotod Mr. Qulnn us saying\ntho situation appeared hopeless.\nThe National Umtohsp union is the\njidest in the east. The Dominion Lacrosse association wns'horn four years\nago when the Nationals of Montreal,\ndissatisfied with the National.Lacrosse\nunion, quit ami united :-. club from\nQuehec, Toronto and Ottawa in opposition and when tho other three clubs\nnot Into financial troubles this year\nthe Nationals again joined the National\nLacrosse union and endeavored to have\nthe league reorganized and operate in\nspite of tho poor shape of the union\nand tho depression caused by tbo war.\nA, L. Caron, president of the Nationals, In nn Interview last night said\nbis  efforts  would   he  in  start   a   new\nleaguo willi three Montreal club*\nono from Cornwall.\nEIGHT   HUNDRED  AND   FIFTY\nLarge  Entries  In  Kentucky  Futurity\nfor Fonls\u2014Walnut Hall Heads\ni-.st With 32\nlkxin;;ton. icj\nhundred and ill'lv\n'    II*    '\n..,., April IS.\u2014Klght\nv mares wore iiomii\n*n<\\    )'........!...    !>..\u2022....It\nHundred and ruty marcs woro nominated in ihe $1:1,000 Kentucky futurity\nfor fouls oi lfllfi, entries 10 which\nclosed April I, according to an till-\nlio'iincemenl by the Kentucky Trnittug\nHorse illreetlevs' tissocliitloti hero 10-\ndity,\nW'aiuiii Hall farm nf Ilio bile L. V.\nHarknesH hero heads the list, with 112\nmarcs nominated. The l'atcheni Walks\nstock farm comes second, with 80, and\ntho Allan farm of PiUsfield. .Mass.. is\nthird with !(0. Entries were received\nCJ'oin JtO sbibles, (lie Distrldt of Col-\ntimbtti and. Canada*\nI ZEPALLA VICTOR IN\nALASKA SWEEPSTAKEl\n(Ry Daily News Leased Wire.)\n\\iiMK. AlaKka. April IS.\u2014Leonard!\nKopalln, driving bis own team nf li.l\nSUicrhiu -wolf dogs, won Into Salurday\"\nthe ll'2-nilln Alaska, sweepstake do,\ntunn race, started at 9 o'clock \\Vodnes-|\nday morning. .Ills lime for tbo eoursdj\nwas 7S liours, 4-1 minutes and It\"\n is.  l hours, SO minutes and 17 sec'-j\nonds slower than tho record establish!\ned by John Johnson's Siberian wolve*|\nin   If>10.\nAs Zcpptiln passed Ilio finish lln|\nA. A. fSentty) Allan, who was second!\nwas lust passfuj! Kori Havls, rive milejl\nma  nf .\\...n<-. with the Allan-Parlimr\nlei f   h:  nijilniuntes, owned jolnti'l\nby himself and Mrs. Charles A. Dnrllndf\nof Berkeley, Cnl. Ilsklmo John, drivJ\nIng iho loam entered by tbo r'nunoll\nKi-nuel olub, was approaebing Safct^\nrondhouse, 21 mllea away.\nLet All Have More Business\n\"We have the crops, the coin and the customers. Let us get busy.\"\nSuch was the substance of the message of the president of the Chicago\ngarment manufacturers to his fellow members.\nGood business, the president pointed out, was waiting for those who\nwent after it. And the way, he pointed out, was through vigorous\nand continuous advertising.\nIn this connection he laid emphasis on the fact that it was not the\n\"big splash\" followed by silence that counted, but the dayin. day-out\nadvertising appeal.\nNo medium offers such splendid business getting opportunities today\nas does the daily newspaper.\n l*\\.\nIII      I l, IBWWHP1WIJII...J.!.    I , .HI\t\nCfy Hailrtrtnsi\nANNIVERSARY SALE\nCommencing Tues. April 20\u2014Ending Sat. Nay 1\nEleven Days of the Biggest Bargain-Giving Sale Ever Held in the City of Nelson\nOn Tuesday we properly celebrate the Ninth Anniversary of our entry into business here by the biggest sale in our history.\nThousands of dollars worth of high-class merchandise goes on sale at a small fraction of its value. These are goods taken from\nour regular stocks, and every article carries with in Meagher's guarantee of quality. This is a wonderfnl opportunity to do your\nspring and summer shopping at immense savings. We give below an idea of the bargains you'll find here, though it often happens\nthat sbme of the best are not advertised. They'll be on disolay, all plainly marked. Terms of sale, STRICTLY CASH-NO GOODS\nON APPROVAL.\nLADIES' SUITS\nLOT   1- I\nSuits up to $20.00 for $5.00\nTwenty Suits made of good quality\nTweed or Serges, all plain tailored styles,\nmany of the coats are silk-lined. Full\nrange of colors in the lot.\nRegular Values up to $20.00 .  ap  nn\nANNIVERSARY   SALE  PRICE SpO.UU\nLOT  2-\nSuits up to $25.00 for $10.00\nAll have silk-lined coats and plain\ntailored or fancy skirts. Materials are\nfinest Serges or fancy Worsteds, all colors.\nRegular Values up to $25.00 Q.n nn\nANNIVERSARY  SALE   PRICE SplU.UU\nLOT 3\u2014\nSuits up to $45.00 for $15.00\nPlain tailored and fancy Suits, in women's and Misses' sizes, ideal suits for'\ndress wear. A full range of cloths, both\nplain and fancy weaves. Colors, navy,\ntan, putty, Copenhagen and black. All\nsizes in the lot,\nRegular Prioes up to $45.00 (blE OO\nANNIVERSARY  SALE PRICE JplO.UU\nLADIES'COATS at $5.00\nTwenty-five ladies' Coats in navy, tan, green\nand black. Some sports style, others three-\nquarter length.\nRegular Values up to $15.00 *p.  \u00ab \u2014\nANNIVER8ARY 8ALE   PRICE \\pD.UU\nLADIES' SKIRTS\nValues up to $13.50 for $4.95\nFifty ladies' Skirts in serges and fancy weaves,\nincluding plaids, checks and stripes. Colors,\nnavy, tan, grey, tawn and green.   All sizes.\nRegular Values up to $13,50 q.  qj-\nANNIVERSARY   SALE   PRICE Jp'T.yO\n$2.25 UNDERSKIRTS at $1.50\nGood quality English taffetas, pleated flounces\nwith adjustable waist band, all sizes in stock.\nRegular Value $2.25- ,j,|  r-p\nANNIVER8ARY  SALE   PRICE Jpl.OU\nBLOUSES at $1.00\nValues up to $3.00\nFpur dozen only Blouses in this lot. Fine\nVdile or Muslin, some with low collars and long\nsleeves, others with high collars.\nAll Excellent Value at Original Price ai  nn\nANNIVER8ARY  SALE   PRICE .Jpl.UU\n600 Yards of 18 in. Embroidery at 8c\nAi Splendid Embroidery Bargain. Assorted\npattern*, on fine lawn.\nRegular 20c Goods q\nANNIVERSARY SALE   PRICE   \u2022\u00a9\n$1.50 Embroidered Voile Flouncing at 75c\nForty yards fancy Flouncing, fine embroidery\nwork pn sheer voile.\nA Good Bargain at $1.50 -jrr\nANNIVERSARY   8ALE   PRICE I 0\n  'I    I \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0[      PM\nMn\nMoney Savins Chances In\nWHITEWEAR\nLADIES'GOWNS at $1.00\nFine soft-finished Cambric, pull-over\nstyle, with embroidery trimming at neck\nand sleeves.\nANNIVERSARY  SALE   PRICE i $1.00\nWHITE UNDERSKIRTS at 95c\nGood English Cambric. Some have\nflounces trimmed witn lace and insertion,\nothers have wide embroidery flounces.\nANNIVERSARY  SALE   PRICE    95\nLADIES' DRAWERS at 35c\nFine Cambric, with flounces having\nrows of stitching.\nANNIVER8ARY SALE   PRICE j .00\nWOMEN'S COMBINATIONS at 95c\nGood fine Cambric, trimmed with Torchon lace.   All sizes in stock.\nANNIVERSARY  8ALE   PRICE .'..'.' .00\nHouse Dresses at $1.25\nGood washing Chambrays in stripes,\nalso figured Prints in light and dark colors.\nAll sizes.\nRegularly Sold for $1.75 <M  OK\nANNIVERSARY  SALE   PRICE tpl.tO\nChildren's Wash Dresses at 75c\nMade of good Scotch Gingham, in plain\ncolors with collars and curls of fancy\nflowered muslins.   Sizes 4 to 12 years.\nRegular $1.00 Quality                      \u2022> 7 C\nANNIVERSARY  SALE   PRICE \u2022 ' O\nHigh-class Wash Dresses for Children\nAT 25 PER CENT. OFF\nDresses of the better sort, made of fine\nCrepes, Linens, Repps and Piques, in a\ngreat variety of colors and designs, all\nbeautifully made.\nRegular Valueo from $2.75 to $5.00     *\u00ab nr An  *r\nANNIVERSARY SALE   PRICE.... Vt.fcO t0 tyO. f 0\n350 CURTAIM SCRIMS at 23c\nFour hundred yards Curtain Scrim, mostly\nplain centres with colored borders, full 36 in. wide.\nRegular Value, 35c nn\nANNIVERSARY  SALE   PRICE 1-0\n35C CURTAIN NETS at 25c\nTen pieces Curtain Nets in cream and ecru,\nall new designs.\nRegular Value, 35o nr\nANNIVERSARY SALE   PRICE &\"\n300 Yards CURTAIN SCRIM at 17c\nFine Scrim in plain colors with colored border,\n36 inches wide.\n, i 17\nClearing Silks at Sale Prices\n36 in. Pailette Silk at 98c\nFine weave, soft quality Silk, all colors, full\nyard wide.\nRegular Value, $1,25                                    i\"'. flQ\nANNIVERSARY  SALE   PRICE .OV\n15c Dress Ginghams, Chambrays 12 l-2c\nFifty   pieces   Dress   Chambrays,   in   checks,\nplaids and stripes, good width and fine quality.\n .12 1-2\nRegular Price, 15c\nANNIVERSARY  SALE   PRICE.\nBOYS' CLOTHING\nReduced 25 Per Cent.\nAll Lines of Boys' Suits and Odd\nPants are included in this sale. Made\ndouble-breasted or Norfolk styles, with\nfull bloomer pants. Materials best imported Tweeds and Serges. Sizes 3 to\n15 years.\nRsgular Values, $4.60 to $13.50       aa   ,r qjlnpft\nANNIVERSARY   SALE   PRICE.. .H),J''t0 t0 Jf IU.UU\nBOYS' ODD PANTS\nSerge or Tweed, Bloomer style, sizes 6\nto 15 years.\nRogular Prices, $1.50 to $3.75 ai   ir <J>Q Q(\")\nANNIVERSARY   SALE    PRICE V|)l. 10 t0 J|>\u00a3.yU\nBuy Hosiery at these Prices and Save Money\nLADIES' LISLE HOSE 3 Pairs for $1.00\nTwenty-five dozen  ladies'  fine\nGood fast colors, many having silk\nThe  Regular 45c  Kind\nANNIVERSARY SALE  PRICE\u20143 PAIRS  FOR.\nBOYS' COTTON HOSE at 20c\nHeavy rib cotton Hose for boys, the sort that\nwears well, and a good fast color.     Sizes 6 to 10\nRegular 25c Quality\nANNIVERSARY   SALE   PRICE\t\nLisle\nankles.\nHose.\n$1.00\nANNIVERSARY SALE   PRICE\n75c Dress Goods at 49c\nThree hundred yards Dressgoods in a full\nrange of colors, including tan, navy, Copenhagen\nand brown, 40 inches wide.\nRegular Value, 75c     tn\nANNIVERSARY SALE   PRICE.\n 20\nCHILDREN'S COATS at $1.00\n25 Children's Coats, made of Serges,\nCheviots and VVorstt ds in light and dark\ncolors.   Sizes from 4 to 12 years\nRegular Valuos up to $5.00                                  .        ai   nn\nANNIVERSARY  SALE   PRICE \\|>liUU\nClearing Odd Lines of Corsets at 95c\nFifty pairs of Corsets of the best Canadian makes. All sizes in the lot but not\nall sizes in each hne.\nRogular Values up to $3.00 nr\nANNIVERSARY  SALE   PRICE OU\nExtraordinary Staple Bargains\n200 Yards SHEETING at 35c\nFull bleach heavy weight Sheeting, free\nfrom dressing, nice even thread and full\ntwo yards wide.\nThe Kind You Always Pay 45c For nr\nANNIVERSARY  SALE   PRICE .00\nSHEETS at 75C\nTwenty pairs only Hemmed Sheets,\nready for use.   Good quality soft finish\nsheeting, size 2x2 1-2 yards.\nRegular Value, $1.00 -\u00bb,-\nANNIVERSARY SALE   PRICE ilO\nTHE STOR\u00a3 FOR\nSTYLE\nCO\nTHE STORE FOR\nQUALITY\nr\u00bb\u00bbat\u00bb THnee\n P'W POUR\nffc Batty JWmi\nI*-   MONDAY, APRIL. 19, .1915' ''\"f\nCt)e Bail}) jlctpi)\nPublished every morning except\nSunday by The News Publishing\nCompany, Limited, Nelson, B.C., Canada.\nROBB SUTHERLAND,\nEditor and Manager.\n' Business letters should be addressed\nand' cheques and money orders made\npayable to The News Publishing Company, Limited, and ln no case to individual members of the staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and sworn de*\ntailed statements ot circulation mailed\non request, or may be seen at the office of any advertising agency recognized by the Canadian Press- Associa-\ntlon.\nSubscription rates fit) cents per\nmonth; (2.50 for bIx months; $5 per\nyear.\nMONDAY,  APRIL   19,   1915\nRANCHERS CAN INCREASE TRADE\nAT MA(RKET\nThe importance of the Nelson pub-\nlie market is emphasized ,by tne opening of spring and the season for fresh\nvegetables.\nIt was recognized when the market\nwas first established that if it could\nsurvive the winter months it would\nhe well on tbe. way to the permanent\nsuccess toward which its promoters\nwere striving.\n. Fresh vegetables are beginning to\ncome In and as the season advances\nthe supply of these and other products\nwill increase. This will mean larger\npatronage of the institution by the\nbuying public and consequently a\ngreater demand for dairy and! other\nall-the-year-round1 products of the\nranch.\nTo make the demand grow steadily\nIn advance of the supply is chiefly\nthe 'business of the ranchers. The\nhoard of control can assist the ranchers lu securing a good patronage for\nthe market, but fundamentally a satisfactory! attendance ot the purchasing public depends upon the ranchers.\nThat the public Is anxious to secure ranch produce at the market has\nheen established. It has alBo been\nehown that the demand is generally\nin excess of the supply. For some\ntime to come the amount of many\nvarieties of farm produce consumed In\nNelson will exceed that which local\nranches can offer for sale.\nTo obtain the full benefit of that\ndemand the ranchers who sell through\nthe public market must put out their\nproduce ln a manner which will please\nthe consumers. That la a primary essential to success. Let the produce\nwhich Is offered be scrupulously\nclean; let It be put up as attractively\nas possible; let It be offered in quan\ntitles which experience proves the\nPublic Is most likely to require; let\nit be of the first quality.\nIf these requirements are constantly\nmet the patronage of the market will\ncontinue to increase and the ranchers\nwill have no difficulty in getting fair\nprices.\nSIR\nupon the decision of parltament_to\ngive the soldiers at tho front am opportunity to vote If a general election\nshould take-place in the Dominion\nduring the war.\nThe verbal cartoonists have drawn\nword (pictures of officers going Into\nthe trenches and telling the soldiers\nto cease fire while they cast their\nvote; of bayonet charges postponed\nuntil the ballots have been cast and ot\nthe transport -wagons loaded down\nwith campaign literature. This is, of\ncourse, nonsense.\nThe subject is one deserving ot\nnothing but the most serious consideration. The first point which had\nto he decided was whether the soldiers should be allowed to vote. That\nIs a matter of principle which has\nn discussed throughout Canada\nand In the house of commons, and It\nhas ibefen1 -generally 'agreied (that a\nman who Is good enough to fight for\nhis country la good enough to vote.\nAs to the practicability of taking\nthe vote there is no doubt under\npresent conditions at the front. The\nmen are only In the trenches for\nbrief periods. Much of their time Is\nbeing spent resting at the bases1.\nSufficient latitude as to time of polling Is given .by -the act to enable the\nmen to cast their ballots while they\nare out of action, while they are \"off\nshift\".\nThat corJditlon of ofafirs at the\nfront, even in the event of the \"great\ndrive** being iu progress, is likely to\ncontinue. While some of the men are\nIn action others will be resting.\nThere would be nothing to prevent the\nvarious battalions voting when they\nreturn  from  the  firing  line to the\nROBERT BOROIN UPHOLDS\nBEST TRADITIONS\nhad not the experience and \"had not\nreally the qualities which would entitle him rto be declared tho actual\nleader of the party.\" Mr. Martin farther states that \"like moat wcalt men,\nMr. BrewBter has -tried to make himself appear strong by rash action.*'\nBRITISH DESTROY\nTURK\n\u00ab \u00ab\n\u2666 WHAT THE PRE8S IS 8AYING. \u00ab\n\u00ab \u00ab\nSir Robert Borden, by his actions In\nconnection with the war supplies purchases, has proved himself worthy of\nthe great trust which has heen reposed in him by the Canadian people.\nSir Robert -has shown himself possessed of a strength of character and a\nfearless rectitude of thought and action which justify the high esteem in\nwhich he has been held- since he became prominent iu the public lite of\nCanada.\nSince the first breath of suspicion\nwaB cast upon some of the war supply\nsales Sir Robert and his government\nhave consistently followed the policy\nof fearlessly and without regard for\n\u2022party friends or opponents probing\ndeep Into any deals which seemed to\nmerit investigation. The government\nat Ottawa has gone farther than merely to place nothing ln the way of a\nthorough inquiry. It has used all the\npowers It possesses to get at the facts.\nThere lias been no \"dark lantern\" or\n\"blockers' brigade\" such as disgraced\nthe Dominion under the late government\nOn the cloBlng day of the session\nSir Robert -Borden did not hesitate to\nrebuke   ln   unequivocal   terms   two\nmembers ot his own party   lu   the\nhouse tor their actions. He spoke ot\nthe purchase ot horses in Nova Scotia by young DeWItt Foster, M. P.,\nand of the deal in surgical dressings\nin which W. F. Garland, M. P., was involved.  Sir Robert spoke In approval\not the suspension of officers of the\nmilitia department whose actions had\nIbeen open to suspicion and then announced that a commission of the best\nbusiness men who could be secured\nwould be appointed to buy all supplies out of the $100,000,000 war vote.\n.Sir iRobert concluded with reference\nto Messrs Foster and Garland:\n1 cannot give my sanction or\napproval to conduct of that character.    Members   of   parliament\nshould   keep   themselves   above\n, .suspicion.   1 feel  it  is a duty\n-which I owe to the government,\nthe party of which I am the leader\nand* tbe country to express my\ngrave  disapproval  of  these actions.\nBoth cases have been placed In the\nbands ot the department of justice.\nMEN AT FRONT HAVE PLENTY OF\nTIMI TO VOTE\nThere Is a disposition ln certain\nniuvrtprs lo attempt to cast ridicule\nIf an election takes place during the\n.war and it happens that conditions\nat the fnont have been so modified\ntluf|t |tihia lOTMsh iijsvornlmelirt Seals\ncalled upon to exercise Its power to\nprevent the vote being taken*, the\nCanadian people will accept that judgment. -But they will experience pleasure In the knowledge that the Domln-\nlen government has expressed the\ndesire of Canada to make it possible\nfor the men who are making the supreme sacrifice for the Empire and\nfor this Dominion to exercise the\nright to the franchise. Those men,\nIf they were In Canada, would he able\nto vote. Few would contend that they\nshould he penalized unnecessarily because they are offering their lives\nfor -their country.\nShop before noon today and spend\nthe afternoon cleaning up.\nArbor day has two chief purposes\u2014\nthe cleaning up of the city and Its\nboauitlfication by the setting out of\nshade trees, shrubs and flower plants.\nDo your share today.\nAnd now tho war has a real rival.\n\"What's the score?\" is a question\nheard almost as often as \"Wliat's the\nnews from the front?\".\nGeneral Huerta, former president of\nMexico, says that lie knows who killed\nPresident, Madera, 'but that the Identity- of the the slayers is a \"professional secret.\" The suspicion is confirmed that murder is a profession in\nMexico\u2014and it has an ex-presldent as\nan exponenent of Its ethics.\nAlthough the -bondingof theGranlte-\nPoorman mine does not mean any\nimmediate increase in the number of\nmon employed, the fact that operations are to -be continued on the property, with prospects of future development on a larger scale, is most\nsatisfactory news for the district.\nGermany advances the fact that\nGreat Britain is honoring the captain\nof a merchantman who sank one of\nthe pirate submarines as a reason for\nthe indiscriminate destruction of unarmed ships. The theory that a Teuton should be allowed to hit without\nthe victim hitting hack appears still\nto prevail In Germany.\nIA member of the Russian duma who\nappears to be well informed predicts\nthat after the war a new Islamic empire will be established under BritlBh\nrule and will extend from Egypt to\nIndia. It may be said in favor of the\nplan that the followers of Mahomet\nhave hitherto shown themselves Incapable of self government and that\nIn cases* where they have come under\nBritish control they and their countries have prospered.\nThe worst effect of the war upon\nbusiness conditions has-been, as President Wilson Bald months ago, psychological. It has heen largely in the\nminds of the people. After eight\nmonths ot war the stability of business conditions, the uninterrupted\nmanner In which most of the Industries and activities of the country have continued, has served- to reestablish confidence. The people .:f\nCanada are beginning to realize that\nthere Is little to-be feared. Confidence\n-will help to conquer business troubles\nas well as the enemy.\nJoseph Martin continues to Illustrate the harmony which prevails in\nthe *Llberal party In British Columbia.\nHe takes a fall out of H. C. BrewBter.\nSir Wilfrid's representative at Vancouver says Mr. Brewster was elected\nleader with the distinct understanding\nthat he was merely to act In that capacity during the 1912 campaign. That\ncourse was adopted, states Mr. Martin, because, it was felt Mr. Brewster\nLaurier and the Soldiers\n\u25a0Sir Wilfrid Laurler says that soldiers are entitled to no more consideration than the ordinary man in the\nmatter of voting privileges. This\nmeans that in -his judgment it a soldier wants his vote he should quit soldiering, stay at home and get it ln\nthe regular way. Wliich is character-\nistlc Laurier patriotism.\u2014 Calgary\nHerald.\nA Liberal View\nPremier Borden's explanation of the\ndelay in sending forward the second\ncontingent has two satisfactory features; first It shows that the delay\nwas duo to nothing on this side; second, It disposes of tho talk of conscription in Great -Britain. The second contingent did not forward earlier\nbecause the authorities could not\nhandle it iu Great Britain, the recruiting there being so heavy as to tax the\nresources of the government. The success of the voluntary system seems lo\nhe irritating the conscriiptionlsts.-\nSaskatoon Phoenix.\nTo Every Dog His Day\nSo far as England Is concerned, the\npresent Is the day ot the bulldog.\nAnd this Is speaking literally with no\nintent at a joke. One- of the side Issues of the war Is a boom in British\nbulldogs, and few fashionable women\nIn England are now- without one of\nthese animals among their canine\npets.   A! London paper says;\n\"Before last August toy dogs were\nall the rage, the bulldog being almost\nentirely ignored by women. The war\nhas brought about a change, and toy\n'Poms.\/ Pekinese and similar breeds-\nare at present under a cloud, while\nfew ladles are showing any inclination -for Great Danes or any other\nlarge dogs. Nobody now wants that\nmost ungainly of all dogs, the German Dachshund. Poodles and Borzois, representative of our allies,\nFrance and Russia, have many admirers; but tlie British bulldog is the\nfavorite canine pet at the moment.\"\u2014\nSouthern Lumberman.\n(Continued from Page One.)\nSTEAMER ARRIVALS.\nAt New York\u2014St. Paul. Liverpool.\nAt Providence\u2014Roma, Marseilles.\nAt Falmouth\u2014Potsdam, New York.\nCOLD STORAGE.\nMayor -Bell of Indianapolis said tho\nother day:\n\"The war bulletins, -which used to\nannounce the taking of -provinces and\narmy corps, announce now the taking\nof singlo trenches, or single farmhouses\u2014they announce, like a football\ngains of a few yards.\n\"It's fine work, very fine work. It\nreminds me of the jockey who was a\ntrifle over weight\u2014only a trifle, mind;\nbut tliis trifle was enough to disqualify him.\n\" 'James,' said his owner after the\nscales had told their tale, 'Is there\nnothing more you can do?'\n\" 'No sir, nothing'.'\n\" 'Are you shaved and, hair cut?'\n\" 'Half an hour ago.'\n\" 'Nails?'\n\"The jockey showed his nulls. They\nwere trimmed to the quick.\n\" 'You'd better get your tonsils cut,\nJames.'\n\"iBut this, too, had been done.\n\" 'Well, then, James,' said the owner\n'there's nothing for it. but to have your\nappendix taken out. Hurry off to the\nhospital now, or you'll be too late.''\nRUSSIANS TELL\nOF SUCCESS WON\n(Continued from Page One.)\nBerlin and London.-The foUwurtiK official statement was Issued today:\nThe British submarine E-15 has\nbeen sunk In the Dardanelles off Kar-\nanllk, Three officer!} and 21 men of\nthe crew of 31 were roscueu hy the\nTurkish fleet. Among them was the\nformer British vice-consul at the Dardanelles.\"\nThe E-15 was laid down in Vickers'\nyards in 1913. Detaiis of the new submarines are secret but it Is known\ngenerally that three boats, K-14, E-lfi\nand 13-17, are somewhat larger and\nheavier than their immediate prede\neessors and particularly are credited\nwith a 16 knot surface speed. The\ndimensions of the former clasB of sub\nmarines are as follows:\nLength, 17G ft.; beam, 2'1^ ft-; *\u00ab\u25a0\nplacement, submerged, 790 tuns; 1,000\nhorse-power; armament, four torpedo\ntubes and one quick-firer fur surface\nwork.\nRan Aground, Says Admiralty\nLONDON, April 18.\u2014Tlie British admiralty, in a statement issued this afternoon, announced that the submarine\nE-15 ran ashore yesterday on Kephez\npoint, in the Dardanells, while attempting a difficult reconnaisance of\ntho Kephez mine field.\nThe statement said that according; to\nan offieinl communication published p.t\nConstantinople the officers and men\nwere rescued and made prisoners;\nMoslem Torpedo Boat Destroyed\nLONDON, April If\u2014The Biitleh admiralty, in a statement issued Saturday night, announced 'hat a Turkish\ntorpedo boat had been destroyed in the\nAegean sea.   Tlie statement -.\u25a0ays:\n\"The transport Manitou, carrying\nBritish troops, was attacked by a\nTurkish torpedo boat In tlie Aegean\nsea Saturday morning.\n\"The Turkish boat fired three torpedoes at the transport, all of which\nmissed theft* mark. The torpedo boat\nthen made off but was chased bv thv\nBritish cruiser Minerva and British\ntorpedo boat destroyers and was finally run aground and destroyed on the\ncoast of Chios, In Kalumutl bay. The\nmembers of the crew of the Turkish\nwarship were made  prisoners.\n\"It Is reported that about 100 men\non boaid the transport lost their lives\nthrough drowning.\"\nAn official statement from the Brit\nish admiralty issued last night glws\ntho substance uf a further report concerning the loss of life aboard the\ntransport which was attacked by a\nTurkish torpedo boat in tho Aegean\nsea. The report shows that 24 men\nwere drowned instead of 100, as first\nreported, and thut 27 others are missing. The transport itself was not\ndamaged.\nThe loss of life wan due to the capsizing of one boat in the water and\nanother while being lowered, owing lo\nthe breaking of a davit.\nTurk Warship Could Not Escape\nLONDON, April 18.\u2014A Chios despatch to Lloyds News says there were\nfive Germans, including the captain,\namong the crew of 30 on the Turkish\ntorpedo boat which ran aground after\nbelt iff pursued by tiie allied warships\nThe weather in the Gulf of Smyrna\nwas extremely rough and during t!*c\nstorm the Turkish torpedo boat put to\nsea and managed to elude the vigilance\nof the allies, presumably in compliance\nwith a special order from Constantinople.\nThe transport whicli the Turks tried\nto torpedo in the Aegean proceeded on\nits voyage, ,\nWhen chased, the Turk tried to\ndodge among tho small islands but\nsoon realized that it was impossible to\nescape and, having rounded ihe south\nend of the Aegean islands the captain\nbeached his boat on the shore.\nATI I IONS, April 17, via London,\nApril 18.\u2014It is stated there that the\ncommander .and crew of 30 of the\nTurkish torpedo boat, wliich ran\naground on tho coast of Chios when\npursued by the allied warships, hav\nsurrendered to the Greek authorities\nand will be interned.\nCONTEST   EXTENDER\n\u25a0Requests have been mado that\nThe Daily News' voting canvass on \"when will the war\nend?\" be not terminated until\nthe end of this week. There\nforo the results will not be given out until one week from today.\nPersons wishing to send In\nvotes may accompany them\nwith a 100-word explanation ot\nthe reasons for their opinions.\nRULE ISLAM FROM\nECMTO\n(Continued from Page One.)\nMagic\nBAKING\nPOWDEB\nmen in an opening on the Mediterranean with ports at Alexandretto or\nMessina.\nBritain  to  Rule  Islam.\nM. Mllukoff expressed the firm belief lhat the present war would.be the\nend of Turkey and would result in the\ndismemberment of Austria,. Greece, he\nsaid, perhaps would have Smyrna with\nthe little hinterland inhabited by the\nGreeks and besides the coast of Asia\nMinor facing Chios. Another great\nIslamistic empire is probable under\nBritish rule, going from Egypt to India, with the latter country the seat\nof the Caliphate. The principle of\nnationality, M. Mllukoff continued,\nwould be strictly enforced at the end\nof the war concerning Austria. Thus,\nhe said, Servia would have Bosnia and\nHerzgovina with the Dalmation coast\nsouth of the Narenta river. Croatia\nwould be Independent with the Dalmatian coast north of the Narenta river,\nand Bohemia also independent while\nold Rumanian territory would be added\nto .Rumania.\nBalicia, M, Mllukoff said, would be\nannexed by (Russia lo form part of Vo-\nland, which would become autonomous\nwithout discussion al tho peace conference because, he declared, the Polish\nquestion was Russia's internal question. A project concerning Poland will\nsoon be presented to the duma which\nwould comprise religious liberty liberty of speech and self-government\nRussia, he added, also would grant\nequal rights to the Jews, although this\nstep was much opposed, especially by\ntho military party,\nBulgaria to Come In.\nM. Milukoff said he thought Bulgaria\nwould join tho allies after having received the same amount as the loan\nshe had contracted in Germany.\nRussia, he said, oad offered to Bulgaria tiiat part of Macedonia wliich,\naccording to the Serb-Bulgarian treaty\nof 1912, was assigned to her, and also\ntho territory occupied by the Bulgarians in Greek Macedonia, like Kastoria,\nVodona and Fiorina.\nThe Bulgarians, according to M. Mllukoff, had asked In addition for the\ndistricts of Uzsok and Kumnavo. Tho\nagreement between Bulgaria and Ru-\nmania, ho said, wus on the 'basis of\nthe treaty signed in Petrograd under\nwhich .Rumania will return to Bulgaria\ntho territory taken after tho second\nBalkan war, while, because she had\nremained neutral tho triple entente\nhad guaranteed to Bulgaria that it\nwould re-conquer Adrianople and extend the B Uigur Ian frontier to the\nEnos-Mldia line.\nIf Italy joins the allies, M. Milukoff\nsaid, she would have, If the allies wore\nvictorious Trent, Trieste and Pola and\nin addition a share in Asia Minor.\nCleaning, Pressing, Repairing\nSulta, Drosses, Overcoats, Gloves,\nHats, Furs, Eto.\nCrown French Dry Cleaning Co\nH. J. WILTON, Mgr.\n506 Josephine St.\nNolson, B. C.\nUp to the\npresent time\nour war souvenir spoons issued represent\nKing George\nKitchener\nEarl Roberts\nLord Fisher\nThe Duke oi\n<S> RED CROSS NOTES. \u00ae\nagainst tho height were repulsed,\n\"In the other sectors all along the\nfront there has heen no change.\"\nRussians Win Desperate Fight\nPETROGRAD, April 18.\u2014The follow\ning official statement was issued Sat\nurday:\n\"The nctlons in tiio Carpathians on\nApril IB were concentrated in the sector between the villages of Telepotch\nand Znelia, where we captured a posi\ntlon after a desperate day ot fighting\non the heights that the enemy organ\nized.\n\"We took 1,140 prisoners, among\nwhom were 40 officers, and three ma>\nchine guns. The enemy suffered great\nlosses in making cnunter-atta<.its which\nwere without effect.\n\"In the direction of Stry we success\nfully repulsed the enemy, which had\nreturned to the attack.   On the other\nfronts there were no changes.\n\"Activities cf a more Important\ncharacter on the part of the German\nadvance guards is showing In the districts of Marlampol and Kalwarya.\n\"The emperor has left for the front.\"\nRepulse Russians\nVIENNA, via London, April' 18, 8:55\np.m.\u2014The following official communication wus Issued today:\n\"The general situation is unchanged.\nIn tho Carpathians, in the wooded\nmountains near Enagypolany, Zceloe\nand Telepotch, Russian attacks were\nvigorously repulsed. Sever, officers\nand 1,421! men were captured.\n\"On the other fronts there were only\nortlllery engagements.\n\"In the southern Bphere of war there\nwere no events of importance.\n\"The Servian artillery fire from the\nregion of Belgrade was successfully\nanswered.\"\nManager Brown of the Vancouver\nNorthwestern league olub Intends on-\nping another pennant this year and In\nthat case will take his playnrs to the\nPanama Pacific exposition to play exhibition games,\nWAR DEPRESSION HAS\nITS OWN  REMEDY\nMuch of the Money to Be Spent By\nAllies Will Find Its Way Here\n(Canadian Associated Press)\nLONDON.^Presldlng at tbe Grand\nTrunk railway meeting recently the\nchairman, A. W. Snilthers, pointed out\nthat the only increase In expenses\nwas consequent on th\u00a9 company keeping on the payroll men who had joined the Canadian forces.\nGoverning Cause\n\"The war Is the governing cause\nof all our troubles,\" added the chairman, \"which had had a. greater effect\non* the northwest of Canada, perhaps,\nthan on any other part. There were\nIndications, however,\" he went on,\n\"that tho requirements of the mother\ncountry and our allies were bringing\nrenewed activity to Canada, and there\nis every sign that much of the money\nspent In war requirements will find\n'Its way to Canada.\"\n. Discussing the general situation\nMr. Smlthers said that such a now\ncountry as the Dominion was subject\nto fluctuations which it was difficult\nfor people in the old country to realize. But 'he saw no reaBon for\nundue pessimism by looking at a\nyear as typical which had been full\nof exceptional difficulty.\nGovernment Skilful\n\"The Canadian Iboard of railway\ncommissioners should realize,\" he\ncontinued, \"that If the railways are\nproperly to fulfill;their duties they\ncould only do so by preserving their\ncredit, and by being paid fairly for\nthe services they rendered the community. Never did a country make\nsuch progress as had Canada during\nthe paBt 12 years. Consequently it\nwaB most vulnerable to such, a catastrophe as the war. The Dominion gov>\neminent, supported by the opposition,\nhad faced the position with great\nskill, and the banks and every other\nInterest had given every assistance in\ntheir power.\"\nThe meeting heartily endorsed\nChairman Smtthere' remarks and reelected him director, '\nTl:p Red Cross society acknowledges\ntlie following donations:\nFrom the Masonic lodge, Nelson, $50,\nfor bed tn the Duchess of Connaught\nhospital at Cliveden, Buckinghamshire,\nEngland; ** pairs of pyjamas, housewife of Sulmo; old linen, Miss Mohr;\niiOO handkerchiefs, Mrs. Outhbert; (i\nsurgical shirts, 1 pair of socles, 1 pair\nof mitts, 2 suits pyjamas, Boswell Women's auxiliary.\nIt was never a happy day for Sammy's painstaking father when his\nyoung hopeful's Hchool report arrived at his Boston home. As for Sammy himself\u2014well, he was a philosopher. The awful day had come once\nmore, and father was ln the lowest\ndepths of misery. \"Sammy\u2014Sammy,\"\nhe groaned, \"why is it that you are at\nthe bottom of the class again?\"\nWhat does it matter, Father, whether\nI am at the top or the .bottom?\" queried that wlBe youth. \"They teaoh the\nsame at both ends, you know.\"\nand\nAdmiral\nBeatty\nOthers will\nfollow until 12\nhave been issued.\nSend $3.00\nfor complete\nset, $1.50 for 6\nor 25c each.\nSent   postpaid.\nHenry Birks & Sons\nVancouver\nB.C.\nBusiness Directory\nA8SAYER8.\nB. W .WIDDOWSON, ASSAYBR AMI'\nChemist Box A1108, Nelson, B.C.,\nCharges! Gold, silver, copper o*\nlead, |1 each; gold-silver 11.60a\n\u25a0liver-lead, 11.50. Other metala on |\napplication.\nAUCTIONEERS.\nC. A. WATERMAN * CO.\u2014Opera blk.\nWM. CUTLER AUCTIONEER,  BOX |\n474; phone II.\nGROCERIES.\nA.   MACDONALD   &   CO.,   WHOLB-\nsale   Grocers   and   Provision  Merchants.   Importers of Teas, Coffees, j\nSpices, Dried Fruits,    Staple    and ]\nFancy  Groceries, Tobaccos, Cigars, j\nButter, Eggs, Cheese and Packing ]\nHouse Produce.    Office and warehouse corner of Front and Hall Sts.\nP.O. box 1095; telephones 28 and II. j\nINSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE.\nARE YOU TAKING advantage of the ]\nreduced rates on your fire insurance j\noffered by G. A. Hunter.   If not see\nhim before renewing.   His .companies ]\nare absolutely reliable..\nPROFE^IO^UCAR^I\nGREEN BROS, BURDEN A CO.\nCivil Engineers, Dominion and B. C.\nLand Surveyor!.\nSurvey* of Lands, Mines, Townsltea, ]\nTimber Limits, etc.\nNelson, 616 Ward street, A. H. Green,\nMgr.; Vietorla, 114 Pemberton Bldg,\nF. C. Green; Fort George, Hammond j\nstreet, F. P. Burden.\nA. L. MeCULLOCH\nHydraulio  Engineer.\nProvincial Land Surveyor,\nBaker St., Nelson, B.C.\nT. M. RIXEN, AUDITOR AND-Accountant.   Room 15, K.W.C. Block. ]\n8. TAMBLYN & CO.\nConsulting, Mining Engineers and Surveyors, Mechanical & Motor Engineers.\nMines reported, managed and surveyed, etc.   Good properties placed on I\nLondon market.   Write, call or phone.\n605 Baker St., Nelsen, B.C,\nPhone 444.\nResident   Engineer:   8.  A.   Tamblyn,\nA.M.I.M.E.,  etc.\nDANCING.\nMISS GLADYS ATTREE\u2014Private lessons by appointment. Particulars of\nclasses and prospectus on application\nBox 304.\nLODGENOTICESj\nKOOTENAY LODGB NO 1\u00ab, I.O.O.F. |\n\u2014Meets every Monday night ln Oddfellows' hall at 7:80 o'clock.\nQUEEN   CITY   REBEKAB   LODGB |\nNo, 16, I.O.O.F., meets first and third\nTuesdays,   Oddfellows'   hall   at   I |\no'clock.\nNELSON ENCAMPMENT NO. 7, I.O,\nO.K.\u2014Meets second and fourth\nThursdays In Oddfellows' hall at I\no'clock.\nCANTON   CORONA  NO.   7\u2014MEETS\nevery second Tuesday In Oddfellows' j\nhall, at 8 o'clock.\nKNIGHTS    OF    PYTHIAS    MEETS |\nTuesday  nights  ln  K.  of P.  hall.\nEagle block.\nC.O.F.\nCourt Kootenay Belle, I\nmeets 4th Friday In K.P. ]\nhall, Eagle block.\nHaving Reduced the Price\n50 Per Cent.\non all Furniture, Stoves and Tools\nfor HO days.    Give us a call for\nyour purchases.\nHighest price paid for Beef Hide.\nA. Bernheim Co.\nJosephine St.\nSAFETY FIRST!\nThat Is what It means to patronize a sanitary shop.\nA. O. F. COURT ELLEN\u2014MEETS I\nfirst and third Monday in Eagle hall |\nat 8 o'clock.\nCLAN JOHNSTONE, 213, MEETS,IN\nI. O. O. F. hall first and third Fridays at 8 p.m.\nNELSON LODGB NO. 5. B. P. O. B. I\n\u2014Meets first and third Thursdaya at I\n8 p.m. ln the Eagle hall. All so-1\njournlng members invited.\nI. O. E \u2014 Meets first and third Men-\ndays in K. of P. hai' at 8 o.nt\nDr. ,T. J. Montgomery St. Catharines,\na brother of Mrs. George Benwell, has\nbeen promoted ln rank from captain to\nmajor of Ihe Canadian Army Medical\ncorps. r      j.\nBee Supplies\nWe have just received a largo slock of Beo Supplies, mado by the\nbest manufacturers In Canada and direct from tho factory, consisting of:\nMedium  Comb Foundation,  por Ib 02o\nNo, 2G Honey Extractors, 9'\/2 x 18, each $9.00\nNo. 4G Honey Extractors, 9*\/2 x 18, each $11.50\nAutomatic Honey Extractors, 9'\/2 x 18, each |...$26.00\nHives, Covers, fine Escapes, Feeders, Frames, Uncapping Knives,\nSeotionB, Swarming Baskets, Beo Veils, Separators, Smokors, Guards,\nTraps, Cages, Nails, Staples, etc, etc.\nWE  GUARANTEE  THE PRICES  RIGHT\nCall or write and get your orders in early, so as to get the assortment.\nNelson Hardware Co.\nP.O.  BOX  1050\nNELSON,   B.C.\nJohn Burns & Sons\n\u25a0ASH\n(ieneril Contractor)\nand Bnilden\nAND DOOR FACTORY. NELSON PLANING MILLS.\nVERNON STREET, NELSON, B.C.\nEvery  Description of  Building   Material Kept in Stook,   Estimates Given\non Stone, Brlok, Conorete and Frame Buildings.\nMAIL    ORDERS    PROMPTLY    ATTENDED    TO.\n\u25a0OX   )M.      _1,    PHONB   171,\nSYNOPSIS OF COAL\nMINING  REGULATIONS\nCoal mining rights of ths Dominion\nin Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, the Yukon Territory, the Northwest Territories, and ln a portion ol\nthe Province of British Columbia, may\nbe leased for a term of twenty-ons\nyears at an annual rental of 11 pel\nacre. Not more than 2560 acre* wli:\nbe leased to one applicant\nApplication for a lease must hi\nmade by the applicant ln person to th.\nAgent or Bug-agent ot the district o\nwbich the rights applied for are situ\ned.\nIn surveyed territory the land a\nbe described by sections or legal subdivisions of sections and in unsurveye.\nterritory tbe tract applied for shall b\nstaked out by the applicant himself\nEach application must be accom\npanted by a tee of |6 which will be re\nfunded it the rights applies for an\nnot available, but not otherwise,\nroyalty shall be paid on the meroh\nantable output of tbe mine at the rat\not five cents per ton.\nThe person operating the mine shal\nfurnish the Agent with sworn return\naccounting for the full quantity\nmerchantable coal mined and pay th.\nroyalty thereon. It tbe coal minim\nrights are not being operated, suel\nreturns should be furnished at lias\nonce a year*\nThe lease will Include the coal min\nIng rights only, but the lessee ma:\nbe permitted to purehass whateve\navailable surface rlghta may ba con\nsldered necessary tor the working o\nthe mine at tbe rate ot $10 an aen\nFor full Information applleatloi\nshould be made to tbe Secretary of tb\nDepartment of the Interior, Ottawa, o\nto any Agent ot Sub-agent ot Domln\nIon Lands,\nW. W. CORY,\nDeputy Minister ot the Interim\nN, B.\u2014 Unauthorised publication o\nthis advertisement will not ba pal\nf*r.\nIF YOU HAVE A ROOM TO REN1\nTRY A WANT AD\n w.\nI\"Ti;-MONbAY, APRIL 19, 1915\n%\\)t Batt^jBetos\n.IT 1\u00bbA0E-PlVt\"\nBeautifyYour\nFront Garden\nWE CAN SUPPLY THE FLOWER\nSEEDS\nYOUR   BACK   YARD   SHOULD\nMAKE YOU MONEY\nIT    WILL ' IF    YOU    USE    OUR\nVEGETABLE SEEDS\nArbor Day Special\nONION SETTS\nWr Ib.  20C\nBell Trading Co.\nBAKER   8TREET\nThe Home of Good Groceries\nHOTEL ARRIVALS OF A DAY\nTHE  HUME\nA la Carte Table d'Hote\nGeorge Benwell, Prop.\nI Special Daily Lunch, 35c\nHUME\u2014Dr. H. J. LaSalle, Charles\nW. Taylor, S. C. Steward, R. K, Kirkup. Graham Cfuickshank, Rossland; L.\nD. Stephenson, Vancouver; C. M.\nLayst, Toronto; H. F. Baker, Boston;\nS. Danoff, Rook Creek; A. P. Guthrie,\nRevelstoke; A. L. Larson, Trail; G, K.\nBeeston, Nelson; V. P. Dawson, J. V,\nGriffin, Calgary; M McLean, Now\nDenver; H. Mushant, A. Rublno, B, G.\nStelner, Vancouver; 13. P. Wilkstrom,\nSpokane; P. L. Bouncy, Edmonton; A.\nC. MeBker, Midway; W. Brydso , W.\nA. Crone, Toronto; T. H. Jones, Montreal; J. T.-'Russell, H. Vaughn Russell's Landing; Mr nnd Mrs. B. Town-\nsend, Miss Gilroy, Mlllow Point; F.\nSterling, T. Bowman, Mr. and Mrs.\nClayton, Mr. and Mrs. Tamblyn, H. A.\nEwart, Mr. Lawley, City; W. Rutherford, Sheep creek; D. H. Hope, Victoria; Jnmcs Humphry, W. W. Keiley,\nPort Hope; Mr. and Mrs. Richardson,\nMr. and Mrs. R. French, Mr. and Mrs.\nBunyan, Master Bunyan, Mrs. I. G.\nNolson, Miss B. Betts , M. Mlddleton,\nJack Darling, J. Hamilton, City; J. J.\nHannan, W. C. Scott, Berlin; W. C.\nHamilton, Toronto; Fraser Scott, G.\nScott, Hamilton; Bill Burley, Owen\nSound,\nWinning Nirtnber\nLAST  WEEK\n2470\nWill holder of this ticket please\ncall and receive shoes.\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLeaders In Foot Fashion.\nTOME UP\nYOUR SYSTEM\nThis is tbe time of the year\nwhen a great many people require\na tonic for their health's sake.\nSome resort to medicine and tbe\ndoctor's advice, while others desire a much-needed rest.\nFor the benefit of those who are\nseeking relaxation from work and\nworry we invite you to The\nSprings. Tbe medicinal value of\nthe waters are unrivalled and will\nput you ln shape to resume your\nlabors, whatever they may be.\nEvery care and comfort will be\ngiven you during your stay at the\nSanitarium.\nCome and be convinced.\nRates: $12 and $16 per week, or $2\nper day and upwards.\nHalcyon Hot Springs\nSanitarium\nWM, BOYD, Proprietor.\nHalcyon Arrow Lakes\nKootenay and Boundary\nTRAIL PATRIO\nNelson House\nEuropean  Plan\nW. A. WARD, Proprietor\nCAFE\u2014Open Day and Nlflht\u2014BAR\nMerchants' Lunch 12 to 2\nPhone 97\nP.O. Box 597\nNELSON\u2014L. W. Smith, Salmo; T.\nO'Oordon, Horso Fly; S. L. Drake,\nGrand Forks; A. L. Stuart, W. Wallace, George Grant, City.\nArrow Lake\nHotel\nTHE HOTEL OF COMFORT\non the\nBEAUTIFUL ARROW LAKES\nnt\nEDGEWOOD, B.C.\nARROW LAKES HOTEL\u2014W D.\nBurch, Flro Valley; Mrs. J. Bangs, Miss\nA. M, King, Cascade; M. McLean, New\nDenver; G. W. Benny, Nelson,\nROSSLAND HOTELS\nThe Hotel Allan\nComfortable  Rooms\u2014Splendid\nTable,\nSMITH & BELTON,\nProprietors.\nThe Strathcona\nJames Marshall, Prop.\nSTRATHCONA\u2014E. P. Wilkshom, E.\nBcnn, Mrs. J. H. Frank, Spokane; E.\nE. BaBtin, Maude Michaely, Mrs. N.\nMichaely, Mrs. J. G. Douglas, G, E.\nMansfield, A. M. Awed, RosBland; F S,\nVlndley, T. Stevenson, E. W. Bateman,\nVancouver; Mrs. A.. D. McRae, Hall-\nfax; Mr. and Mrs. K. Littlefield, Montreal; Mr. and Mrs. A, Sims, Appledule;\nMr. Emplnghum, Hamilton; M. M.\nSplllman, Dr. J. Williamson Frank,\nVictoria; R. D. Dawson, K. N. Cuthbe,\nE. D. Dawson, Willow Point; W. Hair-\nelne, Vernon; R. G. Holmes, Denver,\nColo.; J. M. Doyle, Calgary; E. G. Hun-\nley, E, E. Wlnflcld, Edmonton; Mr.\nand 'Mrs. A.\" Marsden, J. A. Cooper,\nToronto; W. G. Fallen, Gait.\nQueen's Hotel\nSteam Heat ln Every Room\nBusiness Lunch, 3Gc.\nRatet: $1.60 and $2.00 Day\nQUEENS\u2014Joo Caron, iMarry Rymcll,\n\\ Kitchener; G, McLean, Proctor; J. C.\nI Carrutlicrs, Midway; C. M. Fox, Vlc-\nj torla; D. Cummins, City; J. Napin\n(* Macandrew, Edinburgh; Walter Gougy,\nBoswell.\nMadden House\nE. C. CLARKE\nCer. Bsker and Ward 8ts, Nelson\nMADDEN\u2014.R. R. .Jones Thomas\nKae, Castlegar; J. T. Wilson, D, E.\nWlok, City; Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Walker, Ryan; D. 3. McLeod. Sydney, N.S.;\nT. J. McAlpln, Butte; Mrs. Monnghan,\nTaghum.\nNew Grand Hotel\nBest Place in Town,\nI1.00-* cay, up.\nHotel Castlegar\nCastlegar, B.C.   W. H. Gage, Prop.\nAll modern. First class accommodation for drummers, Rossland to\nNelFon train stops daily for dinner.\nBoundary train leaves at 9:10 o'clock\nMonday, Wednesday and Friday.\nTo  Belgian  Relief $1800 Has Already\nBeen Contributed and $600 to the\nPatriotic Fund.\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nTRAIL, B.C., April 18.\u2014The Trail\nRed Cross branch has Issued a report\nthrough its secretary of the result of\ntheir appeal for donations. To the Be'.-\nCian relief fund it has already contributed $1800 and $600 has been donated to the Canadian pitri'-tic fund.\nThe following donations 1-ave recently been received: P. Dunker.ey, $\u25a0>;\nF. W. Warren, $15; W. M. Lcw.s, $4.i0,\nA. J. Ellis, $5; A. Hay, $3; H. Harrlao-i\n$2; P. Burns & Co., ?5; R. Trusswe!!,\nJr., $3; J. D. Robertson, $2; G. P. Weir,\n$5; H. E. Wfcde, $10; G. R. Thompson,\n$10;   total,  $69.50.\nWith the donations already acknowledged this makes a total of $3358.35.\nOn local relief $2-12.50 has 'been spent\nand on sundries $130.90. The balance\nin hand April 15 was $614.95.\nA case of linen and old cotton has\nbeen recently shipped.\nThe tea cloth to be raffled in aid of\nthe auxiliary of the patriotic society is\nnow on view in a local store window.\nTt is hoped to raise $50 for a cot in\nthe Duchess of Connaughts hospital at\nCliveden, England and any contribution toward this object will be gratefully received by the secretary.\nThe grey woolen socks recently ask- Tson,9 nospuamy unci banquet and it\ned for should be in size not less than is 'hougfot even a larger number will\n11% inches.\nThe Red Cross depot is now open on\nFridays at the city hall between 3 and\n6 o'clock in the afternoon.\nAt tho concert of the Trail Choral\nsociety on Monday after the performance of the sacred cantata \"The Holy\nCity,\" there will follow a selected program. It promises to be one of the\nbest musical events of the season. The\nnet proceeds will be divided equally\nbetween the Belgian Refugee fund and\nthe Red Cross society. There are 300\nseats available in the theatre and only\nthis number will be sold so that every\none purchasing a ticket will be sure of\nseating accommodation.\nR. Watson Scott, principal of the\nTrail high school reports that during\nthe past week the pupils have been\nwriting their terminal examinations\nand the results will be announced soon.\nIn the Trail public school 18 new\nscholars wero admitted into Miss\nHayes class, wliich necessitated promotions to    Miss Tierce's room.\nThe monthly meeting of tho W.C.T.U.\nis to bo held at the Baptist church on\nWednesday afternoon at 3 o'clock, tho\nsubject proposed is \"Progress.\"\nTho following were in tho city yesterday: F. Prltchard J. Miller and Miss\nB. Cassidy, Nelson,\nTO BE\nLE\ncon\nCTED\nMOYIE   NOTES\nROSSLAND NEWS.\n(Special to Tho Daily News.)\nROSSLAND, B. C, April 18.\u2014A\nmeeting of tin* Golden City Tennis club\nwas hold in the offices of Dr. Me\nNaughton. Several new members\nwere accepted and this season prom\nIses lo be very successful. The courts\nare being put into shape and it is expected the opening will be May 1.\nJ. Schofield of Trail spent the afternoon In the city.\nGeorge Red path of Trail spent the\nweek-end In Rossland.\nH. M. Suckling left Saturday evening on a visit to Montreal.\nMr, and Mrs. Walter Preston and\ndaughter, Madeline, have returned\nfrom the coast cities and Spokane,\nwhere Mr. Preston has spent six weeks\nfor his health.   He is much improved.\nMrs. Rupert Bulmer left this morning for Spokane, where she will take\na three months' nursing course in one\nof the hospitals.\nRobert Duffy of Trail preached at\nthe Methodist church Sunday morning\nand in the evening the pulpit was occupied by Rev. J. H. Wllby of Vancouver.\nMrs. Nevin and little daughter relumed on Saturday night for a three\nweeks' v'sit to Proctor. Mr. Nevin met\nthem at West Robson.\nMrs. Douglas, Mrs. Michaely and\nthe Misses Maudo and Marguerite\nMichaely returned on Saturday from n\nshort visit to Nelson,\nMrs. Trafford of Trail Is spending\nSunday In the city.\nR. Duffle, Mr. Norrlc and Mr, Merry-\nfield of Trail spent the week-end In\nthe city.\nThe Girls' Athletic club held a dance\nin the Conservative hall on Friday\nevening, The music was supplied by\nHall & Padberg's orohestra and refreshments wero served In tho banqueting hall. The hostesses for the\nevening were Mrs. Stenson and Mrs\nJ. N. Post.\nLABOR MAN TO RUN\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nMONTREAL-, April 18.\u2014Wilfred Pa-\nquettc, founder of the Canadian Federation of Textile Workers, announces\nhis candidacy ns a straight Labor candidate for the house of commons from\nMaisonneuve, Que., In the next election,\n(Special to Tho Daily News.)\nMOYIE, B. C, April 18.\u2014F. Carrier\nroturned to KIngsgatc Wednesday and\nMr. Mitchell, veterinary inspector of\nKingsgate, was the guest of Mr. and\nMrs. Fred Kesler, returning on Thursday.\nThe Misses Elsie and Alvyn Nutt\nleft on Thursday to visit Mr. and Mrs.\nL. P. Smith of Baynes lake. Al. Martin returned home the same day.\nThe ice cream social given by the\nMethodist Ladles' aid was a great success.\nUnder tlie leadership of .1. W. Fitch\nthe school hoys of Moyio have started a\nsocial club in which the pastor, J. R.\nNorton, is much interested.\nJ. Taylor, late secretary of the\nMoyle Miners' union, was a visitor\nfrom the Sullivan mine nn Thursday\nand left on Saturday witli Mrs. Taylor,\nwho goes to Prince Edward Island on\na home visit.\nMiss Lily Conrad was a Cranbrook\nvisitor on Friday and Arthur Pitman\nleft for Klmbcrley.\nA novel function is held weekly in\nthe public school. The children vote\nby ballot after the style of a political\neloctlon as far as possible, with returning officers, scrutineers, etc., The\ncandidates for election are the senior\npupils responsible for the daily window decoration with plants, flowers\nand foliage. This feature is found tu\nbe a most interesting and valuable introduction to the practical teaching of\ncivics or citizen government by the\npeople for the people, and invests what\nis often thought a dry and difficult\nsubject With life and interest.\nProvincial     Member    of    Legislature\nPromises Completion of Bridge\n(Special to Tho Daily Nows.)\nCRANBROOK, B.C., April 18.\u2014T. D.\nCaven, M.P.P., returned from Vancouver Friday night, having travelled to\nFort Steele. While at the coast Mr.\nCaven was successful in procuring an\nappropriation for the building of a\nbridge across the St. Mary's river at\nMarysville. Work on the new bridge\nwiii commence at once and on Its completion it will be no longer necessary\nfor residents and ranchers in that district to travel by Wycliffe in order\nto cross the river.\nJoseph McNabb spent Sunday in\ntown with his family.\nConstable Joseph Walsh of Fort\nSteele was a Cranbrook visitor Saturday.\nConstable Loasby of Sirdar Is visiting with Mrs. C. J. Little.\nMrs.   Simon   Taylor  has   returned  to\nKamloops, after spending two weeks\nwith her daughter, Merle.\nW. H. Wilson, secretary of the Cranbrook Automobile association is busy\nmaking arrangements for a complete\nturnout of Cranbrook autoists on the\nfirso Wednesday in May when tlie association members and their friends\nwill be the guest of N. Hanson at\nWasa. Last year some 40 cars and\nabout 200 visitors enjoyed Mr. Hanson's  hospitality and   banquet  and  it\nbe in attendance this year\nMrs. James Boyes and daughter, No-\nrine left today for tho east where they\nwill visit with Mrs. Boyes* sisters.\nA. H. Webstor left Thursday for a\nweek's  vacation  at  Calgary.\nMiss Vada Boytcr returned Thursday from a short visit with friends at\nHosmer.\nThe eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. J. T.\nMcFadden, who is ill with pneumonia,\nis doing as well as can be expected.\niMiss Grundy and Miss Murphy who\nwere operated on in the St. Eugene\nhospital last Thursday for appendicitis\nare progressing nicely.\nFrank Parks, who underwent an operation Friday, is improving.\nColin Leitch went to Macleod Saturday afternoon.\nMrs. Berge of Perry Creek, spent\nSnturday in tho city.\nP. Lund of Wardncr, autood to Cranbrook Saturday evening.',\nBANK  MANAGER SAYS\nFAREWELL TO ROCK CREEK\nROCK CREEK, B. C, April 18.\u2014\nWednesday, C. B. Winter paid a faro-\nwell visit to Rock creek. Mr. Winter\nhas boen manager at the Bank of\nMontreal for about four; years and is\nshortly leaving to tuko dharge of the\nbank's branch at Enderby. Iu the\nevening Mr. Winter and Mr. Marcon,\nmanager of the Hank of Commerce,\nGreenwood, and friends were the guests\nof T. Hanson at the Rock Creek hotel.\nAfter supper speeches were given by\nMessrs. Marcon, Hanson, MeCutcheun,\nMcCreath, Macdonald, Whiting and C.\nLonghurst. Mr. Winter said ho felt\ntho leaving of this district moro than\nany place he had moved from. He said\nthat the optimistic feeling that pre\nvailed among tiie miners and fanners\nhad in a great measure helped tn keep\nthings going these dull times. It was\nthis feeling that had helped Rossland\na few years ago to tide over a quiet\nperiod and mako It one of the most\nsuccessful cities in the Kootonay-\nBoundary country at the present time.\nMr. Debnoy of Victoria is visiting his\nsister, Miss M. Dobnoy at Nicholson\ncreek.\nThe British Columbia Telephone\ncompany bus commenced lu erect tho\nline that will connect outlying houses\nat Rock creek and vicinity with the\nlong distance line to Nolson and Vancouver.\nWEDDING\nGVEN A\nMrs.   Gendle   Honored   by   Friends\u2014\nSixty Guests Attended.\n(Special to The Daily Newa.)\nROSSLAND, B.C April 18,-An enjoyable evening wus spent on Friday\nat the Cliff hotel, tho occasion being\na miscellaneous shower )n honor of\nMrs. Gendle, nee Miss Sylvia Docl.\nSome 60 guests were present and numerous and beautiful gifts received\nshowed the popularity of the young\nbride and groom. After receiving good\nwishes from their friends refreshments\nwere served hy the bride's mother, Mrs.\nC, P. Doel. During the evening a violin\nsolo was rendered by Mrs. R. Gosse.\nThe following Is a list of tho presents\nreceived:\nSalt dips, Mrs. Dan Fei'gtiflon; berry\nspoon, Mrs. King; fancy plate, Mrs.\nLane; celery dish Airs. D. Thomas;\nscarf, Miss M, Gregory; jardiniere,\nMrs. J. G. Murray, towels, Mrs. Borth-\nwiek; towels, .Ruby and Pear Doney;\ntowels, Miss Esther Fredland;\npicture, Miss Margaret Mlchuely\ntowels, Mrs. Grue; hand embroidered\npin cushion, Mrs. Shirley; doylies,\nAlice Davies; doylies, Mrs. J. Cocking;\nberry spoon, Mrs. Johnson and Edna;\ncalling book and hatpin holder, Mrs.\nF. Smith; fancy plate, Mrs. M. Powers; salt and pepper, Mrs. McLeod\nand Mrs. Potrie; centre, Miss C. Larson; half dozen Lainose plates, Mrs.\nA. Inches; Syrup dish, Miss L. Supple;\nhand embroidered doylies, Mrs. D.\nLawson; towels, Miss M. Supple; bonbon dish, Mrs. Falkner; scarf. Miss N.\nDriscoi; bath towels, Mrs. Mtachan;\nberry bowl, .1. F. Mitchell; wine set,\nMrs. Edlnger; sugar and cream, Mrs.\nA. Burnett; bath towels, Mrs. Arm-\nshaw; vases, Mrs. M. Thomas; teaspoons, Miss D, Brown and M. McLean; picture and centre, Mrs. Cosse\nand Winnie; meat fork, Mr* Grant\nscarf Mrs. Anna Swanson; cold meat\nfork. Misses H, and E. Trembath\ncondiment set, Mrs. Whitford, vases,\nMr. and Mrs. Haynes; sardine fork,\nMrs. Ferguson; hand embroidered doy\nlies, Miss E. Isaacson; tray cloth, Miss\nA. Isaacson; pin cushion and scarf,\nJessie Bell; doylies, Mrs. J. Servold;\ndoylies, Mrs. A. Newltt ; table mats,\nMrs. Keating; salt and pepper. Mrs. W\nD. McDonald; towels (linen) Lauru\nand Alice Jewell; tray cloth, Mrs. C.\nGriffith; picture, Mrs. F. Harding; tea\npot stand, Mrs. Anderson; fancy bowl,\nMrs, P. and S. Hunt; bon-bon (cut\nglass) Mrs. Douglas; mayonnaise dish,\nMiss E. Fox; cream dish, Miss E Cocking; cut glass bowl, Mr. and Mrs.\nWaistell; cut glass bowl, Mrs. Lam-\nmond (Vancouver); marmalade dish.\nA. J. Elier; half dozen spoons, Esther\nFredland; cream and sugar bowl, celery. Elks' quartet; fruit knives, Mrs.\nGosso; towels and apron, Matsom; cut\nglass vase, Mr. and Mrs. Michaely and\nMiss Maude Michaely; vases, Mrs.\nRobinson; fish servers, Ida Alio; cut\nglass mustard, Mr. and Mrs. A. T Col-\nlis; dozen teaspoons, Ray and Lam-\nrnond Doell; pearl knives and forks,\nMr. and Mrs. D. Thomas; salt and pepper and cream and sugar, Mrs. Parker;\ncabinet of silver boys; rocking cliair,\nMiss A. Dlvor anil Miss E. Campion;\nbedroom set. mother; table cloth,\nmother: napkins, mother and Eva;\nchina teapot. Mrs. Bert Hamilton; cut\nglass Jug. Mrs. G. H. Wallace; embroidered towels, Mrs. M. Hooper and\nalso Mrs. R. Gordon; embroidered pillow slips, Mrs. A. Johnston; bath towels, Miss M. Evans.\nOur Spring Stock\nFertilizer\nTTlffi    JUST   ARRIVED-WRITE   FOR   QUOTATIONS  I   \u00a3g\\.\nUse\nBurns' Ideal Poultry Food\nP. Burns & Co., Ltd.\nAsk for\nNBC Beer\nXXX Porter\nNelson Brewing Co., Ltd.\nPhone 24\nEstablished 1893\nBox 732\nHALCYON  NOTES\nHALCYON, li. Q., April 18.\u2014H. F\nBaker, Boston, and Mr. and Mrs. A. M.\nMcDormid, Edmonton, arrived from\nthe north on Saturday and left thl3\nmorning on the south bound steamer.\nD. O. Kingsbury, Kelowna, arrived\non Thursday.\nW. Gryareezuk and N. MooKovich,\nTrail, who arrived a weik ago, loft this\nmorning.\nM. A. MaekcM-.ie, Winnipeg, who has\nbeen here since tho end of March, paid\na visit to Revelstoke on Friday\nFERNIE BRAKEMAN\nMAY LOSE ONE EYE\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nFERNIE, B.C., April IS.\u2014J. D. McLaren, brakeman in the employ of tiie\nMorrissey, Fernie & Michel railway,\nwho received serious injuries about\ntlie face and eye from a slack telephone wiro while on a moving train in\nthe Great Northern railway yards here\nabout two weeks ago. returned on\nFriday from Spokane where he has\nbeen receiving special treatment to\nsave the sight of the eye injured.\nEverything has been done but owing\nto the serious nature of the Injuries\ncomplete recovery is still in doubt.\non Friday evening tiie eastbound\nCanadian Pacific train whilo pulling\nout of Fernie broke one nf the coupler\nknuckles and was delayed hen- for half\nan  hour while repairs wore made.\nThe Loyal Order of Moose Is holding\na social on Monday evening in Knights\nof Pythias halt.\nJ. W, Skilllng returned today after\nhaving hado a trip to eastern Crow's\nNest Pass points.\nHorses For Sale\nWe have Four Teams of Heavy Horses suitable for Logging or\nRanch Work which can bo bought CHEAP FOR CASH. These horses\nare all young and sound and weigh from 2.700 lbs. to 3,400 lbs. per team.\nI\nAPPLY:\nWest Transfer Co.\nWATER   ACT,   1914.\nII is not likely that there will be any\ninternational regattas this year, but\nlocal regattas will be hold by Vancouver and Victoria.\nNOT   AS   IT   USED   TO   BE\nSir Wilfrid Laurler; \"The river, channel seems to have changed, boys,\"\nBefore the Iboard of Investigation.\nIn the matter of streams flowing\nfrom the West and draining into Upper Arrow Lake and the Columbia\nRiver between a point live miles southwest of Arrowhead and a point three\nmiles south west of Burton;\nAud in tho matter of streams f w-\nIng from tho east and draining into\nUpper Arrow Lako and the Columbia\nRiver between the southern line of\nLot 2110 Galena Hay and a point five\nmiles south of Burton.\nA meeting of tbe Board of Investigation will 1)0 hold at the Court-house\nat Nakusp on tlie 31st day of May,\n1915, at one o'clock In  the afternoon.\nIa the matter of streams flowing\nfrom the West and draining into Lower\nArrow Luke between a point five miles\nsouthwest of Burton and a point five\nmiles south of Renataj\nAnd in tho matter of streams flowing\nfrom the East and dralnine into Lower\nArrow Lako between a point five miles\nsouth of Burton and a point five miles\nsouth of Deer Park.\nA mooting of the said Board will ho\nhold at Edgewood nn tho 2nd day of\nJune, at nine o'clock in the forenoon,\nIn the matter of streams flowing\nfrom tlie Wost and South and drain\ning into tho Lower Arrow Lako and tlie\nColumbia \"River from a point five miles\nsouth of Renata and a point opposite\nKinnaird Railway Station;\nAnd in the matter of streams flowing\nfrom tho North and East and draining\nInto tho Lower Arrow Lake and tin\nColumbia River between a point five\nmiles soutb of Deer Park and a point\nopposite Kinnaird Railway Station excluding therefrom the Kootenay River\n(and its tributaries) east of Thrums\nRailway Station.\nA meeting of the said Board will be\nheld at Castlegar on tlie 3rd day of\nJune, at nine o'clock in the forenoon.\nIn the matter of the West Arm of\nKootenay Lake und Kootenay River\n(and thoir tributaries) between a point\nopposito Thrums (Railway Station and\na point one mile Wost of Kokanee\nCreek, excluding therefrom Slocan\n'River (and Us tributaries) North of\nKoch's Siding.\nA meeting of tlie said Board will be\nheld at tho Court-house in Nelson on\ntho 4th day of Juno, at ton o'clock in\nthe forenoon.\nIn tho matter of Trail Creek, above\nWarfield Siding and of Sheep Creek\n(Rossland) and its tributaries.\nA meeting of tiie said Board will be\nheld at Rossland on the Sth day of\nJune, at two o'clock in the afternoon.\nIn the matter of streams flowing;\nfrom the East and Wost and draining\ninto the Columbia River between1 a\npoint opposite Kinnaird Railway Station and the International Boundary,\nexcluding therefrom streams set for\nhearing at  Rossland  and  Salmo;\nA meeting of the said Board will bo\nheld at Trail, on the 7th day of June,\nat one o'clock in the afternoon.\nIn the matter of Pond d'Oreille River\nand its tributaries, including Salmo or\nSalmon .River;\nAnd in tho matter of Beaver Creek\nand Its tributaries a-bovo Fruitvale.\nA meeting of tlie said Board will be\nheld at Sulmo on the 10th day of June,\nat ten o'clock in the forenoon.\nIn the matter of streams flowing into Knotonay Lake from tho North and\nWost, north of a point three miles\nnorth    of    Queen's  Bay ami of all\nstreams flowing into Kootenay Lake\nfrom the East, north of Pilot Bay, including streams in the Lardeau and\nTrout Lake Mining Divisions;   ..\nA mooting of the said Board will be\nheld at Kaslo on the 14th day of June,\nat nine o'clock in the forenoon.\nIn the matter of streams flowing\nInto Kootenay Lake from the West,\nsouth of a point throe miles north of\nQueen's Bay, and of streams flowing\ninto Kootenay Lake south of Pilot\nBay;\nAnd in the matter of streams flowing from tho North into tho West Arm\nof Kootenay Lako, east of a point ono\nmile wost of Kokanee Creek;\nA meeting of the said Board will be\nheld at Balfour on the 16th day of\nJune, at three o'clock in tlie afternoon.\nPersons who proved their claims at\nthe mooting hold in Proctor on the\n17th day of April, 1914, need not appear\nagain.\nIn the matter of streams flowing\ninto the Kootenay River south of\nKootonay Lake.\nA mooting of tho said Board will bo\nheld at Creston on the 17th day of\nJune, at two o'clock in the afternoon.\nAt theso meetings all statements of\nclaim to water privileges under Acts\npassed 'before the 12th day of March,\n1009, on tlie respective streams, all\nobjections thereto, and the plans prepared for the use of tho Board will\nthen bo open for inspection.\nAll persons interested are entitled\nto examine these, aud to file objections thereto in writing if they deem\nfit. '\nAt those meetings claimants who\nhavo not previously done so shall prove\nthoir titlo to the lands to which thoir\nwater records are appurtenant. This\nmay be done by producing, in case of\nCrown granted lands, the title deeds or\na certificate of encumbrance or other\nevidence of title; or In case of lands\nnot held under Crown Grant, by producing tho pre-emption record, tlie\nagreement of sale, the mining record,\nor other written  evidence of title.\nObjections will be heard forthwith\nif tho party objected to has received\nsufficient notice of tlie objection.\nTho 'board at tlie said meetings will\ndetermine the quantity of water which\nmay be used under each record, tho\nfurther works which aro necessary for\nsuch uso, and will set dates for the\nfiling of plans of such works and for\ntho commencement and completion of\nsuch works.\nAnd, whereas, thero may be persons\nwho, 'before the 12th day of March.\n11)00, woro entitled to water rights on\ntho said streams and yet have not filed\nstatements of their claims with the\nBoard of Investigation, such persons\naro required to file on or before the\n20th day of May, 1915, a statement as\nrequired by section 294 of the \"Water\nAct, 1914,\" Forms (iNo. 50 for irrigation and No. 51 for other purposes)\nmay bo obtained from any Government\nAgent in the Province,\nHated at Victoria, B.C., the 14th day\nof April, 1915.\nFor tlie Board of Investigation.\nJ. F. ARMSTRONG\nChairman.\nCORPORATION   OF  THE  CITY  OF\nNELSON.\nCourt of Revision.\nNotice is hereby given that the first\nsitting of the Court of Revision for the\npurpose of hearing complaints against\nthe assessment for the year 1915 as\nmade for tho City of Nolson and the\nNelson school district will be held in\nthe Council Chamber, City Hall, on\nWednesday the 19th day of May at 10\no'clock In the forenoon\n,   .\\\\r. E. WIASSOK,\nAssessor.\nYOUR EQG3 CAN BE DISPO8E0 OP\nBY USING A WANT AD\n PAfi\u00a3 SIX\nMarkets - Mining - Finance\nPURCHASES HEAVY\nIN 81\n(Week of Activity in Now York Closes\nWith Generally Higher Price\nLevel,\n(By Daily News boasoxt Wife.)\nNEW YORK April IS.\u2014A week of\ncxtrayrdiiutry activity in tho stock\nmarket culminated yesterday in higher\nloyula of quoted values virtually\nthroughout tho list. Various Indus-\ntrial'alid equipment issues wliich recently ibeeamo the contro of unrest in\ntrading woro again prominent with\n\u25a0further gains of 3 to 7 points, although\nAmerican Locomotive and Now York\nAirbrake closed with not losses.\nUnited States Stool was tho foremost featuro dealings exceeding 105,-\n000 shares, or almost 25 per cent of\nt tho two-hour business session, it advanced to 60, its bost prico of tho current rise and about !! points abovo\nits quotation of tho latter part of last\nJanuary, whon adverse trade conditions and poor earnings impelled the\ndirectors to suspend the dividend.\nTrading in Stoel was on a scale like\nthat which mado the stock conspicuous\nin bygone years. Lots of 1000, 2000,\nKOflt) and even 1000 shares wero absorbed with a freedom begotten of confidence of Gx'tromo bear necessity.\nThere wero rumors that the company\nsoon would announce tho receipt of\nwar orders but of this thero was no\njUjfjfiCia.1 confirmation.\n\"Olio of ilio'day's most important factors wus tho statoment issued by the\nPennsylvania: railway of \"its intention\nto purchase new equipment in large\nquantities. This was accepted as tlie\ninauguration of a tdmilar movement by\nother leading railroad systems.\nGeneral Industrial reports including\na marked increase of production by\nleading steel mills and announcement\nthat\nprcvfi\nluissii\naiicy i\nPurtb\nfor\nprices\nBun|d\nof irn\nnucha\n11\nailin\n\u25a0 pro]\nio  intense pessimism, so long\nin mercantile    linos   was\nS. contributed toward tho bouy-\nlanifestod in speculative olrclos.\nV soiling, domestic and foreign,\nifits waa without effect, highest\nmostly ruling at the closo.\ns were firm after a brief period\ngularity.   Sales, par value, wore\n000.   United States bonds wore\n.1 on ball uu tho week.\nSTOCKS  ACTIVE   IN\nTORONTO;   PRICES  FIRM'\ntho slock market yesterday was fairly\niy Daily Nows Leased Wire.)\nIONTO,   April   18.\u2014Trading  on\nduring   tho   two-hour   session.\nworo fow features of importance\nio general market was firm. The\nupward movement was in Cana-\nLocomotlve,  the stock rising to\nand closing at that figure as\nst \\\\2\\v Friday. Canners declined\n\"A, whero it closed. British Col-\nPackers was higher at U4&\nleum was steady, with sales at\nr   1800  shares.     Brazilian   was\nreacting  to   57  and  closing at\nftbtlv-\nThor\nbut t\nchief\ndiau\n37'\/i\nagain\nto ;u\numbi\nPetri\n820\nquiet\n57-tt.\nLu celona was easier at. 10%. M;\nkay. wus strong with 78'\/i bid at the\ncloye] Maplo Leaf firm at fA% to\n50, closing at the highest. .Nova Scotia\nSteel sold at 66% and Genoral Electric fit 01. Toronto railway closed easy\nat 11-194 whilo Twin City was firmer\nat S>. Banks, quiet with no changes\nnoted.\nFURTHER MEASE f\nTONNAGEJVT SMELTER\nAmount of Ore Treated al Trail Has\nIncreased for. Several\nWeeks\nLust week's returns ill the Consolidated Copper & Smelting company's\nTrail smelter sliow a still greater\nweekly increase in tlie tonnage of ore\ntreated. Two weeks ago tlie Increase\nwas about 2,000 tons and last week's\ntotal exceeds this again by about -Ot)\ntone. The total Cor the week was S,'JS3\ntona and the total amount this year is\n131,170 ton*.\nThe weekly statement, showing the\namount of ore treated during the last\nweek and the current year, fo\"ow\nRossland\n(MOHBAY, +mii-M.Mt   \u2022\u2022t,\nGRANITE PROPERTY\nES\"\nCentre star .\nI.o Itol \t\nLe Rol No. 2\nOther mines .\n3,012\n2.72S\nSOU\n0,840\nIIS\n00,079\n13,054\n5,726\n5\n1119,463\n353\nS53\nQueen   \t\nOther mines\nNelson\nMETALS.\nCopper up to 17.12l\/2.\nBy Daily News Leased Wire.)\nNEW  YORK,  April  17.\u2014The metal\nmarkets were unlet.   Electrolytic copper,  17 nt 17.12V,;  casting,  10.02U,  at\n$16.13.\nBit silver, 50.\nThe Consolidated Mining and Smelting Co.\nof Canada, Limited\nOffices, Smelting and Refining Department\nTRAIL,   BRITISH   fJOLUMBIA.\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper and Lead Ores\nTRAIL BRAND 1'IG LBAD: AND BLUESTONE.\nForest Mills of B. G, Ltd.\n\u25a0\nHEAD   OFFICE,   REVELSTOKE\nMills: Cascade, Comaplix, Three Valley, Taft, Nelson\nMANUFACTURERS   OF   LUMBER,   LATH,   SHINGLE8\nFor Sale: SLABWOOD, 4-foot,\nand 16-inch STOVEWOOD\nTerms Cash.    Prompt  Delivery.\nOrders taken by:\nD. A. MeFARLAND, Room 6, K. W. C. Block.   P.O. Box 24.   Phone 49.\nJ, H. LEMMON, Manager Nelson Branch,   Phone 15.\nTHOMAS  SARGENT\nH.   D.   CHISHOLM\nNELSON MOTOR SUPPLY CO.\n301 ward Street\nLargest Retail Stock of Motor Boat Supplies in British Columbia\nAgents for Sterling, Mercury, Niagara, Kermatb, Barber, Wonder,\nTermatt and Monahan Engine:;, ColumVlan Propellers, Joes Clutches and\nRear Starters, Chesnut Canoes, Punliaid and Keystone Lubricating Oils\n\u2022nd Grease.   Frosh Columbia and Ante Ilapid Fire Butteries always in\nstock.  Copper Paint for Boat Bottoms,\nVarnish;   Kenynou Cushions;   Paddles\nMartin-Senom* Paints and Valspar\nand   Oars;   Steering  Wheels  and\nRope; High and Low Tension Cable, Spark Colls and Plugs, Searchlights,\nMagnetos, Carbureters, Copper Tubing,\nUnguishcrs, Flags and Poles and Boat i\nAGENTS FOR FORD CARS  AND  ACCESSORIES.\nBilgo Pumps, Pyreno Flro Ex-\n'ittings of Every Description,\nTHE NELSON IRON WORKS, Limited\nPARTIAL   LIST   OF   SECONO-HaKiD   MACHINERY   FOR   SALE\nENGINES\n1 10(1 ll.p. High Sjiood Ball.\n1 13 X IS III) lull. Slide Valve.\n1 12 x 10 75 h.p. Slide Valve.\n1. 40 ll.p. A. C. Motor, 2,000 volts\n1 S x 10 Mine Hoist.\n1 414 X 2%  x 4 Duplex Pump.\n1 No. 3 d-ntrifut'al Pump.\nAND   MUCH   OTHER   MATERIALS-SEND   US  YOUR   INQUIRIE8\n0 x 24 Surlneer aud *-Matcher.\n20 h.p. Vertical Boiler.\nSmall Gates' Crusher.\nSmall Gules Crusher,\ndates' Grinder.\nSeveral large Gyratory Crushers.\nHydraulic Elevator.\nThere la no habit more easily formed than the habit of\nsaving. It you have not already acquired the habit do\n\u2022o now by opening a eavlnga\naccount\nOne dollar opens an acoount\nIn our Savings Department\nEstablished  1675.\nHead Office, Toronto, Ont\nCapital (paid up)  ..$7,000,000\nReserve Fund  *7,000,000\nPeleg  Howland, President\nElla* Rogers,  Vice-President\nEdward Hay, den. Manager.\nNelson Branch\nf, H. D. Benson, Manager.\ng\"R!   .'t .X\u00a3W:\" to\nBank of Montreal\nESTABLISHED 1817\nCapital   authorized    $25,000,000\nCapital   all   paid   up $15,000,000\nlest ,.., $16,000,000\nHEAD  OFFICE!   MONTREAL\nH. V. Meredith, Esq......President\nSir  Frederick  Williams-Taylor,\nGeneral Manager.\nBranches ln British Columbia:\nArmstrong, Athalmer, Chllllwack,\nClovcrdalo, Enderby, Greenwood,\nKamloops, Kelowna, Merrltt, Nelson, New Denver. New Westminster, Nicola, Pentlcton, Port Al-\nberai, Port Honey, Prince Rupert,\nPrlnoeton, Rossland, Summerland,\nVancouver, Vancouver (Main\nstreet), Vernon, Victoria, West\nSummerland, Albernt.\nInterest paid en Savings Deposits\nat 8 per cent (present rate).\nNelson Branch, L. B. DeVsbsr, Mgr,\nJaily News Want Ad Brjnai R*su|t*\nTotal          39   .   1,200\nEast Kootenay\nSullivan     1.3SS    13,821\nConsolidated Co.'s Receipts, Trail, B.C,\nCentre Star\nLo Rol \t\nLe Hoi No. 2 ....\nSullivan   \t\nBen jclur \t\nLone Pine \t\nKnob Hill \t\nUnited Copper   ..\nRambler Caribuo\nQueen\t\nWhitewater   \t\nBonanza\t\nSt. Anthony \t\nTotal   .',.........\n3.012\n2,728\nSOI)\n1,388\n.     210\n188\n37\n121\n00\n39\n31\n,J9\n00.079\n\u25a013,051\nr.,725\n13,821\n4,211\n890\n061\n1,335\n129\n353\n31\n\u202219\nSpokane Promoter Has Bond on Gold\nProperty\u2014Operations Will\nContinuo\nTliOi,t)raii'|te-Poorman gold property\nHas beSn bonded by C. V. Bob of Spokane, representing American investors.\nIt has been held !jy the late J. P. Swed-\nburg and others ou a lease and will be\nworked by tho new holders at the expiration of this agreement.    -\nWork will be continued but no new\nmen will be needed at present.\nThe deal was put through by Mayor\n1. J. Itttlone, liquidator jf the company\nowning the- mine.\n>\u25a0    L.'!   I*   . Illl!   ,11 \u25a0 .HI! .,[\n8,983   131,179\nGRAIN.\nCLOSING GRAIN  PRICES.\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\n\u25a0WINNIPEG, April 18.\u2014Wheat: May.\n$i.58\",i; July, $1.57%: Oct., $1.2110.\nOats: May, 05%; July, 06'4.\nFlax: May, $1.7!i!i; July, $1.S2%;\nOct., ?1.851i.\nMinneapolis: Wheat: May, $1.02;\nJuly. $1.30;  Sept., $1.1HJ\u00bb.\nChicago Wheat: May, \u00bb1.55!i; July,\n$iS2%; Sojit., S1.19.\nPRODUCE.\nipM^ft^>m4>^>^^rP^4^4>^H^P\nMONTREAL PROVISIONS.    .\n(By Daily News Leased Wire.)\nMONTREAL, April 17\u2014Cheese: Finest westerns, 1\" at %; easterns, 17\nal >A. '\u25a0'\nBlltter: Choicest creamery, 35<4 at\n30: seconds, 34.(4 at 35.\nEgga\". Fresh, 21 at 22.\nPork: Heavy Canada short mesa, 2S;\nshort cat backs, 27*\u00a3.\nSOLDIER  HAD \"ROTTEN\nLUCK\"-HIT BY SNIPER\nWounded on Second Day in Trenches\nBut Hopes to Be Back Before\nApril Ends\nCorp. a. s. Lo Mcsuricr, a member\nof tho Sth battalion of the first Canadian contingent, writing io a friend in\nOntario, says:\n\"I hud rotten lack.\" he says; \"and\ngot mino from a deriuau sniper the\nsecond day of the first lime we had\nbeen ni tho. trenches. He got me. in\nthe chest, high up on the left side, the\nbullet going through the lung aud coming out a little lower down in the back\nnear tho spine. I understand that:\nI should be half dead according to\nHoylc, hut 1 am glad to say I am feeling pretty fair. 'They won't let hie\/out\nof bed, but I don't expect lo be hero\nlong new. I am weak from loss of\nblood and there is a lot of blood clot-\nled arcund the lung where I did some\ninternal bleeding. I am gradually absorbing this into my system and when\nthat hus finished, the doctor says, 1\nwill be as good as new.\nMessage Home\nI have made up my mind to go to\nthe trenches as soon as possible, probably beforo Iho end of April. I am\nlooking for great things fronVou\" boys,\nand I want to get ont and sec them,\nTho Germans are great exponents p'.\nthe gun art. 1 have not been In a\nbayonet charge myself, but, rrom what\nI hear, the Germans hate to face cold\nsteel. How is recruiting going on in\nCanada\" Tho end looks a long way\noff yel, and we wilt need mbtv men,\nfor there is going to be hard fighting.\n\"I wish it wero possible to bring\nhome to the young men iu Canada who\naro not coming forward just what tliis\nfight means and also lhat il is the\nduty of eacli one to enlist. The period\nof training may not be pleasant and\nthe actual fighting no picnic, bill wheu\nwo take.into consideration what we\nwill gain by it, it is worth enlisting fur.\nEvery man between Ihe ages of 21 and\n25 should enlist, Give my best wishes\nto all at home.\"\nThe Rungs in the Ladder of Success Are Too Weafcip\nHold the*Man Who Stands Still 'on Them Too Long\nThere is truth in the above\nquotation. Dally we meet those\nwho have \"steed still too long\"\nand were therefore deprived of\nthe success they could have\nachieved. The man of today\ncan'not'afford to stand still and\noxp\u00abct to prespor\u2014his first and\nbest move should be to advertise in a medium of known\nmerit which will be his most\nsuccessful salesmen. Try a\nlittle want ad new.'\nPUBLICITY SHOULD . BE\nPUT TO ITS BIGGEST TE8T\nWHEN THE NEED 18 BIGGEST\u2014and tho man who acts\nupon that principle will find that\nhie growth and business oxpan-\neion may be realized NOW,\njust as surely as in times of\nprofound world-peace.\nWhen you place a want ad in\nthe Daily News remember you\narc  addressing  an audience  of\novor 20,000 people. Imagine if\nthese people were standing before you what a great deal of\n.work and effort you would put\ninto your address. This is really\nthe situation when you.place a\nwant ad in The Dally News. It\nhas over 6,000 daily subscribers\nand covers the Kootenay and\nBoundary dlatriot as well as the\nCity of Nelson.\nDaily News Want  Ada*\nWAR  SPECIALTY  STOCKS\nSTRONG  IN  MONTREAL\n(By Dally News Leaned Wire.)\nMONTB13AL, April IS.\u2014Stoats of\ntiio p-o-i'iillfd \"wnr aiit'euiUy'' ktuup\nWore kUuuk Teat uivs oi' tlie loeiil market yesterday. Canadian <-'ur advancocj\n2, to 74 bid ul the close, Seoti-i cluslnff\nti2 !i bid, while Dominion Brldgo roue\n2 above its minimum of HJ0 -Mid eloacd\nsteady at 10SU bid.\nThe big markets of tlie morning were\nln th.,- three stocks naiiiei' The balance of the list was on tliu quiet sido\nbut the undertone was firm tn strong\nand under the influence of tin; forward\nmovement in the New York district\nprices were bid u|i fairly ytnuv in the\nfinal trading.\nTh.; demand tor Dominion Bridge,\nthe first since the market's clone, was\nbased on the company's big shell orders, the lire.-ojit output of which, it is\nunderstood, runs in excess vf 1500\nday.\nThe leaders of a few days u\u00abo lilte\nI'uwer, Brazilian, Toronto Halls and\nLaitrentide, were quiet and ((notations\neased off. There was little or no pr\nsure of stock on the market, huwevcr.\nUnlisted securities wen; dull.\nLacroE'Ep has taken a strong held in\nthe American colleges, ricifrly eyery\ncollug; having lis representative lean..\nThe Toronto University team will make\na tour ef tho Mates, starting the hist\nof .May.\n.\u25a0I0<!l>\n.50\n.15\u00ae\n17 tt\n.15\n\u25a02G\u00ae .31)\nBLOOD WAS ANKLE\nDEEP SAYS TRAIL MAN\n\\\\~. Hill of the Coldstream guards,\nwriting from Franco to friends in Trail\nsays:\n\"At last I have u few items of news\nwhich I am sure will interest- you.\nFirst and all-Important, I was recently presented with a son. I have\nbeen over this sido for nearly two\nmonths but as luck would have it our\ndivision has been resting for six weeks\nto reach proper strength by drafts\nfrom England, wo have been 12 days\niu tho firing lino as follows: -IS hours\nin tho trenches and IS hours rest ln\nbillets severnl miles vehlnd the firing\nline. Tho real fun did not start until\nlast Tuesday, when we bombarded the\nGermana with about 300 guns, oach\ngun Tiring over 200 shells in tho three\nhotlrs. Tho cavalry und infantry then\ngot to work, we happened to too in reserve. Wo saw tho Bengal lancers and\nBritish cavalry return after tho storm,\ntheir lances and swords bolng covered\nwith blood. Then wo saw somo of tho\nwounded coming in. Ono man said\n\"look at my boots and you will havo\nsomo idea of what we've done.' Hij\ndeclared that tho Wood was ankle deep.\nBetween 600 and 700 of tho Prussian\nguard were taken prisoners. Cdpt\n\u2014\u2014 of my company spoke.to a German\nofficer who declared that the bombardment took all the tight out of tho men\nwho were demoralized and Incapable of\ndoing anything. I took possession of\narticles belonging to two of our lads\nwho wero killed thiB morning; ono man\nwas married with threo children, Tho\nsnipers are cruel. Thoy Wait for one\ncrossing a low placo and Woebetide\nthe man that sticks his head too high\nup. My candle shows up a littlo 'bit in\nthe dark and every minute or so something cracks overhead, not very pleasant for a. person with touchy nerves.\nI am fooling fine up to now. Kindly\nremember mo to \"all friends.\"\nQQn%&$&H$&$&&&&$\u00aeHr$i\n<$> LOCAL MARKETS.\nFruits.\nBananas, per^dO\"2eu ..\nIi.emons, per dozen ....... .110\nFlorida Grape Fruit, eacli .10\nCalifornia Grape Fruit, 3.. .25\nApples, per 'box    1.251*2.00\nLocal Northern S|*yn .... 2.00\nApples, 5 lbs  .25\nNavel Oranger, doz. from    20-&>\nFigs,  cooking,  2  lbs\t\npates, Halluway, lb. ...,\nDates, Fard, 2 Lbs \t\nDates, Dromedary,   pkg\nWalnuts, per lb\t\nPecans, per lb\t\nFilberts, per lb \t\nAlmonds, per lb   \t\nBrazils, per lb\t\nMeats.\nBuef, wholesalo \t\nPork,  wholesalo   \t\nMutton, wholesalo  ....\nVeal, wholesalo  \t\nFresh killed beef, retail\nPork,  retail   \t\nMutton,   retail   \t\nVeal, retail\t\nHams,  retail   \t\nBacon, retail\t\nLard,   retail   \t\nChickens, retail 20\u00ae .25\nSausages,   retail    M\u00ae .25\nTurkey, per IU. 2S(y) .30\nGeeso per lb 25<S> .28\nDucks, per lb 25\u00a9 .28\nVegetables.\n.2D\u00ae\n.,12',iiiii\n.lli\n.    .12\u00ae\n\u2022l'l\n.17\n.    .16\u00ae\n.20\n.    .10\u00ae\n.28\n.    .13\u00ae\n.22\n..11!\u00ab,\u00ae\n::'o\n.    .15\u00ae\n.30\n.    .'JO\u00ae\n.2.\",\n.    .20\u00ae\n.25\n.    .IB\u00ae\n.10\nDWUY   NEiWS   CLASSIFIED  AD\nRATE8\nOne cent a word per insertion, four\ncents * word per week, fifteen cents a\nword pier month when cash accompanied iho ordor-. Otherwise one cent\nper wt<rd per insertion straight. No\naceounta opened for yipnt ads. Minimum etjarge 85 eentsi'\n'BrLLY\" SUNDAY'S MeBsaso and\nMethods\u2014Extraordinary revivalist.\nQuarter million converts. Thrilling\nbook. Everybody orders. Make six\nto ten dollars daily. Sample book free\non promise to canvass. Bible H use,\nBrantford.\nTHESE WANT -EMPLOYMENT\u2014Six\nfir-st c|lhs  waitresses, all kinds    if\nskilled k*\u00bbr.\nWANTED\u2014Woman ,cy(jk, hotel; pole-\nmakcrs, .poetihal-re,   good   general\nservant; i\nNELSON EMPLOYlf HINT AGENCY\u2014\nW. Parker, 309 Baker St. (389)\nPOULTRY AND  LIVESTOCK.\nFOK SALE\u2014Chester White pigs, seven\nweilKs old $-1.00;  Mammoth   bronze\nturkey whbs,   ?3.00  suiting.    Duncan\nranch. Wa\"ota. (578)\nBABY 6HICKS, ducklings and hatching eggs; poultry land fruit form\npaying combiVation. Catalogue forwarded on applspatlon Charles Provan,\nLangley Fort, near Vancouver.   224-tf\nHATCHING EOG&i-S.C. R. I. Reds,\n12.00 and $3.00 per'15; -White Wyandottes, J2.00 per 15, ?}\u00bb.50 per 100;\nchicks, 25c each. M. U. Edwards,\nNelson. (342)\nFOR   SALE\u2014Mammoth' PokSn   duck\neggs, $2.00 per eleven.   A. Cameron,\nProctor, B.C. (201)\nEGGS FOR HATCKINI-iBal-red Rock\neggs, gool  laying strain,   $1.00  por\nsetting.   $C.D0   per lOo.   Wtickham &\nMitchell. Robson, B.C. (388)\nEGGS FOR HATCHING\u2014White Wyandottes  or   Buff  Orplnfeton,   good\nstrain of winter layers, $1.60 per sotting.   W. J. McConnell, Hijrrop. (335)\nFOR   KALE\u2014Whito   Wyandotte   eggs\nI'm- setting from prize winning stock,\n$1.00 por setting.   Apply H.,1 Ross, caro\nP. Burns & Co., or box U% (501)\nEGGS FOR HATCHING\u2014Buff Orpingtons, owners pen 1st \"prize at last\nNelson show; $2.00 for 15. Apply X, box\n10-lti. P.O. Nelson. Birds,can bo seen\nat S03 Victoria St. (543)\nFOR SAU5 \u2014  RoKis'cjurl Berkshire\nboar;   2  registered AyTHhiro  cows;\nregistered Ayrshire bull.   S. P. Pond,\nNelson. (542)\nEGGS    FOR\"    HATCHING  \u2014 Barred\nKocks, $1.50 per 15, express paid. T.\nRoynon, Somerset Poultry; Yards, Nelson, B.C. I (3C4)\nGOLD COIN OF TROUT.' RUN\u2014Ayrshire bull of especially fine quality\nand pedigree, of High producing strain;\nfee $6.00. Stands East Duntltlm. J. J.\nCampbell. (540)\nEGGS. $2.00 per 15\u00ab chicks, B5c-\u00abnch.\nLooks high, quality counts, Whito\nOrpingtons, W. Wyandottes, W. Leghorns. Let mo know your wants. R.\nB. Hay, 6lK. Bakery. (517)\nIP YOU HAVE POULTRY FOR SALE\nTRY A WANT AD\nParsnips, por 100 lbs\t\n.05\n1.2<i\n.05\nCalifornia cabbage, lb. ..\nWashington cabbage, lb...\nRhubarb, 3 lbs ;....\nPotatoes, 100 lbs. \t\nHothouse lettuce, lb, ...\nTurnips, per lb\t\nFoodstuffs.\n.00\n.06\n.25\nU6\u00ae2.00\n.35\n1.00\n.02\n15. & K. Bread Flour ....\n2.25\n2.40\nLake of the Woods, 4>a<s ..\n2.50\n2.50\n2,ia\nFancy Queen  ..-.;\u2022\u2022'\u2022\u2022\nSugar.\nGranulated,   B.   C.   Cane\n2.15\n2.15\n2.40\n2.25\n8.758)9.00\nOrahulatod B. C, 20-lb. 8k\nBrown sugar, 3 lbs\t\n.30\n1.80@1.85\n.26\n.\u202280\n1.75@2.00\nHoney, comb, por lb.\nHoney, 1-lb. Jars\t\nHoney, local clover, Jar ..\nDairy   Produce.\nButler, creamery, 11>, \t\nN. Z. butter, per lb........\nChoose, Canadian, lb\t\nCurlew Butter, lb .......\nCheese, Can, Stilton, lb...\nCheese, Imp, Stilton, lb. ..\nChoose, Swiss, lb.\t\nEggs, local new laid, d\u00abz..\nPrairie eggs, 6f>i. -\u00absluiui.\n.20\u00ae .\n.45\n.-15\u00ae ,50\n.25\u00ae .30\n.45\n.30\n.CO\n.30\u00ae .W\n.30\nBARGAINS IN* CATTJJ5 for quick\nsales. Registered Ayrshiros, high\ngrade Ayrshircs, Jcrsdys. Cows' in\nmilk and due to lieshon'Jn April, May,\n.rune, July, and yearling1 heifers. Can\nho seen East Duntulm. J. J. Campbell,\nEast  Duntulm.         j (539)\n__ _^LOJBJ \u201e_.._,\nLl3sT^::pn^AiMnl~wdr~~Bar   brooch\n(fleur-de-lys.)   Finder pleaso phono\nDelves. R377.   Reward.  ' (648)\nLOST\u2014Friday, April 9th, AlrdaV dog\nanswers to the name of 'Tuff.\"\nFinder please notify The Dally Nows,\n4 nyonc found harboring this dog will\nbe prosecuted. (579)\nWANTED\u20141O00 to 5000 shares Utica\nstock. Quote lowest price in first\nletter. Address F. M. Longshore &\nCo., brokers, 420 Tho Rookery, Spokane, Wash. (531)\nSKINS WANTED\u2014Mink, weasel, marten, boaver, lynx., otc.    G. Glaser,\nFurrier, 811 Mill St., Nelson.        (588)\nWANTED\u2014Six or seven seamstresses.\nSteady positions.   Apply Christie &\nBenson's old store, Cor. Ward and Victoria Sts.    (560)\nWANTED\u2014To lot small logging contract to party witli ono or two teams.\nBox 685, Daily News. (505)\nWANTED\u2014A good competent girl for\na family of two; no children.   Apply\nMrs. James Anderson, Kaslo.       (561)\nWANTED\u2014Men and women for organizing and selling thrilling war\nbook, authentic. Positively largest\nsalary and commission. Write today.\nHertol, 182 Spadliia Ave, Toronto.\n(553)\nADVERTISER\u201420   (With   experience)\ndesires work on ranch; wage with\nboard, or willing to batch if desired.\nBox 5S1, Daily News. (581)\nJFjORJJENT^\nK. W. C.  BLOCK \u2014  Housekeeping\nBuitcs and rooms for rent.   Terms\nmoderate   A. Mucdonald & Co. (462)\nFOR   RENT \u2014 Suite   of   furnished\nhousekeeping    rooms    ln    Annable\nblock.   Enquiro room 32. (464)\nFURNISHED SUITES for rent.   Ap-\nply Kerr apartments. (403)\nFOR RENT\u2014Furnished housekeeping\nrooms; coal and goa ranges. Enquire\nQueen Ciga    store. (461)\nFOR   RENT\u2014Rooms   from   $8.00   a\nmonth upwards. Gordon Rooms. (372)\nMODERN furnished house to rent; use\nof piano; C15 Curbpnato St.      (545)\nFOR RENT\u2014Four roomed houso with\nbath, $15 per month, 212 Silica St.\nApply Mrs. J. Dancy, corner Observatory and  Cedar stroets^ (554)\nFOlTltBXT\u2014Comfortably   iunrnlshed\nroom.   Apply 203 Silica St. (576)\nFURNISHED modern houso for rent\nfor six mouths starting May 1st; 609\nSilica St.  , (583)\nF6uSt^ChfldVbraceiet.\" \"D'aifyNews I\noffice. (677) I\nGARDEN SEEDS.\nSUTTON'S SEEDS\u2014In original sealed!\npackets.   Imported  from  Sutton  & |\nSens, Reading, England.   A. J. Woodward, 6\u00ab7 Granville   St,   Vancouver,!\nB.C. . Send tor catalogues. (466) |\nFOR SALE.\nFOR SALE\u2014Dry wood. Phone J, Held, I\nL475. (396) I\nFOR SALE\u2014Having sold \u00abny ranch II\npropose leaving district and by 1\nprivate sale during the remainder of]\nApril one young horse, 5 years old,'\nsaddle, driving and good work horse; 1\nboar and sow 12 months; 5000 ft, I\nrough lumber, farm implements, light I\nwagon, household goods, 8 loads hay, |\nrifle, rowboat, otc. C. 13. Cottatn,\nShoroacrcs, B.C. (.672) |\nLOTS   IN   KENSINGTON\u2014Close in;\n107 feot frontage Granite road, $5.00 I\nmonthly.     Three-acre   plots,    (1JMH) ]\nmonthly.    Own your own home. Edward Ferguson, .office   Humo   blook, I\nnext postofflce. ..(0816)\n$850 Buys Readymade Poultry Ranch,\ncomprising 13% acres land, 4-roora |\nhouse, poultry houses, 60 laying Leghorns, 70 chickens; 5 miles from Nil- I\nson, 10 minutes from school, postpfflco |\nand railway station.   Apply box 541,\nDally News, Nelson^ (541) ]\nSEED~POTATOE8\u2014Woo Macgrcgors,\n$35 per ton, $2.00 per sack.   Cope-\nlaud \u25a0&'Co., box 783. f.646) |\nFOR SALE\u2014Clean seed potatoes, American Wonder and Early Six Wcoks, I\n$40 per ton or will exchange for young J\nstock.    -Thomas Zuccolo,  Porry Sid-1\nIng. (490) f\nMUSIC.\nMRS.   WH1SLLAMS\u2014Certified   toach\ner, silver medallist London, piano,\nsinging, stringed instruments. Box\n573, Daily Nows. (573)\nPLUMBING AND HEATING.\nB. K. STRACHAN, 120 Baker street.,\nplumbers'  supplies, estimates  free;\nwrrk guaran   ed    Phone 262\n^^'\u25a0REJjS^j'jLAJOT&JTa^^\nstoawberry~plaXts\u00a3  ioo~7bc\n1000 $5; currants 10c; gooseberrlet\n16c; rhubarb 10c; fruit trees, perennial\nflowers, roses, dahlias, pansics, etc.,\ncarriage prepaid. Catalog free. Charles\nProvan, Langley Fort, near Vancouver. 824-'f\nPEDIGREE STRAWBERRY PLANTS\n\u2014Hardy northern grown stock of\nleading varieties, 100 plants, postpaid,\n$1.25; por thousand plants f.oib. Wynn-\ndcl, $7.00: cataloguo mailed on request. Monrad Wlgen, Wynndel,\nB.C. (607)\nFOR SALE CHEAP\u2014Ono half interest in well established hotel and cafe |\nbusiness ln Rossland.   Ill health reason for owner having to sell. Apply for I\nfull particulars to Mao Dodson, Ross-I\nland, B.C; (558)1\nFOR SALE\u2014Fresh butter and oggs; I\nselected strain Woo Macgrcgor seed I\npotatoes. Also 15 tons bost whilo I\neating potatoes. Redlands Trading |\nAssociation, East Arrow Park, B.C.\n (56.8) \\\nFOR SALE\u2014Honey in- 10 lb. cans.l\n$2.25; 5 lb. cans, $1.25; 1 lb. glassl\nJar, 30o each, $3.00 per dozen; 12 oz.[\nglass Jars, 25c oach, $2.40 per dozen, I\ncarriago prepaid to Nelson. J. Blinco.l\nBuckingham ranch apiary, Creston,!\nB.C. (666)|\nSNAP FOR QUICK SALE ill Roao-I\nmont; half acre land, half cleared,!\nunder cultivation and fenced; threol\nroomed house, chicken houses and witel\nrun, etc; $350 buys; terms If dcsirouT\nJ. L. Warr. (080)1\nMESSENGER SERVICE.\nKELSON MESSENGER CO.\u2014Prompt!\n\u2022nd reliable. Day and night. Phona\n\u25a0>42 214-74\nJrURS^\nG. GLASER, Export rurrlor, 811 Mill\nSt., Nelson, B.C., can tan your sklnJ\nand fix your heads. Also undertake!!\nthe making up of any sktns into mull\nand stoles, or any otlier garments. Thn\nrepairing and remodelling of furs tdl\nnewest shapes. Summer prices.   (217l|\n\/BEE, SUPPLIES. ^\nAl2r^OU^EED^anTeobT\u00bbKu3oTi|\nNelson at prices you cannot tseatl\nWrite for price Hat. W. Romaln, Falrl\nview, Nelson. -      (3271\nil\nOUT-OF-TOWN   ADVERTISERS\nUSE   THI8   BLANK   ON   WHICH   TO  WRITE   YOUR   ADVERTISEMENT   FOR. -\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nONE  WORD   IN   EACH   8PACE\nTHE  COST\u2014One oent a word each Iniertion or Four Cents a word for Six.   Ten Centa extra to mall\nreplies for box numbers.   No ad taken for leu than 26o.\nEnclose money order or check and mall direct to The Daily News,. Nelson, B.C. I\n\"\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014-\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\n1\n. , '\u2022\n.\" T\n1\n1\n1\nv \u25a0 ;:;.;.:;;.l..j-..)-.'. .- -.'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n 3*\n. MONDAY,  APRIL  19,  1915\nCI)c Batty \u00a7i%*$\nPAGE SFVFN\nArbor\nDay\nStore Closed at\n12 o'Clock\nNoon\nStar Grocery\nPHONE 10\nStore of Quality.\nYour Money's Worth\nThis Is ons place where you got\nyour money's worth. The best\nQuality in Bread, Cakes, Confectionery and Fruit is what we offer,\nand tho\nPRICE IS RIGHT\nMall, orders receive careful and\n.prompt attention.\nChoquette Bros.\nSole Makers of Mother's Bread.\nPhone 258. 516 Baker St.\nWET WATER\nli is best for bath.   Wc have plenty on\nhand always.    Have your annual\nBATH\nll 0. K. BARBER SHOP,\n505 Baker St.\nTHORPE'S\nDRINKS\n#pH0\u00a3V\nft\nDISPUTES WILLARD'S TITLE.\nPARIS.\u2014Tho Timrs rteclnros Joss\nWillard rlnos not bncomr (Shamplon hy\nflofpatlnp Jack Johnson. Previous to\nthe wnr tho InternnUbhnl Boxing union\ndeclVlod that the championship rested\nhotwoon .lolmsnn and Sam Lan'gford,\nv.*hn woro to have fought last Novem-\nhor Longford, therefore, retains the\nright to moot tho winner of tho John-\nf-.iin-.lonimotto right, nooording In tho\n(Iprislnn of Iho boxing1 union.\nCniishlo oi' Paris, howover, WHlnrd\nstill   rontnins  ohiiinpion.\nFreckles and Blotches \\\nl Are Easily Peeled Off\nM you oro feathered with any onl-\nnneons blemislv it's a poor plan- to use\npaint, ppwdel* or ahythlng elsd to cover\nit 'up. Too often this only omphuisizos\ntho defect, IJoRid-H, it's nnioli oasior\nio rorhovo Iho diflflgnrornotit with ordinary mori oiiz-fl wax. Applied nightly\nilio wnx will gradually remove rreokles\nIjlmplOH, moth patolies, liver spots, sol-\nl;owuoss, i*od blotches or any 8L***ace\noniptinn. The ntfoc'tod cuticle Is nh-\nsorhod. a littlo each day, until the clear\nsoft, youthful and beautiful skin beneath Is broughl wholly io view. Ask\ntho drugglpl for one niin'ce of inereol-\nIxeV] wax ami use this like you use\nlipid cream, Remove In morning with\nsoap and water. JVlftriy who havo tried\n-ihis dimply, harmless treatment report\nastonishing results.\nIf troubled with wrinkles or furrows,\na. wash lotion- mado hy dissolving I oz.\npowdered Biixplite in \\u pi. witch hazel\nswill   prove  wonderfully effectivo.\nNELSON NEWS OF THE DAY\nHot weather continues in Nelson, the\nthermometer registering 81 degrees as\nthe maximum temperature yesterday.\nTho minimum temperature yesterday\nwas 41 degrees whleh is threo degrees\nhigher (ban Friday.\n(Harpy Johns, late of tho British Columbia Cooper company and now associated in mining operations with\nFroderio Kcffer, formerly assistant\ngeneral manager of tho samo company,\nwas in Nelson last week.\nTho market board of control met nn\nSaturday at tho city hall and disposed\nof somo 'business and discussed several\nmatters tho chief one being the continuance of ibe use of tbo market\nbuilding.\nTwenty-five men will Tuesday burn\ntho ibrush at the wood camp established last, winter to provide work for\ntho unemployed. The object Is to\nprevent, danger of fire from the underbrush during Iho dry season.\nFRESH BTTTTBR and buttermilk for\nsale.   Beacnnut\"Creamery. <5iiil)\nFire Insurance is a neepssity. Take\nyour policy with C. W. Apploynrd, 505\nBaker St., Nelson, B.C. (530)\nDon't tako chances, Have your carpets, windows nnd chimneys cloaned.\nNelson Vacuum Cleaning Co., phone\n18, (626)\nNelson Brand Jam is made from the\nbest Kootenay fruits and B. C. Sugar\nby British Columbia labor. At all\ngrocers 55)\nFarmpgerm Culture for innoculatlng\nclover and alfalfa seed, also peas, $2.25\nper can. For sale by Taylor Milling\n& Elevator Co. (608)\nA tea. in aid of tlie Church Helpers'\nassociation will he Riven by Mrs. Hamilton and Mrs. Cunliffo at the homo of\ntho latter on Tuesday, April 20.    (570)\nHelp to keep your home factory\nworking. Insist on getting Nelson\nBrand Seville Orange Marmalade. It\nhas quality, purity and fine flavor,\nwhat more do you want. 465)\nFOR BABY CHICKS.\nAlways uso Dr. Rusk's Chick Food.\nTaylor Millng & Elevator Co., Nelson,\nB.C. (-154)\nSMOKING CONCERT.\nA smoking concert will he given in\ntho K, of P. hall at. 8:30 tonight by\ntho Sons of England. Tobacco, pipes,\ntea nnd coffeo nnd cake. Admission\n25 cents,   Everybody welcome.     (584)\nSEED GRAIN.\nMarquis wheat, Canadian oats, Longfellow and Crompton early corn, clover\nand alfalfa seed, sugar mangel seed\nand all kinds of vegetable seeds. Send\nua your orders. Tho Taylor Milling &\nElevator Co,, Limited, Nelson.       (453)\n.    On WodiU'.siiay.Aprii 21st lito Ladies'\naid <'i\" the Catholic church will hold\na, snlo of homo cooking and plain and\nfancy work. Tea will be served, followed hy a whist drive in Ihe evening, (888)\nClan Johnstone hns arranged to g.ve\ntheir last dance for tiie season in the\nEagle hall on Friday, April 23. Johnson's orchestra has 'been engaged nnd\nrefreshments will ho served. Tickets\n50c each to ho had from members of\nthe entertainment, committee.       (R08)\nSHELLS BURST HIGH IN\nAIR-FIGHTING AEROPLANES\nHOW TO KEEP HUSBANDS\nChicago   Welfare   Bureau   Says   Big\nWomen and Good Cooks Succeed\n\"Why do husbands desert, wives';\"\nis answered h> Ilio Chicago bureau of\npublic welfare, which has jusi finished an invesiigatlon. According to the\nfigures in the survey, wives stand a\nrelatively small chance of being de-\nsorted:\nIf they, are big physically.\nIf they arc good cooks.\nIf I hey are sweet-tempered, helpful,\ninterested, iiffocUonnte and loyal.\nIf they Iwivc children; or\nIf their husbands are common laborers.\nOn ihe. contrary, desertion is an\nover .present,   peril to wives who\u2014\nAre weak physically and unhealthy;\nAre extravagant, shrewish and. untidy:\nAro not anxious for children and are\ncritical, or gossips; or\nHave husbands who earn relatively\nlarge salaries.\nIn Il-ii families, of which 200 were\nItalians. 50 JrU*. 10 Polish and HO\nAmericans, but two Italian desertions\nwere found; Americans seven, Irish\nnone.\nNext to steady employment, plenty\nof children seems undoubtedly to he\ntiio best possible guarantee of marital perniaue.nco and solidarity, says\nIhe bureau report.\ni\nBuying Experience\nThe pric eof experience is cheap the first\ntime, but it becomes expensive if it has to\nbe bought over and over again.\nSome national advertisers have not yet found,\nthis out.\nMany have. That is why the drift of advertising is away from other mediums and\ntowards newspapers.\n\u2022\nThe manufacturer is finding that newspaper\nadvertising not only influences the consumer\nhut makes the local dealer enthusiastic.\nHe is finding it the kind of advertising that\npays dividends.\nJ.   Sernon,   with    Queen's    Engineers,\nSays  Boys Are  in Thick\nof Fight\nA letter has been received by Mrs.\nWiliam Person, El gin burg:, Ont., from\nher son, John Serson, who is with the\nQueen's engineers on the firing line.\nIn tho letter, Sapper Serson states that\ntho boys nro lu ihe thick of tlie fighT,\nOne day they had the opportunity of\nseeing a German aeroplane brought 1.i\nearth by the fire of Iho allies. Tlif.\nletter soys:\nMail Service a Marvel\n\"Tlie mail service is fairly regfiiar\nconsidering there are nearly a milPo-i\nmen nloi.g (he front receiving mail\nfrom England and Canada alone constantly cha.ngir.g their addrossei Vet\nthe men In the trenches get: their mail\nregularly nearly ovory night and papers\nfrom England reach us In 24 hours.\n\"When tbo history of this war is written, the mail service and transportation department; will be considered\nmarvels of tho age.\n\"We are Having beautiful weather.\nFarmers aro sowing wheat and peas.\nTlie mud has nearly all dried up\naround ihe trenches and dusl is flying\non tho road. Flowers are in bloom-\neven dai&les. It is warm and r>rlght\nnearly all the time; trees are Jusl eom\nIng Into leaf.\nDelightful Farming\n\"It is really delightful-to he a. farmer here. Everyone seems to he pvos-\nparous, judging, from the look of th;\npeople, country and farms. Every\nfarmer has three or four Be glan refugees, or semi-slaves to do their work.\nThey don't, have lo rush their fall\nplowing' or spring work as they hnv\nall the winter to do holh. The land is\na delightful ricii clay loam and is very\neasily worked. Tbo sun does nol lako\nIt. The farmers raise grant crops of\nbeet, roots and grain. Grass stays groan\nall the year hut cattle are stabled for\nseveral months in winter. Some of\nthe finest draft horses In the * world\nare raised here. Ynu scarcely ever see\na poor native horse. There are \u00abome\nmules and donkeys, The Germans\nseized a number of horses when they\nwere here last fall, A lot of modern\nfarm machinery is used hero Wit* in\nsome instances the implements nr?\nvery crude. I fogs are used for pulling\ncans along tho roads. The carls have\nhigh wheels, the dogs pull underneath,\nwhile a man balances tho earl.\n\"It is greal fun watching our aeroplanes wander al will ovor the Gorman lihts. They get fired at and we\neon see the shells burst, high in tin\naiir and laugh at ihe rotten German\nshooting as they never hit our planes,\ni* airmen are nu.st useful to us\u2014\nthey signal the exact position of the\nGerman trenches and hai terles. Our\ngunners got the range and shell their\npositions. Our batteries nre really\nsplendid, ,11. would do our people at\nhomo good In soe our Canadian guns\ngo into action and they thoroughly protect our infantrymen,. The airmen fly\nhigh ahnvrt1 the clouds and look like\nmere epecks and move so fasi ii seems\nImpossible it. hit mem.\nCrashed to Earth\n'Yesterday a German machine flew\nover our linos and our artillery shelled\nIt, Some 6t tlie shells were awfully\nclose nnd showed fine shooting, a few\nshells hurst, rigbl over our heads over\n'a mile up, but nc fragments iv near\nus. One shell burst on top of the machine, n began Io fall, hui righted Itself pari way down and sailed towards\nhome.\nAnothe\n*   shot,   si rink\ncra'slu\nd to ean\ni a ruin.\n\"The weathei\ncontinues fin.\nare   r\nrowing\nind   more   nr\nPlant.\nI jusi aa\nIf there were\nWhal\na wondo\nfiii recupertiliv\nthe P\nench nre\nII.\nIt\nCHIEF OF \"DAREDEVILS.\"\nServian Major and His Irregulars Said\nto  Have Killed  40,000 Austrians.\nThe best loved and most talked of\nman in Belgrade nnd the north of Servia is Ihe famous Major hjnukiloh. the\nchief dare-devil of the Dnrc-J)evile. or\nComltndges.\nTho Comltndgoft are irregulars in ihe\nServian army,, who receive orders to\ngo lo a particular spot and do particular Work. How thoy go or how they\nperform I heir taste no ono risks. They\nalmost, always succeed or they do not\nreturn.\nMany of then*! are under the commend of iho little, alert, humorous\nMajor Djnukitch. llo sets tbo lask.\nOften ho has led tho irregulars and the\npeople tell, with Joy of his exploit;\nHo Is credited with having killo.i 40\n000 to .'0,000 Austrians and his name\nIs known and feared on Ihe oppose\nbank of tho river Save.\nIt was ho and his men who look\npossession of Ihe island TsigauMa,\nwhich lies in iho elver midway between\nBelgrade and Semhn. It was he who\nrepulsed tin* Austrian assaults and\nplleu up thousand*-* of dead men on\ntho 'banks, while hundreds nf drowning\nmen and dead Austrlans floated down\ntho river.\nHe is a man who always likes In be\nbusy, It Is his nature to he acting and\nJoking and If fighting on his side of\ntho river is slack and if oxen and cows\naro scarce ho Occasionally erosses with\na. chosen lm ml nf I rregula rs I n the\nAustrinn shore, takes what catlle he\nwants and returns.\nOne night tho Austrians planned an\nattack In boats and barges. The major expected tho enemy and ordered\nhis men not. to shoot till he gavo the\nword. So great Is his control that\nmany Austrlans actually landed on the\nisland whero his men were hiding. It,\nwas Impossible for them to go back;\nand then, when they were within yards\nof tho hiding Servians, he 'gave the\norder to flro The Austrians knew tho\nmajor bad trapped them and they cried\nout: \"IMonso stop, major. Vou are killing us all, Wo will surrender,\" Those\nwho were not killed are now In Servia\nas prisoners.\n\\ few weeks ago thero flew proudly\nfrom tho opposite bank uf the Save\nan- Austrian flag. This the major did\nnot like to see. So it was decided to\ntake It down. One dark night two\nboots set out from Tsignalia carryJag\nsomo Servian irregulars. Ono boat\nmado an attack and engaged tho attention of the Austrians while the occupants of tho other -boat landed, took\ndown the flag and brought it safely**!\nhome.\nSAYS GERMANY IS\nREADY TO QUIT\nGERMAN-AMERICAN SAYS\nGERMANY  IS   READY TO QUIT\nCHICAGO.\u2014Germany is ready to\nslop tho war and go hack* io the conditions of Aug. I, according to ft. Herman Bidder of the New York Staats\nZeitung, son of Iho editor of that, paper.\nMr. llidder spoke last, night, nt Orchestra hall. When lie finished his\ntalk ho said he would answer questions.\nOne man iu the audience asked the\nquestion:\n\"On what, lerms would Oonnany\nstop the war?\"\n\"I think Germany would halt hostilities right now and rol urn io the\nconditions existing on Aug, 1,\" said Mr.\nItldder. There wero shouts of \"No,\nno,\" from Ihe audience.\n\"Germany does nol. waul internal\nproblems such as Belgium and Poland,\"\nho continued. \"She is fighting for her\nindependence and hor union, and she\nis imt. attempting to win the four cor\nners of the earth, ns London would\nhave people believe, It is my opinion\nthat Germnny has no desire for territory except her own. What, earthly\nuse would Belgium he to Germany?\"\nSeveral people shouted, \"A whole\nlot.\"\nClaims Army Strong\n\"Tf the war stops now,\" said air,\nRidder, \"Germany will have accomplished one tiling, nnd that is she will\nhave convinced the world that a poliey\nnf aggression against her does not\npay. Her armies are strong beyond\nthe fondest, hopes of us German\nAmericans.\"\nTlie first question asked when the\ndiscussion was thrown npen was:\n\"How many millions graft; money\ndid Wilson and Bryan get. from England?\" \u25a0\n\"Thai, question should not be. answered,\" shouted another man, and it\nwn,s not.\n\"How long will the fond supply in\nGermany last?\" was another question.\n\"There is a. committee of I\" scientists,\" replied Mr. llidder, \"whieh has\ntaken an inventory of all iho food in\nGermany. That, committee hns said\nthat there is enough food in Gormany\nto Inst, until January, llllti, without regard to the present crop, and Germany\nlias planted enough grain in supply ber\npeople.\"\nThe final question put was:\n\"If Germany takes possession of\nEngland, will she give England home\nrule?\"\nIn his talk before Iho discussion. Mr.\nllidder said:\nUnited  States Could  End War\n\"The United Slates could end this\nwar in two months by ihreatoning to\nput an embargo on all munition:-; of\nwar unless tlie nonlending nations\njoined in a ponce conference, bul. that\nwould require a little opnstruotlv.Q\nstatesmanship in \"Washington, which\ni.s asking a. good deal. Tbe United\nSlates is making the arms and ammunition for Great Britain and Great\nBritain is gelling tho trade,\"\nTHE TRAIL OF\nONTARIO LIQUOR BOARD\nSALARIES TOTAL $2-l,E0J\n(By Dally News Leased Wire.)\nTORONTO, April I*. Tiie personnel\nof tho new commission which will direct tlie administration of Ontario's\nliquor license net has heen settled by\ntho govern ment. The hnar.l of five\nmembers, appointed under legislation\npassed ai. tlie legislature's Jrifit scssfdn,\nwill have full control over licenses and\nhas powor lo enforce directly the law\nwithout referring its actions to tlie\ngovernment. The board will be composed as follows:\n.1. U Plnvelle, Lindsay, clmtrhiah';\nW. s. Oingman, Stratford, vlce-\nehnlrman; Ifrederlck Danp, Toronto;\nGeorge T. Smith. H'aMeyhury, ;M1d ,i,\nAyearst, Toronto,\nThe salaries: Chairman, $(.r.00; viee-\nchairmnn, $fiQ00; other members, JUOO'J.\nThe appointments will take effect\non May 15, A permission has hc-on Issued bringing iho now net n'to force\nforthwith. Thn local boards will thus\npnss away with the issuance.of Hcer-sos\nwith the coming of this licenso year\nnnd tbo hoard will lake oVflC the diuLM\non the above date.\nMr. l-'lavelle is a well known merchant of Lindsay. Mr.. Dingmair is\npresident and editor of (ho Stratford\n\u2022Herald. Mr. Dane was formerly land\ncommissioner of tbo Tomistthntfn* \u2022&\nNorthern Ontario railway commission\nand a year ngu appointed Canadian\ncommercial agent at Glasgow, Mr.\nSmith is nilnlng recorder at Hnlley-\nbury and Mr. Ayearst has been prominently connected with the enforcement\nof the liquor laws in Ontario and the\nWest.\nPresent  Generation  of   Inhabitants of\nWar-Stricken  Areas Will  Never\nBe the Same\n\u25a0<. Everywhere In fields and orchards\nthere are old trenches, some made for\npractise by our own men, more by the\nretiring enemy in vain efforts to stay\nthe retreat, says a correspondent of\nan exchange. There are waterlogged\ndugouts and large saucer-shaped cavities, where shells havo burst. In\nsome places even the roads are pitted\nby those shell holes, and when they\nare filled wilh water and reflect the\nlight from sun or sky, the passing\nrider has to be careful lest his horse\nshould stnrt aside in fright. On the\nroadside's one often sees household\nutensils lying where somo laden looter\nhas abandoned them. One day I came\nupon an old \"wag-at-the-wa\"' clock\nwith the works smashed and the while\nWooden dial broken In two. What a\nfind it would have, been for somo ono\nat homo in the first throes of the\ncraze for antiques! As I write, in this\ncheerless billet, I can seo a large dugout half mado on the opposite side of\ntho road hesido a deep ditch of stagnant water. It. Is now almost waist\ndeep in water, having never been used.\nThe German shells do not. reach us\nhere, and such prelections are, therefore, unnecessary. What a filling up\nand a levelling of the ground thero\nwill bo all around when peace has been\nrestored! What a. rebuilding and reforming of shattered homes. But\nbroken trees and ruined orchards will\nlong bear mute witness to the horrors\nof the present, although brand new\nslendings rise beside them.\nAnd the present generation of inhabitants will never be the same, for\nthe trail of war has passed across\ntheir lives and the iron has plowed\ndeep into their souls. One day I was\nIntroduced to a. kindly old lady dressed in widow's weeds, and was told\nher story\u2014one of mingled sadness and\nsavagery. Her late husband wns\nproprietor of a. prosperous hotel when\nthe place was overrun by German officers. Among I hem was a crown\nprince, which of these ornaments of\nthe German army it was I could not\nlearn. He and a number of like-mind\ned brothers-in-arms made themselves\nfree of tho hotel, sprawling over the\ndrawing-room chairs and sofas with\ntheir spurred and muddy hoots. \"His\nroyal highness\" ordered the proprietor\nto bring out his best champagne. This\nwas done, hut one particular brand expected by the eplcurlan bully did not\nappear. Jt could not, because the cellars did not contain il. Furious at this\napparent thwarting of his exalted will\nbe shot the proprietor dead in his own\nhouse. Another householder and proprietor, more fortunate in that he escaped with his life, estimates that li\nlosses during a. few days of German\nlooting amounted to -10,000 francs-\nroughly speaking ?10,000. Every village has its tale nf minor tragedies. A\npretty little red-haired girl the other\nday came lo visit the family with\nwhich I am billeted and brought news\nMini ber father had Inst a. leg r,r\ndays before from the explosion of a\nGerman shell. Another day 1 met a\nBritish soldiers carrying a. child of\nthree or four years and learnt from him\nthnt the mother was lu bed with a. bullet, wound received while visiting a\nfriend. Tho regimental surgeon informed mo lhat she is near confinement. How it may he with mother and\nchild when the hlrth lakes place can\nbest he conjeoturbd. A population that\nhas suffered thus will never forget.\nTho lass of life and limb, or prnporly\nand health--due largely to wanton\ncruelly\u2014will bring forth a harvest of\nhatn that even the passage nf a ci\nlory will hardly obliterate.\nSILVER  SHIPMENT\nTC   THE  ORIENT\nII..-\ni.1.11-\nshi\nTho Trail smeller\nof .March this, spri:\nthrough IteveUtoke Ian bars of -diver,\neach oar weighing aboio inn lbs., assaying iWi per cent pure silver. By\nexpress on Wednesday 7!) bars were\nshipped and yesterday IHO bars pnssed\nthrough ihe cl(y, says ihe Revelstoke\nReview.\nThe shipments aro hilled Ihrongh to\nChina nnd Japan via. San Francisco\nWe Close at Noon\nToday\nGo  Home,  Lunch and Then Help\nTo Clean Up Our Beautiful   City.\nFrom 8 a. m. Till Noon\nWe Will Group in Some Handsome\nMorning Snaps That Will Draw You\nDown in Hot Haste.\na.m. s^iiM a.m.\nTill\nNoon\nTill\nNoon\n45c Heavy Herring-Bone Sheeting\nfor 32c\nWill wrar llko duck: 7S inches wide, unbleached; find never\nREGULAR  45C-FOR,   PER  YARD OaaC\n65c Overalls and Aprons 39c\nSpecial in Ladies' Overalls and Muslin Aprons. These are in 'Light\nBlue, Cadet and Navy.   Tlie Aprons are White. <JQ\nALL WERE 65c\u2014FOR  *>\"C\n35c Japanese Matting for 22c\nYard Wide Heavy Matting, in rieli Oriental designs. Ynur bedroom\nwill look much better for nsinp this sanitary matting. Only six\npieces left. OOrt\nREGULAR. 35c\u2014FOR tmtrnd\n45c Curtain Cloth for 27c\nThis is a, l-'ancy Ecru Net. richly designed, double fold, Inken from\nour resulnr 45c lines. 0*7\/\u00bb\nTHIS   MORNING.   PER   YARD *wC\n^WneM^fe^.!5J?S!S\nNO  CHANCE  OF   BANNING\nKISSING SAYS M. H, O.\n(By Daily .News Leased Wire.)\nCLEVELAND, Ohio. April 18.\u2014Bo-\ncnuspi of la. Rripne epidrailc, some\nChloagonns WBut kissing banned. \"No\nchance,'' snid Dr. Frederick of the\nstate health hoard today.\nKAISER HAS $42,000,000\nAND 297 UNIFORMS\nHis Greatest Political Ambition is to\nGermanize Turkey\nThe KitIhoi-'k -personal fortune- ox-\neeeded $42,000,000 last August, says\n.Miles niilien, 'iho famous psychologist,\nleCently, In an exhaustive study of\nEmperor WBhelm's habits, and temperament, iu whleh lift makes piquant,\nrevelations.\nOno of. tho disclosures is tliat, tho\nKaiser's greatest .political ambition-.of\nrecent, years was ihe establishment, of\na German protectorate over Turkoy.\nAll his plans were laid, when -In 1912\ntin.' Balkan war completely upset,\nthem, Ihe result, being to place vigorous warlike nations lietwoon tho tjer-\nuian people ami the Ottomans,\nThe Kniser owns 207 different uniforms, says Dulion. hut wears only 20\nor M.\nWhen, he rises at i! o'clock, the; emperor rends references to himself In\nthe wjoiM's newspapers* magazines\nand -books. A'specUl staff translates\nthese articles from seven languages.\nBIG TRAMWAY  FOR\nTHE  LANARK  MINE\ni   I ,*fc*.r\u00abt;\nThe Lanark mining company, orij.'in-\nIzeil this month by William ill. Dorn-\nberg and Leo. al. Dornhorgot Spokane,\nwill begin In two weeks Hie erection\nof a 7000-foot tramway at. the Lanark\nmine in British Colnmlbia, 22 miles\neast, of Revelstoke, it wns announced\nrecently by William It. Dornnorg, manager of the property, says the Spokane t'hronicle.\nThe new equipment will cost, from\n$1.0,000 to $12,0110 and will bring the\nore from the mouth \u201ef Hie mine to tlie\nrailroad, 3600 feet below. Sufficient\nore is available to maintain shipments\ntills summer of 100 tons dally, after\ntho completion of tlie tramway, it Is\nilc-clared*. making Hie Lanark one ot\nIhe Important British CColumhln producers.\nGot it For $60,000\nFor tbo last, two years -Mr. Boni-\nberg has been conducting development, work on this properly, making\nregular shipments last, season by the\nuse of a pack, train down the mountain until tho smelter refused to\nhandle ore ibeieiiuso of low pi-ices.\nThe Lanark was purchased bv Mr.\nDnrnberg in 1911 for $60,000 after it\nhad heen idle for 17 years. It was\noriginally opened by the Honr-Payne\nsyndicate along with the numerous\nother properties in Hie ltevolstnke district.\nTho Lanark produced! about $iiOO,ooo\nduring the ear' yyears of its operation\nIt is estimated. The report; of .1. M.\nTurnbull of the Trail smelter In the\nhands of Mr. Domberg' states thnt\n$12o,nno worth of ore was received\nduring 1807 -from the mine.\n: The mine Is declared to carry some\nor tho richest silver lead values of\nBritish' Columbia, some of tho oro running ns high as fin and 00 cents a\npoiind In silver. Three tunnels have\nijeen run, Into the ore bodies. A one-\nfool; vein hns been opened up for 000\nfeet, running at $120 In the ton. Six\nsamples picked1 up hy 13. A. Ely of\nSpokane assayed $-14.tio per ton, II. Is\nstaled, nnd samples taken from tlie\ndump wero found to carry 135 ounces\nof sllvor.\nDornbergs Control It.\ntflttmatoly It Is tho plan ot Mr.'\nDornborg to utilize the water power I\navailable below tin- mine, a large amount, of old rinma construction and a\n-partially completed dam being ready\nfor lij'dro-elertrio development. The\nInstallation of a. power plant will bo\naccompanied with Hie erection of a\nmill.\nTiio control or the mine is retained\nin Hie hands of the Dornborg family\nand up in ine present the property his\nnot. boen Incoporafced. The Lanark\nMining company was Incorporated by\nW. B.. Leo M. and Mrs. Ella M. Dorn-\nberg, having an authorized capitalization of $200,000. Capital nock io\nfile extent, or $1)0,000 is io tie issued, it\nIs staled.\n\"During tbe last, four years I have\nbeen aide t\u00bb acquire two properties\nwhich have been demonstrated mines\"\nstates .Mr. Dornherg. \"I believe that\nany man acquainted Willi the mining\nbusiness can leave Spokane in any direction of tlie compass and lie successful iu finding a genuine prospect\nwhich will ultimately become a mine.\"\nSave Honey on Your\nGroceries\nI have just ten more days to clear out my stock\nof Groceries. I am selling everything in the store at\na 10 per cent, discount for cash. If you will anticipate your wants and buy $50.00 worth of goods, I\nwill give you 12 1-2 per ceBt. discount. This is your\nopportunity. Good housekeepers are seizing it. Are\nyou one of them.    A few extra specials:\nCash Price.\nECONOMY .TABS\u2014\nPints\u2014Regular $1.G0 a. dozen  $1.20\nQuarts\u2014Regular $1.7fi a dozen  $1.40\nHalt-Gallons\u2014Regular $2.25 a. dozen  $1.90\nFCHBAMS\u2014\nPints\u2014Regular $1.2.\", a. dozen   $1.00\nQuarts\u2014Regular $l.!in a dozen  $1.25\nPERFECT SEAL\u2014\nPints\u2014Regular pl.OO a. dozen    85c\nQuarts\u2014Regular $1.25 a dozen  $1.00\nCANNED CHICKEN, 1's\u2014Regular 45c '.\"...''.'.. '\"'.'I. '..'..''.'.''.\",'. .35c\nPR. PRICE'S BAKING POWDER\u2014\n0 oz.\u2014Regular 25c  2 for 40c\n12 oz.\u2014Regulnr 45c  2 for 75c\nEGGO, 10 oz.\u2014Regular 25c  4 for 76c\nMAGIC, .12 oz.\u2014Regular 25c   2 for 40c\nTEA\u2014\nRegular 60c  40c\nRegular  40c    30c\nCOPPEE\u2014\nRegular 50e 2 lbs. for 85c\nRegular 40c   2 lbs. for 65o\nA. E. JOHNSTON\nPHONE 7 Corner of Silica and Josephine PHONE 7\n W   PAGE EIGHT!\ntTfje Hailf!^*\nMONDAY, APRIL 19, 1915\nLadies' Shoes\nIn sizes 2Vi and fl.   Regular $5\nTalnes.   Onr price\n$3.25\nAH  shoes at cost. |\nH. Lawrence\n417 Baker St.\nUnequalled for General Ua*.\n\u25a0. P. TIERNEV, General Sales Agent.\nNolion, B.C.\nCars shipped to all railway points\nTooth\nPaste\nWe have a cleansing, purifying,\nwhite mint flavored Tooth Paste\nwhich wo can highly recommend.\nIt Is good for bad teeth and Is hot\nbad for good teeth.\nAsk the assistants to show you\nthis Tooth PaBte.\nCanada Drug\n& Book Co.\nTha Drug Store That Is Different.\nF. J. BOLES, Mgr.\nMall orders filled promptly.\nPhone 81.\nMen's Strong Roomy\nWork Shirts\nALL   SIZES\nEach\n.50o\nTHE ARK\nNew and Second-Hand Furniture,\nCheapest ln tbe city.\nJ. W. HOLMES, Mgr.\nPhone L395. 606 Vernon St.\nNelson, B. C.\nAuction Sale\nHOOSEBOLD FORMITORE\n3rd Street, Fairview.\nTuesday, April 20th\nAT 2 P, M.\nMiss Spence, in tho Tevlotdnle residence, has Instructed us to sell all\nher furniture on nibovo date. Singer\nsewing machine, hair parlor suite, 6-\nhole McCleary range and hot water\ntank, chickens, all laying pullets, etc.\nOne Block from Car Line.       ,\nTERMS:    CASH.\nChas.A.Waterman&Co\nAuctioneers.\nNOTICE\nW. Cutler\nhas the best stock of\nSECOND HAND FURNITURE\nKITCHEN  RANGES\nSTOVES\nHEATERS\nGAS STOVES\nCHINA, GLASS and\nTINWARE\nln the city at his Auction and Sales\nRoom, 609 Ward Street, open every\nday from Nine a.m. till Five p.m.\nAuction Sales conducted\u2014a visit\nwill pay.\nCROCKS\nWo have just received a lot of\nstoneware crocks from 1 to 5 gals.\nJust tbe thing to preserve eggs In,\nnow while they are so cheap.\nFlower and fern pots of extra\nfine quality.\nWe are still trading crockery,\netc., for Becond-Uand goods.\nChina Hall\nA. W. MUNRO\nPhone L261 Box 583\nMen's Suits\nDry Cleaned  $1-50\nMall Orders Pnld One Way.\nH. K. Foot\nDry Cleaning Specialist\nCottonwood Street        Nelson, B\u00a3.\nGem Theatre\nTOMORROW\nBig  Military Three-Reel Feature\n\"A   MILITARY   JUDAS\"\nThursday, April 22\nBIG\nRED   CR08S   ENTERTAINMENT\nSongs and Dances by Local Artists\nROSSLAND LEAGUE\nAT TRAIL TONIGHT\nLength\/ Prog rem of Music and  Reci\ntations Prepared\u2014Special Train\nChartered\n(Special to Tho Daily News.)\nROSSLAND, Ti. C., April 18.\u2014Following is the program which will ho\ngivon by the members and *Mends of\ntho Rossland Epworth league at Tm>.\nMontlny night: Address of welcome, by\nthe president of Trail league; reply, by\npresident ot Rossland league; chorus\n\"The Maplo Leaf Forever\"; song, \"The\nHappy Littlo Country Girl,\" by th-\ngirls' chior; recitaticn, \"The Minister's\n\"Wife,\" by Mrs. Nute; solo, by Philip\nRnlph; recitation, Robert Healer;\npianoforte solo. Miss Eslella Mjrrish\ntenor solo, Ernest Meachem; recitation,\nMrs. Nute; tableaux, introducing tlv\npopular songs of th.i day, as follows\n\"Sing Me the Rosary,\" by Mrs. Flor\nenco Hamilton, Mrs, Nute, Miss Hazel\nPitt and the girls' choir; \"An Irish\nLullaby,\" by Helen Newman and girls\nchoir; \"When the Twilight Comes to\nKiss the Ro?e Good Night\" hy Mrs. J\nB. Weber and girls' choir; \"When thf\nDew Is on the Rose,\" by Annio Stan\nton and girls' choir; \"Rebecca of Sun-\nnyhrook Form,\" hy Lettie Stantc n aud\ngirls' choir; \"That Old Qlri <-f Mine,\nby Grace Lougheed and sir's' cIku**.\n\"When I Dream of Old Brln,\" by Flor\nenco Dally, Bruce Fortoath ami girls'\nchoir; \"Sympathy,\" by Alice Header,\nSam Morrish and girls' choir; \"Tipperary,\" by Robert Healer and ulrls'\nchoir; \"God Save iho King,\" by all\npresent.\nIn addition the Rossland city band\nwill play.\nTho special train, which the league\nhas secured, will leave tho C^imd-un\nPacific railway depot for Trail at\n7 p.m.\nANDERSON GUILTY\nFo^nd   to   Have   Assaulted   Rossland\nHotel Man Last Tuesday\n(Spocla.1 to Tho Dally News.)\nROSSLAND, April 18.\u2014Olaf Anderson yesterday morning elected to be\ntried by Magistrato Plewman on tl e\ncharge of wounding August .lacksor.\nat the Central hotel. Dr Coffin staler\nthat the wound appeared to have been\nmade by some sharp instrument and\nwas deep enough to reach to the covering of the Jawbone. Jackson swore\nhe was lying on a bed on Tuesday\nafternoon when aitaekod by Anderson\nbut he could not tell what tho latter\nhad in his hand as the room was dP.rk.\nThare wus no conversation Immediately\npreceding the attack.\nJohn McNeely and Mike Donovan\ntestified that the accused saU tt.it le\nhad not finished Jackson then, but lie\nwould yet. Anderson had been drinking. Gust Anderson swore to a conversation in I. E. Almstrom's shoe shop\nthe morning beforo tho attack, in\n\u25a0which Almstrom said that if tho accus\ned did anything to Jackson he would\nhave to go to Jail, Accused said, ye-\nthat was the worst cf it. Olaf Ander\nson said he merely struck Jackson\nwit'n his fist, 'hat ho had no weapon\nand thnt he did not mako the state \u25a0\nments attributed to him. The magistrate found him guilty and renanded\nhim until Tuesday next for sentence\nTho regular monthly mooting of the\nLadies' aid of tho Y. M. C. A. which\nwas tp have beon hold this afternoon\nfcas been postponed and will ho held\nMonday, April 26.\nUse    \"BAPCO\" Paint\nFOR  SPRING   PAINTING\nThis It the best Ready-Mixed Paint we can buy and wo carry * wlda\nrange of oolora to choose from.\nFOR  FLOORS  USE \"IRONITE\" FLOOR  PAINT\nIt ia Notad for Ua Hardness and Durability.\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co\nLIMITED\nWHOLESALE   AND   RETAIL\nNELSON, B.C.\n[   Nelson News of the Dag\nKNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS\nCELEBRATE IN MAY\nTRIP TO PROCTOR\nGrand  Lodge  Meets in   Rossland  on | Is   Ready  for  Service   As   Soon   Aa\nMay 26-27\u2014Initiations i Needed\u2014Change in Paddle\nof Dokays Wheel Is Improvement\nTho grand lodge moating of tho\nKnights or Pythias will ho hold at\nRossland on May 2(5 anil t!7. Tho Rossland lodgo is making thorough preparation for tho evont. Itoss Tate and\nRichard Hartmnn are tho delegates\nfrom Nolson to the grand loilgo meeting.\nA special train will be run from Nelson on May 20 and on that, day bo-\ntwoen 40 and B0 candidates will bo\nInitiated by tho Dramatic Order\nKnights of Khorassan.\nThe local lodge Is preparing to do its\nshare lnnmnking the event, a success.\nWILL BE ASSISTED\nTho Nasooltin, the Canadian Pacific\nrailway's, finest, vessel in tho lako and\nriver service in this part of tho province, made her first trip on Saturday\nafternoon since having boon overhauled.   Sho ran lo Proctor and return.\nSomo changes have been mado ln\nthe big paddle-wheel that havo obviated tho throbbing noticeable last\nseason. Tho buckets of tho paddle-\nwhool have been slagged so that three\ndo not strike tho water at the same\ntime.   This had the desired effect.\nCapt. J. C. Gore, hcoil of the Interior\nsteamship service, was in charge. A\nnumber of womon and Canadian Pacific railway men mado the trip.\nTho Nasoakln is now ready and can\nbo placed in sorvlec ns soon as traffic demands.\nBRITISH FOOTBALL\n(Canadian Associated Press)\nLONDON, Apr'l 18.-01(1 Country\nfootball\u2014Glossop 1, Stockport 1.\nAmateur cup finals\u2014Bishop Auckland 0; Clapton 1.\n\u2022Northern Union cup semi-finals\u2014\nHuddersfield 3.3, Rochdale 2; Wlgan\n4   Leeds 15.\nNorthern Union league\u2014Batley 3,\n3winton 11; Broughton 11, Salford 3;\nHull 61, Wakefield 3; Wldnes' 21, St.\nHelens 0; York 18, Kelghley 3; Huns-\nley 18, Bromley 5.\nVAPORITE\nWHO  REAPED, THE   CROP   FROM   YOUR   GARDEN   PATCH   LAST |\nYEAR,  YOU   OR THE  CUT-WORMS?\nA  SMALT.,   SUM   SPENT   FOR  VAPORITE   WILL   SAVE   THIS\nVF.AR'S   CROP  FOR  YOU\nThe Brackman-Ker Milling Co., Ltd.\nLADIES!\nNOTICE!\nBesides all the regular Talcums we have three new ones that are so\ngood that we waht you lo try them.   The  odors  are  Violet  and   Rose-\ndelicate, fragrant and lasting.   The powders are extra fine and pure.\nPRICE  26o.\nOITV   ROUP   Pft    For DRUGS, STATIONERY, Neilson's\nUl I  I    UnUll  UUb     Chocolates, Phonographs, Etc.\nNELSON'S BUSY STORE  PHONE 34 P. 0. BOX 1083\nLoeal Relief Organization So Decides\u2014\nMany Needy Families Given\nValuable Help by Women\nIn March the local relief organization save assistance to 1C families, Including 28 adults and 31 children.\nClothing contributed was distributed\nfrom local relief headquarters to many\nneedy families.\nArrangements were made hy tho organization that enabled ono family to\ngo to Grand Forks and children woro\nsont to .Edmonton to loin their parents.\nAt Saturday's meeting- it was decided no help would he given lo bachelors. Attention will bo dovolod to\nneedy families nnd especially wonien\nand children.\nA substantial amount, was raised hy\nmeans of the card parties at. the Hume\nhotel. Tho loeal relief orgdnlstatlpn\nwork is separate from thnt of the or\nganlmtion o( whicli tho city clerjc Is\ntho secretary.\nAT\nBRING THIRTY CENTS\nLocally Grown Rhubarb on Sale\u2014Produce Did  Not Supply tho\nDemand.\nTrading at thn city market on Saturday was somewhat slow but because\nof the small offerings producers were\nsold out early in the day. Lack of a\nmarket building is responsible for the\nsmaller offerings in somo lines, it is\nsaid by somo traders. Demand for\neggs wan brisk and the price in small\nquantities rose to 30 cents; 25 cents\nwaa tlie trading prico for caso lots.\nLocally grown rhubarb was offered for\ntho first time. Trices were:\nEggs, dozen ? .2i>@ .30\nCreamery butter, lb\n\u25a015\nCreamery hatter, 2 lbs. ..            .s\u00bb\nDairy butter, lb              M\nFowl for breeding J.0O(fH.2r>\nPork. lb oSfi? .lfi\nBeets, per cwt  1.50@2.00\nParsnips, per cwt -. l.BOtgjS.Ou\nCitrrots, per cwt  1.25(}T2.0A\nTurnips, per cwt.  l.*jr\u00bb5f2.00\nPotatoes, per cwi  1.7r\u00bb@2.00\nApples, per box ..j  l.25fli<1.75\nLayer cakes, each              .3f>\nTea Cakes, dozen              15\nDrop cakes, dozen             .15\n.15\n.15\nCurrant bushes, each ....   -l\">ffji .25\nRaspberry canas, per  100          2.00\nTomato plants, dozen ....            .15\nGeranium plants, each lGtf? .25\nPot flowers 25\u00ae .75\nSOCK DAY n\nE\nLO\nN\nNELSON 1\n[0\nMO\nm\nDepot Will Be Open All Day Tuesday\nto Receive Donations.\nAs Tuesday, April 20 has beon do-\nclded upon as ''sock day by tho Ked\nCross society all over the Dominion,\ntho local depot will bo open on that\ndato from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. and 2to\n6 p.m. in order to receive any donations of socks that the pcoplo of Nelson wish to give. The socks should be\nof fairly largo size\u201411 or 11% inch\nfoot\u2014 and if possible grey or khaki in\ncolor.\nAs booUb aro so -groatly needed by\nthe men of the army it. is hoped that\na largo number wilt bo collected by\nthe socloty.\nNEWS OF SPORT.\nMINTO CUP HOLDERS FAVOR\nEAST AND WEST SERIES\nCompetition to Be on Same Lines as\nStanley Cup\u2014First Series in\ntho West.\nAid. Kolllngton, manager of tho Now\nWestminster Salmon Bellies, has announced that thero was no doubt but\nthat Now Westminster would support\ntho proposal to havo tho Minto cup\noffered tot\" competition between the\nonsi. and west on tho samo lines as the\nStanley cup. \"Westminster has held\nthe cup seven years and, with tho exception of ono season, we havo beaten\nall comers,\" declared Aid. Kelllngton.\n\"Wo find It impossible to induce eastern teams t.o play us for tho cup now\nand t think and I believo I voice the\nsentiments of others in New Westminster, that thn time is at hand when\nwe should have annual competitions\nwith tho eastern winners for tho\ntrophy. In view of the fact that the\ncup Is held out hero 'it is only right\nthat tho eastern winners this year\nshould make tho trip to the coast for\ntho first series.'\nSALARIES OF N. H. A. ARE\nDUE FOR CUT NEXT YEAR\nPlayers Will Be Passed up Next Season Unless They Agree to\nLower Salaries,\nOTTAWA\u2014That there will bo a general reduction in salaries throughout\ntho National Hockey association next\nseason was tho prediction made by\none of the directors of tho Ottawa\nHockey club. The attendanc hero this\nseason, on the average was not as good\nas last winter and while the Senators\nhad ono o*vLra game, tbo expenses of\noperation wero much heavier. The trip\nto the const wns financed hy the club,\nthough they derived no revenue. They\nbroke nbout even on that expedition,\nThe Ottawas, as previously stated,\ncarried the highest paid team lu tho\nleague. They paid out over $15,000\nIn salaries and then had to bonus tho\nplayers. This meant an extra $1600.\nThey woro obliged to carry a larger\nsquad than ever and injuries to some\nof the players necessitated frequent\nshifts and the acquisition of ono or\ntwo new men. in addition they pur-\nchased Sammy Bebert and Fred Lake\nfrom the Shamrocks and thus neut\nralizcd tho salo of Ronan and Lesueur,\nFERNIE LACROSSE BOYS\nCHALLENGE NELSON TEAM\n(Special to The Daily News.)\nPERNIE, B. C, April 18.\u2014The Fernie intermediate lacrosse team is challenging tho Nelson junior or intermediate lacrosse team. For particulars\ntha Nelsou team Is asked to write to\nRussell Dudley, Fernie, B. C.\nMccarty beats colin bell,\naustralian heavyweight\n(By Daily News Leased Wiro.)\n\u25a0NEW YORK, April 18.\u2014Tom McCarty, Montana heavyweight, had tho\nbetter of every rouud of a 10-round\nbout Saturday night with Colin Bell,\nAustralian heavyweight title holder.\nThe weights were McCarty 185, Bell\n195.\nSPORTING  NOTES.\nFor a period of 10 years Joss Willard must give 50 per cent, of his earnings to his manager, Tom .Tones.\nSeattlo wrestlers did well in the\nsemi-finals of the wrestling tournament at tho Panama-Pacific exposition, winning five bouts.\nWillie Hoppe, blllard champion, has\nbeon -jhallcnged by W. Cochren, an 18-\nyear-old cuo artist from Iowa.    \"\nMembers of H. M. C. S. Rainbow will\ntake part in the box'.ng championships\nof British Columbia, which will he hold\nnt Victoria,\nGeorge Borgon, a New York amateur\nboxer, died thero April 16 from the effects of a blow ovor tho heart received\nin an exhibition bout with a friend,\nArthur Slehhlr.s.\nINSURANCE\nFIRE   INSURANCE\nACCI06NT   INSURANCE\t\nEMPLOYERS', LIABILITY   INSURANCE\nGUARANTEE BONDS\nChas. F. McHardy\nOREEN   BLOCK PHONE   135 NELSON,   B.  C.\nNEWS OF SPORT\nBASEBALL AWAY\nT0G00D START\nFirst Game Junior League Played Saturday\u2014Two Other Matches\nPlayed\nBaseball hold sway at the rocrea-\ntion parte on Saturday afternoon,\nwhen lu all three gnmes wero played,\ntwo Junior and ouo senior. The\ngames, with the exception oi tlie\njunior city league contest, were featured hy largo scores, which is accounted for more by the heavy hitting\nIndulged ln by the players than by\nragged fielding. Baseball has already\ntaken a good hold in the city this year\nand a junior league has boen organized. In all probability a senior city\nleague will lie got under way within\n;lte next week or so, composed of\nthree teams. Such a, league would\nmaterially help in establishing baseball on a firm footing in Nelson.\nThe results of the Saturday games\nare: Hovers 25, Hungry Nino Junior\n20; All Stars 7, Eagles C; Y. M. C. A.\n20, Locals 2.\nRovers Defeat Junior Hungry Nino\nAt first glance the scoro in this\ngame appeared to he that or a cricket\ncontest, and not. of a. baseball game.\nTho unusually high scoro was the\nresult, of heavy hitting comMned with\nragged fielding ou tho part of both\nteams. Tho score was Rovers 25,\n11111180' N'lne 20.   Tho lino up:\nRovers\u2014C., P. Shields; p., I..\nThompson and C. Scanlon; 1 b., G.\nWilson; 2 i>\u201e .1, Roe; 3 h., L. Thompson; s. s., B. Adams; r. f., Q. Benwell;\n1. f\u201e R. Smith.\nHungry Nino Juniors\u2014C. L. Desl-\nreau; p., W. Marquis; 1 b., CI. Bart\nlett.; 2 b., A. Bell; 3 p., S. Clionuette;\ns. s., M. McQualg; 1. (.. H. Duck; r. f.,\nT. Brenon.\nAll Stars 7, Eagles 6\nTho junior baseball league got. off\nto a good start when the All Stars defeated the Fnlrvlew Eagles In the first\nleague game by n scoro of 7\u2014ti. The\njuniors put. up a good exhibition\nthroughout the game, the result of\nwhicli was in doubt until the last, man\nwas put out. The Eaglos took the\nlead In the first few innings and held\nIt until the ninth, when the All stars\nrallied and put two runs across the\nplate, putting them ono in tho load,\nand then blanked the Eagles In their\nhalf of the ninth. The lineups:\nAll Stars\u2014Forrester, L, Hall, Bishop, Radcllffe, I.. Hall, Middle, Connie,\nPhlllpB, Shore.\nEagles \u2014 Shuttleworth,   Blanchard,\nBoyes,   Curran,    Marquis,   Hartwlg,\nMcLaughlin. I. Marquis, Deslreau   .\nY. M. C. A. Defeat Locals\nThe team representing the Y.M.C.A.\nliterally walked through the Locals\nIn the senior game on Saturday, the\nscore ending 20\u20142 In favor of tho\nY. The game was exciting and close\nup to the end of tlie seventh, when\nthe scoro was 4\u20142 ln tho Y's favor.\nIn the first of the eighth, however,\nMcKlm, on the mound for the Locals,\nblow up, nnd 13 runs were shoved\nicrosB the plate by tho Y. The fault\nIn this inning was not altogether due\nto McKlm, as the whole Local team\nleemed to forgot that it wns Dlaylng\njail and numerous errors wore chalked up against the lnfiold. The high\nichool outfield playing for the Locals\nlayed well and missed fow ehanees.\nQlbbs pitched a steady gamo for the\nY. and had Its opponents guessing\nall the time. The two teams:\nY. M. C. A.\u2014C. Lcaoh, p. Gibbs, 1 h.\nSutherland, 2 b. Nagle, 3 h. Brnsch,\ns. s. Maurer, r, f. Anderson, c. f. Robinson, 1. f. Wilkinson.\nLocals\u2014C. Murphy, i>. McKlm, 1 b.\nRoe, 2 b. Waters, 3 h. Lucia, s. s.\nBretincn, 1. f. MeArthur, o. f. Bradshaw, r. f. Lensman.\nMANN CUP REJECTED\nPresident Heydon Sends Formal Notice to Alberta Game Association.\nCalgary Will Play Brampton\n(By Dally News Loased Wiro.)\nCAM AMY, Alia., April 18.\u2014President MoKlnley of the Al'aerta laeross\nassociation hns received formal notification from President. Haydon of tho\nCanadian Amateur Lacrosse Association thnt the Maun cup has been repudiated by that, body as the championship trophy. He admits that Vancouver acted lu an unsportsmanlike\nway last season, but holds that tho\nAmateur Athletic Union of Canada\nmust be. recognized as infallible in tho\nease.\nVancouver's refusal to part with the\ncup Is interpreted by local laerosso officials as being a repudiation of the\nCanadian Amateur 'Lacrosse associ.\nalion and Its president. Meanwhile\nCalgary Is preparing to play against.\nBrampton. Tho dates for the game\nhave not. yet been agreed upon, but\nthoy will probably be about July 1.\nli\nGAME WON BY EE\nROI\nLOCAL FISHERMEN\nTOO KEEN; ARRESTED\nAppear   in   Court  This   Morning   for\nHaving  Rainbow Trout Out\nof Season\nThroe fishermen ol this district will\nappear In the provincial police court\nnt 10:30 o'clock this morning for hnv-\ning trout. In thoir possession ont o.\nseason. Their catfh totaled 1G ruin-\nbow trout of fine size.\nH.B. R. Bedford of Trail, provincial\ngamo wardon, mado the nrrnstH ni'ar\nNelson.\nTho authorities, it is understood, aro\ndetermitiod to enforce tho regulation\nthat no trout must be tnlten heforo\nMay 1.\nMACFARLANO, CYLE RACER,\nPROBABLY FATALLY HURT\nNOT YORK, April 18.\u2014Floyd A.\nMucfurlnnd, gonernl manager of the\nCysle Racing association and one of\ntho most widely known bicycle riders\nin tho country, sustained a fractured\nskull and other Injuries about the\nhoad whicli may prove fatal in a collision with Lantlnberg, a confection*\nen' dealer ln the volcdrotn\u00a9 here lato\nSuifcta _ ,.,.__ _\u201e|\nCentre Star Defeated by Le Roi\u2014Score\n3-1\u2014R. Himms Referred.\n(Special to Tho Dnlly News.)\nROHSl\/AiXD, B.C., April IS.\u2014Teams\nrepresenting tlie Le Hoi nnd Centre\n\u25a0Star mines met in a Kanie of footbnil\nat Rosalind yesterday afternoon which\nended In a win for the Le Rol toam by\na score of 3-1. The. ynmo was exciting throughout and was kept clean\nby Referee R. Tlmms, Who handled\nthe game Impartially. W. Rutledge\nnnd H. T. Bllkoy officiated as linesmen.   The line-ups:\nCentre Star\u2014Goat, Lee; ihacks, Lee\nand Churchill; half backs, Mathews.\nFnwn, Henley; forwards, Chamberlain.\nRoff, Cook, Costollo and Cunlilfo.\nLe Rot\u2014Goal, Rottor; backs, Wallace\nand Cell; half backs, Ham', Scanlon,\nHarrison; forwards, Bird, Finney, Cox,\nMorris and Hannah.\nFRANK J. BUROE ELECTED\nPRESIDENT OF P. C. P. L. A.\nVancouver  and   Westminster  to   Play\nTwelve Games\u2014Victoria Unable\nto Get Players\nVICTORIA, B. C, April IS.\u2014Frank\n.1. Burdo, business ninnnger of a Vancouver dally newspaper, has been\nelected presldont of the Pacific Coast\nProfessional Lacrosse association and\nhe is to be supreme in all disputes.\nThe clubs will play 12 matches, six in\nVancouver and tho remaining six between Westminster and Victoria. Inability to secure players was tho rea-\nroii advanced for tho failure of Victoria to remain lu the league.\nThe British Rugby league r.f Toronto\nis in a bad way owlr.g to the fact that\nnearly all players of the leaguo have\ngone to the front. The Irish club hns\nlost ln ill about 1G players.\nROSSLAND DEFEATS\nTRAIL'S RAIL TTAHl\nBy Score of 13-0\u2014O'Neill and Patter-1\nson Oo tho Heavy Work.\n\u2014Tomkina Umpire.\n\u25a0\"Special to Tho Dally Nows.)\n'ROSS-LAND, B.C., April 18..\u2014The |\nRossland baseball team took the measure of Trail yesterday afternoon whenl\nthe Trait team was defeated by thel\nscore of 13-0. Patterson pitching tof\\\nRossland had the Trail 'team stopped I\nall tho time and was ably supported!\nby his team mates. O'Neill did thel\nheaving for Trail but didn't have good!\nsupport. J, D. Tompkins umpired td'l\nthe satisfaction of tho players and th*\u00a3|\nspectators.   Tho line-ups:\nTrail\u2014Woodland, c; O'Neill, p; E.1\nWilme, lb; Burns, 2b; Donaldson, 3b; I\nS.S., J. Mllme; l.f., Btttoac; r.f., O'Neill;,)\ncf., Morrow.\nRossland\u2014Kelly,   c;   Patterson     p;\"\nForan, lb; Isaacson. 2b; Griffith, 3b; |\nK.S., Hender; l.f., McAllister; r.f., Hunter; c,f\u201e Cosgriff.\nHIGH SCHOOL TO PLAY\nHUNGRY NINE TEAM TODAY]\nSecond Game of Series\u2014Bradshaw and |\nWhitebread to  Do the\nPitching.\nThe second game of the High School I\nHungry Nino bnsebaU sorieB will bo|\nplayed at the recreatio.i park this afternoon at 3:30 o'clock. The first game I\nwent to the Hungry Nine by a margin of one run and as both teams have |\nbeen strengthened since then, an interesting   and   close   contest   can   be!\nlooked    for.   - Bradshaw  will do t.hol\nheavy work for tho High School and|\nB. Whitehead will do the dellvnrlng for\ntho Hungry Nino,   Tho line-up.\nHigh School\u2014c. Brnsch;   p. Brad-1\nShaw;   lb.,   Gibbs;   2b,   Roe;   3b,  MeArthur;   B.s.,   Maurer;   l.f., Neelanda;\nc.f., Corey; r.f., Nagle; spare, Wilkin-1\nBon. *\nHungry  Nine^\u2014C.,  Bronnan;   :    B. |\nWhitehead;   lb,   Garde;   2b,   McKim;\n3h, Lucin; s.s., Richardson; l.f., Hob- I\nkins;   cf.,   Lyonnnisc;   r.f.,   Frost  or |\nDeslreau.\n-j_\nStarlandTheatre\nThe Fourteenth  Episode of\nThe Trey o'Hjarts\n(\"THE FIRST  LAW\")\nA tremendously exciting episode.\nTerrlflo   action   all   tlirough.    Remember\u2014Next   Monday    the   last\nepisode will he shown.\nTWO  BIG  COMEDIES\nSTARLAND   ORCHESTRA\nTomorrow\nThe Million Dollar Mystery\nIF one of your \"new Spring\nSuits is to be an all\u2014around\nservice suit for every-day wear,'\nwe recommend the Fit-Reform\nmodel shown above. It is a\npractical, conservative style\u2014:\nmedium fitting \u2014 with natural\nshoulders and broad,peak lapels.\n|We have this style in all the\npopular fabrics\u2014from $15. up.    ^\nEmory & Walley\nFit-Reform Wardrobe\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1915_04_19","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0386405","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"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.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","@language":"en"}],"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","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1915-04-19 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1915-04-19 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Daily News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0386405"}