{"@context":{"@language":"en","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"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2021-03-16","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1920-04-22","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0396179\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" mm\n1\u2014\n\u00abhe D-llf New. to th\u00bb wly <U_JlH\n\u2666paper   In   to*   Interior   of   BritUb]\nt Columbia.    Full  leased wlr\nlot Canada Press, Limited.\nt\u00bb. inmtiii\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb\u00bb\u00bbmm \u00bb___.\n-fe\nNELSON,  B.  C, THURSDAY BtORNING, APRIL 22, 1920\nTHE WE A'\nNelson      and .    vici_B__^-Geiierally\nfair and mild.\nNO. 5\n^Present Country is Singu\nlarly Free From Strike\nThreats\nPROVINCIAL LAND\nSETTLEMENT BOARD\nNOW SUPERSEDED\nVICTORIA, April 21.\u2014Reorganization of the British Columbia land settlement officii commenced today,\" an order in council being passed abolishing the\ndepartment in its present form.\nUnder- the new arrangement a\nsuperintendent, Col. R .D. Davis,\nwill be directly responsible- to\nthe minister of agriculture,' and\nthrough him to the provincial\nexecutive.     ...(..\n\u00ab!-\nIUEBEC SHIPBUILDING\nCHIEF TROUBLE AREA\n!i  \u2014___\u2014!_ \\ \\    ,.\n\\o Serious Tie-up in Can-\nr  adian Industry at Present\nin Sight\nTORONTO, April 21.\u2014Reports ob-\n:ined today from Canadian Press\n(-respondent. In various cities in\nastern Canada, Indicate that the\nfospects tljia year for May Day,\nid the traditional el-ike season, in\nlost cities, i do not promise any\nsrious: lle.-up in Industry. So far\nts thej hull-l-f. and trades are con-\nwned, except In the case Of Ham-\njtqn, a settlement has been reached\nitweon employees and employers in\njjoarly an the; trades, nnd If thero\ncessation' of building- operations\nwill be on accouht of the cost\n' ^materials, and not because of\nhor  troubles,\n\"There are 'prospects, however, in\noronto, London and other points,,\n1 street railway strikes, but in\nost cases the ^agreements do not\nul \"out till later In the'summer.\n)clallst organizations In Toronto,\nontreal and other cities are pre-\n.iring for extensive demonstrations,\nJrgrely in the form of parades and\nben air meetings on the afternoon\nj May ' Day. .\n' Quebec Worst Area\nJqTJEBBC, April 21.\u2014Seldom has\npiebec district been gripped by\nsch a large number of strikes and\n[bor unrest.as it is at the present\nme.\n.There has been, a strike or -hip-\nlllders at Three Rivers since Monty nffirnlng. Higher prices Is the\nsmand of the 'men. There is a\n.ike at the pulp and paper plant\n'the Brompton Pulp & Taper com-\niny dt Bromptonville. There* the\n,u-o of the trouble lien in a dts-\nlte     regarding    lnte'rnal    manago-\n'\u00bbH*fc'   '-r =-'-i.y'v.-..,.r--.....--.\nThe   strike   was     declared     this\nonline- bt the St. \u25a0\u25a0Htwrence Dock,\n! ie   men   demanding   higher   wages,\nftrt  of  the  employers  have  neced-\n\u2022 I to their men's demands.\nPeaceful in West '\nSASKATOON, April 21.\u2014Labor\nire is fairly plentiful with appllca-\non_ for work equal with demand\nir men. There are no prospects\nI   labor   trouble,   and   the   proposed\niimlnion wide May. Day strike has\nit been considered nt present\nEDMONTON', .April 21.\u2014Every-\nIng ln the labor world of Ed-\nonton looks bright at the present\nne, and no strikes \u25a0 are in pros-\n\"ict at tho present time. Owing\n\u25a0 the lateness\" of spring, there is\n,tle demand as yet for farm labor,\nit a^large number are being plac-\nj I by the provincial labor bureau\nr mining and lumbering work.     ;\n-\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\/        Ul '.\u2022', '.'%_.   -\nCALGARY, Alia., .April 21.\u2014One\nrreement, that of the Typographl-\n1 Union, expires before June 1.\nlis union is making requests for\nureases. At present there are no\nrikes in Bight. Three agreements\ntplre June 1 and four July 1.\njasterers. laborers on -June 1 will\nk \u25a0 76 cents on hour, ' and sheet\nfetal workers will ask ?1, as will\nMetrical \u25a0 workers.\n.REGINA, April 21.\u2014Labor condi\nms in general are much more re\nsirring than a year ago, when a\nneral strike in tho building trades\nis on. This.year all the building\nades unions have signed ogree-\nents at an -advance over last\nar, With the exception of the car-\nntors, .whose . agreement does not\nplre'f till May h They nre asking\nr a closed shop at a dollar an\n,ur. and the contractors object to\ne closed- shop principle. It is con-\nlered unlikely there will be' any\nrllte. The farm .labor situation 1-\ntgarded is satisfactory.\nTHE DAY IN\nPARLIAMENT\n\u00ab5>-\n-0\nVANCOUVER,., April 21.\u2014British\ndjLimbia coast points are partl-\nlai-ly free of labor troubles at\ne\u00bbent, nor are arty strikes of large\nbportlon 'anticipated in the Imrae-\nMo future. With the opening of\n.ring and summer activities in tho\nirions lines of. Industry, labor con\ntipns nre apparently quite tran\nill.        '  .    . '\nfill TRY TO seTT\nTOJONTP WORLD\nTORONTO, April 21.\u2014Creditors of\ne Toronto World' Newspaper com-\n\"!ny met this Afternoon,- among them\n\u2022ins representatives of the Sterling\nink, the Bank of Nova Scotia and\ne Canadian Bank of Commerce,\nid also a number of employees,\nie list of creditors <wns not read\ntho meeting., .*-\u2022 |-J;\nThree inspectors were appointed,\nho; wero authorized to dispose of\ne estato of the Toront? World,\nthor by private or auction sale,\nie creditor^ -decided in favor of the\ninllnuanop-qf the. management of\no paper b.\\! Assignee . Clarkson,\naiding the winding up of the WorM\n.jnpany' affairs.\nHoues\nSpecial committee appointed to\nconsider and report on the form of\nmemorial, if any, to . be erected on\nthe battlefields to commemorate the\n\u25a0gallantry   of   Canadian   troops.\nSir George Foster announced that\nthe budget would be brought down\nIn a week or 10 days.      >\nResolution to provide for the np-\npolntment of a purchasing bourd\ndiscussed, and progress reported.\nGrand Trunk bill again before tho\ncommittee of the whole, parsed out\nof  committee.'\nAmendment introduced, by 1. E.\nPedlow on third \u25a0 rending of Food\nand Drug act lost on division of\n100 to  57.\nSenate\nBill to promote uniformity in tho\nivorce practice of provincial courts\nwas carried for second wading on\na division of 43. to 14.\nResolution advocalihg electrification of government lines in Ontario dropped.    '\nSecond. reading *vas given to bill\nincreasing governments annuity to\ncity  of  Ottawa.\nSecond reading was given to the\nbill amending the Canada shipping\nact  ln relation  to certificates.\n,.\\,\nRMANY FULFIL\nSAN REMO, .April 21 (Associated\nPress).\u2014Discussion- of .what shall bo\nasked of Germany, and how what is\nasked shall be exacted, will be begun\nby the supreme council tomorrow.\nTension between the ..British and\nFrench delegates, on this subject haB\npeen considerable.\nThe French aro declared to feel\ndeeply that they have been the\ngreatest sufferers from Germany's\nomission in fulfilling her obligations to the treaty, that Germany's\nretention    of   war   mat-rial    obliges\nFrance lo remain armed, and that\nthe reduction in .coal deliveries keeps\non Important fraction of tho French\nIndustries idle. * ~ .\"A\nThey say that Germany, 'during\nthe last nine, months, has indicated\nclearly to the French ifiiml that she\nIntends to do nothing she eannot\nbe compelled to do, and that, unless\nthe Allies sharply warn her and\nprepare to follow up the warning\nby forcible measures, Germany will\ndefault upon the essential clauses of\nthe   treaty,   counting   upon   escaping\nfurther penalties\", or upon a revision,\nof the treaty greatly disadvantageous to the French.\n- The British position, is that al\nthough Germany has defaulted ln\nseveral extremely Important respects\nand .she must be required to fulfil\nher obligations, she .can be made to\ndo.so without further occupation of\nher territories, and by severe economic restrictions. The British\nstatesmen are understood to look as-\nkapce on. the French aims and feel\nthat leadership among the Allies is\nbeing disrupted.\nCommons Appoints Special\nCommittee to Report on\nQuestion\nSITES CONVEYED TO\nDOMINION ALREADY\nAction Taken on Request of\nGovernment to Submit\nGeneral, Scheme\nThird Reading Stands Over;\nLucien Cannon Sassy in\nHis Criticism of Measure\nOTTAWA, April 21.\u2014(Canadian\nfrttssJ-^-AftiW-s -TBift-ffler'- ..'?flf^trajr.ted\nsession on the proposed ratification\nof the Grand Trunk agreement, the\nhouse of commons thnlght put the\nbill through the committee stage,\nbut agreed to allow\"the third reading to stand over, Hon. C. J. Doherty stated that third reading\nwould come up- ln tho ordinary\ncourse tomorrow-\nReplying to Hon. W. Ii Mackenzie King, Dr. Reid stated that no\namendement could be accepted to\nthe agreement as already decided\nupon between the company and the\ngovernment.\n\"Then It Is useless for Sthls discussion to proceed further,\" said\nthe leader of the opposition, and\ntho bill was reported out' of committee at 11.20.\nTomorrow the house will discuss\nthe franchise bill.\nIn the evening debate Lucien\nCannon, Dorchester, professed to see\nln tho Grand Trunk bill more than\nappeared at first reading. He aroused. amusement by comparing government, acquisition of the Grand\nTrunk system with tho, methods employe-* by fhe bolshevlkl ln Russia.\nReferring to Hon. N. W. Rowell.\nMr. Cannon, said: \"The time- has\ncome for the representatives of the\npeople of Canada to put a stop to\nthis radical policy of Iho govern\nment, especially when holshcvism is\nintroduced into this country by a\nminister who carries a bible ln one\nhand and a temperance tract In the\nother,\"\nMr. Cannon also took a fling at\nHon. C. J. Doherty' who, he said,\nwas a good Irishman iii Canada.\n\"Some people say he is not aB\ngood when he reaches Pails and\nhaa,.to discuss the Irish situation\nfacing Lloyd George,\" he added.\n\"Would the honorable gcmlemon\nallow me to ask him who are the\n'some people' who say that, or does\nhe father the falsehood?\" queried Mr.\nHojierty.\nMr. Cannon replied that the United States representatives ot the\nIrishmen in the United States came\nbaok to the United States, made\ntheir report, and said \"something.\"\nHe, did not say Just what had been\nsaid.\nMr. Doherty expressed tho belief\nthat the line taken by Mr. Cannon\nconstituted a \"gross impropriety,\"\nInjurious to the interests of Ireland.\nFinally the chairman requested\nMr. Cannon to stick more closely\nto the subject under debate\nWINNIPEG, April 21.\u2014W. J.\nClarke, aged 63, .prominent in Methodist ciroles, died ;at his -home here\ntoday, following a two weeks Illness.,\nMr. Clarke was bprn ln Hampton^\nOnt., and resided In Toronto for a\nnumber of years. T* Clarke, ot Co-\nbourg, Ont, member of the' Ontario legislature is a brother.   ,\nSTEAMER \"ARRIVALS\nTocahontas at NeW Yorjtv from\nAntwerp. \u2022\nItalia at Gertoa from New York.\nWar Peridot' at Antwerp. from St.\nJohn,. N.B. ,'\nGrampian at London from St.\n.tohnt N.Br   '\ni ;Wnpolo   at   Halifax,   from   Gibraltar, , *\nOTTAWA, April 21.\u2014(Canadian\nPress)\u2014On the . motion of Hon.\nHugh Guthrie, seconded by Hon. T.\nW. -Orothers, the hoijse this afternoon appointed a special committee to consider and report on the\nquestion of \"What memorial, if any\nshould be erected on ,the battlefields of the Great War to commemorate the gallantry of Canadian' troops.\"\nSites, Mr. Guthrie said, had been\nselected for, the purpose off ere\u00a3t*\n3ng memorials In cbmmemoration of\nthe battles of St. J^lkp. Passchen-\ndaele, Observatory Riage ,'or St.\nEloi, VImy Rfdge, Arras, Courcelette\nancT Amiens.\nVoted  Last Year\nIt would be remembered that $500,-\n000 was placed in the estimates last\nyear lor the purpose of erecting a\nmemorial. ^Tho -sites had been conveyed to the government* of Canada, and in the estimates for the\npresent year there was a vote of\n$10,000. This was to carry on \"the\nnecessary work of surveying and the\nlike.\nThe government felt it proper to\nask the house to take the whole\nquestion Into, consideration, and for\nthis purpose, that a special committee be appointed to go into the\nfacts and \u00ab determine upon some\ngeneral policy for the erection of a\npermanent memorial.\nI\u00ab BOAT\nGoodbye to Everybody for\nEvermore; Disabled at\nSea\nPRINCE RUPERT, B.C. April\n21.\u2014The trawl boat McDuff, which\nran ashore at Alford Bay with no\none on board, is on her way here,\nbeing sailed by an Indian. .Ar letter\nwas found on board addressed to\nMrs. Anne Brompton, 176 Burgess\nStreet,   Grimsby,    England,     saying:\n\"Engine broken, rudder smashed'\ndrifting In Hecate straits, storm.\nBidding goodbye to everybody for\nevermore,\"\nTHE WEATHER\nVICTORIA,   April   21\u2014Nelson   nnd\nvicinity\u2014Generally   fair   and   mild.\nMin. Max.\nNation      30 \u00ab\nVictoria    39 48\n'Komloops     38 C4\nRupert      32 46\n\u25a0 Dawson      8 33\nWinnipeg    ,   ,    88 44\nPentloton. \\... ...    86 64\nVanoouver    ......   40 50\nBackervllle       28 40\nAtlin !    24 40\nCalga. y    30 38\nPort Arthur  ' ...   .'.   36 40\nForty-Five Supporters Wait\non Sir George Foster to\nPress Matter\nDEFINITE POLICY TO\nBE STATED SHORTLY\nOLIVER GOVERNMENT\nPREPARES TO PASS\nPROHIBITION BUCK\nVANCOUVER, April 21.-AI- '\ntorney General Farrls stated today that if this year's provincial\nplebiscite showed that the people\nwere in favor of the. present\nProhibition act, as opposed to\ngovernment control and sale of\nliquor, in sealed packages, at the\nnext session of the legislature\nthe Dominion government would\nbe asked to take a plebiscite on\nthe question of bone dry legislation.\nPREPARING 10\nIS APPROVED\nSupreme Council Gives Sanction lor British. Wo. iters\nToiir\nWestern Members Believe\nAction to Utilize National\nResources Coming\nOTTAWA, April 21. \u2014 (Canadian\nPress).\u2014Indications hero now point\nto (he firm belief among western\nmembers of parliament that the government intends to take some definite action along the line of -h*e development of natural resources before the close of the present session. ,-\nHeaded by those who havo been\npressing for such action, a delegation\nof some 4 or 5 supporters of the government, waited on: the government.\nThe cabinet' rSeii- Vtireaeiy. InBluded-\nSir' Oeorgo Foster, acting prime\nminister, Hon. Arthur Meighen, H.\nA. Drayton, and C. C. Ballantyne.\nMany Benefits\nIt was urged that-the .government\nshould immediately consider undertaking some policy whereby the\nmineral development of the country\nwill be extended, and whereby all\nthe orations already mado in the\nhouse wilt be implemented hy effective action, on the ground that\nthis would be one, of the possible\nmethods of increasing the population, lessen the tares, enhance property values, secure a market fotr\nagricultural products, provide employment where it is badly needefl,\nfurnish freight for the already overdeveloped railways, make Canada\ncommercially indepenndent of the\nUnited States, and generally help to\ngive Canada Its proper. place among\nthe advancing industrial nations of\nthe world.\nIt was also strongly urged that\nthere has sprung up throughout the\n.entire country an Insistent, demand\nfor tho development of tho natural\nresources. '\nThe government Is understood lo\nhave replied that it is already cognizant of the nrguments\" piiti forth,\nand that some definite announcement of policy could be expected bo-\nfore the dose of the present session.\n.. Practically every province was represented at the conference.\nSOVIET GOVERNMENT\nWILL RECEIVE PARTY\nInvestigation Will Cover\nBoth Political and Indus\ntrial Situations\nLONDON, April 21.\u2014The delega\ntion of British Laborites, which is\njfofng lo Huasla to Investigate the\ngeneral situation, will be composed\nof three representatives of tl]i\nTrades Union congress and four\nrepresentatives of' the Labor party.\nTbe delegates will leave London\nnext Saturday. The foreign office,\nafter receiving San Remo advices\nyesterday that the allied council up-\nproved of the mission, Informed thi\niaborites that they would be granted\npassports to Esthonia, word having\nbeen previously conveyed from Mos\ncow that the party would be persona\ngrata fo the aovlet Russian government.\nThe trades unionists will investigate the working and living eonji-\ntion^i in Russia, while the poiitifinl\nrepresentatives of the delegation will\nconfine their inquiries to Russia's\ngovernmental ministry ahd economic\nand   trajtfe  matters.\nA. A. Purcell, of the Furnishing\nTrades association, Miss Margaret\nBonfield, who was recently defeated for parliament, and who will\nrepresent the, British women workers, and H. Skinner, of the Typographical union, were named today\nby  the  trades  congress.\nThe Labor party executive will\nname its representatives at an early\ndate, and decide whether correspondents will be permitted to accompany   the   party.\nGovernment Guarantees Returned Munitions D e a d\nior Exhibition\nOTTAWA, April 21 (Canadian\nPrss).-rThe government has a guarantee that all active m\u00bbnitlons returned from overseas are property\nexumlned nnd guaranteed to be harmless before being used for, exhibition\npurposes. \u2022\u25a0'\",'-\nThis, information was given-, to\n.Tames Arthurs, pf Parry. Sound, In\nthe houso of commons today.\nMr. Arthurs asked Whether a claim\nhad been made for compensation\nfor the death' of Mr. Alves,, who was\nkilled at Parry* Sound fall fair by\nthe explosion of a trench mortar\nbomb, supposed to be harmless,.. He\nwas told that such a claim had been\nmade, and that the question of\nmaking provision for the family of\nMr. AlveB was now under consideration. \u25a0       '    \u25a0 ,   i\nThis. Stated to Be Policy of\nPresent Dominion Administration\nOTTAWA, April 21.\u2014(Cnnn.dl.in\nPress)\u2014It is the intention of the\ngovernment to transfer to Alberta,\nSaskatchewan and Manitoba, their\nnatural resources, as soon as terms'\nfair and equitable to all other provinces of the Dominion can he arranged.\nThis Information was given by\nJ. A. Campbell, of Nelson, in the\ncommons today. Mr. Campbell, was\ntold that it had been the policy ot\nthe government to make these\ntransfers .ever since its formation.\nParliamentary, action was necessary\nto effect this transfer.\nCALGARY PREPARES.\nCOMING PAGEANT\n'\t\nCALGARY, April 21.\u2014Arrangements were outlined today by a big\ncitizens committee for the historical\npageant on . May J 2 , here In commemoration of the 250th anniversary\nof the Hudson's Bay company. About\n30 floats all of an historical character will. be in tne pageant, together with many other features,\nRich and elaborate costumos are\nbeing prepared by the company for\nthe seventeenth and eightee.uli i century  floats.\nSTRIKE CLASH AT BUTTE PUTS FOURTEEN\nSTRIKERS PICKETS AND POLICE IN HOSPITAL\nBUTTK, Mont., April 2}.\u2014Fou-teen men, believed to be I. W. W. strike pickets, and one\npoliceman, are in local hospitals suffering from gunshot wounds sustained in & battle on\nAnaconda road, near the Neverswea. mine, at 4:10 o'clock this afternoon;.i Physicians believe\n'two of the alleged I. W. W. will die. \u2022\u25a0\u25a0 .   \u25a0 *. .     -\nPolice are searching for. three other men, said to have been wounded seriously.\nStriking miners are massed in Finlander hall and m the street in front of the building.\nFeeling runB high.   Police reserves have been called out.        \u2022 '.%.\nJ WITH THE FESTIVE     I\n|        OVERALL   CLUBS\n<v \u2014-~7 \u2014\u20141\u00bb\nTORONTO; April 21.\u2014All of the\nmembers of the legislature who yesterday agreed to don overalls\n\"renigged\" when the time came for\nthem to live up to their agreement\ntoday, nnd appeared at the legislative buildings attired as usual in\nbusiness suits of serge and tweed.\nQuestioned as to what had caused\nthem to change their minds rnlher\nthan lhe clothes, the members concerned for the most part were inclined to pass over the compact as\na. joke.\nSchedules for the Building\nTrades Completed; Generous Increase\nWINNIPEG, April 21.\u2014The' provincial fair wage board completed\ntonight its revision of the wages of\nworkers employed in the building\nindustry. The schedule, which applies to government work, and Is\nadopted by the city of Winnipeg,\nthe Winnipeg school board, and a\nnumber of private concerns, represents ah increase-.over last year's\nschedule of from 20 to 26 per cent.\nThe wages for the following trades   were   fixed   at   tonight's   sitting:'\nTerrazzo workers, 85 cents per\nlayer, 44 hours week; helpers, 05\ncents  per   hour,   50-haur  week.\nPlasterers   $1.12 y,   cents per  hou\n44  hour  week.\n\u2022 ,j OU^nflng. engineers, (^three j drum\nmachines, $1.25 per \" hour (three\ndrums) BO-hour week; \"double drum\nmachines ?1.12^ per hour, 50-hour\nweek. Single _ drum machines $.\nper hour,  50-hour week,\nFiremen, 60 cents per hour, 50-\nhour  week.\nElectrical Workers: journeymen\nand inside wiremen, 92\"^ cents an\nhour,  44  hour week.\nBridge and structural steel and\niron workers, $1.25 per hour, 44-\nhour  week.\nAsbestos workers: journeymen !)0\ncents an hour, first class improvers\nSO cents, second class 70 cent, 44-\nhour  week.\nAsphalters: finishers 75 cents;\nmen mixing and handling material\n60 cents,  44-hour week,\nCarpenters, 35 cents' an hour, 44-\nhour week.\nUrge Ontario Government to\nDefer Imposition of New\nHeavy Tax\nTORONTO, April 21,\u2014The Ontario\nprovincial government was today\nurged by an influential and representative body of race track men to\ndefer the Imposition- of the proposed\n$10,000 per day provincial tax on\nrace tracks until the federal government's decision with regard to\n(he tax on pari-muteel, machines\nwould  be  disseminated,\nThe basis dC appeal, as outlined\nby tho race track men, Is that the\nfederal authorities will impose some\ntax upon the profits which may be*\nderived from the gambling devices\ninstalled at the tracks.\nIf the provincial tax, as proposed,\nwas also added, it wt.s said, it\nwould be impossible for racing in.\nOntario to continue either with or\nwithout,  betting.\nThe government promised consideration.\nBUL PROGRESSES\n\u25a0   \\    .   J i  \u2022    ',   '!\nGets Second Reading in the\nSenate by Large Majority; Ottawa Annuity\nl-\\ -*t\nOTTAWA, April 21\u2014(Canadian\nPress)\u2014By a majority of 43 to 14,\nthe bill to promote uniformity in\nthe divorce procedings in provincial\ncourts was given its second reading in the senate today. This, together with second reading of a bill\nincreasing the government's annuity\nto the city of. Ottawa, and some dls-\nousBion on electrification of government lines in Ontario, composed the\nafternoon's work.\nWITH IKY\nSupreme Council Accepts\nflans of Allied War Chi&s\nfor Action     -\nKURDISTAN TURKISH\nFOR JUST TWO YEARS\nMandatory States Will be\nCut Off and Disposed of\nLater\nRAN REMO, April 21,\u2014(Associated Press)\u2014The supreme council, of\nthe allies In hilly prepared to execute the Turkish treaty by military   force,   if   neeesBiiry.\nThe council accepted today a plan\ndrawn i'ur the employment of the\nAllied armies, by Marshal feoch,\nField Marshal S'lr Henry Wifeon,\nBritish, chief ot staff, ^and- Gen.\nHedogllo, luiliai. chief of staff, who\nwere presejit at the morning session.\nBig   Army   Moboiized\nTwo hundred thnusnnd ntlied\ntroops nre now within the borders\nof the Turkish ..Empire *Htrategeti-\ncally exposiklj and these forces can\nbe increased if Turkish resistance is\ndeveloped, in any .essential \u2022 number. Greece will probably sup-ply\nthe   largest   number  of  troops.\nSupplementary naval plans were\nalso announced by the council, to\nwhich Uiiroi. \"Beatty, commander of.\nthe British grand fleet, and Admiral\nLevavassour. assistunt lo the chief\nof thetgPiieral staff of the French\nnavy explained the plans in .person.\nMandatory States\n'The treaty does not include the\nfinal arrangements for mandatory\nstates. They will simply be cut\napart from Turkey, and disposed of\nby the supreme council in\/the future.\n^Fhe council has determined to\nleave Kurdistan, part of Turkish\nterritory for a period of ttwo years,\nand then decide whether to leave\nit with Turkey, or make it a; separate province under a mandate.\nThis morning the council discussed tho composition of military,\nnaval and aerial commissions in\nT,urkey. It gave t to ,tho \u25a0 miUtyry,\nati'd naval experts 'the Instructions\nnecessary for preparation of data\nfor compilation by the editorial\ncommittee on articles relative to the\nTurkish   treaty.\nTurkish Delegation\nCONSTAXTIXf )1\u00bbLE, April 21.\u2014\ntAssociated Press)\u2014The Grand Vizier, Da mad Ferld Pasha, tonight received notification that the Turkish\npeace delegation is expected jn\nParis   on   May   10.\nThe delegation has not yet been\nnnnieil. but . doubtlnss will be beaded  by Pamad   Forid   I'ashn.    \u25a0\nExplains Why Government\nPut Referendum Up to\nPrivate Member\nTORONTO, April 21.-Support of\nIT. McCi-eary's liquor referendum\nmot ion Wns forthcoming from both\nsides of the house when the result., ion was debated this afternoon.\nThe only opposition to the measure\nvoiced during the afternoon came\nfrom' C. G. Halcrow, Labor' iriemher\nfor East Hamilton. ' Three liberal\nmembers pledged themselves to vott-\nfor the resolution, as did a number    ot    government    supporters.\nThe feature of the afternoon was\nPremier Drury's speech In defensn\nof the introduction of the measure\nby   a,   private   member.\n'We have ' been asked,\" declared\nPremier Drury, \"why we have not\nmade this motion a ' government\nmeasure, and blamed for pur fnll-\nli'rel to assume tlie full responsibility\nfor it. it has been said that wo\narej hiding under the barn. Let\nme' say that I am not afraid to\nsubmit It as a .government meat-ire,\nbut I believe that It Is to the\nadvantage and in the Interest pf\nlhe people of the province, as well\nas to the members of tbe house, lo\nsecure a fair pronouncement, and it\nshould not, therefore, in any sense\nbe made a part$* question. (Lourt\napplause from the government members and some members of both opposition   parties.)\n\"The government has many . responsibilities 'which i,t .cannot and\ndoes not care to get away from,\nBiich as the rosponsibt.LUes for expenditures and matter\u2122 of pollcy>\nVtnt then the private memberB of\nthe house* have certain responsibilities for expenditures ajifl matters*\nof policy. ( But then the private-\nmembers of the house have certain\nresponsibilities whiclV they also cannot get  away  from.\n\"We have had governments. In\ntfie past with a servile majority\nbehind them that could put through\nany measure, and these not always\nin the interest of the province or\ncountry. Every member Bhould im\nfree to prononnce his views on\nquestions of such great Importance,\nwithout any fears ot party efltangle-*.\nmehts.\" \u25a0_\u25a0'\u2022 _ _^_ij\n r Page 2\nTHE DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, APRIL 22, 1920\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWho. \u2022 tha Travelling Publlo May Obtain Superior Accommodation\nTHE\nPremier Hotel\nOf the Interior\nX\n*-_.\nSERVICE   UNEXCELLED\nA La Carte Table D'Hota\nSPECIAL SUNDAY  DINNER ?1.00\nINCOMPARABLY THE FINEST TEA ROOM IN B.C.\nOpen  Daily  10 a.m. to  Midnight Mueio and   Dancing\nThe  Latest Sundaes, Ice Cold  Drinks and  Ices\nAfternoon Tea  (3  p.m. te 5 p.m.), 25e\nHeadquarters  For All Travelling  Men, Mining  Men and Tourists\nEUROPEAN   PLAN \u2014 \u2014 ROOMS, 51.00   UP\nHUME\u2014O. H. Jameson, .1. Tt. G\\etr-\ne'ricb, Vancouver; Mr. and Mrs. c\u201e.ore\u00ab\nS. Rosenthal, Winnipeg: I- \u25a0'\u2022 Bdwnrds,\nNakusp: Miss Doris lOdwardn. Nakusp:\nMr. and Mis. H. D. Dawson Kaslo:\nA. C' Mesker, Midway: Miss .1.Nicol.\nVancouver; Mrs. S. Brewster, Fruitvale; Mrs. Reid, Prince Allien: J. .,\nRiondel; .1. Hates, Retlaw, Alta.; H. R.\nDeschamiis, Itosslaiul; ('. F. Sherwood,\nArmstrong, \u2022 Montreal;   A.    W.   Walsh,\nBalfour; A. R liardner. Regina: W.\nII. Wan-on, Toronto; H. H. Rickelson,\nVancouver; Capt. H. Westmoreland.\nEsquimau; Mrs. ]_ Thompson, Ainsworth; A. 1,. Macl'liee and wife, Sllverton: C. F. Caldwell, Kaslo: Mr. and\nMrs. Towgood. Sandon; I). C. Scott,\nVancouver; O. C. Armstead, Boulder\nMill: Geo. K. Ui-vant, Oolton, Wash.;\nC. P. Lindsay, Spokane; Mrs. G. I.\nMdNlcpi,   Vancouver.\nft\nd&-\nH.\np^\nm\n&&\n^Sh\nNelson':;  Leading  Hotel\nFor Travellers  and Tourists\nrop.\nOre\nSample   Rooms  all  around  floor with  natural  light,\nfortably furnished rotunda in the interior.\nMost com-\nt Large   Drawing\nEuropean   Rate $1.50\nRoom   for   Ladies\nAmerican   Plan $3.50\nAthletic Association Officers\nElected; To Draft Constitution\nSTRATHCONA-Mrs. W. G. Mara, Rossland; Mr. and Mrs^CHffortNew\nDenver \\ur Alstrom, Spokane: A. 11. Colter, Calsary; .1. \\\\. Clark. \\ ictoil.i,\n'ill B ' Siledmim. -Natal. B.C.; Capt. Kills, Boswell; Thomas Blake, Toronto;\nB. Hill., J. C. Auld,  Toronto;  F.  Hardy,   J.   W.   Orr,   Spokane.\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\n- European and American Plan\nSteam 'Beat In Every Room\nA. LAPOINTE,  Proprietor.\n->\nI QUEENS\u2014M\nI.  C.  Markln\nary Joseph,\nand cltilll-e\nGregor, tl. A. Ritchie, Ca\nMakesson, Ymir; O. H. C\nDenver;  J.  Small,   .losepli\nl.anlo; Mrs.\nli .1. S. 11.\nitleear; Alex\ninVeron, New\nSpo\nkane;   D.   Beattie.   Benton   Siding;\nGrand Central Hotel\nJ. A. ERIOKSON, Prop.\n'   Opposite Post Office\nRoom and Board, $40 per Month\nEuropean and American plan.\nBOOMS   SOc   UP\nThe Standard Cafe\n820 Baker Street, Nelson, B. O.\nOPEN BAI AND NIGHT\nII   to   1:10,   Special   I\/nnch,   S_\nPhone  IM\nWhere to Spend a Holiday\n(.RANI- CENTRAL\nSaiiao:   J.   McDonald,\nman,   Rupert,   Ida.;\nolty;   S.    Beck,    .1.\nAlta.;  A.  N.  Cowan,\nI'.oltl. Thompson.\nSandon; D. Sel-\n.   c.   Mcl.ennon,\nThe Kootenay Hotel\nMRS. MALlLETTE, Proprietress.\nA Home for tha World at $1.60 a\nDay,    Flr-t-claas  Dining Room.\nComfortable Rooms,\nlis Vernon St.    Near Post Office\nMADDEtf HOUSE\nU   J. MADDEN, Proprietress\nSTEAM   HEATED\nWHERE THE FISHING IS GOOD\nOUTLET HOTEL\nPROCTOR\nFishitlg,   Boating,   Bathing,   Golf,\nTennis   Courts\nFishing   Tackle  Supplied.   Grocery\nStore in Connection\nW. A. WARD, Prop.\nRates Reasonable Good Meals\nOrganization work nf the -newly\nformed Nelson Athletic association\nwas rapidly pushed forwawl, hy a\nbumper meeting of sports foregathered in the .hoard of trade\nrooms lust evening at, which officers of the association wero elected,\nand ft cpmmittee appointed to draft\nup the constitution. Ft J. Boles\noccupied. the chair and was ably\nsupported in his efforts to get action\non the proceedings by all the players and a number of city business\nmen  present.\nReports from representatives of\ndifferent lines of sporty were heard\nrespecting the prospective numher of\nteams that would Ite available in\neach line and on the views of the\nmeetings   held  In   Tuesday   night.\nA. Wallaeh, speaking tor the footballers, stated that the feeling at the\nmeeting on Tuesday was in favor\nof having more members on ihe\nexecutive to handle the choosing\nof  teams.\n.lack Morris, supporting his statements, was nn the opinion that the\nfootball and other clubs - should organize themselves and arrange their\nown matches in ti city league, with\nall outside games to he arranged\nthrough tho executive of the Athletic\nassociation. He stated that there\nwere enough players now ready to\nplay to fill three or four teams.\nTlie hankers would put on a team\nhy themselves, and it was anticipated that there would he a team\nof C.r.R. men, which might possibly\nrequire a few additional players ti\ngot   a   full   lineup.\nA suggestion advanced by  11. Smil\nHe met  with, general  favor,  and  was\nfinally    decided    on    as    tlie    basis\nof organization..   While endorsing tlie\ngeneral scheme of the association, he\nintimated   that   if  each   team   organized   itself,   some   teams   would   get\nall    tlie    applications    from    players,\nand   weaker   teams   would   lose   out\nBut    if    the   executive   selected    the\nteam, a balanced lineup would result,\nand   competition   sustained    through\nout    the    season.     As    a    basis    he\nsuggested   that  one  member  of   foot\nhall and other clubs be appointed  to\nthe executive of  tho association,  and\nthat   he   have   a   committee   of   thr\nto   work   with,   who   should   organize\ntheir   clubs   and   select   their   teams\nsubmitting    them    to    the    exeeutiv\nfor   approval.     The   decision   of   tlie\nexecutive   to  be  final   in   all  cases,\nF, .1. Boles, agreeing with the suggestion, stated that in dealing with\nbaseball, a percentage book could bc\nkept and the - record of individua\nplayers easily ascertained. In thi-\nmanner  players could  be\nhall, stated that there was enough\nmateri.)l .in, sight to. make up two\nsenior teams and probably ' two intermediate}). He anticipated a large\ninflux .of--players- into the association as soon as weather conditions\npermitted Hf practice game's being\nheld, \u25a0 \u25a0<.-\nOther members discussed cricket,\naquatic sports and track sports In\nthe last iiamed it was intimated\nthat a schedule would probably be\ndrawn up for meets once a month\nat which' outside towns, and towns\nacross the line, would be asked to\ncompete. Mr. Smillie stated that\nthere was a good numbef1 of high\nschool hoys anxious ' to take, up\ntrack  work.\nMayor Promises  Help\nMayor j. .A. -McDonald, who was\npresent at\\ ^he meeting, gave assurances of lhln support in furthering\nthe interests of sport generally and\nof having.Uie'.grounds put Into shape\nfor  the \u2022 goings.\nA communication from tbe . Crows\nNest l'ass Football league asked that\nthe Nelson footballers get into the\nleague*. It suggested that should\nNelson, and Boundary teams join\niq), matches could be arranged between the-city and Boundary teams,\ntlie team with the highest standing\nto compete ivith the Crows . Nest\ntoam of ' similar standing, for the\nleague   championship.\nA .notion \\vas carried that a committee of four be appointed to draft\ntlie constitution of the association In\noider Jbat the teams now ready may\nbegin practicing immediately.\nOfficers Named\nThe following were appointed to\nofficer      ;;\nHonorary president, Mayor .T. A.\nMcDonald; \u2022\u2022president. V. J. Boles;\nvice-president, U.' Smillie; secretary-\nireasurer. .1. CI. Smith; auditor, ,1.\nH: Laurence.\ni-.xecutive committee: Business\nmen, Aid. C. F. McHardy, A. S. Horswill. M. H. Baskin. A. T. Walley, A\nW, Nagle, George Ferguson; players:\nfootball, A. \"Wallach; baseball, E. I..\nBuchanan;; ]acrosse, A. A. Perrier;\ncrocket, '\u00a3. Mason; track sports, Pf\nCeley; aquatic sports, T. D. Desbrisi\nsay.\ni Constitution committee: President\nF. J. Boles,. Secretary ,T. G. Smith,\nA-Wallaqh  and  fi,   I_.  Buchanan.\nReady-to-Wear\nNew Models of Stylish Spring Suits just in\u2014which gives\nyou an attractive selection of suits to choose from at\nattractive prices\nNEW SKIRTS\nIn   Silk,   Poplin,   fine   Serge\u2014are  graceful  in  line,  splendid In quality and ot\nvery special values at our prices.     SEE  THESE   SKIRTS  TODAY\nOUR DRESSES\nHave   made  a  nnmo   for   themselves  with  tho  public.    They nro  designed  on\nyouthful  lines and  carry, with  them  an  air  of  distinction.\nSMILLIE & WEIR\nLADIES' WEAR SPECIALISTS\nMI\nlil Oil\nChurch Parade and Graveside Ceremony Will Take\nPlace on Sunday\n'each  team  that would ensure a uniform   strength  in  the  various   teams.\nE. B. Buchanan, speaking for base-\nFinal arrangements for the Ypres\nBay observance to be held by returned men in the city on Sunday\nwere made at a*, meeting of the\n<J. W. V. A. last (evening.\nA church parade\"; .at'which all ex-\nhosen   fori members  of the towes are requested\nHalcyon Hot Springs Hotel\nARROW LAKHS, B. O.\nUnder entirely new  management.\nRenowned throughout the west\ntor the water's wonderful cure ot\nRheumatism, Sciatica, Urlntc Conditions, Metallic Poisoning.\nSpecial Massage Given.\nGrand scenery around the estate\nln a moBt beautiful climate.\nLarge hot water swimming pool-\nEnglish chef and staff.\nAmerican plan, S3 and up per\nday,   $21.  per week.\nH. A. HEFFER, Manager.\nCor. Baker and Ward St\u00ab\u201e Nelson\nMADDION\u2014Miss Donis Cralgi KaBlo;\nO W Unburn, M. D. Maternlck, Spokane: I.. I'. Ward, willow Point; W.\nO.nn.iv, Medicine Hat; W. A. Wnjtwall,\nIj, F. Carter, .1. Gordon, Oiurid Forks;\nH. HunlliiEton, Trull; .1. .MacKl.r, Kaslo- E. .1. Smith, Boulder: .1. \\V, So.ovil,\nMrs. .1. W. Scovll. Perrys; .1. Ratoh-\nl'ord, Aneroid; C. A. Johnson, Chloago;\nNels Nelson. Spokane; Ed. Johnson; G.\nW. Ames, Ainsworth.\nTREMONT HOTEL\ni      BAKER   STREET\nF.   N1LSON,  Prop.\nFurnished    Rooms   by   Day,\nWeek or Month\nENJOY   A   VACATION   AT   THE\nHotel Grand\nNAKUSP\nFrank Hughes & Son, Props.\nOn the beautiful Arrow Lakes.\nSplendid fishing nnd boating. Nice\nrooms, good meats, pleasant surroundings.\nWHAT ITS  COMING   TO\nTREMONT\u2014May Me.ers, Sandon; A.\nJ. Johnson, Salmo; W. Scott, Mai cum;\nO. Moberg, A. Verjion, Creston; C.\nAnderMoii.\nIn days of yore we used to purchase\ncoal\nIn ten-Ion lots, nor did we need beguile\nThe dealer. On the contrary, he'd\nsmile\nAs though our order pleased his\nvery soul.\nAnd though full oft we grumbled we\nwere  hit\nIn pocket by  his  prices,  we'll  admit\nWe were not badly treated on the\nwhole.\nBut now he will not listen to a hint,\n...ntreaty or a threat.  Unloved, alone.\nHe  will  not  answer   his   own   telephone.\nTils heart  is cold as ice and  hard 'ap\nflint;\nAnd    won't   react   to   anything   we\nspring.\nNext week, perhaps,  he'll  help  us  if\nwe bring\nA paper bag, he'll let us have a pint.\nattend, in uniform.if they have\nthem,' will be held in i the morning.\nThe parade' will fall in at 10 o'clock\nin front of the Y.M.CA. building,\nand headed by the Veterans' hand\nwill proceed to the Church of St.\nMary Immaculnte for divine service.\nA party- of four \u2022eornetists under\ndirection of F. Warner Smith will\nsound iho general salute in the\nchurch during the celebration of\nmass.\nTn the afternoon the parade will\nfall in at 3 o'clock and traversing\nsomo of the main thoroughfares of\nthe city, headed by th-; band, will\nmarch to the city cemetnry, where\nthe pastors of Trinity Methodist\nchurch and St. Pauls, i'resbyterlan\nchurch, and the captain of the Salvation Army will hold a union service. At the same time the graves\nof soldiers in the soldiers' plot, and\nin otker parts of the cemetery, will\nbe decorated with wreaths, the making bf which is in the hands of the\nWomen's auxiliary.\nDESPITE WEATHER\nDespite inclement weather, the return shoot between city and Slocan\nshot-gunmen- brought ont some fine\nshots yesterday afternoon at the\ntrnps on the C.P.R. flats. Onj man\nbrought down 15 birds straight, and\nthere  were   several   good   scores.\nAmon\u00a3 those taking part in the\nshoot were Willi'im Hicks' and\nGeorge Long, of Slocan. and  Howard\n_____\nOccidental Hotel\nRod by Canadians. All White help.\nRoom and board, per month $10;\nweek 110; day Sl.50. Meal. 50c,\nserved family style. Beds son. AU\nyon can eat aiid a good, clean bed\nto sleep lu. Give ns a trial. Auto\n.meets all. trains and boats.\nED.   K1SHK,   Proprietor.\nNew Grand Hotel\n016  VERNON   ST. EAST   ..\nOniforuiblo Rooms, -lot and Gold\nWater.     Dining  Room  ia\nConnection.\nRate*   *l  and  Cp\nAdrianople, Turkey, was named for\nits restorer, Emperor Hadrian,\n..exico   has   between   1\ngOO.-OO  miles   of   railway.\nHo-Ke\nAnti-Flu\n ft\u2014\u25a0\u2014\nThorpe & Co., Ltd.\nPhone 60.\nSweet\nCrisp\nDelicious!\nThat's the first impression of Grape=Nuts\nThen think how this\nsturdy wheat and barley food builds health .  *\nand strength.\nNo waste,\u00abaHd it makes\nits own sweetening.\nGive Cuticura the Care\nOf Your Skin\nAnd watch that troublesome eruption disappear. Bathe with Cuticura Soap, dry and apply Cuticura\nOintment. For eczemas,^rashes,\nitchings, etc., they are wonderful.\nNothing go insures a clear skin and\ngood hair as making Cuticura your\nevery-day toilet preparations.'\nSoap 25c, Otntnunt 25 and SOc. Sold\nthroughout theDomimon. CinadianDepot:\nLyroasa. Limited, St Paul St.r MontrccJ.\njPtt^Culicura Soap .liuvc_ without muj\u00bb.\nBush, G. Lapolnte, E. Andrew, J.\nBrnssEield, Joe. O'Gensld; W T.\nChoate antl C. D. Blackwood of this\ncity.\nWe Are Setting the Foot]\nStyles in this Locality\nWe do .more than just sell shoe!\nWe feature numerous designs an]\nstyles for various feet. Our,Hard\nline is the greatest incentive to inl\ntelllgent   buying  that. we   can  offeif\nO. ROMAN!\n'    THE 8HOE MAN\nturn\nto\nwork.\nThey\nwent\nout   tl\nthe\neamp   last\nnight.\nIt\nIs\nsaid  sotne quest\no.i of wags\nwas\nat\nthe   bottom   of\n.the\nirotbU\n...                 ' f\nTRAIL BOY WILL\nEight Straight Contests Arranged; Ladies Specially\nInvited to Attend\nKing's Quality Flour\nGUARANTEED ABSOLUTELY\n-_a_.u_jiCT._r__ b.   tho He_ley-Sli\u00bb\u00bb\nMilling Co., Ltd., M-di-lne\nHat, Alberta.\nT\/rlt\u00bb u\u00bb for price,  on nr lot!.\nFLOUR AND FEED\nT. R. CLARK, Rtp.\n?. O. Box H. N-ltoa, *. C\nIs a wonderful food\nSold bf grocers everywhere!\nMade by Canadian Porstum Cereal Co., Ltd,\n\"Windsor; Ontario. *\u25a0\n\/\nSome classy scrappers have been\nmatched for tonights boxing tournament at the Y.M.CA., at which\neight straight contests wiil be staged besides some exhibition bouts by\nboxing instructors of the Y.M.CA.\nAdmission will be open to members of both sexes nnd a 3pec'al\nInvitation has . been extended to\nladies to attend. Everything haa\nbeen done to insure good clean contests, and ladles attending may rest\nassured that they will net. wlmess\na mere bruising competition, but\non the contrary will be able to see\nthat when conducted under p.ood\nconditions, boxing is one of the finest sports for the -exercise, of good\nsportsmanship.\nIt is promised thi: this tournament will ' go far to prova that\nscientific training, speed of arm\/\nfoot, and eye, and the control gained by freauent practice of the {.port,\ncoupled with the right spirit of\nsportsmanship that Is being cultivated, has robbod boxing of the\nmore object'ional feaairea commonly,\nthough, erroneously associ ited with\nsuch  competitions.\nThe main attraction of the evening will be a contest between\nPercy Bloomer of this city and\nLuther Gordon, of Trail, The letter\nhas gained some renown lis a first\nclass welter weight boxer, and has\nissued challenges on th? strength of\nhis aspirations towards the amateur championship of British Columbia.\nAU contests will b:3 conducted\nalong strictly amateur lines and itq\nprevent \\ anything cf an objectlonal\nnature 'occurring tho regulutioj.\nnymber of officials will be in attendance, including judges, referee,\nweight-In, time-keepers, seconds\nand   advisors.\n2E=^3C=\naccepts\nSeven Doukhobors Quit\nWork But Are Persuaded\nFinally to Return\nA one-day strike temporarily' shut\ndown the sawmill of tho Baokin-\nStedman company, on Eagle Cruck,\nyesterday, when snvon ..Donkhobois\nflult work, and came ln to the city,\nM. H. Baskin, summonel by ' a\ntelephone' message, came In from\nYmir by tbe Great Nor'tnelrn train,\nand by a conference with tbe aggrieved men persuaded them to ie*\nCanadian\nCurrency\nat Par\nFrom B. C. visitors in\npayment of hotel\ncharge's\nSpokane\nHotel\n #.'\u25a0\u25a0\nTHBI DAttiY' WW)--Tf-tlHgflAif- MbRNlNe, APRK'az,'WEO -\nP\u00bbP 8H\nn'-ffluaJj-K-'i'l\n';nwWiiVri))i'i-i_y*'i.\n_ff_M**-riMW_M_M\n>te\n7Ae CommercM. Man's Wonse\nArlington Hotel\nHot and Cold  Runnting  Wattr in tho Majority  of thi  Rooms\u2014First -\n-   class Sample Rooms\u2014Long Distance Telephone Service .\nEUROPEAN AND AMERICAN) PLANS\u2014RATES MODERATE\nTho lundlords have opened their*. .car t_ and\" hav. already expended nearly six thousand dollars (sc.ooo) during tnb last six\nmonths, on tho dining room and enlarged a portion of 'this hotel as\nWeil as the main Uulldlng and ate ready to,expend more. The objpet\nia to give Trail a firstclass.hdtol to. the' traveling public, which\nhas heen needed very, badly. There havo been' six '.newly fUrnisho.\nbedrooms added to the hotel fop, the corhmcrcial trade which Is .p.\ngreat asset In assisting the management'\" to \"giv-V the commercial\nman comforts; and the newly finished and furnished; dining room\nIs cerUilnly a credit to the town, 6. Trail. T,hp hotel, will run; in\nthe future first class both In'service and quality of food nt modernto\nlirlccs that will Srtisfy the traveling publlo and make the Arlington\nHotel popular. ,,.    - _'.:'\nDining  Room Open Day and  Night'\nG.  H. GREEN\nProprietor .\ns. j. mcajrrbi^ & caj\nWholesale and Retail Tobacconists\n^THE. LARGEST; STOCK OF   HIGH   CLASS\n'   SMOKERS'   GOODS   IN   THE   KOOTENAYS\n\u2022TRAIM.C.\nReports nt Annual Meeting ia Montreal Tell of Expansions;\nHuge Ore Reserves in Sullivan Disclosed; Rossland\nProblems at last Solved; Copper Manufacture Extended; Gross Receipts for Period Thirteen Million\nDollars\nTRAIL LIVERY CO.\nDaily   auto   service   meets .all\nGreat  Northern  Trains  at\nCOLUMBIA GARDENS\nTravellers   wishing   to   save\ntime   Phone   135.   Trail    .\nCars for hire  at all  hours\nmm\n.\u2666\u00bb \u00bb 1\nPhono  116L. Office  Cedar Ave,\nPlumbing. Heating,'!\nSheet Metal Work\nJ. BALFOUR\n|i-Estimatos  Frej---m'\nWork   .Guaranteed.\nTRAIL SECOND HAND\nSTORE\nWe   buy   ant)   salt   house   furnishings  in  and  out  of  town.\nCrockery, Carpets, Ranges, Sewing   Machines.\nSee  me and  get honest Treat\nment*\n<m\nJ.  McPHAIL\n..   BAV AVENUE\ns\nBay Avo.\nTrail, B. C.J\nMeals at ail hours Day of:Night\nSpecialty   of 'Sunday   Dinrior [\nPrivate     Boxes     for  ,\" Parlies.\nCentral Feed and\nFuel jCompany\nHay,  Grain   ahd   Poultry. Supplies,\nCOAL and WOOD\nSpecial   Shipment  just'arrived\nJlmothy Seed\nRod Clover\nMam.   Red   Clover\nAlsyke\nAlfalfa Seed\nlimine 'Grass '   \u25a0\nLawn   Grass\nWhite- Cloyor\nITIold   Poas\nSpring  Vetch\nSpring Rye\nLong Te)low  Corn\nChick- Pood'\nLinseed Meal\nCalf   Meal-\nSpring Wheat\nSeed oats\n.'\u25a0,\u25a0'     _.\n\u25a0a*\n\u25a0:mI_\u00bb^\nRossland Ave. Trail\nWe have a first class Machine\nShop fully equipped for Repairs\nto   all   Classes   o   fMachinery.\nNew 'Ford,   Maxwell   Cars  and\nTrucks,   .Chalmers   .Cars   .and  |\nTrucks for sale.\nSee  us about anything In  the\nmechanical   line, f\nfarm'   ENGINES\n'    MOTOR    BOATS\nTRACT0R8\nSAW   OUTFITS '\nCYLINDER    REBORING\nPI8T0N  WORK\nAUTOMOBILE    REPAIRS\nACCESSORIES.\nCar  and  Truck for  Hire\n. Phone  No. 1\n\"RIDERS OF\nVENGEANCE\"\nA Universal Special Western\nDrama of quick shooting and\nfast  riding. M     '    '   ::..'\u2022\nYour Daily Needs\nCan    always    be   satisfactorily\nV \u25a0'\u00bb met\nFrom high grade lines wo carry\nB.. C. MEAT MARKET\nProp.   W.   J.  OWEN ,n\nNoxt  to   Bank  of   Montreal      1\nPhone 37 - j\nTomatoes   2',_1_   Can OA\u00ab\neach    _.._ iiUC\nMagic   Baking   Powder QA\u00ab\n12 oz. tin i: - UVV\n' f\nEggo   Baking   Powder QKi\u00bb\nlilo.. tin i.  091.\nRoquefort   Cheese      (M   FA\nper,   lh  (Bl.dV\n' \u25a0 _. '\n1-ollog   Cprn   Flakes nF _\n2   Packages   ._'.:  UO\\\nMot    House    Lottucd k f_.\n,. per   lb   .!  \/4pV\nRipe     Tomatoes QH_\u00bb\nper   lb    i.  OUC\nFresh    Cucumbers FCA\/i\neach      .' uUL\nFresh   Spinach -J K j,\nper . lt>, _  JLt)C\n}. Lauriente & Son\nPHONE L39\n... -i.-.\u25a0*.-, mm,m~.\nfhe Daffo News\nIS ON SALE. IN TRAIL\nBy J. A.  McKinrion,  Margeson's  prug  Store, t P..W.'\nWflMeh> Arthur Nollie and Hunt Bros & Kennedy;- k\n\u2022^\u2022WfflPJ^B\nmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm\nAnnual rtptirts or- tlie Consul {dated\nAlining & .Smelting Coniituny of.,Caji\nttdti,, for the \"year'' of 15 Inontlm enOtnl\noh t)6c. 31tytB.ipi ami nresented tO'lUc\najmuul. nicetiilg pf the'. shareholders\nof tlie comphily : ai' -Montrfeitl \u25a0'' .hjrt\nliiftt -Th-Qfiitiay^iirfc now avuTtoble, anil\ntell a story , of- g&i.cml *.*t]V:tiision', '\nterm applicable alike to th(v.i.orpor-\nation'a,. pre .reserves, -its mine eiluip-\nntent, its' 1'st of properties} am.1 Its\nrnan*ufheturliHg . enterprises..\nThe ' report: of^the directors, vhich\nwas, submitted by;''Preside lit James J,\nWat-fen, wafc'as follows:' \u2022 * ' '*'\nDli-ootors' Report   \u25a0\n\"Your directors have pleasure in submitting the fourtoebtb aiUihitl report\n\u25a0of operatlb'iisj tilb'iig with the geiVehil\nmanager's report kn<l the report 6f tho\ngeneral manager of the West Kootenay\nPower & Light company^ Ltd.,.covering\nthe financial statement of that company. The general manager's report\nih eludes thb reports ot the 'manager\nof; rtiines* and the comptroller.\n\"After charging $280,271.38 hi dcvel-\nbtimcHt Account, setting aside JrfW;-\n381.80 for taxes, Wrmng off $102,139.no\nfor depreciation of plan^ and. equip:\n-hen^i and providing for capital renewals, as Well as au'ordhtary repairs,\nthe net profits -Were '$l;0U,212.liS, of\nwhich M86.539.35 were djsbursed for\nbond Interest, and the remainder transferred   to   profit  and   loss  account. \u2022\n\"Your direotors felt justified In declaring the usual dividends because\nthe deficit was attributable largely to\nnon-operation and non-production\nthrough temporary conditions not likely  to  recur.\n\"Heavy disbursements wei'e made on\no.tpltal    account,    the    principal     Items\nbeing:'    ':\n\"Advance to West Kootenay\nPower &.. Light 'company Ltd.\nIn connection with extending\nIts    power    lino    to    Copper\nMountain  $754,000\n\"expended    on    property    ami\n.' plain account; Fluorspar property         217(301\n\"Expended on  property account ,   \u25a0\nSunloch   Mines,  Ltd    105,861\n\"Advances to Const Copper Co.,\nLtd ;...'. ;    170,045\n\"Smelter Improvements and extensions, Including the mineral separation mill and the\nmagnetic concentrator, in the\nZinc plant    037,113\n\"The results from most of these ills\nbursements were nbt felt during tin\nperiod, but they will be in evidenci\nhi futut'fe operations.\n\"The plants have been well maintain\ned during the period, the general mnn\nagcr reporting them In better coiull\ntion than at' tlMJ\" beginning of, the\" term.\nDuring tho five fiscal pcrlo'ds' ending\nDeC.*,3l, '1919, $1,629,11^0.20 have been\nwritten oft' .on account of depreciation,\nwbich your directors fuel has been\namply provided for. Capital renewals\nwere largo during tho 15 month period.\nThey were provided for from current\nrevenue.' ,\n' \"The ore reserves have been largely\nIncreased, the devclopinnts In the\" Bui;\nlivnu mine being most satisfactory.\n. \"Owing to a strike, the prosecution\nof the power company's line extension\nto. Copper, Moutaib was seriously interrupted. It should bc completed early\nIn tho comli)g. sumpior, As usuaU\nyour company was the large consumer\nof the power company's output.\nCopper Ambitions\n\"Fpr many years your directors have\nboeii' ambitious to miike your company\na large producer of copper. Originally\nthe .Rossland mines promised to contribute considerable iiiiantities of this,\nmetal, but latterly the copper content:\nis almost negligible, tho gold value*-\/\nbijlng the  important ones; '\n\"With the acquisition 'of controlling:.\nInterests iii. the Cdast Copper company'\n(Quatsliuy and the. Sunloch Mines'\n(Jordan Klvor), both properties being;\nsituated on Vancouver Island, and the\nsatisfactory developments 'In these;\nproperties, thb ambltlbh referred to\nseems about to bo realised.\n\"Outside of the remarkable advance1'\n|nenttf' in the \"Bull Ivan mine, the outstanding occurrence, of the period wuis!\ntlij demonstratlbii of a satt-. factory,\nprocess of treating the lower grade,\nore,H * of the Jtasslalid camp\u2014a rro.K\nlem that it has taken over 20 yean.\nto solve. This followed months of op\norating of a large, sized experimental\ninill. As a result, .many years have\nI\/eon added to the life of'the Holland\nipines. :;    - *\u25a0''\n\"Another important Inot'depx' of the\nperiod was the improved , practice\nmfbughf about fn the etmeeritratlug\nifrtll at the Fluorspaf- property, 'in consequence of which a product, .of tbe\nhighest grade can be turned | out, and\nalso the lower grades can bc produced\nnlore uniformly and economically.\nEnlargement of Plant\n\"The copper refinery is being, enln\ned to a, capacity of 50  tons, ppr day,\n....:rl\"? \u2014-.r.-. ....  --\nlug   Installed.\nA,, rod', mil\n\"llie'same capac'ftji* Is be>\n, 'These ejt'tehslons u$e neebs^ary to\ntake care of th\u00a3 cdncentrltVis'of the\nCanada* Copper \"corporation.1-,.shipments,\nof whiqh -wllLbfcain In the cbmiH'jr suirt-.\nlifter. Tnfco.Dwlglit & Lloyd '(.interiitc;\nnincltines'; are \" being provided to treat\nthese concentrates prior to the main\nsnvcttlng' .operations. ''',\n\u25a0\"YoU ^o,re jtware' thla ill\" July lasii\nunder tbe (Uitborily of a special meet-j\nIng,, tne h^ad office was .moved front\nToronto t'o Montreal.\nFollowtng this; youf soiling depart\nment took oyer the hiarkctlhg of nil\nvour product.     '    \u25a0\u2022 '^t\/v   )''.\u25a0'.: \u2022!\nuYc.ur; former selling\" rbprviftfutatWo:\nIn Montreal, Thomas Kobertsjti* *L- Co,,*\nLtdi,' also performed their 'diitUfc fallh\nfully and . sntlsfactdMiy;        '' '\n\"lltietoforcV y^nt fiscal,yii.ir tormln-\natetl .on.aeptl 30 ^n each\", year. Iii\norder to''avoid extra ex yen so \u25a0 thvoumi\nhaving tb' prepai-e' practlcilty two\nannual\u2022 statbments, one foi-.'Sharehold-i\nors, nptJ, \u201e6he for iax-gatlieiMrs, youi{\ndirectors decided In September to have\ntho fiscal year terminate ''with \"the caw\nehdar'year. , *.\nESflt May last,.W.t). MUttllcWs, whrf\nhas been .your', president sln'Oft the Iih '\nceptlon of the company, paHSed away.\nMr, Matthews was untiring In his cf-r\nforts .on your behalf. His loss has\nbeen .keenly felt, and is very much re-i\ngrcttcd. i\n\"Your- directors filled the vacancy\ncaused by his death* by electing J. K.\nL, Ross, of Montreal, to .the board. 3\n' \"Tlje $30.000,0.00 bond issue author-\nlied at .tne last anpuat meeting was\n:aheA -tip; In .'full,      . t\n\"The staff worked loyally and ener-j\ngetlcally  throughout .the period.\"\nbi.itt.fcAX.   MANAOER'S   REPORT   .'\nThe, f<.Uti.wlng Is, tlie tepdrt ot S. CfJ\nBlaylock,  general  mannftdr.\n\"1 hr>g tn Submit tho following i-wporiJ\nthe in-niontbs period ending Otic. 81?\nIIJIO- \\i        .\n\u25a0 \"Although 'apparently not reflected\nIn tho .genora!. financial,, results,. there\nhas been ve'ry rndrked progress in\nnearly every branch; recoveries of 'metals havo been MiM.lt' better in every\ndepartment and' inShy parts of .the\nvarious processes have been I gretitly\nimproved.   ; -'   \u25a0      '        '   ;  \u2022 \u25a0   *\n) \"Early In the, period, operations we're\ndemoralized through the Influenza cpi-\ndemie, ,.Ws's-rlHnn One-half of. the force\nremaining7 at work, . Thin wim followed by\" a sevcro downwai'd. adjustment\n(Continued 'onl Page \"Six).\nmi\nliill\nIt Would Probably be Car*\nried if Resubmitted to\nProperty Owners\nTtlAIL, April 21.\u2014There Is godd reason to believe that should tho * fire\nprotection bylaw, which was recently\nvoted on and defeated, bo - again submitted to tne taxpayers, ft would be\ncarried by a luuidsonie majority. It Is\nthought that lack of proper1 publicity;\nand a general misunderstanding of' the\nWhole situation, are responsible for the\nrejection of the bylaw. A number of\nproperty owners have intimated their\n[le.slre tt> have the bylaw resubmitted,\nand state that they will get out nnd\nopenly advocato the scheme and boost\nfor  ltd ' ...'. i < ... \u25a0 -'    '\\\\\nDivides Its Constituency In\nto Eight Districts; One\nWeek (or Work\nTftAiL, April. 81.\u2014At A meeting or\nthe' congregation of St. Andrew's church\nMonday evening it was decided to devote this week to raising from ambng\nthe members of the quota of the -An*\nglican forward movement subscriptions\nundertaken by the members at a former meeting. ( ' \u25a0_'\n, The subscription committees arc ns\n.follows: District No. I.1 Mrd. Wade\nand Mrs. J. J. Wilson; Nb. 2, Mrs.\nHaxiMiii.ilf. and Mrs. Newel); No. 3, H.\nC. Caldlcott and F. J.-Moodtei No. 4,\nTt. Spencer And W. J. C. tJloave; No,! 11,\ntl. N. Drousfleld and H.* Ollls; No. ti,\nIt. Gordon and .f. Black; No; 771 Miss\nDocUerlll and Mrs. McCallum; No, 8,\nMrs,   Thompson  and   Mrs.   Hopkins.\n-The crinvass is to close next Mbnday,\nwhen tho total amount required, namely,! ?2500^ wljlj hayfi __j___H obtained.\nConsolidated Company Will\nMake Loans Up to Two\nThousand to Employees\nTUAIL, April 21. \u2014 The \u25a0 houslup\nproblem is hitting Trail .'vary hard\ntl(esc days, many men employed here\nhave been uliable to bring their families  as   no  houses are  available\nTho Consolidated company is' offer-'\niiig to ndvitiico SO per cent of'the cost'\nto any 'employee desiring fo buy or\nbuild a dwelling for their own use,-\nrepayment being arranged for on a\nmonthly plan. The maximum amount\nadvanced 'will be J^OOO.\nThis is Intended to encourage new.\nconstruction of houses -and relieve the\npresent shortage.\n_ilLi__J_U.I'J. .L-LLiJiU\ntoo many\n\\t H_ hod only one, It is true, but lis\nbasely admitted it wo. one to\u00bb many.\nAs a Professor of Science, hit married\nin a moment of ob-traction, iad then\nforRot all about it. But his wife was\nhuman. 6h_.rcse.tcd being nn \u00abperi-\nBlent She desired to be ioyflli Pow\nProfesaor I What could h< do? r WhM\ndid he do? Did l\u00ab find matrimony a\ndelightful experiment after nil? Or did\nthe e.perlmcnt of having a wife prove\nthe Professor's undoing?. It's well\nworth while finding out, both about the\nstory and about men who so carelessly\nforget. ''Hearts Are Trumps,\" is complete in the April issue of\nEVERrlOIIN'S\nOn Sate\n,    Tfrday!\n' WWef* OTHER'i^X.\n\u00abC mean        u^vimsTAMos\nll-,09ddopiesinWUS.M.HomMi>cr_\u00abioth\nmwn'ilmi'^---\".   ' -; \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 :':^;''\u25a0^\u25a0 >- \u2022-'.\nWill Erect Several Additional\nDwellings Upon Riverside\nAvenue\nTRAIL, April 21.\u2014The Doulthohors\narfe projecting the' construction df several more dwellings bn their prdperty\non Rlvct-sido avonUc, The buildings\nWhich they have already erected are\ntiuiU' creditable, and make a, marked\nlmprovenMent in the appearance of that\npart -of' the city,    '     \u25a0      '\u25a0-'\nThe now auto owners In' town are\ncortalnly getting- out of the rut these\ndays, (is the wheel tracks along some\nof the streets would Indicate, they\nbeing anything UUt straight'.' ' It is\nexoected* that in' order' to avoid accidents the old-time car owners will*\nrefrain from going out with their\ncarp, next Buhdayl      ..;\nTRAIL COUNCIL IN\nSPECIAL SESSION\n\u25a0TRAIL, April 21.\u2014The city dounc.l\nare having it - special1 mectliig tonight\nat which certain bylaws Will- be ad*\nvanced ^flnd dther necessary bisineSs\ntransdeted.\nThe general colnhitttce of the memorial building wiirthetit in the city\nhall  ttnndrrow- ^evening.    M    \u25a0' '\nTRAIL PERSONAL NEWS\n\u25a0TRAIL, April '21.\u2014G. A. Lafttrty,\nmanager of the Bank of Mlntreal, Rossland, was a visitor to the city yesterday.\nA, R. Waldie, mines accountant for\nth-fi Consolidated comimny, left last evening for a month's vacation to Trenton, Ont. P. Dodge is taking over his\nduties during his absence. ' ,\nGuests, registered at the Arlington\nhotel yesterday included J. Richardson,\nNelson; ' W. J. Hlpperson, Nelson; J.\nt'arkhill, Toronto) W. A. Parrot and\nM. Rethunc, Montreal; H. W. Day,\nVancouver; Thos. Parker and J, MacDonald, Nelson; John H. Wicket-son,\nVictoria; 'Wm.  Cliffe, Kaslo.     \u2022    \u25a0   -,\u25a0\nJ. H. Bchoflcld, M.P.Pi,'* and 3. 'U\nWilson, M.PU'., aTe in tlip city todfty,\nhaving returned home' from the recent\nsession  of  the' pi-dvlhclal 'legislature.\nLome Campbell, general manager of\nthe :West * Kbotenay Power and'Light\ncompany,  is a. visitor to1 tho  elty.\nMr. uiid Mrs. WJ M. Archibald of\nRdsalftnd Spent tbe day here yesterday.\nTRAIL ODD FELLOWS\nWILL COMMEMORATE\n\u25a0TRAIL, April RSShS Odd Pellbws\npf Trail Intend celebrating the 101st\nanniversary of the order by attending\ncl.'vlnd ' service oh Jlay U, E\/tterprfse\nLodge, No,\" 48, has been going strong\nfor tho past three or four years, and\nhas a membership at the present time\nof 17H. At the meeting held last night\nsevem applications for degrees were\nreceived, and two degrees were conferred.\nI The Rebekah Lodge has also Inid a\nprosperous period, and now has a\nmembership numbering 90. The good\nwork done 'by these organizations\namong the fraternity can hardly he\nover-estimated,*\nBill to Constitute it Makes\nSome Progress; Saving of\nMillions\nmmmmmmmmmm\nOTTAWA, April 2i.-T(Cauadian\nPress)\u2014After a .somewhat stormy\ndiscussion, ,tiV th^_ ..commons this\nafternoon, progress. w.as reported on\nthe government resolution tq provide for tho establishment of' n\npurchasing commission for govcrh-\nmopt  supplies.\nA similar measure was introduc-l\nod by N.'W.. Rowell at .the last sos-:\ngetting ,'py, . Its introductiuif, today\nby,. S\\v Goorgc Foster prompted S-\nW. .Jacobs, Montreal, lo, remark tluft:\n\"the prasideut of the privy council\nfound It was no, cliild'n\/ play, so;\nfather had  taken ii, on.\"   ,\n,. Claim   Unnecessary  ,   It\nOpposition oi'ltlcism of tlie resolution was based on the, contention\nth\u00ab,t. the government was seeking\nto- cumber tho country with auoth.cr.\ncommission, which   was   unnecessary-'\nThe wqrk could tg,s .well .'bo done\nby the deputy ministers or other\nofficers .fumillur with the needs of(\nthe  various  departments,\nThe government,- on the other\nhand, contended that, ,thc- -War, purchasing commission ; had,, saved the\ncountry millions, and that this commission   would .do   likewise.\nSome of the govorrm^cnt support-;\novb, however, wero uns,vmpathetic td\nthe proposal, and. -lolin llest. of\nDufferin said that ^hqre was ilo\nilood lor this cumbersome commls\nsldn .just, to giy.o somebody, \"a ,\u00bb.ce(\nfat Job.\" \u25a0')\nprogreeaives Side with Government\n' ISitrly In . tho. aftornpon tho Uouao\ndivided on \\ un amcndmmit. Jn^o-\n\u2022duced by h B._ ^edlqwj of ..South;\n. Rohfrew, to. the,,. Food, and Drugs'\nact. Tho amendment jveb dofoatcd\nby 100 to.^7, a majority jaf, 43 for\n.the   government. !\n\u25a0The mombers of the now Pro-,\ngresslve party votjed with..the gov-\n.ernntlertt. ^. t, j-\nPOORMAN RESERVE \u2022  *[\nNOWjTHROWN OPEN\nOTTAWA, ApUl 21.\u2014i'he aOPl-er\nsettlement board artnounebs the op'ert-i\nlrig at Saskatoon on TUOBtJay of the\nvPoorrtidn'B reserve, a. fortner.Rjdinn\nreservation ln the, TOu^h-Wpctjd. #ti)s\ndistrict, 100 miles from Saskatoon.\n.There nw 2!i farming, units, totalling\nabout\" 8.0.00; jic^jvylji tho r.epfifye,.k*ind\nrhoBt of .them wero disposed' vot to\niVtnrnod  sold (ors by the  hntfof sys-\nwa   . ,,.\u201e.... ..,^...,^.\u2014._.\u2022\nMothers!\nWHY   NOT   MAKE   YOUR\nHUSBAND'S   OR   BOYS'  .\nSHiRTS\nWe have six hundred yards of English' Shirtings' of\nFINEST QUALITY, full S2 inches wide, worth today 70c\na yard.\nThis. lot goes on _alo Monday morning, .or tlirco days only,\nat a special  prlco  of,  por-yard..,\u2014 , at\t\nMail Orders Given Prompt Attention.\n55c\nB\u00a3TTS$0D0f\n\"TRAIL'S LEADING DRY GOODS EMPORIUM\"\nKODAKS AMD BROWNIE\nCAMERAS\n... \u25a0 .\u25a0 i~i-    \u2022\u25a0 ,*. .if--.j   jj%\nat \u25a0 all   prion.   Films   developed   and\nprinted.       ' \u25a0_',       .       .-       .      -\u2122 ... C\nKeep a picturo record ot- youft\npleasant outings by purchdBlng a\ncamera. - **\u00a3_\u00a3* :\nE. W. HAZELWOOD    .\nThe  Rexall  Drug  Storo\nThe |Rex Billiard Hall\nGentlemen, spend a pleasant hour in playing pool\nor billiards.\nNothing but the best cigars and tobaccos sold, also\nsoft drinks, chocolates, retc.     \u2022 \u2022    \u25a0\nBARBER SHOP IN CONNECTION\nA. SHERMAN, Proprietor\n\"Hi i.t \".I\u00bb\"\n>\u00bb.. *\u25a0\u00bb>\nJ. D. ANDBRSON\nReal Estate and  Insurance, Trail, B. C. Notary Public.\nEast Trail   Lots,  Easy   Payments.\nSix  Room  Modern  House for Sale\u2014Nearly new,  nice  grounds,  good\nlocation.     Reasonable   price'and   terms. .  \u25a0    '\u25a0''\"\nTen   Room   Boarding,   House   Down   Town.     Immediate   possession.\nNew   Four   Room   House   p.t   loss   than   cost.\nTwo   Large,   Level   Lots,   close   iri. .'\nSeveral   Ten-Acre   Tracts   of   Unimproved' Land.\nfcEAD\nThe Daily News\nThe Daily paper of the\ninterior of British Columbia.\nr. d. Mcdonald\nTHE CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER\nNothing  too  small  or too  large\nPrompt attention to Jobbing of every\nkind.    Estimates   Free\nShop and Office*\nBay  Ave. .   Trail,   B.  Q,\nTHE MUTUAL LIFE\nOF CANADA\nWATERLOO     ONTARIO\nESTABLISHED  1869\nA   company   owned   and   controlled by l'olle'\/\"'Ftbldera.\nTho   Most   Democratic   System\nJOHN   BLACK\nDISTRICT  AGENT' TRAIL\"\nP.- 0.\" BdX \"28\"\u2022      \u2022Photw 6BR>\n -    \u2022 \u25a0 \u25a0    \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\nC. Dodimead\nOPTICIAN JEWELER\n.     ., , TflAIL, B. G. ...,\nExpert   Watch,   Clock,   Jcwolcry   Ro-\npairing.    Hand   Engraving.\nWatches for repairs sent us will\nreceive our prompt service and export   work.\nTRY   US\nMining & Smelting Co.\nOf Canada, Limited\n.     ,  Offlcss, 8m\u00bbltln_  and  Refining  D_p_rtm\u00abnt_\n. TRAIL,  BRITISH' COLUMBIA   .\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPURCHASERS   OF   GOLD,  SILVER,  COPPER   AND   LEAD  ORES\nPtoduc.is of Gold, Sllvar, Copp.r. Blue.ton., Pig L..d and Zlno\n*  '\u25a0:   \u25a0- TADANAO BRAND \u25a0 \u00abv:_.i.<'i\nTHE DA.LV Ni#S\n{[ Carries the full leased wire Canadian Press-\nAssociated   Press   Cable   and   Telegraphic\n\u25a0 <\u2022.   ,-\u25a0 seryice. \u2022 (\nKOOTENAY  AND   BOUNDARY'S i UP-TO-THE-\nMINUTE DAILY NEWSPAPER.\nin\t\nSOAPS\nA  IiIk  Bhipmont  .hiaH to V. nd \u2022 tK\n\u2022lino Toilet yo.'i|i:i.   ;.oe eir   \u25a0.-Iiulotta.\nVinolU   n.initf   Br\",   nt   tho   ..:\n,. \u00bbW Pr>,.\n3  WR   $0(7    .\nL A. MARGESON\nCHer.:i-r ANb oru(.6ist\n mm-\nPage 'i'\n<jft_5 DAILY NEWS, TfrUBSDAY MORNING, APRIL 22, 1920!-\nPublished every morning except Sunday by Tne Mews Publishing Company,\nWmlted, Nelson, B.C., Canada.\n' Business letters should be addressed and checks and money orders made\npayable to The News Publishing Company, Limited, and ln no case to individual\n\u25a0embers of the staff. \u25a0      .\nAdvertising rate ckrds and sworn detailed statements of circulation mailed\non request or may be seen at the office of any advertising agency recognised\nby the Canadian Press Association.\nSubscription rates:   By mall (country), 60 cents per .month; $2.50 for six\nmonths, |I per year.   By mail (city), 00 cents per month, S3.25 for six month.,\n19.00: per year.   Delivered. 75o per month; $4 for six months; $7.50 per year,\n''\" l advance.\t\n0: per year.\nttya-iejn \u2014-\nMember Audit Bureau ot Circulation\nTHURSDAY MORNING, APRIL 22, 1920\nThe Four-Fold Uprising\nThe story that a great revolt is being planned by anti-\nBritishers in New York to take place simultaneously in Canada,\nEgypt, India and Ireland is probably true enough. Soviet\nsympathisers, Sinn Feiners, Egyptian nationalists and leaders\nof the disaffected among the Indians quite probably have some\nsuch scheme.\nGetting away with it, however, is quite a different matter.\nIn Canada, a revolt is out of the question. What occurred in\nWinnipeg at the first sign of an attempt to* overthrow constitutional government is proof enough of that. In Ireland the\nrevolutionists are doing their worst and have been doing their\nworst for a long time. They' are murdering, thieving, destroying, intimidating. Yet they are a long way from a successful\nrevolution. The people of Ireland in some sections are being\nIntimidated by the outrages of \"the Sinn Feiners, but that is\naboutr-the extent of it from a revolutionary viewpoint. There is\na vasj; difference between- a constitutiorial home ruler and a\nCasement or a De Vate&t. Egypt has had its revolutionary\nexcitement, and it was very much of a damp squib. India has\nnot been free from trouble and may have more, but a successful\nrevolution is neither desired by the Indian people or capable\nof being carried out.\n*a \u25a0:. yk m.. **\u2666*\nCanada's Pulp Industry\neastern mayor\nIT\nAccording to facts compiled in the Canadian Forestry\nJournal, this country's pulp and paper exports lead all manufacturing industries.\nCanada has the largest forest area of any country in the\nBritish Empire. Our daily output of paper made into a\ncontinuous strip three feet wide, would be long enough to\ngirdle the globe at the equator.\n\u2022 Canada's preeminence as a paper-producing country lies\nin the possession of thousands of acres of pulp wood forests\nconveniently located to water powers.\ni The great danger to these invaluable forests has been from\nfires; th&r destruction has been tremendous. According to\nforestry experts one-half of the forest area has actually been\nburned over within the past 100 years.\nIn, British Columbia the destruction from fire has been\nspecially alarming, six'hundred and sixty-five billion feet of\n\u25a0 timber having been burned. The lack of proper forest protection in the past has been criminal. It is only of very recent\nyears that earnest efforts have been put forward to lessen\nforest fires, and replace forest destruction by tree cultivation\nand forest planting.\nCanada has a striking object lesson from the United States\nas to the folly of tree destruction. The total forest area in\nthat country is five hundred million acres. Of this one hundred\nmillion acres or more are so devastated as to be almost nonproductive. Two hundred million acres have been cut over\nand more or less damaged by fire.\nOne'hundred and fifty million acres are in standing timber\nWhere growth merely balances decay, with no net increase\nin wood production from year to year. For many years the\nUnited States has been viewing with concern its vanishing\nforests. Today the States has taken to forest planting with\nfeverish energy >-**nd has ideal forest patrol services in many\ndistricts. Americans now regret that these precautions were\nnot taken when enormous stretches of virgin forests existed,\nIn this country also there has been frightful waste of\ntimber lands, and numerous precautionary enactments are yet\nnecessary if still further loss is to be prevented.\nWrites to School Children\nof Canada on National\nSafety\nMayor H. S. Little, of London\nOnt, has addressed the following\nletter to the school children, of the\nDominion, in cinnection with' the national safety campaign;\n\"Do you realize that one of the\ngreatest assets of any Country Is\nits manhood and womanhood? And\ndo you realize that you are an. even\ngreater asset than the present\n'Grown Ups'? Their work Is partly\ndone, but yours Is only beginning,\nand you have a wonderful opportunity  to   profit  by  their mistakes.\n\"Wo 'Grown Dps' have tried tn\ncarry on the Government of .pur\nCountry in order .to provide 'Life,\nLiberty and Happiness' for all, but\nthere will always be room for improvement. Our fore-fathers fought\nfor these principles, and wc look\nto the young people to do even better than they or we. In one particular especially you can perhaps\ndo more than we can\u2014that is ln\nthe   prevention   of  accidents.\n\"Statistics show that in this country during 1919 there wero . more\nthan three persons acicdently klllod\nevery day in the year and mo\/iy\nmore injured.\n\"The Fire losses in 1919 amounted\nto over Twenty-three Million Dollars\nin Uiis Country\u2014and most of these\nAccidents and Fires, we are told\nby people who should know, Tvere\npreventable. Will yen hehp to stop\nthis waste?\n'Children often run riBks because\nthey think it shows bravery, and\nmore often because thoy are careless. Do you know thnt a truly\nbrave man scorns boasters and reckless persons, and never runs risks\n'for fun'? Remember you have no\nright to take undue chances, for\nshould you become maimed you .are\ncharge on your parents or fellow\ncitizens.\n\"Two good sloggans for .you to\nbear in mind are\u2014'Stop! Look! and\nListen!' whenever you are approaching a dangerous place; and\n'It is. my Duty to protect the Property and Lives of others.' If we\nkeep this advice before us, we\nshould make bigger and better Canadians.\"\nFtEipes\nProvision lor Civilian Attention to Troubles Caused\nby Service\nInformation has been received by\nthe local Office of the department\nof soldier's civil \u25a0 re-establishment\nthat dental troatmont will be extended through civilian dentists to\nthose' ex-soldiers that are able to\nprove that dental treatment required\nby them Is,Hie result of active service. . ,\nExmembers. of the forces requiring\ntreatment must apply first through\nth. district dental officer, M.D. No.\n11, 417 Monzles street Vancouver,\ngiving regimental number, rank,\nname' and the- unit last served with.\nThe. mofle of procedure in operation is for tho men to apply for\ntreatment, and on authority, to vMIJ\na civilian dentist.\nAll authorized work is paid for by\nthe department, but all work above\nthat .pecl.lc- has to be paid for\nby the applicant. Where- different\nwork than that authorized is dcslr-\np<l, It may be done, but the difference in cost between it and that authorized must be paid for by the\napplicant. In certain cases travelling expenses aro also borne by the\ndepartment,.\nBEST SEASON IN\nI\nTEN YEARS AGO TODAX\n.(From Dally News of April 21, 1910.)\nSamuel  Langhorn  Clemens,  (Mark\nTwain)  died at  6.30  o'clock  tonight\nat hla home in Redding, Conn.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nA fire broke out last night in the\nsawmill   lot    the    Creston    Lumber\nCompany,' at   Creston   but   prompt\nWork   with    the   extinguishers   and\nhose   saved- the  mill..   A  close  investigation   after   the   fire   revealed\nthe fact that the mill had been set\non   fire ,by   seme  person,  who  had'\nthrown coal oil around the place.\n-\u00bb\nTWeNTY YEAH8 AQO TODAY\nSIR OLIVER LODGE\nt\nAt  THE  THEATRES\n-$\nThere seems to be,no denying the\npotency, of .Mult -arid Jeff. This\nfact has been emphasized .time ahd\nagain,\" and . the fact 1b more than\never firmly realized this * season.\nJudging by the colossal reception\" accorded the .brands, new Gus Hill\ncomedy In three acts in which the\n\"Bud\" Fisher cartoon creations have\nbeen acclaimed this year. The title\nof the big event Is 'Ttfutt and Jeffs\nDream,\" which is 'underlined aB the\nnext attraction at the Opera House\nApril 26th, with the. lisual matinees.\nIn this particular . vehicle, re-\nsplendcntly costumed, produced,\nmounted and aVranged tinder the\npersonal direction o\u00a3 Mr. Hill, the\n\"long and short of It,\", as Mutt and\nJeff are universally known, with\ntheir opportunities of renewing and\nsettling their good natured uuarrels\nail over again, have unlimited scope.\nTho music of the comedy is said\nto be unusually tune\u00a3ul, while the\nchorus, comprising \u25a0 20 unusually\npretty and vivacious . young\" \"^ornen\nin captivating gowns, has come in\nfor exceptional praise and endorsement. Thirty-odd people all told\nare employed, providing a cast capable of furnishing an entertalnmont\nboth to be remembered and enjoyed.\nWEDDINGS\nlElLIDERLS\nBoys Plan to Turn Out in\nBlue on Monday; Girls as\nFarmerettes\nSeemingly the overall epcdlmlc\nhas reached Nelson, and there is a\nstrong movoment among the high\nschool boys leading towards the\nadoption of the blue denim uniform,\nand although, the scheme is not to\nall appearances, a popular one with\nthe teachers the boys are strong for\nIt, and aro pledging themselves to\nthe .fadeless true blue from Monday\nonwards.\nTlie young women of that institution, not to be outdone by tho youths,\nare considering life adoption of the\nfarmette uniform' and the idea is\nIn great favor. Tho mothers, however, are yet to be heard from.\nBARKER-LAURIE\nWilliam S. Barker, son. of W.\nBarke., . foreman of, tho Hewitt\nMine, was married to Miss . Ona\nLaurie, formerly on the nursing staff\nof the Kootenay Lake General hospital, Nolson, at Colvlllc, Wash., on\nApril   H.\nAfter a brief honeymoon in\nSpokane Mr. and Mrs. Barker are\nvisiting friends and relatives in\nNelson before leaving for Marcus,\nWash, where they will reside.\ns\nBoxing Commissioner Stops\nBout With Murray in the\nFinal Round\nCAMDEN, ;N. J., April 21 .(Bulletin)\n\u2014Jimmy Wilde, British- '\u2022 flyweight\nchampion, so. tax, outclassed Battling\nMurray, of Philadelphia\/ in their\neight round bout here tonight, that\nCommissioner * Smith, of , the ' New\nJorsoy Boxing commission, stopped\nthe contest in the last rouind.\nMurray had ' been knocked down\nthree times in the eighth round from\nshort left- hooks to the Jaw. He\nwas up without taking the count,\nbut was in such a battered condition\nthat a dear knpckjmt defeat appeared certain, when Commlsbloner\nSmith interfered 30 seconds before\nthe end of the bout.\nMurray's face < was covered with\nblood as a result of a nasty gash\nover tho left eye, caused by a col-\nlisI6n with Wilde's head. His nose\nwas also bleeding freely.\nMurray had the honors In the\n'early rounds. Ho knocked Wilde\nclown with a left hook to.the jaw In\nimproved in the fourth * and flffcM\nand with the beginning of the aixtl|\ncut rloose in championship style.\nMurray  made  a  rally  in  the sev\/J\nenth, but It did not last long.\n.Both fighters  were  beiow  the  re|\nquired weight  of  116.pounds,\nless than  a   minute   after   the  figlfl\nstarted.    Wilde  outboxed   Murray\nlong   range   Uf  the   oponlng. round\nwhile   Murray   was   trying   to   slug\nWilde    began    showing\" his    trtf\nform   in   the  third   rourtd   when\nspeeded up his  attack,  with the n<|\nsuit that  the  round  was  even.    Hj\nOlive Oils Are Never Uniform Like |\nAprOl\nThe   Sweetest   ON   from    Apricots!\nQUALITY, NOT\nSIZE\nIt should always be born in\nmind that . in diamonds size\ncounts but little' if' quality ' is\nnot  present,\nA small stone of. perfect quality ]\nIs really preferable to a larger\none with . flaws or spefiks, or.\npoor color, or incorrect cutting,\nBirks' are the highost quality\ndiamonds procurable\u2014you have\na definite guarantee as to this,\nHave you  our  Catalogue?\nm\n'^VANCOUVER; *#. Ci\n(From the Files of the Daily News,\nApril 21, 1900.)\n(From the Files of the Dally Miner\nHon. Joseph Martin, premier of the\nProvince of British Columbia, spoke\nto a packed house in the Nelson\nOpera house  last  night\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nThe new wing of the General\nHospital Is now complete and ready\nfor   use.\n\u2022. \u2022   *     ''\nPremier Martin stated most enthusiastically that there would be\na   candidate   in   the   Nelson' Riding.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThe annual district meeting of\ntbe Methodist Church took place today in the Methodist Church ln\nNelson,\nSome folks wipe the drops of\nsweat off. their faces as if they\nwere really ashamed ' of them. Man,\nalive, drops of sweat that come\nfrom good, honest work are finer\nthan any \u00abems that ever sparkled\nin the crown of king. And their\ngreatest beauty is that they make\nthe whole world happier and better. This cannot always be said ot\n\u2022the stars on the monarch's brow.\u2014-\nExchange.,\nTells Great Audience in Vancouver He Was Ten Years\nReaching Conclusions\nVANCOUVER, April 21\u2014A great\naudience greeted Sir Oliver Lodge,\nthe noted British scientist, here last\nnight when he delivered his famous\nlecture \"Evidence of Survival.\" Sir\nOliver spoke with convincing simplicity, and dealt in a plain matter\nof fact way with his subject. He\nwas Introduced by Hon. W. J. Bow-\nsor.\nHe said that It had taken him 20\nyears to arrive at the conclusion\nthat tho spirit of the dead can\ncommunicate with the living, and the\nresult was so momentous that he\nhad. hesitated a long time bofore.\ncoming out lq the open with a dec.\nlaration.\n\"My statement to-night,\" said Sir\nOliver, \"Is that under certain circumstances the departed can and do\ncommunicate with the living. You\ncannot have communication without\ntheir identity and - must show thoir\npersonality.\"\nA cliff swallow will eat a thousand fleas, mosquitos, wheat midgets\nor beetles that injure fruit trees in\na day, and, therefore, Is to be encouraged. This bird is also known\nas the cave swallow because It\nplasters its nest on the outside of a\nbarn or other buildings up under\nthe eaves. Colonics- ;of several\nthousand will build their nests together on the side of a cliff. These\nnests, i shaped like a flattened gourd\nor water-bottle, are made ot bits ot\nclay rolled Into pellets and lined\nwith' straw or feathers. This bird\nwinters in the tropics.\nFruit Growers' Organization\nBeats Its Past Record;\nDirectors Elected\nAt tho Ninth Annual Meeting of\nthe Kootenay Fruit Growers' Union,\nLtd., held in the company's office\nIn Nelson, the directors' report\nshowed that the yoar 1919 had been\nthe most satisfactory in tho history\nof the union.\nThe retiring directors, O. B.\nAppleton, J. C. Harris, and C. W.\nBusk, were reappointed, and H. E.\nDill was appointed auditor.\nThe directors, at a later meeting,\nelected Mr. Busk president and E.\nNorman manager and 'Secretary for\n1920.\nReport  of  Directors\nThe director's report for the season of 1919 was as follows:\n\"In making our report for the\npast year, we may say that the\npast year has been the most satisfactory during tho present management\n\"As compare^ with 10 carloads In\n1918, we   shipped   24   carloads    in\n1919. We take this as an indication of increased confidence. We\nhad very few complaints, and have\nbeen fortunate In having many expressions of commendation. Our\ndealings with our wholesalers havo\nbeen most cordial and they havo\nexpressed a desire to handle our\nfruit again next season. The grow\nere' grading and packing have been\na great Improvement on past years,\nbut ia far from perfection yet.\n\"During 1919 we handlod 20,459\ncases of fruit. Ot apples .5% per\ncent were l's and 2's, and 44% per\ncent wero No. 3's, as against 90 per\ncent of No. 8'b in 1910. Our total\nturnover was 130,580.62, on which\nthe total commission was 12,618.72,\nan average cost to tho grower\nof 8% per cent\nThe union's share of commission\nTho  union's  share   of\nI\nWTEfllUT'\nUnited States Capital Has\nNo Information of Intended Risings';\nWASHINGTON, April 20.\u2014No definite Information was obtainable here\nin connection with the London re\nport of a plot fomented ln New\nYork, nnd having as its purpose\nsimultaneous uprisings in Canada,\nIreland, Egypt and India. The British embassy knew nothing of the report. State department officials likewise without information concerning\nthe alleged plot, supposedly to commence ln June.\nFARMERS INSTITUTE\n, TO GRIND LOCALLY\nAt a meeting of the directors of\nthe Shirley Farmers Institute, held\nTuesday night, it was decided to\nInstall a grinder and a crushed, to\nbe operated by motor, in connection\nwith the institutes handling of feed.\nThe various grains will be purchased\nin bulk, and reduced to feed here ,\nat  Nelson.\nVANCOUVER TAX   RATE\nVANCOUVER, April 21.\u2014This\ncity's gross tax rate this year -will\nbe 31 2-3 mills, and the net levy\n28.50 mills, with half, tho value of\nImprovements exempted. Last year's\nrates were 26 2-3 and 24 mills. Tho\ngross  assessment Is  $207,600,000.\nTho first lord high admiral in\nEngland was created by Richard II\nin 1385.\n, Bugs, Fleas,. Files, Roaches,- Mosquitoes, Moths, Ants, Beetles\u2014ALL\nKilled by KEATING'S POWDER.\nSold in cartons only, nt all dealers.\nMECHANICS' l|OLS\nWe have a splendid assortmeM*. of-!\nSTANLEY'S TOOLS\nTo  Select From, Including\nPlanes, Squares, Screw Drivers, Try Squares.\nChisels, Etc.\nSee the New Dowel Machines\nPRICES RIGHT .' \u25a0\nNelson Hardware Co.\nBAKER STREET\nNELSON, B   <\nJohn Burns & Sons ^3l\u00ablSI\nSASH  AND  DOOR FACTORY NELSON   PLANING  HILLS\nV ... Vernon Street, Nelson, u. C.\nMVERY  DESCRIPTION  OF BUILDING MATERIAL  REIT  IN   STOCK\nEstimate. Given on Stone, Brick, Concrete and Frame Buildings\nMAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO\nP. O. BOX 1(14 PHONW't's'\nA. gold?-wire one-eighteenth of an,\ninch thick will hear a weight of 600\n{pounds,\nA standard dictionary of the Chin\nese language was published 1109\nP.P.\nwas   1502.74.\nexpense . was   $97.26,    and   interest\n1173.90, or a total of 1271.18.\n\"We have reduced our debt to the\nbank by *200, and to others by\nJ116.42,   a   total   debt   reduction   of\n' \"Our      present    Interest    bearing\ndebt now stands at  .690.00.\n\"All current accounts havo been\npaid to date, and. all accounts to\ngrowers were paid 'up on Dec. u.\nor in less than 30 days from the\ndate of our last shipment.\nFuture Pelioy\n\"Wo are very much In need ot\na warehouse ln Nelson, \u00bb\u2122ew*l<'\u2122\nalong the railway. The C.P.R. have\nunofficially told us that we cannot in future load from their freight\nsheds. With a warehouse we. could\nhave tho local fruit packed under\n_ur own supervision, and thus eliminate a lot o&low grade fruivwhh*\nis the sourceot most of \"our troubles. It would also allow us to hod\nsome of our best varieties till\nsoring, and to supply more of our\nlocal market. This would cost considerable money but it is becom-\nln_ more necessary year by ye\u00ab-\nBoon it will be an absolute necessity.\" \u25a0    '\nMaster\u2014Haven't you *wept the\nshop out yet, John?\nBoy\u2014No, sir. \u25a0\nMater\u2014Then what on earth have\nyou been .doing? _.'.-\u25a0_.'   , ,\nBoy\u2014Sweeping tho duet out, sin\n\u2014Pearson's Weekly.\nEpitaphs were inscribed on tdmbs\nby the Egyptians, Jews, Greeks anq\nRomans.\nLabor Board Rides That\nApplicants Did Not Comply With^Orders\nWASHINGTON, April 21.\u2014Applications of unauthorized strikers for\nhoarlngs on their demands for a\n\"living wage\" were denied today by\nthe railroad labor board, after Chairman Barton had ruled that any one\nmight filo a complaint, but that it\nwas for the board to determine\nwhether tho dispute was ono which\nthe law empowored It to adjUBt.\nIn its reply to \u2022 Edward McHugh,\nof New York, who filed a brief as\na cltlzon asking a hearing on the\nground of the \"existing emergency,\"\nas well as a formal complaint, the\nboard said it declined to authorize\nthe application to be filed and\ndocketed as a case, because it .did\nnot comply with the law and with\norder No. 1.\nChairman Barton announced that\nthe same ruling applied to tho applications of the St. Louis and Chicago\nYardmen's associations, or any other\nbody which had', not complied with\nthe rules adopted by tho board.\n\"You can talk about gramophones\nall you want tq,\" explained the\nAmerican visitor! ,''bqt wo can whip\nyou at that. I've Hoard a gramophone ln New York: that you could\nhear   clear, ln   Chicago.\n\"That's nothing,\" retorted a quiet\nBritisher. \"In our regiment there\nwas a bugler who. blew a call in\n1914, and thoy heard\" It ln the States\nat the end of 1917.\".\nHood's\nSarsaparilla\nMakes Food\ntaste Good\nCreates an appetite, aids digestion, purifies tlje Wood, prtwiotei\nassimilation so as to secure full\nndtiritivt yalne of food, and to\nCire strength to the whole system,\nPlan Your New Curtains Now\nHave your Curtains and Drapes all ready\nbefore spring house-cleaning. We are showing a large range ol Mercerized Voiles, Marquisette, plain and fancy borders; Scrim\ntrimmed in filet insertion.\nBUNGALOW NETTS, white, ivory and\necru.   Prices from 25c to $1.50 per yard.\nLACE CURTAINS\nIn Novelty,, Nottingham, Scrim and Marquisette, from $2.00 to $12.00 per pair.\nCretonnes, Chintz, Sateens for draperies\nand cushions, $45c to $1.50 per yard.\nSUNRESISTA   CASEMENT   CLOTH,  in\nrose, tan, green and blue shades.\nSee our FLAT CURTAIN RODS,\nsingle or double. Guaranteed not\nto sag, tarnish or rust. A perfect\nrod for all windows. Adapted to '\u25a0\nany home where attractive draping\nis desired.\nA large range of Extension Rods\nat 12 i\/2c to $1.50 each.\nEXQUISITE RUGS TQ BEAUTIFY\nTHE HOME\nIn Wilton,  Axminster,   Brussels,\nand Tapestry.   Ail sizes.\nCARPET SWEEPERS, $3.50 up.\nO-Cedar Mops and Dusters\nCocoa and Wire Door. Mats.\nLino. and. Congoleum Art Rugs\nin all sizes.\nStandard Furniture, Q).\nComplete House Furnishers\n$.\nBaker St.\nNelson\n_____\n \u25a0\u25a0\"\u25a0\nm\nTHE BAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, APRIL 22, 1920\nrage\n__\u25a0_\nTho   new   Liquid   Veneer   Mop,\ncomplete with d\u00bb-|   nfr\nhandle - ffili I O\n' \"  i \"\"\nNew .shipment   Breakfast Bacon,\n-by  tho piece, KKt.\nper lb.*....-.,  OOK,\nSweet Juicy Oranges,  extra large\ndozen  OUCj t\/UC\nSquill  sizes Kf\\o\nfrom  tlVC\nCabbage,, per\nlb \t\n10c\nFlorida  Grape -Pruit, A\\__ti\nCalifornia Grape, Fruit,       OC*\u00bb\n3    fOr    . ... ...._..\u201e_...-    e\u00a3DC\nExtra large size,\neach       ....\n15c\nStar Grocery\nPHONE 10\nSQUEEZED\nTf) DEATH\nWhen tfie body to_jn3 to stiffen\"\nend movement t icoir.es painful\nit issHSually en btlixtion that the\nkidneys are out cf order. Keep\nest organs hcc-Lhy :itijk taking\nmOLD MEDAL\n,4he world's otandard remedy for kidney,\nllvor, bladder and ur'.'! held troubles.\nFanftuo cinco 1GQ6. Tc'.io rofjularl-y end\nIteop )n gocd health, AU rki.-*j|-ji3tE:, 50c,\na box.   Guaranteed ;_- r presented.\nLook for. t!_\u00ab rnmc OH   . l~'_nl on  ov.tr\nbox and ncotpt 1:0 imitation\nTHIS MILK\nIS\nGOOD\nPacific Milk has found its\nplace in many new homes during the year.\nIn mnny instances-it has\nbeen tried first because there\nwas no fresh milk In thp\nhouse.\nThe results were so good It\ngradually worked Itself into\nall the household cooking and\nbaking.      -   f\nPACIFIC MILK CO.\ntimtted\n**'; Vancouver, B.C.\nFaotory *t   Ladnor,   B.C.\nLADIES!\nYOUR  SPRING\nOXFORDS\nNow Await You at Our  Store\nTheso Oxfords aro graceful\nIn appearance and made to fit\nthe feet.\nWhether your taste be for\ntho Louis XV. heel or the\nsmart military heel, we feel\nsure wo. can please you.\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLoaders   in   Foot   Fashions   I\nMANSLAUGHTER VERDICT\nVANCOUVER, April 2WBlackie\"\nFord was found guilty of manslaughter at the assizes here this evening,\nin connection with, tho shooting of\nAndy Goovan in this city on Dec, 1.\nI DON'T   USE  CURLING  IRON!\nj    HERE'S A BETTER METHOD\n4^ 1\u2014, i ->\u25a0\u25a0\nThousands of ruined heads of hair\nbear striking testimony to the Injurious effects of the heated curling iron.\nThe continued uue of such Instrument\ninvariably moans dull, dry, shriveled\nhair, With split, broken, uneven ends.\nIf more women only knew It, the\nhair can be kept beautifully wavy,\nsoft and fluffy\u2014without uny harmful\nresult whatever\u2014by the occasional use\nof plain liquid sllmerine. A small\nquantity is applied before' doing up\nthe hair, using a clean toothbrush for\nthe purpose, drawing this down tho\nfull length of the hair. The curly\neffect lasts quite a considerable \/line.\nIt is so natural, looking, and the texture and lustre of the hair are so\nImproved, that the woman who adopts\nthis simple method will never go back\nto the atrocious waving Iron. . A few\nounces of liquid sllmerine ' from * the\ndruggist will last for weeks. The\nliquid Ih agreeable to use, and It leaves\nno gummy,-.1:greasy or= odorous trace. .\nSEARCHLIGHTS\nand headlights, both new and secondhand. Also other motor ' boat acces-\nories at bargains to clear.\nO. K. Barber Shop\n__ __ WILSON\nOLD CURIOSITY SHOP\nJosephine Street,  Near  Baker\nWe   buy   all   kinds   of   SECOND\nHAND FURNITURE and Stoves and\nClothes,    Rags,   Brass,    Copper   and\nRubber.   We pay highest prices.\nJ. Radcliffe & Depatie\nP. O. Box 794\nPhone  114\nGunrrmtGca   to   Put   on   Finn,   Healthy\nrionh and to luoroaso  Strength, :,j\n;,. Vigor   anil\/ Horvo   Force.    I   fgt\nWeiiiri thin oeo$(g-\u2014meni -or wopiifSif^\nare nearly $iWfw\u00a3' nervous wrecks;\nthus .conclusively\/'; proving that thinness, .weakness,- debility and neurasthenia are almost Invariably due to\nnerve '.starvation. Feed your nerves\nand all these symptoms due to nerve\nstarvation will disappear.\nEminent Hpeciallsts state that the\nbest nerve food is an organic phosphate.known among druggists as Bitro-\n_\u00bbh< spljate, a five-grain tablet of which\nshould'ho taken with each meal. Being\nx genuine nerve, builder and not a\nstimulant or habit-forming drug, Bltro-\nPhesphate can bo safely taken by the\nWriikest   and   most   delicate   sufferer.\nKootenay and Boundary\nArrive From Central States\nto Choose Site for New\nSawmill\nCRANBROOK, B.C., April 21.\u2014W. H.\nBlssell, Frank Blseell,- John It. Ross,\nB. F. Wilson, of Wansan, Wis., and\nW. F. Baker, of Manistee, Mich., arrived in Cranbrook Saturday and are registered at the Cranbrook hotel. Theso\nmen represent the company which recently acquired 'large areas of timber\nlimits from the East Kootenay Lumber\ncompany, in this district, and are here\nfor the purpose of locating the site\nfor the big mill which the company\nintends building.    _     \t\nBENTON SAWING\nIN FULL SWING\nBENTON SIDING, April 21.\u2014A successful community dance was, held In\nthe schoolhouse Friday. All were .Invited lo attend and bring refreshments.\nDancing was enjoyed well into the\nearly morning hours. Mr. and Mrs.\nWohlford Hansen, and Mr. and Mrs.\nJohnson, Meadows, drove over for\nthe  occasion.\nMiss Mary Barkley left for tho coast\nSaturday.where she will spend somo\ntime visiting friends and relatives.\n\u25a0 Mr., and Mrs, Lake returned from a\nvisit to Nelson Thursday.\nThe Benton company's lumber mill\n!s now ln full working order, fitnd many\npost-makers are at work for the new\nfirm.    Shipping  continues  to  be  nrlBk.\nThe recent rains have greatly brightened the crop prospects, and farmers\nare getting ready  for a record season.\nTO ENTERTAIN MOTOR\nVISITORS TO THRUMS\nUNITUN CRMP\nProposal for Cranbrook and\nFernie to Co-operate in\nMatter\nCRANBROOK, April 21.\u2014T. H. Hutchinson, boys' work secretary for the\nY.M.CA., for Alberta and British Columbia, also secretary far the boys'\nwork board of the religious and educational council, Vancouver, addressed\na meeting ln tho Y.M.C.A.- Sunday evening after the close of the regular\nchurch services, In connection with the\nopening of a camp for boys during\nthe   summer   holidays,   nt   Green   Bay.\nMr. Hutchinson stated that Fernie\nwould like to , cooperate with Cranbrook in the operation of the camp,\nand thought that there would be about\n25 boys from there who would attend\nthe camp if It is opened. It was the\ngeneral opinion of the meeting that It\nwould be a good move to have a cainp\nfor boys along the lines suggested, and\nthe nucleus of a committee to have\ncharge of the arrangements, was appointed, Ilev. R. W. Lee being named\nas chairman.\nI\nMr. Carlson Controls Local\nPlant; Timber Limits\nViewed\nTHRUMS, April 20,\u2014The Kootenay\nValley Women's Institute held its\nmonthly meeting at\/the home of Mrs.\nSprock on Thursday. Mrs. Chalmers,\nmember of the advisory board, paid a\ntribute to Mrs. Pennock of Rosebery,\nand Arrow Park, who, for many years\nwas an ardent worker of he Women's\ninstitute.\nPlans were made to entertain nil motorists coming to Thrums  on  May   24.\nMrs. Oodd led a discussion on flower\ngardening.    \u2022\nAt the close of the meeting tea was\nserved bv  the  hostess.\nTwo new families have recently\nmoved to Thrums.\nSupday school was held in the\nschoolhouse,   led   by   Mrs.   Chalmers.\nA. Knickerbocker returned his week\nfrom the prairie, where he has been\nfor  the  past month.\nPROMOTIONS AT THE\nFRUITVALE SCHOOL\nFRUITVALE, April 21.\u2014A very successful box social and dance was held\nIn the public hall on Friday. The\nboxes, were auctioned by J. Grieves\nand C. Mason, and the sum of $77.30\nwas realized. Visitors from Waneta,\nTrail and Park Siding were present.\nExcellent music was rendered by Mr.\nShackle assisted by J. Grieves and J.\nBell. Dancing was kept up until about\n3 o'clock. The evening's arrangements\nwere well carried out by Mesdames\nMason; Grieves and 'Barretts, Miss\nTlmaeus  and   Miss   Stanthorpe.\nF. G. Calvert, school inspector, visit\ned the two divisions of the school on\nThursday and Friday respectively.\nPupils promoted to Fourth Reader\nwere Tom Cole, Albert Llndholme, Gilbert Pago; Earl! Greive, Olive Hearsey\nand Lottie Barrett. The second .primer also  received promotion.\nI\nI\n, and tho results following its use are\nOften simply astonishing,'\nI Weak, .tired people regain strength\nand vigor; thinness and angularity\n'give way to plumpness and curves;\nsleep returns to the sleepless; confidence and cheerfulness replace debility\nand gloom; dull eyes bocomo bright,\nand pale, sunken cheeks regain the\npink glow' of health. \"Bltro-Phosphate\nthe use of which is inexpensive, also\nwonderfully promotes tho assimilation\nof food, so much so.that many people\nreport market! gains of weight lu \"\nfew   weeks.\nCAUTION:\u2014While Bltro-Phosphate\nIs unsurpassed for the relief of nervousness, general debility, etc, those\ntakiug It who do not desire to put on\nflesh should use extra care In avoiding\nfat-producing  foods.\nNew Jersey Committee Wires\nProtest to Washington\nAgainst Reception\nNEWARK, N. J., April 21.\u2014A telegram protesting against recognition\nof Sir Auckland Geddes, the new\nBritish ambassador, as \"ambassador\nfrom Ireland,\" was sent today to\nSecretary of Stato Colby, by Major\nEugene If. Klnkhead, of Jersey City,\nchairman of the New Jersey state\ncommittee for Irish independence,\nwhich claims a membership of 600,-\n000.\n\"An overwhelming majority of the\nIrish people having elected to live\nunder a republican form of government,\" road tho telegram, \"unless\nwe repudiate the American principle\nof self-determination repeated enunciated befofo our entrance into the\nwar, during the war, and after the\nsigning of the armistice, we cannot\naccept the credentials of Mr. Geddes\nas far as thoy relate to the Republic\nof Ireland.\"\nStiver    forks    came    into    general\nuse  in  England  only a century  ago.\nNAKUSP, April 21.\u2014A houso famine\nexists in Nakusp. Half a dozen families are unable to secure dwellings.\nG. E. Horsley and family arrived on\nWednesday from Revelstoke and will\nmake their homo here In futuire. Mr.\nHorsley is the moving spirit \u25a0 in the\nnew electric light company, aaid will\nstart work at once. -\nV. Carlson, of the Nakusp dumber\ncompany, has secured the controlling\ninterest  In  the local  sawmill.  .\nW. Horle, an East Kootenay lumberman, is inspecting some timber limits\non the Kookanut creek, with a. view to\nentering  the  lumber business   here.\nW. Freeman and family, or Jaffray,\narrived on Saturday and will make\ntheir home hero.\nParliamentary Committee is\nAnxious tooHjwe ^Con\nstructive Suggestions  *\nOTTAWA, April fl.-*. (Canadian\nFreBs).\u2014Many suggestions as to proposed changes in the pensions regulations have already been considered\nby the special committee on pensions and reestablishment, and several suggestions in regard to reestab-\nlislfment are before the committee\nfor later action. Howcyer, the com\nmittee is anxious that any further\ngeneral or specific constructive suggestion on either pensions or reestablishment should be placed In its\nhands at once, as the committee\nsittings cannot continue indefinitely.\nThe ' chairman, Hume Cronyn, Lon-\n,don, issued the following statement\ntonight:\n\"The committee must bo prepared\nto present a report to the house before the session closes.\n\"There have already been brought\nto our --attention through the Great-\nWar Veterans association and other\nsoldier and civilian organizations a\nnumber of problems .connected with\ntho subjects of this inquiry,\n\"On tho pensions aide, among\nothers, aro the following:\n\"Increases in pensions to disabled\nmen and their families; to widows\nand their children; to 'mothers and\ntheir   dependents.\n\"Special treatment and allowances\nin tho case of those suffering from\ntuberculosis, from amputation and\nblindness.\n\"Changes in the provisions' of the\npresent law which withholds pensions from tho families of those\nwho marry subsequent to their disablement.\n\"As to reestablishment, while evidence has not been heard, many\nsuggestions have been aont  in.\n\"The committee would appreciate\nreceiving, at the earliest possible\nmoment, any further general or specific constructive suggestions of\neither side of the inquiry. Theso\nshould bo addressed to the chairman\nof the committee on pensions and\nre-establishment, houso of commons.\nstralnt on the channels  of trade.\nIt is fully understood in London\n-ind Washington that, in furtl-fcrance\nof its determination to force political\nrecognition at the hands of the\nwestern European nations and America, the Soviet government will do\neverything possible to hamper such\ntrade development along independent\nlines. The negotiators aro believed\nto feel, ^oweve?; that Lenine will\nscarcely,, be prepared to riuso the\ndemand of his own people for the\nessentials of life, which are held out\nto them in this way.\nTWO KILLED WHEN\nPLANE PLUNGES\nLONG BEACH, Call.., April 21.\u2014\nGeorge Daly, a pilot flying for an\naviation school at Wilmington, near\nhere and' a passenger, -wore killed\ntoday, when Daly's airplane fell 1000\nfeet Into tha Pacific ofcean, oft the\nrecreation pier here. The engine\nexploded when, the plane hit Ihe\nwater.    The   bodies   were  recovered.\ns\nYAHDWerS MEET\nSpeakers Howled Down\nWhen Grunau Found to\nBe in Jail\nCHICAGO, April 21.\u2014John Grunau,\nleader of the Outlaw Chicago yardmen's association, who was released from jail at Joliet, 111., today, after'frlcnds had deposited $10,-\n000, was 'expected to call a new\nmeeting of striking switchmen \\o\nend the walkout, following tho\ntumultous termination of a mass\nmeeting today, aclled by a committee of strike leaders to vote on\nreturning to work.\nDeclaring they had been \"sold\nout,\" and Hooting down attempts of\nstrike leaders to appeal to them to'\nend the walkout, several thousands\nof strikers today bolted a mass\nmeeting when it was announced\nGrunau, who was to have presided,\nwas still in Jail.\nThe gathering broke up In an uproar. Tumult reigned Insido and\noutside tho hall for a half, hour,\nbut there was no violence and no\narrests.\nShannon Jones, R. S. Murphy, and\nM. J. Kenney, who culled the meeting, urged the strikers to return to\nwork and await action of tho railroad labor board on the demand\nfor  Increased  pay.\n\"I hope that you can seo that it\n| 'on't do any good to fight tho\ngovernment,\" Jones told the strikers. \"You can fight the railroads,\nbut not tho United States, and you\naro foolish to try.\"\nCaresses    Flag\nOn; the rostrum was an American flag. Jones touched it constantly as ho spoke.^ As Murphy began\nto speak, ho was gretted with cries\nof \"Whero's Grunau?\" \"We want\nGrunau.\"\nT he railroads announced that\n120 men returned to work today,\nand that live stock receipts in Chicago an dthe movement of livestock and fresh meat to eastern\npoints were normal. Eleven hundred  cars  of  coal  were  received.\nNew Arrivals\nOf SPRING DRESSG00DS, TWEEDS,\nVELOURS and BROADCLOTHS arriving\nwith every Express. The most up-to-date\nmaterials are just to hand (or making new\nSpring Coats, Skirts, Suits and Dresses.\nAmong the recent arrivals deserving mention are:\nNEW SPRING TWEEDS\nIn Grey, Brown and Fawn Mixtures.   These\nare very handsome goods, lull 54 inches\nwide, and price is very reasonable.\nPer yard     $3.25 to $5.00\nALL-WOOL VELOURS and BROADCLOTHS\nA range of the newest in colorings, all come\nin 54-inch width.  Per yard, $7.50 to $8.50\nNOVELTY COATINGS\nIn Tweed and Silvertones, all colors at, per\nyard .....$5.00 to $8.75\nTHE STORE FOB STYLE\nTHE STORE FOR (JUAIiITT\nSLOCAN   AND  ARROW   LAKES\nPLUMBING   and   PAINTING\nProblems  can   easily   be  solved   by\nconsulting   us.    0\n,   THE G. T. STORE\nPhone 22 P.O.  Box 4\nOver Thirty Years' _r:\u201e e.lo.co is Yours\nfor  the  A__l\u201e_.\nRain    guages    on    lofty    buildings\n.\u25a0olleet loss  than  at  the ground.\nCuticura Soap\n\u2014The Safety Razor\u2014\nShaving Soap\n\u25a0mBMfibamwif\nIthwfag. _tJ____________tU_\nStomach and\nLiver Trouble\nEnglish abbesses attended ecclasias\ntloal councils as early,, as 694.\t\nUSETIZFORSQRE.\nlElIHIIFEET\nNo    more    pitffed-up.    burning,\nBWtuity,  calloused feet\n-.; or' corns.\n. ,Just take .your shoes off and then\nput those. Weary, shbe-crinklcd, aching, burning, corn-pestered, bunion-\ntortured feet of yours in a *\"T1__\"\nbath. Your toes . will wriggle with\njoy; they'll look up at you \"and almost talk and then they'll take, another dive in that \"Tlz\"  bath.\nWhen your feet feel like lumps of\nlead\u2014all tired out\u2014just try \"Tlz.\"\nIt's grand\u2014it's glorious. Your feet\nwill dance with Joy; also you will\nfind, all pain gone from corns, callouses and bunions.\nThero's nothing like \"Tlz.\" It's\nthe only remedy that draws out all\nthe poisonous, exudations which puff\nup your feet and cause foot torture.\nGet a box of \"Tia\" tt any drug or\ndepartmental stare\u2014don't wait. Ah!\nhow glad your feet get; how comfortable your shoes feel. You can\nwear shoes a size smaller if you desire.\nOFFER TO RUSSIA\nBritish and United States\nGovernments Have Cordial\nDiscussions\nWASHINGGTON, April 21.\u2014Negotiations between the state department and the British foreign office\nconcerning the proposed .reopening\nof trade relations with Soviet Russia\nand progress were made cordially,\nSir {Auckland Geddes, the n'ow British ambassador, announced today.\nThe-question of recognition of the\npresent government of Russia is entirely apart from theso conferences,\nit was said.\nIt is the purpose of England and\nAmerica to arrive at an agreement\nas to means of expanding the trade\nalready being carried on with Russia through (Scandinavian countries,\nand by way of Finland and Lettvla.\nWhile the plan to be adopted has\nnot assumedshape, \u25a0 it is regarded as\nprobable that the old license system\nwin be abandoned \u25a0 entirely, or so\nlUhfirallzed  as to leave but Httlfe re-\nOnce the liver falls to filter the\npoisonous bile from tho blood, there\nIs al clogging up and poisoning of\nthe whole -system which causes many\ntroubles to arise. Therefore, upon\nthe liver, more than any other organ\nof tho body, depends the general\nhealth.\nCarelessness and neglect, and oftentimes wilful disregard of nature's\nlaws will put the system out of\nsorts. The bowels become constipated, the liver inactive and the Btom-\nach upset. To bring the system back\nto its normal state, you should take\nMilburn's Laxa-LWor Pills. Thoy\nliven up the liver, get the bowel.,\nback to their proper condition and\ntone up the stomach.\nMrs. G. L. Cackett, Enchant, Alta.,\nwrites:\u2014\"I have used Mllburn's Laxa\nLiver Fills and have found them\ngood \u2022, for both stomach and liver\ntroubles. I have told others about\nyour valuable medicine and they\nhave   used  them' with  good  results.\n\"They are also good for headache.\"\nMilburn's Laxa-Liver Pills are 25c.\na vial at all dealers or mailed direct\non receipt of price by The T. Mil-\nburn   Co.,   Limited,   Toronto',   Ont.\nDon't Suffer\nFrom Piles\nSample    Package    of    the    Famous\nPyramid    I'He   Treatment    Now\nOffered Free to' Prove \\VI_nt\nIt Will Do for Vou.\nPyramid Pile Troatmont rIvos\nrjulck relief from ltchlns. bleeding\nor protruding piles, hemorrhoids and\njL  '  ;.,.:.m\nPyramid In Certainly Pine and Work*\nMuch Wonders So Quickly. *\nsuch roctal troubles, In tho privacy\nof your home. 60 cents a box at all\ndrugffiBts., Take no substitute. A\nsingle box \"often relieves. Free aiim-\nple for Trial mailed In plain wrapper, if you send coupon below.\nFREE SAMPLE! COUPON\nPYRAMID DRDO COMPiANY. '\n67S Pyramid Bldg., Marshall, Mlcb.\nKindly   (\\eoi   me   n   Free   Hatnnlc   of\nPjmutLld File Treatment, lo plain wrapper.\nName,.\nStreet.,\ncitr...\nMinard's\nLiniment\nfor\nSpinish\nFlu\nColds\nCroup\nAsthma\nPneumonia\n! GAREIiESS SHAMPOOING |\nSPOILS THE  HAIR |\nfr J _ $\nSnap Bhrivicf lie used very carefully\nif you want to keep your hair looking Hi. best. Most soaps and prepared shampoos contain too much\nalkali. This dries the scalp, makes?\nthe   hair   brittle  and  ruins  It,\nThe best thing for steady use is\nMulslfiod cocuanut oil shampoo\n('which is pure and grcaseless). nail\nis bettor than anything else you can\nuse.\nOne or two teaspoonfuls will\ncleanse the hair and scalp thoroughr\nly. Simply moisten the hair with\nwater und rub, it In. It makes an\nabundance of rich, creamy lather,\nwhich rinses out easily, removing\nevery particle of dust, dirt, dandruff\nand excessive oil. The hair dries\nquickly and evenly, and It leaves\ntho scalp soft and the hair fine and\nsilky, bright, lustrous, fluffy and\neasy to manage.\nYou can get Mulsifted cocoanut\noil .shampoo at any pharmacy, it's\nvery cheap, and a few ouncos will\nsupply every member of the family\nfor months.\nQUAKER\nBRAND\nThese Grew in EL C.\nVegetables all**grown in' the rich, fertile valleys of British\nColumbia. The best are picked and sent to a canning factory.\nHere they are examined again, and those found perfect are\ncanned for your use. The flavor of the ripe, fresh vegetables\nis all retained, i\nYOUR GROCER HAS QUAKER BRAND\nDOMINION   CANNERS  B.   C.  LIMITED\nHEAD OFFICE, VANCOUVER. B. C,\n rfm*\nTHE \"DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING,; APRn\/^1920;\nLosses of from Five to Forty-\nFive Points; Money Mar-\n.   ket Factor\n. NEW YORK, April 21\u2014 Quoted\nValues crumbled on today's feverishly active Btock kmarket, the list\nclosing In absolute demoralization.\nleaders showing extreme loeseB of,\nfive to almost 45 points.\n; Apart* from the increased scarcity\nof timo funds, there wore no developments in * the money market\nto explain the declines. Shares which\nrecently derived their chief support\nfrom professional sources sustained\ngreatest depreciation. , There were\nrumor.* that the banks were again\ncurtailing loans composed of speculative collaterlal. $to confirmation,\nof these reports was obtainable.\n.'Liberty b^nds broke to lowest\n(trice yet recorded on very heavy\nofferings. Some of these crime war\nflirtations i fell \u25a0 to levels \u25a0 whero they\nRepresented nn Interest return of almost t per cent. Selling of Liberty\nbonds proceeded from various sources, but was popularly attributed to\nlarge corporations, which probably\nWound it more expedient., to liquidate\ntheir Ihpldihes than to ongflge ih\nhew afid costly financing.-J .\n\". Conspicuously V,*oak'stocks included General Motors at an extreme\nHAS of 42H points to 275, Baldwin\ni.ocomotive which was extremely\n-erratic toward*-the end, at a- decline\nof 3494 poiilta, .juid various other\nmotors, equipments, steel and oil\nIssues, which ^'finished at net losses\nof three to 10 points.\nI Sales amounted to 2,000,000 shares,\nover one third of the total business\nOccurring In the. final hour, the ticker being some 20 minutes behind in\nrecording the day's, business. i\ni Bonds, Including . standard i rails\ndnd industrials, followed the course\nof government issues, losing one to\ntvyoper cent. Total sales, par value\n\u25a0520.250,000.\nv,01d United States 2's. lost.% point\narid Panama 3's five points on call,\nothers  being unchanged. ,\nCHICAGO, April 21.\u2014Grain and\nprovisions , collapsed fn value Unlay\nunder an avalanche of selling. The\nstrained financial situation as re\u00bb\nf lee ted by the Japanese banking\nfturry, and by sovere declines In\nthe New York stock market, prow\ned too heavy a burden for corn and\nallied commodities. The close on\n'change here in every , pit waa^j\nsemi-demoralized, with corn 1% to\n8& cents net lower, with May 166%\nto 168 and July 158 to 158&. \u00bb\nOatB finished 4 ^ to \"6 cents down.\nProvisions lost from, 25 cents to\n$1.30. . ]'\u25a0,\u25a0'\nClosing   Quotations\nHign   Low   Close\nU.  S.  Steel   com\nV.  S.  Steel  Pfd.\nChtno Copper   ..\nInspiration  ..\nUtah   copper   ..\nC. P. R.   ..'\t\nWillys  Overland\n^tudebaker. .....\nGeneral Motors\nPierce,. Arrow ..\nTexas Oil  .\n102%\n110\n,5.5\n73\n119\n22 Vi\n88%\nflO-   - 110\n33%.     33%\n62 .       52\n72 72 .\n117%    117 Vi\n21%\nIM.i     106%\n321       275\n\u2022-69%-   60\nS3\n21%\n107%\n2*80\nChicago- Markets Collapse\nUnder Strain and Pits Are;\nDemoralized\nDEPRESSION ON\nTORONTO BOARD\nTORONTO, April 21.\u2014Reaction\ntook possession of the stock market\nhore today. There was dullness, but\nIt was accompanied by irregularity,\nand on the whole, the situation was\nanything but out ot hand. There\nwas very little buying power In evidence, and \u25a0 selling orders were\nnumerous in the hands of the brokers.\nPaper stocks varied in their fate\non the day's trading here, but at\nleast they were not neglected. Spanish. RiVer common sold down two j\npoints, and there was no bid at the\nclose. ' Brompton gained a fraction,\nwhile; Abitibi was weaker. The loss\nof 27l,{. points covers a period of\nabout two weeks since the last\ntrade.\nBurt preferred nnd Canada Bread,\nBell Telephone, and Canada Cement\nresisted tbe day's tondency, and\nhi'adc small gniris.'. Brazilian, however, In a turnover of more than\n700  shares  closed   %   n  point  down.\nBank stocks were almoat passed\nover, and the 193?' 5 per cent war\nbonds were agalh weaker by %. a\npoint at 96&,\nMETAL MARKETS\nNEW     YORK.\nTuesday  $1.17V_..\nApril     21.\u2014Silver,\nLONDON,\nday U8!_d.\nApril\" 21.\u2014Silver,   Tues-\nTlic Hindus observe December 2G|\na_ a holiday, bu^jiot Cor reUsUm..'\nreasons.\nLegal^NoTices  i\n\u2014\"\"\"nffis^ \u2014^\nProvince  of  British   Colombia,   County\nOf   W\u00abtt   Kootenay.\nTO   WJT:\nBy virtue of a warrant of execution\nissued out of the county court of \"West!\nKootcliay. holden ut Rossland, at the\nsuit of Kootenay Colymbin Fuel Sup*\n, ply, plaintiff, and to me directed,\nagainst the goods and ' (.battels .\u00abr\nCalvin Hicks, defendant, I have \u00bbc>.\nand taken in execution the. follow.a,:\ngood-, .aiid chattels, viz!:\nA Q.miitity of cordwood, about 100\ncords; 1 set bobsleighs.\nAl) of which I shall expose for sale,\nor sufficient thereof to .satisfy said\njudgment, debt and coHtu, at the office\nof *Doiuild Macdonald, barrister, Trail,\nB.CT, on the 23rd day of April, A.t>.,\n1920, at lite hour of 10 o'clock ln the\nforenoon.\nDated   Trail.   B.C.,   April   Utth,   1920.\nNote:'\u2014Intending purchasers wilt\nM.ttifjfy themselves as to Interest und\ntitle of .-\u25a0\u25a0..id defendants.\nj  \u25a0 JAMKS H.   DOYLE,\nV       Sheriff.\nNEW YORK, April 21.\u2014Cupper\nquiet. Electrolytic, spot and nearby 18% to i9*Hj May and June and\nJuly lUH to Itf^.. Iron steady,\nprices unchanged, -Antimony l0.62'\/a.\nTin, easier, spot 62.25; May, Jupo\n\u25a030.75. Metal \u00a3 exchunge t| botes lead,\ndull, spot und April 900 offered\nand May and July 875 bid. Zinc\nweak. East St. Louis delivery spot\nand   April   810   offered.\nLONDON, April 21.\u2014Spot copper\n\u00a3100 7s. 6d.; futures \u00a3103 7s. 6d.\nElectrolytic, spot \u00a3110; * futures,\n\u00a3112. Tin, spot \u00a3343 lot..; futures,\n\u00a3342 17s. 6(1. Lead, spot \u00a338 os.;\nfutures \u00a339 15s. Zinc, spot \u00a345 5s.;\nfutures,  \u00a3-411 17sv.'^d.   '\u25a0     fy . \u25a0\nCANADIAN BONDS\nTo Shareholders Only; Bank\nof Montreal Makes Foreign Alliances \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nMONTREAL, April 21\u2014The directors of the'Bank of Montreal\u2022 announce the issue of .J2.OUO.000 new\ncapital stock to be offered to shareholders ns at the close of business\non May 20. 49.20, at 1B0 per share in\nthe-ratio of tine in teti.\nIt is understood that the Bank! of\nMontreal, in view of Canada's large\ntrade developed with foreign countries since the war, recently purchased a substantial interest in the Colonial bank, an old established English\nblink that has operated for many\nyears In the West Intlios, British\nQuiana and West Africa, and has\nallied itself with other important\nbanks doing business abroa^S '\nSTERLING EXCHANGE\nNEW. YORK, April 21.\u2014Sterling\nexchange weak at $3.87 y. for sixty,\nday bills and nt $3.92  for demand.\nCanadian   dollars   91.50.\nBelgian   francs   7.55\nFrench francs  fr.95.\nItalian  llrps 6.10.     , .,     '   \u2022.\u25a0' s\nWINNlPEG*L.VEStOCK'\nWINNIPEG, April 21.\u2014Tho totals\nthat passetT over the scales yesterday were 90 cattle. 77 hogs and\nfour sheep. Disposition of stock was\nas follows: Local packers secured\n38 cattle and 88 hogs. Local butch-\nens took out three cattle and 40\nhogs. 159 stockers and feeders wore\nshipped to Alberta. Receipts up to\n9 a.m. today showed a decided improvement, consisting of 1,100 cattle\nand -1,200 hogs and 30 sheep.\nGood butcher steers formed bulk\nof offerings moving freely under\nfairly Bteady prices.\nSteers, choice 13.00 to 14.00; fair\nto good  10.00  to  12.50;  medium. 9.00.\nButcher heifers, choice 11.00 to\n13.00;   fair to  good  8.50   to 10.60.\nButcher cows, choice 10.50 to\n12.00; fair to good 8.25 to 10.00;\nmedium   7.00   to   8.00.\nBulls, good 7.50 to 8.75; common\n\u00ab.00  to  G.50.\nFeeders, choice 10.00 to 11.00; fair\nto good  8.60  to  9.60.\nStockers (steers and heifers)\nchoice 8.00 to 9.00; fair to good\n7.00   to   7.75.\nCalves, choice 14.00 to 1G.0D. good\n10.0 to 13.00, Common 0.60 \u25a0'\u25a0 to\n7.75.\nHugs, selects 20.00; heavies 16.00;\nto 18.00; lights 17.00 to 18.00; sows\n16.001' { stags   11.0.0.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, April 21.\u2014Egg prices\nup one to two points, other prices\nunchanged.    .\nCheese,   finest   easterns   27   to   28.\nButter, choicest creamery 60 to\n61.\nEggs,  fresh  C2  to 53.\n< Potatoes, - per   Bag   car   lots   $5.75.\nMONTREAL LIST\nGENERALLY WEAK\nTENDERS rOK COAL\n. Sealed tenders addressed to the ua\nt dersigued ahd endorsed \"Quotation for\n\u25a0Coat.-' Dominion Buildings, British Columbia,\" will be received until la\no'clock noon, Monday, May 17, 1930,\nfor the supply of coal for the public\nbuildings throughout, the province of\nBritish   Columbia.  \"',,'.\nCombined specification and form of\ntender can lie own hied, from the Purchasing Agent, Department of Public\nWorltB, Ottawa, and, from, the Caretakers of the different Dominion i Buildings.\nTenders will not. bc .considered Unless\nmade on the forms mipplied by the, Department and hi accordance with the\nconditions  set   forth   therein.\nEach tender imiBt be accompanied by,\nan accepted cheque ! on a chartered\nb&nk, payable to tlie order of the Minister of Public Works, equal to 10 p.c.\nof the amount of the tender. War\nLoan Bonds of the Dominion will also\nbe accepted as security, or war bonds\nand cheques If required to make up\nan odd amount. \u25a0*:\nBy order, i\nR. C. DESROCHERS,\nSecretary.\nDepartment of Public Works,- \u25a0\u2022\nOttawa,   Ont.,  April   12,   1920. :     '\u25a0\n(7408)\nCOXFOBATION    07    T\u00abE    CITY    OP\nGSAND  IOHKB,  \u00ab.C.\nWanted, thoroughly reliable man to\noperate Electric Light and Water. Departments, Including electrically driven\npumps. Must be able to do outside\nand Inside electrical construction and\ninstallation work, and general repairs\nto both systems.; SUte full particulars; of age, qualifications, experience,\nsalary expected, and enclose references.\nApplications received till .May 1st.\n\u2022Duties to commence May loth.   '.,\nJOHN A. NUTTON,\n\u25a0 \\W) City Clerk.\nMONTREAL, April 21.\u2014The fol- j\nlowing were the asked prices for \u25a0\nbonds at the close of the market\ntoday:\nWar loans. 1925, 1)4%; 1*>32, !)3%;\n1937,   87.\nVictory loans: 1WJ2, 911; 1927 99%;\n1937 102; 1923, 1>\u00bb; 1933, 100%;\ni\u00bb24,   93   1934;* 96.\n 1 *\u00bb,\t\nMINNEAPOLIS.   GRAIN\nMINNEAPOLIS, April 21.\u2014Cash\ngrain, No. 1 .Dark * Northern wheat\n305 to 315; Np.-M-Northern 300 lo\n$10;   No;  2 White ' :Oaui,'*6' to  97.\nWINNIPEG    GRAIN    QUOTATIONS\n,    ' fipen   High   Low   Close\n''\u25a0Ms \u2014\n.May      !V 1 ICHj,    Hl>\u00ab 100%\ninly      lOiry; 103%      99 89 tt\nOct 87% 87%      S3',b '86%\nBarley\u2014\nMuy      1(13% 105%    Mlft ll!3\nduly      100% 102'X,    159% 160%\nFlax*-\nMay  510 G10  501 501\nJuly  503 503  496 496\nRye\u2014 \u25a0... . .\u201e \u2022'.    ; ,\u25a0;\nMay,.. ,.\u2022.<.\/.;j_i41\\ fcvri ** 1*12*36 B15\nMANlTO^BONiTSALE\nTORONTO, April 21\u2014An issue of\n$500,000 province of Manitoba bonds\nwas sold here* to-day to A. 13. Ames\nand Co. The bonds are fbr three\nyears, bear 5 per cent, und are payable ih Toronto and New. York, It\nIs expected that tttey will be offered\nfor Sale in New York within the\nPext few days, on a basis to yield\n7 per cent or a little over. At the\nprice paid by the purchasers, the\nprovince will borrow on a bas\nof   SH   per   cent.\nTORONTO LIVESTOCK\nTORONTO, April 21.\u2014Cattle, re-\"\noelpts 1,900. The cattle trade was\nslow at fairly steady prices, with\nyesterday's average. \u2022 A few heavy\nsteers were on sale und four head\naveraging 1,350 pounds, Bold tat\n14.00, with \"several small lots moving ; atH 14.00 to 14.50, the bulk of\nthe: butcher\" cuttto selliilg at 12.75\nto 13.75, with choice cows at 11.00\nto 13.00 and best bulls at 11.00 to\n12.00. Calves, receipts ,1,246. - Thff\ncalf\/trade Was slow with priced\nabout steady With yes.le.rduy... Best\ncalves sold ut 21.50, mont sales being made at 15.00 to 19.00.\n' Sheep, receipts 58. The lamb and\nsheep trade was firm. A lot of\nSpring lambs Sold dt 18.00 each.\nYearlings were up to 21,00 and ewes\nup to 17.00.'\nHogs, receipts 3,273. The hog\ntrade \u2022 is unsettled, with packers\nbidding 20.50 to 20.75 and commission firms sold for 21.00. No sales\nhave   helm   reported,\nMONTREAL, April 21.\u2014Trading\nin listed stocks on the Montreal\nexchange today amounted to 13,593\nshares.\nThere was a better distribution of\ndealings in -the market than on tliti\nprecoding day, only one issiie out of\n48 furnishing better than 1000 'Shares to the trading. This issue was\nBrompton, in which the turnover\namounted to 2,635 shares. On the\nother hand, ten issues finished better than the half thousand mark,\nagainst seven on Tuesday. Those\nissues included among the most active, Spanish River preferred, Dom-\nihkm -Steel, Spanish River common,\nAtlantic Sugar and Laurentide * in\nthe order named and to a lesser degree, Cejncnt and National Brew-\ncries.\nWith the exception of Sugar and\nBrompton, each of the issues named closed at a net loss for the day,\nfollowing general strength throughout the whole list In the early\ntrading and active liquidation in\nthe afternoon. Sugar was tho day's\nstronger feature, finishing tho trading ut a. ndt gain of \\_ points at\n88%, the day's best price, with\n88 % bid for more stock at tho close\nand none on offer. Dealings am\nounted to 665 shares. Brorrt'pton,\nthe day's active feature, opened at\n86%.. ot % point above the preceding day's close and advancing to\n87%, from which there was a gradual reaction in- the afternoon to\n85% and rallying. to 85%,-In\" tho\nafternoon. The Soanish River: stocks\nshowed greater ; weakness than on\nthe preceding day. The steels were\namong the-'Weaker features. . Laurentide, which lost ,2H points on\nTuesday, lost a further point today\nat 93%, but closed at 93%, with no\nstock   offered   under   94%. ;:\nDedajre). It* Object Is to\nBefog; Must Re-establish\nLab*.  :\nWINNIPEG! April 22.(\u2014Canadian\nP--s_),-Ch-.glng O.B.U. leaders\nwith tiding to befog the minds of\nworkers, arid declaring that If .they\nwould only come Into the open and\nstate their policy, this would be\nfound, only to lead to one erid, tho\npredomination of one class over other sections, of\u25a0\u25a0 the cominunity, Tom\nMoore, president of. the trades congress ot Canada, addressed a meeting of the 'Winnipeg trades and\nlabor council last night. MP. Moore,\nwith other international labor leadr.\ners, Is in theJclty at the request of\nthe trades oouncll, to review tho\nsituation, with-a view to the trades\ncongress fbrmulatlng a policy in\nconnection-.with the release of the\ncondemned leaders, the support of\ntheir dependents, and the establishment ot labor before law. He refrained from malting any statement\nas to the. policy that might be\nadopted. 'He. made it clear that the\nconferences which had -been held so\nfar *4n . the city had demonstrated\nthat therei. wag no division of opinion between the officers of the tradt\nes congress and the members of\nthe trades' council, executive as to\nwhat should be done.\n. Mr. Mopre made a sharp retort\nto tho circular issued by the defense committee, and especially the\nparagraph stating that the Canadian\ncongress had tried to do their beat\nto retard work, of the defense.by\nlying Insinuations.\n\"The men who issued a statement\n.of that kind,\" he said, '\".re simply\nstating that they are willing to\ngamble with the comfort of the\nwives and children -of the, convicted\nmen, that they are willing- to gamble\nwith the men's liberty, and that\nthey are willing to gamble with the\nworkers, iri orde. that they might\nmaintain the prejudice created\nagainst the international labor\nmovement.\"\nMr. Moore claimed that the whole\nquestion could only be effectively\nhandled by the . trades congress,\nracked by the rank and file' of labor.\nBLIIlCiES\nI\nSix Lives Known to Be Lost\nand Several Persons Miss\ning; Herds Perish\nDENVER, Colo., April 21. \u2014 At\nleast six persons lost thoir ives in\nthe bli-zard which raged over Colorado, from .Baturday to Monday, and\nmany others are reported, missing.\nThree of thX'; dead were sheep herders, and their herds porishod with\nthem. Nineteen other herds are missing and their herders ttrc believed\nto be lost, tilso.\nMOUN'CIE'S estate %\nVANCOUVEK, April 21.\u2014The- eB-\ntate of the late Superintendent J.\nHorrlgtin, of tho. Royal Canadian\nMounted Police, who died recently\nin Honolulu, is valued at $90i)G\u201e according to pagers filed In court hero\ntoday. Tho estate is divided between relatives and charitable institutions.\n\u25a0\u25a0\"\u25a0\u2022\u25a0T-     '    '*\u25a0\nMartin Luther Is said to have originated the Idea' ot the Christmas\ntree. .  ''\nAH . enameled. jewel Lwhich belonged .to' Klnfe:'Alfred.- Is on .display \u00abt\nOxford.\nmum\nStrains The Lungs\nThe terrible, hacking,' lung-wracking cough*-th^t sticks to you in spito\nof everything ydu have done to get\nrid of it is a great source of danger\nto your health, arid the longer it\nis allowed to stick'the more serlout\nthe menace becomes.\nTou can easily get rid of the cough\nor cold. at its inception by using\nDr. Wood's Norway 1?ino Syrup, a\nremedy that has. been universally\nused throughout Canada for the\npast 3d years.\nI Mrs\". Samuel Matthews, Portage,\nP.E.I., writes:\u2014\"Last winter I caught\na heavy cold, and was laid up for\nsometime. I had ouch a hacking\nCough I could not sleep: at night, and\ndid not think I could ever get over\ntt The day a friend dropped In to\nsec mo, and was surprised to .nee\nhow bad my COUgh was.. She ad-\nVised me to use Dr. Wood's Ndrway\nPine Syrup, m tho -next day I sent,\nfor a bottle and noon got relief,'audi\nby the time I had taken two bottled,'\nray cotigh wae all gone. I doubt\nthere is anything to equal* it.\"\nDr. \"Wood's Norway- Pine ; Syrup\nis put up in a yellow wrapper; 8\nbine trees the trade mark; price 25c,\nand SOc. Manufactured only by Tho\nT. Milburn Co\u201e Limited, Toronto.)\nOnt     ' V'      \u2022 ;\u25a0'     l\n(Continued from Page' Thi-co) t\nin the. price's of . the baser rtietals,'\nwhich had the effect of curtailing production, all around,,- Towards the end\nof,.the period, -shipments from the\nSu|livart mine were interfered with by\na Strike, and finally *'unprecedented!y\ncold weather caused a shortage of\nwater supply and crippled the plants\nvery   seriously.\n. \"Labor remained very scarce throughout the entire period, making It impossible for, the mines to hold up the\ntOithflge and' still keep *up the grade\nof the product. Nearly ftll materials\nIncreased in price, so that operating\n-qosts generally were excessive ahd abnormal.\nReview of. Plants\n\"Reviewing the plants separately:\nCppper Plant:\u2014The main source of\ntonnage for this plant Is the company's\nRpssland property, Owlim* to the very\nhigh cost of operation and the shiall\navailable tonnage of. ore sufficiently\nhigh in grade to offset this cost, it\nwas not considered advisable to mine\nlarge tonnage at Rossland. Mining\noperations were, therefore, conducted\non a very small scale and only one\ncopper furnace was operated at the\nsmelter. While the tonpage was s6\nsmall that both mining and smelting\ncosts were high, the metallurgical recoveries were the best that have ever\nbeen obtained in the smelter, and tonnage  considered,  the* costs  wero  very\n;IOW.\nLead Plant:\u2014Most of the ore treated\ncame from the Sullivan mine and consisted of crude ore 6r Vine plant tailings, but there was an Insufficient\nsupply of ore, a condition that will bo\nremedied , when the. new Sullivan con*\nccntratoi'H have readied the point\nwhere they can, provide the required\nlead tonnage. There has been much\nImprovement in the clast. of customs\nore received, shippers taking more care\nto ettmintite the. zinc from their lead\nconcentrates. The metallurgical Work\nof the lead plant has been greatly im-\niroved, this year's work, considering\nvhe analyses of the ores treated, being\nbetter metallurglcally than that of any\nof the last 10 years.\nZinc Plant :-r-Owlng to the delayed\ncompletion .of the magnetic concentrator through the non-dejlvery of\nmachinery, the cost of production in\nthis plant did not decline as-expected.\nThis cost was Increased too through\nthe raw ore. dropping in grade dwisjg\nnuxluly** td shortage of labor at the\nmine. The magnetic concentrator ia\nnow completed, so that much lower\nCosts and higher production should\nprevail.    .\n\"Copper Refinery:\u2014Improved methods have been introduced and better\npractice prevails. The pi-odtiet is now\nadmitted to be thoroughly high grade,\nand most suitable to the trade. The\npresent capacity (20 tons of refined\ncopper per day) is being increased to\n&0 tons of refined copper per day, to\ntulte care of the production of the\nCanada Copper corporation under a\ncontract  with  that  copipahy.\n\"Lead Refinery:\u2014This plant has continued to turn out its uniformly high\ngrade product, and has shown very\nmarked improvement In costs, which\nare now well below the costs of a\nParkes' process plant operating on the\nsame tonnage.   .\n\"Gold ahd Sliver Refinery:\u2014The gold\nand silver refinery has been practically rebuilt, and is now thoroughly\nUp-to-date.\n\"Acid Plants.\u2014These- plants operated\nsatisfactorily during the period.\n. Concentration Department\n'Zinc Leiid Ores:\u2014A flotation mill\nof 200 tons daily capacity was run\nfor several months on low grade\nRbssland ore. This mill proved beyond a doubt that the Rossland ores\ncon'be concentrated at reasonable, cost\nartd\" with good .recoveries.' Plan** lire\nWell'under way for a concentrator to\nhandle 1500 . tons of* RoSBlaitd ore\ndaily. ' \u25a0\"\"\u25a0*.*   \/'\n'Researcl) Department:\u2014This department Is, a very Important factor in the\ndevelopment of new processes and improving old methods, and has done\nmuch good work during tlie period\nunder review..\n\"In General:\u2014Many improvements\nhave been installed and some very\nheavy renewals have been made during\ntly. period. The plants are in better\ncondition than at the beginning of the\nperiod. '   .\nMining Department\n'Mining costs have been affected\nby the low tonnage' produced In the\nsame manner as the reduction plants.\nWhile the developments in the Coast\nCopper and Sunloch properties have\nbeen very satisfactory, probablyv the\nmost gratifyipg think has been the\n.actual opening up of the ore bodies\nfoil tho JOW.etVtunnel leyej. qt th? Sullivan mine,' The ore opened up here,\nWhile slightly ' different1 in1 character,\nIS richer and larger' thai! tny tine expected, and assures even greater tonnages in this tremendous ore deposit.\nIMie   tonnage   developed  at   this   mine\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 -\u25a0 .^is-emsmxsmmx^ssessm\u2014as-BB-SB-\neasily justifies the building of a concentrator of from 2000 to 3000 tons ot\nore per dav. Tne erection of such a\nplant at the Jftlnel will make great\nSavings In freight, besides which the\noperation on such' a large scale will\ngreatly lower t\u00a7e cost of production.\nATiother advantage derived from a\nmill of this slzet.wlll ne that tt will\ninsure a sufficient supply of lead\nconcentrates to make a very substanf\ntial   lead  production.    '\n\"Fluorspari-^he opening of the Rock\nCandy mine and the building of a concentrator at that mine has added a\npew industry to the Hit. Tho company are now able to supply practically any grade of fluorspar required iri\nfhe trades.\n\"In spite -of the fact that Jt was\nimpossible tb follow the highest wage\nScales paid in the country, the best of\nour employees remained in our service\nand have raised the Standard of efficiency.\n\"The staff have worked faithfully\nand loyally in the face of difficult\nconditions, and It IS -largely duo to\ntheir efforts that the company's operations are as successful as thoy are.\nThe following officers have ,becn In\ncharge of the various \u25a0 departments:\nW.   M.   Archibald,   manager   of   mines,'\nand his efficient staff;. T. W. BlnsaAl\nComptroller;   James   Buchanan,  smelteiil\nsuperintendent;   B.  A.   Stimmel,   supers!\nintendbirt' Bine   plant;   P.   R - Eettsley^T\nsuperintendent copper  and  lead  refin-f\ncries;   J,   J.   Flnglnnd,   superintendent^\ngold and silver refineries; R. W. Dia-|\nmond,      superintendent      concentration\nand  testing; G.  F.  Chapman, construci\ntion on filacer; G. E. Murray, assistant\nsuperintendent of smelter;  A;  L.  Mac-\nCallum,    superintendent    acid    plants!\nR.    K,    Blots,    superintendent   smoke\nplants;   F.   S.   Willis,   H.   Woodburn,\nGraham   Crluckshnnk    and    R.,' G.\nAnthony,    department    supBrlntendentsL\nin the sine plant; t). G. Hissett, chiefI\nchemist;. J,   L,' Maclachlan,   chief   ac-I\ncounttint; R M. Stiles, chief draughts-l\nthan;   F.  B.   Lee,   W.   H.   Hannay   andfr\nH;    R.   Motherwell,    research   department\"\ntfttOPltf   AND   iOSS\n\u25a0 Tho profit and loss account for thai\nIS\" -months shows gross' receipts ofl\n$13,01)2,408.70, of which amount 9076,-1\n065.13 was.profit, The suni of fi,-|\n195,64.0.63 was expended on mining,!\nSmelting and general expense, ahdl\n$280,271.38 was expended on devolop-|\nmont.\n. The   following  Is   the  statement   of profit and .loss account:\nTo ores, metals and smelter product\u2014Oil   hknil  and .,                       .     _    .\nIn   transit at Sept:   80,  1018  $2,828,41\u00a7.fiC\nTo customs <jrti, lead artd bullion purochhSed     3,OG0,l38(..34\nTo freight on ore from company's mines    8&8,3?G.0O\nTo  mining,  smelting and genorat   oxpensos:\nMolly Gibson mine  5 68,072.80\nRlchmond^Rureka mine  -    202.87\nHighland  mine     -.     35,730.28\nNo.   1  mine  6,806.13\nBt.  Kugertc mine     29,621.90\nSullivan -mine      .  033,208.35\nRossland   properties      4l3.83fl.l8\nNo.   7   riilne  1,753.80\nLucky   Thought   mine    ;  217.82\nEmma mine  40,091.94\nOttawa mine \u2014 \u2014  689.4Q\nSan  Poll  mine     ..... 16,820.23'\nTadnnnc Reduction plant  4,041,592.78\nTo  development expenses:\u2014\nMolly Gibson mine  \t\nHighland, mine   \t\nSullivan   mine   \t\nRossland   properties   ....\nEmma   mine\t\n5,195,640.03\n$16,705.78\n27,072.50\n40,888.62\n175,119.54\n20,484.04\n^To   depreciation\t\nLTo directors'  fees     ....\n|To bond interest\t\nTo sundry items written off, including had.'debts.\nTo  balance\u2014Profit\t\n280.271.38.\n\u25a0    102,139.50\n\"     7,050,00\n185,589.35\n2*120.27\nS76-065.13\n : L\u2014\u2014\u2014.\n?13,O02,408,'.C\n$9,76ij*05.\u00ab0\nBy sales of smelter product, ores, etc.\t\nBy or\u20acs, metals and smelter product on    band     and    Ih    transit ,    \u25a0-____\n(value of metal  contents corrected to market quotations  2,987;2s7.22\nBy .rents and sundry revenues  1L659.13\nBy West Kootenay Power and Light Company, Ltd., dividends... 242,6^7.21\n\"%\"*\n? 13.002,408.70\nINSURANCE\nSTOCKS RENTALS\nREAL  ESTATE\nD.ST. DENIS\nPhONE   39 609 WARD  ST.\nNELSON, B.C.\nA Display Ad in the\nDAILY NfcWS\n. \u25a0   0\nEnters Many Homes\nCatches Many Eyes\n'   c\nSAILINGS    TO    SUftOVB\nFrom Quebec To\nVictorian  May 7 '. Liverpool\nEmp. France May 14 Liverpool\nFrom Montreal\nCofsican   May 8 .....Liverpool\nScotian May  9 Havre-London-\n. \u25a0    . Antwerp\nMellta   May 15 Liverpool\nSicilian May 19 Glasgow\nGrampian   May 21   Havre-Lqn-\n;   \u25a0    .      don-Antwerp\nrtmieiafi May 28 Antwerp\nFOr particulars apply\nJ. J.  PORSTEB,  Gsn.  Agent\nCan. Fao. By Station\nv Vancouver, B.C.\nCANADIAN  PACIFIC\n1CEAN SERVICES,\nThe NELSON IRON WORKS, Lid.\nNELSON,  B.C.\nMining, Sawmill and General\nMacWne|py, New and\nSecond Hand\nSEND USiYOUR INQUIRIES\n_i_\nWi. PILLS .\n,       -\u2022    KIDNE'-\ni$sii\u00bb\nSUNDAY, MAY 2,1920\nTr\u00abn\u00bbrC_n\u00bbil\u00bb L|init\u00abil again In\ntervtoa\nDetails trom- Local .Agents or\nWrit.   \u2022    '   \u25a0  -\nJ. S. CARTER,\nDist.  P\u00ab_._naer  A.iSnt\nmmmmmmmtgmmmmimtm\nMpre Money .IS Made\njby Judicious Investments\ntnan by (Lucky Speculation\nA judicious ittVestment is one which has good possibilities of large\nprofits with very little chance of loss. \u25a0 \u25a0 .,\n2,750,000 auto tires will be used ih Canada during _92l, representing an outlay of over $100,000,000. The profits to the manufacturers of these, tires will be over $10i000,000.\nThe Gregory Tire & Rubber Co. Ltd. of Vancouver,\nB.C., is preparing to start the manufacture of tires\nat its new factory at Port Coquitlam within a few\n\u2022 It is estimated on a conservative basis that in 1921\nthe company will supply at least 150,000 tires\nin addition to its output of inner tubes. t\nThis is less than 6 per cent of Canada's demand\n\u2014only a drop in the bucket\u2014but sufficient to\nshow a profit of over $500,000 for the year.\nThe: capital' stock! of the company is $1,500,000\u2014150,000 \u2022 Shares\n6f par value of $10. .\u25a0 \u25a0'.\u25a0\u25a0....\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\\'-     \/.'.:-.;       = .'?.VfV,V'vJ'^'J \u25a0:\u25a0 -'.'^i\nWtiat profits wililtHe 'Slwrekoldm -draw-on-tHeir-investment?\n^Figure it out for iVQiyriielf.i.   .' :, ,,,'\u25a0. . ;.;;\u25a0,.,..\n-f^hen-wrtte the .undersj^hea''Fiscal: Agents lot .particulars which .\nWill convince \u2022 the most skeptical 'that this is \u2022 a judicious investment ' \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0.f. .\u25a0\u2022\u25a0  >.,.\u2022\u25a0' . .  ;\u25a0.;,. .:\nw\n<w\/\nAct at  Once\u2014Only  a  limito-  number  of  Shares  ar*  available for\n,\u00bbl\u00bb\u2014This i\u00bb.1h\u00ab last time5theie Shares can bo obtained at Par.\n1; JiMcGiyern % Ci>.\n\u25a0m _miiBi__________________i\n#\n;X F|SCAL '^ENIS;;,;,^\n1322 Standard Bank Building\nVANGOUVBiR. B. C.\nJ. ._|iL..i|IJ .III' . I  . .! 'Jl... ILl-ll' It'tuKIl .111.111111*1. IHU'l!i|\u00abi\"\u00bb'iW,|\nMcGivern\n'& \/     1322 8tandard ,\n\u25a0_    '\/ Bank Bids.\nr\u00a3f \/      Vanoouver, 8, C,\n'4j \/ I  desire  to In-\nr vest  lp  the Greg-\n\u25a0 ory Tire & Rubber\nCo.,. Ltd., to the. extent\n*r ;';..!\"..;..;.: shares.\nPlease, send tne full\nparticulars or have your\nrepresentative call on\nme.\n~>   ...........4\n W.-M\nlM.\nTHE DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, APRIL 22, 1020\nPage 111\nSmall    Advertisements\nH'hat   Bring   Quick   Returns\nClassified Advertising, Rates\nPer insertion, one cent per yord.\nMinimum  25 centB. ,     *       .\nSix consecutive insertions, four cents\ntier word when cash is paid ln advance.     Minimum   25   centB.\nPer month,  daily,  18   cents  a  word.\nNo accounts opened for classified\n\u2022 advertising*.\nEach initial, figure, dollar sign, eta.\ncounts as one  word.\nLegal Advertising (Includes Calls for\nTenders, Water Notions, Certificates of\nImprovement and other Satutory Notices, etc., and Municipal and Government Notices)\u201412c per line for the\nfirst Insertion and So per line for\neach subsequent Insertion.\nNotices\u2014Birth or Marriage Notices,\nDeath Notices, Funeral Notices, Cards\nof Thanks, In Memorium Notices, 2%c\na word, minimum 60c List of \"Wedding Presents or -Floral Offerings, 10c\na line.\nBlack face capitals three timet the\nrate for ordinary  type.   .\nBlack face type, double rates for\nordinary type. .\nBlack   face   capital   headlines,   36c.\nLocal Beading Notices \u2014 2%o per\nword each insertion. In black face or\nmachine capitals, 3o per word. Black\nface capitals 4c per word, 26 per cent\ndiscount if run for one month or\nmore. Where advertisement is set out\ntn Bhort lines the eharge is 12%c per\nline for Roman type, 15o for black\nface, and 20c for black face capitals.\n. Minimum   charge   86c.        ____^___\u201e\n10   Male Help Wanted\nneed you to make socks on the fast,\neasily learned Auto Knitter. Experience unnecessary. Distance Immaterial. Positively no canvassing.\nTurn supplied. Particulars, 3c\nstamp. , Dept. 82c Auto Knitter Co.,\n\u2022%pro'rito. (7218)\nJtACIflNlfSTH, Toolnmxurs and Designers may greatly increase their\n\u25a0 earnings through study of I. C. 9.\nMechanical Engineering Course. At\ntractive home study prospectus free.\n\"JntbrnatJonal Correspondence Schools,\nMontreal. (,72_!r.)\n\"WANTED\u2014Competent     mill     man     to\n..overhaul and  take charge of a  lend\nconcentrator at Emerald  mine.    Will\n'\"Bay    right     man   * excellent    wages.\nWrite, wire or telephone, John Walrt-\nbeser,   manager,   Salmo. (7543)\nWANTED\u2014To communicate' with parties having telephone poles for sale\nfor quick delivery. J, T. McCool,\n11. Black Block, Regina, Sask.  (7530)\nWANTED\u2014Man aiftl wife for ranch.\nMlin to team and do general work.\nWife to cook for few men. Apply\nMidway Ranch,  Midway,  B.C.   (7500)\nUSE these columns If you have anything to sell or want to buy ar.y-\nthing. A 25-word ad. costs 25c for\none insertion or $1 for a week, ca&h\nin  advance.\nDOGGER wanted with teams to log\nhalf million feet logs. Midway Sawmill.   Midway,   B.C.        (7441)\nWjCNTED \u2014 At once, one edgerman,\nwages $6.60, 9 hours. J. S. Des-\nchamps,  Blrchbank,  B.C. (7370)\nWANTED\u2014Setter, millwright, dogger,\nedgerman, trimmer man, planer man,\nengineer, sawmill men; practical men\nrequired. , Good wages paid. Apply\nJ. B. Winlaw, Duck Creek, B.C. (7375)\nWANTED\u2014Operating millwright, at\nonce. John Ktlpatrlck, Wardnp.r,\nB.C.  (7317)\nUSE these .columns if you have any-,\nthing to sell or want to buy anything. A 25-word ad. costs 25c for\none insertion or $1 for a week, cash\nfn  advance.\t\nWANTED\u2014Two gangs ot log  cutters,\n?aywg $1.75 per thousand feet; good\nImber,  under  ten  logs   to   thousand\nfeet, level ground.    Salmo Cedar Co.,\nParks Siding. B.C.  il2\u2122*\nWANTED\u2014Edgerman for sawmill. Apply .Forest Mills of B.C., Ltd., Cascade, or Nelson, B.C. (7219)\nWANTED\u2014Dishwasher,    male    or    fe-\nmaife.    Apply The Grill. (7213)\n11 Female Help Wanted\nWANTED\u2014DinttiB   room   girl   at   once.\nApply   Hume   Hotel. (7517)\nGIRL  wanted  at onco.    Apply   Nelson\nSteam Laundry. (7515)\n\u25a0WANTED\u2014Girl for housework In small\nfamily.   Phone 255R after six.  (7513)\nWAiNTED\u2014Experienced      stenographer\n'    and    bookkeeper.     State    salary   re-\nnulred   and   give   references.     Apply\nBox number 14s. (7501)\nA 25-word advertisement can be run in\ntfil. column for a week for II cash\nftp advance.    It will-nay- yoa  well.\nWANTED   \u2014'   At   once,   2   women   for\nhousecleaning.    Hume   Hotel.   (7306)\nWANTED\u2014Experienced dining room\ngirl. Winnipeg Hotel, Grand Forks\nwages   |35   per   month. (7289)\nADVERTISING in these columns pays\nwell. That Is why bo many people\nline Classified Ads\nWANTED\u2014Waitress.\nHqtel.\nGrand    C-ritra.\n(7171)\n12  SituationsWanted Female\nSexI'IORH-NCED woman cook wants\ncamp cooking. Accustomed to handling fairly lnrge crew. Apply Box\n7528    Nelson    News. (7528)\n|ff Sifa\u00abHoM_W\u00ab^ted^^e\nI'V^N^KP^Position by man and wife.\nFirst class cooks 'and bakers. Large\nor small crew. Steady nnd\" reliable\nBox 749ff Dally News.    , (7-196)\nWindow\nEnvelopes\nAddress Themselves\nMade ot hlghgrado whit* wove\nstock and with a window of\nclear transparent quality.\nTHEY 8AVF  HOURS OF\nVALUABLE   TIME\nwhen lending out Invoice,, bllla\nor letters.\nWrite for sample! *nd quota-'\ntion,. 1   ' >.      'i\nThe Daily News Job\nirtment\nTha Horn* of Good Printing\nNELSON, B. C.\n23   Property for Sale        19   POULTRY & EGGS\nPOR pALIS\u201460 acres of land at Winlaw. Reasonable. Apply Mrs. H.\nDcarln, Slocan City. (7034)\nPOR SALE\u2014By owner, modern 6\nroomed house, large living room,\ndining room, kitchen, pantry, and one\nbed room on ground floor. Two\nlarge bedrooms and bathroom 'Upstairs. One large lot with garden\nand garage in good residential section. One block from car. This\nhouse is In splendid condition; stone\nfoundation and very well built. Price\nfor quick sale $2350. Reasonable\ncash payment, balance monthly. Box\n7492 Dally News. (7492)\nPOR rent or aale\u2014Fully modern 8\nroomed house and 4 good lots in\nFdlrvlew. Pull particulars, owner,\nP.O.   Box  698. (74G2)\nPOR SALE\u2014Six roomed cottage and\ntwo lots in Falrview, $1500, with\nterms. Apply W. M. Stubbs, Nelson\nAve.,   Falrview. 17403)\nWHY buy rent receipts? Bargains-\nFive rooms, two lots near car. $900.\nFour rooms and bath close Carbonate street. A. L. Wilson, O.K. Barber Shop. \u25a0  (7408),\n45    Property Wanted\nARRO^Xaltir^miti^\nperties   wanted.     Give   full   particulars.     H.   E.   Dill,   Nelson. (7541)\nI WANT listings of Slocan Valley\nfarm lands for sale; also lands appraised, inspected and reported on,\nlow charges. Geo. A. Hlrd, Hawthorne Ranch, Winlaw, B.C.      (7439)\nIMPROVED ranch for Hale. One hundred and forty acres. Good buildings, roads, close to school. Forty\nacres ready for plow. Right price\nand easy terms. Apply owner, Box\n07,  Trail. (7538)\nPOR SALE OR RENT\u2014On West Arm,\n2 % acres, 6 Vj miles from ferry, 5\nroomed house and out-houses; water\npiped to house, $12r,0. Apply H,\nMldOleton,   R.   It.   No.   1,   Nelson.\n(7459)\n* & \u25a0 \u25a0\"ArtWfcs forJSate >\nHEINTZMAN- PIANO to* sale. Reasonable price. Will allow short time\nfor payment If necessary, Box 7535\nDally   News. (7535)\nFOR SALE\u2014A bargain.    A Carey safe,\nas   good   as   new.     Outside   measurements  118x49,    J. J. Walker, Nelson.\n(7516)\nFOR SALE\u2014Studehaker wagon, one\nhorse plow, both new. Apply P.O.\nBox 34, Rossland.' (7514)\n\u25a0'OR SALE\u2014Assayer's outfit, suitable\nfor mine. Used very little, Box\n7472   Dally   News.    (7472)\nFOR SALE\u2014One Taylor safe, also\nNational Cash Register. Will sell at\na bargain. Apply to Mrs. Ben Long,\nCreston,   B.C. (7473)\nPRINTED ENVELOPES cost little\nmore than plain envelopes and they\ngive a much better Impression to\nyour customers. Write The Dally\nNews  Job  Department   for  samples\nunr.   nrlffta\n5i_Arh^Wwited__.\nW^VN^rED^for'^easti, second hand motorcycle. Harley or Indian Twin preferred.,    Apply   Box 1388,  Trail,   B.C.\n-\u25a0\u2022-r.^T   r*\"-\"       \"' '\"-' (\"40)\n37 Boats and Automobiles\nMcLAVGHLTN Five Passenger, six\ncylinder, light touring car for sale\ncheap. Almost new. Bought last\nvear and in fine shape. Extra tires.\nOwner leaving country. Apply Box\n7548   Daily   News. (7548)\nFOR SALE\u2014McLaughlin D. 35-4 cylinder, the most popular car ever manufactured. This car is in good order\nand for sale cheap. Phone 491. Box\n1090. (7524)\nFOR    SALE\u2014Plat    bottom    rowboat,\nnearly new.    Cheap,    Box  857.     (7521)\nFOR  SALE\u20141  Ford, one  ton  truck  in\nfirst  class  condition.    Nel?on Transfer  Company,  Limited,  Phone 35.\n(7405)\nEGGS from prize winning Rose Comb\nReds, $2 for 15. A. Treglllus, Box\n543,   Nelson. (7479)\nWHITE Leghorn hatching eggs for\nsale. Heavy laying strain. 52 ner\n15; $12 per 100. Wlckham & Mit-\nchell, Robson, B.C. (7650)'\nFOR SALE \u2014 Two valuable Barred\nPlymouth Rock Cockerels, from prize\nstock, and great layers. Apply to\nAylmer,   Queen's   Bay,   B.C.       (7481)\nEGGS for Hatching, from my champion winners. Best in B.C.; S. C.\nRhode Island Red and S. C. White\nLeghorn, $3 per 15. T. Bowen, Columbia Poultry Yards, Grand Forks,\nB.C. (7314)\nINCUBATORS for sale\u2014One cyphers,\n200 eggs, one cycle, 50 eggs, Brix\n484 Kaslo. (7461)\nBARRED ROCKS wxcluslvely. Visitors, call and see my splendid mat-\nings: $2 per 15, T. Roynon, Phone\n434L2, Nelson. (7102)\nHATCHING EGGS\u2014S. C. White Leghorns, Barrons cockerel, heavy laying strain, $2.00 per 15. A. A. Pitch-\nford,  Nelson. (6837)\nHATCHING Eggs, White Wyandottes,\nRegal strain, two-fifty per fifteen,\nfour-fifty per thirty, $7 per fifty,\ntwelve dollars per hundred. White\nLeghorns and S. C. Reds, $2 per\nfifteen, five-fifty per fifty, Atkinson,   Nelson.     Phone   1SSL3.      (15930)\n20    Livestock for Sale\nFo1T\"*1^u^15^o1iu^^\nIn   April,   first  calf;   also  one  colt,   2\nyears    old,     will     make    big    horse.\nApply  Mrs.  Anderson,  South   Slocan.\n(7:is7)\nFOR SALE\u2014Roan horse, 900 lbs., good\nworker, age a years. Cheap. Box\n47,  Sllverton. * (7521!)\nFOR SALE\u2014Three young horses, cheap\nfor quick sale, in good condition.\nWeight about 1200 pounds, work\ndouble and single. T. Anderson, Cascade,   B.C. (7525)\nFOR RALE\u2014A reliable pony, drive or\nsaddle, with single work harness. A.\nCameron,  Balfour. (7527)\nPOR SALE \u2014 Three Collie Airedale\nPups, from good sheep and cattle\ndogs, $5.00 each. W. G. Bateman,\nMoyle, B.C. \" (7476)\nFOR   SALE\u2014One   good   Ayrshire   and\nJersey cow, 4 years old, good milker.\nApply   Ferryman,   Castlegar,   B.C.\n (7*155)\nFOR SALE\u2014Three year old mare, well\nbroke. Harness complete Three\nyear old pure bred Holstein cow;\ndelivery wagon; also new cutter.\nTerms reasonable. Apply David\nMain, Perry Siding- (745C)\nHORSES for Sale\u20141 team good work\nhorses and harness, $4 00. Weighing about 2800 lbs. Nelson Transfer\nCo., Ltd,, Phone 35.  (7466)\nFOR   SALE\u2014One   Jersey    heifer,    just\nfreshened.    One four year old  registered   Jersey   cow,   freshen   last   of\nApril.    Jones & Janson,  Sirdar,  B.C.\n(7400)\nFOR SALE\u2014Registered Black Aberdeen Angus bull, 3 years old; seven\n10 weeks old pigs. Wm. Schad, Bull\nRiver,   aC. (7395)\n14 Furnished Rooms to Rent\nFURNISHED ROOMS\u2014Clean, comfortable, steam heat, shower baths,. $2.25\nper week, $9.00 and $10.00 per month,\nY.M.CA. (7214)\n28 Miscellaneous Wanted\nWAftTFffi^f^                  two thousand\ndollars,   improved   revenue producing\nproperty   security\u2014reliable party.   H.\nE.   Dill,   Nelson. (7540)\nWANTED to borr.ow $3000 on mort\ngage. Good security. Apply 170\nNelson Daily News. (7482)\nSLIGHTLY used Chevrolet for sale;\ncheap for cash. Address Box 7489\nDaily News.   (7489)\n33 Fruits and Vegetables\n_tT*ACtv^urrant   fi*ush\"\"e1_     SuuiTBeN\nglum Boskup,' 2 years old, 25c each.\nT.   Roynon,   Nelson,   Phone   434L2.\n(750S)\nRED Surrey Carrot Seed and other\nfield carrots, $1.00 lb.; mangels 75c\nlb. All garden seeds sold in bulk\nnnd package. Gopher death tablets,\n$2.00 box. Mall orders filled. Ruth-\nerford prug Company. (7468)\n42        Matrimony\nF.   Morrison,   1,-300-   W.  Holden   St.,\nSeattle,  Wash  (74.7)\nA. 25-word advertisement can be run\nin this column for a week for $1\ncash in advance. It will pay you\nwell. \t\n29    Lost mi Found^^^\nLOST\u2014Saturday noon, Alberta Gold\nCoin brooch, also amethyst brooch\nvalued as presentation gll't. Finder\nreturn   to  Dally   News.     Reward.\n(7551)\nLOST\u2014A gold bracelet,    Roward, r.O.\nBox   1094. (74.16)\nLOST\u2014Purse containing $15 and two\nbrooches.      Reward.      Return    Daily\n_News.       (7448)\nLOST\u2014Dark brown Stetson hat, sf_e\nIV., in Eagle Hall Saturday night.\nPhone 381R1, or call 712 Victoria\nstreet. (7188)\nWANTED\u2014Good ranch horse, 1400 lbs.,\nmust be under 8 years and sound.\nCame,   Proctor. (7475)\n2JMMachiMi7jW^\nWANTBD^One n^iJmepowiif \"eK-trio\nmotor In good condition: Write giving full particulars and prloe to\nNews Publishing Company, Ltd.,\nNelson.  B.C.  \u00bb8W\nPRINTED ENVELOPES cost little\nmore than plain envelopes and they\ngive a muoh better. Impression to\n.your customers. Write The Dally\n' News Job Department for samples\nand prices,\t\n46   Salesmen Wanted\nW^VNTliiD^^SlBr^grao^\ning on the grocery and hardware\ntrade to handle first-class sidelines.\nState lines carried and territory\ncovered. Confidential. F. C Grantham & Co., Ltd., Manufacturing\nChemists, 700-16th Ave. W\u201e Vancouver,  B.C. (7556)\nWANTED\u2014A salesman to cover East\nartd West Kootenay and Arrow Lakes\ndistricts with a full line of nursery\nslock, big demand and little or no\ncompetition, permanent position and\nliberal induoemonts to a full time\nman who can got results. Write at\nonce for particulars and terms, give\nreferences. British Columbia Nurseries Co., Ltd.,1 Sardis, B.C.        (7458)\nA 25-word advertisement can be run\nln this column for a week for $1\ncosh in advance. It. will pay you\nwalL   ^____.. _\n22      Miscellaneous\nYOUH   hair   falling,   what?     Try   the\nViolet   Ray   at   the   Hume    .Harbor\nShop,   2  barbers at  your  attendance.\n(7502)\nUSE these columns if you have- anything to sell or want to buy anything. A 25-Vtbrd ad. costs 25c for\none insertion or $1 for a week, cash\nin advance.\nWE are offering six months' free subscription to the Texas Pacific Oil News\nto all persons sending in their\nname on or before 1st of June, 1920.\nLatest information from all points\ndirect from Texas. Keep posted if you\nhave Invested or contemplate In;\nvesting. York & Webster, Publishers, 419 Winch Building, Vancouver,\nB.C. (7444)\nADVERTISING in these columns pays\nwell.    That Is why so many people\nii go   PI Aval flat*.    kAm\n35\nFor Rent\nFOR RENT\u20143  furnished  housekeeping\nrooms, 524 Latlnicr.  (7404)\nFOR RENT\u2014Floyd Ranch on Rossland\nRoad, consisting of approximately\n300 acres, of which 80 acres are\ncleared. Eight room house and\nbarns. Reasonable rent to desirable\ntenant. Apply Consolidated Mining\n& Smelting Co., Ltd., Trail, B.O\n(7158)\nTO RENT\u2014Offices on upper floor K.\nW. C. block. Apply A. Macdonnld\nCo. (7209)\nFRUIT RANCH to rent  Apply Btrath-\ncona. (7217)\nUSE these columns if you have anything to sell or want to buy anything. A 25-word ad. costs 25c for\none insertion or (1 for a week, cash\nin  advance.\nSecond  Hand  Dealer*\nTHE-ARK pays, cash- for second hand\nfurniture, stoves; 606 Vernon,' Pbont\n651. ' (7237)\nBusiness and Professional\nDirectory\nSaw and Shingle Mill and Mining\nMaohlnery, Yellow Strand Wire Rope;\nLeather and Rubber Belting and Packing; Acme Shingle Bands and Bp.\nStrapping. B. C. Agents Monogram\nOils and Greases. Buy and Sell Steel\nRalls and  Maohlnery.\n-60   Gamble   St.,   Vancouver   B.   O\n(7238)\nA 25-word advertisement can be run\nln this column for a week for $1.\ncash   In advance.    It  will  pay you\nIt.   E.   DHL\nFARM  AND  CITY  PROPERTY\nAll  Branches  of   __.sn.a_oe  Written\n508 Ward St. Telephone 180\n(7239)\nLED   KEE   &  COMPANY\nBoots & Shoes Made to Order, Kopalreil\n612H    -BOKI   ST.        (7240)\nGASOLINE,    Oil,   AND    OAS\nENGINES\u2014roar or two cycle, over-\nhauled, repaired and Installed. Satis-\nfaction guaranteed.   Box 1223, NEl>_OB\n(7179-\nCommission Merchants\nRANCHERS' PRODUCE sold on commission. G. W. Bartlett, Wllllnmf\nSiding. (7300)\nWholesale\nA: MACDONALD & CO., WHOLB8ALI\nGrocers and Provision Merchants, Im\nporters of Teas, Coffees, Spices, Drie<\nFruits, Staple .and Fancy Groceries\nTobaccos, Cigars, Butter, Eggs, Cheoi\nand Packing House Products. Offici\nand Warehouse, corner of Front an(\nHall Btreets. P.O. Bo. 10.95; Tele\nphones  28  and  23. (724H\nFlorists\nGRIZ.EI.l.I.S GREENHOUSE, Nel\nson. Cut flowers and floral de\nsigns. (7242)\nAssayers\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, Bo. A-110S\nNelson, B. C. Standard westen\nCharges. (7242!\nBarristers\nG.   MATTHEW\nBarrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc.\nBox 38.     Alan Block, Kelson.     Ph. 644\n(7244)\nPhysicians  and Surgeons\nDr. A. T. Spankie |\nM.D., CM.\nEYE, NOSE, BAB AND THBOAT\nSPECIALIST\nOffices\u2014Suite    121-122,   New   P.\nBurns Bldg, cor. 8th Ave. and\n..2nd  St.  E.\nCAI.GAI1Y\nPhonos: ... ,\nOffice M2B48 House M 2077\nInterne .and house.y&urg-.o,-of\nManhattan eye, ear, nose and\nthroat hospital, New York City,\n1911-1914.       Specialist     Calgary\nSchool   Board. (7245)\nArchitects\nN.    EMMS    BEAD,    M.B.f.S.A.\nARCHITECT\nBay   Avenue. Trail.  B.   O\n(7246)\nPainters\nB. SCHOF-ELD\nPalnter, Papperhanger and Decoratoi\nTenders given for all kinds of work\nPhone  594 coo's  Baker St\nNELSON, B. C.\n(7247)\nEngineers\nZASLO, B. O.\nH. B. BAWSON\nB.    C.    LAND   SURVEYOR\nCIVIL   AND   MININO   ENGINEER\n(7248)\n^eetv Bros, Burdei2 Cfl\nNelson, B. O.\nCIVIL    AND    MINING    ENGINEEBB\nB.  C,   Alberta   and   Dominion\ni.AHD   SUBVEYOBS\nOrowa   Orant   Agents.   Blue   *^\u00ab\nA. l. Mcculloch,\nByraulio Engineer\nProvincial  Land  Surveyor\nBaker  St.   Nelson  B.  C.\nA 25-word advertisement can be run\nin this column for a week for V\ncash   In   advance.     It  will   pay   yo\u00bb\nA.  D.  NASH,\nMining Engineer\nConsultations,     Explorations    Develop\nment  Reports\nRoom   2,   Royal   Bank   Bldg.,   Nelson\n(7252.\nAuctioneers\nG.    HORSTEAD.    Opera   House    Blk\n(7253\nA 25-word advertisement can be run\nIn this column for a week for $1\ncash in advance, it will pay you\nwell.\nW.   CUTLEB\n..Auctioneer,     Appraiser, Valuator\nGoods   sold   privately   or at   Auctloi\n319 Ward Street Sh\u00b0..54i\nMANILLA\nSECOND SHEETS\nFOR\nLETTER COPIES\nOr for copies of documents or\nstatistics for office use. The\ncheapest and most suitable\npaper for the purposo, at\nAttractive Prices\nAsk for quotations. You will\nfind that our prices are lower\nthan elsewhere.\nThe Daily News Job\nDepartment\nNELSON,  B.C.\nW. MATTHEWS S CO.\nAuctlonerrs\nOffice 508 Ward St. Tel. 180 ft 329S\n(7265-\nBusiness Colleges\n\u00bbr_n?S3rir~irifstssa_^^oi23-8SP\nDay and night classes. Coroplett\nbusiness course. Apply P. O. Bo)\n745. C (7256)\nAccountants\nW.  H. PABBELX,\nPublic   Accountant  and   Auditor\nNELSON,   B.C.\nP.O.  Box   1191 Phono   -T7B1\n(7267)\nW. H. PALDINO,\nPubllo   Accountant,   Bank- of   Montroa\nChambers, Rossland, B. C.\n(7258)\nFuneral Directors\nDTTT^OBERfSON, FJ..D. & B., \u00bb0I\nVlcortla, Blreet, Phone 292; nlghl\nPhone  157-J.     <\u00bb269)\nSTANDARD FURNITURE COMPANY-\nC. J. Carlson, Undertaker. Undertaken\nand Embalmers and Funeral Dlreotors\nThe FlneBt and most up-to-date under\ntaking parlors and chapel In lnterloi\nB. C. Lady attendant for women anc\nchildren.  Day   Phone 85,  Night  Pbont\n262  and   to (78601\nPRINTED    ENVELOPES    cost    HttU\nmora than plain envelopes and the.\ngive   a   muoh   better   Impression .lo\n\u25a0 your   oustomers.    Write   The   Dally\nNewB   Job   Department   for   sample.\nand niioes.\nNEW ARRIVALS\nFrom Canadian Factories and Europe\nWe have recently cleared through the .Nelson Cilstoms House a large quantity\nof British Merchandise, bought from manufacturers and shipped direct to Nelson.\nThis means a saving to you.   No .jobbers' profit.\nThe Canadian Merchandise is chiefly garments for Mene, Women and Children\nand we know that, Quality for Quality, the prices are lower than now obtaining\nin outside points. ,\nTODAY WE ARE OFFERING NEW SPRING\nSUITS\nOF NAVY AND  BOTTLE GREEN   ALL-WOOL\nSERGES  AND   POPLINS  FOR\t\n$57.50\nThese suUh will be found all on one rack. All are brand\nnew suits, bought for the present trade and In style are up-to-\ntbc-mlnute. There are several very cievor models. Some\nof the coats show a now ripple effect and full flare. Others\naro In the more tailored style, trimmed with bra his and\nbuttons. A\u00abnin, a few show fancy vests. All beautifully\ntailored, well lined with plain or fancy slllSa and satins.\nSklt'ta for the most are tailored in the straight lines, gathered\nwaists, with belts. We expect to sell this week\nend every one of these suits at \t\n$57.50\nLadies' Lingerie*\nSummer Underwear\nExceptional Values at\n$1.25\nNightgowns, Combinations.,\nCorset Covers, Petticoats\nand Drawers. Prettily\ntrimmed with fine laces\nand  embroidery.\nMEN'S   NEW   SPRING   DRESS\nSHIRTS\nSmart    and    effective    designs,\nalso neat stripe or plain color\neffects.\nFor  your   selection   is   a   wide\nrange  of  qualities  and  prices\nranging  from\n$2.35 to $5.50\nOur   Men's   Own   Store\nBOYS'    KHAKI    BLOOMERS\nOf- a vary  closely  woven   Drill\n$2.00 to $2.75\nComplete   with   belt   loops,   side\nand hip  pockets'.\nBOYS' DARK GREY COTTON-\nADE   PANTS\nA sturdy school pant,(PQ rtpr\nupwards from  wQtmmD\nDolt loops, side and hip pockets,\ngovernor fasteners.\nMEN'S    NEW   TWEED   HATS\nFOR SPRING ARE HERE\n$4.50\nGood shades in light and dark\ngreys, fawns and heather\nmixtures. Silk lined n\\\\A\nstitched. A hat that will\ngive   lots  of   good   service.\nOur Men's Suits are hard\ntp beat at $26.50 to $52\nQUALITY - FIT - STYLE\n\u2014Features of the New Footwear for Spring\nThree important features in a shoe that every woman is interested\nIn. It is the style which attracts the eye, the quality that gives\nperfect satisfaction, while comfort results from a perfect fitting\nmodel.\n.                       LADIES'   BROWN   KID  OXFORDS\nSharp   toe,   imitation   toe   cap,\nmilitary heel, tf\u00bbQ AA\nPrice  tln\/.UU\nWOMEN'S   PLAIN   PATENT\nOXFORDS\nMade on a nice snappy New\nYork last, with sharp toe and\nwhite welt which gives tho\npleasing erfect to tho foot;\nit has jilso full quarter white\nkid lining and\nleather  heel \t\n$12.50\nLADIES'   BLACK   DONGOLA\nKID  OXFORDS\nCushion solo, rubber heel, medium toe, comfortable last;,\neminently suitable (Pff AA\nfor nurses   v) I \u2022\"\"\nLADIES   BLACK   KID   PUMPS\nLeather Louts heel, long vamps,\non the newest last. Can be\nworn with or without ornament.\nPrice \t\n$7.00\nA SPECIAL SALE OF LINO and FLOOR COVERING\n1000 YARDS R1NGWALK LINO in ten different designs. Made to\nstand   bard   wear.     2   yards   wide. (J>-|   Off\nPrice,   per   square   yard     tDl*OD\n500 YARDS PRINTED FLOOR OILCLOTH in tile and floral designs.    Two  yards  wide.\nl'ric\nper  square\n$1.15\n500  YARDS   HEAVY   PRINTED   LINOLEUM\u2014All  exceptionally  good\ndesigns and colors.   Two yards wide. dj*|   \/\u00bb\u00a3\nPrice,   per   square   yard      _ tDXtOO\nNews of Sport\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nCINCINNATI, April 21.\u2014Ring's\nwlldness In the first Inning enabled\nPittsburg to secure a lead of four\nruns, which the Reds could not\novercome, artd the visitors won their\nsecond straight game from lhh\nhamplons 5  to  3.\nU.  II. E.\nMttsburg    Ti   *8     3\nCincinnati    3   13     2\nBatteries\u2014Cooper and Lee; Ring,\nFisher  and  Rarklau.\namericaTleague\n(, CHIOAnO, April       21.\u2014Chlca.o\nbatted out ati easy victory over St.\nLouis In the final game of tlie\nseries by a score  of  7   to  4.\nR.   H.  E,\nSt.   Louis     4   12     3\nChicago    1     9     3\nBatteries\u2014Gallia, Vongllder and\nScveroltl;   Williams   and   Schalk.\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nAt  Baltimore\u2014 R. II. B.\nBuffalo    0     3     1\nBaltimore    8   12    1\nBatteries\u2014Rogers, Lyons and Ben-\ngough;  Ogden and Egan.\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nSan  Francisco       3\nSeattle       2\nBatteries\u2014Scott and Agnow; Goory\nand Adams. .\nSaltlake       0\nOakland      ........   3\nBatteries \u2014 ftelger 'fend Byler,\niKfause and Mltzfe \u00ab        *V \u2022\n.Sacramento    ...,_f, 3\nVernon       6\nBatteries \u2014 Cooper,!     Horwedge,\nKuntz,   Pennerand,   Schang;   Shellen-\nlaich and Sullivan.\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nAt   aKnsns   City\u2014 R.  H. E.\nSt.   Paul    13   17     3\nKansas   City    4     7     2\nButteries\u2014Merrltt and Hargraves;\nJohnson,   Bolden   und   Sweeney.\nAt   Louisville\u2014 Ft.   H.  E.\nToledo    7   10    2\nLouisville     4      6     1\nBatteries\u2014Nel.on, Stryiter, Long\nand McNeill; Kooh, Wright and\nMeyer.\nAt Indianapolis\u2014 R. H. E.\nColumbus    0     3     0\nindiunupolis    2     .     2\nBatteries\u2014Sherman and Hartley;\nCavot and  Gossett.\nAt   Milwuukec\u2014 R.  H. E.\nMinneapolis    3   10     0\nMilwaukee    2     4     1\nBatteries \u2014 Craft and Mayor;\nNorth  and Gaston.\nPOSTPONED BY RAIN\nAmerican League: Detroit at\nCleveland; Washington at Philadelphia;   New  York at Boston.\nNational League: Boston at\nBrooklyn.\nInternational League: Akron at\nJersey City; Rochester at Syracuse;\nReading  at   Toronto.\nPacific Coast League: Los..Angeles\nat   Portland.\nSASKATOON BOUT\nENDS IN DRAW\nSASKATOON, April 21. \u2014 Eddlo\nFingard, of Winnipeg, und Mickey\nKing, of Australia, fought 16 rounds\nto u draw tonight. King gave a clever\nexhibition throughout, but Fingard\nwas the aggressor in the least two\nrounds, which in tho opinion of the\nreferee entitled him to an even break.\nSENATORS  WIN   SECOND\nVANCOUVER,   April   21.\u2014Suui.b,-\nIng out 15 hits beM._vthe effective\nhurling of Dalley ..and Pillett, tha\nRegina Senators tool, the second\ngame of the series from the Beavers\nhere today,  7  to  1.\nr. h. a\nRegina    7   15    1\nVancouver   '.    ..1     U   '5\nNEXTGOLF MEET\nHopes to Entertain National\nGathering Next Year;;\nComing Championships\nWINNIPEG, April 21.\u2014wim the\nhope that Winnipeg will be accorded tho 1021 championship meet, the\nManitoba GolC association will send\na team of 12 to 15 flayers to tho\nCanadian Golf association tourney\nthis summer. This was decided at\nthe annual meeting of tho Manitoba\nbody here today, when officers were\nelected, and preparations made for\na very active season. The amateur\nchampionships will take place on\nSept. 4, 5 and 6, and It is likely\nthat an open championship when\nInvitations will be issued to some of\nthe best players in America, will\nalso be held.\nEXPLAIN CONTROL\nOF VICTORY BONDS\nOTTAWA, April 21 (Canadian\nPress).\u2014The minister of finance told\nMr. J. H. Sinclair, in the house of\ncommons today that transactions In\nVictory bonds are carried out through\ntho Victory Loan special committee\nat prices fixod from time to time,\nhaving regard to demand and sup-*\nply, and existing financial conditions.\nThe main purposo of the control\nexercised by the committee was to\nInsure n sound and steady distribution of bonds. Tho export of capital from Canada'for the purchase of\nsecurities abroad was being discouraged by Canadian banks, stock and\nbond dealers, etc,P on account of ad*\nverse exchange rates.\n F-#-i3fe-8\nTHE Km? NEWS, TI.URS1.AY MORNING, APME -22, 1920\nVNEQUAL.BD FOR GENERAL; U8E\nW. P. TIERNEY, General Sale, Agont\nNelson,   B.C.\nCars  supplied  to  all  railway  points\nKERR'S JITNEY\n\"Safety   First\"\u2014Guaranteed   to\nPlease  You.    ...\nPHONE 491\nAgents for Nash Cars, Korr  Block\nTHE ARK\nBaa some drygoods that are still\ncheap. Bath Towels pair, SJ and\n$1.25; 'nice .Ginghams, 40# l'er\nyard; Bordered Curtain, nice patterns, 35^ ner yard.' Our stock\nof Wallpapers Is now complete.\nCeiling and Wallpaper, 40(> double\njroll; Oatmeal Paper. $1.25 per\nroll.\nJ. W. HOLMES\nPHONE 65L 606 VERNON ST.\ncriAssrnp.D ads. biung  ri_.\nSUMS  EVISRY  TIME.\nEdison Amberol Records, April\nA   Matrimonial   Mixup,   Negro   Sketch,   orch.   ace\u2014Rilly   (lolden   and   Joe\nHughes.   No. \u201e!li>7.\nBackyard Conversation  Between  Mrs.  Reilly and  Mrs. Finnegan\u2014Ada Tones\n5      ahd  Steve  Porter  No.  3940.\nChasin' the  Blues (Piantadosi), orch.  ace\u2014Al Bernard.    No.  3049:\nOardanella Fox Trot (Bernard-Black), for dancing\u2014ll.irrv Rndermnn's .Taz.\n0|-chestra.    No. 31)66.\nDixie Lullaby (Dixon), Soprano,    Mezzo-Soprano  and   Contralto\u2014Homestead\nTrio.    No. 3HG2.\nIt's the Smart Little Feller Who Stocked  Up His Cellar That's Getting the\n'      Beautiful  Girls  (Ager), orch. ace\u2014Mnurlce Burkhart.    No.  3961.\nLeaf   by   Leaf, the  Roses   Fall   (Bishop),   Baritone  and   Tenor,  orch.   ace\u2014\nVernon  Archibald and  Lewis Jnmes.    No.  3959.\nLet the Rest of the World Go By (Ball), Contralto and Tenor, orch. ace\n!      Marlon Evelyn  Cox and Harvey  Hindermyer.    No. 3955,\nLinger   Longer   Letty    (Goodman),    Contralto   and    Baritone,   orch.   ace\nHelen . Clark  and  .loseph   Phillips.    'N...39G0.\nLisztiana March (Chiaffarelli)\u2014Conway's Band.    No. 3947.\nLittle; Girls,  Good-Bye\u2014Apple   Blossoms   (Jacobi), Tenor,  orch.  ace\u2014Lewis\nJames and Chorus ot Men.    No. U_58.\nLucille\u2014Fox  Trot  (Wadsworth-Arden),  for   Dancing,  Saxophone,  Xylophone\ni     and Piano\u2014All Klur Trio.   No.. 3952.\nMake   Thate   Trombone   Laught\u2014Fox   Trot   (Scharf),   for   Dancing\u2014Harry\nRaderman's Jazz Orchestra.    No.  3900.\nMolly: Malone (My Own)\u2014Passing  Show of  1919  (Schonberg), Tenor,  orch.\nace\u2014Charles Hart.    No.  3945. \\\nNightingale Song .{Wilson), Yodel, orch. ace\u2014Frank M. Kamplaln.   No.'3951\nPretty   Little   Rainbow   Waltz   (Plunkett)\u2014T.en.herff's   Riverside   Orchestra.\nNo.  3954.   ...\nSahara, We'll Soon Be Dry .Like You   (Schwartz), orch. ace\u2014Hilly  Murray.\n\u25a0 :      No,.  3903.\nShall We  Meet?  (Rice),  Baritone and Tenor, orch. ace\u2014Vernon  Archibald\nand   Lewis  James.     No.   394S.\nSunny   Weather   Friends    (Kendis-Brockman),   Tenor,   orch.   ace\u2014Harvey\nHindprmyer.    No. 3963.\nSweet \u25a0 and    Low\u2014Waltz     (Introducing     \"Lonesome\u2014That's     AH\"\u2014Tuxedo\nDance Orehestn.    No.  3950\u00ab\u00bb\nThe  Mighty  Deep  (Jude),  Bass, orch.  ace\u2014Wilfred Glenn.    No.   3.959.\nWho Wants a  Baby?\u2014Fox Trot, Introducing \"I'm Waiting  For  Ships That\nNever Come  In,,  (Olman)\u2014 Lenzherg's  Riverside Orchestra.    No.   3944.\n90 CENTS   EACH\nCanada Drug & Book Company\nIF. YOUR HEART IS WEAK\nStay at home tonight, for the\nblood-stirring   thrills   in\nThe Grim Game\nStarring    that    Master   Wizard\nHoudini\nwill cause that old organ of\nyours to skip -beats and turn\n$liprfIop's.   *\nOur personal guarantee that\n\"The: Gf.rn Game\" is the moat\nsensational picture ever screened in Nelson.\nBurton  Holmes Travelogue\n\"The White Elephant\n\u00abiilitai.t\"\nBriggs   Comedy\n\"New Folks in Town\"\nPARENTS!\nYou  want your child  to  pass  the\ncoming:  June  school  exams.\nThen\n1ST fill 1\nWill Spend Week in District ; Starkey Drawing\nUp Itinerary\nThat a party of Vancouver business men 100 strong will spend a\nweek in the Kootenay in July, if\nthe .present plans are adhered to,\nwas announced yesterdny by Fred\nA*. Starkey, commissioner of the\nAssociated Boards of Trade of Eastern British Columbia, who is in\ntouch with President Spencer, of the\nAssociated Boards of Trade of British Columbia, and Secretary W. E.\nPayry., of the  same organization.\nBoth of these Vancouver business men were at the Seattle mining convention, where Air. Starkey\nmet them, and at that time they\ngave some intimation that tho trip\nwas_^ being  considered,\nMr. Starkey, at the request of\nPresident Spencer, is now working\non an itinerary for tbe trip, based\non a whole week to bc spent in this\ndistrict.\nThe general idea of the Vancouver management Is for a. tour, first\nof the Kootenay, and then of the\nnorthern   districts.\nThe Simllkameen and Okanogan\nwere covered  lost summer.\nLADIES' SUITS\nAND COATS\nCleaned or Dyed\nH.K.Foot\nHigh-Class   Dyer   it  Cleaner\nFAIRVH.W \u2014 NEISON, B.C.\n\u00a5\nFarewell Dinner at Strath-\ncoha Precedes His Departure (or Coast\nFor two hours last everting the\ndining room of the Strathcona Hotel\nwas the scene of a pleasant fare:\nwell function in honor of Archie\nDonaghy, of the. legal Mm of\nDonaghy, Brown & Dawson, on the\neve of his removal in Vancouver.\nThe function took the fofm of a\ndinner party, In which 15 of Mr.\nDonoghy's Nelson friends and as,-\nsoein tes   participated.\nD. St. Denis acted as toastmaster,\nand all the members of tho friendly\nparty in turfi spoke in complimentary terms of Mr. Donaghy, and\npredicted that in the end lift would\nornament the h ighest rung of tho\nlegal  ladder of  this  province.\nAfter thb dinner was concluded,\nthe entire party drove down to\nthe station, and saw the\/ guest of\ntho evening off, with a farewell\ncheer. The members of the party\nwere D. St, Denis, J. S. \"besohamps,\no( Hossland, A. G. Langlay, of\nRevelstoke, and J. A. Gibson,\nGeorge Ferguson, D. W. Proudfoot,\nDr. .h- E. Borden, Dr. A. H.' Wallace,\nI. G. Nelson, Harold Lakes, J. G,\nBunyan, J.' Clark Johnstone, \u20ac. F.\nBlecna and William  Br.own.\nMr. Donaghy came to> Nelson\nthree years ago, taking over the\nlaw business of A. M. Johnson when\nthe latter became deputy attorney-\ngeneral. At Vancouver he will practise law. Id partnership With \"his\nbrother,   Dugald    Donaghy.\n\u2014 \u2014..\u2014\u2014.   i\u2014     '\nJapanese  Defeat  Bolshevik  Band\nTOKIO, April 21.\u2014(Associated\nproaH)J_Tho war office today announced on April 10, the crushing\ndefeat hy lhe Japanese of 1500 Bolshevik troops at Chllnofski. west of\nChita,   in   eastern   Siberia.\nTONIGHT\nKOOTENAY AMATEUR BOEING TOURNAMENT\nEIGHT  BOUTS\u2014DIFFERENT WEIGHTS\nMain   Event\nLUTHER GORDON versus PERCY BLOOMER\n(of Trail)11  * (of Nelson)\nAD.MISSION  50 CENTS\n8 P.  M. SHARP AT Y. M. C. A.   GYMNASIUM\nAs through the picture, a\"t tho\nback of tho eye, to the brain, is the\nchief channel through which know\nledge is absorbed.\nSo-\nBy having these eye pictures clear\nand distinct, tho brain is deeply impressed, this picture impression staying in the brain resulting in knowledge being gained and retained,\nas In taking phonograph records, the\nnecdlo impresses the music into the\nrecord.   Help your child. Consult us.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nOptometrist  and   Optician\nCLASSIFIED   ADS.   BRING   RESULTS  EVERT *IME.\nFOR BREAKFAST\nCarnation Wheat Flakes, \/JA-\npter package     OUC\nRolled  Oats,  8-lb.  sack, flX**\nper  sack     I OC\nWheatlets,   10-lb.   sack, QPJfi\nper sack     e\/Ul\/\nWheatlets,   5-lb.   sack, P*fl\/\u00bb\nper sack     Ovl\/\nPuffed  Rice, O(\\o\nper package   _uUC\nPuffed Wheat, 9A_f*\nper package    mvv\nRoman  Meal, 4.flf\u00bb\nper package    Wv\nJ. A. IRVING & CO.\nTHE   GREAT   SUPPLY   BOUSE\nPHONE 161\n\u2022_____-_______-\nA. HIGGINBOTHAM\nGraduate    Eyesight    Specialist\nEyes examined  and  properly\nfitted.\nPunktal, Tprle and Kryptok\nLenses.\nK.W.C. BLOCK, NELSON, B.C,\nWHEN YOU OVERHAUL YOUR LAUNCH USE\nBAPCO MARINE PAINT\n-WHITE, GREEN  AND  RED\nAnd Berry Bros, \"tuxbeny\" Spar Varnish\nWa  can  also supply ycu  with  Paint  and  Varnish   Remover,  Steel\nWool,  Sand  Paper, Varnish  and  Paint  Brushes,  ato\nWood-VaHance Hardware (W Ltd.\nThe De Laval Milker Saves Labor\nThe drndgery is eliminated and milking is\nreduced to a science, when the DeLaval Milker\nis used.\nThe saving .ot1 labor and the fact that the\nwork Is made more pleasant, tend toward the\nsolution oi' the labor problem' on the dairy\nfarm. .\nCall or Write for Catalogue, Prices\nand Terms\nCurlew Creamery Co.\nA.S. Horswill \u25a0$, Co.\nGolden   Bananas,   lb.      20<.\nHothouse  Lettuce,  lb 45^\nFinest Cauliflowers\nNaval Oranges'from, doz 45^\nPendray's     Water     Glass,    Q5it\nand      35tf\nPuffed Rice and Wheat, pkt., 20#\nDutch  Setts,  per lb  25<-\nPra.tt'a  Chicken  Food'\nDr. Rusk's Chick Food\n\u2022    McKenzle's Garden  Seeds\nTobaccos and Cigarettes Wholesale\nand   Retail\nGreat War Veterans'\nAssociation\nSecond Annual\nYpres Dance\nFRIDAY, APRIL 23\n7 PIECE OR-ltESTBA    \"\nWE  CARRY  IN   STOCK\nAutomobile Ignition\n*  Parts\nMagneto and Generator Brushes\nHowe Electric Co.\nOPERA HOUSE BLOCK\nP. O.  Box 923 Phono 630\nHORSES!   HORSES!\nSeven' good teams work horses,\nyoung and sound, prices ranging SWj to $500 per team. Will\nsell single or double. Algo one\nnice black Holstein -Jersey cow,\nto freshen  in few  days.\nNelson Transfer Co., Ltd.\nCorner Vernon and Stanley\nPHONE \u00ab.\nSocial and Personal\nDr. W. O. Ilose, M.P.R, antl Mrs.\nRose, nrrivtjd home from the legislative session at Victoria, last night,\nby   way   of  Ttevelstoke.\nDavid Wade, who has been spending\nthe last few days in Calgary on business,  returned homo last night.\nAfter a visit of a few days In Nelson, Capt. T, P. Fitzshnmons, of the\nCP.lt. steamer Yale, plying between\nArrowhead and Beaton daily, left last\nnight   for   the  Arrow   Lakes.\nJ. S. Deschamps, the Rossland lumberman, wan a visitor in Nelson yesterday.\nMr.  and  Mrs.  Clifford, of New Denver,  are   registered  at   the  Slrathcona.\nC. F. Caldwell, manager of the Utica\nmine,   loft  yesterday  for  Kaslo.\nC. P. Lindsay, the Spokane lumberman,  Is at  the  Hume.\nCapt. Roland Ellis, the Boswell\nrancher, was amongst city arrivals\nInst evening.\nNelson News of the Day\nFor  messenger   Phone  19--Tho   Bungalow. ,   .- (7320)\nSEE      VIMY      RIDGE. BATTX.E-\nPIELES TOUR. ROBERT HUGHES'\nPARTY .WEAVES IN JULY, RETURNS IN AUGUST. PARTICULARS\nC.P.R.  OFFICE. (7462)\n>era House S_.\nApril 26\nTHE LAUGH SHOW OF CREATION\nGOOD CATCHY CLEVER\nCOMEDY       -- MUSIC DANCER8\n'  j \u2014and\u2014\nA   Real   Beauty   Singing   and   Dancing   Chorus\u2014The   Last   Word   in\nMusical   Comedy\n Not a Moving Picture \t\nPRICES:\u2014$1.65,    $1.10.    55c \u2014 Includes    Tax\nSeats   on   Sale   at   City   Drug   Store   Friday\nFURS\nHigh class Eurs from\nselected skins kept in\nstock or made to order.   Oustoraers's Fuft.\nmade up, remodeled* apd repaired.\nSKINS DRKSSED AND MOUNTED .\nP      CI    A CpO ' HIOHEST WIIOB PAID FOB\n___WA_.D ST. PHONE 10\u00ab RAW FURS\nFor Sale At Your Own Price\nEight Roomed House on Victoria Street, modern; only five minutes\nwalk from Post Office.    Here is a snap  going for someone, as\nWe have got to get an oiler for this property\n.-i >_\u25a0\u25a0-   \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 \t\nHighest Market Prices Paid for Victory Bonds\nCharley F. McHardy\nINSURANCE\nPHONE  136\n\u2666     REAL   ESTATE\nAt dance will be given at South Slocan Friday, April 23rd. JohnBon's orchestra will furnish the music. Automobile   will   leave  Nelson   Transfer  at\n30. Admission, gentlemen, 11.00;\nladles 50c.    Supper Included. (748G)\nAlsike Clover Seed!\nWe have special value this season in Alsike Seed.   It iM\nNo. 1 Government Standard, and much cheaper than Rei|\nClover.   Makes a good mixture with timothy for home use*\nThe Brackman-Ker Milling Co., Ltd]\nOnly\nin the city\nFOR HIRE\nMeets all trains and boats.\nAlways ask for Big John's\nDodge Car.\nFor Sale\u2014Two sets double harness; one dark brown horse, weight\n1150 lbs.; good driver, single or\ndouble; one gray horse, weight 1500\nlbs.,   just   right   for  express   work.\nCITY GAB COMPANY\nPhone  18\nGive   Us  Your Order For\nDry Wood, Lump\nand Not Gait Coal\nAlso for Your\nFURNITURE and PIANO MOVING\nOrders   Promptly   Attended  to\nMacDonald .Cartage &\nFuel Co.\nFOR SALE AT A\nSACRIFICE\nOne of the best fruit and\nstock farms in West Kootenay,\nconsisting of 125 acres. 30 acres\ncan be cropped this year. Good\nhouse and other' buildings;\nsmall orchard; fine creek running through the center of the\nproperty; 50 acres of merchant\nable timber nt the rear. For\nquick  sale,   $4000;   half  cash.\nJ.  E. ANNABLE,\nNelson.\nEvenings   at   7:15  and   9:00\nJESSE  L.  LASKY  PRESENTS\nParamount Picture\nL1LA LEE\n-ifj-\n\"HEART OF YOUTH\"\nEpisode 11\nTHE GREAT GAMBLE\nTHE 8TOL.EN  IDENTITY\n\"SNUB\"   POLLARD   COMEDY\nFriday  and  Saturday\nBRYANT  WA8HBWRN\nih \"LOVE  INSURANCE.\nH It's NELSON BRAND!\nMARMALADE It's\nRight for your customers because '\nthe  quality  never  varies.' ;\nRight   for   you   because   Neleen\nBrand  pleases every taste.\nTHIS WEEKl\nCheero  Boys  in  \"Fourth  of August\"\nat St. Saviour's  Parish Hall,  April 28.\n(7507)\nB.P.O.rt. Nelson Lodge, No. 5, meets\nevery first anil, third Thursday.' In\nElks*   Hdme,   Magllo   Block. (75112)\nBeginning   today,   ull   Barber   Shops\nwill close Wednesday,  12.30  b.m.(  Saturday 0 p.m.    All other days 8 p.m.\n(7542)\nDied at Banbury, on tho 10th Inst.,\nCatherine Bethia, only daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. Robert Cameron, aged six\nyears. ,   (7549)\nI, Jack Jones, apologize to Tom\nGrieve, of Fruitvale, for trouble 1\ncaused him over my posts, an It wa\u00bb\nmy miscount. (7559)\nPythian Sisters, will meet tonight at\n8 o'clock. After the meeting a social\nevening  will  be  spent. (7557)\nRegular meeting of Nelson Encampment, No. 7, I.O.O.F., at 8 o'clock tonight. All patriarchs please attend.\nCanton Corona will muster at the\nclose. (7558)\nFor Sale\n802 Mill Street \u2014 Neat Bungalow,\n2 bedrooms; 2 level lots on corner.\n$1250.00,   reasonable   terms.\nFor Sde\nOne and a half story houso on\nObservatory street, 3 bedrooms, etc.,\nopen fireplace; 50 foot garden lot.\n\u00a51500.00,   very   easy   terms.\nFor Sale\nExcellent bungalow, 2 bedrooms,\ngarden  and lawn. . '$2500, terms.\nBeautiful Summer Home\nOne acre of land; creek water-\npiped to house; 189 feet lake frontage;\nlovely aandy beach; nine miles from\nNelson. *\nHouse 20x36, verandah 9x12, living\nroom 14x10 with 4 foot stone fireplace; 3 bedrooms, kitchen and\npantry, $2600. Summer homes like\nthis are hard to find. -Act at once,\nC. W. Appleyard\nBox 626 NELSON, B.C.\n\"Please,\" fox trot by Henri's Orchestra, is pure jazz. Don't miss this one.\nWillis   Plhnos,   Ltd.,   304   Baker  St.\nAM.   ODDFEMOWS  ATTENTION\nKootenay\" Lodge No., 1G, T.O.O.F.,\nwill attend divine service at Church\nof England Sunday eveiring, April 25th,\nMembers and sojourning brothers meet\nat I.O.O.F. Hall; 7 p.m. sharp, froni\n%here march will commence, 7.15 p.m.,\nescorted by Nelson City Band.    (7560)\nSEEDING NEAR REGINA\nREGIGNA, April 21.\u2014SeecUng. began at several farms in the Regina\ntiistrlct today, wjiere it has been\nraining off and oy since noon. The\nsnow has all gone, but much land\nis too soft to'.permit of farm work,\nFrom miany points In south and west\nSaskatchewan, 'reports have come ot\nseeding operations, but in no,, part\nof the province can It yet be (.aid\nthat seeding < la general.   \u2022\u25a0\nDESPONDENT FROM\nHIS INCOME TAJ.\nREOINA, April 21.\u2014William Jas.\nBrndt^ suicided by .taking poison m\na. fit of despondency because* he\nthought his Income tax return might\nbe incorrect, according to reports\nof the. provincial. police frorti ttf-a\nWoodrow, Sask., district.\nM1NI8TER  MACKAY  ILL\nEDMONTON, April 21.\u2014Hon. A. 0..\nMackay,   minister. oi   municipal   af\nfairs and health, in the Alberta\nlegislature; was taken to the 'Gen>\neral hospital tonight suffering from\na severe attack of bronchitis,\nPneumonia \\\u00bb feared.\n10 Per Cent\nOff AU\nSUIT CASK\nCLUB BAGS\nTRUNKS\nETC\n\u2022 \t\nJ.   Holland]\n608 BAKER ST.\nP.O. Box 811\nNELSON AUTO LIVERY]\n\u00bb 113 Bake.  Street\nTWO NEW CARS  POR  HIRE'\nDAY   AND   NIGHT   SERVICE\nAutos   meet   all   boats   arid   tralnl\nCareful   driving,   \"Safety   First\"  Dl|\nmotto.\nPHONE 119\nBASEBALLS\nand Rubber Balls, ten kinds.    IteoflJ\nenable   prices.\nFleming's Store]\nFAIRVIEyi\/\nDRY   GOODS   GROCERIES,   ETCj\n^ff^^BS!\u00ab^^Ti\nRflineoats\nTrim looking, comfortable garments, cut\nand tailored with all the distinction characteristic of J3mory & Walley Clothes. Tweeds\ntn neat patterns\u2014\n$15.00 ,.$35.00\nI\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1920_04_22","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0396179","@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":"1920-04-22 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1920-04-22 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\/1.0396179"}